South Bend News-Times, Volume 31, Number 100, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 3 April 1914 — Page 8

8

l'ltlDAV. APRIL 3, 1911 THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES.

SOUTH J WS-TXIVJES THE NEWS-TIMES PRINTING COM P NY. ttf TTesi Cottat Avenue. Fouth nnd, Indiana Ml ... X2atr4 - tecond cla rr.atter at t h Pt-stortVo at South liTid. Indiana

th breaking f a It!!!1 of hooz cn the noe. Th" fighting of hooze under j tho nose will rnrne later on.

J7

Br CARP.IEK.

afid fiur. dir in adiaxice. nr Oailv and Sur.dv hv tha wec.fc...l2o

SS.00 Dally, fting-ls copy 20 ftundajr. Ina-la copy 3c

HY MAIL. pACy and 8anday In advanca. per year $4.00 aXr.jr, In 4rnc, jxf year 13.00 It 7xt cun appear In the te'.r phone directory you a.n telephone tear wunt "axS" to Th Newa-T!mcn o.tce and p. bill will b mailed after lu taaertlcn. Horn pjtjone 1151; Dell phone 21X. CONE, LORENZKN A VOODMAN Korelim Advrtlainj Representative. ESS Fifth Avenue, New York. AdvertUint Bulldinr, Chicago

Villa wires that h has riot yet j taken Torreon. If conducting ci'ii lized warfare perhaps the city would have surrendered some time afro.

THE MELTING POT COME! TAKE POTLUCK WITH US.

1 1 i i a i i M ! i 1

STATESMEN REAL AND NEAR

BY FRED C. KELLY.

sorTK hi-:m. Indi ana. apiul :i. in

the same care nust exercises for the protection rf life and limh as in

to leave the

Tin: iu:c;ion"aij hanks. One of th- most Important steps in

the onranizati'.'tt of the new regional , permitting pa.-,e rigors

reserve banking system has been j car?-. taken with the determination of the The principle is well established that boundaries of the districts and the lo- carelessness resulting in death or incation of the banks. The next stop Jury to a human beintf renders the will r the organization of the re- j offender amenable to the law, and

perv board which is to have Kneral supervision of the system. The final atep will be the organization of the

reserve banks in the various districts. The organization committee, composed of the secretary of the treasury, Mr. McAdoo, the secretary of njrriculttire. Mr. Houston, and the controller of the currency, Mr. Williams, took advantage of the maximum limit of the banking and currency law by -lectins 12 locations for reserve hanks. The district centers selected are Chicago, Minneapolis, .St. Louis. Kansas City, Cleveland. Dallas. San Francifco. New York, Hostin, Philadelphia, Illehmond, Va., ami Atlanta. These cities were selected from 37 applicant. In capitalization the leading cities rank fix follows: New York. Chicago, Philadelphia, Cleveland, lioston. San Francisco. The Chicago district Includes north and central Illinois, all of Iowa, the lower pennisula of Michigan, southern Wisconsin and northern and central Indiana. The Chicago bank will have OS 4 national member hanks and a capitalization, up to date, of $ 13. 15 1.923. This is likely to he increased by additional memberships on a basis of six per cent of the member banks. In choosing the regional centers the ommittee was governed by the ability of the member banks within the di&trict to provide the minimum c:tpital of $4,000,000, the mercantile industrial and financial connections existing in each district and the relations between the various portions of the district and the rity selected, the probable ability of th- federal re-i-erve bank to njeet &ie legitimate demands of businvsiTTt-fair and equitable division of apH.l amonp the districts. geographical situation, transportation lines and facilities for communication, the population area and prevalent business activities of the district, its record of growth and development in the past and its prospects for the future. State lines were followed as far as possible, but where deviations were found necessary the division has been made aion what are believed to be the most advantageous and toiivnitnt lines.

WASHINGTON, April 3. Senator; Harry Line of Oregon,. though a quiet, i nonadventurous-lookint? old chap, j once spent nine months ransacking a

part of Alaska for gold. When the senate was debating the proposition for Alaska railways recently. Lane caused all his associates to look up and blink in surprise at his knowledge of the weather, fauna and flora of that region.

Lane has been a doctor most of his

TIIHOUdH THi; YI1K WITH lon;it:llov. Tho cloud are ialniT far and bid.; We little birds in them play; And everything tltat can sing and fly CIoos with us, and far away." The Hlrd and the Ship. Overhead bends the blue sky, dewy ami soft, and radiant with innumerable tars like the inverted beH of some blue flower sprinkled with golden dust and breathing fragrance. Hyierion.

Tin; ni:v ALi;xANDi:n. Paw. is Motherspoon so great That he can slay a nation. And now can the United States Just wallop all creation?

that there is no Justification in the

'act that the person injured is an interloper. Penalties such as those imposed by Judpe Funk seem to be necessary to abolish a practice that has become common among trainmen and detectives. The tramp nuisance is the most annoying thing railroad companies have to deal with in the operation of trains. The train hoppers are constantly in evidence. In some cases they are car thieves, in others hoboes getting on their way and in others impecunious workingmen jumping from plnee to

place in search of Jobs. Trainmen and ! railroad detectives are inclined to j

"lire" them on sight, whether the train is moving or not and seemingly regardless of consequences to the "fired".

life and never caught the spirit of go- J PKEXY ELIOT, emeritus, tells us ing forth to do and dare until he was ! that he is in good working- order old enough to settle down and devote at SO because he inherited a good conhis entire time to poking the tire or j titution and took care of it by being kindred pursuits. j abstemious in his diet, taking plenty of When the Klondike rush was on in ; iit lor exercise and spending two the late '?0's, a young man Lane i months each year at the seashore, knew returned from Alaska with a ' An1 now comes John burroughs and couple of hundred thousand dollars ' "1 "nd Fays that he keeps hlmto show for his winter's work- i.:in I self n trim mating three square

was then superintendent of an in-

meals and walking five miles a day.

wne asj urn. but he rmn ,1 that ! TH,S information be useful t0 he would .forsake all and go to Alas- , tm,.t. who for th , Hhore every kin. His acquaintances shook their ; s!imm,.r and spare time from their heads and said: Uthy tll .VJllk. fJv. n ri:lv

t-i.. rn t , . ' ... ....

i rie leiiow s neen nrounu in

sane asylum so long that he's funny ieas himself."

all have a conscii:nci:. The Ilritish government's "treaty" with Its army ctticers. whereby the latter will not have to make war upon the Ulster men against their conscience, has publicly presented a question that is pertinent to all humanity. If officers are excused from obeying orders against their conscience, why not privates? The Importance of the question is evident. Privates do the killing, as a iule. and the conscience of the private is with the man who is striking for living wages. The British government may have temporarily palliated its Ulster trouble, but if it has done so through conceding that the officers may refuse to obey orders when they feel like it, it has done so through a policy that will come back to plague it.

in

etting ! "If you criticize Billy Sunday he tells you to go to hell." says a Pittsburgh I minister. Which is a useless thinir for

In that way they jokd him out of i anybody to say to an obstinate person, going. But, he still had the notion in!- Toledo Blade. the rear of his ivad ami. it stuck Still, if Billy's consignments should there. In 1004, even though lie was , reach their prescribed destination that then about .10 ears old. Lane mad- 'mooted place would be over popu

lated.

j IF. as Pres. Smith says, the railroads 1 are going to the devil as fast as they can with what the country is doing ' for them now we see no other way i than ta just let them go.

up his mind that he was going to take a pick and shovel and set out for the gold fields. "I won't be gone long." he said, as he told his family good-by: "I just want to glance the place over." He went to Fairbanks, then up in

to the mils and began to poke around j Con-re-smen's Ideas of ImiMUtaiice. in the ground with his pick. But ( Mil. FKFNCH: Before taking up there wasn't any gold any place that , the subject itself of whether or not he iooked. w- shall repeal the clause exempting The proposition grew monotonous American coastwise shipping from the after a time. It was much harder payment of tolls, let me call attention work than looking at people's tongues to a matter that I think is exceedingly and handing them pills to tr.ke after ! important to us all. eating and before retiring. bant-' He (Mr. Townsend) also presented wished he was back in Oregon prac- ' a petition of the congregation of the

l ticing medicine, and one day he came ' First Baptist church of Flint, Mich.,

dashing into Fairbanks to take the remonstrating against any change in beat for the coast. But to his dis- tlu' present compensatory time privimay he learned that the last boat had ' gone and the river was frozen. There' " "

would be no more navigation for sev- ; eral months. t "Oh, hut I've got to get home."' said l;inc "I intended to remain here only a short time and my folks' will be getting anxious about me."

I lege of employes of the post office dej partment, which was referred to the

committee on post offices and post roads. IT is discovered that the head of a Chicago mail order house pays the largest income tax In that city. By frugality and industry he has been enabled to build up a net income of $1.320,000 a year. How much do you contribute? WE shall not attempt to describe the disappointment of Gen. Villa's followers when they discovered they had captured a soap factory. It was one of the hardships of war in Mexico. Social Kvent at the Hospital. (Lafayette Journal.) Misses Nellie. Mable and Ethel Buskirk, Edna Deckard, Chester and John Sekema and John Klinkhammer called at the Home hospital last unday afternoon to see Guy Klinkhammer, who was operated on. PENDING the establishment of wireless time service betveen Washington and iouth Bend we are setting our watch by the man who calls "time" in the composing room and never find ourselves behind time. Out, From Burk, to liutler to Mills. (Decatur Democrat.) Sim Burk is working today as parcel post carrier in the place of Omer Butler, who has taken City Mail Varrier O. P. Mills' place, while lie is taking a day's vacation. WATCHING and waiting seems to be working all right in the free tolls fiKht and certainly you wouldn't call the Mexicans a tougher proposition than the opposition? Withered IIopo. This was written for the suffraget edition of the Warsaw Union The cash I've spent on thee, dar heart, Is like a fierce nightmare to me. I scan my checkbook o'er and o'er That memory! That memory! Each day a gift, each gift a check, To make you madly dote on me; I count each stdb unto the end, And there a dun I see. O flcsvers dead, and sweets consumed! 0 novels read and thrown away! 1 sigh alone, and strive at last to pay That one last bill, s-w-e-e-t-h-e-a-r-t. That one last bill. A fellow of infinite jest and quirk, We knew him well; ' To his heart of oak and arm of steel, Farewell, Waddell! C. N. 1

THi; VANISHING HOST. The vanishing army of the rep iblie is a deep pathetic note in U: records of time. The hosts whose camps covered the fields of 'the south from ISol to - lSt3 are rapidly disappearing, gathering momentum with the accumulation of years. A glance about 'w any community of the north will reveal the ravages that "have been wrought in the ranks f the boys In blue and on Memorial uy the increased number of Hags in the cemeteries of the country will give emphasis to the sad story. But perhaps It Is most strikingly told in the statistics of the pension department, which present in concrete numbers the losses that have been sustained. The pension roll for the current year i $180.C0O.0C0, but of this 57.000.000 will be covered into the treasury. Ouring the year ending June 30. 1913, pensioners to the number of .'vt.0f4 died. This was an increase of 2,17 3 in the number of deaths for the previous year. For the year ending June 30. 1?15, the sum of $ 161. 1 30,000 has been appropriated for pensions, a difference of 1 1 1. ISO, 000. That sum would pay the pensions of a good mar.y old soldiers. No better illustration of the passing of a generation could be found. The armies of the republic were composed of the flower of the youth of iShl. In little more than half a century the end of the procession Is drawing near. Another decade will see the pension roll reduced to pitiable proportions and the few surviving ' ct runs scattered here and thereover toe land, while in the cemeteries on Memorial d.iy there will be forests of

AS TO IKI;SS IIKFOKM. Miss Gypsy Haywood "did" San Francisco in man's attire, says the attire means "freedom", and adds: "I believe every man ought to put on women's clothes tight skirts, big hats, corsets, ribbons anil all for a tiay, and see what we women have to put up with." Miss Haywood's proposition is a serseless one. Man isn't responsible for what woman has to put up with and he's ready to agree, without experimentation, that tight skirts, corsets "and all" mean suffering. A more sensible piopositiop wouid be that ever? woman put on men's attire tight trousers', starched shirts, caps and all and see what we men don't have to put up with. The road to woman's dress reform through letting man try her present styles is too almighty long, crooked and replete with tares and thistles and safety pins.

WHAT THE PAPERS SAY

For solution of the canal tolls problem, James L. Cowles, of the World Postal league, has a broad and high class suggestion government ownership and operation of its own ships through the canal at cost. Then, it would make no difference whether or not we charge ourselves tolls either way, it's our money. Nothing wholly new this suggestion but migMy pert and pointed.

Everybody just laughed. Isn't there any other way to go?" asked Iane. "I don't car- how I travel. I'm willing to ride on a freight train, or go by horse ami buggy any way at all." "You can walk." they tdd him. "By following the river it's 4(H) miles anil

TWO FACTS FOR MISGUIDED SIIOUTERS. On tricksters and hypocritical defenders of indirect subsidies alike facts and arguments .would be absolutely wasted. But in the tolls controversy there are honest and misguided critics of the president and other advocates of

repeal who think there is some force

longest way is best because there are ; or point in the contention that it inroad houses scattered along." olves a sacrifice or surrender of sov"Road houses or no road houses, t ereignty in the canal zone to give up

wnen it comes to walking 600 miles extra just for hotel accommodations," replied Lane. "I decline. Has anybody ever gone the short way?" "Yes, one man. the mail carrier, and he had to kill his dogs and eat them before he got through." "Oh. well." said Lane, optimistically. "I can do it. "I'll have to do it. because I have a number of important engagements at home."

And he set' out. When he started everybody hade him farewell with sad faces that suggested hearse plumes and white cotton gloves; but Lane seemed to think no more of it than if he were merely going around the, corner to an aU-night drug store. Strangest of all wns the fact that he made the trip without any particular difficulty. "Wasn't it pretty cold." he was asked by another senator the other day. "Oh. yes; it was fairlv cold, of course," admitted Lane. "But then i man often gets cold traveling even in a Pullman berth. And I had the advantage over a Pullman passenger of having plenty of blankets."

A group of newspaper men sat at a table in one f the capitol restaurants eatin;: food. Elmer Murphy of the New York Tribune, had ordered a piece of fish and when it came it tasted altogether too much like a fish. The fish taste even in a fish ti i.o

the exemption granted to coastwise shipping. Have we not the right to do what we will with our own? Can we submit to dictation? thunder certain senators. To well-intentioned critics who are not thinking of electioneering or personal grudges two facts may be quietly pointed om. The first is that the United States is not "sovereign" in the canal zone. The zone still legally belongs to the Panama republic. The sovereign title is in Panama, Th

i United States is a tenant with "rights

to use, occupation and control" of the zone. It pays an annual rental for those rights. The second fact i that England is not dictating. She is simply pointing to a treaty voluntarily made, a treaty which many able and disinterested Americans interpret with her as precluding any exemption or discrimination whatever in the matter of tratfic charges or rules. if the exemption clause were to stand the issue would have to be arbitrated, as England has suggested that alternative. Even the jingoes would hardly venture to say that we can interpret treaties as we please, act as judge in our own case and decline to arbitrate issues of construction. Everybody adm' that arbitration would result in a decision adverse to the United States. Is not repeal, then, the course of sanity, interest and dignity ?

Statements of the condition of Mish-I c'a'ried to extremes.

- - , A

i mil i vai mis

awaka financial institutions recently published in these columns show a

prosperous state of affairs. One shows I

deposits of nearly three-fourths of a million, another paid its depositors nearly $29,000 in interest during the ear 191.1. These figures represent the prosperity of Mishawaka u a very tangible way.

fish. Take it

away: said Murphy. "Bring me a piece of roast beef in place of it." When he got his bill he was charged with both the fish and the meat. , Then everybody at the table began to storm around and talk about what an outrage it was. "Don't you pay it!" commnaded John Callan O'liughlin of the Chi-

i cago Tribune. "The idea of asking ! a man to pay for a thin hp e:ivt

The house has parsed a bill giving eat! We'll all hack vou

up. Go to

pensions to widows and minor children! the manager and have it out with of officers and men who served in the) hn A"d he pounded the table ex-

.panlsh war, the Philippine insurrection and the boxer uprising n China. The pensions to widows are limited to those without means of support.

citedly with his fist.

As anticipated South Bend will he

in the Chicago regional bank district. Northern Illinois. Indiana, northern Ohio. Michigan. Wisconsin, Iowa and part of Nebraska will be in this district.

A.'(er hearing a little talk like that. Murphy got his Irish up. and went to he manager with the other. follow-

ing. All glared with determination.

j ready to die for a principle.

Do I have to pay for this !k;h that I couldn't eat?" savagely inquired Murphy, pointing to his bill. "Why. no. Certainly not." replied

the manager, politely, as -he crossed

Pres. Smith was up against a harder proposition that the unsophisticated, confiding public when the commerce commissioners tackled him. They knew as much about the New York

TRAINMEN AND TltVMI'S. In the eyes of the law human life nd limb are entitled to the same consideration from a railroad company whether the ownr of thm is a nas-

s-mger in a Pullman car or rides thej1ntral lines as he did

trucks or a ireight train. They are precious in the contemplation of the !uw and cannot be wantonly destroyed, imperilled or injured with impunity. Two m-n who w-re thrown from a L'ike .-'ho re freight train and injured by a brakeman while .stealing a ride to Chicago, have been given judgments against th railroad company to considerable amounts in satisfaction for Injuries ree-ied. and in rendering his v rdict Judge Funk held that la removing trespassers from a train

MR. SHI'MAKFR'S WISH DECISION. Superintendent Shumaker of the Anti-Saloon league has never done anything throughout hls long and devoted service to that ct-use more creditable to his leadership than his de

termination to rescue both the statutory and the constitutional aspects of the question from the difficulties and embarrassments of partisan politics. A man may be a very good democrat and be "dry", or he may be a very good republican and be "wet". The effort to make all republicans "dry" and all democrats "wet" -has proved as disastrous in practice as it is pernicious in theory. On the one hand we have seen the cruel spectacle of anti-saloon democrats being disciplined for voting their deep convictions agaic.st the saloon, and on the other hand the effort that certain accomplished gentlemen in the republican ranks have made to impersonate the role of temperance reformers has disgusted every observer with a remnant of decency and the reuse of humor. It is but simple justice to say of Mr. S'humaker and his advisers that they were not responsible for making the

liquor question a party issue. They were, in fact, opposed to it; but were

overborne by hectic near-statesmen who affected brewery-baiting as a source of political capital and private income, whether as platform orators or attorneys in damage cases. It was rather Mr. Shumakers hope and desire to gain adherence to the cause from men of all parties. Latterly this position has been strengthened by the justifiable desire not to lay ground that counry option was responsible for inevitable republican defeat. Who, then, is going to make the liquor question a party issue in Indiana, if the Anti-Saloon league is against it? No man who sincerely loves either his party or the right thing in politics. No doubt there will be liduor interests that would like to ride the democratic party as heretofore, and republican orators who crave to weep over widows and orphans on the rostrum in quest of votes; but in neither case does their activity proceed from any genuine solicitude for the party welfare or the general good. In the legislature or in the constitutional convention every man should be free to vote his conviction on the liquor question regardless of his national party affiliation. Indianapolis Star.

Detroit and Mt. Clemens Grand Trunk has the only ihroudi service from South Bend. Leave South Bend 1 :4S p. in., arrive Detroit 7:35 p. m., Mt. Clemens 8:32 p. m. Leave South Bend 2:12 a. m., arrive Detroit S:5 7 a. m. Direct line to the west and northwest, including points via the Grand Tr:;nk Paei::. ::.. miles of which are now in operation. C. A. McNUTT, Pass. Agt. G. T. Ry. Station, So. Bend riiones: lb II !:.. Homo ro;.. Ocean Steamship Agnecy All Lines.

lb

CMVDRAPi:

JUST THINK What it means to you to have a Stoo.ooo.oo hnui that the title to the property you buy is good. Better than an abstract or a lawyer's opinion and usually costs less. Title Insurance is what we call it. Indiana Title and Loan Company Title Building, Corner Main and Cenler Sts.

it off the slip.

And a crestfa.ien bunch of aggressive young men backed away in silence. It is an awful tiling to !, nady for a flsht and not find it.

(Copyright. 1914. by Frd C All rights reserved.

Uy

For several weeks to com th forensic stuff will supercede the even tenor of the committee work in the

senate. Much unusued oratorical j power will be turned loose in a. flood, i

j Twenty Years Ago

i

Reminders From the (V.'umnof The Ially Times.

dames Carpenter. Kennedv and Doohtfle. Mr and Mrs. F. L. Stedman's little son fias tonsilitis. Oeorge O'Brien left for Mobile, Ala., to attend a wedding. J. K. Williams and Ira Miller left yesterday for the Kankakee on a duck

! hunt. ! Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Matthews and Mrs. A. H. Miller returned from a trip j to Cuba. , F. M. Jackson, democrat, and Wali tcr A. Funk, republican, are the comi missioners for the city election.

C. P. tlish.was thrown from a horse

! in Colorado and broke his collar bone.

" The safes at the Sinrer works and; ,.rit' -:ineer Whitten makes many The battle at tomez Palacio. Mex.. nt the Knoblock Cinz flouring mill "lS("v Tie interesting to the scienwas mainlv for possession of a soap were broken and the latter va lded tifio :nimi in tlie work on the'Taylor

i

factory. If the Mex are going to fipht j over soap. Fncle Yarn's "waiting" pol- t,,.T,h Medico-la gal soc iety met at

I ruich. anu Humphreys oince and j Frank M. Jackson read a paper on "Is

. . .. . . .. , urunKenncss a Disease?" The Oklahoma. I nele ham s hmget ; ... . .r 1r . , , . ,

,n. j. Luuuit'Ki eiuei uiineti me

Icy will prove to be the very thins.

fighting ship, has been launched with j L o. T m. ' he wat assisted by Mc.v

street sewer. Pieces of petrified wood.

etc.. are found "0 feet below the surface, and today a cylinder of blue clay H-' t ra inches long and studded with ;rael was found. He also reports distinct dykes in the quicksand where such a formation would fcem to be impossible.

jusncK wn.b scwkttmi; hi: DOMi One of the grave injustices of our modern system of Justice has arisen again over the brutal murder of a Iaporte county man, fifteen years ago. A man named George Boucher, was convicted for the crime, and wa.s sent to the Michigan states prison at Jackson for life. The evidence against him was circumstantial, but was believed to be very strong. For fifteen years, Boucher has been living the' life of a dead man, without hope of freedom ever corning to him again. Now another man, never suspected of the crime, has confessed that he did the murder and th.t Boucher is innocent. 'Of course if :he confession is accepted, Bouchfr will be speedily pardoned. He will be turned out in the declining years of his life, quite Incapable of again taking up Its threads. He will be not much better outside of prison than inside its walls. The victim of another man's crime will receive no recompense for the wreck of his life. The state makes no provision for such miscarriages of Justice. It ha.s taken from this man all but life itself, and then says to him we are rorry we made a mistake. It cannot be helped now. It will be helped some time. The rank Injustice on the part of the state will result In payments to victims like Boucher. It may be difficult to prevent fraudks under such a system, but jome way will be found to get around the opportunities for fraud and at the same time do simple justice. The state can no more afford to be the instrument of injustice and wrong than individuals. Gary Tribune. .

A DIH'KRKXT STOKY. "Handsome Jack" Koetters wailed dismally when convicted of the murder of a foolish woman who had trusted him, and declared with a whine that if he had been a pretty girl the Jury would never have convicted him. Probably not. The average juror is more or less prone to distinguish between pretty girl defendants and pretty boy defendants in murder cases, and a-s a very general thing there's a mighty Rood reason. About 9y times out of 100 the pretty girl defendant is one who trusted to the honor of some man who cast her off when he tired of her charms, driving her to that frenzy of resentment that found its suitable expression in the slaughter of her betrayer. On the other hand, the pretty boy defendant as a usual thing is one who employed his good looks to get the ad vantage of a silly woman and Anally killed her for gain. At any rate, that was the state of affairs in Mr. Koetter's case. The miserable whelp should be rejoicing that the jury didn't send him to the gibbet. For

that is where he belongs, forduville Journal.

,.' i.".. i mil I

Ml.

N 1

1 JL yJL

Will insure your health by keeping the air cool, clean and pure your family against accidents from fire, burns, explosions, or injury through falling. Now that Spring is about to be ushered in you will be cleaning house. . Again you are confronted by the same old problem of repapering those rooms and buying n;w decorations and so it is every year, so long as you use an inferior open flame illuminant that is blackening and blistering your ceilings and walls. When you have electricity in your home you have the only clean and convenient as well as the safest illuminant that has ever been put on the market. The tungsten lamp has made Electric Service so economical, that every home, large or small can afford it. Our special housewiring plan makes it easy for every housekeeper to install and enjoy electrical comforts. We are wiring houses and furnishing fixtures at actual COST of time and material required, allowing twelve months to pay without interest. Furthermore we give THREE MONTHS FREE light to anyone wiring an already built house. 9 Call 462 either phone and ask our representative to call.

M

t

a

1

Indiana & Michigan Electric Company 220-222 W. Colfax Ave.

i! i;

"i 11 f M . i mi i i i

1 1 h

Route

of the Lakes

TIME TABLE

(EZZcitlve SepUfUiuv't" iJi3.) COSUII-N DIVISION. LUlj Trains Leave. 6:1. a m 11:00 n m 6:0 p m 6:00 a m i::Wno;0 p ia 7 njO a m 1:IW p m :U0 p rn 8:" a Q 2.00 y a J:0o p m 9:00 a m 3:( p ni U:0) p ra 10:00 a in 4 :o0 d x ll:0O p ni

MICIIIGA CITY DIVISION

5:15 a. m 6:00 a. ia 7 0 a. m

9:00 :i. m. 11 :l0 a. m. 1 :00 p. in.

:i:o0 p. m.

4 :.o p. kj. U:Uj p. in. j:j p. ia.

8T OSF.ril DIVISION. 5:30 a. ta o:00 a. in.. 10:0u a. in . !2 JO noon, 2:00 p. m., 4:00 p. m.. t:oo p. rr.. anj 8:00 p. in. to Niles. Mich., only. 7:00 . m.. 'J:00 a. ru.. 11 :uo r. m . 1:00 r ra., 3:00 p. m.. p. m.. 7:00 p. m., i:00 p. m. and 11:00 p. 'u. to St. J ftph Daily except S.urnlriv F. 1 IIATJDV. Sunt. Trnsrrrr ' i

New Jersey, Indiana &. Illinois R. R. Co.

TTMi; TAB LI. .NO. 6.

HCTocUv; Murvti 2nd. 1911.

Fouth Ind.. Klzer Wharton ... Fvue)vS .... Tiu

SOUTH HOUND. No. 1 3

:."V m 10:1 .", a rr. II 1 " . :47 am M :.12 am - .1: f, :'V am 10:4J am 2:4J , 7 .'; a:n .f "1 - "1 , 7 :15 s: 11 :(.' n:n 3 :(J

rite Whnrt .ns . Klzr

s'ORTil BO UNO. N., 2 N 4 No 7:4. h:.t 1' :4j am 3:2'. 7 :."7 11 :"7 :in p, Vf1ur:i 12 :' pm .Vpl :1T am 12 :!." ;r:i 2 :.".". S :2-J diA 12 :?J) j m 4 :'0

; i

r, : i ;.:: 1-4

All trains daily except Sunday. This Comwny Reserve riK.t vary from this without notice. H. J. JACKSON. Commercial Arr.t.

to

LADiES' READ Y-TO WEAR

Corner Michigan & JcFFLRscri,