Heppner herald. (Heppner, Or.) 1914-1924, March 16, 1920, Page PAGE TWO, Image 2

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PAGE TWO THE HEPPNER HERALD, HEPPNER, OREGON Tuesday, March 1 6, 1920.
Dread LiKe Mother "j - ' jfe
Used to Mahe IUHFIi I
Qtar : -as
You can have it if you use our famous
White
Flour
For Your Baking
We have just received a car load of Spring
Beardless Barley for Seed
We pay highest cash prices for
Hides, Pelts and Furs
Heppner Farmers
. Elevator Co.
When your Plumbing goes
Wrong
Phone
Us
TUP T ii W-
El. J ifd Wi
A.
Wo make a specialty of quick repair work, keep
ing always ready the materials and men for im
mediate service.
If you have new work that you wish us to figure
on we will he very lad to suhmit prices.
( ur work is guaranteed to give yon perfect satis
faction and if you are not pleased in every partic
ular we will spate neither t hue nor money to
make it riht.
Peoples Hardware
Company
rrm
We Keep a Record
For You
om or 1 111 tvru.ii 01 11 w i. 11 wk
iimiM I mi 1 rr iiir 1 1 if h:nsi.
I lo ; ( ol:il It ON I III IUMiK Ol 1 III! IUk
i iiiwi 1 n wini oi it uvni r is 111 1 .
oi:i III Ulll II ol MU II I ( I II Ml.
I ssll.
Mill llltoIlK Ol II N HtnW ill I.UI l
u 1 1 .
I III. IIWK Mil I III I I I M II Til MWI o K
IIWMM. Ill MM s.
Farmers & Stockgrowers
National Bank
HKIM'NKK, OREGON.
An Appeal In Favor of Millage
Tax for Educational Institutions
(Continued from last week)
Classroom conditions at the college
and university are almost impossible.
U it; natural that they should be when
it I;-, remembered that the buildings
of I!' 13 were even then insufficient,
and that the number of students has
increased ten times faster than class
room space. Out of the dozens of pos
sible illustrations there is room in
these two pages for one or two only.
At the university the sciences have
the laboratory and classroom facili
ties sufficient for an institution of
about 700, instead of one of 1745.
The university library was built when
the studentbody numbered 400, and
has study facilities for 211 at one
time. At the Agricultural college
students are shifted all over the
camuuB to find room at all. then are
constantly crowded Into wholly un
suitable quarters. The teaching ef
ficiency of the two institutions Is fast
beinc broken down by lack of class
; rooms and laboratories.
The cost of living has risen prob
ably about DO per cent, in Oregon
since 1915. Faculty salarles'at the
! university, college and normal have
I advanced about 20 per cent, since
that time. The result has been
I steady loss to the state from its best
j faculty material. Teachers cannot be
i expected to stay on indefinitely out
of loyalty when they '.r.ive to borrow
from banks, or dip Into previous sav
ings to keep their families supported
At 111' agricultural college alone
there hit v' been 4". faculty resigna
tion!! sir.ee July 1!'lf. Sumo go to
tin b;n"i her el' ir.du-tiy l!) which
thiy ;ivo speiilalii'ts. for ore of the
,-:e.:t Vrrr.ns of the world war war
the unrealized value of ti e technical
t'c.lnlti" of t'.ic ui.ixersitv and college
profit. -or. Others go to states th
have .heady met the crisis !n their
hl-her educational Institutions by
providing mine adequate funds
Yet it Is vitally Important that
many of these faculty members tie
kept In the Mate, and in partieulr.r
the technical specialists. I'lifes"!
uf agriculture, horticulture, dairying
animal husbandry, education am!
child Muily, Join nnlism. co nn. erce
engineering. tureMiy, and sue.i prac
tlial biamhcf come In their hlghes
! worth III a Mate only after year of
pel vice. New men cannot learn Ore.
gun In a season nr two.
Higher education pills dollar Into
the poihels of thousand of Oregon
i ltUi ii. The le.it of the ugi li lilt mill
rnlli-gc In turn .iMiiK the grain output
per acio he all n tid.l. d mole to th
ne;-!th ot i:e::i n for i ach )ear than
t'.ie entile coM of higher fd m at inn for
the p. ime e;tr. .' has the work of
I he college ill ledilclllg the fllltl pelt
Sn has Its achievement In lalsluK th
i -k'i. Living iiveiawe and in Imprmlng
the iHcMmk. In II less Msllile but
no less dlri-i t way the unlM-islty n
the normal me making their rnntrl
bullous to the wealth Pf the st.iU'
Hither education I al'-mmi
.ie.iir.si aii.uciiv on the one hand, and
iu-.nn'-t aO'tiMiaiy mid lemtion
! the other. Nearly all the inventions
i that helped win the war were contri
butions of college professors or college-trained
men. Educated men and
women produce more and save more
The arrival in the business and indus
trial world in the last fifteen years of
a great number of young men of
broad university training has helped
make America the business and in
dustrial leader of the world. It has
helped bring the worker and the em
ployer closer together, and to im
prove the social and financial posi
tions of the former. Higher education
in Oregon has been one of the strong
est factors in bringing in settlers to
populate a vast region that at the
present average only nine persons' to
the square mile.
Assessed valuations, in Oregon us
ually vary from one-third to two-
thirds of the so-called "cash valua
tion," which In Its turn is generally"
lower than the "asked price." A man
paying on $1000 of assessed valua
tion would have $1.26 added to his
annual statement. As the prevailing
tax levies run, including1 the special
levies for roads and towns and local
schools, his increase would usually
range from one twenty-fift'.i to one-
fortieth.
That is, it would add from two
and one-half to four per cent to his
annual taxes to have the agricultural
college, the university and the normal
of his state placed on a footing that
ould let them remain the equals of
the higher educational institutions of
Ighboring and middle west rtates,
nd make it posrble for "aim to edu-
ate his boy and girl at home, with
out goln-c to the far greater expen;";
if ( iidlng them ir.vav from the state. !
Iiivigiro youn vlf to be res pon.jibie !
or the earn Ins on of higher educa-i
ion in Ore-on. The in; -tit '.Minns for
vhieh you h::ve this responsibility,
have been creut' i! by the people for
education of th.lr boys and girls.;
or the spread of good citizenship, for
lueation of the republic's free InMl-
i i
tutlons.
'impose that ;eu have been pio-
vided by the people with what they
expected r.t the time would be an r.de-
liiate tnillnge income. Tnexpectedly
fn t lifin and to you. however, the In
come fail to meet rrowth, fail to
meet the linlorseen condition cre
ated by a world war. In fact, the In
come Mand almost still.
Meanwhile yirtir rust begin to go
up. up. Ttiev itouiiie in even year.
Your dollar become worth 4 5 rent
of their old buying power. Your
building aie depreciating. Your
1'Hiiipment I weiring out.
And. on top of I' your student
nrtillnic lit lumps ime liu'iilnil hiI
fifty irr rnl.
Wmild )ou close up our donrs'
Or would yod let your whole educa
tional tem break down?
Or would you i frankly befnu
the people, make the fart known to
them, and ask for the Incieusi In In
come that ha been niH-eary In every
other activity.
U ou would do tht last. It I then
your consistent duty 10 ote for Ihr
Higher Kdiicatlon.il Tat Art.
Our line of Men's Dress Shoes, Florshiem Brand,
cannot be surpassed. They insure you style and com
fort. We also carry the famous Endicott-Johnson Brand
in both Work and Dress Shoes tkat give you
value for every dollar invested.
LOOK OVER OUR LINE OF WOMEN'S AND
CHILDREN'S DRESS AND SCHOOL SHOES
Sam HugKes Co.
real IVY
Buy Wheat Land
and Prosper
I now have a fine list of choice Wheat
and Stock Ranches to select from, but
they are going fast. Now is the time to
buy and get ready for summer fallowing
Easy Terms and Fair Treatment
E. M. SHUTT
The Real Estate Man
Up-stairs in Court House
WJ
ror
One years' subscription
to the Heppner Herald
For $2.00 f
on
Tht HofnbocW.
Th hen. bis k. Hueiiie.l In J and
Used Up to the rlee i.f the cUtitei'llth
iii.lurv, ttiis tie listed text l"il of
Accommodating Lightn rg.
S 'liiellnii llgh'tiltij; .ei?,irm nrticr
ininlrnl freak. It Ins tm-n ns-nrdid
that n t-rtnlti limns mi In Wales bail
II iM. i.iiiry b.s... , thin shib ll"w 'r'" n? I'k-M.THHk-. wm.-n savci
ef ,:,rd.".. whs .inered w'tb piintl- 'be . r..llt the tMul.le of llMln( N
tn.i l. on wt.l.h n Hie prlhliiu.' A flrr! The ihiiniiiT was stru.k mid the
Ibiti b..t of Iran. pi.r.-iit nm li..r. I f'le' li-bl i'l "lie ef the gratis n
kept . it in.ii.ture ! Itf'd ed.
I
lb- 1.
rem t .
Wifk. I
i .t u ,n ef l n X. I i
li.il'i il.iliip If le'l f.
i til "til ike ' It hi.. I II.
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I bll.k. t nil eer t. p Tl.ke it HIT
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j liffl.Tt' H. Hi.- lie I -I. pi). I J.u II llll'l II
lllte !').
Crbtt'l il'Omtr,
Th At no an .it '. i I ' i -e a rt.t-
bell in n I ar.-iei-'.-r I ;t .!rt . fnr
um'ber It I" w I , I ' . b.it wl,.n r.i n l
1 i.pprnn. tiinit red '("'ts npsrar en It.
! ,(1.0 wIllO l-Ves.ltr lll..lsllir i in tbo
i ilU't'b'f l ls lir rI '! I'lrf.
Choice Cuts of the
Best Meats
EVERY 1 IOUSEWI FE WANTS TO SERVE THE
best in Mfat to her family.. She can be assured she
is !uin; s it -ho b'.n htr M-at ;i ihj, s,(,., which
tii..rniity with m...!vrii iiutho.h of
i ci'tiilucttil in ft
-anitarv tnaikilin
Central Market
McNAMER S SORENSON. Propi.
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