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Jx 1! New U!m Review Wednesday, May 1, 1907. ITENRY M. SOM«EN, ATTORNEY & COUN SELOR. Practices in all State and U. S. courts. Collections given particular attention. Office over Postoffiee. NEW ULM, MINN R. L. A. FlUTSCUE, PHYS5CIAN AND SURGEON Office over Co a N E W 0 A. HAGBERG, GUARANTEES* yr"*— "II ill ihwmil I N N ATTORNEY & COUNSELOR. Office in Masonic Blk., 2d floor. Legal advice given and suits tried in aH courts. Collections attended to. N E W ULM, MINN A LBERT STEINHAUSER ATTORNEY AT LAW Office in Masonic Block. Special attention given to probating Estates. Practices in all Courts of the State and U. S. Court. New Ulm, Minn. R. F. W. FRITSCHE, E N A S E O N Wdwntunder for extracting. Office over Brown Co. Bank. NE W ULM, MINN. Wm. Pfaender Jr, Real Estate AND...m.a Insurance Agent, Insures against fire, hail, tornadoes, accident and death in the beat of com panies. Real Estate Bought and Sold. Legal documents executed, loans negotiated, steamship tickets sold. KILLTHE COUGH AN CURE THE LUNGS Dr. King' WITH PRICE SOe & $1.00. AND ALL THROAT AfViQ! UP3 3Gu£ 7 OK. HEONEY ?*"*.: 10.. ,h. 50 YEAMS* EXPERIENCE "IRADE MARKS DESIGNS COPYRIGHTS & Anvone *t*nrllnfj a sketch and description may quickly ascert mi our opinion free whether an invention is pio jibly patentable. Communic* 'lOiiaatnoMyconWcntial. HANDBOOK on Patents sent free. Oldest aceney for securing patents. Patents taken through Mnnn & Co. receive apecial notice, without choree, in the A. handsomely illustrated wppklr J.arprest cir illation of any pcientlllc iournal. Terms, $3 a ye ir four months, $1. bold by all newsdealer* TON & Co.3GtBroadwa''NewYork "ranch Office. 62b St. Washington. B. PARKER'S HAIR BALSA Cleanses and beautitieB the balr. Promote! a luxuriant growth Hever FailB to Kestore Gray Hair to its Youthful Coloi Cures scalp diseases & hair tailing. g0c,and$100at Druggists BEST FORTHE BOWELS If yon haven't a regular, healthy movement of the bowels every day, you're ill or will be. Keep your bowels open, and be well. Force, ia the shape of violent physio or pill poison, is daneerous. The smoothest, easiest, most perfect way of keeping the bowels clear and clean is to take CANDY CATHARTIC EAT 'EM LIKE CANDY Pleasant, Palatable, Potent, Taste Good, Do Good, Never Sicken, Weaken or Gripe 10, 25 ani 5d cents per box. Write for free sample, aad book* let on health. Address 433 Sterling Remedy COP pany, Chicago or New York. KEEP YOUR BLOOD CLEAN An Only Daughter Cured of Consumption. When death was hourly expected, all remedies having failed, and Dr. H. James was experimenting with the many herbs ©f Calcutta, he accident ally made a preparation which cured his only child of cunsumption. His child is now in this country, and en joying the best of health. He has proved to the world that Consumption can be positively and permanently cured. The Doctor now gives this recipe free, for two 2-cent sldnjps to pay expenses. This herb also cures Night Sweats, Nausea at the Stomach and will break up a fresh cold in twenty-four hours. Address CRAD DOCK & CO., 1032, Race St., Phila delDhia. naming this naner. Digests what you eat. nipt eiMN is "ACQUITTED 61 JURY EX-CONGRESSMAN HELD NOT GUILTY ON CHARGE -OF DE- STROYING PUBLIC RECORDS. TWELVE WEEKS' TRIAL FINALLY COMES TO END Verdict Reached After 21 Hours of Deliberation Irregularities Al leged While He Was General Land Commissioner. Washington, April 29.—Binger Her man, former congressman from Ore gon, and former commissioner of the general land office, was acquitted of the charge of destroying public rec ords by the verdict of a jury rendered at 12:40 o'clock Saturday. The trial had progressed for 12 weeks, and the jury deliberated 21 hours before reach ing a verdict. Nothing was heard from the jury room after the jury retired at 3:30 o'clock Friday afternoon, until 11 o'clock Saturday, when word came that it was desired that Justice Staf ford repeat his charge to them. This request was granted after brief argu ment of counsel, and the next hour and a half was occupied in rereading the charge, after which Justice Staf ford, who, at ten o'clock Friday night Binger Hermann. had sent word to the jury room that it would be better at that time to drop consideration of the case and get some sleep, advised that the jury proceed to their luncheon before endeavoring to reach an agreement. The jury, however, disregarded this admonition, and within ten minutes after its sec ond retirement appeared with the ver dict of "not guilty." There was immediately a general scene of congratulation in the court room. Mr. Hermann expressed hi« thanks to each juror, as did his coun sel. United States Attorney Baker and many others in the court room congratulated the defendant. FILL RIVET HOLES WITH PUTTY. Congressman Waldo Says Private Contract Warships Are Faulty. Boston, Mass., April 29.—Congress man George B. Waldo, of New York, the principal speaker at a mass meet ing held in Faneuil hall under the auspices of the National League of Em ployes of the Navy Yards, asserted that warships built under contract by private concerns contain serious de fects. He said "Warships built un der contract by private concerns and almost immediately after their comple tion sent to the Brooklyn navy yard for repairs have been found to have rivet holes plugged with wood, putty and soap, instead of iron rivets being inserted. In one instance I know of several hundred rivets supposed to have been put into a warship built by contractors whose workmen filled the rivet holes with putty and wood." Ordered to Chinese Waters. Washington, April 29 —Rear Admiral Hemphill was Saturday relieved from duty in this city as president of the board of inspection and survey and or dered to proceed at once to Chinese wateis for the purpose of assuming command of the third squadron of the reorganized Pacific fleet. He will sail from Seattle May 13 and will be ac companied by Lieut. D. P. Mannix, who will serve as an aide on his staff Capt. Richardson Clover has been as signed as president of the board of in spection and survey. Prominent Philadelphian Dead. Philadelphia, Pa., April 29.—William Piatt Pepper, oldest member of a prom inent Philadelphia family and well known for his philanthropic, educa tional and church work, died here Sat urday, aged 70 years. He was one of the founders of the Pennsylvania Mu seum and School of Industrial Art of this city. Mr. Pepper in 1878 headed a movement which led congress to pass the act admitting free of duty works of art to be exhibited in museums and art galleries. Village Nearly Wiped Out. Frazee, Minn., April 29.—A large portion of the village of Vergas, lo cated about seven miles south of here, was destroyed by fire Saturday morn ing. Six business houses and the resi dence of C. W. Chaflie was burned. The Chaffie family were forced to flee in their night clothing. Chile Volcanoes Spout Lava. Lima, Peru, April 29.—News received from Puerto Mont, a seaport in the ex treme south of Chile, says that the vol canoes of Calbuco and Huque are in a state of eruption. s#%RjJ K^f** 8 PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT MAKES ADDRESS AT OPENING OF JAMESTOWN EXPOSITION. Declares Best Way to Maintain Peace Is to Be Prepared for War—Great Problem Is to Exercise Just Con trol Over Vast Wealth. Norfolk, Va., April 27.—"This great republic of ours shall never become the government of a plutocracy, and it shall never become the government of a mob," said President Roosevelt Friday afternoon in his address at the opening of the Jamestown exposi tion. Mr. Roosevelt paid a compli ment to each of the nations taking part in the fair, and added: "In par ticular let me express a word of hearty welcome to the representative of the mighty island empire of Japan, that empire which, in learning from the west, has shown that it had so much, so very much to teach the west in return." Refers to Civil War. The president touched a tender chord when he said of the great civil war: "Rich and prosperous though we are as a people, the proudest heritage that each of us has, no matter where he may dwell, north or south, east or west, is the immaterial heritage of feeling, the right to claim as his own, all the valor and all the steadfast de votion to duty shown by the men of both the great armies, of the soldiers whose leader was Grant and the sol diers whose leader was Lee." The president's reference to his vis it to the foreign warships and the American navy was turned in an im promptu manner upon the recent gath ering in New York to discuss world policies, and he held up peace and righteousness as virtue and blessings that go hand in hand. He said that if the time ever comes when the world must choose between them "Shame to it if it chooses peace." The thought for this expression was accredited to the Bible, which the president said contained a good deal of sound read ing that would not be out of place in a peace conference. Excerpts from Address. The most important utterances in the president's address are as fol lows: "The world haft moved so far that it is no longer necessary to believe that one nation can rise only by thrust ing another down. "I believe that there is a rising tide in human thought which tends for righteous international peace a tide which behooves us to guide through rational channels to sane conclusions and all of us here present can well afford to take to heart St. Paul's coun sel: 'If it be possible, as much as lieth in you, live peaceably with all men.' "We cannot afford to forget the maxim upon which Washington insist ed, that the surest way to avert war is to be prepared to meet it. "This is an era of combination alike in the world of capital and in the world of labor. Each kind of combina tion can do good, and yet each, how ever powerful, must be opposed when it does ill. At the moment the great est problem before us is how to exer cise such control over the business use of vast wealth, individual, but es pecially corporate, as will insure its not being used against the interest of the public, while yet permitting such ample legitimate profits as will en courage individual initiative. "We show ourselves fl»o truSst friends of property when we make it evident that we will not tolerate the abuses of property. We are stead ily bent on preserving the institution of private property we combat every tendency toward reducing the people to economic servitude and we care not whether the tendency is due to a siD'ster agitation directed against all rroperty, or whether it is due to the actions of those members of the pred atory classes whose antisocial power .s immeasurably increased because of the very fact that they possess wealth." HOW WOULD YOU LIKE TO BE THE NURSE GIRLT /Ci0M#**3£/S /MOMS ON BURGLAR TATE'S TRACK POLICE FOLLOW THE ESCAPED FELON TOWARD MILWAUKEE. Said to Be with Notorious "Eddie'* Fay—Capture of Both Men Expected Soon. Chicago, April 27.—Edwin R. Tate, "gentleman burglar," charged with dynamiting the school board safe at Peoria and destroying evidence against Newton C. Dougherty and other rich and influential citizens of that city, is on his way from Chicago to Milwaukee. Detectives from Capt. O'Brien's office Friday picked up the trail of the man, who walked away from the Peoria authorities under sus picious and sensational circumstances. His capture is believed to be a mat ter of only a few hours. Tate is with "Eddie" Fay, accord ing to police information. It is now believed by the police that Fay, who is another notorious safeblower and burglar, really executed the job of blowing the Peoria safe under an .agreement with Dougherty and his accomplices which was negotiated through Tate. Capt. O'Brien's men had shadowed the home of Fay in Englewood and discovered that Tate was there. Six men were sent from the city hall, led by Detectives Tobin and Duffy, and plans were laid to surround the house and capture both men. The detec tives were all heavily armed in an ticipation of a desperate resistance. Before the detectives reached the house, however, they received word that both men had left and boarded a train for Milwaukee. The authorities in that city were at once notified, and all the intermediate towns were also warned to be on tne lookout for the fugitives. Two de tectives left at once for Milwaukee, and Capt. O'Brien is expecting in formation of Tate within a few hours. PURE FOOD LAWS DEFIED. Preservative for Meats Is Found in Use in Kansas. Topeka, Kan., April 26—Dr. S. J. Crumbine, secretary of the state board of health, announced Thursday that he had discovered in use here a preserva tive for meats, the manufacturers of which, he asserts, are openly defying the state and federal pure food laws. The preservative is made in the east and chemical tests show that it con tains charcoal and pure sulphur, which when burned form a sulphur dioxide gas that is absorbed by the meat and has the same effect as borax. The manufacturers their circulars state that the preservative makes it possi ble for butchers to evade the law, con tending that the powder itself does not touch the meat. Secretary Crumbine has notified all pure food inspectors in Kansas to warn butchers against the use of the preservative and he says he will sub mit the matter to Dr. Harvey W. Wi ley, chief of the bureau of chemistry at Washington. JUDGES OF CONTEST HAZED. Tied to Trees by Displeased Freshmen of Shurtleff College. Upper Alton, 111., April 27.—Having decided in favor of the sophomores in an oratorical contest at Shurtleff college Thursday night, which de cision was displeasing to the fresh men, Prof. M. Mugan, of St. Louis, and E. M. Dey, general advertising agent for the Missouri Pacific system, two of the three judges, were seized by the freshmen, tied to trees on the campus and left helpless until morn ing. Attorney Harold Johnston, of St. Louis, the third judge, who rendered decision in favor of the freshmen, was not molested. Prof. Mugan and Mr. Dey struggled for hours to free themselves after be ing tied to the trees, but to no avail Before dawn they were released and permitted to return to St. Louis chilled and chagrined. Mrs. a us Is Dead Los Angeles, Cal., April 2b'—Mrs Alexander Chytraus of Chicago, whose husband arrived from that city .Wedneday, died Wednesday night. §^^&:kMMh^'»i^^M mmp 1 NEW S OMIBOTH A a a Bridge 1 St a W it he ad crushed a both a ms a legs shattered to splinters he of an unidentified an as found lying on he railroad a a he south of th« bridge at St. a th« clothes it is a a re at he dead an as a laborer, a all .-ircum a in his a indicate suicide. he high bridge which stretches across the river above he Hat ms to possess a peculiar fascination for those a in at life is not while in the bridge' existence thirteen people a or fallen from its giddy heights re men who fell from he railing of the bridge and one so to end his fife, lived to tell he story, he other ten me I a either in he in a ol the river or on he a along he a A its highest in he high bridge a he river at a height of 180 feet, a a fall from a section of it is al a in a or a person seeking to end his life it is excellently a a for it is an easy a tfl climb the five-foot iron railing an-] a into the river. victims of he bridge a been a the a a as he sec on of he list of suicides. Loses 31 of His Herd. a a to W W McConnell, for a dairy a food inspector, a in he a in having a of a a institute corps, as ad his fine a herd of Jerse on his a us in pa stock a tested for tuberculosis. he test as a by Dr. W it an expert of he a a it a a live stock a of which Mr. McConnell is a and of a a 100 a a re bred, 31 were a a been shipped to he S St. a stock a where will be slaughtered he test •was a as he result of the recent a of five or six head from the in he local a in house and he in of all one by Dr. a Dell, he inspector. he loss is a a one to Mr. he as in to purify his herd or five or six a he as been in the milk to a re a ery, a in discontinued his milk route, other milk occasionally supplies of •were short "When the milk route as in operation it supplied so me of he best a in he city. St. Paul Man Run Over. a a to W am Mattoke a a an on an a freight a in on he O a ha road, while assisting in a in a flying switch in he a in this city, as by a a a a a a in car at he ad been clinging to. to so noticing ha accident an to the a a unconscious an a pulled a a from he a before he wheels rail over him Mattoke' right leg as a ad to be a a at he knee he bones of his left foot re broken a he as badly a bruised is in a local hospital it a favorabl to recovery resides with his a re in St. a a is a single an a a old. for so a is a he would a been in a ly killed. S a to Death S a A. Roche, a perou a of O a a in this tv, as re before Municipa Feli A. Borer, on complaint a by S a A A a of he a a society, a in he it to a a in at he as neglecting to feed his cows properly a as a in to a he pleaded guilty to the charge and it a a in at two co-w9 re a re a dead and the others re skeletons, re imposed a fine of $30 a costs he immediately paid ax Dirte of he local board lodged the complaint with A Moak Recor for Institutes Mankato—TV W McConnell of this city, as completed his in te a in as the ad of a corps of a institute conductors a sisted in holding 69 institutes in a territory in diagonally a he a from he iv valley to S a Minnesota he total a a at the institute as a 40 000, or an a a of 572 at each in stitute, is a an ever fore. Injury by Saw Fatal. Hallock—Arvi a in -s dead from blood poisoning, as caused by an injury which he received while as in a slab a at "Williams. a to re so me of the a lying inside he saw a in in a it the blade a as a severed from a as a to a to to' re a a later to a hospital at W in nipeg, re he died. is body as been re for bur!.*.*. NEWS NOTES. a it S a S a to Mose E Clap of St. a will deliver an a re re on a day in a is a is in his glass it a cheery, ""Well, good by, boys, E a carbolic acid in he saloon of W Randall 1729 S on street a died half an a at he city hospital a to he eight a old a of to S a is dead as he result of he child a a a on ad a a fire in an old tin pail. he girl's a in is he fire, in doing so he child's clothing took fire. a a to he village council of on Cente as a a a contract to install a a in the village, including engine, boiler a tank for a $5,000. a a to a O. Olson of Alde as a he Citizens' a at is a will a it a a a Mr Olson a re a is a in he a in business at Alden im v*" »*-•#—TRn LEGAL ABVERTBEWErm Order for Hearing Upon Petition fox Determination of Descent NOW, THEREFORE It ordered that the said petition be heard at a term ©f this Court to be held at the Court House, in the City of New Clm in said County of Brown, State of Minnesota, on Monday the 13th iay of ftla -a. D. 1907, at 10 o'clock A, M. is FURTHER ORDERED, That notice of stid hearing ot said petit'on be given by the pub lication ol this order once in each week for three successive weeks in New Ulm Review, a weekly newspaper printed and published in said Brown Countv. Now, Therefore. Notice is re by iv at by of he power of sale con aine in said Mortgage, a a to he a in case a a pro vided he said Mortgag will be forclosed by a sale of he premises described in a conveyed by said Mortgage viz he S a a (SEJi) a he E a Half (E%) of he N a a (N E M) "f Section N E (8) :.., A •fit In the Matter ef the Estate of Anson S- Piper, THE PETITION OF Ellen Werring having been duly made and filed in this Court, repr& seating among other things that one Anson S, Piper, who resided last prior to hi» death at Chi cago in the State of Illinois, died at Chicago in the County of Cook, State ol Illinois, on the 21st day of June 18S6, seized of an estate of inheri tance certain lands hi the County of Brown, 8tate ol Minnesota, described said petition, and that said petitioner has an interest in said lauds, and that more than nve years have elapsed since the death of said Anson S. Piper deceased, and that administration has not been granted or had of said estate in this State, and praying that the descent-of said laqgf and ol the interest of said petitioner therein fe by this Court determined and said lands assigned to such persons as may be entitled tnereto by law- Dated April 16th, 1907. (tfeal) GEO. ROSS, 16-18 Judge of Probate- Order for hearing proofs of fill. STATE OF MINNESOTA, County of Brown, In Probate Court. Special Term, April 12tfa, 1907, In the Matter ot the Estate of Joseph Popp. Deceased. V\ hereas, an instrument in writing, purporting to be the last will and testament ot Joseph Popp, late of said county, has been de livered to this court, And Whereas, Johanna Popp has filed herewith her petition, repiesenting among other things that said Joseph Popp died in said county on the 25th daj of March A. D. 1907,. testate, and that no executor is named in said last will and testament, and praying that said in strument may be admitted to probate, and that letters testamentary be to Johanna Popp issued thereon It is Ordered, that the prooiaof said instrument and the said peUtion, be heard before this Court, at the Probate Office in the Court House in the City of New Ulm, in said County, on the 9th day of May, A.D. 1907, at 10 o'clock in the forenoon, when all concerned may appear and contest the probate of said instrument, And it is lurther ordered, that public notice «SJjF the time aud place of said hearing be given to all persons interested, by publication of a copy of this order lor three successive weeks previous to said day of hearing in the New Ulm Review, a weekly newspaper printed and published at the City of iseyf Ulm, said county. Dated at New Ulm, Minn., April 12th, A. D 1907. By the Court, [SEAL.) GEO. ROSS, 16-18 Judge of Probate. Mortgage Foreclosure Sale. Default a in been a in he a of he of iv a re a ix Dollars, is claimed to be a is at he a of is notice upon a certain Mortgage duly a delivered by W. a a Ros a is wife, Mortgagors to Loui Rathje Mortgagee a ii a he 13th a of a a 1902, a it a DOwer of sale therein contained re corded in he office of he is of Deed in a fur he of A a Stat of Minnesota on he 24th a or a a 1902, at 9 o'clock A. in ok 82 of Mortgages on a 359-362. W said Mortgage to it he debt secured re as a by said Loui Rarthje Morgage to Conra H. Sippel by written a a he 17th a of a 1902. a recorded in he office of a id Registe of Deeds on he 2d a of Apri 1907, at 8 o'clock A M., in Book 36 of a on a 292 etc., a no action or proceeding a in in stituted at a or otherwise to recover he debt secured by said Mortgage or a part thereof. N On re antJ eight (108) North of a N hirty-two (32) Wes of he Fifth Princi pal Meridian in Brow a S a ol Minnesota.witM he re it a a a a sale will be a by he Sheriff of said at he front door of he Cour House in he it of Ne Ul in said a State on the 25th a of Ma 1907, at 10 o'clock A M., of at day at nubile to he highest bidder for cash to a said iv a Tw re a Six teen Dollars, a interest a he a if a on said premises a O red Dollaib, Attorney' fees, as a in a by said Mortgag in case of fore closure, a he is allowed by a subject to redemption at a me within one a he a of sale, as provided by law. Date April 8th, A 1907. ad Sippel, A of a Alber Steinhauser W Attorne ot Assignee 15-20MTv LONDON ROWDIES. he W a Terrorize he it In he Old a Some curious particulars of the dan gers of London streets in the old days, are given in an article on. "The Scow rers and the Mohocks" in the British ilonthly Review. The favorite prac tice of the Scowrcrs was to invade some tavern in the evening, drive* out the customers, ill treat the proprietor and his attendants, wreck the prem ises and, above all, "roar." Steele tells of the Mohocks, one of whose pas-A times was to "inclose women in caski and roll them down the street." In 1712 a royal proclamation was issued offering a reward of £100 for the ap prehension of any Mohock. Soon after the accession of George IV. to the throne in 1820 there was a recrudes cence, though in a milder form,, of Mohock rowdyism, and attacks on the watch—"boxing the Charlies," as the phrase went—once more became fash ionable among the wilder spirits of London. These revelries, however, were rudely disturbed by the estab lishment in 1829 by Sir Kobert Peel of an efficient body of police. Yet again in early Victorian: daysi there was another Mohock outburst un-& der the auspices of the Marquis of Wa-Y terford, and once more knockers and bell handles were wrenched off,.-public monuments injured, lights extingufeh ed and crockery smashed. This form of humor, however, was quite wasted upon the local authorities, the marquis being promptly knocked down by a watchman and taken up half dead. The same authority tells us that in the following year he and some other men of fashion were convicted at Derby as sizes of trying to overturn a caravan, screwing up a toll barkeeper and paint ing houses and people red. For these recreations they were fined £100 apiece! one helL—German Prover mmmtimilamitKttfmmtta & A good conscience is heaven, a baa helL—Oarrnnn PrnxrorVb lir 1