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About The gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1912-1925 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 7, 1915)
,1 1 J THE GAZETTE-TIMES, HEPPNER. OR-:.. THURSDAY. OCT. 7, 1915 PACK TWO THE GAZETTE-TIMES. Pendleton East Oreponian. It re- RED TAPE AXD COMMUNITY RE fleets the spirit of the "Let 'er Buck" city. How izeite, KstaMished, The Var.-h 3C ! The Heppner Times, l'stiiblished No Temher IS. 1S9T. Consolidate February 13. 1912. A W T K tl K.htor a; t il., THK HIS8IAX SITIATIOX. entt : lrei.,'Ti. a: One Te.ir . . Six M.-nths Three : Smtie ." It would be interesting to know i n a w form exactly wnai is Koins on in nussia. i rropnttor. A few weeks ago we learned, all on flw. coma H that tha Pai" hnt r- atHn'pnerl i moved Grand Duke Nicholas frdm the matter. I ,.0nimand of the armies that face the YELOPMEXT. X KATES: a pv :.;; Display. t.,i one niorilii. display. ru'. insertion. I t insertions, p, tions. per lir, all ailvevf.. com' iu tea f1 KATES: r less i.'-a. ler than inch. .ens. l.c; looals, nrst ; subsequent knie resolu h socials and rtuinment3 lar rates. MORHOW COIVIY f! I U !AL TAPER Thursday. OctoVor 7. 1915. A RURAL ( lii:ilTS LAW. Newspaper:? in tiio ; In the Western st-ciion generally, are freely prospect of rum! cre-i at the next seloa of r.thwest and of the country r.scussing the s legislation, duress draws near. Congressman livii.'y oi Texas, who has heretofore championed a $500,000,000 bond tesae for the re lief of cotton planners, is making a demaEd for rural credits law, the chief plank in the platform on which he is canvassing his state as a candi date for the United States Senate. It was Mr. Henry who introduced the first cf the rural credit bills in the House, very soon after the convening of the special session of Congress April 15, 1913. The fight for rural credits to be made by congressmen representing the cotton states will depend, to a considerable extent, upon the condi tion cf the cotton trade at the time Congress meets. Should conditions then be normal, or near normal, their i! ore'liis will be much fight f -,r rural or more aggressive tfcau one for some special legislation Uv the relief of cotton planters. Should Vas cotton situation be desperate, however, the f.ght will be made for special cotton legislation to afford quick relief, and that for a rural credits law, apply ing to the entire country, will not be so earnestly pressed. The outlook for rural credits legislation is not, accordingly, either dark or bright. There is hope cf a normal cotton sit uation during the winter, but this is not an assurance. Any aggressive support cf such legislation may have to come out of the West and North west, if the Democratic House ma jority, which comes mainly out of the Smth. is in a complacent mood becaus.-. the chi-.f staple of its section is moving freely at good prices. The joint House and Senate com mittee appointed during the closing hours of the last session has not been called to m.-et during the long recess, although the purpose cf its appoint ment was that it should meet as often durir.? the vacation as might be nec essary for gathering all needed data bearing upon the proble and pre paring a bill for introduction. Its inactivity mav or may not indicate that the administration is not favor able to the rural credits law. Mr Glass of Virginia, a member of the committee, and often an administra tion mouthpiece, asserts that the new banking system makes a rural cred its law unnecessary. The president denied this in one of his messages to Congress. But Mr. Wilson has often shown his ability to change front. St. Louis Globe-Democrat. German invaders and had sent him to $1.50 i the semi-exile of the Caucasus; that the Liberal party was in control of the Duma, and that the leaders of that party, besides insisting on many administrative reforms, intended to bri-.g about a change in the cabinet and the dismissal of Premier Goremy- ! kin. Next came word that, in spite of the protest of the Liberal majority, the Czar had prorogued the Duma. Are we to believe that these things point toward a change either in the foreign policy or in the internal or ganization of Russia? It is never easy for the western peoples to understand the workings of the Russian mind and of the Rus sian political system, and it is es pecially hard now when we are kept in ignorance of much that would or dinarily be made public. Some ob servers take the removal of the grand duke from the high command to mean that the Czar tires of war, and that he is beginning to listen to the pro-German party, always strong at Petrograd, which is urging Russia to avoid further defeat and despoliation by making a separate peace. But there is as yet no real evi dence that that is the case. It is more probable that the grand duke's downfall is the result of a cousinly jealousy on the part of the Czar, and of a widespread enmity on the part of Influential persons whom the auto cratic soldier has offended. He has shown military capacity of a high or der, both in offensive and in defensive warfare. His reverses do not appear to be his fault, but his enemies have made them the occasion to break down his authority. ' But Russia is not likely to make a separate peace, unless its statesmen have lost all power of vision. Such a peace would deliver the empire from much present suffering and humilia tion, but at a cost of its future in fluence in Europe. It would mean the surrender of every historic Rus sian ambition, and the abandonment of the Balkan Slavs to German and Turkish control. If the Czar were weak enough to make the surrender what would his people say? What does that great inarticulate nation think of the war, anyway? It is suffering much and enduring stol idly; but the Slav by temperraent and past history is prepared for that. Those who have the be3t oportunities to judge think that the empire really has its heart in the war; that it un derstands the issues of the conflict, and that it is ready to make still heavier sacrifices if need be. The in creasing power of the Liberals at Petrograd points in that direction, for liberal Russia dreads political LET US REAP THE BENEFIT. The artf-ian water developed by the :.-,v!or!s in Morrow county, was not an accident as many such dis coveries are. but was the result of nort'jfent effort of three years of hard work in the sinking of many wells to determine the true geologi cal formation of this section of the country. Their sleeps In producing this valuable well has been phenom enal insofar as they have had to over come what would be to many, insur mountable obstacles. There is just on other thing that the N'-wIobs are as much interested in as in getting water for the wonder fully rich section known at "the Ba nana Belt" and that is, that the peo ple of Morrow count' should reap the benefits as far as possible from this discovery. Mr. Newlon learned only last Sun day that there was a company form ing to take over Ir.rge tracts of this land. This company will of course be made up of speculators, and this Is what the Newlons are trying to keep out, and as they are in a position to get the choicest of tills land for the bonifide settler or developer at ap proximately $8.50 per acre, on very easy terms, those interested will not miss it by making an early selection for their future homes in the Banana Belt of Morrow county. reach of scissors, pins, knives, etc., or perhaps if the child had not been al- lowed to run across the room with For a year and a half an investiga- ,he do ,n her armg mi tion of the, California-Oregon Power Co. has been going on at the hands breaking the doll's eyes of the Public Utility Commission. and having her own eyes cut by the Inventories of all the properties broken bits of glass. Many of these In many towns and the power plants preTentable accidents can be avoided ; on the Rogue River have been made. j and then hearings have been delayed. ' ' , For the past month hearings to de- common sense. iNoi aione in me , termine rates for service have been care of infants, but with adults en- had at the State Capitol, where law- gage)i jn orajnary household em yers of the power company and state loymentg M we a mUe extra and city attorneys have appeared. All these hearings have cost the 'i'wpnu. re- taxpayers a great deal of money and suits from apparently trivial acei- the public utility company has been dents. For example, eyes have been put to great expense for witnesses ipaiy damaged by flying bits of and lawyers and inventories. .... , . . . .... v . As these hearings have for their " ' ultimate purpose fixing values of the Was into the eye, in lavlng a properties and finally are to fix rates carpet; from a small bit of lime fall- for the company to do business upon ing Irom a broken ceiling; from stooping in a dark room and striking the eye on the sharp corner of a table or chair. In fact, the possibilities of accidents of this sort are innumer able, where a little less haste perhaps or a little extra care, would prevent them. subjection to Germany more than re actionary Russia could possibly fear it. It is almost certain that the breakdown of the Russian campaign is owing in part at least to the sam shameful peculation and greed in high places that prevailed during the war with Japan. If that is true, the resentment of the nation may yet bring about startling political and governmental changes at Petrograd but such changes are quite as likely to be followed by increased efficiency in the field as by the collapse of Rus sian resistance. That will even more hlv be the case if the allies should win at the Dardanelles. Finally, the world will watch with interest the attempt of the Russian Liberals to gain more justice and freedom for the Jews, the Finns, and tha Pole within the empire. If the defeat of the Russian armies shakes the stolid internal policy of the Rus sian bureaucracy, the humiliation throueh which the country is pass ing will mark only a step, and, for all its bitterness, a necessary step, ill the progress of the people. The Youths' Companion. NORTHWEST CLAIMS GRAHAM I. P. Graham has resigned as as sistant chief of the livestock depart ment of the Panama-Pacific Interna tional Exposition to become editor ot the Rural Spirit, at Portland, Ore. Mr. Graham is a welcome addition to the ranks of those who are working for better farming conditions in the Pacific Northwest. He was for nine teen years a professor in the Kansas Agricultural College and for several years was editor of the Kansas Far mer. He was the organizer of the Kansas Pure Bred Livestock Associa tion and was one of the strong men in getting legislation favoramle to the farmers. Mr. Graham is well known to local readers of the livestock journals of national circulation, he being a reg ular contributor to several of them. He Is enthusiastic concerning the possibilities of livestock In the Pa cific Northwest, and pronounces the The Oregonian started something exhibits that he has Inspected at the a little over a year ago, when It ere- Utate fairs of Washington and Oregon ated the Monday Crawfish. Since then a8 the equal of the best they grow in we have witnessed the arrival of the! the corn belt states, where much of all development work has been sus pended. In the meantime the California- Oregon Power Company has been threatened with competition of a pi ratical character that has started to enter its field. Public ownership projects have been launched in many communities to force down the rates of the California-Oregon Power Company, but so far none of them have materialized. The Oregon Utilities commission finds the properties have a. value in the opinion of their engineer of $1,- 820,471 as cost of reproduction, and $2,085,990 in the opinion of the com pany's engineer. The hearing was made riduculous by Introducing testimony that tne employees had a clubhouse at Gold Ray where among the restaurant equipment was found a set of wine and punch glasses. It seems that a former owner of the plant did maintain a clubhouse for his friends in the Rogue River Valley, and later it was made a club house for the employes by the pres ent owners. It can readily be seen how under a long-drawn-out red-tape hearing, if conducted never so fairly and with never so much good intent, has held up the development of these properties. Instead of being able to borrow cheap capital and extend their lines to furnish cheap power to commun ities and irrigation companies and for private Irrigation plants, a big invest ment has been killed. State development demands a more practical system of handling public utilities unless the whole state is to be forced upon a public owner ship basis as private capital will not come In under such a handicap, with no certainty that it can earn divi dends. The State Banking department pursues no such policies and banking is prosperous and new banks are be ing opened in different parts of the state and all are proud to have banks make money. 1 Suppose on complaint of citizens all the banks in southern Oregon were given a prolonged investigation and overhauling by the state bank ing commission for the purpose of as certaining their value and fixing rates. In the meantime, pending the in vestigation, their business would fall off, and some of them would have to close their doors, and no new banks would start up in business in Oregon. But the State Banking department does not do that kind of business simply because it is not "good busi ness," and would not be tolerated In any other line of investment except public utilities. But the public utility has to make rates for service the same as the banker makes rates for exchange and on loans and its rates must be accept able to the public or it cannot do business. A power company must make spe cial rates to power users, to farmers who want irrigation, to the women who use .ranges in their kitchens and the rates must be low enough to pro duce customers. The whole tendency of the public utility commission, aside from spend ing $100,000 every two years on red tape investigations, is to hinder the development of utilities and keep capital out of the state. Forest Notes. Fire fighting in Oregon, Washing ton and Alaska, since July 1, has cost the government $50,000. Most of the fires were prevented from doing any material damage to merchantable timber. The majority of them were confined to old burns. The Forest Service has in Oregon and Washington a total of 4062 miles of telephone and 4028 miles of trail. These are primarily for use in fire suppression. 1 The Forest Service has. In Oregon and Washington, over 100 high look out points constantly manned dur ing the fire season. The best known of these lookouts is Mt. Hood. An officer of the Forest Service has designed a .portable telephone for rangers, which weighs only two and a half 'pounds. Connection may be made anywhere along the lin with this instrument. Over c.-.s hundred of them will be used in Oregon and Washington next year. Success has followed forest plant ing on the sandhills of Nebraska. Jack pine planted there by the gov ernment forest service ten years ago now have a height of over 15 feet and a diameter of 4 inches. Only one modern sawmill Is oper ated in the Territory of Hiawaii. In Oregon there are approximately 769,000 head of sheep grazing upon the National Forests. This repre sents 43 per cent of the number grazed in the State. During the fiscal year ending June 30, 1915, there were opened to entry on the National Forests of Oregon, upon individual application, 315 for est homesteads, covering an area of about 29,000 acres; and in National Forests of Washington, there were 812 forest homesteads opncd to en try; covering an area of 3.S0 acres. Results obtaia(! from !:.! dei fication work on the National For ests demonstrates the fart that prac tically all farm land has been ex cluded from the Forests. According to figures compiled by the Government, water powers in the state of Oregon are capable of devel oping 3,500,000 II. P. and in the State of Washington 5.000,000 H. P. In Oregon there are already devel oped 156,183 II. P. and in Washing ton 408,000 H. P. Relic of Prehistoric Days. Messrs. Finalyson and Roddick, who operate the Quartz Gulch placers east of town, at the foot of Canyon mountain, brought into town the oth er day a very interesting relic. It is a petrified ivory tusk. The tusk is in two pieces, one piece about 12 inches long and the other about 18 inches. The two pieces do not fit together, but evidently belong to one tusk, the middle part having been broken from the other parts and as yet not located. One of these pieces was found a year or two ago embedded in the ground at a considerable distance below the surface. It was. washed out while piping for gold. The other piece was found near by this season. The mid dle piece likely remains In the ground. Whether this tusk belong ed to a mastodon or an elephant is A radical utility commission would not known, but it is evident that some Saturday Evening Alibi, which has made Rex Lampman as well as the Oregon Journal famous, the Portland Telegram's Monday Mutter, and now the foundation flocks and herds in Oregon, Washington and Idaho have been purchased. Mr. Graham has a national reputation as an authority force the state and all its political subdivisions into public ownership enterprises that under the same kind of red tape political management would bankrupt the taxpayers. In the meantime the good money of the taxpayers and the capital and revenues of the utility company are wasted on expensive investigations that will all have to be repaid by the light and power users. Pacific Coast Manufacturer. Preventable Injuries of the Eye. Much has been done in recent years to protect the eyes of workmen from Injuries, and the number of eyes thus saved has been considerable. Even with all these precautions how ever, accidents are bound to happen, but If the sight of an eye is occasion ally lost through some unavoidable accident, we can feel that everything possible has been done to prevent it. How different are our feelings when we see an eye destroyed througn monarch of the forest roamed over Canyon mountain age3 past, leaving this relic as mute evidence of his ex istence. Canyon City Eagle. Library Will Serve Lunch. The ladies of the Library Associa tion announce that they will serve sandwiches, cake and coffee at the library room of the City Hall next Wednesday afternoon. It is promised (and the ladies always make good their promises) that you will get all you want to eat for twenty cents. Here is an opportunity for the gen eral public to help a good cause along and at the same time get more than value received for your generosity. Remember the date Wednesday af ternoon, October 13, from 2 until 6 30; the place Library room, our own section of the journalistic along livestock lines and in his ripe field Is represented In this particular experience as an educator the farm line of endeavor by "The Weekly j en of the Northwest have gained a Bulldogger," In the columns of the splendid co-worker. Dr. Hunlock Improving. Dr. E. R. Hunlock, for a long num ber of years a resident of Heppner, informs his friends here that he Is some accident that could easily have slowly recovering from the effects of been prevented. Many a mother has an operation wnicii he underwent wept bitter tears of anguish knowing several weeks ago at the Mayo broth that she alone was to blame for the ers hospital in Rochester, Minn., for loss of the sight In her baby's eye, the removal of a goitre from his through her carelessness. If she had neck. Dr. Hunlock is now in Port not allowed the child to get within ( land. JUST RECEIVED by 0 IV 1 PK3 A carload of FAIRBANKS & MORSE Gasoline Engines direct from the factory At Greatly Reduced Prices At Icr.st 25 per cent un der last year's prices We are fully equipped for installing Beep Well Pumps and Irrigation Systems of all kinds, and guarantee all work to give satisfaction ' WW W!i len you want water get our prices before closing a deal aliffiiia DIRECT TiOrTB TllKOlTiH THK COLUMBIA KlYEK GOWiK TO PORTLAND OCEAN LINER OR SHA ST A KOrTE RAIL KKKVICB TO SAN FRANCISCO STEAMSHIP COAST LINE OR ORANGE OROYES RAIL TRIP TO SAM C3EGO LTiifiifAiT- STOPOVER PRIVlUXiES DIVERSE ROUTES BOTH WAYS IF DESI RED FARES: San Fraru'ispo S33.70 Both Expositions S55.70 This Year has held more of interest, of wonder, of beauty, of pleasure, than ever before possibly ever again. The world-famous Expositions are now at their best. The opportunity to visit them is neanng its end go now. Make all arrangements with J. B. HUDDLESTON, Agent Oregon-Washington Railroad & Navigation Co. UNION PACIFIC SYSTEM 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 When you're in Portland visit the fine big plant of the Pacific Coast Biscuit Company. See them make thousands of deliciousc.TrkllT I. the meanthne, o,de, of SNOWFLAKE SODAS your dealer tne NEW FAMILY PACKAGE Freh, crisp delicious Snowflake Sodas, packed in a sanitary and useful tin box. Only 50 cents. Every dealer faai them or can get them quickly-freh from our ovens PACIFIC COAST BISCUIT CO. PORTLAND, OREGON