csw—■iepouam—gcwu>maw——^^**5?* The Sentinel! One Year - Six Months submitted- this week to the state in­ dustrial development commission by Fragments of Fact and Faneg ' AH was hurry and bustle over on the city lot facing on Willard street this mprning where Chairman Bert Folsom and a crew of men were busi­ ly engaged in getting the tent for the Chautauqua raised, the platform built and the seats installed. Ray Jeub went up to Portland yes­ terday moçning to drive a new car down. Mrs. W. C. Laird, who has been visiting here since early in May, in­ tends leafing Sunday for hef Mme in Honolulu. Her sister. Miss Vesta Boyrie, will accompany her home for a visit of indefinite lehgth. Sharing of state non-property tex collections would “encourage busi­ ness in general and the location of J. M. Sturdivant, a pioneer of Coos new industries in particular in Ore­ county and resident of the Coquille gon," is the conclusion of the memo­ valley for 40 years, died Monday randum’s authors. Such sharing night at his heme at Myrtle Point, would also, it is believed by the aged 88 years. League researchers, “represent a con­ structive method of hedging against Last Saturday morning James H. return of the holocaust of property tex James, one of our oldest citizens and delinquency of the depression peri­ a prominent member of the Masonic od;” “help slow down the movement fraternity, died at his home here at of people from the cities to unin­ troubles incident to old age. corporated suburban areas;” and “help reduce inequalities of property ta» bills and benefits ' received from local government among residents of different taxing units.” Particularly available for sharing with local units . . county, school district, and city . . ’, are income texes and liquor texes, in'addition to motor vehicle and land-user taxes. The memorandum outlines a method of sharing Income taxes by distribut­ ing all amounts collected over a cer­ tain aum to local units. . Necessity for sharing state-col­ lected texes to relieve the plight of Last Saturday George Raymond Clausen and Miss Goldie Gertrude kens, J. K. Norton, Jack Bridges and Johnson, of Riverton, were married C. W. Gardner. , i i mi . i w m !■■■■■ eamp consists of 300 men and the average cost to the government Is 31000 per man per year. Oregon camps would have cost 13,600,000. Between 1911 and 1941 property taxes levied by all governmental units |ncr«ased 185 per cent, while the as- teased value of taxable proprty with­ in the state increased only 6.1 per cent, the memorandum points out. Shrinkages in local tex bases are accounted for by the removal of sub­ stantial Valuations through foreclosure of marginal properties; by depletion of timber resources; by removal of valuable classes of property from the local tax rolls, such as motor ve­ hicle property, stocks, bonds, mort­ gages, certain institutional property, by^ increasingly large etc., and amounts of federal properties not tax­ able by local governments. Tax bills in cities of oVkr 5,000 population varied in 1941 from 7.75 cents per dollar of assessed valuation in Grants Pass to 3.40 cents in Pen- (move from cities, and added to tax of improvement of administrative services will reduce high levies that primarily result from supplying governmental services which our 20th century environment requires, and which are now being financed on a tax base designed to support the lit­ nuse," the report em­ tle red I it “penny-wise and phasizfl Ky major reduction pound I iment services.” of local I inequalities in different taxing unite. In pointing out the feasibility of greater local, sharing of* state-col­ lected tex revenues, th«* Leagt»' of Oregon Cities notes that complete figures for 194U show Oregon was 30th among the states in local tax­ sharing, and test in flneftcial support given local schools. Oregon shared ony 7.8 per cent of its collections, whereas Washington, in first place, shared 39.2 per cent of its texes. Only .2 per cent of local school sup­ port came from the state in 1938. In the same year California schools re­ ceived 43.2 per cent and Washington schools 56.7 per cent of their funds from the state. Ruled out by the -League as effec­ tive remedies for excessively high property taxes were radical reduction of public expenditures and stream­ lining of local services. “No amount «S HANDKERCHIEFS y A Real Maa’« Sits. Goad ^79L.n25’ SPLIT A QUART! —I In "Par SI m Quarti«« El El El Brewed in Tacoma bu COLUMBIA BREWERIES,INC Cream O’ Coos la Cream Co., Distributor, Coquille DEALERS 1 TRAINI D MICHAN ICS 1 1 QUALI! Y MATBRIR ILS [ LOW CO ST service ail make of cars and trucks He has trainad mechanics. • . • He uses quality mata- rials. ... He performs all service operations at reason­ able rates. . •. 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