ALBANY DAILY DEMOCRAT, TUESDAY, MAY 9, 1910. M". THERE'S GOING 10 BE A CIRCUS IN ALBANY KAY 26 Weathor, changeable as the kind w have been having lately, demands aeveral weight! In clothea to keep one comfortnbl. You can dress properly, without extravagance, by purchasing from our popu Ur priced garment.. VmSHTJ i'U r .1 ' New Petticoats, Suits, Skirts Oood assortmetn and moderate price are here. ' From Your Side of Advance Men Have Been in City Today Plastering the Bill Boards. the Fence SPLENDID PETTICOATS The Pettlcoata today are essential. ' They are here In great num ber. You want a ahade that will go well with your aklrt or dreu. We are aatiafled that we can pleae you, a we have many good aliades. Ask to ee our new number. We have petticoat arriving continually, In thia way enuring a jood allowing. SUITS and SKIRTS NEW SUITS Tint are good are on display. Shepherd and Urge checka.ln land, light tan and blue serge, poplins and gabardines. The price are moat reasonable. $12.50 to $35 DO YOU ENJOY DOINO FANCY WORK? An unusually good op portunity (or learning Is now afforded. Mr, Print Is with us, teaching the new stitche free. A full stock of patterns are ready so that you may begin at once. Don't neglect starting another day. Be here tomorrow morning, classes from 9 to 12 o'clock. Afternoon 1 to S o'clock. Remnants Are Half Price Wednetdava Watch for Our Wednesday VALUES for CASH WORTH WHILE Deliveries Leave Store Morning 1st 8:3i 2nd 1 Ait. r ooa 1st, 2 2nd 4O0 , m ; BANK DEPOSITS CAIN. In Nine Year In Oregon they In crease $42,000,000, Speaking for Our Progres. Salem Journal: How the bunk de posits in slate and national banki in Oregon have grown from $85,0.OO0 to $127,000,01X1 lincc I'XW it shown on a chart which hat been prepared by S. G. S intent, stile superintendent o( banks. Following the panic in 1W in this state there were I1.' I national and suite banks and now there are 261 hanks of which 84 are national and 177 operate under a state charter. Nine years ago there were 59 na tional banks and 132 state banks. From 1908 to 1910, inclusive, banks deposits in the Mate rose steadily without fluctuation from $85,000,000 to $119,000,000. From the, first of 1911 to the close of 1913' deposits in national ar,d state banks showed slinlit fluctuations, with a rising tendency. At the rinse of 1913 deposits in Ore. jon touched their IiIkIi mark with a t Ul of $133,000,000. With the outbreak of war in Europe a decrease resulted, until at the beginning of 1915 depos its aggregated only $1 17,000,000. Since then, however, conditions have stead ily improved, and the gain in deposits has been steady until now they total $127,000,000. The national banks in 1914 began to gain in deposits, while state institu tions fell olf. This fact is accounted (or, according to Superintendent Sar gent, because in 1914 the Security Sav ings Si Trust Company, of Portland, was consolidated with the First Na tional Hanlc of Portland. The decrease in sine bank deposits at this time was approximately $10,000,000. Since the third call of 1915. however, deposits in Oregon state banks have risen steadily, gaining about $5,000,000 in the last six mouths. Slate bank deposits now total ap proximately $49,000,000, while depos its in national banks of the state to tal approximately $78,000,000, Increase Your Business Acquaintanceship How many of the passing night crowds know your store, or what you have to sell An electric sign will introduce your store to all pnascrsby and in a friendly way, keep , ou in their memory. , Arrest the passers' attention with nn economical electric sign remind them of your business and sales will mount with logical precision. Make your store popular with lots of light. Find out to- . day how little It will cost. I Oregon Power Co, "Reliable Service" Telephones 15 306 West Second St. A SUBSTITUTE FOR GASOLINE. A Liquid has Been Made Which Costs One and a Half Cents to Manufacture , A dispatch from New York tells oi a wonderful discovery, if it shall "pan out." Dr. Louis Enricht's substitute for gasoline, which costs a cent nnd a half a gallon to manufacture, was bought today by the Maxim Munitions corporation. The price is reported to be $2,000,000. While ncithci the in ventor nor officials of the corporation would say what price was paid for the green fluid' that turns water into en gine fuel, it was said that Dr. Enricht received $1,000,000 in cash and 100.000 shares of stock in the Maxim Muni tions corporation. This stock was quoted at $10.50 a share today. Dr. Enricht's discovery was an nounced several weeks ago. It consists of a mysterious green fluid which is mixed with ordinary water. He was visited at his laboratory in Farmingdalc by many interested per sons, among them Henry Ford. GOVERNMENT SELLS TIMBER A Hubbard Man Buys 3,900,00 Feet, Which He Will Sell at Klam ath Falls. Portland, May 8. Announcement is made today by the Forest Service that the district foreser, Portland, has just approved the contract for the sale to Brown Bros, of Hubbard of 3,900,000 feet of timber on the Crater National Forest in. Southern Oregon. The timber is located on Crystal Creek on the west side of Klamath Lake and consists mostfly of western yellow pine, although there is some sugar pine and other species. The prices paid for the timber are $3.20 per M feet for the yellow pine and sugar pine, and 50 cents per M feet for the other species. The timber will be towed down Klamath Lake and sold to Klamath Falls mills. ' . . o '.' Dissolution Notice- Notice Is hereby given, that the part nership of Weaver & Forslund, plumb ers. has been dissolved, the former continuing the business, paying nil bills nnd receiving nil Collections. m5-10 Jewelry repairing of all kinds t Kreamer'a new store. e25tl adv There is a circus atmosphere in town this morning and its all due to an attractively lettered bright red pas senger coach that came in from the northtand very early this morning and was shunted on the siding across from the S. P. depot. The visitor is the advertising car of the famous John Robinson Ten Big Shows which arc scheduled to appear in Albany May 26 for two performances. With the advance car is a brigade of 24 billposters, bannermen and program boys, all of whom are putting in a strenuous day distributing the billing matter that heralds the coming of the big circus and menagerie. This is the eighty-ninth annual pil grimage of the Robinson Shows and it is said to be close on to a score of years since the Pacific Coast has been visited by them. As far as can be learned from Albany folks, this is the first time the Robinson circus has ever been in this vicinity. The Robinson shows are an insti tution back in the Middle West and more particularly "Down South" be low the "Mason Dixie Line," where their coming is looked forward to with eager expectancy as one of the very important local annual events. Out this way, it is a c?sc of making new acquaintances, but judging from the very favorable reports that have preceded the circus from other sec tions of the for West, where it has al ready pppeared, the attraction seems to be making quite the same big hit hereabouts as it has always scored on the other side of the Sierras. The No. 2 advertising car will be here a week hence to finish whatever heralding there may be left to do, and then next in order will arrive the big show with its four special train- loads of curious and interesting freight. That will be the one day when every small boy and little Miss in Albany will give the public school a secondary thought and consideration. If some little urchin takes a notion to play "hookey" that morning in or der to get a glimpse of the big ele phant in the free street parade and brayes the parental anger just to take a sly peep under the sidewalls of thebig white top, just lay the blame to the innoculation. of the circus germ and remember that you grown ups were boys yourselves once on a time. And for that matter, the same bug is likely to get you, too, before the circus day is over. Just you wait un til you hear ti e siren shrieks of the BERRY BOXES $3.25 per M Standard deep pints Crate and tin tops also Get thtm t Lb Albany Home Restaurant JIM CHRIST. Manager Many year chef in big hotels FINE MEALS Week day and Sunday. Special order. Will set up good banquet and dinner parties. Open all day from 5:30 a. m. to o p. m. SPEND a DIME for a BUTTON and buy 200 votes for Miss Anderson ' DONT BE A PIKER Sometime a customer says of a store, "Oh, they axe talking for their own good." , This is particularly true when a merchant ay, "Boy Early"! But let's consider it from your standpoint. Suppose you want a suit of clothe for warm weather. ' You have decided to buy Clothcraft because you're satisfied that you can't get any better value or any more service sat isfaction at the price $10 to $25. ' , ' You put it off till midsummer. Then, even if you get the suit you wanted, the season is half gone and you lose the benefit of having had the suit the firt half of the summer. Do you see the point? Come in and well tell you other reasons. . The Blain Clothing Go. 1 The Clothcraft Store JEFFERSON AND PRINEVILLE. To Debate Friday at Eugene, Under Auspices of U. of O, for State Championship. - The final high school' debate for the championship of . Oregon, be tween Jefferson and Prinevillc, will take olace at Eugene Friday night at 8 o'clock, under the auspices of the U. of O. The judges chosen for the debate are: Geo. Nuencr, Jr., district attor ney at Roseburg; Father E. V. O'Hara, Portland, and Wm. L. Mar shall, chairman of the state industrial accident commission. H. C. Baughman, principal of the Prinevillc school, will accompany the team. Herbert Lombard, a former student of the U. O. is the Jefferson coach. " The Democrat will hope to see Jef ferson keep the championship this side of the Cascades. 99t993l9S99 S CITY NEWS 9 3 Miss Harknes on the Border According to a letter received by her folks Miss Orah Harkncss left Deming on Tuesday of last week. At the time things were getting critical there, and an appeal was made for young men to enlist from the' Chau tauqua platform. It is worse now, since the recent raid. Mies Harkness is now at Hollywood, near Los An geles, where she is promoting a Chau tauqua. . Linn Tenth In the total amount of taxes paid in the state Linn couny is tenth. Fol lowing is the order: Multnomah, Lane, Marion, Clatsop, Clackamas, Jackson, Coos, Umatilla. Douglas, Linn, whose taxes are $568757.87. Crop Report The U. S. government wheat fore cast for Oregon, made May 1, is 12, 400,000 bushels, which is nearly 4,- 000,000 bushels less than last year. The decrease in the whole country is es timated at over 55,000,000 bushels. The price is also less. Corn is less, oats less .potatoes the same, hay more and eggs higher in Oregon. Billie Burke AH Right After seeing Billie Burke in Peggy it is easy to see how she has captured the country. She certainly acts the most naturally and in the sweetest way of any of them. Peggy will be seen again at the Rolfe and deserves the packed houses she gets everywhere. Captured at Medford ' ' Sheriff Gellatly, of Corvallis, return ed last night from Medford, where he had been after a couple of young men, said to be Greasers, who were charg ed with stealing a buggy. They had been captured down there and he was sent for with the proper warrant. He had them handcuffed together. Left for Iowa Mrs. E. H. Rhodes and grandson. Etwood, left this morning on the early train for Webster City, Jowa, where they will visit relatives for some time. Here from Jefferson Mrs. Thomas and daughter arrived last night from Jefferson for a visit at the home of Mrs. Thomas' folks, Mr. and Mrs. D. S. Smith. ' Big Man Passes Through F. W. Woolworth, of New York, owner of the famous Woolworth build ing, the highest in the U. S., passed through the city at 1108 today on his way to Portland, with a party of eight others He is at the head of a big chain of 5-10-15 cent stores. ' Petition Filed John R. Sayer has filed a petition asking that claims amounting to $168- .9ft be allowed against the estate of Robert Sayer, deceased. Was on a Sub- Carl F. List passed through the city on his way from Portland to Los An geles, walking. He once had the ex perience of passing eleven days in a German submarine. He was a sailor on the Cambus Kenneth, which a intercepted by a German submarine off Ireland and he was one of eight taken aboard. List lectures occa-icn-ally. ... big steam calliope and the lilting mu sic : of the circus bands, and get a taste of that pink lemonade and the palatable roasted circus peanut. If they don't take you bo.ck once more to the kid days, then it will be time to call the family doctor. : "The Two Orphans" A Drama in 4 acts, or : ..;' "PAGE FROM COLONIAL TIMES" Br the pupils of the Sitters Academy . . Albany Opera House FRIDAY, MAY 12 Admission: Reserved seats 35c Curtain 8t30 1 Returned to Portland . Mrs. Clara Eckert Ramsden, of Portland, returned home last evening, after a visit with her sister, Mrs. Panclc The K. of C. Convention At Poitland yesterday the Knights of Cclumbus re-eHcted all the old of ficers, except secretary, Eugene Mc Coy Dcing elected to succeed A. A. Mickel, of Salem. W. A. Barrett was re-elected state deputy, the head office. Albany's delegation reports a 'ood time, and a session full of en thusiasm. Mrs Thompson Re-elected A: ir.itland yes:ecav Mrs. r I..' Thompson, a native of Albanv and former resident hir during her girl hood :avs, was ic-c'tcted preside.:; of the Poitland W(',.c,an' Exchange it has been doing a gcod work in tl e INCtlOpoJlS. Bank Resource 1 The Albany banks all show a heal thy increase in resources, a fact that should speak for business conditions.. It is doubtful if the total resources were ever larger. WANTED Wanted to patch sacks at the Oregon Junk shop, 315, E. 2nd. m8-10 FOR RENT 3acres in North Al bany. New. barn; house newly pa pered. Home phone 1441. m8-10 FOR RENT Modern 5 room cottage near 7th and Montgomery. O. D. Austin, Bell 582-R. mD-ll The Albany Military Club will give its next dance at the Armory Today,' May 9 Music will be furnish ed by tlfe Albany Concert Band COMING! Corvallis Fire Department's VAUDEVILLE TODAY GLOBE Theatre Under auspices Albany Fire Dept. PROGRAM FIREMEN COMEDY SHOW ACT I. No. 1 Saxaphone solo .......... Carl Gloss. No. 2 Vocal solo Irish Lullaby , Mrs. Mark Rickard No. 3 Duet (Trombone and Cornet).. Messrs. Woodcock and Moses No. 4 Vocal Solo (Maytime) : Mrs. Florence Hanna Brock No. 5 Violin Solo (Berceuse from Joccly) '. ; Goddard Mrs. Mason Smith No. 6 Chalk Talk . .....::..... Prof. N. L. Hayes No. 7 Strong Man Act Benjamin Sandow Graves o. 8 Scotch Songs . . William A. Nichols !' ". : act n. ' rv V.-;V, Scene No. 1 Interior Albany Fire Station, showing apparatus, etc. , Scene No. 2 Street, Albany, Ore., showing fire department on way to fire losing their way in snowstorm t. ' Scene No. 3 Big spectacular fire scene. Women make pcrlioua leap into life net from six story window, First National ' ' Bank Building. ' . ' ; , The Corvallis fire department refund the - price of admission to .those riot satisfied with the entertainment , ALBANY FIRE DEPARTMENT