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Indiana Messenger Wednesday, January 01, 1862,
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Indiana Messenger Wednesday, January 08, 1862,
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Indiana Messenger Wednesday, January 15, 1862,
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Indiana Messenger Wednesday, February 12, 1862,
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Indiana Messenger Wednesday, February 19, 1862,
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Indiana Messenger Wednesday, February 26, 1862,
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Algona Upper Des Moines Wednesday, September 01, 1869 ,
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Kingston Gleaner Wednesday, September 01, 1869 ,
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Indiana Messenger
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Indiana Messenger

   Indiana Messenger, The (Newspaper) - September 1, 1869, Indiana, Pennsylvania                                THE INDIANA MESSENGER 4MOM T the to at ODD RATES PER TEAM no year paid i will be out of the county discontinued unless at the option he until all arrearages are paid Marriage and Death notices inserted gratis attention paid to communications e terms will he strictly adhered to A lull an VOLUME 14 INDIANA WEDNESDAY HOUSE near the K li Depot Proprietor e newly furnished anil second no hotel in tin c fort convenience ami location aufl the tr J Tannery Indiana Pa Second Quarter commences AUGUST 9tli 1S69 A W Prin HOTEL North Proprietor Dar is fur The oW i wellknown house j mt lation of the public The tlir with choicest trundo and ol tho reflect ed ill Ml for til always nil th PEAL ESTATE AGENCY The attend to the Purchase sale or of Ittal at reasonable pri having property that they wish to Bell will do well to give a description in their price payments and location in the Peoples Banking House on jr U House in JAMES Estate Agent ESTABLISHMENT SOLOMON EARHART Proprietor I street opposit j of Indiana corner of Diamond JAMES S been refurnished and ROUSE AND LOT FOR STORY BY Said I to Sally years ago when she had only been my wife a little while Sally hard and we dont get along as Id like to for your sake What do you say to going West and taking to farming Sally just looked at me quite quiet for a moment and then said Do you mean it James said I I mean jt if youn agree Its better than drudging here at so much a Let me said Sally and she thought Then she said to pan about his neck by a string and is good asked for whiskey Dick followed her r Proprietor the reception new Hotel ia open Jl ihe by I J ulle anil be given immediately For hop opposite thu F anil EC K S ii OTK I PENNA ti on t lt locality makes it particularly J the City on business Sii 25 PER DAY an mm i i iMiD lz of the West MARTIN 1r tin c U UTA E Y 11 0 USE Corner of and JOHN Proprietor lilIT Idea ere fm ia well i always near the Proprietors ll anil iv j IN YOUR FOK all th AND LOT 1OR SALE A FOR A GOOD BUSI NE NESS HOUSE 1 a feet with kitchen The l i with pen front It would room The story i rooms all well lied ly new i town being LMt r lerais call on 11 ew Court Ho if for you I know what a poor mechanic may have to suffer in his old age and Ive often thought how happy it would be to have a homestead if it were ever so plain and poor Ill go Jom if ou feel sure about had felt sure for a lono while The work that I was at wal hurting my health and ray lungs were not what they were I should take my turn soon as other men began to at my age at staying home a day or so at a time and having a cough and going down to the grave or gi my trade and I felt sure that farm work would save me So Sally having consented I made arrangements my share of government land Mid started Sally cried hard when we left the dear old place and I could have cried with her But before we reached the end of our journey she was her old blithe self again And when we had built our little loo cabin and she had set itiu order and out beyond the door lay the rowed ground and our one cow came lowing to the rude gate at sunset and the chickens clustered about the door step to be fed there was not one re gret in her dear heart It was only a tiny settlement but you see in new clearings neighbors need each other and so come to be friendly as they never are in towns so we had no fuel ing of loneliness even at the very first I grew and well and meant to give torn some with her innocent remember him by but the wife bullet went through his heart and he dropped dead with a yell that every one in the settlement heard though it was half a mile away And Dick took back the rifle and the pan and walked home with them The Indians must have taken Bio Thunder home for his body was gone an hour after but we knew that they would revenge themselves and watched night an day for weeks None of the Indian women came in with bead belts to sell and none of the men were seen parading about but there was no attack and after two months had passed we be gan to think either that the tribe had not guessed who killed Big Thunder 1869 s WIPE MARKET ss a girl is born in the better ranks of society 2 THE TOST Some s persons saysan ion s tend to make them or they thought him rightly 1 T 1 t rude thing but still a shelter The medicine woman is there she she turned her back on me and stood silent with her head bent down and her face covered with her blanket I dont know what I expected to see I dare not even now try to think I put the covering of the tent aside and stooped down to look in just as youd stoop to look into a grave and in a moment more I had em So we I for not seemed I towards given a shout alive and unhurt for her coming husband I have heard of a lady of rank and wealth who had prepared a costly dowry of silks linen jewels plate for her beloved who died as she came to be twenty years old The mother resolved to endow six girls with these riches and actu ally advertised for them A host of applicants came and she selected None of them had lovers But that they had a respectable dowry lysi bere ut now sc cured each girl was speedily and with the husband took 1 and paid the rich lady by ters soul In no country is this arrangement me was mv witl quite safe and quiet Jici j T back to our old life I TM ae ft home as I dld died then and tlon aud more cau f i J i Av lie lui things at the nearest town though to be sure they were such as we heart arid crying as I never it a man could cry before rp i She me the story According There was to I to Indian could not do without be another in our little home very I of the i t T soon and Sally a thousand lo the and cotton and back one brigh to be back in three days I kissed her a dozen times but aft tion and Russia The young man goes to the house of 1is proposed bride and counts the dresses and examines the form ture and soes to the whole with his own Wmo he Commits himself to the bargain In high hie such things are carried on with but to keep her from all j harm and help her in her womans peril and put her newborn baby on more apparent but the facts sense of the term are condemned for life to enfeebled and an idle existence Your pale delicate girl is 1 while thi romping merry laughing Tom Boy is full of life and vivacity and as brimful of sweet as a walnut is of meat Some one has said that the Tom Boy is an eager earn est impulsive brighteyed gladheart specimen of the genus and wo believe it If her laugh is a little too frequent and her tone a trifle too emphatic we are will ing to overlook these for the sake of the true life and exulting vitality to which they are and indeed we rather like the high pres sure nature which must close on its steam in such ebullition The glancing eye the glowing cheek the balmy breath the lithe and grace ful play of the limbs tell a tale of healthy and vigorous physical devel winch is natures best beauty The soul and the mind will be devel oped also ia due time ami We sha have before us a woman in iho highe has now in marval t on The is com the tae itself is of almost It is at present manufacture of machinists and from solid steel at of one every three seconds work m three which would re quire the ard workman 8 whole day to e power for the by more par pro the work much better P T o 11 r woman gave Wanona kittle Sally I said my pretty her papoose Wanona gave medicine little bally shall I live three days woman her papoose eood and three nights without you Can I went out and to thank the Q Indian woman but she would not fehe had been my wife a year but I even look at me May I take Sally eant it I said She answered Go And then I rode away in earnest So I took the two moth I rode fast and made no halt but child before me and rode there were too many miles between That mother and i IM farm Factories and one inj t 11 of mills bor JOHN F MCOLAIN It PULE ON HEIRS MANUFACTURERS OF Pure White Lead Kry in OIs OFFICE AND No 64 MERCHANT TAILORS At their old tand Indiana Pa lied Potters Zinc and Spring and Summer Goods Consisting of AMERICAN AND jSD Silk Velvet and ap John For sale Pa ESTABLISHED IN isco at TEH BUGGIES dc Ho purchased the right to mako and sell Improved Farm Gate in Kayne TOWE ship Indiana County if to trade buy or seU JOHN NAGLE BELOW Ou Oak POE SALE PRICES I Iff H GAMBLE PRACTICAL MILL 1VBIOHTS And Agent for the sale of Turbine Water nd mill generally All communications l receive prompt attention s giren Address KEW best of refer her cheeks bloomed like roses and the only thing that ever made them blanch was the word Indian Yes she was afraid of even the friendliest about Sally was but when one day to the well she found an Indian woman sit ting there holding a baby iu her arms like a Christian she couldnt help asking what was the matter and when iu her queer lingo the woman told her the child was sick what did my Sally do but bring her to the house and make what benighted critter had never seen a mustard plaster and put it on the baby and give it doctor stuff besides and warm its feet and cuddle and comfort it until at last it shut its black beads of eyes and went to sleep on her knee and woke up better and soon got well The mother didnt say much but a day or two after she came back and brought Sally a basket and a bead belt the gayest thing I ever saw and called her a medicine which was her lingo for lady doctor And the baby on her back grinned and crowed and Sally was delighted We found out that the woman was named Wanona and that her husband was a chief He may have been a great man in his own tribe but he bad a queer way of showing it among us He came into the settlement very and always stole something nobody caught him at it but we all knew well enough Big Thunder never came and went without a chick en or so or a ham or a tin pan or what not going too Dick Walker swore hed punch him if he ever caught him at it Dick was a fellow who had a temper of his own and wasnt much afraid of anything The rest of us owned to wanting to be at peace with the Indians It seemed uai woman never turned Shi the settlement and the town to be rid ered her face with her blanket den m less than the time lotted stood like a statue until we out 1 made my purchases and slept her no more turned She cov and statue until we could seu Im posed day being in the hands of a br vigoro before the wedding to become a worker in the great sy A tern of humanity She will not si curious down to sigh over the work custom which is gradually giving to to simper nonsense lang is ay wuh the advance of civilization in fall sick at hear h The young people of a neighborhood will ever be able to take up come together and the girls stand in dens of duty In her bur only m their best and painted too Heavens o oughts own purity worid turned You arable chicken rp i Three days and three thief of a Big Thunder was her hug nights no more and I stood where I band after thought I could see the settlement thought him I drew rein and looked and saw could have killed all and I suppose she great fellow She me with pleasure e wo a the older will be the better that she has lived of tins country use cosmet in To her allotted task she will ics and a box of ladies paints bring health vigor energy and spirit is a common preset fora these will give her give her both the some respect at TT n T i im nig Had I lost my way or wasI but she let me live for Sallys sake glowing Where were the log though a have brought cabins What was that dense cloud some of the red devils out on What had happened In a moment a minute I never saw her afterwards more I understood it all The settle We settled in a place further east ment lay m ashes The dense cloud and were not troubled with the Indi was the smoke from the burnt houses ans again but whenever I hear folks ihe Indians had revenged Big Thun say that those red critters have no der at last God forgive me if it was gratitude I dont quite agree with selfish but I gave no thought to the them I know one Indian woman rest I only remembered Sally had else my old woman and I would No no I cried they would not sit as we now do watching our not kill could j grandchildren at play and lookin man to make the girl he Be power and endurance without which hind the row of girls are their moth her life must be in ere the young men having made least a failure H r I r crateful to ovo f in are very ious to marry liberty bS kept constantly J Earths anued and it will produce as it by magic any description of tool for mowers and reapers all with the same facility and exactness m fact almost every article which now comes from the anvil as the re wait om the by the skill ity of the intelligent smith machine which is the many years of thought and labor be sides an expenditure of many thou sands of dollars is destined ro revolu the smithing trade suit of the arm a and in Tins THE LORDS York of translation of the prayer made many years bythe venerable Samuel Hanson Cose Our Father who art in the Heavens be sanctified Thy name come Thv kingdom to be lone Thv will t Thy will as in also on the earth give us duly our needed food and forgive us our sais as we also forgive them that m against and bring us not unto probation but rescue us from the no since to Thee belongs the and the eye until they are ui to th husband and then ey t L th own course which is round of tv ety and di p r and assume a brighter green The milder light and e softly as it power md the Jor ages latthew ud is will in s 1 Her iu the s a tumbler of whiskey sugar ami Thcy will about it jn gentleman who has tried it rilling to swear that it is lie says informs that the oj iln 1 their means of k out upon the still atmosphere f WH Of 4 Lang Pa Of Stewart 4 by SASH PIVOT BLINDS VENITIAN AKD PANEL SHu Doors and Sash helow Factory Prices Dont forget the place sign of Sakh GAILY WESTERN FLOCS AND PEED HOUSE promptly filled 52 May 5 GROCERIES Cc cac as though Big Thunder wanted to provoke Dick He stole his chickens oftener than those of other folks He took an axe from the wood pile and somehow got Mrs Walkers best bon net and went round with it on the wrong way with the feather sticking up in the air But Dick forgave after a fashion until one day the cal stole his rifle Then he came storming down into the settlement to borrow another raving about Big Thunder and swearing that that should be his last theft A frontier man loves his rifle as a sailor does his even they Sally Sally my wife my little love Sally Sally I wen down into the ruins of the screaming her name not a voice an swered me The sight I saw wa enough to drive a man stark mac Bodies lay around on the ground bodies of men women and children I knew they were the folks I had seen every day for a year but I tell one from the other Those red devils had scalped and mutilated them out of all human likeness Some had been burnt in the flames were just charred logs And through that awful place I went looking for Sally hoping to know her by her clothes thinking that I should leel that it was her somehow no matter what theyd done to her trying to believe that they wouldnt be so cruel to her as to the rest And then there came over me the most horrible a one as any man that lived to see all the rest of the world dead and knew that he was the only one who breathed under the sky might have I do suppose You see this had been my world back on that stormy part of our life as you look back on the ocean after you have crossed it and stand safe upon the shore with solid land be no divorce but the Pope can tions Mik greedily grt drunk instantly tumble in head over heels immediately and die in a jiffy Our informant otates that tins wiil kill the pests ten times quicker than tho lightning fly and ten times more than thu old fash molasses and water It and theres I J J the Emperor like The hum of busy life has ceased for a to on marry again one in Russia can neath your feet Sally often says she T reckons Barbara who is still livin be married more than three times THE The sister of the imprisoned nun reckons we shall meet that Indian woman in heaven Our parson dont think so because she wasnt convert ed but I do g at W communicated to a Polish after a stormy passage on the sea of life and with the sales of care all furled the tossed spirit is moored at postal currency specimens of are rare in that region She look ed it over and over CWT to mo some far ther particulars if her history It ap pears from her statements that her nr parents were small land proprietors OF that they died young leaving At the recent session of the Troy four daughters Of these Anna after Annual Conference a committee was ward named Barbara was brought up appointed to raise the necessary funds by her aunt and afterward sent to and erect a monument to the memory of the Order of the Visita i v ti the hearth Tne streams flow more j seems strange stilly and the lakes are like mirrors be As much as the Sabbath is trampled look like money U American Methodism The of this man now lie in i Here she became ill upon taken by the Countess remains into her hoUse As beautiful soon as her health began to improve cemetery m the pleasant village of she again begged to betaken to the Cambridge Washington county N Convent of the Visitation but she T A hundred years ago in his own WS refuSed She then ob New York he originated first A r since then her ana it is in sorrow the fim Methodist America nothing more of her ex of that we see farthest also luc T jii on and disgraced it is a blessed day J like Well the utmost sobers us and makes the I a for an mind geniaL And in sorrow we love our friends more tenderly and the dead become more dear to us And just as the stars shine out in the night so there are blessed faces that look at us in our grief though before their features were fading from our recol lection Suffering Let no man dread it too much because it is good for him and it will help him to make sure of his being immortal It is not in the bright days but only in the night that other worlds are to be seen shining in their long long dis tances And it is in sorrow the Japan s a battle ground of re ligious ideas as well as political ambi tion A great pressure is brought to bear on the authorities in favor of re ligious freedom l1 or a the Japanese have regarded Christi anity with especial fear but the opin ion is now prevalent and gaining among them that Christianity is soon to be their prevailing relig for a while Wed been brothers those men and L I knew that I clutched at my hair and howled like a wild beast I heard myself didnt hear anything else until a hanc came down upon my living band in that place of death I turned and there stood Wanona She was a stern looking woman al ways and sterner than ever now She carried her baby on her back as she had on the day when she brought her presents to Sally and she had a blanket wrapped about her She had been Big Thunders wife now she i M ex tie also erected with his own hands cept that she had become insane and he first Methodist church in this was well treated In one of the let country and ministered in its pulpit ters sent to Eleanor Barbaras until a regularly organized clergyman sister by the Abbess of the c convent BOW M D Physician and Surgeon in the Sew Law Building t ship and we couldnt blame him but j was his widow I remembered that we knew Indian nature and we i but there was no triumph in her face thought he knew it well enough to be j that stern sorrow At last careful he didnt though A week sh spoke after Big Thunder met him with Big Thunder was a great chief Dicks lost rifle over his shoulder his i white man killed him Other wifes bonnet on and her tin pudding fs have killed the white man It was sent from England Then he that lady thus expresses herself The moved into the section of the State news which you received about the ill which is now Washington county I ess of your sister is little boy a pupil in 3n jjast ern grammar school was scolded by a mother a few days sines Sammie said she did you do and know ourselves natives of and sons and daughters of the most would hurt yourself I High Irishmen stopping at the Is land House Toledo lit their gas and with windows open sat down to enjoy men years and while at work iu the field with a has been suffering from a severe scythe injured himself so that he tal disorder for the last three died of the wound For a long time and is subject to very violent fits the whereabouts of his grave was unIf you lament her unfortunate posi certain but twenty years ago it was tion we do so even more We have brought to light and the remains reto pay a great deal for her moved to the burial grounds of and are in constant fear grove church which then stood in the for her It is very painful to us that town of Salem and last year when as the say she must have the conference was held at Cambridge suffered from this illness before and the bones were exhumed and with we were ne ver told of it for if we had ting ceremony conducted by Bishop she would been ad united to our convent You may be correct She a chat The hungriest of Toledo i m quite at ease M ta the treatment of o it is proposed by your sister we do her no harm and 1J the over them monument worthy of the man and one which out his grave to the children church for genera tions to come she would be unhappy if she were anywhere else The convent is a great protection to her though God has made her a great and heavy cross to us This letter is dated Aug ll 1851 mosquitoes soon flocked in and drove i know replied the youngster as the pain from his bruised skin ceased for a moment am I a future tense The boy has recovered but no hopes are entertained of the mother them desperate The clerk who was f what do you think is the summoned to devise some defence with my little boy against them them to close the I Why its only a exe windows and put out the gas emanating acted on the suggestion and placed tho Serra the animal refrigera themselves between the sheets a prolific source of ir as they began to doze a lightning bug which had strayed into the room caught the eye of one of the travelers ile roused his companion with a Jamie Jamie its no use Heres one of the craturs sarchin for us wid a in the pericranial epidermis of the mental Ah thats what I told she lowed it was Lover once wrote to who rejected him tended to r man who threw the first stone I n the streets oi Baltimore at the old I To Massachusetts Sixth is living in whether fayette Indiana in straitened medium or large aze 1 I tances not since been heard  

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