1892-06-23; Saline Observer |
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■WW
A. J. WARREN. Publisher.
SALINE, WAS
BUSINESS DIRECTORY.
PROFESSIONAL.
P E.JONES. •
Attorney at Law.
All Business attended to with Promptness and
Cara. Office on McKay street.
SALINE,
MICH.
Q. R.WILLIAMS
Attorney at Law,
Especial attention paid to Pension Claims of all
kinds. Newcomb Block,
MILAN,
MICH.
TT A. NICHOLS, M. D.,
PHYSICIAN and SUKGEOH.
Office at Nicho s 1 ros\ drug store.
SALINE, - MICH.
p F. UNTERKIRCHER, M. D.,
PHYSICIAN and SUBGEON.
Calls promptly attended to at all hours.
Office in Hauser block, ChioaRO street.
i<£ SALINE, - - MICH.
C W. CHANDLER, M D.,
PHYSICIAN and SURGEON
Office ou Adrian Street, first door south of t£e
Wallace Block,
SALINE, - • MICH.
IT O. HELLER, D. D. S.
DENTIST.
Headquarters for the best Tooth Powder
in the market.
Office over Nichols Bros', drug store.
SALINE, - - MICH.
I - C. SLAGHT,
Veterinary Surgeon.
Graduate of Chiuago Veterinary College,
I rsideneo VA miles east of Peunington s Corners. Culls may beleft at either of the
stores at the Corners. AU calls
promptly attended to.
MACON. - - MICH.
MISCELLANEOUS.
vy-ATERMAN'S
PHOTOGRAPH GALLERY.
(Miss Gillett-1 ~"ytand.)
Will be in Saline every Wednesday and shall be
pleased to meet all in need of work in my line.
'Jail and see samples of our work.
V
CORDON,
The Pioneer Painter.
Over Forty Years Experience.
.Tarriags, Sign and Ornamental Painting, Paper
Hanging, Frescoing, Etc.
SALINE, - MICH.
iy M. BRIBBS,
Practical Painter.
Ioubb painting, graining, paper hanging and
kalsomining. All work promptly and
neatly done, and satisfaction
guaranteed,
SALINE, - - MICH.
y AN DUZER'S
Barber Shop.
lair Cutting. Shaving, Shampooing and aU
Work in the Barber bine.
Bath room in copqecfip.n. JJof fir cold baths at
ny times. " A. B. VAN DUZER.
: gALJNE., : -- MICH.
Bridgewater Budget.
I. W. Kirkwood,, our station agent,
will spend the latter part of the week
with his parents at Freemont, Ind.
Mrs. F. E. Orttenburger, of Detroit,
visited at Geo. Bheinfrank's this week.
Messrs. Wm. Alher and A. A. Schcen
candidate Theology Of Eden College,
St. Louis, Mo., came home last Thursday to spend their vacation with their
parents here.
Miss Lizzie Eslinger, who has been
visiting at Wm. Stein's, returned home
to Ann Arbor, Monday.
School closed in district No, 1 last
Friday, with Miss Nettie Sanford teacher. In the afternoon, for enjoyment,
the scholars gathered at Joslyn Lake
and had a* pleasant time.
Mrs. C. Rentchler and Mrs. C. C.
Warner, of Lodi, and Chas. Schoen and
family, of Dexter, visited at F. W.
Sehcen's Saturday and Sunday.
Miss Grace Burns has gone to Manchester to spend a week with friends
there.
Simon Nissly and Theo. Ulrich, circuit court jurors for last term, returned"
home from Ann Arbor last Saturday.
A. MILLER & SON.
(Successors to J. A. Alber).
Xjives^y, Feed and
Sale Stable,
First-class rigs at reasonable rates.
Commercial travelers and their baggage carried to and from adjoining
~ .owns witn promptness and at living
Fates,
Old American House Barn,
SALINE, - - MICH.
Mil Baumgardner,
(Suecesso to Anton .Eisle,)
-DEALER IN-
Foreign and American
Marble,
Granite and Building
stone.
Comer of Detroit and Catherine Sts.
ANN ARBOR MICH.
OBSERVE
IGH., THURSDAY, JUNE 23, 1892.
VOL. XII.—NO. 35.
Milan Murmurings.
Mrs. F. Trussel is entertaining a sister from Burr Oak.
Mrs. D. Ailsworth is very ill.
Rev. Jay Hunlinjfton and daughter
left for Plymouth, Saturday.
Uncle Toms Cabin is billed for Milan June 27th.
Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Minto moved into
Mrs. O. P. Newcomb's house, on County street, Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. T. T. Lacy are entertaining guests from New York city.
Rev. Geo. Sloan and family left Monday for a visiting tour in the northern
part of the state.
Mr. and Mrs. C. Sill and daughter, of
Detroit, are the guests of H. Sill aud
family.
The races will materialize Saturday.
Mrs. E. Bennett, of Fort Dodge,Iowa,
is the guest of her sister, Mrs. H. Hack.
M. Day is confined to the house with
a sprained ankle.
Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Fuller are visiting friends in Ann Arbor.
Miss Grace Wilson is entertaining a
guest from Flat Rock.
Claude Chapin is the new clerk at
Blackmer & Minto's clothing store.
Several from this place will attend
the commencement exercises at Ann
Arbor this week.
Mrs. Larimer, of Topeka, Kansas, is
visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. A.
Osborn.
The graduating exercises were fine
this year. Diplomas were presented to
an interesting class. The TJ. of M.
Glee Club sung in a pleasing manner
the college songs that are always listened to with interest.
The M. E. society gave Rev. G. E.
Sloan a small donation the last of the.
week,
Mrs. J. H. .Ford is very ill with inflammatory rheumatism.
Rev. Gallup preached at the Baptist
church Sunday morning and in the
evening the Children's Day exercises
were observed. The program was good
and well rendered.
The Presbyterians observed their
Children's Day exercises Sunday evening. The program was line and well
rendered,
Al
terria
Grees
relinl
says a
N. Y. Sun\
the trunk <
just as Jacll
the plucky
also. Mr.
down, but Jacl
the tough bark and]
until he had climbed
, a fox
Allows of
jray sqiiir-
pws' farm,
mt of the
pped np
pie tree
Eseit, and
ip the tree
i) call him
nails into
and. clung
the crotch,
4th of July Reduced Rates.
On July 2nd, 3rd and 4th, 1S92, the
Lake Shore & Michigan Southern R'y
—Lake- Shore Route—will sell special
excursion tickets at reduced rates to
all points on its lino located within 200
miles from selling station.
Tickets will be good to return only
on July 4 th and. oth.
Complete particulars from ticket
agents. 36
."4^0. REPAIRING DONE ON SHORT
NOTICE.
All kinds of Forging* Repairing Horseshoeing,
snd general Jobbing.
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED and prices reasonable. Shop on Ann Arbor street,
SALINE,
near Main.
MIOH
Commencing Monday, May 23rd, the
elegant steamer, "City of Marquette,"
will make regular trips between Frankfort and Kewaunee, Wis., in connection
with trains of the Toledo, Ann Ai'bor
& North Michigan Ry. Through Express leaving Toledo at 5:45 a. m. daily
except Sunday, arrives Frankfort 5:55
p. m. connecting vrith steamer "City of
Marquette. Leaving Frankfort 7:00 p.
m., arriving Kewaunee 1:30 a. m.
Holders of first-class tickets are furnished sleeping berths on steamer free
of extra charge and will be permitted
to retain berths until morning. First
train leaves Kewaunee 8:55 a. m. for
Green Bay, Winona, La Grosse, St.
Paul, Minneapolis and all points in the
west and north-west,
36 W. H. B.ENNBTT, G, P. A. -
fifty-two feet from the ground. By
that time the squirrel was chattering
on one of the topmost limbs, and Jack
couldn't get any further. He couldn't
get down either, and he began to howl
and whine for his master to help him.
It was soon dark, and Mr. Fellows
hustled around to find some way of
reaching Jack and lowering him to the
ground. He and his sons tried in vain
to climb the tree, and then they
went among their neighbors and got
several volunteers. No one was able
to climb it, and Jack continued to
whine up there iu the dark. By 9
o'clock all the near-by farmers had
heard of Jack's predicament and were
under the tree -with lanterns. There
wasn't a ladder .in the neighborhood
long enough to reach halfway to Jack,
and along toward midnight three ladders were taken to the spot, lashed together, and hoisted against the tree.
Then Albert Fellows started to climb
up with a surcingle and! a long rope.
The bottom ladder broke ana gave
him a pretty hard fall, and the attempt to rescue Jack was postponed
till daylight. Mi-. Fellows and his
sons worked until 2 o'cloek to make a
new ladder, and then went to bed.
Jack howled mournfully all night up
in the big maple, and the members of
Mr. Fellows' household got very little
sleep. When daylight came Jack was
still hedging to he saved, and the men
fastened the new ladder to the other
ones. Then Ausil Fellows climbed up,
buckled the surcingle around Jack,
and lowered him at the end of a rope.
When he reached the ground he began to bark for joy, aud the saucy
squirrel chattered "at him from the
treetop.
HER NEW BROTHER.
Commissioners' Notice.
STATE OF MICHIGAN, county of Washtenaw.
The undersigned having been appointed by
the Probate Court for said county. Commissioners to receive, examine and adjust all claims and
demands of all persons against the estate of
John I. Easterly, late of said county, deceased,
hereby give notice that six months from date are
allowed, by order of said Prohate Court, for
Creditors to present their claim* against the
estate of said deceased, and that they will meet
at chelate residence of said deceased in the township of Saline, in said county.on the ninth day of
August and on the ninth day of November next,af
ten o'clock a. ra. of each of said days, to receive,
examine and adjust said claims.
Bated, Ann Arbor, May 9,1892.
■ BENJAMIN MONROE.
, WILLIAM RHODES,
Commissioners.
Story for the Littlo Folks About a Child
Who Discovered Heaven,
This thing happened on Troost avenue, out in Kansas City, and it has
the merit of being true. If you have
never been to that rising young city
at the mouth of the Kow you will have
to be told that Troost avenue is the
great, residence street of the place.
Spacious mansions line its sides for
miles. In one of these houses a little
boy died not long ago. He was a
happy youngster about 2 years old.
With his 4-year-old sister he played
ahout the nursery floor in the second
story. Sometimes the nurse would
hold him up to the window so he could
look across the street or watch the
cable-cars go by with the ringing of
bells that so pleased his child fancy.
But the nurse was careless one day.
She left the window up, and the
draught that ca'sae through the room
was laden with the germs that the
doctors are telling us so much about.
The little boy was in bed with diphtheria the next morning. All of his
toys were piled on the bed—the big,
soft rubber doll that he liked so well
was put close to him. He squeezed it
to his side with one chubby little hand
for a moment, but the arm relaxed
and dropped the plaything. He took
no more interest. He grew worse in
a day. The doctors could not do much
with an unreasoning little chap like
that. And so he died.
Every parent can imagine the gloom
that hung over that Troost avenue
mansion while a bit of white ribbon
fluttered in the wind from a white
rosette pinned to the plate on the front
door. The little sister had been taken
away when the disease first broke out,
so that at least one of those household
treasures might he preserved. But
tho funeral was over very soon—so little aud unimportant was that wee
dead body in the nursery—and the big
house was gloomy in" its" stillness. The
father and mother wanted the little
girl hurried back, but she was kept
away until all danger was passed.
"Where is baby?'0 she asked when
she was brought into the home.
The mother tried to smile. "He has
gone away for a long time," she said.
"You must get along without him until he comes back from, heaven."
That night the little girl cried for
her brother, but the nurse—she was a
new one, who would not be careless
about draughts—told her that he had
gone for a long visit. *
The next day the Utile girl was allowed to go to the window of the nursery and put her no^e against the glass
while she watched the cars go by. She
stood there for a long time; then she
cried out, suddenly: "There's brother!
Look, nurse—it's baby!"
The new nurse looked across the
street, where a pretty, young mother
s|ood au a window with a "baby in her
arms. The motherwaved herhand at
the little girl. Pretty soon the baby's
wee eyes saw, and he waved too.
"Tell mamma!" cried the little girl,
and the nurse, who was a sympathetic
creature, ran down-stairs for the
mother.
"Look!" cried the little girl, as she
waved her hand at the "baby across the
street. uThat is heavetn, mamma, for
there is baby."
But the mother^ eyes could not see
across the street.
Mortgage Sale.
Notice is hereby given that default has been
made in the payment of certain installments of
interest secured by a mortgage bearing date the
20th day of December, A. D., 1SS9, made and executed by Fred Robison and Hattie Eobison. his
wife, to Eliza M. Kerrand recorded in the office
of theRegister of Deeds for the county of Washtenaw and state of Michigan in liber B7 of mortgages on page 291 on the 13th day of January, A.
D., 1890, whieh said mortgage was duly assigned
by the said Eliza M Kerr to Comstock F. Hill on
the 19th day o£ May, A. D-. 1890, by deed of assignment duly recorded in the office of the Register of Deeds for the said county of Washtenaw
on the loth day o£ April, A. D., 189-'. in Liber
Eleven of assignments o£ mortgages on page 1C9.
That more thau thirty days have elapsed since
the aforesaid installments of interest upon the
said morteage felldueand the same nowremain
unpaid and in arrears by reason whereof the
said mortgagee or her assigns by the terms of
the said morteage bas the option to declare tha
whole amount secured by the said mortgage due
and payable. And the assignee o£ the said
mortgage by virtue of said option hereby elects
and declares the principal sum of Seven Hundred Dollars in said mortgage named with all
arrearage of interest thereon i o be due and payable at the date o£ this notice. By reason of
which default in the payment of said moners
secured by the said mortgage and now due
and payable as aforesaid the power of sale
contained therein has become operative
and there is now claimed to be due upon
the said mortgage debt at the date of this
notice the sum of Eight Hundred, Twenty
and thirteen-hundredths Dollars aside from
an attorney fee of Twenty Dollars provided
for and made payable by the terms of the
said mortgage and no suit or proceeding at
law has been instituted to recover the debt
secured by the said mortgage or any part
thereof.
Notice is therefore hereby given that in
pursuance of the power of sale containec'
in said mortgage and the statute in such
case made and provided the said mortgage
will be foreclosed and tbat the premises
described in and covered by said mortgage,
to-wit: The south-east quarter of tin-
north-east quarter of section thirty-two (32)
township of Saline, county of Washtenaw
and state of Michigan will be sold at public
auction at the easterly front door of the
Court House (that being the place of holding the Circut Court for the county of
Washtenaw) in the city of Ann Arbor in
the county of Washtenaw and state of
Michigan on the 16th day of July, A. D.,
1S92, at ten o'clock in the forenoon of said
day.
Dated, April 21, 1892.
COMSTOCK F. HILL,
Assignee of Mortgage.
Frank E. Jones.
Attorney for Assignee of Mortgage.
Ladies, drop in our store and see the latest in
Red Florence msB
Red Theo.
Red Cleopatra
Every well dressed lady should have a pair of these
ties for hot weather
Carpets,, Rugs? Mattings,
Men's Russici Calf Bloscfoers
JOEIIEsT BUBG-, Ann Arbor
THE STORE
COOL FABRICS!
For Summer -wear.
Tills "Weeisz
Ten pieces India Linen 8c
Ten " ■' tk 10c
Fifteen" " " 12 l-2c
Twenty-two pieces India Linen 15c
Fifteen pieces India Linen SOc
Yoile Laine going witli a rush at 18c
Onr 5c Challies, worth double that price,
keeps people talking about The Store
Men's well made Outing Shirts 23c
Boys' handsome Flannel cloth Waists 25c
Men's Blue Dennis Overalls, heavy weight,
atill selling at 26c
Still selling ladies' Vests, worth 12 l-2c to
15c, for 5c
MACK & SCHMID
ERE
Reduced Rates to New York City
On July 5, 6 and 7 the Lake Shore <!c
Michigan Southern R'ywill sell tickets
to New York Citjr and return at onr
lowest First-class Fare. Send to A. J.
Smith, G. P. & T. A., Cleveland, O.,for
free copy of folder of information. Thi-
Lake Shore is the only line to Nev
York without a ferry transfer. 36
BEE KEEPERS.
We have a full line"of supplies ready
and invite all who are interested to call
and examine them.
We have Hoot's Dovetailed Hive:?,
Sections, Comb Foundations, Smoker,*.
Veils, Foundation fasteners, Enameled
cloth, Perforated zinc, and numerous
other articles.
It will pay you to order early while
we. have a good supply.
Two Honey Kxtractors for sale at less
than first cost. It will pay anyone
having a half dozen swarms to have an
extractor.
Send for our circular with samplo
of sections and fdn.
Beeswax wanted.
JH&AL Boyden,
SALINE, MICH.
One-quarter off
One-half off on
on Suits
nits
Caveats, and Trade-Marks obtained, aud all Pat-
ent business conducted for Moderate fees.
Our Office is opposite.U. S. P.»t;nt office
and we can secure patent in less time than those
remote from Washington.
Send, model, drawing or photo., -with description. We advise, if patentaole or not, free of
charge. Onr fee not due till patent is secured.
A pamphlet, "How to Obtain Patents," with
names of actual clients in your State, county, or
town, sent free. Address,
C.A.SNOW&CO.
OpP, PATENT OFFICE, WASHINGTON, D. C.
LES!
One-quarter off on woolp an ts
Large stock at your own price. I want to reduce stock and for a short time you can
buy clothiug at less than the wholesale
price Don't forget the Place.
Parsons, The Clothier
vj
The Great Champion,
W. J. Jackson,
Agent.
ANEWPAJHLESS
CERT Alii GORE.
GIVES SSSTAHT
BELIEF AUD LASTING CURE. Ki'iER .RETURNS. T9 PROVE IT and to convince I
you that it will promptly cure any case j
bof riles, External, Internal, Bleeding
I Protruding or Itching, we will send a I
ATRIAL PACKAGE FREE to any address.I
3 Sendstanips to cover postage ic address I
1 THE PYRAMIDDRUGC0., I"
Snx4S. ALBION, MCIT. |
BEE
MILLINERY .
We have just received a fine new stock
of Spring and Summer goods, and can please
you both in style and quality. . - -
Our goods are all new and tempting, Call
and see them.
Mrs H S Weaver,
McKinnon Building.
Object Description
| Title | 1892-06-23; Saline Observer |
| Date | 1892-06-23 |
| 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 |
