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tar ^THE NORTHWEST. 1Events Summary of the Important of the Week in the Northwestern States. I N N E S O A The Farmers' alliance has decided to build large warehouse at Lake Benton. During the recent session of the state tfe8 iWh.- su- *s|ne court 269 decisions were handed *,iitfwh. VV'-'^V Several cars laden with farm" implements ere derailed near Rochester and badly Fred Corwin, of Lake City, while carelessly (handling a revolver, accidently shot himself through the hand. The report that the South St. Paul stock yards had been sold to tbe new syndicate is Without foundation. G. M. Cowre, station agent at Maynard, jdeserted WB wife and family and eloped with the wife of a neighbor. Burglars ruined the safe in the postofflce -at La Crescent, but were frightened away be .'Jt&Jj--* they could secure any plunder. ^Ji The pu *.+offlce at Cold Spring was entered by burglars and..a quantity of postal cards, stamps and money laken. The Mille Lacs Indians are moving of their, own accord from the Mille Lacs to the Yellow 'Earth reservati on. A son of George Herber of Farmington was drowned in Prairie lake while bathing. iffis age was about sixteen years.? A boy named Frank' f'Lohstreter, living jnear Hokah, had one of hit* feet so badly Crushed by a mowing machine as to render amputation necessary The postofflce at Sauk Rapids Vas entered Jby burglars the safe blown to pieces and Jobout $50 worth of property destroyed. 'Only a small amount of booty was secured. The independent school district of Duluth 5 has decided to issue $100,000 4|£ per nea*. school bonds for the purpose of evrectlll£ ad" ditional school buildings. According to the assessors' retuKns there ^arein Freeborn county 9,123 horses\15,783 jcows, 14,296 other cattle, 13,881 hd|S8 a B,522 sheep. N Herbert G. Stout, an ex-postal clerk,\ •victed of robbing the mails at the June 1»erm ioi the United States court at Winona,, a -sentenced to states prison for three year"8* The Blue Earth County alliance has a -jphased for its members 30,000 pounds of toest manila binding twine at 13% cents Per ipound. The usual price is 18 cents, The large barn of Peter E. Hanson, iv tniles southeast of Litchfield, with all its cPn" jtents, including seven horses, was tota''? destroyed by fire. The loss will reach several thousand dollars. Mary Swanson, aged 14, living sev\m miles from Rochester, dropped a lighted natch into a can of gasoline, and her c!otn" -|ng catching fire, she was burned BO friglii? fully that death resulted four hours later. At Oronoco, as August Templeman was pulling down a hay shed, it fell to pieces 'Unexpectedly and the flying timbers struck him and his son, a boy of 6 years. The boy was killed and the father's leg broken. Private Martinson, of company K, Still water, who did brave work in rescuing peo ple from the Sea Wing wreck, is confined to Iris bed in a very le-w condition as the result of exposure to the elements. The large barn of Luther McCoy, at Rochester, was destroyed by fire, together With its contents of hay, grain and farm ma chinery. The fire is supposed to be of in cendiary origin. Public meetings are being held in £'ari bault county to protest against the rebent resolution of Mie county commissioners to Appropriate $25,000 of the surplus money in (the treasury for the erection ol a new court -house. '-.:.? -.'.:: N O A O A The State bank, of Lisbon, has been ihcor porated with a cash capital of $75,000. Thereis talk of starting a democratic paper at Grand Forks for campaign purposes. From a bunch of sheep costing less than $900 a farmer this year received $471 worth of wool and $510 worth of lambs. Plans for the new Manitoba d^pot at Grand Forks have been accepted and the \y work of building will begin at onee. The building will be entirely of Btone. yj The North Dakota Editorial association will leave Grand Forks on an excursion trip through Montana und the Yellowstone Na tional park. Preparations are being made to open the Indian industrial school at Fort Totten. It is expeeted that the school will have about 250 pupils to begin with. The little daughter of Mr. Derrig, of Ma pleton, fell head first from a necond-story window, striking the pavement and sustain ed fatal injuries. SportBmen are ahxibusly awaiting the date when prairie chickens will be ripe. Reports from various parts of the state indicate an enormous crop of young birds. Rev. H. G. Mendenhall, formerly editor of the Grand Forks Plain Doalejr, has accepted a call to the pastorate of the Greene Avenue Presbyterian chucr-h, Brooklyn N. Y. ylt The original package venders of Bismarck are protesting against the paying of city li cense for the sale of liquors. They contend that the city is exceeding its jurisdiction by passing ordinances conflicting with the state constitution. .' At Minto the 7-year-olfl daughter of Otto Evans was bringing a cow from pasture and tied the rope about her waist. The cow be came unruly and knocked down and dragged her several hundred yards, injuring her so badly as to cause death in an hour. Mecca temple, NoblesJ of the Mystic Shrine, of New York, have accepted an invitation of El Zagel temple, of Fargo, to attend a pe rception in their honor in that city, after L* which the New Yorkers will visit the bonan za wheat fields and other places of interest. At the Fargo Republican convention Hon. M. N. «1 ohnson of Lakota was nominated for congress onthe first ballot by a vote of 161% to 138% for Hansbrough. Capt. W. H. Burke of Fargo was then nominated by ac clamation f# governor and Roger AUin of Walsh connty for lieutenant governor, vt Dr. Elstad, a veterinary surgeon of Grand Forks, has mysteriously disappeared. A week ago hb was called to attend a sick *3b.orse at Bast Grand Forks, since which time aUtraceofhim has been lost. His friends •cannot account for his absence, as he was doing a lucrative business and had a host of friends. North Dakota has iust been divided into two internal revenue districts, the dividing lino ^running from the southern boundary line of Grand Forks county directly west on county :j lines to the Montana line. Maj. Warnock, .' .v'. of Jamestown, who has heretofore had the entire state as his district will hereaflier have charge of the southern district, while A. Haigght, of Gilby, has been- appointed as deputy collector for the northern district,,, with headquarters at Larimore. f'.'vt/?? "iv'V'^Y S O A O A -J Reports froir -all sections indicate that the corn crop will LJfthe largest ever raised, y^-i Pierre has a burglar that takes the bread. He broke intoa bakery one night and waltzed off with forty-five loaves. Hereafter rations will be distributed at sub-agencies so that no Indians will have to travel morethanforty-five miles for supplies. The little ehild of Silas Carmen, living near Mound City, drank from a dish of fly poison with fatal effect. A good vein of coal has-been found at Eearl ing at a depth of seventy-eight feet. A shaft will soon be sunk and the surrounding country supplied with cheap fuel- A Mitchell man, who has traveled exten sively over South Dakota, estimates that taking the state as a whole, wheat will be about 25 per cent, short of a good crop, oats 50 per cent, and flax above the average. By the opening.of of the Sisseton reserva tion, which is expected to occur before the present congress adjourns, abont 600,000 acres oiHhe finest farming land in South Dakota will be thrown open to settlement. Col. Allison, the noted army scout, who has lived many years among,the Sioux, says there is no danger of trouble in the reserva tion country and tharthe reports of "out breaks" are sent out by the cattlemen, who want the country for grazing purposes. Two Hamlin connty men, named Town and Arnson, were the other day adjudged in sane. The former lost his reason, it is said, because he drank too much of the essence of alcohol, and the other because he could not get enough to drink. One of Uncle Sam's blue coats, finding life monotonous at Fort Sully, spiced things a little by eloping with Miss Maggie Jordan. The elopers only had a half hour's start, but managed to reach Pierre and have the knot securely tied before the pursuing party put in an appearance. During *t »ain°+orm near Groton the other day, two men named Rigga and Eppard took refuge in a barn to escape the element*. A puff of wind came along, lifted W building off its foundation, carried it some distance and dashed it to pieces, leaving the poor men to seek shelter elsewhere. Talk about the wonderful growth of things! A few weeks ago the Pierre Free Press saw an eight-foot water snake in the Missouri river at that point, and the other day the same snake arrived in Forest City and was measured by the editor of the Press, when it was found that it had grown to the length of twenty-two feet. The Indian police are fast catching on to the ways of their metropolitan brothers. At the Crow Creek agency the other day a man named La Croix "'sassed" an Indian cop named Whipper, when the latter seized a base ball bat and struck the former over the head, fracturing his skull. Whipper has been arrested and may ''lose his buttons." WISCONSIN The La Crosse Times tells about 'kt "horse who ate a huge chunk of ice left by the deal er in front of a saloon. Mathew Peterson was arrested at Western Union Junction for selling still-fruit without the government stamp on it. Mrs, Hackbarth, of Wausau, is missing. She went out with a party of berry pickers and wandered away from the rest of the party. The residence of 0. B, Guenther, living four miles north of Port Washinnton, was struck by lightning recently. Mr. Guenther's son was made deaf by the shock. George Brown, under arrest at Eau Claire for jewelrv robbery at Waveriy, Ia„ was proven to be the wrong man. A damage suit is now in order. A. D. Kerr, employed by the Bay Shore Lumber Company, at Ashland, captured a deer which started to swim across Chequa megon Bay. He pursued the animal in a skiff and run it down. At the Mendota hospital, at Madison, there are 528 patients, at the Wauwatosa hospital 269, and at the Northern hospital 605—375 male and 229 females. In county hospitals there are 1,712 inmates, making the total in the state 3,104, which is an in crease of 173 since October, 1889. There are 300 more male than female inmates. The third trial of the Salvation Army cases, at Eau Claire, close with the convic tion of Capt. Emma Albertson, the jury so finding after an half-hour's deliberation. She was fined $5 and costs, amounting to about $40. The determined, though patient, little captain will refuse to pay her fine, and an appeal will be taken to the circuit court, Miss Albertson giving the required bonds. Adolph Berg's $300 trotter, Doctor, saved his life, perhaps, at Eau Claire, th«\other night. Berg was driving along a lonely sec tion of the town when a man stepped out of a clump of trees, grabbed the bridle of the horse, and whipped out a revolver. Berg gave the animal a touch of the whip and away dashed the frightened animal, throw ing the highwayman to the ground. County Clerk Fowler of Richland Center, died a month ago and took the combination of the vault along with him. Since that time experts have been working night and day on the door with drills and all the available burglar's tools in the town. There is $600 in the vault, besides some valuable papers, and the chances are that if the officials dp not get the money out soon some enterpris ing and talented crook is likely to come along between two days, and blow the door open and walk off with the contents. IOWA Judge Linehan, of Dubuque, has grant ed injunctions against fifty-five saloons, and the prosecuting attorney was allowed $1,125 in fees. A Dubuque policeman shot a stray dog and the bullet, glancing from the pavement, struck a boy in the head, but/ortunatelydid not injure him seriously. X. r'-i i'-- M. Kirk, conducting an original package house at Imogene for Omaha parties, wap tried before a jury for violating the state law, convicted and fined $150 and costs. Pension Agent Marine, of Des Moines, esti mates that when all the claims have been adjudicated the new pension lav will increase the state pension roll 15,000, bringing it up to 45,000. A strong flow of gas was strack on the farm of Charles Turnbloom, near- Carson, Pottawattamie county. When the vein was struck, at a depth of 117 feet, a terrific roar ing noise emanated from the bottom of the well. :£V Mrs. Henry Luth, of Ute, attempted suicide with a revolver. She fired one sh^t at her self, but her aim was bad, and. before she could fire a second shot the weaponj was taken away rom her. Domestic troupe, the cause alleged. ._,/ \f During a-beamy rainstorm at Sibley re cently fish fell from the clouds and million! /^f them were found in a small pond.. Upon examination it was f)undthat they were a fish called axalatt. found only in Old Mexico. The theory advanced is that they had been taken up in a waterspout and carried all that distance-. \-iS%-M^H A peculiar and distressing case- is-that of A. D. Faulon, of Gilman. He has been con fined to his bed for some time with rheuma tism and paralysis, and the other day while suffering with a headache closed his eyes to shut out the light. When he-opened them again his sight was gone. $*- •'. ,1-**^* '•*a Dar Eells, df Battle Creek, had an'arrow escape from being crushed to death the other day. He wa» working around the machinery of the mill when his pants caught in the shafting. He had the presence ofmind to. grasp a post and hold on tillthe buttons gave way, when his pants left him in a very sudden manner. He escaped with slight bruises. "Here and there, in the- older portions," says the Des Moines Newsr "the cen, sus shows a slight falling off ia population in the past ten years but, in nearly every locality, there are slight gains, and in, the west and northwest and in all the cities there are largt gains. There is everv reason, to anticipate a net gain of 20 per cent, in the entire state." A in is of he Tele:- "I remember," said one of the down-town old-timers at a luncheon, "when we first had the telephone. It was much more of a curiosity then than the phonograph is now. I used to wait for the bell to ring so ^s to have an excuse to howl in the thing. One day it went off and I was on hand promptly. I discovered that the talker at the other end of the fine was one of the most prominent so ciety ladies of the South Side. I also discovered that she thought our of fice was a butchershop, She wanted to know if Mr. the butcher^ was in, and I said that she had the honor of talking to him then. "What do jqu mean,' she asked, by sending irie such a roast, of beef as that of yesterday?" ,/,? ?,/ "I asked her what was the matter with it and she replied that it wasn't fit for a dog to eat. I spunked up at this and told her bhat I had had more trouble about her trade than all the balance of my customers com bined. I told her that she not only did not kn^w a good piece of roast beeff^he she saw it, but that sh\. did not know how to prepare it, and that she didn't know how to eat it after it was pre pared. Of course, she rung me off, and I went over to my desk and rolled over and laughed. In a few days I had occasion to go into the butcher shop milady had been talking about, and while waiting for my order I said to the butcher: 'Does Mr trade here now? mentioning the name of the husband of the lady who had talked to me over the wires. 'No, sir,' the butcher replied. 'He came in here and said that I had in sulted his wife over the telephone. I tried to explain, but he wouldn't have it. So I have ordered the con founded thing to be taken out of here. I was afraid of it in the first place and told the fellow that it wouldn't work. It was a humbug.' "I looked up at his telephone and saw that he had a chunk of leaf lard stuck in the transmitter and a kidnev tied under the bell. He said he had had the thing stopped up until it could be taken out. I suppose I ought to have told him the truth, but I couldn't summon the nerve. Besides, I enjoyed the tongue-lashing which I gave the lady on the South Side, but I always feel guilty when I meet her."—Chicago Herald. Did Yo Know It? Webster's eloquent description ol the British Empire is very reliable, says the Great Divide, but we doubt whether it is generally realized that we, too, have a dominion on which the sun never sets. It will hardly be believed, perhaps, without an exam ination of the maps, that San Fran cisco, instead of being the west line of this dominion, is only about mid way between our eastern and western limits and yet it is a fact that the furthest Aleutian isle acquired in our purchase, of Russian America is as far to the west of that city as East port, Me., is to the east of it. Be tween the northwest limit of Alaska there is a break of a few degrees, but with the slightest reduction our ter ritory extends through 196 degrees of longitude, or 17degrees morethan half way around the globeN Hence, when the sun is giving its goodnight kiss to our westward isle, on the confines of the Behring Sea, it is already flooding the fields and forests of Maine with its morning light, and in the eastern part of the State is more than an hour high. At the very momemt when the Aleutian fisherman, warned by the approach ing shades of night, is pulling his canoe toward the. shore, the wood chopper of Maine is beginning to wake the forest echoes with his stir ring music of the ax. g^jj I he Calliope...,** There is a kindly old gentleman in Springfield to whom the trumpet like notes of the .calliope or steam piano on circus day bring a strange medley of triumph and grief. This man is the inventor of the instrument, J. C. Stoddard who lives on the Ad vent camp ground. He never tires of telling how forty years ago he kept the common in Worcester black with people all day long the glorious fourth with his novel instrument, and how he was swindled out of the profits by a stock company. Hehas in his possession a characteristic ar ticle ty N. P. Willis, describing**his sensations on first hearing the calli (Mass.) Home stead. S ise «fflMrffBB38IONAL 1 Eesume of the Proceedings of Congress During the Past Week, iff wsi SENATE. .-, .-tr^^s^-w Among tbe amendments reported by the committee on Indian appropriations and agreed to were the following: Inserting an item' of $150,000 to pay the Chippewa Indians of Minnesota the award for damages sustained by them on account of the building of dams and reservoirs on Lake-Winnebagosbisb, Cass lake and Leech lake. Inserting an item for $100,000 for mills,, agricultural implements, etc.-, and one 160,000 for surveys, allotments, etc., for tfoe Chippewa Indians of Minnesota— both sums to b* reimbursed from the pro ceeds-of the sales of Chippewa lands. Another provision of some interest to Minnesota, and particularly to the people ol North Dakota, was a bill which Senator Casey introduced, and which was.passed several montha ago, providing for the re *aoval of the Turtle Mountain Chippewas to the White Earth reservation in Minnesota. HOUSE. Th* appropriations committee of the housenon-concur in all material amendments to the sundry civil appropriation bill made by the senate, including that striking out the appropriation of $750,000 for the irri gation project and askjor a conference. Th# fight on the Indian bill was upon th« policy of the present Indian commissioner in abandoning contract schools with sectarian societies for the education of Indians. Sev eral provisions in the house bill for continu ing these schools under Catholic supervision were stricken out by the senate committee. The entire Northwestern delegation stood solidly for the mission schools, and against the policy of Commissioner Morgan. Sena tor Washburn did not vote with them on the proposition. HOUSE. \-Lfi X:^'y:Ul The house proceeded, after a short prelim* inary wrangle, to vote upon the committee amendments to the bankruptcy bill These amendments are principally verbal and in formal in their character, and having been disposed of an amendment was adopted en forcing the laws of the states giving- wages for labor a preference. The Torrey bankruptcy bill was then, passed with unimportant amendments—117, to 84. Congressmen from Minnesota, North and South Dakota, Montana and Washing* ton voted in the affirmative. ',• SENATE. Senator Call introduced a resolution foi an investigation to determine whether or not elevator and transportation companies are combining against farmers. The Conger lard bill, which has been pe titioned for by many farmers in the West, will be taken up next week and probably passed. The representatives from the South ern states will make B.. fierce opposition to the bill, as it interferes with cotton seed oil lard, extensively metnuiactuied in the South. Ho "l&^'fV The honse postofflce committee agreed up* on a substitute bill in lieu of a number of pending bills adverse to lotteries and order ed it roj: urted to Ytfe house, he substitute piohibits lottery circulars and tickets, Hate: of drawings, money orders for purchase ol lottery tickets or newspapers containing lot* tery advertisements or drawings from being earned in the" mails or delivered by carriers, and a penalty of a fine not exceeding $5,000 and imprisonment not exceeding one year is to be imposed upon any person depositing such matter in tbe mails. The house committee on invalid pensions ordered a favorable report upon a bill grant ing a pension of $6,000 per annum to the widow of the late Gen, George B. McClellan. Mr. Mitchell offered a concurrent resolu tion, which was referred to the committee on finance, stating that the United States would hail with approbation any recipproeal arrangement, by treaty or otherwise, be tween the government of the United States and the governments of all or any of the South American or Central American states, whereby there shall be admitted to the ports of such nations, free from all national, pro vincial, municipal and other tariffs or taxes, the products of the United States as may bi agreed upon but declaring that it is not the sense of the United States that in any such treaty or reciprocal arrangements the ar ticles of foreign wool or hides, in any form, should be admitted free into the ports of this country. The senate passed bills granting pension! ol $2,000 a year to the widows of Generals Crook, McClellan and Froemont. The hous.e amendment concurred to the original package bill were nonconcurred in by the senate, and conference committees were appointed by both houses. The house committee on banking has or dered a favorable report on the bill intro duced in the house by Mr. DorBey for the re tirement of national bank circulation. Mr. McKinley of Ohio, from the committee on rules, reported a resolution directing the speaker to appoint a committee of five mem bers to investigate the charges brought against Pension Commissioner Raum by Rep resentative Cooper of Indiana. Adopted. There is growing evidence that both the Blaine and McKinley Republicans will con Bent in the end to adopt Senator Fierce'* amendment to the tariff bill, which, while re taining the advantages of free sugar, opens the way to reciprocal benefits for our farm products. Senator Vest presented to the senate th« remonstrance of a large number of persona of St. Louis, protesting against the passage of the federal election bill. The house committee on appropriation recommended non-concurrence in the senate amendment to the sundry civil bill increas ing the amount for surveys of public landi from $200,000 to $600,000. The house ac cepted the report of the committee, but it ii understood that the matter was merely form al and that the house would accept the in crease after conference. The recommenda tions of the committee were agreed to with out much friction, the bone of contention— the senate irrigation amendment—being passed over until the other matters were dis posed of. ,^ ^V SENATE *^i "t,+ The'tariff bill was taken up by the senate— the pending questiom being on Mr. Mcpher son's amendment offered to reduce the duty on acetic or pyrnligneous acid. Mr. Jones of Arkansas spoke in opposition to the bill, which heeharacterizedas the most radical and extreme measure of^protection ever presented. Mr. Gorman said that Democratic sena tors wanted a free diseussion of the bill and nothing more. They wanted it considered intelligently. But the Republican senator! wanted to rush it through the senate at railroad speed. In the house Representatives Oates ol Alabama offered for reference to the com mittee on rules, a resolution embodying an editorial from the Natioaal ^Economist, as organ of the Farmers' aljiancek, declaring that tbe silver bill has been passed throngs congress by bibery and corruption, and that the interests of the- house demand that the truth or falsehood of Jke charge shall be established and provtduqr. that a committee of seven member* he appointed to investi gate charges. '.SK '28roun% (So.lSci'nh. O.H. CHADBOtnRJTi, President*. t?.B. BOS4, Casbfto COP Minn anJ Centra Sirs. N:^YULM, MINN. OBU««tioBiM?«l!ba«!n«Mp*rf«Tniai t» ksaktav promp^r *ttaado4 te. W Individual Responsibly, !$500,90Q_ Pi* Eagle Rotter Mill Go.^ ,„ Has -Capacity of1 _\ '*. 600 Barrels Per Day. Our flour a a be beat NEWULM,, MINNESOTA. Obtained, and all PATkNT JttVisltiJCSH av tended to ior-JfODRRATE FEES. Our office is opposite the 9: S. Patent Office, and we can ob tain Patentt in less time than those remote froai WAMUKQTON. Send HOVEL, DRAW IK PHO'TO of invention. We advise as to patent* Ability free of charge and we make HO CMJ.M.QM UNLESS PATENT 18 SECURED. For circular, advice, terra* and references t» actual client* In. your own State. County. City ol OppotiU Patent OJfiet, Wathtngtn, If. a Bingham Bros. DEALERS LATH, SHINGLES, BOOKS, SASH AND BHNB. Lime, Cement and Coal Lowest prices always* Opposite Railroad Depot, NEWULM, SfTXl FRANK FRIEDIANN, dealer in Groceries, Crockery, Stoneware J" Slassware, Notions, Canne Frait, Flour, etc. Ali goods sold at bottom prices and delivered free of cost to any part of the city. "\'1 7 ,J N E W ULM, MINN GEO. BENZc© SONS. Importers and Wholesale Dealers la WINES & LIQUORS. 217 & 219 E. 3rd Str. St. Paul, Minn PF -DEALER I N LATH, SHINGLES, DOORS SASH, BLINDS, —and all kinds ©J—- Building Material. NEW ULM, MINN. M.Mullen, Pres't. E. Vajen,rtee-Prts* 1 J. 0. Budolph, Cashier. si W IV':\ Directors:"v .„' ,' Werner Basch\ Chus. Wagner, Dr. Weschcke, 0. M. Oteen, E.G. Koch*^ DRAFTS TO ALL PARTS OF EUROPE, AND PAS SAGE TICKETS SOLD. Close!Attention Given to Collecting. Bacslen Arnica SaVve 7 $ The best salve in the wosid for Cn», Bruises Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Fever Sores, Tetter, chapped^Jfcroda, Chilblains, Corns, and ali Skin, Erup ions, and positively cures PiJvjs. or nc OHV required. It ie guaranteed to give ytrlect satisfaction,or mocey refund d. Price 2$ cents per box. Sold DV O "W Fr. lufderKfeid^ Sfttpufactarer of* W S Bric for 'd$%i ornamental fronts. NEWBLM, MINN. «y Fire, Well Building ft&d SteopI* Have the heat of shipping facilities and will pay prompt attentioa to mail •rdere, %NEW ULM, MINNESOTA. H. Kudolphv liANUFAOTUlt*R OF 4 BXALXB a Boats and Shoos! IOnn.Ja3dN.strs.. N«w THM, A large assortment of aaen*s aafu boys' boots and shoes, and ladies' MM if children's shoes constantly kept* «er *p| hand. Custom work and repsiiiM, ,^ .womntlj attended fco.^JT3cI,f7'Vf^ John Hauenstein, BREWER MALTSTER Our brewery Is fully equipped and able to ii* ill orders. Mr. F. Grebe haaeaargs of the bottling estafe iiabmeat. Jew dm, ffinn. Manufacturer of and Dealt* CIGARS, TOBACCOS, Cor. Minnesota and Centre streets. Jno. NeurHaji, Dealer in rTzrzr O O S Hats, Caps, Notions, Groceries* Provision^ Crockery and Glassware, Green, Jrle and Canned JTrutts* etc, etc. I will always lake farm flrodata la exeaamgt lor seeds, sad pay the highest market tries Cer es kinds ef paper rags. Ia conaeot!9« with my store Ihn«e a Brat-ota* talooa furnished with a splendid bMtarC teM*: ea* jC •yeastomera will always And good liquors aaf dears, asd erery forenoon a eplsadld laaea. •II goods purchased of me will be deUrered say part of the city free of oost. iClnneaota Straei, Now Pirn, Miay JhisKmeat 9 M. EPPLE, Prop'r. MonnwoiA ST. NEW fcLMINB! BvdsTslgned satires totefora the people* Naw Ulia and vicinity that ha liaiire-establish/ market and is sow prespared to we» on hit eld customers and friends with only Ust best fresh and cured meats, sauMirss, lard aod ew ery(Mna usually kept in a first-class market Tit sigeut market price will be paid for FAT CAS TLS, HCDJM, WOOI., ETC. M. E TTVOLI AND JOS. SCHMUCKER,Prop NEW ULM, MINNESO & Pure beer Bold in quantities to suit/ ...... purchaser. Special attention paid to the bottling oi beer. THE DIRECT THROUGH LINE O CHICAGO®fiSf: •. AND ALL POINTS E A S Is so operated as to meet the requirements et through and local travel, providing feat throw*.* trains with closeconnections for &}1 ST. PATJJL,MINNEAPGij['s, fel SIOUX CITY, COUNCIL HLWPS,*' t$m OMAHA, DENVER, SAN FRANCISCO, PORTLAND And all poii%ia h* MONTANA, WASHINGTON, OREGON&l CALIFORNIA and BRITISH COLUMBIA. A A E S E E I N A N I N I N A S sre roo on all through trains. O O N I S S E E I N A S oa overlandtraias to California and Oregon. E E A I A S on the Denver Limited. For time of trains, tickets and all Information, apply to Button Agents of the Chicago & North Westers Railway, or to the General Paesenaea Agent at Chicago. Jfr* W. H. NEWMAN, J. *'&*<• 3d Vice-President. ii ,1/ WHITMAN", General Mw^ga?,, Gen-'i Pass. &Tk'^ Ajr*.,