

Some day, when the interurban comes to the lake, this will develop into a greater summer resort.
Outside capital will then be interested in the place, it will be advertised properly, and thousands
of people will be brought in where hundreds are now.
A big $100,000 hotel will find a fitting site somewhere along the shores of the lake, and Maxinkuckee
will have its regular space in the Sunday papers.
We believe the next three years will see something of this sort realized.
Meantime there will be brick paving and electric lights in town, the streets will be curbed and parked,
window and porch garden boxes will decorate a great many of our homes, and there will be a general
sprucing up of the town which will attract favorable comment from visitors and will bring in families who
will build nice homes and settle down to enjoy the beauties of the place.
Maxinkuckee is the gem of all our Indiana lakes, and as the most beautiful in the state it needs only to
be properly advertised and brought into convenient reach of the people to make it the largest and most
popular resort in Indiana.
When this condition has been reached we shall see more expensive cottages taking the places of those now
around the lake, and the whole West will know Lake Maxinkuckee as the most charming lake resort in the
Mississippi valley as well as the seat of the great Military academy and Summer Naval school.
Culver Citizen Aug 24, 1911