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Parent Issue
Day
13
Month
June
Year
1895
Copyright
Public Domain
OCR Text

The graduating class in the High School will be the largest on record. There are 98 in the class. The sexes are evenly divided. The regents Monday decided upon the following apportionment for the library f und for the yearv 1895-6 the amount being distributed as follows from the total appropriation of $15,000; General library, $10,750; medical library, $2,000: law library, $1,500: dental library, $250; homoeopathic library, $500. The music club of the Y. M. C. A. organized last Thursday evcning by electing Herman D. Allmendinger president, Sid Bangs, vice-president, William Biggs, secretary, and Fred Fischer treasurer. A committee was appointed to draft by-laws and report at a meeting to be held on Monday evening. A student was arres ted on State-tt Saturday evening for being foolishly drunk. Ho was taken before Justice Gibson but did not know his own name, but knew enough to deposit a fine of $3 and il. 70 costs. If the saloon keeper who sold him the liquor had only known that he was a student, he would have boen saved all this trouble. A. Hunter, brother of Robt. fiunter, has oponed a machine shop at No. !t E. Liberty st. Mr. Hunter has soine fina machinery in his establishment and has had considerably exporience as a workraan. He is prepared to do all kinds of machine work at moderate rotes. Repslrlng of all kinds also promptly done. Repairing of bicycles a specialty. Wanted- at once, by The Times, the fellow who perpetrated the blood,curdling fake about the horrible murder, in Northfield, an elabórate account of whlch appeared in last Saturday's Times. He is wanted for the purpose of being prepared for the pickling vat. No more fakersneed apply at the Times office- at least for the next ten days. The sewing school will closo for the summer, Saturday, June 15th. The teachers are to give the children a picnic, and ask thoir friends to oontribute meat, cake or money, the same to be left with Miss Brown, 17 Church-st., Miss Marshall, cor. Williams and División-sis., or send'to their rooms in the Courier block, Saturday morning, June 15th. Dr. V. C. Vaughan was called to Muskegon last Friday to tcstify in the IXmglass murder trial. Dr. Vaughan had ))reviously made an analysis of Douglass organs and on the witness stand he testitied that the deceased carne to his death by arsenical poisoning, there being ten times as much arsenic in his body as was necessary to produce death. During the past year there has been SOld at the Aiin Arbor post-office 178,597 one-cent stamps; 809,690 two-ceat stamps; 7,03.5 three-cent stamps; 6,129 four-eent stamps; 10,838 five-cent stamps; ti.200 slx-cent slamp.s; 5,185 eight-eent stamps; 5,599 ten-cent stampa; 2,025 special delivery stamps ; 171). 473 one-cent postal cards; and 2,742 two-cent postal cards, The offlcera of Otsemngo Lodge, No. 205, I. ü. O. F., for the next six montlis u-ere elected at tbc meotinjv last week and are as follows: N. O., J. N. Morse: V. G., Richard E. Portwine; reeording Beeretary, John J. Ferguson; permanent Becretary, John Wahr; treasuren George H. Miller : representativo to the grand lodge meeting at Lansing the fiwt week in October, John Wahr. A scholarship assoeiation was formed in Grand Hapif.s Tuesday on the plan of the Detroit Hlffh School 8cholarBhip Association, its object being to assist ff rad ua tes from the high school of that city to get an education in the U. of M. ïha term of the Corporation is thirty years and all memben of the High School Alumni Associatlon in good ■ing. and all persons eontributing 850 In $10 annual paymenta are to bel eousidered members.- Detroit Tribune. { L. D. Watkins, of Manchester, read a paper at a farmer's club lately, in which he stated, that one ounce of coal would carry a ton of freight in an ocean steamship one and one-half miles. Mr. Watkins is tbe man the great steamship lines have been looking for. He can make money enough to buy Jackson and Washtenaw counties in one season, if he wiü furnish that kind of coal.- Adrián Press. AVe herewith put in a bid for 16 ounces of that coal each weck to enable us to distribute the regular issue of The Register. The display at the Art School exhibit was a remarkably fine one, much more so than most people, not familiar with the workings of the Art School, expected to see. The exhibit was certainly an improvement over that of last year, and shows that a great deal of careful work is being done in the school. Therj were a number of really fine water colors, alao several pieces in oil that possessed great merit from an artistic point of view. Those in charge of the training are certainly building up a school that is destined to grow rapidly in the future. The Experiment Station at the Agricultural College has recently issued in pamphlet form bulletins as follows: Small Fruit Notes, L. R. Taft; Native Plums, Russian Cherries, H. P. Gladden ; The Apple Orchard, U. P. Hedrick ; Pests of the Orchard and Garden, L. R. Taft and G. C. Davis ; Potatoes, L. R. Taft; Vegetable Novelties, H. P. Gladden. We understand that copies of these bulletins may be obtained free of cost by farmers and fruit growers by addressing the secretary, J. H. Butterfield, Agricultural College, Mieh., and asking for a copies.

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Subjects
Old News
Ann Arbor Register