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Personal

Personal image
Parent Issue
Day
12
Month
October
Year
1894
Copyright
Public Domain
OCR Text

Mrs. C. Thayer, of Mt. Pleasant, is visiting in the city. August T. Sinke left Tuesdav on a business trip to Niles. Miss Lydia Burton, of Tecumseb, is a visitor in Ann Arbor. Mrs. A. L. Noble is passing a few weeks with Buffalo friends. Governor Rich was the guest of Col. Dean, Tuesday night. Dr. Emil Baur, of Chicago, is in the city visiting old friends. Mrs. C. Stein, of Owosso, is a guest of Ann Arbor friends. J. D. Ryan left Tuesday on a business trip to Rochester, N. Y. Burt Wade, of Chicago, is in the city as the guest of Fred O. Martty. Burt Ellis has returned from a visit to his brother in Galveston, Texas. Prof. B. C. Hess, of the Northwestern College, passed Monday in the city. Alfred Weinmann was in Niles this week attending the funeral of a cousin. F. Walker, of Kalamazoo, is visiting his brother, Dr. Frank Walker, of this city. Chas. Golden, of Hammond, Ind., is visiting his brother, William, of this city. Mrs. Carrie Litchfield, of Detroit, was a guest, Monday, at the home of Aid. J. C. Snyder. Carrol Jones has been elevated to the superintendency of the Cincinnati electric light works. Hiram and Alonzo Pritchard, of Wauseon, O., were the guests of Geo. M. Hawes, Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. F. H. Riley, of Toledo, are guests of Mrs. Riley's sister, Mrs. A. J. McMahon. F. N. Wadhams, of Mt. Pleasant, is the guest of his brother, W. W. Wadhams, for a few days. C. H. Young, of Chicago, is now night clerk at the Cook House. He is a clerk "to the manor bom." Mrs. S. P. Hosmer and Mrs. Frank Rector, of Tecumseh, are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. D. A. Hammond. Rev. Max Hein and Louis Boes are in New Washington, Ohio, attending a meeting of the synod of Northern ühio. E. E. Monteith, owner of the Aylmer, Ont., Sun, has this week been a visitor at the home of his brother-in-law, Dr. D. A. MacLachlan. Nagamara Manoda has left the city for his home in Japan, and a chance to get foot in the muss between the "'Yankee Islands" and China. Mrs. R. P. Mason, of Gladstone, Mich., has returned to her home after several weeks' visit with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Harriman. The young lady that arrived last Sunday night at the home of Fred Hoelzel weighed ten pounds. And yet it was said that the Wilson bill had completely ruined the "infant industries." It was a campaign nosuch-thing. D. W. Grandon, proprietorof the Adrián Messenger, prohibition, and one of the proprietors of the Daily Telegram, of Adrián, was in the city today. Mr. Grandon is the prohibition candidate for congress in this district. He is a very much alive newspaper man, and an honest, upright gentleman. He is campaigning the district and speaks at Chelsea today. He says if he is elected the rose-nose and bungstarter must go, or he will pay the drinks.