Hi. Dill! THE 11 MR. TELLER OF COLORADO 19 FOR THK BILL. HE LAUDS THE MEASURE HIGHLY. Beera the) Financial Policy of the) Ad ministration and Gives It Out That No Carreney BUI oa the) Ad min istration's I lne Can I'm at Tola Session of Congress Other Capital Kavrs. Washington. Jan. 14. The senate galleries were well filled to-day in anticipation of a speech by Mr. Gor man on the currency question, in which it was thought he would an nounce the ideas of the Democratio senators, and because Mr. Quay of Pennsylvania was expected to speak on the income tax. The latter had spread on h.is desk a roll of manu script, which looked like one of his formidable and carefully prepared speeches. Mr. Wilson of Iowa ap peared on the floor for the first time this session, after a long illness. Governor Foster of Louisiana was also on the floor, being1 introduced by Mr. lilanchard. When the routine proceedings were out of the way Mr. Cockrell called up the urgent deficiency bill and the presiding officer, Mr, Harris, ex plained the parliamentary situation coming over from yesterday. Mr. II ill bad offered an amendment to the item appropriating funds for collect ing the income tax to permit the ref erence of the question of the legality of the tax to the courts, the chair had ruled out the amendment on a point of order; Mr. Hill had appealed from the decision of the chair and Mr. Mor gan moved to lay the appeal on the table. In order to permit senators to further discuss the income tax, Mr. Morgan agreed to withdraw his mo tion and this postponed a vote on Mr. Hill's appeal. Mr. Teller of dorado then ad dressed the senate in support of the income tax. He pointed to the large treasury deficits, which had been temporarily met by bond issues. The gold supply was down to S77,O0O,OOO, and was rapidly disappearing. Any proposition to do away with the in come tax, therefore, should be accom panied by a plan to increase the revenues. He gave it as his opinion that the income tax would become permanent, even though it was limited to five years by the present law. He believed that it was such an equitable tax that the people would insist upon its continuance. Import duties could not be put so high as to entirely keep out goods. And without these high duties there was certain to be a deficit in revenue. It was essential, t hens fore, that some middle course should be adopted and the income tax was the justest means of taking this course. He spoke of the vain and fruitless efforts of the executive branch of the government "to do something to relieve the present dis tress of the government and the peo ple." It shows, ne said, that the executive branch was in the wrong hands. Mr. Teller spoke caustically of the "scheme of banking coming from the treasury department" He referred to the current reports that the bill had been read off in fifty minutes to a stenographer. "I wish to show all due respect to this bill," said he, "coming, as it does, from such high sources, but if such a measure came from any senator or member, if it came from any Populist, it would be branded as the height of lun acy." He declared that the cur rent bill proposed to inaugurate the old era of wild cat paper. It vio lated every principle of finance iq this country or any other. He ridi culed the talk about an "elastic" and "flexible" currency, while banking corporations had charge of the elas ticity. "There is about six weeks re maining to this congress," said he. "Now does any person seriously be lieve that a revision of this vast cur rency system can be accomplished in that time? Why then is congress and the country stirred by these frantio appeals from the treasury?" - A SET BACK FOR HATCH. Tha Oleomargarine Original Package Bill Held Up by Filibustering. Washington, Jan. 14 About twenty members crowded into the area in front of the speaker's rostrum at the opening of the session of the house to-day in the hope of getting bills of local importance through by unani mous consent, but all were unsuccess ful. Hatch, chairman of the com mittee on agriculture, called up a bill to extend the provisions of the Wilson original package liquor law to oleomargarine in original packages, so as to allow states to exercise their police powers over oleomargarine, butterine, imitation butter or imita tion cheese imported in original pack ages as if they had been manufac tured in the states where they were consumed. The bill precipitated a discussion regarding the merits of the oleomargarine act and its consti tutionality. Mr. Hatch attempted to have the extra hour, to which the bill would be entitled under the rule when the committee is again called, granted at this time, but his request was re fused. He then tried to have the previous question ordered, but fill Postering by Mr. Bynum consumed the time till the morning hour ex pired and the bill went over. The house then took up the bill, to codify the pension laws and it was passed. Shortly before 2 o'clock pub- lie business was suspended and eulo gies were delivered on the late Rep resentative George B. Shaw of Wis consin. Butelde to Avoid Disgrace. PtTEBLO, Col, Jan. 14. L. M. Ball, awaiting trial for petit larceny, com mitted suicide in a cell at the county jail last night by hanging himself with a dog chain. He had stolen dry goods from Nathaniel Dunning, his employer. ROME'S WARNING. Bishop Flak proclaim tha Baa oa Secret Societies la Kium. Kansas Crrr, Ma, Jan. 14. Catho lics of Kansas City, Kan., and vicinity will be not.fied through their pastors, of the ban put upon secret societies recently by Rome. The Rt Rev. I M. Fink, bishop of Kansas City, Kan., has made public the following letter, which he has sent to each parish priest: "Rev. Dear Fathr send you a certain Roman docu concerning three secret societies ad their con demnation by the holy see. You will read it from your pulpit, together with this letter, in all the public masses on the Sunday after its receipt and if any of our Catholics have been so unfortunate as to join any of them, you will endeavor to induce them to cheerfully submit to the decision of the Holy See. You will impress on the faithful that anyone who would refuse submission or neglect severing his connection with any of them, will cut himself loose from the church and the use of the sacraments, no matter what his excuse might be. The de cision is nothing new or unheard of, but the reassertion of Catholic princi ples, which a false liberalism intended to 6tifle. I congratulate our good priests on .the firm stand they took in regard to secret societies and our good people on their obedience to their superiors by which they were kept from them, despite examples to the contrary around them. On this oc casion you will not fail to warn the faithful not only against the three societies which are specially men tioned in the decision of the holy see, but against all secret and non-Catholic social societies, according to the intention of the Third plenary council at Baltimore, and urge upon them the necessity of establishing Catholic benevolent and social societies, or forming branches of such as have been established elsewhere in order to afford the ' necessary relief and assistance in sickness and death. The establishment of such societies is especially necessary in city congregations, consisting in great Eart of mechanics, business men, la orers, etc. The document in ques tion, whose English translation I in sert, is addressed to the apostolio delegate, who is ordered to send it to all the bishops in the United States. " To this letter is attached the lette r from the pope condemning the Odd Fellows, Knights of Pythias and other secret societies. , The Rt Rev. Fink's diocese ex tends about 200 miles into Eastern Kansas and includes most of the im portant citieB of the state. A PETRIFIED OUTLAW. Tha Body of an Old-Time Texas Des perado Turned Into Stone. Waco, Texas, Jan. 14. George Renick, who catches fur animals, on his round of his traps on the bank of the Brazos, saw a leg sticking out of the sand and unearthed the petrified body of a man, perfect in every limb and feature, except a gash in the abdomen. He took it to the nearest town when it was recognized as the petrified body of Bill Johnson, a murderer and outlaw, who, after killing five men of the sheriffs posse in 1859, was mortally wounded and afterwards taken from the jail by lynchers and hanged while he was dying. He was shot in the jaw, twice in the breast and in both legs, and the bullet marks are on the petri fied body. . TOM CARTER FOR SENATOR. Tha Es-Kepnbllean attonal Chairman Honored by Montana Republicans. Helena, Mont, Jan. 14. The Re publicans of the legislature in joint caucus nominated ex-Congressman Thomas H. Carter for senator. When the result' was announced he was lifted on the shoulders of men and carried triumphantly through the cor riders. He is a Catholic and his nom ination is a defeat for the A. P. A. He was chairman of the national Re publican committee in the last cam paign. AID ASKED FOR KANSANS. New York's Mayor Appealed to to As 1st the People of Ransom. New York, Jan. 14. Mayor Strong has received an appeal from the Rev. E. E. Gunsbel, pastor of the Meth odist church, and a committee of the Christian Endeavor society of Ran som, Kan., asking for aid for the peo ple of that section who have been un able to raise any crops during the past two years on acccunt of the severe drought The people are suf fering from want of food and cloth ing. Honduras Hold Down Foreigners. Washington, Jan. 14. One article of the new constitution of Honduras, which has just gone into effect pro vides that foreigners cannot have re course to diplomatic intervention ex cept in cases of denial of justice. A judgment or sentence not favorable to the claimant shall not be under stood as a denial of justice, and if re clamations are not conducted in a friendly manner and cause damage to the country, the claimants will lose the right to remain in Honduras. May Yohe Is Lady Hope. London, Jan. 14. The report that May Yohe, the American burlesque actress, who has been a London favorite for several years, has been married to Lord Francis Hope, brother of the duke of Newcastle, turns out to be correct The Hampstead parish register shows that thev were mar ried there on November 27 last. The register gives Miss Yohe's name as May Augusta Yohe, 25 years of age, spinster. Lord Hope is 32. The Kaiser and Agriculture. Berlin, Jan 14. The Emperor William has ordered detailed reports as to the agricultural depression and the proposed remedies. The funds at the disposal of the minister of agri culture will be increased for this purpose. - Lost With All on Board. London, Jan. 1 4. It is regarded as certain that the British steamer Pros- cott, bound from Sunderland for Mar seilles, foundered with twenty-three persons auring the recent gale. Our Great Clubbing i uu jx oeuure ... 111 By sending that amount Immediatelj Everybody knows What the Nonconformist is our National Paper. Gives all the news fresh from the battle-fields. It is tl.00 per year, so is The Wealth Makers, but 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 Dew ones. You Ought to Have It Send us $1.55 immediatelj and get these two great papers Wealth Makers Pub. Co. Lincoln, Neb. "er iY. 7 Va..: 'jr71J' - 1 --V, TO PU7rURU0t)aXTHlHG5xPnPLE.&Ma aAtts- FIFTY CENTS 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 Cariosity Shop. The great big directory of everybody, everywhere, does not mention the name of anybody of any size or age who doesn't love pictures. -59 HERE IS A MINE FULL-1000 A YEAR. The "Paper World " says: "The Piotorb Maoazius Is in keeping with its title, a magazine of pictures ; but they are not the ordinary kind. Instead, the closely printed pages are filled with odd, grotesque, quaint things, culled from all sections of the earth not aiming especially at 'art' per fection, but seeking rather the uncommon and fantastic, it must require a world-wide research to maintain the standard set by the Initial number ; yet the price Is only the modest one of M cts. a year. Each number contains 20 large pages, and 80 of the whimsical, droll, bizaare illustrations." It is not too much educational food that causes mental dyspepsia. It's how it is cooked and served. The Picture Magazine is " done to a turn." The Magazine of type must be seen and read; this needs to be seen only. Interests and pleases everybody. Is all digested ready for assimilation. The best pictures that the world has are gleaned and packed in solid pages, with briefest possible descriptions, and it is guiltless of what the late James Russell Lowell was moved to call " the modern plague of printed words." EVERY READER OF THIS PAPER WANTS THIS NOVELTY. By special arrangement with the publishers, we are enabled to send both "The Picture Magazine" and The Wealth Makers to any subscriber, new or old, for one year for only $1.20. Who will be the first to send and get this fine magazine and Thb Wealth Makers for one year for only $1.20? Address, WEALTH MAKERS PUB. CO.. Lincoln Neb. Send Us Two New Names With &2, and your own subscription will be ex tended One Year Free of Cost. HIGHEST BICYCLE HONORS AT THB WORLD'S PAIR were swtrded to BICYCLES A decision merely supplemental to the Judgment of approval of the best informed wheel devotees. Catalogue tree at any tumbler Agency. CO R MULL Y A J1FFIRY MFC CO. Chicago, BorroK. Washihotok. Niw Tou. E. R. 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Southern Mercury, 1 02 Main St., Dallas, Tex (Efye Southern 2flercunj and .... "WM-"Both One Year for $1.55 To our old subscribers as well as new Who wants a good Southern paper? Address, Wealth Makers Pub. Co., Lincoln, "Neb. F. M. WOODS, Fine Stock Auctioneer, itoe eraser. LINCOLN, NEB. Every woman aeeds Di. Miles Pain Pills. Stye .dvoeal . . wsm sBsnNn eaeHBiBeVB aaieaeBaBBta eaeieiseBBsasBBMBia 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 Year. 16 Pages, 64 Columns, $1.00 a Year. KANSAS LEADS THE PROCESSION THE ADVOCATE'S edncatlonal Influence 1 has been (elt in every county in Kansas and In every state in the Union. It le recognised as a LEaDKB In this great Political Revolution. The people want (rood literature, and we want then to have It. We aleo want a few dollars with which to do business. Ton pay the DOLLAR, we do the rest. . THE ADVOCATE PUB. 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THB BEST CLTJBBXEQ OTTO BTEX BCADB To sea have The Wealth Makers ... and The Prairie Farmer both One Year for............91.oO. tm nffa la to nld nbficribers as well as new ones. Just think of it I Two such papers as The Pbaibix Farmer ana ibx Wealth Makebs one year for f 1.801 Send in your Subscriptions Immediately .-sv-JC w. An not know how loDfir we can af ford to make this offer. Address, WEALTH MAKERS PUB. CO., I. in coin, Beb. BOOKS FOR THB MASSES. Get these books and our paper as fast as you can into the hands of the people, friends. Buy, read and circulate. Ad dress all orders to the Wealth Makers Pub. Co., Lincoln, Neb. 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Ignatius Donnelly, author of "Caear'a 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. Per Year . . $L00 Six Months 50 Three Months 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 our family of readers. This battle is raging over the whole world, and it will yet revolu- t ion ire the whole world. You are behind the age if you are not l a . a. 1 It poBiea. m ROBERT ECKFORD, ! ' d..ih a. V UBIN099 manasoi . 306 Boston Block, Minneapolis, Minnesota. You may have both Sf; leprtseptatiue AND- She Uqaltl? Tak;er8 One Year for $1.55 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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