THE FOLK COUNTY OBSERVER, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1915. Published Each Tuesday and Friday. Office 617-618 Court Street Telephone ', Main 1 BY LEW A. CATE8. Subscription Rates. One Tear (1.60 Six Months .76 Three Months. ., .40 No subscription taken unless paid for In advance. This Is Imperative. ' Entered as second-class matter in the Postofflce at Dallas, Oregon. AND ALL FOR WHAT? The balance sheet f the European war continues to pile up astounding items of debt and losses, with practi cally nothing as yet in compensation. An apparently authentic compilation places the public debt of England ait the end of the current year at the colossal sum of eleven billion dollars. The debt of France will be very near ly as mueh. Germany is apparently more fortunate financially, her pub lic debt being only about half that of either of her .two principal adver saries, amounting to about six. and one-half billions. Austria owes al most two billions and Russia nearly eight and a half billions. Italy, which has a comparatively small public debt, has spent about half a billion since the war began. ' This tabulation estimates that the war has already cost the belligerents , named eighteen billions of dollars, and the end is not yet in sight. No mat- .. ter which side wins, all the nations in volved will emerge from the conflict Itottering under a load of debt which it will require many generations to pay. There are no conceivable re sults which will warrant the expen diture of these stupendous ums of money, to say nothing of the millions of lives sacrificed. Moreover, it is perfectly clear that Ithe havoe wrought with the industry and commerce of the contending na tions must be added to the actual cost of the war, and to the whole mighty aggregate must be added the billions of dollars lost ito the business inter ests of the neutral nations, involving also incalculable hardships to citizens of those nations affected by the in dustrial derangement. Surely nothing that has been accomplished, nothing that appears possible of achievement, can justify this appalling waste of blood and treasure, of which there .does not appear at this time even any prospect of cessation. And an amaz ing fact in this connection is that even today there is no agreement as to what the present war is about, or as to who really started it. How future generations will scorn such seeming stupidity. substantial increase in field artillery. If the navy, which will ask for an in crease of $100,000,000, carries through its plan making the total naval ap propriation $248,000,000, the appro pnations for national defense, includ ing the army's $182,000,000, would total $430,000,000. It is probable, however, that in final form the appro priations will not exceed $400,000,000. One feature of tlie plan as outlined is an increase of 50,000 men, besides a large reserve force to be created ,through inducing men to join the ranks by short term enlistments. The national guard would also be given greater encouragement by the govern ment. This arrangement the adrainis tration is hopeful of carrying through at the next session of congress, be lieving that not only democratic lead ers will support tne measure, Due many republicans as well. . SMALL MERCHANTS. ' Upon the so-called Htevens bill, now pending in congress, depends to a considerable degree the fate of the small merchant of the country towns throughout the land in their struggle for existence against the great city department stores, and mail order con cerns. It is a great economic ques tion that is about to be brought squarely before the American people prior to the assembling of congiess, and the success of the bill mentioned is quite largely dependent upon public sentiment. Every person in Dallas, and elsewhere, who has kept his eye open must have observed that for some reasos the big city merchants have been gaining ground, while the tradesmen in the interior have found the struggle growing constantly hard- The money order issues, and bank drafts purchased, clearly show that preat snms of money that should be used in trading at home, are going to the mail order houses in the large cities. And the department stores in the pre a centers are monopolizing ' the trade, and the little stores are becoming fewer and poorer. This con dition is attributed to "cut-throat competition," or price cutting, and from every part of the country there has come a demand for the enactment of a federal statute that will enable manufacturers of staple articles to fix a price onjheir goofls and compel the retailing at a standard figure, no matter where the goods are sold. The Federal Trade commission is working in this direction, and the in dications are that there is bad weath er ahead for the handful of city in terests that have been driving out the smaller dealers, and growing opulent and arrogant at the expense of -the country merchants. WORK OF TEACHERS. A fine rumpus has 'been raised by Comptroller Prendergast of New York, by the suggestion that public school teachers do not work as hard as is commonly supposed and that they should be required to give to the school service at least a portion of their vacations and days off. He believes the present system is unbusi nesslike and based on a wrong pre mise. He does not think that teach ers do more work in five days than other people do in six. He is not prepared to admit that teachers need three months vacation each year t when other people who also work at occupations that strain the nerves get along with from two weeks to a month off. Admitting that it is necessary to close the schools .in the summer months, because it would be difficult if not impossible to get children to study at that time, even if it were for the children's good not to give them the "long vacation," he does not think it follows that the teachers also need all that vacation. According Ito his way of looking at it, much work could be done for the school system by the teachers during those months that would sav money to the cities' and not be a real hardship to the teachers themselves after they became used tdit. This sounds rather revolutionary, but for that matter so does every thing that is entirely different from the order of things to which we al ways have been accustomed. We .have pome to take it for granted that teaching is unusually nervous work and that the school teacher needs the summer rest as much as his or her pupils. It will take more than an efficiency expert to convince school authorities in,general, and educators in particular, that this is not so. And if the hours of work were substantial ly increased for school teachers, would there not appear immediately a de mand for proportionately increased salaries? Mf. Prendergast also maintains that the business of teaching is conducted with too complicated an organization; that the school system generally needs simplifying. He says so much work is done in the average city school that is a mere matter of routine and form, that it would be possible with a busi ness like system to increase the net amount of instruction and at the same time decrease the liuntber of teachei s, even though the present hours of work were retained. Of course the teachers generally scarcely will agree with him on' this point, any more than they will on the other point which he raises. But it is something to think about, just the same. tions on distilled spirits despite the fact that wines are paying high tax as a result of the emergency war tax law enacted by the last congress; the enactment in prohibition states of stricter enforced laws; the discussion of total abstinence and prohibition by press and popular magazines, and the marked decrease of their liquor ad vertising; the growth of anti-alcohol sentiment in the medical world these, with the endorsement of national con stitutional prohibition by hundreds of influential organizations and the out spoken declarations of men prominent in the official and' political are or the United States and other nations in favor of prohibition and total ab stinence, have given a marvelous im petus to the movement tor the banish ment of John Barleycorn from the business, the social, and the political life xf the civilized world. The ma jority vote on the Sheppard-Hobson bill in the United States house of representatives on December 2, 1914, even though it fell short of a decisive victory, was a triumph for nation wide prohibition. The white ribbon contingent of the prohibition element is praying for the success of the temperance cause at the polls in Ohio next month, and in Ver mont in the spring, while encourage ment is being extended to co-workers in California, Florida, Kentucky, In diana, Louisiana, Michigan, Minneso ta and other near-prohibition states, which are fast approaching the moun tain top of state-wide prohibition. Verily, the nation is doomed to "spit cotton." Goethals in higher esteem than ever. It would have been easy for him to regard his task as completed, and to insist that some other be assigned to the work of repairing the damage to the canal in order to restore it to service. But he, more than any other man, perhaps, knows just how to go about this work, aided by the expert ence he has had in getting the canal in shape in the first place. And he willing and anxious to "stay on the job" until the canal again is cleared and opened for traftic. It is this devotion to duty that has won the unbounded admiration and approval of the American people for General Goethals. And now that he again has shown an unselfish willing ness to submerge personal plans and convenience to the public good and welfare, the people of tlns,nation will more than ever feel like honoring him and holding him up as a conspicuous example of a rtnly patriotic American citizen, one who freely gives his very best efforts for his country, so long as the latter is in need 01 his sei vices. WILSON FAVORS PLAN. The president has approved Secre tary Garrison's plan for increasing the army, and the matter will be pre sented to the congress with the back ing of the administration. The prop osition aft laid before the chief execu tive of the nation calls for an annual expenditure of $182,000,000, an inn-ease of approximately $"5,000,000. According to the plan as devolved by the secretary a considerable amount of the increased appropriation would be devoled to coast defenses and a WOMAN'S CONQUESTS. Looking backward over the past itwentv months of momentous sue- esses teniiierance aovocates nave gooa and sullicient reason to be proud of their achievements. They should feel encouraged for future crusades against alcoholic victories. Glancin; over victories and forward to probable ones, one might epitomize the move ment in retrosect and prospect as "a movement of victorious yester davs and confident tomorrows." Dur ing a period of twenty months there were chronicled an unprecedented number of prohibition victories. The temperance transformation of Russia; the anti-liquor measures in effect in German, French and English military circles; the complete abolition of al cohol in the United States navy and in the Panama canal zone; the out lawing of the liquor traffic in Virgin ia, Colorado, uregon, asuingion, Arizona, Arkansas, Idaho, Iowa, Ala bama and South Carolina; the major ity vote for state-wide prohibition in both branches of Utah's legislature; the triumph of the enemies of the saloon in a large number of counties and cities; the upholding by the Uni ted States supreme court of the con stitutionality of the prohibition pro vision of the Indian treaties making one-fifth of Minnesota dry; the vic torious prohibition elections in forty five of Minnesota's counties; the bat tle royal for prohibition in the dis trict of Columbia; the total abstin ence rules enforced by many indus trial railroad corporations; the decrease at the rate of $1,250,000 a month of the internal revenue eollee- MAINTAINING ROADS. Some opposition has developed to Judge Tears plan to retain a road master throughout the winter months in order that the rural highways may be patroled during a time when the greater amount of serious damage is done to roads by reason of the wet weather. The Observer is convinced that the patrol system eliminates waste and saves large expense, pro vided, of course, that the proper prin ciple is followed, which is necessnry in every successful business. It is doing the small things, admirably ex pressed by the proverb that "a stitch' in time saves nine." When ruts be gin to appear in a well rocked road they should be given immediate at tention, and when drainage is inter rupted the obstruction should be re moved, thus . keeping the subgrade dry. If when chuck-holes begin to develop they are filled with a few shovelsful of gravel it is the stitch in time, and saves much repair work the following spring, when possib a wagon, load of gravel might be neces sary to bring the highway back to its former condition. A hoe or spade would eliminate any obstruction to proper drainage, where later a day's labor with a team might be required to repair the damage created by "dead water" soaking into the sub-grade. The patrol system is practical, and should be adopted by Polk county in the interest of the tax-payers, who are annually raising large sums of money for the construction and re pair of highways in all parts of the county. The few hundred dollars that might be saved by dismissing the roadmastcr until work is renewed in the spring would be, practically speaking, returned a thousand fold through the patrol system if the work be thorough. One who is familiar with road construction, and the main tenance of highways, certainlv can appreciate the value of constant vigi lance, especially as regards' rocked and graveled roads. A deluge of second-hand exhibits from county and state fairs are' ar riving at the Oregon building at the Panama exposition, and in many cas es these are pronounced worthless by those in charge. Of course the president doesn't want to be bothered with an extra session of the senate. between-riow and December. Woodrow is busv with other affairs. In the confusion of greater clashes the dumdum bullet seems to have been lost sight of. Dear reader, eat an apple. This is National Apple day. ' ' OTHER THINGS A Rare and Curious Collection of Fact and Fancy. SHOP EARLY. With Christmas only a little more than teu weeks ahead, the merchants and the newspapers are commencing to push the annual "shop early" cam paign. It is being pointed out that the autumn season already is well ad vanced and that the holiday shopping rush probably will be heavier than usual this year, for bumper crops and returning prosperity are supplying the people with ready money and mak ing them feel both liberal and opti mistic. As a result it is anticipated that the coming holiday trade will take on "bumper" proportions, to correspond with the bumper crops and the general good times that already have returned and are gaining head way every day. And this will mean unusually busy times in shops and stores, with a prospective "rush" of trade just before the advent of the holiday season. Anticipating an mi usually heavy holiday trade this year the merchants all over the country are planning to make an extra effort o induce early shopping and a-rei earnestly advising the people not to put off their shopping until the last few weeks, or days, before Christmas. The Dreamer. I am tired of planning and toiling In the crowded hives of men, Heart weary of building and spoiling, And spoiling and building again. And I long for the dear old river Where I dreamed my youth away, For the dreamer lives forever, And the toiler dies m a day. John Boyle O'Reilly. The Rev. Messrs. Stewart are min isters of the gospel in different de nominations and preside over church es at Independence. That is to say, one is a Methodist minister and the other is a Baptist. Genial christians in that pleasant little city distinguish the gentlemen by calling one the Rev. "Sprink" Stewart and the other the Kev. "Dip" otewart. A little cigar, a real dainty little thing, brandished itself fragrantly from Doc Cherrington's lower lip one day last i week. County Clerk Robin son saw the odious fumigator, mistook t for a cigarette and said: ' "Doc, I do believe you'll be riding a bicycle next time I see you." . SUMMONS CASE NO. 4720. In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for the County of Polk. Harrison B. Riley and William C. Niblack, Plaintiffs, vs. Mary Augi, Frank Laundry, and the unknown heirs of Joseph Augi, deceased, and each of them ; and also all persons or parties unknown claiming any right, title, estate, lien or interest in the real property described in the com plaint herein'. Defendants. ; To Mary Augi, Frank Laundry, the unknown hairs oi Joseph Augi, de ceased, and also to all persons or parties unknown claiming any right, title, estate, lien or interest in and to Lot 6, and Northwest quarter of the ooutheast quarter and North half of the Southwest quarter, Sec tion four, Township seven South of Kange eight West, Willamette Me ridian, Oregon. Jn the name of the State of Oregon, you are hereby required to appear and answer the complaint hied against you in the above entitled suit within six weeks from the date of .the first publication of this summons, to-wit, on or betore the 1th day ot .Novem ber, 1U15. And if you fail to appear and an swer for want thereof, the plaintiffs will apply to the above entitled court for the relief prayed for in the com plaint herein, to-wit: A decree adjudging that plaintiffs are the owners in fee simple of Lot 6, the Northwest quarter of the South east quarter and the North half of the bouthwest quarter of Section 4, Tp, 7, S., R. 8.W., W. M.,X)regon; that the claims of the defendants, or either ot them, of any right, title or interest in or to said lands are void and of no effect, and that plaintiffs' title to said lands, and every part thereof be lorever quieted against the claims of the defendants and all persons claiming by, through or under them, or cither of them, and that defend ants and all persons claiming by, through or under them, and each of them, be forever barred, enjoined and restrained from claiming or setting up any right, title or interest to all or any part or said land. I his summons is published by order of the Honorable J. B. Teal, County Judge of the above-named County of Polk, duly made and entered the 4th day of October, 1915. Dated at Dallas, Oregon, this 4th day of October, 1915. A. C. SHAW, Attorney for Plaintiffs, 819, Yeon building, Portland, Oregon. ' First publication, October 5th. Last publication, November 16th. Observer wane ads. do the btx. West Side Marble WorKs O. L. HAWKINS, Proprietor. MONUMENTS, HEADSTONES AND CURBING. Send It By Parcel Post Bend us your laundry by parcel post The ruial carrier la now authorised to transact this business. It coats but a few cents. We'll return It promptly. DALLAS STEAM LAUNDRY. GUARDIANS NOTICE. Notice is hereby given that the un dersigned has been duly appointed Guardian of the estate of Henry M. Betiiry, an incompetent person, by the Hon. County Court of Polk County, Oregon. All persons holding claims against said estate should, present the same to .the undersigned for adjust ment, and all persons owing said es tate are hereby notified to settle same with said guardian. J. D. SMITH, Guardian of the estate of Henry Ml Berry. SIBLEY & EAKTN, . ERNEST HANSON Carpenter and Contractor, Wall-pa pering and Fainting, Cement and Brick Work. 512 Orchard Ave. Phone West Red 63 2 World-Famous Brands Eacft the beet of ite claim. 2 eplendid gradet at 2 different prices Old Master and San Marto ' Coffee . "The Kind WitK the I SOLO BY ( DALLAS MEAT COMPANY. i lOZMHEK i" I -. IS OFFICE I When We Hand You Our Estimates Last week Herman Hawkins went hunting with a cold on his chest. Now he's got a mustard plaster.' Keeps Her Own Secret. . Miss Lenora Brown is taking a va cation from the postofflce, her broth er Hinton filling her place there. She left on the 1:30 train today (Thurs day) but where she s going she will not tell, but look out, there has been several going away from Willamina this year without telling where -they were going but the boys were usually ready to meet them with the tin cans upon their return, and we surmise there is something of this nature this time. lllamina Times. Professional Cards DENTIST M. HATTER Dallas National Bank Buiulding Dallas Oregon S. B. TAYLOR Civil Engineer and Surveyor Office, City Hall Phone 791 or 542, Dallas, Oregon REAL PATRIOTISM. Colonel Goethals is no quitter. He has withdrawn his resignation as gov ernor of the Panama canal zone and will set about the task of repairing the damage done by the latest land slide, which promises to tie up traffic through the canal for an indefinite length of time. For this decision, the American people will hold General Hank Serr, the w. k. and belinguous grandfather, called on the Gov. and Tom Kay at Salem last week. Bill White, the debutant proarnosti cator of atmospheric phenomena, says the drv belt may extend to include independence because Col. Matthews sells seven bottles for a $ and Brother Whitney sells only five. About that new typewriter the connty bought for Sheriff John Orr: e have received from the manufac turers a testimonial written on the machine hy the w. k. keeper of Polk county lodgine. "sin ce-udsine yure antomati q doble&action tgpe. wryter l have used No otherr: l un hesittta- ttingly prono nee it to be al azd MncH morre then the manfacturs sad It tftud be. dueRinj the ti.ime it hes ben in Our osfice! it has paid for iOself 3hree tiMes -ej. in the sAvinj os Timd an d labr." lOhna W. orr 'pilK county, sheeruf, dallas, OrE- anE. Somebody sneaked up and" regulated the court house clock last Thursday. Al. Rushlight. Portland's w. k. ree- nlator of civic affairs, was in town Thursday. So also was Bill Himcs. the polite joyrider. Martin Luther Bovd announces. with pride, that he was on a jury lat week. And here we've .been a whole week trying to figure out why that jury hune until alter supper, and then found a verdict in ten minutes. , BROWN-SIBLEY ABSTRACT CO. 610 Mill street, Dallas. Only up-to-date set of abstracts o' Polk county. Posted every morning from county records. of the cost of the lumber you require yon can depend upon it that the fig ures will be as low as first-class, well seasoned lumber can be sold, for hon estly. If yon pay more yon pay too much. If yon pay less yon get lest either in quality or quantity. Willamette Valley Lumber Co. Olive Smlth-Blcknell Teacher of PIANO and ORGAN . Studio 401 Court St. . DALLAS OREGON DENTIST . B. F. BUTLER Office over Fuller Pharmacy. Office hours from t to IS a. m.; I to 5 p. m. Dallas Orego. DR. A. McNICOL OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN Rooms and Dsinw Building DALLAS. OREGON SIBLEY St EAKIN Attorneys and Abstractors, The only reliable set of Abstracts In Polk County. Office on Court street Dallas, - I Orego ATTORNEY AT LAW OSCAR HATTER Dallas City Bank Building. Dallas Oregni ATTORNEY AT LAW WALTER L. TOOZE. JR. Dallas National Bank Building Dallas Oreaoi, THEO. BERGMANN SHOE MTQ. CO. Incorporated. ' ). Manufacturers of the Celebrated Bergmann Shoe. PORTLAND :- OBEOON The strongest and nearest water proof shoes made for loggers, miners, prospectors and mill-men. AND ALL KINDS OF GOOD PRINTING AT THE OBSERVER. J. A. BAR HAM E. V; BARHAM BARHAM BROTHERS General Contractors and Builders REPAIRING AND REMODELING, CEMENT WORK A SPECIALTY. LET IS FIGURE ON YOl'R FOUNDATIONS AND SIDEWALKS. Phones 661 and.1012 Dallas, Oregon R. W. BALLANTYNE PIANO TUNES Player Pianos Begulated and Repaired Phone 177 Butter Wrappers! Get them at The Observer BLACK S GROCERY We can please you if you want the best