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The Indiana Weekly Messenger from Indiana, Pennsylvania • Page 5

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Indiana, Pennsylvania
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5
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VOL. 45, NO. 28. INDIANA, WEDNESDAY EYENING, JUNE 27, 1900. WHOLE NUMBEE, 2228 1 Measuring a Man.

it) Many people measure men by their clothes; we measure them for their clothes. We are anxious you shall be well fixed for a Stylish Spring Suit or Overcoat. We have on our counters an elegant line of cloths that are marvels of beauty. Almost everybody goes to VOGELS'. Come and be one of them.

Tailor-Made Clothes FIT! tf VOCEL jjj Merchant Tailors, 'f Indiana, Pa. eeeeeeefc Making the Selection It is, of course, difficult to make a selection when you have a great deal of attractive material to choose from. That is just the way you are situated here. Every roll of Wall Paper we show is attractive and will please any taste. The advantage is that no matter which, paper you select it is sure to be a good one.

All new patterns and colorings sold close and are selling rapidly. We have Room Moulding that will match tlie Wall Papers, Window Shades, Shades made to order, Curtain Poles, Extension Sash Bods, Pole Sockets, Plate Bails to order, Paints, Oil, Turpentine, Varnishes, Brushes, strictly pure White Lead. Everything at the lowest market prices. Paper Hangers if desired. BOUCHER, Phone 208.

660 Philadelphia St. T. STILL DOING BUSINESS! W. S. DAUGHERTY, the Planing Mill still does business at the same old stand.

With one less mill in town to snpply the demand, I -will have to hnstle to get the increased trade, and I will, as before, keep the largest stock of the best materials for carrying on a general plan- ing mill business. I can make anything that is made out of wood. I can furnish anything in the planing mill line that is necessary to commence, or complete, a house. We are making the prettiest grilles this fall we ever made. Grilles? What are they? People who have not built houses hardly to-day know what grilles mean.

Come and see me, and you will be astonished at the beauty and the price. Call or write for prices if you don't buy, it may keep somebody else from robbing you. W. S. DAUGHERTY, 1048 Philadelphia Street, Indiana, Pa.

1 A Great Semi-Weekly Paper, I lie II etJKiy Republican in Politics. St.Louis Globe-Democrat. $1.00 Price, One Dollar a Year. $1.00 Issued in Semi-Weeklylvfday- Sections, As a The WEEKLY GLOBE-DEMOCRAT, issued in Semi- Weekly Sections, is almost equal to a daily, at the prioeofa-weekly. The two papers each week give the complete news of that week from all parts of the world, so selected and arranged as to preserve the thread of events from issue to issue.

The preparation of the news in this form involves an immense amount of labor and expense, and comprises the most complete and comprehensive Service of any dollar-a-year publication in the United States, if not in the world. As a Home Journal The WEEKLY GLOBE-DEMOCRAT is equally as pre-eminent. It is morally clean, and may be read without contamination by all the members of any family. It contains the very cream of current literature and the best pictorial illustrations. Its departments devoted to "The Home," "For Women," "Agricultural News," "The Farm, Garden and Dairy" are each of the highest grade, and its Market Reports are correct and complete in every detail.

In A 111 a. WUlU BRILHARTS'. Screen Doors. We can save you money on Screen sizes at same price. A yellow pine door for 78c.

Better and cheaper ones. Screen Windows, Wire Cloth, Mosquito Netting. Hammocks, 98c and up. Lawn Mowers, $2.65. Fancy Lamps, 85c up.

Ice Cream sizes. Dinner Sets, Toilet Sets. Everything that's new in China and Glassware. Bissell Best Carpet Sweepers. BRILHARTS' CHINA STORE.

''Phone 87. R. W. WEHRLE (Successor to B. I.

Welirle), Watchmaker, Jeweler and Optician, Phil'a INDIANA, PA. OF VAMTE. The Information Contained in This Citizen's Statement is Priceless. The hale, the hearty, the strong can afford to toss this paper to one side impatiently when they read the following, jut any sufferer in Indiana who has spent a mint of money and suffered aours of excruciating torture caused by kidney complaint will stand in his own light if he does not follow the valuable advice offered by Mrs. B.

F. Miller, of West Philadelphia street, who says: "It is now over three years since we learned the value of Doan's Kidney Pills and since that time our appreciation of this remedy has grown still greater through knowing of the great good its use has proven to others. Three years ago Mr. Miller was suffering greatly from pains in his back. The remedies he used had proved of no avail.

He heard good reports of Doan's Kidney Pills and this induced him to try them. Their use brought him speedy relief. I concluded to use them myself after seeing how valuable they had proved to Mr. Miller. The beneficial results were apparent in a very short time and I was very soon freed from all the pains and backache." Sold by all dealers.

Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Buffalo, sole agents for the U. S. Remember the take no substitute. "Strongest in the That's the Way? Insure your house your of value to up to the they were burnt you would feel the loss yourself.

Don't assure your life that's of value to your You wouldn't reap the benefit of the assurance on your life if you if you can do better with your money. That's the way some people look at it. Do you think it's the right view to take of it? The Equitable Life Assurance Society, WBUTH3IE General Agent, INDIANA, PENN. "P7ho can tbint of some simple thing to patent? Protect your ideas; they may bring wealth. Write JOHN WEDDERBCRN Patent Attorneys, "Washington, D.

their $1,800 prize offer and list rf tw Horne-Stewart Co. DRY GOODS. Underwear Comfort. The new Mesh Underwear for men is becoming more popular every day. It is cool, comfort- 'able, the thing for this hot summer We have it in cotton, linen, lisle and silk.

Thin Cotton Net, very strong and durable, soc a garment. thread in new fancy net weave, a garment. Silk net, a very superior garment, $1.00. Fine net, $2.00 a garment. Thin Mercerized Cotton.

fine and soft as silk, $1, $1.50 and $2 a garment. Pure silk from $3 to $7 a garment. Mail orders will be given prompt and careful attention. 233 Fifth Pittsburg. To PATENT Good Ideas may be secured by our aid.

Address, THE PATENT RECORD, Baltimore, Md Subscriptions to The Patent Record 81.00 per annum. ffisisjusr WHAT I SHAU. bOAFTERTHIS McFARLAND'S BRICK The WEEKLY GLOBE-DEMOCRAT is a complete news- a erj prepared and printed for intelligent and thoughtful people. We have confidence in its ability to speak for itself, and will cheerfully mail SAMPLE COPY, free of charge, upon receipt of request. Address THE GLOBE PRINTING SI Louis, Mo.

FOR A LIMITED TIME We will accept subscriptions for THE WEEKLY GLOBE-DEMOCRAT (issued in Semi-Weekly Sections) in connection with THE MESSENGER, both one year for only $1.50, cash in advance. This offer will be in oroe only a short time. Send in your subscription AT ONCE to THE MESSENGER, Indiana, Pa. JSTO. 23 TE3L.EFHEO3STE1 ISTo.

SS Off ICE OR OR UNDERTAKER AND EMBALMER. Graduate of Oriental School of Embalming. Member of Pennsylvania State and National Association of EmbaTmers. "Will get you Lots and furnish yon with Burial Permits in Greenwood, Oakland or Catholic Cemeteries. HENRY H.

STBVING, All kinds of castings made and machinery repaired. The machine shop is fitted up with the latest new improved machinery for all foundry and repair purposes, and every department is under the control of skilled workmen. THRESHING MACHINE REPAIRING. It is a specialty with us. Now is a good time to have this class -of work executed.

There isn't anything about repairing this class of machinery that we do not understand, and we guarantee the job. THE PATTERN DEPARTMENT is complete. All kinds of special castings and work promptly done for all kinds of machinery. No. 1051 Phil'a St.

Phone 242. SQUIRES CARRIAGE 116-118-I2O Seventh PITTSBURG, PA. Buggies, Surries, Wagons. Traps, Runabouts, Doctor Buggies and Harness. Sixth Opposite INDIANA, PA.

We have the largest repository in the State. Our prices are lower than elsewhere. You are cordially invited to call. CHEERFULLY MY LADY'S GOWN. My lady's gown is gray and soft, So like her eyes That from its silken folds there cornea A hint of paradise.

I hold it close against my My lady's gown. The she hummed a little song I saw her lay This bit of lace around her throatj Dear eyes of gray So serious in fashioning My lady's gown. My lady's gown is folded now; The knot of blue Upon her breast is passing sweet With lavender and rue; It brings me dreams of bygone lady's gown. Today I see the little gown With brimming eyes, For out ben-nth the grass grown bill My Inr'y lies, And despairing sobs I kiss My lady's gown. Heed in Munsey's.

ACT. The Delusion of a Student of Egyptian Antiquities. BY OWEN OLIVER. JK fc Js 'Dr. Strange has told you of my delusion," he said, with an unmirthful smile.

"Let us start from the delusion. I cannot very well tell my story in any other way." He pushed his papers aside, leaned back in the cozy reading chair and folded his hands. This is the story: Four thousand years ago, when men worshiped God under the name of Osiris and Isis, I was Amenemhat IV, king in which you call Egypt. My conquests and learning are graven upon the great tablets, but the scribes left unsaid what should be unsaid. Therefore you will seek in vain for mention of Numidea, the slave.

Felix, the trader, brought her from over the Mediterranean. When she stood before me, with flushed cheeks and with tears in her pale blue eyes, "Kill me, if thou wilt, king," she said tauntingly, "for in truth I love thee not at all!" A whole month I wooed her, disdaining force, and she said no more. Then she cast her eyes upo'n Kales, tlie captain of the guard, and cared less than ever for me. "Take her to the deathsmen," I commanded. "In the morning she shall die." Lest I should break a king's word I rode to the great temple far away.

But I could not sleep for the thought of her great blue eyes, wide With fear. So I rose and bade them harness the swiftest' horses to the light- cLariot, and Charmicles drove for me, whose hand was lightest upon the reins. All the night we sped in the moonlight, with the sand flying in long clouds behind us and the great pyramid scowling upon us from afar. "If thou lovedst a slave, Charmicles," I asked, "and she loved not thee?" "If I loved her a little," he said, "haply she would perish, lord." "And if thou lovedst her much?" He looked at the moon fleeting through the clouds for a long time, and his face grew sad. "If I loved her enough, King, perchance I should set her free: I covered my head in my robe and said nothing.

Was I not racing the flying hours to open her prison doors? Ra, the sun god, sprang up and laughed upon the land, and Charmicles wiped the sweat from his brow and ceased to strike the horses as they panted and struggled to the base of the great pyramid, where the prison was. And, behold, they had tortured her, and she had died in the night! So I went back to the temple and dwelt alone. Presently I made a spell, from my arts, that I might be reborn when she was reborn, and another spell that I died and none knew why. So I fell asleep and slept 4,000 years. When I was newborn a child, I knew none of these things, but one by one they came back to me.

One evening my father held me upon his knee and showed me a quaint picture book, and I trembled with vague remembrance. "This is how people drew in Egypt thousands of yesterdays ago," he said. "The lines are all straight, because they were cut upon stone. See, these are archers, and these are horses, and this looks like a big bull." I touched the figure of Apis reverently With my hand. "This," I said, "is a god." After leaving school I devoted myself to Egyptian antiquities.

They seemed to present no difficulty to me, and I soon made a great name. Then I met Nerissa, and for awhile I studied no more. There was no one, nothing else in all the world that mattered the least to me. I became her accepted lover, and for a few months I lived in paradise. After this I had a strong fever.

In the dreams and delirium the past came back to me, and when I was well again I remembered. I was Amenemhat and she was Numidea, the blue eyed slave. As I had ordered by the spell, I was reborn to live with her again. Kales, her lover, had known no spells, I told myself. So he was in the future or the past, perhaps 1,000 years, as the gods had ordered, and she was not for him, but for me.

The thought of her wrong in the past made me wondrously tender of her, and she was always gentle. Yet I tortured myself that she did not love me as I loved her. "When we are married, it will come," I told myself. "It shall come." One day in the spring we were sitting together. Rupert had come home on a furlough from his regiment in India and came first to see me.

They looked at one another for a long time. There was remembrance in their eyes. Fool that I had been" to think myself wiser than the gods! He was Kales. After that they seemed always meet- Ing. The light leaped Into their faces when they saw each other.

They looked wistfully backward when they parted. I entreated Nerissa to hasten our wedding day, but she tearfully refused. "Suppose," she said, "that we had made a mistake after all. Sometimes I She paused here, and when. I questioned her she was silent One evening I went slowly into her and ixeard.

sionatcly. 1 lingered benina 'a great creen. It was an unworthy thing to do, but I would have done worse, far worse, for love of her. "You love me!" he said trimphantly. "You love me! You are mine by right, Nerissa, my dear." "Hush!" she sobbed.

"Hush! I am friend's! I promised!" "You do not love him! You cannot love him!" "Oh, I have tried!" she cried. Then he took her in his arms and comfo-'ted who had been my friend. I went stealthily away. But when her lover was gone I returned, intending to bury my dagger in her heart. Then the words of Charmicles, the charioteer, came back to I loved her enough, king, perchance I should set her free." I the dagger before her and threw the pieces away.

came to kill you!" I said. Then I fled into the street. People leaped aside from my path as I sped along to my old friend, Dr. Strange. "Put me away," I demanded, "or some day I shall kill her! I am mad!" So they put me away.

That is ten years ago. I have staid here since, except twice, when they have taken me to Egypt for some researches. I am seeking for the spell. Soon I shall find it Then I shall sleep wake again. This time she loved me a little.

There will be a third act, knows? He dropped his head in his hands and was silent. I left him thus. "A sad case," said the doctor; "a very sad mania, complicated with the delusion that he is an ancient king. It is a thousand pities. He is the authority of the century on Egyptian antiquities, you know, and on most points as sane as you or I said nothing.

I was thinking of his dark, wise face and the things he had said. A month later he sent me a note to announce that he had recovered the spell. The next day I heard that he was mysteriously dead. The second act was closed, and the curtain would not ring up for another 4,000 Madame. Consolatory.

One day Bunsen sat with another shining light of Heidelberg "university, who, like him, had had the highest honors bestowed upon him that could be gained in a scientific career. Bunsen was cool and taciturn, while his colleague never ceased to chatter of his financial losses suffered through the great fall in Turkish bonds. Bunsen remained silent while the other went on to console himself in this wise: "I can get a certain amount of consolation for iny bad investments out of the fact that the great Helmholtz himself invested pretty heavily in Turkish and has lost a lot of money too." Then, at last, Bunsen broke the silence with the laconic words, "I didn't think Helmholtz was so big a San Francisco Argonaut. THE PALACE WAITED, A Builder's Suggestion. That Changed tlie Plans of a Pope.

At a. time when there was" great suffering among the people from lack of food and when famine in its worst form was threatened Pope Alexander VI had made arrangements for the erection of a magnificent palace. The best architects had been employed, and the plans had been submitted and accepted, and an accomplished builder had been sent for to come from Venice, a man whose work had won for him renown and who was known to be a just and upright man. The builder had arrived, and at an appointed time he waited upon his holiness to receive the plans and make his estimates. "There is one thing yet to be done," said the pope.

"There has been no proper inscription or legend thought of to be placed over the main entrance of the palace. It should be put above the great gate. You have had experience. Do you think of an inscription that would be appropriate?" "If your holiness would pardon me for the liberty, I might suggest one most appropriate at this time." "You are pardoned in advance," sale the pope, smiling. "Now, what shall it be?" "Sovereign pontiff, let it be thus.

'Command that these stones be made The pope was visibly and deeply affected. He paid the builder munificently for his expenses of coming and going, and instead of building his palace he fed the hungry ones of his children. Bouquet. Married the Day They Met. Horace Greeley and Mary Young Cheney were married the first day they met.

They had corresponded for some time, a common friend, who was something of a matchmaker, having brought this She was all his fancy paint ed her, but she was much disappointed in his appearance, so much so that when he appeared before her, having proposed and been accepted by letter she frankly told him that, although she married him, she was not in love with him. Their married life was long and happy, and the loss of his wife was a blow which Greeley did not long survive. His Queer "Way In Church. The most original character we meet In the "Memoirs of the Princess Mary" is her father, Duke Adolphus of Gambridge. He was a strong churchman, but "his religion sometimes took rather an unconventional form." On one occasion, after the officiating clergyman had repeated the usual exhortation, "Let us pray," the dnke was heard to reply, "By all means." During a very dry summer the vicar read the prayer for rain.

At the close the duke joined fervently in the "Amen," adding, in exactly the same tone of voice, "But we shan't get it till the wind changes!" One Sunday, when the words, "Behold, the half of my goods I give to the poor," were read, he astonished his fellow worshipers by rejoining: "No, no. I can't do that. A half Is too much for any man, bnt I have no objection to a tenth." Again, on hearing the text, "For we brought nothing into the world, neither may we carry anything onV he ejaculated, "True, many calls us for MEETING A BM LINES NOT EASY TO BOARD AN INCOMING VESSEL IN NEW YORK BAY. DOWN WITH A PARACHUTE. Uncle Sam Grants Few Reonests Passes on tne Revenue Cutters Which Go Out to Meet the Steamships From European Ports.

When it is generally understood, as generally is not, that fully 300 persons make application daily in season foi passes to board incoming ocean steamers from revenue cutters and that no1 more than 2 per cent of the requests are granted, it may understood how valuable the treasury department considers these privileges. The occurrence is rare, but is nevertheless legal for tht master of the strip for which a pasi calls to refuse to permit the holder tc board his ship. All revenue cuttei passes are issued by the collector oi the port and must be countersigned by the surveyor. The revenue of every country on dutiable personal effects depends for its volume on the ability of the customs authorities to have them duly listed and taxed on arrival. In the event of a promiscuous granting of cutter passes it would be possible for a certain dishonest element that is to be found under every sun to meet incoming friends down the bay and surreptitiously bring ashore at the piei valuables purchased abroad.

The treasury department trusts few, a fact that has increased Uncle Sam's revenue a great deal, as the majority ot the boarding officers know. Recently the holder of a pass boarded a White Star liner and was approached by a passenger to whom he was a perfect stranger. The latter said: "I understand you are connected with so and so. I have a small package here that I would like to take ashore. There is nothing dutiable in it, but you understand how the government piles it on.

I will meet you at the head of the gangway when I get my luggage released, and I will take the package from you." Not only did this pass holder not take the package, but the first thing he did upon landing was to point out the passenger to a member of the surveyor's staff, who very promptly demanded and received the package. It contained jewelry of all descriptions. That an unauthorized person may not get on board an incoming craft in advance of the customs officials the following is attached to every pass that is issued for the revenue cutter: "This permission is understood to be subject to the assent of the master of the steamship and of the health officer as guardian of the public health, and boarding is strictly forbidden until after the customs officers are in charge, according to the following extract from the passenger act, 1882: 'Section 9. That it shall not be lawful for the master of any (such) steamship or other vessel not in distress after the arrival of the vessel within any collection district of the United States to allow any person or persons except a pilot, officer of the customs or health officer, agents of the vessel and consuls to come on board of the vessel or to leave the vessel until the vessel has been taken in charge by an officer of the customs nor after charge so taken without leave of such officer until all the passengers, with their baggage, have been duly landed from the When the revenue cutter pass system was originally introduced, nobody in the government employ seems to know. In the old days it was the custom to meet relatives and friends back from an ocean trip on the pier heads.

The revenue cutter pass is a simple piece of paper in itself, but is the study of many years and countless number of practical officials. The manner in which it is obtained, the demands made upon its holder, the restrictions as to its use and its composition in every way are the result of innumerable revisions of passes that have preceded it during the last 20 years, and it now omits nothing that will protect Uncle Sam, as it really should do. A few years ago it was possible for all sorts of idlers to gain admission to a pier while the passengers of a ship from foreign parts were landing. This had been the practice for some years, and the steamship gateman had the sole and exclusive right of deciding who should enter. It was supposed and frequently discovered in individual cases that dutiable gpods were secretly passed to these friends who came down to welcome the homecomer.

As a consequence the inability to get a revenue cutter pass did not make much material difference, the dock affording full scope for any desired work in a dishonest way. To protect the purposes of the cutter passes and to place a further barrier around illegal practices the treasury department recently made a new rule that admission to a pier during the docking of an incoming steamer could be obtained by card only. This admission ticket, like the revenue cutter passes, is not transferable and must bear the name of the bolder, the signature of the steamship company and the indorsement of the collector of the port. The perfection of the cutter pass system as to transfer may be appreciated when it is stated that the beneficiary of the pass must affix his name to the pass on receiving it at the custom house and again when he boards the cutter at the Battery. This eliminates all chance of the pass being transferred.

Transfers have been illegally made, but the holder, being unable to furnish the same signature as that supplied at the custom house, was compelled to leave the cutter, and the pass was taken York Mail and Express. Failure to the man who learns means experience, and experience is equipment, and equipment is Evening Post. The Missionary's Ruse. Cannibal on the big griddle and let's roast this fellow. Captured king, but give me a.

dose of quinine before I die! You see, I am a. victim of the habit. I consume three ounces of quinine every 24 hours. Cannibal pass this fellow up. I can still that quinine fiend we roasted two months, ago.

A Circus Balloon 3Ian Says It's Gentle and Xot Hazardous. "Coming from the clouds in a parachute is like a dream," said a circus balloon artist. "Ever dream of falling from a high place? You come down, alight quietly and awake, and you're not hurt. Well, that's the parachute drop over again. Xo; there is no danger.

A parachute can be guided readily on the down trip, but you cant Steer a balloon. To guide a parachute out of harm's way a practiced hand can tilt it one way or the other, spill out air and thus work it to where you want to laud or to avoid water, trees, chimneys or church spires. Circus ascensions are generally made in the evening. When the sun goes down, the wind goes down. The balloon then shoots into the air, and the parachute drops back on the circus lot or not far away.

A balloon is made of 4 per cent muslin and weighs about 500 pounds. A parachute is made of cent muslin. "There is much more danger is coming down in a balloon. When it strikes the earth, it's like a big ball and bounds up again, taking you with it. Not long ago in McXeesport, I came down in a balloon because the parachute would not let go.

I nearly came down in a big stack of a blast furnace, but tho hot air drove the balloon away. After that I never intrust- ed the parachute arrangement to any. one, but attended to it myself. "The rope that secures the parachute is cut with a knife. The aeronaut drops fully 100 feet before the parachute begins to fill.

It must fill if you're up high enough. There are several hundred parachute men in the business, and the accidents are less in. ratio than railroad casualties. A man can't shake out a parachute if it don't open. A man in the air is simply powerless.

Invariably the fall is head first. When the parachute begins to fill, the descent is less rapid, and finally when the parachute has gradually filled it bulges out with a pop. Then the aeronaut climbs on to his trapeze and guides the parachute to a safe landing. In seven cases out of tea you can land baelr on the lot where you started from. The first performers must have had nerve to make the drop.

Now it is a regular business, not considered hazardous at all. The hardest work is to bring back the balloon with a wagon. Sometimes it tears in the trees or wherever it may land when not in the York Sun. COLT'S INVENTION. The First Great Improvement Made In Repenting Pistols.

In this day of improved fireams fact that the first great improvement made in repeating pistols by Colonel Samuel Colt was patented in the day of our grandfathers is seldom recalled. It was Colonel Colt, then of New York, to whom was granted the patent, Feb. 25, 1S3G. The original petition in the case was destroyed by the fire in December following. The letters patent were returned when application was made for the reissue, Sept.

1, 1848. The original letters are signed by Andrew Jackson, president; John Forsyth, secretary of state, and Benjamin F. Butler, attorney general. After describing his invention Colonel Colt claims as new "the application of caps at the end of the cylinder, the application of a partition between the caps, the application of a shoulder over the caps as a security against moisture- aud the action of smoke upon the works of the locks, the principle of the connecting rod between the hammer and the trigger, the application of the shackle to connect the cylinder with the ratchet," etc. There had been a revolver patented about 20 years before by one Coilin, but until Colt's invention little headway was made.

Indeed it was not until Colt's invention had been given a. trial by Major Sam Walker and his Texas rangers that it gained popularity and was regarded as a success. About the time Colonel Colt was applying for a reissue, in 1S4S, Mr. Wesson had filed an application for a repeating firearm, by which the Smith Wesson pistol of today is represented. Star.

3Iasical Mirror. An ordinary mirror of any size oc shape, a piece of French chalk, pointed so that it can be used to write, and a silk handkerchief are the Draw upon the mirror, with the chalk, any design or words you choose. With the handkerchief wipe the glasjs lightly until it is perfectly clear and no writing or design is apparent. Having all this prepared beforehand, show to some one and request that he breathe gently on the face of-the glass, when he will picture of his future wife, for the design drawn wiQ show very distinctly. This can again be wiped off, and if breathed upon tlia design will be again visible.

Automatic Renown. "Kirby could become famous if he so lazy." "Oh, he will get famous yet." "What do you mean?" he takes such good care of himself that he will live to be 100 and be famed for Detroit Press. A. Iiabored. Effort.

"What do you think of my play?" asked the author. "Play!" grunted the leading man. "Play nothing! It's hard Philadelphia North Americstn. An agent for tlie American Bible society says that the first book printed in Minnesota was a Bible. It was printed in 1S36, about 13 years before the first issue of a newspaper in St.

Paul. A leaf is only a metamorphosed branch and the covering of seeds onlsj a'metamorphosed leaf. Earthquake shocks nowadays are comparatively slight with those that shook the earth millions of years ago. Lazy men always hurry -when, they, dodge opportunities to make themselves It is easy to say,.

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About The Indiana Weekly Messenger Archive

Pages Available:
39,267
Years Available:
1862-1988