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Showing posts with label Wisconsin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wisconsin. Show all posts

1942: Wisconsin

Area and Population.

Wisconsin, a north central state, has an area of 56,154 sq. mi. The population in 1940 (U. S. census) was 3,137,587, an increase of 198,581, or 6.8 per cent over 1930. Of this total, 3,112,752 were white persons, 12,265 Indians, 12,158 Negroes, and 412 Chinese, Japanese and others. The foreign-born white population was 289,018. Total urban population was reported as 1,679,144, or 53.5 per cent of the total; and rural population as 1,458,443, or 46.5 per cent. The chief cities and their population (1940 census) were Milwaukee, 587,472; Madison, the capital, 67,447; Racine, 67,195; Kenosha, 48,765; Green Bay, 46,235; La Crosse, 42,707; Sheboygan, 40,638; and Oshkosh, 39,089.

Education.

Education is free for all persons in the state between the ages of 4 and 20 years (831,123 in 1939-1940) and compulsory from 7 to 14 or until graduation. During the year ending June 30, 1942, the state's children were served by 5,408 one-room rural schools, 687 state graded schools, 463 high schools, and 48 separate junior high schools. The state's educational system also includes a large number of schools for handicapped children and 45 vocational schools. During the year ending June 30, 1942, there were 519,642 pupils enrolled in the public schools. Of these, the high schools enrolled 158,043 students. The state had 20,773 teachers in service, 13,771 in the elementary schools, and 7,002 in the high schools. The median monthly salary for teachers in the elementary schools was $107.08, and in high schools, $174.48. Total expenditures for elementary and secondary schools for the year were $51,616,700.

Agriculture.

The total output of Wisconsin's dairy plants in 1941 was the largest on record. The state produced 476,682,000 lb. of cheese in 1941, an increase of 18 per cent over 1940. Butter produced in Wisconsin creameries was reported at 163,887,000 lb., which was about 10 per cent less than the 1940 output. Condensatory products reached a total of 1,394,957,000 lb., an increase of about 31 per cent over 1940. Wisconsin continued to lead all other states in the production of cheese and condensatory products, and ranked third in the production of butter. In 1941 the state produced 50 per cent of the national output of cheese, about 28 per cent of the condensatory products, and about 9 per cent of the butter.

As was the case in the first World War, agricultural income has risen during the present war. In 1941 the farmers of the state had an estimated gross farm income of $468,000,000, which was about 40 per cent above 1940, and was the highest for any year since 1920. Of the gross farm income in 1941, 88 per cent came from livestock and livestock products, leaving only 12 per cent from crops. The index of prices received by Wisconsin farmers rose in October, 1942, to 176 per cent of the level of farm prices during the period 1910-1914, as compared with 155 per cent in 1940. The index of prices the farmers paid in October, 1942, was 156 per cent of the level of prices during the period 1910-1914, which was eighteen points above that of 1941. The purchasing power of the Wisconsin farm dollar rose to 113 per cent of the level of purchasing power during the period 1910-1914, as compared with 112 per cent in October, 1941.

Industry.

In 1939, Wisconsin's 6,717 establishments employed 233,691 salary and wage earners and produced goods with a value of $1,604,507,356. The principal manufactures were lumber, dairy products, boots and shoes, agricultural implements, paper and pulp, electrical machines, meat packing, malt liquors, automobiles, etc. The index of employment in October, 1942 was 140.2 per cent of the 1925-1927 level, as compared with 126.7 per cent a year ago. The index of pay rolls advanced sharply from 173.2 per cent in October, 1941, to 229.3 per cent in October, 1942.

Unemployment Compensation.

Wisconsin's unemployment compensation act became law on January 29, 1932. The law now covers employers who have six or more employes during each of at least eighteen weeks of the calendar year. During the fiscal year ending June 30, 1942, benefits totalling $4,679,159 were paid to approximately 46,000 workers. At the close of December, 1941, the net balance of the unemployment fund was approximately $68,000,000. During the calendar year 1941 contributions to the fund totaled $13,512,896.

Finance.

The state budget for the biennium 1941-1943 was $73,868,278, an increase of $2,656,302 over the 1939-1941 budget. The principal increases were for pensions, teachers' colleges, and the University of Wisconsin.

Taxation.

Wisconsin residents paid $214,900,000 in state and local taxes in the fiscal year ending June 30, 1941, as compared with $204,700,000 in 1940, an increase of about 5 per cent. The Federal government collected $121,813,000 in 1941, an increase of about 41 per cent over the $86,388,000 collected in the 1940 fiscal year.

Banking.

On June 30, 1942, Wisconsin had 467 state banks (including six trust companies and four mutual savings banks). Their total deposits were $542,097,000, an increase of $73,866,000 over the $468,231,000 in 470 institutions reported on June 30, 1941. There were 98 national banks operating in the state. Their deposits were $584,173,000 on June 30, 1942, as compared with $529,496,000 in 99 banks in 1941.

Government and Political Events.

The Legislature, composed of a Senate of 33 members and an Assembly of 100 members, meets biennially in odd-numbered years, on the second Wednesday in January. Since there was no session of the Legislature in 1942, there are few important events of a political character to be chronicled. In the November elections the Republicans maintained their majority in both branches. The Legislature which meets in January, 1943, will have 24 Republicans, 6 Progressives and 3 Democrats in the Senate, and 61 Republicans, 24 Progressives, and 15 Democrats in the Assembly.

In November, 1942, Governor Julius P. Heil was defeated by Orland S. Loomis, Progressive, candidate for the governorship by a majority of 105,719 votes. Loomis, the only Progressive elected to a major state office, died Dec. 8, a few weeks before his inauguration. Since he was the first governor-elect of Wisconsin to die before inauguration, his death brought days of uncertainty as to who would become governor. On Dec. 29, the Wisconsin Supreme Court ruled that Lieutenant Governor Walter S. Goodland, 80-year old veteran of Wisconsin politics and a Republican, should become acting governor for the two-year term beginning January 4, 1943.

State Officers.

Governor, Walter S. Goodland; Secretary of State, Fred R. Zimmermann; State Treasurer, John M. Smith; Attorney General, John E. Martin; Superintendent of Public Instruction, John Callahan.

United States Senators:

Robert M. La Follette, Jr., Alexander Wiley.

1941: Wisconsin

Area and Population.

Wisconsin, a north central state, has an area of 56,066 sq. mi. The population in 1940 (U. S. census) was 3,137,587, an increase of 6.8 per cent since 1930. Urban population in 1940 was reported as 53.5 per cent of the total, and the rural population as 46.5 per cent. Of the total population, according to the 1930 census, 2,913,859 were whites, 11,548 Indians, 10,739 Negroes, 2,396 Mexicans, and 464 Asiatics. The foreign-born white population was 386,213, or 13 per cent of the total. Of these, 128,269 were Germans. Other large groups were Poles, 42,359; Norwegians, 34,391; Czechoslovakians, 19,580; Swedes, 18,808; and Russians, 16,418.

The chief cities and their populations (1940 census) are Milwaukee, 587,472; Madison, the capital, 67,447; Racine, 67,195; Kenosha, 48,765; Green Bay, 46,235; La Crosse, 42,707; and Oshkosh, 39,089.

Education.

Education is free for all persons in the state between the ages of 4 and 20 years (831,123 in 1939-40), and compulsory from 7 to 14, or until graduation. A pupil is required to complete a high-school course, if the pupil's school district includes such a school. In city vocational schools, students between 14 and 16 must attend full time; between 16 and 18, half time.

In 1939-40, there were 535,165 pupils enrolled in the public high and elementary schools of the state. Of these, 160,311 were enrolled in the 462 high schools, and 374,854 were enrolled in 7,120 elementary rural and state graded schools. The state has 24 state-operated schools for deaf children, not including the State School at Delavan; 27 schools for children with speech defects; and 45 vocational schools.

There are 21,577 teachers employed in the public-school system, with 11,591 of these in rural, state graded, other village grade and high schools. The city schools employ the remaining 9,986. Their yearly salaries average about $1,307. Total expenditures for education in 1939-40 were $69,074,084.93 as compared with $70,500,800.40 in the preceding year.

The 1941 session of the Legislature enacted that pupils of public, private, parochial, and denominational schools shall be taught proper reverence and respect for, and the history and meaning of the American flag, the Declaration of Independence, the United States Constitution, and the duties and responsibilities of citizenship. The state-wide teacher tenure act of 1937 was repealed. Milwaukee teachers are covered by a separate law which remains in effect.

Agriculture.

Cheese production in Wisconsin in 1940 was reported at 406,673,000 lb., which was 52 per cent of all cheese made in the nation, and the greatest amount ever produced in this or any other state. This was an increase of 9.8 per cent over the previous high established in 1939. Wisconsin creameries produced 183,103,000 lb. of butter, an increase of 5.7 per cent above the 1939 production. Condensery products reached a total of 1,065,205,000 lb., an increase of 13.3 per cent over 1939.

The index of prices received by Wisconsin farmers rose in October 1941, to 151 per cent of the level of farm prices during the period 1910-14, as compared with 102 in 1940. The index of prices the farmers paid in October 1941, was 136 per cent of the level of prices during the period 1910-14. This was 14 points above that of October 1940. The total cash income of Wisconsin farmers in 1940 was $315,476,000, including government payments amounting to $12,273,000. The tax of 15 cents a pound on oleomargarine was retained.

Industry.

Business and industrial indexes in October 1941 were above those for 1940. The index of employment advanced to 126.2 per cent of the 1925-27 level, an increase of 22 per cent over October 1940, and the index of payrolls advanced to 172.8 per cent of the 1925-27 level, a gain of 53.4 per cent over October 1940.

Mineral Products.

Production of iron ore, again chiefly from the Montreal underground mine in Iron County, northern Wisconsin, amounted in 1940 to 1,262,065 tons, a substantial gain over 1939, when 1,173,828 tons had a value of $3,526,980. Although the amount of zinc produced in 1940 was slightly less, at 5,770 tons, than in 1939, its value at $727,020 was higher than in the previous year. Sand, gravel, and stone add materially to the total value of the state's mineral resources, which in 1939 amounted to $12,704,942.

Legislation.

The Legislature meets biennially in odd-numbered years, on the second Wednesday in January. The Legislature which assembled January 8, 1941, adjourned June 6, 1941, after the shortest regular session since 1903. The outstanding legislative acts passed during the session are summarized under each topic.

Unemployment Compensation.

Wisconsin's unemployment compensation Act became law on January 29, 1932. Under the law each employer is required to contribute monthly a sum figured as a certain percentage of his payroll. This cannot be deducted from the wages of the workers. The Industrial Commission of Wisconsin credits each employer's payments to his separate account, from which benefits are payable solely to his employees. The contributions are submitted to Washington to be credited to Wisconsin's account in the Federal 'Unemployment Trust Fund.' The amounts thus credited are invested in Federal bonds and the interest earnings credited to Wisconsin's account. At the close of 1940, the law covered 12,134 employers of six or more employees, and over 500,000 workers. Unemployment benefits have been payable to eligible Wisconsin workers since August, 1936. By the close of 1940, benefit payments had totaled nearly $20,000,000. At the close of 1940, Wisconsin's unemployment reserve fund had a net balance of more than $55,000,000.

Taxation.

Wisconsin residents paid $204,677,479 in state and local taxes in the fiscal year ending June 30, 1940, as compared with $201,368,105 in the previous year, an increase of $3,309,374. Federal internal revenue collections in the state during the fiscal year amounted to $86,387,901, as compared with $86,406,708 in 1939. Federal and state taxes for unemployment compensation totaled $26,706,323.

Finance.

The summing up of the state's financial position on July 1, 1941, was as follows:

The budget for the biennium, 1941-43, calls for $73,868,278, which is $2,656,302 more than the budget for the biennium 1939-41. The sum appropriated for relief was $2,108,000, as compared with $5,000,000 authorized in 1939. The estimated total revenue for the biennium, from revenue laws in force, was slightly more than $67,000,000.

The Legislature extended until July 1, 1943, the emergency tax on gifts, the privileged dividend tax, the two-cent cigarette tax, the emergency tax on transfers of property by inheritance, and the 60 per cent surtax on individual incomes. The session rejected a gross income tax, a tax on the gross receipts of light, heat, and power companies, and an emergency tax on telephone utilities.

Banking.

On December 31, 1940, Wisconsin had 459 state banks, 6 trust companies, and 4 mutual savings banks. Their total deposits were $456,310,000, an increase of $32,899,000 over the $423,411,000 in 475 banks reported in 1939. During 1940, there were 103 national banks operating in the state. Their deposits were $578,584,000 on December 31, 1940, as compared with $536,460,000 in 105 banks for 1939. The total deposits for all banks, numbering 572, were $1,034,894,000 on December 31, 1940.

National Defense.

Among the important measures enacted by the 1941 session of the Legislature were five acts having to do with national defense. The Legislature created a Home Guard to be active while the National Guard is in Federal service. It enacted a Sabotage Prevention Act which prohibits and penalizes intentional injuring or interfering with property to hinder the defense program, intentional defective workmanship, and unlawful entry on posted property. Another Act restored compulsory military training at the University of Wisconsin for male freshmen and sophomores. Another denied the Communist party, or affiliated groups, the right to a place on the Wisconsin ballot. Lastly, the 'little Dies committee' was created to investigate subversive activities in Wisconsin.

At the request of Governor Heil, the Wisconsin State Council for Defense was organized. The Council functions through six divisions: protection, health and welfare, aviation, publicity and information, communications and transportation, and a planning division, which has charge of evacuation, finance, and morale in time of emergency.

State Officers.

Governor, Julius P. Heil; Lieutenant Governor, Walter S. Goodland; Secretary of State, Fred R. Zimmermann; Treasurer, John M. Smith; Attorney General, John E. Martin; State Superintendent of Public Instruction, John Callahan.

United States Senators:

Robert M. La Follette, Jr., Alexander Wiley.

1940: Wisconsin

Area and Population.

The 'Badger State' was admitted to statehood on May 29, 1848. It has a total area of 56,066 sq. mi. The population in 1940 (U. S. census) numbered 3,137,587, an increase of 198,581 or 6.8 per cent since 1930. The chief cities and their population (1940 census) are Milwaukee, 587,472; Racine, 67,195; Madison, the capital, 67,447; Kenosha, 48,765; Green Bay, 46,235; La Crosse, 42,707, and Oshkosh, 39,089. The urban population in 1940 was reported as 53.5 per cent of the total. In 1930, the foreign-born white population was 13 per cent of the total, and included 128,269 Germans, 42,359 Poles, and 34,391 Norwegians.

Agriculture.

More cheese and condensery products were made in Wisconsin in 1939 than in 1938, but there was a decrease in the output of butter. The state produced 370,430,000 pounds of cheese in 1939, which was 52.7 per cent of all the cheese made in the United States. For the seventh consecutive year this set a record over all previous years. Condensery products reached a total of 940,241,000 pounds, or 27.6 per cent of all such products manufactured in the nation during 1939. Butter production in the state in 1939 was 173,227,000 pounds, which was 8.3 per cent less than that of 1938. Wisconsin still, however, ranked third in butter production.

The Wisconsin corn crop of 1940 was the largest in the state's history.

The total cash farm income in 1939 was $285,008,000, of which $32,655,000 was from crops, $232,936,000 from livestock and livestock products, and $19,417,000 from Government payments. The index of prices received by Wisconsin farmers in October 1940 was 105 per cent of the level of farm prices during the period 1910-14, as compared with 108 per cent in 1939, and a five-year average of 114 per cent. The index of prices the farmers paid in October 1940 was 122 per cent of the level of prices during the period 1910-14. This was two points below that of 1939 and four points below the five-year average of the same month.

Industry.

Wisconsin stands tenth among the states in aggregate value of manufactures. The principal manufactures are lumber, paper and pulp, furniture and wooden ware, farm machinery, engines, automobiles, electrical goods, and liquors. There were 1,262 utilities operating in the state on July 1, 1940. Of these, 858 were operated by private companies and 404 by municipalities. Business and industrial indexes in October 1940 were above those for the same month in 1939. The index of employment in October showed an increase of 10.9 per cent over the same month a year ago and the index of pay rolls advanced to a gain of 17.4 per cent over October 1939.

Mineral Products.

Mine output of iron ore in 1939, chiefly from the Montreal underground mine in Iron County, exceeded that of 1938 by about 50 per cent, the total being 972,685 tons, compared with 625,378 tons in the preceding year, valued at $1,886,477. Production of 5,904 tons of zinc more than doubled the low figure for 1938. Large quantities of sand, gravel, and stone again added substantially to the total value of Wisconsin's mineral products, which in 1938 equalled $10,636,741.

Finance.

The budget for the biennium, 1940-1941, called for $68,552,832, as compared with $67,266,000 for 1938-1939. The 1939 Legislature appropriated $78,226,286, as compared with $73,954,937 in 1937. The revenues provided by the Legislature to balance appropriations were estimated at $57,767,863, leaving a deficit of $20,458,423.

Among the revenue measures passed by the 1939 Legislature were a two-cent cigarette tax, a dividend tax, a 60 per cent surtax on personal incomes, and a 3 per cent tax on the gross receipts of Rural Electrification Administration cooperatives.

Taxation.

Wisconsin residents paid $201,368,105 in state and local taxes in the fiscal year ending June 30, 1939, as compared with $186,764,938 in the previous year, an increase of $14,603,167. The Federal Government collected $86,406,708 in the state during the fiscal year.

Banking.

On December 31, 1939, Wisconsin had 462 State Banks, 9 trust companies, and 4 mutual savings banks. Their total deposits were $423,410,835.09, an increase of $28,934,027.61 over the $394,476,807.48 in 484 banks reported in 1938. During 1939 there were 105 National Banks operating in the state. Their deposits were $536,460,000 on December 30, 1939, as compared with $490,153,000 in the same number of banks for 1938. The total deposits for all banks, numbering 580, were $959,871,000 on December 30, 1939. At the end of 1939 Wisconsin had 563 credit unions in operation, with a membership of 133,504 and assets of $9,287,974.56, an increase of $1,861,261.71 over the $7,426,712.85 reported for 1938.

Unemployment Compensation.

At the close of 1939, the state unemployment reserve fund had a net balance of $50,495,433. During the year ending December 31, 1939, contributions to the fund amounted to $13,809,426 and benefits to $3,663,572.

Political Events.

In the November elections the Republicans obtained a majority in both branches of the Legislature. The Legislature which met January 8, 1941, was made up of 61 Republicans, 23 Progressives and 16 Democrats in the Assembly and 24 Republicans, 6 Progressives and 3 Democrats in the Senate.

State Officers.

Governor, Julius P. Heil; Lieutenant Governor, Walter S. Goodland; Secretary of State, Fred R. Zimmerman; State Treasurer, John M. Smith; Attorney General, John E. Martin; Superintendent of Public Instruction, John Callahan.

United States Senators:

Robert M. La Follette, Jr., Alexander Wiley.

1939: Wisconsin

Area and Population.

Wisconsin, a north central state, has an area of 56,066 square miles. The population in 1930 (U. S. census) was 2,939,006, an increase of 306,939, or 11.7 per cent, since 1920. The population according to the latest Federal estimate, July 1, 1937, was 2,926,000. Urban population in 1930 was reported as 1,553,843, or 52.9 per cent of the total, and the rural population 1,385,163, or 47.1 per cent. Of the total population in 1930, 2,913,859 were whites, 11,548 Indians, 10,739 Negroes, 2,396 Mexicans, and 464 were Asiatics. The foreign-born white population was 386,213, or 13 per cent of the total. Of these 128,269, or 33.2 per cent, were Germans; 42,359, or 11 per cent, were Poles; 34,391 were Norwegians; 19,580 Czechoslovakians; 18,808 Swedes; 16,418 Russians; 15,572 Canadians; and 8,477 were Englishmen. The chief cities and their population (1930 census) are Milwaukee, 578,249 (1939 estimate, 628,758); Racine, 67,542; Madison, the capital, 57,899 (1939 estimate, 66,500); Kenosha, 50,262; Oshkosh, 40,108, and La Crosse, 39,614.

Education.

Education is free for all persons in the state between the ages of 4 and 20 years (848,871 in 1937-38), and compulsory from 7 to 14 or until graduation. A pupil is required to finish high school if there is one in the pupil's school district. In city vocational schools students between 14 and 16 must attend full time; between 16 and 18, half time.

In 1937-38, there were 540,431 pupils enrolled in the public high and elementary schools. Of these 152,104 were enrolled in the 459 high schools with 6,696 teachers, and 388,327 were enrolled in 7,051 elementary schools with 14,725 teachers. The 103 city school systems had 289,633 children enrolled. There were 14,000 boys and girls between the ages of 14 and 18 enrolled in vocational and part-time day schools, with 900 teachers; 6,750 men and women attending the nine state teachers colleges (at Eau Claire, La Crosse, Milwaukee, Oshkosh, Platteville, River Falls, Stevens Point, Superior, Whitewater), Stout Institute at Menomince, and the Wisconsin Institute of Technology at Platteville, with 500 faculty members; 11,400 men and women registered in the University of Wisconsin with a staff of 1,700; 10,250 teachers and other students registered in the summer school sessions of the University, the state teachers' colleges, and Stout Institute; 95,000 adults enrolled in vocational evening schools with 1,900 teachers, and 26,500 men and women enrolled in credit and noncredit university extension courses. Wisconsin has 24 state-supported schools for deaf children, not including the State School at Delavan; 27 schools for children with speech defects; 43 schools for mentally handicapped children, and 12 orthopedic schools.

The median salary of teachers in the elementary schools during 1937-38, was $98.35. and for high school teachers $170.88. Total expenditures for education in 1937-38 were $66,068,813.71 as compared with $63,119,094.47 in the preceding year.

The 1939 Legislature extended the school term from eight to nine months. It cut state aid for schools with less than ten pupils, in a move to bring about district mergers or transportation of pupils to larger schools; lowered the tuition rate to encourage pupils to continue their studies in neighboring high schools, and created a new bureau in the Department of Public Instruction to supervise the education of physically or mentally handicapped children.

Agriculture.

Wisconsin produced 365,215,000 pounds of cheese in 1938, or 50.4 per cent of all cheese made in the nation. For the sixth consecutive year cheese production set a record over all previous years. Butter produced in Wisconsin creameries was reported at 188,933,000 pounds, which was 10.6 per cent of the nation's production, only slightly less than its share of 10.8 per cent in 1937. Condensatory products reached a total of 895,052,000 pounds, or 26.6 per cent of the nation's total as compared with 27.9 per cent in 1937. Wisconsin continued to lead all other states in the production of cheese and condensatory products, ranking third in butter production.

The Wisconsin corn crop of 1938 was the largest in the state's history.

Total cash farm income in 1938 was $277,847,000, of which $36,980,000 was from crops and $240,867,000 from livestock and livestock products. The index of prices received by Wisconsin farmers rose in October, 1939, to 106 per cent of the level of farm prices during the period 1910-14, as compared with 99 per cent in 1938, and a five-year average of 110 per cent. The index of prices the farmers paid in October, 1939, was 125 per cent of the level of prices during the period 1910-14. This was two points above that of 1938 and one point below the five-year average. The purchasing power of farm products in 1938 rose to 85 per cent of the level of purchasing power during the period 1910-14, as compared with 83 per cent in October 1938, and a five-year average of 87 per cent.

The 1939 session of the Legislature extended the statute under which the Department of Agriculture fixes the price of fluid milk in urban districts for two years, or to December 31, 1941. The tax of 15 cents a pound on oleomargarine was retained.

Industry.

Wisconsin stands tenth among the states in aggregate value of manufactures. In 1935, its 6,330 establishments, employing 200,893 wage earners, produced goods with a value of $1,334,914,000. The principal manufactures are lumber, paper and pulp, furniture and wooden ware, farm machinery, engines, automobiles, electrical appliances, etc. There were 1,244 utilities operating in the state on July 1, 1938. Of these, 866 were operated by private companies and 378 by municipalities. Business and industrial indexes in October 1939 were above those for 1938. The index of employment advanced to 89.4 per cent of the 1925-27 level, an increase of 8 per cent over October 1938 and the index of pay rolls advanced to 96.2 per cent of the 1925-27 level, a gain of 15.3 per cent over October 1938.

Mineral Products.

Shipments of iron ore, the state's leading mineral, in which it ranks fifth in the Union, were greatly reduced in 1938, or by about 55 per cent, to 625,378 tons valued at $1,886,477, compared with 1,419,810 tons in 1937 valued at $4,473,942. Production of zinc was lowered by an even greater amount, equal to 70 per cent, the total being 2,973 tons as against 6,938 in 1937. Stone as well as sand and gravel were shipped in slightly reduced amounts in 1938, totaling 3,097,230 tons of stone, worth $3,880,935; of sand and gravel, 6,273,424 tons valued at $2,709,926.

Unemployment Compensation and Welfare Laws.

Wisconsin's unemployment compensation act became law on January 29, 1932. On August 17, 1936, the Industrial Commission paid to a Wisconsin worker the first unemployment benefit check ever paid in America from a state unemployment compensation fund. Under the law each employer is required to contribute monthly a sum figured as a certain percentage of his pay roll. This cannot be deducted from the wages of the workers. The Industrial Commission of Wisconsin credits each employer's payments to his separate account, from which benefits are payable solely to his employees. The contributions are submitted to Washington to be credited to Wisconsin's account in the Federal 'Unemployment Trust Fund.' The amounts thus credited are invested in Federal bonds and the interest earnings are credited to Wisconsin's account.

By the close of 1938, more than $11,500,000 in benefits had been paid under the law to more than 200,000 workers partially or totally unemployed at some time between August 1936 and December 1938. At the close of 1938, the unemployment reserve fund had a net balance of more than $38,000,000. In 1938 the law covered about 10,000 employers (with 7 or more employees), and about 450,000 workers. Employers with six employees are being covered in 1939, which will bring the total to about 12,500 employers and about 460,000 workers. For the year ending December, 1938, contributions to the fund amounted to $16,656,767 and all benefits to $9,532,735.

The Child Labor Law, rewritten in 1937, prohibits the employment of children under eighteen years of age unless the employer has on file a labor permit issued by the Industrial Commission, except in the case of agricultural pursuits and work usual in the home of the employer during vacations and outside the hours when the full-time schools are in session.

Wisconsin also has a system of old-age pensions, widows' pensions, teachers' pensions and workmen's compensation.

Legislation.

The Legislature, composed of a Senate of 33 members and an Assembly of 100 members, meets biennially in odd-numbered years, on the second Wednesday in January. The Legislature which assembled January 11, 1939, consisted of 53 Republicans, 32 Progressives and 15 Democrats in the Assembly, and 16 Republicans, 11 Progressives and 6 Democrats in the Senate. The Republicans had a majority in the Assembly, but in the Senate the Democrats joined with the Republicans to form a coalition against the Progressives. The Legislature adjourned October 6 after a session of 269 days, the longest in the history of the state.

The two outstanding accomplishments of the session were the passage of a labor law and the reorganization of the state government. The labor law, passed in March, declares that no labor dispute shall be deemed to exist unless there is a controversy between an employer and a majority of his employees; establishes majority rule in collective bargaining; requires a three-fourths majority of the workers in a plant to establish a closed shop; outlaws sit-down strikes; prohibits secondary picketing and boycotts; demands ten days' notice preceding a strike involving perishable agricultural products; prohibits the check-off as a means of paying union dues unless authorized individually by the workers; orders unions to report finances to their members, and establishes the Wisconsin Employment Relations Board consisting of three members, to administer the law.

The reorganization of the state government followed two plans: the substitution of executives for commissions and the use of policy-making boards and directors. The Department of Agriculture, for example, is run by a policy-making board of seven members appointed by the Governor and confirmed by the Senate. The board elects a director and establishes such divisions as it needs. These now include six: administration, plant industry, markets, dairy, livestock sanitation and milk control. The Department of Public Welfare is a policy-making board of seven members, appointed by the Governor and approved by the Senate. The board chooses a director, who, in turn, names the chiefs of the following divisions: public assistance, child welfare, mental hygiene, corrections and accounting and research. A new agency, the Department of Taxation, is organized on the executive model, with a commissioner serving six years. The La Follette Wisconsin Development Authority was abolished. The Wisconsin Rural Electrification Coordination division was set up in the Department of Agriculture to guide rural cooperatives in the construction of federally financed light and power systems.

The Legislature refused to reorganize the public service, banking and highway commissions and rejected the administration's sponsored board of review, designed to hear state commission appeals. An act of the Legislature outlawed the use of trading stamps which reduced the price of merchandise below the minimum fixed by the manufacturer; another permits the formation of non-profit corporations to contract with hospitals to give service to members when needed.

Taxation.

Wisconsin residents paid $201,368,105 in state and local taxes in the fiscal year ending June 30, 1939, as compared with $186,764,938 in the previous year, an increase of $14,603,167. The Federal Government collected $86,406,220 in the state during the fiscal year. Special state taxes increased from $9,611,004 to $24,639,608. In this group unemployment compensation taxes were the highest at $15,576,667. The assessed value of all property in the state in 1939 was $4,393,151,680, of which $3,937,350,326 was real property and $455,801,354 was personal property. The assessed value of all property in the state in 1939 was $74,167,259 under that of 1938.

Finance.

The budget act for the biennium, 1940-41, calls for $67,672,307, as compared with $67,266,000 for 1938-39. The 1939 Legislature appropriated $75,837,902.94, as compared with $73,954,937.34 in 1937. The sum appropriated for relief was $5,000,000, as compared with $4,350,000 authorized in 1937. The revenues provided by the Legislature to balance appropriations were estimated at $57,167,863, leaving a deficit of $18,670,000. Failing to agree on revenue measures, the Legislature appointed a tri-party interim committee 'to study the revenue needs of the state for the current biennium.'

Among the revenue measures passed by the Legislature are the two-cent cigarette tax, a dividend tax, a 60 per cent surtax on personal incomes, and a 3 per cent tax on the gross receipts of Rural Electrification Administration cooperatives. The Legislature rejected a sales tax, a gross income tax, the broadening of the income tax base and a tax on the gross receipts and tolls of telephone companies. The state of Wisconsin has no bonded debt.

Banking.

On Dec. 31, 1938, Wisconsin had 471 state banks, 4 trust companies, and 9 mutual savings banks. Their total deposits were $394,476,807.48, an increase of $2,098,767.79 over the $392,378,039.69 in 497 banks reported in 1937. During 1938, there were 105 national banks operating in the state. Their deposits were $490,153,000 on December 31, 1938, as compared with $462,126,000 in the same number of banks for 1937. The total deposits for all banks, numbering 589, were $884,630,000 on December 31, 1938. At the end of 1938, Wisconsin had 542 credit unions in operation, with a membership of 117,423 and assets of $7,426,712.85, an increase of $1,019,095.95 over the $6,407,616.90 reported for 1937. On December 1, 1939, there were 574 credit unions in the state.

Welfare and Correction.

The state has two general hospitals for the insane, the Mendota State Hospital, and the Winnebago Hospital near Oshkosh. The criminal insane are committed to the Central State Hospital at Waupun. The Wisconsin Memorial Hospital at Mendota for the treatment of ex-service men suffering from nervous and mental diseases, is operated by the Federal government. The chronic insane are treated in county asylums and not in state institutions. The state also operates two institutions for the mentally deficient, the Northern Colony and Training School at Chippewa Falls and the Southern Colony and Training School at Union Grove. Other institutions include the State Sanatorium at Statesan. Waukesha County, for the treatment of persons suffering from tuberculosis, and the Lake Tomahawk State Camp for convalescents from tuberculosis.

State Officers.

The chief state officers in 1939 were: Governor, Julius P. Heil; Lieutenant Governor, Walter S. Goodland; Secretary of State, Fred R. Zimmerman; Treasurer, John M. Smith; Attorney General, John E. Martin; State Superintendent of Public Instruction, John Callahan.

United States Senators.

Robert M. La Follette, Jr., Alexander Wiley.

1938: Wisconsin

Area and Population.

The area of this state, the fifth and last of the Old Northwest, and admitted to statehood May 29, 1848, is 56,066 square miles. In a population numbering 2,939,006 (1930 census), the largest city is Milwaukee, with 578,249. Madison, the state capital, has 57,899. Other important cities are Racine (67,542), Kenosha (50,262), Oshkosh (40,108), Sheboygan, Green Bay, Fond du Lac, La Crosse and Superior. Among the states Wisconsin ranks 25th in size, and 13th in population.

In the 1930 census, the aggregate of the urban population was 1,553,843, all whites except 13,565, most of whom were Negroes. In the rural population of 1,385,163, Negroes numbered 866, and about 10,000 were Indians living on reservations or scattered among the whites. Of the total population, foreign-born whites numbered 386,213. Rural society showed 44 per cent native whites of native parentage, 40.5 per cent native whites of foreign parentage. The corresponding classes in urban society showed 35.7 per cent and 43.4 per cent respectively. Urban society had a majority of the foreign-born, 20.4 per cent as against 14.8 per cent in rural society.

History.

About 1890 Wisconsin was regarded as a German state. Emigration from abroad had been very heavy from the early 1840's, though the population in 1850 was prevailingly American and 'Yankee' from New York and New England. The foreigners — Germans, Scandinavians, Poles, and others — settled most largely on farms, remained, reared families, and now their children and grandchildren constitute the largest percentage of rural society. After the farm lands were fully occupied, the later emigration from Europe passed mainly to the cities, hence the large foreign-born group, and natives of foreign parentage in urban society.

Native Americans, especially Yankees, dominated politics, business, education, finance, and manufacturing for many years. With the approval of all classes, and the firm support of the stronger foreign-born elements, they provided for universal common-school education, free high schools, a state university; they developed agricultural and industrial training and also adult vocational training. They led in manufacturing; they have always been among the state's leading financiers and also its agricultural promoters. Nevertheless, the progress made in all these lines would have been impossible without the cooperation of the foreign elements.

Politics.

Yankee political leadership continued unbroken to the end of the nineteenth century, when it was successfully challenged by Robert M. La Follette (1855-1925), who was a native of Wisconsin, of Kentucky ancestry. Emanuel Philipp's governorship (1915-21) broke in upon La Follette's control. Since the latter's death, his two sons, Philip F. and Robert M. Jr., have been the most prominent state politicians, though Walter J. Kohler, Fred R. Zimmerman, and Albert Schmedeman, all of German descent, held the governorship each one term. In 1936, Philip F. La Follette was elected governor for a third term — his second consecutive term — and with a favorable legislature put through in 1937 a number of important measures. These included, among others, a 'little T. V. A.,' a 'little A. A. A.' and a state reorganization law. All were strongly contested, and the first-named was forced into the courts and some of the powers conferred upon the Wisconsin Development Authority were denied.

Education.

Of a total count of 862,818 inhabitants of school age (4 to 20) in Wisconsin, for the school year 1935-36, there were 548,568 enrolled in the public schools, including 143,732 in the high schools. In 1937 the state established nine months as the requisite period for a school year, and set a minimum salary for teachers of $80 a month for 1938-39.

Financial and Welfare Administration.

A banking commission controls state banks and allied financial institutions. In 1937 a board of control, which governed penal and charitable institutions, was superseded by a department of corrections and a department of mental hygiene. Wisconsin administers a pension system whose beneficiaries are widows, the aged, and the public school teachers. The expense of outdoor relief is shared with Federal authority. An industrial commission administers the Workmen's Compensation Act.

Agriculture.

Dairying is the leading agricultural interest of Wisconsin; in this industry the state leads the nation.

Mineral Products.

At present, the most important minerals of Wisconsin are iron ore and zinc. In 1937, shipments of the former amounted to 1,419,810 tons, with a value of $4,473,942, compared with 918,935 tons in 1936, valued at 52,568,129. Zinc production in 1937 amounted to 6,938 tons, as against 8,126 in 1936, valued at $812,600. Including substantial amounts of stone, sand and gravel, the total value of Wisconsin's minerals in 1936 was $15,785,440.

State Officers.

The election in 1938 resulted in the defeat of Governor La Follette, candidate for a fourth term, by a Republican, Julius P. Heil, a Milwaukee industrialist. All other Progressive candidates were likewise defeated by Republicans. Both houses of the Legislature now have Republican majorities. The delegation which was displaced contained no Republican member. All were Progressives or Democrats.

As a result of the election, the chief officers of the state are: Governor, Julius P. Heil; Lieutenant Governor, Walter S. Goodland; Secretary of State, Fred R. Zimmerman; Treasurer, J. M. Smith; Attorney General, John E. Martin.

United States Senators:

Robert M. La Follette, Jr., and Alexander Wiley.