Perry Enterprise-Times. (Perry, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 41, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 4, 1898 Page: 2 of 8
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J
JOHN J. EN RIGHT.
In this issue appears the announce-
ment of the above named gentleman
1 for the nomination for county attorney
VTe are authorised to announce the name ;
of John.J Knrlght as a candidate for the of. subject to the notion of tue Uepublican
fice of County Attorney, subject to the cU-ds ...inVftntinn ir.q aKt|!t. nR n nractitmner
lou of the Republican county convention. j convention, 11m aouiiy >s a pracuuoner
( is recognized throughout the territory,
having been prominently i<Jeutiti> d with
1 the legal and judicial departments of nu
ANNOUNCEMENTS,
COUNTY ATTORNEY.
SHERIFF.
I hereby announce myselt as a candidate , ——- «--■ T1""*"
- • • - to the decision of the ! inerous of her c«'ies.[8inoe the opening
for sheriff, subject
Republican county convention.
GfcOJtliU a. FO-STKK.
I hereby announce myself as a candidate
for the office of sheriff, subject to the decls*
COUNTY CLEttK.
f hereby announce myself a-; a condldate
for County Clerk, subject to the decision <>f
the Republican county convention.
K. T.ODKN.
We are authorized to announce the name
of Homer 1'. Larsh asacandldaet for the
oQm df county Clerk, iubject to the di1 If*
ion of the Republican county convention.
PUBLIC WEIGHER
We are authorize^to announce the name
of ▲ . I. Acers.of the Rig Horn Meat Market,
ns a candidate for Public Weigher, subject
to the decision of the Republican county
convention.
Cards are out for the apology.
Chanc.k in the administration. Price
of lots in the addition" of Perry will not
eiceed $4
Those parties rrtu«t be as narrow * s
the platforms and principles if Keaton
can straddle the three
Ephriam Sells the elder of the Sells
Brothers, circus rpen. died at Columbus,
Ohio, yesterday of Bright's disease.
Jerry Simkson is back to his home at
Medicine Lodge ready for his campaig
His oampaign has not been outliued as
yet.
Through an error wo have been run-
ning the county convention to be held
Sept 1D#Vwhen it should have been
Sept. 10. •' •
Thf. local Diplomatic corps have come
to the conclusion that Bismark wasn't
mu?h of a fellow, but he had an awful
good army.
of Oklahoma. And while such organi-
/, itions hnve as a rule been given to d is -
bonesty and cjrruption, no one can say
that John Hnrght. has wronged any
man by abuse of authority or has prov
ep false to any trust confided to him as
a citizen, attorney or official. With an
eastern education, with that experience
peculiar to our people,, Ik> is a man who
best ||knowsour wnnts and is cognizant
of our duties. Particularly recogniz^d
as a despiser of hypocrisy, plain and
outspoken, the community knows him
just as he is—candid, honoct and sin-
cere.
Ah our present police jut'g. to which
position he w s e'e :ted by an overwhelm
iug majority, he has been ever awake to
the interests of the city and has made
en enviable record as a fair and impar-
tial official, aud every tax payer can rest
arsured that if he is our next county
attorney the affairs of the otlica will be
administered in a manner honorable to
himself ana meritorious ot the conH
dence that sha'l have been imposed in
him by the electors.
GEORGE A F08TER
In another column will be found the '
ON TO MANILA.
announcement of George A. Foster for
the oftice of sheriff of Noble county.
Mr. Foster is too well known to our
readers to n«ed any introduction through
us. He is one of the solid farmers of
lied Rock township, a straight forward
hnsiness man who has gained the uu- Ae Rapidly as Possible and the Down-
qualified respect and confidence of our
FRE8H INFORMATION 0AU3' S RAD-
ICAL CHANGE IN PLANS.
TROOPS TO BE HURRIED
Guthrie papers laugh at us because
we',said Perry was a dry city Sunday,and
say they are from Missouri They ought
to have been here
Peack matters could be facilitated
very materially in the Philippines if
Oewey would turn one of his 6 pounders
on the half breed Aguinaldo,
Kkatoh'h three horse hippodrome
bare back riding is expected to attract
♦he attention of the whole world. This
is the tirst attempt of any man tc ber-
form the feat.
Through "the laws' delays" the Alva
formal will be completed before the ac-
tion enjoining further building will be
beard, and thus will a job of petty jeal-
ously be frustrated.
Since Bill Grimes has announced that
heisnot^or Capt. Bob Huston for con
tfr-BB, Beckmeyer has collapsed on the
Rough Rider boom. What relation is
Barnes to Grimes?
Albert .1. Bulauu.
Among the many candidates for hon-
ors before the coming Republican coun~
ty convention there has been none men
tioned that we could recommend more
h ghly than that of Albert J. Balaun
for sheriff. Mr. Balaun is of Bohemian
descent, his parents leaving the mother
country in 180G. lie waa born on the
way over under the stars and stripes.
The family settled in Pennsylvania and
after ten years moved to Ottowa county,
Kansas, where he enjoyed farm life until
he became of age when left f^>r Califor
nia. Th«re he engaged successfully in
the lumber and fruit comni'ssion busi
ness until the opening of the Strip,when
he came to Perry and entered in*othe
hardware business, which he is yet en
gaged in. He is recognized as one of the
hard working Republicans of the county
and as a member of the present council
from the 2nd ward, carries the confidence
and esteem of his constituents. A jovial
good natureJ.hail fellow well met,whose
acquaintance means friendship, compe
tant and thorough in business affairs,the
Republicans would make no mistake in
nominating A1 Balaum for Sheriff of
Noble county.
people.
He is a native of the state of Ohio,but
had lived the past 15 years in Kansas be
fore coming to Oklahoma on the lGth of
September, 1893, when he located on his
present farm on R«*d Rock, one ef the
finest in the county.
Two years ago he was the Republican
nominee for sheriff and with a normal
fnsion majority of 270 against him was
defeated by 81 votes—a maUer trulv re
gretted since by a majority of those who
voted pgainst him, Since then he has
gained a friend with each acquaintance
and if chosen by th« party as their choice
fur the oflice, will be our next sheriff,
Homer I*. Largli.
Homer P Larsh is announced in this
issue as a candidate for the Republican
nomination for county clerk, There ie
nothing thst we can add in a way com-
mendatory of nim as our readers know
him better than we can tell as to his
character and ability.
He was born and reared in Kdinburg,
Illinois, being 28 years of age. He came
from there the first dav of Perry's exis
tence and for four years and a half, as
Agent Westervelt'a cashier, he made
friends of all who had business dealings
with him or with whom he came in con-
tact in a social way.
He was elected last spring a member
of the city council, beiag the youngest
member holding a s at in that body, and
has made an excellent record as a con-
servative and worthy official, He is now
connected with the Perry Mercantile
Company as book keeper. Bred from
Republican stock, temperate and relia-
ble with unq jestioned ability, the party
will make no mistake in nominating
this hustling young Republican for the
oflice he desires.
fall of the City Will be Followed by
The Philippine Proclamation
—Insurgents Desert,
FREE SILVERITES.
It is to be hoped that Bruce wiil
square his contest manipulations before
we get to him. Bill is a pretty good fel-
low and "nth Ed Stagg's future deputy
tfhip we dislike to abuse h'tn.
The result of the supreme coort rul-
ing that witnesses are not entitled to
fees will cause some large stzsd tears
aud cuss words from the capitalists who
hive bought certificates at the usual
discount.
Ar^usT 4 is Indian Day at Omaha and
live hundred of the dusky boys, repre-
sentative of thirty tribes, will b9 on p i-
rHde. It is hoped that Deputy Marshal"
will bj barred and the show prove a
success
With Billy Bowles' petition on the
•"Price ■ f Absolution" and "Politics and
•Glory" he is in hard lines this early in
•the campa'gn. It will take several of
Smiling Willie's explosions of mirth t«<
cut the mustard this fall whicn is sadly
realized by Willie.
«Gf.N Garuia is reported to have said
that the Cuban army could hove won iu
dlependeuce without American ussis
t*n€& Outside observers think that a
few years more of Weyler would have
•c jmpleted the extermination of the Cu
bans. The facts end figures are againrt
sUarcia's views.
E. T ('DEN-
In his announcement for sounty clerk
before the Republican convention, E T.
Oden presents a record which is worthy
of the consideration of every Republi-
can of Noble county.
He vva3 bom of Republican parents at
Dresden, Ohio, 3^ years ago. In 1870 the
family moved to Kansas, where they re
s.ded five yearn, going from there to
Harrison county, Missouri, where young
Odeu grew to manhood and where he
secred an excellent education. He
taught two terms of school there and
then entered the postoftice as sesistant
to his father under President Harrison's
administration.
He came to Oklahoma September 23,
1831, and has lived here since, coming to
Perry on the third train from Orlando
in the opening, lie took up his vocation
as school teacher aud taught a very 6uc
cecsful term of school in south Lowe
township, and on June 5,1893 acccepted
a position in the local postoffice,which he
acceptably tilled until July 1, 18'JJ, when
he res gned on account of ill health,
caused by the close confinement and
hard labor of the office
During his service in the postollice,
where we best know him, lie gained the
oonlidence of every patron for prompt
ueaa and competency. He writes an el -
egant hand and is in every partiaular
well tilted for performing the dut-es of
county clerk and his selection for that
place wou'd please a host of friends.
TERRITORIAL JOTTINGS
The W. R. C. of Ponca City wiU give
a concert at the opera house next Tues-
day night for the benefit of the Oklaho-
ma boys in Cuba.
John I. Dille, one of the leading* at-
torneys of the Territory, has been elect-
ed Dean of Highland Park college of
law, at Des Moines, Iowa, and will take
his position Sept. 18th.
Sam McKee, the 17 year old boy of
Lockhart, Okla., who was placed in the
Guthrie jail July let for hores stealing,
has gone violently insane,
Mrs. Leavitt, of this city, has begun a
suit for 611,000 against the vVestern
Union Telegraph Co., for causing the
death of one of her children. It seems
that she alleges that she telegraphed to
have a bus meet the train some months
ago when she was coming with the child
an.1 the message was not delivered.
While at the depot waiting to secure a
vehicle to take the chlH home, it died
in the waiting room. Hence the action
brought to recover.—Ponca City C >urier.
A Young Hough Ruler.
From Jewel City, Kansas, Mr, D L.
Palmer writes of the birth of a tine boy
to his children, Prof, O. G. and wife.
The father of the young Rough Rider
was on his way to Santiago as orderly
sergeant of troop D and it may be posei
ble that at this time he is unaware of
the birth of the heir.
The grand father says that the boy-
will be named Orlando Gray Palmer Jr.,
after the father who may yet not return
from the war for humanity and his
country.
Sau Francisco, August 2.—It is evi
dent that the government has bad fresh
information from Manilla thathas caus-
ed a radical change in plans, or else has
changed its policy,
A week ago orders were received here
looking to the cessation of transporta-
tion of troops to Manilla. Quartermas-
ter Long wj,is ordered to secure uo more
transports.
Today orders were received which in-
dicate that at least 125,000 more soldiers
are to be sent to the Phillippiues, and
that this large force is to be hurried to
Manila as rapidly as possible.
It is the intention to debark part of
the troops from Portland aud Seattle be
cause transports which were intended
for the Klondike trade can be secured at
those places.
Chicago, August 2 —The Chicago I\9C
ord's dispatch from John T. McCutch-
eon who is now with Dewey at Manila,
states that General Merritt has prepar-
ed a proclamation to the Philippines
but it will not be issued until after the
fall of Manila The situation is extreme
y critical in the city. It is reported on
good authority that Manilla would sur-
render if it were not for the fear that
the insurgents would sack the city.
Two companies of insutgents, it is
said*, have gone over to the Spanish
cause.
The Monterey and remaining trans-
ports have not arrived at Manila
PEACE ACCEPTED
BY SPAIN IN THE PRINC PAL 00N
DITI0N8.
A. I. Acres
Today we announce the t ame of A. 1
Acres fur county weigher, subject to the
action of the Republican convention,
Mr. Acres was born in lg.jO in Deio-
\vat« cojinty, Iowa, his father be:ng a
wall to do farmer At the age of 15 hie
parents moved to Texas where he grew I
up in the stock nnd butcher business,
c inducting one of the finest meat mar-
COUNTY FINANCES. ket8 in Dallas, Texas, for anumbdr of
The Fettlemen', of two cases in the ye"_rs
past few days adds $20,800 to the c. IVeis j tTpon the opening of the Cherokee
of Noble county. Strip he came to Perry and opened the
The tirst was thoc is* of the City | '!iK Horn meat market which he has
.School Hoard vs. (i, T. Hr) an. treasurer i ! "uocessfully conducted up to the pres-
jjn which the supreme court held the j timP- He has an interesting family
Territorial school build ng law valid ; Bnd on a farm three uortb of the
Mil Will give th* City fc|,800 for the burn j oitv- Mr Aor88 h,1B b>' h'8 straight for.
aog Liw oast side school buildiug laht i wtiri' bUBine*scoupse won the conlldence
(Winter. ""d reePe<Jt °f "ur people aud it is with
yesterday the Slant# Pe tax dispute I *V0r>' insurance that we can say he will
.«iit settled and the railroad pajd oyer to j mi,ke' «nd painstaking olli ■
the county treasurer 817.000 for { A«, ; P r it '>• Bhould receive the position to
und penaltieson their property in the j vvhioi. «e usjnres.
Otoe and Miasoan reservation. Therein " ,
I ne lowuu'to Hoard have secured the
rooms upstair
A HEAlTHY GIRL,
AT SWEET SIXTEEN S A BEAUTI-
FUL SIGHT.
In a recent lett«r to Dr 11 art man Mrs.
•J. Ij. Jud , of Washington CJ. H , Ohio,
writes: ''Four years vgj my daughter
had the typhoid
fever, which 'eft
her verv weak
and with a
cough. Our phy
sioiana called it
c on s u mpt i o ri
She was confined
ONLY TWO AMENDMENTS
Will he Asked of America's Terms and
All Hostilities Will Cease—The
Commission Will be Formed to
Formulate a Treaty and the
War Cease.
New York. August 2—A cable'to the
Evening Journal from Madrid, publish-
ed in a late extra edition of that paper
says:
Spain accepts the principal conditions
of peace as set forth by the American
government and only the peace details
are needed to cause all hostilities to
cease.
A peace delegation will be chosen at
once to confer with the representatives
of the United States. The peace condi
tions set forth by President McKinley
were discupsed at length by Minister
Sagasta, and at the conclusion it was
given out officially that ths terms of th
United States would be accepted. There
are one or two amendments in the propo
sition that Spain will ask to be mad*,
and if thi" is done peace will be dec'ared
at once.
Immediately upon the acceptance of
terms by Hpain a commission will be ap
pointed, to be named by Hpain and the
United States, to oonclude a treaty < f
p^ace on the basis of agreement o >n
tamed in the note to Spain.
Issue a C il for a Delegate Convention
at Guthrie Sept. 1st,
Oklahoma City, Aug. 2.—There were
fourteen counties represented here to
day in the caucus called by the populists
of Pottawatomie county. The counties
hure were Kay, L>gan, Noble, Garfield,
O he ma, Lincoln, Cleveland, Pottowat
<u . Woods, Canadian, Kingfisher
W < award, Blaine and Payne.
W. J. Crawford of Kay, was made
chairman and J. N.Clark of Lincoln
secretary.
The conditions were thoroughly die -
cussed. Every man present was a pop-
ulist of the middle-of-the-road variety
Each protested agamst the attempt of
the mongrels to drive them into thedern
ocratic p irty. Each wanted a ni'ddle of
the road populist candidate for con
gress.
A convention was called at Guthrie
September 1st. for that purpose, with a
representation based on the same vote
for Callahan as the last populist conven
tion, which gives 'GO delegates.
Noble county gets s x delegates.
—
THE PROPOSITION
Which Spain Mi'st Accept .to Obtain
P* ace,
all hop
l*r? I'. Page's Lecture
Last night at 7*:i0, Prof. I. E Pflgp,
president of the Langston University
spoke to a large and enthusiastic audi
ence at the A. M. E. church.
After the opening sing. "All Hail,"
led by Ivev. Cole, and prayer by Rev
At well, Prof. Page was introduced and'
in a pleasant and fluent manner, spoke
of Langston college. He carefully out-
lined the woek of the University in its
elementary, normal nnd collegiate de-
partments and staged that the agricul-
tural and mechanical departments would
be opened in the near future.
He gave a good, hard sense lecture to
his hearers along th« l.nes of higher edu
cation as the demand of the hour for hi«
Washington, August 2.—The follow-
ing official statement was given out at
the White House today at 12;35:
"The president does not demand pecu
niary indemnity for damages; he re-
quires the relinquishment of a'l claims
of sovereignty over Cu >a and iis imme-
diate evacuation by the Spanish army;
the cession of Porto Kico and islands in
che West Indies now under the sover-
eignty of Spain is d«manded. The prts
ident demands the cession of one of the
Ladrone islands to the United S.ates
Pending the conclusion of peace and
fulfillment of all obligations the United
States is to retain possession of Manila
and Manila Bay.
Townsite New«.
Trustees B, B. Crawford and George
Todd are here today and in a few dajs
will commence operations in proving up
North weal, West and Northeast Perry
North Perry the Line addition, wj|t
follow later as the motion for rehearing
has just been overruled and the case
closed in favor of the settlers.
The lots in the additions named will
be assessed according to th« value of
the naked lot, regardless of improve-
ments, and the highest assws neat for i;
deed will not exceed $4. The settlers
are to be congratulated upon receiving
the services of the present board, as we
had anticipated paying the usual price
of about 320 per lot
The notice requiring th« Northeast
Perry settlers to make application for
their deeds was givpp some eight
months ago, and as nu further official to
tice will he given and only twenty days
allowed to m ike applications, those par
ties claiming lots in the Malone quarter
had better make their application this
week. There is no limit on the number
of lots one person can take if the assess-
ment on each lot is paid.
The board will be at woik here for
pome five or six months.
Costs He-taxed.
Jn the District Court yesterday even
mi; the Noble county cost" in the case of
Territory vs Jfrank Hall urd which was
tried hereon change of venue, were re
taxed and District Clerk Horn's bill re
duced from to £77, by Judge Hain
er. This waa brought about chi*Hy
through the fact that the supreme
court last Saturday decided that the
county could not pay witness fees con
trary to the last legislative enactment,
and as Clerk Harn's principal charge
was for certificates of witnesses and
oaths as to attendance and travel this
portion of the bill was knocked out
Hereafter it may be staled witnesses
will not be paid fe# s in the trentorial
criminal ca°es as has been done in the
past two years
BISMARK DEAb.
THE GLHMAN RULER PEACEFULLY
PASSES AWAY.
of her.
r\ J°j"| ; people ff I hey wished to cope in the race
March, aril four j of''fe'anii ftlso impressed upon them
of our best phv- j 'heir relationship nod iluty to the
fr-'iurs U[i college anil exorerstd a fervent desire to
I K"t one of your hook 11 pee this part i f the territory well repre
and it rs omraenHed I'e ru-na no highly ; senttd therij during tljtj fall term, which
that 1 concluded to try a bo',tie, and it j oamnmnces Sept. 4
was wonderful to watuh the change it! The Profeeeor's dess^rtation w.t olo-
made. Heforo Bhe had taken two hot- , i,uent and instructive anal tboM who
tle« she cou'd go about the house and heard him readily placed him foremost
yar and aft.-r taking ten bottles sh^
win well and at ong. She «^as twelve
y -ars old when she ti St took sick. She
id now sixteen and haa the best of health
and no sign of trouble I wou'd not
keep home without Pe-ru na. It. ie thf j
most wonderful medicine and the best
In the h-t of educators and orators and
highly deserving of the vote of thanks
tendered him at the olose of h-u lecture.
still about $2,000 back on this suit held
in abeyance until the question of t wn-
ship and school tax lew ih adjudicoUd
tby the supreme court, the tola! amount
sieged to be due the county from the
•railroad company be ng in tiiencighb i
iiood t>f *20,000.
clerk's ofti
b* r nd) f-
opposite the
in thp nur' i. , i.
business in a day or two
Married.
James Carpenter and M:sa Cora Blair
.... , . _ were united in marriage July3ls\ by
that I eve, found. I never „et Und °f Judge T. Jayne, at the home of the
Singing its pra, es to my friends and ' (jri|le,8 p,ir,nts jn ,, jd{ towrishi
■ lutriut I "" " '° "nBWW ' T,'e fr""ldn ,""1 of the young
, vil, , liny letters of ;n.,u,ry that may be writ- ' p^ple were present and bad an ,„j,yu
1 "" r. ii . , . , We time. Tin happy doupls are now
. , ,|, . p l' ui , r I t";,1 , I book ] viiitioK M,. Carpenter'- parents at Bl
I he infant child of U. fc, Hlout of near . entitle "H,ilth and Ueauty." Sent D0rlll|0f 1Un,t /.'ut ln the near fut,„e
Mo o was drowned yeste day by falling s ,« to w„,nan only, by Ur. Ilartman, I wi„ relurn to lbs;r ,, d
in o a tub of water, Columbus, Ohio. Hook
The Normal.
Through some misunderstanding the
high school building wai not secured by
Prof. Alien for the opening of the nor
mal, and a meeting was held at th'
Chris ian church last night, which was
largely attend, q by th..se interested in
t'>e work. Speech^, reciWUons and
iinpic form <d a pleasant program At
1 o'clock tod ly the regular program of
the school work was taken up at the
same place, where it *jl| I*. conducted
until the repairs are completed on the
high school building, when it will lw
transferred, to conlinue during ths
month
Notion to Nt'WHiuip^rs.
1 mil now ready for a tile of all Okla-
homa newspapers and will be pleaded to
have every publication sent to me until
the tirst of November, so that persons
Visiting the exposition from the different
"ounties can have their own paper to
read.
Jl.'HM QOLOUIK,
S'c Oklalomi Commission, Trans-Miss
Imposition, Omaha, Neb.
Druggis, Kd IJonne'ly is up from
(iuthrie to day on pharmaceutical bud.
ness,
HIS DEATH A SURPRISE.
Owing to the Secrecy Maintained by
l''amily and Phteimane and the
Culmination of Long Stand-
ing Chronio Disease -The
World .Send Words
of Condolence,
Freidrickeube, July :k).—Prince bis-
mark died just before 11 o'clock this
evening.
Prince Biemark, or to give his full
name and ti^le. Prince Otto Ednard
Leopold voo Uismarrk-Shoenhaueen.
was born April 1, 1815, on the knight'j
estate of yc'ioenhnusen near Stents], in
Prussian Saxony. He came of an old
family of the lower order of Prussinn
nobility.
The begiouing of the end dates frooi
JulyJOth, when the prince was contined
to hiB bed. He had been several day,
prostrated before an inkliDg of hie d«.
oline reached the w<>rld.
Bismarck waa one ot the central tig,
uresof the century. In an age prolific
of great men, he w aa, measured alike by
the range of his intellect and the ma-
jesty of his achievement*, probably tbs
greatest personality of hia time, lis
whs the produot of a single idea—tin
unitica'ion of the thirty .nine states of
the German confederation into a feder-
ation of which Pru.sia wae to be pre-
dominant. This was the dresmofhis
youth, the realization ot his old sge.
He lived to eee ambitious youth prspsr.
ed to discount his uiaivelous life work,
when the work «as d<ne, yet his fame
towered so contpicuouely that that of
the greatest (jermau monarch is but t
dwarf to a giant beside It
Bismarck Derdr humbugged the peo-
ple—one reepect in which he chiefly
differed from statesmen of his time. He
did not obtain his eminence through
the practice of political jugglery like
Iteaconstield, or through pas mg popu-
lar measures or by brill-ant scholarship
like Gladstone, or by changing and then
reconstructing the national government
like Thiers. He nevsr pandered to pop
ular pa«sion nor courted popularity. It
is doubtful if he was ever really populai
du'ing official life, lie wua never a man
of very agreeable temper, not alwsya a
"histertield to his people, but he ...
to them a benefactor. He was tirst
among constructive European states-
men; snalching his country from a crisi.
in which she might have become the
prey of revolution or Ih • envy of neigh-
boring stiiter, reversing the march uf
empire from Austria's direction and
sending it toward Prussia, detaching
the contending elem nis of a polyglot
"tateonone border and humbling her
threatening foes on the other and f, re-
going the component states into one
homogeneous nationality, with larger
hbertiee, improve.] system of education,
more secure government; msking, tn
fact, of all one people with a cooibi'jl
d«stiny, a common 'anguag# and a com-
m <n Mag.
1 he whole world tonight mourns ths
passing of the insater ipint.
lowiieliip I'riniHrte*.
NOiLF. TP
Primary for the election of delegate*
to the county congressional prevention
w il !>e held at iuy house on August 11.
18'U, from \ to ti p. m.
O 8. Flu it a, Committeemen,
ar.n kook tp.
The primary for electing delegate, to
the countv congressional convention in
this township Will be hsld at the school
house on se >jr '.li-'JR i weet on August
II, from ■: to 1 o'clock p. m
I', K DciVII A M, Com
AUTRY 1 P,
1 nmane# for the election of debates
to the county congr^s lonal convention
will be held at Morrison Aug 11, 18SH,
from 2 tf> 4 p. m. Fr.i Jo.vks, Com.
ACai RN TP.
I he primary for the election o^ of del-
egHt .« U) the county congreeeional con-
vention wilj 60 hsld at Humner post of-
tice, August 11, from 2 to G p. m.
W. p, Pom.i:, C« ni
WATtlNS TP.
1 hjj Kepublican primaries for electing
"e.agates to the munty ioongreseion*i
convention will he held at Uonfil's plnoe.
ne «|r 1 wtj<jt, August Utb, from J
to 4 p. m.
A Thief Oapturatl.
Harry 8hort rniw1" cook, Lewis Her
mi*e, who worked fur him last week a >d
disapi>eare<l bunday with all th«* kitch n
furniture he coijld uarry. was uaugbt
yeeterday at Cleburne, Te*as. As the
fTenee was not sufficient In warrant a
rei|uisition he will probtb'v l>e dis
charged.
Klrst Pub. in Weekly Katerprlse.Tlmss
August 4. 1HHS.]
N0TI0E.
o whom II MAT conf'kk.n
hn.t7\ h,Mr,,,,y Klven that Joseph rsfTsriy
in r ' ly nlHl h,H Petition for llrens"
nMaU Ui,uor.s in P rry, N<SI>le County,
lahoma Inrrltory, ami tlvat unleg* ohlectloa
a,l,u'- HH ^MUlre.l hy law. he n!••«! hy
ti iiw ii y ,,f Au/• A
non will {(ranted.
t •Au* *. ***•
AM.KJS lUMI.f,
County clerk
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Perry Enterprise-Times. (Perry, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 41, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 4, 1898, newspaper, August 4, 1898; Perry, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc127754/m1/2/: accessed April 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.