Daily News, Volume 2, Number 136, Franklin, Johnson County, 27 January 1881 — Page 2
STTBSCTMIIBE
—FOR T»B—
DAILY NEWS
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THE .LARGEST ANJI
E S A E
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II
The Tern- Haate NEW* published every af tcnioon, cxcept Sunday, at the office, corner of Fifth ajutMsJn streets.
Price-fire cent# per copy. Barred by carrier* in any part of the city, ten ccnts per week. By mail. postage prepaid, forty-five centa a month epbscription by the yew, #6.00, s,
Advertisements, ten cent* a line
THIC President has nominated Stanley Mathews Ansoofote JiiWtco oft he United States Supreme Court. Vice-Justice Swayne resigned. unJiLUi-.i.,. mm mi I ...
Tim House CbmmtUoo on Torritories i!: cidwl to report adversely Delegate B^nfcgtt'fiilll to (levide Dftkoftfsand admit the Boutbeni portion aa a8t?044 JU
BASTRKN tnerchanrs and shippers arc urging this Government to. use its influence to bring about a'settlement of the difficulty between Chili and Peru.
A UKitiwfi rfoaj&foh no* Ulm *&andard gays. Germany has semi-officially cau-
f|FWUIEL^V3ION
med Italy I'gairfat allow)ng a jneetljg ih llfofcoricurrea^of J|np^altr d»|FTRI{A^Jj| jyj
II- I
TIIK 86ntitb iiM confirmed Joseph W. Burke to be Collector of Customs at llofcitej'Uioliolns II.. Owings, Secretary for Washington Territory, and Edmund P. Smith, of Indiana, to be Consular Agent at Carthagena.
THK
Cologne Qatette publishes a letter
from Menotti Garibaldi, accepting the. presidency of Mw Trieste Committee of Action, and declaring it is the duty of ev-
It a a
Rii ii
4
each inser
tion. Display advertisement* vary price ac cording to time and position. Ko Advertisements inserted aa editorial newt matter. ,.
All ccttnrannicati^ns should hje adidrfsstf EMOJRYP JtEAUCflAiMF,
DAILY
THURSDAY: .TAKUAHY 27. ISSI. VFiH Wv? recruits to tbe Fifth Cavafry nave been ordered to Omaha.
TTIE Internal revenue, receipts of the Government yesterday were $2S4r153.77. Custom receipts 549,142.89.
0
cAusc of Trent and Trieste. gCySBSBKfftSBWHP'S TUB Commissioner of Pensions has •written a letter to the Chairman of the 8ena|« Committeepn Appropriation, In whlcJj ne estimiulis that more thau faOO,000,000 will be required tot»y All claims under the Arrearages of Pensions Act, ttBWHffffSSBfTS'SiCSSSSBCBHBSKWWffSfiS
EXTKXSIVK burglaries are going on in Chicago. Yesterday •er#ting millinery establishment was robbed to the amount of |?00 before dark, Something is wrong in tin- police organisations up there. Such a thing could not occur down here, under Torre Hauto's very efficient force.
IT it understood that Special CommiVr tee appointed by the House to investigate abuses of the frtvnklag privilege during the last Presidential canvass wul report that "the evidence has disclosed carelessness or looseness in the use of the privilege by .both parties.
1
It tali mated
lhat thi Committee may rec«mm*nd the abolition of the franking privilege* •».... UW.JJ. llowKt.i, E. Jackson was elected Senator from the State of Tennessee yesterday on the thirteenth ballot*. Ins, his speech be said that "he would endeavor to repre sent not merely the interests of that great commonwealth' b\»t the whole country, to allow sectional animosity to break
»tuv, and aliav this alarm of sectional aglutiow. ,t
•"SrKAKV^W of Mr. BWnifAd the Cabi net, Senator-elect Hale told a New York reporter that he had neither area nor heard from General Garfield, but was generally understood in Maine that the LecMatutv of that State would he railed topon lo fiil Mr. Blaine's seat in the Senate about the time the new Cabinet was sworn
From the general run ot tldnfs. it is HKttt probable that Senator Blain fHI be tendered a position in General Garfield's Cabinet, and. Indeed, it would be lilt justice from Garfield to Blaine mfier what occurred at Chicago. It i* a -well established faet, ibat the Blaine faction, after the break of the tndiana deleSiti^n. wheeled in line and nominated arfield, and it would be but jusHce to Bl»ine. that he receive the proper recog jaition The question recurs however, tfupon Blaln^ accepting any cabinet poai lion, within the jfift of *i» administrate.
Mr Blaine to peculiariyfiitted for a leg• festive bodv, and we doubt veqr much •whether the Senator wo«ld «are to ebange his pm»nt position for a place in Garfield's cabinet.
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11111 1
.SO-TES ASP
The Indians still "Continue to^v^r frontiersmei. M' The minj^^mlte ro ||linitv 6if London|^ded4 -J
General Asahel Gredley. a millionaire ef Bloomtngton, Ills., is dead.
Brooklyn, New York, is alarmed by the apppamnce in jtbat d\j» small pox A despatch from Buenos Ayres savs: Two regiments of Chilians hatfe been alsbanded.
It ia said that the
ex-Emprtss
Eugenic
is writing the life of Napoleon III. and of the Prince imp^ll. Small pox is spreading to an alarming extent in Chicago. Ten new cases were reported yesterday,
T% fcliafa<f (be l|te A4 Soth&rn, were inUrrad ^Soldbaibptop. Thft au-
A Justice of the Peace in Somerset Ky., Was shot yesterday while trying to settle a fight between two barbarous youths.
Dispatches from all parts of the country. chronicle a startling number of accidents, caused by the icy pavements and streets.
A dispatch from Calcutfti to the Time* says:—"The Government press at Simla has been destroyed by fire. The damage is £80,000."
Parental objections to marriage and interference in love affairs, last Monday, led to a fatal fight between a wife's brother and her husband.
A Justice of the Peace was murdered yesterday in Memphir br sonte-unktrowtr parties. His skull was crushed in with a hammer, which was found by bis side.
An infatuated member of' the Womeu's Christian union, fell in love with a prisoner in the Nashville, Tenii. JftJ, while on a charitable mission, and has married liim.
A Constantinople despatch to the N, ,Y Time# savs:—"There is reason to believe lhat the rortq is disposed to admit Greece to the proposed conference at Constantinople."
ni
',n
News from Rome brings, word that the Pope and Cardinal Jacobinii Patal Secretary of State, strongly faror a conciliatory policy on the part of the Church towardrBeJgtwtt.f'-^ t, ..-tt
A thaw hasf set .'in" an#
!'tlie'ice'In
ffib
Thames is dissafepeartiig rapidly. If ,tbe thaw continues Hanlan will practise.oil tl»e Thames for his sculling taatch with LaVcock. which has been postponed to February 14.
The Chilian and Argentine Minister^', of Foreign Affairs have expressed the (.'Uef that peace between the two couhtfics .will be maintained. A complete understanding exists between them, and the treaty is expected to be signed when Congress m'cts.
A telegram from Chili says that Lima surrendered unconditionally after Chorlllos, Barraca and Miraflotesnad been taken and destroj'ed with great slaughter It is •officially announced that Callao has c**pitttlated. The capital is entirely deserted. #.
A dlspntfch from Ldndon, to the N-" Y. Herald, states that:—In the Houste" of Commons this afternoon Sir Ghntlfes Dilke, Under Foreign Secretary, replying to.R question, stated that some techhlbftT difficulty had arisen respecting the itttifi cation of the treaty for the surfiressiow ff the slaf© trade ori'the part of Turkey/ lalormitUon !from,%ilrhinftonM '"'^C., says: Snow^h^s been falling here •^iticc last night, and at 6 this eVenlng w^ still falliug rapidly. The fetyeets are thickly covered, and unl^SSS tke wekthe^ moderates there will, be good slfefghln^' to-mbr'-rpw. The Whole"city is excitea oter the tart'spcct^de arid a litVge numbet* of 4adftsarc in the street^ engaged in snow b""ih«' I.,:, kn lie Creaim Trttfti tt Nantutket,^1
BUKDBTTK, of the Burlington
Hawk-!
*y«, tolls bovr tbo scaroi^ of young men| works for evil at Naotnckat: 'One avoning. I don't remember when, 1 intfodue&t yotmgfriend of mine, and he is vary voting and bashful, Mr. Julian C. Elginbrod of Buffalo, to young lad)* acquaintance. After a few: momenta of society chattel* he suggested the ioe-oream salooeu Then she arose and introduced him to her two sc hoolgirl friends, her mother, the uiotber of one her friends, and aa aunt who was visiting theml Then the aunt introduced hira to.her older sister and »n old lady who wiws not a relative, they explained, but was as dear to them as though she WHS their own mother. Then they ail said in a general sort of a way. 'Well, aro you all ready?' aud answered themselves in the ailii'mative, as they slowly followed the horrorstricken young man to the door, and the procession filed down street toward the io*t-cf«aai saloon, stopping on the way home at a house to pick up the old SadYs daughter, and calling at a store for the twin co mint of oneof the aunts— beautiful girls they wore—from Springs Held, I watched the column when, it swutig by 'fount, right into line* in front of the ice-cream saloon, where itformed tiko a line of men, at a tiok«t offlrn. the old lady smilitjgiy and patiently bringing up the rear, standing under the flickering «u»light and the steadfast stars, awaiting her chance at the frozen ptodditig. It was far, far in the summer night whtm JuHan Elginbrod return to the 'hotel, and when I looked oat of the "window and saw his pal lid face anil glittering' eyes, and noted the dub in ortte hand' &nd the revolver in the other, and heard him mention mv jiame and ask the night clork what was the number of my itKtm, I feared that he might feel harshly toward me, *nd I barricaded the door of mf room with the lounge, the bedstead. the stove and the trunk, just before he came banging apinst it. He nlept in the hall that night, across my threshold, and I only escaped the next afternoon, when the landlord, awwwy of his incessant pounding of my door panels with his dub, had him arrested as a dangvroas lunatic.
"""r
—House plants will upt thrive with* "out fresh air. When the weather is not extraordinarily cold the upper sash of th* window may be opened, and the window gartteia will feel the benefit.
To voung toooseiteepers we would say thai in cooking it i* far bett^ to hare a few, wy fe"» dishes detieafceij and oasefaHy pt*pared than to provide nor*
ALL SORTS.
Iff San Dle^o, Tex., a colored girl fifteen yeaiK old committed suicide with a rsvolv«r because her father whipped her tojprevent a marriage of whien he ^iisapj^oved.
A CRKSOS enumerator In Washington County, Peon., reports afamilyin which there are four children who have not been assigned given names. The oldest of the four is aged eleven years.
Tit* census enumcr&torslhjWflghout Virginia found numbers of negroes (ac cordin# to the negroes' aoooant) from one to two hundred years bid, but no| A boy of twelve, wit& white person above the age of ninety-' -swrong.^ _am eight. j*
BBOOKLTN takes a dog oensofi every year. Last year it had 7,616 dogs. This yeac* there' are 10,232, canines ift thf city.\| A t^x ol tJoCleAch dog poseqf. Brooklyn seems to beth py land iof Cat^ne.'i
UNE of the dangers incidental to bathing is that of diving into shallow water. Recently a boy pltinged into water which was only three feet in depth, his head striking the bottom. The result was immediately fatal, as the concussion produced a fracture of the spinal column. 'U O -^T:-
THK "baby stare" is considered pretty for young girls tiow. It is done by opening the eyes as wide as possible without raising the brows, and slightly turning the oorners of the mouth upward. Saying •'mouse" five*, or six times gives the right position to the lips.
TH« bnrnt body of a woman in a. deep and narrow grave of prehistory times, was recently excavated in Berkshire, England. The bones were perfectly free from any admixture of earth' or charcoal, and beautifully white in color. No implement, ornament or pottery had been buried with the body.
A SWEDISH colony was located ih an Aroostook township of Maine ten yea^s ago. New Sweden is now prosperous, with five hundred and seventeen souls, who have kopt themselves wonderfully Jike what) they were in the old country: except that they fare far better. They are about to celebrate the tenth anniversary of their arrival with a speech by the Governor and several days of festivity 'i
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A SWINDLES has been selling to residents of the lower Pennsylvania counties boxes of what he called, electric light, They contained simply colored borax, which he declared was extract of eleotrioitv and would last a hundred psars. The secret of how to use it WAS to be imparted when ten purchasers, a ten dollars each, had been obtained in the town.
AKKBICAstarted with the civilization! of a higixly civilized age. She did not. rear her own civilization on her own! soil. She started with prosperity, and I the first use she makes of her prosperity is not to cultivate the fine arts in her own people, but to laugh at them in others. Up to now only one class of transatlantic writers have challenged the attention of Europe, and that was! humorous And profane, Emerson, Bry-j ant, Ccoper, Poe, Lowell, Holmes audi Irving ate merely Europeans born in America. ButHarte, Twain andBreiVmann are ^, original and American Amerioa is undoubtedly the t- literary promise-land of the future. It hasdone nothing up to this. Its oondition has forbidden it to achieve anything, but great triumphs may be anticipated from it.—Tiri4ley',8
Magazine.
tS*$ H' i'. i-l Soxn of tho#6 authenticated pre^ sentiments of death are very strange sayB theNew York Hour. A lady roiratng in*
Cheltenham, England, had two
sons,one in the navy aud stationed in the West ItfawSftftlFbtB^ ifi the army at the Cape. One {days Ihemother received a letter from the soldier asking anxiously after his brother. The mother wrote sack that his last letter gave a capital aocount of hitaa. Shortly afterwards two letters arrived simultanfeomly —one from the son at the Cape, saying thathe was delighted nt hearing' good news 6f Charley, as be had been frightened by a dream, in which he saw' him lying drowned at the bottom of deep blue water thfe other contained the neWs of? Charley's death. He had been drown-1 ed while bathing in water so clear thatj they could see nis body lying at the bottom.
»Hollering*' to a Big Help.*
THEY were holding.an out-door wardl meeting the other night, and a speaker] had just commenced to warm up to hiai work, when a stranger with all hist worldly duds" in an old sheep-skin on his "back, boots gone, hat going and a dyed-ln-the-wool tramp air about him, halted on the outskirts of the crowd. The speech soon caught him, and he began to applaud. At the end of every sentence he clapped his hands and' roared like a fog-horn. No matter, whether the speaker hit 'em" or not,the stranger never failed to come down with the applause, and he carried a good share of the crowd with him. After toe speaker had finished, and while he was wiping his heated brow, the tramp approached him and said:
That'ere speech was one ot tfcte
b«st 1 ever heard in all my life. Ah? Tm glad it pleased you.1* "Pleased me! Why, it lifted right oft'n my feet! I tell you. you're bom orator, aud iust wish 1 could stay In this town and hear you make speech eVen night."
me
Yea, I wish yon could." But I can't. I am on my wsy West. I shall, however, think of your speech'a hundred times a day. I can feel the electricity of it set, aud~-«ay, can't you lead me half a dollar to help me our* "Why, I don't know you. Why should 1 lead you half a dollarr' ••Oh. ooue now —don't try to ride any high horse over me. You know how loud-1 hollered, aad you know as well as I do that if 1 hadn't pat in my best licks yoa'd hare fallen as fiat as shingle! Yon area great orator, sir, and that was a great speech, but if you don't know that hollering ia what does the business, you'd better hang right «P»"- .*«.
The ottitor pondered over the luftter for ai few seconds, and then probably concluded tint the Mttd,aak« piuesd over the 2Mrt&Fnt*
TW08C0BS AND TEN.
ACROSS
the sleepy, sun-barred atmosphere Of the pew-checkered, square old moating* house, Through the high window, I could see and he«*
The far crows cawing In the forest boughs. The earnest preacaer talked of Youth and ^iJ^^tibook,^rfe»eelin«s«reaittiJMr last Each word a moment, every year a page.
Till^leaf-by leaf, «j* quickly tup |he last., Eren while he spoke, the sunshine's witness rropt
By many a fair and many a rrizzled head. Borne droopinjr heavily, as If they slept, Qver the unspelled minutes sped. fancies fmh and
Who found the text no cushion of repose. Who deemed the shortest sermon far too lon& My thought* were In the tree-to pa with the crows upon the back lirfg*in tikeitbreb^B blue trota thoir da*jslin|r track id hiffh-backed
white cl he recall the old
eager childhood, as It turns the leaf. How long and bright the unread page appessrsl r.i But to the aged, looking back, how brief—
How brief the tale of half a hundred years!
Over the drowsy pews the preacher's word Resounded, as ne paused to wipe his brows: I seem to hear it now, as then I bfeard,
Re-echoing In theJioliow meeting-house.
"Our youth Is gone, and thick and thicker come The hoary years, lfce teirfpest-drlven snows: Flies fast, tliesast, life's wasting pendulum,
And ever faster as it shorter grows.
My mates sat Pondering wearily the while Hx)w long before his "Lastly" would eome In, Or glancing at the girls across the aisle.
How strangely, wandering here beside the sea, Tne voice of crows in yonder forest boughs,' A cloud, Sabbnth bell, bring back to me
That morning in the gaunt old jaeetinghouse 1
And oasis amid the desert years. That golden Sunaav smiles as then 6miled:. I see the venerated head through tears
I see myself, thit tar-off wondering child 1?
Hie pews, the preacher and the. Whitewashed wall.,., An imaged book, with careless ohildren turning Its awful pages^Tretnember all
My vqry thoughts, the questioning and yearning
The haunting faith, the shadowy superstition That I was somehow chosen, the special care Of Powers that led me through life change* ful vision.
Spirits and Influences of earth.and air. In curious pity of myself grown wisa» vtI think what then I wa#und dared to hope, And how my*b^ (U.'h!ev«hi eawmirize
The boj.. brave dream and happy horoftcopft To *ee the future flushed with morning fire,
Rosy with banners, bright with beckoning
Not In rewards, but In blessing lies,
The gained In dafiy duties done,
4
I.
•tr
Or In some distant, corner playing pin.
But in that moment to1my inward eyes A sudden window opened, and 1 caught Through dazzling rifts a glimpse of other
IKiG9«
Thedixzy.^seps, the blue abyss of thought. Beside me sal my father, grave and gray, And old, so old, at trwoseore years aud ten I I saidv will remember him this day,
When I am fifty, if I live till hen.
I will .remember all I see and hear, My very thoughts, and how life seems to
This Sunday morning in my. thirteenth venrr— How will.it seem vfhen I am old as he?
What is the work that I shall rind to do? Shuil 1 be worthy of his honored name? Poor and obscure? or will my dream corae true,
My secret dream of happiness and fame?
Ah me, the years betwixt that hour and this! The ancient meeting^hotiSo has passed away, And in its place a modern cdiilce
In^ ites the well-dressed worshiper to-day.
With it have passed the well-remembere
The old'are gone, the boys are gray-haired men They, too, ar& scattered, strangers fill their placcis
Ana here am I at twosoore years and ten!
desireoars.
Fresh^e^s1ln^iti^*courage,and de This is th» iiory or our youthful
To feel the pettiness of prize* won. With all our vast ambition to behold go much attempted and so little done—
This Is the bitterness of growing ola.
Yet' why jtepine? more For .triumphs which, sw'eer,'
Though soon we care no
till won, appear BO
Hiey serve their use,'as'toys held out before UeguUed ourlriftmcy totry 1ts feet..
the strength ^o strive, aha 'hew experience
That Love and Thougl tertalned.
Bo not in vain the struggle, though tho prize Awaiting me wu» other thap it seemed. My-feet have missed the paths of Paradise,
Yet life is even more blessed than deemC?.
Riches I never sought, and have not found. And Fame has passed me with averted eyeIn creeke and bays my quiet voyage is bound,
While the great world without goes surging bJT. No withering envy of another's lot,
Nor nightmare of Contention, plagues my restt For mo alike what is and what is not.
Both what 1 have and what 1 lack aro beet.
A flower more sacred hart far^eert success Perfumes my solitary path 1 find Bweet compensation in my humbleness.
And reap tile harvest of a tranquil mind.
I keep some portion of my early dream: Brokenly bright, like moonbeuns on a rtv It lights my life, afar elusive gleam.
Move* as I meve. and leads me on forever.
Our earliest longings prophesy the man, Our fullest wisdom stilt HfoM* the child And in my life 1 trace that larg.?r plan
Whereby at last all thine* are. eoonciled. The storm^clad years, the years that bowl and hasten.
The world, where simple faith soon grows
Toil, passion, loss, all things that mold and chasten, Still leave the Inmost part of us unchanged,
name I bear,, lue pew, bore.
Wondering and «udng out into the blue
And marvel at this sober, gray-batred man lam or seem. How changed my days, bow (time The wllhJ, swift hopes with wbteb my you"* began! Yet In my inmost self I am the same. The drearajrsoul, too sensitive and sbf.
The broodiiur tenderneM for bird and flower* The old. otd vrt.r.ier at the earth and sky. And sense of guidance by an Unse«Jti Pow(ifiM, fl* $4*
These keep ptrpetuaJ childhood in my heart. The pean of age. Unit looked so bare and cold,' Hinm peaks aad I are stltt as far apart
AS tn the years wtten fifty fwmw so oM. 'Atfe. that appeared far off a rum at rest, Recedes as I advanea: the fount »f joyE(se perennial in my gntefni tireast
And still at fifty 1 aaa but a b»?y, —J. T. Tntv#rvioe~ ifiosllf
A ooKaKsroxDEyr of the Ohio Farmsays that he has found by experience that six Gotswold sheep will not conflostt more food than a eow. and sure more profitable. For a lamb of this breed, weighing 126 pounds, 95.50 is obtained. He es^matee
that
six ewes
will prodoee eight lambs per sonata Kjr yMadi of wooL
:h
Sweepingv
n-v ftiixriwfci
im
-:V
ft
Reduction
IN PRICES OF
OVERCOATS,
/I
-AT-
OWEN, PIX1EY, & CO'S
Wholesale Manufacturers,
508 and 510 Main St.
.Ml
TERRE HAUTE, UsD.
KATZENBACH & GO.
Have just opened anew
"VYHOT iES ALE
HIOTJSE,
21S Soutli Fourth Street.
WE KEEP A FULL STOCK OF,
CALIFORNIA, and
IMPORTED WINES
BRANDIES,
AND rt
ALSO FISE WHISKIES AKD FANCY
LIQUORS. 'A
Our Sour Wines embrace Ber-
ger, Riesling, Tramlner and Gut-
edei
u.i
kept alive.,, are housed and OD-(
Our Sweet Wines Angelica,
Muscat, Madura, Port and Sher
ry and our Red Wines, Zanfan-
del, and Chateau Margaux.
We are prepared to deliver
Wines and Liquors to the Trade
and private families in any quan
tity and by the case free of
charge.
Gentle "Women
Who Wtfot glossy, luxuriant and wary tresses of abunoant, beaiitifal Hair mast use LYON'S KATHAHtON. This elegant, cheap article d*iW makes the Hair grow freely* and fkst, keeps ft from out, arrests and caresjgray^ ness, removes dandnuT and^ itching, makes the Hair strong, gtrte it enriing tendScy a«T keeping it tor any derired pofdtton. Beanttftl. healthy Hair is the sure result of ifflta^Kattiairon.
OPIUM SRIV&FLSFFIIISFFISS
ee atiiMimr GUKED two
Post ©fficc Bcilctij
OMU«sftle KailtaaSCuTlt Caif Lea*
KAST. Delirt
ladiuiBpelis aad thro' esst... 7 00 a% Indianapolis and etatiors on Vandalia Railroad...........^7 60 a Indianxpolia acd stations on
Vandalia Railroad.^ 11 30 Indianapolis and sutions on 1 7^0)ti I. A St. L... [1190|| Eastern Indlaniu Chicage ana f'
Northern Illinois 11 SO Eastern Kentucky 4S0P iiarrans^siM os«r«*it:r.: 4 201
Northern Illinois Eastern Kentucky Ti^TabaljSirp-inSI Indianapolis and stations on
Vandalia Railroad Iowa. Michigan, Minnesota and Wisconsin 4 2ft tl
WEST.
St. Lonis and thro' west, Junctions on Vandalia RR and Southern Illinoi St. Lonis and thro' west St Louis and stations on VandaHa Rai5roid, .i...^, St. Louis and stations on 1. fc
St. L.RR
HEAVY SUITS,
St Lonis and thro' west 4 SO pi Marshall snd stations south on tiaDanriyiA.Viatensie8RH.il 3D stoij Pednaiand srtitip|s 04 Illinois ii fi
Midland- Rj5lnad-V.h a-ta Stations on Toledo, Wabash & Western RR. west of Danvlllc ..' TOOa'nyE -r KORTH. rrS CiiicagoVl'i- (thro* fxtuchy.. 7 W Danville and stations on E. T.
H. AC.RR 7 00 a m.^ Iovra, MinHeeota. Wisconsin and Northern Illinois....... TOOa Chicago, Iowa, Michigau,
Minnesota. Wiseonsia and 115ft.' a in. NortliernIllinois 700am. Loean sport and stations on.T. 11. & Logansport RR 4 20 m.. Stations oulndiai«tt«Hs.Decitnr A Springfield liR 7 00ai Stations on Toledo, Wabash &
Western RIi„ east Danville. 7 00 a Northern Ohio, I^rertheru Indiana, Michigan ami Canada... 7 W) a
SOUTH.
Evan syi lie, Vin enncs ^nd Princeton !... 7 00 a m. .| Fort Branch and Sullivan(thro ponchcs) 7 00 a ni. Svansxillc and stations on E. &
T. II. ltK,...,.—,...... 7 00am..il Evansyille and? staUousion K..f Jt T. II. RR... 4 SO pin.. Southern Illinois and Western
Kentucky 4 SO m.. Southern Illinois alid Western Kentucky 7 00 m.. Worthington and stations on
T. U. &. S. K. Rtt 4 SO pm.. HACK LINKS. r'rairieton.Prairie Creek,Grays villo aud Fairbankf.Tuesday,!
Thursday and Saiufdayi... 7 00a in'l Xelsoa. Ind., Tuesday and Saturday ...y 4 30 pm..
The city is diviofeft in^A setter, furrier I. as follows: FIRST DisTnici*—Friftd Trier, Carrier.
North side of Main street, between fit streets north from Main to city limits, to the allev between 7th and 8th and to between 4th and 5th streets also, 8th, 10th streets, north of 8d avenue.
SECOND ISTHICT—John Ku ppen he in The south.sidc 9t Maiii |treet. bjjtwee* olh. and all territory between 4th and C! fouth to the. city limits, including to tLitween, 3d and 4th streeta and to the alley OH and 7th streets also 7th street south ing to city limits.
THIHH DISTRICT—James Johnson, Cnrr The south side of Main street, from th 5th street, and all territory west Of the .IWeen 3d and 4thitreots south to city liiui!
FoURTn DisTmcT—Frank Sibley, Carrier Tho north side of Main stroet, from the 5th street, snd aM territory west, of the al tween 4th and 5th streets, and north to tl! limits.
FIFTH DISTBKT -uPrsnh M. Mills, Carri. The north side of Main street, from 7ti old canal, between 9th and loth streets, territory from the alley between 7th niul 8th cast to the Vandhlia UK., north to 3d aveh all territory north of tho Vandolla UR., 10th street to city limits.
SIXTU DISTRICT—John R. Byers, Carrier, I The south side of Mslu, between 0th streets,.from the alley betwoonSH andTth sf east to the old canal, sontiti to Denning, and tl ritoryeast on Poplar street and south to city if
SKVKNTII DISTRIOT—Louie Bagans, Jr., Cil South side of Main street from 7th east limits, including tho hhrth Side of Main, old canal bed to city limits, and all territo from Ninth street, east to city limits from street on the south to the Vandalia RR. trai tho north.
I
Wm, S. McClain, Auxiliary Carrier, whos» It 1s to woke extrtt collection and delivery RBODLATIOMS.
The mall is collected from street letterbox' Main street from 1st to 18th streets, north on', Cherry, south "On 4th to Walnut and south to Poplar, and Ohio street between 1st an every weeXdfty hetwcen6.80 and 9.30 ft in. bet 9:80 an3 lOTsu m, between 12:») and8:(V) [this collection incindes to Poplar street «onth, and enet'to 13th, and north Unioh between S:80 and 3:30 m, between 4:90 an: jm .snd between ~8:00 and 9*00 m. AIM boxes are collected- from twice per day, bctw the hours of 8.-00 ahd 10:f)0 am and betweern| and7:8ppru. rT
There are four deltvuHci mat' per day ia business pnrtof the city:) at 7:00 and 11:30 2:00 and 4:80 also a 'delivery at fe m. to such business houses as desire it,# place of business Is located between 8d a*"»M streets and not more than one square from
On Sunday, the Post Office Is (open from 9 o'clock a ia, and persons' desiring their mull call at the window designated by the numtv their carrier.
Sunday collodions ovci the entire city Is d| between 4:30 and 5:30 m, and again In the ness part of the city betweeh 8 atid 9 o'clock*
Receiving boxes have been placed on every® ner of Main street to enable perenns residing9 it to avail themselves of the frequent collec® made thereon with a very shsrt walk.
Xhe attention of the public is called to the im distance each carrier Is obliged to walk, and* ties living a distance back in yards arc amr* requt'Stea to place boxes In their front doors o^ such other convenient places as will facHlt&Vcgtv prompt delivery of mail. Carriers arpnotaift# to Walt longer than 30 seconds for an answer In belt and after waiting that long and rucelvinjf answer, he must reiain the mail until we next livery. Carriers arc Obliged to be prompt, am do their work quickly, hut under no clretrmstanl to be impolite or discourteous, and anvsnch sho be immediately reported to the Post Master. sons owning dogs are warned that unless their them tied during the day. carriers
luring the day.
their mail, but they will be obliged office. N FILBKCK\cinowtowill
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