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

August 8, 1888 · Page 3 of 8

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Ml znon party should step up and force a tariff issue on the people, and proclaim that NEW ULM, MINN. its opponents, because they are such, advocate measures contrary to their own The republican party has gone EMIL WESCHCKE, Managing Editor. on record of having treated the matter Wednesday, Aug. 8, 1888. of duties and taxes not as a political J: t**/ THEODORE CRONE So Ask the Readers of the Review, party but as an administrative one, and Republican State Convention. has therefor been able by its wise legislation WHEN THEY GLANCE AT HIS to treat the matter fairly and for the benefit of the majority of the people, A Republican state convention for BARGAIN AD. and now that we have a democratic administration the state of Minnesota will be held en Wednesday, September 5, 1888, in it is said that republican Market Hall, in the city of St. Paul, at ideas of tariff reduction are not in favor 12 o'clock noon, for the purpose of Grea I^pdxiotion in FrioesON of the American working-man. placing in nomination candidates for But the Milk bill, that tariff fabrication the following positions: SPRINGAND SUMMER STOCK. ACCOUNT OF THE LATE SEASON WE ARE OBLIGE] Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, which bears on its face the mark of One Associate Justice of the Supreme sectionalism, which has been originated TO REDUCE PRICES OF A GREAT MANY GOODS. Governor, Court, Dry^GoodsldotliiiLff but for political capital, as it aims Lieutenant Governor. to catch southern votes, is, as the democratic Secretary of State, jfi*\ Colors.1$ Dress Goods in White and party has it, the greatest and State Treasurer, Attorney General. wisest demonstration for the protection 10 to 12 yds. Fine Dress €kods with 2 Width Embroider And for the transaction of such other of the northern working-man^? The -AJSTD & business as may properly come before eyes of the country have been opened, WSW*' .* -A to match, offered very low. GENTS-1 FDRNISeil-:G00DS. the convention. and suspiciously view all democratic All citizens who believe in the principles of the republican party who desire attempts bearing on the question of 2*20, Reduced from $2*75., Dress Rbes, Full Size its success,and who will support the tariff. That the democratic party has ~t 2*85, 3*50.?. candidates nominated by the National fc made this question the national issue is .^ r:- «cv a fi|3^o, W 4,50. Republican convention held in Chicago' X«')'. I shall continue to give great bargains in Mens', Youths' proving the greatest mistake it ever "", June 19, 1888, are invited to co-operate fS4*15, y\*:* 5.00.i-, made,for its attempts at tariff legislation and Boys' Clothing, Hats and Underwear. Good Suits from in the election of delegates. 'V. "^#5.25 ^Vv 6.00.^-. The counties are entitled to the following have proven already that a sectional $1.50 up, Boys Pants from 50 cts., up. Good Men's Suits Also Great Reduction in Swiss Embroidery at 85 centsworth number of delegates and ancourse only will be pursued. $1.25. 65 cents, worth $1.00. equal number of alternates. from f4-00 up. \-M keep the largest line of single pants in all Martin...-..','. Atkin 3 3 "Brooks, the third party Prohibition shades. Our line of Underwear is the largest in the city, Meeker 6 Parasols a fine line. T?ret£y Child's Parasol only 23 cts. Blacf fi candidate for vice-president, has shown Mille Lacs... 3 ft and -will be sold at bottom prices, ranging from 25 cts. up. Satin, 20 inch, with Red, Blue, Ecrue or White Lining $1.20, well 9, Morrison 4 his real purpose in joining the third party worth $1.75. Fine Parasols with Wide Black Silk Lace $2.45, _wrtl| Latest Styles in stiff and soft hats and the line is immense. 8 Mower so clearly that there is talk of his being $3.50. Plain, all Silk $1.65, sold last season for $2.50. -:i*" Big Stone 4 withdrawn from the ticket. He was The prices are so low, that everybody can afford to buy Blue Earth.... 9 Nicollet Summer Underwear for Ladies and Children. Ladies fine Vesi a Missouri slave-holding preacher politician 5 Nobles 5 himself a good hat for very little money. Twenty-five cents white or unbleached, 25 cts. each, worth everywhere 45 cts. Bette 3 Norman 4 before the war, whose sympathies Goods at 35 and 45 cts., which are Great Bargains. Gloves and Mitt will buy a fair hat, and fifty cents is not too much for a hat. Olmsted 7 were all with the rebels, but whose personal Lisle and Silk, 25 cts. and up. All wool Cashmere Shawls $1.00, sol| 3 Otter Tail ...11 courage was not strong enough to I keep the celebrated come and try Chippewa Pine ROTATE "WHITE SHIRT 4 .. 3 last summer at $1.45. make a soldier of him. According to 6 it, and you will find it is the best for the money. No trouble his own acconnt, he followed the rebel GREAT BARGAINS SATURDAY IN EMBROIDERED Clay Polk ft to show goods.V Cook Pope .. 5 troops away when it got too hot for him PILLOW SHAMS. Cottonwood 4 Ramsey. .20 THROUGH HONESTY I PROSPER. at home. It is claimed that he was a Crow Wing 4 confederate chaplain for a time, and he LOOK OUT FOR NEXT WEEK'S BARGAIN ADD. Dakota Renville ... 6 1 fi makes his boast that while Gen. Fiske Dodge Rice ...| 8 I ft a A A iA^3Lxr $ was shooting one way he was praying Rock ... 4 1 fi 1 St. Louis... ...10 the other. If Brooks's prayers had I Filmore 9 ... 3 been more effectual than Fiske's bullets ... 4 the third party would never have had 1 Goodhue 1? Attention Bwnter Mr. Brcoks for its candidate, and he 4 1 1 Hennepin 38 would never have had the opportunity 1 Houston Stevens ... 4 fi he has now, and which he is using now 'Hubbard 2 Swift 1 for all it is worth, to abuse the party I Isanti Todd ... 5 ft DEALERS IN that crushed the rebellion he prayed Traverse 4 These are the best manufactured and will be iBliBPS 1(M8(1 u3Jbriug6S| 1 6 for. sold at prices so low that it will not pay hunters to load their own. 7 Wadena. 4 Dry Goods, Groceries, This blusterer and braggart, who 3 ft CHAS, ROOS, thanks God that though he may have 1 Washington.. 7 Lac qui Paarle. 6 4 been a rebel and a slaveholder and a Lake 3 Wilkin 3 rotioi^, fire-eating Democrat, he never was a fkt& Cfef$ ($enttf tfuri^- 5 Winona 8 Republican, is overdoing the thing. Lincoln ft Wright '8 The report from Illinois, where he has Lvon Yellow Medicine. 5 ft Druggist and Apothecary ^___ been taking his revenge on the Republican Marshall 4 4ft0 Total.... party' for depriying him of his St. Paul, July 20, 1888. slaves and whipping him back into the JOHN S. PILLSBURY, Union are to the effect that the Repub. ?o^t Offide £loc&. tfewUlm, JOEL P. HEATWOLE, Chairman. lican Prohibitionists, who had expected Secretary. l@*Tfle chairmen or secretaries of to vote the Prohibition ticket, are thoroughly the different county conventions will disgusted and are tearing off PROMPT ATTENTION TO MAIL ORDERS. please report to the secretary of the 4* S* ABWOtt) their Fiske and Brooks badges and declaring State Central Committee, the names that they will never vote for such and post-office address of the delegates and alternates, and also the county an unreconstructed rebel for vice president. committeemen. If tnis iff done promptly The old soldiers are especially indignant XDesiler in it will be of a great service to the that any party should dare to party, and insure prompt and active Stoves and Ranges, offer such a candidate for the suffrages work. of loyal men. The third party Prohibitionists The State Committee request this kind favor of each County Convention. have done what the Democrats B. BEHNEE & CO, themselves have not dared to do." Gasolin Stove and Tinware When we come to regard the political MINNEAPOLIS JOURNAL issue before the nation and remember Hardware, Farming Implements, Says the Illinois Staats Zeitung, con the circumstances which forced the adoption sidering the Mills bill. of this issue by the people, we DEALERS IN A true, unalterable and just tariff reform must necessarily censure the democratic Nails, Fence Wire, consists 1. in the introduction of Dry G[opd& f{e^dy-n\kde Clothing, fjubbet party for having, exerted itself in behalf absolute free trade for all products and of a measure which can never be thePumps, Western Washers, articlesjwhich can not, or only in a $ G[ood$, 8oot$ kud $l\oe& Skt^ &i\d CJkp^.' treated fairly if in the hands of a political minute degree, be produced in party. The tariff question proves United, States. the bone of contention between Cleveland's Clothes Wringers, Boss ]Vfotioi\& G^oderie^ &i\d dfockefy. 2. in the equalization of the costs of advocates and the republican production for all such products of human party. labor for which ample crude material Churns, etc., etc., etc. The president in his message has outlined THE CHEAPEST HOUSE IN THE CITY FOR CASH, jfr is to be had in this country. But a plan, smacking of free trade, a reform, as deceiving as the Mills PLEASE CALL AND GIVE US A TRIAL. and compelled its adoption by his party, "protection for the South," would, if special attention given to inending and repairing of Tin Ware. All and has thereby forced its opponents Farm Produce taken in Exchanged made a law, have no other consequence, Work warranted. to recognize the necessity to come but to NEWULM, -. 3IINN before the people with out-spoken views 1.- destroy a number of industries in A. Behnke, Manager. -D* EIllIlJlTj&jij & CO. on the tariff, and in the same breath it Charles Gebser the North. was said that the republican party is in BANKRUPT 2. reduce in those which would thereafter opposition to this measure. A. C. 0CHS exist, the wages to half of their It has been the endeavor of the administration present amount. and its friends to create HAS THIS SPRING SALJJ 3. force hundreds of thousands of CONTRACTOR & BUILDEE. the belief that the present system of mechanics to give their attention to taxation is a tyrannical one and of dire ~, PUNS UNO SPECIFICATIONS FURNISHED. farming and stock-raising, and ROLLS OF WALL PAPER consequences to the people, and as the The Prince of Clothiers is in the 4. cause thereby an overproduction second step in response to Cleveland's JOB WOBK DONE IN CITY OR COUNTRY of bread-stuffs and meat, which the continent field with a full assortment of, message has followed the Mills Bill. Bids given on Buildings of all kind. of Europe would not buy, where, a. 4 A It has been a proceeding from bad to READY MADE CLOTHING, by the price for all farm products for sale, also the finest Center and Corner pieces and other Decorations. worse, and has most forcibly demonstrated Stucco Glue and Plaster Paris for S&le* GENTS FURNISHING would be most materially reduced, and that the tariff legislation at the r^CHot air Furnaces Sold and Set. GOODS AND The only store in New Ulm where both ..^ cause the farmer, who is even to-day a hands of democracy is unjust and sectional BOOTS AND SHOES, poor laborer, to hover in poverty, just in the extreme. Ernst Pfeiffer as the farmers of Rumelia have been are sold. He also carries an extensive line of all of which are to be disposed of With these proofs against it the democratic forced into poverty by British free-trade party has therefore gone before at bankrupt prices. 5§jg» Cor. Minnesota and 2nd N. Sts., legislation. ,' ^STMOHERY, ALBUMS, ACCORDEONPAND the people, and has thereby shown itself Give him a call in his new quarters Hik Over Tappe's Tailor shop. in its true colors. In response to PAINTER, CALCIMINEBT* HARVEST EXCURSIONS :. i, Subcriptions taken for American and European periodicals. in Klossner's new Brick Block. 14? them the republican party has forcibly f::^, AND defined its standard in regard to protection, Will be run by the Chicago & Northwestern Prices guaranteed. Mail orders, receive prompt attentionr-4 Re- CriBaltrusch K/PAPER HANGER, I but has also demonstrated that Railway to points in Iowa, member the place, one door nortliiJf F. Kuetzing's .#^-^-vj '-'?-i^ executes all work promptly and at it is unequivocally in favor of a proper Minnesota,Dakota (including the Black NE W uLM,isa- a- W9-t!t&& reasonable prices. Artistic Graining? a MINN. reduction of the.tariff, and that it will Hills),Nebraska, Wyoming and Colorado, Just received anew stock and full Specialty. *s exert its best endeavors in favor of American for which tickets will be soldAugust supply of .mm*$ laborers and industry. ?S -Sfl 21st, September 11th and 25th, October IDress Star Sample Boom, 9th and 23d, at half the usual rates, one This the democrats would do By advocating SeLtixis SLndL for NEW DIRECT LACING thefare for the round trip. These Excursions a measure in favor of Qinglisiriis Farmers' Home.f will enable those desirous of locating south and against the north, as is KID GLOVES, 7 on free government land or of pur" proved by the Mills Bill, and in view of the latest patterns. A fancy of its political situation, in view of itschasing cheap railroad lands to look the of all kinds, assortment of JOSEPH SCHN0BR1CH, Prop'r| ,1 ground over carefully and judge far relation to its constituents, we necessarily For sale by ICE CREAM AND SODA EMBROIDERIES, LADIES themselves of the wonderful fertility of cannot expect abetter course. Dealer in fe* CONFECTIONERY, CIGARS MRS. A. OLDING, UNDERWEAR, SILK the soil, which is fully demonstrated by Wines, Liquors With the democratic party all tariff AND TOBACCO, GLOVES AND MITTENS. the bounteous harvest of the present legislation will be sectional, will necessarily MILLinSTEIVY" and Cigar/ and everything pertaining to a firstclass season. For full information regarding be in the interests of the majority Special Bargains in rates, tickets, ^etc, apply to any Confectionery at of the party, and this majority re- AND DRESS TRIMMINGS, Handkerchiefs and Dress Trimmings A fine lunch will be served every-u*^ Eiker's Palace Restaurant, Agent of the Chicago & North-Western fe€i?%vi£ Bides in the south. G^feat fWgaii\£ every $attrfday. Cor. Minn. & (Jftnter st|ets. Railway. 4 NEW ULM, MINN. &5 it is therefore not wrong that such a POST OFFICE BLOCK. New Ulm. Minn.' —r