Daily News, Volume 1, Number 71, Franklin, Johnson County, 11 May 1880 — Page 3
t4
S
DAILY NEWS
TUESDAY, MAY 11, 1880,
yolUual.
POM LOXCKK**.
TMOKA* H. N"ci*O*, of Vigo County. -»csn dictate for Representative in Caafrtti trim the
Kijfhth District, Indians, sabject to tbe decision gif (He Republican DatniDtllix coonsttMi, toW iicld as Terr* Haute, June 23
FOR KftntlFP.
Jon* of lUrrison Township, Is a csndl date far Shed# of Vigo County. subject to the de 4 r(*kiti of the County Democratic Convention.
ASROIAX AUK LB. of Otter Creek township. wlU be a candidate before the Hepnbllrau County Convention for Sheriff. jACKnoa frrtrr will be a candidate for Sheriff of Vigo County, subject to I he decision of tbe Repnb llcan 4fon*cntfc»n.
cot
5
(.
STY TITKAWRAR*.
AI-T Jons L. BIUI»S will be a candidate be r«r- ttit- lie publican nominating contention for tt»«- »(llce of County Treasurer, subject to tbe win he* of the convention.
The
Daii Kkw«
i'
is author iw*I to announce
Wfcss W. CAJTTO, Of Kugsr Creek Township, a* a sndiiiau- for Treasurer of Vigo county. subject to tl»«- decision ufth«* Republican nominating ton
Vr niton. i» M. WAM.A'| wilt be a candidate for the olBce 'if Tri*a»nr»-r of Vigo rounty, subject to the deI inion of tb«- Dcmocratlc nomination convention.
N. 1$ KEN'KTT. of Pimento, will tw a candidal. fi.r the office of County Treasurer, subject to tin- tlrri-l.rti uf I he Democratic nominating con enl ion
cut VI* CIJKUH.
Wi ere authorized to announce that MKBHU-L N, Ha IT it I* a candidate for the nomination for Clerk of Vigo county, subject to the will of the Kepublicaii nominating fonvehtlon. \V»- nrr authorized to announce that C. A. f'owr.it will a candidate before the Republican
count) convention for the nomination for Clerk of Vigo county. I, A. HtrnxrrrU a candidate for Clerk of the Court*, subject to the decision of the Itepubllcan
nominating convention, .liHIS Kofsr. will be a candidate for the office of County Clerk, it abject the decision of the Democratic Nominating Convention.
We art- authorized to announce that WILLIAM \K. llr-HitMic ii I* a candidate for the office of Clerk «-»f the VIgo Circuit Court, subject to the decision of the litpnbtlcan Nominating Convention.
M*inoratitltitit of Coming Conrentlonii. For th« benefit of our many renders we Htibjnlu bolow
ft
list of
the
viMtiion# iind commltlft-j*:
sitth wsttl. J«»hn A.
»l*srUKjn
tmd
coming con
HKI'UIU.H'AN CONVRKTIOS8
Nntionut Cottvi-nlion, ChicAgo, .Ittne
C.'onyiMitlon, IndinnitpolH. June
17, 1MH0. OongrofiHlonnl Convention. Sth District, Trrrr flnutp. June 3JI, 1N8).
DISMOCltATIC CONVKNT1DNH.
Ntitioiiftl Convention, Cinrinnatl, June •». 1M80 St»U» Convention. Intlinhftpolis, June 9, mi
CoTtgrrssiotittl Convention, 8th District, Crawford»vlHe, June4tli, 1880. Kcpuhlh-an Committpcumn of the 8th X'ott)fr«'HHioitiil DUtrlct, Hon. li. II. Boudi nt»l rrsidencf. Terro Haute.
COUNTY C.'UNVKNTIONB.
Hrpuhllenn CoUNty Convention will lw hold *t tlio Cottrt HoOuc in tlds city i*t 10 o'clock,
A.
June 10th.
Demoi'Wtiti: To he held May 29 nt court house. Dt'tuocrntif tlplc|f«trfi to Congressional. Jutlirlnl and Kt«t« convention* to be se Tectod nt county convention, May 30
Hepublicrtti rntMwi-meetings to be held in I lie vnriouH wards and townships on the liith of June, to noRtinitte delegate# to the Congressional «ud County Convention*- Out townships meet nt 2, P. M. and the wards nt 8 P.
Republican County Centml Committee, 11 b. Miller. Chttirnmn J. O.Jones, Hec retnn% First ward, t, c. tirelner Terre Haute second word, 4, o. «2rtne» Terre Aaute I'hlrd ward, K. S, Krnsir. Tetr» Haute 'onrth
wartt.
It. L. Miller Terre Haute
I hirth ward, Hsmael 0. Cliff
Terre Hants
lt»'ynold* Terre llante
to. A.
». fejra. T»rre Haute tp. Ueu. Itarrto Maeksvllle }, B.Owen* ..Newtloshaa .JaiaesW Watt*
K*yette O'J (1. II. Owen*
Ksyette (Hani twtt Nevis* t», W. 11, .Melrsth l^*» Creek tp. I.. W. IMfkerstm Ktley *p- ChristSehlnnerer ... Honey Creek tp. Joshua M. Itttll i*rslri«'tun tp, Lawr«ttc« 8. Bill... Prairie Creek tn, P. R, Ke«ter I, in ton n», W. N. Ke«ter
otter Crwek t|». I. Rltter
|*lsf«t»»i tl. S S!*fk
Hsnford
Terre Haute Coat Bluff Terre llante
Rller O
.Terre llsnte
..Prslrleton Prslrietoa .... Pimento
Pimento
ill a*r*e item If. u. HtehnrrtMtii ft '.mve thr Hnr«l rtUplsy of ttllrerware la trke ri». and nt itsMWahlr prtr«s.
E A I
Is the he"»t phu^e in Terre Hsitite to buy he»p Notions, Toy*. Hosiery, Albums, Hirretvtemx'x ami Views. Ame'rir^tn chmm«»* .Satchel '. Mimr«. W tx and C'hinA IkilR Uirvl Cntrt *. Hti«e il«ll* and Rut*.
the twst line of baby earriaars nt the owest prtws In the rtiy. For the*?, and II mhcrlljMiemts jewwrlV no pliwv excels
THE FAIR.
•m Main stnvt
Jinjto
bttyinff yottr lHXTi? AND
SHOR^ call on l^adtbx Terrell 407 i.Mniii strwt opposite Opem Hmtw They Ti instantly keen on h»nd full line of rlaUpxvtis uttd wll ehenpet than •^oy^'xly Y{ettte«*ber the sign of
By
H*w sad elefaat llae «f iilvanrare jast reived at Kiduundiea'a Qaeaasware start, £0? aia ilwl
For an (pxeelWnt dinner winn, try a hot tip of Haute Santeroc, from lite Terrr Haute Home Har1
5«Utic& Itettrp
Meet Tw iHtlwai Wit* a
Mmfle.
Tbooft th* bsbles io cry Md the children do fret, Tboogfe roar boiler should leak and the fljv
roar
barn low.
'a**j0 ntftook fiookiur a* biark a sarly old crow. wear a sweet saute wbea he eater* the
A
Yet
And haste for bis slippers and soft dressing
"T1* joar doty. (Hi woman, to drive away gloom. Aaa the Lord of tbe hoxiwboid sboald ne'er Me a fruwa.
When yott've tcoored yoor icor till year cheeks are aglow. And yon from eihaojtloa are ready to fail. If your beabaxtd ihoRtdcnw hone draegfaf in fffnl iQov
Tbnw* his hat and his ouat on the door in the hall. Don't, pray, lose your temper, but
ra
hsagr
them
rack, a* yon always do then do not #top To think that yoor stentbMsg was labor vain.
But tailing ly tor the broom sad tbe mop.
And while he his newspaper leisarely reads. Haste
0
wife, to the kitchen. If servant
none
yon're
Remember the kind cares fond husband needs. And »e* that bl« victual* are properly done. Bat If in voar efforts ta please yon sboald fall.
If the beer* too rare and tbe padding's not done, Don't *peak of hi* temper (there's reproach in the tale)
Though be chides yea, look pleasant and smile on and on.
It la all for yonr good But a •trsight'fc
a wife neeJk no praise,
rsight /orward coarse of *trlct training in*tssa For compliment* uow would yonr self-este«m raise
Your ohare you had of them before yon were wed. Hhottld praise be indulged In. wxm out of her upbere
Every wife In the country would certainly be And forget "t we* her dnty to love and to fear And tremble and »inile upon his inajentjr.
S^kftcb lUiBCcllann.
A Policeman with a History. New York Graphic. Patrolrnrtn Peter Hart, of the City Hall Police, was in the regular army at the out break of the late civil war. At the attack on Fort Sumter, wlien the first shot was fired by the Southern Confederacy, he held rank
OK
a sergeant, in the first ar
tillery, stationed them in Charleston harlor. During the terrible bombardment that began on tlie twelfth day of April, 1861, ho cornmandci a battery that re plied vigorously to the Are from the shore. The story of how, on the Hecond day of the battle, the Union flag was shot tiown, and hung torn in shreds, from the pole, and how a brave sergeant coolly walked upon the fortifications,climbed the shattered pole, and, amid that terrible rain of shot and HheJl, nailed it fast, is too familiar to he repeated. That man, whose heroic act thrilled every heart in tlio Union, was Peter Hart. He escaped unharmed from his perilous feat, and when the fort surrendered marched out with Major Anderson and those of the garrison who survived, carrying the old hag stoutly aloft. During the years of the war, the greater oart of Which he was incapacitated ny illness from active service, ne had it in his possession, and his house in this city was a sort of Mecca for enthusiastic ndinircrs of that gallnnt little band. It is now preserved In the National Bank of Commerce, at Nassau and Liberty streets When. In 18(15, it was triumphantly hoist ed again over Fort Sumter. Sergeant Hart was among the honored guests, and was the recipient of a Warm eulogy from the lips of the orator of the dav.
Mr. Hart joined the police force immediately after the war, and has been a patrolman ever since. Before the civil war he had been through all the hardships of the Mexican campaign. He is now flftv-five years of age, and lives with his wife ami one surviving daughter at No. 211 West Thirty-fifth street. Of a modest and retiring disposition, he lacks entirely ihe faculty of a*«erting himself, and having never asked promotion, has never re reived it. He can with difficulty be made to speak of his war experiences, and then will say nothing about himself. As a m«tubor of the Ordinance Police. Officer Hurt does at present no patfol duty.
Mycen».
With respoct to Dr, Hehliemano's discoveries at Myoensp, the Russian savant, Mr. Htephani, has expressed opinions which have attracted considerable attention in OtMrtuny. The learned twademfclan by no means disputes the great antiquity of many of the indiydualT objects unearthed by Dr. Schilemann, but he holds that the'remains include objects belonging to very different eras of history. He contends that the date of the tombs must lw? determined by the latest pro ducts of art or industry which have been discovered in them. The seal ring is especially important iu this respect, as according to his view, it is ext cuted en-' tlrely in the style of the new Persian art. He ia of the opinion that the tombs originated with the barbarians who in vaded Greece in the centary B. and made the citadel of Agamemnon one of the chief centres of their dominion Here he believes they buried their chiefs, and decorated the tombs partly with such an dent relics of an earlier date as had fallen into their hands and partly with ornamental objects produced in their own times."
Three or four of the New York dele gates propose to boh instructions at Chi-
P*$&atwtH
they gain by It?
Io they suppose they will help the candidate for whom they cast tholr votes? Why. there is nothing surer than that thev will kill fchn. It was so in Cinrtti nail in ISTTft will be so In Chicago in 1380.
Heaven help the candidate that receive* the votes of bolters. But if it were otherwise. and they could nominate their man, their act of perfidy co«ld aot but be disastrous. A candidate nominated bv a few Itoltem and against the almost solid voice of New York would be'almost sure to lose the State. Men defeated by the treason of their own number are not apt to turn in and make that treason a tri nraph. The impracticable numb*fcuil.« who are talking of bolt*, therefore, are. in any possible eveffltdlgjcfitff a pit into which they themselves must inevitably fall
Hit? (lew*
TcUte* lib St»ry.
From the Borllngton Hawkeye.
"OonceT oTer these boundless prairies," the sad passenger said, *4over these prai
"They call them prairies over in Indiana," tbe fat passenger said. "And down in Illinois," said the crc&s passenger, "thev call them perarrie*," "And up in Michigan/' the brakeman said, 'they call them prairs." "And down in Kentucky," the man on the woodbox remarked, "they call them prerara" "Well, anyhow," the sad passenjger resumed, "ounce over the plains "You said prairies before," said the passenger with sandy goatee. "Yes, and started a very profound philological discussion by it- Well, once he an a "The first time," said the
cross
passen
ger, "you Mid boundless prairies." "Well, then, over these boundless prairies once "Only oncef' asked the fat passenger.
The sad passenger sighed, but went on: "Once the painted Indians roamed "What forf croaked the woman who talked bass.
And the sad passenger went into his #hell and said he would tell that story yet, if he had to hire a hall to tell it.
Tallest. Heariest, and Oldest Men. The tallest men of whom record is 'made were a German named Hane Bar and a Hungarian soldier, name not given, who lived several centuries ago, each one being eleven feet high, their weight is not known. The heaviest man of whom record is marie was Miles Darden, the Tennessee giant who was seven and onehalf feet high, and weighing over 1,000 pounds. He died in 1851. Daniel Lambert. the English "mass of tlcsh," was five feet and eleven inches jn height, and weighed 739 pounds. In 1565 there was buried at Bengal. India, a man named Cugua, who claimed to be 350 years of age. The oldest person who died during the present century was a Frenchman in Paris, named Jean Golembeaki, who was 126 years old A man named David Kurnison died in Chicago in 1801, who claimed to be 110 years old.
A New one from I.lttle Joltnnv. San Francisco Argonaut.
One time there was a man wicli had a tagger, and the tagger it was a shoaiul the man- lie tuk the money for to get in. The man he had a big paper naild onto the tagger's den, ana the paper it sed, the paper did:
TUB
ROIL BENUOL TAUOEH, some times cald
Tins MONNERK
OF THE
JCNOJ.E,
HANDS OF
No TETCHEN
THE
TAUGER!
The monnerk of the jungle it was always a layln down with its nose tween its poz, antl the folks which had paid for to get iu thav was mad cos it wudent wock, and rore like dissent thunder. But the sho man he sed: "That's ol rite wen I git the new cage done, but this is the same cage which the offle feller broke out of in Oregon, time he ct up them seventeen men and their families."
Then the fokes they wude ol stand back and tock in wispera wile the tagger slep. But one day a fellah wicli was drunk he tuke to nunchn the tagger with the mast hed of his umbreller, wicli stampecded the oddienee, wild and the wimmen fokes thay stude onto cliairs and hollered like it was a mouse: but the drunk chap he kep a lobbin the monnerk of the jungle crewel. Prety sune the monucrk it bellerd otlie, ami riggled. but the fellah kep a pokn like he was fireman to a steam engine. Bimeby the monnerk It jumpt onto its hine feets. and shucked Itsellef out of its skin, and roled up its sleefs, antl spit onto its hands, and spoke up an sed "I bed am if I can^ iest whol lip the pea green stufn out the gum (lasted galoot wich has ben a proddin this ere tAgger!"
And the oddienee thay was a slonish!
Draco was the author of the first written code of laws at Athens, which he is supposed to have published in the fourth year of the thirty-ninth Olympiad. 031 B. C. He was of distinguished birth, honored for his severe manners and his large experience hi public affairs, and the people of Athens, a prey of anarchy. !esought [dm to give them a code of laws. The system which he proposed linked together civil and moral duties. He took the dtitcn at the moment of his birth, prescribed the manner in which he should be nourished and educated, followed, him with directions through the different epochs of life, and flattered himself ttyu he should make men free*and virtuous. The penalty of death was to be indicted for almost every crime. The slightest offense, he said, deserved death, antl he knew no punishment more severe for the greatest. So violent a code could not last, and within thirty years Athens was again in Anarchy. Draco died at the culmination of his glory upon the isle of J5gina.
Kinevah was fourteen miles long, eight miles wide, and forty-six miles around, with a wail 100 feet high, and thick enough for three chariots abreast. Babylon was fifty rhiles miles within the walls, which were seventy-five feet thick and 100 feet high, with 100 braaen gates. The Temple of Diana, at Epheaus, was 420 feet to the support of the roof. It was 100 years in building. The largest of the pyramids was 481 feet in height, and 853 on the side*. The base covered eleven acre*. The stones are about sixty feet In length, and the layers are 808. It employed 850,000 men in building. The labyrinth of Kgypt contains 400 chambers and twelve halls. Thebes, in Egypt, presents ruins twenty seven miles around, once containing 350,000 citizens and 400,000 slave*, liie Temple of Delphoswaa so rich in donations that it was plundered of $50,000,000 the Emperor Nero carried away from 300 statues. The walla of Rome were thirteen miles around.
The empress |of Russia keeps alive by breathing oxyacn gas mixed with acid and turpentine, which is administered to her four times a day. The physicians say thai her death can not be much longer postponed by this artificial proees*.—
IV* frtkur.
Railroad Sirat (table.
ttxriLAXATIOX
or wriwxci sim.
KXTI-AJUTIOX
or wriwxci
8*tParlor
JUKKA.
Every day. All other trains dalbr except Sonr. our* dally, except Sondav. Sleep'cars, Reclining chair car. Ubios Depot time.
da"
lag car*, Reclining chair car. bios Depot time, which is ftre minntes faster than city tine.
Terre Haute ft ItullanapolK RK. I Union Depot—Tenth and Chestnut SU.J Vandmlia line. Trains leave for Brastl, GreeoeMk, Plaiateld, Indianapolis and all Eastern cities: *«Fast Line. 1.40am *aU and Accommodation, 7.00ani «*t
Express, .1U5 Mail and A ceomraodatioa, 3.*) pin. Trains arrive from the«e points: »Pacific Express, 1j£ a at Mail. $J&ai», *Fast Express.3.05
Train* leave for MarshalL Martinsville. Casey. Effingham. V&ndalia, Greenville, St. Louis and all Western and Southern cities: *sPacific Express, 1.33a Mail. 10.03 a nt *sFast Kxpres^, S.W m. Train# arrive from these pdints: *Fast Line, IJK a m: Mail and AocoTOHKxi!iti'n.!-S0am: *lay Kxpr6*s, 8.45 m.
Kvmnsvllle Jt Terre Haute BR. [I'nion Iep(..t -Tenth and Chestnut Sis.] Trains leave for Sullivan. Carlisle, Vineenne*. Princeton, Evassvilleand Sc»atherncities: *sKa*h ville Express.4.S)a at 4Ex|ress,S.!0pm. Trains arrire from these points: Eastern Express, SL50 m: •Chicago Express, 10:45 m.
Kvan»ville. Terre liaute
a m: Terre Itaute Accommodation. 11.10 a hie ago and Terre Haute Express.
4,ao
SJ30
m.
lndlaiutpoltM A: tit. Ixmts RK. lDe|Kt, Mxth and Tippecanoe Mi-.] Train* leave forGreencastU*. Danville. Indianap olis and the East: *cs New York Expreso, 1.25 am Indianapolis and Mattoon Accommodatiou, ti.46 a *Iay Express, 3.10 m. Arrive from thew points: *Scw Yort Kxpres. l.Sti am *Day Ex press, 10.Ka in •Indianapolis anil Mattoon Aceotn modation.6.35 m.
Train# leave for »t. Mary's, Paris, Charleston, Mattoon, Paris, Alton. St. Loni» and the West New York Express. 1.38 a Day Express, 10.54 a itt lndianaiolls and Mattoon AccommotU tlon. fl.37 in. Trains arrive from these point* •New York Express, IJB a in lndianatKili* and Mattoon Accommodation, H.M a m: »Day Express, 3.US in.
fHisccllnncoiiG.
1868. 1880.
Terre Haute Ice Company.
Has a full supply of ICE with which to nupuly all demands,hotn wholesale and retail, the coming Kt-ason. Price* are a* low as tin lowest. Ice as good as the bent. Thin is the thirteenth year of this company, the eighth nnder thu present management this alone lit our n*coinmend| to the public. All orders promptly tilled.
L. F. PERDUE,
•lioaM MB 4 for
Proprietor ami Manager.
Terre Haute Banner,
Tlti-WEEKLY aki» WKKKLY.
Office 21 South Fifth Street.
P. OKROEIIER, Proprietor.
THE ONLY GERMAN PAPER IN THE CITY OF TERRE HAUTE.
English and German Job Printing
fixectited In the best manner.
E N E S O N S See°S
[Beaters* ltblaad IS
PLANIS
AGENTS WASTKD to tend for ParUcnlart o| oar New Book, 5,000 CUKIOSITIK8 OW THR BlBLK. a
WO for the Handsomest and
CHEAPESt BIBLES &£ ""5SA.1T*"' CASH
'HE DEAF HEAI
Leorarsa.Obaoerta, s^skf
•e*wT» wntrrco to »«II tt»» ntw mxMr,
CARMfWB FOR PROFIT
TEIX8 HOW TO ta«~jftam crops is th« mm Mmatn I and ^roforBtocic^prosr Fn^ti Maa—a
Parmer tbottld have a
ClttCi
MAN'S ^.WOMAN'S 8TRENCTHrxBEAUTY
Or tk* Refill Road to Lift!, Love and hmg€9itj,
MNMM.
MUS
aa MglMU
s«4 MaMntW I
KtHwri,
It, rtti it^MH^«B^^it-. aaOTHBaa A w., OtwitaaH, o.
©. a. a.
Morton Post, No. 1,
nepAamrmcT os turn***.
TERRE HAITTE.
Headquarters SovUi Third. Ke*nlar«»eethiRs«r#t and third
Ttrarwdar *t«a •:%, aacbwcwUi. ^S^Iteading open ery e*eni«»*.
Comrades vtttiUas tbe city will ahravs He made w«kwH. W. ft. McLRAX. Oowi dr.
JaV cr**t*«s, Adj't. i. A. Monrwrrr. P. *. at Headqearters
SUBSCRIBE FOR THE
&aifg News*
Votl &eux BaUttin.
CLARTAK^UWMAOAAAMCMTLERTTELLVERY. Carriers Leave fur Malls
I.
Day
A"
Chkaitii By.
Il'nktn Depot—Tenth an«l Cbo4nat Sis.} Trains leave for Clinton, Hillsdale, Newport, Perrjsville, Danville. Chicago aisd the Kortlucent Terre llante and Chicago Express, 7.10 a Danville Accommodation, 8,10 *sKashviUeand t.'hicago Express. 10^10 m. Trains artfre front these points: Chicago and Nashville Express,
EAST. Delivery. OoMd.
Indianapolis and titro* emat TOO am. BOOxadt iMlianapo^U sod statfona oa VendtiS&tftroed 700a m. 600a Indianapolis and stations
VandaliaftaUroad....... Indlanapotta andstatlor.tcat TK10au..lSt)0mdt
utl .. II»
Eastern Indiana, Cbleago and
1130 am.. tUpo am..lSOOjmlt aa.. SSOpni
rnmtoSs...7T:.
Kortbern Wtnols 1190am.. jll&pm Eastern Kentucky 4 80pm.. SSOpta Indianapolis and thro" east 4 X) pm.. 2 13 pm Indlsnapotl* and statiuns on
VaxxiaiiaRailroad 490pm.. Sl&pra Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota and Wisconsin 4 90 pm.. S 15 pm
WEST.
St. Lonis and thro1 west....... 7 00 nt. WOOmdt Jnnetkwu on Yandalia RR. and Sinitbeni lUtaot....» 700a m. HK»mdt St. Lotiis and thro" west 4 SO ISOOmdt it- Leats sad stations on V«»dall* Rallrosd 4 90 9 X) am St. Loai* and stations on I. A 8u L.RR 450pm 1030am St. Lonis and Thro* west 4 30 pm.. 815 pro Marshal! and stations sotttb on tbeDanvilleAVineenneaRR.lt 3Bam.. 216 pm PsoHa and stations on Illinol*
Midland Railroad 700am.. fttttam Stations on Toledo, Wabash A Western RR. west of Dan riilc !.. 7 00a m..t000pm
NORTH.
Chicago, 111., (thro* ^oocb) 7(Uam.l00t)pm Danrille and "sutions on K. T. II. AC. RR 7 00a ttOOau Iowa, Minnesota, Wisconsin and Northern Illinois 00 a m.. 10 00 Cbicafo, Iowa, Michigan,
innesota, Wisconsin Northern Illinois.
Western RR.. east Danville. Northern Ohio, Northern Indiana, Michigan and Canada...
8 15 pm 600 am
In and11 90am 7 00 am
-Loeansport and stations on ft. H. & Loganiport RR 4 30 m.. 00 a ut Stations on IndianapoU!, Decs tur A Springfield Rlt Stations on loledo, Wabash A
00 a tn 00
a
in
00
a
m.. 10 00 pm
7 00 a nt. .10 00 pm
SOUTH.
KvansVlUe, Yincennes and Princeton -Fort Branch and Snllivan(thro' pouches)
7 tV»a in. .ISuOmdt
Tint* lKuOauit
Kvansville and stations on E. A T. U. 11R 7 00 a in?.1800mdt Kvansville and stations on K.
A T. 11. RK 4 30 m.. 3 30 pin Southern Illinois and Western Kentucky 4 U0 tn.. a 30 Southern Illinois and Western
Kentucky 7 00 tn 18 00 unit Worthington and stations on T. II. A S. K. RR 4 90 pm.. 0 00 a
HACK LINES.
Pralrleton,Prairie Creek,Grays villo and Fairbanks.Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday 7 00am.. 7 00am Nelson, Intl., Tuesday and Saturday 130pm.. 11*) pin
The city is divided into seven Carrier Districts, as follows: FIRST DISTRICT—Fred*Tyler, Carrier.
North side of Main street, between 5th and 7th streets north from Main to city limits. Including to the alley between 7th aud 8th and to the alley between 4th and 5th streets also, 8th, tfth anil 10th streets, north of 3d avenue.
SECOND DISTRICT —John Kuppenheimcr. Carrier. The south side of Main street, between 5th and 6th, and all territory between ton and 0tt streets south to the city limita. Including to tlx- alley between 3d and 4th streets aud to tne alley between 6V4 and 7th streets also 7th street south of Dent Ing to city limits.
TRinn DISTRICT—James Johnson, Carrier. The south side of Main street, from the river to 5th street, and all territory west of the alley br tween 3d and 4th streets south to city limits.
FOCKTH DISTHIOT—George A. llayward, Carrier. Tbe north side of Maiu street, frutu the river to 5th street, and all territory west of the alley between 4th and 6th streets, and north to the city limits.
Fimi DISTRICT—Frank M. Mills, Carrier. Tbe north side of Main street, from 7th to tbe old canal, between Uth aud* 10th streets, and all territory from tbe alley between 7th aud 8th streets eaftt to the Vsndalla RR.. north to 3d avenue, and all territory north of the Yundolla UR., east of 10th street to city limits.
SIXTH DISTRICT—Isaac N. Adams, Carrier. The south side of Msln, between flth and 7th streets, from the alley betweenft4 antl7th streets, east to the old canal, south to Dcmlng, and all territory east on Poplar street and south toclty limits.
SKVKOTit DISTRICT—Louis Paganr., Jr., Carrier. South side of Msln street from 7th east to city limits, including the north side of Main, east of old canal bed to city limits, and all territory west' from Ninth street, east to city limits from Poplar street on the south to the Vsndalla RR. track on the north.
Frank Sibley, Auxiliary Carrier, whose duty It la to make extra collection and delivery trips. REGULATION*.
The mail Is collected from street letterboxes on Main street from 1st to 13th streets, north on 4th to Cherry, south on 4th to Walnut and south on 1st to Poplar, and Ohio street between 1st and ftth, every week day between K.30 artd9.3Ua m, between 9:30 and 10:30 a nt. between 12:30 and 3:00 tn, [this collection Includes to Poplar street on the south, and east to l3fh,and north to Union Detwtl between 9:30 and 11:30 nt, between 4:30 and 5:.% t) m, and between 8:(J0 and ttKX) m. All othct boxes are collected from twice per day, between the hours of 8:00 and 10:00 a in ami between 1:30 and 3:30 in.
There are Ave deliveries of raall per day in th*» us in pa it 7 0 0 an 1 1 3 0 a 1UX), 9:00 aud 4:90 also a delivery nt *:U0 p. m. to sneh bnslness houses as desire II, wbosu place of business Is located between 3d and 7th streets and not more than one square from Main.
On Sunday, the Post CMttcc Is |upcn from 9 to 10 o'clock a m.^snd persons desiring their mall can call at the window designated by the number of their carrier.
Sunday collections over the entire city Is made between 4:30 and 5:30 m, and again In the bosl ness part of the city between 5 and 9 o'clock in
Receiving boxes hare been placed on every cor ner of Main street to enable personsr#»lding near it to avail themselves of the frequent collections made thereon with a very short walk.
The attention of the public l« called to the great distance each carrier Is obliged to walk, and pir ties living a distance back in yards are earnestly requested to place boxes tn their front doors or In stich other convenient places as will facilitate the delivery of mall. Carriers are not allowed to wait longer than 30 seconds for sn answer to a bell, and after waiting that long and receiving no answer, he must retain the mall until tbe next delivery. Carriers are obliged to be prompt, and lo do their work quickly, bni nndir no circumstances to be Impolite or dltieonrteons. snd any such sbonl1 be Immediately repotted to the Post Master. Persons owning dogs are wanted that unless they keep ring the day. carriers will not deliver their mail, bat they will be obliged to call at the office. N. PlUMfCB, P. M.
THE VEST LATEST.
A. Campbell's Son*) & Co'»
"NEW CAMPBELL"
TWO REVOLUTION PRESSES
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