Hope Republican, Volume 2, Number 52, Hope, Bartholomew County, 19 April 1894 — Page 2

HOPE REPUBLICAN. By Jay C. Smith. HOPE INDIANA Life is too short to eat oranges ■with a spoon. In the meantime, who is representing Col. Breckinridge’s district in Congress? Coxey’s Common weal Army has been called “The Army of Peace;" yet one fatality has already resulted. An Ohio farmer fell dead of heart disease when he saw the ragged hosts approaching. It is said to have been a heart rending sight. Prenderoast may be insane, but his ravings since the stay of proceedings were granted that saved his neck strike the average mind as being overdone, and are very suggestive of collusion with his attorneys. Evidently he is acting a part and doing ft well. The interest on the bonds of the Mexican National Railway is payable in gold and that corporation suffered a loss in 1893 on this account — by reason of converting its revenues, which are almost entirely collected in silver, —of $761,929. The losses of American railways from this source are not apparent and can not be traced. The probability is that they did not lose any thing. The bankruptcy of the Salvation Army of Kansas City is announced. It is not supposed that this will make any material difference in the city revenues. There has never been much money in salvation any place. Still the fact that the illiterate venders of free salvation are in hard lines and can no longer con- | tinue their missionary efforts in be- I half of the heathen on our western | frontier is worthy of comment and ! perhaps regret. April’s here, winter drear is a | thing of the past and at last storm 1 and frost we have lost on the way. j Clouds mid rain may remain, but i they’ll bring and upon the earth will fling blossoms gay that will say: “Only wait, sure as fate harvest comes to your homes and we’ll fill till they spill all your bins and the tins; you may eat fruit and wheat and the land great and grand shall rejoice with one voice. Harvest home it will come and the garnered fruit and grain will remain as a sign of a favor divine,” So the spring hope doth bring to the gay and the sad to the good and the bad, and we feel as upon our drowsy senses steal visions bright that delight, balmy airs that our cares do allay while the fragrant odors stay, that ’tis joy even tho' it has alloy—just to live. The peculiar phase of constitutional insanity that prompts peojjle to scratch their names and initials upon public buildings, and in other less creditable places, is giving the Commissioners of the Soldiers’ Monument at Indianapolis„a great deal of trouble. Notwithstanding several persons, including a half-dozen refined and elegant young ladies of the city, have been arrested and fined for the offense, almost every day a new infraction of the rules and law is reported, in spite of the watchfulness of the officers in charge. Why otherwise rational people will yield to an impulse, when they cannot but know that detection will surely be followed by unpleasant consequences, is a mystery that has not yet been satisfactorily explained. “Some men are born great, some achieve greatness, and some have greatness thrust upon them." There cannot be two opinions as to which class “Gen.” J. S. Coxey belongs. Whatever one may think of his motives, methods or the principles advocated by him and brought into such prominence by his “march to the sea,” the fact remains that by this proceeding he has achieved notoriety, fame, a certain “honor”, and an assured place in the history of his country. “Coxey’s crusade” will at least rank with “Shay’s Rebellion”, if it does not accomplish the reforms Which its projector alleges he'is striving for. Many people will be uncharitable enough to say that this is all that Coxey is aim-

ing at. If that be the case, then he will assuredly succeed in attaining the summit of his ambition. “Honesty is the best policy.” This has been proved so often that it would seem that business men would have long ago made the proverb the inexorable rule that should govern all transactions. Yet some Clarksville, Tenn., tobacco dealers, when shipping their consignments to Bremen, Germany, recently, thought they saw a chance to escape from this old-time adage. Their shipments failed to tally with tho samples that led to the sale in quality, and the Bremen tobacco importers in a body rose in arms against Clarksville tobacco, sending a communication to the Claricsville Tobacco Board of Trade that in the future they would positively refuse to buy the weed when it bore the Clarksville brand. The Board at once, took action and sent a vote of thanks to the Bremen importers for calling their attention to the matter. “Chickens will come home to roost,” even if sent to tho other side of the world. A suit of general interest, tho result of which will establish a precedent of great importance, was begun at Indianapolis on the 3rd inst., being a demand for $2,000 damages against the proprietor of a pool room, the plaintiff alleging that he had at various times lost sums aggregating 12,000, which he had wagered on horse races, in the defendant’s establishment. Other suits of a similar character are expected to follow. If it shall be finally established that parties can recover the suras lost in gambling rooms from their proprietors, the “industry” will probably languish and go into a decline. Very few men engage in the business “for their health” or for sport, but are generally fishing for “suckers” like the plaintiff in this case. If they can not “land their fish” they will likely engage in other avocations. Mount Calbuco, a comparatively small elevation in Chili, which has not in historic times shown evidences of being a volcano, On Feb. 24, 1893, produced r- phenomena showing that its long lost activity has been regained. From that time until the 23d of last October the mountain was incessantly in action with occasional outbursts thatruined the country for many miles around. On that day ashes fell at Orsono, sixty miles away, in such quantities as to obscure the sun, so that lamps were necessary in all the houses of the town. Mount Calbuco is located about 41 deg. s. lat., in such a remote and isolated quarter of the world that no advices later than October 23, 1893, have been received at New York. The little volcano is 1,000 feet lower than Mount Washington* Its “resumption of business at the old stand” is a surprise to scientific and geographical authorities.

PEOPLE. Canon Wilberforce. it is said, thinks that animals, as well as man, have souls and will enjoy a future life. Dr. Seward Webb, president of the Wagner Palace Car Company, has the largest private park in the j United States. It comprises 200,000 acres in the Adirondack mountains. Since his recent attack of the grip the Czar has betrayed symptoms of a nermanent affection of the lungs. He will probably make his imperial residence at Kiev, where the climate is more favorable than at St. Petersburg. Senator George, of Mississippi, preserves the primeval customs oi the plantation in Washington. He goes to bed not long after sundown —usually between 8 and 9 o’clock—rises in time for a (J-o’clock breakfast, and otherwise regulates his habits by the sun. In official dress the Sultan of Jahore wears, including his crown, $12,500,000 worth of diamonds. His collar, epaulettes, belts, cuffs and orders blaze with diamonds. On his wrists are heavy gold bracelets, and his fingers are covered with almost priceless rings. The Prince of Wales is in constant dread of being trampled beneath the feet of a crowd, and he rarely appears in public except in a carriage which affords some protection. His appearance is the instant signal foi a great crowd to collect.

THE CAMPAIGN. Victory Is in the Air—Democratic Demoralization. DoinaKojjy, Cant and Hypocrisy. ludlanupoJis Journal. There is just cue class of people who will be delighted with Senator Voorhees’ speech opening the tariff debate, and they are his followers in Indiana who assume that the great mass of people are so ignorant that they can always be more easily led by being fooled than taught by the lessons of experience. Mr. Voorhees has not changed. Without the application which insures accurate information, Senator Voorhees has introduced his tariff bill with one of his old demagogic harangues—harangues which, by arraying his followers in Indiana against capital, manufactures and industrial progress, have cost the State millions. Of course. Mr. Voorhees makes no argument except epithet. He never did. He can not. Therefore, he resorts to appeal, to prejudice and to rant. Mr. yoorhees poses as the champion of the people, and yet the leading papers of his own party in his own State, like the Sentinel, charge him with being responsible for the extension of the bonded period for spirits, which it stigmatized as a “worse concession to one of the worst trusts in the country” than the concession to the sugar trust. It is not the purpose of the Journal to enter into an extended criticism of a speech made up of demagogy. cant and hypocrisy. There is, however, one clause to which attention is called. It reads as follows; “Sir, I challenge the attention of the Senate and the country to the great commanding fact that, by the provisions of this bill, the seeming paradox of a reduction of taxes and at the same time an increase of revenues will be reconciled when it becomes a law." There has been no seeming paradox to reconcile here. A duty, say, of 50 per cent, on glass would keep out all the foreign made except a few special qualities or an overplus which is better to be sold at cost to be brought to America than kept an warehouses at home. Under that protective duty, laid specifically, assume that 1500,000 worth of special kinds are imported and upon it duty of 1250,000 collected. Under a tariff for that freer'trade which Mr. Voorhees declares is a step toward universal free trade, let us assume that the duty is reduced to 25 per cent, ad valorem. The cheaper labor of Belgium and France enables the glass manufacturers in those countries to produce the article enough cheaper to pay the 25 per cent, duty and be able to undersell the American producer. Instead of $500,000 worth of glass, $5,000,000 worth are imported. The 25 per cent, duty would yield a revenue of $1,250,00(3 instead of $250,000 under the higher protective duty. The first is for protection and revenue, the second and lower duty is for revenue only. There is no paradox about that, reconciled or angry. But here is the point which Mr. Voorhees ignores; By his lower duty the value of glass made in-Eu-rope for American consumption is increased $1,500,000 a year. What does this mean? Simply that $4,500,000 worth of glass made by American workmen at full wages has been transferred to Belgium and France to be made by low wage workmen. What will result? Either that the men who made the $4,500,000 worth of glass under the protective tariff here must become idle under the revenue tariff or consent to have their wages reduced to the level of glass workers in Belgium. One of the other of these alternatives must be taken if the Voorhees policy is adopted. Fortunately, the mass of intelligent wage earners have now come to understand this truth, and while they may have listened to Mr. Voorhe» 3 two and four years ago with something of credence they now understand his demagogy and are so disgusted and angry that they are impatient for election day to come in order that they may denounce it.

The Versatile Voorhees. Indianopolls News. Voorhees’ speech, Monday, is an illustration ot what the News said of him that when it comes to talk he raves against monopoly, but when it comes to action he is its humble servant. His first sentence, yesterday, was about the “great abuses in Government embedded in powerful interests of priviliged classes created, fostered, encouraged and protected bythelaws.” “These things,” he immediately proceeds to say, “can not easily be overturned,” and so, with much more of that kind of talk, as, for example, of “the robberies committed in protected markets, the untold and incalculable millions of blackmail levied by American manufacturers for their own pockets on the enfored customers,” he goes on

to sustain every bit of this “blackmail” that has been asked by these interests of the Senate. The sooner the Democrats of Indiana awaken to the fact that Mr. Voorhees is the tool of concentrated capital and monopoly; that he has for the plain men of Indiana word, words, but for special interests votes and influence, the better it will bo for Indiana. Voorhoes is a humbug, is dangerous as all ill-balanced, ignorant men are in places of power. A Wise Statement. Indianapolis Journal. Representative Conn, of the Thirteenth district, has had enough; or, rather, he fears that he can not be re-elected, and, therefore, he announces that he will keep his promise made when nominated in 1892 not to be a candidate for re-election. Captain Conn is fortunate to have made such a promise, since to have not made it would have put him in a position where he could be compelled to be a candidate this year. Even now, the desperation of the Democratic leaders in the Thirteenth may be such that may compel Representative Conn to present an attested copy of his promise not to again be a candidate, as there is no prospect that another can be obtained who will be so liberal in furnishing the sinews of war as the gallant Captain is alleged to have been. Besides, it has not been a fortunate season for the Thirteenth district statesman. As a manufacturer he promised his employes full employment and the liberal wages he was then paying them. He has not been able to do either. He seems not to have appreciated the destructive capacity of a Democratic President and Congress when let loose upon the industries of the country. Since Captain Conn re membered his promise his newspaper has changed its tone. For months it had declared that the Democratic Representative who failed to support the Democratic measure known as the Wilson bill would be false to his party. Since announcing that his promise will not permit him to be a candidate for reelection the Conn organ has faced about in a leading article and deplored the enactment of the Wilson bill. There are other such men in the Democratic party at the present time. In office and in their capacity as statesmen they are for free trade and the Wilson bill, but out of office and manufacturers or business men they at least demand the protection of their own industries. Captain Conn does well to refuse to be a candidate in 1894, to snend his money to be defeated. If he has not had enough of Congress he knows that he has all there is for him. His successor from the Thirteenth district will sit on the Republican side of the next House, and Captain Conn’s refusal to be a candidate is a tacit admission of such an expectation. SO BUDDHISTS IN INDIA. Marion Crawford Corrects a Very Common Impression. Marion Crawford is a true cosmopolite, equally at home in Benares or on Broadway, and yet his imagination seems mostly dominated by the things of the Orient. In the April number of The Century he has an interesting article on “Godsof India,” treating the subject in his own graceful, attractive way. India has served many gods, he says, and the monuments raised in their honor are countless. It appears to be generally believed at the present day that the religion of India is Buddhism. How this common impression gained ground it is hard tc say. When Sir Edwin Arnold published “The Light of Asia,” he did not think it necessary to state that Gautama the Master had no longer any following in the country which witnessed his birth and holy life: but Sir Edwin’s book produced a religious revival, or something very like it, among a certain class of semi-intelli-gent readers who are continually foraging for some new titbit of religion with which to tickle the dull sense of their immortality into a relish for heaven.

There are no Buddhists in India. There arc many in Ceylon, and there is a sect of them in Nepal, an independent territory to the north, on the border of Buddhistic Tibet.- The religion vanished from India in the early centuries of the Christian eraThe neo-Brahmans set up anti-Bud-dhas, so to speak, in the figures ol Krishna, Mahadeva, and Rama—demigods and idols of the great neoBrahmanic religions, Vishnu-worship and Siva-worship; and these swept everything else before them until the Mohammedan conquest; and at the present day, in one shape or another, these forms of belief are adhered to by five sixths of the papulation, the remainder being Mussulmans! The Buddhists are gone, though not without leaving behind them a rich legacy of philosophic thought, and many monuments Ot their artistic genius.

Lydia E. Pmkham’s Vegetable Compound CURES ALL Ailments of Women, It will entirely euro the worst forms of Female Complaints, all Ovarian troubles. Inflammation and Ulceration, Fulling and Displacements of the Womb, and consequent Spinal Weakness, and is peculiarly adapted to the Change of Life . It has cured more cases of Leucorrhosa than any remedy the world has ever known. It is almost infallible in such cases. It dissolves and expels Tumors from the Uterus in an early stage of development, and checks, any tendency to cancerous humors. That Bearing-down Feeling causing pain, weight, and backache, is instantly relieved and permanently cured by its use. Under all circumstances it acts in harmony with the laws that govern the female system, and is as harmless as water* A ; ii druggists sell it. Address in confidence, Lydia E: Pinkiiam Med. Co., Lynn, Mas*. E. Pinkham's Liver Pills, 25 cents. The Greatest Medical Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY’S HtiilGAL DISCOVERY. DONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBURY, MASS., Has discovered in one of our common pasture weeds a remedy that cures every kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula down to a common Pimple. He has tried it in over eleven hundred: cases, and never failed except in two cases (both thunder humor). He has now in his possession over two hundred certificates of its value, all within twenty miles of Boston. Send postal card for book. A benefit is always experienced from the first bottle, and a perfect cure is warranted when the right quantity is taken. When the lungs are affected it causes shooting pains, like needles passing through them; the same with the Liver or Bowels. This is caused by the ducts being stopped, and always disappears in a week after taking it. Read the label. If the stomach is foul or bilious it will cause squeamish feelings at first. No change of diet ever necessary. Eat the best you can get, and enough of it. Dose, one tablespoonful.in water at bedtime. Sold bv all Druggists. In the first year in which the Aermotor Co. did galvanizing II expended $50,0!)0 in this work, and did not furnisn galvanized goods for the entire year either. No extra charge was made for the goods into which this enormous sum was put Are you curious to know why this lavish expenditure was made? Are you curious to know how the Aermotor Co. came te make bed-rock, hard-times prices long before hard times set inf The explanation is this: The Aermotor Co. foresaw that something better than painting was required and foresaw that hard 11 THE W AKItWOTOR CO. FORESEES, IT LOOKS AHEAD, H ANTICIPATES, IT KNOWS WHAT 18 COMING, IT KNOWS WHAT SHOULD BE C OMING, IT KNOWS IN ADVANCE WHAT IT SHOULD DO. , Because of this it has an enormous factory, and turns out au enormous quantity of goods, and good goods. The othe* fellow is a used-to-be, has been, or might have been, had hs known, but he didn't know. It is all in the past. His bua iness is in the gone by. Ours is in the present, the future. His consolation is found in the darkey’s statement: “It'e better to be a has-been than a nebber was.” After we have done and are doing a thing and it is known to be the only thing te do, certain little piping voices are heard saying: “We can de U if you will pay us enough money to do it.” We made the Steel Windmill business, made the model te which the best of our imitators can only hope to remotely approach and in their endeavor to approach it are still weakly ex. perimeivting at the expense of the user. But to return to out enormous outlay for galvanizing. Why did we do itf The reason is this. WE BUILD THE BEST WE KNOW, REGARD* LESS OF COST, and we believe we know better than anybody. We know that Ihlu nHAl, exposed to tbo nlr, will not las| unless galvanized, but if properly galvanized, will last score* ol years. Barbed wire galvanized will last 20 years, and lie practically as good as now. How long does it last painted? Bui the barbed wire is an eighth of an inch thick, while some o| the steel used in the vanes of windmills is from a thirty, second to a sixty-fourth of an inch thick, and therefore would last only from a fourth to an eighth as long as the barbed wire, other things being equal, but they are not equal; the shod metal has holes punched through it and is riveted to thick** and more rigid pieces. The vibration of the thin parts at once cracks the paint around the rivets, and water at once gets in and rust quickly eat* away the thin parts. Some have used galvanized metal and pu( in black rivets. This of course is not so good as painting, einc* the cut edge of the galvanized metal is exposed and is in no wav protected. WE BUILD FOR THE AGES. We wouldn't sell Can a poor painted wheel, nor one made of metal gal van. ed before brlnsr put together If yen would pay us double price for II. We build the bed we know, and know- tag Ibal suck things are praet- teal If worthless, wo have nothing to do with them.

When V the sectionS. of an Aer-> motor Wheel is all riveted up,completed and cleansed of rust and it is then immersed in melted tine and al*<minum and left there until it becomes as hot as the metal is and until every crack, cranny, ererice, pore and opening of every sort is filed, closed up and saturated %citk the m sites metal and the whole 23 pieces composing ths section become soldered and welded together as one piece, then you have something that is strong, enduring and reliable. It is expensive H do, and small doers cannot afford to do it. We keep 40 tons of sine and aluminum melted from one year’s end to another, bid we have business enough so that ws can afford to do it. One word ab; it the nature of galvanizing. The silvery white eoating which fills every pore and covers every portion of the Aermotor Wheel, Vane and Tower is zinc and aluminum when it is first put on, but which, after standing for a time fom% with the steel, a chemical combination or alloy which caunet be melted and is practically indestructible. The 5th advertisement in this scries will show a 4-Wheel Steel Truck, weighing 175 lbs., which will carry i tons, and of whiek we use 500 in the Aermotor Factory. It will be found almesl Indispensable on any farm or in any warehouse. For 2 copies ol this advertisement, which is No. 4 in the series, and |3.50 cash, sent in immediately after the appearance of adv. No. 5 we will deliver f.o.b., Chicago, one of these Trucks or forward froa branch houses, freight from Chicago added. Where we can, we shall make liberal offers to accept copies of these advertisements m part payment for Windmills If yot have any thought of using a windmill this year write us at once, stating what you will need, whether Pumping or Geared, and if possible we will make you a liberal offer. PBIZKS for'tho best essay°s P writUn by the wife,* o^or^VuJhS “ wVshoVld i“*e° iJ IerbotoeT""^ eompetktion and amounts and numbers of prizes send for papUcularato the iomotor Co., Chico*., or to it, broncho, ancisco, Kansas City, Lincoln, Neb., Sioux Citv Java Mi *-5'S neopoho, Buffalo, or 65 Park Place, Mow York City k.moSivS Pumping and Geared pr i c ,, An stool, jj afoniaSlftlJl Completion, delivered tree on car, at Chloaao and .kloAni jnyono, anywh.ro, ,t the followinj prioo. 8 •'■'PP*! t. B-ft- S25. I 2-ft. $50. i 6-ft. $ I 25.