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About Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980 | View Entire Issue (May 14, 1925)
PAGE FOUK THE CAPITAL JOURNAL, SALEM, OREGON THURSDAY, MAY 14, 1925 CapitalJtJournal Salem. Oreeon A Independent Newspaper Published Every Evrnins Except Sunday Telephone 81; Kewe 82 GEO KG 12 PUTNAM, Editor and Publisher BIBLE THOUGHT FOR TODAY Hut J keep under my body, and bring it into subjection; lest that by any means, when I have preached to others, I myself should be a castaway. Corinthians 9:27. The School Problem Calling attention to the fact that the limit of taxation for higher education has been reached and that the state educa tional institutions must readjust their expenditures to meet income, as private business has to, the Oregonian comments: To what extent la the state under a moral ohlfratlun to furnish higher education, embracing all the ao-alled enrichment!, the orna ments, the enjoyable, but not indlspenuuble trills ol culture, to all who apply for them? The state is under no moral obligation to provide education beyond the high school, if that far, to any one. The theory that the taxpayer must pungle up for all the fads and foibles fostered at either the university or agricultural college is absurd. Why should the public provide anything but funda mentals in education? It is only within the last half century that such attempts have been made and the results are not encouraging. Until then, anyone desiring higher education paid for it, or laboriously acquired it by self study.- The first move to cut costs should be to place all the higher educational institutions under one board of regents to be operated as parts of one university instead of rival institu tions. Other states have successfully reduced costs by adopt ing this plan, thereby eliminating duplications and reducing overhead. The board of higher curricula should be abolished as a failure. Then further economics can be made by eliminating frills. At the same time, drastic reorganization must overtake the public school system, which cost three times as much this year as 12 years ago. Its budget of $5,256,0G0 in 1913 has grown to $15,010,433 for 1925, emphasizing the fact that the limit has also been reached in grade and high school expenditures, which now absorb 85.18 percent of all taxes. With the higher institutions, Oregon's educational system accounts for 42 percent of taxation. Readjustment and reorganization is the only alternative to unlimited taxation for schools. Our Inferiority Complex Oregon's inferiority complex is again to the fore. The Portland Rwtlty board has under consideration a resolution censuring newspapers for publicity given to the fact that it rained on the opening day of the baseball season a fact that it is asserted should be suppressed lest the prospective settler learns that it really does rain in Oregon. This same underlying consciousness of inferiority, of being ashamed of old Oregon and her climate, of aping other states of desert-like characteristics, is manifested on every possible occasion. It is apparent in the effort to side-track the pioneer nick-name of "web-foot", in the protest against the word "Mistland" as a trade-mark for our fruit and in other imitations of advertising of less favored regions. Oregon is, with her verdure clad hills and picturesque valleys, the fairest state in the union and beautiful beyond compare chiefly because of the mixture of sunshine and showers that constitutes her chief charm. No other climate could produce an Oregon and instead of making false pre tenses and concealing truth, we should blazon the facts of our summer paradise to the world as our best publicity. "She flies with her own wings", the territorial motto of Oregon, should still be her inspiration. A state upon which nature has showered such allurments should not disparage herself but imitating the go-get-cm blah of California boomers. FOUR PAVING PLANTS WILL BE OPERATED (Continued from page mo) cronsroiutH, where the road turn: south to Auburn. Connection ol stretch on Wheat- lund road at Cla.wtt creek whert a new concrete bridge was in stulled Iul summer nnd ap proachen were left uupaved. The gap to fill Ib About 600 feet. Will Connect Gn Connection of a Rap on the. Oeor rond at Pudding river whero con ditions are Himllttr to those on the Wheatland road. If foundation can he put Into proper shape tnree-rourtiw oT mile of pavement will be laid on the PriiiKle road past the 8cho.il for feeble minded by the girl Bchol to the rock crusher. Work under a.aylon paving Three miles of pavement from the end of tho present pavement east of Stuytou to a point about three miles from Mehama. One mile of pavement on Hk Turner-Marion road from the bridge over Mill creek nt Oak Tree corners south toward Marlon. Work under Sco third plant: Mite and a half of pavement from Wood burn on what Is known as the Ct:rvais cutoff from Wonil rurn to tho Pacific Mfihway. Thin fltnrtfs from the highway about two mile north of (.errata and lea da to the Woodlmrn city limits past the Layman place. The city of Wood bum plans to pave a htll mile Inside ti n city limits to meet this cutoff. This will aire Wood burn roada to the highway fruni the east and the south. Mile and a half of pavement rrmo Hubbard to Uroadacrei, com Dieting that rond. Pavement connecting the coun ty paving at Aurora with the Pa clflc highway. The county paving la the end of the Aurura-DoniilJ pavement. A new bridge la no being built at Aurora, stronger and heavier than the old bridge and the paving will go over thin bridge. Paving under the St. Paul plant: Six mile of pavement to roav taect the pavement at tU. Paul t the end of the New berg bridge. Yamhill county ha requested Mar Ion county to construct faalf a mile of pavement for them from the bridge to Newherg on the Yamhill aide. This will make a complete pavement from Woodhurn through St. Paul and Newberg to Portland. The foregoing constitutes the complete progrtim for paving this year as now outlined. The coun 1 court la stlil working on the details of the nropeed big five-year program of -which the 1925 won. la a part. The paving for this year as out lined by no means covers the work in rood building contemplated for this year, ne the work will cover n largo amount of grading and mak ing preparation fur paving during tho following four years of to five-year progrnm. The court has been besieged on every hand to etahlish market roada under the five-year program and already It linn in Its possesion more petitions for such roads than it can possibly accommodate. The court contemplates with holding any announcement of Its five-year program until efter tlr' new road laws go Into effect on May 2S. After that time it will l.o essential 'or the court to have its progrnm approved by the high way commission. Tlu court is op erating carefully no ae to-outline a program that will meet with ttie commission's apporval without nny complications or setbacks and com-, mission engineers have eauilneii the proposed work which the eourf I baa so tar tentatively decide! snouiu come tinner the Mr pro grain. When the legislature decided to leave the market road bill alone in Its main feature .It made It possible for the county court to go aueaa nun a definite plan and enough is known of it to assure an ambitious program of market rond building which can be carried out and at the same time not Inter. fere In any way with maintaining and Improving the small lateral and local roads which feed th minor commuulties. New Corporation!. The following article ot incor poration were filed yesterday with tha atate corporation department cignai i,timer company, Signa N'auon. Lane county; incorpora tors, A. J. Kroenert. Irene Kroen rt, A. H. McCurtatnf capital. $15,000. , Hotel ' Illlildtn nrru.r.Hn.. Portland; iacorporatom, Tred A. Hurgard. V. W. Lucius. llnhn n aJorrteon: ra.it Ui $25.0(1. T Elba Theater commm. In Aetorla; Incorporator. W. J Mr- Oregor, Joseph Jacobs. Kdwarrf R Gray; capital, $40,000. TODAY'S CROSS WORD PUZZLE HORIZONTAL f. Fnduly aroinulnna 1. Ao . ho t. Used to cxjiivms negation II. No 15. Itiillrniiit (lib.) 14. ItniiifxL 16. Itc-.stinjr lilioc 17. Ivvpoit (nb.) 15. IH-part IV. ;h-mn 22. .llllll-U 21. I 'poll 29. Ol-loixT full.) 2T. Itoyul KiiKlficers tab.) 2ft. AtiKlfi-Nornuiii (nb.) 2. liuir 111 Wratt-m Siberia 31. Ucclro iiimrnctlc cylinder HOW TO SOLVE TUB CROSS WORD PUZZLE Tile way to solve the Cross nrnrd Puzzle ts to mi Ua the while snuares of llie dlaizram with tha-words which surce with the aocoin imiqrliiK definitions. The ilcriiiitioua are numbered to correspond with toe numuers on toe oiatfrum. Any word defined In Ine tr-rt unoer 'HOHIOVT Al1 will licet n at Its nanibrr, auoun on the dtaeraui, and will cilund all tlu way iu inn urai ui.-ic.-h siince to inc riKiii or iiiai uuiniier. 'jnal u, the word must begin In llie squire Hint contains Its idem lf Ing num ber, and extend as far as the while snnnrrs continue unliitcrruntcrtl An. word denned under "VERTICAI." trill also brain, In the white space that cnntnlns lis number, but will extend downward as Car as uiu mute spaces ren.uin unliilcrruutcdly. OB TESTH.ItUAK'S l't .,!. K, SOLUTION IASSEMBL13D GEHAN1.UM15 VERTICAL . Assriiililitgps of war vessels I'nlK'd States (lib.) An no (IrlS mi nte Isjiliili (b.) Jiitrciiillt y Nova Nc-otla (tilt.) Vaeri In clmpplng n-nod Royal Kxetuuign (nb.) Instrument usotl In oiK'riitlng a lock To hend In rrvorenre AiiiinynHiiiH (nb.) Army Corps (lib.) Kllher 1 p p I "v p I . U 2fc I? Copyright 1934 George Matthew Adams 2.',. Single , as. Man' nickname 26. Also so. ID m u u tli (ab.) My Matrimonial Vacation byvMetDare I cauffhtigbt oC Virginia at last, in a corner of the palm-room with a woman who would have been very beautiful if she hadn't been bo aad. I made my way be tween the tables eagerly, anxious to meet her. Aa 1 paused beside them Vir ginia turned to me. "Oh, Nancy " she eald, then, to the woman. "Mrs. Jordan, this is my daughter." A photograph I had noticed the evening before, tucked away on a iesk in the Jordan library, flashed into my mind. It was 4 his woman's picture. So Jordan was the man in the case. Ah I sat there talking with Mrs. Jordan I thought of her husband as I had seen him the nisht before. Xot one of the women guests had been as pretty as his wife was. And she had charm and Intelligence as well as beauty. Yet he preferred those others one or two very gay debutantes, a chorus girl, several actresses who had very small" parts In second-rate plays and me. Was I second-rate too, I asked myself. I studied Mrs. Jordan across the tea-tahlo. It seems queer to me al ways that the old theory about beauty Isn't true. Perhaps there wan a time when It was the beau tiful woman who had everything, though they do say that Cleopatra was no beauty. But nowadays a girl who is quick-wilted and fascinating does n't have to have beauty, if she has style. And there are so many real ly beautiful women, like Mrs. Jor dan, whose husbiinds Just leave them to eit on the fide lines while they pursue somebody else through : the game of life! x I Nathalie Jordan was really won-1 derfully beautifu!, if her face hadn't been so sad. I sut there looking at her, and suddenly I re solved to step In and play Kate. After all, why shouldn't I? I felt sure that her husband didn't real ize how lovely she was. And she'd let herself be unhappy over him till she'd lost her charm for him. If she really loved him, she ought to have him back! "Oh Mrs Jordan, why do you go south?" I asked her, as sho lan guidly discussed her plans, and wondered whether to go to White Sulphur or Virginia Hot Springs or take the Mediterranean trip. "Oh Just to be doing something, I suppose," she answered. "I'm so tired of New York." "I think I could show you a side of New York that would interest you," I exclaimed impulsively. "Won't you let me try?" Virginia looked at me In sur prise, but I hurried on. "There are so many attractive places and people do play around with me a bit, Mrs. Jordan, and see If I can't make the city interesting." I could see that she didn't un derstand at all; that she wonder ed why I should take euch an In terest in what she did. But after a momen't hesitation she smiled and slowly, "Well, why not? I'll post pone my trip a few weeks, and meantime you can show me what ever you like." I wondered later, as I walked over to the hotel where I was to meet Nick, whether I had been awfully foolish. X hadn't the faintest Idea Just what I was go ing to do. But somehow I was go ing to make that Jordan man ap preciate his wife! Nick took me ot the quaintest I place sort of a cross between a I HuMttian inn and a deep sea cavern It was awfully attractive, and ae yet unspoiled because the general public hadn't discovered it. There was a Russian nobleman In charge I don't believe there are any left anywhere except ' in New York, where they all run restaurants! And a group of Russians furnish ed the music, and there were Rus sian waiters, and chefs, and bua boys. There were benches around the walls, and huge floor cushions heaped in the corners, where you could sit if you wanted to. "Nick, I love this place!" I ex claimed as we went In. "How did you ever discover it?" "It's backed by thre young bus! ness men," he answered, with a queer little smile, "and your friend Mck is one of them!" "Nick! Not really!" "Sure. Didn't I tell you that I had to have more money? I'm willing to do anything to get it. I ' lost what I wanted more than any thing else In the world because I didn't have it, and now " "Now you're going to get the money, and then get your heart's desire back again," I supplied, as we sat down at a corner table. "No, there's no hope of that, I guess," he answered gloomily. "But I'm going to get the money any way." I looked around at the other people who were dining there. It was really on interesting crowd, not at nil the usual sort that one sees on or near Broadway. Over on the opposite side of the room was one of the prettiest girls I had ever seen, dining with a rather oldish man. "Nick, what a pretty girl over there," I said; a man always thinks you're so generous if you call his attention to some other girl that way but being a blonde myself, I never bother to do it unless the other girl Is a brunette. Why take chances foolishly! He glanced at her carelessly, then turned back to me quickly. He had turned very pale, and his face had grown tense. 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