Hpra.E3 ABROAD WC DO HOT Vi41T PRE-EASTER DAYS AT THE HAMILTON STORE. A GOOD TIME TO TEST THE STOCKS AND THE SER VICE OF THE STORE. BOTH WILL STAND THE SEVEREST ORDEAL SMILINGLY, WE ARE READY. Veiling We have often tried to but the REAL reason why the wind tosses altd tumbles out a VEIL, and the while ;i ueau cairn not a nreat 1 n - THINGS THEY NEVER SAY: Veils ract ft mysterious shadows around dreamy expression. Veils irame iaces alluringly, ihe fact we wish to emphasize is that the newst desiens are here. All the latest Paris mediec may be seen here as nowhere Albany Democrat Entorod at the post oflico,;Albany,Or, ' Kcer.d tints mill trait' r. F. P. Nutting. j Our Wants. CAKf'lST CLEANING. With now vac cuum cleaner, best useil. Oporuted by C. M. Wcstbrook, Albany. Plionu Homo 7001. U DRESSMAKING. Work guaranteed. Evening gowns, tailored skirts, shirt wuiBts a specialty. Suit alterations. Mrs. Tyler, 306 Klsworth St. Phone 650-J 9t TO MR. HOME SEEKER. Do you want a flnu suburban home joining the city limits, consisting of nino acres, with good H room dwelling, large barn, all well improved, easy terms, if so see either of the following Sanies, Collins & Taylor. J. V. 1'ipe, . A. Howard, P. M. French. 2U K.0VED. The harness shop of Chas. Wagner, to Kerry Btreetnear Second. Call there for good work in hadnosB and saddelry. DRESSMAKING. -Fashionable dress making at reasonable prices BUKK.HART& BURNETT, Boll phone 241-K Lyon St. tl3 EGGS. For Betting, single and rose comb Black Minorca!, (1 50a Bitting, BuiT Orphington $1 00 totting. W. E. Baker. Sunrise, Home Black 2981. tMl FOR QUICK SALES list your property with Grav & i'eebier, Real Estate Agents, 2nd and Lyon Sts. 16t 50, 000. -Do you want a loan, or to make a loan, nee J. C. Christy, Alty. l-6t MADE IN ALBANY, Show' eases, ounroie, tad other store fixtures, hrit-olaMi goods, by the Union Furni ture Factory. Order of them. Keep money at your home. EG(!S. Brown Leghorn, cheap in in eubhtor lots. W. 11. Curry, U. D. i, Phone Homo 356. 14t GOOD BEDS and absoluto cluaniness at Walton's Rooming House. New ind modern. Schultinew brick, next door to opera house. FlM SALE 8 ft. cedar posts and anchor posts at the Shinglo Mill. It IF THERE IS ANYTHING in the fruit tree lino you are in need of call and aeo W. A. Ledlmtter, ho h . a nice lot of apples, peachrs and wnlnuts for your inspection. At trie corner of 114 Washington St., Albany. Oregon. PIANO TUNING. l.eavo orders for piano tuning at Davenports House or WiKidworlh's Drug Store. C. M. Henderson, Tuner. FIRE INSURANCE Hist companies. Low rates. C. C. Bryant. WOOD FOR SALE. Short slabs. Call at Shingle Mill. CHEAP LAND. Large I, ft goodfarms 1 .f,' gfjT, II. mailed free. R. W. lri-p. Browns- ville. Or. . lot GARBAGE. If wwt ofl.jon street 60e month. S' B MVmiv tt e garbtge man. Home pho..e '."SUI. GARBAGE. Fred ' ir,wt r koki atar garbage. Prune How 23UR, GLASS. At sun ami kiik, for Ml at the ABxniy 1'Imiuw Mill, cheaper than aywW rtaa in ; Albany. SklhV h at U dwlrcd. look heliinrl vpilino- tn find women wear them. They say the hair if th PV cm fnrf-Vi uuifl-i- THERE IS NO WIND only stir eves. -pi vine- them a wistful' impart a bloom to cheeks and else. THE WANTED. -Gentleman wishes board and room with private lamily. Ref erence. Give ull particulars. Board ir, care Democrat. FOR SALE. -One cottage and lot in W Albahy. Good sized garden, chicken park and different kinds of berries. Inquire at 934 W 6th St. t28 FOR RENT. Two acres with house nnd barn, in suburbs. John Chance, 516 E. 6th. tG FOR ENT. Furniahid housekeeping rooms, on th . ground floor. 723 Ells worth street. til FOR RENT.-Housekeeping looms. 116 Washington street. til FOR RENT. Business house, Jeffer son, centrally located, suitiblo for restaurant, bakery or rooming house, it including 7 bed rooms, city water, electric lights, besides main room 20 by 30. tl3 FOR SALE. --Three year old colt, weight ubout 1200. Home photo 3105. W FOR SALE. -100 bushels of good small I seed potai oes. J . V. Pipe, 203 v est znu st. ist PLANTS FOR SALE. Magoon straw- , berries, Phenomenal, and Mammoth Blackberries. J. G. Gibson. Home ' phone 4064. FOR RENT. Two suits house keeping . rooms. Call 225 W 3r1 St. FOR SALE. A couple acres, close to : North AILany school, one acre in ! fruit. Price $750. Mary E. Perfect, 1 R. D. 4. Home phone 2041. 27t FOR SALE.-- By the owner, now, ; modern bungalow, and lot, Wright's I ad. Call 1138 W 10th. 30t FOR SALE. - Indian runner duck eggs. F.M.Mitchell. Home phone 2704. FOR SALE Lot 67 by 111 on West 6th street. See W. F. Pfcilter. 3 2t FOR SALE. 1 lot, I block north of Hospital on Ellsworth St. See D. Bussard. 23t FOR SALE. Thoroughbred black Orphington cockerels. Jas. A. tloag ' & Son. AU any, box 205. FOR SALE. Five room, new modern bungalow, rooms light, fire nlace, china closet ami dutch kitchen. 'ee owner 516 West 11th St. 20 1 FOR RENT. 32 acres pasture land just east of Hackleman's Grove. Write A, M. Williams, McMinnville, Oregon. FOR SALE at a bargain, to lots and two ho js s on Third and Railroad Sis. Prica 42700 00, bv wner. G. W. Simpson, 4i'3 Commetcial Block, Port land, Oregon. Hit FOR SALE by the owner, a six room bouse and two lo's, center of town, half block from High school. Apply on the premisus East 4 h stuc H. Hums. TUUKISlfAND RUSSIAN BATrlS. Corvallis, under Benton County Na tional Bank, open aftr Monday, March 20. Ladies day, Tuesdays snd Fridays. R L. Taylor & Son, pro prietors. Homejpnone 4105. 116 FOR ALL KINDS OF BARGAINS in farm property and homestead rehn uuishments and government land opened up for eiitiy, vttwe to rni rea l in Crook countv, write to Bruce Hood, Madras. Or., real estate agent and home stead locator. tti FOR SALIC. Linn County ranch. 8C4 acres. B. M. Payne, owner, Albany, CifCiti. (titut..if.) VE Millinery The pulse of Paris beats The over-sea novelties light fastened in New York. The secret that isn't revealed in our Small Hats, medium-size be fancy-free please your individual taste without involv ing your headgear in a quarrel with fashion. Personal becomingness! that's all you need consider! HAMILTON STORE SOME WASHINGTON EVENTS. After two weeks' recess the supreme court convened on the 3rd inst. There was an impression abroad that a de cision would be rendered and as a re sult there was a grand rush to the court room. Three minutes after the doors wese opened all the available space assigned to the public was taken and before the court convened the space given to attorneys was tilled and attorneys standing and the re porters' bench filled double. The rush was said to break all records.- Many do not know that a court re cess is a time of hard study and work formulating decisions. This was clear ly proved at this session. Many de cisions were read but the one wc were most anxious to hear did not appear. Court convened at 12 m. precisely as usual ami in a few minutes Justice Hughes was giving the court's decis ion on the "drug state cut rate" case. He read for half an hour and estab lished the principle that the manu facturer of proprietary remedies could not compel the purchasers of his goods to sell, at a price 1ixed by himself. He said the proprietor could charge for his goods so as to secure for himself a satisfactory profit but that he has no control of the goods when once sold. The retail druggist can fix his own profit. The principle is very wide in its application and in direct conflict with customs in business long practiced and regarded as legitimate. The decision was not unanimous. Justice Holmes read a dissenting opin ion for ten minutes arguing for the largest liberty in trade contracts. Jus tice Day read three decisions, two were unanimous and to one Justice Harlan and Justice Holmes dissented. Justice Harlan read two decisions on railroad cases from Oklahoma. There is a growing opinion that the spirit of the court is changing, that instead of listening to every little technicality that can excuse crooked business the court is now rather dis posed to go for the monopolies and trusts and railroads. 1 was interested in these cases for I had heard them argued about a month ago. In the course of his argument for the rail road the attorney hinted that the prof its of railroads in Oklahoma were less than elsewhere. Cine of the justices, asked. "Why less?" The attorney said, "on accouni oi adverse leg islation." Another justice said, "What specific legislation?" This rather staggered the attorney, hut he re ; plied reicrring to an Oklahoma law. The next ipiestioti of a justice -was, ; "How does that law diminish -profits?" ' Tlii- bothered the attorney, but the best he could say was that it increased ; the office work and force of clerks in j .uvotiiu,ng and preparing the required reports. There was a r.c.ir smile or j near sneer s-n the faces of the nine ' gowned justices and I was sure the . attorney had lost his case and he had. There were five other decisions rer , dered so we all came to understand i that the judges had been busy durinc: the two weeks' recess. It was not i easy to realize the importance of the 1 decisions in that little court room, not 1 as large as the Linn county court riHim. The cases decided were from . all parts. One was from Manila. Pages rush every tew minutes from j the reporters' bench to the telegraph I office and the words are scarcely spok OFFER THEA TO OUR SUCH THj4T JUST yiSSOOA I HE Y AfrLAft A l rMiUAoo uukxl "WE- IL4VE TNEA 01 DISPLAY M OUR ESTI&LISHAEAT. j4LL OF THE LATEST Ai4TERIi4LS 4AB AODES FOR EASTER AKZ REMDY. VE RESPECTFULLY INVITE YOU TO PAY U&A VISIT. in the millinery department here soon after they are un wizards o.f fashion haven't a display. Hats, large Hats you may en intil they reach the far distant parties interested. Grnr representative, Hawlcy, on in vitation addressed the Washington Ministerial Asociation at their month ly meeting last week, about one hun drecTand fifty preachers. His address was excellent and kindled a good deal of enthusiasm. I was much pleased for I had commended him and was his only constituent present. I need not write a line about the opening of the 62nd congress. The papers are full of it, but 1 may say I was there too. The evening of the 4th I attended the annual banquet of the "Twenty-iour-Hour-a-aday Club," a missionary club of men of the Y. M. C. A which is very large here, several thousand members. The name is intended to express that their work never ceases round the world. It was an elegant affair, you might say a swell affair in the most elegant banqueting hall of city, ?2.50 per plate (a friend paid for mine), and was followed by very stir ring addresses presenting . the wide world work of the Y. M. C. A. South America was presented by the general secretary of that continent. Enough in itself for one evening. He was fol lowed by Mr. Tong Kaison of China. He has been for years an active Y. M. C. A. worker in China. He is accred ited ambassador to Hague ionierenoc, but his particular work in this coun try now is to place about one hundred and fifty Chinese boys in American homes a'nd schools. When the Boxer trouble arose in China some years ago and much damage was done to foreign legation and other property an inter national commission assessed the damages alleged to have been, sus tained bv the different nations. Iney assessed' $22,000,000 to meet U. S. loss. When all the claims were in they only amounted to half that amount. The , U. S. declined to receive more than $11,000,000 in the Chinese treasury. This money had been appropriated by China to pay all claims in full and the U. S. was the only nation to decline the full allowance. Then the Chinese government determined to spend that eleven millions in America educating Chinese bovs. The boys are brought from 50 to" 100 per year and placed in homes and schools to complete university or technical courses, lhcy bring young boys so that they may . imbibe" fullv the American spirit. This 1 will be continued until the efc-ven mil lions is expended. He was followed I by Mr. Y. Minakiichi of Japan. His address was vcrv emphatic in drawing the contrast between Christianity and ! all heathen systems of faith in its up 1 lifting power and the betterment of j the race. He tried to make us sec that wc did not halt" appreciate our own j CtTistian civilization. The last speaker was Mr. William Jennings Bryan on his impressions of ' missions around the world. He be : gaii by suggesting that before Mr. ! Minakuchi returns to Japan we should have him travel over this country and wake us up. Mr. BTyan has high ideals of Christian character, is cvan- i:...! .. ,l.n r IS .1 tmlv SOir- KCIH.il v, niv v.-. . - v . itnal man a tine preacher though lie may never be , uorT f 0. WILL. ;tor Vfitcho If, STYLES H4VE BCCi PTROAS, EUT OUR . - m . . . v n if Jtn A Women's The Spring: crop calls thing for tailored wear? Embroidered stiff collars, high stock softened by a small pleated jabot, sword-shaped jabot, side frill or just a simple mannish bow. Irish crochet lace and fine French batiste or Marquis ette are exquisitely combined fier styles. . Round Dutch collars, jabots, tabs and other effects. Clumsy, American in others. Beautiful embroidery is also a feature. Chic conceits mixed with French and Austrian wits. GOOD TEETH Are Necessary To Good Looks Good Digestion Good Health , More than one thousand satisfied patients have been treated "for tootb : troubles in my office since I opened September ISth, 1910, and WHY? ' BECAUSE they have all received the best work which is GUARANTEED i FOR 10 YEARS, and at a price that was within the reach of all. My terms are cash when the workis finished, but an examination and I estimate COSTS YOU NOTHING. DR. W. A. COX, PAINLESS DENTIST 225 W. FIRST STREET, ALBANY, OREGON. STORMY WEATHER is sure to come. It conies in finance as well as in . climate. We aim to conduct, not only a fair . weather bank, but one that will withstand the storms. A bank's assets and liabilities always balance. We have $1.33 for every dollar that we owe de positors. Our aim is to be safe, rather than big. i We conduct no other business . and have no preferred depositors. J. W. Cusick & Co., Bankers. ALBANY, OREGON. H. S. RICHARDS VioKn Maker and Repairer Bows refined. Old and new vlolies 1 for sale. I Violin instructor. 32 years exper I ienc I 1025 E. 9th etreet, Albany, Or, "VORA OUT" BEFORE COMECTIOrtS AWL TT TT A f 1 II rt f P ftim I CI Neckwear you to the counters. Some in the fancier, dressier, fluf and Valenciennes laces figure f li Dr. W. A. COX CEMENT WORK Iliistimat'S given on Plastering JSidi Wilk and Cement Work. 1. F. TBAVER, tth A Calafccia