Show by IS N I LIVE In small town In which there is a In that park ar comfortable On warm dayi those seats are occupied by a con number of most of them 50 or more years of some of them physically The majority could fill Jobs which these days they could have for the I. sit in that park at times to listen to the Almost invariably they turn to the subject of the government owes and their hope for The habit has mastered these They have been fed on a diet of for They expect a perpetual I know many other men in my and In other towns and on farms men of equal age and of equal needs wha are working for the living they want and must They are enjoying life because they work for what they I know farmers of more years than the average of those men in that park who are working long not lone that they and their families may but that the our armed forces and our Allies may be Th-y know the Joy of In this land of it is not well that we should acquire the we should j encourage and practice the desire to to that we may do for i ourselves the things the men on the park benches demand that the government do for DEFINITION OF A REGARDLESS of what Webster to me a bureaucrat is the fel-low for whom I. as a citizen and have provided a and who then feels he can push me be discourteous when I seek n. and be generally He feeds at the public into which I pour and a bit of brief authority has given him a swelled He sees himself as the You frequently find the species holding public of both high and low in from dogcatcher to heads of Important bureaus and departments of the public J They forget that citizens and have thi privilege of i changing HOW MI UK I THE LATE GEN HUGH instituted the method of ing as a means of getting re- i suits It did not Other bureaucratic chiefs have tried the same method of enforcing their and It has not worked for them American people have been masters for the past They do not appreciate being talked to as even in An article on the serious rubber problem by Rubber William M. Jeffers in the February issue of the American Magazine was couched in the language American people understand and His is the method and language which will produce results so far as co-operation by the people is He rather than The American citizen does not stand for SON U R S BE THE PER CENT of his pay that it Is proposed to take out of the worker's pay envelope is needed and will be paid without undue But that is not all he pays If he has a he as an average on all a year s tax collected by the telephone Over and above the state sales if any in his he pays a tax on everything he a tax which and must be passed along by the retailer the transportation The war must be paid and there la no complaint about taxes to pay war bills There is a complaint against the cost of unessential civilian activities of whether they be state or People demand the elimination of such ETCH 1 1 1 1 T I DO NOT HAVE the figures for all but in California the privately owned electric light and power companies pay as taxes a fraction over 28 cents out of each dollar of gross revenue In most other the amount is approximately the The publicly owned utilities carry no part of our tax WE ARE ENGAGED in an all-out but those on the home front have not been disciplined to take as they do in American are more inclined to listen to than they arc to That is the American AT THE LAST Idaho voted every person over 63 years of age a a month pension Now Idaho is trying to raise the six million dollars a year with to do the |