1941-09-04; Saline Observer |
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*■
OBSERVER
YOLUMS 60
SALINE, WASHTENAW COUNTY, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, SEPT. 4, 1941
<%'
■*£#*"
r'^
NUMBER 48
j erating full time the past six
! weeks. Mr. Prochaska is a mem-
Mrs. Tola McGowan
GETS THRESHING DONE,
GOES BACK TO ARMY
Private John V. Prochaska of I £« of the 40th Coast Artillery
Holloway, who was granted a 30,BnSade at Fort Sheridan, ™- ; • ■ j n .
day furlough to thresh for his! -= -AflOlTSSSfiS i\0t3rl3nS
neighbors and was later given a| America is in a state of emerg- ,*■*•*" v*wv«. iwiuuuuv
two weeks extension, will return ; ency. Every citizen is urged to '
SEEN AN' HEARD
.•opext week to his army duties. His i do his part by buying Defense
"two threshing rigs have been op- j Savings Bonds and Stamps. •
Tells of Operation
Of Goodwill Industries
And Their Employes.
"Missing Word Contest Ad"
Borrowing Wisely and Well j
j PROFITS LIE AHEAD
through feeding and cattle loans . . .
Every year many experienced farmers in
this community borrow wisely and well from
us for feeding and cattle loans.
Perhaps there is a source of profit here
for you that will bear investigating. Since
we are thoroughly familiar with this line of
farm financing, we'd like to discuss its possibilities with you.
You won't be obligated by coming in for
a talk the next time you are in town.
The One Story Bank On the Corner
"Missing Word Contest Ad"
"Missing Word Contest Ad"
Meat—Even the
'"Tiny Tummy" digests
it Easily
hpfm/*fiL> h/SfJj* Club Steak lb. 30c
temmmnmiaer Veai Sh'der R'st, lb. 30c
s^-'j <m\ / -^ Pork Loin Ends, lb. 31c
WW\ W{ FWT Pork Steak lb. 32c
' ' J4^^i Meat Loaves... lb. 29c
skr-^f (l Delicious, juicy home-
f^L^M^ made Bologna, Frank-
im^rM furts>and New En&land
vv';'v"''"v^'- Ham.
% lb.
BLUE
LABEL
40c
1 lb. box 18c
2 lb. box 33c
Fresh Fruits and Vegetables
Wealthy Apples 4 lbs. 15c
Bananas 3 lbs. 25c
Cabbage lb. 5c
Carrots 2 lbs. 18c
Celery Hearts 10c
Cucumbers 5c
Grapefruit 4 for 25c
Head Lettuce 2 for 25c
Lemons 3 for 10c
Oranges, 176s 89c
Peppers, red 4 for 10c
Yams 3 lbs. 20c
I*
This Week's Bargain Counter
By buying 2 lbs. Red, White and Blue Coffee for 49c you
may purchase a genuine Fiesta Juice set for $1.19. Bring
your coupons for Super Suds and Palmolive here. Many
specials on Sweetheart Soap, Swan, Ivory, etc. Our regular
price on Nola, 2So—on Magic Washer, 21c
SCHMID'S FOOD MARKET
Complete Food Service—Phone 38
CAnother group of cars was collected at the Five Points for de?
! livery in Illinois last week. When
I they left there was a line-up
which extended from Herman
Gross' residence to the Federated
ehurch. ([America has certainly
been vacationing. Cars have
been rolling- along with suitcases
tied to the bumpers, fastened on
the running board and hitched in
all possible locations. School has
called the greater number back
to the cities and another sum-
mer has gone into history ^Robert Love came back to The Observer last printing day to help
fold the papers. He spent part
of the summer on his grandfather's farm and enjoyed it immensely. He drove the team
when they loaded hay and says
he only fell off once. We imag"-
ine once was enough. He escaped
the drudgery of picking potato
ped and underprivileged voting j bugs, a job which country boys
people, and older ones as well, i:. i do destest but often had to do
An interesting program was
enjoyed by Rotarians at The Tavern last Thursday noon. Supt.
Bearss passed out booklets containing an outline of the program
for the school year, school calendar, personnel, athletic program, etc., and made a few remarks covering the same.
Chairman Lendrum introduced
Mrs. Tola M. McGowan, representing the Goodwill Industries of
Detroit, who held the close attention of all as she told what this
important organization, entirely
supported by voluntary contributions, is doing for the handicap
Lovely Wedding
Saturday Evening
United In Marriage
Miss Lillian Kern
And Charles Holzhauer.
Nation's Smallest
Wheat Field
■ Wolverine
Parsons'.
Work Shoes at
At Tecumseh; Averages
100 Bushels To
The Acre.
i For Sale
Phone 19.
-Range feeder lambs
44tf
(From The Tecumseh Herald)
What was probably the small-
the big city.
The industries have 350 people
on then.' pay roll and salvage almost everything one can imagine
even to the accumulation of wocl
taken from carpet sweepers, which
we claim is "going some." Sha
told of how happy the employe;
Many sprayers have been devissO
to do the work and not a farm
lad is sorry. Robert will be in
the fifth grade this fall. Mrs.
Hutzel is the teacher. (Tin r
neighboring city we saw a little
lad who was the envy of many.
He had a black dog which trotted
!LOiU UJ- liuw lliiyuv Liie einui'-'.yc^ < — ~ *.—.. .. ~—— ■—^ ...~~.. .,.« ^
- are in doing something useful and , along like a pony pulling a tiny
j at the same time being self-sup-! two-wheel cart in which rode the
LARRO HOG FEEDS
are the result of many experiments. No formulas or feeding method is recommended to you
until it has proven itself to them first after exhaustive research. Let them do the experimenting so that you may profit. It's results that
count.
- .* f ■
The same goes for Dairy Feeds, Calf Meal,
etc. Come in and let's talk it over.
Cole's Feed Store
I portng; now they enjoy their > young lord and master. ®A card
I parties on special occasions, such ! fr°m Mrs. Bert Gillen tells she
S as Christmas and New Years, i nas had a trip over the border
I and pleaded for all to contribute; «*to Mexico while visiting in Los
8 anything that can be made over i Angeles. «A coast to coast mov-
or repaired, old newspapers and j nig van which broke down and
magazines, etc. If current maga- '"had to unload its contests in Sa-
zines are given them, they are j hne created quite a bit of inter-,
sold- older ones go for junk, but! est one afternoon last week. It
everything, as stated in the be- ; was huge and certainly could hide
ginning, can be used in some way. a lot of furniture. ftMr. and Mrs
which will give employment to. George Uphaus have moved to
these people who are so worthv i their new home near Manchester.
of everyone's consideration. " I This brings to mind many nappy
It is hoped at some future; memories as for 19 years they
meeting to have movies of every j have lived beside the printing of-
part of the Goodwill Industries I nee. Many times Mr. Uphaus has
and when they are shown it is i come in with a friendly lift when
hoped to invite in many to wit- i the typesetting machine has been
ness them following the luncheon,. balky or another -pair of hands
Visitors were Rotarian Dr. Dean was needed to slip some repair
W. Myers and Albert Fiegel of into the huge press. These and
Ann Arbor and Joseph Warner many otner reminiscenses have
of Ypsilanti. i Deen passing through the mind of
j the publisher who is going to
j i- T*vi'fl*m j miss his old neighbor but wishes
AjcSiie JQluail | him happiness and success in his
Hq+o TIiq "Rirv PvWo inew location. ^Congressman Earl
Ueib A lie .Dig JTJ-1/.t; ,c Michener recently made a fine
The largest prize of the season' sPeech in the House on the wheat
was taken at the Merchants -situation in Michigan He was
Night last week as Lester Jordan: not erratic but took a long slant
won $63. It was the first time: ^ both sides of the picture and
a green ticket was drawn for theihopes to see a change m the law
although several iwhlCn w"1 Permit farmers to
■ have been drawn for dollar priz-! Sr°w *s much wheat as they
I es. The winners of dollar awards, ^ to use for feeding purposes
I were C. T. Wurster, William Mill- i without Penalty or , controlled
I nan and Miss Josephine Decker. 1 acreage. On what uiey sell let
! The band, which has been im- i ^ penalty apply for a time at
j proving with each concert, again
' did well and the rest of the pro-
least and see how. it works out.
This seems like a reasonable way
gram was made up of local tal- of modifying the situation and
ilnt. Mrs. C. F. FitaGerald ac-jnis proposition vriL have the
companied Miss Bonnie Bearss in s^etl0]L of many farmers, CAn-
* a couple of musical selections
iLast Week Of
j Missing Word Contest
j Except for tabulation of results
; and announcement of the same,
| this week niarks the close of our
: Missing Word Contest, which ex-
! ceeded in interest our fondest
j hopes and will probably ensure
! a similar contest another year.
Last week's missing word was
more difficult than many have
been,- which carried out the promise made early in the campaign
i that they would not always be
i easy of solution. This week's
! missing word probably will be
, difficult for all to solve, so take
' your time on it just so you get
' your answer ini before next Wed-
j nesday noon. ,
j Next week we hope to print a
, list of all of the missing words
! and the week following announce
i the winners.
Saline General Hospital
Mrs. Lillian Gilbert had her
, tonsils removed on Wednesday of
last week.
j Rudolph Schumaier had his
I tonsils removed Saturday.
I Miss Bessie Richards returned
i to her home in Milan last Wed-
' nesday.
j Miss Augusta Josenhans, who
j entered the hospital for medical
i treatment last Tuesday, is much
I improved.
j Henry Boettger is able to sit
; up in a chair a little each day.
■ He entered the hospital Wed-
! nesday.
j Mrs. Ray Hunt and baby re-
j turned home Wednesday.
.Obituary—Cow No. 282
| Ten years is not an especially
I ripe old age for a purebred dairy
cow, but ah obituary was prepared recently for No. 282 of the
Chatham experiment station herd
maintained in the Upper Peninsula by Michigan State College.
J. G. Wells, Jr., station superintendent, announces that No.
282, known more formally in registration papers as the daughter
of Fobes Pietertje Ormsby and
Chatham Pietertje Echo Lass, has
gone to the butcher shop. She
became too stiff to get around
easily and failed to breed, although she had a record/ of six
heifer and two bull calves and a
milk production averaging 15,195
pounds of milk and 473.7 pounds
of butterfat for eignt lactations.
other Washtenaw County Fair
has passed into history and the
State Fair at Detroit is drawing
large crowds. The Saline band
performed creditably in Ann Arbor and won new friends and
much praise for themselves. CThe
holiday traffic was heavy and began Friday when the week-end
started for many. Labor Day
marked the end of the fishing
season and many devotees of the
rod and reel went north and to
the surrounding lakes. C.A high
ranking army official says "Our
soldiers love apple pie, apple pudding and apple cobbler." He further says that the army consumes more apples per capita than
any similar group in the United
States. CMilton Finkbeiner dropped in at The Observer office
while home on furlough and expressed his thanks to the American Legion and The Observer for
making it possible for the soldiers
to have the home town newspaper
while they are in camp. He
thinks we can't realize how much
it means and probably we don't.
It is nice to hear from the boys
in camp and know that they enjoy keeping in touch with the
home town folks. CGoldenrod and
asters, fields of conn going into
silos^—these remind us that summer is waning and fall is on the
way. CWith the opening of
school this week we imagine more
than one little face received an
unusual amount of scrubbing, little heads were combed even more
meticulously and little Americans
went to school as cleaii and rosy
as mothers could make them.
CA drive around our rural section a week ago revealed house-
cleaning in progress in many of
the country schools. Yards were
being raked and refuse burned,
desks ;and floors were scrubbed,
walls cleaned, and everything put
in apple-pie order for the opening of school. CWho can not remember grandmother's dried
corn? It had a flavor all its
own, a particular something
which no canned corn ever could
possess. Many grandmothers have
given us their particular method
but here is an unusual one which
comes from a reader in Ohio. Perhaps you'd like to experiment.
This lady takes Time cups of
corn cut off the cob, mixes it
with one cup of sugar, one-half
cup of salt. "After it has been
well mixed she cooks it over a.
very slow fire for 35 or 40 miffi-
^fcontinued on page two) j
St. Paul's church was the
scene of a lovely wedding Saturday evening when Miss Lillian
Elsie Kern, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Kern, and Chartes
Holzhauer, son of Mr. and Mrs.
George Holzhauer of Ann Arbor,
were united in marriage. Rev.
Wittbracht read the impressive
double ring ceremony. The altar
was banked with palms and
flanked with baskets of gladioli
on either side. Mrs. Lucille Henderson was organist and Kenneth
Volz sang "O Promise Me" and
"Because." The bride was given
away by her father. Miss Aiiene
Kem, sister of the bride, was
bridesmaid and Kenneth Holzhauer of Ann Arbor, brother of
the groom, was best man. Robert Holzhauer of Flint, another
brother, and Niel Kern were ushers.
The bride was dressed in white
brocade taffeta, made princess
style, buttoned down the back,,
with long sleeves and a sweetheart, neckline, her full skirt ind-
ed in a short train. Her fingertip veil was caught in a tiara of
orange blossoms. She carried a
spur of orchid gladiolas and wore
a double strand of pearls.
The bridesmaid wore pink brocade satin and carried white
asters and gladiolas.
The bride's mother chose for
her costume brown cable crepe
with white accessories while the
groom's mother chose black with
white accessories. Both mothers
wore gardenia corsages.
A reception in the church dining parlors for about 100 guests
followed the ceremony. A delicious two course luncheon was
served with five former classmates of the bride assisting:
Miss Alice Feldkamp, Arlene
Lange, Doris Jean Henne, May
Pfitzenmaier and Florence Seeaer. |
Mrs. Edward Wild baked the|
wedding cake which was three- j
tiered and topped with a cluster j
of roses. The bride's table w?H
centered with the wedding calf \
and flanked on either side with j
white candles in crystal candelabra and bouquets of autumn
flowers. Bowls of autumn flow- j
ers and white candles were used
on the- other tables.
The bride's maternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Jacob
Visel, attended the wedding and
one grandmother of the groom.
The young couple were the recipients of many lovely gifts.
For her going away costume
the bride wore .a tan suit with
matching accessories. After a
short trip they will be at home
to their friends at 401 Pauline
boulevard, Ann Arbor. The groom
is employed at. the Ypsilanti
Stove Works and the bride is
at the Hoover Steel Ball plant
in Ann Arbor.
The bride's aunt, Mrs. Howard,
Kern, of Ann Arbor entertained
at a miscellaneous shower Friday evening. Twenty one guests
were present and nice gifts of
linens, pyrex ware, electrical
appliances and china were received.
Cider mill will run every Friday. Lawrence Weber. 49
For Sale—10-room house, nice
est wheat field in the United for three families. Feed mill fc
States, made what was probably rent. C. Boettner.
one of the best showings, so far. .
as yield "was concerned. j Take advantage of Burkhart
Clarence
Phone 152.
Cook, Auctioneer.
For Sale—Sow and 12 pigs. Alfred Walker, phone 149-F32. : 48
Heating and sheet metal wOrh.
t'iU-..aee ^^<ui.ng and repairing.
R. G.- Wiilii. yhone 160.
For Sale—Good eating chickens,
dressed if you wish. Andrew
Hartman, phone 114-R2. 49
The field, which was about four new policy of wrapping gift pur
feet by eight feet, and contained chases. Phone 77.
12 rows of wheat, each with 30 j , „, „„„ . . _„,= --■'
kernals, was planted on land! Wanted-Board and room fo. i vfSZ SwJ?\^ Kennedy,
For Sale—Two oil burners, one
a Nesco 3-burner with oven, one
owned by Henry Ford, a few rods high school student. Address
east of the Hayden Mill, on M-50 F, Observer office.
just east of the village of Tecum- i
seh.. i For Sale—Cut flowers—
311 East Michigan Ave.
49
rlacv
SCHOOL NOW
IN FULL SWING
Another Change In
The Faculty Is
Announced.
School opened yesterday on
schedule as registration began at
8:10 and short sessions of classes
followed. The enrollment is not
known as yet but it is believed
that it will be larger than last
year, as there are several students
transferring from other schools.
During the past week there
has been one change made in the
faculty. Miss Gertrude Freidrich
will teach the second grade in
place of Miss Irene Huehl, who
will teach a Ford School. Miss
Freidrich has a B. S. degree and
a Master of Arts from the'^Uni-
versity of Michigan and has
taught several years. She will
take charge of the Girls' Glee
Club. „
Miss Dorothy Horning will
teach the kindergarten and music
and art in the grades. She has
a B. S. degree from" Michigan
State College.
Much work has been-done on
the school grounds during the
summer. A parking place has
been made and the tennis courts
are almost completed. The materials have arrived for the Jback-
stops and they will be put up in
a few days.
The seed, certified Bald Rock. and zinnias. Cecil Davenport, 20.
wheat grown by C. D. Finkbein- : South Ann Arbor St. 47tf
er of Saline, was planted on al
piece of ground that had never \ Peaches—Both at our store a::'
grown a crop of anything but at the farm, 75c and $1 per bush-
quack grass within the memory; el. Haarer's Quality Market.
of those living- today. j
The occasion of the- planting of \ Baked Goods like Mother us-.-:
the wheat was a sermon preached ; to make. Parties and entertain-
in the Tecumseh Friends church, ments a specialty. Milan Pastry
Sunday morning. Sept. 22, 1940, j Shop.
in which the minister used the j
text taken from the -12th chapter; Wanted — Dead and useless
of John "Except a corn of wheat; stock; horses 53, cows §2. Call
fall into the ground and die, it; collect Tecumseh 350. Carroll
abideth alone: but if it die it;Frost, Licensee for Darling & n0
bringeth forth much fruit." Per- ;
ry Hayden, who heard this par-1 gee our new floor coverings
ticular message, and is in the ! at reasonable prices. Rauser Out-
milling business in Tecumseh, j fitting Co. 118 N. Fourth Ave.,
thought it would be an interest- (Ann Arbor. Tolls paid from Saline
ing project to plant one kemal I
and see what would happen if j For Sale—Grapes, cabbage, and
the progeny each year were re-j two Jersey cows, one fresh, calf
planted for six years. Lacking, by side. Call after 4 p. m. Ru-
enough faith to wait one whole; dolp Haas, 9008 Monroe road,
year for the crop from one ker- second farm from Saline,
rial it was decided to plant one
cubic inch. School teacher House
of the Macon Ford school constructed a tin measure exactly
one cubic inch in dimension, and
Wheat Farmer Finkbeiner supplied the wheat which was planted on Ford's land, amidst a gal- We handle belts and canvases
axy of agricultural bigwigs of to fit the popular Allis-Chalmer!
Lenawee county and Michigan; combines. We also carry bear-!
last September. Ralph Comfort; jngg for many of the tractors,
took colored movies of the event; Gross Hardware.
in which some 100 persons par-1 \
ticipated. j Especially equipped to repaii
The wheat was cut July S, 1941 j auto parts and farm macliinerv
and the grain was finally threshed j Welding of all kinds. Brooks
with a carpet beater in a flour, Brothers will nx it. if anyone
bag, and the chaff blown out by j can_ phone 101.
power furnished from the lungs; * ! I
of' the Hayden family. After in-j A. & B. Feed is made to pro-1
eluding the 379 kernals of wheat! auce a profit for the poultryman i
picked up by Mrs. Hayden from not for a big feed company. Wp ■
under the dining room table, the! QOn't change it when prices of in-1
total crop was listed as 79,305 gredients go up. Saline Hatchery, j
kernals. Excluding 1,305 kernals j
as being too light to be of much j For sale—Several high grade]
value, the 360 kernals planted' nrnking goats, 1 registered male]
last fall showed a 50 fold gain. • sanaan, 20 nice feeding lambs, 1 j
Perry Hayden, who is an ard- = calf 13 weeks old. Bert Anglemy-i
ent exponent of tithing, says that • er> 7 mi. W. of Saline on US-112. j
five cubic inches, or 1,800 kernals i
Dr. Mary Minnis, chiropodist,
all foot troubles quickly relieved.
353 S. Main, corner of V, i.Uims,
Ann Arbor, Phone 22G70.
We have a complete line of
Master Mix Poultry Feeds; also
Hog and Dairy Concentrates.
Phone 1S2-F22, Morton Poultry
Farm.
It is here! The rvj
about Ford six-cyliri.l;,*
display in cur shov.' •* r
in, see it, diive it. ;::
buy it. Wiedman An .
Dead, Useless I":r-:i
Removed. Highest r,;'i-' :
prompt siivice inc^r.u.:'.
call 484, Adrian, rwr:
Adrian, Mich. Adrianf
":cd
on
xra&
•..ill
: -;-"."",. For
; S-mCays
: - • -h trares,
'ankags Co.
J/P Air Conditioned
Saline Theatre^
M «—^
Friday and Saturday
Wallace Beery-M. Main in
BARNACLE BILL
Sunday, Monday and Tuesday
C. Gable-R. Russell in
They Met in Bombay
Wednesday and Thursday
Marlene Dietrich-J. Wayne; in
SEVEN SINNEHS
w-
will be given the Tecumseh
Friends church and the remaining
45 cubic inches replanted this
coming month.
It is estimated that at the end
of six years of reproduction, if
just a^fifteen fold gain is attained for the next five years, that
this one tiny cubic inch of wheat
even with the tithe taken out each
year for the Lord, will give the
Free choice growing concentrate for your pullets. Feed 85%
of your whole grains, no grinding
or mixing. The simplest, most
economical way to feed. Morton
Poultry Farm.
Used Farm Implements
9-year-old horse, wt. 1500, cheap.
Herman Heininger
One McCormick-Deering chain
drive corn binder, one regular
Hayden Flour Mills around 10,000 j Farmall, an F-12 tractor, two
bushels of wheat. Mr. Hayden es-! 10-20S, a 22-36, one 15-30, Mc-
timated if it were possible to i Cormick two 14-in. plows, John
continue the experiment for 11! Deere corn picker that will work
years, on the basis of an increase j on either John Deere A or B
of fifteen fold annually, that this, tractor—looks like new; McCor-
tiny cubic inch of wheat would' mick-Deering power drive corn
exceed the largest wheat crop of ; binder—has cut only 30 acres •
the entire nation. He says it | (traded in " on picker). Also a;
would amount to 1,447,363,245'" -- . *. --
bushels. And that the tithe from
that would have enough cash value to build 15,000 "churches, each
costing $10,000,, providing the
wheat had a value during the six
years of $1.00 per bushel.
Mr. Hayden's wheat marketing
card, signed by Earl E. Scott on j
July 9, is No. 1254371, so his}
operations have governmental j
"sanction." ;
Had an acre of wheat, with
two bushels of this same seed, attained the same yield, it would
have amounted to 100 bushels per
acre. .
Missing Word Contest A^-
FROM
§49.00
TO
$500.00
All lands of Furs.
You're sure to find the
coat you want.
/
MGLER'S
Exclusive Furs
318 S. Main St., Ann Arbor
ADDITIONAL LOCALS
EYES EXAMESfED! j
Glasses fitted. Every Saturday
2:38 to 9:36 P. M. Office 3a MHan'
Hotel. See De Frank Qifford, To-
READ THE USER ADS NOW ledo Optometrist
Miss Blanche .Walters of Ann
Arbor spent the Labor Day week
end at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Reuben Feldkamp. Mr. and Mrs.
Louell Roehm and children were
dinner guests Sunday.
School Commissioner Julius W.
Haab is calling an institute for
the 145 rural teachers at 9 a. m-
on Sept, 6 in the County building, Ann Arbor. The purpose is
to pass out necessary teaching
material and to consult, advise,
and discuss the problems pertaining to their work and to the
general welfare of their schools.
All teachers are requested to stay
for the afternoon . session.
September 7 marks the 34th
anniversary of the opening of
Michigan's first state tuberculosis sanatorium at Howell. In celebration of the day the sanatorium will welcome visitors between
3 and 5 p."m. Regular tours
through the building have been
arranged.
OBERVER LINERS
Classified Advertising
6c per line first insertion, 4c per
line each subsequent insertion.
MINIMUM CHARGE. 25 CENTS
For Sale—Hale and Prolific
peaches. J. Marion, phone 199-F31.
A very large line of Men's Bill
Folds just in. Priced from 75c
to $1.65. Gs L. Parsons. 48
Don't miss out on the many attractive week-end grocery specials advertised in The Observer,
today in Saline •stores. It's an
economical thing to read the advertisements each week to effect
desirable savings.
Wanted—People in this vicinity
■who have any legal printing re-
having it sent to this newspaper,
quired in Hie settlement of estates, etc., will confer a favor by
The rates are universal in such
matters and to have your notices
appear in this paper it is only
necessary to ask the Probate
Judge to send, them to The
Saline Observer.
CASH PAID
For DISABLED or DEAD
HORSES _ - S3 — COWS $2
Market Prices for Calves and Hogs
Carcass Must Be Fresh and Sound
Phone Collect Nearest Station
Howell 360 — Ann Arbor 5538
OSCAR MYERS RENDERING CO,
A Beautiful
SCHWINN
BICYCLE
FREE
To the Boy or Girl with
the most votes. Vote how
now for your favorite! ,
I^Votes allowed1 with these purchases at our store.
30c
rimic
wiSHER
1 9-16 lb. Magic Washer.
(One votej
5 lbs. Magic Washer .... 75c
(Three votes) h,
1 5-16 lb. Nola Soap Flakes.. 32c S ^^
(One vote) 5
3-lb. Nola Soap Flakes 57c O -ma
Haarer's Quality Market
Object Description
| Title | 1941-09-04; Saline Observer |
| Date | 1941-09-04 |
| 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 |
Description
| Title | 1941-09-04; Saline Observer |
| Date | 1941-09-04 |
| 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 |
| Transcript |
*■ OBSERVER YOLUMS 60 SALINE, WASHTENAW COUNTY, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, SEPT. 4, 1941 <%' ■*£#*" r'^ NUMBER 48 j erating full time the past six ! weeks. Mr. Prochaska is a mem- Mrs. Tola McGowan GETS THRESHING DONE, GOES BACK TO ARMY Private John V. Prochaska of I £« of the 40th Coast Artillery Holloway, who was granted a 30,BnSade at Fort Sheridan, ™- ; • ■ j n . day furlough to thresh for his! -= -AflOlTSSSfiS i\0t3rl3nS neighbors and was later given a America is in a state of emerg- ,*■*•*" v*wv«. iwiuuuuv two weeks extension, will return ; ency. Every citizen is urged to ' SEEN AN' HEARD .•opext week to his army duties. His i do his part by buying Defense "two threshing rigs have been op- j Savings Bonds and Stamps. • Tells of Operation Of Goodwill Industries And Their Employes. "Missing Word Contest Ad" Borrowing Wisely and Well j j PROFITS LIE AHEAD through feeding and cattle loans . . . Every year many experienced farmers in this community borrow wisely and well from us for feeding and cattle loans. Perhaps there is a source of profit here for you that will bear investigating. Since we are thoroughly familiar with this line of farm financing, we'd like to discuss its possibilities with you. You won't be obligated by coming in for a talk the next time you are in town. The One Story Bank On the Corner "Missing Word Contest Ad" "Missing Word Contest Ad" Meat—Even the '"Tiny Tummy" digests it Easily hpfm/*fiL> h/SfJj* Club Steak lb. 30c temmmnmiaer Veai Sh'der R'st, lb. 30c s^-'j |
