Rensselaer Gazette, Volume 2, Number 3, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 19 May 1858 — Page 4 Advertisements Column 3 [ADVERTISEMENT]

SOMETHING NEW"! IN RENSSELAER! rpHE undersigned is desirous of inionning his JL friends and the public generally, that he has now on hand A LEETLE THE BEST STOCK OF GROCERIES Ev«r Brought to this Market. Everything always nice and clean, In addition to his Grocerv department, he j keeps a general assortment of Provisions, such as i CORN MEAL, FLOUR, BACON, PICKLED PORK, OOD FISH, &c. His stock of good Wooden-wnre is complete, such as Tubs, Buckets, Churns, Half-Bush-els, Ac. Call around, gentlemen, With the cash, and vou will always find the latch-string hanging out. [so] J. M. AUSTIN. The Eclectic College of Medicine, CINCINNATI, O. THE spring session of 1858 will commence on Monday, the Bth of February, land continue sixteen weeks. A full and thorough course of Lectures will be given, occupying six or seven hours daily, with good opportunities for attention to practical Am atomy, and with ample Clinical facilities at the Commercial Hospital. The arrangement of the chwrs will bo as follows: T. E. ST. JOHN, M. D., Professor of Anatomy anjpfhysiology. J. F. JUDGE, $Mb.. Professor of Chemistry agStPharmacy. A. J. HOWE, MTI),, Professor of Surgery; C. H. CLEAVELANt*. M. D., Professor of Materia ]Vl«dica*l|fi'Therapeutlcs. WM. SHERWOOD, ,M. D., Professor of Medical Practice and Pathology. J. R. BUCHANAN, M. D., Emeritus Prtifessor of Cerebral Physiology and Institutes of Medicine. JOHN KING, Professor of Obstetrics and of Women and Children. The terms for the session be the same as heretofore, viz: Matriculation, $5; Tuition, S2O; Demonstrator’s Ticket, $5. student is required to engage in dissec.tign <*ne session before graduating.) Graduations's2s; Ticket to Commercial Hospital, (optionajj,) $5. The Lecture Rooms arc finished, neat and comfortable, and in a central locality, (in College Hall, Walnut street,) where students will find it convenient to call on their arrival. Tickets for the session may lie obtained of tho Dean of the Facuity, at his offico, No. 113 Smith street, or of Professor C. H. JEleayelnnd, Secretary of the Faculty, No. 139 Seventh street, near Elm. [l4-ly,] JOHN IX, Dean.

PROSPECTUS Of the Thirty-seventh Yoluine of THE INDIANA STATE JOURNAL. TITHE JOURNAL is now entering its ThirtyJL seventh Volume. It was established in 1822, and is the oldest paper in Indfenn. It is equal in age to the city of Indianapolis, and is nearly as old as our State government. It was established when Indiana was littlqMs.o than a wilderness, and when Indiana scarce?/'existed except in name. It has lived and grown upon its own merits, seldom receiving officgi! patronage, Or governmental favors. Its numcPis a “household i word” throughout tho length and breadth of the State, and its position upon all-public matters—political or otherwise—is so well known that anything said in reference to itjrtftotirse upon any ' of the questions now before the people would be superfluous. Tho Journal will continue io advocate the great nrinciple of freedom, and- give its support to tho Republican party, as the party of the people—acting with the party when right, and repudiating it when wrong —but it will be for the coming year more of a family paper that it lias ever yet been, and d.* made mqfe acceptable to j the general reader than a pure|jr political paper i could be. \v. The session of Congress u new adminis- j tratiou is always fraught with ’ T jp r <| or l ess portanfce to the welfare of tho dVjtntry, and the present session will he looked ufcto-with feelings of peculiar interest. Tho posit|o*i the administration upon Kansas affairs is a matter of much public concern. Tho Utah question, and the progress of the anticipated war Jti that qua: ter, will be a subject of great public Interest as long as it remains unsettled. Eveuts are transpiring in our country and throughout tne world to make a newspaper indispensable to every individual. Bounteous crops have blessedsUie husbandman throughout the land, and pleiM smiles upon ail, and we appear before the pinfiic, asking for its support, feeling that we shalJJreceive it libererally. The past course of tho ' Journal will be the best index of what the figure will be, and promising to improve upon format efforts in producing an acceptable lamily newspaper, we submit our claims to a generous and intelligent people. » * TERMS. v One copy one year V7.<» 50 Ten copies one year, and one to getter up of the club V. 15 00 Twenty copies one year, to one across... .20 00 Thirtv-five copies one year, to onqnddress, and" one to the getter up of the'cldb 35 00 Fifty copies one year, to one adores, and two to the getter up of the club. 50 00 o*ln clubs of ten the name offjktch subscriber will be written on his paper, bute#i-larger clubs, where the papers are sent for ono'flpDar each, ns name will be written on the paperfalntt the entire club Sent to one person for distrifyftiiai. This is the invariable practice of all papdfir sending out clubß at cheap rates, and cannot be.ekrpartcd from in any particular. THE DAILY JOURNAL will be sent by mail for six dol'arSLiyear, or fifty cents a month. Address, JOURNAL COMPANY, 37 Indiujptjfolis, Ind. DR. E. J. HAZBN, PRACTICAL OCULIST, Huving permanently located I Jti R E N S S E L ASjB B , WOULD respectfully announce to the citizens . of the surrounding country that he will be in readiness at all times to cure all curable diseases of the Eye, either re- ‘ cent or chronic inflammation, partial blindness, granulations of the eyelids, films, 35-ts W anted—Lumber. ANY person wishing to btiilffhjrtttl pay the carpenter in Itifnber, can make' such arrangements with 4T-«m JOFEPH A- 4T. JOHN-