Daily News, Volume 1, Number 117, Franklin, Johnson County, 5 July 1880 — Page 3
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DAILY NEWS
MONDAY. JULY 5. 1880.
fiailroafr &imc Cable.
R.tlLROAB TIXK TABIDS. (Carefully corrected to date.] Union Depot—Tenth and Chestnut St*. to all 'Wain# except I. 8t. L., T. H. 8. IS. (to Worth tnjfton), ana freight*. Time, five minutes fitter than Terre Haute time.
EXPLANATION OF RKFZBEKCZ MARX*.
'firerr day. All other train* daily except 8nn da/. •Parlor care daily, except Sanaay. a SleepI ok car* Reclining chair car. Union Depot time •rfilch i« five minutes faster than city thoe.
VANDALIA LINE (Leart going East)
»«Faiit Line. Mail and Acc •rtlay Ex tf ail and Acc
*sPaciflc Ex Kail Train. ... 'sfast Ex (Arrivefrom West •4
'nVh.Ki Line MaiT and Acc 'sDay Ex ...
I
:40 am 3:40 3 G6 7:00am 1:2S am 9:55 am 8 7:00 :32 am .10 QR am 3 10 -M am a JM am 2:45
Arrive from Eaat)
»n Pacific Ex Mail Train.... »#tFa*t B* Indianapolis Acc
Leave going We*t»
TBELilfi HAt'TE & LOGANSPORT, Logansport DHr. of Vandalia. 'Leave for Northeast) Mail Train :30 a no Mixed Train 4:00
Arrive from Northeast
\Mail Train Mixed Train
TKHKE HALTE A EVAN8VILI.E (Ld-sTe for South) '«Nash«ille Ei ffCipr en* .. Krei|cht and Arc (Arr *e from South iKafitcrit Ex 'sChtcAgo Bt f?reiglit at»d Ac
Pcorlo Mall ant! Bit
Decatur Panfenirftr s' (Arrive from Nurtfiwenl) I i'ftorift Mull and Ej. fndiii(i.ii J'anenir.-r
Arrivi'from
1:15 I 5:00
:. 4 \ff) a .. &: 10 5:00 am .. 2 :&o (. .JO:45 .. 6:«)
CHICAGO A EASTERN ILLINOIS. (l.«-avf for North and Chicago Ex Dan villi Aci •((NajfhviH^ anfl Chicago Ex
., 7 :S0 a tn 3:10 ..40:50
Arrive from North!
Tcrrv Ha.. I "rid Ti-f rI find Nanhv
laut .ill.-
Est
11:10
am
5:20 pin 4:9) am
Kx
ILLINOIS MIDLAND RAILWAY, Lea*^ for Northwest)
6:37 a ra 4:0*/ iu S) :%l 1:10 pm
T. H. A SOliTfl EASTKRN. kl-f Worthlnptoi:. Main and Klr*t St*.. /L«av(- forSouth.-Avt) A( cotnriiudatii*r 7:00 am (Arrlvf fr.im Southt'&fl) At.cotnmodalir. 3:00
INDIANAPOLIS A ST. LOflS. I Df-pot. Sixth and Tlvp«canot- feix.J Lvave trolnfr Kn«t)
*{aPew V(ik Kxpt.n* .. 1 pdlaiittpolir and Nfuitoot) Ac: Day ISxprMt!
1:86 a 8:40 a 3:10
Arrive *r'»t*i Ka^i.i
Day Exprt*»» .. cw York Expr««» (ndlatiupolig aud Mattoon Ac. ,. 1 (Leave jrolng Wuet.» «K*cbNIW %ay Ex
'coNew York Hx av E: IiuIir.i:[ipo!l* find MnUogn Acc.
1:30 a in 8ft pin
lV:S
1:88 a in 10:54 ii C:«t 1 :!J3 am 4 A a in •1 :W pin
WI-M I
'CKNCW York Ex ftndiKiinjo1i» and Mattoon Acc.., Day
Kx
A WEEK in your own town, and no capita! rlfkcd. You can nflv« the* buginuas a trial without cxpeniM-. The be«t opporunity rvcr off.-rctl for tho»« willing to work, You flumld try nothing clue until you net) for yournnU what you can do at. tho wc offer. No room to* .rxplain li«rc. Von can di'votn ai! your time or only your aparo ,'une to tlic luiit.n^M, and mak»: k'rcal pay for evtry boar ttint you work. Woiuon innkt- a.» much tnttn S.ino for tpt'dal prlvHt« term* and particulars. Which vre mall frw. fA.OO outfit fr^e.
Don't cot.iV'11'11 °f hut'rt tlni.-* while you huvt-Diich r.hanpp. Addrt-e» H, HAI.LBTT A CO., Portland. Maine.
GENTS WANTED
f'A. !j
p«r
HAMLIN [JANS
for th^ »^*t and faainpll-
pictorial Book* and Bible*. Price# rehcio
3M
I-nnt. NATINAI. PVRI.IMHINU CO..
r'tviladelphla. Pa. 108ml.
MASON AND
Rent paid two-and a-ouarter yearv buya one. Bt»#t Cabinet or Parlor oricana in the World winiier* of hi|rlic»t distinction At every worltP* fair for thirteen y'«ar». Price* tM. $TT, $tC, $84, $I0K, to $500, and up-
ard Al»o for eacy payments, ffi a month or .Dt* a quarter and upward, ('dialogue* free. *ao.N
HAMI.IN OHOAN CO.
Sinir*'5
1M Tromont Street.,
oaUn. 40 Kant Fourteenth Street., (Union
New York: 2.*» \Valw»h Av»nne. Ohicajto. lOSml.
bet-NT* WANT!D the NIW |OOK,
URMINB FOR PROFIT
TEI.IJI HOW TO
IvMvmU all thaJt*r» Orooa la tiiejaa* Itom rviaJjfamti and ftkra for itooktOrow Fr«Ut Man #&Td^mWFAii:
Farmer abonld ba*« a cony SA0 Ftc
140 Ijlaatrwtlpna, genii tor drtnlan ta McCOnbf CO., Claelxuaiktl. O.
WtAN'S ^. WOMAN'S
STRENGTHS BEAUTY iht Royal Hood to Lift, Ltm and Longevity. VTtm BrttilakMt RkKiW. ftuoinaUag la tt*U »l
ta
rudorw4 hT madtear aalikcrlt
nftidt 6* mv*i*rl*a of MarHafta. ana eptoductioo KI«t»oUy prie.Ud «n4 lllailratad. It i-JU at alalia. T»ih*r* aa4 MMbara, Y«aa Mm n«t lull II. it. and «tu4f W. Mmn ladn«Mu«ni( Awwea. Add
JOHB* j»R0T8«a« A OO., Oteaiaaah, O.
IEO WJEC^NEJR. KKK»' TUB
Prt*U
&EST BEER IX THK IT
And c*n Vc found
NO. 416 MAIN STREET.
Co. have the finest di^p^a ol |,ieir
seasonable prices. 807Main st
j.1 •.
1 1
Wt-m™«Ki«ibra* MSIM «"»&»•«.!*-».
!out. Neuralgia. Catarrh, Oieet, SrDtiilis. kin Diseases. Dyspepsia a&d MI
Diseases Elegant new bath house. CcmMtent attendants. Cheapest and best ithginthe world. Bath house at the mi of Walnut street
MAGNBTJC ARTEMAS BATH OO
SflerUb Poetrp
A FADED FRAGMENT.
A word nospokea. a hand unpreaacd, §g^ft» A look onaeea or a tboof bt unftwased,
20
And aoola thai are kindred may lira apa 1 Kerer to meet or know the tooth, Jterer to know how bean beat with heart.
In the dim past days of a waateil youth. Kbe ahail not know how bis poises leapt, 'Whan ore* hli temples her tram swept k. AM ahe leaned to (ire him the Jasmine wreath.
She fe»t bia breath, and her flwe ttoabed red, *tth Use paaakmate tore that choked ber breath.
A
Bdaaddene ber life now her youth to dead, A fkded womao who waits for death And mormon a name beneath ber breath A cynical man who aooflk and Jeera
At woman and love in the open day, And at night time kisMS, with bitter tcaia, A ihdad fragment of Jasminespray-
THE NEW TENOR.
Sa.e drew hia breath wtth a gasplnf sob. With a qemring voice he aaog: Bui bis volss leaked oat, and could not drown
The accompanist's clamorous bang Be lost bis pttch on the middle A Ha Haltered on lowerS And ibander*$. at length, like a battered wreck
Adrift on the wild, hifb&
—Mnickey-
Selected ittiscelanp.
A KANtiAROO HUNT.
rr is
AK
Exanso
SPOBT.—now THB KANQA-
BOO FIGHTS ITS I'URBUBKh.
The kangaroo, as is well known, is found only in Australia and Tasmania. Its means of locomotion and defense aro so peculiar, and its swiftness so great, that the chase of it is attended with excitement and dangers wholly unique. Hunting the fox in England is over comparatively smooth ground and moderatesized fencefe, with, well-trained horses while the kangaroo has to be chased over new country, full of holes covered with wild greese, over ditches, fallen trees, amongst treee and their branches, on horse* that nave no superiors in the world in Bpeed, and whose power is not loftt in civilization. Then the dangers you are to eucouuter when you overtake the kangaroo, though not in reality extreme, are as great hr those met in the liger-huntfw usually conducted, while in the latter you have,not the exviteintMil aud danger of the cliiine.
The place where 1 write is about 200 unit's from the ocean-shore, on I he banks oi' a beautiful river, shaded with eucalyptus trt't'H. Thfse trees are the natural zrowth ol' the country, cover a-large part, of it, and are believed, both here HIKI
in Europe, to-so destroy malaria its to be a sure guarantee against levers of all kinds.
The conches are. carefully examined
I before retiring at night to see if there ire any snake? in them but none tre fount!. A native with two women are camped on the shore near by. Their camp is a half-circle of piled-up \c% three feet hip'.1, while on the open'side, toward* the r/aU r, glares a brilliant fire, liulninj.' op tlietii and the darkness with a fVviittisfK" savapeness. Tiioee natives resemble the African move nearly, than either of the other four of the human races, and come without doubt from that *to« k. Their hair cannot be strictly SJIid to be either hair or wool, but most nearly resembles the latter. They are of good size, ktrk brown, well-made, and don't encumber themselves with much clothing. One of their weapons war is the roomeraiig, and it is a curious affair. It is made of very hard wood, three feet long, four inches wide, one inch thick at the center, and bends edgeways so as to make a third of a circle. With the Land they are said to throw this implement 150 yards, cutting off the head of an enemy, and having the weapon return to the feet of the sender. 1 have seen it thrown that distance and return to the person who threw
The full grown male kangaroo is called "boomer,M and is about seven and a half feet long from his nose to the end of his tail,—the tail being about three and a half feet of this, and one foot in diameter at its base. He lives on grass,—sometimes invading tho fields of the frontiersman and eating up all he has. He stands on his four legs when feeding, and at no other time. His tail is full of powerful sinews, but it is used only to assist in the equilibrium while Bitting, standing on the toes and running. In a sitting fosture he is about four feet and a half high but when he stands on his toes to survey the country or an enemy, he is taller than a man. He has a soft gazelle-like expression but the white teeth gleam between the open lips. His color is brown, tending in age towards red or gray, according to the species. They weigh (the male) from 150 to 170 pounds each. The meat tastes somewhat like venison, but is not very I'good, though tne tail makes excellent jisoup. j! The female isuooer six feet in length, imnd is different somewhat in appearance from the male. The young when born i'i» only an inch iong. and are first Seen: uursing the mother in the pouch in front, where she carries them. They remain in this pouch til! they are eight mohths ld and weigh about ten potmds, and long afterwards return to it ou appeara&ce of danger. When the mother ia hard preyed by an enemy in a chase ishe throws the young one out of the, pouch, who thereby makes its escape.
—r-rrr— "•*., bottt a wit! the middle claws of their clerk figured away andjremarked as he All agree that H. S. Richardson I are very sharp If froct r?icr^»v nt thty are the water they try to hold
eR€SK Gti
lilverw&Td in the cut v. and at Thf will leave a dog to attack a
MmrneUv Arir«Uiu 'eluding mye«if started oil horse twtck, been different. He has
.uthoritv for Paralym ltheuruatism. veng
Yvmale
Jllrei:rp^Tt
ronr
Terse Haute, Inc.
There an? kangaroo-dogs, very swift fringe aud jet gimp for its heading. He! Mid strong, especially adapted to hunt-1 entered a large Boa
ing the kangaroo but no experienced'see the prettiest of silk trimming, and I dog will tackle one of them *ithout after much thought ou the Bubject sesome body to back him. They jump lected the heaviest of chenille and silk taboo: fifteen feet at a time usually, fringe, and the widest and prettiest and but sometime* twent or more, and most jetted of gimp, aud haa the required their swiftness is prodigious. Nothing ituml»er of yank cut off. He rememberscan apparently overtake them in a fair,e-1 having heard somewhere that trim-: r.. t, and Hi* usual *ay is to practically mings were expensive v^ after all they unround them. When hard pressed were but trifles, and a very
ilwy pla -e their back to a tree fbr the?! the whole. et. he thought, as he took fight: or, in preference, thev always out his pocket book, the pile looked so «trik* for the water, if there is anv near. soft and pretty, and glittered *o, that They try to seize their enemy with the perhaps it would break well into a ten fbre-pp.ws, and then rip it from top to dollar bill, and he had it ready. The
^r *lt till he is browned.
party, half going toewh ud« oft partly open plain. I soon saw a buge kangaroo and tiro email ones coining towards onr party. We waited until tber were near enough to see ua, when tbey made a right angle, and went off at an astonishing pace, in jam pa of fifteen to twenty feet length, going from eight to ten feet in the air at each jump. We "went for" the big one. but he quickly got beyond our sight, the three having already distanced the dogs. The kangaroo-dogs hunt bv sight, like the greyhound. These three were all lost, we learned, as we met at the point agreed upon. Wc next surrounded another large tract of forest plain and meadow, this time dividing the dogs. In a few moments a hundred or more kangaroos came bounding toward the party with me. The dog with me started for them, and all the dogs and men were at once in pursuit. The kangaroos divided into several parties—each dog selecting one to follow, and each man following one of the dog went for a boomer, and I
0
are rarely overtaken.—Axiitrailian respondent* of the Chicago Tribune.
This plea is based'upon an observation of the working of this system in several towns and cities, aud upon the concurrent testimony of medical men. In eome places the rules of the governing boards forbid the imprisonment of children, but the roles are generally set at naught by teachers. They ought to be enforced. It must be that there are methods of discipline for school less injurious and more effectual than imprisonment—Good Company.
What He Learned Abent. Trimmings# A gentleman not versed in the intrica' ries of feminine attire evidently thought it his duty to become a little critical in Buch matters .after his marriage. Of course, nothing was good enough for his bride, and several times'he had made slighting remarks upon an overdress of here. It was not heavy enough or long enough to suit his fancy. *1 have a new black silk to trim," she said, "and you shall buy me the trimmings in Boston to suit yoitrscif." This he very cheerfully consented to do, merely asking for the number of yarns of silk and
At 6 o'clock llw* morning, ten men (in- H*1 was newly married or «t might have,
took no the on)-
to be u*^d. We bad no diii-
juity in finditt tlie ai inmls. It was dieJAimd to avoio Midi feneee as we found, and we jumpec several of a height of
to five feet
htm on a full run.
,v
approach
mmmmm !$k
My in
company with two others of the jarty I ^at
The boomer* stood up. took a look at utJ
Seeping Children after School. There is one common practice of the .publicschools which ought to be abolished at once and every where without
and then flew. We followed him When a man is so fugitive and unamongst the trees and branches, jump-1 settled that he will not stand to the versing logs and debris of all kinds, and! diet of his own fiiculties, one can no across plains at a fearful rate. The horsee more fasten anvthing upon him than he needed no urging their blood was op can write in the water or tie knots of now. The dog "laid to it." but made no! the wind.—[Henry Moore. sound. When he woulu get near the Mnst there always be hungry, shiverkangaroo, the animal would make a ing wretches who wander in the cold jump at right angles and change hie and darkness outside the house of hapcourse, whilst the dog would shoot on a jjiness, snatching now and then only a distance before he could turn. After a hasty glimpse of the feasting and merryrun of this kind for some distance the making going on within kansaroo started for a swamp. After Wesmileatthe ignorance of the savreachmg that, and going in a distance, .who cuts down the troe in order to be turned his face towards us, sending
reac
upon his hind paws to a height of seven blunder of this description is made by' feet and prepared for battle. The dog .Very person who is ever eager and imwent for him, and the fight commenced, ^lieut in the pursuit of pleasure. The dog succeeded in getting hold of
,,
question or parley, fhis is the practice
1
ug emidren in me school-
houses beyond the school hours. Pretty near every school-house in the land lie thus turned into a penitentiary, in which children are immured every day, some of them for imperfect recitations, others for faults of deportment. The method of punishment might, if the teachers were all judicious, be resorted to occasionally with good effect but teachers are not all judicious, and thousands of children are thus detained every day to whom the detention is a serious injury, and a grave injustice. For some trifling breach of order, like turning in the seat or dropping a pencil, for some small failure in a recitation, aud often for no fault at all—whole classes being kept on account of the indolence of some of iheir members and the innocent thus sutt'ering with the guilty—the children are shut up in the school-houses, sometimes during the intermissions, often after the close of school. Thousands of children in delicate health, to whom the regular school hours are too long, are permanently injured by this svstem of confinement. If only the stupia and the willful aud thoBe in sturdv health were thus punished there would be less reason of complaint but auy careful investigation will show that such discrimination is not generally made, and, from the nature of the system,cannot well be made and that the injury to the health of pupils resulting from the practice more than outweighs any good that may result from it. The health of the pupil is a subject to which the average schoolteacher gives but little consideratton any practice, therefore, which is liable to result, in the impairment of the pupil's health ought to be forbidden by law.
jston store, asked to 1
STORII
part of
signalled a cash boy, "Fiftv-one dollars aud seventy cents, sir." Whatever the Inner man may have felt, there was no outward sign. He walked to the desk and drew his cheque for amount ff ... l_ 1A A. 1\a
.4the
...
ikW
a
one more,
communion. His wife insists that he shall go to Boston once more and her a Mack silk suitable for that trimming, the one she has being not half fine enocgh but he refnaes to do any QDKMre shopping* and falls into a brown stadv when
,h"buy
gtittering garment sweeps
__ {.mt'him, convinced that the trimmings afwavs
im 1 of this world would clothe the naked
a. \Ve divided the feexi the hungry.
flayfegg.
Seneca, the preceptor of Nero, understood the difficulty of teaching the indifferent, fie observed: "That can never be said too much which is never learned enough."
Folly soon wears out her shoes. She dances so fast we are all of us tirec Golden wires may annoy us as much as steel bars,, if jyUey keep us behind prison windows.
spring, it rises up to meet you. Genins without religion is only a lamp on the outer gate of a palace. It may serve to cast gleam of light on those
a«
CTt*
without, while the inhabitant
,n
darkuess.-[Hannab More,
the fruits but the fact is that a
Tf
.u *. o-
1
his tail, and was carried in the air «?ome ,, distance by repeated jumps. The don Pu should then lost his hold, and was seized and ,, put nnder the water. Owing to my hav- jmre tli© same ing the best horse, I was first to come to ... the dog's aid. I was warned by shouts P''l^iaJs refining their spirit*, not to approach the animal, but disre-j 1 would not-like to think of Heaven parded them, and showed mvself a good
If there beany difference in natural seem the advantage lies on the side of children born of wealthy traditional sloth and ixurv which render their body weak
5n
kangaroo-hunter. The animal proved' Bunyan's Christian went in at those
be eight feet long. The rest of the I golden gates, he gave up a great hope party killed two smaller ones, and for a great jKissession—then, knowing later in the day, at another chase an-! what 1 do, and only what I do, I pity other large one was killed. The femaleu him.—[B-obert Collyer. don't tight, but run so swiftly that they A
Doay i.—[8 wift.
»ny sense a finality. If, when old
1
There are some frauds so well conducted that it would be stupidity not to be deceived by them. A wise man, therefore, may be duped as well as a fool but the fool publishes the triumph of his deceiver the wise man is silent, and
denies that triumph to an enemy whidh
he would
]iaraiv concede to a friend a
triumph that proclaims his own defeat, —[La con.
Love never- reasons, but gives gives, like a thoughtless prodigal, itsall, and trembles then, less it hasdone too little.
MR. PRESIDENT,
I AriM to UU the People
if go to
J. THEg|
It is not worth while to think too much about being good. Doing the best we know, minute by minute, hour by I ..."DTTCSTTVrCGJC! tlppw hour, we insensibly grew to goodness as UDAJ.N JLDD JuJiilN, fruit grows to ripeness. Should ot« This Fact, Abo, the Fact
Knowledge cannot oe acquired without pain and application. It is trouble- NEWS Circulates Largely some, and like deep digging for pure among, and is the Friend of the WORK* waters but, when once you come to this roewpx ^Dnvivr spring, it rises up to meet you. INGMEN—the men who PATRONIZE
DAILY^NEWS
NOW ENJOYS A CITY CIRCULATION EQUAL TO THAT OF ANY DAILY
PUBLISHED IN THE CITY, AND HAS THE ADVANTAGE OVER OTHERS OF A DAILY INCREASE.
Life or Larjre'br. cents
Life l.ar cents.
SOHLONS.
Merchant Tailor
AMI [(l.OTHIER.
4'JO MAIN HTRKET.
TI.B8E IMI I'fc, IMI.
4 ferrart fcalerprtne.
The Hop fMtv re Manufacturing Comtany is one of f^chester's greatest business epU:rpflTSfc»^'JT&«ir Qop Bitters have reached a saie beyond ail precedent, haying from their ictHm value found their way into almost eveTy Household in the land.—- Graf, kit.
v^'
HOME INSTITUTIONS.
ADVERTISED Call and see us. We will give you Reasonable Rates, and Guarantee Satisfaction.
A N A
Importer and Dc aler is
Italian Marble
AND
Granite
MONUMENTS,
Sfiituary, Vases, etc.
25 SOUTH FIFTH STREET,
TERRE HAUTE, JND.
THE LITER ART
pjjE-^OLTJTionsr. The most successful revolution of the. century, and, l. A me:'.can r«ader« of the most import/ml. Only bookf of the highest class are published by us. nnd tlie prices are low beyond
coin).'i with the che»)Mst books ever issued. Injtr to city limits. ,t. 1
To illusrrate and demonstrate these tnit.hs, we send tin- bookt-. all complete ami nnbridgcu. 0Et-pai&, at tin- prieec named:
Macaulay's
tk the ireai. Former price. $l.'Ar), iteaiitii'iil print price three
Carlyle's Rums. Former
vu type,
Manliness1 of lirjst. Former pric.
JOHh' ,'iSX. .M»i. ii.-i r.
(»ric. \?.Y price three
beautiful prirrt
Light of Asia.
Arnold, Former price. $1.50 K-i- type: price five centi.
By lMv print. i»i
lit autiful
Tlios. Hughes's
$1.00
tiful print, i'revier *ype: price three cents John Stuart Millse"'
Chapt«r8 on Socialism, interest snd :rc1rortaiHe.
H-MII-
His Traie^s araSnrpri»ln$r Adventures. Former price. $J A"-. Bonrgeota' tyj'e: price five oentik
Mary Queen of Scots'
Life, by Lamertine. Forim-r rice $l-'5t'i. Brevier type, bfat.t,ifu! print: price three cents.
Vicar of Wakefield.
By Ol iv«?r Goldsmith, Brevi-r type, beautiful print: pricc five cents.
Bunyan's Pilgrim'^ Progress
ype, leaded beautiful. print
Bourse-iise six cents.
Private Theatricals'
pnoe
Uy author o? "Snarrowgra#? Pap'-rs," Smnll type, leaded: price two cents
Stories and Ballads
For YiJunj: Kelks, by Kllen TrHov Aid en. very nne iii'istrations. »-n :i'-n» complete ber hook. Large typo: |»rlee (IK rrntw.
with from
Leaves from the Diary
Of an Old Isugl.uble. rsn
Lawyer, pathetic
Short t- lories of
Ihrillltiff. ilnwe
intcrost. Hrlof
Booksellers.
Locil At'ent.
The Only Remedy
jTUAT ACTS
AT
BBsSt Beea uie vx. lukrit them great organ* ito become dogpm or torpid, tod\
I
poitonout hvrrwrs art therefore forced
BITImm
post Office enllftin.
oiwluii: (*t the Mafl* und Carrie** DeMveiry Carrie** LeftTe fw
^AST.
Detlroty. Cloaed
Indianapolis and thw*east.... TWam.-UW®*1 ImJi.mapoHo and station? on .m._-600am
VawlalURailroad...:.
700am..
Indionaptilis and actions on Vandalia Railroad 1180 a m.. Indiiuiapclis
And
station#
on 1*®}®
1.&SLL hl30a»m.
Saltern Indiana. Chicago and Northern Illinois*...i i... .11 30a Eastern Ken tacky, Indianapolis and thro* Tmlianapolls and cUtion? on
481,1,11
350pm 815 pro pm pm
4 20pnx. 4 30 pm.
Vandalia Railroad Iovra, Michigan, Minmwuand Wisconsin
4 20pm 4 90pm
815 pm 315 pm
7 001 m. .WOOmdt
WKST.
St. Lonla And thro4 wv?t Junctions on Vandalia RR. ud Sonthcrn Illlnoi St. Loula and thro' we?t St. Ixutd and stAtion» on Vandtlla Railroad St. Lonls .and stAttons on I. dc __
7 00sm..li00®dt 20 pm..l200mdl 4X0pm.. 980»m
Si. L.KR 480pm..1030am
St Louis and thro' west 4 90 pm.. S15 pm Ma rshall .and sUttono math on tlieDanville AYinceumeRR.11 SO
am..
ft 15 pm
Peoria and stations on Illinois Midland Railroad TOCa&i.. 600am Stations on Toledo, Wabaah
Weetern RR. weat of Duntitle 7 00 a m..lQP0pm NORTH. Ctaxaeo, 111., (thro1 ponch) Danville and stations on E. T.
H. A C. RR Iowa. Minnesota. Wisconsin and Northern 1111: Chicago, Iowa
7(K»am..10 00pm 7 00am.. 600am 7 00 am..1000pm
Uiaoia. Michigan,
Minnesota, Wisconsin and 1110 em.. 215 pm Northernnilnois ..l Louansport 11-A Log.i Stfiona on 1
00 am.. 600am 4 20pm.. 6 00am 00am.. 000am
art and stations «n T. art RR.
aaa^oUf). Deca-
A Springfield
St* ions on Toledo, Wabash ft Western RIL, east Danville. 7 00*am.. 1000pm Northern Ohio, Northern Indiana, "Michigan and Canada...
Keotnekv
H.
00 am.. 10 00 pm
SOUTH.
Evi.navillti, Vincennex and Frinceton Fort Branch and aulHvan(thro, pmchps) Evufisvtllo and station*on E. & I T. H. RR 700am.. 1200mdt
00 a m.
laOOmdt
00 a m. ISOOmdt
Evi.aavlJlo and atatior.9 on E. 4T.I1. RR 4 30 m.. 2 80 Soi :hcrn Illinois and Western
4
S.
90pm.
Soi.tiiorn UllnoiHanil Western fntncVy 7 00am W« rthington .and stuhon! on
i80 pm isoomdt
tl 00 am
KR 4 90 ptn HACK LINES.
Pmirieton.Prairio ('roek,G rays 4^ ille and PairbankH,Tuesday, r'5? Thnrad.iy and Saturday 7 X) a m.. i)0 a m' Neiion, Ind., Tuoidavuiul Saturday 1 1 pm..-. I'tilpm 1 :ie city is divided into eeven Carrier Districts as fnllowd:
FIHUT DwTRtcr fred Tyler, Carrier. Kurth «ii\c of Alain attwt,, between Sth and 7th is st.r nta notth from Mam to cit limits. noludiiig to the alley between 7t.h and 8tl) and to the alley bet veen -Ith and 5tli streets ulno, Gth. 9th and lOtt. streets, north of «d av« nue. 11DISTRICT-John Knppenheim«r.
.- MJD
0,»rrier,-.:-^|
T!\e aouih «ido of Main street, between 5tli and 6th ind .ill territory Imtween Sth and 1U streets soe'n to the citv limits, including to the alloy he* twi ..n 3d and 'Itn HtrvetK and to tno alley het ween ®H -'«ncl 7th trcetn, nUt 7th street south, of Dein-
PISTR«!T—JaoM Johnson, Carriee. ,•
te nth aide of Mam street, from the river to fttfc street, and all territory
tw-' .md -Ith is tracts south to csitv Itmtrs. 1*
UIHTN
PIMTHICT--
1 i.e nnilh silde of Mi.iti street, from the river 1,0 5tl. -tired, .inl all rt .Jory weet. thu alley lxi-tw«-n 'Ith and ath st-et is, and north to the city fi 1 Irr. rrtt
DISTBIOT
Fratih
A,'.t I'll IC' V\ HOOK K.\I tM. K. 1 .vaiVfori/pr than 30 seconds for an answer to a Trlliime llnllilln*. \ov 1 ork/j\T- wiolirj h»i nnd reeeivlng no Ii lit we r. he inosl, return uie tnafl until the nextde--.4 llv. -v u.irrleiii art- obliged to he. prompt, and lo
THE SAKE T1X£ ©N|
THE LIVER,
THE BOWELS,
KIDNEY6.
and the
Thu combined action gita iitoondcrfvl power lo nxrt, all diteaMt,
p*lM aad actual
Ifky tomrttw vitii PilM,C»MttMll*« 11 Wky frigttwwd aver
llwtwN
Kidaayc
T1
weal
.if the alley be-
(George A. Uayward, Carrier.
M. Mills, Oarrior.t
Tue noi Ih Hide of Mailt street, from Yili to the old urial, between titli nod 10th til.rtmf.s, and all tei ilory from the aiiev l.i'tvrmDVIJiand8(listreets eat" to the Vandalia Kit, north to .'Id avenue, and
all territory north of the VaridoMft lilt., east of lOt ft. roe I. to city lliuits. *".«» r.rii DISTRICT Ifaae N. Adams, Onlrter.
The south side of Main, bet,WOOD 6tli and 7th
eah:
it
Kt-t-ays of exceeding Price three cents.
Earon Munchausen.
t*. from tho alley betwetnf.H and7th streets, -s to 'uhc old canal, south to Dcmlna.and all terOftst on Poplar street ar.d south tocitylimits. truth DIHTRIOT I.onis Bagnnx, jr., Carrier. t- nth (iiK- of At,niii street from Vth east tocity Itn s«, int. lmllriff t.ht north'side of Main, east of oh anal bed to city limits, and all territory west fro- Tvfinib -treei. east to city limits from Poplar str t.ton Mn eolith to the Vandalia RR. track, on tli* north.
I mik Hit-ley, Ait.vihiw.y Carrier, whose duty it It t« make extra collertion and delivery trips. KKOCI.ATIOKS.
Ti.r mail is (ollert.cil f.-em street letterboxes on Ms street from hit to titth street,s. north on4th to Ch' try, nonth on 4th to Waliint and south ou 1st lo opiar, an: Utno street between 1st and 5th, fv ,-y week day between l(i &ud0.30a m, between (l:.v and 10:80 a in, litiwcen 1£:.')0 and 2:00 ni, i.ollection Includes to Poplar street on the :h. and c.int to Idth antf north to Union Depoil
OODBOK K. do their woik tprtcKIy, btitundor no circumstance-*, (to 11 jin-volite t:.i dis tr u-, j.nd anvpuoh should» be fijmediate ly foporte.el to the Post Master. Person* 'iwnifig 'logs' are warned that unless they keep. th«'tn iied tfie day. caficrt! will not. eteli'-er
I
\into ihttooodihai thould be expcMk\ \%aturaUjf,
OTUOPMneW, P1LKR, OOKSTIFATlpH, m»*ET OOWFLAITTK.ITBnriBl, »igSA8K6, rtlMALE WEAK* -. 5E88E8. AIDJ»K*VOD» ^?KSOK»Kft9, .. .4^1
I
by ESIIUMINGFREE action OF ORGARII
I
I and ratoring their power to throw off\ \dueam. Whf Ssffn
I
Whf aadorc or sftek kaadaekeal Whj km riwyl sat stfkU I Urn XLDB9CKT WOBT awt rtfotce tel I Aeottfc. II it A dry.vrpeiabU cempomndgnd [•m 1 a Was ••«»*—TJ 1 CM *f FEW* PRUGQ**. he wMorltr U\
YSR PEM7JMETF9SM
VIUA BCE4SM0I COu
fwn^r*
1
mail but ihev wVH be- obli/tcd to call nt the N. Filheck. P. M,
All tit latest Styles of
SUMMERS HATS!
fcr. AT -r
S- I/jEE
3c
3
ISNIO and JJK-' m. hettveen 4:80 and 5:80
n.. and between nnd $-Mi m. All other Iko mi fue collected from twici? per day, lietween nrino 'bt Hours of 8 00 and 10 0() a and between 1:30
I am H:80 pm Therr art live deliveries of nvt\t' per day in the bu-mettii pintot the city: at 7:00 and 11:80 a m, 1:0
it
00 itn4 -1 ."M0 tn, also
pica
A
delivery fit H:00 p.
m. u- tiiic 11 neae IKHIS'1* as lenire if, whosti pl8-«: of businesii is located netween 3d and Tth streets and not more than one square from Main,
Ou Sundiiy. the I'ost Office is (open from 0 to I0 cock in, .iinl i" -oi deslvin(: their mail can c«|. at the wt'i liov designnfed. by the nrirober of the'r carrier. f»mday c)llct tions over the entire city Is wad', between 4 ,j0 .Hid 5 W m, and t»daitl iu the bus:. ne»* part of the t'.il'y between 8 and 0 o'clock liecvning t.rses.liitve- N'er fli«c«d on every cor ne: of Irtalft street lo enable persons residing near It in .vvdi! lheiin»el«,'((« of the frequent collections imeifc theie v.'iih avery short walk.
The utter I 'on of Ut« public Is called to the ^rcat keep dis'aur, each rirricr ts ohif^e-t to walk, snd par-
fcvecywher* otil oi d-al»-r :i eacL 'fown thes*- Him O-'.T Urjte list.ef "taiidhru hook*. »hi h.t tie,. 4 viny a distant'e batk iu yards arc earnestly sre s«*llnni Iw thf miSHon vohntieK, brcause the reeiu.sled u- place boaer in thalr front doors or In tiottiU" i»-iie\e in lite I.lterurj «u?ti"o1tier fivenienjLpiaees will facilitate the fUiri. jn'mri'utii\ 1 eif ruaii Oniriera are not. allowed
OO.'S,
TOff. Fifth (fe'Main sts.
