1904-09-01; Saline Observer |
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SALINE, WASHTENAW CO., MICH., THURSDAY SEPTEMBER 1, 1904.
—mm- . / ^ -
VOL. XXIV.-NO. 46
art
hreet 8c Son's
LESS GOODS
were never prettier, good quality and sensible
styles.
MOHAIR novelties are better styles than ever
ior Waists or Suits.
We haye a first class dressmaking department, all work guaranteed.
We do a big business in
L-ilDXES FURS
Get first choice.
Last year's stock all closed out, a big new
line just in, from $2.00 to $25.00 a piece.
* All summer goods at bargain prices.
Take the car and see what we can do for you.
ke Dress
Silk and Wool Crepe de Chine---Black
NEIGHBORHOOD NEWS
^Ut. Happenings of Interest Gartered far the
£BBk "Benefit, qf Oar "Headers.
$1.00 Quality
89c
$1.15
$1.00
$1.25
$1.05
$1.50
$1.30
A fine grade in all the light shades, regular $1.00 quality at 89c.
Fancy mixed Brilliantines for skirts and rain coats—High grade goods.
48 inch $1.75 cloths at $1.25
48 inch $2.00 cloths at $1.65
Silk Crapes, light colors, 22 inch widths, 50c grades at 15c per yard.
50c Wash Silks in Champagne and White at 35c.
Remnants of silk, all qualities at 25c per yard.
•
Davis & Kishlar
1 ^ W V ftfl VEGETABLE SICILIAN
IIA JLi*%> Hair Renewer
Why not stop this falling of your hair;? At this rate you will soon
be without any hair' Just remember that Hall's Hair Renewer
stops falling hair, and makes hair grow. "'-'tf'asssSgfiBS
11.0010
Westward the orb of glory takes its
way,
Wisconsin is the slate, you hear everybody say,
It's made itself famous by one great
stride;
Bocky Mountain Tea has made it's
name world wide.
Wheeler's Pharmacy
££§^-gf?r?-"
Bis 3 ell
Sweeper
Me^keyoiir
Floors Bloom
with
l^ich&r<teo.\&
•Superlative
Carpets
-For Sale by
A.C.CLARKE
Perfect Health
for All Women,
Zoa Phora Will End Your Troubles
and Make Your Life a Joy—It Has
Always Done This for Women
' "and: Always Will, >
FEEE TRIAL BOTTLE TO ALL WOKEN.
No matter how many doctors have tried and
failed; no matter how many remedies you have
used without results, Zoa Phora will cure you
and your cure will mean something. It will be
complete and perfect and- permanent. It always
has done this and always will. AU the women
who have suffered from any of the diseases peculiar to their sex and who have used Zoa Phora
are to-day rejoicing in the security of perfect
health and all the happiness it brings.
Zoa Phora cures all diseases and irregularities
of women, misplacements, leucorrhea, suppressed and painful periods, Hooding, piles, kidney, bladder and liver troubles and regulates
the change of life. Not a mail arrives that does
riot bring letters from women who have been
cured of some of these terrible diseases and
whose lives have been made happy by the noble
tnd wonderful work of Zoa Phora.
Mrs. George Sidle, McClure, Ohio, E. F. D.
No. 1, says: "I was so nervous and broken down
ihatl could not do my work. I doctored with
two of our home doctors, ahd they said I had
heart trouble. I had spells with my heart when
itwouldbeatsohardandthenlwouldfalntaway.
I received a sample bottle of Zoa Phora, which I
took according to directions, and thought it was
just what I needed, so I threw the doctor's
medicine away and got a large bottle of Zoa
Phora. It helped me so much that I bought two
more bottles, and now I am well and strong. I
do not have the spells with my heart since I
took Zoa Phora and I am regular now, where
before I took Zoa Phora I was very Irregular
and had severe pain at monthly periods. I
have found it to be truly a 'Woman's Friend.*
"If anyone calls in person or writes to me, I
will give them the particulars in my case. I
hope this will help induce some suffering
woman to try Zoa Phora.*1
'Write the Zoa Phora Co., Kalamazoo, Mich.,
for a free trial bottle and copy otthelr Illustrated
medical book, "Dr. Pengelly's Advice to
Women." The doctor will gladly give free
medical advice when needed. Zoa Phora Is for
cue at $1.00 a bottle by
Wheeler's Pharmacy.
The women outnumber the men in
Lenawee county by 485.
Mr. and Mrs. John . Stricter of Ann
Arbor, celebrated their fiftieth wedding anniversary last week.
Dr. Hoyt of the Normal faculty, bas
been appointed a member of the commission to prepare a uniform aourse of
study for the graded schools of Michigan.
The state inspection bureau has notified tbe people of Manchester to haye
their houses properly wired for electricity or the insurance rates will be
increased.
A little daughter of Paul Schall of
Ann Amor, had her mouth full of
potash but fortunately did not swallow
any but her mouth was badly burned
in consequence.
An exchange suggests tbat if some
preaeher was only smart enough to put
a side door in his church he would
haye it filled witb men who would go
in from force of habit.
It is rumored that the headquarters
of the D. Y. A. A. and J. Ry. will be
transferred from Detroit to Ypsilanti,
and that the track west of Chelsea to
Jackson will be taken and the Boland
line track used.
The Blissfield Advance will be a
strictly cash-in-advance papei after
September 1. There are but few
editors now-a-days that dare try the
plan, and we hope Bro. Goff will succeed.—Milan Leader.
Dr. Raymond D. Sleight, of the TJ.
of M. faculty, has followed the example
of his chief, Dr. Carrow, and has resigned as assistant in the Ophthalmic
and aural surgery and will engage in
private practice in Battle Creek.
Mr. Custard bas 3old his business as
dealer in agricultural implements at
Mendon. If be were in the printing
business it would have Custard pi
every day, and use no eggs," but he
would have enough dam to hold St. Jo
river.—Adrian Press.
Geo. W? Carpenter of Dexter, with
his brother Clarence were laying tile
in a deep ditch near Pinckney when
the aides caved in, completely entombing George and burying Clarence to
the shoulder. Wben George was dug
out he was found to have been suffo-
calgfl.
A new kind of berry similar to a
strawberry has been supplied to the
local market tho past two weeks by
Fred Burgdolt. The berry grows on a
shrub, has much the same flavor of the
common berry and ripens most any
time during the summer.—Hillsdale
Leader.
The electric storm of last week Wednesday did considerable damage to the
D , Y., A. A. & J. Ry., burning out
the fuses of the Ypsilanti waiting
room putting every lamp out of commission, also burned out the Francisco
rotary which took about fifteen hours
to repair.
• Ann Arbor is going to be without
a playhouse this year. The Athens
theater is owned by the White estate
and William Pierpont White of Buffalo, one of the executors, has ordered it
closed up and it will remain so until
sold. No bookings for plays, lectures,
or political meetings will be made.—
Ex.
The largest mortgage ever filed in
Washtenaw county was put on record
Saturday by the Pere Marquette Railroad Compiiny. , It was for §65,000,000
due July 1,1954, 4 per cent gold bearing bonds, lo the New York Security
& Trust Company, trustee. The road
cuts a corner in Salem township which
made it necessary that a mortgage be
filed in this county.—Ex.
An exchange says: "At a recent revival meeting a butcher arose and said
that he was the wickedist man in town
.and had given his customers short
weight for years. I'd go to hell if 1
should die to-nigljt, be continued. Immediately an old deacon, *■>Ho is in tbe
grocery business started tbe tomn 'If
you get there before iMp, lookVout for
me, I'm coming too.'\ Aim then
the grocer wondered why\everybody
laughed." N^ \
A number of farmers in the sotrt&ern
part of the state claim to have been recently swindled with the following old
trick: A man drives hurriedly to the
farm house, holding a telegraph en-
office, and that the message announces
the death of a relative. He collects
several dollars for tbe delivery and
then drives away before the swindled
farmer realizes that the dead person
named in the dispatch is a stranger to
hi m .—Ypsilantian.
A couple ot automobilists were the
cause of what might have terminated
fatally last week Sunday at Chelsea.
A party of five were driving home
from church when they passed two
autos and the spirited horses began to
rear and plunge, throwing the occupants, of the carriages out, bruising
t"hem up considerably. The party motioned the sutoists to stop but they
paid no attention. They refused to
give any names. Efforts were made to
bead them off by telephone, but they
were fruitless. The same autoists
caused an accident in Lyndon.
Messrs Holmes and Raftrey of Chelsea, stopped at our orchard Saturday
last and Mr. R. wanted to try our
apples—sour enough to make o-ir pigs
squeal. I told him to get some fresh
ones right from the tree. I gave him
a pole and he began to slash at the
limbs. A drove of hogs heard him
and came to help. Raftrey would
make a slash, knock down the fruit,
then drop the pole and by the time he
could stoop down the apples would be
all gone. After a while he stogped to
say they were the best baseball nine to
catch a fly he ever run up against.
You could have heard him puff for 10
lengths of fence. Would like to have
him try again when he feels like it.
I'm ready.—North Lake cor. Chelsea
Herald.
A couple of farmers had a little celebration all by themselves in Davis'
grocery store this morning, and they
came very near not being in a position
to attend the picnic tn-morrow. Mr.
Davis had just made a deal in potatoes
witb the two men, who were bringing
them into tbe store in bushel baskets
and loading them into the elevator.
Just as both men, each bearing a loaded basket, stepped into the elevator,
ene of them hit the trip rope and the
elevator started down, while the
weight went up. So rapid was tbe
trip that neither man had time to set
down his basket, and the landing was
equally sudden. Whereupon the cable
which held the 100-pound weight snapped, and the latter, which was then at
tbe top of the three-story building,
started on a return trip alone. The
weight struck the elevator" within a
foot of where one of the men stood,
and the wonder is that he was not
killed instead of being mere badly
frightened.—Ypsilauti Evening Press.
Mary—Sponge the pimples with
warm, water. You need a blood tonic,
would advise you to take Hollister's
Rocky Mountain Tea. It drives away
all eruptions. 35c Tea or tablet
form. Wheeler's Pharmacy
Ivelope in bis-hand, claiming to be
message from some near-by telegraph
DAILY EXCURSIONS
DETROIT famous
St. Clair Flats
Tashmoo Park
Port Huron and
TOLEDO
On the magnificent steel steamers
TASHMOO, GREYHOUND (New)
and CITY OF TOLEDO
Toledo >nd Return, every Sunday
Morning, 50c; Flat* orT«shmoo and
Return, Dally, 50c; Pt. Huron and
Return, $1.00.
Steamers leave Detroit for Flats,
Tashmoo. Port Huron and "Way Ports
Daily, 8.30 A. it. and 2.30 p. ir. standard
time; additional steamer for Flats and
St. Clair week days at 3.30 p. x., returning arrive. 8.15 A. Jr., 11.00 A. v.
and8.30p.sr. lassengerstalringafter-
noonsteamersto the Flats have ample
time for fish supper and return on the
Tashmoo at 8.30 p. it. Steamer for
Toledo daily.leaveweek days 4.30 p.m.
Sundays, 9.06 a. if. and 5.00 P. M.
Telephone IIOO
GRISWOLD ST. WHARF
are now complete,
We are now prepared to show the largest and most complete line of Hart, Schaffner & Marx Suits, Top Coats |and
Rain Coats we haye ever offered, comprising the latest
and snappiest patterns andjfabrics.
Remember the H., S. & M. straight front Sack and Varsity is a new design in Spring Suits, selling from S14 00
to §20.00.
The H., S.& M, 32 inch Top Coats are the newest and
most stylish overcoat you can buy this season. Xou won't
find them elsewhere. There are points of fit, style and
quality that other makers do not have. They are priced
from $10 to $18.
Our lines of Spring Shirts, Neckwear, Hosiery, JFancy
Vests, Hats and Caps are the largest we haye ever offered.
C. S. WORTLEY & CO.
~,X~-ps±:Laj;CL.l3±-
Our School Sals of 'ton Chi:"
In order to create a demand for "Iron
Clad"^ hosiery and thus increase onr
Sales, we have devised the following
plan for getting the attention of the
customers and will call it a "School
Sale."
We will donate (entirely free of
charge) one school tablet of a special
design and printed in three colors with
each pair of hose purchased during
the month of September.
The following numbers of "Iron Glad"
stockings for Boys and Girls will be on
sale during the month of September and
included in the Special "School Sale."
No. 19 Black. One and One Rib, Boys'
heavy stocking with triple leg, heel and
toe and harrowed ankle. The best Boys
stocking on the market. Sizes 7 to 10.
Price 25c.
Iffo. 16 Black. One and One Bib stocking
for Boys and G-irls, medium weight.
Sizes 6 to 10. Price 25c.
See Window Display.
YOURS FOR GOOD CLOTHING
Nissly Clothing Co.
I am getting in my fall line of
SHOES #
which will be complete and splendid values.
I have been very fortimate in securing a bargain for the trade this
fall. I will show you bargains that
will call you in.
S. T. FAIRBANK
Old Papers at this office.
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Object Description
| Title | 1904-09-01; Saline Observer |
| Date | 1904-09-01 |
| 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 |
