t THE HEPPNER HERALD, HEPPNER, OREGON ttffigSAY, APRIL 26, igar PAGE TWO THE HEPPNER HERALD AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER S. A- PATTISON, Editor and Publisher Entered at the Heppner, Oregon, Postoffice as second-class Matter Terms of Subscription One Year $2.00 Six Months $i.rx Three Months .' $0.50 u.Mt mini:ss 1 j'Koni i s i amim: I lllfill SCHOOL notls Kln-aHnK K in lull n;Ug on lh J'ar '( I 1 n lani-v.i; low wool is fillin (.-hearers inii.K !! wkw While 1,'lSI -ill's WOOl .slill fill.4 till' v.iv houses ami 1 1 u I'd ii h ih' banks. T'ioul'Ii llic 1:1 i 111 k an- ritiiniiig at li s;; limn f'il'iy per cm t of Heir cap acity, ni-iirly a. 'liillinn pounds of un .11I1I copper is vainly fel, ing buy- Hoppmr High mot and dol'eat cd 1 lie Pilot Kocli High in a slugfest. here last rial unlay with a score of S to 15. Tin' first inning the Pilot iht- prune Iri'i' lias hlossoiiii (I j Koi-'k boys started with three runs. mill the tiny new fruit is forming on T,,n in t)l(. half of the first, the Heppner boys hit the hall for 11 runs, making the score at the end minimi ratile mi-mis, but tli" tuns sill I'ouiain almost half of last years liar vest. This frl ii I of useful products is 1 of the first half ?, to 11 in Heppner's 'Ik 'direct result, of Kuropes sham peace. They fu--,s about reparations. Tin- American fanner paid five bil lions of it last season through the shrinkage in. the value of his pro !ii ti. The lour million unemployed Amer icans lost a billion in wages in three moil i hs'ljown in Luenos Ayn-s the wharves are sagging under the weigh I of American inerchnnilise, re-,je--li d because Kuiope could not buy A rgent ines products. And yet. the iirmies of Kurope are on the march again as spring begins. Since 1918 no fighting season has opened with worse prospects for the entire world. liul the darkest hour comes just before dawn. 11 luav lie I hat the mi-sent red snasm of Kuiope is the hist, and most vio-jhave larger crowds favor. After the first inning both sides tightened up a little but the pitchers didn't get warmed up good until (he sixth, after which only one run was allowed and that to Pilot lipck. There were few big hits dur ing the day and Peterson pulled down the only home run of the day. The Heppner team hit the hall much better last Friday than they ever have before, but. they made a lot of errors in the field. leiii before I he return or sanity and order. May Sunset Ti;i.l PIIONi: MONOI'fA.Y TrfXIH TO ('i:,l'..M', It ATKS April (To PORTLAND, Ore, the Kdilor) Two agencies -competition and public regulation primarily control the finality of service received and (lie price paid fur it by the patron of a public utility privately operated. Where compel it ion exists, there is little need for public regulation, which usually comes into play when a monopoly has been cn-aleil. There is a third element always present, in 'some degree and given liul slight consideration, namely I he ability fir willingness of the public generally as distinguished from In dividuals", to take the service and pay the rate required. A fourth ol .ement, always magnified and put forward prominently, is the alleged necessity for Ihe utillhy nr more money. When II is considered that in Portland, no attempt has been made hi increase rales for electric lighting in which service lo separate con cerns compete, Ihe (iiesllon natural ly arises, why dilfeient .principles are applied lo the construction of lales for competitive service and for momum' isiic -'! lire, and how it hap p. ns He, I competing utilities are aide to ;i - en wiiPoul nppoulin to H'e public lor ill'T ' isi "1 r'tes. M u-.l I he public fish! a::i?n:'l PioM onoly and elicoci'are compel il ivo ; er- id- u il Ii its at !"iidii"I -renin less Mid duplication of I'.i ilii'.es to nro li'.:'l liself a !.,'' in ' uniibrdloil eac lii as or should the Public So'-v'ce Ceicinis.-ieii ..'..- i'lii.' con ioo.rt'ou. The town people turned out. as well as could be expected for a cold day, but if Heppner High expects to make baseball pay they will have to out to their games. We are expecting a game with Hill Mililary Academy here on May 27 and 281 h. The play "What Happened to Jones," given by the high school last Friday evening, went off in a very smooth manner. We are sorry that more of Ihbe town people could not get out to the play for we feel that they have missed a very :;ood even ings enlertninnienl. Some lime in the near future ihe High School will take a day off for pienlckin. Mr. James says the grades will go on a picnic of their own Ihe same day. mark that no increase in Portland telephone rates was proposed until control of competition had been ef fected. I A review of Ihe Tronic Telephone I I i n nsnrl ion and its application to the two proceedings before the Public Service ('omission involving increas ed telephone rates in Portland and ! some other communities creates a 'very vivid impression that some thing is out of .joint either in the re gulatory activities in this slate or in (lie generally' accepted theory thai the rights of the public is the paramount consider!!! Ion. In iis order N'o. tliit ef Mayl, 1 'i I !i t he Commission says that I he ii',inisii"n o1' the .iiitonia'ic system by the li- ll inlet ests will in our opin i, n re lilt in improved and more ef ficient service and I J' the removal of ilu'iiii "Minn, save to the telephone luck USTRIKEJ Cigarette No cigarette has the same delicious flavor as Lucky Strike. Because Lucky Strike is fro toasted cigarette. recognized as influencing the de mands that the Pacific Company now makes, or that the Commission in granting them remembered the findings it made in the order of May 2, 1919. EDWARD M. COUSIN 42 7 Railway Exchange Bids. FORMER PROMINENT COXDOX CITIZEN PASSES Jim Dunn, one of the original members of the pioneer firm of Dunn Bros., died at the home of his sister, Mrs. Susan Greiner, in San San Diego, California, last Sunday evening. The funeral services were held n San Diego yesterday. For a number of years Jim Dunn was oni of the leading business men of this section. With his brother, Judge Ed Dunn he conducted the general store business now owned by J. D. Burns, and was also exten sively interested in the livestock business. He left this section some 15 years ago, and has since been in business in Arizona and California. Mr. Dunn never married, and the only immediate relatives surviving him are his brothers and sisters. They are Ed Dunn of Boise; Joe Dunn of Mt. Clemmens, Mich.; Mrs. F. W. Burns who recently moved from this city to Portland; Mrs Thomas Crimmins, Monroe Mich..; and Mrs. Susan Greiner, of San Diego. Con don Globe-Times Mr. Dunn was an uncle of Ed Breslin of this city. Mrs. of t'ie tour cities named not in conni' tioi; with an application to (,. s ,,.m f j o.otMl annually, and "It iai:;e pnldic ii'ili'y tales. whether ls) ;, n' 'cipii.ted that the equipment compel ii'oii ha '- been stifli d. mirchnsed will take care of the The bisi' rv o! the an;!!' it am ot It.e Home Telephone and Toleg'aph Company's propeiiy by Ihe Pacific lephoiie and Tilegripli I'ompapv 1, drcided petiinet'.t al this lime ni iis relationship to the repeated gran I nie of increased rales lo Ihe exist lug monopoly. It in iy he well to ro- reaii r pari ot me new nii'ues.s ex pecled for Hie next three years." A careful examination of the C"tu niision's proceedings in the tele phone cases fails to disclose any In timation that the elimination of the , uioiuai'u' system was in nny respect TO THE MAN WITOUT A RANK ACCOUNT EVEN if your business is such that you have gone without a bank account, the idea is worthy of your consideration. EVERY TIME you give your check you make a legal, indisputable record .of .that transaction. WE WILL APPRECIATE AN OPPOR TUNITY TO SERVE YOU Farmers & Stockgrowers National Bank HEPPNER, OREGON. A Member of the Federal Reserve lSViiV's & 'as a. g' 'S.iM,)l Iff a 1 Mia To Make M oney LISTEN Whenyou have tried out all other places you will realize that HEPPNER TAILOR ING & CLEANING SHOP (lives vou the most for your money GET YOUR SUITS HERE G. FRANZEN, Prop. Getting money is only one step toward making money. Keeping money is a small part toward making money. To make money you must make money work for you. - - - - ..... -. ... . Start a Savings Account in your name. Every dollar of your savings earns a safe rate of interest for you. First National Bank Heppner, Oregon A Member of the Federal Reserve dsoxv TRADE MARK The Fordson TVaclor was made to meet the demands and necessities of the every-day American farmer. It was made with the thought that it was the necessity of the man of forty acres as well r.s the man with one thousand acres. It was made not only for plowing, harrowing, discing, drilling, seeding, mewing, reaping but for all other work on the farm where power is necessary. It was made to bring conveniences to the farmer's home as well as for the cultivation of his fields. It wasmade to furnish power for the cream separator, silo filling cutting feed, sawing wood, furnishing power for milking, washing, supplyingthe house with running water, electric lighls, and the hundred and one thniss on the farm. It was made to do all this economically and in a reliable way. It was made to be the big profitable servant on the farm. And it has not failed in any of the expectations had for it. It has been tested as no other Tractor has been tested. Il has proven reliable and can furnish prros impossible to any other tractor. It has done these things not only in America, but in Kurope. Asia. Africa, and in the Islands of the Sea. It has met successfully the demands of the farmers in every part of the civilized world. Therefore ,the Fordson Tractor can meet all the conditions of your farm. When you buy a Fordson', you are not buying any experiment you are buying a servant and a money-maker for you that you can de pend upon absolutely from the firM day you put it to work. It is easy to understand. It possesses all the power you want. It is simple, in control. It is mme flexible than you imagine. It will help you cultivate every loot of ground you have, and every day in th year you1 will find use for it on the farm. Its appeal to the fanner is in its dependable service and the w ide variety of work it can do. We'd like every farmer who reads this, if he hasn't a Fordi-on Tractor already, to come to us and let us sell him one. Let us demonstrate its powers, its values, on your own farm Let's get into details power, reliability, economy. While the sale of a Tractor gives us a small profit, the purchase of a Tractor to the tanner means a money making servant every day for years. So the sale of a Fordson means more to the purchaser than it does to us. We are arguing for your good Mr Farmer. Come in and talk It over. Your tune against ours It Is worth It. And remember when you buy a Fordson Tractor. we are right here to keep that Tractor in reliable running condition eveiy day You wont have to wait If any thing should get out of order. We are right here to keep It right, because one of the conditions of the Fordson Dealer is that he must keep on hand always complete supply of parts. This is a guarantee we don't belie e you will get with any other farm tractor. Come tn. Let s talk It over. v. Latourell Auto Co. Authorized Ford and Fordson Dealers