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jejcfelx %mxmt PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY BY JOS, BOBLETER. Office over City Drag Store. TERMS: O NE DoiiLAB PE YEAS IN ADVANCE. BATHS OS" ADTEBflSINU. Ten Lines "BREVIER makes a Square. Space 1 Square 2 Squares ji Column & Column 1 Column M, 1 1 1 3m 6m 75j 1251 3 00 5 001 7 0010 8 00 12 00 Harnesses, Collars, lyr 9 00 00 00 00 00 1 501 3 00 2 00 4 00 4 50 3 751 6 0010 6 00 10 0016 00 16 0030 16 00 SO 0050 JUENEMANN, MANUTACTUBBR AND DEALER 131 Saddles, Whips, n. Saddlery, Blankets, etc., etc., etc. Upholstery, and all custom work pertaining to my business promptly attended to. Minn. St., Next Door to Ziher's Saloon, NEW ULM. PFEFFEKLE, Dealer in GR0GER4ES and PROVISION'. Canned, Dried and Green Fruit, F?4)UR AND FEED, STONB, WoonitiT AND TTIL,IA TTAHB. MINN. ST., NEW ULM, MINN. |3 F. WEBBEK, 1 A.ttorney &> 'Counselor AT LAW. HONEY O LOAN Office over Citizen's National Bank. JTEW ULM, MINNESOTA jTVAKOTA HOUSE, DPI*. POST OFFICKN EW TJLM, MIITN.. ADOLPH SETTER, PKOP'K. hia house is the most centrally located house in the city and affords good Sample Rooms. c, H. CHADBOURN, President. TUT-BAl1 C.H. Rosa, Cashier. BROWN CO. BANK Cor. Minn. and Centre Streets. NEW ULM, MINNESOTA. Collections and all business pertaining to banking PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO. INDIVIDUAL RESPQNSlBiLTlY #500,000. & tx. A\ SrjBinu, JOCK BELV. NewUlm CityMill, Centre Street, New Ulm, Minn We are running day and night, and can supply any quantity of best brands of Flour at regular rates,pa, short notice. "We have improved machinery for the grinding of Bhorts and fodder, having added a stone reserved for such a purpose. Jrtour exchanged for wheat very liberal terms. "'..NEWULM CITY MILL CO. MAKlvtl', C. STUEBE, Prop'r. A large supply offresh meats, sausage, hams lard, etc., etc., constantly on hand. All orders ffom the country promptly attended to. CASH PAID FOR AIDES. MINN.ST NEW ULM, MINN. TTY 7~ Me&t Msirket, M. EPPLE, PBOP'JC A large supply of fresh meats, sausage, hams, lard, etc., etc., constantly on hand. All orders from the coun try promptly attended to. CASH PAID FOR HIDES. lfl^N, ST^BET. NEW.ULM. MIN^ nffrlfli. *zT2ZZ3ritS2 YOLUME I. KEW ULM, MEOT., WEDNESDAY, DEC. 25th, 187&$. FUBNITIURE AT As times are hard and money scarce, I have con cluded to sell my large stock of Furniture for cost, The assortment embraces Bedsteads, Bureaus, Kocking- and other Chairs, Cupboards, etc. This is a rare opportunity to obtain all kinds of Furniture cheap. I will also dispose of my Farmers' Friend Fanning" Mills for cost, which enables farm ers to obtain these popular mills at a very low price. S C. HELD, Center street, near City Mill. Chean For Cask I ofl'er my large and in every way best assorted stock of Drv Goods, Ready-made Clothing, Ladies' Cloaks, Ladies' and Gent's Underwear, Buffalo Coats and Robes, Fur Goods for Ladies, Hats and Caps. Mittens, Blankets, Groceries, Crockery and Glassware, which are equal in quality to any in the city, sit prices that cannot be beat. My stock of Ready-Made Clothing wi51 fee closed out at Cost. Heavy Gent's Overcoats at $3.00. Buffalo Overcoats from $8.50 to $20. Underskirts fr om 2Sets, to S4.0Q GMJs Hats From 50 cts. to $4.00' Buckskin Mittens and Gloves from 25 cents to $2.00'. C. BALTRUSCH, NEW TJLM, MINS. JL- Dealers in DRY GOODS, GROCERIES, READY MADE CLOTHING, HATS, CAPS, BOOTS & SHOES, LADIf S AND GENTS UNDERWEAR, NOTIONS, TRIMMINGSr &c. &c. &c. "&c. &c Highest market price paid fo^ arm produce. Sleepy Eye, Minn. HAIR WORK.,. Ornamental hair jewelry, such as charms, chains, pins, ear-rings, brace lets, rings and all kinds of solid work, promptly made to owler. Combings 50 cents an ounae. 'MRS* K. PICKER, Centre Sir., New TJlm, Minn, HARNESS SHOP. I would "respectfully inform the people of New Ulm and vicinity that I have opened a Harness Shop in the rear end of my Hardware Store, under the management of my son-in-law Fr.Quense. A good and well assorted stock of harnesses, saddles, col lars, whips, blankets, etc. will be constantly kept on hand and sold at bottom figures. Fr. Quense will take pleasure in waiting upon all his old cus tomers. Upholstery.and all kinds of custom work, promptly attended to. if. BEUSSJWAKnV. CENTRE STREET SAMPLE ROOM & BILLIARD HALL, IN BASEMENT OF 2SHesling"s ZBlocls:. The best of Wines, Liquors and Ci gars constantly kept on hand. Louis Ffllkei. Prop'r. A.Y UPAll persons indebted to me are kindly requested to call and settle their accounts on or before Jan uary first next, and thereby save costs. All accounts not paid by January first will be placed in the.hands of an attor ney ior collection. THEO. CRONE*. BOP AD SHOE STORED 3B oh e,"while,s y. \j \1rtf DEALER 1ST 'M-M'** BOOT S & SHOES,f Minnesota Street, Ne^Ulmt:, i*\A large assortment of, en's boots and shoes and ladies' a: shoes constantly kept on ha^T6Jffato)|CL work and repairing promptly attendeding to. lOR SALE Four or five improved farms, in this andNicollet county. For particulars enquire of TJTEO. CRONE^ For the first time sirme 1862 gold sold at par in New York last week Tuesday. Sherman has $135,000, 000 of gold coin ready to pay over the treasury counters one week from to-day. The way to resume is to re sume. 'i^$i7jv0- Major Strait last week introduced in Congress a bill appropriating $150,000 to test the. Adams fleume for deepening the channel of the Mississippi,, and also a bill granting additional rights to homestead set tlers. The Mankato Review states that the physicians of that city, as near as could be ascertained, reported 350 cases.of diphtheria in the city from the first of July up to to the first of December, and the deaths between the same dates number forty-eight. The death rate being only" about thirteen and a half per cent, is con sidered very low, when the severe character of the disease is taken in to account. The New York Tribune in its prospectus this year recounts fairly enough Its work during t^ie late cam paign, and then warns the Republi can party that the victories this Fall would have been reversed if the Green backers and Democrats had united. In" ~the possibility of this union, it thinks, lies the danger of the immediate future. It is un doubtedly right, therefore, in sum moning Republicans to the contin ued work of educating voters by the diffusion of sound political princi ples. The Tribune's services in the campaign were so influential, that its counsels now deserve especial at tention. It presents an attractive programme of its owji for the next year,, and. its premiums are particu larly dazzling. See its prospectus on fourth page of this week's Re- view.- Cable dispatches from Europe give accounts of great suffering among the laboring classes ofGreat Britain, especially 'Scotland and England. In manufacturing towns there are thousands of suffering men, women and children who have been com pelled to apply to the authorities for shelter from the severe weather and for food to stay their hunger. In Glasgow, Scotland, the streets are said to be swarming with starving people, and that relief measures are far from sufficient to supply the wants. In England large numbers of manufucturies, mills and mines are closed, and consequently there are hosts of unemployed workingmen. Manufacturers have been conduct ing their business at a loss for years, and many of them have been com pelled to suspend operations for want of means. A million of looms and lathes that were in full blast three years ago are now lying idle, while Jarge manufacturies are rotting down from disuse. If this state of affairs is to continue for any length of time, there is danger of a communistic outbreak which may lead to serious results. A correspondent of the Pioneer Press writing from Marshall, Lyon Couty, compliments Judge Cox on the excellent charge which he gave to the grand jury at that place dur ing the late session of the district court, especially that part relating to the selling of intoxicating liquors to minors. The result of that charge was that every saloon keeper in Marshall was indicted and placed under bonds for trial, which is set for January 21st. In hi charge the Judge states that while the law permits a man make a brute of himself and paupers, or worse, of his wife and family, it attempts to throw a feeble guard a roiind the child in the tender years of infancy that punishment certain find swift ought to follow and ,be inflicted on* every violator of that ^tftt^W^ rt v,vr~T. ^iXOren'sM iamiMs\ W cause them to take from the widowed moihers' arms the stay aud support of age and virtue, and with fiery drink madly plunge him into a fel on's grave. If the law were rigidly enforced by proper complaint and punishment, crime and vice would decrease at a rate that would astonish the most furious fanatic on the subject of enforced temperance, and jails would yawn for inmates with those who learn to "look upon the wine while it is red," in the days of early youth." Death of Bayard Taylor. Bayard Taylor, United States minister to Germany, died at Berlin last Thursday afternoon, after an illness of several months' duration. Mr.a Taylor was nearly 54 years of age at the time of his death, having been born in Pennsylvania in 1825. At an early age he learned the print er's trade, and while working at the case he imbibed such a taste for lit erature, that he employed his leisure hours in. studying and writing verses, which he published in 1844. In 1844 and 1846 he made a pedestrian tour in Europe, an account of which he published* in 1845. entitled "Views Afoot." He traveled on foot through France, Germany, Austria, Italy, and other European countries, his trip costing about $500. which he earned by writing letters to a New York jour nal. He became connected with the New York Tribune in 1847. He has traveled through California, Egypt, Syria, Asia Minor, Europe, India, Japan, and Iceland, and has written about twenty volumes of travels and poetry. He has also been engaged in the lecture field, having lectured upon modern litera ture at Cornell: Fni v#si^ asi %iibh resident professor. His latest and greatest work is a translation of Faust, which was published in 1875. At the time of his death he was en gaged upon a life of Goethe. His appointment as minister to Germany was made last year by President Hayes. FLUCTUATIONS OF INDUSTRY. Written for'the Review by O. P. CHAMPLIST. The industries of the land fluctu ate. Sometimes .there is an over production, and then the wave of the great industrial ocean ebbs a gain, there is an increased demand, the wave flows in towards the la boring class and work is. plenty and wages good. Sometimes the fluctuatiou is caus ed by anew invention, such as many used in manufacturing, or in agri culture at the present day. Changes of fashions, also, are disturbing el ements and, even natural causes may produce a marked effect upon industry. ^\x/ !& Wsrkingmen are liable to be dis turbssd in their labor bjr ance. amo: tudes who afSng the. facture of{ ot emplo changed, those en sof crinoli: society and tha 1' i|^|d from the hor- ^^^AMJ^:tit^gL\^^ reek through the^eeWlalfeeldeliri um.. ,of intexicatiofiy homes and bleeding hear^-|^\ise3"| the open, 'frequent ^nd tiotoriovTs violations of la^teC^^.-wHofee avaricious lust tJ "^Hftix-^^iuld eontrolled' fluctuate tal can stoj stances bot^ injuriou|' dustry any one or all of these causes. It occasionally happens that in dustries that have supported thousandsglcomepi to an end. We are told that when shoe ribbons were substituted for buckles it was long felt to be a severe blow by Sheffield and Birmingham. When it was the fashion for a woman to surround herself with a congeries of parallel steel hoops, fifty tons of cri noline \&ere turned out weekly from the factories, chiefly in Yorks-hire. A few years ago women dressed themselves plentifully" in ribbons but now the fashion has changed and where there is now one yard sold hund^ds used to be. All these changes, v^iich might be further il lustrated, g|oduce a marked disturb workingmen. Multi ained a living by oper looms in the imyiu ibbon were thrown out?, ent when the fashion A like calamity befell ged in the. manufacture ie. It will beseen at once .that manjEcauses operating to throw men oxxt 6s*vork cannot be very well Industry is bound to neither labor nor capi and -in many in or and capital are ected. When an in to an endthe machine-. ry must be remodeled to produce something else, or remain in idleness Jlimself "ust as the operator must betake to some other occupation or do nothing at all. But respecting the operative the change is not so easily effected. One who is skilled in*one trade, and has worked at it jr years, does npt turn to another without difficulty. Nor is it always convenient for the laborer, who has been thrown out of employment, we will say by. business failure, to move into some other community where he may pursue the same avocation. There are hindrances of one nature and another hard to be overc'ome,and especially, if the laborer has a fami ly. Here now is a state of things which must be duly considered by all parties in the present discussion. Capital is not responsible for inven tive genius nor must labor put its fopt on the neck of the young chihj it "brings forth. Every improving invention must be given a chance indeed, .we need not qualify for it is only as, an invention has a trial that we can tell, "wether it is.an improve ment or.not. Capital is not respon sible for a change of fashion but it often causes great distress among the working classes. Here is something for the laborer to bear in mind. On the other hand, when the laborer, the husbandman, for instance, is dis tressed in his industries by natural causes capitalist should make a note ofit. In truth the fluctuations of indus try offer to both classes the oppor tunity to exercise mutual forbear ance. The theme is suggestive and particularly so when' you cure to competition in labor but this aspect of the case I care not now to go in to. My present object will be at tained if I cause any one to be more mindful of the chance.elements that, enter, or positive factors, into the case between the laborer and the capitalist. The distress and the misery of the workingman does not lie always at the door of the man of wealth. ^rf/^'f Burnstown Item** Merry Christmas to om' Burnstown friends. Turkeys have come down from their roosts and gone up in the market. Collecting agents are to. be seen a round almost daily. .%S||^ Ourschool is now in good running order, but the school room is already found to be too small, ts The Springfield string' band spends considerable timein practicing dancing music. The writer would suggest al iterary* association for the long winter nights.x Don't all speak at once. Last Monday was a mighty cold day up in this seetion, but if we only had snow enough to make decent sleighing we wouldn't complain.. 'I^V-f^^ The grain trade continues tolerably, lively. We would like to see more op~ position in the market here. The ladies of our town the last few days have been more than busy pre paring for our Christmas festival. Lamberton wants a flouring mill. Well, so do we, and we want a good torisorial artist and a merchant tailor besides. The recent change oftime on the W. 3k St. Peter railroad is a benefit to us, and we ape not disturbed now during dinner hour. Thanks to the Company. John G. Parsons'left last Saturday with several car loads- of cattle which he had taken in exchange for his hors es. We are sorry to see John go, as he is a jolly good fellow. .V-j gy. Henry Dressier ha returned from ,|"i Chicago and reports the cattle trade h. fair. He is in the fteld roady to^buy again. $$& John Hauenstein of JTew Ulm made our town a pleasaat call last week.. John is a liberal good hearted fellow and we are always glad to see him. It's all a mistake about John Dooner being a happy daddy of anew boni babyK'John Whelan is the happy chap." But what's the odds so long aa the new born bad'smaroie.is John. These sudden changes of tSe^wvath-. er seldom,? ail-to* bring |M3ough or Cold, and, j^e ca reqoxepiend Dr.. Marshall'^ fng ^yrupfafP|a certain cure for aft'diseasesof the.J^mg an Chest? The price isjwily|?25 cents-, Soldat the^pity Drugs^i *&?$* 'l.x ML" j & '^Ji'