Perry Enterprise-Times. (Perry, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 119, Ed. 1 Monday, September 21, 1896 Page: 1 of 4
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PERRY ENTERPRISE-TIMES.
Official Paper of Noble County and City of Perry—Published D;>ily.
VOL.IV
PERRY. NOBLE COUNTY, OKLAHOMA, MONDAY, SEPT. 21,1890.
NO 119
SCGRtO fly w. j. tm,
SILVER CANDIDATE DENOl'NC.
ASSISTANT REPUBLICANS.
Declare* Thai Ai\f .linn Who tu
llcfi-ai lliiu Should Vole for Major
Mckinley Direct Iii<I1miih|miIU
i « iiton t'olloncr* arc
Tri^or* ;«11• I Uptcrlrni
— Virginia Tour.
Richmond, Va., Sept. .'jl — Last night
the Auditorium was nacked wheu Mr.
Hryan appeared there at >m"> o'clock,
going straight from his train. Ten
minutes elapsed before the cheering
ceased, and there was another out-
burst when ho was presented by Sen-
ator Daniel.
I here was much disorder during
Mr. Ury an m delivery, but he managed
to make himself heard by nearly
everybody. He said in part:
"I am tlie uomiuee of tliree conven-
tions, but I do not appeal to the vote
of any muu on the gmun I that I am
nominated by his party. 1 have a
higher claim to your suffrages than
party ties can give mc. 1 appeal to
you as the only candidate for the
presidency who believes thai the
American people can have a
financial policy of their own. If
there ifi a man who respects party
regularity, he cannot complain of the
manner of my nomination. The Dem-
ocratic convention which met at ( hi-
cago represented the voters of the
Democratic party more truly, more
completely than any convention which
has IM*en held iu recent years. Hut
with all this claim to regularity, I do
not ask a single Deino rat to vote for
my election, if iu his heart he believes
that my election would injure his
country. To me a party is but a
means tu an end. Ilut I shall not feei
kindly to any Democrat who honestly
and couscieutiously nuts his country
above his party and \ otes against me,
if he believes the policy for which 1
stand would bring injury to our com-
mon country. Hut. my friend, 1
want the man who leaves the Demo-
cratic party to tind hi> reason in his
head or in his heart, and not in his
jKX'ketbook.
• Mow can you tc I whether a man
in honest when lie tells you the elec-
tkm of iIm ibkNHro tiokel wo«M In*
jute hi- 'oillitry ' I wi'i give yon a
way tu tell. Any man who thinks my
election wouhl injure thiscountry can
nrovc it in just one w ay aud that s by
voimg fur the Kepuhlicau candidate to
make Mire of my defeat Don't tell us
your const ience would ti t permit you
t> vote the Democratic tit*wet tud then
VO !>r a boltlllf liolltt. I hi Uihle
• ells us uf the man who hid his talent
in t ti«* earth and who was romicmued
Iu cause he neglected to improve his
opportunity I want tu s.iy to von
t at the ba:lot la flvtv to Ihi ellis u
as a sacred trust to b • used according
to his judgment an I hi* con* i« n e
andihai no ui in hi the hour of peril
ha % a moral right to throw away his
Vote.
Why is it that some Demo-'rata or
SOiii * People who used to lie Demo-
crat* spend the day in telling bow
the election . f the Chicago ticket
would ruin this country and then re-
fuse to cant their votes for the only
man it ho cau defeat the Oiicauo nom-
inee 1 I will tell you why. It IS |>«
cause the\ have not the .'ourapc to
tn ai the odium of being Kopublicativ
Wv are engaged iu a irre.t struggle
one of the greatest struggle* in which
the |n«..pie of this countrv were e\er
en raifed iu the time of fieaee It U a
struggle between Democracy on the
one side and plutocracy on the other,
and there is nn u.'ddle ground for any
mautostaiid upon. They who are
not for us are against us We w tild
have more respect for them if they
were holiest enough tu go where thrp
belong
*'N« w, as I have sit id, we appeal to
no man to set contrary io his judg-
ment Ilut I want to warn you who
are < oiiempi itiiiif de • rt-on from the
Democratic Pattv that the man who,
in the face of such an ei "nv, either
go« s to ihe rear or in fonno n secret
eonferen «• with the enem,' is a traitor
upon whom the brand halt be plac««d
and he shall not come buck again
These B*ostBlit Uepubllean a whose
hearts are willing, but whose
fteah wi".iU mi \ a* o eli
understand now that the contest in
which we ar engaged Is hot a con*
test for tht* year alone I believe we
ahall win now Ilut whether we win
•tow or not we have begun a warfare
against the gold standaid whleh shall
eontinue until the gold standard Is
flrleeu from our *horea back to l-.ng*
land We have been opposed to f he
importation of criminals and paupers
from abroad and we ahr I oppose the
tni|M rtaMon of a llnettc>el svsteut
whleh Is erlniinal an I which make*
pauimo* wherever It *•*>«
"I her tell ns that the election of
the t hleago tb>et will dri« e geld
ma UHa mmiiij i wkm jhm t" i•
member that the meie n • nation nt
a candidate for I'reai lent on a free
silver platform ha* be.u imaging
tfoid to thiseoun'ry for I'm nasi fei#
weeks Mv friends, If a tenhttiat ma
will start «aeh a ft- w or (mm,| to the
I Kited * n ea. what will he the emo
mows How wlieo He *«neatly have a
President who |« for free filter
Mr frlen«ts. out t otnt** fe*l ns
thtt i' we have the fee* .,f
silver that '• -e«gn nations ti if **i
i*nr tfom. 1 vafettw ear' to foe that
the moment tin.- nanos opens its
mints to the tree coinage of silver the
creditor nations of Eurone will have
to join us in the maintenance of the
value of silver at a parity with gold
ins'ead of conspiring to force down
that silver as they do now. You tell
ino that we must have, a gold stand-
ard because England has. I reply to
you that we will have bimetallism
and then iet England have bimetal-
lism because we have bimetallism.
You say that it is American to brag
about what we car. do. I reply that
it is English, you know, to doubt that
pc cau do anything
"But we arc uu?,f;< t that wc .auuvft
maintain the parity because Mexico
cannot. Every man who thinks that
this nation is no greater than Mexico
ought to vote the Republican ticket.
Jt is the only placo he will feel at
home. This nation can dj what Mex-
ico cannot do. This nation can create
a demand for silver ten times as great
as any demand that can be created l.y
Mexico, and if there is a Republican
who still doubts that this uatiou is
greater than Mexico, let him remem-
ber that the United States and Mexico
together may be able to do what Mex-
ico cannot do alone.
"I want you to take this question
and do what you think is best and
whatever is tne result 1 shall be will-
ing to abide by it, whether it be to
elect or to defeat, conscious that vic-
tory must at last come to all those
who light for the cause of truth.'
MOKE ai'KECUKS IN VIRGINIA.
In an ordinary day coach of the i
Richmond, Fredericksburg &. Poto- !
mac railway, William .Jennings Hryan
continued his trip through Virginia
this morning, leaving Richmond at 7
o'clock. At Ashland, where the train
stopped two minutes, he said: "I be-
lieve this country claims the honor of
being the birthp ace of two of Amer-
ica's greatest men. Henry Clay, the
mill boy of the slashes, was born in
this county, as was also Patrick
Henry. I believe the policy for which
I stand iu this campaign in some re-
spects reviews the memories of bo h
men. Henry Clay iu 184•"> described
the effect o contracting the currency
and Patrick Henry was in favor of uii
American policy."
At Milford Mr Hryan attempted to
make a short address, hut the train
pulled out before he could get the
crowd quieted.
Fredericksburg, the home of the
mother of W ashington, sent a recep-
tion committee of nine to escort the
candidate to their city. There he was
driven to the Exchange hotel, where
he tried to rest, but in •ealitv heid an
informal reception till II o'clock.
Then he was taken to the Washington
monument, where he made an ad-
dress to a large crowd, lie was then
driven to the residence of Mayor W.
8 White, where he dined. At l:uO
o'clock he took the train for Washing-
ton.
A TKIIIt TE TO MOTHERHOOD.
Mr. Hryan spoke as follows at the
Mary Washington monument:
"La«lies and Gentlemen: Fredericks-
burg is n^t a large city, and yet is
rich iu in ddenta of great historic
value, lie e the women of America
have rcare 1 a monument to Marv, the
mother of Washington. I aiu glad to
stand on this snot 1 am glad to feci
the inllucncc which surrounds her
grave In a campaign, especially a
campaign like this, there is bitterness
and sometimes abuse leveled against
the candidate for public office, but,
my friends, the mot tier is the candi-
date for the affections of all mankind,
against whom no true man can utter a
word of abuse And there is one name,
'mother, which never is found upon
the tongue of the slanderer. In her
presence all criticism is silent. The
painter has with his brush transferred
the landscape to the canvas* so that
you cau almost believe that the trees
and the grasses are real, rather than
imitations. The painter has even
transferred to canvass ttie face of the
iiia<deu until ita beauty and purity
| almost speak forth, but there is one
i picture which no painter ever has
I been able faithfully to portray, and
tnat is the picture of a mother hold-
ing in her urn's her babe. Within the
shadow of this monument reared to
her who, iu love and loyalty, repre-
sents the lilo-her of each one of us, I
Im w in humble reverence to mother*
hood.
•'I am told in this coiintiy were
fought more hattlcn than in an v coun-
try of like ai/e kit the World and that
upon the earth within the limits of
thla count? there fell more dead and
wounded I* mi ever felt on aaiuiilar
snare In all the history oi the world,
lie re opposing lines were drawn up
face l* fur**; li r . ii|>| minir .Mil C.
iiirl iiml «l*r,.<l id i'ui'Ii ntlitr mid t lien
Miiiirli t Id titU«* c i> li nUt"!**' live..
Ill I K A*l> I.IHV IN HANMllNV.
"Hill nil Ihnw .('.ti*, !mv,< |(ii ,mi
«*v i,ti<I tli ,c « li-i in.) In il(.iidlv nr-
r v hum iihhM km.I C'lminlnkrli' kli.r.
fll.liil. Here lit. |>l(iuirli liar. tin.
Iwii inml. <iul of lit* twerri and
«|H. r. lime Hern t'nnv.rlcil lntn prun
Inir lt""k. nml |wnpli< Icii-ii war no 1
tii'Tr llrr. III. li.liil, on fiber M,<
Mlir.ll up the ftnirfflntf rem Willi iidtm
thitl lhrlll.il the hMrli nf men.
Tlie.e ImmU nre now i<nmpiin.ut purta
of uM. trul linnil nml •• th. Imml In
III. I.kiI pint* 'Vnnl(.. IKhnII. ntui
•IH*li*' I't'MinI II (iillnw. II,* wnr
e«rrr.| v.l.ritn, whit wur. III. Iilii.
«n<l III' wnr m'ii-n t.lemnt wlm
win. Ih. iff.*, mill tiding M lilt I li.
ulli.r In lit. .Itiirl in iiuliv lliln th.
■friinil.M «ml Kt.nl.«i ,tf nil (h. im
I inf. i in Unit « I.hiI.IimiI,
•MMIM. kHDMIIw Mrird.d
,l h.t< fitv, N. .1. o.pi ■>! „ \t ,
iti.rllHf nf III. I^iiim'inlii' Ni.i, ,.,m.
,it'll., in ihi« uii*• in ilny th* e nimii<
I** t-ftl..ll In K.TepI III* f..|(,,,H,,a
nl IU ehulrmnh I nil.,I Him.t „,|„f
<>•«*, ^Milh. j*.
IKE TRADE SITUATION.
STILL NO DISTINCT IMPROVEMENT
CONFIDENCE VERY SLOW
Ilut an Ea< rinoa« Hunine** !■ Ilctd Hark
I'nIII llie Future |« More Clear—Cot*
ton, |||<le«, Wool ami rig Iron
l^ulle Arlive— Inrreaiie In
the NiiiiiImt of fruilure*
—Trade Noi«>«.
New York, Sept. 21.—K. G. Duu &
C'o.'s Weekly Review of Trade says:
There is still no distinct improvement
in business, although conditions favor
it. Confidence slowly rises, specula-
tive buying- materials for future
use continues, imports of gold do not
cease and the ItanU of Kngdand has
not tried to check them by further ad-
vances in rates as the weight of the
demand now falls upon France. Hut
an enormous business is held back
until the future is more clear. Maine's
great majority had no such influence,
as was anticipated from a verdict less
emphatic.
To many minds nothing an Eastern
State can do iu a contest represented
as sectional gives sufficient assurance
how the Western and Southern states
may decide.
In cotton, hides, wool and pig iron,
buying, opening speculative in char-
acter, marks the current business.
Resumption of work by a good part
of the Fall River cotton mills and ad-
vances in some kind-, of cotton goods
helped to raise the prices of middling
uplands to 8%c again, though realiz-
ing sent it down to 7!^c
Failures for the past week have
been .'I 7 in the Uni ed States against
•,'13 last year and 32 iu Cauada against
33 last year.
MISSOURI GOLDITES
They Will Tut 1'p I onicre««ional id
C utility Tlrketn
St. Louis, Mo., Sept. 21. —The State
committee of the sound money demo-
crats held a meeting here yesterday,
j The committee chosen to select a name
| for the State ticket which could be
! used without any legal objection sug-
J gestcd that the ticket be headed the
j ''1'almer and liuckuer democratic
I Ticket " This was approved. Candi-
date Trimble will open the guber-
natorial campaign at Mexico Septem-
I qer •, ♦' , and liourke Cock ran will speak
! here on October The committee
| decided to make nominations in all
: congressional districts and also place
in nomination a county ticaet in all
count<es
Iroopt .trier |ti«ii<llt«.
Sii.vkh Citv, N. M., Se t -Can-
tain Pitcher, with Troop I of the First
I nited States cavalry, left here for
Deming to-day to assist the marshal's
posse iu another attempt to capture
the gang of border bandit* which re-
cently attacked the Mexican custom
house at Las I'olotnas. The gang
numbers twentv.four men and is re-
ported encamped in the Florida moun-
tains. south of Deming, in New Mex-
ico. Mexican troops ure also in
pursuit
I orhett ami lltxaliiiiiiotia Indirteil.
New Yokk, Sept. .'I —The World
savp t orlwtt and Fit/.simmou* were
indicted by grand jury yesterday an l
warrants were issued the indict-
ments are only for u in i ad e men nor the
pugilists will not be arrested until
they arrive in this state In the in-
dictments Corbett aud Fitasiinuious
are accused of having violated the
laws so far as it relates to the further-
ance of a prize tight,
Mr. Ilryan Will Aerepl.
ItiruuoMp, Ya , Nept. 'Jl,-—Mr llryan,
wheu asked as to wnether he had re-
ceived < hair mail Allen'a letter liolfy.
ing him of hia nomination by the
People's nartv, said he had read the
letter aa published, hut ha I not re-
ceived the formal one written by
Senator Mien Mr Itrvan s i| ),,
probably would aend his acceptance
early next week.
Uraeral Horace t*orler Neslans.
Nkw Yoiih, Sept 91.—li la officially
atated tint tleneral Horace Porter
haa resigned the vice presidency of
the Pullman Palaee Car tom pan,?.
Thla a'ep hail been exfieeted for ouie
time |iaat ow ing to Oeneral Porter'a
ieeeptaiiee of the chairmanship of the
INN of dneetom of t ne St. l.uula
And Nan Franeiaeo railroad
W«*« an alMH He a •twarder
Uf. l#otia, Mo,, Sept. ?I.-Mrs /.ore
Urnwe, a wt « w, was ahnt and almost
instantly hilled In one nf the moms
of her own hotfte, hv Charlee Welsler,
a young man who haa tteen boar.iing
with her. tVelater la now tinder ar
real at the Pour Court* lie declares
that the shooting waa entirety aeei«
dental
Vwtim, li., sept 11.-The tianuinn
hou«e of n N. WitNl A %ma, eatah-
Itailed forty veer* ago, made a general
assignment veaterday aftf-rnoon to
Matt ( a*s«-h fot the i*euvft' of all
creditors, the liabilities are rail'
mated at livi.mai and es**u nt ei*,«i.-
•*mi Ml depositor* and i ther rted-
itore will he pntd in full.
GRACEFUL AS A BIRD
.%|l itr.M« FlyiiiT Slarlilne tkwr< Easily
and l« (Julie Safe
Chicago, Sept 21.—The first free
teat of Octave Chanute's Albatross
soaring machine, invented and con
structcd by William Paul, was made
at Millers, Ind., last evening, under
unfavorable conditions.
While the machine was heavily
loaded with ballast so as to prevent
it from Hying any great distance, and
was anchored by four ropes, each 200
feet iong. the three points which the
trial was to decide — first, as to
whether it would leave the chute
evenly: second, whether it would right
itself iu the air, and third, whether,
when it coinmenccd to dosccnd. it
would move downward slowly and
alight evenly, were all determined in
a manner gratifying both to its iu-
veutor aud owner.
The flight was less than lOo feet
but the descent and final alighting on
the sand were as graceful aud even as
of the bird from which the machine
was patterned. The trial proved that
the machine is perfectly safe, a
proof which was the more acceptable
inasmuch as it had been asserted that
the machine was dangerousand an at-
tempt to fly it would be sure to result
In the death of the operator. An-
other test will be made to-day if the
wind is favorable.
A PHENOMENAL PACER
atar Pointer Went the Three Fastest
Heat.* Ever Mn«le In Competition.
Mfdfohu, Mass., Sept. 2!.—Star
Pointer at Mystic park yesterday af-
ternoon not only beat two accredited
faster horses. Robert J., 2:011 , and
Frank Agan, 2:03but paced the
three fastest heats ever made in com-
petition. the times being 02*., 2:0*^
and J:03 4, an average of 2:0.3K,. ||e
also lowered the record for the fastest
heat ever paced. i:02' ., as well as the
records for tlie fastest quarter and
half, :S9;14 and :5l*% respectively.
BIG CROWDS 11 CINTil
Ended by a llrenchliiK Kain.
Akkansas City, Kau., Sept. 21.—
Kiglit thousand people attended the
last day of the Southwestern soldiers'
reunion here. In the forenoon Col.
D. S. Elliott of Coft'eyville, Kan.,
junior vice cominandei of the depart-
ment of Kansas C . A. R , addressed
the veterans. Judge H. (i. Yander-
voort of Nebraska, also made an ad-
drnac Hon. Sydney Cook of Okla-
homa City. O. T., and Judge J. V.
Beekman of this city were the orators.
A drenching rain commenced falling
at 4 o'clock, terminating the reunion,
the grand camptire meetiug being
abandoned.
AHmiiee (train Kate*.
Cum auo, tept. jjl.—The Western
roads have agreed to an advance in
rates on cars from trans-Missouri ter-
ritory to the Mississippi river and
Chicago, and also to New Orleans and
(•alveaton. The advance from Wich-
ita and Southern Kansas points to the
Mississippi river and to the gulf ports
will be 7 cents per 100 pounds, but
from other points, where the reduc-
tion has not been so great, the ad-
vance will varv at from :! to " cents
per !uO pounds.
Killed IIU llhoreed Wife.
Roth ron p. III., Sept. 21.—Kdw.ard
Shimon, an old resident of Helvidcre,
shot his wife in a car as she was
about to leave for Chicago to live with
her children. she had just secured a
divorce, after a bitter fight. Talk of
lynchiug is strong.
Two ll.ingrd for Munler
Tain K<jraii, Ind. Ter.. Sept. .1.—
James Swimmer, a full blood Chero-
kee Indian, and llcnrv Williams, a
colored youth of l«, were hanged iu
the rational jail yard yesterday after-
niHin for murder.
THE MARKETS.
ClTT, Mo., h.,.i SI. a fnw esrly
Ml"- uf \\ i tlt W"r IIWllli* loxiav Nt ,I)T
an I thi-n hm r-, >|iilt. elHiininn tlist ih v
rnll'd • ti tfi'l .• r« lo Imnl VI'llll f.'l Si| I lit*rII
l « tl- Iroin aliirh Ih 1 In- I h|<|« rani Moni«
S • li.iril «o d at Sf, i'hiratfo. hut not mnr*li
1 ■ ■ 1 imali a ■
Mo • i eni««r« rarrlad their aaplm lor Hon*
dn v « innrliel
ItardWInst Nu . T7(.; \
I . r«-Ji«ei n| ll*i |7rt, tut frsd *. •• aJ&e
Whenl No :. *V •: No. *, Mo I.
rajeet «l i;p11 . no vrn i • i • m h|iritif
Wheal- No, i, f, ej N„ ^ %\ rfaarled,
4 #|«e
Com No j. :*c. No. :ui in No. «, i*',«{
imtfMde.l e; whitncora Sit £, .In o i, , i
No I. |He
Out- No. I, iv Nu. :i ItH'ltei No 4,
'•'t:. Iio atad". nolle No I whlh-. i U<|
No. a will a, II live No f I:ir>.
than l t ai in I Kklli *a • k* Iatlb. He |ea«.
Hi' No. I. ne-j No Nu I,
IN i le.
Hiit Clndae tinioihr, flu imi So i, em*
I • . No J, iu j No i llu ill elnuea
prairie, Hienli No. i, M*V4 ft i No I lit all;
No \ M 111 ___
t'hleavo Hoard of Traile
I an wi, -t. The foliowi t# IiiIm raafi
nf| riees"f lh-« #-d i aa I |.roti«inn mnrli ♦ oa
Ihe |l. ard of Tfadei
I.Mtt Clov* I line
w,w pi m
WWMt
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S idnrah f
adi t
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is. - «ua>r
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Hal t oeho
I S-'nll .r
l *>•«
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aer aT Ma«
a >t irt ehi t
neV.tHa.
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I" I ! U'l • IU
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THOUSANDS FROM VAOSPXTS
CALL ON MR, M'DLEY.
THEY COME IN SECTIONS
Kleven Spselal Trains of Uallroad SI en
From Chicago the Feature of the
Dnjr—Msnjr More IVnni.vlvanla
Visitors — McKlnley l.aods
Protect Ion and the ||e-
IMlhllran Money I'ollcv.
Canton, Ohio, Sept. 'Jl. — lu spite of
rain and bad weather, with the single
exception of yesterday, wheu about
10,000 people were here, the largest
gathering of the campaign was that
of to-day. The first arrivals were
men from the various railroads enter-
ing Chicago. They came iu sections,
each of the roads having a train or
more, as was necessary. In al' there
were eleven trains. The first one ar-
rived at U:l5 o'clock, and at intervals
of fifteen minutesothers came,it being
noon when the last train arrived. In
the meantime trains from other di-
rections came in, with crowds to be
provided with shelter. They were sent
to the various halls about the city.
Aside from the railroad men, the
delegations scheduled for the day
were: Republicans of Iluiton, i'a.;
two train loads from the Carnegie
Steel Works at Homestead; people
from stations between Jamestown,
N. Y., and Newcastle, Pa., and from
points on the Western New York and
l'ennsylvpnia railroad, all arriving
shortly after noon. In the afternoon
commercial travelers from Cincinnati,
commercial travelers from Pittsburg
and a numbe** of trains from Northern
Ohio are scheduled.
At li o'clock the first of the Penn-
sylvania delegations arrived. It had
been organized at Iluiton and brought
1,000 citizens of that locality ami two
bands. Kain was pouring down when
they arrived and the party was taken
totheCirand Opera house, instead of
to the McKinlev lawn, as usual. The
good wishes of the visitors were ex-
tended by (ieneral A. C. Litchfield and
Dr. C. M. C. Cam obeli. bo„!i of Oak*
mont. Major McKinley responded.
In his speech Mr. McKinley lauded
the protective tariff system and de-
clared his belief that American work-
shops and workingmen should be de-
fended by a tariff system against
foreign competition. Then he con-
tinued: "The first thing we want in
thiscountry is plenty to do and when
we hare that, then we want to be
paid in good money for what we do.
We neither want short work nor short
dollars in the United States. Wo
neither want free trade nor free sil er
in the I*nited States. We w .nt
an opportunity to work and we
want when we have improved
that opportunity to be paid in
dollars that are worth as much the
week after they are received ih on the
day of their receipt Free trade L is
cheated you iu your wr •• ;, and we
do not propose to permit Iro j mi v >r to
cheat us in our pay. I am glad to
meet my comrades of the war whose
cause has been so eloquent ly oresented
here this inornintr We tight our bat-
tles now with the ballot. The only
foree needed in this country now is
that of reason aud intelligence and
patriotism. And with this we are
bound to achieve a victory next No*
vein her.
Wheu Major McKinley finished his
addreta he introduced Senator Culloni,
who spoke briefly in favor of protec-
tion.
During this meeting the delegates
from the Carnegie City mills, l.'JX)
aires ft an.l several bndl MM in
and their reception was also held in
the opera house, I. T. lirown, super-
intendent of the mills. Introducing
th# party.
KILLED FOR HER MONEY
Ktldrur* thai Madill Mrllir.l of U .
renre *11 Kllltil ami Hiihli.il
I.awbkxcr, Kan..s«|)t. .i. —Thecor*
nntr'tjurjr Impauttad to I ivc.tl|r*iv
! tli* dcntli of Mai-ili* Mcl nr.l, i lie
(IrrxmnUcr. who Wt.found ilea.I nltli
three hutchd wound. In the mile uf
h«r head, found thtt t povkctbook
which hc wt teen to take from under
h*r pillow \va, miMiiiu and that th*
, ImiIIoui had Iwen cut ult of nn« oj the
! poekeU of t aklrt .lie Mure, aa thoiitfli
j il had li en rifled In thai way. Hli >d
ataln. «ere found on the lieil elotlilnir
whleh appenred to hare lie*u tna le hv
aoHMone wiping hi. handa on tliem.
I Alwill DM of the w.uuan a money i.
I nnaeciHinted for, tad It la generally
lielleved tnat «he aa murdered f.i'r
her money.
VIST UNDER b \N
MlMaia.l imd IIibwhi. Wilt ti,hi the
aenainf MM If.
Kt. I.ooa, Mit., fepl. 31 —The *t*M
eommlttee of the fold alandarri liew
nentie (tarty held • Ion* pneaie eon
ferem e yetlerdav. I,.|t eial ho.tllity
w a etpreaaeu to He«ttor Vtat, and II
wt. decided lo iaaitrfiirale an a,life
etmpaltfn ttfalnat leriaiatt.e candi-
date* fatorthle to him in eierv dl*.
trlel uf the aiate lour of tne co*.
streKlontl distflcla i.e> fully r*.
ported upon, and thei* ita* a feeim<
Dial It many of the letfi«lai|te ilia-
irld. ftepubllran etndidatea ahoulil
ti* Ittdxi *ed.
(A REMARKABLE CASE.
I ILL SINCE GIRLHOOD, NOW A
PICTURE OF HEALTH.
From the Star, Valparaiso. Ind.
The attention of the Star having
been called to a«*v *ral caa^s <>( radical
cures effected by l>r. Williams Pink
Pllle for Pale People, It was determin-
ed to InvestlKate some « f the nu re no-
table of these cases, with a view to
dlssemlnatitiK exact information on ths
•ubject and benefiting others who were
suffering. Prominent among those
who had experienced benefits from
the use of this remedy was mentioned
Mrs. Mary Noren. wife nf John Noren,
a prosperous farmer, living northeast
of Valparaiso, Ind , and to her a re-
porter was accordingly dispatched.
Mrs. Noren was found busily en-
gaged In household duties, but she
found tlm* to detail her experience,
and was willing and even anxious that
ths benefits she had felt should be
told for the benefit of those who had
Buffered as she did.
"I had been HI since girlhood with a
complication of complaints." said Mrs.
Noren. "never so much as to b«- con-
fined long In bed. but I suffered In-
tense misery. My chief trouble waa
with my stomach. I felt a constant
gnawing pain that was at times al-
most distracting, and which hnd been
diagnosed by different physicians as
dyspepsia and sympathetic derange-
ment dependent on the condition f tha
generative organs. T had pains in the
back, sometimes so great as to make
me unable to work, ami frequent bil-
ious attacks. I also suffered greatly
from constipation, from which I never
could find permanent relief. Then
these symptoms were aggravated by
rheumatic pains between the shoulder
blades, which were most excruciating
In damp or cold weather. After my
marriage about five years ago, and
when my baby was born the trouble
seemed to Increase, and T was fre-
quently so sick that I could n"t do my
household work. I tried different phy-
sicians and used numerous remedies
but all in vain, until one day last fall
I happened to read "f I>r. Wllllama*
Pink Pills for Pale People. My hus-
band got three boxes from Mr. C. P.
Hushton. the druggist, and ! b.'gan to
use them. From the Urst I > 'i.an to
feel relief, and ■ .e the three b« *ea
were gone 1 was nearly well. Th-*
constipation was cured and the other
troubles were so much relieved that I
felt better than I had felt for years.
As I continued in the use of the pills
I grew better and strong, my appetite
was more natural, and my flesh in-
creased. until I am in the condition
you see me now."
Dr. Williams" Pink Pills contain, in
A condensed form, all the element®
necessary to give new life and rich-
ness to the blood and restore shattered
nerves. Pink Pills are sold by all deal-
ers, or will be sent postpaid on receipt
ef price. R< cents a box. or six boxes for
$2.60 'they are never sold In bulk or by
tha 1 >0). by addressing Dr. Williams'
Medicine Company, Schenectady. N. Y.
The cost of living is two or thru
times as great in Samoa a* in the I ni*
ted States.
The king of Pa home , and other
African inonarchs estimate their own
dignity by the number of skulls of ! «••
headed slaves they are able to show
about their houses.
Trolley cars are now runiiin<r in tlio
I streets of Cairo. Kgypt.
The official directory of the < atholie
church In the Tinted stale* plates th*
number of « atholicsin the country at
V,410.7!Hl.
An average of 'o.o
ed without addrcs<si-
et ters n re pout*
l ai .j a ml every
The out look is never sm good a« tha
n plonk.
Keligion is like tlie niu
not use it we v\ ill lose it
do
No girl over *ix*een Oiould siv that
she is "impulsive Impulsiveness i*
I no excuse for an old woman making a
' goose of herse If, A t eli i it son I i li ihe.
Kverx elmivli lm an •angel' tho
aauie as evct \ thcatin.il company
No \tommr 'un i Miawfil "ii her
huslilind a* s|ie * miles on h* r lover.
If yuii have an\ ir ml who regarda
you as no ideal, don t ask a favor of
him.
The children always Iiml the *| *ei«
men apples that n man puis swap I#
aave.
The present London bridge cost IU,*
sou, onn
(ilnagim s mulctu nod railway Is
running
Water has ls en Known to sustain
life for VI .1st «
History ami a wnimm have the *ame
i habit of re|M>atiii|f
Lot' of ja otde u In* < tartcd to H«hlntf
on Ntiidav went t i he I t«si
The ►Mrs! oftense irt i
hut It* repetition u a •
A etrta«*nr ta-i* u
artieil tn an unvit • ai
mislabel
A man I «|i
nof ta« its on
| linn 111 II
tie frtntt ^
a*talb •'
fe'ltha
' for Mf; an
it*
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Perry & Welch. Perry Enterprise-Times. (Perry, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 119, Ed. 1 Monday, September 21, 1896, newspaper, September 21, 1896; Perry, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc111862/m1/1/: accessed April 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.