I i I n Kfe K J U EU I t it EnSnStwmaSSwM Lincoln Letter Current Gossip from the STATE CAPITAL Legislative and Otherwise S P 6 by Root of Caas providing lor stamping packages of liquor shipped into any community has be come a law without the signature of the governor While there were some objectionable features in the 1111 affecting wholesale druggists who desire that It be vetoed Governor Sheldon saw in the bill also some good features so while he would not accede to the demands of the whole salers neither would he sign the bill The fight in the legislature over a 2 cent passenger faro came to a close when the senate passed H R 267 the -Joint committee bill hurried it over to the house where the sonate amend ment was immediately concurred In The bill was then enrolled soon after was in the hands of the governor Tho railroads took a last stand in an effort to kill the emergency clause which will put the bill In force three days after it is signed by the governor but the attempt failed in the senate and all but four of the senators who gave thl3 clause as their reason for oppos ing the bill hurriedly changed their votes before the final result was an nounced and lined up with the major Inty The vote as finally announced stood 27 to 4 two senators OConnell of Johnson and Latta of Burt absent The four senators who persisted in opposition to the bill even after they saw it had secured the required ma jority were Burns of Lancaster Glover of Custer Gould of Greeley and Hanna of Cherry On the first roll call Gibson Thomas and Saunders of Douglas and McKesson of Lancaster voted against the bill giving as their reason the ob jectionable emergency clause but be fore the vote was announced all of them flopped to the affirmative Glover of Custer at first voted for the bill but when it appeared that a change in his vote might defeat the emergency clause and after consultation with some of the opposition he changed his vote to the negative His change came first and it reduced the vote for the bill to 23 just one more than enough to carry the emergency clause When It was found the emergency clause had carried there was scurry to get oa the popular side of the fence The fight in the senate was watched with considerable Interest from the -other end of the state house If the assault on the emergency clause had been successful it had been agreed among the leaders that the house would take up and pass with the emergency clause the Sackett bill which went through the senate several days ago with -the emergency clause This would have put the senate in the awKward position either of receding from its hostility to the emergency or killing a part of a hill it had already passed The presidents of railroads it was announced from Chicago last week had decided to fight 2 cent fare bills in all western states For the purpose of bringing on the fight before the leg islature adjourns it is said a majority of the members decided to rush the bill through with the emergency clause so that the contest may begin as soon as possible and perhaps per mit the legislature to take a hand in the fight With Harvey of Douglas and Hamer of Buffalo only voting in the negative and ninety one members voting in the affirmative the house passed tho anti pass bill prepared fcy the railroad com mittee with the emergency clause The bill was discussed at length in the committee of the whole and nu merous amendments were defeated and later it was called up and voted -upon though Hamer tried to get it recommitted and then rushed to the senate It carries the emergency clause Both Harvey and Hamer ex plained their votes by saying they -were in favor or an anti pass bill such as the platform contemplated but this measure each said was too dras tic and not in line with the sentiment of the republican state convention The bill allows bona fide employes of railroads to receive passes and the care takers of live stock vegetables and poultry and fruit It knocks out the political railroad lawyer and sur geon and allows to ride free only those lawyers and surgeons who re ceive a salary of at least 1000 from the railroad which employs them The house committee on railroads granted railroad representatives a final hearing on reciprocal demurrage bills Several hearings have been granted at which alleged defects in ponding bills were pointed out by railroad men who have however contested against any legislation of the kind proposed An entirely new measure will be drafted The senate has killed several of the Insurance bills introduced at the re quest of the state insurance depart ment including one to require life companies to apportion and account annually for the surplus as to policies heretofore issued but several of the - number considered regulating Insur ance companies were placed on the general file The friends of the an nual accounting plan saved one bill from destruction which came up to day It provides for an annual appor tionment only en policies issued in the future Appropriations by tho dozen carry ing sums aggregating thousands of dollars poured into tho legislative hopper on next to the last day within which bills could bo introduced Prob ably the most important is a recom mended appropriation by the finance committee of 250000 for the erection of a building for the state library and the supremo court on the capltol grounds Tho erection of such a building has been urgently requested by State Librarian Lindsay who points out that the present quarters of the library are so overcrowded that there isnt room for another vol ume while the entire library is in constant danger of fire damagein its present quarters in the central por tion of the state capitol building Ac cording to the apportionment of tho 1 mill levy for the university that levy Is oxpected to bring in about 645- 000 Its apportionment has been rec ommended by the finance committeei as follows Salaries and -wages 375000 Fuel gas water and lights 38000 Incidentals 8000 Departmental expenses 15000 Farm department maintenance 35000 Printing- postage and station ery 15000 Books 5000 Repairs 16000 Boilers 15000 Electrical generator 4000 Furniture and apparatus 13000 Equipment 7000 Engineering building 100000 Total G4500o The people of Thurston county are anxious to have brought about some method of securing an adequate re turn of the expenses which the Win nebago reservation causes them and for which they now have to pay out of the small taxable area of the county They will attempt to have this brought about by means of a leg islative solution to congress As this county is at present organized there are about 35000 acres of taxable ter ritory in the southwest portion There are 250000 acres in the remainder of the county which are occupied by In dians and which qo not pay any taxes into the county treasurer In spite of this the white citizens of the county complain that they have to keep up a number of bridges and roads on tho reservation and that the county is put to a continual expense in trying In dian cases The house committee on claims spnt three hous at night trying to get at the bottom of the old claim filed before the legislature four years ago and two years ago by Allen G Fisher of Chadron first for 8000 and then for 11500 and again this year by Henry Kaup of Cuming county for 1500 Fr Fisher was not pres ent but a letter from him was read in which he offered to appear before the committee after March 7 He is now in Rapid City on business The claim Is for the value of a section of land in Sioux county formerly owned by Herman Goedde At his death it escheated to the state because he had no heirs living in this country Armstrong of Nemaha county be lieves there are too many inquests being held and if the number could be decreased the taxpayers in the various counties would have their burdens just that much lessened To remedy what he considers this evil Mr Armstrong has introduced a bill providing a fee of 5 to be paid the coroner for viewing the body of a per son whether he holds an inquest or not and the same fee now provided for in case the Inquest is necessary Mr Armstrong says the coroners in quests are held on the slightest pro vocation The two big appropriation bills in troduced in the legislature total 2 922410 The salary bill aggregates 991180 while the current expense bill with 131820 of miscellaneous items will total 1931230 The de ficiencies bill and the miscellaneous claims bill will require so many amendments that the totals may not yet be given with any degree of ac curacy Randall of Madison presented a joint resolution asking the regents of the i nityto report to the legisla tures gard to receipts and ex penditures of money and why they have not complied with that part of the law which says that the regents shall furnish text books to students at cost The resolution will take the course of a bill The house will attempt to get back from the governor H R 116 by Quack enbush the bill to increase the fees of court reporters If the house doesnt get the bill back the governor will veto it It has been discovered the bill increases the salaries of the court reporters of Douglas and Lan caster counties out of all proportion to the work done The committee on public lands and buildings selected to visit the vari ous state institutions reported back a clean bill for all of them and prac tically recommended giving to the su perintendents everything asked for in the way of appropriations South Omaha people went tothe legislature to protest against forcible annexation with Omaha They ap peared headed by a band carrying banners and a Roosevelt big stick and during the short time they swarmed through the capitol building and the legislative halls they made it understood with emphasis that they would not be attached by legislative enactment to any big city that hap pened to lie adjacent to tneir borders The legislature devoted part of an hour in joint session to listen to their speakers YOUR OBLIGATIONS SOME OF THE THINGS YOU YOUR OWN TOWN OWE YOU SHOULD BUY AT HOME The Country Town Can Be Made the Very Best Place to Live In the United States Copyright by Alfred C Clark A preacher who was a crank on doctrine wearied his congregation by constantly harping on baptism A brother that longed for a rest handed him a text he thought safe The way of the transgressor Is hard Friends said the preacher there are three things suggested by this Bcripture First the transgressor Second his conversion Third his baptism We will pasB over the first two and come at once to the third Many reasons why people should trade at homo rather than send their money away have been given but sup pose we pass them all by and come at once to the one vital reason It is the right thing to do For after all the fundamental ques tion in every transaction is whether it is right or wrong Not will I save money but is it just Not is it more convenient but Is it fair Not whether is it good business but whether It Is good morals For you and I know and all the world is coming to know that not one dollar is ever saved or made by unfair means that does not curse the possessor And a man may be as dis honest in saving money as in getting It It Is right to spend our money with the home town and wrong to send it away because we are under obliga tions to the home town but not to the mail order house Financial Obligations In the first place the country is un der financial obligations to the town Of course the town is also indebted to the country but the town cannot help but pay Its debt its very exist ence does that Hence we are merely discussing the country side of the ob ligation HlMli HiLliJiU Idolatry Jennings just worships his auto I know it In it he lives and moves and has his beine Judge jriwnnBuM lijaiu ijM Mm r wa afg 8- Hiimum 6 fUWYA mm M U I I I I I II I II VJ Q Ill ill VlWV M VSVil Wrar d g055 flu h mail i Jitii 9 a g ftimn ill UN m I J i tm lit ir a Jlsi i iT g lrsse -- alectric railways have accomplished a remarkable growth in the last decade and they are firmly established to day as a part of the transportation system of this country The new mo tive power has become a competitor of steam but not to the extent of driv ing the latter from the field as is oc casionally said So far as the eco nomic aspects of the competition are concerned the time seems not yet to have come when the electric motor can successfully supplant the steam locomotive in all those forms of serv ice which have been developed and standardized by the latter From the beginning certain fields of usefulness have been particularly favorable to the electric motive power These fields of adaptability however are continually broadening so that per haps in a few years the electric mo tor may be a successful rival to the WfWPyy yy g1 1 town you meet your neighbors Satur 1 C J ff7 Q k VET ffl A f M day afternoons and exchange news S OialULi DJ V EtU 1 Ailll and experience You go to it for a day of recreation when the snow comes the fair or on holidays There during the winter lecture course you hear great orators and ex cellent musicians Thq political rallies the church conference or association aro held there By and by In the pretty little vil lage church whose spire you can see from your farm you son will preach the gospel In the brick building two doors from the corner a farmer boy will open a law office and In the little frame two blocks away another son of the boII just back from college will begin the practice of medicine There is the high school to which you send your children and there after awhile your daughter will teach And some day when you find the farm work too heavy for your age and want to get near the children you will build on that grassy corner lot two doors from the Methodist church and move to town Yes the town is a mighty good thing to have a pleasant thing and the more you put Into it the more you get out of It For It grows according to the trade it gets and the more it grows the more it can buy and tho higher will go your land The Moral Obligation But the last and strongest reason why it is right that the country peo plo spend their money at home is the moral obligation The town is yours yours to ruin or prosper The same sense of obliga tion should prompt you to support it as prompted our old Teutonic ances tors In the forests of Germany to stand elbow to elbow in protection of their village The same spirit of loyal ty should Inspire you as fired tho Highland Scot to spend his blood for the welfare of his clan The country town with all Its faults is the best governed most enlight ened most moral and happiest spot in American civilization It is a good safe place Not too swift nor yet too slow In touch with the current of progress but not racing with greed The place from which come nearly all the great business men lawyers scholars preachers physicians The place where men are neighborly and helpful This town my farmer friend Is yours But the city belongs to the Dont Let the Catalog House Batter Down the Wall of Civil and Industrial Solidity That Makes for the Safety of Your Community Interests Find 200 acres of good land almost anywhere that is 20 miles from town and you can buy it for 25 an acre The same land within ten miles will bring 35 within five miles its value is 60 within two miles 85 an acre Thus that town has increased the land within a radius of ten miles an average of 35 dollars an acre As that is about the age of country towns generally you may figure that a town as long as it is fairly prosperous in creases the land around it an average of one dollar an acre every year Not considering staple articles like cattle hogs and grain which can be shipped and sold anyway the town as a local market is worth at least 75 a year to the ordinary farmer For example This year the peach markets were so glutted no ordinary fruit would pay the express Around the little town in which the writer lives most farmers have a few peach trees The 4000 Inhabitants bought nearly every bushel in the vicinity at from 40 cents to a dollar a bushel More than 4000 was paid for peaches within three weeks That was clear gain which must be set over to the credit of the town Plums cherries early vegetables scores of little odds and ends perish able stuff that the farmer could not or would not ship he turns into cash at th home town So if a man owns 200 acres within reach of town he will receive 275 a year direct cash value from that town none of which he would receive from the mail order house To be sure the town does not do nate him that amount the town was not built for the purpose of philan thropy yet he receives an actual cash benefit because the town is there and he is under actual financial obliga tions to return that benefit by spend ing his money at home It is not an obligation that the law rcould recognize but it is one that ap peals to those Independent clean hearted men of high honor who feel that perfect honesty demands that when benefits are received from stranger or brother friend or foe benefits should be returned Social Obligations It Is right for thecountry to spend Its money with the home town because of the social obligations between them The town is the center of your com munity From it radiates your rural mail service in it center your tele phone systems On tho nt ao o mail order houses and the devil With its corrupt government its overflow of population and Its vice the great city is the menace of our morals and our liberties The city like the dragon swallows the vast throngs of country boys and girls that flock into it and by and by when health and virtue and hope are gone spews them out to die in want or wander as derelicts over the face of the earth And dont you see my friend that when you take the money from the country town you destroy the chance of success there and the boys and girls will follow where you have sent the money This town of yours was founded on faith on the faith in the customs of men for hundreds of years to trade at the nearest town These merchants and carpenters masons and editors are your neighbors They have grown up amongst you or amongst others like you They have put their all in a little business money time and hope Around the corner there is a little cot tage and the wife and the baby it may be your grandbaby wait and there is a smile of happiness when business is good but the troubled look comes when business is poor They are struggling to live and pay for the little home and by and by ed ucate the children They are your neighbors and friends not your ene mies They work hard you scarcely realize how hard and are not living high They have pinned their faith to the town your town Their success or failure is in your hands For your trade they will give you good returns and all will prosper together If you withdraw your trade failure must follow Some poor strug gler must go down facing bankruptcy The light must go out of some wom ans eye and hardship be laid up for the child Even If you could save a little by sending your patronage to the city do you not think it the fair thing the just thing the right thing to trade at the little home town with those you know those whose prosperity and happiness are in your hands For it is written Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself WILLIAM H - DITCHED RUNAWAY LOCOMOTIVE JUST IN TIME Engineer Tell3 of Experience That Put a Few Gray Hairs In Hla Head But Ended Better Than He Expected After comin aroun tho bend In Collins Cut said the fat engineer I lust glanced back to see that tho mark ers those little red and green tall lights which mark the end of a train were there all right I leaned way out of the cab window n counted the sleepers as they swept aroun the curve Yes there they came all right burnln like bright little emeralds n I knew my train was all together n followin me safely down the hill The night I am speakin of I was running the Sunrise Limited as the fast eastern express on our road was called It was In March n gentle spring was already spreadin her vel vet touch over the land We had had a deal of snow that winter n now that it was commencln to thaw out the stuff was makin quite a little trouble for the management slidin aroun the tracks from the mountainside sometimes bringin a piece of hill with it As I glanced back along the sides of the glistenin coaches I was attract ed by a glare along the rails behind my train n in another second a head light flashed aroun the curve out of the cut in our wake makin very fast time Even a blind baggage car could see that one of the engines in the yards at the top of the mountain had slipped her throttle n was running away chasm us down the mountain I was some set back for a second but the only thing for me to do was to turn on a full head of steam n make the best time I could which wasnt the safest thing in the world to do as we generally hold em pretty steady comin down the mountain but I must show a clean brace of tail lights to the runaway She wasnt quite a quarter of a mile behind us n looked like a fiery comet comin down the rails as her firebox door was open n with uvery exhaust of the engine the flare from her furnace lit up the sky My engine bounded forward under a wide open throttle n our race for the lives of those in the rear sleepers was on Notwithstandin the weight of the train behind me which should give me a little advantage over the light engine comin down the hill we didnt seem to be able to shake her off An each time I trusted myself to glance back at her she seemed to be crawlin up on us a little If I could keep a few yards of moonlight between the pilot of the wildcat n my rear car until we got down the mountain n started up the Razorback on the other side I could drop my engine down n leave the run away behin as by that time she would be out of steam n lay down like a runaway horse which has shot its bolt But I wouldnt bet more n 50 B R T rebate checks to a rag doll that we would beat her down However we had a fightin chance n the way I pounded my good old en- ELECTRIC AND STEAM LINES Motor Has by No Means Supplanted the Locomotive The competition of electric inter jrban railways with present systems of steam railways in the passenger traffic has of late become a matter of some popular interest and of more or ess common speculation Much is currently written and spoken upon the subject but cf these discussions glue sent the hot coals out of th stack I was gottln a llttlo nervous as that light ongino hung onto our trail Uko a bicycle cop after a spoodln auto Comin through Rocky Hol ler I got sovoral chills down my spine as tho watchman down by tho llttlo shanty was hysterically wavln his green lantern at me Durin tho thaw the road had sovoral watchmen sta tioned at Intervals down tho mountain to watch for landslides n warn ap proachln trains Evldontly thoro was a dangerous spot In tho track that tho watchman had discovered n he was signalln me to come ahead with ex treme caution I sure was up against tho real thing now A wildcat engine pressin mo hard on the rear Hank n a danger ous piece of track ahead This was a case where tho rule book failed to help me out Take a safe course n run no risks says tho railroad Hoylo In chilly black doublo face type Which was the safe course for me I did some quick mental calculatln n concluded to keep a full head of steam up Ive read In newspapers about trains beatln their way through slight landslides n there was a show for me to cut through it if there was one ahead But if I stopped my train that en gine behind would be half through those sleepln cars klllln n malmln the sneozin passengers It would bo safer for me personally to slow down but I was not so selfish as to consider my personal safety So we bounced along by the fright ened watchman with speed not a whit diminished I fairly stopped breathln as we whirled down through the Hol ler Just beyond the watchmans shanty I felt a tremblin of the track n my engine keeled badly I clung to the cab cxpectln every second we would slide down the bank But we kept the -rails We had bare ly passed the shanty when there was a rumblin sound n I saw the little watchmans cabin swirlin down the bank The heavy weight of our train at its terrific speed had caused the track to give way n slide out just in lime to take the runaway engine with it n we were out of our bad mess Cassatt Kept His Horses A J Cassatt president of the Penn sylvania railroad always liked a good horse When he was a vice president and director of the line he owned a small string of racers which he enter ed as representatives of the Willow brook stable At that time Mr Rob erts was president and as there was a strong quaker influence in the board Mr Cassatt was gently reminded that he should resign from Willowbrook or from the road He did both at once and ere long It became evident that he was taking up with tho Reading railroad The Pennsylvania people hastily requested him to resume rela tions with them Mr Cassatt placidly assented buc thereafter his horses were entered under his own name Rolling Stock In round numbers 380000000 was spent last year in rolling stock for the American railroads More than 250 000000 was spent in freight cars A freight car costs about 1000 and a passenger car about 8000 The price of a good engine is about 15000 a certain amount seems to be based equipment of the earlier days involved jpon sensational statements or upon mistaken ideas as to the comparative older power in almost all important particulars but until that time comes the competition of electric roads with steam railways will be confined prin cipally to competition in special fea tures of transportation and to certain localities where particular conditions bring the two systems into conflict This restriction of the competition to special features and localities has been and is the keynote of the situa tion with regard to any contest foi business between the electric and the steam roads The electric railway if -- fi ti wiiv - rT v jwrf rt Yi3P I -6 iJ a g J vw rr itfj5 I ay S I 1UDIANA jFtftLn certain technical limitations which made the system unsuited for any but i - - tanumg oi tne two railway industries comparatively short distance trans mit the present time The interurban portation These features are now Stcsn Xailura Steazi rcrsietdiyscy fwwn Cite liuitrdcr Coftsfrzcwr MJ cfr I a A- N p 7 JSM Sz f I tzuZe lMIII - i -- ZrS s y i e A x OHIO Section Well Supplied with Both Lines J SzzlJ2Z 7Zr iv ---v ti iuntrf -T SSSSr EL2S x rx j PENN i i largely removed as far as the tech nical limitations are concerned but notwithstanding the most recent de velopments the electric roads still are favored as a means of transporta tion far more for short distance than for long distance travel And even for short distance travel the electric service will appeal chiefly to certain classes of patronage only Many pas sengers are always found who prefer to travel by the steam trains With regard to the merchandise traffic the sphere of the electric road has been still more limited and the amount of -freight carried by them except in a few isolated instances has been insig nificant Likewise with regard to lo calities the competition of interurban roads has been specialized rather than general for the roads are at present confined principally to a comparative ly small section of this country a - 1 a STlAsfcr f X t