Muncie Post-Democrat, Muncie, Delaware County, 15 August 1930 — Page 2
FRIDAY, AUGUST 15, 1930
i
THE POST-DEMOCRAT A Democratic weekly newspaper representing the Democrats of Mancie, Delaware County and the 8th Congressional District. The oily Democratic Newspaper in Delaware County.
ISntered as second class matter January li, 1921, at the Postofflc* hi Jluncle, Indiana, uder the Act of March I, 1879.
PRICK 6 CENTS—12.00 A YEAR.
08 08 01.
228 North Elm street—Telephone 2540 CHARLES H. DALE, Publisher. Geo. R. Dale, Editor.
Muncie, Indiana, Friday, August 15, 1930
Democratic State Ticket Judge Supreme Court, First District Walter E. Treanor, Bloomington Judge Supreme Court, Fourth District Curtis W. Roll, Kokomo Judge Appellate Court, First District Posey T. Kime, Evansville William H. Bridwell, Sullivan
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Judge Appellate Court, Second District Alphonse C. Wood, Angola Harvey J. Curtis, Gary Superintendent of Public Instruction George C. Cole, Lawrenceburg Secretary of State Frank Mayr Jr., South Bend Auditor of State Floyd E. Williamson, Indianapolis Treasurer of State William Storen, Scottsburg Clerk of Supreme and Appellate Courts Fred Pickett, Richmond Democratic County Ticket
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Congressman Eighth Congressional District
Claude C. Ball
Prosecuting Attorney—Tod Whipple State Representative—Paul Bowden State Representative—Ithamer M. White Judge Delaware-Grant Superior Court
J. Walter McClellan
County Clerk—Arthur J. Beckner County Auditor—Samuel R. Snell County Treasurer—Thomas E. Weir
County Recorder—Atlee Rinker Sheriff—Fred W. Puckett
County Coroner—Dr. Clarence G. Rea County Surveyor—S. Horace Weber County Assessor—Edward W. Barrett
County Commissioner, hirst District Garl D. Moore
County Commissioner, Third District
Arthur M. Wingate
County Councilman, First District—William A. Clark
Center Township Trustee—Frank J. Lafferty
Center Township Advisory Board—John D. Curtis
Center Township Assessor—Leslie Brand
Center Township Justice of Peace—Edward E. Femyer Center Township Justice of Peace—Ambrose D. Gray
Center Township Con^table-^ohn Cox Center Township Constable—Sorter L. Rees
It Can’t Be Done
If the council finance committee hasn’t already found out they will learn that their announced intention of making salary cuts on the appointees of the mayor and various boards in the budget is of no avail. For regardless of how much they desire to carry through their spite cuts it just isn’t done, according to a member of the state board of tax commis di^ —^ comm jttee with the exception of Chairman Everetts, announced that they were going t 0 slice Bill Daniels the street commissioner from $2,600 to $2,000. Bill is the best commissioner in years and even the Press devoted a tine editorial to the subject of the intended cut on Bill s salary. The editorial declared that such a move was a fine bunch of applesauce because Bill was a real street commissioner and had performed his work even beyond the expectations of the citizens. On street oiling alone Bill saved property owners more than his salary cut was to be. ' , Other cuts intended by committee were $400 from the salary of building commissioner, $240 from draftsman in city engineer’s office, and a series of series of other small reductions in employes of various boards. Nothing but spite work was behind the committees petty attitude, and we don’t believe the remainder of the councilmen would have fallen for such a gag, even though they could. But t he whole thing is that the cuts couldn’t be made even if they all wanted to. With the exception of the policemen and firemen the various boards are empowered to hire and fix the compensation of the employes. The saine goes for the aviation commission as the finance comrpjtte will learn if it already hasn’t found out. Mayor Dale upon hearing of the spite cut intention of The finance committee wrote that he would most certainly 11 raise plenty hell if the committee thought it could single out the appointees and employes in that manner and snip off a part of their salaries just to be mean about it. n We believe the committee was not familiar with its power when it announced the spite cuts intentions, but upon checking up found that it couldn’t be done after all.
Ur
V Walburn Wrong Again
Instead of suing Patrolmen Dan Davis and Friar for supposed damaging of his cigar store business “Plug” Walburn might have went farther by suing the pair for alienation. 11 For according to “Plug” whose gambling record is so well known Davis and Friar made disparaging remarks regarding the kind of business in which Walburn is engaged, and these remarks it seems were heard by the some customers or prospective customers. Naught, naughty patrolmen to say anything about “Plug” and his crowd, for it might damage Walburn’s business. Several things damaged “Pug’s” business long before Davis and Friar spoke right out as to their sentiments. We expect that when the damage suit is tried, if ever, that Walburn will hawk out the old alibi so well established by-the Indiana state supreme court that truth is no defense and if everything that Davis and Friar were declared to haVe said proved true, it couldn’t be used as defense. Tf “Plug” had sued for alienation of the affections of the public from the rotten, thieving gambling ‘ that Walburn used to do so well, then he might arouse some interest. j Now everybody knows that business is considerably
off, despite the Hoover glowing prosperity, so “Plug” naturally doesn’t do as much lunch, soda pop and tobacco selling as he did when times were more prosperous and as for “Plug’s” old gambling business it went kerflooey early this year along with all of the gamblers. “Plug” we believe chose the damage suit route as sort of stunt to intimidate Davis and Friar and other policemen who might show Walburn the administration means to keep gambling out of Muncie. He wants the patrolmen to think that perhaps their homes will be sold out from under them to pay him a judgement from a suit of damages. But “Plug” won’t get far with his underworld threat for Davis and Friar are two men of courage and the rest of the police department is just as zealous as these two men in keeping Muncie clean. “Plug’s cheap trick won’t get anyplace, but it does give Walburn the satisfaction of keeping the pot boiling even if there is nothing in the pot for him. As one chap put it, Muncie is so unusual that even the cheap gamblers have become so sensitive that they sue for damages if anyone speaks of the past. The bankers are one up on the gamblers for the gentlemen of the counting rooms were able to persuade the state legislature to make it a criminal act to say disparaging things about banks, while the gamblers can only get a civil action for whispering or talking out loud about their business. If Walburn thinks his suit will make the policemen hold their tongue to save their homes he is quite mistaken. As for damaging his business of selling sandwiches, cigars, cigarettes and soda pop, “Plug” should have the national Republican administration, the weather man, the Stock Market, Wall Street and Andy Mellon indicted for conspiracy to keep even small change out of the Walburn cash register.
$83,000 NOT LISTED. We notice that the school board in its budget failed to list its $83,000 temporary loans thereby bolstering up its estimated working balance for the last half of the school
year.
For fear Brothers Will White, Ed Tuhey and J. Lloyd Kimbrough, and their legal adviser, Myron Gray, don’t get what we mean all they have to do is to look at item 4 of
Corpo
NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS OF TAX LEVIES
Notice i* hereby liven the twepeyers of Delaware County, Indiana, that the leeal officer* of *aM school corporation at their regular meeting place on the
day of September. 1#30 trill consider the following budget: BUDGET CLASSIFICATION FOR SCHOOL CORPORATION.
SPECIAL SCHOOL FUND.
A. General Admlftirtrettoo— .
1. Board School Trustees and
Secretary** Office $ 2,475.00 2. Superintendent’* Office 6,150.00 3. Finanoe end Accounting Off. 6.570.00 4. Business Director’* Off. 5,658.44 5. Buildings and Grounds Dept. 3,040 00 *. School Attend, and Census.. 975.00 7. Research Office 4,560.00 8 ’ 5 U ?£, , !iS,MJ? epartment_ 74# 00 CWVi Salftflei 6,3<KM>0 Other Expense* 2,350.00
37,168.00 10,504.80
42,000.00 47,039.90
even among neighbors. Yet the group is one of relative unity in governmental commitments, sufficiently so at least to cause wonder that the per capital farm levies are as far apart as $51.64 in Tipton and $70.46 in Clinton, with Hamilton and Boone coming in the middle with $53.91 and $58.83, respectively. In Tipton the per capital county seat sum is $32.35,-in Clinton, $43.74, in Hamilton, $40.14, and in Boone, $37.82. Without full knowledge of all the circumstances, it would be illogical to draw too many conclusions. What'is obvious is that the contrast, in instances, ought to spur budget framers to find out economies in items that have been
brought about in adjacent regions.
Agricultural sections, where the development of public works and an expansion of educational facilities formerly was not so rapid as in urban communities, have been going ahead more speedily in the last decade, proportionately, than have many cities and towns. That fact, coupled with a population drift from the farms, helps to explain the heavy per capita tax burden. Unfortunately, much of the expansion
has come in a period of low income from crops and live stock, 0 coordinate a „ d Actuary ' bringing with it mounting difficulty in meeting the revenue , capita^outiay- mioo®
calls of public agencies. The same economic drift in industrial earnings has been in evidence in industry during 1930, thus enlisting new elements in tax saving endeavors. Fiscal administration is facing more watchfulness as an outcome. Systems that have been conducted loosely, both as to assessments and disbursements, should be scrapped, and sound
methods substituted in their place.
Obviously, this is a work of immense importance. Lewis Taylor, director of the tax and legislative department of the Indiana Farm Bureau, has proceeded wisely in appealing to members of the organization to familiarize themselves fully about prospective budgets in their townships and counties. The advice is excellent for the inhabitants of the state, regardless of their vocation. Niggardliness is not being advocated in any quarter. It is quite another matter to campaign against waste and to insist that all appropriations be justified in value received.—Indianapolis News.
•eoond
the “ESTIMATES OF FUNDS TO BE RAISED” tabula-
tion.
This budget ad without the $83,000 temporary loans and the resultant false but higher balance for the last half of the school year appears on Page 2 of The Post-Democrat, and on Page 3 is the school board’s own ad for the $83,000 temporary loan. In the daily newspapers the budget ad was placed in the afternoon newspaper and the temporary loan
aid in the morning paper.
Item 4 in the school board budget reads “Temporary loans to be paid ^efore December 31. Reading the ad for the temporary loan it is found that the loans are to be pay-
able on December 31.
Legally Myron Gray can give the nicest, smoothest, trickiest, and most gracious jurisprudential answer that the school board’s published budget item reading “before Dec. 31” don’t by a long shot mean the same as his temporary loan ad of being “payable on Dec. 31”. Consequently the board didn’t have to list the temporary loan of $83,000 and was justified in creating the impression that the working balance would be just $83,000 higher than the books will
show on Jan. 1, the following day.
Looking over the published report of Ed Tuhey, secretary of the school board, we find that in the three brinks still left in Muncie the school board had on deposit a total of $42,460.57 CASH on Aug. 1. Reading Myron Gray’s ad
for temporary loans we find that $83,000 of such loans are^| pe ^ r ° n
to be negotiated for by sealed bids in spirited competition-''" from the three banks with interlocking directorate still left
in Muncie.
Can it be that the school board will receive its own money loaned back to itself at not to exceed 6 per cent interest for according to the ad Myron Gray has arranged the most perfect installment plan, so easy to meet for the
banks.
With its already $42,460.57 balance in the three banks still left in town that sum on Sept. 2, the day of opening the bids will be supplemented by $22,000 for the special school fund. Theoretically this money at the disposal of the school board will be paid out and then seventeen days later the tuition fund is to be credited with $25,000. The way money passes in and out of the banks these days would hardly take seventeen days for the money to get back in again so when the $25,000 is credited there might be several former dollars right back in that fund Now Oct. 1, the special school fund gets a measly $6,000, but wait, for two days later the tuition fund gets credited with another $22,000 and away along on Oct. 24 comes the last of the loans which sugars the vocational fund by $8,000. Now this sure is a perfect installment arrangement, and so easy on the bankers. Darn clever, these bankers, for the interest on these in and out exchanges ought to reach up to around $3,000, sorta of in and out fees as the sheriffs used to like so well.
From Whence They Came Upon the insistance of Controler Holloway, forty or so colored laborers from outside were returned outside early
in the week.
The colored gentlemen had hardly alighted from a truck on South Walnut street to replace some steam mains until they were on their way from whence they came. These outside laborers were expecting to work for the Northeastern Piping & Construction Company which obtain contract for replacement of staam mains from the Indiana General Service Company. The Indiana General Service Company, however, announced that it had instructed
the N. P. C. C. to employ Muncie labor.
2. Sup^rrtsor* D. Operating School Ftant— 1. Adralnwtrttton Bwflding 2. -Hlgfc AMtatol* 3. Elementary Schools E Maintenance School Plant— 1. Administration Building ....
2. High Schools 9,255.00 3. Elementary Schools 12,772.00 T. Fixed Charges 36,850.00
Capital Outlay—
1. New Acquisition* 38,500.00 2. Alterations 15,300.00 Total Exp. Sp. Sch. Fd $315,667.14
NOTE:
H. Debt Service— Durln
be necessary to
lectio
the year it 'Will
A. Teacher’s Salaries—
1. High Schools iJunlor( $130,900.00 2. High School (Senior) 83.600.00
B. Teacher's Salaries—
Elementary Schools 199.800.00 C. Transfer Tuition 28,000.00 Total Exp. Tuition Fund $442,300.00
VOCATIONAL FUND.
A. Salaries Vocational Teachers and Directors •.$11,571.36
B. Equipment C. Supplies ..
TUITION FUND, cher’s Salaries—
Total Vocational Fund $ 11,571.36 BOND OR SINKING FUND. A. Payment Principal $ 92,000.0# B. Payment Interest 44,112.50 Total Exp. Bd. or Sink Fund. ,»13«.U2.50
ssary to anticipate semi-annual collections by temporary loans in sum* approximating $150,000. This will be repaid by current levies in course 6t
collection.
ESTIMATE OF FUNDS TO BE RAISED. Special Tuition Vocational Bond
v Fund Fund Fund Fund
Total Budget Estimate for present
school year $315,667.14 $442,300.00 $11,571.36 $136,112.50
1. Deduct Misc. revenue for present school year (estimated on former
year mlse. rev.) 18,000.00 81,914.00
Subtract line 2 from line 1, (Taxes) $300,#07.14 $390,386.00 $11,571.36 $136,112.50
subtract line 2 from line l, (Taxes). Temporary loans to be paid before December 3ist
5.
Total (of lines 3 and 4) $300,667.14 6: Actual Balance July 3l*t, present
7. Tax to be
8.
ax <D
year
collectad present
settlement)
Misc. Rev. to be collected between
July 31 and December 31
9. Total (of Hites 6, 7 and 8) $163,526 87
10. 11.
Subtract line 9 from line 5 Est. Working Bal. for last half of next school year (not greater than
% of line 3) $109,959.73
Amount to be raised by tax levy (add lines 10 and 11)
.$300,667.14
$390,386 00
$11,571.36
$136,112.50
S
$ 20,059.66 . 143,467.21
l
$ 337.05 178,843.4#
$ 2,067.12 10,131.04
$ 19,996.74 67,642.04
.$163,526 87
$179,180.54
$12,198.16
$ 87,638.78
.$137,140.27
$211,205.46
$ 48,473.72
$172,294.54 Transferred $ 81,526.28
$247,000.00 $383,500.00 PROPOSED LEVIES.
Depleted $130,000.00
Net Taxable Property ' ' $65,000,000.00 Number of Taxable Polls 6,887
Levy Levy on Levy on Amount to 1929-1930 Polls Pro erty be Raised
Special 42 .25 !38 $247,000.00 Tuition 52 .25 .59 383.500.00 vocational : 03 ... ... Bond or Sinking 20 ... .20 130,000.00
CITY ADVERTISEMENTS
Department of Public Works
Office of The Board
City (H&Jl
Ili( L
Notice to Contractors'itrtd to the lected Muncie girls competing.
jgjMie: ^ . Notice is hereby given, td the public and to all contractors, that the Board of Public Works of the City of Muncie, in the State of Indiana, invites sealed proposals for the construction, in said City, according to the respective improvement resolutions below mentioned, and according to the plans, profiles, drawing tnd specification
file in the office of of each of the public
improvements herein described, to-
which included a tour of the Pnblix Circuit of Theatres and an engagement in the “talkies.” During her stay here. Miss Barte will conduct a local Boop-A-Doop Contest, awarding cash prizes to the se-
ipfcftng
Tot*! $1.17 .50 $1.17 $760,500.00 COMPARATIVE STATEMENT OF TAXES COLLECTED AND TO BE COLLECTED.
To Be
Collected Collected Name of Wind » 1928 Levy 1929 Levy Special .$194,700.00 $213 569.74 Tuition 2S3.200.00 301,086.70 Vocational 17,799.00 12,542.79 Bond df Sinking 70,800.00 87,816.95
Total $566,400 00 $614,716.18
Collected 1930 Levy
$273,000.00
338.000 00 19.500.00 130,000.00
$760,500.00
After th
Collected .1931 Levy $247,000.00 383.500.00 130.000 00 $760,500.00
e lax levies
ed bv such levies, may and final action thereof
appeal to tne State Board of Tax Commissioners for further and final action tnereon. by filing a petition therefor with the County Auditor not later than the fourth Monday M September, and the State Board will fix a date of hearing in tbjls county.
August 1, 193*
ng in tms county. WILLIAM F WHITE, EDWARD TUHEY.
J. LLOYD KIMBROUGH,
Aug. 8. 18
wit: Salary of IR-646, 1930, For sidewalks on Office Rent west side of 15th Street from the Trustee’s Expense:
first alley west of Burlington Drive j a. Traveling 150.00 and running east to the north line j b. Office bond 100.00
of Burlington Drive; also begin- Supplies for J. P. ning at the west line of 15th Street Records and Adv and running south west along the Public Ditches _
Notice To Taxpa pers of Tax Levies In the matter of determining the Tax Rates for certain purposes by Monroe township, Delaware ( '° U Noiice^^reby'given th^ Uwe^foTMo^ oe township, S' er legal officers of said municipality at the regular meeting place ,on the 2nd da> of ocpcember, 193J, will consider the following budget: BUDGET CLASSIFICAT ION FOR TOWNSHIPS
Special School Fund
Repair of Building and
Ground —-i—
Repair of Equipment 200.00 School Furn. and Equip. - 400.00 School Supplies — —- 400.00 Janitor Supplies 200.00 Fuel for Schools —, 800.00
Township Fund Trustee $
720.00 60.(10
Just To Mention Research We read from a brave, big story in the morning missed that the council finance committee will enthusiastically recommand and rejoice in the removal of the item of $1,000 for research in the mayor’s budget for the coming year. Now in the back part of the same edition appears the report of Ed Tuhey, secretary of the Muncie school board. This report shows that last year the school board spent exactly $5,900 for research activities. Furthermore, in the school board’s budget for the coming year appears the item $4,560 for RESEARCH OFFICE. Supt. Allen better not let the council finance committee know about his research desires or they are liable to get busy with a big pair of scissors much to the disgust of the superintendent. The council finance committee, of course, has no jurisdiction over the school budget, or anyone else for that matter although this extra-<iity department spent, according to the report of the secretary, a total of $956,217.51 last year.
north side of Burlington Drive to
the east line of 16th Street. Each bider is also to file with
the Board an affidavit that there has been no collusion in any way affecting said bid, according to the terms of Sec. 95, of the Act of March 6th, 1905. (Acts 1905, p.
219).
All such proposals should be sealed, and must be deposited with said Board before the hour of nine o’clock in the forenoon of the 26th day of August, 1930 and each such proposal must he acompaniced by a certified check payable to said City, for the sum equal to two and one-half per cent. (2%%) of City Civil Engineer’s estimate which shall be forfeited to said City as liquidated damages, if the bidder depositing the same shall fail duly and promptly to execute the required contract and bond, in case a contract shall be awarded him on such acompanying proposal. Said Board reserves the right to reject any and all bids. By Order of the Board of Public
Works.
Bernice Carpenter
Clerk.
August 15-22. 1 o
Pay of Adv. Board
Exam. Records Miscellaneous: Legal Advise Cemeteries
50.00
300.06 100.00
15.00 50.00
Road Fund
Labor 875.00
25.60 50.00
Road Tools and mach ___ Bridges and Cluverts Gravel, Stone and Other
Material 300.06 Total Road Fund 1250.00
Rivoli Theater
Indiana Tax Surveys
Survey made by the Indiana Taxpayers’ Association in four counties adjoining each other, of expenditures for governmental purposes, are significant in two respects. One is that a very considerable variation exists in the amounts collected, when averaged by the number of inhabitants affected, for public affairs. The other is that revenue requirements, if they were fixed on a per capita basis, bear more heavily in rural areas than in county seat cities and other towns. The findings announced yesterday will be supplemented later by an announcement of the results of examinations elsewhere, conducted in similar fashion. There is every cause to expect divergences that will correspond to
those just cited.
The four counties dealt with in the first report—Tipton, Hamilton, Boone and Clinton—oould not reasonably be expected of course, to be practically identical in per capita
demands. ' Needs are ne^er exactly the same in all areas, or ^ew'^ork' VoopXVoop 'Vontcst
Helen Kane, the “boop-boopa-doop” girl, will be seen and heard in the little role of “Dangerous Nan McGrew” at the Rivoli Thea-
tre. Sunday and Monday.
Mis Kane was transformed from a stage person to a stage personality about two years ago when Paul Ash, impressario of jazz at the Paramount Theatre on Broadway, gave her a “break” in one of his stage shows. She sang her baby-voice songs so charmingly that she broke all attendance records for a singer and was retain-
ed for return engagements.
Shortly after that she was cast in Hammerstein’s musical comedy “Good Boy.” Her voice became a thing to be sought on the radio and her phonograph records sold
by the hundreds of thousands.
Came her first picture, “Nothing But the Truth,” with Richard Dix It brought Miss Kane forward as an outstanding singing comedienne. Other hits in which she starred were “Pointed Heels” and “Sweetie.” She was teamed with Sheets Gallagher in “Pointed Heels” and with Stuart Erwin in “Sweetie.” Erwin is again seen as her blond and befuddled play mate
in “Dangerous Nan McGrew.”
As an extra added attraction, the mangement has secured the services and presentation of Miss Claire Bart, the young lady who carried off all honors in the recent
50.00
25.00
Total Twp. Fund — 1620.00
Poor Fund To Reimburse County __ 480.00
(Complete detail of budget estimate may
1. Total Budget Estimate for incoming year — _____ 2. Deduct Misc. Revenue incomiing year (estimated on former year Misc. Rev.) 3. Subtract line 2 from line 1 __ 4 Unexpended appropriations July 31 of present year 5. All additional appropriations between July 31 and Dec. 31 __ 6. Temporary loans to be paid be-; fore close of present year __ 7. Total (of lines 3, 4, 5 and 6) __ 8. Actual Balance July 31st of present year 9. Tax to be collected present year (December settlement) _ 10. Misc. Rev. to be collected present year (1-3 of line 2) 11. Total (of lines 8, 9 and 10) __ 12. Subtract line 11 from line 7 _. 13. Est. working bal for 6 month after close of next year (not greater than 1-2 of line 3) __ 14. Amt. to be raised by tax levy (add lines 12 and 13)
Net Taxable Property $2,401,660. Number of Taxable Polls 235. COMPARATIVE STATEMENT
FUNDS
Township Road 1 Tuition Special School _____' Library Bond Poor TOTAL
Tuition Fund Pay of Teachers 15770.00 Total Tuition Fund — 15770.00
Library Fund Library Tax 240.00
Loans, Jnt. and Insurance 200.00 School Transfers 100.00 Pay of Teachers 800 00 Teachers institute 150.00 Janitor Service — 990.00 Transportation of Children - 10000.00 Light and Power 350.00 Miscellaneous 100.00 Total Special School Fund 14990.00 • Bond Fund Bonds 3000.00 Interest - 1700.00
4700.00
Total Bond Fund
be s een in office of Township Trustee.
Township -Fund
Road Fund
Tuition Fund
Sp. Schl. Fund
Library Fund
Bond Fund
Poor Fund
$1620.00
$1250.00
$15,770.00
$14,990.00
$240.00
$4,700.00
$500.00
1,620.00
1,250.00
1,242.00 14,528.00
14,990.00
240.00
4,700.00
500.C 0
675.00
785.00
7,923.00
7,335.00
179.00
2,073.00
32.00
150.00
300.00
700.00
2,445.00
2,335.00
22,451.00
23,025.00
419.00
6,773'.00
532.00
489.93
17.85
1,018.91
6,323.71
192.40
815.00
600.00
8,000.00
8,556.00
100.00
2,000,00
100,00
1.305.00 1.140.00
618.00 1,717.00
414.00 9,433.00 13,018.00
14,879.00 8,146.00
292.00 127.00
2,000 00 4,773.00
100.00 432.00
480.00
500.00
2,342.00
6,254.00
113.00
4,773.00
48.00
1,620.00
1,217.00
15,360.00
14,400.00
240.00
480.00
PROPOSE D LEVIES
; V ;
tfENT OF
TAXES COLLECTED AND TO
BE COLLECTED
Levy On
Levy on
Amount to
Polls
Property
Be Raised
$ .07
$ 1,620.00
.05
1,200.00
$.50
.64
15,360.00
.25
.60
14,400.00
.01
240.00
. .20
4,700.00
.02
480.00
.75
1.59
38,090.00
FUNDS
Township Road Tuition Special School Library Bond Poor __ TOTAL ___
Collected 1928 Levy $ l r 730.00 3,460.00 11.500.00 14.900.00 288.00 9,000.00 40.878.00
Collected 1929 Levy $ 1868.00 2.935.00 9.606.00 13,340.00 266.00 8.805.00 - 36,820.00
Collected 1930 Levy $ 1,636.06
1,335.00
1 17,113.00 T5,615.00
- 250.00
. : 7,560.60 7 267.00
43,776.00
tax levied have been deter-
i.
To Be
Collected 1931 Levy $ 1,620.00 1,200.00 15.360.00 14.400.00
240.00
4,700.00
480.00
38,000.00
Taxpayers appearing shall have a right to be h eard thereon. After
mined, ten or more taxpayers feeling themselves aggrieved by such levies, may appeal to the State Board of Tax Commissioners for further and final action thereon, by filing a petition therefor with the County Auditor not later than the. fourth Monday of September ,and the State Board will fix a date of hearing in this county. • John R. Kirkham, Trustee. Dated August 12, 1930. f . ‘'7 ' - • • ■’
— - ' ' , ; c v - • '■ .
■ • .-- 1 ; ..lie ... ;
