Rensselaer Union, Volume 5, Number 21, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 13 February 1873 — Page 4 Advertisements Column 1 [ADVERTISEMENT]
The Little Corporal —The contents of the February number are made up of excellent original reading matter adapted to the wants of that large portion of the reading public for which it is especially intended—the little folks. The hearts of the editor, Mrs. Emily Huntington Miller, and {Jie corps of talented contributors of this magazine are evidently enlisted In the cause, as they always succeed in producing an entertaining and useful book, and one that is Immensely popular with the younger readers, and is olbo read with pleasure and profit by the older heads of the family. The subscription price is sl. to per year. If you seh<Tsi.6o to the publisher'; John E. Miller, Chicago, you will receive the magazine for one year and two beautiful chromos. * The Phrenological Journal for February comes out as fresh and vigorous as ft crisp, seasonable and salutary stock of reading matter can make a magazine. Among its content s are: A good sketch and portrait of the regretted Norman McLeod, D. D, Speculative Non-Philoso-phy; What do We live For? Natural Death; Daniel Foz, the centenarian fanner; Clara Louise Kellogg; Christian Charity; Harvey Prindle Peet, LL.D., the eminent instructor of Deaf-mutes; Is Phrenology Dead? Price as usual, 30 cents, or *B* a year. We notice that the publisher offers a premium of a new Chrorno to new subscribers who send 30 cts. extra for postage and mounting. S. R. Wells, Publisher, 389 Broadway, N. Y. * Arthur’s Illustrated Home Magazine.—With the beginning of the present year the publishers of this magazine added largely to its dimensions, and the number for February contains a liberal assortment of excellent literary matter, several of the sketches being accompanied by appropriate Illustrations. The subscriber to this magazine receives a full equivalent for his money ha the book itself, bat as an extra inducement the publishers will give to each subscriber for 1873 a copy of “The Christian Graces,” pronounced one of the loveliest steel engravings ever issued. Terms, $8 60 a year, with a reduction for clubs. Address T. S. Arthur & Son, Philadelphia, Pa. •
Thh Children's Hour.— The little ones who are Is receipt each month of this juvenile publication, are always sure of finding within its pages much to amuse and enlighten them. A good deal es the reading matter Is of a practical kind, and the illustrations are usually instructive, as well as pleasing. The, terms are: $1.25 a year; five copies, $5: ten, and one extra, $lO. T. 8 Arthur & Son, Philadelphia, Pa. * What Next?—This favorite juvenile magazine gives 168 large pages of excellent reading, and a SI.OO Chromo, 10X12 Inches, mounted for framing, to every subscriber, all for only 30 cents a year. Enough, certainly, for the price. The February number is a real gem, every way. Specimen 8 cents. John B. Alden, Publisher, Chicago, Ills. * THK WEEKLY SUN. Only $1 a Year. 8 Pages. Tins Best Family Pater.—The Weekly N. Y. Sun. 8 pages. $1 a year. Send your Dollar. The Best Agricultural Paper.—The Weekly N. Y. Sun. 8 pages. $1 a year. Send your Dollar. The Best Political Pater.— The Weekly N. Y. Sun. Independent and Faithful. Against Public Plunder. 8 pages. $1 a year. Send your Dollar. The Best Newspaper.— The Weekly New York Sun. 8 pages. $1 a year. Send your Dollar. Has All the. News .--The Weekly New York Sun. 8 pages. $1 a year. Send your Dollar. The Best Btory Pater.—The Weekly N. Y. Sun. 8 pages. $1 a year. Send your Dollar. The Best Fashion Reports In the Weekly N. Y. Sun. 6 pages. $1 a year. Send your Dollar. The Best Market Reports in the Weekly N. Y. Sun. 8 pages. $1 a year. Send-your Dollar. The Best Cattle Reports in the Weekly N. Y. Sun. 8 pages. $1 a year . Send your Dollar. . TwEßaxrMssawUrSfafpWHjsesr-"TBS 5 WfeeKty N. Y. Sun. 8 pages. $1 a year. Send your Dollar. Address THK BUN, New York City.
Oas Aar Medicine Do Mores The art of changing the bate metals Into gold has not been discovered, but the happy results of a discovery infinitely more Important are familiar to the community, and have been so for the past twenty years. To exchange debility for vigor, sickness for health, apathy for energy, gloom for cheerfulness, is a much more desirable operation thf»n to transmute lead into the root of all evil. And thu is whst Hostetter’s Stomsch Bitters accomplish and have been accomplishing dally, ever since their Introduction. Dyspepsia, biliousness, nervous affections, constipation, intermittent fevers, rheumatism, sick headache aud general debility are no longer the bugbears that they were a fifth of a century ago. The Bitters, taken as a protective medicine, prevent them, and taken as a remedy, cures them, and the people know It. Hence their overshadowing reputation and enormous sale. The fame of the great vegetable specific Is ever on the march, and at a pace that no competitor can llvo. It la to-day the foremost mediejne of Its class in tha civilized world. Every BOW and then attempts are made to rival it. and sometimes a nostrum concocted in the idle hope of sharing Us popularity has a brief spurt of apparent success But it is ail illusion. One by one they alak like atone* in the sea, while the gruattonlc, whose celebrity has been the cause of these blind ventures, continues to ride on the topmost wave of public favor, unapproached aud unapproachable. ,
