Vernonia eagle. (Vernonia, Or.) 1922-1974, January 13, 1949, Page 4, Image 4

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    M TTJKSDAY, jAJr. is, 1949 THE EAGLE, VERNONIA, OREGON
A PLEA FOR THE DOGHOUSE
“Yep,” said the old man who
lives up on the hill, the handiest
thine to have around the place
is • good doghouse. I know that
most newly married men are con­
vinced that there never will be any
need for a doghouse, that their
married life is going to be ‘differ­
Don't fool yourself. Sooner
ar later the need for a doghouse
will come and the need will be
forthright, right now, and he, who
has not been foresighted enough
to prepare for such an eventuality,
is sure out of luck. He will either
have to stand around cut in the
weather or listen to a narration
ef his misdoings by an irate
spouse. And he dassent talk back.
If he hasn’t already found out the
hard way I want to tell him right
now that so far, none has ever
won an argument with his wife.
Even if he did, he would be
farther in the doghouse than be­
ent’.
fore.
I urge all those who are con­
templating matrimony to see to
it that the place where they plan
PAINTING
Interior — Exterior
FLOOR SANDING
COLOR MATCHING
ALI, WORK GUARANTEED
ON CONTRACT BASIS
Charles Seeberger
856 Rose Avenue
Acetylene and
Electric
WELDING
Portable Welder to
Go Anywhere
Telephone 453
Rose and Columbia
Rose Avenue
Welding Shop
Russell Junken
to live has an adequate doghouse
or at least, some place that can
be converted into one. Besides
being a sanctuary when one is in
disfavor in the home, it can be a
‘haven of rest to turn to when it
is too hot to hoe in the garden in
summer or when the mother-in-law
comes to visit. But all mother-in-
laws are not as the joke books
or would be humorists make us
believe; there are many who are
wise and understanding and they
more than make up for the bung­
ling interference of those who try
to run the domestic household of
their daughters as well as their
own. But you never can tell;
why, even Ma went home to
mother once, but she didn’t stay
long. I never did find out what
happened. I would givp a pretty
to know but I dassent ask. All I
know is that she cooked up the
best supper that night that I
ever ate. While I must admit that
I do not have to use my doghouse
so very often of late, still it is
mighty comforting to know it is
there.
Norblad Appointed to
Committee Position
Low Cold Freezes Pipes
Representative Walter Norblad
(R-Ore) has been appointed a
member of the powerful house com­
mittee on committees. This group
determines the Republican mem­
bership of all house committees
and is currently meeting to read­
just previous committee assign­
ments changed by the G.O.P. loss
of control of the house and to
make appointments involving the
newly-elected members.
•
The National Housing agency
has tested several types of struc­
tural concrete which use as much
as 90 percent of wood or vegetable
fibers from farm and forest
wastes. Some can be sawed and
nailed.
RIVERVIEW — Many water
pipes have frozen here in River­
view during the past week.
Miss Betty Davis missed school
last week because of illness.
Mr. and Mrs. Dashney of Aloha
visited their aunt, Mrs. Jenny
Shafer, one day last week.
C. I. Anderson returned home
from the hospital in Portland
Thursday where he was operated
on the 29th. He is getting along
fine now.
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Cline of
Portland visited at the Merle
Cline home over the week end.
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Staight of
Portland spent the week end at
the Bud Rose home.
*
Vernonia, Oregon
Total All
Funds
ITEM
Estimated Receipts from
Delinquent Taxes
................
County School Fund ..............
Basic School Support Fund
State Irreducible School Fund
Elementary, Transportation
. . $ 8,689.07
7,898.00
. . . 54,213.46
627.61
3,464.43
Estimated Total Receipts ....
$74.892.61
Estimated Total Receipts and Available Cash Balance or Deficit
Master
UK US TO TEST TOUR WATCH, FSEE
NF.W WATCHES SIMILARLY TESTED
BEFORE YOU BUY THEM TO ASSURE
AGAINST MECHANICAL IMPERFECTIONS
A. L. KULLANDER
WATCHMAKER — JEWELER
Official Watch Inspector, S. P. 4 S. Ry.
$74,892.61
Estimated Expenditures
Schedule II—--General Fund
Exenditures for two fis­
cal Years Next Preceding
the Current School Year
y I
"5 a o> be S 22
D
cU w
c'g
2
£ o 71 o
M
ITEM
I. GENERAL CONTROL
Personal service:
Superintendent ............ ............................................
Clerk ................................
• • • ■ •..................
Stenographers and other office assistants ....
Compulsory education and census ......................
Other services ..........................................................
Supplies
•_........ ................................................
Elections and publicity ........ .....................................
Legal service (clerk’s bond, audit, etc.) ....................
Other expense of general control:
National Assembly ........ ........................................
g -C
•8 S
M x
a
$ 5,400.00
780.00
1,600.00
150.00
700.00
75.00
150.00
250.00
$ 5,400.00
780.00
1,600.00
150.00
700.00
75.00
•
150.00
250.00
$ 9,105.00
$ 9,105.00
II. INSTRUCTION—Supervision
Personal service:
Principals .............. ................... ..............
Supervisors.............. ................................
...$ 4,260.00
$ 4,260.00
Total Expense of Supervision ....................
... $ 4,260.00
$ 4,260.00
$88,320.00
200.00
2,000.00
2,500.00
$88,320.00
200.00
2,000.00
2,500.00
Total Expense of Teaching ................................................... $93,020.00
$93,020.00
Total Expense of General Control
III. INSTRUCTION—Teaching
Personal service:
Teachers ................ ......................
Library supplies, repairs ........................
Supplies (chalk, paper, etc.) ................
Textbooks
.....
........... .......... -...-
Other expense of teaching—work books
IV. OPERATION OF PLANT
Personal service:
Janitors and other employees ....................
$ 8,486.00
Assistant
........................................................................
Janitors’ supplies ..................................................................... 1,000.00
Fuel ..................................................................................... ... 2,140.00
Light and power
......................
600.00
Water
........
450.00
Telephone ................
200.00
..............................
$12,876.00
Total Expense of Maintenance and Repairs .................. $
Your watch "prints"
a record of its own
performance
PROVING
the efficiency o!
our work
WANTED
Active or inactive, in growing
business, of exceptionally sub­
stantial character, in Vernonia
and vicinity. Opportunity for
expansion almost unlimited. In­
vestment required. Local person
preferred. Address P.O. Box
81, Vernonia.
Estimated Receipts and 5vailable Cash Balar.ees
Schedule I
Total Expense of Operation
Your watch represents an important Ln-
vestment. Don't take chances on repair
work. Bring your watch here where all
work is scientifically checked on a . . .
PARTNER
BUDGET
V. MAINTENANCE AND REPAIRS
Repair and maintenance of furniture and equipment . ..$
Repair and maintenance of:
Buildings ...........................................................................
Grounds ..............................
'DEMAMD
THIS Wm'
ACCURACY
•
The new U. S. Navy cruiser
“Des Moines” is a 17-thousand ton
vessel.
NOTICE OF SCHOOL MEETING
Info Asked of
Lumber Plants
Oregon-American
LUMBER
CORPORATION
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Krieger
and sons visited at the W. J.
Lindsley home Saturday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Billings and
family of Washougal, Washington,
Ray Billings of Lebanon visited
at the Lindsley home Tuesday and
Wednesday. Mrs. Billings is Mr.
Lindsley’s sister.
Mr. and Mrs. Hank Hudson and
Mrs. O. M. Hudson made a busi­
ness trip to Portland Tuesday
afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Lindsley made
a business trip to Portland Friday
afternoon. Mr. Lindsley remained
there till Sunday on union busi­
ness.
Mrs. Lauder made a business
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to the legal voters of Sehool District No. 47 Jt., of Columbia County, State of Oregon, that a SCHOOL
MEETING of the said district will be held at Vernonia, Oregon on t le 27th day of Jan.. 1949, at 8 o’clock p.m., for the purpose of discussing
the budget for the fiscal school yeai^ beginning July 1, 1949 and ending June 30, 1950, hereinafter set forth, and to vote on the proposition of
levying a district tax.
__ _________
•
Local lumber manufacturers are
being asked this week by the West
Coast Lumbermen’s association to
aid in a region-wide census and
appraisal of the lumber industry.
Compact forms will be received
by every local lumber processing
plant which will give a capsulized
statement of each firm’s manufac­
turing record.
“We trust that every one of the
1800 lumber firms receiving this
questionnaire will return it very
promptly.because it is to their own
best interests,” said H. V. Simp­
son, executive vice president of
W.C.L.A. i“Complete, accurate in­
formation on tile entire industry
is needed countless times in the
freight rate hearings, to advance
lumber’s cause before government
agencies, for adequate statistical
background and other uses which
benefit industry and this region.”
The forms will go to some 1800
lumber producers in western Ore­
gon, Washington and northern
California in the Douglas fii* re­
gion.
trip to Portland one day last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank McCool and
family and Claude McCool and
daughter LaVonne, visited at the
Louis Huntley home Sunday.
Mrs. Parson returned from
Seattle Monday to stay with Mrs.
Alice Mills. Mrs. Parson was
visiting a daughter in Seattle.
200.00
VI. AUXILIARY AGENCIES
Health service:
Personal service (nurse, etc.) ...................................... $
70.00
Supplies and other expense ........................................
Transportation of pupils:
Personal service ............................................................... 10,010.00
Health Insurance .............................................................
Hot Lunch .........................................................................
Total Expense of Auxiliary Agencies ................................. $10,080.00
vii .
h sZfn
$ 9,105.00
$ '4,260.00
$93,020.00
$12,876.00
200.00
$
,g
800.00
$
70.00
800.00
70.00
$ 3,960.00
300.00
$ 8,150.00
300.00
$ 4,260.00
$ 3,450.00
$71,560.00
200.00
1,200.00
1,200.00
200.00
$56,400.00
200.00
1,000.00
1,000.00
200.00
$74,360.00
$58,800.00
$ 6,850.00
50.00
800.00
1,500.00
600.00
375.00
200.00
$ 5,709 00
100.00
800.00
1,100.00
600.00
375.00
200.00
$10,375.00
$ 8,884.00
200.00
$
500.00
400.00
$ 1,100.00
$ 1,100.00
45.00
25.00
$
$ 5333.09
$ 2,770.24
$43,458.00
200.00
500.00
400.00
$
$10,080.00
$ 4,500.00
720.00
1,000.00
150.00
200.00
50.00
150.00
211.00
$ 7,051.00
$
$
o
£¡5
70.00
10,010.00
$10,080.00
t--
t = S
o
Ò5
$ 8,515.00
500.00
100.00
$
SÌ
£ 5-
«3
$ 5,400.00
720.00
1,500.00
150.00
200.00
75.00
150.00
250.00
1,000.00
2,140.00
600.00
450.00
200.00
$12,876.00
■o
3,2
w o
a
$ 8,486.00
500.00
100.00
800.00
5— 0
a _
45.00
25.00
8,510.00
540.00
2,000.00
8,010.00
500.00
$11,120.00
$ 8,580.00
$
245.00
$ 1,265.00
$ 8,145.00
F ixed charges
Insurance
.... ................................... $
Other fixed charges:
Retirement
...................................................................
Boiler Inspection .............................................................
900.00
$
900.00
5,600.00
5,600.00
5,600.00
12.00
5,600.00
12.00
Total Fixed Charges .......................... ...»....................... $ 6,500.00
$ 6,500.00
$ 5,857.00
$ 6,877.00
500.00
1,200.00
500.00
1,200.00
$ 2,000.00
2,500.00
5,500.00
50.00
3,000.00
500.00
500.00
200.00
180.00
VIII. CAPITAL OUTLAYS
New Roof
. ...................................................................
Alteration of buildings (not repairs) ...................................
New furniture, equipment and replacements ..................
Other capital outlays:
Library books ...................................................................
Encyclopedia .....................................................................
Total Capital Outlays .......................................................... $ 2,200.00
X. EMERGENCY
Total Schedule II—General Fund—Total estimated ex-
penses for the year—sum of items I. II, III, IV, V,
VI, VII, VIII, X
485.00
660.00
200.00
$ 2,200.00
$ 2,200.00
$10,380.00
$ 3,250.00
$
$ 4,000.00
$ 4,000.00
$ 3,000.00
$ 3,000.00
$ 3000.00
100,992.00
72.567.24
142,841.00
128,967.00
Schedule VI—Summary of Estimates of Expenditures. Receipts and Available Cash Balances, and Tax Levies
Total all
ESTIMATION OF TAX
General Fund
LEVY
Funds
Total Sched. II
Total estimated expenditures ..............................
... $142,841.00
$142,841.00
DEDUCT.
Total estimated receipts and available cash balances (Schedule I) 74.892 60
74.892.60
Amount necessary to balance the budget
• • 67,948.40
67,948.40
Balance to be raised by taxation ..........................
.... 67,948.40
67,948.40
ADD:
Estimated amount of taxes that will not be collected during the
fiscal year for which this budget is made
6,082.35
6.082.35
Total estimated tax levies for en«wng f'sesl ▼rur
74.030.75
74,030.75
Dated this January 3, 1949
Signed. R. M. Aldrich, District CleTk
Glen Hawkins, Chairman, Board of Directors
$
Approved by Budget Committee January 3, 1949
Signed: W. G. Heath, Secretary, Budget Committee
J. J. Grady, Chairman. Budget Committee