PAGE TWELVE The OREGON STATESMAN. Salem. Oregon. Snnday Morning. November 9; 1930 IRTH RELAi INDUSTRY TOLD Belfast is World's Linen Center but- Building Ships now Leads (Continued from page 11) passing from the drawing frames to the roving where It Is made Into a soft thick thread prior to spinning. In gill spinning roving Is eliminated; the yarn is spun direct from sliver. Gill span yarns are only used In the manufacture of twine and are made only in the coarse num bers but owing to the low twist put on them require a somewhat better flax than for a similar number in wet spun yarns. It is to be understood however that a bigb grade flax is not required. The best flaxes are used in the manufacture of cloth, some high grade flax is used in the making of thread for needle, work pur poses but this is a yery small Item. Dry spun yarns which are gen erally made from tow or a very poor flax may be described as the shoddy of the linen trade. They are only made In the lowest counts, seldom exceeding 20's and are used in the making -of twine or as a weft in low grade linen fabrics and unions. Wet spun yarns are the cream of the yarns as their names im ply. They are passed through a saturating bath on the spinning machine prior to twisting. The finest yarns are made on this system, one mill at Belfast spin ning No. 400s. The diameter of this thread U .003125, in. : Some idea, of 1fs fineness. can be had by considering that No. 25s. the finest spun locally has a diam eter of .0125 in. Some idea of the class of fibre required to make this type of yarn can be got from the fact that the select of our lo cal flax will only spin around No. 40s. Linen yam has been spun as fine as .00238 Ins. diameter; one pound of this yarn would be al most 120 miles long. Linen wearing which is look ed upon as the most important j branch of linen manufacturing calls for considerable1 skill as by many it is considered the most difficult of all weaving opera tions and for the making of fine cloth calls for yery exacting con ditions in regards temperature and, humidity. It is generally separated into two classes; plain and damask, the former covers everything in linens except damasks. Contrary to general belief plain linens are the most difficult to make, sheet ing is about the most difficult of all to make. Many look upon damask as the finest of linens. While It is the most beautiful and the most costly to make, is is a coarse linen, the yarns used in the finest damask would not make the. coarsest handkerchief. Compared by weight and count It can readily be seen, taking 240 threads per square Inch, the ave rage for damask Is six ounces per pquare yard cambric, 2 ounces and sheer lawn 1; ounces per square yard. Sheer lawn Is the finest of all linens end Is the only linen woven ''bare" all the other linens being "covered." Follow ing are the figures In threads per square Inch for the finest of some of the best known "linens, crash SO, huck and sheeting 200, dia pers and cambric 240, sheer lawn 260, and damask 300, these figures are based on power loom cloth, la cambrics and sheer con siderably finer is made in band looms. Some ideas of the cost of dam ask can be got from the fact that there Is no . difference in plain looms and damask until the Jac quards are attached, with the harness and cards, the cost of the loom ready for operation will be from five to ten times the or iginal cost of the actual loom, added to this Is the fact that the ccst of the harness and cards have to be written off every five years. In fact the cards will re quire several lacings and repairs during this period. Bleaching operations are us ually carried on remote from the cities where plenty of water Is available and for the purpose of grassing the cloth and also to get away from the smut of the city. Linen which has much coloring to be removed than cotton la much easier tendered by chemi cals than cotton consequently the treatment has ot be lighter nad performed 'many times. It is often said that no Im provements have been made in linen manufacturing, but a close Inspection would reveal many. The present day hackling ma-4 chine, which .can be operated by one person is almost unrecognis able from Its predecessor In which the carrying clamps bad to be screwed and unscrewed- by hand both at the feed end and at the switch end. One ot these old type of machines employed more boys than either of the lo cal -linen mills. All the machines in the spinning department have been Improved to give a consid erably greater output. Automatic looms have not given satisfactory results In the weaving Industry except In coarse -work where the warp threads are well spaced apart, as "catches," the bugbear ot linen weaving, can only be de tected by eye are Increased by the warp detector on automatic looms. "Catches" make it so dlf . flcult to make tubular linen that 1U manufacture is seldom under taken. Many erroneous statements have been regarding linen. It has been said that with modern equipment that linen could be' made as cheap as cotton. The . state has not f made flax . any cheaper and linen mills could not make linen as cheap as cotton if they got the flax for tfothlng, ow- lng to the difference In manufac turing costs. Low altitude has been given as one of the essen tials for linen manufacture, al ' tltude has little bearing on It but an equitable climate with plenty of humidity, some of the finest ' ot linen Is made at higher alti tudes than Salem. X refer to come SALT WATER BARRIER PLANNED T . : rr ; v , - .mm , ,- ,m,ti ,-t .. iv Thfl aerial drawingjhowa the propose4 aites lor a aalt irater barrier ,wbch, flrill, eliminate' the menace of aalt water damage to the fertile river bottom lands in the Sani Toaquiji and 1 1 Sacramento river country. The proposed barrier would make a fresh water lake oat of San Pablo Bay, an arm of San Francisco Bay, and would be one of the outstanding engineering: feats of the age. The aerial photograph shows one of the barrier sites. The car is a Buick Eight sedan, sent out to secure data on the barrier plans. of the mills In Alsace. France. Even the Oregonian which gen erally considers Itself correct, re cently stated that York street had 2,000 looms which Is 500 in ex cess of the number In that plant, there Is only one mill at Belfast with 2000 looms, York street however enjoys the distinction of being the only other mill with over 1000 looms. There are sev eral companies operating two mills which combined would be around 1000. The Milfort mill with two branch factories had around 2000 looms. This com pany has gone out of business. - There is one mill with 30,000 spindles, there is a company op erating three mills wIch com bined would probably exceed this number. It has been suggest ed that as hemp can be grown In Salem district that it be grown and be mixed with flax as some of the Belfast mills do. This was adopted during the war as a means of ekelng oat the flax sup ply and- for a short time after wards but I believe Is now dis continued. Many of the leading weaving plants refused to use It whatever, and recently the Broad way Damask company took ac tion against a continental spin ning mill for supplying linen yarn adulterated with hemp on a contract which called for all pure flax. In this case It contained 30 percent hemp. This company has always refused to accept adulter ated yarns, as they always have been noted for the high quality of their products. It and York street may be considered as the two leading mills of the' city. The objection to hemp Is that It has not the durability of linen and It Is much easier bleached, so that when mixed with linen it Is burn ed In the bleaching process be fore the linen is bleached, result ing In a very Inferior fabric manufacturers are very conserva tive is a well known fact, but In many cases it Is just a refusal to lower i the standard of their goods for which they are justly noted. With the present demand for rayon mixtures many of them refuse to make it. Rayon has a very short life compared with linen, and they believe that when the consumers find out Its poor wearing qualities, that it would react to the detriment of the lin en trade. During the war and for some time after when flax was 1 very scarce many of the damask mills nade cotton damasks, one of the old line stalwarts would have nothing to do with it saying that only a "rag man" would make cotton. Belfast Is looked upon as a great linen center, because all of the linen is shipped through It, and nearly all of the mills have their warehouses and show rooms there. Even Dublin's only linen mill has its warehouse and show rooms at Belfast. Considerably less than half of the industry is in the city. Lurgan where some of the finest of linens are made1 may be said to depend entirely on its linen mills. In this town of about 16,000 there are about 2,500 rooms and about the same number of stitching machines. Some of the weavers here make fancy bordered handkerchiefs, in some cases using as many as 17 shuttles, compared with the Bel fast weavers are only novices. One company In this town could well adopt Buick's slogan re vamped: "When better linens are made Johnston, Allen A Co. will make them." When some of the other leading mills require excep tionally fine linens this will make it for them. The stitchers In this town cannot be excelled, as even York street have their stitehlng room there. One mill "Shamrock linens" Is a short dis tance out of the city over the door ot their weaving ahed In large letters are! the words: "Good doth or no doth." Six out of the first eight linen mills are outside Belfast as are also all of Barbour's Linen Thread com pany's mills, outside of the Bel fast Rope works, Barbrous con trol the thread and twine indus try. While It cannot be classed as a linen mill the rope works use a considerable quantity of flax for net making. This plant employs 3000 people and make from net twine to a rope 8 inch es in diameter. M m is BLAMED FOB COLDS That many of the Irish linen world famed for Its BALTIMORE (AP) The common cold, research of more than two years by a corps of-specialists at the Johns Hopkins med ical school Indicates, Is transmit ted by a disease-producing virus bo small It defies the most power ful microscope. This virus, present fn the nose of a person suffering from a cold, passes through the finest flnlters and it la Impossible to make It grow In the laboratory, according to Dr. James A. Doull. formerly director of the Johns Hopkins re search, and Dr. Perrin H. Long, now of the Johns Hopkins facul ty. The finding Is the first defin ite announcement to come out of the research. The work done by the1 Hopkins group, leaves much to be desired before the hope of Isolating the specific! organism can be found. products a member of the faculty, said to- O- liberty -o i -o LIBERTY, Not. S Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Dencer attended a meeting of the Allagrea club Tuesday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Snyder of Salem. Ed Hamel has gone to Seattle to spend the winter with his son, Floyd Hamel.' A. A. Eugle who has been -visiting the past week with his sis ter, Mrs. E. Williams, left Sat urday for Newport where he will spend the winter. Mr. and Mrs. O. L. Dencer had as their guests Friday, Mr. Den cer's aunt, Mrs. John Thomas of San Mateo, California and Mrs. Thomas's son, Edwin Thomas of Salem. Roger Batt, a former resident of Liberty, but now of Boise. Ida bo, was a guest at the Bruce Cunningham home last week end, i . ; Mr. and Mrs. Harry Asbahr and family of Corvallls were week end visitors with Mr. Asbahr' s sister, Mrs. Henry Gilbert. Mervln Seegar accompanied by Lola and Jeanete Daseh motored to Corvallls last Sunday to vlit with Dale Dasch who is a student at O. S. C. , Mrs. Julius Beekman, nee Opal Davis, of Salem, who was re cently operated on at .the Salem General hospital, is bow recuper ating at the borne ot her parents, Mr. and Mrs. O. E. Davis. This was examination week at school and next week report cards are to be distributed. There are still a number of pupils out of school with chick enpox. , Friday visitors at the school were Mrs. Mary E. Fulkersttn, county school superintendent and Miss Grace E. Taylor, coun ty health nurse. The club In Mr. Myer's room has been named "The Liberty Lore "club" and' a meeting Was held "oh Friday, afternoon; Offi cers for the next two months were -elected. For president, Franklin Hauser; vice president, Leona Polk; secretary. Lee Stowe; treasurer, Jerry Jo Pat terson; reporter, Catherine Dal las. Four-H club work Is getting under way. The seventh and eighth grade girls are organizing a cooking club and the boys are planning on a pig-club.' The pupils of Mrs. Rees' room also had a club meeting and elected new officers. The Jolly Workers club of Mrs. Rain's room met on Friday day. If the virus could be made to grow In a laboratory tube the hope of developing a vaccine would be nearer. But the virus now blamed for the widespread malady estimated to cause a 92,000,000,000 loss annually In lost wages to American workers alone, cannot be detected even with the strongest microscope or the finest filter. Confirmation of the theory that the cold is transmitted from one person to another, was said to be itself important, as the hypothesis has been held that the cold might be the product of chemical changes In the body. morning and for their program had a number et very interesting reading repots given by the pu pils. Next Tuesday is a holiday be cause It Is Armistice day. Newt Abbott, the school Jan itor and a number of the parents accompanied the football team to West Salem on Wednesday after noon taking the team and root ers over in their cars. Thank you, parents! - Mr. and Mrs. Robert Denny and family of Beaverton were recent visitors at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Gilbert. Mrs. Denny is a sister of Mrs. Gilbert. O- I o- Rickey i o RICKEY, Nov. 8 W. Flood, proprietor of the 4-Corner gar age has has his place ot business repainted. H. E. Martin and M. Wells are farming the D. A. Harris farm. This Is the third year they have farmed this place. Roy Crabb has been pledged to the junior chamber of commerce of the Salem high school. Michael Fltzpatrick spent sev eral days In Portland the past week. . George Edwards who has been 111 for some time is now in a Sa lem hospital where he under went an operation. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Humphreys attended the International stock show and visited their daughter, Mrs. Rolph Westering in, Port land last week. Jason Jones of Seotts Mills who received special mention at the old time fiddlers contest held at Woodburn recently was a for mer pupils ofMrs. M. M. Ma gee of this place. At that time he was only a small boy but even then played the violin exceptionally well. Mr. and Mrs. A. E. LaB ranch e were patrons for the bazaar dance given at the St. Joseph's , hall in Salem Friday night. MrawVeneta Was among throse on the arrange ment committee. Julius Jasmer has rented the F. Durbln and Son farm, known as the Meadow Lawn dairy. Independence o o INDEPENDENCE, Nov. 8 Mr. and Mrs. Albert Skelton and young son Robert, who has been visiting at the home of Mrs. Skel ton's parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. N. Jones have returned to their home at Grants Pass. Mr. and Mrs. O. B. Travis, have returned from Portland where they stayed a few days at the home of Mrs. Ida Sullivan. Mr. and Mrs. D. A. Hodge and Mrs. John Mills of Salem attend ed the lodge meetings here Thursday night. Mrs. Eley Fluke Is In a Salem hospital, for treatment. Last re ports she was slowly Improving. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Busby ac companied Mr. and Mrs. H. Hat field of Corvallls on a weekend fishing trip over on the Alsea riv er. Some are having good luck catching the silver sides at this place. Mrs. B. F. Swope, Mrs. Nelson, Mrs. Jim Crowley and Miss Ida Bush, attended a missionary rally at McMinnville this week. O- I o- Monitor o l irrivrrrnT?. "Nor. s Mr. ana Mrs. Lewis Melby and , M. O. White were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Jessing in Port land. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Lowry mov ed the first of the weekf to Silver ton to be near Mrs. Loury's par ents, who are both on the sick list. . Francis Rebekah lodge held their annual bazaar Saturday night, November 8, in the T. O.. O. F., hall. A good program of music, readings and a short play were given and lunch was sold following the sale, i Mr. and Mrs. L. D. Lemon ac companied by Mrs. V. G. Calvin drove to Corvallls Sunday after noon to take back to school Miss Walvo Lemon and Miss Eliza beth Kraus of Aurora. The vote in the Monitor pre cinct went strong for Meier, he receiving 99 votes, Bailey 34, Metschan 6 and Streiff 6. Paul Campbell of Ontario, Ore gon was a week, end guest at the D. J. Glllanders home. Mr. Camp bell and sister-in-law, Mrs. Gil landers visited friends In Port land, Monday. - Byron Ballweber Is drilling a deep well at Harmony school. Mr. and Mrs. T. O. Thornton, Miss Alma Thornton and Ray mond and Theodore Thornton re turned Tuesday night from a two weeks visit with relatives In Cal ifornia. C. M. Llndberg of Portland visited Monday with his father, E. Llndberg. The Dorcas society of Kidpras church will hold their annual bazaar Saturday night, November 15 in their hall east of town. The Home Makers radio club held their meeting Tuesday at? ternoon at the L. D. Lemon home. The lecture for the day. by Mrs. Sara Watt Prentiss over "KOAC was "What Do ' You Do W,h e n , Y,our Child , , says I Won't? " Mrs. L. E. Dlmlck, . chairman o X . a. lil.A or ue servic onop commit ir has the club members busy plec- g a quilt for the service Bfcop. Mr. and Mrs: J. A. Van Cleave entertained tne xouowing guests at dinner sunaay, Air. ana irs. William McMorrls, Mrs. M. Van Cleave and Miss Bertha Van Cleave, TJnlonJ" i - Leon Ballweber of Hood River sent Sunday with Byron Ball weber and family. ' Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Uenhart Sd chlldrenj Wlnnlf red, John d Frances and j Miss Naomi Dlmlck were" Sunday dinner gjuests of Mr. and Mrs. Rex Cole man in Can by. Miss . Viola Uenhart spent1, the veek, end with friends in Port land i and- attended the stock show. " - ' Kingwood I -o KINGWOOD, Nov. 8 Mrs. ames Grigsbr and small son Jimmy of Medford, are guests of Mrs. Grigsby's parents, Mr. and Mrs: J. A. Yantlss. They came Wednesday and - will remain until- tomorrow. 'Mr. and Mrs. Victor. Barr, new arrivals from Detroit, ' Michigan, have leased the Rich Relman house on Parkway. They are i laying for the present with Mr. nd Mrs. Robert Hall until their household ' effects arrive from Michigan and In the meantime the Relman, house is being re decorated. ) I- Recent guests of Mr. and Mrs. Stephen LaRaut were Mr. and Mrs. Leston Lewis and Mrs. R. O. Smith, all of Portland. Both Sirs. Smith and Mrs. Lewis are isters of Mr. LaRaut. A neat garage hag been erect 4 at the Carl Mobley place and Improvements are also being bade on the house. The Eric teutler house In which Dr. and Mrs. D. A. Williams lire Is being dressed up In a new- coat t, of paint? Mr. And i Mrs. Theodore Bernard are having the Interior their home redecorated. o o o W2HI1 Savq srum? 3ai? When did you have the top dressed? Bring it in and let us do it. Feimdei? 444 Ferry Street Telephone 3441 Salem T IF iSPECTW wmsi On a ilaybestos Brake testing machine built by the makers of Ray bestos brake lining. Winter Car Owner In what condition are your brakes? kTHE Winter season is almost here, and it is on ac count of the wet, slippery, and icy condition of our highways during this season of the year that we call your attention to the condition of your brakes. Do all of your brakes take hold alike? If not, they should. . . Bring your car in if you are not sure whether they are all right or not and have them checked on our Raybestos brake testing machine, and we will tell you in what condition your brakes are. 7 For this inspection there will be no charge. 4 SALEM AUTOMOBILE Go. Inc. 435 North Commercial Salem, Oregon - j Telephone 97 :r : General repairing for all makes of cars 18-HOUR SERVICE 1 -V ff 1 I j " ( ' ' iihiii mi i imih wiiyyii ii hi i i i. i i i - i- 77. V tT?ii--wf'i-; -' i r TJ ring Public f! Another Amazing Victory Won With the Moto Setting a dazzling pace, the sates of Gilmore BIu-Green Gaso line have set an unprecedented record of increases for 29 successive months ; . the most astounding rise to popularity ever attained by any gasoline. f , . These successive victories have been won in the face of keenest competition with the motoring public at the wheel . . ; not by trained racing drivers in special built racers, nor by specialists in mad dashes through the air or on the water. . " - By octuardemonstration me superiority of this patented (U. S Patent No. 1664050) carbon eliminating gasoline has convinced 076,631 motorists that it is the bestJordairy use. Try It fora few hundred miles ;7."you1I notice how much better your car will run. Insist on the genuine Gilmore BIu-Green Gasoline from the familiar cream and red pump , at Independent Service Stations end Garages.. Don't be fooled by imitations. GREATER GILMORE CIRCUS SATUROAYSi 8 p.m. to 830 p.m. K P O . 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