Newspaper Page Text
''•xfSffljg&fm?*" sj»*»' New Ulm Review Wednesday, February 22. 1905. O A. ALEXANDER ATTORNEY AT LAW. Prompt attention given to collections. Insurance in good old line companies. Office cor. Minn, and 2d. N. St. New Ulm, Minn. WE TAN Horse and Cattle Hides and Skips of all FUR bearing animals suitable for Robes or Coats. Write for price list, shipping' tags, etc. free M. TAUBERT. Dresser Oyer. 6 2 2 BRYAN AVB.N. 'MINNEAPOLIS, MINN. R. J. H. VOGEL, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON [Office over Alwin's Store. '._ T3 Residence on Broadway Residence Phone 179, Office 188. N E W I N R. O. C. STRICKLER PHYSICIAN AND'SURGEON. Office over Alwin's Drug Store.! Residence cor. N E W 4 Broadway & 2d N St. OIDALE & SOMSEN. L. A. FMTSCHE, I N N ATTORNEYS & COUN SELORS. Practices in all State and U. S. courts. Collections given particular attention. Office over Postoffice. N E W I N N PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Ollioe over T'l-ownJCo. Bank. NKW TJI.M, MINX. (J. A. HAGBERG ATTORNEY & COUNSELOR. Office in Masonic Bile, 2d floor. Legal advice given and suits tried in •all,courts. Collections attended to. 'INE W I N N I 1 A. HEEPvS. ARCHITECT AND BUILDER. Office on State street. Plans and specifications furnished. Contracts taken on all kinds of build ings. N E W I N N I)R. F. W. FRITSCHE DENTAL SURGEON. •duntunde for extracting. Office over Brown Co. Bank. N E W I N N DR. G. R. KOCH, DENTIST. •fliee in the Post Office Block, over the City Drug Store. !SI EW I N N C. & N W. R. R. DEPARTURE OV TRAINS EAST. Pass. No. 504 (Ex.Sua.) new line, o:42a ui No. 34 (Kx.Sun.) old Hue, 5:4fiaiu No. 502 (Daily) new line, 8:55pm No. & (Daily) old line 8:56 No. Ex. Sim.) newlttie :65pm DKPAKTITKK OF TRAINS Vi EST. No. 13 (Ex. Sun.) new line, 7:52 No. 23 Daily) old line, 1:00 No. 503 (Daily)'new line, l:«8a No. 27 (Ex. Sun.) old line, 8:25 No.501 (Daily)dne3whave.sleeping3 line 12-4 a ':.«rs between Mankato and Minneapolis. Mining cars between Witiona and Tracy •*«d Mankato and Minneapolis. Tra ins Nos.504 and 501 ha ve sleeping cars •etween Minneapolis awl Redfield, S. D. ISurther information inquire of H. Lv Beecher, Ajjent. A.C.Johnson C. A. Cairns St. Paul, Minneapolis, Chicago* St. Louis, Peoria, Kansa City, Omaha, Des Moiues and all points beyond. A I N S LEAV E AS O O W S NORTHBOUND ...'.•-."^ Twin City Pass (daily) 6.40 a Twin City Pass (ex. Sun.) 1.50 in .ocal Freight (ex. Sun.). .3.30 SOUTH BOUND Esthc^ville Pass (daily).. .9.37 StormLakePass.(ex.Sun.)12.28 Local Freight (ex. Sun.). .8.30 a Elegant new Vestibuled Pullman Sleeping Cars and Coaches run daily. or folders, rates, etc., apply fc G. W N I O S O N Agent. A. Cutts, &£T. A. nsapolis, Minn. DffiE's Min- Califoruia Prune Wafers, nature's cure for all bowel troubles. Act promptly without pain or inconvenience. 100 for '23 cents. ASK your Druggist. Eiarly Risersf The famous little pills.,v fM 'i'&iaSiS CEIL LEW WALLACE CLAIMED BY DEATH FAMOUS SOLDIER, WHITER AN DIPLOMAT PASSES A W A AT CRAWTOBBSVILLE, IND. Unable to Take Nourishment for Weeks, Author of "Ben Prac tically Starves to Death—Brief Sketch of Hi lAte.^Mix J& &,S» Crawfordsville, Ind., Feb. 16.—Sur rounded by his family, Gen. Lew Wal lace, author of "Ben Hur," one time minister to Turkey and veteran of the Mexican and Civil wars, died at his home in this city Wednesday night, aged ?8 years. The health of Gen. Wallace has been waning for several years, and for months, Respite the efforts of the family to keep the public in ignorance ©f his true condition, it has been gener ally known that his vigorous ea_stitu tion could not much longer withstand the ravages of a wasting disease. Practically Starved to Death. Dr. Ristine said that the direct cause of the general's death was exhaustion resulting from starvation. For weeka Gen. Wallace has been unable to take and assimilate strengthening food of any kind. His stomach refused absolute ly to perform its functions, and it was only his iron constitution and remark able vitality that kept him alive for more than three months. All nourish- GEN. LEW WALLACE. ment for weeks had been given by hy podermic. The general's health began to fail two years ago. He had been an inveterate smoker and this was ascribed as the cause for his illness primarily. He gave up the habit, however, and lent every aid to the skilled specialists that were called. Born in Indiana. Lewis Wallace was born in Brookville, Franklin county, Ind., April 10,1827. He was "to the-nianner born," his father, David Wallace, having been elected gov ernor of Indiana in. 1837 and to congress in 1842 from the Indianapolis district. Young Wallace hated books and schools and remained at school only so long as it was impossible to avoid. In this man ner he acquired but little real founda tional education. Previous to the out break of the Mexican war Wallace had undertaken the study of law. When the call for soldiers came he was among the first to enlist. He was not yet 20 years old, but his services were so meritorious that he came back from the war a lieu tenant. At the close of the war he mar ried Susan A. Elston, widow of a pioneer of Crawfordsville. I the ehr|l:War Trains Nos.5&l an o0 cars between Mankato and Ckicago and chair d«nt Harrison he was appointed terri- Gen. As't, Winona. G.P. A.. Clifcnjro. Minneapolis & St.touis Time Table at New Ulm, Minn. Corrected to May 25th, 1004. The "Short Line" to At the beginning of the.civil war he was appointed adjutant general of Indi ana, and soon after colonel of the Elev enth Indianan volunteers.. He served in West Virginia and became brigadier general of volunteers in September, 1861. He commanded at Donelson, was made major general, led a division at Shiloh and prepared the defense of Cincinnati in 1863, saving the city from capture by Gen. Edmund Kirby Smith. Lafter he saved Washington from capture. During the administration of Presi- torial government of Ne Mexico. From 1881 to 1885 he was minister to Turkey. As a'ftiploffiat he was eminently success ful. iAs An Author. "Ben-Hur" was written in 1880, after Robert G. Ingersoll had given Gen. Wal lace his first impetus toward acquiring the biblical lore necessary to its crea tion. His other works were: "Life of Gen. Benjamin Harrison," 1888 "The Fair God," 1873 "The Boyhood of Christ," 1889 "The Prince of India," 1893 "The Wooing of Malkatoon," 1898. CHILDREN DIE IN FIRE. Three Little Ones Meet Death at Ed wards, 111.—Mother and Father Ar Seriously Burned. Peoria, 111., Feb. 17.—Fire of a mys terious origin the house of Man ning Harris, a eoal miner living at Edwards, 15 miles from this city, burned the bodies of three small chil dren to a crisp early Thursday. The mother was taken from the burning house so badly burned that the flesh hung from her body in strips Har ris himself was horribly burned.-'\- \~& ^''©S'i i1|Bill Hits Trusts. n\C.: Springfield, 111., Feb. 18.—A drastic an^-trust bill, to take the place of the law of 1893, which was declared uncon stitutional by the supreme court three years ago, was introduced in the legis lature. Imprisonment, in the peniten tiary for from one to ten years is pro vided for those guilty of any combina tion in restraint'of trade, no_ class of business being exempted. v"^v$,£^1 r'\y%%.** Date Set for New Trial. «h£*& New York, Feb. lSi—District Attor ney Jerome Friday sent a notification to. counsel for Nan Patterson, accused of murdering Caesar Young, that a new trial of her case will be begun on March 6. in the criminal branch of the supreme- court. HlilliliT ||. IHiWl THE KIND OF TONIC THE PATIENT NEEDS. STANDARD OIL TO PEEL PROBE E S I E N ORDERS COMMIS SIONER GARFIEL TO BEGIN INVESTIGATION. Action Follows Adoption of Resolu tion by the House—Kansas' Figh on Trusts May Result in Calling of a Constitutional Convention. Washington. Feb. 17. President Roosevelt has directed James R. Gar field, commissioner of corporations of .,, the department of commerce and labor, tion requested by the house of repre sentatives Wednesday in a resolution adopted unanimously. The investiga- tion, by direction of the president, will be rigid and comprehensive The pres ident has directed a letter to Commis sioner Garfield, in which he has given his directions .and presented in .outline his views. Action to B« Pressed. The inquiry will be pressed as rapid ly as possible. The scope of the in vestigation and the time it will occupy cannot be indicated at this time. Rep resentative Campbell, of Kansas., the ,, A A .President house, had a conference with Roosevelt Thursday. Mr. Campbell's idea is that the investigation should concern particularly the situation in the Kansas field, but he expressed to the president his belief that the in quiry once begun, would extend to the operations of the Standard Oil com pany in the Beaumont field of Itexas and perhaps to other fields. State Hennery Assurtd. Topeka, Kan., Feb. IS.—Gov. Hoeh at noon Friday signed the bill pawed on Wednesday, appropriating $200,000,\. for the erection *Hd maintenance by the state of an oil refinery, uritn a ca pacity of 2,ftfcft barrels a d*y. Th signing of this measure will make it possible for Kansas to begin in earn est the fight against the Standard Gil company. In signing the bill. Gov. Hoch sent a lengthy message waging the legislature to supplement the re finery bill with railroad legislation which will prevent the trust from de feating the purpose of the act. Wa on Trust* in Kansas. VTopeka, Kan., Feb. 17.—To .success- a constitutional convention may be called" to broaden the powers ©f the Kansas legislature The bills striking at trusts, particularly those .dialing with oil, have met with so many ob jections on constitutional grounds that a sentiment in favor of a new consti tution meeting the situation has sprung up. To this end, a resolution submitting the question of calling a constitutional convention to a vote of the people in 1996 has been prepared and will, it is stated, be presented in the senate shortly. Awarded $10,000. New York, Feb. 18.—Dr. Ashbel P. Grinnell, for 20 years dean of the med ical department of the University of Vermont, in the second trial of his action to reeover $50,000 damages from Edward Weston, onee commodore of the Atlantic Yaeht club, for false ar rest and imprisonment, which termi nated Friday in the surpreme court,ob tained a verdict for $10,000. Upon the former trial .or. Grinnell got a verdict for $12,000, but this judgment was re versed upon technical grounds. ,}- ««9l3ft fully fight the trusts Within its borders, priation bill, carrying *2.156,©60. The Won Wager Lost Iiif«.«&s*^!f Cincinnati, Feb. 18.—John Nichols (colored), lo years old, a newsboy, drank a quart of whisky on a wager and died at the city hospital later, aft er lying in a stupor for many hours. As the result of investigation by the po lice, Samuel Becker, a prominent tail or, was arrested, charged with man slaughter. It is claimed that Becker bst Nichols 15 cents that he could not drink a ouart of '.whisky 5T ^t&S •___ -*, lToted Cartoonist Dies. New York, Feb. 17—Daniel H. Mc Carthy, at one time one of the best 'mown cartoonists in the country, is aead at his home here of heart trou ble. IN CONGRESS. Resume of the Proceedings Day by Day in the Senate and House. Washington, Feb. 14.—The house on Monday considered bills relating to tha District of Columbia. The senate heard ten witnesses in the. Swayne impeachment trial, and devoted the remainder of its time to the consid eration of the agricultural appropria tions bill. Washington, Feb. 15.—The house on Tuesday again considered the naval ap propriation bill.. The omnibus public building bill, carrying authorization for new public buildings and the purchase of sites amounting to ?9.499.000 was re ported to the house by Chairman Gil lette, of the house committee on public a to begin immediately the oil investiga- A a a appropriation bill and began considera lion of the bill making appropriations for the District of Columbia. TheHans- horough amendment to the agricultural bill, relative to drawbacks on the duty on wheat, was agreed to after an ex tended debate in which tariff questions figured to considerable extent. Washington, Feb. 16.—The question I of what the policy of the government should be with respect to the upbuilding of the navy was again threshed out in the house Wednesday during the con sideration of the naval appropriation bill, the debate developing nxueh oppo sition to the proposed addition of two 5 I battleships to the naval establishment. The senate continued, but did notcon- elude, consideration of the bill making appropriations for the support of the government of the District of Columbia. Washington, Feb. 17.—In the house on Thursday the Mann bill, to provide a government for the canal zone, was passed without furl her discussion. The bill gives all the right of govern ment of the eanal zone to the presi dent until the end of the next con g-iSsss, but provides that the governr ment shall be so exercised as to protect the inhabitants in fhe free en joyment of their liberty, prosperity and religion. A It aboTishes the isth- mian easa.1 commission and places the work of the construction of the canal in the hands of the president and sueh persons as he may appoint and employ. Aside from two hours spent in rou tine business the senate on Thursday gave its entire "ttsration to the Swayne !W»eachment trial. Washington Feb. 18.—The senate on Friday passed the bill appropriating $9,M0JG0 for the ©istrict of Columbia, and the diplomatic and consular appro district bill had been before the senate for several days and had been much debated. The diplomatic bill received the attention of th* senate for only 12 minutes and was passed without dis cussion. In order to facilitate action at this session on the statehood bill the house passed a resolution sending that meas ure as amended by the senate directly into conference without an opportunity being afforded to debate it. GIVEN TO THE SENATE. President Boosevelt Transmits Protocol San Do Mingo., tub! I Pb0D*8— 2. III the Washington, Feb. 16.—The protocol or treaty between the United States and San Domingo drawn up by Mr. Dawson, the American minister, and Mr.' Sanchez, the foreign minister for Pres ident Morales' government, reached Washington Wednesday. Briefly stated, it provides that the United States shall colleet the customs revenues of San Domingo and turn over to President Morales' government a specified per centage necessary to meet the expense of administration, and disburse the re mainder among foreign claimants. The United States undertakes to respect the integrity of San Domingo and the pro tocol or treaty must be approved by the United States senate and the Dominican congress. Eli Bug Hanged. Mound City, 111., Feb. 18.—Eli Bu?s (colored) was hanged here Friday as an accessory to the murder of Chris Mathis at a picnic. William Cross, who is alleged to have instigated the murder, has never beemcaptured. Oe the scaffold Bugg claimed he was i-n nocent of the crime, and advised his hearers to keep out ol bad a As delicious as a Fresh Orange I Why is August Scheli Brewing Co.'s beer always pure? __— Try a case of our Pilsener beer and be convinced, parte of the city. K% 3 The New Supersedes old-fashioned Cod Liver Oil and Emulsions Body Builder Guaranteed to contain all the medicinal elements, actually taken from .genuine fresh cods' livers, with organic iron and other body-building ingredients, but no oil or grease, making the greatest strength and flesh creator known to medicine. For old people, puny children, weak, pale women nursing |\, mothers, chronic cold, hacking coughs, throat and lung 1 troubles, incipient consumption—nothing equals Vino!. i. Try it—if you don't like it ws will return money. E. A. PPEFFERLE, Druggist. N: HENNINGSEN, THE LEADING INSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE MAN.* 1 represent 25 of the largest and strongest Fire and Tornado in-, -sumnce companies in the world. -i I also represent the largest and strongest— Sottdtod fidelity, Employers'liability, accident, *ail and life! Insurance Companies. I Improved and unimproved lands I^ClllUdo bought and sold, I have some bargains in Red Iliver valley lands io Minnesota. The time to buy land is now. If you buy land you are sure to save money. I have made thousands of dollars for my clients. I can make money lor you. N Henningsen, Insurance & Real Estate New Ulm. 9 My aseticv is one of the lareest in the state. Because. THE BARLEY IS RIGHT THE WATER IS RIGHT THE HOPS ARE RIGHT THE PLANT IS RIGHT Aug.Scheli BrewingGo. BmimiuuiimminiiiMuniuiuuiuuiuiuiiuiuuu uuuHiiuuiuuuiiiliuiiiuiuiiuilumiuiimiinumiiii mmumimm Buckwheat FlourIII Made at the New Ulm Feed and Cereal Mill. For sale at all grocers. ••TRY-ITI* Manufactured by the New Dim Feed and Cereal Mill Co. Kansas City Southern Railway -s Straight a* thft Crow Pi:~,s" "WJe?^ Straigh as he Cro KANSAS CITY TO THE GULF PASS! NG THROUGH A GREATER DIVERSITY OF ?CLIMATE, SOIL AND RESOURCE THAN ANY OTHER RAILWAY IN THE WORLD, FOR ITS LENGTH Along its line are the finest lands, soitedfor mowing small grain, corn flax cotton for commercial apple and peach orchards, for other fruits and ber nes for commercial cantaloupe, potato, tomato and general truck farms for sugar cane and nee cultivation, for merchantable timber- for raising horses, mules, cattle, hogs, sheep, poultry and Angora goats. Write for Information Concerning E E GOVERNMEN O E S E A S (f&. New Colony Locations, Improved Farms, Mineral Lands, Rice Lands and Timber k""*5, a for C0SL'.es We deliver to all S Clro. Minn. °l Current Events," Business Opportunities, v* R'ce Book, K. C. S. Fruit Book 4 Clienp round-trip homeseekers' tickets on sale first and third Tuesdays of eaeh month. h-Z THE SHORT LiNE TO "TH E LAND OF FULFILLMENT" H. D. STTTTOS*. Trav. Pass. Agt. s. G. WABZTBS, O. P. and T. A. Kansas City, Mo. Xansas City, Mo. P. E. O S & Trav. Pass, and Imig'n Agt., Kansas City, Ho. f? 7 i|