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About Albany daily democrat. (Albany, Or.) 1888-192? | View Entire Issue (Jan. 8, 1920)
Special Sale on - Cascade Linen Writing Paper Saturday Only 1 Pound Cascade Linen . .50c 2 Pkg, Cascade Linen Envelopes 30c An 80c Value for 56c Dawson's Drug Store LOCAL Personal Mention of People Harrisburg Visitor Albany boy, . in the city this we;k H. W. Cooley, of Harrisbunr, was visiting his father Her.ry Suacns an Albany business visitor again Returns From Portland last night, Mr. Cooley is one of the R. R. Cronise, of the Albany Dcm prominent pioneers of his home town ocrat, returned last night from a bus Frosi Toledo ine" riP to Portland. Mrs. H. W. Rice and L. R. Bateman, Visit Porents of Toledo, were Albany business vis- i Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Buckman, itors last night. . of Salem, are in the city visiting their Salest Visitors parents, Mr. and M:s. Thco, Hoflich Geo. H. Groves, H. D. Merse, E. J. and Mr. and Mrs. John Bruckman. Huffman and Frank Allwick, of Salem 1 are in the city today as business vis itors. From Lebanon Chris Jessie, and Ed Saben, of Leb- 1 anon, were in ne cuy last nigni as guests of the Van Dran hotel Here From Lebanon ! R. B. Snyder a well known citizen of Lebanon, transacted business here today. 1 Attends Farm Bureau Convention W. W. Poland, J. B. Cornett and C. Carlson, of Shedd, were among the live wires at the Farmc Bureau meet ing at the St. Francis yesterday. Returns to Seattle I Mrs. Danahcy, of Seattle, left for her home this morning after being called here to attend the funeral of her mother Mrs. D. M. Walters. I Returns to Illwaco Mrs. Elizabeth Sutherland left for her home at Illwaco Wn., this morn ing after visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. M. B. Craft and, her sister, Mrs. B. Carry, of the city. Went to Salem Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Dorgan, of Elm street, went to Salem this morning to visit friends. Here From Corvallis J. P. Martin, of Corvallis, a former Albany business man, transacted busi ness here today. From Tulsa J. W. Morgan, a leading fanner of Tulsa, arrived in the city this morn ing on the Electric to look after business matters here today. From Shedd Henry Freerkensen, a retired far mer, of Shedd who recently celebrat ed his fiftieth wedding annaversary, was an Albany business visitor this forenoon. Attends Jackson Day Jrogram Miss Lenore Powell, county trea surer, left on the early train for Port land today to represent the lady dem ocrats of the county at the Jackson Day program today. From Olympia Wn. Mr,. Henry Ewing, and daughter Miss Sylvia, of Olympia Wn., are in the city vi'ilng their sister and daugh ler Mrs. Norman Kendall. Visits Father Riy f users, of Portland a former BAKE - PITE Bread Cake Pies Cookies, Rolls, Doughnuts, Etc., are Making A HIT Try Them Elite Bakery & Confectionery 0 fed m BRIEFS apd Activities About the City. I Attends Jackson Day Meeting- D. S Smith rl,.ff f n- ty. and Postmaster, C. H. Stewart ioUs union fft1 bt h Kovern went to Portland toHv .o dnV from offer in settlement of the wage the fountain of pare Democracy at tne Jackson Banquet tonight. I Former Lebanon Man Here .N. S. Dalgleigh formery in the furniture and hard ware business in Lebanon, was here yesterday on his way from Canada to visit old friends at Lebanon. isits Friends Mrs. H. T. Ridders left for Portland yesterday afternoon to visit friends. Business Visitor H. G. St. Helen, a former commer cial traveler to' Albany, transacted business here today for W. R. Mac kenzie and Son of Ponland, who are -rtified public accounts and will be "resented in Albany to assist all citizens who are subject to govern ment income tax. County Agent Leader Here Paul D. Maris, state county agent leader, attended the farm bureau meeting here yesterday and compli- mented the farmers of the county on their progressive policies and gave much timely advice along the line of united effort on th part of the farmers. Weather Report Tonight and Friday fair, continued cold. Yesterday the temperature ranged from 41 to Z0 degrees. The river stands at 4.0 feet, falling. Married At Court House ' Le Roy Carter and Miss Wilda Vaughn two popular young people of Benton county were married here yes terday at the court house by county judge W. R. Bilyeu. Elks to Dance 1 The local lodge of Elks will hold another of their enjoyable dances in their hall Friday evening. A fine time is predicted and all members of the ladge and the ladies are welcome. Crowells to Return Mr. and Mrs. George H. Crowell. ?ho have llbeen ab,ent '" Albany for more than a year, are in Portland today and are expected to arrive home Friday. Mr. Crowell has been a Y. M. C. A. secretary in France and but recently returned to this country. Mrs. Crowell has been visiting relatives in Illinois during Mr. Crowell's absence. Baptist Ladles to Meet The Baptist Ladies Missionary cir- cle will meet Friday afternoon of this week at the home of Mrs. Fred Ward. : at Fifth and Vine streets, first ouse , east of the ditch, for their regubi quarterly ten cent tea, as well as hav ing the usual study from "Women I Workers of the Orient", Mrs. W. C. Burkhart leading. Everyone especial ly invited. Be Slender M Bow fwt. rW th blrtursa; U sVbsXlowa 4U 2i urn fuuinia Sari. i. bl raunM br KimeUns, Add to fuu cpMlllr tn4 etara. Anil, ill who ftj jwt. Bacon llafitar la araa, yaaatar gliralcians, Aak lot OIL Of KORCIN II J drug a'or& Aet no auhatltuta. It oaaaa la a boa. witb guaraata. Or ami tut Urn broobura to KORIIN CO, atatlea f, Naw Vert Crfe urnoc rouraHf or tattoo mm- JQ clam No during with Mtu, . t UBS no thrrotd. no loi of ttm Jut W F follow mo Map. (urtfi m. S V . no oswi or Sai II It M MMila sfS. Interest in Meetings Is Steadily Growing Increasing crowds are greeting ,n Rev. A. A. Heist t the MotliodUt Church lat night when ho jt- his frist sermon in the evangelistic meet ing being held there. Ill message was devoid of "fireworks" ami rhe torical ili-phy, but was given with force that made every member of hit audience think. The clone attention given him through his entitv dis courx testified to intense interest which he created from the very first He has a straight-fromtihe-shouldcr form of address, that wins him a hearing at once, lie will preach again tonight, the service beginning prompt ly at 7:30, and he and Mr. Spencer, the pastor, "the teahm," as they call thorn-elves, are planning aonie inter esting features for the next week. Lonestar Dietz Begins Sentence SPOKANE, Jan. 8. A. P. William II. (Lonestar) Diets, former coach of the Washington State College foot ball team, pleaded guilty today in the United States district court here to diy to a charge of .falsfifying in his draft qiestionaire. He was sentenced kto 30 days in the county jail and began his sentence today, is was stated. England Shows Interest Today In K. It. Strike LONDON, Jan. 8. A. P. Interest in the resumption of the railroad men's conference here today centers ' around whether the men will declare another strike or proceed with the bal lot or a nail million members in var- demandl' 18 Chiropractic Graduate Tonight The Democrat editors are in receipt today of an invitation to attend the graduating exercises of a class of eighteen students of the Pacific Chir apratic College at the First Congre gational church of Portland tonight. he graduates who are known in var ious parts of the state arc: Oscar L. Baker, W. Lafayette Bishop, Alfred Burkland, Herbert V. Hagen, William ?anford Hamacher, Edward W. Hoff man, Clara C. Ingham, Isaac Jacabs, Minnie A. Jensen, John J. Morrow, M. Olsen, Frank T. Pollard ft. A. Rice, Eugene A. Spear, Alonze L. V. Smith, William F. Todd, William M. P. Teasley and Robert James Whitley. Hatching Starts SoOtl At Pacific Plant E. O. Newport of the Pacific Hatch ery, Tangent, was in the city today on business. He says that he will be gin hatching in about a week. He has just completed his incubator room and sl" a large scratching shed. He is well pleased with his new lo cation. He has issued a 1920 mating pamphlet describing the stock he will have to market this season. Casualties are 2,000 MEXICO CITY Jan. 8 A. P. The estimated casualities attending the earth quake last Saturday in the West ern Part of Vca Cru , fill stents at ii.'M'i or n.c.i. DRINK EOT TEA TOE A BAD COLD Get a small package of Hamburg fireast Tea at any pharmacy. Take a tablespoonful of the tea, put a cup of boiling water upon it, pour through a sieve and drink a teacup full at any time during the day or before retiring. It is the most effective way to break a cold and eure grip, a it opens the pores of the skin, relieving congestion. Also loosens the bowels, thus driving a cold from the System. Try It the next time you suffer from cold or the grip. It Is Inexpensive snd entirely vegetable, therefore safe "no narmieaa. RUB BACKACHE AND IGHT OUT Eub Pain and StUTneu away with a small bottle of old honest St 7aoobt liniment When your back is sore and lame or lumbago, sciatica or rheumatism has you stiffened up, don't Buffer I Get a 30 cent bottle of old, honest "Ht. Jacobs Liniment" at any drug store, pour a little In your hnnr1. and rub it right into the pain or aehe, and by the time you count fifty, the soreness and lameness Is gone. Don't stay crippled! This soothing, penetrating oil needs to be used only once It takes the ache and pain right out of your back and ends the misery. It Is magical, yet absolutely harmless and doesn't burn the skin. Nothing else stops lumbago, sciatica and lame back misery to promptly PLUMB HAS PLAN TO CONTROL ALL Industriul Program Weuld riace all Business Under Tri-partitc Control WASHINGTON, Jan. 8-lly the A. P. A Plumb plan for all American industry, modelled after the plan of the same name for the railroads, has been prepared and is expected to be publicly announced soon. Copies of the plan, CHptioned "an industrial program by Glenn K. Plumb," are being circulated in Wash ington and some of them received in government circles. Briefly the plan proposes for all American industry the system of tri partite railroad control advanced some time ago with the backing of the gn-nt brotherhoods, which, it has been an nounced, would be made an issue at the elections. It proposes practically the same division of representation for capital, labor and the public. Industry is classed into four divi sions, in this way: 1. Those "individualistic in own ership and operation, Including the farmer and the small artisan, con fanner and the small artisan, con tractor and manufacturer, who is both capitalist, laborer and consumer." j 2. All industries "formerly individ ualistic, but which through organiza tion have so developed that owner ship is separated from labor and con cerns itself only in direction and sup ervision of production in which it en gages the efforts of others who have no share in ownership." 3. Industries "based upon a grant from society in the shape of a fran chise, grant of privilege or monop oly." In this division art include the BSSSBSSSEBSSSSSSSSSSSSSSBBSSSSBSSSSSSSSBSSSSSSSSSSC How Old Is n MiciiAiK-insN Jh VMM. -naif llllll ft -VTT V Of course, you could call our staple suits "Grandfath er's Clothes " if you wanted to, but just let us put one on the average man of 45 to 00 and if you can discover anythoing old logish in its lines we'll buy you the best dinner in the city and Grandpa can come along with us for a chaperonc. Michaels-Stem Suits for Seniors in fine silk and wool worsteds dark cashmeres and quiet cheviots. The Blain Clothing Co. Value First all public service corporations, except those rngsged in interstate commerce, "and all industries engaged in ex- plotting natural resources." These latter are described as including mines gas and waterpower. 4. Railroads and commercial trans portation facilities. The plan ex plains that these are considered sep. arately from the public service facili ties embraced in the third division bo cause the former are "under local con trol, created by local authorities and subject to local regulation." WHEN ANSWKKINO - ids lv mention I na Democrat. The Ease of Chalmers Engine Has a Story QumlUjr fir it WHEN you sit behind the wheel of a present day Chalmers you will long remember the rare ease of its engine. ' It responds to the slightest call without effort At high speed you are conscious of.no great activity under the bonnet. But you roll along with a certain comfort of mind that is comparable only when you lag along at slow speed and note no "breaking," no "missing," no jerky action but a quickness, a silence that is smooth and expressive of high efficiency. There's a story back of this. Most troubles in a car come from vibration. In a Chalmers there is so little vibration as to be negligible. Its crank shaft and reciprocating parts are balanced to a fraction of an ounce, both static and in motion. More than this, Hot Spot vaporizes the raw gaso line into a "fog," and Rams-horn supplies each cylinder with an even "charge." This provides double insurance against vibration, and generates an ease of action not often found in a motorcar. Once you experience- this you, too, will say Chalmers ia one of the few great cars of the world Waldo Anderson DISTRIBUTORS Albany, - - Grandpa ? Years ao the term "Grandfather" usually meant u very wrinkled old man leaning on a cane. Today, almost any hale and hearty fellow of middle iiko may be a Grandad but if he car ries a cane it's for looks and not to lean on. Grandfather's clothes have change too. Winter Term Opens With Many Students (OKVAI.1.IS. Jan. 8 Special The college opened for the winter term with an unexpectedly large num ber of students entering for the first time. While figures are not available it is expected the attendance will rfc. the largest for any one term In the history of the insttitution. Iue to the fart that school was closed in advance of the scheduled date prior to the holidays only ap proximately a thin of the students had registered before they left. & Son Oregon y