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Your Cistern Out of Order N or Soft Water is scarce^ don't worry yourself for a moment— ro right ahead and use hard water with snd you'll never know the difference. The clothes will be just as white, dean and sweet-smelling, because the "White Russian" is specially adapted for use in hard water. A 5 S KIRK & CO., Chicago. Bnsky Diamond Tar Soap.Be9tted£w** ^:]§HiH21?r|jfi8JiS. N A I]-M' MOCK of ihe Best Patterns leickof Taikriug EsMfcsrai1 PKTKH MOEUKlt, 1'HOF. The goods sire of Foreign anil Domes tii- maim fact lire anil of superior quality %10~ Fit Guarantee'!. I 1 3 I I« I 1 Prop, Pure lieer old in quantities to suit the pun-ha^er. Special attention paid to the i)ottling of beer. CBA8. STUEBE. A larire supply of fresh meats, sau sa-jfe*. hams, lard, etc. constantly on hand. All orders from the country promptly attended to. •Cash Paid for Hides FTBURG Manufacturer of and Dealer in CIGARS, TOBACCOS. PIPES. Corner Minn and Centre Str. AUG. SGHELL BREWER AND MALTSTER N E W I N N This brewery is one of tlv largest establishments of iis kind in the Minnesoi a Valley and isfittedop with all the modern improvements. Keg and bot tle beer furnished an pari of the city on short notion. My bottle beer is especially udv.pted lor iamilv use. .. ... Country brewers and others that buy malt will find to their inteiestto place their oruers with me All order-by mail will receive my prompatten tion, O O S E Manager. H. HANSCHEN. Contractor and Builder. Estimates on buildings or on material and labor, more especially on mason work, furnished on application. Prompt atten lion given all work and satisfaction guar anteed. The sale of all kinds of cement, I lime, adamant (a new kind of hard plast er) atul plaster hair a specialty New Ulm, Minn* "We mean N EW TT\ rn Dress Qoods. £55£TPrices to suit. tisfaction is yours in buying of G. F. DONGUS. Wm. Frank. John Benizin. (SLoiicromoob QHKlitU Custom grinding solicited. Will grind wheat for (one eigth) or exchange 34 lbs. flour, 5 lbs shorts and 5 lbs. bran for one bushel of wheat. Flour and feed sold at low prices and delivered at New Ul free of expense. Frank & Bentzin Dakota flousz* OPP. POST O I E N E W ULM, MINN, 0 lT/ps A' ©eiiei? If rop This house is the most centrally located hotel the city affords. Good Sample Rooms. Sing, sweet it is the twilight hour Thy voice brings rest and peace. And onto thee is given the power To bid all discord cease. Let day fade with its load of sorrows Now is enough for me I care not for the coming morrows. For they may banish thee. Oh, that this eve could last forever. Ambition's sun be set. For with thee near my heart would never The busy world regret. Only count us as Love's immortals: Let each be one in soul Bid Night halt at the western portals And Death collect no toll. Then twilight would be fraught with splendor. Bathed in Faith's golden stream. And each to each all love wo Id render- Sing, sweet, and let me dream. —Flavel S. Mines in Harper's Weekly. THE STUFFED CAT. I was all alone one evening in my study. Do you not know this study? That is natural because I never have introduced yon to it. Perhaps you would not like it. I like it very much—first of all be cause it is mine, and then because I have arranged it according to my tastes. There is a little of everything in it—a colossal writing desk with an infinity of drawers and pigeonholes, a bookcase, soma shelves for books, two tables, one larjje and one small a divan, an arm chair, on the floor rugs and cushions thrown down everywhere, pictures on the walls, a gas lamp in the center. In one corner on top of a column of black wood is a stuffed cat—a magnificent tiger striped cat with sparkling green eyes that seems ready to spring down from its pillar, tired probably of- acting Simeon Stylites. In this den or study, as you please to call it, I pass beautiful hours, day or evening, writing, reading, meditating, smoking and doing nothing. It is here that I retire in hours of the blues, in those hours of unconscious, in stinctive ill humor which one cannot ex plain or justify and which exactly on that account one translates into an ex traordinary nervous irritation. This den is the despair of my wife and the rest of the household because they are positively forbidden to touch, to even move a book or a paper under that pretext of putting into order which re solves itself into real disorder. I will wager that if rny wife, my sister-in-law, my nieces, could arrange my den accord ing to their tastes, turning it upside down, they would be happy. But they do not venture for fear of me. Only when I speak of my study all those feminine lips curl with smiles, disdain ful, ironical or compassionate. It is especially the stuffed cat that jars upon their nerves. My wife absolutely wished to throw him away, give him away, destroy him. I was obliged to de clare to her that such an outrage would immediately provoke on my part a de mand for legal separation pending the approval of divorce by vote of the Italian chamber of deputies. Now that I have presented, so to say, the surroundings, I will go on to relate the fact, the terrible, frightful fact that has taken place in my delicious den and to which I am indebted for the gray hairs that embellish my 36-year-old locks. One evening in the autumn all my family was in the country. I only had staid in town to attend to some urgent work. I was all alone in the house. A wom an came every morning to clean, to sweep and air the rooms and went away after noon. I dined at a restaurant. Now, for some days I thought that I noticed in my study something strange, odd, unaccustomed. It had the same effect upon me as if something were not in its place. I would have taken my oath that certain books had been moved, certain papers had been rummaged. I questioned the domestic, who swore and perjured herself to the effect that, faithful to her trust, she had touched nothing, but had limited herself to sweeping the floor and dusting the furni ture. And no one else ever entered the room. One morning it seemed to me that the stuffed cat, my good cat with the green eyes that I called Tic when he was alive, had been touched. Certainly his attitude was not the same or I was dreaming. Yes, yes, his head was turned another way, and the expression of his face, that of an honest feline, was different from that which I was accustomed to have before my eyes. How in the world had such a strange phenomenon happened? But this was nothing. For two or three evenings, shut up in my study, writing—alone in the large apartment— 1 thought I heard singular noises here and there. I arose from the desk, went out of the study and all through the house, carefully examining every room, stopping now in this one, now in that, to listen. Nothing. The rooms were de serted the silence was complete, pro found. Then I returned to my study and set to work again. But the noises persisted and became more decided and frequent. I would have sworn that some mys terious and invisible being was scratch ing in the walls or forcing some lock. One evening indeed it seemed to me that the noise was just behind me, and I turned mechanically. Well, I would have taken my oath that I saw the cat Tic move almost im perceptibly, and bis eyes gleam brighter, and his back arch, and his bold, majestic tail stretch itself in an act of defiance. But surely it was an hallucination, be cause the cat was still in his place, im passible, and gave no sign of moving fftom his column. All these small things, insignificant an4 extraordinary, at the same time, had im pressed and disturbed me. By instinct, by nature, I don't fancy what I cannot explain. I am a foe to the supernatural, the marvelous, the mysterious. I like to see clearly within and around myself. I, you see, am of a well balanced and sound temperament. Nervousness, mor- bidness and each nonsense annoy^ me and are repugnant to me. J/I And as I think I know myself pretty well, I was surprised and bored by a 3tate of mind so contrary to my habits and nature. Evidently my physio-psy chological system was in a moment of crisis. How could 1 get out of it—be cured? Must I, too, take the first train and go into the country? Perhaps that would te the best way. But unfortunately 1 rould not. I had an important engage ment to supply some work, and I could net run away and leave it for whims of a dreamer fit for a hysterical woman. "Per bacco!" I told myself, "Pay no attention to the thing! Let us be a man. what, the deuce!" And I returned home that evening as usual, after having dined and visited the cafe. I had planned to work hard that even ing, in order to make haste to finish. Having entered the house I made as usual an inspection of the apartment and found everything as before. even a chair out of place. Then I went into my study and lighted the gas, to be gin work. But as soon as I seated myself at the desk and cast a glance upon the manu script where I had left off writing, a marvelous, amazing surprise awaited me. You must know that I was writing a novel—oh. what a novel! Something fine, exceptionally fine! A romance like that surely no one ever wrote. The real and the fanciful, the romantic, the classic, the naturalistic, were skillfully mingled in it. Now that day when I went out I had interrupted the story at a very interest ing point, and the period ended thus: "He burst into a sonorous laugh of scorn he was very sure that the time of phantoms and specters was long past! That apparition then gave him no fear. It must be a trick." I had left it there. Taking up the pen in order to con tinue, with'my good cigar lighted in my mouth, I cast my eyes on the paper, and what did see? Just heavens! What indeed! Directly below the last line written by me had been written one word only: Fool! There it was, ironical and men acing, in Gothic letters, which showed the handwriting of a former age. Who had traced this scornful and mocking word? You can imagine wheth er I remained amazed. I will say even more—I felt an impression of terror. My servant did not know how to read or write. No one had come into the house during the day. Then by whom had the words been written? I grew livid and felt myself shudder. I sprang to my feet. I felt the hair stand on end upon my head and a cold perspiration trickle down my forehead! Tic, the accursed stuffed cat, looked fixedly at me, and his green eyes seemed to dilate and become variegated with a thousand colors. But was that cat really stuffed? Or was he not rather alive by virtue of some witchcraft? All at once I roused myself. I had a feeling of shame and rage and furious, striking with a heavy fist on the writing desk, I exclaimed: "But who is the demon who has writ ten this word? I would like to know him to twist his neck?" If I were to live a thousand years, 1 shall never forget what happened then. I had hardly finished speaking those words when the study resounded with mocking laughter—dry, strident, infer nal. Then the wall opened suddenly, and there came forth a woman wrapped in a great black mantle. And Tic, the ac cursed cat, made a leap from his pillar, and mewing as he had never mewed in his lifetime went to rub himself against that mysterious being. I drew back more dead than alive. Still, I had enough presence of. mind to stretch a hand behind me, open a drawer of the desk and take out a loaded re volver. As soon as I had seized the weapon I"felt safer. I raised my arm and pointed the re volver at that being, with the exclama tion: "Now, we will see who you are!" Alas! Once, twice, thrice I touched the trigger, but the revolver was no longer obedient. The mysterious figure made two steps toward me. The black mantle that en folded her fell to the floor. What a fearful sight! It was not a man nor a woman. It was a skeleton—a skeleton with two lights flaming in its empty, cavernous eye sockets—a skeleton that laughed satanically, while the cat Tic made fantastic and wild leaps. It was—it was Death! In the morning they found me insensi ble in my den. The servant ran to call a physician, who found me in a high fever. My family hastened from the country. I was taken care of, treated and cured. But the fact remains, my hair had turned gray. When I was able to return to my den, the cat Tic was no longer there. My wife had made a coup d'etat and sent it to be thrown into the river. The column had also disappeared. It had been given away, I do not know to whom. My manuscript was, however, still in its place. Only the word "Fool!" was no longer there. Then it had not been written? Still I was very sure of having read it. Who knows? If the cat Tic had still been there, perhaps he could have told me. But poor Tic was there no more. Then, whafr am I to think? What shall I believe?—Translated From the Italian For Short Stories. Curious Offer of Marriage. A piece of evidence some tune back in a Quebec breach of promise case was a cuff with an offer of marriage -written on it. One night, while the defendant was holding the plaintiff's hand and whispering fervid words, he popped the question on the smooth linen at her wrist. Oh, my love, my queen of May, The light of youtli is gone. Thy balmy tresses gather gray. Thy rosy lips are wan. Will thy true eyes alter yet And their nuptial smile forget? Oh, my love, will Time deceive. Will he wither true love so? There is more in love, believe, Than the silly nations know. More injfeuve, when bloom is dead. Than the rose wreath round his head. Oh, my love, and if thou need Harbor when the north winds blow If thy tender footprints bleed On the flints among the snow. Love will raise a-sheltered cot, Where the ice blast enters not. Oh. my true love, we are wise When snow whitens on our land Underneath the cloudy skies We will travjfl hand in hand. Since we have not far to go To our rest beyond the snow, Lord de Tabley. Individual Freedom. There is greater individual freedom in I Not Great Britain and her colonies than in N O I E O I S E N E N S America. For instance, every Sunday small knots of men may be seen in the principal London parks, giving expres eion to the most varied sentiments on matters political, social and religious. and language painful to the great niajor ity of the people is constantly being used. I No restriction is ever placed on such ex pressions of opinion, so long as they are uttered on sites designated by the police, where there can be no obstruction to traffic or danger of intimidation being exercised. In America, however, no meetings of any kind are permitted in these open spaces. In Central park, Ne'w York, no one ', may even pick up a leaf without, danger I of fine or imprisonment. No one may I walk on the grass unless he is playing a piaintiti adfiVcUred *tto game. I barely escaped arrest for walk- ^""PiL™:!™-:1* ing on the carriage drive. The police I march $ '.out with their batons out— often swinging them—and appeal- to re gard themselves more as the masters than the servants of the people.—Earl of Meath in Nineteenth Century. Wendell Phillips' Power. The writer heard Wendell Phillips once on the nobility of the North Ameri can Indians, and while the spell of the speech lasted he was almost asnamed of himself for being white instead of cop per colored. One secret of the power of Phillips with an audience was that he was always definite, certain in his state ments and position. If he had privately doubts about a course or a policy, he never exhibited them when on the plat form. He very well knew that tfeere is nothing an audience' likes so little in a speaker as indecision and beating about the bush. There was no haziness in what he said. His subject stood out be fore his hearers as clearly cut as a cameo. —Charles Dudley Warner in Harper's. The Minister Agreed. During the war an Ohio minister was on his way south as an emissary of the Christian commission, and he boarded an Ohio river boat at Portsmouth. At the first landing below, the mate "turned loose" at the deckhands. He cursed their eyes, their hearts, their lubbery feet, their laziness, their whole line of ancestry from Adam to that hour. Final ly, exhausted with profanity, he turned to the shocked minister with the query: "Don't this beat hell?" "Yes, sir, I'm afraid it does." And the good man retired to his cabin.—Cleve land Plain Dealer. Experiments With Durable Woods. In some tests made with small squares of various woods buried one inch in the ground, the following results were ob tained: Birch and aspen decayed in three years willow and horse chestnut in four years maple and red beech in five years elm, ash, hornbeam and Lom-named bardy poplar in seven years oak, Scotch fir, Weymouth pine and silver fir decay ed to a depth of half an inch in seven years larch, juniper and arbor vita? were uninjured at the expiration of the seven years.—Chicago Times. The Political Chameleon. When the chameleon had to explain his changes of color, it is recorded that "Then first the creature found a tongue." The political chameleon differs from the natural one. He is all tongue, and he uses it, while exhibiting in succession all the hues of the rainbow, to prove that he has never changed his color at all.—London Saturday Review. Why the Dnke Sold Bis Estate. The Duke of Westminster, who has scandalized the English aristocracy by selling Cliveden, his ancestral estate in Berks, to Mr. Astor, excuses himself by saying that he has a family of 10 children to provide for. The sale adds $50,000 a year to the duke's income. Times Have Changed. Mrs. Smythe—Before we were married you didn't use to groan the moment 1 sat on your knee. Smythe—I know it, my dear, but you didn't use to stick a millinery bill under my nose then, either.—Life. The letters in the various alphabets of the world vary from 12 to 202 in num ber. The Sandwich Islander's alphabet has the first named number, the Tar tarian the last. While Eyraud was being prepared for the guillotine he said: "Don't bother me about religion. Tell my wife and daugh ter to do the best they can. That is all I wish to say." Remember that proper cultivation and nse of the voice not only add to its beau ty, but prevent it from becoming pre maturely old, worn and cracked. The largest cut stones in ttie world are in the Temple of the Sun at Baalbec. Many are more than 60 feet long, 20 feet broad and of unknown depth. She was sentimental or shrewd good circulation, bnt perception of it is enough to keep that article out of wash. Perspiration of the feet is a sign of a sign of vulgarity. cure. Neatness is a sure '«*j&?- SUMMONS. JK? State of Minnesota, County of Browi.! 59 District Court ninth Judicial District. Henry Pfeiffer, Plaintiff. —vs John Hohner,Hcinrich Kruse,and Ernst Fricke, the unknown heirs of said John Hohner, Heinrich Kruse, and Ernst Fnc 'ke and also all other persons or pr.rties un known claiming any right, title, estate, lien or interest in the real estate described, in the complaint herein. Defendants. The State of Minnesota to the above named defendants: Y.ou and each of you arc hereby sum moned and required to answer the Com plaint of the Plaintiff in the above entitW, •action which is tiled in the office of t* Clerkot the District Court of the N'rHs* Judicial District, in and for the County*? .Brown and State ofIinnesota,and to set*--' a copy of your answer to the s=aid Co n plaint.on the subscriber at his office in tlie City of New Ulm in said County, within twenty days after the/service of "this sum monsuporiyou.exclusiveofthedayof such service, and if you fail to answer the said complaint within the lime aforesaid, this plaintiff in this action will apply to the Court for the relief demanded in the com plaint. Dated Tune 5th A. D. 1S93 JOS. A. ECKSTEIN, Plaintiff's Attorney New Ulm, Minn. State of Minnesota, County of Brown.—s.s. District Court, Ninth Judicial District. Henry Pfeiffer Plaintiff. VS- John Hohner, Heinrich Kruse and Ernst I Fricke. the unknown heirs of said John I Ho'aner, Heinrich Kruze and Ernst Fricke end also all other persons or parties uri known claiming any right, title, estate, lien or interest in the real estate described in the complaint herein.—Defendants. Notice is hereby given, that an action has been commencedin this Court by the above named Plaintiff against the above named Defendants for the purpose of de termining any adverse claim, estate, lien or interest in "and to the real estate nerei-s Hfter and in the complaint herein describ ed, claimed by said defendants, or either of them, and to have the same adjugdeil void also to have said defendants and ail persons or parties claiming under ,r through them forever barred from claim ing and from any anil all claims, right, vitle, estate, lien or interest in and to the *aid rea estate orany part thereof advert* the pl'aintiif herein and t' have said be the owner in fe. to the pessessiun .* aid premises and real esiate and to hav.t the title thereto forever Quieted in him. The premises affected by said action situated hi the County o." Brown und Slav-... ofMinnesuta, and described as follows: ivot No. one (I) of Block No, One hundred and twenty-four (r-'U, Lot No. Eleven ":'i Block No. One hundred r.nil twenty-lv '125),L,ot No. Nine VJ) of Block No. Or hundred and forty one (III], all north Center street, also Lot No. Thirteen (1U) c: Block No, Ninety (%)),Lot No. Twelve U--')..c Block No. One hundred and forty-two' 142) all south of Center Street all of tut? foregoing being in the City of New Ulm in said County according to the plat of said City on file and of record in the officii the Register of Deeds in and for said Countv. Dated Tune 5th, 1893. JOS. A. ECKSTEIN, 31 Plaintiff's Attornev _• ...,„- Mew Ulm, .Minn. SUMMONS. State of Minnesota, Count of Brown ss. District Court, Uth Judicial District. Henrv P. Crone Plaintiff. VS. Thomasjoch or Jock the unknown heirs of said Thomas Joch or Jock and also all other persons or parties.unknown, claiming any rij4iit,t'ttle,estate, lien or interest in the real estate described in the complaint herein. Defendants. The State of Minnesota to the above named Defendants. You and eacli of you are hereby sum moned and required to answer the com plaint of the Plaintiff in the above entitled action, which is filed in the office of the Clerk of the District Court of the Ninth Judicial District, in and for the Countv of Brown and State of Minnesota and to serve a copy of your answer to the said complaint on the subscriber at his office in the City of A'ew Ulm in said Countv within twenty days after the service of this summons upon von, exclusive of the day of such service and if you fail to ans wer the said complaint within the time aforesaid, the Plaintii? in this action will apply to the Court for the lelief demand ed in'said complaint. Dated July 10th A. D. 1893. JoS. A. ECKSTEIN. Plaintiff's Attorney, New Ulm, Minn. NOTICE OF LIS PENDENS. State of Minnesota, County of Brown ss District Court, Ninth Judicial District. Henry P. Crone Plaintiff. VS Thomas Joch or Jock, the unknown heirs of said Thomas Joch or Jock, and alsi all other persons or parties, unknown, claim •ngsny ri.trht, title,estate lien or interest in the real estate described in the com plaint herein. Defendants. Notice is hereby given, that an action has been commenced in this court bv the above named plaintiff against the above defendants, for the purpose of de termining any adverse claim, estate, lien or interest in and to the real estate herein after and in the complaint herein described claimed by said defendantslor either of them and to have the|same adjudged void also to have the above named defendants and t.11 persons or parties claiming under or through them forever barred from claim ing and rrom any and all claim,right,title, estate, lien or interest in or to said real es tate or any part thereof, adverse to the plaintiff herein and to have said plaintiff adjudged to be the owner tn fee simple and entitled to the possession of said pre mises and real estate and to have the title thereto forever quieted in the plaintiff,his heirs and assigns. The premises affected by said action are situated in the County of Brown and State of innesota, and are described as follows: Lot No. thirteen (13) in Block No. one hundred (100) South of Centre Street in the Citv of New Ulm in said County, according to the plat of said City on file and of record in the office of the Register of Deeds in and for said County. Dated July 10th 1893 JOS A.ECKSTEIN Plaintiff's Attorney, Statn T6 New Ulm Minn of Minnesota, County of Brown J-ss. I Probate Court, Special Term, June 23d 1893. In the matter of the estate of Elizabeth R. Crandall, deceased. Letters of administration on the estate of Elizabeth R. Crandall, deceased, late of the County of Cook and State of Illinois, being granted to James N. Crandall of Chicago, Cook County, Illinois. It is ordered that six months be and the same is hereby allowed from and after the date of this order, in which all persons having claims or demands against the said decease-1 are required to file the same in thePrpbate Court of said county for ex amination and allowance or be forever barred It is further ordered, that the first Mon day in February A, D. 1894 at 10 o'clock A. .M. at a general term of said Probat^Court, to be held at the Probate Office in the Court House in the City of New Ulm in said County, be and the same hereby is ap pointed as the time and place when and where the said Probate Court will examine* and adjust said, claims and demands. And it is turther ordered, that notice of such hearing be given to all creditors and persons interested in said estate by forth with publishing this order once in each week for three successive weeks in the New Ulm Review, a weekly newspaper printed and published at NewUlm in said county. Dated at New Ulm, Minn., this 23rd day of June A. D. 1893. By the Court, E. P. BERTR AND, [L. S.l 29 Judge of Probate C. A.HEEBS. Architect-^ Builder. Plans and Specifications furnished and contracts taken for all classes of building YNegligesave ou can money by Shirts at Crone Bros, keep them in every size. &,' W. I_ DOUGLAS S3 SHOE HOTWIP. Do yoa wear them When In nee try pabh} Best?In thenext world.d #5.00 44.00 &>•£.. $*50 FOR LADIES $2.00 #1.75 FOR BOYS I-75 If you want a fine DRESS SHOE, made In the latest styles, don't pay $6 to $8, try my $3, $3.50, $4.00 or $5 Shoe. They fit equal to custom made and look and wear as well. If you wish to economize in yourfootwear, do so by purchasing W. L. Douglas Shoes, Name and price stamped on the bottom, look for it when you buy W. I.. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mas*. Sold bj H.LOHEYDE. otieetc IfablfQ. REMOVAL FROM OI.I» s^T-vsr. I um no prepared to do business in my new iruUer.v (second d'.or north of Dakota House.) I now do woik from mincttc to life size. All woik uiiiilied in Pjiiv-inn Enamel, second loiione. 1 now have fine looms, new outlit (life size) and am prepared to pic .**" all customers. I also 'ake orders for crayon, water and oil color work. Special imitation ex tended to wedding parties, hil«-, babies, and people with costumes. Plesi^e call and see new goods, rooms, etc. We will treat you the best we know how Call and have your photo taken. J. F. Cuow HLL. eler icrjerep E A E LATHS SHINGLES, DOORS SASH, BLINDS -And all kinds of- Building Material. N E W MINN BIKGHAM BROS. E A E S I N Laths,Shingles,Doors, Sash and Blinds, Lime, Adament and Coal. 0 0 Lowest Prices always. 0 0 New Ulm, Minn. Vr)\ot) Jlotel. WENZEL SCHOTZKO, Proprietor Minn. Str. New Ulm Minn. The only first class brick Hotel in the city. fire-proof Importere|and Wholesale Dealers in Wines & Liqors- 117 & 119 E. 3rd St.1 St. Paul Minn. Commercial Hotel, Chas. Stengel Pro. Opposite Depot. I will serve a hot and cold lunch every morning, and at the same time th- iest line wines, liquors and cigar ill al ways be found on hand. I will endeav or to accommodate everybody to the best of satisfaction, hoping to always ex tend and improve the place. CHAS. STENGEL. NEWULM MINNESOTA. John Hauenstein Brewer A N .1 have bought out the shop of Jos. Seifert and to the gen' I extend an invitation to coi look' at my stock of light anc1 nesses, whips, collars horse bl: your We 55 Malster Our brewery is fully able t© fill all orders. New Ulm' 'Jb :.-sS equipped and Minn. New Harness Shop. in goods •ublic' and -ybar- ~E