Democratic Sentinel, Volume 2, Number 40, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 15 November 1878 — Page 3 Advertisements Column 2 [ADVERTISEMENT]

The Democratic Sentinel. FiITDAY NOVEMBER 15, 1878. Butter to cents per lb. F.ggs.Ld seats per dozen. Bacon and Hants !3 to 14 Potatoes 40 cents per bushel, Lard 8 cents per lb. Apples,2s cents per bushel. Flour (winter wheat) $1 z 3 to $1 40 per uuavter bid.

A nice lot of new Jewelry just received at Oi win’s. The census of the city of Washington I’ftporis twenty-two colored persons over 10v) years old Boys’ school suits in great variety at the Narrow Gauge Oue Price Clothing Store. There are 39,258 post-offices in the Union, 1,913 having been added iu the course of the present year. The cheapest place in town to get groceries is at Catt ifc Smoot’s. Try them and see t‘o>- yourselves. The exportation of American pork has made the keeping of pigs unprofitable in England, and even the Irish farmers are giving up the attempt. Doc. Kelley, Dentist, is now occupying rooms over Leopold’s st( re. Two convicted thieves were arraigned for sentence in a court in Roxford, Mass. One had stolen hens, and the other, a town treasurer, had stolen public money, but the former’s term was eight years, and the latter’s ouly six.

T. M. Jones lias made large additions to his stock of goods. Go and sec for yourselves. The intelligent Mr. Janies Wilson, of Bruce, Ontario, wentj to shoot crows, and placed his left hand over the muzzle of his gun so as “to keep the crows from smelling the powder” till the last moment. He has more sense now, but is one haDd less. Look at the new slyles of Overcoats at the Narrow Gauge One Price Clothing Store. At Atlanta recently a negro seized an axe and fractured a companion’s skull with the weapon. Three pieces of the boue were removed, one an inch wide and two inches in length, and next day the wounded man was out of bed. walked about tk. house and yard and ate a hearty dinner. Men’s woolen scurfs, all sizes very cheap, at the Narrow Gauge One Price Clothing Store. The St. Louis Journal of Commerce says: “A Chicago wholesale grocery which, a few years ago, carried sixteen drummers at an expense of S4U,OUO per annum, and did an almost pi ofitless business has abandoned the drummer system, spends one-fourth their cost annually in newspaper advertising, and divides the rest among easterners. As a natural result the trade has increased tenfold, and the net profits to the house in 1877 were $130,000.” Boys’ winter caps 25, 35,4) and 50c. at the Narrow Gauge One Price Clothing Store.