vHfrl fiTPfrrThAT A WIPCRf A XT, Chicago, with all expenses paid by the Western Railway - A VXI KJM JTm. JL JU4kJJ.fJifXXl . Ited Daily Except Honda ,y THE STATESMAN PU BUSHING COMPANY" SIS Soeth Commercial Street. Seleaa. Orecoa ' K. J. Httdrictt Irf 8. McBhtrrj . Rfph 0. Curtis - 'ctor D. Carlaoa -Eoiella Buack - , V" . M T RIp H. K letting-. Aeertlear Ihntpr -, Mimriii o'M I eo. ' . Martiu. Bupt. Mecbaaicel Oept - 8 porta - fceeiet j Kd.tor Editor Editor w, H. iiendcraoa. Circa la tioa Manager E. A. Khoten - Utoek Editor W. C. Coaaer . . - , Pdnitry E4ita . , ' OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS v 1tttW Jrr ' 1 erlaie7 entitle the aM for paalicatie f w iptcbea credited U it or sot otherwise credited la UU tapr u4 lae tta local aeya pablnbed herein. . - , ? ,,. i sr.-.. Btrsnrass omcis: o? Uft Oregon Heeapapera Pacili Coast "' ... reuiano, Borartty Bide.; Baa tacmaa F. CUr Co Sew y,rk. 128-1SSW. tltt sit Clieas.' afarqaette BM. Eenrpt eat Urea Detr "raaeieeo, gkuea 3Id(.; Xoa Boaiaeaa Offieew2S or S8S Society Editor TSLEPHOgE ; -.-. Hewa lep.I3 or J 08 Vb Department a la tin Circa la ti Office. RSi -583 Xatered at the P0.1 offiea h Saieta, Oretoa. si aeeabJ-claea naUer. Decwnber 8. 1927 Ana wnen tney bad received it. they murmured against the goodman of that house, saying. These last hare wrought but one hoar, and thou hast made them equal unto us, which hare borne the harden and heat of the day. - But he answered one of them, and aid. Friend. I do thee no wrong; didst thou not agree with me for wauji xaatmew zu: 11, iz and 13. ; MORE NEARLY PEAR PARADISE Presidents association. s - ; - He has exhibited at faira throughout the west, including the International Livestock Show at Chicago, : In all, he has won 65 prizes in club competition and 147 in open classes. He now owns 50 head of purebred Cotswold sheep, six head of Shorthorn cattle and two purebred Poland China brood sows.' He is financing his way as a sophomore in agri culture at the' State college with money derived from prem iuais in cjub work and from sale of livestock. It is a splendid achievement.?' It is example of what ine Doys ana gins ciud worK is doing in tjregon. it is promise for the lad of a future leadership and usefulness that will be of great value to farm life and to the state. Yamhill county must be very proud of Alex Cruickshank. The Eugene Register of yesterday had the' following lead ing editorial paragraphs: i "A great deal has been said in this column within the past few days about the $3,000,000 pear crop which has been marketed this year in the Medford district.! A great deal has been said for the "simple and obvious reason that it is an interesting- and significant subject. "The fruit industry is a big industry in Oregon, and here and there pessimists are to be found who will say that the fruit industry is not prof itabler The Texpence of the Rogue river pear growers is proof that the pessimists do not al ways know what they are talking about, ; . "As W. G. Ide, manager Df .the Orego State Chamber of Commerce, said in a letter printed on this page the other day, the big thing is standardization of quality.; That is what the Rogue river pear growers have donethey have stand ardized their quality. Having accomplished that big task, they are able to market their product at a profit. "Some of the fruit districts of Oregon are! suffering from lack of adequate markets, but when their situation is anal yzed it is found all too often that they lack a standardized quality product. "Frequently they are growing too many products, with ..none of them outstanding as to quality. f "Among the standardized quality products of Oregon are walnuts and filberts, and this fortunate situation is largely due to the efforts of the Western Nut Growers association. "Thanks o the work that has been done by this associa tion, every walnut and filbert bearing the association mark is guaranteed as to quality. The result is a ready market. Here again, quality scores. i "The day is past, if it was ever here, when just any kind of fruit or nut can be sold at a profit. Buyers in these mod ern days are demanding quality, and in the main they are willing to pay the price. The obvious thing to do is to pro vide the quality, and then guarantee it. ; ' "The Western Nut Growers association, incidentally, will meet at Salem December 7 and B, which' is next Wednesday and Thursday. (. I . ' ; "Among the interesting addresses will j be a suryey of market conditions by W. H. Bentley, of Dundee; a talk on chestnut' prospects, by J. O. Holt, of Eugene ; a report on walnut seedlings, by C'E. Sfchuster, of O. A. C; and a dis cussion of filbert pruning, by George A- Dorris, of Spring T field. - I 'The nut is. one of the most promising of all tree crops in western . Oregon. The filbert, in particular, '. looks like a western Oregon monopoly, in which event its market future ought to be promising The 1927 meeting of the nut asso ciation ought to be an interesting and profitable one. ' The Eugene Register is correct. The meeting In Salem next Wednesday and Thursday will be an interesting and ' profitable one; ; And in the other statements the Eugene paper is correct. Secretary Webb of the California Walnut' Growers asso ciation has just reported that the present walnut crop of that state is four times greater than that of 1926; that il wiU return to the growers $13,000,000; that the present crop totals 42,000 tons, and marketing of 90 per cent of it will be finished by December 20 And yet Oregon's crop of a thousand tons is selling high- er on the same grades than California's crop, because we can and do grow a superior walnut. And we can produce walnuts all the way from 4 to 9 cents a pound cheaper than they can be grown in California; considering among other things low er land values here; less overhead. j As to the filbert, it not only "looks like a western Oregon rronopoly," but is; it is one of our franchise crops. And as to pears, we have here in the Salem district more nearly a pear paradise than the Medford district has. This was the testimony o the late Prof. C. L ewis; author of a text book on pears. It is the testimony of Marion County Fruit Inspector s. H. Van Trump. It is the fact.. We can grow here as good pears as Medford, with the same attention; and we can grow them at a less cost, and more of them ; vastly more, because' we have vastly more acres of suitable pear land. . j FROM OLD YAMHILL (Portland Journal) ; A Yamhill county boy is America's outstanding leader in toys and girls' club work. 4 ' t He is "Alex Cruickshankv 19, a sophomore inTthe. Oregon State colleare, and the distinction came to him in a' recent national club leader contest where he won first prize as the best boys' and girls club leader in the United States. It is the second time the prize as the nation's best club leader has come to the : westi He also won the national prize as the best local club leader, and it is th first time both prizes have ever been won by a single contestant. -V. . For the first prize he received $250 in cash. Forthe oth er, he was awarded a silver loving Cup and a ,trip, with ex penses paid, to the club training school at Springfield, Mas- echusetts, next year. . He lcr-n club work at 9, in 1917, In the period, ht v.cn ?2i03 in cash premiums. He has been awarded twe - .11 v. atches and many trophies. ; In 1923 he was selectee t!. c: t::I:"T club hicrcf1 Oregon," nnJ was 'awards The above from the Portland Journal is a pretty and a just tribute. - - j- , , Tlie home of Alex Cruickshank is near McMinnville. He worked himself through high school at McMinnville with his club and live stock activities.' . 'Old Yamhill against! the world"; was a pioneer . Oregon slogan, when it was the boast that all the great men of the state were from or born in Yamhill county. In point of work that is useful to his day and generation, that of young Cruickshank will compare favorably rwith that of any ofthe great people of Yamhill in the pioneer days, or in later times. ;"' -i ' : It'1' A i-'B- " Some of the people out in the northern limits of the city are raising objections to the location of the incinerator in that section: :, They lack vision. They are alarmed at a shadow. The people out that way, and clear down to St. Paul and old Champoeg, could afford to subsidize the loca tion of the incinerator on the proposed site, for it will bring the sewage disposal plant there, and that will make the whole northern section of the county, along the river, one of the richest districts in this state, or any state. The walnut and filbert men, to meet in Salem on Wednes day and Thursday, should be given a royal welcome. They are the forerunners of two of our greatest industries on the land. I ' , lL Soviet Russia will have to cease being soviet, and there fore worse than barbaric, before any gesture by the leaders and oppressors of that people can be so much as considered by the civilized world-4hat is, considered as coming from a sincere and honest motive. ; . I SIS IT MIK COfWICTtD YOUTHS Lack of Food arid Work No Excuse For Crime, Says Judge Tazwell O H es In rates proposed in the meas ure are the following: Reduction of the tax rate on corporation incomes from 13 to 11 per cent; reduction from to 1 per cent in the sales tax of automobiles; cutting in half of the tax on club dues; increase from 75 cents to 1.00 in the ex emption from tax on admission tickets, and increase from 12,000 to S3, 000 In the exemption grant ed domestic corporatibns with in comes not exceeding $25 000. fwETITY-FlVE YEARS AqB ' . " Inn 1 nil O (From column of The Statesman, .D..4, -10.) Tillamook During the election Monday- Kme miscreant tapped the till of the White Comer saloon for 10. ; James J. Jeffries, champion pugilist, and Robert Fitsslmmons will fira a sparring exMbltion In Portland Tuesday evening. A plain v case of - "snakes" caused a sensation in the Noble sa loon laert night. . Doctors Smith and Byrd' attended the case., Mrs. Myra A. Wiggins has re ceived fire prizes in the world competition of photographs. There were 21,000 pictures in the con test. , I .' .; ; Humanity is degenerating, says Rev. C. E. Hunter. He attributed this to tbe lack of trne and earn est teaching among the pro feasors of religion. v 5 , aeaaa The Willamette university ladies basketball teams, the "Old Golds" and the "Cardinals" slayed an ex- hihttiAn - rima resteraay. tw "Old Gold" won II to 11. ' ? Blta For Breakfast O Salem the nut center :;,.,. V w . Will have the walnut and filbert growers of the state next Wed nesday and Thursday nnrsentlnK industries that will in time be bigger than those of California. where the walnut growers are now cashing in on 42.000 tons, the 1927 crop, to the tune of $13,000,000. V We can heat California on wal nuts, and California cannot grow filberts at all, excepting along the coast in the northern part, b V Salem is to have another restaur ant, in the big new market build Ing. Haa already a good many restaurants. m But there wUl be room for all the restaurants and all the apart ment houses, and every , other line here now, if the linen Industry is put over, making the founda tion for specialty mills. V S P!TT-r Klnzle oerson who has a business In Salem, or a foot of real estate, ought to help put this over. It will do the trick of keep ing Salem on In the way of growth and development. PORTLAND. Dec 2. (AP) Dan Flynn, 23, and Mickey Mur phy. 22, railroad workers stood before presiding Circuit Judge Taswell here today, and were sen tenced to spend the next It years of their Ufe in the state prison at Salem. They : had acknowledged guUt in connection with a series of armed holdups in Portland recent ly. . ; r "i r VI, too, hare walked the streets of Portland in search of work. without money in my pocket, but that did not lead me to . commit crime." "' ' f ; ' So did Judge Tazwell answer the pleas of the youth that they had been, hungry, that they had no mpney, no place to go and no hope of charging circumstances. . Judge Taswell had indicated that he might sentence the youths to terms almost in keeping; with those of last 'Saturday when he ordered .five other young men to serve sentences of from 20 to 25 years. ' : . ; 4 But in the ' case of Flynn and Murphy today, there was a de fense attorney who made a plea in their behalf. Then, : too,, the chief deputy district attorney de clared the prisoners .la this In stance had committed their first offense against society. , : It was then that Judge Taxwell spoke to the youths, and the words seemed to halt in his throat. "But your, plea," he -continued. "ha no effect on one experienced in the observation of 1 criminals. The fact that you were 'broke' ha no effect with me. .4 1 . ! ' . "Times have changed the feel ings of the public The public Is getting very tired of the maudlin sentiment expressed In late years toward crime, and I am forced to take this into consideration in be half of the public -: h I?' "It is not pleasant for me to be compelled to send young men to prison, but it is the only method prescribed by- law. t: p :4 TO BILL CQ?.iPLETE DRAFTTXa PREFABATOBI LEGISLATION FEXISHED WASHINTON, Dec. 2. (AP) The drafting of the $238,000,000 tax reduction bill was completed today by the house ways and means committee, and. except for a few minor changes, the measure wa placed in the form for intro duction the opening day of the session. - - - It is the plan of Chairman Green to place the measure in the Mil hopper as soon as the' house haa organized for business Monday.- Under procedure It will be referred to the committee which has been called by the chairman -o meet Tuesday to approve for- HELD IN HUE PLOT HENRY IL8E, OLD SUSPECT, ARRESTED AT SPOKANE BPOKANE, Dec. t. (A P) Henry Use, former city fireman tried last September and acquit ted of placing a dynamite bomb In the entrance of the "Spokesman Review building here, was held in the county jaU tonight in default of $5,000 bond, on a charge of second degree arson. He Is accused of having at tempted to burn the garage o& Fire Lieutenant H. R. Woellner, hi former superior. Policemen who made the arrest early today declare they -watched him stuff a kerosene-soaked gunnysack un derneath the door of the" build ing, light it and depart. While they Were extinguishing the fire, they state. Use escaped, but he was arrested a little while, later not far from his home. In the dynamiting trial Use told a story of having been the object of persecution by his follow tire men because he had opposed a double platoon system in the fire departmnet. He charged that he had been ordered to blow up the office of the Spokesman-Review, which also had opposed the double shift, and that after he refused. itellow firemen stole dynamite and a, bread can from his ranch and made, the bomb, which failed to explode. Bandits Wear Overalls 1 To Rob Bank. of Large Sum SACRAMENTO.' Cal., Dec. 2. (AP). Garbed la bine denim overalls, their faces swathed in red bandana handkerchief and their caps pulled down over their eyes, two s bandits robbed the : Davis branch of the Bank of Yolo at Davis, of. $7,200 late today, bound hand and foot four persons in- the bank : building, and then made their escape in a mad ride in small touring ear. DOTY AWARDED RELEASE American Veteran Granted Dia " charge From French Legion SIDI BEL ABRE3, Algeria, Dec. 2 (AP) Bennett J Doty of BIloxL -Miss., was released" to day from the Foreign Legion at ter winning honors and nearly facing a firing squad during his wrrtee with the .famous organira- ton. ' f:Xi:'."- ' Doty -dfseharge frees him af ter serving only 30 months of a five year enlistment. Old timers. WAR REPORTS RIFE RUMORS STILL CONTINUE OF CONFLICT IN UKRAINE BUCHAREST. Rumania, Nov. 2. (AP) Unconfirmed reports from the border town of Kishinev to the Bucharest newspftper Ade- rerul tonight say that bloody en counters have occurred in the Pod olia coal region of the Ukraine between rebellious forces led by General Naldow and Soviet troops commanded by General Leplewsky. "The Cheka (secret police) is making thousands of .arrests.' says a dispatch to Adeverul. "The warehouses of Odessa have been transformed into prisons for un desirables, last week more than one hundred Nepmen (members of the new economic policy or ganlsatlon) , were shot. : It was trne that they had , been working secretly in fvaor of those opposed to the regime of, Stalin, large numbers of. worker in coopera tive societies have Joined the op position., i "At Jambolla on the Podolian side of the Dniester river severe street fighting, has occurred,. many Russians have taken refuge across the Pdlish and Romanian frontiers.- ' -v . i The foregoing dispatch like aU recent reports of - aUeged revolts growing out of Leon Trotsky's ex pulsion from the communist party, la taken at ; Bucharest with C the greatest reserve. The Rumanian government has no confirmatory information. Rancher Hear Bend Gets $10,000 .Verdict In Suit BEND. Dec 2. (AP) -End ing a case which attracted 'much attention in all parts of central Oregon., jurors, out five . hoursJ last f night, awarded j James H. Lane, for many years a rancher in Lake county. $ 10,000 In Jala defamation of character suit against C- S. Hudson and the re ceivers of the First National bank of Bend. V Lane had : asked for $75,000. The suit hinged on a letter writ ten by Hudson, when president of the bank, to Lane. - This letter wa read to Lane by a third per son, the rancher having lost his sight years' ago.' Lane charged that Hudson knew of this ailment and realized a third person would have to read the letter, said to have contained statement which hurt the rancher' standing in his community. Huge Timber Owner Says ; Contract To Be Cancelled PORTLAND, Dec 2-(AP) Fred Herrick will . allow his con tract for the purchase of 770,000.- 000 feet of timber in the Malheur national forest to be cancelled. Frederick Stelwer,. United States senator,-said yesterday in, a tele gram to John L. Day, chairman of the Multnomah county republi can committee. The telegram was based,' Senator Stelwer said, on Information recently acquired by him, but wor which he has not accepted responsibility. ' The conditions which Colonel W B. Greeley chief United States forester, has proposed to Herrick to obviate the cancellation of the contract on December 15, accord ing to Senator Stelwer Informa tion, are that Herrick obtain back ing to the extent of $1,600,000 by December 15, -and proceed at once to complete his railroad and saw mill and start cutting timber. The senator understands that Colonel Greeley has written Herrick to thia effect. Squabble Begun When . , 18th Amendment Hit TULSA. Okla., Dec. 2. (AP) The eighteenth amendment to the federal constitution never has been validly ratified, because it was submitted to the state legis latures and not to the people themselves. George H. Williams, of St JxjuIs, iormer United States senator from Missouri, declared last night before the Oklahoma Bar association, j Fortifying his conclusions with opinions of the supreme court and statements of farmers of the con- suiuuons, Mr. Williams con tended: .v. v ' 1 "That the institution may be amended by the people or the state legislatures. . L "That the subject matter of the proposed' amendment will deter mine who may raify if If the pro posed amendment . relates to the operations of the srovernment. then state legislatures may ratify it; but if it gives new power to congress to regulate the conduct of he people and punish them for disobedience of laws passed under such powers then the people must ratify it. German Court Considers Scientific Blood Tests White Leghorn Pullet " Ties Up Subway Traffic NEW YORK, Dec. 2. (AP) J A i- white leghorn pullet which barkened to the cry of "avoid sub way crowds and use the open air L ' blocked, the crowded Ninth avenue line for 20 minutes. Trains maneuvered cautiously ' and -pas sengers craned neck for a glimpse of a real barnyard chicken "with its clothe on." .To the ancient riddle about road cross. New York er's are offering the new one, "How does a chicken reach the elevated f hardened v -rears of nerrim tttnnA naUy the work it has Just com- aght at the American's luck in ileted. - ' winning "freedom after courtmar- No change,? were made today In tial ami de-er tion In Syria . and aajor provisions which had "been -ardon after Fervtng part of an Exploring Expedition Has ; Choice Rabbits For Meal CAMP PEARSON, Painted Des ert. Arizona. Dee. 2.-r-(U. S. Sig nal Corps Radio to the Associated Press ) After having eaten their first meal of meat in three weeks roast of "Jack rabbit the Bray-Pathe Colorado expedition planned to leave early torn orr owl morning ; to continue down the dangerous river to Needles. CaL The members of the . party shot the rabbit sear Camp Pearson to day and ; carried them down to Lee's Ferry where the balance of the IS members of the party had been since they arrived Wednes day from Green River. Utah, seven dAys beyond the time hey had' ex-' Pcted to-take In navigating thh t BERLIN Dec. 2. (API A German eourt for the first time has rendered a decision on the determination of the parenthood of a child by blood test. - I A woman in the case- was charged with falsely describing as the father of her child a man who denies paternity. AU three per-j sons involved underwent blood test by the state medical board at Wurtemburg. ; The doctors reported to the court that jthe man was "not the father of the chUd. The woman wa convicted of perlurr. and sen tenced to six months imprison ment. - Mrs. Susan Jane Hearing of Haines, 7$, affectionately known to hundreds of her friends as "Grandma" Hearing, died at her home recently after a long period of falling health. - v : THE MORMNG ARGUTiIENT - AUNT HET. .E4r Rehawt Qiiillea "Some married women are hap py, an' some has '' husbands that ain't got back-bone enough to bos em." (CopjiHht, 1927, Publisher Syndicate) POOR PA ' By Oaade Callan IP "Jones Is so polite to his wife that I believe she's the one that owns the property they talk about." - (Copyright. 1927, Pbblisaera Syndicate) Al Smith Breaks Silence On Dry Enforcement Issue ALBANY, N. Y., Dec. 2. (AP) For the first time since he has been prominently mentioned as a democratic presidential possibility, Governor Alfred E. Smith Ct New York state tonight broke bis sli-l ence on the prohibition question by declaring that while he stands tor enforcement of all laws, he sees no reason why any group of voters should not oppose the fed eral prohibition statutes. The i - governor declaration,: made at' the annual convention dinner of the ; New .York State League of women voters, was in answer to a resolution adopted by the Nassau county branch of the league .condemning organized op position to the eighteenth amend ment and the l Volstead act and urging "respect tor and obedience to law." H : . "Whafe wrong about that?" asked the governor after he had read the section of the resolution referring to organization of a group to oppose j the prohibition laws. . "Is there any reason why the opposition should not organ-j lzer Is there any question about the solidity, force and effective ness of the forces on the other side of the question when by their own announcement : they will .re quire $5,000,000 for the operation of their organization in the next five years T - "Is the right of our people to organize to oppose any law and any part of the constitution with which they are not in sympathy. I have taken an oath of office as as semblyman, as sheriff of New York county and ' four times as governor, to sustain the constitu tion of the state pt New York and! yet there are parts of it I hate. I have promised to sustain It, but I have not promised to give up any right to oppose any part of it I don't like." r Glancing down at the copy of the Nassau county league's reso lution the governor then quoted: "Respect for, and obedience to law Is vital for the preservation of any form of government." wub . enaractemuc smith ex- ploslveness, the governor broke in with his own comment: . "This is so fundamental that no body differs with it. Any well or ganised government must rest up on that principle.' Quoting again from the resolu tion Governor Smith went on: "And nullification Is being preached by those in authority." "I would like the specifications of that," he continued. "It's news to me. I have no record of public expreasion of any one in thia state who has preached a doctrine of nullification of the constitution. Certainly T never preached 11 I took directly the opposite view." :y The governor then recalled that In the fall of 1928 he had attend ed, with the governors of several other states, a conference in Wash ington called by President Cool- ldge to discus law enforcement. : "We had a perfectly delightful time; a luncheon at the Whit House with fine Maryland chicken and all the trimmings," he said. "All the different governors of the states made speeches- Oh, how vigorous, they were for, law en forcement but h they were all made for the record, for the folks back home. ' , "The suggestion was made that each executive call all his law en forcement officers to his capital and warn' them that the eighteenth a.v endment and the Volstead act were a part of the law and that it was their, sacred obligation to en force them. We left Washington. I came back here and filled the assembly chamber . with law en forcement officers and carried out exactly the sentiment of the Wash ington conference. Six month3 later I learned to my surprise that I was only one of two governors who carried out the resolution." IMPROVISED BOAT SINKS Tacoma Ranch Owner Drowns When Mixing Board 81nks TACOMA, Dec 2.- (AP). An attempt to use a mortar-mixing box as a rowboat proved fatal this afternoon for Oresta Del Chicca. 37, owner of a chicken ranch south of the city, when he was drowned in eight feet of water in a small winter lake within sight of the Fort Lewis highway. -'- . Chicca started to paddle across the lake In the mortar box to get his rowboat, which wa on the . other side. When he was about 75 or 80 feet from shore his make shift craft began to sink. Passers by were unable to rescue .Chicca) who could not swim. AIR PROGRAM AMBITIOUS Non-Stopr Flight from , Berlin" to ". San Diego Among Plans SAN DIEGO, Dec. 2. (AP). A "non-stop flight from Berlin to San Diego by the world's largest dirigible, now under construction at Friedrichshafen, Germany, sod a national' aeronautic exposition which will bring to this city America's leading aviators and aircraft manufacturers with every type of plane now traversing the air lanes, will be held in connec tion with the dedication of the triple A municipal air port next fall It was announced today by the aviation committee of the chamber of commerce. Bonds to build the airport were voted by the city last week. NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT Notice la hereby given that the undersigned has filed in the Coun ty Court of the State of Oregon, for the Countr of Marion, his duly verified final account, as adminis trator , of the estate of Frederick Adoloh Graf fen. deceased, sna that said Court has fixed Mondar. the 5th day of December. 1027, at the hour of ten o'clock A. M. of said day, as the time, and the County Court Room In the County Court House in the City of Salem. Marion ' County, Oregon, as the place for hearing said final ac count and all objections thereto. Dated at Salem. Oregon, thia 4th day of November, 1927. N RONALD C. GLOVER, Administrator of the Estate ot ': Frederick Adolph Graf fen. De ceased. N-5-12-19-26D3 L Gi nil sts VI V15 k - A t f th ha he St an IV ch it Tl tn M( dr su tw ag Ce ch i '' c. to Co La t CO La du ce c: re t:: f.: til. V.'. ii 18 r ie -; : Blanks .That Are Legal We carry In stock over 115 leal thr.!ra ssited to racst any besiacsj transactions. We xaaj hare just the forxa yoa axe looking for at a bij caTin2 as compared to ra&de to order fcrras. Borne of the forms: Contract of Sale, Road Notice, WIU forma, Assign ment of Mortgage, Mortgage forma, Quit Claim Deeds, Abstract forma, Eill cf Safe, BaUdics Contract, Promissory Notes, Instalment Notes, General Lease, Power of Attorney, Prone Books and Pads, Scale Ke eeiptA Etc. Theso terras are carefcSJy prepared for the eocrta ana Private ess. Priee cn forms ranges frca 4 cets to 16 cents ajcs, and ca note books from 25 to 50 cents. - Y PXITNTED AND F03 8ALC CT The Statesman Publioliing Co. ; At Eucin Olficc, GrciJxr:: j y-. a On ir ::t, i ' f: tc i 10