Democratic Sentinel, Volume 5, Number 29, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 26 August 1881 — Page 3 Advertisements Column 1 [ADVERTISEMENT]
Newspaper IW*lom 1 Subscribers who do not giro express notice o the contrary ar»considered wishing to continue their subscription. 2 If subscribers order the discontinuance of their periodicals the publishers may continue to send them until ali arrearages are paid. a. If subscribers neglect or refuse to take their periodicals from tho oibce **have rocted thev are held responsible until tney nave settled their bills anti ordered them discontinued 4. If subscribers move to other places without informing the publishers, and the papers are sent to the former direction, they are bold responsible. 5 The courts have decided that “refusing to take periodicals from the office or removing and leaving them uncalled for, is prima faeia evidence of intentional fraud.” 6 Any person who receives a newspaper and makes use of it, whOther he has ordered it or not, is held in law to be a subscriber. 7. If subscribers pay in advance they are bound to give notice to the publisher at the endof their time, if they do not wish to contiMe_taking it, orherwise the publisher is authorized to send it on and the subscribers will be resDODßible until an express notice, with payment of all arrears is sent to the publisher.
Barklev Township Items.
Go and look at the New Goods At Reed’s Store. Rain needed badly. No plums this season. Still they improve “Wall Street.’* The “Stai” is completed at last. Elder berries are getting ripe iu abundance. Forg. Payne has purchased a buggy. Ah! Mr. Frank Moore is expected back from Kansas. The steamer is to be in this township today. Fall plowing is progressing but slowly, owing to the drouth. Gypsies are to be seen traveling on the highway. John Moore’s dog soon returned to “Home. Sweet Home.” Mr. Bill Smith is 3lowly moving to wards Nubbin Ridge. Old England is now harvesting her golden wheat crop. Threshing machines are still to be heard in the distance. Mr. Jim Antrim sailed through this township one day last week. Mr. George Haste is furnishing timber for a bridge in Walker township. Mr. Ed. Purktson and family were visiting in ibis township last Sunday. Weather is considerable cooler now than it was the first part of last week. The Gilmore boys hud a "smash up” last week, white threshing for Sol. McCurtain. The threshers of “Canada” nave had some bad luck with their horses this fall, partly the result of bad management. Mr. Isaac Walker is. now proprietor ol Hie Bill Smith rurm, and is improving the. same. Owing to the insufficiency of pasture here quite a number of cattle lmve been taken to the northern wilds, winue there is nothing but grass and cobbledupbridges. Mr. John C. Norman has completed the well he has been working at for several weeks past. Mr. N. has now goii" to Marion township to sink a well for Frank Warier.
Mr. Isaac- Tapp, of Pleasrnt Ridge, stepped in and out of this township oni• day iu it wee!:. Call again. Jlf. I’.sjra Ciouse, of Attica, landed iu Rurk'ey last Saturday evening. He reports business live-]} ju Fountain county. Miss Henna English, of lie aver Fia irie has been veen visi'ing her cousins, Misses Dora English and Grace | Nichoia. Femu rs should patronize Mr. Bill Price. -lie is tin; “boss” workman, clover and accomodating. Farmers who expert t‘ make wheal laising a silences,slio’d sow either tin Clawson or Fidt*., for ueitln r has rv er been km Massed in quality by any other kind to our knowledge. Mr. D. fj. Pritchard and family ex-, pact to move to the Hawk>. ye Slat'' this fall. Mr. David L. is a good oil itzen and staunch Democrat. das por’s loss will be lowa’s gain. We *wish him suebess. Considerable of sickness is f revailing among the children <>f Nab bin Ridge, and we regret to state two have gone the way of all flesh. Rev, Lodor preached his valedieu ry sermon at Center school house la t Sunday evening, ami Itev. Thompson also delivered his farewell sermon a 1 .same place at 10 o’clock, a. m. The only son of Mr. and Mrs. Wy Grayson died ter- suddenly on the evening of the 19th inst. Funeral services on following day bv ih v Thompson, and interment in Brown - Cemetery. The parents have tie sympathy of neighbors, friends and relatives in tneirrad bereavement. We were indeed glad to hear from the widow’s children, in last week’,Sentinel. We always sympathize witdi orphans, and would tie glad to inform them concerning the Smith Sabbath school, but as we have’nt gave it a call for some time, we are unable to give any facts concerning it. Call on Secretary F^ r
A READEB.
August 24,1881.
Healthft’t.ness of Milk, — lf any one wishes to gioyv fleshy, a pint oi milk taken on retiring at night will soon cover ihe scrawniest boues. Ai though we see a good many fleshy persons' nowadays there are a good many lean and lank outs, who sigh for the fashionable measure of plunq - ness, and who would be vastly in - proved in health and good appearam e could their figures be rounded with good solid flesh. Nothing is more coveted by a thin woman than a full figure, and nothing will so raise the ire and provoke the scandal of the “clipper-build” as the consciousness in a rival. In cases of fever and summer complaint milk is now given with excellen. results. The idea thnt milk is feverish has exploded, and it is now the physicians main reliance in bringing through typhoid patients, or those in too low a state to be nourished by solid food. It is a mistake to scrimp the milk pitcher Take more milk and buy less meat. Look to your milkman; have large siz d and well fill <1 milk-pitchers on the table at each meal, and save doctor’s bills.
A St. Louis cat was sun-struck the other day, and Chicago again makes a stand-off of ti e gameby producing a hog which committed suicide by drowning. The public await fnrther developments with almost breathless interest. In order to oure her husband of drinking, a colored woman in South Carolina put concentrated lye in his whisny bottle. The last words he uttered were to the offeet that it would be a relief to him to drop into Hades to cool off, and the last words the widow spoke to the out side world as she dodged into jail were: “I nevah seed sich weak stomachs as de niggabs are nittin’ nowadays; dey can’t stand nuffin!"
