Democratic Sentinel, Volume 13, Number 52, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 17 January 1890 — Page 8 Advertisements Column 1 [ADVERTISEMENT]
This hearing is a magnifi | cent educator. It is not sur-1 prising that some of the wet nurses of protection are becoming alarmed and demand ing that a star chamber take the place of an open inquiry. At a rat hunt held in school 1 cislrict, No. 5, of Bethlehem township, Coshocton County Ohio, recently, 2,066 rats were killed. ! On the roof of the New York Hospital Building will be a garden, probably inclosed in glats, where patients may em ,]oy the cool breezes that blow over the housetops. Here will be flowers, plants, an aquarium, seats and hammocks. Jeremiah Smith, of Morgan Couuty, Ohio, has a cat which 5? known by the neighbors as ‘solar spectrum.” From the tip of its tail to the end of its nose there are distributed all the colors of the rainbow. Its nose shines like a carbuncle, and there are seveial shades of violet on the fore legs. Chicago’s Auditorium and Hotel is on leased ground and cost to build and furnish $2,500,000. Max O’Rell saya: “The thing that most strikes a European in this country is the entire absence of stupid looking faces. Everybody here works and is proud of it. A bill pending in the Leg islatureof North Dakota provides that both interest and principal shall be forfeited where a greater rate of interest tLan 10 per cent, is charged, no matter in what form the overcharge may be. As an illustration of the queer blunders sometimes made by compositors the fol lowing is noted: A country correspondent, in giving an account of a certain pastor’s able address to a Meadville paper wrote that he was “full of fire and vigor.,’ • When the proof came in it gave the somewhat startling information that the minister was “full of pie and vinegar.” —■ ■ • All winter goods at cost, for cash, at R. Fendig’s.
MAMMOTH FURNITURE WARE-ROOMS-Muliii, j, f. UU i M-tam, MFirnilgiii At Mm' Prices. HI Eii i Prises. -s* JAY W, WILLIAMS^ -DEALER IN—PURNITCJ RE WILLIAMS-STOCKTON BLOCK, Third Door West of Makeever House, Rensselae, Indr PETERSON’S UA6AZINE FOR Jffl 1890 BEST AND CHEAPEST. THE BEST STORIES—Our stories and novelets are from some of the most popular authors, i&d are admitted to be the best published. For 1890, such writers as Mrs. Lucy H. Hooper, Alice Bowman, Frank Lee Benedict, Alice Maud Ewell, Ella Higginson, Howard Seeley, and others will contribute some cf their beet productions. Eight novelets and nearly one hundred short stories will be given during the year. THE BEST HOUSEHOLD DEPARTMENT-emhraeing articles on hwlth,nnntsg the sick, home dressmaking, the garden, kitchen, and other subjects invaluable in every household. THE BEST FASHION DEPARTMENT-givingthelatestanA«hoiceet«tyleeof dress for outdoor and house wear, fully described, illustrated by Handsome Colored Fashion-Plates and numerous wood-engravings. Also a FuU-Sire Dress-Pattern monthly. . THE BEST FANCY-WORK PATTERNS-many of them printed In colo»-em-bracing the newest and most popular designs produced at home and abroad. k THE BEST STEEL-ENGRAVINGS-“Eimmo»” Is nowthe only magasine giving these, the finest of all engravings. > THE CHEAPEST—M no other magazine gives so much of interest and variety for the same money. Its price Is within the reach of everybody. TERMS: $2.00 PER YEAR, IN ADVANCE. ELEGANT PREMIUMS FOR GETTING UP CLUBS I % Copies. - - - 53.50 f With a handsome engraving,“The Two Beaders,"ore 8 Copies, - - - - 4.50 \ choice of one of onr standard bound books, as premium. € Copies, - • . 86.40 f With an extra copy of the magadne for one year; 8 Copies, ... - 9.00 (to the getter-up of the club. 8 Copies, .... 88.00 f With an extra copy for one year and the engraving 9 Copies, ••mm 10.50 l ora book, as premiums to the getter-up of the club. FOR LARGER CLUBS, STILL FINER PREMIUMS •md for 4 mifli WIPT with fell particulars.
