The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 3 September 1928 — Page 2
f P?ge Tv:o
TBE GHEENCASTnE DAIEY BANNEK,
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 3,1928.
many BEAiTin’L scenes FOl'ND ON COl NTY ROADS
Th -e \v! can fin<l satisfaction in looking upon the color of gold in lieu of th yellow metal itself need but to travel along Putnam county’s roads to at late their vision. Seeing so mu It of the color, it is hut one step farth to imagine that the substance it.-df is there, and that one is look ing upon untold million, in valut trewn over out pastures and road-
sides.
This is th inning for yellow flow et- iti ih n floral calendar of the year A botanist might find as many a thirty speciis of yellow flowered; plants in a single ficl l. Indiana p duce that many spe cic of golden- "d ah lie. The com moaest which we have and the mos' ;ia,v/y, is the Canada variety, whirl r< ches a height of eight feet undei favorable conditions. A smaller kind is th" swamp golden tod, -ninetime kniwn r.s the bushy or fragrant, ac cording t . Blatchley’s handbook 01 Indiana weeds. The golden-rods ar just now coming into th< ir maximun of display. The bur-marigolds, which produc th ' annoying “beggar-ticks” or “pile! forks.” are n°w arrivals, and thcr bright color is spread out in gloriou cloth-of-gold effect, .-rmetimes ai acre in extent, where the soil is d im] u ually along sluggish streams. There are some sixteen kinds cf wild sunflowers in the state, am. Putnam county has a large represen tation of these. They are the yellow flower,- with coarse leaves, resemb! ing the cultivated sunflowers in shap< and color, bui smaller. They belong to the Helianthus, meaning sunflower a name, due it is said, t the belief that these bh -.-oms constantly face the >un when it is within view. The Jerusalem artichoke, a wi! plant i.f ‘his family, was, according to Blatchley, cultivated by the Indianwho used it oblong edible tubers foi food. The plant is grown even now occasionally, for the same purpose. The elcampane or horseheal, is another tall, howy Putnam county yellow flower, with broad oblong leave lhat grow from the main stalk without distinct ‘e-ms. The root of th elcampane is used for medicine, as if is tonic and expectorant, considered of value in coughs and dyspepsia. The cup-plant, ometime known as Indian cup, Iris a coarse yellow flower, reaching a height of seven or eight feet at times, whose leaves partly encircle the - talk and form cav ities in which water collects, wherein insects frequently suffle off their mortal coil. There is some reason to believe that the plant deliberately bring this about, having a taste for their delicate fie h. The Ida k-i yed Susan, or darke; head or yellow-daisy, is a very prominent and hr.ely member of the yel-low-flower family in Putnam county. It is found along roadsides, in hayfields often, but u. iially in place* where it is not much in the way. There is also a yellow iron-weed and the sneeze-weed or swamp-flower. The sneezeweed is used medicinall} to produce violent sneezing, but the plant, if eaten by cattle, -ometime kills the animals, and w uld produce the same effect vn human beings. One of the symptom is staggering and a man walking in that oratic manner may be suffering from snee/.e-weed, rather than from what one might goes; was the cause of it. But not likely. —G. K. Black.
Tully story.
Dale Young the Indiana’s newest featured organist is presenting his
original version of the “Laugh Clown Laugh”.
The Circle theater is offering unusually attractive shows, presenting its ‘‘12th Anniversary Revue,” with Dick Powell as master of ceremonies md with a delightful comedy “Heart o Heart,” featuring Mary Aster,) Lloyd Hughes, Louise Fazenda and !
I.ucien Littlefield.
“Heart to Heart” is a comedy ronance between a window washer and ,
.. it introduces
■'ir.-t National’.- most tamous corned-]
THE DAILY BANMEH
Entered In the l*o»t Office nt Green-
■frond m»n act •! Marcfc 3.
187®.
Hu ImcrlptloB price. 1U
week*
famous -ong *•
matter. Under tbc
John Cartwright was a visitor in Indianapolis today. The local band will practice tonight at 7::10. All members be present.
rente
STATE FAIR PREMIUMS WON BY GREENCASTLE 4-H CLUB
Personal And Local News
( lothing
Art Needlework Club. j The Art Needlework Club will | meet Thursday afternoon at 2:30; o’clock at the home of Mrs. Oscar
Members please note the j
Thomas.
Mr. and Mrs. II. E. Burkhalter ■ spent Sunday at Thorntown.
Resener’s overture anniversary Rorn Saturday to Mr. and Mrs. Alva
of the be-t j stone> E outh of Mt. Meridian, a son.
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond O’Neal, citv
ar- the parents of a daughter, born
Sundaj.
Mr. and Mrs. Cass Broadstreet of Linden were visitors in Greencastlc
Sunday.
Chas. E. Cooper drove to Rockville today to pay a claim for the National l.ife Association.
ans.
Ed
veek is a symposium
mown compositions of living comicsers. Dessa Byrd will be nt the
■ rgan.
HELLO-GIRL UNITES BROTHER AND SISTER
SIOUX CITY, la., Sept. 3. (UP)— Jrs. Charlotte Rittenhaus, chief elephone operator for a Sioux < ity iewspaper, earned the everlasting ratitude of Howard Myers and bl-
ister, Mrs. Viola M. Fi.-ke.
Recently Myers came to Sioux City
vith a circus.
“Sioux City,” be reflected. “I used
o have a sister living here."
of PutnamGreencastie
Mrs. Nellie Williams j vilie was a visitor in ' Saturday afternoon.
Mrs. Aaron Swift and Mrs. Robt.
Myers went to the new paper of-! Cowling of Morgantown were visitors
where Mrs. Rittenhaus offered jin Greencastle, Saturday.
Prof. A. F. Caldwell arrived home Saturday from Oxf rd, Me., where he
spent the summer vacation.
Mrs. William Price and daughter, Mrs. Ida McAtee have returned from a two week’s visit in Kentucky with
relatives.
ice,
er assi-tamc. Mrs. Fiske’s name vas in the directory, but a call to the iddress revealed that she no longer ived there. She was listed as a wait-e-s, so the telephone operator hit ipon the idea of calling every restmrant in Sioux City if necessary, 'he 51st call brought re-ults, an I lyr: s met his sister for the first time n more than 15 years, when she hail
■lope 1 and came to Iowa.
But the meeting was more than a •eunion for Mrs. Fiske. For her it vas a visit from the dead. Shortly
Mrs. W. E. Burk and daughters, Miss Ruth and Mis- Erma, Pana, 111., are spending this week in Greencastle with relatives.
Harriett Heaney, First pair darn-i change of date.
+ + + + + ■»
Third “Be=t Ruark Reunion Held.
’ ' j The annual Ruark reunion was
Dress Costume. dregs i he]d Sunday at the Bittle Grove at
School 1 Fillmore. Many members of the fum- ! ily as well as friends attended and : all had an enjoyable day. The bas- : ket dinner at the noon hour was the outstanding feature and there was also entertainment for the young and
old.
Audra Chenoweth,
ress” Costume.
Mary Riley, Fourth
Dorothy Harlan, Eighth
costume (wool).
Anthus Hunter, Tenth, School cos-
tume, (woilj.
Baking
Houbigant Preparationi Face Powder Bath Salts, Quelguea Fleur* ' ^ PERFUMES—ODOR« The Quality Sh« i. h. pitchfork
Etter, Second, Raisin
Hunter, Third Raisin
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Marshall and
ifter she had left her former home ini Mr. and Mrs. Henry Marshall spent Astoria, N. Y., her brother had joined Sunday in Terre Haute visiting Mr. i circus. Two years later he joined 1 and Mrs. James Baker, he famous French Foreign Legion | Mr an(i Mrs Ebcr H nm jit on have
message came to had been killed
rel-
inl
and in time a itives that he
Egypt.
“That report was all wrong,” My- j ■rs explained to his sister. I was |
wounded, but not killed.”
Myers said be wa; discharged from he Foreign Legion in 1922, returnng to the United States a year later. “I ju-t never bothered to write to ny relatives,” he said blushing. Be'orc leaving (Sioux City he promised le would communicate with other relatives in New York, arid possibly pay
them a visit
returned homo after visiting the lat-
ter's sister, Mrs. J. W. Neider and
husband at Akron, Ohio.
Mr. and Mrs. Rex Payne of Buckcreek, have been visiting home folks for several days. Mr. Payne is connected with the telephone plant there. Mr. and Mrs. William R. Davis, ! and family of North Terre Haute, spent Sunday and Monday with Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Davis and daughter.
v Charlotte
bread. Anthus bread.
Anthus Hunter, Third, Graham
bread.
Charlotte Etter 4th Swedish tea
ring.
Anthus Hunter, Fifth, Swedish tea
ring.
Anthus Hunter, Second, Graham muffins. Mary Louise Talbott, First, Nut bread. Vera Grace Brown, Fifth Nut bread. Mary Louise Talbott, Tthird, Gingerbread. Charlotte Etter, Fifth Gingeibread. Authus Hunter, Third, Wheat cook-
ies.
Anthus Hunter, Fifth, Fruit cook-
ies.
Vera Grace Brown, First, Cup cakes. Authus Hunter, Fifth Cup cakes. Charlotte Etter, Second Assortment Fancy Cookies. Anthus Hunter, Fifth Assortment Fancy Cookies. Mary Riley entered 9 articles in Gills Department, (regular State exhibit—not Club work) won 9 first premiums. Apron, specimen of darning, breakfast cloth and napkins, handkerchief, dress, dresser scarf, pillow cases, gu' st towel and nightgown.
PUBLIC SALE
FEATURE PROGRVMS
Residents of Greencastle vi.-iting Indianapolis during Fair Week, will have the opportunity to see the two 1 leading motion picture theaters of In- i diana, each presenting a program out- ' standing in every respect, out of de-' ference to out of town visitors who | will lie in Indianapolis during fair
week.
The Indiana theater features Char-i lie Davis the Hoosier master of ceremonies who is the principal figure of the Publix stage show “Main Street to Broadway,” in which Charlie mixes the hay of Main tieet with the
“Hey Hey” of Broadway.
f Life” is a !ra»atfc|^ lnt for ra ' h - story of a pair of young lovers, in which Wallace Beery, Louise Brooks and Richard Aden are starred. It is the screen version of the famous Jim
We will sell at Public Auction on the R. P. Moore Farm 5 miles west of Greencastle on Monday, Sept. 10 at 10:1)0 A. M. The following prop-
erty.
9 MILK COWS 1 fine Jersey cow 5 years old fre-h Sept. 25, a good one. 2 Jersey Cows 8 and 9 years old. Giving a good flow of milk, good
ones.
1 Jersey cow 8 y nrs old, gives 2
| gal. per day.
1 Large Short Horn cow 5 years old a good one, a five gallon cow. 1 Jersey cow, 7 year old, a good : one, gives 3 gal. milk per day. 1 Jersey cow 2 years old, giving 3
gal. per day.
1 Jersey cow 2 year old, giving 3
I gal. per day.
I 8 Heifers to be fresh in February
i and March, good ones. 1 Fine Jersey Bull.
MULES
1 Span of good work mules 7 & 9
years old.
HOGS If, HEAD 8 Shoats weighing 140 lbs. 8 Shoats weighing 65 lbs. TERMS—On all -urns over $10, n ciedit of 6 months will be given.
Mrs. W. C. Matthews has returned to her home in KeiitlaHTd after spend*) — i ing the past week here with her mother, Mrs. Raser Bittles and fam-
ily.
Mr. and Mrs. James C. Reynolds and son Virgil Clifford, who have been spending a f< w day.- visiting relatives in Greenca tie have rcturnI ed to their home in Lafayette.
Gilbert Brown, who has been in training in an aviation school in California for some months past is ex- , pected to return to his home in this city some-time Monday evening. j Two more series of sheep killings I have been reported to Paul Albin. He i stati d that Thai! Jones had lost 21 | sheep and that dogs had finished the : rest of Milo West’s sheep when they
■ killed the last eight.
Miss Geneva Brown, who ha. been j in Indianapolis for the past week preparatory to going on the stage with a gill’s orchestra, spent the week end with her parents on Vine
DEPAI W GR VD TALKS ON ( HINA OF TODAY
INDIANAPOLIS, Sept. 3. (UP)— Lack cf Educational correspondence and transportation facilities is re-.-ponsible for the difficulty in establishing stable government in China, says Li(ut. David M. Shoup, of Cov-
ington, Ind.
Shoup, who entered the United States marine corp- in 1926 following graduation from DePauw university, Gn encastle, has returned from eleven months in the orient. “ Methods of communication are such that an event of a town btdng uventy-five miles away may never hi heard ct in tile interior of China. It Lj not lik in America where news travels fast,” Shoup declared.
+ + + + *■* Baptist Society To Meet. The Missionary Society of the Baptist Church will meet at 2:30 o’clock Tuesday afternoon with Mrs. Charles M. Ewing. S. C. C. Picnic. The S. C. C. Club will hold a picnic at the home of Mrs. Ross Runyan, Tuesday evening on East Washington street. .[• .j* •i* Meeting Postponed. The Tri-Angle Club meeting has been postponed until Tuesday, September 11. Members are asked to please note the change of date.
-I- *1*
Mrs. Handy To Entertain. Mrs. W. T. Handy, Cemtcry Road, will entertain the Missionary Society Tuesday at 9 a. m. Each one is requested to bring one dish of food, sandwiches for one and table service. 4* 4* 4* 4* 4* Goes To Benton Harbor. Miss Crystal Cooper, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William A. Cooper, has gone to Benton Harbor, Mich., where she will teach music in the public schools of that city during the coming year. + 4* + + + + Crescent Club Postponed. The regular meeting of the Crescent Club has been postponed. + 4* + *1* + Entertained Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Ash entertained at their home on east Poplar street Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Snyder and daughter, Mrs. Theodore Bock, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Geales and family, Mr. and Mrs. John R. Ash, Mr. and Mrs. Russell Ash of Beanlstown Junction, Ky., and Mrs. Sarah Kleibusch.
Talking Movies At Local House
Playing for the first time outside the larger cities, patrons of the Granada Theater, were able today to see and hear Synchrotone pictures. This invention, which has been years in preparation, con.-ists of six vaudeville acts on the silver screen, accompanied by words and music, making one forget that it is not right on the stage when in reality it is talking movies. The Synchrotone program includes singing and dancing acts and Hawaiian string music. This specialty which is featured along with the regular picture program will be at the Granada today and Tuesday. A QUEER CASE EVANSVILLE, Ind., Sept. 3. (UP) —Despite blackened eyes and other bruises, Mrs. Walter Gibson unsuccessfully tried to tell the court that one had been suffering from toothache and had been bruised in a fall. The court took another view of the case when it listened to the officers who arrested Gibson tell of finding his wife with blood streaming from her face. Gibson was sentenced to pay a fine of $50 and serve 180 days on the penal farm for wife-beating.
r-flili...
Attendance Of 30,000,000 Is Due In School
■ Notes to bear 8' , inter'st, 2% din-
R. P. Moore & Son
street. Charles Blue and Roy Sutherlin are leaving Tuesday morning for Missouri where they will register in the University of Missouri and then return to Greencastle for a few days before school opens. Claire Albin and Staten Owens left at four o’clock Monday morning for Mitchell, Indiana, where they took two new truck chassis on which bodies for school trucks will be built. They expected to return Monday evening.
“America knew all about Lindbergh landing in 1’aiis a few hours afterwards but -neh a feat is impossible under existing conditions in China,’
he said.
“Strength of a government is largely dependant on communication and ability of a people to under- i stand their one problem.”
BUT FALL OPENING PROBABLY WILL SEE LESS FIRST GRADE ENROLLMENT.
Marines are stationed as
og ’ along the China s a coast to promote commercial relations with
the orient.
WASHINGTON, Sept. 3. (UP)— When the school bells ring this month about 30,000,000 students will answer the summons, according to the U. S.
Education Bureau.
By far the largest proportion of this huge student body are elementary school pupils whose numbers the bureau estimates at a total of mare
than 23,000,000.
High and preparatory schools are “watch ( n( > x t with an enrollment of about
C. A. VESTAL, Auctioneer
Dinner will be
Add vrr.cn' to your trip East or \. giving you a delightful break in your journey. C&R LINE STEAMERS Each Way Every Night Between Cleveland and Buffalo efr-r TOU unlHnlird f..i!ltl»,. Includln. Ut**, comfort- „ I ‘l” lon li i' l KHl , .rette«kln*.le*p. Luxuitoui .afam w.de dt.li. ciccltrm dlnin* room SMmhcr C ° U *U*nUtmt. A trip you will loo* Connection* at Buffalo for Niagara Falls, Eastern and Canadian Points. ■.Inily S’^viccMay lit to November 14th Leavir.y at 9:00 P. M.; Arriving at 7:30 A. M. Ark your tick ft agent or tourist agency /or tickets sia C6fB Unc. New Low Fare $4.50 8K "Vir $8.50 AUTOS CARRIED $6.50 AND UP
CWv ‘ ;l,u ‘ J “ nd BulUlo Tran.it Company K-t M Hum . ““"Ur/ *
Frank Wick and Mrs. Olive Vancleave of Louisville, Ky., spent the week-end with Mr. and Mrs. John G.
served on grounds. Friend and Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Friend.
Mrs. Frank Wick and son who have been spending several weeks here will return to Louisville with them. Harry Vonderschmidt, owner of the Voncastle and Granada theaters in Greencastle, and also movie houses in Bloomington anil Bedford on Saturday eompleted his deal which was pending in Crawfordsville, anil purchased the Strand and Arc in that
city.
A clipping from the Seattle, Wash., Post Intelligencer, has been received by Mr. and Mrs. Harry Smith. It carried u picture of their nephew, Dick Lippman, who at the age of 14 years, is operating a well equipped print shop in the basement of his home, ami is turning out various kinds of printed mutter. The young man’s j equipment is now valued at $2,000 | the story says, and it was started with an investment of $20. The boy is a student in the Broadway high school of Seattle, and after making his school expenses, expects to open an up-to-date down town printing shop which he proposes to produce from his present equipment.
Shoup said he personally witnessed outrages of the depraved soldiers who had gone month- without food, clothing anu money. Banditry in China differs somewhat from the American tactics, he
said.
“It is a common thing for a desspet ado to form a band of bandits who kidnap wealthy men and hold them for ransom. It is ea^y for a leader to form a bandit band by offering depraved soldiers a small recompense in food or clothes.” He
-aid.
.
the famous of the out-
Shoup said Chine.-e like th.- mar ines and often refer to them ‘Good will envoys.” He was
Canton three days after liot and saw the results
rages.
Employment of the uneducated natives in one of China’s problems. “Officials prohibited the use of modern giain mills and machinery to saw timbers because it robbed the labor class of work,” Shoup said. There is a class of natives who spend their lives in Sanpan’s small boats which are propelled by a long paddle. This class of natives seldom visit land, eating and sleeping in the boats. They are crude boats about twelve f et long. Many of them are
used for fi-hing and
passengers for a small fee.
1.500,000 and cilleges and universities will absorb another 1 1,000,000, Normal schools, commercial schools and special institutions account for the remaining 1,500,000. Measured by the number of persons engaged in the educational field, education is the country’s biggest business. In addition to the 30,000,000 students, theie are about 1,000,000 teachers. No other single industry employs or engages the full time of
so many persons.
Expenditures for education, which have been constantly on the up-grade since the War, will aggregate $3,000,000,000, this year, in the opinion of Dr. Frank M. Phillips, chief statistician of the bureau. Reports to the bureau gave the total expenditures for 1925-26 as $2,744,979,698, and Dr. Phillips believes a conservative estij n i mate of the increase will bring it to
AGREE ON NEW CONTRACT CHICAGO, Sept. 3.—A new fouryear contract providing for a reduction of from 15 to 20 per cent in the wages of Illinois coal miners was fom ally agreed upon Saturday by the general joint conference of Illinois miners and operators. The new contract, subject to a referendum vote of the state’s 90,000 miners, calls for a basic wage scale of $6.10 a day for the day work and 91 cents a ton for the tonnage miners, a compared respectively with the $7.50 day rate, and $1.08 a ton rate under the Jacksonville agreement which expired a year and a
half ago.
If ratified by the members and it was said there was no doubt that the agreement would be accepted, the new contract will become effective Sept. 16 and continue until March, 31
1932.
Officials of the operators’ association said the immediate effect of the new agreement would be the reemployment of perhaps twenty thousand more miners just as quickly as the cines can lie reconditioned and prepared for reopening. There
now about thirty thounq* work, although not r, individual agreement?
owners.
It will perhaps requi*. year for the industry ;• regain the production jj the Jacksonville agi * due to lost markets ditions within the indu Affects Indium TERRE HAUTE, H new wage scale for mi J Illinois is bound to havezj conditions in Indiana, am, to an early parley 1*^ operators and official, ofq 11, United Mine W rbn, Cartwright, district pr^ when informed that an had been reached in they
state.
“Yes, an agreement, i»i be sure to effect Indiana,-] Cartwright, “and it is f J operators here will geek *J ley with our committee ifij The mine workers will U meet the owners in com any time.” The rumored wage a| higher than that offered J iana operators, who cir.j*| ly a return to the 191? J is $5 a day, will enable t«| a profit from their invejj opposing the $5 wage, um] also claim that there re j other provisions in therenJ which miners havenererJ
fore.
The Indiana operator?atw conference here insisted a I competition is mainly ri ai union fields and that a ettid Illinois would have little dj the situation.
OLD P.IPB' NEWCASTLE. .V- '■"'j membership lamiiiptadaf public golf links next week by the A**®! Golf committee here. The purpose of the campaign is to gain iwl struction of the course il|
park.
A goal of sOO mewheiilj each hu- been set by tbj which if completed will 1 This amount, the g"K tm lievse, will enableUnH of work on the news hit It was pointed out tk would bo inexpensive f J some because artificial 4 not be neci -ary ani tural lay of the land-■
are j are blessed with natunl®
Apples and Sugar Pears. Our apples are the finest they have been in years. & see what we have in the line of fancy eating and cooM phone your order. Priced 50 cents per bushel and up. McC ullough’s Orchard, Phone
NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS OF TAX I KVIt j In the Matter of Determining the Tax Rate*
by the Civil Town of Bain bridge, Putnam County, Iti'iitel Board of Trustees. . y|
Notice is hereby given the taxpayers of the town “
narn County, Indiana, that the proper legal officer- llf ’"Vjl regular meeting place, on the 10th day of September, «'
ref \l ...ill
will consider the following budget:
SSwlUi&iS
three billions for this fiscal year. A deciding birthrate in this country materially has lowered the rate of increase in attendance at elementary schools in recent years. A graph of the attendance rate increase shows a tendency to flatten out since 1924, though the birthplace decline has been in progress since 1915. This lowered birthrate is expected to be felt in the high schools and colleges in a few
years.
Illustrating the lessened attendance in elementary schools, the firstgrade enrollment is 1918 was 4,281,013, in 1922 it was 4,084,145, and in 1926 it declined to 3,923,492. A part , of this "* ,| u<'tion may be charged to
transporting better schemes to promotion by which
nearly all pupils at* moved on a grade
Shoup returned to Quantico to join d.iti tu indicate that the the Eastern coast aircraft Squad- c< n ' us ma > show little, if auy, ron of the Murines. Since he was ,M< roaM m 1 l( nu rober of children commissioned in June 1926 he has , rri “ y . t0 ,>nt, ‘ r scho °l over the num-
vi.-ited every state in the country j " r s ow,1 ,n f 1*30 census, except Florida and Vermont, visit-: 0
ing practically all largir cities. I ADVERTISE IN THE BANNER
of 7:30 P. M General Fund
Salary of Trustees Salary of Clerk-Treasurer Salary of Marshall Salary of Health Officer Compensation Town Attorney Communication and transportation Street and signal lighting Election expense Fire equipment Examination of records Printing and advertising Office Supplies Street, Alley and Sewer Material . Insurance Premium
Total General Fund Street FundWages Street Laborers Oil or sprinkling
Total Street Fund
Total estimate of expenditures Miscellaneous Revenue deducted
$ 130-00
120.00 1K0.00
30.00 1-0.00 50.00
470.00 100.00 125.00
25.00
100.00
10.00
350.00
35.00
$1785.00 350.0* 350.00 ••’SS
$1485.00
•Not -.mount I. be r.i.ed ^,£8
Net taxable property $287,000.00.
Taxable polls, 07. . . L. v> on b'dli; • • — - - STATEMEn7 OF ^A*^ 1 ° U 'I
AND TO BE COLLECTED
Collected ♦"i
Funds 1926 Levy General Street 812.51
Collected 1927 LiA V $1244.87
879.13
’■s:
Total Taxr
tax levies
■
al $1949.00 m ..,.
Commissioners for further and final action th< ^ ■
therefor with the County Auditor not h r,rin<' September, and the Steta Baard will i* a da)
Attest: Earle Evans, Clerk.
21* nun l1u>t
