1936-12-10; Saline Observer |
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OBSERVER
VOLUME 56
SALINE. WASHTENAW COUNTY, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1936
NUMBER 10
VING
MAKES GIVING
POSSIBLE, AND
VING
MAKES A
\erry
Christmas
-i
avmgs
The One Story Bank On. the Corner
May we suggest for the men:
Cigars- Tobacco, 50c up Pocketbooks, 49c to $2.50
Razors, 25c to $15 Shaving Sets, 98c to $2.85
FOR THE LADIES
Compacts, 60c to $3.95 Perfumes, 69c up
Yardley Sets, $1.10 up Cotey Sets, $1.25 to $4.75
Manicure Sets, 50c to $3.75
GENERAL SUGGESTIONS
Candy, Hot Water Bottles, Heating Pads, Fountain
Pens, Watches, Alarm Clocks, Stationery
Christmas Cards lc to 10c-"
Wrapping Tissue, Cord, Seals, Stickers, Etc
GREETING CARDS FOR ALL OCCASIONS
rug Store
SALINE
&__*&____-_
Bnik a
With uncertainty in the offing, now is an opportune
time to build, repair and paint. Prices of materials
and labor are almost certain to advance soon.
PLACE YOUR ORDER WITH US NOW FOR
To keep out the cold, disagreeable wintry drafts. Will
save on fuel bilb Tildes adding to the comfort of
your home. Prie '3 reasonable.
IV. J #1 £
fe-_lto.li-_.t
EVERYTHING IN BUILDING SUPPLIES
Basketball Season
j Opens With Alumni
'Alumni Takes High School Quintet
I Into Camp By the Tune
| 34 to 17.
!
| By Robert Dieterle
i Tuesday night of last week the
iBlue and White engaged the Alumni
Iin a game which was more like a
i football struggle, which should have
■found the players wearing shoulder
'pads and head guards. The Alumni
committed the most personal fouls,
14, the Blue and White nine. The
Alumni showed complete superiority,
the High school boys seeming to be
flat-footed, and many times the former broke away for a tally. The
score at the end of the contest was
34 to 17 in favor of the Alumni. The
box score is as follows:
FG FT PF
Gleason, R. F 0 0 0
Armbruster, L F 1 1 1
Mann, C 0 0 0
Rentschler, R. G 0 2 4
Ward, L. G 2 2 2
Bowen, R. G 0 0 2
Hartman, C 1 1 2
Volz, R. F 110
Kendall, G 0 0 0
Finkbeiner 0 0 0
10
ALUMNI
Jedele, F 3
Marion, F 4
Westphal C 6
Marken, G 1
Burg, G. 1
Rogers, C 0
Dieterle, F 1
Hertler, C 0
32
MORE PROFIT OVER FEED COST!
Why not step up production, be it milk, eggs or pork?
Pigs started on Larro Pig Feed means they mature quicker, dress a better percentage and make better flavored pork.
32% Larro Dairy Feed is proving very popular.
It's a much safer feed than cottonseed meal, as you
have three sources of protein instead of one.
Larro Egg Mash needs no comment—ask the
dozens who are feeding it.
Also in stock, Meat Scraps, Package Salt, Grit, Cracked Corn,
Bone Meal, Charcoal, Cod Liver Oil, Bran, Middlings, Dog Food, Calf
Meal, Stick Yeast, Stock Tonic and Conditioner, Epsom Salts, Morton's Smoke Salt, Liquid Smoke, Sausage Seasoning, Larro, Golden
Eagle and Snow Loaf Flour, as well as Pancake Flour and Table Corn
Meal—we might trade some of this for Johnnycake.
1
2
1
3
0
3
0
0
0
0
0
3
0
2,
0
0
' Klager's Hatchery at Bridgewater
THE OBSERVER LINERS
Classified Advertising
each subsequent insertion.
Since 1920 the familiar figure of a. of Michigan is nationally famous for 6c per line first msertion. 4k. per line
giant white rooster mounted at the j its delicious chicken dinners. I MDJ-DJIOM CHARGE. 25 CENTS
Wood for sale. Cole's Feed Store.
Mrs. C.
11
front of the building has told the j For five years the Klager hatcher-
passerby that Klager's Hatchery is j ies have been under the supervision
operating. This business, founded | of the U. S. Bureau of Animal _ ——;
and operated by two brothers, has ' Husbandry and the state bureau also. jja£^r e C
grown steadily from year to year, j Dr. Beck of the Lansing bureau con- , '
While they are even now culling ducted the blood tests this year and i Read ^ d na.rpf._iiv •_•* vmi
flocks to secure eggs for hatching;Dr. Jacoby was in charge of tuber- refd &e news articlet
they do not stop at that, they also j culin and pullorum tests. Arthur , '_
_^_ __ __. ' Men's Dress Trousers, new patterns,
~~T~! ! §2.95-$3.65, at Parsons'.
Use Good Luck Laying
Saline Mercantile Company.
Mash.
For long service buy Ball Band
Rubbers. Sold by G. L. Parsons.
Men's winter Union Suits 89c-§1.00-
1.15-$1.35 to §3.95 at Parsons'.
j W. E. Dietiker, licensed embalmer
j and undertaker. Phone 175-F2.
For Sale—Holstein cow, calf by
side. Fred Braun, phone 1S3-F31. 0
KLAGER'S BRIDGEWATER HATCHERY
For Sale—One 25-gal and two 12-
! gallon crocks. M. Sage, phone 191-F2.
14
Ladies' Night For
The Rotary Club
Members^ Their Wives and Guests
Will Have Supper at League.
Building; Special Feature.
Last Thursday was rural-urban
day at the meeting of the Rotary
Club, and they had. the pleasure of
having with them some twenty representative citizens from the country.
As guest speaker, Dr. Turner of the
Normal faculty, entertained with an
outline of Negroes of the south as he
knows them, punctuated with many
serious and laughable stories.
Tonight, the Club, their wives and
friends will meet at the Women's
League building, Ami Arbor, at 6
o'clock, instead of the regular meeting at The Tavern this noon.
Dinner will be at 6 o'clock and a
special feature will come later.
have the flocks blood and tuberculin Williams, Eugene Luckhardt and Ray- L.^r *?•. *j- Gildard, Chiropractor,
tested. Thus all chicks purchased; mond Streeter comprise the local 106 w- Mich. Ave., Saline. Phone 27,
from their hatchery come from r- force. 1 _ „ ,~^T7 I "
healthy, large egg producing strains.! Luther Klager and his brother, Er- i Ur- ±lesf fatock ana Poultry Tome
They also do custom hatching for | win, are owners and managers. Their jnow on sale h? Salme Mercantile Co.
many people throughout the country-: three hatcheries, Chelsea, Ann Arbor j _ ,, ... -,___.._,.._.
side. jand Bridgewater, have a combined Roller skating every mght. Private
While chickens predominate they i capacity of 182,000 eggs. j skating parties. East Cross street,
also hatch duck, goose and turkey! In the off season the Klager broth- *Psllanti. 13
eggs. The greater demand lies in I ers travel for the Smith Incubator
the chick market. The lake region Company.
HOWDY
A friendly column with somecning
;to inspire and help you, to interest
you, or to amuse you, contributed as
much as possible by your friends and
neighbors.
A. Light in the Window
Gales may blow and frosts may come
To silence the laughing rill,
But Christmas fires glow warm and
bright
And holly is beautiful still.
—Russetter.
Community Sing At
Ann Arbor Dec. 16
All School Children and Parents of
Saline and Vicinity Invited to
Attend and Participate.
Silk Hosiery for Xmas will please
her. New colors and each boxed foi.
69c. G. la. Parsons.
10 Fords and Chevrolets priced be-^
low $100.00. They are real bargains,.
Wiedman Auto Co., Saline, Mich.
LIST YOUR FARM PROPERTY
WHERE FARMS ARE SOLD
Write A. C. Gaston, Ann Arbor, Mich..
Coal and Coke. All kinds. Now
For the past seven years Ann Ar-
bor has had a Christmas Sing and is ^ tims t lace ^ b
this year it will be held in oonjuno- fore the p.rices Advance. E. J. Muir.
tion with tlie University students at
i the Baird carillon on Wednesday, De-
' cember 16, at 7:30 p. m.
For your linoleum: Linex, Rogers
_ Synthcote, Johnston's Glo-Coat, Old
The sing will be aided by the new ; English Wax, B. P. S. Varnish. E.
'And they who do their souls no bells in the Burton Memorial Tower. * j. jiuir.
wrong,
Christmas carols will be sung. All,
But keep at eve the faith of morn, school children and parents of Saline j j am opening a dressmaking shop
Shall daily hear the angel say, are cordially invited to be present at j over ormsby"s barber shop. Fully
'Today the Prince of Peace is this great event. The program is as | experienced. Reasonable prices Mrs.
born.'
-James Russell Lowell.
Dora Love.
11
MACON LADY RECEIVES
WELL DESERVED HONOR
(By Our Macon Correspondent)
Icing for Your Christmas Cakes
1 cup diced apple.
1 egg white.
1 cup sugar.
1-8 teaspoon of salt.
Pinch of cream of tartar.
Put in dish and set in a pan of
hot water and beat until it stands
up. This makes a large quantity of Newell," French-English
follows:
I. Hymns of Christmas
a. Bells: "In Dulci Jublio," Ger- J Lest you forget, we say it yet, any-
man 14th Cent. ! 011e may have The Observer four
b. Bells and audience: "Joy to ! years for §5.00. 25% is big interest
the World," Handel. . on your money.
II. Cradle Song i
a. Children: "Away in a Manger," j For Sale—Pianos, new and used,
Luther. ; 525 up, all makes—EZ terms. Carrie
IH. Pastorale ; chadwick, 25 So. Grove St., Ypsilanti,
a. Bells and audience: "The First Michigan. Phone 996J
Miss Ruth Halladay, who attends, neheious ^mg
Michigan State College, lias been; Contributed by Mrs. Fred Burk-
selected as one of the outstanding hart.
students in America.
The biography is being printed in
the college publication of the 1937
"Who's Who Among Students in American Universities and Colleges." i-jm _ . ...
This honor is the highest that a j* stiffly beaten egg white.
t Carols of the Magi j Por sale—Oak wood, §3 per cord if
a. Interlude—Bells: "March of the you COme and get it. George Bur-
Zee ^S*4LP^Tnce~"13th Cent- meister, R. 4, Ann Arbor, Uvo miles
- b; AMen= We Three Kings of Or- east of Pleasant Lake. 11
lent Are," Hopkins. !
V. Songs of the Holy Night ] Repairs ordered for all makes of
^ ^2d- ^n™1 „ " Came' furnaces, stoves and ranges. All
rn_ TVT.Hmo-Tif Roc. » Txmiic ■ . . . ... - °
airs. Nissly's Karo Icing
1 cup of sugar.
y2 cup of water.
1 tablespoon of Karo syrup. _._-_.<_.-.„ ...v.».=_. c_-_v_ _-.__-.__. t_-_
Cook until it threads and beat into Upon the: Midnight Clear," Willis. \ kinds of tin and furnace work
student can attain while in college,
This icing remains soft and will not Herald Angels Sing," Mendelssohn.
b. Bells and audience: "Hark the promptly done. E. J. Muir.
rbecause only a small number of! crack,
seniors and juniors are selected from j
each institution.
Miss Halladay was superintendent
c. Women: O Little Town of j Christmas bake sale Saturday, De-
Bethleherm," Redner. ; cember 19, in the afternoon at Tan-
In December, 1881 p' Bells and audience: "Silent; ner's grocery, under auspices of the
Ann Arbor has several over-offi- Ni|i5t,"mGr?"?i?r'- I Trinity Lutheran Ladies' Aid. 11
of the canning department at the cious officers who for the sake of; J1- ^PPf^0^J^rP** - a. _, \ ^ . ^ ,-. ... _,.<.
Same Valley Farms the past two pocketing the little fee snatch up a ™*" K^tf^J^ ™ God Rest You! Christmas Decorations. The bet-
summers, iian for a trifling offense. TMs Mf^ Gentlemen,' Enghsh 1 ter kind holly, mistletoe, English yew,
'costs the county about $15, to say ; P- ■Beilp.PpPd au dience: 'O Come, j Christmas plants, cemetery wreaths.
DONKEY BASKETBALL GAME j nothing of the injustice perpetrated. AU *e Jjaithful, Reading. (Harris Seed Store, 303 So. Main, A_m
I Arthur Rouse is clerking for Z. B. i j Arbor.
-Hie basketball sensation of the-Mason. ' ComMHmity Hospital Notes I
year will be staged in Saline High! George Mitchell is teaching the
gym on Tuesday evening, Dec. 15.: Judd school, south of town. j
Instead of the regular form each! On Thursday evening, December 6, ■■. ljltu<t, fa"une Hertler
player will be mounted upon a don- 'Mr. and Mrs. T. Sutherland of Pitts- • home Saturday after an appendix
key and with ten donkeys and ten-field township celebrated the tenth. operation.
players trying to stay on the ten 'ranniversary of their maEfiBa life. . carl Wiedman, who lives on Harris
donkeys and at the same time trying [ Our enterprising citizen, J. Sturm, TLeet> iep Tuesday while at work,
to get the ball through the baskets,has worked up a scheme which will j™*1 JJavm-. some broken bones in
you are promised a real thrill, and a! make ;things lively this winter. He J"8,fot^ Place_f m a cast he was able
big laugh from the start'to the fin- jlias purchased 80 acres of timbered zo Pp taken home,
ash. land on the Russell Briggs farm,. Chester Parsons, of the Saline Val-
This game and entertainment will 1 which he will clear. He expects to ley Farms, had a portion of one fin-
be staged for the benefit of assist I cut about 200,000 feet of lumber, f «r amputated Monday night, following those who received injuries in rraaiich '.will be loaded at the saw mill, ; ™ff the nre. During the excitement
ithe football season just closed. ;as the railroad company will build j ^s finger was caught in a door.
I The game is -scheduled to begin at a spur for his convenience. I Roland Goltz is making a rapid re-
!8-.O0 p m 3e on hand early if you! Make some absent friend a Christ- ^p^pp? from an_appendix operation,
LISTEN to Headlight Overall program every Thursday night at 7:45
returned! EST, CKLW or WLW. Special
prizes. W. L. Sturm, Leather and
Gent's Furnishings Store, Saline.
A pedro and dancing party will
be given by O. E. S. at Masonic hall,
Monday evening, December 14. Playing will start at 8:30 sharp. Admission 25 cents; dancing only, 10 cents.
want a rsea;t
There has been some talk that the
I two teams to aide the donkeys will
y i be made up from the American
Legion Post and the Rotary Club.
. . .-■■__■» m.u..^.-^-
, NEW MASONIC OFFICERS
! The following newly elected officers
of the local Masonic lodge were installed Tuesday evening:
mas gift of The Observer.
AUCTION SALE
The undersigned having decided to
performed last Thursday.
CARD OF THANKS
I am more than grateful for the
tin.
Worshipful Master—William Aus- ^e followmg described property.
quit farming, will sell at public auc- i many acts of kindness shown me
tion on the farm north of Saline on. while in the hospital by friends, rela-
the Saline and Ann Arbor road, on tives and neighbors, and especially
Friday, December 11, 1936, mp Larh-W 'Air! Knr>.e.-- nf at t^w..
Commencing at 12 o'clock sharp.
Three Horses—Gray gelding, wt.
1400, 15 yrs. .old; mare, wt. 1100,, 12
yrs. old; sorrel gelding, wt. 1200, 20
yrs. old.
Pr-riior "Warden—Oscar Weber.
Junior Warden—Floyd F~"st.
Treasurer—Alwin Burkhardt
Secretary—<J R. I ,
Senior Deacon—George Austin.
Junior Deacon—Jack Brocken.
Tyler—George W. Seeger. . • _ ,, „ - ,. . .
Stewards—Charles Schultz, Ernest new milch, 7 yr& old; 3-yr.-old giving
the Ladies* Aid Society of St. John's
church.
Mrs. G. Hindere:
Faulty eyesight results in nervousness, headaches, fatigue. Have your
eyes examined regularly. Dr. L. O.
Gibson, U. of M. graduate, oculist, 45
years in practice. 549 Packard St.,
Ann Arbor.
PURE, HEALTHFUL AIR IN
your home, kept at just the right
temperature. Ask us about air conditioning. Phone 23578 collect. Furnace cleaning and repair service on
all makes. Carl Heinzelman, 319 N.
Main St., Ann Arbor. 11
Wanted^-People in this vicinity
who have any legal printing required
in the settlement of estates, etc.
13 Holstein Cattle—3-yr. old, due 1 will confer a favor by having it sen;
to freshen Dec. 15; 2 new milch, __ j to this newspaper. Tlie rates are
yrs. old; 3-yr.-.0ld, giving good flow j universal in such matters and to
of milk; 2 new milch, 5 yrs. old; 2 j have your notices appear in this
Let Art fix your radio. Guaranteed
repairs' on all makes. Tung-Sol tubes.
Parts for all sets. Day and night service. Shell Station, Saline-Ann Arbor-Pleasant Lake Roads. Saline
phone 181-F13. Your neighborhood
dealer, Grunow, Philco. Tubes tested
free. ■ Ait Klager, Proprietor.
i Mann.
! Marshal—Emanuel Cook.
j Charles Koch was the installing of-
', fleer.
CARD OF THANKS
good flow of milk; 2 heifers, 10 mos.
old; 2 heifers, 16 mos. old.
Thirty fine wool breeding ewes.
Two wagons with flat racks, 7-ft.
Deering binder, 6-ft. Deering mower,
McCormickDcering side rake nearly
new, McCormick-Deering loader, Mc-
i I wish to thank the Ladies' Aid of Cormick-Deering spreader, grain
Ithe M. E. church for the flowers sent driU. x- H- c- com planter, watong
:to me while in the Hospital, the, Plow, two 1-row cultivators, 28-tooth
What-So-Ever class for fruit and Mr.! spring drag, spike drag, two sets of
and Mrs. Curtiss for flowers. double harness, two cattle racks,
Mr. Walter Waters. ! skeep troughs and racks, milk cooler,
tank and cans, and other articles too
Bring that order for nrinting to
your Home Town Printers. Quick
service, prompt delivery, reasonable
orices.
numerous to mention.
Terms: Cash.
C. H. and A. C. MH-LER
JIM FINNELL, Auctioneer.
paper it is only necessary to ask th_
Probate Judge to send them to Thf
Observer.
ONLY 12
Shopping
Days
il
ATTENTION: FARMERS
The original company to pay for
dead and disabled stock is now paying: horses §4.00, cattle 33.00, hoga,
sheep and calves accordingly. No
^^0^ strings to this offer. Prompt service.
^==g^ Power-loading trucks. Phone collect
^^S. to Milter-bach 3retTiefs Company,
Detroit, Vinewoofl 15210.
CHRISTMAS
FLOUR IS BETT
AJwws keen a fev
DEN'S "1900" or
Flour in the home.
—TH AGE.
of ?-,vY-
<•-—!—>' RT\.R.
Every sacTc 13
dated. Use the eldest *._ • 3..
Bring a grist of wheat to cirr mill
today and enjoy the thrill of good
luck always in your baking. HAYDEN MILLS, TECUMSEH, MICHIGAN.
Object Description
| Title | 1936-12-10; Saline Observer |
| Date | 1936-12-10 |
| 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 |
