Democratic Sentinel, Volume 14, Number 42, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 14 November 1890 — Page 8 Advertisements Column 3 [ADVERTISEMENT]

NOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR LICENSE. Notice is hereby given to > 11 the citizens of the Town of WKeatfield> nd Wheatfield Township, of Jasper < ounty, and State of Indiana, that the undersigned George W. Tilton, a white male inhabitant of said Town and Township, and over the a- e of twenty-one year-’, and v,ho is not in the habit of becoming intoxi ated. and a man of good moral character, and a fit person in every respect to be entrusti d with the si'.e of intoxicating liquors, will make appliaation to the Board of Commissioners of said Jasper county at the next regular session and meeting of said Board, to be held in the Town of Rensselaer, in said County and State aforesaid, commencing on the first Monday in December, 1890, the same being the Ist day of December, 1890, and called the December session of said Board, for a License to sell and barter spiritous liquors, vinous liquors. and malt liquors, and all intoxicating liquors which may be used as a beverage, in less.quantities than a quart at a time, with the privilege of allowing and permitting said liquors to be drank on the premises where sold and bartered, said premises being precisely located and described as follows, to-wit: In a onestory frame building situated on the following described land to-wit: Commencing at a point six (6) feet north, and forty (40) feet end ten (10) inches east of the southwest corner of lot five (5), in Block one (1), in Bentley’s Additiovto the Town of Wheatfield, in Jasper county, Indiana; thence north thirty (30) feet; thence east eighteen (18) feet, thence south thirty (30) feet, thence west eighteen (18) feet, to the point of commencement. Said License will be asked for the period of one year. GEORGE W. TILTON. James W. Douthit, Att’y for Petitioner. November 7, 1890.

™Hello! Tom. Glad to see you, old fellow! It's almost ten yean since we were married. Sit down: let's have an experience meeting. How’s the wife! ” “Ohl she’s so-so, same as usual,— always wanting something I can’t afford.” “ Well, we all want something more than we’ve got. Don’t you!” “ Yes: but I guess ‘ want will be my master.’ I started to keep down expenses; and now Lil says I’m ‘mean,’ and she's tired of saving and never having anything to show for It. I saw your wife down street, and she looked as happy as a queen 1 ” “ I think she Is ; and we are economical, too,— have to be. My wife can make a little go further than anyone I ever knew, yet she’s always surprising me with some dainty contrivance that adds to the comfort and beauty of our little home, and she’s always ‘ merry as a lark? When I ask how she manages it, she always laughs and says: *Oh 1 that’s my secret I ’ But I think I’ve discovered her ‘ secret? When we married, we both knew we should have to be very careful, but she made one condition: she would nave her Magazine. And she was right I I wouldn’t do without It myself for double the subscription price. We read it together, from the title-page to the last word : the stories keep our hearts young; the synopsis of important events and scientific matters keeps me posted so that I can talk understandingly of what is going on: my wife is always trying some ■ new idea from the household department; she makes all her dresses and those for the children, and she gets all her patterns for nothing, with the Magazine; and we saved Joe when he was so sick with the croup, by doing Just as directed in the Sanitarian Department. But I can’t tell you half 1” “ What wonderful Magazine is it! ” “ Demorest’s Family Magazine, and—” “Whatl Why that’s what Lil wanted so bad, and I told her it was an extravagance." “ Well, my friend, that’s where you made a grand mistake, and one you’d better rectify as eoon as you can. I’ll take your ‘sub? right here, on my wife’s account: she’s bound to have a china tea-set in time for our tin wedding next month. My gold watch was the premium I got for getting np a club. Sere’a a copy, with the new Premium List for clubs,—the biggest thing out! If you don’t see in it what you want, you’ve only to write to the publisher and tell him what you want, whether it is a tack-hammer or a new carriage, and he will make special terms for you, either for a club, or for part cash. Better subscribe right off and surprise Mrs. Tom. Only $2.00 a year—will save fifty times that in six months. Or send 10 cents direct to the gublisher, W. Jennings Demorest, 15 East 14th treet, New York, for a specimen copy containing the Premium List.” * T: 1*: W r-i ylxt, Undertaker i embalmeß Rensrelaer, - - - Indiana. LAND FOR "SALE. Several Improved Farms. an-th-usaiuls of acres of good lillabl* and gr izing land, in northern Jasper, which will be sold in tracts to suit purchasers Cheap for cash, orjhalf 1 ash, and lialance in yearly payments. Correspondence solicited. Call on, or address Frank W. Austin. Wheatfield. Ind