Newspaper Page Text
W It J. if EPUBLICAN BLASTS. Scared the Other W»y. J^C fr,WS a IJ" to know whetlif^"lfr. Cleveland B*or flfitht!" exclaimed M\ Watterson about ten days ago. {Money talks," responded Mr. Cleveland, B^fnt up $ 10,000 (or lesB) to aid hi* re flection.—Kansas City Journal Will Belmke Them. wage-earners and producers, who are 8 a consumers, will inflict in "November a crushing rebuke to those who Kre trying to force the American scale of Images, profits and living down to the En -sropean level.—Cleveland Leader. Too Late for the Operatic Season. "^j^jg "Retaliation: or, Cleveland and the KaL-» licks," is not the title ofGilbert and Sullivan's latest comic opera. The President's buffo message came too late in the season to be •available for operatic purposes this year.— Brooklyn Daily Times. Wu is Running This Thingl hat ha8 Mr. Cleveland's United States marshals been doing while all this imported contract labor has been pouring into New York to take the place of American laborers. Who is running the government now, any way?—Omaha Republican. "HhyThey Can. I know something about steel rails. I know that even with our present duty foreign steel companies can afford to put their rails pn ourmaiketsat the ratecharged by Mr. Carnegie. Why is this? Simply be cause iron woikers England and Germany Jjara sixty and fiity cents a day instead of the Hwor more which the Pittsburg men receive." •-Chauneey Depew. Ilold His Coat Tails. "Just see me wallop Canada] Hand me a club—no, not that one, a bigger one."—G. Cleveland. But the senate and the people are asking T\ Iiy he hasn't used the club which •WPS placed in Jus hands a year and a half ago. senate now gives him a bigger club he right down behind it, just as he did the other one, and hide. As a blufier, veland swells up very large.—Detroit & Free Trade for Connecticnt. ief movemant in this state against I rade tendency of the democrats is ng and deep. It amounts to an ex may hear it wherever you go. talking it quietly over among them jcognize that the issue is vital to Ad old-time democratic business men, cmg the party ior its folly, have de to vote against it this time to save ,elves.—Hartford Courant. Upsetting Democratic Falsehoods. It is alleged that the Mills bill is not a Free Yode measure, because it reduces the duties per cent. This is a subterfuge, and as as a falsehood. It entirely removes the from articles now producing $22,000, year levenue, or, say. on $60,000,000, asmg the amount of Free Trade imports 00,000,000, thetotai imports being but 000,000. In other words, it increases ilue of Free Trade articles so that they ltute three-nfths of our entire lmporta —Chicago Journal That Letter, York World. It may be remarked that ocuments is due. 'timoie Amencan: President Cleveland 1 invoke the services of Mr. Gallagher, the letter go. na Transcript: We wonder if President land will mention anything his letter jeptance about the dangers of a third dedo Blade- Grover having gotten off ungo" mcssaae will probably now have 1 time to devote to his long-delayed let acceptance. York Tribune- Cleveland's letter of »ptance is being held back for want of The (setting of the first 100 words ex .ted all the capital I's and M's. The Republican Young Ladies. is very pleasant to have the girls with us htically. The Mail told of the repub an club organized for campaign pa des by miss Mmme E. Davis, oi this city, will be a pretty feature of the parades. It 11 be a telling one, too. It will show the world what 16 toleiably generally known al ready—that charming girls are generally republicans. The young ladies who form this republican club are not women's lights women. They are simply enthusiastic girls who wish to aid a good cause. They are the young Mary Logans and Lady Randolph Churchills, of Chicago, who think, and rightly, that a wo man, in a womanly ay, can do much to promote a party's success.—Chicago Mail. Some of His Record. Come, flatterers and worshipers of the Tat tooed President, tell us if these things are not true. Is the record at fault when it sets forth the names of 218 officeholders ap pointed since 1885 who have been directly connected with the criminal classes? Is it true or is it false that the civil list of this re forming genius of yours includes two murder ers, two hirelings of assassins, seven forgers, three rioters, five indicted offenders against the revenue lawt, and mail thieves, defraud ing county officials, embezzlers, bribers, blackmailers, gamblers, wife beaters, and drunkards without number? Is there any possible answer on your part to the indict ment framed by the Tubune against the ad ministration as at once the least efficient, the most partisan, and the most corrupt and in famous in the annals of American politics?— New York Tribune. Democracy and the Teterans. The Cleveland Plain Dealer referred to the Union veterans as "stupid and bigoted sol diers." Congressman Kilgore, an ex-Confed erate Democratic officeholder, openly insulted them on the floor of the house as paupers and now Matson, the Democratic candidate for governor of Indiana, in a Democratic ma jority report from the committee on pensions, says: And if one (meaning a soldier pensioner) receives not enough, it is because he did not serve long enough, and can he be heard to complain if he gets a just rate equal to his fellow soldiers? And for the remainder of the relief necessary to his support, he shall be al lowed, as other citizens must, to accept the charity of the local authorities. Isn't that statement disgraceful? If an old veteran, mained or in the last stages of dis ease, is unable to support himself, he can go to the poorhouse before the government shall aid him. That is the exact substance of Mr. Matson declaration. This is some more of the gi eat love the Democratic party bears toward the soldiers! ATaleWithAMoral. John Smith had a board fence arotind his •corn field to keep out his neighbor Brown's cows. Mr. Brown didn't like this fence at all. His pastures were lean and dry, and he its protection restored.—Springfield (Mass.) Union, thought it would be a fine thing if his'cows could get iijto Mr. Smith's field. According ly he^/j/y^work with Mr. Smith's hired man and persuaded him by arguments and bribes to pull down apart of the fence. One day when Mr. Smith was looking over his farm be found the man at work remov ing some of the boards from the fence. &p "What are you doihgthereT*demanded Mr Smith. '"I'm reforming the feneey sorr—there's a dale too much of it for the good of the corn.'' "But you'lllet in Brown's cows, and they'll trample down the whole field/' urged Mr. Smith. "Bedad, it won't be so bad as that/ eorr. I'm only taking down 15 or 20 pereentoi the fence. There's enough of it left to pro tect the corn, sorr. I'm only rejuicing the average of the fence. Sure, it's there still:" It is enough to say that Mr. Smith didn't see thfr pointy and, ordered the fence and After Trr» Months. =W'- General Harrison in every respect is a stronger candidate to-day than when he was nominated two months ago. His record as a gallant soldier in the field, distinguished leader of the Indian bar, and a sagacious legislator with an honorable-and useful ca reer in the United States Senate is without flaw, crease, or wrinkle-. The Democratic press has found leisure to scrutinize his speeches and public acts, and to ascertain whether he has ever done or said anything which could be used against him in a Presi dential canvass. Feeble attempts to con vict him of inconsistency in his record on the Chinese question, of hosluity to the interests of workingmen during the labor riots oi 1877, and of contemptuous disregard of the principles of Civil Service Reform have been abandoned as soon as made. Defamation has recoiled at once upon the de famere, and only served to prove that General Harrison's reputation is invulnerable. Eight weeks have passed, and our friends the enemy have notching to say against it. They can only repeat the silly fling with which they greeted his nomina tion that he is the grandson of his grand father, as if it were anything against him that an earlier Harrison should have won the battle of Tippecanoe and the tariff can vass of 1840, or that a still earlier Harrison should have signed the Declaration of Inde pendence. The Republican leader is not only a strong candidate from his unblemished rep utation, and his honorable caieeras a soldier and statesman, but he is also a man of in tellectual resources and sagacious judgment. Since his nomination he has made as many as eighty speeches in Indianapolis, in answer to congratulatory addresses, and he has in variably left a favorable impression upon the delegations who have listened to him, and upon the larger audience in the country which has attentively followed his words.-* Tribune. Bottles That won't Break. The paper bottle industry has achieved considerable success in the West, and is gradually extending throughout the United States. Fore most among the advantages accruing from this new adap tion of paper is the fact that the bot tles are unbreakable, while the cost at which they can be placed on the market is considerably lower than that of an article of the same size in glass, stoneware or tin. A great sav ing in weight is moreover effected, a desideratum of no small moment where cost of carriage of large num bers has to be taken into considera tion, while the cost of packing is re duced to minimum, for breaking in transit, which is a constant source of loss with glass bottles, is obvious ly impossible. Special machinery is employed in the manufacture of pa per bottles. A long slip of paper of requisite.4 thickness, having been formed into a tube by bending around a circular "mandrel,'"is cov ered externally with an outer glazed sheet, bearing any labels to be employed the tube is then cut into short lengths to the end of which are added tops, bottoms and necks of paper—or of wood, if special strength is required—nothing further beyond pouring in and lining the inside with a composition, which, on setting, will effectually resist the ac tion of acids, spirits, inks, dyes, etc. The utilization of paper is constant ly receiving new adaptions, a bare enumeration of which would consti tute a formidable list, while enough has been said to demonstrate that the latest development of this matrial in the bottle-making indus try bids fair to hold not an unim portant part in the varied uses now obtained from paper. Trees on a Raw Prairie. Thousands of dollars have been thrown away and much valuable time wasted in "experiments" of this sort, and still we find new people coming along asking the old question. There is no question of greater practical im portance than this of tree culture on the prairie. I have been on the track of facts several years, and I say plain ly that there is not one prairie in twenty on which you can set out trees of any sort with reasonable prospect of ultimate success. I don't know why it is, but if you break within say half a mile of where other trees are growing, you will get poplars to do there fairly well, but right out on the prairie they won't grow Till by free cultivation you have worked the "wild Indian'' out of your land. I once saw in western Iowa a grove of ma ples each side of a roadway. On one side they were going backward, every tree put in to close the gaps dying faster than the originals. On the other side strong, healthy trees, that had been planted two years after the others on land that was meantime cropped—all other conditions being the same. Try the experiment yourself. Break at once if not already done, and backset in October, or earlier, four or five inches deep, where you want your trees to grow. Plant a little of it in trees this fall, a little bit more next spring. Put in pota toes and corn on the rest of the patch. Grow them two years on the same ground, going down deeper each sea son. Then plant as before. I back the unmanured potato patch every time. This is what my observation leads to, some places the land aft er corn may be as good as the other. Twenty years after, the last of those trees will be first and the first last many of them probably dead. Slow and Sure is the pace for tree planting and don't you forget it.—"Rambler," in the Farmer. 3~f The SIOBX Treaty The Indians at Crow Creek Agency are still considering the treaty for opening the Sioux reservation. The outlook is very bright at this agency and very gratifying reports are also received from the lower Brule, where it is expected that still less difficulty will be en countered in securing signatures. Capt. Pratt is confident that if a comparatively clean sweep can be made at these two agen cies no serious difficulty will be met in secur ing sufficient signatures to render the bill operative. The prospects of a successful ter mination of the labors of the commission are not by any means hopeless. The fountain head of all the opposition en counteretThere lies with a certain few who have forged ahead of the great mass and now possess considerable stock, and they are fear ful that they will not have the entireearth to graze over. They seem to lose sight of the fact that it takes but a fifth of the proposed reservation to locate every Indian entitled to land upon a 320-acre farm and that an abundance will be left, They are opposed from selfish purposes and seem to be willing to sacrifice schools and all the privileges of civilization and ad vancement to the great mass of Indians so long as they are allowed to occupy thou sands of acres with their comparatively small herds of cattle. Still this bill would would not interfere with them in any respect, but they allege that any change would necessarily do so. Chief White Ghost at the last council said: Now. my friends we want to do this work peaceably and quietly. That is good, that is right I am glad of that. We want to put our attention closely to the work you have brought to us. We want to consider it quietly and peaceably. We were to come lorward with the pen, but this is not the day we want to put it off another day. White Ghost was about to retire, when Judge White called his attention to a brief which the Indians had referred to him for consideration, which covered two requests which the Indians made, one being remuner ated from the Northwestern road for about seventy-five acres of land which that road had taken possession of when extending to Pierre and the other calling for the transfer of a number of their people to tins agency from Standing Bock. The judge stated that| he had examined the papers carefully, and would call the attention of the government to both matters at once. White Ghost then said I thank you for that that is good. The Great Father when he sees he has an impor tant work to do. work that must be done quick and properly, he takes his soldiers by the hand and tells them to do it right. The great father will choose a roan from among the multitude, a good and wise man, for a judge. A man who has no malice toward any one. That is the kind of the man, the greatfather generally chooses for a judge. And among you all there is a great spirit who watches over him who is chosen and it will be well with us. Why I am happy at this. I have suffered from this earthly work, this land work, and I hope that everything will be straightened out. I have wished for that, and it will make me happy. Grunts of approval were frequent during the speech of White Ghost. He W8s immediately followed by other prominent speakers, none of whom spoke in reahty against the bill, but laid great stress upon the proposition set forth in White Ghost's speech. The real sensation of the day came when Bowed Head, an Indian, sprang into the circle and delivered the following urgent ap peal to the Indians: Tou are my friends, and what I am going to say may hurt you. Nevertheless I am going to speak. My friends, I am on a differ ent path from some of the rest of you. I am not one of the chiefs sitting there, but I am a member of the tribune, and I want to make a lead for the children. I am not a bit afraid of you. because you aremen. The only man I am afraid of is the God in whom I believe. I want to save the young generation of this tribe. He that believes the Great Spirit and sweats ior him, I believe in him. I am going to say a few words to you Indians. I am not going to act for my own personal good. I have no children, but I have grand children. I do not wish to impose upon the rights of you chiefs who are sitting in front. No, my friends, I only look at it for myself individually. You know my allotment. There is large, fine timber on it. four stacks of wheat, and I have a sell-binder. I feel that I am at liberty to say what I want to. If anybody is a friend of the great father I thought you chief's were his friends. Now, you chief's have spoken of our fore fathers and their graves upon the hil^ and then I thought to myself like this: When our forefathers died what had they accomplished for us? What did they do for us'' I will tell you what works they left behind them. An old campfire, where even now the grass does not grow and old buflalo lanes that we can see on the prairies. That is all that is left oftheir work. We can see the old stones that they worship ped still piled up. Young men, do you wish your children to go in this way? You chiefs, my brothers, my cousins, myrelatives,Ipray you to have mercy on the young people who are beginning life and have no property to start with. I do not say these words because I seek to gain honor for myself personally. I do not say them because I expect my great father to remember me hereafter for it. Come forward, you chiefs, and set us an example. ["How."] We are waiting for you because you are chiefs ["how"], but if you do not come forward we will go for ward regardless of you. ["How."] White Ghost, you are poor in health and death is waiting for you every day. But I have something deeper than that to say to you. My friends, you may hate me, but I tell you what is good. I know it is good. You may not think it is good, but I know that it is good. I have finished. FOLLOWS HIS EXAMPLE. A young Indian named Williams then walked into the circle and placing his hat gently on the ground said that in the pres ence of older men he uncovered his head. He then made the most feeling and effective speech that has yet been delivered by the Indians, calling on the Indians if they loved their children and wished them to be come educated, made happy'and prosperous to come forward and sign the paper, and then walked bravely up to the table and regard less of threats placed his name upon the bill. At this action the entire mass of Indians sprang to their feet. For a moment a fear ful silence prevailed. Then the friends of the bill, including two chiefs, gathered about the table, and those opposed, seeing the folly of interference, quietly withdrew from the coun cil. It was an imposing sight when Williams walked coolly and quietly up to the table had the first name enrolled, and he deserves great credit for his nerve, having been frequently threatened with death if he carried out his determina tion. About sixty names were enrolled at the council and about thirty more later on at the rooms of the commissioners. The commissioners are gratified with the day's work, and are confident that nearly every Indian on the reserve will come up and sign during the coming week. No more councils will be held, and the work hereafter will be done at the rooms of the commissioners. The commissioners brought their work at this agency to a climax at the evening's council by calling for signatures, which resulted in nearly 100 being secured. A Couple of Fatal Sunday Fires. t*~i At We^t Superior Wis., at an early hour on Sunday morning, fire was discovered in the American house. Before the fire department arrived the entire building was enveloped in flames, and the screams of frantic men and women escaping from the burning building some in only their night clothes, lent horror to the scene The fire was finally gotten un der control and confined to the hotel. The cause was a lamp explosion in a room occupied by Walter Carter, Minch Storm and John Oleson, who had been out the night previous until pretty late and were considerably intoxicated. Their es cape was almost miraculous. The girls who were employed in the hotel were so horrified by the awful death that confronted them that it was with difSculigr t&atr they wen' forced to Igave the doomed hotel. Tht charred bodies of three mettwese found ont of which is supposed to be-that-of Pat Claire a Canadian. The others have not been identi fied. Several men appeared at windows ii the second story, and blankets were held bj citizens for them to jump into,, but they fel back again and it is not known whether oi not they escaped by other means. At about the same hour a fire broke out ir the toy warehouse of E. A. Prior & Co., at Baltimore. Before the firemen could get tc work an explosion of fire works wrecked tht building and causedthe flames to spread with alarming rapidity to the drug house of J. Winkelman & Co., on the north and the haf honse ofM.S.Levy & Co.. on the south. Scarcely had thefireentered the edifice occupied by the drag house when the inside of the building seemed to suddenly drop in. A terrific ex plosion followed and the immense building collapsed. The entire fire department had by this time reached the scene, and as the at tention of the men was concentrated on the building under which their comrades were burned the flames had chance to spread, and spread they did with frightful rapidity. In an incredible short space of time the entire block, running from Lumbard to Pratt street, was a seething mast of flame. A* the drug house the firemen worked bravefy. Holes were cut through the pavement and every effort was made to reach the imprisoned men, but they were buried under a great mass of brick and iron and fierce flames were roaring around the spot. Awful groans eame from the pile, which seemed to make the working firemen put forth superhuman efforts, and, after more than an hour's, work, it became evident that some of the men were alive, and that they were being roasted to death. John Kelly, oi Truck No. 2,. managed to crawl out from the rubbish, and,, of the eight men who entered the building, he was the only one to escape with his life. He was cut and bruised, but his injuries are- not serious. Labor Day. Monday, September 3rd, was the national labor holiday, and in all the larger cities it was duly observed. In New York the organi zations turned out in their full strength, and there were probably not less than 15,000 men in line. Following Marshal Sullivan and staff, who were at the head of the pro cession, came a number of carriages contain ing the Central Labor union's committees of arrangement. The right ofthe line was held by the building trades, the housesmiths leading under Section Marshal James McKim. There were 500 of the housesmiths and as many of the slate and metal roofers. The section contained nearly three thousand workers oi all classes, and fifteen bands of music. A fea ture of this portion of the procession was the marble cutters' display. Several wagons were occupied by sculptors and stone dress ers plying their trade upon pieces of halffin ished work. The German and Hebrew typo graphical unions, leading the printing trade section, next appeared, followed by the bookbinders. Three hundred oyster men, some on foot and some in wagons, pres ented a neat appearance in brand newjumpers and caps. In the baker's section, a cone six feet high on a four foot base covered with ornamented ginger snaps,attracted attention. It was borne on the shoulders of eight men. A six foot loaf of Vienna bread followed. Five hundred brewers escorted the car of Gambrinus and other emblematical "chari ots." Gambrinus held a foaming goblet and was attended by two pages. Each brewer had a sprig of hops in his hat. The printing trades again claimed the column, and Typo graphical Union No. 6, a thousand stifraar, each chapel headed by a band or drum corps, marched by. An immense blood-red flag was carried through the leading streets of Cleveland Ohio, and behind it marched a score of anarchists. This was "labor day," so-called, and twelve hundred men formed in line and with musie and waving emblems paraded the down-town thoroughfares and then with drew to a garden in the suburbs. At the garden the anarchists unfurled their flag and refused to acknowledge the stars and stripes The committee in charge induced them to put their flag away. When the committee men turned their backs, the anarchists seized their emblem of blood and waved it aloft tri umphantly. Immediately they were attack ed by a hundred working men. Theflagwas trampled under foot, and one anarchist after another went to the ground in the fight that continued for at least ten minutes. All the anarchists but five escaped the three detect ives who were present, but those who got away were bleeding and lame and will hardly appear in publie for some time to come. Sncccs* at Crow Creek. The Indian commissioners have left the Crow Creek agency for lower Brule. They have made arrangements for the reception of all the signers who may present them selves during their absence. They leave with the satisfaction of having left behind them an army of active workers among the In dians, who are certain to bring comparative ly every one eligible to sign finally. The list is steadily increasing, and the most gratify ing feature about the result of the work"is that those who are arrayed upon the side of of the commissioners are the most intelligent, industrious and progressive element upon the reservation. In compliance with the request of Chief Dog Back the commissioners held another council. Chief White Ghost and several others delivered speeches, but they simply rehashed their former speeches and reiterated that they were not ready to sign. ChiefDog Black then delivered a good speech in favor of the bill, at the conclusion of which he came forward and touched the pen. A num ber of his friends followed. When Dog Back began speaking. White Ghost and a nnmber of his followers quietly left the circle and were seen no more at the council. The Indians who had signed had requested Judge Wright to deliver a speech and the council therefore adjourned to the headquarters of the commissioners, where the judge delivered the most eloquent and touching appeal to the Indians that has 3«et been uttered. He reviewed their past and present life and what their future would be if they accepted this act. The time had come when their old customs had to be thrown aside and their roaming and un settled life abandoned and the habits, cus toms and characters of the whites adopted. The school is the civilizer and the provision for educational facilities having expired in the treaty of 1860 it was necessary that further provision be made and the act now under discussion did this grandly and com pletely. It furnished them with farms, houses, horses, cattle, clothing and every thing necessary to happiness contentment and prosperity. The speech of the judge had a marked ef fect upon his hearers and they left the circle active workers for the measure. The result of their work is beginning to be noticed in the stragglers who are continually presenting themselves for enrollment. The commission ers feel that they have succeeded and confi dent that with the workers who are so active ly advocating the adoption of the act nearly every signature on there reservation will short ly be placed upon the black paper. The In dians are scattering out to their homes anc when they .are away from*the influence of tht chiefs, who are afraid that the Sioux bill wil depose them, the work will be speedily finishec at this agency. p*i" Martin Voss. aged 60 years, one of th« most prominent farmers of Winona county Minn, was killed while on bis way front Winona to his home in New Hartford. Hh team ran away, throwing him out, and hit skull was crushed, being dead when found He leaves a family well provided for. Wm. J. McCoy registered at the Madisoi House at Middleton. N. Y. from San Francis co. He took laudanum with suicidai intent but took too much. Next morning he shol himself with a Colt's revolver. The ball en tered his left breast and the surgeons taint it just missed his heart. Letters found in hii raom show the act to have been premeditate.1 He will probably die. PETEE SCHEBEH, L-DEAI N— LATH, SHINGLES, DOORS, SASH, BLEmtPI —and all kinds of—i Building Material." ffEWULM, Hnor. NEW ULM, MINN. M.Mullen, PresH. E. Vajen, Vice- Preset T. 0. Rudolph, Cashier. Directors: Werner Bosch, Chas. Wagner, Dr. Weschcke, 0. M. Olsen, E. Q. Koch. DRAFTS,TO ALL PARTS OF EUROPE, AND PAS SAGE TICKETS SOLD. Close Attention iven to Col lecting. FIVE HARVEST EXCURSIONS TO MINNESOTA, DAKOTA, MONTANA, AUG. 21st TUESDAY SEPT.11th and 25th. (OCT. 9th and 23d. VIA THE St. Paul, Minneanolis & Manitoba By. FROM ST. PAUL ANDMINNEAPOLIS AT RATES CHEAPER THAN EVER BEFORE! Points west of Grand Forks in DAKOTA and MONTANA, LESS THAN ONE FARE, no round fcnp rate being more than TWENTY DOLLARS, Including GREAT FALLS, MONTANA. Persons desiring to take atrip through North ern Minnesota, Dakota or Montana for the pur pose of looking over the country, or with the idea of selecting anew home within the bound aries of the GRANDEST WHEAT BELT IN THE WORLD, and an agricultural country suit able for diversified farming, dairy and stock purposes, will do well to take advantage of these rates. For maps and information apply to your home ticket agent, to any agent ot the company, or E. I. WHITNEY, Gen'l Pass, and Tkt. Agfc.. St. Paul, Mmn Cheap Cash Store G$O. jSdoSg, DEALER IN DRY GOODS, NOTIONS, HATS, CAPS, GROCERIES, CROCKERY and OILS. Also Musical Instruments %nd WMJEJELJSM & WIL SON'S latest Improved SJSWING MACHINES. Ul Goods Sold at Bottom Prices SEW ULM. MINK. Empire Mill Co. ROLLER MILL. 24 Rollers and 4 Burrs. We take pleasure in informing the Dublic that we are now ready for bus .ness. The best machinery and all the latest improvements in the manufac ture of flour enable us to compete with ihe best mills in the country. We are constantly buying Wheat,'" Rye, Com, Oats, Buckwheat, At the Highest Market Prices. W all kinds of SHOB.T& AT LOW BATES. Special Attention given to Oiistoi^o. *Wor:fc An extra stone for gi'inding feed. Steam Cornsheller. Wood taken for cash or in exchange Sfapife £ill do. $f^m CA SH PURCHASES ig«&fe .. tnd CHEAP SALES. EUEMK E & mwm, Oa,2rpenters, Builders ancfc^Contractors. Nh W ULM, MINN. Designs and plans made to order and estimates on all work furnished, and contracts faithfully executed. NION HOTEE, WENZEL SCBOTZKO, Propriat^, Mrcrar. ST. N E W W Th only first class brick fire prop! Hotel in the city. with large, airy rooms and an A No. 1 table. Good large sampel rooms for the accomodation of com mercial travelers. Passengers and baggage will be carried free from and to the depot. Rates reasonable. The finest wines, liquors and ci gars at the bar. Bucklen Arnica Salve The best salve in the world for Cuts, Bruises Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Fever Sores, Tetter, chapped Hands, Chilblains, Corns, and all .Skin Erup tions, and positively cures Piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction, or money refund ed. Price 25 cents per box. Sold by C. L. Boos. M. GRATZ DEALER IN 6B0GEEIES and GLASSWARE .Minnesota Street opposite the Congregational Church. NEW ULM, MINN. FRANK FRIEDMANN, dealer in Groceries, Crockery. JStonewara,, Glassware, Notions, Canned Fruit, Flour, etc. All goods sold at bottom delivered free of cost to the city. N E W ULM MINN GEO. BENZ & SONS. &*# Importers and Wholesale Dealers In' K, WINES & LIQUORS, 217 & 219 E. 3rd Str. St. Paul, Minn MODOR MUELLER, MANUFACTURER OF AND DEALER IN WM. FRANK. *froHN BBNTZIH. CottcnwooclPMillsf Custom grinding solicited. WiU grind wheat for (one eigth) or ex change 34 Sbs. flour, 5 fis. shorts and 8 lbs. bran for one bushel of wheat. Flour and feed sold at low rates and delivered a New Ulm free of expense. 'm prices and LV part of V.-jiig !.^K Kuemke's Building, New Ulm, Minn, NEW ULM, MINN. MANUFACTURER OF FINE CIGARS. 8®*Special brands made to order. FRANK & BENTZIN. AUG. QUMSE, HARNESS MAKER ,, —and Dealer in— Whips, Collars, and all oth-¥5* er articles usually kept in a fi/rst-#lass har ness shop. New harnesses made to order andjre pairing promptly attended to. *4 NEW MLM, MINN H.FRENZEL, Manufacturer of '1|fP SODA WATER, J| SELTZER WATER Champagne Cider. Ceat*e Street, New Ulm, Minn