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Stony Creek

Stony Creek image
Parent Issue
Day
21
Month
July
Year
1887
Copyright
Public Domain
OCR Text

T. Buch has repainted his house. The wheat is nearly all harvested. Mrg. Harmon is visiting in Detroit. Oats are being rapidly put into the shock. A compsny of serenaders were on the streeU one evening this week. Mrs. G. L. Hayden, of Toledo, Ohio, is visiting friends and relatiyes in this vicinity. A. Annbruster has his new house nearly completed. C. Vanblarcum did the carpentering. Workmen are busy at work on the new church for the M. E. society. It etives promise of being a fine structure. Wm. Calhoun has as fine a patch of onions as one could wish to see. He expects to gather about 2500 bushels. Last Sunday was affirmed by some to be the warmest day ever known in this vicinity. In tome places it marked 110 in the shade. R. Salsbury had a very narrow escape from death recently. While oc a load of wheat the horses became unmanageable and ran away throwing the load onto Mr. Salsbury Djuring him severely if not fatally. While some men were at work for T. Buch, lately, they caught a rare and curioub bird which never had but one wing, that one beirg fully developed. But no sign of any on the other side having been there. No one seems to know what kind of bird it is. It is certainly a great curiosity. ,____ To dreun of a ponderous whale Erect on the tip of his tail, Is the slgn ol a itorm (If the weather is warm), Uulea it should happen to fail. Dreams don't atnount to much, anyhow. Some signs, however, are infallible. If you are constipated, with no appetite, tortured with the sick headache and bilious syptoms, these Bigns indícate that you need Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Purgativo Pellets. They will cure you. AH druggists.

Article

Subjects
Old News
Ann Arbor Register