Perry Enterprise-Times. (Perry, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 33, Ed. 1 Friday, June 12, 1896 Page: 1 of 4
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PERRY ENTERPRISE-TIMES.
VOL. IV
Official Paper of Noble County and City of Perry—Published Daily.
I'EKHY, NOBLE COUNTY, OKLAHOMA, FRIDAY, JIJN1U2, 1896,"
MARCUS HA1NA0I DECK
MR. M'KINLEY'S CHIEF LIEUTEN-
ANT ARRIVES IN ST. LOUIS.
NO. 33
eoumtions. id tlia eastern part of the
state the sentiment la largely for the
free coinage of llver. In the western
part the reverts ii true. Our delega-
tion come* to St I*oula uninitructe.l
on this point, bat at the State conven-
tion a resolution wai passed advocat-
ing acund money, and recommending
that some International arrangement
be made whereby silver might bo
made one of Iho standard money
mediums of the world. While I, mv-
self, am friendly to silver, I am con-
POLITICAL POT DOILING. that if the convention adopts a „
"U radical g0ld standard platform .that CANDIDATES DISCUSSED
_____ ! Washington will still cast her elec-
i toral vote for the Itcpublicau nominee
f'OPULISI FUSION PLANS.
CHAIRMAN BREIDENTHAL OF KAN-
SAS TALKS ABOUT THEM,
WILL Be A DEMOCRAT.
Hi* niiver piank Mn t, t i D6xt The question of protection
rue P,mnk Muc.h VM,d Aboa|_ i w<j conft,der q( mQre j £nce thau
any other."
Color Line Seem* to lie Nettled—
Contest for Temporary Chair*
man—Convention Hall Test-
ed and Pound Perfect—
The Vice Presidency.
thurston favors tiie indiana idea.
Senator Thurston, member of the
national Republican committee from
, Nebraska and delegate to the conven-
! tion, w&s among the early arrivals to-
j dey. He appeared at the breakfast
table wearing the first combined
St Loria Mn i„nn . a •• A | presidential and vice presidential
ll.„nJ .f'.um',' . Marcus A. Udge displayed by anv of the Kepub-
Ilanna and William A. Halm of Ohio, [ lican leaders. It Ixire the faces of
Mcjiinley s niaiiagcrs-in-chief, arrived McKinley and Hobart of New Jersey,
to-day anil the .McKinley headquarters 1 "I' >R pretty well understood," said
at the .Southern ui once became the "that I am for McKinley for first
busy portion of the hotel. Hanna P'*."*-. With his nomination assured,
said that ha had not been long enough "S 'i, we . want an Eastern man
in St Louis to make any statement, Hota^'t^be* thJ'V!?, hi b°"*Te
a «::rT;r" s*i?r r:1 ~ twsssva
the friends of Major McKinley had situat on in all respects. We want to
not in the least overestimated hit keep New .Jersey in the Republican
popularity, liahn said that assurance ranks now that we have it there.
Furthermore, Hobart is strong in New
York, where he is personally well
known and much esteemed."
Asked what course he thought would
be adopted by the conventiou on the
Tinancial question. Mr. Thursion re-
plied that he believed the Indiana
declaration upou that subject would
form the model upon which the money
declaration would be based.
kkrkns' i'j.ank sl'ggkaflvk.
The following was given out to-day
by Richard C. Kerens, member of the
National committee from Missouri,
and much importance attaches to it
because of Mr. Kerens* visit to Major
McKinley at Canton, although he
would not have it understood that the
proposed plank had the sanction of
Mr. McKinley and gave no lutimation
to that effect: "We believe that our
money should not be inferior to the
money of the most enlightened na-
tions of the earth, and are unalterably
opposed to every scheme that threat-
ens to debase or depreciate our present
monetary standard. We favor the rea-
mnable use of silver as currcncy, but
such should be to the extent only and
under such well defined regulations
that its |>arity with gold as currency
can be easily and efficiently main-
tained. As consistent bimetallists.
we nre opposed to the independent
free coinage of silver at a ratio of Jtl
to I as a measure fraught with cer-
tain diaOMrr to all commercial in-
erests. destructive to the interests of
the wage earner and, in the absence i
of international agreements, sure to 1
lead to silver monometallism
JAPAN AS AMERICA S RIVAL
The Oriental Nation a Factor In the
Trade situation.
Washington, June II. —Chairman
Dinglcy uf the House ways and lueuns
committee made a report on the men-
ace to American manufacturers by the
t'esT'lntha threatened invasion of the cheap pro-
MARK A. HANNA,
had t>een received from friends of
other candidates that little or no con-
.est would be made.
Halm, asked what the financial
plank of the platform would be, said
that it would be such as every Repub-
lican could staml upon who wanted
the uational credit sustained.
There is something of u contest over
the selection of temporary chairman.
The McKinley ncn have decided
upon C. W. Fairbanks of Indiana, but
many member* of the national com-
mittee are urging Samuel 1-Vssenden
of Connecticut The friends of the
latter say that he is well ai'i|iiuintcd
with Republicans every where aud has
been attending national conventions
so long that lie knows everybody of
prominence, and is also familiar with
the management of large conventions.
Hut I'essenden will not lie satisfaelory
to the McKinley leaders and if the
national committee should name him
it might precipitate
ducts of Oriental labor and upon the
effects of the difference of exchange
between g.ild standard and silver
standard countries upou I'nited States
manufacturers and agriculture, thoso
luestions having been investigsted by
the committee.
The report says the sudden awaken
ing of .lapan from the Oriental slum-
ment I he matter will lie brought up her of centuries Is being followed by
In the committee to day und Chairman an equally rapid Westernizing of lie'r
i i oimwlttee will | methods of imlustrv; that while the
convention. It is po-sible, however,
that everything will lie adjusted in
committee.
The trouble about the colored dele-
gations seems to be settled. * hairman
Carter lis. received telegram, from
all over the r.iuntry calliug for the
removal of the convention if the col-
ored men do not receive fair treat*
Kennard of the Im al
give assurances that tha colored dele-
gates will lie taken care of. A colored
delegation called on Mr. Hanna to-day
end assured him that they were very
comfortably quartered.
Till; at'PITonit m a i.i. m;(tv
The convention auditorium was
dedicated to-night and u notable
gathering was present A te,t of the
aeoustie properties of the hall showed
that an ordinary s|ieaker could lie
heard plainly In nil parts nf the audi-
toriutu Nlcbalac M Hell, who has
acted as reading secretary at nearly
every Democratic convention except
the last, since l*7il, spoke from differ-
ent parts of the hall, and declared:
"The acoustic properties of the hall
eould not tie better."
th : an vkn oi rsrios
Mr. Thurston said in reply to a
Japanese do not have the inventive
faculty of Americans or even of
Kuropeans, their imitative faculties
are wonderful. Their stsndard of
living would be regarded as prac-
tical starvation by the workmen of
the I'nited States, and the hours of
lalior average twelve a day. Such
skilled workmen, as blacksmiths, car-
|>enters. masons, compositors, tailors
and plasterers receive In .latmtirsa
cities only from twenty-six to thirty-
three cents, and factory operatives
live to twenty cents a day in Ameri-
can money and nearly double those
sums in .lupanese sliver money, while
farm hand* receive 11.44 per laoath.
Europeans and American., saya Mr.
Dlnglev, are recognising the profit-
able Held aflorded tor Investments
and factories, and he adds: "While
your e in in11 lee have uot found that
any articles of Importance made by
qaesUon thai he had ao doubt thai the factory method. In .lapaa. outside
anme nf the delegates from the Kast of cheap silks, haadkerchlefs. mat-
•ra seaboard would make a strong
contention for a more pronounced and
explicit declaration for fold, but It
would not he wise to concede I heir ex
Ireme demands "Tliey will In the
•ait be satisfied Willi a conservative
pronouncement,'' he said, "and I hay
will he glad enough to take It In pref*
erenee to ihe unequivocal free sliver
declaration Ihe I hleagn con rent ion
will (lee oat.'
lings, rugs, etc., have as yet Invaded
Ihe inarketa of Ihe Hailed Stales, It
la probable lhat Ihe tepid Intr.aluc-
tlon of machinery lato Japan will
within a few years make Japanese
feel orr product., sad probably line
cottons, alike aait other arllelea, la
which Ihe labor enst here is an Im-
portant elemeat la production, a
more serious competitor in our mar-
bets than the products of Ureal llrlt-
aiM, t rance and Germany bare been,
Referring to other qnealloas of f"* thareawta that Ihe Japan
which tbe platform would treat, I be "HTLfut!L'Sf'flCI!
Naaalor said he thought Hist place
Would he given in Ihe tariff, as that
was and has been a distinctive feature
of the Remthliean party's lasne. lie
Ibonghl there wou!d be a declaration
demanding In strong terms a distinct*
Irely American poller, bat be waa at
tbe oniatoa that tbe A f A. questloa
would awl Mgare In Ihe eon veal Ion
"Waabiagion will not bolt tbe caa
wages, and Japanese labor la Iftteltr
si mn lo become as effective with ma*
cblnery as Kampaaa lalior."
According In Sr. IHagley, tbe com-
petition will differ, ant ta kind, bui
in degree, from Kuropeaa com petit loa
The committee rapo.le lhat It knows
nf no remedy outside of ihe abaelata
prohibition enforced agaiast eoaeiel
labor goods, eccept tbe impottiion of
nnsniagton win not mu me ess- tlallon on mntamlla* m.!. u.i>.i.
ST£* ? «•&
SI n*rr" " vfiianw m "fWiWt liiis Is SMaiaaaft ! • uu ^.lus. u
for
■llorfan of Alabama or Caldwell of Ar«
kansas Would lie Suitable— lilnud
Not Out or the Po4sil llltles—
Cameron aud Teller Held to
He Objectionable lie-
cause of Location.
'•sb a delegate al-large • "tie have
twn dlatlnel feeliags oa tbe •,>•!«
V'Miws itwie caused nv geoerset-as-
lion An argument for this polle* la
matte, it tieing said lo aeisimpllsh a
doiiide purpose—the mlleetioa of r v<
tiu to snippet tbe roverfmeut
Toi'KKA. Kan., .luno 11.—John \V.
/Ireidenthal, chairman of the I'opuiist
state committee, thinks theru is a
prospect of a fusion of the silver men
Of all parlies in the national cam-
paign this year, lie believes the Pop-
ulists would be willing to yield some-
what to the silver Democrats anil the
silver Republicans if the Democratic
convention at Chicago should nomin-
ate the "right kind of a man." "1 <lo
uot mean, ho said, "that our party
would consent to lay aside its party
organization, or that ive would aban-
don all other principles for the sake
of silver. I mean that wo would for
the sake of silver not be so tenacious
as to tiie presidential candidate.
Our party has come to stay, aud it
will ultimately accomplish all the re-
forms which it was organized to ac-
complish, but an opportunity to give
to the country free coinage of silver
is offered this year, and I believe the
silver leaders of the other two parties
have it iu their power to uuite our
forces with theirs."
Asked to name the man whom he
thought the Populists would be will-
ing to indorse, Iireldenthal said:
"Well, there's Morgan of Alabama, a
Democrat, or Judge Caldwell of Ar-
kansas, a Republican. I believe the
Populists would bu willing to accept
either of them."
"How about Holes?"
"Oil, lloies is not a silver man; that
is, he is nut silver enough. It was
only the other day that he said silver
men should not stand on the question
of ratio, 'i hat kind of a man is not a
siivcr man."
" Would Doi. ron do?"
"Too far Kast."
j "Well, there's Teller?"
| "A good man, but he is uot located
l right. He lives in one of the silver
States, and the old cry would be
raised that tin- free silver movement
; wa, Started simnly to help the mine
I owners."
"Well, llland ought to suit you?"
"Yes, Jiluii'l ought to bo acceptable.
I have not heard nur people say much
about him, hut it is certain he is sound
on tbe silver question. He has led
the tight for many years. Should
Teller and the other silver Repub-
licans get together at St. Louis and,
after looking the entire silver Held
over, pick a man properly located
who would be seceptSSIe und go to
Chicago aud urge his acceptance by
the Democrats, there Is reason to be-
lieve that the two conventions to bo
held at St. Louis July 33 would take
him up. The Democrats need not
surrender their party existence, nor
need the Populists. Kaoh party could
continue its organization aud make a
platform and run state and congres-
sional tickets, but have the same
■ 'residential ticket In that way the
greatest good fur the greatest number
could be accomplished and the honor
anil credit of neither party would be
sacrificed."
BLAND MEN TO OONFER.
Mlxmirl Lesil.r. Wilt Mm |n at Lmls
T. -.ley—A l-riler Prom lllsn.l.
Sr. I .hi is, Ma, J une 11. -To-morrow
a conference of the free silver Demo-
cratic leaders from every section of
the state will be held at the Planters'
hotel for the purpose of advancing tha
Presidential candidacy of Richard
I'arks I ti ii ml nnil to give Impetus lo
Ihe wotk of lhat thorough organiza-
tion of the party which was deter-
mined upon by tlie stale ccntrai com-
mittee several months ago.
Illaml will make formal announce-
ment of his candidacy for the nomin-
ation In Chicago through a letter,
which lie recently addressed lo lleurgc
W. Allen, llland will he In St. Louis
Krlday night and will remain until
Sunday morning The purpose of his
visit Is to Mil an engafement to deliver
an address In Kusi St. Louis Saturday
for the benefit of the cyclone auf*
ferers.
Mamtlea tf tbe reteee4 Mae.
HneTuN, June II.—A reception and
dinner was tendered Ihe Republican
delegates sl-large by tha l.lncola Re-
publican (Tub last night. Senator
Henry tahot Lodge announced that
If t ourtney, the colored delegate at-
large from Massachusetts, should b«
muse In mom by Ihe hotel mea of
Ml. I.outs, the entire delegalioa would
aol accept quarters In aay hotel.
fceesat l° iver M '« fteee
I.Annrsi r, Kan,June II The eon-
eluding exercises of commencement
week were held thla moralag la*
atead of orations by members of th«
#laa*. Ilr. I' t\, llunaeuuis of Armour
Institute, i hleago, delivered an ad-
dress. after which the dlplon ss were
Itreaented to ihe gradnsle. i ho an-
anal alumni banquet we, at vtoeb
Holes Thlf ts There Is ao Chanee
Senator Teller.
Washington, June 11.—The follow-
ing letter from ex-Governor lloies of
Iowa, has been received in this city:
Waterloo, Iowa, June 6.—Dear Sir:
If the silver delegates control the
convention at Chicago a Democrat
will certainly be nominated by that
convention. It is not vastlv important
as to who he shall be if he is a thor-
oughly tried and true friend of the
free coinage of silver aud capable and
honest. It would, in my judgment,
be absolutely impossible to unite any
considerable number of the delegates
iu favor of nominating anyone outside
of the party for the head of the ticket
at least.
TORNADOJN ALABAMA.
Two Persons Killed and s Hundred In-
jured at Wyeth City.
Chattanooga, Tenn., June 11.—At
11 o'clock yesterday morning a torna-
do of unusual severity struck Wyeth
Citv, about thirty miles from Gadsden,
in Northern Alabama. The tornado
made its appearance in the usual fun-
nel-shaped cloud in the southeast, and
carried all before it Thirteen houses
have been literally blown from the
face of the earth, but only two deaths,
Ed Long and a negro woman, have
been reported. A hundred or more
persons are injured, several fatally.
NONE WILL CO HUNGRY.
8L l.ouit Will Take Care of All Colored
Delegates.
St. Louis, June 11.—No solution
of the puzzling question as to what to
do with the negro delegates to the
national convention has been reached,
but the local convention committee
declares that no one shall go un-
housed or unfed. Hotel men now say
they have not refused to entertain
colored delegates, but have simply
told them all the rooms were engaged.
This they maintain is the truth.
State Delegations afc Chicago.
Chicago, June 11.—The various
State delegations to the national Dem-
ocratic convention are already select-
ing their quarters. The New York
delegation will be lodged at the
Palmer house. The headquarters will
bo in parlor F. The national commit-
ted will also have rooms provided for
j ti Jem at the Palmer.
! ' THE MARKETS.
Kansas Citv. Mo.. JunoII.—Elevator mm
showed a littl • in >r • disposition to buy whoat
to-'lny, nn I there was some milling demand.
Hard Wheat—-No. -o ^>25 : No 3.
No. 4, :7c reji-c ed. 8 c. Soft Wli'at—No.
I&ei No I >•: N< . 4, 4Jc; fsjeeted*
3SQ k c Spr n? Whoat—No. ', f> 'P^4c; No.
3, 4t 48c; rejected. ium.iIc whito spring whoat
3 44 c.
lorn—No 2il4c; No 3, 2t'ic; No. 4, 20c; no
grade, H'jc: white cora, No. 1, Jlc; No S,
! ,c: No 4, 2)Vic.
Onu -No l. IV' I rtc; No. 3, 1 No. i tie I no
j grade, 1*411c; No. 2 whito oat , 18'«c; No J
white, 17c.
Hran-Dull; 33'ji c in l))>lb sacks; bulk, 6c
1.JKS.
Iive—No. i, l!c; No. 3, 2S'c No 4, ^7o.
Hay — Timothy -I'll -i *o, 911 «li, No I, $K30*i
1 L*)| No. .. *7 • II ; Ho, I, 11. I : choice
11r i kt II " ' ilOl Nn. I. Huett ill; .So I,
lull 15:; No ', :3U0<ilUis No- ,
st raw, JCI t. j()
lirtKun Corn—Short ami common, 1.0<S^ per
t« n; self working, fair to good, • •lii-l' per ton;
self w rking. choice, iliMifM jht ton; flwarf
corn a2(Mi,4 • per ton; all hurl, .'4 H'O per ton,
acconlinx to quality.
Kg:- -Kan«as and Mi^tnuri strictly candled
sto k ledoi ; Soutliura stojlt, .'n.
Poultry—H«n«, ." c lb rt o«teis, r<e each;
serint\ Ho lb; turkey*, hens, tic; gubblors, ftej
oil. tj c; ducks 7c; g-e«o uot wantetl; pig.
eon . iWe i#l |x r dos.
flutter Creamery, extra faney foperator,
1 e; tlrsti, l.'c; dairy fancv, 12c, fair. lUiv store
packed fr<tsh < <Ai9o ; packing s o *k, 7e.
I'otatoo— lloun grown niock w.ts plen'lful
ttMl ty and priees raiiff * I Irtim ::o <.iuc per bu.
New Okl alioma ntock, 5 per bu in round lota,
.VI u 'tr Pi n siua' I wav
Apples New Arkansa* stock. 7ic i«er third
himhol box; SJaUU per bushel Uil. IU n Davis,
film lioiuauite**, fti.
Chleavo Hosril or Trade,
< ik'aoo June 11 —Thi'following n thtr iflt*
of prices of tim gnu i and provtsi sti mti kat on
the Ikttrd uf I rutin ;
lligli I Low,
WllkAT-
af MU •
•luiy
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IN NIK -
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Hep'eMl'ief
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PMONT MlHt
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Jul.
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5W
WORK ON THE CONTESTS
THE NATIONAL COMMITTEE BEGINS
THE HEARING.
CAREFUL WORK PLANNED.
The Oee Handred ssi Miij-RIght Ceses
ta be Censldersd end tieelded an
Their Merlte iHstdlw of Free*
tdaetlel Frefsrene«s nr the
rieneelnl Unesttpn —Me-
tro Queatlan Again.
St. Louis, June 11.—The national
Republican committee met at noon to-
day with the national chairman, T. H.
Carter of Montana, in the chair.
General Clarkson, the member from
Iowh. is sick at Philadelphia and can-
not be at the meeting. Senator Gear
has his proxy. K. Cleveland has the
proxy of Enoch Strother of Nevada,
aud Oscar Meyer of Neiv York the
proxy of Joseph H. Simon of Oregon.
The business before the committee,
the consideration of 16s contests, was
promptly taken up. The initial meet-
Mee Maeh
HtMts t in. Mi,. Jtii. il i ntiI.
r.i|.i« 1,11 rslts. it*41 .III* pi •■Her,
I, Kt'sltK l"esl «i til" m.m^t S. >l sd
.lie HI s il'Slrshl. r.liis ssl n«l|
Imt .lew itt ■<>** i ssil en.. • I —..
II |m,| .„,i, ,|m,i
T si. stul IhiImh ilw.
Nilitt me.
Nsll, • lisltsn
ftis-kef. ,
I'st «
ll.«. Ns'.ih* It,'it; .hi,-*.-1 M«>rite.,
t« IV MstkM «l -Inn,i set rl.«H
stmet iv I i.e., th. ' i sil> i. Mil s 4
the Mslh nt ..i". Im«i 1*1 in *1 n,
*Me« II . i- e'< lt.lt >hiM -I t'^.tlet.
TV m.flte' 1« s- IM ,n4 «l*il,
l'i'l!'«*t*t pfS th^ls, . S,|s,:
Mlmlt.nl 1 SI
f ' ' ««>
• * t .s« Mm-e. i | ti
i - ■■ 'i iti
• shi m ,
takes IM
t'lmtn
f unstli
I tt«t
I mifi
oe, utt
s
si •**
sbsator teller, who is expected to
lead a free silver bolt,
ing was executive and press and pub-
lic were excluded.
The members are of the opinion
that the interests of the party will he
promoted by a careful analysis of all
the testimony and by the decision of
all cases upon their merits, regardless
of the personal Presidential prefer-
ences or prejudices of the contestants
upon the llnanclal question. The de-
cision in favor of any delegation will
have only tha effect of seating its
members for the temporary organisa-
tion, but they hope to perform the
task so thoroughly aa to leave com-
paratively little for the convention's
credentials committee to do. The
national committee will probably be
engaged upon the contests during tha
greater part of the week.
The committee had been In session
only a few mlnutea when Richard
Kerens of Miiaourl offered a motion to
admit the press, which was adopted.
The proceedings after that time were
very brief, as It wss found as soon as
the committee announced Its readi-
ness to take up the Alabama contesta
that the part'es were not prepared to
firocted Immediately. A recess was
herefore taken until I o'clock, when
It was announced that the Ntatee
would be taken up In alphabetical
order to hear contests.
Secretary Marnier announced Jnst
prior to the receas that a iaige num-
ber of telegrams hail been receives
from various parts of the country In
regariUo I lie reporta that colored del-
egates would be denied hotel accom-
modations st St. Louie and suggesting
Ita removal to some other point, lis
aald that he kaaw nothing of tha dle-
poeltlon of the manager* of any of tha
hotels except the Nouthtrn, but tha
manager of that had nnnonneed that
contracts made for accommodation*
there would bo fnltlled regardle** of
the color of Ihoeafor whom rumus had
been engaged.
A KANSAN A SUICIDE.
■a-Hagee Ranaaet MseeHt af tee sea-
waeth Mills Mimed# at as. leal* Ma
l.kavmwiirtm, Km., Jane II.—A
telegram waa received hare nt t
•'clock by tha faalljr of as-Maye*
Samuel Ihidaworth of thla place, wlw
has heea slek for some time la • hne-
pltal it H. Iiottla, Na, lhat he haS
eommltted satclde there. No particu-
lars have hem learned a* yet.
SaMtMl Dndsworth was
•U
tShl _
an tha Kepnblteea tlehet la IN* a ad
carved mm term, tela* snteaedaS h*
tbe preaeal Incamhent, It A. Haab.
Ma left a wife, asoa a ad adaagbter
LONDON WOMAN HANOBO
J Bamael Dndeworth wa* proprietor
of a job prlatlag sad bookbladlag aa*
tabllshmeat lie waa elected mayor
aa tba Mepabllaaa tlehet la IMM a ad
l^atma, daaa It—Ufa Aaala Itrer,
tbe balw farater af Iteadlaff. who waa
arretted April lea tba charge af wmf
Aa>ImM ataAM (■ laa|a aaliaalai Sja kae
arrinj irsij miiii wrvswa le srr
eara, waa baa^ped Is Selegate artaaa
at • a cloeb tbM Mnraiag.
itcar m aetttiaa* fraat m Kaacaa
town, enataiaiag l«."*t aaawa, baea
been Hied with tba atata hoard af rail*
tied ei«wMia*Hieer*,ar#te*tief eeawO
' aaistia* grata tate*,
EXPECT TELLER TO BOLT.
auvee vacation the AII-AtMorblng Topt«
«l at. Louis
Nt. Lot-is, Mo., June 11.—Politicians,
great and small, from all over the
Union, are swarming into this city.
Among the representatives from the
West, the name of Colonel M. II. De-
Young, member of the national com-
mittee from California, and a strong
advocate of free ailver, is already be-
ing urged in connection with the no m-
ination for the vice presidency.
When Mr. DeYoung was asked for an
expression of his views as to the
course of the silver men, he said:
"Tho delegates from the silver state*
are very determined in their desire to
advance the interests of silver. They
want the right to liave the free coin-
age of silver at lfl to 1. Some of them
are very radical anil talk about leav-
ing the convention iu case their views
are not adopted. This action will not
be general. It is generally known
that Colorado, under tho leadership
of Teller, proposes to walk out of the
convention. The California delega-
tion has been instructed to vote for
McKinley, and the convention adopted
a resolution in favor of the free coin-
age of silver, but our delegation do
not intend to leave the purty or con-
vention in case of failure of that
nature.
"The silver men. especially of Colo-
rado, Montana and other states, think
that if Teller should he nominated by
the Democratic party in Chicago,
there would be no question of his in-
dorsement by the two conventions
that meet in St. Louis on July 22.
That is, the silver party convention
and the Populist convention. In fact,
if is an understanding already made
and agreed to that both of these con-
ventions will indorse the nomination
of Teller. If Teller is nominated by
these three parties, my private opin-
ion is that he will come very near be-
ing elected.
"There Is one serious question,
though, to the whole of this proposi-
tion. Will the Democratic party take
a man out of the Republican national
convention and make him the stand-
ard-bearer of the Democratic party?
Tbe general impression among the
leading Democrats is that they will
not do it. I think it Teller leave* the
convention, Montana and Idaho will
follow. Utah, as a whole, will not
There inay be one of their delegate*
that will. Nevada is just as anxious
for free silver as any of the other
states. While I do not know what
their delegates propose to do, they
can be depended upon to do anything
that lies in their power to advance
the interests of silver."
Mlaaonrt Crop Bulletin.
Columbia, Ma, June It.—The Mi*-
aouri weekly crop bulletin saya: The
larger portion of the corn crop is very
weedy, and the rains of the t>th and
7th will still further retard cultiva-
tion. Much corn on low land look*
very yellow, and considerable ha*
been drowned out entirely. Much
planting aud replanting still remain*
to be done. Wheat is ripening rapidly
In the central and southern section*
and harvest is in progress where the
weather will permit. Many fle'ds will
have to be cut with a cradle, being too
wet for machine* Notwithstanding
the heavy rains, much damage has
been done by chinch bugs In places,
and th* crop has also been consider-
ably injured by rust. Oats, flax and
grasses ara generally doing wall,
though there Is some complaint of
rust in oats, and in some districts both
oats and flax have beeu injured by
the excessive rains. Considerable
elover haa been cnt during the week,
bat tha weather has been unfavorable
for tha work.
Jaehey Vail Killed.
Kansas Citt, Mo., June 11.—In the
laat raee at Kxposttlon driving park
yeatarday afteraoon AI Watts, tha
proparty of Jam** Stevens, stumlilad
aad fall, breaking Ills neck and dying
laitantly. Jockey llenny Vail,a local
rider, had th* mount, and he wa*
tbrowa violently aad trampled upon
by Mrs. S., who was right behind Al
Watt*. H* wa* picked up in a dying
condition and llvad only a Utile whlla
after being taken lo III* home. No
oac could be blamed for Ihe accident,
which waa due lo the horses stumbling
and being nnablc to ree.iver. Strode,
who rode Mr*. N., was not hurt.
Asa* aa.ee* tm Heine railed a Thief.
Fort Siott. Kan., tunc 11. — Inmes
Overlleld, n young man who drive* a
grocery delivery wagon for iii* father-
•a-law, W. H. Mruce, haa brought suit
for Ki.tiOu agala*t Mr* Sarah Ogtlea
far alleged daader Mr*, iigden la
tba wife of J. O. Ogdcn, aad haa coa-
*ld*rabl* wealth. Young Overlleld
allagaa that aba publicly accused him
af uaallag bar diamonds and threat-
aaad to proeeeate him. Hhe waa hla
father-in-law's customer aad he da*
live red goad* to Iter bouse.
Tnrta*. Kan., June ti—Called
State* Saaalnr l.uclan Maker made a
Sylag trip tsltopaba jwUMSMpel1
laf twa boar* la some nut nf tba way
place, which wa* umliscoverabla to
Iba aewepaper men Me did aol ray
later al a hotel aad appeared at aaaa
af tba wall baown political haaaia
Oae story baa II that bl* baelaeaa waa
with lb* Noa J II tturtua, caadlaaM
tar I'altml Mate* Heaatof
Vinita. I T., Jaaa 11.-Tha ladiaa
Territory Democratic eoavaallaa waa
k«IA |m i hla alao ssj slssls^ Aaua Aa|^
Mlw ra IRIS Wrey IIS SlWIW leer
AlM tlM NipMilVt BtlMM Ii
■ate VsaailMSe amA
VIM iwiTiwty eea iwe
ffttlll ti to i M tMtofitd.
M iMftMl
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Perry & Welch. Perry Enterprise-Times. (Perry, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 33, Ed. 1 Friday, June 12, 1896, newspaper, June 12, 1896; Perry, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc111780/m1/1/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.