Rensselaer Gazette, Volume 3, Number 36, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 28 December 1859 — Page 3 Advertisements Column 1 [ADVERTISEMENT]
T TrT Ti SATURDAY EVENING POST. STILL GREATER INDUCEMENTS! A CHANCE TO OBTAIN TWO lIAND««inC STEEL ENCB AVIffiCSl ! A Beautiful Engraving also as a Premium to Every Subscriber! Fiction, News, Ilumor, Agriculture, the Markets, &c. f riHE proprietors of the SATURDAY F.VEN--L ING POST —•■the oldest and best of the weeklies” —have the pleasure to announce to the reading public, that they h ive made an exclusive arrangement with an author whose powerful I Stories of late attracted great attention; and they will open the year 1860 with a novelet, written j expressly for the Post, called THE EARL’S DAUGHTERS, > By the author of the “Red Court Farm,” “The ; Rock,” the “Hester Hailiwell Stories,” “'rite : Six Gray Powders,” “The Diamond Brace- J | let,” &c. In this Story, expressly written for the Post, . this powerful writer's genius lias had full scope afforded it, and we tire able to state—having read it ill manuscript, for it is already in hand—that it will make a sensation, unless we are greatly : : mistaken, as one of the most powerful and inter- j esting Stories ever published. To enable tlKise unacquainted with the Tost to judge of the richness and variety of its gener- ! al contents, we may state that during the past ; year ive have published Novelets, Stories,Poems, | Essays, X c., from the pens of tlie following ; gifted writers: G. P. 11. James, Charles Dickens, Alfred Tennyson, Charles Reade, H.VV.Longfellow,Chas. Mackay, Wilkie Collins, Dr. O. W. Holmes, T. S. Arthur, Author of “The Scout,” &c,, Alex. Dumas, ! John G. Whittier, Owen Meredith, P. J.JJailcy, (author of “Festus,”) Lieut. Habersham. Author of the “Red Court Farm,” Mary Hewitt, Grace Greenwood, Miss Pardoe, * Author of-“ Farm of Four Acres,” Florence Perfcey, Amelia B. Edwards, Emma Alice Brown, Mrs. M. A. Dennison, j Author of “The Ebony Casket,” Fanny M. Raymond, Miss Murtinean, Nora Perry, Isa Craig. The Post docs riot confine itself, however, to works of the imagination, as so many Weeklies now do. It generally devotes a fair portion of | its ample space to the news of the week, foreign and domestic; to Letters from Paris, to an Agricultural Department, to Bank Note and Stock Lists, and to a weekly and accurate Price Current of the Produce Markets, &c. TEUMV-EVLIIA Vl.\«S. Hantil/on's-Ttco Views of Niagara Falls, A couple of handsome and large-sized Steel Eti- | gratings, tiie retail price, of which is five dollars, we are enabled to club with tile Post on the following remarkably liberal terms. We also club 1 with .those well-known monthly Magazines, Arthur's Home .'Magazine, and Godey’s Lady’s j | Book. Read the fallowing and take yonr I choice of TERMS. 1 ; i copy of the Post, per year s'2 Oil I copy of the Post and both Engravings of Niagara Falls.. . 3 00 1 copy of the Post and one of Arthur's flonic Magazine 3 Of) i 1 copy of the Post and one of Godey’s La--1 d'y’s Book ' 3 00 CLUBS. *2 copies of the Post one year 3 00 I 1 copies, and one of the Engravings to getter up of clut) 5 00 8 copies, and one copy extra or both Engravings to getter up of club 10 00 13 copies, and one copy-extra or both Engravings to getter tip of club 15 00 20 copies, arid one copy extra or both Engravings to getter up of club .20 00 .30 copies, and one copy extra and both Engravings to getter up of club .30 00 Ministers and School Teachers are charged | only $1 a year. The Riddle and Problem Department renders the Post particularly acceptable to the latter class. jV IIEAVTItTL EXGKAVING. .4 large and beautiful Engraving on Steel, 17 by 22 inches, called “The Speaking Likeness,” will be sent to et cry subscriber lo the Post for 1800, who shall scud, in addition to his subscription, the sum of twenty-five cents, to pay the expense of postage, mailing, dkc. The retail j price of this Engraving is $4! It is a gem! P. S. Tito postage will be prepaid on all the Engravings. Address, DEACON & PETERSON, No. 132 South Third st., Philadelphia. 11.T”Sample conies of the Post sent gratis when j requested. 30 Look Here 1 r FUIE New Year has again set in, and the old firm of Irwin & Wishard still have a number of debts out Now, they would suggest to ull who call themselves Christians to coinc forward, pay up, and see if they’ cannot go into the presence of their God with a good deal more confidence after the burthen of keeping us lo! these many mouths out of our just dues is off of their minds. Those whose consciences are quiet on tin; subject we will awaken by the law. We are in earnest, no mistake. 30-ts IRWIN X. WISHARD. EXECETORJS SALE. NOTICE is hereby given that the undersigned, Executor ,of the last will and testament of Woden Stanton,’ late of Jasper county and State “of I ndiana, deceased, will sell at public outcry on Saturday, the 2]st day of January, A. D. 1800, all the personal property of said decedent not taken by the widow. A credit of six months will be given on all sums over three dollars, the purchaser giving note with approved security, with interest from date, waiving all relief from valuation or appraisement laws: under three dollars, cash will be required. RICHARD WHITE, 30-3 t Executor. ESTItA V XOTIOE. r IL\KEN up by Jackson Pyatt, living in GilJ- lain township, Jasper county, Indiana, two estray Cows—one red and white spotted, supposed to lie four years old hist spring; the other a red roan three years old last spring; no marks or brands perceivable. The spotted appraised at seventeen dollars, and the other at fifteen dollars, by John E. Richards and Benjamin Brasket. A true copy from the Estray Docket of Elisha Sewell, Esquire. Attest: C. M. WATSON, Clerk, 30 By D. J. Jackson, Deputy. MOTILE OF INKOEVEMCY. AT tin 1 October term of the Court of Common Pleas for Jasper county. Indiana, the estate of Daniel K. Warner, deceased, was declared probably insolvent. Creditors are thei'Wtote notified that the same will be settled accordinglyNORMAN WARNER, Dee. 21. 1 >SO 130-31] Administrator.
