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The Coshocton Tribune from Coshocton, Ohio • Page 4

Location:
Coshocton, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
4
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE COSHOCTON AQE--EIGHT 1885. THE GOSHOCTON AGE. PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY --BY OFFICE: 228 WEST MAIN STREET OPPOSITE CITY HALL. year. In advance Six months three months This paper will not be sent to subscribers outside of the county unless patd for in advance Subscribers desiring to have address changed from one rostolfice another will please give the post' office at which they have heretofore received their mail, together with tlv one they want it sent to.

Obituary notices of not more thai ten lines will be inserted free. Al additional matter will be charged fo at the rate of five cents per line Obituary poetry and resolutions of re spect will be charged for in every- instance MR. UAKC.AK'S connection with the Stewart insurance case is a "scorcher 1 that is more violent to his reputation than the "wool scorcher" he sent out when Chairman of the Democratic State Committee two years ago. JNO. K.

MCLEAN and the boodler who sent money into this county last spring to defeat the nomination Col. Williams for Representative, now have the satisfaction of knowing that if it did not defeat Williams, it helped elect the kid candidate for sheriff. I I are a goodly number ol blooming Dt mocratic patriots around Coshocton who consider themselves in hard luck. They were building hopes of a winter job under Iloadly and a Democratic Legislature. No more special porterships and spittoon clean- irsfor the political paupers.

THE kid gang in Coshocton felt satisfied last spring that the next Legislature would be Republican, and therefore felt justified in putting the money the coal oilers sent into this county to beat Col. Williams, into the sheriff contest. It was that that beat both Speck and Marshall, and it is coal oil tactics that makes everything so harmonious in the ranks now. BROTHER MI-CADE, of the Standard, and Congressional-aspirant t'orbes made speeches throughout the county during the recent campaign and invited the Democratic brethren to help jollify over the election of 1 loadly. The jollification failed to materialize and the orators arc glum.

Mr. Forbes thinks it lessens his chances for Congress, and Uarney McCabesees that he will have to confine himself to the scissors and paste pot for another two years. tie gang ol place hunters about Ce- shocton. The Treasurer's and Sheriffs offices have been dealt out, and next year they will make a fight for Auditor. They have publicly boasted that Frank Sell's scalp will be the next to hang at their belt, and, that never again shall a candidate be nominated who recognizes the old Democrat as an organ.

Go in, bretraen, it is furnishing us a "picnic," yet in the interests of peace the papers should be consolidated. THE President is reported as sipping comfort from the Ohio election after this style: "It natnw) I should like sac the Democratic party successfu everywhere. I have always been Democrat. Hut so far as my adminis troti is concerned, 1 do not thin the elections this fall have any bearin upon it--cither as signifying approva or disapproval. The issues are loca Hut 1 am free to confess that nex year, when a new House of Reprcsen tativcs is to be chosen, I shall be anx ious for Democratic success.

Th people of all the States will then ex press their judgment upon what th Democratic party, in Congress and the Executive, has done or tried to do and 1 shall ceitainly feel badly if tha judgment shall be igamst us." Yet the election in Ohio mean cither the return of John Sherman to the Senate, or a Democrat who wouli support the Administiation, and in this sense it was National. 1 lowcver it the President can find any comfor in the result of the Ohio election, we presume there arc none to oLject. TWENTY graduates a J'oston grammar school were recently exam ined with the purpose of finding som enc fit for the position of a genera clerk, and not one of the candidate: passed. An exchange commenting thereon says Hoys and girls of a former genera lion whose entire schooling was comprised in half a dozen three months terms, learned to spell and write am "cipher" with an ease and accuracy which many childern do not now at- a ten years' course in the Under the old system the THE political situation in New York is decidedly mixed. The Democrat; want Hill elected because it would be an endorsement of Cleveland: the mugwumps want him defeated because it would be an endorsement of Cleveland.

The Republicans in the meanwhile arc putting in good licks to elect because the best interests of the party demand that the Republicans be victorious. And there is fine prospect of the latter being victorious. THE Democratic State Committee at Columbus, in derision of the Republican victory and of the boys who wore the blue, hung out an immense shirt in front of headquarters on which were spots of red paint to represent blood. It raised a hubbub, and a committee from the Ixal G. A.

Post waited on the committee and asked them to take it down. As it was being lowered, it was taken by some Republicans, saturated with coal oil and burned The Democratic Committee, ashamed of their act, plac ed the blame on Allen O'Mycrs. WmuTwc were actively fighting the battle in this county, the dastardly thieves stole the State away from us. --f Democratic Standard. Oh, yes, the returns from the thirteenth ward in Columbus look like there were dastardly thieves at work, but they were not of the Republican persuasion.

such an attempt as the coal oilers there made, the Standan! should never again talk about why was it so thieves. By the way, accessary to turn the whole force of the ring, including coal oil funds sent into the county to defeat Col. Williams, upon the election of one man? There must have been something rotten somewhere. THE squint-eyed whereby Mr. elected Sheriff discloses the fact that harmony does not prevail to an alarming extent in the Democratic ranks in this county.

In fact, discord rules; yet no sensible person is surprised. Ever since the little ring that surrounds the Democratic Standard has been in existence has been widening, was founded for no other purpose than to breed discord and keep the local offices among a lit- the discontent Tbe Standard tain after schools. pupils did not listen to so 'much in truction in geology, botany, physiolo- astronomy, nor did they devote much attention to music, drawing German and French, all of which are linned into the ears of even the babies now; but what they did learn was ol mmediatc use and an excellent ground vork for the practical education which must come in later life. To this the New York Herald says the "purpose of teaching is to graduate glib smattcrcrs our public schoo iystcm is correct; if it is to fit young men and women for life's practical lutics it is wrong. Not one child in a mndrcd reaches a high school or college.

Why, then, should the time of all be wasted in preparing for something which they can not enjoy, and neglecting that which is important?" THE AGE surrenders each week several columns to an educational department. The editors arc experienced educators, and their views upon this question would be read with intcicst. Let us hear from you. As a starter, however, it might be said that THE AGE believes the views of the exchange quoted above arc correct. It is a fact that while pupils are graduated every year from our public schools, and put forth, to commence life's a flourish of trumpets, not one in ten of them can pass the county examination, and any district school in the county can furnish from one to six pupils that far excel in the fundamental topics, rcadin', 'ritin', and 'rithmctic.

This is the startling fact, but it is not given in criticism of the instructors, but with a desire that discussion may be secured and the wrong remedied. THE AGE is not of those who believe in excluding namcntal" from the curriculum, but it should not be given the preference to the practical. THE term Democracy, as applied to party, has long been synonymous of fraud, but in all their experience of devilish attempts to defeat the will of the people, there have been none more desperate than has been practiced in Ohio since the election of last week. True, there has been blood shed in the South, innocent men killed and maltreated to prevent their exercising the right suffrage, but that was brute force, with no effort to conceal from the public, the claim being set up that they were justified by the circumstances. In Ohio kid-gloved and polished thieves have attempted to thwart the will of the people, while publicly proclaiming their devotion to purity and expressing a desire for an honest count.

On Wednesday following the Section it was given up by nearly cvcry- Ixxiy that Foraker had in the neighborhood of 20,000 plurality, and that the Legislature would be Republican on joint ballot. On Thursday it began to look as if Hamilton county would decide the complexion of the Legislature, but the figures as gathered from that county by the Press Association, composed of representatives from each of the daily papers in Cincinnati, gave the entire legislative ticket to the Republicans, with the exception of Marian, who ran behind his ticket. On Friday the result in some ruial counties was still doubtful, and the coal oil gang at once set up the claim that the Legislature would be Democratic, and that the whole Democratic legislative ticket in Hamilton county was elected. No figures were given, no names of successful candidates anywhere, simply a wild claim that the Legislature was Democratic. The Republicans, in the meantime, chimed the Legislature and gave names and majorities to substantiate the c'sun, which gave them a majority on joint ballot outside ol Hamilton county.

This was claimed from the first, and official returns have justified the claim--the majority outside of Hamilton county being three. At one time it was thought the Repub licans had but one majority outside of Hamilton county, and a desperate effort was made by the Democracy to steal that one, as they had evidently intended to steal the Queen City. The returns in Franklin county had been made to the Clerk ol the Court, and the official count commenced on Monday. When the thirteenth ward was reached, it was discovered that he return had been tampered with, 300 votes having been added to the Democratic column, which if counted would have elected one more Demo cratic Representative and the Democratic county ticket. The fraud vas so palpable that the canvassing board threw out the spurious votes and counted the true returns.

It was a dcspeialc effort of the coal oil gang, but failed because of there being honest Democrats on the board. The face of the returns in Hamilton county show the election of the Republican Legislative ticket with one exception, but the tenacity with which the Enquirer and the cca! oil corrup- tionists continue to claim it, indicates that the returns have been changed and the will of the people will be thwarted. Kvery effort will be made to catch the thieves. The count will not be completed before Saturday. In spite of the rascality, however, John Sherman will be returned to the Senate.

An old Battle Flag. Memlcrs of the 97th O. I. will be inter estcd in the following Columbus Special to the Cleveland Leader: The following letter received today by the Adjutant General from General J. M.

Schofield explains itself: -Greenville, S. September 21, To General. J. M. Schofield, Major General United States Army: General: As I am personally unknown to you I have requested my liend' General Marcus j.

Wright War Record Office, Washington, to orward this communication. I had the honor to command' a colonel' the Twenty-fourth South Carolina Regiment in the battle of Frankln, and have in my possession the colors of the Ninety-seventh Ohio Volunteer Infantry, captured by my re- jiment in the, battle. With the hcar- consent of the survivors of those members of the Twenty-fourth immediately concerned in the capture, I desire to return the flag of the Ninety-seventh to the survivors of that rc- and to beg through you to communicitc our purpose. May I ask .0 be put in correspondence with the representatives of the Ninety-seventh. The capture of the flag was on the inside of the works, beyond that crrible holocaust abatis, where our )rigadc, General Gurtis, of Brown's livision, was decimated by the fire in our front, killing our General and vounding every field officer in the brigade.

The men engaged in the cap- urc of the colors of the Ninety- seventh were Lieutenant James A. fillman, and privates J. P. Black well, F. Carpenter, and Anderson Walls, all of Company of the Twenty- ouith; the color bearer of the Ninety- seventh being killed in defence of his flag.

The name of the lieutenant commanding the company presumed to be color bearer of the Ninety-seventh thought to be Jenkins or Jameison. ic surrendered his sword to J. P. Jlackwell, who would be glad to know us address, if he is alive. Appreciating the acts of generosity hown by soldiers of the United States of America in returning trophies of war to my late fellow-soldiers of the Confederate Army, I have long wished to do honor to the memory of he brave color bearer of the Ninety- seventh Ohio who fought gallantly for lis flag and who gave his life to up- lold it.

It is a silk ensign, and bears he scars of battle. The inscription is as follows: "Ninety-seventh O. V. I. Stone River." With much rcsptct I General, your obedient servant, ELLISON CAPERS.

The Ninety-seventh O. I. wasi Muskingum, am raised in the counties of Guernsey, Morgan, and Coshocton, and mustered at Zanesvillc in July and August, 1862. John D. Lane was the colonel' and Milton Barnes, ate xretaryof state, was a field friccr of the rcgimcpt.

Capttain J. M. Compton and Ir. ones McCIure, who were rs of the gyth, have written Mr. Capers requesting him to deliver the ag in Coshocton or at Columbus and is expenses will be paid.

If the flag is secni ed efforts will be made to hold re-union at Coshocton, and have a ubtic presentation of the flag to the urrirarsof the gallant regiment. BROADBRIM'S HBW-YORK LETTER. (XirrmuoQdeiiee Co, The revelations now being made be. fore the Commission which is looking into the workings of our Excise Board arc as disgraceful as anything yet brought to light in the history of 'his ill-governed city. A license is applied for by the keeper of a disreputable dive, the known resorts of prostitutes and thieves.

There was no doubt about the character of the place, and when the Excise Commissioners made application to the Police Captain of the precinct for a report, he promptly reported it. The proprietor ot the place, a notorious thief, finding his nefarious business blocked, applies for aid and advice to a local politician. This worthy, a gentleman of influence in the ward, advises him to get somebody else to apply for the license, although the person obtaining it has to swear that no one but himself is interested in the business, and the gentleman of influence promises to sec the matter through for $520. There certainly could never have been a better test of the value of political influence, for the three Excise Commissions had voted unanimously against it. The police captain of the precinct had reported against it.

The place was known to be a thieves' den, when the gentleman of influence steps into the ring. First and foremost he procures a reputable man to commit open and deliberate perjury; he swears that he alone is interested; he pays $500 to the go- between, and hey, presto, fly, the license is granted without any further delay. Bad as this city is, there never was a more flagrant case than this, and the man who received the money acknowledged the fact without blushing, and the only satisfaction that he gave the commission was, that he did not sell his political influence for nothing, and if he had known at the tune of his application that Captain Williams had reported against the place, be would have charged him double what he did. It seems as Jif every public office was honey-combed with fraud. For many years the Commis- sionersbip of Jurors has been worth more than the Presidency of the United States.

The salary, though very liberal, would scarcely furnish whisky and cigars for the incumbent, but it is as much of a prize as Consolidated Virginia was when they struck the big bonanza. You may ask how this is. Well, simple enough, in its way. The business of making up juries for the Courts is delegated to the Commissioner of Jurors. In making up the poll suppose he put in the box from which he draws the names of a lot of rich men--Henry N.

Smith, S. V. White, C. P. Huntington, Mr.

Jafiary, Mr. Bates, Judge Hilton, Jay Gould, W. H. Vanderbilt, and Russell Sage; now out of the lot he draws ten or twenty such names as these. The Deputy serves them with a notice.

Here is the case of a very rich man whose business would suffer by his absence, being compelled to sit in a foul-smelling court for weeks to listen to cases of murder, assault and robbery. All the surroundings a de- rading and disgusting. If the rich rmn has a sick wife or child, or has important business out of town, so much the better for the Commissioner of Jurors--the rich man is willing to pay for his immunity; and the official is not unwilling to receive, and the amount agrexl on depends on the victim's financial ability to be squeezed. Thousands upon thousands of dollars arc annually paid by our wealthy men to secure cxemptionjfrom jury duty, and that is the reason you seldom sec any of them serving on criminal trials. In regard the granting of licenses to disreputable and immoral places, I 'do not sec how the Commissioners can escape punishment.

We seem to be getting back to the worst days of the Ring, and nothing will bring us on solid ground but just such a revolution as drove the Ring thieves to exile or to prison. The County Democracy has "shied it castor" into the ring, and defiantly asks Tammany to "tread on the tail of its coat." If there ever was a time Tammany refused an invitation to this kind of an invitation, I havejno recollection of it. Tammany came up to the meeting of the County Democracy on Monday, and has been wearing a beefsteak on its left optic ever since--for it got a terrible black eye. War has occn declared between the two factions and the County Democracy has staked its all upon the issue. If it is beaten in the coming election, it goes out oi sight as a political factor, and no man prominent in its organization, from Hurbert O.

Thompson to Fatty Welsh, need expect at chance 'at the public crib for the next ten years. Irving Hall is ground to pieces between the upper and nethsr millstone, and when the bolting is finished there will not be enough of it left to make a respectable Sixth Ward affidavit. If ABSTRACT OF VOTES. Polled in Coshocton County, October 13th, for Governor and County Officers. TOWNS I MI'S.

Ik-dlord Clark- Krnukllii Kei'Ui 1 1-ifayetU; I.tlltOll oxford IVrry I'iko TIturum Whlti- Kyi'x. Tnlitl nor 'cntatvc' urt-r. Mills' K) Sberlfi. I Itvvor-rl'ros'ng di-r Atfy. i i Com'r.

lutlrm- aryUlr. 1 no UN r.V, IH yi 1 W. Mi SI us 1 1:5, 1 iru' U' 1 1 1 Oi ii; ia' in KI, aw si' iu: iu rM, in! lad, ,,,,1 iu7i iur. Ml i rail wi Mi Id us HI; an. ii i.v ic UN 0:1 0:1 ii'i iai iii'i K).

1171 M' 11 Jl ue ITU Wi 18U. 7U i. no, ail Ir 1 111 517! l.V, 1C. 117 70, I I I 71; axil 113 l.V. IM 131' IV.

IMJ! us! laii 13V WSi, Mi UO ivsj 161 HI 115 7i lw; 11'Ji UM, UN ii-'. 74' KV SS. llii; Twj 17J; IK; n.t, -i-7 1 oi. iix! Hv 117! Mi r.a\ M' Ull KI; i.iLi if IIS 7(1 101 I'M 151 T.1 M' h7 Ml! Vi I7a list IK' 111- 2K lui; iiv' iosl M. US'! 70, 107 1211 I 147., 112 Illy IS', o- 1 -i; aM as iai; w' isiI 100 1731 100J 11!) 1171 70 1SU! lli I SKI 1IU 1 lOii UK 13.,, iiii iis! iu; yij iii Its! 4 527! 512 4il'; iix)' ijoi Hi, IIS, 70! 120- lOi 1211 I'r.

1'roliiblMuii oatulMalf for tiovvriior, rwoivctl 137 vou-s--1 In 1'lko, 2 In Cmu-font, 2 in Oxford. 2 in Vlnjliila. a In in In Uuton, 5 In in TlMTtoii, i. in In J.l!cn Kvvnc, 1- In I'J In Juclcson, IS iu White Kycs, -'l in In l-afayctu-. Tammany is defeated in the square fight which is forced upon ir this fall, the oldest Democratic organisation in the United States goes down ruin, never to rise as a power in Democratic politics again.

Tammany Hall, in which the Democratic Ark of the Covenant was supposed to be kept has not the first spark of Democracy in its composition; it is an Autocracy pure and s'mple; one man commands and all the rest obey. Any question of the Czar's power, or right to obedience, was punished by instant decapitation, and all the relatives of the poor wretch might just as well have been pariahs or lepers. This condition of servile and absolute slavery has awakened a bitterness of antagonism which will only be satisfied by the political destruction ol one faction or ths other. Of late years Tammany has been a most unreliable factor in Democratic victoiies, and this sense of insecurity has made many men who have been identified with the piriy all their lives prefer ignominious defeat to an existence which is the price of degrading and intolerable slavery. In any event the people will be the gainers.

The political hacks who have dominated our politics for the last two decades will have to step back and make place for better men. It will compel all parties to raise the standard of their nominations, and perhaps bring us to good government at last. While the stock market may not be regarded as the pulse of trade, there is little do ubt that it is the sciatic nerve, and we watch it with considerable anxiety. There is no very good reason why stocks should advance, but, nevertheless, they have gone up at a rate that has made the beats' heads swim, and which has in the past three weeks brought many of them to grief. When an operator like Henry N.

Smith goes down, all the world hears of it; but nothing is said of the petty gamblers who have dropped their all, and then sunk into poverty and are never heard of again. I know a dozen who went under the same day Smith Bailed, but their names never got into the papers, though their ruin was absolute and Irreparable. The appearance of two celebrated American actresses in New York at the same lime is a sort of challenge for supremacy in which the public has taken a very lively interest. Mary Annerson comes back to us, flushed with foreign triumphs. She has been noticed by Royally, petted by Lords and Dukes and Marquises and Earls and Counts and dudes, and all sorts of people.

It would not be at all surprising if this young lady from the Blue Grass region had her stately head turned and came back to us looking down on her poor relations. Certain it it thit she is not the Mary who left us two years ago. She brings back an English company to support her, and while they have not yet put up the sign on the Star Theatre, "No Americans need apply," the fact stares us in the face that there arc none in her company--nor is there likely to be any during the present season. Her return creates no furore, and the critics agree that while she looks well and speaks fairly, making love to her is like hugging an iceberg. At the Union Square appears Miss Margaret Mather, who is as different from Miss Anderson as it is possible for two women to be.

Without Miss Anderson's physical advantages, she has the divine fire of true genius, which Miss Aadcrson never had. When Miss Mathers speaks it thrills you like an electric shock. You may admire Miss Anderson, but she never moves you. In witnessing the performance of Miss Mathers you forget the theatre and the actress; you see only the character before you and the woman. Mary Anderson is always Mary Anderson--is always an actress --not always a good one, and never a great one.

This season opens auspiciously for both of these ladies, but Miss Mather carries the sympathies of the town; for while she does not taboo an English actor or actress, believing art to be universal, Americans have a chance, and her instantaneous recognition by the public and the press has made her success assured. The obsequies of Cardinal McClos- kcy have been one of the remarkable features of the week. It has proved beyond doubt that the world moves. Never in my memory has the death of a priest caused such profound and heartfelt sorrow. It is not because he was a priest, but because he was an upright man.

In all of his long life-opened to the sunlight watched by jealous eyes--no spot or stain. Happy servant of th-: Lord, to have lived such a life. Happy people, to be blessed with such a teacher. Thousands upon thousands passed the body as it lay in state, repeating the words of the liturgy, "Blessed" are they who die in the Lord." Yours truly, BROADBRIM. Legal Notice.

George 1). WdRfpner, Jolm W.ijroatr, jr. both residing in taa county of l.iwrrenoo in tho StHto 01' lltintlt, olllco aj'lroii Cllxa- cay, Catherine I'cpulo and Josouh I'epplQ, bur busband, who reside in Crnirford county iu the State of Illinois. olllco Ubao- cuy. county, Illinois.

Mary Ann Stockman and J. C. bar hutband. who reside in Koolcuk county in tbe State of Post olllco aIdrs Kichlsu-1, will take notice that on the 9th ol October. A.

1S85, John Waggoner tiled bis petition In the 'Jourtot Common Picai of Coshocton county, Ohio, SKainat tbo above named parties and others, heirs at law ot David Wagoner, deceased, praying for partition of tbu described real estate situated in tbo county of Coshocton and State of Ohio, and In th: Township or TuJcarawns. and being a pnrt ot the following described tractof land jltuatcd i.i the first quarter ol tha IIfill township and sixth range. United military l.tnd.. bounded as follows: Commencing at the south oast corner of a certain tructof land of about nineteen by lieujamln Uioko'is and wife to James lien row by deed dated March IStb, 1823. and recorded In of deeds of said Coshocton county.

Book 3, page 500; tbencc north with tho cast line of said Henfrew tract and a tract tnen owned by one John Waggoner, 98 poles; thence ca-t parallel with tbe section lino 19U polos and one link, tbenco south OS io4cs to a corner bearing tree, a maple one foot In diameter, north 68 west a links, and a hickory IS incnoi ID dlnme- tcr north32 degrees east 12 links; thence west 106 poles to tbe place of beginning, containing one hundred and twenty acroj.vand being the same land conveyed by John Waggoner and heirn of 1'hilliu Waggoaer, doceaied, to said David Waggoner by deed dated October 2Stu. 1S31. recorded In of deeds of said Coshocton county, book 6, pages 27 and niul being tbe home lartn David Waggoner, deceased. The said part of the above tract sought to bo partitioned as aforesaid, li all that part of said tract lying east or the right of way ol the main line of tno Connotton Valley Uallway Company, ai tho jama was convoyed to said Hatlway Company by said David Waggoner and wife by deed dated December, 20tn, 1832, and recorded in records of deeds ot said county, Hook ss, pago 451, to which reference Is made for a description of said right of way; excepting about three by said David Waggocer and wife to Kmlly Brown by deed dated November 6th, 1S73. recorded in records ol deeds of laid county, Book 47, page 27, to which deed reference Is in ado lor a description kof said three acre tract.

said petition also prays for the adjustment ot advancements made ly said David Waggoner, deceased, to his children. The above named parties are required to an. swer on or before tbo 19th day ot December A D. or Judgment may be taken against them. JOHN WAGGOMKU, By Nicholas JtJamci, oct21-Cw.

Legal Notice. Amelia Davis. Thomas Davis, her busband. Wilbur Green, Kmorttto Green. hU wile, KOI Elizabeth Green, all residing at Winsted.

Connecticut. Amos osborn and Jbaura Osborn. wile, residing at Riverton, Connecticut, Truman Green and Delia Green, bis wile, residing atThomaston, Connecticut, Kocclla Dcwolt, residing at Colobrook Kivcr. Connecticut; William Perkins, Fanny Perkins, his William C. Perkins, all residing at Worcester, Massachusetts; IlaulcK.

McEwcn and.Sam- uol W.MeKwen.her husband, residing at 163 New Uall street, New Charles Perkins, Dewltt C. Perkins, Cora Walters and Walters (whoso given name in unknown) her husband, all residing Sprlngucld, Ii.Osborn, Annie M.Otborn, William G. Osborn and Charles D. Osborn, all residing at Connecticut; Julia ana Manly B. Stevenson, residing Eisi Jctvott, New fork Kllcn A.

Kovrloy and JLonH Kowlcy, her husband, residing at Xow Uavcn, Connecticut, and Edwin C. Kowloy Howley, bis wile, ruldlng at 410 Kasonth street. Bridge port. Connecticut, will taka notice that on Oo Bnbort D.Osborn and Robert Graham, Administrators, with the will annexed, of Truman Osboro, deceased. Hied tbclr petition In tho Probate Court of Coshocton county, Ohio, against the above parties and others, praying for antborltylto execute and deliver to one George Bible In behalf ot the heirs law and devbeei of said Truman Osborn.

a deed In Ice for forty acres ot land off tbe west side of lot 14 In the 3J quarter of tbe 6th towasblp and 6th range In said Coshocton county, Ohio, in pursuance of and to carry oat a written contract for the sale oi said land made by said decedent In bis life time, and which contract hai been folly complied with by said George Bible. Said parties are required to answer on or fore tho 26tb day of December. A. D. 1883, or Judgment may be taken against thorn.

II. D. O3IJ-JKN and ROBERT GBAIUV. Administrators. Ao.

By R. M. Voorhcs A C. B. Hant, their Att'yj Oct2t HELP! NOTICE.

I hereby warn all persons against purchasing a rote given by me to Jothna Knbn. dated September. ISO. aa he It holding the con- trtry to agreement. JOHN KUHX.

oct3-3w. for working people- Send 10 cents postage, and we wll I mail you free, a royal, valuable samcle box of goods that will pnt yon In the wmy of Ing more money In few days than yon tver thought possible at any buslnm. Capital not required. Yon can live at borne and work In time only, for all tbe time. All of both sexes, of all ages, grandly soccessfuU SO to IS easily earned every evening.

That all who want work may test the business, we make this unparalleled offer: To all who are not well satisfied we will send to pav for tbe trouble of writing vs. Fnll particulars, directions, MDtfrea, Immense pay absolutely sure for all who start at Don't delay. Address srissox Portland, lie. STRAYED. A year old black hone, weight about thirteen hundred When iMt.tetn wai la tho neighborhood of Conovllle, on the evening of Oct.

1Mb. Any perton, returning tbU bone or giving Information to nil will bo duly rewarded. ABHOR FBT, On Una o( Samuel HoElwoo, near New Cwtlo Ohio. In order to find out where to do the most ad- venising, and who reads our advertisements, we will give any one who presents the following slip any day next week FIVE PER CENT. On the first "bill they buy: G-ood to the bearer for Five Per Cent.

Discount, if presented before October IS, 1S85. F.F. BIGGS. Cut the above out and come and buy your CLOAK THIS WEEK AT THE N. B.

If those ladies who called at our opening last week, and didn't get waited on, will come in some day this week, we will be pleased to show them the goods. F. F. B1G6S. IN SPA PERI Si EW SPA PERI.

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About The Coshocton Tribune Archive

Pages Available:
94,135
Years Available:
1862-1945