Daily News, Volume 2, Number 137, Franklin, Johnson County, 28 January 1881 — Page 2
STJBSOR/IBEI
-FOR THE
BAII^Y News
FOR THE MONEY
rum ii in mis.
The Tern* Hante
KKW»
JOHNSON M. CAMDKJJ, Democrat, has been elected U. S. Senator, to succeed Frank Hereford, by the Legislature of West Virginia,
A eo.S'KKitKNCE was held in the Attorney General's office in Washington, on Wednesday, between representatives of the Central Pacific Railway and the Gov ernment in relation to the controversy about the dividends receutly declared by the Government No definite conclusion was reached.
TIIK Illinois Legislature adopted a reso lution requesting the President to appoint a citizen of thu seventh Judicial District to fill any vacancy that might now exist in the United States Supreme Court.
THE-HOUSC Committee on Commerce has voted to make an appropriation for Missisippl River improvements and for the reservoir system, but bas loft the amount to be determined after the other item of the river and harbor bill shall have been fixed.
PROFKBSOU Low, of Cornell Uuivcrsiiy, has arrived in Washington to appear be foro the Stmalo Committee on Prevention of Cattle Diseases. He says ten head of cattJe on the steamer France, from Lon don, were found to be suffering from the foot and mouth disease also that the lung pUgue is almost aa widespread in the state of New York as before any agita Uou led to State interference.
Coi
ONFI.H.
THF.KR
,v
0. Ntrrr, a representative
of the Mexican Uailray, of which Thomas Nickerson, of Bo*ston, is President, has returned to St. Louis from El Paw, on the Uio Grande, where he decided on the point where the road should cross the rivet, and also secured a site for a depot and shops. He says engineers are now surveying the line to Chihuahua, and theneo to the GUtv of Mexico, and track laying south of $1 Paso will probably be commenced by April 1st,
TUK Bxprms says that it does not «l* vNtjf* read the columns of its esteemed contemporary, meaning the and says that it will not l» uMtvetoIM so tomplimtnUtry as to Yfct admit* that in its failure to read therein it »iHj8 not miss much of the hunutn ptin* townee of mtdom, It again admits that* iidh sip, from, the great "fount" known as U»e Wux!/#«, it mght be come moire learned in f&ttiludtj, and pedofptfS*Jw* and petimiry, and *itMy HutumMtality. This is pretty good young fellow, audit shows a ww team on life, and the ioowr vou acslp your r« a *w, ami shake the bloody corpse, the betttr.
I haul. in tue matter anding jjnst wlwst/every body with U»ciYi«o,Crit»inaLGoMit iOtcMEMf,* tb# tUfcetfofi k*f
SEIMS
to*BE a
V«IT
A despa
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JPJEG&. WBZHTK:.:
A'i
tkjS' Ltiik.itktt '1CNI{
E S A E
la published every
Uirnooa, except Sunday, at the office, carjner Fifth and Main streets. Pric® -five e«nU per copy. Served by carriers to any parlof Uie dty. tea ccnta per week. By null, postage prepaid, forty-five cents & month subscription by the year, 86.00.
Advertisements, ten cent* a line each Insertion. Display advertisement# vary price ac. cording to time and position.
No Advertisements inserted as editorial news matter. All communication# should be addressed to
EMOAY P. JBBAUCHAMP, Proprietor.
DAILY SEWS
FRIDAY. JANUARY W. 1881.
CLUTTER, Express, Debs et al. UiJJL.il II II DEBS used the long, keen, "black snake." yesterday, the Express comes back this morning, with the ttiktto.
has been
Philetus Sawyer, Republican,
electcd U. S, Senator by the Wiscousin legislature to succeed Angus Cameron.
amount of
"pull and hnul.* in tbe matter or understanfling wants done with fihMI w*Jt& ilotCMRHf,
th«^ Legt*iaHire more" or lew* at In We hardly know what,,to think of ®ome of m»r attorney** tbey »*y at on® time, they -waat ifw Criminal Court abolished, at anrr the* waot civil jurisdiction etf-' led t« ibc Criminal CouK. at one timje mod as though alt wi^ a few Interfgeeptions %va* In .favor of a $&'•
In making Y%wt the obje^j
the&ggtel wthaiiM Wlo so arrant ic dispense..n ul ittilt&Mhmugh lU Omilt# !it a manner trtofah the mott ""YeadUy five r*4»e with least expenae ju Ums gptteJitf It Viiliuv weft t6 kxte to tlir eoatt-ii( sit asd" wis!.' of ttll?l MttotSI^IU vaifeffti ft ^Hhtfghian^jusltee. Ml, l#v3fpt
Court be abolis?1 and a Court eatablisbed will expend tucxten a_5o«rt alrvad/ estabit^kea. ana sobsftve Urt «48»/ "4 and at the ttne Umf be aeceptab tx
io datemi'nCv and wtt& ibe concurrence of the Ugtslaturn. mi
saya It that GreeW be ferencdfcnlib* tinople. -TkS«wlw fltbstreet, N. Y.was open yesterday forthe jpft^Ctl^n ]of vJiUotf-'i the evening, addresses were made by Judder Trunke «ai P«ivear«4^ov«roor Polioek aod J. Mitcbeson, Esq.
Homttj Noj ftll Bmiih
The Philadelphia Assoctelion of Mapu facturers of Texile Fabric* at t|ieir annual meetiaf, *^op»4«^«solfi««»o quiring that %h9proposed school of tex tils arts shall be a chartered corporation distinct and separate from the Textile As sociation sfabrfrff|h|i htf|g0ftv 1 of jCailiurl, j^llsrqJ- f*cld tf t^ia ^orkh^i^ madfc |r poor In* gnattliawr, iwid 4% them go until they should promise to giv them work. The guardians compromised by agreeing to furnish out-door relief for one week to the starving familes of the unemployed.
rors in the let
A cold wave swept down the Valley of the Hudson during Mondey night, and at .Readout yesterday morning, the teraper ature was 12 degrees below zero. At oth er points it ranged from 12 to 19 degrees below. Through trains have not run on the Poughkeepsie, Hartford and Boston
Railroad since Friday evening, owibg to huge snow drifts. The correspondent of the THmtrt Paris says: The conference at Constant noplc will meet in a week. As the Powers had agreed not to entertain the idea of a conference unless Turkey previously withdrew the Porte's note of the 3d of October, which proposed a frontier line running north of Volo and south of Lar issa, Metzova and James, and terininat ing at the mouth of the river Arta. Turkey ha# now withdrawn the note.
TIIK New York Sun. says: "Tbe Treas ory Department has been positively and formally offered to Senator Allison, of low*, and there is no doubt that he will accept it.
With Mr. Blaine in the State Depart mentand Mr. Allison in tbe Treasury the Third-termers will think that they have got a very poor show. Allison t? good fellow in a social sense, and smart He has, however, not been entirely sound on,the hard money Question. The people who voted for, Garfield as the incarnation of hard money, will be apt to think that they are sold in the appointment of Alii son."
We would suggest to our New York contemporary the advisability of '^keep iug its shirt on," as the chances ai'e very few for a rumpus between the leading members of the Republican party and the incoming administration,
?An Insinuating Laud Agent,
At thq hotel where we stayed we found ft seedy-looking man talking to the landlord. Judjxiilg by the elastic character of the tale.? the seedy, man was. telling I supposed he w:is an insurance a^ent. The landlord introduced him to us. I asked him what company ho represented, which led to mutual explanations. He said he was a real astute agent, lie had lands to sell, in every county in the State, in lots to suit caponiers, from an eleven-league grant to a lot in a graveyard. He wanted to know if we w'ere prospecting for land. Intimated that wo would not mind buying a runeh or two if the location and price would suit.
In tho most enthusiastic manner and with extravagant gestures he told me of several tracts andleagues of land wheie the grass was absolutely offensive in its luxuriance, and where murmuring streams supplied countless herds with refmsning water. He spoke of fields burdenetfWith gold*n gram, the silken phituosi of the waving corn and the emerald green of the sugar cane—pictures which would delight the €ye of an artist. Such timbered shelter as he described! 'Where cows lived antt tiourtahed until thev yjrere so old that the yearly wrinkles covered their horns to the very tips, making it necessary in some cswes to attach corn cobs for the wrinkles to grow out on. He told us of farms where the feuces would
last until
our grandchildren would be decrepit with age and where the com grew luxuriantly that they used the stalks for wagon*tongues. Everything he had for sale was cheap and the terms easy.
Be-a-u-tiful. sir—just the thing to suit yon—-exactly what you want—a small payments down—balance five yearpayment—Urn per cent, interest." did noe stop or give us a chance to say a word for two hours. His harangue was one of the most intensely gorgeous pieces of brass-mountml mendacity I ever listened to. Recognizing that h# was an interested party, I was prepared to receive his statements cum grano sails, as the Irish my. but I was not prepared to meet such a iluent and volum5nou« liar. Shades of Homer, Munchausen ami Mont** Christo! What a gorgeous imagination that land agent !ia«l II any one haa al% to paint, or finrgold to gild. he is the one to do it* His description of a Canadian thistle would leave the hnpressidn that vou had,been li^teiitiig to a full uad detailed dsd^Iptioii of one of this cedars of Lebanon. HJs inJ»i»»atiott that the wealth and treasures oi the Indies were ¥ult a ineri l^aclle—the wealtK of a church moitdh, in f^t~-|kvhen wsujar«c ith iho latent rlch^a lying Jiid in the ^iVft?td a«r«i%g toW appreciated by the tninsplsinter Fen1.4n and Tnutonio exile—wartieddwdly twwT ami gratifvog.
All Hnds offoitrd for sale by fell est tatc agents are rieh and fruitful. If thetv ar^ r--ai\ it
&
,T^r
i: is all the
more Ui, ^.e. I'oti c?.u,,p ^k up KM rocks a&4 U! Hoe everlasting fen^is 1: %.oa oby$, to tit* ag rt' tyiU lit 'te fss'Tal »V.# than the laud Jf \ou b*tJhetv mber wi wi., vou i.i- uawni yoa Jiave uvt **avxa^ cut .tm*M i* more than Ui« prk« ht mks for the farm* The land is r« '1 vcatered. Spriugs amt brooks mui miif and me&ud&r all 1\sL
Hint* on Home Adomm^at. I aesii# to offar a few geniinti ttfg? to the rural worker
whn nmat miLktt
1
And t^ii]
new ornment, 11 our verwo grow lovely throughm&a?s and labors, it is this class of persona
it *o- XJ^-ijuaueii
should take plenty of ground for ortwpwitatjioh*. he^^va &ii what Irregular surface available for such
xor speo-
Though a slow-grovving tree, there is none which assumes a pleasing appearance sooner and which will give greater satisfaction than the hard maple. There is no other deciduous tree that clothes
Most farmers consider the extensive planting of evergreens very expensive. The proper way to reduce cost is to set out a small nursery of hardy, freegrowing kinds. The cost of small trees is little and the labor of caring for them trifling. In a few years they are ready for use during any leisure day io the tree-plan ting season. My own expense for small evergreens sufficient for use on my farm did not exceed $30. When they had grown to a si*e suitable for removal to already chosen permanent localities, with a team, low sled and a man to assist I have removed and set out a large group in a day. The days spent in thu labor are among the happiest of my life, it is a joy to raise a tree, to set it in its permanent home, and think that it will remain a monument of one's tastes an* labors for perhaps a century or more. For this farm I paid #20 per acre, and in less than ten years I sold it for $50 per acre. Farm adornment does pav in money as well as in beaut}. Dollars never return a heavier interest to the farmer than when put in attractive objects that will incres.se the charms of nature upon, his laad^
Woodlands^ keep the homestead In good heart," No farm is complete withIf ye
but one. for beauty as well as utility. I it be close tq the higb way^ aad bAye :$m»e depth, it adds greatly th$ tu*» of one's premised Instance m•rdeceptiwa^i-grBatly magnified in woodlands. -Deep gr^nr^i/i^i, snug in winter and cool in sunj^ what fires light up a wood mlngjei trees iSrmmmf in
:wbod
through j** -Car
«-m- mii
santterv
mal reoommf children
walking on stHta 1* for correcting d*feet* of
as pact*
Karl« for oorracting d«feet* of aaniage resulting from weakness of the #pp«r dorsal musdtak such as stooping of tbe sfeoakfo* aad turaJng the toes Inward
i« rettd«r«4 very p!ea«aa»-if
aotif-d in September with p*l^ of sutnaoh. A few trees of the JttnebeHNr* wHd plnm, and flowering dc«|^rood Wifil whiten its borders In May, and ka bd^isional crab-apple will Su-rtt it. with wd act about the same Reason. A gooQr, &X&3
1
and weU-kept orschtrd spe^s mudh for the owner-. Orchards a|
to do with its attractiveaep. ditiouof tba highway
do "with the appearance of J*ea*4 A deeply plowed vraahed roftdslde^with unsodi mars thef m&Uty of tb grountla.
pnrpoac it ahonid be mm th¥ «llbitrW!Tr enoe to the smoother land, as it affords have a full view of it. So three sides. better,opportunitiesfor varjlat^ja thin to bjlfj^wjred inour westeriLlantfccap It h£dMa»n(t taWsuflicienwN^Sce an in a person of taste it will prove a matter for life-long regret. Manv peoplp have this to lament over. They havo lanted everajeens, hard maples, wiltvelderil, honey loo a| clo*J iofether, thefc t^qee aiirive at |n age' td^y« then* beauty they begin to deform eao other. Every time the owner steps through his door-yard he seea a fine evergreen, or some other favorite tree, growing into hopeless one-sidedness or stunted worthlessness, from the olose companionship of other trees, and, v^hUe he deplores it he usually lacKa courage to do anything about it thus his door-yard becomes a torment instead of a joy. Whoever invented the country door-yard did the world a great injury. Since that time most country people find no place to put a fine tree but in the door-yard. j. Plant trees liberally but not indiscriminately. Every tree has its own heauty and its own plaoe, but nothing can be more indefinite than the ideas Usually entertained on these points. The most common thought seems to be that if a tree or shrub is handsome in itself it will look well any whore. Tho \mth appears to Ho that, if we wjsh to produce fine effects by tree-planting the adaptation of the tree to its place, not only by its general form and habits but by the sentiments which it awakens in the behplder. is of urime imj}ortatifce. Tieps which express strength, Indeendence. retirement shelter, seem etter adapted than any others to our prairie hom«s. Our winters are cold, our winds are lierce the trees must have strength and durance to withstand them. Upon one broad open lands we seem to live in all out-doors we want trees that will shut us into the retirement and privacy of a home. We want trees that will warm and comfort the landscape. A home with oaks, maples. elms and evergreens has independence, intelligence and refinment associated with it. A home with poplars and other soft wood chiefly, is a cheaply gotten up ar:air and has a pov-erty-stricken look. We* would not disparage the planting of the deciduous soft woods, but great care should be taken in regard to kind, place and also number,
?rork,was
itself in such fine apparel at the diame- wSl be brought into the system soon ter of five inches. One or two in the The company controls about a dozen pasture, a clump in your special grounds near the house, and a few, or a row if you choose, beside the road, will never seem out of place. There is no single tree that individualizes itself in a more characteristic manner than the white elm when it attains age. It is especially welcome at the corners of the road, at the entrance gate, or as a roof-tree. The oak is a iiardy, independent tree, and stout enough in th«i shoulders to hold its arms out straight without splitting. The man who is so fortunate as to have a grove of old oaks, or scattering ones, about his dwelling should be careful about cutting them away. Nothing which he can produce in the way of ornamentation during his life-time will ever replace the loss of such old settlers. Th«i red or swamp maple, as seen in tSs September woods of the East, is like the scarlet tauager among the feathered tribes. A tree or two of this species in a group of evergreen would, at the time of yea? when it puts on its scarlet, make a remarkable feature in the landscape. This tree in color is the pure red wine of autumn nothing in the landscape intoxneates like it.
P«11
as woo^nds that extend to the K!^Hway, shottid have depth to otake thfin renting. Pleasing effbets, out ppodjmdby wraajrin^ the trees so tW U»e higher colored tm|tj will Tiare the most prominent places. The ©oadiii^n the ^urlaee of an orchard has much
rem-
farffier'H mind, after he gets ou AiuVluis some tlcrfieyrahaaid, ia'tt) Ituild what would be called a beautiful house
ming in wood en*»a fea*-auoes
arc held out for our admi^^%Jvhile urth side, beiHJf designed ror the pigs and poultry to look at, is left somewhat modest and decent. Pre tontions to show usually prove a de [ormity. Build the house rather low rambn^,"i^ff h^pdidlbf a steep f, projplifmm eates iindl wfebjesome iimneysiL-i wS.Wfdb .ta. sae Avklences of home shelter and home fire. Why should the roof and chimneys be constructed as to appear subordinate to the rest of the house? If the walls be of stone they will grow handsomer wii age. Build so that the house will show care for home convenience and home comfort. Wej ilo not care how many gables there are if they express farm and family needs. Lot tho house live t-etired'life among trees and broad fields. Make the house neat, conve nient, elegant if you choose, but never gaudy or pretentious with wooden trinkets... Its beauty should be enduring, like the beauty of the hills and prairies. If the farm be properly ornamented by tree and vine, green slopes autumn-tinted groves hnd sheltering tirs, it were best that the house, the work of man, be modest, as its owner should be, in the midst of these rich blessings from the hand of God. Edmund Hathaway, in N. Y. Tribune
Rapid Telegraphy One Thousand Words a Minute. A few days ago the American Rapid Telegraph Company opened its ollice for business on Devonshire Street, near the Old State House. It holds patents which it is claimed enable it to send messages at the rate of a thousand words a minute, by methods which are probably familiar to the public from previous descriptions. In brief, messages are prepared by perforating machines the perforations are arranged conventionally into letters, and all that is required of the operator is turning a wheel—the messages appearing as perforations on continuous strips of paper at the receiving end. The main work of transmission is in making the perforations at the sending*end, -and in transcribing into writing (or type-writer copy) at the receiving end. The com
any organized hist year in New but the officers are all Boston men. At present about seventy-iive persons constitute the entire force at each end of the wire. A line is being put up between New York and Washington, and several New England cities
patents which are of service in this method of telegraphy. Besides the patents which will be used for land telegraphing, there is an independent system for ocean cables which will admit the same method of perfora tions to use on them. It is as promising as the land system, and will enable one cable to do the work of five under the present system. It was invented by the same man who invented the rapid system of telegraphy, and the inT struments for its application will cost several thousand dollars apiece. It is called the "metrical system," because the dispatches are sent and charged for by measure—so much a yard. Mr. lteed owns these cable patents personally, and also the right to use the land-patents in Europe, and his brother-in-law* has already gone abroad to introduce them there.
As the business of the company develops the lines will be extended to the West. A line is in contemplation to Chicago, but it is not decided whether to build the coming fall or in the spring. It is the expectation to join all the great Western cities with the East ultimately. As the rate of transmission is a thousand words a minute, whereas the ordinary method can send only twenty-five, the great saving in time and expense is at once apparent.—Bos* ton Advertiser,
Rare American Coins.
Said Mr. E. F. Gambs, a St. Louis numismatist, to a Chronicle reporter: Those who have a weakness for collecting old and rare coins are generally men of wealth who indulge in it as a pleasant pastime. They can afford to ay handsome prices for rareties and econae amateur numismatists. The principal coin center of the United States is Philadelphia, mainly because the mint is situated there. In Eastern cities, such as New York, and Boston, coin-collecting is more iudi^ged in than in the South or West. There are about one hundred journals devoted to the ooin and stamp interest published in the United States- The prices of rare coins fluctuates considerably from time to time. Probably the rarest coin is the silver dollar of 1804. There are said, on good authority, to be only six of them in the whole world. Their market value is all the way from $300 to $700. About two years ago Mr. Gaaibs ran across a half-dime of the year 1002. which was an unusually fifte specimen. He told it for $50 to Wm. F. Brown, of New York, who shortly afterwards refused 8^00 for it, thinking that it would bring more at auction. It was sold at auction for $ 147.60 and changed hands again for 175.
Thesecoftd rarest American coin is the haW^nftarTJf-rJ^V*. Ttmy~were only coined at tbe Philadelphia Mint. Cents and half-dollar* are" tnfe principal coins
looked aftei bV com mate of tlicfse deaofflinatjotta than a»v other. V«fry f^tce, are tie old of 17V3, im and ilwif. ijAH-cenU whitih were caiu«d from173$ lo J857 tor mrae datec trithia Ui&t period bring handsome prices.
Jo»ld to be &
CTBftt t^ilftdbor of coIDA, and tbe inte King Victor Emahoel and A. T. Sf»vrmrU tbe gre*l diy-goods raertshant. %^r« both ool!e hi Kew York. PhiladcSphta &nd fiostoo(anctloa Mies of ooUecttozu jure frequently told.
Sweeping
,§ ..IOV
IN PRICES OP
wercoits
_. TJIi
Wholesale Manufacturers,
508 and 510 Main St.
TERRE HAUTE, IND.
KATZENBACH & CO.
Have just opened anew
AVHOJ/ESALE
HOUSE!
218 South Fourth Street.
WE KEEP A FULL STOCK OF
CALIFORNIA, and
IMPORTED WINES
AND BRANDIES,
ALSO FINE WHISKIES AND FANCY
LIQUORS.
Our Sour Wiries embraoe Ber-
ger, Rtesling, Traminor and Gut
edel. ..
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.
i., ,'RKJ
•ti-
X-
'k-
rt
Women
Wbo want glossy, luxuriant and wavy tresses of abnndant, beantiftil Hair must use LION'S KATHAIB0N. TW»
out, arrests and cores *ness, renioTes dandrofT and itdbiog, makes the Hair ^strong, giving ft a cnrling^ tendency ana keeping it irte rikanj desired position. Bean-" t- tift]. healthy Hair Is tiie sore resolt of nstoig KattiairoB,
OPIUM
Cletlns er tbe Malls and Carriers Carrier® KAiT. tea ladjsnapolit m»4 7 00*tt® ladlaiuirali* tad etstions on jf
Vand«li.itallro»d T00*«§ TJWSIMJ*PO!(»
«wd «tattoas en
VandalU Railroad 11 80 a iff tadlanapoUc and «latlohaon I ?900IkqBl I. A St. L... 11 80anM Eastern Iudlana. Chlcaso too
—Kttrttoern tntnoir. :r.T ,r. ,r.1T StrTW" Kastern-'Kontncky .,.'4
IndlXSi*
HEAVY SUITS,
-AT-
OWEN," PIXLEY '& DO'S
20p
Wlecoualn 4 nm.. WEST.
•pm..f
Sontheru 111inol T00i Si. I/aul* and ttoro'. 4
SO
1
mS
ipmT
St. Loots and stations on Van.dalla Railroad..... V......... 4 90pttl.. St. Louis and stations on I. A 4 I SL Lottlf^and itOpni.. Marshall ana stations south ou the Danville JfcVinccnncsRK.ll am.. Peoria and stations on Illinois
Midland Railroad 700am.. Stations on Toledo, Wabash As Western RR. west of Danville.-.. W,.... TOOan..
N6 BTH.
Chicago, III., (thro' pouch) 7 0U a m.. Danville and stations on E. T. II. fc ?0O» m.. Iowa, Miniunou^ Wisconsin and Northern Illinois TOOaai.J Cbicago, Iowa. Michigan.!
Minnesota, WiscWtsis and 11 90 a m.. Northern I lUnoi#.......... 7 00 a to..
Lotcansport and stations on
JfcLc
H.
rt RR. lle,Deca
4 90 m.
Stations on Indtannr tur A Sprinefield ItR........ 7 00 am. Stations on Toledo, Wabash &
Western RR., east Danville. 700 am. Northern Ohio, Northern Indiana, Michigan and Canada... 7 GO a m.. 1I
SOUTH.
Evangville, Vincennes and Princeton 7 00am..32j Fort Branch and Sullivan (thro' pouches) 700am Evansviltearid stations 011 B. &
T. II. RR.. 7 00am..vu Evansville and stations on li.
T. a.
«R.r...
4 SO p.m ..
rahoiu niinoit and Western
1 30 ru..
iKenfeickt.»..t...!... SOnthofn Il]'.t)oi?Hrid Wetttfern
ton'u m..l*3
..... .V: fr..
Worthington and stations on T. H. &. S. E. RR
4
SO pi
BACK LINES.
Pralr ietoir.Pra rie CrtH- .0 rays ville and Fairbanks,Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday..... 700nm.. NelsoH. ind., Tuesday and Saturday 4.w piu..
The city is divided into seven Carrior D? as folUAw: FIRST DISTRICT—^Jfred Tyler, Carrier.
North side of Main street, between 5th streets north from Main to city limits, !r to the alley between 7th and 8th and to t(! between 4th and 5ih streets: als»o. 8th. & 10th streets, north of 3d avenue. 1
SECOND DISTRICT—John Kuppenheimer, (Vj The south side of Main street, between 6th. and all territory between 4ti and 8H south to the city limits, including to tl.c- a, tween 3d and 4th streets and to the alley 6Mi and 7th streets also 7th street seuth lng to city limits.
TniH» DISTRICT—.James Johnson, Carrier1 The south side of Main street, from tho rf 5th street, and all territory west of the :vli tween 3d and 4th streets south to city limits
FOURTH DISTRICT—Frank Sibley, Carrier The north side of Main street, from the 5th street, ?ud all territory west of the aV tween 4th and 5th streets, and north to ti limits.
FIFTH DISTRKT -J^rankM. Mills, Carrier.! The north side of Main si roe!, from 7th old canal, between 8th and 10th streets ail territory from the alley between7th and8th 8t' east to the Vamlalia RR„ north to Sd avenu* all territory north of tho VaulolJa RR., tOth atreut to city limits.
SIXTH DISTRICT—.John R. Byers, Carrier. The south sldo of Main, between Oth an streets, from the ulley between 6H and 7th st cast to the old canal, south to Demlng.and a ritory east on Poplar strectand south tocltyl
SEVENTH DWTTUCI1—Louis B%auz, jr., Oii South side of Main street from 7th east ti limits. Including tho north side of Main, old canal bod to city limits, ahd all terrltoi from Ninth street, east to city limits from street on the south to tho Vaudalia RR. t! the north.
Win. S. McClaln, Auxiliary Carrier, whon. It is to make extra collection and delivery tri REGULATIONS.
The mall Is collected from street letterbox Main street from 1st to 13th streets, north on 4 Cherry, south "on 4tli to Walnut and south to Poplar, and Ohio street between 1st am every week day between 8.80 and9.30a m. bet 9:30 and 10:30 a m, between 12:30 and 2:00 [this collection Includes to Poplar street o: south, and east to I3th,aud north to Union t)etween 2:80 and 3:30 sn. between 4:30 ami .apd between 8:00 and 9:00 pm. All oi tmxe* are collected from twice per day, bqtv the hours of 8:00 and 10:00 a and between and 7:30 m. k. 'There are four deliveries mai' per day' business p«rt of t^e city: it 7:00 and 11:3 2:0ft and 4:30 in altio a delivery at Ori m. to such business houses as desire it, place of business Is located between 3d am' streets and not more thin one (Hinarc from
On Sunday* the Post Otllcc isjoptn fiora9 o'clock a in. and persons desiring their mall call at tho wlnd«w designated by the numlx their carrier. 1
Sunday collections ovet the otitire city Is between 4:30 and C:30 *rt, and again In th--ness part of the city between 8 and 9 o'cJoc
Kec«Wlc_' boxes have b««n placed on eve ner of Main street to enable personsresldln It to avail themselves of the frequent colli' made thereon with a very sh#rt walk.
The attention of the futile is called to thl distance each carrier fs obliged to walk, an tles Uvlng a distance back in yards arc earn requested to place boxes In their front doort snch other convenient places as will facilitate prompt delivery of mail. Carriers are ,iot allo« to walt kmger than 30 seconds for an answer 1 bell, and after waiting that long and receiving! answer, he must retain thc mall until vie neitl Ureiy: Carriers are obliged to be prompt, ai-fl do thclfcwork qclfkly. but under no circii!n«tj»¥ U) be impolite er discourteous, and any suet be immediately reported to th'j Post Ma«t! sons owning dogs are warned that unless thi them tied dnriiw tke day, carriers will not i_ their mail, bnt lher will be Obliged to call al office. N
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