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Personal

Personal image
Parent Issue
Day
11
Month
September
Year
1894
Copyright
Public Domain
OCR Text

] Joe Parker has returned from the :ast. Claud Denman is visiting in Detroit. A girl to Mr. and Mrs. Walter Mack. Arthur Kidder, of Terre Haute, is in the city. Prof. C. E. Green, and family returned from the east. Mrs. M. C. Boylan, of St. Ignace, is visiting her parents. Frank and Anna Condón have returned from Old Mission. Fred. Schneider, of Jackson, visited in the city last week. Mrs. S. Hawks, of Kalamazoo, is a guest qi Ann Arbor friends. Dr. Wm. Eister, of Flushing, spent Sunday with nis mother. M. T. Woodruff, of the Ypsilant Sentinel, was in the city today. Leonard H. Zimmer, of Chicago arrived last week on a visit to f riends A. Long, with the St. Joe orchestra for the summer, is in Ann Arbo again. Miss Pauline Schneider, of Jack son, is in the city on a visit to he purents. Peter Kelly, of Cincinnati, is visiting his sister, Mrs. Galick, of N. Main st. Mrs. M. P. Gott, of Three Rivers, is visiting Mrs. N. H. Drake, of E. Huron st. F. C. H. Reynolds, of the street railway company, arrived from thq east yesterday. Prof. Blessing is repairing the organ of St. Thomas1 church. May it prove a blessing. Conrad Noll and daughter Anna ire attending the G. A. R. encampment in Pittsburg. Charles S. Millan, of Scharier & Millan, leaves today for New York, ( to purchase goods. E. J. McClure, proprietor of the Cook house, arnved from St. Joseph yesterday morning. Mrs. F. White and children have returned from a visit to in Battle Creek and Jackson. James McWade, late night porter at the Cook, is now with the Hawkins' house, Ypsilanti. Rev. Max Hein left Friday to attend the funeral of Mrs. Hein's father at Fort Wayne. Mr. and Mrs. John Bell, of this city, last week, attended a wedding in Kalamazoo last week. Mr. and Mrs. William Densmore, of E. Washington street, left Saturday for a week's visit in Cleveland. Mrs. James Bennett and Mrs. C. B. Messmore, of Manistee, are visiting Miss Fannie Graves for a week. Archine Van Cleve, class of '86, U. of M., was in the city last week. He brought his son to enter the high school. Clyde, twin son of Alvin and Minnie Sinclair, of Brook st.,died Saturday, of cholera infantum, aged abovit nine months. Prof. A. C. Laughlan and wife, have returned from a two years' residence in Europe, where the fessor has pursued the stuay or history. Hon. W. Stearns, of the Adrián Press was in the city "between trains" last Saturdy. He greeted old friends and acqaintances a short time and departed for Detroit. Rev. John Neumann, with the choir of the Bethlehem church and a number of the members of the congregation attended the mission festival, held in Dexter, Sunday aftsrnoon. James Murnan, the popular clerk of the Cook House, was in Jackson, Friday evening, attending a party given by the society ladies on the occasion of the dedication of the new opera house. Mr. and Mrs. John Dean, ot Litchfield, returned home Friday, accompanied by Grant Sherwood, who will shortly return to Florida. They were called to Ann Arbor by the death of Mrs. Elizabeth Metcalf. Theodore G. Roehm, formerly of Ann Arbor, now assistant secretary in the offices of the C. B. & Q. R. Rat Chicago, was married last week to Miss Bertha A. Gillner, of Ottumma, Iowa. It was an inter-state railroad affair.