Rensselaer Gazette, Volume 2, Number 39, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 19 January 1859 — PUBLIC MEETING TO-NIGHT. [ARTICLE]

PUBLIC MEETING TO-NIGHT.

Thare will be a public meeting of the citizens to-night, at the Auditor’s office, to devisa means for erecting a fence around the Public Square. Henry Wilson has been reelected to the United States Senate from Massachusetts. . Legislature of Michigan on the Bth inst., elected ex-Gorernor Bingham United States Senator. railroad article from the pen of the President of the Fort Wayne Western Rail- j road will be found in this paper. Hon. Wm. Pitt Fessenden has been re-elected a&. United States Senator from Maine for six years from the foyrth of March next. 3 Board of County Commissioners j last week granted an order of S9O for fencing the Court House Square, provided the citizens of Rensselaer would guarantee the erection of the fence. This is a good move, and the fence will be built. second, debate between the Eru- | dites and Calliopeans came off last Wednes- i day night, the latter society again gaining i the victory. Judge Milroy and Mr. W. W. j Wishard were the Judges, and Rev. Mr. Whallon acted’as Moderator. Valparaiso Republican is now is- 1 ■tied daily 1 , and is an enterprising little ! sheet. Judge Talcott, its principal editor, j appears determined to keep up with the rail- j read, which our Valparaiso neighbors have 1 had but tw'o or three months. Northern Indian ian , published at Warsaw, Kosciusko county, came to us this week in an entire new dress and greatly enlarged. It is now the largest paper in Northern Indiana on our exchange list, and is doing good work in the Republican cause. Success to it. (£5"We have received the first and third numbers of the Indiana Farmer, published at Indianapolis. It is as neat a paper as our own Gazelle, but larger in size, and devoted to the interests of the farming community. It is published weekly by F. Wellhouse &. Co. at the low rate of $1 a year, and is ably edited by J. N. Ray. The State Board of Agricultures have adopted a resolution highly rccommf rujlng it to the farmers of Indiana.