TAGK TWO THE GAZETTE-TIMES. HEPPN'ER. ORE., THURSDAY, SEPT. 30, 1915 THE GAZETTE-TIMES. Tho HeppmT Gazette, Kstablishe!, M.irrh lv" The Htiiiier Times, KsuMished No vember !, lv'7. Consoliilatt'il February 15. l!12. V A W T K l C U A V P O It D Kmtor and l'roprietor. Issued everv Tiivr-!av morning, and ente' e.l at ti e !' : ' . e at llenpner, Oni:-n. as n'.' i-ii.:ss matter. sfnsrr.n-n n rates: One Tear $1.50 Pix Months 75 Three Months .' 50 Single ij : s .05 .APVH!:TiSlN'l KATES: Display, t- : . i less than one momti. i.:; : ' per Inch, 2ro: sul'.' r:.r:. t i-vi'Mions. ISH'M displs.., i. . locals, first inse. ttoii. pt I: u l .v.; sut'seitueut insertions, per l;r.e. e.: loiijre resolu tions, per lit'.-. -Vr. i !i socials antl all a.lvc: : : . ri" piertainments oor.'lm ; . . - .; ::ar rales. JHOKKOW Crtl"T I ' !! 'MI, IWPEIl Thursday, S,p;. .::l,r SO, 1915. OITOUTl iTV KNOCKS. As we view it. ; ir'tintty is now knocking at ta-: ur of Morrow county as pptmrfitny lias never knocked tn?rr Wo .r;l'ably do not realize that it wa be possible that this county lias about reached the point where si'.e U t ) take off the well worn clothes of iJorniancy and don the "glad rags" of industrial activity and development. The discovery of artesian water in this county has exceeded the hopes of dry-land farmer, stockman and every other business man and citizen alike. But the unlocked for has happened. Probably throughout the past three years while the experimenting for artesian well water has been going on there have been only two people who have had unlimited faith in what the result might be. The majority of us were skeptics. W. D. Newlon and his faiihfuj wife have proved a bless ing to this county, and it is safe to predict that their names will live on the lips of the irrigation farmer of this section long after the New Ions have gone. That great good will result from these wells there can be no doubt. But as a suggestion to the Heppner Commercial Club. Why not send gome live wire to the Panama Exposi tion, a man who is acquainted with his subject matter and knows what he is talking about. Supply him with excellent photographs and with his own personal knowledge at hand, the advertising that he would give Mor row county in the next two months would be inestimable. We have in mind a man who would fill that posi tion admirably. He is a man who has had considerable experience in that line of advertising. He is thorough ly acquainted with conditions as they exist in this county and although we know he is a very busy man and might not be able to go on such a mission, we would like to suggest the name of W. D. Newlon. He has spent more money in getting results which would ultimately put this county on the map than any other one man we know. Consequently It is safe to say that the Heppner Com mercial Club would not make a mis take in sending this man, should they decide to take up this valuable means of putting our county before the eyes of the world. OREGON'S EXPERIMENT. Oregon was one of the first states to adopt a minimum wage law for women. We suppose employers op posed it from a conviction that it would be disastrous. Employers commonly do oppose such laws from such a conviction. Over a year and a half ago the Oregon commission fixed minimum wages for women in retail stores as follows: For those under eighteen, and those over sixteen hav ing less than one year's experience, six dollars a week; for those over eighteen and having over a year's experience, eight dollars and a quar ter a week, except in Portland, where they receive nine and a quarter dol lars a week. Thw:e do not sound like very for midable wages. The Bureau of La bor Statistics, at Washington, has in vestigated results so far and reported. Fewer women were employed in stores at the time of investigation than before the 'minimum wage went into effect, but that seems to have been due to general business condi tions and to some particular causes unconnected with the wage law. It does not appear that men supplant ed women as a result of the law, or very generally that inexperienced and less competent women supplanted ex perienced ones. That the law has not resulted in keeping the wages of women down to the legal minimum is clear from the fact that the proportion of women getting more than the legal minimum is greater than it was before the law went into effect, about a quarter of the girls under eighteen got less than six dollars a week; so, on the whole, the law has somewhat in creased wages in that department. ' Covering but a sinle industry in a state that is not highly developed in dustrially, the evidence adduced by this investigation is not very con clusive; but whatever weight it lias 1b favorable to the minimum-wage law. Saturday Evening Post. HOW THE FAST I.OVF.S VS. From the Atlantic to the eastern base of the Rocky mountains the settlers helped themselves, as they advanced, to everything they could find in the then wilderness. The ut most they ever paid for the richest lands was $2.50 per acre-just enough to pay for the surveys and the mak ing out of the deeds. Some three score years or more ago some crank started the idea that inasmuch as the government owned the public domain, it in reality be longed to all the people and if it any where contained special treasures like lead or zinc or coal or iron de posits, the whole people should own these 4ePs'ts-" The idea seemed a good one to the men in the far east, who knew nothing of the frontier or the hardships incident upon its set tlement and redemption, and they caused a law to be passed to secure to themselves their pro-rata of the undiscovered or undeveloped wealth. It was tried for five years and its unproductiveness and its manifest in justice caused congress to repeal the law without one dissenting vote. But a few years ago the thought was revived in the east and though in the interval between the repeal of the old law and the resurrection of the old thought, the west, and most ly the deserts of the west, had sup plied the means to the east to enable it to make available its many re sources and grow rich, this revived thought took a strong hold on eastern cupidity, and the then President, one Theordore Roosevelt, selected a per sonal friend, one Gifford Pinchot, to go west, spy out the land and see what he could find and appropriate. By the way, it is understood that Mr. Pinchot, for his personal use draws large annual revenues from coal mines in Pennsylvania which origin ally cost his ancestors only $2.50 per acre. In the meantime because of the partial subduing of electricity to man's use, water power had become valuable. So had timber lands, so had oil lands, so had iron and coal lands. Thus when Mr. Pinchot came west, what he did was in effect to deliver an ultimatum to the men of the desert, which, set to words, was about this: "Our great and beneficent gov ernment loves the men of the desert almost as much as it does the lovable mongrels in Mexico; it wants you all to prosper and so opens the whole of this domain to you, only keep in mind that if you discover any for ests, any streams that will make wa ter power, any coal or iron mines or oil lands, you must not disturb them for they are on the public domain, they may become valuable after a while and all the people of the east have a common interest in them and must realize their pro rata of any profits that may come from them." Then he sent out a small army of his friends on government salaries, as spies to see that the greedy men of the west should not appropriate any thing in which his benevolent friends in the east had their pro rata inter est. In this way about one-third of the state of Idaho was placed under a timber reserve, including the streams that water power might be created from. In the same way Utah oil and coal and timber lands were covered. In Alaska some nervy men had begun to make some coal lands available for the people, but the cry went up that they were monopolists and the government immediately sat down upon them, and so for five years past, the general public up there has, with ample coal measures at its doors been forced to buy coal from Japan and British Columbia. But it is idle to inveigh against the mingled cupidity and stupidity of the educated idiots who at long range feel it a duty to rob the west though they know no more about the real conditions than they know of the God they pray for blessings from. So they continue to pray to God and to prey upon the west. Goodwin's Weekly. INDUSTRIAL EDUCATION. Those of us who have witnessed in dustrial education and its beneflcient results little appreciate the advance ment that has been made in our edu cational ideas of the past half cen tury. The public school, which was the advance agent of industrial edu cation, was not established without argument. Many there were who strenuously opposed public schools as an imposition upon taxpayers. No h'ss an influence than Herbert Spen cer proclaimed it at as late a date as forty-five years ago that the state had no more right to administer educa tion than to administer religion, and that the proposed general establish ment of schools at the expense of tax payers was an infringement upon the rights of the person so taxed. They said it was plunging the slate into benevolency which would eventually breed political corruption and bank ruptcy. We have had both these ca lamities, but few attribute them to education. Industrial education, under which head cornea our agricultural colleges, experiment stationo and farm exten sion work, found no easier sailing in entering the harbor of service than did its forerunner, the public school. Ever since man began writing rec ords, we find two classes, those who are content with, and hold fast to, the things they iiave, and the other that seeks newer and better ways. Radical and conservative, progressive and reactionary. Between the two forces are hammered out compro mises that make for real growth and development. And so it has been with our long steps in educational matters. The advocates of influence of blood lines in breeding livestock and in their claims of being able to estab lish special types of livestock partic ularly adapted to producing greatest possible results in certain lines, have met with opposition in their propa ganda and have found their strong est ally in the agricultural colleges with their small army of scientific workers. The point of attack in pro moting the special types of livestock has been in the class room with the rising generation, in judging at the fairs and stock shows, and lately in the tests for milk and butter produc tion both in an official and private way. The milk cow testing associations are being organized in every part of the Union. At mos of the state fairs and at many of the county and dis trict fairs these milking tests are car ried on and they are proving one big point to the average man who milks cows, and that is some cows always return a loss, while others make a profit and that the little details of keeping a record of what cows are eating and what they are producing, is absolutely essential for success in the business. This is becoming more and more necessary as the price of products, the price of the cow and the cost of the feed that she eats all ad vance alike. The benefits derived from free schools, the necessity of agricultural education are now disputed by few if any people. And rapidly is coming to prevail the acceptance of the nec essity of getting better financial re turns from livestock through tiie in troduction of the right blood lines. One of the war's remarkable ef fects upon American trade was shown here when, for the first time in his tory, sugar was purchased for export from the United States to Switzer land. Although Switzerland is a next door neighbor of Germany, the great est beet sugar country in the world, the war has caused an embargo to be laid on the exportation of sugar from Germany and Austria-Hungary, and consequently the Alpine republic finds it necessary to send three thous and miles across the Atlantic to se cure the national supply of sweeten ing. Not only Switzerland but Great Britain, France, Italy and Greece have been purchasers of sugar in the New York market. In the first nine months of the war exports amounted to nearly 500,000,000 pounds valued at over $23,000,000. Naturally the heavy export demand for sugar which usually comes to the American mar ket has kept the prices comparatively high, and the American farmers who grow sugar, either in beets or cane, are likely to have a prosperous sea son. In fact persons familiar with the sugar trade agree that the war has saved this industry from extinc tion for the time being. Prior to the outbreak of hostilities and following the legslation adopted by congress for the free admission of foreign grown sugar, many sugar mills and factories closed down and tens of thousands of farmers abandoned the planting of beets and cane. With the better price conditions brought about by the war, the American crop prob ably will be larger than ever before, and it will be possible to continue su gar growing in this country, at least until the European conflict ends. BANKERS ARE TAKING NOTICE. Myron T. Herrick, ex-Governor of Ohio and ex-president of the Amerl can Bankers Association, had the fol lowing to say concerning rural cred its. To read of a man of national prominence and banking experience being at last in faver of the farmer coming into his own, must convey to the yeomen of this land that their fight for right has not been in vain. Mr. Herrick, speaking before the Portland Chamber of Commerce, said in part: "When we realize that the farmers of this country have assets aggregat ing $45,000,000,000, and an annual output of $15,000,000,000, the ques tion presents itself in a very workable form. "On such a basis there should be no difficulty in obtaining credit. It certainly would not be difficult in or dinary business. So all that we need, then, is organzaton." And "rural co-operaton," he sug gested as the programme. "The best breeding ground for co operation," he continued, " is an as sociation distinguished from a cor poration or a joint stock company. The recently enacted laws on credit unions and soealled co-operative banks in Oregon and elsewhere are not enough. These laws tend to in terfere with, rather than encourage, co-operation. "The laws to be enacted should make it legally possible to do through an association what now may he done through a corporation or a joint stock company." Mr. Herrick emphasized the neces sity of organizing the farmers on a definite legal status, so that they col lectively, may be able to transact bus iness and thus obtain the benefit of rural credits. "But the laws that should be en acted," he added, "ought to be gener al in scope. That is, they should not be confined to any particular class or persons. They need not contain one reference to agriculture in order to permit the farmer to avail himself of them." He explained that the last three Presidents Roosevelt, Taft and Wil son each in turn have recommended co-operation as best edapted to the need of the farmers. IONE. Mrs. Jack Hughes, from Fox Val ley, is visiting with friends in lone these days. Mrs. M. Morgan is visiting out at the Burroughs ranch with her sis ter for a few days. Last Sunday's train brought home a large bunch from the Round-Up. They all report a fine time. Mrs. J. H. Cochran has gone up to the Yakima country to visit with her children for some time. A. E. Pierce left lone last Wednes day with a carload of hogs that he will take down to Portland. Quite a number of the Masons went "up to Heppner last Monday evening to attend some lodge doings up there Chas. Allinger, who lias been hob bling r.bout for some time on a walk ing cane, has trrown the stick away. C. R. Johnson is very busy finish ing putting up his last crop of hay. Don't worry, Chas., it hasn't rallied yet. Miss Kittle Wilmot was a passen ger to Portland last week where she will visit with friends for a short time. Peanut Dan, the premium painter, is with us once more. He is making Ed Moore's house look like a man sion. The way real estate changed hands here last Sunday was not slow, and those who missed a good deal are lucky. Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Lundell have gone down to Rheas Siding to spend a couple of weeks on Oscar Lun- dell's ranch. Floyd Ftaxier is the happy daddy of another baby boy, born at his home last week. Mother and child getting along fine. J. E. Frazier and wife were in town last Monday visiting witli Mrs. C. J. Anderson, who is schooling her child ren in lone this winter. Sam Esteb went up to the Ed Day ranch last Sunday to wire the new house preparatory to putting in elec tric lights. R. N. Hymer extracted several bunches of whiskers without pain at Dick Turpln's shop while Dick was letting 'er buck. Dalles Perkins, of Portland, spent several days recently visiting with her father. She returned to her home last Tuesday morning. Mrs. Turpin, who has been visit ing with her son Dick for the past couple of weeks, returned to her home last Tuesday. The Benedict girls of Morgan went to Pendleton last week in their car with Fay McNabb as pilot and they had some time at the Round-Up. E. R. Lundell finished up thresh ing last Sunday after a splendid run and has moved to lone again where he will school his children this win ter. Herman Ray. and family, who have been living in lone for the past year, left for the Valley Saturday of last week, Mr. Ray having disposed of his lone property. Elmer Griffith received a carload of gasoline, distillate and coal oil the latter part of last week. It seems good to have a few spoonfuls of gas in the little burg once more. O. D. Forbes drove his jitney over to Pendleton last Friday taking over Dick Turpin, Flossie Kirk and Mrs. Turpin. They returned home the following Sunday, reporting a splen did time. Vawter Crawford is one of the Ioneites these days. We do not know for sure where he keeps him self, but he generally hoves in sight about meal time. Our friend Vawter has not got over the eating and sleep ing habit yet. E. M. Shutt is very busy building a couple of cow bams. His son Law rence and another blind schoolmate look after the milking, which gives E M. a great deal more time to drive nails and hammer his, thumb. , E. M. has a very fine bunch of milk cows and he Is preparing to give them the proper winter care. Lou Land, who has been in lone for the past six months taking care of his parents, who are getting old and feeble, left for his home at Win chester, Idaho, last Thursday, where he will paper and finish his new house. He will probably return af ter a time. His wife, who has been in Portland for some time, will meet him at the Junction and accompany him home. 13,0(10,000 1'eoplo at San Francisco t , Fair. San Francisco, Sept. 28. When the gates of the Panama-Pacific expo sition closed at midnight nearly 13,- 400,000 persons had seen the big fair. Officially 13,325,553 have passed the turnstiles up to Friday night and it was estimated 60,000 or more visit ed it yesterday. . Ideal September weather has drawn big crowds daily; trains are crowded with belated vacationists, Only two months of the show remain. JUST RECEIVED by A carload of FAIRBANKS & MORSE Gasoline Engines direct from the factory At Greatly Reduced Prices At least 25 per cent un- tier last year's prices , We are fully equipped for installing Deep Well Pumps and Irrlgalion Systems of all kinds, and guarantee all work to give satisfaction T1 en you get our prices before closing a deal xi x V v t f I I I WAfClES I f f f I I JEWELlf I : HAY LOR f 1 JL People's Cash Market Phone Main 73 All kinds of Fresh and Cured Meats, Poultry, Lard We pay highest cash prices paid for Stock, Hides and Pelts. HENRY SCHWARZ, Proprietor mum in the crisp and delicious Snowflake Sodas now come pacKed in a sanitary tin cake and cracker box. Keeps your Snowflakea fresh and crisp. Acts as a useful kitchenihelp. At your dealer's. Per box 50c also in 10c and 25c packages and in bulk Look for thli name on every pacbaga PACIFIC COAST BISCUIT CO. PORTLAND, ORECON sbee 1&D1 want water AA .A. rWBSWv 'Corn! SNOWFLAKE SODAS new Fami!y Package in