Muncie Post-Democrat, Muncie, Delaware County, 13 April 1923 — Page 2
PAGE 2
FRIDAY, APRIL 13, 1923.
THE MUNCIE POST-DEMOCRAT
A Democratic weekly newspaper representing the Demu Mancie, Delaware county and the Eight Congressional strict. The only Democratic newspaper in Delaware County • Entered as second class matter January 15, 1921, at th t poet•Ac* at Muncie, Indiana, under the Act of March 3, 1871k
Subscription Price, $2.00 a year in Advance Ofice 733 North Elm Street. Telephone GEO. R. DALE, Owner and Publisher. FRIDAY, APRIL 13, 1923.
THE “EMPEROR OF AMERICA” There is something in the dispatches from Atlanta, Georgia, for those calling themselves “100 per cent Americans,” to study. Reference' is made to “Emperor” William Simmons, the head of the Ku Klux Klan. “Emperor,” think of it! An emperor in free America, living in an “imperial palace.” Seems like a number of years ago a considerable bunch of Americans uprose and threw \ off the yoke of old King George of England, and then went to work and adopted a Constitution declaring that from that time forever, the United States of America was 'one with kings, emperors and such like. Yet now we have an “emperor of the invisible empire,” who proposes to usurp the perogatives of a President of a Republic, take over the powers and conduct the United States as a kingdom, or empire, invisible, to be sure, but nevertheless an empire, ruled over bv an emperor, who is an autocrat, and the citizens of the United States his subjects or serfs. This is a fine situation. No wonder the few gullible ones who have bought their serfdom into the invisible empire for a few paltry dollars, are so anxious to hide their identity. “100 per cent Americans !” How ridiculous!
The Star and other Indiana daily newspapers in v/riting up conditions in southern convict, camps, should not forget our own penal farm, which is a world beater, in its way. The Indiana penal farm is a disgrace to civilization and should either be reformed
or abolished. He strenuously fought for the principle that the military
authority should be under control of and subordinate to>. the civil
It must be gratifying to the ministerial association to know ( au thority. He hated the load and the aristocracy that grows with that they are to be given a chance next month to go before the / the curse of standing armies and militarism. ^ . federal grand jurv and tell all they don’t know about Muncie. j Jefferson said, As the atmosphere needs lightning and a
I thunder storm frequently to purify it, so does the nation need a
. The Muncie preachers’ union which passed resolutions j to purifyjt, and-ft its
clarmg that all of our city and county officials are above reproach, 1 ^ ^
and that lawlessness has at last been curbed in Muncie, due to their activity, are hardly qualified to pass an opinion. We suggest that these gentlemen go slumming for a few nights in company with Fred Frohmuth. If Fred shows them around they ought
to be in good trim for the federal grand jury.
When republicans fall out honest men get their dues. The quarrel between Governor McCray and Chief Accountant Jesse Esbach is affording the public a general insight into the reckless 1 mismanagement of the state funds which has marked the republican administration of state affairs.
machines. The Blood of tyrants and
patriots is the natural manure to fertilize a republic.” He established our money units, the dollar, the ;ceht,'the mill. He wanted to get away from anything th$t was tinci>ired with English pounds, pence, etc. Only a few folks know that Jefferson
is the Daddy of our Dollar.
He was the first President to personally deliver his message to Congress. Wilson and Harding follow his example. In his first
Complete Plans For Wool Selling
Farmers Sign Contracts with Cooperative Sales Agency Expect Large Volume
The new r “democratic” newspaper is not going to discuss religious matters. That’s right, Brother Bob, leave it to the preachers of Muncie, who have been neglecting their religion of late in order to alibi crooked officials who have been protecting law violators.
THOMAS JEFFERSON
April 13 is the birthday of one of America’s Greatest Americans. Today there is being held at Monticello, Charlottsville, Virginia, a meeting of many distinguished., citizens .of the country. They are paying tribute to Jefferson and taking the first steps to preserve his home. Mr. Jefferson is responsible for his birthday not being generally observed. He requested that the Fourth of July be observed instead. The following is a liberal excerpt from an address delivered by Hon. A. P. Sandies which will refreshen the memory on history and show the accomplishments of
this great man:—
Thomas Jefferson, Virginia, born 1743,,April 13. Justice of the Peace and fiddler. Resigned his seat in Congress to accept a seat in home state legislature. Mighty few Congressmen do likewise today. Resigned from Washington’s cabinet because he was
not entirely in accord with his chief.
Farmer, inventor, lawyer, architect, scholar, author, traveler,
statesman and diplomat. He hated England and its boobs of aristocracy. He had the courage to worship God, fight a king, and write the Declaration of Independence. He had faith in com-
mon folks. He was a good neighbor to rich and poor alike. As Governor of Virginia and President of the new Republic,
he reduced expenses, reduced the national debt, decreased taxes and fired a, lot of useless, loafing job holders and improved the public service to high efficiency. He hated any tax beyond the toll
of what was absolutely needed for the public good. Founder of our public school system. Before his time the
child, to get an education had to go to the teacher’s home, or the teacher had to seek the child in its home. Jefferson said “It is right to tax the rich man to help educate the poor man’s child.” This is the greatest corner stone in our government today. The army and navy could not take it away. Yet Jefferson was called
radical when he proposed it.
Jefferson divided public education into three grades, viz: The graded school, the high school, and the University. He believed that a teacher of thorough scholarship was the greatest piece of
furniture that could be placed in a school room.
Only a few teachers today,.know that Jefferson is the father of free schools and education. His birthday should be observed in every school room. He gave birth to the law that provided for
the public library.
He did the same for courts that he did for schools, viz: divided them into three grades or classes. Very few judges on the bench today, know that Jefferson, in large measure, is father of our judicial system. He wanted to give the Supreme Court the same right of veto over acts of Congress as was given to the President. He insisted on three branches of government in the states and in the nation, viz: The legislative, the judical, and the executive. He brought repeal of laws that inflicted the death penalty for two hundred crimes most of them petty offenses. Treason and murder are the only offenses for which he let the death penalty
stand.
How many farmers, who hold the plow in the furrow and turn the world upside down, know that Jefferson invented the moldboard plow? What would the world do without it today? For centuries the law of entail had existed and given to the oldest son, all of the property of the parents. The younger sons and daughters were denied any share of the estate of the father and mother. In spite of wails and moans of rich aristocrats, Jefferson smashed the rule and said that, each child should share, and share alike. That is the rule in America today, yet Jefferson, himself, was the oldest son of his parents. He never asked any human being to take medicine or law that he would not take himself. He annulled the law to compel all folks to attend one certain church. He wanted religious liberty for himself and was willing for others to have the same privilege. This is the rule of America
today.
In 1778 he tried to enact a law to emancipate the slaves. In that he failed. He set his own black folks free. He took this action twenty nine ye&rs before any such action was attempted in England. Jefferson believed that good , government ascended upward frorn county to state and nation and not downward from the top. This was another evidence of his faith in the masses instead of the classes. In his day politicians and office holders did not get rich as some do today.
Leaders in plans for the cooperative marketing of wool in Ohio are making efforts to complete arrangements for the handling of the com-
message he outlined, word for word, what we now call the Monroe I Under th^p^n^adopted for m^rketDoctrine. | ing the crop this year all wool not His master stroke as President was the purchase of the vast J arrangedi for the cooperative piool, territory west of .the Mississippi River, known as The Louisiana a |f ^atm-eT of^^oducers Purchase. The price was fifteen million dollars, which was three ' on a the Cooperative U contract marcents an acre and at excursion rates. If he had not done this when keting wool are coming in from all he did, the British Union Jack Flag would be flying west of the i wo °l producing sections of the state great river'today as it is to the north of us. p J e +^ nt He wanted a president elected for one term only, and by theGrowers Association at Columbus, people direct. He wanted United States Senators elevated by the j Thp local arrangements are being people direct. He laid out the City of Washington and planned in th e various counties by farm
many of the public buildings of the National Capital.
He divorced the church from the state arid established the rule that no public tax should be collected to support church, preacher or priest. Before this was done, preachers had a life job
and many had immoral and drunken habits.
He had no use for ribbons, badges, medals, star?, garters or gold braid. He is reported going from White House to the’Capitol on a brood mare with a suckling colt following. When a candidate for his state legislature, the bait he used was lunch and punch in his home. The voters came to see him during the campaign. He was justly proud of being the founder of The University of Virginia. He planned its buildings and grounds, which are
models of architecture and landscape beauty.
His home was known throughout the world as ■ '“Monticello.” It is located in the topiof a mountain, three miles from Charlottsville, Virginia. It was “open'house” for well nigh all 1 the world.
bureau organizations and county
wool growers associations.
Officials of the state cooperative wool sales agency say the contracts already received indicate the handling of an increased volume of wool tUroigh cooperative channels over thflt sold a year ago in this manner. Last- year about 2% million pounds were sold cooperatively from Chip. The average returned to the producer for all grades of wool in the state
was about 44 cents. HUMAN EFFICIENCY
INFLUENCED BY FOODS
Notables Will Name Roosevelt Medal Winners
The life purposes of Theodore Roosevelt as exemplified by the motto “If I must choose between righteousness and peace, I choose righteousness,” will be commemorated by a series of gold medals to be presented, thrfee annually, to fteijsons distinguished for their service to the American people, William JLoeb Jr., keting president of the Roosevelt Memorial Association has just announced. The persons on whom the medals Will be conferred will be chosen by an impressive committee comprising two present Cabinet members, one former Cabinet member, a noted journalist, and a Senator’s wife. Those on whom this year’s three medals will be bestowed will probably be chosen before the end of May. The committee consists in all of one woman and 'five men: Mrs. Medill McCormick, wife of Senator McCormick of Illinois; John H. Finley, formerly head of the New York State Department of Education and now editor of the New York “Times,” chairman; Charles E. Hughes, Secretary of State; Henry C. Wallace, Secretary of Agriculture; Gifford Finchot, Governor of Pennsylvania; Oscar S. Straus, Secretary of Comjtnerce and Labor in President Roosevelt’s Cabinet, and William Boyce Thompson, president of the Roosevelt Memorial Association. The medals will be conferred upon persons distinguished in various lines of activity held in high esteem by Col. Roosevelt. They will bear on one side a profile of Roosevelt and on the other a flaming sword with the inscription: “If I must choose between righteousness and peace, I choose righteousness.” The medal was designed by James Earle Fraser, whose bust of Roosevelt stands in the Capitol Building. It Is to be three and one-half inches in diameter. The medal will be awarded every year for the greatest service in three out of the following seven fields; administration of public office, public and international law, industrial peace, conservation of natural resources, promotion of the welfare of women and children, natural history and the promotion of outdoor life, development of the American character with regard to foresight, courage, initiative and patriotism.
DISEASE RESISTANT TOMATOES ARE BEST
The highest efficiency of the human machine demands that the li-
His debts and his'guests kept him poor. In 1824, General Lafay-1 traitor 1 slightly 1 ette came to visit “ him. ' i j which is maintained by a proper
of : acid anu Dase forming
Justice of The Peace, Legislator, Congressman, Governor of f 0 al ( a J ce
Nearly all of the mineral elements of the body, which in turn dtepend
years after he had signed the Declaration of Independence. He was buried the same afternoon, on the mountain side, near his
home, on his own farm.
Lord Curzon says “Any fool can make war.” Some fool almost
always does.
his State, Minister to France and England, Secretary of State, Vice President and President/eight years, is the record of Jef-
ferson’s thirty years in office. _He died July 4, 1826, just fifty ur,on our food, contribute to either * " ‘ ‘ - - - £] 10 acid “or -alkaline condition, says
C. H. Hunt, nutrition chemist of the
of the Experiment Station.
If the food contain an excess of acid forming elements harmful disturbances will result. A food, such as many of the fruits, may be acid to the taste without producing an acid condition upon oxidation in the
body.
A large number of very wholesome and essential foods, as meats, fish, oysters, eggs, cheese, and the cereals are acid-forming. The diet should
WINDOW PEEPER IS, contain enough of the basic or alkaFwwEftwrN PIQUA line elements as found in fruits, Piqua, April 12 - Hubert Mat- ] vegetables, and to some extent in thews, windbw peeper, must serve , ~ n ^, ar ^» l' 0 . counteract any 30 day& in the county jail and pay .?9 lc l^effect and maintain the desired
a firie of $10; He was fined an<b ! sen-
If Henry Ford wants to do his country another uftefuk service, he’ll start making good gasoline at prices people can afford to
pay.
Youthfulness Record Held by Grandma ot 32
Mrs. Myers, Married at 14, Cares for Child of Daughter, Aged 15
Los Angeles, April 12—Who is the youngest grandmother in your community ? Los Angeles recently thought it had discovered its youngest grandmother at 36. She married when she was 16, and her son was bom when she was 19. He eloped when he was 16, and a few days ago, when he was only 17, and his bride 16, Mrs. Buckley became a grandmother. Friends of slighted grandmothers hastened to take Mrs. Buckley’s short-lived laurels away. Dozens of grandmothers under 36 were report-
ed.
Mrs. Jessie Myers holds the record at the present writing. Mrs. Myers is a grandmother, andi she only celebrated her thirty-second birthday on March 19. At the age when many women are caring for their own babies, Mrs. Myers is helping care for her three weeks’ old grandchild. The child’s mother is Mrs. Bertha Blanche Hauschild. She will be 16 years old on August 31 next. Mrs. Myers was 14 years old when she married, and 15 when Bertha was born. Not only tha(t, but the baby’s great-grandmother is living, and is only 47. She is Mrs. Vina Cunningham.
Disease resistant strains of tomatoes are safest for planting in districts which have become infested with tomato wilt fungus. Greenhouse soil in which the disease ha,s gained a foothold may be sterilized with steam, but plant pathologists have not yet found a means of controlling the disease after it attacks the plant, it is stated. However, they have with the aid of growers been able by selecting seed plants to secure immune strains which they recommend for planting. These strains may be obtained from Reliable seedsmen. !
RESUME SMALL PROBE
Waukegan, 111., April 5—Grand jury investigation into charges of jury tampering during the trial of Gov. Len. Small was ordered resumed.
COMMISSIONERS ALLOWANCES April Term
M. L. Yoakefn,' Sal. Road Supt.. .$120.00
I. . L. Cooper, Rep. f. g. rd. . W. O. Pitser, Rep. f. g. rd. . G' H. Pormen, Rep. f. g. rd. J. H. Clevenger, Rep. f. g. rd Cliff Applegate, Rep. f. g. rd. \V. E. Smithi Rep. f g rd. — Herbert Shroyer, Rep. f g rd. Lewis Lowman, Rep. f g rd. C. H. Guthrie, Rep f g rd
fenced after he had entered a plea of guilty before Judge E. A, Hiatt in municipal court ..donday. Matthews was caught in the act of peer-
neuttal' condition.
And France Will Do Reminding
(Springfield Union)
The Germans know that they were
ing through a window at the home w ^PP e( ^’ as . we £ a ^h er -fr 0111 . Umh' of J. M. Hennessey. He admitted r^rfermances since the armistice, his guilt after his arrest. they like to be reminded of it.
St. Louis now has one of the finest church edifices in the United States, or the world—the new Catholic Cathedral.
W. T. Minton, Rep f g rd .. F. D. Swanders, Rep f g rd J. B. Gibson, rep f g rd Harry Mott, rep f g rd R. O. Snodgrass, rep f g rd , Jno. L,. Vernon, rep f g rd . N. T. Wingate, rep f g rd . Verda Howell, rep f g rd ... Boyd Trout, rep f g rd .... Sam McAllister, rep f g rd . Otis Norton, rep f g rd ..... W. • H; Snodgrass, rep f g rd Orland Trout, rep f g rd P. C. Rector, rep f g rd ... Wm. Jones, rep f g rd Frank Johnson, rep f g rd ... Jasper Ross, rep f g rd Herb Lawrence, rep f g rd . F. L. Wachtel Co., rep f g rd City of Muncie, rep f g rd . Herman Sa.rver, rep f g rd . I. B. Tel. Co., Phone Rd. Sup
Muncie S. & L. Co., Rep. r g rd.. 147.57 Burroughs Co., off exp elk 75 I. B. T. Co., do 15.00 Jas. P. Dragoo, Sal aud 362.50 A. E. Boyce Co., off exp aud .... 61.40 I. B. T. Co., Do 15.30 Burroughs Co., do 1.75 A. E. Boyce, do 28.18 Burroughs Co., do 75 Mildred E. Irwin, asst aud 75.00 Reha Dunn, do 50.00 Fred Reasoner, Sal Co. Treas. .. 375.00 R. R. Yates, off exp treas 1.25 Burroughs Co., do 1.50 I. R. T. Co., do 15.00 A. E. Boyce Co., do SO Allison Cole, asst treas 125.00 .Tonies L. Davis, sal sec 225.00 James L. Davis, off exp rec 10.00
80.80 65.35 59.90 70.00 69.20 124.90 37.00 38.40 90.30 14.00 84.75 168.50 102.10 134.00 107.00 93.65 210.05 100.82 77.05 39.75 116.85 101.31 173.70 46.37 71.20 190.30 50.95
1.90
167.40 39.07 16.10
Portha Alber, dep asr Yorktown 12.00 Lucy M. Hartge. dep asr Har. Tp. 12.00 Do., den asr Wash 15.00 Fyrne Baird, dep asr Center .... 92.00 Agnes Hampton, do P2.0O Grace McKeever, do S2.00 Pollie Pfeiffer, do 24.00 Carl Huffer, do ; 92.00 Elmer Warfel, do 92.00 Wiley West, do '2.00 J. F. Nation, dep asr Centre 92.00 Tavlor Moon, do 92.00 Geo. W. Pfieiffer, sal asr Centre .. 250.00 Geo. Mills, dep asr Centre 92.00 Frank Holhert, do 92 00 Jno. Burns, do 9.^ Off Chas. Thompson, do Perry Langdon. do 9-.00 Margeret Sampson, do 92.00 Ruby M. Retz, do 92-00 Marian T.empler, do 92.00 Dortha Alber, dep asr Hamilton .. 9.00 J. A. Oliver, dep asr Lnion 60.00 Geo. S. Morris, asr Union 48 no Dortha Alber, dep asr Union 9.00 Lucv M. Hartge, dep asr Eaton ... 12.00 Dortha Alber, dep asr Perry ...... 11.00 G. H. Ross, asr Liberty 84.00 Dortha Alber, dep asr Liberty .... 9.00 Do., dep asr Del 9.00 Lucv M. Hartge, dep asr Albany 9.00 Dortha Alber, dep asr Niles 9.00 Harrv Hoffman, exp sheriff 3.00 G. S. McGaughey, trus. ooor Salem 84.72 P. J. Kautzman, poor Mt. Pleas. 198.46 H. M. Long, poor Wash T. F. Clevenger, poor Monroe — 155.lo Merritt Heath, poor Centre 2271.20 Hampton Und. Co., burial noor .. 15.50 Tavlor Gibson Trus. poor Union.. Ml.53 D. ‘E. Hausknecht, trus., poor Lib. 58.8o C. J. Stafford, Trus. poor Del 197.46 Herman Cary, rep ct house 55.00 Clark Bros., Rep Ct. house 39.01 A B. Wetberelk Main ct house .. 117.19 Wm. Guthrie, Janitor Ct. hous".. 125.00 Frank Hoosier. asst, janitor C. H. 60.00 ArHline Zerlincer, matron rest rm 40.00 Water Wks Co., water ct house 10.50 Allen Bennett, sun ct house .... 21.50 P. G. & D Co., do i- 120.00 Hampton Co., do 306.07 Johnson & Aspy, main ct house.. 1.90 Hampton Fur. Co., do al R. M. Jones & Son, do M. G. * P. Co., do 15:00 G. M. Lumber Co., do 5.50 Otis Elevator Co., <K> 2'O' H. M. Brush Co., do 20.00 T, G. S. Co., H. L. & P 921.41 A. J. Glaser, cont jail _ 1500.00 Houck & Smenner, Arch, jail 55.10 Phil Stnuf. rep jail 1255.00 Harry Hoffman, care grounds jail 6.00 Mrs. Harry Hoffman, matron jail 240.00 Dr. Drumm. Phys. jail 33.00 Hervet & Clark, sun jail 14519 Johnson Aspy Co., do 54.20 F. E. Wright, do 35.1,0 Kimbrough Co., do M C. I. Gas Co., do 12.10 T-Ta.rnnton Fur. Co., do 339.04, Wallace Hilbett, do 30.7a ■ I. B. T. Co., main jail 9.30 P.oss Boone, do 14.07 A. B. Wetherell, do 31.69 H. E. Hoffman, do 300.00 Hardesty T. Co., Alain jail Kimbronah Co., rep co inf S. P. Williams. Matron inf H. C. Greenwalt, asst inf Mary Weiss, do Pth el Weight, do Cassius Davis, do W. IT. Williams, Jr., supt inf W. Murphy, asst inf — Margaret. Carson, do .Tame TCeifer, do Hervet & Clark, sun. inf Dr. Jump, phys. inf F. E. Wright, sup inf Farmers Coop. Co. do Hoffman Garage, main inf , C. M. Mix, do T. L. & T>. Co., do Sinaer Bakerv, do McCracken Co., sup. inf . Johnson * Aspy Co., do C. I. G. Co., main inf Muncie Lumber Co., do Keller Co., do Palph Sho’d;, do Hampton Co., do Dr. C .C. Allen, do ■Farmers Coop. Co. Sup. Inf T. L. & P. Co., main Co. inf 104.Pt St. Oil Co., do 9.7! Jno. Ryan, do 35.76 Moffett & Piepho, do 59.00 T. B. T. Co., do 26.23 F. I,. Clevenger, rep ch home 183.02 0. R. Ammerman. rpp ch. home.. 33.70 Martha Gamble, Matron ch home 100.00 Rosa Driscoll, ast ch home 10.09 Jessie- Stevens.- <1© 1JL0O Gladys Victor, do ‘ 200 Lou Van Tilburgh, do 35.00 Alary Yaggi, do • 35.00 Alary Youngman, do 35.00 Perry Gibson, do 60.00 Hannah AIcFadden, do 35.00 Catherine Gibson, do 35.00 Josephine Wright, do 38.00 Farmers Coop Co., sup ch home .. 296.21 Johnson Asny Co., do 35.10 Colorcraft Co., do 9.46 Chas. Penzel, do 1.62 I. B. Tel. Co., do 13.18 AT c Guff Co., do 46.12 Howell Co., do 53.42 T G. S. Co., do 59.95 Martha E. Gamble, do 12.00 Ed. Ch. Guard, Depen. ch 878.80 Dp, Do £ 641.70 W. I. AT. L. Inst, do 270.00 Harry Hoffman, care insane 28.00 Joan Casterline, do 84.00 Dora Burton, do —.... 21,00 Larry Briggs, sold Bur 75.00 W. H. Polhemus, do 75.00 ATeeks & Son, do 75 00 Do Do > 75,00 Do Do 75.00 Do Do 75.00 Do Do 75.00 Do Do 75.00 Hampton Co., do 75.00 Star, County adv 6.24 Post-Democrat, do 7.02 Do Do 25.10 Star, do 25.10 Post-Democrat, adv Burke rd ... 9.36 1, ester Janney, Eng. Baldwin rd.. 188.00 Star. Adv. Baldwin Rd 12.47 Post-Democrat, do i2.40 TT. H. Brehmer, do 60.00 Post-Democrat, adv Tingling rd.. 8.43 Star, do . 11.65 A. E. Boyce Co., Sedan rd ta.70 Post-Democrat, do 17.05 Press, do 20.02 A. F. Boyce Co., Benton rd 49.7) Post-Democrat, do 17.05 Press, do 20.02 Do Reeves Rd 20.02 Post-Democrat, do 17.05 A. E. Boyce Co., do 61.70 J. B. Lnpton, sal. W. & AT. Ins... 125.iHi H. H. Brehmer, al. ditches 60.00 Lester Janney, do 61.00 A. L. Hodgson, sal. ag. agt. 208.73 I. B. T. Co., expt ag agt 18 50 F. & A. Boyer, ref. tax 7.41 Jno. Watson, sal. sup. W. IT. ... 90.00 A/. L. Yoakem, H. C. signs 7.35 T. S. P. do 4.28
j t> r F
E. T. Co.. exp pros atty 15.15
Do, expt B. C. G W. VanMatre. agt B. C. G. .. TT 1 . \ TT 1 v rv +- R /'"I f
“JUST FOLKS” ENJOYING A QUIET AFTERNOON PORCH PARTY But the “folks happen to be the President and Mrs. Warren G. Harding, seated on the porch of the McLean cottage at Palm Beach, Mr. Harding holtL ing the youngest McLean child and the McLean family terrier.
A. E. Boyce Co.,
I. B. T Co., do Harry Hoffman, sal sheriff Do. per diem ct ct Do., per diem com. James Cremean, Care pris Ralph Bryan, sal dep sher .. Harry Hoffman, board pris. Do., care pris , I. B. T. Co., exp sheriff Do., exp sur Beckman Co., Do A. E. Boyce Co., Do Lee O. Baird, sal sup sch A. E. Boyce Co., exp sup sch . I. B. T, Co., exp schools I.ee Baird, trav exp E. Ferguson, sal assessor I. B. T. Co., exp asr F. W. Dunn, autopsy J. F. Downing, per diem cor ... Dr. S. G. Jump, sal tiealth com
W. F. Haymond, agt., cont dis elin 70.00
20.00'
10.00
15.00 80.40
1.53
60.00 150.00 150.00 150.00 66.66 100.00
94.90
98.00
9.90
84.00
do 92.03
15.00 250.00 148.001 24.00 100.00 100.00 ....1233.80 242.85 20.60 15.30 5.39 4.80 250.00 .... 5.00 15.00 39.70 154.00
15.00 33.00 71.05 70.00
18.35 140.56 20j'0 98.15
2.50
33.35 16.60 19.00 103.60
8.00 8.00
602.23
Dr. Jump, do.
Emm Burns, do V. Gordon, do Everett W. Jones, do. T. G, S. Co., do Pansy Cumpton, do Jno. McCreery, sal com 1st dis Andhew Jackson, do 2nd dis S. J. Shroyer, do 3rd dis Fred McClellan, sal co atty ... Harry Redkey, sal poor atty . L. Baird, attd off Carrie V. Dunn, attd off Dortha Alber, dep asr Salem W. S. Reed, asr Alt. Pleas
A. E Boyce Co., Expt B. C. G. Minnie Snyder, exp Prob. off .. A. E. Bovce Co., do I. B. T. Qo., Phone Ct Ct .... A. E. Boyce Co, expt sup ct I. B. T. Co., do A. E. Boyce Co., Loyd road .. J. E. Green, viewer Loyd rd John Riley, do James L. Davis, excess fees
Isaac Reed, dep asr Mt. Pleas... 69.00 Frank Black, dep asr Liberty .. 69.00 Reba Dunn, den asr Alonroe 9.00 C. F. Koontz, F. K. A 500.00 N. P A. expt prof off 22.20 Harry Hoffman, Co. inq 11.25 Do, Do 11,25 Muncie Bank Co., Red cert 67.13 Dora Burton, nurse hire 21.00 Jas. I,. Davis, excess Fees 602.25 Frank E. Barber, co inq 69.00 Geo. Hawkins, do 69.00 Dr. LaDunn, do 9.00 Muncie B. Co., Red cert 195.00 Dr. Deardorff, co inq 6.00 Harrv Hoffman, do 6.72 Do Do 11.25 Do, Do 11.25 Omer G. Weir, atty Barley ditch.. 303.50
Circuit Ct. Allowances
Durward Sharp, grand jury 35.00 Harry ATott, grand jury 35.00 Walter Small, grand jury 35.00 Jay Adams, grand jury 35.00 Owen Helvie, grand jury 35.00 Frank Kimbrough, grand jury .. 35.00 ATorgan Fountain, grand jury 28.00 liOra Devinney, Ct. Ct. jury 5.00 ATaud Dorman, ct ct jury 5.00 Nannie Sutton, ct ct jury 5.00 Margaret Gill, ct ct jury 2.50 Jno. Roberts, ct ct July 5.00 Chas. Hester, ct ct jury 2.50 Wm, Gibson, ct ct jury 2.50 Louis Peck, ct ct jury 2.50 J. R. Peacock, ct ct jury 5.00 A. L. Yohey, ct ct jury 2.50 Lewis Shideler, ct ct jury 5.00 Hanen Legg, ot ct jury 5.00 Jno. Adams, ct ct jury 5.00 Chas, Wells, ct ct jury 5.00
ct ct jury 5.00 ct ct jury 5.00
T. Wingate, ct ct jury 5.00 A. D. King, ct ct jury 5.00
J. E. Sturgeon, c G. H. Whitehair,
SlT~£OV-e/M<FSPl
