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The Marysville Tribune from Marysville, Ohio • 1

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Marysville, Ohio
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RATES FOB AD YE re. One tqaare. ona weak. Oae xi are. two weel at- ARYSVILLE TRIBUNE.

One utre, three moBlbr. fT 1 re 6 en If te Mto una Mfaere. oaa roar. SON- JOIN SHE ARE He One-foujrtk sol am a three saeatas. One-fourth column lis month yne-ronnn column ona rear.

aavrUC sSV BM cm mi Oae-thirdooluean three moBlha- We nw 1 vint-isirufoiaai six montat I tltl 00 .00 IBM an CIO One-half column three the. Txaaca or subscription. Uoe-half column six One-half colamn one Tear Oaeeolaaaa fret ineertioa. lS Onocol las each adtUtioaaJ ii Mai (at an tat One column three months. One column six A FAMILY NEWSPAPER: DEVOTED TO POLITICS, LITERATURE, THE ARTS, SCIENCES, AND INTERESTS OF UNION COUNTY.

FO-L. XXXI. MARYSVILiLiE, UNION COUNTY, OHIO, JUNE 9, 1880. NO. 43 itahrsiwaahall Oneeoiamnnne raar.

as easy. AdaUaUtrator'a or Bxeentor't Motiaa io toea 1 Wot ice 1 1 a re oe ertion 1C 17 a Vi eilililliftiiell. ItlllHNI wkfl dlseon tin uanoe of the pa Mtitlnt be pain I orer4. taes Wftrtlft.mHla .11 els. rt axte ings of Confucius.

Well do I remember Caret, i NASBY. EARLY HISTORY. John Thompson and Hannah Bar- when a boy to have read the doctrine of deck, by James Thompson, J. P. Voltaire and Volney and others who wiiiuun U.

Martin and lan nan Mann, BY WILL CARL ETON. er them over with beautiful Sowers; mdibc the yean of their manhood away; by Rev. Daniel Long. speak of the wonderful influence of this form of heathenism. We have lived to see the day when men in prisons in California feel that the Chinese civilization is FIRST OHIO 'STEAMER.

Yearn they had marked for the joys of the brave. SERMON OF BISHOP SIMPSON. Delivered la Music Hall, Cincinnati, Ohio, May tb, 1880. Text-Forty-second chapter, fourth verse, Iaatah: "He (hall not fail or be discouraged, tilt be hath set judgment in the earth, and the isle shall wait for hi law." I In Uiewftdaj avwe lien it said that Christianity is a failure, and on this theme many pens have been employed and many addresses have been made. As if forseeing this stale of mind 2,500 years ago, the prophet took up his harp Chri aanv these sweet notes, savins "He so unifotmly beneath them that it con B.

JL. VOODBVKIi, taminates them, and the cry has been, The Long A go-- Rem i i scene of lie must wane id me siuiu ui mo i rear tney must wane id tue eiutu ui im crave. Uiv them the meed they have won In the peat; "The Chinese must go." Because the civilization is bo poor, so low. And if Orleans and the Yeta Traditional SavisraUete. OlMti HouiioBBIook.

oT.r Field's Giee thwrn the cbapleta they Won in the trife; Iras Pittsburg Dispatch. Olre tbem the laureumey ioii wua ineir uie. that be the case, what is the result of the teachings of Confucius? Why, old China with her 4.000 years upon her head is Cover them over yea, cover them ore 63. I. MULFOKD, Judge A.

G. W. Carter, of Cirmnnati, mm 2 EfSlVnV Boo oea of or. I in two columns of reminisceneca of tl Ohi rtmovetwUBDeaunv Bhaii not fail nor be discouraged." That aftM W-TT incinnati dailies, says Tbe fitstiteam- nklln an It. van alUOMing MIUUM these words apply to the LOra jesus Christ is shown in the fact that they were wealth? All these are gathered around Christianity, and they make us hopeful of the future.

We have our mission stations. We have our translated. Our missionaries ge to the very ends Of the earth there have been more converts this year than in any year since Christ preached the gospel on the sides of the hills of Gallilee. No clanger uf Christianity failing. No, no.

She has taken the arts of the earth under her care she has taken music under her care she is teaching the children she has built this large, magnificent College. Your May Festival will open with this grand old story from the voice of Luther "A strong lort is our God." And the time is not distant when a great hallelujah shall go up and the kingdoms of this world shall become the of our Lord and His Christ. Dispel all fear there is no danger of Christianity. It is standing secure, it is founded on a rock, the glory of God is on it. But you tell me here and there arc men who attack it.

This is the very proof of its truthj for the Apostle wn.i, "In the last days there shall ho scoffers glorying in their own ungodly lusU." If there wre none I might doubt its teachings. A lecturer may occupy a had and startle the people for a night, Inn the churches arc- full, anil crowds come tu hear the Gospel, and Nations are gather ed around the cross and the beauty of Cover the facet that motionleat He, Shut from the blue of the glorious iky; facet anoe lit with the smiles of the ir acet now marred by the frown of decay. Kyee that beamed friendship and love, to year Law aud Notary Public A. Milford Center. Ouio.

w.leve epeeW f.ih&wt&f bU ittt liiewtio. idV teuton lu tan-writing ot Mtmc. collection. takin Mnn.tm AhunnU. til to-day kowing to young America and sending her sone to he educated and Japan by her side is asking for our teachers and our schools.

Applause. Today in Japan the Bible is a text-book in some of her schools the young people are beginning to see the light and glorv that emanate from Christianity. Now, 1 say on the principle of the "sur of the fittest" is Christianity a failure? Paganism is gone Brahraanism is going Confucianism is going down Christianity is just rising. Oh I see there is beauty on lier brow. There is a lustre in her eye, there is glory on her cheek.

I see her distributing blessings on the sons of ,1 Jeuoaltloiii. examining. Kseords. and nil logo 1 nil legi 31-32-ly Browf you have seothed in the day of diitreti; Cbeekt yon have flushed by the tender caress, tanaalhat hriahtened at War i atirrinc crv: Biiaiawas intrusted to nts cr. nt streamed whoa they bade yon good lowed in the battle' rod flame.

quoted in reierence to xiib after haying performed miracles, the Jews took conrfcil against Hitn. "Behold my servant whom I have chosen my beloved, and in whom I am well pleased. And this expression was given of God to the Savior at the commencement of His reign, and in His public baptism, and repeated near the close of that ministry on the Mount of Transfiguration. Toe pur pose of Christ is the conquest of the world, and In carrying oat this great work He ia9yA fail ortbe discouraged onjij HeMioW rfMgmtAt utbe 1 eArtrV thit is, until the system of truth which He teaches is everywhere understood, ud JMJlfthJgre came. till too uentn Angel yea.

cover them ve iii aAD I rant.adhBfJ naught, ana brother, ana lorer; boat on the Ohio river of which we havdk authentic record was called the Gr eens, ao named, perhaps, because it waa dew ed and proposed by her builders that at. should make the first voyage to the city of New Orleans, down the Ohio and down the great Mississippi front tbe city of Pittsburg, where she was built- She waa owned and constructed by the great Robert Fulton, the inventor of emmmrn boats in this coosatry. and abe van built quite strong and large, for aha waa a steamboat of 400 tons carriage, but mostly designed for freight alone. She Baited from Pittsburg in the month of Deiiiii bar, 1813, and arrived at New Orieaxaa, the French city of the South, in the latter part of the same month, making the trip inside of four weeks a rapid sad speedy trip indeed for the experiment of rtaw UkCKKH a JKWKLRi 1 Kiaa dona heroes or oar. Bi afc aTfcelfceW4Wth beautiful flower.

men. 3BBBBK- Central Bioek, iUrravUie 0. Cjntll A. H. UFFIC HOCKS- From n.

te 2 p. sa.ii (FroM5toir.it.- gorer tbehanda -bat kreres tioalfrttltd. Crossed on the bosom, orlew bythe si-Ui, to the Bye. Bar and 3fc.io.Ul -mention lire imut Hands to you. niotber, in tntaney tnrewn; Hn4a.tvntyottthja-ilojBAiol in your own: ilanta where yotw liML wftT tried and die- BBJd.

Hum tor nrotection tu counsel and aidi HoMnmon. -O. yrf J. holiness. The universality oi tiis our Lord Jesus Christ is attracting more and more.

Yes, in the lesson we read, the Church is established ou the tap of a UBhda iht yon. brother, for MftMffeMtnewv ftpcr, srmww, fngdom is expressed in the pfcrase, uanua inne you. wire, wruua in nuwr nuicu. I Brwy the cros-of ebelr ecu try they bore; mountain, and all Nations are flowing Wordt ol devotion thoy wrote with their fore; Urnadly tBey eraaped for a carl 3d or licnt. I uruilee law in Union nndadjeiuing ettantlon will be tiven to all ool- into it.

Flowing yes, flowing up hill. Flowing yas, up the mountain side. Catching the mantle of death-darkened night. Cover tkagin over yea, cover thewover When was a boy i said that is laise the first steamboat on the FareaWnd fartnunna gnsonna, anoiproiao anaaover; Clatnrn youAheaata thesftdeadharoos own 1 le lieu entrusted their oare. ALIO nWAVICITOmS wTOfi z.a.fjre.

Once In Boblnson'e building on 8. Main St. afnryerUle. Ohio. ters.

From New Orleans rhettaric -a mistake. I went to the workshop of a friend and I saw in the dust a parcel of steel fillings, and he had a "Until He hath set judgment in the earth," in all the then inhabitable globe. And looking beyond to the unknown the expression is, "And the isles shall wait fJr HilAW. or, mother words, that the progress of Christ's Kingdom should be continually onward, until it should pre vail over all the known kingdoms of the earth, oiid fuel wVered portions of it also ahuuld receive His law. The work whioh he proposes to do is a mighty one.

Hens tarrying on His gaeat r- But you tell me there is lnlidelity. Yes. What is infidelity? A negation something not to be believed. It is no system. rWtSere are its temples? Where Were they ever? Where are its schools? Where were they ever? Where are its hospitals? Where were they ever? What did it try to do for man, anywhere? There have been men strong men, learned men, wise men who have been skeptical, infidels, but they have never worked together powerfully for the alleviation of the xace.

There was one Na tion, and only one, that I know of, that evar tried this system of Infidelity. It wai France. They cried, "There is no God, and death is an eternal sleep." And the result was that in a few years their streets ran with blood society was upheaved, and men were glad to go back even to poor temples for the sake of find ing some relief from the errors and terrors into which infidelity has had its era. Take the last century, and. see how "Voltair and Volney affecved the publi mind for a time.

Some years ago I was to tbe city of Natchez, and thence for two years afterward she plied regularly between Natchez and New Orleans, car- magnet, and as he urougn. it near tne Coar tbn fat that. aCTAaJ Btthor by comrades were tenderly borno: iiM that have trodden, through lo ve-iighted steel fillings they were attacted to it and I. M. BBOBBIOK.

Bi01UlCK, a. t. canrsjrriB. CARP JESTER ate wars. in the old happy days; Boar tu your own kissed the magnet, and then said, i ve me a magnet large enough and place it rying freight, and passengers w' Feet that have life ooeninx morn.

ii iaeaed. In voy- to take the passage, and Kotee of plestare, and Veath't poiaoned thorn Swiftly they nataed to the help of the right. on a mountain top and it shall draw all nations to it." That magnet is the Lord Jesus Christ, for he "If I be lilted ages from city to city in about poses, tnougn ne niuifii tiu uu me rijrht band ot the Majesty on High-for Firmly tbey stood in the shock of the fight. Mr. Nasby Leaves the Good Patriot Tildcn and Returns to Kent tick j.

From tbe Toledo Blade Harp uv Erin Tavkn, Noo York, April 26, 18804 lam more and more impressed, ez times flies on, with the greatnis and patriotism uv Sam. J. Tilden, the Great Defrauded. His entire devosbun to his common kentry, his utter simplicity uv caractcr, the gilelisnis uv a naterally simple nacher, wich contact with the world hez never corrnptid, and his general child-liko trust in the jestis uv his fellow men, all combine to make him a man wich to see is to rove, and wich to be in confldenshl relashuns with him, in a monetary way, is to be supported. I hev bin for several weeks xesidin at the Harp uv Ein Tavern hard by Gran -mercy Park, arranging fflilircky for the sage uv Noo York.

It is need lis to add that I don't pay my own board. In the interests uv his common kentry, the good Mr. Tilden has the bill sent to bis-self, for he recognizes the fact that the lab re for his common kentry is entitled to his daily bred, and a liberal allowance for likker and tbe other nessaries uv life-The good Mr. Tilden hez ten or a dozen patriots uv my kind at the same place, and life with us is not altogether gloomy. We all sleep in one room, but there are three meals a day, and unlimited credit at the bar.

A man wich can't live on that is a Sybarite wich hez no place in a vi rebus Republic. I concluded Kentucky yisterday, and start for home to morrer. I bed two hours with Mr. Tilden, the good Tilden, and we fixed the hull matter. "I don't want to be President," sed the gilelis old man, "but the good uv our common kentry demands it.

A man wich won't make sacrifices for his kentry should be compelled to live under a corrupt aristocracy. How is Kernel Plunger, uv Covington "The Kernel is for Thurman," sed I. "Tell tbe Kernel that ef that deestrik goes for me be shell have the postoffis at Covington, and that mortgage on his house will be attended to. No patriot wich wants to be President will pay him more than I will, which is drawd out uv retiracy reluctantly, and solely for the good uv a kentry." I replide that I thot that wood fix the Kunnel. Referring to a memorandum book marked Kentucky, he went on "Gineral Podger, uv Leginlon, hez been savin suthia for Bayard.

It won't do. Ef my sufferin kentry elex me to the Presidency, which I consent to solely on its account, and against my will, he shel hev the postoffis there, and sich money ez he expends in kerryin the deestrik furnished him, and his bills she! not be lookt into very closely. In savin one's kentry, a patriot must be liberal. Wat is paltry dross compared with the good uv one's kentry And Major M'Grath?" I replide that the Major was not altogether satisfied with givin the sage uv Noo York tbe nominashen, but that I wuz satisfied he wuz waitin to be seen. "See him.

Find out eggsackley how much ha wants, and promise him any 1 itu re Ne'er shall the enemy hurrying trump days and nights quick tripe to said of Him that He should sit AttorneysatLaw. Will aiT their entire attention to the practice of law In the "nriou. cour-e of Union and SoBBtle. Will nl BBgOtiBU lOBBl. nod sell real eftate.

B-0eo oTPOiite Court Houee. Maryiville. OWn ecv proph Summon thorn forth from "their dcuth-guarded up on earth I will draw all Nations unto for those early days, when we at the ksmanU ills enemies snouiu is wtstool. luleR' be rn the dangerous, snaggy and me. Blessed be (jcxi, we are trying to see the fulfillment of His promise.

My God hasten the day when gladness shall rised, however, that men a in) nm Bnrp the purpose must oe a rf'iJarV that shout nil the earth, and i-y overspread our Among the Musty Records. No. IS. Marriage Licenses issued by the Clerk of the Court during the year 1846, and by whom married Peter Lame and Matilda Graham, by A Bo wen, J. P.

Andrew Herd and Sarah Jane Turner, by Joshua Judy, J. P. Washington Davis and Martha Ann Smith, by Rev. Wm. M.

Spoflbrd. Smith Brown and Susannah Sampson. Married on license from Franklin county. Alanson Parmenter and Ann Elisabeth Brown, by Rev. E.

Mather. Iaaac Shirk and Maria Jane Dillon, by Joshua Judy, J. P. William C. Wood and Hannah M.

Mc-Williatna, by Rev. W. M. Galbreath. Warren laithrop and Mary Poland, by Rev.

John Johnson. James Wood burn and Maria B. Curry, by Rev. N. Laughead.

John Bennett and-Sarah Hi'ibuI. tF: Wm. Hayes. J. P.

Stephen B. Hutchinson and Mary Ann Lock wood, by Joshua Judv, J. P. Samuel G. Smith and Elizabeth Jane Herd, by Rev.

D. Dudley. William McAllister and Nancy Oglesby, by "Rev. Ziba Brown Joshua S. Murfield and Elizabeth Ann Bennett, by William Hayes, J.

P. James W. Brooks and Roxy Hunger, by Rev William M. Spolford. Robert B.

Raymond and Sarah L. Lock-wood, by Rev. A. Darrow. William Bonnett and Leah Welch, by Rev.

James Smith. John Caldwell and Sarah Jane Thompson, by J. W. Robinson, J. P.

Joseph Evans and Mary Ingram, by K. Beach, J. P. John Paver 'and Maria Poling, by A. A.

Williams, J. P. Truman S. Sampson and Lydia Brown, by Joshua Judy, J. P.

Ferdinand "Kleiber and Elizabeth Burns, by Rev. A. Ernst George W. Marks and Caroline Harris-No return record. Samuel Poling and Margaret Sheniman by E.

W. Crary, J. P. John Wheeler and Rebecca McAdow, by Rev. John Johnson.

John B. Bishop and Margaret Ruhl, by Rev. A. ErhBt. Aaron Bizel and Esther Mcllroy, by Joshua Marshall, J.

P. Christian Myers and Mary Demering, by J. M. Wilkison, J. P.

Daniel Merritt and Elizabeth Nichols, by Joshua B. Haines, J. P. Pleasant S. Reams and Mary W.

Starr. No return record. John M. Kaler and Dorothy Leener, by Rev. A.

Ernst. Jonah Beard and Julany Beach, James McCormick and Margaret J. Johnson, by Samuel Said, J. P. "Samuel Barcus and Emily Spoflbrd, by Rev.

Wm. Hamilton. Robert F. Lee and Eleanor Jane Abraham, by Rev. N.

Laughead. Henry Crattinger and Catharine Mc-Kitrick, by Rev. J. M. Ford.

Calvert Burgentine and Mary Ann Jordan, by Joshua Marshall, J. P. John A. Stirrett and M. E.

Irwin, by Rev. James Robinson. David Gill and Sarah Latimer, by Rev. David Polir. Wiiliam goblor anil Barncen Kaaat, ky Rev.

A. Ernst. W. S. Ktiihem and Ann Maria Page, by Jehu W.

Robinson, J. P. Periey Converse and Hannah Phillips, by Kilburn Beach, J. P. Jacob F.

Singer and Rebecca Maria Durobraw, by James Turner, J. P. Benjamin, Tucker and Amanda M. Gleeson, by Rev. H.

Shedd. William Cooper and Mary A. Curry, by Rev. E. B.

Chase. James McMaster and Lucinda Smith, by Rev. James Smith. James Moore and Lavina Granger, by W. Crary.

J. P. Josiah Elliott and Jane Bark dall, by Rev. J. M.

Johnson. Gideon Draper and Clory rah ood, by Joshua Marshall. Robert Kite and Ann Baird, by Rev. W. Ferguson.

John Dodd and Margaret Chapman, by Rev. lssacber Pepper. James Biggs and Julia Ann McDonald, bv Rev.D. D. Mather.

VOU WANT DBBD8. MOBTOAGM. TT' in tue nrsi uun-- me mm in Berlin with the Evangelical Alliance. globe. faihir great, M.

Bon ade, or any ifOBai raner. ri project so vast, that it seems to tcamp B'er, Viii Eternity's bugle shall sound, I 111 they come out from their couch in the ground. Cover tnem oyer -ye, coyer thorn ovor Parent, and husband, and brother, and lover; Rough were the paths of those heroes ot ours How cover them over with beatiful loworat Coyer the heart that have beaten high. Beaton with hopes that were bom bat to die; Hearts that have burned in tho heat of the fray. Heart that bare yearned for homo far away: Heart that beat high in the charge' loud tramp.

ten and aokno BMP I 111 LI tie. mere nave oeen great uDon this earth of ours, but meu kinsd rtSigttet How Postal Cards arc Mad The postal cards now in the Unit A. H. BBIGHTLBR, Attorney at Jlaw and Notary Public, Vnrynvtlle, Okie, i ed Slates are made by tbe Phntotyi Company, Holyoke, Mpss. Their manu Una anwrial enre to vpiioouona.

to Pottsdam, the old place of Frederick. There we were shown into a room where we held our consultations the room that Voltaire stood in, and wrote part of his works, and where he and Frederick thought they were about to overthrow Christianity. Yet in that very hall we came to consult about the best means of spieading Christianity over the world. Voltair said he lived in the twilight of Christianity, and so he did. But it was not, as he fancied it, twilight deepening into darkness, but twilight deeply opening up, a new and facture is thus drHcribed in the Tiftnaciipl nt Hearts that low fell in the prison's foal damp.

Onoo they wore swelling with courage and will. Bow thay are lying all pulseless and still; Onee they were glowing with friendship and there was never a kingdom" which reach ed to earth's remotest bounds. And there have been conquerors who dreamt of universal Empire, but their conquests extended to but a small part ot the earth's area, and as they extended the ir conquests their kingdoms became weaker, until finally they fell to pieces, partly from the diversity of interests and the divergence of views, and the inability to combine under one Government peoples I promptly toall BBfOaoa orr Flol Drot Btoro. of that city The postal cards are printed in sheets containing forty each, two of reare. rea re.

laaa. r. irmy Hoe's super royal presses being used for iHAft W. NOWELL, the purpot-e, and after being "seasoned" condition of navigation, in a river not at all accustomed to be navigated except by broadhorns and keel boats. This steamboat this Brat steamboat Orleans wis finally tbe victim of tbe perils of before untried and new navigation, and she was -wrecked, and sunken in the Mississippi river, by striking and it being driven into her hull a snag-sawyer, near the town of Baton Rouge.

She was coming up the river from New Orleans to Natchez when she saw the sawyer by which she was sawed in two, and covered by the muddy and murky waters of the Father of Waters. Alan, fog her fate! She was the first the beginning of the steamboats in successful navigation of the Ohio and Mississippi rivers, and her disaster waa a warning toall that followed her, of the dangers of navigation of the Western waters. She began and she soon ended her beginning area most useful, hen-ending was equally so to all the steamboats that came aftsrfter. The one showed the glory of accomplishment, theofl- for two or three days, they are taken to tbe "stripper," wlit-re each sheet passes brighter day, and the Sun of Righteous ness is shining now iu supreme beauty over our world. England, a century or Now the great souls have gone soaring above.

Bravely their blood to the nation they gave. Then in her bosom they found them a grave. Coyer them over ye cover them orer--Parwrt, and husband, and brother, and lover; Press to your heart there dead heroes of ours And cover them over with beautiful flower. On there i. sleeping in yonder low tomb.

Worthy the brightest of flow'rets that blooom. Weakness of womanhood's life was her part; Tenderly strong was her generous heart Bravely she stood by the sufferer ide. Cecking the pain and the life-bearing tide; Fighting the swift-sweeping phantom of Death, Bating the dying man's fluttering breath; Then, when the strife that had nerved her was o'er. more Aim. in the dominion of infi Dry Good Store.

mAni aver RnbiniOD between rollers armed with circular knives, which, operating piecisely like a pair of cissors, with a continuous cut, quickly divide it into four stripp, each The result was degradation of AUhiade kiade of rarmeaU maae to orner of gnrmenU made to or Clothet and Utartetylea. Cnltins a morals and general degradation of society. ire me a call. aed and repairea. un Hut as a reaction there came forth those containing ten cards.

These strips are works of Butler, Wesley, and a host of others to defend the principles of Christi next taken to the "cross-cnttei whii being fitted with circular knives like the W. W. WOOD W. DOLBBAB. anity.

And we have to-day, believe, a Calmlyho went to where war i ara no more. have blessed her now silent and dumb; Voices will blest her in long year to stripper, divides them into single cards purer a clearer and stronger Christianity because of these attacks of infidelity. of varied opinions, thoughts and languages. But this purpose is expressed to oe not only to found a kingdom which should be like the kingdom of Alexander, or the kingdom of Rome in its glory, hut a kingdom embracing all lands, taking in its vast sweep authority over all Nations, and not only for a time, but enduring forever. Such a project seems to men impossible.

We speak of our own territory, and sometimes patriots have feared that it might become too vast to remain under one form of government; but what a little patch comparatively on the earth's globe do these United States occupy? Think of the outlying regions! England is a vast government to day, laying her hand on parts of Asia and Africa and on the islands of the sea, but how small a part of the earth's area does even ahe occupy Again, men think Christianity must be a failure because the agencies seem to DOLBEAR A WOODS 9UB Where are the infidels and their writings 1 Cover her over yes, cover hey over LfBeasings. like angola, around her shall hover; rCheriih the name of that slater of our. I And cover her over with beautiful flowers. Rl. AT uf that day? They have scarcely left their mark.

Christianity is taking little er manifesfco the dangers attend Strip follows strip in rapid succession and the cards drop one after the other, into a revolving receptacle or hopper, which being turned as so as wen -live strips have been fed through the macidne, brings an empty hopper into position for MABXVTXLltS WAREHOUSE children hv the hand, and thev join with us in singing "All Hail the Power of th. dalle Baerianddall eom- Jesus Name." Applause. Yes, Christianity is growing -stronger and stronger, Cover the thousand who deep far away Sleep where their friend can not find them today Thay who in mountain and hill-side and dall Ref where thay wearied, and lie where they fell. Softly the grat-blades creep aiound their repose; Sweetly above them the wild flow'ret blow; ft i I ,1 ntly o'erhead. catching a new lot of cards, and at the and as 1 Laid, on the principal ot the survival of the fittest," she is the only power remaining in strength and in beauty.

Zephyrs of freedom fly got Whimpering names for the dead. same time brings those previously cut within reach of the banders. Each ma chine has three young women, besides the ieeder, -hos; duty it is to recouui them inadequate. The old treefe philo thev tell us sometimes the discov in our mina we win ver them o'er; So in oar hea rts we will sophers thougtit when men proposed to change the thoughts of the world, or he i blue I ttosea and lines ana vio eries being made are undermining the foundations of Christianity they tell us that the world is a great deal older, the Bloom in our souls for the bravo and the true. Cover them over yes.byer them over Parent, and husband.And brother, and lorer; and assort, throwing out all dirty or torn cards, press-mai ksor nrscuts, and to band the cards iu packages of twenty-five, and fossils of the earth show that millions of Think nf those fkaawkv heroes ot ours.

And cover them over With beautiful flower. years have elapsed that those great rocks, those immense deposits show that thing in the way uv offises that he i en it requires nimble lingers to do the work When the long years habits or worsnip oi tne worm, Dy wiling the story of the life, death aod resurrection of Christ, that it was simply foolishness, and they said it was impossible. Men say there is no adequate agency. If the earth is to be conquered tbey look for the sword for vast armies. But Christ sent forth His disciples to conquer the world and preach the Gospel to every crept slowly away, funeral day: a longtime ago, before public knowledge, Kn to the dawn of Ea quires.

In tbe great work uv savin on common kentry, promises can't be too aji the time at lower prleee a atmnnany otke gaa. wjf mi-tor' BTILLAHEA1D1 rpHK RAB UABBLB WORKS, omtod Clafk, Woodard Lew, la rally prepared to All all ordere. in their line ot nek at MMiBMBte md Tomb Stones, abb raoM AmeHun and, Italian ffarlfa, ajd Foreign ant Anuriem OranUe mm rimi enll and examine oar atnek of 6n-JafceVwer. We will not be enaereoW. Boa.

54 and 96 South Main ttrewt. idABYSVILLE, OHIO. the earth existed. What ii it did? the in a proper manner. From the machine the cards go to tne boxing tables, where they are carefully packed in paste lion, it Bible does not tell me when it was made.

freely made. Offer him tbe postoffis It simply tells me in the beginning God made the earth be it six thousand vears icrc." boxes, each containing twenty-five pacts creature. I I IJt or five hundred cards. These box aie "Honored and patriotic I rep'ied, that uffis hez bin already promised to Whan, at the Archangel's trumpet and tread; Rise npthe faeeaand iornisof the dead; Whoa the great world Ha last judgment awaits; W-fierj the Wne iky shall swing open Us gates. And our long column march alien tly through.

Past the Great Captain, for final review; Then Her the blood that has flown for the right. Crowns shall be given, untarnished and bright; Then the glad ear of each war-martyred son Proudly shall hear the good judgment, "Well done." Blessings for garlands hall cover them over-Parent, and husband, and brother, and lover; Ood witl reward thoe dead heroes of ours. And cover them over with beautiful flowers. in turn packed in wooden cases uf various There is a tradition, and there rxtnv be troth in it, that there were steamboats on our Ohio before this one of Fulton's and there is a pioneer about here who says that be saw a steam boat on the river, near North Bend, in the year 1811. He may not be mistaken in his eyes, or his years; but we have no such authenticated account as that of the steamboat Orleans being the first genuine regular steamboat of any importance which ever navigated the Ohio and the MisstEStppi rivers.

Other boats, large and small, followed the Orleans. These were varicua-ly built st Pittsburg, Brownsville, lenn-Wheeling, Virginia, and other rdaces wp the Ohio, until we come to the steamboat Vesta, which was tbe first regular steamboat built at Cmcinnati. Sire waa vessel of 100 tons burthen, and ass built out ot an old barge in the year lSir and was owned by Bosaon. Cowdin A Co She waa designed as a packet for freight and passengTS between Cincinnati and Louisville, and she plied to and fro for a long, long time. The Great Wail ef i na.

An American engineer, who, being engaged irr-the construction of a railroad in China, baa had unusually favorable opportunities of examining the hunoos Great Wall," built to obstruct the inenr-sions of the Tartar, gives the following account oi this wonderful work: The wall is 1,728 miles long, 18 feet wide nod ago or be it six millions of years ago, my faith is the same; God made it. But they tell me that the extension of science, or the discovery of worlds now known to science, teach me that the earth is too small and the number of in three men." sizes, containing lroui two thousand to twenty-five thousand cards, ready for Marshall B. Wheeler and Elizabeth 1 "Hev they sense ennff to keep their mouths shut till after tiio Con venshun "I feer not, patriotic and honored shipment to the post offices of Uie coun habitants too insignificant to attract atten March J. IWO-tf tion of my Savior and should he die for a little world I can only say this, while sir," 'Then offer him a furrin misbun and there are worlds and I rejoice that there try. Many small offices order less than two thousand cards at a time, and arJ to fill such orders are shipped in pack ages but larger amounts are always shipped iu cases.

All the cards are sent are so tar on tnat my niinu is over a small amount uv monev in hand. whelmed when I try to count the. differ Tke Prospective Wheat Crop. The following estimate of the crop of wheat in this country and Europe is from the Cleveland Lead: Reports from ever direction are exceedingly favorable ence, yet wherever worlds are there Cod H. nODinsuui Thank the Lord said he," acd he fervently, "for furrin mishums.

Yuo dou't hev to specify, and, there are a great many uv em. Yuo can't hev too ostoliises in aUble. -er-w a aamalaaad I It fronting Xbiiia is. His hand guides them and keeps them in being. I am not sure that they are inhabited by men if tbey are, I am not a .7 nnrwi.ite the athery Baughan, by Wm.

Norveil, I. P. George C. Scheiderer and Catharine Ruhl, by Rev. A.

Ernst. John F. Hicks and Sarah Jane Thomas, by Wm. Norviel, J. P.

John W. Davis and Martha Powers, by Rev. L. Enaminger. Nahnm Page and Susannah E.

Kidder, by Philip Snider, J. P. James Andrew Guy and Mary Ann Anderson, by Rev. D. Long.

Joshua Eaton and Elizabeth Huff, by A. A. Williams, J. P. Hamilton Said and Mabala Budley, by Rev.

E. Mather. Daniel Rice and Elizabeth Ann Bur-well, by John F. Sabin, J. P.

David P. Moore and Eliza Erwin, by Rev. E. B. Chase.

Albert Phelps and Nancy N. Shelp-mau. bv A. R. Bowen.

J. P. tot tf 'tjfcy large crop of wheat probably oae place, out there are a great many sure tbey are inhabited by sinful men Then again men say unnstianity is a failure, because it has not accomplished its work while eighteen centuries have passed away. They tell us fifty generation have risen and gone down, and as yet not half of the population of the earth has been reached. And how can it.

be that the earth is to be conquered if in eighteen centuries so little comparatively of the work has beendOne? Then again, they tell us that Christianity is likely to be a failure, because, they say, there is a conflict between science and religion. Thev tell us that the ad vance of science is showing errors in the accounts of the Bible, and that the views we hold cannot be held, as the light of science continues to Fhed its rays over the human mind that the system of Christianity has served its day, and we most look after something grander and nobler and stronger to hold the attention of the human mind. But let us look at the subject. It is a favorite expression of these men who fancy that Christianity is a failure, that in the order of this world there shall be the survival of the fittest; tnat the weak er shall pass away and the stronger shall remain, and they depict the future glories of our race under the triumphs of science. Now, then, if we contrast Christianity with by mail.

The orders for cards vary great ly in size, according to the amount of business done at the different post offices Thus the New York st uflioe, which takes nearly one-tenth of the whole number of cards issued, requires a million cards every two weeks or so. I Oe not know that they need a Savior- the largest ever harvested in this tka aaawBtmodatioB of the public, win aiso r.d horsas at oae But I do know that this sin-cursed earth "TL a. 1., ska da. or week. I rlaa far asi it relates to number of of ours needs a Savior.

I rejoice that iTta elaMast iu town, a4 aty aeoommo- God gave His Son to die for men, that ushels produced. This great increase ill be cjml fen acreflLa9 urope the report Is uniform in favor of you and I might be exalted to the very throne ot trod. 4 see nothing in this to weaken my faith. I turn my eyes to the having the best crop she has had for mrriu mishuuis, and a great many more km be made, it need be, to save our common kentry. I hev alii beleeved that oar com mo.

kentry wuz l.ot properly re cs, nttd al a and that her uught to be at one Consual to every Cun-greshunal deestrik, and tu ez many lull mishumv. ihaieto double up, but wat kiu I do? Ther ain't not inn I won't sucrific-1 our com on kentry. For its sake i am beta drawd uut ui retirement tt its sake I am wiliin to serve ez its fieiident ior'tts sake i am wiliin to open jt ez many har'ls ez my uubought roe yefcrs, both in quality and quanta vast expense, and I am charmed. But I turn my eyes to a drop of water, and I see almost an infinitude of beings sport md at stable. I invite to eallaadte.

my aorses. roBLSSON. ing there with as little sense of confinement as the whale in the ocean. Yet Maeraville. March 19.

l7-tf. Alonzo H. Ennis and Olive Bird, by Rev. D. Dudley.

Oliver P. Odell and Mary Ann Low, by Andrew Keyes, J. P. Samuel McAdow and Sarah Susannah ty. Should this prospect bold out, and the crop should be uHy above the aver age, the result will be curious on our crops in relation to the total value, as eettipared with, last year's crop.

It will Keep to the Right. Only villagers or persons with rural ideas now contend that ladies should always bo given the insidi of the pavement iu parsing. The rule adopted in cities is to turn to the right, whether the right leads to the wall ur tu the gutter and an observance of this common sense rule would obviate much unpleasant "scrouging" by over-gallant gentlemen God cares for every one of them. He friends desire- -and shel I hesitate for its JBLATTIE MrBPltV amain Ah at our fartaaTa will not receive hand other forms of religion, wheiein shall ua m.iafefor full croo. sav above the av tna iiwiB mm JKKld.BatlKrA.uld if the anl Duu 1L la IV liuiuici vumpaic ji ith Patranism.

I speak not now of the 15 feet thick st tbe top The fouadirkna tbronghoot is ot solid granite, and the remainder of compact masonry. At hstor vals of between 200 and 300 yards to we i a rise up 25 to 80 feet high and 24 feet in diameter. On tbe top of the wall and on both aides of itare aaaoory parapets to enable the defenders to peas unseen from one tower to another. Tbe wail itself earriod from point to point in a perfectly straight line, across valleys and plain and over hill, without the slightest regard to the configuration of the ground, sometimes plunging down into abysses a thousand feet deep. Brooks and small rivers are bridged oyer by the wall, while on vori tir-foiirtri'9 croD.

fenouia ia- who persistently crowd for the outside of the walk. Another common custom, low, degrading Paganism we find among tb.4 Indians of our Continent, or the Africans of yonder land, speak of Pag has given them their circulation, and watched over them. And then he comes to me and lays his hand on my head, and tells me in a voice of sympathy and love, "The very hairs of thy head are all numbered." 'Oh I have seen a young woman take her I abe to her bosom I have seen comb its hair, and curl the hairs around the fingers; and have seen her held the babe to her bosom in affectionate loye and kiss it a hundred times, charmed with its innocence and beauty, but I never saw a young woman try to count the hairs upon her baby's head. But God numbers yours and mine, and not one of tbem shall fall to the ground without our Father's notice. But they and required by fashionable etiquette, and one which nearly as incxpicable owing to nerproi j1 in toe uays ot imj urees imiuuso-and the pomp of Rome, when its and absurd is the practice of a whole Dies shone with splendor; when sculp- bum re and architecture gathered around it.

string of men filing out of a church pew, making themselves as ridiculous as an fwfWWWonfl. uaheltf. TO ffirfmt WflP "awkward squad" practising at "catching step" in order to give a woman the RuchinKS, Tiwic, I speak, ot it wnen it iiaa ioj tegeuas oi mythology. Skepticism, then existed. There were skeptical philosophers who doubted apd denied, but all the skepticism of Greece RqUI npypf ceedingly low prices lower, perhaps, than ft has been for years.

Instead of our the everything to be found in And Inffet. tell me, as I have said, Christianity has not done its work in the time it had. I Fancy Oeod. w)rambtr and uouBtry being richer, as far as dollars and. cents are cent cciicarriEdahw will be a temDle.

and-- dethroned One of id (tana, ppgt.sieo mw bar their imaginary deities. JucTaTkuirstood beside paganism, hut, notwithstanding it taueht the knowledge oi tne one true admit it. But what about the time it took to make this earth Tbey say it took millions of years, and they count by the deposits and fossils of the ages they tell me that Qnee on a time there were no men on the earth, hut there were lit absolutely poorer with great crop on hands. To illostrater Suppose our yield should be 400,000,000 bushele With a good crop in Europe we shalj A me I lean mi. God, has it p4e any advances against idplatryaQh-tbe other band, fche people woo nearu vuu vvu wrong end uu the pew, is that of a man, when on a promenade or walk with a lady, to keep himself on the outside of the pavement.

A little exercise of-judg-ment will convince any person of ti Utter use 'ess in -lis of this bobbing beck and forth ut every corner. The common rule is this: "If a man and woman are walking, she should always be at bis right arm, bother it be towards tbe inside or outside uf the walk then the woman will not be shoved against the have the surplus already given, ins tle animals, or something else and by tnriiP.l- to auirvo idols. JJUt wnat skeoti sake to promise tbe same ulhs to five men Never No troo atrioit wood balk at so small a thing ez that. Let em come. They (shall hev all they want.

Kiu Knnnel Simmons be depended unto?" "Honored and patriotic sir, Kunnel Simmons adores you in his heart, i am certain. But tne Kunnel is iauriu under dnansbel troubles, and he hex hesitated, to see which can. id would gtv "I understand the Kunuel, and I am his man. Aghoor the Kunnel that the collectorship uv his district "But, honored and paiiiutic sir," I replied, looking at my memorandum, "That offig hez bin prom ist to four men already." "So it hez," replied the patriot, "so it hez. Very good.

He must hev a furrin misbum. Tell bim to select any one he iikes, and give him my word for it. Will that anser "Better than anything. The Kunnel is so hevily iu debt that a residence abroad wood soot him belter thau to remain at home. He cood hav the flag ov our common kentry wavin' over bisolfis, wich wood console him for his enforced eggsile.

He wood prefer flag uv bis common kentry over ha ils iu Guatemala to the Sheriff's flag over his house in Kentucky. The Sheriff's flog is lurid' red, and is not variegated cnuif for him." There waz some more arrangements uv like nacher, when I bid tue great and trooi man gcoi bye, and departed for my feeld uv labor. "Don't forget," sed be, as he wrung my hand at parlin, "that the Coliectorahip at Loois vide, is ur'n." I shan't forget it, but ez it hez biu promised to six other patriots, to my cer tin kn allege, I shan't buy a brown stun house to-morrow, on the strength uv it. Whether I get that or net I hev got wat I hev in my pokket, and I shel hev the postoffis at the Corners, be in ez I am the only Dimocrat ia that region wich kiu write. This much I am shoor uv.

But rice will go Bay an average oi ou cents ana by they developed into turtles, into caf philosophers could not do, and what tj 1 1 ,1 rl rh rial i I i monkevs, into gorillas and by and by Davis, by Rev. John Johnson. Sylvan us Stoddard and Marv Coffman, by Rev. F. Wrait Aurelius Hager and Nancy Jane Mc-Can, by Thos.

M. Ewing, J. P. Hugh Stickney and Hannah Jane Draper, by Joshua Marshall, J. P.

Adam Raush and Catharine Blumer-schein, by P. Snider, J. P. Archibald S. Irwin and Nancy E.

Sheldon, by Rev. James Smith. Reuben L. Partridge and Marian Wol-ford, by Rev. E.

B. Chase. Samuel W. Marks and Sarah Ann Sa-ger, by A. R.

Bowen, J. P. winfield Scott Hartford and Lucetia Rebecca Thomas, by William Halford, J. P. Joseph Wells and Ann Case, by Kil-bourn Beach, J.

P. John G. Pensil and Ann B. Kritline, by Brnj. Posee.

Frunuis Henderson and Mary Stewart, by Rey. D. Griffin. Pnilebren-ToBsey and Judith Graham, by James Thompson, J. P.

Washington Spain and Sarah Shene-man, by Rev. C. Bellinger. John A. Bee man and Elizabeth R.

Price, by Rev. J. D. Heath. George Michael Wolf and Susannah Barbara Dellinger, by James Turner, Jeremiah McCumbcr and Rebecca Cork, by Wm.

Hartford, J. P. Valentine Jones and Lucy Fanner, by David Dan forth, J. P. Samuel S.

Jewell and Roxana A. Kel-sey, by James Turner, J. P. Resolve Criteh field and Rebecca Belts, by Rev C. Ballinger.

Jacob Trapp and Susannah Swartz, by Talior Randall, J. P. William Stranahanand Mary J. Sanaft, bv Rev. E.

B. Chase. Andrew S. Stitbem and Delight Mapes, by Perry Buck, J. P.

Wesley Long and Nancy Latimer, by K. Beach, J. P. Gideon Liggett and Elizabeth Hayes, by James Thompson, J. P.

Andrew McCampbeil and Maria Mitchell, by Rev. I. N. Laughead. Royal P.

Lombard and Sophia Fay, they developed into men. What about kmialiaheiL being Jo day eh gtouhi amo this theory hows-to Jupiter.no temple is open to 7 Admit its truth for a moment. Won't Venua. noJueembly prostrates itsel: be you give me as much time to have uiuxt euuiu in intju- fore Mars, no garment saved ftoin a ship or. i5uu.uw.uw.

auo Christianity conquer this world and turn wreck la hntie un the Temple of Nep er. sav oaa dollar per bushel, equal to sinners into saints, and raise the earth tune. All this through the preaching of the throne of God, as yeauwant to turn a $00,000,000 for the whole crop more than if "we had aJnU crop both banks of laigesatwolMawsong nana-ing towers are placed. Ten to Pieces. A gentleman residing near Halera, and the owner of a large plants lien, and the former owner oi 175 slaves, in letter to a former slave of has now living in Chicago, after giving him the news in regard to bis former BiwHala and bis own family, says: "The exodus will finely tear us to pieces tt is a fixed fact No country can survive without labor, and it is bosh to assert that we can get other labor.

The colored people want to stay but tbey can't and enjoy freedom- De, mocracy and bulldozing degrades beyond endurance. It is so. Uisder Democratic rule the Sooth is not habitable for Union men nor colored -people. All I have is here, and here I am compelled to stay. I eaa't get away, but watch it.

You bet when labor all leaves, and these bulldozers become plowAoys, the political spirit may become slightly renovated." Ifctereft, thehaatorian, lias in his home a. Washington ajfine pamtisw of the Em-perorof GarnnMy, presented to him by Emperor. Willuun himself. BenerorlwIU in October bc eighty years old. He is tall, thin and slightly bent, and big thte cross! To day where is Paganism? monkey into a man? They demand Grouchine in the daitprta of the-earth W1U of 400.000,000 bnsneis.

uonseqoeniiy. No man of learning dreams that Pagan ages for the one, and are not willing to give us time for the other. Now, I say the times are full of prom ism shall again be a power on this earth with a eood croo i Europe, a big crop gkwtral share of paroe kdi. 'w-nnld make ub poorer, while a small We have compiate sAock uf Christianity is making inroads on it 'e ver where. Paganism has not in the i.ra would make us richer.

At noes made a convert from Christianity, ises, loox over tne earth and nearly everything is JwefuhiJnri8tianity is growing stronger, are more ri.itrh the ftiriner Would be dPfoint. low is it ia India, whereit has come in FUSI Premeditated Harder by Rats. From the Troy Press, Hay 21. Mr. George Clayton, residing in the village of Lansinbnrg, was ie possessor of a white rat of which he mad a grei pet, and kept him housed in a snug ca e.

Last night the pet rodent was foully murdered, and the evidence gleaned from a view of the surroundings this morning tends to show that tbe homicide was committed by other rodents ot a darker hue that had not been petted. The box or cage of the pet rat had been Utterly gnawed to pieces, and tbe pet torn to pieces, as tbe marks plainly show. Bibles, more Sunday school children, a tn Hni7 a oood nrice for his lfj JramalUfe, i aawnjtem trseHat hat wtrcrr-itf itr tfatt- 4-betHrfiful, 0u iu -atttgianmmmey. re teach, rs, more sermon? than there yet the rest of WV a4 jM mm partoiBi bc toake.j-g ever Were since the light of the sun dawn a A art a cm tn oheato food. cnany of its precepts are BUDiime ana hfcWitlsjlg Ft rtbMQtiW of tbf0ple of India with PET ed on the Garden of Eden.

Christianity is going over this, earth; it has visited heathen nations she is taking idolaters for want jll fnensate in a great meawjire trooil nrices. JBxexWhw I tleir nraiiiiian ItWi cannibals, and rawing them up djusfi riaauiiiaifgnaTi innn. and sua 1 a i Re nhTiHtf Talali "Cxoodneesrsafd. se ga. a a is raisimt man to.

ins lull Height and Because the a ara op It. i.inaadl Mr. Tilden is a troo patriot, and does luv suture before the throne of God. Who There must have been quite a number tor the expenses of his an rfMiVlilon stem fa of rats concerned in the murder, as the his common kentry. Hopefully, franai-w i rWi4 bill of mis thousand manhood arisftanity are OUr discoverers Who are our inventors? Where ia the power of this incisors of one or two could not have eee tt-r i .1 gives it stren; PBTKOLEUM V.

NASBY, iTilditv) not to raft. done the work in a week that waa done. fte teach earth. where is eommeree. its iiansgeq to afm, "i oaa aimoe.

rtuw fVompare oat. tlttVt.

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About The Marysville Tribune Archive

Pages Available:
14,877
Years Available:
1851-1939