The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, May 16, 1935, Page FOUR, Image 4
The Frontier B. H. Cronin, Editor and Proprietor Entered at the Postoffice at O'Neill. Nebraska as Second Class Matter. ADVERTISING RATES: Display advertising on pages 4, 6 and 8 are charged for on a basis of 25c an inch (one column wide) per week; on page 1 the charge is 40 cents an inch per week. Want ads, 10c per line, first insertion, subsequent insertions, 5c per line. One Year, in Nebraska _ $2.00 One Year, outside Nebraska $2.50 Every subscription is regarded as an open account. The names of subscribers will be instantly re moved from our mailing list at ex piration of time paid for, if pub lisher shall be notified; otherwise the subscription remains in force at thedesignated subscription price. Every subscriber must un derstand that these con ditions are made a part of the contract between pub lisher and subscriber. WHAT’S DOING IN THE LEGISLATURE " By James R. Lowell Whatever the shortcomings of the last two house legislature, it must be admitted that it did righr by Nebraska’s state :»:sl:cutions. The appropriations bill provides $3,903,880 from tax funds for man agement of the institutions, con siderably above the appropriation two years ago, and $416,578 for improvements. State educational institutions haven’t fared so well, however, what with the university cut down to $3,442,180 and the four teachers’ colleges to $1,195,356 for the bien nium. As a consequence of a visit made by Senator Gallon, chairman of the upper chamber’s finance group, and C. W. Eubank, the new ly appointed board of control member who will go on the payroll July 1, to the Hastings insane hospital, that institution is to have a new building. The $200,000 balance in the capi tol construction fund is to be used to build the new structure. The house had passed a bill to return this money to the counties. Many Nebraskans believe the legislature is making a big mistake by taking this money out of the capitol fund. They say it means that the beauti ful edifice never will be finished so far as the murals are concerned. Fountains must be placed in the four inner courts and considerable work done in the basement before the structure can be termed really completed. The old main building at the Hastings institution which is to be replaced is a veritable fire trap and in a wretched state of repair. It is of wood construction thruout and was built in 1888. It houses about 730 patients, or about twice as many as it was originally in tended to handle. Plans are being made to install a well and irrigation system at the Norfolk hospital for the insane. It is needed to water the hospital gardens. Planting work and purchase of equipment for the newly acquired state institution at Genoa has pro gressed rapidly. A tractor and a gang plow were purchased out of the $35,000 appropriation made by the legislature. Another appropriation in the sum of approximately $100,000 is to be made to put the place in readiness for occupancy. Inci dental, the legislature passed a bill changing the name of the in stitution to “Genoa State Hospital.” A campaign pledge made by Governor Cochran has been fulfilled with the passage of a bill giving depositors in a failed hank the right to select the person who will act as its receiver. It permits a majority of the depositors and creditors in a failed bank to appoint their own receiver, instead of hav ing the bank liquidated by the state banking department. Another banking measure com ing from the legislature enables the organization of banks of a min imum of $10,000 capital in villages of less than 1,000 population. It does not disturb the $25,000 mini mum in larger towns. Still another piece of hanking legislation recently signed by the governor authorizes deposit of ir rigation district funds in banks and permits the bank to pledge their asset for security. The legislature succeeded in hanging up a new record, altho attendant honors are dubious. Tuesday was the 100th legislative day for the house, while the senate was 11 days behind. The previous record was 99 days ftir the house, with the sessions of 1913, 1921 and 1933 holding the claim. The short est session on record was in 1925 when the house folded up its tent £.fter 65 legislative days. The legislature decided against a state police force as embodied in j a bill introduced by Senator Callen, and also put the skids under the sales tax provision for raising old age pension funds in benator O'Brion's bill. Instead of a sales tax, the gov ernor’s plan of financing the pen sion will be followed. It requires reappropriation of the $4,000,000 state relief fund, so that $4,000,000 of state and federal funds will be available for pensions annually. A head tax of $2 instead of 50c as at present is proposed to raise $500,000 annually, thus providing a total of $5,000,000 a year, half to come from the federal govern ment, to give qualified Nebras kans a pension of $30 per month. The plan for establishing prison industries at the men’s reforma tory and state penitentiary as re cently revised by the house of rep resentatives provides $80,000 in stead of the $315,000 asked for by the board of control. All but $10, 000 is to be used in buying equip ment, while the sum mentioned is for a revolving fund. The work program includes meat packing, making shoes and clothing at the penitentiary, and expansion of dairying and printing activities, and instllation of a metal furniture factory at the reformatory where a plant has already been estab lished for making automobile li cense plates and metal signs. None of the prison made goods are to be sold in competition with private industry, making state in stitutions and governmental agen cies the only legal customers for such goods. Newly created laws provide that a three-member state workmen’s compensation court is to be set up as recommended by Governor Coch ran in his inaugural message to the legislature; Fixing pay of police magistra tes in villages up to 1,000 popula tion at $50 per year, and in second class cities and large villages at $150 per year(this law is the work of Von Seggern of West Point; Requiring consolidated, school dis trict busses to pick up children living along a paved state highway instead of making them congre gate at a shelter house; Requiring the county treasurer to furnish the assessor with a com plete list of all car owners to whom licenses are issued (this measure was originally intended to require car owners to pay the taxes on their vehicles before a license would be issued;) Enabling residents of a school district to force an instalment tax method of financing construction of schools instead of the issuance of bonds (this provides a “pay-as-you build” plan for schools). Final disposition of bills to abol ish the state railway commission and the state land commissioner’s office was made last week, with the first named bill being put to death and the latter put on the statute books. While the legislature spared the life of the railway commission, they verbally took off pieces of hide from members of that body, and a bill was passed taking supervision of public utilities and common car rier securities away from the com mission. Lusienski, of Columbus, father of the bill, said: “The present setup of the railway commission is the poorest in personnel the state has ever had. The members are constantly bickering with each other and are always pulling three ways.” He predicted that the next move would be complete abolition of the commission. The blue sky department also came in for some verbal castigation on the part of the solons. Dunn of Lancaster declared: “That bureuu has been nothing more than a joke for years. 1 agree that we have a bunch of poli ticians on the railway commission, but the blue sky department is no better.” Governor Cochran sponsored the bill which he signed recently, trans ferring responsibility for the 1,» 600,000 acres' of state school land from the state land commissioner to the board of educational lands and funds. Leo Swanson remains as secretary, however, as a provis ion permitting the board to name some member other than the land commissioner as its secretary does not go into effect until 1037. The new rural public power dis tricts stand in the offing as the re sult of filing petitions to create them. Former Attorney General Sorenson is attorney for the pro jects. The Roosevelt Rural Public Pow er District at Mitchel is one of the districts, and the other is the Southern Nebraska Rural Publi< Power district. The former is lo cated in Sioux and Scottsbluff coun ties, and the latter includes Adams Phelps, Harlan, Furnas, Kearney Clay, Nuckolls, Thayer, Fillmore Webster, Franklin and Gosper. The enabling act created by the legislature in 1933 made it possi ble to form such districts. Meanwhile, the Platte Valley' Power and Irrigation project has completed plans for distributing power over much of Nebraska and connecting with the lines of the Loup River project at Columbus. A high voltage line will be built from the power house near North Platte to McCook, thence east to Gage county where it will be uti lized in operating a $500,000 rural electrification project for which plans have already been made. From Gage county the line will proceed to Lincoln and Omaha (lines from Columbus will also serve Nebraska’s metropolis). A line carrying 110,000 volts will ex tend eastward from North Platte to Kearney, thence straight east to a point six miles north of Hast ings, thence due north to Grand Island and east along the river to Columbus, thus completing a syn chronated power network. It is likely that lateral lines will be run Sidney to North Platte and from Hebron to Columbus. The Massa?hussetts Bonding & Insurance Co., which refused to write the bond for Nebraska’s state treasurer early this year, thereby causing a furore which re sulted in the state going into the bonding business, can continue to do business in this state, Sta".< In surance Director Moose has ruled. | GAMBLE’S TRADE-IN SALE! Boys, your worn out bike is worth up to $15.00 at Gamble Stores on a new one—Bike Tires, 25c—Old Baseballs and Diamond bails, 20c—Gloves and Mitts, 75c— Fish Line and Flashlights, 25c. CONGRESS—AS SEEN BY A NEBRASKAN Navy Graduates — Thirty-five more days before graduation for the senior class at the naval acad emy and the Nebraska boys who graduate in June to become naval officers are all excited. Some of them are going to be stationed on airplane carrier and cruisers. How ever, right now they are the whole show at the school which is all aflutter with color and graduation excitement. There are all kinds of athletic events, LaCrosse, bout races, ball games, etc. At night there are dances and teas in the afternoon and the proud parents are starting to reserve rooms at Annapolis. When the cadets grad uate there will be 1,600 cadets on parade; 1,600 sweethearts of the cadets (they call the girls “drags” in the navy); 1,600 proud parents and thousands of relatives and visitors. Potatoes—Are we importing too much foreign farm products? There are agruments for and against that question, but former Governor Brewster of Maine be lieves we are. He is interested in potatoes. He believes that the im portation of foreign potatoes in the United States has caused a slump in the price of potatoes raised in Maine, and he went to see the President about it this week, and he quotes the President as saying that he will not allow any reductions in the taritf rate on foreign potatoes shipped into this country. The Derby—There seems to have been a reason why there were so few congressmen and senators pre sent in the House and Senate dur ing the past few days, and that reason was the Kentucky Derby. Many of the senators and congress men attended the races, and some of them apparently guessed right. Those who are back from Louis ville tell stories of great crowds, chilly weather and wild parties. It seems that if anybody was com fortable in Louisville the night be fore the Derby and during the Derby, it was the horses which ran in the race. They say it was im possible to get a decent room, and taxicab drivers charged $15 to take you from town to the racetrack, and then the overcoats were too thin to protect human beings from the terrible cold and dampness. Gallons of rye, bourbon and scotch were consumed, and if the stories were true, it was a hilarious time the night before and the night after the Derby. Jobs—Uncle Sam has 5,000 peti tions for jobs. Crowds of hopeful job seekers are growing by leaps and bounds every day. The Gov ernment has rented a vacant store building to speed up the handling of employment applications. Clerks, laborers, doctors, plumbers, and the once-rich, wait patiently in lines for a blue sheet that might prove , the ticket to some kind of a job. , One office handled 5017 applications , the first week it was open. One I place was so crowded that the doors were closed. If you are not there when your number is called, it is just too bad, and perhaps you have to wait another week. Smoke Screen—The have a club in Washington called the Congress ional Club, and the wives of the congressmen and senators are members. They have a very beaut iful building in the northwest part of town, where they hold card parties and dinner dances frequent ly. The other day they had a “breakfast” at noon, in honor of Mrs. Roosevelt, and the wives of the members of the Cabinet. These prominent ladies sat at the honor table, and one lady who attended said she was surprised to see so many ladies seated at the honor table smoking cigarettes. She thought that there was so much smoke coming from the lips of these ladies who were guests of honor that it resembled, a smoke screen, and she was unable to dis tinguish the faces of prominent women in Washington. Good Grass—Mrs. Roosevelt had her annual tea on the lawn of the White House grounds from four to six o’clock about 5,000 people walked in a long line thru the east gate and thru the grounds to shake hands with her, and then they went to little tents and drank lemon ade and ate tiny sandwiches and cookies. It was a beautiful day and the south lawn was in wonder ful shape. A congressman from Kansas leaned over and whispered, “Gee, wouldn’t some of our cows grow fat on this wonderful grass?” They are going to have a uni cameral legislature in the Phil lippines and will try it out very similarly to the way the unicam eral government will be tried out in Nebraska. In the meantime the Phillippine Commissioners will en deavor to put laws across which will give the Phillippine Islands some benefits of free trade with the United States, and members of the House Committee on Insular Affairs are watching every move the Phillippine Commissioners are making. Among the many interesting sights in Washington, there are three which are outstanding; one is the Constitution of the United States, one is the Declaration of Independence, which can be found 1 1 in the library and the other is the Capitol of the Nation. The Con stitution and Declaration of In dependence have faded out to such an extent that both of these are hard to read. I - It seems that everybody in the United States is here in Washing ton trying to get a slice of the five billion dollar work relief pie. It seems definite now that the states are going to get in propor tion of this money to the number of men and women now on relief, and the money will not be put out on the basis of population. F. H. Chapelle, of the Nebraska ! State Legislative Board., BVother i hood of Locomotive Firemen and j Enginemen, came in today. He I used to work at South Sioux City, ! and knows a lot of the Northwest ern R. R. boys, including Lou Wad dick. Mr. Norris of New York came in to say that he knows all about Ne braska. He says he knows Anton DeGroot of Madison real well and wants to know when watermelons will be ripe in Madison county. KARL STEFAN. ANNOUNCING! A new' Blackstone Electric Wash er at only $34.95 in actual Black stone quality—Delivered to you from all Gamble Stores. Time Pay ment plan, $5.00 down, with small carrying charge. City Council Proceedings O’Neill, Nebraska, May 8, 1935. The New Council Met and Org anized. Present: Mayor Kersenbrock, Councelmen, Norbert Uhl, John Protivinsky, Thos. J. Brennan, Levi Yantzi, H. E. Coyne, W. H. Harty. Minutes of previous meetings read and approved. City Treasurer’s Statement for the Year of April 24, 1934, to May 1, 1935, read and. approved. Upon motion the following bills were allowed: On General Fund: I). I). Hunt _ $100.00 Bob Williams _ 3.75 Uhl Transfer . 2.50 Mrs. R. L. Arbuthnot .. 14.00 Bert Gunn _ 3.00 On Water Fund: H. E. Coyne ..$54.27 Arbuthnot & Reka .... 1.72 I_* FRANCIS DEMPSEY Standard Servisman O'Neill It Makes a Real » Difference in Qasoline You'll be surprised—agreeably surprised—at the difference you notice when you run your car for the first time on a gasoline that contains Tetraethyl. And it's easy to tell whether the gasoline you buy does contain this valuable anti knock fluid. Simply look for that little metal sign (re quired by law) on every Standard Red Crown pump. Tetraethyl is the finest known anti-knock fluid—the very same valuable fluid which (in larger quantity) goes into premiunvpriccd gasoline. You get it now in every drop of that famous Live Power gasoline—Standard Red Crown. HERE’S WHERE YOU GET IT: Standard Oil Service Station Fifth and Douglas _ _ l*™*i?**iri . ^1 ii i VI i i^B I Mattie Soukup __ 18.47 Continental Oil Co. _ 29.13 Ed Hagensick_4.30 The Mayor made the following appointments for the ensuing year: Appointments: City Attorney—Emmet A. Har mon. Police and Pound Master—Chest er Calkins. Engineer at Pump Station—Jesse Scofield. Medical Adviser and City Physi cian—Dr. L. A. Carter. Street Commissioner — H. E. Coyne. The Mayor named the following committees for the ensuing year: Streets and Alleys—Coyne, Prot ivinsky and Harty. Lights—Uhl,Brennan and Harty. Water—Brennan, Protivinskyand Uhl. Sewer—Protivinsky, Coyne and Harty. Walks and Crossings — Harty, Coyne and Yantzi. Parks—Yantzi, Coyne and Prot ivinsky. Auditors—Harty, Uhl and Coyne. Custodian of city property—Levi Yantzi. Finance Committtee — Brennan, Coyne and Harty. Moved, seconded and, carried that the appointments and committees as made by the Mayor be confirmed. Moved, seconded and carried that H. E. Coyne, be made chairman of the City Council. Motion by Councilman Brennan, seconded by Councilman Protivin sky, that the Chief of Police be allowed $5.00 per month for gas and oil. Motion carried. Upon motion the application and bond of P. B. Harty for an on and off sale beverage license was ap proved. Lowell Johnson met with the City Council and presented the fol lowing petition. PETITION We, the undersigned property holders in Block “H” and “I”, in Fahy’s Park Adidtion to O’Neill, agree to hook up with the sewer if the City sees fit to extend it be tween the blocks above mentioned. It is understood that the fee to be paid to the City is $1.00 each. Signed: Lowell Johnson, August Schroder, Otto Clauson, J. C. Bazelman, Esther Harris, D. H. Clauson, J. B. Ryan. The Mayor appointed Council men WT. H. Harty, Levi Yantzi, (Continued on page 8, column 2.) PILES World Famous Clinic’s Private Proscription Now Available to All Sufferers. Thousands are on the road to premature old age because of Pile pain and inflam mation which sap their vitality. The Pri vate Formula Prescription of the Thornton & Minor Clinic, world's oldest and largest rectal institution, is the finest treatment we know of. Sold on a money-back guarantee. A & B Drug Stores, Ine. O’NEILL & BLOOMFIELD TREASURERS STATEMENT CITY OF O’NEILL, NEBRASKA From April 24, 1934, to April 30, 1935 GENERAL FUND RECEIPTS: County Treasurer ..... . ..$ 8,500.00 Licenses, Shows, Peddlers, etc. ______ 671.00 Total ... . . ....$ 9,171.00 WARRANTS ISSUED: General _$1,418.62 Fire Department _ 472.83 Police _ 1,108.20 Street and Sewer_ 1,657.22 Street Lighting . 3,749.07 Parks and Grounds_ 64.40 Printing _ 405.84 Band . 45.00 Total . $8,921.18 BALANCE SHEET: % Balance on hand April 24, 1934_ $ 503,38 Total receipts for the year----- 9,171.00 Warrants on hand April 30, 1935 ___ 831.63 Total .... .. $10,506.01 Warrants issued from May 1, 1934 to May 1, 1935 $8,921.18 Warrants on hand May 1, 1934___ 936.21 9,857.39 Balance on hand May 1, 1935.....$ 648.62 WATER FUND RECEIPTS: Water collections from April 24, 1934 to May 1, 1935 _ $ 6,083.60 Warrants issued from May 1, 1934 to May 1, 1935. 4,904.19 BALANCE SHEET: Balance on hand April 24, 1934_____ 455.36 Total receipts for the year..— - 6,083.60 Warrants on hand May 1, 1935 .. .... 136.38 • ——————— Total. ....$ 6,675.34 Warrants issued from May 1, 1934 to May 1, 1935 $4,904.19 Warrants on hand April 24, 1934. ..— 298.03 5,202.22 Balance on hand May 1, 1935 _$ 1,473.12 SPECIAL WATER FUND Balance on hand April 24, 1934_____ $ 2,500.00 Transfered from Water Fund April 2, 1935... 500.00 Balance on hand May 1, 1935 .... $ 3,000.00 ROAD FUND Balance on hand April 24, 1934 .._. $ 5.69 County Treasurer—Labor Fund . ... 760.00 Balance on hand May 1, 1935 ---$ 765.69 INTERSECTION PAVING DISTRICT NO. 1 WARRANTS ISSUED: Registered warrants issued .....$ 4,750.00 Interest accrued -- -- 41.53 Total.—. —.-. $ 4,791.53 Sold Bonds .. $4,750.00 Interest received - 14.25 Additional interest paid - 27.28 4,791.53 Balance on hand May 1, 1935 ..... $ NONE CURB AND GUTTER DISTRICT NO. 2 Warrants Registered --$ 2,790.64 Deposits . $1,924.78 Warrants paid, No’s. 1 to 7 inclusive $1,750.00 Interest paid 40.37 1,790.37 Balance on hand May 1, 1935 ..—-- $ 134.41 Unpaid Registered Warrants No’s. 8-9-10-11-- $ 1,040.64 CURB AND GUTTER DISTRICT NO. 3 Warrants registered ...—..j—-$ 2,992.07 Deposits $2,286.79 Warrants paid No’s. 1 to 9 inclusive $2,250.00 Interest paid __— 7.73 2,257.73 _ __ Balance on hand May 1, 1935 —-- $ 29.06 Unpaid registered warrant No’s. 10-11-12 .. $ 742.07 CURB AND GUTTER DISTRICT NO. 4 Warrants Registered. $ 2,389.19 Deposit- $1,210.61 Warrants paid No’s. 1 to 4 inclusive $1,000.00 Interest paid_„— -- 4.68 1,004.68 Balance on hand May 1, 1935 $ 205.93 Unpaid registered warrants No’s. 5-6-7-8-9-10 . $ 1,389.19