Democratic Sentinel, Volume 11, Number 16, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 20 May 1887 — Page 8 Advertisements Column 3 [ADVERTISEMENT]
the only ehtyatry tw women can Afford to receive from men, in work, wages, and general conduct, ia fair pity, equal advantages, and ©quid wages. No woman will ever ask of men other than to treat her always as they treat each other.—lnfer Ocean. A Michigan farmer thinks polecats of great value on the farm as destroyers of insects.
A Boston Girl In Chleage. I feel that I am very far from Boston, I realize that I am many miles nearer the line that separates civilization from the land of savages. And into these Western solitudes I have brought a volume of Herbert Spencer to refresh and eheer my mind. He always fascinate*; and the fact of his being still unmarried has something to do with it, for you know there is a halo surrounding the celibate which marriage utterly destroys. As in most philosophical questions, it is useless to ask why this is so. We can only observe the working of the phenomena, but not its cause. But truly, of Spencer I never tire. His ideas of the higher life are so consoling—the development from an “indefinite, incoherent homogeneity to a definite, coherent heterogeneity.” What could be tnier or more conclusive ? Perhaps the illiterate mind might be staggered by the unusual combination of polysyllables, but we who are cultivated can appreciate the subtle significance of a definite, coherent heterogeneity. His ideas of love, however, are not extravagantly tinged with romance. Suppose that a man with tender eyes aud raven-hued mustache, having seated himself by your side, should tenderly take your hand in his, and then assure in fervent tones that he is conscious of a molecular change in the vesicular nerve matter of his system, whose concomitant is love, and that you are the external object which has caused the change. Would an ice bath be more chilling? An hysterical woman would certainly lift up her voice and shriek aloud. No wonder that Herbert Spencer has lived to the age of sixty without marrying.
I NZCB feeoU 10 cents postage ana we wi. fl 111 Fl Tnoi ' yon FREE s royal. valuable II Mil ■ sample hex of goods that will pat yon in the way of making mori money at orce than anything else Both eexee of al ages can live at home end work in spate time, or all the time. Capital oot re qtt’red. We w’’i start y»U. Immense pay snie >r ’.no«e war- start a: «uee. area,* i Ce-, T 7 E. QUIVEY. DENTIST, Special attention given to the preservation <M the natural teeln. Artificial teeth inserted from one to an entire set. All work wabbjlntbd. tST- Office over Warners’ Hardware Store, Nov. 27, 18S5. Rexsselabr, ln>. JohnMakeever Jay Williams, Pres.dent. Caehie FARMERS’ BANK, ? f®“Oppos itePablic Square_£3 RENSSELAER, - - - INDIAN/ Rece.ve Deposits Buy and Soil Exchang Collections made and promptly remitted. Money Loaned. Do a general BauK> ing Breiness. A igust 17.1883.
THE WRJGrHT U N DERWM.r Furniture F<ooms, T. P. WRIGHT, NEW£ALLNEVV!! I would respectfully announce to the people of Jasper County that I have made arrangements to sell ->«FARM-IMA6HINERY,><-FmPIREYMOWERSRi; IfIUfiREIREiiFEB? EMPIRE BINDERS . And will keep extras on hand at all times for the machines.— I am also prepared to do REPAIRING. in the best and most workmanlike madner, and at the lowest possible rates. WAGONS AND B UGGES repaired, and all other work usually done in that line. NEW WAGONS AND BUGGIES ade to order, and of the best material and workmanship. USF’Shop on Front Street, South of Citizens’ T, I K H - YEOMAN! Rensselaer, fnd., May 21, 1886
v , VICK’S FLORAE GUIDE FOR 1887 2 Colored Plates, hundreds of Illustmtionß, and Dearly 200 pages—32 pertaining to Gardencontaininf an IHnetratM UH es nearly al Alfe TMBTABLEB grown, with directions how to grow them, where the best Crmo fM A MTA A aiva imiira JAMES VICK, SEEDSMAN, Rochester, N. T.
