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Hfl$ m\ Tie Strength of the coffee you buy adds to its value in the cup. Lion Coffee comes to you fresh and of full strength, always in sealed, air-tight packages. Bulk coffees lose their strength, deteriorate in flavor, and also gather dirt. Uniformity, fraahnaaa and fall strangth are Insured to users of LiOn Coffee. $3.00 Modern improvements in the manufac ture of shoes have cut the cost in two. Ten years ago, five times five dollars would not have bought such shoes as we are now selling for 3 00, We have high priced shoes to sell, but you won't wear so many of them if you carefully examine our Crossett $3 shoe. Come and see about it. Tii Zcllc Rips repaired free of charge. Not the only Grocer who sells June poods at moderate prices, but we believe we give more pure goods for the same mouey than any of our competitors* For Example: Cream Cheese 7 Brick Cheese?edro T....17c Boiled Ham I 25c 25c Sweet Pickles£**...20c Apricots Dried Beef BUcei per lb 1 6 1 25c DriinflC A-l °f fancy, small i| rlUlltJd size, per lb... 4C Try a pouad of Red Front Brand coffee put up in one pound packages, per pound 25c. Ju leceived a full line of Decor ated English Tei Po»s. Prices right. THE RED FRONT GROCERY, Geo. Hauenstcin, '5 tlepiione id. •$,»$•«£•«$««$•.$.•$••$»•$•*$'•»"$'•$"$•*$••$••$*•£••$••$••$••$••$*•$*•$••$• Call at the WENEEDA BAKERY AND RESTAURAN FOR Fresh Breads, Biscuits, Cakes and Cookies. Hot rolls and pies every morning. Kot coffee and lunch served at all hours of the day until 12 o'clock at night. Oysters, raw, fried or stewed. Give us a trial and you will come again. •$(.{M$M{M$M{»a$M$M{^{a^{M{M{M$»$**{**$MiM$M$* $MSM$M$M$° Coughed I had a most stubborn cougb for many years. It deprived me of sleep and I grew very thin. I then tried Averts Cherry Pectoral, and was quickly cured." R. N. Mann, Fall Mills, Tenn. Sixty years of cures and such testimonyas the above have taught us what Ayer's Cherry Pectoral will do. We know it's the great est cough remedy ever made. And you will say so, too, after you try it. There's cureineverydrop. Three sizes: 25c, 50c, $1. All draggtsts. ••^MMaaaBMBBSSHaHaaaMassMasaBaMsaBsaBBaaaaaajj Consult yonr doctor. If he saya take It, then do as he says. If he tells yon not to take it, then don't take it. He knows. Leave it with him. We are willing. AVER CO Lowell. Man. NEW ULM REVIEW. WEDNESDAY, MAR 25, 1903. Henning Criticised. Prof. Bosky, who takes an interest iii subjects such as Dr. Henmng lectured on at Turner hall Monday evening con tributes the following criticism It was a complete disappointment to ihe earnest thinker who was looking for enlightenment. Only one luminous pcint was raised and that was that the definition of light should not necessari ly be taken as identical with the gener al belief tiiat light originates from burn ing bodies, like the sun, for instanced The speaker tangled himself up in contradictions from the beginning. He said, "The world is making progress" and in the same breath he states that that people today are given more to buying dime novels than to leading such progressive literature as Darwin. He admits that the Jewish biblical story of the creation is ^identical with the older Babylonian story, and goes even so far as to say that a still older race of people had also a story of The This will Interest Mothers. Mothers Gray's Sweet Powders for Chil dren, Cure Feverishness, Bad Stomach, Teething Disorders, Break up colds, move and regulate the Bowels and Destroy Worms. They never fail. Over 30,000 tes timonials. At all druggists, 25c. Sample mailed FwEK. Address, Allen s. Olmsted. Le Roy, N. Y. 14 Little Needs at Little & Cost* Lemons, in A per dozen. Large navel orangea OQP per dozen *-«....*"« Cranberries, "7ft per quart Honey, OCp 2 cones for ...LOU Extra fancy prunes, On per lb Ou These are real things which are a bargain at the price, roc Phone 93. 'S. The best and cheapest way to send money. Notice the difference in cost between Bank Monev Orders and Ex press or Post Office Orders. 1 COST OF AMOUNT. Bank Draft P.O. Order $ 5.00 10.00 35.00 55.00 100.00 Express Order 5c 5c GRAND SPRING OPENING TUESDAY. MARCH 31, 1903. 5c 8c 5c Oc 10c 10c 10c 15c 20c 30c 15c 20c 30c FOR SALE AT THE STATE BANK OF NEW ULM.ory You are invited to view the ex qu isite beauty of our Spring Millinery Display and secure, as no doubt you can, something suitable to your taste, face and your purse. Every fain ous centre of style has contributed something. There are bats from Paris, New York and Chicago and our own models, second only in *price. MRS. B. FOLLMANN. creation covering the Bible history. It id astonishing that inspite of theTillman admission of such creation theories!, leaving no doubt about their genuine ness, the honesty of old savants and they knew about the creation, is doubt ed and the„ modern scientist still try to belittle the very foundation of their doctrines. Mr. Henning said absolutely nothing about the forces, the power which was behind any creative act, which alone is inseparable from the subject. What gave the impulse tor the creation—for any creation? Dr. Henning meutioned the prophet, Amos, the courageous man who called attention to the corruption in public life, through cultivating the materia instead of the spiritual side of life. Ho much superior in intellect must Amos have been, when he could muster cour age to oppose existing rules, 3000 years ago and have it known today. Who is the man of this age whose name and voice will be heard 3000 years hence in the same respect! Dr. Henning mentions the struggle between the upper and the under waters (Timat vs. Marbuc) and states that to end the struggle, "a bolt was put be tween them." Who put the bo't be tween them? The "between" is the fir mament between our planets and other planets. He mentions that the germs of life eome from this water, Loin the ocean so created. He says nothing about intelligent life from whence comes that? He does not say that in telligence started with ignorance^&ut he admits that nothing can be lost. After constructing Buch a solid foun dation, namely, the identity of the ear liest creation theories as a result of the researches and investigations of modern science, Mr. Henning jumps again into the unknown and says, "The days of faith are past, the light of modern science leads you to surer light than the light of ancient tradition which these same scientists so persistently use in the construction of their own theories. That Mr. Henning ridiculed the church was in bad taste when he so contradict ed himself. The times are such that we have to use tolerance. Thought, today is rapidly developing, and we are on the verge of overthrowing many old, pte conceived theories. Tbe intense sti us? for an existence in this great, living nature, leaves many with little time to think on subjects of this nature, and we help here only through a spirit of kind ness and love towards each other. "Li»ht" was the only "ideal" held out bv Mr. Henning worth striving for What is light to a tired coal miner com in4 home from work? What is light to me, in the full beat of summer? If I size up "light" as Mr. Henning undoubtedly puts it, from the viewpoint that the oldest known creation theory is identical with the biblical theory and the theories of modern science, then I cannot possibly find the connecting link to the authority which inspired him to say that "faith is vanishing." Mr. Hen ning seems to confound church and re ligion. He also talks of progress and admits that three thousand years ago they knew as much or more than we do He does not say a word about the influ ences which hinder most people from seeiner light he says only we shall in due time see it. Who? His pleasing address was a fine shell around a wormy nut and I doubt if any listener got any enlightenment on a the which demonstrates itself in reality every day in our lives with every new birth. It was a thinking being which formed my creation and it was a thought of a superior being which created the body on which my oody lives. As wholesome as I consider such lec tures, I should think opportunity should be given for asking questions of the lec turer at the close of the meeting.4! philosophers who reported to us what on tbe question. While the senator's ad dress exceeded the bounds of reason and was so bitterly uncompromising, it shows that there is a reason for the feeling that exists in that section of the United States, and if it is quieted or even abated it will have to be done by the people ©f the south and it is doubtful if they, with all their knowledge of the colored man will be able to solve the question. People in this northern country have no conception of the feeling that exists there and when they do awake to the condition that the has imposed on the south by reason of the fifteenth amendment, which Sena tor Tillman has so bitterly denounced, it will be to discover that the whole theory is wrong. Snch men as Mr. Till man do the cause of the white man in the south no good, and if the negro ever dominates the south as he will some day, if he is given all the privileges to which he is entitled, it will be to the exclusion of every white man, more because of this bitter opposition than for any other reason. It is impossible that a nego will permit a white man to rule over him when he has the power to have one of own color, and when the time comes it will either be the complete domination of the negro or his total dispersion. There will never come a time in this country when the negro will have the full rights and benefits that accrue to tbe white citizens m'any considerable numbers. Dr. Henning overlooked the meaning of Tiamat (»he woman, "Earth"and Mar bue, the father, "Light".) He had notnoith courage to draw the conclusion that the intercourse ofboth caused spirit. By what right does Mr. Henning, or the scientists who speak through him, question the authority of the Jewish story of the creation when he admits that of the Babylonian. Could there be any stronger areument for the form er than that the Babylonian is older and the two are identical with one that is still older? Should we not rejoice that through the Jews we became acquainted with the true theory, which has come down to us through 3000 years. Had it not been for this we would now behis getting our first lessons of the creation through Babylonian discoveries. The fact that we have an account of the cre ation from the Jews proves that they were smartest, which reached its climax in the appearance of the great philoso Christ among them. ED. BOSKY.' THE STOMACH Is THE MAN/*" A weak stomach weakens the man, be cause it cannot transform the food he eats into nourishment. Health an strength cannot be restoied to any si man or weak woman without first storing health and strength to the sjbm ach. A weak stomach cannot ingest enough food to feed the tissues afnd re vive the tired and lun dovn limbs and organs of the body, Kodol Dyspepsia Cure cleanses, purifies, sweetnes and strenghtens the glands and membranes of the stomach, and cures indigestion, dyspepsia and all stomach troubles. Eug A. Prefferle._^r^T^^ Growing put of the visit of Senator to Minneapolis where he de-• livered a lecture on the race question in one of the Baptist churches, the Tribune of that city has a most sensible editorial TJie drying up ol what was once the lajfee lake called Swan lake and the lviding of it iuto farms may be a good things for the farmers in the immediate vicinity, but that in connection with the same condition that prevails with other lakes all over the state is one of thej-jjl worst things that can happen to theBjB country. The ditching and draining of these lakes is working an injury to thej"R| state that will never be overcome. Peo ple wonder why it is that tbe lakes dry u.p and the streams are running low. It is simply because the natural waterways that have fed these places, from the formation of the country, are obstructed by man, and no other provision made. Man can never improve on nature with any certain degree of success, his at tempts have always proven to be more or less of a failure, and more frequently dismal failures. The building of rail road grades and of wagon roads and the ditching of low places in the farms, thus diverting the water into new channels, is the principal reason why many of tbe lakes are going dry and the seasons in this state are each year becoming more and more uncertain. The drying up of a body of water as large as that once represented by Swan lake means the taking out of the air a large per cent of moisture, and when it is considered that it is only one of the many lakes that are disappearing it cannot long be wonder ed why conditions in this state are changing, Tbe small lakes are almost as important to the state as the forests, and perhaps more. Piano Contest. Following is the vote cast for the pi ano at L. J. Buenger's store. It is the sixth count and the Lutheran church has the strongest showing* Lutheran church 13220 Catholic Church .. 11770 Turnverein 6986 Congregatioual church 1536 Forester lodge. Haimony Camp A. O. U. W. °ublic school Horeb church, Cambria St. Joseph's verein Hanska school Dr Martin Luther College. Woodman Friedens church West Newton C. O. St. George church Turner Frauen Verein Arbeiter Verein Methodist church I 32 54 3 19 14 14 31 19 31 155 3 34 4 6 10 Episcopal church 130 Total 34,071 Dyer Bros. Piano Contest. Following is the result of the votes cast in the contest for the Dyer Bros, piano: German M. E. church 11772 Catholic church 3152 Lutheran church 888 Congregational church 125 Turnverein 1032 Frieden church St. George Foresters Conrtland Evangelical church... Bernadotte church High school Wtfpdman Blank ballots As a result of the early rain which came before the frost was out -of the ground, added to the wet season of last year, the sloughs and low places are fill ed with water and it looks as though much of tbe land that has been culti vated on many of the farms would be unfit for cultivation when the season arrives for sowing grain. There is more water standing on the ground than has been noticed for several years. fJS? OUR RyCS Mre certkiiifyf ira*Appreciated You will also need new paper for the walls of some of tbe rooms. Come in and see the new papers that we are offering. Some of the newest and handsomest designs. The best that the market affords at the lowest possible prices. We will not be un dersold by any house in Hie city and we challenge comparison in prires and goods. 4 4 4 4 0 You cannot afford to buy anything in the line of furniture or dtcorntions of any kind without fir&t seeing what we have to offer. One of the noteworthy points of this store i? its «ohd reliability. People who come here in response to our printed announcements find the advantages we offer—our high qualities our low prices, our splendid assortments, our many conveniences—are facts—not theories. Because of the prevalence of facts in this establishment our customers come to us in constantly increasing numbers and our firm adherence to facte is the best guaranty that could be offered for our merchandise. Yes, appreciated by evefybody.' The reason is that many 1 times a rug is more pre ferable than a carpet. They makechouse clean ing easier. & A rug is a complete design in itself, therefore (they present a more cosy and artistic aspect which is more pleasing to the eye. A large percentage of people are buying rugs everyjyear. We offer you a most complete line of Good Wearing Rugs in all styles and sizes. Our prices are within reach of all. N L.J. BUENGER, THE NEW FURNITURE STORE. iSee here, young man== "I bought this can of coffee from you and it is absolutely worthless." jg~§ "Can't help that, sir." |g "But you guaranteed the can." iggi "Exactly, but I didn't guarantee the coffee—couldn't, its one of the SJI fff cheap brands, but not in price. Itfz ism Wife—"I advised you to buy SB I Pfefferle's Bulk Coffees. I They are always tresh and right. Cost no mote, but are one hundred QH per cent better." mM HB You don't pay for the can, but receive honest r* value. Our customeis like them, oui competitors g£g fear them. Prices 12£, 15, 20, 25, 30, 35 and 49c BS a pound. Why pay 30 to 35 cts for coffee when ngg jr^j you can gel just as good coffee at our store for 20c ^Bj R. PFEFFERLE, Don't forget tbe Sideboard ticket The Pure Food Grocer. Egg Phone 77* John H. Forster. As the spring season approaches you will want to do something in the way of cleaning house and this means that you will have to have new car pets. We are offering some excellent new designs in carpets and rugs. Furniture, Wall Paper, Carpets, Rugs, Etc. Undertaking a Specialty. John H. Forster. We were fortunate enough to secure a number of choice corn-fed beef cattle and these being only about 14 months old are termed"5 "Baby Beef" cattle the beef of which is in enormous demand at fan cy prices in all large cities. ^7 We have concluded to give the people of New Ulra the advantage of this purchase, and so have decided to £e*»p these cattle for home consumption. Jf The first of this "Baby Beef" will be on sale, Saturday,March!4th, 1903, at reasonable prices. We invite all lovers of good meat to try this meat as one trial will be enough to convince you to be a S tomer of our*. All other fresh and smoked meats and sausages at IS our market are of the very best quality, at reasonable prices. |f S SStuebe'frModel Mea Marketer 1 A ijfe**s &>? I