I-.';:; mx THE GAZETTE-TIMES. HEPPXER, OREGON. THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 2. 1922. III HUE li'J L. MONTERESTELLI Marble and Granite Works PENDLETON, OREGON Fine Monument and Cemetery- Work All parties interested in getting work in my line should get my prices and estimates before placing their orders All Work Guaranteed UGHT OF PUBLIC 01I1IS TOLD I. C. Railroad Head Holds Optimistic Viewpoint for Betterment. etiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiif S v I A. M. EDWARDS WELL DRILLER, Box 14, Lexington, Ore. Up-to-date traction drilling outfit, equipped for all sizes of hole E 2 and depths. Write for contract and terms. Can furnish you LtlALLEiNUE SELF-UILLNU LD31ILL s all steel. Light Running, Simple, Strong, Durable. ntlllllllllllllllllllllllllMlllltlllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllltllllllllllUllllllllllllir Pioneer Employment Co. With Two Big Offices PENDLETON AND PORTLAND Is prepared to handle the business of Eastern Oregon better than ever before Our Specialties Farms, Mills, Camps, Hotels, Garages, Etc. WIRE Rl'SH ORDERS AT OUR EXPENSE PsrtUaa OfJee 14 R. It. PcBtletea OSes 111 m. Wckk It. Only Employment Office m Eastern Oregon with Connections in Portland The Byers Chop (Formerly SCHEMPPS MILL) STEAM ROLLED BARLEY AND WHEAT We handle Gasoline, Coal Oil and Lubricating Oil You Find Prompt and Satisfactory Service Here vOU have been walking m the sunny fields of prosperity. Life seems secure. Youth and strength are careless and forgetful. You have spent money as you have earned it. Suddenly a flood of hard luck f comes rolling toward you. Will you be overwhelmed by it A BANK ACCOUNT IS A SAFETY ISLE. START ONE TODAY! Dollara deposited in tMa bonk draw intercut at 4 per cent. They lire safe dol lars busy dollara. A small litnk account serves as an incentive to aave, aave, Save If you have only a email sum put aside, deposit it , with us today. All large fortunes bad small begin nings. The biographies of all rich men start with their first bank account. YOUR BANK CAN HELP YOU FARMERS & STOCKGROWERS NATIONAL BANK Heppner Oregon Country Starts to Realize ' Value of Railways to New Civilization. By C. B. Markham Editor's Note. C. H. Markham is president of one of the greatest rail road systems in the world. He speaks with the voice of absolute authority and knowledge. His opinions are ac cepted and hailed by railroad execu tives throughout the United States and because of his close touch to the executives of other railroads what he says may well be considered a voicing of the sentiment of the American railroads as entertained by their gov erning heads. For twenty years the American pub lic has withheld sympathy for the problems of the railroad, problems that were vital to the welfare of the public. For twenty years the American rail road has proven too often to be the football of peanut politics, the "hor rible example" for the pointing finger of demagogues and the sounding board for the more or less silver tongues of spellbinders. Constructive legislation has been hindered rather than helped by this attitude for in their desire to please a suspicious public even fair minded legislators have leaned so far toward repressive legislation that the con structive sort has been lost and en tangled in the maze of restrictive red tape of the former. A better service to the nation at large, a wider scope of production to the city and a lessening of cost to the farm producer who must move his product would have resulted long ago if the railroads, often as unseeing as the public that frowned upon them had been met half way in friendly spirit and problems that were Teal and tangible been thrashed out to gether rather than attacked from varying angles that neither solved the problem or tended toward the crea tion of mutual benefit. Both Sides Blamed In thus placing blame upon the pub lic, I do not wish to give the impres sion that I believe railway men al ways have followed the blameless course; in fact, I hold them jointly responsible for the mistakes of this dark period. I believe they erred in not pursuing at all times a policy of taking the public into their complete confidence and telling the public frankly what their problems were and what was being done, or should be done, to solve them. Railway men have largly pursued a policy of re ticence where their own actions were involved, seemingly proceeding upon the theory that the public did not need their counsels. Recent railway history has proved that their atti tude was wrong. But, regardless of where the blame is to be placed, the fact remains that the impression gained popular ity that the railroads needed protection. That, in fact, they were entitled to no protection, and that the public welfare could best be served by attacking railway manage ment, embarrassing it and putting every hindrance in its way. Every action undertaken by the railroads looking toward an improvement in their capacity for rendering service was viciously attacked; every ap plication for rates which would pro vide revenues sufficient for opperat ing expenses, fixed charges and I return which would be attractive to the capital needed for financing ex tensions, improvements and better ments was bitterly fought; hamper ing legislation and restrictions were adopted, increasing the cost of rend ering transportation without in creasing the capacity for it. Bait ing the raidroads became popular political sport. The public grew to look upon the critics of the railroads as being always worthy of belief, and the defenders of the railroads as being always in the wrong. Roads in Future. My optimism for the future of the railway situation is based upon a be lief that this deleterious period is passing. One finds it still cropping out in some quarters, but it is on the wane. We as a people seem to have learned the lesson the last few years have taught us; namely, that the fu ture of our country is tied up with the well-being of transportation, and that the two must develop together. But, even though I entertain an optimistic belief in the future of America's second largest industry second only to agriculture I be lieve there still remains a great and pressing need for further pub lic education on railway questions, .The public must be constantly re minded of what it has at stake in a solution of railway problems. Our efforts must not lag. One of the most important steps, I believe, in creating a wholesome public sentiment which will assure progress in transportation is inspir ing public confidence in the men who stand at the head of America's great transportation systems. I have been in railway work a great many years and I know the calibre of the men who hold positions of trust in the railway industry. I know them to be honest, conscientious men, trained in their calling, and I know their ambition is that American railroads shall maintain their high rank among the transportation agen cies of the world. I believe them worthy of the public trust. At Public's Mercy. The growth of public regulation has placed the railroads literally at the mercy of the public. The rail roads are controlled through gov ernmental agencies in the service they shall charge, the wages they shall pay and the conditions under which their employes shall work; while to managment is given the power of directing operations with in these limitations. But I hold for managment a greater task, that of impressing upon public opinon the need of constructive policies, and of outlining what those policies should be. Railway management is the trustee of vast properties valued at nearly (19,000,000,000, and it would be derelict to duty if it did not exert its utmost effort toward construction as a,;:iinst destruction, toward progress as against retro gression. When we are ill e call upon men trained in the diagnosis and treat ment of human ailments to etfect a cure; when questions of jurispru dence arise we consult the best lerai minds at our disposal to guide our actions; in railway matt ers men trained in that ecienc should be our advisers. In the con sideration of every public question there always is proposed a plethora of untried remedies, fake cures, quack panaceas; these have exer cised, in the past, too great an in fluence upon public thought in rail way matters. The first principle of railway prog ress is the necessity of placing at the disposal of the railroads a net income which will be sufficient to pay obligations and attract the savings of investors in order that extensions, improvements and betterments may be carried out The only source of this revenue is in the rates charged for transportation service. "What the traffic can bear" is the misno mer. The movement of traffic can be more seriously hampered by physi cal inability to handle it than by rates which seem high as compared with those of another period. Rates, of course, should be so distributed as to allow for an easy Sow of pro ducts from producer to consumer, but the importance of protecting the railroads against rates which will impair service to protect other in dustry from rates which might up set the scale of price adjustments. Oppressive Regulations. Another important element in as suring railway progress is the need for curtailing oppressive regulations which increase the cost of produc ing transportation without increas ing the capacity for producing trans portation. In one of the states in which the Illinois Central operates bills were introduced and passed for passage in the recent session of legislature which, if they had been passed and approved, would have in creased the expenditures of the railroads of that state more than $100,000,000 annually without in any way increasing their efficiency Pract ically the same situation has existed in the regular sessions of every state legislature of the forty-eight states for years past. Fortunately for the railroads and for the public, which must underwrite the railroads' bills, the measures to which I have referred failed, but that has not been the history of such legislation. Too often the ill-advised burden has been placed. The cumulative effect of this shortsightedness has been to place the railroads under great handi caps and to increase unnecessarily the cost of transportation. The hope of the railroads lies in the establishment and maintenance of a wholesome public sentiment to ward them. The public should bear in mind that whatever hurts the railroads hurts the public. Anything that affects railway service and rates detrimentally is opposed to the pub lic welfare, for anything that increas es the cost of transportation with out a comparable betterment of ser vice has a bearing upon rates. The welfare of the railroads and the pub lic welfare are so interwoven that it is impossible to separate them. That the public has not been in clined to accept this viewpoint is un fortunate; that the public is now more favorably minded toward the railroads augers well. . On the Illinois Central System" we are exerting our best efforts to ac quaint our patrons with railway problems and the best methods of their solution, and are asking their constructive criticism and suggest ions. We are being rewarded by the co-operation of the public served by our line in a degree hitherto un known. We have passed through trying" times and bur lesson in railway economies has been a hard one. If we have profited by it, it is well. I believe we have. Two bedrooms for rent; near Main street. Inquire this office. Poem by fncle fohn ROUGH SEA SAILORS I love to talk with fellers, with a glitter in their eye, in defiance of the panic that is slowly passin' by. . . . I love to see 'era swagger, an' to ele vate their chin an' to hear 'em speak of pluggin' till their ship comes in. I like to run acrost 'em, as we travel on our way. ... I take a lot of stock in what they do, an' what they say. ... I get my in spection, and the firm desire to win, from the feller that's a-pluggin' till his ship comes in. I aint got time to listen at the bird of grim despair, that dotes on disappointments, till they get him by the hair, but you'll see my sperit quicken, like you'd stuck me with a pin when my neighbor speaks of pluggin' till his ship comes inl HOMEY PHILOSOPHY for 1922 What a wonderful boy they say he is David Gladstone, fifteen years old, four feet tall, and yet a freshmen in the College of Arts and Pure Sciences of New York University. He plans to enter law school as soon as he has completed his college require ments. Education? A prodigy, one of the seven wonders of the world. Aint it a funny idea when those who see the setting of the sun know that a boy of seven the age of reason always has a much better education than Gladstone when he is taught, and really learns that happiness comes from making the other fellow happy. That's the meat. Why fuss over the trimmings? Will Soon Be Over. Fortunate indeed is Wallowa coun ty to have escaped the bitterness of the campaign being waged in western Oregon over the school bill. Certain factors have entered wbich have broken up old friendships and divid ed families into hostile groups. Per haps years will pass before the an imosities will die down. The campaign will be over in a tittle more than a week. The count of the votea presumably will tell the verdict of the people, and in a pop ular government majority rules. In this case the majority must act with great forbearance and the minority also must be charitable. No man should stake his happiness and peace of mind on the outcome of a political contest. There is an ebb and flow to the affairs of man and sometimes one opinion prevails, while again quite a different view is adopted. No one year is final; no one .campaign settles the fate of humanity. The majority which controls a mass meeting or an election is not alwaya right; in fact very often- it is unfair and unjust and wholly wrong. But it must have its day just the same, while all must await the day when the light dawns. The people of a state or nation are greater than any faction and in the long run, no better form of government has been found than that in which the people rule. So their verdict must stand, and if it is a blunder, they should seek to correct it later. Enterprise Record Chieftain. CHICKEN FRIES FOR SALE En quire of Harvey Scott, near depot. by 1 MA. MATTHEWS DD. LLD. HAS LOYALTY VANISHED? When one looks carefully at the passing throng he is forced to ask the question, Is loyalty a lost art? Have the people forgotten its mean ing? Or has it ceased to have power over the people? Loyalty in its truest and deepest meaning is free from every element of selfishness; loyalty means abso lute devotion to principle, to party, to person. Absolute devotion takes into ac count the sacrifice that has to be made to be loyal. It may mean the loss of everything; but loyalty never counts that a cost too dear. If this is a correct definition of loyalty then it is highly probable that it has been supplanted by the meanest kind of selfishness because men are sacrificing principle, party and person for their own selfish in terest, or to fill their own greedy purses. They seem to have but one God the God of Gold. They worship at his shrine; they bow before him morn ing, noon and night; they carry his image in their pockets; they burn incense to him; his image is stamp ed upon their features; they would sacrifice their homes. Yea; they would give up their families to satisfy their own selfish ness. What can you expect when loyalty in its truest, and most glor ious aspect is surrendered and self ishness is enthroned? Many business men have ceased to fight for great business principles because they are afraid it will cost them something. Politicians have long since mortgaged their souls. They are taking anything that will buy votes. Nearly every election has on its bargain counters cheap politi cians. Loyalty to the government, devotion to fundamental principles are foreign subjects, alien ideas, and ancient history to modern polit cians. Oh, for a power that would bring back to the throne of business statesmanship, and to the religions altar unswerving, untainted and un adulterated loyalty. Come in and see our fine assortment of these Palmer- Coats THOMSON BROTHERS Kcp Painted Wccdvcrk CLEAN Clean wooden floors, linoleum, tile, marble, concrete, with SAPOLIO ill I II l ill o Makes all house- cleaning easy. Large cake No waste tatca Merfaa's Sen Ca, Hew Talk, U.S. A. Good Printing Is Our Hobby The Gazette-Times NEW PRICES ON MASON CORDS HEAVY-DUTY OVER SIZE SIZE PRICE SIZE PRICE 30x3'2Cl. $13.95 32x4'; $30.75 30x3'2s.s 15.80 33x4'2 31.55 32x3'2 19.35 34x4 '2 32.40 31x4 23.10 35x4'2 33.20 32x4 24.50 33x5 38.95 33x4 24.70 35x5 39.95 34x4 25.35 37x5 42.10 FORD OWNERS! Remarkable Prices on Mason Oversize "Maxi- Mile" Fabrics 30x3 -.-$9.25 30x3 2 -.-$10.60 C. V. HOPPER TIRE SHOP FOR REAL TIRE SERVICE KIRK BUS & TRANSFER COMPANY WM. M. KIRK, Proprietor Prompt and efficient service at all times, both lay or night Leave orders at Hotel Patrick or Phone Main 664. BAGGAGE : EXPRESS : FREIGHT COUNTRY TRIPS -:- GENERAL HAULING HOUSE CLEANING TE Calls, among other things, for a good Broom We have just received a large shipment of excellent brooms, at remarkably low prices quality considered. A white enamel broom holder free with each Phelps Grocery Company PHONE 53