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Real Estate Transactions

Real Estate Transactions image
Parent Issue
Day
4
Month
December
Year
1874
Copyright
Public Domain
OCR Text

Calvin Wheeler to Stephen C. Wheeler, e. h. oí n. e. qu. of sec i3, in Salem 80 acres. Consideration, Y1,000. Conrad Jedele to Jane O. Drade, a strip of land containiug 30 square rods, on section 1, in village of Saline. Consideration, $25. Joseph Stevens to Henry S. Thomas and Chas. Hall, lot No. 436 in Norris' addition to city of Ypsilanti. Consideration, $1,700. O. A. Ainsworth and Thos. Wetherell to A. H. Heath and E. W. Hemphill a parcel of land 3 1-3x5 1-2 rods on Adams streèt, in city of Ypsilauti. Consideratiou, $200. John Vogler to Chas. H. Benz, n. e. qu. n. e. fr. qu. of sec. 3, in Lima. Consideration, $3,000. Jerusha Keeve to John W. Eeeve, 120 acres of land on sec. 23, in Webster. Consideration, $5,000. Philetus Coon to Munder Matthews; a piece of land located on " City Eoad," in village of Manchester. Consideration, $450. Joseph McMahon to Alex. Soulier, a piece of land 24x(S0 feet, on Exchange Place Street, in village of Manchester. Consideration, $250. Jacob Bichardson to John A. Smidth and William Holshaner, a strip of land on sec. 3, for a private road, in Lima. Consideration, $35. E. W. Morgan to E. S. Sinith (by quit claim deed) lots 1, 2, and part of 3, in block 2 north in range 3 east. Also lots 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, and 16, in block 5, south in range 1 west in city of Ann Arbor. Consideration, $3,317. Mathew Albee to Lucretia H. Arnold, lots 11 and 12 in block 9, village of Sylvan. Cousideration, $200. Levi Teunoy to Frank L. Tennoy, lots 5C2 and 563, in Norris, Follett, & Co.'s addition to city of Ypsilanti. Consideration, $500. Julia A. Goodrich to Lambert A. Barnes, lot, eight rod front on Huron Street, and running back to Huron river, and lymg between lands owned by D. L. Quirk and F. Andrews, in city of Ypsilanti. Considoration, $11,000. As a man from the country drove into a yard in the 5th ward last Saturday, with a load of wood, one of his horses sat down to rest on the bottom of a cistern, the top of which gave way for the purpose of giving him a good chance. The horizon of his view was somewhat limited, as his head just reached the top of the ground. But he maintained his uprightness and decorum until a congregation of twenflve or thirty men assembled with tackles, and lifted him out of his seat, wlien he was marched off to Eckerish's stables to warm up and got ready for his return home. His voluutary " sitzbad" did not seem to iujure his general health. - Ypsilanti Sentinel. - m- - -- - - ■ - The Ann Arbor correspondent of the free Press says : Don. J. Mozart, inventor of the Mozart watch, and for some time superintendent of the watch company which was formed in this city a few years ago, and which was afterwards removed to Eock Island, Illinois, was taken to the Insane Asylum at Kalamazoo on Wednesday. For some time he has been laboring under fits of temporary insanity, brought on, it is thought, by his loss from the failure of the banking lirin of Miller & Webster, and also by the strain upon his mind made by his newly inventod watch. This watch is a very curious piece of mechanism, and is so constructed as to show the quorter seconds, seconds, minutes, hours, days of the week, days of the raonth, and month of the year. Upon opening the case iive times a day the wateh wouud itself. About three months ago he went East and obtained a very favorable offer from New York capitalista for his invention. He returned here and took his watch to pieces. Afterwards he was unable to replace "the parts. His mind becoming con_ tinually more clouded in his anxiety about his work. His friends have thought best to place him in an asylum, and think that he will recover his mind.

Article

Subjects
Old News
Michigan Argus