Rensselaer Gazette, Volume 2, Number 13, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 28 July 1858 — Page 4
Miscellaneous,, A Sentimental Robber—Kisses More Precious than Jewels. A night or two ago, a fair, sweet girl, residing on Race, rear of Fourth street, was partially awakened from her slumbers by a man in her chamber, but not fully aroused, she lay with closed lips for a minute, when’ the sound bedng repeated, she started up and saw, by the light of the little jet upon the gas-burner, a man’s form disappearing through the window. She screamed involuntarily, and her father, armed with a revolver, was in her room in a few moments, greatly agitated and alarmed, questioning his lovely daughter as to the Cause oilier fear. She told him what had frightened her,; and he ran to the open window, looked out upon the balcony and into the yard, but could see nothing of "the terrible man, the midnight robber, and disturber of the doveeyed darling’s nest., The parent was disposed to think hrs daughter had been dreaming, that her imagination had painted What was not real, but on returning to her apartment, she assured him she was wide and that she had seen all she had stated. Her father was still incredulous, when, looking around, he observed upon his daughter’s dressing btireati, where a beautiful enameled watch, a pair of heavy bracelets, a diamond ring, and a necklace were lying, a slip of paper, on which was written: ” “Fairest, Dearest Girl: I came here to rob, but your beauty has made me honest for the time. I saw these jewels, but believing them yours, I could not take themI have stolen what I value more:—three deliciotis kisses from your unconcious lips. Do not be offended; they were gentle and innocent. An Unknown Lover.” This story sounds romantic, we are aware, and perhaps some of our matter-of-fact readers will be skeptical in relation thereto, but we are assured upon the best authority that it in Strictly veracious, and we publish it as an evidence that the age of gallantry and >- sentiment is not at $n end; that the race of Rinaldo Rinaldini is not extinct.—A’. O. Delta.
A Good Witness.— Lawyer— did the de-! fendant knock the witness down with malice ! prepense!: Witness— No sir; he knocked him down : with a flat-iron. ■' . , Lawyer— You misunderstand me, my ’ friend, I want to know if he attacked him i with any evil intentWitness —-Oh, no, sirj it was outside the | tent. Lawyer— No, no; I wi<h, you to tell me whether the attack was at all a preconcerted J affair. V ~ . - Witness— No, sir; >t was not a free concert affair; it was at a circus. (gy“A drunken sailor belonging to the ' Hart performed a feat just outside of Chicago, the other flay, which he will hard- i iy wish to repeat.- The Chicago Press says ! he went to the mast-head, then to mainmast I truck, where, hanging by one hand to the slender topmast, he wrenched off the gilt ball, and hurled it to a distace from the ves- | Bel’s side, then sprang into the air, coming < down feet foremost into the water, and after • being under water till it was supposed he gone to Davy Jone’s locker, he rose to j the surface, and was rescued. His first in-[ quiry, after consciousness was restored, was i as to the whereabouts of the man who -bet him twenty-five dollars.” He lies seriously injured at the hospital in Chicago. oO"Mrs. Severe Duval, of Rivers, (C. W.,) lately gave birth to a child having/our legs and feet, and three arms. There is a protuberance near the shoulder, as if it.were a fourth abortive arm. The lower part of the child is composed of t\vo bodies, joined near the chest, or rather, the one inserted into, or growing out of th? other. There is but o.ne head, rather particularly on the top and occiput. The child is of the female sex, in apparent good health,.sixteen days old, and weighs about eight pounds. otters from the Gulf shore of Louisiana speak of the yellow fever as prevailing in that region to some extent, and occasioning not a li’tle uneasiness among theinhab- , itants. The disease, upon the same authority, has been in New Orleans for weeks past, thpugh the papers have not thought it of sufficient importance to say anything a,boirt it. CO”A few weeks since Wm. Laycock, of Bradford, England, undertook to walk ten miles .and throw five tuns’weight over his head in the space of two hours. He accomplished this extraordinary feat in four minutes less than the .time. In the first hour he walked six miles and threw a half cwt. over his head One hundred and twenty times. Charleston (S. (".) Courier announces that a process has been discovered by which cotton can be compressed into a solid form, harder, than wood, impervious to the elements, fireproof and waterproof, and capable of use for building purposes, at about one-third the cost of brick. number of deaths by sun stroke reported to the city inspectors of New York last week, was thirty-one
CO"The Newburg (N. Y.) Gazette tells a story about a large calf it saw in that city on the sth intant, and examined with the following result: It was raised by Mr. John Waring, of Newburg, was only twelve weeks old, and weighed four hundred and one pounds. ot7”Steps are now being, taken by' the order of St. John to re-establish a hospital at Jerusalem for sick pilgrims of all. nations, and for the interest taken in this matter by the Empress Eugenie, she has been decorated with the cross of the Order. 0O“One hundred and fifty officers serving in India have tendered their resignation to General Sir Colin Campbell. The eriormous plunder to which the army has had access, has made them too rich to work under the blazing sun of India. 2s, ££5“A resident of Buffalo since 1811 has been tracing out the changes of the lake shore since |he first knew it, and estimates that two hundred and forty acres of land have been lost in that city alone. million acres of the land granted to, the State of Michigan by act of Congress, in 1850, are to be thrown into the market. The sales will commence at Lansing on’tlie 28th instant. CCJ”A late number of the Washington Union publishes twelve columns of Government advertising and says, is certainly a good thing to be a Democrat in, these days. ,, Washington Union ' boasts that the affairs of the Government are going on like clock-work. Oh yes, they are going on-— tick, tick, tick.—Louisville-Journal. (fcs”Myriads of grasshoppers have made their appearance in the wheat and grass fields four or five miles wesj, of Abington, Virginia, and are doing much injury. To Daughters.—The secret you dare not tell your mother, is "a dangerous secret, and one that will be likely to bring you sorrow and suffering in the endDrinkard is acting Secretary of War in the absence of Secretary Floyd. Too many of that family are in office these days.— Louisville Journal.
CAUTION - .—All Genuine 1 ills tho an.-ve Indian on Horseback, on each Box. Merchants and Traders will be on their guard and not! be imposed ■ upon by a Counterfeit of Morse’s Indian Boot Fills, signed. A. B.' A” <reniiiu» Indian Root Pilte hare the name and signature of A. J. White t£ C». t ea each box. 1»K. .Mouse, the inventor of MORSE’S INDIAN ■ ROOT FILLS. ha#--spoilt the greater part cf his life in ' traveling, having visited Europe, .Asia and Africa, as j well as North America—lias spent three years among I the Indians of our Western country—it was in this ’ way that the Indian Root Pills were first discovered. Dr. .Morse was the first man to establish the fact that all diseases arise from IMPURITY Ob' I'HE BLOOD; .that our strength, health and life depend upon this ‘ vital fluid W hen the various.passages become clogged, and do not act in perfect harmon'y with the difTeren t functions of the body, the blot.d loses its acltion, becr.mtes I thick, corrupted and diseased; thus causing all pains, sickness and distress of every name; our siren th is ■ exhausted. our health we are deprived of, and if ua ture is not assisted in throwing off the stagnant humors, the blood will become choked and cease to act, ai»d thus our light <-f life will be forever blown i out. Il .w important, then, that we should keep the I vaiious pa-sa.. es <f the body free and open: and how ■ plea-ant to us that we have it in our plow er to put a i nicdicine in your reach, namely. Morsel Indian Root • Pills, manufactured from plants and Foots which grow around'the mountainous cliffs im Nature’s ear- j den, for th-e health and recovery of diseased man. I One of the roots from which these Pills are made is : a Sudorific, which opens the pores: of the skin and I assists Nature in throwing out the finer parts of the corruption within. The second is a plant which is an Expectorant, that opens and uncloigs the passage to the lungs, and thus, in a soothing manner, performs its duty by throwing off phlegm- and other huuhors from the lungs by copious spitting. The third | is a Diuretic, which gives ease and double strength ; . to the kidneys; tiius encouraging, they draw large amounts of impurity the blood, which is then i throxvn nut bountifully by the urinary; < r water passage, and which could not have been discharged in any other way. The fourth is a Cathartic, and accompanies the other properties of the Pills while eni ga-ed in purifying the blood, the coarder particles of J impurity which cannot by the other outlets, are thus taken up and oonveyedoff in great quantities by the bowels. . From the above it is shown that Drj Morse’s Indian Root Pills not only enter the stomach, but become united with the blood, for they find way to every ; part, and completely rout out and cleanse the system from all impurity, and the life of Hie body, which is i the bloody becomes perfectly healthy; .consequently, all sickness and-pain is driven from the system, fur i they cannot remain when the body becomes so pure and Clear. | The reason why people are so dist-fcshed when siek, and why so many die, is because they do not get a ' medicine av bich will pass i o the afflicted parts, and whieii wilj open the natural passaged for the disease to be cast but; hence, a large quantity of f<R d and i. other in at ter is lodged, and the stomach and intes _i tines 'are literally overflowing with the corrupted mass, thus undergoing disagreeable fermentations, , constantly mixing with the blood, whiic'h throws the j coiruptcd matter through every vein and artery, until life is taken from the body by Dr. Morse’s ■ RILLS have added to themselves vicitory upon victory. by restoiing millions of the sick to blooming health and happiness. Yes, thousands who have -i been racked or tormented with sickness,, pain and , anguish, and whose treble frajnes-have been scorched by the burning elements of raging fever? and who I ave beeji brought, as it were, w’ithin a step of the . silei.t crave, now stand ready to AesJti/y that they ; would Lave been numbered with the dead, had it not ; been for this treat and wonderful mcdic.ine, Morse’s i Indian Ro< t Pills. After one or two Hoses had been i taken, they were astonished, and absolutely surprised, in ‘ wit nessiug their charming effects. Not only do J they give immediate ease and strength, and take i away all sickness, pain and anguish, but they at on< e j go to work at the foundation of the disease, which is j the blued, therefore, it will be shoiwu, especially by those w.ho use these Pills, that they will so and purify, that disease—that deadly enemy will take its flight, and tbeflush of youth and beauty will again return, and the prospect of a lung and happy life will chcri<h and hri.. days, action.—Beware of a counterfeit signed ./]. B. I JiTovre. All genuine have the name of A. J. Co, on each h< x. Also th<‘, signature of A. J. i ll hitc ty All others arc,spurrdus. A. J. WHITE eV CO., So'e Proprietors, 50 Leonaid Street], New York. Dr. Mor.- e’s Indian Root Pills are sold by all dealers I,in Medicines, Agents panted • ry town, village and hamlet in the land p . desiring the agency will address as above for terms. 0'1; Price 25 cents per bga; five boxes will hr sent on : receipt of postage paid. 'l2 lv
JASPER COUNTY LAND AGENCY. R. H MILROY. t. A . COLX. MILROY <fc COLE, REAL ESTATE AGENTS, ARE prepared to transact all business usually pertaining to Real Estate Agencies—will give prompt and careful attention to the purchase and sale of Real Estate, payment of Taxes, &.c They are prepared to and will furnish correctabtructs of titles to airy piece or pieces of land anywhere in this county, and will accompany: the same with a legal opinion as to its validity, without additional charge, whenever required. 20,000 ACRES OF the best land in Jaspercounty, suituated in in all parts of the county, and comprising every variety of timber and prairie; also, several well-improved farms in various parts of ftie county, for sale by MILROY &. COLE, 43 Real Estate Agents. ONJE OI TUE BEST FARMS IN THE COLNTY, C-ONSISTJNG of 176 acres of prairie and 20 acres of timber, 159 acres of the farm in cultivation—an excellent spring and orchard on the premises; the farm situated three nrties from Rensselaer, on the State Road from Rensselaer to Bradford, for sale by ’ '' MILROY & COLE, Land Agents. A l-’INK LITTLE F ilOl of SO ACCiJES, SEVENTY acres of which is under improvement; also, 40 acres of excellent Timber belonging to the farm; situated about three miles from Rensselaer, for sale at a very low price and on good terms by MILROY & COLE, 43 Land Agents. ONi BJEAVJEIB VBAIKIEj ’ ALL of section 4, and the north half of section 5, in township 28, range also, the southwest quarter of the south-east quarter of section 32, township 29, range B—as good prairie as there is in Jasper county, selected years ago by good judges; will be sold at low price upon these? terms: $1,23 per acre cash in hand; $2 per acre on the Ist of January, 1859; $2 per acre on the Ist of January’, 1860, and the balance in four years from tlfe date of the deed, with interest, by MILROY &. COLE, 43 Real Estate Agents. THE IMAI OF PRAIRIE DESCRIBED as follows: AU of section 8, except 80 acres off the west side of the section; the north half and south-west quarter of section 9; the east-half and the south east quarter of the south-west quarter of section 5; the whole of section 4; the south-west quarter of section 3, and the north-west quarter of section 10, all in township 27, range 8, situated in the vicinity of Lyon’s Steam Mill, and in a well-settled neighborhood; plenty of gabd -timber within a short distance of the premises; will be sold at very low price, upon the following unprecedented!y favorable terms, to-wit: Fifteen per cent, of the purchase money in hand, five per cent, in one year, and the balance- in eight equal annual paynumts, with interest at the rate of six per cent, per annum, payable annually, the deferred payments secun dby mortgage on the premises. For tho above real estate apply to ’MILROY A COLE, 43 Land Agents. A EAKOE NCMBEB OF TOWN EOTS, SITUATED in the best parts of the town of Rensselaer, for sale at very low price and on favorable terms by MILROY <t. COLE, 43 Real Estate Agents. Consumptives, do not Despair! LT AN OLD INDIAN CONSUMPTION DOCTOR.UNCAS BRANT, while a Missionary among the CURED.lndians of the Rocky Mountains, discovered a RARE PLANT, that proves to be a certain CONSUMPTION cure for Consumption, Bronchitis, Asthma, Liver CofiiCURED, plaint, Nervous Affections, Coughs, Colds, &c. Having now made his fortune and reCONSUMPTION tired from business, he will send the prescription and diCURED. rectioiis for preparing the medicine free of charge to all who desire it, and will send CONSUMPTION to his agent, inclosing two stamps, (6 cents,) to pay the CURED. ireturn letter, with a description of their symptoms. The Old I octor has cured more CONSUMPTION than 3,0D0 cases of Consumption alone, and hopes all afliicGURED. ted people will avail themselves of this opportunity, as the Doctor wishes to do all CONSUMPTION the good he can before he dies. Address all letters to ‘CURED. DANIEL ADEE, Box 5.1 P.O. N.Y., 9-ly Who is his sole agent. The Eclectic College of Medicine, CINCINNATI, <». r ITHE winter session of 1858-9 will commence L on the 13th of October, and continue sixteen weeks. A full ami thoreugh course of Lectures will be given, occupying six or seven hours daily, with good opportunities for attention to practical Anatomy, and with ample Clinical facilities at the Commercial Hospital. The arrangement of the chairs will be as follows: T. E. ST. JOHN, M. D., Professor of Anatomy and Physiology. J. F. JUDGE, M. D., Professor of Chemistry and Pharmacy A. J. HOWE, M. D., Professor of Surgery, C. H. CLEAVELAND, M. D., Professor of Materia Medica and Therapeutics. .WM. SHERWOOD, M. D., Professor of Medical Practice and Pathology. J. R. BUCHANAN, M. D., Emeritus Professor of Cerebral Physiology and Institutes of Medicine. | i JOHN KING, M. q., . Professor of Obstetrics and Diseases of Women and Children. The terms for the session will be the same as viz: $5; Tuition, s2o* Demonstrators Ticket, $5. (Every student ia required to engage in dissection one-session before graduating.) Graduation, $25; Ticket to Commercial Hospital, (optional,) $5. Tho Lecture Rooms are newly finished, neat and and in a central locality, (in College Hall,Walnut street,) where students will find it convenient to call On their arrival. 1 ickcts tor the session may be obtained of the | Dean of the faculty, at his offico, No. 113 Smith l street, or of Professor C. H. Cleuveland, Secre- ] tary of the Faculty, No. l‘<9 Seventh street, near j Elm- [l4-ly] JOHN KING, M. D., Dean. AI)VER TI S K ' ’ IN THE R E N S S F, I, A E R G A EE T T> .
IF YOU WANT TO BUY GOO D S Cheap for Cash, OR ■ '" F u • ■ I ;; U't- K' ■ PRODUC'F, GO TO THOMPSON & SON’S, - SHANGHAI IBBILBING, RENSSELAER, IND. * I. M. STACKHOUSE.] [c. D. STACKHOUSE. SOMETHING NEW! HARDWARE, Stove an ’ Variety Store I J REELING th- t th ere whs a necessity existing I for an establishment of this kind, wo have removed our Tin Shop to the third door from the river, and have opened THE FINEST ASSORTMENT OF HARDWARE, STOVES, &C, Ever Brought to this Market. OUR STOCK CONSISTS IN PART OF RAILROAD SHOVELS, SPADES, AXES, FIELD HOES, GARDEN HOES, MANURE FORKS, HAY FORKS, GRAIN FORKS, TRACE CHAINS, HALTER CHAINS, CROSS-CUT SAWS, HAND SAWS, CURRY COMBS, DOOR LOCKS, DOOR BUTTS, AUGURS, CHISELS, FILES, GIMBLETS, STEEL-YARDS, CUTLERY, &.c., &c., TOGETHER WITH Everything Else in the Hardware Line that you can call for! Our stock of Stoves is unparallelled in the West, either for durability, beauty or cheapne/s. -Our stock of Castings is complete, comprising, among other things, STOVE POTS, TEA KETTLES, v SMOOTHING IRONS, DOG IRONS, BISCUIT OVENS, SRILLETS &. LIDS. Our Tin Shop is still grinding out work of every imaginable pattern. O’ Especial attention paid to Eave Troughs, repairing, and other "job work. Give us a call before purchasing elsewhere, for as wd buy in tlie Eastern markets, and exclusively for cash, we can afford to sell cheaper than articles in this line have ever been offered in this market before. 49 I. M. STACKHOUSE & BRO. Xj'Oß Grain Cradles, Scythes, &c., go to I. M. STACKHOUSE & BRO’S. 1?OR Grain Forks, Hay F’orks, Rakes, 4tc., go to I. M. STACKHOUSE &. BRO’S. L?OR Nails, Locks, Latches, Butts, A.c., go to 1 -T t M. STACKHOUSE! k. RfcrPS
Jasper Co. Sale of Swamp Lands. Auditor’s Office, Jasper CountyJ •May 16, 1858. j NOTICE is hereby given that the following described lands, patented to the State of Indiana under the act of Congress of September 28, 1850, and acts supplementary thereto, will be offered at public sale to the highest bidder for cash, [no bid for less than $1 25 per acre being received,] on Wednesday, the 4th day of August next, at the Court House door in Rensselaer, in said county. The sale to be continued from day to day until all are offered. TURNER A. KNOX, 5-tt Auditor of Jasper county.
BSSCRIPTION.
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Hundredths., u Rango Township... Section
Hundredths.. Acree Range Tewmhip... Section
DtSSORIrTION.
