3 County OLK VOL. DALLAS, POLK COUNTY, OREGON, MARCH 10, 1905 NOt 50 inn v TT" I I ,""v ) 7 Uf )) V JUit 4 K. JACOBSON & COMPANY. The HUB jg I We will have on display this week a new line of Ladies' ready to wear skirts hi all the very new and snappy styles for both street and house wear. All good new i J styles of cloth and make. Made to lit and fit to wear. 'The new mannish effects in Scotch mixtures for street wear are very nice and all bound seams and fancy cut Ct r)rice $3.75 to $6.50 The new Voiles Panamas in Cheviotts and Tweeds are made in the best of cloth and by the best makers price from $ 5.00 $11.00 m 8 Hi Royal Worcester : Corset? , The best for all-made to fit all styles and figures. The best known, best styles and best price from 50c to $2.50 New Tape Girdles in white and color. Black Cat Hose Don't forget we carry the Famous Black Cat Hose for men, women and child ren. The kind that costs no more than others but wears longer. Lace Curtains i Ladies, it is soon time to clean house and you will need some new . lace cur tains and our line is new and up-to-date. The new Bonne Femme is the latest price from 85c to $5.50. Just received word from Hart, Schaffoer Marx that we will receive our first shipment of Clothing for Spring about March 5 to 10. Gentlemen, you should see this line before you buy. "the hub- R. JACOBSON COMPANY Dallas-0re- K1RKPATRJCK BUILDING. MAIN STREET. m I i i I J. G. VanOrsdel & Son DEALERS IN it I Hi istjcr ar4 Tarn Eands and City Property. PROPRIETOR OF Dallas Electric Eight Plant En; Office on Court Street Dallas, Oregon. 1 FOR A CLEAN TOWN City Council Takes Steps Looking to Formation of Citizens' Civic Improvement League. Oregon " &uvemr Postal ante f w -AT- isei t fJciset DALLAS, OREGON. SSIAN STOCK FOOD ij'kind best food for Horses, Cattle, j'jU Sheep and Hogs. USSIAN POULTEY FOOD For sale by Dallas, Oregon Ice ft ' JESl El EYES! re made a study of the eyes for i and am a graduate Scientific rjiian. Many have been success q;; fitted with my glasses and are eet t testimonials of my success, exultation free. -k': II Cloclis!! I! h I i a t r ' Clocks. ' 1 ne of clocks ' 1 1 with great "in nnA rimo II i v"" ijitits I a parlor or .ry oloviis j..t V'-ry reasonable --sell the Lewi, & Clark Gold i'arsand Tc:;i; i. us. The spoons , lie rrguiar sod both sou ,r cf t!. 1 f ir are unique , fountain rens. Silver Sets and Xovcltifts. ORRIS i Optician Dallas, Oregon "TRIAL BY JURY" Famous Operetta Will Be Given By Home Talent at City Hall Tonight. The following is the program of the musical entertainment to be given at the City Hall this evening, under the auspices of the Epworth League of the M. E. Church : PAET I 1 Chorus, "List to the Bugle Call" 2 Song, "Swing My Baby" Leona Williams, Norville Gates, Ruth Morrison. 3 Chorus, "Old Mother Hubbard" 4 Four Part Song, "Last Night" Rett Kjerul Misses Ella Eoy, Emroy McDevitt, Edna Morrison, Eebekah Gates 5 Solo, "Sing me to Sleep" Greene Mrs. Grace Cherrington 6 Musical Comedy, "O. P. R. A." Manager Walkemhonie Dr. H. L. Toney; Signorina Belatrino Mrs. Mona Thompson ; Herr Von Lagger kegg Mr. Will C. Aylsworth ; Biddy O'Flannagan Miss Pauline Gohrke. PART II Comic Opera "Trial by Jury" Sullivan and Gilbert Judge - Mr. Will C. Aylsworth Counsel - Mr. Lester Butler Usher - Mr. Andrew Holman Plaintiff Mrs. Grace Cherrington Defendant - Mr. Willis Simonton Jurymen Mr. Fred West (foreman) Messrs. Ed. Dunn Ray Grimes, Ralph Williams, Everett Gwinn, F. P. Levin, JoLu Simonton, Dr. Toney, Earl Shelton, Prof. Dun kelberger, Walter Critchlow.Nevin Palmer. Bridesmaids Mrs. Thompson, Misses Gohrke, McDevitt, Morrison, Roy, Gates. Lawyers, spectators etc., Miss Opal McDevitt, pianist W. C. Aylsworth, director Curtain Rises at 8 :15. Dallas, already one of the neatest and cleanest little cities in Western Oregon, will be made still more cleanly and attractive during the coming Spring and Summer months if the movement started by the City Council this week is taken up by the citizens and successfully carried out. The plan proposed by the city officers is to organize a Civic Improvement League, with a membership open to every man, woman and child in Dallas. The work of this League will be tc suggest plans for beautifying the town, and to assist the officers in en forcing the ordinances already pre pared for civic betterment. The object of the movement at this time is to arouse public pride and get all of the people interested in making the town attractive to the hundreds of Eastern visitors who will come here this year. The members of the council invite the citizens to meet with them iu the City Hall on Wednesday evening, March 29, at 7: 30 o'clock, to take steps toward the organization of a Civic Improvement League, and to discuss matters of general interestilong this line of work. The women can render valuable assistance in chi3 worthy movement, and it is hoped that many of the fair sex will be present. The councilmen hope to get the school children interested in the work, and the school teachers are especially re quested to be present. Mr. and Mrs. N. A. Emmitt, of Falls City, Polk county, are visiting at the home of Mrs. Emmitt's parents, Mr. and Mrs. D. Tilton, in Eugene. Eu gene Register. Hon. Tilmon Ford, the well-known Salem attorney, who fell in his room in the Willamette Hotel in Salem about three months ago and fractured his leg at a point immediately above the knee, has been removed to St. Vincent's Hospital in Fortland. Mr. Ford has been in a hospital in Salem most of the time since the accident occurred. The special committee of the Greater Salem Commercial Club, appointed for the purpose of making arrange ments for the holding of a convention of commercial clubs of the valley in that city, and composed of President Hofer, Frank Davey and J. L. Stock ton. has issued a circular invitation to I all of the clubs of the cities of Western ! Oregon, asking them to send delegates to the convention which w ill be held j in Salem on Wednesday, March 23. rOHYSIflBIO'CUIlB BakM Kidney utf Vitddtr E!g!ii Still Holding Hops. Conrad Krebs is highly Incensed by the reports in circulation to the effect that he is selling his large hold ings of hops. He says he will hold his hops until such time as the brewers must get on their knees and pray: "Oh, hop growers, give us this day our daily hops, and forgive us for having attempted to deprive you of your just dues in the face of a shortage which had warranted 50 cents a pound." The new linen-finish visiting cards may be had in any quantity desired atth is off ce. Every Two Minutes Physicians tell us that all the blood in a healthy human body passes through the heart once in every two minutes. If this action be comes irregular the whole body suffers. Poor health follows poor blood ; Scott's Emulsion makes the blood pure. One reason why SCOTT'S EMULSION is such a great aid is because it passes so quickly into the blood. It is partly di gested before it enters the stomach; a double advan tage in this. Less work for the stomach; quicker and more direct benefits. To get the greatest amount of good with the least pos sible effort is the desire of everyone in poor health. Scott's Emulsion docs just that. A change for the better takes place even be fore you expect it. We will tend you a ample free. Be sure that tli'u picture in the form of a label it on the wrap per of trcTj bottle of Emulsion you buy. Scott Sc Bowne Chemist 409 Pearl St., N. Y. $0 crntsaal fl.OO Ail 4ratjiiu LIFE IN THE ISLANDS Walter Nichols Tells of Conditions in Uncle Sam's New Eastern Possessions. ASINGAN, Pan., P. I., Jan. 22 -(To the Editor.) When I promised to write you after my arrival in the Islands, I did not know that the climate here could make me more lazy than I was when in Dallas, but if such a thing is possible, I am lazier here than there. It has been several months since I wrote you. If 1 remember rightly, I wrote you from Dagupau. We left Dagupan, June 11, for Asingan, a town 30 miles to the East. The trip consumed six hours, and cost us $7.50 for ourselves, to say nothing of our trunks and provisions. Asingan has a population of 21,000 natives and three Americans. The Americans are Mr. Sheehan, the prin cipal of the grammar school here, Mrs. Nichols and myself. We have no street lights, sidewalks, sewers, or water-works. Mail service is good here, as compared with some of the more remote towns. Mail is received on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Satur days, and "States" mail is received three days after it lands in Manila. The climate here in November, De cember and January is very much like September weather in Oregon ; that is, very hot days and cool nights. Under three large covers, we sleep none too warm at the present time. The climate in Baguio is very much like the Oregon climate very cool during the winter months, and not ex cessively hot in the summer months. Instead of four seasons, we have but two, the wet and dry. The rainy sea son begins the last of June and con tinues until the end of October, and the other months are all dry months. The rain here is much different from our "Oregon mist." It seldom rains more than a few hours at one time, but rains as much in one hour as Ore gon can produce in six. During the four months of rainy season, I remem ber but two times when it rained more than one day. The people in this municipality are mostly weavers and farmers. l'efore going farther, perhaps it is best to ex plain more fully the word "municipal ity." Each island is divided into provinces, and each province into municipalities. Each municipality is divided into barrios, (villages,) and the pueblo, or city proper. Asingan has twenty barrios outside of the pueblo. The entire municipality is about 12 miles long and nine miles wide. The people, as a rule, have no edu cation except in Spanish and English, and this is usually confined to the pueblo, the boys and girls in the barrios seldom receiving any educa tion at all. The prevailing religion is Catholic. At present the Aglipay branch of the Roman church has a large membership. These people, under the leadership of a man named Aglipay, rebelled against the severe treatment of the friars and established tke Independent, or Aglipay, Cutholic church. In Asingan, both churches have a large rr.embership, but all worship in the Roman church, because the Independent people have no build ing. ' The principal crop in this section is rice, but fine gardens and fields of corn and sugar-cane may also be seen. Tropical fruits are abundant. Bananas ripen every month in the year. Oranges may also be had, but the ordinary orange is not so good as the oranges we buy at home. Fresh pineapples can be had during the months of February, March, April, May and June, and when many are on the market we can buy them for one and one-half cents each. Bananas cost from one to three cents per dozen, dejiending upon the kind. I think the Philippine Islands pro duce nearly every kind of tropical fruit, but the natives are not pro gressive in any of their work, hence the farming industry and fruit-raising are at present in need of Improve ment. The natives follow in the foot steps of their ancestors, and, as a result, the land is not worked any better than it was 100 years ago. This condition does not apply to the people in the pueblos, but only to the people living in the barrios, The rural peo ple have no desire to advance or be more progressive. The Government is now building and opening industrial and agri cultural schools throughout the entire archipelago, with the hope of meeting the needs of the people and encourag ing them to use modern methods, im plements and machinery, besides teaching all the useful arts and trades. The hemp industry of the Southern Archipelago has a very bright future at present, owing to the invention of a machine to separate the fibre from from the pulp. This machine, so the leading daily papers say, will be to the hemp industry what the cotton-gin is to the cotton industry. It is glad news to us to hear of the subsidy bill passing Congress, thus giving us mail from home every two weeks. Asingan affords two schools a municipal school and a grammar roLEYSirciisrTAn school. Mrs. Nichols is teaching In the grammar school. When I came here in June, there were but three schools in the municipality except the grammar school. Now I have eight, and during the month of February will enroll more than 1G00 boys and girls. This number, with the 200 in the grammar school, will give Asin gan a large enrollment. It is my in tention to have the largest enrollment in the province at the close of the school year, March 21. From April I to June 12, we have a vacation of ten weeks, and will probably spend part of it at Bagui, the summer capltol, in the province of Benguet. It is between 40 and 50 miles northeast of Dagupan, and is high up in the mountains. At present, the road to Baguio is not complete, and to reach there one must ride over a trail on a native pony or burro. By the middle of February the Government expects to finish the road so people can go direct iu a cart. This road to Baguio has cost the Government several hundred thousand dollars. One of the greatest needs of this proviuce is good roads and bridges. More than half of the bridges between here and Dagupan were washed out when we came to our station last June : and two have been repaired. Where the large bridges are gone, it is neces sary to cross on rafts duriugthe rainy season. As this is a great rice section, the people, of course, have many rice canals and are not particular about keeping the water out of the road. During the rainy season, the people of one barrio use the road for a rice canal, because it is lower than the other land and they do not need to dig a canal. To make matters worse, the carts on which nil heavy loads are hauled are made like the trucks for a car; the wheels are stationary on the axle. Each wheel is made of some native hardwood, four inches thick at the axle, one inch thick at the edge, and about three feet in diameter. This cart, when turned, acts like a plow on the road, because it is impossible to move one wheel without the other unless you slide it. This slipping and sliding over stones soon cuts the roads to a depth that lenders them impassable for horses or anything else except the caraboo. If this letter does not put your paper out of business, I will write again. Mrs. Nichols and myself are well, and have not been sick since our arrival. Kindest regards to all our Dallti friends. W. F. NICHOLS. CITY ELECTION OFFICERS Judges and Clerks Chosen For Annual April Election. Judges and clerks for the coming annual city election were chosen by the city council, Monday evening. The election will be held on Monday, April 3, at which time a Mayor, Councilman-at-Large, Auditor and three Council men will be chosen. The retiring officers are Mayor J. C. Hayter, Coun-cilman-at-Large H. B. Cosper, Coun cilmen Muir, Muscott and Simonton, Auditor D. P. Stouffer and Marshal J. M. Grant. The hold-over officers are Councilmen C. F. Belt, H. Bonis and Dr. H. L. Toney. The Judges and clerks of election are : First ward E. Cadwell, J. G. Van Orsdel, H. Holman. judges; Ralph Morrison, Frank Holman, clerks. Polling place, Dallas Flouring Mill office. Second ward T. J. Hayter,, W. A. Ayres, S. W. Blessing, judges; H. L. Fenton, TJ. 8. Grant, clerks. Polling place, Council rooms. Third ward Joseph Black, F. J. Coad, J. J. Wiseman, judges; W. V. Fuller, Walter Muir, clerks. Polling place, II. L. Crider's office. The Observeb office wants the print ing you are particular about. Portland and Falem are not the only towns that are growing fast these days. Woodburn, Silverton, Dallas and all the towns up and down the Willamette valley are growing, most of them faster than ever before. Salem Statesman. An enterprising Dallas photographer is offering to make a fine negative free for every man and woman over 70 years old residing in Polk county. The pictures are to be grouped and will bo placed on exhibition at the Lewis and Clark fair. It will prove an excellent advertisement for Polk county, as well as for the enterprising artist Amity Advance. Mrs. Almira McLaughlin was granted a divorce from her husband, William McLaughlin, in Multnomah county last Friday. When the case was first brought, the husband pre pared to contest, but later settled matters with his wife outside of court and agreed to allow the case to go by default. Upon his wife's testimony, McLaughlin was recently convicted in the Federal Court of sending her an obscene letter through the mails. Since the settlement of the divorce case, Judge Bellinger has set aside the jury's verdict in the criminal action, and McLaughlin is again a free man, with no stain of crime against his name. BUMPER CROP PROMISED Weather In Willamette Valley Has Been Highly Favorable to All Vegetation. Prosrects for a bumper crop in the Willamette Valley were never better at this time of the year than they are this season. Fall grain, of which there is an unusually large average, is growiug nicely. The warm sun has given vegetation of all kinds a great start, and farmers are plowing for Spring seeding. A few fields have already been sown iu Spring wheat, and if the good weather continues another fortnight, farm work of all kinds will be well under way. Tho cold snap of last month did littlo damage to the Fall-sown grain, but, on the other hand, had a tendency to kill the wild oats and weeds. A few lots of Winter oats were frozen out, but damage along this line is very slight. Owing to the fact that last year's Spring crop was almost a failure, farmers in this section of the Valley took advantage of the splendid Fall weather, and sowed most of their available land before Christmas. The Spring-sown acreage will be as large, if not larger, than the same acreage of 1904, and the seed will have' the ad vantage of being in the ground a month to six weeks earlier than that of last year. If March proves a favor able month for farmwork, the bulk of the grain crop will lie seeded by April 1, whereas last season's seeding was all done in April and May. Although the wheat acreage will be large.many farmers will sow a greater portion of their Spring fields in barley and oats. Timothy, cheat, clover, and vetch hay will all be grown iu great quantities in the Valley this year, while potatoes and other garden truck will receive more attention than for some years past. Farmers are antici pating large demands from Portland duriug the Lewis and Clark Fair, and many of them will be on the market with big supplies of vegetables, poultry and eggs. Hop yards are being plowed and put in shape for Spring work. Grow ers report their yards in good condi tion, especially those that were set out last year and the year before. If the season is a good one, Oregon's hop crop will be a record-breaker. Fruitgrowers are a little uneasy over tho present state of the weather, for they fear an early growth that may be Injured by late frosts. Fruit trees ure beginning to bud, and if the weather should tuin cold and frosty, great damage might result. Stockraisers are feeling jubilant over the mild Winter and the early starting of grass in their pastures. The months of January and February were all that could be desired by stock owners, especially sheepraisers, who report an excellent lambing season, with a very small per cent of losses. Sheep owners are also elated over tho wool outlook, many of them having refused to contract the coming clip at 20 cents per pound. The supply of Willamette Valley hogs will be con siderably larger than last year. -Dallas cor. in Friday's Oregonian. FIX DATE FOR MOHAIR SALE Polk County Pool Will Be Sold April 1 Growers Plan Fine Exhibit For Fair. The Polk county mohair pool will bo offered for sale in Dallas, on Satur day, April 1. This date was decided upon by the growers at a meeting of tho Polk County Mohair Association, held in Brown's Hall in Dallas last Saturday afternoon. No mohair will be received In the pool after Wednes day, March 15. H. L. Fenton, secretary of the Asso ciation, informs us that the pool will be as large or larger than that of last year. Practically all of the growers in the county have already listed their hair, only a few scattering lots re maining outside at the present time. Applications to join the pool are being received and accepted every day. The officers of the Association sug gest that it would be a good plan for the farmers, while shearing their goats to save the finest samples of mohair for exhibition at the Lewis and Clark Fair. Any such samples brought in to the Secretary will be properly prepared for display, and will be labeled with the grower's name. The goat men of Polk county are wide awake to the importance of tho Angora industry, and never lose an opportunity to advertise the ex cellency of their flocks. It is there fore certain that the farmers will heartily co-operate with the officers of the Association in preparing an ex hibit of fine mohair that will prove of inestimable benefit to all parties concerned. Ralph Butler, of Dallas, came over to the Capital City Saturday for the purpose of entering the Capital Busi ness College, where he will take a business course. Statesman. Cures CoMst PtvbU faeaaiftaia .