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Parent Issue
Day
26
Month
August
Year
1892
Copyright
Public Domain
OCR Text

James L. Babcock is atWaukesha. Mrs. A. T. Bruegel is visiting in Detroit. Theodere Reyer went to Detroit yesterday on business. Mrs. Adam D. Seyler is visiting her daughter in Detroit. Dr. M. C. Sheehan, of Detroit, was in the city this week. Mr. and Mrs. Charles S. Millen spent Monday in Detroit. Miss Annie Smith, of Jackson, is visiting the Misses Drake. Mrs. Peter Deuress has returned from a visit in Carson City. Mrs. Guiñan, of Petoskey, is visiting Mrs. S. W. Millard. James Breakey has returned from a visit to a Lake Erie port. Dr. W. O. Howley was in .Detroit on business, Wednesday. Miss Anna Masón, of Detroit, is visiting at Mr. T. B. Kearney's. Mr. and Mrs. Lew H. Clement returned from Homer, Monday. Rev. Henry Tatlock and family have returned from North Lake. Karl C. Kern spent Sunday, Monday, and Tuesday at Zukey lake. Mr. and Mrs. Warren E. Walker returned to Zukey lake, Wednesday. H. T. Morton returned Wednesday evening from Denver and the west. Prof. Calvin B. Cady, of Chicago, has been visiting old Ann Arbor friends. Mrs. Medaris and daughter Carlotta returned from Algonac last evening. Miss Jennie M. Shadford returned on Sunday evening from her sojourn in Chicago. Arthur Donovan, of Lansing, has been visiting his grand-father, Patriek Donovan. Miss Maud James, of Ypsilanti, spent the week with relatives on Summit street. Jacob Miller, a Saginaw engineer on the F. & P. M. R. R., has been visiting David Rinsey. Mrs. Geo. E. Parker returned home last Friday afternoon, after a week's visit in Jackson. Mrs. L. D. Watkins and daughter, of Manchester, viited Mrs. S. W. Clarkson yesterday. Prof. J. C. McClenahan, of the high school, went on a two weeks' business trip to Chicago. Don S. and Miss Jennie Mclntyre went to Detroit Tuesday evening, to spend two weeks with relatives. John Dowdigan was in Saginaw, Wednesday, acting as best man at the wedding of Dr. Charles Stone. Miss Flora Clark and Miss Sophia Smith have returned from a three weeks' visit with frjends at Sturgis. Geo. Stojl, now on the pólice forcé of Grand Rapids, spent Monday in the city calling on old friends. Dr. T. J. Sullivan and sister, of Chicago, were in the city this week to attend the funeral of their brother. Miss Lizzie Hillerand Miss Sophie Therrien, of Detroit, spent several days visiting relatives and friends in j this city. Mr. and Mrs. L. P. Jocelyn returned, Monday, from a seven weeks' trip to the northern part of the state. Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Dow, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Gwinner and Miss Carrie Wahr are at Zukey lake for a two weeks' stay. Col. Henry S. Dean went to Fowlerville, yesterday, to attend the reunión of his regiment, the 2oth Michigan Infantry. Frank G. Osgood, now steward on a boat running between Cleveland and Mackinac, visited his father several days last week. Miss Libbie Mogk, of Joe T. Jacobs Co., has returned from ünghton where she had been spending her vacation with relatives. Miss Jessie Skeldon, of Toledo, O., visited the encampment at Island lake, Sunday, and is now being entertained by friends in this city. John Weissert and family, of Hastings, who has been visiting with Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Allaby, jr., the past week, returned home Monday. Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Field, of Alpena, who have been visiting in the city, returned home, Monday, accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Beal. Fred McOmber is passing out stamps at the postoffice as if he had never been at Old Mission, from which quiet retreat he returned last week. Prof. W. H. Butts, principal of Orchard Lake military academy, visited his father, Justice Butts, this week, on his way home from a trip to Duluth. Mrs. M. J. Furnum arrived home last evening after a delightful visit with her brother and sister af Orangevill Mills and with friends at Gun Lake. Mrs. Watson, widow of the late Professor James C. Watson, expects to leave in a few days for Colfax, Wash., to pernianently reside there with her brother. Adolph Theodore Bruegel, professor of mathematics of Cogswell University, who has accepted a position at Cornell University will be in the city in a few days to visit his uncle, A. T. Bruegel, of Fifth avenue south.

Article

Subjects
Ann Arbor Argus
Old News