The Frontier D. H. Cronin. Editor and Proprietor Entered at the Postoflice at O’Neill Nebraska as Second Class Matter " ADVERTISING RATES: Display advertising on pages 2, 3 4, 5, li, 7, and 8, are charged for on a basis of 25 cents an inch (one column wide) per week; on page 1 the charge is 40 cents an inch per week. Local advertisements, 10 cents per line first insertion, subsequent insertions 6 cents per line. SUBSCRIPTION RATES One Year, in Nebraska-$2.00 One Year, outside Nebraska $2.50 Every subscription is regarded as an open account. The names of subscrib ers will be instantly removed from our mailing list at expiration of time paid for. if publisher shall be notified ; other wise the subscription remains in force at the designated subscription price. Every subscriber must understand that these conditions are made a part of the contract between publisher and sub scriber. Keonomic Highlights On August 28th the state of Calif ornia produced some of the most start ling political news of the decade. The voters nominated Upton Sinclair, life long Socialist, for Governor on the Democratic ticket. In addition, they nominated him by a tremendous maj ority over his nearest rival, who ran as a straight New Deal advocate, and. his vote was well in excess of that of the Republican candidate, acting Gov ernor Merriam. If Mr. Sinclair wins in November, it will be the first time an avowed Socialist ever reached a high governmental position in this country, with the single exception of the late Victor Berger. As was to be expected, this unpre cedented happening has aroused na tion-wide comment. Those who be lieve in Mr. Sinclair’s principles state jubilantly that his success means the definite beginning of a swing to the left—that it is only a matter of time before believers in socialism will sit in all the seats of the mighty. Those who oppose him tend to the opinion that the voters of California have gone temporarily insane. Neither of these views, to an unprejudiced observer, is convincing. Mr. Sinclair, whether you like his economic dicta or not, is a man of un questioned probity, and absolute, al most fanatical sincerity—and those are two main reasons for his nomina tion. Citizens of California have grown wiuiry of machine politics—the state has been plunged steaddy into debt, and many taxpayers think, right ly or wrongly, that they have little to show for much of the money spent. As a result, thousands of people who do not favor Socialism cast their votes for Sinclair because he is against all existing political machines and appar ently has no political connections or obligations. The Sinclair program is ubout as ‘promising” as anyone could imagine. High lights are: Heavy taxes on large inheritances and incomes over $6,000, pensions for the sick, unemployed and aged. Sinclair campaign motto goes by the initials EPIC, meaning "End Poverty in California.” It is a note worthy fact that Mr. Sinclair financed his campaign by charging admission to his speeches—and he packed the voters in while other candidates, who charged nothing, addressed half-empty halls. This is largely due to the fact that he is a brilliant and experienced speaker and a convincing writer. Some literary critics of distinction, here and abroad, regard him as the foremost living American novelist. President Roosevelt at once made an appointment with Mr. Sinclair—ob servers believe he will attempt to tone down some of Mr. Sinclair’s “wildness.” If he is elected—ami his chunce of tttiat depends upon how many Democratic voters who support ed other and more conservative can didates he is able to hold—it is likely to prove somewhat embarrassing to the Democratic party by putting a genuine Socialist high in its councils. Thus, eyes in all parts of the nation will be trained on California next November. And between now and then, the state will witness one of the bitterest campaign battles in its history. No two men could stand farther apart than Mr. Sinclair and Mr. Merriam, who recently popularized himself greatly by his decisive action in the San Francisco strike situation—such a wide difference is what makes tirst class political wars. A great deal can happen in a year —and high government officials, tex tile employers and textile workers are realizing the bitter truth of that now. A little over a year ago, on July 17, the first NR A code went into effect. This was the textile code, held to he a model of its kind. It outlawed child labor, cut working hour* and raised wages, improved working conditions. Spokesmen for the NRA ami the in dustry made speeches and statements, said that the rode marked a great step forward in social and economic evolution. Today, the textile mills are silent j save for a few in the south, and there I are no hands to guide the looms. Al . most 500,000 workers have left their jobs, and the greatest strike in Amer ■ ican history has begun. Neither side • shows signs of giving quarter, both are digging in for a long, unhappy battle. Last hope for early settlement • collapsed when final desperate efforts | of the government’s labor board, failed. ! The workers demand still shorter 1 hours, without wage reduction, plus a closed shop and further complica tions lie in the threat of sympathetic strikes within other major industries —and that is the stuff of which a national general strike might be made. Heads of the textile union announce that financial contributions are flowing in from all branches of labor, that they will have a war-chest adequate to pursue the strike to what they hope will be a successful outcome. How ever, the nation’s purchasing power will be reduced by about $7,000,000 a week as long as the strike is in effect. —and everyone will feel the ill effects. The whole future of the NRA and, more important still, of employer employe relations is in the balance. The gravity of the crisis cannot be over-emphasized—it is literally packed with dynamite. NATIONAL AFFAIRS By Frank P. Litschert September is the month in which we celebrate the coming into being of the Constitution of the United States. If there is any considerable question about how, in fewer than 150 years we have become the richest and po tentially the most powerful nation in the world, the answer can be found in this great American document. Never in the history of the world has there been anything like the de velopment of the United States of America. Our national achievement is the wonder and envy of the entire civilized world. And a great deal of it has been due to the form of government under which we have lived. The early fath ers were a fearless and a hardy race, the bravest and most enterprising of Europe’s citizens who came here be cause they loved liberty more than contentment, opportunity more than safety. But in spite of this, it is doubtful whether we could have achieved our present greatness as a nation, had it not been for the framers of the Constitiution, and the govern ment which they fashioned for us. The proof is easy to find. Before the creation of our Constitution the American nation was a loosely con nected aggregation of colonies, hem med in by the ocean on one side and red savages on the other. There was no common feeling, no common pur pose., There was every danger that these colonies might fall apart and. set up a series of petty governments, so serious was the situation that many thought a monarch, recruited from Europe’s royalty, was the only means of safety and stability. But the Constitiution changed all of this, and soon the United States of America was a going concern. It has been a going concern ever since. It has succeeded because our Constitu tional government has given us the greatest possible amount of personal liberty, together with a profound and effective nationalism. Its system of checks and balances has worked suc cessfully, and has done so because the Constitution is a practical document, framed not by theorists and profes sional reformers but by honest, sane, hardheaded Americans, who number ed among their ranks some of the finest minds in the civilized world of their day. They built not upon theory but upon experience. In these modern days international ism and depression there has grown up in our country a tendency to sneer at the solid accomplishments of the past, to make light of personal liberty and of patriotism, to seek to substitute for the solid American precepts of the Constitution, a doctrine made in Europe, or perhaps in the Orient. These ultra-modern preachers of the new faith tell us that the days of rug ged individualism are gone, that the old customs and the old religion have outlived their usefulness. Instead of seeking to make our own way accord ing to our ability, our industry, and our integrity, we are told that, under I the new dispensation, Uncle Sam will do it all. Individual effort will not be the measure of our success; it will come to us thru regimentation and government regulation and control, perhaps in the long run thru federal ownership of property and control of the rights of the citizen. This doc trine, we are told is better than that which was taught by the Constitution al fathers. Many are fnclined to accept it because it provides a way out, an alibi for our own shortcomings, no matter what these may have been. But the so-called new idea, which is not a new idea at all, will not work. It has been tried in the past and has failed, just as it will fail again. Con stitutional government, the American plan, has proved a success. If we cherish it and follow it, we will again pull from the slough of despond as we have so many times in the past. If we listen to strange voices ami follow off after strange gods we will pay in ruin and despair, and our child ren, and our children’s children too, will pay in full measure for our folly. Let us then in this month of Sep tember, rededicate our efforts to the maintenance of American Constitu tional government. Let us renew our faith in sound Americanism and send back to Europe an Asia the false doc trines which can do nothing but spread ruin and despair in the free atmosphere of America. Nebraska’s Political Sower By James R. Lowell “It is reported that one of the fas tidious newly married ladies of this town kneads bread with her gloves on. This incident may be somewhat pe culiar, but there are others. The ed itor of this paper needs bread with his shoes on, he needs bread with his pants on, and unless some of the de linquent subscribers to this “Old Rag of Freedom” pony up before long he will need bread without a damn thing on, and Nebraska is no Garden of Eden in the winter time.—J. R. L. Recent events have called attention to the state banking system of Ne braska—namely the increased deposits in state banks, reduced number of state banks in operation, increased dividends being paid to depositors of same, and the platform of the repub ublican state party adopted by last week’s convention at Grand Island wherein a demand was made for a complete reorganization of the state banking department. This newspaper is presenting a brief description of the department as prepared by the Lowell Service at Lincoln. Due to the instability of the early MONEY depoNiled here to day the burglar cannot get to-night. THE O’NEILL NATIONAL BANK Capital, Surplus and Undivided Profits, $125,000.00 This bank carries no Indebted ness of officers or stockholders. banking institutions of the state, a general banking act was approved in 1889. Later, in 1895 a state banking board was created, and in 1909 the banking law was revised to provide that the auditor, attorney general and the governor, as ex-officio chairman, should constitute the board The civil administrative code imposed the duties of the banking board on the bureau of banking. The legislature of 1929 pro vided for the appointment of a bank commissioner. The most conspicuous new feature was the guaranty fund required to be maintained by state banks. The failure of many banks in 1921 led to the creation by the 1923 legis lature of the guaranty fund commis sion to deal with the problem of in solvent banks. It operated until 1929, when Khe legislature abolished the commission and transferred its duties to the secretary of the department of trade and commerce. A special legislative session in 1930 repealed the guaranty of deposits law. Later that year a constitutional amendment was approved fixing liability of stockhold ers in banks. The first bright note in the state banking situation in recent years came with the court decision that RFC funds to the extent of 75 per cent of the approved value of assets might be borrowed on a failed bank. This allowed the depositors to take out a good proportion of his money, and at the same time allowed the debtor three years in whcih to pay his indebtedness. This is one of the most helpful things that has ever happened to Nebraska state banks, according to E. H. Luik art, state superintendent of banks. So far this year seven new state banks have been chartered, Scotia, Staplehurst, Burwell, Clarkson, Peru, Malmo and Decatur. No such banks were chartered in 1933, one in 1932, five in 1931 and one in 1930. There has been a sizable decrease in the number of state banks, this year, but bank failures have fallen almost to zero. At present there are 300 unrestricted state banks in Ne braska, while about 20 state banks are now in the process of liquidating or re-establishing themselves. Up to Sept. 1, $3,155,906 had been paid on dividends to depositors in failed state banks. R. F. C. funds were respons ible in part for this, but contributing were the federal land bank commis sion Ions, corn-hog money, wheat money, and, most helpful of all, corn loan money. The year 1931 saw the greatest mortality rate for state banks. The number of bank failures decreased somewhat in 1932, and was still smal ler last year. This year the number has been comparatively small, while at present the storm has blown over and bank failure is a rarity. The bank guaranty law has lost its teeth, due to court decisions which destroyed the purpose of the law. As ordered by the courts, the benefits of the law have all gone to a compara tively few institutions, while the great majority of failed state banks have derived no benefit from the law. Already this month dividend pay ments totaling nearly $28,000 have been made by the state banking de partment to depositors in failed banks at Anselmo, Auburn and Elmcreek, in addition to a good proportion of their deposits which they had already re ceived. State banks, altho their number has decreased from 415 to slightly more than 300 during the July 1, 1933 to July 1, 1934 12 month period, have nonetheless shown an increase of over $3,000,000 in aggregate deposits dur ing that time and their reserve posi tion is the strongest in history. On July 1, 1933, deposits in state banks stood at an aggregate total of $61,622,000 as compared with $64,803, 000 on July 1, 1934. Their cash re serve on July 1, 1933 was 63 per cent of the total of $39,485,000 in loans and discounts totaling $26,299,000. The sizeable decrease in number of state banks during the past year is attributed to three factors: Receiver ship of banks which were allowed to open temporarily on a restricted basis; voluntary liquidations; and consolid ations. Nevertheless, Mr. Luikart says tthat the state has all the banks it needs with the exception of a very few localities. The situation in state banking cir cles is vastly more hopeful now than for a number of years, according to Luikart. Deposits are increasing over a year ago every month. For example, Omaha bank clearings last Thursday were up nearly two million dollars over the same day a year ago, or $5,384,574 compared to $3,701,829 a year before. The democratic and republican state conventions at Omaha and Grand Island, respectively, have left no doubt as to where the two parties stand as regards President Roose (Continued onpage 5, column 3.) We Sell PABCO GUARANTY 5-YEAR RUGS The ideal product is one which sells itself. The Guaranty 5 Rug practically does this. Does it wear? The label of each rug reads: “This rug guaranteed to give five year's wear, deliberate destruc tion or abuse excepted.’’ Is it attractive? A matter of individual preference. Yet, we say that the Pabco Guaranty 5 Rug line is the most beautiful, the most modern, the smartest styled in America. Is it costly? You can buy these rugs here from $3.98 up to $8.00; size 6x9 up to 9x12. BOWEN’S VARIETY THE STORE OF TEN THOUSAND ARTICLES It is still the FARMER’S CAR Think back a few years and a you'll remember when the i roads were pretty bad. Dirt 1 mostly. Narrow. And the i hills steep and sharp. Took a real car to make the trip to town. And the farmer didn't have a Ford V-8 to drive, either. Those were the days of the old Model T. The old T was just the car for those roads. Today you require a car that is at home both on the dirt and on the pavement. And that calls for a different car. One with the power to dig its way out of a lough stretch, and, at the same lime, with speed for the concrete or improved road. And the Ford ,V-8 is just such a car. I ndcr the hood of the Ford is a real engine. The V-8 and the only one in a car under $2500. An engine that Henry Fori himself says delivers more power per gallon than any Ford ever huiit. Power for the hills an«(« A FORD DIALER ADVERTISEMENT THE MOST KTOSOMICAL FORD CAR EVER HCILT