I 15 CAPITAL ITY HAT NEBRASKA LEGISLATURE GET TING DOWN TO REAL WORK JQINTRAILRQAD COMMISSION COMMITTEE Gets into Action and Discuss Best Methods of Regulating the Trans- portation Companies Other News of Interest How to proceed in the joint com mittee to draft railroad legislation is the question that now agitates the members of that body The committee IiaB held several sessions at which the problems were gone over in some detail and in which several proposi tions were made by individual mem bers Suggestions were listened to from the newly elected railway com missioners with the exception of Rob ert Cowell of Omaha who was not there It appeared that there is little senti ment in favor of a flat two cent pas senger fare though a measure of some sort reducing the passenger fare per haps to 2 cents will be agreed upon That this sentiment exists in the houso was shown by the action of the house railroad committee in recom mending for postponement a two cent passenger fare bill by Representative Whltham of Johnson It was drawn however to provide a one cent rate for children under twelve which would have included all young chil dren The committee realizes that it is confronted with a multiplicity of prob lems There is first the question of what general plan to follow in em powering the commissioners to regu lato rates whether to give them power to make rates in the first in stance or not This once settled there is still further the question of how to settle this power upon them Some mombcrs thought best to make sev eral bills so that in case the courts failed to sustain one there would be others on which to fall back As to the number of bills to be en acted some believed one clear com prehensive and cc icise law was suf ficient Others thought possibly one on the powers of the commission and the method of procedure and another fixing the compensation and organiza tion would be enough To Bring Constitution Up to Date Senator Aldrich of Polk has intro duced a joint resolution senate file No 140 the purpose of which is to secure the full and complete amend ment of the constitution and make it an up-to-date instrument The resolu tion provides for the appointment by the governor- within ten days of a constitutional revision commission of five members to be selected from the citizens of the state and not more than three to belong to any one party This commission shall meet at the capitol within one week and after examining the constitution shall formulate a series of amendments which shall cure defects and make the constitution con form to existing conditions No amendment shall be accepted except by the unanimous vote of the commis sion The commission shall report to the governor and legislature as soon as possible and submit amendments to be submitted to the people for adoption or rejection The pay of the commissioners shall be 25 per day for not to exceed twenty days and the clerk shall be paid 10 per day and stenographers 5 per day each Child Labor Bill The Clarke child labor bill is bring- J ntr rmifh discussion It would I have been recommended for passage thpast week but for the fear that it might lead to trouble in the country where there is a habit of working young men under sixteen years of age rather regularly Mr Clarke asked the house not to endanger a good law and one that was needed in the cities of the state for some rather imaginary difficulty Speaker Nettleton and Representative Farley were not op posed to the bill but they raised the objection as did Lee of Douglas that there might be some families who would depend on the support of child ren under sixteen These Mr Clarke said were extremely few It was stated in the farming communities it would be possible for one farmer to cause another trouble by causing his arrest if he worked hisboys too hard Rather than insist on the measure at that time Mr Clarke moved thai further conference be had on the bill State to Buy Bonds Having been authorized by the board of educational lands and funds to pur chase 117000 of the Mississippi state bonds as an Investment for the state school fund State Treasurer Brian stands ready to deliver the money for the bonds He has received consider able money during the first two weeks in January and now has funds to take up the proposed purchase The bonds are to be bought at a rate that will netihgtate 375 per cent Interest Shall We Have Commission Shall Nebraska have a state elective railway commission This question is to come before the supremo court of Nebraska February 5 It is consid ered to be one of the most important legal questions that has arisen in the past twenty years when an appointive railway commission was created This commission was declared unconstitu tional about ten years later by the su preme court that body having decided that the title of the bill creating It had been changed some time during the progress of the bill from one house to another In the present test suit in the su preme court the railroad attorneys are privileged to appear as friends of the court to present their side of the case in the event they desire to com bat the constitutional amendment Dairymen Want a Commissioner The dairymen of Nebraska believ ing that their industry has become a powerful factor in the material pros perity of the state and that the state is therefore enriched by the addition of millions of dollars will ask the legislature to give them a dairy com missioner It will be asked to make such an appointment and attach a sal ary for the commissioner and inspect ors The dairymen want a more rigid inspection of dairy products They say that in testing milk and cream for commercial purposes it shall be made unlawful to use any methods not laid down by the dairy commis sioner and fully endorsed by the pro fessor or animal husbandry of the state agricultural institution who shall prescribe and furnish the food com missioners most accurate and practi cal methods to be used in testing milk and cream and rules and regulations governing the same Second it shall be unlawful to sell any milk cream or dairy product to be used as food that has been put in any pail separator vessel churn or other implement which is in an unclean and unsanitary condition at the time or operate in the manufacture of any dairy product in any creamery or fac tory any implement or vessel which is in an unclean and unsanitary condi tion Third it shall be unlawful to sell or offer for sale any milk or cream from diseased or unhealthy cows or from cows kept in filthy and unsanitary manner Want a Board of Examiners The Nebraska Optical Society is in terested in a bill providing for the appointment of a board of examiners in optometry The bill defines the pow ers of the board which shall make such rules and regulations not incon sistent with the laws as may be nec essary to the proper performance of its duties The bill provides that per sons desiring to commence or continue the practice of optometry after Jan uary 1 190S be required to take an examination before the board to de termine his qualifications There is at present no law governing or regulat ing the practice of optometry and the design of the bill favored by the so ciety is the protection of the public from the practice of those who engage in optometry who are not qualified to do so The public will understand better what is meant by the term when it is explained that optometry Is what is practiced by opticians The Price of Railroad Fare Several bills relating to the rate to be paid for railroad fare have beenN Introduced the rates named varying Senator Phillips of Holt has one in which he names 2 cents as the maxi mum charge He has also introduced an anti free pass bill or a bill intend ed to give publicity to the names and addresses of persons who receive free transportation for persons or property His plan is to require the railroads to file an annual statement with the county clerk containing the names of all persons within the county who have received free passes for persons or property and the reasons such passes were given No State Fair Levy The house overwhelmingly voted for the resolution of Tucker of Douglas that all appropriations shall be made in specific amounts and not in mill levies This means that the state fair management must ask the legislature for a specified sum and can not have the one eighth mill levy it desired U of N Charter Day Preparations are being made at the state university for the charter day exercises Friday February 15 when a crowd of several hundred visitors are expected in Lincoln The program will be the best ever presented and the students at the big school are man ifesting much interest in the plans for the exercises Adultery Bill Passed Bills on third reading have been reached in the senate S F No12 by Root of Cass making a lighter penalty for adultery and defining the crime to consist of a single offense instead of a continuous offense was read the third time and placed upon Its passage Twenty eigh senators voted for it and It was declared passed with the emer gency clause McKesson of Lancaster voted in the negative I NEWS ITEMS IN NEBRASKA The Burlington has begun work on the new depotat Minden The new Methodist Episcopal church at Edison has been dedicated The ice harvest a very satisfactory one is proceeding In all directions Fire destroyed the houso of Peter Kohler in Burt county Nothing was saved Seward citizens are considering the matter of holding a chautauqua thero the coming summer The county commissioners of Wash ington county estimate that 90000 will be needed to run the county the coming year John Sams while shelling corn near Arnold had his right hand ground up in a horsepower so that amputation was necessary above the wrist Oliver G Myers and Mrs Carrie E Carpenter were found dead in bed in a room at Lincoln Death was caused by asphyxiation by fumes from a gas stove The state of Washington has accred ited the Peru Normal certificates thus permitting normal graduates to teach in that state without further examina tions C C Hughes former assistant gen eral superintendent of the Northwest ern railroad on its Nebraska Wyoming division will probably locate in Fre mont A telegram has reached Fremont from Washington slating that Presi dent Roosevelt has nominated Daniel Swanson for reappointment to the po sition as postmaster of Fremont A number of firms and families in Auburn are now burning Nemaha county coal James Hayes owner of the mines located on Honey creek be tween Auburn and Peru shipped the first carload last week The trout pools of northern Nebras ka will have a considerable addition to their population this summer when the eggs which have just been re ceived by the state commission are hatched and the fry distributed At the request of the members of Russell post Grand Army of the Re public Fairbury Congressman Hin shaw has secured from the war de partment the donation to the post of one of the cannon captured in the Spanish American war which will be placed in the city park Some forty prominent property own ers have petitioned the board of coun ty commissioners of Cass county pro testing against the action of the board in reappointing Anderson House as superintendent of the poor farm They charge corrupt practices and extrava gance Copies of a petition are being circu lated at Ainsworth to be forwarded to Congressman Kinkaid asking that the service pension bill be amended in the house to provide pensions ranging from 10 at the age of GO to 25 at the age of 75 and to do away with all boards of examiners Adjutant General Culver of the State National Guard in his biennial report just issued advocates a plan for build ing permanent armories for all the companies of the guard His plan calls for the organization of an asso ciation to collect funds and build me morial armories at each guard station to be dedicated to the great soldiers of all wars of this country John Samuel Jay who was caught In the shafting of the sugar factory at Grand Island while leaning over the same to clean some windows and who was terribly injured after several days of intense suffering succumbed to his injuries His clothing was caught he was whirled about the shafting and to the floor and many bones were broken and internal in juries caused Congressman Hitchcock has re ceived a letter from Mr and Mrs Henry Doorly his son-in-law and daughter dated Kingston January 12 giving him and his family the assur ance they already felt of the safety of the Omaha tourists in the earthquake district They were to leave Kingston that day and are supposed to have gotten away before the shake oc curred The Nebraska Volunteer Firemens association elected these officers President J V Hyder York first vice president Mark Mortenson Fremont second vice president Bert Galley Co lumbus secretary E A Miller Kear ney treasurer Henry Graff Seward board of control George Howe of Fre mont J F McNee of Kearney R N McAllister of Grand Island R H Rey nolds of Norfolk and John McKay of Blair The TJnjon Pacific has asked eight passenger conductors running into North Platte to have their photo graphs taken to be used in an adver tising pamphlet that the company will Issue The feature of these eight con ductors is that their combined weight is 2090 pounds or an average of 261 pounds each The conductors to be represented in this group are Mooney and Layton of the Wyoming division and Madden Wallace Powers Clap 1 per Shoemaker and Keene They are a bunch of big ones and every ounce of them represents gentlemanly quali ties and efficiency as employes Henry Oltman aged 70 years has been arrested at Madison on the charge of incest He is charged by his 18-year-old daughter with being the parent of a child to which she ia about to give birth The exhibit of the Nebraska Corn Improvers meeting in Lincoln last week is said to have been the best ever seen at an association meeting A Shamel of Chicago who has been judge of the Nebraska corn show for the past five years said that It sur passed anything which this state has heretofore exhibited New York Up in the Berkshire Hills there is a vast estate contain ing many thousands of acres in one of the most beautiful regions of America and which belongs to a small community of which the large majority must soon pass away Seven miles this estate runs along the country roads Spurs from the Berkshires cross it and lovely valleys He between In one of these valleys clusters a group of houses which have slowly ac cumulated during a hundred years and more Good houses they are well built and large filled with every con venience and comfort and surround ed with trim gardens shaded drives and deep fruited orchards It looks like a little paradise In summer The place would be suitable for a great charitable or educational institution a sanitarium or summer boarder en terprise There are many rich farms in the great estate In the hands of those who knew how to manage it the whole would form a holding of great value As it Is the title rests in a community of about -80 persons of which the majority must in the course of nature die within the next few years and into which no new mem bers are entering Who is going to become the final owner of the great Shaker property at Mount Lebanon N Y Which of the younger women of the community will be the last survivor of an organi zation formed more than a century high type of character and intelli gence Indomitable workers the pro ceeds of their toil put into a common treasury made the community rich al though the members possessed no in dividual property The buildings and grounds to day are full of comforts and improvements which have been added by the busy skillful hands of one generation after another It would seem as if plenty of peo ple who live in neither comfort nor plenty outside would be thankful to enter this peaceful retreat and know they were provided for for life with no harder work than they would do anywhere But they do not come The Shakers are anxious to get new mem bers They do not want the sect to perish from the face of the earth Its dwindling numbers are a matter of distress to them It is for this reason that they have within recent years adopted a more liberal policy In for mer years the world was never per mitted to enter their gates except for strictly necessary business Two years ago they took the unprecedent ed step of calling a peace convention which attracted many distinguished speakers and visitors They serve dinners through the pleasant weather now and the automobile folk from Lenox and Stockbridge find these an agreeable goal Last summer for the first time in history one of the families took summer boarders These activities have been profita ble but morethan profit the Shakers songht new material from which to re plenish their dwindling numbers Conservatism Triumphed This policy seemed good at first During the summer of the peace con vention seven new members entered the North family By winter all were gone The history of two of them is an example of the rest Both were men in the prime of life one an American who had been the financial editor of a big daily paper the other a London merchant Both belonged to that small but persistent percent age of the population to whom com munistic life is attractive Otherwise there was nothing to take them to the place for no Shaker receives any personal emolument All goes into the common treasury These two men saw possibilities In the place They advanced various plans for making it more profitable They entered with enthusiasm Into the idea of moderninzing the whole organization bringing it in touch with the preesnt day world getting in fresh Jjlood and building up a strong growing organization once more They were allowed to do nothing Everything they proposed was vetoed by those in authority and they be came conscious of an unspoken but acute jealousy Gradually they saw they were to be reduced to simply two pairs of hands doing the manual tasks that were or dered like little boys Their brains were not wanted their new ideas were not wanted and they had to take orders from men who were men tally their inferiors Then they went away and by winter the rest of the seven had followed them One Womans Experience A young woman went to Mount Lebanon last summer thinking per haps she might join She was a dreamer and an idealist She had had a hard and poverty stricken life for a few years and she was penni less The ilfe attracted her the work was congenial she liked all the ma terial conditions But she found that should she become a member she would never again have a moments privacy Working or sleeping an other woman would be always with her Eldres3 Anna would road all lot tors she sent or received and she would ask the eldress permission for overy act of her life a3 a child does its mothor At tho end of six weeks she left to begin her struggle with poverty again preferring that to prison life Mother Ann Lee who foundod tho Shaker sect was a remarkablo wo man says the New York Press LIko most founders of rollglona the sub liminal was on top In her and she Baw visions and droamod dreams Powers were claimed for her which correspond to what are known a3 clairvoyance and healing by sugges tion nowadays She had a career which shows her to have been a strong character and probably had her followers lived the ordinary fam ily life the sect would have been a flourishing church to day replenished in each generation with tho children of the members Mother Ann had some very ad vanced ideas for her day For in stance she believed in tho absolute equality of man and woman and Shakerdom has always been conduct ed on that basis But democratic government was not known In her day and she made the rule of her communities despotic through an elder and eldress at the head of each family appointing their own succes sors and with no check on their au thority Eldress Anna now holds the reins with a hand of iron in the North fam ily She is of the type of the born priest Her face is that of the ascetic and the devotee She is able consci entious and profoundly religious but she is an autocrat One Scandal in Community There was one scandal at Mount Lebanon once just once but it is still whispered with bated breath One brother now in his GOs entered the community at 13 bringing 4000 with him With the flight of years he was made elder being a most able and devoted member A few years ago after the brother had spent near ly 50 years in service of the com munity a new sister entered She was a stranger young and fair but most exemplary in her conduct and obedience To the horror of the whole family ago and what will she do with this vast deserted place when by law it passes into her hands For no new members are entering the Shaker commounity to remain permanently The community is slowly but surely dying out Survivors Will Be Women The last survivors will undoubtedly be women The great majority of the members are now women about 65 out of the 80 The younger members are all women These younger women are mostly in the fifties although the remarkably youthful appearance of all Shaker women makes them look in many cases at least 15 years younger The great majority of all the members are aged women ran ging from the seventies well along toward the nineties Eldress Harriet Bullard who is at the head of all the Shakers in the United States is well over SO So is Eldress Anna White the head of the North family the most distinguished family in Shakerdom These old wo men are marvels of activity and achievement for their age like all Shaker women Yet they can hardly live many years longer and consider ing the large number of them of about the same age there must within the next few years be a marked diminu tion of numbers How will the few who remain man age this great place already too vast for the survivors Miles of Shaker territory lie unoccupied and unproduc tive One great house in the valley with its big bams and outbuildings stands vacant Its family died out within a few years past and it is quietly falling to decay Nobody joins the Shakers now People enter from time to time stay a few weeks or months and then go away The Shakers have taken chil dren from time to time to raise and have raised them well But when they were grown these children nearly al ways slipped quietly away into the big world outside Rich and Prosperous Yet a hundred years ago that valley at Mount Lebanon was a busy hive of industry Inhabited by hundreds of hardy thrifty New Englanders of a it awakened one morning to find Bro ther Ephraim and the new sister gone Worse yet Brother Ephraim who bandied the banking business of the family had taken not only his own 4000 but 6000 more being every cent of the familys ready money Rather than betray its shame to the world the family made no sign and never strived to recover its 10 000 One morning all wet with sleet and cold as ice Brother Ephraim came creeping in and told his tale with sobs and tears He followed the authority of Adam strictly and laid it all on the woman She had bewitched him he said He could not resist her but Just as soon as the money was gone she had left him and then he sobbed again He brought back not one dollar of the 10000 It had flown with wings for they lived high After 50 years of celibacy Brother Ephraim had gone on one grand bust The crime was one even more de testable to the Shakers than to ordi nary folk But Brother Ephraim was so useful a man that they had been at their wltB ends to get on without him So they took him back and set him to work and he lives a chastened and humbled man and a firm believer in the superman End Must Be Soon That is the only scandal Shaker land ever had They are clean hon est hard working people who live the simple life with plain living and high thinking None of the vices of the age are theirs Yet year by year there are more of those strange silent Shaker funerals when by night with out music flowers or weeping they carry out a rough plank box to a nameless unmarked grave Nobody comes to fill the vacant chair and soon a picturesque historic experi ment the only experiment in Ameri can Protestant monastic life will see its end The only question Is which of the Shaker sisters will be left the last possessor of that seven miles of land and the group of great empty houses with their century old memo rles - V t v