Newspaper Page Text
MARKET,REPORT. Corrected Apr. 30, 1912. 1 08 1 04 Hew Wheal No. 1 No. 2 No. 3.. Flour, Compass II II Shorts 8heep Lambs 1 02 100 tt»3 05—3 35 Paten* Penally Bakers Graham Rye i« .V IBraa Buckwheat per 100 lbs ... 'Oats J$t** Ivy •Flax •Coca .. Potatoes, per Bushel itter, per ft per dozen ws and Heifers 100 lb.... DtQOPS 2 0 0 3 20 2 80-3 10 2 46-2 70 2 55—2 80 2 60-2 85 1 ?0 120 1 40 50 75-1 10 82 190 65 ,, 1 40® 25-35 16—16^ 2 50-3 50 300—4 00 4 60-^4 75 2 50—3 50 3 50-4 50 6 80—7 10 RHEUMATISM This nerve-racking disease is caused from impurebloodanduricacidpoison. External .applications sometimes give temporary re ilief but won't cure the sure way tosecure lennanentresultsisto thoroughlyeradicate rom theblood all the impurities. Nothing earth will drive out the poisons from 'jour system, keep the bowels, kidneys and r. jLverin good condition asSEVEN BARKS, the /wonderful remedy that has proved itsgreat ,7merits the past 42 years. 4SEVEN BAliS can be had of all druggists, at 60 cents per bottle. Give it a good trial l' «nd watch your rheumatism disappear. 1YMAN BROWN,68 Murray St,NewYork,N.Y.rheumatism, ATARRH MAY FEVER ELY'8 CREAM BALM felVIS RILIIF AT ONOI. ift cleanses, soothes, heals ana protects the tseased membrane resulting from Catarrh f^nd drivesawaya Cold in theHead quickly. teaxores the Senses of Taste end Smell. 11 is easy to use. Contains no injurious pruga. No mercury, no cocaine, no mor* ferine. The household remedy. |f/Price, 50 cents at Druggists or by mail. gUf BROTHERS. 56 Warren St., New York HAIR BALSAM ICIMIMM and bcaotificf tt« htte IPromotM tuxaiiwt growth. •Never Vails to BMtoie Ony I Hat* to it* Youtfcfta Cola*. IFrerento hair falllni JO&andjtjJOat DRUNKENNESS The steady or periodical (spree) drinket can be saved In 3 days with lils knowledge. Or secretly. My remedy Is guaranteed. Ctontle, pleasant, per' fertly harmless. It does not matter Uovr many years. This to the genuine home Treatment, medically endorsed and proved by a lesion of testimonials. Boots "Sjf" and particulars, free* postpaid. Address E0W.J.W00OS.S34SixUA«. 266 NmYork.N.Y.: f^ testing Root' sng Strength This is one way to deter ine the strength of pre red roofing. Five other uality tests are contained in free book, "Ten Years of in Ten Minute Tests." If own a building—if you use Ifepared roofing—if you consider it, you can't afford not to see book. Our dealer will gladly live you a copy. Ask him about Vulcanite Roofing See what our dealer has to say tbout Vulcanite Roofing. If you're nterested in a money-saving and a Itiality gain, you must hear about /ulennite. Ask the dealer today. Get your free book nd samples. $% PatentVulcaniteRoofing Co. m& Chicxo.ni. -I. NACEL LOCAL NOTES H. H. Arhart of Thief River Falls, a fireman on the "Soo", Is spending a week's vacation at the home of bis parents. Mrs. Jacob Klossner, Sr. celebrated her89th birthday last Tuesday. She is ID the best of health and quite active for her advanced age. 7 Chief Henry Engel had the fire de partment out for their first practice Sunday morning. It is intended to have occasional fire drills during the summer and fall. Chas. Emmerich,, the well known plumber, tells us that we can announce the arrival of a son at his home. The young fellow put. in an appearance early Saturday morning. Alvin Friedmann of Mapleton, a New Ulm boy, was in the city the early part of the week. He has sold out his business interests at Mapleton and is looking for a new location. Miss Martha Reinhart, who is com pleting the term of school at Cobden for a teacher who had to give up the work on account of illness,- was home for the week-end and attended the Junior reception to the Seniors at Turner Hall Friday evening. J. A. Adlemann, West Plains, Mo., was iu bed with kidney trouble and but Foley Kidney Pills put him on his feet. He says: "I was no better when a friend recommended Foley Kidney Pills. They benefited me from the start and iu a few days I was out of bed and in 14 days threw away my cane. I cheerfully recom mend Foley Kidney Pills. O. M. Oiseo. On Monday, May 6th, application will be made to Hon. I. M. Olsen at Sleepy Eye for the appointment of a member of the Board of Public Works to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Dr. L. A. Fritsche. Tbe Mayor, we understand, will re commend the appointment of C. H. Dirks. This appointment will again give tbe 3rd ward a representative on this Board. The other members are Ferdinand Crone and Eugene A. Pfefferle. The assessors of the County gathered at the Court-house Thurs day forenoon for the purpose of receiving their assessment books and supplies from the County Auditor and to discuss matters in general and agree upon a uniform rate of taxation. Tbe meeting was held in the grand jury room. William Bossbacb of the Town of Albin, the oldest sssessor in the County, was chosen to act as chairman and Chas. Grusendorf of New Ulm as Secretary .fi^was decided to assess the personal property at tbe rates prevailing last year and to raise the rate for real estate from $12 10 to $13.50 per acre. Only a small number participated in the shoot held by the New Ul Business Men's Club at the Fair Grounds Sunday afternoon. The day for the weekly shoot has not been decided upon, but will be in a short time. Tjeclub numbers 30 members who are willing to accept new mem bers who take kindly to this sport. Secretary A. G. Bierbaum will be pleased to give detailed information to any one who may desire it. Out of a possible 25 birds, the following scores were made: A. G. Bierbaum, 20 Arthur Janka, 16 Theo. Johnson, 15 B. Esser, 1' Math. Pederson, 14 Anton Simmet, 12 Wm. Edwards, 8 Stsnis Sperl, 4. The dry grass in the infield of the Fair Grounds was set on fire by school-boys Wednesday afternoon and for awhile threatened the fence and some of the buildings. Nick Faas who first discovered the flames gave the alarm and William Eagelbert 8eoy. of the Brown County Agricul tural Society hastened to the scene. Their united efforts for more than an hour were required to get the fire under control, and to eliminate the danger to the buildings. It seems, however, that the fire got a fresh start during the night and about midnight Ferdinand Crone, Pres. of the Society was routed out of bed and went out to tbe Grounds to satisfy himself that there was no immediate danger of the fire spreading to tbe buildings. The members of the Hunter's Club will try to demonstrate that substan tial improvements can be made at Hunters Rest without the expenditure of money. The present shooting stand is inadequate and at the last meeting of the club it was decided to erect a new one if it were possible to do so with an empty exchequer. The com mittee in charge secured the necessary slabs from the local saw mills as a donation and the posts from Albert Everling. The Hauenstein Brewing Co. furnished the teams to haul the material to its destination and Sunday the members of the club and their friends furnisned the brawn and muscle for the construction work. The job could not be completed, of course in one day, but will be shortly. Be sides tbe shooting stand with log cabin effect, a third target will be in installed to facilitate the practice work. Mies Doris Kiesliag, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph Klesllng of Klesllng, Wash, and Louis A. Dyer, were united in marriage on tbe 24th of April. They expect to make their home at "Pabatn", Klesllng, Wash. The annual meeting of the New Ulm Rural Telephone Company will be held atSchell's Hall, Thuraday (May 2od)tn the forenoon at 10:30. The reports of the officers will be sub mitted at this meeting and new officers elected. Every stockholder is urgently requested to atted. The Republican County Convention will be held at the Opera House in Springfield May 13th at 11 o'clock a. m. The primary elections will be held at the usual polling places Friday evening, May 10th at 7 o'clock p. m. New Ulm will be entitled to 27 dele gates in all, eight for the 1st ward, 9 for the 2nd and 10 for the 3rd. F. R. Reiss, 1005 Forest St., Racine, Wise, had an acute attack* of kidney trouble and knew at once what would cure him. He says: "My back ached and I was miserable, but I took Foley Kidney Pills and in a few days time my back was better. Now I am cured and have had no return of tbe trouble. Foley Kidney Pills did it." O. M. Olsen. Knights of Columbus to the number of 75 from St. Patrick's Council went to Fairfax Sunday morning by special train at 10 o'clock returning shortly after midnight. They assisted .in the organization aud installation of anew couucil at that place. Our informant I tells us that the degree work done by a team from St. Paul was etmply grand, that the banquet was delicious aod that everybody had a royal good time. There are people in this town who unthinkingly neglect a "mere cold" though they wonld not otherwise expose their children or,, themselves to danger. Yet a cold neglected may develope into contagious diptheria, bronchitis, or pneumonia. Use Foley's Honey and Tar Compound promptly for it stops coughs quickly and cures colds. It contains no opiates and is safe for children. O. M. Olsen. Realty Transfers. Newton N. George to Owen F. Jones, Lts 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, and 20 Bl 1 Brackenridges' 2nd Add. Sleepy Eye •1.00 Emma Semens to Geo W. Bauman 9 14 W. & St. P. Ld. Co's 2nd. Add. Springfield Minn. $1100. Gottfried Carl Boebme to Clara Scbreyer 2 180 North New Ulm $200.00 Fred Stoeckert to The Church of St. Mary of New Ulm, 8 60 South New Ulm $367.00 Sebastian Grausam to Andreas Zieg ler, 5 6 Brackenridges 3rd Add, Sleepy Eye. $l,OCO.0O Lorenz Flor to James F. Garrow 60 by 90 ft of Lots 8 and 9 Bl 104 S. New Ulm $1800.00 Emily Hanson Bangs et al to Leo W. Druscb, 4 7 Breckenrldges 2nd Add. toSleepy Eye. $1000. Joseph Sommer to Frar.z Vogel 40 A in S 25 119 31, 40 A in S 19, 80 A in S 30 109, 30J8000. John B. Hickel to Edward H. Sarra bee, 4 25 Sleepy Eye $2500. Franz Hogen to Martin Hose, 7 109 S. New Ulm. $775. Helena Turbes to Martha Baumann W)2 of 3 3 in Bagens 2nd Add Springfield. $1330. August Lange to Minna Schwieger, 8 and 9, Bl 2 Allison & Dayton's Add, Springfield $820. Steinke. Seidl Lumber Jo. to W A. Anderson N 131 ft of 22 all of 23 and S 13' 3 ft of 24 in Bl 2 Brackenridges 1st Add Sleepy Eye •600. Maria Eder to Edward Bigot Lt 10 59 So New Ulm $150, John Nun Jr. to Henry Barth 139 S New Ulm «300. Heleoe Klesllng to W. J. Winkelmann Sublot 1 of Lots 12 and 13 65 S New Ulm 16000. Anna Neumapn to August Schwarz 80 A In S 11 110 32 $246. John Schwarz to August Schwartz 80 A In Sec Ho 32. 9400. Frank Rose to Julius Erause, 1 & 2 Bl 4 Essig Minnn $1050. Julius Pautzke to Henry Bendixen 11 and 12 12 Van Dusen's Add Springfield $550. Johanna Lueder to Dora Heers 6 Bl 101 So New Ulm $1.00 Friedrich Meyer to Anton Baumann 1 38 No. New Ulm $1200. William E. Helm, et al to Adolph F. Reim, Und of 8 and 9 107 N New Ulm $2333.33. Carl Kaiser to Richard Bieraugel, 6 & 7 180 So New Ulm $3600. May Werring to M. M. Radl, 140 sq ft in S 29 111 32 $28250. Marriage Licenses. William O. Arndt, City. Mary Meyer, City. Henry J. Forstner, Madelia. Celia T. Tauer, City. W. H. Wehatiy. 4836 Wabash Ave., Ottumwa, Iowa had a bad attack of kidney trouble that developed into rheumatism and intense suffering re sulted. He says: *'I beard of Foley Kidney Pi 119 and took them, and began to improve promptly. Now I am entirely cured and have no more rheumatism, thanks to Foley Kidney Pills." O. M. Olsen. i^ PRESIDENT DONS FIGHTING TOGS Tatt Bitterly Denounces Former President Roosevelt. REMARKS BRISTLE WITH FIRE Asserts Colonel Is Dangerous Msn and His Nomination or Election Would Be a Calamity. Boston, April 26.—President Taft donned his fighting clothes, abandoned his policy of silence under the attacks that Colonel Theodore Roosevelt has made upon him and upon his adminis tration and, for the first time since Mr. Roosevelt announced his candi dacy, launched into a bitter denuncia tion of the former president. From the time Mr. Taft entered Mas sachusetts and made his first speech at Springfield he hammered away at Colonel Roosevelt. The president made close to a dozen speeches, many of them extended, the rest only a few words in length. In all he made it clear that he is unalterably opposed to Mr. Roosevelt that he saw disaster in a third term in the White House for any man and that he did not believe Colonel Roose velt had given him a "square deal." He spoke to good sized crowds in all the cities where he made set speeches and at the towns and villages where his train stopped briefly the people flocked around his private car and lis tened with close attention. The president spoke at Springfield and Palmer, twice in Worcester and at Natick, South Framingham and several smaller towns 8eems Reluctant at First. In the beginning he seemed to utter his attack on Colonel Roosevelt with reluctance. "This wrenches my soul," he said once. As the day wore on, however, and he made speech after speech in which he denounced Mr. Roosevelt again and again Mr. Taft grew more aggressive in manner, emphasized his words with gestures and apparently laid aside any feeling of regret he may have felt at this evidence that the long friendship with his former chief was broken. His principal Boston address was de livered in the arena to a large crowd, but before retiring to his private car he spoke briefly to an "overflow" meet ing in Symphony hall. His speech in the Arena was delivered from manu script, prepared during the last few days in Washington, carefully gone over by members of his cabinet and containing a detailed aUswer to many of. Mr. Roosevelt's charges. Mn'Taft's speech bristled with coun ter charges against his predecessor in the White House. He declared that Mr. Roosevelt had wilfully misrepre sented him, had falsely distorted some of his public utterances, had failed to live up to his policy of a square deal and had violated a solemn promise to the American people not to be a candi date for a third term. COLONEL MAKES BITTER RETORT RooseveltMereHesslyDeoouRces President Taft. Worcester, Mass., April 27.—Merci less denunciation of President Taft was Colonel Roosevelt's reply to the president's attack upon him. Some of Colonel Roosevelt's assertions were: That President Taft had not given the people of the country a "square deal," but that owing to a. "quality of feebleness" he had "yielded to the bosses and the great privileged inter ests." That one part of the president's attack upon him was "the crookedest kind of a deal" and "deliberate mis representation." That the president "has not merely in thought, word and deed been dis loyal to our past friendship, but has been disloyal to every canon of ordi nary decency and fair dealing, such as should obtain even in dealing with a man's bitterest opponents." That the president's statement re garding the influence of federal office holders in the campaign was "not only an untruth, but an absurd untruth." That Mr. Taft convicted himself of insincerity when he signed the Payne Aldri'ch tariff bill. That in speaking of Colonel Roose velt's position in regard to the trust problem President Taft "is himself guilty of a crooked deal." Dozen Buildings Burned. Bcunswick, Me., April 28.—More than a dozen buildings, including two churches, the water tower and shops of the Maine Central railroad, the sheds of a coal firm and several dwell ing houses were destroyed by a fire which for a time threatened to wipe out the town. The losses total mora than $100,000. 0wt?^^'v7^^-Wj &Wf received a tjew lot of goods re cently, which we will be most pleased to you Gome in and look them over. Mrs. Chas. Rolloff OOP AINTING CANONLY BE DON! WITH GOOD PAINTS Tonr wife knows she cannot make a good dress out of poor material. She knows that it would not be economy. It is just as poor business to buy poor paint. You cannot get any service or value out of it. If yon only stop to realize the importance of this fact, you will investigate the paint question, and when you-do you will buy your paint from us, for the paints we handle are made and sold on merit. This is the way we buy them and we sell them the same way. We carry the well-known Harrison Bros. Town & Country Paints. PIONEER DRUG STORE Now is The Time Our Store is the Place You know the Girl. Bring1 her in and show her this kitchen cabinet witti all the conveniences dear to a woman's heart and we feel quite sure you will not have to wait long for the answer you want. We have these cabinets from $5 up and they are so complete your kitchen furnishings are well on the way when you have told us to deliver one for you. Next week we'll show you something else you will want for the new home. EMIL F. BUENGER UNDERWOOD TYPEWRITER The UNDERWOOD has been displayed at all ex positions of importance sinc^ 1900 and in every case was awarded the highest prize. Recent championship typewriting contests in the United States and Europe have been won on the Underwood and all speed records are held by operators of this machine. The UNDERWOOD is a mechanical masterpiece and universal favorite. "The machine You Will Eventually Buy.". •k Underwood Typewriter Co. inc. *l 62 East Fifth Street .**•,- St. Paul Minn.