1893-07-20; Saline Observer |
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A. J. WARREN. Publisher.
SALINE, WASHTENAW CO., MICH., THURSDAY, JULY 20, 1893.
VOL. XIIL---NO. 39.
BUSINESS DIRECTORY.
PROFESSIONAL.
1^ E.J0NE8.
^Attorney at Law.
Business attended to with Promptness and
Care. Office on McKay street,
SALINE, - - MICH.
Q. IR.IWILLIAMS
Attorney at Law,
Especial attentionjpaid to Pension Claims of all
kinds.&Newcomb Block,
MILAN. - - MIOH.
rr A. NICHOLS, Nl. D., „
FHISIC1AN and SURGEON.
Ofllce at Nichols l-ros'. drug store.
SALINE. - MICH.
p F. UNTERKIRCHER, M. D.,
i*llYSlClAN and SURGEON.
Calls promptly attended to at all hours.
Omce in Hauser block, Chicago street.
SALIN.E. - - MICH.
b.
W. CHANDLER,™ □.,
1»H YSICIAN and SURGEON
Jfllcu .u. Aiirian Street, flrrt door south of the
-Wallace Block,
SALTNE, - MICH.
p 8, SH.ASHT,
Veterinary Surgeon.
SJACON, LENAWB-3 CO., MICH,
QpnueQtion with Teoumseh hy Telegraph
and by Mail.
AW, CALLS PBOIIPTLT ATTENDED TO.
MISCELLANEOUS.
WATERMAN'S
PHOTOGRAPH GALLERY.
(Miss Gillett's old stand.)
■Will be in Saline every'Wednesday and shall be
rjleasedto meet all in need of wort in my line.
Hall and see samples of our work.
p g_R.B°M.
The Pioneer Painter.
Orer Forty Years Experience,
Carriage, Sign and .Ornamental Painting, Paper
Hanging, Frescoing, Etc.
SALINE. . - , MICH.
yr M.BRIQQS,
Practical Painter.
louse painting, graining, paper hanging and
kalsomining. All work promptly and
neatly done, and satisfaction
guaranteed, -
SALINE. - - MICH.
rTANDUZER'8
Barber Shop.
lair Cutting, Shaving, Shampooing and all
Work in the Barber Line.
Bath rofiin;ln' *S>iiPSSttPn* Sot & S-aW &l.u.s at
•nytfroes." ' A.l..¥4l»Pyz^
A. MILLER & SON.
(Successors to J. A. Alber).
laivery, I'esd and
Sale Stable,
First-class rigs at reasonable rates.
Commercial travelers and their bag-
■s-tg,' carried to and from adjoining
..owns witb promptness and at living
r-ili'S:
Old., Warner House Barn,
SALINE, - - MICH
The Newest Driving Rig.
Two or three summers ago, tbe
smartest women used to be quite content to drive about tbe country highroads of a morning in. bird's-eye maple
dog-carts or buckboards, and only a
few -went to tbe lengtb of stringing
tbeir borses out in tandem to tbe infinite delight of tbe farmer folk.
Those fair old days of content and
bucolic simplicity are quite gone.
Fashionable favor has pronounced the
low-swung, wide, roomy, English pony-
phaeton and donkey-cart permissible
and proper, and this is the way it must
be done:
A nice pony-phaeton that opens low
down on both sides, that has a rumble
behind, and a vast spread df dashboard
in front, costs all tbe way from six to
thirteen hundred dollars. The ponies
must be well clipped, slosely docked,
sleepy little animals, harnessed to the
pole far forward. The "tiger"' in the
rumble must be a rosy-cheeked little
chap, sixteen or thereabouts, and done
up in most formal livery of breeches,
boots, top hat, frock coat With leather
belt and silver boltons, and yellow
gloves.
The occupant of the phaeton does not
mount upon an inclined seat, but in a
ruffly muslin gown, a wide straw hat
trimmed with poppies and wheat, a
buneh of roses at her belt, and wash-
leather Biarrita glovos, sits directly
in the middle of the seat and drives.
If tbe sun is hot and bright, the groom
raises the phaeton's hood half way;
and when Madame is weary of the
reins, he slips them through the curling silver brackets set at the extreme
ends of the dash-board, and drives from
his rear perch.—Demorest's Magazine.
BROWN LEGHORNS.
itieir Merits as Told by a California]! In
The Fanciers' Monthly.
Without disparaging any other breed
too much can hardly be said in favor of
the practical merit of the Brown Leghorns, which show up on the credit gide
of the poultry accounts in a manner and
with a persistency--which enable us to fig^
xvre \rit_ almost r^tbematical nicety the
probable results of" proper care and keeping when this breed is chosen as the
foundation of poultry speculation. In
fact, the breeding of Brown Leghorns can
scarcely be considered speculative when
well defined lines and established methods are pursued in their management and
keeping. Their proficiency and precocity, combined with extraordinary vigor,
render them no inferior antagonists in
the contest for honors, in the financial
arena of poultry culture. Their ancient
lineage has stamped an indelible impress
on their constitution that rough visage
and promiscuous interbreeding seem
powerless to wholly efface. Long continued, judicious selection under favorable climatic conditions has made them a
fixed breed with such tenacious, innate
qualities as no mushroom breed ever
presents, and they come nearer, to being;
fy sp.epies than any otliei; pf our* domestic
varieties, of the gallinfe,
gven the characteristic markings of
%he newly hatched chick of this breed
indicate an inherited vitality and stam-
"jjia due to long continued influences.
From the moment it breaks its shell
the Brown Leghorn chick will attract
attention by its manifest ability aud iu-
John Baumgardner.
(Successor to Anton Eiale.)
.-_ -DEALER IK
Fjareigi* and American
Marble,
Granite and Building
stone.
Corner of Detroit and Catherine Sts.
ANN ARBOR
MICH.
A. J. WARREN,
QONVEVANCEB AND
Xfotas'Sr-"- Ei*Wici
All legal p;ipers drawn on short
liotictianu at piiees within tho
reaoli of all.
General Fire Insurance a Specialty.
BROWN LEGHORN COCK AND HEN.
tention to cope with its environment
and give full returns for its developr
ment into broiler, egg producer or breed;
er. If they are small, theij predominant
jiptiyityfiil} compensates a Jack of bulk
in their ability to obtain more than an
equivalent of nature's bounty in foraging when given their liberty, and even
in close confinement tbey withstand an
amount of abuse truly surprising, as
practical illustrations which have come
under my observation demonstrate. In
meat or eggs this breed will produce as
much for food consumed as any breed,
and. contrary to popular opinion, under
adverse conditions.
Intelligence in poultry, thougb seemingly little noticed by writers on poultry subjects, is to me a prominent
thought in estimating the value of any
breed of fowls, and that the Brown Leghorn possesses a high degree of intelligence, estimated by the true poultry
standard, is certain, and to rme this is
not the least part of the practical merit
pf this breed.
Bee Paralysis.
The symptoms of bee paralysis, a disease quite prevalent in many aviaries, is
thus described by a beekeeper in "Gleaning" in Bee Culture: "'Symptoms of the
disease are first noticeable by the guard
bees at the entrances attacking the diseased sisters with a hustling movement as they go and come, and tho
diseased bee in this stage seems to enjoy this kind of treatment, and this indicates that the bee is feverish—a conation that produces an itching: sensa
tion,' dlso causing the "half to loosen and
to be easily extracted by the bees in the
hustling movement as above stated.
When the bees reach the second stage,
or hairless condition, the guard bees are
more determined to drag them from the
hive than at any other time. Further
observations teach us that as soon as the
bee begins to bloat she immediately
leaves the hive and soon expires,
"This advice in way of a cure is given
to all who have or may have bee paralysis among their bees—try one or two colonies thus: As soon as the bees begin to
fly freely make a strong brine and thoroughly wet the bottom boards of these
hives once a week, so that when they dry
they look frosty; also freely" spray the
combs and brood with a solution of salt
water that you can taste quite a little
salty (not strong) once a week during the
season."
Treatment of Pip.
Pip is the name applied when there is
a dry, scaly substance on the tongues of
sick fowls. It is generally considered
that this dry scale is the symptom of disease elsewhere, and usually of some affection of the air passages, which causes
the fowl to breathe with a little noise
which suggests the name pip. As soon
as the health of the bird is restored the
pip vanishes. Do not attempt to remove
this scale. If you favor homoeopathic
treatment, give spongia three times a
day. Otherwise diet the bird carefully
and give two or three grains of black
pepper in fresh butter daily. In either
case apply chlorinated soda to the tongue.
ManjT do not give any treatment beyond
seeing that the affected bird is properly
housed and fed.
Neivs and Kotes.
The horse show, the poultry show and
the kennel show at the World's fair will
open June 13. A cattle exhibit will be
held from Aug. 21 to Sept. 21.
At the Utah station last season early
Bpring plowing seemed favorable to the
development of straw, while the late
spring plowing gave more grain than by
any other time of plowing.
The director of the Sew Jersey station
says that dried brewers' grains are a
wholesome, nutritious and palatable
horse feed, and at present prices they
may be* substituted for oats and a decided savins made in the cost of the ration.
The Rural New Yorker says that any
man who needs to use manure at all can
use to good advantage 10Q pounds of superphosphate -with every ton of manure.
Evolution of tlio Ballet Girl.
Somebody could write an article on the
evolution of the ballet girl. Not many
years ago she was a poor, despised creature
■who worked hard and was happy to win
SO to $10 a week, the average wage earnings
being 75 cents or *?1 a performance. Sow,
more power to her elbow tor rather her
ankle), the ballet girl has awakened to the
fact that she is an entity, having a soul and
a definite mission in life, and so she gets
825 a week. She has risen superior to her
baldheaded environments, has raised the
banner of revolt and has sounded on the
tocsin of fate a note of warning. Behold
her! She has organized. She wots of
Knights of Labor; hence she demands higher pay. She has f o.vniect a protective union
and will strike at a, moment's notice. She
knows full well her value in the community iis a thing of beauty and a joy forever.
Delsarte has postulated her xnosition. She
is the embodiment of poetry in motion, and
damned be he who says she is old, ugly and
a grandmother. He is not testhetic.—New
York Recorder.
Horsehair Padding..
Horsehair is less used now than formerly
for the padding of military coats. Probably one cause for its abolition is the troublesome wound that it makes when a bullet passes through the stuffing before entering the flesh, for the hard, stiff hair is
driven in before the bullet and sets up a
constant irritation there. Several such instances occurred in the civil war, where
soldiers were shot by marksmen perched in
trees.—New York Sun.
- Advice For a Third Party.
It doesn'trpay to tamper with other people's love affairs. As a rule, spoons are so
wrapped up in each other that they get to
be awfully selfish and ungrateful. You
may do something that ono of them begs
you to do, and if it turns out wrong that
one will set upon you and glare at you and
^ilently call you awful names.—Chicago
NewsJiecord.
$
History of tlie Brress Coat.
The present dress coat -was the result of
a compromise. The ordinary surtoat coat
beingfound on occasions inconvenient it was
the practice to fasten back the lapels to
two buttons at the back, with the result
that in time the same Were cut away altogether and the coat eventually made without them.—London Tit-Bits.
In a Strange Place.
Dawson (to stranger at Mrs. de Noo's reception)—Who is this Mrs. deNoo?
Stranger—She is Mr. de Noo's wife.
Dawson—And who on earth is De Soot
Stranger—I.—Exchange.
Not by lamentations and mournful
chants ought we to celebrate the funeral of
a good man, but by hymns, for in-ceasing
to be numbered with mortals he enters upon the heritage of a diviner life.—Plutarch.
Tbo experience of humanity in life is yery
likemfca'in a 'crowd."''Some fKiow' their
>fay fca'thefront,'others are pushed tothe
front, and others again are forced to the
One heat unit equals 772 foot pounds, and
the heat that must be extracted from one
pound of water to convert it into ice equals
109,624 foot pounds.
The German and Austrian Alpine society
has erected 419 taverns on the mountains,
Where students can board at reduced rates.
Toledo & Ann Arboi R'y Excursion Bulletin
Kates of one fare for the. round trip
will be made for the following conventions.
Chautauqua and Bay View Camp
Meeting at Bay View July 11th to .August 10th.
Baptist Young People's Union of
America at Indianapolis July 13th to
16th.
International Epworth League at
Cleveland July 6th to 9th.
North America Saangerfast at Cleveland July 11th to 14th.
Rates of one and one third fare for
the round trip for the following:
Hackley Park Camp Meeting at
Muskegon June 28th to July 10th.
Hackley Park Assembly Meeting at
Muskegon July 27th to August Sth.
Salvation Army State Encampment
at Flint July 27th to August Sth.
Por information as to date of sale and
and return limit of tickets, call on
Agent, T. A. A. & N. M. R'y or write,
W. H. Bennett, G. P. A.
A Million Friends.
. A friendin need is a friend indeed, aud
not less than one million people have found
just such a friend in Dr. King's New Discovery for Gosumption, Coughs and Colds.
If you have never used this Great Cough
Medicine, one trial bottle will convince you
that it has wonderful curative powers in all
diseases of Throat, Chest and Lungs. Each
bottle is guaranteed to do all that is claimed
or money will be refunded. Trial bottle
free at Nichols Bros.' Drug Store. Large
bottles 50c and §1. 1
Are again running
Has just been placed and we are now
prepared to do as good, work as can
be done and to produce as fine grade
flour as can be.made from wheat.
We shall continue our
Large Rim of Ctistom
work and are in shape to serve you ou
short notice with good llour or other
milling.
Onr flour wiil be found in all the
leading groceries, and sold as low as
any otlier goods of eqnal quality.
Give us a share of yotiv" trade.
Friis & Minnett.
Is tlie Best too Good ?
Is superior to all other preparations
claiming to be blood-purifiers. First
of all, because the principal ingredient used in it is the extract of genuine Honduras sarsaparilla root, the
variety richest in medicinal proper-
Cures Catarrh %ZJ£?&
low dock, being raised expressly for
the 'Company, is always fresli and
of the very best kind. With equal
discrimination and care, each of the
other ingredients are selected and
compounded. It is
THE
because it is always the same In appearance, flavor, and effect, and, being highly concentrated, only small
doses are needed. It is, therefore,
the most economical blood-purifier
p in existence. It
LrlilcS makes food nour-
Qfipnnil A isliing, workpleas-
OUnurUUH ant, sleep refreshing, and life enjoyable. It searches
out all impurities in the system and
expels them harmlessly by the natural channels. AYEIt'S Sarsaparilla
gives elasticity to tlie step, and imparts to the aged and infirm, renewed health, strength,and vitality.
-Sarsa
parilla
rren.ired "by Br. J. C. Ayer &(*«.. !.o*vr- : M'.*.*■»
Soli byjilll)ni!!gi*!te; Trice*SI: sis i*c:i..-..;"-.
Cures others, will ears yes
« Large Stock »
OF
Harness, Summer Horse Goods,
?nages, bimes,
and. Road,
for sale at Bottom. Prices,
agons.
THE STORE
SILK SALE!
Another Thunderbolt
One more demonstration of how we are knocking them
all out and doing more than our share to bring trade
to our city
Saturday, July 22nd
we place on sale our
«< ENTIRE STOCK OF SILKS IX*
making them for one week
our regular selling price. All our Natehang and J. 0. Cutter's celebrated
Dress Silks. Every yard warranted. All our fine Gros Grains, Satin
'Rhadames, Faille Francbaise, Bengalin? de Soies, Black Crystalino Ondee,
Fine Pean de Rnies. Plain and Jaequered China, all our Black and Colored
■Surahs.all onr Trimming Silks, all our new printed India Silks. Everything
you want and is seasonable. What you have in your mind for your
World's Fair Dress
will be sold you for cue week for 1-4 below lowest possiple price.
A Suit
IN THE
lothing
At a. K.sdLuctio.&si
ouse
Nothing Reserved.
OUR SHIRT SALE CONTINUES.
Rememeer—wortli $1.00
Former Sale 69c
Now 1 Shirt 63 e
a Shirts $1.20
• 4 Shirts 2.S5
Sizes s ■■.:?! unbroken.
Leading Clothier and Hatter.
.IsTo. jL .
is !hfi pl.-ied to gpt »1! feind*.- of
BAKERS GOODS
mill -j;fX ••i.**r.) fresh. 11 im.' !>V!.'i« Hr-uvi -mA Pasf.erv Cookiog a speuialty.
Vie jiigo keep a ln>« of
§1&«>f^^'^*»-i3.-5-5>___2 C^5S>3"_ fr%v>c*J*«?
i~01$
Sis'-,
x..j~J%Mt
•^s^H
A TEAK t Icn«i'rtiaw*iAlw*rflj
j teacli nny fairly mtelJtpeiii jmtsou ul *«tvr
I»t.\, i*!"> can- rwul ami wrin*,ah„ wltu,
3afl*ri»frtriivt!bii,*\vfli -work imltistriousiy,
'liowio mm Three Tlmnhnnd Dollars a
Iicirown loc«IUiMOVli<T.'v_'rtIif.y live.! will iilfofurn^lt
In jtltiatiwior^niiiloynit'iil^lftlm-liyMUfTiii cim HintaiitomitV
v.iinoticv furmt*'nuie.WMiCM,a>tiil«sj.l»m'e. tj»ily»ii(!-*pil.'i 1$ I
'•aiifeCt&.'Mimliututie worker (him eaeli'tltoim-i mti.ulitj. •
av-fuireaiivuiuplit miJ provide* m-it!yx!nl^ifi>-r.iVirfai j.r-.
, amiicr, wllo are -nmUiug' qvt-r SSH«0 rify'etttttuih.. Xi"s?-£ E ^
.»1 -ttOftl-Ife ViiftteH-nculursKKKlSrAdJwssm.i-
^Egai?>3 aafi TO &31CG04
Bring your Butter and Sgga and get th§ Cashpr Trade
Kfrngmbet- .No* L umt ~2 Wallets Blool?, nn4er ibu Opera II<*iw.
SO.2 -.v~ALLAOJi BLUi-K IS WXttlK-R TOU CAN GST A GOOD MEAI, CHEAP
~i*jb_
"&h!v.*Jg*
Object Description
| Title | 1893-07-20; Saline Observer |
| Date | 1893-07-20 |
| 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 |
