Published Each Tuesday and Friday. BY LEW CATES Subscription Rates. One Year LM Six Months Three Months No subscription taken unless paid for in advance. This is imperative, ative. Entered as second-class matter in the Postoffice at Dallas, Oregon. Office 517-519 Court Street Telephone. Main 19 HOME BUYING HELPS. An educational campaign on mail methods of buying would do more toward stimulating home buying in Dallas than any other one thing, and it would be profitable to all con- iprnpfl were it undertaken. Ihe mer chants of Dallas buy only standard goods and get the quality they order. The mail order concern dictates its -,.lmaino. nrice. It is a fact OWU puil.'liniii jji.vw. Iliac ouyeia ii wn "'ut proach the manufacturer, of an ar- tide and tell him they must have the goods at a certain figure. It is ever a question of price ami not mialitv. The manufacturer gives the mail-order concern an article which he has cheapened until he can make a margin of profit in spite of price stipulation. It it Happens iu ui "" .. , i nn itiPtir- m-tinle rmido of metal, then an infer ior grade is used, or paint is used in stead of enamel, or some other mcth od employed to force the cost of man- ufacturing down to meet me ..,io- Vm-uor's mice. T)f course, the outward appearance of the article may be the same as the one carried by the merchant in this town, but The merchant paid more, but he got more for his money. If yon buy of him you will too. Then again a mail-oirder house will sell an article at a loss to attract attention. These "leaders" are a bait. The catalogue buyer compares this with the price he would have to pay here and, not ing the difference, jumps at the con clusion that every thing in the mail order house must be less expensive. Paradoxical as it may be, the mail order goods are cheaper but no less expensive. If these arguments are logically sound there is still the social, moral and religious view to be considered. The retail merchant is the backbone of the country town. The mail-order house is his worst enemy. The farmers need the town and the town needs the farmers. If the persons in this town who buy of mail-order houses can he brought to realize that buying inferior goods at low prices is not always a saving of money, a big step would be taken toward .eliminating the mail-order evil. LET 'ER SIZZ. We are reminded by the rapid ap proach of the soft-drinks season, and !. mar.itinna mnktmr hv Dallas venders, that these beverages have .j ltUrliout tmich- IfUrilt'll "lie I'l I Hi: i es alongside hops, prunes, butler and autoinobilcs in the scale ot lite s ..,......,;t;.u ' ' i.i ,.a.m'iinMi Kit, ii mis been placed up on a marble pedestal homes, which ill turn indicates pros . ..... . . i , -ii I1I1U V H1C ll umicil n....i - ship oh men, summery girls, middle i ...... ..,1 i.. ..!-.. I iimi-n in wnr. lured ladies, and luvaehers. r.very n . . n ..I, .i .,.i..r,,iii uii.n-o mir nicklc over iiu. iic (iiiriu".! t,e ba slab and murmur humbly that a destiny would be untnllilled tin i n (i ...... ..I, .ii-i-t' iiluitinliiitp H'SS H' lllll i ii , i..i. . i i - or a "pistachio royal sundae" with given trimmings. And all tins means things in cold, comparative figures that slick in your brain and make you think of economy and the inci eased t price of living. K.,.n iimt.lipmiitii'Hllv inclined in dividual savs that ten billi of niikles aie 'spent every year at soda fountains in this country, ami as there are onlv a billion nicklcs in circula- tion, it is plain to be seen that eacn .- . . one of them would have to make ten trips to the soda fountain if only nickles were used; that the nation's expenditure for soda water and car bonated drinks this year is estimated at $.")00.000,0(M1. It makes it all the more appalling when yon think that is half a billion dollars, which would buy hard-surfaced roads for every county in Oregon, and is over twice the value of the yearly output of automobiles and would pay the debts of all the American churches four times over and would defray the uni versity expenses of half a million slmlents and is more than double the combined yearly cost of the army and nav,v. The amount of sihla water rnnsunied ye::ly is estimated t 479,062,500 gallons. And in these days the soda fountain is sizzling summer and winter. From year's end to year's end the hiss and jingle ot the soda fountain in Uncle Sam's domain never ceases. The time was when for balf the year the fountain was about as idle as the straw hat and the parasol. Public fancy has changed all that, and now the dispens er of sizzing sweetness works nearly as hard in January as in the dog days. Soda fountain drinks tickle the palates of the countless numbers the year round, and thus it happens that the disher the handy little tool that soda fountain attendants have for scooping up the cream never gets a vacation. FLY A MENACE. Althoueh "swatting flies" has fur nished the humorists of the country with new material for their jokes the anti-fly campaign is not a joke bv any means. Even these sad-faced lone- haired humorists appreciate the importance of it. Their bright, sharp way of turning a laugh out of this very important work, is in itself the nur. ... "coi ..t Tjn!m anything is important enough to fld jts way into the joke column, ;s noj important enough to attract National attention, jjle anti-fly campaign has done The scientists have demon- strated beyond the slightest shade of (Jouhjt that flies breed disease. If flies connnea ineir uueniwu soieiy til.- 1......1 flin oMctavr! to the susrar bowl and the custard pie; if they were born, lived and died at the garbage can, there would be no serious objection to them. They would men De merely pesis, ramei than plasrues. But since flies are born in filth, fatten on filth, and make only side excursions to the susrar bowl, with early morning trips to the slumber couches of perfectly healthy people, they are a menace TTnon their tinv feet are carried the germs of innumerable diseases. The only good fly is the dead fly. It is impossible always to keep out of the home the flies that seek admittance. Be the windows and doors screened to the limit, there will still be flies on the inside. But it is possible to eliminate to a large extent the fly nuisance. AVe should not treat the anti-fly campaign as a joke. It is a serious matter and every precau tion should be taken to eliminate this daily peril. GOOD SIDEWALKS. Dallas is setting a good many con crete sidewalks, and these walks are a valuable asset to the city, not only because they aire substantial, but be cause they are permanent and sightly as well as safe. Then, added to this thev brins about conditions of im provement which otherwise cannot be had. When the concrete walk has been nlaced it is permanent and the yard can be graded and the grounds leveled to correspond with the walk as the owner has something establish ed to build from, and work is carried ahead with the assurance that there will be no change. This cannot be M.rno wlipnp nnlv temnorarv walks are . ....... 1 in use. Good walks become a stimu- his to help in the building ol nice varus nn nice varos suirircsi wen ilkui ijwvm.. ...... t , have their tendency for the upward ivirniia am, mnnpn npdii R unit hii life ot humanity. Taking this view we sometimes " wonder why various persons are loam to put a lew dollars mio a ueiuiuu- ent sidewalk when the value of their property will be increased more than t be cost 01 construction, uuv men c are reminded of " Huckleberry Fin and his old barrel. AVe are too apt o eet into a stale of inactivity from which onlv the power of energy can move us and too often that energy must be applied from outside forces. Man has the opportunity and the ability, wnen using ms u-6m privileges, to rise to an intelligence . , i . , U., surmounted only by his creator, but in order to reach the condition out lined he must move out in the right direction and strive with that energy which knows no abatement, to nil out the measure of his creation and be what his maker intended him to be. This altitude can be reached only by progressive action, and as the spirit ual and temporal laws are closely al lied so also are the spiritual and temporal needs and inaction or lack of energy is but a clog in the pro gress of the individual. The cordial reception accorded The Observer by the citizens of Dallas and Polk county is, indeed, gratify i,,ir in the mauasement of the publi cation. Words of commendation to THE POLE COUNTY OBSERVER, a newspaper are an encouragement and stimulus, and the editor who does not push forward under such circumstances is certainly unappreci ative of good will and well wishes. It is The Observer's aim to be a newspaper in the truest sense of the word; a medium of publicity second to none in the state; a eredit to Dallas, and. one that will herald its name and fame abroad throughout the land. And in the accomplishment of these objects we hope to enjoy the hearty co-operation of the people. BROWN IS QUALIFIED. The Oregonian sees in George M. Brown qualifications for the office of attorney-general that are not to be overlooked. It says editorially: "Mr. Brown has had a long and wide experience as a prosecuting attor ney in one of the most important judicial districts of Oregon and has served the state zealously and ex clusively for eighteen years. He has tried many cases involving liberty and life, with great benefit to the im partial and correct administration of justice, and he has besides had in charge a great variety of important general matters, involving public in tdrests, in the several counties of his district. All who have had direct dealings with - Mr. Brown testify to his unusual legal ability and single minded zeal and industry; and his reputation generally throughout the state as a true example of the devoted and useful public servant is most en-vinble.-- "Mr. Brown's fitness for the office of attorney-general is not questioned anywhere. The state has an oppor tunity by his nomination and election to ireward faithful public service and, far more important to secure as its attorney-general a man who is ad mirably fitted for the place. It is an opportunity for the state. On that ground chiefly the Oregonian commends him to the voters." OCCUPATIONS OF WOMEN. Out of the 305 gainful occupations of the United States there are only eight in which women do not appear. In all the other 297 theie are accred ited representatives of the coming sex to the number of 6,000,000. The eight occupations in which women do not appear fall into two classes, in Hie first of these classes the absence of women is due to the tyranny of men. There are no women soldiers in the United States army. There are no women sailors in the United States navy. There are no women marines in the navy. And there are no wo men firemen in the municipal fire de partments of American cities. All this is simply because women have been ruled out. With different reg ulations there might be different re sults. In Sweden there is a fire de partment in which women are fre nneiitlv enrolled. And the fighting done by the women at the siege of Saragossa in Spain during the Na poleonic wars has always stood as a spectacular and sufficient proof of feminine valor. In the remaining four of the eight womanless occu pations in this country the absence of woman cannot be so readily ex plained away. It must be simply due to feminine neglect that at the time of the last census there were no wo men apprentices and helpers to roof ers and slaters, no women helpers to l.roas.workers. and no women street car drivers. The next census will probably repair this defect. There is no reason why women should not enter these four trades. Already they can be found in tirades which are similar but more difficult. Only four occupations, therefore, are today be yond the reach of women in the Uni ted States. They can not be federal soldiers, federal sailors, federal mar ines, or municipal firemen. Every where else they have knocked and have been admitted. PUBLIC DEBT OF OREGON. In a bulletin issued by the census bureau of the Department of Com merce it is said that in the li years Inst passed the public indebtedness of the state" has decreased materially; for each $1000 owing in 1890 there was but $653 owing in 1913. The debt of the state was at no time large and shows a marked de crease during the period, while the population more than quadrupled; these two causes resulted in a very small per capita debt. In 1880 the total debt of Oregon at the close of the year was $511,000; in 1890 it fell to $2,000, but in 1912 amounted to $31,000. The population of the state increased from 175,000 in 1880 to 731.000 in 1912. In 1880 the per capita debt was $2.93; in 1890 it fell TUESDAY, MAY 12, 1914. to $0.01; reaching the maximum, $0.(18, in 1900; and subsequently de clining to $0.04 in 1912. In contrast with the state of Ore gon taking tne entire neoi oi no states per capita debt according to the- latest report is $3.52, or $3.48 more than the per capita debt of Ore gon. Comparing tne decrease in me per capita debt of Oregon and the 48 states for the period, we find that $5.48 fell to $3.52 in the average for the 48 states, and '$2.93 to $0.04 in Oregon. At the present time about 0.8 per cent of the total population of the United States will be found in the state of Oregon, and less than one tenth of 1 per cent of the total debt is attributed to this state. PIONEER DAY. Believing that those sturdy pio neers who blazed the first trails and made it possible for others to follow into the "Oregon Country" should be honored whenever opportunity of fers, the Dallas Chautauqua associa tion has invited the early settlers of Polk county to be its guests on the opening day. It is but fitting that we who today are enjoying a multi plicity of privileges through the ef forts, of these brave and heroic men and women who came among savages t establish homes and develop a territory second to none upon the hemisphere, should display an inter est in those still with us, remem bering the departed ones with sincere gratitude. It is largely due to the pluck, energy and hardihood of, the courageous pioneer who first beat the paths of this grand country that such broad and magnificent acres are now beheld on every side, and we should not only take unlimited pleasure but deem it an obligation to inject sun shine into their declining years when ever possible. Let us join in making pioneer, day, on June 27. an event that will long be remembered as hav ing been thoroughly enjoyed by both guest and host. Twenty million baseballs are made annually in this country. Somebody must hit 'em out of the lot occasion ally. The Observer libeled County Clerk Robinson when it stated in Friday's issue that the list of registrations would not be completed for a day or two. He finished the work Friday afternoon, and the complete regis tration by precincts is given else where in this issue. Marriage always changes people, but unfortunately it doesn't always alter them for the better. Every republican in Polk county should go to the polls next Friday and express a choice of candidates for the various offices. Isn't it about time for our es teemed and honored friend, the gov ernor, to stop another fight. Wait a minute! Teddy is enroute home. Those people who are continually predicting Secretary Bryan's resig nation should bear in mind that this is the first office William Jennings has held in twenty-five years of al most continuous effort. A fi.000.000 etre shipment from China adds the promise of a foreign yolk to the yellow peril. The republicans of Polk county should be gratified over the result of the registration. The list of Americans killed and wounded in Mexico continues to grow while we are "watchfully waiting. The inoepenoence "i spruced up considerably of late, and ....... Krt nlaccnil nmnmr real news- UH1V nun uc L""'". B papers. A number of republican candidates fnr nublic office have declined the en dorsement of the prohibition party, evidently preferring to win or Jose flying their own colors. Some people are satisfied to take what thev can get, and others get what they can take. Women imitate the men in many things, but you never hear of a girl chewing tobacco. Knowing a good thing isn't enough; you've got to know a bad thing when you see it. Some genius may yet be able to make breakfast food of wild oats. Some men drop out of sight of their own free will. Ut tiers marry pnm donnas. Editor Observer: I was talking to a grocer the other day. There come times in the lives or all men wnen they must talk to grocers. I might go so tar as to say uiai nine me some grocers to wnom 1 am very proud to talk. And there is one to whom I am very anxious to talk each month immediately after his active and enthusiastic assistant has slipped that annoying little statement of ac counts through the mail slot in my door. In anticipation of the never ending demand for another month's groceries I always go to the corner and slip a check to the said grocery man and he, in his exuberance over receiving it, invites me to take a smoke with him. It is not a real smoke, just 'a dried vegetable that never would have been saleable in its natural fresh state and was, in con sequence, kept in storage until it de cayed sufficiently to assume the color of real tobacco. But the smiling good will that goes with it always persuades me to accept and I sit on a condensed cream box while my food producing friend pours out the dregs of trouble from his ever-agitated heart. "I don't know what the grocery business is coming to," he wailed last Saturday, after he had bowed over the customary presentation of the quondam cabbage. As the fumes floated above my head when I had set fire to the parched salad he con tinued: Nowadays folks insist on their butter being fresh and their eggs being newly laid. They must have seedless jraisins and boneless chicken. Crackers are put up in sealed wax-paper boxes, vinegar is bottled and molasses comes in tins instead of bulk. It costs me more and it costs them a little more. It is not the high cost of living that is the matter with this country it is the cost of high living. Long and loudly he raved while I fumigated myself with my facial bonfire. He sputtered of "the good old days" when the grocery business was a real business. I suppose he was think ing of the times when a cat slept in the box of crackers if it happened to be in a sunny spot. Of the vanished days when the molasses dripped out onto the flo and offered to the cas-, ual visitor an excellent opportunity to do a spectacular neck fall. The fault that this man possesses is that he is blind to the things of the present he is living in the past. And his condition is very much like that of a lot of other people. They look backwards and dream of the good qualities or other times without remembering the bad ones. There never were such good groceries as there are right now. Business was never better, as a whole. Grocers are better oil than they have been in the history of the world. There is not an item that can be mentioned that is not an improvement over its predecessor in the past. The groc erymjan that sobs for a return of the days when he sold oysters out of an open barrel that sat in the street and served as a landmark for the village dogs is still more retrogressive than the actor that sighs for the narrow gauge period when the janitor filled the footlights with coal oil and the only steam heat noticeable came from the pot-bellied stove upon which those in the front row expertly expectorat ed. Keep your "gool old days" stuff for scrap-book musings these days are all right if you keep up with them. OPTOMISTIC. Wants Correction. P. J. Halem, of Monmouth, sends The Observer the following, with a request to correct a wrong impression given out last Tuesday: Monmouth, May 9. In regard to the collision of an automobile and motorcycle as per your account in paper of this week. You state that -the automobile was on the wrong side of the street where the accident occurred which is a mis take. Also the motorcyclist's name I understand is Frank"" Mueller in stead of Walter, as you have it. Now after the accident quite a crowd collected and they were going to hold me until some one in authori ty could get my name and number of car, but after pointing out the wheel tracks and seeing where the motorcycle hit the machine they agreed the cyclist was to blame. 1 also asked Mir. Mueller if lie wanted my name or number of ma chine and he said no;, that he was in the wrong and consequently it was his fault. Toll? to olinan Trliifli mnv evnloin why. we are given so much gratuitous advice. BEAUTIFUL HAIR--A CLEAN, COOL SCALP Use Parisian Sage. It Makes the Hair Fluffy and Abundant. Tt U needless for vou to have hair that is anything short of perfect. If it is falling out, losing color, spiiiiing, t tha cialn Knrni Anil itches, im mediately get from Conrad Stafrin or any drug counter a 50-cent bottle of Parisian Sage use it frequently the first application removes dandruff, invigorates tne scaip, ana oeauuum the hair until it is gloriously radiant. Parisian Sage supplies hair needs is perfectly harmless. It contains ilm Taet elements reanired to make the hair soft, wavy, glossy and to make it grow ttncK ana oeauuiui. Yon will surely like Parisian Sage. It is one of the best and most de lightful hair tonics known. int WANTED An old mare in good con dition, apply to L. G. Miller, phone,. Black 1551. W-4t- FOIt SALE Property on south-east corner of Uglow and Miller Ave nues. Mieht trade. Barton Riggs. 17-tf.. FOB BENT Furnished house, 80 Jefferson street. Vacant June 1. 20-4t. FOB SALE Cheat hay, baled. U S. Grant, Dallas, Oreon. 18-tf. FOB SALE Recleaned red clover seed 10y2 cents per pound. No. 1 grey oats. Telephone 24155. C. S. Calkins, Airlie, Oregon. 18-tf. JUST RECEIVED A car of cedar fence posts. Sohren Warehouse. LOST Purse containing $15.00 gold. Return to this office and receive reward. 18-2U FOR SALE All the lumber from a 30 x 30 barn, taken down and piled; $15 takes the pile. Must be. sold not later than Saturday night. J. S. Macomber. Phone Black 25. FOR RENT Why pay out your cash for rent when you know that you will never get a cent of it back. Mr. renter, why not live in the house and pay a small rental every month and in a very short time your monthly payments will cease and the home is yours, no more rent. Also vacant lots, same plan, build a home to suit your own ideas. Phone 544. 16-tf ' W. M. McQueen FOR SALE Land plaster at the L. A. Westacott Warehouse, Rickreall. Phone Lucas & Price. 9-tf. TO TRADE Twenty acres, with good new bungalow, barn, wagon sheds,, chicken house, and outbuildings-, some prunes, loganberries, family orchaiul, water-piped to house and' barn from mou,ntain spring, ten or more acres may be irrigated' from branch on the place, two miles from Willamette town of 3,000.. Three saw mills less than a mile away, land hog fenced. , An ideal small ranch. Will trade for Dallas property. Enquire at The Observer office. 21-tf.. WELL DRILLING Having purchased a Standard Well drilling machine I am prepared to contract for this class of work, at REGULAR PRICES I can drill a six-inch hole to a depth of 900 feet. Give me a call and let me figure with you. G. G. KESSLER One mile north of Dallas. 19-tf. HillsDros FOR SALE AT Lcughary Grocery DALLAS, OREGON LODGE DIRECTORY UNITED ARTISANS Dallas Assem bly, No. 46, meets on first and third Mondays of each month at Wood man hall. Visiting members mad welcome. W. J. WHITE, M. A. WILLIS 8IMONTON. Secretary. WOODMEN. OF. THE. WORLD Dallas Camp No. 209 meets in W. O. W. Hall on Tuesday evening of each week. J. F. Driscoll, Consul Com. F. J. Craven, Clerk. A. F. A. M. Jennings Lodge, No. 9, meets second and fourth Friday of each month. In Masonic hail osr Main street Vlsttlng brethren wel come. W. R, ELLIS. W. M. WALTER & MUIR. Secretary. Get your bntter wrappers at the Observer office. COFFEE