Other Expense of General Control ......... Salaries of SUPETVISOTS ....... mmm Salaries of Principal's Clerks and Assistants ........ 420.00 Supplies of Principal's OIC... . 66.80 Other Expense of Supervision 62.40 Salaries of teachers .. 33,252.41 Textbooks 1,809.88 Supplies used in instruction 2,700.17 Attending Teachers’ Institute Commencement Exercises, Etc. net 315.71 Other Expense of Instruction wrist 44.58 Total Expenses of Instruction $ 41,903.92 EXPENSES OF AUXILIARY AGENCIES AND COORDINATE ACTIVITIES. Social Centers and Recreation .... $ 546.24 Enforcement of compulsory attendance 100.00 Other Expense Coordinate activities .... 10.50 Total Auxiliary Agencies and Coordinate Activities cco. $ 656.74 EXPENSES OF OPERATION OF SCHOOL PLA Wages of Janitors and Other Employes ... Fuel Light and Power ... 669.46 Janitors’ Supplies .... Care of Grounds i Services, Other Than Personal Telephone Rental 15.00 Total Expense of Operation EXPENSES OF MAINTENANCE OF SCHOOL PLANT Repair of Buildings ... Repairs and Replacement: Of Heating, Plumbing and Lighting .. Of Apparatus Used in Instruction © 641.97 Of Other Equipment 12.00 otal Va eIIaNCe | i a a is losin ini $ 976.98 EXPENSES OF FIXED CHARGES. State Retirement Board . $$ 1,005.24 Insurance: BPE: ohn ris 756.22 Compensation 125.43 Total ser .$ 1,886.89 TOTAL CURRENT EXPENSES . . $ 51,640.98 | RECEIPTS | Balance on hand July 4th, 1938, General fund ... mands 7164.08 Property tax 1938, $13.410.06; Per capita tax 1938, $4,650. 9 18,060.98 Delinquent tax (Previous to 1938) ... ma) 31 | State Appropriation: Teachers, Transportation, Tuition, ‘Vocational... 23,208.20 8,555. Tuition, non-resident pupils Special State Aid . Temporary Loans Sale of real estate, supplies and ‘equipment 19.10 | All other sources .... 263.49 [I Total Receipts... AR RI I 573,145.78 | DEBT SERVICE Redemption of Bonds direct from General Fund .. Redemption of Short Term Loans ... Payment of interest on Bonds ...... ; Payment of Interest on Short Term Loans at on Refund Taxes, Tuition, Ble. oo atten tons sieieshis eon occtoantsi aan .. 13,100.00 | Total Debt Service ............ EL CAPITAL OUTLAY Improvement of New Grounds ooo Heating, Lighting, Plumbing and Electrical Equipment Furniture ni Instructional Apparatus 4.98 | Total Capital Outlay ....._. . $ SUMMARY 699.26 | | TOTAL RECEIPTS ...... TOTAL PAYMENTS: Total Current Expenses Total Debt Service .. Total Capital Quilsy Total $73,145.78 | Balance on Hand (To be Available for School Year 1939-40) _.. SINKING FUND REPORT | t RECEIPTS Balance on hand July 4, 1938 $ Received from Returned Taxes 5,450.4 Total Receipts o........... 5,921.44 DISBURSEMENTS Paid Out to Redeem Bonds ._ 5,150.00 Paid Out in Interest on Bonds 440.00 Total payments Balance in fund, July 3, 1939 $ ASSETS School Buildings and Sites Textbooks and Equipment Unpaid Taxes: $180,000.00 | © 20,506.00 J. EDW. STEVENS FUNERAL DIRECTOR wi | in PHONE SERVICE, Day 3651, Night 2651 of { ally. | are showing the way. | long stood for close cooperation bet- | | ween the two. Now it has worked out | | in New York state, and it will work | 72,631.27 | out elsewhere. .$ 51451 | dustry, de : _—_—————— Dr. Francis B. Haas, Bloomsberg, su- Total General Control rae ievereseon Sebeareebessssmemstrgs sees PR wens $ 1.40115 1,401. = | INI EXPENSES OF INSTRUCTION F AR M ERS JO NG .$ 2999.97 FORCES WITH CIO NEW YORK STATE building of the junior type 2 232.00 | Milk Trust Squeezes All Profits | and Dairymen Find the CIO Sympathetic. Farmers are supposed to be a pretty patient lot of men. They don’t lead | | too easy a life. They work hard, long hours and they get too often a pretty | tary enrollment reflects a drop of 2,- small cash return for their labor. | Their compensations are supposed | 9500 more will be in higgher grades to be elsewhere — air life they lead, with nature, in the fine ope and the clothing or a few of the comforts that | 211.68 make life more tolerable for an Amer- | 10.00 | ican working family. Certainly theyre not supposed to go | 94.45 | cut on strike when Wall Street can't see its way to giving them a mini- | .$ 4,815.30 | mum of the things every American | . S—————— family ought to have. | they're not supposed to get together Hn 148.25 | with organized industrial labor in the | struggle to secure those benefits. This is the picture the bankers and 174.76 | the mortgage holders try to peddle to' the farmers and to the public gener- It is a pretty picture — for the bankers. It is anything but a pretty picture for the millions of families who get their living by wresting from the land. And now it’s a picture that has been drastically upset by dairy farmers and CIO workers of the New York stat Tired of being squeezed by the milk trust — which is one of America’s big- gest monopolies — the farmers struck for a price for their milk that would enable them and their families to live like human beings. This was bad enough, but the dairy | farmers have committed an even great- er sin. They were offered — and they 62 | | accepted gratefully — the full cooper- | ation of the CIO in New York state | in winning their just and reasonable demands. So the working farmers and the or- industrial workers of New ~ | York state got together, and made ef- fective the right of a large section of our population to earn a living by ..$ 4,000.00 | their toil. Naturally the milk trust and the 2,677.30 | newspapers that speak for it are wor- 508.48 | rned and outraged. This is somethin 5.25 | new, | farmers and industrial workers can get $20,291.03 li together on a fair price for milk, what is there to prevent them from getting | together to ensure decent living star- $ 370.83 | | dards for everybody, 117.65 | work on the land or in the factories? The answer is“that nothing can pre- 205.80 | vent them—if they stay together again- | st their common enemies, ng milk trust and the chiseling em- | ployer. [ganized something ominous. If workin whether they The CIO and the working former It will work out in the packing in for example, if the attitude o he meat packers—another big mono | poly in their field — remains as stub | born against genuine collective bar- | 471. id | gaining as it has been prev previolly. LARGE CROWD H EARS COUNTY CANDIDATES AT EBENSBURG MEET | A throng of some 500 persons at- | 5,590.00 | tended a rally held in the court house | at Ebensburg last week by the North- 331.44 | ern Cambria and Central Cambria Re- publican clubs. Candidates for county ffices were guests at the meetings. Jerry J. Sheehan, president of the Northern Cambria Republican Club, and Edward George of Lillyl, president of the Central Cambria SUMMER VACATION IS AT AN END FOR STATE SCHOOL CHILDREN Pennsylvania's 1,838,000 school child- ren have returned to their classes this eek. While a number of pupils in rural areas and in some towns, includ- KNOWN BY SERVI( T Fw Patton, started the job of master- g the three “R’s” last week, majori- | ty of the 11 ,500 buildings were opened | for the first since spring on Tuesday | this week. The new school year is starting un- r a new educational system head— in their contact | like. They're | = not supposed to worry about cash in- i i come to buy sordid things like decent | of the compulsory attendance age to Above all, the chissel- The CIO has Republican PAGE SIX. THE UNION PRESS-COURIER, Thursday, September 7, 1939. AUDITORS’ REPORT 1938 Tax (Current Year) .. 6,152.76 : | " i ' 1 bis | 1937 Tax 514. ABOOOCHIOOAOOONOOONONOOGE BHOOOOOBANNNNNHANABAOOOOD Of the Patton Borough (Cambria County) School District, for the | 1936 Tax 35am : o School Year Ending July 3, 1939, Previous to 1935 Duplicate 5.396.36 | 3 Tuition Receivable 6,344.40 | 3 Assessed valuation of Taxable Real Estate .. ~ $1,162,070.00 | Sinking Fund Balance .. 331.44 3 a Number of Mills Levied on 18 | General Fund Balance 514.51 | 2 s Number assessed with Per Capita Tax .... erases Mere eRRE— 1576 | el biikg] 3 Rate of Per Capita Tax ee ssissestenn ‘ . $5.00 | Total Assets $220,104.94 | 3 4 AMOUNT OF SCHOOL TAX Per Capita Property Total LIABILITIES. 3 4 Amount levied (Face of 1938 guplicuie) .. $7,880.00 $20,917.26 $28,797.26 | Bonded Indebtedness (With Vote of Electorate) $52,000.00 | 2 Additions to duplicate . a 20.00 BY Bonded Indebtedness (Without Vote of Electorate) . 8,000.00 Penalties added after Oct. 1, 1938 . 168.12 415.30 583.42 | Temporary Loans 19,000.00 | Total amount of tax to be collected .... v 8,068.12 21,332.56 29,400.68 | Supplies — Payable ... ; 257.15 Exonerations (1938 tax) rE 34a All Other Accounts Payable 111.09 19388 Tax Returned “ he ,922.5 7,922.50 | TL Net amount of 1938 tax collected resi 4,650.92 13,410.06 18,060.98 | Total Liabilities $79,368.24 CURRENT EXPENSES [Amomt of Tax Collector's Bond .. . $28,000.00 | THE PLACE TO TURN FOR EXPENSES OF GENERAL CONTROL. | Amount of Treasurer's Bond .. $10,000.00 Secretary’s Office, Salaries .....o mmm ..$ 120,00 Amount of Secretary’s Bond ~ $300.00 Secretary's Office, Supplies ... resamstirismian oes 1510 | we hereby certify that we have examined the above accounts and find BUSINESS ADVICE Secretary's Office, Other Expense ... A 430 | them correct, and that the securities of the officers of the board are in accord- Tax Collector .. toned ERR 3.000, > ance with law. BUAIIOPSE iii iin soins FRA! . Legal Service 50.00 | ey > Toone, Census Enumeration 3 25.00 | R. G. SHANNON, Auditors. While we realize that you know your Other Expense, Business Administration — rrr eres 52 August 8, 1939. 110 business better than any one else, you may at perintendent of public instruction from | some time feel the need for some cutside ad- 1925 to 1937. He will have charge of a | higher state enrollment than last year, when 1,837,273 boys and girls were in school. With a score of new high school ILIICIANN, ARICA NI III IIR ITI ICK DOOCOCIOIOOOICICIINICIIICIHIIICHIA, vice on a particular business problem. We urge you to make use of our experience and fa- cilities at all times. This bank is always ready ting for loss of a number of one tea- cher schools through mergers,, approx- imately the same number of buildings —11,600—will be used. Elementary schools will have 1,242,- | | to make loans to sound businesses. | | 981 pupils, or 64 per cent of the ol | | | Ue Are A Member of the FDIC. enrollment. High schools will enroll 657.787 students and 37,000 children will be in kindergartens. The elemen- 000 students from the 1938 figure and | ARMM MHI H KY KRAMHIHKK. BD | and approximately 2,000 more in kind- ergartens. Inability to obtain jobs and raising | First National Bank at Patton KHIOOOOOOOOOVOOO00VVO0VOO00 BOOOOOOOOH | 17 years are chief factors for the high chool student increase, department at- taches explain. Far more attractive | courses, particularly in the vocational field, are also helping keep students in class rooms. BY I Js il 1 e. 5 og S fl GEO. C. HOPPEL DEMOCRAT .. FOR County COMMISSIONER SOLICITS YOUR SUPPORT FOR THE OFFICE, AND IF NOM- INATED AND ELECTED WILL SERVE THE OFFICE WITH FIDELITY AND WITH THE SAME INTEREST HE HAS GIVEN HIS PRIVATE ENTERPRISES FOR THE PAST THIRTY YEARS. Four years ago Mr. Hoppel was the runner-up in the Demo- ocratic Primaries for this same office. He supported the ticket as nominated, and has always been an active worker in the party in- terests. This year he is the only candidate of the party from the North of Cambria County seeking nomination, and feels, with his friends, that the North of the County is Entitled to Representation in the Commissioners’ Office. Fair to all, Mr. Hoppel bases his can- didacy on his experience gained as a lumber dealer and building contractor for well over a quarter of a century. | LR —— Hii AE
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers