LG. HARLAN EDITOR AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER TUESDAYS and FRIDAYS EDITORIAL SECTION L HEPPNER HERALD K. HARLAN MANAGER SUBSCRIPTIONS $1.50 PER YEAR OUTSIDE COUNTY $1.50 THE ALIEN WHO LIVES IN FEAR One reported yesterday that he had a neigh bor, a young man who is trying to get on in the world, who is living in dread that he may be cal led to the colors of his country in Europe. He has been even told, since he is not an American citizen that the foreign government can send an agent here and take him back into the army. And his American neighbor believes this also. It seems necessary again to state that any man is safe on American soil whether he is a citizen made or not. There is no European country that can come and take him. The flag of the free is over him and protects him. If he were a fugitive from justice he might be taken out of this country, but no man can be taken out of this country except for an extraditable crime, whether he is a citizen or merely a resident. The young man of foreign birth, who is try ing to get on in this country may count himself entirely safe. All he has to do is to go on get ting on here. He does not have to go back, even if the war should last for years, and he cannot be taken back the only way to get into the ar my of his native country is by voluntarily offer ing up himself and while a man may owe some thing to the country of his birth, he owes, we believe, more to his family and home in America and there are enough poor devils in Europe now for "cannon fodder." O WILSON DOWN ON HYPHENATED AMERICANS The president has put his foot down on dele gations of Americans with hyphenated names who. want to call upon him to protest against this or that nation in Europe. He says he will receive no hyphenated Americans. He says a man is either a Frenchman, a German, a Belg ian, an Austrian, a Russian, an Englishman, or he is an American. Ho cannot be a German- American or a French-American or any other kind of an American except a plain American. No American citizen can appear before him and make complaints against any one of the Euro pean combattants as such a hyphenated-Amer ican, and if he is an American citizen he ought to be observing the neutrality which has been proclaimed and not puplicly take part in the war whatever his private opinions may be. The president is right in this also and it is to be hoped that his advice w ill be heeded. We all have our opinions and our sympathies.which are apt to be along blood lines, but vc should refrain from expressing them in such manner as to em orou me (inioroui racial elements in our own country. A man who wants to light should not do so with his mouth in America, lie should go to Europe and enlist in the proper army. We should have other business here than washing oui Europe s uniy linen or iiiood stained gar ments of Hie present. 0 . I'SINC AMERICAN WATERS NOW aqniu nt.w .ii! w .m) p:in sHiiimn .i.itijo tfuoiuv for us is (he annnints we have been spending for waters and for treatments at the European springs and hat lis limn Pad t I'.aden Radon. These expenditures aeording tu careful estim aiors, nave loiaieii anoiii .1(mi.ihm),(hhi a vear since most of the wealthy class have made their expenditures there, and on a liberal scale. Per sons sullVring from rheumatism are the most numerous among these patients and money spenders. Rut Americans are now nit olF from all ac cess to foreign .prings and they will be turned toward the springs on their own land and these are abundant enough and as oIl'iciuMous as those of Europe, if not more so. A few years ago an Oregon man went to one of the German springs and while there consult ed a doctor, a doctor who happened to know a bout Oregon waters. The doctcr promptly told him that he need not bae made so long a jour ney, that right al his nw n door at Hot Lake and various other place.-., there was running water to waste, that had i.ll the qualities of the water he hud come S.oou m.les to get. Hut with Ani'-i ji ;ms it has always been the theory that the pot g.,d jrt at the foot of the rainbow and the cm e all is in ;.omo place with a name that he cannot pronounce. Pel haps, while the war is lasting, we will he ah educate Am ericans away livm ttu li I'oohMi ideas. Let us 'hope so, for in the pa-t we hae kept oursches poorer than we need to be hy showering our patronage upon things foreign, itutcad of ujmn things at home. complain that they do not know what to do with their apples, since the export demand for them has stopped. In Iowa, often, we do not know where to get good apples cheaply. In Oregon they are rotting in the orchards, in Cedar Rap ids the Oregon apples are selling for five cents a piece on the fruit stands. The problem of dis tribution comes in again and it is always the biggest part of the food problem, for the aver age consumer pays two and three and even five times as much for what he eats as the average producer gets for it." We hope that the Oregon apple and the Iowa stomach may be brought together into intimate contact. Apples, we are told, are the best of human food. A noted analysist says that two ounces of apple contain as much energy as an ounce of wheat bread. If that is true, and it is scientifically proved, then a six-ounce apple is the equivalent of three slices of bread, the apple weighing six ounces on an average and the slices one ounce. An apple, is, therefore, three times as good for your child, or for yourself, as the slice of bread. The apple contains the sugar and the starch, about six to ten, but not the fat and nitrogen, but the apple has what the flour has not, cellulose and certain acids which the human system craves and requires. The command to eat fruit is, therefore, an imperative one and it cannot be violated without, injuries to the human system. In good old days when the writer was a "kid" in Iowa, every fam ily cellar had an ample supply of apples for win ter use, but the old orchads have died out, many of them, and they have been neglected because the planting of wrong varieties of trees, and the habit of not caring for them, has convinced the people of Iowa that it is not an apple state. But if Oregon has the apples referred to in the above caption from the Cedar Rapids paper, the people of Iowa can afford to trade some of their corn for good red apples and they will be the gainers, while the growers of Oregon apples will be glad to dispose of their surplus apples in this way. o "HEAVEN ON EARTH" The Bulletin issued by the State Agricultural College states that one farm in four keeps beesr Bees have been known to mankind for a long time, in fact they are often mentioned in the Scriptures, evidently showing that the value of the bee was known at that time and heaven has long been pictured as a place "flowing with milk and honey." A bee is a wonderful insect. Maurice Maet erlinck, the great Belgian writer who has been in the public eye considerable ot late, has writ ten a masterpiece under the title, "The Life of the Bee." Bees he states possess wonderful in telligence. Bees understand the law which Ad am Smith defined as "The Law of Deminishing Returns," and which simply means that when you get too much of a thing, instead of getting a benefit you get a disadvantage. They under stand that when a hive gets too big for the good of everybody, that the hive should swarm and whether they shake dice to see who has to go, we do not know, but in any event we know that a part of the hive migrates and makes a new swarm. A bee is a natural and intelligent worker and with a bit of co-operation on man's part he will accumulate considerable wealth in a year's time in the shape of honey. Years ago we simply allowed the bee to collect honey promiscuously and where his instincts prompted him to depo sit it. We now furnish him a respectable place to live and lo and behold we find that instead of marketing three or four dollar's worth of honey- yearly, we have doubled and trebled that am ount and also bettered the product. Boost are best adapted to intensive agriculture and intensive agriculture is differentiated from ordinary agriculture as nubbins are from the full oars of corn. No farmer is making the nest use of his time who neglects to have a few swarms of boos on the place. Getting some thing for nothing is very near possible with ieos. in fact more so, than with anything else Success often depends upon the extra effort or the extra minute needed to perform a task right ami the wasted minutes in farm life t an be nrof- iwtiuj upem in uio culture ot uevs and in justice to the large number of farm or t.iUiiiL' nn in-. live interest in this business, let us add that there are few men who cultivate the soil for a living but what harbor luv. HOUSE AND LOT FOR SALE Located in South Heppner and in order to dispose of same in the next two weeks I am offering same at a remarkably low price. House has six rooms with bath, sleeping porch, sur rounded by fruit trees and berry bushes, renced in chicken yard. In quire of the owner, C. T. Humphries, or Herald office. FOR RENT Nice place at Olex, Gilliam County. 668 acres bottom land, nice orchard. 80 acres hill and bench land has been farmed, about 200 acres in all. Will rent or sell cheap on time payments. L. O. RALSTON, Owner, 608 Market St., Portland. Tfiats cjoodcoj SEAL RESTAURANT FOR SALE. In the city of Heppner, Oregon. There is a good restaurant in Hepp ner for sale. Located on Main Street and doing a first class business. It is well equipped with everything necessary to do the business.. .Clean and neat in every particular.. .There are some household effects which will go in the sale, all new and useable articles.. .The right man can take this place and make money, as it is a money maker now and you know what it is to buy a business paying well, Just drop a line to the owner or bet ter yet, stop in and talk it over with him... He is desirous of making a change. Yours for business, GONG LANE III 1, 2 and 3 pound cans Never in bulk I Ml) J in m i v ri mill i ! i i.iii-. RAND C round, Unground or Pulverized Cfiase & Sanborn The Importers Sold only by j Phelps Grocery Co. THADi: SO Ml-: A ITU'S 1 OR I OUN t gam the knowledge from a Cedar Rapid. Iowa, paper that apple growing i fast becoming it thing of the p.i-t in the corn Mate and it i proposed by that paper that the torn grower of Iowa trade M'inr Oregon grown for PROFESSIONAL COLUMN F. DYE, DENTIST Pemanently located in Odd Fellows building, Rooms 4 and 5. J. H. COX CONTRACTOR and BUILDER Plans and Estimates Furnished for All Kinds of Buildings. First Class Work Only. I Make a Specialty of and Have Complete Equipment for 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. Drs. WINNARD & McMURDO PH YSICIANS & SURGEONS Heppner, - Oregon Dr. F. N. CHRISTENSON DENTIST Heppner, Oregon Offices with Drs. Winnard & McMurdo C. E. WOODSON ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Office in Palace Hotel. Heppner, Ore. SAM E. VAN VACTOR ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Heppner, Oregon S. E. NOTSON ATTORN E Y-AT-LA W Office in Court House, Heppner, Ore. WELLS & NYS ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW Heppner, Oregon KNAITEMSEKG & JOHNSON ! ATTORNEYS j AND COINCELOUS AT LAW lone, .... Oregon Life seem to be passing along just a smooth a before election. Hard fooling which may have arisen over difference of opinion regard ing certain men or measures will soon bo for gotten. IIowout, if all or rvt-n half of the cum Mi-vm i i wwii liiimiiiaiis ik ioio el of their ui phi i grain t oction are true, then the eoplp have Itocome 'me ol our MirpbiH apple. iacqainted with the character f some of the W. I- SMITH, AHSTRACTER i Only complete t of ahitract books in Morrow County. IIKITNKR. . OREGON IOR FINE ITTOIUTK HOMES ! T. C. PKNMSEE, AK(IIITrT AN!) CONTRACTOR. I-Ot'IS PEARSON r TAILOR Hrppnrr, Orrfon. The iVdar Rapid paper a : "In Oregon they blacket-hoartod coundrol that vor lived. DR. HKAZEA1.K. P. V. M. DU'lTY STOCK INSPECTOR House Moving Heppner Garage All Kinds of Repair Work Done Quickly We are agents for Ford, Overland and Mitchell Automobiles. Jii I. ti' iti'. j u T0VES GILLIAM offer you stoves of every description THE GREAT MAJESTIC MALLEABLE RANGE (Which has no equal) down to a $9.00 Cook Stove Heaters from $2.00 to $40 Note the parts of the New Mission Heater for wood and coal, has duplex grates the same as a Steel Range. If you want something to make a fire in Come In And See Us We will be glad to show youwhat we have Gilliam & Bisbee The First National Bank OF HEPPNER Oldest Dank in Morrow County Capital, Surplus and Profits $140,000.90 Your Banking Business Will be Appreciated Frho, Orrfon.