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Parent Issue
Day
15
Month
July
Year
1892
Copyright
Public Domain
OCR Text

Sharonville is hoping for two mails a week. Charles Sandford, of Manchester, makes 100,000 pounds of butter this year. Mrs. Weaver, of Saline, will move her millinery establishment to Ann Arbor. The Manchester city dads have turned to the light. Their council chamber is lit by electricity. Mrs. Charles D. McMahon, of Manchester township, died July 3 of heart disease, aged 29 years. Thieves broke into four places in Clinton one night recently and secured S20 in money and some cigars. The Enterprise says the Manchester council has decided to prosecute the saloon keepers who kept open July 4. The Fourth of July celebration ut Manchester brought $440 into the Germán Workingmen's society's treasury. F. E. Orttenburger, formerly of Bridgewater, has purchased the Zehn stores in Manchester and will push the hardware and grocery trade there. Mrs. W. A. Jones died in Hastings, Minn., July 1, aged 23 years. Her maiden name was Wheeler and she was born in Ann Arbor and had spent most of her life at Urania. Twenty-two sheep belonging to Thomas Green, near Manchester, were killed by a train on the Jackson branch last week, Wednesday, and a number of others were wounded. A barn belonging to T. Sears in Sharon on the old Steinaweg place burned July 5. Loss on the barn, $800. A separator worth 250 belonging to Henry Steinaweg was also burned. . While Chas. Fish, of Sharon, was leaning against a fence discussing advanced theology with a friend, a red squirrel ran rapidly toward him on the top rail, leaped upon the brim of his slouched hat which bent under its weight letting it fall to the ground. Charles uttered au exclamation that would not look well in print. - Grass Lake News. ISelleville now has ajustice of the peace that is a hustler, and it is 110 other than Isaac Crane, the harnessmaker at that place. Mr. Crane's term of office commenced after 12 o'clock on the night of the Fourth, and at 12:10 Hiram Lawsno, of Whittaker Station, was arVaigned before him for assault and battery upon the person of Morris O 'lorien, and at irto a. m. he ,sente'ce[l the prisoner to pay a fine of $${ and costs, or sixty days in the ïvetroit House of Correction. As h'could not pay the fine in two hours, the time allowed him, he was taken to the "works" on the early train, but his brother followed on the next

Article

Subjects
Ann Arbor Argus
Old News