Daily News, Volume 2, Number 146, Franklin, Johnson County, 8 February 1881 — Page 2
U. -i* -FQB THE-
DAILY NEWS
IPiEPl WB3B3K:.
S=S=
T~4''
THE LARGEST AKD
jBEST PAPER
FOB THE MONEY
IB THE. STATE.
The Terr* Bute Nzwa is published every aftcntooB, czecpt Sandtf, it the office, corner of Fifth and Main streets.
Price —Ave cenU per copy. 'Served by carrier* in any pan of the city, teti ccats per wwtr. By 'maO, postage prepaid, forty .five cents a month subscription by the year, J6.Q0.
Advertisements, ten cents a line eacb 'nsertion. Display advertisements rary price according to time and position.
No Advertisement* inserted as editorial or news ntatier!.' All communications shonWl be addressed to
EMORY P. BEAUCHAMP, Proprietor.
TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 8. 1881.
NEW YORK IS
water famine.
CALIFOHNIA
WM.
about to experience a
is apain experiencing great
distre&s by a revisitation of heavy rain
H.
VANDERBIT-T
an purchased the
Manhattan market site, in New York, for the purpose of converting it into railroad propety.
HAD
not
Mr
Atkins figured thftt the
bad too right to originate such a
bill, the appropriation of f175,000 for the jeaunette search expedition would have passed unanimously.
THE
KTun
MW
Land League# of Iowa, will meet
In convention at l)es Moines on St. Pat rick day to consider the situation of Ireland. The probabilities are that the money that is yearly spent in the celebration of St. Patrick, will be collected, and went to the sons of tLe Emerald Isle.
Cunard Line steamer, which left
York for Liverpool on the 19th of last month, has not yet been heard from. It is thought she has broken down and is proceeding under sail. The Atlantic has been exceedingly rough, and winds with heavy sea make it exceedingly uiracUlt sailing.
Bret Harte'sJSnng Berth.
London tetter.—Speaking of literary people, actors and the rest of that kind, a friend with whom I dined on Sunday tell# me he met Bret llarte in Loudon a few weeks back He says the California stoiy-ieller tuu changed ,very mueh slriCu he went abroad. TbsraHs about astntdh of the American About him no*, According TO my friend, as there Is about the Prince of Wales, llattc frequents all the crack club* of London, and t«!1s his Amrltsn acquaintance* about hla
If our memory serves us ri/tht, the distinffuishedcitiitenjabove refered to was ap pointed Coi»uTitr accent "at C^feldt. and ws are imprimed wlUi tbn Idea that if h« attended tV the Autte* of h\* office, he would have little time to dine six nights Out of the week in' London. Bret liarlc may have added extensively to the htimorus literature of the Country, and indeed this il true, but aa to whether he wiil add much dignity or be any great ••beaconUghC in the Consular service we very much question. jjiiii1-.-.li-
The Temperance Qawtion,
Norwrrit!*tANDiso the worn and exhausted Mate of the tempo ran cr question, there are still some parties who persist in retracing the same ground and setting forth Uie tunc thread bane argument*, the monotony of which the peof»k» have been forced to endure, for an unasuftHj exlen del period of tin* The Niswa dtw not desire to diseoamg* the? different IKCM? ties in Uteir work, but as to Journalistic di«cus.-don on the subject, it is iu opinion, all htu h*w said that can posslbb haw anv effwt The attention of
We now
^QtOw gather
The Prankfort, Ky„ a New Haamshire earthquak^Hnock.
One man met
a O in
ttAteto
adln
ner last night wHh Lewd So-and-so, deah boy.V and his engagement to-morrow to "sap with the Prince, ye know." "If# is," says my informant, who is an old New York Journalist, "the most pronounced cockney la the whole of England. I don't believe he re members that there is any such place at all aa San FVjiOf isco. Why, he actually told «*, with an Immense amount of patronage atwsnt it, toes that he dined on an a*e»age 'irocs a week w'.th the noblTlty. Anil he forther declared that 'fifty' thousand pun,' as be caMed it, had been subscribed to stari «inig*Xloe ffr h|mofnt there. What he wanted, he said, was to bavo all the really great writer* in the world write for it, and he looked suggestively at toe when tee saM It But I dlBo isake, and 1 haven't hea^d anything about the magasiae. Oh 1 you wouldn't know Uarte at all, and I'm quiet srire he wouldn't know you.Claclnna*i Commercial*
TH«S KWS
W* cslled thk mornlnff to a tepaiperaiiti? sermon from a fether who had foand his »on bowing to the dicUtcs of a pleasure loving life.
3W appeal to the reader and it had not boen better for that to lia*o spared Ws ann this dtanc au»r of tftatfUteoient, and suasion impressed of far better rerott __ of teadiing these ksaona without resort In* to iournsliMn, as a mode «f turning ihe mind of ajrAuag m«a.in the way dealnad, and in many cases this proves to -via| to a result far different than that ex
lad.
iwjMBJiiygjiai
Five people feft through the ice on FilLf _Wftw
river, and drowned. Four thousand factory hands are on strike in Hyde. England. "r
\m
the North Hampton bank robbers. Five prisoners succeeded in escaping from the Charleston, III., county jail.
A Milwaukee boy, a*ed 15 years, killed bimuelf because his father punished him. An ex-policeman of St. Louis named J&eclia, killed himself by taking muriatic add. 'A. P. Miller of the Toledo Blade, is now business manager of .ih» New.Yo^k Vribune,
Meetings have been held in London, by Radicals, to protect against the coercion bill.
Iron Dog have surrendered to the ties.
Sioux,
itary authori-
Anew passenger pool Will to the war in rates betwecti Chicago and
put an end
in rates between
St. Louis. An express train on the Cheshire R. R., in New Hampshire, collided with a freight trttin, and killed one man.
The Tekkes who fled from Geop Tepe are being pursued by a large body ol General Skofleff's troops. iHenry Nessell was instantly killed last Sunday, by his brother John. The par ties both liye near Kcndallville, Ind.
The Massachusetts Reform school has recently been deserted by twentv-five boys. Fifteen have been recaptured.
The Purgatory River has overflowed its banks great damage is beine done. No eastern mails can get through to Pueblo.
Thwe policemen were shot in Edinburg, wlule arresting two men who were suspiciously hanging about the Custom House.
A man named Xavien ^izillime, shot! bis Mistress last Sunday in a St. Louis house of prostitution, and then killedj himself. I
Davitt is at present confined in Portlandl prison. It is said he will be released on condition that he will free Ireland of his presence.
is
of Rus
The present government of 8pain prohibits the celebration of the anniversary of the proclamation of the Spanish^ gov-, ernment in 1879. .vv-
An express train, on the Texas Central railroad, which contained among its pias-j sengers the Hess English Opera troupe.} fell through a bridge, near Hampstead, and a large number of passengers were in-i jured.
The London Ladies Committee of the Land League have issued an appeal irt which they predict the early imprisonment of the leaders and organizers of thq League, and urge the women of Ireland to form associations to carry on the agitation. .,«•
Bates House.
In another column of this paper will be found the advertisement of the Bates House. This House has long been known, as the best, the most convenient abd central stopping place in Indianapolis: but on some account theTerre Haut,e public has
one other bouses when visitiug our Capitol Since the remodeling, refitting and refurnishing Of everything, beauty and elegance seetns to have sprang from chaos, and one is impressed with the Idea that the Bates will be a grand sueefess tinder its present, Regime. Let our Terre Haute people congregate and once mbre make thfe ad Butes headquarters abd they will know whe^e to find each othfef. syfrf muu,...q."i—il
tbon^i their progress is alow as compared ot Loodon. One com it«e of lxwdon. One company has dpal aobipc»ly, and owu# ail the
with thoSe a mumd lines. are of difiVraft «ol»s, and the lines aro ietteifd from A to Z, and from A to A & In IK73 there were In London about
ftfletn hytodrvd omnfbuaes, t^iiy aeirea thousand pttsoou. naiaber was formerly mfeii lasrpfTin pr«|tortiOtt fbr, la ltMl, end company employed (0» fourt«aihundred omniboaea. fiatiwrge part of t&ediy and antmrban tlavei is now
__ rarried oo tram warsa^^ndexprouxid railaad~ bv nro&er && war*. In New York City «ne waa made upon his mind a lesson i« and run npoo Broadway. la 1806 TWWTrrt- other means the number of tfene eoadMS employed op-
MS
vastaw IM wrnt few fcossdrvd and ereaty-niaa. Thia waaa tBoaaidarahle i» taetian firoa tl» aoatbar
Hill
The king of Ashauted has declared hostilities against England [jian use and the rest ie allowed The death roll of Chicogo, reports for to stand-in tl»e stacks for mice Rnd venthe month of January, 978 deaths, min (o feed on. One field of about four
if
inWiH
—A delicate reuily accom.
A
Saturday Sight. j.\
*jrA' '4It appears that the Saturday Night
lechauieal feat was
lottery JbW ©»1\ ot Providence, R!—--drilled & Hole throughout the entire haii exoetiMosd ii *»gthof*common pin, from taadto haa experience an
krge
CHiNffli TOPKR.—A
POPULAR ERRORS.—To
is
not so Obscure after all. for we observe from our eastern exchanges, that »he Satunkijf Night
is a favorite to exchange, «hd
islargelv quoted.U «t m* IJML. j- I llW TnK answer of Tammany Hall to the committee of Cne Hundred, inviting its co-operation in recbnrtructing and har mousing the DetftHoratic party, shows tha,t Tamttfaoy intends, to prevent \he reuniott rtf th«f party.J
1 8
"v\
Speaker Ridpath had his pocket picked faoo on the feccttt legislative excursion Lafayette. Ha ougtit to pinup the flap .Retim. "Flap* ts very suggestive, especially when it Is the Rid pkhn of dutv.
l*aris in 1&J7 and ia 1631 it began to come character of toughened glasa. But into ttse in Undoa. in large citics it eveniia* in the seventh month afiesr found the moat economical form of carriage having been
The omnibuses on the several lines
HMUMU1
OF
bfimt
yoajts,
to the miilnw*i«H of hoiae.|*0oads: aad
tfce 'MWpfTO•)f»
totteMtmlttMt
i'
re-
by a watchmaker ie Island, who
enough to admit the
passage o£ a iitte hair,
LOWN9^P(
Duclw
tJy the name of Elias Black, who believes in keeping everything on his sold any
doom by an accident i? th^Slv^r^^old.^
on thi Pan Handle, last Sunday »°me of them fully 15 eara old. John Brown & Sons., haye fouled with ^oO.O^D
un
The Pinkertons have captured all of cloeely huddled
Over
,lUOVy ,w
_'f tlte pictures of an Indian lodgo ku African kraal. The best refeeipt we know, if vo
jkuvw. r'oi
Mc, is
•rant to be a.i8eri2)fo, is to think about yourself, how muen you have lost, l»ow mooii you have not made, and the poor prospect for the future.
A
brave man
wifh a soul in him gets out of such pitiful ruts and laughs at discourageiDani, rolls up his sleeves, whistles and sings, and makes ihe best of life. This earth never was intended fbr Pajnadiae, ana the man who rises above Ids discouragement and keeps his manhood will only be the stronger and better for Ids adversities. Many a aoble ship has been saved by tkrowing overboard its moat valuable cargo, and many a man is better and more humane after h® has loci hH* gold
CONDUCT UPON CHARACTER.—Nothing fs more certain than that human conduct produces its effect upon human character and determines its future weal oi woe. Virtue and uprightness give the pure heart and clear conscience, whose working is an ample reward for effort and sacrifice. Vice and wrong inevitably leave their marks on the soul and tend to misery. Retribution follows ai the night the day upon human actioa Goodness hath its reward sin hath it* punishment.
IM^WOTAL TROTH.—Truth
grave
1..
United States authorities in Alaska, are at work surpprt ss the manufacture of in-| toiicating liquor: the formula
will nevei
:lie the stars will grow dim, the sun will pale his glorv.bnt truth will be ever
immortal principles. They have been prison, but they have been freer thmv before those who enshrined them ui their hearts have been burned at the stake, but out of their ashes their witnesses have arisen. No sea can drown, no storm can wreck, no abvss can s\\ allow up the everlasting truth. \ou cannot kill goodness and integrity :ind righteousness: the way that in consistent with these must be a way evcrListin^.
A PHONOGRAPHIC DOG. When toe phonograph shall have become so oheap us to be within the reach of all, which it must inevitably do fifter a while, the, dread of burglars will no longer be one of the terrors of the night. Fill jour phonograph-—No.6intended exclusively for the use of families—with the fierce bark of a dog, and have it so arranged with wires or cords that not a door .iboot the house can be opened, not a shutter loosened, nor a window raised without starting tho indobiti6 and tuniMiflr I006G the vicariate bow-wow-wow lxttied withifc it, and you can retire to your virtuous «oach at night "with the serene conscience which the Christian feels in four aces."
P'llS1 Mil SB—
Bakbsm
or TotwHKsan
hint to
the entrance behind, and the seats along drmkiruraiasa was bought one day at the side, faring each other, originated in
M1
IBS MHLA2#CBCa.Y OP BMLAiSOttB.
fk SMtk wttook ua, tow Mbttil gloomy. «MU. mi wssiwi
AMR.m SMOI
CO
cotm-
—-New Britain township he Pa., contains an eccenirtc old fermer .»' .. D1M AU vstUA KA.
AS
nwkl Osrlcaasi lia^t Is doaWr *MW, tof
doobljr »w««t tn miOia rf
Times:
ical Times
JS
story is currenv
aitrjug the Chinese of a great wine .drinker, who was able to sit all day at a taWe, and after consuming what would uave been sufficient to drive the reason out of half a dozen men, would rise up perfectly sober. The Emperor, hearing the feme of this deep drinker, ask en him to dinner, that he might test hit. marvelous powers. Aa the story goes, the king bad ordered a hollow figure tf be cast bronie, of the exact sifce anu model of this man, and, as the wine was served, fbr each enp the guest drank, a similar eup was poured into the opening at the top of the head of the image. This went on for some houta, until at Vngth tie brohae statue overflowed, while the guest cbntinued at the table, ami roee from it perfectly sober.
think that the
more a man eats the fatter and stronger he will become. To believe that the more hours children at tidy the faster thpy will learn. To conclude, if exercise is good, the more violent it is the morts good is "done. To imagine that everv hour taken from Bleep is an hour gained. To act or. the presumption that the smallest room in the house is laige enough to sleep in. Toargne that whatever remedy causes one to feel immediately better is good for the system, without regard to more ulterior effects. To eat without an appetite, or to continue to eat afl*r it has been satisfied, merely to gratify the taste, lb eat a hearty, snppcrr for the pleasure experienced dnr ing the brief time it is passing down the throat, at the expense of a whole night of disturbed sleep and a weary waking it!* mMttte the morning
Glmb.—Hent
is a tittle incident, related bj Prof.
The Omnibus. Richard, which recently occurred in Uobemia, and which mar give a useful The long coach called an omnibus, with
fimjiUea: "A child's
during si* months it suatained
SMUWITtffCTt MH «U*lt he floOr, neadleaand fltaffinmita a, bat the md not only the floor, bat the bed, ano *bte, the curtains, etc., were oon ered A-ilth them. Tlie «mply glass had burst vithoot ap^wtrent eactse, without the
rinnf
v-ch
Sjht, and with a force ao
eilrnorditwfry that all the inhabitantr of the hooMt unere friffhto«®d. Soeh «ixplo«on iadoabtkssa canaed by some
Sana? in the extreme tension of the ibras of harden^ 0a«Cw "j111 --i mt*. PardnvtaNs mjr* Don't take any of the qtmck
they are r^imeAtafto hut put yomr trust
iwiwiCWrite.
rostrums, as
II
Hon Bitten, which
will "ciure general dilapidation, costive habit* and all comic diseases. Tber«*ved Isaac from a severe eartractof tripod fever. They are the ntphwMMm of
meditiaea.
the lunatic asylums testify." —Truth is not to be decided merety by majorities, but after all, majorities have some significance. It is often asserted by the opponents of Christianity that it has had a fair trial and has failed to convert the world. Buddhism and Mohammedanism are said to be quite as strong aumerically, and to be of quite as missionary a spirit as Christianity. Prof. A. J. Schem gives the following as the most accurate figures at present attainable: Population of the earth ... 1,396,752,000 Under Christian .Gov'ts .... 685,450,411 Under non-Christian Gov'ts 711,383,580 Areaof the earth, square milos, 52,002,470: Area of Christian Gov'ts .... 32,419,015 Arejiof non-Christian lands 19,642,555
Xn other words, nearly half the •v.jple of the World and nearly twoitirdB of its area arc nominally Chrisitm. If Christianity is a failure, it is a failure on a pretty large scale at any rate. A nd as its area is increasing every yeai •ofore it becomes a total failure we may irtect it to cover literally the whole eal'I-h.
Hints to Writers.
William Cullen Bryant onee gave the following sensible advice to a young man *ho had offered him an article for the Evening Post
My young friend, I observe that yoa have used several French expressions fn your letter. I think, if yoti will study the English language, that you will find it capable of expressing ail the ideas that yon may have. I have always found it so, and in all that I have
ten
I
do not recall an instance where I was tempted to use a foreign word, but that, on searching, I have found a hettei one in my own language.
Be simple, unaffected be honest in your speaking and writing. Never use a long word when a short one will do «s well.
Oall a spade by its name, not a well known oblong instrument of manual labor let a home be a home and not a residence a place 'not a locality, and so on of the rest. When a short word will (Jo, yon always lose by a long one. Yon lose in clearness you lose In honest expression of meaning and. in the estimation all men who »re capable of judging, you lose in .reputation for ability.
•'TiirlfWiW
aouvtjre rart«t&. |r
And g\oe*
BOL,
toys, O ftauoft-MottTrtn
Hw em fatw oon^i3»e rametatotrt Utiwtle tm vtmrtn sua otaaaws tawSr, And Esaeo paaguoirs C^dtM eatber.
tnncm%
awl *U that W»V* noM
6mr
Li
The only I me way to shine, even in this false world, is to be tbodest and unassuming. Falsehood may be & thick crust, hut in the contae of time truth will find a place to break through. Elegance of language may not be in the power of us all, but ftiinplifigty and «tm£gbtforwardnes* are. mts nt*
Write much aa von would speak, and as you think. If with yoor inferior, apeak no coarser than usual: if with your superior, speak no finer. Be what you say, and within the rules of prudence. No one ever was a gamer by singularity of worth! or in pronunciation. The truly wise man witt ao apeak that no one will observe how he tpeaka.
U-J-U -*L -i--
J!U J«BS
IMV
I
sniBMisosi gr
swr*.,
1
Msyneta ssoea am tomonow. Theok*«ilhw andto*e.wblJeret Oar«kast4tv«d bapplxKHS amtapsflu Boott, im to am, wm corns wsrd
Anapw^Stv oo ptarsicSMi aarstti. -Xenny kissed when nxt, Jumptu« from the cluvlr alieaM ki^ Time, yoa thief, wlio love to get
Sweete upon your lfcit. put that U— Say rm waary, say rm sail, that beattta atid wealth b*TemlMdnia Sttf Tm growtug otofc: tut add—1 p,.p. -s««uijrUsMdaMr*
—It necomes proft»"sed Christians to take aire that they do not dishonor the Gospel and its Author by subordinating them to the claims of worldly admiration. If others come to the place of worship with no higher wishes-, let the spirituality of pious hearers "helping together Uy prayer," so co-operate with the preacher that the worldly spirit shall be awed and hushed by the unworldh 'influence that pervades the place. The sermon will then be in harmony witk the worship. In both God will le exalted, and He will make them a blaeajig and a power. —New York
The editor's Is a
most fascinating employment does not require any previous education or pre-, paration. ana pays enormously. The principal occupation of leading editoys u? to receive enormous bribes for leading articles to attend theaters, conceits, and other places of public r-esort, occupying the best places, of course, and to inform political leaders how they should regulate affairs. Assistant editors and reporters, who are scarce at $365 a week, generally work four hours a day when they are pot awav on vacations, have free oasses every wnere, and thoir company is contended for bj' the elite
of tin.
eitv —A recent London letter to the
Med
gives an interesting abstract!
of a lecture by Dr. Alfred Carpenter on •'Alcoholic Drinks as Diet, as Medicines, and as poisons." The lecturer considered that alcohol in any of its forms may be, a a in a T\n/] niAf1 a good medicine, "but it is a bad aiet., and that its action as a poison is visible' among all ranks of society." fie summed up its effects very strikingly in saying that "work which is kept going, by continuous dosep of alcohol always fends in a break down. If it is taken for the purpose of increasing muscular exertion, ultimately there is great loss of muscular power, as all athletes know.: If mental exertions are kep£ vroing by alcohol, there is a mental brcaK-down,
too Lato to Ltmm.
Socrates, at an extreme old age-teamed to play on musical instruments. Cafio, at 80 jreara df a«e, ienrned to 1s«if the Greek hmgoage.
Plutarch, wlten between 70 and 80, oomnaenoed the stady Of Latin Boccaccio waa 36 years of aae when he oommenced his etodies in light lfr exatore, yet he beoame one of the neatest masters of the Tuscan dialect"— Dante and Petrarch being ttve other two.
Sir Henry 8pelman nogiected the sciences in his youth, but commenced the stady of them when be wau between 50 and 90 vetirs of age. Aftei* tlvis time Ive became a moet learned antiguarian and lawy r.
Doctor Johnson applied himself to the
Dutch
language but a lew years
before has deathv Ludovico Itfonaldesco, at the peat age of 116, wrote the memoire of his, own times.
Offlibly, the traneQator £f Homer ai)Q Viml, was unacquainted avith latin and Greek till he was past 50.
Franklin did not fully commence his philosophical pursuits till he had reached his 50th year.
Dry den. in his 68th year, commenced the translation of the Iliad, his most pleasing production.
We oould go on and cite thounands of examples of men who commenced a new study,' either for livelihood or amusement, at an adwnoed age. But every one familiar with tlie biography of distinguished men will recollect individual cases enough to oonvince them that none but the sick and indolent will aver say, I am too old to learn.
KATZENBACH & CO.
Have just opened anew
WHOLESALE
ZECOTTSIE,
218 South Fourth Street.
WE KEEP
A
FULL STOCK OF
CALIFORNIA, and
IMPORTED WINES
AND BRANDIES,
js*«v-*3 ite.
A
eases to lireaUto wit one win enjoy ter health, and find more time for bnaineas, who livea^on common »r.
Sidney £mith «nee remarked: "After yott have written an article, take yow mm and **rik« out ltalf the words, and yon will be snrrriw*! to see how much ttrooeer ii is."
.iv-
•?*,, Tw« mtmam.
RMralale fimt the stomach, secosd the liver esperfally the fir»t,*aas to perform fun cue ns their. fqnctCana perfectly aw! you
wi3l re
move It least mnet««n twesmths of all the ill* th# mas kind is heir to. in this or any other climate.. Ilop BiUem is the only tbiof t|si wHl fi«s J^decCy healu*Taction to .Oiflse^w^ uiffos.
Farmm,
,.
-lu£
V"...
ALSO FINE WHISKIES AND FASCY LIQUORS.
Our Sour Wines embrace Ber-
ger, Riesling, Traminor and Q-ut-
edel. _________
writ
Our Sweet Wines Angelica, Muscat, Madura, Port and Sher
ry and our Red Wines, Zanfandel, and Chateau Margaux.
We axe prapared to deliver Wines and Liquors to the Tra4e, I'-
.'.1
and private families in any quantity and by the case free® of I charge.
Grentle Women
'Who want glossy, inxuriant ,pnd watt tr«Me« of abundaiii, jieaotiftii Hair mart mo Jioirs KATHAIBON. Tto «Ieaant, cheap article ajwawi !JIII5S
lb© Hair grow
fhnA thst,
Stl, baslthyJUrti tke reenlt of mag
Katttalnm*
-*S*»
Post 0ffice jBnlkfin.
Cleataur of «*e Xa&la aaid Carrier 1 Carrier -r Leaxe to
BAST. DeliTery
Indiaaapoll? and thro' east—7 00am •Indianapolis and sUttons on TandaliaRailroad 100 a a. ilndianapolis and stations on
Y&ndalia Railroad ,1130am.. Indianapolis and stations on I 7:00am.. I. ASt. (I? SO am. Eastern Indiana. Chicago ana
Northern Illinois 11 30 a nr Eastern Kentucky 4 90pm.. Indianapolis and thro1 east.... 4 Indianapolis and stations on
Vaadalia Railroad 4 20 pm. Iowa, Michigan, Utiimesota and WiiRonsin... ,. 436 pm.. •f" WESf St. Lonis and thro' west 7 00 a m.. 1 Junctions on YandaliaRR.and
Southern Illinoi s.. 7 00am.. St. Louis and tkro' vrcst 4S0pm..l St. Louis and stations on Vandalia Rpilroad A 4S0pm.. St. Louis and sutions on I. A
St. L.RR 4S0pm..l St. Louis and thro' west....... 4 90 pm.. Marshall and stations south on theDanrilleit VincennesRR.ll SO am.. Peoria and stations on Illinois
Midland Railroad 700am.. Stations on Toledo, Wabash A Western BR. west of Dan-
Tille TOO am..10 NORTH. Chicago, Dl.. (thro' poudh)— 7 00 a m. .10 Danville and stations on E. T.
H. ft C. RR 700 am.. 6 Iowa, Minnesota, Wisconsin and Northern Illinois. 700am.. 101 Chicago,
orthcru Illisou* 700am.. 101 lows, Michigan,} isota, Wigc»nsia and 11 30 a m.. 2 1 ,era Illinois... .) 700am.. 6r jort and stations on T.
Minnesota. Northern Logansport at
H. ^Logansport RR 4 S) pm.. Stations on Tndianapelis, Decatur Ss Springfield RR 700am.. Stations on Toledo. Whbash Jk
Western RR., east Danville. 7 00 am. 10 Northern Ohio, Northern Indiana, Michigan and Canada... 7 ©0 a m.. 10
SOUTH.
Evansville, Vincennes and Princeton Fort Branch and Snllivanlthro' pouches) Evansville and stations on E. &
00 a m.,12(
7 00 a m. 12
T. H. RR 7 00am..li00Evansville and stations on E. 4T. H.RK 4 20pm.. 2 Southern Illinois and Western
Kentucky....... 4 00pm.. 4 S*uthern Illinois and Western Kentucky.,... 7 00am..l2( Worthington an^l stations on
T. II. & S. R.' RR 4 30 pm.. '3 HACK LINES. Prai I ton ^Prair re k, Gray 8 villeandFairhanks.Tuoeday.
Thursday and Saturday 7 00am.. ?i Nelsoa, Ind., Tuesday and Saturday 4 80pm.. li
The city is divided Into seven Carrier Distr as follows: FIRST DISTINCT—Fred Tyler, Carrier.
North Bide of Main street, between 5th streets north from Main to city limits, inol?' to th« alley between 7th and 8th and to the/ between 4th and 5th streets also, 8th, 9th 10th streets, north of 3d avenue.
SECOND DISTBICT—John Kuppenheimer, Ca The south side of Main street, between 5th Uih, and all territory between 4tn and 6H at south to the city limits, including to tl.c tween 8d and 4tn stroets and to the alley betw 6& nnd 7th streets also 7th street south of ing to city limits.
TniRB DISTRICT—James Johnson, Carrier. The south Bide of Main street, from the riv 5th street, and all territory west of the alio tweon 3d and 4th streets south to city limits.
FOURTH DISTRICT—Frank Sibley, Carrier. The north side of Main struct, from tho rive 5th street, and att territory west of the alley tween 4th and 5th stroets, and north to tho limits.
Firrn DISTRICT -.Frank M. Mills, Carrier. The north side of Main street, from 7th to old canal, between 8th and 10th ctroets, an" territory from tho alley between 7th and 8th st east to the Vandal la RR., north to 3d avenue 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 streets, from the alley betweenflH and7th stroe east to the old canal, south to Doming, and all rltory caet on Poplar streetand south tocltylimi
SKVBNTH DISTRICT—Louis Baganz, jr., Carri South side of Main street from 7th east to' limits, including the north side of Main, eas old canal bed to city limits, and all territory from Ninth street, east to city limits fromPoti etrect on the south to the Vandalla RR. track tho north.
Wm. fl. McClaln, Auxiliary* Carrier, whose 1 it is to make extra collection and delivery
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keeps it from felling
ont, arresto and efflpeajgray--new, renmea dandmlT and etching, nakes the Hair !JIIUUUGJ sStobs, RiTta* It enritag, trndener «ai keeping tt in an denired pMltton. Beaa-,
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RBOCLATIONS.
Tke mall 1s collected from streot letterboxes Main street from 1st to 13th streets, north on 4th Cherry, south on 4th to Walnut and south to Poplar, and Ohio street between 1st ai overy week day between 8.80 and 9.30a m, bat? 9:S0apS .10:80 a m, between 12:90 and 8:00 (this collection* Includes to Poplar street on SQUtb, and eaet to I8tli,and north to Union Do between 2:80 ana 3:90 m, between 4:80 and ]m and between 8:00 and 9:00 pm. All oth boxes *re collocied from twice per day, betwe tho hours of 8:00 and 10:00 am snd between 4: and 7:80 pm.
There are four deliveries mat1 per day In business part of the city: at 7:00 and 11:5 2:00 and 4:30 also a delivery at 0:00 m. to such fcnslness houses as desire it, who place of business Is located between 3d and 7: streets and not mora than one square from Mai
On Sunday, the Post Office Is (open from 9 to o'clock a m, and persons desiring their mall call at tho window designated by the number* their carrier.
Sunday collections ovct the entire city Is mad between 4:30 aud 5:80 m, and again In the liuM ness part
of
the city between Sand 9 o'clock
Receiving boxen have been placed on every cor ncj of Main street to enable person* residing near It to avail theinselxes of the frequent coUaotlon made thereon wltb a very *h#rt walk.
The attention of the public is called to the{ distance esch carrier is obliged to walk, and ties living a distance back in yards are earnestl requested to place boxes in their front doors or such other convenient placos as will facilitate prompt delivery of mall. Carriers are uot alio wo to-wait longer than 80 seconds for an answer.t bell, and after waiting that long and receiving answer, he uiust retain the mail until ue next delivery. Carriers are oHlged to be prompt, and to do their work quickly, bnt under no circumstances to be impolite ar discourteous, and anv such should mediately reported to the Post Master. Perawning logs are warned that unless tbevkowx thetn tied during the day, carriers will not doltrdf their mail* hot they will be obliged to call at
bo Im sons own I
office.
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