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About The west shore. (Portland, Or.) 1875-1891 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 1, 1885)
THE WEST SHORE. 229 ' ' commerce will never be realized Nothing is more cer tain, however, than that there will soon be some radical Chungs in the routes of TiiciSo ooiuweioe. Whether it is that "The wish is fathor to the thought," or because their mentnl vision is bounded by the narrow horizon of local prejudice and self-interest, or whatever other cauise may, in charity, be assigned to it, the fnot remains undeniable that it is impossible for the citizens of one section of the West to recognize the pal pable advantages and future prospects of a rival, or to admit the existence of facts and conditions which soem dear and indisputable to a stranger who has no local interest to warp his judgment Daily we hear the remark made that when certain events happen they will " lay out" this or that place "cold." The party making these asser tions is certain those events will happen, for no Iwttor reason than that he desires them, and that they will have the predioted effect because his supposed interests lead him to feel antagonistic to the place doomed in his imag ination to be blottod out On the contrary, through the same process of reasoning, a oitizen of the place roforred to is equally positive no such events will occur, or, if thoy do, will not have the disastrous effects ascribed to thorn. He even goes further and sees in his mind another train of events that will bring inevitable ruin to the home of the individual first spoken of. To one not influenoe by local pride or personal interest it is plainly apparent that both partios are doceiving themselves. Whoever believes that the completion of the Cascados branch, the opening of the Upper Columbia River, the construction of a line across the mountains from Yaquhia Bay, or any or all of a dozen mooted projects, will be a death-blow to Tort land; that the lease of the 0. R. & N. Co. will prevent the completion of the Casoadns branch; that a failure to build that branch will be a mortal stroke to Taooma; that its completion to Taooma will kill Seattlo, or will prevent any other road from seeking a Puget Sound outlet; or that by the happening of any of a numier of possible events their town will be placed in the lead in the race for metropolitan honors and their rivals " squolohod," is a sadly mistaken individual His judgment is warped by prejudice; he is reasoning from false promises to a wrong conclusion; he has not given the subject dispas sionate investigation; he has not sufficiently informed himself of the great resources of this region, nor of the commercial hihtory of older communities. If he had he would know that each section has its elements of strength ; that none are dependent solely upon the Impelling of any future event or series of events; that all are estab lished and will grow as the onuntry becomes belter devel oped, and that in no case will either the lugubrious pre dictions of the croaker nor the rose-tinted visions of the enthusiast be realized. We are all here to stay, to grow and thrive, and it would be more seemly, as well as of more profit to us all, to view this subject in the light of common sense, friendliness and that community of inter est which, whether we realize it or not, our position gives us. SCIENCE APPLIED TO AGRICULTURE. AGRICULTURE involves all physioal soionoo. Earth, air, light, heat ami moisture are evor factors in vegotablo germination and growth. Natural laws direct and control the operations of the husbandman, however ignorant, and his practice, if wise and judicious, Is an unconscious formula of the results of science applied to agriculture. ThuB we find in every rural community, howevor primitive anil unlettered, peculiar methods and traditionary practices, whiuh are crystalled oommon sense and uuwritten science. Statistical research shows that a crude agriculture is not abundant in product, that it is defloiont in working capital, and that it is compelled to pay high interest on borrowed money. A low grado of farming is cursed with mortgages and mildews, with insects and ignorance. Un certainty broods over its harvests and famine decimates its people. Famine is unknown in a country of advanced agriculture, though a fourth of its people only may be engaged in rural production. On the oontrary, millions famish in India, whilo most of its people are in agricul ture. It is said that in . 1270, in England, " parents ate thoir ohildron whon wheat rose to 8.10 shillings a quarter at the present value of money." Fivo hundred yean ago, when nearly every Englishman lived by agriculture, the product only sufficod for a home supply; now, with a population of 4 1(1 to tho square milo, of which only ono in eight is an agricultural worker, six-tenths of all the food required for consumption is produced at home, though half the island is oooupiod for residences, pleas ure grounds and hunting preserves. The lint in races of Southern Euroe, slower than the Anglo-Saxon in utilizing in rural practice tho discoveries of modern soionoo, are still mnking sure progress toward a higher and more profitable agriculture. In Italy lands are more productive, buildings more numerous and eon vonient, and the peasant is bettor paid and better lodged and clothed. An official commission has recognized the improvement as a measure of progress in scientific agri. culture, and made the futuro prosperity of Italy depend ent upon schools and scientific experiment Spain is mainly agricultural, yet its entire value of rural production oould bo purchased with the valuo of the oorn crop of the United States. It is because the yield is small and the price low. Russia, with labor employed principally In agriculture, yields hut nineteen bushels of cereals per head, while Great Britain, with sovon-elghths of her jmoplo employed outside of agriculture, last yusr produced ten bushels of ceroids for every inhabitant of the country. In Great Dritain the yield per acre of wheat is twenty-eight bushels; in Russia scarcely more than a third as much. This high yield has been attained by science applied to agriculture. A single Individual has given his fortune to experimental agriculture, and endowed his farm with the iueome from $.7)0,000. In seasons unfavorable to production the money value of skill and scieuco in sgriculture is immensely en hanoed. It is often remarked thnt farmers receive ss much for a very small crop ss for a very huge one. In