PAGE TEN HEPPNER GAZETTE TIMES, HEPPNER, OREGON, THURSDAY, MARCH 25, 1937. NEWS o Lawmaking Costs O Anti-Gambling o Mining Board By A. L. LINDBECK Salem. Day by day in every way the cost of law making mounts high er and higher. A comparison of the expense of the recent legislative ses sion with that of 30 years ago shows that the costs have more than doub led in that period. 1 Whereas the session just closed will have cost the taxpayers of Ore gon between $140,000 and $150,000 by the time all the bills are paid the session of 1909 cost only $65,360. High peak in the legislative expense scale was reached in the session of 1927 which cost a total of $160,103.18. This figure, however, includes $20, 120 in expense money which the lawmakers voted to themselves at the rate of $5 a day and which was later held to have been in violation of the constitution and repaid in part. Increase in the expense of clerk hire acocunts in large measure for the mounting costs of legislative ses sions. Whereas the session of 1909 spent only $23,215.55 for clerks, sten ographers, door keepers, sergeants-at-arms and other employees, the recent session spent $63,834 for the same service, not including the cost of revising the House and Senate journals which work is still in prog ress. Incidentally the records also re veal that no session in the past 30 years has adjourned within the 40 days for which the constitution al lows the members to draw their $3 per diem. Three sessions have ad journed within one day of the 40 day limit, but the others have run long er, that of 1933 setting a record at 60 days. This session, however, in spite of its length spent only $46,990 for clerical help and cost a total of only $102,172.05, establishing a record as STATE CAPITAL 1 BAND BENEFIT j l spner Elks Hall Heppner I SarJbwdby Apirol 3 I Elmer Steele and his Swing Band J HI 75c the couple 3 KSjS ,.,M!!m.i!!mn:m ' ' " ' f (SflS jsKv) " " ' ""' ' 1 ' ' " BScs Herman, the Emu SAN DIEGO . . . The world's first incubator-hatched emu is snapped right after emerging from his sheik at the local zoo. Herman belongs . to a race of wingless giants from Australia who are second cousins, tv the ostrich. the least expensive session since 1919. The following table shows the du ration of each session for the past 30 years together with the total cost and cost of clerk hire: Ses. Days Total Cost Clerk Hire 1909 41 $ 65,360.88 $23,215.55 1911 41 67,764.46 25,766.57 1913 51 79,862.85 33,219.95 1915 41 68,416.03 31,569.50 1917 43 80,226.99 36,152.50 1919 46 97,780.38 42,118.00 1921 45 110,641.07 46,132.00 1923 46 106,773.93 44,385.00 1925 46 122,371.74 50,041.00 1927 46 160,103.18 58,322.50 1929 50 140,103.18 61,617.50 1931 54 134,811.30 .66,157.75 1933 60 102,172.05 46,990.00 1935 59 116,572.80 59,992.50 1937 57 150,000.00 63,834.00 Includes $20,210 voted as legisla tive expense but later held un constitutional and repaid in part. Estimated. Two members of the state parole board W. H. Treece of Portland and Floyd L. Utter of Salem resigned this week in protest against the ac tion of the state senate in killing the new parole program. Governor Martin does not expect to appoint their successors before uJly 1. W. L. Gosslin, secretary to the govern or, is ex officia a member of the board. All members serve without pay. The proposed parole board measures would have created a full time chairmanship at $3600 a year and allowed the other members of the board $10 a day for the time ac tually served in performing their duties. The Martin anti-gambling bill which was left on the table in the House whqn the legislature adjourn ed sine die took its place on the stat ute books along with all of the other legislative acts which Governor Martin did not veto, Attorney Gen eral Van Winkle held. This is the measure against which the governor exercised his right to veto the emer gency clause. When he sent the bill back with his veto message it was laid on the table and left there. In his opinion the attorney general points out that the House had be fore it for consideration only the governor's veto of the emergency clause. The bill had already passed both House and Senate and was in the hands of the governor for his attention prior to being passed on to the secretary of state and a place on the Oregon statute books. Since the legislature did not override the governor's veto of the emergency clause the veto Stands but the rest of the bill remains intact and will become law after the lapse of the 90-day waiting period unless the referendum is invoked in the mean time. Opponents of the Carney bill out lawing slot machines who seek to smother the measure under a "cloud" of irregularity, appear to be due for still further disillusionment. These opponents were quoted as viewing the bill as invalid because it failed to contain certain amendments al leged to have been written into the mm Across the Plate I it if Jr. 7C1T. - PASADENA, Calif. ... Here we have a worm's eye view from between the catcher's legs as Gale Wolfe, rookie pitcher for the Chi cago White Sox, winds up for a practice throw across the plate. ' measure by the House. Legal lights around the state house make light of this contention and point to a supreme court opinion written 40 years ago in support of their posi tion. In that opinion in the case of McKinnon vs. Cotner, Mr. Justice Bean held that an enrolled act, signed by the proper officers and filed in the office of the secretary of state will be held to have been enacted as enrolled though the legislative jour nals show that in its progress thru the legislature an amendment was adopted which is not in the enrolled act. Which would appear to settle any dispute on this point. , Either the Portland city police are not so vigilant in their pursuit of drunken drivers as are members of the state police or the police judges of the metropolis are more lenient with offenders than are the magis trates of the rest of the state. At least records of convictions, for drunken driving would so indicate. During February only one motorist had his driving permit revoked by a Portland court whereas in the rest of the state there were 34 revoca tions for drunken driving. And ap proximately one-third of the mo torists of the state are to be found ( in the city of Portland. The legal, mining and banking in terests are all represented on the newlv anDointed state mining board. W. H. Strayer of Baker is an attorney and as a member of the state senate helped to draft the measure creating the new board. Albert Burch, of Medford is a nationally known min ing engineer and E. B. MacNaughton of Portland is president of the First National bank of Portland as well aa a civil engineer with a considerable knowledge of mining. B. F. Irvine of Portland who has declined reappointment as a member of the state board of higher educa tion will continue to serve until his successor has been named probably next month, according to Governor Martin. Irvine has been identified with higher education in Oregon for ' the past 39 years, first as a member of the board of regents of Oregon State college, and for the past eight years as a member of the unified board of higher education. Employers in 27 different classi fications will enjoy reduced rates of contribution to the workmen's com-, pensation fund as a result of an or der issued by the Industrial Acci dent commisison this week. The re duction in rates was based upon the accident experience of the industries , in the 27 classifications. Mrs. Bonnie Cochran entertained Mr. and Mrs. Louis Marquardt and son George, Mr. and Mrs. Ollie Wil liams and Tom Craig of near Lex ington, Mrs. Conrad McNamer, Mrs. Ruth Stevens and Mrs. Lucy Rod gers at a birthday party one day this week. The New York world's fair will open April 30, 1939, the 150th anni versary of the inauguration in New York City of George Washington as president of the United States.