Democratic Sentinel, Volume 2, Number 46, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 27 December 1878 — Page 4 Advertisements Column 5 [ADVERTISEMENT]

QQQflflA YEAH. How to Mske H. As AgmU COB A YONOk, St. Leals, Me. OH) A , , uA JC,^ Ae?n '* canvassing for the FireShy aide Visitor, forms snd Outfit Free Addres. P. O. VIUKKKY. au^ I S , atn T* (I*OCA AIOSTH—AGENTS WANTEO-368£57 nnmw habit & skin diseases: I i r 1 I i 111 Thousands cured. Lowest Prices. Do not UZ Z UlUfait to write. ISr.F.E, Marsh. Quincy .Mich n||| PAY—With Stencil Outfits. What costs • tfBIL eta. sella rapidly for 60 cts. Catsloguo Am Id S. M. SPKSCK&, 112 Waah'n St., Boston, Maas YOUNCMENIS^rfiid ■ month. Every graduate guaranteed a paying situation. Address It. Valentine, Manager. Janesville. Wit, {till tfl tinnn IoY-eted In Wall Btt stooki Jtkee PIU IU tpiUUli fortunes every month! Book aunt Vddresa BAXTER k'StfVgSZ** VHfStli.. N. Y. JK Sp'oh'fhf Work ready with *»l Illustrations. Agents Hanted on ssilaty or coniinlsslon. v V n at ,n prices of Books and Be/A JK 5? lia - bend tor catalogue. Hedd.n* A Oo . Mastinic Pub., 4.11 Broadway, N.Y Beware ox apurioos Rituals now being offered ESOO0 v ‘ L KSiS S Bi!EinSfAYl in receipt of namo and address, « AiVA will surprisol •ou. Send now, before t hoy are all gone. Don’t wait .1 Vo hoys need apply. Address P.O. Box 173, Uhlcago.lll.l Dr. Craig’s Kidney Cure. The great Specific for sll Ktdney Diseases. Has never failed an any disease of the Kidneys in the past, three years. Sena for pamphlet, amt address Di'. t'K.VIG, t£ UNIVERSITY PI,ACE. NEW YORK. RIM MAO §123 to S lOO—factory prices— M B D&lvßnJ wk highest honors—Mathushek's w.i!r ■ Rallw" for squares—finest uprights In America—over 12,060 in nse—regularly incorporated M fg. ffo.—Pianos sent, on trial—4 B-page Cataloouk FItKR. Mendelssohn Piano Co.. 21 K. lath Street. N. V. AGENTS, READ THIS! We will pay Agents a Salary of SIOO per month and expenses, or allow a large commission, to sell our new and wonderful inventions. W’e rnran what tot say Sample, free. Address SHERMAN A- CO., Marshall, Mich. ® TRUTH IP MIGHTY! -ilk —Fir t.f r*si Mias, ths tin* snd place where you Will tlrsl meet, snd ths .l»i« of n-arriaga. MASON & HAMLIIN CABINET ORGANS Dmum-tratrd h<at by HIGHEST HONORS AT All WORLD’S EXPOSITIONS FOR TWELVE YEARS, rt*.: At Paris, 1867: Vienna. 18.3; Santiago, 1876; Philadelphia, 1876; Pauib, 1878; and Grand Swedish Gold ed highest honors at any anch. Sold for oaah or Installments. Illustrated Catalogues and Circulars, with new styles and pricos, sent free. MASON A HAMLIN ORGAN OO- NEW YORK, or OH IQ AGO. UCCES3FUL FOLKS. Maitlew-Halc Stitt's new boot 1,000 Prominent persons—men and women analyzed. Steal I'ortriiU, of A. T. qrpL'WAPT VANDERBILT. OEEtVY AJX L , BENNETT.Etc. The sensation of the season. Now Is the time for ACCuV Cto secure territory. Address, soHUCIs I w agency, circulars and terms, AMERICAN I*UBMSHING CO., Chicago, 111. T KT MIS: f Bf*® jJOu W Tlio very bestKooda Aral from the Ima gaoc* « vis*' w por(t , rfl nt na i f tbs , usual coat. Best plan ever offered to Club Agents and lnrffe buyers. ALL EXPRESS CHARGES PAID. New terms FREE. Tie Great imfm Tea Company, 31 and 33 Vestry Street, Ncxv York. P. O. Sox 4833.

LIST OF DISEASES ALWAYS CURABLE BY USING MEXICAN MUSTANG LINIMENT.

OF ANIMALS. Scratches, Sores anil Galls, Spavin, Cracks, Ringboue, Screw Worm, Grill), Font Bot, Hoof Ail, Hollow Horn, Gome ness, Swlnny, Fourniers, Farcy, JPoll Kvll, Sprains, Strains, String Halt, Sore Feet, Stillness, n ud every hurt or accident stable and stock yard it ia

OF HFMAN FLESD. Rheumatism, Burns and Scalds, Stings and Bites, Cuts and Bruises, Sprain. At Stitches. Conti-acted Muscles, Stiff Joints, Backache, Old Ulcers,' Gangrenous Sores, Neuralgia, Gout, Eruptions, Frost Bites, Hip Disease, and all external diseases. For general use in family,

THE BEST OF ALL LINIMENTS THE NEW YORK SUN FOR 1879. The Sun will be printed every day during the year to come. Ite purpose and method will be the same as in the past : To present all the news iu a readable shape* and to tell the truth thoufili tho heavens fall. The Sun has been, is, and will continue to be independent of everybody and everything save the Truth and itfl own convictions of duty. That is the only policy which an honest newspaper need have. That is tho policy which has won for this newspaper the confidence and friendship of a wider constituency than was 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 tho rich man, bat It seokt to do equal j notice to all interests in the community. It is not tho organ of any person, c ass, sect, or party. There need bo no mystery about Us loves and hates. It is for the honest man against the rogues every time. It is lor the honest Democrat as against the dishonest Ropubll* can, and for the honest Reoubiican as against tho dishonest Democrat. It does not take its cue from the ut. terances of any politician or political organization. It gives its support unreservedly when men or measures are in agreement with tje Constitution and with tho principles upon which this republic was founded for the people. Whenever the Constitution snd constitutional principles are violated it speaks out lor the right. That is The Sun’s idea of independence. In this respect there will be no change in its programme The Sun has fairly earned the heatfcy hatred of rasoals, frauds, and humbugs of all sorts and sizes. It hopes to deserve that hatred not less in the year 1879 than In 1878, 1«77,0r a y yenr gone by. The Sun is printed for the men and women of to-day, whose con eern is chiefly wit h the ass i Irs of to-day. 11 has both the disposition and the ab lity to afford its readers the promptest, fullest, and most accurate intelligence of whatever in the w.df* world is worth attention. To this end the resources belonging to well-established prosperity will he liberally employed. The present disjointed condition of parting in this oountry, and the uncertainty of the future, lend an extraordinary significance to the events of the coming year. To present with accuracy and clearness the exact situation in each of iu vaiying phases, and to expound, according to ita well-known methods, the principles that should guide us through the labyrinth, wi l be an important part of The BUN’s work for 1870. We have the means of making The SUN as a political, a literary and a general newspaper more entertaining and more ure.ul than ever before; and we mean to apply them freely. . . „ Our rates of subscription remain unchanged. I? or the DAILY bUN, a four-cage sheet of twenty-eight columns, the price by mail, postpaid, is *>»i cents a month, or SG.dO a year; or, including too Sunday paper, an eight-page sheet of ttfty-six columns, the price U G 5 cents a month, or $7.70 a year, postage paid. The Sunday edition of The Sun is also furnished separately at 81.20 a year, postage paid. The Sundal Sun, in addition to the current news, presents a moat entertaining and instructive b-ody of literary and miscellaneous matter, in bulk twice as grea', and.in value not inferior to that of the best monthly magazines of the day, at one tenth of their cost. , . , The Weekly Sun is ospeci illy adapted for those wh > do not take a New York daily p> per. the near.* of mj week is folly presented, its market reports *r« furnished to the latest moment, and itji i gncultural department, edited with great c ire and ability, is unsurpassed- The Weekly bUN is probably road to-day by more farmers than any other paper published. A with pix*** ftifi , .fuJv-i»reparei miscellany, a fawue. Th ©Weekly protect* its readBrnbj barring its advertising columns against frauds and humbugs, and furnishes more good matteripr *- money than can be ootained from any /»; u " ;• "'Rt, , f r The price of the Weeku i|M? .fifMwd* columns, is SI a ydkr, puetage paid, ru- chi >scf ten sending $lO we w.ll end^"p'soLAND Publisher of THB SUN. New* York Oltjr O. N. U. *» 32 WnEN WRITING TO' ADVKKT tjciuip say yof. s.vw ’n«v, rtssctnrr 'n t Jit* ■mpnr.