Rensselaer Union, Volume 8, Number 16, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 6 January 1876 — Page 4 Advertisements Column 4 [ADVERTISEMENT]
TUB weekly sun. 1776. NEW YORK. 1876. Eighteen hundred and aeventy-six is the Centennial year. It is also the year in which an Opposition House of Representatives. the first since the war, will be in power at Washington: and the year of the twenty-third election of a President of the United States.' All of these events are sure to be of great interest and importance, especially tiie two latter; and all of them and 'everything connected with them will be fully and freshly reported and expounded in Thb Sun. ■ ■ i> The Opposition House of Representatives, taking up the line of inquiry opened years ago by The Sun, will sternly and diligently investigate the corruptions and misdeeds of Gmant’b administration; and will, it is to be hoped, lay the foundation for a new and better period in our national history. Of all this The Sun will contain complete and accurate accounts, furnishing its readers with early and trustworthy information upon these absorbing topics. The twenty-third Presidential election, with the preparations for it, will be memorable as deciding upon Grant's aspirations for a third terra ot power and plunder, ynd still more as deciding who shall be the candidate of the party of Reform, and as electing that candidate. Concerning all these subjects, those who read The Sun will have the constant means of being thoroughly well informed. The Weekly Sun, which has attained a circulatiou of over eighty thousand copies, already has its readers iu every State and Territory, and we trust that the year 1876 will see their numbers doubled. It will continue to be a thorough newspaper. All the general news of the day will be found in it, condensed when unimportant, at full length when of moment; and always, we trust, treated in a clear, interesting and instructive manner. It 1* our aim to make the Weekly Sun the best family newspaper in the world, and we shall continue to give in its columns a large amount of miscellaneous reading, such as stories, tales, poems, scientific intelligence and agricultural information, for which we are not able to make room in our daily edition. The agricultural department especially is one of ils prominent features The fashions are also regularly reported in its columns; and so are the markets of every kind. The Weekly Sun. eight pages with fiftysix broad columns is only $1.20 a year, postage prepaid. As this price barely repays the cost of the paper, no discount can be made from this rate to clubs, agents, Postmasters, or anyone. The Daily Sun, a large four page newspaper of twenty-eight columns, gives all the news for two cents a copy. Subscription , postage prepaid, 55p. a month or $6.50 a year. Sunday edition extra, sl.lO per year. We have no traveling agents. Address, THE SUN, New York City.
SAVE MONEY By sending $4.75 for anv $4 Magazine and THE WEEKLY TRIBUNE (regular price $6), or $5.75 for the Magazine and THE SEMI-WEEKLY TRIBUNE (regular price $3). Address Tlti: TRIBUNE, New York.
Most Extraordinary. The attention of readers is called Io the extraordinary inducements offered to all persons who will subscribe for the Weekly Indiana State Journal with fife Rensselaer Union . Both papers will be Jfefnished at the veiy low price of $3.50 per year—postage paid—and each subscrioer will receive an entirely new township and sectional map of the State of Indiana, 35x48 inches in size, engraved and piloted especially for the Indinapolis Journal. The map alone retails at $2.50. Nd such oesirable offer was ever before made to the people of this State. The Journal has been greatly improved since the recent change of management, and is now one of the beet newspapers published in the West. A specimen copy of the map may be seen at this office. Agents and canvassers wanted in every township in this wild adjoining counties. ' *■ to 23
VICK’S Flower and Vegetable Seeds are the best the world produces. They are planted by a million people in America, and the result is, beautiful Flowers and splendid Vegetables. A Priced Catalogue sent free to all who enclose the postage —a 2 cent stamp. VICK’S Flower and Vegetable Garden is tne most beautiful work of the kind in the world. It contains nearly 150 pages, hundreds of fine illustrations; and four Chromo Plates of Flowers, beautifully drawn and colored from nature. Price 35 cts. in paper covers; 65 cents bound in elegant cloth. Vick’s Floral Guide. This is a beautiful Quarterly Journal,k finely illustrated, and containing an elegint colored Frontispiece with the first number. Price only 25 cts. for the year. The first No. for 1876 just issued. Address JAMES VICK, Kocliestcr, N. Y.
jY. J. REED'S HOOSIER HAY SLIDE ■ One of the Greatest Labor-Saving Machines yet Invented for the Hay-Field.
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Cheap. Practical. i Durable, ICfiicieiit. Two .jjnen and one span of {horses can haul and stack more hay with the Hoosier Hay Slide in one day, than five men and two span of horses can in the same time with any other appliance. Easy to load, and unloads itself. Price, 14-foot Slide, $7 ; 16-foot, SB. A. J. REED, Pleasant Grove, Jasper County, Ind. Agents: —F. W. Bedford, Rensselaer, Ind.. Hunbard & McFarland, Francesville, Ind 44 AGENTS WAITED. —Territory cheap and on leasonable terms. Patented late—* April 6,1875, ’ .
