Page Six Heppner Gazette Times, Heppner, Oregon Thursday, March 6, 1941 STATE CAPITAL NEWS Another Week Redistricting Out Federal Dictation By A. L. LINDBECK Salem. As the legislative session entered its eighth week indications were that it would go into if not through still another week before it cleared the decks for sine die ad journment. Of course the lawmakers could take the bit in their teeth, throw the remaining bills out the window so to speak, and go home at the end of this week. ' It is generally agreed that no great violence would be done the state through such a procedure and there was some sentiment am ong the weary legislators for such a course. But for the most part the members of both House and Senate were for an orderly consideration of the business at hand no matter how long it might take. Still pending is practically all the major business of the session, in cluding amendments to the unem ployment compensation act, the workmen's compensation act, "big truck" legislation which is back in again in a modified form, school fund equalization, extension of vo cational schools, firemen's pension and a number of other issues. The unemployment compensation fight has been substantially narrow ed down through House action throwing out bills which sought to repeal the experience rating and seasonality provisions of the act. La bor, however, is still insisting on an increase in benefits for jobless work' ers while employers continue their fight to hold down payroll taxes. Labor is also making a strenuous fight for increased benefits for in jured workmen and their depend ents through the workmen's com pensation fund, a program to which the senate committee on industries has agreed and which will, if en acted into law, cost employers of Oregon in excess of $522,000 a year in increased contributions to this fund. While the House has passed the firemen's pension fund that fight still has to run the gauntlet of the senate. Inasmuch as this pension program will take about $100,000 a year out of the state's general fund and impose that much more of the load on to property if and when the income tax begins to lag, its ap proval by the senate is doubtful while Governor Sprague is believed to be committed to a veto of the measure if it should get as far as his office. In the senate a proposal to abol ish the Umatilla-Union-Jtorrow dis trict and transfer that senator to Klamath county met with over whelming defeat. Senator Cornett of Klamath county in support of his measure pointed out that the four northeastern Oregon counties of Umatilla, Union, Wallowa and Mor row with a combined population of only 55,000 is represented by three senators, whereas his own district comprising Kamath, Deschutes, Jef ferson, Lake, and Crook counties, with a combined population of 70, 000 has only one senate seat. The proposed shuffle had the support of the senate committee on elections and privileges and it was thought that it had the support of a ma jority of the senate members until the roll call revealed otherwise. j In the House Representative Kim berling's proposal to give each county one House seat and distri bute the remaining membership on a population basis met with de cisive defeat after that assembly had turned down a proposal by Neuber ger of Multnomah county that the entire state be redistricted on a straight-out population basis. l8L I The school fund qualization mea sure HB420 which passed the House Saturday by a vote of 33 to 25 is now before the senate for final consideration. If passed by the Sen ate and signed by the governor, who has already approved the plan, the measure will be on the ballot for voter decision at the general elec tion in 1942. Under the provisions of this measure the state would be required to levy a property tax of approximately $5,400,000 a year for support of elementary and high schools. This would be apportioned among the counties on the basis of school attendance. Most of the east ern Oregon representatives opposed the bill which would take a heavy toll from their counties for support of schools west of the Cascades. The Multnomah county delegation div ided on the bill in spite of the fact that it would cost that county ap proximately $350,000 a year in sup port of education in other counties of the state. Washington, D. C, March 6. Na tional defense has created a serious living problem in the national cap ital. In two years, at the present rate of population expansion, con ditions will be grave. The district is 10 miles square; had a population when the census was taken last year in excess of 600,000. More than 100 new, permanent residents are ar riving each day to work for the gov ernment. This is a number that will be increased as the great government machinery grows, and no one knows what to do with these arrivals. In Washington are many hotels roughly 30 or more and the influx has kept every room filled for sev eral montas. A 1,000 room hotel has not had a single vacancy since last summer. Patrons are stowed away on cots, several to a room. The peo ple who use the hotels are not gov ernment clerks; they are contrac tors, architects, cement salesmen, powder salesmen, dollar-a-year men nrougnt nere by the government and Falls at a conference of renrpsenta who do not live on $1 a year, and tives of interested agencies, and ap plication blanks have already been are located in Baltimore, 34 miles j away. Other agencies, not directly I connected with war or national de- New York or Philadelphia. There are single bureaus which are scattered in a dozen places, unable to find room to collect the branches under one roof. A bus terminal has been taken over by alien registration div ision of department of - justice the registering has called for a unit of hundreds of people. The workers are swarming in from every state, all having passed a civil service exam ination and attracted here by a wage a little higher than they would receive at home. They come, and find that with room and board they are worse off than at home and with little prospect of saving enough money to buy a ticket home again. A plannmg committee is now working on a proposal to place two more cantonments in the northwest and two or three ordnance factor ies. The Washington cantonment is expected to be not far from Yak ima. Nothing definite has been de cided on the Oregon cantonment (it will be Oregon's first) and no prop erty has been bought. The ordnance plants will be bag-filling and shell loading undertakings. The canton ments are expected to cost about $7, 000,000 each, probably more. Potato Divesrsion Plan Started by State AAA Arrangements for Oregon parti cipation in the potato diversion pro gram of the Surplus Marketing ad ministration were made in Klamath J. 0. Turner ATTORNEY AT LAW Phone 173 Hotel Heppner Building HEPPNER, ORE. A. D. McMurdo, M. D. PHYSICIAN & SURGEON Trained Nurse Aulitant Office in Masonic Building Heppner, Oregon Even if the legislature does pass the bill authorizing construction of another office building it is not likely that the building will be start ed for several years. Members of the ways and means committee have freely expressed themselves as op posed to any extensive building pro gram during the period of high la bor and material prices. These members feel that it would be bet ter to wait until after the boom induced by the defense and war in dustries program bursts and there is a real need for jobs to take up the slack of unemployment that is expected to follow. This view is said to be shared by members of the state board of control who are un derstood to have agreed to delay the building program pending a real need to provide jobs. Appropriations so far authorized by the ways and means committee exceed the governor's budget by more than $500,000. This deficit is off-set in part by increased revenue estimates but even at the the gen eral fund is confronted with a de ficit of more than $350,000 on the basis of authorized expenditures. Legislative reapportionment is out for the current session and in all likelihood for another ten years, or until after Uncle Sam completes an other census. Two such proposals were rejected by the lawmakers this past week. One of these involved a slight change in the senate set-up. The other in volved a major operation in the House apportionment The autocratic attitude of federal bureaucratics is beginning to get under the skin of the Oregon legis lators. Much of the legislation that is being considered at this session is virtually dictated from Washing ton. This is especially true of leg islation affecting state activities sup ported in part by federal funds. When the Washington bureaucrats decide that certain legislation is de sirable they pass the word ' along through their henchmen who tell the representatives of the state to pass it "or else." The latest attempt to dic tate to the Oregon lawmakers came I this week in a hearing on the pro posed new state oitice building when representatives of the Social Secur ity boaM told the ways and means committee that Oregon must take steps to provide more adequate quarters for the Unemployment Compensation commission "or else." The "or else" involves a threat to withhold federal funds for adminis tering the jobless insurance fund which are taken away from Oregon employers in the first instance by the Washington bureaucrats and re turned to the state only on condi tion that the terms of the Social Se curity board be complied with. This latest threat aroused the resentment of several committeemen members with Senator Pearson declaring him self a opposed to the proposed new building unless the unemployment compensation commission was bar red from occupying space in it. there is the ordinary traveler. Ar rivals on morning trains must wait until late afternoon before they can obtain a room, .wait until someone checks out. The government itself is hard pressed for room. Mushroom bur eaus are springing up and every inch of available space has been occupied. The great sprawling fed eral buildings (costing an average of $10,000,000 each) are crowded. War department has expand! until it is wondering where it can locate its new personnel. Social security built a building but before it was completed National Defense com mission moved in and SSB is as bad off as before. With government money from RFC an organization erected a modern building recently and Rural Electrification leased it for years to come. It happens that this building is at the intersection of two major streets. There are 700 employes in REA, most having au tomobiles, and there is no place for them to park. This is a sample of bad planning. An agency has been organized and is requesting everyone with a room to rent to list it. Sixth in spectors look at rooms. During the first world war so many men and women were brought to Washington that to solve housing the govern ment erected many dormitories. These have since been torn down. Today there are many more work ers on government payroll than at the peak of the first world war, and this is only the beginning. Some talk of the government building bar- j racks for men and women to be rented at a nominal price. mailed to growers in Crook, Des chutes, and Klamath counties, and in Siskiyou and Modoc counties in California, reports N. C. Donaldson, state executive officer of the AAA at Oregon State college. Only four counties in Oregon will participate directly in the program, Malheur county being attached to the Idaho district. These four are the only counties considered as com mercial potato-growing counties under the terms of the AAA pro gram. Grower in these regions who wish to divert potatoes of U. S. No. 2 grade or better for use as stock feed will make application to their coun ty AAA committees. Growers who stayed within their potato allotment last year are eligible for payments of 25 cents per hundred pounds on potatoes which they agree to feed to livestock or sell to others for such purposes. Professional Directory Heppner Abstract Co. J. LOGIE RICHARDSON, Mgr. BATES SEASONABLE Roberts Building Heppner, On. P. W. Mahoney ATTORNEY AT LAW GENEBAL INSTJBANCE Heppner Hotel Building Willow St. Entrance' J. 0. Peterson Latest Jewelry and Gift Good Watches . Clocks . Diamonds Expert Watch and Jewelry Repairing Heppner, Oregon Vawter Parker ATTORNEY-AT-LAW First National Bank Building Dr. Richard C. Lawrence DENTIST X-Ray and Extraction by Gas First National Bank Bldg. Phone 562 Heppner, Oregon Dr. L. D. Tibbies OSTEOPATHIC Physician & Surgeon FIRST NATIONAL BANK BLDG. Rec. Phone 1162 Office Phone 492 HEPPNER. OREGON Maternity Home Mrs. Lillic Aiken Phone 664 P.O. Box 142 Heppner, Oregon NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT In the Matter of the Estate of James H. Allen, deceased. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned, as Administratrix de Bonis Non of the estate of James H. Allen, deceased, has filed her final account in the County Court of the State of Oregon for Morrow County, and that Monday, the 7th dav of April, 1941, at the hour of 11 o'clock in the forenoon of said day in the Court room of said Court has been appointed by said Court as the time and place for the hearing of objec tions thereto and the settlement thereof. Dated and first published this 6th day of March, 1941. IMA McDANIEL, Administratrix de Bonis Non. Eating is not such a problem. Ev ery government building has a cafe teria and all the drug stores are lunch counters. There are no places to live near government buildings and workers must either drive a car, ride a bus or streetcar. Too far to walk. Those with autos get down town early to find a parking space, possibly a mile from where they work. The traction company has been buying new equipment and puts everything on wheels into the streets to handle the rush in the morning and the stampede in the afternoon. Getting a bus or street car is almost impossible at any time of the day. Some idea of how Washington is growing can be gained from the tel ephones used by the government alone. In 1933, when the new deal came in, there were 20,500 tele phones. In 1938 there were 28,211, and in January the number was 51,570. These are figures for the government telephones. To ease pressure on space in the district thousands of SSB workers Phelps Funeral Home Ambulance Service Trained Lady Assistant Phone 1332 Heppner, Ore. Jos. J. Nys ATTORNEY AT LAW Peters Building, Willow Street Heppner, Oregon V. R. Runnion AUCTIONEER Farm Sales and Livestock a Specialty 405 Jones Street, Heppner, Ore. Phone 452 MAKE DATES AT MY EXPENSE NEW AUTO POLICY Bodily Injury & Property Damage Class A $13.60 Class B $17.00 See us before financing your next automobile. F. W. TURNER & CO. Morrow County Abstract & Title Co. INC. ABSTKACTS OP TITLE TITLE INSURANCE Office in New Peters Building Heppner City Council Meets First Monday Each Month Citizens having matters for dis cussion, please bring before the Council J. O. TURNER, Mayor GLENN Y. WELLS ATTORNEY AT LAW ATwater 4884 635 MEAD BUILDING 5th at Washington PORTLAND, OREGON Peterson fir Peterson ATTORNEYS AT LAW U. S. National Bank Building PENDLETON, OREGON Practice in State and Federal Courts Real Estate General Line of Insurance and Bonds Phone 62 W. M. EUBANKS Notary Public lone, Ore. M. L. CASE G. E. NIKANDER Directors of Funerals 862 Phones 262