Grand Rapids Herald-Review Newspaper, May 11, 1901, Page 6

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Central Division~ Continued. VILLAGE OF GRAND RAPIDS, - CENTRAL DIVISION, Woodland Addition~ Continued, Foley's Addition—Continued. Woodland Addition—Cont’d, from Pago Fi VILLAGE OF GRAND RAPIDS, WOODLAND ADDITION. VILLAGE OF GRAND RAPIDS. FOLEY’S ADDITION. VILLAGE OF GRAND mien WOODLAND ADDITION. Name of! Deserip Year or years| ; ‘4 jusive for |. chap- inclusive for hich Name of} Deserip- Year or years] cha) ter 322 as shown Property |: by|tion off judgment. |property, EY as shown! propert delinquent {al laws it ai 1889, judgment. |property, +5100) Toye) * sautog ---svtiog | _ Garland’s Addition—Continued.” | VELLAGE OF GRAND RAPIDS, GARLAND’S ADDITION. Am’t of ment enter- Year or jed un years in- | der clusive | chap- for which |ter taxes are |Gener- deling ue’t jal laws 1899. Name of| IS and 184 0 BRI eee RELA eet z VILLAGE OF GRAND RAPIDS, CENTRAL DIVISION. GESCEEEBEES z% faa Ff Be M_L Suln.on RSQELESEERRERELEENZZ ZEEE EGEEGEEE oeteagtere ie rege so tere2e Ss ieistels DOMME WHOS SOAR MES VILLAGE OF GRAND RAPIDS, GARLAND’S ADDITION. uke VILLAGE OF GRAND eee ereveyet ny | Bi 3h y He daa te ce os rer cc eseree coer erases er or seco Oe HE Bs Ro penaumest aS Adele V. Canuany Markel & Munger Markell & Munger.. ce BRS Ss BE z z GERE Sez 1B. a0. 20 OF 08 ce og coor nn ate RE RE porererey z Se = peeeb BEERS Sreokkoeee, eeee CESEREE PERSIE Ee pe ReRe Re aerel ee Be Ee eqererey 2 ; eS REREEREREESESS ced hepphere. same...... D, R. Miller. same. 3ame Continued on Page Seven. BEES STAMPEDE Sting Horses Attached te thy Cause a Comme- tion, Ag the hearse containing the body of James Bracken, formerly of New Albany, was driven into the rural cemetery near Bradford, Harrison county, Ind., one of the horses at- tached to it trod on # nest of bumble bees. For a few minutes there was lively scene. The angry bees swarmed from the nest and it at tacked everything and everybody im sight. They stung the driver of the earse until he was blinded and fled. They attacked the pall-beaters around | the hearse and drove them away. The widow and the mourners in the car- riages following were victims of the insecta’ activity. The attending min- ister was stung by two of the bees and many of the attending friends were driven from the cemetery. The horses attached to the hearse were the first to feel the vengeanee of the bees and were stung so badly that they ran away, but they were caught by the committee of Hope lodge of Odd Fellows of Louisville, Ky., of which Mr. Bracken had been | a member, just as the hearse and cof- fin were about to be overturned. Aft- | er a vigorous fight that lasted for ; half an hour the bees were driven away, the coffin taken from the hearse and the body laid to rest. TO CHANGE CHURCH MUSIC, Cardinal Steinhuber Will Bar Oper. atic Airs from Catholic Services, The official confirmation of the ap- pointment of Cardinal Steinhuber as prefect in Rome of the congregation of the index was received at Washing. ton. The news is expected to cause lively comment in clerical cireles, Cardinal Steinhuber has some de- cided views on the adoption of a bet- ter standard of church music than now prevails in this country. With his ap- | pointment as head of this congrega- tion he will have direct control of the St. Cecelia’s society and other organ- izationgy looking to the betterment of church music in the United States. The operatic airs which are now gen- erally sung by the choir here are ob- noxious, it is said, to the spirit of the Catholic church, which for cen turies has recognized no other form of ecclesiastical music than the Greg- orian chant. For certain reasons, how. ever, greater latitude has been given to American choirs than to those of any other country, but now the au- thorities at Rome are determined to support societies like that of St. Ce celia, whose pur} is gradually to eliminate. what is considered baneful in church music, PASTORS FOR SHIRT WAISTS. Cincinnati Clergymem Favor Com- fortable Summer Apparel for Men. With scarcely an exception Cincim nati (0.) clergymen favor shirt waists for men and are not averse to having them worn in church. Rev. W. D Holt, of the North Side Baptist church, said: “I would be glad to see the men at church in shirts without suspenders The shirt-waist idea is reasonable, and I will support any reasonable plan that will bring men to church.’ , Rev. S. 8. Aikman, of the Fifth Pres byterian church, said: “A preacher might as well talk to a dummy as try to make an impression on a man swel. under ceat and vest in a pew.” “It's a sin, thie, business of wrap ping up in summer as {f we were freez ing, and then saying we can’t ga te | churel because it is tov hot,” sai Rev, A, M.,Harvuot, of Central Christian ehureh. 3 It is anid that Maritim eee! one | | | oe ie WANTS LAW CHANGED Corbin Claims Unjust Diserir in: tloa Against West Pointers. Bulistea Men Bligible to Promtieu te Commissions After Tro Yenry —Weat Pointers Are Obligud te Serve Four Years. Adjt. Gen. Corbin, aceording ‘10 \ New York Tribune special from Wes, ington, has started 8 movemius i) induee eongress te remove from ‘he | statute books a law that makes aa unjust discrimination against § ‘Y<s! Pointers im the army. I6 is «!mond inexplicable, the adjutant says, 1 hs! such legislation sheuld ever sire been enacted or have remainc! fm toree for 18 years as that whieh f200r) the promotion of enlisted men commissions above the youny specially educated at governim:s+ += pense to fill commands. In his current annual report U Corbin devotes eonsiderable space ¢ the act of June 18 1878, whieh pr vided for the promotion to the ¢ of commissioned officer of merit« non-commissioned officers who be found morally, intellectua! physically qualified for promotion, and the aet of July 30, 1892, w tends to all unmarried soldiers u 30 years and possessing the requirite qualifications the privilege of compet- ing at prescribed examinations ‘or commissions. That the law operated well in s- tracting to the ranks a superior <! of intelligent young men was <ernc? strated by the yearly increasin ber who obtained admission in commissioned braneh of the There were six in 1893, and 68 | These men were compelled to in the ranks only two years up law, and, calling attention to | fact, Gen. Corbin says: “Experi has shown that two years is too a period in which enlisted m fit themselves for the impo duties of commissioned officers. only little less than travesty that a man can qualify as an © by serving as an enlisted man | one- half the time required for a cadet * complete his course at West Poi is recommended that the law amended to read four years insteod of two. This will put appoint from the ranks and the milli. academy on the same footing.” KAISER HAS A NEW BAR Dismisses His Former Attend=02 | Because of Undue Fa- millarity, Emperor Willism’s barber, Fre Haby, the inventor of his me y style of mustache, recently ven! ord to remark: “What does your majesty thin): China?” This so ruffled the emperor's tem per that, taking Haby by the es escorted the barber from his ch. ber. The incident has been lavy at throughout Berlin. Apparently Francois Haby has turned to grace only to be again cas, down, for it was announced May | last that it was frequently remark« during the then recent festivities ‘b« his majesty’s mustache was no lozyer “turned upward so fiercely as forii:<: but worn at an angle of 45 degrees 0+ with the ends no longer spreading ov proudly.” It was added that it wasa fact t the emperor had abandoned his for: fashion of.wearing his mustache, though all male Germany adhere< it, one reason being the dismiss=| Baby, who had “become impudent had presumed to trade upon his al! friendly relations with the emper PLAN TO REMOVE THE MA) Objections Made to the Use of Dynsy mite—Coffer Dam to Be | Built. aly Captain of the Port Young has aske the government to refuse any and 4!) proposals looking to the removal o! th4 wreck of the United States battleshij Maine by explosives. Last year t) rej firms offered to remove the hull of 4 battleship in return for the materis but there has always been a strong ol jection to the use of dynamite, becau. of the probability thet there are Ae tions of bodies still in the wreck, 2: the authorities shrink from the ide of desecration. A scheme has been submitted invol ing the construction of a coffer du the pumping out of the water a: taking. of the wreck spas in picee and work on this line will probably gin next month. An Alpine Gurden, At Schachensee, in the Bavarian Al at an elevation of 1,500 meters, Alpine garden has been laid out a planted by a foreman of the Mun Botanical garden. The plan and o} line of the work were furnished Prof. Gobel. The land is the prope: of the crown. It is irtended next y to build a blockhouse and furnis! with the necessary comforts for use of scientific visitors, Alpine g dens already exist near Innsbrueck the Datphiny, in Italy, and on ime Alps. This Bavarian gai will be the medins of rescuing the fix _ Alpine plants from destruction, 1 1a Te eae 1; Canning Meat tn China, , Just before the cutbréak of present troubles a canning fac was established at Chin-Kiang, intention heing to supply Euro; markets with tinned meats, mord pecially game and wild fowl. The ply of id fowl, at a ridieulo is practicay unliny ba nari at tae seientidi rs} | |

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