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Show I I I t i THE CITIZEN situation Mr. Mellon was enabled to announce a reduction of $350,000,000 in the estimates and it is now evident that a continuance of the policy of close economy, reform of the loose purchasing methods in vogue and other sensible and businesslike improvements introduced by the director of the budget have brought results which can not but be gratifying to every taxpayer. While there is little comfort in the presidents letter for those who asserted that promises of economy were mere campaign talk, there is much food for congratulation among citizens who took Mr. Harding at his word and now find .that his promises are being redeemed even more amply than it was hoped or expected they could be in the first year of his scenes shows how he D.jg bow in amateur theatricals 'JL Laura Rewbush produces child brain The Childrens Jf 0f the Table Round. L modern femininity, Penrod strict aversion to bare legs, Jlly when his upper trunks are mlsable remnant from dads last Penred flannel underwear. So uries into the dressing room fading lady and Jumps into a is red pair of underwear that our sizes too large. ' about the time that Queen Round is mak-- f tere of the Table most beautiful speeech begins to slip and humorous ; )ar We Tl Dd bei 5J . Pen-mholst- ery de-Th- w cai ridicule of Maurice Levy, jl for the hand of his lady fair, matters, and a general licates ensues, during which the curtain P down. og e ( tli So e tkels d to able aBrry in the role of Penrod the most creditable and performance of the year in give roduction. pr i ate in PI eo MILK FED 8HOE8. inistration making good. stirring events of one kind mother have temporarily divert-- e public eye from the adminis-n- s program of economy and ef-it becomes apparent that the listration has not been forget- its promises in this regard. Ltdent letter to Hardings . Gillett, conveying the infor-- n that the administration ex-t- o effect an aggregate reduc-i- n et government expenditures for seal year of 1922 of $439,000,000 stifying ber of leather so-call- ed evidence that the . pros- et forth by the president and tal Dawes is being faithfully car-oThe fact that estimates indicate an expenditure of $90,-- ut Boots and shoes, like their wearers, get tired and need a tonic. Leather to sudden atmospheric subjected out rapidly. During wears changes winter the leather and stitching of a good pair of boots could support a weight of about 1,000 pounds to the inch, without ill effects. In hot, dusty, summer weather, however, the pores of the leather and the stitching, being particles parched and dry, the flint-likof dust eat their way into the leather, cutting it in all directions. One of the best methods of preserving footwear in dry weather is the use of fresh milk. As the milk is rich in natural grease, the pores and interstices of the leather are fed and nursed back to a normal life. By increasing the pliancy of the leather, dust will not penetrate. Instead, it is kept on the outside, where it can be easily N also, it appears, made of compressed paper, and the public takes it for real leather because it has its color and grain; moreover, most of these articles have been Impregnated with a chemical product which gives the odor of leather. Nor is that all. Many neckties of knitted silk are in reality paper, and the German chemists have succeeded in imparting to them the than was estimated last demonstrates conclusively the get together meeting held at time, at which department were lectured on economy and ad to reduction of expenses, was event. recalled that Secretary first estimates for the fiscal 011922 aggregated $4,550,000,000. General Dawes took hold of the fill JU8T SO. You be na cant live your, - own life. Huh? The butcher, the baker ana the landlord keep butting in. A literary critic says poets are born. Thats the unfortunate part of it. &,llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllliaillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll!!llllllllllllllll' Crystal Hot Lakes Its SOMETHING entirely new warm a wonderful auto ride to Crystal Hot Lakes. South on paved State Street to the point of the mountain. Then but a moment to the west and in plain view of the State Highway, are the lakes. Ball grounds and luncheon pavilion adjacent. being hot. Plenty water and no lack of deep. Fed from mammoth hot springs, the water runs in and out constantly over the firm sandy bed so that it is always pure, clean and sanitary. You can rent at bathhouse and a suit for thirty-fiv- e cents Swimming Till 11:00 p. m. South on State Only minutes from Broadway forty-fiv- e e r4iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMaiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiaiiiiiiiiaiiaiiiiiiiiiiiaiin llllllllllllllllllllllilllllilllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII! he linn boon Mr. and Mrs. Newlywed, in fitting up their apartment, will do well to scrutinize closely the furniture they buy, and especially any carpets made in Germany, says the New York Tribune. It is reported that many carpets coming from Germany are made of paper and the imitation is so perfect that it nnd re-decor- Main' Street lied nnd Im now nt your nervlee. ART PHOTOS wiped off. MADE OF PAPER IN GERMANY. OTilcox fetubto 122 South less itful objects i are of sliallow st un softness of silk, so that at a distance one is easily deceived. 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