Hope Republican, Volume 2, Number 42, Hope, Bartholomew County, 8 February 1894 — Page 4
HOPE REPUBLICAN. *UB-t8M8D EVERY THURSDAY. ilAY C- SMITH, Editor and Publish**. Subscription. |K H) per Year, In Advance. f- oh Advertising Rates. Affut at Office. Kniered at tin* p<ust oillco at 1 lope, Indiana, us second class matter. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1894.
OUR CLUBBING LIST. For 1894 the Repebucax 4uts triarte' - arrangements for clubbing with several of the leading periodicals at the following rates. In order to take advantage of this offer subscriptions to the Bepwbucan must be paid up to Dec. ill, 1894. Regular Flub Price of Pi ice of Hoth Both ? V. Independent 4.00 3.50 \ alrle Funner 2.00 1.00 ■ I ilcilo Blade 2.00 1.75 * Asmopoliiau Mamir.lne.. 2.50 -2-25 I oroo anil Farm 1.50 1.25 I ai pel 's Magazine 5.0i 4.00 “ 5t*) 4.20 “ Young People— 3.00 2.50 i - nttivy 5-O0 4 50 1 <ipis Weekly Journal... 2.00 1.75 A outli’s Companion (new subs.) 2.75 2 25 We hope many of pur readers will again take advantage of these liberal offers to secure their favorite perv 'dieals. Coi„ R. G, Inokusof.i, voices the sentiment of the. majority in our v nun t ry wJveu he stvys: Tin' people are now in faver not only of protection, but of a high protective tariff. Next fall the country will go overwhelmingly Republican. We. want the factories to start. We hate to see '.he chimneys without smoke, lookmg like I ie tombstones of prosperity. W r e ; re tiri>d of furnaces with the fires < nt. We want the mechanics in the. shops instead of on the streets. We ant to see contented wives and happy children in the schools and •with good humor and plenty of food. The death of Geo. W. Childs has j called forth eulogies from every j press in the land. Living in an age; beset with sordid motives, he rose | above them and found bis highest I pleasure in acts of benevolence performed iVnostentatiously. He has j won a high place in the esteem of j his coitntfymen. He has raised 1 imself a monument more enduring Than polished marble. The New York Commercial Advertiser says: 1 ■ ‘To fowraen has it been given to lead j such a noble, broadening, kindly life, and humanity can well afford j to sadly lay upon tils bier a greerner more fragrant wreath than ever I decked a warrior's, tomb or graced u poet’s brow." The effort to organize a Y.M.C.A. in our place should receive the warmest encouragement from all interested in the welfare of our young men. The Young Men’s Christian Association,, organized* nearly fifty years ego, has spread until it girdles the globe and has become a mighty cower in upholding young men and d eeping them away from paths of wickedness. There are' those who are ready to cry down every movement for good, but their months should be stopped and they should he made to see the harm tney can do, by. merely talking down a good movement. Young, men deserve encouragement iu every advance step they are willing to take. And our young men are lo be especially comnu ndccl in this because is is a movement started among themselves Let us see to it that every encouragement possible is given them.
“Times are getting better, t he mills are starting up!” exclaim our Democratic contemporaries whenever n factory resumes operation. Hut they fail t ) complete the sentence. The missing words are as follows: “At reduced wages and with smaller working forces." —-Burlington HawkEye. Win. Robbins will move his feed store to the Bittrich room on the north side of the square. His present room will be occupied March 1st i -by Mrs. E. Kennedy who will put in I a e tuck of dry goods. i
FARM EXPENSES. The following expense account for a farm of 1U0 acres for the past eleven months is handed us by a farmer in Flat Rock township, Shelby county. Groceries I 41.59 Hardware 39.2s furniture 49.70 Dry Goods f®-*' Doctor and llruzKlst tl.stl Itlscksmithln'.' 2.35 | lilted Help - «0.40 , farm Implements 99-00 Slock 311.25 Insurance -5 00 | Total 842.73 The income for the elovn months ■was us follows: Wheat raised..,.* Ht9lm Corn " 2,200 '* . ; Gats " 100".' Potatoes " SO “ . Eat huzs sold $073.10
Job printing at this office. Progress, the highest lesson of statecraft.—Lowell. Men, at some times, are masters of their fate.—Shakespeare. The simple heart that freely asks . in love obtains.—Whittier. The world supports 9,000,000 men in its standing armies and navies. Put off thy cares with thy clothes; so shall thy rest strengthen thy labor; and so shall thy labor sweeten thy rest.—Quarles. When a nation gives birth to a man who is able to produce a great thought, another is born who is able to understand and admire it.—Joubert. A Powcrfnl Antiseptic. Extensive researched made upon corrosive sublimate by Ur. McClintock of Loudon show though the substance is not a valuable germicide—germs withstanding its action for some time —it prove" to possess, of all substances, the greatest antiseptic power, so that a germ treated with the article. Unless iterchunce it gets into the blood <a- is exposed to very exceptional conditions, is powerless to grow—that is, it is probable that a spore ofsubtilis or anthrax treated with sublimate, 1 in 1.000, and then thrown on the soil or into water, will not germinate, ; owing to the fact that the capsule of | (sublimate srrronndinjj it is not removed, j It if found that corrosive sublimate , forms with cellulose, as cloth, filter pu- ; per, etc., with silk, with albuminous | bodies, with some part of bacteria, probably the envelope, a chemical compound i lhatcannot bo removed with'uny amount i of washing in water. Thus sublime.j J when acting on a germ forms n capsul j around it that protects the germ for« time from the further action of the sublimate and in turn forms r.n impeuetraI ble barrier to the growth of the organism unless removed. This barrier may heremoved with salines.
I A rtiflclul Auroras. I Artificial miniature auroras of the borealis variety Lave been produced by i both Do la Rive, the Drench savant, and i Lcnstrom, the Swedish astronomer. In Professor Lenstrom's experiments, which were made in Finland, the peak of a high mountain was surrounded with a coil of wire, pointed at intervals with tin nibi The wire was then charged with el <■- tricity, whereupon a brilliant aurora appeared above the mountain in whic i spectroscopic analysis revealed u« greenish yellow rays so characteristic in nature’s display of "northern lights.”— Foreign Letter. Our Other Self. Each of us has two selves, the higher I and the lower. When God seems out of reach, as is often the case, and our prayers return to us heavier and sadder than when they left our lips, it is a good plan to commune with that alter ego which is a shade nearer the divine, that part which longs to help and to overcome. but is held down by the infirm!- | ties of the lower nature. Ask it for strength and instruction, and by so doing help the whole man. (iod is so often beautifully found in such ways.—American Woman's Journal. A Story About i'alntlug. T|ie story i! told that u woman once asked Bt. Francis do titles whether sho might use paint to improve her complexion. Ilis reply was: "Some holy men object to its use. while others see nothing wrong in it. 1 would adopt a middle coirv.o and grant you a dispen iation to paint one side of your face only."— New York Times. The Itutlrrtly iukI llaCnae. The most curious thing about the butterfly is the size of the case from which , the insect proceeds compared with the I sire of the insect's hotly. The case is j rarely more than an inch long and a j quarter of an inch in thickness. The butterfly covers a surface of nearly 4 inches square.—St. Louts Republic. There is nn unknown quantity of silver in the bay of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil—a silver mine, in fact, of. comparatively speaking, unlimited dimensions, and every ship that drojts anchor there cuts into the bed of ore- —Exchange.
GOOD BOOKSjl ILL! We take pleasure in calling the attention of our readers to the exceptional opportunity ottered to them to secure u selection of the most high class literature ever published at nominal prices. The books in our "PBKMltfM Library” are regular 25 cent edition, but wo are enabled, through a special arrangement with'.the publishers, to■ offer them to our readersnt much less t han wholesale prices Two of the following coupons and ten cents will secure any oneof these hooks. IT■gpmgf *gF j Book Coupon No. 6. j ! a Out out two of these Coupons numbered® I C differently, iftny number as long as they J] Bare different)and semi tons with Hve2-ct.« □ stamps ami the book ordered by you will 2 a be sent free of expense. ijj : S*Name * .* J of Book Wanted he. jAk jAuAkLaftc. jfflk nfk. rfk nfk jAkjAk. aCk jsSol^ We have arranged for the exclusive supply for ibis place of a great book publishing house and offer our readers st andard literature In the most attractive from at a price never before heard of in the book world. We wish that every pno of our readers would order one of the books that we are offering In our great hook distribution, because they are all good, and we notice that those that get one number usually order the others.
BOOKS UKft THE ABOVB. The new book t bin week In Dream*, by Olive .Schroinvr. This hook is lioi h Interesting uml .suggestive, and besides Its high meili-»•!'•«» qualities. is rich in the discussion of those mental and mor al pt obI which this clever writer delights to propound [ to herself and lay before the thoughtful reader. Previous Issues are: 1. Reveries of a Bachelor, by Ik Marvel. 2. Lays of ■ Ancient Koine, by Lord Macaulay. <1. A Tilly loss Hcnndal, by ,1. M. Barrie. 4. The House of Seven Gables, by Hawthorne. 6. Cranford by Mrs, Gaskell. 6, The Coming Race, by Lord Lytton. 7. Dream Life, by Ik Marvel. 8. Frankenstein: or the Modern Prometheus by Mrs. Shelley. 0. A Book of Golden Deeds, byC. M. Vonge. 10. Mosses from an Old Manse, Hawthorne, 11. The Scarlet Letter, by Hawthorne. 12. Essays of Ella, by Charles Lamb. III. Vicar of Wakefield, by Goldsmith. 14. Twice-Told-Tales, by Hawthorne. W. Pauland Virginia, by St. Pierre. ! 10. Story of an African Farm, by Ralph Iron. 17. Lays of Scottish Cavaliers, by Aytoun. 18. Lucile, by Owen Meredith. Any one of those will be presented free to anyone sending us one hew subscription to Hie Republican. The following books are now ready for delivery and a new one fcs added each week. Send us two coupons and ten cents and try one of tli-m. Address, Hope Republican. Hope. Tnd. Lumber, lath and shingles at 'reo. S. Cook’s. Spa Sale! overcoats, Heavy underwear. woolen overstnrts. Will take place at CHANDLER’S Special Bargain Store. FOR NEXT TEN DAYS.I
FOR Ladies’ and Gents' Gold-tilled Watclies * Clocks, Jewelry, * Silverware * and * Spectacles, GO TO j. h. jlthxoujd, Ti JEWELER AND OPTDCAN, 404 WASHINGTON STREET. COLUMBUS. i : INDIANA. PRICES THE LOWEST.
—>HORSEMEN<r~ Are requested to bring their Bill Printing for 1894 to this office where the best and neatest job work is always done. Hope Republican. When in need of :i SUIT or OVERCOAT Call on— G. A. NIENABER, merchant tailor. Best goods and lowest prices in the city. 208 Washington street, - - - Columbus, Ind. 3T. W. AVERY Wholnis lieen in tin- furniture and undertaking business at St. Paul for sixteen years,, has bought the stock recently owned by Haiisiil Sliirlev at Hartsville/ and is to fntniah all kinds of furniture at lowest prices. He will attend nil Turn-nils with a hearse. CAVITY AND ARTERIAL EMBALMING A SPECIALTY. Mr. T. S. Garrison, assisted by his wife, will liave eh urge of tie- work at HurtsvlTle. Black caiis will be loaned for use at funerals when desired. The business at St. Baul will he continued. F. W. AVERY, Hartsville, Ind. OCCIDENTALS feHOTEL RAUSAL SHIRLEY, Proprietor. BEST Pt ACE IT TOWN. EAST SIDE SQUARE. ■ ——' ,-!.■!*;! '■ 11 !",! ■ y ' 'tf ' ■ Undertaking. I will give prompt attention and the most tender care to all cases entrusted to me. My stock is new and complete and everything first-class. Hearse Free. * EMBALMING A SPECIALTY I'HILIF SPABGH, Hut, liit COLUMBUS MARBLE & GRANITE WORKS CLUTCH i OOLMAN. . . . V»o.R,.TOR.. O. d, BEMY, GRANITE MONUMENTS A SPECIALTY. HEAT DESIGNS; GOOD MATERIAL; PERFECT WORK; PRICES REASONABLE. afi* FOURTH STREET* COLUMBUS,.
