Perry Enterprise-Times. (Perry, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 24, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 13, 1896 Page: 4 of 8
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Perry Enterprise-Times.
PKRBY & WELCH. Proprietor..
PEftltY, ; OKLAHOMA
V i±±
♦
FEBRUARY—1896.
J Sun. Mon. !Tu8. Wed.
■i
+ 16
3 41 5
JO 11 12
17 13 19
123 24 25 26
Frl.
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14 15 T
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21 22 t
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THE WORLD AT LARGE.
Summary of tho Daily Nowa.
\V ASIII.\(,TON NOTES.
Tmc president on the 7th signed the j
bill prohibiting prize fighting in the |
territories and District of Columbia.
Tiie treasury officials on the 7th
completed the computation of bids of-
fered for the new bond issue, from
which it appears that the amount of j
bids above that of J. I'. Morgan and his
associates (£110.0877) was 8<><<,7S8,0fl0, ;
and that the amount which will be
awarded to the indicate therefore will
be $33,211,350, or approximately one;- j
third of the whole issue. The number j
of successful bidders was 731.
Tiik resolution on the belligerency
of the Cuban Insurgents of tho United
States senate committee on foreign re-
lations has created a great sensation
in Spain, all tho newspapers taking
great offense at it. The Ileraldo ad-
vises the Spanish government to send
f The clearing house returns for th%
| week ended February S for the follow-
I ing oities were: New York, 8330,362.2 98;
; Chicacro, 984.345,451; J3t Louis, &3.303,-
'<00; Kansas City. 80,604.765; SL Joseph,
31,262,600; Topeka, $453,445; Wichita,
£383,679; Omaha, 84,417,4^4.
j Tub right of the women of Ohio to
vote for members of school boards was
! sustained by a close decision of the su-
preme court at Columbus on the 7th.
! Alf unknown man was decapitated
by the wheels of a Hannibal & SL
Joseph train on the river bridge at
Quiocy, 111., on the 7th. So far identi-
titration has been impossible on account
of the fact that the head fell into the
Mississippi.
I Stanhope RorsTEH. who shot and
killed Hanker McFarland for betray*
ing his daughter,was acquitted of mur-
I der after a week's trial at Boone, Ia.
The jury was only out five minutes.
When the verdict was announced men
and women rose to their feet and
cheered, hats were thrown in the air
■ind handkerchiefs waved in every
tiand.
William H. E.volisii died at Indian-
apolis, Ind., from inflammatory rheu-
matism, superinduced by an attack of
the grip. He ran for vice president on
the democratic ticket with Winfield L.
Hancock at the head in 1HS0.
The British steamer Laurestina,
which sailed from Baltimore, Md., for
Ireland about two months ago, has
been officially posted at Lloyd's as
missing and all on board, 20 to 25 men,
were believed to have been drowned.
Gen. John Gibbon, the famous Indian
fighter, died at Baltimore, Md., re-
cently, of pneumonia, pged 08.
Joe Mekhifield, aged 12. shot his
brother, aged seven, with a Winchester
rifle at Hedrick, la., on the 7th, ami
then blew the top of his head off. The
father had left the boys together in
the house and they quarreled. When
neighbors came in the two boys lay
dead on the floor.
Recently* the women of Black .lack,
Tex., called on two men there who sold
whisky and malt tonic and asked them
to quit the business, and on their refu-
sal a large body of women gathered
an ironclad squadron to Cuba.
Tin. National Fanners' Allinnco an<l nl the Haptlst church and from there
Industrial union, which has beeu in wall{ed into "'e houses where tho
session at Washington adjourned on
the 0th. The "sub-treasury plan," to
which the alliance has been committed
for a number of years, and the demand
for an increase of the circulating me-
dium of 350 por capita were eliminated
from the platform.
The work of opening" the bids for tho
government bonds be^an at tho United
States treasury department on the 5th.
There was an immense string of bid-
ders, great and small, and the loan
was subscribed for-many times over. It
was reported that no bids below 111
would be accepted.
A collision occurre 1 between tw ■>
freight trains on tin Wal ash railr-a !
near E1 wardsville, III The fireman!
was killed and the engineer injured.
The engines of both trains were de-
molished and the cars piled as high a->
the telegraph poles.
'I he steamer Lamington was driven
ashore near New York on the 0th an i
14 men were in peril onboard. Th<j
life savers made many attempts to
reach the men with a line and ha 1
failed. The men were too exhausted
to catch the lines. The life savers ha I
given up all hopes of saving them, as
the vessel was loins' pounded badly by
the waves and threatened to go to
pieces
The Pocahontas dam at Morristown,
N. J., broke on ths 0th. Twenty-five
people were reported missing and may
have perished. The break was fol-
lowed by a great flood. Men, women
and children were in the windows of
houses, completely surrounded by rush-
ing waters. Boats were procured and
brought many to places of safety. The
current was so swift that it was impos-
sible to reach the more distant houses
until tho occupants had been swept
away.
The barn and stables of Henry B.
(Jaither, near V'idalia, La., were struck
by lightning and 20 head of horses and
mules were burned, besides much feed.
The local option bill was defeated in
the lower house of the Ohio legisla-
ture at Columbus and thesenate passed
a bill to increase the liquor tax to 3">o0.
Six workmen lost their lives and
nine others were barely rescued from
the icy water of tho Pequeboc river,
near Bristol, Conn., on the Oth. They
were pulling an old bridge down when
it suddenly collapsed and they wero
precipitated into the river and the
broken tnassof timbers fell upon them.
A fihe started in a lumber yard at
Boundbrook, near Plain field, N. J.
early on the morning of the 7th and
the place was thought to be doomed.
The inhabitants had the choice of
either burning, swimming or drown-
ing, as the dam at the place had broken
and many houses were swept away
and the water was waist deep. Owing
to no direct communication with tho
place the news was somewhat meager.
A committee of prominent residents
of Chicago has issued a call to all parts
of the country for expressions of opin-
ion on Washington's birthday on the
proposition to establish a permanent
board of arbitration for the settlement
INVENTOR EDISON.
Makos
Startling' Discoveries in
Photography.
NOT QUITE READY FOR THE BRAIN
Light Which Doiv* Not Lighten wn t Shi
trench l'lutc for Vulritiiiz«<t < uoiii
• hour-fvzperliueutu ( onilrtueil
—From Other J'otnts.
Lewelling, N. J . 1
atories of Thomas A.
besiegred during the
people who are anxi
progress the great
made in the use of <
phc
9—The labor-
son have been
few days by
to know what
^rimenter has
ok-:'
tuv'
on to
it Mr. Edison
the human
It
CONGRESS.
The Week'* I'roreertlngi Given In Con-
rfen«e«l Form.
The senate wus not in session on the 3d —
In the house the senate fre«?-coinuKe4uiistltute
, was referred to the ways and meuna commit-
tee. The army appropriation bill was re-
ported. The president transmitted tho cor-
respondence In regard to the Italian lynching
t-> the house and this about wound up the work
of the sitting for the day
When the senate met on the <th the tariff
bill was reported from the finance committee,
with a free silver substitute. Chairman Mor-
rill made the report, stating that a free silver
amendment had taken the place of the origi-
: nal bill and adding, amid laughter, the closing
J phrase of official procedure of Massachusetts,
"and may God save the commonwealth." Mr.
Quay made two attempts to have the bill re-
; committed, but it went over under objections.
The substitute agreed to by the tlnaace com-
mittee Is in the exact words of the silver sub-
stitute for the house bond bill already passed
the senate. Among the bills favorably re-
ported , was that granting a pension of
>-0u a month to the willow of the lato
I By Halves.—"I always moot trouble
half way," said tho mau "who had paid huif
of his promissory nolo and arranged for an
extension of the other half.—Detroit Free
Press.
"Ix Italy," he was telling her, "they make
flour out of chentnuts.'* "Do they?" she
answered, swoetly; "what a bonanza you
would bo to them.'—Detroit Free Press.
tor ha
in rea
dently -xpeets :■
made by M nda
Mr. Edison sa
• a number of nev
its were on hand
to have some ne
or the work of ti
:h standing the fa.
Mr. El,
ve all pre
lien. Wa
to the Wi-
lli
Q. Gresham. and ?I00 a montl
of the late Gen Thomas Ewina
eported back the pension appro
I In the house Mr. Dlngley
the ways und means commltt ■
iou.m- bond bill, with tho recom
Mr. Crisp, representing
nutlce that the minority
i concur. The District of ■
then debated until adio
but was
that he was
iotograph:nK
ting
a relatively
while hard
rilm
st fre
io a f
the different
i proves to be
bber permits the
□ f the light. Lead
deba
at
Iler, of
to ref
to th
some length
Colorado. tot k
cess of tho bo;
slon
the
whisky wo-a sold and began the work
of destruction with axes, hatchets and
hammers, totally destroying ull they
could lay their hands on.
Benjamin Ratcliff, the slayer of
the entire school board of Jefferson
ilintrict, Park county, Col., wo* hanjfeil of difficulties between this country and
ut thu penitentiary at Canon City on England. Or. William C. i;r:iy.
the night of tho 7th. 1 Dearborn street, Chicago, and William
RomiKita entered the house of Mr. E. Dodge, of 11 Cliff street, New York,
Casper Wagner, near Pittsburgh, Pa., will arrange them for transmission to
and bound him and then held lighted j the president of the United States and
Queen Victoria.
matches under tho bare feotof his wife
to compel one of them to tell the
whereabouts of their wealth. The
husband finally told them where
they could get it and the rob-
bers, after getting it, then tortured
Mr. Wagner to see if they could ex-
tort any mere. Mrs. Wagner was re-
ported dying from her injurios.
A shifting engine on tho Baltimore
& Ohio railway ran into an electric car
at Rankin's crossing, nino miles east of
Pittsburgh, Pa., on the 7th, killing tho
conductor and fatally Injuring the
motorrnan. All the passongers escaped
The secretary of the interior hns de-
cided upon May 1 next as the date of
the opening of the agricultural lands
of the Red Lake Indians in Minnesota,
which embrace about 800,000 acres and
will be sold at 81.25 per acre.
Tiik treasury department at Wash-
ington issued a statement of tho with-
drawals of gold from January 8 to
February 5, 1601 It appears tho total
amount withdrawn for export aggre-
gated 88,004,133; not for export, 87,340, •
545; total, 810,253,079. I serious injury. The accident was
The supreme council of tho National caused by slippery rails.
Farmer's Alliance, on tho 5th, at Wash- The Union Republican club of Wash-
ington, disposed of all the matters | Ington is arranging to have the 40th
coming before the annual meeting, anniversary of tho birth of the
Wann 1'age, of Virginia, was elected national republican party celebrated
president, and It. A. Southworth, of throughout tho country on the 22d in physician who had testified to the in- rif
Colorado, secretary and treosuror. J. fitting manner. sanity of a man who threw a stone it struct 'h
F. Willets, of Kansas, was put on the ! I*ike caused 150 tenants of the Bright- the king-
executive committee. ! on apartment building at Chicago to A London dispatch stated that the
Conguessman Ml I.LRU has prepared a mOTe *n ft great hurry on tho evening Scotch oil combine had been dissolved.
bill dividing tho state of Kansas into of th® 7th- Some had to be carried with heavy losses to its investors, and
two judicial districts, the dividing line I out« {or tho flames spread rapidly and
running east and west nearly through smoko filled the whole structure.
Loss, 8^5,(XXX
A well of fine petroleum was struck
25 miles west of Eufaula, I. T.
Gen. Wikhokin. the Russian chief of
police at Warsaw, Poland, was killed
by poison administered by nihilists,
lie had the reputation of being tho
most cruel henchman of the czar.
Neak South McAlester, 1. T., tho
southbound Missouri, Kansas Texas
mail train was wrecked, five coaches
and one sleeper being badly smashed.
W. Henry Grady, a wealthy planter,
was instantly killed and John Owsley
Evans fatally injured, near Versailles,
ky., on the. Oth, by a Louisville &
Southern train which struck a buggy
in which they were riding.
Sixty anarchUts have been arrested
at Lisbon, Portugal, as a result of the
xplosion of a bomb in the house of a
BDISON'S DIFFICULTY,
principal difficulty which the in-
ntered in his experiments
n -- fact that a sharp shadow of
aterial under test could not be
secured unless it was directly under
the tube. This indistinctness is due to
th-r- smallness of the tubrrs which have
been used in the experiments, and it is
this same trouble which has caused
th— delay in photographing; the human
brain and bones of the head. The
tubes which are n >w being: constructed
are much larger than those used here-
tofore and by the combined use -f .sev-
eral of these the inventor hopes to
make a satisfactory shadow of the
head, bones and the brain.
In answer to a question aa to the def-
inition • f the ; ew Mr K lin n paid
"The Roentgen ray is a wave in ether
More than this I cannot say at the pres-
ent time. I consider >t a very great
discovery and have confirmed all the
experiments of him who flr*t gave the
discovery to the world. These experi-
ments with the foulrescent light are
all very simple and beautiful and I
a.m only trying1 to increase the Dower
The senate
was reported from
mittee The house
prize tightintf mis
not less than five <
three o'clock debute
bond bill, and befoi
Armond (Mo ) introd
rec.-'snltion of the Cu
Tiie credentials of
Ohio, were presented in the si
•aator Tbur
agreed to dlrec
ithe
1 Issue,
ruban resolution
gn afTairs com-
a bill making
punishable with
priionment. At
ced on the silt er
rnment Mr Do
solution for the
el liferents.
jlect Foraker, of
;nate on the dth.
itoa CN'eb.) wiij
1
etary of state to si
to the senate copies of all laws, regulations
and decrees of Germany. France. Belgium an 1
Denmark which discriminate aaalnst the in-
troducti-n of American cattle. Mr. Turpie
then addressed the senate In favor of the elec-
tion of United States senators by popular vote.
Mr. Morgan i Ala.) offered an amendment to a
resolution of Mr. '^uay to recommit the tariff
cts the flnance committee
lucting ten percent, from
ids importol In vessels of
r of the country producing
provided that the couu-
i goods shall provide by
llion. the product of tho
shall be admitted to
silver bill. It in^tr
to add a provision d
custom duties on gc
the United States,
the imported artlcl
law that silver b
1 .nag
mine'
nl terir
old. The
.'atrn,
i th -
an J
'in
rd.'
was again must*.
the center of the state.
Edwin F. Uiil, assistant secretary of
state, has been tendered the post of
ambassador to Germany, to succeed
the lato Theodore Runyon.
The National Farmers' Alliance and
Industrial union met at Washington
on the 4th, nearly every state being
represented. J. F. Willets, of Kansas,
was president.
The house ways and means commit-
tee has decided to report a bill fixing
penalties for knowingly selling and
The meeting of striking machinists,
boiler makers and blacksmiths of the
Mexican International road, at Eagle
Pass, Tex., resulted in no terms being
made with the company and they have
been joined by the carpenters and
builders, who walked out This closed
all departments and the strike has ex-
tended all along the lino.
Scott Jackson and William Wood
have been arrested for the murder of
Miss Pearl Bryan near Fort Thomas,
Ivy. Jackson confessed The body of
shipping or keeping for sale wdnes or
liquors under names of different the murdered tfirl was discovered with
brands. The penalty for the first I *lor ^ead missing.
offense is fixed at 8500 fine and six : ^ illiam R. Morrison, Interstate
months' imprisonment, and for the sec- ' commerce commissioner, has denied
ond offense double that. | the roP°rt that he had sent the Illinois
| democratic leaders word that the free
uknkral news. silver idea must be abandoned or that
The sultan of Turkey has replied to i,e would rofuse to bo a candidate for
the autograph letter of Queen Victoria, tho democratic presidential nomina
which, it is understood, was a personal tion.
uppeal to the better nature of tho sul- Senator Marion Butler has issued
tan against
Minor. The sultan sympathises with of tho silver party in
the Standard Oil C
of the situation.
Flames broke out in the Beau port
nsane asylum, near Quebec, Can., on
tho 4th, but the inmates were removed
from the building in safety.
The steamer St. Paul, which ran
aground on the New Jersey shore sev-
eral days aaro, was floated on the 4th
amid the tooting of whistles and went
on her way to New York.
Richard Klattke, his wife and
three young children and his aged
father and mother were found dead in
Chicago on the 5th. The victims were
all killed by shots from a revolver,
which was found by Klattke's side. He
was a carpenter and had beeu out of
work for some time.
A resolution was adopted by the Ca-
nadian house of commons declaring
Canada's inalienable loyalty to the
British empire. The resolution was
introduced to let the United States
know just where Canada would stand
in the event of war.
A man named Jerry Scott was jailed
at Jackson, Mich., for beating
LIGHT WHICH LIGHTS NOT.
The reporter wtio visited Mr. Edison
today was shown a tube In active op-
eration. The power of the light as a
luminant is very small Indeed, and It
is this fact which surprises the nov-
ice. His wonder is much increased,
ji'iwt-ver, when he is told that it i.s r. t
"it a!! improbable that under fav< ra!de
conditions the light mipht be absolute-
ly invisible to the eye. The fluores-
cence is caused largely if not entirely
by the glass which is used in the con-
struction of the tubes. Th- new tubes
which are beintr made at the laborato-
ry are about eight inches long and two
inches in diameter. Th- first Inten-
tion of Mr. Edison was to construct a
tuks of cellul : but he n >w states that
he can obtain glass of sufficient thin-
It unnecessary to con-
dyloid tubes. No exper-
iment has ever be*n made at the labor-
atory which caused so much interest
as the present one. Every employe
of the establishment shares the enthu-
siasm of the chief and all are anx! >usly
waiting the developments of Mon lay.
IN THE CASE OF DROWMNW.
New York, Feb. 9. —Thtf World this :
morning announces that Professor Max
Os ten berg, a fellow of Columbia col-
lege an 1 a pupil of the celebrated Mich-
ael I. Pupin, assisted by experts, while
c nducting a s- ries of experiments with
Roentgen, or X rays, accidentally dis-
covered that animals held under the
water for fifteen minutes, and apparent-
ly drowned, have been restored ; . con-
sefousness through the mysterious ac- j
tion of the new light.
louse bill to prohibit prize fighting
■itories passed the senate. lathe house the
ienate free coinage substitute for tho house
)ond bill wa* uebated flvo hours In the
ifternoon and for three hours at the night ses-
sion. No other business was transacted.
When the senate met on the Tth Mr Frye
(Me. was u
tem. a res
><1 pr.
to i
pro
matlon in the event
taken
djourn
until
betwe
BUAZOS MX I I !
HIGHER
the At-
still Another Wavo Rolls Doi
ready Overflowing Siren
Fort Worth, Tex., Feb. 0—During the
past thirty-six nours a rise of six feet
came down the Brazos river, playing
havoc. At Hempstead twi ferry boats
were swept aw iy and the heavy iron
tiew bridge are gone,
ead horses and cattle are
Hur,
ti a ting
heavy <
the Braz
orth Carolino
the humane sentiments expressed and which has caused somewhat of a sen
declares that the reports of the maasa- sation
cres were spread by evil disposed per-
flolng much
the condition of Asia an address calling for tho organization eltrht'v^ar^nl 1* / ""n' ]*'' ^
ilum sympathizes with of the silver party in North Carolino f, * „ .'It / 7
ing her on a hot stove and roasting her
from the effects of which she died.
, ... ., , The jail was strongly guarded for fear
1 UK hlffh wind which prevailed at the culprit bein.f lynched.
New Yorl< OQ thc nth did (jreatdamajfe \v. w. Havks, treasurer of Anderson
to property. A three-story brick build- countv. Tenn . has \ een found to l o
In If was blown down in Ilrooklyn am! over short in his accounts.
three workintrinen were killed. Gov. Kickards, of Montana, has de-
Moiito.v Fi.nkli. was wartninsr up raanded of Secretary Olney thrit the w-nat
Bomo sticks of (fiant powder in a (,'overnment forthwith ri 1 M on tana
stove at a quarry near Anaconda, Mont, Cree Indians, who have come over from
when there was an explosion and he i Canada, and who, it was claimed,
was blown into an unrecognizable were spreading disease.
mass. Two others wero dangerously
injured and the cabin was wrecked.
It was reported at El I'aso, Tex.,
that Schlatter, the Denver healer, had
been frozen to death in tho New Mexi-
can mountains.
Mr. a.vd Miis. Suar.v.vrssy and two
children were asphyxiated on their
down stream. The losa Is
11 along the river. At Velaeco,
s higher than It was ever
b before and the town is
nd. Two whites and one
drowned. Their names
learned. The Sabine river
xas is out of Its banks and
'..image to sawmills and
sons. He also assarted that It was the
Turks who were first attacked while
praying in tho mosque.
A m ivkmknt was reported among
leading republican politicians of Indi-
ana to send ex-President Harrison to
the national convontion at St Louis as
one of the delegates at large.
George IJaxtbr, a logger at Port-
land, Ore., slashed his wife's throat
from ear to ear and then attempted to
commit suicide. Tho woman died in a
few minutes, lloth hud boon drinking
heavily during the day.
Tiik failures for the week ended
February 7 (Dun's import) were 833 in
the United States, against 281 last
year, and 63 in Canada, against 58 last
year.
Tiik San Carlos Apaches were said
to be again on the rampage. A cow-
boy while riding along the reservation
was fired npon from ambush at a point
about 15 miles from thc San Carlos, A.
T., agency. All the settlers in the vi-
cinity were confidently expecting C4i
attack In the near future.
Tiik Wire Nail Manufacturers' assre
ciation, at Pittsburgh, Pa., hus ad-
dressed a circular letter to the jobbing
trade, giving notice of another ad-
vance in prices of 15cents per hundred-
weight. This will change the base
rate from 82.25 to 82.40 per hundred-
weight, which is tho highest price nsked
for wire nails in many years.
I'OI'l LISTS WII.I. THY IT
Senators in ( Hiictm Nominate for > -rret:irj
and serKPiiiiUiti -Arm*.
tfilngt >n, Feb. ( -The PopuINt
a caucus today and con-
cluded to stand by their former decis-
ion to nominate candidates of their own
f'>r the '>fflces ■>( secretary and serg-
eant-ai-arms of the senate, when the
,, | election of these officers is undertaken
LojffiiiiKRAiii.K excitement was caused jn a« r lance with the Hepubiicm
in Christian Endeavor circles on the program The Populists will name
30th by tho news that Hishop Arnett, H- n. Thomas Watson of f^ orgia for
of Ohio, had been refused admittance r"-rtry and Mr Taubeneck of Illl*
to three of Boston's leading hotels oq I J •' r eerj int-at irats
account of his color.
Tiik Central Lumber Co. began busi-
ness at Port Townsend, Wash., with a
farm near Carbondale Pa, through thc capltal of 870,000,000. Its membership
gos escaping from a kitchen stove.
Tmf. Indiana Democratic Editorial
association, in session at Indianapolis,
defeated a free silver resolution by a
vote of 18 to 8k The editors unani-
mously indorsed Gov. Matthews for
president
Uy the collapse of a two-story frame
building in course of erection, at Oak-
land, Cal., a lather was instantly killed
and six other mechanics workiug on
the structure seriously injured.
II. M. Naok, general traffic manager
of the Rock Island railroad, died in
Chicago on the Oth of paralysis, aged 02.
A rich strike oi gold has been found
at Woodland Park, between Cripple
Creek aud West Creek, CoL
includes every timber mill on the west-
ern coast
(Jk.v. Campos, in an interview at Co-
runna, Spain, declared that the troubles
in Cuba should be ended either by force
of arms or the granting of Cuban au-
tonomy if necessary, as the island
could no longer pro fide the necessary
expenses for further warfare.
Two large iron compressed air tanks
for furnishing power to drills ex-
ploded at Lawrence. Mass., on the 3d.
The engineer and fireman were killed
and the shock was felt for ten miles
around doing much damage to window
glass.
Thk Congregational church In Au-
burn, Mass, founded in 177'i, has beea
destroyed by lire.
SOMi: OI.ll TI!IN(. IN 1'HANKPOHT
> I nltcU State*
a tor From the Corn,
cracker Slut p.
Frankfort, Ky.. Feb. 0 There was a
small audience in the loUMffl of the leg-
is)ature today when the senatorial bal-
lot began. More pairs than had been
made f >r a w -ek was announced. The
antl-Dlackburn Democrats united on
Hi' hard F. Tyler, Wesslnger, Carroll,
8pelght, Violett and Walker voting for
hirn. The ballot resulted: Hunter 60;
Blackburn Tyler 6; Bate l Th-
Joint caucus adjourned until Monday
noon.
Morton ImlnriPd at Home.
New York, Feb. \> -The Republican
state central commute this afternoon
decided upon March 24 as the date of
th * state convention and this city ae
the place. The presidential rand! '
of Governor Morton Is Indorsed.
agre.
ury for certain lnfor-
* passage of the pend-
ltion contemplating a
n llin* appropriation hills by dls«
mao.nj? th«j several committees
ip and adopted
fhen the house
3n Mr Talbert S. C.) and Barrett
(Mass.) over words used by the former the day
1 before in which he justified secession, but the
matter fin illy quieted down. At the night ses-
sion the bond bill was further debate V
PEARL BRYAN'S MURDERERS.
Excitement at Cincinnati Incrf)fi4f4—The
Three Sn«pectcd .Arraigned In I ourt.
Cincinnati, Feb. a-Although it is
Just one week since the decapitated
body of Pearl Hryan was found near
Fort Thomas. Ivy., there was moro ex-
citement yesterday over the tragedy
and in the Kentucky suburbs than on
any previous day. Scott Jackson and
Alonzo Walling, the suspects, who
were roommates while attending the
Ohio dental college, were confessing
against each other all day. The}' were
examined separately and together
When they are confronted face to face
with each other's confessions they call
each other liars and exhibit murder-
ouo feeling. All efforts have been di-
rected to finding Pearl Hryan's head.
Ill the series of confessions Jackson
says Walling carried it in a va-
lise to the Covington suspension bridge,
and he thinks Walling threw it in
the river, or he might have carried it
with him to his home at Hamilton and
thrown it from the Miami bridjre at
that place, but Jackson says he lid not
go with his room mate on these trip?
an9 cannot tell just where he left tho
head.
CREATED ILL FEELING.
St. Loals I'rlests Object to a Visit fron.
Matolll During Lent.
St. Louis, Feb. 8.—Thirty-sever
priests of this diocese out of so present
at the recent conference of the clergy
in Kenrick seminary, called*by Arch
bishop Ivain for tho purpose ol
making arrangements for the re
ceptlon of Cardinal Satolli in St Louis,
strenuously opposed his visit durinp
the Lenten season. When a banquet
was proposed as one of the features ol
the entertainment a very largo minor
ity voted against it It is said th*
archbishop has now decided to cut th«
banquet down to a Lenten dinner and
in other ways modify the whole affair.
Timothy lleMlv !lolte«L
Dvnu.v, Feb. 8.—The quarterly mcci
Ing of the council of the Iris?. National
federation was held here yesterday.
The proceedings were private, and tho
meeting lasted for seven hours. It was
reported after tho meeting that it had
been very contontious, and that after
several divisions by vote. Timothy
Ilealy and of his supporters left tho
room.
Frye Will IW President Pro Tem.
Washington, Feb. —Senator Frye
will be elected president pro tom. as
the first business after tho assembling
of the senato to-day. There will bo
no opposition and no roll call. The
republican caucivs to consider tho
other elective officers of the senate
will be held this afternoon
For a llrldge ut St. Charles, Ma
Washington, Feb. ft.—Congressman
Treloar yesterday introduced in tho
house a bill providing for the construc-
tion of a wagon and motor bridge over
the Missouri river at St Charles, Ma
Bin— uPapa has consented to aconson*>
tory off th.' ballroom, and I've been plan-
ning it.'' Ho—"Indeed! What is it going
to bo lillod withf" Sho "Hofos." Truth.
MERIT
Is what gives Hood's Sarsaparilla Its great poj>
ularlty, increasing sales and wonderful cures.
The comblnotlon, proportion and process In
preparing Hood's Sarsaparilla are unUnown
to other medicines, and make it peculiar to
Itself. It acts directly and positively upoo
tho blood, and as tho blood reaches every
nook and corner of the human system, all tho
nerves, muscles, bones and tissues comu un
der the boneflcent influenoo of
The sensation In the senate on tho Mh was
the speech of s-nat -r Ve-. la ridicule of the sec-
retary of agriculture, in which the senator
severely criticised the praotloe of furnish-
ing costlf dowers from government green-
houses for the receptions at the executive man-
sion and referred to the "bugle blasts" from
the secretary of agriculture as to the congres-
sional extravagance In distributing seeds.
"The trouble Is." said Mr Vest, that the sec-
retary of agriculture l« a monomaniac on tha
gold standard." The resolution to distribute
appropriation bills among the several commit-
m B'M'V
Sarsaparilla
The One True Dlood Purldrr. All drucglats. II.
Hood's Pills EE 5r :r •:I
ASK YOUR DEALER FOR
w. L. Douglas
fe3. SHOE beMdthe
84 to 96 ' O O
w
see what a good shoo you can buy for ■
OVER IOO STYLES AND WIDTHS,
CONGRESS, IIL'TTON,
au<l LAC1-!, made in ail
hinds of the bent selected
leather by skilled work-
men. Wo
make and
sell moro
fe3 Shoes
^ thun any
other
manufacturer In tho world.
None genuine unless name and
price is stamped on the bottom.
Ask your dealer for our 83.
84. 8.1.00, 82.no, S i.2.- >h< • s-
83.50, 8'J ar, « 81.75 for boys.
TAKE NO SUBSTITUTE. If your dealer
cannot supply you, send to fac-
tory, enclosing price and 56 cent*
to pay carriage. State kind.-ty.-
of t w (cap if lUuu. • ir 1
width. < lur Cust'.m I >ept. wil! fill
your sder. -end for new Illus-
trated Catalogue to Ho* H.
W. L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mass.
I*he Greatest Medical Discovery
of the Age.
KtZNKEDY'S
MEDICAL DISCOVERY.
DONALD KENNEDY, of RQXBURY, MASS.,
Has discovered In one of our common
pasture weeds a remedy that cure^ every
kind >f Hum r, fr^m t'.ie worst Scrofula
down to a c mmon Pimple.
He has tried it in over eleven hundred
cases, and never failed except in tw ca>es
(b th thunder humor.) He nasnow in his
possession over two hundred certificates
of its value, all within twenty t.nles of
Boston'. Send postal c ird r r book.
A benefit is always experienced fr^m the
first bottle, and a ; erf ct cure is warranted
when the r;_^ht quantity Is t.iken.
When the iun^^ are affected It causes
shooting pains, like needles passing*
through them; the same with the Liver r
Bowels. This is caused by the duct^ be-
ing stopped, and always disappears in a
week after taking it. Read ti e label.
If the stomach is foul < r bilious it will
cause squeamish feelings at first.
No change f diet ever necessary. Eat
the best y u can get. and enough of it.
Dose, one tables; • >nful in water at bed'
lime. Sold by all Dnuzists.
$
$
§
| This is the
; CUPID •
; hair pin. It has a
! double set of spiral
; curves and will not
! slip out of the hair.
It is made by jfli
! Richardson & De-
Long Bros., manu-
facturcrs of thc fa- 55
moos DcLONG §5
HOOK and EYE. ®
E«>
1
A
tffi: AFHMOTOU CO. a<m naif the
windmill busln*-s\ taranfle It had r«Iuce<l thor<«i of
wind power to i fj it waa. It many branch
houaee. and ropplli* ita m„i r-; tin
9. .. —r j, Mu oan aud duM fori i
i t-'-'ter urtirlo f■ t i> vj ii.' i..-j t. ,
i U r| it t"*i PamiIng • 1
I'joar' !. >ti r|
4 . -tloo Wln.lu.ru, Tilting
FliM st r| T'wn, Stwl IJuiz
i'-s stMl K md ruttern ar.'i F-'-i
i wind**. (in appltoaMoB it win mum <*■*
«... --.J .t:"t>,at 'l furt.iiii until
•jnnary l*t at 1/8 Um Mil i>no«. It |In
Tanks I'urup# ( m\ hirt.la Hf-nd *-t <-atal"tf<4a.
Fattury : I2«b, b<Aliw«li au«| HUaiorc Strccia, Cbltanx
Treated free.
ro.ui..i/ ctm:)
wtrti Vtf.U'jl*
k.bii .Mm. hit*
... an 1 > ** ,' •
r ij"- I1i 1'r.tn fr^f 1 +* ri : ««;
^ ill .(tilivmp' inirti f :
BOOK. ' l-i'm ' M il 'I a « ,r FREE.
TP*TRD 70 TRAM
Saltan'! ami rlob
K TREES
mak'r* aaaUd far
OOLD plum. .U
Stark, L<-ui<lan&.
lU'kport, lilt.
opium amgfcSK
UHI5 WHcR
iwn brrup.
ti<axx uho
In lima H-^^MlrugKtata
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Perry & Welch. Perry Enterprise-Times. (Perry, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 24, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 13, 1896, newspaper, February 13, 1896; Perry, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc127711/m1/4/?rotate=90: accessed March 28, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.