1895-05-09; Saline Observer |
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A. J. WARREN. Publisher.
SALINE, WASHTENAW CO., MICH., THURSDAY, MAY 9,1895.
VOL. XV.-NO. 28.
BUSINESS DIRECTORY.
T W. GAUNTLETT, D. O.
Graduate of the
Chicago Ophthalmic College and Hospital
"Will call and test your eyes if you address
meat
MILAN, - MIOH.
T> F. SHEEDER, A. M., M. D
Physician & Surgeon.
From the XX. of M. and Jefferson Hospital College, Philadelphia. Late assistant to the Bliss
Eye Hospital, Springfield, O.
. Special attention given to the eye.
Eyes tested aud glasses fitted.
Office and Residence—the Marsh house, Chicago St.
SAUNB - - MIOH.
D
%
R. G. E. HATHAWAY,
Dentist
Office over Nichols Bros, drug store.
SALINE, - - MICH.
F
e. jo:nes.
Attorney at Law.
Business attendedlto with Promptness and
Care. Office on McKay street,
SALINE, - - MIOH.
Q. |R. WILLIAMS
Attorney at Law,
Especial attention paid to Pension Claims of all
Icinds. Newcomb Block,
MILAN, - - MICH.
O W. CHANDLER, M D.,
PHYSICIAN and SURGEON
Office on Adrian Street, first door south of the
Wallace Block,
SALINE, - MICH.
p C. SLAGHT,
Veterinary Surgeon.
MACOtf, LENAWEE CO., MICE.
Connection witn Tecumseh by Telegraph
aud .by Mail.
AM. CABLS PKOUPTLY ATTENDED TO.
■fX7*ATERMAN'
PHOTOGKAPH GALLERY.
(Miss Gillett's old stand.)
Will bein Saline every Wednesday and shall bo
leased to meet all in need of work in my line.
ZaX\ and see samples of our work.
piSH'S
Barber Shop.
lair Cutting, Shaving, Shampooing and all
Work in the Barber Line.
HOMER FISH.
SALINE, - • MIOH.
.A. J. WARREN,
CONVEYANCER AND
Notary - Public.
All legal papers drawn on short
notice and at prices within the
reach of all.
General Fire Insurance a Specialty.
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 of
Fresh and Salt Meats of all Kinds,
Poultry, Fish, Sausafe, Etc.,
AT POPULA. "RICES.
Complete steam outfit for manufacturing sau
sage. Remember the old stand.
C. A. LINDENSCHMIDT
Council Proceedings.
Regular meeting held May 6, 1895.
President G. Burkhart in the chair
Presenttrustees: Hauser, Harmon,
Schittenhelm, McKinnon, Jackson.
Absent: Sturm.
Minutes of the previous meetings
read and approved.
A report of the street commissioner
on the defective sidewalks, presented.
On motion the street commissioner
was ordered to notify all parties to
build a new walk where needed and repair those that needed repairing.
Transcript of Circuit Court judgment
and of cost in the Mary D. Baty case
of |348.00,also the petition of said Mary
P. Baty asking that the said amount
be assessed upon the taxable property
of this village to pay the said judgment and cost of suit, was presented.
Motion by Jackson that an order be
drawn on the treasurer in favor of the
President for the sum of "J3IS to pay
the Baty judgment; motion did not
meet with approval.
P. E. Jones was re-elected village
attorney same as last year.
President nominated Geo. Barr for
street commissioner; no action followed.
A motion to raise no money by tax
this year was then carried.
On motion the sum of §200 be appropriated for cement or concrete walks,
also that the applications for such
walKS he numbered until the two hundred dollars is so expended.
On motion the board of ceme.tery
trustees be empowered to receive bids
for an addition to the cemetery, to be
submitted to the council.
The following bills were allowed.
Wm. Brainard, Marshal, care tramps S5.73
Geo. Cullen, Street Work, .75
Andrew Riggs, " " .®i
51. D. Wallace, '" " 4.40
S. W. Chandler, Health Officer for *91 S.OO
Meeting adjourned.
G. BURKHART,
C. N How, President.
Clerk.
Saline, May 6, 1895.
Present A. J. Warron, chairman; A.
C. Clarke and G. C. Townsend.
A motion was made and carried, ordering the sexton to set a post at each
end of the walk outside the cemetery,
to prevent teams driving therein.
Following bill allowed:
C. N. How, books and blanks
for Cemetery §5.31
raking cemetery 3.75
A. Eiggs,
C. Marion.
W. French,
J. Lutz.
3.50
5. DO
Meeting adjourned.
A. J. Warren,
C. I"". How, Chairman.
Clerk.
CAN I OBTAIN
Foe a
prompt answer and an honest opinion, write to
MI7NN Ss. CO.. who have bad nearly fifty years'
experience in the patent business. Communica
tions strictly confidential. A Handbook of Information concerning Patents and how to obtain them sent free. Also a catalogue of mechanical and scientific books sent free.
Patents taken through Hunn & Co. receive
■pedal notice In the Scientific American, and
thus are brought widely before the public with-
ont cost to the inventor.
issued weekly, elegantly illustrated, has b:
This splendid paper,
. strated,hasbyfarthe
largest circulation of any scientific work in the
Special Meeting held May S, 1895.
Roll call, full board present:
By unanimous consent,all voting, the
motion adopted at a former meeting to raise no money by tax, was re-
cinded.
Motion by Hauser to raise by tax
§358.00 was carried as follows:—
Yeas—Harmon, Hauser, Sturm.Jack-
son, Schittenhelm, McKinnon.
Nays—None.
Motion by Jackson that an order be
drawn on the treasurer for the sum of
S353.00 in lavor of President Burkhart
to pay the Baty judgment. Carried as
follows:—
Yeas—Jackson, Harmon, Hauser, Mc-
Kinnon, Schittenhelm, Sturm.
Nays—None.
President Burkhart nominated Geo.
W. Barr for street commissioner. Said
nomination was confirmed by the council.
Meeting adjourned.
Geo. Burkhart,
C. N. How, President.
Clerk. •>
Milan Murmunngs.
World. S3 a year. Sample copies sent free.
Building Edition, monthly, jaJJOa year. Single
copies, aa cents. Every number contains beautiful plates, in colors, and photographs of new
houses, with plans, enabling builders to show the
designs and secure contracts. Address
MONN 4, CO- NEW YOBS, 361 BROADWAY.
Mooreville. ■
P. E. Holcomb is laid up by ivy poison.
Mrs. James Lawrence is very sick,
with little hopes of recovery.
Boman Hathaway, of Vassar, was
here last week calling on friends.
The social at James Hall's was postponed on account of the death of his
sister.
The commissioners chosen by Judge
Kinne, were here last week to divide
the Hathaway property.
A drove of fat cattle, thirty-two in
number, passed through here last Sat.
afternoon en route for Ypsilanti. Average weight 12001bs. They came from
Holloway and Deerlleld.
Died, April 30, the wife of Prank
Warner. The funeral was held Thursday at the Umyersalisl church, Jesse
Powers preaching. The remains were
interred in the Mooreville cemetery.
Sick headache, constipation and indigestion quickly cured by DeWitt's
Little Early Risers, the famous little
pills. Nichols Bros.
Miss Gracia McGregor is visiting Detroit friends.
Mr. Homer has purchased a fine new
double carriage.
Mrs. H. Putman has returned to her
home in Union City.
Sunday and Monday we were favored
with slight showers.
Wm. Easterly has his walks graded
ready for the cement.
A. B. Smith made fast time on his
bicycle one day last week.
Miss Rheinfrank spent Saturday and
Sunday with Saline friends.
Dora Smith has returned from her
visit with Ypsilanti friends.
Mrs. Minto and daughter Blanch, of
Corunna, are visiting relatives here.
Mrs. Dorson and children left this
week for a visit with friends in Canada.
Atty. P. Jones and wife, of Saline,
visited Milan friends the last of the
week.
Mrs. Whitmarsh and Mrs. Barnes
spent a day last week visiting in Ann
Arbor.
The masicale at Mrs. Chas. Schmitts
Wednesday evening was a very pleasant
affair.
Ona Clark, Jessie McMullen and
Rev. Stone attended the Baptist As-
sociational meeting at Dexter last week.
Dr. and Mrs. Thomas will move in a
few days to Maysville, Tuscola Co.,
where he will resume his medical practice.
Died, May 5th, after a long illness,
Mrs. D. Hitchcock. Deceased leaves a
husband, son and two daughters to
mourn her loss. Services were held at
the residence Monday afternoon, Rev.
Stone officiating.
Needham & Son are making numerous improvements in their line of business. They have enlarged their brick
oven and put a fine show case in their
window so that the passers by may be
tempted to go in and partake of the edibles.
Wonderfully Good Effects
by the use of Speer's Port Grape Wine
are chronicled by noted families and
physicians all over the world. Its
seeming high price is no barrier to its
use by those who appreciate its age and
want a wine that is effective and reliable and sure to assist the physician in
his work of saving life and restoring
health.
In New York, Brooklyn, Philadelphia, Baltimore, Washington and on
the cars and steamboats the wonderful
effect of the use of Speer's wine is the
daily theme of conversation.
The price of the Port is $1.00 per
bottle. Some druggists will persuade
you to take a port wine at 50 or 75 cts.
a. bottle instead because some of them
are cheap" watered stuff they make
more profit on, even when sold at half
the price. Unfermented Oporto Grape
Juice is 75cts.; the Claret pts. and q_*;s.
30 and COcts. Be sure-to ask for Speer's
wine. If they want to shove off another wino don't take it, but write direct
to Speer's vineyards at Passaic, N. J.
for it.
Wide Tires.
It i-s singular that there is not a
more decided tendency toward the use
of wide tires on vehicles, particularly
those designed foruse on country roads.
Experiments conducted by prominent
manufactures of vehicles show that it
requires but little more power toroove a
wide-tired vehicle, and under some
conditions even less power, than needed for narrow tires. The good roads
problems would be nearly solved if
wagons were fitted with wide tires
which would in passing crush the
ridges and fill the ruts.
In another generation when toll
roads were much more common than
now it was the custom to allow any vehicle fitted with tires four inches wide
or more over the road free, on the theory that such a vehicle improved the
road. In these days when legislators
are -struggling with questions as to
how roads can be improved. It mignt
be well to consider the granting of a
substancial rebate of road tax to the
owners of a farm providing he would
fit the vehicles which he uses oh the
road with wide tires. The "working
out" of road tax as it is ordinarily
practiced in a farming community is a
farce. To give a rebate of this road
tax in consideration of the use of wide
tires could not be other than an im-
provment. Wheel Talk.
.*►-•-•■———■
It is stated that the following is the
rule of order in China:
A newly born son in China is presented by its maternal grandmother
with a pound of pork, twelve boiled
hen's eggs, a branch of pomegranate,
100 duck's eggs and 100 hen's eggs uncooked, while other relations add pork
and vermicelli. Other equally ridiculous presents are presented later.
" Mrs. T. S. Hawkins, Chattanooga,Term.,
says, "Shiloh's Vitalizer SAVED MY MFE.
I consider it .the best remedy for a debilitated system I ever used." For Dy"PePsiai
Liver or Kidney trouble it excels. Price
75 cents. Sold by Nichols Bros, 2
J. A. Richardson of Jefferson City,
Mo. Chief Enrolling force SSth general
assembly of Missouri, writes; I wish to
testify to the merits of One Minute
Cough Cure. When other so called
cures failed, I obtained almost instant
relief and a speedy cure by the use of
One Jklin ute Cough Cure. Nichols Bros.
Sleepless Nights.
Who but those who have had the unhappy experience can tell the horrors
or appreciate the unhappy experience
of people troubled with sleeplessness'!1
The damnable hatred of all the demons
in hell for mankind must surely be appeased by the consciousness of such hu-
tnau suffering. The long, dreary, unhappy hours, who can describe them
and why is it necessary? If you have
ever been troubled you know what they
are, and if you have been spared you
have no interest in the knowledge of
such suffering.
Mrs. A. Bateman, Romulus, Mich.,
after describing her suffering from
sleeplessness extending over a period
of eight years, receiving at times only
bout twelve hours' sleep in a week,
writes of Dr. Wheeler's Nerve Vitalizer as follows: "I began taking it in
common doses and the first nigh tl slept
eight hours end had a nap the next
day. Every night since I have slept
eight or ten hours. Oh, how thankful
I am for having had Dr. Wheeler's
Nerye Vitalizer brought to my notice
and for the benefit received from it.
Stop and think,eight years of sleeplessness and cured in a day, does it not
seem like a miracle?" This medicine
is equally as effectivein curing nervous
prostration, spasms, fits, sleeplessness,
mental depression, exhausted vitality,
despondency, sexual and general debility. For sale at C. P. Unterkircher's
drug store.
John,have you seen that woman lately?
John, in astonishment, What woman?
That woman Picking Grapes for
Speer's Unfermented Grape Juice.
Just see her in another column, and
read about it. It is absolutely pureeing preserved by a new process of fumigation and is used by churches for communion purposes where fermented wine
is discarded; also by physicians where
the medical properties of the grape are
desired without stimulation.
BICYCLES!
If you are thinking of buying a
wheel, call on mo' at the Depot and
get prices on the DAUNTLESS,ACME,
OWEN. SYLPH and other high grade
wheels. Satisfaction guaranteed.
Every wheel warranted lo bu lirst class,
in workmanship an :1 material.
Yours
D. A. Bennett,
Saline,
Mich.
Por Sale—40 bushels choice Rural
"New Yorker, No 2, seed potatoes.
Seed procured last spring from /. A.
Everitts seedmen, Indianapolis, Ind.
R. B. Rquse.
Trees! Trees! Trees!
Evergreens, both Common and Rare
and Choice Varieties,Deciduous Trees
Ornamental Trees of all kinds,
Large Trees for Park and Street
Planting,Hedge and Bordering
Plants,1?ruit Trees and Plants
Budding Stocks and Root
Grafts, Nat Trees and Ornamental and Flowering
Shrubs, Tree Seeds.
We have a larger assortment than
any other nursery in America.
IE so send us a ist of what you wish to plant
And we will quote you lower prices than ever
offered.
When you send thelist^utout this advertisement and we will send you by mail, post paid,
one small KVERSREEN THEE, FREE, or we
will send twenty samples'of our trees. GtolO inches high, 5 or 6 sorts, for 25 cents in stamps.
Write at once. •
The Evergreen Nursery Co.
EVERGREEN, WIS.
Prepared for Summer?
You must answer "No," but we can say "Yes."
For many months we have been busy with our work
of preparation for the summer. The results are before
you and our immense trade the past few weeks testing
ta the public approval of our goods and prices.
Wash G-oods
In hundreds of styles and dozens of qualities, ranging fronrcheap Ginghams at 50c up to fane Organdies
at 40c.
Our SPECIAL for this week is a complete line of Fine Inpoet-
eu Scisses—50c goods, in all the leading shades at 31c.
Wash Silks at 31c and 39c still draw many buyers.
Our lines of SUMMER UNDERWEAR are complete from a 5c
Jersey Vest to. a fine all silk Ypsilanti Union Suit at S4.50.
Our sales on SHIRT WAISTS exceed twice over those of any
previous season, and customers say the reason for it is that our
Waists are the .best styles, the most perfect fitting and the lowest
priced in the city. You will acquiesce in their verdict when you
see them.
E. F. Mills & Co.
20 Main St.
Ann Arbor.
Ice Cream at Alber?s^-=s^^-
And if you want a good glass of
Soda Water, Milk Shake, Root Beer, G-inger
Ale or Pop be sure and give me a call.
I have also a fresh line of Candies, Oranges, Bananas and fruits of all kinds.
I sell Ice Cream by the dish, quart or gallon, and in large quanties
very cheap. '
O*. A. jmSESR
G. C. TOWNSEND'S
* Fop Dry Goods.
^*-~ ^$ -&-^ -2&
>*p-ri^'%^A-.--r-££3nh^^^^
THIS MUCH MUST BE ACKNOWLEDGED There is no mower
manufactured that has as few gear wheels or pinions as the McCormick.
Our gear has three pieces—tho spur wheel, bevel wheel and bevel pin^
iou. This simple gearing giving the highest motion with the "least friction, has proven so valuable an adjunct in lightness of draft and even
werk thit to improve upon it and gain any preceptible advantage in
draft can only mean a loss in the direction of simplicity or durability, or
both. Neither extreme lightness nor extreme light draft cin alone be
considered desirable in a mowing machine.
The McCormick mower is as light as is consistent with good
work and durability. The man who causes two blade of grass to gi:ow
where but one grew before h:is tlunu much to advance the interests, of
mankind, but us some otic has well said, the man who adds a lot of
wites, hooks and*tools when none whatever is needed, has simply mistaken activity for work, and is proceeding upon the plan of using four
men to keep one man's hair on.
The McCormick possesses all the good. qualities of a first class
mower. ■ It is a perfect gem. will'work in every kind of grass.and is ex-
polled by none. Buy the be$t.
WABREKT & JACKSON, Agts.
H. ■.»•.>, a.^j i, t,.
Object Description
| Title | 1895-05-09; Saline Observer |
| Date | 1895-05-09 |
| 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 |
