Daily News, Volume 2, Number 139, Franklin, Johnson County, 31 January 1881 — Page 2
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Daily
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ZPIEIFt WEEK. .Ut'UH.'J
tu ..•! r'l fr»hifoif THE LARGEST AND
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BE 'APER
gFOB THE MONjnr
tllSIEl II TIE Sim.
The T»*re HaaUs hx,w* la parish $d c*ery sf ternoon, except Sunday, at |he office,^ corner of Fifth and ^Mahrstreek.
V**B
Mahpi Okas
*,!}"
Prtc« -rflve cents p«r copy. Served by carriers in any part of the city, ten cents per week. By mall, pontage prepaid. forty-five* ienti a month aobiMjHptJooy the year, 8^00^ 4^
&
Advertisement#, ten cents a line each Insertion. Display advertisements, ra^ cording to time and position.
?i
No Advertisement# ins$rj£d as editorial or news matter. A!1 communications ghonld be addressed to
EMOIjy f\BBAUCilAMP.^I
'5 Proprietor.
7
1
*\{d$pkY. j|Nl|AftY|j| Jsl|
Senator Blaine's bill for subsiding focean steamed of Ameriearrnifhufafcture provide far nhiextraorlihary.rate of Iui mmt era thfdbfrof thtffcA&fiff --CiiJftii-iU.jJ.i-., i. '.aa^
will be celebrated in Mem.
phis Fjjbruiri $6th.| po^t$6rn'Ji6^ for weeks pa«t have been decorated with flam' in^hand bills announcing that at that time his Royal Highness, the King of. the Carnival, will make his triumphant entry in that city.
THE Phidian Venus announced as a disr covery with such flourish from Athens a week or two ago, turns out to be a copy made during the Roman times, and a very little one at.thjit It is but thirty-nine inches in height to represent the majestic statue whose altitude was nearly forty feet.'. es-sBsa^^
New Youk is getting alon^ much faster I than expected with its JExhibitton project. The discussion as to whether the show shall be open to the public on .Sunday has been started already before it is right sure there shall be an exhibition to be opened -on veek (lays. Still if the qtrestion can be settled ono wav or the other before con« tributions are made or stock sold, one complif atioh' Will bit a^otdpd.
bents be Acquired.— Mail. Our udlgubor hrap #trv "load." incumbtnt*.
It sh^ltL^e*
Uae,"
,.-S -W?
Ckrtain newspapers are agitating a reform looking to the abolition of coroners. The "Crowner's quest," they urge, has teen the burlesque.of jurisprudence from the time of Hamlet down. One thing is pretty certain Either, the office should died at his residence, Saturday night, bo abolished oi a higbirorder Of Ihcum-[ heitrt disease. jquired. _'gt ....
Uuboiindcd Cheek,
Every body who knows any thittg: at ali about the Indianapolis & St. Louis "Railroad Company," knows that it has always leen on the "baat'' ita construction, fn soAe wWf of oiMr If it kills a farmer's cow, or horse, and is legallv liable under the law, it invariably tries to get out of it, even though it ba at tho end of a law~»uit.r It has ftp Attoriiiy employed bv the yearrwhose duty it Is to look after the iiu*re*(* of the road, as they call it, and ii is very seldom that it is ever known to pay for any tAing except at the end of a law suit. ,.
The conduct of the road officials toward Torre Haute ci tl*ens is duly appreciated by our people, as has been seen by their patronage toward the rdad since its con struction. By an examination of the sta Uslica, it will be seeu tliat more than niM tmtht ot the travelers and freight, going from this point, take tho Vaadwia Haute, or more familiarly known as the "old Reliable." Why! Simply because the road officials, are all gentlemen of highstanding, and accomodating to a degree,
Merchant, citizens and travellers, The know when they are weirtreated, **a 11879(
well treated, and
their patronage i* bestowed accordinglv.
To show the public, the disposition of this 3^
road tn "beat'* every body, anfl get semething for nothing.' We publish the following prvptmtton to newspaper*, sent out by the general passenger agent, a. J. Smith viu t*. **a wnaaocTa,,.,-.^,... inDiixmui A sr. touts auuaoao. «K)(«tlUL PAMKKttMM M?ART«**T. "fa coB«der*«ion of p«Wishing regnttrty tn four trwuuwt a ttmndtaf id**rti»«ment, or an adter U*eni»nt tn k*al column, a* we may prefer, at NMtuUi l«n|tlk, and apecial Betlcet*, oar foi$7*»tb a» wt *111 JW ft®*: 4*'
i^ndthe ««w»inf ot 1m£
To put up the standard of race courtesy
-white
is one tbi education I other. if the that admitted on
carry, Court1•**r *6*inartials for conduct "unbecoming an officer and agentleman," are, it is remarked, more frequent now than formerly. Occasionally, a boy who cstxnfTtipaas the ^fCtUet^y -€*amto alfbn is )|lu«]ioio ilif aochy1 fciti| ajp^int eou^lie lort of»cmtp«ffiTC^c|mln4tion «[ufrell to get irrby tfiis tfoor rtot^being exhaustive either of mental or moral character. The late ingenious device of Congress to prevent an overplus of edu cation officers in the army by offering each graduate his choice between a sec ond lieutenancy and seven hundred and fifty dollars, was designed, apparently, to make ipore room for civi, appointments, as these'still go on, ahhbhgh the resig nations from etch year's graduating class are not numerous. In fact, they ought not to be with self-respecting young fel'ows. The Government here gives a good four years of maintenance and education to these young men, and if it wishes to weed out their numbers, it shpuld do' so on the principle of selecting ttfe -fittest to remain. The Normal College would stultifj itself should it oifer to its grad uates, after a terra of fr.ee education, bonu# in money *to ell such qualified studeuts as would choose not to be enrolled as it* "'fellows." 8uch an absurd law-left as it is to choice of grad untea themselves—ought to be £ot rid of as soon as possible. The proper way to prevent an overplus of officers, is to make the West Point standard higher instead of lower, and also to make the civil appoint mcnts correspond to it also it would be well to encourage promotion from the ranks of conspicuous, merit, upon a fair test of capacity,., This would give an impetus to the post schools in which it is desirable that private solcliers should pass much cf their Uisure time ratlier than in their usual dull round of cards and, skylarking. There is no reason that a civilappointment in any way"should be by'loss seyere examinations or ffe^uisit^s than thoje of Military Academy the only advantage beiner that a more mature can didate might apply. -r
It will be much harder to reopenjublie interest and public opinion in the Whittaker court-martial than it was to get the Court, ordered in the first, place. The public mind has crystallized into a belief that the particular injustice done to Whir* ana his predecessors was altogether outside of the especial assaults he alleged, And rather in sending thorn there at all— while leaving it for boys to decide what elsewhere is a matter of time and exam pie only. The indignities complained of were as nothing compared to four years of isolation among gay young companions and no finding of the court-martial, one way or the other, can undo that.
NOTES AND NEWS.
Dakota Territory boasts of a population •pt 185,180, ,*r. .v Sniall-pox is increasing in severity, in large cities.
The Measels ami Scarlet feyer are doing good work in Indianapolis. An attempt has been made to poison Hughes the pedes train in New York.
The formations of ice about Niagra Falls are of unusual beauty this winter. Qeneral John Love of Ind anapolis, of
i. ,,The lrttg(f mill of Meekleiohn and HolManawa. Wis., was last week desI'trdyed by fire. ,, U'H "i'sio &tfii
A land league lias been formed at Camden, N. J., under the title of the Fanny Parnell Brunch.
An earthquake shock at Montgomery, New York last Tuesday, shook keys out of the door locks,
The French SentttcJ haS pdf^ed 'tH^ Tjill granting subsidies to merchant shipping, which will shortly become a l%w.
The large fancy cotton mills of E. Fislin fc Son, of Grafton Mass. were burned last Thursday night, loss $1&»,000.
This British troops are still required to prevent trouble in the mining districts ot England, where the miners are strikers!
In the Nevada Senate a Wednesday resolution opposing the confirmation of the Chinese treaties was labled by the Rean 1
The London Standard says there is a report current that the government has re ceived information of & serious rising in Turkish Armenia, which has been in an unsettled at&te for some lime.
of
lrade wilh the
lo
lime, giving on the prtvlte** of *»akt«»g sach reaSima^fe ch«nge» find »K$ewety. and forwarding a copr «f paper r*f«larb to «t vUlrtm
Lonl*. Mo., w# will i»*«« UckH on »«*nt jmmr pojwr, good ty* tw*oty-f»«f orer thia
th,
Oe«er*}^M«MMW»ir A^ent
.. .... himtt that It aski a newspaper to giv« the road almost
Itwful
efl»hined. mi j^a.teundei^
4
Tbia
cular prtytomm to direct Jnsult to every respectable paper hi the ttanttj. to ^ifhom su«h circulars *°d tmwfetemthto A* tty&im&e* tent tn, 1.3» Wp» P«r««aJ JW" mooted, that all the depredations commiued around Bt mr*i, "%as to all ph ability the fiendish work of W?ioree of the road, made tnad, hr the treatment reoeloed et the hand* w, some oflkial of the road.
.%-n
A -4 ,A. wt/- t'Vi
It
tahitts |n&
lack" scholarship than at pres
themselves As the West Point Academy ^aaaot established f«?»eUle disputed questions, out ib'traih 'officers, it is desir lh®4, serriee more accessible than it is now to incapacity, of whatever color. The civil appointments, all of theftMft&de th political influence,! an# quite cient load Mow %Jf*"rae
OM* a population of 1,750,000 in Mas» aachusetta, nineteen cities have 980,000. —f£n choir of the Presbyterian Church Penn Yan, N i", they clash
uibals. •,{ jpeach crop Mlddla Geo almost total failure'and suoh a
scarcity was never known in the Macon
Three-^ourtha of the Parisians ara pbdcT 11»ere am fa ^he ^city 68i,9.i2r lodgings, of wj^ich M$M\, wftM&t less than eighty dollars a year.
It was found in Manchester, En gland,\|hat tw^St^ J|tr
was
nose is admissible. Tho Disadvantage
1
rifr
I
The Canadian trade and navigation returns for the past year, show an increase of trade with (fc#at Britain, Oyer that of
H3 018.438. and a decrease in
United Sta'es, of $8,307,-
863. A Berlin dispatch to the London Time* says: The Marquis Tseng, Chtfiesc EmJ basaador to Russia, has informed the Chi nese Embassador at that place that the Kuldja difficulty will probably be settled fairly.
A dispatch to the New York iRfafci, from Constantinople says The latest dispatches received by the Porte show that England is more disposed' to concur with the other Powers in adhering, in principle, to the Turkish proposal for negotla ting here an the Turco Greek question.
A farmer, named Peter McCallum, residing in the township of AId borough. Oat,* claims to have discovered the long lost Charlie Rom among the Tusearora Indiana Mr. McOaiium states that he baa had correspondence with Mr. ROBS which establishes the child's identity beyond perad venture.
A number of tdegrttti"and* term cations have just been received at the War Department regarding the movement* of Sitting Bull and his followers, but there is nothing of special interest embodied therein, beyond what -ha* already been published. No inslructions have at ye£ been issued to Major Bges relative to his Inquiry whether or not *e should proceed to the Canadian holder for the parpose erf receiving Sitting Bull and the balance of hit followers Fa the «veut of their surrender to the Mounted* Ptihse.
mmmSm
m* rtali
a
r«ets dltaniishes 1
to't&cTe^ent of twenty in 11 —During a storm, l^st month, at Norance, in Switzerland, lightning struck one of two little girls sleeping in the same bed and instantly killed witifout evfea teaching tlie
olbtari/iforfawakiiig
—KirCareon, a son of the famous scout, says that he and Henry M. Stanley of African renown once olippod sheep at two cents a head in Ne^r Mexico. and worked with a team near Ogden. Utah, for $15 a month. —The true Egyptian lotus is blooming in Selden's Cove, on the Connecticut River below-Hartford, Conn., wheffe it is said to have sprung from some seeds dropped from Egyptianf rftgs bound for paper mills up the river. —A Saratoga letter savs: The tall and rather distinguished iooking lady whom ope may sometimes see on the Grand Union piazza is Mrs
VA.
T. St6w-
arL She dresses plainly but richly and is very affable in her manners, thtmgh a slignt deafness is somewhat embarrassing to her in company. —According to the Journal de St. Petersbourg, Samara, ono of the most fertile grain-grovvin^ provinces* pf Russia, is again threatened with famine. The wheat crop fias been almost totally destroyed by insects and tbe authorities bf BoUsoulouk, one of the desolated'districts, have applied to. the Imperial Government for tliesum of 2,000,000 francs to save the population from sfar-vation. —Tears, chemically considered, ,are a weak solution of chloride of sodium and phosphate of lime, the overflow of ^the lachrymal glands, caused by the contraction of certain muscles. A writer who' has analyzed them as a weapon11 says. "The best method is to hold the head erect, look the cruel tyrant in the face, and let the tears flow down while the lips feign a smile. If the h.ead be bent forward the tears will be likely to run down the nose and drop off at the end and that spoils the whole thing, for the eyes get red and the nose sympathizes "with the general moisture and gets a sort of raw look at the end. To use tears with effect requires in fa6t, judgment. The effectiveness is gone as socfn as ap|' 'mopping1 begins.. A light hysterical sniflfe may be permitted, if artistically executed, with agasping sob, but no polishing off of eyes or rtnao ia oHmiaaihL *U
the
of Wealth in
Bringing up of Children.
Wehave no dofabt., whatever, that, in this generation especially, the well-to-do have much more difliculty in bringing up their children tliau the strugglers have. Formerly tfiis was not so much the ease, because the necessity for strong discipline was so thoroughly acknowledged that it was maintained al« most without an effort, and the habit of obedience was enforced by practically irresistible authority. But the specialty of to-day is to concede freedom in all directions, and especially freedom to children and those who are subordinate.: Discipline in any strong form is, among large classes, and over great tracts ot the world, nearly dead. The bad effect of that change—we do not mean the change from severity to kindliness, but the change from studious government to comparative inattention—is very great, but is partly concealed by thefact that poverty acts as & disciplining atmosphere. It fixes conditions rigidly. The girl must learn to do her own dressmaking or go, untidy. The boy must go to work, or there will not be enough and to that particular work, for onlv the rich have much choice of occupations Economy i# imperative, for the mouey is not there, and no training in selfsacrifice acta daily, hourly, momentarily, like compulsory economy. The will i& compressed by the facts of life and becomes at once strong and pliable like leather! With the rich that discipline is absent and cannot be artificially produced and the young have only conscious training," in the athlete's sense, from direct authority, which, as we said, it is the tendency of the age to relax. The result is not only that the passions, especially the passion of selfwill, grow too strong, though that is so clear as to have become a truism but that among both good and bad a certain bonelessness of character is apparent, a certain indisposition to enduro* or to form strong purposes as to the work of a life, a certain want rot so and perstrug^lers
much of energy as of decision and tinacity. The children o" Terr orten fail utterly, either from inherent defects of character or from insnperable obstacles of position but more of them win than the children of the well-off, and, taken a$ a body, they have stronger and finer characters. As their children grow up the well-to-do find them more burdensome, more difficult to manage, more trouble to settle," than the poorer do are more anxious. for their future and more displeh^ed with their defects of character and conduct, which, indeed, from the ao$ence ot the pressure of circumstances,, are much greater. With the very rich, anxiety about their children, crosses of different kinds inflicted by them and their frequent total failure#, make up, we believe, a definite and separate souroe of and even with the weii-ofF, greatly crease the burden of life, just at a time wbea burdens are moet anxiously avoided. A man has not gained much in the life whose children Are characterless, or and that is far ihoife ofteai the lot of the rich than of the poor and oonstittrtes at 1c puichof wealth."—-Zxmrfow Sp&stater. familiar instance of color Wind ne» is that of a roan taking a brown »lk stahreUa and leaving a green giafhaza tftili sboa. -i 1,
struggle profligate, batyiiht giren np to aelashm
Bagman*y«»
Not all ragmen are inconsiderate of th® popular ear. Now and then there tea rag-gatherer with a mind
Jpfaen the small boy: 1 "WevFuntold .-•
Jfcove the
oommouplace. In the cold# part of yest#day one of^ tlie^e merpan& was oassii^g^ong Njtptli street, tsowerfug in nllf auadbrst wjij^i and pri^i «»f rmce. At liW f0®trTialf buried in the cargo sat .A, jyttaXxay lm mble-vehicle a u«i un— pretentious horse moved with funereal $ & 1 0 a to sing: .'iwmwwmw Mitwl Moral
I take old clotbea! 1 take alt kinds of rubbish 1
Au^mstmi
too
WhateYr you have, We'll make it do.
i^extthe man: "Your rijrht, good son. That's how it's done.
W*fc*-k^«l( k-i-n-d-s of rubbish I"
by some thiifty
keeper, and the music was evidently Well received all along the jraute, foi the wagon-bed was full as the show passed Walnut Street.—Louisville Cou-rier-Journal.
jtAlthough very eai^y this season, iV h&s 'already been- discovered that thtrin^ the present winter ice will, as usual, freeze with the slippery side up. —Philadelphia Chronicle- Herald. —A Michigan boy ate a bar of soap on a wa^eremd then drank a lot of soda to take, the taste out ot his mouth, ivnd the way he spouted «ids and soap bu& blest'for the next half-hour baffled the skill of fourteen doctors, who madly performed about him, not having been informed of the cause of the lad's suffering. They are all 'at loggerheads now about what to call the case.—Boston
Why Wear Plasters? I™
They may relieve, but they can't cure that .lame'back for the kidneys are the trouble, and you want a remedy to act directly on their secretions, to purify aiid restore tlieir healtby condition. KidneyWort has thai specific action—and at tne same time it regulates the bowels perfect ly. Don't wait to'get sick, butgetapackage to-day. and cure yoursalf. Either liquid or dr^ for SHle at the' 'druggists. Binghamton Jiepttblican. •,:
ts
1
Busineca Jpucctorn.
3. C. Davis. ,1 L: S. B. Davw, Notary, DAVIS & DAVIS, Attorneys at Law,
223^ South Sixth Street^ Over PostcfUce, Terre Haute, Ind.
& O A N
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW,
Office—521 Ohio St., Fred Ross' building.
}3l)TisicianD.
Dr. A. Drake,
VETERINARY SURGEON,
OFFICE:—24 north Third street, (Carico's Stables.) RESIDENCE:—624 North Fifth!
BIUOtrgNEaa, PILES, Ce^STIPATIoy, KIDKKT OOHPUDTrt, CRTS'AKT DISEASE*, FEMALE WEATNE**,
AND KERTOC8 MMBDEM, 16y cauMngfra action of thfre 'eryan* and restoring their jtomr to throw vj' d'ueaM.
Why SnNVr Bilioax paiiiM and aches!
Wkf terme*ted with Piles. CuRklipaUon! I Why frifhteaed over dlnonlrrwl Kidneys! Why eadare nprrous or sick headaches!
Why km ilwylM at|rhta!
TJ* KIDNEY-WOKT and rrjok* tn health in tin
I est jtoft cr vamatn. WSLLH, KICHABDSOX
„A -J
ftfiUfnyf am
„IN?ggESOr
OVERCOATS,
JTT ILSTiatN. ANItf
if
-»r Tjr
CAL. THOMAS.
OPTICIAN AND JEWELER, Main Street, Terre Haute. 5
McLEAN & SELBOMRIDGE, Attorneys at Law, 420 Main Street, Terre Haute, Ind.
Hi:\VY*sriT.
-AT-
OWEN,
PIXLEY, & CO'S
V'WTX-.'^rtlC 1 Wholesale Manufacturers,
508 and 510 Main St.
TERRE HAUTE, IND.
a6bo3
KA.TZENBACH & CO.
Hkve Jifet opened a^nbw
•t
WHOLESALE
it i!
HOUSE,
218 South Fourth Street
.Oft
WE KEEP A FULL STOCK OF,
CALIFORNIA, and
'U i«
Treats every disease known to horse or caUl at moderate cost. Has mfet with large practic and uniform sn-:cces.
Thia Oroat Rfwedv
in cither Llqnld or Dry Form acta at the hUd« time on the di*rawes of the
ILiyer, Bowels and Kidneys,
edel.
pives it wonderful \alldittam.
WHY ARE WE SICK? Bacavj* we allow these great organs to bf I come dogged or torpid, and pclfon&tg vmor* I art therefore/orced into the blood thai should I be expeOed naturally. mi?
charged
A CO..
IMPORTED WINES
AND BRANDIES,
**At" i''' ti'i*1 3 i' •.* v-
Who want
Pram's,
I (WPlxnd dry pa»C-p»ld.) *tH.U\BTOX, TT.
llldnay Won $*ntttaU«tl*ni mril nu
and la «««aQr mmmm. Rwnflaiw•itsBMC« waOj
WHtllpwWWi
uoncDinmao^ w: vn^iiaiiNnioMN^
1
ALSO FINE WHISKIES AND FANCY if LIQUORS.,
F.
Closjicir of tlicMalls and parrl(
1
Our Sour Wines embrace Ber-
ger, Riesling, Traminer and
Our Sweet "Wines Angelica,
Muscat, Madura, Port and Sher
ry and our Red Wines,
Zanfan-
del, and Chateau Margaux.
I
f*
We are prepared to deliver
Wineg,and Liquors to the. Trade 'v.--'. a V../ 4 *~t «.» I*
4
A
and private families in any quan
tity and b^. the case free•- of
tit' i-
rAf *r 'i'.m
Gentle
&mjr
luxnriaat
aad wivy treees or sbuiident, bouittfu Hair most n»o LION'S KATHAIBON. This elegant, cheap article always mate the Hair freely and fitft, keeps fiom felling out, arrests and enes grayness* renove& dandruff ail fafabBTMakes the Hair ftaff'gMg .tt a arily teataqr aaa Mfptag la deured
mUm.
EAST. Dcltv
tndlanapolie and thro* east.... 00 Indianapolis and stations on Vawdttatisatoreifltvi/ati ^.TW* Indianapolirand!stations on
Vaadalia RaQrfiad... XJSmWtM Indianapolis ard stations on I T:00 a. I. Jfc St, L.......... kU a Saltern Indiana. Cbicagfe aim
Northern Illinois....11 30a Eastern K«to*nr^/1. hilS. .*'4mp Indianapolis and thro5 east.... 4 20 Indianapolis and stations'oa Iowa, Micbig*n,jtf inne*ota*n(i 1 p' :t. a J! Junctions on VandaliaKR.acd
WBpdtiain.,
Southern lilinoi 700a St. I/ouis and thro'west, 42Q.O,.*
St. Louis and stations on I. A St. L.RR 4 90pn St. Louis and thro* west.4 0 Marshall and statian? sonth bii eDaxiTiUcA Vinc«nacs mt.li SO am -faand st^ii«ns 6n filiaois dtend Eailroad*
4
.. 1....... »*#a
Stations on Toledo. Wabash ^"oatern KR. west vt Danville.... 00a m. V**" S
1
NORTH.
Chic*RO. UIa (thro' pon«h.M Daaville and stations on E. T.
7 00 a m. 00 a m.
H.'&C.RR..: Iowa, Minnesota. Wisconsin' and Northern Illinois, 7 00 am. Chicago, Iowa, Michigan^ tn
T,. IT.
'M
i|n
Minnesota: Wisc^qi^ln and Kortherli IHlnofs.. 3.-... Sr) t#ii ^transport and staUpns on T. H. L«gans{)OTt RR. 4 80 ni
Lotransport and staUpns on T. LoganspoTt, R7 Stations on Indianapolis, Decatur & Springfipld ltR.... 700am. StaUous on Toledo, Wabash &
Western RR„ past Danville, 700ani.J Northern Ohio, Northern Indiana, Michigan and Canada... 7 Ha
SOUTH. 11
Evans ville, Vincjmnos and Princeton 7 00 a m.. lfort Branch and SnHivan(thrqv ponches) 7 00a Evansville and stntionson E.
T. II. RR TOO am. i. Evansville »and #tationa en E. AT. H. RR. 4,50 pin. Southern Illinoii aiid Western
Kentucky 4 90 pin. Kcntjtck WorthftiE
Cky
Southern Illinois and Weste jhnfr Rations oi iR: ^.\4i ''ilACKLISJSS.il PrairTetbn,Frairio Crock.t* rays ville and Fairbanks,Tiu'sday,
tu.!l
Thurfidax and Satyi dav.... .700 a m. Nuuoa, I^d., Tuesday tirday .,. :... .... .... -i 'SO in.
The city,i9 divided Into s«vcn Carrier 1)! as follows: First DISTIUCT-^YR?\ Tylra Carrier.
North side ot Main strcdt.'neKvoen 5tJi
E'reets
north from Mala to £itv limits, in.j th»|dlV\- be^woeuTth' and eitU a»l to tlJ pvvean fth fcnd 5th streets .al«», 8th, u] tJOai Streets, n£rih of 4d «veBUti.
Sbcond District—JohnKuppcuheimer. The flOBthsflidr of Main street, between 6th, and all temtor.t bfctweefl Tth afid Ol .i south to the city limits, Including to tlx tween 3d and 4th streets and to tho alley and 7th streets also 7th street south ingto city limits.
TniR» UisTKiOT—James Johnson, Carrie] The south side of Main street, from tho 5 twee
I OUUMI DLUU tM lURUl dblt'l't, IIVHH LIK' 1 street, and all territory wenf. ofjthe a* aonhad *th strcots soatli to City IfinitJ
Fooktu Disthict—Frank Sibley,
Currier
The north side of Main, street, from tho 5th street, snd all territory west, of th« alf tweon 4th and 6th streots, andtiorth to thS it
Fifth DiaTKK-T -Jrank M. Miils. Carrier., The north side OfSWain strout, from 7th old kftnid, betwaotfiOth and IiJtn stteots, al teriitor* from 1 h«5 alley betwouu7tli nVul8Hi p! cast to the Vandalia Rlt., north to 3d avenue! ull territory north of the Vandolla ^?I. 10th street to city limits.
SiXTn District—John R. Dyers, Carrier. Tho sonth nido of Main, between 0th litw streets, from the alley between 6% and 7th nttl east to tho old canal, sonth to Demlng.iSnd ail ritoryeast on Poplar streetand south iocitylil
Sevrnth DisTKHTfr-Louie Baganz, Jr., Cai South aide of Main atreot fftnn 7tli east tl limits, including tho north side of Main, cia old canal bed to city limits, and ail territory' (rota Ninth atroot, easu to city lliniU fromPc. atfcct on the aouth tj tho Vandalia RH. tracl tlii) tiorth, I 1 i,.
Wm'. S. ^fcclain, Auxiliary Carrier, whose It is to make extra collection and delivery regulations.
Tho mall is collected from street lettcrloxl Main street from 1st to 18th atrdots.nortlion4L Chcjry, iotitli"On 4th to Walnut and south on| to Poplar, and Ohio street between 1st anV every week day between 8.80 and 9.80a m, bet? 0:80 and 10:8ft a m. between 18:80 and 2:00 [this collection Includes to Poplar street oii !outh, and east to 18th,and north to Union Del between U*80 and 8:3ft m, between 4:80 and] pm .and between 8:00 and 9:00 pm, Alhi boxes arc collected rrom twice per day, bctv the hours of #00 and 10*00-a and between! ^nd 7:30 m.
Tltero«ie four dellveriof rmiU' per day Inl inat|le«^|iary»r (ha ettj at7:0i And ll:80 .»l :O0 and 4:30 also a delivery at 1*1 m. to such business houses as desfro it. placoof bustnos« is located betwfcen 8d nij ftreets and not more than one square from
On Sunday, the Post Oltlcc is (open from I o'clock a m, and persons desiring their mall call at the wjncUw deslguated ,by. tits riuml their carrier.,
Snnday collections ovet the entire city is between 4:30 and 6:80 m, and again fn tbo ness part of the city between Sand 9 o'clock i?
Receiving Twxcs have been placed on every ner of Main »treat lo enable persons residing It to avail tliemselves of the frequent collects* made there m. with a very sbart walk.
The attonfiftn of the public is called to the jtrij distance each carrier is obliged lo wal*, ami ties living a distance back in yards arc carnci requested to place boxes in their frout doors niich other convenient places as will facllitab delivery of mail. Carriers arc not alf
prompt to wait longer than 30 seconds for an answ bell, and after waiting that long answer, he must retain the mniT
and receiving until ue nexi
livery. Carriers are obliged to be prompt, ati] do theft WorkquIdtly^bti'TuHder no circumstai to be Impolite or be immediately
to be Impolite or discourteous, and anysuch sho be immediately roportad tolhj I'oat Master, sons ownintt dot! ar« warned that unless they them'tTCd auHng fhc day. osi'rleri their mall, but they office.
gtac day. osi'rlers will not will be obliged to call*
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