Wilmette Life (Wilmette, Illinois), 23 Feb 1939, p. 20

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oD,,ëcat be'. Experience. has shown howeëve r, that hnùcreased tax rates on local property do not always, result in'iii- creaaed revenues. There is a limnit to -the property tax which if exer- clsed does not result iniIncreased ffleld If' this attitude is adopted theni ichools must either continue to re- duce their budgets from year to year or seek new sources of revenue. This problem is not one for the teachers oôf the, state to solve. A higblY suc-essful tea cher can also be successful ni other lines of Work and the competition will gradually draw a wOaY from the +mpn hina nrfer. The City of Denver made by the first grade children ili Roena Mulford's room. This iu the outcome of their trip made to the Chicago and North Western railway station a few weeka ago.ý president and secretary, while the seventh graders werie nominated for, the. offices of, vice -president and ttea.surer. February 14 the follow- !ng leaders Were elected:7 president, er Bettinhaus;- secretaryr, Jacqueline Brown; treasurer, Joan Johnson. We are .looking forward to a very profitable assembly club, with these new officers,:durmng the second s e- mester., Do You Know i Jhai lit Happening Do te School Revenue? i Teticher, the Southern move but thE NY. G- 'ra1Tde The assessed valuation during the past eleven years in Cook county real - -- -estate has gained 4 per cent-Rail- ess. They seem to' roads have lost 36 per cent-Per- irth, we know, is sonal property has gauned 64 per ,em- cent. (However, the 1938 figures imbrella and drew will probably show a reduction 'of at the Little Dipper, least 20 per cent from that personal n the inside, then naorapt-v raion local propery of an- excessive bur- huge1 den.Th To be exact there are 34 sta tes by Gei today that are bearing a greater of our portion of their educational costs, "At than does the state of Muinois. Il- the st liois rankine, eighth amonn t he stellat: ~ur u. bright and close and- they- are so _ In 1this- latter cas e we have an ini- th clotte far away. At night we see the stars- stance of a new cominon carrier the loseif it is not cloudy. They are round taking over a business of the rail- like our sun. They are balls of roads but the revenue formerly paid studying gases. Each night they can be seen by the railroads for public. education any con- about four minutes earlier than the is now being paid by the- truckung of their preceding nigh.t. conipanles into the State Highway J-ipper, e efome nnhp . -3 many

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