Page 2 Heppner Gazette Times, Heppner, Oregon, April 7, 1949 EDITORIAL OitcjcNu(s(Frti PlIUSRSOltTIOI NATIONAL EDITORIAL ASSOCIATION ..HH'im'UmiJi The Higher Cost of Education Taxpayers should get ready to pull t heir bolts In a notch or two their money belts, thai is for vhr-n the school budgets are voted there will he loss loose change for cigarettes, candy, ice cieam sodas, beers, cosmetics, and what have you. Now don't get the idea that an outrage is about to he perpetrated on the taxpayer. The above items were casually mentioned much in the manner an attorney throws in a statement now and then which he knows will be laid aside by the judge, or at least contested by his opponent, as irrele vant or immaterial, but a. little trick that more often than not influences the jury. When your tax statement comes this may serve as a hint on cutting corners. The fact is, we are faced with the problem of not merely keeping up with the normal course of education. We are confronted with a combination of forces which calls for digging rather deeply into the family purse if we are not to slip backward in our educational system It will require not a little readjusting of living habits, of our thinking along educational lines, to accustom ourselves to the idea of paying more for the upkeep of school plants, the salaries of school executives and tea chers. In truth, it will be an educational force to many of us who were inclined to forget about schools once the doors were closed on our student careers. It should teach us to peruse the budgets, to learn the whys and wherefores of the various expenditures and not merely listen to what neigh bor Jones has to say on the matter. If we must be prejudiced, let us form our own prejudices, but it will be wise to go into the budgets thoroughly before forming an opinion relative to their merits. And remember that in this article we are not discussing the "cost of higher education" but rather the higher cost of education. It is not nec essary to go to the trouble of reciting the many reasons why our schools are costing more these days Any reasonable person knows that his or her living expenses are all out of joint with normal conditions. Of course it costs more to run the schools) It costs more to run anything, And on top of living costs, the average Oregon community is faced with the necessity of enlarging school plants to care for the increasing population. Morrow county communities as a whole have not been faced with population increases, but the time is not far distant when larger school plants and additional teaching staffs will be necessary. Changes in the school set-up such as district consolidations have added first-cost increases in the purchase of busses, plus operation of same. Teachers are now paying more each month to live than some of the older ones received in days gone by. Teaching is no longer a work of love in the sense that the person engaged in the work would refuse to consider a more lucrative position in some other line of endeavor. If they are fit to teach our children they are worthy of pay com mensurate with the services rendered. It is the sincere hope of the Rural School Board and the budget committees of the various districts that school patrons, and particularly those qual ified to vote, will go into the budgets of their respective districts and the overall county school set up with open minds. They admit that the bill for education is heavy but justifiably contend that our educational system is the nation's most valuable asset and if it is permitted to disinte grate or even lag we will lose our proud station of bulwark of democracy. There is more at stake than mere money, and after all money has no value in itself alone. The value lies in the things it will buy. Looks Like Best Solution Necessity for adequate water supply for the hospital building has created something of a problem for the city. It is a problem due to a multiplicity of improvements confronting the city officials at this time. In less arduous circumstan ces it would be a comparatively easy matter to go ahead and provide the new building with water, at a pressure guaranteeing ample fire protection as well as for all other purposes. The county can and will run a pipeline from the county reservoir to the hospital. There is a suffi cient supply to provide all services. The sticking point is that the elevation of the reservoir is not sufficient to provide more than forty pounds pres sure at the hospital That is enough for regular use but might prove a handicap in case of fire. On that score we are not sufficiently informed, but it is to be hoped that need for fire pressure will not arise. The court feels that there should be an auxiliary water service to safeguard possi ble shortage from the county well, or possible breakdowns. On the city's side of the picture it is found that water can be supplied through extension of the Gilmore street line, but this would provide only fifteen pounds pressure. The city has made a proposal to the county court that rather than make this extension a deal be worked out where by the two systems could be merged. The city could install a booster pump which could be set in motion any time it is needed. Auxiliary service would thus be provided at a small expense. The merger could be effected by the city leasing the county plant and operating it, a proposal having more appeal to the council at this time than the suggestion that the plant be bought outright. There is a disposition on the part of oth the county court and the city to be cooperative in working out a solution to the problem and it may be possible for the city in the near future to build a reservoir above the present one that will provide ample fire protection and supply the homes that are expected to be built in the vicinity of the hospital. Who Said That? Appearing side-by-side in a recent edition of the Communist "Daily Worker" are a couple of items which, to say the least, reveal some interesting expediencies of the Kremlin line. In glowing words of praise for the progress of farm mechanization in Soviet Russia, the "farm' columnist of the "Worker" writes: 'The combine was heralded by the first socialist nation as one of the means of liberating peasants from their age-old 'drudgery. Today a higher percentage of their grain is combined than our own(?). Under socialism, mechanization of agriculture means liberation from toil, it means leisure and rising culture." Adjoining this gem of information is a two- column photograph of a newly developed mech anical cotton-picker now being used in our South ern States. The caption underneath reads: "What happens to the pickers when this giant machine, a mechanical cotton-picker, replaces the tradi tional farm laborer on many of Alabama's large cotton tracts? Unemployment and hunger, of course! It's the law of capitalist agriculture." In other words, what's good fur the goose isn't good for the gander. However amusing this appaient inconsistency Heppner Gazette Times. Thursday, April 10, 1!U9 In order to get the matter full; before the people of the count; and ascertain their full desires Judge Campbell has called a j meeting of the citizens of the I At the regular meeting 01 me county to be held at the court city council on Monday evening, house in Heppner this evening at City Recorder Williams was voteu S o'clock. It is expected that there an increase of $15 per month in will be at least two represent;! ! salary, and from now on that of tive citizens from each precinct 1 ficial will receive $50 per for his in the county, and also that the Farmers' Union will have a dele gation there to represent them. . . . Judge Campbell and F. I!. Brown held a meeting with the citizens of Pine City Tuesday eve ning. in which they discussed vith the people of that vicinity he road bonding proposition, and also took up the matter of get ting a mail route established be tween Butter creek and Heppner. to your INTERNATIONAL STERLING SET For perfect entertaining you need these lovely and useful pieces . . . the correct serving lilvcr for gravies, co!d cuts If'Z'l arid a host of other dishes. niClS INCLUDE FFDfKAl TAX j r war Peterson's Jewelers RECORD SESSION The thirteenth week of the 45th legislative session of Oregon started last Monday which was the 85th day and established an all-time record for length. "Another ten days,'' says Sen ate President William Walsh, I "will be required to do justice in essential legislation." Speaker of the House Frank VanDyke con leurred with President Walsh in ' the reckoning. I Undecided major issues in elude: The $50-a-month old-age assistance. The tax program. The budget for 19591951. Basic school j aid request for a raise from S5(i to $80 or more a pupil. The pro posed veteran's' bonus. Increases in unemployment and industrial accident benefits. A requested S12.000.000 for new buildings for the University of Oregon and Or egon S'ate college. The highway revenue bills. Increasing gas tax I from 5 to 6 cents and auto H j censes from $5 to $10 a year. The j proposal to give $2,000,000 a year to poor scnool districts wno need new buildings. NO VETO TET "I am looking for a bill to veto," said Governor Douglas Mc Kay last Monday, but he was smiling when he said it. "So far the legislature hasn't given me much trouble and I will have no reason to bother them I think." As yet the governor has not "re turned with comment" or vetoed any measure passed by the legis lature. This week the governor spent nearly 8 hours putting his signa ture on 3,000 bonds calling for $3,000,000 to be applied to veter ans aid. The large bonds, about 12 by 16 inches with detachable coupons, "are clumsy and slow to handle," the governor said, "but I can sign 300 or more an hour." may look to us, it is not an inconsistency to the Communist. It has been firmly imbedded in his subservient mind that whatever is done in Russia is 100 per cent right. Likewise, whatever is done elsewhere is all wrong. It Is this double-standard of values that Americans should not forget for one minute, regardless of such seemingly humor ous incongruities. To do less is to invite disaster. There is no such thing as an American Com munist. Whether they all realize it or not, native American Tarty members are agents sworn to fanatical obedience to a foreign power, a power diametrically opposed to all that we stand for. They will stop at nothing to serve those ends dictated by the despots In the Kremlin. To them, anything American is bad; anything Russian is good. It's as simple as that. Exchange. Are pharmaceutical benefits "Free" to New Zealanders? Yes, if the product is on a very limit ed list of trade-mark products, otherwise the patient has to pay. Most of the desired products are not on the list. Are New Zealanders under this "Free" plan getting the proper medical attention? No! Persons with minor ills or fancied ail ments keep the doctors so infern ally busy that they have time to give only superficial examina tions to the genuinely sick. Why does a New Zealander get so little for the $00 per year he is taxed for medical care? The answer is simple. Because the greater part of this $00 Is ab sorbed in the cost of administra- 30 YEMRB AGO Clark, Mary Van Vactor, Dorothy Pattison, Velma Case, Vivian Uobison, Lovell Lucas. Willetta Barratt, Esther Nealc Berniee Sigsbee and Muriel Cason. A splendid banquet was served to the Royal Arch Masons and their wives at Masonic hall on Friday evening; a sort of "before the war" repast that was greatly enjoyed by the many partici pants. Sherman county votes $300,000 for roads, her bond election held on Saturday last resulting in a vote of 1017 for and 26 against practically unanimous. Members of the Pollyanna cbs; of All Saints Episcopal church school and their teacher. Mis; Muriel Cason, were royally enter tained on Friday evening at a 6 o'clock dinner prepared by the members of the class at the home 3f Mr. and Mrs. M. D. Clark. This was followed by a theater party it the Star, given by Berniee Sigs bee. Those present were Mary ifOUNG REPUBLICANS WIN Oregon young republicans .vant some changes made. They want the convention sys tem for primary elections. They want state chairmer to have authority to call conven lions. They want a law that will al low state party conventions to services. W. W. Shamhart has disposed of his property just back of the Palace hotle corner, to Dr. A. D. McMurdo. Mrs. Dick Wells is now driving a new Hupmobile, purchased thir. week from Albert Bowker of the Heppner garage. Laxton McMurray of Jordan Siding, accompanied by Mrs. Mc Murray, was in Heppner last Sat urday. Mr. McMurray was divid ing up his wealtlfwiih the coun ty at the sheriff's office. Johannes Troedson and wife of lone are visiting for the pre sent at the home of his brother, Paul Troedson, at Gresham. They expect their son Carl home from France soon. Alfred Troedson, hustling far mer of the Morgan section, was a visitor in Heppner Saturday. He was rejoicing over the fine rain that visited them the past week and says an abundant crop seems assured. Miss Lucille Elder received a telegram Tuesday announcing that her brother, John, who has been n France for the past year had arrived on American shores again and had landed safely at Boston. with a prescribed fee schedule. The oAmerkan Way MEDICAL NON-CARE I By George Peck ; In a previous article I pointed out that "Free Medeine" has : proven to be "Expensive Medi cine" in Germany. Let's now take 1 a peek at what has transpired in New Zealand, which country in 1939 made the sad mistake of launchign a program of compul sory health insurance. Since 1939 the New Zealand Government has brought under its control by nationalization, the banks, dental profession, chem ; ists, masseurs, National Airways, i and many other formerly private businesses and professions. This serves to prove that the regimen tation of its medical profession was but the entering wedge, part of a carefully calculated plan of the "Left-Wingers" to socialize completely New Zealand's econ omy. There is no reason to doubt that the proponents of "Free Medicine" here have in mind the eventual complete socialization of the United States. In propaganda used by the .!lih.irtA jive official approval of selected primary candidates. A legislative sponsors of the New Zealand law, delegation is in Salem talking the word "free" was used in many turkey to the legislators. At the GOP state convention and election in Portland last Sat. urday the young republican par ty workers walked away with three top offices. Slgmund 1,'nnn der, Portland, was named state chairman. Lawrence Neualt, Ba ker, was elected treasurer, and Newell Elliott, Baker, was reel ected secretary. There was one change suggest ed, however, the fermenting young statesmen did not adopt. A telegram from a "Well Wisher" advised the convention to adopt an axiomatic gnomic similar to he GOP used by the grand old party. The wire pointed out that the gnomic for the grand young party was a natural GYP. CANCER CONTROL MONTH In an open letter issued Friday Governor Douglas McKay said, "I am glad to lend endorsement to the sponsorship of Cancer Control Month by the American Cancer Society and urge that during the month of Arpil, citizens of Ore gon give their full support to the program of the Society in its ef fort to defeat the disease which is taking an ever-increasing toll in the state and nation. The Am erican Cancer Society will seek contributions to its funds and the money collected will help strengthen the research and edu cational work that is being done effectviely by the organization." ELECTION COSTS UP Future state elections in Ore gon will cost approximately $30, TOO more than in the past. The many new voting precincts creat ed to serve the increased popula tion of the state will add mater ially to the costs. New precincts carved out of existing units will require that county clerks send cards to voters affected inform ing them of their new voting places. Each of the new precincts will require 10 election board members who are paid $4 each per day. Other added expenses are for rent of the voting places that average shout $10 a day and an investment In new equip ment booths boxes and sup plels for each new unit. SORRY FOR LOBBYISTS The hordes of footsore lobbyists that throng the legislative halls have drawn the sympathies of the weapy lawmakers who Intend to do somelhing about the sad plight of their unofficial advisers. A resolution has been prepared to authorize the secretary of slate to "furnish suitable and comfort able furniture to be placed In the lobby of the capitol" for their convenience. instances, tor example, it was stated that the act would pro vide pharmaceutical benefit: "free of any cost to the patient," and State hospital benefits "free of cost to the patient." The tax deductions and other expenses were not mentioned. Today So cial Security expenditures equal $b0 per person per year, or ap proximately one-fourth of the Government's total income. Does this "Free-For-$60-Per-Year" program give the New Zea lander adequate medical care? Not by a jugful. A New Zealander is required to pay a considerable fee .in addition to that paid by the government to achieve thai goal. Are hospital benefits "Free" in New Zealand as promised? They are not. Private hospital charges are subsidized by the government up to $2 per day during a period of hospitalization and any char ges over that are paid by the pa tient. Are the services of physicians "Free" in New Zealand? Yes. if a specialist is not needed. The doctors are paid in accordance tion. An army of civilian servants is engaged full time in routine work, checking claims and milk ing payments to doctors. Of course, this medical plan is costing New Zealand more per year than was anticipated actu ally almost six times as much. There is nothing strange about that, such ,is always the case. All the evidence proves that "Free Medicine" is not "Free" In New Zealand. It is darned ex pensve and awfully darned in efficient, just as it is in every country that has embarked on such a Utopian scheme. We do not want that kind of medical care, or to be more factual, med ical non-care, in the United States. 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No Vibralionl ion tank SlkL JM W;stinthousc GONTY'S V V v.- ' rr: :4'V. jr. '" The STETSON mi Youll spot the sweep and rugged good looks of this superb fur felt clear across America. For the Stetson Open Road is a man's hat a hat that really goes to a man's head. ' Available in a wide range of prices. WILSON'S MEN'S WEAR THE STORE OF PERSONAL SERVICE Mom none weak stetson hats than ant othm mand PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY TUNE IN TED MALONE . . . tvtry morning, Monday through Friday . . AtC Ntlwork JOS. J. NYS ATTORNEY AT LAW Peters BUIg., Willow Street Heppner, Oregon J. O. PETERSON Latest Jewelry & Gift Goods Watches, Clocks, Diamonds Kxpert Watch & Jewelry Repairing Heppner, Oregon O. TURNER ATTORNEY AT LAW Phone 173 Hotel Heppner Building Heppner, Oregon Veterans of Foreign Wa rs Meetings 2nd & 'Ith Mondays at 8:00 p.m. In Legion Hall P. W. MAHONEY ATTORNEY AT LAW General Insurance Heppner Hotel Building Willow Street Entrance Saw Filing & Picture Framing O. M. YEAGER'S SERVICE STORE JackA.Woodhall Doctor of Dental Medicine Office First Floor Bank Bldg.' Ph one 2342 Heppner Turner, Van Marter and Company GENERAL INSURANCE Dr. L. D. Tibbies OSTEOPATHIC Physician & Surgeon First National Bank Building Res. Ph. 1102 Office Ph. 402 Phelps Funeral Home Licensed Funeral Directors Phone l.!;s2 Heppner, Oregon A.D.McMurdo,M.D. PHYSICIAN & SURGEON Trained Nurse Assistant Office in Masonic Building Heppner, Oregon Heppner City EMlMil Mftet Firt Monday V.OUnCII Eh Month Citizens having matters for discussion, please bring them before Hie Council. Phone 2572 Dr. C. C. Dunham CHIROPPACTIC PHYSICIAN Onice No. 4 Center St. Hjuiio Cals Made Homo rhonc 25C3 Office 2572 Morrow County Abstract Cr Title Co. INC. ABSTRACTS OF TITLE TITLE INSURANCE Orilce In Prturi Building C. A. ItUGGLES Representing C'ains E. Isom Insurance Agency Phone 723 Heppner, Ore. Call Settles Electric at HKlTNKIt APPLIANCE for all kinds of electrical work. New and repair. Phone 2542 or 1423 Dr. J. D. Palmer DENTIST Office upstairs Rooms 1112 First National Bank Bldg. Phones: Office 783, Home 932 Heppner, Oregon RALPH E.CURRIN ATTORNEY AT LAW First National Bank Bldg. Phono 26.12 N. D. BAILEY Cabinet Shop Lawn Mowers Sharpened Sewing Machines Repaired Phone 1485 for appointment or call at shop. Morrow County Crtnrt Mrotx rirnt W otitic id ny UUI 1 of finch Month Count. v Tudtfii Office Houmi Monday, Wadneiiday, Friday 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Tuomlny, Thaudny, Saturday Poro non only Walter B. Hinkle REAL ESTATE Farms, Busines, Income Prop erly. Trades for Valley & Coast. Income Tex Returns Arlington, Oregon MERCHANTS1 WISE Advertiie!