The Frontier Pa Mia bid by D. H. CROHIR SO th* Yaar T6 Cent* Biz Mootha OlBolal paper of O'Neill and Holt county. ADVERTISING RATES: Mepiay adrertlamenta on pagea 4,6 and 8 recharged for on a baala of SO oenta an lnoh on* oolumn width) per month; on page t tbe charge la 11 an lnoh per month. Local ad rerttaeruent*. S oenta per line eaoh lnaertlon. Addreaa the offlc* or the pabllaher. Removal from office is the thanks Dr. John W. Russell, sup erintendent of the hospital where Thaw is confined, got for disclos ing to his superiors a plot to bribe Thaw out of the asylum. Taft’s enemies haven’t been able to find an excuse for laying the responsibility of the Balkan war upon him, but they have ample reasons why he is the cause of the Mexican revolts. Turkey signifies her willing ness to yield Adrionople in the in terests of peace, which happy event seems again about to be realized. Little by little the Turks are yielding up their European posessions. English sufferagettes have got in bad by their rough tough methods of exploiting the ballot box. It is hard to believe, how ever, that the women are alto gether to blame. The high born English dame is proverbial for decorum and ladyship. Condi tions that are not understood this side the Atlantic no doubt obtain which drive the women to shear desporation. Lady Parkhurst says it is an upheavel in remon strance to the English white slave system. She believes if the women are given the ballot box they can effect reforms in this re spect, and intimates that they are not going to let up until they win or are all sent to jail. Congress may consider taking up the Dr. Friedman tubercular cure if experiments now being made in this country warrant it. It appears that in the Friedman discovery congress will have an opportunity to do something of real benefit to all sections of the country, as was done by the en actment of pure food laws. Ap propriations can well be made lor the establishment and main tenance of institutions for the treatment of people afflicted with tuberculosis. Resonable fees could be charged those able to pay for it and those who were not able to pay taken in free. The discoverer of the serum, now in America, shows no signs of want ipe to exploit his discovery for financial gain as he administers the treatment to poor as well as pch. Two Views. * A view of the democratic esti jhate of party success in Nebras ka is set forth in the party’s chief ftolitical organ, which says: £ What the rank and file of demoorats f ant Is for Governor Morehead to as for a second term and build up his personal influence enough to over come the republican majority two mats hence. And, give us good dem ocratic appointments and make his administration so popular that the appointees will have a prospect to hold their offloes more than two years. Ex-Governor Holcomb made himself popular with the party that elected him, and he gave us a long lease of power. The foregoing makes it clear that the principal concern of Ne braska democrats is to hold the jobs. In contrast to this, their nation al standard bearer takes a more exalted view of the trust bestow ed to his keeping. In President Wilson’s inaugural address this expression of high ideals is found; This is not a day of triumph; it is a day of dedication. Here muster, not the forces of party, but the forces ol humanity. Men’s hearts wait upon up; men’s lives hang in the bal&noe: men’s hopes call upon us to say what we will do. Who shall live up to the great truat? Who dares fail to try! I summon all honest men, all patriotic all forward-looking men to my side, God helping me I will not fall then If they will but counsel snd sustali me. THE LEGISLATURE What’s Being Done by the State Law Making Body at the Capital. Lincoln,March 3.—LastThurs day the house took up for join consideration H. R. 54 by McAl hater of Dakota, making a om mill levy for extension of the Un iversity at the farm site and H. R. 345 by McKissick, which pro vided a levy of one-half mill for the same period of six years for the extension of the present city campus, and the erection of ad ditional necessary buildings there on. After six hours of heated and sometimes stormy debate, the house killed the McAllister bill for removal to the Farm by a vote of 68 to 59, and recommend ed for passage the McKissick bill for the extension of the present down town site by a vote of 80 to 18. Later in the week the Mc Kissick bill was presented for final consideration and was passed by a vote of 77 t0 10, This action is the direct reverse of that taken by the senate during the previous week at which time the senate by a heavy majority on a separate question, which re flected distinctly the removal question, voted for removal. The outcome of this situation is considered by competent obser vers to be a problem. With the house and senate divided on this question, the probable outcome will be, that while removal is de feated at this session the appro priation for the University will probably be limited to a liberal maintenance of its current activi ties, and that any appropriations for new buildings at either site will fcul of passage and the ques tion of University removal be left hanging in the air for another two years, during which time to secure final settlement of the mat ter the electors of the state will have to express their wishes for the final guidance of a succeed ing legislature. McAllister of Dakota county, in a set speech which had been reduced to manuscript form, lead the fight for removal, and made a logical and connected argument in favor of his position. Cronin of Holt was an able second in the effort for removals, the gener al line of argument presented by the removals being along the line that genuine economy in the handling of this question meant looking ahead in the years to vcome, and building for the needs of the state in the future in the face of the fact that the mistakes of the past could not now be remedied except by looking the matter squarely in the ■ face, and making the start now that the state should perhaps have made 12 or 15 years ago. Pearson of Frontier, in a short but very effec tive speech also supported the re moval idea and Hoffmeister of Chase, followed in the same sup port. The supporters of the down town campus were led by Palmer of Clay, also in a set speech re duced to manuscript in which he presented many alleged statistics covering the presumed cost of re moval and other relative ques Uons affecting the financial side of the question as it related to the tax payers of the state, and the students who work their way through the school. Potts of Pawnee, in an impassioned speech of half an hour took up what he referred to as the dollar and cents question affecting removal, point ed out the already heavy demands of state institutions on the tax payer, the necessity of consider ing the needs of other state in stitutions not yet amply provided for, and therefrom argued the necessity of not involving the state at this time in the heavy ex pense of removal, which is esti mated at varying amounts from one and one-half to three millions of dollars. Norton of Polk also declaimed earnestly against re moval, while Mockett of Lancas ter followed with one of the most logical and \clean-cut arguments in favor of the present site that was offered in the debate. An offer by the city of Lincoln to subscribe $100,000 in cash to the extension of the present down town campus was declared by Nichols of Madison to be not other than a bribe and denounced as an improper effort to influence the final conclusions of the legis lature on this question. Gov. Morehead, early in the week, sent to the Senate his ap pointments tor state Board of Control for confirmation by the senate. While this message was not made public, it is definitely understood that the men named • for this board were Henry t Gerdes of Richardson, C. H. ' Gregg of Buffalo,and Chas. Grafl : of Cumming. At a caucus held by the republican majority of the senate on the following day, the appointments were referred to a committee of five to report to the senate their conclusion on these nominations. This report may not be forthcoming for a week or ten days, and many rumors are afloat as to the prob able action of the senate thereon. Common rumor predicts all sorts of action ranging from the prob-> able confirmation of the three' men proposed to the rejection of the entire list. The matter is suf ficiently complicated that in fact no one at this time can for-cast the action of the senate regarding these appointments. During the week by vote of 50 to 30 after a hot debate extend ing over two hours, the house recommended for passage the McKissick bill abolishing capital punishment; recommended for passage the Bollan bill giving votes to women on all subjects by a vote of 45 to 38. As this is a constitutional amendment requir ing 60 votes to pass it through the house, the prospects for its passage are apparently not good judged from the vote above given, although seventeen members were absent and not voting and from these it is possible the bill might gather enough additional support to pass though this re sult does not seem probable. The time for bill introduction having passed, and no one but the governor having authority to introduce a bill, at the request of standing committee, Gov. More head near the close of the week sent to the house a special mess age and introduced three hills; one for a $50,000 appropriation for a new building at the girls’ home at Ceneva; one for $25,000 for an infirmary at the state hos* pital at Kearney, and one for $3,000 for the completion of the woik of the code commission and the publication cf the current edi tion of the statutes. Only the last of these bills received a re commendation from the governor in the message accompanying them. The house spent an entire afternoon in a wrangle over the licensing of pool halls outside of incorporated cities and villages. Some of the radical drys in the house immediatefy scented a*" foundation for some sort of ir 1 boot-legging or carousing pro- 1 position, and it was not until other I of their brethern of the same faith explained to them that pool 1 halls were already in operation ( in these small settlements without • any regulation of law whatever, ' and that this bill was an attempt J to regulate what already existed, ! and not to create a condition not ^ existing, that their opposition was ' withdrawn and the bill received ' practically'unanimous approval. Late in the week the finance, 1 ways and means committee pre- 1 sented to the house the bi-ennial ■ appropriation bill for the mainten- ! ance of state institutions, the bill 1 carrying a total appropriation of ' $250,000. Among the items passed on during the week by the senate^ ' was a recommendation to place 1 on general file for passage H. R. ! 3 and H. R. 21, the house bills 1 creating public ownership of I telephones by county purchase or ] establishment. I The senate passed the bills creating a state department of . weights and measures, and an act providing for working the con- ! victs of the state on public works and public roads, The senate j showed its decided disapproval of an effort to in some degree make ] a monoply of the state banking business by defeating by a vote of 9 to 16 a bill by Marshall of Lancaster, which gave descretion to the state banking board to re fuse a charter to a proposed new bank in any locality where the board might conclude there were already enough banks. This proposal was attacked along the line of creating at least a sort of monoply of the banking business. The house killed the bill by Quiggle, providing for a plan of f50,000 To loan on First Farm Mortg ages in the next 30 days. Call and leave application before inspector arrives, j* j* JOHN L. QUIG, O'NEILL NEB. FISHERS “I Big Closing Out Sale Furniture and Hardware! As my lease on the building we are now occupying will expire on May ist of this year, and I we have decided to change our location we are going to close out our immense stock at a great B sacrifice to us. Our stock is too large to move and we could not afford to move it anyway. So 1 we have concluded to give the people the benefit by slaughtering profits on the goods. 'These 1 articles mtSst be sold before May ist, and we are going to make prices on them that will make it an object to the buying public to carry them away. Our stock is all up-to-date stuff and clean and each department carries a complete line. We are not quoting ahy prices as we want you to see the goods and examine the quality before we astonish you with the low prices we are putting on them. _ 1 * These Goods Must go Regardless of Our Profits Below we list some of the articles we are offering, but everything in the store is on the list 1 Read them Over and see if there isn t some thing in the list you need, then come in and let us cive I you our price: b Stoves Forks Tables Springs Ranges Spades Rockers IMattresses Heaters Shovels Chairs Sanitary Couches l 0.1 Heaters Bolts Book Cases Spring Cots Stove Pipe Screws Buffets Couches TinWare American Woven ' China Closets Window Shades Granite Ware Wire Fence Library Tables Curtain Rods Aluminum Ware Steel Posts Tabourelts Wall Molding Wash Boilers Farm Gates Side Boards Plate Moulding Wash Tubs Barn Door Tracks Dressers Clothes R icks OilCans Paints Commodes Ironing Boards I Mail Boxes Varnishes Hall Trees Pictures Clothes Baskets White Lead Hall Racks Linoleum Cutlery Linseed Oil Music Racks Matting D Tools Machine Oil Go Carts Rugs B v Ammunition Washing Machines Chiffoniers Kitchen Cabinets i Guns Clothes Wringers Davenports Garden Seed Rope Window Glass Beds jg nTMF — — I ^® f®c^ that we are offering the public a great opportunity to save H |T| ^ I/ I money as all our goods are seasonable. The goods must be sold by H M May 1st and it will be your fault if you do not get what you need | T T^i.21 IVr vt 1 By the first of May we shall have made arrangement for our new ^ H 1,11 fl Y JL °cation and the rich bargains we are now offering will be a thing M of the past. Call and investigate the purchasing power of your dollar Never before have we offered such bargains as we are now offering. The short time we have to close 1 this stock makes it necessary for sweeping reduction in prices. The opportunity is yours at our expense ' FISHER FURNITURE & HARDWARE CO. ... ...A •eorganization of mutual insur mce companies into stock com panies. The bill by Qates of Douglas, warding to a sheriff his entire :xpense account when pursuing :riminals was also defeated, as vas also the bill by Mallory of 3ox Butte providing for a con titutional convention. Only a ew days previously, the senate lad killed a similar bill by a leavy majority. The bill by Gates of Sarpy, to permit saloon at Ft. Crook,where hey have been denied for six 'ears past under a special statute prohibiting a licensed saloon with n two one-half miles of a military posf, was defeated by a vote of \2 for to 44 against. During the week the house passed the Hardin bill interpret ng the bi-ennial constitional imendment of last year, whereby f this bill becomes a law it is probable the tangle in the amend nent will be cured and no gener il election held this year, 1913. Hie bill to incorporate villages of 00 inhabitants passed after a ong fight, its opponents alleging hat it was an effort to extend the pooze business. This was dis proven by many of their own col eagues from the small settle nents, who claimed that it would NEWCOMERS, WELCOME \ Come and see us. We have helped the old settlers to more money for their cream; we will be glad to help you. It will also help us. We have done much toward making Holt county a profitable place to live. Come in and see a modern, complete creamery. Mc6iNNIS CREAMERY CO. O’NEILL, NEB. 11-^ r ,>. John Moler’s Big Closing Out Sale! 16 miles north and 2 west of O’Neill, 3 1-2 miles west and 1-2 south of Meek, on Tues., March 11th 12 head of Horses, 26 head of Cattle, 28 head of Hogs, farm machinery, 30 tons(of hay in stack, 300 bu. corn, 300 bu. side oats k everything will be sold, no by-biddidg. not aid license advocates in any case and would give the little places authority of law for need ed improvements. Among other laws passed by the house were the following: Fries bill, giving 35 cents per hour for judges and clerks of election; creating a con dition on forestry to report on the feasibility of reforesting the sand hills otherwise barren. Norton’s bill to work convicts on public roads and house roll 441 provid ing for the labeling of all convict made goods. Both the senate and the house adjourned Friday to meet Monday. The senate is well abreast of its labors while the house has yet a mass of bills on general file that would require three months for consideration. Helvey News Bureau.