o ,- WHS! V'W'W" THE WEALTH MAKERS December 27. 1894 Hflf'l 111. THE CARLISLE BILL IS TO BE WITHDRAWN. TO BE REPLACED BT A SUBSTITUTE. Important Change la Regard to the Bond Hatter and the Liability of Bank for One .Another Agreed Cpon The Bill Being Made Beady Result of a Dem ocratic Caoona. Washington, Dec. 28. The Carlisle currency bill, now before the house of representatives, will be withdrawn and a substitute presented. The de cision was reached after a caucus of the Democratic menrr of the bank in? and currency committee quietly held last night, followed by a confer ence between Secretary Carlisle and Chairman Springer. The substitute will be offered to the house before the holiday recess, as the desire of all concerned is to get it before the coun try prior to the adjournment The caucus of the banking and cur rency committee Democrats, at which the decision was reached, was held at the committee room, the following members being present: Messrs. Springer, Cox, Culberson, Sperry, Warner, Cobb of Alabama and Ellis. The absentees were: Messrs. Cobb and Hall of Missouri, and Johnson of Ohio. The discussion took a wide range and the sentiment was general that the bill would have to be mater ially changed in order to meet the ob jections and command a support which would secure its passage. The needed amendments were formulated and it was arranged that Mr. Springer should see Secretary Carlisle to-day and submit the contemplated changes. When Secretary Carlisle and Mr. Springer met to-day it was deter mined that the better plan would be to frame a new measure in the shape of a substitute instead of muti-'atinsr the bill with many amendments which went to its vital principles. Accord ingly, the substitute was agreed on in full and, as soon as it can be copied and put into proper form, it will be presented to the house and will thenceforth be the bill on which the currency debate is to proceed. TWO IMPORTANT CHANGES. Two very important features make their appearance for the first time in the substitute. The main one will have the effect of allowing the na tional banking hystem to run along without an arbitrary provision that banks must organize under the new system. The original Carlisle bill contemplating that all national banks must reorganize under the new plan. This would have forced thera to sur render the government bonds which now constitute the basis of their cir culation. Under the substitute, if national banks wish to continue to hold their United States bonds and issue circulation thereon, they may do so. It is felt that they will soon discover the advantages of the new system and will therefore adopt it voluntarily. The other important feature is that it does away with the Unknown liability of banks to guarantee the notes of all other banks. This feature of the original bill has been much criticised. It contemplated that if a national bank failed its notes would be paid out of its assets, and the deficit made out of the "general safety fund," and if this should not be enough to pay the notes of the failed bank, then the comptroller of the currency should make a pro rata assessment on all the banks of the country. The bankers said that this plan placed before them an unknown risk. In effect it made them supply insurance on all the notes of banks in which they had no concern. In view of these criticisms the substitute will do away with the assessment plan. The "safety fund" will be the limit of joint liability of all the banks for the failure of individual banks. They will, however, be compelled to keep up this safety fund by more rigid pro visions than appeared in the original bill. A DEAD WOMAN'S BYES. Photography Shows an Impression of Her Murderer on the Ketlna. Jamestown, N. Y., Dec. 23. Photo graphic science may have given the first tangible clue to the Identltv of the murderer of Mrs. Shearman and Mrs. Davis. Several have been the subjects and clues followed up, with out success, but yesterday the im pression of the murderer was found on the retina of Mrs. Shearman's eye The photograph was taken Dy Fred D. Marsh, a local photog rapher, and to mm is due the credit of having originated the idea of examining the organ. The exist ence of the Impression of the mur- ! derer on the eye was first discovered by means of a powerful microscope. Unfortunately the features of the man could not be seen, as the view obtained shows only the back and a very little of the side. An apparently big man is presented, with bushy whiskers and wealing a long over coat The trousers appear to be badly wrinkled. The coroner has taken out both of the eyes of the mur dered woman and another photograph will be taken by a skilled pho tographer. . Bank Robbers Foiled. Wichita. Kan., Dec. 22. Jack Harris, alias Tulsa Jack, and Bitter Creek, two of the boldest members of the Cook gang of bandits, held up a storekeeper in Manchester, Ok., yes terday but secured less than $30. They rode into Anthony, Harper county, yesterday morning and one of them entered the bank there, evi dently with a view to robbing it but ihere were too many people around tnd the two bandiU jumped on their reaching Manchester they went into Wlana's general store and with leveled funsmaae the proprietor turn over iwwm vnunir UUIILI ROUTED BY A WOMAN. Hie Fannie Nesbitt of ilonner Spring! PnU a Masked Robber to Flight. Bonner Springs, Kan., Pec. 22. Miss Fannie Nesbitt, night agent and operator for the Union Pacific railway at this place, was alone at the depot at 3 o'clock this morning when she heard a noise in the waiting room which is separated from the ticket by a partition. Opening the door, she found herself face to face with a masked man who commanded her to keep quiet The brave women sprang back into the ticket office to get her revolver and the intruder grappled with her. In the struggle the would-be robber struck her a blow on the head with the butt of a revolver or some blunt instrument but even this did not daunt the courage of the young woman. Miss Nesbitt finally secured her re volver and opened fire. Her assailant fled and she followed him out of the depot firing her revolver and scream ing for help. She did not give up until every chamber of her revolver was emptied and the would-be robber had disappeared. Then she sank into a chair prostrated. A crowd gathered quickly, and while some cared for her others Instituted a search for her as sailant but in vain. Dr. Low man of Kansas City, Kas., was summoned and dressed the young woman's injuries, which consist of a painful scalp wound and a slight abrasion of the skulL An artery had been severed on the head from which he bled profusely, and was quite weak from loss of blood, but was not seriously injured. The robber did not secure a thing of value. He entered the building by breaking a .window in the waiting room. The desks and floor in the de pot are spattered with blood from Miss Nesbttt's wounds. WOMAN FOULLY MURDERED. Mrs. A. D. Watson, of Topeka, Km KUied tot net Money. ' Topeka, Kan., Dec. 22. Late yes terday afternoon the dead body of Mrs. A. D. Matson was found at her house at Fifteenth and Monroe streets, thia city, where she had been assaulted and foully murdered ten days ago. A boy who has regularly visited her house to deliver milk re ported to the police authorities that a pan in which he had left a pine of milk, on the 12th instant at Mrs. Mat- son's residence was still there and had not been removed. Officers went to the house and, after breaking in through a back door, discovered the body lying on the floor in one of the lower rooms of the building. The woman's skull had been crushed, and sitting in the corner of the room was an axe with which the crime had been committed. About the neck was a strip of carpet securely tied and enough to cause strangulation. Mrs. Matson lived alone. She waa known to have a small amount of money from time to time which she received as rent from several houses she owned in this city. Mrs. Matson was well known in Topeka and highly respected. She was for several years a member of the city board of educa tion from the Fifth ward and took an active interest in the city schools. She was at one time a city teacher. Her husband left her four or five years ago and took up a homestead in Cali fornia, where he has since lived. Mrs, Matson was a member of the Topeka Equal Suffrage association and a prominent suffrage worker. LEO ON SECRET SOCIETIES. A Bweep'.ng Condemnatory Decree Issued Catholics Mast Withdraw. Washington, Dec. 22. The edict of Pope Leo placing under the ban the secret societies known as the Odd Fellows, Knights of Pythias and Sons of Temperance has created greater comment and more extended discus sion than anything emanating from Some since the appointment of M;;r. Satolli as apostolic delegate. Hereafter the Roman Catholic who joins any of the three Societies men tioned does so under pain of excom munication, and every influence will be exerted on those already affiliated to resign. This action on the part of the church is the result of the council of the archbishops of the United States held in Chicago on September 12, 1893. There the relations between the church and the secret societies were carefully discussed, and at the conclusiqn documents were for warded to the pope recommending the action against the. three orders in question, whose principles were held to be of a decided anti-Catholic tendency. The pope, upon receiving these papers, laid them before a conference of cardinals, the indorsement of the American prelates' action resulted, and the pope fixed his seal to a decree of condemnation. This decree was forwarded to Mgr. Satolli for pro mulgation in this country, where the interdicted orders exist It was in the form of a letter in Latin to the archbishops and bishops in the United States, who. in turn, were to notify the priests, who would communicate it to their parishioners. It will be quickly mail public all over the country CHINA ANXIOUS FOR PEACE. Two Commissioners Appointed to Make Terms W Ith Japan. . Washington, Dec 22. Minister Denby cabled the state de partment to-day that the Chinese government has appointed two peace commissioners, Chang Yin Huan and Fhao, who will proceed at once on their mission from Pekin to the Japanese capital. Shanghai, Dec. 21. It is reported this evening on good authority that uireci peace negotiations are proceed ing between Pekin and Tokio. One Thousand Rabbit Killed. Lamar. Col., Dec. 22. The most successful of Lamar's annual rabbit hunts took place vesterdav. About 100 hunters came in on the niht train and left earlv in tha mnrnino inr tha haunts of the jack rabbits. About i.uuu were Killed. A Banker Commits Solelde. Brewer, Maine, Deo. 22. F. P. Far rington, treasurer of the Brewer Sav arose at 4 o'clock this morninsr and , . .... . .. . - . . snot nimseu tnrougn tne head with a revolver. 'Cause of suicide unknown. Our Great Clubbing You Can Secure Imrieai) and. Jlft U?aItr; Makers Both By sending that amount Immediately Everybody knows mm What the Nonconformist is our National Paper. Gives all the news fresh from the battle-fields. It is f 1.00 per year, so is The Wealth Makers, bat by special arrangement with the Non Con we are enabled to send you both papers for one year for only $1.55. Old subscribers may take ad vantage of this offer as well as new ones. - You Ought to Have It Send us $1.55 Immediately and get these two great papers Wealth Makers Pub. Co. Lincoln, Neb. f7txpTiC. : to riSTuaa FIFTY CENTS rotma.oausra ISSUED BY PAGE PUBLISHING CO., TIMES BUILDING, NEW YORK. A Novelty In Magazines. All Illustrations with Brief Descriptions. " It's a good thing, pass it along," ONE OF THE MOST UNIQUE PUBLICATIONS IMAGINABLE. Every Issue a Veritable Curiosity Shop. The great big directory of everybody, everywhere, does not mention the nam of anybody of any size or age wno doesn't HERE 13 A MINE FULL-1000 A YEAR. "jes- The "Paper World " says: The PiottwiMaouiot to In keeping with Its title, a magazine of lores : but they are not the ordinary kind. Instead, the closely printed pages are lilted with odd, tesaue. auaint thlnes. culled from all sections of the earth not almlne especially at art per- pictures irroteaau lue, quaint things, culled from all sections of fectlon. butsneldni neionff rami er the uncommon and fantastic It must require a world-wide research to it hr the initial number : ret the mice Is only the modest one of to cts. a main tain the standard set by the initial number year. ttanh nnmW mtalna VI Urga payaa, and It Is not too much educational food it is cooked and served. The Picture Magazine is " done to a turn." The Magazine of typo must be seen Interests and pleases everybody. 4 Is all The best pictures that the world has with briefest possible descriptions, and it Lowell was moved to call " the modern EVERY READER OF THIS PAPER WA'iTS THIS NOVELTY. Bv special arrangement with the publishers, we are enabled to send both "The Picture Magazine" and The Wealth one year for only $1.20. Who will be the first to send and get this fine magazine and The Wealth Makers for one year for only $1.20? Address, WEALTH MAKERS PUB CO.. Lincoln, Neb. QUEER QUERR1ES. Witts So you don't believe that the good die young? Potts That used to worry me when I was a boy, but I know better now. Mrs. Workaday Oh, I do so like 10 see a good, strong, determined man- Mr. Workaday, straightening So do I, my dear. Mrs. W. John, the coal hod is empty. She But how can you think I'm pretty when my nose turns up so? He Well, all I have to say is that it s hows mighty poor taste in backing away from such a lovely mouth. Mrs. Wickwire Did you read about that man who has been married for the third time to the woman he has been divorced from twice already? Mr. Wickwire Yes. Seems to me that a man of that sort ought to take some sort of treatment for the habit Fair Visitor So you have really de cided not to sell your house? Fair Hostess Yes.- You see, wo placed the matter in the hands of a real estate agent. After reading his love ly advertisement of our property neither John nor myself could think bt parting with such a wonderful and perfect home. The runaway convicts took refuge in a church which was having an ex perience meeting. They listened to tho stories told by several of the re generated, until one of the fellows exclaimed in a whisper to the other: "Come, Jim, let's get out of thisl It's a tough crowd, and no man's life's Worth a copper!" The new song book, now ready for de livery, is immense. Fire in your orders. Thirty-five cents a copy. $100 Reward, $100. Tbe reader of this paper will be pleased to learn that thera li at least ona dreaded d'erase that science has been able to care In all Its staves and that I Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Core Is the only poaltlTe cars now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh belna- a constitutional dis ease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure la taken Internally, actios: directly noon the blood and mocona surfaces of the sys tem, thereby destroying tbe foundation of tbe disease, and rItIdr ths patient strenirth by bolld Ins; op toe constitution and aaslstlna- nature In doing Its work. Tbs proprietors bars so much faita in (ts curatlnrpowers. that they offer Ob Handrsd Dollars for aay ease tnat it laws to car. Bend lor list of testimonials. Address, K. J. CHENEY A CO Toledo, O. Wbold by Druggists, Too. . TV ... jvlopeoiformist One Year for Only to the publishers of this paper. Jca' - TKsto pqjpii. PER YEAR. love pictures. the earth not aiming especially at Q of tha whlmatoal. dmll, hlmara UlllHtnUlnniL" that causes mental dyspepsia, If how and read; tnis needs to be seen only. digested ready for assimilation. are gleaned and packed in solid pages, is guiltless of what the late James Russell plague of printed words." Makers to any subscriber, new or old, for The Northern Alliance Moulton, la., Nov. 26, 1894. The annual meeting of the National Farmers' Alliance will be held at the Commercial Hotel in the city of Chicago, Illinois, Tuesday, January 15, 1895, at 9 o'clock a. m.,for the purpose detecting officers and the transaction of such busi ness as may come before the convention. By order of the Executive Committee. August Post, Elwood Furnas, Secretary. President. Fester Time Better Service, Tha Rlftck Hills nnssencer now leaves daily at 1:25 p. m. and will land passen gers at not Springs at o:uo a. m., ana nt. Dead wood at 11 a. m. next aay. From Chicago two fast trains arrive hoiv woolr riava. one Snndavs. For further information apply as De- low. A. B. f IELDINO, uty TlCKet Aga,, D. A. iUUBlllfilae VJCU 1 Agl., 117 So. 10th St. rt a If V M A THE FASTEST BICYCLE TIRE ON EARTH is called the "G, & J. Pneumatic Tire" the most serviceable for every day use because of its relia bility and ease of repair when damaged. "A CHILD CAN MANIPULATE IT." Being the "best that can be purchased" it is used on all BICYCLES which re made of the "best of everything from tube to tires." OOHMULLY a JtrrtHY MFQ. CO. Chicago. Baton. . Waihingtoa. New York. Stsoklyiw Oetrolt. CoTeatty, Eaf. E. K, ULTHR1E, Agent, Lincoln, Neb. Established la ISO. -THE- Prairte 5armcr A Weekly Journal lor THE FARM, ORCHARD & FIRESIDE. Published by Tin Pbaibib Fabmib Pvausame Co Mt-US Adams 8 tree t, CUeaco. -g-t 1 .00 A YEAR.4iM" This great farm journal is head and shoulders above any agricultural paper Of tee day. Bright, Clean, and is just the paper for the wide-awake farmer and his family. , New Writer for ISOa-'M. PROF. GEORGE E. MORROW, Special staff writer. C. P. GOODRICH, E. H. FARR1NGTON, Special writers on Dairying. WALDO BROWN, F. B. MUMF0RD, THOS. SHAW, Special writers on Live Stock. JOS. MEEHAN, Special writer oa Horticulture. CHARLES DADANT, ; iji:: Special writer on Bees. Tha Household department Is con ducted by experienced writers, and ths Young Folks department is in competent hands. In short, there is everything necessary to a nrstrclass agricultural paper. tn nn olxxbbxvo orm am TMMiUn ' Tha Wealth IMers ... and Tha Prairla Farmer both One Tear tor. 1.30. This offer is to old subscribers as well as new ones. Just think of it 1 Two such papers as Thk Praibix Farmer and Thi Wealth Makers one year for 4)1.80 1 Send in your Subscriptions Tiwmarli'ntaly - - We do not know how long we can af ford to make this offer. Address, WEALTH HIKERS PUB. CO., Mnooln, STeo). Stye .duoeattj Printed in Topeka, Kansas, Wants to talk to you And all your folks, And your neighbor's folks, About politics and other things. It's a Weekly Reform Paper All the Tear. 16 Pages, 64 Columns, $1.00 a Year. KANSAS LEADS THE PROCESSION THS ADVOCATE'S edncatlonal influence bas been felt in ever county In Kansas and In every state In the Union. It Is recognised as a les deb in this (treat Political Revolution. Tbe people want Kood literature, and we want them to have it. We also want a few dollars with which to do business. You pay the DOLLAR, we do the rest. THE ADVOCATE PUB. CO., Topeka, Ks. The Advocate ... and The Wealth Makers Both One Year CI lor Only . . BOOKS FOR THE MASSES. Get these books and our paper as fast as you can into the hands of the people, friends. Buy, read aud circulate. Ad dress all orders to the Wealth Makers Pub. Co., Lincoln, Neb. The New Redemption $0.75 A Plea For the Gospel . 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'MA b . immIhI rm nak laa. 3 rfstmt Hra Aral 8laaretta( macalaa Jl anil 7 flalahM, nkk.l pUuJ , ad.pl.d to llhl and bay work-, ro.r.ntaed for 10 Team wits r Saatlla, Hlf.8atUal'le aed a oomplrta tt of Steel lltaekamrte) skipped sat wfcm oe m SO Daf'a Trial, no mooT reqanro w MBta. Bay horn factory tat aero Mlrra sad eftert P vtef?f? Cat TkloOat end and to-d.T for neebtae or Urn f0 rntC oaUleeoo.le.tnBOnlalf ae; 'mr -ST- . V llT" OXFORD NFS. CO. 8U Wstota In. CHIC AB0,llU W waa7CB to notice RTsrjLPew.ad,' In our columns. They are put there es pecially for your benefit win . no B -u- Offer! 5hV-THE REPRESENTATIVE, -or- I i MINNEAPOLIS, MINN. The Greatest Reform Paper in the Northwest. It is less than a year and a half old, and has risen to an immense circulation. Tbe weekly page of contributions from Hon. Ignatius Donnelly, author of "Imafa Col umn" and the Preamble to the Omaha Platform, is alone worth many times the subscription price; while our "Forum" contains every week contributions from the brightest minds in the People's Party, not only in Minnesota, but throughout the country. v Per Tear $1.00 Six Months................... 50 Three Monthi .25 Everyone should see what the new party has got to say for itself, through the mouth of one of its. ablest organs. The People's Party will Carry the Nation in 1896. Come in and be one of oar family of readers. This battle is raging over the whole world, and it will yet revolu tionize tbe whole world. You are behind the age if you are not "posted." ROBERT ECKFORD, Business Manager. 306 Boston Block, Minneapolis, Minnesota. v I I I You may have both 51 leprseptative She Ualtl? Tak;er8 One Year for $1.55 v ; By addressing Wealth Makers Pub. Co., Lincoln, Neb. This offer is open to old sub scribers as well as new ones. 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