Newspaper Page Text
:•¥«. Weak Hearts l*0* Are due to indigestion. Ninety-nine of every •ne hundred people who have heart trouble Ban remember when it was simple indiges tion. It is a scientific fact that all cases of heart disease, not organic, are not only traceable to, but are the direct result of indi gestion. All food taken into the stomach •rhich falls of perfect digestion ferments and swells the stomach, puffing it up against the fceart. This interferes with the action of tie heart, and in the course of time that delicate but vital organ becomes diseased. Mr. D. Kaubte, of Nevada, O.. says: 1 bad stomach doable and was In a bad state as I bad heart trouble «ith it. I took Kodol Dyspepsia Cure for about tour •Booths and it cured me Kodol Digests Wh/»t Yo Eat and relieves the stomach of all nervous •train and the heart of all pressure. Bottles only. $1.00 Size holding 2% times the trial size, which sells for 50c. Prepared by E. O. OeWITT & CO., OHIOAQO. for sale by all druggists. a W O A N S I AND QUALITY is in is SHUBEKI SHOE FOR WOMEN old by Leading Dealers $35 0 A N A E DY C.GOTZIAN^CO. ST. PAUL. CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH PENNYROYAL PILLS "fa. °*ttti Safe. Always reliable Ladies, ask Druggist foi 9IIICHESTER-S EBWI.ISH in Red and 4old metallic boxes, sealed with blue ribbon. Take no other. Refuse dangerous inbiti tutions and imitations. Buy of your Druggist, or send 4c. in stamps for Particulars, Testl •moniaU and Relief for ladies," in Utter, by return Mall. 10,000 Testimonials. Sold by all Druggists. CHICHESTER CHEMICAL CO. 2100 Madison Square, PHILA., PA, Mention this paper. 5 0 YEARS' EXPERIENCE ATENTS TRADE MARKS DESIGNS COPYRIGHTS &C Anyone sending a sketch and description may quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an invention is probably patentable. Communica tions strictly confidential. HANDBOOK on Patents «ent free. Oldest agency for securing patents. Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive special notice, without charge, in the Scientific American. handsomely illustrated weeklv I ireest cir culation of any scientific journal, 'i erms, 3 a year: four months, fl. Sold by all newsdealers. MUNN & Co.361Broadwa^ New York Pranch Office, 625 St., Washington, D. C. BUY THE: SEWING MACHINE not be deceived by those who ad ertise a $60.00 Sewing Machine for $20.00. This kind of a machine can be bought from us or any of our dealers from $15.00 to §18.00. WE MAKE A VARIETY. THE NEW HOME IS THE BEST. The Feed determines the strength or •\uukness of Sewing Machines. The E a combined with other ong points makes the N riie best Sewing Machine to buy. th dif ferent of V:K8 fOFCIRCULARSshowingstylee Sewing Machines A manufacture and prices before purchasing THE NE W HOM E SEWIN UffHIHE GO ORANGE. MASS. 2s Union Sq. N. Y., Chicago, 111., Atlanta, Ga., tf Louis.Mo., Da'lasTex.,San Francisco, Cal FOR SALE BY E. HELLRIEGEL, Hew Ulm, Minn. (A-gent since 1871.) Also the most famous and best pianos and organs. Tuning and repairing free. HI, A. BINGHAM. A. W. BJNOHAK. Bingham Bros., DEALERS IN Coal Grain. NEW ULM, MINN. SENATOR I IS LAID AT RESTtj Funeral Services Over Remains of Distinguished Oaioan Held* at Cleveland. Great Throngs Take Last Look' at Dead Statesman While Thousands of Others Are Unable To—Many Noted Persons in Attendance Body Deposited in Chapel. Cleveland, O., Feb. 19.—Surrounded by great masses of flowers and guarded by a detail of state militiamen, the re mains of Senator Marcus A. Hanna lay in state and were viewed by 50,000 persons yesterday afternoon. The cas ket stood on the same catafalque on which rested the remains of President McKmley at Canton. As his lifelong friend and companion it was thought fitting that the same bier should be used for Senator Hanna. The Last Bites. Cleveland, O., Feb. 20.—The last rites over the body of Senator Marcus A. Hanna were held yesterday afternoon at St. Paul's Episcopal church. During this solemn service, Cleveland was a silent city. Nearly all business was sus pended for the entire afternoon. Street railway and steam road traffic on every line in the city was stopped for five mm- city was stopped utes from one to 1:05 o'clock. People generally in all parts of the city bowed their heads in reverence for a brief space of time at that hour. Cleveland mourned as it never mourned before. A Immense Throng. Thousands who were unable to view the remains of the dead senator, as they lay in state in the chamber of com merce auditorium Thursday and Fri day, flocked to the corner of Euclid and Case avenues, to witness the conveying of the simple black casket, bearing the remains of the senator, into the church. There they stood with bared heads and moistened eyes as the cortege moved into the edifice where the last earthly tribute was paid the dead. The Funeral Services. A few moments before one o'clock Mrs. Hanna, accompanied by her son. Dan, entered the church. She was dressed in deep black and was heavily veiled, and as they slowly walked down the aisle to the first row of seats the stillness of death fell over those with in the walls of the church and heads bowed in token of sympathy. Other members of the family followed. When the body had been gently placed upon the bier and the pallbearers had been seated the choir chanted the Thirtieth and Nineteenth Psalms. President Pierce, of Gambier college, an institution of which Mr. Hanna was a benefactor, read the lesson, and Bishop Leonard then de livered the eulogy. Body Placed in Chapel. The service was most solemn and impressive, and outbursts of sobs could be heard at frequent intervals from all parts of the church. The body, accompanied only by the family, pallbearers and Bishop Leon ard, proceeded slowly out Euclid ave nue to Lakeview cemetery where a final farewell of the dead was taken in Wade Memorial chapel. The services consisted simply of a prayer by the bishop. The body was deposited in a crypt in the chapel to await burial at the pleasure of the family. Honor Hanna's Memory. Wilkesbarre, Pa., Feb. 20.—Yesterday was generally observed throughout the anthracite fields as a day of mourning and all the mines and collieries were closed, out of respect to the memory of Senator Hanna. President Mitchell, of the miners' union, had issued a procla mation that the men cease work at noon, and the miners and mine em ployes so heartily favored the plan that they did not report at all for work-in the morning. In Memory of Hanna. New York, Feb. 22.—Commander Booth Tucker, of the Salvation Army, conducted a memorial service for Sena tor Marcus A. Hanna Sunday in Me morial hall, army headquarters. Com mander Booth Tucker said that in the death of Senator Hanna the Salvation Army had lost one of the best friends it ever had. "He was one of the grand est men the world has ever seen," said the commander. "He knew the army, and stood by to help in the launching of our work. The effect of his help will go on, even though he is now dead." Hero Loses Hi Life. Ithaca, N. Y., Feb. 22.—In an attempt to save the life of Ames G. Allen, of Chi cago, with whom he was skating on Cayuga lake, Louis T. Dickinson, of New York city, a senior at Cornell university, lost his life Sunday. The two young men had skated as far as Atwater, 18 miles north of Ithaca, when Allen broke through the ice. While attempting to pull him out Dickinson fell in and sank after struggling for some minutes to re gain the ice. Allen was dragged ashore after having been in the water more than half an hour. Says a Tramp Ha Bights. Des Moines, Feb. 22.—The Iowa su preme court decided that a tramp has rights which a trainman must respect, affirming a decision from Pottawattamie county, in which Joseph Johnson se cured judgment for injuries sustained by reason of forcible ejectment from a mov ing train. Demand Statehood. San Juan, Porto Rico, Feb. 22.—The federal assembly, by a vote of 60 to 15, demanded that Porto Rico be admitted to statehood or that the island be granted independence. FIVE ARE INDICTED. jGrand. Jury Investigating the Iroquois Theater Horror in Chicago Returns True Bills. Chicago, Feb. 22.—Five persons—two city officials, the active manager of the Iroquois theater and two of the theater attaches—must answer to the law for the fire panic that cost 575 lives, says the special grand jury that has been inves tigating the horror, and Mayor Harri son's administration is censured. Those against whom true bills were voted are: George Williams, commissioner of buildings charged with malfesance in office and held to be directly accountable for the lack of protection in the the ater. Edward Loughlin, building inspector charged with palpable omission of duty in connection with his investigations of the theater. Will J. Davis, senior manager of the Iroquois charged with manslaughter. Thomas J. Noonan, business manager of the theater charged with manslaugh ter. James E. Cummins, stage carpenter charged with manslaughter. SIEGE IS RAISED. Government Forces Defeat Insurgents at San Domingo After a Two Days' Battle. Washington, Feb. 22.—Late last night the state department received a cable- 4. A +...,«?„ „r, sram from Minister Powell, dated at a a 16 A a the government forces and the insur gents. It extended over two days and resulted in a victory for the government. The siege has been raised and the insur gents are in retreat" Close attention is being given by ad ministration officials to affairs in San Domingo. A number of warships are be ing kept in the waters of that country so that American interests may be zeal ously protected. Forcible interference in the affairs of the country, however, have been avoided up to this time, so far as news received by the department is concerned. It is authoritatively stated that the question of the annexation of San Do mingo to the United States never has received the slightest consideration on the part of the administration. BULLETS FLEW FAST. Biot Occurs in an Effort by Officers to Close a Poolroom at Mad ison, 111. Madison, 111., Feb. 20.—In an effort to close up a pool room that has for a long time operated in the outskirts of this city, three constables, augment ed by a posse of citizens and bearing warrants for the arrest of six men con nected with the poolroom, precipitated a riot late yesterday, which resulted in the shooting of seven men. Two may die. The wounded are: Lee Harlan, druggist, probably mortally William Schooley, posseman Edward Harris, spectator, not seriously, Edward Downs, seriously Patrick McCam bridge, policeman, probably mortally two unknown, not seriously. BLAST KiLLS MANY. Cars of Dynamite Explode in Utah and Over a Score of Persons Lose Their Lives. Ogden, Utah, Feb. 20.—Two carloads of dynamite exploded at Jackson sta tion, on the Ogden-Lucin cutoff yester day, killing 23 and injuring 30 work men. The victims, it is said, are most ly Greeks. The explosion wrecked everything within a radius of half a mile. The ac cident was caused by a water train run ning into the two cars loaded with dyna mite. Five locomotives were reduced to scrap iron and the big steam shovel at Jackson was demolished. A soon as news of the explosion reached Ogden a special with physicians, nurses and stretchers was hurried to the scene. Must Surrender Bi Sum. Milwaukee, Wis., Feb. 20.—Judge Tar rant rendered a verdict for $94,000 against Gerhard Terlinden, the German absconder arrested in Milwaukee some years ago, in favor of the Disconto Gesellschaft, of Berlin, Germany, who had charged him with misappropriating 400,000 marks The money was deposited in Milwaukee banks by Terlinden prior to his arrest and has been in litigation since that time. Death of Col. Bouck. Oshkosh, Wis., Feb. 22.—Col. Gabriel Bouck, leader of the northern Wiscon sin democracy and former state attorney generad, died yesterday morning at the age of 76. He served two terms in con gress, being elected in 1876 and 1878. He commanded the first company raised in this section for the civil war, and later was made colonel of the Eighteenth Wisconsin infantry. Installed President. Panama, Feb. 22.—Dr. Amador was in augurated first president of the Repub lic of Panama at four o'clock Saturday afternoon before the national constitu tional convention. Pablo Arosemena, president of the convention, adminis tered the oath of office. Fourteen Killed. Paris, Feb. 22.—Fourteen employes of a celluloid comb factory, at the cor ner of the Boulevard Sebastopol and the Rue Etienne Mariel, lost their lives in a fire which started by an explosion of gas. About 20 other employes were injured. Official Notice Given. St. Petersburg, Feb. 22.—Ambassador McCormick has been officially notified that Russia will not participate in the S Louis exposition. MINNESOT A NEWSUt Tfae Kext Fair. The board of managers for the state fair held an all-day session at the fair grounds, and revised the premium list and authorized numerous improve ments to the buildings on the grounds. Several thousand dollars more will be spent in premiums next fall in addi tion to the sums spent in former years. The committee appointed to revise the premium list and the report was made, and, "with few changes, the report was adopted. One new feature will be introduced next fall in offering premiums on agri cultural exhibits from Ramsey and Hennepin counties. This innovation was made at the request of the Grow er's Association of St Paul and the market gardners of Minneapolis. Ad ditional premiums have been offered for the horticultural exhibits. An in crease was made in the premiums of fered in every department of the cattle, sheep, swine, horse and poultry exhi bits. A new racing program was also adopted, in which more than $3,00 will be offered as prizes in addition to the sums expended for that purpose last year. Heretofore there have beea two $5,000 purses offered and ten $1,000, making $20,000 all. The new racing program will offer two $5,0CH races as formerly, and two $2,500 races have been provided, and in addition to these there will be eight $1,000 purses. Repairs will be made on many of the old exhibit speed barns, wnich were built in 1885. The speed barns will receive new roofs and will all be paint ed. Two of the machinery sheds will be painted and new roofs will be put on them. To Poultry Raisers. "The only way the growers of pro duce and poultry raisers can protect themselves against unscrupulous wholesale dealers is to insist on being paid for their product before it leaves their control," said Secretary A. C. Clausen of the state railroad and ware house commission. "If the producers of these things as a class would refuse to ship them un til they got their money, the dealers would have to send agents into the country to buy at the farms. The farmer would get less than the fancy quotations sent out, but he would be ahead in real money." "The commission probably receives more complaints against the unscrupu methods ot dealers in produce and poultry, the so-called commission mer chant, than against all the railroads in the state." A Pad Case. While attempting to frighten two employes of his father, Fred B. Wat son, aged seventeen, 381 Ferdinand street, St. Paul, was struck over the head with a piece of iron by David Parker and killed at mid-night. Parker gave himself up to the police and is being held until the coroner's report is announced. Watson was a son of D. W. Watson, who conducts a livery barn at St. Anthony avenue and Ferdinand street in the barn two men sleep, David Park er and Charles Jenkins Fred B. Wat son and his brother, Clinton E Watson, thought to have some sport with the men by frightening them, and crawl ing into the basement intending to alarm them by creeping up on them. "Wards of the State. Few people realize the amount of dry goods and clothing purchased by the state board of control every quar ter for the inmates of the state institu tions. The dress goods, flannel, sheetings and skirtings alone, arranged in strips a yard wide, would extend twenty-one miles. The dress goods are enough to make dresses for 1,000 inmates, reckon ing ten yards to a dress. The sheetings would cover 4,000 six feet square. Taxes Paid. The state received $5#,000 royalty on 201,000 tons of ore taken from the Pool mine at Hibbing. This is the first year the mine has been operated. The great mine at Buell paid $10,000 on 40,000 tons and the Oliver at Vir ginia $1,500 on 6,000 tons. Th£ state also received a minimum royalty of $1,200 on eight mines not in operation. The steel trust pays the minimum roy alty to hold them for future operation. A Fine Fur. Po-ka-na-ga, a Chippewa Indian liv ing at Pine Point, on the White Earth reservation has a fox skin which he will take to the twin cities and ex pects to get $150 for the fur. Po-ka-na-ga discovered that when he was away from home, a fox made reg ular visits, and he set a trap and the animal was caught in the house. It is a red and silver gray skin and the In dian was offered $25 for it there, but as he sold a black fox skin in the twin cities for $150 he will start for there at once with his booty. News Motes. All the bids for the library site at Crookston have been rejected. St. Paul will be the headquarters for the Northwestern civil service district. Eighteen of the thirty-nine railroads inltthe state report an increase of near half a million dollars in gross earn njs. i'he farm residence of John Ashler in Roscoe township, near Red Wing, was destroyed by fire. Nothing was saved. The origin of the fire is not known. The Washington County Rural Mail Carrier's association has been organ ized and the first officers are: W. W. Briggs, Stillwater, president M. L. Lonegren, Afton, vice-president C. H. Cobb, Cottage Grove, secretary, and W. W. Stewart, Stillwater, treasurer. The Hubbarn Milling company is running its flour mills at Mankato almost to its full capacity, turning out 1,600 barrels a day THE PAULIST GEDEE «,S=*-S^Pjj S%£"^r FATHER DESHON'S DEATH REMOVED THE LAST OF ITS FOUNDERS. The Famoni Quintet of He W Were the Charter Member* of the Organisation—How the Order 'Was) Formed and the Work For Which If Is Famed. The recent death in New York of the Rev. George Deshon, superior general of the Paulist fathers, closes one of tae most interesting chapters of Church history in the United States. He was the last of that famous body of men who constituted the charter members of the organization known as the Paul ist fathers. Fathers Hecker, Hewit, Baker and Walworth, together with Deshon, made up the quintet. They were all men of striking personality and of remarkable individuality. The youngest of this group of men was Deshon, a practical man of af fairs, hard headed and logical, of a mathematical and sentimental turn of mind, a lover of austerity and frugal ity and yet a profoundly jligious spirit All these men came by different roads to the Catholic Church and without any previous arrangement found themselves thrown together in a religious commu nity that offered to them the highest ideals of sanctified manhood, with the best opportunities for cultivating the higher life. When the old ship of Protestantism began to show signs of unseaworthi ness about the middle of the nineteenth century the best spirits left It and sought refuge in the bark of Peter. The Tractarian movement in England brought to the Church such men as Newman and Manning and Ward and a host of others. It had its effect in this country, and Baker and Hewit and Ives and Wadhams and Walworth and many others were carried along by it into the Church. But outside of I the Tractarian movement there were other converts from the evangelical bodies and even from rationalism. From the latter came Hecker and Brownson. However, the providence of God cast five of these earnest spir its into the Redemptorist community. There they learned the principles of the religious life, and there they plighted their vows of obedience and poverty and chastity, and there they cousecrat ed their energies to the uplifting of their fellow men, and in it all they found the supreme joy of simple, chaste and holy living. Many years went by, and their voices were heard in every corner of this country, from Quebec to New Orleans, denouncing vice and exhorting sinners to repentance. In the hard work of the missions they found their sweetest joy, and never a shadow of regret crossed their minds for the emoluments and the honors they had left behind. But conditions arose In their own household and by their own fireside which made it imperative for them to go out once again. They were all Americans and stont believers in the vocation of the American people, and they were earnestly anxious to bring the best people on the face of the earth, as they considered the American people to be, to a knowledge of the truth in the Catholic Church. A Teutonic spirit ruled among the Redemptionists at that time, and an effort was made to turn the work of these talented Amer icans into German channels and thus cut off their chosen field of activity. It was a vital question. The useful ness of their lives was to a large ex tent wrapped up in it. The difference of judgment was appealed to Rome, and Rome bade Hecker, Hewit, Wal worth, Baker and Deshon to separate from the community they loved and start afresh, so that they might con tinue on the lines of their chosen work. It was all done in the best of spirit. The Paulists began without a cent, but with stout hearts and a firm con viction that their chosen lines were the best, and fifty years of labor have not demonstrated the contrary. They came te New York and made a beginning at Fifty-ninth street and Ninth avenue. This was in November, 1858. For nearly fifty years they have lived there, and their life has been an open book, and their work has been known to all men. They gathered dis ciples about them who became animat ed with their spirit. They continued to carry on the missionary work in which they had been trained. With the profound conviction that they could preach from the printing yress as well as they could from the pulpit, they started a printing plant, jut from which have gone millions of pages of literature to do their good work of explaining and commending the doctrinal teaching of the Catholic Church. An article in the American Ecclesiastical Review says that the activity of the Paulist fathers in the fulfillment of their external vocation has radiated chiefly in eight directions and mentions these eight avenues of work to be: First, Preaching of missions to the faithful second, the splendor and ex actness in carrying out the Church's ceremonial third, in reforming church music by going back to the old Gre gorian plain chant fourth, In opposi tion to intemperance and the liquor traffic fifth, in the elevation of sermon ic standards and the encouragement of Catholic literature sixth, the apostolate of the press represented by their print ing house, which during the past year sent out over a million books, pam phlets, etc. seventh, the preaching of missions to non-Catholics, and, eighth, the formation of the Catholic Mission ary union and the building of the apos tolic mission house for the training of secular priests to be missionaries to non-Cathoiics. In all these many works Father De shon, who has just passed away, was a moving spirit—Rev. A. P. Doyle, Paulist, in New York News. E.!Bobleter. Office in the Postoffice Building. Residence phone 178, office 210." REAL ESTATE. INSURANCE AND COLLECTIONS- Life, Fire, Accident, Hail, Tor nado, Employers' Liability, Plato Glass and Steam Boiler Insurance All old line companies. LANDS! Improved and unimproved farms •*. Minnesota, North and South Dakota Wisconsin, Missouri, Iowa and Texas. City Prop rty. We have a number of rare bargains in city property. List your property with us and receive quick returns. Collections given strict attention. Ed. J. Bobleter, New Ulna. 50 Years of Success This is our record. From a smal beginning we have grown until our fac tories now cover many acres. Many of our machines sold forty to fifty as ago are still giving their users faithfti service. Can anything be more con vincing of their merits and durability* Did you ever hear of any other machim with such a record? Note a few of the many superWr points of the Wheeler & Wilson Sewing: Machine Wilh our superior attachments the greatest variety of work is possible. Do not make the mistake of buying a sewiDg machine until you have given the Wheeler & Wilson No. 9 a trial. telerMilson}% .Chicago, M. FOR PALE JOHN H. FORSTER, NEW ULM. MINN. DO YOU WANT PROMPT, UP-TO DATE, RELIABLE LIVERY SERVICE? If so, patiouize the.. .. PALAC E Best of service night or day. Telephone No. 183. Hack to all p*rts of the city. -*3? NEUMANN & MUELLER, Praps F. fJa^I & Co. CONTRACTORS BUILDERS. NEW ULM, Mtww. We are again r«-ady to take contracts in our line nnd guarantee prompt ao8 good work. We feel that we n^ed sky no more where we are so well known. Looking for a Homel Then why notkeepinview the fact that the farming lands et Western Canada are snffictent to support a population of 50.000.000or overf The Immigration to Westeai Canada during the past tig. years has been phenomenal. Homestead Lands easily accessible, and other lands may be purchased from Railway and Land Companies. Western Canada's gram lands producemarvellous crops.whils the grazing lands contain al the nutritive qualities for fat tening cattle and other stock. Market*, School*, Railway* and all other conditio** matte Western Canada desirable spot for the home* seeker. Write to the Superintendent Int migTatlon.Ottawa.Canada.fora descriptive Atlas, and other in formation or to the authorized. Canadian Government Agent— E. T. HOLMES, Jackson Street, St Paul, MJZMV I 3 No.9 The Rotary Hook displaces the OJB, out-of-date, unmechanical and trouble some shuttle. The Frictionless ball bearings and per fect mechanical construction enable it to be operated with one-third less exertion than is required by ordinary machines. It sews three yards of goods whiles shuttle machine sews two. It makes the most elastic and most perfect stitch whether sewing light heavy goods. Ha£$ g££**„*-®^ -v- -^sa^ JI