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TR al = % o B R PAG: THREE m@ .. .m BGHAN w""H@" DVERTISES HIS WARES ANDPRICES is NATURALLY A FAIR DEALER A WlLL FIND miSPAGP.‘, A LABOR AND TIME SAVER IN DECIDING HER ORDER Reduction 5. R! President. Harding topl nflgz an March 4 1921, The first complete| fiscal year ' df government husiness| under his administration began ‘on! July 1, 1921, and closg +June, 30, 1922. .The Budget ureau was, created .in_June, 1921, pracl wAlly simultaneously “with-'the>com] ende- ment of the fistal year. The e mated expenditures tentatively sub- mitted by ‘the varlous departments for the fiscal year ‘3922, aggreguted_ $4,550,000,000. The operations of that fiscal year have just closed. By the application ‘of pressnre by. the:: President, exerted ‘through. - the Budget Bureau and with the coopera- tion of the heads of depaftments and d other administrative officers, the-or- 'ex dinary expenditures for 1922-actual-| ly amount -to $3,795,000,000, a re- duction “of -$755,000,000 - from the| figure submitted by the departments| at'the beginaing of-the fscal year. | cember indicated a “deficit for -this same fiscal year-of $24,000,000. How guccessful .the efforts:of the adminis- trdation havé been’in-holding down expenditiires and conserving revente is ‘attested by the fact that instead ot a deficit there was 'a surplus for the year of $314,000,000. .. The fotal’publie debt of the United | States on June 30, 1921, one year\ ago, was $23,977,000,000. This sum | had been reduced on June 30, 1922 to $22,963,000,000, a reduction of $1,014,000,000, ‘The ‘policy of the administration * has been a return to normal condi-| tions in ‘public éxpenditures. How well this has been accomplished is amply reflected by a glance at the ex- penditure figures.of preceding years. The Republican party gained con-| trol of the Congress.in-the elections | of 1918.and came into.power in Con-| gress on March 4, 1919. During the .period the administra- tion was Demotratic and the Congress was Republican, requests of the Demo- cratic executives for appropriations | were reduced by the Republican Con- gress by nearly $3,000,000,000. Appropriations are the yard mck of expenditures. The enforced re-; One Year of Repubhcan Rule Shows Tremendous and Nearly Two Billions in.Public - Budget -Requests. PRESENTATIVE WILL ANA), MEMBER OF HOUSE COMMITTEE fthe flual yeéar ‘1921 -a further reces- ne-t 1922 under 1920 is $3,030,000,000 The first budget Submitted in De- a2 | words, although fregiently charged ¢ with being the spendthrift branch of 52,500,000 FAR PROGRAM READY. ‘Greatest Exposition Ever Staged! in- World” Promised -on Sept. 2 to. 9 of Over Billion‘in Public Debt pen ongress ‘Cuts A score of fairs wnhln a. falr—that fs what the grest "Minnéaota “State,{/ Fair, Twiif Citles, Seéptember 2 to-9; will be this year., In point of enu‘ s and {n qullliy ot R. WOOD (INDF. APPROPRIATIONS 3 ductions 'in appropnauonn and esi- -exhibtt ,uu eg‘h‘ wili tnn«flon mates made a most gratifying. re as anl Inte Xpibition. Wm-e e tion in the expenditures. The pgak|than 260 3 \ more thap' 2,500,009, will be nresented y the biggest and'|’ best _educational fair ever staged in the Northwest. No other fair or exposition staged in _America this - year is offering as much money for prizes and pre- miums as'the Min- nesota State Fair will day to winners in the many exhibits and contests on the program. One hundred and twen- ty-eight thousand, four hundred and forty-nine dollars in ‘prizes is offered by the fair management—about $7,000 more than ‘was offered in 1921, when winners in many contests divided $121,817.00. A livestock show that will .not be excelled ‘anywhere in the country will feature the coming falr.. The fair has offered $59,905.00 in premiums for livestock exhibits. The remarkable in- terest that has ‘been shown in the cat- tle show this year presages the finest collection of animals that has ever graced. a show at the.fajr. So many Lentries have heen. raceiyed by.the man. agement that the mew mammoth cattle barn erected recently at a cost of $600,000.00—and which was thought big enough to take care of the needs lot the cattle.department for years to come—will ‘prove, inadequate to house all of the mlmn.l ‘which will be ex- hibited: Egpecially interesting will be the exhibit ot dafry’caftle. ,No other in- dustry has . wonderful | growth in: racem‘ LSNP years ;as has dal rying. “The stock: ing of -firms with 'purebred dairy ] cattle™”'has 2 of ordinary expenditurés was redplied. in the fiscal year 1919, 318 514,008, '000. The drop to the fiscal year 19 is most, extragrdinary, the total that year being $6,403,000,000. ¥ sion’ brought thetotal down to $5,- 115,927,689, . For .the fiscal year 1922 the tofal, as Teretofore stated, came down to $3,795;000,000. This sum ‘includes $422,000,000. of public debt ¥etirements: chargeable ‘to, .ordi- nary receipts and should. be elimi- nated .from the.$3,795,000,000 in or- der to obtain a figure comparable to jenditure figures- for the ‘fiscal] yeara 1919, 1920 and 1921. The 1922 ‘éxpenditures, therefore, ‘excli~ sive of public debt .retizrements, are $3,372,607,899. The Tréduction of and the reduction of 1922 under 1921 18 '$1,749,319,789. ; Evidence. of the value of the cen-. tralization of ijzre 11 responsi- hlmy in connection “the public appropriations _is furnished in the propr 2 ted for, 1923 " $312 172 252 less than the Budget Bureau requested. In .other the goyernment, in point of fact the Congress appropriated seven per cent. less than the budget estimates asked tor. F . E The people of the Upjted States have just reason 'to be proud of the financial record of this administra- |tion. While other ecountries are | struggling’with luge qencus in their: budgets and are burdened with enor- mous taxes- and staggering puhlic a raté that scrub’ debt, the United States hds shown alaninials. are _be: | surplus for zhkfiml year just closed |¢ and at the game time, ucompllshed Ly :i;’ael:ghgzt lefi:rtkwuh That pm | most gratif¥ing ' in its Pub- | perity follows -:the * dairy - €QW -Zwas lic debt. £ 3 proved; o mmeru and breeders’ m i lhture rebels against heavy | Much illness in summer is caused by overtaxing the , stomach. Change your diet—and keep snnppy m mmd and muscle! Kellogg’s Corn Flakes with cold mil& and fresh frurt are wonderful for the hot days—for breakfast, for lunch, for supper or for “‘snacks.’” They the stcmch and supply the nourishment the body needs. For children, for the workers and for the aged Corn Flakes. TInsist upon ture of W. Flakes. Noze l 7 sustaining summer food than Kellogg s RED and GREEN package bearin mm&m&n’sm.flmrm-udh—fld imes the past: two years, when i filflhwest remiained ene' of the most erous ugtlcu!luml secfions in the tire country. Bath the swine and the sheep shows wlll larger than éver. Nearly 1, Q0e /0t swine:will be exhibited for the 37 110.00 in premiums offered. For the sheep contests, . the fair, is ofiermg j4,470. The agricultural butlditig,” With fts inspiring .exhibits of grains, grasses "°"' Buddy bey! Leek and vegetables of all descriptions, will into t‘L '7:-: bt R lld be & veritable paradise to visitors in- whole pack~ terested in farm crops. Counties of g Reioee's Corn the state will vie with each other In .i-‘n‘ their -arrangement of attractive dis- plays from our 1922 “Billion Dollar Harvest.” Nearly $20,000.00 in cash prizes will be paid out for winning exhibits. The thousands of plants and flow- ers; and heaping displays of fruits and vegetables, will convert the horticul- tural building-into a veritable fairy- jand. Luscious plums, rosy-cheeked apples, shapely pears and peaches, and delicious strawberries and grapes, will peep out at visitors from long rows of exhibits. Beautitul flowers and . RN Rnnne gy shrubs, rich in color and design, will draw out muiierous “Ah’s” and “Oh’s” from passers by 1) y focds in warm wuflm‘ o irentest barnyard chorus of the year will be heard in the poultry show, where miore than 2,000 birds will be shown. The prize winning birds will be given prem fums of $2,967.00. The women will come into their own - at the fafr. An entire building with an: annex has been set aside for exhibits of canning, sewing and baking. Wom- en’s exhibits will prove to all that in- terest in home-making is as great to- day as fifty years ago, still making it the -greatest occupation in the world. Delicious breads and cakes, pies and cookles, canned foods and other home- made - products, will _be :on stempting: digplay. Home needle work of every| kind, from fancy work and laces to the most practical sewing and dressmak- ing, will be a feast for women's souls. ‘Boys and _girls, too, will have ex- nibits. ‘To them, the fair is to be an “Achievement Week” I will give without taxing there is no more delicious, Kellogg’s Corn Flakes in the g the sif K. Kellogg, originator of éu are genuine without it! 1 o 1 tnem a Giapce 10 snow their parents and friends what-they have learned in school, and what they are getting out of their enrollment ‘n Boys’ and Girls’ :Club Work. There will be team dem onstrations of all kinds by boys andl } girls, showing how expert they have become in bread makiug, in sewing, [ canning, and in the judging of ch stock. Record Cattle Show at State Fair, The biggest cattle show ever stage jin the middle west will feature tHe. Minnesota Stete, Fair, “Twin Cities, |’ ‘September 2 Moré than 1,000, bead of cattle will be exlifbited on thel main floor of thg $500,000 Cattle Baru, Premiums amoummx to . $24,772,0¢ bave been put up by the Statée Fair: Enrly Mediums of Euhunge. Paying for a purchase with go: was practiced-by: the: Egyptiang éa ‘In history. Later rings:- of gold also of copper we RS & m of exchange, these being the fuu.lqd ners of the earliest coins. One Eyed Man Finds Gem, & A diamond logt In avhotel. conlbin was found in ten minutes by .4 one- eyed employee' after fen men,” with | perfect sight, had searclwd for hours in vain. S5 t Signifies Good Faith, In ancient days the addition of a & cross to the signature did not always indicate that the /signer could not write, but was added as an m(psl (tion | of good faith. PEACHES! PEACHES Lif. F Stone, El- California_Free bt bertas; a few hundred ito ;ellll buy !iow—the pncc 3 Creamery Bmter, 1- lh prints Pure Domino Cane Sugar, Rice, broken, clean and . white, a Ca.nning Rubbers, doz. . . Klrk’s Flake White Sonp, 10 bars .5. Fresh Fruits in season. advise canning now, Coffee, speclul 10 1bs . 81.9& A complete assortment of 3c, To Work Ancient Gold Mine. Goldtields that'have not bevin worked since the Pifteenth and Sixtéenth cen: turies are to be expluited Dby ihe | %t Austrian governinent. The depositsi g lie in the Ziller and Lavimt valley' on the Tyrol-Satzburg frontiers>and pros- ting has given vield df hH"htIJ o thiil ait Giifice hyas n,é‘;... « ¢ PRICES FOR SATURDAY Arm & Hammer Soda, Corn_Starch, pe Hershey Cncoa. Iarge size, E‘ e Seeded uun, 1- Salmon, -tall cans Salmon, Clover Brand i ot 2c, 35c Pot Roast, per B oo v Rolled Rib Roast, ib. Boiled Beef, Fresh Ha.mhurzer and Sausage, 1b Link: Sausage, Ib . S!ock up on ‘Smoked "Meats " below cost! Picnic Hams, 1b lsc- Regular Hams, Ib . 28¢ Bacon, by the strip, ib..18¢c QUALITY AND PRICES WHY PAY MORE? Meat Market |: EDD BROS. rdehy, act now! dfancy Bartlett Pears, Thomp- son Seedless Grapes; Plums,| 'Jthe best, not the chenpest), Peaches; berries splendid for jelly; Concord Grapes at their best; beauti ful assortment of Peppers and Sweet Spai Onions. . Home-grown new stock of Potatoes. La ize pacluges of Rol¥- zge(;atll a pkg . 25c¢ Picnic Hams, a 1b Pure Cider Vinegar (this i a gallon Walnut Meat, fresh, Ib. .85¢ iNew shipment of fall Can- dles, popular pnces, from Parlor Brooms, each. |Syrup, dark, gallons, 'amount we make | charge depending on th | distance. PHONE 94 staple Fruit and.Oranges; fancy, large Lemons, and Bananas. Express shipment of Sweet Corn, Cabbage, Onions and 35¢c_to_20c| | We deliver free anywhere in| i the city an order of roceries 1 $5.00 or aver—un er that]| a :malll \Flour, 49-1b sack . ... 5 € —~—Phone 66— _Next to Rex Theatre Eheord Grapes, per bskt. Picnic Hams, per Ib . Bacon, narrow strips, Ib 22c 28.1b cotton sacks. . . . Salt, in HUHHI NN Per 1b 3¢ 5 = Phone 160 OPPOSITE C! "Fancy Alberta’s Peaches,’ per box Jumble Pkék ‘Apples, per’ de‘ il Royal Lemon Washing Powder, per pkg.... SPECIALS THIS WEEK At Clifford’s ..CANNING PEACHES THIS WEEK ..$1.25 OUR LEADER COFFEE Fresh roasted—-—“‘l'he Memory Lasts” 5-1b lots CLIFFORD'S ITY HALL Phone 160 |SUBSCRIBE FOR THE PIONEER RN -— i llémmflni:mlmmmmnummm! n Lilllan Boye Minn will SCHOOL GIRL FLIRTS WITH DEATH IN AIR. State F s from auto to aeropla hicago school girl, will thrill visitors to the | 09, as they were never thrilied before. She { e, fang by one foot from the wing ot the Dlang, i 18-year-nld C Septembe and umm herselt un the plane hanging only h) her teeth. s | 02 A PRSP LS SIS LRSS SO S WHJH-“‘JJ-W-’M‘-WWE Want 'Ads— PIONEER . 1 lt”migvht surprise you to know how easy it is to get a response from a.Want Ad that is prop- erly worded— Every day there are opportuni- ties presented in our Want Columns—turn to them now and see what is offered— It costs very little to talk ‘to every one in town through the ) ni0R Want Ads Bring Results | Read The Pioneer Want Ads .