1897-07-08; Saline Observer |
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The Saline Observer
*4i
A. J. WARREN. Publisher.
SALINE, WASHTENAW GO., MICH., THURSDAY, JULY 8, 1897.
VOL. XYIL-NO. 36.
BUSINESS DIRECTORY.
D C. TRAVER, Wl. O.,
PHISICIAN aafl SUKGEON
Office in the Davenport building over the bank.
SALINE,
MICH.
p F. UNTERXJRCHER, IW.4 D.
Physician & Surgeon.
Office at Unterkircher's Pharmacy Chica-
:o St.
SALINE - MIOH.
r\R.Q. E. HATHAWAY.
Dentist
Office over Citizeu's Bank.
SALINE, - - MIOH.
"** E.JONES.
Attorney at Law.
Business attended to with Promptness and
Care. Office on McKay street,
SALINE, - - MIOH.
. WILLIAMS
Attorney at Law,
special attention paid to Pension Claims of all
kinds. Neweomb Block,
MILAN, - MICH.
p C. SLAGHT,
Veterinary Surgeon.
MACON, LENA.WEE CO., MICH.
Connection witn Tecumseh by Telegraph
...... en... •'i'an^y,*4aij.. "
ALL CALLS PBOMPTLY ATTENDED TO.
■^•ftTIRWM-
" pftorggKAFttGAWisBY.
.'"i*Sss t3illet4's o\& stand.*)
^iilbein Saline evety "Wednesday and shall be
.1 (Vised tp meet all in need of work In my line,
•tvll and see samples of pur vtQfk:
IRISH'S
Barber Shop.
rair Cuttintr, Shaving, Shampooing nd all
j Work in the Barber Line.
SALINE,
• HOMEK FISH.
MIOH.
-_^-=eaN<.-,3¥ANOEB AJ*"D«™~
Iffotar^ - Public.
All legal papers drawn on short
notice and at prices within the
reach of all.
'cneral Fire Insjr.pj a ipeiiilty,
THE MILD POWER CURES.
HUMPHREYS*
That the diseases of domestic ani-
kmals, Houses, Cattle, Sheet. Doos,
/Bogs, and Poultry, are cured hy
Hnmphrcy8'*Vctcrinary Specifics, is as true as that people rldo on railroads,
send messages by telegraph, or sew with sewlne
machines. It Is as Irrational to bottle, ball and
bleed animals In order to cure them, as it Is to
tnkp passagp li*a slqopfrom 'Sew yin-ktp Albany.,
^tge'tif^n tiieiies^'Sfables and feJA'mmended by
th'a"tl. & 'Army Cavalry Officers.
t"B~S00 PAGE BOOS on treatment andcarsoi
"Domestic Animals, and stable chart
mounted on rollers, sent free.
VETERINARY
CURES tFevevs, Congestions, Inflammation.
A.A..1 Spinal Meningitis, Milk Fever.
B. B.—Strains, Lameness, Rheumatism
C. C.-p'sffinip.er, Nasal I)"Sf**H,rges.
ti. tr.^Bajs-oi' 8f »l>s, Wom&aSr'- '■•>
E= E.—CouIbtIib', JELeai'cs, FhcUmonia.
T. J?.—Colic or Gripes, Bellyache.
G. G.—Miscarriage, Ilemorrhaees.
H.H.—Urinary and Eadney Diseases.
1.1. —Eruptive Diseases, Mango.
J. K..—Diseases of Dicestion.
Stable Case, with Specifics, Manual,
Tet. Cure Oil and indicator, $7.00
Price, Single Bottle (over 50 dosesl. . .60
SPECIFICS^
-"■^■■•■BWBMWHWWMWP"^"" mmmmmmmm
Sold by BiuggUts; or Sent Prepaid anywhere
.nd in any quantity oa Seceipt of "Price.
HTJIVIFBBBirS' MEDICINE 00-,
Oorner William and John Sts,, Naw York-
HUMPHREYS'
HOMEOPATHIC
SPECIFIC No.
In nse SO years. Theonlysnccessfnlremedyfor
% Nervous Debility, Vital Weakness,
and Prostration, from over-work or other causes.
Bl per tial, or 5 vials and large vial powder, tor $5.
Sold by Drngglsti, or .ent postpaid on receipt of price.
•{■rrrMPHHEYS' MEDIOIITS QQ„
Comer William and John Sts,, Hew York.
■*?
SIKIltD.OOsvctirlJDelngBiaffs'by JoHn IV
Goodwin.Troj-.X.V^Rt wort for U9. Kcdcr,
you mny cut make as much, but we cue
tench you quickly hovr to earn from if 5 to
#lo . day .t tlie start, andmore as you g t-
on. l'MtUs*xcs,.U ages. Inanyiwrtof
^America, you can commence at home, giving all vourtime,orspare moments onH-to
the work. All U new. Great pay SCKK f..t
every worker- We start you, furnishiitr
amrthlng-. EASILY*, SrEEDIlf leanuit
'•AUriCULAUS I'KEF. Aadressat ome
STissas » tO.. I ilRTIAJSD. aM' -
Mooreville
0
Sow hot! is tbe cry.
The Baptist Sunday school will unite
with Milan in a picnic "in Mr. Hacks
grove Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Forsythe spent the 4th
in Monroe.
Mrs. Lottie Cuse ot Detroit is spend
ing the week with her parents, J. D
Forsyth.e
A good many spent the 4th in Ann
Arbor.
Wm. McAllister has three sisters
visiting him from Birmingham, Alabama.
There were many family gatherings
the 4th.
Lodi News.
Bertha Jedele has been spending a
few days at Fred Bassetts.
Strawberries seem to be plenty
around here. It is difficult to find sale
for them.
Elmer Bassett ot Ann Arhor, is
helping Mr. Hamlin in haying.
Abe Meyers is building a new barn.
The neighbors all turned in and helped
him raise it last week.
Quite a number went to Ann Arbor
to spend the fourth.
Mr. and Mrs. Sereno Bassett of An n
Arbor, have been visiting their son
Fred.
Miss Herbert and Mrs. Fred. IJasset t
went to Ann A.r.b&r Tuesday to, attend
the ejar3g day exercises, a,t the Llnivei'-
sity. Thfs** wppe faelcl under the tap-
pan oajes, -".nci weca very good, much
pleasanter than in the hall.
Farmers are very busy cutting hay.
It is very ljeay.y this, ye^r- and the rain
hinders iyxxm getting it cured-
INAUGURATION DAY.
and
When It Will Fall Upon Sundays
What Then Happens.
From the year 1017 to the year 2085
inauguration day will fall on Sunday
every 28 years, hut in changing from,
the twentieth century to, the twenty-
first the 40. ygar. "period eeaies in, aud
affer. 20J§ the next inatiguration Sun-
fey Will be in 2188. So, there will be
a 40 year period from 2181 to 2321 and
from 2277 to 2317, hut only a 28 year
period from 2373 to 2401, as 23 is uot
divisible by 4.
During any century whose number is
divisible by 4 inauguration day falls on
Sunday 4 times. During any century
whose number is not divisible by 4, i%
falls on Sunday only 3 timeg. """tobi
2000 to 2100, for ^e*t^ice,'^'-will fall
on Sunday. 4J tiroes, aaS also from 2400
*9 !!*$■ §Q «U«1 84 being divisible by 4,
foit from 1Q00 to 2000, it will fall on
Sunday only 3 times, and so from 2100
to 2200, 39 and 21 not being divisible
by 4. Observe that, in speaking of the
"number of a century" we do not mean
the year; 20 is the number of tho century—which we divide by 4—and 2000
is the year. Observe, also, that in all
this we are not speaking of the recurrence of the date, March 4, but of the
particular March 4ths that are inauguration days.
Here is a table showing how many
times inauguration day falls on eaeh, $
the seven days of the W'ie^ ft^ft' \\&
year 1800 to the, vear. 8-J^-, "
DATS OF "THE
Sunday.
Monday , ..
Tuesday......
*"Vednesday... ...
Thursday
Friday
Saturday—
"S£*S*|,"S!
!;8;S'8 8|
"61 BIB •8'*?
'!"SSg
' Perhaps it niigbt \n} Y"eU \a fay \hai
when jriuugur»||pn, day. falls. 9:0,' Snn-
daj/'t-he incoming 'president^ tfikerf the
Oath oh Shturday, March 3, lro'tf is* not
formally inducted into office nntil Monday, March o. This is done to prevent
a lapse iu the office, for the outgoing
president has no authority as such after
12 o'clock, noon, on March 4, whether
that date fall on Sunday py ^ anyother
day. If, $ierefnre, *3ccas^on sheruW arisft
"jjetwsen noon gn Sunday, Sfar'cF4,'and
noon on Monday, March 5, for the exercise of the presidential authority, the
incoming president, having taken the
oath of office, would be qualified to perform the duty. Such a case never has
arisen, but it might arise.—Philadelphia Times.
Bucklen's Arnica Save.
The Best Salve in the world for Cuts
Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Kheum, Fever.
Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chilblains,
Corns, and all Skin "Eruption, and positively enres Piles, or no pay required. It is
guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction or
money refunded. Price 25 cents per box.
Por salo by "LiNtor & Sheeder the Drng.s»ists.
THS CHIN AS AN'INDEX.
111 l.e ijinu'd ai ..ilrSFH lmeorwnra.
faioilly ami ht.iii.ntbly. hy tliosv tiV
.'iilicr >cx, yoimjriir ulil, anil hi thtir
,wu!tn-aliiirs,Avh»*n'Ycrtlirylivr.Aiiv
oiumhii 1I0 ihewitfc. Easy to learn
i\*e fnniish every thinjr. We start vim. No rh-fc. Yon ran devol»
vonr spare moments, or -ill yimr lime to the wurK. This is an
fiit'TCl v neiv lenil^mil brings n ondtrful snreess to every worker
Brjrinuersatv-eomiiisr fnnn f^3 lo *5»» perwerkantlanvanls.
mil morea.ti'ra little exjierience. We can nirui.-hyoutheeni-
iii.jvini-iit anil teach youeUKK. So «imccto explain here. Full
'niVBiat'on FKKK. T JIVE -*■ l'V>.. *1 MIST*. MilM'
Can "Con Tell a Person's Character by the
Shape of His lower Jaw?
I have read Dr. Leuf's letter on
"Physiognomy" in The Medical Council and am prompted to say, in reply to
his request for contributions on the
"chin:"
Protruding chins characterize men
and women of the get there type. Successful people usually carry their chins
thrust" forward, with compressed lips.
This chin, if heavy, with broad rami
and swelling masseters, indicates fighting blood.
A retreating chin shows lack of force,
mentally, morally and physically; usually of the yielding sort; soon discouraged; desires protection; small executive force. The development of other
faculties often makes up for this defect.
A small, well rounded chin, with
mobile and red cushion of flesh upon,
indicates a pleasure loving owner. If
dimpled, all the more so, for dimpled
chins belong to coquettes. People with
dimples love to be petted and loved;
like admiration and praise. Generally
fickle. Usually this chin is healthy, recuperative and long lived.
Broad chins signify nobleness and
large dignity, unless vertically thin,
when, if with it there he thin lips cf
bloodless kind, you find cruelty.
Square chins with little flesh denote
firmness and executive ability. These
make good haters.
Drunkards usually have a circular
line about their chins.
Slovens have wrinkles ahout their
chins.
Long, thin chilis are poetical, unstable and delicate in constitution. Snch
people are subject to bowel derange-
Ptepts, If thin through the angles of
the mouth, too,, they -ore prone to tuberculosis. Generally short lived.
Medium chins with a suggestive bifurcation in the center, with small
mounds of flesh on either side, characterize generosity, impulsiveness, cheery
natures. (The same sized chins, with a
dab of flesh just under the center of the
lower lip, indicate meanness,selfishness,
brutality.)
N. B.—No one feature can be taken
in judging character. Often development of other faculties of mind or feature entirely governs. In each case take
the "totality of indications" before
judging.—St. Louis Cliniquo.
ROBERT BURNS.
Tue Poet's First Lore and tlie Verses In
Which He Praised Her.
"Robert Burns, the Scottish poet, was
born at Mount Oliphant, Jan. 25, 1759,
near Ayr, in a clay built cottage, reared
by his father's own hands. When a lad
of 18, the family moved to Lochlea.
His first three or four years at Lochlea
were still with the poet times of innocence, an<i "hii* conduct was governed
l?y tfe» sstxietest rules of virtue and modesty." At last he set his affections on a
young woman named Ellison Begbie,
the daughter of a small farmer, and
asked her to he his wife, but he could
not prevail on her to marry him, and
this disappointment had a malign influence over the poet. Long afterward,
when he had seen much of the world,
Burns spoke of this girl as, of all those
pn whom he ever fixed his fickte affections, the one most likely to have madea
pleasant partner for life. It was to her
he addressed the pure and beautiful love
lyric "Mary Morison," and in these
lines the lyric geni^is ef Burns was for
the first tim,o \«id;eniaj)ly revealed:
*STesti,«ei\vriien, ^o, the trembling- string
* '£he, danca gaecl through the lighted ha*.
"J*o.the<iJ-ay- fancy took its wing,
"j sat, hut neither heard nor saw,
■""hough this was fair and that-was Toraw
And yon tho toast of a' tho town.
I sighed and said amang them a', >
"Ye are nae Mary Morison."
Oh, Mary, canst thou wreck his peace
■Wha for thy sake would gladly dee ?
Or canst thou break that heart of Ms
"*""hase only fault is loving thee ?
If love for love thou wilt not gie,
-At least be pity to-mo. shown.
A thought ungentle fcatrfia bo' '
"***he thought of Mary Morison,
^Boston. * \^pman"'!3, jompnii*^
Ttf'E WfPMUNKe
How lie Bouses Himself, and, Welcoaiea.
tlio Spring. ^
As the woodchuck sleeps away the
bitterness of cold, so in his narrower
chamber sleeps the chipmunk. Happy
kittle hermit, lover of the sun, mate of
the song sp^rrpv* and the butterflies,
what a goodly and hopeful; token of thet
earth's"renewed life is he, verifying the
promises of his own chalices, the squirrel cups, set in the warmest corners of
the woodside, with libations of dew and
shower drops, of the bluebird's carol,
the sparrow's song of spring!
He comes forth from his long night
into the fullness of the sunlit day, to
proclaim his awakening to his summer
comrades, a gay recluse clad all in tbe
motley, a jester, maybe, yet no fool.
His voice, for all its monotony, is inspiring of gladness and contentment,
whether he utters his thin, sharp chirji
or full mouthed cluck, ox laugh^ § ?!>%
teripg rnocfeery as he scurxi^ i*\*at "kV%
narrow; d-sor, x
'**^Ie winds along. Ijis crooked pathway,
of the fence rails and forages for half
forgotten puts in tho familiar grounds,
brown with strewn leaves or dun with
dead grass. Sometimes ho ventures to
the top rail, and climbs to a giddy ten
foot height on a tree, whence he looks
abroad, wondering, on the wide expanse
of an acre.
Music hatb charms, fa*; him, andy.ou,
may entrance Jjim with a softly whistled tune and entice him tp frolic with
I No Gripe
"When you take Hood's Pills. TheDig, old-fashioned, sugar-coated pills, wliich tear you all to
pieces, are not in it with Hood's. Easy to take
Hoods
and easy to operate, is true
of Hood's Pills, which are J% 511
up to date in every respect. W^- III ^S
Safe, certain and sure. All ■ III *9
druggists. 200. C. I. Hood & Co., lowell, Mass.
The oiily Fills to take with Hood's Sarsapariila.
a herd's grass head gently moved he-
fore him.
Wfien the fairies have made tho white
curd of mallow blossoms into cheese for
the children and the chipmunk, it is a
pretty sight to see him gathering his
shar1* handily and toothily stripping off
the green covers, filling his cheek
pouches with the dainty disks and
Ecanrpering away to the cellar with his
ungrudged portion. Alack the day
when the sweets of the sprouting corn
tempt him to turn rogue, for then he
becomes a banded outlaw, and the sudden thunder of the gup announces his
tragic fate. He keeps well the secret of
constructing his cunning honse, without a show of heaped or scattered soil
at its entrance. Bearing himself honestly and escaping his enemies, the cat,
the hawk aud the boy, he -lives a long
day of happy, inoffensive life. Then
when the filmy curtain of the Indian
summer falls upon the year again he
bids us along good night.—"New England "Fields and Woods." ,
DAYS TO COME. "
A long, grim corridor; a sullen bar
Of light athwart the pavement, where no'
fleet, t
Pale sunshine spreads for dark her winding
sheet.
A light not born of noon or placid star
Glows lurid through tho gloom, while from
afar
Beats marching of innumerable feet.
Is this the place where tragic armies meet?
The throb.of terror that presages war?
I strain to see; then softly on my sight
Thero falls the vision, manifold they come—
White, listless day chained to her brother
night;
Their hands are shackled and their lips are
dumb,
And as they meet tho air where each one dies
They turn and smile at me with weary eyes.
—Helen Hay in Century.
A Valuable Prescription.
. Editor Morrison of Worthington, Ind.
"Sun" writes: "'You have a valuable pre-"
scription in Electric Bitters and I can
cheerfully recommend it for Constipation
and Sick Headache, and as a gene-rat sys
tem tonic it has no equal." Mrs. Annie
Sthele, 2G2"i Cottage Ave.. Chicago, was
all run down, could not eat nor digest
food, had a backache which never left her
and felt tired and weary, but six bottles of
Electric Bitters restored her health and
renewed her strength. Price 50 cents and
§1.00. Get a bottle at Lister & Sheeder's. 6
Notice to Creditors.
State of Michigan county of Washtemv s s
Xotice is herejjy given, that by an order of
the Probate Court for the county cf Washtenaw,
made on the T day of May, A D. 1897. six months
from that date were allowed for creditors to present their claims against the estate of William
GKienther. late of said County deceased, and
that all creditors of said deceased are required
to present their claims to said Probate Court, at
the Probate Office in the city of Ann Arbor, for
examination and allowance on or before the 7
day of November next, and that such claims will
be heard before said Court, on the 7 day of
August and on the S day of November next, at ten
o'clock in tlie forenoon of each of said days.
Dated, Aun Arbor, May 7. A. D. 1807. .
H. WirtNewkirk,
Judge of Probate.
Mr. J. M. Good, a prominent business
man of Springfield, O., savs: "1 was
recently injured in a bicycle accident.
I suffered intense pain ii'ona a, ^ruisp
and concussion*. Ijad tjrieda.ll tl*t,e n'*.ilu,
i ■
Our Spring and Summer Styles in Dress Good.?
at a large reduction to close every piece.
All 75c Spring and Summer Dress Goods 5gc
All 65c - 4gC
All 50c
All 39c
All 25c
39c
2gc
igc
At these reductions, absolute and genuine, you can buy
a dress so cheaply that you ean well afford ' to reconsider your determination not to buy this season.
We shall also offer all our fine
Imported Pattern Dresses
in Spring and Summer Styles at
A Reduction of 25 Per Cent
making each pattern costing just J its regular price.
E. F. Mills & Co
The war in Greece is ended,
And onr prices are away down.
In Jowolry, Watches. Chains and Silver
ware wo have a line assortment and
will sell them to you RIGHT.
Bicycle repairing a specialty.
' E, H. Cressy.
was alrnoat ?*is'.,aataip.eo;$!s> J"i*om. the fti*st
ap.pjli'jqtien,. Xjigh.tijin.jj l%pi Drops.
•.vi,ll do all that is claim,ed foi- it." " For
jsaleby L Mj.'Pimm'sCash Grocery.
**■■■->. I* mJ&>
Br&l
■ t '
i^AlLRO^rD*.,
Toledo and Points East und Soul h
Lt-avo Pittslield, South 7:40 a. m
8:51 p. iu.
11:37 a. m.
FOB
Owosso, Alma, Mt. Pleasant. Clare.
Cadillac, Manistee, Petoskey a«d points
"Leave Pilteh"eJ.d.. "Sfarlii. S:3'3 a. na-
4:39 p. m.
11:58 a. m.
If you are going to the Northwest,
you can savo money by buying tickets
via Frankford and'Ann Arbor' Steamers
which run between Frankfort, Manitowoc and Kewaunee Wis. and Frapk-
fort. Menominoo and Gladstone Mich.
^W. H Bennett, G. P. A.,
Toledo
Buy Drugs of'Lister & Sheeder
Harness, Carnages,
Snrries, "Wagons, •
Road, and Milk Wagons,
Trunks, and Valices, see
6,000
Soil o±.
WALL PAPER
At p§g^ 'fcotiom prices
Chas, Burkhart.
WARREN & JACKSON Agents.
Subscribe for the OBSERVER
i
ii
.,!:*
Object Description
| Title | 1897-07-08; Saline Observer |
| Date | 1897-07-08 |
| 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 |
