Muncie Post-Democrat, Muncie, Delaware County, 1 April 1932 — Page 2

FRIDAY, APRIL 1, 1932.

I THE POST-DEMOCRAT A Democratic weekly newspaper representing the Democrats of Muftcie, Delaware County and the 8th Congressional District. The only Democratic Newspaper in Delaware County.

Entered as second class matter January 15, 1921, at the Postoffice MuaCie, Indiana, under the Act of March <>, 1979.

PRICE 5 CENTS—$2.00 A YEAR

223 North Elm Street—Telephone 2540 CHARLES H. DALE, Publisher Geo. R. Dale, Editor

Muncie, Indiana, Friday, April 1, 11)32

The Case of Dale

(Indianapolis Times) The demand of George Dale that the attorney-general of the United States investigate his indictment to determine [whether the local district attorney or grand jury has been made the subject of imposition seems reasonable. The treatment of Dale after his arrest suggests a vindictiveness that was in itself suspicious. It was common gossip upon the streets of Muncie that Dale would be kept in jail over the week-end, no matter what bondsmen might be obtained in advance. That rumor became fact after the arrest of Dale, a strong contrast to the treatment afforded those arrested in Anderson on the same day. Dale publicly charges that he is the victim of attacks by those whom he prosecuted for the very crimes he is charged with protecting. He submits to the attorney-general that he has eliminated notorious and costly graft in connection with public contracts and that grafting on public contracts and protection of crime have always been twin evils. Both exist or neither exists in any city. That sounds reasonable. Dale calls attention to his record for economy. He has reduced the tax rate. He has a surplus instead of a deficit so common in other cities. The appeal of Dale has the ring of sincerity. It does not sound like the whine of a guilty man appealing for favors. It is open, not secret. It has the note of outraged citizenship which believes that this government should not be imposed upon or used by vicious elements to destroy effort to serve the public good. The record of the prohibition department in this state has not invited unquestioned confidence. The disappearance of large amounts on repeated occasions of confiscated liquors from the Federal building suggests the resale of this department that has established such a record might easily dpartment that has established such a record might easily lend itself to the sinister purposes of those who are no longer able to pillage the public funds. Something more than the fate of Dale is involved. If innocent men can be forced to the costly process of trial and defense, if mayors who strive to serve the public are to be humiliated and destroyed without reason and by imposition practiced upon any part of the machinery of justice, the people should know it. If Dale is guilty and his charge baseless, an investigation by the attorney-general will fortify its case. If innocent, public confidence in courts can he increased by prompt apology by the government through its chief legal officer.

Trial Blazers

(By A1 Martin, in Elks Bulletin) There was a man who hated the drab ways of mediocrity. He would not be just one of the crowd. He believed not in the divine rights of kinds just because millions of other men so believed for countless generations. He dared to think. From disorganized mobs he created armies of matchless warriors, raised his country from the slave of royalty to its mistress, taught grizzled generals they were but infants in the red art of war. And to the masses he taught the majesty of their own might. That man w'as Napoleon. He PROVED what men can do. It is hard to think; easy to tamely follow the leadership of others. To lead is to be aggressive; to follow is mere passiveness. Most people lack success, lack personality, lack the bright rewards of life because they are too lazy to use the brains God gave them. They run with the herd because they fear to think for themselves. They are afraid to run counter to the opinion of the majority, always forgetting that the majority is usually wrong. They want to know what the majority is thinking so that they may think likewise. Mental effort to them is a hateful task; it is so much easier to follow marked trails than to blaze a new trail in an unknown wilderness. Education in America is almost universal, yet only a small percentage of educated people achieve even moderate success. Unless education teaches and stimulates a man to think it is largely wasted. The curse of thfe age is the trying to thing and act like everybody else. And this general craving to be one of the crowd lies in mental laziness. Thought—daring original, soaring to the starts, brought man from the jungles to his present stage of civilization. Nothing worthwhile was ever accomplished but it was preceded by imagination of some galant mind. Here and there in the vast multitude is one who has the courage to be himself—the courage to be different! He is not afraid to blaze a new trail through the jungle of mediocrity. He will not drift with the tide, but fights manfully to swim against the battling currents. He fears not the "weight of responsibility, because he has vision, confidence in himself, the knowledge that out of crumbling ruins of failure the bright sun of Success oft rises like fabled Phoenix. * Men who* have scaled the lofty heights of Ambition have always been individualists. They have had the courage to blaze new trials, to be different, to scorn the blind run of the herd. .Scorning the siren voices of false leaders seeking only their own profit, such men have risen superior to environment and .the times. They were great because they spiced existence with their own personality; were themselves—not pale shadows of others or others' thoughts.

luster Brown Shoe Co.

"red W. Puckett

10.49

3.00

204.03

t. Hene luster Brown Shoe Co, ilsbel B R.ngo ■label B. Rtngo Circuit Court, v. E. Boyce Co., supplies T2 a 11 n'* • * — "

! ’red W. Pu i. M. C. A..

■f claims

ertised for the njo: Witness my hand

VINES DROPS TEXAS MATCH

COHON PLANT FOR CELLULOSE

New Drleans, March 31.— (UP) —The day when reapers will run through fields of cotton as they do through hay v fields, mowing down stalks and bolls alike and baling them for cellulose mills, was en-

uiaitor, Delaware;* visioned. Tuesday in an address C^ut^y, Indiana. ; j b e f ore the 83rd annual meeting of

the American Chemical society. Harry J. Skinner, president of Skinner and Sherman. Inc., chemists and engineers of Boston, forecast the new kind of cotton farm.

i my

the month of March, 1932.

this 1st day of April, W. MAX SHAFER. Auditor. Delaware

Davis Cup Aspirant Beaten in Second Round; Others Advance.

sal

50.00

thought that the council does not approve of the mayor. ! Alpha p 0 i S t,

And then there are times when the Post-Democrat won- f <,1 , tiers what the people of Muncie would think of the mayoi 2 «.5o Fishei . Detroit> 1240) 6 „ 4>

Houston, Texas, March 30. —(U P)—Ellsworth Vines, Jr., matlonal ■singles champion, was eliminated yesterday from the second annual Houston ii|citational tennis toir’nanient when he lost a second, round match to Martin Buxby, Texas University star, 4-6, 6-2, 7-5. Vines, No. 1 ranking player in the United States and defending champion here, had been looked upon as a heavy favorite. He won a bye in the first round. Buxby, from Biloxi, Miss., is Florida State champion. Gilbert Hall, East Orange, ' N. J., No. 10 in’ national ranking, defeated Brown Baker, Houston, 6-1, 6-0, in another second round match. Buxby will play Jimmy Quick, Dallas, today. Quick went into the third round by defeating Lindsey Dunn, Houston, 6-2, 6-1. George M. Lott, Jr., Chicago, second in national ranking, defeated Neil Thomason, Dallas, 6-2, 6 1, in a second round match. Thomasan reached the second round by winning from J. D. Norton, Hous ton, former Texas singles champ-

ion, 7-9, 6-2, 61.

Another upset came in the first found, when Fred Baggs, New York, national veterans singles and doubles champion, lost to Karl

will have been launched, he said. Cotton grown for its cellulose content will be produced at a cost of two cents a pound, Skinner predicted. He based his observations on experiments now under way at the University of North Carolina.

Walnut Logs Are Hauled 80 Miles

Columbia City, Ind., Mar. 28—.'U P)—Walnut logs are being hauled to the S- J- Peabody mill here from a radius of 89 miles to supply the mill with timber !o fill an order for 600,000 board feet. The walnut is needed to finish the interior of the hew 42-story building being erected in Chicago by the Marshall

He said the demand for cellulose, j Field estate. used in making paper, explosives, The structure is not expected to combs, tooth brushes, billiard balls, be completed before 1934. laminated glass, in production of During the World war, (he comrayon and hundreds of other oh- pany here filled large orders for jects was growing so rapidly that gunstocks and airplane propeller extensive production must be re- blades. sorted to, and cotton is the best* o

of 2,000 varieties of plants fountl 17_

to be potential sources of the need- Jr UlTlIlir iTlalTUlI ed substance. ^ • j-v t

Mayor is Dead

The present drawback is, however, that there are no mills for unscrambling the mixture of cotton boll cellulose and the quite different cellulose of the stalk from the rest of the plant. When such a device or formula is obtained ,the new cotton industry

Marion, Ind., ‘March 80.—(UP) — Field W. Swezey. 67, former mayor of Miarion and for manv years a member of the legal department of the American Gas and Electric company, died at luq

home here tonight.

if the couieil really did approve of him.

Well here’s hoping - that the boys will all be careful

Monday night.

It’s all right to make the well known welkin ring, but why bust the diaphragm or strain the goofy old gizzard ?

rgiiila coal uo.. expe

Public Service Co., expense 123.DH Indiana Reformatory, expense 42.7ft Kuhner Packing Co., expense ^ 84

e>

A. E. Brown, expense

Co.

The Marx Co., expense Ind. Bell Telephone Co

dware Co.^B ard Co., expe

A. Retherford. tr., ex tt Chemical Co., expen Muncie Star, expense

rine. exi

19.16 ense 32.63

'expense .. 18.50

Johnson Hardware Co., expense

Jos. A. Goddard Co

Clyde

Vlunket

Elden Mar

Martha E. Gamble, sala

Dr. Hen Martha

Mattie Thomas. Blanche Nichols*

e. expense 16.03

Children's Home.

Bibler,

lar ar.

salary alary

ry E.

Yockey. salary

as. salary

"V • lary

“Bad Advertising” . Say it once with flowers.

Wilbur Sutton has long been the voice in the wilderness

complaining of the “bad advertising

famous over the land.

He and his newspaper had their part in starting the

latest load on the way, but it has got away from them. Agnes petro Now that it is going big, with banner headlines in such Herbert,Bem g cp papers as the Chicago Tribune, the Herald and Examiner, | Johnson 11 Hardware 0 c 0 .. niopiis the Indianapolis Times and many others, Wilbur thinks it’s * scon Foresm r a 0 n "co Co sunniies ^.... i i Charles Scribners Sons, sup'lies time to quit. I Williams Plumbing <fc Sup. Co . sup.

- -■ - Ind. Bell Telephone Co., service....

A. E. Browm, supplies ....

25.10

. . . 239.14 | nse 79.35 . . 70.00 i

3.00 )

Junior Coen, Kansas City, former national boys’ titleholder, beat Leslie Coleman, local favorite, 6-4, 6-1. Coleman defeated James Langham, Houston, 0-6, 6-1, 6-3, in

the first round.

All the ranking stars drew byes

in the first round.

$150.00

3.50

36.00 50.00 50.00

that has made MuncmJIHo

| Brittella Bass, salary 35.00 Gertrude Yockey. salary 35.00 James Brothers, salary 20.00 Carl Forkner. salary 50.00 Ida Grantham, salary • ,r - n "

Gary

Salary

Benadum. salary

ral Scrvi<

service

Starting something they can’t stop is a specialty of

Wilbur and his cronies.

;rown, sup

Co'orcraft Co.. Inc., supnl

J Delaware Car & Tractor Co., sup.

Martha E. Gamb’c. expense

Df LA WARE COUNTY COMMISSIONERSCIRCUIT AND SUPERIOR COURT ALLOWANCES ON FILE IN THE AUDITOR’S OFFICE TO RE ADVERTISED FOR THE MONTH OF MARCH, 1982.

Gravel Roads.

.$ 150.00

Uru*- ttBgif. mmmIuk Oenlri.,.. r.(* Bobbl* OUng«r. utMtlng 0*ntr« .. 300.00 Velma Miller, ■eeeeilni Center .... 300.00

“ ‘ Menu

Centre .. 300.00 , c c

plies

tor

ha E. Gamb'e.

Jos. A. Goddard Co., expense M. P. Odle. expense The Knaop Supply Co., ex ens Dunk Shafer, expense H. R. Theis. expease

Virginia Coal C

Hazel Car

. * Repair Free

: Robie Hirons. salary

! Thatt Witt, et al. salary rank Shock, salary 8.40 i John Burns, assessing G heo Van Fleet, salary 35.3S .Minnie Barber, assessing ames Landis, salary 3.20 Lulu Parish, assessing C

Fr

Ti mm

James Landis, salary 3.2| Ldw Huffman, salary' « 04

Glen Stinson, salary William Knott, salary Charles S. Heaton, salary Herbert R. Fuson. et al. salary

MMUlng Centre .. 300.00

Earl Clark, aisMslng Centre ...... 300.00 Stella Miller, awning Centra .... 88.00 Laura Adams, assessing Centre .... 80.00

rpenter. assessing Centre 100.00

mArsdol,

expense

Allen, exnense

Feed Mill.

Ind. Bell Telenhor

Board of Ch

la.oo' j. w. van

assessln

2.4t 2.4( 1.2C

40.7!

Charles M. Curtis, salary 3.9(

ss. salary 37.4!

Ted Snodgrass, salary Oren McKinley, salary Mort Plummer, salar

Forest E. Hiatt. Clifford Reasoner, John Brimhall, sal Joe McColm, sal Omer Hedgeland,

ary

alary

37.4! 11.2<

2.0( 3^(

24.8<

9 6<

49.01

1.61

as

Castor, assessing

Sarah E. Smith, assessing Newton Peterson, assessing Nil

ing Centre 100.00 entre .... 100.00 Centre .. 100.00 entre .... 68.00

sing Union.. - 27.00

Union... 75.00

les... 88.00

Luella Peterson, assessing’Niles.... 21.00

Clerk.

Glenn Miller, salary $ 90.00

Ben Dcpo

ell

card

Lola Wells Kig-r. ex ens

•'’-air & Sal"

ense .

Co., expense ren’s Guardi

Typewriter R"’

H"»'th

ip

iild

Sal"s

Coinraiss*

jaler

Co..

oner.

lu Parish, Ercie S. Sarah E.

S. G. Jumn, sal County Attorney.

45.00 45.00 46.00 106.91 16.95 10.95 10.56

8.10

30.99 10 00

.. 41.16

3.00 3 20 9.26

. . 74.87 .-. 50.00 .. 41.60

1.75 4.0''

. . 159.57 j . . 10.00 | . . 20.20 i

7.05

ns.

. .$151.50 exp. 2.25 $81.01

Americanism: Living on credit to make timej^r unnaturally good; thinking the times abnormal because we must pay for what

get.

we

Paid

Quarterly Dividend

April 1st

the regular quarterly dividend on i ? the Preferred Stock of * ❖ % * INDIANA GENERAL ! % SERVICE COMPANY | I t

lary

alary ...

lary .

Omer Hedgeland. salary

H. Reid Bowers, et al, salary .... 29.4< Charles E. HamiUon, salary .... 8.5( Verda Howell, salary 41,6!

: Rorter Ross, salary ... C. A. Marker, salary . | Harvey Jackson, salary Ralph Richman, salary Kenneth Miller, salary Orland Trout, salary . Hobart Hirohs. salary , Jim Moore, salary ... Orville Stephenson, sal , Ernest Johnson, salary Jim NiccUm. salary .. iCharlle House, salary . Charlie Hiatt, salary .. ' Henry Williams, salary Will Jones, salary ... Eugene Hirons. salary Carlton Howell, salary

O. ~ ’

Elizabeth Meranda, salary Bertha Arbogast, salary .

Ond

67.50 81.00

Heckenhauer and Son, supplies Delaware_Co. Nat. Bank, supplies

Electric Repair Shop, R. M. Jones, supplies

Rector Supply Co., supplies

United Parts Co.. Inc. Kitselman Brothers.

supplies

PPl

H. J. Shrader Co., supplies 2.7i Knapp Supply Co., supplies 2.3< Ileckett Bronze Co., supplies .... 29.3i

up lie-

plies..

80.11 110.01 50.41 47.61 53.21 67.21 53.21 56.01 24.51 46.21 42. O'

2.8i

30.8i 53.2< 39.2' 46.9*

5.6 2.5i 1.9i 7.4 6.0

30.6

8.0

17.14

ere Petro, salary 67.50 Mabel B. Ringo. expense 5.00 Coast Carbon Paper Co., expense.. 12.50 A. E. Boyce Co., expense 252.40 Ind. Bell Telephone Co., expense.. 10.81

Auditor.

Mildred E. Irvin, salary $ 79.16 Ada Williams, salary 66.66 Miriam S. Reed, salary 62.50 Remington Rand, Inc., expense .. 3.15 W. Max Shafer, expense 1-31 Ind. Bell Telephone Co., expense .. 8.45 A. E. Boyce Co., expense 245.56 Treasurer. A. E. Boyce Co., expense $ 75.20 Joseph T. Meredith, expense 100.301 Ind. Bell Telephone Co., expense .. 8.45 Burroughs Adding Machine Co., exp. .75 | Recorder. Ind. Bell Telephone Co., expense ..$ 6.50 A. E. Boyce Co., expense 185.49 Excess fees 1. 575.88 ,

Sheriff.

F. W. Puckett, board prisoners. .$1,978.40 J. Morris F. Leech, salary 125.00

125.00

8.00

John Carr'

lance Officer

S. Moore, sa'a-y i" V. Dunn, salary

Weiebls ami Measures Iwspecto

21.0 16.8

3.»

18.9i

3.61

28.01 17.6 17.61 15.41 45.5<

supplies

r Arthur B. Cassell, et al, salary G. M. Waite, et al. salary3. M. Peterson, salary ........... Raymond Oren, et al, salary .... Prank Freer, salary Otis Norton, et al, salary Perry Orr. salary Kenneth Swander, salary Delbert Bowen, et al. salary ....... Robert Bowen, salary

VtTn. H. Boyd, et al. salary 37.H • Lbwls Beach, salary ’ "*

’/•The W. Q. O’Neall Co., supplies .. G. A: S. Tires, Inc.,< supplies Muncie Stone & Lime Co., sup... Max Zeigler & Bros., supplies .. Kernp Machine Co., supplies .**. George Haiss Mfg. Co., supplies .. Delaware Sand & Gravel Co., sup. Muncie Washed S. <te G. Co., sh] Jtuncle Water Works Co., supp!

City Supply Co., supplie

Morris * . • die B. porn, sala

Fred W. Puckett, salary Fred W. Puckett, trans. prisoners Fred W. Puckett, mileage Fred W. Puckett, expense Ind. Bell Telephone Co., expense A. E. Boyce Co., expense

Surveyor.

H. K. Morrison, salary

Lester Jaunty, mileage 21.70

W. and L. E. Gurley, expense

119.00 58.31

5.00

14.97 12.10 $100.00

H. Lester Janney. expense A. E. Boyce Co., expenst

Ind. B

Boyce Co.. ;ell Telepho

LaVaughn Ind. Bell

e Co., expense

Superintendent of Schools.

S.

41.27

1.50

.45

6.80

) The City Council The council marched up the hill and marched right

down again.

In other words a special meeting was called for Wed- j nesday night and when nobody came but Bob Parkinson and Earl Everett the epochal gathering of super-statesmen was

called off.

The boys were simply surcharged with wim, wigor and winegar and thought they couldn’t w*ait until Monday night, the regular monthly meeting time. vSo Monday night the pop valve will blow open and Station BUNK will crowd the crooners off the air. Local dailies are authority for the statement that it was intended at the special meeting to voice the many grievances against the mayor that trouble the hearts of the coun-

Ipilmen.

Sometimes the Post-Democrat is assailed by the dread

Magic City

' Lincoln Oil Re.

[ Indiana Gen. Service Co

Bell Telephone Co

pply Co., fining Co.,

vice

iiip. lies

;upplf<

sup

pplies

■ Ind. Bell Telephone Co., supplies I i. E. Boyce Co.,. supplies ! I Johnson Hardware Co., supplies

Assessing.

1.8<

193.2< 324.Of 26.2S 29.6( 54.01 53.21

6.0(

16.0C

1.2!

1,012.0B 4.20.86

9.71

14.65

8.2C

18.98

Duke, sala

Telephone Co.,

Lee O. Baird, expense

Coroner.

Clarence G. Piephoi sala Dr. J. R. Hurley, autop

County Asse

Ind. Bell Telephone Co., expense

A. E Boyce Co., expense

The J. M. Coe Printing Co., expense

Coe

Prosecuting Attorney.

Co , expens

ry $72.00 expense .. 7.7o 25.80 ry. expense. .$73.00 ipsy 33.06

ssor

pense.... $ 96.'

6.15

15.00

Wm. H. salary $66.6C

Attend:

$80.0" 95.00

o-.

J. E. Green. s->Fry '. $125 00

Poor Attorney.

Wm. Taft Lesh. salary $100.00

Contagious Diseases.

Owl D’Mig Store, exoense $17 50 J. M. Atkinson, exncnse in.on Emma Burns, expense 10.00

salarv 25.00

25.09

mma Burns.

Fdna H. Williams, salarv Pansy B. Cumpton Howell, salary

Clinic.

-s Life Ins. Co . rent Service Co , expense

Northern State Ind. General

Wayne Pharmacal Abbott Labo’-atorif

Simply Co

n<>n;

a nee lileaa

$30 oo i

1.05

exp. 8.35 70.86 . . . .$17.80

40.00

John s Moore, mileage Car-'e V. Dunn. mlPaze

Weights am* Measures Inspector. . J E. Green, mileage $29 80; Ind. Bell Telephone Co., expense .... 7.75 Conntv Agricultural Agent. Mvron F Cromer, salary and exp.. .$153 09 i Althea Harvev. salarv 50.00

County Advertising.

Post-Demncrat. county advertising. .$ 53.39 Muncie Star, county advertising .. 102.61

Refund

C. V. M. Peckinpaugb. ref. Cen...$38.20

Mont S. Vore.

Tax

cinpaugh. efund c'tv

1.49

.$75.00 . 75.00

75.00 75.00 75.00 75.00 75.00

$3.00

8.80

A. E. Boyce Co , expense Ind. Bell Telephone Co . expense

Court House.

Arthur Jones, salary $ 75.00 McClellan McFierson, salary 75.00 Melda Batten, salary 50.00 :Otis Elevator Co., expense 1150

C. M. Kimbrough Co.

Ind. Ge:

irthur Franklin, assessing Salem . .$100.00

prank Daniels, assessing ~ ~ ‘ Mt,

Frank

J. S. Vanland

Salem .. 72.00 j-i*. Pleasant 100.00 Mt. Pleasant 15.00

ohrtson. assess. Mt. Pleasant 75.00 tnland’ham, assess. Harrison

n. Service

Plunkett Chemical

John Burnam. expense Johnson Hardware Co.

Muncie

J. A

expense

Wm. fi. Reed, assess. Geneva Reed, assess.

J<M

Har

100.00

well, assessing A. Fymne Baird, assessing Centre 88.00 assessing Centre .100.00

ugh Co., expense 18: rvice Co., expense.... 729.24

105.00 91.00 I

I., expense .. 70.84

icie Water Works Co., expense 40.47 I Butts and Son. expense 243.24

Jail.

Marie M. Puckett, salary $ 50 00 John Watson, salary , 90.00 J. F. Downing, salary 25.00 Ind. Gen. Service Co., expense .... 354.ol Ind. Bell Telephone Co., expense .. 16.7o Clvde A. Retherford. trustee, exp. 3.50 Muncie Water Works Co., expense 2,>.09 H. R. Theis. expense 16.30 Johnson Hardware Co., expense .. 7.50

ref

Soldier Burial.

John W. Patterson. Downs ... O. O. Fraze. O'Dell ..■ Harry Garland. Conner Moffitt &; Pienho. Hughes Moffitt & Pienho. Hnuk Moffitt & Pienho. Ball M. L. Meeks & Sons, Ra'cliff

M. L. Meeks & Sons. Bradbury 75.00 M. L. Meeks At Sons. Shanks 75.00 Mrs. J. E. Johnson. Maiovs 75.03

Dependent Children.

Board of Children’s Guardians, children in home $873.95

Board

motl

White’s

stitute. depend'

The

dependent Poor Relief.

C. L. Richman. trus.. pr.. Salem..$ 298.32 T. H. Miller, trus.. pr.. Mt. Pleas. 2,165.16 B. F. Tuttle, trus.. pr.. Harrison 282.14 M. E. Vannatter, trus., pr., Wash. 427.16 , C. D. Kern, trus., pr.. Monroe 427.16 Carl E. Ross. trus.. pr.. Centre 73,213.38 i

87.50

6.00

» 5.00 10.00

2.93

me ..

of Children's Guardians,

oers’ pension 889.29

Indiana Manual Labor In-

<fiit

ute. dependent children Inriiananolis Orphan Asylum, endent children

204.75 23.25

Kern,

I. Ross. trus.. pr..

A. At P. Store, noor, Centr M. L. Meeks At Sons. poor. Centre J. H. Williams, poor. Centre .... Dr. J. C. Stover, poor. Centre .. Dr. J. C. McMillan, poor Centre.. Dan Dowling, poor, Centre Ball Memorial Hosn., pr. Centre Dr. F. E. Hill, poor. Centre .... G. W. Brinson, trus.. pr., Ham’ton J. M. Osenbaugh, trus.. pr.. Union H. R. King, trus.. poor. Liberty S. W. Michael, trus., pr.. Del’are Arley E. Shirk, trus., poor, Niles

nity Ir

A Mofie Treat for the whole family j and you know it’s worth the price ♦.»

Inquests.

nuHCS'i ... Clllie Garver. assessing centre .... 108.00

Smith, assessing cer

A. Ret

ie Water . Theis. e ■on Hard'

A. Goddard Co., expens ms Plumbing Ar Supply, etc Chemical Co., expens*

Infirr

God cl

exp.

11a Smith, assessing centre 100.00 o. P. Miller, salary ollie V; - Pfeiffer, assessing ■ Centre 96.00 Bessie E. Miller, salary .. p.VJ. Pfeiffer, assessing Centre;... 96.00 Dr. C. A. Jump, salary .. 1 Betty Lou Pfeiffer, assessing Centre 36.00 Jennie Kiefer, salary i M.‘ P. • Manning, assessing Centre 96.00 James Fox. salary Wilfred Wingate, assessing Centre 100.00 Edith Dunkin, salary Rav Munshower, assessing Centre 100.00 Milton Webb, salary Milt Davis, asseasing Centre .... 100.00 Harry Dunkin. salary ,.Charles 1 Devinney, assessing Centra 100.00 jatne* Green, salary ‘Oscar Reed, assessing- Centre IflO.Oo Charley Curtp: .salary — Charles Thompson, assessing Centre 60.00 j H n'cs Helm, salary Elmer Warfel, assessing Centre .. lOO.on Minnie Curtis, salary — Grace Guthrie, assessing Centre.. lOO.OO Margaret Rinker, salary

MS* VuDi Assessing Centre 66.00 ~

22.38

5.15

35.00 .$150.00 60.00 . 113.00 . 75.00 . 20.00 . 45.00 . 15.00 . 45.00 . 45.00 . 15 60 . 24.70 . 45.00 . 50.00

Insanity

Mabel B. Ringo Roscoe H. Beesgn Fred W. Puckett

The Keller Company 26.84

Mabel. B. ~

When you take the family to the movies—you know, and they know—that three hours of feature entertainment is well worth the price. But consider what values you and the family get when you buy electric service. To run a washing machine or a vacuum cleaner for three hours costs less than three cents—and substitutes leisure for drudgery.

More than /4 hour

♦ ♦ ♦

but where

do you get more for your money than in buying Electric Service?

Lena Larke

The Ma

Dr. P. D. Ar

rTd

Mabel B. Ringo Arthur C. Rettlg Henry Bibler A. t. N. Trent ..$ Kfabel B. Ringo .5.1 1. N. Trent

5.00 3.00 5.00 6.00

6.00 1 3.00 1

5.00 6.00 6.00 3.00 5.00 6.00 6.00

Will C. Moore 3.00 Mabel B. Ringo 5.00 Orville E. Spurgeon 6.00 Olay A. Ball 6.00 John' H. Williams , 3.00 A. E. Brown 12.25 . . Fred W. Puckett 82.00‘ ^ A. E. Brown 22.49

Frank E. Hill Charles J. Stover Mabel B. Ringo F. E. Kirshman C. J. Stover ..

Moore

More than X hour

More'than JX htmr* mJc

Indiana General Service Company