HB 6.17.2021 DONE

(J-Ad) #1
The Hastings Banner — Thursday, June 17, 2021 — Page 7
club the evening of Sept. 2.
The Hastings City Band, better known as
“Troxel’s Band,” will be continued under the
leadership of Dr. Clarence H. Barber.
Tents for the coming Chautauqua should be
ordered at once.
A special school meeting will be held
Monday, July 3, for the purpose of bonding
for $65,000 for the erection of a new school
building on the Central grounds.
Mrs. Herman Frost gave an enjoyable
at-home party Tuesday afternoon honoring
the 80th birthday of Mrs. Sophia Brink.
Andrew G. Cortright, former sheriff of
Barry County, died suddenly Saturday
morning at the home of relatives in Caledonia
where he and Mrs. Cortright were visiting for
a few days.
Professor Homer C. Washburn, dean of the
department of pharmacy at the University of
Oklahoma, has been selected to found a
school of pharmacy to be added to the
University of Colorado.

Forty years ago
June 20, 1901
The friends of E.G. Holbrook of Lansing
will be pleased to learn that at a recent
meeting of Lansing Division, U.R.K.P.
[Uniform Rank, Knights of Pythias drill
corps], he was elected captain.
Dr. Samuel Dickie of Albion, former
resident of Hastings and first superintendent
of schools here, was last week elected
president of Albion College, to succeed Dr.
John P. Ashley, resigned.
Chas. H. Dawson graduated from the
pharmaceutical department of the University
of Michigan yesterday.

Fifty years ago
June 18, 1891
Hon. Clement Smith will deliver the oration
at the celebration at Freeport July 4.
Cadet George Rock, who is completing his
studies at the Glasgow university, recently
took the first prize awarded by that institution
to its students in naval architecture. [Later
Admiral Rock, he was put in charge of the
Brooklyn naval yard a week after the U.S.
entered World War I and credited with aiding
in the groundwork for modernizing the U.S.
Navy.]
Miss Maude Bartley and her class in
instrumental music, together with the male
quartette composing the [Methodist Episcopal]
choir for which Miss Bartley is organist, gave
a very pleasant musical at the home of W.H.
Schantz Friday evening.
Mr. Weaver, having removed from Hastings,
Messrs. Stuart and Knappen have made an
association with William O. Lowden with
whom they will have an office in the new
Hastings City Bank building.
The graduating exercises of class ’91 of the
Hastings High School will take place Friday
afternoon, June 26, in the courtyard, if the

weather is favorable, otherwise probably in
Union Hall.
Ed. Bottum will soon enter the employ of
Ingraham Mfg. Co., manufacturing chemists
and druggists of Detroit.
Miss Edna Havens’ many friends will be
pleased to learn that she has been elected
principal of one of the schools in Owosso.

Banner June 26, 1941

Twenty years ago
June 23, 1921
About 400 attended the alumni banquet
Friday evening.
The recent school census gives Hastings a
68-student lead over Charlotte, the record
showing 1,274 boys and girls between age 5
and 20, a gain of 44 over last year.
A farewell party was given for Mrs. Otto
Krueger Tuesday afternoon, prior to her
leaving the following day for her new home in
Chicago.
Through the courtesy of Claud Lydell, the
courthouse fountain has been supplied with a
large stock of goldfish.
Mrs. Effa Beamer, 70, died suddenly Friday
at the home of her son, E.F. Bottum.

Thirty years ago
June 29, 1911
Thirty-seven members of the senior class of
Hastings High graduated last Friday.
Gerald Nash, son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Nash, and Miss Blanche Bidelman, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Bidelman, were
married at the home of the bride’s parents at
Quimby Wednesday at noon. The ceremony
was performed in the presence of the

immediate relatives and friends.
About 250 attended the annual banquet of
the Hastings High School alumni Friday
evening at the M.E. church.
Miss Bessie Bush has finished her course at
Kalamazoo Normal and has accepted a
position as kindergarten teacher in the
Ironwood schools.

Forty years ago
June 27, 1901
The 19th annual alumni banquet was held
at the Episcopal Parish house Friday evening.
The business meeting was held on the lawn of
Mrs. Rose Colgrove’s and the following new
officers were elected: President Franz
Willison, Vice President S.C. Greusel Jr.,
Secretary Miss Myrtle Sullivan and Treasurer
Miss Mary Wooton.
Prosecutor [Charles H.] Thomas and Squire
[Alanzo] Kenaston, equipped with all the
latest kinds of fishing tackle, went to Leach
Lake Tuesday afternoon and succeeded in
getting – wet.
Miss Nonna Michael will go to Grand
Rapids soon, where she expects to take a
course prescribed for trained nurses at
Butterworth Hospital.
Misses Angie and Eva Bates, teachers in
the public schools of Detroit, arrived Friday
to spend the summer with relatives in this
vicinity.

Fifty years ago
June 25, 1891
Wool commands 25 to 28 cents at Freeport.

1941 column recapped June


news 20-50 years earlier


Goldfish in the courthouse fountain,
graduating classes, biting dogs, fish that didn’t
bite, injuries, deaths, business transactions,
promotions and assignments and more were
among the bits of news published in The
Banner
in June 1941. Under the heading
“Backward Glances – Bits of Yesterday,” the
column reviewed the news from 1891, 1901,
1911 and 1921.
The following extracts were reprinted in
three separate issues:


Banner June 12, 1941
Twenty years ago
June 2, 1921
The last legislature raised the tuition fee for
rural pupils attending city high schools from
$25 to $60.
The eighth-grade commencement will be in
the high school auditorium Saturday afternoon
with State Supt. Johnson giving the address. A
health pageant picnic dinner and games at the
fairgrounds are part of the program.
The safe at the Wing and Hammond store
was robbed of $150 sometime Tuesday night.
The graduating class this year numbers 88.
Mr. and Mrs. Vere Herrington of Jackson
have moved to Hastings and will reside on
Hanover Street.
Mr. and Mrs. D.R. Foster have bought a
home in Eaton Rapids and are moving there
this week.


Thirty years ago
June 1, 1911
The Palace of Sweets will open next
Saturday with Miss Crandall as proprietor.
Members of Fitzgerald Post G.A.R. and the
Women’s Relief Corps attended the memorial
service at the Wesleyan Methodist church
Sunday and pronounced the message on “He
fought a good fight,” by Rev. Chas. M.
Duryea, one of the most interesting and
scholarly they had ever heard.
James Troxel, well-known musician and
band leader, died Sunday morning from
neuralgia of the heart. [A native of Holland
and director of the Hastings City Band, Troxel
had suffered heart trouble for more than a
year, according to his death certificate. He
was 36 and left behind a wife and three
children under 5 years old.)
Miss Anna Johnson (Hope Daring) is
preparing to issue a new book next fall
entitled, “Valedero Ranch,” a story of
California life in the early days.
Deaths: Mrs. Harriette Melissa Spaulding,
75; Mrs. Abijah Eaton, 70; Mrs. J.B. Mills,
widow of the late Probate Judge James B.
Mills, 71 [and mother of Ella Eggleston, the
first county probate judge in the state].


Forty years ago
June 6, 1901
Word has been received from Washington
that the two rural free mail routes from this
city will start July 1. The route through
Rutland will be known as No. 1, and the one
to North Irving and O’Donnell [near where
Ryan Road intersects Fighter Road in Carlton
Township] will be known as Route 2. John
Curtis will be the carrier on Route 1, and
Grant Hendershott on Route 2, with Alfred P.
Trumbull of this city as substitute.
One day last week, the boys at the Table
factory were recreating by playing ball. An
extra strong batter knocked the ball through
the window at James Grace’s residence, where
it disarranged the bric-a-brac on the center
table. The boys settled, and the game goes
merrily on. [Grace lived at 305 E. Mill St.,
northwest of the factory].
County School Commissioner [John]


Ketcham has purchased the late W.S. Shriner
resident in the second ward and has moved
into same.

Fifty years ago
June 4, 1891
Mrs. Annie Demond of Woodland
Township, age 102, was in the village the
other day and had her picture taken.
Fred Heath was pressing a cork down into
a bottle with his thumb Monday when the
bottle broke in the center, and his hand
slipped down onto the broken part in such a
manner as to sever an artery in the thumb.
Geo. Van Sickle of Rutland was injured
Monday forenoon when severely bitten on the
left arm [by what it does not say] just below
the elbow, also knocked down and injured
about the face and leg.
John Busby and a party of friends captured
a boatload of Long Lake pumpkin seeds
[panfish] Friday.
C.M. Weaver of the law firm Stuart,
Knappen and Weaver will leave the last of this
week for Adrian where he will enter into
partnership in the law business with his
brother.

Banner June 19, 1941

Twenty years ago
June 16, 1921
Miss Retha Eckert, who graduates from
Kalamazoo Normal this month, will have
charge of 10 weeks of supervised play at the
playgrounds in the city park this summer.
Hastings has a fine new band. O.A. Skelcher
is leader and Dr. C.H. Barber is president.
City mail carrier Jakie Edger was bitten by
a bulldog Thursday forenoon and although a
painful injury, it is not expected to be serious.
G.M. Fox has sold his farm in Rutland
Township just west of the city and has
acquired a store building and stock of
groceries on Plainfield Avenue in Grand
Rapids.
Arthur F. Vickery has sold his drug store to
John V. Sassaman of Charlotte, who has taken
possession.

Thirty years ago
June 22, 1911
The Methodists plan to dedicate their new
church Sunday Sept. 3. Bishop Quayle, noted
author and famous preacher, will deliver the
address under the auspices of the Boosters

Rural routes date back to 1899 locally


An article accompanying the Turning
Back the Pages column in last week’s Banner
mentioned that some addresses in 1940 were
still rural free delivery, or RFD, rather than
rural routes, or RR.
However, this week’s column, a 1941
lookback at news from decades past,
mentions that the U.S. Postal Service had
announced in June 1901 two new rural
routes for Hastings.
Why, nearly 40 years later, some residents
had RR addresses and others had RFD is not
clear. The following is a list of rural route
start dates for local post offices, as approved
by the U.S. Postal Service.

Bellevue – April 1, 1903
Clarksville Aug. 15, 1902
Cressey – Jan. 15, 1904
Delton – May 16, 1904
Dowling – April 1, 1904
Freeport – April 1, 1903
Hastings – July 1, 1901
Lake Odessa – May 1, 1902
Middleville May 1, 1899
Nashville – April 1, 1903
Quimby – July 1, 1904
Woodland – April 1, 1903

Source: about.usps.com

Dr. Samuel Dickie, who served as
Hastings’ first superintendent of schools,
became the seventh president of Albion
College in 1901, a position he would hold
for 20 years. (Albion College photo)

Hastings First United Methodist Church was dedicated in September 1911. In June,
The Banner announced “Bishop Quayle, noted author and famous preacher, will deliv-
er the address under the auspices of the Boosters club the evening of Sept. 2.” (File
photo)

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162560
City of Hastings

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
ON THE SPECIAL USE PERMIT FOR
1009 WEST GREEN STREET

The Planning Commission for the City of Hastings will hold a
Public Hearing for the purpose of hearing written and/or oral
comments from the public regarding the request for a Special
Use Permit for parking lot reconstruction at 1009 West Green
St. The public hearing will be held at 7:00 PM on Tuesday,
July 6, 2021 in a hybrid format. Please check the City of Hast-
ings website at http://www.hastingsmi.org or contact City Hall at
269-945-2468 for details.

All interested citizens are encouraged to attend and to submit
comments.

A copy of the plans and additional background materials are
available for public inspection from 8:00 AM to 5:00 PM
Monday through Friday at the Office of the Community De-
velopment Director, 201 East State Street, Hastings, Mich-
igan 49058. Questions or comments can be directed to Dan
King, Community Development Director at 269-945-2468 or
[email protected].

The City will provide necessary reasonable aids and services
upon five days notice to the City Clerk at 269.945.2468 or TDD
call relay services 800.649.3777.
Jane M. Saurman
City Clerk

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