Perry Enterprise-Times. (Perry, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 31, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 2, 1896 Page: 2 of 8
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Perry Enterprise-Times.
PfcRRY A WELCH. Proprietor*.
OKLAHOMA
~ |NEWS OF THE WEEK.
Oleaned By Telegraph and Mai'
PERKY.
CURRENT COMMENT.
Crux is said to have cost Spain in the
last year more than the island is worth
to her. _
At least 400 of the 2.000 Italian i:n- |
migrants who were landed on Ellis
island, N. Y.. a few days ag-o, will be
deported, as they have no means to
subsist upon for 30 days. The law re-
quires each immigrant to have at least
^30 or to have some relative in Amer-
ica before he is admitted.
At Benton. Ark., a recent fire de-
MYSTERY IS DEEP
CONGRESS.
The We
Ih Con-
rrocr*<line«
drntpd Form.
A* uaex-ccteJ climax to the Cuban .iebate
rnree Men Disappear From Salt |
PERSONAL AND POLITICAL
At the republican convention at
Austin, Tex., on the 26th policemen
nad to be called in to stop the riot be- Proved a dozen residences and nearly
tween the McKinley men and the Ree l aj[ t}le business part of town. Loss, t
men. One faction elected an Allison s^q qoo.
man and two Reed men to the conven- Matt Mootiiy. a negro, was hanged
tion at St. Louis, and then after they at Georgetown. Tex., on the 2,th in
Tur latest estimate of iiliteratesover ^ad adjourned the McKinley forces pre^encc of 1 ^■ people for the
ten vears of are in the United States took cbarge of the hall and elected a mur,jer of Andrew Hickrill.a Bohemian
t', 702. or 13.3 per cent, of the contesting delegation. ^ farmer, last May. Attended by two
The report of the death of President Qg^j-o preachers, he sang a hymn and
Hippolyte, of llayti, has been con- pniyeii, and then made a long talk,
firmed. confessing his crime, but did not seem
A New Yoiik Sun special from In- l0 think it justified hanging.
dianapolis. Ind., on the -5th slated Tiie worst windstorm experienced in
that ex-President Harrison was being
Late Ci"y.
CANNOT BE FOUND TO BE IDENTIFIED
Cuban re olu-
verv car«*
,i:rect tb«' pre.-i-
nt local self-
) Cuba and In case of refusal tha
iknovvn Englishman Who Disappeared
A boot the Same Time a* the Others
—lnqaeitt loiue* to Nothing
—Other U'e Mew*.
whole population
A Ni'JtnEH of wnmen in London re-
cently sent a communication to Lord
Salisbury, the Ilritish premier, declar-
ing that war must cease.
Five hundred land agents from the
southern states are said to be in the
northwest to encourage a migration ot
farmers and mechanics to their section.
Tiie defeat of Senator llavis' pres.- j
dential aspirations in Minnesota *a-
attributed to the labor organizations, j
who were bitter against the senator .
on account of his radical stand against
the Chicago railroad strike of twe
Prof. fiMUm the Western :
nniversitv at Pittsburgh, Pa., who has
teen working in making develoqments
with the new X rays, has invented a
meter whereby they can be measured.
The invention will assist greatly in
studying the effect of the new dis-
covery.
Am. the information coming from
trustworthy sources represents the
condition of the Armenians as most
deplorable. Great numbers are dying
of starvation and the masses of the
unfortunate people are subsisting on
one-fourth of what is required to sus-
tain life
AN appeal was recently made to the
appropriations committee of the house
by the Lincoln Memorial association
for an appropriation with which to
deluged with letters urging him to be
a candidate for the presidential nomi-
nation and save his party from the
nomination of McKinley. who repre-
sented the extreme idea in protection.
Jr-T before the republican state
convention was called to order at Min-
neapolis, Minn., on the 24th it was an-
nounced that Senator Cushman k.
Davis had wired to Congressman Taw-
nev withdrawing from the presiden-
tial race.
Tiie formal unveilin? and transfer to
Denver, Col., in two years prevailed on
the 27th, the wind reaching a velocity
of 02 miles an hour. The telegraph
lines on all the railroads in the south-
ern part of the state were demoralized.
Cripple Creek the shaft house on
the Little Daisy mine blew down, kill-
iDL' John May and severely injuring
John llannon.
The failures for the week ended
March 27 (Dun's report) were 250 in the
United States, against 234 last year,
and 39 in Canada, against 42 last year.
In several towns in the Indiau terri-
New York city bv the (irant Monu- torv sraall-pox was prevailing on th
Chlcajo, HI., March CO.—The mystery
of the body found in the trunk by Carl
Haas and Phillip Griess, at Austin,
Thursday aftern ->n. yet remains unsol-
ved. Three cases of men who have dis-
appeared in the w^st, in or near Salt
Lake City, have been reported to the
authorities but there seem* to be no way
of determining the identity of the body.
The eases are:
Oliver Pike, disappeared at Seattle,
Wash . three years ago.
An Englishman, employed on a ranch
near Salt Lak? City, three yean ago.
J anes Prosper Chaxal, disappeared
at Salt Lakv C.ty three years ago.
It f -m> unlik -ly, the police say, that
the brxly at the m rgue is that of Cha-
rt'.. The Franehman is described is
} • ng * feet 11 inches in height, while
th.- body is only 6 feet 6 in he3. The
t-:-eth of the Frenchman w -*re fille 1 with
a compos!t. n of steel, while ihe teeth
rf th- cadaver are .--iund anJ without
,f murder and ,
for Francaia, has just be^n
mittee on foreign relations, the *.
lions were recommitted to the conferencecom-
BlttM Mr Mills then offered some very
;al Cuban resolutions which
ient to request of >pain to crar,
government to Cuba and In ca>e ol
president is authorized to take P0*,*/"1"*1
the island and hold it until such >elf-tfo\ern
ment is established. The senate then ' on-
side red the legislative appropriation bill....
The house spent most of the day considering
the Curtis bill to abolish the dev.h in paper.
all h.-re it isInd Ismail de U
statutes, save la the .-a^es of
criminal assault The bill failed t- ,
want of a Quorum. The committee on election
of rresident and vice president reported favor-
ably the bill providing for the election of •
ators by rtircct vote of the people.
In the senate on th • -I- i Mr Mills spoke for
two hours on his resolution f ">r the forclbi
cupatlon of the Island of * uba in or er >
th«® inhabitants in securing local *e I-g<
ment. The senator from Tesas sever-.-
raigne.i «ien. Weyi-r. culling him an-atr.
scoundrel and villa.n The reso.'.t -.
to thr* calendar The house pas>ed th
ate bill to remove the r.'-trlct;-;.s agair
confederates, Mr. lloutcll- M- hen.
to abolish th* death per^M
Delated cf the renowned.
Mcnetek of Abyssinia is pas-
fond of champagne.
from
nn attac
King
sionately fond of champafrn.'.
The prince of Wales i suffer '. s
of low spirits and his ia<
orn of late.
is said to
; haa
grown
m lent Faure of Krone,
be growi..g weary of th* carta of of-
fice, and is not as energetic as he us«l
'"ITia «aid 'that Nan«-n nrre^i. for
the sum of SJ.TOO. to send b. -<
MM on bU return to an Enfltob news-
(irand
sepa, Bon of the
ntenccd to
nnient f^P
to aid
siimA
nnd his
and i
pa-
luors
er a
int
for se'.lii
e brand
>duced bv
a short term of inipn-
threatening a jutre de pr x who hart
Bimkcn disrespectfully of UU motlicr.
Lord Leigliton not a rieli man
when he died, in spite of the larffe su
he earned during his lifetime
famo.us house, with all it« art tr.vui-
must be Bold at auction.
oiadstoni- usually has tJirw
at the ramf tim" a:; 1
v «nne to another sm bfi
chanm from on «
thinks that his mind has reached the
limit of absorption.
is res,
Mr.
books in reading
Mr A:
r thati
that t
.thout
um thq
ment association of th® Grant statue
is set for April 25. Gen. Grant s grand-
son, Ulysses S. (irant, son of CoL Fred
(irant, will unveil the statue.
Tue junta on the :24th received news
of the successful landing in Cuba of an
expedition led by Ilraunce Pena. The
party of 3S men was thought to be that
conveyed to the island by the steamer
Commodore, which left the United
States some time a#o.
Tiie New York republican conven-
tion on the 24th indorsed Gov. Levi P.
Morton for the presidency. The plat-
i form declared for a protective tariff
and reciprocity, opposed the free coin-
age of silver and favored the gold
standard.
Dkxkis F. Murphy, since 1843 one ol
the reporters of the United States sen
purchase'the house on Tenth street ate, is'dead. He was considered one
in Washington, in which A1 rahara Qf the ^est stenographers in the world.
Lincoln died, and to make it a per- ,\T the Massachusetts republican
petual shrine of patriotic pili.'rimafre 6tatc convention at Boston on the . th
for the millions that venerate his the boom of Speaker Ileed for the nom-
cemory. ination for the presidency was launched
amid preat enthusiasm. The principal
Gxeater New York will have an
area of 3S9 square miles, making it the
largest American citv and nearly three
times the size of Philadelphia. Hut
London spreads over '>i srpiare miles.
Tiie consolidation will advance New-
York to the position of the world'-
second city, and as its rate of prrowth
is nearly double that of London it
should le the first before the end of
the coming century.
Thomas Edison lias succeeded, with ,
the aid of the X rays in penetrating ,
the human body with the naked eye.
He looked into the lunss and heart
and examined the arteries, muscles
and blood vessels of one of his assist-
ants. With the powerful cathode
light behind the subject, he looked
through the screen of prepared chem-
icals. and is said to have plainly seen
the working* of the various or-jaoa of
the body.
As unpublished letter from Oen.
Grant upon the Monroe doctrine was
found a few days aso among the rec-
ords of the war department. It was
written to President Andrew Johnson
some time before the 1- nited States
resolutions denounce the present tariff
law and call for a new one for protec-
tion and reciprocity; denounce the s.l-
ver agitation; oppose free silver coin-
age; oppose state banks and uphold ^ CBge I phipps
national banks; demand the restriction divorce,
of immigration, the entire separation
of church and state, the enforcement
of the Monroe doctrine and express
sympathy with Cuba.
STth in a malignant form and the pe
Die were greatly excited. The pi.ices
were rigidly quarantined and business
was at a standstill.
The badly decomposed body of an
unknown man was found on the 20th
in a trunk bou.'ht at an auction sale of
unredeemed property at Chicago.
A TRAIN on the Indiana. Illinois i:
Iowa railroad, loaded with grain and
dressed beef, was wrecked near Toto,
Ind. The wrecking train, in cleaning
jip the track, found the dead bodies of
four unknown men in a car o' oats.
They had evidently died from suffoca-
tion.
Representative Crowtiier. of Mis-
souri, recently introduced 37 petitions
into congress fr"tu the G. A. R. posts
of Missouri, praying for the passage of
a. bill restoring all discontinued or re-
duced pensions.
IxsiiiK of three hours over 5.000.000
feet uf lumber was burned at two lum-
ber yards in La Crosse. Wis., recently,
together with a bridge over the l..ack
river. I.- t
By order of the court and consent of
counsel on both sides six men and six
women composed the jury impaneled
at Ilrookin^s. >■ D., on the 2..th to hear
Phipps. a suit
If the friends
Englishman --r
identifying the
a scrap of hair
truss
it either the unknown
Hiv it l ike ■ ic < • 1 in
■ay at the morque by
a set of teeth an 1 a
aee .nplish wonder®.
they have
the body is past
told
these ar^ the
to go by. The r<
identification.
Mrs. Theodore Mother t
Deputy Coroner McXally the etory or
Oliver Pike's disappearance. She said
he was at Seattle Wash., at the time.
H - rr. •• her !■ Mrs Willi im Hawee ar.!
sh- lives at Fayette. Fuhon county, o.
Mrs, Moaher is a c'rae friend of the
family and ha 1 kn wn young P k-
a number of years he sail als«.- th-
description of the body as regards size.
weight, hair. K ... .
of Pik-. H- had been Injured early in
life and wore a trus= He always had
plenty of money, she said.
The inquest at the morgue this after-
noon resulted in nothing.
Aft^r considerable testimony nad been
1-eard it was adjourned to Tuesday at-
ternoon at 2 o'clock.
Sa 1' I.ake City. Utah.. March The
lutios wa-
in the senate on the -'th
senate shoul 1 not a.ljourn
the free coinage of «..ver an<i ta. ^
secretary of the treasury the power • ; '
bonis. A fav.-rable rcf-rt ,n t-e bill f_-ra
commission n lator. a.-ru-alture and capital
was madf by the committee on labor an., -h. n
the leiris'.ative appropriation bill con-
sidered.. The naval appropriaf
passed In the house. It carrle;
authorizes the construction of f
and l-5" torpedo boats. Mr. H«
Introduced a resolution for a commission01 e «
perts to examine our banking and curr '..
system and report Its conclusions to congress
The senate indulged in an acrimonious 0-
bate on the -'Tth ovnr the leg ilative aoproprl _•
ti on bill, but the bill
carries f21..VW.'J00. Th
the system of compensat
, district attorneys and marshals
Ing substituted for fe<
loomed until the Wth.. .Tne appropriations
committee in the house attempted to tarfe^up
-e th*
31.61!."iU and
ur battleships
t-.vole i Minn.)
was finally pas>e i.
bill effect-, a reform of
f. r United States
on ate then ad
t'n and age were those ttsP sundry civil appropriation bill, hut
members defeated thern and th- d vywasae
voted to the consideration of priviite btlis af-
ter wh.ch the hous- a-ljourned to the « tn.
BREAK
A MINISTER'S BAD
Fjt
nt Lin-
was well acquainted with the French
1 nts here, makes the stat nent
th U its his be'. •f th it th- rnur Urer Is> a
Frenchman named Juiea wn > .-rt ■
Like the summer f .llow ng Lhaza. ^
n ^appearance, going t > Sp- kan-*
• . New York and fr m the iitl
Leon declares that Julrs
e2uela with a party x
Seattle. Wash.. Mir;h
c.ir. ' • found here of • >.iv^: P.k , wh-
MISCELLANEOUS.
By direction of the officials of the
uniform rank, Knijrhts of Pythias, the
arrangements to hold(the national en-
campment in Minneapolis have been
declared off and Cleveland has been
selected as the place for the coming
event
Tiie clearing house returns for the
week ended March 27 for the following'
cities were: New \ork, $502,2*0,.t,
Chicago, $77,303,703; St Louis, $20,583,-
ei.V. Kansas City. 89.119,410; St. Joseph,
| 81,033.096; Topeka. S44T, 207; Wichita,
£337,725; Omaha, $4,458,074.
President Ci.evelaxd was to issue a
proclamation on the 23th opening the
lied Lake Indian reservation in Minne-
sota to settlement. The date selected
x.
,v Q-tiArrr
1 curve
ce of
■nmer
n'
rnvernment demanded the withdrawal , is May t The White Earth reservation
of French troops from Me\ ca (ien. will be opened by a proclamation to be
Grant, us the letter shows, was ir. fa- j issued later. The two comprise about
vor of extreme measures to overthrow
juad of ;• li
1 with Wine
Maximilian and to sustain the repub-
lican cause in Mexico.
The government of New Zealand
has drafted a bill for the exclusion of
consumptives from that colony. It
imposes an extremely heavy penalty [
upon captains of ships bringing1 con-
sumptives to a port, whether knowing-
. r unwittingly. The law, if passed,
will compel the captains, as a matter
of self-defence, to require all intend-
ing passengers from American, English
or Asiatic ports to provide themselves
with medical certificates showing that
they are neither consumptives nor ex-
hibit any tendencies of being atllicted.
The announcement that President
Cleveland will soon extend the civil
service rules so as to embrace all cler-
ical employes of the government is
not suppritdng, the Indianapolis Jour-
nal Bays. At present nearly 90 per
cent of all such employes are under
the rules, and it is but logical that the
rest should l e placed on the same foot-
ing. Every president and head of de-
partment who has held office since the
civil service law was passed has become
a convert to its operation, an 1 public
opinion has finally accepted it as a dis
tinct improvement on the old spoil?
system,
The senate committee on election?
recently reported an amendment to
the constitution for the election of
senators by direct vote of the people,
but the prospects that the amendment
will be made are small. In order to
have it submitted to the people a two-
thirds vote of the senate is required,
the prospect for which is rather im-
probable. Should the senate decide to
submit the question, it would be nec-
essary to have the amendment ratified
by three-fourths of the states, either
by a vote of the legislature or by the
voice of a convention called for the
purpose.
1,000,000 acres and form a portion of
the old Chippewa lands.
The women of north Texas have
signed a petition to President Cleve-
land, Secretary Hoke Smith and con-
gress, calling attention to the numer-
ous robberies and high crimes gener-
ally which have been committed by
outlaws in the Indian territory on the
citizens who live adjacent to the terri-
tory, and apfpealing for protection and
relief from the outlaws, which, the
petition says, can only be done by the
settlement of the Indian territory by
civilized people.
Forest fires burned over a large ter-
ritory to the east of Illack River Falls.
Wis., recently, doing damage to the
extent of many thousands of dollars.
They have destroyed the prospects of
the blueberry crop in the burned re-
gion. which has in the past furnished
emnloyment to hundreds of berry
pickers.
Six men in the freight yards of the
Central railroad at Elizabeth, N J.,
were run into by a train which
was being shifted from one track to
another on the 26th. An effort was
made to stop the train, but a coupling
pin broke and several cars slipped
along the siding. Two of the men
were killed and one probably fatally
wounded. The others were only
slightly hurt-
Mr& Ballington Bootii lectured on
ihe 2'ith at Pittsburgh, Pa., on "Slum
and Shelter Work in Large Cities." to
a large audience, and broke the silence
as to the cause of herself and the com-
mander breaking away from the old
organization. She practically admitted
that they had become too much Amer-
icanized to suit the ideas of the powers
in London.
A TERRIBLE explosion of fire damp
has taken place in a mine at Brunner-
ton, in New Zealand. Five persons
.* n r-m v 1
ted this evening.
s Tr< - it ■■ D
;,-rnment. an 1 J
,rc5 - mpany, i
Tiie insurgent expedition which left
New York recently on boar 1 the Ber-
muda for Cuba lias safely landed all
the men and munitions of war on the
island, according to a Havana dispatch, j believed tchav*
In Sancti Spiritus province all of the cMeago in the
archives of the insurgent government >, lvt, n rec -1
were captured by the Spanish troops. arv su n man
Tiif. British l ark Alexandria «• ' appcur in t'
towed to the Mud Flats at <an Fran- >«"•.
Cisco and beached while ir. a burning
condition. The stores were trans- n <
ferret! to a tug.
The dead bodies of three boys, ape ! c
IS. 15 and 11 years.named Boone r-mith. ,
Tom Shitlet and Charles McMillan, m
were found on the railroad tcack twe ur:
miles south of Brownsboro. Tex., on .i:
the 23d. The boys were supposed to
have been killed by a train during the r .
night. The boys had run away from ; t;
home.
Fifty thousand people were report-
ed suffering in Chicago on the 33d be- .
cause of the strike in *^ie clothing .
manufacturing trade, and there was .
no prospect of any settlement of the t
trouble.
A NEGRO, named Ike I'izer. was
lynched by a mob near Emporia -ta- ,
t'ioD. La., on the S'nreveport .v Houston .
railway. The victim had insulted two ,
white ladies the previous day and a >
posse searched for him all night unt.l
his hiding Dlaee was discovered.
Gov. Morton, of New York, signed
the Raines' liquor tax bill on the .31
and it is expected that the ne v law
will enormously reduce the number of
saloons in the empire state.
Constablk.3 in levying on the stock
of C. A. (jusham. a farmer near Perry,
Ok., shot the farmer's son through the
head and slightly wounded his wife
because they resisted the officers.
Tiie Merrimac mills at Lowell, Mass.,
closed down its cotton and print works
on the - 1. The mills employed "J
operatives and had a weekly pay roll of
c<i:, oo The Lowell Manufacturing
to. will also shut down its carpet mill
and only operate it every other week.
Suva, the capital of Fiji, was de-
stroyed by a hurricane recently. The
loss of the ferry steamer Pearl ir. the
Brisbane river, bv which people lost
their lives, was also reported.
The Cuban insurgents burned 65
houses at Punta Ilrava, near Havana,
recentlv. Several other estates were
also reported as being burned by them
in the province of l'inar del Rkx
A train on the Chicago & Ka-teri,
Illinois road ran into an oil tank at
Hillsdale. Ind., and the oil was ignited
and the engine wrecked. The nas^en-
gers were rather badly s:;aken up.
Fihe destroyed the building occupied
by the Washburn-Halligau Coff.-. < o.
and slightly damaged the plant of the
Daily Leader at Davenport, la. The
loss on the stock of the o, ifee company
will be about S-o.OUO and the insur-
ance 550,000, and the loss on buildings
50,000.
Tiie department of agriculture at
Washington has issued a book on Ar-
. ice
countrymen.
• —N
The p-
liev. I. T. Johnson I
OT'i'itgp *n<1 Is Ordered *o Town.
Fbesvo, CaL, March 27.—The people ,
of Fresno were aroused to a state of
indignation by the publication of an
article denouncing Rev I. T. Johnson,
a traveling evangelist, for having re-
peated from the pulpit a statement
which he claimed had been made to
him that two-thirds of the girls of this
city were betrayed before they reached
the a?e of 14 years. The paper
also contained an interview with the
preacher in which he admitted an i re-
peated the statement, but declined to
give the source of his information.
An angry mob gathered and would
have treated Rev. Johnson roughly
had not cooler heads interposed and
promised that the preacher would
leave town on the first train.
INDICTED.
Probably t!i t o Is n thing
land cwners inor«* ;it t'u
ft-iK'ii:j.r- They want. 1.
article they c an for th-'
to use it. and at the I" '
While is fi<) d business, pru «.* f.ho ..-1
not take the e of , ^
smooth wire t< e ;• u <i 1 '• h ■ 11 11 1
temper rv us,.- \> ,t -x t it t , l..>t ••■ry.-ars.
and to i."-t tli.s k;n«l "t' an art. K-.it n quires
a certain amount of ir odmai' n. . ; i:.ake it.
Th De K U > Fe Co., f I
nois, has the larpfst and n. -t >
I of inioottl wire fencing of at
country. They .:«-«*iru part ma; ; to < tJ
v attend n to their g l write toem
for a catalogue, which they will mail yo*
free. Ho line of g is bos grown to rapid*
lv in demand or given - .. h •- ■
t'u n as tlie f« t . • ■ s
e o pany. TI j r • • 1 et fi cef< r
lawn anil vard purposes; tli -ir t abled fie
and hog fence for farm use -, t
poultrv, garden and rabbit t-
! they claim for them. Yon will hardly do
I yourself justice if you do nottboriughly i!i-
vestigate their lines before pluming your
i or^or*
It is a peculiar fact that tr • - t! ' l®
.vh . have u i r.'-y with wh i. * :>* <
I jor's hills never have app«mi.> it.s aiuu
I ion Globe.
Minpu te line
p.ant in the
cat led
Be honest in : ur hear*
may look like i uiut for
world soon learns the (linorem •-
Bulletin.
Wiikn* a man trets to thinking t
do it ah. the ouly way to brin_-
senses is t. let him try it. I lart!-,
Tnr truth is bo
White was
ile, but V.
L A W
W©tBn®rs
TON* OF WI \LTII
!i„„H of I'orle S. m'4 Colo
ILLINOIS
Failed to Ke
PASTORS
• t- loat'.ns AhoT
—Tho
which
overno
he
■ m
Old Glory
'nrochlal School#.
mpaign, lit, March 2
j0(. Champaign county grand jury,
re- indicted John I'. Altgeld.
s- the state of Illinois, and the other
t" members of the board of trns
-i the Illinois university, for non-com-
and pliance with the state law requiring
and the United >tates tlag to be floated over
^ ail public school building-.also brought
: in indictments against Bet. Father
. Wagner, pastor of Mary's Roman
!rm- ! Catholic church and Rev. Fred Vereha-
rua r 1
I thi
vhl
han, pasto
-.vn.'h was '":n-
As^'.stant United
P pa for the
■ Hilton, for the
i charge of the
TO INCLJ Ih. GUKF.B
,rnnv General DirecU .
day fr -m Att m-y
stru )ttag him to cs
of • - i; re -
attach Gretr e unt
Oklah ma. Or. tha
Henfr -w '-v... a;-po.
Ol'NTV
pecial Co
the county,
in the princ
To I>1
*h 31 Int-*'
|-;M) Til Klit < '
!a Irid. Sp
irraga, mi:
Peter's German
Lutheran church, for failure to comp...
with the law in not maintaining the
United Mates dag over their respective
parochial schools.
NEW RELIGIOUS MOVEMENT.
"American Le.eue of Ihf* t.r.nd Arn-.yof
th- I ro.« ' Orjanll.-il In V.ir<
New York. March J*.—William I'hil-
lip^ Hall, president of the Hall >ignal
Co.. and a director in several large cor-
rt porations. has organised a new evan-
_ gelistic movement. It will be known
. j as the American League o( the Oran l
.- Army of the Cross, and its leaders will
n- bear military titles. It is modeled on
the lines of the Salvation ariny. No
uniform will be adopted. Its object is
' "aggressive evangelism among the peo-
°r pie." Mr. Hall's design is to use his
yl fortes as auxiliary to regular church
rd work.
THEY CAUGHT A TARTAR.
fllabwafRMfn Tr, tn Hold 1p Kan.a,
Miprlff and Ilotll Wer. -hut.
Guturie, ok.. March -7.—Sheriff
mt Skinner, of Cowley county. Kan., was
held up by two highwaymen near
r*l Parkland. 30 miles east of here, when
on his way to get a prisoner, li.-tired
'. .' upon them, wounding one fatally and
• ' breaking the other's arm. one ..f the
outlaws' bullets hit him in the breast,
-t but struck a large pocketbook and
glanced oft. His team got scared an 1
ran over one outlaw, preventing the
^ sheritT fr- rn finishing the fight or fin 1
t Ing out who the outlaw-were.
INSURGENTS WARNED.
nrst o
:i". i I am
arc t
Sarsaparilia
Pr- part• l ...v < _I
Hood's Pills
mmtM
XSH!N1NG^sW*H||
~ ■ EXAMPLE I
- —A
(ti* -mn C*. '>•*>■
fhe
\\ i 1
Di
IMMITTLK
hooi lletia
u>ri«T
Nolle# 1 h it Up Will Tr
.tion I'til.
March
rnmltte^
Wov
Wash-ng-t^n. i
hou?•* lu\.^ f
!« considering th-
th- I> tv.-3 c-mm
ii-an Territ ^ry. m.
when a sub-commltt _
. f Kanfas. Fisher
, mm -n ih . n'
i In regard t
im- material
toda
llAVAXA, March JT -< apt.-<,c
ler ha.s issued a proclamation declaring
that, in view of the fact that the insur-
gents avoid engagements with tiie
troops and devote themselves entirely
to acts of incendiarism, he has resolved
i .leal with them as incendiaries an 1
were killed outright and 80 more were
entombed, with no hope of being res- j,0r day" with suggestions for its ob-
eued.
Mr. and Mrs. Snyder have died at
I'ort Jarvis, N. Y., from being pois. >ned
and the daughter, Mrs. Martha Whit
ting ot Curt. arpi;'.Vnt-d. banliVs. applying the rule set for them j rtMy in,„tlu n,mtnU.
■x-\ lraf, a bill up i in hU former proclamation, which was , monv.i< draw •'
1 all the c"mmlt:« msy . i.at inocndiiarieis and bandit* were to tAr.,u.;l> t'u
—111 hold itj -
servance.
June Hrackett, a negro schoolboy,
stabbed a white boy named Johnson in
the arm and side at Guthrie, Ok., and
it was feared that the injuries would
result fatally. The young negro es-
CoL. CiEoitor. W. P.AIN, of Kentucky
addressed the Women's Christian Tern
pernnce union at Washington recently | was under guard suspected of
and made the statement that one of t|le crjme.
the causes of our recent depression [ ' l,tti_e n-.vear-old Elbert Henderson, j taped.
was the spending of $1,000,000,000 in ! cj jeffer5on*ton, went into l^uisTilie, ]x the Kickapoo Indian country the
UM bv the American people for llqOOf i OQ the j, with a chain two feet j ten-months-old child of Weshah, living
and tobacco. "Do not say that our i j0Dg attached to hia ankle. He w a - near McCloud, was attacked by hogs
figures are exaggerated," he said, j taken tt hardware store and the | while the mother was gathering fuel
"until congress gives us a committee of c(,ain remove.! lit: said that for two and was torn nearly to pieces and
inquiry to prove that they are wrong. year8 h|g father had had him chained
If the workingmen of Chicago had a j0^ Uemlerson will be prose
saved the money they sncnt in one | cate(j
day for liquor during the I'ullman [ mjciujab* of AoBlcfLTilUt Morton
strike they could have bought the • jltts or,iere(| td.OOO.'sin packages of seed#
I'ullman plant " | lo 1 istributed during ApriL
killed.
Wi[.i.iaM CovF.r. wife and child were
burned to death in their' home near
Montgomery, W. Va. Tramps set fire
to tiie house for the purpose of rob-
bery.
New York
The c mm it*.
which it is ho.
-.rrur. The gub-c rnmitt*-^ w
first m eting neit Tuesday^
Wbltrnmb KU«T
Indiana;1 '■•«. March 28.-J mes Whit- ,
pit,., thf lloosler p->et. wh" e ,
condition became alarming last night, j
i was much better today.
nhvura, M^h > -W thin the Ust two
„ tv." have „«en made to
\ .v,* i.tv,'r-old «randdauKht r of
k.-lnaj- ■' ' .jj,. In thi* c.ty.
Mm"/ ;tr f th -h Id has recH.vd num-
threat U unknown.
Hill. Mo.. March 28 —Bllsa Prt-
, ' T," of th- aeslth'est men of ic**
Mliao'jri. !• 'had. uf ■
In these days tii^* matrimonial matj-h only
seems to light on the money bu*.—Truth.
te *hot, after the most summary trial.
Mormon ColnnlM >n Mwtlco.
CimirAHUA, Mex., .March 27 —The
BidllgO colony of Mormons in this
state is to bu increased by HO) families
from Utah and 1<j0 families from Eu-
rope, permission for their settlement
in the atate having just been obtained
by Bishop A. T. Stewart from the Mex-
ican government
.for on thr • MinimlgH C*ommttt««.
WaviiimotoN, March 27.—The Mis-
souri republican congressional deleya-
♦ n mi jrmUrdfty d#«id«d on
DIB 1 hlflM f Joy as the
Missouri repre! cntativo on tho con*
tressional campaign committee.
BAl*
DIUECTIOXS for u$i
mm AM HALM — Apt
partie t of Ihc Ha.
r;.< thru lime* i day, <*ftn |
mail* preferred, and btfore
r$Uring.
CATARRH
ELY'S CREAM BAI.M "i "
II«*l the«oi
He l<<re* tb
la qulckif soi
>•« Protect Ih1
,,f T*'t
• >rr>«sl ami gl e« M ' nce
Kn.t InflnBimsiinn
,r),rv. f.nmrol.li
. . • The lUla
.etrll iin.1 \r
A purtlclo l« tpp11«"t into piich '•
ITI.-f v.trk
KI T niuVniKKS - Warren !*tr«st. Now \orK.
HcKINLEY
.^^v:V.vtv.:;*:vtV-*1 th.
' . U. lUXlktua lll . 10., Ih' yfc'*
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Perry Enterprise-Times. (Perry, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 31, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 2, 1896, newspaper, April 2, 1896; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc127716/m1/2/?q=virtual+music+rare+book: accessed June 11, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.