PAGE FOUR THE HEPPNER HERALD, HEPPNER, OREGON THE HEPPNER HERALD S. A. PATTISON, EDITOR AND PUBLISHER An Independent Newspaper Entered at the Heppner, Oregon, Postoffice as Becond-class Matter TKIIM3 OF Sl'BSCIUPTIOX One Year ..' ....$2.00 Six Months $1.00 Three Months $ .50 A THE PEACE CONFERENCE I WHATEVER else the Peace Conference may be it is; not an open comerence, and whatever else the Peace j ! Treaty may be, it will not have been "openly arrived at." i Thus goes glimmering the first of President Wilson's "fourteen points." 'this cannot be other than a great dis appointment to the world, and particularly to America. We ' are not only intensely interested in what is being done, but we are keenly alive to the significance of being deni .d i .ill but fragmentary information. I Yet, in our opinion, iuderment should be suspended un- 'TICK the many recent brilliant exploits of the upper til the treaty is published. Judgment need not be sus- housc of congress which culminated the other day pended as to those who insisted upon secrecy, but THE SENATE AND THE RAILROAD ADMNISTRA TION when the body adjourned sine die in a blaze of windy fil busterisni, many otherwise conservative citizens will be in clined to agree with the old socialist (or was it a populist) demand that the senate be abolished as a useless wart on the nose of the body politic. The spectacle of Jiob Lai 'ollette, ultra radic i 1 lames Sherman, ultra conservative, patching up their dit jcrences and uniting their wind bags in the highly com Meuuable work, I rum a partisan standpoint, of talking to death the railway appropriation bill which carried with it every meritorious measure for reconstruction and for the welfare of the returning soldiers that had been proposed in that fossilized body in many months, is one to make ordin ; ry people sit up and take notice. It is not so long since rabidly patriotic senators Sherman were clamoring for little liob.s head on a charger we hould not censure President Wilson for consenting to the secrecy until we know all the facts. No sane man can doubt that the President wanted cpen sessions. That he finally consented to closed sess ions is, to us, proof that, for reasons which we do not yet know, he considered it wise to yield. He could, 'of course, have compelled full publicity by refusing to participate in secrecy. Events will have to show whether it would have been wiser to have created, at the beginning the animosi ties that, inevitably, would have followed. The actual work of the Peace Conference at Paris ha only well begun, and there will be time for the President to u-;e his great power of coercion if it shall be necessary to do so. 1 If it shall become necessary to wreck the conference 1,1. i , 1 . . . . , i i i i j. j. . j j .. ana inrovv uuropc into revolution, u win ue oeuer 10 uo o alter all other means of prevening an unclean peace have ST At because of his opposition to the declaration of war against faicd than tQ haye taken drasdc actkm before ascertaining i'.,Tn-mi, -inrl fiihf-r ;i Csi-efl acts or pro-tjermanism ana perhaps the reason they didn't fire him bodily at that time was because they cherished fond recollections of frequent times in the past 'when his copious gales of wind, prevail ing hour after hour, saved the day for the filibusters; am! they may have had' sufficient vision to suspect that they might need him again. We recall an occasion several years ago when Eal'ollette engaged in a filibuster perfor mance during which he spouted typhoons continuouFlv tor several days (or was it weeks) "widout stoppin' fo 1 after be irut through he claimed that UIMI IM V 11 ".( ... ' whether patient and persistent striving might not have ac- ,iished the desired result. At least, so it apparently seemed to the President, and in our opinion he is right. Deprived of the information to which we are entitled, we must trust, for the present, first to the steadfastness of 'he President and second, to the steadfastness of Lloyd ( h'oi jc. 11 we are kept in the dark as to what is going on tiiey arc not. The President and the British Premier have gone on record, not once, but many times, as to the necessity of i.: u i ..i, t .. c T.T 1, 1 he couhl have done better only that the opposition sent him fa l ,: fu ;i,;i;t nr , i crave him nains m hic ti '-''' u uoi, "",J1,OLl- - " r- i MONDAY, MAR-17 HI a uiass of poisoned lemonade tummy and brought out a cold sweat. ( Many peoile are of the opinion that the chief reason or the recent lillibuster was a desire to embarrass the rail road administration and make it impossible for the govern ment to coHtinue successfully in the transportation bus iness hereby encouraging the growing sentiment in favor of government operation and control or even of full owner ship of the rail lines. This must he a mistaken opinion, iiowcver, for hasn't little Bob always been strongly in fav or of every thing usually called radical? Why, has he, for years been considered a pretty good socialist only when he wan'cd to run for office and it can't tbat h still harbors that ambition. We hear and read much these days to tne encci uiu future wars. He have the word of Lloyd George that in his opinion science has it in its power to make a war so destructive (...it, unless effective steps are taken now to end war, "men ,uw living will see the last of this civiliation." Earnest ness cannot go much further than that. Lloyd George has also said that unless conscription is everywhere stopped, ttic war will have been fought in vain. . . , If the world cannot trust men like Wilson and Lloyd George to make a decent peace in the dark if there can ie no light we might as well blow out the lights and let 1 out some degree of mutual trust. We feel that President Wilson is doing the best that Admission 1 5c and 25c plaint being that '1C can m most difficult circumstances and is, perhaps, bid he railroads, in ,AS his time for a blow, if a blow shall prove necessary. it ne snouui aecm u wise 10 mane compromises mat in to nmiucsi'oxDENTs coron ooukt proceeding the rovernment oreration of the railways during the war has not been a success me cniei tomui. hns deteriorated and that the ,i . i ... i---. vi rws mnrp than thov took in. lOlo, p.uu out auui - f , . f f m9uPnmnromi.ws that would spnd Amm We do not hear nor read so nuicu aooui me umti siuu ui . i he sK.rv For instance there is not much said about the can soldiers to the' ends of the earth, as a matter of contin ue! tint during the same year the government increased uous policy, to police other peoples then let the Senate re the wages of its employees on the railroads $636,cxx),(on ject the treaty. But, first, let us wait for the facts since ;md that the compensation paid by the government to the v are compelled to wait. Reconstruction. .-.iUvriv coivinanics is cxceedimrlv high as compared with - ' j ilie compensation paid by the British government to the XOtick British railway Cvir.patr.cs lor the use ot meir ro.ui. : ..... The Horald welcome rommunl'i- Wheti the govormr.cnt took over the railroads it is tlonR from gubltcrber and the public well known that some of the companies were in financial g,.neiaiijr touching on aubject of ,:fficu!ties due to their inability to Lorrow any more mou- gener.d intrea to the community. Jy with which to run the roads and had the government An t pubUcaUon not laucn them over when it did many of them would haw of h wrltcr Bot neceiUHirlly forpUb. liroken do-wn as tliey had frequently done in the past when nfat0n but u n evidence of good l lie government has been forced to take theln over in the faith of the writer, hum ..t ieeeierships and pull them out of the financial Write only on one aide of the pa- iniiddle into which they had "high -financed" themselves. M- ' . . Avoid perwinalltlei. ' No doubt the service furnished the general public writ, M iPKit,iy poiiite, pay since the government took oxer the roads has deteriorated in particular attention to the iiii- .1 -. .iii.li il.it ili.. -..in,,. i.-n.liT.-d I lie lrovernmcni anJ IfKlhillly of name of per- iii i i ........... ' - - - r- - -- -- in the movement ot tioopN and supplies troin all over he ..i. ii.is in ilie Atlantic seaboard did not deteriorate. Gen iii iiieii who so luti.il) cm ic he go ei nuunt's tqeratioii 'i the railways slmuM i eiiieiiiber tli.it the country was at ..:r nitM all ot the las'. e.u and the question ol the per .iMial coin enieiice ol travelers was secondary to the move incut of the troops and supplies so urgently needed in I ramt while the question of cost was perhaps consid lie. I no more by ttic railway administration than it was by any other department ot the go eminent. This writer fan it-call numerous occasions last summer when the lleppncr "flyer" was from one to tic hours late gett'ng " bket into lone because they had to wait at the junction tor the main line trains which were "laid out" somewhere to al low the passage of troop trains or freight trains laden with govci mnent .supplies, but like other travelers he alw;i) s managed to get home to a late supper at some hour ami like alt such other patriotic citizens he quite for got all peevishness canned by Mich minor inconveniences when on a tt-ilaiu November evening all lleppncr in com mon with all the world outside of Germany tore loose and lu tied and howled and made the welkin ring with song, ami laughed and cried and hugged each other because ot the woii-leihil words the wires brought that WK HAM won Tin: wau. Winn, place, etc. PuMlnhlni; of communications diieit not nienn that f.ie Herald no-ii-arlly iirr.TH with the views ex piesM'il. The Herald, however, lie lieve that It In the province of an tmli'iienileiit local iioiar"'r to Rlv nil nidi' of cvety illetlun of loi'.lt Itlteipnt a nearly n ponnilile. The eilllor renerve the right t.i rejwt all matter which he conlder Improper or unfit for publication. Anoiiymoui articles go itralxht to tin-rvni hand oiujamkh County court met In regular aea aton last Wednesday, morning with Judge W. T. Campbell, Commlasion er George Bleak nin, Sheriff E. M. Shutt and Clerk J. A. Waters pres ent. The usual gist of bills were pres ented, audited and ordered paid. John Garslde was employed aa care-taker of the county building and machinery at the fair grounds E. J. Merrill was appointed justice of the peace for Hardman precinct. A road petition from S. H. Doard man, ct al, wa taken up. the viewer Heppner Meat Market H. C. ASHBAUGH, Proprietor Now open for business in our New Shop on East Side Lower Main Street, with a complete stock of the finest quality of Beef, PorK. Mutton and Veal Call and give us a trial order. We will treat you right. 1 ! e HEPPNER OREGON report waa approved and the road ordered opened after the statuatory period of twenty days If no objectlou Is filed within that time. A road petition from Lee White, et st, was continued until April 2. 1919. The matter of selling Lot 1. niock 4, was taken up and after du con sideration the lot was ordered sold. .Ill Yes. people, we won the war, and by no means Mu.illcst item ot Atnesua'- p.ut in that vut.tv wa the . i . ii i i . ' u e mi'H H i; " i re ,v. , iv .hi i.iiiu.iv t: iui, i i ( I all. u. tl. Trellmlnary steps ta th organita llotl of Hcppner's new band were tales taut Tuci.lay evening when a number of Ch Interested In the new tnuatcal orMaltatlnn met at the council chamber and perfected th parliamentary prtanlutloa. Hr Cochran was elected president and Hpence Ctfor. awretary -treasurer A cmunlttee appolnteit to draft a et of rule riverain the orsant t ion and 1. a committee t.i wot with the ladie of the OMc :npioe tnent t'liih In tH-tfectln aifanse menu for tS benefit dance to I" given ltch lTtti. Initial ! p wei ali lVi-n t ... uie iritruimni f.n th.- hn. 01) Poultry Twenty Years To Pay For Canadian Pacific R. Lands Lands for all. Irrigated or non-Irricat ed. W'ht T ivct. ixed I-arming $n.oo to $30.00 per acre buys good, rich fertile prime wheat land and only $50.00 per acre for irrigated land inrl; "! ' P from tire Canadian Government. aiv' Your Opportunity Fanners, Exchange of the Inland Empire P. R. BROWN. MANAGER. ,,r. I.. P. Thornton. .v,S R. K. Exchange. iSuihling. Tortlan-l. Oregon