Daily News, Volume 2, Number 149, Franklin, Johnson County, 11 February 1881 — Page 2
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Our street commissioner is dole* good serrice in tbe way of having the gutters and street* cleaned.
*'v T'
r•sgtsbzr
II TIE STATE.
The Terre Haute
News
is published ercry tf-
ternooa, except Ssnday, at tbe odce, corner of FUth and Main street*. Price -fire uati per copy. Served by carrier* to any put at Lite city, ten ecnu per week. By mail, postage prepaid, forty-ive eenta month subscription fey the year, 96.00.
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JEMORY P. BKAUCHAMP, Proprietor.
DAILY NEWS
FRIDAY. FEBRUARY IT, 1881.
MM
Tub coercion bill passed to a second tisn House of Commons reading in tbe Bri by, a vote of 869 to 56, i*»
A
couple
of scheming individuals were
last oi*bt oyerheard in plotting against our police force, but as their condition was not that of sobrietv, we attach no importance to the question.
Laboring men throughout this country and England, unsatisfied with the compensation received for their work, are trying to impress upon their employers' minds, the' wishes in the mutter by refusing to work.
Tub Porte bets issued a decree authorizing an internal loan of 800,000,000 piastres, to be contributed by persons liable to land taxes, and also poll-tax of from one to flvo medjidus on tbe inhabitants of the capital.
J' u. ii1 in in
Bssassmmmmm
It is intimated In Washington, that Governor Murray, of Utah, was actuated by other than motives of public policy in refusing a certificate of election to Delegate Cannon, the Mormon. Governor Murray Is ttnderstood to be Interested in a mine, to work which MDr. Campbell has advanced money.
ABOitxttsnor McCabe, of Dublin, has written a reply to the recent pontifical letter. lie expresses the utmost veneraation for the rope, but insists that the land agitation in Ireland has a just object in view and must be encouraged, He regrets that outrat» have been fcommitted itlTHnll and promises Catholic cHfcfcy cesses.
t%
KOTE8 AND HEWS. ft. iI»W ii^» i|«»
Hew Orleans is still flooded, Ship carpenters are still striking. The "Railroad on ice" it still In op era-
In Canada. A new at Harv
The Royal
1
A. J. McGuthmn, "the missing witness," testified before the committee charged with investigating the bribery of members of the Tennessee Legislature. He said Representative Davis offered to vote for Shelley, a Republican, for $100, but did not do it. He informed witness afterward that he had received a better ofTer. j-yf ^-lUt^
At
a mooting of the Land League In Dublin, Dillon urged the continuance of the organisation even after the passage •f tbe coercion bill. He advised the tenants to resist the landlords in every way short of physical force, A resolution was adopted requesting Parnell to proceed to America at once to secure the sympathy of Americans.
uence of the Roman prevent farther ex-
to
Anothkk attempt is to Utv made to secure an International atamlisrd
6t
value
for gold and silver, France takes the initiative this time, and has invited the nations of the i^ortd to join her in a conference. Consul General Walkcr, of Paris, will represent the United States. Mr* Walker was the agent of the RoVernmeut for several years in endeavoring to negotiate a monetary treaty witb the European power*.
Peculiar Word*.
There are ft number of words in the English language
«#eli
aU
of which costaim
of the five regular vowels, tat ii wo«W male almoat anyone tbiiik of more than one or two at short notice. The following mav be given as examples! Education. reputation, re|ralati«n. emulation, perturbation, mwwuration repodiation. Be* *»d«*tl*4* the* are #s*e»l word*, containing all U»e
vow^Vj
U\\
ineluding the
Ctf out»e we may revolutionaJ7, eiocutiooarv, mad mwttcetionahiy. The worf inviribiliSy may W noted as a pecn liar wok. tot contain* the letter *1^ fiv tim*, and T*aii*s«*e*re spelled with onfr ftmr diftrmit letters of the alphabet* altWh «ne«wtaim etem letters and the other nine. 8chna|n* a word of one syllable and eight letter* con telning
one wret Tlwn are no wot^
in the Kiudieh laii«ra*|t« of mora than eight Sl^«Tana^ri&e containingXt smniber may W awsatiooed incoucjprelMft "Mi^ __
The fbUowtaf Is a toodiing ArikansM ^tuary versa: "Grim Death
ha*
stablisbed
ir I^tr School is to baizes'' SHV.. Mad dogs are reported in several dif— ferent lorslitioa
The police were stoned jtt a fair held ift Killkuily, Ireland. One thousand Miller* at Rtmavon* W.1M, on Btrikt
sn
$12,000,000. have thus far been expended on East River bridge. Afire on the Victoria docks, London, did a great amount of damage. -Wisconsin is going to take measures against female tramps. 875 Sioux have surrendered, and other tribes will probably sue for peace.
are
Different sections of the country still visited by destructive rainfalls. The business men of Montreal, are excited over the telegraph stock transfer.
The wife of Charles Miller, of Detroit, attempted to cut his throat with a razor. Small pox has broken out among the inmates of Poor Asylums in the northern part of Illinois.
The wedding gift to Stepaner, from the Pope, is a beautiful table bedecked with precious jewels. ,,
i4
Stock subscriptions books of the Merchants Telegraph Company have been opened in Buffalo.
The annual meeting of the National Stove makers association was held in Detroit last Wednesday.
It is said that the proposed Monetary conference will certatnly be adhered to by Germany and Italy,
A woman named Niccolls committed suicide, by jumping in to a well, at Carthage, Mo., to baa for the well.
De Lesseps ha* received a telegram from Panama announcing the commencement of operations oa the canal.
In a letter written by tne Duke of Cambridge, on the military side of the candahar question, the retention of the place is urged.
iJ 01
Suits for $800,OOO^have been commenced against the ex-mayor of East St. Louis and ex-clerk for money* received and not paid over.
jt
It is reported that Gould and Yanderbuilt are to work in conduction in the in terest* of the proposea railroad to the City of Mexico.
decree
dissolving the Spanish
cortes reported that the new ministry would change all the Spanish representatives abroad.
A half-witted girl was inveigled into saloon at Harrison, Mich., and was outraged by seven lumbermen. The authorities take no notice of the crime.—
Inter-
O a The Austrian empress, haven again chosen Ireland and England as her hunt ing ground, will probably spend in Ireland another $100,000. Last year she brought eighty attendants and all her own horses.
A bill was introduced into the Missouri legislature, yesterday, providing that a guardian who is proved to have defrauded his ward, or connived at the same shall be imprisoned in the State Penitentiary for not less than five years.
There has been a decrease in the value of the goods imported into England dur-
year the value of the exports of $208,812. The Twenty-third Regiment of Brook lyn, through a committee appointed for tliat purpose, has tendered to the Rev. Dr. Talmage, of the Brooklyn Tabernacle, the position of chaplain of the reffimentmade vacant by the resignation of the Rev. Dr. Leonard, who goes to fill a pulpit in Washington. Dr. Talmage has accepted the position^ *s
4
A large piece of ice. several miles in ex ten^ broke away from the gorge abovethe St. Louis bridge, on the Illinois side of the Mississippi River, and floated down, crushing a warfboat, but doing no further damage. 8maller pieces then delMshed an'l moved down stream, and it was thought this process would continue all nigh 115 ..
Unci© EseM Wisdom.
SUenoe is a hard opinion to beat. No man is envious of what he can eqnal. or even imitate.
Most successes sp from tbe ashes of some
Good breeding is a letter of credit all over th« world. 'ir
The most cunning of all egotists is the man who never speaks well of himself. There is a great deal of modesty in thU world whieb will ©tie at almost anything —provided it can be seen through a crack.
A man of twie genius is generally as simple as a child, and as unconscious of hu power as an elephant
Hie man who is always ready to take chances will very probably take his last one in the alms house.
It is viNsllto give hoed to ytrar doobfet for they are very often the dawning* of troth. Biogtry knows of bat one way to reach heaven, wMfc fc*ith knows of a hundred.
Man tea two-legged, cccentric animal that deals in politics, religion and general merchandise.
Itrsqmircs wisdom to be able, wad it requires hoiMftty to be willing, to oaH things their right name*.
It is more difficult for a man to make a eirctimstattre than it is for a to make a maa|M
If we wenid wMrclre^wr lun Uie condition of those below us, instead of tlioae above, we should find ourselves very watt off. & S
T»t Fiwnr Pafjrn sound of cotfee ever
CniteH ^aiea baa been woman. She obtained nicsltoral
If
take®
darliafUtile Jmy.only and Stanakewafe 4ay« toa wj*****&
*:v- ^^wusnr •sawr?1®?.**
Trathleta.
Quarrels should never occtirl^jf ee© tme friend*. Unchaste language is the sure index of ait impure heart
Learning Is wealth to the poor, and an ornament to the rich, Reafton wrapped up in a lew worda 1* generally of tne greatest weight
The judgment of this world is ofterier Baaed on ponqrlhan on justice and truth. Tfoerfc ia
tpiany
severe
a mao whose tongue
might govern multitudes, if he could only gorenrhie tongue.* awHard work is the price of success, and it can be purchased with no other kim^ of currency.
It is dangerous to aak a woman id+e questions wnen she is adding up & grocery bilL
It is easier for a camel to swallow a whole paper of needles thad for a delinquent subscriber to get to heaven. "What men want," sa^s Bulwer, "is not talent, it is purpose." not the power to achl
To know a thing is right and not to do it, is a weakness. When you know a thing, maintain that you kno# it when you do not know it, admit the fact
The envious man is tormented not only by all the ills that befall himself but by all the good that happens to another. He Is made gloomy, not only by his own donds, but by another man's sunshine.
gingoiar Defense
A lawsuit once settled some strikingly original features. Among other articles, a lady purchased a coffee pot But nei* ther she nor her maid could make good coffee from it, and it was returned to the dealer. He refused to receive it, and the husband sued him. In court the defend* ant managed his own case. The manner of procedure was very unique, to say the least The dealer took the coffee pot and a liberal supply of coffee, sugar and cream, a gasoline stove and a coffee mill into tbe court-room.
The Art of Taklagr Leave. •"v It has been said that one of the most important social accomplishments is that of entering a room gracefully, but to our mind, that of leaving one easily and judiciously is to be preferred.
It is painful to see people anxious to beat a retreat from a call or visit, and vet apparently as unable to escape as rats a trap, although nothing bars their egress, and all persons concerned would gladly dispense with their company.
The art or science of departure, both from localities and positions, is worthy of careful consideration and study, in great as well as little matters. To understand when to bring to an end a morning call or a public career requires, ia a greater or lesser degree, the exercise of the same faculty. No visitor is likely to be popular who has not the tact to leave at the proper time a house at which he may be staying.
One of the greatest difficulties in bidding farewell to a host, is to convey to him the impression that you have en ioyed vourself. Expressions of thanks tor a pleasant visit are apt to have a stereotyped and conventional ring to them. A hospitable man likes to know that his friends have been happy, but when each of them mutters a sort of little grace on his departure, he feels that they are but paying him an ordinary social compliment, for he knows that they thank their entertainers wherever they go as regularly as thsy iir the servants.
Damascus.
Damascus has been ruined by the opening of Suez Canal. The overland trade, both Oriental ahd European, by caravan with Bagdad and Persian Gulf has been diverted to the water-way. The competition of India and China in silk and seasame seed through the canal has affected the value of these
gassensibty
[rin« up, Phoenix-like, tmemilure.
1
The man who oan distinguish between goOd advice and poor does not need either. Next to silence come* brevity—the wise masta strength and the fool's refuge.
Coffs*—H*e raised in tbe toaFtadMla plants from Che at Wi
tea aad coffbs ewa be jiroiiiesd 1st UmM Sam% domhsdiotta PnimlB tHT a torn aaay* howei es, lie dis|Meed to iia^olfe th# east adbni tt/slshsg iMattcnariMiatiMi aaHivatissiof tfcasa sllwnila—s ^.
roducts the late discovery of ala*arine rendered valuelesethe cultivation of madder for export and the diversion of large numbers of Modem pilgrims from all parts of the East, who had hitherto made Damascus their point of arrival and departure, with much profit to the city,
10
the sea route by. the canal, has
contributed in no small degree to its downward progress. House rent has declined 30 and 60 per cent and large numbers of empty houses Jn every of the city indicate the^ general dec! The streets are filled wi Moslem and Christian, and that too, in a city where eighteen months ago a begger was a rarity. The more elevated districts of Lebanon, which formerly contributed the principal portion of mendicants daring winter months, have this year sent donble the number to swell the atnonnt of local indigence. The far-famed eye of the East is no* doll and lustreless.
UJi LimUlUiXJ-l JI_IMLU—L
There sure now four Atlantic cables in operation. The first one was laid in 1S65, the second in 186the third in l&39,and the fonrth in 1S7S. A fifth war laid in 1874. The first cable ceased working in 1874, after a fruitless expenditure of $400,000 had been made to repair It The cost of one cable is about $5,000,000, The capital of the Anglo-American company, representing three cables, is $35,000,000. The toburecdpt3rf this company firom JimeJUrttoDec.lst,I#J'8,were $1^47300, against an outlay daring the same periodof $279,000.
—ft isdiiRcalt to say what constitutes the beanty of a woman. The Sandwich Islanders estimate women by their weight. Tfc* Chl&eat fettsiro them to have deformed feet and black teeth. A girl most be tattooed aky-Uueand wear nose-ring, to aatfefy a SojtoSiss ItJaadter. Afri^n pri^rw^ t^r bride* to have their teeth fiknllike iho*e of a aaw. And tbus criterion of tft yr*?*****
2 £$
acconling
1
CtaOMta, xL, a
wu a ftmntato) o'wrlookin* tbe#«»•f*: i.ju»#*,*vtn..«-tt. pwaaamoM barfedander
*1
'P*n«%*xv.,«.
«w a/hat-bora, bad from bta' Hebrews xi. Ift. —Hf w»»ralf» wlw WnfcMKWflh- 5®
Acta, xxiv., SS.
wm
other words,
eve, but the will to
labor. We must look downward as well as upward in human life. Thoagh many have passed you in the race, there are many you have left behind.
The coffee was
ground in the presence of the jury, the gasoline lit in the stove, water and coffee put iu the pot, ana allowed to boil over tne gasoline blaze. At length the concoction was pronounced complete, properly mixed with sugar and cream, and passed to the jurors and the justice. What jury could withstand such sweet blandishments? They called for more, and as there was plenty and to spare., their request was granted. At length the jury retired fer consultation, and on returning, rendered a verdict for the man who made the coffee. It generally paye to appeal to the appetite of men.
«a arcbitort «ce* ago— Q«nesl, vL. IS—23.
wm
"L4.
A BmUOALiLPK^JT-.i,, A. mi a traitor baa* by U»efe*fa II. 8*mn«l, xtIU, «. BwM*fbil7biiUtMshlntb**lr~ ft uicfnr-
JO WW ^ra«*affxw, ant w«ii «ood word*Daniel, tx., 21. Iwnart to th
I. Saiaael, L,Z7—SS.
I w»s
a
n*m* roce(v«d of On# Lord—
1(ii
OcQMls, xxxll.,a—IS. ,» 1c wm ft *heph«rd In
Ambl&n
Exodus, lii., 1.
WM
pl*c« n«*r the d«a«rt of aoaU DeaUaronom*. L, ia
Xww»^perbt(|Iiwbbltt«u-
Lukts XTl., 20-21.
ww tm Idol, «v ottf«ct of dn*d- ,1 Levltlciw, xx., 2—3. N
?$ •&-*£' .**•'
,w»w#
vor vi 80 «w
For hoar of rest, 80 sweetly blest
if
naturally
the great majority of them are connected with important productive industries. The directors believe that by combining practical work with theoretical study, the student's entrance upon professional life is an expansion of nis school life, and not an abrupt transition to anew mode of life, and the results seem to justify the belief. Practice, in this school, is subjected to three conditions*. First, that it shall be a necessary part of each week's work secondly, that it shall be judiciously distributed and thirdly, that the students shall not expect or receive any immediate pecuniary return for it At the middle of the first year, every student except the mechanical section chooses some department under the advice of the instructors, and, until his graduation, devotes ten hours a week and the month of July, to practice in that department—that is, for two and a half years. Students who select •jhemistry, work in the laboratory the civil engineers, at field work or problems in construction thosetwho select drawing, in the drawing room and physics, in the physical laboratory. The mechanical section practice in the workshop from the beginning of the apprentice half year, and their practice extends over the whole course of three and a half years."
The act of Congress Creating the industrial schools in the various States contemplated just such as this with the addition embracing agriculture. But most of these schools have been, througk a total misconception of the field they were to occupy, or utter incapacity of the management* one or both, crippled in public esteem and dwarfed into mere high schools, or starving imitators of university classics. Wfienever these schools are bent to practical ends, like the Worcester institution, it will requre no lobby or beggiag to get appropriations from their several State Legislatures, for then the public will feel that they are doing a useful, practical work for tha industrial of the country and for the classes who do not aspire to enter the professions. This latter class In braces over 90 per cent of the tax paying people, a fact which has been totally ignored by these schools, and which accounts for their present awarfed condition.
Is experience worth nothing to our school-men and school managers? Shall our public schools, supported by taxation in a large measure—the higher grades we mean—never come to a rec•nition of practical truths, and afford ». nst to the 00 per cent, equal facilities for becoming useful to themselves and the State, that they do to the 10 per cent?
England, France, Germany and Russh. are solving this question In a most
Sournal
radical way. A number of Chambers' contains a most interesting article respecting the operations and results of this method of education in England. That country gives aid to support schools of applied science, artisans, mechanics, etc., not in the manner that we did by congressional donations, but with substantial iy the same encouragement
The same journal states that at present fifty thousand young men in England annually attain respectable proficiency as artimns, mechanics, and in other in* dustrial pursuits, in these schools. Our own pablic institutions offer
By cblldffeood'a 1 i,
I Quart
Q|aru fiUss with ope wide,
jp
t.
.Mis*tbeirlo^e
4
O ww« a rampart to ke«p out tbe foe—
j..i
JI. C3iroaicle», xvlL, 2—S.
was an tale, whecce a taint looked abova— Revelations. I., 4—0. wm a Christian sainted In love-
Romans, xvl., 24.
It
olacure, yet a mother of Kings—. Matthew, L,
8
8 wm
a Danlte, who did
woriclerftil
wm
a
dty
things—
Judges, xlv., 5—9.
that had a stronghold— II. Samuel, xxlv.. 7.
'"U
wm
a oonntry productive of gold—
f*
Jeremiah, x., 8.
wis a Queen whom a King set aside— Ksther, 1., 10—22, 2
wm
a place where a man wished to hid©— Oenesis, xix., 1. Bead il. Timothy, lit,, IS.
How to Educate.
In our series of articles last year on "Methods of Education," (says the Indiana
Farmer)
we alluded at some length
to the splendidly organized and managed Free Institute of Industrial Science at Worcester, Massachusets. It has been in operation now ten years, ahd the result of its work is most important. One of our cotemporaries says of it: "It hat graduated eight classes and the list of the residences and occupations of its graduates shows them to be, almost without exception, engaged in honorable and lucrative occupations. Very
While child-hood fair, Frte wtbs alr. Sporting among the flowers*
Recall*toWn*. Pieasnres we Pleetfng, as simmer hosra
irdhl sleep, 1 YH r#TAJ *•*4 Dull hours away "~4 Of tbe future, dreameth not.
Lest with a happy heart, Tpe sooa you part,
rn
KATZENBACH & CO.
Have just opened a new
WHOIjESAIiE
MIMCM
HOUSE,
318 South Fourth Street.
W1C KEEP A FULL STOCK OF
CALIFORNIA, and
yypys
«s*' v:
S
1
-vr
Uf darling,' Maaife Kay.
Indianapolis, Feb.ifth^vss,*** J. B. H.
IMPORTED WINES
V.
AND! [BRANDIES,
ALSO FINE WHISKIES AND FANCY
LIQUORS.
Our Sour Wines embrace Berger, Riesling, Traminer and Q-ttt-
•i'.
edel.
Our Sweet I Wines Angelica,
Muscat, Madura, Port and Sherry and our Red Wines, Zanfan-
ael, and Chateau Margaux.
We are prepared to deliver Wipes and Liquors to the Trade
and private families in any quantity and by the case freeHs of
charge. ..
tT
t-s s'ii')
r&n
and
abundant facility for young men to entei the professions, bat with it all enly small per cent make what they learn of utility to themselves or the public, ami no opportunity is affdnied for entering the usefhl indttshts*. ShnM w* go
00
educating thus, while the fact is plain that nine-tenths of ail who go out of the shoots know how to do nothing that any one would pay them a dollar for?
A German inventor proposes to make boots that will never wear out He mixes with a quantity of waterproof due a suitable quantity of clean quart* sand, which is spread on the thin featberaole employed as a foundation. These qfosits soles are said to be flexible an! aim** indestructible, while they enable the wearer to go safely on slippery roads.
*Tw»0»w*m.
Herniate first the stomach, second the liver especially the first so as to perform their functions perfectly and vou will remove it least nineteen twentieths of all the IBs that mankind iiheir w, in this or other climate. Hop Bitten is tbe thing that ^will gjve perfectly beal*
Gentle Women
il'i i"4t,
ft mil an
The city
ib
,.
I iRV
LYON'S KATH1IE0N. This
out, arrests and earwgrayness, remotes dandruff" and itching, makes the Hair strong, giving it a enriing tendency and keeping it in any desired meitioii. Beaiitmf healthy Halr is the sure reralt of i^ng Eath&iron.
HA»T CU«EO wbboBt pain in
OPIUM 5
MASTIC TKC8S
a^sm am Mr. ai j^^yfciiegseie*He*5
SHSi
WM H(M
(MaaihSnhkMlMMlf
ea S
A
I
iiMm tarns oou a****
J*
1
Ijnil #aiUUn.
assise s( the Malta aai Carrter Eg Carriers! I fli, Leave fori
BAST. DeliteryJ
ladlaaapolls aad tbro' east 7 00 am tndianspolis and statkms en VaadaliaRailroad 700am. Indianapolis and stations an
Vandalla Railread 1180 a m., Iadlanapolle and stations on 7H)0aa.! I. A St. 111 30a in. Eastern InAlaaa. Chicago
Northern Illinois 11 30 am 4tPB..] 4Dpm„
Baste rn Kentucky. Indianapolis and thro1 east.... Indianapolis and stations on
TT,
I
4*1 pm..
A ...
Tvinzsiis jaamma Iowa. Michigan, MinnesoU and Wlawnsln....,,,.. .,Ok WBST. iLLoala and Qu»' wisat....... Junctions on Vandalla RR. and
4S# pm..|
TOO a m.J
7 00am..] 4 SO pm..
Soatbera Illinoi s...... St, Lonis and thro' west St. Lonis aad sutloas on Vandalia Railroad. 4t0pm St. Lonis and stations on I. A
St. L.BR 4 90 pm.. St. Louis and thro' west 4 80 pm.. Marshall and stations south on theDanrilleAVlBCennesRR.ll 30 am.. Peoria and stations on Illinois
Midland Railroad.... 709am.. Stations on Toledo, Wabash A Western RR. west af Danville TOO a m..l
H. AC.RR 700am Iowa. Minnesota, Wisconsin and Northern Illinois 700am.. Chicago, Iowa, Michigan,
Minnesota, Wisconsin and Vll 00 a m.. Northern Illinois 7 00am.. Lotransport and stations on T.
1
NORTH
Chicago, 111., (thro^ pouch) 7 00 m.. 1 BanvQle and stations on B. T.
&
4 30pm..'
H. & Lagansport RR Stations on Inaianapalls, Decatur & Springfield RR Stations on Toledo, Wabssh A
7 00 a a..
Western RR., east Danville. 700 am. 10g Northern Ohio, Northern Indiana, Michigan and Canada...
'00 a m.ioi
SOUTH.
EvansTllle, Vincenaes and Princeton Port Branch and Sullivan (thro' pouches) Bvansville and stations on B. A
00 m..
TOO
am.
7 00 a in..
T. H. RR Bvansville and stations on B. *T. H. RR. 4 90 pm.. Southern Illinois and Western
Kentuckv 4 SO Southern Illinois and Western Kentucky 7 00 m..l Worthingtoa aad stations on
T. H/I.&K. RR ,.. 410 pm.. HACK LINE8. Pralrieton Jhralne Creek,Grays ville and Falrbanks,Tuesday,
Thursday and Saturday 7 00am.. Nelson, Ind., Tuesday and Saturday 4 30pm.. 1
divided into seven Carrier Di
as follows: First District—Fred
Tina
Tyler, Carrier.
North side of Main street, between 51 streets north from Main to city limits, to the alley between 7th and 6tn and to 14 between 4th and 6th streets also, 8th, ff' 10th streets, north at 3d avenne.
Sbcokd District—John
Kappenhelmer.C
The south side of Main street, between" 6th, and all territory between 4th and 6X south to the city limits, including to tLc al tween 3d and 4tn streets and to the alley tx 6H and 7th streets also 7th street south of Ing to city limits.
District—James
Johnson, Carrier
Fourth District—Frant
A
The south side of Main street, from the r** Ith street, and all territory west of the al' tween 3d and 4th streets south to city limit*
Sibley, Carrier.
The north side of Main street, from the 5th street, and aU territory west of the al tween 4th and 5th streets, and north to th limits.
FTRAA District-Frank
M. Mills, Carrier.
The north side of Main street, from 7th old canal, between tth and 10th streets, ai territory from the alley between 7th and 8th east to the Vandalia RR., north ta 3d avenu all territory north of the Vandolla RR., 10th street t6 city limits.
Sixth District—John
R. Byers, Carrier.
The south side of Main, between 6th at streets, from the alley between 6ft and 7th stl east to tbe old canal, south to Demlng, and ai ritory east on Poplar streetand south to city lil
Ssvxkth District—Louis
Bagans, jr., Cat
South side of Main street from 7th east limits, including the north side of Main, old canal bed to city limits, and all territon from Ninth street, east to city limits fromP' street on the south to the Vandalia RR. tra the north.
Wm. S. McClaln, Auxiliary Carrier, whose It is to aiake extra collection and delivery tr| RXSOLATIONS.
The mall Is collected from street letterbox Main street from 1st to 18th streets, north on 4 Cherry, south on 4th to Walnut an(t south oi to Poplar, and Ohio street between 1st ancf every week day between 8.80 and9.80a m, beti 9:80 and 10:80 a m, between 13:30 and 2:00J [thiscollection-Includes to Poplar street of south, and east to 18th, and north to Union Dl between 8:80 and 8:80 m, between 4:80 anq pm .and between 8:w and 9:00 pm. AIL boxes are collected from twice per day, bet] the hours of 8:00 and 10:00 am snd between and 7:80 m.
There are fonr deliveries mat1 per day business part of the cltv: at 7:00 and 11:8 2:00 and 4:80 ra also a delivery at 6 m. to such business houses as desire It, place of business is located between 8d anl streets and not more than one square from 1
On 8unday, the Post Office is (open from 9" o'clock a m, and parsons desiring their raai] call at the windaw designated by the numb their carrier.
Sunday collections ovet the entire city ie
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between 4:30 and 5:80 m, aad again in th^ ness part of the city between 8 and 9 o'clock Receiving boxes have been placed on ever] ner of Main street to enable perrons resldinr It to avail themselves of tbe frequent colleJ made thereon with a very shert walk.
The attentioa of the public is called to thel
distance each carrier Is obliged to walk, and1, ties living a distance back in yards are earn' requested to place boxes in their front doors such other convenient places as will faclli 1. Can' econd that long ansifcr, he must retain the mail until vae n»
prompt delivery of mall. Carriers are iiotallc to wait longer than 30 seconds for an answi bell, and after waiting that long am! roceiv
livery. Carriers are obliged to oe prompt, do their work quickly, but under no circnmn tobev'mp«lite »r dlscourteons.and anvauch be Immediately reported to tbe Post Master, sons owning dogs are warned that unless they 1 them tied aurlng the day. carriers will not dc their mail, bat they will be obliged to call 1 office. N
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