1895-09-26; Saline Observer |
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The Saline
A. J. WARREN, Publisher.
SALINE, WASHTENAW CO., MICH., THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER, 26 1895.
TOdLvX^--^!®.^.
BUSINESS DIRECTORY.
j( T W. GAUNTLET!", D. O.
Graduate of the
Chicago Ophthalmic College and Hospital
Will call and test your eyes if you address
meat
MILAN, - MICH.
T> F. SHEEDER, A. NI., M. D
Physician & Surgeon.
From the TJ. of 31. 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 Eesidence—the Marsh house, Chicago St.
SALINE - - MICH.
+,
.'*»■
Milan Murmunngs.
T\R. G. E. HATHAWAY,
Dentist
Office over Nichols Bros, drug store.
SALINE,
MICH.
P E.JONES.
Attorney at Law.
Business attended'to with Promptness and
Care. Office on McKay street.
SALINE.
MICH.
Q. R. WILLIAMS
Attorney at Law,
Espepjal:attentiQn paid to Pension Claims of all
fc"nds, Hewcomh Bloclf,
MILAN, • - MICH.
%
Q W. CHANDLER, M D.,
PHYSICIAN and SUKGEON
Office on Adrian Street, first door south of the
Wallace Block,
S VUNE, - MICH.
f * C. SLASHT,
Veterinary Surgeon.
3IACCW, LENA.WEE CO., MICH.
Connection wita. Tecumseh by Telegraph
and by Mail.
AU. OAI.15 PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO.
WATERMAN'
PHOTOGRAPH GALLERY.
(MiEs Gillett's old stand.)
Will be in Saline every Wednesday and shall be
•leased to meet all in need of work in my line.
Jail and see samples of our work.
•RISK'S
Barber Shop.
lair Cutting. Shaving, Shampooing and all
Work in the Barber Line.
HOMER FISH.
SALINE, - - MICH.
A. J. WARREN,
CONVETANCER AND
ffloiar-y - Public.
All legal papers drawn on short
notice and at prices within the
reach of all.
General Fire Insurance a Specialty.
Whaley & Sons' eider mill is running.
A cold wave struck here Monday
morning.
Eev. C. B. Case has returned to his
home in Clayton.
Rev. H. F. Shier is the uaine of the
new M. E. pastor.
A. B. Dexter is breaking in a new
bicycle now-a-days.
Mrs. Chas. Clark returned Saturday
from her visiting tour.
The Ann Arbor fair is being well
patronieed by Milanites.
There are enrolled 251 pupils thus
far and more expected this week.
Mrs. S. Egner is entertaining a sister and friend from Detroit for a few
days.
Mrs. Luxtou and Charlie have returned from a four weeics sojourn in
Ontario.
Mr. and Mrs. Webb Blackmer are at
home to their friends in their new home
on Wilcox street.
Miss Blanch Farrington indulged in
a birthday party Saturday afternoon
and all the little folks had an enjoyable
time.
Married: Chas. Lamkin of this place
and Miss Theresa Heral of London
Thursday p. m. Rev. J. W. McGregor
officiating.
THE SACRED CODFISH.
CITY MEAT MARKET.
(J. A. L!N!!KNS''H3in>T
k still .Milt-"I'l •'t.-tu'l. wltfri-hi-ls (ilwajs |,n
i'lirt'ii to sttrvt. his iMistumiTK with THE BEST
fR THE :V"ARK.ET in the ""ne. of
Fresh Mil Suit Meats of all Kinds,
I'oiiliry, Fish. Sausa-'e, Etc.,
AT POPULAR ■***"" ens.
* umplplf stfji.ni «»ntttl fur ituimifiwtmihi: s:iu
<atr«'. Ki*nmm.ber the old staipi.
G. A. UNDEN3CHIWIDT
CAN I OBTAIN A *A"EEN*E? "for a
Prompt answer and ani honest opinion, write to
IUUNN <fc CO-.Trtio have hadneaTlySfty years*
experience in the patent business. Commnnlca.
tions (strictly confidential, A Handbook of Information concerning Patents and how to obtain them sent free. Also a catalogue of mechanical and scientific books sentlreo.
Patents taken thronRh Maim & Co. receive
special notice in tho Scientific American, and
thus are brought widely before the public without cost to the inventor. This splendid paper,
issued weekly, eleftantlyillnstrated. has bylar the
largest circulation ot any scientific work in the
world. S3 a year. Sample copies sent free.
Building Etlition, monthly, J3J0 a year. Singla
copies, 35 cents. "Syerynumber contains hean-
tiiul plates, in colors, and photographs of new
houses, with plans, enabling builders to show the
latest deslcns and secure contracts. Address
MUNN & CO, KEW YORK, 361 BBOADWAY.
Bridgewater.
Jacob Schumacher was in Detroit,
last week.
Rev. C. Clessler made a trip to Ypsilanti Monday.
F. W. Schcen received a carlond of
salt last week.
Mr. Schallhorn will leave the John
Riedel farm this month.
Bridgewater was almost crowded
with poultry Saturday.
Phil Blum Jr. spent a few days in
Detroit last week on business.
Chris. Schlegel bought a nice;road
horse of Ed. Stierle last week.
Jacob Riedel is painting and papering a house for Jacob Blum Sr.
Atnile Schadderand mother went to
Ypsilanti Saturday to spend a week.
Geo. Bcettner is buying poultry to be
shipped from Manchester next wopk.
Bcettner & Nissly shipped a carload
of poultry to New York City Saturday.
Chas. Hildinger spent a day last
week on his farm two miles west of
here.
John Stabler had the misfortune to
lose a finger while at work on some
machinery.
• The wells in the neighborhood are
so dry that nearly everyone must dig
deeper for water.
Mrs. John Hutzel had the misfortune
to scald her foot so severely lhat she
cannot stand on it.
Oscar Blum bought a milch cow at an
auction last Friday, the next day she
took French leave and raced up the
railroad track ahead of a handcar.
A search was made for her next day.
Phil. Blum Jr., administrator of the
Miss Matilda Riedel estate, will sell at
public auction, Tuesday, Oct. 81 h, Ihe
deceased farm consist iii*** of 70 tic:i*'"=,
-10tiiT- s improve.!, tho l>:il;iiev. in j.o nl
in aw Mandinii timber land.
Tho Conservative papers of Groat
Britain belittle as a pitiablo affair tho
demonstration in Hyde park, Loudon,
of tho National League For tho Abolition of tho Houso of Lords. They say
there were "only" 10,000 persons present, and that they looked very small and
weak scattered as they were among tin
12 speakers' platforms. Bnt the Conservative papers that make light of this
demonstration forget it is a tremendous thing that there should be such
a meeting and such a league at alL
When one thinks back and recalls what
would have been the status in old feudal
days of the very people who now. compose that league, the distance the common people have traveled in Great Britain will be appreciated. From tho
rwineherd over whom his lord possessed
"lower even of life and death the -an
titled citizen of England has readied
the point where he dares to protest pub'
licly against the right of the hereditary
lord to make the laws governing him.
In no reign previous to Victoria's would
such a gathering have been possible. It
wonld have been almost high treason to
suggest such a thing. As to tho noble
lords, for them this movement is the
handwriting upon the wall. Tho twentieth century will doubtless look down
upon British lords still, but they wi»>
no more be hereditary lawmakers.
rhe Proposal to Take It Ont of the State-
*nonse In Boston Creates a Sensation*
The Worcester Gazette says:
Charles Francis Adams recounts "The
Story of the Cod" in the Springfield Republican. In 1782 John Adams secured
from Great Britain an eminent diplomatic victory after a wearisome contest
—the right of fishery—and on March
17,1784, John Howe, a Boston member,'
asked and received permission to hang
tho historic codfish on the wall of the
chamber of representatives in the state-
house. Thirty yoars later another war
with Great Britain occurred. John
Quincy Adams was called on this time
as a diplomat, and he, too, saved the
codfish once moro from British encroachments. The statehouse cod, which the
sacrilegious are now threatening to store
in the garret, is emblematic of commerce, war and diplomacy and tells of
Massachusetts victories in all three
fields. After the peace of 1783 John
Adams quartered the codfish in his coat
of arms, and it is there now. This must
have been the origin of the phrase "codfish aristocracy," once irt-common use.
It was commonly spoken in derision,
but the pride of the Adamses in the codfish wonld seem entirely worthy.
On this subject the New fork Sun remarks:
There is a proud and beautiful building in Boston. Bnlfinch did it. It is a
Parthenon surmounted by a gilded gas- ■
house, and to those who love it it is the
supreme architectural achievement of
the world. Even tho limited or prejudiced persons who deny its charm cannot forget the joy of its associations.
To go to Boston,, to view that dome
with an eager eye and to perspire with
the pulchritude of it and the deeper
thought that one doesn't have to live in
Boston is not tho least of pleasures in
a world that persons of fair digestion
regard with a certain amount of attachment. As a matter of fact, the dome ia
a hollow fraud. Mr. Bulfinch, who has
had the distinction of having an eminently parochial street named after him,
was not lucky enough to have-his designs carried out, and the statehouse,
with its feeling Dutch name, is not ali
that it might have been. Bnt it has
merits. There is or was in it the sacred
codfish, a palladium that fell from heaven plash into the Frog pond in the
days when Boston was an eminent seaport. This codfish was almost human
and quite superhuman. It conld wink
It had learned to say cultyur.and literature and leftenant, besides the other
things that are said in Boston. Thero
was a silver bathtub in which it nsed to
tipple when the Boston nine got a
game. It used to leap into the air whenever Governor Greenhalge appeared
with blue knit thinking cap on. It*was;
sprinkled with champagne whenever the
Ancienl and Honorable Artillery company had a feast. All the thinkers in
the legislature revered it It would
wag its tail at a good thing and drop
dead wbonsv-sr a bore was up.
They have been "fixing np" the state-
house. Evidently some idiot is in
charge. The sacred codfish is not to be
included among the treasnres of the restored statehouse. The Law and Order
people say it drinks too much. The A.
P. A. says it has a Hibernian counte-"
nance. All the samo, it was the best in
the state. It was the most venerable in-
stution there, except Harvard college
and George Marden of Lowell. It is
gone. It has been torn down. It is nil.
So falls the codfish aristocracy. So fades
a glory unmistakable.
The Grip.
An experience with ibis. disease during
all its -past epidemics, warrants the bold
claim thatDr^ King's New Discovery -will
positively cure each and every case if taken
in time, and patient takes the ordinary care
to avoid exposure. Another'thinghas been"
proven, that those who have used Dr. King's
New Discovery; escape the many troublesome after results of this disease. By . all
means get a bottle and try it. Itis guaranteed and money will be refunded if no
good results follow its use. Sold by Lisrer
& Sheeder. 4
His Shirt.
•'What do you charge to wash a
shirt?" inquired the man at tbe counter in the laundry.
"What kind of a shirt?" asked the
clerk, with his mind ou outing shirts,
dress shirts, negligees and the various
other possibilities in that line.
"A dirty shirt," replied the man,
and tlie clerk fell in a faint.—Detroit
Free Press.
While in Chicago, Mr. Chas. L. Kah-
ler, a. prominent merchant df Des
Moines Iowa, had quite a serious time
of it. He took such a severe cold that
he could hardly talk or navigate, hut
the prompt use of Chamberlain's Cough
Remedy cured him of his cold so quickly that others at the hotel who had bad
colds followed his example and half a
dozen persons ordered it from the
nearest drug store Tbey were profuse
in their thanks to Mr. Kahler foR.tell
ing them how to cure a bad cold so
quickly. For sale by C. F. Unterkircher.
tired on Water.
Old Lady—Poor man! So you've been
living on water for three days. Here's
a quarter.
Rollingstoncj—Ycs'm. I was workin
me way on a cnnalboat —Opelika (Ala.)
People's Choice.
Tha police census shows the population of New York city to he 1,8S8,780
even without Brooklyn and Staten Island. And Chicago has not even an out
lying cow barn that she can annex.
— m wi
For Sickness Get The Best.
Old choi-e win '-- fi*»m Sp'*erV vineyards, Passah;. The rich Port Grape
th**- Claret, vin, 1SSK tbe Burgundy
and unferinented aro unexcelled for en-
l«i*tainmi*nts, family use. and invalids.
Ot>' bull"*.*. <>f Speer's is wor'h three* of
(.'aliforuia wine.
Fr3s Pills.
S'lid your iuldres* to H. 'E. "Bnclden & Co
Chirngo; nild gwt:if••en sample VioX: of Di*.
Kings New f.iTo till-, A tr'at will" convince you o'i|Dlieir me-its. These" pil's; nre
esisyinactionn.n&.an' piirticnlurly effective
iu the enro nf Jjick ITr nda<-he and Constipation. For Mnluriit and F/iver" troubles; they
have b 'i?n : p oveel inval lable. They are
guaranteed to be peifectly free from every
deterions mbsdiuce ami to he purely Vegetable. They do not weaken by their action
but by giving tone to the stomach aud bowels greatly invigorate the-*vRtem. Kegular
size 25c per box. Sold by Lister Sf Sheeder
4
Captain Sweeney, TJ, S. A., San Diego
Cal., says. "Sbiloh's Catarrh Kemedy is
the -first medicine I have ever found that
would do me any good. Price 50c. Sold
at Lister & Sheeder. 6
Trees! Trees! Trees!
Evergreens, both Common and Rare
and Choice Varieties, Deciduous Tree§
Ornamental Trees of all kinds*
LargeTrees for Park and Street
Plan ting, Hedge and Bordering
Plants,Fruit Trees and Plants
Budding Stockb and Root
Grafts, Nut Trees and Ornamental and Flowering
Shrubs* Tree Seeds.
We have a larger assortment than
any other nursery in America.
If so send us a list of what you wish to plant
and we will quote you lower prices than eTer
offered.
. When you send the list cut out this advertisement and we will send you by mail, post paid,
one small EVEEGBEEN TREE. FREE, or we
will send twenty samples of our trees, G to 10 inches high, 5 or 6 sorts, for 35 cents in stamps.
"Write at once.
The Evergreen Nursery Co.
EVERGREEN, WIS.
-**
etroit
eekly
ribune
f
-TO-
75 Cents a Year.
Unsurpassed as a Newspaper.
Uiirivaledin Popular Interest.
^■oundlv Republican.
An Agent wanted in every
Township in Michigan, to
wh(.m liberal terms Trill "be
given.
THE TRiBUNE - - Datrol".
PALACE STBAM1R3.
LOW RATES
CLEVELAND.
PITTSBURG, ._
BUFFALO and
ALL POINTS EAST
EVIRV BVBNINO BBTWaiN
DETBOIT.#CLEVEUND
Connecting with earliest trains at Cleveland
for all points East, Sonth and
Southwest.
Sunday Trips June, July, August and September 0n*|
POUM '**"■*'* **■■< W.MK B«TW*«M
TOLEDO, DETROIT^ MACKINAC
PETOSKEY. THE --SOO,** MARQUETTE,
AND DULUTH.
Two new steel pissenger steamers have just
been built for our Upper Lake Route, costing
$300,000 each. Seed ior illustrated pamphlet.
Address,
A. A. OCHANTZ. a. r. * t. a.
DETROIT, MICH. 0
ike DEfmniT 4 aHawo siEjy any. ca
Its A Sharp Piifci
We have set for ourselves this fall. Every thing portonds a returh. of
better times, and we are prepared to take advantage the changed conditions. Merchandise of every description is high and itill adyatiding'.
In the face of this fact we are selling goods below last seasons low
prices and doing it because we think it good business policy.
DRESS GOODS.
We shall, as usual, easily lead the Dress Goods procession in Ann
Arbor. Whether yon wish a cheap all wool Hohiirietta at 19c of
an exclusive pattern dress from^the Paris or Berlin market of high
cost and exquisite design" we can supply you
CARPETS
'While others are advertising closing out sales of Carpets at phenomenally low prices we are daily selling quantities of carpets at our-regular prices, which in every case are as-low, and in some lower, than
their «-fake sales'' figures. Our all wool ingrains at 39 and 48 are
wonderful values, while in tapestry and body brassies we have many
exclusive patterns and sell them at figures as low as the lowest.
E. F. Mills & Co.
20 Main St.
Ann Arbor.
Just Received,
A Large line of Boots and Shoes
^B«w^And more corning.
Can dress that Foot with the shoe you want. The price cuts
no figure. Bring the babies: Bring the Whole Family and take
Dinner with us.
Wo have a New Line of
Everything needed for Fall and Winter wear.
Underwear forC hildroa.in best, values.
We will sell you a good Syrup for 15c per gal. A good
Tea dust for 12 1-20
S. T. Fairbank
--City Bakery"
Wo keep constantly on band, and fresh daily,
All kinds of Bakery goods, such as Home made,
Vienna, Rye and Graham Bread. Fried Cakes,
Cookies, Pies, Jelly Rolls and Layer *Cakes,
Wo also make any kind of Cake to order on short notice.
m
i 1
For the balance of the season we will furnish tho. above article at remarkably low prices, by the gallon, as tho people of Saline never heard of.
Call ±03? IPx^o^B.
In Soft drinks we have Ice Cream Soda. Ginger Ale, Sour Soda and
Root Beer.
• Give us a call and be convinced'that we lead the
Ice Cream trade, both in quantity and price.
F. H. BEST, The Baker.
Farmers Who Build The Truss. Wire Fence
Save money and have (hu best Foiicp Ijiat.can iw nuulu with wjrn,
as there is no other fence thai c:in oouipiiro wiili- it f(»i* sli'iMiVlli.
durability or beauty. Farm rijrhls'fur •"•ilH.^ir-feiicu built ji■ . ;iiiy
tinie by loaving orders at llm 0!V*.i*r.yi'r"()iii>*<-, SalTno. l"rie>;"50..*"."",
anil 40 cents per roil. Agents Wanif-il: *
F. A. CULLpt, tn'Il|t
-^*
ARE YO]
te
if
Send Postal Card for illustrated Catalogue of
8
El] WINCHESTER
»N/ MODEL IS73
Repeating
Repeating Shot Guns
-Ammunition
-TO—
WINCHESTER REPEATMB OSB mMPkWi
NEW IIAVEX, CONIS.
Object Description
| Title | 1895-09-26; Saline Observer |
| Date | 1895-09-26 |
| 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 |
