Tuesday, May, 9, 1922 THEHEPPNER HERALD, HEPPNER, OREGON PAGE FIVE FOR GOVERNOR A vote for Senator Charles Hall, of Marshfield Coos Bay, Oregon, is a direct vote for Lower Taxes If elected, Charles Hall will put into operation the Illinois System,' namely, 10 commissions to run the State's Government, instead of the 70 commissions now functioning 1 He Stands for a Clean American Business Administration r -Paid Advertisement Where Your Taxes Go How Uncle Sam Spends Your Money in Conduct ing Your Business By EDWARD G. LOWRY Antnar "Washington Clou-Cm." "Bnnto and Financial Snm," te. Contributor FollHeal and Economic Article to Laadinc Pariodlcala and n Wrlur rf inir Anthoritr ma UM National Oovammant'a Bailnaw stoUwda. , THE HEPPNER HERALD ONLY $2.00 A YEAR Coming to The Dalles & Pendleton Dr. Mellenthin SPECIALIST in Internal Medicine for the past eleven years DOES NOT OrERATE Has Your Car a KNOCK? 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 .... ZEROLENE 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 GOcts per Gal. Over 5 Galloais 57 cts per Gallon WHY PAY MORE Try Vs For Service Fell BROS. Repair Shop 1 Block East of Hotel Patrick Hot Drinks-Sandwiches Hit the right spot this time of the year You Get the Best At McAtee & Aihen i 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, n miles from raihoad. Price OInly $20.00 an Acre. $2,000.00 down, Terms on Balance Roy V. Whiteis KELOGG'S SHREDDED KRIIBLES "Whole fct Ready to Eat" No cooking; just a little cream, a bit of sugar and - - - Let's Go. Of course you'll like them Try a package at Sam Hughes Co. Coprrigfet. Wnmrn Mawapannr Union XIX. JUST KEPT GROWING The origins of these antiquated, cum bersome, costly, inefficient pieces of the national machinery that we call the executive departments show how any establishment If well watered with government money will expand and hold together, no .matter how conflict ing and incongruous Its functions. Hardly one of these great business es tablishmentsfor that is what they are was planned. As they are today they just happened. Take the Department of Agriculture, for example, one of the greatest and most complex and wldespreading of nil the departments. It is in closer touch and more directly affects the greatest number of people in the United Suites than any other branch of the govern ment with the possible exception of the post otlice. It began in 18;i!) with an appropriation of $1,(X)0, taken from the patent funds for the 'distribu tion of free seeds and the collection of agricultural statistics by the patent office, then a bureau in the Stale de partment. Now look at the darned tiling. It is all over the place. The title of the department indicates its most Important field of activities, but Its functions have been extended to in clude the whole range of rural indus try and some. branches of administra tion only very indirectly related to agricultural interests. For about 60 years subsequent to the Revolution the general interests of agriculture were left almost entirely to Individual initia tive. Federal activity was confined to ' relatively narrow limits and was mere ly sporadic. Soon after the national government was organized some at tempts were made to establish a board of agriculture ; but neither the first proposal in 1790 nor a second effort in 1817 was successful. Shortly after the Revolution, follow ing the example of Benjamin Frank lin while in England, as agent of the colony of Pennsylvania during the I years I7(i4 to id.), American consms : and naval officers begun the practice of sending home foreign seeds anil cut tings for new crops, and of aiding in the introduction into the United Slates of new breeds of domestic animals. Even such small governmental partict- ' pnticin was, in the beginning, rather , extra-official. j In 18I1G the commissioner of pat : ents, one II. L. Ellsworth, began the ! distribution of considerable quantities j of seeds and plants received from gov ernment representatives in foreign countries; and three years later through bis influence an appropriation 1 of $1,IX)0 was made for the purpose of I procuring and distributing seeds of new plants, carrying agricultural in i vestigatlons and collecting agricultural statistics. This was the historic be ginning of the much-talked-about free seed distribution. Ry an act of congress in May, 1S02, since generally called the organic act, the activities of the government affect ing agriculture were placed under a separate and distinct organization known as the Department of Agricul ture, in charge of a commissioner of agriculture. It did not rank, how ever, with the other executive depart ments, and the commissioner was not entitled to a seat In the President's cabinet. Isaac Newton, chief of the agricultural section in the patent otlice, was appointed the first commissioner of agriculture. Other officers provided by the organic act included a statis tician, a chemist, an entomologist and a superintendent of the propagating garden and experimental farm. The chrysalis was now ready to be broken. In 1SS! the Department of Ag riculture was elevated to the rimk of the other executive department's and its commissioner was made secretary of agriculture with a seat in the Presi dent's cabinet. This was in fjrover Cleveland's administration. In honor of its new rani; a few more f unci ions were ta';en on. But that's enom:h detail. It. kept on growing. Beginning with an appro prhitioti of .SU'OO and two or three clerks, rhe department inid. ir. employees to the number of IL'.i-b, and an apiiroprlatii.il of yi'2,!Ki."i.'i"i;. i'lve years biter the appropriation had grown to If l!l.S.'.r,,s:','j and tie em ployees to );.'J'':. The employees In .May. I'.t'jd, numbered l.iJtts and the appropriation given by congre-s for the fisenl ye.ir V.f'l was .$::i.47.V'.S. The department has Increased Its cost of living in 82 years from a mere $1.niO that Is, $S:i..'i.'! a month to more than $31 .OMI.OHO a year--$'.'.022,-17.:!S every month. That shown as clearly and ns sharply a it can be j shown now trie mgn cost or govern, i merit living affects your own cost of i living. We, you and I, paid out of our av I lugs and earnings every red cent of that Increase from $1.xj0 a year to more than $,'il.0K,iO. It may have been well spent. We probably got a run for our money ; but nobody known, ex cept In a general way. We hava a right to know. It U simply fatheaded Dpfis on our tart not to find out. Will be at THE DALLES, WEDNESDAY, May 31. Hotel Dalles and at PENDLETON, THURSDAY, June 1. St. George Hotel Office Hours: 10 A. M. to ,4 P. M. NO CHARGE FOR CONSULTATION HijijUllu M la I'M, ft Dr. Mellenthin is at regular gradu ate in medicine and surgery and is licensedby the state of Oregon. He visits professionally the more import ant towns and cities and offers to all who call on this trip free consul tation, except the expense of treat ment when desired. According to his method of treat ment he. does not operate for chronic appendicitis, gall stones, ulcera of stomach, tonsils or adenoids. He has to his credit wonderful re sults in diseases of the stomach, liver, bowels, blood, skin, nerves, , heart, kidney, bladder, bed wetting, catarrh, weak lungs, rheumatism, sciatica, leg ulcers and rectal aliments. ! If you have been ailing for any length of time and have, not been get ting any better, do not fail to call, as improper measures rather than dis ease are very often the cause of your long standing trouble, Remember above date, that consul tation on this trip will be free and that his treatment is different. Married women must be accompan ied by their husbands. Address: 336 Boston Block.'fin' neapolis, Minn. i 2-4 TO ilEN'T Four Hundred acres bunch grass pasture with 1 mile of running water through it. About 17 miles' south of Heppner. Call at ranch or address, MATT HUGHES, ltf Heppner, Ore. Be Caretul and Systematic People who pay their bills by check get a reputation for being careful and system atic in their business dealings. Such a rep utation means much in the establishment of credit. It costs no more to pay your money out by check than it docs to use thd hard cash and you have the advantage of having it in a place that is absolutely safe. ' To have money in the bank is of itself a valuable asset in the establishment of credit. And it is possible 1 to practically everyone without one cent of cost. It takes no more money to do business by the checking method than it does by the cash-in-hand method. Wc invite you to open a checking ac count with us. We will help you to make your account a real convenience. First National Bank Heppner Ore. nsTVtttHMM. IIBSEMVIV Heppner Herald Want Ads bring home tho bacon. What Are Vitamines? It is a name used by an eminent English scientist to distinguish the vital elements found in food. If you want Cereals containing Vitamines use Whole Grain Products We have just stocked a full line of Whole Wheat Flour Breakfast Rye Southern Corn Grits Wheat Granules Natural Brown Rice Scottish Oat Meal Phelps Grace Company ry 4 i i r - 1 mi V- if 11 it tit