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About Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980 | View Entire Issue (July 28, 1925)
THE CAPITAL JOURNAL, SALEM, OREGON PAGE FIFTEEN Oregon Has Magnificent Resources of Majestic Scenery TUESDAY, JULY 28, 1925. USED TRUCKS AT BARGAIN PRICES 2- Ton Master, solid Tires, ingood shape $600 An excellent truck for wood hauling. 3y2-Ton Federal, good mechanical condition $750 3,4-Ton Oldsmobile, slightly used $300 1-Ton Bethlehem, pneumatic tires, fair condition ; $500 34-Ton White, pneumatic Tires $1,100 (Eeconditioned) . 212-Ton White, long wheel base, near ly new, operated 3 months; solid tires, new truek guarantee $4,000 3 Ton White, express body, recon ditioned, new truck guaran tee . $3,500 5-Ton ..White, chain .drive, ..flat-bed, rebuilt, solid tires '. . .$1,750 -Ton G-M-C, pneumatic tires, .. flat bed, good shape .$450 3- Ton Denby, excellent condition, completely equipped for lumber hauling $1,500 MARION AUTO COMPANY Open Day and Night Phone 362 Salem, Oregon LWe Save You Money 1223 SEE THE POINT, THREE DAY SALE Thursday-Friday-Saturday Granilcware, Buckets, Dishpans and Preserving Kettles at 50c Aluminum Teakettles, Double Boilers, Percolators, Buckets, Preserving Kettles, Dishpans, at 95c We Pay Cash for Used Furniture Nash-Smith Furniture Co. 219 North Commercial Street near Court Street Semi-Annual Statement of the Oregon Fire Relief Association of McMinnville As of June 30, 1925 ADMITTED ASSETS Real Estate, Home Office $63,300.72 Mortgage Loan - 8,000.00 Oregon and U. S. Bonds 385,249.65 Cash in Banks 14,455.08 Premiums due and in course of call 62,335.80 Re-Ins. due from other companies - 40.13 Accrued Interest on Bonds 4,225.96 $537,616.40 LIABILITIES Unearned Premium Reserve $335,075.99 Unadjusted Losses 7,500.00 Commissions and others unpaid claims.... 6,910.92 Unassigned Surplus .. 188,129.49 $537,616.40 B. F. Rhodes, Pres. W. C. Hagerty, Secy E. C. Apperson, Treas. T. B. Kay, Local Trustee STANDLEY & FOLEY, Local Agents They Are Measured by Mountain Ranges Hundreds of Miles in Length and Miles in Elevation They Include Crater Lake One of the World's Most Splendid natural Wonders and Mount Hood Clothed with Snow and Garnished with Glaciers and Skirted with Noble Forests They Take in Fifteen Peaks More Than a Mile High, the Pacific Ocean for Summer Refuge and Cooling Forests for Vacation Camp Life By Richard L. Rowc Oregon has not been heralded as the Phenomenal Scenic Arena, but it can match any state in the Union in Great Out-of-Doors Attractions and Splendid Spectacles. This form of Recreation Capital is not now appreci ated because there is so much of it. The same was once true of the great prairies, but they are worth Billions of Dollars now, and legions of people are very regretful that they did not realize their value when the show was new. Its Scenic Greatness is one of Oregon's very Important Resources. Take a glance at Nature Rare Festival. There is the Cascade Range of mountains which crosses the state from north to south. Glacier-garnished Mount Hood is near the north end, 11,225 feet high, 665 ieet more than two miles, surrounded by forests deep and splendid, traversed by snow-fed, plunging, picturesque Btreams, often leaping into abysses in whitened trails of spray.. Two hundred miles toward the southern end of the range .is one of the most splendid Natural Marvels on Earth, Crater Lake. It is a mountain whose peak has plunged into itself, in some stupendous seismic cataclysm. The crater, with an average depth of 1,000 feet, contains a lake of water, more blue than the heavens, in walls that are fresoed in stately volcanic colors. This lake is about six miles in dia meter, big enough to accommodate a large city, with the highest steeples and skyscrapers invisible a little distance from the margins. The lake surface is 6,177 feet above the sea, and the Government Lodge (it is a National Park) is at the 7,076 foot elevation both more than a mile high. The destroyed mountain peak, that once was, remains as an island pinnacle in the lake. The region is surrounded with volcanic spires and multiforms thrust up when the mighty convulsions were in process. The mountain sides are clothed in forests. About 30 miles to the south by west is Mount McLoughlin, 9,493 feet in elevation. Ten miles northward from Crater Lake is Mount Bailey, 8,365 feet in elevation, and Mount Thielsen, 9,176 feet high. A little farther north are three more peaks, 7,668 to 8,792 feet in elevation. The Eugene-Klamath Falls extension of the Southern Pacific railroad is projected to pass between these peaks. There are several fine lakes by and near them. y Still More Magnificence Next come the Three Sisters, 10,352 feet above the sea ; Mount Washington, 7,769 feet in elevation ; Three Fingered Jack whose fingers point 7,795 feet into the air, Mount Jef ferson, 10,523 feet tall, and Olallie Butte, whose top is reared heavenward 7,243 feet. ; There is enough noble scenery in this range of mountains to keep any energetic person a lifetime busy in exploration and admiration. In season, there is real hunting and fishing. In eastern and central Oregon there are other moun tains and forests that would be called wonders in any prairie state. If Minneapolis or Chicago had the smaller of the peaks near their limits, they would let the World know all about every view and crevice every year. Montreal is very proud of a hill in the city limits, Mount Royal, that is 700 feet high! so much so, that a lord's title was partly taken from the hill's name (Lord Strathcona and Mount Royal). Oregon could name all the Lord's and Dukes of history and have hills left for some yet to come (if there are any!) The Pacific Ocean Too As the birddman flies, the Pacific Ocean is only fifty miles westward from Salem, and just a nice little drive with a machine, by the longer roads. There are elevations parallel with the coast which would be immense for Chicago or Indianapolis people, but are small stuff here. Bathing at the seaside towns is a growing entertainment, and for the people of states that serve up sweltering sum mers, would seem like an earthly paradise and a sanitarium at the same time. There are unlimited square miles of grand forests in which to camp, where real out-of-door life can be lived as is not possible unless the settings have been made to order by Nature on the scale and in the perfection they are found here. The far Eastern states literally swarm in the toy mountains of the Alleghanies, the Catskills, the Adirondacks and the White group during the summers. What would they do if they had the Cascades? There would be millions of them there, and for the state, there would be "Millions IN It." All the indicated Potential Bigness is in the Scenery and Attractions of Oregon, and in time they will be valued beyond present belief. . Linen Industry in Oregon By JOHN H. McVAKY Flax has been grown In Orojron for 80 years. It n-nn first plant ed by Albert Johnson in Yamhill county, near Lafayette, in 184C. Mm, Johnson spun the fibre into yarns nnd other articles. It was sown for the first time In Marlon county, Oregon, in 1847, by a rainier residing near Woodburn. The growing of flux continued until 1871, when there were about 3200 acreft of flax grown In the Willamette, valley, (he eeed from which was sold to the 1'luimer Oil coinpfiny at Salem and manufactured by It Into Unoeed oil. At Phil adelphia In 1876 Oregon flax was placed- In competition with that grown In foreign countries and adjudged superior by expert. I ro cllo this history to show lhat the growing of flax In Oregon Is no lunger an experiment but a demonstrated fact. Our water Is free from mineral substances which Interfere with the retting process, and our seiison in midsummer Is Ideal for har vesting. Ctinfcriuittly. with our soil, water a rid weather, we h.'ivo every essential (o the development of a great linen Industry In the Willamette valley. According to the estimates made by export there are In the Willamette valley 247.000 acres well adapted in their present atate to the growing of flax and S05.000 acres lhat could be made suit able for fiuch growing by systems ot drainage. Flax mint be shown In the early spring to Insure a good crop, which would require the draining of uch lands as nro found in French and Albany prairies. The contemplated mill nt Hulem will manufacture into linen fibre to be grown on about 8000 ncres, from which you can determine the extent of the possibilities of such Industry. PItOl'OSDD LIKEN MILL Tho linen mill proposed to be established In Salem will contract wllh farmers for the purchase of flax at the price of $38 a ton. A conservative estimate of the production would be at leant two tons per acre. The cost of raising and harvesting flax since tho Inven tion of a flax-pulling machine I approximately $21.26 per Acre In cluding 6 per cent on the land Investment of MOO per ncro. As compared to other cereals and fruits, flax would be by far the most profitable crop grown In the Willamette vailoy. The fibre from the Willamette valley flax has been shipped to Scotland nnd Ireland, where It has been woven, bleached and fin ished Into hfghclas linens, settling peyound question Its quality. An Important factor to the success of our proposed mill at Bnlem Is nn agreement made by our Chamber of Commerce with the Dominion Linens Limited, a corporation, of Canada which has suc cessfully operated four linen mills for a period of approximately 80 years, to transfer from their plants a sufficient number of skilled operators to run the plant without experimenting with unskilled labor, Tn consideration of the opportunity given the Dominion Linens Limited to purchase 1000 share of common stock at par, it has agreed In writing to supervise the purchane of the machinery, the erection of suitable buildings for our plant, and to supervise Its" management and sales department for a period of 10 year without cost except actual expenses, the same to be terminated at an earlier date should the Oregon corporation become dlaMttlsfiei). In view of the Impossibility of selecting a board of directors In Oregon ex perienced In the manufacture of linens, such services will be of great vulue. 01;K LINKN HILL An analysis of market conditions will fdiow that tho United Stales imparted In 11)24 over $98.0(10,000 of llnons, $25,000,000 of which were of tho ebiss Intended to bo manufactured in Salem, A suffiriont market to keep In cnnnlnnt operation 45 nilllH of tho capacity of the one in contemplation. There will bo no competition In tho United States with this Industry, a flax and water of a quality permitting of tho manu facturing nf gigh grade linens has been fnund nowhere in tho United States outside of tho WNlametto valley. Thero Is a I irlff on such high grade linens of 5(5 per oent ntl valorem, which h;i been the law of tho United KWitcH 'for moro than 30 years, thereby establishing a sale) price for linens In Amo eiica permitting of largo proffts, Canadian factories have success fully manufactured and sold linens In Canada for almost a half a century under a protection of only 12 ft per cent ad valorem. The establishment of such nn Industry will give to tho farmers of the Willamentte valley a profitable crop, and with tho coming of like Industries which nro certain to follow, waste lands will be brought Into a stato of cultivation, the rural population will bo in creased as a given acreage when so cultivated will sustain more people that at present. It la an economic principle that wo can be prosperous only while our income exceeds our expenditures. Thie principle applies to the Individual, community or nation. "We have observed the huge expenditures of the people In Ore gon In the purchasing of automobiles nnd consumption nf gfiHoline, noted our vast expenditures in dry good, groceries and machinery, the money for the purchase of which is sunt beyond our state. OVtl TKADE BALANCIC An examination will lead to the discovery that our balance of trade Is maintained mainly through the salo of timber products, which for the Inst ten years have been from $56,000,000 to $70,000, 000 annually. Writers and statisticians have estimated that with the present rate of depletion our timber product Will hecomo ex housted within a period of approximately 26 years, excepting such timber as Is grown In our government reserves. If we drift along as at present, without developing any Industries to maintain our balance of trade, serious financial embarrassment will become In evitable. We will then be required to detrmlne whether or not our luxuries and some necessities shall be foregone In order to live within our Income or whether we shall continue to live at our present pace and meet with financial ruin. Nature endowed us with wonderful forests which have been the source of our prosperity In the past, nnd nature has endowed us with a soil, water and climate which will enable us to establish a great linen Industry In the Willamette valley, from which we can expect our prosperity to continue, WHEN YOU EAT Weatherly ICE CREAM You are building the Will amette Valley as tons of milk and cream are used from the Valley. Dealers who handle Weath'- erly ice cream have the satis faction of knowing that they; will at all times be in the lead with any thing new that comes out with merits, such as.. Eskimo.. Pies,.. Frozen Suckers, etc. J Take a Brick Home ButtercuP ice cream co. Phones 1101-1102, Salem, Or. HOTEL MARION 0 Large, Airy Dining Room Always Cool it One of Oregon's Finest Treat Your Family lo One of Our Delightful Sunday Dinners They arc not formal Come Pressed As You Are. 5:15 to 8 p. m. MILLS An Organization Worthy of Your Confidence nn- nam