Hammond Times, Volume 2, Number 78, Hammond, Lake County, 18 September 1907 — Page 4
'4
THE LAKE COUNTY TIMES Wednesday, Sept 18, lOttf1
The Lake County Times AN irVXNINQ NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED BY THE LAKE COUNTT PRINTJNG ANI PUBLISHING COMPANY.
-Entered a second ciaea matter Juno 2S. 190. at the postoQce at IIam tccnX Indiana. undr the Act of ConTsa, Marcn S, 1479."
I TALKS TO FANS BY OIL
-
MAIX OFFICES IIAJ1JIOXD, IAD, i-ELEPUO.NES UAMMOXD. 111112. TVTITTTXG, 111. OAST CHICAGO, 111. ISTOIAXA llARUOIi, 111. south cniCAc.o, sio. SOUTH CHICAGO OFFICE 0140 IJIFFALO AVXNUS. TELEPIIOMj 2SS. VCJZKiaS flEPRESENTATI L'tLDIXG, CHtCAGO 750 MAIIQI'ETTB H IXG, ,EV YOftK. 610 I'OTTEK UULbVES PAYXB A YOUNG.
STAIIDDIG OF THE CLUBS.
AMERICA LEAGUE.
TEAR HALF TEAR SINGLE COPIES...
.ONE
..13.00 ..$1.50 CENT
V. L. Pet Philadelphia 0 12. .606 Ietxoit fcO 54 .597 Chicago 70 57 .."sl C'U-velanl 77 5'J .56 5 New York C4 To .477 Koston 5S 73 .424 Ht. Louis 57 78 .422 Washington 43 &7 .530 NATIONAL, LEAGUE. W. L. Pet. Cbfra&ro 07 SS .710 Pittssburjc hi 04 .600 NVw York 77 5J .565 Philadelphia 73 5a .553 Urooklyn C3 73 .463 Cincinnati 55 7'J .411 Bus ton 52 81 .391 .t. Louis 41 Kt .2'J9
Larger Paid Up Circulation Than Any Other Newspaper in Northern Indiana.
CIRCULATION 1 g FJ YESTERDAY li ' g 3
tiit.LLATIo: IIOOK OPEN TO THE PUBLIC FOR INSPECTION AT ALL TIMES.
TODAY'S POSSIBILITIES. IVlu. Lone.
I'hlladvlphla .CM ,i2
Cleveland 5t .Wia
V!u Ilrenk Lone Two Even Two
Uetrott K:l .51tf JOSS
Chicago ...... .rb7 .570 .572
8U1ISCRIHERS Hfftdrri of The Time are requested to favor the management by report In any lrrra-ul art tits In delivering. Communicate VTlth tba Clreulatica Department, or telephone 111.
REASONS FOR INCREASED LIVING EXPENSES.
If recent ffrurps are correct living' expenses have Increased 40 per cent
In late years, while wages and salaries have not gained proportionately. Tho in
crease In the wages of organized labor has been 17 per cent during tho same
period, but with salaried peoplo the increase has been little, if any.
It ia popular to ascribe tha advanced cost of living to combinations and trusts, almost entirely Ignoring natural conditions, tho law of supply and demand and the larger wuges workmen receive. It Is truo that food costs more and rents are higher, while wages and salaries have not advanced In
Ilka ratio.
But, as the song goes, "there's a reason." The two prime factors in household expenses, which absorb the bulk of earnings, are food and rent. There
aro natural canses for the Increased cost of food, particularly this year.. The
vegetablo and fruit crops have been partial failures. In addition there will be a shortage in grain. Meat prices are also high, but tho coet of meat, like fruits and vegetables, Is governed by the natural law of supply and demand.
notwithstanding the general belief that the Chicago packers are wholly re
sponsible for the Increased prices. Live hogs are now selling In the Chicago stock yards for over six cents a pound, and good beef at higher figures, to the
Joy of the stock growers, and the gloom of the consumers.
As to rent. Rentals are based largely on cost of building and the value
of land. The cost of lumber Is double what it was some years before the Michigan and Wisconsin forest were cut over. Tho wages of carpenters and
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS. AMERICAN LliAGTJE. Detroit, 9; Chicago. 1 (called
of sixth; darkness).
New York, 11; Philadelphia. 3. St. Louis, 2; Cleveland, 0
game).
St. Louis, C; Cleveland, 5
game).
Washington, 9; Boston, 1.
end
(first (second
NATIONAL LGACtTIS. Pittsburg, 2; St. Louis, 0. Brooklyn, 6; Philadelphia, 1, Boston, 6; ICew York, 3.
GAMES TODAY.
AMERICAN LEAGUE.
Chicago at Detroit (two games).
St. Louis at Cleveland. New York at Philadelphia. Boston at "Washington.
Royal Rooters came along with the Sox, and hired a brass band but they soon began to play that old refrain, "Please Go Way and Let me Sleep." The Tigers certainly mean business as far as the pennant is considered and they are in shape now to give most any team an awful go. Their pitchers are In good shape and In today's games, weather permitting, three pitchers await the call, Wild, Bill Donovan, Killian and Mullin. Ed Walsh and Altrock may get the chance or perhaps Doc White will try again.
MASMIE
A Story for Young Folks By MARION HEATH FREEMAN
Children who read this story are requested to communicate with the author, Mrs. Freeman, in care Lake County Times, giving Impressions ol it.
John K?nn Is the new American League umpire appointed by Johnson to fill in for the rt-st of the season in the place of Evans, who is so badly injured as a result of the bottle throwing at St. Louis. Egan was once before signed as arbitrator, but a Southern league team had an option on his services and would not let him go. Jack Stafford, who has been doubling up with Sheridan all the season, was suspended recently by Ben Johnson. No one knows why lie has been suspended as liis work this year was very creditable, but it is one of the Czar's baseball mysteries. Comiskey must have liked Stafford's work too weil.
NATIONAL LEAGUE.
Chicago at Cincinnati.
New York at Boston. Philadelphia at Brooklyn.
For the first time since the season
opened, the Sox fans are beginning to
lose heart and now can see a chance
for the Chicago team to lose out in
otw nif-chnnics in the house buildinsr trade have been advanced, although the Pennant race. That second beat
. , ., , . , x , lnS at Detroit wa3 too much for them not in proportion to the rise in lumber. a he price of other material has also and the BCQre tQ j gent the,r hopeg advanced, besides houses are built with more conveniences, with better sanita- dashing to the ground. Those Tigers
tion and the like, which costs money.
The green bug and drougth In Oaklahoma and Kansas and the backward
season in tho Dakotas should sufficiently account for the present high price of
wheat, from which flour is made, without charging it to the millers' trust.
One of the anomolles resulting from the organization of labor has been
that the increase of wages has advanced tho cost of building, which, in turn has raised the rent of the very laborers and mechanics who built the buildings
Tho unfortunate class on whom the burden of Increased living expenses
falls the heaviest is those who have a fixed income or salary, and who have
not shared in the general rise of wages. TRUST THE TEACHERS.
clawed Into the immaculate hose In an awful manner and they etripped
Frank Smith entirely. Selver, on the
other hand, was Invincible and only
five stray hits were put over. That trick of Sluggers Cobb, D. Jones and Sam Crawford were the big stickers again yesterday and they fattened their average with three hits each. The
It was all Detroit yesterday as the other three contending teams met with good and plenty and it is doubtful if
they recover from the blow. The St. Louis aggregation got next for the two games and now the Naps are away down the ladder. Philadelphia also was in tho wrong with New York and were laced badly by the Highlanders. Connie Mack must certainly be losing hl3 mind or else he is holding his pitchers In reserve for the invasion of the Western clubs. It may be his plan to lay back until the final rush and then let out with Plank Bender, Waddoll and
Dygert In the home stretch. That looks good to me. A new league of twenty-four aggiegations has been formed in Chicago and surrounding places will see plenty of good football this year. Among the teams is the West Ends of Michigan City. The Cornell men have begun practice at Ithaca, N. Y., and over thirty men reported.
SYNOPSIS. i Marnio is an orphan, an inmate of St. Luke's orphan asylum. Doris Methven, the daughter of a wealthy director of the institution, visit.? the latter in company with her father. She sees and takes a fancy to Mamie and invites the orphan to visit her at her home. The invltaton incurs the jealuusv of Jennie Cowles, an underhanded, "deceitful girl, who plans trouble. Jennie succeeds in causing the matron, Mrs. Weber, to believe that Mamie broke a rule of the asylum by returning after dark from Doris' house, and Mamie, misunderstanding the reason of Mrs. Weber's reprimand. fails to clear up the matter and is pent to bed In disgrace. In the meantime. Bertha Baker," a crippled inmate of St. Luke's and a great friend of Mamie's, eontracts scarlet fever, which soon beccnits epidt-mic in the institution. Marnie, having had the ailment and being therefore immune, offers her services in the 'hospital." and In the absence of enough regular nurses, is accepted.
Jake Stahl, the popular manager of the Souh Chicago semo-pro team and at one time captain and manager of the Washington team is receiving the congratulations of the Fans on the new arrival at his home. It is a girl and was born on Sunday.
Sonoma Girl came back into her own yesterday when she defeated her old time enemy, Highball, at Columbus. She earned a new record of 2: 054 clipping the world's green trotter record.
Thomas J. Hicks of Boston, one of tho greatest long distance runners In the country is the latest entry In the Marathon race.
SIXTY-ONE LliO
STANDARD'S PROFIT
The news columns of Tuesday related that patrons of the Thorp school of South Chicago were indignant about tho questions that soma of the teachers of the school aro asking: the pupils about politics. They obiect to Questions
being asked grammar school children as to who makes the laws of Chicago, Trust's Net Earnings From
what a referendum is, when It Is used, etc.
It is an easy matter to agree with tho parents that the questions asked by
tho teachers aro not understood by tho pupils and that no reasonable answer
can be oxpeced but it seems to be the wrong course to grow indignant about the efforts of the teachers who are merely trying to lay tho foundation for a
little study in civil government.
It is expected of these same children that they understand that seven
times seven are forty-nine, and any child that Is ablo to master this arith
metical fact ought to be able to understand the rudiments of civil government
It is safe to nssumo that it was not the teachers' Intention to teach their pupils all tha principles of civil government. These questions are nothing more than the prompting of the born teacher who realizes how a new train of thought will impress Itself upon the youthful mind and continue to grow until the child lias grown to manhood when ho will understand all tho work
ings of civil and municipal government Just becauso he was taught early to
take an interest In them.
1899 to 1906 Reach Sum
of 490,315,943.
$308,359,4302 DIVIDENDS
Figures Long Hidden From Public
Revealed in Government's Suit May Dissolve Corporation.
New York, Seut. 17. In eight years.
from 1S99 to 1906, tha profits of the Standard Oil company of New Jersey reached the enormous total of $490,315,934, tho average annual profit be-
That not enough of this work la thrown into tho routine of school work ing, $61,000,000.
is evidenced as often as an election comes around when American born citizens blindly follow the teachings of some boss or ward heeler as to how they should mark the ballot. Let tho parents who would object to an occasional question that seems to be out of lino remember that they will start their children to
thinking along a new una which can nave nothing rut beneficial results. As proof of this there Is tho fact that tho few questions that have been asked In tha Thorp school have started a discussion which have been carried to tho
home which but the parents are trying to kill in tha root.
A FEW more days of growing weather like we have had In the past and the "calamity howlers" will bo put to route. All of tho products that were
iioi nijuieu iy uio luu' eiiiii mo unuau;my imuiy a.nu give promise Oi &
heavy crop. This is especially true In Indiana where the majority of farmers
are anything but pessimistic,
In the same period the eum of $303,-
359,403, or more than $38,500,00 each
year, was distributed among the
shareholders.
The capital stock of the company is
S9S.333.3S2. Between 1S99 and 1906 the
assets of the company grew by leaps and bounds from $200,791,523 to $371,-
6C4.531.
Tho Standard Oil company of New
Jersey owns 9,900 shares In the Stan
dard Oil company of Indiana, recently
lined $29,400,000 by Judge Landis. It
is the parent company of all the sub
sidlary concerns in tha oil trust.
Long Sought Figure Out at Lmt
Tho revelations of the stupendous
profits of the Standard Oil company
marked the federal suit for the disso
WHILE ENDEAVORING to attend tha council meeting at Whiting where lution of the trust, which Frank D,
tho fifty-year franchise was about to be discussed, a certain citizen of that Kellogg is conducting as special prose
town was forced to wait an hour and a quarter for a car to get over there. It cutor for the government. It is the
1 TdiPs tr, v w h ArniA.ni fhA msr first time the actual profits of the oil
i trust ever nave Deen uiscioseo. x m
w anclers and those seeking knowledge
THE MICHIGAN CENTRAL railroad is still in doubt as to whether they of the profits of the Standard Oil com
will be able to place the new depot between tho tracks and Plummer nvr.-n,, pany have striven vainly to obtain
the figures which Mr. Kellogg 6uc
"First they thought they wouldn't, then they thought they couldn't, then they
whispered well, we'll see."
IN SPITE of the opposition of tha residents of Indiana Harbor the East
(jnicago council votea to navo in new city nail erected on the old site. It
looks as if the tall was wagging tho dog. 4 $
IT is a splendid thing to te aula to take a trip to Egypt but we don't
see how Mr. A. Murrey Turner can leave Tils automobile that long.
it w uuiiU do an awiui thing to have to pay tho hospital bills of the
Whiting councilmen after they had rassed that fifty year franchise.
THE POPCLARITY of certain sections of Lako Front park depends on the
number of electric lights that are not there.
Physically Impossible. "I don't seo how a cockfight can ever bo a square sport." "Why not?" "Because naturally every blow given la a fowl stroke." Baltimore American.
Will Never Dress Llka Men.
"Win women ever dress like nen?" asks a New York reformer. No. Even
if they wore trousers they wonld want l,3,-' "IHc-'Io-
to put them on by poking their heads lisoo!! 337!ls!i05
1906.. 371,664.531
up through from under. Chicago Rec-
ceeded today in placing upon the rec
ord of the court.
The evidence gathered here by Mr,
Kellogg, special prosecutor for the government, will be introduced in the St. Louis suit, which was brought against the Standard Oil company of
New Jersey and seventy other eubsi
diary corporations by Attorney General
Moody to secure the dissolution of the
trust for the -iolatlon of the Sherman
act. The hearing was set In New Tork
because of tha proximity of the cen
tral office of the Standard and the
Immediate availability of tha books and
records of the concern.
These figures ware brought out In
the suit by the government.
Gross Total Dividends
Tear Assets. Profits. Paid.
1S99. .$200,791,623 $34,420,314 $14,304.1S8
1900.. 09,140,331 55,501,774 46,691.474
62,21,767 64.613,365 S1,3S6,94 61.570,110 57,459,356 5)3,122,251
101.
1902 .
214,764,550 235.445.S22
46,775,390 43,851,996
42.S77.478 35.1SS.266 89,335,320 39,335,320
SAYS TQM L. JOHNSON
HAS HUGE MACHINE
Congressman Burton Tells
Why He is a Candidate for Mayor.
NOT FOR NATIONAL ISSUES
Says Cheap Street Fare Was Used as
Crusade fcr Political , Purposes.
Cleveland, O., Sept. 17. National Is
sues are not at stake in the coming
municipal election. So declares Con
gressman Theodore F. Burton, who Js
running for mayor against Tom L.
Johnson.
"Ring rule" is the foe that Mr. Bur
ton says he is fighting. He declares in
a public state ment tonight that, un der tho guise of a "cheap street fare'
crusade, Mayor Johnson has built up a huge machine which holds the city In
its grasp.
It was to break up this ring that Mr.
Burton consented to run for mayor, at
President Roosevelt's advico. In his
statement which also contains Mr.
Roosevelt's letter, Mr. Burton says:
"An erroneous Impression has gone
forth that the mayorallty campaign
hero Is to an exceptional extent complicated with national politics. Such
is not the case. The all sufScient rea
eon for my candidacy Is the local sit
uatlon. Unless I am grossly deceived,
existing conditions under the present city administration demand Immediate and radical reform. The aim of the campaign in which I ara engaged is to
redeem the city of Cleveland from the
administration of a ring.
Tom Johnson's Machine. "The specious claim has been made that the main desire of the present administration is to give the people of Cleveland cheap street car fare. Under cover of this slogan there has teen built up in the city of Cleveland a tremendous political machine. Every department and agency of the city government has been utilized to perpetuate Its power. Favors have been granted and bargains made wherever political support could be obtained. Influences are being exerted through political and building departments among contractors who have dealings with the city and among an army of city employes with an arbitrariness and a resort to Questionable methods never surpassed In any American municipality.
Agasslx's Criticism. On one occasion a person entered
Prof. Agasslz's room with a picture which he desired to sell, denominated
a "Bird's Eye View of Cambridge.
The professor contemplated it for a
moment, lifted bis eyes and said with
bis characteristic accent, "WelL I
Totals $490,815,934 $308,359,403 thank my God sat I am not a bird,"
(Continued.) But remembering her promise to Mrs. Weber to be patient, Mamie learned a lesson of self control which she found very useful In after life on more than one occasion. IIow-ovr-r. not. 'all of the children were
fretful. No word of complaint ever passed Bertha Baker's lips during the entire term of her illness.. She was slow in recovering, although she did get well finally, after having been given up several times by Dr. Graves and the nurses. At first it was terrible to Marnie to see the suffering all about her.
Some of the convalescents were so pale and thin and unlike themselves
in their normal condition that Marnie did not know them. Others there were who did not know her, or any one else for that matter in
the delirium of this fever. But
n time Mamie got accustomed to
her surroundings, and although her
heart still went out to those who
suffered, she learned to look upon it all with a degree of calmness.
There was general rejoicing
among those who were not too ill to
rejoice, when Marnie was first ad
mitted. Dear, patient Bertha uaser
followed Marnie about with her
eyes all day and when the worst of
it was over and Marnie had time .... j
to "breate a spell" as one oi mo
nurses put it, she would tell stories quietly in the corner beside Bertha's bed, while the few children who were
well enough to sit up were propped In chairs among pillows where they
could all share in listening.
After she had told and retold all
the small store of fairy tales that she had read, until not only she, but her audience was heartily sick, of
them, Marnie wove fanciful tales out of her own imagination. No wonder
the children grew very fond of her
and she of them.
The nurse gave good accounts to
Mrs. Weber and Dr. Grves of Mar-
nie's usefulness. This was very
sweet to Marnie, too.
Mamie's bed was a little cot in a
corner of a room adjoining the hos
pltal. She must have been asleep
about two hours on one memorable
night, when suddenly she was broad
awake. She would not have realized that she had slept at all, but for the
striking of the hour from a near-by
clock-tower. It was midnight.
This is the time that Dr. Graves said the crisis in Lizzie Jones' fever
would come, thought Marnie.
will just slip out and see how she is
getting on.
Marnie put a little shawl about
her shoulders, for the air was chill
and went to the door of the room In
which Lizzie, the sickest of the pa tients, had a solitary bed.
Her condition had been so serious that the physician had ordered her removed from the ward where
the other children lay, and the night
nurse had been appointed to keep
special watch beside her.
"At midnight the change wil
come," Dr. Graves had said. "When this crisis is reached, give her three drops of the brown medicine and watch the result. If the fever leaves
her, give her a powder from one of
those pink papers. If it does not
three more drops of the brown
medicine may be administered. The
powder must be given the moment her temperature goes down. If there
is still no change after the second
dose of drops, telephone for me."
It was as clear to Marnie as
though Dr. Graves had but just re
peated the instructions.
"I could do it as well as the nurse
if she were not there," thought
Marnie, but she trembled a llttl
when on entering Lizzie's room, she
found the latter deserted by all save
the patient. Marnie had stood by so often at the critical stage of these fever patients' illness and had watched them so narrowly, that she at once recognized that the crisis had been reached in Lizzie's case. There was
no time now to search out the ab
sent nurse. The situation demanded immediate action. The loss of a moment might cost Lizzie her life. Mamie's heart beat high with excitement, but her hand wa3 as steady and hex head as -cool as though life
RAILWAY TIME TABLE-
Ly.
Ar.
"Dou't in her
and death hung not in the balance of her action as she measured out the three drops of brown fluid, administered it to the patient and then proceeded to watch results. She took Lizzie's temperature as she had seen the nurses do time and again, but there was no change. She waited what she regarded as a reasonable length of time for the fever to abate and as it did not, she gave Lizzie three more drops of the brown medicine. On swallowing the second dose the patient's temperature went down and Marnie gave her the powder from the pink paper in pursuance of the doctor's instructions.
Suddenly while Marnie still watched she heard the door of the hospi
tal open and a moment later the
nurse on the nlghtwatch stumbled in and fell to the floor in a dead faint.
This was more than poor Marnie
had bargained for; but she was, even now, not really frightened.
Dr. Graves' first warning:
et them excite you," rang
ears.
"I am not, I am not, I am not
excited," Marnie kept repeating to
;ierself as she brought water and
bathed the nurse'a face, and at the
first return of consciousness on the part of the prostrate woman, the lit
tle nurse made her way swiftly to the
telephone.
"Give me 24 3 South, very quickly,;
please," she called into the instru-
ment.
There was a pause and then a i ittle voice with a decided quaver n it now, for the strain was begin
ning to tell upon Marnie asked tim-
dly: "Is this Dr. Graves?" On being assured-that it was, Mar
nie continued: "This is Marnie Dougherty."
"What the mischief!" roared the
voice at the other end of the line.
'What are you doing up at this
hour? Where are the nurses?"
"Oh please don't make me explain,
now but come as quickly as you can.
The nurse on the night watch has
fainted and Lizzie Jones, our sickest patient, has passed the crisis and I
am all alone."
This time Mamie's voice quite
broke- down. She heard a hurried ejaculation which sounded almost like profanity and then the voice called back:
"Be there in twenty minutes." The doctor was as good as his
word. Mamie let him in and after
he had done what he could for the
stricken nurse, he took Marnie by
the hand and led her into the next
room.
"Now," said he, "I am going to
remain here all night, as there ia not
one of the nurses but needs her rest
more than I do. Before you go to
bed, however, tell me about the little
girl yonder. Do you know what
has been done for her?
"Ye3 sir. I gave her six drops.
three at a time, of the brown medicine, and the pink powder when her tempertaure began to go down."
"You gave her!" cried Dr. Graves
seizing her hand with bo fierce a
grasp that she almost cried out with pain. (To be Continued.)
Uoadi Hiud. CbL A.SI. P.M. Penn.. 5.50x .5 Monon. 6.1 7.10 Erie... 6.1J 7.12 L, 6.1Jx T.U Wab'Bh .16 7.15 M. O.. . 6.20" 7.10 Pena.. 6.16 7. 25 L. S.. 6.20x1 7.S5 M. C. 6.40 7.3 N. P.. 6.40 7.40 Penn.. 6.4 7. 45 L. a. i ilxl 7.57 I 8.. 7a8x S.C3 Krle... 7.?5 s.so Penn.. S.OOx 9.00 Erie... S.S0 9.84 L. ii.. S.4S 9.45 Wab'ih 9.34 10.22 Monon. 9.S6 10.35 M. C. . 9.55x 10.45 Erie. . .10.0 10. 5S Penn.. . 10.07 11.10 K S.. 10.141 11.15 Monon. 11.11 12.00 M. C .11.53x 12.35 P.M. P.M. Penn. .12.tx 1.J5 L. a. 1.12 2.0$ M. C... 2 0S J.65 Penn... J.ISs 8.15 Penn.. SSlx 4.30 Kri... 5.60x 4.50 N. P.. 4.02 4.59 M. C. . 4.0Sx 4.60 Wab'U 4.10 5.00 Monon. 4S9s 6.55 L. a. 4.47x1 6 04 Monon. fcoi 5.55 M. C... 6.12x 6.00 Krie... 5. IS 6.07 L. a. 6.2Sx 6.27 Penn.. 5.S2 6. id L. H. . 6.02x1 7.15 L. H. . 6.2S 7.25 I a. 6.431 7.65 Penn.. 6.2x S 00 M. C. . . 7.05x 7.55 Monon. 7.49x 8.40 N. P.. 1.1 9.15 M. C. . . 8.24 9.10 Wab'ih 8.63. 9.40 M. a. . 9.18s .9.65 Erie.. 11. 20 12.10 L. a.l2.2i 1.45
Hoadn.
1ve. Ar
A.M. P.Hi
6.1 ( 6.30 t.4 7.e. 6.514 6.53 7.5 8.101
s.Si 9.1 j
Penn.. &.2d
L. a. 5.2Sx
Per.n. . 5 80 L. a. 5.821 L a. 5.67 x
Pecn.. 6.00 M. C... 7.10x Erie... 7.15x
L. a. 7.SSI Penn.. 8.00x
Monon. &.J0
Penn.. 8. 60s 10.071
I. a. 9.20 10.14! Erie. ..10.45" 11. IS Pnn. .11.20x 12.8 P.M. PL Monon 12.00 lt. i a. i2.oii iu
ao mi.U4" 18. 5J
r'onn., l.uOa M. C. 1.15X Pnn.. 8.10x Erie... 8 25 N. P.. 2.83 Wab'ih 3.00 Monon. 3.05 M. C. 8.15X Erie... S.JIx I- a. SSOx L. a. 4.12x1 Penn.. 4.15 Pwin.. 4.80 L. a. 5.06s Erie... 6.15 L. a. 5.17x1 Penn.. .40 1 a. 5.60 Penn.. 6,1 5 x M. t.. 6.25 Monon. 9 00
N. P.. 9.14 10.0J Erie... 9.80 10.J3
M. C..
Monon. 11. 1011
I. a. 11.85 11.84
Penn. .11.35s 18.83
M. a. .12.01"
Eri... 12.45
xPaily ex, FnrtdayJ Dally ex. Mondajl Sunday only. i I Via Indiana liar-
18.53 8.11 154 lt 8.301 S.2S 8.54 8.55 s.&a 4.1 S 4.41 6.31 6 37. 5 S3 6.01 6.13 6. 2 J IM
.64
1 10 . . . . v- i w.q . C... 10.00 10.41 'ab'ahll.OOx ll.4l onoo.ll.10il 11. li
18.34 13.81 1 13.4J It
EXCELLENT TRAIN SERVICE TO POINTS .V MICHIGAN
VIA
MICHIGAN CENTRAL "Thm Niagara Fulls Routt "
Underwood
Standard
writer
Some of our atore ne-vra today fa calculated to put you In a good humor.
Tl - TVTr
For Speed Safety, Surety A Solid Roadbed Is essential Visibility and Speed in the Underwood (Tabulator) Typewriter are supported by perfectly balanced construction. Underwood Typewriter Company
135 Wabash Avenue, CHICAGO
Vymmn ny mi. .m.p.ii pi l mi imiiiLL ijWMiiii.4,uwiww'fl I 1 4W-. i.iwm. .I-W Wwim ijp.n.ifiiuiMW'..i"l.W WlUJjtWffl I & .jmimmtv.mmm man.m m f ij i You9il See i; i; j! When the frost is on the punkin ; ; j And the bleak winds coldly moan j !; X You'll hesitate to walk the streets 5 ! 5 And wish you had a 'phone. 5 ; i j A Rate For Any Purse I CHICAGO TELEPHONE COMPANY 5
THE FINSEN LIGHT AND ELECTRIC INSTITUTE DISEASES NOT ONLY TREATED BUT CURED AT THIS INSTITUTE NERVOUS DISEASES:- Both Functional and Organic. STOMACH DISEASES:- Dyspepsia, Constipation, Piles, etc RHEUMATISM:- Acnte, Chronic and Muscular. DISEASES OF THE EAR, NOSE, THROAT AND LUNQS:-in all their stage SKIN DISEASES:- Ecaeca, Cancer, Tumors, etc. BLOOD DISEASES:- and Diseases of the Heart. KIDNEY AND BLADDER DISEASES:- not curable ia privata practice. DISEASES OF WOMEN :- Inflammations, Displacements, and all forms of Female Disorders. Saod ,SouAcr1rt,v Suite 300-304 Hammond Bids. ttAJftMONO.
