thfihlahniftadlanl. LI» Il-K-fiifiafkthb lumen. agar 1hr. _ 1t u most regrettable can“ QQQunnIQIIIIOIIII iVI-III IOIIIZDCIJUOZIQIIIHQ“ :1 Y." (leIveIel) ll llwnnee- all IGIO.D ILLI- > “i THFHRSDAY, AUGUST _24, 1922 turbances should hayeuocc-urt at the Hurray liar-bur“ "beefing. preventing a full and freemdlscns- sion of the matters at issue be- tween parties. It appeiri" from the published tcports ‘ihilf-‘bnllf and P Consprvstive 251i?- ‘rnz BYE/ELECTIONS ' The stage Is now set for )4 ls quite trufthat the govern- menh expended this alumni. during candidates and other npql sitar reed in condemnation of thepBell I whenthcy lnariisndooosotnuab Itiyondoroothoaplnlofl oupnonsdby Ilooelvnb ,.DIGOQU. lam. u.» a Blunder ‘mama - ‘ A $5,$6, ‘A Supreme A inQualitu and Style Jola’ sfore; - sas. conisrmz s co ., l nouvncnL -_~==—._~-.=;r .Fiia Sale All shades in stock, sold at half price. $1.50 to $1.75 shades for 75c. 3 light fixtures, com- plete with shades $7. 2 light fixtures, com- plete with shades, $6. 8; Mclsaaci 8r Sons Ifil Queen Strut! Phone 722-J. ' ierl confidence. that abyss-elections; the candidates, were I regularly nominated ybsterday iand the issues befor .he electors i.” d", and y,“ “mum Tbejtbe expenditure was neither a de- ificit nor a debt. Wftb that amount éelcction is iqrbhe session only, ‘fand sifiar as the winning or Ion-g! of seats is concerned. Willi-i ‘sever the result may be. the Bclii igovernment will still have a in lority and will still be Ih a pool ltlon. for one session at‘ least. t0 carry out it's policy In It's own‘ way whether that way be for the good or the ill of the province. iTbe ‘byeelectious. therefore. or ivery largely" the passing of a vote ‘of confidence or want of confid- [ence in the Boll government, i If the people In the vacant dis-i tricis are satisfied thaotbe Bell? igovernment Is worthy of contInu-j it ha‘: acted ltruthfuily and honourabiy v with- tine people. that it has kept m the‘ wrest of it's ability the promises ;ymade before the election, that It's- iborrowing indefinite sums jmonay without giving any account lof It to the people. they will vote’ for the government candidate. " tlieve that the it's pre-eleciion pro-- Boll government has broken imlar-s; that practically everyihlngi git has done since coming . ipower has been In direct onpoatfl -liinn to it's professed pollrv; that! BINDER TWINE Buy The Best -“Silver Leaf" Brand Guaranteed 550 feet to the. pound and every Hall guar- anteed w give perfect satis- faction. *2 Carloada of this brand. We are P. E. island Argo-Ills "/'fhe Brantford Cordage 3**°'**niakera of the " T" '—'*=br:inil of T hf‘ a 7 * ' ia '73- . - Oal Wholesale .in-'I Retail [f n hllcuriui- & 00., ma. ill 1 Ci ful A New 1 ' Su- EASTERN A I??? mrslm" o. a oovssuos emote“ It I s. m. and every Saturday Wednesday trips an vi. l ‘I0 a. m. Thursday. F‘ aliw“! "l!" r0 to lanai? niTURm-Lu a Huston M "I" ‘IVMI Tim!) for Eutport, l FAR! 010.00 - l! llltiln notification Is‘ made ‘i, and friends. rather than lh the in-z I w; will su 'ort the Conservative can-f it's present road policy which It; violently opposed when In opposi-g _lion is being carried out in the: interests of contractors. hstzfiers‘ iterests of rihe province, then theyi . . glidaic . ' T record of the Bell govern-, hi. for three years ls before the peoplc. They know how 2hr Pub’ lllc Accounts have been cooked to, 5 show a surplus that never exist- -eil; they know that the Bell gov-f at it's [compelled to provide for ‘interest. ornmt-nt. last session was -- on $200,000 more than yas paid ‘In iiois; they know that llotwilh-i iivumiihg the claims that the déb' inns been reduced and a siurpitis] produced yearly the debt of the! confession, increased by 3200.000. In addition to the enormous in- crease caused by the expenditures on the roads of which no ‘ac- cuunt has over been given. Every elector in ‘he provlnceknowg the pro-election promises made bylhe Liberal they know how these promises have riot ‘only hcen broken but shamelessly ile l riled; they know that from the candidates; day the Bell government came in- to power tlll ihepresent campaign the Bell government has. through It's press and its representatives, curried on a deliberate campaign tor deceiving and misleading the v people. _ i Knowing sll these things, with the record plainly before them in the Public Accounts. in the Lilie- ral press and by the mouths or their exponents. tlie electors have a clear duty Io perform, a duty to themselves and in the province. a duty to futuro generations of clec= tors and representatives ‘and a warning to all politicians that. henceforth the country's represen- ihilvos shall be expected to deal llflflflllfllbly‘ with those who elect them. DELIBERATE DEGEPTION and over again the deliberately misleading statement that the‘ Arsenault ‘governmont..;ha,d.,_ dilrlhs the uuhrmuhuurqr can; last year] a ‘Emmi passenger stumars fdq for momma. mu Ind mm 266,000" Willie; statement ls abso- .*_‘ the time a ions government bfll‘ lths taxes for were always ipollcy‘ In increasing the taxes and. “"5 be Arsanault for wharves autumn. When tlieBeil government came iinio power it summed up all the mentioned. government had purchased the supplies for the year. including coal for the vari- buildings. ‘lplies for thorough repairs to Pal-l iconwood Hospital. creosoted and bridilis. teachers’ salaries to date. work on ,ros'du and bridges and in short. all elthe supplier for the current year. - (Moreover they had not collected- the year as these received during the ‘BKDGDIHUITCI for txe eight months; [and called it a deficit. taking no ‘clock In what. hail been purchased quite true that the expenditure was vouched ifor by the provincial auditor. But III} lum~ ofzaccouni of it's expenditures with- out taking stock of what the ex- u. Oli the other band. they bo- I""""“P*- "ml clal Auditonnot for an account or The Pllrint has .-mehréu our in utriéh rolled. up“; uanFu amply-nature: hnyNi-suujriie pendiiures had purchased. would by such showing be hopelessly But this is not all. not even the worst of this 8253.000 "deficit." The government asked the Provin the eight months transactions. but for the amounts expended during the eight months. The Auditor gave them what they asked for; overnment and there seenu. no reason to doubt that the troubio arose from the same cause which aroused the indignation-meetings of two years ago. The deception practised upon the people, the trebled taxes. the dirty indem- nity Grab. are evidently not yet forgotten? But even the men who looted the "empty" treasury to cram their own pockets are entitled to a bearing! Let them proclaim their own supreme merits and rail. against the "bad Tories“ to their hearts content. lt is not now the Conservative Government that Is now In the dock! They are under the gravest indictments. They are charged with obtaining power by false pretences. decept- ion and fraud and with gross ab- use 0f the power so pained. Let them h; heard; let them ..piead "Not, Gulliy" if they will and make qood their plea if they can. Sure- ly they need a better defence than to proclaim themselves "the Bgst the “mount and gull . wltrthei-or nota person's taxes are _ M ‘H Govfl-"mnm" naiil. Boiler carry out their pin- flll hfilld- All)’ 591""!!! 6°71‘ mlses of economy. dispose with ‘ "h uiwlnai and expensive offi- ln Charlottetown giving au ‘m BM by a“ means ‘et them be "inln and leave the coIIeclinK heard! Their defence may be led- lous, boresomo, nauseating, bui give them a ‘nearing. Let It be a falr subject of debate in the pith. lit: ‘ti!!! and at the firesides. is the Bell Government the best we have ever had, or the worst we have had In the past quarter of a century’! What Government before ever so deceived the peo- Dl". broke its must solemn pled- ges, taxed the people, insulted and lordcd it over the people? Wha! government ever before he could not. do otherwise. The in . cit - I ti n are given-to the Audi-i “we n a w llore denied the rzght of the peo- .Dle to reprnaentatioti in’ the Leg- ilniention of using his figures ‘Ollfllalufe, Vining"! the law o‘ people. The figurasfland to do so? tor in this way with the deliberate dacalva the were sproad over the Patriot's .froni page in‘ caprtai lgttera with} the deliberate Intention of deceiv- ing the people. and the Patriot, al- though ii knows better. has rte-- peated them over and over again for the deliberate purpose of de- And yet the people are not deceived. they know calving the people. ‘all. the tricks and all the deccir lion that have been attempted. Anll even with this the actual deficit ‘as shown by the Auditor's statement was only 813734-131 In- . i i province has been. by their own stead of 3353-53313 B! l0 "BQIIQM" i I ly misrepresented by the Patti!!!- 4 THE COAL STRIKE The Nova 8-6715! coal strike is passion and the only result will be the loss of probably some mil- lions of dollars to thucountry. all increase in the cosliipf living which the strikers must share with the rest of us without a dollar's worth of advantage to them or to us. inallly of destructive strikes will probably be realized only all" a period of starvation and want on strikes. if only vindication were learned from the present sfrlkfi In the Nay. schtiu ‘it-i-Iuesrthe mil- ha... thht it will cost woitid My. been well invested: lt-Flfilfiglhiflfl Is that ‘every foreignes-of native who shevlsm in ihIs country should be at once deported as an unrleslr-- able citizen. l-lad this been done when the arch agitator there de- fled the authorities this strike would iiot haveE-mhterlallzed. This lesson also we shalLlonrn eveni- uully blil-pfiilllhiyxflfifll’ infinite in- iury has been done. THE HARVEST The frequent rains of the few weeks. accompanied as they hail sonar; ‘y b?“ With . bill! '1' .- i;- ‘ ‘. ‘a winiisa‘ hep’; flap/propagating‘ e m ‘dupi- sge however. -we_ ‘ii-e informed. ‘i1 past he Pairiqtaad not |s__ great n’, at first, lured. ruin-aili- The absolute foolishness and crlm the part of those who prerrlltllfllfi attempts to sow sedition and Bol- ye have such evidence of its inex. ut-rir-ni~.e, its biunderlng lflfiflpa. y? What government ever be Sir, — “f-‘armers’ shore-letter “Somebody Blundered" in a re- cent Issue of the Guardian appear-I to have riled the Patriot's editor somewhat. l-le silt-er does not know which ha should. or pretends not to know, that affairs in the Provincial Tax Depart t are not conducted as they sh uld be. But the many persons who have received threatening notices de- manding payment of taxes already paid. and those upon whom the sheriff has called with a document authorizing him to levy ou their goods and chattels. and in default of‘ payment take and deliver them up to the nearest lailor. while all the while they held receipts show- ing their taxes to have been paid; these people know only too well that somebody blunrlercd. No wonder ir" tries to bluff the people seeing that be was a party to the appointment. at a large salary. of a. chief c'erk In the tax office. aa- sessorend independent LuIIP-‘or. three-in-one official to run that da- partment with the results men- tioned abnve. Oh yes: he is rllert but tlivse who have had to suffer surh inriisniiies. and their frirnris m: well. are also riled A nice slate of affairs, spendinz the peo- ples monev to pay an official who dries not know enouxh to tell In the hands of Mr. Newbt-ry, a south-man who hna mnnazed ibP business for many years to the satisfaction of all. l am. Sir ANOTHER FARMIJIL WATCH IT GROW Sir,——The‘ following dispatch ap peared recently in various papers as far east as P.E.i. and us; far west us Alberta. It emauaierl from Montreal, and was sen‘. as a "special" of date July 25tb:-— MONTREAL. July ‘lulu. Thatl the pimple of this province are' drinking considerable less provinces under the system, appears on figures lust Issued. Total sales by the liquor- the i What KOi/ernmeni ever’ before {shut clown rpublic utilities commission of this province for] Jho past year was valued at $15.- ; 1000.000 whiledor Manitoba. with I ia population of only-one fourth that of Quebec. sale of liquor iu| ithe same period totalled 812.263.- !,>l2. In British Columbia, with a] likellmpulation of the mussel mud plant ai Hiidgcll about one Jifth, lhatof Querbecanrl where the liq- innd the Dalton Sanitarium? whmluor situation is much the same Rfivernment here or elsewhere in lildseshln of the Supreme Court. to provide a place for one of its own members? What government F0 lezialated the taxpayer's mon- ey into the pockets of minisierh and their supporters? What gov. ernment ever before so. ylgglgcted "If!" Public duties. or maintained for years a feud and scandalous quarrel between its own mem- bers? ‘ Thane are exclusive ear- marks 0f ‘he Bell Government. Let the electors search the records of all our governments. Liberal and Conservative for 25 “yearn Past and see If they can find a parallel for the record of this w. called Bestct Governmental it cannot be found. But l0! them have a hearing! Let thcm tell ‘zow wise and good and unselfish tncy nrg flllr] how $001M!" and Wicked are the “had Tories." Some Ihiugs they may W789i to mention. but hear whuf. "WY have to say. Some Govern. merit or httier- not the Bell gqv. arnmenh- caritlad Canada, and Prince Edward island through the 3""! Wnl‘. gave us the Car Ferry Ind Ibroke our ‘winter chuckles, saved our representation In Par- Illment from further reduchpm ""4 l0! for the Province an add. mien of 8100.000 for all lime to our federal lubnldy; Th, "m, w" then auspicious for inst-gaging m‘, pay of membsrs supporting the government. The revenue had been increased 25 per cent without tax- "II "to people. Later, the war 0v". the cost of living enormpug. Iy Increased, and stlll the "bad Tories" dld not illbflllgjhg mam "fflf Pay or iirnpou a pointy-l, I ,. . power in raising the bowed heads of the tall srain which wentdown under lthefipressura of rain and wind. There may be some dam- aited straw but the grain is ripen- ing nicely and, ‘although there any ba more difficulty ill harveiF 11g It. there will be little setiia1.;,|,>yd_ guy,“ 1mm“ "m" m u, of grain, I'll (Fanatic ever Imposed a pfQ ‘"1013! iwll~ tax? What govern- ment beforr- created a mum“ ever before In this Province evcr' 11s here, total sales for the year‘ reached 814.000.0110." The Charlottetown Guardian. us, ually careful and reliable, publish} cd this dispatch under tho head- line “Quebec drinking less Liquor than any Dry Province." The writer of this letter see-l fng the dispatch decided in lu- vesiigate the facts regarding Manltoba,. the only "dry Pro- vince" named Mr. J. N. Maclvean, chief inspector, writes that the "xact amount of liquor (Including beer‘ sold under prescription In Manitoba in the year ending 31st of January. 1922. s-as 13195.29 gal Ions which fizured at $4.00 a quart [Quebec price) would bring In $291,084 instead of $l2.263.912. This figures out at. more than 4000 per cent of the actual! ‘How did such a whopper come to‘ be told and retold? ll. seems a Calgary paper stur- ted It by saying that Manitoba has sold on prescription 510.993 gallons or 492.707.7i gallons too mflYlY Bcfwrdlng to the [official fig urea. A Saskatoon paper turned this IMO llllafts by multiplying by 6 Instead of 4 Hills again adding 59 PM cent. The Montreal dis- imtcher taking this at its face value multiplied this enormous fiiz "To by 54-00 ilivlnz tho result of $122631"; lumping DPBI‘ and all Ht Quebec's price for Whiskey, namely $4.00 per quart ‘bottle. Thus Intentionally or otherwise dry KMIUIIIOUTR drink bill is made to appear almost. equal to wct Qll6b6c'_s wlib four time sihe po- pulation! Nexti 3 I am "Sir. etc. , J- 0- NWIMI‘. Gun’: beqflethry. Social Survico Council _of Jclailllttikii. PB"! r5corda..l..oi ‘them ‘hair; the k001i "thing that.- the government which claims lo be “The Best" has done, one oasis-In thwbarveu 1188011- of H1811’ doingg, W9 d9- sire-that they may have full cre- dit for It. Lei. what. the Conserva- tlvewGovernment did in its time- a time of great difficulty, because (rf the War-iv also ‘be . ldiriy/ con- sidered. The Bell Government is the prisoner in the dock. 1t‘ may avail little That other govern- monis- _h_ave_ __ dope better than it has’ doiio. fie! the electors try. the Government fairly. on its merits and demerits, and may ‘Ourifafome these Pmvllli ' i=8. the sea naturallkash for RED want very heat- ROSE u uusrnurll n!nswlltsuuslcmlluuvsuursw REDROSE obi S TE Qgggtea“ Klondike Gold Rush IIas Silver Jubilee ‘Twentydlveyears ago. July 17. events in the history of the West-— ‘an event which profoundly influ- enced the history of the entire PaciflcCoast from tae Arctic Oc- ean southward. lt was the arrival at. Seattle of the steamer Portland oi whom carried ashore a "poke" of gold from the Klondike, a tribu- rary oi the Yukon Just eight of the Alaskan boundary. That gold was material “proof that rumors 'of the great strike made by Blll Cormack in the preceding summer true, and it started a stampede surpassing that of Lao California argonauta half a century earlier. immediate eflects were almost magical. not only in Seattle; but all along the Pacific Coast, and they were felt in the East and even in foreign countries. The free silver campaign of 189B had turned the minds of the people to gold alonu with silver. Hosts of people were ready to grasp at any chance oi bettering their shrunken fortunes. WIIIQFIA vague belie! pruvailed ma‘ ‘uwmos’. cities an ordinance forbids the than are the people of the "dry" aska was a land of vast,- untouched uttering of [he sidewalk‘ n mus, PTQFCFHWM‘ wealth, and it hadbeea supported be admitted ma,” compared with by LAG sight of steadily Increasing quantities oi gold brought. back from Forty-mile, near the Yukon. [and b)’ We "911 lode dwelopmcmsdooklbg neat. As for the parks, no around Juneau. A New Land of Gold ‘in a day hard limes were for gotten. all minds were on Alaska. which was regarded as a mcrc ex . Lention of the Klondike, and thous- ands set out. though the short Northern Summer was nearing its end when they arrived. Dawson in a Iew months became a great. hustling city Wild all the character- istics, good and bad, of a pioneer mining town. The north-bound stream grew lu 1898 to a might)‘ flood, which narrowed but unbroken stream when it climbed the precipitous Cliilkoot pass to the lakes which ioriii the heat. waters of the Yukon. Every Pacific Coast port outfitted Klon- dlkers and ran steamers to Skag- usy, Portland taking a band _wit.i the old steamer Elder. The flood oi‘ husky manhood was made up of From Dawson the gold-seekers scattered down the Yukon and up every tributary. They landed far- ther west and penetrated the mighty Mount McKinley Many took ths“sea_ route; to_St_. t.lie Yukon, and some ol them stray- ed up [.19 beach oi'_Beariiig Sea to the Seward {Mfinflllj They. found the Koyukuk, Cpo ' ‘inlet and in profusion in the each sand at Nome, which supplied characters and-plot for t ‘r llcx Beach's "Spoilers." Tlioy [glut-z tpundi-inuch more-wopperwh he l‘ er of that ‘ niinitl, coal in great beds iii the -i-.—-s-i-— r sumo region. many seepage-s of oil, Le; l)", elem,“ who p; '3}; oatl iertliu valleys where any. i0 you, calmly Cami-pg égyQh‘ .iln'g would Brow-land where 2i. hou days compensated for short Respecting History .. 1t seemed that the history of our Western States was to be repeated in Alaska-that the placer miner was to belolloweil-by the lode miner. he by the seeker for ihaser metals and other minerals, they by the homesteador, farmer and cat.- ever biased the way, and they by the merchant. banker, manufactur- er, trader, .1\il’road, until wall- rounded cornniiinities formed a prosperous SIQIQ.» That was the future fornflaaka that was fore- usiif decision! soon by the Klondiltors of 1897. on __ whose trail followed the stamped- » _l-lt\"‘€“m.ddh.e _. ab,‘ RWTQQZQT)" h n» occurred one of the most. dramatic bringing sixty-seven miners, each, Wflfeipicked up. This, theshame-iaceil Io a thin PARKE. Michael's andllver steamers up gold-on tho Monook, the Tananihi tlernan, for whom the miner has| RED ROSE COFFEE h 1m; Just- aeliles clear a: ionic View iuuu Q i FOR‘ TIDY STREETS A paragraph ‘has been going the round of a certain number of pap- ers to t-ie effect that a party of Am- erican tourists promenadlng on a Parisian boulevard the other day, eating a popular confection which] comes wrapped in paper. One, hav- lug finished the delicacy, I the bit oi paper away. A moment later be was tapped on the shoul- der and turned to confront-a smil- ing genclariue. The officer pointed to the paper lying on the sidewalk and suggested by signs that it be threw |visitor did. The officer then poli- tely escorted the visitor to a near- by receptacle for rubbish whore the wrapper was deposited. whereupon |ihe niinion of the law bowed 10w fand departed. The Paris auUiorltles_ baveregard even for "a mere scrap oi paper," when it is In the iwrong place. On either side of the iAtlanlic it would be a novel ex- ipericnce to see a police officer‘ {snow similar regard for the ap- pearance of the streets, and yet in European cities, towns over here ‘are not tidy. We are not so much concerned with keeping the streets ‘one seems to mind how they look, icxccpt the force of mcn who are ‘kept busy “picking up" after ihc icareless crowds Iiavc departed. N0 irloubi the general zibseiice of rec-i ‘cptacler! for rubbisa contributes ‘In: lSUlnC degree to the untidincss, but! Ttlie greatest need is the education ol the people in habits oi order and iregartl fur the appearance of public places. An Ontario exchange in complaining of the carlessncss of the public in this respect in Cilll- ‘ladinn cities very iruly remarks iers of 1898. Picture in the mind the immense progress that was made in twenty-live years in Calilornia from 1849, in Colorado from 1859. in Monlano, lilaho, Oregon and Bri- tish Columbia lroni the curly six- ties, and we can realize that [.19 hopes of the Alaskans were; justi- fied by experience in other fron- tier countries. But ii blight soon iell, on the progress of the great North- Lanti. The land laws were so ill atl- iless contests resulted and caused lihe Noyes scandal at Nome. The |Goverument was far away, know illtile oi the country, apparently lcnred lcss, yct. mus’. settle all con~ tests. - I hfismanagemeni That Killed When demands for new land laws and for government in the North. linsteatl of in Washington, finally won the attention of Congress, the cry for conservation also went up, and progress halted during a long; struggle , between those ' who would develop and those who would cou- serve to the point of stifling enter-i prise; When the miner was no longer permitted to own what be had duiz. the farmer ionbltldcn to rchpyyvhat. he had sown, dishearten- best defence the Bell Government 3""! I213‘!- "ld . "XPMIBIVQ 8PM!!! ed pioneers flocked back to “tne can museum! then decide for meadmli‘ "M" ma" IAQIIBM" Stator." and population shrunk themselves, their cliiltlren and "w"? might [aneu- backio the proportions of the days the Province. if there is one before the Klondike was discover- ed. hemorseiul, but still obstinate and Ignorant, the Government built‘ a railroad from the sea to the Tan- anaudiut it would not permit pro- dhctlon to make traffic for it. A law for leasing coal land was passed, but d}. was adapted to a well- develpbed populous country in the old world, not. to a. pioneer, almost uninhabited country In the far North, and the Government had to mine coalfor locomotives which hauled trains without traffic on a railroad lhTOIIKJ a country bursting with, riches which it fonbade man to touch. Alaska stlil waits for the dead baud of Pinohotism to be llmd. _.. . .>4 14-4- Tho Oldoni insurance Agency II a belF-m egg needed. l5 {Dilly Sdectissséior w é (infill Readers From the w. s. "Louooe collection THE THREAD OF GOLD . They are poor That have lost nothing; they are poorer far - .. Who, losing, have forgotten; they most poor 0f all. who lose and wish they might forget This life is one, and in iie warp and woof There runs a thread of gold that glitters fnir. And sometimes In the shows most sweet Where there are sombre colors. it is true ' That we have wept. tlircnd is gold, We would not have it tarnish; lat pattern But 0h! this us turn Oit and look back upon the wond- rous web. And when it shlneth sometimes we shall know,_ That mcmory- is possession. —Jean ingelow APART Thou goefit .th_v way and I g0 miiie Apart. yet not afar» 4 Oulv a thin vci-I hangs between ' The pathways where we are. "God keep watch ‘tween thee and me". This is my prayer He Iooketh- thy way. mine. And keep us near. —Julia A. Baker He looketh that notliini: so much spoils the natural beauty of a locality as the presence of litter. and especially of discarded paper. The city of Boston imposes a ilnc of $5 for violations of its anti-litter regula- tions, aiul the city of New York is at Lie present. conducting a cam- puign, employing 8,000 juvenile In- spectors for the purpose. largely drawn from the Boy Scouts, to keep the streets and parks free from refuse. An appeal to the pub- lic should be sufficient to effect the improvement desired. Citizens must cooperate with the authorities for the proper enforce- ment of the laws which are made ior their own personal enjoyment and convenience. llabits of tidi- ness, like all other habits, are more easily acquired by the young streams trickling from every statclupged in me conduit,“ may and. and for liiiii reason a useful cru- snde on behalf of tidy-streets and other public places, might he ef- fectively carrled on by parents and tcachers.—Acudlu Recorder. i-{om RADIO BAKES BREAD Ont in Muncie, lnd.. recently food show experts baked a loaf nf bread by radio. The actual baking was done by an electric heater. but the heat was controlled, turned of! and on by radio. Mlnurd‘: Lint-sent for Burns, Etc. ._.___...._.. _¢.-__ . fi L088 comes Nor FROM 1's: FIRE, ITSELF, BUT FROM THE LACK OF INSURANCE Our Fire Insurance petioles al- low you to go ahead with your plans, even If your business or your plant burns down. Ccmpiotl financial protection is accorded you. ‘Don't put it eff till the (In happens. ‘ ‘ Insure NOW. Iiyiiilmtii 8: Co. Liil. . ‘L ‘L. naurm orll ‘r ifilqoil.‘ i