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FBI DAY, NQVTMBFR ? 1313,'? THE flXLUHK? HEWS FA'GE miTH STEAMERS PUT UP FOR WINTER Thousands ot Seamen Idle While liners Take Short Rest Lie the New Yolk, Nov. -Vvtrl ci'siii. liners or hemr f,. v, infer, and ihU means idleness many inoiisami men. q , ;lvi,lK- otf t the lu.perator for example, means comparative Idleness tor l.uini men of us wonting siatr. TI4.7 will be, kept under pay at Hamburg for four months unless they look fr assignment, other ships. nun nouns 11, nenvy binary list to be met every 11.01,1 u i,y u,. company, l' ill the. big Iilp Iuim proved so proflt- iioi- niui inn company can ulTord lo Keep its picked slatr lu idleness until il.e next sailing or the hip March. Ami most of the men will I..- p.l.nl ,,f a chance to rest ami neo their mmil .eb. 11 nun peen a liar.l summer for ihene men. viiu 1 wo or n.r.o exceptions ocean liners leiuain u p..rt at. eai h did of Hie route, for a. Week. Those which carry cargo m-ed h,:,i tlmo for 1 hioading uinl Ittaitlitrf of freight. The. Imperii tor ha made round n ips from Hamburg to New yoik every three weeks. This men lis only two- three or four flayH at each port. There is al ways u great amount of work to lo when the ship Is In port. The only day tho nun have, off Is Sunday, ml that only when the shin is lit Hamburg. So the marrie.1 men have had only 1:4 hou th in each three weeks to spend tilth their families. 400 Stewards on Imperator. There are 400 stewards on the Im perii tor. They are the men who look after the statu rooms and wait on l.ilde. The company pays them $13 a month each, hut small as this is It will mean to the company more, than $!'', In wanes for tho four months or 1 lie ship's Idleness. The stewards pay is more, of a retaining feu than actual pay for the work done. Imring the .'.HVen days of u voyage, a. steward works from half past, four In the morning until half an hour after mid night. He polishes brass work, brines food lo passengers in their cabins, he makes beds, sweeps and does all tin? work of a. chambermaid. He answers the bell and tills orders from the bar; he shuts port holes in a storm and opens 1 hem again when the weather clears; he shifts his white jacket for a blue one with brass buttons to serve. In the dining saloon. On a (ierman ship he lias to know something of two lan KiuiKes and perhaps three or be sub led to complaints for stupidity. For all this $1.1 u. month woulu be, iiisntllclent. Hut there are fees which custom llxes which makes the stew ard's .lob 011 a big liner prolltable. I'.very passenger gives his bedroom .steward at least $.'..',(1 and his dining room steward the same. I'assengers who have the liner rooms Kive them more, one steward on the, Impeiator will have 22 cabin passengers to care lor on a good voyago and X l ID in i he dining saloon. From these he will lecelve $75 to $125. The balance of travel on the ocean always with Americans. That is why the liners are always full goinn east in the spring and half empty com ing west, and why they are always rowded west-bound in the late sum mer and half full or less on the cast eln voyage. Time Changes Irregularly, A novelty In ship comfort Is the eleeiric clock system which has been installed on the Impeiator. Time changes irregularly on shipboard, lin ing east the ships time is set forward at midnight or at noon. 1'nnsiially on a. fast ship the advance is HO min utes at midnight and about 1 minutes at noon. Hut the schedule is Incon stant. On the four day ships the I.tisi t an In. and Mauritania, the change would be ubout an hour every day. Heretofore the only way to keep in touch with the ship's time was to look at. the ship's lock in the morning and m ain In I he afternoon and change your natch to correspond. Now they have an electric clock system which serves the entire ship and Is regulated from a central station. In every cabin Is a lock, whose hands move with Hie elec tric Impulse every minute. At mid night you may see the hands of your lock Jump forward 30 minutes more r less. Upper Peninsula Hobo Has Lag Crushed 'ei jiinrray was run over In tin yams at Newberry last week by -ouiii more paenger train and had hl'J ripht hg G(, i,,,dy rru;!nPli H had to i.H an.pmaied. Murray was stealing a rule on the blu,1 bag-gage and in at tempting to jump from tha train hi it enured the yard he was thiown un n ine v neu He was said to have keen under the ii.ibn.co of iiqucr. He 3 oeu.gj tared tor ot in county poor ln.ll.W-. CitjUd Dibtui l.ainr in School iwiM.-i Angelina Th.ilault. ncboo teacher, reprimanded oi, of her pupils yesterday and the child's mother. Mrs Znppone. thinking that the child had not been treated Justly, took the mat ter lu her own hands and went to the scho.i to punish the. teacher. A great deal of disturbance ivast created and Mr.. X.appone was put out of the room A wan ant was sworn out for her nr icm a ini fi.e paid jr. and costs in Jns- ti.e court this morning. lion Moun lain Triimne P.ttor Accepts New Pobt Sunday morning Ii r. R. fVhf.e m.'iKer or the Fist Ha Mist clou. I. ,.t Manlsi ,i,t. riii prised his congregath.l pi.s.iiil.p bis leslgmitli.ii n pas ciieiuv.. Jan. 1st. The d.M-lor has o '.etcd lb.- sup. rial, n.b ncy of th baptist denoml'ialion for the district 'lubracln the south west iiailer ot ho slate. Inrliid. d in the district un- tlic cities of (Iran. I Itapids, Kalamazoo and Jackson. The, field Is an imix.rt.iiil ne. There will be 11', churches lin er his supervision. Struck by an Automobile Stepping from a Gladstone Interur an car in front of the Peter Klein iloon. F.scanaba. ex-Alderman Wil liam King, of the latter city was struck by an automobile drhin by Dr. W1 A i.eMlre and received a serlousr scalp wound, together with several minor Injuries. King Is nlsint sixty-five years of age. Ho was rendered uncon scious and was picked up dud placed in the I.eMire car and taken to the St. Francis hospital, where the doctor t'ave his woirtid medic.! I attention. The man would probably have been badly In luted bad the car Struck bull Sgliai'e- Iv. Plantation rubber experiments In the Island of .Mindanao show encouraging lesults. while tappings- of lour and five. year-old trees on llasilian island, adf'iining Mindanao, compare favor ably with result In North Ilorneo. VERY bottle of our Beer re veals brewing as a fine art. Our Brewery is equipped with all modern appliances Clean liness is the Watchword in all departments. Have a case of our B'tr de livered to your home. In large and small bottles. BOSCH BREWING COMPANY Lake Linden, Calumet, Hancock, 8outh Range, Mich. A Hunting Accident Shot through the fide by n. com panion while hunting a mile from Fos ter City, Heuben I.aessig, fourteen years of nee, was taken to F.scanaba. The bullet, bred from a '.''.'-calibre rllle, pierced the rinht side Just below the ribs and, passim? through the iiIhIoiu Inal cavity, lodged in the muscles of the back. An X-ray examination of the wound was made by Dr. Iinn: and. judging from the position in which Iho bullet Is lodged. It i believed It touched neither the stomach nor the Inlest lues. Unless complications de velop it I believed that patient will suffer no material ill effects and may be able to return to his home at For est City in a few days. According to the story of the boy, be and a com panion were standing about six feet apart when the gun was accidentally discha r.ed. Expensive Venison ('harmed with attempting to ship venison out of the Flat" without, hav ing ii peiinit to do so. Napoleon Ven ue and T. 1. Ouliian, whose homes are unknown, were taken to the Sort by lMoity State flame Warden .1. It. Idy and arraigned before Judge Hun- iicls lu Justice court, where they pleaded unilty and each paid the $:!) tine imposed. Fnder the present law the only persons who can ship venison nit of (be state are non-residents hav ing the license- and who have pro cured a permit from the state to ill Air. IMily was on n S..o I,lne train eiiroute to Kscanaba and in passing through the baggage tnr he discovered two suit cases which seemed unusually heavy. His curiosity was aroused and ifier an InvextiiiK' bn he found both cases to contain oniy venison. i on .a sea were checked one to Chicago, ind the other to Waukegan, Wis. ASTRONOMERS IN sTILT OVER MARS Harvard Observatory Head f)e dares Proof of life lacking HoHton, Nov. Two noted author ities in the realm of astronomy, I'io fessor F.dward Chuilea Flckei inc. bead of the Harvard observatory, and i'ro- l'essoj- ivrcival Jewell, owner of the famous observatory at Flagstaff, All. nave taken issue on the inestlon of the inhahltublliiy of the Planet Mars, which promises to arouso a world wide controversy among scientists. "No astronomer lu good standing be lieves that there is surticjeut evidence as yet to warrant the belief that in teiiigent life exists on the planet Mars," declares Professor Pickering Professor I a well has used bis imagi nation too fjeely Jn making his dedlic Hons, lie has not uwed good Judg ment Dr. I .owe.il. lu an Interview, at which Professor (Jeorge Apasslz ami a Bten oe.rapher were present, said: "These criticisms of my deduct ions e made by men who uie not ex perts, and who, therefore, have authoritative opinion on the subject ' Professor Pickering says: "As olie uslrollomer suggested, there may be a Held of cabbages on Mais, but what good would It do us to signal a held of cabbages?'" All astronomers who have devoted their time lo a study of the planet ar in accord h to the canals and other evidences indicating intelligent lit. there," says Dr. Lowell While Professor Lowell makes n reference in his statements to any In dividual astronomy, he Insists that every reputable astronomer who has faithfully studied Mars is in accord with his views that Mars is inhabited There Is not one such." ho says, 'who has not corroborated our dlscov ries." Professor Lowell has aiuired an international distinction on the Mum 'life theory." His llndings indicate that canals exist on the. planet; that these canals are undoubtedly the work ol human thought and human hands. ind his photographs of the. surface markings of Mars, he says, hear out these theories 3eorge Agassi, son of the late Pro essor Alexander Agassi', who has studied the marking on Mars, corro borates the findings of Dr. Jowell, as does, also, Professor F. A. Sea grave, ormerly instructor at Harvard, and noted Providence astronomer. r few years ago lTof. William Hen Pickering, brother of Professor Kd- ward and also a Harvard authority. worked out what he asserted was feasible plan for signaling Mars. The plan included the construction of a series ir mirrors, to cost about 1U,uuu,ihiii wiierehy the suns rays ould be used upon this giant reflector to Hash messages to the neighboring planet Vincent Astor and His Fiancee '. J - To Spend Honeymoon on Yacht j Dotft Buy FlaUrOn j Qy ! Shaped Clothes ; r ) : 7 HI , M-m : f 1 ' II : I l ' I! R,.l bp doib a,e ; I j . ' I ' ",Cr' J'v, : t s - - rNb I . j a j i,i i,,m-.i ui ti.no j. ijuii. s "Y ' ' ; j I 111 fijl ' I (.!.'!( ui.J ' dui tt.red-' ;; rr J ' ' 'i; -, : rl All "" "I i ; Photos of Mr. Astor arid yacht copyright, 1913, by American Prtaa Association. Photo of Miss lluiiUntuu copyright, 1!1J, by Camvbell. AN t'UI'IO accompllfcheil u nice little coup when he ensnared Hie heart of America's richest young bachelor, Vincent Afitor, hou of Colonel John Jacob Astor, wlio lost bis life lu the Titanic disaster. When joung Afetor became of age scverul months ugo and plunged eat neatly Into the taL of mastering tbe details of his father's vat estate, one of the greatest Jn AuierKa, the society gossip9 began to wonder who would be the Ituky young lady to win his heart. Mr. AMor kept his oivu counsel, and tbeNJ whs uo inkling Unit bis heart Lad beeu captured. Suddenly the news of his eiigaKeiuent to Miss Helen IMusinore Huntington of a wealthy New York family leaked out. .' It Is said the couple may be mart led ueit Eatder and epcud their houejuioon on the Astor yacht No in a. Miss Hunting ton's fuiolly ha a beautiful e&tute calltst Hopelund House at Slaatsburg, N. Y. i..r!(lil Hart 9, Unm 1 t M. IT IAKTS ItGNrr.T trriJi cwohk a no (.owf) MAT f R IA 1. . To M A K t: (. o o n (-1 oT (ICS. Let quality be the fn&t and pries second (;risnJoi'ation that's wl'?t ou will bod in H. S A M. Clohes. Pcnbcrthy & SpeEiar "The Itomr of Mail, Sdiaffm r fiflli SI. M.iix Cltlimg" CnlmiH'f LORD GREY 62 YEARS OLD. tel. London, Nov. 'IX. Letters and grains of congratulation from many distinguished persons in Canada and from friends in many parts of (ircat Miitain and the colonies were received today by Lord ("Srey, former Koxrnor geneial of Canada,1, who celebrated the sixtv-second anniversary of his birth day toda.v. Among the messages were several from temperance uud ciic or gani.atious in various part i of Canada. Rounding Up Illegal Hunters Stiite Deputy ci a me Warden Wm. Harrington of lahpemiug. who Is oper ating in the Oogeblc region on ac count of the Illness of (Jame Warden Claude Larson, of Ironwood, is getting results. Recently he rounded up n bunch of lower peninsula, chaps north of Topaz, in Ontonagon county. Al bert Hachman of Dranch county paid JUT. in Justice Oreogry's court at Pergland for hunting partridge with out a license; Hackman. had the birds In his possession. James Orary of tho same county, seventy-four years old. was hunting deer with n license belonging to Hoy Unchman. The li cense was confiscated and sent to the game department at Lansing. While walking over the new highway between Tula, and Wakefield. Mr. Harrington arrested Charles Koskey for hunting deer without a license. Koskey was convicted In Justice Filling's court nt Uessemer and was assessed 115.73. Small Girls Maka Long Trip Traveling from Morehead, Ky., to Kscanaba, unattended. Oraco Atkins, aged nine, and Anna Atkins, aped iev en, arrived In that city, only to find that their father, Walter Atkins, a section foreman employed by the Es canaba I-iko Superior Railway, had not gone there to meet them. Crylnar bitterly the little girls were found at the Not th western stalen by George Prlcklop. They told their ftory t Mr. nrickley rind he turned, the job bing little youngsters over to Oftlcer pomlnlck McCnuley. The officer was about to take them to his horn to re main until the father eolud be located when Thomas J. Daley .traveling aud itor for the I. Stephenson company, was communicated with. Mr. Daley knows the father of the girls and he at once took charge cf the .children AVENGERS GET 11 OF 12. Another of Party Suspected of Murder in 1405 Slain in East. New York. Nov. '.'X. The band of avengers who for eight years have hounded i'i men (inspected of murder ing Francisco Madenlo, an alleged counterfeiter, got their eleventhv vic tim today, Joseph Farino, a Hrooklyu fruit Inspector. Farltio's death leaves alive only one of the dozen arrested In 190.", charged with the murder of Madenlo. It was paid that Madenlo was killed because his murderers feared he would betray them. The dozen were held for eleven months and then discharged for lack of evidence. Since then eleven of them have been murdered. Farino was Net upon by three men who, after a struggle, dragged him In to the hallway and shot him. The murderers escaped. Dress Well and Never Miss the Easy Terms of Payment WOMEN'S FALL COATS Women members of the First. Pres byterian church of Kansas City, Mo., have opened a working girls' hotel, where board can be secured for $2.7.' to SI a week, Including two meals u day. and provided quarters for them at the Colonial Hotel, where they remained until yesterday, when Mr. Daley took them to the homo of their father in the woods. Big Bridge at the Soo Completed Larger, It Is asserted, than uny oth er structure of Its kind in the world is the new bascule brIJge which spans the new locks at the Soo and which has been accepted by the ofllclals of the Canadian racific Kail road com pany. At a cost aggregating $3..0,000, this bridge has been completed and after a thorough test by th engineers In charge found to be perfect. The bride was constructed by the Pennsyl vania Steel company of Steelton, Pa. Since the beginning of tho work, H. E. Trout, f-nglneer for the uteel com pany, and E. S. Roberts, engineer In charge for the railroad company, have been on the Joto every minute and un der their rersnnal supervision the bridge has been erected. This Is the third bridge of its kind, built by the Canadian Pacific people, the other two being considerably smaller. Its con struction was necessary as a means of railroad transportation over the new United States ship canal wtilch la rapidly nearlng completion. The bridge has a spar, of 336 feet, and workf something on the order of a jack-knife, hence the name Jack-knife bridge Is commonly applied to It. Two counter weights each colntalnlng RSO yards of concrete serve as sort of n balance for the large steel arms as they are raised or lowered. When the bridge comes together It Is locked au tomatically at the center. It Is operat ed by electricity and a. man In a sratchtower runs It. It contains three million pounds of steel. r l " Wn) v II I ' CLAIM NEW TYPHOID CURE. Illness Eradicated in Vaccination by New Method. San Francisco, Cab, Nov. 2K. An nouncement, was made at the t'niver sity of California of the discovery of a new method of typhoid vuccinat ion more crTa''tou.s than any other of the fifteen re.onnize.i methods. Unlike the others, It does nut affect the patient with violent brief illness and pain."l)r. Hay personally tested the method, us ing ll'l cases. NCREASE your business by advertising in M j a KA the cauumet news fVlogiey ? Sm ut modi f..r I'.ill ;ind ;ind up to the Is In utiles tb.it will :i!siiiilc! l- in lo Winter. The ariely hirt'e, the f;ilri'- i minute, and .prices surprisingl.'. 1u. $12.50 to $40.00 WOMEN'S TAILORED SUITS While nuality and workmanship in our Suits is nlivav nbov- suspicion, yet those i.rc but two of the strong fea tures that makes this store "different" from all other.; lc caus "style" Is an element that enters Into every trans action. I'.y "style" we mean fabric, cut, irimtnluv am effect. N'i w mix'c's in l-'rench Serue, Faie-v Wor- ted Itroadi loi h and Ch viots. $12.00 to $36.00 LADIES' AND MISSES' FUR SETS Th style and ciuallty of our Indies' Furs for this F.tl are absolutely unajiproach.ible, all the p'ipuhtr' furs ar reiresented In the selections, Mack l.ynx. lilack l'ox. Nat oral Ited Fox, Natural lt.i', on. Japanese. I.ynx. I'liin.-r. I.vnx, Japanese Mink, French Corny, etc. $10.00 to $50.00 m m. ,t.-jK-i AfcL'-.V'tfRS i. - v ; r , a - tj v 1V1 ' ? f ' v. I'-vi stiPEMim i calumet md.miin jt fliw.TO 7r. cyTcr mm II I Hp.UGHT.ONX IROH.MOUNTAIH ilS9-5HEL00N:5T I 'MiSTEVENSOtf'AVE