1900-09-20; Saline Observer |
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SERV
j. WARREN, Publisher.
SALINE, WASHTENAW CO., MICH., THURSDAY SEPTEMBER 20, 1900. VOL. XX.-NO. 48
are now coming in-**-^5-5*-*'''
New French flannels'
that are more popular than ever.
3_Te^rDress <__roocLs
Venetians, Whipcords, Broadcloth,
Cheviots, Etc
All kinds of Dressmaking to order and satisfaction guaranteed. •
We sponge and shrink our dress" goods at a
very low price.
New felt Street Hats in our Millinery Dept.
^ Bargains in all Summer G-oods.
Ypsilanti
iweet & So
Mich
If you are looking for<f^__~-~^
or just ordinary curtains or rugs or
carpets or any kind of house furnishing goods that come in the dry
good line.
and souie store keeper or professed Mend should prevail upon you to buy somewhere, anywhere before seeing in or
rather our stock, take our advice briefly proffered
During September we are having a Special Sale on
house furnishing and prices are low,
avis & Kishlar
Doctor Yourself At Home.
Seud for a fr^e copy of Dr. Humphry's Manual, giving treatment and
euro of liio sick iu all ailment'.. Humphrey's Company, P. O. Box 1S10, New
York.
Kali way Accidents.
There were 2,431 train accidents in
the United States in 1899, against 2,228
in 1898. The killed numbered 589, and
the injured 2,081. This exceeds the
total killed and wounded in the Philippines during the eighteen months ended Dec. 31, 1899, the excess in tilled
being 24 per cent and in w-ounded 11
per cent,
Membranous Croup Same as Blplitlierla.
Philadelphia physicians now must
report cases of membranous croup.
The Philadelphia board-of health, considering diphtheria and membranous
croup to be identical diseases, has
adopted a resolution that all cases of
this kind of croup be considered and
recorded as diphtheria.
Ba,a?it of
fr~
Would look better with a coat
of paint on it, to say nothing of
the protection that tbis paint would
be to the building material.* A
building of any kind well painted
will last two or three times as* long
as one !«ft to the nierej of the elements
Our MINERAL PAINT is a
standard coaling for outside paint-
in •_. Do not, accept a. substitute.
Everr pi'-kag.i b '.-ir.i our name and
address.
680.1, Pitkin. Co.
Chicago. 111.. U. S. A.
M'adtt in Black. huiI Five Shades.
Color Curd on application.
D^lPEFtTcfDE
The greatest aid to DIGESTION.
OvererowcUnir la Schools Averted,
An ingenious arrangement to prevent overcrowding of both elevators or
stairways is in use in the offices of a
school in Scranton, Pa. The time of
entering and leaving the building is
regulated by clocks on each of the five
floors. On the lower floors the clocks
are set correctly, but on the upper
floors they are a few minutes slow^ so
that the employes on the lower floors
are at their works before those on the
upper floors are due, and,' of course,
those on the upper floors do not leave
their desks until several minutes later,
thus avoiding all confusion.
"I had a running sore on my leg for
seven years," writes Mrs. Jas. Forest
of Cheppewa Falls, Wis., "and spent
hundreds of dollars in trying to get it
healed. Two-boxes of Banner Salve
entirely cured it." Unterkircher's
drug store.
King In lovo and Tyitchcraft.
The ring has figured not only in
domestic concerns—in affairs of love
and witchcraft—but in church and
state. The Greeks of ancient days
elevated the ring from a mere bauble
to a sentimental distinction, and ever
since that time the ring .has assumed
a significance accorded to no other ar-?
tide of personal adornment. By them
it was regarded as a type of eternity
and became the emblem of stability
and affection.
HOOP'S Sarsaparilla is the One
True Blood Purifier, Great Nerve
Tonic, Stomach Regulator. To thousands its great merit |s KNOWN>
Little Did He Think.
"Ah," sighed the long-haired passenger, "how little we know of the
future and what it has in store for
us!" "That's right," rejoined the man
with the auburn whiskers in the seat
opposite. "Little did I think some
thirty years ago, when I carved my
initials in the old country school house
that I would some day grow up and
fail to become famous."—Chicago
News.
Milan Locals
Fail with its wind and clouds bas
reached us not a welcome guest.
Died, September 12, little Marion
infant daughter.of Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Pullen. Funeral services were held
at tbe house Friday morning.
Rev, Geo. Atchinson left Monday
morning for a visit with his son at
Holly.
The Baptist ladies are getting ready
for their October church fair. They
met last Friday and were quite enthusiastic over their work.
The Chicago -Bloomer Girls, Chatn-
piou Ladies Base Ball niue were here
Monday and played a game of ball with
the Milan nine. Score 5 to 5, game a
draw.
■ Miss Cecil Gauntlett was home from
her Ann Arbor school over Sunday.
Miss Bessie Brown of Ann Arbor was
the guest of Miss Cecil Kelly over Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs.- L. B. Gilbert moved
Tuesday from the Marble cottage into
the Palmer Block.
Mell Barnes of Elkhart Ind., was in
town Saturday.
Geo. Minto has returned from Union
City.
Miss Gi*ace Gauntlett is iu Detroit
visiting friends for a couple of weeks.
Miss Annie Delaforce left Saturday
for her school work in Detroit.
Mr. and Mrs. R. R. Wilcox entertained guests from Whittaker over
Sunday.
Frank Atchinson commenced worn
for Whaky Bros, Tuesday.
Prof Charles Hoyt of the Normal
college gave his sister Mrs. Homer
Sill a call the last of the week.
Miss MiLlie Hitchcock returned the
last of the week from her business trip
in Chicago.
Mrs. Charles Johnson has her dressmaking rooms In the second story of
Gauntlett & Sou's Department store.
Paul Newcomb has returned from a
pleasant visit with friends in Northville.
Hattie Wooleott has returned to her
work in the Stay Factory in Ypsilanti.
Mrs. Clara Pauline has returned to
her home, in Detroit after a pleasant
-two weeks visit with her sister Miss
Ada Smith.
Rev. F. O. Jones is away attending
conference.
Mrs. Bray has returned from her
Detroit, vir.it.
Mm. G. R. .Williams who has been
quite ill is no.v on the convalescent
list.
Chas. Gauntlett's mare "Larclloid"
won second prize at the Washtenaw
races at Ann Arbor.
Amos Taylor aud wife have moved
from their farm iu London township
into the old B. rah am house.
A good many consumptives would be
cured and the worse cases comforted
and relieved by using Foley's Honey
and Tar. Suggest it to those afflicted.
You should do this as a friend. Unterkircher's drug store.
Great Cures proved by thousands
of testimonials show that Hood's Sarsaparilla possesses power to purify.,
'vitalize and enrich the blood.
Hood's Pills are tlie only pills to
be taken -with. Hood's Sarsaparilla.
Postage Stfvmpa in *Btao!_s on Sale.
The first consignment of postage
stamps issued in books has arrived it
the Chicago postoffice. The consignment consisted of 500 books of twelve
stamps each, 200 books of twenty-four
stamps, and fifty books of forty-eight
stamps. These are now on sale at the
postofiice, and will be distributed at
Gnce fo the stations and substations in
the city. The books are small and
convenient for carrying in the pocket.
At present the department is issuing
stamps of the 2-cent denomination
only. These are sold at an advance of
1 cent on the stamp value of each book,
to cover cost of manufacture. The
pages are of six stamps each, interleaved with paraffined paper to prevent premature adhesion.—Chicago Inter Ocean.
Allen Halverson of West Prairie,
Wis., says: "People come ten miles to
buy Foley's Kidney Cure,'" while. J: A.
Sj.ero of Helmerylnd., says: "It is the
medical wonder of the age," Unterkircher's drug store.
When you want a pleasant physic
try the new remedy., Chamberlain's
Stomach and Liver Tablets. They are
easy to take and pleasant in effect.
Price, 25 cent?. Samples free al Lisler
& Sheeder's drug; sto-e."
At the Post-office
Having moved my shop iuto
the post-office room, I am now
ready to do all kinds of Watch,.
Clock, Jewelry, Lock and Umbrella repairing on short notice.
Bring in yonr work.
C. N. How -
SWERVES must be fed on pru-e, rich
■ ™ blood. Hood's Sarsaparilla is tlie
best nerve tonic. By enriching the
blood it makes the nerves STRONG*
SCHOOL COLUMN
Seventeen more pupils are enrolled
in the High School now than at the
same time last year.
The work in music was begun yesterday with H. C Maybee as teacher.
There are at present 39 pupils in the
class. All but four chose this subject,
instead of its substitute, English, but
five were advised to take the latter on
account of changing voipes.
Rev. J. B. Wallace conducted chapel
exercises Monday morning. Visitors
at chapel, Mrs. J. B. Wallace and Mr.
Phillips..
The uniform heating of Ihe building
by the new process is thoroughly enjoyed by all during the cold and damp
weather this week.
Miss Crippen and Miss Smith visited
at their respective. homes "Saturday
and Sunday.
Edith Clark has not yet entered
school on account of her recent illness.
"Victoria in military Costume.
In the earliest years of her reign
the queen was accustomed to view her
troops mounted on a charger dressed
in militai / costume. Two months after her accession, mounted on a gray
charger, she wore a trim blue cloth
coat and skirt with a star on the
breast, and a round cap With a peak
ornamented with a deep gold band,
in reviewing for the first time the
Household troops at Windsor. Later
on the queen was dressed in a long
habit with a cutaway jacket and a
large hat ornamented with military
plumes.—Scottish American.
Chamberlain's Cough Eemedy a Great
Pa7orite.
Tbe soothing and healing properties
of this remedy, its pleasant taste and
prompt and permanent cures have
made it a great favorite with people
everywhere. * It is especially prized by
mothers of small children for colds,
cough and whooping cough, as it always affords quick relief, and as it contains no opium ot* other harmful drug,
it may be given as confidently to a
baby as to an adult. For sale ,by
Lister & Sheeder.
Beggarly Salary.
The young congressman ran his eyo
again over the pages of the" speech he
expected to deliver on the morrow. He
made a trifling alteration or two, passed his hand across his brow, folded
his arms, and gazed hard at the typewritten pages before him. "And all I
get for this kind of work," he remin-
ated, with a tinge of bitterness in his
tone, "is 55,000 a year."—Chicago Tribune. .
Foley's Kidney Cure
Slakes kidneys and blaiiss tight*
Mortgage Sale.
DEFAULT having been made ia t he condi tion
o£a oertain mortgage made by Frederick L.
Seeger and Anna Seeger, Ws wife, to John
Schneider, dated March 12th A. D. 1S92 and recorded in the offlce of the Eegister of Deeds, for
the County of Washtenaw, and State of Michigan, on the Fourteenth day of March, A. D 1892,
in Liber 79 of Mortgages, on page 393 which said
mortgage was on the 4th day of May A. D. 1891
duly'assigned by John Schneider- to Dorothea
Schneider (now Dorothea Jedele) .ind said assignment was duly recorded in the office of the
Eegister of/Deeds, for the County of Washtenaw,
in the State of Michigan, on the 20th day of June
A. D. 1891, in liber 11 of Assignments of Mortgages on page 613, on which Mortgage there is
claimed to be due at the date of this notice the
sum of four hundred sixty three and 99-100 dollars (§463.99) and a reasonable attorney's fee together with the necessary expenses of the sale*
and no suit or proceedings at law having been
instituted to recover the money secured by said
mortgage, or any part thereof;
Now, therefore, by Virtue of the power of sale
contained in said Mortgage and the Statute in
such case made and provided, NOTICE is hereby
given'that on FfilD AY NOV.EMBEE 9th A. D.
1900, atTen o'clock in the Forenoon, I shall sell
at Public Auction to the highest bidder at the
East front door of the Court-house, in the City
of Ann Arbor, Michigan, (that being the place
where the Circuit Court for the County of
Washtenaw is holden)r the premises described in said mortgage or so much thereof
as may be necessary to pay the amount due on
said mortgage, with sis per cent interest, and
all legal costs, together with a reasonable attorney's fee, tlie premises being described in said
mortgage as follows;—A strip off the east side of
the east side ofthe east half of the North-west
quarter o£ s^ction six (6) Town Three (3) south
of Range Five (5) east. State of Michigan: containing One and eighty-six one-hundredths (1.86)
acres being thirty-two chains ten links long and
•sixty-four links wide at the North end and fifty -
two links wide at tlie South end.
Also Eighteen and fourteen one-hundredths
(18.11) acres off the -west side of the west half of
the north east quarter of said section six (6)
Town three (3) south Bangs Five (5) east, State
of Michigan, the east line of which is parallel to
the north and south quarter line and from east
of it including the first described parcel of land
twenty acres of land.
Dated August 14th A. D. 1930.
Dorothea Jedele,
Assignee of Mortgage.
Blum S; Awrey,
Attorneys for Assignee of Mortgage.
A GREAT record of cures, unequalled in medical history, proves
Hood's Sarsaparilla possesses merit unknown to any other MEDICINE.
Tlie lETa-ll-
CAMPAIGN
This week we inaugurate the Fall Season with the most
complete and best selected stock of DRY GOODS that ever
graced our store.
You'll find values such as will seem impossible in this year
of advancing prices. You'll find styles too captivating to be
resisted.
Rainy Day Skirts $3.98
Oxford, Grey or Black
Cheviots handsomely made
Fancy Silks 75c
Dollar Values in new
Waist Silks.
Elegant french flannels 75c
The Seasons most popular
fabric in every city.
Fall Suits $8.00
Made of Stylish Cheviots
well Titled-and trimmed.
50 inch Cheviots 50c
Dark Grey and Brown only
"A specially good thing for skirts.
Peau De Soie $1.00
The best wearing and best appearing Dress Silk ever made
for such a price.
Every department filled to overflowing with the
newest and choicest the New York market affords.
t_e___e_ i_^xrcr:D "che*
of our CARPET DEPARTMENT commences this week
Last spring wo disposed of a largo part of the stock,
this fall must see the balance go. If you want any
Mattings, Lace Curtains, Portiere s, Rugs, Draperies,
etc.* you'll save 25 to 33 per cent by buying of us
just now. *
A.few remnants of Ingrain and Brussel Carpets still
on hand and at prices placed on them won't remain
long.
E. F. MILLS"5." CO.
120 3_v_Ia,-L___. S-b_
_A._Q._CL ______*1do__*
First Annual
_■_&•.
$5K
Fall Opening
of Boys and Children's.,
which we have just receiyed. You cannot afford to
miss seeing our Line as wo can save you money.
Bop7 School Sults~"V
Blues, Blacks, Oxfords, and Fancy Mixtures, from
ages 4 to 17, elegantly made and very stylish.
Prices: $2.50, $3, $4, $5 and $6.
Fin© Suits fos? "_Toutl_s~^v
that are made by tbe best tailors and will fit to perfection and delight the wearer. The prices:
$6, $7-50, $10, $12 and 12,50.
Everything New.
Staebler & Wuerth
Clothiers and Furnishers,
211 S. Main St., Ann Arbor.
Plymouth Binding Twine
- A Comparative Statement showing the Cost and Value of Binding
Twine, based on the supposition thai a farmer needs, to bind his grain,
300 pounds of Plymouth Sisal, or Standard Twine, which runs 505 feet
to the pound. -
Three hundred pounds of Plymouth-Standard or Sisal will give him
151,500 feet, ' . - _ ■
151,500 ft. of.505 ft. to the lb., weighs 800 lbs. @ 14c will cost §42.00
151,500 ft. of 480 ft. to the lb., weigtis 315| lbs. @ 14c will cost S44.19
151,500ft. of 470 ft. to the lb., weighs 322J lbs. @ 14c willcost $45.13
151,500 ft. of 450 ft. to the lb., weighs 336*f lbs. @ 14c will cost S47.13
151,500 ft. of 430 ft. to the lb., weighs 352J- lbs. @14e willcost §49.33
We have recently tested twine sent us for examination, that averaged
a, little less than 430 feet to the pound.
The PLYMOUTH Twines are the only ones of these grades that run
505 feet to the pound. You save by buying them, over the lowest
grade,'.S7.33 on 300 pounds, or §2.44 per 100; or 2 44-100 cents per
pound. Therefore, if Plymouth sells for 14 cents per pound, the other
should sell for 11 66-100 cents, to be as cheap, and others in proportion
The Moral is. buy PLYMOUTH Twine, and save money, and the
. annoyance of loose bundles, caused by poor twine.
E. W. Ford & Son, Agents
Hi " il lilWllliWHIIWM—IM■—
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______
Ev.:':_-t_C:
Object Description
| Title | 1900-09-20; Saline Observer |
| Date | 1900-09-20 |
| 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 |
