Hammond Times, Volume 7, Number 260, Hammond, Lake County, 15 April 1913 — Page 4
Tuesday, April 15, 1913. THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS T Tfc Lake CMU7 Prlatlac mm rk Uakla Cesa ? HEARD BY RUBE Assisted by HENNERY COLD BOTTLE
THE TIMES.
Or for A rlJtL I EMpiDAY -
ha 1
S
Tha Lake County Tlmea, daily except aaday, "entered as aeoaadUM mattar June l. 1MB"; The Lake Oounty Time, dally exeept Saturday ana Sun. day. entered r. I, nil; The Oar 7 Evening Time, daily except Sunday, antered Oct. 5, 1909; The Lake County Times. Saturday an weekly edition, antered Jan. SO, ltll; The Times, daily except Sunday, entered Jan. 15, lilt, at the poelofftce at Hammond, Indiana, ail undar the mot f March 1. 1ST.
Entered at the Poatofflca, Bumtui Ina.. aa aooaad-claee matter.
"oiaw abvrrtisinq omcm, It Rector Building - Chicago
PUIUCaTIOIV orriQEt, ITamatond Blading. Hammond, Iat TELCFHOTEl, llaxamand pa4v4 ut)uuit) m COall for deamrtaaaat wwatad.)
Gary Of Sea TeL 117 East Chicago Office Tel. 649-J Indiana Harbor TeL 349-M; II
Whiting Tel. 80 -if Crown Point Tel. ! Hegewlscb TeL II
Advertising eoHcrters will bo a eat, at
ratae given on application.
K you har-o any trem! gtttflc Tb
TUnea notify the nearest afflca and
nave it promptly remedied.
LARGBA PAID CP CIRCULATION
THAN AMY OTHER TWO NEWS
PAPERS IN THE CALUMET REGION.
APfforrrMOUS communications will
not he noticed, but other will be
printed at diecretlon. and should be
addressed to The Editor. Times. Haxa mond. Ind.
Hammond Council No. 90 R. and S. 31
Stated Assembly first Tuesday each.
month. Class of candidates Tuesday, June 3rd. J. W. Morthland, Rec, R. 8.
Ualer, T. I. M.
Hammond Commandery, No. 41, K. T.
Popular meeting Monday, April 21st,
Malta degree.
Hammond Chapter No. 117 R. A. M. Special meeting Wednesday, April 16, P. and M. E. M. degrees.
THE TWO MVSTERIES.
We know not what It Is dear, this sleep
deep and still;
The folded hand, the awful calm, the
cheek so pale and chili, ....
The lids that will not lift again, though
we may call and call.
The strange white solitude of oeace
that acttlea over all.
We know not what It means, dear, this
desolate heart pain.
The dread to take our dally way, and
walk In It again.
We know not to what sphere the loved
who leave us go.
Nor why we're left to wander still, nor
why we no not know.
Hut thin we knowt our loved and loat.
If they should come this day.
Should come and ak un, "nhut is life?
not one of us could say.
Ufe Is a mystery as deep as death can
ever bej 1
Yet oh, how sweet It Is to us, this life
we live and see!
Then might they say. those vanished
ones, and blessed Is the thought. So death Is sweet to us. beloved, tkoug-h we may tell you nsught.
We may not tell It to the quick, this . mystery of d-ath Ye may not tell It If ye would, the myatery of breath. The child that enters life cornea not with knowledge or Intent So thoae who enter death must go aa little children, sent. Nothing la known, but I believe that God la overhead! And aa life la to the living, so death Is to the dead. Mary Maples Dodge.
OUR TRAVELING CORRESPONDENT. CALIFORNIA legislatchoor wants to
regulate the size of bird cages. Well,
of
Washington, r. C.. April 14. Nothing doing here on the Gary appointments yet. Nobody but his folks ran get a word out of Congressman Peterson. I think you had better announce my
candidacy for the postmastershlp Gary. In my platform . I promise not to raise the price of stamps, not to keep people's mall any longer than necessary after It arrives, and not to read the postcards that go through the office. Hennery Coldbottle.
ONLY 73 more years until Halley's comet come again.
MISSOURI NATURAL HISTORY NOTE. (From the Ozark Democrat.) Mesdames Allie Fox and Bird Rice took a flying trip to Springfield one day this week. (From Jasper County Democrat.)
ONE thing we like to see go under. It's a cork qn a fishing line.
Stated meeting Garfield lodge No. 669, V. & A. M.. Friday. April 18. 8:00 p .m. E. A. degree. Visitors welcomed R. S. GALER, Sec E, M, SHANK LIN, W. M.
IF It were not for the United States navy custom of granting shore leave, fighting might become a lost art in Central and oSuth American ports.
POSSIBLY the Baltimore man who went to jail for six days rather than ride Bix months on the water wagon la subject to car sickness.
DEGENERATE MUSIC.
v e are approaching the distinct
American type more rapidly than we
imagine. We seemingly respond to a
rhythm peculiarly American, and In
nothing Is this more apparent than
In our dancing and in our music
Not long ago a dancing master who
is making a success of his profession
in the Calumet region, made the statement in private conversation.
that it Is almost an impossibility to
teach the present generation the step
or the old fashioned waltz. Our
young folks waltz it is true he says.
but instead of emphasizing the third beat as did the dancers of twenty
years ago, they prefer to put action
into this easy going movement and
emphasize the second. Well, this is their generation and their privilege. It is with more regret by far however,
that one observes the degenerating
taste for music. This taste has been
deplored year in and year out, in season and out. What we mean, is pointedly contrasted in a cabaret version of that ever sweet song "Annie Laurie" by one writer. This is the
way he says it would have to be writ ten today: Listen to my story kid. About Annie Laurie, kid, Down on the Maxwelton River. She's no flivver; Her neck's like the swan, are you on? are you on? Her face la fair, she's a bear, she's a bear. She's a wolf, she's an otter. She's a swell turkey-trotter: She's some dancer, that's th answer. Oh, oh, when I squeeze her, I please her, O Caesar!
that Annie Laurie Rag!
CHORUS. Maxwelton hugs are bunny, Alnt't It funny? Ain't It funny? Nab me, grab me, tax cab me; Do that glorious, Gyratorlous, . Annie Laurle-ous Rag!
CON AMORE. A short while ago a certain Gary paper gravely drooled that it was going to Install music In its editorial rooms to influence its reporters in writing stories. Much ado was made over it and there was a sort of anti-climax to the yipping when it was revealed that the music was just that of a squeaky phonograph instead of the soul stirring drum, the ear piercing fife, the lascivious pleasing of the lute, the plaintive flageolet, the self-satisfied "cello or the pink-pank.of the banjo. It seems that the phonograph can't be turning out, the music that hath charms to soothe the savage breast,
to split a rock or melt a cabbage. ,
THE TIMES is informed that rep
resentatives of the paper mentioned aforesaid, have hitched up with fel
low pie-counter warmers on the onetime opposition sheet and DOUBT
LESS INSPIRED BY THE TINKLING
TINNTINN ADULATIONS OF THE
MUSICK BOX AND SUNDRY POTATIONS OF GROG are clattering from one saloon to the other, trvlne to
frighten the excusably nervous pro
prietors in a ludicious attempt to
prove that THE TIMES is a bogey
man and that It is unsafe for the saloonmen to advertise their licenses
In these columns.
We have this to say to the saloon-
men. THE TIMES was in business long before the Tribune or Post were
ever conceived.
No saloon keeper has ever lost hia
license because he advertised in this
paper and NONE EVER WILL.
THE TIMES will continue to print
Gary saloon license noticea in its
columns this month, next month and
all the months to come; all the sneak
ing threats and ballyrot bluff, not
withstanding. These licenses whose
notices the GARY TIMES print WILL
CONTINUE TO BE GRANTED JUST
AS THEY ALWAYS HAVE BEEN.
In the meantime when the Btate
board of accounts on its coming trip
to Gary goes over the printing bill
graft which the "Pie Counter Twins
are soaking the city of Gary, it will
be necessary to put a new record or
two on the phonograph and we sug
gest "Chopin's Fuceral March" or the
Dead March In Saul."
Oh,
MAYOR Gaynor takes a day off whenever he wants to forget the worries of his administration. But the people of New York don't seem
able to forget them that easily.
THE senate is now full for the
first time in two years." Consider Ing its reputation, that Is doing re
markably well.
IF enough of the suffragists go
without meals long enough., some im
pression surely will be made on the
high cost of living In England.
CAN it be that Woodrow in giving us
free sugar wants to give us free taffy? We've had enough of It already.
that's nothing. Ohio legislatchoor tried to regulate the size of clothes young wrens must wear.
TIME to begin to scrub out the icebox.
NOTE that 600 barrels of oil have spouted on lands owned by the Hon. Lem Darrow, mayor of Laporte. Lem might do a brotherly act by loaning the stuff to some of the local mayors. It will take a good many barrels to soothe troubled waters this coming campaign.
ANOTHER BUTCHER GOES WRONG. Lon Nees, the retired Wheatfleld butcher, has traded a bunch of horses for an automobile.
ENGLISH paper tells of new mongrel autos. Hope none are Imported. Its bad enough to have mongrel chauffeurs at large.
"ROBBERS ARE BUSY IN GARY.
Times' headline. Which ones? Ordinary porch-climbers or some of the city hall contracting gang?
SEE that Blanche Ring'
came back to Chicago "with a smile on." That's a whole lot more than Mary Garden had on last time she was in the Windy City.
EAST Gary farmer sent half gallon
of cream to Aetna man by parcel post anil when it arrived It was butter, hav
ing been churned by the Jarring of the train. Bet you It came over the rough and rocky Wabash Great dlea! Householders worried by the butter trust can
have some Westville farmer parcel . 1 , L. V. d A I
post a JUg or crmiu mm men
arrive via the Wabash In the shape or
nice butter.
ALSO: Only 16 more days until the
end of the oyster season and the beginning of the moving season.
THOSE who are economical with time usually are that way with money.
"IF SOME FELLOWS PUT LESS TIME ON BOX SCORES AND MORE ON FLOWER BOXES THEY WOULD GET ALONG A WHOLE LOT BETTER WITH THEIR WIVES. AS I GOT TO WORK LATE TONIGHT I CAN EAT GREEN ONIONS FOR SUPPER." Hennery Coldbottle.
VERY much afraid that Woodrow's list of disappointments is going to be
much greater than that of his ap pointments.
YOUNG king of Spain la either
breaking into print with some one tak
Ing a shot at him or else his family Is
increasing.
NOT SO I0UD.
IN view of the fact that' congressmen and senators are continually calling upon the president, why
shouldn't he call upon them?
I altered. The progressives have really 1 If 1 . V. 1
Sitting on the editorial tripod In "
the wild and wooly province of Wes t.
virelnia is to enjoy a lire 01 reu.
pepper and to handle copy that sends the blood crashing through the veins. Take this sample of Worcestershire sauce from the McDowell County Re
corder:
"There are a lot of you dirty, lying Democratic editors throughout the State that published all kinds of d d lies about Dr. Hatfield and the county of McDowell before the election. "You knew you were liars then, you knew then that you occupied no higher position than common hound pups. "You occupy no higher position than an egg-sucking dog. "Such men as the editor of the Clarksburg Exponent can take this personal If he wishes. This county is tired of such cattle. "This county Is tired of dealing with such contemps. "You have had your day and now get ready to take your medicine or leave the State which you try to disgrace. "We didn't take our conservative during the election for nothing. "Now we are ready." Some day we expect to see Mayor
No. 7. SPECIAL ASSESSMENT EVILS. Too little is known of the important subject of city building. How raanv
subdividers discriminate between main traffic thoroughfares and a street that will never '
be utilized for other than residential purposes.
While all streets should be wide, most pavements should be narrow. A street
is an allotment of land for general traffic purposes and extends from lot line to lot line. The pavement is that portion of the street which is devoted to wheeled traffic.
It is easy to determine what streets are likely to become thoroughfares; what
streets will have traction lines and will some day be congested with automobile, car
riages and wagon traffic. The pavements on those streets should be wide.
But where is the sense, the economic justification for paving a street that is
exclusively residential to a width of 40 or 50 feet. An exclusively residential street need
never be paved to a width greater than 25 feet. A short residential street will find a
pavement 20 feet wide ample.
The pavements in Kenwood are all of a minimum width to reduce the assess
ments. The only thoroughfares m the subdivision are Hohman and fetate Line streets and Kenwood avenue, and these are either paved or about to be paved by the county.
The walks are five feet m width excepting on thoroughfares where they are
six feet. The saving here is considerable. It illustrates the desire or the builders of
Kenwood to conform to the modern idea of keeping assessments as low as possible. Just remember that the ultimate owner of a residential lot must pay the special assessment freight. If he dos not pay the assessments in installments lie pays it in the inereaed cost of the property. That is why we are so concerned about keeping assessments down to the minimum. Roscoe E. Woods, President. Frank Hammond, Secretary. Office Hammond Savings and Trust Company. . Phone 62.
WHAT HE MEANT. The live political question of the day In local politics la, will the progressives swallow the remnants o" the republican party, or vice versa. Our guess Is that the pro- , gresslves will do the swallowing act when the time comes. Michigan City Dispatch. , Bro. Faulknor evidently wrote the
"Fifth avenue. It will be seen, is to become the main east and west artery of traffic between the cities of North township and the cities of Calumet township. It is the most direct route from both East Chicago and Hammond, and that means from Chicago, to the Magic City. It' ilea Just south of the great manufacturing district that Is now in the process of building along both banks of the Grand Calumet." This calls attention to the fact that the city of Hammond should follow the lead of the cities of East Chicago and Indiana Harbor In taking up this thoroughfare, opening and improving it. Fifth avenue would come into
field school board; became associated him talking to his wife on a street with the late United States Senator ' corner Butcher formerly conducted a John M. Palmer in the law Arm of grocery store In Indianapolis and also
Palmer. Shutt & Graham, which con-, lived at Martinsville for a time.
tlnued until the death of Senator Palmer, and later of Mr. Shutt; since that the firm of Graham & Graham; served In the Sixty-first and Sixty-second congresses and was re-elected to the Slx-ty-tJrd congress.
UP AND DOWN IN I-N-D-I-A-N-A
FLOOD UNCOVERS 1812 RELICS". A projectile fired from a rifled cannon that had been Imbedded in the knobs
'back of New Albany for perhaps a cen
tury, together with a grape shot of crude make and a flint Indian spearhead, were found yesterday, having been uncovered by a washout made by the recent flood. It Is believed that they are relics of the days of Gen. George Rogers Clark. The projectile was made of wrought Iron turned on a lathe, with a leaden point, and was hand-made. It weighs ten pounds. TRAIN HAS NARROW ESCAPE. Passengers on Big Four train No. 41 from New York via Cleveland, due in Indianapolis at 10:40 o'clock yesterday morning, were given a mild shaking up
the rear wheels of the tender
CONVICTS GUESTS AT FEAST. One thousand convicts of the Jeftcr-
Hammond at Gibson and would logl- sonville Reformatory marched from ir A-a t; their cells to the chapel, where the
Ldli Y IU li Iir. L Willi liaiUUluuu P , . . , . . ... ,K i ,k ri 1 1 wfTt of the town had laid one of the when
business Streets which run down to moBt elaborate banquets In the history .were derailed about two miles north of meet It at a point near where Fifth of Jeftersonvllle in token of their au-jMuncie, where the company's tracks avenue Intersects with Forsythe ave- preclation of the work of the men in. had been washed out In the flood. The
stripes during the flood. Through me accident occurrea at xz:i. xmo one was work of the convicts the town was (Injured. Among the passengers were saved from inundation. and not only J. D. Maxwell, automobile manufactur-
!th citizens but the mayor aa well as.er of New York; Grant Smtlh of New-
A ST. Louis man dropped dead Superintendent Peyton helped to nll'castle, connected with itba" -Maxwell
nue.
while Starting the kitchen fire. This, the plates of the convicts. The banquet should be a warning to all wives. ! K,ve" byth? Tlf'uT fJlZT . I was the first of its kind on record.
FIND BODY OF FLOOD VICTIM.
word "hope" in place of the word nas neen ordered out of. ; - w; &iacov
guess" but the blamed linotype man a VVestern hotel. Probably he mi3-aimost burled in the sand on the edge
misread his codv. These mistakes 'tooK the register for those lost rec-lof Deer Creek. Just below the high
will happen in the best of regulated
shops however.
PROPHESY WAS CORRECT. THE TIMES Real Estate edition, published April 17, 1912, forecasted
Knotts' two pet shoe-strings, the Gary the development of Fifth avenue as
Post and Gary Tribune, quarreling in the Becond most important street in
this manner over the drippings oi
hizzoner's city printing hog troughs.
But, long may that day be stayed
away.
THEY have finally found a way to
keep army aviators on their own side of the border. The big Zeppelin
dirigible that landed on JFrench territory was made to stand for a custom assessment of $2,000.
LOVE AND RICHES. Love may laugh at locksmiths but
he shies at money. That is the experience of Miss Thyra Benson, worth
a few millions ,who became the bride of Montague Flagg the noted archi
tect. In Grace Episcopal church, In
New York City, today.
The bride met her husband while
engaged in philanthropic work. She
feared that some man would marry her for her money, so posed as a poor girl. When Mr. Flagg found out how much she was really worth, the match came near to being broken off, until Cupid asserted himself and said that his plans should not be interrupted. The wedding was one of the smartest of the spring. We may soon expect Cupid to disguise himself as a beggar maid again so he can pull off a few King Cophueta stunts.
SOUTHERN REPRESENTATION. Members of the republican national commitee are very busy these days planning to upset a movement looking toward the formation of an Independent meeting to revise the rules and constitution of the party. Unless the regular committee act within a
few days, dissatisfied republicans
state that an independent national
convention will be called. Th dis
contents wants the basis of southern
representation changed and state
primary laws recognized in the elec
tion of national delegates in the new
constitution of the party. This was one of the elements that created trou
ble at the last national republican
convention. It will be recalled that
ex-Congressman Cru'm packer 4Is the
pioneer In the republican party for a change In the basis of southern representation. In fact he introduced a
bill years ago in which the basis waa
Gary and within one year attention
has been attracted from Broadway to the remarkable development that is taking place on this street.
Nothing could better indicate how
closely in touch with the general real estate situation THE TIMES is. The prophesy aa printed iu THE TIMES on that date is as follows:
"But while Broadway will always be the show street of Oary It may not always be the most important street commercially. At one end of Broadway is the steel mills; at the other nothing. Broadway Just extends and extends but It does not connect Gary with any other great center of population. It wil! doubtless some day be the main artery through which the suburban population will come Into Gary but that Is a long way off. "It is a good guess that Fifth avenue in Gary will be the more Important commercial street in another five or ten years. Fifth avenue is not as wide and showy a street as Broadway but it traverses a territory that is full of possibilities. "It is being rapidly extended westward to the Cllne avenue where it will divide Its traffic. Part of it will go northward to One Hundred and Fifty-first street and , thence northward into Indiana Harbor and westward to East Chicago and on to the northern portion of Hammond. "The other part of this traffic will go southward on Cllne avenue to the road occupied by the Gary & Interurban railroad on the section line and thence directly Into Hammond's business-district.
ords.
The Day in HISTORY
APRIL 15 IN HISTORY. 1558 Marriage of the Dauphin of France with Mary Stuart, queen of the Scots, to whom he had been affianced ten years. 1796 Napoleon defeated the Austrlans at battle of Mllliesime, Italy. 1805 United States frigate Essex, Commodore Basron, arrived at Trlesy. 1855 Mob at Parkvllle, Mo., declared that no person belonging to the Northern Methodist church should preach in Platte county, under penalty of "tar and feathers" for the offense and a hemp rope for the second. , 1904 Jaaps repulsed in an attempt to land near the mouth of the Yalu. 1910 Campaign for French elections at Its height, some uncertainty feared as to the success of the government at the polls. 1911 A $50,000 loan to China was signed at Peking. 1913 White Star liner Titanic foundered In mid-ocean after striking an iceberg. One thousand five hundred and three persons were drowned, among them Col. J. J. Astor, Major Archibald Butt and . Isador Strauss. Lifeboats saved 703. TODAY'S BIRTHDAY HONORS. Congressman James M. Graham of Illinois, is 1. He was born la Ireland, but went to Illinots In 18S8; when of age he began teaching in the public schools, of Champaign County, 111., and continued teaching for about seven years; was admitted to the bar in 1885; was married In 187 to Miss Kate Wallace, of Rantoul. 1111.. has seven chil
dren, all living. Served one term In the I
Illinois legislature and one term as state's attorney for Sangamon county; also served as member of the Spring-
bridge at Delphi yesterday morning. The body had been in the water and sand probably two weeks. There was not the slightest clew as to identify. The man was five feet seven Inches tall, black eyes and hair, weight about 150 pounds, about 45 years old and evidently a laborer. The clothes were overalls, blue shirt, working coat and canvas overcoat. The body will be held for Identification. SENDS BUTCHER TO PRISON. After deliberating several . hours, a Jury at Bloomlngton yesterday morning found James Butcher guilty of assault with Intent to kill Thad Robinson and sentenced him to the Michigan City Prison for a period of from two to fourteen years. Butcher, who is a blacksmith, slashed Robinson With a knife several weeks ago after he had caught
company; J. Guy Monihan of the Premier company and H. C. Bradfleld of the Cole company. GAS BLOWERS WALK OUT. The walkout of about 20! blowers and molders in the United States glass factory to suspend operations, throwing about 350 persons out of employ
ment. The company operate factories in Tiffin, O.; Pittsburgh and Glassport, Pa., and Gas City, and the walkout is reported to be general in all its plants and comes as the result of a movement started last , evening to unionize the several plants, which have been oper-
The Canadian Pacific owns 6.740 of main lines and branches and 3,973 of leased lines. The improvements planned by the Great Northern this year will cost, it Is estimated, about $25,000,000. Interurban electric lines are one of the important features of railroad advancement in Texas. Electrical development of all kinds is going on rapidly In every part of the state.
SEND IN YOUR TRIAL SUBSCRIPTION TO THE TIMES FOR A MONTH-
CREAM
i Mem
0 0
Made from Pure, Grape Cream of Tartar Surpasses every other baking powder in making delicious, healthful food. Protects the food from alum.
East Ciiicago to East Hammond, South Bound. mammond. whiting
T4 yz 71 74 73 72 71 75 74 70 69 68 67 66 70 69 r? T.birNo:i? "21267 68 69 70 66 67 68
Easi jaanunond to. j&ast o&icago, North Bound.
73 74 71 72 73 74 72
Wit lUi till J?2? UA Hi0 J100 1060 1,40 lm 7 55J a . s - East Chlcaga 64$ 601 1 31 646 791 tl t 11S 11BJ 1113 1230 12S0 S IA Ull 1225 J1?! 1104 1051 144 P" 841 426 611 66 3 ?2 mi. White Oak A v. switch. 639 541 556 611 2 641 5 Til c5 U2i U4 1208 1226 1139 S 'IS? HA 1139 1108 ia 64 828 1 588 r ..Hickory St., iwltch... 637 539 654 09 24 3 654 70 5 HH "4 lt0 11X8 1187 ' l lil m Ittl HfS Jiff J1" 108 650 485 405 660 " 2t ...State and Calumet... 630 649 604 619 684 649 701 1119 118 1169 1217 1235 g at A ?22 Jfl? ? MM 1151 U!I 1117 ? 1061 2 652 637 4" 607 68J 7 128 ... State St.. switch 627 647 602 617 632 647 70 KB 117 11?7 1157 1 215 1284 P J06 I!4.! 1311 1168 1188 I11 1054 'oS 24 609 664 639 624 ...State and Hohman... 525 646 60 615 639 646 706 1116 ll85 1165 1218 1J38 1240 1JJ ? Hit B- 1219 1201 1141 1,41 t- 1058 S5 668 841 888 811 658 541 636 I Rusaeli St-awttch..: SBB ffl 658 13 68 643 65? 5 " 1U3 1183 1158 1211 1231 11J9 Ui it Mil lm MM 1,07 1149 J Il3 "tt 792 647 633 617 602 647 633 .So. Hohman St.. switch. is.t 5- S63 607 621 687 65k 1107 1129 1149 1207 1J27 1235 JOS 51 "66 S 1226 1209 1161 J131 S 1195 S"" 794 649 634 619 604 549 634 New Gonkay Av.. switch Za-m- 850 805 810 835 85l 1105 1128 H45 llll Mil Hit Mi i w 1?27 1211 1158 1188 w 1107 S-g 706 651 636 621 606 651 186 Old Con key A v.. switch. ! I 648 60S 618 633 64 1103 1123 1148 1203 1223 1233 103 S$? 100 1230 1315 1157 1137 f 1110 2 ? 718 665 640 625 610 565 640 East Hammond S St 645 600 615 630 64& a - 1100 1120 1140 1200 1220 1230 106 116 114s . litr 31 -... fn kT cm , B
Cars leave State and Hohman streets for 63rd and Madison avenue. Chicago, at 5:101 ml 6: 36 and every twenty minutes thereafter until 8:50 p. m., then 9:15, 9:41
and eTery thirty minute thereafter until ii:ii m. t . i
Cars leave East Chicago for 63rd street and Madison avenue. Chicago, at 5:25 a. m and every twenty minutea thereafter unttt 9 p. m. then every thirty mlm
ue uie re aiter ami ii.iu s. m. then 11:50 n. jn, & 'J.: W a. m,
