Hope Republican, Volume 1, Number 16, Hope, Bartholomew County, 11 August 1892 — Page 4
mn MraBUCML tfiro jaoSt utlllopo, (Indiana, «is aoooitdclass matter. YVJBLISHED THURSDAY BY .JOSEPH CARTER & SONv •JOSEPH CARTER, - - *Ed*tor. SUBSCRIPTION: <One ' 5 Sfcnjr - ;6i.<K) INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. For Advertising Rates. Awly at Office. THURSDAY, - AUGUST II, B92. TO OUR ADVERTISERS. Tlio«e advertiser* wishing to cliRnge ftUcir a(lver(l8€itif iitH mu«t lurnlsli-tiic •desired copy to Huk office not latertliau 'Saturday morning to injure change uthc following week. FOR PRESIDENT^ BENJAMIN HARRISON, Of Indiana, roil nCE-PKEStRXNT, WHITELAW REID, Of New V »rfc~ STATE TICKET. For Governor, IRA J. CHASE, of Hendricks. For Lieutenant-governer, THEODORJ? WKK'A'NEY -A liandolph. For-Secretary of State, AARON JONES, of St. Joseph. For Auditor of StaS-e, JOHN W. COONS, of Mari ©a. For Treasurer of State, ;F. J. SCHOLTZ, of Vanderburg. For Attorney-general, J. D. FERRALL, of Lagrange. For Supreme Court Reporter, GEORGE P, HAYWOOD, of Tippecanoe, i For Superintendent of Public Imstructlcm, JAMES H. HENRY', of Morgan. For State Statistician, IMEON J. THOMPSON, of Shelby. For Judgesef Supreme Court, Second District—JOHN D. MILLER. Third District—BYRON K. ELLIOTT. Fifth District—ROBERT W. McBEIDE. For Appellate Judge, First District, A. G. CAVINS, of Green, For Appellate Jodge, Socood District, C. S. BAKER, of Bartholomew. For Appellate Judge, Third District, JAMES B. BLACK, of Marlon. For Appellate Judge, Fourth District, It. S. ROBINSON, of Madison. For Appellate Judge, Fifth District, EDGAR C. ORUMPACKER, of Porter. This township has some men who claim to he Republicans whom the devil wouldn’t own if they were his boon companions. They are mugwumps of the meanest and most contemptible sort. They try to dictate to the party, but always kick out of the harness if they are not nominated for an office, and then swap off the other candidates to secure Democratic votes for themselves. Men, we are getting on to some of the sneaking you are doing right now, and filing it away in our little book. If you are Democrats, be honest about it and maybe they will reward you. If not, quit fighting your home journal and come out openly and help roll up a good Republican majority in this township this fall. Democratic Love of Hie Farmer. While our Democratic friends have been willing that the farmer should pay a duty of 68 per cent, on his sugar and a still higher duty on his rice, they have attemped to do nothing more favorable for him than to put him in open and unrestricted competition with the wool growers of foreign countries, where both laud and labor are much cheaper than they are here. The McKinley bill, on the contrary, protects the farmer all along the line. There is nothing he produces that comes in competition with the products of the foreign farmer in our markets, on which the McKinley bill does not provide an ample duty. In this respect, quite as much as in any other, does that Republican measure differ from all the Democratic Tariff bills which have been introduced into this house. But this bill, while it puts the farmer’s wool on the free list, leaves a duty of 39 per cent, upon manufactured woolens. The purpose is plain. This bill holds out a bribe to the manufacturer to join his forces with the Free-
trad eDemocrats to deprive the farmer of the duty on his wool; and when the fanner has thus been shorn of $27,--600,000, which he now gets through Protection, then our wily free-trader . will (propose to him to help repeal the duty on woolens, and so by combining with ’one industry to assault another, and then with the other 'to assault the one, he i designs to knock out one brick -at a time, until the whole structure of protection shallhave been demolished and our rich American market is opened to all the cheap labor products of the globe.—Congressman -Milikon. Prices of manufactured ■products were never so low in our history as they are to-day. The Senate report Allows that agricultural products have advanced 18 ;per cent, since the passage of the new tariff act. 'The balance of trade in our favor during the lasttwelvemonths wasover$200,000,000. Yet the Democrats tell us we cannot trade with foreign countries if we put a tariff on their products. We export of wheat to-day in (oae year more than we did in fifteen years under a Democratic low tairiff. We have sixty-five million of people that consume more than any other ■sixty-five million peojplein the world, because we have more money, because of the protective tariff eaa'oing us to make more money than any other sixty-five maillions of people. The best consumer in the world is the near-by -consumer. Weave told that if we had raw material free in this -country we could go -out and capture the markets of the world. We have the finest raw material in the world, and under the Democratic, tariff we had nothing hut raw material. Protection encourages the American shop—free trade the foreign shop We can have free trade in this country-only when the Rations of the-old world lift up the oonditson of the laboring man until It is equal to ours. Then we will compete with them anywhere in the world and take our chances for supremacy. Foreign nations want us to adopt free trade because under that system they could come in and take our home market from us unless we would bring the condition of our laboring man down to the level of theirs. This we will never do. —Governor McKinley, at Lincoln, Neb,, Aug. 3. J. A. Spaugh is visiting thescenes of his boyhood in Colorado and Wyoming. He grew up on the western plains, from whence he came a few years ago- His life had been spent in the saddle following the, wily Texas steer over the cattle trails of the great west from Puget Sound to the Gulf of Mexico. He was nineteen years old when he visited this neighborhood, the home of his birth, a few years ago. While he wooed and won the hand of Miss Sarah Marlin, who was possessed of 89 acres of good land and some personal property, Ollie was then thought to be a wild, wayward boy, and many were the predictions of disaster that would follow this union, but to the utter astonishment of all Ollie settled down to business, and by industry and close attention to business is to-day the owner of 200 acres of good land, a large amount of personal property and plenty of cash, and, best of all, is one of our best citkens and staunchest Republicans. The Flatrock Baptist Association will meet with the First Baptist church at this place Aug. 23, 24 and 23. This will be the seventeenth anniversary of this association, and lovers of good music and able, instructive sermons should not fail to attend every session. The first day’s session will consist of appointments and reports of committees, introductory and other sermons, reading of letters and women’s home and foreign missions. Rev. A. Aspy, of Adams, and Miss Mollie Aspy, of Anderson visited John Aspy and wife Tuesday. The latter’s daughter, Miss Daisy, accompanied the former home. John Carter, one of Clifty township’s most prosperous farmers, was a caller at this office Tuesday.
NEW FLOUR & FEED EXCH ANGE! I have just opened to the public a new Flour and Feed Exchange in the Reed building, Hope, Ind M and will keep for exchange the celebrated Columbus ROLLER FLOUR And wail also keep a large supply of Feed, Meal, etc., which I will exchange for Wheat at reasonable rates. I cordially invite the puo lie to give me a trial. I will treat yon right. BRUCE L. MILLER.
HS8ISVIU.E College, i N -— A PLEASANT, HEALTHFUL LOCATION, FREE FROM SALOONS AND ATTENDANT VICES. THOROUGH CLASSIC COURSE, REGULAR SCIENTIFIC COURSE, PREPARATORY COURSES, ; COMMERCIAL 'COURSE, MUSIC COURSE, FINE OIL PAINTING. Music department in charge of Miss Augusta Carr, classic graduate from Cincinnati, student of Prof. W. Waugh Lauder. Tuition and incidentals, if8.00 per term.. Board, $2.IK) par week, i Rooms, 50 cents. FALL TERM BEGINS SEPT. 6, ’92.' Send for a catalogue. L. J. Freese, A. M., Pres. TAKE YOUR Upholstering and Repairing WM. BOWEN, HOPE. i INDIANA. Who reupholsters lounges, sofas, chairs, etc., and repairs mattresses at reasonable prices. Furniture of all kinds repaired and varnished on short notice. Nice line samples of upholstering goods to select from. Orders left at L. Albright’s carriage factory or at residence on north Main street will receive prompt attention. Satisfaction guaranteed. “Something - New." WHEEliiTwiLSON No. 9.
T© StltoJa. on. It Saves Time. Xrx T3-u.3rin.gf it "2"oio. Sava In ■CTslsigr it TToia. Save Strong-tli. DEALEItS WANTED In Unoccupied Territory. WHEELER & WILSON MFCK CO, 182 W. Fourth St., Cincinnati, 0. FOR BAZOO BY H. D. LEEDS, HOPE. - - IND.
X-.EHIM:-Ap.3sr <Sc oo.’S Of Light-weight Summer Goods of every description, consisting of Dress Goods, Clothing, Shoes, Slippers, Straw Goods, and Gents’ Furnishings has begun And will continue until sold, in order to make room for our Fail Stock, which will be larger and more 'complete, if possible.^ Come early and secure some of the many bargains we are offering. LEHMAN & CO., Hope, Ind., June 30, 1892. P. S. —We are still offering choice of cur fine collection of Pictures FREE with every cash purchase of $25.00 in six months’ time. DO YOU WANT ’: TO SAVE MONEY? : Try a can of the . .. “Marechal Niel ,• DO YOU LIKE I Coffee, put up in 1 LOW PRICES? 2-lb cans. 1 DO YOU WANT * * FRESH GOODS FOE YOUR TABLE? DO YOU LIKE FAIR DEALING? * * DO YOU LIKE i Try one of our 1 **ND TREATMENT? ; “Diploma” cigars ; did YOU SAY ; The best smoke in 1 “YES?” WELL. ; town for 5 cents. 1 liQ AND TRY Reed & son. THE GROPERS. —>Daniei worm & go..<— PRAGTI GAL Undertakers and Embalmers, And the Leading Finite Dealers, Trade Palace Building, • • HOPE, INDIANA, Mr. Wurth is a Practical Undertaker and Embaimer of IT years’ experience, and his patrons can rest assured that every call will receive his personal attention. Mrs. Worth (his wife) is a practical embaimer, and will take charge of all ladies and children if requested. FURNITURE at lower prices than elsewhere. Stock new and complete. Residence next door to store. Light in front room all night. P. S. E. I Huber, of Columbus, has no interest whatever in this store. 1853 GO TO THE 1892 RELIABLE FOB Hardware, Stoves and Tinware, Tin,' steel and Iron Roofing, Iron, Wood and Chain Pumps, Cement, Plaster and Hair. My stock is complete. GEORGE D. WEINLAND a Hope, Indiana. fa the Republican four Job Printing This Time!
