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isS^Mife Legal Advertisements. Order to Claims Within Thre Months S A E O N N A I •li J11.**^0 csc# of I a Specia N 25th.. 1912. in he a of he a of a of A in is a on it W an on he estaterot Jlos a a he Citv of N Ul in he of a he S a 6f in a be a a to J. K. HIJJJ« I A a in on proper proof by affidavit a a id by law at re a re no a a in he a of said a I I O re at re be a E a ls A I I O re at notice ot a in be iv to all creditors a in re in said. E a by it is in is in *i?c T\7™e?k iv in he J\ew a a in a is in said Iated at N is 25th a of N 1912. he Court GEO. (Seal) 4.S— -0 Tudg of a Order to Examine Accounts. STATE OK MINNESOTA! ,, Comity ol Brown On .Reading *nd Piling the Petition of Am alia Baltru8Ch, claiming to be entitled to a con veyance ol certain real estate lrom the Administrator ol said estate, setting forth that AlbeFt Buschers deceased, was bound by a contract in writing to convey said real estate to the said Amalia Baltrusch upon the terms and conditions therein stated, with a descrip tion of the land to be conveyed, and the facts upon which such claim to conveyance is pre dicated, and praying that the Probate Court make a decree authorizing and directing the saidJohn Buschers, Administrator of the estate to convey said real estate to said petitioner as the person entitled thereto. It is Therefore Ordered, Tha all persons interested in said estate may appear before this Court, at a special term thereof to be held on Thursday the 19th daj of Dec. A. J. 1912, at 10 o'clock in the forenoon at the Probate office in the Court House in New Ulm in said County, and oppose said petition. And it is Further Ordered, That this order shall be published once in each week tor three successive weeks prior to said day of hearing in the New L'lm Review a weekly newspaper printed and published at New Ulm in said County, Dated at New Ulm, Minn., the 22nd dav of Nov. A. D. 1012. By the Court. tSeal] GEO. Ross a re by allowed from a after he a of is order in all so a in a ms or a a a in he a id a if a re be.ar required to he a me in he a of a id for a in a on a allow a or be forever a re I is O re at he first a in a 1913, at 10 o'clock A -PI., at a a of a id a to be at he he it ot Ne in said be a he a me re by is a in as he me a place a re he said a Cour will a in a a a id a ms a a ss I Special Term, No\ 22nd 1912. In U»e Matter of the Estate of Barbara Rewitzer, Deceased. On reading and bhngth petition of Albert Steinhanser, Executor, of the estate of Barbara Bewitzer, deceased, representing, among other things, that be has lully administered said estate, and praying that a time and place be tixed lor examining and allowing the final ac count of his administration, and for the assignment of the residue of said estate to the parties entitled thereto by law It is ordered, that said account be examined, and petition heard by this Court, on Thursday the 19th day ol December A. D.1912, at 10 o'clock A. M., at the Probate Omce, in the City of .New Ulm, in said County. And ii is further ordered, that notice thereof be given to all persons interested, by publishing a copy oi this order once in each week lor three successive wreks, prior to said day ol hearing in the .New Ulm Review, a weekly newspaper, prin ted and published at New Ulm in said County. Dated at New Ulm, Minn., the 22nd day of Nov.. A. 1». 1912. By the Court, (SEAL) GEO. ROSS, 48-60 Judge of Probate. Order for Hearing on Petition to Convey Lands on Contract. STATE OF MINNESOTA, County of Brown fss" S I Probate Court, bpeclalTerm, Nov. 22nd 1912. In the matter of the estate of Albert Basrhers, deceased. N 48—50 Judge of Probate. Wise Provision. "Bliggms says ho has Hie smartest youngster in the -world "Of course," answered Mr. {rowdier "Every parent feels that waj. and it's a wise provision ot nature. In every human being's life there ought to be a time when somebody thinks he is •mart."—Washington Star. Hi* Tints. "When I last saw him Jabbs was green with envy, yellow with Jealousy, white with fear and .red with rage." "What a highly colored life his must !•!"—Baltimore American. Another Optimist. Tommy—Pop, what is an optimist? Tommy's Pop—An optimist my son, is man who is married, and glad of Philadelphia Record. Trim carefully around the edges. s" Cut out this coupon! to-day and nominate yourself or some friend. GOOD FOR 50 VOTES I Nominate Order to Claims Within re Months S A E O I N N E S O A of 5 I a Court bpccia re A 26th, 1912. I he a of he E a of S a ah A. -Lauden&chlager, a of A in is a on it w«ll a on he E a of S a ah A a a a a of he Cit of N in he of a he S a of in so a being: er. a to E G. a I Appearing on proper proof by affidavit E G. a a a filed* herein 4 9 5 1 Probate Court id by a at re a re no a a re in a*, pro dc-biss c*jiditibt he a of a id a I Ordered at re be a he a me is re by allowed from a after he a of is O in all a in a ms or a a a in he said a if a re be a re re re to file he a me in he a of a id County fore a in a on a a a or be forever a re I I Ordered, at he first Mon a in a 1MI3, at 10 o'clock, a. m. at a a of said a Cour to be at he Cour in he it of N in a id be a he a me re by is a in as he me a place a re he said a Cour will a in a adjust said a ms a a A I I O re at of a in be iv to all creditors a so in re in said E a by it is in is O in a for re iv in he N a a in a is in a id a at N 01 is i6t a of N 1912. he Court (Seal) GEO O S S of a MANLIKE MANATEES. These Queer Creatures Are Linked With trie Mermaid Myth. In semitropicaf waters of America there disports a member of that family of aquatic nmnirnals to which has been ascribed the mermaid myth. Related to the dugoug and the now extinct rhytina, we still have the manatee. This name is preferred by some to manati, under the impression that the latter is the plural of the Latin "mana tus" (furnished With hands), though the name is probably of Mandingo ori gin. The manatee is a herbivorous mam mal inhabiting the shallows about the coasts of Florida, Mexico, central America and the West Indies. It is not known to attempt the open sea and •does not possess the ability to come ashore. "This animal is somewhat whalelike in shape, with a horizontal tail fin. It is from eight to twelve feet in length, the body being scantily cov ered with hair. The only limbs are the fore flippers, low on the side of the body. This flipper has no fingers. It does possess, though, three flat nails and has a free motion in all directions from the shoulder. The elbow aud wrist approximate the human anato my in movement. With this crude re semblance to an arm the manatee has been said to carry its young. While the statement is not authentic, it is quite believable, its possibility being vouched for by all observers of the arm in motion. The head of the manatee is divided from the body by a slight indication of neck. The upper lip is extraordi narily flexible—so much so that each side can protrude independently of the other, and, thus separated into two lobes, the upper lip can perform the complete operation of grasping food and conveying it into the mouth. In each jaw are twenty pairs of two ridged teeth. With this formidable equipment the manatee is not, how ever, ferocious, but browses tranquilly on the water plants of its habitat. In some views the head is surprisingly manlike, though far from beautiful, and no specimen has ever sat on the rocks and combed its golden hair.— Harper's TH E BUSY WOMAN'S DAY. It begins early, ends late, and is full of work. She often has kidney trouble without knowing it Her back aches, and she is tired and worn out. Sleeps poorly, is nervous, no appe tite. Her bladder gives her trouble too. Foley Kidney Pills will cure all that and make her strong and well. They are the best medicine made for kidney and bladder disorders. O. MI Olsen. Get all the Vote Blanks you can Every one is good for 50 votes 10 blanks good for 500 votes To Contest Manager, New Ulm Publishing Co. VOTE BLANK 3 Cut this out and send it to the Contest Manager, New Ulm Publishing Co. with your name I or the name of your favorite candidate. The name of party making nomination will not be I published nor will it be devulged if contest manager is requested to withhold it. «. K'-i-'" vT*-u Date HAWAII'S VOLCANIC INFERNO. A Peep Into KTrauea's Lake of Brim stone and Fire. Kilauea. in Hawaii, is a round ex tinct crater about three mile* aero— and 700 or 800 teet deep. It has IHM-MI the scene of terrific explosions in pn-t ages, but it has now dwindled lo the small active crater of Halemaumati. which is suuk near the middle ol like a huge pot, 200 or more feet deep and 1.000 feet across. In the midatternoon a party of eiirlH of ten ot us on horseback set out TO visit the \olcano. The trail led tiimn the brokeu and shelving side ot the crater, amid trees and bushes till it struck the floor of lava at the 'otto.n Our course took us out o\er the cracked and contorted lava beds. here no green thing was growing. 'I he forms of the lava flow suggested mailed and writhing dragons, v* lth horrid, gaping mouths and vicious claws. The lava crunched beneath the When half a mile 1 rom the crater we dismounted and, leaving our horses in charge of the guide, proceeded on foot over the cracked and heated lava rocks toward the brink of this veritable devil's caldrom. The sulphur fumes are so suffocating that it can be ap proached only on the windward side. The first glance into that fearful pit is all that your imagination can picture it. You look upon the traditional lake of brimstone and tire, and if devils were to appear skipping about over the surface with pitchforks, turning their victims as the cook turns her frying crullers in the,sputtering fat, it would not much surprise you. This liquid is rather thick and viscid, but it is boil ing furiously. Great masses of. it are thrown up forty or fifty feet and fall with a crash like that of the surf upon the shore. The mass of boiling lava is said to be about one and one-half acres in extent. Its surface is covered with large masses of floating crust, black and smooth, like leather or roofing paper, and be tween these masses, or islands, the molten lava shows in broad, vivid lines. It is never quiet. Looking upon this scene with the thought of the traditional lake of fire CROUPY COUGHS AND COLDS. The quickest simplest way to rid the children of dangerous croupy coughs and wheezy stuffy colds is to give them Foley's Honey and Tar Compound. It gives almost instant relief and stops a cough promptly. It soothes and heals. Contains no opiates. O. M. Olsen. All He Was Fit For. A tramp was passing a marine store, and, seeing the man at the door, he asked in a joking way. "Do you buy rags and bones?" "You've guessed it first time, old chap," answered the man. "Get on the scales I"—London Telegraph. Down the Rhine. "Look at this beautiful castle." "Don't bother me. How can I read the guidebook if you keep pestering me to look at rocks and castles?"— Washington Herald. Hi* Anxiety. She—You must see papa, dear, about our marripge. But don't be anxious about the outcome. He—What I'm anx ious about is the income.—Boston Tran script NOT GOOD AFTER DECEMBER Htb, 1912 FnUname of Candidate" V**?' ,. *rrs I Address "*WK-........ ±.... I .....]..:...:. r.::/•.? .*! .*.""•: As my Candidate in the Review-Post Contest. oigned ..~.~.*.~ L.«^?VV. ...^.?:.V* ^-^-*tJEv .. ^-CKiresS' «^»w»**»1W'£.v%3.-€^NF£.».?^f^ Note—Each nomination sent in will eount 50 votes if sent to the Contest Manager We if LW&SS 1 "«»rve the right to reject any objectionable nomination. ponies* Manager, we !... _.„„:..„..:. :..^ \.:±:.^f,—-^-«:-?^^^V„|£. __£____^_j^ *u«^ .• horses' feet like shelly and brittle ice. Namaras and Ortie E. McManigal At one point we passed over a x\ ule. after the Los Angeles Times explosion jagged crack on a bridge. As we neared the crater the rocks grew warm anil sulphur and other fumes streaked the air. and brimstone of our forefathers in Francisco was looking after the plot, mind, you would say that these black. told him I believed Tveitmoe would filthy looking masses floating about on the surface were the accumulation of all the bad stuff that had been fried out of the poor sinners since hell was invented. How much wickedness and uncharity and evil thought it would represent! If the poor victims were clarified and made purer by the proc ess, then it would seem worth while.— John Burroughs in Century. WHEEZ W & 4^- im*%4 ^31# fte. BURNS ON STAND AT INDIANAPOLIS Detective Tells Story in Dyna mite Conspiracy Case. HOCKIN GAVE K!M THE UU Secured Information About Explosions From Present Secretary of the Iron Workers' Union. Indianapolis, Nov 30.—William J. Burns' story of his pursuit of the Mc- was told by him at the so called dy namite conspiiacy trial. At the time of the explosion, Oct. I, 1910, he said, he was on a train going from San Francisco to Los Angeles. He was employed the next day by Mayor Alexander of Los Angeles to run down the dynamiters, he said He remained on the Pacific coast un til the latter part of December, when he returned to Chicago. In Chicago, he said, he met Herbert S. Hockin, now secretary of the iron workers' un ion and alleged betrayer of the dyna miters, while Hockin himself, accord ing to the government's charge, was a dynamiter Burns in substance testi fied: Says Hockin Gave Him Data. "Hockin told me he wouldn't have met me if it were not for the fact that the dynamiters were going to do a lot of killing. He said John J. Mc I Namara, then secretary of the union, had employed James B. McNamara and McManigal to kill as many people as possible to bring about the result he hoped for. "I told Hockin he was late with his information, as I knew all the facts already. Then I asked him where he I got his information that people on the Pacific coast were going to blow me a id 0 1 a A of S a do it if he had a chance, for I had opposed Tveitmoe in the San Fran cisco graft investigation and I had sent my son Raymond to Minnesota to get a photograph of Tveitmoe in the penitentiary uniform and had it published in San Francisco." PATRICK SECURES PARDON Governor Dix of New York Frees Noted Prisoner. Albany, N. Y., Nov. 29.—Albert T. Patrick, who is serving a life sentence in Sing Sing prison for the murder of William Marsh Rice, an aged million aire, in New York city Sept. 23, 1900, was pardoned by Governor Dix. Patrick, who was saved from ^he electric chair by the late Governor Higgins in December, 1906. has made a remarkable fight for freedom. A lawyer by profession he protested when Governor Higgins commuted the death sentence to life imprisonment, declaring that the governor had no legal right to cancel the original sen tence and impose a punishment of life imprisonment. GUNMEN TO DIE IN JANUARY Rosenthal Murderers to Be Executed First Week of New Year. New York, Nov. 27.—Gyp the Blood, Whitey Lewis, Lefty Louie and Dago Prank, the gunmen convicted of the murder of Herman Rosenthal, were sentenced by Justice Goff to die in the electric chair at Sing Smg during the week of Jan. 6. Each of the prisoners was sentenced separately and in each case Charles G. F. Wahle. their counsel, moved that the verdict be set aside and the judg ment be arrested. Each motion Jus tice Goff successively denied. One of the grounds for Mr. Wahle's motion was that the verdict was the result of "passion, prejudice and other influences." GIRL DEAD: DOCTOR ENDS LIFE Police Nab Trained Nurse in Denver Crime Wave- Denver, Dec. 1.—The police ex pressed the belief that Dr. J. E. Cheer ington, found dead in his home here, committed suicide fearing prosecution in connection with the death of Mrs Maud White, a housekeeper, who died under mysterious circumstances. Phy sicians who performed the autopsy on Mrs. White's body reported that death was the result of.a criminal operation. '*, Mrs. Mabel Howe, the {rained nurse who attended Mrs. White before her death was tak^aaninto custody.- She disclaims any^owledge of the crime. "£Jv JOHN T. BRUSH IS DEAD Baseball Magnate Expire* While En r^ Route-to the Weet. & ^IM Louisiana, Mo., Nov.' 27.—John T. Brush, president of the New York Na tional league team, died in his private ear between here and St. Louis. He was on his way to the- Pacific coast for his health. ~fjgl Mr. Brush, who had suffered for years from locomotor ataxia, 'was hur ried from New York Sunday nifht up* ffitJRHft S*3m JOSEPH J. ETTOR. Strike Leader Acquitted of Murder Charge at Salem, Mass. ©1912. bv A P-es* ASbOCiation STRIKE LEADERS GO FREE Ettor, Giovanmtti and Caruso Guilty of Murder. ReportsIndicateTyphoonCaused Hundreds ot Deaths. Manila, Nov. 30.*—Owing to the pios tration of the telegraph wires no defi nite estimate is yet possible of the number of fatalities or of the property losses by the typhoon which crossed the islands of Sainar, Leyte and North Panay several days ago. Such information as has been re ceived indicates that 260 persons were killed in Samar and Leyte and fifty in the other territory traversed bv the storm. Despite the enormous dam age in Tacloban, capital of Leyte, the fatalities there were less than a dozen. The government is forwarding relief supplies to the stricken district. No word has been received from Mindanao, except a wireless dispatch from the transport Warren, which saw the storm was unusually severe HYDE GUILTY, OF BRIBERY Former New York City Official is Convicted. New York, Nov 30 —Charles H. Hyde, former city chamberlain, was found guilty of bribery in connection with the performance of his duties as a city official. Hyde is accused, in -the words of state's counsel to the jury, of using "the power and the pressure of his of ficial position unlawfully to induce" Joseph G. Robin, head of the defunct Northern bank, to cause the bank to loan the tottering Carnegie Trust com pany $130,000. WILSON SECURES 6,156,748 Roosevelt Polls 3,928,140, Taft 3,376. 422 and Debs 673,783. New York, Nov. 27.—The popular vote for president in the election of 1912 shows that Wilson polled throughout the country a total of 6,156,748 votes Roosevelt 3,928,140, and Taft 3,276,422. The Socialist vote for Debs amount ed to 673,783, with the Socialist count still incomplete in seven states. In 1908 Bryan's popular vote was 6,393,182 and that of Taft 7,637,676 ROBBERS MAKE RICH HAUL after lining seventeen men up against After cutting the telephone wires the bandits made their escape. *i Fearing prosecution the gamblers refrained from putting Any informa tion in the hands of the police. FORMER SENATOR JONES DEAD 8ticeumb in Lea Angeles After Long Los Angeles, Nov. 28.- SITUATION NOW BECOMES'ACUTE Servians Occupy Albanian Port Without Resistance. AUSTRIA MAY RESENT ACTION Warlike feeling Prevailing at Vienna* Likely to Keep Europe, in a Con-/ ttnued State of Anxiety* 4. A. 4. .1. .5, 4. 4* Not Salem, Mass., Nov. 27.—Standing an iron barred cage in the center ot* the courtroom Joseph J. Ettor, Arturo Giovannitti and Joseph Caruso, labor leaders, charged with the murder of Anna Lopizzo, killed in a Lawrence textile strike riot last winter, heard the jury declare them "not guilty" Their faces lighted up at the words and then, with their voices catchinaf almost in a sob all three cried out their thanks to the men who had re fused to condemn two of them to a lifetime of prison and the third to the electric chair. MANY FATALITIES IN PHILIPPINES Austria Withholds Consent. Should the proposed conference ma terialize—tor apparently Austria ha? not yet consented to participate—if would be considered as preparatory to a later full conference, which would Include the Balkan states and'Turkey for a final settlement of all questions Nothing has been decided as to where the conference will be held or precise ly what questions will be discussed. The project appears to have arisen out of a general sense of irritation at the inevitable delays necessitated bj the constant telegraphic interchange? of views. Great secrecy is preserved regard ing the conference at Baghtchef and it is not known whether the plenipoten tiaries are discussing the terms of &Xk armistice or bases for the conclusion of peace. It is reported from Rome that & provisional Albanian government ha* been constituted at Valona (Avlona* by eighty Albanian delegates. WAR MEASURES STIR VIENNA Excitement Follows Arranging for Army Mobilization. Vienna, Nov. 29.—Much excitement has been occasioned by the action of the government arranging for the mobilization of the Austrian army, which proves the ministers' deter mination to be fully prepared for any development in the Balkan crisis. The parliamentary leaders met an*3 decided to allow the ministers thre^ bills dealing with matters conned with the mobilization to go to conS mittee without the customary fiya reading. CLOSING IN ON ADRIAN Secure Si2,000 in Money and Jewels at Calgary. Winnipeg, Nov. 27.—Two masked men held "U a. gambling hoaie on Lawyer Gets Second TriaM Ninth avenue, Calgary, Alberta, and.i ^Joskin, N. Y., Nov. 27.—^rtonTw the wall at the point of revolvers,-ob~ ing whose guilt or'innocence of the tained $12,000 in jewels and money* eharge of murdering his client, ikn Rosa Menschfk Szabo, the jury wa« unable to find a verdict, #111 remair in jail here for months, in all proba bllity, before given a second trial Former Unit- ed States Senator John Perciv.al Jones, who ^represented. Nevada in the upper house of congress, died here after a lena illness. W Lines of Investment Drawing Tighter About Beleaguered Fortreaa. Sofia, Bulgaria, Nov. 30.—The liner «f investment drawn by the Bulgarian troops around the beleaguered Turk ish stronghold of Adrianople are beine tightened daily. The attackers trenches have now approached within 1,100 yards of the city itself and the foreign consuls have hoisted flags over their offices so as to prevent the Bul garians firing shells in their direc tion, GIBSON MUST REMAIN IN JAIL May \«^nth »efor« N«w Yortc Gibson, the New York lawyer concern- COUNTESS OF FLANDERS PEAP Mother of King Albert of Belgium Passes Away. Brussels, Nov. 27.—The Connte* Flanders, mother of Ring Albert of Belgium, is dead. She bad beea ^suffering for some days from pne* monia. She was sixty-eight yeara King Albert and Queen ElizabeUr i^Cainamed at her bedside till the lam &* W&4 4* •$• *S* Sofia, Bulgaria. Nov. 30.— Two entire divisions of Turk ish reserv es sun endered to the Bulgarian troops near the ri1 lage of Marhamtt, between =3ie port of Dedeaghatch and IV.m otica. according to i»n an nouncement made by the offi cial news agency here. 4* Bulgaria troops near the ri 1 lag of Marhamtt between =3i *f- 4* 'V 4* 4- -I* 'h 4* 4* 4* 4* 4* •$• 4» London, Nov. 29 —The Servians, ig noring the proclamation of Albania* independence, have occupied tho p»rt of Dura-szo without resistance. TKW» information comes in a direct dispatcV from tha.t town A dispatch from Belgrade also, sajes It is officially announced that the ?*t Serviafns have captured the town of* -1 Dib^a, in Albania, forty-five miles to* Ure southwest of Prisrend. Thus the conflict now is raised ic acute form between Austria and Servia. and it remains to be seen whether the Austrian government will take any direct action or will be content tc leave the question for the after the war settlement. The Servian action, coupled witn the eminently warlike feeling prevail ing at Vienna, is likely to keep Europe in a continued state of anxiety. On the other hand, the fact that the ne gotiations are progressing at Baght chef and that there is £o sign of re sumption of the operations on the Tchatalja lines, while the great pow ers are exchanging proposals for th« assembling of a European conference all make tor a peaceful settlements /P HL