Old News

New Ulm weekly review (New Ulm, Minn.) 1878-1892

April 17, 1878 · Page 4 of 8

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Minnesota at Gettysburg Cemetery, discharged, and Mile. Volantc fell itiTSfBeussmanns. dead on the stage, shotthrptigh the forehead. Nothing can be learned A Correspondent of the Tipton of the victim, who has been on the {Iowa) Advertiser, writing from'Gettysburg, public stage but five weeks. Mrs. Pa., thus describes that Franklin was taken into custody by portion of it in which were enterred the police. the -remains -oaf the soldiers who fell MANUFACTURER ANT) DEALER IN" in that terrible four days fight: CIGARS, OJNE OF THE VICTIirBS tt.F TFI224 "After leaving the battlefield I next CHEYENNE STORM. TOBACCOS, & entered the Gettysburg citizens' A Cheyenne, Wyoming, special of cemetery, which is beautifully decorated PIPES the 8th says:' During the late storm with shrubs, flowers and evergreens. an old gentleman named Brower, Next I visited the soldiers' Minnesota street, next door to C. who lives about 28 miles west of here, cemetery, and was surprised to find Sommer's Store. went to feed a young calf, which everything so nicely arranged. All NEWULM. MINN. Avas a few yards from the house. graves are marked on a small slab Previous to going his wife tied a with name, company, regiment and handkerchief round his neck and tftate to which they belonged. My said: "Now, John, I will stand at attention was drawn to a neat monument .Wholesale and Ketall Dealer in the door and shout your name, so erected "by the survivors of the SHELF & HEAVY ERDWARE that you can guide yourself through First Regime&t of the Minnesota Infantry the blinding drift.'" He started, in memory of their fallen IRON AND STEEL. and, becoming bewildered in the comrades. On a beautiful mound in storm, was not found till Saturday, the^ cemetery is erected a large, notwithstanding an untiring search national monument with the Goddess was continually prosecuted for him. of Liberty on the top, and low AN His younger son found the remains down are four statues as large as BUILDING PAPER. about 'half a mile away from the lifetwo females, one with a slate house, in the snow drift, the fuce. and pencil in hand, the other with a Agent for .just appearing above the surface, perfectly sheaf of wheat resting on her knees, GAS & SWEEPSTAKE THEE SEERS. black. He was '72 years of the other two are males, the one representing age, and leaves a wife and two grown the mechanic, the other a Kirby, Wood, Whz-s.Lr and Bucksy? sons, who live in the vicinity. soldier with a musket in hand." REAPERS and MOWERS, ATBeus Owatonna Bevieic. WAR CRY IK ENGLAND. maim's Store, Furst df Bradley The King of Tramps. HAYRAKp Escape of BradlaujjJi, tlse EeSormar Post Office Block, Cor. Minn. & I North Sirs., New Ulm, Minn. from a. liosirriifj KEob. A man was in this city last week, FURST $ BRADLEY Bradlaugh, the great English radical who we think, has done more tramping and infidel, was convinced There always will he found a full line of different kinds of FARMTNV. MACHINES: than any yet heard from. We ar, Treshers. Self Binders, Harvesters, I?papers, Mowers. Horse Rakes Ma- recently, that, if there is no hell, give the story as it was told to us by N*?. clime Repairs Sulky, and other Plows Cultivators etc. etc. there are certainly devils. He was a prominent merchant of this place, I Also F'U-'iuel a ful Assortments of Sheif Sportind an Heavy, Hardware, Iron. Steel, Carpen- Gun & Goods etc. etc. one of the speakers at the London About thirty years ago the oldest son McSHEYRY SEEDERS.. te iJiRS i "peace meeting,'' which the war of the surgeon-in-chief of the Germ-. We invite all our farmers and other friends to come and examine onr ma- party broke up with demonstrations an army, who had received a line %ConwrVfum. &- Second North StS. Klines, ami other goods, hafore purchasing elsewhere. Our machines are all and acts of vicious violence. Bradlaugh s\v eim TOJatn. tully warranted, and will be sold at bottom prices.' course of training in his father's profession, was forced to rn for his. life. fell desperately in love with i ZZT. 0, Hanit, J. Franta, II. II. Bcussmann. His flight from the mob is thus described: Kieslinrr Keller a peasant's daughter, but on account i of the difference in social position, a Sz Co. Bradlaugh. seeing his condition marriage Avas opposed by the parents i hopeless, threw away his staff, which of both parties. When the young'. Csirry the largest sccl of he had hitherto used with as much man found that a marriage was impossible ^3 skill as an Irishman does ashillelah, 3 DRY GOODS, i1 he became slightly dement-1 and fairly took to his heel's and X ed, left home, and has since been in -l-i scoured across the park at full speed. GROCERIES, nearly every quarter of the known f'\ ct He took the direction of Park lane. world. He has passed through almost fl l~~l HATS AND CAPS, With louJ% yelling hooting, mob every inhabited part of Europe, of several thousand followed iii pursuit. pj Asia, Africa, Australia, South: Across the beautiful hayaemth 4-S America, and has been roaming^ O beds and over the light iron railings -n through North America, for the last AND went Bradlaugh with more 'agile r=5 W three years, always on foot, never us-, Gjaanfl EMmlise, r/5 cc bounds than would be believed. ing any sort of conveyance except! p O The crowd was in full chase after OF ANY HOUSE WEST O ST. PAUL. when crossing seas, lie was in the him, and heedless of every obstacle. Gj city last week and told a gentleman 0 Arc in constant receiptor h-i The elegant Uower parterre* and the in this city, who was acquainted with ISTET W QOODB. Ol handsome fences wore trodden ruthlessly^ a. i-i him in Germany, that he thought of i-J under foot. Gradually the returning to his native town after I A Large And Well Selected Stock (if crowd gained on the flyino- agitator, his thirty years' absence. He is QJ and, as lie reached Park lane, were .2 Ladies' & Gents' Underwear. .about fifty-four years old, but does '+4 O only a score or so of yards behind not look to be more than forty, r rn him. Already the mob shrieked in Our stw-k oi er bt which is an argument in favor of anticipation of triumph, but luckily, Notions and Trimmings the healthiness of tramping that cannot for Bradlaugh a deus ex macliina.a\ be overcome.St. Peter Tribune. peared in the form of a 'four-wheeler'or ci Is full, qoinplete nrt marked it low living pvoSUs cab. Like a hunted deer he Efl. ^4^ AN OLD a-KEEJLKY S3^IXOK3A.Ii. sprang into it, and-the driver, quickly comprehending the situation, H. itarmstlij r.i'jnwf an c.raviinatJoi Showing-Biow L,ong fle Kiisso-Eiiglisli drove off at a full gallop. Groans of Trouble IS is Keen Breeding-. b'fr.n purchasing.ilmchzr-'. disappointment came from the crowd The following is nn extract from an editorial in r~'i r* as tiiey retired discomfited. Kiesling, Keller & Co. Horace Ureeley's New Yorker of March, liM'.i: "It is only since the virtual subjugation Cor. Minn. and Cn!r.' Sis. \E of Turkey and Persia to the AN ENERGETIC MULE. liu, Minn. giant power of the northern colossus, iVew 0 that England has felt any serious apprehensions "Speaking about miiles/" remarked for the safety of her oriental a six-footer in Arkansas, as he possessions. But the complete cracked his whip at market, "I'v prostration of the Ottoman power by the last war, and the peace of Adrianople got a mule at home which knows as the grasping conditions imposed much as do, and I want to hear in the treaty by Russia the somebody say I'm a fool.'' ISTo one further exactions, especially with regard said so, and lie went on. "I've stood to the passage of the Dardanelles around here and heard men blow and the navigation of the Euxine, about kicking mules till I've got disgusted. KNTOWN AND ERLIABLJ] AGEXT FOR THE WELL since or secretly at that time imposed When you come, down to the defections from his allegiance of kicking, I want to bet on my mule. the pasha of Egypt the vastly important Afriend came along and took dinner alienation of Persia from the with me'the other day, and, as he interests of England, and her present seemed a little down-hearted, I took close alliance with Russia and finally him out to see Thomas Jefferson, my the constant aggressions and extension champion mule. I was telling the of power by Russia, especially good man how that mule would flop on her southeastern frontier, have his feet around, and he said he would impressed upon the British nation, like to see a little fan, He'd passed particularly upon those who have a his whole life in the South, but had deep interest in the preservation of never seen a mule lay his whole soul her Indian empire, a vivid sense of into a big time at kicking. Well,'' I impending and formidable danger. he said, after borrowing some tobacco, "We shall not attempt, at this distance, "I. took Thomas out of the stable, to judge of the reality or imand backed him up agin a hill gin minence of the danger. W prefer him.a.cuti' on the ear, and we stood to detail facts rather than indulge in by.to see the amusement, I twas a speculation." good place to kick his durndest, and what d'ye s'pose he did? I ten minutes by .the watch he was out of sight Killed at Last. five more we could'nt feel liim In PROVIDENCE, R. I., April 5.A with a twelve foot pole, andand'' variety company from Mozarts Garden^ the crowd began to yell and sneer, Brooklyn, lias been playing this and the narrator looked around and week in the op^ra house of Pawtucket. asked: Does anybody think I'm lying? One feat is shooting an apple Right here nnder my arms is a from the head or hand of the performer. pound of tallow candles which are to To-night Mile. Volante, tight the hole for tq go in after Thomas trapeze performer, held an apple on and Igot word-not an hour ago her head, and Mrs. Jennie Fowler, that the l^ind feet of the mule w,ere known on the stage as Franklin, was sticking out of a hill thirty-nine to shoot the apple. With uncom* miles as the bird flies from where the mon recklessness, she stood with her Will say I believe I am now better prepared than ever before to famish mv customers with machines MOST mule went in. I'm shaky on religion, back to the mark, taking aim by the PROFITABLE and MORE PURABLE than any other in the market and will simply sa}% ccn erndexamine mv line gentlemen, but our familv nccr had reflection in a mirror, 'fhe riflle was of goods before purchasing elsewhere. My machines are FULLY WARRANTED, and Fold at a LOW rate cf interest. a liar in it. A full Slipyly of REPAIRS KEPT CONSTANTLY 0 HAND.', y--. -h f" t j^- ^j^- Us*' *'-T- Tf -is i^KX*it^i^JS0tu