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New Ut Review Wednesday, Now 1. 1903. It. .1. H. VOGEL, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office over Alwin's Drug Store. Residence on Broadway. Residence Phone 170, Office Phone 188. NEW ULM. MINN. it O. C. STRICKLER, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Office over Alwin's Drug Store." Residence cor. Broadway & 2d N St. NEW ULM, MINN. fl O'IDALE & SOMSEN, ATTORNEYS & COUN SELORS. Practices in all State and U.S.courts. Collections given particular attention. Office over Postoffice. K«w ULM, MINN. H. L. A. FRCTSOrlE, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office over Bnnvn Co. liank. NEW ULM, MINN. A. HAG BERG, ATTORNEY & COUNSELOR. Office in Masonic 131k.. 2d floor. Legal advice gi\ en and suits tried in all courts. Collections attended to. N«w ULM. MINX. WVR. F. W. F1UTSCHU DENTAL SURGEON. tuduntunder tor extraction. Office over Brown Co. Bank. NEW ULM. MINN. R. O. G. WJCHERSKI. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Office over Olson's Drug Store. NEW ULM. MINX. Wm. a ,^ Real Estate AND.... Insurance Agent, Insures against fire, hail, tomndoes, accident and death in the best of eo-ni panwis KKAL. ESTATE BOUGHT AND SOLD Uegril douii'iK nts \eruted, loans ne gotiMted, .teamslii| tickets sold. C. & N W R. R. i' 11 iv'i I',!-- \i Mil 4~.i iti \l ''A (li\ S a I 1.1(1 hill", I ii in 12 in 14 S in I I HOTEL IS Til 4" :t.-f in FLAMES BREAK OUT WHILE IN MATES ARE ASLEEP—ES CAPE CUT OFF. Six Unfortunates Are Burned to Death —Negress and Three Children Perish in Flames Which Bum. Their Home in Asbury Park. Hot Springs. Ark., Oct. 27.—The Rail roadmen's hotel, located a block below the Iron Mountain railroad depot on Elm street, was destroyed by fire early Thursday morning, and when the fire was gotten under control six badly charred bodies found in the ruins. At the inquest they were identified as fol lows: A. Mann, railway conductor, Denver. Col. Mrs. Mack, pianist, city Ed. Snyder hotel porter, Harry Brad ley, waiter. Little Gem restaurant H. Roberts. Taeoma. Wash. John McLeon, Austin. Tex The structure wab a two-story frame building and the flames spread rapidly, cutting off all efecape by hallvv ay both up and downstairs The crackling and falling timbers awakened Steve Mal colm proprietor, who gave the alarm lo his sleeping guests the best he could. All escapes being cut off. the occupants jumped out of the second story windows and those who were in jured in this manner were: James Strickland. Venice. Ill William Strong. Rock Creek Ark The fire department searched the ruins for other victims, but no more were discovered in I 1 S liti L.i.l t.h 2 ")(',.il),ill I IIPV llll Ti I ulil I N 'iol(l 1 (HI 111 i.t'S il 111 ••.. in 1J 13 a in (lt in (•,'{ a ii if ii a it in ii a a '.ir- in it in in a is in ii a MI W a a a id a a a in a is a N 5 a "01 a ii a in a is a S in a on of I I A A A A W a A a Minneapolis & St.iouis Time Tabl at New Ului. Minn. Mav 2oth. 1!)04. Corrected to The "Short Line" to St. Paul. Minneapolis. Chicago. St. Louis. Peoria, Kansas City. Omaha. Des Moines and all points beyond. TRAINS LEAVF. AS FOLLOWS: N O O N ypin City Pass, (daih .ti.40 a in H$P City Pass. (ex. Sun.) l.."u 1 lOfeal Freight (ex. Sun.)... .:() S O O N Es§fc."ville Pass, (dailv).. .9.37 StBmLakePass.(ex.Sun.)12.28 LoStl Freight (ex. Run.). .8.30 am Elegant new Vestibuled Pullman Shaping Cars and Coaches run Tijbr folder-,, rates, etc., apply to G. W. NICHOLSON, Agent. A. B. Cutts, P. &jT. A., Min neapolis, Minn. MARE MONEY hy sending your HIDES FUR S ETC to us-We pay hi^h prices &seH gtms, traps etccheap N.W. HIDE & FUR CO eool^JStM. Minneapolis Mnn RITE FOK CATALOGUE AND PHlCE 1£T! Kodol Dyspepsia Cure Digests what you eat. Mother and Three Children Perish. Asbury Park N J.. Oct. 27—The bodies of Isabelle Spney (colored), aged 24 years and her three children. Marie Louise, aged ten. Gladys aged seven, and a bov of three years were tound in the burned ruins of their shantj early Thursday under such circumstances to lead thp authorities to suspect that the two little girls had been killed before the fire started Their skulls weie crushed Coroner Bennett, after a thor ough investigation ot Ihe fire, said he I could not find the slightest reason to sus pect foul play Mrs Spivey he says, ap parently went to sleep and accidentally overturned the lamp The tact that the skulls of two of the children were crushed i* accounted for by the firemen walking on them The bodies were dis covered in a sodden mass of debris. TAFT NOT" A~CANDID ATE. Secretary of War Declares He Will Not Make a Campaign for the Presidency. Washington: Oct 26.—The Post this morning publishes what it terms "Sec letary Taft's Announcement" as fol lows: "I have no intention of resigning liom the cabin»t to make a campaign toi the presidency and, furthermore, I have no intention whatever of making a campaign for the office of the na tion's chief executive." The Post says. "Secretary of War Taft is not plan ning to enter a campaign for the presi dency, has no intention of doing so, is content with his seat in the cabinet, and means to stay ihere as long as the president desires il. Such is the sub stance of an announcement made by him yesterday, and which will tend to put at rest, temporarily at least, the talk of his being a presidential candi date Honors for Japan. London, Oct 26.—It is officially an nounced that King Edward has com manded that a special mission, headed by Prince Arthur of Connaught, be dispatched to Tokio early in 1906 to confer the Order of the Garter on the emperor of Japan. The king has also decided to immediately laise the Brit ish legation at Tokio to an embassy Lumber Dealer Fails. Racine. Wis Oct. 28.—L. A. Nelson, who for 25 years has been a prominent lumber dealer of this city, filed a peti tion in bankruptcy, his liabilities be ing $50,000 and his assets less than 1 0 0 0 0 Republicans Nominate Jerome. New,York. Oct. 28.—William Travers Jerome has been unanimously comi ixated for district attorney by the re publican county convention. Fairfield, la., Oct. 27.—Two fast pas senger trains on the Chicago, Rock Is land & Pacific railway collided, head-on. at a point one mile south of Fairfield early Thursday. The wrecked trains were No. 11. which left Chicago at 8:30 Wednesday night for the west, and No. 12. which departed from Kansas City ai fi.'in Wednesday p-crirg. Four per sons were killed and between 15 and 20 injured, none tatally. The dead are: F. J. Milks, Muscatine la., engineer of No. 11 Glen Canfield, Murray. la., mail clerk, Detective Griffith. Lucas, la., a tramp, name unknown. The cause of the accident is laid to the train dispatcher's office. When the en gineer of No. 11 appeared at Fairfield he was handed the following order. "Run 40 minutes late to Eldon." The fireman of No. 12 declare* that they had clearance orders from Eldon and that the blame for the wreck was in the is suance of them from the dispatcher's office. A NOTABLE CELEBRATION. Forty-Seventh Anniversary of Presi dent's Birth Observed in House in Which He Was Born. New York Oct 28—In the house in which President Roosevelt was born, at No 28 East Twentieth street, the forty-seventh anniversary of the presi dent's birth was celebrated Friday night at a banquet attended by a hundred members of the Roosevelt Home club with invited guests It is the purpose of the club to purchase the house and use it as a permanent headquarters. It was announced that an anonymous donor had offered to give $10,000 to ward this when the club shall have raised the remainder The banquet was held in the room in which the presi dent was born, a partition having been removed in order to give the club a larger space The banquet room was profusely decorated with the national flag in various forms and banners show ing a picture of the house and President Roosevelt's famous declaration "All I ask is a square deal for every man." WORK OF BANK ROBBERS. Vaults of Indiana Institution Blown Open and $6,000 Taken— Battle with Citizens. Ridgeville. Ind., Oct. 25.—Burglars early Tuesday morning blew open the sale in the Bank of Ridgeville, stole 56.000 and after a running battle with a posse of citizens in which the cash ier of the bank and two of the rob bers were wounded the safe blowers escaped Before going to the bank ths robbers met the town watchman, over powered and bound and gagged him The bank's loss oi $6,000 is covered by burglar insurance, and neither the bank nor the depositors will lose any money. Bailey Released. Peoria. 111.. Oct. 27.—Judge Slem mons, in the county court, Thursday sustained the motion to quash the in dictment against O. J. Bailey, chair man of the finance committee of the school board, for malfeasance in office, in permitting N. C. Dougherty to carry on his alleged defalcations undisturbed. Following the delivery of the opinion Judge MeCulloch. attorney for Mr. Bailey, moved his discharge from rec ognizance, which was allowed. Bank Bobbed. Redfield. S. D.. Oct. 27—The state bank, at Rockham. a village 15 miles west of here, was robbed at an early hour Thursday morning. The safe was shattered by nitroglycerin and $3,000 in currency, besides valuable securities stolen. Sent to Prison. St. Joseph, Mo., Oct 25.—W. H, Har roun. charged with having forgea $700, 000 worth of bills of lading and obtain ing money on them, wa •. -r ity by a jury Tuesday night and the pen alty fixed at five years in the peniten tiary. Many Die in Chili Riots. Buenos Ayres, Argentine Republic. Oct 25—A dispatch from Santiago', Chili, says that about 50 persons were killed and 500 -wounded during the re cent riotinr. there. It is hoped that .order will be restored soon. IN THROES OF REVOLDTI THE CZAR HESITATES IN THE MATTER OF ANNOUNCING CONTTITTJriON. Disorder Increasing1 in all Parts of the Empire. Provisional Gov ernment Formed at Moscow to Take Control. London, Oct. 30.—The correspondent of the Daily Chronicle at St. Peters burg1 sends the following: "The court is in revolt against the emperor, who is vacillating between the counsels of his ministers to grant a constitution with Count Witte as premier, and the advice of the re actionaries to proclaim a dictatorship under Gen. Count Alexis Ignatieff, a member of the council of the empire. "One of the most ominous factors in the situation is the feeling among the Finns. There are only 4,000 troops in Finland, the 6,000 reservists sent there having been brought back because they developed revolutionary leanings. "Should the Finns revolt, the gov ernment could not reinforce the garri sons because every soldier is wanted here, and the navy is unreliable." London, Oct. 30.—A dispatch to the Standard to Odessa, timed 7 Oct. savs: '"A cillision between the military and a croud of students and btrikers oi cured an hour ago in Tyraspoloskaya street The so.diers, without warning, fired point blank into the people, kill ing twenty and wounding1 sixty. The students are ho'din^ a stormy conclave a1 the univeiM'\ "It is reported from Kieff at three regiments have mutinied in the south western provinces and there are alarm ing reports here of the doubtful fideli ty of tnree battallions of infantry." St. Petersburg Oct. 30.—While Sun passed quietlv without bloodshed in the Russian capital and while the citv is outwardly calm, developments all indicate that a crisis is imminent. A meeting of the munipal couucil was held last evening at which a dep utation of thirty members of the strikers' committee appeared. In an impassioned speech the leader of the deputation presented the following de mands of the workmen and affiliated organizations Although the streets are filled with troops and reinforcements are now pouring in from Finland, the govern ment seems utterty powerless to cipe with the s'luateon and many calm ob servers seem seriously to believe that the present regime is tottering to its fall. First—A constitution and political liberty. ^eeond—That the city furnish food to the wot km n. Third—That the city refuse further sunplies to the troops and police. Fourth—That the troops be removed from the waterwoik-, or otherwise the strikers would cut the water sup ply. Fifth—The immunity of the depu tation from arrest. UP TO GOV. JOHNSON. Gouernor Must Send Evidence Guilt to Washington Embis sy in England Acts. EJ iiwnHinnnjminnHnmfwnimwnm!! .^.-^"S 1 I AUC. 1 Phone 8—2. of "Washington, Oct 30 —Peter August Ecklund of Clay county, Minnesota, who is wanted there by th-* local au thorities on a charge of embezzlement, and who has taken refuge in London, will soon be brought back to the United States Announcement was made at the state department that before any action would be taken in the case, that Gov. Johnson must make a request of the secretary of state that Ecklund be ex tradited. This request must bo ac companied by evidence of Ecklund's guilt. The governor at the same time must nominate some (,fficar to .go to England to bring E^kiund back. This can be done either bv a United States mar?hal or the sheriff of Clay countj-. When tuese formalities have been attended to negotiations will then be opened up with the Britisti govern ment for the extradition of Ecklund. Will Seed the Land. Dead wood. "s. Oct 27 —Capt. Bullock of the -forest leserve has an army of helpers composed of small boys who are tratheinjr pine cone1? for which they are paid ^'5 cents a bushel. Il was decided a short time ago to seed over all the burnt districts of this re serve in order to produce new growth. This experiment was trttjd last spring on thirty acres of land near Roubaix and proved amply satisfactory The thirty acres produced one seedling to each square foot. With ?o satisfactory results before their eyes, the forestry department decided to push the mat ter still further. Capt Bullock iias been collecting pine cones with the in tent of seeding all the burnt district of the Hills next spring. Much. Wool. Helena, Mont., Oct '33—Never in the history of the sheep business in Montana have so many sheep and lambs been shipped out of this state to E istern markets as this year. A Fort Benton commission man has figures to show that S."6 000 head have been ship ped from Nor'.uu-n Montana, of these 162,000 head going to a well known S SU a firm E as Montana come« the same report of many shipments, and it is predicted that there will be quite a falling off in the wool production. '^'^T^~l~?sl -^•y ammmmiiiiiiiiiaiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimudiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiii.iiniiiiil You have heardof ..Angelina Flour.. but what you want to do is to TRY A SACK. You will then be convinced that all that you have heard is true. Manufactured by the New Ulm Roller Mill Co. WANTED li\ Chicago Manuiactui ing House, person of ti ustworthiness and somewhat famili'ir with local terri tory as assistant in branch office. Salary Sis paid weekly. Permanent position. No investinient required. Previous experience not essential to engaging. Address. Manager tranche-. Como Block. Chicago, 11! 40-'0h Woes of "Wealth. "Wealth has its penalties," said thfe philosopher. "Yes," answered Mr. Cumrox. "It's pretty hard for a man to have to go guessing through a French menu when he would rather have pork and beans." —Washington Star. The Poor Printer. One of Browning's remarks is char acteristic. He once said to Dr. Knight that "all the unintelligibility of 'Sor dello' Is due to the printers. They would change my punctuation and not ^5int my commas, semicolons, dashes and brackets." Ins a re on io rf ironun« Laxative Bromo=Quinine TWHCM "ie remedy that cure* a cold in one das SAVE HOUSEHOLD DRUDGERY rfiiiiiffiiiiiiitiiiifiiitiiiiiiiiiitinifiifitnffiitsi As a Hot Weather 1 Beverace 1 good, properly cooled and 1 served beer ih always a a strong favorite—you try 1 other drinks, but jou come 1 back to beer. Made of pure water, pure hops and other materials and manufactured byskilledworkmen,Scheirs 3 beer is hard to equal, im- 1 possible to excel. I BREWlNC SCHELL FC O. -3. LOWEST RATES EVER MADE TO $outhwest JVJissouri, lipdiar Territory jKrkarj^s, Uoutyar)*. $5 Texa5. DATES OF SALE—November 7 and 21, December .* and lit. STOPOVERS—on going- and return trips. LIMIT—21 days from date of sale. The tide of immigration has turned to the South where land is cheap and crops abundant—The Land of Fulfillment. No other section of the country promises such great return from products of the soil and increased values. It's worth your time. W I E O I S A E I E A E H. D. DUTTON, Trav. Pass. Agt. s. G. Kansas City. Mo. F. E. ROESLER. Trav. Pass, and Lmiir'n Homeseekers' Rates. Via the Minneapolis & St. L»uis R. R. On first and third Tuesdays of each month, to Nebraska, Kansas, Missouri. Arkansas, Oklahoma. In dian Territory. Texas. New Mexico, Colorado, and other states. Stop overs allowed and tickets limited twenty one days. For rates, time of trains, etc. call on agents or address. A. R. Cutts. G. P. & T. A apohs. Minn. (ONIPANV New Ulm, Minn. WAKXER, G. P. & T. A. Kansas Citj. Mo. Aaent. Kansas ("'itv. Mo. To Land Agents. This to call your notice to the fact that the Minneapolis St. Louis R. II. will sell daily during the summer months lound tiip tickets at one tare plus two dollars to certain northern Minnesota and Dakota points, limit for return October .'Jlst. Lou round Minne trip tickets also on sale daily to St. Paul and Minneapolis after .June 1st. Foi paiticulars call on agents, oi address. A. B. Cutts. p. vv Minneapolis, Minn. T. A.. for Coughs, Colds and Croup, Homeseekers to the Northwest. One\eiy Tuesday until December the Minneapolis & St. Louis R. R. will sell Homeseekers* round trip to in in Io'w a in so a South and North Dakota, and the Canadian Northwest, at one fare plus two dollars. Tickets limited twenty one days and stop-overs allowed. For rates and particulars call on agents, or address, A. B. Cutts,G. P. & T. A., Minneapolis. Minn. Rates To Pacific Coast Cut SI5.00. Commencing September loth, the Minneapolis S: St. Louis will have on sale daily one way tickets to San Francisco. Los Angeles. Portland and other points in the West and North west. Rates $15.00 below ordinary fare. Through tourist ears to Cali fornia twice a week. Call on agents for full particulars, or address A. B. Cutts. G. P. &• T. A. Minneapolis, Minn. The dreariest household drudgery is to carry coal and ashes to and from stoves and grates. No need to do this penance California Prune Wafeis, nature's cure all bowel troubles Act promptly "Hlioiit pain oi inconvenience. 100 for 25 cents. ASK your Diuggist. where Hot-Water or Steam System is used only one fire to care for, located just next the coalbin and so economical too