1901-11-28; Saline Observer |
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SALINE, WASHTENAW CO., MICH., THURSDAY NOYEMBER 28, 1901. VOL. XXII;- NO 6.
A. J. WARREN, Editor.
h
i*-i
XT@ot Black-Goods,
New Colored Suitings.
iff&m Cloth io* Walking Skirts.
New French Flannel
plain, stripe aiid Dresden patterns.-
All these wejiiake to order if you wish.
' InOurjN., '
Cloak Department
Are the new styles in Ladies'
and Children's Coats.
A large line of Ladies' Street Hats in our
Also the very latest in trimmed Goods.
Ypsilanti
& Son
Mich.
Oio-X-- 35fco§£"ixXa-:r?
,v<"
$
|~c
CLOAK STOCK
Needs no Speeial Advertising.
Almost every pustomer who sees our line is an advertisement for ns." She takes a cloak with her. But
*ye haye twenty three jackets that need some advertising. \Vo bought them last season, they are one
year old. The cloth is right, tho colors are right, and
they five splendid fatting garments, the only thing
wrong 8-bpnt them is that they are a littlp shorter
than this jear's gan-pepts.
Tlmy are rearked from S6.5Q"to $10.00 each-
They are all on one rack, and they are-all one prioe.
$4.05 for your choioe.
Davis & Kishlar
Ypsilanti Mich
HEAD
NOISES?
ALL CASES OF
DEAFNESS OR HA:
ARE
«i. J&V
HEARING
1LE
. bv our new invention. Onlv those born deaf are incurable.
HEAD NOISES CEASE IMMEDIATELY.
F. A. WERMAN, OF BALTIMORE, SAYS:
IJ.u/ruioiin, Md.. March 30, 1501;.
Gentlemen : — Beinc*-ciitirejv cured of deafness, thanks to your ireaiinuu, I will now giVevpu
a full history of iny case; urbeu?ed at your discretion.*'
About five years a^oMny-rigliteaf began tosingvaud this kept 0:1 gctti::^ worse, until I lost;
my hearing in this ear entirely *' - ' - * ; •T' - ."'*"' '
I underwent a treatment for catarrh, for three months, without any;success, consulted a ntim,^
ber of physicians, anions others, the md>t emhremeltr* specialist of ihi» city, who told me that*
only an operation could" help me,'&u<V*eS-*eit that:oitly temporarily, that the head noises would
then cease, but the hearing in the affected ear would he lost forever." ""
I then saw your advertisement accideii ally in a ^ew Vork paper, ami ordered your treatment. After Iliad n**cd it only a few days according to your- mfectio!:>. t:;^ n-iscs ceased, aiid
to-day.■"after five wcch=. my hearing iu the diseased ear has been entire;;.'ro-tor-eti I thank you
heartilv aud be!* :o remain Vervtmlv vours.
F." A. WER1UN, 750 S. Eroadv,':.y Baltimore,-Md.
Our treatment- does not interfere with your usual occupation*
**&%-?* YOU -GAR GURE YOURSELF AT HQiE M r'?^lno1
'■ ISTEBKATIOKAl AURAL CLINiC,596 LA SALLE AVE.: .?, ILL.
I-
%
THE
GRAPHOPHONE
Prices $$ to s1SO
ENTERTAINS
EVERYBODY
EVERYWHERE
Latest NEW PROCESS Records
SEND FOR CATALOGUE 35
COLUMBIA PHONOGRAPH COMPANY
'■» ■
Letter Heads at this Office.
Judge Watkins
'Makes a Change.
The information comes from a reliable source lhat James E. McGregor,
ex-city cler1-. of Ypsilanti, will be probate register after Jan. 1, when the
present register, George R. Gunn, will
return his portfolio of office to Judge
Watkins.
Judge Watkins announced last year
that he intended appointing four registers, one for each year of his term of
office, so* the news that Register Gunn
is to lose his title in January is no surprise.
Judge Watkins is professedly a one-
term man, and McGregor is credited
with a desire to step into his shoes, so
the latter's appointment as register
would be considered to have special
significance.
Whether or not McGregor is slated
for the remainder of Judge Watkins'
term or merely for one year, is not
known.
Rev. Irl R. Hicks Is Not Dead.
Notwithstanding a widely current
rumor that the Rev. Irl R. Hicks is
dead, he never was in better health,
and never did a harder and more successful year's work than that just
closing. He has just completed his
large and splendid Almanac for 1902
and, witb his staff of able workers, has
brought bis journal, Word and Works,
justly forward into international reputation. For a quarter of a century Mr.
Hicks has grown in reputation and
usefulness as the people's astronomer,
and forecaster of storms and the character of (joining t>easons. Never were
his weather forecasts so sought after
as now, his timely warning of a serious
drouth this year having saved the
people from loss and suffering-. Millions of bushels of wheat were harvested through his advice to plant
crops that would mature early, The
Amerioan people will .certainly stand
by Prof, Hicks, when it costs them so
little and the benefits are so great.
His fine Almanac uf 200 pages is only
25c, and his splendid family journal is
only one dollar a year including the
Almanac Send to Word and Works
Pub. Co . 2201 Taocust St., St. Louis,
Mo,
How The Mistletoe Comes To Be: j
The Seeds Stick to the Birds' Bills, and
They Wipe Them off on the
Tree-Branches.
Th'e story of how the mistletoe gets
on the trees is a most interesting one.
Covering the'raistletoe twigs are.pearly
white berries. These come in the
winter season, when food is comparatively scarce, and hence some of our
birds eat them freely. Now when a
robin eats a cherry he swallows simply
the meat and Hips the stono away.
The stone of the mistletoe the bird
cannot flip. It is sticky and holds to
his bill. His only resource is to wipe
it off, and^he does so, leaving it stieK-
ing to the branches of the tree on
which he is sitting,at the time. This
seed sprouts after- a time, aud not finding earth—which indeed its ..ancestral
habit has made it cease wanting—it
sinks its roots into the bark of the tree
and hunts there for the pipes that
carry the sap. Now the sap in the
bark is the very richest in the tree,
far richer than that in the wood, and
the mistletoe gets from its host the
choicest of food. With a strange foresight it does not throw its leaves away,
as do most parasites, but keeps them
to use in winter, when the tree is leafless.—Professor S. C. Schmucker, in
the December Ladies' Home Journal..
Coffee a Barometer.
Drop a lump of sugar in a cup of
hot coffee, watch the bubbles rise without disturbing the coffee. If they collect in the middle the weather will ba
fair. If. they adhere to the cup, forming.a ring, rain will fall. If they separate, floating in unfixed position, it
Is a sure sign of changeable weather.
Picnickers, watch your cup of coffee
in the morning.
BEAUTY OF AN EMPRESS
Wat Maintained at an Outlay of S330,-
OOO Annually.
The Empress Josephine of France
was allowed at the beginning of her
reign $72,000 a year for her toilet, and
later th;? was increased to $90,000. But
there was never a year during the
time that she did not far overreach
her allowance and oblige the emperor
to come to her relief. According to the
estimate Mason has made, Josephine
spent on an average $220,000 yearly
on her toilet during her reign. $ is
only by going over her wardrobe
article by article and noting the cost
Snd number of each piece that one can
realize how a woman could spend this
amount. Take the simple item of her
hose—which were almost always white
silk, often richly embroidered or in
openwork. She kept 150 or more pairs,
on hand, and they cost from $4 to IS*
a pair. She employed two hairc"res3r
ers—one for every day **£ $1,200 a
year; the other for great occasions, at
$2,Q00 a year; and she paid them each
from $1,000. to $2,000 a year for furnishings. It was the same for all the
"smaller items of her toilet.
- Spreads Like Wildfire.
When things are "the best" they
become "the best sellings" Abraham
Hare, a leading druggist, of Belleville,
O., writes: "Electric Bitters are the
best selling bitters I have handled in
20 years.", You know why? Most diseases begin in disorders of stomach,
liver, kidneys, bowels, blood and
nerves. Electric Bitters tones up the
stomach, regulates liver, kidneys and
bowels, purifies the blood, strengthens
the nerves, hence cures multitudes of
maladies. It builds up the entire system. Puts new life and vigor into any
weak, sickly rundown man or woman.
Price -50 cents: Sold by Weinmann &
Matthews druggists
The Cure that Cures
Coughs,
Colds,
Grippe,
Whooping Cough, Asthma'
Bronchitis and incipient
Consumption Is
CUR
*5uws*^T*i*e^*a^\-i*i^ fivs'i'a'ses.
i^-Ai^^V *JlTU*^\*&\s." ESS^CM*-*/
Kind to tlie Xegroes.
R. B. "Weddington, a Union county,
North Carolina, farmer who died recently, lived in the kindliest relations
with the negroes, and in his will he
gave three tracts of land to three of
his faithful colored servants, leaving
money to others. The remainder of
his estate, amounting to 1,660 acres,
he bequeathed to the Methodist church.
O
Beara the
Signature
of
-tltffl Kind You Have Always Bought
Astounding Discovery.
From CoopersviUe, Mich., comes
word of a wonderful discovery of a
pleasant tasting liquid that when used
before retiring by any one troubled
with a bad cough always ensured a
good night's rest. "It will soon cure
the cough too," writes Mrs. S. Hirnel-
burger, "for three generations our
family have used Dr. King's New Dis-
obvery for Consumption and never
found its equal for Coughs and Colds."
It's an unrivaled life-saver when used
for desperate lung diseases. Guaranteed bottles 50c and $1.00 at Weinmann
& Matthews'. Trial bottles free.
Dp Not Gratify yrealcness.
If Jthon wouldst conquer thy weakness, thoji musi* never gratify it. N<
man Is compelled; to evil; his consent
only makes it his. It is no sin to bt
tempted, but to be oyercome —"Willian*
Peps..
That Throlfoing Headache.
Would quickly leave you, if yoa used
Dr. King's New Life Pills. Thousands
of sufferers have proved their matchless merit for Sick and Nervous Headaches. They make pure blood and
build up your health. Only 25 cents.
Money back if not" cured. Sold by
Weinmann & Matthews Druggists.
Commands Polar Expedition.
Emperor William appointed Eroies
sor Erich Drygalski to command tht
German south polar- expedition. The
objective point of the expedition is
Kerguelen and thence southward. In
case the south polar land is discovered
a scientific station is to be erected and
maintained for at least one year. The
expedition must return in the spring
of 1904 at the latest
Epitome of Domestic Practice.
Dr. Humphreys' pocket Manual on
the treatment and care of the sick in
all ailments- mailed free; Humphreys'
Medicine Co., Cor. William .and John
Sis. New York.
Brings attractiveness to listless, unlovable girls, making them handsome,
marriiureablo women. That's wha?.
Rooky Mountain Tea will c*0, S5c;
Weinmann & Matthew*,
NE R V Ef mnst be fed on pure, rich
blQQil. Hood's SaTsaparilla is the
best neiiye. 'cmio. By enriching the
blood it makes the nerves STRONG'
THINK about your health" Do not
allow scrofula taints to develop in
your blood. Take Hood's Sarsapa-
villa now and keep yourself WELL..
Never such a season as this. Everybody wants a Cloak. Complete
and unmistakable change of style makes last year's garments Impossible. '.■*-■
The new effects are in now for three or four seasons. Buy a CLOAK
this year and havo it in style for several years and get the goo.d of it.
Our CLOAK ROOM has been a very busy place lately, for in no. other
store can such values be found. *
Three lengths are used this Fall—27 inch. 42 inch
and 58 inch Coats. Eaeli length particularly adapted
to ejrtain figures and for yarious uses.
27-incrj Coats
Castor or Black
Well lined
and made
ONLY
$5-oo
27-iQch Coats
Kersey Cloth
, in pretty Castor
Shade
ONLY
$7-00
j 27-incfe Coats
' Washington Mills Ker-
I sey Cloth in Black, Cas-
; lor, Cardinal, Etc.
I Special at
f $10.00
Our Special Leader, , Made from Elegant Kersey Cloths in
Black, Tan or Castor. Guaranteed* Satin Lining.
Elegant Cut Pearl Buttons. The best value inHhe City.
42-incli Coats
Raglan Effect,
ONLY
$8.50
58-incli Coats
Gastor, Black or
Oxford Kersey.
Satin Lined.
ONLY
$25.00
58-incii Coats
Very Stylish
and Swagger
ONLY
$12.50
E. F. MILLS & CO,
Ann Arbor.
FLAVE FORD
lias put in a stools: of . ;.'-' ■ ■
Brand New Buggies I
Ad will be pleased to sriow them whether you ■■'
wish to buy or riot. Also, . ."
Birdseli Lumber Wagons. 3
3~es.t for- Diamonds, j
For diamonds a good test is that o*,1
hardness. A genuine diamond cannot
be sacrificed by a file or by quarts
and a ruby should stand a similar test;
but emerald is not much harder tiaj
quartz and cracks easily. ;
A Physician Testifies
"I have taken Kodol Dyspepsia Cure
and have never used anything in my
life that did me the good that did,"
says County Physicians 'Geo. W.
Scroggs of Hall County, Ga. "Being
a physician I have prescribed it and
found It give the best results." If the
food you eat remains undigested in
your stomach it delays there and poisons the system. You can prevent this
by dieting bat that means starvation.
Kodol Dyspepsia Cure digests what
you eat. You need suffer from neither
dyspepsia nor starvation. The worst
cases quickly cured. Never fails.
TJnterkircher's drug store.'
Dyspepsia Cure
Digests what you eat.
This preparation contains all of the
digestants and digests all kinds of
food. It givesinstant relief and never
fails to cure. It allows you to eat all
the food you want. Themost sensitive
stomachs can take it. By its use many
thousands of dyspeptics have been
cured after everything else failed. It
prevents formation of gason the stomach, relieving all distress after eating.
Dietingunnecessary. Pleasant totake.
It can't help
but do you good
Prepared only by E. O.DeWitt&Co., Chicago.
Tho $1, bottle contains 2y. timestheaOc. size.
A Good Hearted
or in other words, men with
good sound hearts, are not very
numerous. The increasing
number of sudden deaths from
heart disease '
daily chron- I ,^sss»^
icled by the
press, is proof'
of the alarm;
ing prevalence of this
dangerous
complaint,
andas noone
can foretell
just when a
fatal collapse *•-.A- Kreamer.
will occur, the danger of neg-
8 lecting treatment is certainly a
very risky matter. If you are
short of breath, have pain in ■
left side, smothering spells, palpitation, unable to lie on side,
.especially the left, you should
begin taking .
MUes-Heart Cure.
J. A. Kreamer of Arkansas City, Kans.,
says: "My heart -was so bad it was impossible for me to lie down, and I could
neither sleep nor Test My decline was
rapid, and I realized I must get help
soor» I was advised to try Dr. Miles'
HeaVt Cure, which I did, and candidly
' believe it saved my life."
Dr. Miles' Remedies are sold
by all druggists 011 guarantee.
Dr. Miles Medical Co., Elkhart, Ind. |
By Its Record of remarkable cures
Hood's Sarsaparilla has become the
one true blood purifier prominently in
the public eye. Get only Hood's.
Hood's Pills are the best family
cathartic and liver medicine. 25o.
AGENTS i
WANT:E0,
SUCCESS
We &m yon tie »a£ is SUCCESS ltd rOSTUHS.
BI6 PAT—STEADY "WOBK-NEW* PLAB*.
Ton can -work at hoffioor travel. ■ Write »fc
once for FKKE_8AMP1"I5 and T.Tn-RgAT.
TERMS to AGENTS. * ^**
THESUCCESSCOMPANY,CooperUnian,N.Y.Ciiy
Kodol Dyspepsia Gure
Digests what you eat*
•"€1
.. .■
Object Description
| Title | 1901-11-28; Saline Observer |
| Date | 1901-11-28 |
| 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 |
