Democratic Sentinel, Volume 2, Number 45, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 20 December 1878 — Page 4 Advertisements Column 4 [ADVERTISEMENT]

Ciicap Business limy, mcfarlaicd m oo.,» uakm stock raids ii*wr PRODUCE COMMISSION. S. 0. BARG KANT, OstiL Oaouulasioa, BT So. Water Mk W. H. WILLI AMS A OO..Bnttr A Flah.ia So. Water BS. " USE MERCHANT’?* BAKOLHIB Oil-. __ A DAY to Agents canvassing for the Fly?S7 l™ Ti p u s r v.ca.r 80METHIN8JEW for A6ENTB wanted In every tßiff. Address Box 788. New York $lO to SIOOO SrJSsiSr 28 Address BAXTER A*CO.?&n*anf Vrffiuii., N.T. vOung ■ month. Evary graduate guaranteed s paying aituStkav. Addtsssß. Valentina, Mgnsggr.Janeaville.WlS. ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■ißnre relief i arpinr I If mnCD’C DRQTII I r*3 FriceSScts.ußluniJl* InoansTwoenta and uuvranls. try it, mtuiu>—try it, mothers, for your children. WOOLRICU A CO. on every label. In cans, 85 oents and upwards. Ml M *125 to *4oo— factory prices—--B*C JS Mll\ highest honors—Mathushek’s scale I IHHWw for squares—finest uprights in America.—over 13,000 in use—regularly incorporated Mfg. Oo.—Pianos sent on trial—4 B-page Catalogue FBXJR. MEHDBLBeoHH PiAWQ CO., 2 IK. 15 th Street, N. Y. Successful folks. MatttißV Hale Smith’s new bool. 1,000 Prominent persons—msn and women analyzed. Steel Portraits of A. T. «S r Pß'Wfi'R r P VANDERBILT. OIL W ix-Xvl, BEN NETT. Etc. Ths sensation of the season. Now is the time for ACClttfi to secure territory. Address, for HDCIi | U agency, circulars and terras, AMERICAN PIBLIBHI.\G CO., Chlcugo, 111. §APONIFjE|£ Ib the Old Beliable Concentrated Lye FOR FAMILY SOAP-MAKING. Directions accompanying eaoh can for making Hard, Soft and Toilet Soap QUICKLY. IT IS FULL WEIGHT AND STRENGTH. The market is flooded with (so-called) Concentrated Lye, which ia adulterated with salt and rosin, and won’t make soap. SAVE MONET, AND BUT THE Saponlfilß MADE BY THE Pennsylvania Salt Manuf’g Co., Abbot t’s Patent Portland Cuty m ter—Sold for half the price, finished Bupcriorand warranted strongerthnn MSMBHI ordinary sleighs. Abo, Abbott’s \Xt7l II \\ Patent Runner Attachments wll 111 1 \ for every variety of wheeled vehicles. devico of the kind in existence. . Fit* any axle; perfectly practical, strong and cheap. Wido trnck for m , W city use; narrow track for country ForaalobyAgl. Itnpl.andHamSUBSCRIBE FOR FRANK LESLIE’S ILLUSTRATED NEWSPAPER!

WILKIE COLLINS’ New Novel, entitled “THE FALLEN LEAVES,” will be commenced—simultaneously with its publication in England—in No. 1,‘214 of Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper, to be issued the first week in January next. The appearance of this latest work of one of the greatest novelists of the age will be a leading literary event of the New Year. Send ifM.OD for Three Months 1 .Subscription, to begin with Number 1,911. Remit hy Money Order to Frank Leslie’s Pnli'Mieu Sense, 53, 55 & 57 Park Place, x r w Ygint, LIST OF DISEASES ALWAYS CURABLE BY USING MEXICAN MUSTANG LINIMENT. OF HTHAH FLESH. OF ANIMALS. Rheumatism, Scratches, Burn* and Scalds, Sores and Galls, Stings and Bites, Spavin, Cracks, Cuts and Bruises, Ringbone, Sprains A Stitches, Screw Worm, Grub, Contracted Muscles, Foot Rot, Hoof Ail, SttlliJoints, Hollow Horn, Backache, Lameness, Ofd Ulcers,! Swinny, Founders, Gangrenous Sores, Farcy, Poll Evil, Neuralgia, Gout, Sprains, Strains, Eruptions, String Halt, Frost Bites, Sore Feet, Hip Disease, Stiffness, aaa all external diseases, and every hurt or accident

For general use in family, stable and stock yard it it THE BEST LINIMENTS " THE NEW YOHK SUN FOR 1870. The Sun will be printed every day during the year to come. Its purpose and method will be the same as In the past: To present all the news in a readable shape* and to toil the troth though the heavens fall. The Sun has been, is, and will continue to be independent of everybody and everything save the Troth and Us own convictions of dnty. That is the only policy which an honest newspaper need have. That is the policy whloh has won for this newspaper the oonfidenoe and friendship of a wider constituency than waa ever enjoyed by any other American journal. The Sun is the newspaper of the people. It is not for the rich man against the poor man, or for the poor man against the riob man, bat it seeks to do equal justice to all interests in the community. It is not the organ of any person, class, sect, or party. There noed be no mystery about its loves and hates. It is for tha honest man against the rogues every time. It is for the honest Democrat as against the dishonest Repnbli' can, and for the honest Republican ms against the dishonest Democrat. It does not take its cue from the ut_ teranoea of any politician or political organization. It gives Its support unreservedly when men or measures are in agreement with toe Constitution and with tbs principles upon which this republic wss founded for the people. Whenever the Constitution and constitutional principles are violated it speaks out tor tbs right. That is The Sun’s idea of independence. In this respect there will be noobsnge In its programme for 1879. _ , The Sun has fairly earned the hearty hatred of rascals, frauds, and humbugs of all sorts and sizes. It hopes to deserve that hatred not less to tbs year 1879 than to 1878, 1877, or any year gone by. Th* Sun is printed for the men snd women of to-day, whose, eonoern is chiefly with the affairs of to-day. It has both the disposition and the ability to afford its readers the promptest, fullest, snd most accurate Intelligence of whatever to the wide world is worth attention To this end the resources belonging to web establishsd prosof pMtiaa In (hfe country, and the uncertainty of the future, lend an extraordinary significance to tha events of the coming year. To present with accuracy and clearness the exact situation to eaoh of its varying phases, and to expo and, according to its well-known methods, the principles that should guide us through the labyrinth, will be an Important part of Thi Son's work for 1879. We have the means of making The Sun as a political, a literary and a general newspaper more entertaining and more useful than ever before; and we meen to apply them freely. Onr rates of subscription remain unchanged. For tha Daily Sun, a four-page sheet of twenty-eight columns, the price by mall, postpaid, is 55 cents a month, or $6.50 a year; or, including tha Sunday paper, an eight-page sheet of fifty-six columns, tho price is 65 cents a month, or $7.70 a year, postage paid. The Sunday edition of The Sun Is also furnished separately at $1.20 a year, postage paid. The Sunday Sun, to addition to the current news, presents a most entertaining and instructive body of uterary snd miscellaneous matter, in bulk twice as great and in value not inferior to that of the best monthly magazines of the day, at one-tenth of their oost. TheWEEKLY Sun is especially adapted for those who do not take a New York daily paper. The news of the week is fully presented, its maritet ro°orts are furnished to the latest moment, and its agricultural dopartment. edited with great oare and abUitv. is unsurpassed- The Weekly SUN Is probably read to-day by more farmers than any other paper published A choice story, with other ~ n ta. ?a appear* to each issue. The Weekly protects its readereby barring its advertising columns against frauds and humbug*, and furnishes more good matter for less money than can be obtained from any other s inrce. Theprioeof the Weekly Sun, eight pages, fifty-six columns, la II a year, postage paid. For clubs of ten sending 810 we will send an extra oopy free. Address I. W. ENGLAND, Publisher of The Sun, New York City. 0. N. V. No. 51 TI7UWI WfIWMU 'iv AlWMtfi'pLurJ 1 I# tbtt PApV* 17 y ° U "* W