er Se Ne WT - BY BEN JAMES (Editor's Note: This article by Mr. James is used through’ special arrange- ment with The Country Home, in which mazazine the story appeared recently The Post secured permission to use Mr. James’ article because of the current interest in taxes and because of the interest in municipal ownership. a. Be... Suppose a turbaned story-teller, wrapped in rags ,strayed from the dusty road to Bagdad to squat on your lawn this evening and gave you, in return for a cup of tea and a puff at your pipe, rare tales of fantastic places . And suppose he said: “Once upon a time there was a bustling thriving town with ten thousand men and women and boys and girls working and play- ing within its limits. It looked like the best towns of that size look. There were miles of pavement beneath tree-canopied streets ,clusters of white lights along its buiness thoroughfare, rows of well-kept shops and factories blowing smoke from tall chimneys into the clear, blue sky. { “But there was something very strange about this little city. No other city of its size or larger in the whole country was like it. For this town had no municipal taxes. It was a tax.free town.” You'd certainly give him his cup of tea and puff of smoke and perhaps a few coins. And you'd say to yourself, “Such a Utopian tale is worth the pay.” But you would not be paying him for a fairy tale. There is such a town. It exists today lke a magic island of sanctuary on a mad sea of taxation. You can find it in south-eastern Kansas. Its name is Chanute. In this day when tax assessors hover like black ghosts over farm, bank account and salary, Chanute has thrown a gauntlét in the face of Benjamine Franklin's shrewd maxim, “In this world nothing is certain but death~"and taxes. eo : In Chanute the revenue derived from city-owned utilities, jwdter, gas, and electricity, pays all the costs of operating the municipality.ef the town. This does not include the county and state taxes ‘with whi he schools are sup- ported. But is covers all aspects of ciey governm There must be a catch in it, I assured m 1, as I Ilooked from my hotel window onto the wide, brightly lighted main street with traffic darting between lines of cars that put parking space at a premum. I recalled the warning gven me by @ rich man in a Kansas city who frowned upon the Chanute system. “You can’t. It's subterfuge to say you do. It takes money to run the government and somebody has to pay it. If a statement sent to you for payment is listed as gas. water, and electricity, and. you pay it with money spent to keep up the city,’ it’ taxes, despite its trick name.” But Mayor H. W. Loy of Chanute dosen’t let that argument bother him. A middled-aged man, with a sharp, straight nose, firm chin, and fedora hat, set challengingly on the side of his long head, Mayor Loy is a characteristic leader of men. His penetrating ‘eyes and his clean.cut enunciation are the same as when he was first issuing crisp direcitons to bring order out of the hectic boom oil fields where he was a successful operator. For Mayor Loy is first a business man and second a politician. That is part of the explanation of ‘Chanute’s success with public owner- ship. He is typical of the commissioners T met who work with him in handling the affairs of the city. In the manage- ment is a keen business sense and a spirit of co.operation and local pride. “We commisioners are in our city of- ficeS every morning before we go on to our own work, “the mayor assured me. “People do not need to wait for the re- gular weekly commissioners’ ' meeting to see us about current business.” I knew this was true, for I was meeting Mayor Loy early in the morning. We walked with an old man, long employed by the city of Chanute, up a gravel road lined with red roses, to. ward a set - of chalk-white buildings that were the Chanute waterworks. The old man is in charge of the plant and: very proud of his gardens and aquarium and the reservoir that is a sheet of silver in the floodlights black eyes from an impassive wall. “I fired these boilers for twenty- two years,” he said. “And they made Chanute a City the whole state’s proud of and the whole world knows about.” “Yes,” said Mayor Loy, “our whole set-up has its roots right here in the waterworks. Starting here, we have built up a system that has made it possible for Chanute citizens to be ex- empt from paying any municipal taxes for- the last three years—-1931, 1932, and 1933. : “This set-up wasn’t built in a day. Nor was it contrived as a depression measure. We have been able to have three tax-free years just at a time when such a relief is most welcome, because of the normal growth of muni- cipally owned public utilities, started soundly many years ago. “Municipal ownership began in Chanute in 1894, when the- city, after at night and clear as crystal in the |much haggling and indecision, erected sun. a water plant at the cost of $44,000. We moved over floors of spotlass| Today the water plant and distribut- cement, glistening in their slate-like !ing system represent an investment of $558 423, with wa bonded debt out. standing of $139,861. This is being re- tired at the rate of $16,000 a year from the earnings of the plant. “By 1899 five years of municipal ownership of the water plat had con- smoothness. We climbed down steep lacy stairs of steel to an 'engine-room that had an immaculate, metallic cleanliness. The old man tapped the iron firebox doors that stared like two square, If you live on a farm or outside the city insurance limits you are eligible for FARM BUREAU AUTO INSURANCE I will be glad to show you how you, can save money in dollars and cents if you are eligible. GROVER C. STOCK Wyoming R. BD. 3 'Phone Dallas 112-R-18 THE UNINSURED DRIVER IS BETTING HIS CAR, HIS FARM AND HIS LIFE SAVINGS THAT HE WONT HAVE AN ACCIDENT, — mm N, Beware of Slippery Roads Prepare for winter driving now by equipping your car with tires that are built to meet all driving hazards. Dupont ‘50 “the famous fifty thousand mile tire” with its 252 shoulders of strength enable it to withstand severest shocks and its MASSIVE TREAD furnishes traction for all road con- dition. PRICED LOWER THAN OTHER FIRST LINE TIRES. Dupont Super “6” - 4B0-20 0. ii nib tai $6.80 450-21 $7.08 115-19... a $7.55 KENYON TIRES a six ply tire sold at prices unbelievable. A Deluxe tire in the fullest sense of the word. i] ABR. imation $5.54 ABO-AL id $5.97 475-19 $6.15 | Liberal allowance for your old tires. SEE THEM - . EXAMINE THEM AT Hillside Tire Co, Huntsville Road & Main Highway Hillside, Pa. ( vinced the town that it could handle its citizens. So, by a vote of 389 to37, a bond issue of $5,000 was approved for the purchase of a privately owned gas plant. The $5,000 was a down payment on the $62,500 purchase price. In three and a half years the profits from the plant had paid the whole bill and Chanute was on its way to wholesale public ownership. “In 1903 the municipal gas plant was able to contribute $32,000 to buy a site and install the first electrical generat- ing equipment. Two locomotive-type boilers were set up. In 1917 the ‘entire plant was rebuilt with a bond issue of $75,000. The last of this was retired in 1930 by earnings from the plant, and the building enlarged to accommodate three 250-horsepower water tube boil. ers and a b500-killowatt steam-driven turbine unit. The earnings of the plant paid for improvements costing $148,000 from 1924 to 1928. Today it is debt-free, with a reserve fund for replacements and repairs amounting to $40,246. “So, you see the municipal gas and electrical plants have paid for them- selves, are debt.free, and have a work- ing reserve more than adequate, while only thirt yper cent of the elaborate water-distributing system debt is out- standing and the earnings are ade- quate to retire this at the prescribed rate. “That is why we were able to meet the depression with relief for taxpay- ers.” Many other cities throughout Kansas PERG Era Repaired and Re- modeled at Ex- tremely Low Prices. At Z. Berlinski 70 Main Street Luzerne, Pa. Phone Kina 79228 The Good Old-fashioned Bakers want the good loose Baking Molasses and Table Syrup that GEORGE HUEY has sold for many years HUEY’S CORNERS Kingston, Penna, a its own utilities to .the advantage of THE DALLAS POST, DALLAS, PA., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1933 The Taxless Town Is Chanute A Model For Us? have laid the foundation for a set-up similar to Chanute’s. All but two of the seventy.seven cities of the second class in the state own and run their water utilities. Great Bend and Mary- ville are the only exceptions. Thirty- seven of these seventy-seven cities own and operate their electrical utili- ties, Colby, a smaller town of two thou- sand, west of Chanute, was the pio. neer of tax-free cities, even beating Chanute. And other Kansas cities are swinging in that direction, operating their utilities, employing some of the income for tax purposes, and material- ly lowering their levies. Winfield, Be- | loit, Osawatomie, Anthony and Min- join ‘neapolis are almost to “rg wy ready Chanute and Colby. The average city tax levy for thir- ty.seven cities in Kansas owning and operating their electrical utilities & is 9.94 mills, while that of forty cities with private ownership is 60.02 mills. I heard it asserted that some of these cities lose money on their utili- ties—the eternal indictment that busi- ness in the hands of politicians is in- efficient. Whatever may be the case elsewhere however, that certainly isn’t true in Chanute. It is a commission form of govern- ment. Three commissioners, elected by popular vote, with the mayor as chairman of the triumvirate, control * FOR GOOD OLD-TIME BEER Stop At FRANK HARTER’S CAFE Fernbrook, Penna. PAGE SEVEN ’ Left: Mayor H. W. Loy, a business man first and a politician second. He took Ben James around Chanute and proved that there IS such a thing as a taxless town. Below: { MUNIGIPAL LIGHT PLANT | 7 A EL CC Their sal- the operation of the city. ary is twelve hundred dollars a year each. All the present commissioners have been in office several terms. And the employees are not blown hither and yon with the winds of poli. tical fortune. I met many directors of the city business who had held office over a decade. The superintendent of the gas works has been twenty-two years on the job. The man shook his head evenly. “You're wrong.” he said. “Our rates here are quite a bit below the average of the state of Kansas. “Here they are,” he said. “Compare them with your own home rates,” And Left: The office building. city Below: Chanute’s muni- cipal swimming pool. Chanute’s city-owned electric and gas plants are debt free and make profits for the ¢ity. scale, from 25 cents down to 8 cents a hundred cubic feet with a minimum monthly charge of 50 cents. “And if you're interested,” fhe added “look in some of those magazines on the table and you'll find rates in other cities.” 3 I looked there and ran across the . lowest gas rate. quoted in Kansas, at McPherson. There the first two thou- sand cubic feet was 50 cents, the next fifty thousand 30 cents, the following fifty thousand 25 cents, with a drop to 12 cents in excess of one million cubic feet. AR ® * * I pointed these out to my acquain- tance. “I suppose it’s true that if we weren't paying taxes out of our gas _ rates, they could be a trifle lower,” he admitted. “But so long as we till have a lower rate than a lot of cities in the neighborhood and don’t” have to pay taxes, we aren't kicking.” I went next to the police station, un- der the command of Chief Lindquist, two hundred and twenty pounds of muscle hung taut on a towering frame a A LS rs 4 ; he pointed out the schedule on the! His strong jaws, hawk nose, and re. back of his statement. “You see,” he said, “our gas rates are among the lowest in the Middle West. They are on a ‘sliding scale. “The, gas rate begins at 45 cents a thousand cubic feet for the first ter thousand cubic ‘feet. The next ten thousand cubic feet is sold for 40 cents a thousand, the following eighty thou- sand cubic feet for 35 cents wa thou- sand, while all over one hundred thou- sand cubic feet is sold for 30 cents a thousand. Of course industries using large quantities of gas can make spe- cial arrangements with nates even lower than these, “And here's our electric rates. For domestic use they begin at 6 cents a kilowatt hour for the first 50 kilowatts and range downward to 5 cents a kil. owatt for the next 50 kilowatts, and 4 cents for all in excess of 100 kilowatts with a minimum monthly charge of 50 cents. And our power rates begin at 3% cents a. Kilowatt and range down as low as nine-tenths cent a kil- owatt. “Water rates too, are on a sliding For Appointment 'Phone Dallas 109-R-10 MARGARET’S BEAUTY SHOPPE Finger Waving, Especially, and all other lines of Beauty Work. Carverton Rd. Trucksville, Pa. ATLANTIC GAS & OIL Candy - Milk Cigarettes Soda and Ice Cream Jone’s, Service Station HILLSIDE, PA. termined eyes mark him as a man of courage. And his city’s pride and ab- ility to pay have equipped him with ul the implements modern police need. On top of his desk was a short-wave adio transmitting ‘and receiving sta- Lion. “We don’t have any automobile stealing here” he told me. “Insurance rates are low. Few automobile thieves have gotten away from us in the past five years.” A terrifying arsenal was on display in a glass case. “We can go them one ed. ‘Besides our rifles and service pistols, we have got this.” He opened the case and laid before me a sub-ma. chine gun, well oiled and glistening, that would receive the polite respect of any New York mobster. “And see ‘these,” he said with par- donable pride, displaying a box of tear-gas bombs: i Thaa was not all. I could try on the bullet-proof vest, for that armor, along with the steel shield. is a part of the chief's equipment. And there was a finger-print outfit and a sys. tem of bank alarms . i The fire station in the rear of the great building was a flashing mass of red and white enamel motor trucks loaded with ladder and hose. In an adjoining room was ‘a pool table for the department’s. recreation. The brass poles and metallic features of the equipmentiglistened with the po- lish that testified to diligent work. The fire chief was preparing his men (Continued on Page 8.) Phone Dallas 90-R-7 For Reservations FERNBROOK INN HALLOWE'EN PARTY" Schlitz Beer on Draught Dancing—Everybody Welcome McKEEVER’S LENDING LIBRARY And HANDI SHOPPE Everything for Hallowe'en MAGAZINES Trucksville, Pa, Main Road REE. W. 6. PAY. OFF. Represented By Mrs. F. P. Kunkle R. F. D. No. 1, Dallas, Pa., 'Phone 121-R-12 Write or phone for an appointment. y Eh | : 7/4 For Quick Service and Fine Workmanship Have Your Shoes Repaired SICURELLA’S SHOE HOSPITAL 76 MAIN ST., LUZERNE. PA.,