The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 27 July 1968 — Page 2
Page 2
The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Indiana
Saturday, July 27, 1968
THK DAILY BANNER and Herald Consolidated It Vaves For Air Business Phone: CL 3-5151 - OL 3-5152 Lu Mar Newspapers Inc. Dr. Mary Tarzian, Publisher Published every evening except Sunday and holidays at 508 South College Avenue. Greencastle. Indiana. 46135- Entered in the Post Office at Greencastle. Indiana, as second class mail matter under: Act of March 7. 1878 United Press International lease wire service; Member Inland Daily Press Association; Hoosier State Press Association. All unsolicited articles, manuscripts, letters andjsictures sent to The Daily Banner are sent at owner's risk, and The Daily Banner Repudiates any liability or responsibility for their safe custody or return. By carrier 50C per week, single copy 10C. Subscription prices of the Daily Banner Effective July 31. 1967-Put-nam County - 1 year, $12.00 - 6 months. $7.00 - 3 months. $4.50-Indiana other than Putnam County - l year, $14.00 - 6 months. $8.00 - 3 months, 55.00. Outside Indiana 1 year, $18.00 - 6 months. $10.00 - 3 months. 57.00. All Mail Subscriptions payable in advance. Motor Routes $2.15 per one month. : ...
Personal and Local •X
Saturday Visitors Mr. and Mrs. Charles Cornell and sons called on Mr. and Mrs. Ray McCloud, Barnard, Saturday evening.
Bible thought
For now we see through a glass darkly, but then face to face.—I Corinthians 13:12. Now we suffer the limitations of the flesh. We hope for the time when these limitations will pass away and when we will understand all mysteries that now confuse us.
Area girls earn honors at Russellville 4-H Fair
“Fashion Explosion” was the theme of the Russellville TriCounty 4-H Fair Dress Revue. Some 85 girls from Montgomery, Parke and Putnam counties participated. The girls paraded in front of a backdrop of varying degrees of mod and bright colors resembling two mushroom explosions. Silver stars and green and silver lettering completed the back stage. Sally McAfee served as fashion narrator. Edith Hays and Helen McElwee were judges. Ruby Goff furnished background music. First place winners received $3; second place winners, $2; and all others participating received $1. Winners were as follows: Division 1-lst, Carol Myers, Waveland; 2nd, Donna Mitchell, Waveland; 3rd, Rhonda Chaplain, Russellville and 4th, Jayne Myers, Waveland. Division 2-1st, Jeanna Clodfelter, Russellville; 2nd, Debra Rivers, Bloomingdale; 3rd, Jessica Tolliver, Waveland; and 4th, Kim Long, Waveland. Division 3-1st, Pamela Allen, Roachdale; 2nd, Cathy Proctor, Greencastle; 3rd, Joanna Bushong, Waveland; and 4th, Mary Sennett, Waynetown. Division 4-1st, Julie Todd, Ladoga; 2nd, Linda Ban non, Ladoga; 3rd, Dianne Spencer, Judson; and 4th, Cheryl Cox, Waveland. Division 5-1st, Judy Roth, Bainbridge; 2nd, Cheryl Spencer, Russellville; 3rd, Lora Myers,
Roachdale and 4th Janet Ford, Roachdale. Division 6-1st, Cindy Ades, Russellville; 2nd, Candy Bridges, Russellville; 3rd, Linda Everman, Russellville, and 4th, Chris Tolliver, Waveland. Division 7-1st, Teresa Tolliver, Waveland; 2nd, Denise McMullen, New Ross; 3rd, Lana Lieske, Russellville and 4 th, Connie Leatherman, Judson. Division 8-1st, Sherry Mitchell, Rockville; 2nd, Rhonda Sutherlin, Russellville; 3rd, Karen Lieske, Russellville; and 4th, Patty McGaughey, Russellville. Trophy winners were: Grand Champion-Sherry Mitchell, Rockville; Cindy Ades, Russellville, Reserve Grand Champion. Judging results of the girls’ 4-H projects in the 1968 Russellville Tri-County 4-H Fair are as follows: CLOTHING CONSTRUCTION Division 1:-Dotty Alcorn; Bainbridge; 2nd, Maria W i t s ma n, Russellville; 3rd, Sally Shannon, Russellville; and 4th, Brenda Kahle, Linden. Division 2: 1st, Suzanne McGaughey, Russellville; 2nd, Sandy Redifer, Russellville; 3rd, Regina S e y b o 1 d, Crawfordsville, Route 7, and 4th Sara Baird, Russellville. Division 3-1st, Deanna Roberts, Russellvillt 2nd, Cathy Proctor, Bainbric ;e; 3rd, Pam Allen, Roachdale and 4th, Mary Sennett, Waynetown. Division 4-1st, Cynthia Goff, Russellville; 2nd, Linda Ban— non, Ladoga; 3rd, Julie Phil-
lips, Rockville and 4th, Diane Spencer, Judson. Division 5-1st, Janet Ford, Roachdale; 2nd, Cheryl Spencer, Russellville; 3rd, Judy Roth, Bainbridge and 4th, Judy Fordice, Russellville. Division 6-1st, Cindy Ades, Russellville; 2nd, Candy Bridges, Russellville; 3rd, Linda Everman, Russellville and 4th, Charlene Sennett, Waynetown. Division 7-1st, Lana Lieske, Russellville; 2nd, Connie Leatherman, Judson and 3rd, Bonnie Escew, Judson. Division 8-1st, Sherry Mitchell, Rockville, Champion; 2nd, Rhonda Sutherline, Russellville, Reserve Champion; 3rd, Paula Thomas, Bloomingdale and 4th, Patty McGaughey, Russellville. Division 10-1st, Nancy McGaughey, Russellville. . HOME FURNISHINGS 1st, Suzanne McGaughey, Russellville, Champion; 2nd, Lou Ann Brown, Ladoga, Reserve Champion; and 3rd, Cheryl Rush, New Market. FOODS Division 1-lst, Brenda Kahle, Linden, 2nd, Vickie Proctor, Bainbridge; 3rd, Suzanne Frazier, Greencastle, and 4th, Donna Roberts, Russellville. Division 2-1st, Gay Cox, Waveland, 2nd, Regina Seybold, Crawfordsville, Route 7; 3rd, Kim Long, Waveland; and 4th, Terry Kahle, Linden. Division 3-1st, Gail South, Bainbridge; 2nd, Cathy Proctor, Continued on Page 4
NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS OF TAX LEVIES In the matter of determining the tax rates for certain purposes by Bainbridge Civil Town Putnam County, Indiana, Before the Board of Town Trustees. Notice is hereby given the taxpayers of Bainbridge Civil Town. Putnam Countv. Indiana, that the proper officers of said civil town, at their regular meeting place, on the 29 day of August, 1968 will consider the following budget:
GENERAL FUND Salary of Town Trustees 380.00 Salary of Clerk-Treasurer ,.... 190.00 Salary of Marshal and Deputy Marshals 2,000.00 Compensation of Town Attorney 200.00 Hydrant Rental 1,500.00 Printing, & Advertiseing. 150.00 Telephone 150.00 Town Park 1.000.00
Fire Equipment Current Charges Current Obligations 2,500.00 Total General fund 9,770.00 STREET FUND Services Personal 1,000.00 Materials .....2,500.00 Current Charges 150.00 Total Street Fund.., 3,650.00
ESTIMATE OF FUNDS TO BE RAISED FUNDS REQUIRED FOR EXPENSES TO DEC. 31 OF INCOMING YEAR 1. Total budget estimate for incoming year, Jan. 1 to Dec. 31, 1969 inclusive 2. Necessary expenditures, July 1 to Dec. 3l of present year, to be made from appropriations unexpended 3. Additional appropriations tq be made July 1 to Dec. 31 of present year 5. Total funds Required (Add lines 1. 2. 3 and 4) FUNDS ON HAND AND TO BE RECEIVED FROM SOURCES OTHER THAN PROPOSED TAX LEVY 6. Actual balance. June 30th of present year 7. Taxes to be collected, present year (Dec. Settlement) 8. Miscellaneous revenue to be received July 1 of present year to Dec. 31 of incoming year —Schedules on file b. All other revenue 9. Total Funds (Add lines 6. 7, 8a and 8b) 10. NET AMOUNf REQUIRED TO BE RAISED FOR EXPENSES TO DEC. 31 OF INCOMING YEAR (Deduct line 9 from line.5) 11. Operating Balance (Not in excess of expenses from Jan. 1 to June 30, less misc. revenue for same period) 12. AMOUNT TO BE RAISED BY TAX LEVY (Add linel 10 and 11)
Net Taxable Property 557,030.00
PROPOSED LEVIES
Genera I.
Street.
FUNDS
Total
General Fund 9,970.00 4,612.91 14,582.91
1,875.56 866.55
4,227.73 7,019.84 7,563.07 1,060.64 8,623.71
Levy on Property 2.00 2.00
COMPARATIVE STATEMENT OF TAXES COLLECTED AND TO BE COLLECTED
FUNDS
Collected • 1966
General 2,377.00 Street
Col lected 1967 4,754.00
Collected 1968 2,395,00
Street Fund 3.650.00 1,920.80 1.630.88 7,201.95
1,630.88 3,036.95
4,667.83 2.533.85 2.533.85 Amount to Be Raised 8.623.71 2:533.85 11.157.56
To Be Col lected 1969 8.623.71 2,533.85
Taxpayers appearing shall have a right to be heard 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 a petition with the county auditor on or before the fourth Monday of September or on or before the tenth day after publication by the county auditor of tax rates charged, whichever date is later, and the state board of tax commissioners will fix a date for hearing in this county. Dated July 19, 1968. Marion Lawson, C lerk - Treasurer
July 27 - Aug. 3 - 2T
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Birthday Party Mr. and Mrs. Charles Gorrell and sons were Sunday evening visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Evans and family, Greencastle, and enjoyed homemade ice cream and cake to celebrate the birthdays of Mrs. Evans and daughter, Jo Ella. In Indianapolis Mrs. Charles Gorrell and sons were in Indianapolis Wednesday, to visit the Riley Hospital, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Gorrell, Indianapolis, and Mr. and Mrs. Carl Euliss, Avon. Jerry Gorrell was a patient at the clinic at Riley. Visit Parkersburg Mr. and Mrs. Charles Gorrell and sons called on Mrs. Everett Graham, of near Parkersburg, Saturday afternoon and visited with Mr. Graham who is quite ill in the Carmen Nursing Home, Crawfordsville. He is a cousin of Mrs. Gorrell. Visitors Mr. and Mrs. Bell, Greencastle, spent Saturday evening with Mr. and Mrs. Charles Gorrell and sons. American missing MANILA (UPI)-The U.S. Coast Guard said today it was searching seas made turbulent by tropical storms Nadine and Olive for an American identified as Gerry McLoughlin, missing for a week on a voyage in his 28-foot sailboat between Hong Kong and Manila. His home was not listed. Need strict air travel control WASHINGTON (UPI)—C o mmercial airlines are trapping themselves in the sky by overcatering to the scheduling whims of their passengers, says an air traffic control executive. “The present system cannot support scheduling so that all passengers can leave their homes at 8 a.m., and be back by 6 p.m., in time for a dip in the pool and dinner,” said G. W. Kriske in a letter to the F ederal Afiation Administration (FAA). Kriske, executive director of the Air Traffic Control Association (ATCA), wrote the letter to demand the FAA take over airline flight scheduling from the airlines themselves. Travel at 3 a.m. He said passengers “must learn that they may on occasion have to travel at 3 a.m., if they're going to be able to travel at all without hanging in a hold pattern for hours over an airport.” Kriske said commercial airlines are jamming big airports at peak travel hours, which correspond to auto traffic rush hours below, with “duplicate competitive scheduling.” The FAA said it would meet early next month with ATCA, its rival Professional Air Traffic Controllers Association (PATCO) and 18 other groups to get their further views on the situation before taking any action. FAA officials met with their regional directors again Thursday in an attempt to find solutions to the congestion problem— an answer it says won’t be forthcoming for at least several weeks. Meanwhile, Rep. Lester Wolf, D-N.Y., in the latest of a series of actions aimed at easing the growing congestion, called government and industry officials to a meeting in his office today to discuss the problem. He is especially concerned about mammoth air traffic james clogging the New York City area’s airports. Plans Invesgitation Rep. Robert Taft, R-Ohio, announced plans for an investigation in the next few months into the whole problem of air traffic safety. Taft’s investigation would carry no official weight, and chairmen of the House and Senate committees governing air operations have expressed little interest in pushing such an inquiry.. The current flurry of concern over the congestion problem was precipitated when members of the newly formed PATCO decided to follow the FAA safety rule book to the letter in guiding aircraft around the country. ATCA had no choice but to follow suit. The result has been extreme congestion and long landing delays as airliners stacked up all over the so-called “golden triangle” bounded by Boston, Chicago and Washington, and including the busy New York metropolitan area.
To the Editor: This letter is written in the hope that it will be read by all my neighbors around the country who are afraid of any effective gun-control laws and think it would be the government’s first step toward taking guns away from everybody. This fear is absolutely unfounded, as anyone who will examine the facts for himself can see. But unfortunately, a powerful gun lobby, led by the National Rifle Association, has so frightened a great many decent, reasonable people that they really do believe it. A staff member of the Senate Special Subcommittee that has been investigating the need for gun controls said this not long ago about the people who are so afraid of laws to regulate firearms: “These sportsmen are mostly ordinary, decent fellows. They have no idea that they ha/e been intentionally misled for been intentionally misled for someone else’s personal gain, and that they are intentionally and that they are indirectly responsible for thousands and thousands of unnecessary deaths and injuries every year. If we could only get the truth across to them, they’d back us all the way.” The fact is that in spite of all the propaganda by the gun lobby the great majority of American citizens do want gun-control legislation. The Gallup Polls have shown for the past thirty years that more than 84 percent of the American people favor effective gun controls. In January 1967 a Gallup Poll showed that 73 percent of all Americans would support a law requiring registration of all rifles and shotguns, and 85 percent favored a law requiring registration of all handguns. Even a majority of the nation’s gun owners favor guncontrol laws. A Harris Survey has shown that 66 percent of the 27 m illion white Americans who own guns are in favor of a law requiring all persons to register all gun purchases, and a Gallup Poll last year showed that 60 percent of the nation’s gun owners would vote in favor of a law requiring a police permit for the purchase of any gun. The overwhelming majority of law enforcement officials in our country have been on record for years in favor of gun-control laws. For more than thirty years the International Association of Chief’s of Police has favored a law requiring Federal registration of all firearms. FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover has long been in favor of gun controls and has stated: “Those who claim that the availability of firearms is not a factor in murder in this country are not facing reality... a review of the motives for murder suggests that a readily accessible gun enables the perpetrators to kill on impulse.” The American Bar Association supports strong gun controls. So does at least two thirds of the press, including such a highly respected farm publication as the 127-year-old Prairie Farmer, whose editor made a survey covering the states of Indiana and Illinois and concluded: “I doubt very much that the gun lobby speaks for the American people. It certainly doesn’t speak for the urban citizen like myself. And we offer you proof from personal interview polls that it does not speak for midwestern farmers.” What is the truth about the need for gun controls? Here are some facts I hope readers will examine carefully. In the United States there were 6552 murders with firearms in 1966 and 7700 in 1967; there were 43,500 aggravated assaults with firearms in 1966 and 55,000 in 1967; there were 60,000 robberies with firearms in 1966 and over 71,000 in 1967. This adds up to more than 110,000 gun crimes of all kinds, from armed robbery to murder, in the United States in 1966 and more than 133,000 in 1967. (I won’t even talk about the 10,407 suicides and 2,557 accidental deaths by firearms in 1966.) How does this compare with countries that require gun licensing and registration?In Great Britain, which has one fourth as many people as the United States, instead of 6,552 gun murders in 1966 there were 30-about the same number that are shot to death in the United States every 36 hours. In France, a nation of enthusiastic hunters with a population one fourth our size and 2 million hunting rifles and shotguns registered in 1967, there are about 500 deaths by shooting each year, or 1 per 100,000 population—less than a third of the rate in America. In Paris and its suburbs, with 5 million people (a little more than the population of Indiana), the i
number of homicides and attempted homicides with firearms has been going down since 1962. That year it was 145; in 1966 it was only 76. In Japan, with 98 million people, almost half as many as the United States, there were only 2111 murders of all kinds in 1967 and only 37 of these involved firearms. In Holland, which has just about three times the population of Indiana, the total number of gun murders for the entire year of 1967 was 15, and for a period of three years in the early 1960’s there was not a single gun murder in all of Holland. But perhaps somebody may argue that the lower rate of gun murders in all those countries is not really due to their gun-control laws but just to the fact that in those countries conditions are somehow “different.” All right, let’s look closer home. Canada is so close and similar to the United States that the Canadians sometimes wonder whether they aren’t little more than the fifty-first state. They are a nation of outdoorsmen and hunters, and they have even more great open spaces than we have. But they also have registrations of all firearms. With a population about equal to that of Indiana, Illinois, Iowa, and Kentucky, Canada had a total of 281 murders of all kinds in the whole year 1967. Of these, only 140 were committed by firearms, or an average of .8 per 100,-
000.
Your chances of getting deliberately shot to death are nearly 5 times greater in the United States than in Canada, 27 times greater than in Holland, 29times greater than in West Germany, 60 times greater than in England, and 89 times greater than in Japan. Why? Are the people in all those countries more moral than we are? More peaceful? More law-abiding? I refuse to believe it. I am convinced that the difference between us and all the rest of the civilized world is very simple: we still stubbornly insist on being anarchists when it comes to the control of firearms, and the rest of the civilized world has learned bet-
ter.
The firearm anarchists like to claim that the gun-control laws already passed by some states and cities do not really make any difference. But the facts do not support them. The first column of figures in the table below shows the percentage of murders that were committed with firearms during the period from 1962 to 1965 in each of the states named. The second column of figures shows the overall murder rate per 100,000 population.
Rhode Island
24%
1.4
Massachusetts
35%
2.4
New York
32%
4.8
New Jersey
39%
3.5
Pennsylvania
43%
3.2
1. States with gun controls: 2. States with minimal or no gun controls: Louisiana 62% 9.9 Arizona 66% 6.1 Nevada 67% 10.6 Texas 69% 9.1 Mississippi 71% 9.7 Again let me ask you: are the people in Mississippi twice as murderous by n a t u r e as the people in New York? Are the people in Nevada three times as murderous as the people in New Jersey? Or is it the guncontrol laws that make your chances less of getting murdered in New York and New Jersey than in Mississippi and Nevada? • Firearms are involved in only 25 percent of the murders committed in New York City, which is under the Sullivan Law, while ih Dallas, Texas, and Phoenix Arizona, which have virtually no laws controlling firearms, the rate is 72 percent and 65.9 percent respectively. Moreover, despite what those of us who were born in the country or in small towns may like to think about the wickedness of New York City, it has the fifth lowest assault rate of the nation’s ten largest cities, the third lowest murder rate, and the lowest robbery rate of them all. If the rest of the United States were likewise under the Sullivan Law, so that New York residents could not get around their own state’s gun-control law by buying firearms out-of-state, the crime rate in New York City would very likely be even lower. We hear a great deal nowadays about crime in the cities. My wife and I have just returned home after living for four months in Washington within three blocks of the Senate Office Buildings, and we know at first hand how bad conditions are in the capital city of our nation. But we Continued on Page 3
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DEAR HELOISE: milk carton with water and I made a towel rack for the freeze it overnight, inside of the wooden door be- In the morning I pack it in low my sink. my lunch pail next to my With small screws, I at- sandwich, tached two window shade Now I have a cold, fresh brackets about a ftnjt apart sandwich and as the ice melts, up near the inside top of the I also have a cold drink door. Just so the brackets are throughout the day. not in the way w'hen the door Pearl Drucker closes. * * * Then I cut off an old broom DEAR HELOISE: handle the length between the For those who go camping brackets and nailed it in place, with children here's an idea with the nails going through my husband got a kick out of. the holes in the brackets and I tie a vegetable bi'ush at into the ends of the stick. the toe of an old nylon stockMrs. Lawson ing. Up a little ways I tie a knot and insert a bar of hand DEAR HELOISE: soap. Then I tie another knot When the elastic comes out up a little ways to hold a bar - of knee-high stockings, or of facial soap, they just won’t stay up. I take You still have room at the some stretch elastic and sew top to tie the stocking to a it in a circle. Then sew it branch, a rope, or tack it to a around the top from the inside table, depending upon where of the sock. your wash water is placed. If you can’t get elastic the Marty same color as the sock, just * * * sew the elastic to the inside DEAR HELOISE: of the sock. If you have an upright vacMargaret King uum cleaner, you can vacuum * * * right up to the edges of your LETTER OF LAUGHTER room-size rug and wall-to-wall DEAR HELOISE: bathroom rugs by "walking' A man in my office said he in it’s most upright position, always reads your hints. Keeps and then as you near the edge him one up on his wife ... ... just slightly tilt it backEve Dietrich wards. (It “forks", you kuuic.j This way the rollers in the DEAR HELOISE: front of the machine do not I would like to share an idea touch the edge of the rug I find helpful. but the suction brings the dust Take a wire clotheshanger up right from the edge of the and pull the bottom crosswire fug. - down from the hook until the Jane W. side comers aro completely * * * bent together, making a long And to think of all the years handle. Then use this to pull they have sold upright vaethings to the front of high uutn cleaners and nobody had shelves that w'ould otherwise ever mentioned this before . . . require a step-stool to reach Isn’t Jane terrific? Works, to the back. too. I keep one in every closet Helolse including the utility closet * * * and save lots of climbing and DEAR HELOISE: reaching. Help yourself to those little Mis. E. Davis free paint charts when shop- * * * ping. Then when you must You’re short, too, eh! match a certain color in buttteloise tons, ribbon or even the shade of a wall when buying accesDEAR HELOISE: sories, merely carry along the During the hot weather, the little paper slip or swatch sandwiches in my lunch were that matches the color you are spoiling at w’ork. So my so- looking for. lution was to fill an empty Mrs. Frank Grover NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS OF TAX LEVIES In the matter of determining the tax rates for certain purposes by Madison Township, Putnam County, Indiana. Before the Township Advisory Board. Notice is hereby given the taxpayers of Madison Townshio, Putnam County, Indiana, that the proper officers of said township, at their regular meeting place, on the 27th day of August. 1968, will consider the following budget: TOWNSHIP BUDGET CLASSIFICATION TOWNSHIP FUND Pay of Trustee, Rent, Clerical & Travel Exp 1422.50 Books, Stationery, Printing & Advertising 350.0C Care of Cemeteries 400.00 Other Civil Township Expenses 565.00 Total Township Fund 2737,00 TOWNSHIP POOR RELIEF FUND 8. DIRECT RELIEF 1. Medical, Hospital and Burial .-...2000 2. Other Direct Relief .500 3. Total Direct Relief (Total B1 and B2) 2500 Total Township Poor Relief Fund 2500 FUNDS REQUIRED FOR EXPENSES TO DECEMBER 31st OF INCOMING YEAR 1. Total Budget Estimate for incoming year, Jan. 1 to Dec. 31. 1969. inclusive 2737 2. Necessary Expenditures, July 1 to Dec. 31. present year, to be made from appropriations unexpended 1542 5. Total Funds Required (Add lines 1, 2, 3, and 4) 4279 FUNDS ON HAND AND TO BE RECEIVED FROM SOURCES OTHER THAN PROPOSED TAX LEVY 6. Actual Balance, June 30th of present year 1567 7. Taxes to be collected, present year (December Settlement) 1141 9. Total Funds (Add line 6. 7. 8a and 8b) 2708 10- NET AMOUNT REQUIRED TO BE RAISED FOR EXPENSES TO DEC. 31st OF INCOMING YEAR (Deduct line 9 from line 5) 1571 11. Operating Balance (Not in excess of expenses from Jan. 1 to June 30, less miscellaneous revenue for same perion) 1200 12. AMOUNT TO BE RAISED BY TAX LEVY (Add lines 10 and 1 1) 2771 PROPOSED LEVIES Net Taxable Property..., 1700.000 FUNDS Levy on Amount to Township . Pro 1 P 6 ertV Be^aysed COMPARATIVE STATEMENT OF TAXES COLLECTED AND TO BE COLLECTED FUNDS Collected Collected Collected Collected 1965 1966 1967 1968 Township 2948 2451 2445 2595 Total 2948 2451 2445 2595 Taxpayers appearing shall have a right to be heard 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 a petition with the county auditor on or before the fourth Monday of September or on or before the tenth day after publication by the county auditor of tax rates charged, whichever date is later, and the state board of tax commissioners will fix a date for hearing in this county. Ralph M. Furney. Trustee Dated Juw. 1968. July 27 - Aug. 3 - 2T Madison Township
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