Daily News, Franklin, Johnson County, 25 March 1880 — Page 3
DAILY IEWS
THURSDAY, MAltCH 35. 1880.
my
4
A NEGRO RELIGIOUS SONGL
TwoatearaeraaraarinciB'deban. Uttta to UMwsrntnt One got* la hetfn mo' one to b«il»
Xtrly lad* morals'.
0
Ot»I darfcias git oa board Ua ecaO, Listen
to
d« warnin'!
We'* gwtn*
ti)
start de gospel nft,
Harljr Indet&ornia'.
LlMantad* murato"! To get to twto'jt wklottt mistake EarlySo de morula'.
TtwiUMwl reus d# odder Hnfc, Listen tode warnln'S IIt'srann«ri wt to bob yon Jtaa,-,
Korty lo de mornln'.
xt
Don't hear a word tfedebbeTteiy, Msi«R to d* Wattdn'! U. We*agwino to Mortal break ob day.
Early In dft tuortiln'.
To ootob alt shtmwHMCfi yoo Listen to de warnltr! I*skbb*W*Mtuner"$ jmanted now.
Early to do mornln'.
Bui if yoa get on ho'd wM bin*. X*Wiw t« w#ruW Ttebcu you wilt be lauded iu,
Rartr le roonrtti\
lYnacltjr of Life la AitftuaU. fJie r«crnt account* in the Chicago Field about do«r running after lx'ing shot through the heart, recall* an in* •rtance or two of the tenacity of Ufe in itniuiuta, eapecially of the deer, which -ame in personal observat ion of the writer of thin article. Several years ago, in mmjmiiy with Col. Litchfield, then stalionetl nt this city, and several sportsmen, «I«w of Omaha, I went for ft day't n'. ibmt ten miles from the city, vtheru deer were known to be plentiful. AVe mine upon the tracks of a doe and two fawns in tho «now, leading from a com Held into ft favorable ravine of hazel and «onie scattering second-growth timber. It wa* decided tliat should follow the trucks into the bush and rout out the deer for my companions to shoot, the Col. and anotiier taking the ridge at the right, and another of the company taking the left in military order except that the right aud left flanks were to keep two or three hundred yards in udvance of the center. In this order we had proceeded about half or two-thirds of the length of the ravine, when I saw the Colonel raise his rifle to his face and fire. He reloaded the empty barrel of hla double rifle, and then with his usual atatoly jnllitary tread walked in the direction of his shot into the ravine, indicating that he had bagged or wns about lo bag his game in safety accordingly I moved on, but had not proceeded far when a "Look out! she is coming down by yon," from the Colonel brought mo to halt, and sure enough there came a line doe rattling through the brush some fifty yards to
right. As she came in
to an opening which gave nie a plain view of her head she stopped, ana fristantly I drew bead on her head and fired. She fell like a stone. walked to her, drew my hunting knife and ctit her throat, severing her windpipe add the left jugular vein entirely, and she lay apparently lifeless but bleeding pioftiaelj. We stood around her congratulated the Colonel uinm his Ucky shot— he had hit just back of the shoulder lather high up to be entirely or certainl fiital, but still a good shot at 125 vard». Concluding to leave her there for the (line being aod to fawns, we started on. Just then noticed Mrs, Doe lit her ejM opon, and they glistened very brightly. I culled
Cot. Ih attention to the fact, and rtggested it might not be entirely safc to leave her in that condition. He replied "If she hud life enough to run away then she might go." Our companions alwo turned back, and while wc were discussing this remarkable instance of life in a deer, she sprang to her feet and with a few bounds was ont of sight In the brush. She kept tho brush, twisting and turning about in th« thickefes fortjuite half*a mile, and then 1 shot her again through the shoulders at seventy-five yards distant. which put an end to her life. At another time in the same locality I sltot ubnok, hitting him in the loin, which brought him down a hundred and twenty yards distant. He lay flouudering in the snow, and remaining in my tracks I reloaded and shot him again through the body, l»ck of tho shoulder, when he stretched out apparently lifulesw. On approaching him he Sprang to his feet, ran eight or ten rods through the brush, stopped, settled down in the snow, and when my companion and I reached him he was entirely dead. Another instance felling within mv own view will relate, and then close. I waa ducking a single mallard flew by about thirty yards distance I ilred one barrel he flew straight on a distance of four hundred yaws or moi*. as if not hurt, whan of a sudden ho feil ta* the ground. I picked him up entirely dead. Upon opening him to satisfy my own curiosity. I found that Mire© No. ti shot had passed Npntirely through his body and heart. I can give other in$4anoes equally fingniar, bu these wiUsotfioe.-*-^ ffeW..» gji •••g.aBii
Tits Plrastiui OP DOING j^».MThere Is a satisfaction in the thought of having done what we know to be right and there is a discomfort, amounting often to bitter and remorseful agony, in the thought of having done what conscience tells u* lo be wrong. This implies a **tm of rectitude or what is virtuous. There la instant delight In the first conception of tmnevoNmco there is suatained delight in its continued exercise there is consummated delight in the happf, smiling, and prosperous recant of iu Kindness and honesty and truth are of U»ei»«elves, and irrasgwetive of their rightfte**, awett nnto the of the itutor man. Malice, envv, falsehood, injustice, irrespective of their wrongness, have, of themsoivess the bitterness of fall and wormwood.
Nobody can tell how many disputes for Ui« from siiie of the bed have l*Mm settled bv moving tlie bedstead into the c*»t«r or the room
'bffflhg la *k-
Let ua throw overboard tbeaickly idea f—more like the laay dream of a waterlily at mid-day in a slimy pool than the thought of a aatnan being—the notion that there is any absolute bliss in rest. The world is a working world, and man is a working creature and he who doea not understand this is plainly out of place here.
Kpicurua, no doubt, sitting iu his leafy Attic garden, with fragrant Jioney-laden breeaea from Hymettns fanning him on a summer's day, might ftacy his Olympian ^oda doing nothing through all eternity but drinking nectar, and sipping ambrosia and laughing at lame Vulcan but this certainly waa not his serious thought he waa merely abutting the celestials of the day on into a corner, like an easy Iavia Hume, not to be bothered in any wise with what be could not altogether comprehend and he was busy himself all the while writing books, in which sort of work he was extremely prolific, having written no less than three hundred volumes in his day.
Budlia, likewise, the great Oriental Quietist, if all that is written of his Nirvaita be true, is the prophet of an extreme kind of stupid holy life, which never can be a model for a healthy Occidental man. Historians and travelers grove most abundantly that at all times and in all places a man is most a man when he has most to do. The savage in a hot tropical climate works little, works violently/and works by starts our civilization in this temperate western zone is built up of a higher potency, a more cunning division, and a more persistent continuity of work. We are ail working men, those who work with the brain often a great deal more so than those who work with their hands. Who more assiduous in work than a well employed lawyer? Who more hardly worked Jhan a conscientious clergyman in the most populous and least prosperous districts in one of our large towns? Wiio more the minister of another man's needs than a skillful surgeon?
Let no man, therefore, sit down and fret over his work, and envv the rich who have nothing to do. The richest men are often those who have worked, and who do work the hardest and if there be rich men, as no doubt there are in this country, who live upon the inherited produce of othor persons' work, with nothing specially to do for themselves, they area class men to be pitied rather than to be en. i* J. W'ork enough there is for them no uoubt. Plato would not have tolerated theui in his well-ordered republic, nor Alexander 9everus in his palace but they have, unfortunately, no spur for action and being inspired by no high feeling of the dignity of work in the universe, they will be found too frequently sitting down and rotting their "lives away, living on their rent% or filling up the vacuities of their hours with degrading pleasures and unfruitful excitements, xor such we must be heartily sorry and if they cau be of no use in the world, they, may at least teach us not to fret over our laily task, but rather to rejoice in it.
V:
Grafting Grape Tines.
Those who wish to graft their vines with other vines should remember that winter and not spring is the time for it— and in this the grape is different from most other trees. It is different in this that in the spring of theyear there is such a tremendous pressure upwards by the ascending sap, that the parta of the scion and stock which to unite must of course .touch omumathex are forced, by the.sajp apart. When the grafts are put in nt this season there is little of this. The severed cells granulate and heal, aad when the sap is ready to flow upward strongly, it goes up through its regular channels in the[graft without any tendency to break out ujrouglf the junction.
How to graft grape vines admits of many various replies. The best is probably that described ft }i umber of years ago in cur pages by Samuel Millar, who was very successful as a grafter of the grape. He drew away tho soii lVom the stock to be grafted, cut it down about two inches from the surface, then cut with a •tout sharp knife a long and narrow wedge-shaped notch in tn& stoek, find shaped the scion as a wedge to fit in the notch in the stock. The lips of the notch arts then tied together and than tho iiarth drawn in around tho whole, leaving the upper eye of the graft above the ground.
W^may flrty tfeat it ia very-aaWn ieh ing that grape grafting is not more generally practiced, and especially since the discovery that the great success of the Concord, Clinton and ,a few other grapes is not owing to any extra constitution*! hardine«e, but to the fact that the power to throw out numerous fibrous roots is greater in these kinds. If this be true, and it seems to be really this case, we may have the choicest and best of grapes by grafting them on theee vigorous rootInst stocks.
For once the. Frerfch seem to have taken a start ahead of to in thiB matter. They sent an agent to this country some years ago—a shrewd observing fellow— and he took in the whole situation at once., Tho nsraU has been that millions of
Ctinc4r4
THtgraph,
kf'K
Xi
aad Clinton cuttings have
been sent to Franco since his visit aud in future winee of that country may be brought to a higher grade oi perfection than ever before,—Gcrmnntown
tjO A to G,risDo riot estimate the worth of a young man his ability to talk soft nonsense, nor by the length of his moustache.
Do not imagine that an extra ribbon tied aMttt the neck «n& remedy the defewt of a aotled collar ami untidy time.
If your hands are browned by labor, do net envy the lily fingers of Miss Fuaa and Feathery whoee old mother works in the kitchen, while Jwsr daughter lonnges'ln the parlor.
If a dandy, with a dgar between his fiugeva. asks yon if smoking is offensive to you. tell him empfeatfeaUy, "Yea." The hsblt should b», even thoogh the f- odor may not.
Do not waste vonr tears on the imaginary sorrows ot Aioaato and Melissa, I nor the trials of dime novel heroines,
Seek rather to alleviate the woes of tht suffering one* of earth.
Bural Beanac* K:-JS®Sfi
Michael Kelley, or Mike Kelly as he was usually called, was an eccentric old farmer living in one of the suburban towns. Born of poor parents, by industry and' perseverance he had become possessed of one of the fines* farms in that section, of which be was justly proud but no prouder was he than of his own physical strength and agility that had assisted him in accumulating his property and made him an excellent boxer and wrestler and he had a corresponding contempt for men of inferior powers. One spring, when help was unusually plenty, lie determined to have his farm run that year by a strong team. So, when a man presented himself and asked for work, after inquiring of the man as to his habits, etc„ he would finish up by asking him to fight. In this way, he disposed or quite a number of applicants, and was beginning to despair of getting his "strong team," when, one morning as he was standing at the door, a young man came up the road, and, seeing him, called out:, "Good morning, sir." am "Good morning," gruffly. "Do you want to hire a hand to work on your farm, sir?" "rerhaps'so want to hire out?" "Yes, sir I am looking for a job."' "What can yon do?" "All kinds of farm work, sir I was born on a larm."
1
"Can you fifht?" "What, sir?" "Can you fight, I say can you (lick me?" "I don't know, sir, whether I can or not but I can try."
And he did try. The first thing Kelly knew he was on his back on the floor with two teeth down his throat the next, the man was astride his stomach, with a fist in each eye, and his nose was bleeding. Then he let him up, and was just picking up hia bundle to start off, when he was called back and set to work, and he proved to be as trusty aud industrious as he was brave. Tho farmer's daughter needed just such a man for a husband, and now he may be seen at any day superintending the work on the farm, while father Kelly sits in the armchair, and tells to the grandchildren the itory of his last light.
Hiving Bees by the Use of Electricity. Perhaps one of the queerest applications of electricity to the useful arts is its* employment in the hiving of bees when they swarm. The old-fashioned way of accomplishing this interesting feat of domestic economy was, if not absolutely dangerous, at least quite annoying and provoking. German scientists of a practical disposition conceived the notion of utilizing the electric force to stupify, without injuring, the bees for a short period. The plan was found to work like a charm. It was first tried upon bees that had gathered on trees. Whether the clusters were large or small, tho result was perfect. The bees fell
the ground in a trance which itted of safe handling. The next stage in the experiment was to capture the bees when they were about to swarm. By introducing the ends of two conducting wires into a fully occupied honeycomb, and turning on the current for an instant, the insects were rendered inactive for about thirty minutes. Bee-rear-ing and the producing of honey are yearly becoming a greater industry in this country, and especially in the Mississippi Valley. Parties interested in the business should test the German idea of hiving bees by electricity. The chance is not remote that bee proprietors will apply too strong a shock and lose their bees, but they will gain in science, which ameliorates all small disasters in this progressive age.
Employment.
The following sentiment was uttered by Daniel Webster in a speech in the United States senate: "Sir, I say it is employment that makes the people happy. Sir, the great truth ought never to be forgotten it ought to be placed on the title-page of every book: on political economy intended for America, and such countries as America. It ought to be placed in every farmer's magazine. It should be proclaimed everywhere, notwithstanding what we hear of the usefulness—and I admit the high usefulness of cheap food—notwithstandingthat,tle great truth should be proclaimed everywhere, should be made into a proverb if it could—that when there is work for the hands and Drain there will be Work for the teeth. Where there is employment there will be bread. And in a country like otir own, above all others, will this truth hold good—a conntay like ours, where, with a great deal of spirit and activity among the masses, if they can find employment, there is always great willingness for labor. If they can obtain fair compensation for their labor, they will have good houses, good clothing, good food and the means of educating their children from their labor, that labor will be cheerftil, and they will be a contented and happy people."
When you stub your toe and fall, don't look at the object you hit any longer than is necessary to recognise and avoid it smother time. When by some error in business you get temporarily floored, don't spend too much time thinking about how it was done but go to work to repair the loss. Oar foresight, as Josh Billings says very trnly,vis not as good as ottr hindsight, but it ffiay be added that if we look backward too mnch we ran the risk of stumbling again.
"those young persons whose shyness proceeds from an undue self-conscious-aew may be benefited by the following I remark of Sydney Smith: "I was ©nee very shy, but it wss not long before I made two very useful discoveries—firsts that all mankind were not solely employ»fed in observing me (a belief that ail young people have) and, next, that ahaiasntag was of no use—that the world Was very 1 clear-sighted, aad soon fsomaMsa man *t his just value. This cmrM mS, azxi I determined to be natural and let the world find me oot.H ,,
HHP Ptfiss
5Z $28,000- .. a iff!'* ffce targssTXsn Ettt tali tf tiiiH
AgBwyiaTm&yats.^^
Th* fc&eOO iawiiaace of Kejre* Sjrke* *ra4
Thife acttoa ofttecnbipiwie* *pe*k» loader Umh column* of newspaper notices, If ytKs mmt Policies writtW wtvoo tre insured in oompanlea tfeat will treat yon f*iriy» and p*y joa promptly in ease of loss, j*rironi»
IS B.F. lfAVKm
OTSHINGFS^^ MA35TOAL
OF PABLIAM KXTARY PRACTICE.
"5^1
VLES of proceeding and debate in delibera. It tive &»s«mblieK. This* is the standard authority in all the United State*, and an India* pen*«bie hand-book for cv«ry member of a deliheratire body, *9 a ready reference tipoti the formality and legality of any proceeding or debate. "Th« mwt authoritative expounder of American parliamentary law."--Cha*. Saraner.
New edition revised and pdnted fram new plates just published. Price, 75 ceht#. For" MJe oy *11 tMokrieilei*. Sent bjr mall on receipt of price.
THOMPSON, BROWN A CO., Publishers. dG 83 Hawley street, Boston
Dailn ^ctos.
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IN TIIE IN THE
IN THE IN THE
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DAILY NEWS' DAILY NEWS
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THE PEOPLE THE PEOPLE
THE PEOPLE THE PEOPLE WHAT YOU HAVE
WHAT YOU HAVE WHAT YOU HAVE
WHAT YOU HAVE 4 i-l'it CU-v AND WHAT YOU WANT. WHAT YOU WANT
WHAT YOU WAN'i WHAT YOU WANT.
EVERYBODY TAKES IT!,
EVERYBODY TAKES IT! EVERYBODY TAKES IT!
EVERYBODY TAKES IT! TEN CENTS PER WEEK TEN CENTS PER WEEK,
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DELIVERED DELIVERED
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7
BY CARRIER BY CARRIER. BY CARRIER.
BY CARRIER.
(2Tl|e Koran.
TflE KORAN.
enriositf to evet^ one, anil a ncceunUy to «JI iHndent* of W*tory or Reffgion:1 .f'
THE KORAN OP MOIIAMMED
Translated by Oeorj?p Sate. Formerly pnblinhed at $3.75: a sew, beautiful trpc, neat, cloth-boiind edition: price,85cents,ana 6 ccntu for poataee. Catalogue of many utandard work«. remarkably low In price, with crtra termc to club*, free. Say where yoo aaw this adrcrtli'cmetit.
AMERICAN BOOK EXCHANGE. Tribune Building. K, Y.
Dirk's Publicflltona.
itim '*"'$-• mk# TT"
TICK'S ILLUSTBATED:
FLORAIiiOIJIDffi, A bcantifnl work of 140 Pace*, Oa* Colored Flower Plate, aad 500 IUttiit raUonR. Willi dc.«crij* tkm* of the be#t flowers and re^^tables. ami how to now tbem. All for Ffw C#ot SiaMp. la English »r German.
VICK'S SEEDS
Are Umb to the world. for po*ta«*
VIC KB FlvOWtK AKD TEOKTABLE GARDEN. ITS PM8R. fix Ooiored PJatec, aad »aay
Snfrnvi^ng*. F«r 80 eentu In
Sim
hnmirvi
mpetjaoxtr*:
fl»«
elegant ckxh. In Oetman or Kn#l*Si. VICK'S ILLUSTRATED MONTHLY MAGAZINE, 4»Fa«%ft. a Oalsrad Ptate ta rre*T «ws&et. many
K&cxaringft. Prk*, $L*5 W*"*
copte* for Speclioea ntunber* tn 10 cent#: three trial copien for 55 t-eat*. Addre*». ^JAJIJES VIC*. Botbenar. 5. Y.
mmm
|taf ©nlktm.i
t*-' Itemn for Mails XAST1. Deltrery. Closed, tmnaemqwll* nar.tr Wrtadt In«liiuiaiQiis stations on
V'HwiartahrAad' l. t(V*a.. 800 am ImMani|»liraadTataUons VandfilaHailroad...... ll»am.. 815pa IndtonMlSa aml .7*»*•..IflOQmdt
OsLL ...tllSOam.. fSOpm Eaaton Indlat^CMcago aad NorthernillinAs ..uaOam.. 815pm BarttTn'-KeirtxH3qr............ 490pm.. »SBpm* lndiaaapeti««Qdanro,««ti\ ...4«S9m.. tlfipm Indianapolis and stations oa
VaaduialbUlroAd....... ... 4S9pn.. S 15pm Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota and WiMonsin ..,.. 490pm.. 315pm •"WESlV
1
St. Lonis aad thro' vreM —?OOam..ttQOmdt Janctioas on VandailaKR.and Southern IHlnoI s........ ?OOam..liOO»dt St. Lonls and thro'west 4 Wpm..lS09ndt St. L«ais and statioiui on Vandalia Railroad. 4S0ptn.. 9S0*m St. Louie and stations on !.fc
St. JLRB ...'—«.....Tr..?.• 490pm..1030am St LooUandthro* we»t.i. .v. 4SQ pin.. Sl&pm Kftr&hAU tod gtations south on theDanrilleAVlnceat5esRR.il SO am.. 215 pm Peoria and stations on Illinois
Midland Railroad 7 00am.. 600am Stations on Toledo, Wabash A Western RR. west of Danville... 700am..1000pm
NORTH.
Chicago, III., (tliro' punch) 700 a m. .1000 pm Danvflle and statlou* on E. T. U.&C.RR 700am.. 900am Iowa, Minnesota, Wisconsin ana Northern Illinois 700a m.. 1000pm Chicago, Iowa, Michigan.)
Minnesota, Wisconsin and }-ll 80 a m..
ft
15 pm
NorthernUilnoia 7 00am.. 000am Logansport and stations on 1. II. & L^ansport RR 4 80pm.. 609aw Stations on Indianapolis. Decatur «fcSprinafiold RR.. 700am.. 600am Stations on loledo, Wabash fc
Western RR.. east Danville 700a m. .1000 pm Northern Ohio, Northern Indiana, Michigan and Canada... 7 00 am 10 00
SOUTH.
Kvansville, Vincennes aud Princeton 7 00am.. 1200mdt Fort Branch and Sullivan^-hro' pouches) 7 00a m..IS00mdt annvtlle and stations on E.
A
T. II. RR 700nin..1800mdt Evansville and stations on £. AT. H. RR... 4 80pm.. 880pm Southern Illinois and Western
Kentucky 4 20 m.. 8 SO Southern Illinois and Western Kentucky 700a m..l£00mdt Worthlngton and' stations on
T. H. £. S. K. RR 4SO pm.. 600am t., HACK LINES. Pralrleton.PrairieCreek.Grays ville andFalrbanks,Tttesday,
Thnrsday and Saturday..... 7 00 a tu.. 7 00 in Nelson, lnd., Tuesday and Saturday.... a........ ISOpm.. 100pm
The city
lb
divided Into seven Carrier Districts,
as follows: Fnt»T District—Fred Tyler, Carrier. North side of Main street, between fith and 7th streets north from Main to city limits, includthg to the alley between 7th aad 8th and to the alley between 4th and 5th street* also, 8th, 9th and 10th streets, north of 3d avenue.
HBooNttDisTRttrr—John Knppenheimer, Carrier. The south sido of Main Btroet. between 5th and 6th, and all territory between Btn and 8Vi streets south to the city limits, including to tLc alley between 3d and 4th streets and to the alley between 6H ttnd 7th streets alsoTth street sonth of Deming to city limits.
Tnino DiHTniCT—James Johnson, Carrier. The south side of Main street, from the river to 5th street, and all territory west of tho alley between 3d and 4ih streets A6uth to city limit*.
Foumh Distbiot—George A. Hay ward, Carrier. The nortl) «idc of Main street, fram the river to 5th street, and all tcrritor'y west of tht alley between 4th and 5th streets, and north to the city limits.
Fifth District—Frank M. Mills, Carrier. The north side of Main street, from 7th to the old canal, between 9th and 10th streets, and all territory from the alleybotween 7th and Btn streets east to the Vandalia HI!., north to 3d avenue, and all territory north of the Vandoiia RTt., east of 10th street to city limits.
Sixth Distinct-—Isaac N. Adams, Carrier. The south side of Main, between 6th and 7th streets, from the alley between6K and 7th streets. iiAst to the old canal, south to Demlne,and all territory east oa Poplar street and south to city limits.
Sevjsntu District—Louis Baganz, jr., Carrier. Sonth sidt of Main street from 7th cast to city limits, including the north aide of Main, east or old canal bed to city limits, and all territory west from Ninth street, east, to city limits from Poplar street on the south to tho Vandalia RR. track on the north.
Frank Sibley, Auxiliary Carrier, "whose duty it is to make extra collection and delivery trips. HKOtftATrONS.
The mail is collected from street letterboxes on Main street from 1st io I3tb streets, north on 4 th to Cherry, south on 4th to Walnut and south on 1st to Poplar, and Ohio street between 1st and 5th. eve*/week day between 8.80 and&SOa m, between 9:90and 10:® a ra. between 18^80 and S:00 m, {this collection includes to Poplar street on tho south, and eifat to 18th. and north to t'hfon Depot] between 8:80and818O in, between 4:30and 5:30 m, and between 8:00 and 9:00 m. All other ooxos arc collected from twice per day, between tho hours of 8:00 and 10:00 am and between 1:30 nnd'3:J»pm.
There are flye deliveries of mall per day hi the business part of tlie city: at 7:00 and 11:80 a m. 1:00,8:00aind4(80pm also a delivery at 8:00 p. m. to such business bouses a« jflesire it, whose place of business Is located between 3d and 7th sUfeta and not more than oneKqiUre from Main.
On Sunday, the Post Office is {open from 9 to 10 o'clock a m, and jpersons deslrl% their mail can call at the wiftdow designated by the number of their carrier
Snttday Collections over the entire city Is made between 4:30 aad6:.30p in, and again in the bus! ness part of the city between 8 and 9 o'clock m.
Keeciving boxes have been placed on every cor ner of Main street to enable persona residing near It to avail themselves of the frequent collections made thereon with a Tefy short walk.
The attention of the public is called to the great distance each carrier is obliged lo walk, and parAles living a distance back iu yards are earnestly requested to place Iti their front doors or in »iiChothir Cfinvonioftt pitcea as will fafttlitat* th prompt delivery of mail. Canlers are not allowed ttt wait lohget than 30 s«onn* for an answer to a bell, and after waiting that long and receiving no answer, ho must retain the mail until the next detWtry. Carriers «ire obliged to be prompt, and
to
do thvir workquirkly, bat under no circumstance* lotelrti{K}lff« or discoufteoiio.and ahVsMCh should be immediately reported to the Post Master. Persons owning
Aogfi
are warned that unless they keep
them Med during the day, carriers will not deliver their mail, but tbcv will be obliged to call at the office. M. Filbeck, P. M.
TOES PROTRUDING-
away on that acwxinl, worn. The American Shtx- Hp Company have saved __
MILLIONS OF lOLLAR8
Annnally to parents In this conntry by the Intro doettot of the COPPER AND SILVER TIPS. Ahdtb«y are applied chieSy to ChOdres's Hecry Hboen, many parents objecting to the looks of Metal Tip*
oa
FINE SHOES.
All snch «Hi be happy to kw^JhAtJhl* psmyhave at. hurt ^erfeetti a a A Whk* add# to the b«Mlty«r the 6»#»t sboe. the tpe rematainittg a»t flotii the shoe Is woo« »nt,
VSHMW-TlMartSrasrSto A. ». Ti SbIThe Jbore costly ti&' fhoe the more important the Tip. as It at Jea«t Amtbe wearing raise of tte shoe.
PARKXT&i boy C^hildr**'s Shoe*
WIUmwi
|)h Xctalor thisittce Stack Tip.andihaa redwe ywnr shoe Mtta
mttre
than one-hsir.
ASK TOT** ftaos DEALER FOR THEM.
