Daily News, Volume 2, Number 155, Franklin, Johnson County, 18 February 1881 — Page 2
SUBSOE-IBE
-FOR TUB—
DAILY NEWS
niME
PER WS5B3KI.
THE .LARGEST AND
E S A E
FOB THE MONEY
Tub
•*4
ii ro suit.
IUEI
The Ten* Haute N*ws Is published every afjernoon, except Sunday, at the office, corner of Fifth and Main afreet*.
Trie* —five cent* per copy. Served by carrier* ta hay part of the city, ten cent* por week. By m*lL ponsUkge prepaid, forty-live cent* a month Sobserlption by the year, $6.00.
Advertisements, ten cent* a line each lastrHon. Display advertisements very price ac cording to time and position.
Wo Advertieements in»erted as editorial or matter. All communications should be addressed to
An
JSMOHY P. BEAUCHAMP, Proprietor.
DAILY NEWS
FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 18.1881. |/°T T*t———•
1111
E
—"•J"1'1-'1- «mt-
Omaha la suffering from a coal famine. It is reported that a ton of coal cannot be found In the place.
Out of 188,000 foreigner* who landed in New York last year, 99,000 are supposed to be tramping, begging and bumming.
electric company, has been organised in Detroit, for famishing electricity Ifor lighting, heating, and driving purposes. xwsBmxmmKssssmaammx
The missing steamer Northern Light Iwas lighted on Monday night of Broughton Island, steering for Georgetown, -Prince Edward's Island.
f' FATHER DOWD
the old Irish priest in
the. Montreal diocese has condemned ^dancing, as a means of obtaining funds for the assistance of the Irish sufferers.
Eastern cities are still terror strick
en by the rapid spread of pestilence in JNway of smAll pox, diptheria and scarlet ..fever. The disease seems to be rapidly ^travelling wetiward and has already apllproscbed as near us as Indianapolis.
Tms Dominion Department of Marine «¥has receivc-d particulars of the wreck of the shin Nono&ium near Cape Anderilla, iNewfoundland, last December. The ship
had a crew of eighteen, only eight or Twhom reached land. BfcaaL^rjKWj.Mi'.iiii .ill j,iL.'jffa»
It Is
reported that eight Indians were drowned oy a sudden rise in the river at Montana, a few _n„. some of the iwhite settlers In the valley have also periled The Indians lost five hundred polos in the Rood.
Poplar Creek A/renoy, Monta Vdftft ago, and it is feared that aMtUisi In tK« vall^v hftt
HJMS3BSKSAJ—I ,-SHK
TfflS Ice in the Passaic river, New Jer,sy, broke above the Falls, on Monday flight, and carried off the dams of the So Mefcy for the Establishment of Useful 'lanufacturos and of the Passaic Water ompany also two mains of the latter bmpany at Patterson. The loss is heavy.
Tn selection of ex-Senator Howe, of Wisconsin, for the Interior Department the Department of Justice, in the new ibioet, would give General Garfield a it rone support, an able counselor, and a life and honest administration of public
Wr». Judge Howe has not sought the isltion, but will undoubtedly accept it, Ft tendered.Ocean.
StftfKTiME
S^TKTtMl
ago the father of Charlie
.' Boss received from West Lome, Oftt. 1 three photographs of a boy found among fthe Tuscorwia Indians, and supposed to 6 the long lost Charlie. Although the ascription was striking, and resembled "the child a minute anamination of the photos has proven another shattered hope.
Our Congress.
The bualnees before Congress is beoom* ififf so vast, aod the time In which to con 1
SSw It te necessarilyao brief that yariou* «*pedlen» have bean suggested fmm tlm« to time to prolong the sessions. Mr. TownsetnVs bill proviSng that Congress ihall meet a month earlier is the latest BrotKttition of this character. Little or nothing would be gained bv the change. In the first place, the Thanksgiving, Christinas and New Yew's holiday* intervene and in the second, there are the Norember elections, in which Congress are alw*y* mofO or less fount sled, arano true remKly lies In getting rid, in some way of tb« Immense volume of pri JUate business that annually presses upon 1th* National Legislature to the exclusion
National Legislature of more Important matter* Nearly one halt the bUl* presented wmx ietsioa concern pnyaseledWdvltaTaad the object of warty alkof them jSkts tome form or another, a **ki upon tWTreaaury. If a separate tribunal were S»at*d to Consider tt would he a wcy pcsl reliol* toeottfereaa, but to the petitioner* for reE^mauT of whom are now compelled STa&w&Vt*x* and years in endeavonng ifeCtt** mtnass for real or Imajrfnaiy LJhttevaaee* Thew are »o many smsil men ess, however, that It It almost to hope that they will sanender the
to th« higW quesdoas of state* lU
&
iS« •a
Br«»d Dedaioa.
The Philadelphia Ledger, in discussing the election law, says: If a decision, made yesterday by Judges Biddle and Elcock. on a challenged vote, is at all likely to go into the general body of our election law, as declared from the bench, it would be well to have the case reviewed, or else to have the decision clearly written out. It certainly carries the doctrine in favor of absentee yoters in Govrnment employment to a rather risky extreme. The case as reported stands thus: Thomas Fitzimmons, has been employed for several years in a Government office In Washington, where he now resides he offered to vote, yester day, in one of the divisions of the Fourteenth Ward, his former place of residence. So far there is nothing *nusual about the case, for a person going to Washington in the employment of the Government does not lose his right of citizenship in the state from which removes by thfi reason of that removal, if he intends to go back to the State. That much is settled law. But Fitzimmons claimed the right to vote in that particular division because of his former resident* in a particular dice ling within its boundaries, but in which dwelling he has not resided for several years. He has not made it a stopping place when he come on a visit to the city none of his family or relatives aeside there ha has no goods or furniture there he does not own the house, and its occupants are strangers to him so far as the election law is concerned. Nevertheless it was decided he should vote in that division and presumptively on his continuing residence in that house, for no other is mentioned in the re* port. This, it may be repeated, is going yery far, in view of the requirement of the State Constitution. There are two residence qualifications for voters in this State one that six months residence in the 8tate is required for voting citizenship of the State—and the other that two months residence in an election division as qualification for voting in that particular division. These are quite distinct thinss. Removal may leave the former intact, but utterly destroys the latter, though the removal is only across the street. It is the former kind of residence that the settled doctrine of anitnu* retertendi preserves for persons in Goverment employment, but it has not hitherto been held that it preserves the latter—that it is voting residence in a particular dwelling in a particular election division—unu$» the absentee has maintained ft claim to residence there by some sort of occupancy, or by an intention in good faith to return to that particular dwelling, capable of being carried out in fact.
The decision to the contrary seems to stand in need of review.
50TES AND NEWS.
France has sent forty Ambulance wagon to Greece. Alien & Crawford's cottonjwarehouse at Columbus, La., was destroyed by fix®.
The New York incorporating the road.
Senate passed the bill Kexican Southern Rail-
D. Bash, of Illinois, has been nominated Mayor and Paymaster of the army, by the President.,', f.
The Merv Chiefs still are determined to resist the Prussians, and have sent to Candahar for assistance.
A convention of vessel owners assembled in Chicago to form an organization of a protective character.
Judge Charles E. Forbes, who died at Northampton, Mass., has left by will $220,000 to establish a public library.
The game of billiards between Schafer and Sexton, in New York, has led to the arrangement of several other matches..
Invitations bearing French and Ameri can signatures, have been issued for a monetary conference, to be held in April.
When ex-Secretary Thompsoa saw Pennsylvania avenue under water be thought it was the Panama Canal.—If. 7. Herald.
The international commission hat decided to issue an appeal to business men to assist in making the Exposition of 1888 a success.
A New Yow York railroad officer says the demand for cars to run to Washington for the inauguration exceeds anything of the kind ever known.
Great destitution prevails among the colliers of South Yorkshire, England. If the strike continues another fortnight it will effect 30.000 men.
John Ennls, of Chicago, defeated Rudolph Goetz, of Milwaukee, in a 100-mile race on skates in New York. A race for $1,000 aside har bwro arranged.
It is reported from Dublin that fcn attempt to ignite a large dynamite mine under the wall of the Beggnr'» Bush barracks was frustrated by a person pasting by chance.
There are between seven and eight hundred professional models in Paris, thrrtythree of whom are Americans. They are of every age, from children of six to men and women of sixty.
In the opinion of the Chicago Tims* the effort to acquire a knowledge of the multiplication table has driven mora boys to depravity than any other one demoralixing cause in youth and infancy.
The murder of a Christian by a Turk in Beyrouth Syria, has led to several eacoun tert in the neighboring village*. Ioone of thfcse fights ten persons were killed. There is great excitement, and business is almost at a standstill.
The German Emperor's speech at the opening of the Reichstag advoMted important legislation f®r the benefit of the working classes. The evident design of the measures proposed is to Influence the approaching Sections by depriving the Socialists of their poiitical&apttal.
During the debate on the coercion bill la the British House of Common* Bi«rar, a Home ruler, cbarced Chief Secretary Foreter with •indfefivesesa, and was forced to make aa unqualified retraction. McCune, another Home ruler, who persisted in speaking irrelevantly, was silenced hy an application of the new rale,
A suit &n equity has begun in the United State# C«urtto New Tori to preve tl* ctrryinroutof the agreement et datioo hfctweea •oiidatioo compan suit in the tract* with
the great te)e$rap
ies, on the ground that ft wiB viotavion of the seedfio t»af the inlted States C&le Com
The law against eoocealed weapons does not apply to Wcyties, although tbsy am revolve* They amsid car(tjrliiftfk mad go off without haadliag It tafens to MS
Old Story R«toil-
Stor York teller DeuoU Frm rraa You may possibly remember something of the terrible scare that Adelaide Neilaoo's first husband, Lee, got at the Grammercy Park hotel dinner to which he waa invited by Wrn. J. Florence, E. A. Sathecn, Dan Bryant, and some other practical jokers. IHJIQI) RUU IWUg vUW» jv»«* |1 pft TCI luw^lUUvwO»
able
Harlem. The jckera wanted to "take a rise" out of him, and arranged how they should doit. When the party sat do w^ to dinner, erery except Lee laid a jevolver at one side of his {date and a bowie knife on the other. It neemed to be done as a matter of course, and it made Lee rather uneasy at the start. But the party soon fell Into pleasant conversation, and after a while the Englishman's nervea became though his appetite did not appear to be good. There was plenty of wine, of course, and all partook of it freely, though each jaan was careful sot to take too much.
When dinner was nearly ova: the conversation became more lively. By and by it grew warm. In a little while mere it- was hot. Then the fun began. The jokers fell to quarrelling furiously. Every man was on his feet with a revolver in one hand and a bowie knife in the other. Chairs were knocked over, revolvers were flourished, and the dishes rattled on the table. Indian war whoops rang through the room and the entire party except Lee was evidently bent on wholesale slaughter. Poor Lee trembled in his shoes. There was no telling but what he might be scalped the next moment. One of the actors opened the door, and then danced back to resume his part in the melee. Lee saw his chanoe. He fled through the open door like deer, and did not wait in the hall for his hat. When he afterward to,id of his narrow escape finom murder by a lot of savages, he really belived that the desperate row he had run away from was real. He never forgave the festive rioters for the trick they had played him.
culc|mr for no man in these watere I'd he a cosamandin a boat of my own."
Europe's Rich City.
Frankfort-on-the-Main, containing a population of about
Lee had heard a good deal about the rough market value equaling that of tin remainf»1 a iA Yw aIKaw an At evil ways of people in America, and his head was fall of extravagant notions on the subject. Be had come to New York expectfng to see bears runniug loose in Central S-k aod be
tolhoot buiblow in
MIt
was a beastly
thing to do, you know," he said, and he oculd not see the humor of it at ill.
It seems that the introduction magnets into the great grain mills of the West has fulfilled the highest expectations of those who complained of wire in wheat. Not only have the magnets captured all the stray pieces of iron bands, and thus removed the last and only ebjecbon urged against wire-banding harvesters, but they have revealed the singular fact that of the scrape of iron and steel that find their way to the mills mixed with the wheat, fiilly one-half are something besides pieces of wire, and a lar^°T proportion of those are of such a nature as to be oven more dangerous to mill machinery. The magnets gather everything of this kind with unerring certainty. mmeassammmmmsmasmmmmBt
It was on a Sound boat, and the xaste Was evidently annoyed about sorndtkisg. "Carry it forward," he roared. "CHIT it forward, you lunk headed son of a sculpin, or I hope to gee whiixley gaul dusted to judeif I don't maul the dad slammed head oft'n ye with a capstan bar, you hogbacked molligrnbber, ye f" And the deck
100,000,
is reported to
be the richest city of its six's in the whole world. If its wealth were equally divided among it* inhabitants, every man, woman and child would have, it is Said, 20,000 marks, or some $5,000 apiece. There are as may be supposed a good many poor people in the town, but the citizens are, as a whole, in unusally comfortable circumstances, more so probably than the dtisens of any other capital in Germany or Europe. Itis stated that there are 100 Frankforters worth from $4,000,000 to $7,000,000 each, and 260 who are worth $3,000,000 and up* ward. The city is one of the great banking centers of the globe. Its aggregate* banking capital is estimated at-$2,000,000,-XK), more than one-fourth of which the famous Rothschilds, whose original and parnte house is there, own and control. The annual transactions in bills of exchange are in excess of $100,000,000. Its general tarade and manufacturing industries nave greatly increased since the formation of the
'alkenstein,
the head of an army and imposed a fine 31,000,000 florins fbr its insubordiantion. tank'* is such a place for conventions :sd n.^s ublies of au sorts that it is apt to oe foil of strangers, aad is consequent!? very expensive, and by no means satisfac kwy to terry in.
Mut Have a Sootofc Hammer. A correspondent writes «f aa amusing incident which occurred atOneonta, N. Yn and says that he kaows all the persons referred to, and tan Touch fer the truth of it "A carpenter and joiner in Oneonfa said to his fiellow-workmea: 'As sooa so I can get a chanoe, I am going to send over home to Scotland and get a daw-hammer, «&• that I can work with I cant get a decent hammer in America.' Abotat this time frfead of his was going back to the *auld aod,' and hs commissioned him to go to the best hardware store In Glasgow and get a carpenter's claw-hammer, theaesthe could fin£ rmazdlem of cost In due tisM the frieed returned, hdnglng the daaired tooL Th« party gathered around him, including some of kS wiow-workmsa, aad he eesdsd toopsa the peohag* in the a
time T»»«**»g thereoMKk: *111 something to make yow eyes water,' the Mend had assured him that he had brought him the kind of ttammsf nasi fay theba* workmen in Glasgow. He aftetieaately unwound the wrnpe, aad, as he took the tool and handed It ever to his JHaadsJbe said: Hwn, look at that? One of Ida Meads did so, aad read the trade-mark on the hammer: 'Made ct Herwfch, N. T, U.
These is a» mom hrsggmg abort tinrtrh lifnirrm Arpuk
A cuweated ctters sfaoaM ho left Awa week or 10 days fbr the csateai to set ami hardest, helbse the watat istatla. If the bottom leaks after that, the osmott mast have be«a of peer qeaaJUy. It weald he well to empty the dstera, aad give it a cost of dear osmoav withoot anyasad with
Weaoa
sops
not aatamHy tftmcy. They
renge above or below H. they may he Veea sad witty hot are
Si0*«p4
It is a well known feet among ^oin collector.! that a few of the standard silver dollars of the issue of 1878 possessed a feature not common to the others of the same stories, the peculiarity being that the tail of the eagle contains eight feathers, one more the government allows to the ordinary bird. This eighth feather seems like a very insignificant thing, but it has
uu
*v uno
ing seven. In other words an eight-feath-ered dollar sells for $2, so that a person who possessed many of them would have his nest well feathered.
Hie coins were issued from the Philadelphia mint in the early part of 1878, and are limited to a few hundred in number. They were struck in proof, but for some reason the die was afterwards altered to make the coins correspond with the rest of the aeries. The officers of the mint do not know why the change was made.
A has no more right to say an uncivil thing than to act one no more right to say a rude thing to a man an to knock him down,
KATZENBACB* & CO.
Have just opened a now
WHOLESALE
HOTJSB,
318 South Fourth Street.
WE KEEP A FULL STOCK OF
CALIFORNIA, and
IMPORTED WINES
ANDI BRANDIES,
ALSO FINE WHISKIES AND FANCY
LIQUORS.
Our Sour Wines embrace Berger, Riesling, Traminer and G-ut-
edeL
Our Sweet fWines Angelica,
Muscat, Madura, Port and Sherry and our Red Wines. Zanf&n-
del, and Chateau Margaux.
"We are prepared to deliver
Wines ana Liquors to~ the Trade and private families in any quantity and by the case free'J of
charge,
German
Empire, to which Frankfort was originally
Gentle Wo:
Who want glossy,
A.
OPIUM
to he h»-
Ssvssthcism liwaf ma gsoA swa» •—HHiay sdf ttsisi*
luxuriant
and fiTTtrww of
abundant,
bmaUfS Hair mast use LYOJTS KAXBlUtON. Thla elegant, dim article always nafcM tlifl
Hair
aad tut, keeps It from foiling «ot, axresls and wwp»F neok ranoies dandrur ana
makes
the
Hair
iSSS it Headettet and keeping It in lertred wwittwu^Beaa. k«ltkylBalrtttJie«ore
WESTS WAKTED^S^i^fcg
CORNER* GROCERY.
WRIGHT: & KAUFMAN,
683 MAIN STREET.
FLESH 0T5TEK5
W"
Staple and Fancy Groceries,
TEAS, COFFEES, SPICES, Ac.
All kinds of fresh vegetables and fruits in season.
mi\W Ml
Bg"Everything sold at bottom prices for CASH.
He, People's Paper,
•OF THE PEOPLE, FOR THE
PEOPLE. BY THE PEOPLE.
The Terre Haute DAILY NEWS
Possesses many advantages as a daily
newspaper over all other competitors cir
culated in the City of Terre Haute.—THE
NEWS is modern newspaper in the full
sense of the term. It belongs to that
class of papers which is flourishing most
signally in the East and West, and filling
the especial want of the people of to day
viz. a cheap, spicy paper which furnish
es all the neves in the most reliable form
Many of our people cannot afford to take
the costly city papers, while others find
neither the time nor the inclination to
peruse thelrlengthyand indistinct columns
printed in|small type. Tbjk
2?f.ws
pres^
ents in compact shape the telegraphic and
general news, willed is spread a ter
minably in the metropolitin journals.
Its editorial columns, while dealing large
ly with National and Statu politics are
especially devoted to city, township and
county affairs. And the miscellaneous
literary selections are culled with great
care, and with a conscientious regard for
the instruction and morals of the _com-
munity. The sound and healthful in
fluence of a hearty laugh is recognized by
Thb News corps, and no effort is spared
to lay-before our patrons the latest and
choicest productions of the Twain? and
Burdettes of the land.
The city department of the News is
well looked after. Each day it contains
a complete record of the events occuring
in our midst. Sensationalism in statement
and matter is itudionsly excluded, and onr
patrons are able to rely upon the sub-
stantial accuracy of eaeh and every Item,
The News is circulated more largely and
So more towns than apv other daily paper
in western Indiana. The Datlt News is
the only fearless outspoken and entcr-
HEWS
B4BfI0 rU789
SSmSSSSSSZ
daQy west of Indianapolis. The
has Increased her circulation over
one thousand within the last thirty days, ,*&,£•
tmi has now a boM jidt circulation of
bout 3000 The
NEWS CAB HE
tkroagfe the
NEWS
Post (Office jBuUetin.
CtoalBK ef ike Nails aad Carrier Belli Carrier* Leave for
"a ci
BAST. Delivery.
tndlABbpolis aad thio' ea«t.... 7 00 am. .13 00m Indiuuipolte nod stattons on Vandali»Railroad...... 7 00am.. (JflOa Indianapolia aod eUUoas oa
V&ndalia BailrMd 11 SO a m.. 915 Imdiaaapolte airf atatioo* on I 7KX®m..lSCX)xn I. & St. fll 80am. Bastera Indiana. Chicago and
Northern Illinois 11 90am StSpi Eastern Kentncky 4 ao m.. 15 pi Indianapolia aad thro' sut— 4-30 m.. a 15 pi Indianapolis and statioae on
Yandalia Railroad 4 SO pm.. $15 pi Iowa, Michigan. Minneeotaand Wlacoaaiu —....... 4 8Spm. 15 pi
WEST.
St. Lonlsand ihre' wert T00aa»..ia(i0mdtj Junctions on Yandalia RJR. and Southern Ulinoi.. ..b.. 700 a xu..
1200md|
St. Lonie and thre' west 4 90pm..lSOOmd Su LoaiB and stations on Yandalia Railroad 4SOpm.. 930a: St.Loui« and stations on I. A
St. L.RR 4 SO pm..l030 ai St. JAui* and thro' west 4 SO pm.. S 15 pm] Marshall and stttiene south ou I thePanTille JbYincennesRR.il SO am.. S IB pm Peoria and stations on Illinois
Midland Railroad 709am.. SSOam Stations on Toledo, Wabash A Western RR. west «f Danville T00am.. 1000pm
NORTH.
Chicago, III., (thro' pouch).... TOO a m.,10 00 pm Danville ana stations on X. T. 6 0S am
H.&CsRR 700a: Iowa. Minnesota, Wisconsin and Northern Illinois Chicago, Iowa, Michigan,
Minnesota, Wisconsin and Northern Illinois Logansport and stations
Western RR., east Danville. Northern Ohio, Northern Indiana, Michigan and Canada...
TOO am. .10 00pm
Michigan, 1 *nsln and 11 90 am.. .J
S 15 pm 600 am
700am..
ations on T.
H. & Legansport RR 4S0pm.. 000am Station* on Indianapolis, Decatur & Springfield KR 700am.. 600am Stations on Toledo, Wabash St
700 am. 10 00 pm
7 00 am.. 10 00 pm
SOUTH.
Evansville, Yincenaes and Princeton Fort Branch and Sulllvan(thro, pouches) Evansville and stations oc B. fc
7 00 am.. 18 00 mdt
TOO am. ISOOmdt
TOO am. .19 00 mdt
T. H. RR Kvansville and stations on B, AT. H. RR. 4 90pm.. SSOpio Southern Illinois and Western
Kentucky 4 90pm.. 990pm Southern Illinois sod Western Kentucky 700 a m..ISOOmdt Worthington and stations on
T. H. £. 8. B. RR,...... 490 pm.. 600am HACK LINB8. Pralrieton.Praine Creek,Grays ville and Fairbanks,Tuesday,
Thursday and Saturday. 7 00
a
m.. 7 00 am
Nelsoa Ind., Tuesday ana Saturday 4 90 pm.. 1 00 pro The city is divided into seven Carrier Districts' as
Ffollows:
IRST
DISTRICT—Fred
Tyler, Carrier.
North side of Main street, between 5th and 7th streets north from Main to citv limits, including to the alley between 7th and 8th and to the alley between 4th and 6th streets also, 6th, 9th and 10th streets, north of 8d avenue.
SIOONU DISTRICT—John
Knppenhctmer, Carrier.
The south side of Main street, between 5th and 6th, and all territory betweon 4th and 6H streets south to the city limits, including to tLc alloy be tween 3d and 4th streets and to the alley between 6H and 7th streets also 7tli street south of Doming to city limits.
TFIIRS „nJ,DL
jistriot—James
Johnson, Carrier.
The sosvh side of Main street, from the river to 6th street, and all territory west of the alley between and 4th streets south to city limits.
FOURTH DISTRICT—Frank
Sibley, Carrier.
The north side of Mais street, irsia tbe river to 5th street, and all territory west of the alley between 4th and 5th streets, and north to the city limits.
FLTTH DISTRICT—J^rsnk
M. Mills. Carrier.
The north side of Mala street, from 7th to the old canal, between 9th and 10th streets, and all territory from the alley between 7th and 8th streets east to the Yandalis RR., north te 8d avenue, and all territory north of the Yandoiia RR., east 10th street to city limits.
SIXTH DISTBJOT—John
R. Byors. Carrier.
The south side of Main, between 6th and 7th streets, from the alley between 6H and 7th streets, east t« the old canal, south to Doming, and all territory east on Poplar street and south to city limits. —SAVSKVH DISTRICT—Louis
til
fl
ordcrd
w'UA
boxes, or iJrect from
10
eorn«r Fifth aad Main
iifc
Baganz, Jr., Carrier.
South side of Main street from 7th east to city limits, including the north side of Main, oast old canal bed to city limits, and all territory
whs'of
froiss Nistii itf6*t, east to city limits from Po street on the south to the Yandalia RR. traci the north.
Win. 8. MeOaln, Auxiliary Carrier, whose duty it is to make extra collection and delivery trips. RXOb^STIOKS.
The mail Is collected from street letterboxes on Main street from 1st to 18tb streets, north on 4th to Cherry, eonth on 4tb to Walnut and south on 1st to Poplar, and Ohio street between 1st and 5th, every week day between 8.90 and 2.35B M, between 9:90 and 10:90 a m, between 19:90 aud 8:00 a, [this collection includes to Poplar street on the south, and oast to 18th, and north to Union Dopotl between 8:90 and 8:90 », between 4:90 aad 6:90 jm .and between 8:00 ind 9:00 pm. All other boxes are collected from twice per day, between the hours of 8:00 and 10:00 am and between 4:90 and7:S0p m.
There are four deliveries mai1 per day in the business part of the city: at 7:00 and 11 :S0 a m. 2:00 and 4:90 also a delivery at 6:00 p. m. to such business bouses as dctiro. It, whose place of business is located between 8d aad 7th streets and not more than one square from Main.
On Sunday, the Post OlBce is jo pes from 9 to 10 o'clock a m, and persons desiring their mall can call at the window designated by the number of their carrier.
Sonday collections ovei tfee entire city is mad between 4:90 aad 5 UK) m, aad again in tha ban ness part of the city between 8 and 9 o'clock
Receiving boxes have been placed on every cor ner of Main street to enable persons residing near it to avail themselves of the frequent collection made thereon with a very shert walk.
The attention of the public Is called to the great lafur.MA asmVI /tavrlov la mHHcrnrl tn araiir and nsr.
such other convenient places as will facilitate the prompt delivery of mail. Carriers are not allowed to wait longer than 80 seconds for an answer to a bell, and after watting that long and receiving no answer, he must retain the mail until ha* next delivery. Carriers are obliged to be prompt, and to do their work quickly, but under no circumstances to be impolite er discourteous, and anvsucb should be Immediately reported to the Post Master. Persons owning dogs are waned that unless thev keep them'tied oaring the day, carriers will not deliver their mall, but thev will be obliged to call at th office. N Fojmck M.
9'
S4
