Democratic Sentinel, Volume 9, Number 4, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 20 February 1885 — GIVEN AWAY FOR ONE YEAR [ARTICLE]
GIVEN AWAY FOR ONE YEAR
We want 200,000 subscribers before April Ist, 1885, to onr large lliuetrntod publication, The Sunshine Magazine. In order to ge* the above number of subscribers we must give away subscriptions the first year, and the second year we will make up the los ->s most of them w|U subscribe again paying our regular price $3.00 a year Order for yourself and friends ana you w il> never regret It. fc»«Ld ter. two-c<-nt stamps to pay postage and you will have something to read every week for one wool- year- If you accept the above offer, wo expect you will bo kind enough to distribute among your neighbors and friends, a few snvill books containing ■ ttr ad vertfsements and one hundred ard sixtv-seveu of the best household receipts, for which we will make you a present of a handsome Mirror, size 12x18 inches State how many books you can give away for us, and we will send the books and Mirror pre-pattf Remember, you will receive the Mirror before you distribute any books Addres Sunshine Magazine Co., Fris- - N. Y. Peterson’s Magazine toe March opens with a beautiful sted-pdate of two girls caught in a snow-storm, and entitled “The Sisters,” illustrating a poweful story by Frank Lee Benedict. In addition, there is the usual double-size fashion plate, printed from steel- and colored by hand. “Perterson’* being the only magazine to give these expensive and refined fashion-plates. Besides this, there is a colored pattern (for a Tidy-on Java Canvas; a capital humorous illustration, “Th“ Beleaguered Garrison”; and some fifty wood-cuts of’fashions, embroideries, worktable designs, and other tilings usefutl to ladies. The principal article Is an illustrated one, entitled “ Washington City, rite Pictorial Side,” a remarkably well written «Dd c’ scriminatinr paper on the Federal O *v consider ed artistically, architect rally socb.l ly, ate., etc. The stori », as always in “Peterson,” are the -y best of their kind. The couli - u*d noyele r —“ThelLo'st Ariadne,” L>.y Mrs. John Sherwood, of New York —lucre*.*; -s in power with every number. Every lady as wo have often said, ought r.o take this magazine. The price is but two dollars a year, with great reduction* to clubs. Address Charles J. Peterson. 30C Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, Pa.
““The Novelist” is the characteristic title of a new paper just started iu ew York, Ly John B. Alden, the “Literary Revolutionist,” The price, also, is characteristic,—only SI.OO a yeat. Jt is not intended to enter into eompetitioo with the high-priced, but iow-character, story papers which darken.the country like a pestilenoe. but will &e devoiedj almost entirely to hlgh-okss fle ion, such us finds place,and welcome in the best magazines of the day and the purest homes of ibe land; making the paper an unrivaled (as to cost certainly) eource of mental .recreation for ihe weary,an<L«f en’ttE&airimt'nr I' r tt. During the year tuorc are pronvised serial stoHesJoy William Black. Mrs. Oliphant, James Payn, Hugh Conway B L. Farjeon, and others—certainly a good variety,a3 well as good quantity for the dodlar. It is printed in large type, *nd is a handsome paper. For free specimen coDies add ess the publisher, John B. Alden, 393 Peat 1 street, New York.
