Evening Republican, Volume 15, Number 301, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 22 December 1911 — Page 2

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DEMOTTE. Kankakee Valley Review. Sam Dutcher visited relatives at Momenoe last week. Sunday school at 10 a. tn.J Ep worth league at 6:30 p. m. George Marr made a business trip so Wheatfleid Tuesday. Prank N. Hart went to Kankakee Tuesday on business. Mrs. Charles Curtin was a Wheatfold visitor Tuesday. John Vanßeek made a business trip to Kankakee last Friday. Steve True went to Rye Tuesday to install a set of new lights. 'Blanch Hart returned from South Bend Friday for a visit with home folks. Carl Gorbelt returned to Morocco Monday after a visit here with home folks. John Trescmer and wile went to Chicago Saturday morning for a Visit wiO taicnds Mrs. Henry Gilbransen, of Wheatfold, visited Tuesday with Mrs. Geo. ~Marr. Sam Dutcher went Tuesday to Momence to visit his son Robert and family. Henry Knipp and wife went to Chi -ago Friday for a visit with relatives and friends. Dan Tanner, of Rensselaer, was here this week, visiting relatives and friends. Trustee Snip and Jacob Groct were Rensselaer business visitors Wednesday. Sam Burroughs, of Monon, visited aver Sunday at the home of Squire Fairchild and family.

RATE OF TAXATION FOR YEAR 1911. : - ' - • . _ * . 1 ' State, County and Township Taxes for Jasper County, Indiana. * ' * "* - - -- - - ■- - % NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, That the Tax Duplicate for the Year 1911 i* k«v in my hands and I am ready to receive at the County Treasurer’s office in Rensselaer, Indiana,' the taxes charged thereon. I The following table shows the RATES OF TAXATION on eaeh SIOO TAXABLE PROPERTY, and on each TAXABLE POLL: LEVEED POLI TIX LEVIED BY STATE | , . ®-w Levied by Advisory Levied by City or Township TOTAL BATE ON *m ! COBWT 5J Board on $l6O Trnstees on SIOO ON $l6O 1 COUNCIL eSw * * w - - j : » j j a NAME OF TOWN- =§ | g *f £ J j * 3 ■ 3 * * H w SHIP,TOWN OR =- - .S j * * H § 2. » £ %■ r,TT * “1 t 3 j fi S i 1 H^"S S C « * « ® i u -i a * , * x ■© .j. *•" w. ®‘2'a h'* i n Ji a Si3®JFia!2S'£ w 95 -4 = * *S©o>w<_s 0 ► «s i "5 T 5 2 ® .9 * !j3 S © S w 3 2 k 3 O « 3 3 s * >3 8-3 e ©2 2 1 a 2, 9 5 © k o XX * &» 2 &» * x I * Si K 5- U<s » 6* H X » S Je;'H Built; 50 50. 1.00 9 1.50 13.60 5 2.75 30.15 810 15 25 20 30 5 2 20 | Ll 6. .81 1.97 Carpenter 50 50 1.00 9 1.50 13.60 5 2.75 30.15 8 10 49 12% 10 10 12% 10 3 1.05 .82 1.85 Gillam 50 50 1.00 9 1.50 13.60 » 2.75 -30.15 8 10 50 18 25 25 10 5 1.24 .89 2.13 Hanging Greve 50 50 1.00 9 1.50 13.60 5 2.75 30.15 8 10 35 30 20 20 20 10 2 1.24 .93 2.17 Jordan 50 50 1.00 9 1.50 13.60 5 2.75 30.15 8 10 3 25 50 20 15 10 1.14 / .89 2.03 Kankakee 50 50 1.00 9 1.50 13.60 5 2.75 30.15 8 10 30 30 25 15 10 5 / 1.10 .85 1.95 Keener 50 50 1.00 9 1.50 13.60 5 2.75 30.15 8 10 25 36 20 20 10 2 1.12 .81 1.93 Marian 50 50 1.00 9 1.50 13.60 5 2.75 30.15 8 10 28 14 16 22 15 4 6 1.00 .85 1.85 Xilrey r. 50 50 ' 1.00 9 1.50 13.60 5 2.75 30.15 8 10 40 40 50 25 10 1 1.40 1.06 2.46 Newton ... 50 50 1.00 9 1.50 13.60 5 2.75 30.15 8 10 22 25 20 30 10 2 1.15 .74 1.89 Remington, Town of 50 50 1.00 25 25 2.50 9 1.50 13.60 5 2.75 30.15 8 10 49 3 40 10 10 20 40 50 50 1.76 1.76 3.52 Rensselaer, City of 50 50 1.00 9 1.50 13.60 5 2.75 30.15 8 10 28 | 4 10 35 43» 20 10 40 40 3 1.56% 1.56% 3.13 f II ' * Union 50 ;50 1.00 9 1.50 13.60 5 2.T5 30.15 8 10 'lO 35 35 30 10 5 1.23 .82 2.05 * ' ' Walker 50 50 j 1.00 ! 9 1.50 j 13.60 5 2.75 30.15 810 !20 40 25 30 5 2 1.18 .84 2.02 Wbeatfield : 60 50 1 1.00 9 I 1.50 13.60 5 2.75 30.15 8 10 !22 25 50 30 10 , 15 1.36 .96 2.3? J. | I . '| a Whcatfield, Towa of 50 !50 25 50 50 | 2.25 | 9 i 1.50 j 13.60 I 5 2.75 30.15 8 10 30 - 30 50 50 25 1.32%' 1.32% 2.65 L 1 i I) 1 i I 11 [ •■II l h L_L LZ ■ f %V d* I % ALL the Road and Bridge Tax and ONE-HALF of all other taxes make the FIRST INSTALLMENT and must he paid on or before the FIRST MONDAY IN MAY, 1912. ONE-HALF of all taxes, except Road and Bridges, constitute the SECOND INSTALLMENT, and mast be paid on or before the FIRST MONDAY IN NOVEMBER, 1912. Fallnre to pay First Installment when due makes both Installments delta-, quest and attaches a penalty of 16 per cent to the fall amount The Treasurer can not make and hold receipts for anyone. Please do hot ask it. PROVISIONS OF LAW RELATING TO TAXATION. "The owner of property oa the drt>t day of March of any year shall be liable for the taxes of that year. The parehaser on the first day of March shall be considered the owner on that day.” Purchasers of PERSONAL PROPERTY as well as Real Estate should remember that "TAXES FOLLOW PROPERTY when the taxes thereon remain unpaid.” "COUNTY ORDERS in favor of persons owing delinquent taxes can not be paid without settlement of taxes.” p , "It h the duty of the TAX PATER to state definitely on what property he desires, to pay taxes, la whose name assessed, and in what township or town It was assessed.” THE TREASURER WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE for the penalties and charges resalting from taxpayer’s omission to so state. The Tax Duplicate for any year Is made with reference to property on the first day of March of that year and remains unchanged for the year as to the showing of property, and in whose name assessed and taxed. Transfers after the first day of March of any year will never appear upon the Duplicate of that year's taxes. Those who pay taxes of property in trust, and whose taxes are complicated, such as undivided estates etc„ should pay early enough to avoid the rash of the last days »» it requires time divisions and separate receipts. * looHoKdoMiliadUi4Ami»k»'jxw.., Road Receipts are Not Negotiable, and Must be Presented in Payment of First Installment, and then only by the Owner of the Land. - '• —— v-r —— • • -r"r~ — L - ■ -... ~—t —7' • THE ANNUAL SALE OF DELINQUENT LANDS AND LOTS WILL TAKE PLACE ON THE SECOND MONDAY IN FEBRUARY, 1912. JESSE D. ALLMAN, Treasurer of Jasper County, Indiana.

C. D. Shook made a business trip to W&lkerton Friday evening, returning home Saturday morning. Mr. Wolf and wife, of Hammond visited over Sunday at the home of hla parents. Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Wolf. ; Richard Evers and family left here Tuesday for Chebanse, 111., where they will locate on the farm of Sim SamWttST . "■ Mr. and Mrs. Harry Ploegsma left here Saturday for Chicago where Har ■ ry has accepted a position with au electric company. Mr. and Mrs. Ted White have moved back here from North Judson. Ted has jumped his job as lineman on the C. I. & S. Ry. Cliff and John Fairchild returned last Friday from attending the fat stock show at Chicago and visiting relatives at Hammond. Mrs. Bert Strubel has been on the sick list the past ten days and her sister, Jessie Doty, of Shelby, has been assisting In the household duties. Mrs. E. M. Fairchild orders the Kankakee Valley Review to be mailed to her son Albert at South Bend as a Christmas present. Nothing if more appropriate as a holiday present than one year’s reading of the home paper to a relative or friend living at a distance. Only one dollar per year, postage paid to any part of the U. S. A. George McKenzie, who has been in poor health for some time with several aheesses, was taken to the Feo : pie’s hospital in Chicago Tuesday for : an operation. He was accompanied I by his nephew, Dr. Kenneth | son, of Hamburg, Towa, who came to 1 see his uncles, George and John, and j found the condition of George such as to warrant his being taken to the hospital for treatment. On Saturday Mr. Lee and Miss Martha Stump' went to DeMotte to vis: f and celebrate the birthdays of J.ee aud his cousin. Miss Eva McGinnis, which was on Sunday. After three days of merrymaking they. went, to Wheatfleid. whdre on Tuesday they

celebrated the anniversaries of the birth of one of their cousins, Mr. Knapp, there and Miss Martha, which also fell on the same day. Lee has been studying the “family tree” ever since his return in the hope of finding some more cousins with birthdays in the near future.—MedaryvlHe Advertiser.

LEE.

Mrs. George Irwin was in town Tuesday. Miss Minnie Zable was in town Monday. O. A. Jacks went to Lafayette Friday on business. Mrs. Lamport and son Ross were in town Tuesday. Mrs. Carl Westphall and son Trueman called on Mrs. Jacks Monday. Miss Lona Jacks and Miss Agnes Sticrs spent Sunday with Dollic Jacks Mr. Frank Overton and O. A. Jacks went to a sale Tuesday near Frank Mays. Mrs. Swesley, of Delphi, is visiting her sister, Mrs. Widner, for a few days. Mrs. O. Er Noland went tq Rensselaer 4'riday to do Christmas shopping. „ ; Miss Myrtle Peregrine and brother visited Mike Peregrine and family this week. Mrs. Della Culp and son Glen went ». Monon to have dental work done on Glen’s teeth Wednesday. Wednesday Mrs. Ida Lewis and Mrs. Dora .Tacks arid Mrs. Clara Overton and son Lloyd went to Rensselaer ‘o do Christmas shopping.

We wish to call your attention to the fact that most infectious diseases such as whooping cough, diphtheria and scarlet fever are contracted when the child has a cold. Chamberlain’s Coug£ Remedy will quickly cure a cohl aim greatly lessen the danger of contracting these diseases. This remedy is famous fdr its cure of colds. It contain? po opium or other narcotics anc may be to a child with implicit confluence. Sold by all dealers. c

WHEATFIELD.

Kankakee Valley Review. Edward Lidtke made"a business trip to Kankakee Saturday. James Cooper went to Monon Wednesday to visit relatives Herwon Langdon has had an attaok of the grip tirt? past week. John E/Meyers, of Kniman, was a business viator here Tuesday. Mrs. Warren 3, White went Friday to Chicago on a shopping trip. Mrs. Henry Gilbransen went Tuesday to DeMotte for a day’s visit with friends.

Mrs. George Stallwood and daugh-; ter, Mrs. Chamberlain, visited friends here Monday. (? H. W. Marble went to Crown Point Monday to visit with his mother and other relatives. M. J. Delahanty, Robert Mannan and Jacob Hell were county seat visitors Wednesday. N|rs. G. D. Gregory, June Jessup and sister went shopping to Kankakee last Saturday. Roy Heil went Monday to Illinois ‘and told us he might be married before he returned. Mr. John W. Williams and children went, Friday to Rensselaer for a -visit with relatives. Art Tuteur, of Rensselaer, visited last Thursday qnd Friday with Mr. and Mrs. Simon Fendig. Mrs. John East was called to Gibson Monday by the illness of her daughter, Mrs. Grace Knitter. _ Mr. and Mrs. Roy Nichols and baby went last Thursday to Danville for a visit with relatives and friends. Mr 3. Louis Paulsen returned Friday evening from several days visit with Mrs. John Tilton and family at Rensselaer. Allen Fendig returned Monday from a visit over Sunday with his Grandma Fendig and other county seat relative Mr. and Mrs. Earl Pierce, of Kouts, dro\ k e here and spent Sunday at the home of her father, , August Lidtke and family/ The grand old man "Debs” enter-

tained a few bachelor friends at a possum and sweet potato dinner Sunday evening. Fred Marlowe, Carrie Banes, of 3waningion, lizzie Wiseman, of Virgie visited here this week jeith Wm. and Luther Wiseman. John Pinter, who has. been confined to his home, the past ten days with rheumatism, is reported better and able to be about the house. Harold, son of Mr. and Mrs. P. O. • Kennedy, who was recently kicked in the head by a mule, has recovered nicely and able to be about again. Ray Anderson returned Tuesday from South Bend, where he has been attending a meeting of the stockholders of the firm known as Whiting Bros.

At the election of road supervisors in Wheatfleid township last Saturday the following were elected. First district, Everett Finney; Second district. Orley Miller; third district, John Haladay. Wm. H. Minor returned Saturda-” from St. .Louis, where he had been to the hospital on account of a surgical operation being performed on his son-in-law for appendicitis. His daughter, Mrs. Ethel Lambert, came with him for a visit

John Payne and wife, of Glendale, Arizona, came Saturday for a visit at the home of his brother Samuel Payrn and family. John speaks highly of th 1 Arizona and its people and reports that Arthur and Phillip White are doing well. Mr. and Mrs. Payne will visit with relatives in Starke and Jas per counties until the middle of January, when they will return to Arizona, where John has a position in the of flee of a large sugar factory. The sad news was announced Monday of the sudden death of Mrs. Baughman, wife of Willard Baughman, the merchant of Stoutsburg. Mrs. Baugnman was apparently in her usual good health preparing the noonday meal, when she fell uncnoscious. Medical aid was summoned and Dr. Weils diagnosed the case as indigestion. Restoratives were given without avail and she died about one o’clock. The fun-

Sleep Well Tonight Don't let constipation, indfeestion, or laxyHrar rVELAXOS^ but effectual. Tones end- invigorate* the entire system. AH druggists, 25 cents. DoKalfe Drag A Cham. «», DeKaMtftt

eral will be held from the home Friday morning and the remains will be taken to Rye for burial. The family have the sympathy of the entire community in this# their hour of bereavement. \j,‘

Telephone Any Namber For Wasson’s Bas, Day or Night. All calls for bus service, either to the trains, down town, or from one part of the city to another, promptly answered. Call any of the following phones: „ Makeever Hotel, Phone 107. H. Wasson’s residence. No. 49. W, F. Frye’s residence, No. 359. The patronage of all the public fs solicited. HARRISON WASSON. President Taft and his cabinet witnessed a demonstration in the cabinet room yesterday of -the White House of just how the Maine wa’s blown up in Havana harbor. Rear-Admiral Vreeland and Chief Constructor Watt, of the navy, both members of the Maine investigating board, staged the show. ... , X You will find that druggists everywhere speak well of Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy. They know from long experience in the sale of tt that in cases of coughs and colds it can always be depended upon, and that it is pleasant and safe to take. For sale by all dealers. c •The second longest railroad bridge in Indiana, which spans the Wabash river at a point eight miles west of Huntington, rapidly is being supplanted with a modern structure by a force of Wabash railroad workmen. The old bridge was 750 feet long and the new one will be the,same length.