County PUBLISHED SElVfl-WEEKLY VOL. XX DALLAS, POLK COUNTY, OREGON, SEPTEMBER 1, 1908. NO. 29 MANY LICENSES ISSUED privilege of Hunting in Polk County Has Been Granted to 157 Men Since January 1. The records in the office of E. M. Smith; County Clerk of Polk county, show that since January J, bunting licenses have been lssueu to lbi rnon. More than half of thjjse have been issued since July 1, to. huntsmen who were preparing for the opening of the deer season, while during the time between the last day of January and the first day of July, a total of only 29 licenses were issued, considerably leas than the number issued during any one of the other three month. The month of August heads the list with a record of 48 licenses 'Issued, July scores 43, January, 37, April stands at the bottom of the list with only 3 liceuses to hercredit, two of which were issued on April I. It is not known whether this "boodoo" date had any effect upon the hunting fortunes of the two Nlrarods who had the temerity tJ secure their licenses at that time. During September as the opening of the elk season and pheasant season approaches, the num ber of licenses Issued will be Increased even more. Dr. C. A. Mock and Professor Floyd E. Fisher returned last week from a two week's outing In the Alsea country, where they have been on a fishing trip, and Incidentally have ' been working with good success for the interest of Dallas College among the residents of that locality, George Nessllng returned to his work at Black Bock this morning after a short visit in Dallas. A live business training school. Endorsed by business men. Tho school whose graduates secure positions and hold them. Living expenses low. School in continuous session. Send for catalogue. - SALEM, OREGON GROCERIES We carry the famous DIAMOND "W". Brand of Extracts, Spices, Coffee, Canned Goods FRESH BREAD EVERY DAY Simonton & Scott Dallas, Oregon "THE SCHOOL OF QUALITY" Tenth and Morrison, Portland, Oregon A. P. Armstrong, LL.B., Principal C.We occupy two floors 6s by too feet, have a $20,000 equipment, employ a large faculty, give individual instruction, receive more calls for office help than we can meet Our school admittedly leads all others in quality of instruction. It pays to attend such an institution. CSaid a "Business Han : " Keep hammering away everlastingly on' thorough work. It will win out in the end." Said an Educator "The quality of instruc tion given in your school makes it the standard of its kind in the Northwest." C.0pen all the year. Students admitted, at any time. Catalogue free. References: Any bank, any newspaper, any business man la Portland. NEWPORT YAQUINA BAY Oregon's Matchless Beach Resort The Place to go for Perfect Rest and Every Conceiv able Form of Healthful and Delightful Recreation TS FACILITIES ARE COMPLETE Best of food ami an abundanos of it Fresh water from springs. All modern necessities, such as telegraph telephone, markets freshly provided every day. Fuel in abundance. Cottages partly furnished or unfurnished to be had cheaply. Strict mun icipal sanitary regulations NEWPORT Is reached by way of the Southern Pacific to Albaoy or Cor Tllis, thence Corvallis & Eastern R. R. Train service daily and the trip a pleasure throughout. Rate for Season Ticket From ) independence i.zo Saturday to Monday Ticket j Our elaborate new Summer Book gives a concise oeerriptloo of Newport, Deluding Hat of hotels, ibelr capacity and rate. Call 00. trlephooe or writ I. N. WOODS, Local Agt. Dallas WM. MCMIRRAY General Paesecgrr Agent, Portland. Oregoo. INTEREST INCREASES School Children Are Busy Preparing Exhibits For the Industrial Fair. Only a few weeks remain until the time for the annual Industrial Fair of the school children of Polk county, and County Superintendent H. C. Seymour says that communications coming daily from the various school districts in the county, indicate that the preparations for the Fair have been more thorough and extensive than at any previous time. It is a significant fact that the school children themselves throughout Polk county seem to be taking an even more aotive Interest In the Fair than the parents and teachers themselves, and on this fact may be based the belief that the com ing Fair will achieve a greater success even than the pro ceeding ones, since it Is mainly upon the efforts of the school children that its success depends. . In addition to the fine exhibits that have been prepared and are being prepared for the Fair, the committee is endeavoring to secure as fine pro grams as possible for the occasion, and is sparing no effort to make the Fair the best In every respect that has ever been held in Dallas. In their work they are enthusiastically sec onded by the majority of parents and teachers in the county and by the mass of school children, and in view of this .they feel justified In anticipating com plete success. Harry Byers returned to Dallas last night after an extended stay in the vicinity of Grants Pass, where he has been working on a timber cruise In company with J. P. VanOrsdei. W. I. STALEY, Principal 1 DALLAS l.hS 2S l DtPEMEMCE WORK ON RIFLE RANGE Men of Company H Make Active Preparations For Installing 1 Targets. A number of the young men of Company H spent Sunday forenoon on the rifle range near Ellendale, measuring off the grounds, building the butts and digging the rifle pits. They left the armory at about 8 o'clock, taking with them picks and shovels and plenty of carpenters tools, and, for several hours after they reached the range it presented a scene of almost as great activity as a large and populous ant's nest. Everybody "got busy," to use an expressive col loquialism, and the work progressed rapidly. At 12 :30, they stopped work, loaded their equipments in the wagon once more and drove back to town in plenty of time for dinner. The survey of the range gives a good thousand yards of almost level ground, backed by a hillside, which will serve as a buffer for the bullets during rifle practice. The men will advance across the level ground toward the targets precisely as they would advance upon the enemy in battle, and the practice they will gain in shooting with speed and accuracy from various distances and in various positions, will prove invaluable in case they may sometime be called up on to take part la a regular engage ment. The work on the range was not quite pompieted Sunday and Captain Chorpenlng will call out the men again next Sunday for a few hours, so that the work can be finished and everything put in readiness for install ing the targets. When completed, the range will be one of the finest in the state, and the members are in hopes of being able to secure the state ride contest for Dallas next year. Polk Will Be Represented. Inquiry has reached the state fair secretary from Mrs. F. A. Wolfe, of Falls City, Polk county, regarding the matter of obtaining space in the main pavilion of the Oregon state fair for making an agricultural exhibit at the coming fair. She indicates that old Polk may be numbered among the contestants for the rich cash premiums offered to the eight counties that will make the best displays of agricultural and horticultural products. This is pleasing news for the fair manage ment, as it was thought that Polk county would not participate in the contest this year. Mrs. Wolfe has taken considerable interest in past fairs in this respect and holds a blue ribbon as a winner of the special farm exhibits premium at a previous exhl tlon. Salem Statesman. Heavily Laden Plum Tree.' J. J. Williams brought into the Observer office last Friday, a branch from a green gag'e plum tree, which although less than a foot in length, had CO plums on It. In spite of the fact that they were crowded so closely upon the twigs, the plums were fully as large and well formed as the aver age plum. The tree from which this rnmarkable'sDecimen was taken grows on Mr. Williams' residence property on Church street The branch brought to this office Is a good type of the whole tree, whose branches are so heavily laden that Mr. Williams has found it necessary to beat off several bushels of the green fruit to prevent the tree from breaking under its enormous burden. Fit Up New Theater. Messrs. Whiteside and Cooper began clearing out the room in the Eiley building on Main and Washington streets adjoining the rooms occupied hv the Dallas Furniture Company, yesterday morning, preparatory to fitting it up for their moving picture, theater. The-wails will be plastered, the front altered Into a regular theater lobby, and the floor given toe approved forward slope to insure a clear view of the canvas from any portion of the room. The management will have the work rushed as fast as possle and expects to have the building ready for use with In two weeks. Orera Peaches te the Front . There Is probably nothing in all the fruits of the world thst surpasses the big yellow peaches that from the hun dreds of orchards of Oregon are now finding tbelr way to market Kothing finer at least ever came to Portland from anywhere, and the crop this year it as big as the Iruit is One. Every train and every boat that comes lo from the east or south brings in its offering of this superb fruit The Oreroa reach, as the Oregon apple i has already done, bids fair to be k nown hereafter as the standard telegram. Professor D. M. Metxger returned to Dallas yesterdsy. He was dismissed this week from the Isolation hospital I in Portland, where be has keen qoar ' en fined for three weeks with a light attack of smallpox. His illness was ! at no time of a serious d store, ana o i is now as well and healthy as ever, j Cleveland Sears and Job a Van 5k Ike ! returned yesterday from Eastern Ore go where they have beea employed la lb harvest fields for some time. LIMBER CUT WAS, LARGE Year of 1907 Makes Record in this Industry in Spite of Adverse Circumstances. The lumbercut for 1907 In the United States proved to be greater tban that of any of the preceding years in spite of the depressing influences of the short financial panio during the Fall of that year. Thisisexplained by some authorities to be due to the fact that prices of lumber and other building materials reached a lower stage during and Immediately after the financial flurry, than they may be reasonably expected ever to reach again, and that the increased demands for lumber from those who desired to build and at the same time to grasp the opportunity for securing their materials at the most favorable rates, caused-the demand to rise above the average, resulting in a marked increase in the total lumber cut and in the sale of lumber far that year. The increase in building activity seems to gather momentum as time goes on, and although the subsidence of the panic wave and the rapid return of the oountry to prosperity was naturally followed by an upward Impulse in prices of lumber and other building materials, it seems probable that the demand for lumber during the present year will be even greater than In 1907, Bince builders apparently realize that the advancing prices will probably never fall back to as favor able level as they hold at the present time. Commenting on tho remarkable record made-by the lumber industry last year in the face or adverse cir cumstances, the Oregonlan gives the following interesting statistics : "Figures of the lumber out In 1907 compiled by the bureau of the Census and the Forest Service showed the largest total ever reported In the United States, exceeding by over ieven per cent the cut reported for 1906, until then the record year. This does not necessarily show a larger actual out than in 1908, for the returns obtained last year were more complete than ever before. The figures themselves dis close some interesting facts. 'In 1907, 28,850 mills made returns, and their production was over 40,000, 000,000 feet of lumber. This Is believed to include 95 per centof the actual cut. In 1906, 22,368 mills reported about 37, 600,000,000 feet. Since according to these figures nearly 19 per cent more mills reported last year than the year before, while the Increase in produc tion was only a little over seven per cent, it might be thought that the amount actually manufactured must have been greater In the earlier year. This, however, would be a too hasty Inference, for It is almost wholly among mills of small output that the gain in the number of establishments reporting has been made. "The figures of production show that during 1907 Washington fell off very decidedly from Its huge cut of 1906, while Oregon, Is credited with a slight Increase In its total. In the early part of the year Washington suffered from a car shortage, and at the end the combined effects of business dis turbance and higher freight rates had brought the Industry almost to paraly sis. Oregon kept up its cut because of Its larger proportion of coastwise and foreign trade. These two states together produced more lumber than any other two states in the Union. "It is a striking fact that though lumber prices have been steadily going up during the last half century, the per capita consumption of lumber has also been going up. In 1850, accord ing to the best figures obtainable, the average consumption to each person In the country was 250 feet, In 1900. 460 feet, and In 1907, 480 feet This illustrates what has been found true the world over that with Industrial progress the demand for wood becomes greater and greater." Notice to Contractors. Notice is hereby Riven, that sealed bkls will be received by the County Clerk uptosnd Including the 2nd day of September 1908, at 10 o'clock a. m. for hauling and spreading gravel up on the following named fills. At IndeDendence bridge. Flannery bridge and Ash Swale bridge. Bids will also be received at same time for furnish ing Oak or Cedar posts and railing and for setting same and putting on railing and bub board all complete. Bids will be opened at 10 o'clock a. m. of said 2nd day of September 1908, reserving the right to reject any or all bids. Bv order of the County Court Aug ust 26th 1908. Specifications are on Die with the County Clerk. (Seal) E. M. SMITH County Clerk. The wooden sidewalk In front of the Williams and McCallon property on Main street between Mill and Oak, ill be replaced with a concrete wain. The portion of the new walk la front of Caldwell's pool room lies over tbe mill race and a concrete arch Is being kniit tVwr similar to the one that tne city has put over the race where It I erows the stree. Wesley Atchison was a busioess vis itor la Biark Rock yesterday. READY FOR HOP PICKING Season Will Be Almost as Busy Throughout Polk County as Ever Before. ' The approaching hop picking sea son in Polk county will be one of almost as great activity as ever in all districts except that lying about Bridgeport, where the majority of the yards that have this year been with drawn from the hop acreage of Polk county, are located. In the vicinity of Independence, the largest hop center of Oregon, practi cally everything is cultivated (though a trifle less thoroughly than In previous years), and almost as large an army of pickers will be required to take care of the hops in that locality this season as has been required dur ing previous years. , Dallas will see almost as active a hop picking season as usual, since in the widespread crusade for the reduc tion cf Oregon's hop acreage last year, only four of the yards iu this vicinity were plowed up and put out of cultivation. These are the Rowell, Kirkpatrtck, Hagood and Grant yards, all lying in the outskirts of the city. ; Polk county's flops are almost entirely free from lice and mildew and It Is anticipated that the 1903 out put will be composed of an exception ally fine quulity of hops. Pear Canning Commences. Operations at the Salem cannery, which since the close of the cherry and strawberry season had been quite slow, opened again with renewed energy Monday morning when pear canning was begun. Although the price this year Is far below the usual, market price, pears are coming in quite fast and from present indications' there will be fully as many cases of this commodity put up by the cannery this year as lust. This Is only true of the pears, however, other fruits showing a decided falling off, and It is not likely that the total pack this year will exceed over two-thirds'of the amount put up a year ago. With a large yield of pears throughout the country gener ally, and no demand In outside mar kets, thecannery is filling up fast with the fruit and the amount that will be handled by th,e company will largely depend on the amouut of help that can bj obtained. While a considerable force will be put on tomorrow and additions will be made through the week, yet it is feared that when the bopand prune season opens there will be a scarcity of help and much of the fruit will go unbandled. Salein Statesman. Train Collides With Wagon. The morning train between Port land and Dallas collldod with the wagon of a Mr. McCrumm near New berg, Friday, overturning it and kill ing two horses that were tied to the rear end. The occupants of the wagon were uninjured. Mr. McCrumm was driving from Portland to the coast with his family. His wagon was covered with canvas after the manner of the old "Prairie Schooners" and it la supposed that he failed to see the train until It was close at hand. He then whipped up his team and endeavored to hurry aoross the track, but was un able to do so before the train was upon him. It is generally conceded that the blame for the unfortunate occurrence attaches upon the driver of the wagOD for attempting to cross the track without taking the precaution to see that all was clear. Meetings Will Close Sunday. The tent meetings held by Rev. W. F. Martin and O. W. Pettlt In the Gospel Tent on Mill ami Shelton streets will be closed next Sunday. The attend ance has been large at every meeting and the subjects handled by Elder Martin have been of great interest to all who heard him. The subject for tonight's address will be "Spiritual ism; Are There Such Things as Ghoste?" Tomorrow night Elder Martin will speak on "Religious Lib erty or The Tendency of the United States Toward Union of Church and State." Elder Martin Intends to remain In Dallas for a time after the close of the meetings. Dance Was Successful. The dance given at the Colosseum rink Saturday night was most success ful, the attendance tieiog far greater tban the management bad anticipated when the affair was announced. The big rink proved an ideal dance hall, sod the guests were Insistent in their demand that another dance be given next Saturday night Encouraged by the liberal patronage they have received, Messrs. Kerslake & White have decided to give a dance every Saturday night during September, until the time when the rink will be re-opened for skating. Work on the new Williams building j on Cqurt street Is being carried for-1 ward rapidly. The foundations .are all laid, a quantity of the brick is on the groundsand the walla will prob- 1 ably be well advanced la construction by the end of this week. J. B. Nona went to Portland this morr leg 00 a business visit NEW New Arrivals in SHOES DRESS GOODS UNDERWEAR BLANKETS KINGSBURY HATS Campbell CASH Electricity for Lighting Is only expensive to people who are ' wasteful and careless. To you, who are naturally careful, it does not come high. .. v - .'. It is economical because it can be quickly turned off wnen not needed. With gas or kerosene there Is the temptation to let light burn when not needed to save bother of lighting and adjusting, in some homes the electric light bills amount to only one or two dollars per month. You can probably get-some kind of artificial light for less money than electrlo light, but does it save you anything when it limits op portunities for work and recreation ruins your eyesight smokes your walls mars decorations and increases household work. You could probably save a dollar tomorrow by going without your meals but It wouldn't be economy. It Is not so much what you save, but how you save that counts. WILLAMETTE VALLEY CO.' RATES Residence on meters, per' Kilowatt 15o ; Residence, flat per month, 16cp 60a RATES FOR BUSINESS HOUSES 26o per drop and 60 per Kilowatt up to 10 drops; over 10 drops 200 per dropand 6c per Kilowatt up to 40 drops; over 40 drops 17Jo per drop and 60 per Kilowatt. A drop figures 16cp or less. For power rates apply at the offloe. We are always ready to explain the "Ins and outs'' of the lighting proposition to you, call on us or phone to us, we are never to busy to talk business. Willamette Valley Company E. W. KEARNS, Manager for Dallas. Office on Mill street, just north of the Court House. Phones Bell 421, Mutual 1297. DALLAS Places an education within the reach of every ambitious young man, and woman. The earnings of vacation will pay a full years' expenses. Offers advantages equal to those of any similar school In Ore gon. Courses: Classical, Scientific, Elementary Academic and Musical. ' Special work for those preparing to teach. TERM OPENS SEPTEMBER 23. For Catalogue and Information address the president. C. A. MOCK "CLEANLINESS IS NEXTTO GODLINESS" says a noted proverb. Following out this line of reasoning we are missionaries to the good of the general public We will call at your door for your soiled linen and will return It clean and white as Mt Hood snow. We laundry Carpets, Rugs, Blankets, Quilts and Lace Curtains. Will wash and press your suit In fact, anything that is done In a first class laundry. Despite the vast superiority or our work our prices are the lowest Phone in your orders to the DALLAS STEAM LAUNDRY. Mutual Phone 1-J7. A. E. THOMPSON Dallas, Ore. BLACK'S STABLES Having purchased this well-known barn, we so licit a share of your patronage. EVERYTHING FIRST-CLASS Excellent accomodations for commercial men. 5TOVVE BROS. MAIN STREET DALLAS. OB COON i TTOSSITS IT tAW. FlBLEY & EAKI5, Tbe eirfr reliable set a Abstracts Is Polk eouatj. Office ee Coart St. DALLAS. ORMOS. GOODS Hollister STORE COLLEGE Dallas, Oregon TfoaasT at taw. Oscar Hattee, Upstairs la CaaopbeQ. Vuildlna. Kin Bt. DALLAS, ORJSOOJC e