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j^cii &* Wednesday Jau. 17, 1 9 0 0 DR. L. G. BELL. t. D'! FRED W. FRITSCHE. 1 CHARGES REASONABLE.Y LONG EXPER- IENCE W b« at he to re of a a N W a a S a a DR.L.A. GEBHARDT Dental Surgeon. Office in the Schoch-Ottomeyer Building. New TJlm, OS. A. ECKSTEIN. A. IIAGBEIIG. HOMS OFFICE MANKATG OHNLIND. Attorney and Counselor, PRACTICES IN A STATE & V. S. COURTS. S a a on a id to an an4 S a in a an a a Office in a Block NEW Ur.M MINN, E1NAtt HOI DALE, ATTORNEY AT LAW. a in all Courts We shall aim to give prompt and cars fitl attention to all business placed in our Imuds. N E W I MINN. Or. PH YSICIAN AND SDRGEON Office over Pioneer Drug Store. NEW ULM, MINN. Geo. Benz & Son, I a W a a in Wli^es &MqUors, ST. PAUL MINN. P. Scherer. Dealer in Lumber Coal Best Quality of Stock. 7 -, Most Reasonable in Prices.'/, It will Pay You to Deal With fani.l Office & YardslUffi} .on lower S^#® Centre Street S The s', Dental Surgebn?//-i TEKTH EXTRACTED BY PAINLES S M«TJts» office in he id an NEW UZ.VL Dentdl Surgeon. ODUNTUNBEB FOB EXTKACTLUG. Office Co, a NEW Oi-N R. h. A. FRITSCHE. Minn. Attorney and Counselor I E S E A I N E I A N E E E a a a on iv to collect ians Office Brow Co a NEW Ul'M MTNN. F. STRICKLER, M. D. PHYSICIAN & SURGEON. Special Attention, Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat. Office over Alwin's City Drug Store. NEW UT.M MINN Attorney and Counselor. OI'KieE IN MASONIC Br.OCK—2ND ELaOR. Laical a iv a it 4 rn all court!- Collection a to Ns\v ur.n 1 A.HEERS. Architect and Builder. PLANS AMU SPECIFICATIONS EURNISHEJ*. a a on all in of in Office on S a Street NKW CJLM MINN, J, H. JAMES. Fhysician and Surgeon, TREATS EYE THROAT, EAR a NOSE. At Dr, S office fiirst S a of Judicial System to Undergo a justment PRISON MINN rai*N- Physician and Sargeon Office Brovr Ce". a a NEW Ur.M R.M. LIPP. Veterinary Surge©n M£. Sff3 ABUSE S O BEjyiRliECIED. a Secretary -Will Act ait 0»te—lYfSC*to .^mission Composed of TOuree Ainer .'^4ctM mid Three Cabana "Will Be ^Appointed—To -Meet MM Sooa as •Possible at Havana. Mr. Runcie, for the American side. These are ail lawyers, well-versed in the Spanish code, as well as thorough ly acquainted with American practice. a a Bkurly a a a a The Cuban contingent will probably be selected by Gov. Wood from among the members of the Havana bar. The commission will meet at the earliest possible in Havana and begin at once a revision of the criminal methods, fol lowing this up later on with amend ments of the civil code, where neces sary.. It is not the purpose to outrage local sentiment and disturb well-es tablished practice, except in instances where rank injustice nourishes under it. But it cannot be tolerated that per sons charged with the smallest of mis demeanors and little larcenies should languish, as at present, for a year in Mr. Rubens had a consultation with Secretary Boot Saturday, and left Washington for New York. He ex pects to proceed to Havana via Miama next Wednesday. .,-J}-' V** Thanked by the Czar. St. Petersburg, Jan. 15.—The czar has addressed a rescript to Count Maravieff, the minister of foreign af fairs, highly eulogistic of the eminent qualities displayed by the minister in bringing about a happy solution, in #*f» Washington, Jan. 15.—Secretary Boot has taken steps to institute at once sweeping reforms in the judicial sys tem in Cuba, the animating' purpose being to correct as soon as possible the Cuban prisons abuses which have al ready been the subject of representa tions to the war department. Gen. Wood has been giving this matter his attention and his investigations into the conditions of the prisons and the faults of the Cuban judicial system gen erally have confirmed Secretary Root in his purpose to apply corrective measures at the earliest possible mo ment. To accomplish this purpose, the secretary has decided to appoint a commission comprised of three Ameri cans and an equal number of Cubans. This committee will probably consist of Horatio Rubens, E? L. Conant and senator's son stated that this arrange- ate* committee on «privHeges aad ele$ ttons -began, tts session Saturday in the case of* Senator Clark of Montana, the defence stated that they had been un-, able to find the letters written to Sen ator Clark and Mr. Bickford by the dentist, .Ector, wnolfridayr* pTMnejea their letters to him. It was then decid ed to have C. W. Clark, son of the sen ator, .make .a statement as. t^,the-dis position of the documents, Tout Mr. Clark being absent Mr. Garr^ was re-' calle'd to afford Senator Turley aa op portunity to, question himeoncerning his-visits to Helena prior to the meet ing of -the legislature last winter. Garr said the principal object of his 'visit was to .See about ii resignation .-as United States commissioner, ^fp-^f^' ., The first regular witness of the'day •was M. L. Hewett, a miner, wrho was in Helena during the'session of'the legis lature in '99. He asid that Charley: Clark had asked, him to see Senator Myers and offer him $10,000 for his rote for Mr. Clark for senator. 'He had ac cordingly talked -with Mr. Myers and testified that that gentleman had told him, after first declining the proposi tion, -to say to Clark that if he was dis posed to .do so he could put $10,000 in the hands of Mr. Whiteside to be paid to him (Myers) in case he should vote for Mr. Clarke Hewett said that the ASSAULTING AN IMPREGNABLE POSITION. [From Black and .White.] in he a of E W he Britis W re S to in he to Dislodge It a me N a to Sen a a N a to Support. inent was satisfactory and had after ward told him that the money for Myers had been given to Whiteside and ihat bis vote was assured. On cross-examinaftion Air. Hewett siiid he was a republican and not' es pecially interested in any of the sen atorial candidates. He had "just drifted into" the contest. He pro nounced as incorrect the report of the testimony taken before the Lewis and Clark county grand jury fur nished the committee by the memo rialists, and he added that he had not told all the facts to the jury. Indeed he had never told all to anyone until he had given the details to Mr. Bir ney, one of the attorneys for the me morialists in Washington a few days since. jail, before having any kind of a trial, devoid to showing inconsistency on and to such abuses as this, as well as to the incommunicado system, the com mission will devote its immediate at tention. conformity with the czar's instructions,.. of the disquieting political events aris-jtions -asked ii and he did not con ing from the Cretan insurrection- and-! sider that he had perjured himself in the Turko-Greek war, thus showingtrue witholding some of the facts. -He, appreciation of the historic mission had, however, made up his mind.\||o. which has fallen to the lotof Russia,. £f*eU the whole truth heweit^ 3KV '. Concluding his testimony, Mr. Hew1 ,- Swede Kills Wife and Self. bBH said he had received no pay for Knoxville, Tenn., Jan. 15.-^ Jacob his services'for'Mr. Clark and no Shudin, a Swede, murdered his wifaand (promise of any. iHe .had been inter* then killed himself at their home six Jested -with the senator in la mining .4 miles from this place. The tragedy is company and preferred' him :-to hfis supposed to be the culmination of do-^, I opponents." mestic troubles., Joe Shudin, a"^-sonM--*,MM has been arrested, it being believe^he is a party to the murder of his motber7 t'U Senator Faulkner's questions were the part of the witness in refusing to. give the details to Montana' repre sentatives of the prosecution, whom he knew, and then giving them to Mr. Birney, whom he did not know/ He asked Hewett whether Birney had not promised to see that he was "taken care of," but the witness re plied emphatically in ^the negative, adding that he had "received nothing and no promise of anything from: the anti-Clark peopjg,Jor,JhisL-part^n these proceedings/' A Under pressure he said that when he went before the grand jury he had desired not to reveal all his transac tions during the sitting of the legasr lature'i .He Jiad only .replied -to ques- oilcloth Factory 1 1 1 1 [blocks, efetailing a loss estimated at Hallowell, Me., Jan. 15.—The oil cloth $^50,000. £be" factory of Wilder & Co., in *fcV city, fMea. Kefth A JSS88S8&Z •^»wa- TCity, ,'ia: '^an.' S a .stroyed one of the^rincipaV'business ^iros"^l«HHa^:'^Hitr^a»e^ :Go.,* was burned Saturday- causing a loss of iWrifi. Bsnfne, jd*y goads &faf*>W~ $75,000. Two firemen badly-in-I Ltners. grocer. jured hy*i explosion. g^l&jgg%: A to a ie$$xyfMxk"°-$£ Ti» Work Being Done by Our S»fST3& Mafcera «tTifty-Sixth Sea-/ Ma^ A a A a a a a a a a -VmMlh a id a a A a urtan Memmuremtn ^Washington, Jan. f.—rln, the senate yesterday Senator Wellington. Md.) introduced a bill to establish the Uni versity of the United States in Wash ington. A resolution was adopted ask ing, for an itemised statement of war -fund .expenditures. Senator Morgan (Ala.) in a speech said that negro suf frage in the south obstructed prog ress, and Senator Pettigrew (S. D.) de clared the United States had attacked Filipinos, though allies, thus being guilty of treachery. Washington Jan. 10. A resolution was adopted in the senate yesterday calling upon the secretary of war for data on purchase of transports. Sen ator Beveridge (Ind.) spoke in favor of American retention of the Philip pines and Senator Hoar (Mass.) in op position thereto. /Washington, Jan. Ill—The time 'was occupied in the senate yesterday in paying tributes to the memory of the late Vice President Hobart. Address es were delivered by Senators Sewell andEeane (N. J.), Daniel (Va.), Depew (N. Y.), Cockrell iMo.), Cullom (HI.), Davis (Minn.), Morgan (Ala.), Chan dler (N. H.), Lodge (Mass.), Caffery (La.), and Allen (Neb.). Washington, Jan. 12. The senate yesterday listened-to a debate on the, Philippine question between Senator Lodge and Senator Pettigrew, the former urging full publicity on ail matters connected with the issue and the latter bitterly attacking the ad ministration. Senator Stewart spoke in opposition to the currency reform bill. Bills were passed conferring ad ditional authority upon the director of the census and increasing to $2,500, 000 the limit of cost of the new Indi anapolis public building. Senator Spooner introduced a bill providing that the government of the Philip pines shall be vested in such person or persons as the president may direct until congress shall direct how the is land shall be governed. Adjourned t? the 15th. I Hoase. Washington, Jan. 9.—In the house yesterday a bill was passed to make the dependent pension act apply to all who served 90 days in the military or naval service, during the civil war. A charge that two federal appointees of the president, Postmaster Jdhn C. Graham, of Provo City, Utah, and Postmaster Orson Smith, of Logan, Utah, are under indictment as polyg amists was ordered investigated. Washington, Jan. 10.—The house was not in session yesterday. Washington, Jan. 11.—In the house yesterday bills were introduced to re peal the stamp tax sections of the war revenue act to license corporations, taxing them at the rate of one per cent, per annum on stocks and bonds when they amount to $1,000,000 or less, and by a sliding scale to ten per cent, on $500,000,000 or more for an appropri ation of $100,000 for a government post office building in Sterling, HI. Washington, Jan. 12. The house was not in session yesterday. Washington, Jan. 13.—In the house yesterday bills were introduced pro viding for the appointment of a com mission to regulate trusts, and to pre vent hazing at military academies. The committee on interstate and for eign commerce ordered a favorable re port upon the bill for the construc tion of the Nicaragua .canal. Ad journed to Monday. a A a Athens, O., Jan. 13.—Charles Town send, formerly secretary of state and member of the legislature, died Fri day, aged 60 years. He had been com mander of the G. A. B. for the depart ment of Ohio, delegate to. national and other republican conventions and was once a competitor of his neighbor, Gen. C. H. Grosvenor, for congress, ^f,-, -ft t* a W a WitliTEKiS'. ^J" ,/o. Nevv-York, Jan. 13.—"Kid" McCoy got the decision over Joe Choynski in,a bout which lasted three rounds at the Broadway Athletic club last night. Choynski would have had the fight- in the^eecond round were it not for an .accident-as to timekeeping. Washington, Jan. 11—Elihu 3i a a a a ,^i'*,'"i*30' ^Milwaukee, Jan. 12.—An Evening Wisconsin, special from. Kacine (Wis.) -says: .Henry F. Corbett, of Milwaukee, held here charged with the shooting of Rev. and- Mrs David B. Cheney,Jtas gone insane: '..''. i'~, s& .-* #& jr a N *S*» Pine Gap, Ky.,. Jan. 12.—Taze HaH, Henry Leap, Henry Sutherland .and Hen^Cami^Tl^wrere Jailed ,here^n./a, quarrel^byer a -game, of eardat .^^^^ 'L&U3«ViHetXy,,, Jan. 13. —Mx%. Mary Theobold, aged 56, and her daughter Lucinda, aged 8»v werei^itned^^to 1 Ie|h^5ar?ian^5ea^sipn'XiV4^ QJi: mm tMetl-A^XSMstl««i«Vti^^%: and not be, a candidate fot the office r^tinfRi.i l$l$? M£^&fyt&t€du4ifervb(rs $ Ss Tinware, ANDREW J. ECKSTEIN DEALER IN DRUGS, MEDICINE, CHEMICAL3 A Sta S S a a in O Var is a a A is S re W in a a for a a Slacksrniitying, J*or5esj oeincjt^^ We guarantee to do both in a satisfact ory manner. If you have a lame or in terfering horse, give us a call. Exper ienced workmansmp is «n claim to be able to give you. nerves.lack nutrition. Jfeed the nerves and life vwtll seaewvtt&'^oys forjyou. tJ W. !#Trie best nerve food.*njd the most valuable tonic (because it both builds up the blood and strengthens:the nerves) is Or Williams* Pink^1 PHIsfor £&$£.-Peopled Hundreds of worn-out, depressed ^men and women have been mode strong-nerved, ambitious, energetic and heaUhfui. by this remedy-. *l^| ?\y i'Among the well-known-men or the newspaper profession is F. X. Lawrence, of485 FonrthAvenue, Detroit, Mieli, who forthe part eleven years hasbeen at his desk every-day. He saysj At onetime 1 was In such a condition thatmy physician said I wooldhave nervous prostration that I would haveto atopnews I'sfto V*P*r ^"»k would go to pieces if I persisted in doing it, as I fifA-' *=swaadestroying what nerveforce I had left I lest flesh and had a 3&i lloompUcatlon of ailmentsIwhtoh baffled sklluul physiclana. An ,,.-• '. .jtwoclate Teeammended Dr. "Williams' Pink: Pills tor Pale People Vr 4«nd I gave them aHriaL I ean't say that I reoeived any benefit Jrom thenrst box, bat derived very good results from the second. ,t They gave me strengthand helpedmy shatterednerves so that I $7, oooldget a full nlght rest. -v4 "A great deal or pain to the small of the back I attributedto a ^derangement of the kidneys. For this complaint Or. Williams' (j. Pink Pills for Pale People worked wonders. Boon after 1 began taking them regularly,*the pain ceased, and I felt like anew man* "I am greatly encouragedfrom the results of using a few boxes ., and am confident that the pills will work a complete restoration i^ Ofmy former condition."—-From Evening Newt, Detroit, Mich. Sold by alldrudgists or sent, postpaid, by the Dr. Williams Medicine Co.,Schenectady, N on receipt tf price,SOcents per box. 6boxes,$*2.50 We have now located in eur new stand and are prepared to show the people an entirely new stock of goods, including Hardwaref COOKOie UTENgng, etc, We now handle the RED CROSS Coding Stove. It is undoubtedly the best in the market. J.B. AENOLD. PIONEER I Stor a N N N & WlIJIUBQ. Livery Stable New rigs, trusty drivers md^good horses Also cheap rates.. /g. Fine new hearse furnished for funerals at reasonable prices. ,-?•' Corner of Broadway and .OeatrjB ^Striie GaDJion and Baarsclt. ViTie Turnouts Ufiorm 'l#^J^f**^7r^^-^m^tm*r*^mS'i ileihconnectionj&ftJtimj^&KJfe f«jj BINGHAM-BRDS. DAKOTA HOUSE UVERY, %^e00I^M n»ade,j^» ^pleaae ||fta pub? IPric^ reasonable. Boarding Sta ANTON WIESI*E«. fibilitr Ittic most Iffistrcsstftd &fur 6,np. ft may also be-caused jfc'toy uwtvrofk Wjy.wental strain or .excesses |g $f ^tmast ^n/#o^ture. Whatever the cause, 7- system means that the S oves, /PLUMBING AND PIPE FITTING. S E HEATING. Employs njne but the best of workmen and guarantees satis faction {^"Estimates furnished on all contracts at short notice. Shop under Brown Co. Bank. Groceries Crockery Glassware Fine Fruits Candies and Nats Lamp Chimneys Lamps Chamber Sets. W keep a large stock of finest goods. Wood and Willow Ware. Salt Fish Canned Goods. Stock selected with care. .. R.PFEFFERLE. Goods iehrered to all parts ei the city-, tmmm• LHAWTKQRNlE S!«C|WCATieiW.3laaw^Hawthprpe. Crani**C S -^indi«dUmandibaf».,Oiuan-3-lt itxtobctx ij hardenea centoi^'aad Y^Pisf 0««lJ»n»P 1 !Ul15 oec^i-^ quality), straw center and fctued *«*&• FtttaKi— %&:< I lWnlarW.toca,opttonM»?»inche6. Ffalae^fHxvi: ioyitle«nsnMBBatlyhaad«tH|ied. €esr-Efc?B!i«- £*& ii, optinn 'W.tooib Tsar and Wlrojastrjroci?^ .* areiiBedm1Snar,10jrad2Son 78. a a Bara I -Adjustable ytaVfa -Bridgeport,rattrtffr, taa. «W^UUaat,fiaddadlcp- f»oIii»-JangenfcKx«l lEOOOSoldEn t8»6 _. i.. iraa*jja|M««rwhacl»¥M»^ **£&*& I ^rovemeuls. ^Ga»ranteedfr?^!R3«9«r, If lei^atfreprmonted, •r^tern at wur ex- »i ^Es«i ways, and yott.^eaa hiive? jour »a«Si»»nYoijawPBBEinrm5(