ANNUAL FINANCIAL STATE- ;-r M*NT OF THE TOWNSHIP ' T TREASURER FOR PUBLICA- •&; HON; TOWNSHIP 45, RANGE 8E. *1%. ttf MCBENRY COUNTY, ILLI '%» NOIS, FROM JULY 1. ttMT JUNE 80, 1928. ' . m«?•' IWnship Fund Receipts ^ OiOl <#» iMmd. July l. 192? :0< Sands Oft tend July 1.1927 | 18.04 3600.00 Total - --H613.04 Expenditures on hand June 30, 1928 --$_ 13.04 >nds on hand June 30,1928 .. *600.00 (Total - • * * D i s t r i b u t i v e F u n d Receipts ; smt* July l, 192? Income of township fund ..«* Jfrom county superintendent .$3613.04 Bxpaklitur*B Salary of teacher* Teachers' pension fund Textbooks and stationery -- Salary of janitor Fuel, light, power water and supplies Repairs and replacement ...... New equipment Balance on hand June 8(^ 1928 - 985.00 6.00 1.BS 10.00 122.94 208.08 60.00 „ 2627.62 Total ---3 4006.19 - DKTRICT Receipts v" Balance July 1, 1927 1412.98 Distribution of trustees ...I.*. 116.66 From district taxes 1005.89 u;": Total 32482.24 */-• , • Expenditures Incidental expenses of trriS- » • tees ,X> " IF or publishing annual state- * * ment .. 7.80 Compensation of treasure*--. 150.00 |)istrit>sted to Districts 2304.19 I :J. Total - IBM8 Expenditures School board and business 153.00 office 2829.21 Compulsory attendance ........ SalfJry of teachers Textbooks and stationery -- Salary of janitor --« Fuel, light, power, water and, 20.251.- supplies Repairs and replacement ...... Libraries Balance on hand June 30, 1928 * Total fUstrtet Fund DISTRICT 12 Receipts .....$2482.24 jjialance July 1, 1927 , 2892. / o istribution of trustees From dist^ct taxes 196.99 3503.85 Total School board and business office ... -- ilary of teachers •MfMm _ Textbooks and stationery . larv of Janitor . JFuel, light, power, water and supplies --425.23 Repairs and replacement 471.01 Libraries --. 45.00 Bent 10 0° c Balance on hand June 80, 1928 3097.83 6.50 6.65 836.00 6.02 15.00 88.08 41.47 8.97 1628.84 MNIEMEE FAR IS FUST DF BIG SHOWS TO OPEN Premiums Increased and New Attractions Bought lor Inter-State Show. Total • 3 2636.63 DISTRICTS 40 AND 41 Receipts ' Balance July 1, 1928 293.39 From district taxes 167.57 Total - -- . . . » . 3 460.96 Expenditures 6593.69 Salary of teachers --..... Teachers' pension fund .......... Textbooks and stationery .... 151.26 j Fuel, light, power, water and 1925.00! supplies 188.26' Repairs and replacement ..-- 280.00 Balance on hand June 80, 1 1928 104.00 6.00 ••'t*>5 M0 7.0C 330.61 Total: 6593.59 3DISTRICT 15 \ Receipts Balance July 1, 1927 Distribution of trustees 1353.25 I^rom district taxes .............. 14311.44 Tuition paid by pupils 184.00 .$ 8154.9-; Total - ^.124003.66 ^ Expenditures School board and business : - office 5 nCompulsory attendance ...-- I - iSalary of superintendent « J? ^Salary of principal Salary of teachers Teachers' pension fund ... Textbooks and stationery ... 'L<y; Salary of janitoT Fuel, light, power, water and PF supplies --•••• Repairs and replacement ...... i|g;' ; Libraries - l!r ,. - Promotion of health jr& New equipment -- i* ' ' Balance on hand June Sly 1928 Total 460.96 DISTRICT 156 Receipts Balance July 1, 1927 ..$ 9066.83 From district taxes .............. 40426.80 Tuition paid by pupils 168.00 Sale or rent of school property 827.60 Reimbursements for vocational education *......u«~..*H...4...... 465.31 Other sourM 365.24 129.07 25.00 31289.97 130.00 9150.55 40.00' 249.81 1320.00 933.74 480.12 ; 121.58 246.46 284.30 9603.06 $24003.66 DISTRICT 17 Receipts Balance July 1, 1927 -- $ 144.27 From district taxes 78.93 Total $50797.78 Expenditures School board and business office -3 161.30 Salary of principal --... 2102.00 Salary of teachers 13019.92 Teachers' pension fund ...*... 35.00 Textbooks and stationery ....* 1298.64 Interest on teachers' orders .. 80.57 Interest on anticipation warrants - 1&.22 Salary of janitor 1881.12 Fuel, light, power, Water and supplies 2066.57 Repairs and replacement,...... 1471.79 Libraries 56.00 Promotion of health 215.00 Rent 66.00 Grounds, buildings and alterations 1043.87 New equipment 412.28 Principal on bonds 10000.00 Interest on bonds 8784.38 Balance on hand June 80, 1928 8145.22 j-, J$' 223.20 • • ' Expenditures Fuel, light, power, water and supplies ..... Balance on hand June 30 . 1928 215.1* .. 7otsl.~~~- DISTRICT 34 : R e c e i p t s Balance July 1, 1927 .... Distribution of trustees From district taxes --. 4 228J20 993.35 359.36 4792.33 Total r--3 6145.04 Expenditures School board and business office . Salary of teachers Teachers' pension fund ........ Textbooks and stationery Salary of janitoT Fuel, light, power, water and supplies Repairs and replacement .... Grounds, buildings and alterations New equipment ........ Balance on fcptd Jjipe 30, 1928 Total $50797.78 S. W. BROWN, Treasurer. Subscribed and sworn to before me this 27th day of July, 1928. L. E. HAWLEY, - _ . . Notaijr jWWic. 1#S»0 2888.00 10.00 151.01 6.50 443.82 929.44 16.00 11^9 1678.38 SEMrt' DISTRICT 85 Receipts Balance July 1, 1927 .... From district taxes ttotal Expenditures Balance on hand June ? 1928 i? ^ DISTRICT 36 Receipts Balance Jul 1, 1927 Distribution of trustees .... ' From district taaces Total ..~f 6145.04 ....$ 290.93 411.95 ....$ 702.88 .... 375.73 ..... 827.15 Bogota Plans Better Homes for Workers Bogota, Colombia.--Adobe hut dwellers on the fringes of Bogota are anticipating better and more samtprj homes equally as cheap ps those they now occupy.' A workmen's ward, centrally located, is the objective of the municipal cheap habitations commission, which is now negotiating a $500,000 loan to finance the project, the first of its kind in Bogota. As a beginning 500 or 600 small model houses to cost not more than $1,000 each would be constructed. The commission believes the establishment of such a ward wonld not only meet the housing requirements of the poor but centralize the wotk of the health authorities in tlieir fight against disease and infant mortality. Grave Diggers Kick Toledo. Ohio.--Grave digging is an important operation apd should entdil Important money for the men who do it. sevpn grave diggers* of Forest cemetery here believe. Their wages recently were cut from 70 cents an hour* to 55; and they are objecting strenu ously. . 702.88 302.51 " 123.49 1125.04 Up-to-Date Shopping New l'ork.--Drop a coin In the slot for what you wish to buy and receive your change and a "thank you" from a mechanical man. A robot is to be used by a merger of automatic merchandising companies. a... Expenditures School board and business office Salary of teachers Teachers' pension fund Textbooks and stationery Salary of janitor * Fuel, light, power, water and ' supplies Repairs and replacement .Jt.. New equipment Balance on hand June 30, * Tstal DISTRICT Receipt*' Balance July 1, 1927 jr - ^'-teeTZT irott taxes •~'er township treasurers .. .$ 1551.04 Bolt Tears Up Girl's Shoes and Stockings Petersburg, Va.--Susie Burrow, twelve years old, daughter of Joseph Burrow of I'rince Georges county, had a narrow escape from death by lightning recently at Burrowsvllle, when a bolt tore her shoes and stockings ig shreds. sWmecl child} who Was visiting her aunt and was in a room with another child lying upon a bed, ran downstairs and discovered blood Issuing from a gash 1ft her foot. Aftar annarently passing through the girl's foot, the lightning flasiieg tinder the bed and continued through th^ house, doing considerable damage to ceilings and tf&llB. OSMM 46.54 130.24 80.28 420.: ...$ 1661.04 ; ; Some people whittle to kl» and others attend disarmament conferences. Gold filling keeps teeth from hurt* lag, especially the teeth of the criminal code. Don't waste too much sympathy oo the man with the hoe. He may %e digging fish worms. The Bay stater who found a coin in a gizzard should be convinced there la money In chickens. Many new features and substantial Increases In premiums and purses are being offered this year by the Kankakee Inter-State Fair which is to be held August 13 to 17, inclusive. As the Inter-State show is the first of th« great Middle Western expositions to open the season, the announcement of many improvements In attractions as well as exceptional inducements to exhibitors throughout the country will be greeted with interest throughout Illinois as well as by thousands of the fair's patrons in adjoining states. The Kankakee Inter-State Fair haft for years been regarded as one of the finest attractions in the country, with an appeal not only. to spectators but to exhibitors of fine stock as well. The liberal premium money paid each year has in the past brought fine horses and cattle to the Kankakee grounds from all parts of the United States. The increase of premiums Offered in many classes this year is expected to attract the best in the country. The fact that the Kankakee show is held the week preceding the Illinois State Fair makes it convenient for exhibitors who desire to enter Iheir live stock in both expositions. An Unequaled Horse Show. For a number of years the Kankakee Inter-State Fair has laid undisputed claim to the best society horse show in the country. Many of the shows held there have been pro- Bounced by Journals devoted to the show horse business as being the peer of the best shows in the United States. The premium money offered for all classes of the horse department has been increased several thousand dollars this year. The sum of $20,000 will be paid out for the winners in the various classes shown this year. In the show horse classes alone a total of $14,500 is offered the competitors. Premiums have also been increased tn the cattle, swine and poultry departments,- insuring one of the biggest exhibitions In the country in these classes. Five Days and Nights Beginning Monday, August 18, the Inter-State Fair will be open to the public for five days and evenings, closing Friday night, August 17. In this continuous performance the management has learned how to crowd more entertainment into five days and nights than is offered by any other attraction of its kind in the country. Tl.e famous free grandstand attractions of the past have made the Kankakee Inter-State Fair known in many distant parts of the country. In fact the spectacular nature of the show has done much to make it the leader of all the larger outdoor spectacles. The program offered this year Is even more elaborate than any that have been shown in the past. Thirty of the most thrilling acts known to the circus and the vaudeville stage have been purchased for the entire week. These acts, combining the spectacular with the beautiful, will make up a program this year that will not be equaled by any other fair in the country. Evening programs will be featured by fireworks of a most spectacular nature and a full-sized schedule of other attractions will be given •ach of the five evenings, in addition to the society horse show which will be In progress in front of the grandstand each afternoon and evening of the week. Eaeh Day Has Features. Each day of the fair has its special feafures. Monday, August 18, will be "Old Settlers' Day," when the pioneers of Kankakee and adjoining counties will be admitted to the fair free of charge. Men and women who have lived in Kankakee or an adjoining county continuously since 1865 will be admitted as "Old Settlers." Veterans of all wars will also be admitted free of charge on the opening day. Tuesday, August 14, will be "Illinois Day." On that day Gov. Len Small will entertain delegations of prominent men and women from all parts •f Illinois. In past years thousands of Illinois men and women from dis tant parts of the state have assem bled at Kankakee. A greater throng than ever is expected again this year Wednesday, August 15, will be "Indiana Day" in honor of the Indiana patrons of the fair who have always attended In large numbers on that day. Wednesday „will also be Kankakee day, when stores and factories Will close during the afternoon to al low employers and employees an op portunity to attend the afternoon and evening performance. Thursday, August 16, has been named "Live-Stock Pay," because of the celebrated "Million-Dollar Live S*oek Parade," which Is held on the afternoon of Thursday each year of the fair. Hundreds of breeders and buyers of fine stock attend the blgl pageant each year. Friday, August 17, the closing day of the exposition, Is known as Home- Coming 3ay. Entries in all departments of the fair are unusually heavy this year am' the Inter-State management predict one of the most successful sea the entire history of the fair. The "Golden Rule" will prove valuable not only in motor traffic. international relationships. Various books are written to disclose information which might have been important if not eo long delayed. A profound mystery: Why do we never hear anything abont the oldest living graduates of the female colleges ? They say canned grapefruit Is quite like the fresh article: When you punch in the top with a can ope©ei4i squirts Into your eye. Our idea of a perfect match would be for the woman who names sleeping cars to wed the man who makes the statuary for radiator caps. The Supreme court has decided a train has the right of way over Its own tracks. But a lot of automobile drivers are still unconvinced. Chili and Peru are ready to settle their ancient dispute over Tacna-Arica. We are glad of this, because the name always xexninded us of patent medicine - According to science »«« will'Inhabit this earth for at least 100,000,- 000 years to come. Probably he'll have time to get the bathroom faucet fixed. Once upon a time there was a fellow who carefully read through all the fine print, etc., in his new insurance policy, and lived thereafter tSr.Jfc ninety. Words are those little things with which the energetic sales manager had to explain his distribution scheme before there were maps and colored tacks. Newspaper men make splendid foreign ambassadors and we are Inclined to believe that Colonel Lindbergh was once a printer, as he Is adept at make-up." £aber nourishes noble Free speech butters so bread. A lost good name is ne'er retrieved. Culture sad common seaas are sisters. . ! Half our tiroubies art the offsprings of fear. ' Idle talk Work In. is always getting Its It's an ill wind that can't find anything to blow about When a man lacks nerve ha If likely to think he'is discreet The man whose bluff is not sometimes called never existed. Don't think that a man Is foolish because he thinks that you are. Many a man fails to make good because be loved his ease too much. A girl thinks that she is a firstclnss cook If She can make fudge A bachelor says that women eaiv. talk twice as fast as they can think. Somehow the homely girl always has fewer enemies than the pretty glrL But few people ever feet so full of emotion ihey have oo room for dinner; v Vy • The man Whd hits no ttefef Mte never gets into an argument with a woman. A business man's idea of tough luck is to be compelled to attend a social function. The Individual who uses his tongue for a weapon Is apt to use his feet for defense When his Satanic majesty bids you adieu,* keep an eye on him till he turns the corner. Some men would rather Sleep an hour later than to wake up sad find themselves famous. Good advice Is well enough In Its way, but a hungry man can't make a satisfactory meal on It MANY MONEY-SAVING VALUES OUR ADYERTISERS OFFER YOU GOOD "KID" STORIES, BUT NO AFFIDAVIT ft' Mot guaranteed, but related te as i»y reliable though fond parents: Ann, who is only two years old or so, gets great pleasure out of walking part way to school each morning with her older brothers, Joe and Bob. One morning this week, Ann was slow getting through breakfast, and was told she'd have to show more speed, or she couldn't take the kids to school. In about a minute, she was ready to go. "Well," said her mother, Myou did get through In a hurry, didn't you?" "Yep," said Ann. "Joe et my breakfast food for me, and Bob drank my milk, and so let's go." The kids on a certain street were bragging about what their'dads did In the World war. "My dad wasn't in the war," volunteered Ted, without pride. "He wasn't Invited."--Kansas City Times. Clpra mf Parrots • Feather-pulling in parrots is a dfe^ treesing haMt btought about by rious causes and the treatment must vary according to the baste troubtaT Irritation of the skin following in#> gestlon is one cause Feather-pulling may be due to lice, in which eveat dust pyrethmm powder through tfcar feathers to the skin of the bird Sk Intervals until all the parasites afs killed, and thoroughly SterlllSS IV cage or other quarters. . . . * & • • Shape of Bridg*r ** Tba bureau of public roads tfgt that often small highway bridges aflt bullt in the shape of the letter S bs> cause the road approaches the stream at an. angle (not a right angle), aadl it Is desirable to cross the stream 'St a right angle with the channel. OUR ADVERTISERS OFFER YOU TVfANY MONEY-SAVING VALUO GOOD PAINT Costs You Notiunq Because It Saves More than You Pay for It G°9? paint more tkian P®y» for itself in the value it .. adds to your property. It is worth its coat many times over in the necessary protection it affords. Cheap paint is expensive because it fails to do these things wJl. Oood paints cost the least because they cover further and last longer. Buy your paint in terms of beauty and protection over a long period of time. Paint wisely and welL and save money. J ^ DKPENDABLE Patets mrm OOOD Paints Come in and receive an attractive and instructive < j? *j*ll bc to ypu In detemininc cotor eooS^^Dttsl^lKl be glad to help you with our advice at aU time*. .^.•Ors & H. C. KAMHOLZ Wwt MHiary ' OF NORTHERN ILLINOIS near YOU are cordially invited to visit and inspect our new 80 acre Model Farm on Diamond Lake Road, 2 miles west of the North Shore Line Station at Mundelein ... It will be operated as a practical lanq, and as a permanent exhibit ol the many ways in which modern electric and gas labor* saving equipment is to the convenience and comfort of farm life . with special interest to city folk who would like a home in the country. the ElectrtfUdFarm Kitchen, ModdDairy House, Motorized Stio Filler, Automatic Water System, Electrically heated Brooder and matty other New Ways of Doing Old Jobs with Electricity. Also, Gas Fired House Heating, Gas Space Htaters mA Gas Water Heaters. of Valuable Alloy ^ BNOA IS an alloy of &ppep tin; sometimes with other »*^ments, as rlnc and phosphorus, '.'aCia<ie<i, ao> cording to an answ^ed question \Q Liberty Magaaln^ " ; ^ ; 2651.711 154.44 659.07 689.97 4005.19 rowhtn Idea of cbro In menttl ba&on was the reaction we felt ly to the statement that $100 bills are being counterfeited.--PhiladelpMa Inr , uuirer. •ANY' '.v -- . .10KTHSR1OJJH0M t A. SchabociL District Manager ff T» Ifcoch the Model Form: Ittckiard, take Scats Highway 5_to . Isfl on Dia • nawMiy, then bear left on Diamond Lake Road direct to Farm; frost Mneota, then straight ahead through Crystal Lake and Uke Zurich to Highway 22 to Halfdar, then left on Diamond Lake Road to ~ . « • • . n * *k a l f t v «a