1909-03-04; Saline Observer |
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■*ya-*-****w--**i--*---IMiW-^W^'^^
3Pi&
k; J. W^JRREN. Editor.
SALINE, WASHTENAW CO., MICH., THURSDAY, MARCH 4, 1909.
VOL. XXIX.-NO 21
w
SALINE SAVINGS BANK
CAPITAL, $25,000.
STOCKHOLDERS' LIABILITIES,• $50,000.
Michigan,
and
i
9*
4-
A bank: managed by a Boai*d of. nine Directors who DIRECT
and know what is being done.
A bank operating under the: Laws of the State of
regularly examined by the State Banking Department.
A bank whose FIFTY-SEVEN stockholders, with two exceptions
are residents ot SALINE and vicinity.
A bank whose officers give ADEQUATE BONDS for the funds
they handle.
A bank whose Board of Directors appoint aiid employ an EXPERT* AUDITOR tO'inake thorough examinations ol its books.
We offer Superior advantages tq.-Commercial Depositors.
' We loan money on apprdvcd security. 4
We pay THREE per cent on Sayings Deposits.
We issue attractive Certilloates of Deposit.
VVe have modern SAFETY DEPOSIT BOXES To Rent.
We represent a numbei* of the LARGEST and BEST Insurance
Companies.
Ou^tTustotner's ROOM is always open to the PUBLIC.
Charles Burkhart; President
Daniel N issly, Vice President Geo. A. Lehman, Cashier
Arthur A. Wood, 2nd Nice Prag. W. T, Bradford, Auditor
^^°aws5*^^33I*Ji5(*E}aTOK.S *^SSBSBsn»-^
Chas. Burkhart Geo, J, Feldkamp Frank Rose
Daniel Nissly . Gottlieb Hertler Arthur A. Wood
-'Julius Feldkamp * Webb DePuy G. C, Mann
mmmmmmmmmmmmm
Auctions.
Gideon L. Hoyt, having sold bis
farm one mile wes.t of Lodi cemetery,
will sell at auction,-ori ' ■>
Tuesday, March 9 -
at one o'clock sharp, tho following:
2 Work Horses; 2 Grade Jersey
Gows soon to be fresh,* 1 Steer; 48
Breeding Ewes, 1 Bam, 38 Yearlings;
11 Hogs—10 Fall. Pigs, 1 Brood Sow
due April 15; 80 Thoroughbred White
Wyandotte Chickens;
Wagon with 2 sets of wheels narrow
and wide tire, 2 Buggies, Farmer's
Friend .Grain Drill, Tedder, Rake,
Back, 2-horse Iron Age Cultivator,
Corn Sheller, Roller., 'Root Cutter,
Pair Bobs, 2 Plows, Lever Spike Harrow, Spring-tooth. Harrow, Seeder,
Fanning Mill, 1000-l.b Howe Scales,
Double' Harness, 2 Single Harness,
Stack Canvas, 22-ft Ladder, 50-gal Oil
Tank, 40 Bags, Wool Box, Cross-cut
Saw, Hay, Corn, Oats, 2 bu.'Clover
Seed, Quantity of Household Goods,
Quantity of Small Tools.
" J. W. Hull, Auct.
College Course""in Politics.
To Columbia university belongs =the
credit of offering the first course designed to give students a. practical
knowledge of the conduct'of political
affairs. That institution has asked
the bureau of municipal- research in
New 'York to give the .-members of the
class the benefit of the experience it
has derived from the study of the-affairs of that city, and" the invitation
has been accepted. The growing demand for. the adoption" of the scientific methods of city governments
lends support to the view that college
men "Will be in demand in this department of the public service, hence
the propriety and usefulness of a university course established on^he lines
indicated by the innovation, at Columbia.
*>**?•
Wheeler's Pharmacy
lias *a full line of
STAPLE Goods
including Jewelry, Silverware, Toilet
Articles,. Books, Stationary, Etc;
THE STDHOftRD
BRBIS8Y FOR 8J.W FORMS OF-
UlUMATISM
LUMBAaO, soriTici,
NEURALGIA, . -;
KIDHEY TROUBLES, :
CATARRH, ASTHMA and
K1HDRED DISEASES
GIVES QUICK RELIEF
Anr*He4 fHftert-.au"? ft atfp**flB ai**3R!*i;}n.-
mm W]V>t f rfljn drib. -white pennan-:,
eut, results ar§ i-enig effeotea by taking
U tatefnnlly, PHVtfyiBg tbe blond, dis.
solving tue poisonous substance and
r6mo?lnu H from the system. .
DR, C, U. GATES
HoncfleVt Minn., wrjte»i * r
!>A little Blr) here had snob a weak back
iii-U-e<l by Ulieiiiiifrtlsm and Kidney Trovblo'
' 111" 6 "to WW not stand on her feet. The.
livmoiit; they pnt her dorni an. tha floor she-
KnuM pCFWim with pain*. I treated her with-
"iVIHllH'*'' O-Tict toilivy She runs around «» well-
will happy »B ean be, lpresorlbo"M)ROPS" •
(or my patients and use It In my practice."
TfST^-DROPS"
| K.vau»Tesurfertng'wltb.RneumatisnitT.|
tiiimbaim, Soiatioa. Neuralgia, Kidney
trouble or any kindred disease, write.-
to ns for a trial bottle ot "5-DROPS.",.
*"3'DROPS "■ Is entirely free trom'-L
opium, oo0aine,morphlne, alcohol.laud." I
apum and other similar Ingredients,.- ■
Lirse Sl« Brttle "B-PROPS" (300 Boioi) *
$1.00, r*or'8»l« by OruMUl-h
8WAK59H RHEUMATIC CURE COMPANY
6«Dt. 80. 174 Ufc« Street. ChIc«o
Heart Strength
Heart Strength, or Heart Weakness, means Nerve
Strength, or Norvo"Weakness—nothing more, Pos.
Itively, not one -weak heart in a hundred is, in it.
self, actually diseased. It is almost always a
hidden tiny littio nerve that really is all at fault.
This obscure nerve—tho Cardiae, or .Heart Nerve
—simply noodg,- and nrast have, moro power.inoro
stability, moro oOntrollinu. moro goveroiilB
/strength. Without that the Heart must continue
to fail, and the stomach and kidneys also hava
these same controlling nerves, ■ '
This clearly explains why as a medicine, Dr.
Shoop's Restorative has in tho past done so much
for weak and ailing Hearts. Dr, Shoop first sought
tho causo of aUthis-painful,.palpitating, suffocating heart distress. Dr. Shoop's Kestorativo—this
popular prescription—Is alone directed to these
weak' and wasting nerve centers. It builds;
it'strengthens: it offers real, eenulneheart help.
If you would have strong Hearts! strong di.
cestioh, strengthen these inerves — re-establish
them as needed, with
Dr.Shoop's
Restorative
0. C. WHEELER.
B. N. Smith, having sold his farm
three miles North-east of Saline Village, will sell at auction, on
Thursday, March 18
at 9 a. m. sharp, the following:
4 Horses—1 Team 7 years weight
2500, 1 Horse 17 years old, 1 Roadster
12 years old; 21 Head Jersey Cattle—
1 Thoroughbred Jersey Bull 3 years
old bred by J. H. Murray of Salem, 12
Milch Cows,, 2 year old Heifer due
April .1, 3 Yearling Heifers, 4 Pall
Galves* 113 Sheep—Go Breeding Ewes,
47 Fambs, 1 Rambouillet-; 1 Brood Sow
5 Shoats, 35 Chickens;
Double Carriages, Single Buggy, 2
Wagons 1 with wide tire(s, 2 Hay
Backs, Slock Rack, Gravel Box, 2
Pair Bobs, Double Cutter, Mower,
Hay Loader and Side Delivery Bake
nearly new; Dump Bake, Boiler, Disc
Harrow, 40-tooth Drag," Smoothing
Harrow, Spring-tooth Harrow, Tedder
2 Plows, l-hocse Plow, Shovel Plow,
Potato Digger, 4-borse Sweep Power
and Jack and No. 2 Shredder, Corn
Binder, Ro.ot Cutter, Lawn Mower, 2-
horse Cultivator, Single Cultivator,
Corn Sheller, 800-lb Scales, 24Q-lb
Scales, 700-lb Cream Separator; Grindstone, Self-rake Reaper, 70 Cedar
Posts, 6 bottle Milk Tester, Spring
Bqmp, Wheelbarrow, 9 sets Double
Harness, Single Harness, Pair Blankets and Robes, Bedroom set and other
Household Goods, Quantity ol Clover
and Timothy Hayt 75 bu. Oats, 100 bu.
Corn, 4 bu. Seed Corn, 4 bu. Seed Potatoes, 16 and 24-ft Lalders, 2 Crosscut Saws, Match Planes, Woodman's
Mall and Wedge, 201b Mall, Post
Hole Digger, Fanning Mill, Truck
and Bag Holder, 60-gal Oil Tank.
\ J. W.'JTinneil, Auct.
Haitians a Lazy Lot.
Sydney Brooks, writing to the Ion-
don Chronicle about Haiti, says .the
Haitians were the first people in the
world to. abolish slavery, and Mrs. C.
R. Miller, "writing in Leslie's Weekly,
says of Haiti: "In that little republic,
covering ahout 10,000 square miles,
within five days' sail of New York, one
may encounter more strange complications 'and a greater disregard for" human life than in the remote countries of the eaBt. Situated in the
very heart of the West Indies, where
civilization exists in a high degree,
Haiti alone has kept her doors closed
to-progress. She hecame an independent state more than 100 years ago.
Her rich lands were already under cultivation, but the lazy natives allowed
the plantations to go to ruin, and forests have grown up instead."
Have Yon Seen Gur
HEATEEFlELOOM Mil
Hew this week and they are beauties.. *
Kew line of Aprons 25c and 50c,
Newest things -in belts and bags.
WALL PAPER—We oarry a line of wall paper and
also sample books of the finest wall paper to be had.
i -j -
Come and see for yourself. **
OIL—Have you used our "Red Star" oil? Only 13c '
per gallon ai.d declared to be the best in town.
Our usual line of good groceries fruits and' candies.
\
-CASTORIA
- J?or Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
' * * * " "V» i- \
Bears the s
" Signature of (~4
KILL.the COUCH
and CUKE the LUNGS
wm*Dr. KtagV
New Discovery
for CSffil18 JSBkL
AHD ALL THROW AHD itfWG TROUBLES.
GtJABANTEED S ATISFAOIOR'El
OK MONEY REFUNDED.
Rare Washington Portrait:
A rare and curious mezzotint portrait
of George Washington in the library-
of the late Lafayette S. Richardson
of Lowell, Mass., was auctioned off
last year in Boston. It .is - entitled
"George Washington, late president of
the • United States of America, etc."
and was published March 14, 1801,- hy
J. Hinton Lindon. It is a small folio
and is colored by hand. It looks as
much like' George III. as it does the
Father of 'His Country. Baker, who
wrote the "Engraved Portraits of
Washington," says that only one impression of this mezzotint has come
under the notice of the writer. It was
in neither the Clarkson nor the Carson sale of Washington portraits.
Farm .Employment for Criminals.
Gov. Harris of Ohio believes -that
criminals can be employed on a farm
with advantage to themselves and*\the
state. He proposes'that prisoners in
the penitentiary who are not confirmed criminals be transferred to the
reformatory and put to work on the
state farm. "It is the conditions of
our cities that breed crime," says the
governor. "Most of it can he traced
to idleness and drink, and idleness' is
frequently the cause of drink. There
is little drink in the country and practically no idleness. If the young man
Who had slipped over the hounds of a
law were taught scientific farming'he
would come to like it and escape the
associates who carry him down when
he returns to the city."
SALINE CO-OPERATIVE CO
PHONE 86.
Insist on Yellow Flour.
Charles Chrlstadoro, an expert on
flour and grains, sounds the keynote
of the new situation brought about by
the bleached flour decision when he
says in a communication to the editqy
comnienting on the bleached fiQur decision* "The housewife will now insist on yellow tinted or creamy flour,
and will learn to realize that a natural
flour very- white can in no manner
compare with the creamy or yellow
flour in so far as glutens and muscle
builling values are concerned.
"as from 85 to 90 per cent, of the
large flour mills of the country were
using this bleaching process, the decision is far-reaching."—National Food
Magazine. _
Protective Device.
When a telephone line is electrostatically" ^charged the telephone acts
as 'a condenser. The winding serves
as one plate of the condenser, the
frame of the receiver as. the dielectric
and the person who is holding the receiver to his ear as the other plate of
the condenser. In order to prevent"
this - condenser from* discharging
through the person, a German inventor!
provides a grounded metallic cover for
the receiver, the capacity of, which is
somewhat greater than that of the
body.
Bound to Be a Success.
Smiley—I see the women of Suburbia have adopted a sure method of
securing a circulating library.
Banks—How is that?
Smiley—-Why, they've made a rule
that every time a woman says a mean
thing about any of her neighbors she
has to contribute a cent to the library
fund.—Illustrated Sunday Magazine.
Church Items.
. Standard Tinao
• BAPTIST
Rev. John P. Tree, Pastor.
10:00 a m. PreachingService.
11:15 Sunday School.
5:30 B. Y. P. U. service'.*
6:30 p. to. Preaching Service.
Mid-week prayer meeting' Thursi
evening 7:00 p. m
PRESBYTERIAN
Uev: tt, M. .Morey, Pastor.
10:00 a. in. Preaching Service.
11:15 a. id. SuLday School.
.6:00 p. m. Christian Endeavor.
7:00 p. m.. Pceaching Services:
7:00 p. m. Thursday evening praj
meeting.
EVANGELICAL.
Rev. Theo. O. Papsdorf, pastor.
9:30 a. m. Preaching Service.
10:30 a.m. Sunday Sohool.
7:30 p, m. First Wednesday of
mouth Y. P. S.
METHODIST
Rev. Howard Goldif*, pastor.
9:30 a. ra'. CIhsS meeting.
,10:00, a m. Preaching service. ,
11:30 a. m. Sunday School.
3:00'p. tn. Junior League.
6:00 p. ra..Epworth League
7:00 p. *r.. Preaching- service.
7:00 p. m.vThursday evening prnje
meeting.
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ~
First Church of Christ, Scii-nti»i
Nissly Tiall. -Sundav.service. ]0ic0. a. in
The sermon will be reading of se
lections.from the Bible iiud the .lex'
honk, "Scii'iu-o and Health, wilh K
to the Hi-ripturt'.f."
Stind.'iv *-«lio«il 1PQ0 :i.tn
Wednt'.-day ••Vfiiing inpetintf for
tiraoniM* und rxpi-fit-ij-ps :tt-'7:00.
Reading room open dailv. Sundays
<-xcep'ed,'fi*tim 2.0T ta 4:00 p in. Al!
are cordially inviu-d in bol'i-lhf 'Read
Bin rdijm and rhu*'i:h »i_i vUsi =.
COOL BROS. GRAIN CO.
We carry the following in stock: FLOUR all kinds,
FRESH GROUND BUBKWHEAT, OIL MEAL
fine ground and pea size, COTTONSEED MEAL,
BEET PULP, BRAN, and MIDDLINGS, some very
fine WHEAT SALVAGE, SAGINAW SALT,
.GRAIN BAGS. We sell
Homestead Fertilizers
it's a money maker for farmers. Try some on your
spring crops. That is the proof.
We are always in the market for grain of all
kinds and clover seed. Call us up before selling.
GOAL—We carry all kinds, of COAL, Hard
Coal four, sizes, Pocahontas, Hocking Valley, Washer-nut for cook stoves. Have you tried our GAS
Coke, economical and.smokeless, it will please you.
Overstock of Watches
' Until May 1 will sell any, size Elgin or Waltham
movement in a gold filled case for $10.00.
E. H. Cressy,
Jeweler and Optician.
Better Not Get
sia
If you can help it. Kodol prevents Dyspepsia, by
effectually helping Nature to Relieve Indigestion.
But don't trifle with Indigestion.
A great many people who-..have
trifled •with, indigestion, have^been
sorry for it—when, nervous or
chronic dyspepsia resulted, and
they have not been able to cure it
"Use Kodol and prevent having
Dyspepsia.
Everyone is subject, to indigestion. Stomach derangement follows
stomach abuse, just as naturally
and just as surely as a sound and
healthy stomach results upon the"
taking of KodoL
When you experience sourness
of stomach, belching of'gas and
nauseating fluid, bloated sensation,
gnawing pain in the pit of the
stomach, heart burn: ■ (so-called),
diarrhoea, headaches, dullness- 'or
chronic tired feeling—you need Ko--
dol. And then the. quicker you'take
Kodol—the hetter. Eat what you
want, let Kodol digest it.
* Ordinary pepsin "dyspepsia- tablets,"- physics, etc.^ are not likely
to. be pf much benefit, to you, in
- digestive "ailments* Pepsin, is only
H
a partial digester—and physics are
not digesters at all., . .
Kodol is a perfect digester.., If
you could see Kodol digestingevery
particle of food, of all kinds, in the
glass test-tubes in our laboratories,
you" would know this just as well
as. we do.
Nature and.Kodol will always
cure a sick stomach—hut in order
to be cured, the stomach must rest
That is what Kodol does—rests the
stomach, while the stomach, gets
well. Just as simple as A, B, C.
Our Guarantee
Go to yonr druggist today aiid get a dot- -
lar bottle. Then alter you have used the
entire contents of the bottle if yoa catt
honestly say, that It has not done you any
good, return the bottle to the druggist and
he" will refund your money -without question or delay. We will then pay tue druggist for the bottle. Don't hesitate, all
druggists know that our guarantee is good.
This offer applies to. the large bottle only
and to but one in a family.* The large bottle contains 2& times as much as the fifty
cent bottle. .
Kodol is prepared at the labors.*
toriesof E.C.DeWitt &Ck*.,Chlcasov
^"'J*^8JH!F.^ *. I!« H it.liWiSt.'W^SS
yry%
Object Description
| Title | 1909-03-04; Saline Observer |
| Date | 1909-03-04 |
| 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 |
