The gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1912-1925, October 08, 1914, HOME AND FARM MAGAZINE SECTION, Page 3, Image 9

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

    nOME AND FARM MAGAZINE SECTION - S
Home and Farm Magazine Section Editorial Page
Timely, Pertinent Comment Upon Men and Affairs, Following the Trend of World News; Suggestions of Interest to Readers;
Hints Along Lines of Progressive Farm Thought.
TO ADVERTISERS.
Advertisers in this locality who wish to
folly cover all sections of Oregon and Wash-
Ington and a portion of Idaho will apply $
to local publishers for rates.
General advertisers may address C. L. 6
9 Burton, Advertising Manager of Farm Mag-
azine Co, Publishers Oregon-Washington- $
Idaho Farmer, 411 Panama Building, Port-
land, Oregon, for rates and information. 8
The publishers will accept business from $
no advertiser whose reliability can he ques- $
tioned. $
WHAT JORDAN OVERLOOKED.
4i-pIIERE WILL NEVER be another
Y great war," declared Prof. David
Starr Jordan, former president of
Stanford University, on many occasions upon
which he delivered his famous address on
world peace. The reason given by the savant
for this statement was that the great money
powers of Europe were so closely related that
for one country to go to war would mean
a great loss to those controlling the finances
of other countries. He pointed out that the
mammoth holdings of the Rothschilds the
most wealthy family in the world in Ger
many, France and England absolutely put
war between these countries out of the ques
tion, for to carry on such a war the govern
- ments would have to borrow the money from
the Rothschilds, who would never consent to
see their interests in any one of these coun
tries destroyed.
That David Starr Jordan's dream for
world peace was premature, all the world
now knows. Theoretically, the idea was per
fect; practically, it was not. In observing
the strands of the great money web which
bound the countries of Europe together so
that the breaking of one might mean disas
ter to the whole, David Starr Jordan over
looked one element. This was the vulner
ability of the money kings. Despite the
wealth they controlled, the Rothschilds and
other money powers did not control men.
Would a great government refuse to go to
war because the finance of his country was
at a low ebb, when residing within its bor
ders was one of the richest men on earth, a
private citizen!
Naturally not. The wealth would be con
fiscated if necessary and the money king
would have no redress against the royal
troops. True, the government might pledge
itself to pay back the money forcibly bor
rowed in the future, but this would depend
upon the fortunes of war and if the emperor
should be defeated and his kingdom rent
asunder no restitution would be made. Were
it within the power of a money king in one
of these countries to prevent war, he would
assuredly do so, for if his country borrowed
from him and won he would be a long time
in regaining his money, whereas if his
country lost, his wealth would be gone
irreparably. Were money the real -king of
Europe, the present war would not be rag
ing. David Starr Jordan reckoned without
the might of kingsrnling by rights heredi
tary or divine.
WORLD PEACE.
THE DREAM of David Starr Jordan for
world peace will come true much
sooner because of the great European
war. Though the war was the one thing this
learned man believed could not occur and
one thing which he must view with unutter
able horror, yet the fact remains that it
probably advances the peace propaganda of
the world by a hundred years by its very
inhumanity. There are those who say that
this war will set back the world centuries.
It may do so in the progress of fine arts
aud sciences, but will it in the growth of
human brotherhood?
When this great war is over and it is too
gigantic in its proportions to last fpr long
humanity will shrink from the thought of
ever repeating its horrors. Great as are the
bonds of patriotism, greater will rise the
bonds of human brotherhood when it is seen
that patriotism may mean a blind sacrifice
of happiness, and even of life itself for sat
isfaction of the jealousies of thrones.
THE DEATH OF MOLOCH.
OP GREAT INTEREST in considering
the question of the war's effect upon
peace, is an editorial by General Har
rison Gray Otis in his paper, the Los An
geles Times. In a recent issue, he says :
"Those of us" who were in the flesh dur
ing the awful days of the terrible Civil War
that raged in America from the early spring
of 1861 to 1865, will recall probably an old
war song of the day whose refrain ran thus:
" 'Many are the hearts that are weary to
night, waiting for the dawn of peace.'
"The struggle was awful and the battles
strenuously fought, on both sides. To that
time it was the most destructive of human
life ever fought upon the earth, and con
tinued so until the present conflict now
raging along the French frontier where the
Germans are finding every step of their ad
vance contested fiercely by the French and
the British soldiers.
"Tl)e new war is but a month old at this
writing, and yet there are millions of hearts
weary waiting for the dawn of peace in that
war-torn continent, hearts bleeding with an
guish for those who are exposed to the dan
gers of war.
"It is generally recognized that there was
no valid foundation for the conflict now
raging, that it is a disgrace to humanity and
an awful menace to modern civilization. It
is impossible to conceive that mankind will
much longer tolerate the existence of such
wars as are now cursing Europe.
"Women will not go on much longer en
during the pains of childbirth, the anxiety
of rearing children, the expense of training
them for life, lavishing love, toil and money
on their sous' to have them made food for
powder and balls. Already there are low,
deep mutterings that forebode evil in the
future for the man who raises a word in
favor of war. The day of the fierce war god
Moloch, who mounted the cone of a burning
mountain in hell and shouted: 'My voice is
still for war,' is about at an end among
mankind, and it is quite time it was so."
THE COUNTY FAIR.
A FARMER owes himself an outing or
vacation of at least one week a year,
ne owes it to his family, he owes it
to his business to keep in touch with up-to-date
ideas, to be progressive. The county
fair points the way.
The real object of the fairs should be,
first of all, educational. Then amusements
should be furnished so as to give the farmer
or others attending a change and a rest after
the long months of hard work. "All work
and no play" is no better for the farmer
than for anyone else.
All classes can be equally benefitted by
attending the fair, no matter whether poor
or wealthy; whether farmer or mechanic;
whether private citizen or public official.
Thus the entire state must profit.
The fair helps the farmer boy and the
farmer girl because no bright boy or girl can
attend an agricultural fair without broad
ening their ideas, and inspiring in them high
er ambitions for success in their work. They
enjoy much honest amusement and absorb
a vast amount of general information from
the fair and all its departments.
The fair helps the farmer's hired man be
cause it teaches him how the simple appli
cation of "brains" can reduce the amount
of labor needed to accomplish the farmer's
task. He may own a farm himself some day
and the more he can comprehend and prac
tice scieuce in his work, or make brains
save the labor of his hands, the greater will
be his success.
In fact, no man, woman or child can at
tend a good county or interstate or state fair
without going home with a better under
standing of the work, better equipped in
mind aud body to meet every emergency.'
BUSINESS TRAINING.
EDUCATORS differ in opinion regarding
which of the- numerous courses offered
by the colleges of the land is the best.
The fact of the matter is that most of the
courses are good, but none of them are good
for everybody. A course that might be just
the thing for someone else would not do at
all for you. You must make up your mind
as to what kind of training will do you the
most good.
A business course teaches you to do things.
It teaches you the things that you must ao
to make a success in life. If you learn these
things while you are in school, or even learn
part of them, you will be just that much
ahead when you get out into the world. You
will know how to deal with people, what
business terms mean and many of the im
portant facts that will save you time and
money when you get into business for your
self. It is remarkable how few people know the
common ordinary rules of business ; how few
of them know how to handle a bank account,
for instance; how few of them know any
thing about notes, certificates of deposit,
drafts, accounts and the numerous other
things that are encountered every day in the
world of business.
Whether or not you decide to follow the
lines of a "higher education," you should
not neglect to become well informed in the
basic transactions of the business world.
Practicability of the parcel post as a me
dium of direct exchange between city dwell
ers and producers of the farms has been
established by a test in ten cities. The Post
office Department announces. Postmasters'
reports say the new system had been wel
comed in nearly all the communities, that it
appeared as a factor in reducing the cost of
living, and that improvements under way
assured its growth. Damage to parcels in
shipment amounted to less than one-tenth of
one per cent, it was said, and that was main
ly due to inefficient packing.
One of the most lamentable facts in con
sidering the fertile San Joaquin Valley in
California is the lack of interurhan roads.
Sacramento Valley is rapidly developing be
cause of these lines. Several are now in
operation in the San Joaquin district and
many are being proposed, and it is their
completion which means much to the small
land owner.
The German Reichstag and the British
House of Commons have each appropriated
$1,250,000,000 to meet the expenses of the
war. The French Chamber of Deputies has
appropriated billions of francs. Even Bel
gium, that asked only to be let alone, has
had to put up $40,000,000. The people of
Europe will be paying the price of this war
for a hundred years to come.
The Swiss cheese made in Washington and
Oregon seems to be all right, but so far our
neutral cheesemakers have been unable to
imitate the war cry of the Limburger product.
A lot of Americans are coming over to
America as their ancestors did, with all their
belongings in a pocket handkerchief.
The increase in the price of peroxide is
bound to have an effect on the number of
blondes at large in this country.
It is certainly tough when the war pre
vents people from buying necessities of life
like Paris gowns.
Champagne is steadily rising in price. The
suffering by reason of the war promises to
be amazing.
The gold that goes to Europe to buy wur
supplies will pretty soon come back to buy
grub. f
' j .
Really, it looks as if we have been send
iug missionaries to the wrong places