Daily News, Volume 1, Number 146, Franklin, Johnson County, 7 August 1880 — Page 3
SATURDAY, AVGU8T
fUrikoafc £iiuc (Eftfjltf
ltA{LftOA!» TlH^y VAIJI,K
(Carefully corrected to date.]
Union Depot—Tenth and Cheatunt situ., to all trains except t. & 8L Li. T. II. A S B. (to Worth IngtotO.and freight*. Tim" five nrtnttte* facter than Terre Ilatite time.
**Fast I,iri .. Mail and Act ?#+I8y Ex (ill and Arc
Car. I'jiiujp leif time
Ti£lt«ST tfiati citjf
ftje live I
VANDALIA LINE (Leave going Bast)
1: iO am 3:40 3:06 ~:00 a
(Arrive from East)
Pacific Ex 1:25 a nil Train 9:55 am stFaat Ex Indlanapoli* Arc '.. 7:00pm 11-cave going WuH) •sPadflc Ex :32 a ""nil Train 10 CRai* i'a*t Ex 3:io in (Arrive from We«t) •sFa«t Line 1:32 am Mail and Act: 8:50 am »»Day Ex 2:45 pro
TERRK IIA l.'TK »fc LoCiANSl'URT, L/K«n-iirt Div. of Yand&Ua. (L* i' for Northeast) Mail Train 6:8Qa Mixed Train 4:o0 in (Arriv.- from Northeast) wKJif^ln 1:15
Train 5:0Q JTERRE IIAUTE A EYANSVILLE. (licave for South) »sN.,., ivillc Ex 4:30a tBxnress 3:10 Freight and Acc. 5:00 am (Arrive from South) tEastern Ex 2:50 pm •sChicago Ex 10:45 Fraigbt and Acc 5:00 W CHICAGO & EASTERN ILLIN0I8. (Leave for North) and Chicago Bx 7:30 a
Danville Acc 8:10 pm \»sNashville and Chicago Ex 10:50 (Arrive from North) erre Haute Acc 11:10 a hlcago and Terre Haute Ex 5:20
Chicago and Nashville Ex i... 4:2Uam ILLINOIS MIDLAND RAILWAY, (Leave for Northwest) Peoria Mall and Kx 0:87 a Decatur Passenger 4:07 (Arrive from Northwest) Peorln Mail and Ex 9:20 Indianapolis Passenger 1:10
T. IL & SOUTHEASTERN, (to Worthlngton. [Depot. Main and First Sfts.] td-~ (Leave for Southeast) Accommodation 7:00 a (Arrive from Southeast) Accommodation 3:00ptn
INDIANAPOLIS & ST. LOUIS. IDepot, H!xth and Tippecanoe 8ts.] (Leave golug East) \sFew York Express 1:25 a Indianapolis and Mattoon Acc 8:46 a Day Express... 8:10 pm (Arrive from East.)
Express 10:52 a in New York Express 1 :3J a llanapolis and Mattoon Acc.... 6:35 ra (Leave going West.) ••New York Kx 1:38 am ay ndlatiapolls and Mattoon Acc 0:87 a (Arrive from West) .sNew York Kx 1 :SW .itdinnapolls and Mattoon Acc. ":14 a tn Day Ex 8:0Sp
DANVILLE ROUTE.
licago & Eastern Illinois Eailro&d.
ave, Torre Ilauto .. rrive, Danville Hoopestgn ..
NOUTII. m. 10.50 p.ih 1.20 a.m 2.44 3.40 7.4J) 12.05 M. 11,20 a. 7.00
.. 7.50 a. .10.85 11.88 12.40 "p. 8.80 7.50
Watsoka Peoria,,.. .... liuriilicton Keokuk Chicago Milwaukee St. Paul
V.8-
rrlve, Terre Hante...
.18.(1) night 12.45 p.m 1,36 p.m. 0.00 a.m
.. 4.90 a.m 1.50 .11.56 p.m ..11.00 86
1)an\il1a Iloopeston Wataeka.,. Peoria Rurllngton Keokuk 8. Chicago 7.50 Mllwnukee 1.00 St. Paul 8.06
5.20 p.m 2.20 1.25 12.35 8.55 a.m 3.56 4.00 9.00 8.15 12.»
9,80 8.53
?flcago& Northwestern R.&
California Line.
Chicago... 12.30 p.m I Ar. C. Bluffs... 0.80a.m
9,15 7
Sa«,'m
lllwnukcc, Grcea Bay ft^ake Nupertw line. 8.00 10.00 10.00 tt.OO p.m 9.00 #.«
Ar. Milwaukee 11.15 a.m 12.45p.fti
Ureen Ray 5.40 Kocanaha, 10^4 p.m
v'
Nt. Paul ft Minneapolis i.tnc.
.»*. Chicago.... 10,00 a.m 1 Ar, St, Panl.... 6.00 .... 9.00p.m .... 1.80^m
W. II. STBNNKTT, Goal P*«*. Ag't, Chicago.
acijo
V. Chiracs 10.10 n»m ...,io:to .U KOftu ..i.lojv* .... 9.«p.m .. 9.Q0 .... R.0P .... 9.0
,4a,55p.m 2.45 10.10 9.00a.m 11.55 p.m
OOOrtt
A.
I.«S a.m T08 1.3Sp.m It
Oen. Pai». and Tkt.
Ag'l,
jUltWaukw.
?ii
Mtanatl.O. 134 m). ..i«a
WM. DREUSICKE,
ARPSNfER AND BUILDER
Manafactnrer of Dr«uslckc
mi Ecfrfgerators,
i\r. Ninth and $yc*»ore St*„
TERRE HAirrE. IND.
W. P. HOCTOK,
Tactical
AKD OAS FITTER. done in the b«t style. Offlbe under
HIE
crrr bank*
SottCk Slxtfe 8tr«*t.
3»rUk»U CaiXEfiUTE SCHOOU
f«r Mm aa4 Tmm 9R«» UrtMn M, mmwafclt for all (Vvl)ep# tsa lot Baal m\ (iwt Nw i«tia bMriM J* rw wldm* IT. BAflK, *. C,
No. 180 Rim St., OodtiaaAC fi. »4»1-
Sdecleb JJoctrn
Twas/rft late*., Onegio^otaauinmtidayk ... 1 JobttiMtoirr
Sfo$, Trfjakg&Jpttify AjfcT asthe Vf .'uja'damokfeartMel Like lncenae In the air, IbrciuhM ailgft to tlifntf^ln iK)t£.
It was my in cigw!
gun fecp-
I leaned ppon And look'd down in tfe» aea: B"en there tfie pnrpk* wreaiS or smoke
Was curn'ng-grada^Hy. Ah! what had I. at such a time,
Alas, the trembllH^ieii^^rO^jic^d 11 waa my last cigar!
I atchf the aabes an they came Fast drawing to the end: I watched it as a fH«nd would watch
Beside a dying friend: And, as the fire crept slowly on, It vanished into air I threw It from me-apart- the tale-
It was my last cigar.
I've seen the land of all I love Fade In the distance dim I've watch'Ml above the blighted heart
Where once proud hope hath been But I have never known a woe Which could with that compare, When, oflT th« Blue Canary, laics,
I smoked my last cigar!
MY FIRST CIGAR.
[We also give "My First Cigar." from the Keokuk IhUeCUy.i "fwaa in a qniet alley,
One glorious summer day. I sat upon a dr^-gOKls -x, And drew and puffed away: And as the corly smoke arose.
And floated ou the air, I saddenly grew awftil alok— It was my first cigar.
I leaned across the dry-goods box, Tamed almost deathly pale, And gasped and threw up everything
E'en to my great toe nail Ah! what did I at such a time For smoking seem to care, •las! the trembling tear proclaimed,
It was my Orst cigar.
I've swallowed gobs of castor oU. And took pills by tho score Been turned and twisted Inside out
A dozen times or more But sickness I have never felt, Which could with that compare. When In that lonely alley
I smoked my first clttar.
Selected ifltscelans.
"Wonders of the Ocean.
THE SARGASSO SKA.
There is a sea in the middle of the oceunl Astonishing as the statement sounds, it ia literally true. The limits of the sea are as well defined as fthose of any other known collection of water ita characteristics are so special that no one can mistake them.
When Columbus, on his first voyage, had got some distance to the westward of the Canary JalaudSj he was flmased one morning to find his ships in an undulating meadow. As far as he could seej the watev was covered with a green-ish-yellow plant, which appropriated fchij surface of the sea as thoroughly and effectually as water-lilies cover a pond. The wind was light but steady ihere were not any birds to indicate the proximity of land, neither was there any apparent, .cause for such a collection of weed. The sailors, already scared by the persistence of the wind frdm one quarter—they had got info the tradewinds—looked upon the weed before them, behind them, and on either side of them, as infallible p^oof of their imminent uestrnction. The Almighty, they said wasancry at thoir impious attempts to pry into His secrets in the west, and had given them over to the devil, who was oausing a wind to blow that would forever prevent their return ro Spain, and notf had brought them into a snare such as sailors most dread—shallows extending too far beyond the land to allow of iliips or inen being saved. The commandeer could not explain the sight he qaf Mild might have thought with his xfieti tliat the Weed was the cast-off clothing of some dangerous rocks which lay a snort distance down, ready to tear and »nl them. The deep sett lead-line was hove, but no bottom was found. The rihips kept on their westerly course, still sounding and still getting no bottom, till, in a few days they drtwdear of weed and came where the broad ocean was all around them ag^in. unencumbered by anght but the ships.pf the explorers.
Everilnce the day Cplumljto saw the weed, and probaray for thousands of yeAro before lie sa# it. the Sai^gasso Sea —-eucBis the name or the weedy seahas eilfited. Its boundaries mav be indicated by tracing & triangle, of which the three corners Asores, the Canari Within thoee lini torn fees, and is clothed on its surface with a garment of vegetable material, so thiok 88 to retard the progress of vessels sailing through it. Steamers avoid it when they can do so, because of the fouling of tliefr screws and paddles by the weed: "but sailing-vessels outward bound to the W^sT' Indies, South AmeiSos, the Caje,etd, must needs pass through it, SomeRmea a great storm, proceeding from some pofntoutside the charmed triangle, rnuses its effects to be felt within tlie triangle, and &*ttex9 the weeti more or less on* of botinda., But usually til
ere
&
or maR stag tbn »«0.i
1
Rotation of Crops.
BY CHARLES T. PABSOXS.
good order ibr any crop. Last season we
tried to rotate in buckwheat, intending
to pi 2Ctii of July, after a fair crop of rye. The crop was so good we harvested it it yielded about 60 bushels on three acres, and, being on our poorest land, we feel it has well earned a good tojvdrejsing next spring. In plowing under rye for manure we have not met with very good success.
Let me here suggest that it seems Nature has many strong arguments in favor of rotation of crops. When a boy I often wondered why the pines and soft wood trees would erow and flourish so well
other does not require./ It also tails us that wheat and tye should follow a finely cultivated piece of tobacco, which requires potash and the various salts of potash and*the elements of nitrogen and a very small supply of lime. Wheat is a lime crop, taxing only 28 pounds of mineral matter to a growth of 28 bushels to the acre and leaving the land in good condition for grass. Indian corn treated with ashes and superphosphate of lime, followed by rye or oats or wheat, is far better. Let tne roots be enriched by bone and phosphate ofiime,
Money laid out in clover seed for the farmer is always a good investment. Sow it on your wheat and on your rye and oats also on your tobacco land. Keep it growing wherever you can, as it is the Dest substitule for weeds we know of. If the growth is heavy, sprinkle on a little plaster while the dewis on befor^you plow it, and the result is always favorable. As several valuable ingredients of the crops we raise come from the air, keep the land and the plants in good condition to draw from the source.
Rotations of crops depend upon kinds of awil and the crop you Wish to rals6, as well as the past treatment of the land. No system of rotation can be adopted as the oest foi all soils, climates, markets and the home wants. Nor will the most scientific or successful rotation take the
filacedraw
of manure or fertilizers, but pnly lelp out the great possible returns. Should we not always keep in view the great fertility of our soil, and thereby oblige two blades of grass to grow where one grew before?
Chalk and Water iu Milk.
ANOTHER BELIEF SWEPT AWAY.
The daily city papers often call attention to the quality of the milk furnished to city customers. There is abundant reason for doing this, and they not too frequently insist that milk jtnuat be furnished just as it comes from the cow. But tii^ae articles lose much, of their force by implying, indeed some of them directly asserting, that a mixture of chalk and water is served in place of milk. This is absurd the most skilled manipulator can mnke no mixture of any form of blialk that will not be more dense than ordinary milk, from which the chalk will not completely settle, upon standing for a few hours. We doubt if
examined
these
straction
is a placid condition of
things in the S*ra»&^l8ea the wind is light, the sky is cl^rt the water never ragee, and,fcunle8S such a storm aa has been mentioned should disturb the wonted calmness of the sea, the surface, over several
degress
of latitude and lon
gitude. Is covered, as in the day when Columbus saw it, with the weed Sargas» sum, which springs from an apparently inexhaustible source.
No animal of the farm will show signs of neglect as soon as the cow. The coat gets and dirty, and the bones stand out with irregular and peculiar prominenre. On the other hand as a matter of course, good care gives the opposite appearance, and the creature is neat, clean, and plump. There is much In a good supply of wholesome food, but without oecK&onal rabbins and currying it #ill not make a cow look and feel comfortable. It pays to curry the cows.
He who new changed any of hit opinion* new^ cormtsd any of hit
«s aad he who
wha& he reckons
Mm
,vn
We found the old way of allowing such as muddy weeds to fish, land to remain seeded to grass five or
flB\to wI,1J
six years, and often more, all wrong for P^r^, and uiuuy other instances, is most us. Three years is long enough. Laud
remar^a^If
well tilled in this way ought to yield four .asfiurei ly tliose who live bouth tons to the acre every year for three
it matures its seed, many benefits are ^u seasons of the year. When the |os^ dt/neious guava is ripe they are sapid Our mode of rotation applied to 20 seed of the acajou iuijuirts acres of tobacco, was as iollows: As a slight and not disagreeable soupcou of soon as it was cut, we seeded down 5 '®e0"s 8iv.e
twelve oc fifteen acres with about eight flavor butan rorna of cinnamon, cloves, quarts of timotiiy seed to tiieacre. This nnd all berxies give a peculiar quality gave five acres of old land for tobacco,
and twelve or fifteen acres of timothy I parrot which
turf. When the latter was three years old, it was plowed with a double plow, in August. We manured about 30 loads to tiie acre for tobacco, and top-dressed the first fall on the grass one year old. By this course our crop of hay has been doubled.
Corn we rotate with lye for the sake of getting a crop of clover to plow under also because we can raise more corn with compost, of which we have a plenty* Tobacco stalks are very valuable and should be used in rotation about five years apart. All this crop, we find, should be plowed under, if jwssible, when green. Potatoes leave the land in
there
was ever a pint of milk sold in Ne* York city in which chalk was used as an adulteration. In London, milk and other adulterations were carried to such an extent that Parliament had the matter investigated some years ago. Dr. Hassell, who was officially connected with these examinations, and has probably
more samples of milk
than any other person, say# of chalk and
starch in milk, while he admits that they mar be
has
very rarely .used,
substances in milk." Wanklyn, also of
London,
in
in
the
the "Analysis
about the
mpstreoeut work
of Milk," says nothing
occurrence of chalks The
is, the most seriottf
is with water.
B&idtii the addition of
water, milk is impoverished
of
ing off of cream
are the
by
the ab
cream. These
two,
the tak
and putting iu
worst
arid these are bad enough. It diverts attention from these real troubles, to talk about improbable, if not
"chalk ana water."—Amer.
«^HJR«^FR^AN^ HTELTHY P^.^^
other simple plan is to have the children beod over ba&kwazd until they can see the ceiling. This exercise for a few minutes each day will work a wonder-
er
mm
iufebd the
fehildrait
mm-ni-m
S^^sSifsWBs^
About Parrots.'
A noticeable f.ict in relation tothepecu fiar food giving a flavor to the flesh of
ducks acorns to the flesh of
,U1
a
Se, if
a"d
years. The#e remarks as to grass applv delicacy of the flesh varies from to early cut if it is allowed to stand till
RlUsur^
to
psurrpts. We
frequently eat of pairots,
I»ositive rejection during cer-
n0^ onb'
1 are?
ra?re°iV®ri'
bibbers. We had "a parrot which had cwiitracted that habit at the passengers' dinner-tables on board one of thePeninfrnlar and Oriental steamers. He would wjitch the guests retire, and go around "heel-tap" everv dish as dry as any 'servant. The seed of the cotton tree Is the iparrot's especial weakness, and will intoxicate it in the same manner as alcohol does man. Dealers are said to give I parrots alike stimulant previous to showmg them to a customer, as it has the efI feet of making them loquacious. In :-opposition to a contrary notion, parrots '.will and often have been known to breed in captivity in different parts of Europe.
They lay three or four white eggs each time, and incubate .several times a year, sitting from twentv to twentv-five a:
4
to plow it under. We sowed it about the according to the .season. The most cessful results appear to have been attendant upon case# in wiiieh birds have
*«.
ays, sac-
been provided with'nesting places suitable to their habits. In one cose a small barrel was procured and pierced toward a third of its height with a hole about six inches in diameter. In the bottom I was placed a quantity of saw dust three
Inches in thickness. On this the female laid her eggs and sat until they were hatched. Recent works question the fact that parrots breed in domestication, but there exists too many trustworthy
All experiments which have been tried ht Caen and Paris on this interesting Subject have been attended with the most favorable results."
What Makes the Difference? A writer in discoursing upon the way wealth is accumulated, says that as a general rule.it is the result of economy, industry and attention to business. Poverty, oil the contrary, comes from idleness, extravagance and inattention to business. Of course there are numerous exceptions to these g&ueral rulefe, but ,the facts justify the writter in the foliowiug skietcli:
Here are six shoemakers working in one shop, One of thein attends to his business you can hear the music of tyis hammer late and early. He is in love, it may be, with some girl on the next street. He has made up his mind to be a man, to succeed, to make somebody elite happy, to hav£ a home and while
he is working, in his inlaginntion, he can his own fireside ,with the light fallgu^on the faces or wife and child.
The other five gentlemen work as lit-
tie as they can, spend Sunday in dissipation, have the headache Monday, ana as a resiilt, never advance. The industrious 011^, the one in 16,Ve, gains the confidence of his employer, and in a little while cuts out work for these other fellows.
The next thing you know, lie has a shop of his own, tne next store, because tlie man of reputation, the man of known integrity, can buy all he wishes in the TJuited States upon credit
The next thing you know, he is married, and he lias built him a house, and he is happy, aud his dream has been realized.
After a while, the same five shoemakers, having pursued the old course, stand oh the comer some Sunday when he rides by. He has got a carriage, his wife sits by his side, her face covered With smiles, and they have got two children, thenr faces beaming with joy, and tlffe blue ribbons are fluttering in the wind.'
And thereupon these five shoemakers adjourn to. some neighboring saloon and pass a resoMron that' there Van irrepreesibte coriflict between capital labor.
among, the
c* beside
tljat
not happened to ourselves,
"it
to meet
feet
adulteration of mill:
1
water,
that happen to
city milk,
impossible,
AgricuUvrvl.
Help the CfcHflreti Grew Erect. William Blaikie, the author of "How to Git Strong and How to Stay So," spoke before the Brooklyn Teachers' Association I recently on ""Physical Education." "I want, said he. "to see if in an informal talk we can't hit upon some way in which we can bring the physical education of school children down to a radical bftaa. Our cliildren, who are ealthy and buxom when they .begin schooi-work* oome oat pale, sSckly and with round shoulders. If you require the children under you to «t far back on a chair and to hold their chins *ug, you
If a wdQ-^iu^hle^
to super-
and
Observe the Bfirthdays.
Kfcep the birthdays religiously. belong exclusively to,. ag$tfiiret treasp i&rhome
Done
day
tar the) tb 'fkfetfeicj
boots,, are. _donn^4j^
•?sii to-day," ithfi is sc^n "ioiM to. be a maii,* Fat hers, who have half ft abzeh little oitei to car© for are apt to neglect birthdflefB, they come so, often sometimes woen they are busy and sometimes when thfcy are "iierrons." but if they only kiiew how much such, souvenirs arv cherished by the chiWren years aftet, they would never permit any cause to step between them and a parent's priyi»
7
The Hnnan figure.
The proportions of the
htrfoan
figure
are. six times the length the feet. Whether tlie form is slender or ,plump, the rule holds good any deviation
frpm
it is a departure from the higijest beauty in proportion. The Greeks made all their statues according to tliis irule. The face, from tlie highest point. jof the forehead, where the hair trains, to the chin, is one-tenth: of the whole stature^ The band, from the wrist to the midate fingur, is the same. From the,,top of the
tea seventh. tne &ce, from the^roots of the.hair to the cniov be divided into three,equal porta, thefir^t division detinnjnes th$ place, wftcre tlie eyebrows mect. and ih« seiccmd thft nostari^ The l«ojlj^ from the top of the bead, is the disuoce £r»n the ejtreraity of the fingeiw when loe anosare extended.
&B0NNETS
AT ^:ii
of fite
wocM b*
Wholesale and Retail^ Hini&cry dtore Tfce Jargew stoat and lowest prices.
in n-^%rw
wvv/
USSi
PATENTED DECEMBER fl,
S: v*
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The result of fifteen years' experience. Very important for family use, saloon keepers, boarding houses, butchers, groeers, hotels, Railroad cars, ships and vessels, packing houses, brewers, undertakers, dairies, etc. A refrigerator is just as necessary for every family as,a bed.
Drenslcke's Patent Refrigerator The most improved of all. I regulate, the cold air accord!ng.to Ui,e, temperature desired. The air is perfectly dry and pure. As it is well known that zinc is poisonous to the contents of a Refrigerator,' I nave done away with the same —I have no, use for zinc. None but the best quality of yellow poplar lumber is used, and the work is done in the best and most workmanlike manrier. Charcoal packing makes the lumber a dry-rotten. Felt is a noncqqductor of air and preserves the lumber, therefore, I prefer tlie felt, The water is carried off by,a rubber hose which is easily cleaned. The Refrigerator is an ice-saver,
Important to Saloon-Keepers. My Beer coolers are either dry or wet, as m«t be desired. You can keep different articles together without their spoilitog, when in a dry condition. All the ^irork warranted. All Sizes tnrtde to order iy the in venter.
WM. DREUSICKE^
Builder and Caitienter. Manufacturer of Patent Refrigerator, Terre Haute. Ind.
KUNCROWIMUI
UIVCR COMPLAINTS,
WONOERFUb
j***
.-V"*
W"**:
Post ©ffice Snlletm.
Cloalns or the .Walls and (airier Delivery Carriers Le:iw for Mail#
EAST. Delivery. CKw.^
Indianapohs and thro' east TOO am.. 13 (»»£. lndiananolls and stations on
Vandalia Railroad TOO am.. 600am Indianapolis and stations on Vandalia Railroad 11 W a ra.. 9 15 {mt Indianapolis and station? on 7:'tos ro..?-2{Xhni(3& 1. & St fllfcl rm.. 4SW Eastern Indiana. Chicag*? and •NTorthern Illinois............! 1 30 a ro Eastern Kentucky 4 £0 Indiauapolte and ihro' .... Indianapolis and stations on
Vandalia Railroad Iowa, Michigan. Minnesota and W isconsln
St. Louis and thro* west Junctions on Vandalia RR. and
Southern Illinoi St. Louis and thro' west. St, Ivonis «nd stations on Vandalia Railroad St. Louis and stations on I. &
Midland Railroad Stations on Toledo, Wabash 4t Western RR. west of Danville
4 ra.. a 15 yv«r
4 20 pm.. S 15pcms
WEST.
Wa ra..l2WBCH9c
t) a m..l2CO»K^ 4"» m. .lfiOOrwi
4 A1 m.. 0 S' a,
St. L.RR 4^ptn..l(lS0ai» St. Lonis and thro' west 4 00 pn»., 3 ist on Marshall and stations south on the Danville VincvnnesUR.il 30 am.. S 15 pa» Peoria and stations on Illinois
K» a m.. 6 CV a:
CO a m. .10 00 \u
NORTH.
Chicago, 111. (thnv j«»uch).... Danville and stations on E. T. 11. & C.*RK Iowa, Minnesota. Wisconsin and Northern Illinois Chicago, Iowa. Michigan.)
X) a m. .ly
Stations on Indianapolis, Decatur & Springfield 1?R Stations on Toledo. Wabash &
Western RR.. cast Danville. Northern Ohio. Northern Indiana, Michigan and Canada...
T. II. RR
Evansville and stations on E. A T. H. RR Southern Illinois and Western
i»? a m.. t\
X) a m.. 10 0 .)
Minnesota.'Wisconsin ami Northern Illinois, ...... ". Losansport and stations on T.
m. i^..,
H. fc Logansiort RR 4 Klii
T. II. it. S. E. RR 4 30 pin HACK LINES. PrairictonJ'rairie Creek.Grays ville and Fnirbanks,Tuesday.
iEC
S 4*
m.. .6 0.» a it
iX) a in.. 6 a Or
a m.,10 i.k. prs.
a m. .10 O) pm
SOl/TII.
Eviansville. Viricennes and Priucelou Fort Branch and Sullivan ithro" pouches) 'ansville. and stations on E. &
#.• a n»..l?tW.T-a*'
(W a in.. li 00
7W am.. 12(Wtod?
4 iiO m.. 3 SO pre.
pm.'
Kentucky *4 20 m.. Southern Illinois and Western Kentucky T-X)a in..V.'ix'tmlS Worthlngton and stations on
uutO
fl 00 a
Thursday and Saturday TOO am.. 7 00 he. Nelson, Ind., Tnesdayand Saturday...., 4 30 pm.. 100 pot
The city is divided into seven Carrier District** as follows: FIRST DISTRICT—Fred Tyler. Carrier.
North side of Main street, between 5th and Ttifc streets north from Main to city limits, includia®i to the alley between 7th and 8th and to the all«2 between 4th and 5th streets: also. 8th, Oth atwK 10th streets, north of 3d avenue.
SECOND DISTRICT—John Knppenheimer, Carries,? Thii south side of Main street, between 5th atOk' 6th, and all terrilory between 4th and streetasouth to the city limits, including to ti.t alley h«tween 8d and 4t.h streets and to the alley !etwe«r 6i4 ind 7th streets alBO 7th utrect south of Ihtm-, Ing to city limits.
THIRD DISTRICT—James Johnson, Carrior. The south side of Main street, from the river to. 5tli street, and h11 territory west of the alley between 3d and 4th str«ets south to city limit#,.
FOURTII DISTRICT—Frank Sibley, Carrier. The north side of Main street, from the rivertw 6 a a it a tween 4th and 5th streets, and north to the olfs®» limits.
FIFTH DISTRICT--Frank M. Mills, Carrier. The north side of Main street, from 7th lo Mfcv old canal, between Oth aud 10th streets, and i£p territory from the alley between 7th and 8th streafc? cast to the Vandalia RR., north to 8d avenue, asnft. all territory north of the Vandolia RR., east 10th street to city limits.
SIXTH DISTRICT—John R. Byers, Carrier.. The south side of Main, between Oth and' TlW,/ streets, from the alley between 0^4 and 7th strcotay cast to the old canal, south to Doming, and all t«vj ritoryeast on Poplar street and smith to city limits^, 8EVENTII DisTmcT—Lo'uls Baganz, jr., Carriwt
South side of Main street from 7th east toclt* limits, Including the north side of Main, eaet* *SP'' old canal bed, ty city limits, and all territory vrmaF from Ninth street, cast to city limits from Pop street on the south to the Vandalia RR. track the north.
Wnv. 8. McClaln, Auxiliary Carrier, whose duSsp.It is to make extra collect ion and delivery triph. REGULATIONS.
The mall collected from street loiterboxe« «t». Main street7rom 1st to 18th streets, north on 4tt& Cherry, south on 4th to Walnnt and south on 2*$ to Poplar, and Ohio street between 1st and St!^, evofy week day between 8.80 and9.80am, bcfw**» 9:80 and 10:80 a m. between 12:30 and 2:00 P»yt. [this collection includes to Poplar street on tfc&v south, and ea«t to iyth,and north to Union Depot!:? between 2:80 and 3:80 m. between 4:80 pm, and between 8:00 and O-OOpm. All oth«j^ boxes are collected from twice per day, betweoak} the hours of 8:00 and 10:00 a in and between 4Jm* and 7:80 m.
There are1fonr deliveries of mat' per day la KM* business part of the city: at 7:0G aid llTSO-a.M^' 2:00 and 4:20 also a delivery at 8:06 m. to such business houses as deftire It, whowi)*place of business is located between 3d anL7lSi streets and not more than one square from.M*Jt»».„
On Snnday, the Popt Office it {open from 9 o'clock a m. aod persons desiring their mall ante, call at the window designated by the number their carrier.
Sunday collections ovci the entire city is between 4:30 and 5:80 m, and again in tho 1OA ncss part of the city between 8 and 9 o'clock
Receiving boxes hatfe beftn placed on every ew nerof Main str4«l.U«nabl« pcrnw^reslding utmof It to avail themselve's of the frequent collection made thereon vllfi *cry «hort walle
The attention of the ptibli dictan^e mtft carrier' ttee living 4 dittance requesten to place box«* in tneir front aoci ces as will l^llii
Carriers arehati for an &nrw<
bell, a^d after wttUing that long atid receivl answer, he mart retain the mail until tfteoe: IWfcrjr. Carrriere art obliged to be prowpt, do their work quickly bntnnder no cir&i tobelmpoJlt* di»courteous,and anrsufh be' Imfn^difttely repo/tcH to,the Pout Master, sool owning arc warned that nn? them tied miring the day. carriers w: their nail, but tbev will obliged omce. N. Fn.axcK. P. X.. 5-9-
JES8E R0B£RT«0S & CO-
Are Now Owners of the
ODORLESS 3XACHIKK| I .$ Any p*T*mt wanting vaults cleaned CftS- Mtih accfnnodated \ij leaviag orders at
225 south side public square, or at Hifi berg's cisjar store No. 019 Main street 1/
Li RESSNER
Palace' of' Mu
213 OHIO STREET,
TERRE HAUTE,r IND
OMe«t xaotfe hot/4: !c vr^urrp IWfiacSt Always the Jar£ej«l «icf hasd turpi t» city, tlfjidi in.' orgart ti'sted ao rent pay for Uscm.
BKIGOS*
Produee' and CommisslsE::^
MERCHANT,
Ooroer
Pqorlh
and
Cherry
str«rt»
TERRjS HAUTE. DfDIAXA-
