Democratic Sentinel, Volume 3, Number 10, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 18 April 1879 — Teachers! Teachers!!—Everybody!!! [ARTICLE]
Teachers! Teachers!!—Everybody!!!
McCabe’s “Pictorial History of the World” is literally a library in itself, and is one of the most valuable works ever offered to the public. It presents to the reader a mass of information respecting ancient and modern history not to be found in any other book. To all who wish to study the history of the various nations without delving into hundreds of volumes, it ie invaluable, for it contains the pith of hundreds of histories.— Very few people find life long enough to plod through the histories of the various nations, but here you have it from the beginning of the world to the present day. Read one of the many thousands of highly complimentary notices that this work has received: “Wereceived your “Pictorial History of the World,” but it so far exceeds our anticipations that we wish to secure another cony. We will give you a column and a half review, and insert the advertisement several times, or anything else that is reasonable, as we must each have a copy, it is one of the very best books ever published.” The publishers have placed the price so low thatjail can secure a copy. Don’t fail to procure it. of Mr. W. S. Beery, who is the agent for this section. Miss Hubbard may not have done so badly as her friends imagine. She has married a man from all accounts an honest young coachman. She might have married a corrupt politician.—New York Commercial Advertiser. Now is the time to procure the very desirable and most beautiful History of the World. You can’t afford to let this opportunity pass. Mr. Beery reports success. And now it turns up that Ex-Gov-ernor Hubbard, of Connecticut, whose accomplished daughter toox a fancy to a coachman, was in his youth a charcoal peddler, and yet this old »ri jtocratic nincompoop will not be reconciled. “The republicans only ask that elections shall be honest,” remarks the Philadelphia Press. But when it is understood that the Republican idea of “honest” election is one that elects only republicans to office, the modesty of the demand is apparent. Congressman Murch the stone-cut-ter from Maine, who carved his way into Congress over Eugene Hale, drew the searheid by Chittenden, of Brooklyn, in the last House, which is one of the most- eonspicuous seats on the floor. HterefMr. March proposes to hold the fort and from his central seat keep an eye on both sides of the House.
