1901-01-03; Saline Observer |
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SERVER
A. J. WARREN. Publisher.
SALINE, WASHTENAW CO., MICH., THURSDAY JANUARY. 3, 1901.
VOL. XXI.-NO. 11
IW-
3u
Dry Ms. Jackets.
- Every Department Brim Full.
We incite your trade upon the basis of the Lowest Pkices for the very
best qualities. No fictitious prices used as a bail.
New Dress Goods, in. Serges, Homespuns, Venetians, Cheviots, &c. Leave
your order in our Dressmaking Department for a new Fall Suit. All work-
guaranteed.
We carry a large and complete line of Hosiery and Underwear for Ladies,
Gents and Children. .Flannels, Blankets and Comforters in great variety:
Kid and Golf Gloves—latest and best styles; Ladies1 and Children's Outing
Gowns, 50c to $1.00. We also carry a great variety of Fancy Notions.
Wo have a new and choice line of Ladies' and Children's Jackets'and
Capes for winter.
Our Millinery has a reputation all over Washtenaw for Low Prices and
Popular Styles. We offer great bargains on Trimmed Hats.
W.H. Sweet & Son
Ypsilanti
Midi.
Bridgewater
E. F. Layher and family are entertaining their cousins Mr. and Miss
Luckhardt of Sebewa Michigan, trie
past week. . ■
Mrs. Geo. Nissly spent New Years
day in Manchester.
Wm. Killinger of Sebewa, called, on
his old friends the past week.
Conrad Sohade had the front of the
house brightened up with the remodeling of the veranda. ♦
F. J. Vetter will anove from Ihis
place to Horton, Michigan where he
will resume business. Fred was a
good blacksmith and he will be missed.
Leonard Layher who has been at
Marshall during the past year is spending his vacation at home.
Bridgewater is .in need of a good,
young, sober, industrious blacksmith
and wagon maker.
Bev. C. Clessler. spent Sunday at
Ann Arbor.
Mrs, D. Thrasher spent the weeli at
Jackson with a sister of Mr. Thrasher.
Dress Goods Remnants
Silk Remnants
Cotton Remnants
at half and two-thirds prices.
A fresh lot of Remnants relics of the Season's selling
-•,-* go on sale to-day.
Dress Goods remnants in lengths from 1 to 6 yards.
Correct Patterns for skirts, waists and children's wear.
A few odd Dress patterns are included in the lot.
.-' Remnants are a bad thing in a silk stock. -We have
a lot of them, and propose to clean up quickly.
We put the prices on and you'll do the rest.
Remnants of Prints, Ginghams, Percales, Outings,
Sateens and short ends in all kinds of cotton goods at
about two-thirds the original prices.
Come Early
Blankets, Underwear and Cloaks,
at Special Figures.
Davis & Kishlar
Ypsilanti Midi
Pleatv of
flty.
Ae4 a goocl pIa,c§*tQ load it at
E. W. For^ & Son, Agents
-!
A Cold Wave
Is coming
And you will want some
thing to keep you warm.
BLANKETS
FUR ROBES
» PLUSH ROBES
We have them, the Finest line we
have ever kept at prices ranging from
SI. to $15. Come and see them.
A. W. Lashier
• Uc-Doloureux- Swelled Face.,
"", A swollen face* is. the -characteristic
■*-opideroic symptom this year of a Cold
j^qr- the .Grip. Humphreys* Specific
jKIf cures it—25c
Wppien Save Historic iandmarfcs.
Nearly twenty-five years ago the
women of Boston" united' to save Old
South church, of Revolutionary memory; "within two years the women of
Philadelphia have restored Independence Hall of that city. After th' death
of the poet Lowell, a Cambridge
woman started the mpvement, owing
to which the grounds of his home
were purchased for a Lowell park.
The women of San Francisco have recently endeavored to save the great
Sequoia Grove, and are now agitating
3 public park for the historic Telegraph Hill, while the women o£ New
Jersey are bent upon preserving the
noble Palisades, and those of Brooklyn preparing to honor the martyrs of
the prison ship.
V
At the Post-office -
Having moved my shop into
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 your work.
C. N. How
Foley's Honey **<* Tat
heals lungs and stops the cough.
Milan Locals
CASTOXtXA.
Bears tha" >gThft Kind Ygu HaW Always
8ignfitTir&
of
v'ris.
«*r*u
M
•**-*
Our village is exceedingly quiet
since the Holiday trade.
Mr. and Mrs. O. A. Kelley entertained guests from Fort Wayne, Indiana the last of the week. * v
J. C. Rouse has one of the fashionable colds.
Mr. and Mrs. Barnes have returned
from their Quincy sojourn.
Miss Knight gave an elegant reception to the class of 1901 Monday evening. All bad an exceptionally interesting time. Miss Knight is a pleasant hostess.
Mr. Guy and family of Detroit, are
visiting friends in town.
The school entertainment .was postponed until New Years night.
Mrs. O. A. Kelley is on the sick list.
Born, December 27, to Mr. and Mrs.
Milton Crane, a son.
Clarence Wisdom and wife of Shep-
ard, are visiting friends here.
Mr. and Mrs. Burgess and children
of Illinois, are visiting H. Kri-ght and
family.
• Mr. and Mrs C. M. Puller and daughter will leave for Detroit in a few days
after a pleasant visit with friends.
. Girt Tramps .Are Numerous.
New Jersey has come to the front
with a product entirely its own. It
is nothing less than the female tramp,
dressed in boy's clothing and stealing
rides on freight trains. She is .becoming common. Recently "James"
Robinson of Philadelphia was released
from the county correction farm at
Trenton on payment of a $3 fine, the
money having been sent here by telegraph, frr -q Philadelphia. "James" is
a girl about 16 years old. She was
arrested by a railroad detective and
sent.to the farm chained to six tramps.
When captured she had a large revolver strapped to a belt around her
vvaist, and upon being questioned
promptly admitted her sex. She refused to give her nam?, but said she.
was trying to reach the home of her
:inele in Now Brunswick. The justice
ommjtted her to the stone quarry
or thirty clays in default of the ?3
Ire imposed. This, is the third girl
ramp the detectives have arrested at
he coal chutes within a few days.
-»-*-«»
A Valuable* Book Free.
The Detroit Free Press offers until
further notice a copy of the Free Press
Year Book and Encyclopedia absolutely free to - all who subscribe for the
Twice-A-Week Detroit Free Press for
one year, at the regular subscription
price of $1.00. ; The book will contain
over 550 pages of useful information on
10,000 subjects; a correct, concise and
complete record of the events of 1900.
As a book of reference it has no
equal. There will not bo a useless
page jn it. A Practical Educator and
Hand Book of Encyclopedic Information on subjects Statistical, Official,
Historical, Political and Agr-^jjltural;
likewise a Book of Religious Fact, -and
general Practical Directions on everyday affairs.
The Twice-A-Week Free Press- is
conceded to be Michigan's leading
newspappr. It is published on Tuesday
and Friday, and is almost equal to a
daily. It is up-to-date in eyery department.
The book will be published about
December 27,1900, it being impossible
to get it out earlier on account of getting complete records of 1900 events,
and will be mailed as soon after above
j date as possible.
* Do nottlelay but^ take advantage of
this liberal offer, which is. made for a
limited time only. . '~
Address your order.-to'the Detroit
Press, Detroit., Mich.
. ST'
Marsh Gets A Position.
It is reported in Detroit that some
of Col. Bliss5 advisers are working
against the reappointment of Tax
Commissioner Oakman by the governor-elect. It is "related, -however, that
Oaklnan recently made an appointment
which has caused some of the McMillan
men to warm up to him. The case was
that of R. H. Marsh of Washtenaw
county, who has lost the use of his
legs. Marsh was formerly employed
by the auditor general, but when Auditor Dix let him go, Marsh was promptly taken care of by Secretary of State
Stearns, because Marsh has a family to
support and has little chance for employment except in a public office. A
strong effort was made to induce Secretary-elect Warner to retain Marsh,
but Warner refused to keep him. An
appeal, was made to Oakman by certain McMillan men, and the commissioner at once gave Marsh an appointment, to talre effect January 1.—Lansing Journal. Mr. Warner in the
above appointment is maicing no mis-
lake. Mr. Marsh has been a life long
republican and true to his party, and
not only did Mr. Warner by his influence get certain votes, but others before him have fared likewise. As an
office employee Mr. Marsh is accurate
in figures and careful at his work and
he will serve the state well.
l-4tlx off
It has become too frequent a custom
for lawyers to urge people into suits,
in the expectation of getting big judgments and then dividing the proceeds.
—Ann Arbor Times. It ought to be
made a penitentiary offense for a lawyer to engineer a case in the courts
with the understanding that a division
of the proceeds, if any materialize,
should be his remuneration. Quite a
per cent of the business of the courts
is based on litigations of this sort, to
the shame and disgrace of the legal
professions. The briefless pettifogers
who wish to remedy their impecunios-
ity by such contemptible scalliwagism,
ought to be barred from practice before all tribunals.—Grass Lake News.
BuoMen's Arnica Salve. .
Has world-wide fame for marvellous
cure3. It surpasses any other salve,
lotion, ointment or balm for Cuts,
Corns, Burns, Boils, Sores, Felons, Ulcers, Tetter, Salt Rheum, Fever Sores,
Chapped Hands, Skin Eruptions; Infallible for Piles. Cure guaranteed.
Only 25c at Lister & Sheeder's.
Gasoline.
Gasoline is a colorless volatile, inflammable product of the distillation,
of crude petroleum, having a specific
gravity of .629 to ,667. It is used as
fuel in vapor stoves and for carbonizing air and water gases. The vapor
arising frqm gasoline, when -mixed
with the atmosphere in proper proportion, is one pf the most dangerous
explosives.
Made Young Again
"One of Di\ King's New Life Pills
each night for two week has put me in
my 'teens' again" writes D. JEL Turner
of Dempseytown, Pa. They're the
bestin.the world for Liver, Stomach
and Bowels. Purely vegetable. Never
gripe. Only 25c at Lister &• Sheeder's
Drug- Store.
. The Homo Interest of Clilldren.
Unquestionably .children are the
clearest facts on which we build our
social structure of the future, hut "it
should be held ^axiomatic in all such
=ocial reform work that the home idea
»s inseparable from every problem into
-vhich child life enters. Separate a
•child's life from his home, no matter
how wretched his home, no matter how
ivorthy the interest in the abstract,
and you have made the poor little individual a seat of discord. You have
set him at odds with the life in which
lesides his origin and support; you
have created in him a social tendency
that threatens our political constitutions.—Harper's Bazar.
■ Colonel Coclirnnc's Kecorcl.
Colonel Henry Clay Cochrane, who
has been ordered from his post at the
Boston navy yard to the command of
the marine forces in China, is a Penn-
sylvanian by birth. He has seen
thirty-eight years' service in the corps,
and is one of the veterans in the service. He received his appointment, in
the early part of the -civil war, and
participated in the battle of Mobile
bay and other engasements.-
'ONOUJ.S saAjoaoiflSMpsin^tpooiq
oqj. £niqouu3 £# '"'omoj 0A.iau ?saq
ai[}si Biir.tBdssjTig s,pooji; 'poojq ma
qnti 'a.md uo paj aq asnur S3 AM 3 Iw
People Believe -what .they read
ibout Hood's Sarsaparilla. ..They know
;t is an honest medicine, and that it
cures. Get- Hood's'and only Hood's
Hood's Pills cure all liver ills, relieve constipation assist digestion. 25cv
•<..
Entire Stock
[Cpats' Spool cotton only, excepted. J
Not in ten years have the people of this County had ait opportunity
to buy from a .----•■
$3,500 STOCK
Of Dry Goods, Cloaks Etc..
At such a reduction.
In compliance with this sale we offer ALL .our JACKETS and CAPES at
Its been a warm, unusually warm Fall and we are^ovMoaded
E F. MILLS S, CO.
-A-TiTY -A_:r?"bo:z?
j
\\
At Greatly Reduced Prices.
The balance of our entire stock of
ALL NEW CLOTHING
Afe reduced prices during the month of
We wish'to reduce our Stock to the Lowest ebb, prior to-increasing,
and an opportunity awaits you for the best goods ever offered, for
the money.
This includes our entire stock of-
Suits, Ulsters, Overcoats and
02DL±lcL:r?e:n_3s OXoi3-tL±33_g
Everything New. __
Fleece Lined Underwear at 85c per suit
Every article guaranteed.
Your money backjf you are not satisfied.
' s
Staebler & Wuerth-
vi
*
Nerves that Die
. For lack of nourishment are jusfcas.dead as though they were ,
severed with a knife. In either case the base of- supplies" has •
been interfered with.- Nerves that need nourishing make ..their r
wants known through headache, backache, loss of appente^fidijl™
gestion, fluttering of the heart, irritability, sleeplessness, and general weakness. Feed the hungry nerves, build them up and
make them strong and vigorous, full of vim, vitality and power,
with the.great nerve food and tonic, Dr. Miles' Nervine. - ~
".For many years I was troubled with, nervous dysj %
pepsia. "Weeks ab a time I have silvered so'much. that I
could not Tetain food at all. These attacks .Tjrought on._. .- ;*
nervous prostration and I got-no xesfc day- or' night. I-.; :. -;-;
tried many physicians and advertised reiaeajies, but ney.er \ - -
found relief until Dr: Miles' Her vine was Tecommeiulgd^I .; .. _,
then found I could rest-well and retain fopd and was sSSSi^«#
restored." - , Mks. IS.. Puebnee, Jeffiersot, Wis.- w;<*
Dr. Miles9 Nervine
_■"«*■■* *.
quiets the nervous irritation, stimulates the digestion-
and fills theTslood with just the -nourishment needed lor
. weak and run-down'conditions. Giveit a trial.
Sold by druggists on guarantee.
Db. Mo.es Medical Cto., Elkhart* Indl
m
.^-.sL
Object Description
| Title | 1901-01-03; Saline Observer |
| Date | 1901-01-03 |
| 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 |
