Jasper Republican, Volume 1, Number 20, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 29 January 1875 — Page 4 Advertisements Column 2 [ADVERTISEMENT]
NORTH WESTERN Normal School AND COMMERCIAL INSTITUTE. Kentland, Indiana. Spring Term opens march 22, 1875. "Fall term commences Sept. 13th 1875. Locality healthy. Teaching'modern and practical.— Building new and commodious. Society chaste and intellectual. Citixens in foil sympathy with the schools. Classes will be sustained in all the common branches, Natural Science, Higher Mathematics and Classics. No extra charges for German, French, or' Penmanship. Bookkeeping, Business Forms aad Correspondence practically taught withoot additional expense. A Teachers’Class aud a Model Class will be formed for the practical training of teachers. Tuition $7 to s9per term of 12 weeks, payablein advance. Table Boarding $1.50 to $2-50 per week. Boarding, everything fornished, $3 to $3.50 per week. Rooms at low rates. For further information address the Principal, B. F. NIESZ. 20w8
TTT 'EM CTT TIT ‘JHL JEft auP U JXftu DAILY AND WEEKLY FOR 1875. The approach of the Presidential election gives unusual importance to the events and developments of 1876. We shall endeavor to describe them fully, faithfully, and fearlessly. . The'Weekly Sun has now attained « circulation of over seventy thousand copies. Its readers are found in every State and Ter-, ritory, and its quality to wel! known to the public. We shall not only endeavor to keep it folly up to the old standard, but to improve and add to its variety and power.The Weekly Sun will continue to be a thorough newspaper. All the news of the day will be found in it, condoned when unimportant, at full length when of moment and always, we trust, treated in a dear, interesting and instructive manner. It to our aim to make the Weekly Sun the best family newspaper in the world. It will be foil of entertaining and appropriate reading of every sort, but will print nothing to offend the most scrupulous and delicate taste. It will always contain the most interesting stories and romances of the day, carefully selected and legibly printed. The Agricultural Department is a prominent feature in the Weekly Sun, and its articles will always bo found useful to the farmer. •>. 1 The number of men independent in politics is increasing, and the Weekly Sun to their paper especially. It belongs to no party, and obeys ho dictation, contending for principle, and for the rietion of tho best men. It exposes the corruption that disgraces the eouutry and threatens the overthrow of republican institutions. It has no fear of knaves, and seeks no flavors from theirsnpporters. •• ' • The markets of every kind and the fashions are regularly reported in its columns. The price es the Weekly Sun is one dollar s year, for a eheet of eight pages and fiftysix column?. As this barely pays the expenses of paper and printing, we an* not able to make any discount or allow any premium to friends Who may make special efforts to extend its Circulation. Under the new I*W: which requires prepayment of postage in advance, one dollar a year, With twenty cents, the cost of prepaid postage, added,to the rate of subscription. It is net necessary to get up a club tot order to have tho Weekly Sun at this rate. Any one who sends one dollar and twenty cents will get the paper, postpaid, for a yea l. Wo have, no traveling agents. The Weekly Sun —Eight pages, fifty-six columns. Only $1.30 a year, postage prepaid. No discounts front this rate> The Daily Sun. —A large sous-page newspaper of twenty-eight columns. Drily circulation ever 120,000. All the news for 3 cents. Subscription, postage prepaid. 66 cents,a month, or $6.50 a year. To clubs of 10 or over, a discount of 20 per cent. Ad dress, “THE SUN,” New York City.
