15-258 Billiard halls; disorderly houses; desecration of Sabbath.
15-258. Billiard halls;disorderly houses; desecration of Sabbath.A cityof the primary class may restrain, prohibit, and suppress unlicensed tipplingshops, billiard tables, bowling alleys, houses of prostitution, opium joints,dens, and other disorderly houses and practices, games, gambling houses, desecrationof the Sabbath day, commonly called Sunday, and may prohibit all public amusements,shows, exhibitions, or ordinary business pursuits upon such day, all lotteries,all fraudulent devices and practices for the purposes of obtaining money orproperty, all shooting galleries exceptas provided in the Nebraska Shooting Range Protection Act, andall kinds of public indecencies, except that nothing in this section shallbe construed to apply to bingo, lotteries, lotteries by the sale of picklecards, or raffles conducted in accordance with the Nebraska Bingo Act, theNebraska Lottery and Raffle Act, the Nebraska Pickle Card Lottery Act, theNebraska Small Lottery and Raffle Act, or the State Lottery Act. SourceLaws 1901, c. 16, § 129, LVIII, p. 142; R.S.1913, § 4468; C.S.1922, § 3853; C.S.1929, § 15-256; R.S.1943, § 15-258; Laws 1986, LB 1027, § 187; Laws 1991, LB 849, § 60; Laws 1993, LB 138, § 62; Laws 2009, LB503, § 12. Cross ReferencesNebraska Bingo Act, see section 9-201.Nebraska Lottery and Raffle Act, see section 9-401.Nebraska Pickle Card Lottery Act, see section 9-301.Nebraska Shooting Range Protection Act, see section 37-1301.Nebraska Small Lottery and Raffle Act, see section 9-501.State Lottery Act, see section 9-801. AnnotationsOrdinance prohibiting all business except of necessity on Sunday is not void as discriminatory. Liberman v. State, 26 Neb. 464, 42 N.W. 419 (1889).