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Jottings

Jottings image
Parent Issue
Day
27
Month
October
Year
1882
Copyright
Public Domain
OCR Text

Plenty - potatoes. Busy - the hotels. Don't fail to register. Close - a club steward. Ended- the peach erop. Pleasant weather- the past week. The homeopathie hospital is full. P.nllncm nnlit.irw flonrishinc acain. Janauscliek was bom in Bohemia. Trotting at the iair grounds Saturday. J. N. Hall, of Canada, left forhome Monday. P. Wall lias aold bis farm in Northfleld. Mrs. E. J. Knowlton is able to be about igain. The M. C. f reiglit depot has been repaired. Good - ïhe Mendohlson Quintette concert. Vote the democratie ticket. It is a Dr. Chase of Toledo, was in the city Tuesday. The Unitarian church is fast nearing sompletion. H. Kitredge has a new bu3, the finest :.n the city. Wood and coal are coming into greater demand. Company A. inspection and hop Monlay, Nor. 6. The junior lits expect to wear plug ïats this year. H. Kitredge has sold his livery stable o Gil E. Snow. Miss McDonaugh of L. S., is stopping ffith P. O'Brien. No more articles on the olden time until after election. í). j. jnsner, win issue a proniDition paper next week. Edgar Warren has resigned the office of deputy sheriff. When the time come3 vote the straight democratie ticket. Miss May Ratigan, of Springwells, is visiting in the city. Frank Minnis has ra i sed a second erop of raspberries. Nearly all of the available room in the hospital, is occupied. Watching each other for rate cutters- the insurance agents. Talmage and Judge Tourgee will leoture here this winter. Dr. Davis is resident physician of the Homeopathie hospital. Colonel Burleigh made a great miccess as Othello in Chicago. Free horse races to-morrow at the fair grounds, also a foot race. The Demoobat will whoop it up to the candidatos next week. The fall frosts are forcing people to lift and repot their planta. November i is the time for holding th next pomological meeting. The freshmen are counting the days until Thanksgiving recesa. Miss M. A. Donhue of Detroit, is visitiug Mr. P. O'Brien's family. Mr. and Mrs. Cummings, of New York' are visiting on Fourth street. Wm. April is superintendent of the poor for the next three years. 1334 students registered up to Monday evening. 200 less than usual. Architecturally considered the Baptist ohurch is the finest in the city. Ann Arlor insurance board had another meeting Wednesday evening. The delta upsilon society want to be represented on the Palladium staff. David Thompson, of the sixth ward, died Tuesday at the age of 85 years. The supervisors fixed the compensation of the county officers last week. Ann Arbor is connected with nearly a dozen different points by telephone. The street sprinkler has about ceased to make its daily rounds for the year. Jackson and Ann Arbor will be joined together by telephone within 10 days. Madame Grundy tells of several weddings in our city, to come off ere long. The woman suffrage movement booms best where there are the fewest women. "Pith and Point," a new monthly to be published in Dexter will soon be out. P. D. Eothwell, medical class of '80, eujoys a large practico at Denver, Colorado. E. H. Hudson attended the convention of hotel keepers in East Saginaw tbis week. Tie your dog to your ooal shed or wood pile these cold nights in order to save fuel. The freshmen medies were badly beaten Saturday, in i same of foot-ball by the juniors. Mr. Horsernan, of Ingersoll, Canada, was in ohe city last week, the g-uest o! J. D. Stimson. E. E. Beach, has been elected president, and Miss Hamilton vice president of the sophomore class. dency to board in large clubs. One we know of contains 80 persons. Miss Hunt, of the junior medical clasá, died on Washington street, of typhoid fever, at the honse of Mr. Peebles. Some lits went a nutting, Saturday, and broTight back nothing but tired limbs and certain farmers' blessing. V. E. Laurence, medie, of '80, after two year's suceessful practice, is again back to pursue fnrther his medical studies. Every democrat must see the necessity of registering. If defeated m this county this fall it will be the f ault of democrats. The Manhatten Fire Insurance company whichhas done business in this city many years, has gone out of the business. O. L. Matthews has declined the nomination for circuit court commissioner, as has also Martín Clark for that of coroner. The senior laws have their class election Friday. There are two tickets in the field the independants and secret society men. The following sign may be seen opposite the door of one of our justics' office: "No shooting on these premieses. Fine 85.00." The best pavement in the city is around the Hogers property on Huron street, and ia composed of sawed blocks of wood. The marshall bas been ordered to remove colored glass in the street lamps, because they are used for advertising purposes. The new name for the old Unitarian church is the "Unity house," because, we Buppose, it is occupied by a combination of happy families. Mrs. Kelly who resides on Lawrence street, lost four more plants last week this makes 12 plants that have been stolen from her yard this summer. Henry Lindner, one of the few GermanB in the law class of '78, lias receivthe nomination for proseeuting attoiney of Bay Co., froni the demócrata. The one who offered to show that Daniel Cobb had the "kleptomania," in Justice Brennan's court, failed to appear, and bo the prisoner was dismissed' Chas. E. Wagner, one of our popular young business men, was niarried last Thursday at Danville, Illinois. He expects to reach home again Saturday. The junior laws nominated several of their best men for president Saturday. prominent among them are H. A. Davis, of Chicago, and Mr. Price, of Michigan. Herman Wutler, ghost No. 2, was arrested on the campus Saturday night. Before many days the last ghost will ' have disappeared. Policeman Brown is ' not to be trifled with. Hon. Chas. S. May of Kalamazoo, and Col. Elderidge, democratie candidato for congress in this district, will address the democracy of this city on the political questions of the day Nov. 1. The Toledo road is now a sure thing to Pontiac. The Toledo Gaand Haven.and Milwaukee railroad will strike the T. & A., at Dundee, and use its track to Ann Arbor. It is to connect Toledo and Marshall. Dr. Franklin, in addition to his regular clinics, on Wednesdays and Saturdays, holds a special daily clinic at 12, spinal clinic is held Wednesday afternoon. and the gynecological clinic, Saturday's. The cornet has been broken into eight parts, as is supposed, by striking the sun. The parts can be plainly seen with a telescope. Biella's cornet is the only other cornet of which the same thing can be said, it having broke into two parts in 1846. Dr. and Mis. Kellogg, of the fifthward, were greeted last Friday ', evening, on the anniversary of their wedding, by a party of their oíd associates and f rienda, who after pending a very enjoyable evening.presented them a beantiful china tea set aa a pleseant remembrance of the occasion. Henry Matthews runs a first-elass market. He will have the beBt kind of everything in the nieat line. A look mto his Hurón street market will convince anyone that he means business. John Nanry sold him only a few daya ago, 10 head of the finest cattle seen in many a day. Dr. H. W. Thomas will lecture at'uni versity hall this evening on the subject of "Uses and Abuses." His lecture will include remarks on the different kinds of amusements. After his famoua dispute with the Methodist conference and subsequent withdrawal from that church, he became pastor of the People's church, Chicago. He preaehes to crowded houses every Sunday, and his popularity as a preacher and a public speaker, is scarcely equalled by that of Prof. Swing. He never fails to win his audience by the freshness and originality of his thouglits by his quiet humor, hia pleasing delivery, and his clear, convincing style. A man named Jake Walker, ice peddler for John Tem in Ypsilanti, was instantly killed Monday forenoon by his team running away with him. It seems that the team he was driving is very fractious and had run away once before. In the morning Mr. Teros got a safer bit and put on it the most fractious horse, which seemed to worry him. When on the corner of Adams and Pearl streets Walker took off the bridle, and was going to change the bit and put on the old one, when the team started to run and he grabbed hold of an ear of the horse. He was thrown down and the horse stepped on him, and the wagon wheel struck him near the hip, running upwards across his body in the región of his heart, ornghing him badly. He was picked up by some passers-by, and Justice Griffin was nrf iiiöl TTia lirwv irno rflTvi-níníl 4-.- 4-V..-L UVlllltUi IJin KtJA.J ITUD I ClilU OU VJ IK undertaking establishment of McElheran & McAndrew, -where an inquest was held. He was unmarried, and leaves no friends here. He was 40 years of age and had worked there some time, and was a sober, industrious man. Mr. Terns telegraphed to his people.who live in New York state, and the body will be held till they are heard from. He was a soldier in the union army and was drawing a pension from the United States government. The verdict of the jury was accidental death.

Article

Subjects
Old News
Ann Arbor Democrat