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Neighborhood Notes

Neighborhood Notes image
Parent Issue
Day
29
Month
October
Year
1891
Copyright
Public Domain
OCR Text

"' Saline Methodists will build a chapel. Chelsea's Germán school open3 Mon gr Jffanchester people are wicked. They 'uut on Sunday. Seo. Vink. e has removed from Dex'4er to Ann Aroor. .bout $1300 was paid in Manchester last Friday for poultry. A. numberof cases of whooping cough re said to be in Milan and vicinity. About fifty Shropshires were sold ut ihe Ypsilanti fair grounds on Thursday 'ast 1ü. D. Sullivan, of Unadüla, rai3ed this season 12.60 bushels of beans per icre. The pension of Lewis Conk, of Cheleasbas been raised from $30 to $72 a moa tb. S. B. Weinett has rented bis farm south of SUine and will soon remove to Maskegon. k. A. Wood, of Lodi, hasjust shippel xty Merino sheep to Australia, via New York. fiert Stoll, Stockbridge's saloon-keeptr, was fined $25 last week for aelling { ijuor without proper bonds. 3eo. J. Nisely, of Saline, has been appointed one of the members of the world's fair committee on poultry. X bed of peat has been disco vered underlying Ypsilanti. This provea that the prehistorie settlers of Ypsilanti ■srere Irish.- Adrián Press lt!r. and Mrg. Fred Wyman had quite .-. fortune fall to them on Monday. A ijrretty Iittleblue-ey8d,two-year-old girl 'Jrom the Cold water school has come to 'heer them.- Dexter Leader. At the foot social held at Prof McNamara's last night,$ll.G5 was taken in. At five cents per foot that would get 233 feet of solld girl. Five feet eleven anches is the highest point scored by a agle South Lyon gir!.- Excelsior. 'as yet Dexter has no electric light plant, neither is she blessed with that inestimable boon, water works; but ■wait, we see a cloud not the size of a "iEan's hand. What the outcome will be only tha business men and capitalista of Dexter can teil.- Leader. We are told that a certain farmer just -ut of town is holding his wheat for $3 per bushei, and says that not a kernel of ihis year's erop will be sold below -■tai. We admire his erit, but believe that the sun will rise in the west before eeüs at that price.- Saline Observer. 'Dtü Hitchinghatn, of Augusta, lost a -vahiable horee last Tuesday morning r Me drove bis two teams down to the depot just before the 10 a. m. train was dae, and as the trains neared the station the horses became frightened, and this one raised up and feil backwards ad broké his neck.- Ypsilanti Comvraeríial. The mean people are not all dead; irhere is at least one loose yet; that one jfoi into the Presbyterian church in i-oice manner not yet determined, and rX fieme time during the last two or oliree weeks, broke open the Sunday school box and pocketed the contenta -amouuting to about $42. - Milan Leader. . bunch of berries is not a great ■ irity but a cluster of ripe red raBpisserries plucked from the vines on the ixteenth of October is worthy of note in. this latitude. Wm. Johnson, who resides southwest of the village, Urought iato town Friday the tops of the aboye Asentioned caaes which bore berries in 'ftrious stages of ripeness. - Manchester ! Sntepprise. "he following communication has been received by Tiib Register: "We whe take Tiib Register around Dixboro miah for the truth in regard to the llover seed that Ge. Zeeb threshed lst week on the farm of F. Butterfield. He threBhed in one day and a half seventy-eight busheïs. Now this is the Jrcth. Please print tliis. Wliy not . i ave the truth?" " te editor of the Manchester Enter-e evidently doesn't like sorghum. fristen to him: 'A !arge atnount of orghum is being brought to Carr's mili M this village by farmers from all the urrounding townships. Why farmers ontinue to raise this stuff and pay rwenty cents a gallon to have it made oto eyrup at such low prices is more 'ban we can understand, but perhaps Thy like thé flivór of the atuffand are ound to haveit regardless of expense." bert Haner, of Augusta, has bought he oíd Dr. Silas Newcomb farm in the ■rn -of London, Moroe county, 37 teres, for $1500. It joins Mr. Haner's arm in Augusta, and with its good ft'.iiïdiugs and other improvements will '.ake a nice home for one of his two 'ocys, EvNjrett A. and D. S., who now .re witb their father. This makes the whole property 180 acres in a body. f r. Raiier helped liis father clear up ■ he old home farm on wlnch he live, jtntí is one of AiiKiista's pioneers. - Ypsilantian. LstSunday evening, Geo. Kenz, Jr., ócove up to C. F. Uill's in Lodi, hitched 'rorse and went to the house, after cnemaining there a short time he went ' i get his rig which to his surprise was t. o t there. Mr.Hillsoon carne to his assir nce and as they went to the barn t hinkrg possibly someone (might have toughtGeo. wouldstay ahttlelate) had iied it there. They found oneof Mr. H's test horses harnessed and readytogo. A. diligent search was made about the prmises but withno effect, the rig was _-ou ■. Monday morning Sheriff Dwyer iras notifled and at once set out in -eareb. The horse, which was a valuaone, belonged to John Gordon. - ine Observar. Mrs. Roff, of Clinton, had a very "aarrow escape from death by asphyxiai n last Sunday. She retired Saturday -evening at her usual time and Sunday, .bouteleven o'clock, her daugbter, Mrs. ames Hause, went there and was unable t rouse her. Dr. White was alled and they worked over her an hour and a half before she revived suf■ntly to talk. She remembered feeling very sick in the night and found herself on thefloor, but lost consciousness immediately after. She was "ound just in time to save her life. The coai stove had become clogged with ashes unknown to Mrs. Roff, thereby allowing gas to escape. - Te",'imseh Herald.

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Subjects
Old News
Ann Arbor Register