THE BANNER-COURIER, OREGON CITY, OREGON THURSDAY, MARCH 30, 1922. Page Nine cautomobile Gossip The ParkShepherd Motor Co. re ports the sale of three new Fords on Wednesday and Thursday, a sedan to I Mr. Adrian of West Linn, a touring car to Mr. Smith of Oregon City and ' a coupe to Mr. Smith of Canby. Henry Ford's new five day week is i causing a great deal of comment and ' conjecture as to whether the plan will J work. Some say it can't be done, oth-, ers say no self respecting son of toil would wish to work but five days out of the seven. Be that as it may, Ford ; may have competition if Durant does j what he says he'll do with his new j car. Whether the five day week will j stand the test of competition will re main to be seen. New Welding Shop Opened On Seventh Street Harry Oakley and Geo. C. Parberry have recently opened a welding and brazing shop on upper seventh street near the Cross Harness shop. Mr. Oakley has had nine years prac tical experience in the U. S. Navy, embracing all lines of metal work, brazing, and repairing and feels well able to tackle anything in this line. Ship by Truck Idea Is Growing Fast The Automobile Chamber of Com merce states that last year 1,200,000, 000 tons of freight were handled by motor trucks. About 1,000,000 trucks were employed averaging about 12,000 tons each per year which means about four tons a day per truck. . The statement has been made that the truck industry has grown faster in proportion during the last few years than the passenger car industry. This indicates great possibilities for the future of the motor truck world for the field of operators is growing with every mile of road which is built. In some cases they compete to a large extent with the railroad, however, the figures given cannot be taken as a given amount taken from the regular j railroad business, for much of it has been created whece business would not have been obtained under the old order. Both the truck and the railroad have their distinct realm in the trans portation world but just where the boundary lies is by no means certain. There is another problem which presents itself in this connection and that is the highway and street ques tion. Heavy motor vehicles must bear their share of the expense of upkeep both on the highway and the city street as they play no smajf part in the wearing of our hard surface roads. . IjS'. Where Your Taxes Go How Uncle Sam Spends Your Money in Conduct" ing Your Business By EDWARD G. LOWRY Author "Washington Close-Upa," "Banks and Financial Systems," etc. Contributor Political and Economic Articles to Leading Periodicals and a Writer of Recognized Authority on the National Government's Business Methods. Copyright. Waf tern Newspaper Union L WHY YOU'RE INTERESTED I wish you would take what is written here as a personal report ad dressed directly to you from me about your business. Don't think of It or read It as an article about "politics," or remote public affairs at Washing ton. It Is not that at all. It is what I ask you to think it, a personal business report to you relating to your individual concerns, your pocketbook and your welfare. I have no other interest than to tell you the exact truth. Assume that you have sent me to Washington to find out for you what your agents are doing, how they are managing your affairs and spending your money. I call them your agents for that is all they are the President, the members of the cabinet, the senators and all the members of the house of representatives. You hire them, you pay them, and you can fire them. You may think of them In deference and awe as a group of eminent states men, or you may call them In flippancy and too hasty contempt "a lot of politicians." But whatever you call them, they are your hired men. They attend to your collective business, which Is called the public business. Query : Are they doing It efficiently and with a single-minded devotion to your Interests? Perhaps the largest Item In the high cost of living Is the high cost of government. And far and away the largest Item In the high cost of govern ment is the high cost of armament; preparation for war. About 90 per cent of all government revenues, and that means the money taken from you as taxes, goes to pay for wars, past, present and future. Before I have concluded this series of articles I expect to show you con clusively that the Impelling motive that Induced President Harding to call the present conference In Washington to consider limitation of armaments was financial. The pressing need of considering a proposal for a reduc tion or limitation by agreement of war expenditure was not made entirely on the ground of morality or righteous ness, but as a plan for cutting down the operating expenses of the govern ment. If the United States government were an Individual we would say that It was broke, for its expenses exceed its Income. Your interest is simply this: that whatever decision Is made you will have to pay the bill. If today we didn't have these army and navy ex penses you would have to pay In taxes less than $1,000,000,000 a year instead of $5,000,000,000. That means we would have about $4,000,000,000 more a year to spend on our private needs and pleasures. I frankly confess that I would enjoy having four-fifths of my taxes knocked off. Wouldn't you? Secretary Weeks of the War de partment gave public warning a little while ago that the government "would require of us about $17,000,000 in the next thirty months to meet cur rent expenses and other obligations. Persons who have given close study to that possibility say that the need will be nearer $20,000,000, than $17,000, 000. The great bulk of that Is for past and prospective war expenditures. For this, you and congress and the Executive departments at Washington are responsible. You more than any body else, for it Is your money that Is being spent and you can stop It. In Its simplest terms the procedure Is this : You earn the money, congress takes It away from you In the form of taxes, and then congress and the Executive' departments spend it. A great part of it Is wasted. This Is established, conceded, confessed, and acknowledged by congress, which authorizes the expenditures, and by the executive officers of the govern ment, who do the actual spending. It Is your money that you have earned In your business, on your farm, or by the labor of your hands, that is being expended and wasted at Washington. Every cent that Is extravagantly or needlessly expended by the govern ment you could have in your pocket to meet the increased cost of food, lodg ing and clothing, doctors' bills and amusements, or to put away and save against a rainy day, if you only de manded determinedly and unitedly that governmental extravagance should cease. I can cell you some of the conditions of governmental spending and how your money is chucked about, and I can tell you how you can stop it. The power is yours, and until you exer cise it waste and extravagance will not stop. EL UNCLE SAM AS EMPLOYER The United States government is the largest single employer of men and women in this country. At the present time in the executive civil service of the Federal government, and exclusive of the army and navy, there are em ployed approximately 650,000 workers, or one in 73 of all residents on Ameri can soil, ten years of age or over, en gaged in gainful occupations. A little while ago, when the number of federal employees was even larger than it Is now, one person out of every 68 In the United States who had any sort of a job at all was working for the govern ment. These calculations are based on recent estimates of the bureau of the census In anticipation of the re sults of the fourteenth general census. Prior to the outbreak of the war, in 1914, the number of men and women in civil positions in the executive service was approximately 385,630. In 1916 it had grown to 398,832. In 1917, after our entry Into the war, It was 459,798, On June 30, 1919, the number THE UNI 348 F.O.B. DETROIT NEW PRICE You have never before had the opportunity of securing as much motor car value at so low a price. Take advantage of this opportunity and place your order now when you can obtain prompt delivery. Terms if desired. Park-Shepherd Motor Co. Incorporated 4th and Main Sts., Oregon City, Ore. was 707,448. The number on July 31, 1920, was 691,116. These figures are confessedly ap proximations. Since the signing of the armistice the number of federal em ployees has been decreasing. Un doubtedly the decrease in force will continue to be made for months to come, but the growth of the govern ment business in the past few years has been such as to make it a larger employer in the post-war period than It had ever been In the pre-war period. These thousands of men and women working for the government comprise every type of ability and Intelligence. Their duties cover a range of activities that far exceeds that exercised for other public or private employers ; for, besides its task of lawmaking and law enforcing, of national defense and national finance, the government Is charged with promoting the health and welfare of Its people, of promoting their home interests, their agricultural, mining, manufacturing, shipping, fish ing and transportation Interests. To do this it must Investigate, con trol and eradicate diseases that attack persons, plants and animals. It must Inspect livestock, foods and drugs. It must study conditions and progress In education, labor and commerce. It must prevent individual men or groups of men from using unfair business methods, whether In banking, trans portation, trade or manufacture. The government must administer public lands and the affairs of the Indians, and educate children In Alaska. It grants patents of Inven tion, It sets the clocks of the country, forecasts the weather, and makes observations of the stars and heavenly bodies. It constructs buildings, docks, roads, bridges, irrigation works, builds canals and aeroplanes, makes ordnance and ammunition, clothing and other supplies for its soldiers and sailors. It makes all Its own money and does all its own printing. It dis tributes all mail and many packages. The government does everything that any employer in the United States does, in addition to a great many things that no other employer does. How does It treat its people? Is it a good employer or a bad employer? Are Its employees contented? These are questions that I should advise the railroad men, the miners and other workers who seek nationalization of Industry, to look into before they com mit themselves. Let them find out for themselves what government ownership would mean to them. The first thing they will discover, as I discovered when I began the present Inquiry, is that nobody knows, and nobody in the government service is charged with knowing, the exact number of employees In the service from day to day. Even more astound ing, nobody knows, or is charged with knowing, even approximately, the sum of the payroll of the United States. It is not possible to find out within hundreds of thousands of dollars how much the United States pays yearly or monthly in salaries and wages. I went to the Treasury department, to the appropriations committee of con gress, and elsewhere where I thought the information might be lodged, but nobody knew. I was told vaguely that the government was not run on an asset and liability basis, and therefore it was not necessary to know the exact number of employees on the payroll. If the average compensation Is $1,- CAR 100. the federal civil service payroll now amounts to more than seven hundred million dollars annually. The largest single branch Is the Post Office department, with nearly 300,000 em ployees. The War department has more than 125,000 civilian employees, the Navy department about 90,000, and the Treasury department about 60,000. No other branch has as many as 25,000 employees. Any institution that em ploys one In seventy-thrge of all this country's workers and calls for the expenditure of such a large part of our annual revenues Is entitled to your serious consideration. You and you alone put up the money. VAST TREASURE WAITS FINDER Hidden Somewhere In the Sudan Desert Is Osman Digna's Store of Gold and Ivory. In my travels, when a young girl in Egypt and later In the Sudan, in Ismallia, I met with a woman who had fled from the Sudan during the war with the British. She was related to the once famous Osman Dlgna, the mahdl's general and most trusted friend. She related the following, which I translate: Every year Osman Dlgna used to take 50 Sudanese men and load them up with ivory, gold and precious stones j which the mahdi obtained from traders from the Congo. He led these men in a march which lasted three days Into the wilds of Khartoum, to a moun tain where was his cache. When every thing was put In safely, they started off to return, but halfway another trusted man, named Mahomoud, met Osman Dlgna with a hundred men, who killed everyone of the men used to carry the valuables. When that deed was done they returned to the mahdi, waiting for the next year's caravan. Osman Dlgna consequently was the only man who knew the cache. When taken prisoner he was offered a large sum of money to conduct a party to the place but he absolutely refused to speak. The last I heard of him he was still lingering in prison In Cairo nearly blind and Insane. Montreal Family Herald. For Twenty-Seven Cents. An unforeseen interruption of travel occurred on the West side elevated railroad one morning last week. A short, somewhat stout, middle-aged woman ambling her way to the down town platform at Ninety-third street dropped her purse, as well as her ticket, In the box. The son of Erin whose special duty it is to see that tickets are dropped in the box tried to extricate the purse with a wire. He failed and then the woman wanted to try. The ticket seller was called out Tires Tires We carry a large stock of Goodrich tires in all sizes of cords and fabrics. Priced to suit the times. Come in and look them over. From $9.90 up We can also sell you a tire for $9.00 HALL Sb SON 12th and Main AUTOMOBILE PAINTING A shabby looking car advertises neglect. do your Re-Finishing. WITH O. C. AUTO PAINT SHOP MILLER-PARKER CO. AT THE FOOT Off) ltPays to When choosing mm Unless you know automobiles you are at his mercy. Much depends on his integrity as weU as on his technical knowledge. We hold cureslves personally accountable for every car entrust ed to pur care. Capital Garage Less Crawford, Prop. Potential passengers were held up. A crowd collected. Variegated re marks enlivened the occasion. Final ly a mechanic was summoned. He took the top off the box and recov ered the purse. It contained 27 cents. Travel had been delayed almost, an hour. New York Sun. Church Treasure Recovered. An Italian ice cream dealer in at tempting to dispose of a solid silver cross for $60,000 in Glasgow disclosed the whereabouts of a Thirteenth cen tury church ornament worth $500,000 which disappeared several years ago from the Church of Borgo Collefa gato, near Aqulla, Italy. The evi dence presented in court was to the effect that the cross was one of the most valuable antiquities of Italy, and was thought to have been smuggled out of the country by an art collector. The ice cream vendor's effort to sell it at a $60,000 figure aroused the suspi cions of an antiquarian because of Its greater Intrinsic worth. The Ital ian contended that it has been in the possession of his family for genera tions, that it had been lost in the earthquake at Messina and had been recovered by him from the ruins. "Perfect 36" is No More. The perfect 36 bust is no more, writes a sartorial correspondent. In the days of her prime, before flappers owned their own cigarettes, she flourished. Now she is gone, forever. In her place is the willowy creature with ("figure like a twelve-year-old boy and dresses that are suspended from sharp shoul ders. The fashionable figure now, ig smaller than the 36, more undeveloped. The stylish girl accentuates this thin, wispy appearance. LYCURGUS DID NOT "BELONG" Old Gent'eman Wrong in Classing Him as One of Seven Wise Men of Greece. The seven wise men of Greece, whose names and sayings have come down to us from antiquity, have been distinctly secondary In renown re cently to the several score wise men of the nations gathered here in the conference on the limitation of arma ments. But the ancient wise men are not forgotten. Here and there are men who treasure the sayings which those worthies handed down to us. They are keen on the proper pronunciation of their names, and know to a de gree In which Grecian state they lived. One of these scholars came In last week to settle a dispute, says the Washington Star. Several of his friends, in whom the fine flower of learning had not withered any more than it had In him, were disputing about those seven wise men of Greece. "They could only think of six," de clared the gentleman, nodding his Oregon City Let us OF SINGER HILL STOP! T M7- LISTEN! il be Careful your repair man white head. "I said the seventh was Lycurgus. Am I right?" The seven wise men of Greece, not having figured in the news for a few years, It was no easy task to locate them. But a fat volume finally gave them up and Lycurgus was not In the list. Bias, Chilo, Cleobulos, Plttacos, So lon, Thales and Periander were the seven wise men. Everybody remem bers Solon as the man who got off that really tremendous saying "Know thyself." Cleobulos is credited with a good one too. "Avoid extremes." This latter is the famous "golden mean" of Epicurus. "And to think I would have put Lycurgus In that list!" exclaimed the old gentleman. A LITTLE PLANNING Sometimes a very little planning will change things about a chicken house so the hens will begin to lay. Proper egg-producing feed is neces sary, of course, but if hens are allow ed to run out in the damp and cold weather they are not likely to produce many eggs. It is not necesasry to have a very fancy house for hens, but a scratching shed light and dry, adjoining the roosting and laying room is very prof itable and can be nailed up in a little while out of almost any lumber one happens to have. It should have a sunny exposure if possible and be en closed on three sides with boards. The fourth can have glass if you happen to have some old window sash. 'EQUIPPED TO SERVE YOU BEST on Accessories Hardware Repairs Gasoline Oils Parts Tires Storage Oregon City, Oregon At Elevator Phone 390 i Acetelje lorcnes are I science's most modern I method of welding and 1 repairing any metal work. Our complete eqiupment and skilled workers in this line en jj ables us to repair practically i every kind of a break in or on your car, especially such mls X haps as bursted water jackets, f cylinder heads, cracked cylin g ders, broken frames and the like. And we can do It at a nominal eost. ON THE HILL Oregon ity Welding & Brazing Shop 615 - 7th Street Tires INC. We have a large stock of U. S. Tires on hand in all sizes. Cords and Fabrics priced to suit the times. Come in and look them ovei From $9.90 up We can also sell you a tire fo $9.00 HALL & SON 12th and Main Garage Opportunity On account of the death of the late Mr. L. W. Reed, of Estacada, I am offering for sale the garage business, consisting of all equipment, accessory stock, tractors and used cars. To any one considering entering the General Garage business, this is an excellent opportunity to step into an old established busi ness, less the expense of pioneering a new business which is a large asset. In addition to the above we are the Studebaker, Dort and Velie Dealers for this territory. These are money making agencis. For terms Address all communications to MRS. L. W. REED, In care of Reed's Garage, Estacada, Oregon Many times old sash can be picked up cheap at a place where material from wrecked buildings Is sold. If one can't get window sash wire will do very well. The roof should be water-tight so as to keep the ground dry and straw should be kept on the ground and the grain scattered in it so the hens must scratch for it It is surprising how fine they will work up the straw in a week. The straw should be taken out when it becomes very fine, as by that time it is foul and will make" a splen did top dressing for the garden. Always send your hens to bed with full crops, but make them work for their grain in the morning. Like Store We Give Service There isn't any kind of store that can suc ceed if it fails in cour tesy, truthfulness or service to the cus tomer. In that we're like the butcher, the baker and all the rest, who have to apply common sense principles of business over and over again every day. We're glad to be able to tell you that your battery is in A-l shape, even if it doesn't happen to be a Willard. But here at Bat tery Headquarters we don't hesitate about breaking the news if it isn't in condition or to recommend repairs or the purchase of a new battery if that's the eco nomical thing for you to do. CON HILGERS Battery Rebuilding and Repairing. Twelfth and Main Oregon City, Ore. r Representing Willard Storage Batteries Tires Oregon City