. Electric railway journal . .—Under thebus regulation ordinance at Toledo,Ohio, thirty-six motor cars have regis-tered and deposited their indemnitybonds with the city authorities. Alreadythere have been charges of racingand combination on the part of buseson the Dorr Street line. Most of themoperate in this part of the city. Inde-pendent buses came to Toledo to oper-ate and were attacked by the organizedbusmen there. Offenders are threat-ened with revoked licenses unless sched- ules are properly maintained. Resi-dents of Point Place, a lakeside sub-urb, have voted to remain loyal to thestree


. Electric railway journal . .—Under thebus regulation ordinance at Toledo,Ohio, thirty-six motor cars have regis-tered and deposited their indemnitybonds with the city authorities. Alreadythere have been charges of racingand combination on the part of buseson the Dorr Street line. Most of themoperate in this part of the city. Inde-pendent buses came to Toledo to oper-ate and were attacked by the organizedbusmen there. Offenders are threat-ened with revoked licenses unless sched- ules are properly maintained. Resi-dents of Point Place, a lakeside sub-urb, have voted to remain loyal to thestreet cars which operate in their por-tion of the city. A special line wasconstructed some years ago to serve thecommunity. It is a branch of theToledo, Ottawa Beach & Northern Rail-road and is operated by the Toledo Rail-ways & Light Company. Recently buseshave made such inroads that the rail-way service was threatened. The prop-erty owners, however, in a meeting-voted 290 to 10 in favor of patronizingthe street McGraw Electric Railway Directoryfor August, 1921 The McGraw Electric Railway Di-rectory is the cumulative result ofmore than twenty-five years work. Inthe current issue more than 1,025 com-panies furnished new reports, andmore than 5,000 changes were madefrom the preceding edition. The ap-pendix contains a list of electric rail-ways that are operating motor buses,and in the data published in the bodyof the book statistics are given of thenumber of motor buses operated. The Engineer By John Hays Hammond. Published byCharles Scribners Sons, New York, 1921Cloth 4x7 in., 194 pages. To open the eyes of the youth in aquandary as to what career to followand to aid him in analyzing his fitnessfor engineering is the purpose of thefamous mining engineer in this valu-able outline. Setting forth the quali-ties essential to success in engineeringas imagination, integrity of purpose,accuracy of thought, capacity for judg-ment, ingenuity, curiosity, creative in-stinct and analy


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