J" PAfJE FOUR HEPPNER HERALD. HEPPN'ER, OREGON'. THURSDAY, JULY 3ft, 1314. G. HARLAN EDITOR AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER PUBUSHED THURSDAYS EDITORIAL SECTION HEPPNER HERALD L. K. HARLAN MANAGER SUBSCRIPTIONS $1 PER YEAR OUTSIDE COUNTY $1.15 1 FOR SALE. Six Horses two geldings and four mares, all young, weighing from 1450 to 1600 pounds. Inquire at Herald Office, Heppner, Oregon. The Post Office System had its rise in the days of Julius Casar. He established mil itary post roads and despatched fast riders which kept him in constant communication with all parts of his empire. In slack times they would also carry letters for private par ties. In the early history of this country ,let- ters were first carried by private parties. The express business Interior Mail Service started in much the Being Discontinued. same way. William llornden hrst car ried valuable packages from New York to Boston. The importance of this business was soon recognized and companies sprung up in different places doing the same business. When the Federal government was lormed, it absorbed the mail and express service, lhe mails were slow. Letters went by carrier and the heavier packages were sent by stage. In the wet seasons the roads were often im passible and packages were often months on the way. The express companies were on the brink of ruin whe ntlie politicians got togeth er and ordered that no package weighing ov er four pounds could be sent by mail. The express companies then began to thrive. Last year they reported nearly one hundred mill ion dollars revenue. Today we have better means of transporta tion and the government is going back into the express business. Then! seems to be no reason why we must piously hand over to the private corporations all packages over the small weight limit, who charge all the traffic will bear, coilect at both ends and still cling to other business methods that would reflect credit to the Malay pirates. The theory that all governmental activi ties are carried on under is, tlnt the govern ment will render the service for a charge that will cover all expense, except where for the public good it does not receive what the service costs. For instance, to carry a letter from Heppner to Portland, the sender should be and is willing to pay what the service costs, However when the government, sends mail to Alaska it seldom, if ever, receives1 what the service actually costs. Many instances arc on record where it had to charter steamers to carry the mail there and the average cost per letter was over $")()(). Yet, no one kicks about that. We know that the government should take the mail there, and do it reasonably often. Now the big argument against the Star Routes is merely the cost of operating them There is a loss for the service rendered. Meas ured in dollars this is so. They are far more supporting, however, than the mail routes to the Phillipines, Alaska, or auv other islam possession, yei mese are maintained. 1 lus servie'e should be the last to lie cut off. It is a matter of no small importance to the penph ot Morrow C ounty and the state of Oregon You can think about it as you please but from a dozen papers that have come into this otlie ill the last week, we have seen where many routes were discontinued. Thin means that tlie interior parts of the state are being gradu ally deprived ol their mail service and where people can't get their mail, there they will no go. If we want settlers to come to this state we must at least provide this requisite o easy communication. A citizen of Heppner recently sent a lette to a party living not farther than sixty mile from here that regularly took a week for a n ply, but after the discontinuance of the ol swige line ami going over uie new "improv ed route, it took sixteen days for an answi to get to Heppner. I hat mav be good bus iness ability in Washington but it would tak something stronger than grape juice to get us in a condition where we could see it in that way in Morrow Count v, which is in Oregon The parcel post it is also claimed has mad mese rouies unproiiiaiue, and is the mam cause lor their discontinuance, lhe routes never paid when only letters were carried; it H Hot to be expected that they would w ith th parcel post. Tin1 (lovcrmneiit knew that when it started. The parcel post does no have anything to do with the continuaiici the stage lines. They never paid and proh ably never will, they were operated for tl good of the people they served and the lest o us have said that it was all right. Let tl IVpartnieiit mant so much per hundrei pounds for carrying the parcel post, so a man can make an intelligent bid, and that element is decided. This government has been said t run by a system of checks and balances. The legisla tive lues little to do with the executive, like wise with the judicial. Hut the Post Ollice de pavtineiit seems to have secured a divorce from the main government. They run things much as did our late friend, Caesar. The Czar of Russia the word Czar incidentally comins from Caesar has nothing on the Post Office politicians in this republic. At Pendleton, U- matilla, and scores of other places in this state and nearby states, we read of just such treat ment as has been ladled out to us here. It is high time that this Court of Inquisition be dealt with by the Governor. Some exaggera ted importance concerning their relation to the people who they are expected to serve, seems to have given them new prerogatives, wholly inconsistent with the present plan of government. We claim that the people living on these stage routes should have the service just as they have in the past and such peanut policies as the Post Office Department is pur suing are unwise, unwarranted and ecomic ally exaggerated. o PROFESSIONAL COLUMN CALL ON F. DYE, DENTIST ! Pemanently located in Odd Fellows I building, Rooms 4 and 5. Dr. II. T. ALLISON PHYSICIAN & SURGEONS Office Patterson Drug Store Heppner, - Oregon Dr. A .P. CULBERTSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Office Second Door North Minor Co. Store. Heppner, Oregon. According to the Kansas City Star, the Mil waukee Agent at Excelsior Springs, Missouri, was offered a better station when theofficials, who happened to come a- Courtesy as a long one day, noticed that Business Asset everyone about town had a good word for the a- gent. He accepted but the people of the town ad a word to say about it. They refusetl to et him go and made the Company pay him le salary of the better station to remain in Gxcelsior Springs. Last Friday, our friend Wilkins told one of the officials of the O.-W. R. & N. that they had a man in Heppner that muld be in a bigger place. The official told nm they needed a big man in Heppner so icy kept him here. Wo have no other object in view, more than to state the facts. I might say that Jim owes me eighty cents rather the company does Inch, if business picks up, I expect to get. But the thought expressed by Mr. Wilkins was no idle drift of conversation. A station agent can't afford to let his nerves get on the outside his mission is to serve, to take the gulf and that sifts through the ticket window and to smile audibly. This is what Jim does and when he is advanced we hope it will be only in salary. o A daughter of President Wilson recently ad- lresscd an audience of five thousand people in the auditorium of Chicago and pleaded for a more neighborly spirit Let's. Get among the citizens of that Acquainted. great city. She asked many people who lived next door to them and they did not know. I his is true in every large city and in many owns. It is a matter of common observation that such living breeds suspicion, distrust nid a general disregard for the needs of oth- rs and carries us back to habits of living of our animal ancestors. We are just now getting acquainted with the world ami the people who live in it. Pre judice, lear, and hostility are giving away to friendship, mutuality and co-operation. As we get better acquainted we find that we have ess to fear from those about us. To further this feeling, we suggest that the Commercial Club take a day off and take a trip down to the cities of Lexinirton and lone. Such a trip can only result in good. It is a sort of a bilateral contract, where both parties are beiielitted. 1 Ins excursion could be planned to take place a few dnvs before the fair, or earlier. If time allowed, wc miirht iro the en tire length of the branch. Communities such as we live in can't afford to fuss, fume or fight each other. It is true that people who know and understand each other don't go u- round detaining their fellow citizens. A trip of this nature will awaken the common inter ests of these towns and bring a degree of co operation which will I lenetit us all that can be accomplished in no other way. o One physician gives it as his opinion that there has been less sickness in the city this summer than ever before ami it is largely due to the absence of dust, the greatest foe to health. Few towns or cities have as many streets oiled as Heppner has. It has been definitely determined that Presi dent llucrU was so slow in leaving Mexico City because the Government owed him two month's salary, which he was anxious to col lect. Drs. WINNARD & McMURDO I PH YSICIANS & SURGEONS Heppner, - Oregon Dr. F. N. CHRISTENSON DENTIST Heppner, Oregon Offices with Drs. Winnard & McMurdo -O C. E. WOODSON ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Office in Palace Hotel. Heppner, Ore. SAM E. VAN VACTOR ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Heppner, Oregon The Jack Rabbit E. NOTSON ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Office in Court House, Heppner, Ore. WELLS & NYS ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW Heppner, - - Oregon KNAPPENBERG & JOHNSON ATTORNEYS AND COUNCELORS AT LAW lone, .... Oregon 1 W. L. SMITH, ABSTRACTER Only complete set of abstract books in Morrow County. HEPPNER, - - OREGON FOR FINE UP-TO-DATE HOMES ! See T. G. DENNISEE, ARCHITECT AND CONTRACTOR. LOUIS PEARSON TAILOR Heppner, Oregon. C. O. PRENTICE, I). V. M. Veterinary Surgeon and Dentist ! Office: Patterson's Drug Store ! Phone, Main 123 Heppner, ... Oregon The City Fathers have removed the weeds and trash from Main Street. If some good citizen will donate a few paper receptacles wc can keep it clean. o III his haste to leave Mexico, lluerta forgot to salute the flag. SUMMONS. IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON FOR MOR. ROW COUNTY. S. II. Holder, Plaintiff.) vs. Frances M. Holder, Defendant.) To Frances M. Holder, the above named defendant: IN THE NAME OF THE STATE OF OREGON: You are hereby com manded to appear in the above en titled cauHe on or before Friday, the 21st day of Auuitt, A. I). 1914, to make answer to the Complaint of plaintiff tiled herein againut you, and in case you fail so to appear the plaintiff will apply to the Court for the relief prayed for in the Complaint to-wit: For a decree of said Court dinsolving the bond of matrimony existing be tween plaintiff and defendant and for the custody of the minor child of plaintiff and defendant. Oma Ethel Holder, and for euro other and fur ther reliof as to the Court may seem equitable and just. The time rewriled for the publi cation of this Summons is six weeks, and the date of the appearance of the defendant is AucukI 21, l'.Ul. This summons is published by order of the Honorable C. C. Patterson. JunYe of the County Court of Morrow County, OreRon, which order wss made on the J'th day of July, A. l. IHM. The date of the first publication of this Summons is the Uth day of July, 1914. m '. Van Vactnr Attorney for PluintilT. Garage for . GASOLINE OIL and all kinds of REPAIR WORK This department iu charge of skilled mechanics General Livery Special Attention to Train Service Norton Winnard & EIra Hayes, PROPRIETORS Agents lor "MAXWELL 25" LOCATED ON MAY STREET 1st DOOR EAST of PALACE HOTEL Vic Groshen Carries a Complete Line of The Finest Cigars, Wines; and Liquors. Ice Cold Beer, Either Bottle or Drught, To Quench The Thirst These Hot Summer Days Heppner, Oregon "II 111 II FOR 110 11 IMF BUYAHOMEATONCE AND SAVE PAYING RENT We have several nice cottages that can be bought on very EASYTERMS We invite your inquiries Binns' Real Estate J. H. cox CONTRACTOR and BUILDER I'lansand Ettimntr Furnished for All Kind of Building. First CIumh Work ( hthj, I Make a Sj-rinltu of and hit Contrite Equipment for House Moving 3