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About Dayton tribune. (Dayton, Oregon) 1912-2006 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 21, 1926)
Till BNDAY, THE »AYTON TRIBUNE PAGE SIX Taxation, Capital and the Oregon Farmer I NTYKRNITY <»!•’ OREGON NEARLY SOLD BY SHERIFF 04 TOBER m. •»** Do You Vote? UNIVERSITY OF OREGON. EU You boast that here the people rule. GENE. ORE.. OCT. 19 (SPECIAL! But do you vote? Reminiscences of the days when That we'll be aoverned by no tool, a loan of *2.000 saved the Univer Hut do you vote? sity of Oregon from being sold by You look for graft by high or low. BY BRUCK DENNIS the sheriff because contractors on While politicians run the show. Author of the Itenni» Resolution Heady Hall, the first building, had And doubtless all you say la ao, During the heat and excitement of political campaigns and the not been paid were given today by But do you vote? confusing statements that attend them we- are apt at times to William Scott, of Creswell, the first forget hard economic facts, and the bitter fruits of some pet "ism ’ student of the University. By ballot you express your choice. that look good in theory but do heavy damage in practice. Not only is Mr. Scott the first Hut do you vote? For this reason it is time to begin telling student, having registered on Oc- You're free lo make your primary a few plain truths about land taxation, the tober 16. 1x76. but he is a son of a choice. incomes of our people, corporations and indus member of the first board of regents^ Hut do you vote? tries, and again to bring to mind the fact that William J. J. Scott, who then lived Your mouth with anger almost foams capital dot's not need Oregon but Oregon does : in Eugene. Mr. Scott's grandfather. When laws that regulate your homes need capital. And the reason why we should continue to re Captain Levi Scott, who was the Are left to men with Ivory domna. mind ourselves and our friends Is because an founder of Scottsburg which was an Hut do you vote? other effort is being made to force a state in important town on the Umpqua river come tax upon our people despite the fact that in the early, gold mining days, was "Let's act!" you cry. "For pity sake" practically the same tax coat many millions in Hut do you vote? the first janitor of the University. capital and improvements to Oregon and the Oft and again you bellyache. At seventy years of age. Mr. Scott people of Oregon before it was repealed in Hut do you vote? keeps busy iu his spare time by 19 24. We cannot expect a proved breeder of painting, an occupation he has fol You swear that we have much nt hard times to bring good times, because it can’t stake, lowed a number of years. He was be done. And here are a few of the reasons why. born in Scott's Valley east of Yon To present Ills must be awake. calla. Ore., and entered the Univer And in affairs more Interest take. In all of Oregon's 96.000 square miles there Is an estimated But do you vote? sity when he was 20 years old. population of only 825.000 people—less than 9 to the square mile. Mr. Scott's father. William J. J. Initiatives are yours to use. We have 55,157 farms—an average of one to every 15 people. We have only 2500 industries that employ five men or more—an Scott, is the man who loaned the Hut do you vote? average of one industry to every 330 people. University *2.000 to keep the sheriff On referendums you may muse. Out of Oregon's 825.000 people. 782,256 didn't have net incomes from foreclosing a mechanics lien But do you vote? big enough to file income tax returns. Of the 42.545 who did. on Deady hall. Purchasers on hand The cry "More bonds” still louder one-half of them showed earnings ubder *3.000 and only 311 had to take over the half constructed gets; earnings in excess of *10,000. Only one-fifth of Oregon's 5,000 building and property on the fatal When they exceed those foreign corporations made enough to file returns and of the 1073 reporting day. but the timely arrival of the bling wasps. The lava or worm FARM POINTERS 478 made less than *5,000, and only 183 made in excess of *20,- debts, loan saved the institution for the Then you. perhaps, may have regrets. does the damage It Is elongate, 000. pioneers who had worked desperate If field selected need corn Is not white with a brown head and darker But du you vote? ly to raise enough funds by solicit stored In u dry. well ventilated biting juw». It feeds on the Interior Our farms and our industries are our two main sources for new ing wheat, cattle, vegetables and hogs place In non-freezing temperture It of the crown and tap root, eating wealth. They both face hard problems on account of scant and from farmers to nearly complete the might not us well be picked, nays out the entire heart. scattered population, long hauls, competition, insufficient capital, the experiment station. It need» structure. Infested plants look sickly and and heavy and ever-mounting taxes. If our farms are to prosper “There were three members of the I» MILK CAN FULL OF MINT protection from weather and mice to on being pulled from the ground of they have to secure outside money for loans and money to finance crops. If our industries are to develop they have to finance their faculty when I entered on the first ;; insure good condition at seeding ten break just below the crown, ex oil worth near si.ooo ; purchases and payrolls. Both have to have markets and tint day, and they were President John posing the tunnel Allied with brown time. means new people and more industries. son, M. Bailey, and Thomas Condon. trass, or partly with the lava Itself. OU of peppermint Is vulu- ' ’ • • • Mrs. Mary K Spiller had charge of ' ’ Attractive lamp shades are made The only control measures recom That is what the Dennis resolution is designed to do. It is an the preparatory department. A- ! able. A grower and distiller ' > by first covering the frame with a mended now for unlrrlgated sec invitation for capital to come in and help us all out. We desper bout 40 students were registered in ' • from the Wapato Lake section ' ’ figured material and then stretching tions by the college entomologist Is ately need new money to open up the state. We have to have mon the collegiate department. My Sis i i brought a milk can full of the ! ’ over it georgette or chiffon of a plain digging up and destroying all in ey for our farm loans and no matter how pretty this talk sounds ter Mathilda and my brother Ron ' ‘ oil and deposited It In one of ; ' color. Hush shades are not difficult fested plants, "the best time to do about a state income tax we cannot escape the economic and unal were second and third on the regis I I the vaults of the First Nation- ! ! to make and are good now. this la late fall. In Irrigated sec terable fact that new capital which we require does not have to ■’ al Bank at McMinnville on '* trar's books. tion» a borer can be entirely con and will not come to Oregon unless we make it advantageous for <. “When my father loaned the Un . > Wednesday. trolled by flooding the ground for it to do so. The strawberry crown borer Is While the quotation on pep- J ’ iversity that money he wasn't sure J J three days early In the spring. We must remember that there are 120.000,000 people in the for a while whether he was going to < > permint oil flucuates some- < , expected lo be a serious post of United States. Of them one hundred and nineteen million plus, .. O । «1 reports B. G. Thompson, assistant what, the quantity brought to '* live out-side of Oregon. They have plenty of need for the same get it back, but about five years entomologist of the experiment sta WHY MM'AL TAXI-» INCREASE money in case we of Oregon don't s^ow that we really want it. later it was re-paid. But in those ■ > McMinm ¡He is valued at a lit- <i tion. Numerous Inquiries about We tried it once—and before the people repealed the state income days *2.000 was a lot of money, ¡J tie less than *1.000. Grow- In our Federal Government, the this pest have come Into the depart tax it cost us millions: drove industries, payrolls, and taxable wealth and it was especially difficult to col . , Ing of peppermint on suitable . . ment of entomology this month from 1 President and Budget Commissioner out of Oregon and taxes still went up! Every farmer who had to '' lands Is a paying indqgtry. J ’ lect that much since everyone had borrow money knows what it did to him, too. The McMinnville National <> all parts of the Willamette valley. j make a constant fight to keep down given his last cent in the campaign <> Several Infestations have been found : and, werevor poalble. reduce the na to get enough to start work on Deady ; ' Bank also has some 20 gallons ; ’ tional tax burdens. near Salem. No forward thinking and constructive citizen wants that dister . > of peppermint oil In ten cans • > Hall. Mr Scott said. The Federal Government la work The borer usualyy attacks only to happen again. By the flickering light of tallow J; placed there by patrons for safe J Instead of making things hard for everybody—farmer, merchant j ’ keeping, • • older plants. Plants more than two ing for direct reduction of taxpay tips and in rooms heated by stoves industrial worker and citizens in general we want to have a purely At The First National Bank ‘ ‘ years old are usually most suscept ers' burdens, while most state and the students recited their lessons, < > economic problem taken out of politics. The way to do it is to the pungent odor of pepper- •> ible, but this year many of the young local politicians sent unable to re according to Mr Scott. There was vote no against both the Grange Income Tax Bill and Offset Tax trench. and can only think up er plants are Infested. no place at the University for them . > mint is noticeable when the ‘ ’ Bill and vote yes for the Dennis resolution. By this means we The adult of the borer belongs schemes to Increase official functions •> guarantee to every citizen, industry, and to capital that there will to study so they did that work at '• big door swings open. • I to the family of clear-winged moths, and heap up now burdens of taxes be no income tax before 1940. It further guarantees to every home. On the way to class they family that they will not have to pay taxes on their savings when i I » I I - which are beautiful In color resem and debt would pick up a few pieces of wood their bread winner dies. It is a prosperity-making measure—it to feed the stove in the classroom. is sound business policy and deserves every progressive citizen's “President Johnson, we students support. thought, was a bit old fashioned. He was straightforward and very Vote 306 X YES —Dennis Resolution. thorough. I remember several things happened which made him Vote 329 X NO —Offset Income Tax Bill. loved by the students. W’e thought As a progressive Dairyman desiring to secure maximum profits from Vote 335 X NO —Grange Income Tax Bill. that Friday night was ours for a my milk herd, I realize the necessity of adhering to an organized bit of recreation. Often the late Paid Advertisement. Greater ____________ schedule of care, feeding and handling. Judge McGinn of Portland was my Oregon Assn. J. O. Elrod, Chair man; M. S. Hirsch, H. J. Frank, companion when we visited the places Ira F. Powers, J. B. Yeon, R. L. down town where we bought beer. Macleay, G. G. Gund, J. H. Bur There was a rule that students should gard, W, S. Babson,- Executive not frequent saloons, and when one Committee. night President Johnson came in and 419 Oregon Bldg., Portland, Ore. caught us there. He never said a word, but next day in class he told qu«llfiraUaoe shall an* us he wanted to talk with us. And (tergo a fair, but thor ough test What I spend “Now is the time we move our he gave us a lecture that I will never HERE'S A HOT ONE on my hard must rame bees in Oregon,” says H. A. Scullen. forget. He told us that a man back to me at a piufll bee specialist of the experiment sta could not drink and get an education. A doctor rushing to a hospital to tion. “We do not move them dur After that fine talk we were his ad operate on a patient, was delayed ing the winter. If it is not conven mires for life. by his car breaking down. He man ient to move them now they are left “Then once I went on a camp fully cranked, but she refused to until spring. If they are moved a ing trip with him and he endeared start. Deciding that the bus was distance less than two miles they are himself to me then, for there never month«, whenever poo- cible. I «ball cuppty just dead from old age—he hadn’t thoroughly aroused and disorgan or a truer friend,” Mr. Scott de my hard with a eoo I. had a new one in six years— he ized by pounding on the hive and clared. clean, ou tel da re .ting walked to the nearest state road to smoking. This is to induce them My first «tap should “Who were some of my class place, where they may ba tha seiaction of a hail a car going in his direction. to make new observations when mates? Well, I have forgotten ehow their rude In trua type herd sire• - peace and ruminate on Down the pike came a beautiful, leaving the hive or many will re most of them but there was Thomas a selection which the hlcMinse of belog puring, shiny new Packard hitting turn to the old location. Placing Cader Powell, of Portland, 80, and should always com a pnnlihr rather than mand great earo and softly on all eight as she swerved grass or weeds over the entrance Anne Whiteaker, of Eugene, 81, and a parasita. good judgment. down the hill. Answering the doc also helps.” Al. Powell and Chris. Workman." tor's hail, the car stopped and the The main student activities were -------------- o-------------- doc leaped in. And lo, and behold, those connected with the two socle- The “Dolman” sleeve is good this i ties of the University, the Laurian the driver was a man who owed him five hundred for an operation on > fall. A dark dress is brightened up and Eutaxian literary organizations, his wife over two years ago. What and changed by inserting this type Mr. Scott said. When they met it each man thought for the next few of sleeve in contrasting material was usually for a debate. miels is a difficult piece of guesswork, Figured metal brocade is especially “I remember one night there was A dirty eon di lien like that pictured here cheli never pre- but the fact is that neither said much attractive with black or navy blue a debate on woman suffrage, a rad Proper «election of dem« vail in my herd. Bather than also will bring It* own material. Cilia, curry »nd hruah end- —just sat. Naturally. ical subject in those days. My grad ily, I cheli dip and qutehlv reward« tn more milk, «lean thoroughly by wiping with father had given me the keys with batter milk and belter a damp doth. which to lock Deady after the de animate. « bate which I did, not knowing that Mrs. Robert S. Dean and another Tha comfort of th« girl were left in the building. Late animal 1« important. I at night Dr. Condon got to worry Thorough cleaning ing over where the girls were and aided by periodical walked down on the campus. He clipping about fianke, IS THE KIND YOU WANT udder a aid under- let them in and the joke was on me ■nd no milk- Ini within an Unes during stable more than on them,” Mr. Scott hour nt t—ti month« and al! over AND THE KIND WE DO smiled. the body when turn part of the ing out in th« epring which * chah ------------- o------------- •hall ba part of my program. enforce ri gid - Clean animal, clean milk with OREGON WEEKLY With The Equipment at our Command low bacteria count INDUSTRIAL REVIEW Good Printing WE DO PRINTING, PERFORATING, BINDING, NUMBERING, AT REASONABLE COST See Us for Anything in the Line of LETTER HEADS, ENVELOPES, STATEMENTS, CARDS, SALE AND DANCE BILLS, PROGRAMS, MENUS, TICKETS, DODGERS, LEGAL BLANKS, CHECKS, WEDDING ANNOUNCEMENTS AND INVITATIONS, MEMORIAL CARDS, LABELS, SHIPPING TAGS, ETC. WE NEVER TURN A JOB DOWN BECAUSE IT IS TOO LARGE OR TOO COMPLICATED DAYTON TRIBUNE Rainier — Contract let for grad ing 1 >4 miles streets In West Rain ier. — Portland plants paid *29,000,000 in wages last year, and products were worth »160,986,959. Sutherlin — Local cannery ships prunes in car lots to Germany and Holland. Lumber cargoes on Columbia riv er are 13.5 per cent ahead of last year's record. — Oregon's customs exports already this year are (41,297.215, against 8 18,133,270 for the name period last year. Troutdale — Best celery crop on <- .rd is grown here, with 300 cars 1 in prospect. The dairy or creamery that buya my m!1k I m u • t raluo quality and sanitation a« much aa I do. They must car ry on from the point beyond which I have no oootrol. I Tha growth In the number of cow test ing associations con- vlnoM mo that member ship In one Is a good thing. I pledge my as sociation full support and ou operation. —r-r Proper feeding Is «•oentlal. Therefore I shall always pro vide a carefully balanced ration to my herd, a« welt aa a plentiful supply of puro, clean water. Then when my milk Is bottled I ahall know I am repaid for my efforts. I ahall get more milk and more money for my milk and tho g o s p . • of dean an< hotter milk ahall spread throughout tha land. ft