THE O’NEILL FRONTIER D. H. CRONIN. Publisher. XNEILL. NE»R«KA Rees-."- -- . _i According lo customs of Just a few years ago larmers in this country quit work as soon as the cotton was picked and did nothing until about the first of March, but luckily these old cus toms changed. No plowing for the next crop was done until spring opened end the birds were singing, but this is not so now. Farmers break their land in the winter, turning all weeds end trash under, thereby getting ad vantage of an extra amount of fertil iser and making the iand much easier to work. Improved farming imple ments have been introduced, the old time single stocks having been dis< ard ed. No other Industry has been ad vanced more in the last few years. Farming is now one of the best pro fessions in the country and good Judg ment is exercised by the boy who sticks to the farm instead of going out as a one-horse merchant or a Jack-leg law yer. __ Wassily Safonoff, the Rusisan i«n ductor, is prouder of his eight child ren than of nil his achievements in the realm of music. He never allows his friends to forget the existence of this happy family, which is still in Russia In order to illustrate his enthusiastic talk about his children, Mr. SafonofT carries about with him a large photo graph which shows the family lilted tip like the pipes of an organ. It is so divided that it folds into a size that can be carried In the pocket. Wherever he may be Mr. Safonoff never fails to take out the frame and exhibit his family to his companions. Since 1870 there have been but six seasons when the Mississippi did not freeze over, these being the years 1873, 1875. 1882, 1891. 1902 and 1906. The thirty times that it did close the Ice •topped running thirty times in De Sember, showing that this is the month when the heavy cold usually •ets in. The earliest date recorded is December 4, 1872 and the latest Feb ruary 24, 1889. One season, 1895-1896, the Ice froze up tight and then moved *lx times, the variation of the tem perature for the winter. If Paris had its brigands, as they »re found In some southern Isles, they Would have had a chance for a splendid exploit the other day when a proces eon of three wagons was quietly wend g its way from the Gare Saint La aare to a bank near the boulevards. The little caravan contained 150,000, MO worth of American railway secur ities, which had been shipped from New York on the Provence and have been deposited In Paris. It Is needless to say that the treasure was carefully guarded by detectives. There Is now' being built at Juvlsy, in the outskirts of Paris, a station which it Is believed will when finished be the latgest In the world. At Juvisy »ir the lines meet of the Parls-Lyons Marsellles and of the Orleans systems, about thirty pairs of rails being inter laced. From this point radiate the lines which carry traffic to southern France, to Italy, to Spain and to Por tugal. The new station covering all these rails Is to be built on the latest principles. A new application of the motor cycle to military circles has been Invented In. Austria. In concerns the quick laying *f telephone and telegraph wires. In front of the cycle is Installed a cylin drical roll or reel upon which the wire Is wound, and a man sitting in the bloving car lays the wire, by means of a long pole, either In the tops of the trees, or. If there are none, in ditches »r gutters. With the new apparatus Shree miles of wire may be laid In twelve minutes. During the twelve months ending dune 30. 1905. fourteen persons were killed and forty Injured from British Steam plant accidents; In the United States 3S3 persons were killed and 585 injured. The number of steam boilers Bi the United States does not exceed by Inore than 50 per cent, those In Great Britain, so that, in comparison, the ac tual percentage is ten times as great In the United States as in England. In proof of the assertion made by the German authorities that all is well »n Morocco, an officer of the recent Berman expedition to Fez tells how in the heart of Morocco he had met an English woman touring alone. The fearless woman Is Mrs. Frances V. Bampbell. She is reported to have trai ned all the Way across Morocco on horseback, with no other escort than a few servants. Three notebooks which formerly be longed to Shelley, the poet, containing autograph manuscript, a considerable portion of which has been published, Were sold in London not long ago for $15,000. The purchase is said to have been made for an American. The man uscript formed part of the library of the la'e Dr. Garnett, keeper of printed ♦looks'*of the British museum. The statement has been made that •orses average from twenty to thirty gears of life and dogs from twelve to {ourteen years. A French encyclopaed "t credits the horse with thirtv to forty years, the dog with twenty to twenty-four. There is a sufficient range *f uncertainty In these figures to cause 4oubt whether detailed study lias been tnade of the subject. Diseases among children—notablv •ore throat and bad eyes—caused through dust raised by motor cars, are nost rife where the schools are sit tiated cm roads frequented by motor ears, or where the children traverse these roads. Jn one school the head teacher point* out that thev have ten eases of sore throat where five years Ago they had one. "No more trading stamps," Is the •logan of a campaign which English fxooerymen are carrying on. One of hem. whose shop is in East Loudon •ays: 'There is not a smalt grocer 111 England * ho eurrie is per cent- on Imp capital. Ten per oetit. is average •roflt. and the cost of trading stamps leaves him only 6>i per cent. The state of Washington produced *0.500.000.000 shingles in year, or SSt* i>er cent, of the total out put of the United States Washington has <;.» mills, with a daily output of Jln-4®'^00, °r *? per c*n*' niore than In 190a. In no other state does the yearly output approximate 1.000.000.000. Ramon Pina, the new Spanish minis ter to the United States. Is 4: years oid. And has been in the Spanish diplomatic service since he was 22 years old It la understood that his appointment to ■Washington is a reward for his services to the government as secretary to the Algeciras conference. Disappearing paper is a novelty for use by those whose corespondents for get to burn the letters after their util ity has ceased. It is steeped in sul phuric acid, dried and glazed, the add being partly neutralized by ammonia vapor. It falls to pat^es after a given • time. NEBRASKA SOLONS j Proceedings of the Week in Brief in 1 Both Houses of the Legislature. J* ^ I - -- I j WEDNESDAY'S PROCEEDINGS. Unroll*. Neb.. Jan. 30—The joint commit!*e on the railroad commission has agreed upon a method of procedure that has for Its first object the speedy trial of all rate cases. The commission shall take as maxi mum rates the ones in force on January 1 of this year and shall have the power to make new schedules which shall go Into force at least sixty days there after. This gives the railroads time to file objection*. A hearing is then given and If the roads appear, they must do It before the date «et for the new rates to go into effect. The hearing on the appeal shall be In the district court and upon Its merits. The railroads must attach to any petition for an In junction all of the evidence and the findings of facts made before the com mittee and no Injunction shall lssus until after a trial. Is a New Procedure. This 's a new procedure In rale cases, and prevent* any holding up of a rate until after the equities have been fully determined. Reallxlng that fines against a rail road company disobeying an order of the commission are of little value as deterrents, the new law will affix pen alties upon officers, agents and em ployes who violate these orders, fines ranging from *100 to *5.000 for each of fense. or Imprisonment from ten to thirty days. The bill fixes the salaries of commissioners at *3.000 a year. The subcommittee has added a para graph making the rate of passenger 'are 2 cents a mile. THURSDAY’S PROCEEDINGS. Lincoln. Neb.. Jan. 31.—The bill to abolish capital punishment In Nebras ka was favorably recommended in the house. The house by a vote of 61 to 36 went on record today favoring an increase In the salaries of members of the legis lature from 35 to 36.10 a day. This must be done by constitutional amend ment and the fight came up on whether a bill providing for its submission should be definitely postponed. In the senate two Important meas ures were recommended to pass. One Is Intended to prevent persons seeking pardons for convicted persons from privately importuning the governor. No pardon can be considered without pub licity and notice to the county attor ney who prosecuted and the trial judge. No statement of the case may be made to the governor except under oath at a public hearing. The other bill is Intended to prevent the trusts from selling standard articles of gen eral consumption In one locality cheap in order to drive out competitors while recouping themselves by high prices elsewhere. Rising to a question of personal priv ilege. Senator Wilsey denounced as a new kind of faking the stories that the Joint committee has been prodded Into action. He said the committee had been hard at work formulating sound bills and that every party pledge would be carried out in full. FRIDAYS PROCEEDINGS. Lincoln. Neb., Feb. 1.—The house Judiciary committee introduced an anti lobby bill today. It provides that paid agents of corporations and others classed as lobbyists ihay talk with members prior to the introduction of bills in whioh they are interested. After that they can consult them only in pub lic and before committee hearings. Heads and attaches of state institu tions are unrestricted save that they must not converse with members on matters affecting their compensation. After a tight in the house. Heffernan secured a reconsideration and the plac ing on file of the railroad measure that had been indefinitely postponed a feu days ago. The bill requires a railroad to keep a registry at all stations where shippers may file requests for cars. I he same to be awarded in the order of registry. A bill making all county judges in counties of over 15,000 inhabitants reg ular atto-nevs was killed, tile farmers declaring that it was an effort to fas ten the hold of lawyers on county of fices. HARRIMAN SORE ON UNCLE SAM, RETALIATES Omaha, Neb., Jan. 3!.—The Or.iaha Union Pacific and Northwestern rail roads have refused to make any special rates for a government shipment of soldiers en route to the Philippines to and fiom San Francisco, and the quartermaster’s department of the de partment of Missouri, is much disap pointed, officers expressing themselves In forceful language over the action Of the railroads. The Harriman rail roads are buying coal in Australia and shipping It to the United States fo: use in locomotives on the lints in the system, foal costs the railroads J10 at the docks in Australia, and by the time San Francisco is reached the cost becomes enormous. But so scarce are freight cars and motive power on the Harriman system, it pays railroads to pay this price for coal rather than to lake ears and engines from the general traffic and devote them to coal business. In Wyoming the great coal camps of the Union Pacific are almost at a stardstill. LOVE IS TRuFbUT SHE ASKS DIVORCE Grand Rapids, Mich., Feb. 5.—“I .UinJt just as much of him today as 1 over did and we could live happily if It wasn't for outside interference." This was tue dramatic statement of Parma L. West, aged 64 who is suing her husband. James F. West, aged 44. for divorce. The couple live at Edgerton and Mrs. West brought suit in circuit court for divorce on the grounds of cruelty and nonsupport. On the witness stand she attributed most of the trouble to her ■laughter-in-law. She. testified that her husband is cruel and wishes to get rid of her. ♦ BABY THAT WAS 4 4 BURIED ALIVE IS 4 4 IN GOOD HEALTH. 4 4 + 4 Spr.rigfeld. O.. Feb. .—The grand 4 4 jury r.■turned an inn. tme i uga r.st 4 4 Mai Ida 1 alley and Martin Movers 4 4 on charge of assault with intent to 4 4 kill 111 bury.ng alive th< baby of 4 4 ihelr 17-> ear-old gran.daughier. 4 4 Mary Baitv) The 1 lit was di.-- 4 4 covered liy '.he author.! er soon 4 4 after it was hur.eti It was rescued 4 4 ami ituiv :s alive and .11 good health » ♦ 4 444444444 * 44444444444444>4 WHAT THE PRIMARY LAW WILL CONTAIN Nebraska Measure Which Will Likely Be Enacted Is Outlined. INCLUDES U. S. SENATORS Everybody on the Ticket Get* a Top Place Here or There—Filing Fee* to Be Required of Candidate*. Lincoln. Neb.. Feb. 5.—The Dodge primary election bill, the essential feat ures of which are in accord with the state platform pledges and regarded as likely to be incorporated into the pri mary law that will be passed by this legislature, provides < For a primary to be held at the reg ular polling places on Tuesday, nine weeks preceding the general election in November, for the nomination of all candidates to be voted for at that elec tion and I'nited States senator, which day shall also be the first day for the registration of voters where registra tion is required. For city and village ■•lections the primary 1b to be held four weeks before election day. Notice is to be given by the secretary of state to the county clerk, who pub 'ishes In at least two and not to exceed four newspapers a notice of the pri mary. stating when and where it will be held. In case of city elections the ity clerk takes the initiative and does the work of direction. nominations by petitions. Nominations are to be made by duly signed petition filed thirty days before the primary. If for state office at least 1 ^>er cent, of the voters of the party d such candidate In the state, covering at least six counties. 1 per cent. In each must sign. For congressman 2 per cent, must sign. Any party that cast 1 per cent, of the total vote at the pre eding election can be represented on the official ballot. Nomination papers may be filed for non-partisan candi dates. containing at least 3 per cent, of the total vote cast at the last pre ceding general election in the subdivis ion in which he is a candidate. Presidential electors are to be nomi nated in the same way as candidates for state offices. Provision is made for filing and pub lication of names of all candidates. Separate party tickets are to be printed, uniform in slse and color and modeled after the Australian ballot, on which the offices to be filled are placed in the usual order of importance. The names of candidates under head ings shall be arranged alphabetically according to surnames, after which they shall be rotated In this wise: The form shall be set up with the names in the order upon which they are placed on the sample ballot. In print ing each set of tickets for the various election districts the position of the names shall be changed in each office division as many’ times as there are candidates, as nearly as possible an equal number of tickets being printed after each change. The printer, in making the changes, shall take the top name and place it at the bottom. All ballotF. blanks and other sup plies to be used and all expenses nec essarily incurred in the preparation for conducting such primary shall be paid out of the treasury of the city or coun ty. as the case may be. Filing Fees Required. Filing fees are required of candidates as follows: For senator. *100; for state offices. *50: for congressmen and dis trict judges. *25: for legislative and all county offices, *10. No fee is required from candidates for an office for which there is no compensation. A division of fees between election districts is provided for. The same laws that apply to false personation and voting, to bribing and accepting a bribe or committing elec tion frauds, as in the general laws, are re-enacted for this one. In cities where registration is re quired the polls open at 8 a. m. and close at S in the evening. All present close at 8 in the evening. In all other Places the polls are open from 12 o'clock noon to 8 o'clock in the evening. All present at the dosing hour who have not voted may do so. llefore getting a ballot the voter must State to the judges what political pm\y he affiliated with and whose candidates he supported at the last election and whose candidates generally he intends to support at the next one. Restrictions on Voting. In cities where registration is re quired no voter shall be permitted to vote the ballot of any party except that which he was registered at the last general election as affiliating with. The county canvass of the ruurns shall be made by the same officers and in the manner provided in ihe law re lating to the canvass of the returns of November elections, and the state can vass by the lawfully appointed board. The city canvass is made by three cilv contests. The person receiving the greatest number of votes shall be declared the candidate, and his name placed on the official ballot. If any die or decline the vacancy will be filled by the majority vote of the proper committee. If there is no committee a mass convention can perform the same work. The members of the committee are elected In the same manner, at the pri mary, as candidates for office. In cases of ties the canvassers determine. Con tests are to be heard before county Judges In the same manner as election contests. h All Get Chance to Vote. Persons entitled to vote may absent themselves from their employment for that purpose for a period of two hours, and their wages shall not be reduced because of that absence, if application to the employer is made the day pre vious. Electors are given an opportunity to vote on constitutional amendments in the same manner as for nominees and If a majority favor it it shall be con sidered a part of the party ticket at the general election. Delegates to national conventions shall be elected at conventions of dele gates chosen in a manner designated by the committees. Provisions is made for special primary elections and for the formation of new parties. SUES HETTY GREEN’S NIECE FOR DIVORCE Charles. Jlo.. Fob. .'.—Charles W. ProsSer, c re of the ir.ost^ influential citizens of St. Charles, has filed suit for divorce. * Is w ife was Daisy Kathleen Mul vauey. of a prominent Michigan fam ily. a niece uf Hetty Creep.. i’ro-ser charges she spoke of him to i his family i.i disparaging terms and j O.t.p. usel unvouth and at times d- ! "•OS', vulgar a in referring to l ARRESTED FOR ELOPING WITH HIS OWN WIFE But W. F. Graham, of Lincoln, Prove* He I* Not the Man the Police Are After. Lincoln. Neb . Feb. 4.—Mistaken for another man. W. F. Graham was yes terday arrested for having eloped with his own wife. A telegram to the police asked them to arrest Ellsworth Bdckway and Ethel Starrett. who had left Clay Center, af ter having purchased tickets for Lin coln. It was explained that each was married, but not to each other, and they had a 2-year-old child with them. Four officers at the train found no couple answering the description, but the conductor pointed out a dark-haired young man who had got on at Falr bury with a woman and a small child. The conductor said the woman and child had left the train at a Junction joint. The man. W. F. Graham, was taken to the station badly flustrated, but soon proved his Identity. TEACHER HOLDS JOB BY APPLYING TO THE COURT Lincoln. Neb., Feb. 4.—Miss Jennie Fitzgerald, a spinster of 45, teacher in a country school In the southern part of the county, has secured an injunc tion restraining the county superin tendent from revoking her license to teach and the school board of her dis trict from interfering with her In the conduct of her school. Miss Fitzgerald has been having all sorts of trouble with her school, be cause, os she says, she had a dispute with one of the women with whom she boarded around. The scholars testified In a hearing before the superintendent that she had called several of them names not used in polite society. They said she scolded them rep>eatedly. and when they said they would tell their parents she informed them that she hoped they would, that she was Just aching for an opportunity to tell them that their children were the worst lot she ever tackled, that the parents were not much better and that the direc tors were tarred with the same stick. The school board, she informed another scholar, was a bunch of babies, and ihat if they wanted trouble she would provide it for them In quantities tc suit. The teacher and the patrons appeared before the superintendent with a law yer each, but the hearing had not pro ceeded far when the teacher declared she could nor get an impartial trial there, and had her attorney take the matter Into court. The superintendent says the woman has taught so many years that she is suffering from ner vous prostration, and he had about de cided to revoke her certificate. Several scholars said that she told them stories about her experiences with other schools that were preposterous, one be ing that her schoolhouse was struck by a cyclone one day and turned half around, yet so perfect was the dis cipline that no scholar even looked up from his books. SOUTH DAKOTA IN GRIP OF BLIZZARD Pierre, S. D.. Feb. 4.—A severe cold nave, accompanied by a high northwest wind and drifting snow, prevailed here last night. The drifting is tying up railway travel and nothing is being attempted in the way of getting trains In this direction from the east. The severity of the storm is certain to cause suffering in the little prairie shacks in which many of the homesteaders live west of the Missouri. It is by far the worst storm of the winter. Snow and Wind at Huron. Huron, S. D.. Feb. 4.—A wind and snow storm set in from the northwest yesterday afternoon, developing into ane of the severest experienced in sev eral years. All trains are late and none will be sent from here. The wind is blowing at the rate of forty-five miles an hour. Lincoln, Neb.. Feb. 4.—A cold wave descended on Nebrasaa yesterday, cov ering a large sectioin of the state. The first effects of the cold reached Lincoln at 9 o’clock and an hour later it was snowing and blowing hard. At Alliance at 9 o’clock it was said that a severe storm was raging. The wind was blow ing a gale and snow was fall ing. Reports from Billings. Montana received at Alliance said a terrifit storm was prevailing. At McCook at th< same hour the temperature had fallen 25 degrees in less than two hours. A special from Ainsworth, in north western Nebraska, said the mercury fell 43 degrees in three hours late in the afternoon bringing zero tempera ture, with the prospect of going much lower. Nebraska towns, as a rule, arc fairly well supplied with coal. FLOOO SWEEPS AWAY SCHOOLHODSE AND A PAIR OF RESIDENCES Village of Dorent, Mo., Far From Railroad and Tele graph, Hard Hit. ♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦ 4»444444444>^ ♦ FLOOD VICTIMS 4 4 DANCE TO KEEP 4 4 UP THEIR SPIRITS. 4 4 > 4 Carmi, ill.. Feb. 4.—Cut off from 4 4 the world by the flooo. and the coal 4 4 supply almost entirely gone, great 4 4 suffering is sure to result unless 4 4 trains can be gotten in this week. 4 4 Refugees camped on the hills near 4 4 here, are already using reduced 4 4 quantities of fuel and a pronounced 4 4 famine is sure to come. Tents are 4 4 pitched on Main street and dancing 4 4 is carried on night and day to keep 4 4 up the people's spirits. 4 tiilHUtmtlttmHMHt Charleston. Mo.. Feb. 4.—News has reached here that the overflooded Mis sissippi river has swept away two resi dences and a school house at Dorent. a village twenty-five miles south of here. It is not known whether there was loss of life. Dorent is far from any railroad or telegraph line. Memphis Levee Breaks. Memphis. Tenn.. Feb. i. -Many per sons are moving from their homes in the northern part of the city as the re sult of a break in the protection levee built a year ago. The levee gave way early today and the district north of Poplar boulevard and west of Fourth street is under two feet of water. MONEY MARKET. New York. Feb. 4.—Money easy*' per cent. Prime men-until • paper .'!4CCL p r cent. Sterling exchange weak. |f.84.G?<; 4.84.68 for demand; $4.SO.T1 I.S'.i 60 fn sixty da; -. FROST THROWS GAR. INTO STORE, I DEAD Slipping Omaha Rails Cause a Wreck That Floods Several Streets. TWELVE PERSONS HURT Telephone Withstands Several Well Directed Bunts From the Car and Then Yields—Hy drant Smashed. Omaha, Neb., Feb. 2.—A street car an South Sixteenth street this morn ing got away from the motorman'a control, tore at lightening speed down the steep hill, left the tracks at the corner of Pierce street and wrecked a drug store. Of a dozen passengers on board none escaped entirely with out injury. Sam Thomas, a teamster, employed by the Baum Iron company, was kil led outright and Otto Sellgren, motor mar.. suffered a severe scalp wound. A heavy frost on the rails was the cause of the accident. When the car left the track it first struck a telephone pole several times and cut it in two, and then smashed a water hydrant, letting the water spout in a huge ktream and landing in the center of the drug store, amid a wreck of win dows and show cases. MAY HIT SALARY OF A NATIVE SON Nebraska Plans to Demand Re duction of Paul Morton’s Pay. Lincoln, Neb., Feb. 2.—If the bills introduced in the Nebraska legislature at the request of the state insurance department become laws. Paul Morton will have to submit to having his sal ary materially scaled, or else his com pany, the Equitable, will have to quit Nebraska. One of these measures provides that no officer or agent of any insurance company shall be paid a salary in ex cess of $50,000 a year. If it persists in doing sc it shall be denied the right to do business in the state. Another provides that no corporation or stock company shall be licensed as the agent or representative of any life insurance company in soliciting, selling or in any manner placing life insurance policies or contracts in this state. Another provides that every policy given or produced shall be used against tain the entire contracts between the parties. Fixes Status of Agents. Another sets forth that any person who shall solicit a policy shall be re garded as the agent of the company i and not the agent of the assured. i Another prohibits discrimination by a life insurance company in favor of Individuals in the same class and equal expectation of life in the amount of payment of premiums or rates charged or in the dividends or other benefits I and punishes by a heavy fine any re- i i bating, with the right placed in the I hands of the auditor to deny a new license. j Another inhibits the contribution by any insurance company, including fra ternal beneficiary association to any political committee or party. Any of ficer who violates this provision is sub ject to a maximum fine of $1,003 or im prisonment for a year. No* person, the bill provides, shall be excused from tes tifying or bringing books or papers into court on the plea that such act would tend to incriminate or degrade him, but no one shall be prosecuted on ac count of any matter concerning which be may so testify and no testimony so gi\en or produced shal be used against film upon any criminal investigation or proceeding. Annual Accounting of Surplus Another requires the annual appor tionment and accounting of surplus of life insurance companies as to policies heretofore issued. Every companv bav in force any such deferred dividends policies shall also at the time of mall : ing the annual premium notice enclose ; an annual statement showing surplus i and the amount credited to the policy. I This act does not apply to Industrials." ! Another provides that no life insur ance company doing business in the state shall issue or circulate or cause to be circulated any estimate, illustra tion. circular or statement of any sort misrepresenting the terms of any pol icy or the benefits promised thereby, or the dividends or shares of surplus to be received. A violation is punishable by a fine of $500 ;«nd revocation of 11 ; cense to do new business, while a six months jail sentence may be given. 4 OUTRAGE TO SWELL 1 4 OYSTERS TO FATNESS 4 4 SAYS DR. WILEY. 4 4 Washington, D. C.. Feb. 2.—Dr 4 4 Wiley, head of the Bureau of ehem- 4 4 tstry. says: 4 4 “An oyster is dead an hour after 4 4 It is opened and is not good. It 4 4 loses Its flavor. They ought not to 4 4 be frozen. It ruins them and as 4 4 soon as they thaw they are danger- 4 4 ous." 4 4 He urges that oysters be shipped 4 4 alive and in the shell, and says the 4 4 greatest outrage of the oyster trade 4 4 is to soak oysters with fresh water I 4 and swell them up. making them 4 4 look fat Dr. Wiley says the oy- 4 4 eters sent out In tin cans are ;il] 4 4 rght. but in further denunciation of 4 4 bulk oysters shipped in tubs and 4 4 buckets, he adds: 4 4 “They are either preserved with 4 4 some preservative or are dangerous- 4 4 near the ptomaine line, one of the 4 I 4 two." ' 4 ' -- ! RUSSIA DEPARTS FROM MANCHURIA St. Petersburg. Feb. 2.—The Hussiar J evacuation of Manchuria began today I with the departure of tine Moscow regi ! ment. Premier Stolypin today issued a cir- ’ | cular emphasizing the government s de- : I sire to co-operate with parliament. The ■ premier points out that representative* 1 of the crown arc forbidden to take pari in party politics and urges local au thorities :o assure full freedom In dec. j lions. FORMER RESTRICTIONS NOW LOOK LIBERAL Liquor Lobby at Lincoln Is Trying to Save the Old Law. EFFORT SEEMS HOPELESS Already the Senate Has Passed Thre* Bills Requiring Publicity and Bona-Fide Transaction in Dealing in Intoxicants. Lincoln, Neb.. Feb. 1.—The tamest men about the Nebraska legislature this year are those representing Uis liquor interests. Usually the liquor lobby Is asking some amendment of the Slocumb license law. which will make it easier for them to sell their stuff, but this year U says the Slocumb law is the most complete and satisfactory law that could be devised, and urging that It be kept intact. Notwithstanding this, however, the senate has passed two laws that are certain to hit the brewers and distillers hard. One Is that all liquors sent by express or freight anywhere In the state must bear the legend on the bot tle or box. as well as upon the outside wrappings. "Intoxicating Liquors," in larce letters. A large trade has been worked up In the dry towns and in others where the drinkers buy their supplies for family use from outside so that their neigh bors may not know, but this will be ended under this new law. It provides also that such packages must be sent to a bona fide person, to the one who orders them, and delivery of packages addressed to fictitious persons cannot be made to parties who happen to have the bill of lading. Still another bill passed provides that the place of manual delivery, where the liquor changes ownership and where the money is paid, shall, in law, con stitute the place where the liquor is sold. This means that if the brewer sends a case of beer to the prohibition city of York, he can be prosecuted for selling without a license. ♦ 4 4 HARD BLOW STRUCK 4 4 AT TECHNICAL APPEALS. 4 4 4 4 Lincoln. Neb. Jan. 3,.—The sen- 4 4 ate has passed a law providing that 4 ♦ hereafter the supreme court shall 4 4 not grant a new trial, in any case 4 4 appealed to It. upon a technicality. 4 4 where it is shown that substantial 4 4 justice has been done by the decree -4 4 of the lower court. This is a big 4 4- step forward in western Jurispru- 4 4 dence, and is to be supplemented by 4 4- other leglslat’on that will have the 4 4- effect of discouraging appeals and 4 4- make it impossible to prolong liti- 4 4 gation beyond reasonable lengths. 4 ttMMUHHHiUHMtnt} MURDERED MAN WHO EJECTED HIM FROM ROOM Alliance. Neb., Feb. 1.—Roy Barnes, assistant manager of the Burlington, railroad dining room station, was shot and killed last evening by Roy May nard. a discharged employe. Maynard, while under the influence of liquor, en tered the dining room. He refused to leave and when Barnes ejected him he shot the latter three times. Barnes died almost Instantly. Maynard was arrested and put in jail. OMAHA M’KINLEY CLUB GIVES A BIG BANQUET Omaha. Neb., Feb. 1.—The republi can members of the Nebraska legisla ture and many of the state officials, in cluding Lieutenant Governor Melville R. Hopewell, attended the annual ban quet of the Omaha McKinley club at the Millard hotel last night. Covers were laid for 400. The principal ad dresses were made by Mayor Sherburn M. Becker, of Milwaukee, and Norris Brown. United States senator-elect for Nebraska. COST EX-CONGRESSMAN $1C0 FOR ACTION IN COURT Omaha, Neh., Feb. 1.—Ex-Congress man AY. J. Connell, who was Monday adjudged guilty of contempt by Judge Sutton, of the district court, after trial, was sentenced to pay a fine of $100.’ Connell was charged with trying to browbeat the court in the recent "coal trust" trial. FORMER CONGRESSMAN GUILTY OF CONTEMPT Omaha, Neb . Jan. fV. j. Connell, a former congressman from Nebraska anil for many years one of the leading attor neys of this state, was adjudged guilty of contempt by Judge Sutton, of the dis trict court, after a trial lasting several days. Sentence was reserved until today. The alleged acts of contempt were com mitted by Mr. Connell as attorney for Presiden Howell, of the Omaha Coal Deal ers' association, m the so called "coal trust’ trial. Judge Sutton accused Con nell of trying to bulldoze the court. W. J. Connell served In the fifty-first congress, being elected over J. Sterling Morton in 1SSS. Two years later he was defeated by IV. J. Bryan. NEEDLE GOES IN FOOT AND COMES OUT OF EAR Derby. Conn., Feb. 1.—With the ex traction of the point of a needle from the ear of Miss Mabel Bishop, of Ivehy ton. It is believed the cause of fifteen years' suffering has been removed. In 1992 she ran the needle point into her foot and soon began to suffer from rheumatism that spread upward. Later she had appendicitis and still later gas tric disorders, followed by severe pains in her chest, shoulders and neck successively. A year ago she began to lose iter hearing in the right ear. Operations ?ll^l?„sive.relief until Dl William J. O Neill with a powerful magnet drew out the piece of steel, less than an eighth of an inch long. WOMAN NEARLY KILLED IN MOTOR BOAT RACE Palm Beach, Fla.. Feb. 1.— Just after on. of the motor boat races today the Bruiser, owned by James K. Clarke, of Ardmore, Pa., and another racer col 11.1-d. Mrs. Clarke, who was on the di in tbs re volt! ag machinery and was h.i,i fast. Stu- was rescued just be for. t Bruiser sank The r.n ei whion c j w itty t.i. I.routr alto tank.