1894-10-04; Saline Observer |
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A. J. WARREN. Publisher.
SALINE, WASHTENAW CO., MICH., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1894.
VOL.XIV.-NO. 49.
*
&
D
BUSINESS DIRECTORY.
PROFESSIONAL.
R.S. E. HATHAWAY,
Dentist
Office over Nichols Bros, drug store.
SALINE, - - MICH.
Y E.-JONES.
Attorney 'at Law.
Hus'raess'attended to with Promptness and
Care. Office on;MoKay street,
SALINE, - - MICH.
p R. WILLIAMS
Attorney at Law,
Espial attention paid to Pension Claims of all
kinds. Newcomb Block.
MILAN, - - MICH.
C W. CHANDLER, M D.,
i»HYSICIAN,ana SURGEOJS
yfllce on Adrian Street, first door south of the
Wallace Block,
SALINE, - MICH.
p C. SLAQHT,
Veterinary Surgeon.
MACON, LENAWEE CO., MICH.
Connection with Tecumseh by Telegraph
and,by Mail.
AM, CALLS PROMPTLY ATTENBBD TO.
MISCELLANEOUS
V\7"ATERNIAN'
PHOTOGRAPH GALLERY.
(Miss GUlett's old stand.)
Will be in Saline every Wednesday and shall be
jleasedto meet aU in need of work in my line.
Oall and see samples of our work.
Bridgewater Budget.
KVCORDON,
The Pioneer painter-
Qyer Forty Tears Experience.
JaFtfnge, gigB an$ Ornamental Painting, Paper
Hanging, Freacoins, Etc.
SALINE, - MICH.
F
ISH'S
Barber Shop.
lair Cutting, Shaving, Shampooing and all
Work in the Barber tine.
HOMER FISH,
§ALINE, - - MICH.
A. J. WARREN,
■ CONVEYANCER AND
Iffotary - Public.
All legal papers drawn on short
notice and at prices within the
reach ol all.
General Fire Insurance a Specialty.
M ARBOR ELECTRIC
GRANITE WORKS
Designers & Builders
°f
Artistic Granite and
Marble Memorials
On hand \iwge quantities of all
the various Granites in tbe Kough,
and are prepared to execute fine Monumental work on short notice.
John Baumgardner,
Prop.
Ann Arbor.
The county.ditch in the big- marsh is
completed.
Geo. Schlegel visited the fair at
Adrian a few days last week.
Democratic speaking at Guthard's
hall Saturday evening Oct. 13.
Miss Anna Beutler spent last week
with Chas Schcen and family at Dexter.
Mrs. Pomeroy, of Ypsilanti, called
on Mrs. F. W. Schoen Saturday on her
way to Clinton.
Joseph Gauss and Chas. Hildinger
drove over to Ann Arbor last Friday
to visit the fair.
Mrs. Geo. Rheinfrank enjoyed the
fair at Ann Arbor last week also visited friends a few days.
The musical entertainment or play,
Busted Community, last Thursday
evening was not attended as expected
but will be repeated some eyening next
week.
Mooreville.
CITY MEAT MARKET.
G. A. LINDENSCHMIDT
Is still at the old stand, where ho is always pre
pared to serve his customers with THE BEST
IN THE MARKET in the line q£
Fresh and Salt Meats of all Kinds,
Poultry, Pish, Sausage,* Etc.,
AT POPULAR PR CES.
Complete steam outfit for manufacturing sa
sage. Remember the old stand.
C A. LINDENSCHMIDT.
Bean harvest, is at hand.
Most of the wheat is sown.
Dandelions ,are in blossom.
Jack Frost did not forget to call this
way.
Mr. and Mrs. Fisher are calling on
friends here.
Chas. Jackson has moved into D.
Bankin's house.
Many of our young people attended
the fair at Adrian.
Mrs. Mary Gillette, of Chicago, is
visiting at A. G. Mclntyre's.
Frank Olds czptured the premium
on Holsteins at the Adrian fair.
Mrs. Smith, of Briton, has been
spending afewdaysat Mr. Henderson's.
Wm. McMullen and wife, of Corunna,
are visiting friends here for a few days.
Chester Culver and wife of Ypsilanti,
are visiting his brother W. H. Culver
and family.
Alfred Davenport will deliver about
15 loads of celery to Tecumseh tbis
week.
Rev. Smith preached his farewell
sermon at the Baptist church last Sunday, and he was given a chicken pie
social Tuesday evening.
It must be that the editor of the Argus has lived on the clay knolls of Ann
Arbor where tbey raise Tom Thumb
Corn and red eye beans, so long that he
thinks the correspondent of th Observer luny on raising corn if he will come
down from his perch to the southern
part of the county he may get his eyes
open.
m, . m.
Milan Murmurings.
Weather fine and roads dusty.
There are 250 pupils in our school.
The infant son of M. Hitchcock is
seriously ill.
Mrs. Duersome isenterlainiugguests
from out of town.
D. Burchard has returned to his
home in Detroit.
'The,.Baptist fair has been postponed
9, couple of weeks.
Messrs E. Hinkley and F. Guy drove
to Dundee Monday.
Mr. aud Mrs. Ward aro entertaining-
guests from Ypsilauti.
Mrs Frank Guy entertained guests
from Mooreville last week.
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Fulle Dexter,
Saturday Sept. 29th, a daughter.
The Chautauqua Circle will meet at
the usual place Saturday afternoon.
Mesdames M. Day and W. Woolcott
visited Ypsilanti the last of the week.
Mrs. J. Sprague who has been visiting Mrs. G. R. Williams has returned
home.
Rev. McMuhon and family are at
home to_their friends at the M. E. parsonage.
Mell Barnes returned Sunday worn*
iug from a three weeks sojourn in
Chicago.
The base ball tournament which
takes place Friday is the theme of conversation.
Goo. Leonard, from the east, is the
guest of his brother O. W. Leonard for
a few weeks.
Miss Forsythe, the second Primary
teacher, spent Sunday with hor parents
near Pittsfield Junction.
Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Fuller, of Macon,
spent Saturday and Sunday with Atty.
and Mrs. G. R. Williams.
House cleaning is- here so are scowls,
cross words, stove blacking, decorated
countenances and cold victuals.
Under the auspices of the L. O. T. M.
A play will be given by load talent at
the opera house Thursday and Friday
nights entitled Gyp the Heiress or The
Dead Witness.
Business.
There is certainly a revival of activity in trade centers. Whether it will
be temporary or permanent depends on
several things. If merchants, manufacturers and stockbrokers make np their
minds that it is going to be permanent,
then ifc -will be bo.
There is a number of reasons for the
present revival of activity. First, the
settlement of the tariff, of course. Then
the endeavor of the Whisky trust to get
all its goods ont of bond before the tariff law -went into operation made a wave
in the dead current. The trust scoured
the country to borrow money to pay the
tax, and that created a movement
among many million dollars. This made
a show of financial activity. Then, too,
there will necessarily be a large quantity of new goods bought this autumn
by country merchants everywhere. They
generally reported their stocks on hand
to be smaller this summer than they
had been in years. This, however, was
no sign that more goods had been sold,
but the contrary. Ifc meant that the
merchants had prudently abstained
from buying what they knew they
could not sell.
Now, however, people mnst buy. The
crops are sufficiently abundant to enable
the rural inhabitant to indulge a trembling hope that he will be able to pay
his store bills. People generally have
worn out their old clothes and their
old shoes. Now they must buy new,
and the buying will be all the heavier
because it has been so light for a year
past.
The Electrical Kitchen.
The cost of electricity is all that prevents its immediate utilization in nearly every situation where heat and light
are wanted. Undoubtedly early in the
twentieth century even farmers' wives
will do their cooking by electricity. The
wear and tear of life that will be saved
in that day is incomputable. Electricians ought to work with all their
might and enthusiasm to produce electricity cheaply. Then the marvels related in Bulwer's "Coming Race" will
be every day events in all families.
Electrical kitchens are making their
way slowly. A wealthy man in Brooklyn has his house fitted with one. There
is in New York city an electrical dining
club, where food is cooked in the new
way. It is necessary to have the utensils
specially made. A contrivance is attached whereby they can be hooked to
the wires. Then the button is pressed.
The cook learns just what temperature
she wants for boiling, broiling, roasting
or baking. That temperature is secured
by the strength of the current, which
may be regulated by a key. The temperature is shown by a thermometer. Then,
knowing just how long it will take to
cook a given dish, no more watching is
required. The cook may go off and play
the piano till the time is np.
Two Brooklyn burglars lately got an
object lesson on robbing drug stores.
They were trying to get into one
through the fanlight over the front door.
The druggist slept in the rear of the
room and heard them. He is a small
man, but he can think at the rate of
about a million vibrations in a second.
He slid noiselessly to his big ammonia
bottle and poured out a glassful. Then
he dodged to one side aud waited developments. The burglars were two—a
little ono and a big one. The big one
lifted the little one npon his shoulders
so that he could crawl through. He got
in, then helped the other down. The
little one was in front as they approached the counter behind which the druggist who had presence of mind was con-
oealed. The man of medicines dashed a
wineglassful of ammonia into the face
of the small burglar. He howled and
dropped. The other bent over him to
see what was the matter. He got a
glassful in the neck. He jumped
through the glass of the front door, yelling like a wildcat. A policeman came
np at that moment and caught the other one.
The sugar refining trust did not miss
a lick in its preparations for the new
tariff. A British steamer from the West
Indies got into Philadelphia with
4,642,000 pounds of sugar on the even-
ingof Aug. 27. That night at midnight
the new tariff act putting a duty of 40
per cent on sugar went into operation,
so that the steamer's cargb escaped the
duty.
A Korean mandarin in full dress
wears cream colored trousers with sea
green leggings. He has aesthetic taste
enough to match his sea green leggings
with a green coat thafc has huge white
cuffs. When he wants to have a really
jolly lark and do something very gay,
he goes kite flying, no matter how old
he is.
Farmers have a bit of good news.
The grain crop of Europe and all North
America will this year be short 9 per
cent. The agriculturist who has grain
to sell will get a good price, something
like old times, a little later in the season. . _ ... ... „
Cure For Headache.
As a remedy for all forms of Headache
Electric Bitters has proved to be the very
best. It effects a permanent cure and the
most dreaded habitual sick headaches yield
to its influence. We urge all who are
afflicted to procure a bottle, and give this
remedy a fair trial. In cases of habitual
constipation Electric Bitters cures by giving the needed tone to the bowels, and few
cases long resist the use of this medicine.
Try it once. Large bottles only Fifty
cents at Nichols Bros. Drug Store. 2
Rpring Repairing Repairing.
Bring in your broken watches,
clocks and jewelry aud have them repaired.
All repairing promptly done and
satisfaction guaranteed.
Orders in all goods.
f E. O. HILL, Jeweler.
THE SICK HEALED.
The Weak Made Strong.
If you are sick, or debilitated, do not
be discouraged. Compound Oxygen has
wrought many wonderful cures
and has given strength to many. We
know this to be true from our experience of twentyfive years and we are
ready to furnish abundant proof.
It is worth your while to examine
the evidence, which you can do by
writing to us. We will send you free,
of charge, a book of 200 pages with
numerous testimonials and records of
surprising cures of asthma, bronchitis,
catarrh, consumption, rheumatism,
nervous prostration, neuralgia, and
other forms of disease and debility.
Home treatment is sent out by express to be used at home. Office treatment is administered here. The effect
is the same. Consultation free.
Our success has given rise to many
imitations. Avoid dissapointment and
loss of money, as there is but one genuine Compound Oxygen, by sending to*
Dr. Starkey & Palen, 1529 Arch street
Philadephia, Pa., San Francisco, California, Toronto Canada.
SPEER'S
GRAPE WINES,
ALSO
UNFERMEMTED GRAPE JUICE.
Used in the principal Churches for Communion. Excellent for females, weakley persons
and the aged.
Speer's Port Grape Wine
. ,FOUR YEARS OLD.
T*HIS CELEBRATED WINE is the pure juice
■*■■ of the dead ripe Oporto Grape, raised in
Speer's vineyards, and left Slanging until they
shrink and become partly raisined before gathering. Its invaluable
Tonic and Strengthing Properties
are unsurpassed by any other Wine. Being produced under Mr. Speer's personal supervision.its
purity and genuineness are guaranteed by the
principal Hospitals and Boards of Health who
have examined it. The youngest child and the
weakest invalids use it to advantage. It is particularly beneficial to the aged and debilitated,
and suited to the various ailiments that affect
the weaker sex.
Itis in every respectA WISE TO BE RELIED
OX.
Speer's IMermented Grape Juice
Is the juice of the Oporto Grape, preserved in
its natural fresh, sweet state as it runs from the
press, by fumigation and electricity, thereby
destroying the exciter of fermentation. It is
perfectly pure, free from spirits and will keep in
any climate.
Speer's (Sooialiate) Claret
Is held in high estimation for its richness as a
Dry* Table Wine, especially suited for dinner use.
Speer's P. J. Sherry
Is a wine of Superior Character and partakes
of the rich qualities of the grape from which it
is made.
Speer's Climax Brandy, Vin, 1876,
IS A. PORE distillation of the grape and stands
unrivalled in this country for medical purposes
Ic has a peculiar flavor similar to that of the
grape from which it is distilled, and equal in every respectto I he high price Old Cognac Brandy
of France.from which it cannot be distinguished.
See that the signature of "ALFRED SPEER,
Passaic, N. J.," is over the cork of each bottle.
SOLD BT DRUGGISTS WHO KEEP FIRST
CLASS WINES.
The" Fayette Normal University is a
school with a purpose. Those who are
most familiar with its work speak in
the highest terms of its excellent
methods and equipments.
1 TOU EELLEVE
That any firm can sell you new, or even old goods for
less than we are selling 1894 styles for.
Be undersold, and our stock this fall has bargains lor the shrewd
buyers. Don't forget this and remember that a comparison
of prices and goods is the only true way of determining actual worth. We are headquarters for men's
and boy's Clothing, Hats, and Caps, Boots and Shoes
etc. Everything a man or boy wants to wear at Spot Cash
Prices. Inspection of our stock invited whether you buyjor not.
Ees-peo-fcf-u-Xl^y-
Harper & Parsons.
Cash Outfitters
Wallace Block,
Saline.
■A-PJTXr ARBOR
WILL RULE AT
.%
^CLOAKS and FURS^v
This popular department of our store offered some special inducements to early purchasers— S6.98 buys a nice §10 Cloak, very latest
styles and Trimmed with Fur. §9.50 buys a handsome $12 Cloak. 36
inches long, elaborately trimmed with Fur aud Braid.
Novelties at $12—S15—S18—$20—822 and $25. Equal to former
Season's garments at $6 to $10 more.
Astrachan Capes from $12«up.
SILKS and DRESS GOODS .
Finest stock iu the County. Values such as no other year has ever
seen and such as uo year will see again for a long period.
E. F. MILLS & GO.
20 Main St., Ann Arbor.
G.. TOWNSEND
DRYi GQOBS BOOTS AND SHOES,
We keep the Newest, the Brightest, the Cleanest, and the Best in
our lines of trade. Having purchased a Complete Line -in .
Fall and Winter Goods at Very Low prices we will *
sell to you at Corresponding prices.
We Call Special Attention to our
or capes.*
40 inch All Wool Serge all colors.
54 inch black, blue and tan Broadcloth suitable for suits
42 iuch all wool dress Flannels.
36 inch Novelty dress goods at 25c per yard. * ;
Double Fold dress Flannel at 25c per yard.
40 inch black Henriutta from 25c to 75c per yard.
A complete line of Dress Linings and fancy jet trimmings and braid.
WHITE FLANNELS RED FLANNELS
Canton Flannel, bleached, unbleached and Tennis Flannel from 6 to 12Jc.
It will pay to see our different lines before you get
your supply for winter. AU sizes,:-alitMndsv^lt prices.
For Men, for Women, for Misses, for Eloys i-and for
Children.
German Kniting Yarn.
Saxony Yarn.
Coral Yarn.
Shetland Wool.
* Ladies' KidJGloves
S Ladies' Silk Gloves.
Chenille ^Eable^Sprrads
Gheijille Gurtnins.
In Hosiery we can supply you at any time with redtton,-fleeced* lined or
wool hose. See our table of 4c Prints. A large stock of boot, shoes and
rubbers for everybody. Come and see us and we will-do you-good.
G C TQWIVTS.E:ND
Davenport Block.. New Store
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Object Description
| Title | 1894-10-04; Saline Observer |
| Date | 1894-10-04 |
| 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 |
