Hope Republican, Volume 1, Number 17, Hope, Bartholomew County, 18 August 1892 — Page 6
HOPE REPUBLICAN. By Carter & Son. HOPE INDIANA W- 1 '!' ""i. ii. i —» Another war on the sugar trust is brewing. Nine Massachusetts convicts escaped from the penitentiary recently through the sanitary pipes. They escaped per sewers at the public ex. pense. Young men are ou deck for this campaign. Harrity. the Democratic chairman, isn’t forty-two, aud Carter, the Republican chairman, is a good deal under forty. It cost $4,000 to notify Cleveland and Stevenson of their nomination. This '‘formal notification” of the nomination is all nonsense, anyhow, in this age of telegraphy. Ontario convicts are now forced to make twine and rope. This is worse than the old custom of a parent sending a boy into the woods to cut a switch with which to punish him. Why do men of prominence allow their names to be used by the pro' moters of the “snide” investmentschemes? is a question made pertinent by the failure of the company controlling the imaginary city of Tallapoosa, Georgia, which carried on its board of directors a list of names well calculated to impress people with its responsibility. The preference of the Western man for “a steady, healthy growth” over a boom is explained by the statement of a correspondent that there are twenty well built towns in Kansas without a single inhabitant to waken the echoes of their deserted streets. Saratoga has a $30,000 opera house, a large brick hotel, a $20,000 school house and a number of fine business houses, and yet there is nobody even to claim a place to sleep. At Fargo a $20,000 school house stands on the side of the hill, a monument to the bond voting craze. Tramps ought to utilize these towns as summer resorts. Macaulet once said that English virtue awakens every seven years to sacrifice a victim, and then goes to sleep. There are recent events con. firmatory of this declaration. Parnell was hounded to his grave for moral offenses that were virtuous compared to those of Sir Charles Dilke, the exposures of whose licentiousness shocked the world ; yet the latter goes back to Parliament as a Liberal and a follower of Gladstone. Tbe horror of his immorality was soon forgotten. The first pensions ever granted by the United States were provided for in bills introduced in Congress in April, 1778. On May 15, 1778, Con. gress passed a bill granting that “ ail officers who shall serve to the close of the war shall receive half pay for seven years thereafter, and all private soldiers shall secure a reward of $80. ” This same Congress gave permission to South Carolina and Georgia to raise 3,000 troops of able bodied negroes for service, for whom Congress agreed to pay $1,000 for every soldier thus mustered into service, provided that no bounty or pay he allowed said negroes, ” and also provided that every such negro shall be emancipated at the end of the war and receive $50. " The New York Sun has found a mare’s nest in the statistics of tho United States census. It is in the roll of pensioners: Columbus has. .. 72,863iMilwauke4 3-1.941 Topeka 69.550|Detroit 33,387 Indianapolis 57,771 Saa Francisco.10,337 Chicago 54.336 Dcs Moines 40,54i| Total . 367.725 And in the East; Boston 37.638|Concorrt 21,440 Philadelphia 37,329 Augusta 15,764 Bufluio 36,317 — NTCw York 32.491; Total 212.999 Pittsburg 32,0201 The Sun wonders that New York should bs so far behind smaller cities of the West. Bui the fact remain*—that old soldier* learned s lesson la iha war, and early Hinted lot » hmtXme <‘ampl»g pt»»
THE LADIES.
Of the forty-seven scholarships in the new university of Chicago five are to women. Lottie Blair, the author of “White Roses” is writing a comedy for Daniel Frohman’s Lyceum company.
A LACE MANTELET.
The alumni of Harvard Divinity School passed by a large majority a resolution recommending the admission of women to the divinity school. Caroline Kilby is tbe art decorator of the largest carriage building establishment In New York aud has over twenty women under her super vision. The Prussian Minister has ordered that hereafter all contracts with women teachers shall be cancelled in the case of marriage at the end of the school year. Adeline E. Knapp, the horse reporter of a San Francisco newspaper, promises to be the Midy Morgan of the West. She has had several years’ experience in the various phases of journalistic work. Sara Berhard’s Parisian agent has sent out numerous applications to owners of the famous actress’ works of sculpture requesting a loan of the pieces in their possession for an exhibition to be held in London next winter.
A MORNING COSTUME.
Ruth Kirabal, who was -an attractive figure in the gallery at the Democratic Convention, and whose reports were brilliant and accurate, is the only woman that was ever admitted to the nress gallery in the Senate. Mine. Adam, the Parisian journalist, in a recent interview declared herself to he a competent housewife, and that all other great women have been the same. According to her idea domestic occupations do not exclude but rather favor intellectual culture. The first duty of a woman to quote Mine Adam, is to beautify her home, and rule over her household in such a way thnt it is neat, orderly, and pleasing; then her husband, if he has not done so with confidence until then, will admit his consort to an equal share of his own work, and will make her a companion in the true sense of the word—a companion and an advisor, on a-
equal looting with him. as befits an educated woman whose qualities of mind. though differing from those of m u, are neverthless equal to his. Annie Wilson Patterson, a somewhat prominent musical composer and conductor in Dublin, Is the 011I3' woman Doctor of Music in the kingdom, with the exception of the Princess of Wales. Dr. Patterson is conductor and musical director of the Dublin Choral Union, with which an orchestra is associated, and is a writer of poems and essays, as well as a composer of music. Women may now pursue any of the studies in college curriculum at Brown University as far as the sophomore year. President Andrew is reported as saying that the outcome of this work will probably be the making of the university into a coordinate college with a woman's dormitory and separate instruction in the same building. The first women to receive the fellowships at Yale are Mary Graham, a graduate at Wesleyan, who stood second in her class and took first honors in political science, and Mary A. Scott, a graduate of Vassar, a student of Johns Hopkins and an honor student of Cambridge, who will study for the* legreo of Doctor of Philosophy, uucy A. Boardmanhas given $30,000 for the erection of a school of manual training in this country. Amelia B. Edwards left the bulk of her fortune to found a professorship of Egyptology in a London college, and the late Emily Pleiffer, of England, directed that her fortune of $300,000 should be divided between the women’s colleges, the training schools, the Association of German Governesses, and the Royal School of Art Needlework.
A PRETTY MORNING GOWN.
The Queen of Greece is President j of a sisterhood devoted to the ref- i ormation of criminals, and visits per- | sonally the condemned prisoners in Athenian prisons. After public religious instruction is finished the ladies of the association make visits to the prisoners, whom they insist on seeing alone without the presence of the guards, and talk with them on matters pertaining to religion and repentance. Among the unknown heroines of j the world’s dark places are the brave women nurses of North Brother Island, where the city paupers afflicted with contagious diseases are sent for care. The matron, Miss Kate Holden, has for ten years led a life of solitude and sacrifice, frequently spending months at a time without crossing to the mainland. When the fifty Russian typhus patients were sent in a single day'to this island hospital Miss Holden spent forty consecutive hours among them without sleep or food. A lady at Passaic, N. J., is re ported to have been literally talked to death by two rival sewing machine agents, who were struggling for her trade.
i PRjrr-ff mN,
AN UNDERGROUND OUTLET. XJ»e Father of Wat or* Thought to Be Seek, lug the Gulf by a Subterranean Passage. The caving in of the banka of the Mississippi river now going on in consequence of tho falling water, on Sunday caused the handsome depot of the New Orleans, Fort Jackson & Grand Isle railway at Algiers, the western district of New Orleant, to collapse. The building was probably the most substantial In Algiers, and was built in 1889. Divers, who bad occasion to go down at this point, claim that tho rivet has made a subterranean passage under the land, and at each examination find it growing larger and the velocity of the water greater. Algiers is on a peninsula, and the theory is that the Mississippi is cutting a subterranean passage way through the peninsula, which would leave New Orleans, like Vicksburg, off the main river. CARLISLE'S VIEWON SILVER. Senator Carlisle has addressed a letter to John A, Lins, of Henderson, Ky., making clear his position on the silver-coinage question. He says he is oppsed to tho free coinage of either gold or sliver, but in favor of unlimited ooinrge of both metals upon terms of exact 1 equality. No discrimination should be made In favor ot one metal and against the other, nor should any discrimination be made in favor of tho holders of either gold or silver bullion and against the great body of the people who own other kinds of property. Gold and silver bullion should be treated exactly alike in the mints of the United States—that is, a dollars worth of gold should be coined in a gold dollar, and a dollar’s worth of silver should be coined In a silver dollar, if no chrrge is made for coining the one then no charge should be made for coining the other. Continuing, Senator Carlisle says that, in his opinion, the declaration made upon tne subject of the coinage of silver by tho Democratic party at its recent national convention is perfectly sound In principle and enunciates the only true public policy. CONSUL RYDER'S GUILT. A United States Official Confesses to Embezzlement. Henry B. Ryder, the United States consul at Copenhagen, who is under arrest charged with having misappropriated the sum of 300,000 kroners, has confessed that he is guilty of embezzlement. In his confession Ryder says Dial ho produced false receipts, and that he induced his wife to make a false statement when ho was arraigned in court. Mrs. Ryder is also under arrest, but it is probable that she will be released. Several weeks ago Mr. Ryder and his wife were both publicly accused of dishonest practices, by which they obtained large sums of money. Both were placed under arrest, and both have strenuously Insisted that they were innocent. Ryder is a man of previously good character, but has been living very extravagantly at Copenhagen. A BIG ROBBERY BY BRIGANDSA mall courier has arrived at Durango. Mex., bringing Information of a bold and successful robbery committed by a band of brigands near Culiacan, in the Sinaloa A train of ten burros was on the way from Yedras mines to Cnllacan loaded with fifty thousand dollars’ worth of silver sulphides in boxes for export. It was guarded by twenty men, who were attacked in camp four nights ago by the bandits, who numbered about fifteen men. Three of the guards were killed and the others were overpowered and bound hand and foot They wore left in that condition by the brigands, who drove tho mules with their precious loads into the deep recesses of the Sierra Madra mountains. A company of Government troops jhave gone in pursuit of the robbers. KOLB IS NOT SATISFIED. Ex-Commissioner Kolb, late Alliance candidate for Governor of Alabama Is out in a published letter disputing the claims of Jones’s election. The letter concluded: I have been fairly and honestly elected by over forty thousand majority, and the people of my native State recognize the fact and will see that justice is accorded by placing me at the head of our State government for tho next two years. S. P. Kolb. Tho letter creates a sensation, and is regarded as an evidence of Kolb’s intention to challenge the official count, which is nearly completed and fixes Jones’s majority at between 9,000 and 12,000. UTAH. Tho land of sunshine and flowers—rich also in mineral and agricultural resources —is beat reached by the Rio Grando Western Railway. See that your excursion tickets read both ways via that road, which offers choice of three distinct routes and the most magnificent railroad scenery in tho world. Send 25c to J. H. Bennett, Salt Lake City, for a copy of illustrated book, “Utah; a Peep into the Garden Walled Treasury of the Gods.” T1IK UK GRAND EXCURSIONS. To Kansas City and Return and to St, Louis and Return. From August 19th to 22nd, inclusive,tho Vandalia Line will sell excursion tickets to Kansas City and return at rate of 86.00, and to St. Louis and return at rate of i:. 00. Tickets good returning until Sept. 15th. Call at the nearest. Ticket Office Vandalia Line, or address W. P. Brunner. District Passgr. Agent, Indianapolis, Ind.
A Perfect Success. VIL The Rev. A. Antoine, of Ref agio, Tex., writes: As far as I am able to judge, I think Pastor Koenig’s Nerve Tonic is a perfect success, fox any one who Buffered from a most painful netvousness as I did. I feel now like myself again after taking the Tonic. St. Vixcknt's Hospital, Toledo, O., June 9,1890. We used Pastor Koenig's Nerve Tonic for epileptic fits in the case of a Mrs. Gorman, audit stopped the fits from the time she commenced taking it. We wish you an extensive sale for this beneficent remedy, SISTER BRADY, Secretary, Grand Rapids, Mich., Oct. 8, 1890. I used Pastor Koenig's Nerve Tonic in Mrs. Bull!van's case, and it gave entire satisfaction, and she has no end of praise for it, and never forgets to recommend it to the sick and suffering. I have heard others say they used it with the same good results. THOS. KEATING. poanp—A Valuable Book on Nervom 3. P HIL EL Diseases sent free to any address r u f f and poor patients can also obtain U B Bn La this medicine free of charge. This remedy has been prepared by the Reverend Pastor Koenig, of Fort Wayne, Ind., since 1876. and Know prepared under his direction by the KOENIG MED. CO.. Chicago, III. Sold by Drucffluts et ®1 per Bottle. OforSB Size. S1.15. 6 BoUlas for ISO. WHAT OTHERS SAY. “THAT TERRIBLE DISTRESS.” LIVER TROUBLE, BILIOUSNESS, NERVOUS PROSTRATION, AND KIDNEY DISEASE. Treated toy Eight Physicians Without Benefit. CURED BY LIVURA. Liyura MVg. Co., Dear Sirs:—“For about 5 years I hay© been afflicted with Liter trouble, causing me to become very Bilious. 1 had headache continually, my appetite was , tery poor, and a death- ' ly faintness at tho pit * of the stomach accompanied by a terrible distress. During the past two years my Kidneys became tery weak and pained me so badly I could not rest. Owing to extreme nervousness I was unable to attend to my business, and in January I came down with Nervous Prostration. Eight different Physicians have had me under their care, but I grew worse instead of better. Learning of PITCHER’S LIVURA I began taking i t and my improvement was noticeable from the first. I have taken 3 bottles and am ENTIRELY CURED, able to attend to my work, and have not felt so well for 6 years. I give all the credit to PITCHER’S LIVURA. Respectfully, F. B. ARCHER, SCO West Concord Street, Dayton, Ohio. 34 LIVURA OINTMENT The Great Shin Cure. Cures Eczema, Salt Rheum, Pimples, Ulcers, Itch, and all affections of the skin. Heals Cuts, Bruises, burns, scalds, etc. Sold by all Druggists, or by mail. Price 85 Cents. Liyura M’f’g. Co., Nashville, Tenn. Don’t Suffer. Don’t suffer with rheumatism. Don’t suffer with pneumonia or pleurisy. A.11 these maladies come from one source. When tho kidneys are inactive and fail to separate the uric acid from the blood, it remains in and poisons the whole life current. If It manifests itself in the joints it becomes pleurisy, and if it attacks the lungs it becomes pneumonia or pleurisy. If it attacks the brain it becomes apoplexy; if the heart, heart disease. It may produce any malady, such as blindness, paralysis, or the like. All these maladies have one coalmen origin, and that is kidney trouble. The seeds of most of these are laid in the summer. It is then that people fail to take simple precautions. They get wet and expose themselves unnecessarily, and tho result Is they take cold. It settles upon their kidneys and produces any or all of the maladies mentioned above. When you feel that you are a sufferer In this respect get a bottle of Keid’s German Cough and Kidney Cure and take it freely. Do not be afraid of it. It will not Injure you. It Is impossible to take an overdose. It contains no deleterious substance whatever. It can be given to children without any danger. Ask your druggist for it, and do not let him give you anything else In place of it. Small bottles 25c, large 50c. S ye van Eemedy Co.. Peoria, 111.
, LITTLE Li¥ER PILLS DO NOT GRIPE NOR SICKEN. Sure cure for SICK IIEAD- ' ACHE, impaired digestion,constipation, torpid glands. They arouao ▼ital organs, reraovc nausea, dizjilnesi. Magical effect on Kid* ueysandolodder. Conquer bilious nervous disorders. Establish nalural Daily Action. Beautify complexion by purifying blood. PnuHLY Vegetable. The doso is nicely adjusted to suit case, as one pill can , never betoo much. Each vial contains 42, carried in vest pocket, like lead pencil. Business man’s great convenience. Taken easier tlian sugar. Sold everywhere. All genuine goods bear “Crescent.” Send 2-cent etnmp. You get 32 pa ge book with earn pi 3. MftBTER MEDICINE 00., SI. louls. M& Li UN 6L HEALY, • 53 Monroo St., Chicago. Will Wall Free their newly enlarge.! -* E =~ Catalogue of Band Instruments. forms and Equipments, 400 Fine II-f InstrstiuQS, drscribmf every sitiele' rvquwed by Hands or Drum Corps, —- Sere1? and Urun Vsjor* Tuc [.v%, By■ s a Ji»l uf Hvt4 JlwSc. *
