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£. JSi*. &.%**& w» FEMALE WEAKNESS 5*31-2 CongreM St. S MAnra, Oct. 17, MOJ. I consider Wine of Cardui superior *»y doctor»» medicine I ever need ad I know whereof I speak. Irof ferad for nine months with suppressed menstruation which completely pros trated me. Pains would shoot through my back and sides and I would have blinding headaches. My limbs would •well up and I would feel so weak I could not stand up. I naturally felt discouraged for I seemed to be beyond •he help of physicians, but Wine of Oardui came as a God-send to me. I felt a change for the better within a week. After nineteen days treatment I menstruated without suffering the agonies I usually did and soon became regular and without pain. Wine of Cardui is simply wonderful and I wish that all suffering women knew of its good qualities. Treasurer, Portland Economic League Periodical headaches tell of fe male weakness. Wine of Cardui cures permanently nineteen out of every twenty cases of irregular menses, bearing down pains or any female weakness. If you are discouraged and doctors have failed, that is the best reason in the world you should try "Wine of Cardui now. Remember that headaches mean female weakness. Secure a $1.00 bottle of Wine of Cardui today. of Success This is our record. From a small beginning we have grown until our fac tories now cover many acres. Many of our machines sold forty to fifty years ago are still giving their users faithful service. Can anything be more con vincing of their merits and durability? Did you ever hear of any other machine with Buch a record? Note a few of the many superior points of the Wheeler & Wilson l| Sewing Machine NUiU The Rotary Hook displaces the old, out-of-date, unmechanical and trouble some shuttle. The Frictionless ball bearings and per fect mechanical construction enable it to "be operated with one-third less exertion than is required by ordinary machines, It sews three yards of goods while a shuttle machine sews two. It makes the most elastic and most perfect stitch whether sewing light v" heavy goods. With our superior attachments the greatest variety of work is possible. Do not make the mistake of buying a sewing machine until you have given the Wheeler & Wilson No. 9 a trial. Wheeler I Wilson Jlfg. Co., Chicago, m. FOR PALE BY O N O S E N E W ULM. MINN. 50 YEARS' EXPERIENCE MARKS DESIGNS COPYRIGHTS AC Anyone sending a sketch and description may quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an invention is probably patentable. Communica tions strictly confidential. HANDBOOK on Patents aent free. Oldest agency for securing patents. Patents taken Jirough Munn & Co. receive special notice, v'- bou charge, in the Scientifict American. A. handsomely illustrated weekly. J-nrgest cir culation of any scientific journal. Terms, $3 a year four months, 1. Sold by all newsdealers. MUNN & Co.3&,Broadway« New York Branch Office. 625 St., Washington. D. C. HOMESEEKERS RATES. On the first and third Tuesdays of each montb-g the Minneapolis & St. Louis R. R. sells special homeseekers round trip excursion tickets to points in the Northwest, West, Southwest, South and Southeast, at one fare plus two dollars. Return limit twenty-one days from date of sale and stopovers permitted. Call on agents for full particulars or address, A. Cutts, G. & T. A., Minneapolis, Minn. 42 Cuddy& Cavanaugh PLUB AND PIPE FITTING.^ Steam and Hot Water Heating. Employ none but the best of workmen and guarantee satis faction ^g" Estimates furnished on all con tracts at short notice. Shop under Brown Co. Bank. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure Digests what you eat. r-sSt MINNESOTA REWS., Fire at University. A fire of mysterious origin did dam age to the laboratories in the Mechanic Arts building of the university to the amount of $6,000. The blaze was dis covered at 8:40 in the evening and an alarm was immediately turned in. By the time the department had reached the scene the flames had spread with great rapidity through the basement rooms and were burning fiercely. Strenuous work for an hour extin guished the blaze, which, was confined entirely to the basement rooms. These rooms were badly gutted and a great deal of valuable apparatus used in phys ical and chemical labratory work was entirely destroyed by the fire and the intense heat resulting therefrom. In a Tight Place. To save himself from being crushed to death by a Great Northern freight train, James L. Farrell of Austin leaped from the railroad bridge over the Mis sissipi at St. Cloud, falling fifty feet to bank of the river beiow. Both lof his wrists were broken, his arm dislocated, a rib fractured and his face and scalp cut and torn. He was conscious when picked up, and as soon as his injuries were attended to, left the hospital. Farrell and William Connolly, also of Austin, had cars of movables in the train and were going to Gray Eagle. The freight stopped upon the bridge and Farrell left his car to go to the car of his friend. He had not accomplished this when the train started and left him the alternative of dying on the bridge or jumping for his life to the ground below. Narrow Escape. Ja mes Kennedy and his wife had a narrow escape during the collapse of their home at Lyton place and Park avenue, St. Paul. Mr. Kennedy had his house moved from the top of a sand hill to the street level, and for a couple of days it had rested on piles. When the jack screws were removed the posts sank into the earth. The house careened to an angle of thirty de grees and split in the center. Mr. Ken nedy was on the outside of the house and barely escaped being hit by falling boards. Mrs. Kennedy was inside the cottage, and the plaster and other debris fell on her head. She was pain fully bruised. Mr. Kennedy estimates the damage to the house and contents at $200. Nearly Finished. John Laf arge of New York has near ly finished the first of four large lu nettes, each thirteen by twenty-seven feet, for the supreme court room of the new Minnesota state capitol. Mr. Laf arge's subjects naturally con cern law. The painted lunette is en titled "The Moral and Divine Law," and shows Moses receiving the ten com mandments on Mount Sinaii. He kneels with bowed head on the shoulder of a great mountain, in the midst of fire and smoke. Joshua, stand ing at a respectful distance, warns back the unseen throngs of Israelites, Aaron kneels with face covered. School Buildings. According to reports to the state su perintendent c»i public instruction, the total value of school buildings in the state is $18,567,602. The value of seats and desks is $373,467. The total num ber of school buildings is 8,061. During the year ending July 31, 1904, there were 296 new school buildings erected, valued at $1,072,848. There were fifteen log schoolhouses built, five of them in Beltrami county. The estimated value of 67 school buildings in Hennepin county is $2, 670,000. Will is Valid The supreme court in its decision by Chief Justice Start upholds the will of Fanny S. Wilder, St. Paul, bequeathing practically the entire Wilder estate of $3,000,000 to public charity works. The will provides that the estate shall be administered by three trustees. The heirs of the estate endeavored to break the will, claiming that, under the laws of Minnesota, an estate could not be left in trust. The supreme court holds that the present will is not a gift in trust, but is an absolute gift to the corporation, which is provided for to administer the estate. News Notes. David Arnold, a driver for the Hamtri Brewing company of St. Paul, dropped dead in a saloon on Seventh street W. St. Paul. One man was injured, and the guests of the West hotel, Minneapolis, were thrown into a panic by fire which did $700 damage in the drying room of the laundry in the basement. Joseph Libral, employed in the construction of the German Luthern church at Glencoe, fell from a scaffold ing, and was fatally injured. Brainard has a patrol wagon with the same number of wheels as a wheel barrow. George W. Kurty has been appointed a clerk in the office of the collector of internal revenue at St. Paul at a salary of $900 a year. To get less than $3 a thief broke a costly stained glass willdow in an Osakis church. Robbed poor box at that. H. V. Tucker shot a wildcat weigh ing thirty-five pounds at Nininger near Hastings. Several small boys are caught at Hutchinson ^robbing Great Northern freight cars. A fire at Lake Cyrstal destroyed the building and stock of Davis & Llyod, and partly destroyed he building and stock of E. W. Bartlett, druggest. The total loss is about $15,000 partly in sured. The members of the state board of control favor pensions for the nurses at the insane hospitals and,school for the feeble-minded. nfiTllr nf-ITm Murderers Escape to the Mountains and a Big Posse Is in Hot Pur suit—Their Capture Thought to Be Certain. RELIEF MAP ILLUSTRATING ATTACK ON PORT ARTHUR. [By McCutcheon. In Chicago Dally Tribune.!" 'S BUT LOST MS LIFE CASHIEB RESISTS ATTACK OF ROBBERS IN CODY, WYO., AND IS SHOT DEAD. Cody, Wyo., Nov. 2.—Four heavily armed outlaws Irom the Hole-in-the Wall country Tuesday afternoon raided the First national bank of this place. The bandits got no money, but in the fight that was put up by Cashier Mid daugh he as shot to death. he bank has hundreds of thousands of dollars of government money on deposit, and it was to secure this that the hold-up was attempted. Just before the close of business a party of four roughly-dressed men rode up to the First national bank. Three men dismounted and entered the build ing. The fourth stayed out and guarded the horses. Cashier Killed. As soon as the outlaws entered the bank one of them covered Cashier Mid daugh, who grabbed a revolver and made a game fight Middaugh was ex cited and his bullets went wild, while the single shot sent from the outlaw's gun passed through the banker's brain. The shooting attracted the attention of a party of hunters, and as they rushed around the corner of the hotel they opened fire. Under cover of each oth er's fire the outlaws mounted and rode away into the prairies and from thence into the mountains. THANKSGIVING DAY. President Issues Proclamation Nam ing Thursday, No vember 24. Washington, Nov. 2.—The president Tuesday issued the Thanksgiving day proclamation, setting aside Thursday, November 24, "to be observed as a day of festival and thanksgiving by all the people of the United States, at home and abroad." The proclamation acknowl edges the debt of the American people to God for the blessing upon the nation during the past year, in which "reward has waited upon honest efforts," and calls on the nation devoutly to give thanks unto Almighty God for the bene fits He has conferred upon us as individ uals and as a nation, and to beseech Him that in the future His Divine favor may be continued to us." A HUNDRED DROWNED. French Vessel Gironde Goes Down After a Collision Off Coast of Algiers. Bona, Algeria, Nov. 5.—A hundred persons were drowned Thursray night by the sinking of the French steamer, Gironde, after having been in collis ion with the French steamer A. Schi aifino, near Herbillon, 23 miles from Bona. The Gironde left Bona with 110 passengers, of whom 100 were Algeri an natives. Confederate Veteran Dead. Lake City, Fla., Nov. 7.—Gen. Jesse J. Finley, one of the few surviving brigadier generals of the confederate army, died here Sunday. Gen. Finley was 72 years old. He resigned the dis tiict judgeship of Florida to enter the confederate army. In the southern service he rose from the rank of pri vate to that of brigadier general. He was a member of congress three terms and held many positions of honor and tvust in this state. Truce in Miners' War. Springfield, 111., Nov. 7.—The National Brotherhood of Hoisting Engineers, as an organization, was ignored Friday uight by the executive boards of the United Mine Workers of Illinois and the Illinois Coal Operators' association, and the suspension of workat the coal manes of the state, brought about by the strike of the engineers, was ended under a temporary agreement. A general re sumption is expected Monday. Ireland Day Observed. St. Louis, Nov. 7.—Ireland day was observed at the world's fair Saturday, and the regular attendance was con siderably augmented by the members of the United Irish Societies of St. Louis, r* TRADE CONDITIONS. Continued Improvement Is Shown— No Evidence of Anxiety for the Future. New York, Nov. 5.—R. G. Dun Co.'s Weekly Review of Trade says "Business improves steadily, and there is no evidence of anxiety regarding the future. Payments are more promptly met, tending to stimulate preparations for coming trade and the disposition to limit purchases to im-less mediate needs is gradually disappear ing. Conservatism during the sum mer and autumn had beneficial effect, reducing stocks to a low point. As demand broadens, this scarcity of sup ply produces pressure tor quick deliv ery, and prices are strengthened. Aside from inflation caused by speculation, there is no better sign of commercial progress than advancing commodity markets. All the leading branches of manufacture are in a better position, with noteworthy activity at iron fur naces, woolen mills and footwear fac tories. "Commercial failures this week in the United States are 229, against 233 last week, 215 the preceding week and 246 the corresponding week last year. Failures in Canada number 27, against 28 last week, 39 the preceding week and 22 last year." Bradstreet's says: "Warm weather, activity in fall farm work and, to a lesser degree, ante-election interest, have detracted from retail tj-ade dis tribution north and west. For like reasons jobbing sales are rather smaller in volume. Against this, how ever, is to be cited increased activity in a number of industries, headed by iron, steel and allied lines of manu facture. Resumption of work by 10,000 eastern cotton mill hands is a feature, but the great Fall River tie-up contin ues, and the strike of comparatively small numbers of mine employes is responsible for the idleness of close to 40,000 Indiana and Illinois coal miners and higher prices for bituminous coal. A very general advance in staple prices, covering a wide range of in dustry, is an event worthy of note." EXPENSE OF THE MILITARY. Estimates of the War Department— Appropriations Aggregating $103,686,780 Asked For. Washington, Nov. 3.—The estimates of the war department for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1906, aggregate $103,686,780. This is $22,242,612 less than the war department estimates sub mitted a year ago, and $3,832,388 less than the total appropriations made for the use of the war department for the current fiscal year ending June 30,1905. The amount estimated as necessary for the military establishment, which embraces the cost of maintenance of the army and of the military academy at West Point, is $72,706,156, being $4,650, 006 less than the appropriations for the present year. Under the head of public works, which include the improvement of rivers and harbors and various national parks throughout the country, and of certain public buildings and grounds in and around Washington, and the construc tion of seacoast fortifications, military posts, etc., the estimates call for ap propriations amounting in the aggre gate to $22,876,834 for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1906, as compared with $22,772,511, which is the amount of cur rent appropriations for similar pur poses. Woman Kills Desperado. Asheville, N. C, Nov. 5.—William Morrow, a noted desperado, has been shot and killed at Burnsville by Mrs. John Phillips, a young married woman. Morrow was infatuated with Mrs. Phillips. His advances were re pulsed and Thursday she fired the charge in two barrels of a shotgun at him. Morrow, it is said, had commit ted several murders. Dead Body Found. Mobile, Ala., Nov 5.—The body of Hunt Chamberlain, aged 30, bookkeeper for a wholesale house here and promi nent socially, was found Friday in a se cluded spot in the western part of the city. There was a bullet hole through his head and a revolver at his side. He had not been robbed. Aged Man's Fatal Error. Burke, Idaho. Nov. 4.—Mistaking a can of lye for one of cream, Ed. Benja min, aged 75, drank of the poison Thurs day and died in terrible agony. Weil-Known Author Dead. Fort Wayne, Ind., Nov. 7.—Mason Long, well known temperance lecturer and author, died Saturday. 0mL HATCHING BY HEAT. in of I a on as S Use or Aarea. The ancient Egyptians from time im memorial have hatched large quanti ties of eggB by artificial warmth, ap plied through peculiar but simple ovens. Bonnemain, in 1777, was the first in more recent times to put the process upon a sound commercial footing. He communicated to the Acadamy of Sciences an interesting fact he had no ticed upon the method chickens used to break their shells, and for some time before the revolution he fur bished the Parisian markets with poul try at a time of the year when farmers ceased to supply it His apparatus was founded upon the principle of the circulation of hot wa ter through a series of connected pipes, a novelty which was afterward ap plied to the warming of buildings. Wa ter saucers were placed in the egg drawers to keep up the necessary moisture, and twenty eggs were in serted daily for twenty days, when the first brood appeared. In 1825 D'Arcet obtained chickens by hatching eggs in the warm water baths of Vichy. Modern incubators are essentially water baths, with an automatic regu lator to keep the temperature to 40 de grees C. MINERAL WOOL. A. a a W at W as Once a as W a Mineral wool is a soft substance con sisting of a mass of very fine mineral fibers, which interlace one another in every direction and thus form an end number of minute air cells. It is made quite simply, by directing a blast of steam against a stream of molten slag. Some of the best is made from blast furnace slag, an admirable illus tration of the value of what was once regarded as a waste product. The siag is melted in a large cupola, and as it trickles out of the tap hole It meets a high pressure steam jet which blows it in fleecy clouds into the storage room provided for it. The heavier wool naturally settles down first, while the lighter portions are blown further along by the force of the steam, and so the material naturally sorts Itself. Mineral wool is fireproof and may be used as a sound deadener between the floors of buildings it also serves as a last purpose the wool that is made from sandstone is best, for it contains no sulphur, which, when moisture is present, is a corroding agent. THE BAGPIPES. iThey W re Use by he E a a a E a Bagpipes, mentioned in Jeremiah xlviii. 36, "Mine heart shall sound for Moab like pipes like pipes for the men of Kir-heres," and elsewhere in Scrip ture, were used also by the early Egyp tians. Both Greeks and Romans knew the instrument, for a coin of Nero shows upon one side the tibia utricularis, a bag with two reeds and nine pipes. Procopius also, who wrote about 550 A. D., asserts that Roman soldiers sometimes marched to the sound of the bagpipes, and it is not impossible that they introduced them into the British islands. The earliest, more modern reference to them is in an Irish MS. of 1150, and an Irish illuminated MS. of 1390 de picts a pig playing on the bagpipes. The Scottish highlanders were the first and only people to use the great war pipe, as the highland regiments still do, but, in spite of Sir Walter Scott's assertion, it is very doubtful whether they charged at Bannockburn to the "skirl" of the pipes.—London Answers. The Worn out Old Man. When we become old we want to get off the streets. We always sympathize with the old men who have nothing to do, who are not wanted anywhere and who have no place to go. When we become old and useless we want a place of our own to go to, a place that Is absolutely our own and that we can manage as we please. We hope it will be a little place where we can potter with fruits and flowers, vegetables and chickens, and keep busy. We don't want to give people opportunity to show neglect nor idle time in which to see visions of the grim monster. Old men who loiter about the streets, it always seems to us, make a mistake.—Atchison Globe. N is A man is a very broad, omnivorous animal and needs a great variety of food, both mental and physical. No matter what element we omit in his bill of fare there is a corresponding loss, omission or weakness in his life. You cannot get a full, complete man Dn half a bill of fare. You cannot nourish his body and starve his soul and expect him to be symmetrical, well balanced, poised. Nor can you starve his body and nourish his soul and ex pect him to be a giant on the physical as well as on the spiritual plane.—Suc cess. Must Good. Jenny—Papa, cook must be very good. Papa—Why, my dear? Jenny— Because in my lesson last Sunday it said that the wicked shall not live out half their days, and cook says she has lived out all her life. of Rev. Dr. Thumper—Does not married life seem brighter to you? Mrs. New bride—It ought to. My wedding gifts Included twenty-five lamps. Joy's recollection is no longer joy, While sorrow's memory is sorrow still. —Byron. HALF FARE Plus $2.00 for Bound Trip tickets via Louisville& Nashville R.R. To nearly all points in ALABAMA, FLORIDA, GEORGIA, KENTUCKY, MISSISSIPPI, VIRGINIA, NORTH AND SOUTH CAROLINA, TENNESSEE Tickets on sale May 3rd and 17th, June 7th to 21st, and on first and third Tuesday of each month thereafter un til Nov. 15th, and good returning 21 days from date of sale. For further information, consult your local agent or address C. L. STONE, Gen'l Pass. Agent, Louisville & Nashville R. R. LOUISVILLE, KY. CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH PENNYROYAL PILLS *«. Safe. Always reliable. Ladies, ask Druggist foi CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH in Re an? Cjold metallic boxes, sealed with blue ribbon Tak no other. Refuse dangerous nubsti* tutions and imitations. Buy of your Druggist, or send 4c. in stamps for Particulars, Testi monials and Relief for Ladies." in letter, by return Mail. 10,000 Testimonials. Sold by all Druggists. CHICHESTER CHEMICAL CO. 2100 Madison Square, PHILA., PA, Mention this paper. F. |Mag?l & CO CONTRACTORS A N BUILDERS. nonconducting covering for cold stor- {good work. We feel that we need say I age chambers and for pipes. For this NEW ULM, MINN. We are again ready to take contracts in our line and guarantee prompt and a «ll known, M. A. BINGHAM. A. W. BINGHAM. Bingham Bros. DEALERS IN NEW ULM, MINN. L. A. Fritsche, Pres. Alb. Steinhauser, Yice-Pres, Jos. Bobleter, Cash. Brow Count Bank NEWULNI, MINN. Capital and Surplus $56,500 Does a Qe^eraf Bar kir Bu$ij?ess. Stean?sl?ip Tickets *t)d Faraj koarjs* Accounts of Corporations, Firms and Individuals solicited upon the most lib eral terms consistent with good banking Win, Pfaender. Real Estate AND.... Insurance Agent, Insures against fire, hail, tornadoes, accident and death in the best of com panies. REAL. ESTATE BOUGHT AND SOLO Legal documents executed, loans ne gotiated, steamship tickets seld. H. FREMZBL, MANUFACTURER OF ed $ ee.r\ eiLppaai)"£ Eiel *. Jcli^ep WeiieF, and all kinds of carbonated drinks. De livered to* all parts of the city on short notice. New Ulm, Mirm.