1901-09-26; Clare Sentinel |
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OLABE, MICHIGrAN, THUBSDAY AITEENOOH, SEPTEMBER 26, 1901.
#ew Series ;-Vol, 9, No* #
fc
^
•A-
£.
DISCOUNT
STAMPS ABE RE
DEEMABLE IN
BEAUTIFUL
PREMIUMS.
SAVE TOUR
DISCOUNT
STAMPS.
Do you
wear
them?
If not
try a
Pair.
Ox
Breeches
The kino"
that are
guaranteed not
i to rip
~in~lhlT
seams.
We have a full line of Ox Breeches on hand, prices
from 75c to $3.50. Give you a new- pair free if they
rip. See them! We have sole agency for McMilien
Pants, the only pants guaranteed to give satisfaction.
This week we will put on sale the handsomest line of
Ladies' Misses' and Children's
Jac», Gapes, Etc.
ever seen in Glare This is our first season in this fine, so you will be
sure to get nothing but new and attractiue garments.
Special orders taken for any garments in this line,
tmrnm^^mmwMwmmmm&mmsmi^m^m
* I S6H00L DEPARTMENT |
@-'C">0',!^©"'**"v'fi"<;^tt©-"^9***^S'',,§*©"*'&>'©
LENA DTTKWOODIBi EDITOR,
Next Saturday afternoon at the ball
park a picked up team of school boys
will play the second Mt. Pleasant
school foot ball team.
"Tooters" are becoming so numeral ous around school that the teachers
will soon be able to start a racket
store.
A Michigan-United States map has
been added to the school equipment.
The report cards for all grades -will
be given out on the Wednesday even-
■ ing following each school month.
Parents are asked to see that they get
the cards and examine their children's
record. Last year some children examined and signed their own cards.
Written tests will this year take the
place of examiations.
Misses Ross, Knowles, Cour, Mrs.
Nowlen and Mr. Hathaway were high
school visitors this week.
The country pupils are showing the
town pupils what work will accomplish.
A picture of the class of '01 has been
placed in the high school.
The Bell 'Phone Co. have replaced
ihe 'phone in the superintendent's
Office.
The eighth grade can exhibit some
/jyery nice drawings.
The tuition from non-resident pupils
amounts already to nearly as much as
&bat of all last year.
The total enrollment to date is 386,
§i of Which are high school pupils.
Tuesday morning Nettie Miller
spelled the high school down.
A little five-year-old tot hunted the
&8& to the superintendent's office for
tibiS purpose of showing her pretty new
%*f0ols«
Ben Welch has been promoted to
$$ie sixth, grade having acquired the
©ecesary qualifications.
Monday morning the first grade were
grader the management of Miss
£a.iase3 Pratt and Easton discussed
■jy the lives of Roosevelt and McKinley
• ^tarsday morning.
City of Clare.
Allerman Lee and A. S. Rhodes not
having qualified as members of the
board of public works, the council appointed T. S, Dorsey and E, B. Horning instead.
Oridlnance No. 28 provides that the
street commissioner shall make an
annual report of the condition of the
walks of the city, and this not having
been done, the clerk was Instructed to
notify the street commissioner to
make such report.
At a special meeting of the council
held September 20th, the mayor appointed Alderman Doherty and
Louch a committee to consider the
advisability of adopting a resolution
amending section three of ordinance
No, 28, this section relative to the'eon-
struction of cement walks. It is
claimed by some that it is not necessary to go so deep in this sandy soil as
the ordinance provides, and oy not
going so deep an expense of about
three cents a foot can be saved, This
matter was left to the discretion of
the street commissioner.
On the cemetery committee John
Harris was appointed vice Aid.
Doherty and Ed, Whitney vice Aid.
Louch.
A special meeting of the council
will be held tomorrow evening to pass
the appropriation bill.
Tbe'city taxes will be higher this
year than last and for several reasons;
under the new charter money raised
for any one fund cannot be used for
another and it was necessary to barrow 8900 from the bank. There is a $350
bill -for hoise to be paid and a $500
water works bond. These together
with the small pox bills, the Kelly ys.
city case and the Aberbuch case, the
cement walks and the cemetery annex will of necessity raise the rate.
When folks are invited to people's
houses to parties they see things that
were never there before.
We should think a man would feel
discouraged tf he had to look at his
wife wearing curl papers,
Loafers „are a pest. Notice the
spikes that are put ou railings to keep
loafers from sitting On them.
Considering the improvement it
makes in men's appearance, they
really ought to patronize the barber
more.
A NEIGHBORHOOD NURSEKY.
A Plan for Having the Children
Well Cared for at Very
/Small Cost.
"Establishing a neighborhoodonur-
sery will not be difficult if you know
any young women whom all the children love, and who has to work'for a
living," writes BerthieFogg Anthoine,
in tbe October Ladies' Home Journal,
"If so, suggest to her that she take
charge of the neighborhood babies
from three to seven years old for a
certain sum per month, A large playground and a big room are necessary.
The playground should have a heap
of small stones'and several mounds of
nice dry sand. The playroom should
have plenty of floor space. The
governess should overlook the play
and keep the tangles straightened out,
She should punish only in exceptional
cates, and by the mildest means, but
she should interfere before a quarrel
has reached dangerous proportions.
As to the financial arrangements, circumstances must govern the details.
The average female wage-earner receives five dollars a week, for six
days' work of eight to ten hours' duration. To the twenty dollars a month
add five dollars for rent of room, and
playground, then divide by the number of children enrolled."
The True Source of Woman's
Beauty
A beautiful skin without any blemishes comes directly from good health,
and the first step to health and to a
beautiful skin is to gee and keep the
blood pure. The whole blood system
is like a gorgeously colored Venice
with red waterways, and little boats
hurrying to and fro. The fatter carry
two kinds of messengers, market boys
and scavengers. If these are both
trained to accomplish their work
every day then health and beauty are
assured. If the blood is clear the
skin is sure to be clear.—The Ladles-
Home Journal for October,
Sunday Excursion to Toledo.
On Sunday, September 29th, the
Ann Arbor R. R. will give an excursion to Toledo by special train leaving
Clare at 5:25 a. m. Fare for the round
trip $1.50. Children under twelve
years of age one half the above rate.
Returning special train leaves Toledo
6:30 a. m.
Stand Floss
All Colors per
Skein
SCents
}avu
dc Co.
EVerijthiim to Wear
a* Lowest Prices
No. 40 Satin Liberty
No. 60 Satin Taffeta
all colore, per yard
25 Cts.
Cloaks and Capes.
We are receiving new Cloaks nearly every day. The
fashionable garments this season are half-fitting box coats in
27~inch and 42-inch lengths. Our showing in these popular
garments is very extensive, embracing the very newest ideas
price feromd *"!'* and.ranging ,n S6.50 to #/5. OO
Our Special Sale of long Plush Capes has been very successful. The values are the greatest <*o Qt? j. @>/? Rfi
ever offered in this vicinity. «*«• uo to &0t ou
INleW Silks
Guaranteed Black Taffetas
75c, 90c, 1.25, 1.35
Extra Quality Black Peau-De-Soie
LOO, L25
New line of Printed Warp Silks in
the very latest colors and patterns
in waist lengths at per yard I. O O
l^eW
Waistings
27-inch All Wool Stripe Albatross, in
the leading shades per yard 35c
27-inch All Wool Serges, Silkotine
Stripe large line of colors
per yard
Printed French Flannels in waist
lengths per yard SSc
50c
Hosiery and
U^derWear
FiVe ileitis ihafc
are J3argaii)s
One case Ladies' Heavy Fleeced Hose,
they are regular 15c quality with
slight imperfections in knitting,
and are extra value at per 1 ftr*
pair .... 1UC
One case Misses' Extra Heavy Ribbed
Cotton Fleeced Hose two Q-^C
pairs f or
One case Ladies' Extra Heavy Wool
Ribbed Hose, black or Ox- OJ-Sc
ford gray, per pair
Ladies' Heavy Gray Jersey Ribbed
Fleeced Vests and Pants,
per garment
Misses' Very Heavy Fleece Lined
Vests and .- -rr ,
Pants . . 15c Upward
22c
Ladles' Ready-
to-wear Hats
Mllllneru Dept.
fai/y s
Latest Creations
In Trimmed Hats
Millinery Dept.
New Millinery Stock!
Ladies are respectfully invited to call Saturday, October 28th, and look over our
fine display of
FALL AND WINTER HATS.
Our selection is the nobbiest and most stylish to be found in the county.
The only millinery store that gives discount stamps/
MRS. K. M. GOODMAN.
Memorial Life of President McKinley—A Standard Historical
Work.
The World Publishing Co. of Buffalo, N. Y., are. issuing the best of all
the forthjoining books on the life of
the late President McKinley. It will
be a magnificent work profusely illustrated, written by Murat Halstead, a
celebrated war correspondent, the
man that was selected by the government of the late President McKinley
to write the official report on the
Philippine Islands. Murat Halstead
has been a life-long friend of President
McKinley, and It will be a labor of
love for him to finish this book, which
has long been in preparation. It will
be complete, his boyhood, manhood,
war service, political and social life,
assassination, full account of the
assassin and the anarchist conspiracy
connected therewith, medical treatment, death, burial and state funeral.
The work will be sold by subscription, and is so cheap and so excellent
that every family should have a copy.
—B'rom the Buffalo Express of September 17.
A New Society,
The young ladies of the Clare Baptist church and their friends met in
the church Saturday evening, the 21st
Inst., and organized a society which
is called the Automotion.
The Automotion is for ladies between the years of 16 and 35, and all
ladies between those years are invited
to become members of the Automotion, which will meet Thursday, 2:30
p. m., of each week.
The Automotion is new and original
in every respect—-in its ideas, Its work,
its by-laws. Entirely different from
any other society yet organized.
Vigilance is its motto, and nothing
but vigilant members are wanted.
You Auto, come and enrole your name.
OFFICERS f OK THE YEAR.
President—iBtarry T. Carson.
Vice President—Mrs. M. Saxton.
Secretary—Miss Ethel Stevens.
Assistant Secretary—Miss Pearl
Easton.
Treasurer—Miss B. MOoney. . *
AVXIhlAB.lt.
Mrs. H. Carson, Industrial.
Mrs. S. Mater, Reception.
Mrs. H. Choato, Social.
Miss Ethel Stevens, Pioral. \ *
STURGEON BAY, WIS,
Ann Arbor Railroad Makes*
it a Regular Station for its.
Car Ferries. -.'■■.
The Ann Arbor Railroad Gar !Fertfies
are now making regular Stops at Sturgeon Bay, Wisconsin. Steamer leaves'
Frankfort Monday, Wednesday and
Friday 9;30 a. m.» Sturgeon TBay 3':8G>
p. m. and arrives MepomlneeS-SOpj mv
Going east" steamers leave Menominee
same days 11,30 p. m, Sturgeon Bay
1:30 a.m. and arrives Frankfort M* '
lowing morning 7:30 a. m, £3-2
Hay fever has one advantages. YoQ
can't smell the paste pot.
Object Description
| Title | 1901-09-26; Clare Sentinel |
| Date | 1901-09-26 |
| Publisher | R.G. & F.A. Jefferies |
| Description | Thursday, September 26, 1901 issue of the Clare, Michigan newspaper. Published weekly. Began publication in 1896. Previously known as Clare Sentinel and the Democrat-Press. |
| Subject/Keywords | Clare (Mich.) - Newspapers; Clare County (Mich.) - Newspapers; |
| Copyright Permission | This material is in the public domain. |
| Type | Newspaper |
| Format | JPG/JPEG |
| Language | English |
