South Bend News-Times, Volume 31, Number 197, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 9 July 1914 — Page 3
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THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES THTTt5TAYf .TFT A" f, tni SOUTH SHORE WANTS ASSESSMENT REDUCED Uneeda Biscuit Tempt the appetite, please the taste and nourish the body. Crisp, clean and fresh 5 cents in the moistureproof package. STATE LEADER II Pleads "Watered" Stock and Thinks Tax of $8,000 a Mile Too High.
WTMUI ESTATE IS
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Pays Within $4,000 of Half of Total Collected by Indiana Treasury During the Last Quarter.
jc -inl Correspondence. I X I I A NA I I A S. July 1. The CnrKc Wyrnan estate, iouth Hend, taxed at 5 i .rv r.. paid into the Indian;! state treasury within J4,'0 of half the money paid in under the inheritaiico tax law during the last quarter, according to a report just fild hy Ali'-rt K. Hurnke. inheritance tax Investigator, with the state board of ta.x, ommi.csioners, in which he estlmaW; that the total income to the state will 1- in the neighborhood of J.100,0'0 iinnually. Mr. Ilumko shows that a total of ?7x,lDI.7o has been assessed during the past three months, ending June ::o. Of this ..mount J II. 371. 01 was i.mpesed in Marion county. In the report for the quarter endir April 1, a total of $11,-0.70 was assessed in Marion county and a total of $13,70.was assessed in other counties of the state . for the quarter ending January 1, $ 1 1 , :: 7 0 . 7 was assessed in Marion county on estates .and a total of $40,04.40 W;s assessed in other ouruies. This made a total of approximately SKo.Oimj for the three quarters of the year or somewhere in the neighborh ood of J2O(j,(j0o a year that will be the income of the state from the new tax each year. This is much below the first estimate put on the income from the tax, which was placed at $3m0,0uO when the law was passed. Mr. Ilurnke expl.uns this falling off hy saying that the law does not hecome compulsory until a year after its passage ami that sums paid in prior to the quarter just ended were paid in voluntarily. The total paid in for the last quarter should bo taken as the criterion for the remainder of the year, he said, and estimating J 7V00 a quarter, the total for the year might reach $300,000. Wyinan I'Mut lleljs. One largo amount of the tax paid in during the last quarter came from the Wyinan estate in St. Joseph county. The state received $16, OS", from this estate, the largest amount so
far reported hy the state official. That was the only estate valuated in St. Joseph, county during the quarter. Flkhart county had numerous estates settled, including the following: Albright. $60.75; Tripe, JL'ia.64; Gilmore. $yl; Fletcher, $7.45; I'rescott, Jl;::.7 1; Yoder, $140. Allen '.-ounty was one of the lioavicst conU ibutors to the total during the qur-ter just ended. The estate of Andrew F. Hoffman returned a total tax of ll.tf'i.s'i and the estate of Myron Downing turned into the treasury S:44.0I. Vigo county rontributed two large amounts with the estates of Louis Duebwcg. $ J, 071.S6, and Janu s M Creor, J2.906.S3. iiegardless of these amounts asAesed it is reported that all that the stat- has actuaily received from the payment of inheritance taxes to date lias been in the neighborhood of $;;$,- ono, f,,r tho thirteen vionths that the law has been in operation. "I am pleaded to report that most of our regular permanent appraisers are- rendering satisfactory service by appraising states at their full market alue at a reasonable expense 'o the Mate." Mr. Humke says in his latest report. "The courts of AVmj ne and Madison counties have far disposed 'f all estates without appraisers, other courts are beginning to follow their example more and more. in this wav quite a sum is saved for the state The latest scheme to defeat or reduce the tax is to file all kinds t f claims against the estate, many of which are fictitious or exaggerated, drummed tip to diminish
toe valuation of the amount equal to or st at u tor y ex em p ions. ourts are too liberal in recognizing and claims."
BarossS Biscuit Round, thin, tender with a delightful flavor appropriate for luncheon, tea and dinner, zo cents.
?!ILi i.?&r--il. A'i'jv'hH
w Prince of appetizers. Makes daily trips from Ginger-Snap Land to waiting mouths everywhere. Say Zu Zu to the grocer man, 5 cents.
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Buy biscuit baked by NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY
Always look for that name
property to an les than the Home of the and indifferent allowing these
PRISONERS TRY TO KILL INSIDE GUARD
IS IMPROVING RAPIDLY rliarle- nilinslJ, Hurt in Auto Acvident, is llrtter.
Charles r.ilinski. S. Chapin St.. vbo was severely injured in an auto accident a week ago. is spedily recoving and is now able t, walk about the house, ins shoubb-r. however, has not recovered from the manv bruises it sustained.
Timely Arrival of Warden and Deputies Sends Ten Men to Hospital. NKW YORK. July 3. Half a hundred of the most notorious prisoners in the "pen" on Blackwell's Island broke all bounds Wednesday evening in the mess room and but for the timely arrival of Warden Patrick Hayes and a score of deputies, the inside suard of the mess room would have been muidered. As it was four prisoners were knocked senseless with bitli earthenware coffee bcwls weighing nearly half a pound each, thrown at them by the gang. The official statement issued tonight by Deputy Commissioner Burdctt I Burns, in the absence of Commissioner of Correction Davis, admits that eight were seriously injured, but a reporter learns from an authentic source that ten were injured, and one of them a short term prisoner Is still in the e?ty hospital at the south end
of the Island in a precarious condi tlon.
nottci: doctors. We have tho best location on the Market for you to make money, let us explain. Am. T. Co., Real Estate Dept.. Room 1. American Trust Bldg.
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E35g SavsmiES fer You
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$.60
Per Ton During
July Oniy!
Direct From Mines In Carload Lots! Kelps You Cut The High Cost of Living! Tl.U 'ero'.ld r.vil is n!isohjttIy guaranto-d t prove nut 3 t; It T. C's ppr r,vll pou:;J, wltJi only 'j fr vnt ish nrd 'j pr -nt tnolsturo. Y-o.i will fuol It to t. (.'.prtii. frv l.tirTdifr. tllaker1- r--t. Co'i t!.it Mill devi-lv'p more :,i.U per d'Uir t:ln a:iy c il y.'U nn li'.iy at t!a pr!-o. Ou-ti:i di iivt rii . are a, smrt-d vii.i -flc cunr.uiU' tl.eru.
It isn't r.o'iry for y.u t.. n v.-hr rrxrlond y'irs.. (.'in!) fpethcr with a iai!ilKr or ho. T:,.v will .trlvvnje this vLai.re to Actually save Save $50 to SI 00 On Your Winter's Coal Supply! Read These Low Mine Prices Now! F. 0. B. Mines. Mm Coal- S. n-. !;:::. .vj.m t n : 'ru-LeI Mine Hun, ary $1.10 per t :i; 1'4 I'K-h L'irip. $! ."j j.. r T.n.
i-.ih lo:-t;tlo Nut i iio'a livi.ostio I.un:j
iurmjj juij por ion ..'x1 rt r: Annst 1.7" j.or ton I-irlr. c S;u-rn!cr 'Ja) ;fr ton Fn"irt)t Ji.it to .South llond nlj W Cents IVr Jj, Ton -
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Auto. l'!nr.e V? 4V'.
Special Correspondence. INTHANAPOL.IS, July 9. C. R. Arthrop, representing the Chicapo, I-ake Shore South Bend Railway company (the South Shore line), appeared before the state board of tax commissioners Wednesday, and pleading that the South Shore stock is badly "watered" and the road in "tho hole" $300,000, asked for a reduction in the state tax levy. No interest on bonds has oeen paid. "Moneys jspent on the road early in operation were a useless expenditure," he explained, pointing out such things as grade crossings in L,aporte county. "Karninps between Gary and South Bend are but $C,000 a mile," he declared, and that an "assessment of $S,000 a mile is too much." C. W. Chase, representing the Gary & Interurban, enters a similar complaint, minus the admission as to "watered" stock, declaring an assessment of $9,000 a mile too high, with the South Shore assessed at only $8,-
000. K. VT. Knapp. representing the Elgin, Joliet & Eastern, and the Chicago, Lake Shore & Eastern roads, protests acainst a raise against sfdetrnek assessments from $4,000 to $5,000. The coniMifsion rendered no decisions.
Sense arid Sentiment
Memory of the Pat. When time, which steals our years away, Shall steal our pleasures, too. The memory of the past will stay, And half or more of joys renew. Which Sliall It Be? JT'O WAYS, Sam, there are of in-cr-Ting profits; raising tho selling price or decreasing costs. Tho Quitter. YOU REMEMBER this political epigram, '(Sod Hates a Quitter," immortalized "by Tom Reed when Joe Manley desertei him for McKlnley. in 1R96? Everybody does. And this repugnance is naturally more marked toward quitters In the business world than it is toward those who knuckle under in the Held of polltix. NO MATTER HOW WEUL, YOU DID YOUrj WORK TODAY, BOB. THERE WILL, BE A BETTER WAY OF DOING IT TOMORROW. The "Follow TTp." "KOLIjOW UP" is the most elastic word in the advertising dictionary. Its use is confined to no one business or class. It is universal. Wherever men seek to dispose of merchandise; wherever corralling another man's money is the watchword, the follow up can be effectively utilized. Some good follow-up merchants in South Bend that I happen to recall at this writing are Renfranz and Spiro. Happiness. THE MAX who has "everything to make him happy," as we sometimes say. Billy, is often utterly wretched, while th man we think "has nothing to live for," is one of the happiest. Breaking a Confidence. ANYBODY who breaks a confidence, hates himself or herself. And hatred of Self is Hell. CHESTER REESE.
MAN BADLY HURT AS TEAM RUNS AWAY
Laurence Hodman Thrown Tongue and is Taken to Hospital.
lYom
Lawrence Redman, 25, 217 W. Lasalle aw. wan badly bruised About the head and body. Wednesday afternoon at 3 o'clock when a team of mules, which lie was driving, owned "by the J. C. Barrett Storage Co., took fright and ran away, throwing him to the grouncl. He had crawled out on th? wagon tongue to fix; the harness when the team took fright and started snddenlv. A bov who was riding on
the back of the wagon Jumped and escape! injury. Tho team ran south on N. Michigan st. .turned west on Lasalle av., and into the adlley west of the Masonic temple where the wagon crashed into a telegraph pole and was wrecked. The mules were slightly bruised. Redman was taken to the Epworth hospital in the ambulance where Dr. Chas. Stoltz attended him and pronounced his injuries not fatal as no bones were broken, although he landed "heavily on his left shoulder. 1 :i W A RDSI VURG. Miss Blenn Van Antwerp arrived home from Jamestown, N. Y., to spend a month's vacation with her mother, Mrs. Bertha Van Antwerp. Lillian Boyle and sons, Lloyd and Stephen, of Chicago came Monday to spend the summer at Pleasant lake. Eetitia Beardsley of Kalamazoo was a guest of her mother, Mrs. C. H. Anderson, from Friday until Monday. Marguerite Meyers of Elkhart is here visiting her grandmother, Mrs. Hiram Sharkweller. Elmer Butts of Nilf3 rpent Sunday with C. A. Sherman and family. Mr. and Mrs Fred Bacon have returned to St. Johns after a visit of two weeks here with her daughter, Mrs. B. C. Fisk. Lrt-idv Olmstead and wife of Gary were over Sunday guests bere at the home of M. S. Olmstead. Bessie Ilartman ef South Bend and Elsie Morse of Chicago v.ere guests of Sadie Manchow Saturday. Fred Russwurm of South Bend is hero spending two weeks with friends. Mrs. G. E. Glidden of San Dieo, CaI.. arrived this week for an extended visit with her sister. Mis. Elsie Cra tda.ll and other relatives. T:e Misses Wordemaji of Hammer d. Ind.. came Friday for a week's visit with Mis3 Idella Iee. Charles Tecpks and wife of Chicago are here spending a three weeks vacafion with her sister, Mrs. D. W. Ray. Mrs, Sarah Gott has returned to her home in Dailc,y after a visit here with her daughter, Mrs. Amelia Manchow. Mrs. William Brady of Mishawaka is visiting her sister, Mrs. E. S. Claire. Sarah Jane Hicks of Battle Creek is hero spending the week with her cousin, MLs.s Lottlo Uicl-
NAl IUNAL liil04SEIUS KQL I
Discoverer of America
Leif Ericsson
T-'HE FIRST WHITE MEN to tread American soa wen? Leif Ericsson and his sea-dashed Viking crew. This was nearly a thousand years ago, when the Scandinavian peoples ruled the seas and held the secrets
or navigaucn. i he history ot the lair-haired, liberty-loving sons and daughters of Sweden Nonvny and rn-l Denmark is rich in song and story. We have millions of these splendid folk in our own land, and wherever the
stanaara 01 uoeny ana ouman Progress nas been raised they are found in the tront rank, bravely lighting for fT? the Right. Better citizens or greater lovers of Personal Liberty are unknown. K?r centuries our full-blooded bain- fcj;'i dinavian brothers h ave been modrmtp nrc of Rrl!- Krnvrc ,rbfii1Kr Cf5lf lOC iTn irrl tVorr in r V"i
any way? It is the ancient heritage of these peoples to revolt at Prohibitory Laws, and their vote is registered i V-v f! almost to a man against such legislation. For 57 years Scandinavians have been drinkers of the honestly- f ' v brewed beers of Anheuser-Busch. They have helped to make their great brand BUDWEISER exceed the lu ' "
sales ot any other beer by millions of bottles. Seven thousand, five hundred men, all in all, are daily required to keep pace with the natural public demand for Budweiser. ANHEUSER-BUSCH ST.LOUlSUS.A. Bottled only at the home plant.
W. : J."Tare
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Distributor
South Bend, Ind.
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XT'- vttfmrfty
Means Moderation
GIRL STOLE FOR SAKE OF HER AGED MOTHER
Bookkeeper Breaks Down and Confesses to Theft of $2,000 From Employer.
NEW YORK, July S. fobbing hysterical after a night spent in the Mercer st. police station. Miss Catherine Van Ilouten, a bookkeeper employed by Samuel Bloomfield, a cloak manufacturer, broke clown at police headquarters Wednesday and confessed that she had stolen $2,000. "I stole for the sake of my aged mother," cried the girl. "She is SO years oli and bedridden from a stroke of paralysis, and I could not care for her properly on my salary of $12 a week Often, she said, she went without food during the day in order to save money to hire a nurse for her mother, and buy medicines. The girl was held pending arraignment
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Office Hours: 9-12 a. m.; l-o p. in.; 7-vS p. m.; Sundays, 9 a, in. to 12 in.
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