Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 30, Number 113, Decatur, Adams County, 11 May 1932 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS, BUSINESS CARDS, AND NOTICES • 0 FOR SALE FOR HALE Yarn plants. 30c hundred. Mrs. W. M. Kltsoa. nt i\ FOR, SALO— Early cabbage und tomato plants 5c per tloz. Late potatoes suitable tor seed 49c per bushel. Ernest Ixmgenberger. Craißville, Ind. 112t3x FOR SALE —Rose plants. 25c or 5 tor SI.OO. Tailesman plants 35c or 3 for SI.OO. Decatur Floral Co. phone 100. 96-9t»r>dx FOR SALE - Manchu soy beans. 1 Wanted to buy a good work horse j John Struse. Phone 873-E. 113-3tx FOR SALE Sweet potato and yam ■plants. Decatur Floral Co. Phone 100 113-6-teodx FOR SALE— Sow witfii 9 pigs, also , good male hog. Amos Thieme, I Rout. 8 11 Hit FOR SALE--41U11 pups. Inquire Lewis Yoke. Route 2. Craigville 1 phone. 112-3tx i WANTED WANTED —To give permanents for $3. or two far $5 Bring a friend The Hoagland Beauty Shop 210 South Eighth St, or phone 869 111-3 t j WANTED—To clean wall paper, cisterns, windows lights rugs wash houses, porches. Call 210, . Frank Straub. 111-3 t WANTED TO Bl’Y Smail barn or double garage, that can be moved Inquire Win. J. Bell 239 N. 11th St. U3-31X WANTED~TO RENT •> or room semi-modern house at reasonable rent Address G. R care of Daily Democrat. 113t2x WANTED TO Bl’Y —From owner 5 or 6 room semimodern house.. inside of tailroads. Must be reasonably priced. What have you? Adri- , ress Box M. M. Democrat Office 112-ltx I WANTED v- Rooms, ,>o ches and Wall paper Lt dean. Reasonable prices. Phone 5361. Elmer Bailer. K. . i\ IV ANTED—Good. clean, bin Rags, suitable tor cleaning machinery. Will pay 4c It). Decatur Daily Democrat. FOR RENT FOR RENT—Rooms for light house keeping, first floor, private entrance. porch, nice yard, garden, and garage Low rental. Inquire 1127 West Monroe Street. Phone 1269 lOUf LOST AND FOUND LOS r — Buleva watch e -iinted in diamonds and sapphire-. Liberal Reward. Miss Lorraine Teeple. phone 254. 113 :t o Could Still Hear. However Thety there was the cave of the show that was ap bad that, after about tea minutes, a man came out and asked the lady In the liox otbce If she could change his seat to <>ne behitjd a pillar — Dublin Opinion r t O"'—" * Bosts.. Men pioneers Those who s t ind- ors irs comfort 'n the cold New England winters may thank two Boston men. James Jonys Walworth and Joseph Mas.vri. k In 184-1 went into business o'gettier and ‘agreed to risk their morjtv in a scheme for Inatnlli'e a newt beating device tn busine.se houses ami reswtemca" to thia conuutnv belongs the earl, development of steam pad hot water heat Ing, '>f hnlldire- — Q — Arl'ugtcs Cemetery Mansion JJte mansion in Arlington terne tery -ha» been restored t<> the condition in which It was when a private residence. A great deal of the oris mat furniture could not be 'ecured, singe it bad come from Mount Ver non and had been returned, biz i»eriot!* furniture has been esed. Jt is a han.’.si.ine example of a plants lion imcw before the civil war ... o Paradis, and Hell A fo-M's paradise Is only the ant* room for s fool's hell—Stanley Baldwin ' ’ ——o Groat CeUectioa of Maps Tbe Library us t'ongicss has a eolleiilon ->f tom tarn maps. YAGER BROTHERS Funeral Directors imbcla. ae Service, day or night Lady Attendant Phone 105-44 Funeral Home. lin Figst Si. S. E. BLACK FUNFRAI. DIRECTOR Mr* Blate. Lady Attendant Call* answered prempHy day or night. Office phone 500 H'-Une phone Ambulance Service.
1 People who weal? • I in hcj i* BRAND WORK CLOTHES Have ■’Something Io Crow about. HOLTHOUSE SCHULTE & CO. MARKET REPORTS DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL AND FOREIGN MARKETS BERNE MARKET Corrected May 11 No commission anil no yardage. 1 . Hogs, 100-150 pounds $2.90 ■ 150-220 pounds $3.15 220-250 pounds $3.06 I 250-300 pounds $2.90 ; Roughs $2.00 Stags $1.25. Vealers $5.50. String lambs $5.00. CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE old May July Sept. Dee. 1 Wheat .55% .57% .60 .63%!' , Wheat new .3~ t i .594, ICorn 29% .33 .35% .35% Oats .23% .23% .23% .24% Cleveland Produce Butter market steady; extras | 21%; standards 21c. Eggs market steady; ext™ firsts 12%c. current receipts 12-1 12 %c. Poultry market steady; heavy! 1 fowls 15-16; medium fowls 16-17; I . leghorn fowls 13-14; heavy broil-j ! ers 21-23; leghorn broilers 17-19; j ducks 12 11; old ' wks I#J geese 8. i Pota'oee Ohio, New York Penn.j ; 50-75 c per bu; Main. Green MounI lain $1.25 1 30; few best $1.40 per: lib lb. sack; Idaho Russet large ! sited $1.70-1.75; medium to large! $1.60-1.65 per 100 !t> sack. Fort Wayne Livestock Market ; Hog market steady, pigs ami light lights $3.15-3.25; lights $3.25- 1 i 3.30; mediums. $3.15-3.25: heavies $3-3.10; roughs $2.25; stags $1.50; ialves $5.50; lambs $5.50. East Buffalo Livestock Market Hogs: on sale 1.300; slow, geu- ' erally 15c to 25c under Tuesday's average; weights above 220’ H>s.. at minimum decline; good lo choice, 160-240 lbs. $3.75-3.85; some held higher: medium kinds ground 150 tbs., $3.65. Cattle receipts 100; medium; steers and heifers unevenly high-I er at $5.50; few common kind-, i | $4.25; cows scarce, steady; cutter' grades. $1.50-2.50. Calf receipts 300; vealers drag-1 : gy; steady to weak; good to choice. $6-6.50; common and med-; ' him $3.50-5. Sheep receipts 300; lambs tin- ' changed; quality and sorts eonsid-i • ered; nearly good shorn lambs $6; throwouts sc. few native spring- ■ ers $8.50-9. LOCAL GRAIN MARKET Corrected May 11 Ni. 2. New Wheat 44c 130 lbs. White Oats ... 18c 28 - Whit.- oats Ec ■ Harley . . . . 3UC | j Rye .. 30c J Sny Beans 30c New No. 3 White Corn 34c ' New No. 3 Yellow Corn . 29e I IOC IL GROCERS EGG MARKET Eggs, dozen 11c E IRGAINS — Bargains in Living Room, Dining Room Suits. Mattresses and Rugs. Stuckey and Co. Monroe, our Phone number is 44 ct. tor Belter Health See DR. IL FROHNAPFEL Licensed Chiropractor and Naturopath Phone 314 104 So. 3rd s*. N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST Eyes Examined, Glasses Fitted HOURS; 8:3O to 11-39-12:30 to 5:00 Saturdays. 8:60 p. io Telephone 135 LOBENSTEIN & DOAN FUNERAL DIRECTORS I CaHs answered promptly day or mtbi Atubulance Servne Office Phone 90. finaideiMS Phupt. Daeatw 1011 Ees:den'-e Phnae. Monroe 81 LADY ATTENDANT.
THIMBLE THEATER NOW SHOWING - “THE COLD SHOULDER” By SEqJ i FIT] WI S n I i' i| iLd'' "■' 1* R- ' A A / Lj) ~ B
• 0 ' Test Your Knowledge ’ 1 I Can you answer seven of these , ! test questions? Turn to Page i | Four for the answers. 1 Who wrote: ‘ I do not believe ' a word thit you say. but 1 will de- ■ ■ fend with my life, if need be, your' I right to say it? 2. How many states failed to rati-1 fy the 18th (Prohibition! Amend-; ' ment? 3. To what race do the Arabs be- , long? 4. I i what year did Georgd Wash-. ington take coma and of the Continlental Army? 5. What was tin St ne Age? 6. Who is Oliver La Farge? 7. How long is the Pan ima ; ! Canal? 8. Where are the kingdoms of Hedjaz and Nejd? 9. What wood mostly used by I English a.che:s for making bows?' 10. Must a man be a citizen of the I i I'. S. to enlist in ike Army? Early River Navigation The tirst I.ip up the ••Ido ‘'lvei by ste.i nun in t Mag ,v...de in May 1815. by the Enterprise, of 75 tooa•he traveled from New Orleans tc Louisville tn that year, the trip tak Ing 25 days The steamer Washing ton mn-k the same trip in ISI6 an# I Inaugurated steamboat navigation la the Mississippi valley Q MalUrd Had Mada Speed According to s report made t<> the bureau of biutugii-nl survey of tlie I>epartuient of Agriculture, r. ■ Millard duck banded on Noveuilser ' 23. i:«:U». at Big Suamico, Green I Ray. Wis.. was killed five days later near Georgetown. S. C.. whirl. , Is h record for individual si>eed o’ •’lgrsf'oe. o Antony ma Etymologically the words “friend" I and "fiend" are autonyms. They come from AngloSaxou verba meaning "to love" and "to hate." | respectively, and ure related to | words of the same uieaning in i other Teutonic languages Q— Desolate Land Abiou etie tifth of Iceland is habitable Almost fottr-fiftbs of the Island are uninhabited urd almost ' un In I- a HI • v'-l* Quits Prison I i i * » fe Bw i i Albert B. Fall, former secretary •jf the Interior, who was freed Moudgy from the New Mexico »t*te pecjientlary. and let; the iu an anjtajUuce Sftur s®Amg t«n awatiis for accepting oil i tribe. i
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY, MAY 11. 1932.
Dounier Triumphed Over Early Poverty ♦♦♦ » ♦ ♦ Man Who Became President of France Fatherless on Day He Was Born. Supported Mother and Educated Self. Lost Four Sons in W orld War. v i rfi' CJ VtTH VIFE. iM' GR ASrPCHILOREM wk 4 H!S IWMWTQATION ARTISTS CONCEPTION fb. .reateat battle -h“‘h poa. be from 1896 Cumber o Deputy I- .r.he open.n/of C.rweg.e lo.t.tut. a. P.tUburgh, P. D 4’‘r
Paris, May 11—Though the entire world was shocked by tae a<;a /.i:ati.‘i» jf President Paul i Douine. of France, it is by the i solid iniddlecia-s people of 'lis native land that the death of the statesman is regarded as ue of the greatest national tragedies since jthe martyrdom of Jem d’Arc. Doumer was Idolized by the “petite bourgeoisie’’ and the "rentiers" —that thrifty, highly respectable, : major segment ®f France which is the economic backline of the richlest people on ea th. He was that; j rara avis, a man ot the people who ’lose to great heights aaid still re: (■Mined- a a.t;i of the people. Th ugh practically unknown he j was called to the Presidency in j !1931, Uoutuer had a long and dis tinguiehed career in French polk j tics, and it was due to his hatred j of anything approaching osteuta- ; tion that he was opt better known internal in illy. w Born in Aurillac, a tiny village in , I the hilly province ot Auvergne, the j \ future President of Frame was from birth fated to tight an uphill; >attle. for his fattier died on the ! I day he was bora. Brought up amidst-tbe direst pov-i •rty in the slum district f Mont-1 marve. in Pari-, younj Banner ; spent his early Ide working to sup I M» t his widowed mother and j spending every spare moment in' selfedu ation. This divot; n t | NEW HOPE FOR LINDBERGH BABY — lU»:< I iMrou r'K'-.sS raOi • ih. - — Curtis expected to be gone only i one dayMessage Published New York, May H A' i rar-sage apoeirod today in the personal column of a morning ' newspaper. which was believed to; I refer to the Lindbergh kidnaping. The message which was unsigned and not addressed, consisted of i; three words. Money is reath.” The 'Jafeste • wot ices inserted ■ by Dr J. F Condon, which led to i payment ot »sU.oub to the supposed k.dnapers, were inserted in the I
-tudy had its reward when Doumer, ’ received his degree from the University of Paris in 1877, before he was twenty. The same year he; obtained a position as inst.uctor of mathematics in the little tiwn of! Mende. at a salary of >360 a year. ' I It is said that while he held that ■ position, be used to wilk 20 miles to a railroad station in order to go ! to Paris to see his fiincee. Doumer's entrance to politics was l 1 through the medium of a small country newspaper which he edit ; ed. He worked so well at his job f that following an elect!.u campaign ( he all the candidates he' (beked were elected, and Doumer; ; himself emerged from the melee! Alderman and Assistant Mayor to Aaizy le-Cateau. Three years later, at thirty-one t .he was elected t'j the French Cham- • ber of Deputies, where he slowly ; won a num*- f r himself as a man i w o understood finance. From then on, his rise, through not spectacuilar o. a. rked by any fiasiyng brilliance. was sure, until in 189a Doumer became Minister of Finance in < : the radi.ai cabinet _f Leon Boor-, I geois. While m this position Doumer I i conceived the ''glcbal and prigre; ; .-die income tfut,” thus becoming I the'father cf the income tax in, I France. Because he fought so enerigetically for its adoption the Hour-' ;gecii ministry was ousted, but Dou-! personal columns of the same, newspaper. 0 Aonuitiev fir Doctors In the Fourteenth century im-toi* foes were very h jh. as, spnrt from he sum paid down, the patient con trailed to allow his medical man ’ an annuity for as long he lived I or employed him. He also a creed : to provide the medicwl man wttl. ot>< • nr more mtl.fl of clofhoe vearlv "Land of Midnight Sun” s<>rvgy rep dies :>■> tn: ley into ih-> hndic z.i-ne. and nearly one third of the ceoßtsy is 'a the do s*4in of »lu midnight suo a«d wis *•- darhne**. bat even i« th* extreme south lb— summer day Is long v.d *he w<r.;er dev la short. 4 ' |
mer's abilities had attained national recogniti n. Doumer's next job was as Governor of French Indo-Thina. which past be held from ISM to 1902. when he returned ti France and re- ■ sumed his place in the Chamber of I Deputies. In 1905 he was elected ; president of the Chamber, and in ■ the following year was defeated for I the Piesidency of Prince by ArmI and Falleries by a vote of 449 to '371. Doumer visited the Upited States lin 1907 as official represenative f his government at the opening of !the Carnejie Institute in Pittsburgh . *’a. The World War found Doumer a member of the Superior Council of .Military Ae naulics and of, the Techni a4 Committee on Railways. Three of bis sons died in battle for Fr nee and a fourth di>-d of wounds soon after the Armistice. Usurper's real rise t? power started after the war. In 1921 he was appointed Minister of Finance for | the second time, and again in 1925 after five finance ministers had , t.ied in swift succession to '.vrestie . with the stabilization -•> fthe f ane. His election to the Presidency in 1931, t > succeed President Gaston Doumergue came as a surprise to the outside world, as the practically unknown Doumer was thought to have a slim chance of defeating the ; vrteran Aristide Briand. Freighter Broke Sea Sustom Boston —(UP)—iAn an ient cunI tom of the spa was broken here recently when the Estonian freighter Kinnika arrived in port with two *i;m»n eo ks in her galleys. The crew fed by a long line of indifferlent men coogs, p aised them highly' “fhu»kego«** The name "Muskegon” la an ttjlb . wa hir.lan word meaning, according io most auiboritlws. "imirahy water” , or "«»i prairie”; o»e authority. ; er. gives its meaning as i 'Tamarack,” from the abundance •»f these trees on the river banka Tl>ere Is a popular n’tb that an >Mi-n dn-igkod fels «usket Into the wafer from hit eanoe and. ua If dt»ippettred. exclaimed ' Musket goce” j —Det nd; Kg-« i
NOTH K TO < <» NIH t< I'OH% Notice I© hereby given by the untiersigned that the Board of Com. niisaioner© of Adam© County, Indiana at the office of Auditor in Decatur, Indiana, will receive renled propo* I sal© for Lain Weaver Macadan. road a* Kti out in the plan© and speciff--atL B», profiles and requialtiona now on file in the office of Auditor. Said !4* aled proponalH will be open ed and the contract awarded so: i<t i impnivt uj» Ht on the 7 day of June ' Hbds or proposals will be re< rived up to 1« o’cliMfk A. M. on ©aid date. ; The »akl iusproveinvat ie in Jefferoon towaahij) Adatn# ('our.ty ! Indiana. and more particularly j known as Lon Weaver Macadam ; I Roa<L I ’lYm* estimated cost of aaid Improvement is Hl.l© will be for the completion of | said improvement in accordance I with the plans, profile and spe< ifica- 1 tien© In Hie office of the County 1 Auditor, and xiiali include ail labor and material fur said work In no case will extra compensation be allowed for wi> additional work alleged to have been done by the contractor or contractors to whom is awarded the contract. F7a« h bid ©hall be accompanied by a personal or surety bond in a sum equal to double the amount of the bid filed for the work bid on, to be approved by the Board of Commissioner© Said bond shall be conditioned for th> faithful performance of (he work, the ©uretics, if personal shall be resident freeholders pf the State of Indiana, one of whom shall be a resident of Adams County Said bond shall be for the benefit of any person, person© or corporation who sbail suffer any loss or damage by reason of any such bidder failing or neale ting to entec into a contract to perform such work j awarded on the bid or to carry out (he same io any particular or to pay I for any labor or material which may have been furnished to any such contractor or contractor© or to any subcontractor, agent or superintendent under him, in the corstruction of .-aid work. Said contra* t will be let as a I whole to the lowest responsible L.dIder upon affidavit of non-collusion. I and- schedule of liability and maIchijiery which must be submitted ’with the hid. and upon failure to I submit am h affidavit such proposal I «>r bid will be rejected and the Ib'iFFd reserves th** right ?•» reiec: u»iv and all bids. Time for the < oinpletion of said work will be agreed I upon after the letting of sai l contract by the t’uferd of Cominissiohei» unti succe «ei ul bidder. ALBER l‘ HARLD.V Auditor. Adams Co.. Indiana ys ? ii-i*-.> Q_—... PETITION EOK % Mt< tIMM HOAD i Uefurr (be Bwarti wff t ommifudo»er» Us the < 4*mhl> wf Ida*© *tatr of Indiana ST AT E OF INDI AN A COUNTY OF ADAMS. SS: | We, the undersigned resident vot- | ers and free holders of Union Towni ship in Adams County, Indiana, most I respectfully ask that jou build ami I construct a free Macadam Road in | said Township on and along the public Highway situated on the following route, towit:: Commencing at the south woct corner of the south west quarter of Section three (3) in Township twenty eight north of Range fifteen tla) east in Adams County State of Indiana, running thence east over ami upon the Public Highway . on the Section line dividing Section three t<D from Section ten (10) and div id tag fractional Section two (3) from fractional Section eleven (11) Township and Range aforesaid and terminating at the south east corner of ©aid fractional Section two (2) Township and Range aforesaid in Adams County, Indiana. Your petitioners aver and say that i the improvement prayed for is less than throe miles in length, connects at the west end with a free Macadam Road in said Union Township and connect© at the east end with the East Township Line of said Union Township, ami that a United States Rural Mail Route passes over said Highway and that th*j same will be of public utility and benefit Your petitioners avjer and say that the Highway herein sought to be improved is ayl*ubli - Highway already established and In aae and is ene of tiie Public Highways of said Übion Township. Your petitioners ask that said Highway above described hoi ein be drained and grafted and that broken st <ne be placed upon the grade and that upon such broken stone there be placed stone screenings*; Your petitioners Hither ask that said Highway above described be drained and graded and that the same be improved to a width of Forty <4Ol feet, and that said Highway be graded to a width of twenty four (24) fe*t. and that broken stone be plaeed thereon to a width us ten <lo> feet and to a depth of eight (i) Inches at the sides thereof and to a depth of ten (10) inches in the ; «enter thereof and that crushed stone screenings be placed thereon | to a depth of four (I) inches upon. stjrh broken stone and that said improvement he made a single track ’ 4<vJ that th- name of the same be “The John Diver Macadam Road.’ j That to pay for said improvement we ask that Bonds be issued by the County of Adams, in the Slate of Indiana, in twenty semi-annual inslallmeuts or series and for the payment of whit h we ask that a tax be levied upon the taxable property of said Union Township In a sufficient sum to pay the interest and prim ipa! »f said Bond as they become due; That said improvement be made and constructed and said Bonds be issued and said tax be levied upon the taxable property of said Township in accordance wi(h the Act of the Legislature, of. the State of Indiana. passed in the year of iao.’> beginning on page SRO and as amended In the Acts of 1901 and as amended in (he Acts of 1909 now in force providing for the extension of free gravel or Macadam Roads and ail other and any and all amendments thereto; We further ask the Board tn take al! of the ne 'easary steps required iby Id* Co have said improvement I constructed and made as petitioned for herein, that the s<me be con- ' stsucted without submitting the question of building (he sani*» to an > • election of the voters of said Union | Township, ami that the Board construct (he sgnia umier the laws of *he St&ta lQ<iian4. providing for ♦he e\fefiehwi of free gravel or Macadao) RrMd by Tgwti.%b>p Taxation. Fe.spectfuHy submitted John W. Diver. E. R. Raker. Albert ‘ Knavel. Frank Gletkler, Rudolph,
Weiland, Li, v i, lu . fl Rdwin S. fi.mi’-rioh Kh h ' u '’ ’■ ' ,f H- rv cJfl Bischoff, |.,h,i r ; st 11...ry 1,..;.,., |>)uis jtW h \\ ,I.lnure, J.,h|, i ‘"Hirk pTB 1 •r/’"' 1 " ' W I I 11-' I ■ M ... Allison, A.’• H-hei... i. .!••«•»»•. 1 M I 1 homps. i |„ r e . Kamso. •< , h T „ u . •' " X ! lei. J, j y. % M. ir.l \l y .-..JTM Ha'isk H.. ; h „,,,, tenure. ■ Ria’.mx • M.ts w.?fl ’b 4.4! • K. IK ( J" tn k \nn> £ H’ ■ I.’ berg, H .< > d!lt h. H. E. Ib-irik Mi. |B This prun ■ w iH I* tti»- i , UUI Adams ' i ; diana .lune 7. • whi.h-Hiwfl pa.Y’FS ••! ■ (•'* . shift beard thcr*- •: wi ALBERT HARlfl A i<ii ! • A-Mrns Lenhm a ' . aipmH fl NO Il< I <»» Ml i I |\u IKHIII) OF KMinfl Not)- e is . i.v I'uuntY i - . .: Levi’-ft County. : i••■liana. at io o cl'., k u itie day .hni' n.. thr the fir-t M ••.•(,»> in year at t ru »m .»( M < 'omn i dir of said '''U.i,.. fur Hiegel purposes: Il 1. To h»ai ' pUinUvlefl er of p-'- • " T’ ,r? y pi uper’\ <- 1 -xiua’ly the Slal< U ers. ]|| 2. To < : 'airty <dM the s- ■ . i• di h> the a ■' fJ- tr» to March f * .e • а. To e ; <ai xt ll*. made io t - - - -ro Ing to ■»« o - • « ’arrthiM HuniN as assessno ti‘ ■ tru? of proper! B 4. To f| l.*i /.• the -JualNifl by the r liter to ur tied f’-t- •» o may Im ’•.< •■-sary to men is at perty. B 5. To review « > a! ’ swl tu inquire u vari <u.« • l-‘"• ' * property thereof in t • -• vriai divisions of ; 1 • ’unt). || б. To mak- • • .dupiM esfunents. * • ’ r b.' crease or •i• *’* ,n th<1 ih.- ... »»■•' "'MB may he ne • lu same in ••) •• • i*>rn the ; or an) taxing • i J| 7. io deleiiiinv rat*- ptfJßi l>e added ’f L die ted id make a just a..d fiuiubitjM Cion in the s •• al taxing unit.- a « »• throughout ! •• • • *uniy lu 1 equitable sta; ■! ’> B H. To add .. lotted prupMM necoMiai y ca?-t> V. To increase the omitted pr p-i t) cases. . 10. To coiret t • n-TS inWM of persons and m t‘*e property and h. the vabjM assessment f |> T rrt > a ‘ WB ’W eaament list 11. lo corre- i any H’l as may be derin d proper^fl 12. To corrt-t the valuation : P'/'P' manner as will hi the j uatiou tin-" >•' ' 4 "' *!S© is. -I- 3'l't • ' ca the nauies of ■•isons, per>vn«l prop- ' ! \T To a«-»- ' ' 4'd.l f ran. . „r« d® u<.n i .yepi; jMisesMo b> ■ - a Commissionermendalions n ‘ 1 U. To do v. ; u = ie %^ r yl ever else ma »r ,iete t make all r, ' tu! "' s “L J 3 lists and al! V , w | wiU> the V - - - ‘ laws, and «4- ‘„d» earning tav »- l»l> and «>e ' >•-' of and supply, The Count? '■ '■> aiaosubje. tr C, m th; I eial aaaah’i.. t _ J t „ ~v t3 I Tuesday it: . nra«J eeruped rvi."'- ' i gardlng th- ' ■ '• uniformity t *' ij county as tua? » P-* Mti J ; Board by the Mite .'ommissiutiters. . o .iali»'3 All to he dor." ; nation and 'ssto--and taxabl- s d for the current ", ar |is an property u *d" "J are required •' '‘*? { , 41H In witness " 1 ’ ' low. Auditor o! sj iana. have heiej., ■ • and the s"" 1 'tW mlssioners o, 4,1 day c.f May L‘ Albef * |bi Auditor, Ada: '' un,! y,; Oce.n U»e>» . The mean le'i'l u ( w rtie of 1 •*’" . M j etwnu to he a, ’" d higher .han ’he Atlantic, in the n><> ary the levei* Hre J f throughout t* l * reS nt tid^ 1 on a.-connt of ■>> w ln(1 inrtuetue. the •he Pacific '•atH-'s "La* l the Atlantic. It •’ ** tout Mvber tn t “Hm Anyone 5 Answered at Ca‘ h f Auditorium. ? u ?’ cl %5 { , 8 p. m. Admission J
