Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 34, Number 205, Decatur, Adams County, 28 August 1936 — Page 5
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Ktbol 5 t I IS EXPLAMEB s(‘ ■mb Entomologist ExSins Methods Os Ex- | ’ . ■terminating I’ests ™ A,,u- , IL<« d-< <l>a*>ng caid so! ■*'? ~|S „ be the method for )C the hellfeliold peStS. I \V 1’ Flint. < hies entoniI ■^\., l <- N’.dii .J History Stir-I Ip K Ac: i< ultili'e. * of Illinois. ,11012' ~i th" food habits of • •'""non »" l ' l '- '( r „ ; ,.s and - rounds are out- ■ by Hint and W. E. McCaul-, n ' a recently issued bulletin ip ■ \ n ts. nd How to Cotnant. or the small red-, — — proves the most annoyth* most difficult to eradfl in Him s "pinion. «ivL m house, the ant ■ ev „ n remain throughout the : r.,:.'| -Sm ' essful methods — may I"- in the use ■ltastiim bait containing sulfate poisoning, or in P t'apidng of the ant v ■’! spoil'-''s laden with ■_ Vtm"St ear, is exercised to p siill.ii' poison away from (, i"i I"'- Elint (tuitions. I use of mod laden sponges' (, ■ i.niy five to eight ( J '* polices should be ami lie ants destroyed. I _ u . may act as, (■km supply to aid in building ant colony. nt th" small, yellowish ■f ant is carried out by thor-' ditstim: the run-ways ol| ■ „ ' ».<!( -"'li'in. fluoride, or by _ t.o tar emetic with u ar, use and placing rinse to the ant colony. } . ■iibiiding w ith the , 'dark i.irp.mter ant which ,c tunm 1... into trees or into ■t>:-ti s"",i , • -I li< >ns of timbers • house ( itla rto use the ' sirup i' , ommended for - uni. or to mix a poison | brown susr and pa; is green, reports. bull, tin aiso deals with the winter, large yellow ant; the and the odorous ants; i the winged or flying ants. It i !>' obtained free by writing i Colleg. ~i Agriculture, Uni-1 oi Illinois. Good Town — Decatur | WANTED: Magazines, Newspapers, Iron, Old Auto Radiators, Copper, Brass, Alumand all grades of scrap metWe are always buying all of waste material. are also buying Wool and Pelts, paying the top marprice. I The Maier Hide ■ & Fur Co. H 710 W. Monroe St. ■ Phone 442 ■FEDERAL FARM LOANS I Now At 4% Adams County National H farm Loan Association, ■ of Decatur, Indiana a Ebarter and has ■J" "uly authorized atid empow IHuk,. 0 -I" al<p farin loajts in all ot County. ■ /"u ar-expccHng to re finance ,in, ‘ llian < '' all or writo this '"'-’’lion at once. 9 f,lce - 133 South Seconu Street ■ h„M , Decatur > Indiana ■ FredT n « a r’ sec > treM - Bh <* 1. investigator B 7 _
—.. L J -A ■ AETNA FARM LO ANS YOU PAY NO Commission } OU PAY NO Stock to buy VOU PAY NO Application Fee YOU PAY’ NO Examination of Title Fee YOU PAY NO Farm Appraisal Fee Low Interest Rates, Quick Closings 5, 10, 15 or 20 year loans. you are considering a loan—see First Bank of Berne, Berne, Inil. Farmers State Bank, Preble. Ind. Suttles-Edwards Co., Decatur, Ind.
Mill Closed Because Os Poor Apple Crop Pete Kirsch announced today I i that he will not open hla elder mill l this year because of the poor crop. ' This will be the first time In eight , or 10 years that the mill has been ! closed for this reason. Mr. Kirsch said that the tnajor--1 ity of the orchards were damaged by the severe cold weather last winter. The trees were low in resistance and could not withstand the drought this summer. AERIAL PICTURE MADE OF COUNTY Community Photographed For Soil Conservation Program Steel tapes and chains will not be necessary in most of the instances this fall when check-ups begin on compliance and other details of the soil conservation program in Adams county, it was anj nounced today. Aerial photographs were taken |of the entire county last week by I army fliers. These will be scaled to one master photograph and - sent as a composite picture of the entire county to the local board. With the photograph will come a specialty designed instrument, j by use oi which it will be possible to determine the exact size of each i l farm and field shown on the map. The scale will be something more I than 600 feet to one inch. Only in special cases where fences or other landmarks are hot ' present to mark boundaries of i fields will it be necessary to measure the fields by hands. Adams county was the first to apply to the national guard for a photograph and will be one of the 18 to be photographed this year. The local committee expects that the completed photograph will Ibe returned to the county in a few weeks. Compliance check-ups will begin immediately afterward. NOXIOUS WEEDS WILL BE SHOWN l*tirdnc University Plans informative Display At State Fair Lafayette, Ind., Aug. 28—Among the many interesting exhibits that Indiana State Fair visitors will have an opportunity to see in the Purdue Building will be one showing a display of noxious weeds and their seeds, and information about the state fertilizer and feed-stuffs laws, prepared by the state chemists department at Purdue University. By means of enlarged photographs the -results of sowing pure and impure clover seed will be. shown. In the center of the display on a rotating platform will be placed exhibit plants of the most important noxious weeds of Indiana, offering State Fair visitors an opportunity to study them individually in their growing state. This exhibit will include all of the 19 noxious weeds as specified by the | Indiana state seed law. Along the front of the display will be samples of noxious weed seeds, which may be studied through large high powered lenses that will be provided. Extreme ends of the display will attention to detail ot the state feed-stuffs law and the state fertilizer law relative to information furnished by the Indiana state tag, which must accompany all quantities of fertilizer and feed sold iti the state. Careful study ot the tags will enable purchasers to get a better' understanding of the qtial- | ity of the products to bb bought.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY. AUGUST 28. 1936.
GIRLS WIN FREE TRIP Adams County Girls Will Enter State Fair School Session Wilma Miller, of this city and i I Juanita Lehman, of Washington township, left today for Indfanapol-1 is. where they are to enroll fn the I two-weeks home economics sdhool ‘ of the Indiana state fair. The trips were given as rewards for outstanding achievements dur- : • ing the girls' enrollment tn county 4-H chib work. Miss Miller is a member of the Decatur 4-H club, and has been in charge of the club's activities. Miss Lehman ’ a member of the Wffshington township club, and has also been an active organizer. Both girls were winners of various contests and demonstrations during the Decatur Centennial celebration. The trips to Indianapolis were awarded at the celebration. The girls are to join two girls from each county in the state in a two weeks schooling in home economic« club work, one week before and one during the fair. Mrs. Helen Mann, county 4-H leader accompanied the girls to Bluffton, where they left by traction for the school. o DISCOVER NEW KIND OF WHEAT West Virginia Station Finds New Good Soft Red Winter Wheat Canawa. a new variety of wheat developed by the department of i agronomy and genetics of the West I Virginia Agricultural Experiment Station, originated from a single i iiesad selected from a mixed vari- . ety grown on the Agronomy Farm at Morgantown in 1921 under the name of Canada Hybrid. The activities carried on and designated by an agricultural experiment station as wheat breeding I •.•eually may be grouped unde"Hthree headings, namely, (1) new ' Introductions. (21 pure-line selections, and (3) hybridization. The , first step in improving wheat by ' breeding is to grow and compare available strains that are adapted to the particular region. It the strains or varieties are not pure but consist of a mixture of types, head selections are made and true breeding strains established from them. In case it is desired to combine desirable Characteristics found in different strains, the oply known means of accomplishing this is by crossing or hybridization. The new variety of Wheat described below was discovered by making head setedtlons and then comparing their respective descendants over a period ot years. CanaWa Is a smooth, soft red winter wheat and has medium sized spikes that droop when the! grain is ripe. The straw is purplish! and stiff and hhs shown very little) tendency to lodge. For a wheat be-l longing to the soft red winter class, Canawa has seeds that are relatively hard. The yielding ability of Canawa, as revealed by the experimental) tests, is equal to that Os Fulhio, a high yielding wheat under West Virginia conditions. In cooperative! tests with farmers, Canawa pro-i duced significantly greater aver-l age yields than did the wheats now commonly grown. o Don’t forget the sale of many old antiques, E. L. Carroll residence, Five Points, tomorrow afternoon. - I SPRAGUE OFFERS American Beauty Washers $29.95, $54.95, $59.9$ Sdt of $9..'50 Tubs Fret with $54.95 ahd $59.95 Washers. $5 Down and $1 per week. SPRAGUE FURNITURE CO. 152 So. Second St. Phone 199 I | 111 |
Attention Necessary For Good Pastures While to some persona a pasture is a fenced in portion of the oarth's sin'face'on which grass does i not grow, J. 6. Tretsven. Montana extension dairy specialist, points out that the ideal pasture for the dairy herd contains grasses and one or more legumes, begins Its growth early fn the spring, grows i luxuriantly throughout the spring and early summer, continues to furnish feed abundantly during the late summer and early fall, and 1 does not stop growing until heavy frost and snow drive the cattle fn-1 to winter quarters. Some dairy farmers, “he said, center their at- ■ tention oh field crops, forgetting l that pasture is cine of the most . 1 Important of an crops on the dairy i; farm. o RECORDS MAKE DAIRY PROFITS Culling Out Poor Cows ' Is Good Business For Dairymen Now • ■ ft is important that dairymen keep accurate record on their in- ' dividual cows this year so that they mal cull more closely and , eliminate their unprofitable cows, since feeds are high in price com- 1 ' ■pared to the prices of butterfat says Warren Gifford of the Missouri College of Agriculture. i The most successful dairy farmer must be a business man applying to his business the principles which have been used successfully in industry. He is interested in I reducing the cost of production as a certain means of increasing the net profit to be derived from his farm operation. Maximum profit may be secured f only when every unit concerned is . producing at, or near, maximum | efficiency, anil this point may be ) determined only by an accurate check on each step in the produc- | tion process. , The first step in controlling the factors governing profits on the dairy farm is made possible only by keeping accurate records on the production of milk, butterfat, consumption df feed, and the breeding performance and health of each individual cow tn the herd.
f ■■■■ rw hi in ibii i lIFHAT 15 < ARDEN?] NOVEL FLOWER CONTAINERS ARE EFFECTIVE DECORATIONS They Are Small and Colorful and Their Growing Habits Always Prove Interesting. Use Them For Bridge Prizes.
Present fashion in interior dec,i oration makes effective use ot i 'the novel flower containers which i are available nowadays. The fact ' that they are small and can be moved to different parts of a room, and that the flowers and plants i' being alive, are always changing, adds to their usefulness. •Today we can purchase plants ~ growing in a shiny pot shaped like a black cat, or ft 'huge terrarium filled With tropical flowers, and ‘ ferns. : A recent novelty which will findmany friends is a small bevelled , mirror on to which are attached ' three tiny hollow globes. The three, globes are filled with water, and 1 tiny ivy vines are suspended from , them. The ivies take root in the water, and trail down tfver the mirror, making a very attractive decoration, as well as a useful mirror. Should you run Out of vines for the globes, they can be detached,, and use made of the mirror itself All manner of novel containers are obtainable. A ll unusual one is a pottery squirrel. One or two of them can be attached to the wall or fireplace, and when vines are lilhnled th them, they give the appearance of Crawling. There are dhy number of animal caricatures th bright colors. They make interesting knick-knacks for the mantel or table, and are always "appreciated as bridge prizes. The plants in them will ordinarily grow for many months, and any number of usos ehn be made of the container aftffterward. I A novelty which always attract
SHOULD PLAN WINTER CARE Poultrymen Should Not Delay Housing Vntil Cold Weather It is a mistake to delay housing | the pullets until the onset of cold ! weather, for if ft is delayed until | that time they are likely to stop i laying and go into a molt, says D. D. Moyer of the Missouri College of Agriculture. Every attinpt should be made to have the pullets laying 1 profitably this fall —the season when good egg prices usually prevail. Early pullets should be housed by the time they are in 5 per cent production, and late pullets are transferred to the laying house, they should be kept confined if the house is comfortable since it ; left out on the old poultry yard I and ranges they are likely to pick up diseas germs and parasites. Pullets comfortable housed are , much better off than if left out on the range, because they will consume more mash and grain which is necessary for satisfactory egg production and maintenance of i body weight. Very often pullets molt after they have laid a few eggs because they do not consume enough feed to maintain their body weight. BeI fore the pullets are housed, however, the laying house should be i thoroughly cleaned and scrubbed with lye water, and sprayed with a mixture of crank case oil and kerosene to kill any mites present. If the pullets are infested with lice, they should be treated, using' I nicotine sulfate on the roost, or by dipping the birds in a sodium fluori ide solution. Wherever possible, pullets should not be placed in the. same laying quarters with old hens that are to be kept over, since] , the hens may be carriers of dis-' l ease germs that might cause ser- 5 ions losses in the pullet flock. If t ; there are too many pullets for the I laying house they should be culled more rigidly. -o Soviet Game Abundant Stalinabad, U. S. S. R.—(UP)— ]An unprecedented abundance of game and beasts is observed this year in the Turkmenian. Last month 32- panthers. 121 wolves and over ( 1,700 foxes were killed by hunters.
Im- ■ I • ■ eV v K' ' ® This Bevelled Mirror. Graced With Trailing Ivies, Makes an Attractive and Useful Decoration. the attention of- guests is a tiny cactus garden. Very often such a ( miniature garden is blit a few inches square, and can be aset any- : where, from an end table to a i place of prominence on the mantle. They are particularly hardy, and ! will survive the worst kind of ne- , gleet. They have been known to like for six months without water, . although such a practice is cer- i tainly not to be recommended. ' Most of these floral novelties are , made of brightly colored materials such as the gay pot plants you see everywhere, and are excellent objects to brighten up a colorless nook, or make a prominent one more attractive.
CORNSTALKS ARE DANGEROUS Farmers Waraed Os Diseases To Horses In Infected F'tcMs t’rbana, Hl., Aug. 28---If the present drouth period is followed ’by heavy fall rains the season will be typical of 1934 ■when farmers iotft many horses as a result of so-called corn stalk disease, warns t>r. Robert Graham, chief in animal pathology and hygiene. College df Agriculture, University of Illinois. “Althogh studies have been made since the outbreak two years ago, the specific cause of the disease remains a mystery,” Dr. Graham asserts. "However, it has been quite definitely established by farm practice that if horses are not placed in stalk fields or fed dam-1 aged, worm eaten corn, the disease seldom develops. “If the horses become sluggish, show symptons of excitement or the blind staggers, a veterinarian ' should be called at once,” Dr. Graham advises. "Prompt treatment of the disease in its early stages has given good results, but no curative or preventive measures have been found. “It Is possible that the factor causing the disease may be in oth-
COUNTY FORM NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS OF TAX LEVIES In the matter of determining the Tax Hates for Certai i Before the Countv Council and Purposes bv Adams County, Indiana Board of County'Commissioners. Notice is hereby given the taxpayers of Adams County, Indiana, that the proper legal officers of said mon Iclpallty at their regular meeting place, >n the sth day of September 1»3«, will consider the following budget' arotiirr ci.AssrFw.vi'ioN fok tin nties cu-»b W <»«< 1 IT COI IB- | cotvn. INFIKW4RT 2 Total Budget Estimate Services Personal 53,>60.00 Services Personal J 0.500.00 Part II ijan Ito DeiAll Other op. Expense 990.0.1 All other op. expense ... 10,020.00 31 19371 ’ ’ • . Current charges 1,100.011 Material 375.00 Nee. Expenditures Part * CO! NTY AIDITOR Properties 1,250.00 I (under Part 111 of the Services Personal 53.7t0.00 COI NTY HOSPITAL Welfare Act of I'rtfi/ * All other op. expense 1,080.00 Services Personal >15,122.00 (July Ito Dec 31 ’ COI NTY TKEXSIHER All other op. expense .... 16,683.00 Present year. ’ services Personal 53,540.00 Material 496.00 3Old Age Assistance In; mo nn I All other op. expense .. . 910.00 Current charges 325.00 4 Burial Allow Pac'd ’’’ ’ ° <OI NTI ItF.COKnER Properties 252.00 Reclp Old Age Assist » sin nil Services Personal $2,700.00 Total $32,878.00 f, Burial ’ 830 0,1 Ail Other op expense . 52a.00 Less Receipts 27,500.««. Reclp. Assist for Mind S lOC/M! Services Personal ‘ $3,210.00 <Ol NUn (X.Nf MINNIONERs 7 Assisi for depimcMM- ’ ' ProperUes' 1 '] X ‘ 'zoo'd# An'o'ther op? expanse ~ 2 ,’500.’0? !• Ssonri’s^kes^ 1 * $ 5 ’99b 00 <O4N IN wi UVEYOH Current . l.hrges 11,300.00 10 All other operating i smooii Services Personal . $3,625.001 Current obligations 2.000.001 11 Assist denen children * ®OO.OO All other op. expense 3,05.5.00 ( TOTAL GENEItAL FPNU $106,561.001 in custody of indfvfdls S 700 00 ( (.1 N'l 1 Si I-ERIVI'EVDENT Prin. t > be paid $8,000.00 in cus. inititutimns slxoool Services Personal $2,503.00 Int. to be paid 1,950.001 17 Est work bal for ’ °°' oo All other op. expense . 600.001 TOTAL COUNTY BONDS . $9,950.00 nws after close nex t Current Charges 75.0(f FREE (ill IVEI. HO AD REP lilt vear (not treater COI NTY CORONER FUND lines 1 and 2 tot less est Services Personal $ 6! 5.00 ( Services Personal $23,500.00 reim. for same periodl ’$ 9 onn on All '"ther op. expense 75.001 Al! other op. expense 12,000.00 18 Tot est period Julv 1 * 9100, ’- W ( (II NTY ASSESSOR Material .56.950.(011 1936 to'Dee 31 1937 ’ $96 705 00 Services Personal $1,080.00 ; Current charges 1,500.00 CREDITS ' < ua.ttu AH other op. expense 495.00 Properties 13,300.00 19 July 1 bal Co Weir ■ 'ROSE* I TING ATTORN EV IXTI’AL F, G. It. It. . $107,250.00 reim. Jan ‘ 1 t'o (>». 1 Servb-es Personal $1,7110,00 <‘<>l NTN NVEI.FARE FIND 31. 1937 < - ... All other op. expense 95.00 Part I current charges $52,245.00 20 Old Age Assistnnre " t 1 «• u > CIR< tIT COI H I Part 11 Personal Services 2,180.00 a Old \ge Burials » Services Personal $5,620.00 All other op. ... ......... 960.00 b Blind Burials s 170 (ill Ali other op. expense 290.00 ■ < urreiit Chatges 22 Depen. dill assist S '1 Bno till Current charges 2’25.00 (other than Part 1) 5,000.00 Itefni. Julv Ito Dec '1 Pr Ve Properties 500.00 Properties 400.00 21 Old Age assist ' til 417 in ...ix':-. <ci in hoi si: '"iTAI. $60,765:00 a Old Age bursils $ 51000 Set-vi-. s Personal $1,300.00 ES'rniVTE :»F FINDS TO HE b Blind Burials « All other op. expense 3,750.00 H FOR 4 <>l nVY WKI.FAHE 26 Depcn. rhll. assist s -.non CON NTN Jill, 1 FIND 30 Tat. receipts other than services Personal ■ -,. .$ 700.001 CHARGES Tax Levy ' tea hok <lll All other op. expense . ... 7,025.00 1 1 ’rota'l Budget Estimate 31 Amt. To BO Raised bv ♦.owo .'V Material 1,160.00 Part I (Jan. 1 to Dec. Tax Levy ' t’i «nx in ■I 31,1937 $52,245.00 (Line 18 Less Line 30) ’ . (Complete detail of budget estimate may be seen in office of County Auditor) HSIfIMNTE of COI NTI FUNDS To BE RAISED Funds Keqiilretl For Expenses General Countv iii u i,„,„. Deccnibcr (fist Os titcontlnn Venn Fund Hotuis Fu...l 1. Total Budget Estimate (or Incoming year $106.561.011 $9,<950.00 $lO7 ”50 00 2. Necessary expenditures to be made from appro- .76,'8tnvnh ' ' e . priations unexpended July 3Tst of present year 1.300.00 5. Total Funds Required (add Tines 1.2, 3 and 4) 164,661.00 9.950.00 107 ”50 tin I'iiiklm On Hhikl And T© He Received From SoiirceM Other Thirti f*roi»oNe<l 'l'n\ Lev? : 6. Actual Balance, Julv 31st of present vear 67,3'4’<nh 7. ' Taxes tr> be collected, present year (December settlement) 44,20b:00 8. Miscellaneous Revenue to bereceived Aug. Isk of present year to Dec. 31st of incoming year (Schedule on file in office of County Audltbr): a. Special Taxes (see Schedule) ... ... ... 00 !>. Officers’ Fees and all other itevi"rue < sec■■■■MtflMF 9. ;l otal Funds (Add Tines (i, 7. Ka and 8b) 130.186 on o r » son (in 10. NET AMOUNT TO BE RAISED FOR EXPENSES ■ ■ . aa.su ,uv TO DE'-. 31st OU INCOMING YEAR (Tiedticl Tine f T ■ n ?,2 ,n £. s J -■ m 34,475.00 9,950.00 11,450.00 11. Operating Balance (not In excess of expense Jan. Ist to June 30, Hess Misc. Revenue for same period > 53.560100 12. AMOUNT TO BE RAISED BY TAX LEVY (Add lines 10 and ID j 88,035.00 9,950.0(1 L. , . . . . PROPONED IJENTEN Net Taxable Property — $.’.'.956,817 1.. . dleNy trti Attfinnil Vo 'und” Prn|H-rt> <Ba I twd County Revenue .$ ..-jg SB7 235 00 County Bonds r n t 9 18” do County Welfare Fund " ii 3i'xnsnii TOTAL 7d 1-x.no COWP.XRiVriVIE xTVI ENIEN’r OF THXex CO'l.l.Hiinn AND TO HE ( 01/108 OITn .. ’••O Be Name of Fund < olleefed Coltcctcil « (tflet-leil Collected HMCI TIeNN HMd Levy IWBI9O HHI« UUvy < oitnty Revenue $131,263.98 $99,871.00 697,025,00 $87,236.00 'County Ronds .... ’l'l.OhO.on 11,000100 iT,”Bi.oo 9,182.00 County Welfare Fund ....... ........................... 31,X0K.n0 TOTAL ...... 1’42,863.98 110,871.00 108,306.00 128,'225100 TOWNSHIPS FREE GRAVEI. ROW HAND FINDS 'HSTI VtNTE OF 'FI N’DS TO WE l< 4 Mil) I’nssetl Due PllHxetl Due Toflll anil Current nml Current s>rln. A Total Prhi. Vnd. ITIn. fit Be Int, to He lift, fn ! anti TWi. to BiilnrieeS N’eeesHnry t" Nnitie of Ton iiHhlp |>nhl Paid Be Rd. Towtisltli, Be I’l.ltl i Deducn 'h. Hidse.l Union $ 2,639.40 $ 196.17 $ 3,135.57. Union $ 3,135.57 » 679.43 $ 2,456.11 Root 3,050.26 389.53 3,439.79 i Hoot 3,439.79 <l”2.t() 2,517.69 Preble 3,628.18 160.42 4,1188.611 t ‘Preble I,OSS 60 1.032.74 11,666,86 Kirkland 1,312,00 177 12 1,489.12 J Kirkland 1,489.1 2 416.12 1,(173.00 Washington 16,335.36 1,824.27 18,159.63 Washington 18,169.63 3;062.t(i 15.097.53 St.Mnrys 744.00 112.53 856,53 St. Marys 856.53 189.81 666.72 Blue Creek 3,505.92 509.99 4,015.91 Htue Creek 4,015.91 1,058.7’2 1t,957.29 Monnie . . 8,888.78 1,1.15.:12 10,004.t0 Monroe 10,004.10 3,064.80 6.<139.110 French 1,692.00 162.81 1,7.'>4.xt French 1.754.81 72.19 1.682.6” Hartford 2,710.60 43'4.67 8,145.>7 . Hartford 3,1'45.27 291.71 2,663.66 Wabash 4,048.10 549 35 4,697.451 Wabash 4,597.45 1,392.41 3,266.111 Jefferson 2,698.00 376.24 3,(174.21 Jefferson 3,07 1.24 707.25 2,366.9'4 PROPOSED tssesMed .NWt, ‘fb 1 ToWnsblp 4 ablation levy lie Halved Union ? 982,155.00 $ .25 $ ”,456.14 Blue Creek 921,122.00 .32 3,957.19 Root .. 2,098,076.00 .12 2.617.69 Mhnroe 3,169,649.nd .20 6,939.30 Preble . . 1,527,932.00 .20 3,055.86 ■ French 1.051,640.00 .16 1,682.62 Kirkland 1,192,228.06 .09 1,073.00 Hartford 1,0.56,877.00 .”7 2,853.56 Washington 6,290,638.00 .24 15,097.53 Wabash 1.780,578.00 .18 3,205.01 St. Marys 1,333.435.00 .05 666.72 Jeffhrson 946.797.00 .25 2.366.99 Taxpayers appearing shall have the right to be heard thereon. After the Tax Levies have been determined, ten or nrare taxpayers feeling themselves aggrieved by such levies, may appeal to the State Board df TaxCommissioners for further and final action thereon, by filing a petition therefore with the County Auditor not later than the Fourth Monday in September, and the State Board will fix a date of bearing In thia county. Dated August 25th, 1936. JOHN W. TYNDALL, Auditor Adams County Publish AUGUST 28$h & SEPT. <th. 111:..5W
er feed, but ts so It does not occur in the same frequency aS In damaged corn.” A similar acute malady may develop in cattle pastured In stalk fields but not nearly so often as with horses’. On the other hand, hogs have failed to contract the disease in fields that have proved, dlsstrous to horses. If it is necessary to feed damaged corn, Dr. Graham advises that it be carefully selected. If shelled corn is placed in water before feeding, damaged kernels which usually float to the surface may be skimmed off and fed to hogs. There is no definite way to tell when a stalk field is dangerous, Dr. Graham pointed out. — o— Courteous Police Miami. Fla. (U.R>—Hoping to curb the drunken driver menace, Public Safety Superintendent Andrew J. Kavanaugh has offered the services of a police officer to drive the automobile of any person who has been drinking and does not believe himself in condition to drive the car himself. o Costly Ineect Pest Ottawa, Ont. (U.R> —Government ] experts estimate that the European spruce saw-fly, introduced accidentally in Canada in 1930, has destroyed at least 6,000 square i miles of once rich forests in Gaspe, and ig, spreading into Nova Scotia and further into Quebec.
PAGE FIVE
T.B.CANBE ELIMINATED Culling Old Birds From Hock Will Prevent Tuberculosis "The routine practice of selling the old flock in the fall every year so that nothing but pullets are retained over winter probably will do more than any other one thing to reduce the losses of poultry from tuberculosis,” says Dr. Lee M. Roderick, head of the NDAC veterinary department. Fowl tuberculosis Is one of North Dakota's most serious poultry diseases. There is not only a constant death loss over a given period of time but there 1b likewise a consequent lowering of egg production. Being a disease primarily of old fowls, the policy of disposing of all old birds every fall, as recommended by Dr. Roderick, is effective. While young fowls may acquire the disease at any age, they seldom die during the first year of life. The disease is not transmitted thru the egg so that a healthy flock can be reared from an infected flock, providing the young flock is properly handled. ip Urfles State Lotteries Fargo. N. D„ (U.K)-—Forty-seven years ago State Senator Jerry Stevens. now 82, vdted in the first North Dakota legislature for legal lotteries and he now is advancing approval of lotteries as a cure for the state’s economic troubles. “People,” Stevens said, "are bound to gamble and they might as well be permitted to gamble legally, with the benefits of it going to the government.” Dance Portland Orchestra Sunday gunset Park,
