1922-04-13; Saline Observer |
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VOLUME XXXXII
SALINE, WASHTENAW COUNTY,ifMICJL, THURSDAY, APRIL 13, 1922
NUMBER 29
Radio Concert
. The Saline Savings Bank has made
arrangements to give a radio concert in
its banking house
Saturday Eve., April 15
From 7:00 to 8:30
to which the public, is cordially invited.
The program will be a very entertaining
one and we hope to see you with us on
this occasion.
Saline Savings Bank
He One Story Bank on the Corner
The Quality Grocery
PHONE 86
QiiaMy---B*i€^-^r^icBl ^FW--TLast---AIwap!
Our 28e Coffee—
4 POUNDS FOR $1.00
is sure making a HIT. Try it!
Don't forget we are
HEADQUARTERS
for GARDEN SEEDS—bulk and package
ONION SETS
Highest cash price for
EGGS
YOURS FOR MORE BUSINESS,
Phone 86 MARTIN riiOSS
ZION LACES
We have just received a very nice selection of
Torchon and Yal Laces and Edgings. Also a
very complete assortment of embroidery edgings.
Also some new colors in Yams.
SATURDAY SPECIAL
Muslin and Crepe Gowns embroidered
—a good buy at
79c
Extra sizes up to 20 08c
THE WOMEN'S SHOP
PHONE 15
Next to D. U. R. Waiting Room SALINE
" OUR DAILY BREAD"
You cannot attach too much importance to
the selection of your daily bread. It's one of, if
not the most important item on the bill of fare.
The ancients called it the "Staff of Life"—and
they knew! Be sure that you are leaning on a firm
staff.
If you want to be SURE of the quality of
your bread, just ask for Schnebelt's Jersey Cream
Bread.
Schnebelt's Bakery
Ne0ncome
LOOK* UKE
-tfittt'Ll- 6E
SAY IT WITH OBSERVER LINERS
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING
lc per word first insertion—then ie per word
For Sale—Potatoes. Henry Cornislv
Saline, Macon phone. 31 -
Lost—Bronze turkey gohbler. SToti-
, phone I97-F21, Saline. 29
For Sale—Several good farm hors-
|es. Wiedman Auto Company.
Radio Concert at the Saline Savings Bank Saturday evening.
For Sale—Early seed potatoes.
Herman Kohler, phone 112-F3. 19
Painting and paper hanging. Cam-
'bnrn Bros., phones 160 and 2-F3.
Wanted—Jobs of building fence--.
Conrad Jaeger, phone 212 F2. 32
BIZARRE "CURES" DO NOT
SATE HUMAN LIVES SAYS
tff
For Sale—Good work horse. Walter Gross, phone 149-F12 2Stf
For Sale—Quarteird oak buffet with
bevel plate mirror. C. A. Curtiss. 29f
Watkins' remedies and toilet articles for sale at the Saline Confectionery, 29tf
For Sale—Poland Chinas, bargains
in fall pigs, eiher sex. R. W. Mills,
phone 43. 30
For service and gasoline that's got
Pep, Power and Mileage, drive up to*
Lassen's garage; .
The Willing Workers will hold a
bake goods sale at the M. Fuoss store
Council Proceedings
TUBERCULOSIS ASSOCIATION?, I.
For Sale—Three good milk cows, j
R. B. Scudder, Macon phone 6-F14 [
at 2 p. ni., April 15.
29
For Sale—Good 7-room house on
"3 The village election was held in
Thn Attract the Attention of tb$j^ on ^ McKay stwet. Herman Bredernitz
Public, But the Old Prosaic *-*.
Methods Do the. Real Work. X13' 1922*
If Polls opened at 7:00 a. m. and
"A large concrete igloo, built aftei||-closed at 5:00 p. m. Max Blaess and
the fashion of the snow igloos of the^y--,* Ban. were appointed inspectors
;fa;r north, may be constructed to test j'of tlle eiecti0n; and Mrs. Anna Miller
jout a. theory of curing tuberculosis,'jand Mfes Ka.t.h«rinp. RrpdAr.nit*.
What makes that pump at the
corner so popular—Sinclair Gasoline.
advanced by Dr. Fred M. Spiers, of |-clerks of the election; S. A. Fitzerg- Tavern.
C. A. Rogers, teacher of violin, will
be in Saline every Wednesday at The
24tf.
Don't miss the radio concert at the
Savings Bank Saturday evening, from
7:00 to S:30.
j Alaska, The plans are to have the !.ald aM c ^ Carven> gatekeepers.
| patients, warmly clad in furs, live in,; T]le ejects boar<i was sworn in by
> large .room without any artificial;*.'^ ^ curtiss, mtWT public.
heat. This plan was found success^ For President: 185 votes were cast
ful in Alaska, it is said." ;,^f ^j,-^ Emanuel Rentschler receiv-
The above paragraph was flashe<%ed 102( John, Hull 83i thus eiecting
by a large press, association, to *-h«|"jEin.a.nuel Rentschler to the office of s°w a*1*- eif^L P-&*3- Clarence John
newspapers of America and it won.)president.
wide circulation. It was date-lined| c]erk. 165 vote6 cast for ch£nm_
Colorado, where the plan is purport-icey Fitzgeraldi tnus electing him to
ed to he under consideration. It wasj (.ue 0jjjce 0f c]erk.
j so widely used by the newspapers bej Treasurer: 169 vites cast for Ben
| cause it was a picturesque bit of|Ul>nauSi thus Q^t^g him t0 the „£_
{news, something out of the ordinary«flcer0f treasurer-.
For Sale—Chester White
>\v and eight pi
son, phone 72-F4.
brood
rohn
27tf
Calling cards, wedding invitations
and announcements, either printed or
engraved, at The Observer office.
For Sale—Team of gray Percheron
„, ., * -_„_.3ti»*= "_ ma.res, own sisters, weight 3300.
BuHdttS-aff ordlnai-y-sensiWe. toM^frjatteeat. 182 votes cast of 'which -^-j a^^rigM^TS^San^IeMnie^
Earl- Fosdick received 152, Aaron phone oqi.
culosis sanatorium is prosaic and has
no imaginative appeal for the aver-
' age reader, but building a big con-
■ crete igloo—"that is something else
' again," as Abe and Mauwruss used
to phrase it. It catches the imagination.
! But the plain fact remains, says
the Michigan Tuberculosis associa-
; tion, that it is not the bizarre meth-
1 od, the kind of thing that makes peo-
j pie gasp with wonder, that does the
i real work in the prevention and cure
: of tuberculosis, but the old, slow,
| quiet, much tried method that has
been tested out and that has proved
to have definite value.
A concrete igloo sounds like something mysterious and therefore having a potency for cure. But it is
' merely the old method under a new
; name. It is in effect a sanatorium
and it will have value only in so fair
as the igloo is presided over by a
: trained physician and by a. staff of
! trained nurses; also in so far as the
igloo is equipped with modern apparatus and is conducted along the well
tried lines of tuberculosis treatment
; evolved in the slow course of the
j years. A new name will not stop the
j spread of tuberculosis, says the Micli-
i igan association, but the application
| of methods that are being advocated
jby well informed workers will.
TEACHERS' EXAMINATION
Ann Arbor High School, S a. m [
Eastern time, Thursday, Friday and j
Saturday, April 27, 28, 29. j
For any applicant who
Saturday as the Sabbath
Armbruster 30; A. D. Crittenden 136,
John Kohler 4.7; Charles R. Parsons
140, Fred Gross 39, thus electing
Earl Fosdick, A. D. Crittenden- and
Charles R. Parsons as trusttes for
two years.
Assessor: 1'86 votes cast, of which
S- Y.Cotton received 148, Art. Arm-
Ururter 38, thus electing S. Y. Cotton
to the office of assessor for one year.
The proper papers were mailed t>
the county clerk, the ballot box was
sealed and put in the safe in the
council .room. The seal was put in
the keeping of Max Blaess, and the
key to the ballot box remained in the
keeping of Will Barr.
ROY ROGERS, Clerk.
A regular meeting of the Saline
Common Council was held in the
Council rooms.Thursday evening following election.
President Fuoss in the chair.
Trustees present: Bredernitz, Barr,
Blaess and Curtiss.
Trustees absent: Rentschler and
Ford.
The report of the elction held on
Monday, March 13, 1922 was read as
follows:
President—Emanuel Rentschler.
Clerk—Chauncey Fitzgerald.
Treasurer—Ben. Uphaus.
Trustees for two yea>"s—Earl Fosdick, A. D. Crittenden, Charles R.
Parsons.
Assessor—S. Y. Cotton.
Motion by Bredernitz, supported by
Wanted—A man to work garden on
shares. All seed furnished. Must
give reference. W. V. Peoples, 200
Monroe street. 29
For Sale—Empire grain drill, grass
seeder attachment. Just the thing to
sow your grass seed on wheat. Harold Miller, phone 199-F21. 28-9x
Bmil H. Arnold, Optometrist, 22.
V
S. Main street, Ann Arbor, specializes
in superior eye examination and
glasses at reasonable prices.
Wanted—Gardens to plow, that can
he done with one horse. Raymond
Daniels, phone 28-F3. 30
Furnished rooms for rent. Also
plain and fancy -dressmaking. 400
East Michigan avenue. 29t£
For Sale—Three Holstedh; cows,
heavy milkers. Good test-Price right.. -
% mile east of Lodi town hall. .-JSE-;- -
C. Davenport. _. . * 29-'*.* _„•
NOTICE
Don't forget to treat those oats
with Anti-Smut. For sale by the
Saline Mersantile Co. ?
If you want winter eggs get Busy*
Biddy White Leghorns, figgs, baby
chicks, and custom hatching. Saline*
phone 144-F14. Cv F. Heilman. 27tf
.•FARM FOR SALE
160 aicres choice land, Jjarn "36xl*t0,
granary, tool, corn, liog.%sl poultry, -
I'tonu.^Snaffl?"'""5
Salesmen wanted to solicit ordeirs
for lubricating oils, greases and!
paints. Salary or commission. Address The Harvey Oil Co., Cleveland;.
?^**t-Sr-;
The Belgian .stallion Prince-tieorgey.
weight 2100, will make the season at
my place every day except Sunday.
Fee, $15. Herman Kohler, phomV
142-F3. 2S-31
For Sale—Land contract near Milan. Farm sold for $8,000; down payment $2,500. Well located. Good
reasons for selling. A. W- Williams,
2665 Dickerson Ave., Detroit, Mich.
NOTICE
We will have a car of 1920 War-! NOTICE
thy Seed Oats testing" 36 lbs. at Having leased the Jos nh-ins-
60 cents per bushel. Saline Mere an- j blacksmith shop we want the public-
tile Co., ; to know that we are prepared to give
__________^^_^________ j real service in any department of
~~ ■ our line at reasonable prices. Wil-
PLANT ONLY ADAPTED 1 ]iam Acto]] 29
SOY BEAN TARIETiES !
' BABY CHICKS, March 6 and ev-
A. iery week until July 1. BUY THEM
'NEAR HOME. Rocks, Reds, Wyaii-
i dottes, Orpingtons, Leghorns. CUS-
JTOM HATCHING, Send for
i list. Washtenaw Hatcihery,
-hould!Artor*
Wide Range in Yield Shown at M
C. E.\i>i>riniipiit Station—Good
Emergency Lesumc.
That Michigan farmers
plant only adapted varieties of soybeans, because of the great range
price
Ann
29.
observes | Curtiss, that the report be ratified, crops department,
day, the i Carried.
FARM FOR SALE
One mile east of Saline, on Town
of yield and adaptability of different i nlle. road.
varieties, is the statement of Prof, j 127 acres 22 acres of wheat in
C. R. Megee of the M. A. C. farm j the ground; 27 of alfalfa; 35 of clo-
Recent tests made j vt-r and timothy; 90 apple trees in
at the college experiment station j prime condition,
subjects that are scheduled for Sat-i Motion by Bredernitz, supported by bear out this contention. j Ten-room house; hot air furnace,
urday will be given Wednesday | Curtiss, to adjourn. Carried. Mammoth Yellow, a soybean varie-, *>at*?: '10J anc* col(i w*»te.*'. and Edis-
MARTIN FUOSS, President ty of value in the cotton belt, is fre- j ""xhfee^anis: one 34xfi5 hip roof
ROY ROGERS, Clerk. quently advertised in Michigan, hut i and underground; one 20x60, hip-
is a poor yielder when compared ] rnof, another 50x50, underground.
A special meeting of the Saline with adapted varieties such as the ;Lanii ftl'!?t cIass* Buildings are val-
Common Council was held Tuesday Manchu, Ito San, and Black Eye- j -^fu a*r"^ mcf™7* ask for the farm'
Saline, Michigan,
29
morning. The questions will not be
the same as those for Saturday. No
one will he allowed to write Wednesday morning except those who
'keep Saturday as the Sabbath day.
All applicants whom the county \ evening, March 2S, 192
cil rooms.
commissioner dees not know must
furnish references as to their dig-
ability.
, Will trade for Ann Arbor home,
in the Coun- brow.. The Manchu produced over j Geor*
You Can Never Tell What the Print
er Will Do. j
Down at Astoria last week the edi- j Pointing trustee in place of Ford who
e Braun,
two and three-fourths tons of well j phone 183-F31.
President Rentschler in the chair, cined hay per acre on recent tes:s, j
Trustees present: Barr, Crittenden, while the Mammoth Yellow under
Parsons, Fosdick. the same conditions produced le-ss
Trustee absent: Blaess. than one ton and did not come i'it-i
Meeting called for purpose of ap- bloom until late fall.
Soybeans are provin
Detroit United Lines
Eastern Standard Time.
i Between Saline and Ypsilanti
of value in j Leaves Saline—
tor of the Astorial declared that one j had resigned,
cf his heaviest advertisers was opening up a new line of business under
"suspicious" circumstances. As a
matter of fact the circumstances j
the state as
an emergency legumi-1
6:50 a. m., S:40 a. m., and every
Motion made by Ban* to put Julius nous hay crop and as a soil builder, j two hours to 8:40 p. m., 10:45 p.
Bredernitz in place of Ford. Sup- according to Megee. Well cured! in.. 1:15 a. m.
ported by Crittenden. Vote taken in soybean hay has practically the j Leaves Ypsilanti—
which the ayes were unanimous. The same feeding value as clover and al- j 6:25 a. in., 7:40 a. m., and every
were "auspicious." Yesterday this (clerk was ordered to call up Mr. falfa hay. As a. soil improver, soy-
paper announced that one of its min-iR1'^61'11!'3 and inform him of the ac- beans rank high because of their
isterial firiends would give an "ini- ition* ali^ ne accepted. ability to make satisfactory growth
moral" party, whereas the most des- j Motion by Fosdick, supported by on sandy soils and on soils that are
pea-ate purpose of the good doctor was!Parsons, to adjourn. Carried.
to make it "informal."
Wash., Republic.
-Yakima,
EMANUEL RENTSCHLER, Pres.
C. T. FITZGERALD, Clerk.
somewhat acid. Soybeans are not
so sensitive to soil acidity as alfalfa,
sweet clover, and red clover.
two hours to 7:40 p. m., 10:15 p.
m. and 12:45 a. m.
Last car waits for the theatre car
from Ann Arbor.
Cars connect at Wayne for Plymouth and Northville: at Ypsilanti
for Detroit and Jackson.
" -■£..
Object Description
| Title | 1922-04-13; Saline Observer |
| Date | 1922-04-13 |
| 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 |
