Democratic Sentinel, Volume 3, Number 40, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 14 November 1879 — A Great Aid in Housekeeping. [ARTICLE]

A Great Aid in Housekeeping.

No woman who has the care of a house can afford to-get along without The Housekeeper, a handsome illustrated monthly which is so practical and Helpful that it sayes any housekeeper time, steps, labor, and very often trouble and perplexity, which is worse than work. It. is a 3 f \ill of suggestions and plans of use in house keeping as an egg is of meat. The publishers are bent on introducing it everywhere, and they offer to send it to Jan. 1,1881, to the lady who first sends 25 cents from any post office in the United States or Canadas. Any Italy who sends 25 cents and Tails to be first, will receive the monthly four months, or her money, as she prefers. The regular price of the The Housekeeper is 75 cents a year. They also offer to send Scribner’s, Harper's, The Atlantic.; Godey’s, Arthur’s, Potter’s. Lippincott’s. or, indeed, any of the monthly magazines for one year to those who get up small clubs. For specimen copies and Premium List which gives full parHeulais, address' The Housekeeper, Minneapolis, Minn.

Married.— By Justice Marion, at his residence, in Barkley township* October 23d. 1879, William M. Dowel and Mary E. Sebring, both of Newton county. At the residence or the bride’s father, in Barkley township, November sth, 1879, by Justice Marion, Hahby B. MubbaY" aud Miss Vilettie B. Fieldeb. After the ceremony those present seated themselves around a well-fill-ed table, aud did ample justice to the good things provided for the occa sion. The best wishes of all are extended to Harry and his fair baide. At the residence of the bride’s grandfather, near this place, Nov. 9th 1879, by Justice Hariing, Elden R. Hopkins and Miss Nellie I. Robinson. In Sturgis, Michigan, Nov. 9tb, ’79, by Rev. E. H. Shaw, Wm. Kibtley, jr„ of the Newel’s House, Rensselaer, and Miss Amy B. Moobe, of Peru, Ind. On their return to Peru a handsome reception was given at the residence of the bride’s parents.

From a card in the Republican of yesterday we make the following extract: “If there is in the United States a more prominent advocate of hard money and sound currency principles than my humble self, I have not the pleasure of knowing it. Very respectfully, . Horace E. James. There’s cheek for you. After supporting Haymond for Congress Maor for the Senate, and Brown for the Hous6 of Representatives, all pronounced advocates of a policy directly opposad to what this prominent gentleman terms “hard money and sound currency principles," we think it requires considerable cheek to dispute the point made against him by the Kentland People’s Press.

Keyes, of the Monticello Democrat, and Kitt, of the Goodland Herald, have organized a mutual admiration society. They have established the rule “you tickle me, and I’ll tickle yon.” After Kitt’s pen-portrait of Keyes in his “History of Journalism in Goodiand,” it exhibits the better nature of the latter, who so far forgives and forgets as to manfacture and furnish a reason for the Herald man’s fail ire to succeed in Monticello. JThe object of Keyes is perfectly Well understood, however, not only by ourself, but, we are happy to know, by a host of solid Democratic friends in Monticello and White county. Moro anon. The New York World, of Nov. 2d, contained an editorial article referring to the late election w'hich gave the following bit of nersonal history of the Republican candidate for Governor: “Alonzo B. Cornell owned a cotton plantation in Georgia in- 1860, and .on January 28th of that year stood by chewing an eleven-inch cigar while four strong negro slaves (recaptured runaways and his property) were cut to pieces at the whipping post. The only remark on that occasion of the Republican candidate for the governorship of the State of New York in 1879 was, ‘You must kill George bu* merely cripDle the other three.’ ” George left a wife and three children, and the oldest son, now a man of thirty, Robert Diossy, stumped New York for Robinson.