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The Coshocton Tribune from Coshocton, Ohio • Page 21

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Coshocton, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
21
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

EFW0IOTAHS IN SESSION. The News la General From Towns and Townships. fiathered Specially For Tke Age Readers By Omr Masting Correspondents. tiEJGNTE. KEEKS, May 2S -Memorial das' will be observed as usuaL The procession will form at 10:30 o'clock, and march to the M.

EL church, decorate the graves then march to the Presbyterian cemetery The program will be Mcctfcg Of Mi. VecMd District OR. TAkMAGC ON THE REWARDS OP Be ttU At Warsaw FAITHFUL. 'ENDEAVOR. The annual meeting of the Ep worth eigue of tbe Mt.

Vernon district will be held in Warsaw June i Tbe convention will open with a' sunrise prajer meeting conducted by Rev. M. Kentle and Rev. F. F.

FiterZ. Bev. Dr. Johnson, presiding elder, will conduct the opening exercises in the Clae of Cfexiat ti Uae Obktaelcm WJUcfe SUm. Fol- lovrecv--Satisfaction In tbe tiou of ficod AVork, WASHESGTOX, May this discourse Dr.

Tahuage shows in an unusual way the antagonisms that Christ overcame and finds a balsam, for all wounded rendered in the afternoon. Icecream I meeting. IV 3 1 morning session, and Rev. Mr. Bone, heam: teit Jolm trii Warsaw: W.

J. West Bedford; ed die work which thuu Miss Maud Mohler, Canal Lewisvillec Miss Alice Finley, Keene: Miss Lena Akerovd. Boseoe. willtake part in the me tu I 1 ion will be served by the Ladies' Aid. The speakers for tbe occasion are Bev.

F. F. Fitch and Thos. H. Glover.

Cards are out announcing the marriage of Miss Mildred Shannon and George Whittemore, Wednesday evening, Jane 6. Miss Frankie Smith spent last week inCoshoeton. Maro Beall went-to Pittsburg, Saturday. Fred McMichael called upon friends here, Wednesday. Miss Mittie Hoagland is spending a few days with her brother, Adam Hoagland, in Coshocton.

Mr. and Mrs. Wm. C. Overholt spent last Sunday with Bev.

Overholt. Mrs. Frank Hay and Mrs. Sadie Andrews visited friends here Saturday and Sunday. -Mr.

and Mrs- James Shannon, of Coshocton. spent Sunday with Mr. Shannon's parents. J. J.

fVebal and family were in Mound, Sunday. Miss Fannie Chase, of Clarke, called on Keene friends Friday. W. W. Bechtol spent Sundav in Keene.

I. BL Luke, O. L. Elliott and Charles Endsley, are working in Holmes county- There will be a musical entertainment in the township hail, Memorial evening- Mrs. Sarah E.

Bectol is spending a few days with her son, W. H. Bechtol. in Bethlehem. ukation.

while, on the other band, there "Jhose who will take part in the af- apihing more disappointing thau after ternoon session are Miss Estella Neighbor, Newcomerstown: Miss Hattie Butner, Homer; Walter Kitzmiller. throw up high way on which the whole having toiled in a certain direction to find that our time is wasted aud our investment profitless. Christ came to Millersburg: Miss Iva Lewis, Mt Vernon: W. H. Yearly, Danville: Mrs.

H. world might, if it heaven. He did it. be through foreign travel, the. world.

Bui here was a man. wha Again I remark there m-as no orgaoiza- had graduated at no college, had. not in tion in his behalf, and that was against any academy by ordinary means learned hint. When men propose any great work. the alphabet of the language he spoke, they band together, they letters of and yet proposed to talk, to instruct in agreement, they take oaths of fealty, and subjects which had confounded the the more complete the organization the mightiest intellects.

John says: The more and complete the success. Here was Jws marveled, saying, Uow hath this one who went forth without any orgaci- man letters, having never learned We. ration and alone. If had a mind to in our day. have found out that a man join in bis company, all right; if they had without a diploma may know as much as a mind not to join in his company, all a man with one and that a college can- well.

If they came, they were greettd cot transform a slugga into a philoso- with no loud salutation: if they went pher or a theological seminary teach a away, they were sent with no bitter fool to preach. An empty head after the anathema. Peter departed, and Christ laying on of hands of the presbytery turned aud looked at him. that was alL empty stiU. But it shocked all exitiug All this was him.

Iid any one prejudices in those olden times for a man ever undertake such an enterprise amid with no scholastic pretensions and no such infinite embarrassments and by such graduation from a learned institution to modest? And yet I am here to say it end- set himself up for a teacher. It was ed hi a complete triumph. Notwithstaud- against him. 1 ing his worldly occupation, his poverty. So alM the brevity of his life was bis plain face, his unpretending garb-- the against him.

He had not come to what act that he was schoolless. the fact that howling down prayers. unnfiing up the wnett of blood. faint hearted. ye troubled.

re persecuted here is a heart that can pathize with you! Again, and lastly. I learn from all that has been said today that Christ was fully in earnest. If it had not been a chose, mount into The foul mouthed crew who attempted to tread on bun C- Putnam, Brink Haven. The new could not extinguish the sublime Orticers will be installed at the even- faction which he expressed when he said. ing meeting.

Papers will be limited to ten min- -UH UIB utes, and discussion to three. The and the doctors could not medicate his League orchestra of Mr- Vernon will wounds, and he seemed to be dying, and "I have finished the work which thou gavest me to Alexander the Great was wounded. dream tne sick provide the music. Delegates will be entrained by the Warsaw chapter. C.

L. Reamer is at present president and that immediately it was cured. And Of the organization. Alexander, waking from his dream, told this to the physician, and the physician wandered until he found just the COOPERDALE. COOEBKDALE, May 28--Lake Wright was in Coshocton Monday- Justin Wright spent a day with his parents last week.

A number from this place attended commencement at West Bedford. J. C. Daugherty was in Coshocton last week. Mr.

and Mrs. W. W. Worford spent Thursday with her parents. Ed.

Baughman. of Illinois, is spending a few days with his brother. Fred Timmer and family, of Washington, were the guest of his brother Saturday and Sunday. G. W.

Cooper and wife were the guests of J- F- Baughman Sundav. Ed Wright and wife spent Sunday with his brother, 51. C. Wright. M.

Slaughter and wife, and Mr. and Mrs. WorKman spent Sunday with W. W. Worford.

wen; c-cnuf-m NEW PASSENGER SCHEDULE. tind of plant which the sick man had described, brought it to him. and the wound was healed. Well, the human race had been hurt with the ghastliest of all wounds that of sin. It was the business of Christ to bring a balm for that wound the balm of divine restoratiou.

In carrying this business to a success- How Pan Handle Trains Will Run During The Summer Months. Copies of the new passenger schedule, operative on the Pan Handle Sundav, have been received at the issue the difficulties were stupendous. In many of our plans we have our friends to help us; some to draw a sketch of the plan, others to help us in the execution. But Christ fought every inch of his way against bitter hostility and amid all calculated to depress CAXA.Ii CAXAI. LEWISVHVLE.

May 28--Children's Day will be observed at the M. E. church Sunday evening. June 10. Miss F.

Ling, of lovra. is the guest relatives here. F. L. McMichael has returned to Pittsbarg after a few weeks" visit here.

Prof. Dean and family visited at his old home near Tunnel Hill last week. Miss Ermer Grahtn. of Coshoeton. visited friends here Saturday and Sunday.

C- O.Besst and family spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. belaon McCormick. Chas. Hill, of Coshocton.

was the guest of Bert Besst Saturday and SnnJay. local ticket office. Trains now arrive here as follows: East Bound--So. 20, 9:53 p. Xo.

6,1:46 p. Xo. 14, 2:29 p. Xo. 2, 2:03 a.

in: Xo. S. 2:18 a. a. Xo.

32, 7:20 p. m. West Bound--Xo. 5, 11:47 p. 3, 4:53 p.

Xo. 21, 4:39 a. Xo. 7, 8:02 a. Xo.

33, 6:03 a. Xo. 19. 11:53 a. m.

Trains 14 and 2 going east will not stop in Coshocton, and 21 and 7 going west are not on the schedule for this place. Old Xo. 7 has been given the circumstances and defeat. In the first place, bis worldly occupa: Xo. on was against him.

I find that be earned his livelihood by the carpenter's trade--an occupation always to be highly regarded and respected. But you know as well as I do that in order to succeed in any employment one must give his entire time to it, and I have to declare that the fatigues of carpentry were unfavorable to-the execution of a mission which required all mental and physical facul- number 19. and the new train going ties Through-high, hard, dry, husky, in- west at 8:02 o'clock in the morning at uda to he a waj for a a 6 glorious dispensation was a stupen- will be known as It will be dous undertaking that was enough to de- noticed that Changes in time Of old mand all the concentrated energies even trains are but a few minutes. COURTHOUSE NEWS. PROBATE COTTB.T- William W.

Shaw against Sarah E. Carnahan: order of appraisement and sale, private, issued. Will of Catharine Flood: applisa- at 10 o'clock: notices issued. Sarah Matthews as administratrix against Lulu M- Barrlck et al: order of sale returned: sale confirmed. KEAL ESTATE TKAXSFEKS T.

J- Holl to Malinda Brown. 1-5 acre in Xew Castle township. -fll5. Francis A. Myers to Raymond Hav.

quit claim to acres in Mon- of Christ. We have a great many romantic stories about what men with physical toil have accomplished in intellectual departments, but you know that after a man has been toiling ail day with adz and saw and hammer, plane and ax, i about all he can do is to rest- A weary body is an unfavorable adjunct to a toiling mind. Ton, whose life is purely me- we call midlife. But very few men do ne bad a brief life, the fact that he was anything before 33 years of age. and yet no1 accompanied by any visible orgauiza- that was the point at which Christ's life tipn notwithstanding all that In an exterminated.

The first 15 years you take hilaration which uali be prolonged in 1 in uuraery and school Then it will take you six years to get into your occupation or profession. That will bring you to 21 years. Then it will take you ten years at least to get established in your life work, correcting the mistakes you have made. If any man at 33 years of age gets fully established hi his life work he is the exception. Vet that is the point at which Christ's life terminated.

Men in military life hare done most wonderful deeds before 33 years of age. There may be exceptions to it. but the most wonderful exploits in military prowess have occurred before 33 years of age. But as a legislator-- no man becomes eminent as a legislator until he has had long years of experience. And yet the gray bearded scribes were expected to bow down in silence before this young legislator who arraigned sanhedrins and accused governments.

Aristotle was old. Lycurgus was old. Seneca was old. The great legislators of tne modern world have been old. Christ was young.

All this was against him. If a child 12 years of age should get up in your presence to discuss great questions of metaphysics or ethics or politics or government, you would be as contemptuous as these gray bearded scribes in the presence of this young Christ. "Bleased Are the Poor." Popular opinion declared in those days. "Blessed is the merchant who has a cas- tie down on the banks of Lake Tiberias." i This young man said, "Blessed are the a Dtt wa into a cask of wine? What poor. days, eriastiag chorals he declared, "1 have finished the work which thou gavest me to do." Victory Over Stature.

See him victorious over the forces of nature. The sea is a crystal sepulcher. It swallowed the Central America, the President and the Spanish armada as easily as any fly that ever floated ou it. The inland lakes are fully as terrible in their wrath. Some of us who have sailed ou it know that Lake Galilee, when aroused in a storm, is overwhelming, and yet that sea crouched in his presence aud licked his feet.

He knew all the waves and the wind. When he beckoned, they came. When he frowned, they fled. The heel of his foot made no indentation on the solidified water. Medical science has wrought great changes iu rheumatic limbs and diseased blood, but when the muscles are entirely withered no human power can restore them, aud when a limb is once dead it is dead.

But here is a paralytic--his hand lifeless. Christ says to him. "Stretch forth thy hand," and he stretches it forth. In the eye infirmary how many diseases of that delicate o-gan have been cured? But Jesus says to one blind. "Be open!" and the light of heaven rushes through gates that bave never before been opened.

The frost or an ax may kill a tree, but Jesus smites one dead with a word. Chemistry may do many wonderful things, but what chemist at a. wedding when the wine gave out could change mentous mission he would have tamed back froo it disgusted and discouraged, lie saw you in a captivity from which he was resolved to extricate though it him all sweat, all tears, all blood. came a great way to save you. came from Bethlehem here, through thrtr place of skulls, through the charnel bouse, through banishment.

There was mot among all the ranks of celestials one being who would do as much for you. I lay his crushed heart at your feet today. Let it uot be told in heaven that yon deliberately put your foot on it. While it will take all the ages of eternity to celebrate Christ's triumph. 1 am here to make the startling aaaouncerneut that because of the rejection of this mission on the part of some of you all that magnificent work of garden and cross and grave is, so far as you are concerned, a failure.

Helena, the empress, went to the Holy Land to find the cross of Christ. Getting to Holy Laud there were three crosses excavated, and the question, was. which of crosses was Christ's cross. They took a dead body, tradition says, and put it upon one of the crosses, and there was no life, and they took the dead body and put it upon another cross, and there was no life. But.

tradition, says, when the dead body was put up against the third cross, it sprang into life. The dead man lived again. Ob, that the life giving power of tbe Son of God might dart your dead son! into an eternal life, beginning this day! "Awake, thou that sleepest, and rise from the dead, and Christ shall give life!" Live now! And live forever! 1900. by Loula Tortured and Talked. Yokohama, May former Korean official has confessed, under torture, the names of those concerned is the murder of the Queen.

Numerous arrests have been made, and it is prob able that all implicated will be executed. Popular opinion said in those numan voice could command a school of "Blessed are those who live amid Yct nere te a voicc that statuary and fountains and gardens and scal tribes, until in a place where congratulations and all kinds of festivi- bad let down the net and pulled it np ty." This young man responded. "Bless- no fish in it they let it down again. ed are they that mourn." Public opinion and the disciples lay hold and began to hi those days said. ''Blessed is the Roman DwU ben by reason of the multitude of eagle, the flap of whose wing startles na-! tnc nct broke- Nature is his servant, tions and the plunge of whose iron beak I The flowers--he twisted them into his inflicts cruelty upon its enemies." This sermons; the winds--they were bis lulla- young man responded.

"Blessed are the Dy wnen in the boat: the rain--it merciful." Popular opinion said, "An hun sr glittenngly on the thick foliage of eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth." In parables; the star of Bethlehem--it other words, if a man knocks your eye 8an a Christmas carol over his birth; out knock his out. If a man breaks eo a --they beat a dirge at his death, your tooth break his. Retort for re-! no 'd his victory over the grave! The tort, sarcasm for sarcasm, irony for Binges of the family vault become very irony, persecution for persecution, wound T1Kt because they are never opened ex, for wound. Christ said. "Pray for them ceot to tokc another in.

There is a knob chamcai, if you were called to the up- that despitefully use yon." They looked on the outside of the door of tbe sepul- buildiajf of a kingdom, or the proclama- at his eye. It was like any other man's' but none on the inside. Here comes tioa of a new code of morals, or the start- 5 eye, except perhaps more speaking. They conqueror of death. He euters that ing of a revolution which should upturn felt his hand, made of bone and muscle nlm and says.

"Daughter of Jairus. sit all nations, could get some idea of the in- and nerves and flesh, just like any other UD! Rnd sbc sits UD To Lazarus, "Come coherence of Christ's occupation with his i hand Yet what bold treatment of sub- 1 forth!" and he cnnit- forth. To the wid- heavenly mission. jects, what supernatural demands, a ow son SuiJ "Get np from that Tfee Spiritual Cptmilding-. strange doctrine! They felt the solid bier!" and he goes home ivith his moth- In his father's shop no more intercourse earth under them, and yet Christ said, "I cr snatched up the keys of bear up the pillars of this world." They death and hung them to his girdle and looked at the moon.

He said, "I will cried until all the graveyards of the earth turn it into blood." They looked at the heard him. Death, I will be thy ry in bargaining with men that have vrork to do; yet Christ, with hands hard CENTER CESTTER ALLEY, May Sbepler preached a memorial sermon at tbe Union M. P. church yesterday to old soldiers W. J.

aud T. M. Calhoun was in Muskingum c'-unty. on business Saturday. David Fletcher and wife were tbe guests of their daughter Mrs.

Frank Wagoner Sunday. Rev. and Shepherd took dinner with the T. W. Culbertson and family Sunday.

Mrs. Harry Leslie and Mrs. Libbie Hanaer. of Altoona. are roe townbhip.

-SloO. S. H. Xicholas to Margaret Moore, lot 3 in Kenilworth addition. 3150.

MAKKIAGE PERMITS. Andrew J. Murphy, aged 22. miner, Miss Ida S. Guilliams.

aged 17. Conesville. Charles age 34. miner. Coshoc- from use of tools of trade, was called forth to become a public speaker, to preach in the face of mobs, while some wept and sonie shook their fists and some sraashed upon him with their teeth and many wanted him out of the way.

To address orderly and respectful assemblages is not so easy as it way seein, but it requires more enenry and more force and more concentration to address an exasperated mob. The villagers of Xazareth heard the pounding of his hammer, but all the wide reaches of eternity were to hear the stroke of his spiritual Jipbuildton: Miss Bernice Poland, aeed 25, Coshocton. mg. So also were his habits of dress and diet sea. He said, "I will hush it." They i Ia Sfne! Grave.

I will be thy destruc- looked at I MARKET REPORTS. Grain and Stock Prices For May 2flL CHICAGO. Cattle--Good to prime steers. 10Q5 TO: poor to medium, $4 40Q4 00: selected feeders. $4 3S3 05: niEced stockers.

$3 758 4 20: cows. $3 104 SO: heifers, 93 5 10: cannepB, $2 00; bolls. 93 000 4 29; Texas fed steers. $4 OO3C 15; Texas bulls. $3 23g3 75.

006 SO. Hogs--Mixed and butchers, $5 JBj good to choice heavy, $5 5S6 35; heavy. 55 20; light, $5 30. Sheep aud Lambs--Good to choice weth- ers, $4 75gG 10: fair to choice mixed, $4 af 00: western sheep, $4 85gC 15; year- Hugs. $5 OOtgC 30; native lambs, $4 500 7 00; western lambs, $0 OOrgT 00.

Wheat--No. 2 red, 72c. Com--No. 2. 3TQ Oats--Xo.

2. 22c- CLEVELAND. Hogs--Heavies, $5 35; mixed, Yorkers, $5 25; pigs, 90- Sheep nnd Lanbs--Choice bandy clipped' S3 90: fair to good, $5 009 5 50; culls and common. $4 50; good clipped wether sheep and yearlings, fit 4 75; fnlr to good mixed sheep, $4 culls aud common, $3 75. Cuttle--Good to choice smooth fat 1,050 Ibs.

and upwards, $4 S5Q5 35; green coarse grades. $4 504 75; fat smooth dry' Jed lighter steers. $4 80; green halt fat steers. 60; good heifers, 809 4 73: good fat cows, S3 00; good bnlla, STt 7.V7/J I XL" ff. Calves-- Fair to beet, 600 looked at the stars.

He said, "I will shake them down like untimely figs." Did ever one so young say things so bold? It all against him. After the battle of Antietam, when a Tlie Supernatural JVntnre. No man could go'through all the obstacles I have described, you say, without having a nature supernatural. In NEW LINE IN USE. guests of Madison McColum and fami- Iv.

TUNXEIj BLIliLi. HILL. May Susanna English is visiting Mrs. Bcn- neman. Rev.

Fulton and his father, of Adams Mills, spent a day with M. Sproull. Mr. Kamsev has moved to the property he bousrht from J. F.

Tredway. have arranged for a social to be given Connections Alreadv Seen Made in West Lafayette. Workmen finished stringing the second line of the Telephone him. The niifihty nieu of poor oung man who came up from Xaza- Christ's rirue did not appear in apparel reth to produce a thrill which has never I without trinkets and adoraratnts Xoue of the Carsars would have appeared in appsreL Yt here a in.sn, hero r. as a king, who aluava wore- the same co.ir.

Indeed, it was far from for after be had worn it a general rode along: the lines, although that arm, amid its muscles and nerves the soldiers were lying down exhausted, an bones, wen- intertwisted the encr- they rose with great enthusiasm and Sfies of omnipotence. In the syllables of huzzaed. As Xapoleon returned from that voice there was the emphasis of the his, captivity his first step on the wharf eternal God. That foot that walked the shook all the kingdoms, and 250,000 men deck of the ship in Gchnesaret shall flocked to his standard. It took 3.000 stamp kingdoms of darkness into demoli- troops to watch him in his exile.

So there tion. This poverty struck Christ owned have been men of wonderful magnetism of Aagufetus, owned the sanhedrin, owned person. Bur hear me while I tell you of a Tiberias, ow tied all tbe castles on its i tbe gamblers thought it worth company between this city and West Lafayette Friday. Supe'-intendet Calvin Merre 1 went to West Lafayette and completed the connections. The line is now in use.

Church Social. The ladies of Cecil Memorial church Alva Rine has moved to the the Ramsey farm. Rev. Hyde delivered an interesting lecture at, the Union. W.

J. Wright has moved his sawmill to the farm of F. McCurdy. Daniel McCurdv ss ill. ralT.n? about, but still it uas far an imperial nbe.

It vas a that any ordinary might have worn on ari ordinnrv wns there aay pretension in his diet. Xo caphearfr with golden chalice brought wine to diink. On the seashore be ate first harm? broiled it himself. Xo one fetched him water to but. tending over the well in Samaria, he a drink.

lie sat at only one and that not at al! sumptuous, for to rt-ljeve the awkwardness of the- host one of the guests had to prepare for the company. been excited by any other. Napoleon had around him the nu-mories of Mareugo and Ansterhtz and bat here xvas a man who had fought no who no who brandished no beach and all the skies that looked down into its water, owned all the earth and all the To him of tin- plain co.it belonged tLe robs of celeatinl royalty. He who walked the road to Ernmaus the lightnings were the fire shod steeds of his cuanot. Yet there are those who sword.

lit- 1-ad never seen a look on and see Christ turn water into prince or shaken hands with a fro-a The onh we know oat of as Irt-irii; in his was bis own mother, and she was so poor that in the next Thursday evening at tbe re-si- 1 Other kiazrs in a chariot: dence of Mrs. Wesley Tubbs, Eighth street. Refreshments will be served. WIM.OW BROOK WILLOW BROOK. May 23.

Miss Carry Balo closed the spring term of school at this place last Friday. The ordinance of baptism will be observed at Christian chapel June 0. Miss Gertrude Strouse. Miss Jennie McCoy and Mr. Mil.er.

of Coshocton. visited Abner McCoy Sunday. W. L. Craig and wife, of Helmick visited A.

Wright Sundav. DO YOrR FEET ACHE AND BURNT Use Allen's Foot-Ease, a powder. It makes tight or new shoes easy. Cures bunions, swollen, hot Ai al! druggists aud shoes stores. 25c.

Sample FaEE. Address. Allen S. Olmied. LeRev.

V. Y. TRY GRAIX-0' TRY GRAIN-OI Ask your Crocer today to show you a package of GRAIX-O. the new food drink that iaias the place of coffee. The children may dnnk it withont injury as well as the adult.

All who try it. like It. GRAIN-O kas that rich seal brown of MocLa or Java, it is made from pnre trains, and the most delicate stomach receives hlwithout distress. the price coffee. 15c and 25c per package.

Sold by all grocers. Republican National Contention. -lane 10 at Philadelphia. assemble delegates from all sections of the United States to nominate a candidate for President. Excursion tickets will be sold June 14 to in- ciusiye.

via Pennsylvania lines to Philadelphia: valid returning Tues! dav. June cd. Other kings as they heralds ahead and applauding behind; Christ's retinue was made- up jl snnbcraed fisherman. Other sleep most deiimtf and eolrann hour to a woman's soul was I the ts froni beside him and wine, and thf-y say, "It wns sleight of hand!" And see Christ raibe the to life, tfiey say: "Easily explained. not really dead: playing dead." to lie down among drivers grooming the beasts of bur'Mi.

The Uuextion of onr day standing in Jerusalem. A man de- high lin-aac is standing says: "My re- Tbe Duke and His Outfit. "I see that the British officers under Lord Roberts are cbafina: at the delay." "That's easily explained." do you mean?" under embroidered canopy; this one on a shelterless hill. Riding but as far as I now remember, on a colt--and that borrowed. His poverty was against him.

It quires to build great means are afraid of a lesr a loan be demanded. It requires to print books, to buiJd institutions pay instructors. Xo wonder the wise men of Christ's time lansh- ed at this penniless Christ. "Why." they said, "who is To pay fdr this new religion-' Who is to charter the ships to carry ths missionaries? is to pay the salaries Shall wealthy, discomfited by a i less Christ?" The consequence was that of the people that followed Christ "Why, the Duke of Marlborouch Las had nothing to lose. Affluent Joseph of reached Bloemfonteia with his chafing Arimathea bnned Christ, but he risked dssh outfit." Cleveland Plain Dealer.

no social position in doinz that. It always safe to bury a dead man. Zacchens risked no wealth or social position in following Christ, bnt took a position in a tree to look down he passed. wealthy Xieodemus, risked nothing of social position in following Christ, for he skulked by night to find him. Man Without Diploma.

All this was against Christ. So the fact that he was not regularly graduated was him. If a man come with the diplomas of colleges and schools and the- TaJcInig In Hawaii. James W. Girvin, special agent of the twelfth census, has svorn in all the local agents in Kohala and Hamakua and will soon have the island of Hawaii completed, says The Hawaiian Star.

As fast as the commissions are countersigned by the special agent In chief tne supplies are forwarded, nnd the men are ready to commence work. that -And they see Christ giving sight to the blind man. and they say, "Clairvoyant doctor." Oh. what shall they do on the day whf-n Christ ribC-s up in judgment and the hills shall rock and the trumpets shall call, on peal? In the time of Tbr-odosius the Great there was a great assault made upon the divinity of Jesus Christ, and during that time Theodosius the Oreat his own son to sit on i tbe throne with him and be a copartner father?" Christ answers, I sovcrament of the one A TM day the old bishop came and bowed A man from Athens down tbe emperor. and passed out of thrf room, and the emperor was offt-ndc-d.

saying to the old to my son, who shares with me 25. 6 25. riTTSBURG. Cattle-- Choice cattle. -15Q5 60: prime, f5 30f5 45: tidy $5 comiuoii to good batchers.

$4 40g4 90; biilN and stags, $2 50S4 50: fresb con s. $30 WiKtQ Calves-- SP 50. Hogs-- Prime henries, $5 45; me- dluina. $5 4.W,-, -12; heary Yorkers, $5 35t- light Yorkers, $5 20Q3 20; pigs, $4 903 5 00 Sheep and Iambs Choice sheep. $4 803 4 IK); good, $4 00(34 75; fair, $4 50; choice Iambs.

86 lOig.6 23; common to good, $4 (XXH 00; spring lambs, $5 50g7 00. BUFFALO. Cattle-- Butchers, 54 10; shipping. $5 35; tops, $5 50; cows and- helfera. $4 75; stockers and $4 00 50.

Hogs-- Pics, $5 00(35 10: Yorkers. $5 30Q 5 40, medlnius, $5 50; heavy, $5 5 60. Sheep and Lambs-- Be-tt -Iambs, $6 lOg 6 20; fair to good. $5 7.Vsf6 00; cnlls and commrta, $4 OA5 00: mixed sheep, $5 QQQ 5 10: calU and common, $3 00' yearlings, $3 25S 50. NEW YORK.

Cattlf-- $5 OCK33 -13; tops. $5 653 5 75. fwj fa 20; oxen, a merchant i He the bench in had Who wa standing there- unrolling his parchment of graduation and says to Christ, "Where did go to school?" Christ answers. "I never jrradu.it*-d." Aha. the idea of hoar, his foot in the towns or cities of Judaea than everj thing is in cr-mraotioo.

The people go out on a picnic, taking only food enough for a day, yet BO fasci- starving they follow him out into the I had paid to the emperor. And the emperor was still offended and displeased, when the old 1 -shop turned to Theodosius the Oreat F- .1 vaid to him, "You are of- me because I don't pay the your son whom you have made copartner in the before him dead." A beggar tries to rub the dim- i from his eyes and says, "Lord, that i njy eyes may be opened." A poor. sick. panting woman presses through the crowd and of his garment." government I pay of to in your realm to deny the equal authority, equal power, with God tbe Father." Sympathizer. My subject also us of the fact that in all our struggles we have a sym- hn arm 1 and to kiss his pathizer.

You cannot tell Christ anything tun their fingers through new about hardship. I do not think that I rniitt tosjf-h the hem Children who love their mother better Than any ono else to get into cheek, and his hair. all time putting Jesus i wide ages of eternity will take the scars so in love i tbe little ones there is hardly a nursery in Cbristend'om from which he does not take one, saying: "I must have them. I will fill heaven with these, for every cedar that I plant in heaven I will have 50 white lilies. In tbe hour when I was a poor man in Ju- isea they were not ashamed of me, and now that I bave come to a throne I do act despise them.

Hold it" not back, from his punctured side and his lacerated temples and bis sore hands. You will never have a burden weighing so many pounds as that burden Christ carried up the bloody hill. You will never have any suffering worse than he endured, wben with tongue hot and cracked and inflamed and swollen he moaned, "I thirst." Yon will be surrounded by worse hostility than that which stood around weeping mother! Lay it on my warm Christ's feet, foaming, reviling, livid with $4 35; balls, $3 53: cows, $2 OOgHE 15. Calves Veals. $4 73.

Kbff-p and Lambs--I'oor to choice $8 23; 53 calls, 53 yA4 23: lanil.M. 57 234iS 00. State hogs. $5 305 55; Ohio and western, S3 4W35 45. Wheat-- No 2 red, 7SC, Corn-- 3fo.

2, Oats-- No. 2 white, ye -Xo. 2. 63c. CIXC1NXATI.

Wbeat-Xo. 2 red, Corn-- No. 2 mixed. Oats-- Xo. 2 mixed, Rye-- Xo.

2, Ijird-- 5G 75. Balk Meata-- 56 Bacon -57 Hogs-- 54 35(g5 35. Cattle S3 25. Shevp-- $3 004 35. Lambs-- 14 5OQ5 75.

TOLEDO. Wheat-- Spot. Corn-- Xo. 2 casb. Oats-- Xo.

2 cash. 24c- Rye-- No. 3 cash, 5Sc. Old. 54 70.

COSHOCTON MARKETS. Corrected by Dawson Siniih BntMr.per pound jg Eggs, perdozen j0 Smoked sides poun.1 bushel 259 Onions 60 per pound gj pound Corn a 9 Honey, per pound is pound Potatoes 49 7 Salt, per barrel jiw Tallow, per pound 06 GRAIN MARKET. (Corrected Semi-Week by Edwin S. Lee. Wheat--per bushel-- ra Corn-- Oats-- OK Rye-- RETAIL PBICE3.

Flour--Per Barrel Diamond Buckwert Flour (pure) per iOlbsack. Meal-- yellow bolted, per 10 Ib sack unbolted per 100 Ibs Chop-- Corn and Oata, per 108 Ibs i Bran-- Per hundred per hundred per hundred V..

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About The Coshocton Tribune Archive

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