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Milan

Milan image
Parent Issue
Day
30
Month
March
Year
1888
Copyright
Public Domain
OCR Text

Miss Ona Andrews is sojourning in Hart. Lester Blinn is quite] ill with measles. Joel Marble visited Ypsilariti the last of the week. Mr. O. P. Newcomb is a Detroit visitor this week. Miss Anna Delaforce is visting in Toledo this week. Louis Blinn started for Canada, Tuesday morning. Hattie Woolcott returned to Windsor, Monday. Miss French is the guest of Mrs. Berknap this week. Charles Case is home from his Ypsilanti school this week. The Milan St. Elmo is not the Augusta J. Evan's St. Elmo. Mis. Rogers and son returned to Bay City, Tuesday morning. Miss Dela Holcomb is resting at home. Her school closed last week. Thurlan Blackmer is clerking in the clothing house of Thompson & Co. William Huntington and family returned to Jackson, Wednesday morning. Miss Nellie Woolcott is home trom Ypsilanti for a short visit with her mother. The spring poems have been snowed under and now they are buried in mud. Mrs. Haydon was quite ill last week and is on the gain, we are pleased to be able to say. Mr. and Mrs. O. A. Kellev are entertaining a nephew from Fostoria, Ohio, for a few days. Milaiv people are anticipating quite treat at the Easter social, at Mr. A. D. Jackson's this week. Prof. Hearn left for Dansville Friday evening, where he will visit friends the week's vacation. Mr. and Mrs. George Huntington, of Detroit, spent Sunday with their parents, Rev. J. Huntington and family. School closed Friday afternoon for a week's vacation and the schol - ars are quite pleased to have a little recreation. Editor Wilcox, of the Ashley Argus, visited his Milan friends the nrst of the week. His old friends were pleased to see his smiling countenance once again. Tuesday records an eight inch .snow storm. We murmer in our disappointment, a short stanza : Oh! go, Beautiful snow We wish it so. The new clothing house opens up in fine style. Everything looks nice and new and the firm look enterprisng and mean business. Mr. A. Day and son, of Milán, ;ue engaged in the sihger sewing machine company in Ann Arbor. Mr. Day's family are still in Milan. Milan is about to break out with the base baU and marble fever. Strong symptoms tending that wav and murmurs in the air whisper of fun in the "future and clothes to mend. We are sorry to have Mr. Knickerbarker leave our city but are pleas ed to learn that he is honored by receiving an appointment as missionary under the Hastmg and Nebraska City Presbyteries. We wish him all due success. Where is the Lima child, father Argus? We miss its voice. Dexter, C-helsea, Saline and all of the rest of the brothers and sisters had a few words to say last week. We welcome with great pleasure the interesting Ann Arbor Argus and the chattings of itslively correspondents. We hope its list of subscribers may grow- and grow - but not beautifully less. We are sure its growth will increase in numbers without fai!.

Article

Subjects
Ann Arbor Argus
Old News