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Rane / } eso) eer | Woodland Addition—Cont’d, from Page Five. Woodland Addition— Continued, Foley’s Addition—Continued. Central Division Doptuved. Garland’s Addition—Continued. Ww ANTS W CHANGED VILLAGE OF GRAND RAPIDS, VILLAGE OF GRAND RAPIDS, VILLAGE OF GRAND] RAPIDS. VILLAGE OF GRAND RAPIDS, VILLAGE OF GRAND RAPI —_—__ : WOODLAND ADDITION, WOODLAND ADDITION, ’ FOLEY’S ADDITION. CENTRAL DIVISIO? GARLAND'S ADDITION, Corbin Claims just Discriminae T H st Rp 7 % 7 ey ¥ Am't u 7 ; = : Aurt in Auvt amet tion Against West Pointers. > judg- jude. judg- | : tment aren. ba ment jedan | Jed, un- Year or Jed. ‘un- Year or (cL | Wmlivted Men Eligible to Promotion { | der | Name off Desertp-[: |! |Year or years tags, (i Simaine of Pap eae nora Bee pants: ta | ee So Comuainalonh Atteh OE Neert waer | tion of |: | | Inclusive for [ter 322 | as shown Property taxes are shown byltion of taxes are | Gener- | shown byltion of taxes are |Gener- to Serve baat oa } wn} property. wiitely taxes |Gener. | by judg delinquent judgment. | propert, delinque’t fal om fudgutord: |prepartey : x ‘ dg- are d ~ jatlaws | “nent. : : deling ue’t jal laws 1899. quent. Adjt. Gen. Corbin, sccektings, to a New York Tribune special from ington, has started a movement\to induce congress to remove from statute books a law that makes an’, unjust discrimination against West \ Pointers in the army. It is almost inexplicable, the adjutant says, that such legislation should ever have been enacted or have remained in force for 12 years as that which favors the promotion of enlisted men to commissions above the young men specially educated at government ex- pense to fill commands. In his current annual report Gen. Corbin devotes considerable space to the act of June 18 1878, which pro- vided for the promotion to the grade of commissioned officer of meritorious non-commissioned officers who shail | be found morally, intellectually and physically qualified for promotion, and the act of July 30, 1892, which ex- tends to all unmarried soldiers under 30 years and possessing the requisite same. same... sume. | same | same. VILLAGE OF GRAND RA [RAL DIVISION. engE pee | same... | sume | same... | same >| Saine J. McAuleffe.... 9 10 eee (any Hel Young 3 | sume.. same, 5 16 16 16 | Continued on Page Seven. qualifications the privilege of compet- Min aa ee GS ouetoe “= | ing at prescribed examinations for 5 ~ commissions. ’ BEES STAMPEDE That the law operated well in at- } tracting to the ranks a superior class | Sting Horses Attached to thy of intelligent young men was demon- and Cause a Commo- strated by the yearly increasing num- tion, ber who obtained admission into the commissioned branch of the army. As the hearse containing the body There were six in 1893, and 68 in 1900. | of James Bracken, formerly of New | These men were compelled to serve | Albany, was driven into the rural | in the ranks only two years under the | cemetery near Bradford, Harrison | /aw, and, calling attention to this | county, Ind., one of the horses at-| fact, Gen. Corbin says: “Experience | tached to it trod on a nest of bumble | has shown that two years is too brief GARLAND’S ADDITION, bees. For a few minutes there was a | 2 period in which enlisted men can lively scene. The angry bees| ‘fit themselves for the important swarmed from the nest and it at-| duties of commissioned officers. It is tacked everything and everybody in only little less than travesty to say | sight. They stung the driver of the that a man ean qualify as ‘an officer 03 | hearse until he was blinded and fied, | by serving as an enlisted man in one- 2.85 | They attacked the pall-bearers around | half the time required for a cadet to | the hearse and drove them away. The complete his course at West Point. It | widow and the mourners in the car-| is recommended that the law be 5) viages following were victims of the | 2menced to read four years instead | insects” activity, The attending min- | of two. This will put appointments ft ister was stung by two of the bees| from the ranks and the military and many of the attending friends | 2cademy on, the same footing.” were driven from the cemetery. oo | The horses attached to the hearse; KAISER HAS A NEW BARBER. | were the first to feel the vengeance | of the bees and were stung so badly | Dismisses His Former Attend: | that they ran away, but they were Because of Undue Fa- caught by the committee of Hope miliarity, | lodge of Odd Fellows of Louisville, | Ky., of which Mr. Bracken had been Emperor Willism’s barber, Francois VILLAGE OF GRAND RAPIDS. same same... 2.85 VILLAGE OF GRAND RAPIDS, same FOLEY’S ADDITION. to to to to to wo to bo T.R. Roley oert same same BELLE. same... 3 | a member, just as the hearse and cof-| aby, the inventor of his majesty’s y pe 2 , fin were about to be overturned. Aft-| style of mustache, recently ventured } 4 same - 3 | er a vigorous fight that lasted for [':o remark: ‘ nr ‘ | half an hour the bees were driven} “What does your majesty think of i 4 | away, the coffin taken from the hearse | China?” ' iow. t | and the body laid to rest. This so ruffled the emperor’s tem- i. i same . same 4 per that, taking Haby by the ear, he - pti one pe : TO CHANGE CHURCH MUSIC, | escorted the barber from his cham- ies sume same. 4 ber. The incident has been laughed ae aaa : Cardinal Steinhuber Will Bar Oper. | at throughout Berlin. { 4 atic Airs from Catholic Apparently Francois Haby has re- 3 Services, turned to grace only to be again cast same. down, for it was announced May 10 The official confirmation of the ap- | last that it was frequently remarked pointment of Cardinal Steinhuber ag | during the ‘then recent festivities that prefect in Rome of the congregation | his majesty’s mustache was no longer of the index was received at Washing. | “turned upward so fiercely as formerly, ton. The news is expected to cause | but worn at an angle of 45 degrees only, lively comment in clerical-circles, with the ends no longer spreading out Cardinal Steinhuber has some de-| proudly.” « | cided views on the adoption of a bet-} It was added that it was a fact that ter standard of church music than now | the emperor had abandoned his former prevails in this country. With his ap-| fashion of wearing his mustache, al- pointment as head of this congrega-| though all male Germany adhered to sume . Is a 1st | ee: tion he will have direct control of the | it, one reason being the dismissal of et C same St. Cecelia’s society and other organ- | Haby, who had “become impudent and siume . izations looking to the betterment of | had presumed to trade upon his alleged, _ church music in the United States, | friendly relations with the emperor.” The operatic airs which are now gen- ——— erally sung by the choir here are ob- | PLAN TO REMOVE THE MAINE. noxious, it is said, to the spirit of — the Catholic church, which for cen-| Objections Made to the Use of Dyna- | turies has recognized no other form mite=Coffer Dam to Be of ecclesiastical music than the Greg- Built, orian chant. For certain reasons, how- ever, greater latitude has been given Captain of the Port Young has asked to American choirs than to those of |‘the government to refuse any and all hs any other country, but now the au-| proposals looking to the removal of the . thorities at Rome are determined to| wreck of the United States battleship support societies like that of St. Ce-| Maine by eXplosives. Last year threes celia, whose purpose is gradually to | firms offered to remove the hull of the eliminate what is considered baneful | battleship in return for the material, ’ game . same Markell & Munge: sume... ame. sume sane . same sane same srme sume . sime saiue same. same Ce ‘4 in church music, but there has always been a strong ob- 2.92 jection to the use of dynamite, because 2% | PASTORS FOR SHIRT WAISTS, | of the probability thet there are por- | 2.04 tions of bodies still in the wreck, and } i Coe J Cincinnati Clergymen Favor Com-/| the authorities shrink from the idea { . 6 2.92 fortable Summer Apparel of desecration. b { ; rt 72 for Men. A scheme has been submitted involy- a same 10 2.92 ing the construction of a coffer dam, 5 mes ame Hed i $47 | . With scarcely an exception Cincin. | the pumping out of the water and >& ue i seas 1.68 M, Garland 3:4 | mati (O.) clergymen favor shirt waists | taking of the wreck apart in pieces; % JE Bragies same 1.68, ‘ 3° | for men and are not averse to having | and work on this line will probably be- sane Hote 2 3p | them worn in church, Rev. W. D | gin next month. ALL Sitimo sane 10 222 | Holt, of the North Side Baptist church, said: ‘Am Alpine Gurden, : “I would be glad to see the men af; AtSchachensee, in the Bavarian Alps, church in shirts without suspenders | at an elevation of 1,500 meters, an The shirt-waist idea is reasonable | Alpine garden has been laid out and. and I, will support any reasonable} planted by a foreman of the Munich plan that will, bring men to church.’ | Botanical garden. The plan and out-- Rev. 8. 8. Aikman, of the Fifth Pres | line of the work were furnished by byterian, ehurch, sald: “A preacher | Prof, Gobel. The land is the property, might as well talk to a. dummy as try | of the crown. It is intended next year to make an impression on @ man swel-| to build a blockhouse and furnish it. same same. same same same sam | same same same z — Fi sume ey same REF 1 i i A proapampemonameieis Tc Viet het same i ath ‘tering under coat and a in a pew.’ | with the necessary comforts for the same... Iss7 to. OL | same i 10 “It’s a sin, thig wrap wees ot scientific visitors. Alpine gar- ¢ ‘ a 4 ape net hn Tee ean ping ‘up in summer as i! meg were freez jens already exist near Innsbrueck, in. P j ie to same. " u i 5 to Ini 33 ing, snd then prrig i “I Fhe $8 Raina ie and on the, Pent) satme ca . i io 18) ohtrah Deewuae ne. Alps. | is. Bavarian garden, Iss to meno 4 iH 40 z Re eo 186 2 & M. Hervuot, of Central ii ie means of rescuing the finest 7 sume 2.1 7 1808 5 226 . _ a ie % ame i i ss ‘3 ta 2 ehureh. pees SNS pine plants from destruction. 7 to 2 2 5 1 ASNT 2 Bh 226 Am Unpepular Pronunciation. Be Ie to iB i 33 It in eald thet the Td in Li Hung) Pil orn cogp lords aa Iso and IN ae bt 23 Chang's neon {a properly pronounced present, trodables a canning Fantony sume... 18M and 2 Leo. It ian’t likely, however, remarka . | 3 BL 2.26 i was established at Chin-Kiang, ames: % 90 1s and Fd 338 the Chicago Pant gets that Wi intention being to supply Euro; | Ine and % 226 nt baal whet he vase bantadl markets with tinned meats, more ew. | a Je and = Pe] 7 pecially game and wild fowl, The ior and 5 335 haem em iliraitnisiiaad | ply of wild net at a ridiculoi 1so4 and Bs} 2.26 jet at anh clade unlimi » 2.26 | te that