Newspaper Page Text
H-"n'i.'"M t^f¥n «r jr ft 1 ™S W as Well as Men Are Made Miserable by Kidney Trouble. Kidney trouble preys upon the mind, dis courages and lessens ambition beauty, vigor and cheerfulness soon disappear when the kid neys are out of order or diseased. Kidney trouble has become so prevalent that it is not uncommon for a child to be born 1 afflicted with weak kid neys. If the child urin ates too often, if the urine scalds the flesh or if, when the child reaches an age when it should be able to control the passage, it is yet afflicted with bed-wetting, depend upon it. the cause of the difficulty is kidney trouble, and the first fu A id be to a the treatment of ttt^fe important organs. This unpleasant trouble is due to a diseasea condition of the kidneys and bladder and not to a habit as most people suppose. Women as well as men are made mis erable with kidney and bladder trouble, and both need the same great remedy. The mild and the immediate effect of Swamp-Root is soon realized. It is sold by druggists, in fifty cent and one dollar sizes. You may have a sample bottle by mail free, also pamphlet tell- Home of svamp-Root. ing all about it, including many of the thousands of testimonial letters received from sufferers cured. In writing Dr. Kilmer & Co., Bmghamton, N. Y., be sure an! mention this paper. Don't make any mistake, but re member the name, Swamp-Root, "Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, and the ad dress, Binghamton, N. Y., on every bottle. Sour StomacH No appetite, loss of strength, nervous ness, headacne, constipation, bad breath, general debility, sour risings, and catarrh of the stomach are all due to indigestion. Kodol relieves indigestion. This new discov ery represents the natural juices of diges tion as they exist in a healthy stomach, combined with the greatest known tonic and reconstructive properties. Kodol for dyspepsia does not only relieve indigestion and dyspepsia, but this famous remedy helps all stomach troubles by cleansing, purifying, sweetening and strengthening the mucous membranes lining the stomach. Mr. S. S. Ball, of Ravenswood, W, Va.. says:— I was troubled with sour stomach for twenty years. Kodol cured mo and we are now using it in milk for baby." Kodol Digests What You Eat. Bottles only. Relieres indieestion, sour stomach, belching of gas, etc. Prepared by E. O. OaWITT & CO., CHICAGO. E. A. PFEFFERLE FREE TOJBOYS V2* Just send us your name and address so that we may tell you how to get this nne rifle Absolutely FREE. YOU CAN HAVE ONE As -we are going to giv* away 6,000 of them. We mean It, every word, and this is an honest, straightforward offer, male by an upright business firm who always do exactly as they agree. All we ask is that you do a few minutesworkfor us. It is BOvery easy that you will be surprised. ThU Handsome Rifle is not a toy air rifle, but is a genuine steel, blue barrel, hunting rifle, that Is strong, accurate and sate and carries a 22-calibre long or short cartridge. If you want a fine little hunting rifle, Just write and ask us for particulars. They are free and you will surely sayit'sthe best offer you ever sawor heard of. BESOREamlWRITEATONCE before the 6,000 rifles are all gone, as the boys are taking them fast. Address ?A Peoples Popular Monthly, 567 Arcade Building, DEB MOINES, IOWA. Bargains in Farm Lands. If you want to learn about except ionally rare bargains in South Dakota farms lands or unusual busi ness opportunities the new towns in the magnificent new country being opened bv the Minneapolis and St. Louis R." R. extension write for beautiful illustrated descriptive pam phlet on the "New Empire", the farmers' and stockman's paradise. This pamphlet will be mailed free. A postal card will do it. Write at once before edition is exhausted, to A. B. Cutts, G. P. & T. A, Minneapolis, Minn. STATE FAIR visitors are invited to make them selves at home with us. We will be pleased to see them. Bv buy ing PURS to the amount of $50.00 or more during or before Fair Week they can save their railroad fare. Our Name in a Fur Garmen is an Absolute Guarantee of Fur Perfection Chas. A. ALBRECHT 384 Wabasha St. St- Paul, Minn. if JladdL Here is Relief For Women. have pains in the back, Urinarys Redde or Kidney trouble, and want a cer a lemedy for woman's ill, It is a *«?omonthly regulator. At druggists or by S Sample pactage fre* Address S S a $ Co.TLeRoy, N. Their Boat Run Down by a Tug in Bulnth Harbor. WO MEN ARE MURDERED Mysterious Crimes Baffle the Police of Minneapolis—News of the State in General. Seven men in the employ of the Northern Pacific railroad at Duluth as freight handlers were drowned as the result of being run down by a tug In the local harbor while they were returning in a rowbcat from work to their homes. The dead are: Charles Hanson, John Solberg, Ole Stafness, Nels Steeper, Walter Lin deen and two unidentified men. The seven men who lost their lives, with Hans Thorsen, Iner Skamfor, Andrew Hausen and Adolph Johnson, who Wild been working at Northern Pacific dock No. 2 at the foot of Twelfth avenue west, quit work and boarded a small boat to take the short cut by water to their homes on Garfield avenue, a mile distant. They had proceeded but a boat length when a tug towing a mud scow bore down upon them and swamped the craft. The suction was so great that the men were all drawn under the scow. Four of them, Thorson, Skamfor, Hausen and Johnson, were good swim mers and they managed to reach the surface, but the other seven, with the exception of Solberg, were seen no more DOUBLE MURDER SUSPECTED Two Men Found Dead in Different Sections of Minneapolis. Unknown murderers killed two men In Minneapolis early Sunday morning, evidently for their money. The crime was not discovered until late Sunday afternoon, although the body of one victim was found on the railroad tracks in the morning, where it had been placed by the murderers. The lifeless body of Andrew Bjerk lund, 2518 Eighth street south, was first found, terribly mutilated, under the wheels of a freight car on the side track of the Minneapolis and Western 1 ailway at the foot of Twelfth avenue south. Trainmen discovered the body and as it was supposed that the man had been the victim of an ac cident no particular investigation was attempted. About 5 ?0 in the afternoon a col ored man walking through a patch of wpeds at the foot of Twelfth ave, near First street, discovered the body of the second man, who has not yet been identified An examination disclosed the fact that the man had died from a bullet wound in the bead. The discovery of the second man, who beyond doubt had been murdered, caused a further investigation into the death of the first victim Bjerklund's head was found to be crushed as though he had been struck with some heavv and blunt instrument. The wound would in itself have caused death or unconsciousness, and it is be lieved his body was then placed on the tracks in an effort to hide the crime and the real cause of death. ENDS LONG LITIGATION. Trustees of Hastings and Dakota Land Grant Secure Titles. State Auditor Iverson of Minne sota has turned over to the trustees of the old Hastings and Dakota rail road deeds representing 20,904.47 acres and thus closes another chapter in the litigation which has involved this grant during the past twelve vears The lands will now get on the tax rolls and the state will be the gainer. The deeds have been turned over to Owen Morris of St Paul, land com missioner for the trustees, and now many titles heretofore in controversy will be cleaned up. Another deed for a small amount of land remains to be given and then the whole thing will be past history. The deeds covering the grant, to gether with the number of acres in volved, are located in the following counties- Swift, 11,119.38 Stevens, 5,191.18 Big Stone, 2,061.44 Chippe wa, 1,998 80 Kandiyohi, 240: Yellow Medicine, 160 Lac qui Parle, 93.67 McLeod, 40.1. LOOT P0ST0FFICE SAFE. Burglars Secure Cash and Stamps in Minneapolis Suburb. A bold postoffice robbery has been perpertated at Columbia Heights, Anoka county, a few miles outside of Minneapolis. The burglars locked all the doors through which interruptions might come and barricaded the stairway leading to Johnson's restaurant next door and to Postmaster J. B. Cornell's rooms. They then took their time in ransacking the office, getting $50 in cash and $250 in stamps. The blowing of the safe with nitro glycerin aroused Cornell and Johnson, and they dug through the barricade in time to see the burglars drive off toward Minneapolis. Nitric Acid Fumes Fatal. John Symonds, aged thirty years, a St. Paul salvage corps fireman, is dead at the city hospital. Symonds inhaled nitric acid fumes while fight ing a fire in a boxcar, and from the first his condition was considered crit- had both ical. He died in great agony. 1 accident. Mv. •»,.,. l-y- QUITS GREAT NORTHERN. Vice Die- President McGuigan Has agreement With Hill. F. H. McGuigan, first vice president of the Great Northern Railroad com pany, has resigned. His resig nation nominally will not take effect until Sept. 1, but Mr. McGuigan ad mits that his connection with the railroad in an active official capacity already has ceased. Disagreements with James J. Hill are responsible for Mr. McGuigan's sudden resignation. Mr. McGuigan came to St. Paul in April to become vice president of the Great Northern and almost from the start an undercurrent of antagonism was manifest between him and Mr. Hill. Gradually the feeling became more and more personal until finally Mr. McGuigan decided to resign. Mr. McGuigan was formerly fourth vice president of the Grand Trunk railroad, which position he held for eleven years, with headquarters at Montreal. He is known throughout the country as a railroad manager of exceptional ability. IRON ORE SHIPMENTS. on Now Greater Than Before Strike the Ranges. Mines tapped by the Great North ern on the Mesaba range in Minne sota are now mining more ore than they were before the strike. The Great Northern is also carrying more ore to the docks than it did before the miners went out. In the twenty-four hours ending at midnight Wednesday night the Great Northern shipped from the Kelly Lake yards near Hibbing 32 trainloads of 70 steel cars each, whereas before the strike the average daily shipments of ore was 25 trains of 60 cars each. The Duluth, Missabe and Northern on Wednesday shipped 30 trains of 48 cars each and all the mines in the Hibbing district tapped by this road are aow working with the exception of the Winnifred, a shaft mine be longing to the United States Steel cor poration. About 95 per cent of the customary amount of ore is now being sent down from both the Mesaba and Vermillion ranges. DUE TO FAMILY TROUBLES Prominent Resident of St. Paul Ends His Life. Ross Clarke, aged fifty-three, prom inent in business and political cir cles at St. Paul, committed suicide by taking carbolic acid at his summer home at White Bear lake. Mr. Clarke apparently had been dead for a couple of days when the body was found, his wife and son having left for Fond du Lac, Wis., Friday following a family quarrel and Mr. Clarke was alone in the cottage when he swallowed the fatal dose. Mrs. Cla-ke was known by friends of the family to have been extremely Jtalous of her husband and to have accused him of misconduct. The accusations were without founda tion, friends of the dead man say, but the fact that his wife distrusted him and that his son had turned against him preyed heavily on Clarke's mind and this is believed to be the sole rea son for his self-destruction. COUNT GERMS IN MILK. Mankato Accepts Bacterial Standard of State Board. The state board of health has been notified that the city of Mankato has adopted a bacterial standard for its milk supply. Mankato is believed to be the first city in the state to protect its milk consumers in this way. The standard adopted is the same as that of Boston and is bery liberal. It allows not more than 500,000 bacteria to the cubic centimeter. That means about 2,000,000 to the teaspoonful. The best milk has much less, but dirty milk has many times more. The bacterial count will be made for Mankato at the laboratory of the state board of health. The board stands ready to do this work for any city in the state that adopts a bacte rial standard. Dealer Used Adjustable Measure. John O'Donnell, a Minneapolis po tato peddler, was fined $75 in the Min neapolis police court for using a tel escope measure in apportioning out pecks and half pecks of "spuds." He was arrested some time ago by Frank Gaylord, state sealer of weights and measures. This measure used by O'Donnell works like a folding drink ing cup and when the customer is not looking the peddler pushes in the bottom to give small weights. Increased Pay for Teachers. Minneapolis teachers have won an other victory in their campaign for higher salaries. The board of educa tion has adopted a resolution advanc ing the maximum salary for grade teacners to $1,000 and it now remains for the board of tax levy to provide for the increased payroll by adding to the levy for school purposes as au thorized by the new law. Accident Results in Death. William L. Qualey, fifty-eight years of age, manager of the St. Paul Mar ble and Granite company, accidentally shot himself through the abdomen in that city while he was cleaning a B8-caliber revolver, from the effects of which he died at the city hospital in less than half an hour after he was placed on the operating table. Runaway ,May Be Fatal. Miss Emma Pearson of Grove City, this state, was dangerously if not fa tally injured by being thrown from a buggy in a runaway at Battle Lake. Mrs. P. N. Lundquist of Battle Lake arms broken in the same POWETLOFSOCIALISTS Will Soon Rule the World, Says Professor Bushnell. INCREASING SOCIALISTIC VOTE Unequal Distribution of Wealth and Poverty the Causes, Says Lecturer. One-twelfth of American Wealth Represented by Steel Trust Directors. Professor Charles J. Bushnell recent ly delivered a lecture at Washington In .which he said that the time was not far distant when the Socialists will hold the balance of power in the vari ous governments, if, indeed, they do not now control in several of them. "The Improvement of Industrial Conditions" was the subject of his lec ture, and he laid particular stress up on these propositions, says a Wash ington special to the New York World: That since the organization of the trusts (of which, out of the 400 largest, all but ten have been started since 1890) there has been a wonderful increase of trust made products, amounting in many instances to two, three, four and even six fold. That the wealth of the country is in creasing at the rate of $5,000,000,000 a year. That its distribution is becoming in creasingly disproportionate, causing great injustice, hardship and suffering That the control of the nation's wealth and through it of the nation itself is fast centering in the hands of a few, one eighth of the families now owning seven eighths of its wealth. It is said on good authority that the control of one-twelfth of the nation's wealth is represented at the meeting of the twenty-four directors of the United States Steel corporation alone and that the all important railwav systems of the country are controlled by just six men, with only one supremely dominant. That, on the other hand, 10,000,000, or one eighth of the people of the country, are in constant poverty, while 4,000,000 are pau pers. That through poorly co-ordinated and selfishly administered industrial enter prises nearly 1 000,000 ignorant Immigrants are landed each year and congested in the most crowded industrial centers In the city of New York an average of one im migrant arrives every forty-two seconds, and an arrest occurs every four minutes. That under the pressure of these abnor mal conditions drinking, smoking, mur der, suicide, insanity, robbery, graft and social vice are increasing faster than the population causing financial loss that more than counterbalances our annual national gain of wealth. "There are many people in this coun try," said Professor Bushnell, "who still do not think that any important changes have lately occurred or are about to occur in our industrial and political life. To convince such that they should be more wide awake to the signs of their times let me present, as an inflexible adherent of no one po litical party or creed or tenet, a few evidences that 'the old order changeth, yielding place to new.' "The modern trust is the response under individualistic conditions to the inevitable demand for a more unified and economical business organization. And socialism itself, with all its past faults and failures, is but the further effort to carry the will of the people effectively into our industrial as well as our political life. By its demand that we should own and control col- I lectively what we need to use collec tively socialism is a protest against the theory that all a workingman needs and wants are a roof, a family and a full dinner pail. It is an as piration for a fuller and nobler social life. "So we might point out the same democratic tendency in every other great social reform force of our day. 1 That many people are coming to be lieve in socialism Europeans are much better aware than are Americans. "Here is a statement of the increas ing Socialist vote of recent years in the different countries: "Some of these votes, notably in Austria, have greatly increased since the last date here given, the total So cialist vote of the world having in creased from 30,000 in 1867 to more than 7,000,000 today. In 1900 there were 687 Socialist journals and 321 So cialist legislators out of a total for the leading countries of the world of 5,192. In the principal countries of Europe the Socialists have now set the main issues for every political party, and it appears to be only a question of time and a not very distant time when they will do so in America. "At the present rate of increase, in spite of all kinds of legal and political obstacles, how long do you think it will be before the majority of the great nation's 5,000 legislators are So cialists? And, if this majority is gain ed, then the question of industrial bet terment is bound to take a new turn, for which every intelligent person should be prepared. "If we can keep our American citi zenship unselfish, intelligent and truly patriotic we need have no fear for the future. If not we will have trouble." Burbank Daisy Its Official Flower. The Alaska daisy, conceived by Lu ther Burbank of Santa Rosa, Cal.. five years ago, will be adopted as the official flower of the Alaska-Yukon-Pa cific exposition, says the Seattle Times. The Alaska daisy was grown by graft ing a field daisy and a chrysanthemum. Extensive beds of Burbank's flowers will be scattered through the 1909 fair grounds. £."•*-' & JEWEL STOVES ft?S ILABGCSTSTDVErlAWTlHTflEWOHULi ft ft ft ft ft ft ft 1 Tear. Vote. Germany 1867 30,000 Germany 1907 3,250,000 Prance '..... 1887 47,0"0 1 France 1900 880,000 Great Britain 1895 55,0^0 Great Britain 1906 342,000 Italy 1882 49,000 Italy 1900 215,800 Belgium 1894 320,000 Belgium 1902 \4670C0 Switzerland 18S4 3,591 Switzerland 1902 100,000 Denmark 1872 2SS Denmark 1903 55 000 Austria 1897 750,000 Austria 1901 7S0.000 United States 1888 2,038 United States 1904 442,40.' Fresher than packagegoods,costsless,tastes better. Sold at all grocery stores. New Ulm Roller Mill Co. Hl ft ft ft ft ft ft ft ft We handle the celebrated Jewel Cooks. Heaters arid Furnace. •We also carry a large line of Carpenter Toui.8» an. Heavy Shelf Hardware. In connection with our store we run a tin shop repair •land job work promptly done. Estimates given on all«* J^ job work. Putting in Hot Air Furnaces a Specialty. New Ulm Hardware Co., ft Both Phones 219. 202 N. Minn. St. «f ft ft Wn^WWWMf The store that appreciates your trade. E Hot Food Without Fire, ft ft Jg That seems strange, but we have it in cans, Pork q# j£ and Beans, Tomatoe and Ox Tail Soup. Just the thing ^J Jfc for your Summer Vacation to the Lekes, or a da}-s Pic- ^f Jfc nic. The materials for heating without fire are per- $f Jfc) fectly harmless. ^t BE 3EIE 1 Ell Jt~„*« Just sot in a large stock} of Tin and Granite Ware. 1 J*.« Kxplosi^re. ft ft Try a can, 25cts., we guarantee you *J jt will be pleased. «f ft ft ft ft ft ft ft ft Wm. A. Pfefferle, The Pure Food Grocer. Insure Your Household Goods And clothing, as well as your home and other buildings, against fire and tornado loss. You are taking a big risk by not insuring them at once in a safe, reliable Company. TheSpringfieldFire and 1 Marine Insurance Co. has a policy which will cover your entire property. The Springfield Policy is absolutely reliable, and the company will keep all of its promises, as it always has done for the past fifty sears. Easy to get, at very reasonable rates. Let us tell you about it. Write or call on me today. N. HENNINGSEN, Established 1893. BOTH PHONES, Office No. 102 Residence No. 106 *'-H*sfS¥,?TSf .*«i 'W Kano*es, 7 il 'MM mm* ff ff ff** ft ft ft ft ft ft ft ft ft ft ft Phone 77. 1 *4ft JE s,