Indiana State Sentinel, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 May 1894 — Page 9
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ESTABLISHED 1822. INDIANAPOLIS, WEDNESDAY MORNING, MAY 2, 189-1 TWELVE TAGES. ONE DOLLAR A YEAR. BAGS THE
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THE CONVENTION NOMINATES A TICKET FRIENDLY TO HIM
And Goes Wild Vith Cheers When He Appears to Make a Speech After Long, Bitter Struggles the Old Ticket Is Knocked Out Col. Richard Thompson Presides The Platform Fights Shy of Pertinent Questions Five Thousand Souls in the Convention Hall Ex-Congressman W. D. Owen Heads the Ticket W. A. Ketcham, of This City, for Attorney - General The . Session Continues Long Into the Night Harrison's SpeechProceedings By Ballot Notes.
Secretary of State TV. D. Owen. Auditor of State A. C. Daily. Treasurer of State F. J. Scholz. Attorney-General W. A. Ketcham. Supreme Court Reporter Alexander Hess. Superintendent of Public Instruction D. il. .Geeting. State Statistician S. J. Thompson. State Geologist W. S. Blatchley. Judge Supreme Court, First District J. H. Jordan. Judge Supreme Court, Fourth District L. J. Monks. It was the beginning of an end, that convention that assembled in Tomlinson hall Wednesday morning. It was the beginning of the end of a campaign of villlfication, backcapplng, hypocrisy and forgery. It was the windup of a contest in which the forty-one men who aspired to stand as the candidates on the republican ticket for the ten etate offices within the gift of the voters of this great commonwealth fought not to gain the coveted prizes upon their merits and honesty of purpose, but by the most vicious, underhanded and despicable method3. It was one of the noifest and most unruly political assemblages that has gathered in this city for many a day, the presiding officer at times being absolutely unable to enforce the rules laid down for the government of Its proceed- I ings. Tiie vaporish resolutions adopted by the convention, in accordance with the expectations of many, embodied an indorsement of the fanatical A. P. A., clumsily veiled, and that organization, as was predicted, proved a potent factor in the gathering. The edict went forth early in the day that the "dark room workers" were determined that no Hebrew should receive any consideration at the hands of the republican party, and from that moment the doom of Marcus L. Sulzer, candidate for secretary of state, and Leopold Levy, aspirant for treasurer, the only seekers after nomination of that religious faith, was sealed. Despite the fact that all persons not delegates were supposed to be rigidly barred from the lower floor the members of this arrogant and impudent organization managed to gain accers thereto without the slightest difficulty, and they easily encompassed the defeat of the candidates named. That the convention was absolutely In the hands of the friends of ex-President Harrison there Is no doubt whatever. The first man who captured a nomination, W. D. Owen, candidate for secretary of state. Is one of the most ardent Harrison men in Indiana, and eerved under Harrison as his commissioner of emigration during his term of ofllce. If any of the men who fought so valiantly for Gresham in the campaign of 1892 were in the convention as delegates they must have felt very lonely when the harpoon was ihrust into G. W. Wilson of Ft. Wayne. Wilson, however, was not more cruelly slaughtered than was John Coons, although the reasons were not the same. That gentleman and his friends were absolutely confident that he would go into the convention with 110 of the 130 delegates from this county, when he really came In with only 83 of that number. Men who had sworn to support him first, last, and all the time, traded him right and left in order to secure the nomination for attorney-general for this county. . Long before the hour set for calling the convention to order a steady stream of badge-bedecked delegates ana politician's began to throng the thoroughfares in the vicinity of the hall. Upon arriving at the objective point they found the doors barred against them, 9 o'clock having been fixed as the time for the opening of, the halt They then collected in groups and in an animated manner discussed the prospects and chances of the various candidates. When the doors were finally swung oien there wa a grand rush for the entrances, and the doorkeepers were almost carried away from their posts in the mad scramble. When the mob reached the hall the confabs begun In the street were resumed, and the hum of conversation swelled into a roar. Candidates hustled hither and thither, making and receiving all sorts of pledges. The arrangements for seating the 1,713 delegates were made early In the week by Harry Mounts, sergeant-at-arms, who had fifty assistants on his staff. The delegates were seated by districts, those casting heavy votes being well to the front of the hall. Th Seventh, which included Marion's big delegation of 130, was located as near the center as possible. Two rostrums occupied positions In the main body of the hall In a direct line with the chairman's desk, from which callers could repeat the vote as received from the chairman of the various delegations. A section had been reserved for the alternates In the rear of the hall, they being seperated from the regular delegates by a railing. In addition to the vast number of delegates and alternates on the lower floor, the east balcony was overflowing with ladies and their escorts and the .wst) balcony resembled & vast Ug
party with here and there a cloud of tobacco smoke curling skyward, despite the ordr against smoklr.gr lneorpoi ated in the permanent organization rulc-s. A conservative estimate places the number of persons in the great convention hall, when John K. Gowdy called for order at 10 o'clock, at 5.0 0. It looked like a dignified, respectable body, incapable of inaugurating the riotous proceedings that followed when its tail was twisted. At one time, when a rising vote was called for, the scene was most lmpre5sive: but when the storm broke and that vast concourse of humanity swayed across the convention floor and allowed its mutterings and cursos to ascend 19 high heaven the uproar was tremendous and the convenion was beyond the control of the presiding officer. Conspicuous among the decorations were pictures of Lincoln, Grant, Garfield, ISIaine, Harrison and McKinley, while streamers of red, white and blue were suspended in graceful folds from the chandeliers When the convention got down to business it was early seen that there were to Le many long, weary struggles, the result of the trading arranged vr.th a view of knocking out the "old-ticket" people. Shrewd politicians accomplished this, with one exception, by using W. L. Taylor and his workers to good advantage, and not only were the old peopla shelved effectively, but the younger element received such a stinging blow below the belt that it has not yet recovered.
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COL. RICHARD THOMPSON. ' Briefly summarized, the results cf the convention were: Harrison men got everything in sight; the "oil ticket" was annihilated; the Hebrew Candida es were beaten by the A- P. A.'s. ai d the younger element stood not the Lost of a show. pi:rmaxk.t orgamzatiox, Jack Cowilf I ii I rod qiti Col. Thompson, Ulio .Ma kr a a Speech. "Jack" Gowdy, chairman of the state central committee, pushed his way through the crowd that thronged ths platform about 10 o'clock and walking to the front took his seat behind a pine table ornamented with a very bad 1ml tatlon of that king cf birds, the eagle. The Rush county statesman tenderly caressed his golden beard, freEh from the hands of a barber, for five consecutive minutes, and then cast a sweeping glance upon the sea of faces that confronted him. Then he seized the historic gavel, con' s tructed of a part of the iole raised c!ur ing the Grandpa Harrison campaign In 1S40. and made three dents In the pln table. The buzz of conversation subsided almost directly and th republican state convention of 1854 was ready for business. At a signal from the chairman the delegates and spectators arose to their feet and stood with bowed headswhile the Itev. T. I. Coultas Invoked the blessings of Providence upon the deliberations of the convention. IVrnmnrnt OrRimlimlon. The report of the committee on rules and permanent organization, the substance of which has already been published, was then received. The committee named the Hon. R, W. Thompson of Terre Haute permanent chairman and Charles W. Wilson of Lafayette as permanent secretary. The report wa adopted. When the venerable "Dick" Thompson stepped briskly- to the edga of the platform, despite his great ace, a wave of enthusiasm swept over th great hall, which lasted for several minutes and quiet was only restored when the lips of the Gladstone of the repuN. lican party were seen to move. Mr, Thompson said: Col. Thompson' 5prrrh. Gentlemen of the Convention Facts sra stubborn things, and this magnificent convention demonstrates jeyon.l doubt th gieat facts that the republican party of Indiana is alive; that it is thoroughly aliv alive all over and prevaring to buckl on the armor and battle against any foe on earih which dares assail the honor of our nation. We are en Urtn Into a great struggle which &9f
