Little Rock Arkansas State Gazette (Newspaper) - August 24, 1865, Little Rock, Arkansas 4 72.: ' 1865. 1, illI 3 c - FERS to Physicians and Country - of PURE PREP A RA PATEN T - All of having been purchased at the recent decline of Prices ia Eastern are offered to the trade and at greatly reduced ordered as direct from July 3,1865. ! -' i PRACTICE IN THE FEDERAL and State Courts of Special attention given to the collection of of Blain and Markham over Drug 18,1805, ATTEND promptly to business entrusted to Will as in the sale or purchase of Real and Land Office next door to Mr. D. Butler's 15, 1S65. LITTLE .In over mont's Drug 24,18G5. P RESUMED T JIE PRACTICE OF HIS Profession in - Little 166.5 >r x fourteen parents in the charge of - 0reops.tac % of; the ihe lias s a mania for the commission of - 22d,of- which a match; a pane of in story back reached Aaton a at the as been any fire in the part of the building in which it. commenced for a long On the win g daiy th ere five in ahd the houses within time of 6 theoi of fire apparatus were drawn to As the was in deal of t naturally cheated J of the fires on window fro to a tidy on a chair a third in a fourth in a and the fifth in a Though the girl was not seen kindle any of it was quite from the that she made Oh one or twb seen to go and the fires were discovered immediately after she The matter was investigated by the and he not flong jn satisfying himself who guilty agent to it beyond % she Upon tMs confession she yesterday committed During hearing the accused to be much acts cannot be any other hypothesis than that she is a monomaniac the could not have been any feeling of to for her own was fired immediately after match was applied in the other RESUMED THE PRACTICE OF HIS at the HOT July 25.1865. the his professional services of Little Rock and Drug June 28, 1865. : NOW resumed his Dental having received supply iof Instruments and material from the i attention given to cases requiring Surgical or adjoining work near the of Louisiana and Mulberry Office hours from 9 A. till 5 P. M. July 29,18651 ' 1m. M THEATRE RET Indian will convene about the 1st September at this and not at Fort as stated erroneously by the press promises to be a big twenty-five or thirty from the Arkansas frontier be and it expected that ten to fifteen thousand of the dusky of the plains writ be iii ' Thaj 1 of course be fed for during their The Council was to have been held at first at Fort but in view of the greater eligibility for that purpose of Fort the telegraphic and other important the change be upon th of and at this W e would in th is express opin ion that meeting of a large part of our Indian many of them having been also in against tlie United opportunity to impress them with the and strength of the Government of which they have not had of late a due this purpose there ought to be during the existence of the troops stationed A strong of forces will far toward the bud any manifestations of on the part of Indians and facilitate the Smith of the Madison who was at tone Grant on the occasion the severe hail st orm in that gives account Effects A few miles axay from Ltine Eock we came upon the track leveled and exhibited the fierceness of desolation Has No - green - thing of corn and stoutest -i not only beaten were beaten into the There was nothing tender vines of both being mashed into trees the of in: and lodged at a distance the of the V Of course the seed was all thrashed and was left We do not espect to be but we state r At eleven in: the jihe after iof wagon loads of could lieen gathered in fence and in hollow's by the like snow from half a foot - to a foot and a half in Of course many windows smashed and many fences were carried iWe saw in the road a dead fox with a ribbon about its Iti had the pet of a farmer near and by the and carried by the a long who were en the road were obliged to abandon their teams seek refuge wherever they could find One who thought to stay by his sat in the box was half full of and skin beaten ex posed portions of his including the and He was and to be by returning after the of the hail far was about six miles long and two miles Over one hundred farms within its radius were the damage to each averaging to 1,000,: or perhaps The of which there are are made One farmer had 128 acres of oats The entire damage can hardly be it can hardly be than it was passing along to see the farmers their wandering ever ruined weeping at the visiting field after field where the had and distressed what would do for ' ' ' WOULD cordially the public and citizens of 1 have the largest sell lower for C ASH than any other house 111 find it to their interest us a call and for opposite Old 12,1865. ire an Indianapolis looking at rings around makes the following horrible observe by the planets that a dreadful plague will commence in originating from silks brought over from It will the Baltic desolate cause immense mortality in and then spread over - the This dreadful will spot a and turn the flesh of a purple The pestilence will carry off such an amount of mortals that not be enough left to bury the dead or give them Christian The streets of our towns arid villages will be swarmed dead and Tlie and yells of horror every breast with Confusion will abound oh all The death knell will cease to toll as the malady in. The infected will fall and die wherever they take it. The stench of the of A Utah ' of a Very account of the cultural and of ' The policy of the has to lb to k rural and sb by church So admirably and it has created ah and a production here iii of our 6f importance and value to the future growth of the few of the simpler manufactures have been introduced of but these are not in conflict with the ' j are cotton confined almost and one woolen Probably there are a hundred flouring mills the territory the dried homemade socks these are the chief cles produced in excess and sold to emigrants and Probably tyro pounds of. dried peaches were for and Montana last Hides are there is a good tannery and also a manufactory of boots and C o 11 o h gr o ws a b u n d a n i ly i n t he s o u t h e r u s et and experiments with the tree the silk worm are all f- 2S MAIN -cy become so common not heed the survivors Fifty Cent of the New last says the New Albany the fact for the so far as known to pur counterfeit one dollar treasury notes had aud we now find that certain Walker to see the brother of Andrew on his return is a stout amd some years rile is present bis corroborative of. the about him of bis having a trampled quired to be He to bis and Their where Andrew and In- th e their father's life he held a somewhat equivalent to towa with an income a family were of English grandfather and grandmother both being name English was the first lady who taught apparate female school of Andrew Johnson's was Elize i Her a When Andrew Johnson was linable to and used to make his his credit this for he has made his mark in th world His taught b This exposure frequent ' during the and is in very delicate health consumption by Andrew ' J oh ori above all' men h ave ever b prominent is a self- During the intervals of his lative he used to business of Previous to this time he pursued his studies even while on his tailor's and used frequently to ask children others by the meaning or pronunciation of Thus rose from one position to another solely by the aid of his own inflexible will and till the highest position nation was opened to him death of O. Xenia of the has the following interesting I ui morning Rev C. Pru gh united matrimony Mr. Benjamin to Mrs. Anna five y The ' happy both residents had due preparations hy procuring a. house and furnishing some time marriage ceremony At yesterday -an d ' groom repaired to th h summoned and there became better or wisely concluded that they had no time a wedding straightway to fifth retains a wonderful amount of muscular During the past he chopped one cords of split hundred and made 8,840 and 8,000 cooper Nor is his luride much his inferior in vital years still active and vigorous walking two or with little It is also said that she rides on horseback with singular and The world Gen. Scoit says people think he and simply because he is tall and To a expressed surprise at his he remarked it has been the misfortune of my life to be six feet four inches have a straight Had I been round or had a hump on my it would have relieved the odium in the Decision of the Interior has made an important decision to day respecting the even or reserved sections along the line of the Union Pacific under the grant made by the acts of Congress of the 1st of also the 2d of 1865. ' of a entry at Junction ' one of reserved ai referred the question raised as to the rate per which the said reserve sections shall be The homestead law allows one hundred and sixty ' td settler one dollar and cents per acre or eighty acres of two y cents per party in this case the of We reserved section in The lier o f the General Land the gotten up counterfeits pa the fifty cent rejected the application on the ground that the The paper is about as in in TROUBLE June S. 1865.' of but the counterfeit is easily - the central figures of will if ell for all to glance closely at any fifty cent pieces of the new kind may be Sharp negro about 9 years applied at Provost office yesterday afternoon fpr to leave the He didn't like and said the folks put on too much and the too many airs too suit He had grown of and boasted Br. Ky. - a pass and left for evening fitness of the negro for - the exercise of political rights baa in Hay ti. Eleven revolutions have occurred there in sis - at St. has received dispatches datea to at sum exceeded the party could acquire under the Homestead act of the of 1862. of the judgment of the General Land the fort a Sibley's 18.6.3. warriors reported to be on Gam Io eroine j of 1300'lnclir>i\ were 1,050,000 taon m Union out 830,00 booa tered