1921-09-22; Saline Observer |
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VOLUME XXXXI
SALINE, WASHTENAW COUNTY, MICH., THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 1&, 1921
><192]
NUMBER 52-2:
Your Nickel
and Mine
Let's you and I think just as
much of our nickels as Mr. Wrigley
does, as the five and ten cent stores
do.
- They put forth much effort to get
the little five cent pieces resting in
the corners of our pockets and
purses.
They spend dollars to get you and
I to spend our nickels and they are
growing wealthy from the profit
they make out of our five cent
pieces.
If they are worth so much, to
them, they should be of value to us.
Let's be more careful with the nickels and dimes. Let's deposit them
.for future use in some good bank
like the
Saline Savings Bank
Member of Federal Reserve Bank
MANY LACK LEGAL
;BBILLIANT CONGESTS
COLD WINTER OR NOT!
PBOOFS OF BIRTH :
i
FOR ANN ARBOR i
Census Agent Checks Michigan"- \ ;Eiy0 Big Concert Courses Announced!
Records—Failure to Benort ' .'. !
Births May Bring Pros- j for the Coming Season, j
ecntiou. v j
Two hi
Chancer Are It Will .Be Colder Than
. Year Ago. But Not Sure,
jCertain -rog-osticators are begin-
!
concert courses have 1 ninS to tell what the coming winter
Can you prove—legally—you havejD6e11 anmcunced ior the coming sea- j is going^to he, _A nearby meterolo-
Can you move—legally—you wei?e I**"*"*- by the University School of Mn-jgist has'the following to say:
This is your store—We
want yoii to feel a sense
of ownership and tell us
wherein we are not fulfilling our ideal of service, quality and values.
. BURKHART BROS.
'S WORTH or MONEY "BACK."
horn? C. G. Jermane, special agent!3ic. -^a Arbor. As usual they will
of the "U-. a census bureau, is now \ *** -S^e*"** in* Hill auditarium.
checking vital statistics .records ck* Special interest eenters in the
the state departmerit of health til'1"* «"«»* for the first time a series
learn "what percentage; of births gbjof five strictly orchestral programs
unrecorded in Michigan, what per-i-.will be given in the extra concert
centage of people have no legal I series by the Detroit Symphony or-
proof of birth. i chestra, under the baton of Ossip
Births of hundreds of children I Gabrilowitsch, at each of which a
born each year in the state are nev- j distinguished soloist will appear as
■ear recorded!, present Indications o*E t follows:
the work reveal. In other '-words.' November 9—fEstelle Llebling, so-
it is said, these children may never' P*ano.
be able to prove—legally—that they' "December 12—Raoul Vida, violin-
were, born anid entitled to the rights : ist,
of citizenship. • j January 33—Ossip Gabrilowitsch.
"This means," declares Dr. Wil-: pianist,
liam Deacon, director of the bureau j" February 20*—Hans Kindler, yolin
of commtunicable disease and vital' cellist.
statistics, "that the physician, mi<V] March 27—Bendetson Netzorg, pj,-
wife, attendant, or head of the fara,-; anist.
ily in each of these raises is guilty ; In the regular Choral Union series
of misdeimeanor under the state law j six programs by artists of world re-
and** liable to fine and imprisonment i nown will be given as follows:
and prosecution at any time for fait,} October 20—Brno Dohna-yi, pian-
ure to report births. ) ist-
"Counties sparsely settled ai.d ; November 22—John McCormacV,
comunities peopled with a large pe**-'*tenor.*
centage of those having little know!- j December 5—Ignaz Friedman, pi-
edge of the value of birth registry- j anist.
tion, where midwives or no attend-i January 9—Fritz Kreisler, violinist.
ants are employed are showing the
greatest ' number of unrecorded
births. Records qf the division of
vital statistics are being used every
day by citizens of the state for the
purpose of proving the right to ir_-
herit property, to manry, to vote, to
attend school, to obtain passports,
February 3—Erika Morini, violinist.
March 14—Rosa Raisi, soprano and
Giacomo Rimini, baritone.
Included iira this series will be the
twenty-jiinth annal May Festival,
consisting of six concerts given during four days, about the middle of
May. Choruses, both adult and
"I notice several amateur prophets •
are expecting a cold winter. One
sign they rely on is that *some spec-
cies of birds are preparing to go
southward earlier than usual. So
far as-I have been able to judge
such indications have no great va*uc.
It may be that because the warm
weather came so early in the spring
and the birds came at that time,
their instinct tells them, they have
been here as long as usual and the
whiter is near. But the fact that
the warm weather beggan early in
spring does not prove it will end
earlier than in other years.
"In the past few years extremes
have seemed to follow each other
and one might think that since last
winter was mild the coming winter
will be cold.
"But a study of the actual sequence
of seasons gives no clear indication. Here were two cold winters in
succession, 1916-1917 and 1917-191S.
The next winter was mild, the next
cold, and the last one mild Of the
three cold winters one came after
the warm summer of 1918; one came
after a cold summer, and the other
followed a normal summer, the other
followed one that was rather cool.
"It is possible the coming winter
will be -unusually cold, but there is
no reliable knowledege. At least
the chances are strong that it will'
be colder than last winter.'*
working papers, pensions, or to prove j children's, will participate, as will
legitimacy. ' ~^so t'3j6 Chicago Symphony orohest-
"To neglect to record a child's
birth is not only unlawful but is
distinctly unfair to the child." .*,
The Qualify Grocery
PHONE 86
i'or Fresh fruits, "Vegetables. Staple and JFaney Groceries
MELON.*
WATEB and MB...
Tomatoes Sweet Potatoes .-Spanish Mons
Cucumbers Celery
PEACHES ■" 'BANANAS ORANGES
' FRESH STOCK OF PRUNES
Everything' to do your pickling* with!
PU!E CiNE: SUGAR 7c POUND
Just received a stock of White Ware—Cups, Saucers and plates—TAKE A LOOK!"
AH goods delivered promptly. Tours for more business.
Phone 86
MARTIN fUOSS
WORK YOURSELF TO DEATH
IF YOU V/ANX TO
BUT SATE THAT WIFE
Don't let her bake bread for the whole family and
the threshers when you can buy wholesome bread
at a very little more than the flour costs.
We bake bread all the tome and have fresh
cookies, pies, cakes and other kinds of pastry
every day. ' ' ' .
Sehnebelt's Bakery
tf'a and a group of leading artists.
Special inteirurban cars will leave
the auditorium both east and west
at the close of each concert in both
series"- • -■-■-.« ■ * ,- -
Information concerning tickets,
etc., should, be addressed to Charles
A. Sink, secretary.
AUTOMOBILES* ON' THE TFA*KM"* .
Ahd not all divers, either! Advance sheets of the TJ. S. 1920 censu 3
swears to these returns—a total of
2,146,512 automobiles or more than
332 machines for every 1,000 farms^
Pessimests who bemoan the "poor
.farmer's" inability to come "back
with a rush of prosperity had better j scene Built at California Studios for
YANKEE SCHOOL PARLOR
WITHIN EASTERN PALACE
paint their blue goggles pink. Tho j
"right there,'' fellows! ■
Viola Dana's Picture.'"Dangerous to Men."
farmer is
and while he is just now in too;
much of a hurry to st.ll his crop at j
low figures to get ready cash, you'll; Building an American ' boarding
find the farmer light .ait the bottom j sehool parlor within the gold-fretted
of the reconstruction boom we alljwalls of an. Bast India.ii palace is
believe in.
done only in the "movies,"' of "course,
And this year's farmer is a much I and then as a matter of efficiency,
specidier -citizen than ever before he- ' Such a set within a set was con-
cause he is well-motored and has i structed by Metro technicians for
rubber wheels Under him. Do you) "Dangerous to Men," Viola -Dana's
out of every 100 J picture to be shown at the Liberty
know^ that two
farms in the "United States have mo- = theatre Saturday.
tor trucks today? There are now ; The original setting was the ball-
139,169 si_ehi trucks. (room, of an Indian palace, it took up
Pennsylvania leads with 9,372; New \ nearly one-third of the floor space oi
York has 9,259; Towa, S.910; Ohio,-one of the imrmense indoor stages at
7,319; Ne_raska, 6,548; .California, Ithe Metro studios in Hollywood. It
6,416, and Illinois 6,154, to name a ! was built for some of the scenes in
few. ' i "The Hope," the great Drury -Lar.e
Besides, there are no less than j melodrama now being made into a
246,139 tractors in the field, making j Metro picture, -with an all-star cast.
38.2 tractors for every 1,000 farms, j When* the set was nearly .complete,
The mule-power farmeir of the "one- j Marguerite de la Motte, one of the
hoss" sbary Is the one you see in the i stairs in the melodrama, was injured-
movies, but the fellow who is going f in an automobile accident, and it
to give backbone to our coming era (was necessary to postpone filming
of prosperity is a high-powered ma- i of the picture until her recovery,
chine proposition of vast capacity t It seemed to M. P. Staulcnp, inter-
anid plenty of pep and speed, .com- j ior art supervisor, .am inexcusable
menis Sugarman's Indicator. j waste of spacg to permit the ela-bor-
■—— i ate setting .to stand unused. The
Aeco___ng to J. S. Cox, county j problem was solved by permitting A.
highway enginieer, a new -tate law i H. Websteir to construct within it the
went into effect on September 19 • boarding school parlor .in "Danger-
which turns the entire roadside, as I ous 'to Men." There thirty persons,
regards the caring for brash and; worked with Miss Dana ior several
trees, over to the direction of the j days linden* Maxwell Karger, director
county _-oad commission. This act < general, who personally supervised
excepts the state trunk lines, which the filming of H. V. Esmond's stage
come under the direction of the} drama,.
.Michigan officials. Under the law! .— j pupils under 20 years may he ad-
private i-s-ividcals ,aaid public cor-j Telegraphic reports from the Pordjmitted.
BUSINESS AND MERCHANTS
There are some folks who think
the business of being a- merchant is
"easy picking." All that is necessary
is some capital, credit at the baufc
and* then price''the ""goods and hand
them over the counter when the customers pour in.
How easy it is to be a merchant
has been shown in the past twelve
months. Most of them will tell you
that they have had nothing to do
but worry.
Palling prices have played nob
with business: Ih the first place, receding values left many merchants
with shelves full of goods that had
to be disposed of at a loss or at cost.
Then came the problem of acquiring
new stocks without being bilked all
over again by continued falling values. The problem of a general and
ill-advised cessation, of buying by
the public also worried for a. time,
but that one particular *nrobl£_i is
greatly lessened, because the publit
is again going to catch, up with its
needs.
How "easy" it was to be a merchant was shown hy the number oi
failures the, first six monihs after
values broke. And right here it
might be mentioned as a sign of the
times Brads,_reet t authority now
chronicles a total of failures that
are not much above normal.
.A merchant to be successf_l has to
know his business thoroughly, he
must ha as good at buying as selling,
have executive ability of a, high,order, know the community in which
he does business anid have its full
co-nndence.
But above .all, tear yourself away
from the' notion that the merchant
has a soft snap* They too have had
their full measure of trouble.
Marriage Licenses
"William Klein, 1S2, Ann ATbor; Effie Roos, 26, same.
Carl G. Robwen, 39, Chelsea- Ele-
thear Belleville, 34, Dundee.
John Dryer, 21, Tpsitanti; Marion
Birdgette, IS, "Wayne.
A. Dell Walt, 27, Detroit; Augusta
M. Krauss, 26, Ann Arbor.
Lawrence Coffey, 21, Ann Arbor;
ivathryn Goodenow, 20, same.
Harold M. Crossman, 30, Ypiilaaiij
Ellen Kali-* 21, same.
H. I_ Smith, 26, ypsilanti; SBni_(|
P. Niblich, 24, Jackson-
Leo* Theodore Johnston, 24, Ann
Arbor, Alma Paddock, 19, same-.,
Pred L. Lo-sch, 53, Milan; Bella.
Schroeder, 41, same.
• Phil James Draighead, 21, Ypsilanti; Pauline Wilson-, 19, sr.__e.
Arthur C. Bilenberg, 2S, Toledo;
Blanch Griggs, 20, same.
Sayre Wilson, 21, Ann Arbor; Cecelia Roach, IS, same.
Marvin St. Clair CaYj-, 26, Ypis-
lanti; Helen Elizabeth Homib-rger,
27, Ann Arbor.
Charles Kline, 20, Ypsilanti; Ila
Porter, 19, same.
Prank I. Myers, 45, Lincoln, Neb.:
Eva A. Daveniport, 40, same.
The old-fashioned mam who could
drink or let it alone is now letting it
alone.—Rochester (Ind.) Sun.
In a matrimonial race it is not
easy to tell when; a girl is on her las.
lap;—Breanen (Ind.) Enquirer.
OBSERVER LINERS
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING
.e per Line Kirst insertion- Then 3c
per Line; Miniim-in charge 25c.
Por Sale—Ewes . and lambs,
man Auto Company.
Sinclair gasoline 21c, at
JMulr's and Hneblerts .Gar-age.
"Wied-
-B. 3.
STOVE WOOD FOR SALE
Wiedm'an Auto Company.
HORSES FOR SALE.
Wiedman Auto Company.
Por Sale—Fine wool ram.
Allison, phone 139-P2.
A. JU.
"Wanted—Painting and "D-aper hang1-
ing. Prank Camburn, phone 160.
Por Sale—Large type Poland China-
stock pig. H. Nc-dham, phone,
195-F4. • 52-1--!
For Sale—12-iro.l Advance corns
husker, in fine condition. Herman
Heininger.
To the Farmers. If you have a_y
Hay to sell, see Mr. FL D. Covey at
the Tavern Hotel, Saline.
For Sale—Three brood sows; Oliver
sulky plow; one set of heavy team
harness. Wiedman Auto Company.
For Sale—3 brood sows, with pigs;
registered Chester "White stack hog.
George J. Klager, phone 1S1-F13. 2
For Sale—Quick Meal oil sfove, _
burner, $15. Also a small -.eater.
Mrs. Bert "Welsh, East Henry street.
For Sale—Round Oak range" and
floor heating Round Oak heater, i»
splendid condition. .Charles Fah-
ner. , 52-2
€hrlstiaa Science Notes
Services will he held -in the Citizens Bank building Sunday 10 a. m.
Testimony meeting Wednesday
at S:0Q p. m.
"A cordial invitation is extended to
all.
Sunday school 11 a. m., to which
porations are prohibited from cutting!branches- indioait- daily retail sales]
trees or shrubbery without a permit j of Ford cars and trucks increased of- j Ths teacher in .rural .communities
from the county road commissioner., per cent Lhe first week since price . is often given little consideration' in
The area whieh this act gives the' reductions, with corresponding re-', regard to a living place—people
county board authority over is 66 duetiomsf in dealers' stock. Marked ! seeming to think if she h'as a place
feet or 33 feet .from the: middle of shorta_S!, particularly of the enclosed | to eat and sless> these are the only
the highway. A stiff fine and jail j types of cars, are already being felt j things necessary. The JJ. S. burea_
sentence is provided for violations. in many sections. Uiiifilled orders for of
* j all types of Ford cars and trucks are I the
More than. $22,000,000 worth of: rapidly accumulating as production
good .roads "will have heen construct-; has not heen increased over the reg-
; ed in Michigan a.t the close of the
\ present season, State Highway Com-
; missioner Frank B. Rogers has announced, dn addition there will
"be practically mp contracts left ever
f_r next year..
ulaT monthly schedule of one hundred
thousand cars.—Adv.
His satanic majesty doesn't worry
about (the mam who is going to reform, tomorrow.
advisability of establishing
"teach-sageS" in such cominunities
to provid- a real home for the teachers, and thus check the shortage of
self-respecting aad .qualified teachers. In some other countries a home
for the teacher goss with, the school}
i and the plan. -Cas many ad^antage*!.-^
i Moderator Topics.
1
''Wanted, in Saline, house, or rooms
for light housekeeping. Mrs. Paul
Kempt 312 South Division street,'Ann
Arbor. " 524-
Emil H. Arnold. Optometrist, 220
S. Main street, Ann Arbor, specializes
in superior eye examination ,and"
glasses at reasonable prices. .. ■ j.
TI5IBER WANTED.
We are in the market Ior all kinds
of saw.timber. *We pay yon a good
price, standing or at the mill. Write,
or phone No. 70, and we will he
pleased to call and see what you
may have.
25tf G. F. "BRAGS- & SON.
M
■ ■" *
WANTED—People in this vicinity
who have any leg_l printing required
in the settlement 6? estates, etc, to
have it ssnt to this newspaper. Ths
vrates are universal -in such matters/'
^nd 'to have your notices aj)pea-£_rt:*' ■„.;
tase's.-ijr* jtifis.paper* it" Is. only necessary Jj"p^J^"*-r"
■ ' .1 it-ifeiproBate Jsifd_e to^_end*it_-mSbe-Sf_
St fk\
<*>-.-
Object Description
| Title | 1921-09-22; Saline Observer |
| Date | 1921-09-22 |
| 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 |
