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About Albany daily democrat. (Albany, Or.) 1888-192? | View Entire Issue (Jan. 21, 1919)
ALBANY tMILT DEMrtt'hAt, TLKHDAY, JAM'AHY it, 1019.. Pick TBBK& r - 1 mm ilow Do You Do" And "Good Itye" You Uu Thus Wosd whan friend ram to your lion.. Yu r.rs glad tw see them, nl lurry that tliojr are leaving. IT 18 THE WAY OK TIIK MULTNOMAH HOyKL at Portland. Cordiality of Greeting, nice eervlrw, garage fur your uu If you arc driving a rar, and rloa proximity to all plsrea uf internet, ara msk. lug Ilia Muttnnnah POI(TI.ANIM I.KAlUNf! HOTEL IN DESTROYER'S FIRE ROOM E. COAL THAT lllll'K HI'IIIM! LIMP (ilvt la Yoir Ordrr R. Cummings CITY N K W H Henry I). Mora of .Salem, truvcl-ci-ding. ing freight and paesengrr agent uf the Southern Parifir, wa In All any y trrday awning on bbsim-a fur Li.. tiruthrr Report Yislcidiiy'a temperature rnnirc.r ""rn) f oiii :,:) to ..' decrees, and tlia rain-I Xrl,ort M"n l,r" full .3.' rh. The river reached I , Sl'-"'",r Newport top,.! .... n Altny yralvriluy on nil wity humr the crr.l of th, flood at n.i.lniW.l la.t ! frum 0.knd. Oregon, wher. h. ha. ',' "'f."," fr-'- b"",n been tr.n..rling bu.inc... r. h.nv . At H o. Iu. k, thin moiiii:ii,' i; . U.I i fulU-n to Iri fret .ml v .till r WHKV ANSWKHIN'G cU.f.!. .i. Vj" -r kimllv mention Th I'fmnrmt, Not an Inviting Lounging Plac but Moil Nccca.ary Part of th Wan-hip. tu nr.-tu a nmittHilf In th i.irlf. Th rtivi-r In t'hiMMl mill MTuri'il IhIiIiu1 you. 4 'I'Mir KiiNktMcit will, ruMn-r and liM'kifl hHIi tKKl fiMva you at th foot of tha ItHlder. Aa It opMi, r.nn- a TiHtir on your rnrHlruiii. llk lh nlrliM'k uf a ml iiMn. It la the UirfA ririift. You thnmil your uy .mild iitii ami fi'.O wilier h-otTt bint '1 1 wfinl atlll furtlitT to tlitt furrmrv . Twenty Hv kuota t w.-nly vliilit li n1 I nillin an hour In root) .folfitf. You I It: file of iliJMt, of ..uf, I hi- rliitl.-r of aliovxla. , of ifrliuy, awt'iily hn-iin-u. nt-u'1, ' wntir-ti'inlir aturnJa calmly wrtirliing ; (lit glow of oil Jfla ftHtUuK thm fur- uara fir. Now aii1 then h nt-tii an rye to I ho gnuiff glnim. IIIm two lire tin u if J v a turn to the fuH auk a ahot of oil to ft pump. The vlhmtlon of the hull Hti1 thu hum of thv Mower are the only aoundM. Fral., riMil air awifjm through In tialy airrmn You luire puri'tinned ahMilulloii from the m-rvlri' hunleii of roHllnv atil hut you pay In oil. You nim-ll oil In tin Knioke frotn J he funu.-U. you hrrnihe It fnm the oil -ratine In tin- irnl ley. Your riot hr gnthrr It from atiirifhlona and nitU. The ii-Ntror la not hullt wlxriw hulkhcniU will mmid otl-tlk'ht In thi wi-avlnK hull. &u the water tiuiki are flavoriil with tin a-4-p ilte fn-m nlifhUirlng fuil nninrt iiienta. You ilrlnk petrol urn In the wnter and triwtn It In the Koiip. The curry In th Inrnh "kllln" It. hut the ! rk i.f Mi'Xlmn rrude. Th I. ut ter. altonrMfiK the vaxini, luttn tike onie i(iuir 'iwllne. At flrt your atottiitt'h revi!iPt You atiirve yimnn-lf for a trl? trnw u-.i to It and come hack :th ri'hewd nHHtlr. Th tlnd dntwa ahnd A "hort ua la ninnltiir with tr'tiH-iiliu uroi.nd awell. l-'oiirien knota otild c her, hut ITi ilrll'lf., nhertrl Into It H rniH work for a l-nc. h-tiu !:!! ; no depth : fin Iw-titn ; II fiea II k( a jnk knife. The con'tv U ImuvUij; (fn:ee fully to It, JiiHt 11 Mine her huuM-plp'Ht. You are ithmnrlnliii;, tr.tilns .-:iv Iti "iMfj't" -f i Ti over lh" t;u';i !.!'. -V 1 : . ; . - 3 Swift & Company's 1918 Earnings How They Affected You During the twelve months ended Nov. 2, 1918 (its fiscal year), Swift & Company transacted the largest volume of business on the smallest margin of profit in its history. Profits of the meat business under regulations of tho United States Food Administration were limited to a maximum cf 9 per cent on capital employed but not to exceed 2)a cents per dollar of sales. Swift & Company in the regulated departments earned 7.57 per cent on capital employed and 2.04 cents per dollar of sales, out of which had to be paid interest on borrowed money and taxes. Here is how these earnings affect you. Live-Stock Raiser Swift & Company killed 14,948,000 head of livestock, which weighed alive, 4,971,500,000 pounds. Swift & Company made a profit of only a fraction of a cent per pound Uveweight Consumer The sales of our meat departments were 4,012,579,000 pounds on which our earn ings were less than H cent per pound. The per capita consumption of meat in the United States is given as 170 pounds. If a consumer purchased only Swift & Company's products, he would contribute only about 78 cents a year, or i cents a week as profit to the company. Swift & Company, U.S. A. TOO MUCH WASTED ENERGY Wrlttr Hat night Idta In Pointing Out Folly of tha Pra int Day Huotlo and Buatlt. Tho world la alwaya In a huhhuh; peoph rifchlng hero and there In u tin i nppenra to he a futile fiihlon. AVhy do we not cninM-rve our rierjf1a, nv our lima and atrenjfth for hlf Ihliilfn? Wtuit doea the hutle and huNtli amount to, when we do alt down find rent and think T Nothing! heraue we rouhl have done what we did without that tenwt nervoutmtui which ao utany of u think we inuit aiMuiiie. to miike other thli k we have Importiint hiilneioi on hund. If we only knew how much more force, innifih and ability Pi h-hltid a culm exterior our aim Mould he to aMUine Unit poe until It became our rlk'htful Inheritance. Out of alienee romea thy aireiigth." It hrlntc wonderful rtu!t. ri-Nulta ttiat how ua how our oAer In Id rrennlnt;. Try to be calm for a few dii and watch the Itotue. You will marvel ut your atrenjfth, be antonUln-d at your auccena. lie nlh-Dt, patiently listen, and watt for the atrenvth that In tM-ntowed vn all. It la like the ruhy In vulue. a prlceicu treimure a life fore?. In other word, which tuakea geitluweo of men and women. lieKlu tomorrow. io alow hut atir. knowing you are doing -the rlk'ht thlm;. I'ut aside all nervoUHuciu. and hurry. You will be anma.'d at the rej.ult; people will ctmie to you he-uue that forc Im-Iiij; matm-tlc will druv ull K'mmJ think' In your direction. Some may any, l can not do thin. There l too much to he done In a hort time." We ued not go to the other extreme and become "nulla; but by htr'.klug the huppy miHlium." our aurtoui will come. fM-rhiipa ahmiy at firU but nurely, nevertUrleMi. Kxchainre. ZHZHZHZHZ x H Z H Z H Z H SAVAGES USED "POISON GAS" Ingredianta Wara Different, but Ob ject Waa tha Sam. aa That Sought by tha Cermana. Aa la we'll known, tha fl'-miatu In lh srint war wwe anllcItT by aonw anvuKe Irllm In tha use nf po. winiiiia pna fur war purj,-a. Nntur1 quiilra ailth'irlllca to nhonr that trlbea like the Tuplmnhn and Guurnnla of he Ilmzll llttornl and on tha lllo I'umna umI pf'lwnua jmwa In at larking fortlfled rlllngea. Men went In fmnt of the attnrklne party, earh holding a inn with erubera In ona hand and ground red in-pper In tha other. When tha wind maa acnlimt the Spnnlnnla thejr aprlnkled lha pep Mr on the ambera. Th waa nlno done In attr-eka on the Spaniard In Venezuela. n the aarae way pepjier waa lurcely uaed In einrcinlnit de- mona and erll aplrlta. The ue ot thla pepper, known aa AJI. would aoon be dlwiveml by these Inilliina. who eultivnted the plant extensively. It waa only necessary for anme one to upset a hnidn of AJI Into the Are and a hut would mien be rlanred of Ita eujuinta. The use of the aninke In wnrfure would be a natural development. Cenalrierate In Death. When Sir Itnlph Aln'rvromhT wna morMlly woundid In the battle of Ahonklr be waa carried on a litter en hoard the Fondroyaut. To ease his pain n sotiller'a blanket was placel un der his head. lie aiked what It was. "It's only a aoldler'a blanket." he was told. -Whose blanket la It?" he persisted, ralslni; himself. "tmly one of the men's." "I want to know the name of the man whose blanket this is," the dvlne conuuander insisted. 'It la Duncan Hoy's of the Forty- second. Sir Hntph." snld his attendant at Inst. Then see thnt Iu:iciin Rot cets his blanket this nleht!" comi..nndcd the hrnve innn. who did not forget even In hl ln-t n.-nnli's the comfort nnd wel fare of his men. Star Time Most rtellable. The otttclnl "time man" at the naval observatory at Washington, lying on hl back with his eye to a telescope and his finger on a recording button, checks up "old Sol" by a cerlnln fixed star for the sun is not quite punctual. In fact, Sol Is nhout four minutes be hind time except on Just four occasions during the year; and so mnnv allow ances have to be made for his vngnrles that nn linnginary sun Is used by the government astronomer, on which to base his horoscoplcnl calculations. It may be Interposed thnt the earth's elliptic orbit nnd Its varying rate of sp-cd in its travels, nys the Wiitrhmnn of America, helps to give the sun, ns a timekeeper, a bad rec ord, but the fnct remains thnt aldorenl, or star time. Is much tuoro relluhl than sun time. Look Up to the Stare. There are thousands of people who never look nt the atars, except as pos sibly some bright plnnet attracts their eye for nn Instant. Kven then the gorgeous, plainly discernible Orion, with his belt nnd scnhbnril, falls to Impress Itself Un their earth-drawn gnr.e. Sumly It la a groveling na ture thnt never looks up to the softly luminous twinkle, (no may be norry for people who do not study the stnni they lose so much. Th sun" -rer from Insomnia, wracked by hectic plans nf the morrow, tosses on hi unique bed Instead of forget ting the world In the cool night aephyra nnd the atnrs' medium of peace and right. M- .......rrfffffffffrJJJJtJfJJffffffff TffrJJ i HAMILTON S It Is the Merchandise that Counts HZHZHSHSH II S II a ii B II B respect. M 6'hrn vein make a n 1 1 rr h n co tnn vrorf if kA 1 . ;r-f ... , : mj Trading here is a definite assurance that vonr nnrcha;p will he ntirilv ati u factory. M aa z An Utz & Dunn Shoe, brown kid lace, mole cloth top, Z Victory pattern with Cuban louis heels. $9.50 grade. The H above style is one of the many now on sale H Z H $6.45 H Sale lots of Women's SHODS at $3.95, $1.95, $6.43 X Sale lots of Boys' SHOES at $2.33, $2.48 Sale lots of Misses' and Children's SHOES at $1.73, $1.98, $2.39, $3.23 n Z H 14 g 1 Ilk. M z kBmm IfflBW 25' S if'MJm- Pgr Pent SttS- less H Z Now is the right time to buy a- S 1 H - 7 B H K H J S Yli H Z H Z H S ackinaw Patrick, Mankato, Polar and Black Bear brands ONE -QUARTER OFF $16.25, SALE at $1223 $15.00, SALE at $11.25 $13.50, SALE at $10.00 $12.50, SALE at $9.33 $ic.co, sale at $7.50 Per Cent $8.50, SALE at $6.35 Jefi8 $6.75. SALE at $3.00 25 H Z M Z K Z H H Z H Z H B H B H B H S H NZHZHZHZK HAM I LTONS' ZHZHZHZHX I ITS PROPER IN PARIS i 1 By Margaret Rohe. Written for the United Presa Some fools there nre and they make their prayer Even a you and I To a rair and a hank of some yarn for hair. They call her a poupee chiffon, tres, chere. But a Yank he call her "rap doll," for fair. Even as you and I. PARIS, Jan. 21. And now the sol diers are beginning to take their doll rags and go home. At least most of them are taking rag dolls. To desig nate one cf these fascinatingly artist ic Parisian creations by so plain a name, however, is like calling a rag out a stew. Poupee chiffon is their regular nomenclature in their native hnbitnt. which is Paris. It seems an anachronism to translate their names, even if they themselves are translat ed to most distant climos by husky Australian, Canadian, English and American officers. From the resolu tion of battlefields to these ducky dolls of the boulevards seems indeed a far c-y. yet the poupee chiffon is the crare of the moment in Paris second only to the President "Weelsong" sen snticn. Tho rerriniscent of the Polish dolls that were so much exploited both in Europe and America during the war, and also of the mascot rag dolls that had such vogue in Paris during the air raids and bombardments, these newest poupee chiffon are distinctly original. They arc the work of dif ferent individual women artists, and artists la the right word. Each doll is a little mas;?rricce conceived and executed with as much nrt nnd origin ality .is the canvas of a painter or the marble of a sculptor. They are no two alike, and each one is signed on the sole of one tiny slipper with the i name of the fair nrtist. I The fact of all is of suede with m-1 broidered features, the cheeks onlyi touched up a la huiran females with a hit of paint. The hair, which is the 1 most novel note, Invariably is of yam 1 in exaggerated bright shades of or-1 antra, yellow and henna. I Though there are character and pe-1 riod dolls amnc the' outlny, the most j typical and Parisian are the little girl . (nlls, long and lnnk of leg with their ! abbreviated exiuM for skirts and mops of bobbed wool topped with a provocative bow or n chic chapeau. Their toillettes are worked out to the veriest detail of Frcnchy perfection just like their real little human Paris ian prototypes. No 100 per cent female can resist them even tho their prices are as high as Eiffel iowcr, which certainly is eaucoup. The fact that all the re turning officer are bearing gifta of these delectable dolls to their sweet hearts, wives or mothers is an in. csting sidelight on that old belief that a mere male is incapable of end standing the eternal feminine. Indeed it is the big, grownup girls who are craziest about these toys. They will do almost anything to possess one. Some American mothers of small dau ghters even go to such base lengths as to use their offspring for an ex cuse. They know full well in their reached the poupee chiffon win be snatched from wee daughter's first embrace to be set on a cushion in the drawing room and add just that pi quant touch of novelty to the apart ment. It strikes me that this belongs to the same low form of parental camou flage as that affected by the male pa rent when he uses his young hopeful ps a good excuse to go to the circus. Mrs. David Jaeobson of Talbot, who has been seriously sick, is reported aa greatly improved. On Legal Business Attorney Willard Marks went to McMinnville this morning on legal business. Went to Salem C. C. Hall of the local forestry of fice went to Salem this morning on business connected with the office. Here Yesterday Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Groshong of Dever spent yesterday in Albany on business. !iMfiACH Some one has told this very Inter esting story of a ship that was be ealiMrit. The drinking water thnt they hail on board was exhausted, nnd the sailors were nearly dying of thirst. .Tust as they were about to give up all hope n stiil was spied In the distance. The men. taking a new lease on life, signaled th"lr distress, but to their horror, insteud of veering from Its course to bring them nid. it answered with these words "Iiwer your buckets where you nre!" A frenxy of wrath seized the thirsty men nnd they cursed the enptnln of Ihe ship who. they sun Misod. hud renounced all the tradi tions of the sea. ns well as the In stincts of hutmmlty. In telling them to drink II. e suit water. Then one of the sailors suggested that th.'y obey the order, anil when he had lowenil the hiu-ket discovered thnt the ship was standing In n stream Drink lott of water and stop eatisf meat for a while If yoor Warktsr troubles job. When you wain up with bmckashi ana dnll misery in the kidney region it gaa rally means yoa have been earing too much meat, ears a well-known authority. Meat forms urie acid which overworks the kidneys la their effort to niter tt from the blood sad they become sort ot paralysed and loggy. Whan your kidneys get eluggiah and clog yoa most relieve them, like yoa relieve your bowels; re nxmng all the body urinous waste, lee yoa here bsekaahe, aiek hiarlanhe, dizzy a pellet your stnmaeh soars, tongas is eoated, and when the weather Is bed yoa have rheumatis twinges. The arias ia cloudy, full of eediment, shsrmels often ret acre, miter aceiiia and you era obiiaed to seek relief two or tores times durbej the night. Either consult s good, reliable phyae. eiaa at ones or get from your pliaxmaeiat bout four euooaa ol Jed Baltsi take tableepooniul ia a glass of wmftet before breakfast for a few day and yoot kidneys will then set fine. This famous salts is made from the said of rrasa and lemon juios, combined with lithia, end has bean need for genera Hons ts lean and atlmolats eluggiah Udaays, alao to neutralize acid ia the urine ao it no longer irritates, thus snding bladdaa weaJcnees. Jad Bait is a lit saver for regnlai meat eater. It is mexpesarra, ssasol Injurs and makes a delightful, ecTea vacant lithia-watar dries. Fine Bulk SAUERKRAUT one quart for ISe PRUNES Good 3 Iba. for 25c Ijrre St mlntd 10MATOES one can ISe Frnnish Style TOMATOEE for soup can 10c Hill;- MII.K l.:ireo ..2 for SSe SYP.L'P Kuio, J.'arshmellon. Trythis ons u will like It (Cane and Maple, fine for Hit Cakes). Our 3Rc COFFEE 3 lbs. for ft.04) Will please you. It is equal to any 40c you ran now buy. 1st and Ferry SEAR'S PHONES ft 0