TWENTIETH BIENNIAL REPORT

OF THE

SUPERINTENDENT

PUBLIC INSTRUCTION

OF THE

STATE OF OREGON

TO THE

TWENTY-SEVENTH LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY REGULAR SESSION.

1913

SALEM, ORSGON FTIIAIS S. DBNIWAT, STATE PRINTE8

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TWENTIETH BIENNIAL REPORT

SUPERINTENDENT

OP

PUBLIC INSTRUCTION

OF THE

STATE OF OREGON

TWENTY-SEVENTH LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY REGULAR SESSION.

1913

SALEM, OREGON WILLIS S. DUNIWAY, STATE PRINTER

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LETTER OF TRANSMITTAL.

Department of Public Instruction,

Salem, Oregon, December 31, 1912.

To the Honorable Legislative Assembly of the State of Oregon: Gentlemen : In compliance with the provisions of section 5 of the School Laws of Oregon, I have the honor to submit here- with the nineteenth biennial report of the Department of Public Instruction, embracing statistics and statistical sum- maries indicating the general conditions of the public schools of this State for the term ending June 15, 1912.

The statistics pertaining to colleges, universities, normal schools and other educational institutions close with the term ending June 21, 1912.

Respectfully submitted,

L. R. Alderman, Superintendent of Public Instruction.

TABLE OF CONTENTS.

•PAGE

Letter of transmittal v

General survey of educational work v-xiv

Comparative table showing educational progress 2

Comparative table giving census from 1873 to 1910 3

Comparative table showing enrollment from 1874 to 1910 4

Comparative table showing average daily attendance from 1877 to 1910.... 5 Statistical Table 1909-10

Pupils (census and enrollment) 6-14

Teachers 15

Pupils 16

Number of districts ...J 18

Number of school-houses 19

Legal voters 20

County superintendents' visits 20-21

Institutes . 22

Libraries 23

Private schools 24-26

Financial Exhibit, 1909-1910

Receipts '. 27-32

Disbursements 33-3 8

Value school property 39

Average salary 41-43

Average district tax 43

Financial summary 44

Bonded indebtedness * 45

Number months school in each district 46

Directory, 1910-11 47-56

Comparative statistics .■ 57

Supervisor's report 57-59

University of Oregon 60-65

Oregon Agricultural College 66-69

State Normal School 69-73

School for the Blind - 74

School for the Deaf-Mutes 74-78

Catholic schools of Oregon 77-78

Independent schools 78-82

Reports of county school superintendents 82-92

REPORT

A deep and widespread interest in the study of agriculture, domestic science and manual training ; a steady increase in the number of high schools ; a vigorous attempt on the part of the teachers of the State to bring the school and the home into a closer relation by the home credit plan, and the securing of a firm and permanent position in our educational system of a State Normal School are some of the most interesting signs of progress in the work of our public schools for the past year.

During the past two years I have asked the teachers of Ore- gon to make some recognition of the Avork done by the school children in their homes. The school has made so many demands on the home that the parents have in some cases felt that all the time of the child must be given to the school. But an important thing that the child needs along with school work is established habits of home making. What one does depends as much upon habit as upon knowledge. The criticism that is most often made upon industrial work at school is that it is so different from the work done at the home that it does not put the child into that sympathetic relation with the home, which after all is for him and the home the most important thing in the world. Juvenile institutions find that they must be careful not to institutionalize the child to the extent that he may not be contented in a real home. In my opinion it will be a great thing for the child to want to help his parents do the task that needs to be done and want to do it in the best possible way. The reason that so many country boys are now the leading men of affairs is because early in life they had the responsibility of home thrust upon them.

Every day brings reports of teachers who are working out this idea to meet the needs of their particular localities. Last spring this department issued a bulletin outlining the plan and suggesting a few ways by which the school could be brought into closer touch with the home. A writer in one of our local newspapers says, "It is the testimony of the parents where this plan has been tried that the children are co-operating with them, and becoming interested in their homes as never before. One mother said it seemed that her duties were reduced by half, and that the children were eager to do more, for more work meant more school credits. Conditions are reversing themselves instead of the parent saying, 'you must do your chores or I shall punish you,' the child is asking, 'isn't there something more I can do?' "

vi Report of Superintendent of Public Instruction.

To bring the school and home into the closest relations pos- sible and to instill into the children of Oregon a larger sense of the dignity of labor are the objects the Oregon schools have before them. Working on the principle that the school should be a real helper of the home, and that one of the most important things that a child needs along with the school work is estab- lished habits in home making, this plan of giving some credit for work done at home was started in our schools. The next thing was to encourage the children to want more than the surface knowledge of home work, to become experts in the art and science of bread making, sewing, gardening, carpenter work and other forms of industrial work, the district and State fairs have offered the opportunity for exhibitions of their efforts.

children's industrial fairs.

Last November the secretary of the State Bankers' Associa- tion in Oregon wrote me, asking what their organization might do to co-operate with the schools in this State in helping to bring about a more practical education for our children and indirectly to assist in developing the resources of the State. I replied by outlining a plan of industrial contests to be held at each county, the local prize winners to bring their exhibits to the State Fair for final contest. The Bankers' Association called a conference in December, and this plan was adopted. The State Agricultural College and the commercial clubs were invited to join in this movement. The Bankers' Association furnished a field worker and a stenographer and the Union Stock Yards at Portland also supplied a field worker. This department was asked to manage the work of the contests. In carrying this out I wrote to each of the county school super- intendents, who immediately began to organize the work in the various counties of the State. I also sent letters to every newspaper in the State, giving details of the plan, and wrote to each minister of the State, asking them to set aside one Sunday during the early spring to speak on this subject. In passing I wish to say that the county superintendents, the com- mercial clubs of Oregon, the newspapers and the ministers entered into the work most enthusiastically and gave us very valuable help all through the year.

The State Fair Board set aside $1,000 to be given as prizes for children's exhibits at the State Fair. Livestock men, farm- ers, merchants and poultrymen donated prizes to the amount of about $2,500, for children's exhibits at the State Fair. The Agricultural College prepared a bulletin instructing the

Report of Superintendent of Public Instruction.

vn

children how to raise various vegetables and how to do hand work. One hundred thousand of these bulletins were dis- tributed among the school children of the State. This work has not been a regular part of the school work, but rather the school has been used as a distributing center and through the schools the children have been encouraged to take up this work at home. Similar plans were carried out in all but one of the counties of the State so that the children were repre- sented at the district and county fairs. Altogether the children took part in eighty-eight fairs held in various parts of the State. The value of the prize lists amounted to about $20,000. It is estimated that about 75,000 children prepared exhibits for either county, district or State fairs.

One of the most attractive features of the State Fair was the children's industrial exhibit. All of the hand work and vegetable products were exhibited under the grand stand. The seventy-five coops of chickens were exhibited by the children in Barn No. 8. Had the weather been favorable the room under the grand stand would not have held all of the exhibits. The exhibits were shipped in groups and in a num- ber of counties the bad weather prevented the one in charge from getting the exhibits to the station.

This department is in receipt of thousands of letters from all parts of the State, praising the idea of having the children's industrial fairs and asking us to continue the work next year.

Following is a brief summarized report of the children's fair work as it has been carried out in this State.

A. Beginnings of contest:

1. Committee on industrial education of State Bankers' Association launched movement to arouse more interest in agricultural and industrial work in public schools by calling conference in Portland, December, 1911.

2. Yamhill County plan adopted and made State wide by which children were to be encouraged to grow gardens, and to make useful articles by local, county and State juvenile com- petitions.

3. Making up State Fair premium list started January 1, 1912. Animals and commodities to value of $2,500 were donated for children's prizes. This was supplemented by $1,000 cash for the State Fair Board.

B. Synopsis of Field and Office Work:

1. O. A. C. specialists prepared instructional part of con- test bulletin to go with contest rules and premium list ; 50,000 bulletins issued, 10,000 being distributed from Corvallis, and 40,000 from contest department in office of State Superin- tendent.

viii Report op Superintendent of Public Instruction.

2. Contest department has issued (exclusive of bulletins 9000 pieces of mail matter such as :

(a) Requests for prizes to breeders, merchants, etc.

(b) News letters (at least 800 columns have been used in Oregon, and by such publications as Saturday Evening Post, Survey, Youth's Companion, New York American, San Francisco Examiner, Country Gentleman ) .

(c) Letters to county and State superintendents.

(d) Letters to teachers, parents, children.

(e) Letters to fair boards, seed companies.

(f ) Letters to all Oregon granges.

(g) Letters to ministers (approximately 800 sermons preached on industrial work in March and April).

(h) Suggestive programs for local fairs.

3. The Oregon Development League has co-operated by communicating with all commercial organizations in Oregon relative to industrial work.

4. County superintendents and teachers have worked as a unit in promotion of plan ; business men have liberally rallied to its support.

C. Results :

1. 88 children's fairs were held in various parts of the State.

2. Value of prize lists amounted to $20,000.

3. Juvenile exhibitors at fairs during year 75,000. (Ore- gon has 125,000 school children).

4. Prof. C. H. Lane, assistant in agricultural education at Washington, D. C, whose visit to Oregon in May was a recog- nition by the national government of movement in Oregon, said : "Oregon has started this work on a broader scale than any other State. T never have found a State in which bankers, breeders and business men have given industrial education such liberal support at the outset. The next step should be to make the work an integral part of the public school system."

RURAL SUPERVISION.

I am pleased to be able to report to you that the rural super- visory law passed by the 1911 session of the legislature is giving general satisfaction, and is doing much to increase the efficiency of the work in the rural schools.

The supervisory law was enacted by the Legislature in 1911. It was passed for the sole purpose of improving the rural schools. Investigation shows that every county in the Willamette Valley has rural districts where the population has decreased in the last twenty years. This ought not to be in a rich, beautiful country like Oregon. It is a matter of common

Report of Superintendent of Public Instruction. ix

knowledge that our rural dwellers have gone to town that they might have better schools for their children. This has been going on all over the State, and it is not hard to find the cause for this unpopularity of the country schools. Untrained, poorly paid teachers, unsupervised teachers, too frequent change of teachers, and unattractive school houses have made the country schools not only unpopular, but inadequate for the demand made upon them.

The country over $33.00 is being spent for the education of the town boy and girl, and $13.00 for the country boy. In Oregon, in some counties, the disparity is even worse than that. The City of Salem is proud of her schools, and well she may be. In the school year, 1910-1911, with about seventy teachers, some $6,000 was spent for supervision. In the whole county outside of Salem, with two hundred teachers, $1,000 was spent for the supervision, and at least half of the time of that super- visor was taken up with office duties. With the supervisory law the county of Marion is spending about 76 cents for super- vision for each child in rural schools. $2.50 is being spent for the supervision of each child in the Salem schools, and yet they talk of repealing the law that allows 76 cents to be spent for the rural supervision.

The supervisory law has cost the State the last year some- thing like $23,000 in salaries. A careful investigation will show that we have saved in actual money, to say nothing of the improved conditions brought about, a large sum of money. It is a notorious fact that the school districts in this State, and in most states where there is little supervision, squander a great deal of money in supplies that are not needed. In almost every rural school house in this State there are expen- sive charts, globes and other apparatus that was not needed, for which the school districts paid from three to five times the actual catalogue price. An agent will call upon one director and show him a chart, for which he asks $75.00. The director says that he is much interested, but he is only one member of the board. The agent then asks, "if the others consent, will you give your consent," and he replies "yes." The agent then sees director number two, and informs him that director number one is in favor of buying the chart. Number two says he doesn't know about it, but won't object if the other two agree. The agent then sees director number three, with the result that the district pays $75.00 for a chart that is listed in any reputable supply house for $15.00. With the rural supervisors all this waste is eliminated, as districts are advised as to needed supplies.

X

Report of Superintendent of Public Instruction.

I have seen school districts in the State with but nine feet of blackboard with no erasers, with no maps and with no water supply, that had recently paid $75.00 for a chart, $39.00 for an expensive globe and $30.00 for mathematical blocks that were not needed by any of the children attending- school.

Again, supervisors, by carefully looking over the grading of pupils and advising with the teacher, have, in many cases, saved a year of a student's time. In the rural schools pro- motions are made but once during the school year, and if at the time of the promotion the pupils fall short of making the required grade he must spend another year in the grade. The supervisor guides the effort of the pupil and the teacher so that the pupils will have no difficulty in doing well in the specified time all the prescribed work in any grade. The idea of the supervisory law is that a teacher will improve in ser- vice, and thus be a year's better teacher at the end of the year. With proper supervision every school in the State is in a sense a normal school.

The rural supervisors in this State have, I think, saved, in some cases, the lives of boys and girls during the last two years. They have looked after the sanitary conditions. In thousands of cases they have had the well water examined, and in not a few cases have they found seriously contaminated wells from which pupils and teacher were drinking. There are cases where typhoid fever was prevalent in districts almost every year where they have been free from it in the last two years on account of better sanitary conditions advocated by the rural supervisor.

We are planning to do much industrial work. We hope the children, by proper encouragement, will raise enough chickens so that the gross income will two or three times over pay for the whole cost of the schools of the State. Without supervision it will be impossible for us to carry out any concerted action along this line. You cannot do things of this kind with cir- cular letters or with a talk once a year at teachers' institutes. No industry where the product can be measured in dollars and cents, where so much money is expended, spends as little for supervisors as the public schools. Railroads have supervisors for every few workmen, because they find it pays.

Rural supervision is not a new thing. In all states where it is used it has proven to be a means of betterment. Some states have claimed that it has increased the efficiency of the schools a hundred per cent. In the United States there are 67 per cent of the girls and boys attending country schools, and yet less than 40 per cent of the money is being spent for rural education.

Report of Superintendent of Public Instruction.

XI

All states that are making progress in the way of improv- ing the rural schools have rural supervision. Every authority that has made a study of rural school conditions has advo- cated the great need of rural supervision. The most expen- sive school in the State of Oregon is that school that is so poor that it drives people away from it because the people take their earning power away with them. The cheapest school in the State of Oregon is that school that attracts people with the earning power to it.

It is said by some that we do not need a supervisor, as we have the county superintendents. This law does not call for an extra supervisor unless there are sixty districts or more; eighteen counties do not have a supervisor. It is physically impossible for one man to supervise properly more than sixty districts ; but in addition to the supervision, the county super- intendent is given many office tasks which consume half his time.

I ask all people who want to see the Oregon country home the best place in the world to raise a family to join with me in the improvement of country schools.

To state some of the results of the supervisory law more definitely, I quote from a few special reports made by county superintendents :

T. J. GARY, SCHOOL SUPERINTENDENT CLACKAMAS COUNTY.

"We have a number of teachers who have not had an oppor- tunity to secure special training. Most of these are both will- ing and anxious to learn. To such a good supervisor is a great help. We have a goodly number of teachers who do excellent work and get results. These do not need close supervision, but they almost invariably report that they were helped.

"The supervisors did much good in securing better sanita- tion and better arrangement of school programs. In a few instances they found teachers trying to hear forty to forty-five recitations daily and by skillful combination helped to reduce this number to twenty-two or twenty-five. They also did much good in bringing the schools and the homes closer together through parent-teachers' meetings and school exhibitions."

H. C. BAUGHMAN, SCHOOL SUPERINTENDENT LANE COUNTY.

"Under this supervisory system in a great number of the rural schools the system of lighting and sanitary conditions have been improved. Many local meetings of patrons and teachers have been held. In short, the rural schools of Lane County have made more advancement and received more

XII

Report of Superintendent of Public Instruction.

respective supervision during the last school year, under this supervisory law, than in the last five preceding years. I think it has been and is yet a physical impossibility for the county superintendent to do all that is expected of him. There are 182 districts in this county, on an average of five miles apart. To visit all of these it requires the superintendent to travel more than 1,000 miles, spend at least one hour in each school, besides three times that on the road. Under the supervisory law all of the districts of Lane County, with two exceptions, have been visited from two to six times during the past year by school supervisors.

"It is well known that any company or corporation employ- ing a large number of workmen have at least one overseer for every 50 or 60 men to see that the work is done according to prescribed plans. It is true that the school teachers are required to take an examination and are considered as belong- ing to a profession, yet they are all required to work in accord- ance with prescribed rules and regulations the State Course of Study. I believe that this supervision in the instruction of our youth is at least as important as railroad building and sewer construction.

"As to the cost of the supervisory system I will say that the past school year has cost Lane County $5,250 ; in order to raise this amount it is necessary to levy a tax of fourteen one- hundredths of a mill on the assessable property of the county. This means that every man worth $1,000 will pay fourteen cents for the maintenance of the supervisory system, if he is worth $10,000 he will pay $1.00 for this system."

FRANK K. WELLES, SCHOOL SUPERINTENDENT UMATILLA COUNTY.

"The reports of the supervisors show that they made 363 visits to the homes of the district officers. During these visits they talked over many things relating to the welfare of the schools. As a result, we were able to get practically all of the school houses thoroughly scrubbed and cleaned before the school opened. The directors in one district made some objec- tions to this, claiming that their schoolhouse had not been scrubbed out since it was built, 23 years ago, and they did not think it necessary now. However, it was done.

"In several districts the supervisors were able to get the terms of school extended a month or more, beyond the time named in the contracts, and have gotten more and better equip- ment than ever before. During the year 57 districts purchased closed tanks for the drinking water, and in all of the schools individual drinking cups were used. Two-thirds of the schools now have fine Hyloplate blackboards.

Report of Superintendent of Public Instruction.

The supervisors have created a much better sentiment among the district officers regarding the flag law, and have in other ways greatly stimulated their interest in the schools.

With few exceptions, the schools are now well equipped for work, and hereafter the supervisors will give less attention to these matters, and devote more of their time to assisting the teachers in the actual school work, as does the city super* intendent in the larger districts." 1

Reports fully as encouraging as these have been received from Supt. H. C. Seymour, of Polk County; Supt. J. Percy Wells, Jackson County; Sunt. Justus T. Neff, Wasco County; and in fact from nearly all of these counties where this law is in effect.

A report from Jackson County shows the supervisor has secured for nearly all of the school districts in his supervisory district individual drinking cups, sanitary water jars, window ventilating boards, sheet iron jackets for the stoves, medical attention for the defective pupils. He has also had the drink- ing water analyzed by the State Board of Health, and where the water was found to be impure, he was instrumental in get- ting pure drinking water for the schools.

He also secured supplementary readers for the use of the schools, helped the teachers to a better understanding of the State Course of Study, arranged for an exchange of essays and school compositions between the school children of the various school districts and the school children in certain parts of Texas, Virginia, Louisiana, South Dakota and several of the Canadian provinces. He also caused to be held in the months of January, February, and March, thirty public meetings in the various school districts.

In conclusion I might give a brief history of the enactment of this law. A few months before the 1911 session of the legislature a committee composed of a number of county super- intendents was appointed to inquire into the conditions of the rural schools and to see what legislation might be suggested to better their condition. It was found that wherever possible people were moving into towns for the benefit of the schools during the winter months. The question was at once suggested, what is the difference between the rural and the town schools that makes this necessary? It was the opinion of the mem- bers of the committee that the vital difference was that the work of the teachers of the town schools was well supervised, while the rural teachers were left entirely alone with their work, with the exception of one or two visits each year from

XIV

Report of Superintendent of Public Instruction.

the county superintendent. Some county superintendents had to look after the work of from 150 to 175 rural teachers,_ as well as the immense amount of office work. At the same time a town of 2,500 inhabitants would have a city superintendent, a principal for each building, and in the larger towns, in addi- tion to this, a supervisor for drawing, one for domestic science, one for music, and one for manual training. In both houses of the last legislature there were a large number of members particularly interested in the welfare of the schools and anxious to do something to bring the rural schools up to the efficiency of the town and city schools. When the rural supervisory bill was prepared it was given a careful examination by a large number of the legislators before it was presented. Following their suggestions a number of changes were made and when the bill was finally introduced there was little or no opposition in either house. In my opinion the results are bearing out the prophecy which was made at that time that "rural supervision will increase the efficiency of the country schools one hundred per cent by making more effective the work of the teacher, by appealing to the pride of the residents of each district to better the conditions of the school, by arousing an interest in adult education through the parents' meetings, by encouraging the study of agriculture, and in a general way by bringing about a more direct administration of our school affairs."

HIGH SCHOOLS.

The number of high schools in this State is increasing each year. Twelve years ago there were only five four-year high schools in the State. This year there are 116 four-year high schools, and a large number of three-year, two-year and one- year high schools. These smaller high schools are gradually adding to their courses, making the number of four-year high schools larger every year. Under our laws a county may estab- lish one central high school maintained by county tax, or it may establish a county high school fund and aDportion the money to the various district high schools. The former plan suits the sparsely settled counties; the latter is better for the more thickly' populated counties. Six counties have the central county high school. Eight counties have adopted a county high school fund law. We have also a union high school law, which permits a number of districts to unite for high school purposes, and in the county where the county high school fund law is in operation these union districts are proving very satisfactory. These two laws give the people in the rural districts the oppor- tunity to have a high school within the reach of all the pupils.

Report of Superintendent of Public Instruction. xv

That the people of Oregon believe in high schools is shown not only by the rapid increase in number, but also by the fact that more than seventy per cent of the boys and girls completing the eighth grade go on to high school. This is probably a larger percentage than any other state in the Union can show.

Nearly every district of the first-class in Oregon has a good, modern high school building. Pictures of a number of these buildings are shown in this report. Special attention has been paid to the lighting, heating, ventilating, and other sanitary conditions of the building.

All phases of industrial work are being taught in the Oregon high schools, and we are particularly fortunate in securing the consent of the State University to give credit for all such work. In other words our high schools give a well rounded and fairly complete education. For those who are able to go on to secure a higher education, the University does not insist upon an iron clad set of college requirements, but takes the pupils and gives them credit for all the work done in high school.

Teachers training courses are proving very popular. Many of our four-year high schools are employing a normal trained teacher to take charge of these high school students who expect to teach. The students are given a good course in the practical side of teaching, methods, use of school blanks, school laws of Oregon, history of education, and one good work on pedagogy. Upon the completion of this course, the students receive a one- year limited State certificate, without examination.

The best part of this course is that it gives the prospective teacher a desire to secure a thorough professional training. Those who expect to take up high school work, go to the State University, or some other college offering a course in educa- tion. Those who wish to do special work go to the Oregon Agricultural College, while those who expect to fit themselves for grammar grade teachers, principals, or superintendents go to the State Normal School. The new certificate law is doing much to raise the standard of teachers. Many trained teachers from other states are coming to Oregon, because the graduate of a standard normal school, or of a university, having a depart- ment of education, may receive without examination a certifi- cate to teach in this State. This tends to make those in Oregon who wish to teach first prepare themselves by a good pro- fessional course.

On the whole the public schools of the State are progressing, modern sanitary buildings are being constructed in all of our cities and towns, industrial work is being taught in most of our

XVI

Report of Superintendent of Public Instruction.

high schools and is rapidly being introduced into the grades. The State may be proud of its University and its Normal School and its Agricultural College. However, if our State is to continue to prosper and its resources are ever going to be developed fully, all must unite to make the rural schools a place where parents will feel satisfied to send their children. The rural population will not increase until the rural school does reach this position.

REPORT

The report is designed to embrace the following outline indi- cated in section 5 of the school laws :

1. The general condition of the public schools of the State.

2. Amount of school money apportioned among the several counties, and the sources whence such moneys are raised.

3. Amounts raised by county and district taxes, and the amounts paid for teachers' salaries, buildings, furniture, etc.

4. The series of text-books authorized by the school law.

5. Rules and regulations prescribed by the State Board of Education for the government of the public schools.

6. Number and grade of schools in each county.

7. Number of persons between the ages of four and twenty years ; number attending public schools ; number attending private schools; number not attending any school.

8. Statistics concerning chartered educational institutions and institutions under the patronage of the State.

9. General educational information.

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2,590 730 427

4,036 918

1,115 691

3,423 1.525

758 633

5,376 846

4,106

761 6, 198 1 . 106 13,641 2, 768

874 1,140 4,063 3,574 1,289

2,941 4,109

80.364

1

llsll Is

r-t csf 03 rHi-i Cm" COrH

3,453 1,440

624 518

5.052 800

5, 214

511 5,800 1.043 12,337 2.65S

470 903 3.370 8. 281 1,069

1,951 3,988

77. 941

1

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1

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1,247 707 203

2,337

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County

Baker

Benton _

Clatsop --

Columbia _

Douglas

Gilliam-.- --

Harney _ _

Hood Kiver

Jackson _-. ---

Klamath _ ... _

Lincoln -- .-

Malheur __ -

Mutnomah

Polk

Sherman.. .

Tillamook .. ..

Umatilla ... -

Wallowa .. ... .

Wasco --- - -

Washington

Yamhill ..

Totals

ex 1

Report of Superintendent of Public Instruction.

5

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6 Report of Superintendent of Public Instruction.

STATISTICAL TABLE Continued. CENSUS 1911-1912.

1. Number of persons between four and twenty years of age residing in the county at time of this report

County

1911

1912

Male

Female

Total

Male

Female

Total

Totals

91,891

88,!:07

180,798

96, 485

92,940

189,425

Baker

•J, 797

2,640

5, 437

2,828

2,718

5,546

Benton . __

1,614

1,618

3,232

1.788

1,758

3,546

Clackamas .

5, 187

1.886

10,073

5.580

5, 809

10,889

Clatsop.. ...

2 272

2 200

4 47"?

2 268

2 248

4 516

Columbia .

L699

1, 584

3] 283

JU792

L618

3', 410

2,903

2,775

5,678

3,037

2.842

5,879

Crook . .

1,250

1,174

2, 424

1.549

1,469

3,018

Curry _. _

371

330

701

375

:: r,

701

Douglas

2,977

3, 127

6. 104

3. 164

3. 282

6, 446

Gilliam

566

526

1,092

535

513

1,048

Grant .

898

900

1.798

939

946

1.885

Harney

574

614

1.188

633

556

1,189

Hood River. ...

1,012

1.017

2,059

1 . 1 11'. 1

1,059

2,123

Jackson .

3.542

3.377

6.919

3,761

3,6i0

7,381

Josephine. ...

1.646

1.518

3.164

1,668

1,472

3,140

Klamath

1,105

1,071

2. 176

1.217

1,178

2,390

Lake. __ _.

635

673

1.308

642

601

1.243

Lane

5,6(10

5,218

10.818

5.755

5.494

11.249

Lincoln

923

863

1.786

1,049

865

1,914

Jjinn ...

3.883

3,880

7.763

4,161

3,992

8,153

Malheur . .

1..335

1,210

2,545

1,397

1,283

2,680

Marion ...

6,141

6,063

12,204

6, 653

6,476

13, 129

Morrow

757

624

1,381

691

655

1,347

Multnomah...

21.562

21,714

43, 276

22,043

22, 380

44,423

Polk

2,340

2,119

4,459

2,585

2,306

4,891

Sherman... . ..

494

506

1,000

487

469

956

Tillamook .. .

951

890

1.841

1,034

987

2,021

Umatilla

3. 228

3,017

6, 245

3, 472

3,312

6,784

Union ..

2.870

2. 645

5,515

2,744

2, 699

5, 443

Wallowa... ...

1.685

1,166

2,851

1,650

1,306

2,956

Wasco

1,913

1,823

3.736

2,012

1,878

3,890

Washington

3.752

3,360

7,112

3,940

3,704

7.644

Wheeler ..

430

434

864

444

453

897

Yamhill

2,945

3,345

6, 290

3,528

3.170

6,698

Report of Superintendent of Public Instruction. 7

STATISTICAL TABLE Continued.

CENSUS 1911-191-2.

2. Primary enrollment

County

1911

1912

Male

Female

Total

Male

Female

Total

Totals

63.440

60. 978

124,418

66.494

63. 774

130,268

Baker .. __ _..

1, 954

1,797

3 751

1 783

1 735

O, OlO

Benton

1,214

l, 198

2,412

I . 29 1

l] 215

2 509

Clackamas

:: is.;

2, 922

fi[ 105

3 355

3' 237

O, 0*1.2

Clatsop

L249

L290

2. 539

1 \ 341

i',-m

2.63t>

Columbia _. _

1.172

1,049

2,219

1.183

1,066

2,249

Coos

2, 106

1, 998

4. 1U4

2 171

2 060

"'825

839

1 664

s ;n

822

I , DUO

Curry

225

222

'447

254

225

479

Douglas

2.140

1,9«4

4,104

2,316

2,112

4,428

Gilliam

363

332

695

311

336

677

Grant___ . ._ ....... .

607

632

1,239

682

713

1.395

Harney

290

325

615

310

335

645

Hood River .

743

739

1.482

739

751

1.490

Jackson _ _

2.595

2,566

5.161

2. 676

2,563

5, 239

Josephine _ _

1.187

1,091

2,278

1,113

1,040

2.153

Klamath .

773

781

1,554

809

816

1 . 625

Lake ___ _

386

379

765

386

322

708

Lane ..

3.903

3,759

7. 662

4,014

3.926

7,940

Lincoln _ __

732

681

1,413

682

568

1,250

Linn .

2.796

2,681

5,477

2,889

2,653

5.542

Malheur ._

991

883

1,874

994

933

1.927

Marion

3,827

3.724

7.551

4,234

4,058

S.2D2

Morrow _ ..

570

485

1.055

540

474

1.014

Multnomah

15. 672

15,619

31.291

16. 837

16, 651

33,488

Polk

1,549

1,4:6

2,975

1.667

1,511

3.178

Sherman

358

354

712

342

334

676

Tillamook ...

610

541

1,151

665

582

1 . 247

Umatilla ...

2. 294

2,167

4.461

2.334

2,282

4,616

Union

1.961

1.905

3.866

1.970

1,932

3.902

Wallowa . ....

1.120

840

1.960

1.164

967

2, 131

Wasco .

1,247

1.157

2.404

1.360

1.231

2.591

Washington.

2.:;5u

2.202

4.552

2.501

2. 357

1,-<5S

Wheeler

294

301

595

312

348

660

Yamhill

2.154

2, 131

4.285

2.400

2,324

4.724

8 Report of Superintendent of Public Instruction.

STATISTICAL TABLE Continued ENROLLMENT 1911-1912

3. Secondary enrollment

County

ism

1912

Male

Female

Total

Male

Female

Total

Totals

4 504

4 420

8 930

4 703

4 489

9 9fW

Baker - -

125

111

236

115

121

236

74

05

139

98

113

211

Clackamas . _.

248

203

511

250

228

484

Clatsop -- - --

82

70

158

02

74

136

Columbia __ .._ ...

92

98

190

112

81

iyo

Ooos ... ... .

208

290

564

452

432

884

(57

89

153

123

124

247

Curry.

Douglas . _ ... .

168

171

339

189

190

379

Gilliam .

22

18

40

20

18

44

Grant _ ..

119

136

255

109

128

237

Harney ._

55

60

115

30

35

65

Hood River.

09

67

136

63

51

114

Jackson __ __ ... _-.

270

211

484

256

247

503

Josephine

253

251

504

258

258

516

Klamath

111

130

241

62

47

109

Lake

49

50

99

20

26

46

Lane . .

313

297

610

387

315

702

Lincoln . _ . _ ___

8H

02

145

92

117

209

Linn.. __

80

09

149

226

164

390

Malheur..

49

40

95

70

85

155

Marion ._ _ ..... . ..

302

272

574

297

262

559

Morrow ..

32

37

69

41

30

71

Multnomah. ._ . ..

452

512

964

185

162

347

Polk

134

138

272

117

119

296

Sherman

43

36

79

33

35

68

Tillamook ... .. _

70

70

110

74

77

151

Umatilla.

170

171

847

197

207

404

Union

105

80

185

192

121

313

Wallowa -. .

120

85

205

79

100

179

Wasco . .

119

124

243

127

98

225

Washington

225

187

412

227

231

458

Wheeler. . . _

11

13

24

15

21

36

Yamhill

1 is

132

250

143

142

285

Report of Superintendent of Public Instruction.

STATISTICAL TABLE Continued

ENROLLMENT 1911-1912

4. Primary enrollment. (<0 Over 4 and under 6

County

1911

1912

Male

i'Vni.i

Total

Male

Female

Total

Totals

784

793

1.577

757

787

1 , 544

Baker

19

17

80

20

22

48

Benton

11

11

22

7

9

16

Clackamas __

82

48

Ml

li'

48

90

Clatsop... .

2

1

3

16

14

30

Columbia

7

10

23

16

14

80

Coos

27

10

18

40

02

102

0 rook

li;

20

80

19

20

39

Ourry

4

6

10

Douglas

50

75

125

01

91

152

Gilliam

5

4

'.I

9

5

14

Grant

46

33

79

47

39

86

Harney

23

18

41

25

20

•15

Hood River .

5

6

11

6

7

13

Jackson . __ . .

24

35

59

22

17

39

Josephine...

18

13

20

18

11

29

Klamath ....

16

24

40

21

21

45

Lake .... .

18

12

25

7

9

16

Lane . _ _

79

58

137

83

68

151

Lincoln .

27

36

03

19

14

33

Linn

87

34

71

37

40

77

Malheur __ _ . ...

9

10

19

14

13

27

Marion _

39

20

05

36

38

74

Morrow __ . _ _ ...

14

8

22

. 9

12

21

Multnomah. .

10

15

81

20

12

32

Polk

40

88

78

23

17

10

Sherman

Tillamook

9

20

3 21

12 41

12 12

10 13

2g

2S

Umatilla .. .....

45

32

77

■)■)

26

■>.8

Union _.

12

18

25

17

22

39

Wasco ._ ... _

14

16

30

10

•-5

35

Washington

86

01

22

32

54

Wheeler

1(1

13

7

0

13

Yamhill

86

88

174

28

21

•19

10 Report of Superintendent of Public Instruction.

STATISTICAL TABLE Continued. ENROLLMENT 1911-1912

4. Primary enrollment. (M Over G and under 9.

County

Totals

Baker

Benton

Clafkamas_

Clatsop

Columbia

Coos

Crook

Curry

Douglas . Gilliam..

Grant

Harney

Hood River_

Jackson

Josephine.

Klamath .

Lake

Lane

Lincoln... Linn

Malheur

Marion

Morrow

Multnomah. Polk

Sherman.. Tillamook. Umatilla ..

Union

Wallowa .-

Wasco

Washington.

Wheeler

Yamhill

1911

1912

Male

Female

Total

Male

EVmn h-

Total

18,078

16.878

34,956

19, 151

17,874

37,025

512

454

966

422

355

777

304

310

614

325

283

608

887

882

1,769

917

905

1,822

389

369

758

437

363

800

348

311

659

341

308

649

590

567

1,157

619

583

1,202

230

234

464

279

281

560

35

45

80

37

29

66

i;r,s

461

1,119

697

480

1,177

99

89

188

83

88

171

181

202

383

183

216

399

91

95

186

99

97

196

204

202

406

215

205

420

718

713

1,431

729

705

1,434

301

259

560

291

249

540

198

215

413

222

248

470

105

101

206

106

94

200

1.032

922

1,954

1,145

1,054

2, 199

185

167

352

168

122

290

730

696

1,426

753

694

1.447

289

255

544

278

280

558

1,042

1.009

2,051

1,147

1,110

2, 257

136

146

282

133

142

275

5, 139

4,665

9,804

5,638

5,253

10,891

398

353

751

395

387

782

93

104

197

92

88

180

145

130

275

159

148

307

597

609

1,206

632

598

1,230

531

514

1,045

570

550

1,120

312

225

537

412

238

650

342

328

665

370

358

728

fi53

638

1,291

602

707

1.309

71

68

139

57

73

130

533

545

1,078

598

583

1,181

Report of Superintendent of Public Instruction. 11

STATISTICAL TABLE- Continued.

ENROLLMENT 1911-1912.

4. Primary enrollment (c) Over 9 and under 12 Continued.

County

1911

1912

Male

Female

Total

Male

Female

Total

Totals

17,644

17. 186

34,830

18.466

17, 698

36,164

Baker

526

480

1,006

509

479

OSS

Benton -

331

303

634

349

331

680

Clackamas .

881

880

1,761

900

961

1.861

Clatsop

350

344

694

366

375

741

Columbia ..

340

286

626

344

243

587

Ooos

588

537

1.125

619

549

1,168

Crook

238

230

468

152

138

200

Curry.

58

40

98

73

62

135

Douglas

437

568

1,005

430

571

1,001

Gilliam _.

83

90

173

90

84

174

Grant .

174

226

400

196

2111

436

Harney

59

84

143

59

84

143

Hood River . _

208

187

395

213

176

389

Jackson

680

677

1,357

721

687

1,408

Josephine.

329

285

614

302

261

563

Klamath. . _____ _

191

209

400

219

213

432

Lake_

118

108

226

111

83

194

Lane_. ._

993

985

1.978

1,100

1,000

2,iro

Lincoln _ _. ._

211

194

405

165

172

337

Linn...

709

674

1,383

773

710

1.483

Malheur ....

270

237

507

277

274

551

Marion

1.023

1,003

2, 026

1,150

1,180

2.280

Morrow

147

126

273

145

122

267

Multnomah... ...

6,038

4,911

9.949

5. 321

5,023

10,344

Polk

420

392

812

455

410

865

Sherman .. .

86

83

169

75

79

154

Tillamook _____

153

142

295

161

162

323

Umatilla

59s

580

1,178

630

683

1,313 966

Union _

517

516

1,033

498

468

Wallowa

285

227

512

270

250

520

Wasco

332

317

619

377

315

692

Washington

653

597

1,250

682

655

1,337

Wheeler . ..

47

73

120

118

81

199

Yamhill.. ... _ ......

571

595

1,166

616

627

1,243

12 Report of Superintendent of Public Instruction.

STATISTICAL TABLE Continued ENROLLMENT 1911-1912

4. Primary enrollment, id) Over 12 and under 14 Continued

County

1911

1912

Male

Female

Total

Male

Female

Total

Totals

12,024

11.955

23. 979

12.210

12. 254

24.464

Baker

446

417

863

377

354

731

Benton _ _ ...

221

219

440

250

217

467

Clackamas

629

545

1.174

686

622

1,308

Clatsop

216

214

460

220

228

448

Columbia ... . .. .

214

192

406

207

206

413

Coos _ . .

357

377

734

375

356

731

Crook . . -__ _ .

151

184

335

180

195

375

Curry

72

63

135

75

64

139

Douglas _

480

425

905

431

452

883

Gilliam

73

56

129

84

81

165

Grant . .

100

99

199

124

121

245

Harney

61)

75

135

60

75

135

Hood River ... _

134

142

276

114

139

253

Jackson

480

437

917

448

137

885

Josephine ... ... . ...

234

200

434

202

189

391

141

118

269

142

132

274

Lake. _ . _ _ .

64

66

130

50

54

104

Lane . _

680

725

L. 105

456

630

1.086

Lincoln _ .. ...

162

121

283

144

no

254

Linn .

509

465

974

511

478

989

Malheur

159

168

327

153

172

325

Marion

720

676

1.396

743

680

1,423

Morrow . ._

93

73

166

88

60

148

Mullnomah.. ..

3.020

3,49!)

6.510

3.271

3, 666

6, 937

Polk

277

259

536

325

278

603

Sherman

&8

57

115

61

61

m

Tillamook ...

no

98

208

1 is

118

266

Umatilla.. __ _ . . . _ _

419

376

795

429

363

792

Union .. .

334

342

676

357

352

709

Wallowa

280

192

472

225

207

432

Wasco... ... ... . _ _ ..

207

196

403

207

221

428

Washing-ton .

461

404

865

568

424

992

Wheeler

60

49

109

54

90

144

Yamhill....

403

395

798

445

422

867

Report of Superintendent of Public Instruction.

L3

STATISTICAL TABLE Continued

ENROLLMENT 1911-1912

4. Primary enrollment, (e) Over 14 and under 20 Continued

\jU UXL li j

L'.Ml

1912

i a e

s emale

Total

Male

e emale

Total

JLOiaiS __

14. 910

14, loo

till

Jit, 0/6

15.897

15, 176

31,0/3

Kaker .

451

429

880

449

525

974

Benton

347

355

702

363

375

738

Clackamas - .

754

567

1, 321

810

701

1,511

Clatsop ___

292

332

624

302

315

617

Columbia

263

242

505

275

295

570

Coos _

544

501

1,045

518

510

1,028

Crook

190

171

361

2( 16

1HS

394

Curry _ __

60

74

134

68

61

129

Douglas .

515

435

950

697

518

1,215

t.Tiinam _

103

93

169

75

78

153

Grant _

106

72

178

132

97

"•'29

Harney

57

53

110

60

66

126

T-Tnnd RivfM*

192

202

394

191

224

415

Jackson _. _ __

693

704

1.397

756

717

1,473

Josephine

310

334

644

300

330

630

Klamath.._

227

205

432

205

199

404

Lake

86

92

178

102

92

194

Lane. ___

1,119

1,069

2,188

1.230

1,174

2,404

Lincoln ... _______

147

163

310

186

150

336

Linn. __ _ __ _ _

811

812

1,623

816

730

1,546

Malheur _ ______ __

264

213

477

272

194

466

Marion _ _ _.

1,003

1,010

2,013

1,158

1,100

2,258

Morrow

180

132

312

165

138

303

Multnomah _

2, 439

2, 538

4,997

2,587

2,697

5, 284

Polk

414

384

798

469

421

890

Sherman _.

112

107

219

102

96

198

Tillamook _ _ ___ _

182

150

332

185

141

326

Umatilla. ___

635

570

1,205

621

612

1,233

Union _

567

520

1,087

528

540

1,068

Wallowa

243

196

439

257

272

529

Wasco

352

305

657

396

312

708

Washington _

558

527

1.085

627

539

1,166

Wheeler __ ___ _ _ _

113

101

214

76

98

174

Yamhill

561

508

1,069

713

671

1,384

14 Report of Superintendent of Public Instruction.

STATISTICAL TABLE Continued. ENROLLMEMT 1911-1912

Primary enrollment— Continued. 5. Total (sum of items a, b, c. d and e)

County

1911

1912

Male

Female

Total

Male

Female

Total

Totals

63, 440

60, 978

124, 418

66, 480

63,788

130,268

Bake r

1,954

1,791

3,751

1,783

1 735

0,0X0

Benton ... ... ...

1 ,' 2 1 1

1, 198

2) 412

1 ] 294

1 215

2 509

Clackamas .

8, 183

2! 922

6, 105

3] 355

3' 237

6 592

Clatsop

1,249

1 ' 290

2' 539

1 ' 34 1

1 295

-} tyg

Columbia

1,172

L047

2! 219

L183

1,'066

2.249

Coos

2. 106

1,998

4, 104

2, 171

2.060

4 231

Crook . . ... .

825

' 839

1, 664

' 836

822

1, 658

Gurry -

225

222

447

257

222

' _17Q

Douglas

2,140

1.964

4,104

2, 816

2, 112

4,428

Gilliam

363

332

695

341

336

677

Grant.. . . .

607

632

1.239

682

713

1,395

Harney

290

325

615

303

342

645

Hood River.. .

743

739

1.482

739

751

1,490

Jackson

2,595

2,566

5.161

2,676

2,563

5,239

Josephine.

1,187

1,091

2,278

1,113

1,040

2,153

Klamath ._

773

781

1.554

809

816

1.625

Lake. ....

386

379

765

376

332

708

Lane. _ . .. .

3, 903

3,759

7,662

4,014

3,926

7,940

Lincoln . .... _.

732

681.

1,413

682

568

1.250

Linn

2,796

2,681

5,477

2.889

2,653

5,542

Malheur

991

883

1,874

994

933

1,927

Marion . ... ... _

3,827

3,724

7,551

4,234

4,058

8,292

Morrow _ _ . ... _

570

485

1,055

540

474

1.014

Multnomah... ...

15, 672

15,619

31,291

16,8;;7

16,651

33.488

Polk

1,549

1,426

2,975

1,667

1.511

3.178

Sherman.. ... !.

858

354

712

342

334

676

Tillamook

610

541

1.151

665

582

1,247

Umatilla ..

2, 294

2, 167

4.461

2, 334

2.282

4,616

Union ... _________

1.96]

1,905

3, 866

1,970

1.932

3. 902

Wallowa _ _ .

1,120

840

1,960

1,164

967

2,131

Wasco _ .. .

1,247

1,157

2,404

1.360

1,231

2,591

Washington

2,350

2, 202

4,552

2,501

2,357

4,858

Wheeler.. _.

294

301

595

312

348

66(1

Yamhill

2,154

2,131

4,285

2,400

2,324

4,724

Report of Superintendent of Public Instruction.

15

STATISTICAL TABLE Continued.

TEACHERS 1911-1912

6. Number of teachers employed during year.

County

Totals ...

Baker

Benton

Clackamas __

Clatsop

Columbia ___

Coos

Oi'ook

Ourry

Douglas

Gilliam

Grant

Harney

Hood River.

Jackson

Josephine ___

Klamath

Lake

Lane

Lincoln

Linn

Malheur

Marion

Morrow

Multnomah . Polk

Sherman

Tillamook

Umatilla

Union

Wallowa

Wasco

Washington

Wheeler

Yamhill

M

1912

Male

Female

Total

Male

Female

Total

956

4,013

4,969

999

4, 190

5,189

21

117

138

25

103

128

24

89

113

31

84

115

■16

187

233

46

180

226

13

79

92

12

87

99

18

74

92

17

79

96

25

10(1

125

32

104

136

27

89

116

24

73

97

71

26

37

13

20

33

59

149

208

38

164

202

11

37

48

9

39

48

13

44

57

14

46

60

7

36

43

7

41

48

9

51

60

12

51

63

34

177

211

41

190

231

16

KN

1(14

17

93

110

21

51

72

21)

66

si;

11

41

52

12

32

44

73

295

368

87

309

396

23

65

88

2u

57

77

67

177

244

76

171

247

15

59

74

15

71

86

46

226

272

47

228

275

19

57

76

11

64

75

1(8

769

877

109

850

959

25

112

137

32

123

155

7

43

50

10

36

46

14

55

69

15

64

79

44

165

209

47

178

225

30

98

128

32

96

128

25

66

91

24

77

101

11

96

1(17

15

95

110

30

130

160

39

1 II)

179

13

25

38

6

28

34

40

140

180

44

151

195

J

16 Report of Superintendent of Public Instruction.

STATISTICAL TABLE Continued PUPILS 1011-1912

County

18. Number of eighth grade diplomas issued during year

1911

1912

Male

Female

Total

Male

Female

Total

1,923

2,561

4,484

2,470

2,851

5,321

42

51

93

35

56

91

40

65

105

58

50

108

81

147

228

98

147

245

14

25

39

21

36

57

39

51

90

41

42

83

51

75

126

53

55

108

18

22

40

4

6

10

6

7

13

45

87

132

6H

95

164

9

13

22

10

26

36

10

19

29

24

31

55

8

13

21

11

8

19

31

45

76

36

43

79

74

99

173

140

120

260

16

47

63

50

62

112

32

22

54

27

22

49

12

15

27

12

21

33

195

189

384

174

227

401

16

26

42

21

30

51

78

184

262

139

134

273

21

17

38

33

21

54

65

143

208

79

112

191

15

14

29

22

22

44

584

688

1.272

719

791

1,510

86

90

176

65

85

150

11

9

20

18

27

45

28

22

50

50

64

114

70

75

145

83

100

183

66

82

148

22

37

59

34

51

85

19

21

40

19

27

46

93

108

201

120

139

259

7

16

23

9

11

20

70

75

145

141

156

297

Totals

Baker

Benton

Clackamas.

Clatsop

Columbia

Coos

Crook ... Curry __. Douglas (Hlliam

Grant

Harney

Hood River.

Jackson

Josephine ...

Klamath .

Lake

Lane

Lincoln .. Linn

Malheur

Marion

Morrow

Multnomah- Polk

Sherman.. Tillamook Umatilla __

Union

Wallowa ..

Wasco

Washington .

Wheeler

Yamhill

Report of Superintendent of Public Instruction. 17

STATISTICAL TABLE Continued

MISCELLANEOUS 1911-1912

19. Average number of days taught

20. Average daily

21. Per cent of

County

during year

attendance

attendance

1911

1912

1911

1912

1911

1912

Total average _

141

143%

99867. 2

112057

93.4

91. 4

Baker -

143

148

2613

2629

93

91 5

Benton . .

139. 2

135. 2

2051

2248

8

93.9

94.7

Clackamas _

149.3

160

5148. 2

5454

3

92.5

94.5

Clatsop

152

148

2395. 1

2596

96

97

Columbia ... _

147

164

1725

1763

92.7

93.4

Coos

127.5

130

3695

4154

94

95

Crook

170

124.7

1152

1681

6

90

87.8

Curry .

120

120

395

845

95

Douglas

132

125

8650

3644

97

95

Gilliam

131

131

635.2

624

7

94.8

95.6

Grant _

145

140

1143.6

1280.

5

94.8

94.7

Harney . _

140

140

571.4

639

91.8

90

Hood River. __ . _

150

163

1233

1240

94.2

98.4

Jackson ....

141.9

140.4

4439. 9

4775

93.7

95

Josephine .

144.5

143.6

1719

1791

6

92.8

94.5

Klamath _ _. _ _ .

143

143

1168

1360

94.2

95

Lake

142

143

897

619

94

92

Lane

134

127

1709

7241

92

94.5

Lincoln ... .... .....

118.5

119.7

977. 3

1101

8

92.5

93. 1

Linn.

137

140

4791

4702

93

93.7

Malheur ._ _ _ _

132

130

1541

1654

94.5

93

Marion

143

144

6123

6209

93

94.4

Morrow . .

130

133

870

891

93.2

94.5

Multnomah ..

188

174.9

24118.8

28175.

7

95.3

95.9

Polk

137

144.1

2683.4

2851.

3

93.1

95.9

Sherman

149.1

155.8

526. 4

548.

8

92.7

95

Tillamook .

141

148.8

993

1035

92.6

95.8

Umatilla.. __ _ ...

152

141

3638

4214.

2

94.7

95.2

Union _

143

144

2792

3317

93

93.7

"Wallowa

128

130

1613

1525

92

92

Wasco

140.9

136. 8

1969.7

2378.

7

93.2

94.7

Washington..

147

145

3623

1 125

91

92

Wheeler

130

133

5S6.3

610.

9

95.7

95.6

Yamhill

136

139

3350. 9

4328.

1

90

95.3

Sig\ 2

is

Report of Superintendent of Public Instruction.

STATISTICAL TABLE Continued. MISCELLANEOUS, 1911-1912.

22. Whole number of original districts

County

Totals

Baker

Benton

Clackamas .

Oiatsop

Columbia

Coos

Crook ...

Curry

Doug his Gilliam .

1911

. 265

Grant

Harney

Hood River.

Jackson

Josephine ...

Klamath.

Lake

Lane

Lincoln .. Lin n

Malheur

Marion

Morrow

Multnomah . Polk

Sherman __ Tillamook. Umatilla ..

Union

Wallowa ._

Wasco

Waseington

Wheeler

Yamhill

56 122

33 53

73 27 135

35

47 40 16 96 50

39 27

183 62

L26

44 120 46 55

30 47 95 59 73

62 102 28 89

1912

2.350

56 128 37 53

84 86 28 138 40

47 45 16

98 52

39 2(1

179 66

126

50 1211 47 55 7(1

30 57 97 60 77

65 106 26 98

23. Number of school districts reporting

1911

2,237

66 52 121

33 52

83 72 27 135 34

47 40 If,

95 50

36 25

174 01

121

42 119 45 55 69

30 46 89 59 62

62 102 25

Report of Superintendent of Public Instruction. 19

STATISTICAL TABLE Continued,

MISCELLANEOUS, 1911-1912

County

24. Number of ;25. Number of school houses in1 school houses built the county. during the year

26. Number school rooms in operation during the past school year.

1911

1912

1911

1912

1911

1912

2,431

2,479

116

152

A AA^x

4 , 690

Baker

71

72

1

1

8

1 99

lit)

Benton _

58

59

1

91

99

Clackamas _

125 1 131

4

4

-iUf

224

Clatsop _.

42

43

5

3

un

vo

Columbia _ _

57 86

55 86

1

6

ox

COOS -

1

J.OO

100

Crook

72

76

6

6

97

in

Curry

27

27

0

2

on

Douglas _

139

138

5

7

loll

1 no IV-

Gilliam .

35

38

1

3

AT

AQ

4o

Grant

47

47

1

2

62

62

Harney . . _ . .

39

41

0

2

46

48

Hood River

21

21

1

1

55

58

Jackson .. _ .

103

101 56

10

4

193

227

Josephine

55

2

6

84

82

Klamath. _

37

48

7

6

64

79

Lake... _

34

26

8

1

41

36

Lane

182

185

9

11

310

290

Lincoln _ . .

67

72

7

5

75

76

Linn. _

133

133

7

3

216

226

Malheur ..

43

45

0

8

68

77

Marion .

127

140

6

10

236

212

Morrow

47

47

0

2

64

64

Multnomah. .

108

111

5

5

791

859

Polk

76

76

9

9

120

134

Sherman

30

30

1

1

40

40

Tillamook

48

52

1

4

60

72

Umatilla

104

107 66

4

7

180

195

Union __ .

63

1

3

128

128

Wallowa .

65

68 69

2

3

HI

91

Wasco.. .

67

1

4

96

104

Washington _ ... ..

101

101

1

7

150

167

Wheeler . _

27

27

1

0

83

33

Yamhill

95

85

6

6

165

171

20

Report of Superintendent op Public Instruction.

STATISTICAL TABLE Continued. MISCELLANEOUS, 1911-1912.

Totals

Baker

Benton

Clackamas .

Clatsop

Columbia ..

Coos

Crook

Curry

Douglas . Gilliam _

Grant. ..-

Harney

Hood River.

Jackson

Josephine __.

Klamath

Lake

Lane

Lincoln .. Linn

Malheur

Marion _

Morrow

Multnomah. Polk _ ___

Sherman . . Tillamook. Umatilla..

Union

Wallowa _.

County

Wasco ._

Washington .

Wheeler

Yamhill

27. Number of legal vot- ers for school purposes in county at time of making this report.

1911

116.613

3, 115 1,58) 5,681 2, 360 1,500

3, 425 2,000

193 2, 729

716

1.766

850 1,142 5,291 2,510

1,750 8.039 1,144 4,760

1,927 3, 054 1,000 29. 261 2,991

644 1,314 3,930 7,632 1.837

2,329 4,216 600 4,980

1912

122, 3(

3.278 1 , 085 6.370 2,502 1,600

3,485 2. 350

539 3,648

694

1,916 900 1. 125 5,319 2,760

700 8,509 1,297 4,858

2, 105 7. 424 1,059 31,746 3,074

726 1,477 4,390 3,051 1.724

2.434 4,789 600 4,785

28. Number of schools visited during the year by the county superin- tendent.

1911

2,571

66

79 180 30 60

81

sr, 20 61 4

46

33

it;

75

34 30

142 72

118

57 105

61 153 120

92 44 181 128 60

61

103 20 89

Report of Superintendent of Public Instruction.

21

STATISTICAL TABLE Continued. MISCELLANEOUS, 1911-1912.

County

Totals ...

Baker

Benton

Clackamas __

Clatsop

Columbia ...

Coos

Crook

Curry

Douglas

Gilliam

Grant ...

Harney

Hood River.

Jackson

Josephine __.

Klamath

Lake

Lane__

Lincoln

Linn ___

Malheur

Marion

Morrow

Multnomah. Polk

Sherman

Tillamook...

Umatilla

Union

Wallowa

Wasco

Washington

Wheeler

Yamhill

29. Average number of hours devoted to each visit.

1911

1912

1911

1912

2:10

2:01

61,891

65.210

£ /2

9

1, D\AJ

3,500

1%

m

1,600

1,483

i

¥2

1.000

300

iM

1V2

1,800

1,700

3

3

1,200

2, 104

9

9

1,350

3

3

2.000

2,000

3

3

680

500

m

3

1,600

2,000

3

S

250

410

6

6

1,841

2,319

2

2

2,500

6,250

1

1

25

150

2

2

2.000

1,100

IVi

2

1,920

1,964

3

3

1,100

800

3

3y2

3,000

2.170

1

1

2.400

250

2

2

1.696

2,039

2

3

2,500

2,500

1%

1%

534

468

iy2

2

1,200

1,696

3

2%

2.476

2,025

%

2,185

1,420

2

2

3,784

5.501

1

1%

1,000

1,200

2

2

400

1

1

3, 500

4,000

2

2%

2,200

2.500

2%

2

5,000

4,500

2Va

2V2

1,600

1,528

2

2

2.500

3,000

2

2

700

800

3

3

2.000

948

30. Number of miles traveled in per for m- ance of official duties during the year.

22 Report of Superintendent of Public Instruction.

STATISTICAL TABLE— Continued

MISCELLANEOUS, 1911-1912

31. Number of county

32. Number of local in-

teachers'

l n s t i t n tes

stitutes held in county

County

held during the year.

during the year.

1911

1912

1911

1912

Tntn

34

38

111

218

Baker __ __ ___

1

2

4

Benton

1

1

5

3

1

4

21

Kj Id- to (J L>

1

2

2

Columbia

1

1

3

4

Ooos

1

1

2

3

9,'°,^ •- ' - -

1

1

2

2

L'lirry

1

T^<~*n or 1 ft a

1

j 1

3

3

CX i 1 1 i n m

1 ]

1

1

Grant __ _ . ___

2

g

r l i ( i 1 1 ' v T

1

2

3

1

3

Jackson. ._ ._ __

1

55

Josephine

1

3

3

Klamath.- _

1

3

3

Lake_ _ . _ _ __

1

4

1

Lane . . ._

1

3

4

Lincoln

1

8

4

Linn. ... ...

1

5

6

Malheur _

1

Marion

1

7

4

Morrow . __ __ _____ _ . _

1

5

6

Multnomah

1

4

3

Polk

1

18

13

Sherman ___ __

1

3

3

Tillamook

1

3

8

Umatilla

1

5

IB

Union

1

3

5

Wallowa _ _

1

3

3

Wasco _ ___ _ _ . __. ... .._

1

3

4

Washington .

1

6

20

Wheeler

1

Yamhill

1

3

4

Report of Superintendent of Public Instruction.

23

STATISTICAL TABLE Continued LIBRARIES, 1911-1912

County

Totals

Baker

Benton

Clackamas

Clatsop

Columbia .

Coos

Crook __.

Curry

Douglas . Gilliam. .

Grant

Harney

Hood River.

Jackson

Josephine.

Klamat h .

Lake

Lane

Lincoln .. Linn

Malheur

Marion

Morrow

Multnomah . Polk

Sherman

Tillamook

Umatilla..

Union

Wallowa __

Wasco

Washington .

Wheeler

Yamhill

33. Total number of library books on hand.

1911

221,804

5.390 8. Or 9 13. 305 6.853 [j,:;i ii

6,380 2,868 632 12,502 1.990

3.786 1.570

10,051 4,707

6,000 4, (100

10. 347 2. 212

14.660

4.511 19,222

3.420 12.213

7.505

3. 350 4.645 9.156 7.632 2.571

s.si:; 9,834 3,600 6.790

1912

258, 148

6.440 7,416

7,854 7,441

6.380 3,780 776 13,985 2.208

3.786 1,770 7.443 11.777 5,485

6,750 830 10.648

2,571 16,337

5.902 18.222

3, 722 34.406

8. 230

3.631 5.013 10.382 8, 205 3, 151

9,997 11,318

3,5011 8,842

34. Total number of li- brary books purchased during the year.

1911

33. 703

918 1.353 600 965 .Hit;

772 785 136 1.204

238

672 202

1 . 492 720

s II

1.890 376 1.834

1.071 1.589

326 7,138 833

245 413 1.030 S5.S 426

280 370 476 900

24 Report of Superintendent of Public Instruction.

STATISTICAL TABLE Continued.

PRIVATE SCHOOLS, 1911-1912.

35. Number of teachers employed

County

1911

1912

Male

Female

Total

Male

Female

Total

iota. is __

121

261

382

267

190

466

Baker

3

9

12

3

9

12

Clackamas

3

9

12

6

13

19

Clatsop

5

5

4

4

Columbia _ _

Coos

2

3

5

1

2

3

Crook _ . _

1

1

Curry

Douglas

1

1

5

3

3

Gilliam . - .

3

3

3

3

Grant ... .

Harney

Hood River

Josephine __ .

1

1

Klamath.

Lake

Lane

2

3

5

2

5

7

Lincoln ... .._

Linn __ ._

6

10

16

7

11

18

Malheur .._

2

2

2

2

Marion

30

28

58

28

35

63

Morrow ... . .

Multnomah. _ __ ... ...

57

151

208 8

111

138

249

Polk

6

2

5

2

7

Sherman _._ _ . _ ..

Tillamook . . .

1

1

3

3

Umatilla.

5

16

21

8

16

24

Union

5

5

5

5

Wasco ..

6

6

7

7

Washingcn __

1

1

1

1

Yamhill

5

4

9

14

20

34

Report of Superintendent of Public Instruction. 25

STATISTICAL TABLE Continued.

PRIVATE SCHOOLS, 1911-1912.

County

36. Number of pupils enrolled.

1911

1912

Male

Female

Total

Male

Fem-tle

Total

Tnrti 1<

2.882

1,905

4.787

3.771

4,638

8,409

Baker _ _ _. _.

119

182

301 i 105

180

285

Rpn t An

150 24

200 63

350 258 87 55

335 64

593 119

( 1 1 o t c n r\

i 1nl ?i in Kio

Coos _

23 1

28 1

51 20 23

43

2

.'°i(jJi ■*

l -i i 1 1 i in

20 22

3(1 26

50 48

25 24

40 30

65 54

Grant.. . _ _

9 ! ' 1 1 C V

To <' be An

T / \ c *-» r"^ l"i l ti a

3 2

5

Klamath _ __ ...

Lake..

Lane ...

44

44

88

70

70

140

Lincoln ...

Linn _ _ _

107 8

156 i

445

263

12 899

110 6

388

162

9 448

272

15

a36

Malheur _ ._ ...

Marion

454

Morrow ..

Multnomah...

1,801 64

2.007 60

3, 508 124

2,072 22

2.213 27

4,585 49

Polk

Sherman.. _

Tillamook __ _

30 153 37

51 ~" 174 74

81 327 111

47 147 32

47

364 115

Umatilla . . ...

217 83

Union ._

Wallowa.. ........

Wasco. _ _ _ ._ . .

60

99

150

35 14

3 335

115 18 6

296

150 32 9

631

Washington __

Wheeler

Yamhill.

65

70

135

Sig. 3

26

Report of Superintendent op Public Instruction.

STATISTICAL TABLE Continued

PRIVATK SCHOOLS, 1911-1912

_

County

:

37. Number of pri- vate schools.

38. Average number of months private school taught dur- ing year.

1911

1912

1911

1912

lotals . _ ... .. ...

78

81

8

8. 4

Baker __ _ ._ .__ ... . _ _

2

2

11%

9

Clackamas. .. .. .

4

5

9

8

Clatsop . ... _ _ . .. ._

1

1

1(1

10

Columbia

Coos

2

1

7

7

Crook . _. .... _ ...

1

6

Douglas _ . _ _.

2

*

8

8

Gilliam _. . . _ ._ ._ _

1

1

9

9

Grant.. ___ ._ _. _ _. . .

Harney ._ _

Jackson . . ...

Josephine . _

1

6

Klamath _ _

Lake. _. _ ._ _

Lane... ... . .. . . .

2

2

18%

17

Lincoln

Linn. ... .... .. .... _ ...

3

2

9 8

9 8

Malheur . .. ...

2

2

Marion . .

Morrow ... ... ._ ... .

11

13

5

9

Multnomah. __ _.

34

31

9

m

9

Polk

2

2

9

Sherman _.

Tillamook ... _. ._ ... ... _ _ ...

1

1

9

1

Umatilla ... .

5

fi

7

9

Union _. .

1

1

9

10

Wallowa.. ._ _. _ _.

Wasco _ ... ... ._ ._ ._ ... _.

1

1

10

10

Washington

1

8

Wheeler _ . _ ... _. ......

1

3%

Yamhill

3

5

9

9

Report of Superintendent of Public Instruction. 27

FINANCIAL EXHIBIT

CASH ON HAND, 1911-1912

County

Totals,. _

Baker.

Benton

Clackamas _

Clatsop

Columbia...

Coos

Crook

Curry

Douglas

CJilliam

Grant

Harney

Hood River

Jackson

Josephine ..

Klamath

Lake _ .,

Lane

Lincoln

Linn

Malheur

Marion

Morrow

Multnomah Polk

Sherman

Tillamook..

Umatilla

Union

Wallowa

Wasco

Washington

Wheeler

Yamhill ....

39. Cash on hand at time of making last annual report.

L91]

$ 1.315,927 83

31.228 95 19,5(31 94 27.294 74 51.395 (K) 24,514 73

28,887 75 11,042 17

3, 143 87 20,750 88

3,409 59

575 78 10.792 93 23, 373 39 51 . 158 91 5.559 94

28, 483 38 4,227 72 35,002 38 12. 155 66 24,832 51

1.187 65 22,596 88 11.167 62 565,358 16 32, 853 51

19.134 04 16.221 31 66, 170 81 33.924 03 17,364 17

47,024 90 17,219 11 7.634 53 40.679 89

35,894 28 21,876 18 2,835 02 16,331 35

28 Report of Superintendent of Public Instruction.

FINANCIAL REPORT Continued

RECEIPTS, 1911-1911

40. Received from county treas-

41. Received from county treas-

urer from district tax.

urer from county school fund.

County

1911

1912

1911

1912

lotais __

$ 3,225,643 09

$ 3,604,396 15

$ 1.351,944 74

% 1.567,296 26

Baker _._ _ -

4! 7d Pill

$ f u, uuu

$ OU , H O I

$ 43,094 50

Bencon _ _ _ __

26,848

92

38,420

30

26,274

85

27,641 71

Clackamas , _.

78, 943

57

97,032

09

70,817

56

7Q *WQ u^

Clatsop . _

R7 fi7^

1 I1 1

71 f^W

AC\

W

Q9 •) 1 4

oy

33, 182 99

Columbia __

Aft 970

40, _, i U

00 QAO Zo , OUO

27,071 48

Coos ___ _ __ ___

65, 439

03

68,768

44

40,059

00

46,570 60

Crook _

27, 116

69

41,804

39

24 010

77

26,597 53

Curry ._ __

3, 392

43

3, 191

94

5^382

72

7 90 1 ( in

Douglas __

80,530

85

76,799

98

39,763

16

55.370 44

Crllliam .. _ .

15,354

02

13,825

58

9,989

82

9,338 69

Grant _

27,710

15

27,715

06

14,966

50

15,761 46

Harney _. __

10,888

60

15, 237

71

11.407

24

11.465 00

Hood River

46,689

96

47. 955

55

13,290

53

15, 440 38

Jackson . ._

117.046

36

139,8.15

82

19.875

52

50,306 33

Josephine ..

47,215

68

42,946

23

21,174

29

22,191 U0

Klamath

32,543

24

43,715

94

26,723

72

31.777 10

Lake _

1,023

87

9,025

96

17,612

40

19,2(53 93

Lane

102, 561

28

122,322

09

71,978

49

85,241 36

Lincoln

19,618

48

26, 658

42

14,451

02

19,736 95

Linn. _

50,719

1 1

71,055

77

51,900

96

61.984 27

Malheur _ ._

36,746

83

43.993

58

16,968

55

22,274 30

Marion

94,933

73

147,909

96

83,882

96

99, 178 53

Morrow . .

33. 433

77

27,039

78

11,541

81

12.954 38

Multnomah

1,623,253

04

1,779,216

32

338, 956

50

426,834 £5

Polk

38, 252

IS

45,293

16

35,503

61

46,514 48

Sherman

24,219

34

25. 255

34

7.728

61

5,024 34

Tillamook _. _

39,005

26

41,025

06

12,210

00

12,686 00

Umatilla

114,152

53

127,634

91

58. 60S

96

59,056 50

Union - ..-

73,918

30

83,418

41

37.696

70

41,262 70

Wallowa . .

37, 861

33

33,912

49

21,605

54

18,005 88

Wasco __

50, 218

76

50, 875

12

25, 230

64

30,711 80

Washington -

40, 092

45

50, 875

S",

49. 190

36

50,329 09

Wheeler ..

7. 031

31

7,147

46

7,382

83

7,967 10

Yamhill _

80. 432

03

64,281

26

43, 29(1

00

45.896 94

Report of Superintendent of Public Instruction. 29

FINANCIAL REPORT— Continued

RECEIPTS, 1911-1912

County

Totals ...

Baker

Benton

Clackamas

Clatsop

Columbia ...

Coos

Orook

Curry

Douglas

Gilliam

Grant

Harney

Hood River.

Jackson

Josephine ...

Klamath

Lake

Lane

Lincoln

Linn

Malheur

Marion

Morrow

Multnomah. Polk

Sherman

Tillamook ..

Umatilla

Union

Wallowa

Wasco

Washington

Wheeler

Yamhill

42. Received from county treas- urer from State school fund

43. Received from rate bills and tuition

1911

1912

1911

1912

$ 337.122 19

$ 354,365 75

$ 32.658 11

$ 35,191 80

$ 1(1.039

68

$ 10,439

04

8 122

95

$ 5 25

6] 260

90

6>iI2

93

479

53

lso 80

18.255

36

18. 595

20

1.066

50

2,085 18

8. 528

04

8. 622

97

2,089

00

248 75

7.015

20

o'os?

32

150

17

181 07

10,154

65

11,356

00

596

75

325 25

6.117

90

6.106

10

32

09

3 00

1.916

92

1,995

92

363

10

18 00

10.648

45

11.750

49

373

00

269 00

2,079

30

2,096

64

121

16

90 00

5,116

90

3.442

16

291

80

369 10

2,011

06

2.280

50

12 00

3.895

68

4.071

91

801 50

15. 903 52

12.313

90

13,209

60

514 95

270 00

5,836

80

6.074

88

198 00

326 02

3,690

24

3,538

10

272 12

1.168 43

3.979

40

2.511

36

20.093

37

21,660

69

2,923

58

312 66

3.750

00

3. 956

00

21

00

18 75

14.244

48

14.904

96

9,192

19

4,501 84

4,588

80

1.N.S6

40

23

25

22.979

59

23. 798

09

2.753

22

"~S.2H4~:2b

2,934

40

2,969

68

594

39

173 00

76.081

92

83,089

92

2, 153

90

2, 143 70

7,992

54

8.592

89

329

00

166 00

2,037

12

1,920

00

21

50

3,382

00

3.708

00

333

is

318 09

11.848

01

11.865

50

317

80

407 12

10. 131

St

10. "IKS

80

203

(IS

150 25

5,381

76

6,741

13

35

50

125 41

6,729

60

7; 173

12

286

20

421 90

13,478

40

13, 055

03

622

95

1,058 71

1,656

96

2. 172

95

51

i ,i

4 42

11,951

00

13.579

16

5,323

75

649 78

30

Report of Superintendent of Public Instruction.

FINANCIAL EXHIBIT Continued.

RECEIPTS 1911-1912.

County

44. Receipts from sale of bonds and warrants

45. Received from county treas- urer from library fund

1911

1912

1911

1912

Totals

8 1,289,661 63

$ 659,505 74

$ 8,546 98

$ 11,469 45

Baker _ . -

$ 2.000 00 394 76 52.475 72 83,567 50 2, 200 00

6,521 65

3, 40D 00

$ 5,540 00 18,775 25 13,796 05 2,620 00 27,876 40

10.751 38

35, 689 06

$ 519 73 757 36 1.007 30 6 74 95 42

547 41 338 17 60 70 542 62 111 67

440 77 106 59 626 43 633 77 304 00

317 96

$ 511 76 551 75 1,007 30 3 90 76 66

587 90 446 35 68 92 612 75 114 28

396 18 105 20

Benton __

Clackamas

Olatsop.._ -. _

Columbia _ .

Coos _

Crook-. _._ ...

Curry

Douglas . .

18,737 57

42,969 83

Gilliam __ .

Grant

1.233 78

3, 272 50 500 00

4,200 00 86.568 68 16.995 27

21,356 62 249 07 21,031 73 2,307 10 40,930 77

35 959 45 17,159 28 900 00

Harney ___ _ .

Hood River.- _

22,042 39 86.821 14 46,761 76

7, 050 00 7,1)55 91 42,435 40 10,823 00 19,206 99

61.037 12 121,696 18 1,900 00 351, 6(H) 00

12,002 37

3, 400 00 1,053 00 21,000 00 143. 265 41 25, 100 00

2.800 00 13,197 57

2.000 00 56,882 41

Jackson

684 46 316 40

348 19 128 03

1,124 70 199 50

2,056 77

857 83 19 46

Josephine ___

Klamath

Lake

Lane

101 62

Lincoln. .

Linn _

119 98

609 09 80 95

Malheur

Marion _____

Morrow _ . __ _ ._

Multnomah

Polk

33, 271 04

1 . 400 00 35,753 30 116,177 08 1.360 75 292 68

5.354 76 27.082 27

446 70

3 63 95 94

487 40

50 92 12

Sherman

Tillamook _ .__ _

Umatilla

Union __ _ . _ _

Wallowa

43 42

1 50

Wasco _ ___

Washington _

11 52

Wheeler __ __ _

Yamhill

29,365 42

629 00

658 12

Report of Superintendent of Public Instruction.

31

FINANCIAL EXHIBIT -Continued.

RECEIPTS 1911-1912.

L1 LI Kl 1 1 L' ^

46. Received for library from other sources

47. Received from insurance on account of losses

1911

1912

1911

1912

$ 1. 152 40

$ 8.370 81

$ 7.309 05

$ 22,219 77

9 .

$ 9 53 16 64 67 21

$ 15 £0

S

19

161 25 241 44 15 54

\ 1)8 74 21

416 10

Clackamas

496 20 2 10

256 14

2 20 100 15

Ooos - _ --

6 00

49 75

161 29

225 00

Grant

9 SO

26 85 53 57

37 60 28 00

133 04

9.784 94

Klamath -- ...

168 84

Lake

Lane. - -

3 35 1 90 66 85

17 13 39 01

75 15 3 05 7.200 81

8 62 8 45

801 50

84 2(1

Lincoln

Linn ... . -

132 0(1

44 10

Malheur..

Marion .. _ . - _ _.

Multnomah

5.263 10 73 65

273 95 7 00

Polk

46 00

12 52

Sherman _

Tillamook __

7 44

Umatilla

19 40

1,000 00 498 10

Union

Wallowa

16

1 53 98 55

Wasco. ...

82 25 24

Washington ...

4 25

Yamhill

235 00

215 21

9,932 29

32

Report of Superintendent of Public Instruction.

FINANCIAL EXHIBIT Continued.

RECEIPTS, 1911-1912.

County

Totals

Baker

Benton

Clackamas .

Clatsop

Columbia

Coos

Crook

Curry. ... Douglas Gilliam _

Grant

Harney

Hood River.

Jackson

Josephine .._

K lainath .

Lake

Lane

Lincoln Linn

Malheur

Marion

Morrow

Multnomah. Polk

Sherman _. Tillamook. Umatilla..

Union

Wallowa ._

Wasco

Washington .

Wheeler

Yamhill

48. Received from all other sources

1911

$ 396,968 97

15, 178 16 863 57 3,881 63 2,210 79 1,757 84

809 67 3.636 10

1,260 18

49 35

98 90 681 37 11, 128 24 4,079 30 4,679 01

1,266 64 75 07 21 , 487 80

2,085 11 24,782 31

3, 866 87 79, 183 50 2,638 86 167, 338 45 5,840 50

1,251 94 923 80 5.878 00 3,665 71 1,630 47

971 65 13.427 83

10,367 39

1912

$ 250,549 71

1(1,328 38

7.276 91

16, 100 25

5,236 43

4,504 52

770 97

7.314 95

5,249 05 223 11

187 15

330 00 871 36 4,940 68 4.737 38

18.921 89 7.050 79 8, 299 95

2,955 11 5,404 19 893 58 77,466 29 9,119 56

214 29 820 73 9,116 40 14.128 50 843 03

890 65 13.912 25 2,249 52 10,191 84

49. Total sum of items 38, 39, 40, 41, 42, 43, 44, 45, 46 and 47

1911

$ 7,966,931

170,058 98 81,445 02 253, 903 63 238, 453 39 105,825 18

153,023 99 75,708 (19 14. 259 75

172,881 46 81,114 91

50,444 18 35,887 79 121,848 12 322,468 70 131,783 05

100.347 30 33.974 37

297.388 77 62.906 17

195, 497 38

125,045 29 428. 146 02 61.210 75 3,130,005 07 193,340 36

57,796 18 73,231 93 277.976 11 302,805 10 1(19.022 35

133,263 28 147.322 22 25,756 63 249,790 47

1911

8 8,643.700

183.457 83 113,527 03 279,067 09 172,071 59 142,246 29

168. 169 04 132, 589 78

14,254 09 211,530 88

32,003 73

51,643 99 38.476 59 128,419 00 383,585 73 102,896 32

109.394 07 35,267 35

321,361 68 74.102 57

230.223 10

161,658 45 347,038 34 62,813 29 3.598.424 29 157,776 22

56,263 32 117,956 50 402,753 42 211.730 01

79,068 31

131.322 45 178,830 40 22,376 47 191,101 67

Report of Superintendent ©f Public Instruction. 33

FINANCIAL EXHIBIT— Continued

DISBURSEMENTS, 1911-1912

County

Totals ...

Baker

Benton

Clackamas..

Olatsop

Columbia ...

Ooos

Crook

Curry

Douglas

Gilliam

Grant

Harney

Hood River.

Jackson

Josephine...

Klamath

Lake

Lane

Lincoln .

Linn

Malheur

Marion

Morrow

Multnomah. Polk

Sherman

Tillamook...

Umatilla

Union

Wallowa

Wasco

Washington

Wheeler

Yamhill

50. Paid for teachers' wages

1911

* 2,659.726 94

72.033 37

37.828 55 101.081 03

54,994 66

41.829 19

76.956 99 41,008 40 11,113 80 81.737 59 18, 630 00

28,261 35 16,979 26 34,846 75 85, 966 53 46, 480 96

39,545 14 16,564 14 131,057 52 21.010 95 92,166 41

38.034 05 139,724 76

29,978 59 874,004 57 53,433 00

22, 024 08 28. 683 86 104, 121 52 72,802 91 39,926 67

48,747 22 76. 176 99 12,230 00 69,746 18

1912

$ 2,985.617

$

78,931 25 46,247 47 115,634 08 58.456 40 47.071 29

75.164 14 50.020 82 10.889 50 91,935 00 19, 199 72

29,119 70 16,300 85 39.956 26 103,383 17 40,280 84

43,864 15 18,851 42

154,344 82 24.277 86

104, 230 56

42,964 75 158,003 70

32.089 80 984.742 34

61,011 63

23,524 00 32,250 00 114,808 17 81,263 42 41,181 95

56. 360 07 85,326 83 13.826 73 90.105 27

51.

Paid for rent of rooms and sites

1911

3 21,564 23

176 00

485 60 373 00

20

1,510 Hi 16 25 4 30 373 90 9,506 00

35 0(1

907 13 24 10 525 56

381 17

143 96

1,997 46 1,497 00

69 00 397 65

89 00 319 04

Sig. 4

34

Report of Superintendent of Public Instruction.

FINANCIAL EXHIBIT -Continued. DISBURSEMENTS, 1911-1912.

County

Totals __.

Baker

Benton

Clackamas..

Olatsop

Oolumbia ...

Ooos

Orook

Ourry

Douglas

Gilliam

Grant

Harney

Hood River.

Jackson

Josephine ...

Klamath

Lake

Lane

Lincoln

Linn

Malheur

Marion

Morrow

Multnomah. Polk .

Sherman

Tillamook _ .

Umatilla

Union

Wallowa

Wasco

Washington

Wheeler

Yamhill

52. Paid for fuel and school supplies

1911

$ 298,798 40

10,188 10 4,008 8a 9.713 82 6,251 18 4,135 88

7,565 54 4, 436 29 282 74 8,815 20 2,133 93

2, 183 25 1,667 57 4.2S6 69 11,404 43 5,848 13

5,934 59 2,500 48 11.145 29 1,292 89 7,705 59

5, 028 06 15.393 94

2,556 17 93.984 76

6,744 32

3. 138 80 3.729 71 11,860 79 10,485 01 5,763 36

6,327 67 7,055 28 1,031 45 14. 228 66

1912

« 322,002 89

10.140 25 5,681 34

13.086 52 5, 190 49 6.295 04

8,060 38 7,349 27 698 21 11,750 54 2,085 95

2,216 25 1,252 88 5.556 68 14,395 62 9,877 94

8,869 33 3,327 78

17,081 57 3.460 61

12,426 38

5,055 81 15,077 22

3,341 99 75.091 40

7,803 27

2, 470 37 4,063 31 15, 188 02 10. 112 25 3,703 49

7, 228 68 11,782 42

1.347 64 10,934 99

53. Paid for repairs and im- proving grounds

1911

428,323 72

13, 293 33 7.862 52 14,091 21 11,247 26 6,905 06

11,513 96 3.092 40

523 92 12,530 88

788 35

2,811 91 1.015 19 8.917 96 12,837 99 5.650 75

3,160 05 1,047 67

14, 762 75 2,198 22

10,989 99

3,882 62 30,500 23 2,070 50 146 005 68 5,811 17

1.768 65 4.629 HO 15, 752 82 9,339 62 3,657 65

7.179 20 7,957 08 3,210 17 41.293 06

Report of Superintendent of Public Instruction. 35

FINANCIAL EXHIBIT Continued. DISBURSEMENTS, 1911-1912.

County

Totals ._.

Baker

Benton

Clackamas..

Clatsop

Columbia ._.

Coos

Orook

Curry

Douglas

Gilliam

Grant

Harney

Hood River.

Jackson

Josephine...

Klamath

Lake

Lane

Lincoln

Linn

Malheur

Marion

Morrow

Multnomah. Polk

Sherman

Tillamook _.

Umatilla

Union

Wallowa

Wasco.

Washington

Wheeler

Yamhill

54.

Paid for new schoolhouses and sites

191]

$ 1,353.420 28

5,582 87 41,903 66

80. 147 76 1,958 20

6,818 78 3.839 70 50 00 13, 302 20 908 00

2,006 71 1,501 73 16, 107 15 92,477 44 44,699 53

81,047 57 3,237 33 35,333 67

10.148 94 26,918 71

17, 768 94 35.649 53 100 00 534,044 02 88.768 55

1.885 43 3.799 31 27,342 52 101.390 54 28, 523 63

24,770 60 9.893 31 2.300 00

59,202 95

1912

$ 1,905.006 67

1,611 86 22,147 64 27,752 26 11,084 23 28,984 38

5, 164 85 37,486 03

20,145 52 1,475 00

2,510 00 1.668 40 5, 290 75 114.794 88 8.041 76

20 541 28 7.049 03

19.700 44 B.SliS 93 8,738 25

77.162 48 . 85. 467 38 331 35 1,190.202 26 31,656 32

4,788 38 15, 728 06 67,350 76 37.801 94

2.013 98

3,40] 74 26,892 26 1,501 00 9,652 67

55. Paid on principal and inter- est on bonds and warrants

1:01

$ 706 004 58

12,513 74 6, 164 93 22,516 30 19. 667 72 17,640 48

4,731 98

4.645 24 128 72

23,613 38 1,405 97

10,974 50 1.256 47 10.376 11 33,350 18 7,830 92

1.166 00

5.646 64 37,489 68 12,009 89 27,953 97

4,367 85 139,892 86

9.062 86 143.859 02 15,277 58

620 51 3.566 90 30.158 57 37.486 71 8,149 16

6.661) 61

14.515 12

613 13

311.691) ss

1912

540,113 69

6,730 90 9,113 24 24.382 51 23.299 27 11.312 60

11,297 95 7,585 52

599 09 25.283 64

409 45

9.864 05

4.336 00

9,441 43

46,302 91

18,218 14

1.495 21 1.697 28 40,611 29 13, 102 73 44,818 79

9,051 19 22,350 58

2,546 56 54,448 51 20,747 19

1,497 81 3,574 07 23. 479 76 24,578 74 7.233 56

5, 942 06 18,922 13 767 85 40,071 68

36 Report of Superintendent of Public Instruction.

FINANCIAL EXHIBIT Continued DISBURSEMENTS, 1911-1912

County

56. Paid for insurance

Totals ...

Baker

Benton

Clackamas. _

Clatsop

Columbia .__

Coos __-

Crook

Curry

Douglas

Gilliam

Grant

Harney

Hood River_

Jackson

Josephine.

Klamath

Lake..

Lane

Lincoln

Linn

Malheur

Marion _

Morrow

Multnomah. Polk

Sherman

Tillamook ..

Umatilla

Union

Wallowa

Wasco

Washington Wheeler .... Yamhill

57. Paid for clerks' salaries

1911

1912

1911

1912

$

^9,643 83

$ 32, 293 70

$ 36, 134 03

$ 36 ,931 15

J

750 40

$ 515 40

* 1.221 10

$ 1,262 80

313 77

431 27

581 40

745 50

709 12

2,202 19

1,871 52

2, 413 57

2 091 71

237 52

1,001 70

1,004 53

""369 77

752 92

851 35

986 40

866 15

837 06

1.089 05

1,562 15

170 93

629 01

671 35

922 87

30 20

235 00

210 50

829 35

1, 160 75

1.758 75

1.758 85

130 70

144 30

240 00

219 14

310 00

400 15

760 00

875 00

60 00

96 42

550 00

366 42

393 02

818 92

475 00

540 00

8D6 50

2, 181 04

1,513 70

1.681 12

552 89

600 00

808 00

776 50

780 70

300 40

616 15

752 73

206 90

128 00

292 25

376 30

1,398 11

957 86

2,672 72

2.774 42

150 35

182 70

557 50

807 90

649 41

701 23

1,437 35

1,412 95

60 00

1,235 75

466 33

622 56

749 24

1,038 17

2, 172 99

2,055 13

274 05

220 27

5:3 13

515 68

10,675 99

10,591 40

3.984 20

4,395 00

1 , 160 84

533 46

1,047 60

1,203 22

142 55

177 05

392 50

444 90

112 16

231 96

740 50

77 9 65

964 63

1.670 34

1,675 10

1,747 20

829 52

1,308 50

1,253 29

1,508 13

611 38

285 30

911 00

770 11

700 58

280 55

864 80

990 15

523 59

599 03

1,379 70

1,761 58

111 00

72 68

80 00

170 62

1,157 72

765 70

1,438 00

1,517 57

Report of Superintendent of Public Instruction. 37

FINANCIAL EXHIBIT Continued.

DISBURSEMENTS, 1911-1912.

58, Paid for library books

59. Paid for all other purposes

County

191i

1912

1911

1912

Totals

f 19,716 07

$ 23.051 79

$ 284,343 43

S 321,064 46

Baker __.

$ 532 58

$ 521 06

8 15,997 26

8 9.851 08

Rp n tin n

779 76

571 48

4.211 75

5,358 64

Olackamas

1.138 55

1,074 51

9,824 56

17,635 32

0 lat ^op

149 38

53 87

12. 187 87

11.625 62

Columoia

137 71

235 17

4.988 12

5,003 90

Coos _ _ - -

555 49

571 23

13, 110 15

2,756 34

0 rook

433 90

588 04

2.508 63

2,851 42

Cur r v

60 71

68 92

59 35

71 03

T)nn p~\ f\ <

592 37

774 04

9.373 49

5.362 07

Ci- \ 1 1 iJi.Tn

111 67

114 28

455 86

964 73

Grant.. . .. .

428 12

396 10

697 80

726 81

TT n r n p v

106 59

105 20

4,188 55

82.' 55

Hood River

623 22

361 17

5,871 04

21,863 70

Jackson

908 24

Ol , UJ. UD

Josephine

405 12

407 75

714 61

2,601 40

Klamath . ...

510 93

868 18

10.363 36

3,015 35

Lake.. _

50 00

128 03

1,418 90

2,186 15

Lane .

181 98

1,124 70

11,857 71

19, 147 32

Lincoln _

•201 90

202 55

1,139 42

2,966 97

Linn _ __ _ _ .

193 66

360 04

7,713 87

5,980 02

Malheur _.

626 22

846 45

3.703 89

1,839 39

Marion _ _ .

372 00

483 99

13,265 33

14,592 97

Morrow . ___

15 97

37 19

1,746 61

1.811 58

Multnomah

8,588 75

10,218 76

83,461 1)6

1117.144 46

Polk

500 08

506 59

4.788 05

3,920 20

Sherman .

69 51

133 15

5.305 30

2,994 14

Tillamook. . _ _ _

212 41

103 46

4.144 58

3,131 13

Umatilla . ...

147 88

189 51

8,078 12

10.748 62

Union .

42 22

83 41

8. 763 78

8,124 79

Wallowa

43 58

1,970 74

861 41

Wasco

17 64

37 30

2, 100 68

3, 078 30

Washington

122 22

39 77

7,811 75

9,215 92

Wheeler.

16 43

44 32

3,188 18

471 01

864 00

873 33

4,336 17

1.1S9 08

38

Report of Superintendent of Public Instruction.

FINANCIAL EXHIBIT Continued

DISBURSEMENTS, 1911-1912

County

Totals ...

Baker

Benton

Clackamas..

Clatsop.

Columbia ...

Coos

Crook

Curry

Douglas

Gilliam

Grant

Harney

Hood River.

Jackson

Josephinel.-.

Klamath

Lake

Lane

Lincoln

Linn __.

Malheur

Marion _

Morrow

Multnomah. Polk

Sherman

Tillamook

Umatilla

Union

Wallowa

Wasco

Washington

Wheeler

Yamhill

60. Total sum of items 50, 51, 52, 53. 51, 55, 56, 57, 58 and 59

61. Cash on hand. Difference between items 49 and 60

1911

1912

1911

1912

$ 5,815,775 51

$ 6. 638, 225 18

8 2, 129, 256 48

$ 2,005,475 71

9 13so, ■>-•'

80

1p lIl, too

So

hp 4o,0iy

10

$ 61,699 45

67,510

38

98,512

6]

13,934

u

ID, U14 4i

21 12,879

77

230.108

40

51,023

86

48, 958 69

lot . N)9

_ i

123, 477

40

50 , 594

15

48.594 19

78, 815

76

[ i is , ( )4 -i

m VI

34, 200 38

123, 693

69

116,372

41

29,330

30

52.096 63

CI f

8 1

111,261

26

14, 528

25

91 49ft V?

12,' -184

44

13! 108

07

L775

31

1.146 02

154.539

41

175, 151

58

18,342

05

86. 379 30

24,799

48

25,627

63

6.315

43

6,376 10

49,943

80

50,774

56

500

38

869 43

27.341

61

26,998

20

8,546

18

11,478 39

81,871

84

92, 203

31

39, 976

28

36,215 69

244.581

IIS

332, 960

98

77,887

62

50,624 75

122,496

91

87. 282

46

9,286

14

15,613 86

93, 159

49

86,830

61

7,187

si

22,563 46

80,964

31

35, 267

35

3.010

06

246,807

56

274, 6S4

28

50, 581

21

46,677 40

48,734

16

55, 070

84

14,172

ni

19,031 73

176,253

52

189,310

50

19,243

86

40.912 60

74,322

13

143, 925

59

50,723

16

17,732 86

377.864

8i

318, 009

70

50. 181

18

29,028 64

16.327

88

43, 908

51

17,882

87

18,904 78

1.900,605

51

2,616.869

93

1,229,399

56

981,554 36

179,028

19

137, 188

10

14,312

17

20,588 12

35, 347

33

39, 052

50

22.448

85

17,210 82

49,679

33

65. 099

13

23,552

60

52,857 37

200, 499

60

253,090

95

77,476

51

149,662 47

242,482

60

173,589

10

60, 322

50

38,140 91

89,876

16

61,644

26

19,146

19

17,424 05

97, 369

00

83,485

48

35,894

28

47.836 97

125,446

111

158, 014

72

21,876

IS

20,815 68

22, 921

(il

19.214

63

2,835

H2

3.161 84

233, 459

12

170,325

84

16.331

35

20,775 83

Report of Superintendent of Public Instruction.

FINANCIAL EXHIBIT Continued GENERAL, 1911-1912

County

Totals ...

Baker

Benton

Clackamas. .

Clatsop

Columbia .__

Coos

Crook

Curry

Douglas

Gilliam

Grant

Harney

Hood River.

Jackson

Josephine ...

Klamath

Lake

Lane

Lincoln

Linn

Malheur

Marion

Morrow

Multnomah. Polk

Sherman

Tillamook ..

Umatilla

Union

Wallowa

Wasco

Washington

Wheeler

Yamhill

62. Estimated value of school- houses and grounds

1911

$ 9.921,394

$ 202,917 50 114,860 00 284, 438 75 233,110 IX) 116,337 60

328,760 00 54.325 00 9, 520 00 IS. 660 00 36.512 00

47, 900 00 24,580 00 100. 638 00 275,860 00 155. 500 00

220.675 00 115, 500 00 473,294 00 42.997 50 -1' s.275 mi

102.636 00 446. 530 00 46,590 00 4,159,828 05 203.250 00

35. 596 75 53.509 00 593. 035 00 295,200 00 117, 756 CO

152,214 00 180.484 65 20.075 00 250, 000 00

1912

$11,325,032 62

211,552 50 142,980 00 320,253 26 243, 625 00 127,016 00

319,755 00 106,758 36

12,750 00 214,862 00

38,015 00

53, 500 00 50,000 00

124,688 12 ' 584,309 00

184,775 00

283,686 00 36,651) 00

495.346 00 47,400 00

353,180 00

173,600 00 404,992 00 47.620 00 5,023.254 00 211,340 00

56.996 75 68,709 00 332,775 01 241,191) HO 108,695 00

157,575 87 221.767 99 20,725 00 304.691 27

63. Estimated value of school furniture and apparatus

1911

$ 962.939 40

19,100 CO 17,375 00 53.806 36 21,688 00 19,397 35

28.421 00 12.938 00

2,755 00 625 no

6,718 00

11.971) 50 5.500 00 11,300 00 41,601) 4(1 40,000 00

21,000 00 16.424 00 54.119 00 8.465 00 54.513 00

10. 660 00 57.009 50 10. 253 00 174.778 00 21.290 00

9.055 20 11.041 70 40,453 44 33,880 08 16,970 00

21,073 45 32, 259 50 5,500 00 35,000 00

8 1.1164,274 90

to

Report of Superintendent of Public Instruction.

FINANCIAL EXHIBIT Continued.

GENERAL, 1911-1912.

County

Totals .

Baker

Benton

Olackamas..

Olatsop

Columbia

Coos

Crook...

Curry

Douglas

Gilliam

Grant

Harney

Hood River.

Jackson

Josephine ...

Klamath

Lake

Lane

Lincoln

Linn

Malheur

Marion .

Morrow

Multnomah. Polk

Sherman

Tillamook _

Umatilla

Union

Wallowa

Wasco ...

Washington

Wheeler

Yamhill

64. Amount of insurance on school houses and other property

1911

1912

$ 4,240,947 58

8 4,834,522 56

$ 106,991 66 65.768 00 155,607 66 138,050 00 66.210 50

105,275 00 75,268 00 177,3:'2 66 142,450 00 70,000 OO

127,965 00 16,940 00 2, 750 00 93.880 (10 14,550 00

146,990 00 46, 120 00 1,602 70

117.124 50 16,850 00

22. 560 00 6.000 00 61. 100 00 197,500 00 <H, 175 00

27,265 00 6,200 00

72,450 00 324. 170 50 104,600 00

70.450 00 14.594 00 155.354 00 19. 225 00 72,220 00

74.475 00 13.700 00

202,375 00 19. 175 00

184,655 00

74,535 01 > 193,855 00 24, 200 00 1,533.932 76 109.060 00

84.380 00 267,160 00 26,500 00 1,670,501 00 89.202 00

24, 125 00 23. 285 00 156,725 00 258.850 00 35,100 00

28, 100 00 24,785 00 169,600 OO 179,550 00 42.850 00

57.830 00 96, 259 00 4,300 00 150.000 00

60,280 00 102,209 00 5,620 00 155,717 00

Report of Superintendent of Public Instruction.

41

FINANCIAL EXHIBIT Continued.

GENERAL 1911-1912.

County

65. Average monthly salary male teachers.

of

66. Average monthly salary of female teachers.

1911

1912

1911

1912

Totals

$ 2,637

97

$

82

11

$ 1.956 26

$ 59 96

Baker ._

$ 80

67

$

88

02

$ 58 22

$ 62 21

Benton, ._ _ __

67

56

60

91

50 98

50 76

Clackamas

67

96

75

50

53 km

55 92

Clatsop _ ... ~ .__

95

00

96

30

56 83

60 00

Columbia .. _

72

60

74

47

55 50

59 37

Coos _ _

69

20

68

84

51 40

53 12

Crook __ _ _

69

62

72

88

58 45

59 95

Curry __

65

00

65

00

55 00

55 00

Douglas _ _ . _ __ __

61

13

64

60

is 50

50 03

Gilliam

73

94

80

06

58 51

59 06

Grant_ _ .

82

54

90

91

66 25

67 00

Harney _

70

00

74

00

58 50

62 00

Hood River. ._

91

50

102

00

66 00

70 00

Jackson ___ _ _

91

65

91

00

61 17

63 56

Josephine .._

68

00

66

00

51 25

55 50

Klamath...

80

00

93

no

63 00

70 00

Lake...

95

00

80

83

68 00

73 75

Lane.

58

50

86

00

48 75

61 00

Lincoln _ .

69

22

57

15

49 50

50 44

Linn. ..

61

70

66

00

49 50

50 00

Malheur _ _ . .

81

00

85

86

58 40

59 10

Marion .

76

35

11 -J

30

53 40

53 70

Morrow

79

89

100

47

59 15

62 60

Multnomah. ______ _ .

157

40

151

65

97 50

98 20

Polk

71

21

72

so

50 00

51 06

Sherman _

87

28

93

00

58 62

59 00

Tillamook _ .

69

80

80

00

58 26

60 00

Umatilla-

85

64

28

62 81

65 38

Union _ _. . _

75

77

85

92

57 66

58 90

Wallowa _

61

50

67

00

53 52

57 no

Wasco_ __ .

90

22

83

83

57 19

62 30

Washington _

71

25

69

75

55 25

57 02

Wheeler _

70

40

80

in

55 00

54 66

Yamhill

66

50

66

65

50 00

51 14

Sig. 5

Report of Superintendent of Public Instruction.

FINANCIAL TABLE Continued.

GENERAL, 1911-1912.

Totals

Baker

Benton

Clackamas .

Clatsop

Columbia _.

Coos

Crook

Curry

Douglas . Gilliam..

County

67. Average monthly salary of teachers in one-room buildings

1911

55 02

55 i N I 48 67 58 24

57 00 54 75

46 10

58 8(1

1912

57 29

62 50 51 10 56 81 56 90 64 00

56 00 60 53

68. Average monthly sal- ary of assistant teach- ers in schools having more than one room

1911

$ 63 71

50 00 54 44

58 40

65 00

59 73

62 40

66 04

Grant

Harney

Hood River.

Jackson

Josephine ...

Klamath .

Lake

Lane

Lincoln .. Linn

Malheur

Marion

Morrow

Multnomah. Polk

Sherman

Tillamook

Umatilla..

Union

Wallowa _.

Wasco

Washington .

Wheeler

Yamhill

51 10

58 00

62 50

56 00

61 00

52 64

54 00

62 50 71 00 46 00 48 87

48 00

58 65 51 50

57 15

61 15

49 28

56 47

57 00

62 84

55 (X) 55 00

51 91

45 45 57 50

53 00

54 00

55 10

62 50 59 00

55 98

56 00

66 00

67 50 50 10 50 91 48 50

57 35

58 70

59 15

58 80 60 00

62 50 52 00

55 37 59 11 f>(

55 00

59 00 62 50

66 34 71 00

69 00

70 02

67 00

68 00

70 00 56 00 62 72 50 00

68 50

60 00 66 00 99 15 52 45

68 08 55 00

71 44 65 00 68 05

71 28

54 60 60 18

55 00

Report of Superintendent of Public Instruction.

43

FINANCIAL EXHIBIT Concluded. GENERAL, 1911-1912.

County

69. Average monthl y salary of principals of buildings of more than one room

70. Average annual sal- ary of city superin- tendents of districts of the first class

71. Average number of mills district tax levied

1911

1912

1911

1912

1911

1912

' 1 IaT file

$ 96 72

$ 98 00

$ 1,806 00

$ 1,829 76

3.99

3.7

xjftK*?!'

$ ion 00

79 95

80 23 100 00

76 84

111 10

97 00

C Ifl.l A A

H>4 44

7^ (in 10 uu

82 76

96 30

91 50

109 00

110 33

$ 2,500 00 1, ouu uu 1,700 00

o fw\ nn Z , UUU uu

5? *)77 77 * 11 I I I

^ ftfin no i,ouu uu

1,800 00

i.ouu uu

6.25 3. 54 3.9 6.

3.77

6.

3.5

3.9

6.2

3.7

Benton _.

lor* It' o Tit Q. q

Ol3.t$op _

Oolumbift

Ooos

Orook__

6.076

6.7 1.3 8. 2.5

8.1 2.

3.5 3.1 4.

3. 4. 3.8

96 50 91 00

87 25 90 00 95 0(1

97 46 75 00

110 00 120 00 95 00

88 66

89 00

130 00 87 50 109 55 148 65 83 00

101 20

90 00 106 56

95 00 108 23

81.66 73 55 99 07

98 00

105 00 107 63

93 14 90 00

1,200 00

1,350 00

3. 1.9

7.4

3. 5.

3.43 3.3

4. 7. 4. 4.

1.11

t J. i 1 1 1 Q

Harney ___

_tlOOCl HI VCl

To ulronii

101 04 74 00

116 66 103 75 91 99 91 66

90 00

111 50 88 00 120 68

1,600 00 1,800 00

1,750 00 1.800 00

T/iaa n It n ti a

Klamat h _ _ _

Lake

Lane. .

2, 000 00

2,000 00

Lincoln

Linn

1,650 00

1,650 00

2.

4.6

3.5 2.2 2.4 3.

Malheur. _ _ _. _

Marion.

2, 250 00

1,687 50

2.57 2.27 3.27

Morrow ....

Multnomah

3,325 00

Polk....

Sherman _ ...

101 02 94 00

3,48

2.6 4.5 5.1

3.1 4.8 4. 3.5

Tillamook. _

4. 2.5 4. 3.6

3.2 3.6 4. 4.2

Umatilla

1,587 50 1.125 00

Union .... __ ... .

120 50 119 60

83 33 78 60 90 00 100 00

2,000 00

Wallowa

Wasco - .

1.552 50

2.160 00

Washington ...

Wheeler _

1,350 00 1,550 00

Yamhill

1.300 00

44 Report of Superintendent of Public Instruction.

a 1 1

2 8

3

S I

lllslll?;!

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n*

§ I I

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CO CO

1

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Report of Superintendent op Public Instruction.

45

INDEBTEDNESS.

1911-1912

n\r\ 1 1 Yl ^! V

67. Bonded

68. Outstanding

69. Other

70. Total sums

indebtedness

warrants

indebtedness

items 67, 68, 69

Totals _

$ 3,728,794 60

8 333,958 63

$ 455.197 73

8 4,517 950 96

Baker .

$ 110, 400 00

8

$

$ 110,400 00

Benton . .

79,500 00

12,069 36

85 51

91,654 87

116,450 40

11,928 83

6.402 03

134,781 26

Clatsop _

164,720 00

4,907 75

169.627 75

Columbia . .

23,700 00

11,120 00

184 00

35.004 00

Ooos -_ _ -

165.519 25

9.135 96

1,172 98

175,828 19

Crook .

38,450 00

12,9i8 61

1.108 89

52,487 50

Curry

4,000 00

1,995 02

655 00

6,650 42

Douglas .....

21,700 00

16,948 90

217 90

38.866 80

Gilliam

11,750 00

1.134 63

12.884 63

Grant.

9,600 00

4.670 50

76 25

14,346 75

Harney

36.300 00

7,691 05

307 69

44,298 74

Hood River. __ .

83,500 00

3,754 09

903 00

88,157 09

Jackson ... . .

306.540 75

75,247 47

12,012 11

393,800 33

Josephine .. ..

104. 000 00

14.019 90

3. 462 98

121, 482 88

Klamath ... .

90,000 00

90.000 00

Lake . -

5.784 29

40 91

5,825 20

Lane ... .

160,777 76

13.865 44

12. 112 36

186,755 56

Lincoln . ._

15,200 00

9,856 09

4, 135 50

29,191 59

Linn __ _

149, 600 00

11,333 00

160,933 00

Malheur

137.550 00

525 00

1.9=38 00

140,013 00

Marion

181. 975 00

11.875 00

4,838 00

198, 688 00

Morrow .

12. 800 00

276 09

265 35

13,341 44

Multnomah.. -.

802. 900 00

757 93

392,986 03

1.196,643 96

Polk

122, 600 00

19.501 80

3, 196 00

145 297 80

Sherman

5,000 00

3.425 00

588 10

9,013 10

Tillamook _ .

36,000 00

36,000 00

Umatilla ..

310,326 66

18, 253 05

6,001 48

334,581 19

Union

117,225 00

1,685 70

463 50

119,374 20

Wallowa _ .... .

59,522 80

8.781 83

940 45

69, 248 08

Wasco .

48,311 72

1,310 20

788 99

50. 410 91

Washington _ ..1

51.636 65

23.710 68

68 50

75,415 83

Wheeler . _

4,000 00

500 00

4,500 00

Yamhill _

147, 238 61

14.962 16

246 27

162, 447 04

46

Report of Superintendent of Public Instruction.

STATEMENT.

Statistical table showing the number of districts and number of months' school

held in each.

Totals

Baker

Benton

Clackamas .

Clatsop

Columbia

Ooos

Crook ...

Curry

Douglas . Gilliam..

Grant

Harney

Hood River

Jackson

Josephine...

Kin math

Lake

Dane

Lincoln _. Linn

Malheur . ...

Marion

Morrow

Multnomah Polk

Sherman.. Tillamook Umatilla ._

Union

Wallowa __

Wasco

Washington .

Wheeler

Yamhill

County

Six months

787

20 19 17 1(1 12

89 40 23 90 24

23 31

25 13

12 6

57 10

30

19 17 20 4 8

2 14

27 19 39

23 22 14 22

Seven months

365

8 10

32 3 5

1

18

7 3 1

17

9

3 4

32 9

35

5 2

18

3 5 7 10

11 24

Eight months

667

16

9 15 46 7 8

9

15

10

6 7

55 6

44

9 47 12

6

36

7 11 24 13

9

19 86 6

32

Report of Superintendent eF Public Instruction. 47

Average yearly salary of associate teachers in High School

S ! ;S8 :8 1 ! If !|

5

88

No. of teachers teach- ing classes in H. S.

Number of years in High school course

i i i i i

Average yearly salary of associate teachers in grammar school

Number of associate teachers in grammar school

" :i-Mti- r i re i -

Number of months school during year

Oi ~. cr. c: .■ ci C5

OS OS «D OS GS OS Oi CI

'O'JCXX I - x x x - - 3S o: Cl

Enrollment in High School

Enrollment in all rooms, including High School

Years in pre- sent position

1

5

.a

T

W

Years in pre- I sent position

i i i i i ! i i 1 i i i i ! i

! ' '

c ~ a a

< M

88888888888 888888888

puppiii iiiipin

=c f i - - - n n - I.? ?i - u: w

88888888888 l§§llgf!!l!§

!

Number of district

3 Ci 1. - - - 5 -

IJ.

z ■-

11

iliil

103 io3~:

! « ra a »

1 Dflas £■

521 =

_

48 Report of Superintendent of Public Instruction.

Average yearly salary of associate teachers in high school

CO ©

© So

i I- o I © Ol I CD I-

No. of teachers teach- ing classes in H. S.

Number of years in high school course

^ «* -

Average yearly salary- salary of associate t'ch'rs gram, schools

OiOOiOOOiOQOiOOiOiOiOOiOOlOC w -T I- O O "f1 !M Oi iO X - ' OO © X X -r J. - iO OS

co iq Tt< 10 cn, co co co m lO 00 -"J* lO

CO lO

W iO

Number of associate teachers in grammar schools

iO ©©©©©©© Ci t 0 CT T ~ f" 1"~ CO -^^©©iCiOiO©

© -h « - - O-l CO X -rf

Number of months' school during year

f. © x r. x os © i~ t- © © i- ~ ~ © x i - © © ocic. os as osos oa oa oa as

Enrollment in High School

Enrollment in all rooms, including high school

CD^iHjqwOMCOO 1- X -r- «C X 01 C;l N © ' TO CO x ^ CO lO x »c CO

iO ©

!M -r

cc cm ea co so cc co oa

US CO T -T< OS CO I- OO CM " CO •— i

i Years in present position

Annual salary

© ©iO © X iC <o © I-

71 ©■ oi oi x -M iO o-J

' LO t> 1^ ID I- CO

5 -

/.

'6

Years in present position

Annual

Si 2

I £.1 Jajh^H

IJINHH^^HH- 1 rH M H - < CM I r^ 0M

© © © © © © C © i" © i-T iO © © © O © © © © © i © CC © i O CO J © CO © I - © © C I © © CO ©

© oi © © x x x to iC co o i> iO'Oa os r~ © © © ©

"O iO iO O © © © © tO © C I N Ol X M iO <N

lo © r- co 1

Number of District

© < X d © LO Cl CO -T< Ol -+< CO CO CO 1^ X 1 © 1 0 r- ( © 1 0-J TP ■— < CO © COCOrf©©-f"7"-1HM-r© i-h

Cj rj rj

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03

Oh' -

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gap.

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ael

3

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Report of Superintendent of Public Instruction. 49

1 600 00

810 00 675 00 810 00 720 00 686 00

900 00

00 006 00 000 'l

| | 88888888888888 ! ! j | f^§:g2S£8SS§2| j

i8 ;

\n i

00 018

^ to ^ ! i

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CO-H— < "T" T -f -f -rf' -T

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1 1 -V -T- ^

SSS sssss §oo° ;88 SoSo U8888888S8S888 888 1 § IIS llfll HIS !gg SSSS iSSS&SSgiSS&eSSiSg g8S I £

480 00 675 50

675 00

65 00

!

CO Cs os oa

a s

is M *

11- 111 i

I i i

1.100 900 675

§i§i i \m i mm mmzmmm \

11

640 1,300

990

1,000

||

Mrs. Effie Wilson.

A. J. Robertson... A. Lincoln Barkei C. H. Giles

i ill

s i Hi

I 1!^

« 1 |UI ill

Fred Goff.

J. H Austin

B. H. Smith

Inez Miller

B. J. Neubaur....

J. W. Kerns

F. C. Fitzpatrick.

E. J. Ortman

W. L.Starr

W. L. Beaumont .

W. J. Hammack. Arza M. Willis ....

F. A. Brown.. ._ _ Philip F. A. Boche

A. M. Highsmith..

H. C. Harter

i n co i~~ n

Icq ^ !

1350 0( 1300 Ot 1800 0C 1125 0C

1500 0C 810 0C 720 0C

1035 on

888 ! :

111 I

900 00

8888588888888 SSI

§plIS||||pi ||!

i i j

:8 8 ! |1 1

C. C. Thomason...

H. L. Hopkins

C. A. Howard F. A. Tiedgen A. T. Park

! j ! j

'■ i^t

! §«i

E. L. Coe

J. E. Myers

J. A. Thompson...

F. Connor

E. E. West

Wallace Kelloag..

G. M. Sprague

C. C. Cook

F. A. Goff

J. H. Austin .

Inez Miller

J!

ill

i :J i i is i ;

PIP

->.. ->od

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30 ^ i~H

St. Helens _

Warren

Yankton Bandon. _

Coquille

Marshfield ... .

Myrtle Point

North Be id

Bend

Laidlaw . .

Metolius .

Madras

Prineville . Prineville ._ Redmond

Port Orford

Port Orford

PortOrford

PortOrford

Canyonville

*> i I 1

III

3qp

Elkton ...

Gardiner

Glendale . _

Myrtle Creek

Oakland

Riddle

Roseburg.

j j = !

•* Urn

i|i

Arlington _ _ Condon. _ _ .

Condon _

Canyon City

Izer . .

Monument . . Prairie City

Drewsev -

Cascade Locks..

!

!

| J

s j & *

I i n

O WW

50

Report of

Superintendent of Public Instruction.

Average yearly salary of associate teachers in high schools

No. of teachers teach- ing classes in H. S.

Number of years in high school course

Average yearly salary of associate teachers in grammar school

Number of associate teachers in grammar school

o

P! i !

8

100 I I I I —I I— -rtr

gggoogogg-gooooo gogg

gSs88Bg38 gj|£|! ]§§§§

88088 §88

1§8S8 881

!

CSOi Ol C5 Cl £\ Ol OS OS OS Ol Oi OSOS CiCSOSCSOS CSOSO

Number of months' school during year

^ ai- a ai a:- a ai

Enrollment in high school

QC <M CO

Enrollment in all rooms, including high school

Years in pre- sent position

SSSSf g'88

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i

if

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ii ! !l !l

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Number of district

IIIIIIII

S1I!!I11§

a w m k a x x x x

5

|<5 |P

k OS "5 03 a '

•a T3 3 * 0< Qj £.3

jQQOfi ; a5 02 d oi

Si

Report of Superintendent of Public Instruction. 51

630 00

720 00

188

IS

88 : i

11 i

i8 : 1

H

p i j

675 00 630 00

00 018

rH M

n j j

3-1 N^HH

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8

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if- !

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Elbert PowhII

T. A. Barton Kalbryn C. Wells.

!

-

£ 1

Q i

1 jp-s i- i 1 1 Illli.il,

tf*a'=« ^!d^c

Aiireu rowers

S. A. McGavern ...

O. H. Jones

L. L. Ray

E. L. Swift

Geo. T. Beck

C. N. Patterson

C. W.Tidd

Elbel G. Green

C. A. Arehart

Vera F. Todd

K. F. Cooper

D. J.' Taylor ...

W. P. Sheridan- Ruth V. Grant-..

M. E. Hays

A. B. Beebe

Gladys L.Shelley.

J. C. Holmes

T. 0. Hutchinson

R. J. DaviR

A. H. Weber

Bert, P. Lovett

L. L. Marquam—

888888 888 ; 888

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! £

d

ill

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dd

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52

Report of Superintendent of Public Instruction.

Average yearly salary of associate teachers in High school

i tO lO 00

i iC o

i o

I CO CO

No. of teachers teach- ing classes in H. S.

Numbers of years in High school course

Average yearly salary of associate teachers in grammar school

Number of associate teachers in grammar school

Number of months' school during year

Enrollment in High School

Enrollment in all rooms, including High School

LOCO EC Is-

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s

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a -_

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Report of Superintendent of Public Instruction.

53

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54

Report of Superintendent of Public Instr uction.

s

o O

Average yearly salary of associate teachers in High School

1^ -r

No. of teachers teach- ing classes in H. S.

Number of years in High school course

Average yearly salary of associate teachers in grammar school

Number of associate teachers in grammar school

il

|8 19

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Number of months' school during year

Enrollment in High

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«M ON;

Report of Superintendent of Public Instruction.

r,r,

780 00

IB 1 I 18

i 1 is

1 30 1 1 1 CO

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56

Report of Superintendent of Public Instruction.

Average yearly salary of associate teachers in High School

No. of teachers teach- ing classes in H. S.

Number of years in High School course

Tff -t- m m t ^ ?i ^ ci ^ ^

Average yearly salary of associate teachers in grammar school

O O O © O O Q C

© © <^ o o 10 >a o © o o o

© x. - : © © © x © -r -r O -t- -r>

Number of associate teachers in grammar school

Number of months' school during year

oc © ©> oc oo © as © © ©> ce © ©

Enrollment in High School

Enrollment in all rooms, including High School

Of OiCXtDt-NtDhfOI-- if?C.Mf i-t'-Cr "T X 'C -r T O

Years in present position

i M M H CC

c © c t:i» r-i-:i:i ?i ©

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-a .a

be a

Years in present position

03 CQ

~ - C a

■So

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« -s. ,5 Q 54

Number of district

Report of Superintendent of Public Instruction.

r,7

Value of school property

$ 822,440 00 332,764 00 304,737 00 442,640 00 395,563 00 483,058 00 520, 963 (X) 567,863 00 657,468 00 684.297 00 823, 409 82 1,454,506 49 1,160,483 14 1,239,998 00 1,271,818 06 1.395,217 55 1,533,103 78 1.769.150 41 2.124,801 95 2,494,233 89 2.649,081 85 2,707,182 04 2.797.038 70 2.988,312 17 2,634,576 45 3,374,235 35 2,871,718 34

2.984.443 00 3,008.788 73 3,561.737 07 3.894,083 00 4.390,838 19 4.670.979 00 5,180,584 00 5,781,990 00 7,041.416 00

7.696.444 01 8,624.731 43

10,884,834 20 12,389,307 52

Total amount of school fund received

$ 184,010 00 204,760 00 258,871 00 269,822 00 235, 837 00 258,785 00 351,673 00 339,080 00 858,018 00 385, 218 00 588, 798 51 501,699 95 578, 340 96 901,272 26 069,935 54 801,638 95 916,407 89 1,062,890 13 1,231.190 18 1.324.797 70 1,449,614 86 1,322,910 41 1.205,100 64 1.284,664 06 1,187,484 19 1.276.775 29 1,327,781 59 1,728,224 90 1,595,987 22 2,383,074 93 2,157,926 00 2,404,119 18 2,027,985 06 2,817,559 97 2, 157.993 19 2,725,411 64 3.392.162 61 3. 988, 909 89 7,966,931 99 8,643.700 89

Received from State funds

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Received from county tax

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Received from district tax

$ 71.152 00 47,243 00 92,085 00 67,852 00 51,009 00 73, 456 00 84, 189 00 79,562 00 91,568 00 102,810 00 134,856 20 151,067 16 111,124 48 131,580 08 165,446 65 179,785 22 172,639 98 229,471 71 278,142 81 314,317 89 129,664 21 63,006 24 223,985 22 282,719 27 203.887 92 221,015 48 254,536 60 399,078 04 382,542 34 i 770,808 13 572. 8W) 72 647,221 30 794,475 19 ! 838,330 11 1,003.145 99 1,262,551 38 j 1.921.123 52 1 2,316.555 69 3,225,643 09 3.604,896 16

Whole amount paid to teachers during year

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Average ! monthly i salary of female