Sullivan Daily Times, Volume 48, Number 161, Sullivan, Sullivan County, 13 August 1946 — Page 3
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PA&i TfiRES BULL! VAN DJH7T LT5TFI? TUESDAY, AUG. 13, 1946.
1. J. Aikin& Son
FUNERAL HOME Dagger "Alkln'i Service CoiU N More."
Quit paying rent and own your home. Special - bargains on property on installment plan. Also farms for sale. W. T. MELLOTT
. ANNUAL REPORT OF RECEIPTS AND EXPENDITURES OF , THE SULLIVAN CITY 'SCHOOLS 1 From August 1, 1915 to July 81, NMfi I. SPECIAL FUND: Btlance. August 1. 1945 $13 417 34 Rweipta, August 1, 1945 to July 31, 1946 60!594i55 Total Receipts and Balance .". 74,011.89 Expenditurps; 1 Administration: Salaries of Superintendent and j Clerks, Office Supplies and Other Expenses $8,173.06 a Operation: Janitors' Salaries, Coal, Water, ' Light and Power. Janitor Supplies, etc 14,515.99 3, Instruction and Supervision 196.36 4, ' Maintenance: Repair buildings, heating plants, . replacement furniture, instructional" apparatus 3. 41).. 5 5, Fixed Charges: Rents, Insurance 6.0fi3.n
6. Auxiliary Activities 467.87 7. Capital Outlay, New and Alterations 26,69.'i.66 Total Expenditures 59,511.20 i Balance. July 31. 1946 $14,500.69 .II. TUITION' FUND: Balance, August 1. 45 ' '$ 45,120.3? Reteipts. August 1. 1915 to July 31. 1916 93.164.03 Total Receipts and Balance $138,284.35 Expenditures ; ." 96,126.28 Balance, .July 31. 1946 $ 42,158.07 III. BOND. FUND: Balance, August 1, 1945 $2,079 01' Receipts, August 1. 1945 to July 31. 1916 6.424.38 Total Receipts and Balance 8,503.39 Expenditures Payment of bonds and interest 4,112.50 Balance, July 31, 1946 -." $4,39 ),89 IV. VOCATIONAL FUND: Balance, August 1. 1945 '. $ 320.97 Receipts, August 1, 1945 to July 31, 1946 4.388.83 Total Receipts and Balance ". $4 709 80 Expenditures: 1. Instruction $3,040.32 2. Supplies and Operation 801.53 Total Expenditures 3.811.85 Balance:, July 31,' 1946 .' $ 867.95 , OUTSTANDING DEBT. August 1. 1945 $24,500.00 ' DEBT CREATED during Year 1945-46 26.000.00 TOTAL i $50,500.00 DEBT PAID during Year 1945-46 3,500.00 OUTSTANDING DEBT. August 1, 1946 $47,000.00 ' A report of receipts and disbursements of the Sullivan Citv Schools for the fiscal year 1945-46 is on file in the office of the County Auditor, and is open for public inspection. Claims for the expenditures and a copv of the warrants issued are on file in the office 'of the Superintendent of Schools, and are open for public inspection. r . . BOARD OF SCHOOL TRUSTEES . Hinkle C. Hays.' President ' H. W. Branstetter, Treasurer J. H. Crowder. Secretary
Budget Estimate Sullivan School Corp.
NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS OF TAX LEVIES In the .matter of determining the Tax Rates for School purposes of the School Corporation of Sullivan, Sullivan County, Indiana. Before the Board of School Trustees. Notice is hereby given the taxpayers of Sullivan County, Indiana that the proper legal officers of said school corporation at their regular meeting place on the 29th day of August. 1946. will consider the following budget : BUDGET CLASSIFICATION FOR SCHOOL CORPORATION - SPECIAL SCHOOL FUND A. Genl. Administration . 1 Bd. School Tr. and Sec' Office i. ..... S2 9ftlm
8 Finance and Acct. Office . 100.00
' 250.00 4,730.00 2.500.00 800.00
; S Supplies-Dept.
' 6 Supt, Office B. Inst. Teaching ......,fV,...;., C. laatr. . Supervision .-. .... JL...i';i. D. Op. School Plant
2 High School 8.240.00 3 Elem. Schools 8 485.50 E. Maintenance School Plant 2 High School 1.550.00 3 Elem. Schools ; 2 400.00 F. Fixed Charges . : 1.250.00 G. Co-ordinate and Auxiliary Activities 1,095.00 I. Capital Outlay 1 New Acquisitions 3,125.00 2 Alterations . 250.00
Total Expen. Sp. School Fund , $37,675.50 TUITION FUND A. Tr. Salaries High School .1. $60,675.44 B. Tr. Salaries Elem. Schools , 48,506.50
Total Expen. Tuition Fund $109,181.94 VOCATIONAL FUND . A. Salaries Vo, Tr. and Directors $2,600.00 B. Equipment 2W.00 C. Supplies and Operation 1.120.00 Total Vocational Fund ' $3,920.00 BOND OR SINKING FUND A. Payment Prin $5,500.00 B. Payment Int 1.135.00
Total Expen. Bond or Sinking Fund $6,635.00 FUNDS REQUIRED FOR EXPENS- ' TO DECEMBER 31st OF INCOM- Special Tuition Vocational Bond ING YEAR: Fund Fund Fund Fund 1. Total Budget Estimate for ensu- . ing year. Jan. 1. to Dec. 31.
1947, inclusive 2., Necessary Expenditures. Aug. 1
to Dec. 31. present year
3 Outstanding Temporary Loans to
be paid before Dec. 31st or present year not Included in line 2 4. Total Estimated Expenditures (add lines 1, 2 and 3)
FUNDS ON HANDS AND TO BE RECEIVED FROM SOURCES OTHER THAN PROPOSED TAX LEVY: 5. Actual Balance. July 31st of present year 14,500.69
6. Taxes to be collected, present year (December settlement)
7. Miscellaneous Revenue to be re- . ceived, Aug. 1st of present year to December 31st of next school year (Schedule on file in office of School Board): a. Special Taxes (see Schedule) , b. Transfer Tuition and All Other Revenue (see Schedule) ft Total Funds (AAii lines 5. B 7a
and 7b) 40,255.96
9. NET AMOUNT REQUIRED TO BE RAISED FOR EXPENSES TO DEC. 31st OF ENSUING YEAR (Deduct line 8 from line 4) 10. Operating Balance (Not in excess
of expense from Jan. 1 to June 30, less Misc. Revenue for same period)
11. AMOUNT TO BE RAISED BY TAX LEVY (Add lines 9 and 10) .. $27,006.25 $ 28.536.88 $3,788.75
pnnpnsrn I.KVIKS
Net Taxable Property $3,788,750.00
.$37,675.50 $109,181.94 $3,920.00 $6,635.00
... 19.2S5.74 42,178.34 2,726.32 3,025.00
56.961.24 151.360.28 6,646.32 9.660.00
42,158.07 867.95 4.390.89
.. 13.479.55 7,981.12 1,599.89 2,827.50
.1.830.00 68.374.00 128.00 250.00 10.44S72 14,625.28 ' 600.00
133,138.47 3.195.84 6.968.39
18.705.28 18,221.81 3.450.48 2,691.61
.. 10,300.97 10.315.07 338.27 3,749.27
$6,440.88
Number of Taxable Polls
' FUNDS Special , Tuition Vocational ....... Bond or Sinking TOTAL
Levy on Polls $1.00 .25
$1.25
Levy on Property $0.70 .75 .10 .17 $1.72
COMPARATIVE STATEMENT OF TAXES COLLECTED
AND TO BE COLLECTED
485
Amount to be raised $27,006.25 28.536.88 3,788.75 6.440.88
$65,772,76
Collec ted 1943 $26,525. 03 21.167.27
Collected 1944 $27,980.86 17,278.54
8,008.25
$53,267.65
Collected 1945 $38,313.59 15.771.90 . 2,470.35 6.732.69
$53,288.53
To Be Collected) 1946 $31,805.82 18,746.30 3,722.36 5.583.54 $59,858.02
Name of Fund Special Tuition Vocational
Bond or Sinking 6.624. 00 TOTAL 54.aifi. 30
Taxroivers nnnenrinar Hhall have a right to be neard thereon. After the
tax levies have been determined, and presented to the County Auditor not later than two days prior to the second Monday in September, and the levy fixed by the County Tax Adjustment Board, or on their failure so to do. by the County Auditor, ten or more taxpayers feeling themselves aggrieved by such levies may appeal to the State Board of Tax Commissioners for further and final hearing thereon, by filing of petition with the County Auditor not later than October 15, and the State Board will fix a date for hearing in this County. ., . ;J HINKLE C. HAYS, President H. W. BRANSTETTER, Treasurer J. H. CROWDER. Secretary Dated this 1st day of August, 1946. School Board Members
IT'S ONCE OVER LIGHTLY, BOSSY
This Morning's Headlines SOLUTION OF MYSTERY SLAYING OF BORGMAN CENTERS AROUND THREE-MINUTE CLEW Solution of the mystery slaying of 41-year-old Louis C. Borgman, prominent New Palestine farmer, centered around a three-minute interval in which investigators believe the shooting took place. The well-to-do farmer, father of five children, including triplet daughters, was alive when his car crashed against a utility pole according to a witness, who was on the scene within three minutes after it took place.
mmmmmm
fe-&xYtY ! y W ? . j 1 svC4Y ; ;-4y f lifts l? v I
OREN MILES, 17, of Lawrenceville, HI., gives his Jersey milk heifer, "Volunteer's Carmel Europa," a facial as he prepares her for the judging at the Illinois State Fair. in Springfield. (International)
A COO AND A BARK FOR WELCOME
V f f "vVW r.Jjj
-V,
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WARREN HALE, 16, of Detroit, who may never walk again because of injuries suffered in a gim accident last January while playing with his brother, Nathan, right, watches his pets, Queenie, the toy bulldog, and Billy, the parakeet, meet for the first time. The pets join Nathan in welcoming the boy home from the hospital, after the father sold his car to buy a specially constructed frame for Warren. The senior Hale wonders now where he will find the price to buy Warren a wheelchair. (International)
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MITH
JEWELER
LAG FORESEEN IN INDIANA VETERAN ON-THE-JOB TRAINING Stalemate of 75 per cent of Indiana's "on-the-job" training program, serving an estimated 6.000 Hoosier war veterans, was foreseen as a result of apprenticeship wage standards set Friday in Washington, D. C. Starting wages specified in the new law fall short of the "livr
I ing wage," according to Russell Robinson, education director of VA i in Indiana. The adjustment calls for a $175 monthly pay for single
vets and $200 for married vets or those with dependents.
DECLARES RUSSIAN ATOMIC BOMB TO BE READY SOON Dr. Simon Alexandrov, Russian observer at the Bikini atom bomb tests, predicted today the Soviet Union soon will have its own A-bomb which,, he said, eventually may' be demonstrated in some remote area such as Siberia or the islands north of Canada.
NEW JERSEY YOUTH TELLS OF DROWNING GIRL NEAR TERRE HAUTE Chicago police report a 17-year-old New Jersey youth has voluntarily told of drowning a 20-year-old girl a month ago while they were swimming nude in a lake near Terre Haute when she tried to kill him, but said his story may be a hoax. The youth made the statement as police sought to identify a young woman's torso found yesterday on a Lake Michigan beach.
NOTICE TO COAL BIDDERS The Board of School Trustees of the Sullivan. City Schools at its regular meeting place on Thursday. September 5, 1946. at 4:00 P. M., will let to the lowest and best bidder a coal contract for supplying the coal needs of the School City for the 1946-47 fiscal year. Bids will be considered for six hundred terns, more or less, of a good grade, clean, screened 1 1-4 inch lump, union mined coal. A test analysis is to accompany all bids. Sealed bids will be received at the office of the city superintendent up to the time of the meeting. Bid price is to include delivery to the various school units as called for by the superintendent of schools. A weigher's certificate is to be sent with each delivery. The successful bidder wiil be required to contract at once and furnish a delivery bond acceptable to the board. The board reserves the right to reject any and all bids.
BOARD OF SCHOOL. TRUSTEES SULLIVAN CITY SCHOOLS J. H. CROWDER Secretary
1st ins. 8-6-46 2t.
CARLISLE Mr. and Mrs. Edley Rogers spent the week-end in Indianapolis and attended the funeral of Mr. Rogers' niece. Miss Alba
Rogers. Mrs. Delia Jenkins and son, Tom, left Thursday for Pennsylvania for a visit with Mrs. Jenkins' daughter, Mrs. Nash Walters and family. Mrs. Elsie Bliee and daughters, Mae and Imogene, visited here Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Bond and son of Washington, visited Sunday with Mrs. Bond's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lee Grass.
R
HARD
OOT'S
TO GET
SALE THURSDAY
SULLIVAN STORE
MERCHANDISE
3AJ.
JUST RECEIVED ESKIMO ELECTRIC FANS
10 INCH OSCILLATING FAN, those hot days still to come.
for
.95
CANNON TOWEL SETS
HEAVY QUALITY CANNON TOWELS. Beautiful, pastel colors, rose de
sign. Large bath towel, hand towel, and
wash cloth.
2.00 SET
RAYON HOSE
456 PAIRS OF 42 GAUGE SLIGHTLY IRREGULAR RAYON HOSE. Umit one pair.
71c
BACK-TO-SCHOOL DRESSES
PRETTY LITTLE COTTON STRIPES, for the 3 to 6x crowd. She'll be a little darling in one of these. ON OUR BALCONY
2.98
Hard-To-Get Clothes Pins
SPRING - TYPE HARDWOOD CLOTHES PINS. Buy them by the dozens. 3 dozen for
37 c
Entertain At Sunday Dinner
Mr. and Mrs. U. G. Gilkerson entertained at dinner Sunday, August 11th, the following: Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Draper of Sullivan, Mr. and Mrs. Charles DeLisle and children, Raymond and Henrietta Lou. Miss Mary
Jane Wilson, Robert and Benjamin, all of Terre Haute; Mr. and 'Mrs. J. W. Rentz of Princeton; Mrs. R. M. Clark and children of Cleveland, Ohio; Mrs. Joe Sanders and Mary Jo of Gary; Mrs. Ward Warrick . of Bloomfield; Eugene and Mary Mae Gilkerson and Walter Ridwell of Vincennes.
PY4
v
fKOH0ws now ). ffero ro fos ttMr ""TIOHAl
NOW, MORE THAN EVER BEFORE
THE ARMY HAS A
GOOD JOB FOR YOU!
Oood jobs in non-commissioned grades are being offered now by the Regular Army to qualified former servicemen! Veterans discharged on or after' May 2, 1945, who enlist or reenlist for three years may be enlisted in the non-commissioned grade for which qualified, provided this grade is not higher than that held at time of discharge, and provided that at least six months of former service was in one of 400 designated military occupational specialties in which enlistment is now desired. Important, interesting jobs are open in hundreds of skills and trades in the Army, with splendid training and educational advantages! These are in addition to free food, housing, clothing, medical and denial care, low-cost insurance. Never has this fine profession offered so much, in new higher pay and opportunity for advancement ! Twenty years from now, you'll still be a young man. Yet, if you choose to make the Army a career, you'll be eligible to retire then at half pay for the rest of your life! In thirty years, you can retire at
three-quarters pay! In the case of a Master Sergeant, this is up to $185.63 a month for life! There's adventure, travel, education, a secure and profitable future in this vital, realistic profession. Get full details at your nearest Army Recruiting Station. Highlights of Regular Army Enlistments 1. Enlistments for IVi, 2 or 3 years. (1-year enlistments permitted for men now in the Army with 6 or more months of service.) 2. Enlistment age from 18 to 34 years inclusive (17 with parents' consent) except for men tiow in the Army, who may reenlist at any age, and former service men depending on length of service. 3. A reenlistment bonus of $50 for each year of active service since such bonus was last paid, or since last entry into service, provided reenlistment is within 3 months after last honorable discharge. 4. Mustering-out pay (based upon length of service) to all men who are discharged to reenlist. 5. Option to retire at half pay for the rest of your life after 20 years' service increasing to three-quarters pay after 30 years' service. All previous active federal military service counts toward retirement. 6. GI Bill of Rights benefits assured for men who enlist on or before October S, 1946. 7. Choice of branch of service and overseas theater (of those still open) on 3-year enlistments.
Listen to "Warrior of Peace," "Voice of the Array,'' "Proudly We Hail," Mark Warnow's .Army Show, "Sound OS," "Harry Wismer Sports Review," and "Spotlight Bands" with Guy Lombardo, Harry James, and Xavier Cugat on your radio.
NEW PAY SCALE In Addition to Clothing, Food, lodging and Medical and Dental Care
Master Sergeant or First Sergeant Technical Sergeant Staff Sergeant . . Sergeant . . . . Corporal . . . . Private First Class Private . . . .
MONTHLY .. RETIREMENT StorTlno (NC0ME AFTER: las ray f tr 20 rears' 30 rears' Month Service Service $165.00 $107.25 $185.63 135.00 87.75 151.88 115.00 74.75 129.38 100.00 65.00 112.50 90.00 58.50 101.25 80.00 52.00 90.00 75.00 48.75 84.38
IN ADDITION TO COLUMN ONE OF THE ABOVE: 20 Increaie far SeVvlce Overseas. 50 Increase If Member of Flying or Gilder Crew. ' 5 Increaie In Fay for Eacn 1 lean of Service,
ENLIST SOW AT YOUR NEAREST ARMY RECRUITING STATION AND"MAKE IT A MILLIONI"
315 P. O. Building Terre Haute, Ind.
