1921-09-29; Saline Observer |
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41
VOLUME XXXXII
SALINE, WASHTENAW COUNTY, MICH., THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 29- 1921
NUMBER
This bank continues to grow from
year to year because its older depositors have continued to deposit
their funds here and because new
depositors are being* constantly attracted by the much it has to offer
both in safety and service.
You too, we believe, will find it
advantageous to have an account at
this bank no matter where else you
may have money upon deposit. "'*
May-we see you among* those we
serve? ' *
Member of Federal Reserve Bank
This Is your store—We
want you to feel a sense
of ownersMp and tell us
wJaerein we are not M-
filling our Meal of series, quality and values;
BURKHART BROS,
'MONEY'S WORTH .-or'HONEST BACK." <
^
The Quality Grocery
tmm m
J?or t'resli "Fruits, ."■flegetahtes, Staple saia Fane. Groceries
MEiL'ONf .
WA___B sma-.m-
_?*o___j_#es • B®mt Jtatatoes SpaMsli Onions
Ciiieasates Celery
PEieilS - BANANAS ORANGES
FRESH STOCK OF PRUNES
Everything to do your pieMing with!
mum ckm -sugar. ?e pound
Just received a stock -of White "W-EPe—Cups, Saucers and plates—TAXE A iiOOE! ~. *
All g*o«_s fl«Hvere_ pro-iptl.* Yo_s_ for *_H»e bnsine.ss.
Phone 86
MARTIN PUOSS
4:
WORE YOURSELF TO DEATH
IF YOU WANT TO
BUT SAYE 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 t 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
BASEBALL DOUBLE HEADER, OjS 'COMING SU-TOAT
Dan McGaim and Uncle Sam.
r POOR'TEETH ARE "
! PUPILS' HANDICAP
OCTOBER TERM'"-JURORS
Saline Team Will Wind
'Said Dan McG-anm to' a foreign man,
Un Their Whu> worked * at the "self-sam-'e Parents Urged To Hare Children Tis-
' ! . bench,
j Name* of Thirty Mon Drawn for Du-
Season With Two Gaines.
'Macon, the team that put up the'
*"Lat m_ tell you this," and for em-,
1 phasis, • i
He flout ished a mmkey -vvrench,
it Dentist At Least Once a T ar
One million- dental cavities; 1,000,-
be-t game of the season against Sa j j "Don't talk to me of this bourgois--,: 00° Possibilities of falling in readin,'
line, will furnish tihe opposition, ai-lj Don't open y<mr .mo_th to speak, /ritSn'' or Vithmetic!
two real good contests can he expect-]of your Socialists and your Anar-, Tnis i*3 'he handicapping possts-
ed. Saline has engaged a left-hand-i _.* chists, islon of Michigan school children,
ed pitcher, from Detroit, to pitch ono| Don't <nfention the Bolsheveek, ■ a*ccQr<3i'nS to a statement made by *
of the .games, and Macon will prob-JFor Fve had enough of this foreign j1>r- Kemi" *•"• R* Gihson, director of
ably send one"-left-hander against Sa-! stuff, 'the .state department of health's
line, as it is nnderstod they have en- j i>m sick'as a man can be newly organized bureau or* dentistry
gaged Miller of Clinton. ; Of the speech of hate, and I*m teU"u' &nd oral hygiene.
Saline has had a very successful' /yOU straight, j °f the '50,000 pupils now in
season,, haying won 12 games andi That this is the land for me! j school in the-state 75 per cent, or
losing only four, which gives them a! ;561,500-,-are beliesved by public health
percentage of .750. Many of the s.i-N'if you want to bratg, just take that' authorities to be in need of dental
cailled strong teams around here can j flagi j attention. The number of catties
i»ot boast of a percentaige like that. | An' boast of its field of blue! each child may have will range from
Monday night, Octoher 3. the hoys \ An' praise the dead and the blood one to more than a dozen< it is
of the baseball team will hold a bus"- j they *she_* isaia"
ness meeting at Clark's barber shop.' p^j. tke peace of the likes o' you. ! "°a a conservative estimate there
*r*he special business of this session]ii\ hear no more,
"Will be >to organize a young men*.:!
club, to ha known as "Saline Athletic j
Club." All members are requested to j
be on hand at 7:30 p. m.; al^o a'l j
members of last season's basket ball |
teams, and " amy others who would i i>m done with your fads, and your
like to become members of the new! your wild-eyed lads,
club. • 1 Don't flourish your flag of red
Don't forget the double-he?der Sun- 'where 1 can see, or at wight there*!,
day at the field just west of town i
First game starts at 1:30 p. m. "Ea. j
your dinner early." j
once more,
His wrench in a forceful way.
'Of; the cunning creed of some Russian hreed,
I stand for the U. S. A.!
. be,
Tall candles around your bed.
The Michigan History Magazine
"New England Men in Michigan;
History," hy William Stoeking of the
Detroit Chamber of Commerce, is d
leaidij-g article in the current numbaf
of the offica! state publication, The
Micjh.igan History Magazine, La<ri>
sing. ^
Other articles of, special interest
are "Recollections of Zacharlah
Chandler," by O. B. "McCutsheoa, •_"_'
Sketch of Some rnstitutional Begitf-
nings in Michigan,*" by Prof. Wilbur
O. Hedrick of at A. C; "A Brirf
History pf the ClevelandrCliffs 'Iro^
'Compan--;'* "by 'jV EC Tdplint"'^^-'^-
quette; and "Michigan War Legislation, 1818," by Charles Landnrm,
historian of the M__l_ig"a_i War Preparedness Board.
Copies of the Magazine are ?di-s-
tributed free .to S-hools and libraries.
It will be of .-genera- interest that
the state has mads ;an arrangement
with the Michigan "Pioneer: and Historical society "by which "both the
"So tip your hat to a flag like that'
Thank God for its Stripes an'
. Stairs!
Thank • God you're here where roads
are cj'ear.
-Awfey firom. kings and czars.
I can't just say what I feel today,
Far I'm not a talkin' man—
But first an' last, I am standi*)' fast,
Fqr all that's American.
So don't you speak of the Bolsheveek
It*^- sick of that stuff, I am.
One God, one flag, is the creed I
brag!
I'm hoostin' for Uncle Sam."
t-\> --Iiabor World.
AUCTION SALE '
and he waved are at least a million • cavities,"
"states Dr. Gibson, "which should be
treated immediately to sa,ve the teeth,
prevent sickness, oral inf^vtion, loss
of time from school and possible
scholastic failure.
-•'Parents are coming to realize
that the so-called 'baby-teeth' are
immensely important, and that their
premature loss is the cau*e of the
improper closure of the upper teeth
upon the lower; they should take
particular care to "see that tlie four
permanent first molars which erupt
between the sixth and the seventh
;years—about, the time the child enters school—are w.ell preserved, for
these teeth are the keystones of the
dental 'arch.
"Much of the impaired health in
children, malnourishment and lack of
3'esistatncfi to sickness and disease, is
the .result of improper mastication
and assimilation of food, and unhealthy or,a_ conditions.
"Take your, child to a dentist at
i least once a year" is Dr. Gibson's - ci
ty On 'Circuit Court Jnrj*.
The names of 30 t-iti. ens h£.ve iKien.
drawn for jury duty during the October term of the Washtenaw county
circuit court, and "notified to rejport
on Tuesday, October 4th, as follows:
Ann Arbor city—Emil G. -Slier,
Herman King, Mrs. Charles Bailey,
George W. Gough, Robert HauseiS
Renibert Jones, Dana McComh, 3a.sk
Galbraith. I
Ann Arbor Twp—Thad ProchnowV
Augusta—Mfton Kelsey.
Bridgewater—Charles Scheurer."
Dexter—Floyd Walz.
Freedom—Godfrey Pfitzmeier.
Lima.—Roswell Gates.
Lodi—George Hertler, Jr.
Lyndon—Edward Sullivan.
Manchester—Fred Schumacher.
North-eld—Jrvimg Yanson.
Pittsfield—John Rem.-?ki.
Salem—Coda Savery."
Saline—John Zahn.
- Sharon—Harry La_n__on.
Scio—Daniel Staffer.
Superior—John J. Nanry.
Sylvan—Alvin Cushman.
Webster—^Charles Knapf.
York—George IC W«_ler.
Ypsilanti Twp.—Herbert K. Bur-
rell.
Ypsilanti city—3. H Hopkins, Clifford Sandei-son.
i vice to parents.
1
Charles Broderick, on account of
disolving partnership will sell al
public auction on the Rouse farm, 2
miles north of Saiine and/ 6 miles
southwest of Ann Arbor, or.
Wednesday. October 5. lfl"-L
commencing at 10:30 a. m. sharp, the
following -described property:
Horses—Chestnut gelding 6 yrs
Methodist (Mm Tfotes
Ralph W, Brown, Preacher.
Morning service, 10:00,
Sunday school, 11:30,
Epworth League, 7:00,
Evening service, 8:00.
Last. Sunday morning the pastor
preached the first of a series of sermons on "The Great Fundamentals
of The Christian Religion." Next
Sunday morning the second sermon
__.. , ■ . - '", of the series will be preached, "The
ma,ga_me and supporting member- ,r.]dj wt. i500; bay mare S tt_. old, wt.!Nai_re. and plaCe of R<,ason fe {h_
ship in the society m!ay he obtained} 130O; these are very good horses and
Black colt 2%
by individuals from, the Lansing of-
ftce for one dollar a year.
The state is trying to encourage
the study of Michigan's splendid
history, and. this -touhle affer should
make th'e magazine practically self-
supporting. In many states the _>r_w
of sudi a magazine is two and three
dollars,—In Georgia and Maryland
?3. Six hundred pages of state history for §1. is not ^a bad bargain a*
books go these -days.
Some airticles of lighter -vein ih
the current •n__iber of the magazine
are •"Romance and Adventure on the
Ontonagon,*" hy" the late Henry Ai.
Powers; a biographical' sketch _f
"AunS." Lanra Havlland, .by »Mrs.
■Oara'ine Hirmphrey i>f Adrian; "Eariy
Days' in Petoskey," hy ilenry M.":-
•Connell of Walloon l_ake; an historical -ketch of the public schools cf
Battle Creek, by Supt. W. <5. Coburn.
The artist, Mr, Murray MacEay of
New York City, presents foroib'y in
this number, Michigan's jieed of ,1
state -w'ar memorial and historicaL
building at Lansing.
About half of the magaizine, a
double niumber isj devoted, to the historical news of the state from county
to-
Christian Life."
j Come npw and let us reason
'gether saith the Lord. Isfa,h 1:18.
! .This is a busy age, business men,
: professional men, farmers laborers,
will work anywhere,
yrs. old.
31 Head of Fin-i Cattl<v-:The herd
fe sired by Rundel Crest Clil-den Pontiac Boy 3S266, born Sept. 27, 1919,. _ -, ,
and he will be sold at this Sa*e'. He', 'V* S° rUShe^ that thay io not Jlaw"
a beautiful young bull, straight andi!^ *", f* f d^hi*^ ^ «■*
handsome, and nearly all white. The, ?"^. that ™ *"•**»«** in the
-ire is a bull from 25.34 lbs. at 3 yrs. ^hnstia^ r?^™- ^or this reason
old, and gives 519.4 milk in s-vea-f6 *pasta^ f°r a 5fw weeks on Slra-
days that test 4 11 per cent. The dam • Ja*-mOT™ ^ P"faeh on the
... , ,. .. ., , - following subjeicts:. •
is a heifer who unites the blood of' .,-,„ - , ,
many .great producers and has given' * The C.am^h °f_Jhe Present Un*"
70 lbs. of milk a day at two milk- e3-1"eSS £ ^^^ Chttrch*"
J--3 ' ! How The Old Conception of the
Scriptures Differ From The New."
"The Deity of Christ."
"The (Miracles."
15 Cows—some
Ho'steins;
and other local historical societies j from Huron Farm stock, aill freshen
and from schools and clubs doin^jn. October; Shorthorn heifer to fresh
ing- grade
White Holstein, 6 yrs.,
fresh Oct. 15; blaclc HoHstein, 6 yrs,
rresh Oct 1,- black Holstein, 6 yrs.,
f*esh Oct. 1; large Holstein, 7 yrs.,
fresh Sept, 6; Holstein, 5 yrs., fresn
Aug. 25; large Holstein, 5 yrs, fresh
Nov. 1; spotted cow, 5 yrs., fresh Oit.
15; Jersey, 7 yrs- fresh Oct. 12; Jersey, 5 yrs, fresh Aug. 25; Jersey, !
yrs, fresh March 1; Guernsey, 7 yrs.
fresh Dea 1; Durham, 6 vrs, freshI■*:""*""""•*** — "" "*■" ^•J"'"-=-!='>- a.
Dec. 1; large black cow, 6 v'rs./fresh J.*™**""*-* wln find m .these subjects a
-one 1; 2 Durhams, 3 yrs, fresh F_b. "1StiHmlllS for th^ht'
20 to *)5- sceptic, the agnostic, the ccn-
" Five" high grade Holstein hedfers, fUSed "man' the' «a«*lp. will at last
"Sin and Its Forgivcta.ess."
"Sin, and Its Punishment."
"The Church of the Living God.'*
"The ilmmortality of the Soul."
"The Person and Work of the Hily
Spirit."
j YOung men and young Women are
; especially invited. Those who are
j seeking for tha truth fearlessly and
OBSERVER LITERS
CLASSIFIED ADVERTiS-NG
6c per Line fMrst insertion- Then 3«|
per Line; Miniror-in charge S5c
Sinclair gasoline 21c, at
Muir's and Huebler's Garage.
EL J.
STOVE WOOD FOR SALE
Wi«3_m_n Auto Company.
HOUSES FOB SALE.
u "■^peqinaii Autoi Company.
For Sale—Fine wool
Allison, phone 139-F2.
ram. A. R.
For Sale—2 young Shropshire Rams,
Reuben Visel. Phone 197-F12.
Wanted—Painting and -naper __JSg-r.
ing. Frank Camburn, phone 160.
For Sal'—S'ngle r^lh Bafi- 0rp_.
ington cockerels, R* A Knxm pholi&
3..
136-F2,
For Sal&—12Jroll Advance corn"'
husker-, in fine condition/ Herman
Heininger.
To tie Farmers. If you have a_y
Hay to sell, see Mr. E. D. Covey at
the Tavern Hotel, Saline. '
For Sale—3 brood sows, with pigs;
registered Chester White stock "hog.
George J. Klager, phone 1S1-F13. 2
For Sale—Quick Meal oil stove, _
burner/ "515. Also a smm heater.
Mrs. Bert Welsh, East Henry street.
For Sale—16-ft„ 14-ft. and 10-ft.
counters, a.prescription case and a
good cuphoard. C. Boettner, phone
93-F3.
ltf
For Safe—McDougal kitchen cabinet, In .good condition, looks like
new. WiU sell cheap." R. W. Browne
phone 20, Saline. 3
-work in 'Michigan history.
STATEMENT
Of the ownership and management of
the Saline Observer, published -weekly at Saline, Michigan, for October
1921, required by the Act of Congress
of August 24, 1912.
Name of puhlisher, editor, husiness
manager and owner; Sim. R. Wilson
Saline, Mich.
Known bondholders, mortgagees
and other security holders owning or
holding 1 per cent or more of total
amount of bonds, mortgages, or other
^securities are: A. J. Warren, .Saline,
Mich.; Ldnograph Co, Davenport,. Ia.
Sworn to and subscribed before me
this 27__ _ay of Sleptember, 1921,
A, J. -\jvARREN.
Notary Public.
Commission expires March 1, 1325.
You aix-
i?fej__.v..*.__-si-,"i.:v-
Women can't be logical _ecause
tlj-ar sue always -egging-the question.
* •■ • ._. _■*
. ■• . -j * J*
en in Oct.;'Jersey heifer fresh-May
20; Durham heifer fresh* May 25; 3
Holstein heSfers 1 yr. old: Jersey
heifer 1 yr. old; % Holstein heifer
calves, 6 weeks, old-
Hogs—4 Duroc Jersey boars 6 mos.
old; 8 Duroc Jersey shoats, weight
150 lbs, each. Bred from Brookwater
Farm Stock.
Implements, Ete^.—Gang plow, corn
plantar, side delivery rake, springtooth harrow,- land roller walking
plow, 5-tooth .culjtlvator, -orn hinder,
cutting 'box,' wide-tire wagon, double
harness. Mow of timothy hay, mow
of clover 'hay,- quantity of oats, 35
acres of conn in shock. Quantity of
late white potatoes. Other articles
too numerous to mention.
Hot lunch at noon.
Usual terms of sale.
CHARJUSS THOMPSON, Auctioneer.
Lloyd F__rba!hk, Clerk.
■\ ' -
*-,.1-
find something of interest
invited.
At the evening service the .pastor
will preach on "The. Failure of The
Minimum.''
C-iTist-an Science Notes
Services will be held in the Citizens Bank building Sunday 10 a. m.
Testimony meeting Wednesday
at 8:00 p. m.
A cordial invitation is extended to
all.
Sunday school 11 a. m, to which
pupils under 20 years may be admitted.
Emil H., Arnold, Optometrist, 220
S. Main street, Ann Arbor, specializ _
in superior eye examination and
glasses- at reasonable prices.
Live sa'tsman can earn S250 and
up per month selling our phonographs to consumers . Write for
particulars. American Phoncgraph
Co, Grand Rapids, Mich. 2
Marriage Licenses
William Ward Eyery, 27, 'Manchester; Ola Marie Bennett, 16, same.
Sherman Taft Crippen, 24,, Ann ASf!
bor; Emma K. Bischoff, 20, ■ same*!
Carl Elbekh,' 21, Ann Arb'dr;^™
L. Gray, same.
UMBEB WANTLD.
We are in the market for all "kinds
of saw timher. "Ws payftm a good
price, standing or at, the nfiU. Write,
or phone No 70, and we will be
pleased to call and see what you
may have.
25tf G. F. BRACEY & SON. *
WANTED—-People In this vicinity
»M hf?e a:uf legsi printing reqnired
'^ $*!> settlement of "estates, etc., to
"■haw it stent to thle newspaper. The
irates ^re n-aiversai iu such matters; ,*■
__2_-stP "*a^your"'ai6ncesv;_'ppear ii '■
_ig___SSi_il-_-__i__-^'3_|__^mF___n£:'*4
- 1
ii"
Object Description
| Title | 1921-09-29; Saline Observer |
| Date | 1921-09-29 |
| 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 |
