transcribed by Dorothy Wiland
Members of Cincinnatus Council No. 82,
Jr. O. U. A. M., are hereby notified of the death of our late brother,
Chas. GULDEN. Funeral from residence. 201 Baltimore street,
Wednesday,
2 p.m. HENRY LANG, Councilor.

Indian Huts and Tents Will Be
the Fashion.
Cincinnatians Will
Have a Glorious Summer in th eWilds at Point aux Barril-
Reggig Says Gloucester
is "Paradise of Painters"-
Doings of Society.
A merry party of prominent
Cincinnatians will be encamped for the summer at Point aux Barrill,
Georgian
bay, Ontario, Mr. and Mrs. James A. Green, their four boys, Joseph,
Harrington,
Robert and Matthew, and their four nephews from Chicago, will be
distinguished
among the prominent coterie present. Other Cincinnatians at the
camp
will be Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Coy, Mr. Leland G. Banning, Mr. Asa B.
Morgan
and his son Shirley, the Misses Sarah, Phoebe and Georgetta Haven and
Charles
W. Marsh. Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Hearn and their five children from
Philadelphia
and Miss Annette Sproat of Chillicothe will join the Cincinnati
party.
Indian huts and tents will be the fashion, and eight Indians will be on
hand as guides and servants, for Point aux Barril is an island “just
beyond
the bounds of civilization” where a steamer stops but once a
week.
The main party will leave Tuesday at noon and will remain in Ontario
during
July
__________
Mr. and Mrs. Charles P.
Taft and Miss Taft leave Tuesday for their summer home at Pointe au
Pic,
Canada, where they will be joined by the Secretary of War and his
family.
___________
The marriage of Miss Jennie
A. Grace and Mr. Albert W. Highlands took place Tuesday afternoon at
the
beautiful Clifton home of the Rev. David Fitzgerald, pastor of Emmanuel
Presbyterian church, in the presence of the immediate families of the
bride
and groom and a few intimate friends. The bride is the
accomplished
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles C. Grace, of 38 East McMillan street,
Mt. Auburn. The groom, whose home is at Terrace Park, O., is a
newspaper
publisher and a member of the Cincinnati bar. The bride was
attended
by her sister, Miss Bessie Grace, the groom’s brother Mr. Charles R.
Highlands,
acted as best man. The ceremony was followed by an elaborate
luncheon
at the Business Men’s club, after which the couple were driven to the
Pennsylvania
depot, where they left via the Norfolk & Western railway for a
month’s
sojourn at Roanoke, Mountain Lake and Old Point Comfort. After their
return
they will be at home at the Eden flat, Walnut Hills.
__________
Mr. and Mrs. John Rettig
will stay in Cincinnati until the heat grows uncomfortable and then go
to Gloucester, which Mr. Rettig characterizes as the “Paradise of
Painters.”
Some of Rettig’s loveliest canvases have Gloucester scenes for their
subjects.
The Rettigs are very fortunate in that they always have awaiting their
acceptance an invitation to summer with the Graydons at Harbor Point
and,
while their hearts turn Michiganward, the fact remains that the
seacoast
presents more opportunities for color sketching than the lakes.
__________
Miss Millie Sykes will
spend the summer in Boston.
__________
Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Williams
of New Orleans, who have been visiting their aunt, Mrs. Peterman, left
Monday by boat and will take in Louisville and St. Louis before going
home.

Back to:
June 29, 1904
index
©2003, 2004 by Linda Boorom & Tina Hursh