The Frontier Published by D. H. CRONIN. KOMAINK SAUNDERS. Assistant Editor and Manager. • 1 50 the Year 75 Gents Six Month* Official paper of O'Neill and Holt county, ADVERTISING RATES: i>isp»ay adrertlsments on pages 4, 5 and 8 re charged for on a basis of 50 cents an inch one column width) per month; on page 1 the charge is II an inch per month. Local ad vertisements, 5 cents per line each insertion. Address the office or the publisher. A Non-Partisan Sample. 11 is only an issue or two since our beloved contemporary was parading its broad and all comprehensive politi cal dimensions and professing great non-partisan principles. At the same time it brought out the name of one of the staunchest partisans in the county for ottice. A local paragraph in the last issue of this late non-par tisan champion gives a further glimpse of the breadth of its liber ality and sincereity of purpose. It reads: The editor spent a few days with the Hole county delegation in the legislature at Lincoln. We found them all busy and also very much in evidence at all times. James A. Donohoe Is easily the big man in the Senate and enjoys the full confidence of all his co-workers and he takes an active interest in all legislation com ing before that body. In the House we found H. R. Henry at his post of duty, watchful and alert and here again we found a man who held the coniidence of all and one who is able and conscientious in all he does. Holt county has reasons to be proud of Senator Donohoe and Representa tive nenry. Ordinary newspaper courtesy would include also the mention of the other member of the legislature from this county, but the established policy of this local fusion organ is strictly ad hered to that the name of no republi can will appear in its columns unless in derision or slander. Mr. Allen, the republican member from this county who stands with the hopeless minority down at Lincoln, is probably not grief stricken that the editor of the only democratic paper in his county did not pay him a visit at Lin coln and omitted his name from the roll of honor, but the Independent’s rank partisan conduct gives the lie to Its professions to the contrary It was probably a source of greal satisfaction to George to be able to see in Mr. Donohoe ihe “big man” in the Senate and H R Henry the wise one of the House, but to most every body else it has appeared that they amount to about as much as a tooth pick in a tornado beside Ransom and «Howell. The Omaha World-Herald accuses our own Immaculate Jim Donohoe, who got up In the Senate and tore great chunks out of the air In a speech opposing “tainted money” when it was proposed to accept of the Carnegie funds for the state university, of being made a tool by the public service corporations and brands his bill relating to municipal franchises as an Infamous alfair pre pared by Omaha and Lincoln corpora tion interests. The World Herald gives ahe date of the meeting in Omaha, the hotel and the number of the room in which it was held and the names of tha men who attended, at which the Donohoe bill was framed up and the campaign organized for getting it through the legislature. This cam paign, the World-Herald charges, the expenditure of much money and the employment of shrewd means to se cure the support of the anti-corpora tion element. The corporations pro fessed to be against tire measure and Donohoe as an anti-corporationist, is accused of having been hoodwinked into Introducing and standing sponsor for the bill. The World-Herald re gards the bill as placing into the hands of a chosen few an entire mon opoly of water, light and other muni cipal franchises, these corporations being thereby enabled to squeeze the people, for any price they see iir. Has “Jimmie” fell to the blandish ments of the corporations? The fore most democratic paper of the state says he has. The Donohoe franchise bill has stirred up considerable of a fuss. This paper would not impute any dis honest motive to the O’Neill senator for his part in the framing and pas sage of the bill in the senate and concede to him the right to his opinion as to the merits of the prop osition, but we can not approve of any measure which places the con trol of purely local alfairs in the hands of a state commission. If rightly understood the Donohoe meas ure would take the right of grantiug franchise entirely out of the hands !of municipalities and place'it with the three railway commissioners. That is a wrong'principle. Every (town should have the right to grant fran chises as it saw fit and control its own affairs. The democratic delegation from Holt county in the legislature may be “easily the big men’’ of the session, but they have failed to get a normal school for their home town or doing anything else to hand their names down to history. THE LEGISLATURE. Lincoln, Neb. Mar. 29.—(Special Correspondence.)—A fight on the open floor of the House of Represen tatives between two members of the democratic majority of that body was one of the exciting incidents of the past week, even if it is one in which the people of the state will take no particular pride. The pugilistic con test came off during the discussion of the bill introduced by Taylor of Cus ter, giving to women municipal suf frage. Taylor had introduced the measure and advocated it in debate when the bill came up for considera tion. Judge Shoemaker, a member of the democratic delegation from Doug las county opposed the measure, and in his argument asserted that in the state of Wyoming, where woman’s suffrage had prevailed for many years, open gambling and similar practices had still continued. Taylor retorted from his seat near which the Omaha orator was delivering his address that this ought to be satisfactory to the Omaha member. Shoemaker replied hotly that he was not a gambler, did not approve of gambling, and that Taylor’s insinuations were low down, disrespectful, and had been continued through the session and that the Cus ter county member was a falsifier. This aroused the ire of the Custer county man to such a degree that he stepped forward and struck the Omaha member, who is an older man than himself, a blow on the face with his clenched fist. Before hos tilities could be further continued, nearby members and employes of the House had rushed between the angry men and succeeded in subduing the impending difficulty. Al the close of the morning session, Taylor offered the House a serious apology for hit loss of temper and resulting conduct. Shoemaker also following suit with an apology. Thus doth the demo cratic majority legislate on the im portant matters affecting the inter ests of all the people of the state. From incidents such as these and the lack of needed legislation, curbing the corporate interests of the state, will the people draw their conclusion as to the value of a democratic legislature, when to its kindly care is given the Important interests of all the people. Governor Shallenberger has sent his first veto message to a bill passed by the present session of the legislalure. The bill was directed to II. R. 00 by Gates of Sarpy, the bill repealing the law passed by the session of two years ago, which abolished saloons in the town of Fort Crook near the U. S. military post of that name, and made a “dry” town of Fort Crook for the past two years. The Gates bill re pealed this law and although it was vigorously opposed by the temperance sentiment in both Senate and House, Mr. Gates was able to pass it through both bodies and it went to the gover nor for hissignature. The governor re turned the bill with a veto message which said in part, “The war depart ment does not permit the sale of liquor at any army post and congress has forbidden it by law. To permit its sale at the very border of a mili tary reservation, as would occur if this bill becomes a law, is, in my judgement, to nullify the purpose of the war department in isolating army posts from the cities and making fu tile the act of congress forbidding the canteen.” A distinct difference of opinion ex ists as to the governor’s motives in finding occosion to veto this partic ular bill. Some see in it a leaning of the governor towards temperance leg islation, while other astute observers classify it as mere politics and cite the fact that the bill refers to one isolated spot in Nebraska where the general liquor interests of the state will find no objection to a closed sea son, and at the same time the demo cratic politicians can point out to the temperance element of the state that the governor actually vetoed a bill permitting a saloon somewhere. Final adjournment and the elimina tion of a mass of legislation now pending in both houses, and which it is impossible to reach, and yet to sift out the party obligations and enact them into law, are the items that trouble the dreams of the democratic majority in the legislature at this time. Sifting committees have been it work in both Senate and House for a week, but even this makeshift'was not sufficient to sift proposed legisla tion close enough to make any possi bility of a nearby final adjournment. A committee of three was appointed both in the House and the Senate to reach a further agreement for the elimination of many of the pending bills in process of incubation. This committee reported to the House and Senate a scheme whereby, after March 24th, the |Senate was to con sider only House bills and the House only Senate Dills, in this way reduc ing the actual work to bills already passed by the other house. The Sen ate agreed to the arrangement, but the House would have none of it, leaving the matter hanging in the air, and tire consideration of bills pre sented by the sifting committee goes merrily on. The joint committee on final adjournment rendered a report agreeing on March 30th as the date of final adjournment. This was ac ceptable to the House, but the Sen ate has as yet refused to adopt it, leaving even the date of final adjourn ment as yet undecided. The anxiety of many of the farmer members to get home to the spring work indi cates, however, that adjournment will be had somewhere near the first of April, and at farthest probably not later than the third. The democratic majority is having an endless amount of trouble with its platform pledge which promised to the people the physical valuation of railways of the state S. F. 133 by Ollis of Valley was introduced in the Senate many weeks ago and was framed to carry out this party prom ise. Its provisions were in the main for the physical valuation of the steam railways. The bill was passed by the Senate and sent to the House, where the radical element, who desire great reforms to be accomplished in a day, added to the bill the South Omaha Stock Yards, the Stock Yards Railway, the street car systems of the state, and other matters, making an enormous voL"'ae of work for the state railway commission. With these amendments, tne bill was re turned to the Senate and under the lead of Senator Ollis wtio framed the bill, the Senate unanimously refused to concur in the House amendments. Conference Committees were appoint ed both in the House and Senate to adjust these conflicting views, and readied a conclusion that the House should recede from its effort to amend the Senate bill and permit the bill to become a law in the form in which it was originally passed by the Senate The difference between the Senate and the House on this issue have as yet failed of adjustment. The proba bilities are that the House will ac cept the mutilated bill rather than lose physical valuation altogether, but only the final action of i he House «ill indicate the temper of those wlic wanted a bill which would value tin public service corporations of tin state without exception of that sec tion which comes next to the rail road, the closest to the interests of the farmers and stock raisers of the state, viz: the Union Stock Yards and its railroad. The governor has signed H. R. 428, the famous “guarantee of deposits” banking bill, and In due time ttie bill will become a law. As finally passed and accepted, the bill is little more than a miserable makeshift with which to fulfill the promises made b) the democrats in the last campaign The democratic promises were to so guarantee the deposits in bank’s that under any and all circumstances the depositor should have his money any minute he asked for it. Under this law, as enacted by a democratic legis lature, no such a result is attained. While weakening the entire banking system of the state in several ways, it does not provide for that immedi ate payment of depositors which was so glibly promised by democratic cam paign orators. Some conception of what the bill does in the way of guar antee of deposits may be gained from a slight review of one item. The total deposits of the state banks of Nebraska range around sixty-five million dollars. To guarantee this enormous sum, the democratic guar antee bill proceeds to raise a fund of a little more than half a million dol lars at the end of the coming two years. In other words, the guarantee law will be in existence two years before the fund, without any with drawals from it, amounts to a sum in excess of one-half million. With this “30 cents” of a reserve fund accumu lated in twenty-four months, the democratic mathematicians pretend to stand ready to pay the losses that might occur in a total of sixty-five million dollars, for which the guar antee fund must stand responsible. This might do very well in times of continued prosperity, when no losses occur, but in a period of business de pression the decidedly false conclusion of the democratic plan as provided in this law will become sadly apparent. The democrats themselves, many of whom helped to enact the law, admit privately that the law would be of little use in a period of business disaster, and furthermore, that it is not by any means a fulltiilment of the party promise made to the people, when they were asked to elect a democratic legislature. Governor Shallenberger attempted i political stroke during the past week and broke into the legislative limelight by sending a special mes sage to the legislature accompanied by a bill for a proposed law, as he has a right onder the constitution to do. There is a well founded belief that in this undertaking the governor is playing to the grandstand, as a care ful examination of the situation at the time the governor sent in the bill shows that similar measures are not only pending before both bodies, but i hat less than an hour before the receipt of the message and bill a very similar and comprehensive law that has been pending before the Senate for weeks was passed by that body. After the fortieth day of the session, no member is priveleged to introduce a new bill, that right being conferred by the constitution upon the gover nor alone, who sends his message and suggests the act. This was the pro vision under which Governor Shallen berger acted, and the fact that similar measures were pendidg in both houses gives good color to the belief that the governor’s play was made distinctly to the galleries. This is further sup ported by the character of the pro posed law transmitted by the gover nor. The title of the bill is, “For an act regulating the issuance of stocks, bonds and other forms of indebted ness of common carriers and public service corporations and providing penalties therefor.” Stated briefly, the bill provides ^ that any obligations issued by a com mon carrier to run over a greater period than twelve months may be issued only on the order of the State Railway commission after a thorough knowledge of the facts. The bill pro vides further that the obligations is sued by common carriers for shorter term than twelve months, must not be refunded by an issue of bonds, ex cept by the consent of the railway commission. The merger of seperate corporations is also covered and a pro vision of the proposed act is in effect that the merger of two corporations must not result in a capital stock ex ceeding the capital stock of the cor porations so consolidated and at the par value thereof. Penalties of $5000 for each offense is provided and every violation is to be considered a distinct offense. In case of persistent violation of the act, each day it continues to be counted a seperate offense. The penalty for an officer or agent of the carrier becom ing a party to the violation of the act is declared a felony and subjects the offender to imprisonment for any period from one to ten years. In the tiles of the House and long awaiting passage is the bill by Stoeck -- ^ ^ V' Sold only in ^ ; Moisture Proof Packages fNo woman vjy ever once bought Vw Uneeda Biscuit n try and then willingly i/j) bought any other A | Wf kind of soda crackers. W v No biscuit can be the National Biscuit unless it is 1 O'Neill s& “rs o/ | HuT a 4 direct the affairs of the bank. In E E |\ I . jL* —, - — . I otiier words, they fulfill the duties j§ II X|^ I I imposed and expected from them a ® A 1 viWV/llvW in their official capacity. One of the by-laws of this bank is S Tj 1 (and it is rigidly enforced) that no a loan shall be made to any officer or E I Mt\. I AI\. stockholder of the bank. You and your business will be wel- a come here, and we shall serve you E nnO OH to the best 01 our ability at all times. ij If .vou are not yet a patron of ours we 1 want you to come in, get acquainted E it it and allow us to be of service to you. a vjajJltu.1 VVe welcome the small depositor. 5 per cent interest paid on time S E deposits. ® OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS | E M. DOWLING, PRES. O. O. SN Y DER, VICE-PRES. S. J. WEEKES, CASH IER (2) DR. J. P. GILLIQAN. H. P, DOWLING EEEESolJESISEElSIEEMSErSI® EEEEESEJSl SE1EE5IEE1E SI31S1SI3JSME SEISlfiliPlElSISEla