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Wi^^w e**,, REPRESENTATIVE MEN ON THE WORLD'S FAIR Wha Distinguished Statesmen and Others Sa of the Educational and Inspiring Exposition at St. Louis. The public utterances of distinguish ed men who have visited the world's fair have but one note, and that of emphatic praise. Here are some of their comments: Hon. John Hay, secretary of state: "I have never seen nor heard of anything so fine." Hon. Leslie M. Shaw, secretary of the treasury: "Any father of a bright boy can afford to send him to the Fair simply to study any one of at least a thousand ex hibits." Hon. Charles H. Grosvenor of Ohio: "A visit of ten days by a man of ordinary aptness and appreciative capacity to the Fair is almost equal to a postgraduate course in a university." Hon. Benjamin B. Odell, governor of New York: "St Louis has been badly mis represented by accounts which say that her weather is unbearable. The Fair is wonderful." Hon. George C. Pardee, governor of Cali fornia: "The governor of the Golden State, who has spent all his life within her bor ders, finds that he knew only a little about his state until he came to the Fair and saw all her varied products assembled together." Hon. Albert B. Cummins, governor of Iowa: "The Louisiana Purchase Exposi tion is on the grandest scale of any expo sition the world has ever seen." Hon. Richard Yates, governor of Illi nois: "The more I see of the Exposition the more I enjoy it." Hon. Fennimore Chatterton, governor of .Wyoming: "I wish the Fair the greatest •uccess. It certainly deserves it." Hon. Franklin Murphy, governor of New Jersey: "It is well worth coming from New Jersey to see even a small part of this Fair." Hon. A. B. White, governor of West Virginia: "I cannot speak too strongly of the greatness of this Fair." Hon. William J. Bryan: "The Exposi tion is an unparalleled wonder." Hon. John Sharp Williams, member of congress from Mississippi: "The most wonderful thing of its kind." Hon. Hoke Smith of Georgia, formerly secretary of interior under President Cleveland: "I am highly pleased with the Exposition and believe it to be one of the triumphs of modern civilization." Hon. Perry Belmont of New York: "In magnitude and beauty the Fair is wonder ful. It is worth coming a long distance JH6n. Daniel J. Campau, chairman of the Michigan delegation to the Democratic national convention at St. Louis: "It Is positively sinful for parents to fall to bring their children to see the Fair." M. Paul Dupuy, editor of Le Petit Pari sien of Paris, France: "I admire the Ex position for its immensity, its spirit of the sublime, its general beauty and its com pleteness." Prtnoe George of Bavaria: "I have never seen anything prettier than the S Louis World's Fair buildings when outlined at night with their millions of electric lights." Hon. Louis E. McComas of Maryland: "The greatest Fair in the world," Hon. John F. Dryden of New Jersey: •The people have no idea of the greatness of the Exposition. Every American should see it." T. P. Shants, president of the Clover Leaf route of Chicago: "/The Fair is a big success and will continue to become a greater success as it progresses." WAGE EARNERS AT THE FAIR Prominent Men Planning to Help Workers 8ee the Great Exposition. iWage earners of America~are to see the World's Pair by tens of thousands under the auspices of the National Civ ic Federation. A new bureau of the Federation has just been established at St Louis upon the World's Fair grounds. Back of the movement are Grover Cleveland, David R. Francis Andrew Carnegie, Cornelius N. Bliss and others. Plans are making to have a vast number of the wage earners of the United States see the Worlds Fair, the most glorious spectacle of the age and the most influential factor in the education of the American citizen. The bureau is in charge of Miss Ger trude Beeks, secretary of the Federa tion's welfare department, of which Mr. H. H. Vreeland, head of the street railway system of New York city, is chairman. The bureau headquarters is in the east end of the Palace of Trans portation, on the ground floor. The Ex position management is in hearty acr cord with this movement on the part of the Federation to induce the large manufacturers and other employers of labor to provide ways and means for the wage earners of America to visit the Exposition. President Francis is displaying personal interest in the un dertaking by affording the Federation every facility for the consummation of its efforts, and in this connection he has directed Theodore Hardee, assist ant to the secretary, to co-operate with Miss Beeks and Ralph M. Easley, chairman of the Federation's executive council, in every possible way. The Exposition management has also equipped this bureau with clerical as sistance and a full supply of World's Fair literature. The bureau will be used as headquarters for all wage earn ers coming to the Exposition under its auspices. The aim of the Federation is to make it feasible for the largest pos sible proportion of wage earners to vis it St. Louis and see the World's Fair. It will see that they are met at the de pot by responsible persons and con ducted to suitable lodgings, where they will be treated fairly. There will also be furnished, free oi charge, appropriate itineraries indicat ing the points of Interest to be seen within a limit of one week, which is about the average time each party will spend here. It will also indicate the objects of special interest to various craftsmen In their particular lines, so that they may devote as much time as possible to the objects of peculiar interest to them. These and many oth er efforts will be made to help an wage earners to enjoy the benefits of this great Exposition comfortably and at an ixpense within their means. j-,,««!.,WfiSfe.t •as** PHILIPPINES AT WORLD'S FAIR Complete Exhibition of Island People and industries Covers Forty-seven Acres and Is Independent oi Larger Show. Not even in the heart of Manila city could there be found forty-seven acres of Philippine territory as interesting as that amount of space covered by the islands' display at the World's Fair. Here is an exposition within an ex position, a little wheel that revolves Independently of the larger one encom passing it. Scores of buildings are filled with ex hibits, native life is depicted by as many different villages as there are tribes on the islands, military drills are given by Philippine troops, and con certs are rendered by native bands. For its amusement features the Philip pine exposition has the humorous Igor- SOUTH ENTRANCE PALACE OF IITBEBAII ARTS, WORLD'S FAIR. rote, who dines on dog meat, and visitors are entertained by Visayan actors and actresses. Nothing is lack ing to make the show complete. The Administration building is a rep lica of the government offices in Ma nila, while the Art and Education building reproduces in miniature the cathedral within the walled city, even the mellowed tints of age being faith fully rendered. A section of the an cient but still serviceable town wall has been reconstructed to serve the dou ble purpose of a gateway to the show and a museum of arms and war relics. The other main edifices are types of Filipino homes, being built of undress ed timber, bamboo and rattan, with thatched roofs and broad verandas. Then there are the tribal villages nestling under the trees, some of the houses perched high up among the boughs, others on piles above the wa ters of the Arrowhead lake, all of them actual dwellings fashioned of native materials by native workmanship and illustrating the manners, customs and pursuits of their occupants. Here are women weaving a coarse cloth on a rude hand loom, others making bas kets, others tending irrigated fields of rice. One group of men are in village council, trying an offender according to their tribal laws others are slowly moving in a circular dance to the thump of tomtoms and the clang of brass gongs others, again, are smelting iron by the aid of a primitive but most in genious bellows, the constituent parts of which are a bamboo tube and an air tight mop of feathers working therein like the piston of a syringe. And these are but a few of an almost endless va riety of life pictures. The ethnological problem Is a some what complicated one but, although there are no fewer than sixteen races represented among the village dwellers, the scouts and the constabulary, each race speaking its own dialect and fol lowing its own customs, all may be roughly classified into four groups— the true aboriginals or non-Malays, the pagan Malays, the Christian Malays and the Mohammedan Malays. The first are the dwarf Negritos, with dark skins and woolly heads, wearers of scanty raiment, proficient in the use of the bow and poisoned arrow, a race of nomads and forest dwellers, pagans pure and simple. They live in their own stockaded village. Next to them are the Igorrotes, whose origin is traced back to the first wave of Malay invasion. Here, again, we have scanty clothing, amounting almost to nudity, but copper colored skins, long wavy tresses, pleasant fea tured faces and fine physiques, even though the stature be small. Among these pagan Malays are the head hunt ers and the dog eaters. They are sav ages, yet have their code of laws and a knowledge of several primitive indus tries. The Christian Malays, produced by the second wave of invasion, are rep resented by the Visayans, a tall and handsome race, dressing well, living in pretty homes, skilled in weaving, dye ing, basket making, hat making, wood carving and other- handicrafts, musi cians of no mean merit, the one group of natives who came early and thor oughly under the influence of the early Spanish settlers. Very different are the Monos, who swept Into the islands from the Malay peninsula last of all, bringing with them their Mohammedan religion, also a knowledge of gunpowder acquired with the Koran from the Arabs—fana tics like their teachers, pirates. Wood thirsty, treacherous and vindictive fel- -^t'W'. .:, ^im^k^^y^^k^^M wmm •?h ^i &*$&"**&', Iowa, ever at War affldfig themsel*e* and with the tfthole outside ^vorld. De spite their ferocity they are a clever race, dress handsomely, have their sul tans and their slaves and are expert seamen, while long continued pillage on the high seas has surrounded them with many of the luxuries and conven iences of western civilization. The buildings of Agriculture, Forest ry and Fisheries show all the varied natural products, also the extremely primitive processes as yet In vogue, while in the Women's building we are Introduced to a number of native man ufactures, including the beautiful fab rics from the jusi, banana and pine apple fibers. This information is collat ed in the Building of Commerce, where a unique and most effective method of exhibiting is followed. In one hall are samples of all the articles produced for export, among which manila fiber, of course, holds the chief place of prom inence, while in a second hall are all the manufactures from every country that are imported and find a ready market among the populace. Thus the business man gets a dual lesson. He sees what he can profitably take from the islands, and also what he may profitably send to them. When it is added that a large number of represent ative Filipinos have been brought over to visit the Exposition and study Amer can business methods and manufac tures, it will be recognized that great benefit both to the islands and to the world at large must result from this work of mutual enlightenment. CONCERTS BY MASSED BANDS Prizes Aggregating $30,000 to Be Dis tributed at the World's Fair. Never were musical events in Ameri ca planned upon such an elaborate scale as those of the World's Fair. A series of concerts will be given by competing bands in contest for prizes offered by the World's Fair. These contests will take place in Festival Hall, Sept 12 to 17. Nine cash prizes, aggregating $30,000, are offered for the successful bands. The prizes are divided so as to give to the organization scoring the highest number of points $3,250 $2,*500 will be given to the band scoring the second highest number of points and $1,500 to the one getting the third highest num ber. The above division is made for banda in Class A, which consist of twenty members. In the class $10,000 will be given in prizes—first, $4,500 second, $3,500 third, $2,000. Class C, which includes bands of thir ty-five members, will enjoy the division of $12,750. For the organization scor ing the highest number of points a prize of $8,000 has been named. The second prize is $4,000 and the third $2, 700. Bands employed by the Exposition are not permitted to contest AH play ers must be bona fide members, and each musician must have been enrolled at least three months prior to the date of the contest Each band must send to the bureau the name of its members and a nominal entrance fee. Festival Hall concerts by massed bands will be given at 7:30 each day during the contest in which all contest ing bands will take part under the di rection of a distinguished conductor. All bands entering must agree to play one concert in addition to the compet ing concert and masged concerts. A separate programme has been pre pared by the Bureau of Music for each class, and each band will play through the full programme of its class. The numbers in ajl three programmes are by eminent composers and are chosen with the view of bringing out the qual ities of the bands performing them. The list of composers includes Wagner, Gou nod, Offenbach, Verdi, Saint-Saens, Bi zet Strauss and Leoncavallo. WEATHER AT WORLD'S FAIR. Cool Nights and Delightful Indian Summer to Be Expected at St. Louis. Usually the warmest month of the year, July proved to be one of the most pleasant of the World's Fair season, the average temperature being 67 de grees, a record lower than that made by either Boston, New York, Philadel phia, Cincinnati or Chicago. The weather bureau records show that the temperatures in St. Louis during July were just between the extremes re corded at New Orleans and St Paul, cities located at great variance. August in St Louis is a month of cool nights, and September and Octo ber are the most delightful months of the year. It is that period known as Indian summer, when the foliage and birds linger to challenge the coming winter. Nowhere on the American con tinent is there a spot more delightful than the World's Fair city, a garden of blooming flowers and spraying foun tains. St Louis, like all cities, experienced several hot days during July, but her highest temperature recorded was 93 degrees against 94 degrees registered by the thermometer at Chicago. On the same day the mercury rose to 96 degrees in Philadelphia, and scores of heat prostrations were reported from New York and Boston. The relative humidity shows St Louis to be about normal. Assuming absolutely no moisture in the atmos phere to be zero and absolute wetness to be 100, the relative humidities for July, taken from the records of more than twenty years, Boston shows 70.6, New York 72.2, Philadelphia 68.6, Cincin nati 64.6, Chicago 66.9 and St Louis 6&S. The same degree of heat in two. places, with different degrees of hu midity, would cause It to seem the, hotter at the point of greater density. St Louis may therefore rightly claim' to be a summer resort this summer,! positively one of the most comfortable and delightful places on the map. '.^*£..*«#&* IP%^|' "•i.1 oemta For some time to come the greater portion of the skim milk at creameries will be used as food for the lower ani mals. How to treat it so as to have it returned to the farmer in good condi tion is a very important question. Pos sibly I cannot do better than give an outline of the method followed in the dairy department of the Ontario Agri cultural college, Geelph, Canada, says Professor Dean of that college. The whole milk is heated by a Dan ish pasteurizer to a temperature of 180 to 185 degrees F.J|The milk flows di rectly into a cream separator, where the cream and skim milk part compa ny. The skim £dlk drops into a small tank, and from there it is elevated by means of a rotary pump to a galvan ized iron skim milk tank in the attic of the dairy building. Before the milk goes into the pipes some water is first pumped through in order to cleanse and wet the pipes. The pipes are also washed after the milk has been pump ed. This is allowed to flow out of the skim milk tank before any milk goes in. Once a week a strong soda solution is pumped through the pipes to cleanse them. As soon as there is sufficient skim milk for the patrons to begin drawing out they insert checks into a skim milk weigher, which delivers eighty-five pounds of skim milk for each 100 pounds of whole milk sent to the creamery. This hot skim milk is run directly into the patrons' cans, and we request them to set the skim milk in tanks of cold water as soon as they reach the farm and to keep the ves sels clean into which the skim milk is put. By following this plan we have been able to furnish our patrons with a quality of skim milk nearly equal to hand separator milk. .Champio Bnll A magnificent specimen of the Guern sey breed is the bull Prince Rosendale 4291, says American Agriculturist, from which the illustration is copied. He is at the head of the herd of Clay ton C. Taylor of Erie county, N. Y., and was bred in Wisconsin by Charles L. Hill. At the Pan-American he was the champion of the herd, winning twenty-two prizes on an exhibit of PRINCE ROSENDALE 4291. twenty-three head. He is a large, thrifty, vigorous animal of great sub stance and constitution, very deep bodied, good length and fine handler, large development and well placed rudimentaries and considered by many expert judges a wonderfully strong dairy type. Spee I Milking:. The quicker the milker the richer the milk if the work is done well and com pletely. Two milkers, one rapid and the other slow, will get about the same quantity of milk, but the former will get more fat. The difference between a rapid and a slow milker counts in butter or money.—Dairy and Creamery. Buying: a Cows In buying a dairy cow look well to the udders. They should be well up in front and high up in the rear, teats of good size and well placed and far enough apart so that the animal can be milked without constantly hitting knuckles, says Farmer's Advocate. Fat, fleshy udders are objectionable. They should milk down well and be soft and flexible, having plenty of tis sue to perform their work. The price of ordinary cows ranges from $30 to $60, but there may be more profit in the $85 one than in the one costing $60. The main consideration is wheth er she will make 150 or 350 pounds of butter in a year or give 1,000 or 7,00^ pounds of milk, and a difference of a few dollars is unimportant if you get the best cow for the expenditure. a Notes Since the largest amount of contami nation comes from the udder during milking, it is important that all udders be washed before milking. No product of the farm is a greater delicacy or more palatable than really gilt edge butter, and the time spent in learning to make it is profitably used. If the buttermaker would thorough ly please his patrons and secure from them the highest prices, his butter must not only be of good quality, but uniformly good. All dairy utensils and everything with which the milk comes in contact should be rinsed, thoroughly washeti and sterilized after each using.+ mm For the most Complete Preparation for College or Scientific School, send your Sons and Daughters to lpillsbury Academy* Seven modern buildings, fully equipped, heated by steam, lighted by electricity dormitories for boys and girls campus of twelve acres, gymnasium, athletic field, foot ball, base ball, tennis, skating, militarv drill. Graduating courses in Literature, Art, Elocution, Vocal and Instru mental Music. Diploma admits to College* Large Endowment, Low Expenses, Home Influences. Send for Catalogue to Mil© B. PRICE, Principal, Owatonna, Minn. California Prune Wafers are a good investment. They give quick returns with no after trouble. 100 for 25 cents. Ask your Druggist. Nature's true fruit Cathartic, Cali fornia Prune Wafers are pleasant as candy and just as harmless. 100 for 25 cents. Ask your Druggist. A safe, agreeable and mild remedy for constipation, biliousness and indi gestion. California Prune Wafers. 100 lor 25 cents. Ask your Druggist. It is surprising how quick California Prune Wafers act. They wake up the sluggish liver. No gripe, no pain. 100 lor 25 cents. Ask your Druggist. A perfect Anti-Bilious and Anti Malanal protection and cure-for old and young. California Prune Wafers. 100 for 25 cents. Ask your Druggist. "Throw Physic to the Dogs." Cali fornia Prune Wafers are nature's own remedy for constipation and biliousness, 100 for 25 cents. Ask your Druggist. California Prune Wafers, nature's cure for all bowel troubles. Act promptly without pain or inconvenience. 100 for 25 cents. ASK your Druggist. As a remedy for poor appetite, in digestion, weak stomach and consti pation, California Prune Wafers are un equalled. 100 for 25 cents. Ask your Druggist. Special Reduced Excursion Sates Will be in effect from all points on the Chicago & North-Western Railway for the occasions and with dates of sale named below: San Francisco, Aug. 15 to SeDt. 10, Triennial Conclave Knights Templar and Sovereign Grand Lodge I. O. O. P. St. Paul Minneapolis, Minn., Sept. 28 to 30, Annual Convention Gideons of America. San Francisco, Sept. 5th to 9th, Triennial Conclave Knights Templar. SanFrancisco. Sept. 19thto 25th, Sovereign Grand Lodge I. O. O. F. For information as to rates, dates of sale, etc., of these or other occasions, call upon the Ticket Agent of the North-Western Line. EXCURSION TICKETS TO COUNTY FAIR AT REDWOOD FALLS, MINN., Via the North-Western Line, will be sold at reduced rales Sept. 5 to 9, inclu sive, limited to return until Sept. 10, in clusive. Apply to agents Chicago & North-Western R'y. EXCURSION TICKETS TO COUNTY FAIR AT E SUEUR, MINN., Via the North-Western Line, will be sold at reduced rates Sept. 7 to 10, in clusive, limited to return until Sept. 12, inclusive. Apply to agents Chicago & North-Western R'y. EXCURSION RATES TO YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK, Via the North-Western Line, daily, with favorable return limits. Variable routes. Most wonderful scenery in the world. Apply to agents Chicago & North-West ern R'y. 38 WORLD'S FAIR COACH EXCUR SIONS Via the North-Western Line. Very low rates to St. Louis will be in effect on two Sates, Sept. 12 and 26, for coach excursions to St. Louis via the Chicago & Northwestern R'y. Only $12.85 for round trip from New Ulm, return limit seven days. A great opportunity to vis it the World's Fair at minimum expense. Other favorable round trip rates =ire in effect daily, with liberal return limits, stop-over privileges, etc. For full in formation as to train schedules, checking of baggage and other matters of interest to the intending traveler on application to ticket agents of the C. & N. W. R. 39 DIRECT TO THE GATES OF THE WORLD'S y:'X '. FAIR via the Minneapolis and St. Louis Rail road, The only line with a station op posite main entrance to the grounds. Two through trains daily with Pullman Sleepers, free reclining chair cars and elegant new dining cars. Lowest excur sion rates. Season ticket $25.75 sixty day ticket $21.45 fifteen day ticket $19.30. Seven day coach excursion tickets at $12.85 on sale August 15 and 29 and September 12 and 26th. Mt. Call on agents for "Guide" to the Fair, information in regard to hotels, etc, or address, A. B. Cutts, G. P. & T. A, Minneapolis, Minn. 39 SHERIFF'S SALE. virtue of an execution, issued Out of and under the Seal of the District Court, in and for the County of Brown and State of Minnesota, upon a judgmen rendered and docketed in the said Court, on the 17th day of March. A. D. 1899, in an action wherein the Minnesota Thresher Manu facturing Companv, a corporation is Plaintiff, and Carl Franke is Defendant, in favor of the said Plaintiff and against the said Defendant, for tne of Seve Hundred and 90-100 C$700.99) Dollars which said judgmen as by deed of a filed in said Court Ma 20, 1904, dul as signed and transferred to the Northwes Thresher Company which execution as directed and deli ered to me as Sheriff in and for the said Countv of Brow I a levied upon all the right, title and inter est of the said Defendant Carl Frank in ant to the following described real proD situate, a N One Hundred and 4S?)^r0^!:h• a 4 0 sr N Thirty-three (33) West ol the 5th P. M. Notice is hereby given, that I. the under signed, as Sheriff as aforesaid, will sell the above described real property to he highest bidder, for cash, at public auc tion, at the front door of the Court house the City of N Ul in the County of Brown and State of Minnesota, on Thurs day the:22nd day of September, A 1904, at 10 o'clock A. M„ of that day, to satisfy the said execution, together with the in terest and costs thereon. Date Augus 6th, A. D. 1904. W I S T^T^ jt. of Brwn State of Minnesota, County of Brown, SUMMONS. State Minnesota above a Defendant: You are hereby summoned and required to answer the complaint of the plaintiff a the above entitled action, which com clerk of said District Court, at the city of N Ul said county and state, and to serve a ropy of your answer to the said subscriber, at his office the city of Ne Ul in said County of S days after the serv- Jr 1 S upon you. exclusive a ohfe such service, and if you fail +?™n 7er 8 a .J complaint within he time aforesaid, the plaintiff in this action 2 0 Qe de- mande in said complaint. Dated A 20,1904. A E A E N E Plaintiff's Attorney, Ne Ulm Minn Notice of Lis Pendens State of Minnesota, County of Brown, J"ss* to have he a me ad judged void and also to a said defend ants and all persons or parties claiming under or through forever barred: from claiming and from an and all ?i.a^m-S' 6 estate, lien or interest in or to said real restate or a part there S E S this plaintiff and to have said plaintiff adjudged to be the owner in. tee simple and entitled to the possession E ?!E i5 a a a a STAT E OF MINNESOTA County of Brown. p?I^lt?sJ°. ti IT being in the Coun- of Brown and State of Minnesota, to-wit The Northeast Quarter (NE^ of Section Numbe Ten 10), the Eas Half (EK) of the Northwest Quarter (XVM) of Section Numbe Ten (10). the Southeast Quarter (SE14) of Section Number Three (3) all in County, Minn. X.IND & STEINHADSER. Attorneys for Judgmen Creditor. 32 37 SUMMONS. .. District Court ,- ,, '.Ninth Judicial District. Juhu Mielke, Plaintiff. vs. Victor Zagrodzki, and also all other per or parties unknown claiming a right, title, estate, lien or interest in he real estate described in the complaint herein, Defendants. District Court, i- ™. (-Ninth Judicial District Julius Mielke, Plaintiff A Victor Zagrodzki, and all oth er persons or parties un known, claiming a right, title, estate, lien or interest the real estate described J? the complaint herein, Defendants. Notice is hereby given That an action* has been commenced in this Court by the above named Plaintiff against the above named defendants for the purpose of termining any adverse claim, estate, lien, or interest in and to the real estate here inafter and in the complaint herein- de 2?&- a 8 a ,T if defendants or a estate and to. a the title thereto forever quieted and confirmed the plaintiff, his heirs and a ecte by said action are situated in the county of Brown and Stat SJ described as follows Lot N One (1) in Block No. One Hundre and Eighty-one (181) South of Center Street in the City of N in said county, according to the plat thereof on file in the office of the Register of Deeds, in said county. Date A 20,1904. A E A E N E ,„ Plaintiff's Attorney, S 8 In Probate Court. Special Term, Aug 31st 1904.. In the matter of the estate of Friedrich Heers deceased. Whereas an instrument in writing nur- a a a id A. J». 1904, testate, and that said petitioner is a son of said deceased, and that no person is named in said last will and tament, as executor and praying that said instrument a be admitted to probate, and that letters of administration it this will annexed be to Albert A in is sued thereon It is ordered, that the proofs of said i» strument and the said petition, be hear before this Court at the Probate Office, im.' the Court House, in the City ofJNew Ulm in said coumty, on the 29 day of Septem ber, A. D. 1904, at 10 o'clock in the forenoo*. when all concerned a appear and corn test the probate of said instrument. And it is further ordered, that public notice of the time and place of said hear ing be given to all persons interested*, by publication of a copy of this order for three successive weeks previous to said day of hearing the N« Review, a weekl newspaper, printed and published at he city of Ne ulm In said county. A?D*19M. N W the Court, S a If— a N Ulm Minn.. Order for Hearing Proofs of Will. testament ot Friedrich Heers late of said county.ha been delivered to this court An whereas, Chas. A. Heers as filed therewith his petition, representing a a other things that said Friedrich Heers died on the 4th day of January 1 A 31s S.A.GBORGK, 36'38 Judg of Probate. EXCUKSION TICKETS TO COUNTY FAIR AT GAEDEN CITY, MINN., Via the North-Western Line, will be sold at reduced rates Sept. 13 to 16, in clusive, limited to return until Sept. 17. inclusive. Apply to agents Chicago & North-Western R'y. EXCUKSION TICKETS TO COUNTY FAIR AT E SUEUR, MINN., Via the North-Western Line, Trill be sold at reduced rates Sept. 7 to 10, in elusive, limited to return until Sept'. 12 inclusive. Apply to agents Chicago fc North-Western R'y. -..?:. .--\.•. **&:*---• EXCURSION RATES TO COUNTY FAIR AT- ST. PETER. MINN., Via the North-Western Line. Excursion tickets will be sold at reduced rates Sept. 5 to 8, inclusive limited to return until Sept. 9, inclusive. Apply to agents, Chicago & North-Western R'y DeWitt's jEa Salve I For Pttet, Boras, Sore*, ti,.