1893-03-16; Saline Observer |
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A. J. WARREN. Publisher.
SALINE, WASHTENAW CO., MICH., THURSDAY, MARCH 16, 1898.
vofci
BUSINESS DIRECTORY.
PROFESSIONAL.
F
E. JONES.
Attorney at Law.
rUl Business attended to witlfPromptness and
Care. Office on McKay street,
SALINE, - - MICH.
Q. R.WILLIAMS
Attorney at Law,
Especial attention paid to Pension Claims of all
kinds. Nevreomb;Block,
MICH.
M1LA.N,
FT A. NICHOLS, M. D.,
PHYSICIAN and SURGEON.
Office at Nichols l-ros'. drug store.
SALINE, - MICH.
p F. UNTERKIRCHER, Nl. D.,
PHYSICIAN and SURGEON.
Calls promptly attended to at all hours.
Otlice in Hauser block, Chicago street.
SALINE, - - WEIGH.
^ W. CHANDLER, Ifl 0.,
VhVSICIAN and SURGEON
jrtiee cm Adrian Street, first dpdr spuriv of the
» Wallace Black,
SALINE, • MIOH,
NEIGHBORHOOD GLEANINGS.
p 0. SLA6HT,
Veterinary Surgeon.
5I4C0S, LENAWEE 00., JIIOH.
Connection with Teonmseh hy Telegraph
and by Mail.
AM. CAUiS VnOMVTSX ATTEKDEP TO.
MISCELLANEOUS.
WATERMAN'S
PHOTOGRAPH GALLERY.
(Miss Gillett's old stand.)
Will be in Saline every Wednesday and shall be
aleased to meet all in need ot work in my line.
3iill and see samples of our work.
]i CORDON,
The Pioneer Painter,"
Over Forty Years Experience,
,'mTiage. Sign and Ornamental Painting, Paper
Hanging. Frescoing, Eta.
SALINE, - MICH.
ITT Nl. BRIGGS,
Practical Painter,
To-mhb painting, awwws, J?wer hanging and
kalsomining. All work promptly and
neatly done, and satisfaction
guaranteed,
SALINE* ' • MICH.
ACCLIMATIZATION FEVER.
if AN DUZER'S
Barber Shop.
lair Cutting. Shaving. Shampooing and all
Work iu tlie Barber tine,
Batli room in connection. Hot or oold baths at
ny times. A. B. VAN DUZER.
SALINE, • • MICH.
i%.r
MILLER & SON.
(Successorsto J. A, Albev),
IPoqcI and
Sale Stable,
First-oJass vigs at reasonable rate?
Commercial travelers and thuir baggage oarrioil tu ami Irom sMjoining
.owns with promptness and at hvitfe
pates,
Old Waviiev House Barn,
IALINE., - - MICH.
John Baumgardner
(Successo to Anton Eisle.)
DEALER IN
foreign.and American
>KQf|$rbl'e?
©ranft§ m$ giplding
Corner of Detroit and Catherine Sts.
ANN ARBOR . MICH,
S.1JOSENHANS'
SHOKT
SKI*AIRING;. DONE ON
- NOTICE.
All kinds o£ Forging, Repairing Horseshoeing,
ind general Jobbing.
SATISFACHONZGHABANTEED and prices reasonable. Shop on Ann Arbor .street,
near Main.
3AUNE,_ -..-.- MICH
Newsy Notes and Occasional Occurrence
from our Near Neighbors.
Diphtheria is still doing its work in
Milan.
According to an article in the Courier, the earth used to whirl around on
its axletree, once in three or four hours.
This goes to show thab the old thing is
gradually runninfl down, and will eventually quit the joh.—Adrian Press.
The election "bets are not aU paid yet.
Frank Maginn informs us that the
stove in his oBice is to be blacked by
Station Agent Spencer next Saturday
as the result of Cleveland being elected.—Manchester Enterprise.
The alpha sigma met on Monday night
with a good attendance and an interesting and pleasing programme was presented. The question of openiug the
world's fair on Sunday was dehated,
and it was decided that it should be
xilosod on the day o£ worship.—Man Chester Enterprise.
Returning from Toledo with §30, of
pork proceed-;, Theodore Burrow of
Monroe county saw a stranger and took
him in, as the bible commands. The
stranger was willing to reciprocate and
took lu the §30 Burrow realized for his
pork. He was a pick-pocket.—Adrian
Press.
It is suggested that the date of inauguration should be changed, or fature
ceremonies be held indoors. It is wrong
to make a Presidedt stand bare-headed
in an icy March wind to deliver his in-
auguraV_address, as Cleveland did on
Saturday. Few men could stand such
exposure.—Adrian Times.
All men are not millionaires, hut all
men would be millionaires if they could
All men are not tyrants, but Porje says
that ''the Lord has planted the tincture
in the blood, that all men would be tyrants if they could." And so in life, if
a rjorson attempts to rise above the
commou level there are plenty of hands
raised against him to shove him down
again.—Courier.
A pine tree has just been cut in Pike
county, Pennsylvania, known for many
years as "the last pine,'' which was
found to be 3{2 feet high, and 462 years
old, having thus been a goodly tree of
G2, years old when Columbus discovered
Amoriua. It was sound to the heart,
from the ground up, and cut S>2,000
worth of lumber. "What a pity that
the state couldn't have bought and preserved the noble tree.—Ypsilantian.
We are led to ask if the Ypsilantian
can vouch for the truth as to tho age
of this tree,
Elbert Spooner has loused the big
cheese factory and creamery at Moore-
ville, Mich., and expects to leave for
the^'c to begin business in about two
weeks. Tho factory is one of the largest in tho state, and bears an excellent
reputation. Ip is situated in a great
grazing- country, and in a township
where they now have nearly 1,000 cows.
—Dexter News.
The following idea is origiual with
Kate Field. She says: "In view of the
fact that it costs more to bury and eulogize a dead congressman than it does
to pay a living one for the full two
yeans of nis term, I think that all candidates should submit to a medical examination before being allowed to run
for congress, and that permission
should oe granted them on exactly the
same basis that a reputable life insurance company would take risks on their
lives.—Exponent.
Mary had a little lamb, its fleece was
white rs snow; it strayed away one day,
where lambs should never go. And
Mary sat her quickly down and tears
streamed from her eyes; she never
found hor lamb because she did not advertise. And Mary had a brother -Tohn
who kept a village store; he sat him
down and smoked a pipe, and Watehed
the open door. And as the people parsed along and did not stop to buy, John
still sat and smoked his pipe and bliuk-
ed his heavy eyes. Aud so tbe sheriff
closed him out, but' still he lingered
ueaiyand Mifry cany: to drop with him a
sympathic tear.. How 18 it, sister, can
you-tell why othey merchants here,
sell all %hMv goods go readily and thrive
from year- to, year, Remembering her
own had luck, the little maid replies,
"These other fellows get there, John,
because "they advertize?'—Clinton
Local.
When a man is through wilh his
day's work and is sitting down and
resting iu his home he cannot read the
advertisements ou "the fence, aud Ihe
hand bills and circulars that >v<*re It-Et
ou the doorstep dufiug tlie (i;vy have
been blown away ov tjupn destroyed.
Be calls fill' tho pa/per. and. there he
finds the merchant's, announcement,
and nothing to bother his mind, he
reads it carefully and then he calls his
wife's attention, to it, and they decide
to go to tho merchant's store and examine what is advertised. How
important it is, then, that your name
can be found, the kind of business you
are engaged in and the bargains you
have to offer in its columns.—Holly
Advertiser.
A Texas lAve Stockman Writes That He
Has a.Heinedy.
Herewith I send yon for publication a
specific for that dreaded disease to which
imported cattle are subject in the south
and west (the disease is not known among
natives) — acclimatization or splenic
fever. I bought from Fairview Jersey
Stock farm, Tennessee, last November a
Jersey heifer, Tennessee Beanty and yearling bull, The Club's Grover. Tennessee
Beauty dropped a fine hull calf on March
20,1892, and was making 1+ pounds butter per day at 2 years and 2 months old
when she took the fever June 2. She
lingered sis days and died. I held a post-
mortem,'.from which discovered the trouble. Her manifolds were clogged or
packed with almost dry food, through
which nothing had passed since she took
the fever.
A few days after her death the bull
also took it, notwithstanding he was
kept in a different lot over 100 yards
away from the cow. I gave him the following: Four ounces spirits niter, one
pound Crab Orchard salts and one pint
linseed gruel iu one-half gallon of water.
Dose, a teacupful every two hours for
twenty-four hours. At the end of that
time his bowels did not act freely enough,
so I drenched hiru -with one gallon lager
beer, whit-a jti. d very freely. I kept
up the btxr ■ ; :allon at a time, three
times a dr." n>v two days, then for the
next two ti;.--.. iae gallon per day—two
doses a day. one-half gallon at a time—
at the end of which time he* had entirely
recovered,
This prescription has cured four others
for my neighbors, leaving out the beer,
but they did not recover so soon as did
the bull where the beer was used. "When
the second stomach is affected the lower
bowels will act very freely, but if the
third stomach or pouch is affected the
bowels will soon become constipated. In
each case the same remedy will cure nine
out of ten, and I think I can safely say
99 out of 100.
My opinion is that those cattle should
be kept the first summer in a very cool,
shaded p'asture, and not fed very much
till they have passed one year iu. their
new climate, after which all danger is
over.—D, W. Phillips in Breeder's Gazette.
Linseed Meal.
The grouudproductleft after the oil has
been extracted front fiaxseetlis a valuable
food when given in small quantities.
Too much of it is too laxative for a horse
and has a bad effect on the butter of
cows. It is a highly nitrogenous food
and its great value lies hi the fact that
a little of it will "balance" a ration composed largely of rough fodder. For example, the writer is feeding a horse on
corn fodder instead of timothy hay. A
pound of oilmeal per day with the fodder and usual grain keeps the animal in
fine condition, apparently as well as when
fed on the hay.
A workhorse of average weight might
he fed a daily ration of IS pounds of
hay, 6 of oats and 2 of linseed meal. We
should not feed over two pounds per
day to a-horse, and it should be fed very
cautiously at first, as some horses are
unable to eat even that, quantity without
scouring. For young stock two rations
might be tried:
1. Fifteen pounds corn stalks, 10
pounds wheat bran, 8 pounds linseed
meal.
2. Fifteen pounds hay, 3 pounds corn-
meal, 4 pounds wheat bran, 2 pounds
linseed meal.
The bran will be profitable to Iray for
the young stock, though crushed oats
would answer about lis well. For inilk
cows, a ration composed of 13 pounds of
hay, 5 of corumeal, ? of ground oats
and 2 of linseed meal would answer.—
Rural New Yorker.
Village Election.
The village election Monday passed
off quietly. Two tickets were in the
field, the regular Corporation and
Citizens, the latter with one exception^
was elected in full. Little excitement
prevailed, the principal strife being for
the office of clerk and for street com-
missionoiv In several instances one
name appeared on each ticket. Below
we give the ballot in regular order,
the first name being for the Corporation ticket, the second for the Citizens'
ticket.
PRESIDENT.
John McKinnon
John McKinnon
CLERK.
Chas. N. How
Myron Webb
TRUSTEES.
S. Josenhans
H. T. Nichols
J. W. Hull
A. Harmon
Geo. Burkhart
E. A. Hauser
TREASURER.
J. G. Ehnis
J. G. Ehnis
51
OK
00
50
54
49
4S
(Hi
13
ASSESSOR.
J. Gillen
J. Gillen
■i, STREET COMMISSIONER.
Milton Keynolds
M. D. Wallace
, • CONSTABLE.
F. Jerry '5
F. Jerry"
Auctions,
■■>,,
m
•32
34
57
05
31
03.
MRS. AVM. MUIR
will sell at her home, one mile east of
Saline village, Tuesday, March 21st, at
one p. m., one span work horses, Jersey
cow, set double harness, land roller,
MeCormie binder, Champion reaper,
fanning mill, 40-tooth drag, floating
harrow, spring-tooth wheel cultivator,
wagon, hay rake, drill. Ckavnpion
mower, Fairbank scales, buggy polo
corn sheller, plow, cutting- box, two
caldron kettles, three coin cultivators,
800 fence pickets, wheel barrow, 25
acres wheat on the ground, a quantity
of hay, also a quantity of small tools.
Terms—All sums of 85 aud under cash,
,ill over that amount one year's time
will be given on approved notes at 7 per
cent.
"I have used~Aycr"s Hair Vigor for a
number of years, and it has always
given me satisfaction. It is an excellent dressing, prevents the hair from
turning gray, insures its vigorous
growth, and keeps the scalp white and
clean."'—Mary A. Jackson, Salem,
Mass.
Xiive Stock Points.
E. P. Smith in The American Cultivator writes that once when barley was
selling at fifty cents a bushel he fed his
crop of that grain to the pigs and made j
it pay one dollar a bushel. He reco-u- |
mends keyring -winter pigs, among ofLer I
reasons because they eat up tlie crops of i
grain when they are damaged or are too
cheap in price to sell profitably.
February is the time to set hens for !
early chickens, if you are s<> situated that j
they will be warm enough. Early chick- j
ens pay the best in the market. Those '
hatched later, in May and June, are the
best for stock poultry..
If you have left over straw that you
canncit market profitably, and more
than you need for bedding other animals, bed the winter pigs with it. It
will pay yon first class returns in the
fertilizing line wlien you haul 'it out
upon your fields next spring.
If you are going into the winter dairying business next fall, breed your cows
now. They will come in iu October.
Is it better to market wethers at a year
old as lamb mutton, or to keep them a
year or two longer? It depends largely
on tlie fleece. If you can make the 2
or 3-year-old wether shear- ten to twelve
pounds, of ft good quality of wool, then
it will pay to keep him. Two or three
heavy fleeces, of wool would much more
than pay f05 his extra keep.
The prices for first class pure bred
Aberdeen-Angus beeves have reached in
Chicago over seven dollars a hundred
pounds this winter.
An egg farmer has figured up that the
eggs he sells cost him, all told, eight
cents a dozen. When they sell in the
city markets at from forty to fifty cents
per dozen, as they do sometimes, there
is something of a profit in the. husiness.
It is a little like the saloon keeper's 1 peri
cent, ;•■•■-■ . ;
•I BEAUTY.
mm sii tubs
Pleasant to take.
They ore prepared from ingredients of
• great repute for their valuable blood
purirvin? qualities.
no dangeeToftaking cold.
They Sweeten the Stomach, No need of having
A rOTJL OFFENSIVE BREATH.
Do You Value A Clear Complexion ?
and soft, smooth skin, free from pimples, §c, take
HEWITT'S SULPHUR TABLETS
Will cure the following amouR other diseases:-
Eczema. Rheumatism, Scrofulous Affections. Const!- L
nation. Blackheads. Pimples nnd Soros oi all kinds, f.
Tryabox. PKICE50c. Fors.-Uehyandnnnrists.orli
we will scud jou a box by mail upon receipt ot price, f
HEWITT SULPHUR TABLET 09., j
1 9 East "l 4-th St., New York. ',
BOSTON 0
^LADIESi"FiHa
We have-just received froM-i
Kennedy, C. W. Huits hi
ladies' fine shoes, a large'-
. - different styles^3^
Men's Boots and Si
The best make. We guarantee m
the prices the lowest for good |
in and see them We shall keet
Dry Goods and Gents'-iWj
Have all of the staple styles'
ity always on hand and yd;
" the prices-right*
. Ten pieces stylish Serge god
a yd, now selling for £5c
Our "wonder" line ©f pant
warranted not to rip
I&^w 'S tools oC'Hte'
at the clothing and dry gooeds
and just the style. The ^
we want,don'tcare son
the profits .*
C. Parsons' Old
mm!
m
**■■*
THE SrpO^Bjf
CARPET D^KijEiHf.:
Monday March 20-25 3rd 5pee3#$a3*'
China ■-"-^i^-'-v
< 91-2 otJs/ -■'.-
25 Pitices good quality matting worth 2i oyd. to opM'the Reason im thes D&"
pavtment we make this extraordinary price for Onet'Woek enlj;. "Don't frait
^linking you will sea them again at this pric-i. \„ >■-■•<* '-, *'"-,
Genuine Smyrnia - Rugs
The Largest Size 9x12. The manufaeturers list on llijs- alaa 4s ^O.OO for
one weeli we will Jet tiiem go for ; i ' '* .
$22.50. , - *:r ..' "!N-~C <-!■
Genuine Smyrnia Rugs Vizo 7Jtlv)J I'jUi, Priee ■ii'x.tj \ \V%£pto them Into this
i "* l " - . " '-a. - - •*
sale at ihf Momma., price <y»- ;
/$ 17.50- -"iT
Thesis prio-s -in- m-pii- to WT«lt»ut ri-gunl I i vo-l J>? \v'ilr^i«.;it'3S^j* th» 1>'ir-
I>•».<•. <.f lirintriMjj <-.:!!. a oj-iwl
MACK &, BV^
• > *
?&*
*#&
XT %
W^
>*'
ts casilv earned br unv mil' of t>itlu-r sex in tiny
part of "tlie countr'v. who is willing to work nitlus-
triou*lv at the einplovment wliii-h we furnish.
I'helauoris light and'pleasant, and you nru uo
risk whatever. We lit vou out comjiU'te.so that
•ill cau aive the business n-trial without expense
.• vourself. For those williiijMu d" si little work,
tis is the grandest oiler l.iade. You can work
M d:iv, or iu the eveuins oulv. If you are em.
■'■ > id, aud have a few spare hours at* your dis-
• -i', utilize them, aud add to your income,—
•..•'!i«!.iat'«swiU not intern re :i; rll. You will
;:i~.'d o'.t the start at the rapHity aud ease
uich v in amass dollar uponrtolhir.dayiuand
■;■'. "i'via twsinners firi" Mia-es.-lut from the
■i >!-.r. Ami- oiie can rim the business — none
. lou Mwnl.t trv nothinc else until you see
.;■ >.».rse)f what i-on van do at the business
;i > v.-e u.lVr. So'caniial risfced. Women ara
:«i.I .voikers; wnvudus thyv mike, as pinch.
i men. Thev s-i'-u'd !r- 1V1 - lms'.ui-A as rt is sp
.:ell adapted iu . lem. Wu»- -.it diu e and see for
■pursclf. Addre,-.- 11- i! M'!i*X? ■* CO.,
jlqs StiOs I'Qrtland, Mc,
Call at the new drug; stDre and See*
proveineiit we s re making. Acfeaptet*
of Dru gs, P atent Medicines, School*-j
Stationery, etc. will be kept on hantir
package' Of our Easter egg dyes eontj
six beautiful colora for 5c =
C. F.'Unterkircher.
Successor to G-. B., Mason, .g. ■ (J
.* ».
- ti
uosori
t.«*
1 c
t jj-^*j- » jj^Eufr1"-
Object Description
| Title | 1893-03-16; Saline Observer |
| Date | 1893-03-16 |
| Publisher | LeBaron & Nissly |
| Description | An issue of the Saline, Michigan newspaper. Published weekly. Began publication in 1880. No longer published. |
| Subject/Keywords | Saline (Mich.) - Newspapers; Washtenaw County (Mich.) - Newspapers; |
| Copyright Permission | This material is in the public domain. |
| Type | Newspaper |
| Format | JPG/JPEG |
| Language | English |
