Tuesday, March 7, 1922 THE HEPPNER HERALD, HEPPNER, OREGON PAGE THREE ! 4 2 ! 4 J 4 "J 4 .5. PROFESSIONAL CARDS 4 . ! 4 4 4 4 ! 4 4 4- HasYourCaraKNOCK? f CI If So See FELL BROS, about the NO ..KNOCK BOLTS for any kind of car Absolute Satisfaction Come and talk it over and leave your order .... ZEROLEXE OILS AND GREASES At Right Prices Have your motor flushed out and refilled with Zerolene. We carry a grade for all cars and trucks QUART 15c. Vp To 5 Gallons 60ct8 per Gal. Over 5 Gallons 57 M cts per Gallon WHY PAY MORE Try Us For Service Fell BROS. Repair Shop 1 Block East of Hotel Patrick ' J Hot Drinks-Sandwiches Hit the right spot these frosty mornings and blustery afternoons. You Get the Best At McAtee & AiKen Case Bus & Transfer Co. We Thank you for past patronage and solicit a continuance of the same. Our best service is for you. Leave orders at Case Furniture Co. or Phone Main 393 BAGGAGE. EXPRESS. FREIGHT. COUNTRY TRIPS & GENERAL HAULING A Bargain if Taken at Once 640 acres, every foot in cultivation, all fenced good drilled well with plenty of water to ir- rigate garden, four-room house, one-half mile from school, 1 1 miles from raih oad. Price OInly $20.00 an Acre. $2,000.00 down, Terms on Balance Roy V. Whiteis TABLE NEEDS How about giving us an order for your table needs for today? You will find us well stocked with Veget ables and Fruits, Package, Bottled and Can ned Goods, Cured Meats and all seasonable commodities in our line. Sam Hughes Co. Look In Our Window At The Display of GRANITE WARE Your Choice for 25c CASH VARIETY STORE Where Your Taxes Go How Uncle Sam Spends Your Money in Conduct ing Your Business By EDWARD G. LOWRY Author "WuMorto Clooo-Un," "lining Ftauielol SyWoM." Me. Contributor PoHdeol 5d Looaomie ArtielM k Loading Partodicall and . Wrlur of Reeoffniud Authority on tbo National GoTtnmMot'i Buiin Matted. Copyright, WMtera Nwpar Uumm xn. MAKE YOUR VOICE HEARD Secretary Mellon of the treasury. Id a letter to Representative Fordney, chairman of the committee on ways and means of the house of representa- tlves, savs: "Ordinary expenditures for the first three quarters of the fis cal year, 1921, have been $3,783,771,- 990.74, or at the rate of about $5,000,' 000,000 for the year. . . According to the latest estimates of the spending departments. . . ordinary expend!' tures during the fiscal year, 1922, In eluding interest on the public debt. will be over $4,000,000,000. "The nation cannot continue to spend at this shocking rate. As the President said in his message, the bur den Is unbearable, and there are two avenues of relief, 'One is resistance in appropriation and the other is the ; utmost economy in administration. ' R. C. LeffingVell, formerly an assis tant secretary of the treasury, whom I have quoted previously in these ar J tides, and who is still deeply and ac tlvely interested In securing retrench' ment in national expenditures, com menting on this utterance of Secretary Mellon, says: "Why should there be retrenchment In public expenditure? Why does the secretary of the treas ury speak of current and estimated ex penditures as shocking? What is the evil that we are discussing and what Is its effect? "Government expenditures must be met from taxes. To the extent that they are met promptly from taxes and from honest taxes directly laid upon the Incomes of the people, and in pro portion to those Incomes, exaggeration of the evil of government expenditure Is avoided. Government expenditure takes the money of nil the people for the supposed benefit of a portion of the people, honestly or dishonestly, equally or unequally, avowedly by di rect taxation, or surreptitiously uy me Indirect taxation which results from inflation of currency and credit and of the public debt. "Government expenditure takes the fruits of the earth and the labor of the people and diverts them from the productive and reproductive enter-, prises of men, from the natural enjoy-j ment of the men, who by their pru dence, foresight and effort, created the wealth and made It available, to the sometimes benevolent and sometimes belligerent, but almost always econonv, Ically wasteful, purposes of govern-: ment. "Government exploits all of us for the benefit, or supposed benefit, of some of us. Yielding to the vague aspirations of men for a better world or a better distribution of the good, things of this earth, government im poses upon all of us ever-Increasing burdens In the effort to benefit vocif erous and organized minorities. I "Each of the executive departments Is concerned to Improve Its service and to discover new and useful fields of service. The entire organization of . the army, of the navy, of each of the departments, Independent offices and agencies of the government, Is de voted to an Important task. Its par ticular function seems of vital use fulness, even necessity. Experts In each are alive to its defects and to the opportunities for usefulness which hove not been availed of. "The secretary, or other head of the department, drawn from private life, perhaps wholly ignorant at the outset of the nature and extent of Its problems, promptly becomes the advo cate yf the policies and demands of his permanent assistants and bureau chief.. It he does not become sncli advocate, he may break down the morale of his organisation and possibly lose the confidence of his personnel. "t'Jilnrl It all Js the pressure of or ganized interest In the constituencies, which are the beneficiaries of specific expenditures, operating upon politi cians, executive departments, senators and congressmen. The strident voice of greed Is heard In the market place find In legislative halls; the voice ot the people Is barely audible. "The fact that each project Is con sidered separately, without reference, either In executive departments or congress, to ways and means of financ ing It, prevents concentration of popu lar opinion on the awful total. All agree that there must be economy, but as each item Is presented all seeming ly agree that that Is not the proper field for e'uiiiiiny. There must be econ omy, hut there must he a merchant marine, whatever the cost. There must he economy, hut the government must .uy high uages to milrond employees und furnish transportation on the rail roads at les than cost. There must he economy, hut the World war sol diers must liMve their bonus. There must tie economy, but Ovll war pen sions must be Increased. There must he economy, hut we must prepare for war, regardless of expense." You, know this is true. The new budget law will help very much this condition, but unless you are Interest ed, continuously, actively, openly In tereated, your money will not be saved. VAUGHAN & GROVE DENTISTS Permanently located In Odd fellow's Building HEPPNER, OREGON DR. A. D. McMURDO PHYSICIAN and SURGEON Telephone 122 Office Patterson's Drug Store HEPPNER, OREGON F. A. McMENAMIN LAWYER Office Phone Main 643 Residence Phone Main 665 Roberts Building HEPPNER, OREGON S. E. NOTSON ATTORXEY-AT-LAW Office in Court House HEPPNER, OREGON SAM E. VAN VACTOR ATTORXEY-AT-LAW , First National Bank Bldg. HEPPNER, OREGON WATERS & ANDERSON FIItE 1XSURAXCE ' Successors to C. C. Patterson HEPPNER, OREGON DeLUXE ROOMS Summer Rates 75c & $1.00 Over Case Furniture Co. WOODSON & SWEEK ATTORXEYS-AT-LAW Masonic Building HEPPNE-lt, OREGON THE -"Foremost OLYMPIC FLOUR We have just stocked a complete line of the "OLYMPIC" products including the regular Olympic Flour Olympic Wheathearts Olympic Pancake Flour Olympic Farina Etc. If Your Home Baking Has Not Been Proving Satisfactory Try OLYMPIC A favorite with all the women who are acquainted with it's merits Phelps Grocery Company j ! J i x: TODAY The Right Time Do you know a better time than today right nowto start saving some money for yourself in a safe place? If you don't save the first dollar, how can you save the last one? 'There is a right time to do all things. Today is the time to start saving. No man ever regrets the money he saves. .Today is YOUR opportu nity, don't paos it 1 y. First National Bank Heppner Ore. 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