Image provided by: Scio Public Library; Scio, OR
About The Scio tribune and Santiam news, consolidated. (Scio, Linn County, Or.) 1917-1919 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 5, 1918)
• • A* ■* - ' prnaeeuted at the present time. THE SCIO TRIBUNE | fully Hut there is more glory ahead for IMl'KIl KVKRY TH V MOA Y BY T. l . tN.'OGU. inno» ani » mor Entered at the poetoffice at Scio. Oregon as second class matter. aonm MPTRiN. in aovancr AT KNI» or YKAR 111 MONTHS $1.50 i ;r. 76 AiiverrwiNG rat » i»eal advertising, per line He Display advertising, per inch 15c Display advertising, long time, see manager. Extended marriage or death notices per line 5c special rates m long time display advertising. THE WAR SITUATION. / taxpayer— just to give special and When Oregon abolished capital D. P. Mason Accepts. technical education to a very small punishment a serious mistake was our doughboys The American reg- percentage of <»ur boys and girls. mad«- especially In such cases as doe-1 David P Mw»n of Albany, decid iments which have won their spurs Anyway the present normal college perad» Bennett Thompson who is ed to accept the |»>-mocratic nomi when associated with English and at M<>nm<*uth is not overloaded with . exp«-« ted 1» desperately n-esst cap- nation for state treasurer. Though French troops are being returne«! t«»‘ students. If thia eoll«*ge to not en- ' lure. 11 <ui he been hanged. which not a candidate his name was writ the immediate command <>f General «»ugh to educate teacher« for our hr richly deserved, the life or lives ten in at the primanes in May. He Pershing Their English an«l French' public schools, normal departments of g-wid men might be saved. When is a pioneer Albany druggist and is comrades have no doubts about the ■ could )»e established at both Corval a man forfeits his life Iwcausc of the oldest living past grand master Yankees making good. They hav«- lis and Eugene colleges at compare wilful murder there is small show in point of service of the Masonic had the baptism of fire, they have i tive small cost which would »upt>lv of reforming him into a law abiding grand longe of Oregon. made good. Troops now m train all teachers required. There is no citizen and the *af«*sl protection ing and yet tn lie trainoi will be reason why technical knowledge of which can he given society to the sent to France as rapidly as ships’ teaching cannot lie embraced in the rope. Th«- sickly sentimentality can carry them and in a few months curriculum of out two big colleges ' which c tused the banishment of the DR A. Cs. PRILl- General Perilling will command a as well as that of civil engineering, death |enalty is akin to the pacifist Pluicias aii Sortees larger army than any other Amen «ienttotrv, pharmaev. etc. spirit which would submit to natirm- can general of history Anyway the state pubic school» do al insult ami injury rather than g«> (alls Attended | General Pershing commands the' not get the benefit of the norma) . to war. As long as the world must Day or Night southernmost sector of the western ■ train««) teacher which she ought A be ruled by f«irce desperado nation» »TO ORE. It is also the sector very large percentage of the y«mng a* well as Individuals must be pun , battle line. closest to Berlin. When the final men and ladies which the stair cdu tahrd until it hurts, and when it to drive to Berlin is <m why may not cates for trarhers never enter a demonstrated that a nation or indi- \ our American boys lead the march «chool room in the capacity of tea- They have proven their valor on ev <-her, Also many of those who take ery field, and what has proven true up teaching as a life work go to of those who have been in the fight other slates for work This is hard ing will prove true of the luiiaiicv ly fair to the taxpayers who support Therefore whv should not th«-troop« the normal college and who depend of the trading democracy of th« u(x>n the public schools in which to World l»e given the post of h-in-ir ini educate their children The young fighting for (he iwriietuity of dem- Iman or woman who enjoys the state's «jersey? We American» are not , bounty at th«-normal school should afrai«t tn tru»t them l<» carry Ok) b" required to t«-ach in the schools (»lory to the castle of th«- Hoh«-nznl- of Orig<>u for a state»! number of lerns W<* kn«>w they will bring th«- pears flag back unsullied. However the normal graduate to It to generally believed that tier- n«»t always a snceeiaful teacher, an«l many will be on her kn«*e« begging transversely men and women who for (»race within the next few have never «i-n the inside of a nor- months We hope this expectation . mal college are splendidly successful d«*s not miscarry General Foch is In fact the succrssful teacher to pursuing the same plan adopt«-d by born, not made. While an under General Grant in th«* winter and standing «if normal methods are of spring of |H65 That 1» to »ay to 1 great value to the Isirn teacher in Every American citizen who love* hia country anil her institutions feels greatly elat«-«l at the progre»* of th«- allie«l trtxips over in J- rance and Bel gium They f«*el that the la-ginning of the end of th«- great war hasla-en Ngettod and that when the final bat tie has br«-n fought a je-a«v will be made which will protect the democ racies of the world and tn insure th«» right of humanity in general a place In the world where the home and personal rights of the people will give the enemy no rest nor time tn his work they ar«- of small value to not be molested. The buccimui which is now being recuperate, but to k«-ep everlasting- he or sh<* who has no natural fitr.es« resiled by the m !I i «-«1 troops ia due to Iv pound in* him until he to finally for teaching M —U taxixvers have their minds two cause« the entrance of Amer worn out. Long before Berlín i» ‘ reached the Hun army a* a fighting fi*«-d as to how they will vote on the ica in the war an«l the selection of a unit will have l>e«-n destroys! and normal sch«»ol measure They kn«-w generalissimo to command all of the that destruction seems m>w I b> have and feel that the »late college has armies. tiecome a serious burden Heavier It to uow an admitted conclusion j begun.' Wh< n the war 1» «»ver ami our than should be imposed upon the by the allied nations that without America's help in food, munitions Yankee boys c«»mc back victors there taxpayer and Ins or her vote will lie and man p<>w«*r the war would have should l>e another grand match of “No." Only the (M-ople of Ashland been lost to Prussia. Then* ia no victory a« in 1846, down Pennsylva slid of Eastern Oregon who hope to It secure the location of the school doubt but what the tremendous en nia avenue in Washington city within their midst will vote "Yes ” ergy now being manifested by the would lie the grand«-*! march of all They want a high school built and American people has instilled hope time in which English. French. Ital suppirtcd by the state This to the and courage in the hearts of th« ian and Belgian regiments should real meat of the eocoanut. It would lie a fete English. French and Italians And participate. worthy of one crossing the ocean or as these nations have become en The fourth liberty loan and the continent to see democracy wearing couraged with America In the war. registration of men 1H to 46 inclu Germany and Austria have bemme the crown of victory sive is apt to so aliaorb the public discouraged and have lost hope of mind that little interest will be man winning. ifested in state and county polities NEW NORMAL SCHOOLS Hut even with America in the war. Yet it is vitally important that we there could not be the nrceaaary go on w i^h our public housekeeping One of the measures «u tun it ted by team work on the ¡»art of the var and be unusually careful in the our last legislature In a houm* Joint ious armies without one central head resolution to the people *u the au housekeepers we select. We want or commander. By cotnmon consent thorization to build two normal to keep the home fires burning, both General F«»ch of the French army, We want to schools. one in Southern Oregon and public and private. wa« selected. The present success one in Eastern Oregon, each to cost show our victorious boys when they of the allied armies in driving the return from over there that we have not more than $125,000 Huns back towards the Rhine shows not twen slackers in running the that the selection was not a mistake. ’ Several P**™ •<■» Oreg-m was home machine pending their atieence. curse«) with four normal schools But let us not assume that the war So while we must buy bonds and is over because of the uniform and They had been siioped in on the must register if within the prescrib SDleridid success of the sllied arms. state with the understanding that ed year numbers, let us not over Theie are a great many battles to but a trifling sum of money would look the importance of selecting the be fought in which the lives to be be required from the state for their very best officials from the candida sacrificed fills one with horror. Yet support and that the several locali cies offered We need the best of the Drice must be paid whatever the ties whereat the schools were located ficials now as never before and elec coat may be. There is but one con would care for the support. After tors should use their best judgments clusion thinkable -democracy and the schools had been foisted onto the at the November election regardless state the local support for some rea civilisation must win. of uartv fealty. We want men and When American troops first land son failed to materialize and the women fur officials who are efficient ed on French toil it was advised that state soon found that with the four and whose patriotism is without the regimenta be brigaded with normals, the university and the ag question _______ French and English seasoned troops. ricultural college, it had overload««) They, the French ami English gen itself with colleges Chautauqua* are all right. Thev The final result was that the leg ars educative and replete with ar erals, were afraid to trust the Am ericans as a unit on the fighting islature refused to appropriate mo tistic pleasure and in normal times line General Pershing submitted ney for the support of the normals are worthy of a liberal patronage to this lack of confidence. He was and as a consequence they literally But in war times when the people not afraid to submit the American starved to death. are called upon by (he government boys to any required test What is the result? To the Rainbow division belongs the glory of wresting the in itiative from the Huns. This army of untrained Americans hurled back the crack German veterans on the Marne and initiated the offensive for the allied armies which haa been and to being vi The building of normal schools at Ashland and at an Eastern Oregon point, probably Pendleton. The Tri bune thinks is unwise and unfair to the taxpayers of the state. We are now paying out a very large sum of money annually to support our state colleges so large a sum that it haa grtsvoua borden to the f and war accessoriea. lhev are ill-; timed. The gentlemen and ladies wh«> furnish entertainment should either g<> to war or engage in occu pations necessary to win the war. Scio will adjourn the chautauqua business until the Hun is driven to his lair or destroyed and the war to won for vidua) is a menace tn other nations or aociety the Mosaic law of an eye' for an eye seems the only remedy. Oregon will yet be compelled to re store the death tensity. It ought to he overwhelmingly evident to old .Kaiser Bill that the war is lost to Germany ami that to continue the same until the last ditch is conquered is sinitdy to sacrifice his subjects He certainly now knows that the only way in which to stop the war is unconditional «ur reoder of the German armies, li.- could probably get (tetter terms now than later on. A. K. Randall Vice Pres. E I>. Mvers. < a birr Ikies a general banking business, receives deposits subject tochers, pays , interest un Urne deposits, sei's travelers checks and drafts, ami makes collections. MllNKERSandUEST SCIO STAGE If print paper. inks, etc., soar ST Aliti Mi l TS ALL TRAINS much higher country newsj»a|»er» lx-aves Scio Postoftice will be forced tn aus|>rnd or else tn at 7:10 a ni aixi 6:00 p in for West Scie dou'.tle up rales New»|»apera have and 1245 pm for Munkors been much slower to increase prices than merchants ami lal»or But they will have to join the procession else Notary Public ana quit busmens R. SHELTON Cunceyensor Oregon is rapidly becoming the leading wood ship building stale of the Union. Her ships will soon be at every port in the world Abstracts of I itle Examined KIO OREGON Sanitary Market The Station Mail has changed hands. Alexander and Daugherty retiring and Charles S. «'lark as tin- new proprietor. FRESH MEATS Cleanliness —American The Lol ol the Slacker. I The slacker who has any remain ing doubt» ax to the universal con tempt in which he is held will doubt no longer if h«- will read the letter of the provost marshal-general of the United States Nor is this all. The machinery of the war depart ment for the detection of those wh<- shirk their duty is lemg perfected to b degree that bides ill even fori those who have thus far escaped the I dragnet. Gt'\ McKNIGHT. P rofriktor Morrison & I.owe UNDERTAKERS Calls Attended to Promptly Dav or Night OREGON H. C ROL.OFF AUCTIONEER Remaining at home, the slacker to sure to be caught. fl«*emg. he faces, W atkruhi O rmx » n the taunts and jeers of a contempt a r D. Na. I riauaa IZs Swaat II< mm uous populace wherever he may lie It ia not likely that he will tie able . Sale dates arranged for at 'rhe Scio to get a paaspirt for a Voyage across Tribune Office. Scio. Ore. the Atlantic; over the border on the north and south there is no asy lum I c. C. BRYANT for him Canada will invite him to submit to its draft law or go away from there .Mexico, none too ATTORNEY AT LAW friendly to the United Slates, has even less use for him. Even the i»! S New First National Bank 1-ldg wealthy ones who have ««tablished a I ALBANY OREGON kind of slacker colony in Mexico City are completely isolated Aristocrat and peon alike regard him as less than the dust beneath their feet. A few thousand men without a country who are being smoked out by the present crisis have the pr >s- Uur twenty vear rural credit plan peel of a whole lifetime of misery a1 ,oan,n« money to farmer» helps . . _ _ t , .. .„ . you to g*t get out out of of debt. debt, Under our before them Tl.ry will never tie . __ . .__ .. TOTAL amount form of loan the TOTAL able to rehabilitate themselves in the uf mtere.t paid during its ENTIRE favor of their neighbors and former period of twenty years, is actually friends. The day will come when less than 5 J per cent interest. they would gladly give their lives to Write us for booklet. remove the stigma, but it will come HEC KER A BEAM AgenU too late. Their declining years will 133 l.yon St be one long tragedy of vain regrets. Agricultural Credit Corporation of Oregon Albany, Oregon ♦ 3