Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 36, Number 207, Decatur, Adams County, 1 September 1938 — Page 7
□By,.'. Sport Parade I B" i -up' vi(|1 ’ B* Y " rl ' '' / would have to '.pruz. Leavenworth. B d|lJ "'.a '.iberx "f our mor.) Bj;- - deride "> adopt a f ill lioi"” ll "' laS ' B' H '7< dene. K.'Om p 011...; B’ all H>orls <>tii< nils. | ’ ..rbn.-rs of all games; .h,. additional title of Bl ‘ nd hat. -he -thdistelv I" n " y ueine nnpii'PMy.-'. making 'ulnar gesor throwing objects." M,;-r would Be Full that t ht9 rule
f?”TONS HIGH GRADE COAL FREE! B (OK A 51000 TRADE ' IN ALLOWANCE FOR ANY OLD HEATER) fl WITH THE PURCHASE OF A NEW ■ "Globe Circulating Heater' Lmsbri we suggest you hurry as this SPECIAL OFFER IS FOR A LIMITED B d L TIME ONLY. | This High Grade ($7.50 per ton) Lump H 111 Coal purchased from and delivered by « “The Decatur Lumber Co.” I :* I The “GLOBE” is the most complete cabfl | I ine t heater ever built. ■
S' COUNTY FORM I NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS OF TAX LEVIES Matter of determining the tax rates for certain Before the County Council anti by Adams County, Indiana. Board of County Commissioners e o hereto given the taxpayers of Adams County. Indiana, that the proper legal off here of said I at their regular meeting place, on the Sth day of September, 1931* will consider the following S Hl DGET 4T.ASSIFISATIDN FOR COl STIES OF < lilt IIT<Ot RT (Current Charges 150.00 Total k 115,710.00 ■h> Personal 54,510.00 COUNTY CORONER Less EJst. Receipts 540.010.00 ■star op. expense . 1,411.00 Services Personal ...——o 675.00 i charges 1,400.00 All other op. expense 75.00 8 5,700.00 SB . 1,200.00 t ill MTV ASSESSOR COl NTV COM MISSIONERS CT WIND It IIITOH Services Personal 1,155.00 services Personal 8 5,182.00 Personal 13,660.00 All other op. expense 740.00 All other op. expense 2,500.00 other op. expense . 1,280.011 Properties 10.00 Current Charges 18,150.00 | CT toivn TREASIRER PHONE! I TING ATTORNEY Current obligations 2.000,«« Personal 83,140.00 Services Personal 11,700.00 ’ properties 500.00: op. expense 1,110.00 All other op. expense l'° u 0 I Total General Fund 8116,023.00 i CTpe-..<- 50.00 CIRIIIT COURT , n, w rv iK.xns COl ATI HEXollllt.H Services Personal 85,920.00 , , ol ’ ' 1 * , x 000 00 Ht-> Personal 82,800.00 All other op. expense 190.00 Prln - to . J e ,,. * I'loo uO ■ itter op. expense . 550.00 Current charges ” 5 00 Bon.ls 8 9 200 00 ■ OH TTY SHERIFF I Properties 500 " U ( v ll vrY HITIWAY otter op expense 2,370.00 Services Personal 81,720.00 AN< t. AND RLPA It . CT tot VTV MIRV EV OR All other op. expense n><( , » ® ■k« Personal 85.425.00 Properties 100.00 All cher op. expense 1 j.b»9. 0 CT < "I N I A JAIL lc,‘,r,, .'i 1 Ch-.ro. CT'"’’ 100 °" Services Personal 8 100.00 B ',OOO 00 Htm AGHIiI I.TI H.VI, AGENT All other op. expense 1,975.00 * r ? P ? r , t ~ ~ . .. », , . .... ES Personal 81.400 90 COl NTY INFIRMARY F° tal Co - H - “• * ll on. expense 6R0.00 Services Personal $ 5,750.00 COI'MY WELF.4KK Fl N• > ■M'H M I'EHI\TE\I)H\T OF Material 1.00n.n0 part II Current charges 4,4<u.00 ■ UIIOOLM Properties .... 1,100.00 (Other than Part 1) - Personal |2,<20.00 COlNil HOSPITAL personal Services ...040.00 ■ other op. expense 760.00 Services Personal 122,550.00 All other op 2,460,00 ( CTOIVTV HEALTH OFFICER All other op. expense 20,810.00 Propertie* 350.00 CTb'e, Personal , $ 444.00 Material 1.000.00 Total .... 813 1,500.00 CT utter op. expense 155.00 1 Current Charges 1,850.00 1 B ESTIMATE OF COl NTY Fl NOS TO HE RAINED H County CTtte Krqulrert Far Expenses Te December General Comity Welfare Highway CT* or Incoming tear Fund Bond" Fmnl • )••• ■ Total Budget Estimate fr.r Incoming Year 8116,023.00 $4,300.00 8134,500.00 $113,060.00 ■ Necessary Expenditures To He Made From ApB proprlations unexpended July 31st ot present ■ Tear. 59,000.00 u 3.893.00 ■ Additional Appropriation Necessary To Be Made ■ (‘“X, 11 *' to Dec. 31st of present year 31,950.00 22,674.0 V , ■ r?...J 1 11' 1 in * Temporary Loans To Be Paid be- , B re Dec. 31st of present year—not Included In ■ lines I or 3 .. . I CT, ■ piU i Fttud. l{e, iuired (Add lines L 2, 3 and 4). 107.973.00 9,300.00 188,293.00 136,334.00 CTn« ml "*-?"* T“ *”■ Received From CT, , , r Than Proposed Tax Lew: 1 ■ ■ Ta.!! s alanc e. Jul >' 31st of Present year 45,800.00 21,728.00 B Ims- a ?.? Be Collected, Present Year (Decern- , ... „„ B w s !* ltlem ent) 28,000.00 11,000.00 ■ m ?*. OUs ,! e' enue to he received Aug. Ist B iSrhlam! 1 ye ! r t 0 I,ec - 31st ~f Incoming year ■ I- “edule oni file in office of County An,"tor>: „«««»» B B orrf . Ta . x< ' s < See schedule) 4,826.00 89,800.00 , B , Fees an<l all other Revenue (See B "ehedule) • 21 not 00 1 10,799.00 1 U Funds (Add lines 6,7, 8A and SB) .. L. 101’627 00 173,527.00 89,800.00 ( ■ be<‘ Ji^’ Un , t , To I ? e liaised For Expenses To . ■ lite I ° f Inco ming Year (Deduct line 9 from I VNot in I teri„d’> JUi " 'Avenue for sam- 20 .M.-..90 ( ■ W antin' He Raised by Tax Levy (Add lines ■ xn -1 131,146.00 9.300 00 34,911.00 ■ unty Welfare Fund Calculations as of July Ist, Instead of July 31st and August Ist. I ■t ■ Pr Pro P"*ed Levies COMPARATIV E STATEMENT OF TAXES COLLECTED ( Ml&kU.’ AND TO BE COLLECTED M> Levy Oh Amount ToCnllected Collected Collected ‘ I » Property H<- H.ilscd 1»3B I*l7 J*®* .1 , , 'W Bond? > -51 8131.171.00 8 97.025.00 8 66,.778.00 3 d ‘ ‘ 6S .”" ’ “. '-is'no ' «nty Welfsr, "< 9,716.00 11,281.00 V,182.00 esls?'?m ’ Total i,Unil 15 36,437.00 31,808.00 24,0,0.00 . 2 < - 73 177,327.00 108,306.00 107,562.00 91,467.00 17 1,327700 i ""'■Mill- POOH TIX AX b-rX tk , — Was |,| llK -t^ —- "21,078700 «.SBe,9OLOO .32 ' •’inhin 'mount to Um'mH |<;itr of St. Marys 3.<55.00 a.]-'J-MJ n? 1 ’ he Kmlmihl V nlnation Tax Blue Creek 6;>4.00 lion l.evv Monroe J,oil, 1 < mV" »t 8 905.00 81.006,062.00 $ j>9 French 649.00 J’SJi’x!?,?!! «b'. 1.101.00 2.431,339.00 .07 Hartford fkland 482.00 1,608,794,00 .03 Wabash n- ■ 765.00 1,275,863.00 .06 Jefferson 479.00 9.,9,800.00 .0.. 1V,..... township free gravel road bond find* ENfIMATE OF FI NDS TNI HF. HVINED PROPONED LEVIEN Amount Hale iIM ,lu< ' an ’* Past due mid Total Prln. Neeea- of • urrent pri,,. current hit. and hit. to Overdrafts Halam-e aarj to be Tax Amount <<■ " , 1,1 I" be paid he nald cVddi (Deduct) Raised Levy be raised *7'l. 7-2" 8241.19 82.683.19 8 8168.01 82.515.15 8 Mbls 1.731,82 164 68 1 806 50 1,896.00 .08 1,94.,.I 7 inland ” I 'sl ß An - 08 - 37 2,06837.5 505.52 }« 22M 55 ' **ngton 36.90 692.90 1,603.65 I? i’HMT ‘ fer ■■ M .<> 3 rnree t'sn? - ** 230.16 2,450.16 355.91 'tr r'76l'7- ?? ord 1 "9K n? 3S 8 ° ’w.io 281JJ7 Sfi b??* ,h 162 - 1 S 1,888.18 305.00 ?‘11a1! ’7- 5’733'39 hferson 2,348.10 212 74 AttKl 2,560.84 .15 J.,3.1.33 L l »xpay., I ’ Blo 00 161’38 1,’771.38 1,771.38 .19 1,823.71,' l t a ,f >l> .7 ari l!K shall have a right to be heard thereon. After the tax levies have been determine , »l evs ’ fixed bv t h.S? U,,ty Auditor not later than two days prior io the second Monday In bfP te " ll ! e • a " d 1 "te more t,xn n il! C ? U ! lty Tax Adjustment Board, or on their failure so to do. by ITie County A• J” l ' Ss loner s lns themselves aggrieved by such levies, may appeal to the State Byard of L. 3 Au BUst 10-is le state Board will fix a date for hearing In tills county. fn,,,,.. Be,?? 1 ' detail"„, »• JOHN W. TYNDALL. Auditor Adams County. , '■ST 2i—-SEPTEMBER 1 | Estll “ ate be seen in ofilce ot County Auditor.)
, copied In thin country. The popu-f latlon of Alcatraz would be denser | than that of China, they'd be hang-i ’ Ing from the chandeliers at Leav- ( cnworth, and Warden Lawes would 1 have to put cots In the meat room 1 - at Sing Sing to accommodate the ; 1 crowd. Handcuffs would be scar- - rer than bracelets of the diamond 1 kind, every commercial vehicle! would have to be converted Into a black maria, and a war draft; would be neceeaary to provide auf-' I flcient wardens. The first to fall before the law I ■if it were passed in the United I States undoubtedly would be Joe (we wuz robbed) Jacobs. The. first time a tighter of his sought 1 the bout would be halted in the second round while police officer I 6754 (referee Arthur Donovan) haled him Into court on all charges including witchcraft. He wouldn't get Idnesome in the salt mines, however, because he
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1938.
i would soon be joined by every fight manager and second In the ; country. Need Standing Army The standing army of the United States would be necessary to ; handle the wholesale arrests that 1 would have to be made at Ebbets ' Field the first time the Brooklyn Dodgers played the New York I Giants. And the Pennsylvania i would have to run special trains J to the various hoosegows, and at ; excursion rates. I wonder what Burleigh Grimes' visiting day i would be? Old Burleigh would be I making little ones out of big ones the first time constable Bill Klem 1 called one he didn't like. And wouldn't that Klem like to flash that badge of his around? He'd have a gold one with diamond | points and the first player who I questioned him would be picked up for vagrancy, resisting an offleer, harboring a fugitive, and drlv-
U. S. Comptroller? ’ H' a 18* > fP kC ’ * T —nuff I I I t
According to capital observers, Marshall Diggs, Texas banker, Is scheduled to become permanent i comptroller general of the United | States. Diggs has been acting i i comptroller, succeeding J. F. T. I O'Connor, who resigned to run for I the Democratic gubernatorial ; nomination in California.
. ing without a license. Tilden In Solitare? Bill Tilden would be put away I : for good as a third offender inside I .of three months. Not even the threat of solitary confinement ' would stop Big Bill from telling a | linesman what he thought of his | ( officiating on close ones. And I think of all the football coaches I who would be behind the big doors, searching their mail and presents | for files and jirnmys. The Sing Sing golf team would ,be a' pretty fair one, too, what with Harry Cooper, Lawson Little, and Ralph Guldahl. to mention a ■ few who like to throw things, firing away in the “big house” invitaJ tion tournament. t I also know a sportswriter or two | who would be slitting on the in-! side looking on the outside. Wonder how my tenor is on "If 1 had the wings of an angel, over these prisons walls I would fly.” (Copyright 1938 by UP.) o Dizzy Is Given Excuse Due To Slight Cold Chicago. Sept. 1. —(U.R)— Dizzy Dean. $165,000 problem pitcher of the Chicago Cubs, "has been exI cused from hanging around for | 1 games” because of a slight cold, the cltjb's physician said today. “It s not serious." said the doctor, “just a matter of a chilly day sitting on tjie bench.’ o HOME RUNS Greenberg, Tigers 46 Foxx, Red Sox ....i 38 York, Tigers 31 Ott, Giants — 30 Clift, Browns 29 o CENTRAL SUGAR CO. (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) the company since the last campaign cleaning and repairing the machinery. Additional equipment to perfect the quality of the beet sugar. o New Deal Confronted With Differing Men Washington, Sept. I—(UP1 —(UP) —This week's primary results confronted President Roosevelt and the Democratic national committee today with a somewhat radical New Deal ticket in California and an implacable conservative Senator in South Carolina. Culbert E. Oteou won California's Democratic gubernatorial nomination with endorsement of Tom Mooney and the CIO. Sheridan Downey, a veteran of uptown Sinclair’s end-poverty-in-California and of the Townsend plan, took the senator-' lai nomination with a new S3O-every , Thursday program for the aged. Biff Return Engagement D-A-N - C - E WOWO - KMOX RADIO STARS in person ■ Saturday - Sunday Sept. 3 - 4 From 8:30 to 12:30 p. m. i STATE GARDENS i Middlebury, Ohio Route 224 Featuring Ambrose Haley -Ozark Rani-1 hler. The Ozark Sweetheart ■ Roy Fields, the Accordion Ace. Billy Woods. Guitar. Another Big Time For All! i Admission: Per Person 25c i Children 10c. I
JEWS ORDERED OUT Os HALT Nearly 50,000 Effected By Sudden, Drastic Racial Program Rome, Sept. I—(U.R)—The cabinet approved a decree today ordering all foreign Jews who took up residence in Italy, Libya and the Dodecanese Islands after Jan. 1, 1919, to leave the territory within six months. Estimates of the number of Jews living in Italy range from 44,000 to 48,000 of a population of I 50.000,000. There are probably 8.000 foreign Jews living in Italy as students, most of them studying medicine or law No estimate is available for the number of: foreign Jews living here permanently. in business and the professions. Mussolini's racial program, suddenly announced this summer, was unexpected and immediately caused strained relations between the Fascist government and the Holy See, which took a position of stern opposition to racial dis- 1
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crimination. Program Oppoted There have been indications that some powerful fascist leadi ers did not approve of the racial i program. Some prominent fas- ' cists, such as Filippo Anfuso and Achille Terruzzl, married Jews. I One of the close friends of Air ■ Marshal Italo Balbo is a Jewish colonel of Carabineers. Most powerful figures behind the anti-Jewish campaign were said to be Count Caleazzo Clano, foreign minister; Dino Aifieri. minister of popular culture; and Achille Starace. secretary of the Fascist party. The Jewish question was one of several topics considered at today’s cabinet meeting. The ' ministers were reported to have considered new military appropriations as well as the general European situation. Includes Citizens The decree also includes all foreign Jews who acquired Italian citizenship after Jan. 1, 1919. The cabinet also decided that henceforth no more foreign Jews may establish permanent residence in Italy. Libya or the Dodecanese Islands. No mention was made of Ethiopia. All Italian citizenships granted 1 to foreign Jews after Jan. 1. 1919
are revoked. The decree said the Fascist govt eminent considers a person to be Jewish If both parents were of the Jewish race, even If he proI fesses a religion other than Jewish I While various minor repressive measures have been taken against ■ Jews in Italy, the present decree is the most drastic step yet taken under the government's new doc- ! trine of "racialism.” o Dixie Davis Denies Hines’ Trap Attempt New York, Sept. 1 —(UP) — J. I Richard (Dixie) Davis, jittery and shrilling his answers under cross- j examination, was accused today of; trying to “trap" James J. Hines by l concealing the fact that be was, going to plead guilty to the same lottery charges on which the Tammany leader is being tried. Davis shouted that he had not done so. He said that for a while he had tried to protect Hings. o ADVERTISERS (CONTINUED FKOM PAGE ONE) less than one and one half per cent of Its sales. Advertising has actually decreased the unit price
PAGE SEVEN
of products since they can be made and sold In larger quantities through wider market appeal. “Advertising as we know it — business as we practice it America itself —these are worth fighting for—now! That is why advertising men and women, business men. should flight alien, subversive elements and help direct into constructive, rational lines, the consumer education.'' rdr.nr« h n n c<)lds ’ gs US Fever end | Headaches I.IQI ID. Ttlll UTS ~ SALVE. NOSH DXOI'S Try "Hul>-My-Tl»m"—u Wonderful l.lnlmenl DANCING Decatur Country Club Saturday, Sunday, Monday 9 P. M. Bobby Fredericks’ Orchestra. Single Adm. 20c Couple 35c
