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York

York image
Parent Issue
Day
26
Month
March
Year
1895
Copyright
Public Domain
Obituary
OCR Text

Fred Ranouse has rented the Everett Shavv farm and will move onto it soon. This is a great season for babies. The last one is the property of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Warner. The same is a girl, and it arrived March 15. Edward Robinson dropped dead very suddenly in Dundee one day last week. The cause is supposed to have been heart disease. Although a resident of Dundee, he forraerly lived a few miles west of here, on his farm on the Tecumseh road. The body was placed in the fault in the cemetery near Saline ast Friday. Mrs. George A. Shaw has moved to Ypsilanti. Mrs. M. Miller has been quite ill, but is reported_on the mend. Lem. Goldsmith started for Ohio last Saturday for his spring and summer work. Fred Guy has moved onto the Gary Osborn farm. Very sad was the death of Miss htta Sangree, which occurred last Monday morning at 2:45 o'clock. Death is supposed to have been caused by the neuralgia, froru which she was suffering, going to the heart. The deepest sympathy is telt for her relatives, and especially for the father, for whom she has kept house since the death of her mother. Only the Friday before her death she had closed her winter term of school in the Judd district, and was apparently in the best of health. The funeral was held Wednesday, at the house. Sermón by Rev. Smith, the former pastor of the Baptist church, of which she was a member ingood standing. Mrs. Milo Clark and Mr. Parker are both quite UI. liverett Shaw will have a public auction, Wednesday, March 27. The chicken-pie social which was announced for last Tuesday evening in the Baptist church, but was postponed on account of the sudden death, will be held next Tuesday evening. Services next Sunday morning will be in the M. E. church again. The new seats will be put in place immediately after the social. Mrs. Callie Kelsey-Miller, of Cadillac, is spending a few days with her father. The Baptist ladies are making arrangements to feed the hungry voters on town meeting day. A good warm meal will be served to all who may wish it, at a small charge. Amos Hall has traded his farm south of here to Horace Allen, for some property near the depot in Milan. A Mr. Hiltner, of Detroit, is spending a few weeks at Mr. Josenïans'. The Mr. Thompson who has lived or several years on John Coe's arm, has moved on to the Seeley arm.