}| throw away her clannishness.i|i Who Controls Monroe?1r j Mr. Biumer said in the evening pap-^ | crs of April 4, 1917, Monroe is our town. That, maybe, wiii give you some clue to the power behind the throne. It may explain why no more scientific temperance is taught in the city schools than is necessary to keep 1 the state department quiet. It may i solve some other riddles that have t! puzzled your brain: among them, why -1 the saloons have an extension of time '1 when any unusual event is on; why the “cheese day celebration should he held in a crowded public square,I j making it convenient for pickpockets and crooks to operate, instead of be-- ir.g held on the fair grounds where ; j there is room enough for a crowd toII have a good time; why men were sta-: tmned on street corners to take down [; the names of men in the “dry parade* - 1 etc., etc.