Jasper County Democrat, Volume 12, Number 71, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 18 December 1909 — Page 10
RATE OF TAXATION FOR THE YEAR 1909. State, County and Township Taxes for Jasper County, Indiana. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN That the Tax Duplicate for the year 1909 is now in my hands and that I am ready to receive at the County Treasurer’s Office in Rensselaer, Indiana, the taxes charged thereon. The following table shows the RATES OF TAXATION on each SIOO TAXABI F PPOPrarv on each TAXABLE POLL. ' 1 Y and POLL TAX. LBV.BO BY BTATB “j LEVIED BY ADVISORY BOARD LEVIED BY CITY OR TOWNSH.. t „ t . ON »100. < COUNTY < O GI TY OR TOWNSHIP TOTAL RATE _ ( COUNCIL. g e ON » 100 - trustees on 1100. ON »100. ' Z I 1 ii ’ 77 ——————- £ »- »- s NAME OF TOWNSHIP, c c 5 ■S ? f £ g x x TOWN OR CITY. . | | * | g « ? J £ 5 f g g ’ « * -B.B £ u “! s a | s i 8e > " I < H r11 I!HIM rI1:M s ; t i M ll ij] J - | S S o +• o q, u. $S S ® o e t* $ c ® ”iS g a jgs >, g g g g 1 g l 3 g i g gi 1 5 gjf 11 fM I! i< I i BARKLEY 50 50 |I.OO 9 3 13.60 5 2.75 50 2.65 15 25 34 15 10 1 v 106 80 186 CARPENTER .. 50 50 1 1.00 9 3 13.60 5 2.75 50 2.65 61 25 25 13 20 10 4 rtTTTAtta en “ U 1.37 1.07 2.44 GILLAM 50 50 1.00 9 3 13.60 5 2.75 50 265 60 10 35 10 20 5 1 1.26 1.01 2.27 HANGING GROVE 50 50 1.00 9 3 13.60 5 2.75 50 2.65 50 10 20 5 20 10 2 A 117 86 203 JORDAN 50 50 1.00 9 3 13.60 5 2.75 50 2.65 3 8 25 5 15 10 89 63 152 KANKAKEE 50 50 1.00 9 3 13.60 5 2.75 50 2.65 25 30 35 10 10 5 t 1.11 .90 2.01 KEENER 50 50 1.00 9 313 60 5 2.75 50 2.65 15 36 20 20 10 1.09 .78 187 MARION ... 50 50 1.00 9 3 13.60' 5 2.75 50 2.65 38 7 8 10 15 7 2 2 -99 .77 1.76 MILROY 50 50 100 9 3 13.60 5 2.75 50 2.65 40 35 20 25 10 1.26 .90 2.16 NEWTON 50 50 1.00 9 3 13.60 5 2.75 50 2.65 18 25 25 25 10 ~ 1.12 .77 1.89 REMINGTON, Town of. .. . 50 50 1.00 25 25 2.50 9 3 13.60 5 2.75 50 265 61 i .a • * 40 1° 10 50 50 3.11 RENSSELAER, City 0t.... 50 50 1.00 9 3 13.60 5 2.75 50 2.65 38 3 in 4n w - “ iu 1& 10 40 45 3.17 UNION 50 50 100 9’ 3 13.60 5 2.75 50 2.65 25 30 10 30 10 2 1.17 .76 1.93 WALKER 50 50 1.00 9 3 13.60 5 2.75 50 2.65 20 40 20 25 5 1.13 .83 1.96 WHEATFIELD 50 50 1.00 9 31360 .. 5 2.75 50 2.65 20 20 30 30 10 2 24 1.25 .85 2.10 WHEATFIELD, Town of ..|so| 50 |25 25 25 50 2.25 9 3 13.60 5 2.75 50 265 •> on - I 30 20 50,50 25 2.63 ALL the Road and Bridge Tax and ONE-HALF of all other taxes make the FIRST INSTALLMENT and must be paid on or before the FIRST MONDAY IN MAY loin „ cept Road and Bridges, constitute the SECOND INSTALLMENT, and must be paid on or before the FIRST MONDAY IN NOVEMBER, 1910 Failure to nav the FiL t ta ”*’ installments delinquent and attaches a penalty of 10 per cent to the full amount. IWJ Fl t Installment when due makes both The Treasurer can not make and hold receipts for any one. Please do not ask it. Provisions of Law Relating to Taxation. “The owner of property on the flrst day of March of any year shall be liable for the taxes of that year. The purchaser on the first <l«v . “OO^WYORDFR?! P^ >PERTY """ ™ Real Kstate sht>nld “TAXES FOLLOW PROPERTY when the taxes thereon remain ‘ °“ day ” COUNTY ORDERS in favor of persons owing delinquent taxes can not be paid without settlement of taxes ” "It is the duty of the TAX PAYER to state definitely on what property he desires to pay taxes, in whose name assessed and in wh»t NOT BE RESPONSIBLE for the penalties and charges resulting from taxpayer’s omission to so state. - in what township or toxvn it was assessed. THE TREASURER WILL The Tax Duplicate for any year is made with reference to property on the flrst day of March of that year and remains nnchan ff ed for the vear as to the assessed and taxed. Transfers after the flrst day of March of any year will never appear upon the Duplicate of that year’s taxes. & or t year as to the showing of property, and in whose name 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 rush of th® a o. , the divisions and separate receipts. ’ P > y enou « n lo av °iu the rush of the last days, as it requires time to make ,„ , , > ROAD RECEIPTS MUST BE PRESENTED IN PAYMENT OF FIRST INSTALLMENT. The Annual Sale of Delinquent Lands and Lots will take place on the SECOND MONDAY OF FEBRUARY, 1910. JESSE D. ALLMAN, Treasurer of Jasper County, Indiana
FOR THE HOUSEWIFE
Keep the House Air Moist.
There is such a thing as having a house, or its air at least, too dry. The effect of very dry air is to take moisture too rapidly from skin and mucous membranes. This has two bad re-sults-it produces a feeling of chilliness, making rooms that are really too hot seem too cold, and it injures the throat and air passages. As yet no satisfactory scheme has been devised for keeping the air in a house properly moist in the winter time. Water in furnace pans or in dishes set on radiators supplies only a fraction of the moisture needed. And yet these attempts should not be abandoned; they are far better than nothing. Use pans or dishes of generous size, remembering that the larger the surface of the •water the more rapidly it evaporates. —La Follette’s Magazine.
Italian Cabbage.
Italian cabbage is a very appetizing dish. Slice two onions and fry them in a little butter, add two cupfuls of boiled rice and one-half cupful of meat stock or hot water, simmer until heated through and then take from the tire and sprinkle with one-half cupful of grated cheese. Parboil cabbage leaves of uniform size, spread them with the rice paste, roll them up and tie them ■with white string. Melt two tablespoonfuls of butter in a stewpan and cook until the cabbage is tender. Sprinkle with more grated cheese and serve with tomato sauce.
Carrot Preserves. Wash the carrots and boll just long enough to enable you to peel them easily. Peel and slice crosswise into pieces about one-quarter of an inch thick. Put into boiling sugar sirup flavored with either lemon or sliced ginger root. Cook until the carrots can be pierced easily with a fork. Pack in jars and seal. For the sirup use three-fourths of a pint of sugar
to a pint of carrots and an ounce or ginger root to one-half gallon of sirup. Safety For Window Washers. Much of the risk in the calling of window cleaning has been eliminated by the invention of a New York man. This invention is a safety appliance which enables a window washer to go about his or her work without fear of meeting a sudden and horrible death on the pavement eighteen or twenty stories below. First there is a belt, with rings around it. Then there is a cable of two strands which join in a loop, to which a hook is attached. The cable fastens to the belt by the rings. The washer straps the belt around his waist and takes his position on the window sill. The cable, as shown in the illustration, hangs inside, and the hook can be anchored to some
HOOX HOLDS WOBKBBS.
heavy piece of furniture or to another hook in the floor or surbase near the window. While this device was designed primarily for professional window cleaners, it will be found useful 1b private bouses.
Boston Baked Beans. Pick over beuns enough to make two cupfuls, put in a kettle of hot water and boil for Are minutes after they be-
gin to boll. Drain and put one small or one-half of a large onion and onehalf pound of salt pork in bottom of the pot, then beans, one-half teaspoonful of mustard, one-half teaspoonful of salt (or more) and a large spoonful of molasses. Put in oven and keep covered with hot water six hours or more.
To Steam Brown Bread.
For steaming brown bread use the round pound coffee cans for molds Butter cans and covers well and pour in batter, leaving room for bread to rise. Be sure covers are on tight and place cans in as small a kettle as will hold them, and fill kettle not quite half full of water, keeping it at this height ail the time. Steam for three hours, and if not brown enough to suit remove cover and bake in a moderate oven about thirty minutes.
Potato Omelet.
One cup of mashed potatoes, three eggs, yolks and white beaten separately; a scant teaspoonful of salt, a dash of white pepper, one-half cup of sweet milk and a heaping teaspoonful of flour. Heat and grease a large saucepan or frying pan and pour the mixture into it. Keep on top of stove at moderate heat till set and browned on underside, then set on the rack in the oven to brown on top.
Candied Orange Peel.
A new way to prepare candled orange peel is to boll the peel, changing the water two or three times, until the bitter taste is removed. Drajg from the water and cover with maple sirup and cook till it candies, stirring constantly.
Hexamethylenetetramine.
The above is the name of a German chemical, which is one of the many valuable ingredients of Foley's Kidney Remedy. Hexamethylenetetramine is recognised by medical text books and authorities aa a uric solvent and antiseptic for the urine. Take Foley’s Kidney Remedy as soon as you notice any irregularities and avoid a serious malady. A. F. Long.
X Humor and X X Philosophy d X DVJVCAJV AT. SMITH \ PERT PARAGRAPHS. fpHE smile that won’t come off does not justify its name the morning after election when worn by the defeated candidate. It isn’t pleasant to meet the man with the backbone when he is in opposition to your own interests. Some people have a way of being conspicuous by being persistently inconspicuous. _ < The really mel>r- } ancholy days are — 7 those when your digestion is out (9 of tune and your ,iver B ets off the key ' fM The specialty I / of many of the J / rising generation ,' consists in not Jw rising. One half of the m/ world oftentimes V knows how the other half lives. P but in that case it can’s see why. We naturally expect to see a man stumble and go heels over head into trouble who la star gazing either skyward or stageward. . / There are people so very fond of themselves that they can’t by any chance ever bo lonesome. Not being clever Is often the cleverest play that a really clever person makes.
t _.C, K . vJs S * 11 w- / /§/ • o © We Are High Up In the estimation of all those who have patronized the River Queen Mills. Why not send your next grist here? We can satisfy yon also, as we have hundreds of others. River Queen Mills Phone 92. fO FRIENDS OF THE DEMOCRAT. Instruct your attorneys to bring all legal notices in which you arc ntereated or have the paying for, to The Democrat, and thereby save money and do us a favor that will be greatly appreciated. All notice of appointment—administrator, e» ecu tor or guardian—survey, road oi ditch notice, notice of sale of real estate, non-resident notices, etc., the clients themselves control, and attorneys will take them to the paper you desire, tor publication, 11 you mention the matter to them; otherwise they will take them to their own political organs. Please do not forget this when having any legal notices to publish.
Ml H ! { ' ..DEALER IN j ' I I ii lime Uoii Brick h i II till, | I j —» j I HHSMB, IM. , i NOTICE OF DITCH BALE. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned, as Superintendent of ConstrucV° n . , th ® Edward W. Culp, et al. ditch, being Cause No. 9606 of the Commissioners Court of Jasper County, In- ? Zan^ r JT* 1 * et such work by contract to ar i d .J’ e ?, t responsible bidder, at the office of the County Auditor, in the E“' lr o t . J 1 ® 1186 ’ at Rensselaer, Indiana, on o’clock B*A 8 *A a M° f December ’ 1909 > at eleven I Said proceeding calls for the contruction of a large tile drain and a lateral thereto, and the contractor will be reexcavat? Jbe tile in a tile drain which has heretofore been contracted *" e Ilne °f the above mentioned ditch, a *? d use all of the tile thus secured w hjch are BU itable for use. The plans and speculations for said Ima?°on fI J? In the offlce of th ® Auditor of Jasper County, Indiana, and ar* open for Inspection. or of K W t or W A°bS." V “ rt ’ ht "> received from this date H2J® 2m »?? te £ b 2’ re at which publl’hed and said 1 out °ry. and let to the lowest and best responsible bidder. blds rV,nßr my rl*rht to reject any or all Dated this 29th day of November, 1909. _ _ . . GRANT CULP, Superintendent of Construction. Sale bills printed while you wait, at The Democrat offlce.
