THE GARDEN ISLAND, TUESDAY, DEC. 26, 1922 Who Got the Money? Ily MARQUIS JAMES THE :LIHUE SIX r.iTTCT pr Tjnf 1 qr iaiFi51TI BiHP ilTF 1C 'trim ;iFrrjT-Trr.r:Tr7,-.i;-i.-rT.- rxi.Tiymfc ipincrt.rTt-nirignr "iiE'ui'-i' JifBL.i." (From American Legion Weekly) (Continued from last week) This Increase was sorely needed and it Is not half enough. The sec tion now has 150,000 contracts In hand, which is not all it hopes to have by any means. It took two years to audit 15000 of these, selec ting generally simpler and smaller contracts. At this rate it would re quire 20 years to firish the job. At the pace the section is poin now, though it has only 14 years of vcrk ahead of it. Doubling the force in'iBf.t cut this into seven years. Hut if ve wait that long legislation will be necessary to lift the statutes of limitation or debtors will go free of payment and crooks free of jail. The principal Air Service contracts are not In tl hands of the section, tho' a concerted move is gathering to place them then:. At present they are being checked by auditors 'n the Air Service. It is urged that the audit section, which was not con cerned wit'i tho making of any con tracts, should take over the Air Service transactions as we!l as all records of the liquidation piriod dur ing which the j,avrnmenfs losses were greatest. With this additional work coining on tho budget allowed the section leaves much to bo desired. In addition to recovering millions for the Treasury tha contract audit section's work throws a penetrating light in the situation which sur rounded Uncle Sam, the world's greatest, richest ar.d easiest custi mer, when he strode into the mar kets of his citizen:! and spent fif teen billion dollar. It was not t.n idle shopping tour. !t was a buying expedition forced by war, a war which meant life or death, a war which victory alone could stand be tween the keepers of those marts and ruin at tho hands of a German indemnity collector. One would think that common decency, and if not that the instinct .f self preservation, would have prompted those who sold war materials to u.k i fair price and nothing more. Such was not the case and to what extent the findings of tie contract audit .section is evidence that requires no interpretation. The government paid extortionate prices and the contract ors reaped exorbitant profits, ae ev eryone knows ,and that was bd enough. But now we learn trat on top of that, either by accident or by design, Uncle Sam was mulcted for many millions more. Several thou sand contracts, closed and settled, are reopened as if by chance, and 1116,000,000 is found to be due the government, Pick up almost any contract almost anywhere, shake it and the money rolls out tho pub lic's money. "The findings of the contract audit section," said Congressman Roy O. "Woodruff of Michigan in a speech in the House, "form a positive and tangible basis for action by the De partment of Justice." This statement has been borne out by tho subse quent indictments in the lumber and Old Hickory powder .plant sale cas es on evidence produced by the con tract audit section. Mr. Woodruff went on to predict that there ulti mately would be recovered by iue army auditors "$750,000,000 which was wrongfully nud fraudulently taken from the government by those war contractors whose operations have, incident to the audit of their contracts, indicated unmistakable criminal dishonesty." A few typical cases handled by the contract audit section will dis close the nature of some of the re velations that are being made almost dally. Karnes of firms are not giv en because the collections have not been made. A manufacturer had two contracts for the same product. In one contract he was to use government mater ial, in the other contract . his own material. He used government ma terial in both contracts, pocketing the difference of $700,000. The case Is now a subject for correspondence between the audit section and the contractor. A contractor purchasing supplies and delivering them on his own con tracts with the government was re imbursed on the basis of certifi cates made by the government in spector at the point of purchase. The contractor substituted forged certi ficates for the original ones there by increasing the amount paid him by the government. A contractor drew large quanti ties of material from the govern ment to be accounted for in finish ed products. An audit revealed $1, 371.3C8 worth not accounted for. The case is being prepared for trans mittal to Department of Justice. A contractor manufactured copper shell bands from government ma terial.. The contract provided for all scrap should be the contractor's property. The contractor adopted a novel method of manufacture. He rolled the metal into sheets and punched out the circular bands like doughnuts. Each sheet yielded more scrap than it did metal for the bands. A contractor who had been fur nished with material for use on a contract had a surplus on hand when the contract was completed. Ho sold the government its own ma terial for a good stiff price and then purchased it hack for a figure considerably less, thus getting the material for nothing and a good lit tie rest-egg besides. The Story of the Cantonments So much for a few contracts that have come to the notice of the army auflitors. Let us now look at a few other contracts which have not as yet been favored with the atten tions of this clean-up squad. Let us first turn to a group of contract? with whose results every soldier and nearly every citizen is familiar the sixteen great cartonments in which the national army was mobil ized and trained. These cantonments cost $200,032,020, which figure has been subject to most searching in vestigation by the House commit tee on war expenditures headed by Represenative William J. Graham of Illinois. The evidence fills thousands of closely printed pages, and con dudes with the finding that waste extravagance and graft in the con struction of these cantonments have robbed the taxpayers of the United States of $7S,500,000, or an average of close to $3,000,000 per cantrn ment. In other words, what the com mittee figures the sixteen camps should have cost is in tho neighbor hood of $128,100,000. Before we touch on the details of some of the cantonment, pbwder. nitrate, ammunition and other con tracts, it may be wortli while to sketch in a word the means by which the various industries were able to run "corners" on their par ticular commodities and activities when Uncle Sam entered the mar ket as the world's greatest customer, W'hen the war came the cabinet was designated as the Council of National Defense, and under it op erated a large advisory commission which was charged with establish ing contact with the various indus tries. The leaders of all lines were approached. These industries had powerful and compact organizations ard their job was to sell. The gov ernment had no such organizath n, and in the stress of war was able to form only the merest makeshift; and the government's job was to buy. Hence the advantage was with tho seller with his vastly superior organization, and close groups of lumbermen controlled the lumber problems, construction men the con struction problems, steel corpora tions the steel problems; powder plants powder, meat packers meat, leather dc alers leather, and so on. Competition gave away to the clos est combination, directly contrary to the legal economic policy of the United States since the enactment of the first of the anti-trust laws in lSOO. An unorganized and unprepar ed government stood at the mercy of an organized and prepared series of industrial groups; a war was on. we had to take what wo could get; there was no way out and there you are. While official criticism has been visited upon those in tho govern ment service who handled the can tonment construction, which the Gra ham committee says cost the gov ernment $78,500,000 more than it should have, whatever the waste, whatever the extravagances and fraud, whatever the unreasonable concessions wrung from the United States by an organized industry, in this instance tho fact remains that with some few exceptions tho camps were built and built on time. If as much could be said for some of the other war efforts these paf;es would tell a different story, perhaps.. The draft law was enacted in May, 1317. and the government's camp commit tee went to work. It spent ?2u !. 000,000, and tho Graham investigat ors says this $7S,500,0u0 too much. Nevertheless when the first of Sep tember rolled around there stood the camps and the new army had a place to sleep. It was the same army, let It be said, that fought in France without an American fighting plane over its head, though a bil lion dollars was spent to provide such planes; the same army that advanced to battle under barrages allied shells fired from allied guns though the Liberty bond buyers gave up three-quarters of a billion dollars to the shell makers and half a billion to tho gun manufacturers. (Continued next week) TUT Now on Display are More Extensit Than Eil OLUDAI Remembrances for Young Toys, Dolls and Holiday Specialties Undressed Do'Js, Jointed Dells, Character Dolls, Bisque Dolls, Drowsed lions, .lu.i'niu' iitiou.;, Painting and Drawing Books, History Books, Travel Hooks, Ficliou Hooks, Games, Dominoes and Blocks, Checkers, Metal Cou nt mil ion and Wood Toys, Tinker Toys, Iron and Steel Toys, Kitchen Cab inet and Toy Dishes, Tea Sets, Cooking Sets, Metal Toys, Celluloid Toys, Wooden Toys, Animals and Stuffed Toys, Friction Toys, Mechanical Toys, l ull Toys, Musical Toys, Savings Hanks, Marbles, Tops, Horns, Harmonicas, Drums, Top Guns, Air Rifles, Drawing Slates, l'aiuts, Halls, Tree Decora tions, Tree Ornaments, Trees, Celluloid Rattles and Toys, Rubber Toys, Children's Chairs and Rockers, Automobiles, Velocipedes, Hand Cars, Kid die Cars, Harrows, Carts, Wagons, Rocking Toys, Papeteries, Albums, l'eucil Sets, Decorated Christmas Paper, Tags, Cards, Seals, Labels, Christmas and New Year's Greeting Cards and Folders, Christmas Tree Caudles, Paper Garlands, Tinsel, Hells, Artificial Snow, Toy Pistols, Shoo Flys, Soap Blow ers, Teddy Hears, Santa Claus Masks, Telephones, Pistol Holsters and Belts, Cboo-Choo Cars, Jump Ropes, Toy Brooms, Baby Swings, Go-Carts, Bicycles, Garden Tools, Sand Fails and Shovels, Tool Chests, Iron and Steel Trains, Roller Skates, Etc., Etc. Specialties in Grocery Department Burhaius Clam Boulliou, Libby's Boullion Cubes, Whole Clams, Minced Clams, Clam Chowder, Cream Cheese, Edam Cheese, Chili Cheese, Swiss Cheese, Limburger Cheese, Maclareu Cheese, Jack Cheese, Grated Cheese, Kelly's Mango Chutney, Daw-Sen Chutney, American Biscuit Co.'s Crack ers and Cakes, Arnott's Cakes and Cookies, Marshmallow Cream, Anchovies, Anchovy Haste, Caviar, Fish Flakes, Luncheon Uaddies, Kippered Herring, Carlo Herring, Heardsley's Boneless Herring, Rick's Mackarel, Red Alaska Salmon, Findon Haddock, Kippered Snacks, Imported Sardines, Smoked and in Oil, Sardines in Tomato Sauce, Sardine Haste, Rubidoux Tuna, Fan cy Blue Flag Crabs, Red Jacket and Sea Crest Lobsters, Blue Point, Mary laud and Parrot Oysters, Duubar and Boiled Shrimps, Canned Apricots, Blackberries, Cherries, Fruit Salad, Grapes, Loganberries, Peaches, Pears, Pineapples, Raspberries, Strawberries, Dried Apples, Apricots, Currants, Dates, Figs, Peaches, Prunes, Raisins, Rosario Marmalade, 1XL Jams, Kellys Papaia and Pineapple Marmalade, Libby's Peach, Apricot, Straw berry and Blackberry Jam; Pauls Apricot, Peach, Loganberry, Strawberry and Raspberry Jam; 'Thee" Blackberry, Peach and Plum Jam; Assorted Jellies; Marasca Cherries; Underwood's Deviled Chicken and Ham; IXL Liver Paste; Enchilades and Tamales; Pate de Fois Gras; R&R Boned Chicken; Heinz Mince Meat and Plum Pudding; Libby's Mince Meat; R&R Plum Pudding; Olives; Chow-Chow; Relishes; Condiments; National Bis cuit Co. Crackers and Cakes; Pickles. In the Tobacco Section CIGARS: Americus, Alhambra, Burns, Caswell Club, Champagne, Chan cellor, El (.'amino Real, El Dallo, El Palencia, El Tovar, Jean Valjean, La Corregidora, La Insular, Optimo, Owl, Vamp, Van Camp, "J.D.", Van Dyke, Yoga del Rey. CIGARETTES : Camel, Caporal, Capslain, Chesterfield, Fatima, Herbert Tareylon, Home Run, Lit Marquise, Lucky Strike, Melachrino, Milo Violets, Murad, Old Mill, Omar, One Eleven, Pall Mall, Phillip Morris, Richmond Straight Cut, Three Castle. SMOKING TOBACCO: Blue Hoar, Cross Cut, Craven Mixture, Curve Cut, Dukes Mixture, Durham, Edgeworth, Five Brothers, Good Smoke, Her bert Taeyton, Imperial Cube Cut, E. C. C. Mixture, John Cotton,' Prince Albert, Red Indian, Tuxedo, Union Leader, U. S. Marine, Velvet. Pipes, Pouches, Cigar and Cigarette Holders, Cigarette Cases. AND GOOD Tk Imperial Candy Co. Gooqs CHOCOLATES In Decorated and Fancy Boxes Sweet Meat, Milk, Opera, Smart Set, La Supreme, Brazil Nut, Glace Nut, Black and White, Societie Girl, Fruit and Nut, Scenic, Mountain, Imperial Red, Imperial Girl, Caramel Nougat, Swiss Milk, La Rose, Chewing, Milk and Vanilla, Chocolate Cherries, Al gonquin, True Fruit. Almonds, Wain berts, Hazel 0 Assorted Glassies, Sanded Lemon Drops, Asso get Mixed, Spiced Jelly Hearts, Bun ton Baked Beans, Spiced Jelly Drop ed, Cinnamon Balls, Peanut Squares, Almond Top Chocolates, Tingaling C colates, WTalnut Nougatine, Dusty RI colates, Honey Nougat Chocvates, LI Special at TWENTY CI 20c JUMBO JELLY BICJ A. B. GUM DROPS Drinkable Things, Appleju, Budweiser Beverage, Diamond Apple Juice, Creme tails, Cliquot Club Ginger Ale, White "Phez" Loganberry Cocoa, Chocolate, Beverage, Wielan "A" Cider, Mart de Menthe, Marti Ginger Ale, Rooi Rock Ginger Al Juice, Pinectar, Coffee, Tea. IN THE SHOE New Lines of Mens, V Shoes Jus OUR MEAT MARKET is in r By every Arrival of he Lihue Store Kauai's I Hi