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About Heppner herald. (Heppner, Or.) 1914-1924 | View Entire Issue (April 8, 1924)
Page Two THE HEPPNER HERALD, HEPPNER OREGON Tuesday, April 8, 1924 THE HEPPNER HERALD AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER iii 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 $1.00 Three Months $0.50 THE SCHOOL LAW DECISION The federal court decision returned last week annuling the compulsory school law on the ground that it was un constitutional was in line with the opinions expressed by many of the ablest lawyers in the state during the cam paign when the! question was brought) to a vote of the peo ple. While the decision of the federal judges rested large ly on the question of property rights it was generally un derstood during the campaign that the element of religious intolerance was an important factor in putting the bill over at the 1922 election. All good Americans are believers in the public school system and are jealous of any infringements on its pre rogatives but the matter of education of the young is so closely knitted to the question of religions rights that it is not easy to draw a line. Under a Republican form of government such as ours parents are supposed to have some rights regarding the training and education of their children and the three fed eral judges whose unanimous decision set aside this law, show that they do not propose that such parental rights shall be taken away. ' Making good Americans out of the rising generation is of paramount importance but the taking away of the right of parents to dace their children in schools where they can receive religious instruction in line with the parent's be lief does not seem to be a step in the right direction. . Religion and morality are, after all, the very basis of good citizenship and while we call ourselves a Christian nation, we have so many sects and creeds, all with the same end in view, that it is most probable that no one of 1hem is entirely right nor can any one of them be entire ly wrong. i In matters of religion and education it is well to remem ber the old statement that "There is so mulch of bad in' the best of us and so much of good in the worst of us that it does not sound well for any of us to say much about the rest of us." Tolerance is one of the brightest jewels in the crown of Christian civilization. Let us all try to cul tivate that virtue. LAFOLLETTE A THORN Robert M. LaFollctte, senator from Wisconsin, who is said to have admitted that he may head a third party in the coming presidential campaign, may never be president but he is liable to be a very disturbing thorn in the fle.-sh of some of the old line conservatives in both the major parties within the next few months. "Little Bob," as his iriends call him, has always been a liberal sometimes radical progressive and has been the foe to special priv ilcdge lo these many years. His worst enemies credit him with being honest and square and the present condition of the public mind regarding grafters and grafting in high governmental circles, as being brought out in the oil and other investigations is calculated to make LaFollctte sev eral votes should he become a candidate. The testimony of a witness before the senate committee the other day to the effect that the wfjtness who is a priv ate detective had been employed to go through LaFol lettc's office and papers last summer in an effort to "get something" on the Wisconsin man that could be used to silence him when he commenced raising .1 fuss about oil grafters, w(ill not add to the peace of mind of campaign managers in cither of the old party camps. A thorn in the flesh that cannot be extracted can deal out a lot of misery and all efforts to 'extract" little Bob ttither from public life or from being a receptive candi managers in either of the old party camps. The witness testified' that after going through LaKollctte's desk and n.trs he foui.d absolutely nothing that could 'be used against him.' . , THE BASIC FACTS OF AN ECONOMIC ISSUE In his radio talk that was broadcasted from Pendleton Sunday evening, Mr. Miller, field secretary for the state hankers' association, pictured the McNary-Haugen bill as desirable as a temporary measure to provide relief for fanners; lie said, however, that there are many economic and political reasons why it would be bad policy to con sider it. as a permanent affair. The measure is being advocated as a relief measure, not as a permanent policy. But the farmers would have just as much right to demand that the export commission plan be made a permanent policy as manufacturers have to ask for a high tariff policy that would peiinianently allow them to keep their own prices above the world level. There is io difference in principle between the export commission plan and the high tariff policy. The intent and the only intent of the high tariff law is to place the protected industries of this country upon a basis where they may charge prices that are above the world level.. The Fordnev-McCumber law affords such protection to vir tually every manufacturer in the country able to meet competition audi defend themselves without the aid of the high tariff rates that prevail. It is contended even by pro tectionists that the rates are1 now too high and that they could be lowered and should be lowered. While that situation exists the wheatman is abundantly justified in asking for passage of the McNary-Haugen bill In fact lie has a vastly stronger case than has the manu facturer because it is well known that the wheatman is not making money at present and must either have lower prices for the th'iigs he mrys or higher prices lor the ,,,..!, .,1.:,.. ; . tt,,. f'.rn-,..- tcl curtail produc tion and to diversify! He is also told to economize in his expenditures. It would be more to the point to tell the manufacturer to deflate and thus bring about lower prices so as to restore the value of the farmer's dollar. The pres ent plight of agriculture is not due to shortcomings on the part of the farmer. There is nothing really the matter with agriculture. The trouble is caused by the other fel low, the manufacturer, who inflates his prices and has been encouraged to do so by the tariff system. The. indus trial inflatibn is at the very bottom of farm distress, for it is entirely responsible for the shrunken value of the farmer's dollar. These facts are basic and basic facts must be squarely recognized if we are to have an adjustment. The East Oregonian believes in diversification, where possible, and all that. But we grow tired of hearing people berate the farmer and of hearing the offer the farmer advice that of ten is unwise when all the time the farmer is plainly the victim of a policy of special priviledge adopted to serve the eastern industrialist. The thing is not a political issue so much as it is an eco nomic question. A republican has just as much right to demand tariff adjustment as has a democrat. He can do so and still protect a real producer like the woolman. Washington , D., C, is full of men and the department of agriculture is full of men who know very well what is the trouble. For months past high officials in a republican administration have been telling us that the trouble arises from the fact that the farmer sells on a free trade basis but has to buy in a protected market. President Coolidge must know the situation. To con tend otherwise is to say that he does not have average in telligence. It is to contend that the president does not know as much as do the bureau chiefs in the department of agriculture, f The farmer and! all business menn aligned with agricul ture have a right to demand that effective steps be taken to restore the balance between industry and agriculture. The McNary-Haugen bill is a move in this direction. It should be adopted and allowed to operate until a perma nent cure is provided through removal of tanif pnviledges. If the present administration cannot do even this much in the direction of restoring economic justice, how can it have . . . . . ... f ,1 T- y- any claim upon agricultural votes this lanr r.ast uie- gonian. Tn n rprenr dinlnmatie.e note to the president of France. Ramsay McDonald, discussing the question of national se curity, says: "Thp Tu-ench npnnlp desire security: the British people cherish an identical idea, but whereas France conceived security as security against Germany alone, the British Fmnire attributes to the word a far wider significance. -.-r k ft What we desire is security against war. Sigsbee Studio Is now open and prepared to take first-class Photographs B. G. SIGSBEE PHOTOGRAPHER Located on Main Street Opposite Ster Theatre, Heppner BaBBBBaBHBBBBBHattBaBKBBBBflBBBBBBBBBBBHBH m m a a I Good Spring Tonic B B o When your appetite fails and you tire of ordinary a lood, you need a tonic. iNotning oetter tnan 5 a bottle of S Weinhard's Columbia or Blitz a with your evening lunch. Healthful, refreshing, p non-alcoholic. 2 TAKE A BOTTLE HOME THIS EVENING Visiting Business Acquaintances First Second Story ' Worker What sort of hick did you have on that last safe-blowing job you wa3 going to pull? . Second S. S. Worker Cheese it, cheese It, I no sooner s,ets down my tools to look over the place till some body swipes 'em and when I goes out looking for them I gets my pocket picked. Goblin. Curran & Barr's PASTIME The House of Welcome and Good Cheer A Hard Battle "I saw a man- hanging on to a half empty keg a while ago about a mile 6ut to sea. He couldn't swim and was nearly drowned." VDid you hav much trouble in making the rescue?" ! "A little. I had to hit him over the head with an oar to make him let go, but I finally got the keg aboard." Bayonne News. i ii. B B SERVICE Our Idea of real banking service is to give more than just ordinary at tention to your affairs. We aim to take a personal interest in our cus tomers and study thir needs in or ' der that we may 3erve them better. This bank is owned and managed by men whom you know and trust, and whose first concern is the develop ment and growth of this community. Elks' Building Heppner, Ore. iii&i- JtBKSff; :-AjPB!i:i ABBjfc::;! Forehanded People Inside of the vault of the bank are located the individvual Safe Deposit Boxes main tained for those forehanded people who want the BEST OF PROTECTION for their valuables, Bonds, stocks, insurance policies, mortgages, records, receipts, jewelry, trink ets, etc-, deserve better protection than they receive when kept in an office safe, tin box or hidden away somewhere. This bank has these Safe Deposit Boxes for rent at the rate of two dollars a year and up, according to the size of the box. It offers you the opportunity to keep your valuables where it keeps its own. Rent a Safe Deposit Box today, for the number now vacant is limited. Farmers and Stockgrowers National Bank HEPPNER, OREGON S First National Bank Heppner Ore. a a You Can See What You are Buying when you fill your tank from a Dayton Visible Gasoline Pump 1 have just installed one at my Repair Shop. Let me fill your tank nest time. M R. FELL Chase Street Drop in to MCATEE & AIKEN'S and See their Fine Lane of BOX CANDIES HOT DRINKS and SANDWICHES always 'ready to serve IT PAYS TO READ THE HERALD ADS B B B B B B a B B B m B 1 1 IHBBBI