1899-04-20; Saline Observer |
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The Saline Observe
A. J. WARREN, Publisher.
SALINE, WASHTENAW CO., MICH., THURSDAY APRIL 20, 1899.
VOL. XIX.~NO.26
Miscellaneous
r* F. UNTERKIRCHER, M. D.
Physician & Surgeon.
Office at ".TJnterkircher's Pharmacy Chiea
go St.
SAL—TE - MICH.
J)R.G. E.'.KUHL,
Dentist
Office over Citizen's Bank.
SALINE, - - MICH.
At Manchester every Wednesday and _urseay
p e. jo:nes.
Attorney at Law.
Business attended to with Promptness and
Care. Offlce on McKay street,
SALINE, - - MICH.
Q . WILLIAMS
<* Attorney at Law,
Egpeclai;attention paid to Pension Claims of a!
.-• • kinds. Newcomb Block,
MILAN, - MICH.
'
n C. SLAGHT,
Veterinary Surgeon.
_—(—, lenawee;co., MICH.
Connection with Tecumseh by Telegraph
and by Mail.
ALL CALLS PROMPTLY ATTEND TO.
WATERMAN'
PHOTOG-APUJGAILERY.
(Miss Gillett's old stand.)
Will be in Saline every Wednesday aud shall be
rieased tp meet all in need o£ work in my line
Jail and see samples of our work.
A. J. WARREN,
CONVEYANCER AND
Notary - Public.
"AU legal papers£drawn'*pn short
notice and at prices within the
reach of all.
-neral Fire Insurance a Specialty
^ H.COOK
Auctioneer
MILAN, - - MICH.
»».—^_—v%^^*—^—►*%/^%^/**i
PATENTS
Caveats, and Trade-Marks obtained, and all Pat- J
ent business conducted for moderate fees. <
< ;our OrncE IS OPPOSITE.O. S. PATENT OFFICE J
I and wo can secure patent >n less time than those *j
, remote from Washington.
Send model, drawing or photo., with description. We advise, if patentable or not, free of J
charee. Ourfeenotd—tillpalentissecuret". !
A PAMfH—r, "How to Obtain Patents," with i
cost A same In the U. S. and foreign countries J
lent tree. Address,
C.A.SNOW&CO.
Orr. "patent Office, Washington, d. C.
Dr. Humphreys'
Specifics act directly upon the disease,
•Kthout exciting disorder in other parts
of the system. They Cure the Sick.
HO, CUKES. PRICES.
1—Fevers, Congestions, Inflammations. .25
Jit—Worms. Worm Fever, Worm Colic.. .25
A—Teething, Colic, Crying.Wakefulness .25
4—Diarrhea, of Children or Adults 25
ft—Dysentery, Gripings,Bilious Colic... .25
S—Cholera, Cholera Morbus, Vomiting. .25
7—Coughs. Colds, Bronchitis 25
8—Neuralgia, Toothache, "Faceache 25
9—Headache, Sick Headache, Vertigo.. .25
10—DyspepsIn,Indlgest"on,WeakStomach.25
11—Suppressed or Painful Periods 25
19—Whites, Too Profuse Periods 25
13—Croup. Laryngitis. Hoarseness 25
14—Salt Rheum, Erysipelas,Eruptions.. .25
15—Rheumatism, Rheumatic Pains 25
IS—Malaria. Chills, Fever and Ague 25
IT—Piles, External or Internal .25
18—Ophlhnlmin. Weak or Inflamed Eyes .25
19—Catarrh, Influenza, Cold in t_ Head .25
aO-Whooplne-Cough 25
31—Asthma. Difficult Breathing 25
22—Ear Discharge, Earache 25
23—Scrofula, Swellings and Ulcers .25
24—General Debility, -Weakness .25
25—Dropsy, Fluid Accumulations 25
28—Sea-Sickness, Nausea, Vomiting.... ..25
2T—Kidney Diseases 25
■jSS-IVervous Debility .1.00
29—Sore Month, or Canker. - 25
SO-—inary Weakness, Wetting Bed... .25
31-Painful Menses, Pruritus 25
33-Diseases of the Heart, Palpitations.1.00
33—Epilepsy; St. Vitus' Dance 1.00
14-SoreThroat, Quinsy.Diphtheria... .25
>f—ChronicC'onseBtions, Headaches.. .25
»*r-r—ip.Hay;Fever -— 35
Br. Humphreys' Manual of aUDlseases at your
Druggists or Mailed Free.
_""—I by druggists, or sent on receipt of price.
Hamphfeys—ed. cb7,"Co~r.William" 2; Johists.,
Hew York.
HUMPHREYS'
WITCH HAZEL OIL
" THE PILE OINTMENT."
a JforPlles-Exten—or Internal* B_d orBIeeding;
J—tula inAno; Itching orBIeedingof theHect—i
Tfce relief Is Immediate—the cure certain.
" tWPE,50OTS. TSXAL SIZE, 25 OTS.
Sold by Dnisglels, or aenl posl-paW onrecelpt of price.
■■'-.-' sH*sUM—ES'_D.C0-, llltllSlTUU—SI., Sew—fa
Mooreville.
Scarlet fever has abated.
Miss Luceal Mclntyre's health is improving- slowly-
Mrs. Chester Culver of Ypsilanti, is
visiting* at Hesekiah Culver's.
Roy Ford was home last week and
made a business trip to Toledo.
Robert Needham and Mr. Osborn
talk of trading places.
Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Forsyth of Ypsilanti, wers out to the farm Monday.
Oat sowing has commenced among
the farmers.
The maccabee team went to Milan
Monday night and conferred the degree on two candidates. They had a
gay time and a good supper.
Milan Locals
Dr. Herdman was called from Ann
Arbor in great haste Sunday evening
to consul tin the case of Charlie. Mesic
who is seriously ill with spinal trouble.
W. H. Whitmarsh is having his
house improved with a coat of paint.
Edwards & Co. are doing the work.
Mrs. Edith Randall of Ann Arbor is
the guest of her cousin Miss Florence
Chapin.
Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Rouse returned
Friday from a five weeks visit with
friends in Pittsfield.
Rev. Lockart of Corunna preached at
the Baptist church Sunday morning
and evening.
Mrs. O. A. Kelly and Lelia spent
Tuesday in Detroit.
Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Minto and Son
left for a visit with friends at Uuion
Chty, Monday.
Mrs. Alice Trussell is quite ill and
Mrs. Carrick is taking her place in the
2nd primary dept. for a few days.
Mrs. Alva Dexter is quite ill.
Dr. Mesic returned Friday from a
two weeks visit with friends in Memphis, Mich.
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Sill and daughter went to Detroit Friday,
The reception given at the residence
of Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Debenhams,
Saturday evening in honor of Rev. Geo.
E. Wilson of Clyde was well atten — d
and a social success.
Mr. and Mrs. J. Hafford and Miss
Minnie Mead left for Albion Wednesday where they will make it their home
in the future.
Mrs. Blogett left Saturday for her
home in Ann Arbor after a two weeks
visit with Mr. and Mrs. Gbas. Sill-.
Mrs. Lucy (-lark went to" D—roit,
Tuesday on business.
Mrs Pyle i» «nlertiiiiiini"-gM—isfruni
Chicago and Ann Arbor'this vvei'K.
Mrs. Preston of Glades-have returned
from their Burr Oak visit.
Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Smith have
moved on their farm east of Milan.
Ed Blackmer is visiting friends in
Trenton.
C. A. Morris is exhibiting three
kernels of field corn which he recently
foun.1 in a hollow in a tree, which had
been grown over with an inch of solid
wood. The kernels arc in a perfect
state of preservation. Estimating up
the growth of oak timber, Mr. Morris
thiuks they must have been in the tree
for more than 40 years. He is going
to plant them this spring and see if
they will grow.—Dexter Leader.
469 443 454 46S
Ft. Mail Mail Ft.
p. m. a. m. stations, p. m. p. m.
1.40 9-2-5 Ypsilanti 4.55 12.05
2.05 9-40 Pittfleld Jt. 4.86 11.40
2.25 9.49 Saline 4.2S 11.25
2.45 10.03 Bridgewater 4.14 11.00
3.53 10.27 Manchester 3 53 10.27
4.14 10.43 Watkins 3.35 9.30
4.40 10.57 Brooklyn 3.23 9.10
4 56 11.09 Woodstock 3.11 8.46
5.0S 11.15 Somerset 3.05 8.3'i
5.15 11.19, Somerset Ct. 3.01 8.28
5.30 11.27 Jerome 2 53 S.15
5.50 11.3S North Adams 2.43 S.00
6.10 11.55 Hillsdale 2.2-5 7.35
a. m.
7.30
p. m.
7.3o
Chicago
a. m.
8.80
a.m
3.02
p. m.
11.05
p. m.
2.45
Toledo
a. m.
10 45
p. m.
8.15
a. m.
2.15
p. m.
5.55
Cleveland
a. m.
6.30
p. m.
4.10
a. in.
6.50
p. m.
10.30
Buffalo
a. m.
12.01
a. m.
5.50
People Believe what they read
about Hood's Sarsaparilla. They know
it is an honest medicine, and that it
—res. Get Hood's anc\ only Hood's.
Hood's Pills cure all lhcr ills, relieve constipation assist digestion. 25e.
Obituary
After many weeks of suffering Mrs.
Permelia Shaw Wood entered into rest
on the afternoon of April 3rd as was
previously stated in the Observer last
week. Mrs. Wood was the eldest
daughter of Robert and Eliza Shaw
[deceased] she was born in York township March 12,1840. February 25, 1874,
she married William H. Wood and
they made their home in Toledo until
his death which occurred in a few short
years. Since that time her home has
been in our midst', going in and out
amongst us doing good. She was a
member of the Presbyterian Church of
this place and has lived a very quiet
earnest christian life,5.the beauty of
which shone out most clearly during
all her illness and while suffering the
most intense pain caused by a complete
paralysis of the bowels. She was one
of the most unselfish characters we
have ever known, forgetting her own
agony in her anxiety for those who
were in attendance upon her and in
response to their anxious inquires replied: "Oh yes! I suffer, but only for
one, while Christ suffered for so many."
So long as her strength permitted she
continued at times to urge upon her
friends the necessity of a christian life
and their need of it saying: "I do
want you every one to be a christian
before you too come to Cross the river."
Thus has ended another useful life the
beauty of which will shine out with
much brightness in our memory. ***
A MARCH ADVENTURE.
The ability to rise superior to all
manner of accidents of the road is one
of the qualifications of a vettier in a
new country.
On a chilly day in March, 1898, Mr.
Vincent Bordie of Camas Prairie,
Wash., was riding and swimming his
horse across the swollen current of
the Klickitat river. The horse struck
his knee against a sunken boulder and
floundered against it. In another moment he was rolling over and over
down the stream, carried away by the
rushing torrent.
Mr. Bordie sought to free himself
and make an independent struggle to
reach the shore, but his feet were fast
in the stirrups, and he could not pull
them out.
At one moment he was above water
and at another beneath it; sometimes
the horse was on top, and sometimes
the man. Bordie resolved to put an
end to this state of things, and succeeded in drawing his knife from his
pocket, intending to cut the stirrup
straps. However, before he could cut
them his feet came free of the stirrups
and he struck oat for the shore.
He found the bank steep and rocky,
affording hisi no foothold or handhold. He was out of breath, and was
swept downward along the bank. By
and by he came to a tree whose
branches overhung the water; he
seized a branch and clung to it until
he had regained his breath.
While hanging here he looked about
him, and across the river, on the opposite bushy bank, he saw his horse
caught in the bushes and unable to
rise, hut clear of the water. Bordie,
by the aid of his branch, now felt
that he could get a—ore, but he was
not the man to leave his horse in such
a situation.
He climbed up on the branch far
enough so that he could remove his
clothes, and took them all off, having
no fancy for swimming in dangerous
water with his clothes and boots on.
When they were laid off he dropped
into the river again, and swam over
to where his horse was. He- unsaddled
the animal, assisted it to rise, mounted
it, and picked out the best place he
could find to swim his horse back
across the river.
He got across with some difficulty,
and, still mounted, as a frontiersman
should be, but a little cold in the
March wind, rode on down the stream
in search of his clothes. He found
them, put them on, and continued his
journey as if nothing had happened.
Men and Women Drunkatds.
Some interesting deductions are
drawn in a work just published by Dr.
Lawson Taft, a famous English specialist. Among other things he says:_
"My social experience among men and
my professional experience among
women draw a most emphatic distinction between drunkards in the two
sexes. Men sit down openly with one
another and get drunk socially. Women never do this. I never in my life
saw a woman get perceptibly the worse
for liquor at a dinner table, whereas I
have seen scores, if not hundreds, of
men do it. I never saw but one woman in my life the worse for a drink at
a social dinner party, but then she
came the worse for drink, perceptibly.
A woman, after a certain point, is always a secret drunkard and cunning
beyond all description." He also thinks
that mental or physical misery is the
cause of the "peculiar drunkenness"
among women of the middle and upper classes.
Noti?e.
We the undersigned, do*hereby agree
to refund tbe money on two 25 cent
bottles or boxes of Baxter's Mandrake
Bitters, if it fails to cure constipation,
biliousness, sick-headache, jaundice,
loss of appetite, sour stomach, dyspepsia, liver complaint, or any of the diseases for which it is recommended. It
is highly recommended as a spring
tonic and blood purifier. Sold liquid
in bottles, and tablets in boxes. Price
25 cents for either. Oue package of
either guaranteed to give satisfaction
or money refunded. Lister & Sheeder
C. F. Underkircher
The Appetite of a Goat
Is envied by all poor dyspeptics whose
Stomach and Liver are out of orde**. All
such should know that Dr King's New Life
Pills the wonderful Stomach and Liver
Remedy, gives a splendid appetite, sound
digestion and a regular bodily habit that
insures perfect health and great energy.
Only 25c at any Drug Ttore 4
AGENTS
WANTED
SUCCESS
Ve slow you the lOJi to SUCCESS aai POSHTHB.
Bie pax—s__— \ro_-—iv p__
Ton can work at homoortravel. Write jit
once for J?KEE 8Ai—_, and TiTBTiR/—
TEltMS to AGENTS.
THESUCCESSCOMPANY.CooperUnion.N.Y.City
Ask your physician this ques- I
tion, "What is the one great I
remedy for consumption?" '
He will answer, "Cod-liver
oi!." Nine out of ten v/HI
answer the same way.
Yet when persons have
consumption they Scathe al
fatty foods, yet fat is necessary for their recovery and
they cannot take plain cod-
liver oil- The plain oil disturbs the stomach and takes
away the appetite. The disagreeable fishy odor and
taste make it almost unendurable. What is to be done ?
This question was answered when we first made
!
j
£
I
£
I
£
I
I
s
I
£
I
SOOTT'S
EMULSION
of Cod-Liver Oil with Hypo-
I phosphites. Although that ■
| was nearly twenty-five years *
j ago, yet it stands alone io-
$ day the one great remedy
| for all affections of the throat
I and lungs.
1 The bad taste and odor have been
| taken away, the oil itself has been
j partly digested, and the most sen-
s sitive stomach objects to it rarely.
I Not one in ten can take and digest |
g the plain oil. Nine out of ten can
\ take SCOTT'S EMULSION and di-
| gest it. That's why it cures so
? many cases of early consumption.
I Even in advanced cases it brings
i comfort and greatly prolongs life. I
A 50c. and $i.oo, all druggists. t X
. -,COTT & BOWNE, Chemists, New York, *
-__.__. o-p:p°:_?ij"_L__Ai3;y"
I__-
E. F. MILLS & CO.
An-n ____?"t>0_?
For the balance of the month of April there will be "Price opportunities" in
the Carpet Dep't, which you will be well repaid in investigating.
1000 yds. High Grade All Wool 60-650 Ingrains at 50c
1200 yds. Famous "Lowell" 75c Jngrains at 65c a yd.
RUGS—*<fl^
All our 81-00
" " 2.50
" " 4.00
" " 7oe
" ■' 1.39
" '• 1.75
'■ " 2.50
Moquette Rugs
Jap Rugs
S9c
1.98
8.25
59c
.98
1.29
1.9S
All Rugs at Reduced Prices
DRAPERIES-
Jute Portieres value S2.50 at $1.98
Rope Portieres value 5.00 at 3.98
I Drapery Mulls value 12-Jc at 9 c
Nottingham Curtains value 1.00 at 79e
36 inch Silkolines value I2i , at 9e
Ruffled Mull Curtains value 2.50 at 1.98
Printed Drapery Denims value loc at 12 J
All Curtains Reduced
Issells Carpet Sweepers
2.25 Grade at 1.89
2.75 Grade at 2.25
E. R MILLS
ANN ARBOR. MICH.
Closing out sa
Regular 5c packages go at f3 for 5o.
Great bargains in other m&m
Bakery opened at the New Hotel
Fresh baked goods each day
IF1
' JL— J
Envelopes at the Observer Office
BUY 60
ISO
Have you fried the Catalogue system of buy',;.-:
EVERYTHING you use at Wholesale Friccs? We
can save you 15 to 40 per cenlonyeurpiirclias-s.
We are now erecting and will own and occupy it^
highest building in America, employ 2,000 c!cr; &
filling country orders exclusively, and will refund
purchase price if goods don'i suit you.
Our General Catalogue—1,000 pages, IGjCCC
illustrations, 60,000 quotations—ccsis us 72
cents to print and mail. We will send it to you
upon receipt of 15 cents, to show your gocdiaith.
M0NTG01EHY Will 1 §i,
MICHIGAN AVE. AND KADIS.OM ST.
CHICAGO.
C ASTORIA
For Infants and Children.
*i— _-
Simla
-ilg—ore
cf
Warren & Jackson, Agents *
"tfi
.<■ -*Mt'«--
#»■/
' ' ' «.-!
Object Description
| Title | 1899-04-20; Saline Observer |
| Date | 1899-04-20 |
| 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 |
