Pig Two MALHEUR ENTERPRISE Saturday, January l6l6 RESPONSIBLE BANKING YOUR BUSINESS Your business is just as important to you as John D. Rockerfeller's business is to him. Re gardless of the business you are engaged in or the size of it you need the advantage of mod ern banking lacilities such ati we furnish. We invite you to open an account with us and pre pare yourself for any unlocked for adversities that may be born of the r tv ent world's war. Total Resources over $450,000 We pay 5 per cent on money placed on time deposits with us for periods of six and twelve months OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS M. G. Hope, President I. W. Hope, Vice-President J. P. Dunaway, Cashier B. W. Mulkey, Ass't. Cashier Leslie L. Hope, Ass't. Cashier T. W. Halliday Geo. E. Davis UNITED STATES NATIONAL BANK VALE, OREGON Don't Buy Your LUMBER Before you see what we can do for you. No matter what you need in lumber and building materials, we can supply what you need, and we think we can save you money. We may possibly bomistaken about that, but it will cost you noth ing to make sure about it Lumber and service that satisfy is our motto. vAll we ask is an opportunity to demonstrate to you that these are not merely words, but facts. Let us know your wants. We also sell cord wood and coal. The Home Lumber & Coal Co. EMPIRE QREAlvrSBPARATOR jj a customer saia, inc otneraay, the creditor himself would have less security rather than more. The credi tor is familiar with liens for all man ner of taxes and improvements and looks upon the irrigation-district lien in this light rather than in the light of a mortgage prior to that proposed to be given to him. Hence the set tlers under irrigation districts, wheth er such districts receive water through Federal aid or otherwise, do not find themselves handicapped in this re gard to anything like so great an ex tent as under private methods of or ganization, or under water-users' as sociations incorporated -to cooperate with the United States in the earlier history of the Federal work. Supplemental Work, Now, suppose the project to have been completed and in operation, and suppose it is found advisable to do some additional work not contemplat ed in the beginning. Suppose it is desired to increase the water supply by additional storage, or to take in ad ditional lands to which water can be pumped, or to enlarge the capacity of its ditches so as to permit of rota tion in delivery, or to concrete the system, or to build a drainage system. Under the private plan of financing, all the lands within the project have been plastered with a prior mortgage, It becomes necessary to arrange for some kind of consolidation of the pro posed new lien with the old, or else to secure new creditors willing to ac cept a second mortgage, or one still lower if meanwhile other liens have been placed on the land. This form of security is practically unmarkct able. An irrigation district, however, holds another election after due no tice, secures an additional confirma tory decree, and immediately has moro public bonds for sale. They are simply a new issue of municipal bonds. The proposing purchasers can readily examine the district and find out whether as a whole the lands will give sufficient security for the addi tional bond issue. They examine the proposition as a single transaction without the necessity for examining each individual tract and the title thereto. I This is an enormous advantage, have come into contact with this pro blem in connection with the Okanogan project in Washington where it was proposed by the United States to ex pend additional funds, amounting to about $30 per acre. The land own ers urged, practically unanimously, to have the additional work done, but it was essential to secure a supplement al lien upon every tract in the entire project and waivers of private mort gage priorities, simply because no ir rigation-district organization had been effected. This required two years, whereas under the irrigation-district plan it would have been possible to have secured far better security in 60 days. Popular Control and Responsibility. There is a final advantage in the irrigation-district plan to which I will tion of going concerns as irrigation districts, just as provision is already fully mode for incorporation in order to provide for new development. Irri' gation, where working properly, un- questionably promotes a higher type of community than the humid type of agriculture; but where proper safe guards are not furnished by the law and the form of organization, the neighborhood quarrels are often de plorable, and, as you are aware, many a murder has occurred because neigh bors are unable to agree upon the pro per amount of water for their farms, If the minority is brought into a dis trict, whether they will or not, I am confident that a long step will be ta, ken in many of these valleys for pro. per cooperation. The use- of water on a larger scale would in many cases re sult in the extension of the area irri gated in the aggregate to thousands of acres. Future Development. Now, I want to say something of the future; how the irrigation district can be of service in further develop ment work. We are oil, I am sure, exceedingly anxious that the resourc es of the West in land and water should be utilized, and that within our life-time so far as may be. How can that work be carried forward? We all know that private enterpris es have not been eminently successful. tar too isolated nre the cases on a large scale where the original in vestor and the average original farm er have made a success. The empha- sis in this statement should be plac ed upon the word "original." As you Know tnere have been a great many receiverships, there have been a great many failures on the part of farmers, and the investors often have lost everything. Hence irrigation securities for several years past have been unsalable to a very great extent. The Federal work has not been entirely immune from fail ures on the part of the settlers in spite of the fact that no interest is being charged. Cause of Failure. Would the irrigation district or ganization and financing, if adopted, have made these private projects suc ceed? In many cases I believe it would have done so in so far as the investor is concerned, and in some cases for the original settler also, but not in all cases by any means. The irrigation district is not a panacea. The security it has to offer rests not so much ih the value of the land when the money is loaned, but in the pros pective value when irrigated by the wise expenditure of the inoney by the district. The result has generally been one of an inflated cost and in terest rate, even under the district plan. The district plan does the most for the investor that any known form of organization can do, and therefore does the best for the farmer to secure low cost and interest rates, but it has its limitations nevertheless so far as making the average original farmer successful is concerned. Those lim refer, nnmplv. thnf. nq n nnlilii- inr. pqrution provision is made for popular I its nre found for the district ns well democratic control. The electors of ns for other forms of organization in "Farmers and Dairvmen re set ting wise. They are learning how to buy machines. They consider new, easy running tne ecu pos- slblc evidence of quality. This Is especially true of nigh speed ma chines like cream separators The next thing they consider is, how long the machine has been on the market." Argument doesn't make quality, does it? A properly cared fer EHPI0E Cream Separator will start under the weieht of its crank. You can hold one ear close to an EMPIRE running at full speed and hear your watch tick at your other ear. EHNltES have been used by the fathers and grandfathers of many young farmers who are now buying EMPIRES for themselves. Stop and see the EHP1RE, or ask to have one sent out. FOR SALE INTERIOR WAREHOUSE :AIN COMPANY Vale Oregon IRRIGATION DISTRICT (Continued from pnge 0) if they fuil the public, through its laws and ofllcials, takes adequate and inevitable steps for its protection. The construction payments and interest und operation and mnintennnco charg es are thus taken care of moro near ly as a first consideration and as a matter of course than under any other plan which has been devised. Farmers' Credits. Tho success of the farmers is vital to the success of private or Federal project, and one of the great difficul ties which has ben encountered by tho water users under tho Federal recla mation projects has been that of se curing money for development pur poses during the lifo of the lien for tho cost of tho project Similar dim cutties aro experienced under the pri vate corr oration plan, and here again the irrigation district is a great improvement. Under this form of organization tho I creditor fur moro readily realizes tho actual status of tho mutter, namely, that tho lien is not, properly speak ing, n liability but rather an asset, in that thereby there is created the means for giving the property vnlue; thnt is, tho use of tho water in irri gation, and that without tho irrigation-district lien and what it means tho district run its affairs, and wheth er their success is qualified or unqual lficd, I believe they aro apt to be bet ter satisfied thon if the system were un for them even though it might be with a somewhat greater degree of competency by nn organization beyond their control. Men instinctively pre fer to do their own business rather than to have it done for them , and it is better in the long run that they houlcl do so. Men who have a vote o who shall be elected as a board of directors will put up with annoy ancos uncomplainingly over which they would make a great stir against a pnvnte corporation which might be administering tho system or write loni' letters to the Secretary of the Interior in ense it were a Government project Self-government in irrigation also has a strong tendency to promote in terest in public affairs and in various line of cooperation. Irrigation suc ceed in proportion as men work in coor -ration with one another and the dist ' 't promotes and necessitates this ver alent so greatly needed through out o country. The District for Fully Constructed Projects. T Legislature of the State of Wn 'lington in 1915 passed an act which oxpressly confers the power up on irrigation districts to organize solely for operation and maintenance purposes where tho construction work has been entirely completed. There nro n great many fully constructed projects under the private plan which are running with n great denl of friction. In some cases the landown ers at tho heod of the ditch aro using moro water than they nro entitled to, and the statutes of several of tho States fall very much short of giving proper protection, to tho end that the majority can compel tho minority to do their share of tho maintenance work and to properly provide for rea sonably impartial administration and operation of the system. Every assistance and inducement should bo offered by tho statutes of the various States for the incorpora te answer to the question: How much can the farmer stand? Can the settler struggle under the burdens existing under the project ns ordinarily financed, to wit, payment of the principal and the interest on the building cost from the start, the cost of his improvements, including house, ranch buildings, fencing and leveling nnd ditching of the land, the cost of the maintenance of himself and family, the purchase price o"f the land with interest, and the operation and maintenance expenses of the pro ject? Can the farmer struggle under all of these burdens nt the same time? I doubt it, Mr. Chairman. I doubt, therefore, if private enterprise can handle the situation except under par ticularly favorablue conditions. The investor is entitled not merely to se curity but a reasonable rate of inter est upon his money from the stnrt. Some means must be taken to allev iate the burden. Tho further development of the West, in my judgment, demands gov ernmental assistance, either State or Federal, upon a larger scale than heretofore, unless the record of the future is to be either stagnation or a continuation of toomuch of the record of the past, namely, a large proportion of cases of the failure of tho original farmer or the original investor, or both. The private method of financ ing, in my judgment, is a failure; not, in general, on account of incompeten cy not dishonesty, but on account of the fundamental weakness of the sys tem on account of the falsity of the view that tho settler can bear all the heavy burdens which I have enumerated. State Development. Now, from my merely personal point of view, tho National Govern ment is better able to conduct this work at present than the States. The State government is, after all, a local proposition and the responsibility of the government devolves upon a few men, nnd the pressure from any large irrigation project is simply tremend ous on men who nre local in their af filiations. Of course where a proposi tion Is clearly infeasible any compe tent and honest State official would be willing to render a distinctly un favorable report or take definite ac tion against the project, but the West is now full of borderline projects some of which are meritorious today and others should await tkS day of larger population and better nearby markets, but under State control . fancy it might be exceedingly diffl cult to prevent these projects from being prematurely and perhaps dis asterously undertaken. Do njt understand me to imply by any means' that the agents of the Federal Government ore entirely free from this kind of pressure, but both Congress and the Department of the Interior are able to resist local pres sure to a far greater extent than Stat. ofllcials can possibly be under ordin ary conditions. The Department of the Interior can always, with good grace, supplement sucn examination as may have been made by conference nnd inspection by men of wide exper ience who could be summoned from a distance and who would come into con ference without prejudice or favorit ism. Moreover, before States can go in to reclamation work most of them would need to put through constitu tional amendments a long nnd la borious process in most jurisdictions. Federal Funds at Low Ebb. Now, the reclamation funds of the United States are pretty thoroughly claimed for tho indefinite future, They are reduced in amount and the projects undertaken should doubtless be completed nnd the water appropri ations which have been obtained should be perfected in good faith be fore additional projects are taken up under the reclamation act as at pres ent in force. Furthermore, under the law the $20,000,000 loaned to the fund by Congress in 1910 must soon be re turned in annual installments, consist ing of half the receipts to the fund. Unless Congress makes provision therefor, the Federal Government is not likely to undertake large new de velopments at a very early date. A Possible Plan to Cooperate with Districts. I wish, however, to offer you a sug gestion as to a plan for Federal as sistance. Suppose the United States make a careful and complete investi gation of the engineering facts, the water supply, the agricultural condi tions, and all other necessities of a successful project, and the depart ment and Congress are satisfied as to feasibility. Suppose then bonds of irrigation districts not exceeding a limit set by Congress to run for, say, 40 years, bearing charges at a rate of 1 per cent or perhaps one-half of 1 per cent more than the amount of the interest, are issued with guaranty of the United States. Such bonds should sell nt a very low rate com paratively and the amount charged in excess of interest would go toward tho amortization of the principal debt, The interest during the construction period nnd for a few years of devel opment thereafter should be carried as construction cost by the sale of a larger number of bonds than the ac tual building of the works would re quire. The Federnl Government should perform tho work of construction and might nlso operate and maintain for a period of years, thus further safe guarding the project to both settlers and bondholders. This plan would be equally adapta ble to reclamation by drainage of swamped and overflowed lands all ov er the country under district organi zation. This would add sterength to the measure in Congress. Comprehensive provision should al so be made by Congress for a lien in form of districts upon public lands. Unquestionably the need of the hour in irrigation work is conservatism, Nothing further should be done in our present stage of development and fin ancing that is not placed upon a sound platform of business common sense. Tho original farmer, if he be a man of average intelligence and ability, and the original investigntor must be given an excellent chanco to succeed, I would rather see no more money spent in irrigation development for many yearsy than that he repudia tion of irrigation debts should be car ried further. The stagnation of the last few years is a just retribution for having followed unsound methods, and for success in the future we must have sound foundation I submit that the plan above out lined is conservative. It makes pro vision for the farmer and gives him opportunity as the basis of success. rhe Federal Government will be pro tected by the district lien, provided hat due care is exercised in the selec tion of projects. It is not as sweep ing ns Government cooperation under taken in development work in various parts of tho world, which I have not Mme to discuss. The entire country knows Secretary Lane's deep interest in and compre hensive grasp of this work, but I do not know what plans for the future he favors. Hence my suggestions must not be taken as representing the views of the department in the slightest T School Department UJir DirtctiM f FAT CLARE, Catr 5Ul S?toa&rt A few of the teachers seem to be laboring under the mistake that the library books arrived late this year. Such is not the case. Books that aro ordered in the spring and summer are not shipped to the county super intendent's office until tho last pi No vember or the first of December and as they come by freight they are of ten delayed on the road. The re packing and distribution of the books for the districts and there are over sixty of them means several days labor and in addition to office work is often not completed for ten days or two weeks. In view of these facts no district should expect to receive li brary books until near the close of each year. School in the Bonita District will be closed for two months on account of bad weather and the long distances the children have to go through the snow. The Cow Valley or Bonita school and Sunday School gave a Christmas program at the school house. Santa Claus remembered the children with a treat that would please children anywhere. will do their best to make record grades. - Mr. Thompson, one. of the directors in the Annex School, No. 29, was a school visitor tho other day. The Moorevillo pupils and teacher hid as their guests the peoplo of tho neighborhood Christmas night Miss Eleise Brichoux is teaching her first term of school in Mooreville. The pupils there have spelling matches Friday afternoons after recess and last week LaRue Dutcher was the champion speller. Miss Brichoux re ports Area Moore as a close second. The patrons and pupils in the Ore gon Canyon School celebrated Christ mas December 23 with a program that was enjoyed by all of the thirty peo ple present One auto containing twelve people drove twenty miles to be present Miss Iredale writes that Santa Claus is a good friend of the people in that community. The Skullspring boys and girls were given the privilege of voting on the question of a Christmas holiday and they voted to have school instead of a vacation 1 Either Miss Stuve is an excellent teacher or those are excep tional children. Of course there is a possibility that both ore true. Beu lah Baker of this school treated the school with her birthday cake Christ mas eve. This is further evidence that a splendid spirit prevails in this little school. Blanche Slayton has the distinction of making the highest av erage in the December examinations. The Beulah teacher writes that her boys and girls had a jolly time Thurs day afternoon before Christmas. They popped corn, played, games and were given a complete surprise in the form of a "grab bag" and a hunt for a gift book. Friday evening the children gave a Christmas program and the en tire community enjoyed the Christ-: mas tree. This school, along with all the others report a good deal of ill ness caused by bad colds and lagrippe. Two pupils in the McDermitt school will write in the January examina tions. These are the first children in this district to write in the State ex aminations. We hope that in another year all of the rural schools will bo sending out eighth grade graduates instead of reporting children who are' leaving school when in tho fifth, sixth or seventh grades. There is no rea son why these children in our interior districts should not receive as good training as the boys and girls who live in or near towns. Mr. Thomburg deserves considerable credit for the in terest in school work that he is de veloping in a district where such things have been somewhat neglected for the past year. The remainder of the library books have been received and will be shipped to the various districts this week. Thirteen districts have asked for examination questions for the January examinations. This is an exceptional ly large number for mid-year. School in District No. 29 closed De cember 24th for tho holidays. The teachers spent their, holidays in their respective homes, Mrs. Spaulding in Weiser nnd Miss Weir in New Ply mouth. Miss Weir writes that her pupils who expect to write in the January examinations are working hard and The two schools in the vicinity of Westfall where Mrs. Jacobs and Mr. Parker are teaching are progressing nicely. In Mrs. Jacobs' school twenty new library books, a mirror, wash ba sin, towels, etc., have been added ro centlyv The liberal patronage of a basket social given recently mado these additions possible. The children in this school gave a program, beforo the holidays. One of the features wbb a "fish pond" full of presents. This made a great deal of fun for all con cerned. The teacher's contribution was candy in choice Christmas boxes. NOTICE TO TEACHERS AND SCHOOL BOARDS In the recent convention of county school superintendents, the State De partment of Education instructed the county superintendents to cnll atten tion to the following extracts from tho School Laws of Oregon. Teach ers, school boards and superintend ents throughout the state will here after meet all of these requirements Section 84, Page 44 of the 1915 Ore gon School Laws. Teacher Must File Certificate and Contract The county superintendent shall re quire teachers beforo beginning to teach in nny school district in his county to register in his office, if they have not previously done so, their county certificates or State papers, and file a copy of their contracts, and should any teacher fail so to register his or her certificate or State paper, and file a copy of his or her contract in the office of the county school sup erintendent before beginning to teach in nny district in his county, said teacher shall forfeit to the said dis trict the full amount of salary for the time taught before said certificate, or State paper, or contract were so fil ed. The county school superintendent shall notify tho clerk of said district of the amount of such forfeiture and shall deduct the amount of said for feiture for the next apportionment due said school district The require ments of this section shall be enforc ed only by the county school superin tendent of the county in which the school building in which the teacher is employed shall be situated. Section 24, Page 19 of the 1915 Ore gon School Laws. Registration of Certificates. 1. All certificates issued by the Sup erintendent of Public Instruction shall be valid and entitle the holder thereof to teach in any district in any county of the State upon being registered an nually by the county superintendent thereof, which fact shall be evidenced by him on the certificate in the words "Registered for use in ,. .. County," together with the date of registry, and his official signature; provided, that a copy of the certifi cate or diploma duly certified by tho Superintendent of Public Instruction may be used, for the purpose of reg istry and endorsement in lieu of the original, but no certificate shall be registered in a county until the county superintendent has satisfied himself that the applicant has done the read ing circle work prescribed by the State Superintendent of Public In struction for the teachers of the State for the previous year and such regis tration shall entitle said teacher to teach in said county; provided, that the registration and reading circle work required in this subdivision shall not apply to districts of the first class; provided, further, that it is hereby made tho duty of the super intendent of Public Instruction to pre pare a teachers' reading circle course for teachers as provided for in this section and also to formulate rules and regulations governing the same.. Section 101, Page 51 of the Oregon School Laws. State Certificate and Diploma Must Be Endorsed. (11. No warrant upon the common school fund shall be drawn in favor of any teacher holding a state cer tificate or diploma, unless such certi ficate or diploma shows an endorse ment signed by the county superin tendent that it has been registered in his office, as required by law.) FAY CLARK, County School Superintendent HANDLING HOG CHOLERA State Veterinarian W. H. Lytle will give a series of lectures and demon strations on control of hog cholera and cattlo tuberculosis, at the O. A. C. Short Course, Jan. 10 to F,eb 4. He will also discuss the work of tha. State Sanitary Board'. Dlaeast of horses, with special reference to pre vention, will be considered by Dr. B. T. Simms, of the College staff, who will also give demonstrations of un soundness of horses. The main difference between hen pecked men is that some of them ad mit it THE VALE HOT SPRINGS SANITARIUM Medical Baths and Health Resort. Rooms and Board. Treatment of Rheumatism a Specialty For Information address DR. THOS. W. THURSTON, Superintendent VALE HOT SPRINGS SANITARIUM COMPANY, VALE, MALHEUR COUNTY, OREGON i