The Syracuse Journal, Volume 29, Number 6, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 4 June 1936 — Page 7
THURSDAY, JUNE 4,1936
r Board Os Review Meets At Warsaw Hearing Complaints Regarding Personal Property Assessments In County The Kosciusko county board of review convened Monday morning in the office of County Assessor Harvey D. McCleary at 10 o’clock and commenced its duties.■ « The first matter of business decided by the board was setting the dates on which complaints if any, will be heard by the board on personal property assetments. The first 10 days the board will check over reports of the township assessors. -Commencing Thursday, June 1) the board will hear complaints as follows—Jackson, Monroe, Washington, Tippecanoe, and Turkey Creek townships,, and towns of Sidney Pierceton, and Syracuse. Friday, June 12—Van Buren, Plain, Clay, Lake and Seward townships and towns of Milford, Leesburg, Claypool; Silver Lake and Burket. Saturday, June 13—Franklin, Harrison, Prairie, Jefferson, Scott and Etna townships and towns of Mentone .and Etna Green. Monday, June 15, towns of Warsaw and Winona Lake, and Wayne ' township. Members of the board are County Assessor Harvey D. McCleary, chairman; County Auditor Jesse Bruner, secretary; County Treasurer Vere Kelley. John Poetma, and Charles Christian, the latter two appointed by Judge Donald Vander veer. ORDINANCE 348 Be it ordained by the Board of Town Trustees, of the Incorporated Town of Syracuse, Kosciusko Coun- j ty, Indiana, that the Huntington Street crossing of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, is found to be very dangerous, and a menace to public safety, and that said Board now deems it necessary that said Railroad arrange for. adequate protection at this crossing 24 hours daily, maintaining either a full time flagman, flashlights, or gates, with a flagman on duty 5 hours each day of school • during the entire school term of each year. Therefore that said Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company, be and hereby required to establish and maintain adequate 24 hours protaction daily, at this railroad crossing. which shall include a flagman to bo on duty at this crossing five hours each day of school during the entire school term of each year, for the purpose of warning all school - children, and school busses, when-' ever a train, car, locomotive, is approaching said street crossing. Said Railroad be required to have . such 24 hour daily protection in ser- . vice on or before July 15th, 1936. This Ordinance supersedes any previous ordinance covering this * subject. • Said Ordinance shall be effective and in full force this 19th day of I May, 1936. il Approved, passed, and signed, by S the Board of Town Trustees, of the Town of Syracuse, Indiana, May T 9, I 1936. Attest: f Ernest O. Buchholz, 1 Clerk-Treasurer, p Wm. G. Connolly e Fielden Sharp Francis Grissom ' c * Board of Town Trustees. 1 * That’s Something •A man dat keeps right on playin’ ’. de bosses,” said Uncle Eben, “may not ■how good Judgment, but he certain’y bus’ have credit for s mighty forgivln’ nature."
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SAM GUARD PROPOSES INDIANA RECOVERY PLAN Fara Paper Editor Announces (or Htjb Place on Repnbfican Ticket •
SPENCER. IND.. May 26 1936 - Samuel R. Guard, editor and owner of “Breeder’s Gazette." ai.ncur.ced today that he would s*and for nomination as Lieutenant Governor of Indiana on thr Republican ticket. At the same time Mr. Guard declared for a new State policy: he wants to perfect an Indiana Plan of Recovery. « soys that Indiana has the brains, the resources. the geographical position and the will of the p“ople to »ead the whole nation in the process cf recovery. His declaration was as f Hows: “Every one of ‘he rec’nt decisd-e’s of the Supreme Court on Nrw D al laws has pointed out that the Stat’ is s»vereign and indestructible; that the commonwealth has powers which Washington can neither invade nor take away. This is a direct chnll ng? to us in Indiana to work out our own method of recovery, som’what as Gov. Landon has done in Kansas. My , friends have insisted on placing my name before the state convention on June 3d. 1 have consented to stand for nomination «th the understanding that the following principles be suggested to the platform committee: 1. Our Governor should be the leader of the State of Indiana and not its dictator. The present Reorganization Act should be repealed, the officers of the state should be restored 1 their constitutional responsibilities, and the Attorney General should be elected by the people. 2. Cut taxes. Particularly must real property be protected from further confiscation. Take the word “emergency” out of the tax limitafon law. Substitute a Net Income Tax for the unfair Gross Income Tax. Provide levies for state revenue that will give our state treasury as much tax money as the Federal government takes out of Indiana every year on whiskey, beer, tobacco, etc. 3. Consolidate and retain all the gains that Ohr Indiana farmers have made during the last few years by setting up our own Indiana Soil Conservation and Domestic Allotment ena-
CONCORD Mr. and Mrs. Charles Dean and family visited Mr. and Mrs. James Gilbert, Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Guy Fisher and family visited in the Joseph Good home in South Bend, last week-end. Alfred Brady and Mrs. Nettie Brady and daughter, Ligonier, visited Mr. and Mrs. William Wyland, Sunday afternoon. Dessie Hoover visited Mr. and Mrs. Dewy Coy, Saturday and Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Lentz and family visited in the Silas Gilbert home, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. John Helminger, Milford, called in the evening. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Strieby, Chicage, visited friends here a few days last week. Ruth and Esther Hoover visited
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bling act. Particularly should this protect the educational and leaderly functhns of our staie agricultural college by providing that a qualifying farm organization administer domestic allctmsnt. This would give us price ’.tabibrntion of In liana farm products, the system to be owned and controlled by the f—rn’ra th msolves operating th*ough their nwn farm organization. 4. For labor i advocate the same policy wh ch I have followed in my own printing plant. I have \cpt all our J -cal p pie who wanted to work gainfully occupied throughout the d-pressinn. and as their employer I .-u’srcat'-d :h«> '"'no' t" unionization of our p’ant. My Indiana Plan of n "mv?ry v ''<i back the organization of skill d labor and find a job for every man who wants to work. 5. Foster Indiana industries. The state ex?cu ive could well afford to relinquish his dictatorship and become sales manager for Indiana. His intelligent and active salesmanship would substantially aid the recovery of our steel industry, our automotive business, our Indiana limeston- and building material ipdustry. our mines, mills, packing houses, and factories. I ask that our Republican state platform reassure capital from fear of confiscatory taxes and legislation, and that we actively promote business, so as to enable our busy factories to provide jobs to all employables. 6. Sharply reduce the expenditures of our state government A portion of the savings which can readily be made by a real business administration can well be devoted to Social Security and to paying our eternal debt to the aged. “This is my Indiana Plan of Recovery for Agriculture, Labor, Industry. I think that we should little concern ourselves with the national issues in this state campaign. We must save ourselves from any impending disaster that will come from boondoggling extrivagance. We can do it within the framework of such a platform.”
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Stiffler, Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. James Dewart, Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Bucher attended Memorial services in Fort Wayne, Sunday.. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Bowen and daughter Mary, Urbana, called in the John Roop, Ernest Mathews and James Dewart homes, Sunday. TRY A JOURNAL WANT AD
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SYRACUSE JOURNAL
ORDINANCE 349 Be it ordained by the Board of Town Trustees, of the incorporated Town of Syracuse, Kosciusko County, Indian* that the speed limit for all vehicles, within the corporate limits of the town shall be 25 miles hour, with the following exceptions, where the speed limit shall be reduced to 15 miles per hour. Thru all the business district of the Town Viz: From the intersection of Huntington, and Carroll Streets, to the intersection of Huntington and High Streets, from the intersection of Main and Mill Streets and Fraizer avenue, to the intersection of Main and Lake streets. That part of Harrison Street from the intersection of Harrison and Carrol to the intersection of Harrison and Main. That part of Lake street from the intersection of Lake and Carroll Streets, to the intersection of Lake and Main streets. This Ordinance supersedes any previous ordinances covering this subject. Said Ordinance shall be effective and in full force this 19th day of May 1936. Approved, passed, and signed, by the Board of Town Trustees, of the Town of Syracuse, Indiana, May 19, 1936. Attest: Ernest O. Buchholz, Clerk-Treasurer. Wm. G. Connolly Fielden Sharp Francis Grissom Board of Town Trustees. BRONCHIAL COUGHS Just A Few Sips and— Like A Flash — Relief! All coughs look alike to Buckley's Mixture (triple acting)—one sip of this grand medicine soon stops an ordinary cough — tough old deep seated coughs and the persistent bronchial cough are under control after just a few doses—no more tormenting, sleepless nights. Buckley's is alkaline, that’s why it’s so different—it “acts like a flash”. Refuse substitutes—guaranteed. 45 and 85 cents at all druggists. W. K. Buckley, Inc., Rochester, N. Y.
DRUNKEN DRIVER GETS THIRTY-DAY SENTENCE Edgar Rice, aged 29, Indianapolis negro was arrested for drunken driving about 8:45 o’clock Friday even-
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I ing by State Policeman George R. ’ Harrison, after his automobile had upset on a road on the north side us Lake Wawasee. I Rice was sentenced to serve 30 days
in the state penal farm and was fined S2O and costs by Mayor C. Dußois in Warsaw city court. He was taken to the penal institution by Sheriff Virgil Yeager.
