People's Pilot, Volume 2, Number 41, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 31 March 1893 — APPOINTED TO OFFICE. [ARTICLE]
APPOINTED TO OFFICE.
Paris and Glasgow Consulates Given to Morss and Morse Respectively. Washington, March 28. —The president has sent the following nominations to the senate: Felix A. Beeve, of Tennessee, to be solicitor of the treasury. William H. Seaman, of Wisconsin, to be United States district judge tor the Eastern district of Wisconsin. Samuel T. Fisher, of Massachusetts, to be assistant commissioner of patents. Samuel E. Morss, of Indiana, to be consul general of the United States at Parle. Allan B. Morss,. of Michigan, to be consul at Glasgow. To be marshais of the United States: Frank Leverett, of Georgia, for the southern district of Georgia: James Blackburn, of Kentucky, for the district of Kentucky. Michigan’s Fruit Crop Will Be Large. Decatub, Mich., March 28.—Peach Commissioner Rufus Bronson says that the outiook is favorable in western Michigan for the largest crop of peaches, apples and fruit of all kinds for many years. So far no peach buds have been blasted and many new orchards w*M bear this season for the first time. Manhood Suffrage Popular In Belgium. Antwebp, March 27. The unofficial referendum has resulted in the approval of manhood suffrage by 15,794 of the 18,701 men who voted. Forty-three per cent of the electors went to the polls.
Before singing the song of “The Letter That Never Came,” the woman should look in her husband’s overcoat pocket. He may have failed to deliver it as expected.—N. O. Picayune. A Kansas City man calls his dog Christopher Columbus. This is rather overdoing the matter. Christopher had three barks while the Kansas City canine has but one. —Rochester Post.
