Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1912-1925 | View Entire Issue (June 11, 1914)
HOME AND FARM MAGAZINE SECTION Home and Farm Magazine Section Editorial Page Suggestions Fsom Our Associate Editors, Allowing for an Interchange of Views, Written by Men of Experience on Topics With Which They Axe Fully Acquainted Hints Along Lines of Progressive Farm Thought. WE HEED EXPERTS. SLOWLY, perhaps, we are com ing to the realization that wo , need experts to manage our eitiea. There seems no argument. If it pays the big and little cor ' porations, why not the big and little cities, which are nothing but corporations only on a larger scale! Jn a recent booklet by the Uni versity if Oregon called "Choos ing a Calling," the management of cities is outlined as !V new profes sion and one (net awaits the college-educated student along special lines. , Many of our cities have come to tho commission plan, but it Deems likely that tho commission will be come eventually a jjoverning body an;', that a trained expert of execu tive powers will be engaged to do the actual management and super vision. In the smaller cities this plan seems ideal. Tho only, question is whether in the larger cities such an executive would have the power to "hire and fire" that the cor poration executive possesses. Of course, until we decide to banish politics from our city administra tions that would be impossible. Smalle: cities have come to the front alraady with evidence of the value of a city manager. At the last Convention of North west Municipalities experts spoke glowingly ef the work of thj man ager of the little country town of Milton, OregoB. This man appears to be a j radical engineer. Un doubtedly .uch training is valuable. La Grando, Oregon, is another town that seems to bo finding suc cess wit'i the City Manager. Up in Alberta there is the town of Red Deer. The City Manager there ib called tho Commissioner, lie is appointed by the Mayor and Council. Hero wo havo another type. Com missioner Stevenson of Kcd Deer is a trained executive. lie is more or less ignorant of practical work. But ( he has employed those who know. Subject only to the Council, he has full charge, of affairs. t The result ia remarkable. While other towns in Western Canada are suffering from extortionate taxes and general uial administration, Bed Deer's levy is but 15 mills. It has parked streets, city parks, good soworage and water systems. All over Canada the work of Commissioner Stevenson has boon lauded. Now his daily duties are impeded regularly by delegations from other cities who "want slice whoels s wound"; who wish to know if they can't go and do like wise. The city managor idea originated in Germany. There it has boon a marked success. Germans judge by results and pay by results. Tho man who makes a success in a small city is certain to receive a call to a larger municipality. If he has the right qualities, he will be pr'aioted from city to city, adding as he goes, increasod remuneration and in creased honor. Discussing the city manager, Pro fessor Sowers, the University of Oregon municipal experts, ays: "He cannot succeed if he ex i poets political heelers to do high . class work. A glance into the fu 'iure reveals a calling hore which" !.the young man of the present day lias still a chance to enter on the , ground floor and which will lead -I to positions of dignity and honor. "Courses of training suggested I for oity managerships are eco nomics, political science, sociology, ( history, commerce, English and Journalism." Bat It is a matter for doubt If he young man who prepares him elf. for the calling of city man I agar will find bis reward for many jears in America, True, the spirit of change teems 1 1 be In the air, s ' Tt looked at commercially it ia questionable whether the young wan who is trained as a city man ager will have many cities clamor ing for his services. But, in another sense, men trained to be city managers will be our most valuable citizens. They will be the men to check up on dishonest or ignorant munici pal governments. Ft it is well to say that in these days of much cries of "graft," "graft" is merely often ignorance. And the man trained as a city executive has the training to teach our cities a better way. 4 $ TIKE CLOCKS TOR HORSES. IT IS interesting to compare the treatment of city, horses with those 'in the country. The country horse is treated just as any other worker, with care and consideration. The city horse is a piece of abused machinery. 'the country Aorse, the farm horse, is rarely,, if ever, over worked. . . .. ' The city horse is ever over worked. In spite of the passing of mini mum wage laws and maximum hour laws, the city horse at times still has its 30-hour shift. The tired cab horse dozes sleep- . ily on its stand. The' delivery horse drops from the heat and exhaustion. 80 the Anti-Cruelty Society of Chicago is taking action. Of course, it won't actually in stall tune docks for tones. Yet, metaphorically, that is what is being done. A campaign is on to give the horse a square deal, a fair share of sleep, a fair share of rest. Those who overwork their horses wiil be prosecuted for cruelty to animals. Here's to that Anti-Cruelty So ciety. May it win out! TOWN, COUNTRY AND HEALTH. RECENTLY Collier's Weekly asked this question: "Is it much easier to be good in tho country than in the city t ' ' In a later issue a letter was pub lished from Mr. MacLevy, a teach er of physical culture, who thus answers in a decided affirmative: "For years I have conducted a gymnasium in the heart of New York and a health-building physical-culture plant in a Long Island rural community, and I have had abundant opportunity to compare the effocts of city and country life on the health and morals of men. Health and morals they come to pretty near being the same. The invalid may be a near-angel, and the strong, virile specimen of hu manity a near-fiend, but they are the exceptions that prove the rule. "Most bad people aro sick peo ple, and most sick people are sick because they have neglected and disregarded the laws of right liv ing, such as exercise, fresh air, deep breathing,' plain and nutritious nourishment, regular hours, and more exercise. The city man can, if he wilts, observe all those laws, and lire c long, happy, useful and moral life, but he is not bo likely to do so as the man who spends at least a part of the time in the country. On the other hand, an ex clusively bucolie existence occa sionally tonds to ignorance, bigotry, and narrowness of vision, and so may lead to ill-health and viciousness. " Of course, Mr. MacLevy is quite right, But we wonder where he got that idea about the "exclusively bucolie existence "f There "ain't no sich thing" in the Northwest. Farmers out here, Mr. MacLevy, are never exclusively bucolic. Many of them have automobiles. They visit thoir friends. They see plays and motion pictures in the city. They are regular visitors to Portland, Seattle, Tacoma and Spo kane for the annual city festivals. They ' aro omnivorous readers. They go to school at our agricul tural colleges. Why should men of that type lead an "exclusively bucolic exist ence"! They don't. 3o we can't admit Mr. Mac Levy's exception. Not only is it easier to be good in the country but ier. and women are better in the -ountry. And why shouldn't they bet Their interests are wider. They have most of the advantages of the city and mighty few of its dis advantages. It's a realization of that which started the "back to the farm" movement. But we thank Mr. MacLevy for his remarks, anyway. A STRONG CONTRAST. FIFTEEN THOUSAND berry pickers are required this year to harvest the million-dollar crop of the Puyallup and Sumner Fruit Growers' Asosciations. That is the organization Senator Paulhamus built. And built well. Last year the Puyallup Valley sold $1,000,000 worth of berries. This year the crop will be $1, 125,000 in all probability. Last year the hop fields of Cali fornia were tied up with riots. The pickers rioted because of grossly unsanitary conditions, inadequate water supply and bad living ar rangements. Why, tho son of one of the hop growers had the water privilege and water was sold at five cents a glass. Do you blame those pickers for riotingf It's a different story at Puyal lup. Arriving in Sumner or Puyallup, the pickers find wagons waiting to haul them and their camping out fit bedding and cooking utensils to the fields. Arrived at the fields, the pickers find cabins fitted with cooking stoves and bunks. Water is conven ient at hand and plentiful. Representatives of the grocers and meat dealers of tho nearest town call for their orders and make deliveries tho same day. For their work of picking, 40 cents a crate is paid. This season will see hundreds of the same pickers alighting from trains in Puyallup and Sumner that alighted last year and the year be fore. They expect to spend a profit able season; to many of them it is a holiday. Thero will bo the same story to tell in the Northwest next hop picking season. We are not fond of the California way. Incidentally, we wonder if the way of the Northwest doesn't pay better than the California plan. MORE FIGURES. THE CROP reports of tho Bureau of Statistics (Crop Estimates) of the TJ. .S. Department of agriculture show the average prices paid to the farmers in various states for butter, eggs and chickens, on May 1, 1914, and as compared with tho similar estimates on May 1, 1913, Apparently farmers aro ob taining on an average less for their butter and slightly more for their eggs and chickens. The average price paid to the farmer tor butter on May 1, 1914, was 23.8 cents, or 3.2 cents less a pound than the average prico paid on May 1, 1913. In tho New Eng land States farmers of Now Hamp shire seem to have received on an averago 33 cents or 1 cent more a pound, while in Connecticut they were paid 30 cents or 8 cents less a pound; in Vermont 29 -cents and Rhode Island 32 cents or 6 cents less a pound, and in Massachusetts 83 cents or 3 cents loss a pound, and in Maine 30 cents or 1 cent less. In New York and Pennsylvania and adjoining states the average price, was 28 i 32 cents or from 7 to 4 cents less. On the coast from Mary-' land to South Carolina the .price : were either the same or 1 cent high- er, ranging from 23 to -8 cents. Georgia rarmers receiving 26 cents seem to have gained 1 cent, while the Florida farmers received 2 cents a pound less or 33 cents. In the balance of the states, with a few ex ceptions where the price was stable, . farmers apparently were receiving '. from 1 cent to 5 cents less a pound, except that in Montana the price was 1 cent more, in Arizona 6 centa less and in Oregon 7 cents less. The farm prices for eggs on May 1 were 16.8 cents a dozen, or about . .7 of a cent higher on an averago for the country than on May 1, 1913, or an increase of about 4.3 per cent. In most of the states the price was the same, or varied only by j 1 cent one way or the other. In Montana, however, eggs on May 1, 1914, were 18 eents or 4 cents cheaper than the preceding year, while in New Mexico they were 23 cents or 4 cents higher on an aver age. The price paid to farmers for chickens on May 1 was 12.5 cents or about .7 of a cent a pound high er in 1914 than in 1913, or an in crease of about 5.9 per cent. Tho variation in the price of chickens was commonly less than 1 cent per pound. The principal variations from this were Delaware, where there was a decrease of 1 cents a pound to 14.5 cents, West Virginia where there was an increase of 1.2 cents a pound to 13.4 cents, North Carolina an increase of 1.5 cents to 12.5 cents and South Carolina an increase of 2.3 cents to 15 cents. x$ COUNTRY BOYS' CREED. IN EVERY schoolhouse in Prince Edward County, Va., a placard containing a creed for the American country boy and dedi cated to the Boys' Corn Club of Vir ginia has been posted. It reads: "I believe that the country which God made is more beautiful than the city which man made; that life out of doors and in touch with the earth is the natural life of man. I believe that work witn nature is more inspiring than work with the most intricate machinery. I believe that the dignity of labor depends not on what you do, but how you do it; that opportunity comes to a boy on the farm as often as to a boy in the city; that life is larger and freer and happier on the farm than in the town; that my success de pends not upon my location, but upon myself; not upon my dreams, but upon what I actually do; not upon luck, but upon pluck. I be lieve in working when you work and in playing when you play, and in giving and demanding a square deal in every act of life." $ , WHAT NEXT? CCORMNG to the London limes, an English chemist has discovered a process of manu facturing synthetically a pure and wholesome milk of high nutritive value from the soja or soy bean. It is reported that excellent cheese and bnetter have been manu factured from this artificial milk. These contentions may be true, but it is questionable if the method the good Lord devised, a dairy cow, can't manufacture milk more eco nomically, provided she is given the right kind of raw materials. A CHINA PERIL. LONDON game buyers have been warned that many of the part ridges and pheasants shipped there from China are killed in wood and field by poisoned bait. American egg buyers are hereby warned that thousands of Chinese eggs are being shipped to this coun try and these antique, germ laden, ' yellow perils are likely to be sold at the real American article. '