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About The Monmouth herald. (Monmouth, Or.) 1908-1969 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 3, 1922)
i O 1 I . "a te s original sheets for following years i Hazel Bursell Makes 1919 1920 1921 Obod EDUCATORS HIT THE SCHOOL BILL 1922 Hazel Bursell, ’22, a graduate in (6 mo. ) home economics, in charge of a de Lights 0 >83-1.14 $708.76 $900.00 . $439.68 partment on the American Fruit Interest . 127.80 288.30 300.00 333.33 Growers' magazine, been highly «»College o Heads of National Re- f !'•• '*.1 ;• t;f.:l 02.00 552.00 850.00 425.00 ommended on her has work that Recorder 148.48 141.58 180.00 90.00 publication, according to a on letter Marsha! 234.00 327.93 600.00 300.00 received today. The letter was pute Score So-called Edu Treasurer 36 00 cational Measure. 36.00 36.00 18.00 from C. I. Lewis,* now managing Health Officer 15.00 15.00 25.00 12.50 of this, magazine, to k. J. Active »teps are beiug taken by Attorney 84.50 f 100.00 58.70 editor McIntosh, professor in industrial opponents of the so-called compulsor> Tax Lc\icd 4602.36 4»'vN 38 4863.38 ’ournalism. education bill, which will be on the ... Bursell „ ,, , November ballot, why to Inform the voters j Library fund State of Oregon 100.00 Miss was well known as of their rtfa#oni thU proposed !*. C >unty of Poik ss. Total $5155.18 a writer and editor while in college. *hou!d not pass. Various Protestant City of Menn oulli Estimates of Receipts: in home economics and denominations having vital interests i, J. J. Williams do hereby cer- Dray license $50. She majored ..... . , courses in . . Indus- . . at headquurler, stake have established iify that I am the duly appointed Rent m addition took on the fmh floor general o( tht. 125. and acting recorder of said city, trial journalism. She was women’s I Consolidated Securities building, Port Total $175. and that the foregoing estimates Dated this 24th day of October, editor on the Barometer staff, ’22. lanJ original -heets for the years 1919- 1922. . From 1Uerature this office being dtssein- editor of . .. the n Co-ed , r, Barometer. 22, lnated and is lnforma„on con. 1920*1921 and the first six months O. A. Wolverton, Chairman and home economics editor on the cerning the bill. The organization is of 1 l »22, which have been prepared H. W. Morlan, Secretary. Non-Sectarian and Protestant by me, are true and correct as I staff of the Oregon Countryman. named Schools Committee for Freedom in verily believe. She was also a member of Omricon Education. W. L. Brewster, ex-clty Dated, October 27, 1922. Notice Nu and Scribe. Mr. Lewis says commissioner, and at present a wem- J. J. \\ illianns, ber of the Portland library board, is Notice is hereby given that the that her ability has bte.i recognized City Recorder. the chairman. Joseph A. Hill, prin levying board of the City of Mon and her manager has extensive plans cipal of the Hill Military academy, 1S23 Budget, City of Monmouth mouth, Oregon, will meet in the an old established non-sec Estimates of expenditures for said council chamf ers in the city hall of for her department of the maga Portland, tarian school for boys, is executive city during said year 1922, as pre said city on the 21st day of Novem z ne.—Corvallis Gazette-Times. pared by the Budget Committee of ber, 1922, at the hour of 7:30 P. . aid City on Cct iber 24, 1922, to- M. thereof, at which time and place wit:— said levying board will meet with Interest on outstanding the tax payers of said city to dis warrants $300.00 cuss the above estimates and bud Street lights 900.00 get, at which time and place any Water for fire protection 850.00 person who shall be subject to such Marshal’s salary 600.00 tax may be heard for or against the Treasurer’s salary 36.00 same or any part thereof; and at Health officer 25.00 said time and place said levying City recorder fees 180.00 board will make the city levy for Retiring outstanding the year 1923. warrants 1250.00 By order of the city council. Emergency fund 814.18 J. J Williams, City Recorder. Read your own Herald Counts— Observation Cars with comfortable chairs, wide windows and broad rear platform s: Through Sleeping Cars with latest travel luxuries; Unexcelled Dining Car cuisine and picturesque scenery will add to the pleasure of your journey. Standard Sleeping Cars San Francisco and Los Angeles y\\ ^ Privets behnsi* IffUisnc Private schools, all of which am under slate supervision anyway, am standardised, efficient, nr« NOT n menace, they tench Americas prin ciples and Ideals. Why el»»' them, as the so-called compulsory e location bill proposes to dot A shipment of 15 boxes of Hawtowns and 16 boxes of Spltaenbe-f apples from Portland to Buenos Alien aboard the steamer Want Katas may révolu lionise the movement of PeCftc aortb west apples to South America. Tht teat shipment la to determine wbethw the apples will carry to th< Argentin« without refrigeration by Pacific coast wise vessels. ________ _ „ ..-I Albany merchants will organise a chapter of the Oregon Retail Mar chanta' association. . UNFAIR And UNNECESSARY T A X against the Fair measure for the reason that taxes should not be used for purposes of this- nature. community to do the same, you can not escape your proportion of this to tax no matter what the proponants For Low Round Trip Fares, sleeping car reser- ons, train pict trail schedules schedulM or picture books, inquire of agents or communicate with of the Fair may say to the contrary. JOHN M. SCOTT to increase your now overburden- LIN E S G en era ! Passenger Agent; Portland, Ore. Therefore, vote 3 0 5 NO, so as not ¿ 1 some tax. Only the Best for m e!" declares the woman who takes pride in the hind of food she sets before her family. T A X P A Y E R S ’ LE AG U E L J. Goldsmith, Secy. 3 0 6 Platt Bldg. j She knows it doesn’t pa to wasta her good efforts and her good flour, eggs and other materials by u s i n g a n y t h i n g but R O Y A L — the best bak ing powder made. It Contains No Alum Leaves No Bitter Taste L up the bill's provisions "These comments are by unpreju diced men of tbs highest standing, who have no Internal other than t^e public Internat,” said Mr Hill "It la a good aldallgbt ot the local sit nation from unbiased sources ' W e advise the taxpayers of your Via the Scenic Sha&a Route /Q f - ^ November 3, 1922 are advising the voters here to vote California j T h ro u g h MONMOUTH. ORCOON The Taxpayers’ League of Portland On your Winter Journey to I The M onm outh H e ra ld ; $2.00 per year The city water of Eupcne is abso- 1 start immediately on the construction lutcly pure and the malady that is of the flume south of Bend, replacing now prevalent among students of the the woru-out structure now In use. University of Oregon Is not the result Another source of supply of timber of contaminated water, according to for the sawmill at Garibaldi has been Profi saor Sweets« r, head of the depart procured by the W hitney company, ment of botany and bacteriology at the which concern has contracted for 30,- university. 000.000 feet of choice pine and hem Validation by the state supreme lock situated on Kiger hill, a mile and court last week of the organization a half to two miles east of Garibaldi, and $1-00,000 bond election proceed which property is owned by George ings of the Central Oregon Irrigation Kiger of Tillamook. district will mean that the distriet can Service secretary. That the proposed bill Is causing widespread Interest throughout the entire United States and that It la drawing comment from the country's foremost educators, none of whom, thus far, has been W o n bis to its pro visions. Is the declaration of Mr Hill. Adverse criticism has been receiv ed from Nicholas Murray Butler, preai dent of Columbia university, who con eluded bis letter by saying: "ThU bill should be entitled 'A bill to make Impossible the American system of education In Oregon ‘ It Is fundamentally uu American®! its prln ciple and purpose and should be over whelmingly defeated." "The task of educating all the chil dren of America U great enough to make right thinking men welcome the co-operation of every proper private and public effort to this end.” com ments Robert E. Vinson, president of the University of Texas Harry Pratt Judson. president of the University of Chicago, says he believes the proposed law woflld "vio late fundamental rights of American cittiens with regard to the education of theft- children “It certainly looks like an attempt to give the majority of the people a dangerous power to restrict the dif fusion of truth which It wishes to suppress,'' Is the way Arthur Had- lev nresldect of Yale university, sixes »9# (Faid Advertisement)