1586 examples of advertisements in sentences

He admits indeed that "the falling off in trade last year would have been greater still than it was, if the economic penetration of Palestine were not reinforced by an idealistic factor in the shape of Zionism;" but he is piqued at the "Jewish national vanity" which makes it advisable for German firms to display their advertisements in Palestine in the Hebrew language and character.]

" That is the dark half of the moon, and, as the advertisements say, "must be experienced to be appreciated.

Advertisements of runaway slaves appeared in Detroit papers as late as 1827.

Advertisements were put in all the papers, and the poor father and mother were near sinking under the distraction of their mind.

Now, Bartletts do not send their advertisements and samples to Thomas, Richard and Henry.

See advertisements of tooth powders passim.

Your advertisements were all on the Annersley track you see and they would all be out on the Farringdon one.

She re-read the program and all the advertisements, hypnotized, like every one else in the audience, by the sight of printed matter.

Here it is now!" IX A WHITE MAN'S "NIGGER" Carteret fished from the depths of the waste-basket and handed to the general an eighteen by twenty-four sheet, poorly printed on cheap paper, with a "patent" inside, a number of advertisements of proprietary medicines, quack doctors, and fortune-tellers, and two or three columns of editorial and local news.

Hatherden was just the place to like or not to like, according to the feeling of the hour; a respectable, comfortable country house, with a lawn before, a paddock on one side, a shrubbery on the other; offices and a kitchen garden behind, and the usual ornaments of villas and advertisements, a greenhouse and a veranda.

The laws of slave states make them property, equally with goats and swine; they are levied upon for debt in the same way; they are included in the same advertisements of public sales with cattle, swine, and asses; when moved from one part of the country to another, they are herded in droves like cattle, and like them urged on by drivers; their labor is compelled in the same way.

" The following advertisements, testimony, &c. will show that the slaveholders of to-day are the children of those who shot, and hunted with bloodhounds, and burned over slow fires, the slaves of half a century ago; the worthy inheritors of their civilization, chivalry, and tender mercies.

Almost every newspaper published in the states far south contains advertisements like the following.

" Without inserting more advertisements, suffice it to say, that when slaves are advertised for sale or hire, in the lower southern country, if they are natives, or have lived in that region long enough to become acclimated, it is invariably stated.

This is shown by hundreds of advertisements in southern papers, like the following: From the "Mobile Register," July 21. 1837.

SAMUEL H. BYRN" The first of the following advertisements was a standing one, in the "Vicksburg Register," from Dec. 1835 till Aug. 1836.

The above reward will be paid by Mrs. Lucy M. Downman, of Sussex county, Va." Multitudes of advertisements like the above appear annually in the southern papers.

' The 'protection' thrown around a mother's yearnings, and the helplessness of childhood by the 'public opinion' of slaveholders, is shown by thousands of advertisements of which the following are samples.

" The absolute barbarism of a 'public opinion' which not only tolerates, but produces such advertisements as this, was outdone by nothing in the dark ages.

The first side is filled by 188 advertisements, for the most part, classed according to their objects.

The third column is almost entirely occupied by "Wanted" advertisements and we had resolved to pass over all their "Wants;" had not some of them occurred to us as rather singular, even in these times of general distress.

" The fourth folio, or side of the paper, is nearly filled with advertisements of sales by auction, a single glance at which would convince us of the instability of human affairs, even if we did not read in one corner, of a theatrical wardrobe, containing five splendid new court dresses, trimmed with gold and silver (except the pockets,) and 52 very fine wigs.

In dexterity and dispatch he equalled the advertisements.

I was even so foolish as to glance at some of the advertisements of the wizards who are so ready to put the benefit of their knowledge at the service of the public and make fortunes for others rather (apparently) than for themselves, all of whom hinted at some mysterious long-priced outsider whose miraculous qualities of speed were a secret.

The insides of the churches are often disgusting, in spite of the advertisements that are placed in them to request the forbearance of phthifical persons: the service does not prevent those who attend from going to and fro with the same irreverence as if the church were empty; and, in the most solemn part of the mass, a woman is suffered to importune you for a liard, as the price of the chair you sit on.

1586 examples of  advertisements  in sentences