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Show Rurninatin S Roundabout y In which Kuminutor proposus to ('.renin a lot, tliink a little us necessary, scatter n few bouquets bou-quets while t heir objectives are still above the sod to enjoji them, nnil fire a hot-shot now and then while said Kumlnai or can enjov seeing the spark.- fly. A half-hour orgy of midnight racing up and down Main street, with horn honking and brake.-, screeching brings no rebuke from our awakened city marshal, to the best of our information But a city-trained newcomer to our community, reluctant to park his car in front of a fire plu.it, dm hie-parks for a moment and gets a bawling-out and a ticket for "rong parking". N'ot the ticket nor the $2 fine, but the way he was told "what was what" with the naturally consequent distress dis-tress to the women of tho party is what burns the man up. The fact that the date on the ticket was "July 25" 20 das postdated from the time of the alleged "rung parking" is still unexplained. One of the first work relief projects pro-jects in Milford put over with federal fed-eral cooperation was the establishment establish-ment of a special dump-ground northwest of town and the concentration con-centration within that area of much of the years' accumulation from every which direction. A causeway-was causeway-was constructed so that a car or truck could drive to the edge, dump rubbish, and turn around, with ample room for this purpose. To anyone interested in a clean town and its surroundings the present condition of this dump ground could not help but be discouraging. dis-couraging. Now-, anyone who would comply with the directions and dump refuse over the edge of the causeway must wade through piles of rotten vegetables and what-not all because of the lack of a little lit-tle attention by town authorities.! If things go on as is, pretty-soon pretty-soon this worthwhile project will be a complete Idisgrace and Milford's dump ground wjH again stretch near, far, wide, and unrestrained. |