LOOK BACKNews from... 110 years agoHISTORY CENTER OF TRAVERSE CITY■ IT’S A POOR WIND THAT BLOWS NOBODY GOOD, so that past storms of the fall have increased the cider industry at the C.F. Morgan and Son three fold. During the early fall the apples were small and hard to find. Closely following the storm, cider apples began to come in and the establishment found work to do. Cider making is not an easy task, and the appearance of cider apples is the beginning of a detailed process.■ TONIGHT ERNEST THOMPSON SETON will lecture on “Wild Animals I Have Known” at the City Opera House. Admission is 35 cents for adults and 25 cents for 1children. (■ THE WASP HAS been i observed to waylay and rob bees while the latter, laden with honey, were returning to the hive.■ THE FIRST SERIOUS ACCIDENT in the Interlochen Stave Factory occurred this morning when Chester Sum-merfield cut his hand on an equalizing saw.■ INTERNATIONAL WATERWAYS COMMISSION was addressed by the president of the Lake Carriers’ Association. It was stated that no more locks are wanted at Sault St. Marie stating they are dangerous to navigation, and lake levels.■ THE QUEEN CITY BAKERY has been sold by J.W.Lane to Perry W. Nichols. Mr.Lane will give possession of the bakery immediately. Mr. Nichols’ wife will join him in the venture.■ GERMAN CORDES, former assistant post master at Leland, was sentenced today by Judge Wanty of the United States to serve one year at the House of Corrections in Detroit. Mr. Cordes was convicted of issuing fraudulent money orders for $4,300.■ STEAMER BURIED BY POTATOES as it takes on 1,000 sacks of potatoes, a carload and a half of cider, and some wood. This, along with 8,000 sacks of potatoes picked up along the way was all the Steamer Illinois could handle. The potato business has reached such magnitude, that it has become necessary to divide the freight business between two steamers—the Illinois and the Missouri. The Inew dock at Acme is doing its 1share with nine men on the |docks handling the freight.Michigan dlt;