Muncie Post-Democrat, Muncie, Delaware County, 24 January 1941 — Page 4

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POST DEMOCRAT, FRIDAY, JANUARY 24, 1941

THE EOST-DEMOCRAT A fltemocratie weekly newspaper lepresentlng the Democrats of ■(iuncie, Delaware County ana the 10th Congressional Dlstnet, The only Democratic Newspaper in Delaware County. Entered as second classc matter January 15, 1921, at the PoBtoffice «t Muhcie, Indiana, under Act of March 3, 1879. ^ PRICE 5 CENTS—$1.50 A YEAR

MRS. GEO. R, DALE, Publisher 916 West Main street.

Muncie, Indiana, Friday, January 24, 1941,

Look Whose Hand He’s Been Biting! A company was formed in the depths of the Hoover depression. It paid no dividends in 1931 or 1932, nor in subsequent years. Yet in 1940 its board of directors was able to pay a dividend of 40 cents a share, after reporting that it had spent $100,000,000 in 10 years in construction and modernization of plants. The directors of this corporation point out to shareholders that the enterprise is financially sound and that its productive capacity has increased 41 per cent in 10 years. The report says: “On Dec. 31, 1930, the corporation had a working capital of $41,000,000 with a funded debt of $56,000,000, or $15,000,000 in excess of its working capital. Today the working capital is $150,000,000, or more than $8,000,000 in excess of outstanding funded debt.” The company that has experienced this gratifying growth is Republic Steel Corporation. The nation’s No. 1 New Deal hater, Tom Girdler, is board chairman. Note the following' pertinent facts: 1. The company expanded very rapidly under the New Deal. 2. It did so in spite of the fact that it is part of heavy industry, upon which the New Deal is supposed to be especially severe. 3. Most of its expansion came before the national defense program and as a result of normal New Deal business recovery policy. 4. The period of rapidly growth included the period of bitter struggle with a union in which the corporation fought demands for higher wages and asked public support on the assertion of a spokesman that the union wanted to press it to the wall. 5. That the funded debt of the corporation increased, although its net debt decreased. last is important because Girdler has joined with other real!tH^naries in denouncing the New Deal for spending and increasing tKe^ttebfJn order to create national recovery -—including the recovery of Republic Steel. It is just possible that this record of success is having an effect on Girdler. His report to stockholders is remarkably free from innuendos directed agawsk the New Deal. As to national defense,'the report says: “The course for essential industry to pursue.is clearly charted. Management and employes must work together and in complete co-operation with the government to the single end that the production of the necessary materials for national defense may be insured.” That’s just fine. We hope “complete co-operatiOU with the government” is going to include observance of the National Labor Relations Act.—floosier Sentinel.

ROOSEVELT

(Continued From Page One)

Time Has Vindicated the WPA Time, which tests all things and fenders final judgment, is confounding in the most devastating manner those who a few years ago were maligning the “New Deal’s” relief efforts and shamelessly slandering jobless,American workers who tyere being aided.' Nothing was too mean for critics to say about the WPA, and the unfortunate workers were spared no insult. The situation is different today. Incidents like these have silenced slanderous tongues: The army this week awarded the Distinguished Service Medal to the late Colonel Francis C. Harrington, former WPA administrator, whose death last October was hastened by over-work. Accompanying the medal was a citation saying that Harrington made the “greatest peace-time effort ever undertaken in contributing to the well-being of millions, with benefit to the entire nation.” The job of providing badly-needed housing for 'defense workers has been turned over to the WPA, will assurance that the job will be speedily and honestly done. Colonel Brehon H. Somervell, WPA administrator at New York, has been drafted by the army to salvage the can-tonment-construction program, after it has been messed up by the quartermaster’s department. William S. Knudsen, defense chieftain, rejoiced that the WPA has preserved the skill of millions of workers who otherwise would have become rusty and, therefore, less valuable to the defense program.” Army and navy officials declare the nation is safer by reason of “thousands of useful projects” completed by WPA workers—airports, army bases, strategic highways and similar betterments. “Boondoggling”—that is what the critics once called all this useful work. “National salvation”—that is the way military chieftains now describe it. The critics, like Of Man River, “jest say nothing,” because words to which they are accustomed would stick in thieir throats.—Labor.

Roosevelt and his wife the former Ann Clark of Boston, and Elliott Roosevelt and his wife, the former Rutli Googin of Ft. Worth. Mr .Roosevelt, for the actual oath stood behind a little mahogany table used for every inauguration but there since Lincoln’s second term The Bible was a 300-year old Folio edition printed in Dutch, and originally owned by Nicholas Roosevelt son of Claes Martenssen Van Roosevelt, first of the president’s ancestors to reach the New World The parade which followed was shorter than in most previous inaugurations. |Mr. Roosevelt had ordered simplicity in keeping with the seriousness of the world and national situation. In his inaugural address to massed thousands in the capitol plaza. Mr. Roosevelt challenged the philosophy of men who believe that democracy is doomed, who believe that “tyranny and slavery have become the surging wave of the future.” “We Americans know this is not true,” he declared. “ . . . we do not retreat. We are not content to stand still. As Americans we go forward, in the service of our country, by the will of God.’ 1 Then he turned to the nation’s need for maintenance of the “sacred fire” of liberty, and he said: “The preservation of the spirit and faith of the nation does and will furnish the highest justification and every sacrifice that we make in the cause of national defense.” He spoke just after he had taken the oath Tfor his unprecedented third term swearing to “preserve, protect and defend the constitution” for the next four portentous years. The parade lines were forming near the capitol as he spoke. Fair and cold weather prevailed in contrast to the heavy downpour of 1937 when he was inaugurated for his second term. Garner Swears Wallace He had been preceded in the oath-taking 'ceremony by VicePresident Henry A. Wallace who was sworn in by his retiring predecessor John Nance Garner. The president’s oath was administered by Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes. The president stated the object of the third term as one to service America and its institutions from disruption from without. He said that this is the cardinal principle.of Ibis era chiefly divergent from that, of Washington’s day when America had to be created and welded together and that of Lincoln’s day when the task of the people was to preserve the Republic from disruption from withip.” invokes “National Spirit” Speaking in the heart of a nation at peace but against the backdrop of a world in war, he proclaimed “in the face of the great perils never before encountered, our strong purpose is to protect and perpetuate the integrity of democracy. F<5r this we muster the spirit of America and the faith of “America.” The inaugural address was a call to service for democracy and the profession of faith, that the democraitc principle is so essential in the nature of man that it cannot be stamped out by mailed fists. He spoke of the “spirit” of a nation as the most important element of its life-more vital than its body or its mind. And he added, if the spirit of America were killed even though the nation’s body and mind constricted in an alien world, the America we know would have perished.” U. S. GLASSWARE POPULAR / Glassware from the United States is becoming popular in Mexico. o Brazil’s population has more than trebled in the last half century.

Xjur*younget set calls for GRAVY

Dorothy Greig^

Reality On the Farm

No one has a fuller conception of the word, reality, than the farmer. He deals with reality every day of his life. He does not know the meaning of compromise—thdre is no such thing in nature. And if he is a successful farmer he probably markets the products of his farm as realistically as he raises them. Millions of farmers throughout the country have banded together in local groups and formed marketing cooperatives. These cooperatives are owned and operated by the farmers themselves. They are not subsidized, they do not attempt to mulct the consumer. They are designed solely to create more stable marketing, better distribution methods, and to promote fair and reasonable prices. They are run on a sound business basis and are of ever increasing importance in modern agriculture. They are the farmer’s answer to reality.

rWERY wave of small fry as It Jui comes along over the years just naturally loves gravy—over bread, in a brown pool atop fluffy mashed potatoes, on meat, over vegetables. Even grown-ups have been known to view with anticipation a big bowl of rich brown gravy on the dinner table. t But I know a thing or two about gravy I’m going to pass on to you. One is how to enrich the flavor and increase the quantity of pan gravy. This I call: Savory Beef Gravy 3 cups browned beef gravy ^ 1 can condensed mock turtle soup Add the mock turtle soup to the browned beef gravy. Heat to the boiling point and serve. This gives about 4 l /t cups of gravy. And next, believe it or not, It’s possible to have gravy any time you want it whether you have meat to start from or not. It’s done with condensed soups. This particular one is a deeply flavored beef gravy because the consomm6 and mock turtle soups are both made on a rich beef stock base: Guick Gravy 3 tablespoons butter 3 tablespoons flour 1 can condensed consommA % can wa*er 1 can condensed mock turtle soup 1 Melt the butter in a saucepan, add the flour and blend. Then add the consommS and Vz can of water, cook until thickened. Add the mock turtle soup and simmer 3-5 minutes to blend thoroughly the flavors. Strain before serving. Makes 3% cups gravy.

Bluff Burglar’ Lacks Finesse, Loses On Call

Philadelphia. — Authorities are searching for the West Philadelphia “bluff burglar” who, it seems, always get “bluffed'' away from his job. _ For example, he entered the home ol Hyman Sherman and awakened Sherman when he stumbled over something in the hall. “Is that you, Meriam?” Sherman asked sleepily, thinking the shadowy figure in the hall was one of his three daughters. There was ao answer. “Rose?” Sherman tried again. Still silence. “Is that Phyllis?” Sherman called and again—no answer. “You’d better answer or I’ll shoot,” Sherman shouted, pulling bluff number one, as he had no we (port"It’s William.” the wavering voice from the hall answered. Since there is no Wi Ham in the Sherman family, Sherman ran toward the hall shouting: ‘ill kill you! Adolph! Oh, Adolph! ” That was Sherman’s second bluff. There isn’t any Adolph in his family either, but the intruder Med. Police believed it was the same man who awakened another West Philadelphia sever-i nights previously and when cnallengcd. harked like a dog. That also was an error--there wasn’t any dog m the house o FLIERS FIGHT MALARIA Aviators are applying chemicals to areas in Russia that are sources

Legal Notice

EMPIRE STATE LOTTERY URGED

Albany, N. Y.—A drive to permit state operated lotteries as a means of easing the taxpayers burden and to provide funds for defense will he continued in the 1941 legislature. Sen. Phelps Phelps, New York City Democrat, emphasizing the financial advantage of lotteries, plans to sponsor two. resolutions: to amend the state constitution to permit state-operated lotteries and to memoralize Congress to pass necessary legislation for national tional lotteries. • For two years Phelps has tried unsuccessfully to put across his lottery proposal. But now with the unprecedented armament costs, Phelps believes legalization of lotteries would bring much-needed revenue to relieve the tax burden. Other Countries Cited “Despite all the hue andycry that lotteries are the essence of all evils,” Phelps said, “I have only to point out that some countries have harnessed the will to gamble which exists in most human beings.” Phelps explained that revenue derived from lotteries enabled Puerto Rico to build one of the finest hospital systems in the

world. Ireland, too, he said, built hospitals with the profits from sweepstakes. “In addition, the lottery 'and sweepstakes have given work to thousands of people,” Phelps said. “Anci reliable statistics prove that the cause of gambling was not helped in any manner.” He said $200,000,000 is gambled away in New York State each year, without any part going toward the cost of relief, state government, defense or other expenses which “pile up on every taxpayer within the state.” Draft Lottery Stressed “We do use federal lotteries for some purposes already. Our potential army owes much of its number to a little lottery run in Washof the expense incurred by that ington. We can finance a great deal army by the same means by which it was selected. Phelps’ resolution in the 1940 legislation proposed that the state “operate and conduct lotteries, the net proceeds of which shall be devoted to alleviate the distress and suffering caused by unemployANGLER, 98, GETS LICENSE Sacramento, Cal.—California has entered its claim to having the nation’s oldest fisherman on the basis of a license issued this year to A. B. Randolph, Riverside Negro. He gave his age as 98 and said he was a slave in pre-Civil war days in Georgia.

BSAiLLE ON WATCHES

The Finnish Red Cross has or dered watches with Braille faces for soldiers whose eyes were injured in the war with Russia. t : O Sheriff Sale

By virtue of a certified copy of a Judgment and Decree to me directed, from the Clerk’s office of the clerk of the Delaware Superior Court, in a (Cause wherieln Borne Owner,k’ .J.oa^i Corporation is plaintiff, atnd William E. Kidd, Flossie H. Kidd, Kenneth A. Oreen, Norma Jenavie Green, Fred HlatUeman, Hetli&e Har^lman,' JG(reely Kumlier Co., and Adam F. Williams, are defendants requiring me to make the sum of Nineteen Hundred Sixty Six ■ ($1966) Dollars and Seventy-Four (74) Cants, wdth interest on said decree and etBits, 1 will expose at Public Auction to the higher;! bidder, on Thursday (lie 27th' day of February A. D.. 1941 between the curs f 10 o’clock a. m and 4 o’clock p. uj. c.’ said day, at the door of the Court House of said Delaware County, Indiana, the following described Real Estate, to-wit: X.ot number one hundred seventyseven (177) in John J. Perkins’ Addition to the City of Muncie, Indiana . Said sale will be made without relief from valuation or appraisement laws, and without any right of redemntinn from said salA Immediately after said sale, X, as Sheriff, will execute and deliver to the purchaser a deed of conveyance for said real estate or ;:o much thereof as shall be sold at said sale ,, OTIS P. SNODGRASS of January 2.2rd, 1941. Wm. A. McClellan. Plaintiff's Att'y. Jan. 24, 31. Feb. 7.'

235

(Continued From Page One) losis, 6; painful flat feet and other defects of the feet, 8; defects of bones and joints, 6; underweight, 2Only three men were turned down because of venereal diseases —two cases of gonorrhea and one of syphilis being reported. In addition to rejections because of physical and mental defects, one man was found to have been convicted of a felony and was not accepted by the Army for that reason. ' Lt. Col. Robinson Hitchcock, state selective service director, requested employers not to make pennanent replacements of selected men until final acceptance by the-Army, since it is possible that some selectees will be rejected at the Induction Center. It was felt that these men are entitled to be reemployed the same as if they had completed their year’s training. Lt. Col. Hitchcock also stated that failure to meet the exacting physical requirements of the Army did not necessarily mean that a man was unable to do a full day’s work in civilian life. He explained that the Army is looking forward ten years in each case. All selected men will remain in the reserve force of the Army for that length of time, and only those men are accepted for service now whom the Army can expect to be in top physical condition at the epd of that time.

BEGAT. AirVKimSEM ENT

Annual roport of the Clerk-Treasurer

of Yorktown, Indiana, disburaomiMitil and

for l he

of the Town

showing receipt

balances of all town revenues year ending December 31, 194(i

—Receipts—

Balance on hand Jan. 1, 194° Taxes, .lime draw Refunds Gas tax Excise tax Taxes. December draw Total —Disbursements— Salaries of trustees Salary Clerk-Treasurer Salary of town marshal .... Salay of attorney Salary of fire chief Salary of firemen Telephone service Hall lights Fire truck supplies I.egal advirtlsing Office supplies Bond premiums Firemen's insurance Insurance on building Coal and supplies Fire plug rental Bond of fire truck Bond on fire station Interest on truck and elation Street Commissioner's salary Firemen’s exemption Law suit settlement Clean up Rent on dumping ground.... Street lights Lrfihor .C. Material

$3,124.15 3.216.60

52.95

865.68 333.34 2.360.SO $9,953.52 $ 225.00

200.00

1,275.00 200.00

60.00 179.00 31.65 25.97

24 5.50

102.6 1 136 61 4 5.00 60.00 27.00 71.50

625.00 500.00 200.00

1 1 8.90

255.00

50.13

478.70 YSff.tvri

25.00

633.60 272.75 1.632.03

Total disbursed $(7,861.98 Balance on hands Jan. 1, 1941 .$2,091.54 Town’s indebtedness, $1,600, Fire Engine House and Town Hall, 4% per cent bonds; Fire fighting equipment bonds, $500 outstanding, 5V 3 per cent bonds. Water Fund —Receipts— Balance on hand Jan. 1, 1940. .$1,708.29 Commercial sales 4,039.76 Fire plug rental 625.00 Total receipts including bal. $6,373.05 —Disbursements— Bond retirement $1,000,00 Interest on bonds 1,350.00 Water analysis 10.00 Power and lights 588.30 Ijabor and material 353.83 Water extension 1,079.1 2 Cross income tax 75.87 Printing and stamps 62.93 Bond premium 15.00 Meter refund 1.20 Salary of superintendent .... 600.00 Total disbursed $5,136.25 Balance Jan. 1, 1941, including balance $1,230.80 Water Works indebtedness, revenue bonds, 4 per cent, outfitanding $.33,000.04) Total Receipts and Disbursements of all Funds Balances on hands Jan. 1, 1940 $ 4,832.44 Receipts, all sources 11,494.13

Total receipts Total expenditures

. $16,326.57 .$12,998.23

Bal. Jan. 1, 1941, ail funds.. $ 3,328.34 HERSCHEL WATKINS. Clerk-Treasurer

GOOD LIGHf Oil will be thrilled by the light in His eyes throughout the years in a House ol' Young Ideas—an ELECtric Home. The latest developments in the art of Better Light—Better Sight keep you young by helping to prevent squinting wrinkles and frowns . . . headaches . . . fatigue . . . With our low rates, it’s smart to use electricity for everything you can in the home . . . the more you buy, the less the unit (KilowattHour) cost. INDIANA GENERAL SERVICE COMPANY

MefotyoutAomthk ELECTRIC

THE MORE YOU BUY- THE LESS IT COSTS' PER UNIT

Tax Rate for Delaware County, Year 1940, Payable 1941

Notice 1* hereby given that the tax duplicates of $100 taxable property; also the amount of tax on ea

Office of the Treasurer of Delaware County, Indiana, January, 1940

idy to receive taxes charged thereon and now due. The following table shows the rate of the various townships and corporations on each

Delaware County for the year 1940 are now in my hands, and that I am

each poll. All male citizens between the ages of 21 and 50 years inclusive, are subject to the noil tax.

Treasurer and that I

Salem

Mt. Pleasant

Harrison I ing

Washington

Centre I Hamilton I Union

Perry I Liberty i Delaware I Niles

awn ilban

1940 PAYAYBLE 1941

Chief Justice Hughes

There has been a rumor in Washington for several weeks that Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes will ret-ire-fr-oro the Supreme Court within a few months. He has reached the

age that entitles him to leave the bench.

On I I On

On I I On

On $1.1,00

I On

On I I On

Town of I Town of Eaton I Gaston

On I I

On moo

I On I I On

own of I Town of I, City of I ^ Selma I YorktownK Muncie I E

I On I I On ryTT ID/vTT

.$100 I Pall $400 I Poll

1 1

State Tax

.041511.001 .041511.001

.041511.001 .041511.001

.041511.001

.041511.001

.041511.001

.041511.001

.041511.001

.041511.001

.041511.001

.041511.001

.0 41511.001

.041511.001

.041511.001

.041511.001

.041511.001

.041511.001

1

3 1

Common School Relief Fund

.07 | .501

.07

1 .501

.07

1 .501

.07

1 .301

.07

1 .501 .07

1 .501

.07

1 .501

.07

1 .501

.07

1 .501

.07

1 .501

.07

1 .501

.07

1 .501

.0 7

1 .501

.07

.501

.07

1 .501

.07

1 .501

.07

1 .501

.07

1 .501

2

3 1

State Teachers Pension Fund

.03 V I

.03

1 1

.03

1 1

.03

1 1

.03

1 1

.03

1 1

.03

1 1

.03

1 !

.03

1 1

.03

1 1

.03

1 1

.03

1 1

.0 3

1 1

.03

1

.03

1 1

.03

1 1

.03

1 1

.03

1 1

3

4 1

Indiana Board of Agriculture

.00351 I

.00351 I

.00351 1

.00351 |

.00351 I

.00351 |

.00351 |

.00351 |

.00351 1

.00351 1

.00351 1

.00351 1

.0 0351 |

.00351 |

.00351 |

.00351 |

.00351 1

.00351 1

4

5 1

State Forestry Tax

.002 | |

.002

1 1

.002

1 1

.002

1 1

.002

1 1 .002

1 1

.(7, >2

1 1

.002

1 1

.002

C 1

.002

1' 1

.002

1 1

.002

1 1

.0 02

1 | .002

1

.002 J |

.002

1 1

.002

1 1

.002 | |

5

« 1

Indiana Wolf Lake Park Fund

.002 | |

.002

1 1

.002

1 1

.002

1 1

.00 2

1 1

.002

1 1

.002

1 I .002

1 1

.002

1 1

.002

1 ! 1

.002

1 1

.002

( 1

.0 02 | |

.002

1

.002

1 1

.002

1 1

.002

1 1

.002

1 1

6

1 1

New Harmony Memorial

.001 | |

.001

1 1

.001

1 1

.001

1 1

.001

1 1

.001

r i

.001

1 1

.001

| |‘ .001

1 1

.001

1 1

.001

1 1

.001

1 1

.0 01

1 1

.001

'' 1

.001

1 1

.001

1 1

.001

1 1

.001

1 1

7

8 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

i i

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

t 1

1 1

1 1

1

1 1

1 1

1 I

1 1

8

9 , 1

Total State

.15 |1.50|

.15

|1.50|

.15

11.501

.15

11.501

.15

11.501

.15

11.501

.15

11.501

.15'

11.501

.15

11.501

.15

11.501

.15

11.501

.15

11.501 .15

11.501

.15

1.501

.15

11.501

.15

11.501 .15

11.501

.15

11.501

9

10 |

County Tax

.308 | .50i|

.308

1 .501

.30«

1 .501

.308

1 .501 .308

1 .501

.3018

1 .501

.308

1 .501

.308

1 .501

.308

1 .501

.308

1 .501

.308

1 .501

.308

1 .501

.3 08

1 .501

.308

,50|

.308

1 .501

.308

1 .501

.308

1 501

.308

1 .501

10

11 1

County Bonds

.042 | |

.042

1 1

.042

1 1

.042

1 1

.042

1 1

.042

r i

.042

1 1

.042

1 1

.042

1 1 .042 | I

.042

1 1

.042

1 1

.0 42

1 1

.042

1

.042

1 1

.042

1 1

.042

1 1

.042

1 1

11

12 I

County Welfare Fund

.12 I I

.12

1 1

.12

1 1

.12

1 1

.12

1 1

.12

| i

.12

1 1

.12

1 1

.12

1 1

.12

1 1

.12

1 1

.12

1 1

.1 2

1 1

.12

1

.12

1 1

.12

1 1

.12

1 1

.12

1 1

12

13 |

I I

1 .1

1 1

1 l

1 i

I 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 1 1

! I

1

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

13

14 ,1

Total County

.47 | .501

.47

1 .501

.47

1 .50J

.47

I .501

.47

1 .501

.47

1 .501

.47

1 .501

.47

1 .501

.47

1 .501

.47

1 .501

.47

1 .501

.47

1 .501

.4 7

1 .501

.47

.501

.47

1 .501

.47

1 .501

.47

1 .501

.47

1 .561

14

15 |

Township

.06 | ,25|

.09

t .251

.08

I .251

.08

1 .251

.06

t .251

I .251

.06

1 .251

.13

1 .251

.09

1 .251

.08

1 .251 .08

1 .251

.15

1 .251

.0 8

1 .251

.13

.251

.08

1 .251

.08

1 .251

.09

1 251

1 .251

15

16 I

Tuition ■;

.35 | .251 .34

1 .251

.36

1 .251

.55

1 .251

.39

1 .251

.27

1 .251

.23

1 .251

.34

1 .251

.41

1 .251

.27

| .251

.36

1 .251

.16

1 .251

.7 2

1 .251

.34

.251

.55

I .25!

.27

1 .251

.34

1 .251

.50

1 .251

16

17 I

Special School

.46 11.001

.50

11.00!

.57

11.OOfl

.51

11.001

.54

11.001

.59

11.001

.38

11.001 .47

11.001

.49

11.001

.62

11.001

.45

11.001

.34

11.001

.75

11.001

.47

1.001

.51

|1,00|

.62

11.001

.50

11.001

.56

11.001

17

18 I

Additional Special School Bonds, etc.

.05 | |

.04

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

1

.36

1 1

.25

1 I

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

.1 3

1 1

.25

!

I 1

1 1

.04

1 1

.16

1 1

18

19 1

Poor

I I

.04

1 1

1 1

.03

1 1

.02

1 1

.055

1 1

.02

1 1

1 1

1 1

.08

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

I

.03

1 1

.08

1 1

.04

1 1

.055

1 1

20 I

Poor Bonds

.025 I i

.005

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

.09

1 1

1 1

.08

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 i

1 1

1 1

.06

1

L 1

1 1

.095

1 1

.09

1 1

20

21 1

poor Judgment Bond*

I I

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

.04

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

1

1 1

1 1

1 1

.04

1 1

21

22 |

Vocational School Fund, Township and Corporation

I I

1 1

1 1

1 )

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 t

1 1

1 1

.1 7

1 1

1-

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

22

23 1

To Reimburse County Revenue

.045 |

.055 | |

.04

1

1 1

.03

| ( .045

1 1

.01

1 1

.09

1 1

.02

1 1

.03

1 1

.07

1 1

1 1

.0 7

1 1

.09

1

1 1

.03

1 1

.055

1 1

.045

1 1

23

24 I

Library

.01 I I

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

.05

1 1

.01

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

.0 3

1 L

1

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

24

25 |

1 1

1 1

\

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

1

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

25

26 I

Total Township and Schools

11.00 11.5011.16

11.5011.05

ll.5Grl.17

11.5011.04

11.5011.14

11.5011.07

11.5011.34

|1.50|1.01

11.5011.08

11(801 .96

11.501

.65

11.5011.9 5

11.5011.34

1.5011.17

11.5011.08

11.5011.16

11.5011.45

11.501

26

27 |

Corporation

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

I I

1 1

.7 2

1 .241

.50

11.25

1 .501 .74

1 1

.81

1 1

.87

1 .50

21

28 I

Street

1 1

1 1

1 {

; (

1 1

1 1

L 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

I I

1 1

.1 8

1 1

1

1 1

1 1

.25

1 1

1 1

28

29 |

Bond Fund Albany, Yorktown and Muncie

1 1

1 1

1 1

i i

1 1

1 1

'iT

1 1

1 1

1 1

I 1

1 1

.1 2

1 1

1

1 1

1 1

.15

1 1

.17

1 1

29

30 1

Improvement District Bond Fynd

1 1

i r

1 1

i i

1 1

1 1

i i

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

1

1 1

1 4

1 1

.03251 1

30

31 1

Water

|

1 1

i i

1 1

i i

1 1

1 1

I i

1 1

1 , 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

.35

1

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

31

32 |

Park

1 1

i i

1 1

i i

1 1

1 1

i i

1 1

1 ' 1

1 ' 1

1 1

1 1.0 4

1 1

1

1 i

1 1

1 1

.095

1 1

32

33 1

Light

1 1

i i

1 1

t i

1 1

1 ,1

i i

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

.31

1

1 1

1 |

1 1

1 1

33

34 r

Policemen’s Pension

1 1

i- i

1 I

i i

1 1

1 1

i i

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

1

1 1

1 1

1 1

.02751 1

34

35 i

1 1

i i

1 1

i i

1 1

1 1

i i

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

1

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

35

36 I

Total Corporation

1 1

i i

1 1

i i

1 1

1 1

i l

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

I 11.06

1 .2411.16

11.25

1 .501

.74

1 11.21

1 1

1.1951 .501

30

37 I

Library City of Muncie

1 1

i i

1 1

i i

1 1

1 1

i i

1 1

1 1

1 t

1 1

1 1

1 1

1

1 1

1 1

1 1

.055

1 1

37

38 1

1 1

i i

1 1

i i

1 1

1 1

I i

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

1

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

38

39 I

Total Library City of Muncie

I' 1

i i

1 1

i i

1 1

1 1

i I

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

1 1

1

1 1

1 1

1

.055

1 1

39

44) |

Each Installment

.81 11.751 .89

11:751

.835

11.751

.895

11.751

.83

11.751

.88

11.751

.845

11.751

.98

11.751 .815

11.751

.85

11.751

.79

11.751

.635

11.751

1.81511.8711.56

1.7511.52

12.0011.22

11.751

1.49611.7511.66

12.001

40

41 1

Total Year 1949

11

.62- (3.5011.78

I3.5011.67

13.5011.79

13.5011.66

13.5011.76

13.5011.69

13.5011.96

13.5011.63

13.5011.70

13.5011.58

13.5011.27

I3.50I3.&3

13.7413.12

3.5013.04

|4.00|2.44

13.501

2.99 13.5013.32

14.001

41

' ‘-I JMt.

Salem I Pleasant

Harrison I

Washington

I I I Centre* I Hamilton (- Union —i- Perry

_1 Liberty UDeiaware i Nifts

Town of I Town of Albany I Eaton

Town of (Town of Gaston 1 Selma

To

Yo;

own rkto

wn I

Muncie

_ -- — -ESCTTTaXpayef“may-pay *Tn *niTl" ffTT^-ntn-rr-hr--

tween January 1, and the FIRST MONDAY IN MAY, 1941, inclusive, or, If the . taxpayer prefere. he may pay one-half the tax ^on^cr ^before the first Monday in May, 1941, and the remcinder-on-or before-the J’irst Monday ha November, 1941.

t Monday In May, 1941. an eight percent penalty is 1m-

If tl>e first installment of taxes Is not paid on or before the first Monday in May, 1941, an

d&ediately added, toaether with all ooeta and aharaea amvidad ha law.

IMPROVEMENT -ASSESSMENTTPAYMENTS'DANTTOT BE RECEIVBD BY THE TREASURER BUT MUST BE PAH) TO THE CITY CONTROLLER. Lester E. Holloway, Treasurer of Delaware County aim CUr Muncie. Indiana.