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About Albany daily democrat. (Albany, Or.) 1888-192? | View Entire Issue (Jan. 1, 1920)
CLASSIFIED ADS-BUSINESS DIRECTORY ,0000000000000000 O CLASSIFIED ADVETIHINO O O BATE O O Count your wort nd re- 0 O mlt o th following ealei O O Om word one time, m cnt 9 O Om word thro U.is, 2d. O On word on week, Sc, O On word on month, 10-.. O O No ad (or on tint leu than O O 86e. O O No ad for three tlmta less O O than 60o. O O ' No ad for on . wook ! O tKaa 76c O O No ad for on month lot OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO FOR SALE Mitchell Light Six, first data condition, nlqulr at els w. Second St., or Phono 21. d27J2 FOR BALE Soma good oil-lamp brooders, big enough for 100 ehlcka. Price, complete with lamp 8040 wch. R. E. Bpeuldlng, Rt I., Al bany. Phone, Corvallls 9766. FOR 8ALE Flrat clata appUi. Jona than and Baldwin. Inauir of II Struchmerer, 21 S Baker 8t, Phon 760-L. d2S-Jl FOR SALE Good 6 room 1 atory cot- tag and baMfnant, 8 bodrooma, liv ing room, dining room, kitchen. Good bath, electric lighta, wood ' hoUt Thla la an excellent lot on the the corner, 60x110, located at 814 Jefferson Street Price $2600, pay . ua $500 down, 125 per month. Beam Land Co, 138 Lyon Street, daijl FOR SALE Good 6 paaaengor auto mobile, demountable rime. Price, 100. Call at Pacific Garage, 2nd A Ellsworth SU., d31-Jl FOR SALE )918 Ford touring car. A bargain at $425 eah. See W. Page, SOI Main SC. d30jl FOR RENT FurnUhed aleeping robots with heat Alao a garage. 208 Eaat 6th St dS0J6 HOME SNAP Cheap 3-room houa. with (I replace, outbuilding. 2 large lota, nice location, quick ul price 1600.. term. Alao have choice acreage, ae FUh at Hod gee. d31toJ7 FOR SAL 1919 Nr lik aew, driven a cord tine, on n cellont mechanical way Garage, Cor. 1 touring Just l abort time. tra tiro ex tttion. High 4 Baker. Utf. Miscellaneous. BAUER A BAUER. Tailor and dean en. Phone 12, 107 Lyon St. dltf FOUND On 8clo road, apar tire and rim, owner identifying aame and paying for thi add can recover from F. West. Red Crown Mill. d31J2 WE PAY CASH For used furnltur or trad you new good for your old ones. See us before you sell. E. L. Stiff Son, 218-217 Lyon Street .' d29tf. PIANOS. PIANOS What shall I buy for a Christmas present T Answer. I hav a present suitable for any on of your family. Call at 226 W. Srd Street, Albany Oregon and see my pianos. I want to clot out and sell all the pianos I hav in stock through the holidays. You are all in vited to call and ae them. I will give you soma slaughtering low prices for the next few days. Telephone 894-R. Terms if desired. U9tojl A LINEBACK. THE FURNITURE HOSPITAL . Renovates and make leather 'raat- tresses. Old furnltur and mat tresses mad Ilk new. Bring thorn in or phon 261 JEL, 128 and 180 Frry.St ' dltf. household goods. See ua oefor joo MIL Albany Furnltur Exchange 416-417 West 1st St. Both phone d2tf THE 1 CLANCY KIDS Soma Day They'll Go In for Real Estate 4 By PERCY L. CROSBY ISP ' FOR RENT Two unfurnished rooms, Call 432-J, 824 Calapoola St 2VdSl BTRAYED A Urge brown cow with horns. ' If anyone Jinows of her whereabouts pleas telephone Al bany Furnltur Exchange. Phone 76-J. d31 HELP WANTED WANTED A man fur general fsru, work. Inquire at Democrat office d31-J5 FOR RENT Six room dwelling, hot and cold water. Close In. See J. A Howard Real Estate. U3IJ2 FOUND Sterling silver pencil, In front of Self Service Shoe Store. Owner may hav property by pay ing for this add. dSl MEN WANTED, To cut aawlogs wood, slain brush, good wagea. Hous and atov furnished, some tools. Com and ae W. J. Turn klge, Talbot, Ore, O. E. Railroad. Telephone Jefferson 86F22. d27J6 RADIATORS REPAIRED All make: of radiators repaired by expert. MEDIN A BA1R, Auto Sheet Metal Works, 116 East Srd St, Albany Oregon. dl7tf. WANTED A woman to take charge of lunch room. Hour from 11:30 a. m. to 8: p. m. Apply Mrs. Holmes In basement Hamilton's Store. d30-jl FOR SALE Newly mad over sec ond hand matlres. At the Fur nltur Hospital. 128-130 Ferry St Dltf. HEMSTITCHING 12Hper yard, thread furnished. Bell phon 4&2R Sue Brechenbrtdge, 883 W. 2d St Dltf. BUSINESS DIRECTOR! Federal Farm IS4 par t interest 84 1-t years Prompt aad eOeteat service. Applications will be received by the Flrat National Bank, Albany. Ore. . A. C BOHRN8TEDT 401 Maaaalc Tempi Sale, Ore. J. D. HUSTON PAINTING, DECORATING and PAPER-HANGING Phon 411R Snap at Flrat axel Baker Street Dr. EL E. Jsckaoa DENTIST 404-4M Flrat Nitleaal Bank Bldg. ram 216-J - FISHER BRADEN CO. Progressive Funeral Director AUTO SERVICE "Lady Assistant Phone M Night Call 609R , Fortmiller Bros. Funeral Director Oar Own Aeto Hearse rLadv Attendant Pho 78 . Masonic Building OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO O W Make a Specialty of O Friendship, Engagement and O Wedding Rings O F. M. FRENCH SONS O Jewelers and Kimnn OOOOOO OOOOOOOOOOOO AUTO TOPS . W make and repair Auto Topa, Curtains and Cushions. HORSrrS TTRE STATION WHEN ANSWERING classifieds ads. kindly mention in Democrat , I Iff'? I IT AWMILf Witt ... i X HAMMOND LBR. CO. IS LARGE One of Company's Largest Mills Located Near Al bany; Local Yards One of the Large manufactures of lumber on the Pacific Coast Is the Hammond Lumber Company, who maintain a retail yard In this city. And on of the company three mills it located at Mill City, 80 miloa east of Albany on the Southern Pacific R. R. This plant hat a caplcity of 260,000 feet of lumber per day, and employi from 600 to 700 men in mill and woods. J. R. Shsw is manager of the Mill City plant and has developed the tar get! payroll In this district The lo cal yard of this company proves a great convicnence to the building trade of this vicinity, as they carry all kinds of building material except, hardware, vlx, lumber, lath shingle and roof ing materials,' Mm, plaster, cement, hearth tile and mantle brick, sewer pipe mnd draia til. From tlx to ten men ar employed In the yard at Albany, and the Com pany as whole la responsible for much of tha prosperity of the local merchants, si many employes of the mill and camps com to Albany to do most of their trading. Before Takiag JO-TO After Takiag JO-TO - Sample Free. JO-TO relieves indigestion and miseries of the stom ach in two months. Sold by all local druggists Frank G. Will JEWELER High class Jewelry, Silver, Cut Glass and Hand Painted China VIERICK'S BATHS E x p r t Warkmaaahlp T h r C h a I r a L. VIKKECK. . BERT CRAWFORD, B. P. KIRK Tour Patranage Solicited Flrat and Bllaworth Sta. DRY WOOD Anderson FuelGo. . Phone 106-J Realty Canadian Land . LOANS AND tNSCRANn Geo. Taylor Cener of Second and Bread ' Bell I2J; Hoas 2871 THATV A(.l?6rrT FO? TO TALK-BUT Y0O OONVtHNiC. VjHCRE I JCr rue TAKCX TO 6ET THIS STUFF. BELIEVE MC -IDOfVT KNOW HOU; I'M bOltiS TO MccT MY fffIXT ssse seasaeseissssteBsiaw Daily Market Report May and Grata Wheat 12.00. Oata 76c, Hay fl8ffl8. Mlllfeed 848. . V'eol and Mohair Wool $40'a 862. Mohair 66c ' Butter. ButUrfat aad Egga . Butterfat 74c. Creamery Butter, wholesale, 72c retail, 80c. Eggs, buying price 66e; retail 60c. Dairy B-Jtter 60c trade; retail 66. Poultry Hens 12 to 26c; springs 21 to 26c. Old rosters 21 to 26c. Gees 20c; Ducks 28c. Turkeys 84c. Vegetables Cabbage, 2 l-2c; onions 4 l-2c; tur nips, 3c; potatoes 4c in trade. Lira Stack Market Furnished by D. E. NebergaU Meat Co. Hogs 14 S-4c. Steers 7(&10e. Cows 4&7c Calves 7 S12e. Ewa-8(S6c Lambs 7 1-2(2 10c Yeerlinge 6&7c Veal 18S19C CREAM FOR CATARRH OPENS UP NOSTRILS Teni Hew Te Get Qafck Belief frees Head-Colds. It's Splendid I la om mianto your clogged nostrils till open, the eir nmaii of your bead ill elear aad yoa eaa breathe freely. No more hawking, snuffling, blow lag, headsebe, dryness. No straggling for breath at night, jour cold or catarrh will be gone. Oet a mall bottle of Eljr'i Cream Balm from your druggist bow. Apply little of tkia fragrant antiseptic, keeling cream in your nostrils. It pen etrates through every air psaaege of the head, soothes tbo faflamed or swollen mucous membrac aad relief comes in stantly. It's just fine. Doat stay stufTaa-e with a cold or nast; catarrh Belief somes n euickly. ALBA NY SIGN CO. "NufSedT 111 Lyon St. Hopes Women Will Adopt This Habit As Well As Men Qlaea of hot water each Ing help us look and fool clean, sweet, fresh. . Hasnv. bright alert vicoreua and vivacious, good clear akin; a nat ural, rosy complexion and freedom from Ulnees are assured only by clean, healthy blood. If only every woman and likewise every man could realise the wonders of the morning inside ba'n, what a gratifying change would take place. Instead of the thousands of sickly, anaemic-looking men, women and girls with pasty or muddy complex ions; Instead of the multitude of "nnrr. wrecks." "rundowns," "brain fairs" and pessimists we should ae a virile, optlmlsUo throng of rosy Cheeked people everywhere. An Inside bath Is bad by drinking, each morning before breakfast, a glass of real hot water with a tea spoonful of llmcktons phosphate In It to wash from the stomach, liver, kid ney and ten yards of bowels the pre vious dsy's Indigestible waste, sour fermentations and poisons, thus cleansing, sweetening id freshening the entire alimentary canal before putting more food into the stomach. Those subject to sick headacbn, bil iousness, nasty breath, rheumatism, colds; and particular those who hav a pallid, sallow comploxlon and who ar constipated very often, are urged 'to obtain a quarter pound of limestone phosphate at the drug store which will cost but a trifle but Is sufficient to demonstrate tha quick and remarkable change In both health and appearance awaiting those who practice Internal sanitation. Wo must remember that tnslde cleanliness It more important than outside, be cause the skin does not absorb impur ities to contaminate the blood, while the pore In th thirty faet of bowels An YOU Li5Tp J IONC.VtKTTHN6 we BUY" iYCKJ BOY lit GUY WHIAMETTE VALLEY CLIMATE IS IDEAL FOR GENERAL LIVING AND HEALTH CONDITIONS AND FARMING No country in the world can boast of a finer climate, taking everything into consideration, than that found in th Willamette Valley. Th Urn persture la mild, th thermometer having gone below xero but three times in th last 40 years. Seldom doss th temperature register less than 16 degrees above, and Oregon tans think that it la a cold winter when it doe get thla cold. Th present winter is ona of the freaks that visit tha valley once in decade or two, and when the ther momiter went down to 16 degrees be low xero but month it cam within on degree of breaking the coldest mark on record, which occurred in 1871 In 1884 th mercury went down to 6 degree below sero, in January, 1909 it reached 8 below and in Decem ber 1919 it went 16 below. The snow record was also broken this winter when a total of 264 inches fell at on stretch. In 1916 the total was 32.26 inches, but it was distribut ed through four different months. Usually there ' is not enough snow here to grease th skids of a bob sled and sleighs and sleds are almost a minus article. Following is a summary of the snowfall for th last 10 years, show ing that th yearly average is 947 inches, as compiled by F. M. French, local U. 8. weather observer. January, 1910 240 inches ( February, 19102.00 inches. January, 1911840 inches. April, 19111.00 inches. November, 19110.25 inches. December, 19124.25 inches. January, 1918740 inches. January, 1914 240 inches December, 1914140 inches. January, 191624.00 inches. February, 1916240 inches March, 19162.75 inches. Month 1910 1911 1912 1913 1914 1915 1916 1917 1918 1919 average Jan. 644 1048 9.29 649 11.76 647 643 3.20 647 10.14 743 Feb. 642. 248 4.97 145 4.71 340 644 448 745 945 6.20 March 143 46 341 644 244 2.21 10.44 4.74 3.47 6.22 448 April 149 2.70 247 2.45 341 140 2.77 447 1.23 4.08 241 May 1.75 245 2.71 2.12 143 844 247' 141 1.19 140 2-25 June 1.16 .77 3.18 847 2.07 .79 142 49 42 .28 145 July .00 ' .16 48 45 42 1.28 341 40 41 .17 46 Aug. .08 .00 243 40 40 40 46 40 40 43 .44 Sept. 1.22 4.23 244 1.72 8.76 40 .72 145 46 8.12 242 Oct.. 2.64 1.23 249 345 5.43 148 1.25 43 346 342 245 Nov. 1048 345 . 641 5.70 4.69 10.24 7.45 449 6.26 749 649 Dec 349 4.40 549 3.00 3.22 841 448 1344 3.60 644 . 5.74 Totals 3840 34.11 4647 36.44 44.24 40.12 47.74 3940 8441 6244 41.29 ALBANY PRODUCT IS WELL KNOWN Albany Iron Works Has Rep utation for High Grade Work An Albany man who is always busy is F. J. Miller, president of .The Al bany Chamber bt Commerce, who, plans still bigger things for Albany during the year 1920, in the way of enlarging the plant of The Albany Iron Works, by adding new machinery as well at new bilding. . The first hold Mr. Miller took of manufacturing in Albany was back in 1893 when he boight an intrcst in the old Cherry & Park plant, later' buying all ita stock thus becoming the sole owner of the present Albany Iron Warks. This plant la now specialising in tha I nunufacure of road building machines gravel plants, drag line scrappers, ser ial bucket eonveyars, road scarifiers, and is nnow engaged in manufactur ing the iron parts for logging cars for a Southern Oreon company. They ! also have just contracted for theboild I ing of twenty-five street paving re- I m . t?(jn rv i n otta Trie CANOr AN' JHC TAXCX, December, 1916-3.00 inches. - January, 19174)40 inches. . February, 191711.25 inches. March, 1917 o.25 Inches. February, 19181.00 Inches. March, 1918-440 inches. December, 19192640 inches. Floods are seldom encountered in th Willamette Valley, and when they do come only the low lands are affect ed. The following information sup plied by Weather Observer French shows the maximum stage of the river at the highest points on record: 1861, 36.0 feet above low water mark. The stage of the river is meas ured from the low water mark of 1861 when" local, observations were begun, and strangely enough, the winter of this year saw also the highest mark on record In 1881 tha river reached tha 324 foot mark; 1890, S3 J ft.; 1901, 304 ft.; 1903. 314; 1907, 304; 1909, 314; 1918, 6.7 and 1919, 204 ft. The average annual rainfall for th last 10 years was 41.29 inches, a de crease of 1.60 indies in th annual fall for the 30 years prior to 1910. The abundance of rain, well distributed throughout th year, is th keynote to the success of th Willamette Val ley as an agricultural, fruit and stock raising section. Through the courtesy of F. M. French th accompanying table, showing th precipitation by month of th last 10 years, shows how evenly th moisture is distributed throughout the year. The really wet months are usually said to be March and April, with considerable rain in November and September. The rain fall during the other month of the year is generally so well spread out that it is hardly noticed. Following is th table as prepared by Mr. French for Democrat readers: 10 year pair outfits. In a short interview yesterday, Mr. Miller saki that he will add new mach inery and new buildings to his al ready extensive plant at the beginning of the New Tear. The Albany Iron Works employes now about 25 mem most of theme be ing skilled mechanics, and their pro ducts can be found up and down tha coast, from north to south. " The monthly pay roll of th plant now average is from 3,000 to 84400, distributed every month in Albany. Besides being prominent in busin ess and social circles in Albany, Mr. Miller is not unknown in tha politi cal game of the state, having been first appointed railroad commissioner by ex-Governor Oswald West in 1909 was elected to the same position in 1910. . In 1907 Mr. Miller waa elected joint senator from Marion and Linn counties, and in 1909 was elected joint senator from Linn and Lane counties, and was serving in the legislature . when he was appointed railroad com missioner. During the last four years' of his service, Mr. Miller was chairman of tha state board of Railroad Commis sioners. He is alao a Past Grand Master of the Masonic Lodge A. F. ' and A. M. I ATX At RIGHT FOR 'cawc i don't use rHe TAxej. r-- ...