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THE YALE EXPOSITOR. THURSDAY, JULY 6, 1911. .BUSINESS DIRECTORY. DR. DENJ. CLYNE I3HV8ICIAN. 8UROEON AND ACCOU CliEK. Office on Muln street, first door south of Geo Mrlntyre's Implemeui Ware rooms, ofilce hours from 12 to S:W. Tues days and buturdays all day. YALE. MICH. W. G. WIGHT MD.O. M. TRINITY UNIVERSITY. M. 0. M. Victoria UniTersity, Toronto, Out. Office and realdence on Mala street. Office hours i 7 to a. in., 12 to 1:30 p. la. and it 6 p. in. YALE, MICH. A. POLLOCK, M. D. OFFICE UPSTAIRS IN DOELLE BLK. Office bours: 8:00 to 10:30 a.m. and 1:00 to 4:00 p. m. Tuesdays and Thursdays. YALE, - MICH. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Culls, Dlght or day. glren prompt attention. Offloa oyer First National Bank. 2none o. Yala, . Mich. STEVENS 6. SMEAD VETERINARY SURGEONS. Graduates of Toronto Veterinary College. Mem bers State Veterinary Association. Calls promptly attended day or night. Office op posite Paisley Hotel. YALE, MICH. AARON WINDSOR TON BURIAL ARTIST. If you want a first-class nair-cut. share, khampoo or eevfoain, drop In. Everything neat, clean and up-to-date liaths, Charges moderate. First door south farmleo's Furniture btore. YALE, MICH. JAY B. WEYMOUTH Qenaral Law Buslnasa Solicited Real Eatata and Loana RAP LET BLOCK YALE, - MICH. HART &. PEPPER Ganaral Law Bualnasa and Probata Court Practlca Solicited. XATIONAL BANK BUILDING PORT HURON, - MICH. FREDERICK B. BROWN Attornoy-at Law 25 White Block. Opposite Poet Office. TeLNo.552 Port Huron, Mich MRS. M. M. BOWLES 1KSURANCE AGENT. Policies written In the best Fire and Cyclone Companies. Baal Estate bought and sold. Rents collected MICH. SOCIETY DIRECTORY. YALE TENT, NO. 86. K. O.T. M. M. REGULAR REVIEW ererv first and third Tuesday evenlnxs of ecU month at 7:30 o'clock sharp ,ia lueir nan, wain&ws vient uiock. visiting Mr Knights will be royally re- fcelTed. Members urged to attend regularly. w. A ( aranaKn, ( om. Chas. H. Talmer, ft K. James Sterltng.F. K. A r. 4 A. M. BROCKWAY LODGE. NO. 316. I Regular communications for 191 1 will be held on the following Thursday eve eilngs of each month at 8 o'clock In Masonic hall jroruer Mala and North streets, Yale: Jan. 12 yen. t; Mar, 0; April 13; May II; June 8-24; .luly 6: Aug. 3; Kept. 7; Oct. 5; Nov. 2-30; Dec. '.'7 Henry Teurce. Sec v. A. ( aranugh. W.M. II. E. Beard, Treas. YALE CHAPTER. NO. 64 O. E. S. TKGULAK MEETINGS for 1910 will be held lt on the following Wednesday evenlnes of aeh month In Masonic hall, Yale: January 18; February 15; Mar 15; Apr. 19; May 17; Jui o M; July U; Aug. g: Sept. 13; Oct. 11; Nov. 8; Ix-c. C Mrs. L. Roy Fuller, v. M. Mrs. Daisy Lacy, Sec. W. A. Cavanngh, W. r. WHEN YOU YISIT PORT HURON Put Up at the iUnion Hotel I PHIL CICHHORN. JR., PROP. This bouse is furnished throughout with Electric Call Hells, Electrlo Fans nd ererj other conyenience for the comfort of guests. Flret-Class Tables. Flrst-Clasa Room. ALL THE LEADING PHOTOGRAPHERS In tho large cities are using Plati pum paper on their best work. Blddlecomb'i Studio Is the only place in the cit? to get phbtos on this paper. We use the Platinum paper and rIts you no substitute, and call It Platinum. We also bare excluslre sale for the finest line of Photo Mounts and Fold en manufactured in the United Statea Bfddlecomb Art Studio. Meleel Dleok, Port Huron. Hare you an lmprored farm or err unimproved lands for sale? Drake, ivayles can gt the cash for you la IL ahortest pcsslbie lime, 3- i t YALE J -as. l .PORTA T HEWS NOTES OF A WEEK LATEST HAPPENINGS THE WORLD OVER TOLD IN ITEMIZED FORM. EVENTS HERE. AND THERE Condensed Into a Few Lines for the Perusal of the Busy Man Latest Personal Infor mation. Washington The full certified records of the leg islative investigation of the election of United States Senator Isaac Stephen son of Wisconsin were received by the vice-president, laid before the United States senate and referred to the com mittee investigating the Lorlmer case. President Taft departed from the national capital for his new cottage at Beverly, Mass. Mrs. Taft, Charlie Taft, Miss Delia Torrey, the presi dent's aunt, of Millbury, Mass., and MaJ. A. W. Butt accompanied him. The lone expected report from the bureau of corporations on the United States Steel corporation, recently sub mitted to President Taft, was maae Dubllc at Washington. The report makes no recommendations and is al most wholly narrative in form. Com missioner Smith declares that re striction of competition was a prime object of the organizers of t the steel corporation, or so-called "trust." George H. Earle, Jr., of Philadelphia, renewed his attack upon former President Theodore Roosevelt before the house "sugar trust" instigating committee at Washington. He was especially denunciatory of Mr. Roose velt's alleged failure to Institute crim inal prosecution of American Sugar Refining company officials after the Pennsylvania sugar refinery deal was exposed In 1906. An Investigation to determne whether the International Harvester company has violated the anti-trust, Interstate commerce or national bank ing association laws, is proposed In a resolution Introduced by Representa tive Lobeck of Nebraska. A threat of prosecution of witnesses for perjury was made by Senator Ken yon In the midst of the examination of Edward Hlnes by the Lorlmer in vestigation committee at Washington. Kenyon was prompted to utter a word of warning after Mr. Hlnes had made a long series of denials of charges that he raised a $100,000 Lorlmer "slush fund" made against him before the committee. The Canadian reciprocity bill was subjected to a riddling fire in the United States senate, the chief can nonaders being Senators Cummins and Brlstow. The fight was opened by Cummins, who, in presenting a num ber of amendments to the bill de nounced it as obviously unjust, e e Immediate discharge of United StaUs Consul William 11. Michael, at Calcutta, and Thomas Morrison, dis bursing clerk of the state department, is the result of recent investigation of the Day portrait fraud, is recommend ed in a report which a subcommittee of tho house committee on expeditures in the state department will present to the full committee. e e Domestic i The experimental postal savings banks having proved successful, the post office department opened others in the largest cities of the country, in cluding New York, Chicago, Philadel phia, St. Louis, Boston, Baltimore, Pittsburg, Cleveland, New Orleans, Kansas City and San Francisco. President Taft would have been pre sented with an $1,800 roll of "yellow backs" by Andrew Tomaso of McKees Rocks, Pa., If the capitol police had not arrested him and sent him to the Washington Asylum hospital. A fast mail passenger train on the Philadelphia & Erie railroad was held up five miles from Erie, Pa., by a band of a dozen masked men. The mall and express cars were rifled and three of the crew, C. H. Block of Erie, mall clerk; C. F. Bemis, brakeman, and H. D. Rooney, Erie, conductor, were in jured. Judge Denlson In the United States circuit court adjudged the American Fuse company of Muskegon, Mich., a bankrupt. This is the concern of which Frank O. Jones, in Jail on a charge of forgery, was president. Liabilities are placed at $700,000. Robert Swazey, a Canadian, was burned at the stake by Mexican ban dits near Fort Sumner, N. M., June 16, because he refused to reveal the hiding place of a large amount of money that had been left In his care by a Mexican railroad. Polygamy .no longer Is practiced by Mormons and the man who is caught taking a plural wife is promptly ex communicated, said Joseph Smith, venerable president of the Mormon church, in an interview in Washing ton. . . ., . Members of the Interstate commerce commission at Washington were sur prised when packages were delivered to them containing new tariffs from ill the express companies in the United States, except the Long Island. The tariffs call for a large reduction n express rates beginning August 1. Two hundred and fifty feet above ground, suspended by a rope that was burning and his clothes blazing from naphtha and carbon oil, Chris Sinkas, a stack painter, thirty-six years old, made his way down, hand under hand, to earth, while a crowd of men stood horrified at the Westlnghouse Electric company's plant in East Pittsburg, Residents of Kearney, N. J., are ex perimenting with dynamite for the ex termination of mosquitoes. Lorado Taft's heroic statue of Black Hawk was unveiled on Eagle's Nest Bluff near Oregon, 111. Eighty-four wire manufacturers and their employes, representing thirty- five companies, were Indicted by the federal grand Jury at New York city on the charge they had offended against the Sherman anti-trust law by forming nine pooling associations which acted in restraint of trade. The Supreme court of the United States issued an order to the attorney general directing him to Instruct the lower courts to carry out the Supreme court's decision providing for the dis solution of the American Tobacco company. The 30 days allowed the company to ask for a rehearing have expired. e e Dr. D. F. Dumas, mayor of Cass Lake, Minn., was held to await the ac tion of the grand Jury at his prelimi nary hearing for complicity in the ar son plot at Puposky. The testimony given by Martin Behan, the captured Puposky bandit, was sufficient evi dence, according to Court Commission er Simons, to hold the doctor for the next grand Jury. Dr. Arthur R. Tiel went Into the cel lar of his home at Matteawan, N. Y., and found in an old vault some $40, 000 in money and securities. The treasure is believed to have been placed there by William H. Badeau, who died several months ago, According to a report at Newcastle, Pa., 2,500 engineers on the entire Bal timore & Ohio railroad system will re ceive an advance in pay July 1. Sweeping down from an immense height in a sbowr of rain, Lincoln Beachey In his biplane passed over the Horseshoe falls at Niagara, under the steel arch bridge, on down the gorge almost to the Whirlpool rapids, then rose, mounted again and, shaving the wooded cliff, landed safely and un concernedly on the Canadian side. Sporting Harvard won the annual boat race from Yale at New London, Conn., by a liberal margin. At one point the Crimson boat was nine lengths ahead of the Blue craft. Yale pulled out a victory In tho freshmen eights while the Harvard substitute varsity fours defeated Yale by two lengths. Personal Paul de Longpre, the noted painter of flowers, died in his home at Holly wood, Cal. George Clinton Paine of Elmlra, N. Y., who will be one hundred years old July 9, is in Montclalr, N. J., can vassing for subscriptions for books. He boasts he Is the oldest book agent In the world. e United States Senator Francis War ren of Wyoming was married to Miss Clara Le Baron Morgan in the little ball room of the Hotel Gotham In New York city. Senator Warren is sixty seven years old and his bride thirty five. e Mrs. John Laughmar, widow of a Civil war veteran and former populist candidate for congress, was killed by a street car at Rister park, a suburb of South Bend, Ind. John W. Gates, who had arranged to sail for America with Mrs. Gates and Lord Cowdray, has been obliged to postpone his departure owing to his serious illness. He has submitted to seven slight surgical operations In as many days for an abscess in his throat. e The board of regents of the Unlver city of Michigan appointed Robert Campbell, Port Huron, Mich., treas urer of the university in place o George Baker, resigned. Foreign Lord Kinnaird presided over an enormous gathering at the Metropoli tan tabernacle in London to welcome the new pastor, Rev. Amzl C. Dixon, formerly of the Moody church, Chi cago. Serious rioting In connection with the seamen's strike occurred in sev eral ports In England and on the conti nent. At Hull more than twenty per sons were Injured, Including several policemen, of whom three were seri ously Injured. The riots resulted from the failure to reach a settlement between the ship owners and the strikers. China has begun to fortify Heln chlang, in northwestern China, which is considered a commanding location against Russia IE OF STATE MINISTERS WILL BE HELD BEGINNING JULY TENTH AND LASTING FIVE DAYS. AT AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE Many of Michigan's Pastors. With County Charges Are Expected to Attend Helpful Addresses to Be Given at East Lansing. Lansing. Many of Michigan's min isters with country charges will at tend the conference which will be held at M. A. C, beginning July 10 and lasting five days. President J. L. Snyder of the college has sent invita tions to pastors all over the state. The conference will be strictly non denomlnatlonal. 'It will be shown to the country minister that he can ma terially increase bis Income by going Into poultry raising or dairying, or some other line, on a small scale. Being trained for intellectual work he can study various subjects that have to do with the everyday life of the farmer, with more thoroughness and exactness than the average farmer, until he Is 60 well informed that he can advise them, in the same sense that a college professor who has spe cialized on some particular subject can instruct those who have more practical knowledge of the same sub ject. In this way he can be a useful member of farmers' clubs, and be a leader at their meetings, and become a useful force in the life of his com munity. One country minister who has more than made good in this way will at tend the conference here and talk on such subjects as "Modern Methods in the Country Church," "Difficulties In Country Life Advancement and How to Overcome Them," "The Problem of Leadership in the Country," "The Pos sibilities of a Country Community," and "Country Church Finance." He is Rev. M. B. McNutt, who is pastor of Du Page church, in the Plalnfleld district, Illinois. Du Page church Is in an open country six miles from a railroad or town, and at the time Mr. McNutt took charge was not a very promising field. Since that time he has erected a $10,000 church edifice which serves not only as a church, but as a social center for the entire community. Another country minister who has also made good and is coming to the "conference" Is Rev. Charles O. Ber nles, whose charge is near McClellan town, Pa, Also coming is Prof. A. B. Graham of the Ohio State university. Professor Graham Is superintendent of agricultural extension in Ohio, his work being with grangers, farmers' clubs and country churches. He will talk on "The Rural School Teacher and His Relation to the Country Church," "Tenantry and Church At tendance, The Tendency of the Times," and "The Rural Pastor and Parishioner." Demonstrations will be given to the ministers on gardens and orchards, on the principles Involved In the pro duction of vegetables and umall and tree fruits commonly grown in Michigan. For Exhibition at State Fair. At a meeting of the manufac tures committee of tho board of commerce at Detroit, the principal subject was a discussion on the advis ability of holding an industrial exhi bition in connection with the state fair, which is to be held this year Sep tember 18-27. The committee strongly favored the idea and during the meet ing passed the following resolution: "Resolved, That the manufactures committee of the Detroit Board of Commerce hereby heartily Indorses the proposed industrial exhibit to be given this year In connection with the Michigan state fair, and urges upon Detroit manufacturers the desirability of supporting such exhibit to the end that a permanent manufactures build ing be erected on the state fair grounds, whereby Detroit manufac tured product may be shown annually to the people of Michigan and sur rounding cities." Not only did the committee indorse the project, but they also agreed to aid the State Fair association in se curing exhibitors for the show this fall. Letters will be written by the committee of forty or fifty Detroit manufacturers,' giving them first op portunity to secure space at the ex hibition, which Is rapidly filling up.- The board of commerce committee fully appreciates the advertising value of such an exhibit and Is very anxious to make a deep Impression on the state fair management 60 as to make it possible to have a building erected for Industrial exhibits annual ly. This will undoubtedly be done If the exhibit this fall is a success along Industrial lines. New State Appointments. Governor Osborn announced the fol lowing appointments: William Oates of Lauiium as state game, fish and forestry warden, to succeed Charles Pierce; Perry Powers of Cadillac as state labor commissioner, to succeed Richard II. Fletcher of Bay City; Dellull Travers of Flint, to succeed William R. Oates as the governor's private secretary. Alfred O. Joplln of Marauette was appointed a member of the board of coutrol of Mackinaw hrJ&uL Michigan Guard Wages War on Flies. Lansing. The Michigan National Guard, through its sanitary depart ment, will wage war on the common house fly during the annual encamp ment In Detroit, at the state range out Gratiot avenue. The militia is acting In line with a campaign in which Detroit health authorities are interested, and which has been in augurated by the American Civic asso ciation, working under Dr. Leland O. Howard, chief of the United States bureau of entomology. The house fly is termed by Dr. Howard as a carrier of typhoid, consumption and summer complaint germs. "A single harmless-looking house fly may carry from 650 to 6,000,000 bacteria," says Dr. Howard. "These germs may be, often are, the germs of typhoid fever, in part. The fly not only bears away on Its legs tiny parti cles from a typhoid patient's dis charges on which it gladly feeds, whenever possible but it also carries virulent typhoid bacilli in its digestive organs. "These germs it takes to the food of other persons, leaving them in quanti ties. On every tiny spot of food that has been touched by a fly which has fed on typhoid discharges, a colony of bacteria begins to grow with huge rapidity. "One single footprint of a house fly was found to have left 860,000 fungus spores. The average number of bac teria per fly found by Esten and Ma son in experiments with 414 flies which had fed at cow stables, garbage barrels, pig pens, etc., was 1,250,000. "In 1898 Surgeon General Dr. Geo. M. Sternberg of the United States army warned the army gathering for the Spanish-American war that files would carry typhoid in crowded camps. His warnings were somewhat neglected. One-fifth of the soldiers developed typhoid. While water was partly to blame, the doctors deter mined that the fly was the chief agent for this terrible spread of disease. "As for the wholesome country, doctors have shown that practically all of the terribly prevalent typhoid is borne, not so much by bad water, but by flies. Flies thus gather germs; they leave them In milk or butter, for transportation to crowded cities. They gather thickly about dairies, markets, etc. Typhoid germs will live in milk 20 days, while in butter the germs will live for 140 days. Would Increase Cement Prices. Cement which sells in the eastern part of the United States for $1.25 per barrel is sold in Michigan at 65 cents a barrel. This is the condition from which the Michigan cement manufac turers are asking the Interstate com merce commission to be relieved. The selling price of cement in this state barely covers the cost of raw mate rials and labor, declared Attorney Smith, representing the Michigan firms. "We are not asking protection from the commission against factories which from a superior situation or be cause of better methods are enabled to make their product cheaper than we can make it in this state," declared Mr. Smith. "We believe that the rail roads have no right to give the Le high Valley mills access to the terri tory adjacent to our mills by affording a freight rate which enables them to ship cement and sell it here at 30 per cent, below cost. "The same rate of freight on ce ment will carry it east and north from the Lehigh Valley mills In northern New Jersey and eastern Pennsylvania only one-half the distance which it will carry it westward." In giving a resume of the cement industry of the state, Attorney Smith said that the cement factories of the state are worth from $12,000,000 to $15,000,000. They have a capacity of 6,000,000 to 7,000,000 barrels of prod uct a year, but are putting out only from 4,000,000 to 5,000,000 barrels a year. Approximately $1,000,000 Is paid the railroads In freight, It Is claimed. R. A. M. Concludes Its Convocation. The Michigan grand chapter, Royal Arch Masons, concluded its sixty-third annual convocation, the first ever held north of Saginaw. Reports show the order now numbers 21,000, an Increase of 800 in the year. Grand Rapids was selected as the place for the next meeting and the following officers elected: Grand high priest, Elwln F. Brown, Iron Mountain; deputy grand high priest, James H. Thompson, Lansing; grand king, John II. Kingsley, Man chester; grand scribe, William W. Watts, St. Louis, Mo.; grand treas urer, Emerson M. Newell, Fenton; grand secretary, Charles A. Conover, Coldwater; grand lecturer, Horace S. Maynard, Charlotte; grand chaplain, Rev. John Claflin, Eaton Rapids; grand captain of host, Albert J. Young, Escanaba; grand principal sojourner, Robert S. Hunt, Detroit; grand royal arch captain, Elmer S. Atherton, Du rand; grand master of third veil, Wal ter H. Booth, Grand Rapids; grand master of second veil, George W. Leedle, Marshal; grand master of first veil, Frank H. Williams, Allegan; grand sentinel, James F. McGregor, Detroit Mrs. F. C. Klump at Head. The Woman's Missionary society of Michigan conference of the Evangeli cal church, at Jackson, elected the following officers: President, Mrs. F. C. Klump, Caro; vice-president, Mrs. John Kern, Three Rivers; recording secretary, Mrs. Lows Lelsemer, De troit; corresponding secretary, Mrs. G. R. Scott, Niles; treasurer, Miss Elizabeth Falst, Perry; delegates to quadrennial convention, Mrs. F. C. Klump, Caro; Mrs. Carrie Kauffman, New Castle, Ind., and Mrs. D. L IIST.eU. . STATE NEWS IN BRIEF Wyandotte. A match dropped carelessly on the floor caused the death of Mrs. William Schave. The woman was cleaning house in her home at Wyandotte, assisted by her fourteen-year-old daughter. She had been using gasoline. In crossing the room she stepped on a match head and a flash of fire swept the room. The daughter, Elizabeth, in the next room, heard her mother scream, saw the flash as the gas flared up, and rushed to the rescue. Mother and daughter were carried from the burning house, the former unconscious, and taken to Emergency hospital, Ford City, whare Mrs. Schave died. Three Rivers. Great preparations are being made for the eighth annual state encampment of the U. S. W. V., which will meet here in July. This Is the state encamp ment and about 200 delegates from all over Michigan are expected. At this meeting a state camp of the Order of the Serpent, an auxiliary organiza tion, will be formed. A great parade will occur, when the "big snake" will crawl through the streets of the city and the Great Lair of the state will be organized. A snake 95 long will be brought here for the occasion from Indiana, and this will be the first time that he will crawl in this state. Port Huron. Oone of the most destructive fires that has visited this city for many years occurred in the center of the downtown business district and it is estimated that $100, 000 will Just cover the loss. The fire was first noticed by Police Sergeant Shine at the rear of a large Junk shop owned by Louis Levine. Every company of the fire department re sponded but could not do much to check the flames, which got a fine start from the old rags, rubbers and bales of paper that were stored In the building. This place was burned to the ground, with no insurance. Grand Rapids. Another batch of Imported workers, with whom the furniture manufacturers seem to be slowly breaking the big strike, ar rived here from Chicago and went to work in the Sllgh plant. This is the seventieth day since the beginning of the labor strike, and while both sides are holding firm, there are over 2,800 Btrlke-breakers at work In the various plants. The manufacturers cllam they can handle all orders taken during the July exposition that Is now on here. South Haven. Fire originating In the kitchen gutted the Se bring hotel at Bangor, ten miles from here, entailing a loss of $3,500, partly covered by insurance. The place was built 60 years ago, and was a stopping place for stage coaches running between Decatur and South Haven. It was famous in the early days as a stopping place for hunters, and big game dinners were served to wealthy tourists. Lansing. The hearing of the case of the Germanla Refining company against Auditor General O. B. Fuller, otherwise the state, is in progress before Judge Wiest in the circuit court. The suit is brought to prevent the enforcement of the col lection by the state of taxes on the cars of the company. ' Escanaba. Caught in the act of "head lighting" for deer by Her man Lelsner, deputy state game warden, Moses Lacarte and Joseph Reno have been fined on a plea of guilty. The men were using a rail road velocipede with a powerful head light and wero placed under arrest. Lansing. Mr. and Mrs. Matthew Betz of Grand Rapids and Mrs. William Lott of Holt were In stantly killed and Mr. Lott was fatal ly Injured when the buggy in which they were driving was struck by an interurban car. The horse had cleared the track but became frightened and backed the carriage into the path of the car. Kalamazoo. The bodies of Luther Hale and his son, Truman, who were drowned while fishing in Hamilton lake, were recovered. The bodies were found near together and In about 100 feet of water. It Is be lieved their boat was tipped over while the two were changing seats. They were found near the middle of the lake. Ypsllantl. Charles W. Evans, a milk dealer of Detroit, was killed at Denton, being struck by a west-bound Interurban car. The plat form of the waiting room at Denton Is constructed four feet from the ground, and Is built close to the track. It Is thought Evans was sit ting on the platform and did not no tic? the car approaching. Petoskey. Driving home from a field on his mowing machine Wil liam M. Eckler of Clarion dropped dead, aged sixty-two. Three years years ago, while returning from his father's funeral be said: "Three years from today you will take me to the cemetery." A widow and two children survive. Escanaba. The eight-year-old son 3f. Joseph Bruner of Spalding was drowned In the river at that place while bathing, being seized with waa- ... Fresb Gat Unwpra! AND Fiiiiiml Dan A choice line ef fresh Cut Flowers aU ways in stock FLOWERS For Funerals, Weddings, Etc. made up in the latest designs on short notice. SOCIETY WORK A SPECIALTY Send us your order direct and you will receive prompt attention and save , money. Asman, Florist, For Fresh Flowers. PHONES 606. 84 1 - Huron Ayc, Port Huron, Hich. DETROIT UNITED LINES Seven Fast Limited Cars Each Way Daily between PORT HURON and DETROIT Leave Leave FORT HURON DETROIT 5.15 a. m. C.30 a. m. 8.30 a. m. 10.30 a. m. 12.30 p. m. 2.30 p. m. 4.30 p. m. G.30 p. m. Monday only. 7.15 a. m. t 9.15 a. m.1 11.15 a. m 1.15 p. m. 3.15 p. m. 5.15 p. m. 7.15 p. m. 1 11.00 p. m. t Sunday only Cart run on Central Standard Tim From the heart of Port Iluron to Detroit City Hall in two hours and. fifteen minutes. All Hmiteds run via. the " Short Cut". In addition to the Limlteds a local service every hour is maintained bet ween Port Huron and Detroit over the Algonac route. Fare, $1.50 lor Round Trip. Electric Railway Connections: at the Detroit Interurban waiting room with limited and local cars for Monroe,. Toledo, Flint, Romeo, Ypsllantl, Ana Arbor, Jackson, Lansing and Kala mazoo. For Time Tables, Folders and other information write the General Pass teger Agent at Detroit. pERE MARQUETTE Departure of Trains Yale. West For Saginaw, Bay City antfj Ludiugton, 9:40 a m and 7:15 P M i i East For Port Huron, Detroit anil points in Canada, 9:17 am and 8:06 pv! C F. Curtis, Agent. rheumatism: lumbago, Solailoa.Gout, tlout ralcla, Mdnoy Trouhlo and loQrlpgWm A reliable preparation for both Internal and e; Ureal use that rlvta quick relltf to tbe tuflereir Applied xtaraaUy It atopa all ache and palMt Taken internally It dltsolfea tbe poisonous tubs atanee and assists nature la rf storloa tbe eye tern to a nealtby condition. Sold by drop fiatav i One Dollar per bottle, or nent prepaid nposi receipt of prloo If cot obtainable la your locality. J. a tltWSOir, ftmrdla, Tcbb., wrfUst "Yoar t PROPB" ) rnrad my wtfs ! Hhsanatlsm aod Haat itl. 1 1 o to say that It li worth one fcandrw aouttt m bottle Instead of eniy obs aoUar." WRITE TO-DAY for a trial bottle of "S-DropaM and test It yourself. We will gladly send It ut you postpaid, absolutely free. SWANS0N RHE0MATIQ CURE tOMPAKY, J Dept. 80 174 Lake Street. Chicago REMEMBER THE NAMEE 6-DROPS" WArjsora PILLS THE GREAT REMEDY For CONSTIPATION SIOK HEADACHE SOUR STQUACI1 Heart Burn, Bilohlng and LIVER TROUBLES 23 Cents Per Box AT DftUaGltTS) BEST REMEDY FOR