Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919, October 19, 1908, Page 2, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    -a
DAILY OAPirAL JOURNAL, SALEM, OREGON, MONDAY, OOTOHKK 10, 1008.
THE CAPITAL JOURNAlT
U. IIOFER, Ed. nd, Prop.
a Independent Newppor DeyoUrlo'AmerleAh'"rrlneir'le aftT
the I'roKreM anil Developement of All Oregon.
'
Publlfthod ibrery livening Kxeept Sunday, galea, Ore.
SUHSCIIIPTION RATES.
(InvnrUblr In Advance.)
JteUy, by carrier, per year 94.00 Per months.., ...-.600
JMltr, by malt, per year ., 4.00 Per month 86a
"Weekly, by "Mall; per vear ...,1.00 Six months 60c
H"V .
V ,? '
X
mm
PLAIN fAOTS ABOUT
EDUCATIONAL ISSUES
IN THIS STATE
vANSWEIHNG SOME MISREPRESENTATIONS AROUT OREGO.N
NORMAL SCHOOLS AVIIAT A CALIFORNIA EDUCATOR SAYS
AROUT RACKWARI) CONDITIONS IN OREGON.
Tho Oregonlnn would not know
ingly misrepresent any nittttor nffect
Ing tho educational Interests of tho
state. Hut is recent report of tho
meeting of tho board of rogents of
normal schools convoys wrong Im
pressions In Bcvornl liiBtnncea,
That paper snyB out of aovon ro
gonts two favor abolishing nil tho
present normal achfjols and having
but one. Tho board constats of nine
rogenta, and at tho mooting roforrod
to eight woro In attendance ALL
RUT ONE FAVORED HAVING
THREE NORMAL SCHOOLS, nnd
ono regont, "W. B. Ayor, announced
that ho would bring a minority re
port boforo tho legislature favoring
ono or two schools, ho wns not yot
clear which ho would favor.
THE REGENTS WHO FAVOR
EQUIPPING AND MAINTAINING
THE THREE SCHOOLS AT ASH
LAND, MONMOUTH AND WESTON
are Governor Chamberlain, Bupt.
Ackorranh, 8ocy. of Stnto Ronson, and
Regonts Stephon Jewell of Grants
PasB, II. J, Malor of Tho Dalles,
County Biipt. H. E. llrngg of La
Grando and E. Ilofor of Salem.
On tho original volo nt tho annual
mooting two regent favored four
HohoolH, and by a voto of flvo to
four IT WAS DECIDED TO KEEP
THREE SCHOOLS. Govornor Cham
berlatn at onco acquiesced In tho Jo.
clalon of tho majority and has slnca
voted to equip tho thrco schools In a
creditable manner and put thorn on
a high professional basis.
"W. B. Ayer Is a friend and cham
pion oft normal nchools. but soomn to
be ENTIRELY DISSATISFIED
WITH THE PRESENT LOCATION
AND EQUIPMENT OF TltE
SCHOOLS, which brings up tho
whole question as a political propo
sition boforo tho leglslaturo, which
would have to abandon nil tho pres
ent Investment, dlsposo of tho build
ings, sell tho sites, nnd buy a now
site and eroct now buildings nt aomo
new location on n larger scalo.
Tho Orogonlan report says: "Tho
board recommends that an appro
prlatlon of $330,000 bo mndo to run
tho schools for tho next two years,"
otc. The fact Is tho board rocom
meadod THAT THE SCHOOLS HAVE
AROUT 80,000 EACH TO RUN UP
ON, nnd rocommondod that each
.school have a flrnt class now dormi
tory building so that Htudonta could
lid docontly housed, nnd for that pur
pose fnvorrf $50,000 for ench school,
HUCII A DORMITORY WOULD RE
A GOOD INVESTMENT as It would
lncrenso the attondnnro of tho
schools to nbout 200 each, nnd with
that nttondanco each school would
turn Into tho Htato treasury about
$7000 In feci and tuition, and that
plan would gq far toward making
thorn self-supporting.
Following from tho Oregonlnn ro
port I misleading bo far as It con
voys tho Idoa that anyone on tho
board foarB tho fullest publicity:
Colonel Ilofor nlno oxpivwuMl. hi
ivgrotH over tlio determination of
6r. Ayi'r to fllo n minority report,
bifnuso It will cso tho mnvHpnper.
to print tho itiiiount of npproprln
tJmiH nskcil apil ivlll lend to a luuu
iuov1h of normal noliools by the
prvw.
Col Ilofor did express rogrot that
ny Portlnnd nowspnpor would Jimp
nt tho opportunity to bow dlBcord,
foment strife and ndvortlsQ to tho
world that there wn any virions
normal sohool dlffUuiltv whon snob
waMaMmwaMMHuHMMMww-
JttL
Savings Account
WILL EARN INTER
EST AND IS AIi
WAYS CONVERT
IRLE INTO CASH ON
DEMAND.
FEW INVESTMENTS
OFFER THIS AD
VANTAGE, AN IDE
AL INVESTMENT
FOR IDLE MONKY
AS WELL AS FOR
SAVINGS, WK 1AY
THREE PER CENT
INTEREST,
t
SAVINGS DEPARTMENT
CAWTAL NATIONAL
BANK
wns not tho case. He did ask tho re
porters to say that tlioro wob A
STRONG DESIRE TO SUPPORT
THE NOR.MAL SCHOOLS PROPER
LY IN THEIR LEGITIMATE WORK,
and that other staog all around us
did not seek to breed troublo nnd
causo uproar nt tho expense of their
education Institutions as somo of tho
Portland nowBpnpors did.
Thoro Is no occaBlon for hammer
ing tho normnl schools. Washing
ton Just north of uh Is n rapidly
growing progre8Blvo Btnto and sup
ports throo normal schools, APPRO
PRIATING MORE MONEY FOR ONE
OF THEM THAN THIS HOARDS IS
ASKING FOR THE SUPPORT OF
ALL THREE IN OREGON. The big
papers up 4horo do not howl and bow
discord and strife nnd commotion
Hint urlpplca tho work of tho normal
schools In Oregon wprao than all also.
Tho Oregonlnn advocates admit-
ting, children who havo comnleted
What Is called tho oighth-yonr gradu
ation In tho graded country schools
to tho normnl schools, AND A LIFE
DILOMA TO TEACH AFTER THREE
YEARS.. That would bo ono less
than a high sohool courso for a teach
er. THE PRESENT HOARD HAS
RAISED THE STANDARD OF AD
MISSION TO NORMAL SCHOOLS
ONE YEAR, has established a frc'o
one year toachora manual training
courso In high schools, and mado nil
tho normal schools earn revenues
for tholr own Bupport.
Tho tenchors' normal training
courso In high schools is growing In
popularity. DOES NOT COST THE
STATE TREASURY ONE CENT, and
will do tho first yoar'a work for nil
normnl nrhols, and will this year
havp as many students enrolled as
any ono of tho normal schools.
IV. Intelligent guidance la prac
tice -and training work; of actual
teaching and supervision, that leads
to scientific imparting of instruc
tion. That normal schools shall perform
their proper functions, and return to
the state an equivalent for Us in
vestment, there must bo higher
standards for admission. There must
bo more maturity In tho material wo
admit to the normals. It Is mani
festly an absurdity that high salar
ied specialists shall bo employed to
Instruct classeB In work already pro
vided in graded and high schools.
Normnl schools mtiBt be institu
tions of higher scopo and equipment
than high schools or oven colleges,
on tho principle that teachers must
be trained In an institution higher
than what thoy aro to teach. It In
cludes teaching of subjects or scl
oncea thnt they may in turn bo
f taught, the creation of character and
Ideals to bd transmitted to otliors.
Powers must be given beyond ability
aB. an administrator powers that
touch tho soul and impress tho heart
and mind to future right actions.
Wo must not confound tho pur
Pobo of tho high school nnd college
with the purposo of tho normnl
school. In the former tho end in
view is the Bubject taught nnd Its
vnluo to tho student. In tho normal
school It h the vnluo of the subject
as nn educational process and fitting
tho teacher to present It so that It
shall produce tho highest vnluo to
otl"rp.
The art of teaching is tho finest of
arts, rn It deah with the spiritual
materials that constitute Hfo. Tho
teacher deals constantly with the Im
mortal, the ImperlBhnble, tho real
For the greatest success Is required
natural nntltudo, nobjo character,
fullest knowledge, rlpo experience,
nnd n wide knowlcdgo of humanity
coup'cd with rirlty of thought, ole
vatlon of Ideals, nnd skill in application.
General Debility
Day In arid day out tuero Is that feeling
of weakness that makes a burden of Kselfi
Food does not strengthen. '
Sleep docs not refresh.
It la hard to do, hard to bear, what
should be eaBy, vitality la on tuo ebb, nud'
the whole system suffers.
For this condition take
Hood's Sarsaparilla
It vitalizes the blood nnd gives vigor nnd
tone to nil tho organs nnd functions.
In usual liquid form or In chocolated
tablets known as Sarsatabs lOOdorcsfl.
(From tho
East Orogo-
Pendleton
nlnn.)
In opposition to tho vnguo and In
doflnlto plan of ono normal school
or two normal schools, located no
ono knows whoro, nnd which would
throw tho whole controversy back
Into tho legislature, Colouol E. Ilofor,
mombor of tho board of regonts,
loudly champions tho causo of three
normal schools, locatod at Weston,
Monmouth and Ashland.
At tho mooting of tho state board
ho gavo tho following reasens:
1st. BPcnuso tho state alrondv
has about 1250,000 Invented In tho
throo schools In Innd, buildings nnd
oqulpmont.
2. Ilocnuso normal schools aro
malntaued by nonrly ovory state In
tho Union nnd aro nccessnry to nn ef
llclont D.ib'lc arhool yBtom.
3. The numbor of schools vnrlca
from one to over 100, ns In Now
York md Pennsylvania. The ten
dency In tho foremost stntea Ib to
multiply normal school.
4. Tho normnl school Is, Btrlct'y
speaking, tho foundation of tho pub
lic school aystom ntnd ontttled to
support Just as much ns the public
schools are, bocause without trained
tcucht'u Uo public 8c1iq9)b could no),
bo cnrrlod on succes fully.
5. Tho normnl schools of Oregon
aro entitled to n docont oqiilpmon
of dormlntorleH, trnlnlng dopnrt
tnonts, 1'brnrles, gymnasiums and
athletic grounds.
The bonrd rocommondB that ench
school bo glvon a flrBt-class modern
dormlntory to accommodate at least
200 Bt ulents, with dining hall and
laundry In basement, to cost not to
oxcoed $50,000 furnished. With nu
nttondanco of 200 studonta each tho
throo bohools would earn in tuition
and feis over $20,000 towards
"uppart.
C. They shold be kont nbsolutelv
font of politics and undor a non-par
tisan bonrd of control and all friends
of education should sustain tho rec
ommendations of tho board of re
gonts, which Includes tho following
for annual support of each schoel:
Teachers' salaries , , $20,000
Maintenance 7,500
Library, etc , . 1,000
Tho three schools turned Into tho
state treasury tor tho pant year near
ly $10,000.
7, Tho. policy advocator by the
pnx'tU board of rvgvoU lo to give
fho normal w:hoob h proper equip
ment, h nigh cbs profwtekmal ami
bwtlmwi mlmlntatrntlon, nutko them
an nearly ttolf-suatalHlng an pOtMlhle,
ami (OttHite their work nuaolMtely to
tho prfpumtkH of teachers for tho
imMic nolxwl8.
Tho Functions of a Normal School,
I That it shall Inspire Us stu
dents with the spirit of the true
teacher.
II. Its educational work must
thoroughly, cover the told of public
school needs.
Ill It's work must extead beyond
this to the prlaclples of edmc&ttoa a
applied to tlM ttafoUUBg of th men
tal actlvltw. miim udy and Kfcoi
ornaaUaUoa.
Whnt Supt. Hyatt of Snrcnincntn
Sny of Oretron.
Following Is taken from "A Trip
Through Oregon" in tho Octobor Ore
gon TcnchorH Monthly nnd bIiowb tho
Impressions n strangor gets of odu
cntlonnl conditions here:
Education In Oregon nnd particu
larly In higher public education has
boon In n curiously bnckwnrd state
all thoso years, although Washington
to tho north of It nnd California to
the Bouth are both nlngulnrly pro
gressive. This backwardness Is man
ifested by low Balarlos for teachers
$30 to $40 a month In rural school'i
by short terms of school and by
sennty, mengor appropriations for
high schools nnd colleges. It Ib not
endsed by lack of high spirited lead
ers or progressive school offlcers; but
bv nn unsympathetic public opinion.
Tho people aro prosperous and com
fortublo but do not bollovo much n
higher education, pnrtlcujarly thoy
combat higher education at public
expense. So tho yearly nllowanco
for tho stnto university has boon only
fifty or sixty thousand dollars; ap
propriations whon mado for this and
for tho four stnto normal schools aro
often withheld for n year or two nnd
must bo fought through at ovory
point, by roforondum nnd ovory other
way possible. Even now somo of tho
stnto normal schools aro starving
plowly to death. Without monoy,
thoy nreobllgod to reduco oxnenscs to
zoro point nnd llvo on nothing, Tho
townt)ooplo tnko p a sub'crlptlou;
tho students pny a stipend; tho tench
ors donnto tholr Imnclnnrv snlarlcs to
tho cause; and so they hang on by
tooth and too nnlls, hoping for bettor
loglnlntlon. It la worthy of notice
thnt thooldor ond rlchor pnrts of tho
Htatoi wore sottlod from tho southern
states away bnck In war tlmos; It Is
Joculnrly said that Prlco'a army was
disbanded horo. Tho south lin nl
ways boon backward In education--whoroforo,
thin unfortunato Island of
nubile opinion nwny off In tho con
tinuous woods whore rolls tho Ore
gon. Interesting Isn't It? And Illus
trates tho great fact that we can
only advanco as fast a our pooplo1
that in nil our oducntlonnl progress
wo miiBt tnko our pcoplo Into our
confidence and carry them with us
olso tho advanco doesn't progress.
Everv ono of us, ovon out In tho
smallest country district must be
working on tho minds of his pooplo
gotttng them to sco tho right things
in the r'ght way. T'lot h tho price
of better things in n democracy.
BORING FOR OIL
OUT ABOUT PRATUM
At a meeting held at tho Pratum
school house Saturday by tho farm
ers in that vicinity, C. W. Taylor and
W. A. Leet, two eastern capitalists,
woro leased 1500 acres of laud.
Pratum Ib about eight miles north of
this city, and from Indications found
by several local men who aro ac
quainted wun on, tno prospects nro
favorable for a strike there if work
ed. Tho two capitalists will begin
operations at onco to erect tho ncces
snry buildings and Install machinery
for the purpose of drilling lor on.
u
More Thnn Enough Is Too Much.
To maintain health, u mnturo man
or woman needs Just enough food to
rcpnlr tho waste and supply energy
and body heat. The habitual con
sumption of more food than Is ncces
snry for these purpo-es Ib tho prlmo
cnu30 of stomach troubles, rheuma
tism and disorders of the kidneys. If
troubled with Indigestion, rovlse
your diet, lot ron-on nnd not nppo
tlto control nnd tako a few doses of
Chnmborlnln's Stomnch nnd Llvor
Tnblets nnd you will coon bo all right
ogahi. For sale at Dr, Ston'o drug
store.
HIGH SCHQOL CUSSES
FOR THE WHOLE COIN
EVERV CHILD CAN STAV AT HIS
HOME AND TAKE AGbMPLETtGOUs
SECTION 8431 OF THE, COUNTY SCHOOL LAW
11 U1U UIUJUIH; w h wvvva v-..ow v... -"W I" ujiuailion tO GltftMl.V
ty high Bchool nre in tho afllrmativo, It shall be the duly ni n? WJ5
court, within 30 days after canvnBsIng Baid voto, to locate ii i t0'ty
shall also estimato tho cost of purchasing a suitable lot ererfi T
Ing and furnishing tho same for the accommodation of'sneh 1.5 . ni'
tho cost of conducting Buch school for tho next 12 months' p
that tho county court or tho high school board, as herein ' rnnffil'H
may rent suitable roomB for tho nccommodntion of tho Bchool ft tel
can be obtained in tho public school buildings in the place In m lm
school may bo located, thoy Bhall bo givon the nrefernnro. " wmca saii
Provided further thnt said board may contract with the bna , ,
rectors of any district In tho county that now maintains or dim i
after malntnln n school of high school grndo to teach all connif Vu
school pupils at Btfch a rate per capita, or In tho aggregate as thirl
doom right nnd Just, and shall pay for tho snmo out of the hliS ..v!
fund. (L. 1901, p. 145, Bectlon 7.) "'W ickoot
County Superintendent W. M.
Smith and others who travel about
over tho county nnd tnko tho trouble
ty court, tho county treainrer m
tho school superintendent t
School fund nnil ,i.- . "2
Minister Plenlpotcntlnry John Bar
rett will talk while his Balnry lasts,
In tho fnco of tho above opinion of
nn outsider It h not folly for this
stato to abandon nnv of tho school
It now hns for trnlnlng teachers, ON
THE THEORY OF SUPPORTING
ONE LARGER INSTITUTION, when
It hns novor decontly equipped or
supported those It now has?
Where could our largor normal
school be located thut would accom
modate GOO students as tho throe
will accommodate WITH A DECENT
EQUIPMENT?
Why has tho ono Inrgo normal
chool uot showed up beforo, and Is
it not boosted now just boforo tho
leglslaturo orgninlzes to help cupbure
that organisation FOR OTHER PUR
lOSES, MORE OR LESS POL1TI.
OAL?
Oregon noedB the three normal
school RIGHT WHERE THEY
ARE, Oregon needs a big well
equipped teachers college at the
Btate university. Oregon needs the
one-yonr normal course at the hlga
schools.
Oregon should got out of the back
woods condition In the preparation
of school teachers.
The peoplo should not bo stam
peded Into warfare upon educational
Institution FOR ANY nUT REAL
REASONS.
OUR ' WARFARE SHOULD RE
FOR WETTER RESULTS, BETTER,
CONDITIONS, A N D BETTER
SCHOOL,
This cannot be accomplished by
tM'ni down whst we have but by
Improving the service and develon
Ug a aystew, that Is the outgrowth
Qf ea.vlrQRW.wits,
--1 o-
Do not lot anyone tell you that
something else Is just as good aB Do
Witt's Kidney and Dlnddor Pills be
cauBO thoro isn't anything JuBt ad
good. Sold by all dmigglsta.
Portlan'd has had a horso show
and has no noed for normal schools,
o
$100.00 Reward,
would gladly bo paid for a euro by
many nconlo who nro crippled witn
rhCAimntlsm, yot If thoy only know
It, thoy can bo cured by a few bottloa
of Ballard's Snow Liniment, and tho
price Ib only, 25c, 50c nnd $1.00 per
bottlo. Sold by all dcalors.
O- '
To show that tholr now constitu
tion Is not yot in offoct tho Turks
havo boon killing Armenian womor,
o
Konncdy's Laxatlvo Cough Syrup
drives tho cold out of tho system
through its laxatlvo prlnciplo by as
suring n froo and gontlo action of
the bowols. Sold by all druggists,
o
CASTOR I A
i'or Infants and Ohildron.
Tfis Kind You Have Always Bough)
&&.
l ..I. ..... it.. .,A.ll.ii.,t i9 ttr linn. linnl i,nn1,1 !.... -t . TI
IU UU UHU lU BGUIIIUVUI, Vl nivi n.u-uu...u nuuiu "'" CUargO Of tt klA
nln atnfn ihnt llinro In n widCSIircnd Init ItH (llRlrllllltlnn 7l.. . 'H
IntcreBt being tnkon In tho county I "Tho question on tho ballot Vi 'a.
Boars tno
61gTjanoof
"Jeff" Scrlbor was a pot uf tho po
litical push until ho wns found out
Now thoy disown him.
o
DoWltt'B Llttlo Early Risers, the
famous llttlo llvor pills. Sold by nil
druggists.
' -a
Gompers who weara diamonds Is
shown to bo closo to Standard Oil.
Many n mnh would bolong to soniofi
oiuer poiiucni pany u no wore out or
offlco.
O J& fSf JF O XI. X A.'m
As usual the big newspapers have
grafted and got away with tho big
campaign funds. The llttlo newspa
to:; rro tho beasts of burden but get
nono of the spoils,
A big beef baron wns fined $500
nt 'Frisco Saturday. Awful hard on
tho -trusts.
Old People
Heed "TOTOI.
strengthens and yitaliBM
it
Vlnal ttinex un the dUrestlve organs.
ids aslilatlon, eHricbes the blood,
and rejuvenates every organ In the
body. In this natural manner Vinol
reakeea weaknMM with strenrth.
DeWltf's Carhollzed Wltrh Haiel w. . utv. itni u.ut
SIv la the bt salve tor pile. B w smwmmi wIm wUl iv it a trial.
'UN yM Kt DWitt', IMA by all .It H ilMt w will rtf sii thr bwmt.
UruMhki. .O. W. POTNAll 0 Saleta, Os-egoa. school board conaUtlac of the coub-
hlgh Bchool plan, which is to bo put
up to tho voters for a decision nt tho
Novembor election. HowoVor, nc
cording to Mr. Smith, thoro nro mnny
people who do not undorstnnd tho
scone nnd Intent of tho lnw.
Tho county high school law was
passed In lSDO, but so far only flvo
counties "n the state hnvo tnkon nd
vnn'ng" of Its prov'slons. Four of
theso nro over In spnnoly sott'ed sec
tions of eastern Oregon. The othor
l Lane county, wjilrh decided by n
decisive voto nt tho Juno o'cc'lon to
try tho plan. Tho onntern Oregon
counties hnvo county high reboots
nnd It may bo news to many to know
that thoro Is any othor meMiod of
procedure under tho lnw. Ono sec
tion of tho law states that the county
court shall hnvo authority to con
tract with existing schools for the
education of puplh desiring to take
a high Bchool courso. This means
that children may attend nnv high
school In the county Instead of bolng
forced to go to Bomo contrnl point
at Bomo distance from homo ns would
bo tho caso If n county high school
woro cstabllahod. ,
Any school having tho facilities for
teaching tho high school branches
may, If It has 15 or moro pupils who
doslro to toko tho work, arrango for
a tcachor to handlo tho high school
branches. This will dlvorco tho high
Bchool branches from tho grammar
studios in mnny of theso grado.l
schools whoro a partial high school
courso Is already tonight, and glvo
both grado scholars nnd high school
pupils n hotter chnnco.'
Also, it kcops tho young folks of
tho farms and small villages at home,
which would not bo tho caso In a
county like Mnrlon with a county
high school. In tho sparsely sottlod
counties of tho eastern part of tho
stato a county high school Is tho
most fcnnlb)o plan.
In dlscusalng tho motor recently
Superintendent Smith snldt
"Tho people are demanding thnt
high schools be established In rural
communities. Evory district cannot
maintain n high school, but every
group of six or sovon dlntrlcts enn
do so. Tho district Is not tho propor
unit for taxation for school purposes
aa tho valuation varies from a fow
thousand dollars to sovoral thousand.
"Tho proporty of tho wholo county
Bhould bo taxed for sunportlng tho
educntlon of chlldron nttondlig tho
high schools ns woll nB thoao nt
tendlng tho grammar grades. Statis
tics show thn't ovory community thnt
has a high school must levy a spe
cial tax for that purposo. Therofore
country districts do not establish and
malntnln union high schools.
"Tho county high school law was
nassod by tho leglslaturo of 1809.
This law contemplates the establish
ment of but ono or two high scnoolB
within a county.
"It enn bo readily Been thnt this Is
not feasible In a county which Is
thickly sottled like Mnrlon. It Is un
necessary to bvo mnny high schools
so tho boys and girls may bo homo ot
night, Snturdays and Sundays.
"Tho third section of Article 1
paragraph 221 of tho Oregon school
law nrovldos that tho county high
school bonrd mav contract with the
school bonrd of directors of any dis
trict In the countv which now main
tains or mnv hereafter maintain a
Bchool of high school grade to teach
all county high school pnnlls at Hiich
a rate per camta or In tho nggrocnte
as they deem right and Just and shall
pay for the same out of tne nign
school fund,
"By this plan the tuition ot all
high school pupils In the county
would be paid from tho county high
school fund and a student could 1m
ter school In any district that main
tained a high school with at least
one teacher doing high school work
only.
"Any wide-awake district having
10 or 15 high school pupils, which
Is a common center for several dis
tricts, mav form a hleh school and
he surrounding districts may send
to this central school having tholr
tuition paid and the district In turn
receiving from the county fund that
much more for the maintenance o.
tho ohoo.
"The nlan ns worked In Lane coun
ty Is to allow each h'gh school ro
much for every day's attendance, 20
cents per dav for schools having an
attendance of less than 20 pupils and
15 cents per day for those. havln
more than that number. This differ
ence la made to encourage rural high
schools. A school ot IK paplle weali
get $60 a month, a school of 25 pu
pils -would get $75 per month.
"The law provides for a alga
i i .i., X." -'"?'"' rolfOT!rv
Jill
QOOli
ballot tl.
November election will be Co,',
High school. Ym? rw,. ?.'
school, No. ' " n"
"This docs not mean that ot,
ed, but that a fund will h Z
which will bo distributed to lS
bcIiooIb in tho county already exinlM
or thnt may hereafter U e$u
11H11UU.
' 0
Lnmo flnck.
This ailment Is usually caniMVj
iiiuiiiiiuuwn oi mo nKiiciejeiB!
amau oi mo uncK, and li qtvft
cursu ny nppiying unamucrlaln'ili.
Imont two or threo times a dini
massaging tho parts at each issh.
tlon. For salo nt Dr. Stone's drtf 1
uiuru.
How did you llko the SitiriTr
Capital Journal for a booster tta-l
ber7
n
Kodol Is a combination of the n!-
urnl digestive juices ond It d!(ntt
oil cIosbcs of food and every slit ol
food, so you sco It will do the rl
that tho stomach Itself does. Solitr
all druggists,
o
A good slogan for Oregon-good i
roads and good schools.
O '
You tako Kodol just for a little
whllo whon you have sl'ght tttieit
of Indigestion, and you take It t a
llttlo longer In order to get telltf
from sovoro attacks of tndlgeetloa or
Nervous Dyspepsia. Try Kodol to
day. Sold by all druggists,
o '-
Nearly $5000 shortage reported Is
tho Portland postofllce.
o u-
Fnr Chnnned Skin.
Chnnncd skin whether 08 tl
hands or fnco mny be cured In m
night by applying ChafaberlUrt
Salvo. It is also unequaled, for ert
nipples, burns nnd scalds. Fon
at Dr. Stone'a drug store.
It Is claiming almost too much l
Mnyor Rodgers to say that he wow
not nccopt that offlco If It had a tf
nry attached to It.
'iiiiiHiHniimntftt
GOOD
DRUGS
; ; Bring your prescriptions to at
. . Thoy will bo carefully o
pounded Wo also carry a ccsv
1 1 lete lino of
jj Drugs and Sun
dries, Wmcs,
Whiskies,
Brandies, Etc.
REDCROST
PHARMACY
rtnMiPr Ktnt ami Oom f
Streets. I'hone ! I
i 1 1 1 1 1 H 1 1 1 1 " rJ-H-rtTT-
(picKpir
H BARK
fB Cough R""'
CROUP-
sORt TH0AT
iB tftMi wa "
- -&& ..