Old News

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

March 25, 1891 · Page 3 of 8

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New* Business! We are at a loss to understand bow there can be any other view of the late New Orleans affair than that it was in NEW ULM, MINN. every sense justifiable. Mob law is not a means of punishment that is to be encouraged F. W. JOHNSON, Managing Editor. usually it is simply a medium through which passion and hastv desire We.iresdax, March 25, 1891. for revenge perform their work in advance of the law but in the New Orleans Tne flour trade of the United States case there seems to have been valid Just Opened A fresh and complete stock of Just Received! is taKing on at last one new featuie excuse for the terrible means employed which promises to be of direct, if not DRY GOODS AND GROCERIES. by the people. It was a resort painfnl, interest to Great Britian. That feature is the growth of the shipments to crime in punishment of crime for I invite the public of New Ulm and vicinity to call and examine my line of Oregon, California and Washington self protection. The Mafia, to which Thev will find excellent goods, liberal terms and exceedingly low prices. Goods delivered free to any part of the city. murdered ones belonged, is not a new to China and Japan. These two countries Select table butter always on hand are rapidly cultivating a taste for society. It has been in existence for a ELEGANT LINE OF G. P. D03STGUS, wbeaten bread and cake, and their demands number of years, and with it is coupled for American flour are already all that is low and treacherous in human quite large. It is not at all difficult to kind. It recognizes no state or social Corner Minnesota and 1st South Sts. see that a really important trade in laws and effects its triumphs through flour between the United States and terrorism and threats. It had brought I EMBROIDERIES China and Japan is one of the probabilities about the murder of one of the city's BARGAINS THAT ARE EQUIVALENT TO to be realized within the nest officers, and when thirteen of its members ten yeare Gold Dollarsfor 75cts were placed on trial for this heinous crime, it compelled a verdict of not The employment of potatoes for making guilty by bribery and intimidation starch will undoubtedly have the The city was being place at the mercy effect of absorbing large amounts of of this lawless and villainous organization. potatoes, and thus prevent the glutting IT IS NOT A SINGLE ARTICLE, BUT Society was no longer safe. It DOZEN S O THE and insertions lo match at his usual of markets, and the evaporation of was time for the people to act. When the product of the soil is also a method money, cowardice and fear of life prevented by which the crop of one year may be an intelligent jury from convicting kept over to another. But the latest guilty murderers, it was right for IN use for potatoes is as a substitute for for the people to take back the power bone ana ivory. By the use of certain Watches, Clocks, Jewelry, Silverware, Gold LOW PRICES of execution int- their own hands and acids the potato is hardened, and it punish with terrible severity a band may before this be cut or moulded Pens and Optical Goods that bad menaced the order and quiet into buttons of whatever shapes are desired. of the community. Potato buttons are now often AT Had violence asserted itself before worn when the origin is not suspected, F. W. Hauenstein. the law had had opportunity to take its as they may be colored to suit fancy. way, there would be reason for condemning the conduct of the citizens as The New UJm Review nominates Col. Joseph Bobleter as the next Republican outrageous and murderous, but when it SPECIAL BARGAINS candidate for governor. Col. Bobleter is considered that the couTts were tied E LE.A-DHtfO E W E is a good man, but it seems to us that down with timid ness, that the guilt of the name has been sprung too early. If the accused was clear beyond a doubt the Review had waited till just as the WAL PAPER! campaign commenced, then let er-Bob and that the murderers were but a small by Joe! it might have gone through with fraction of a gang of desperadoes, whose a rush.—Moorhead News. guilty purposes and treacherous natures Not a bit too early, Bro. Lamphere, would be a terror to any community, if we propose to conduct a campaign of one can hardly say that the deliberate principle. If we are to go on the theory and ertain action of the citizens of New that the politicians are to do all the engineering I have lately increased my stock of Wall Paper and am now Orleans, performed in the open light of the last few days, then day and seoking not the darkness prepared to show a splendid assortment including borders, jour surmise is correct, but it was with wherein lurks treachery, was not warranted centres and corners. The styles are new ones and varied the understanding that the people always or justified by the need of the enough to suit all tastes. Contracts made for paper hanging. had something to say regarding hour. Justice4 demanded the punishment K^ the nominations, that the Review made of the Mafia, and, when the courts Its suggestions thus early. "With the Hi I also carry a large line of A A to a fail of their duty, the people must assume masses, a good man always gains For Drugs and Medicine to themselves the authority that Books Schoo Supplies, Periodicals, Novelties, strength by long acquaintance. For was theirs originally. When the agents a Candies, Cigars a Tobacco the same reason the Republicans of ot the people neglect to fulfil their functions, CHAS. GEBSER, Minnesota are already organizing for public welfare demands that the the campaign of '92. people should act for themselves. If Senator McHale introduced his NEW ULM, MINN. A comparison of the weather of the bill regarding ballet dancing for notoriety, present season, together with the conditions be certainly showed good judgment of seeding, with that of the past L. Roos' Drugstore. SCHAPiiK&HM BROTHERS & GO. in the selection of the subject on five or six years is interesting. Prime's E S which to attempt to work reform. Crop Bulletin contains such a comparison, NE W ULM, MINN. Gossip courts a foolish thing in preference and from it we have gleaned the DB. HUMPHREYS' SPECIFICS are scientifically and jarefuUy prepared prescriptions usedformany to acts of wisdom or genuine Contractors and Builders. following data. Up to March 15th fears inprivatepracticewlthsuccesB.andforover thirtyyearsusedby thepeople. Every single Specific woith, and the case of Mr. McHale'p 1885, no spring wheat has been sown. a special core for the disease named. Plans and specifications furnished to These Specifics cure without drugging, purging bill has proved no exception to the rule. The ground however was in good condition or reducing the system, and areIn fact and order. Having received new and im deedthesovereign remedies of the World. proved machinery we are able to fur The New York Sdn advertises it in this and the winter wheat crop favorable, nish all kinds of work in our line, as wav: UST OF PRINCIPAL NOS. CORES. PRICKS. but the total yield for the year was 1 Fevers, Congestion, Inflammation Sash, Doors and -Mouldings, also all 3 Worms* Worm Fever. Worm Colic On moral grounds what occasion is only 857,112,000 bushels. The corn 3 Crying Colic, orTeethingof Infants kinds of Turned and Scroll Saw Work. 4 Diarrhea, of Children or Adults .. there for passing such a law as that introduced yield on the other hand ran up to 1,936' a Dysentery* OrlplngtBlllous Colic. 8 Cholera Morbus* vomiting... IOE. by Senator McHale into the 000,000 bushels and the oats crop to 7 Coughs, Cold, Bronchitis 8 Neuralgia* Toothache, Faceache Minnesota Legislature? If there is 629,409,000 bushels. At a corresponding 9 Headaches, SlckHeadache, Vertigo 1 0 Dyspepsia, Bilious Stomach I have stored in my ice house over reason for it, so also is there reason for time in 1886 very little spring wheat 11 Suppressed or Painful Periods. 400 tons of nice clean ice which I am 1 2 Whites, too Profuse Periods Dry Goods & Notions the protest of members of the Wyoming had been sown. The ground was in 1 3 Croup, Cough, Difficult Breathing now prepared to deliver to saloon keep 1 4 Salt Rheum Erysipelas, Eruptions. Legislature against putting on the seal about the same condition as the year 1 5 Rheumatism, Rheumatic Pains.... ers or private parties. Those desiring 1 6 Fever and Ague* Chills, Malaria.... of the commonwealth the representation previous and the winter wheat prospects ice can ieive orders at the barn of IT Piles, Blind or Bleeding 1 9 Catarrh, Influenza, ColdintheHead Schneider & Kretsch. of a figure of Liberty partially undraped. on a par with those of 1885. That 2© Whooping Cough. ViolentCoughs. 2 4 General Debility.PhysicalWeakness MATT SCHNEIDER. year there was raised 457,218,000 bushels Mr. Anthony Comstock should 2 7 Kidney Disease •-.•35 2 8 Nervous Debility 1.00 -A-T be sent about to shatter or deface all of wheat, 1,665,441,000 of corn and ICE! ICE! 3 0 Urinary Weakness, Wetting Bed. 5 0 3 2 Diseases of theHeart,Palpltatlonl.OO the nude figures of plastic and pictorial 657,618,000 of oats. In 1887 the weather A OTTOfflEYER S Sold by Druggists, or sent postpaid on receipt in the middle of March was clear The undersigned would announce to art. The world should be left in doubt of price. DR. HUMPHREYS' SUHCAL, (144 pages) the public that his ice houses are again and mild. Winter wheat was in better richly bound in cloth and gold, mailed free. the mystery should remain insoluble HUMPHREYS' MEDICINE OCX, filled. After date he will make contracts Oor. William and John Streets, New York. condition than at the same time in whether women have legs or are otherwise for the furnishing of ice, with the S E I I S seeding1, had been finished 1880, and supported. assurance that patrons will be well and Kansas. The yield was about the same G. A. Ottomeyer has just received a nice line of NEW GOODS, promptly served as heretofore. The opposition naturally seek to misrepresent as in the previous vear. In 1888 the LIME! LIME! PETER HERIAN. DON'T FAIL TO SEE THEM. anything that comes from a weather was cold and backward. Winter BATH ROOMS. Republican source, and it would be wheat had made some growth, and 4-V something out of the usual order of some oats had been sown in Kansas. Prices are marked on every article in my stock. I simply ask a share WINKELMANN'S LIME Having opened bath rooms in the things if they did not make an attempt The respective yields were as follows: /,' same building with my btrber shop, I of your trade. KILN. 1 to place so grand an achievement as wheat 415,868,000 bushels corn, 1,987,790,000 am prepared to furnish hot or cold baths at all times. The rooms are nicely furnished Come and see my line of silk veilings, including all the novelties of the the reciprocity treaty with Brazil in an bushels oats, 701,705,000. The On Minnesota River, near New Ulm, and have all the conveniences is fully prepared to furnish lime of unfair light before the public. They next yeai found the whole country from season. The "Beauty Spot" is all the go this spring, whille the "Spider Ladies' day every Friday with lad ip the very best qnality in an quantity to IA started out by saying that the treaty the lakes to the Ohio river enjoying re* Web" is also a favorite veiling. charge. Entrance through nail. contractoib and bull ler«. Delivered to would never be agreed to by our own markably fine weather. With the ex-anv desired point either by team or rail HENRY VEPDER It is impossible to enumerate many articles in this notice. Gall and government, and,after the wind was taken ception of Kansas, the country was dry at hbei tl pi ice- All orders bv mail SIn TVTE OF MINNESOTA, County of Brown ss proinplh aiieiidfd to out of that claim, they tried to for that time of the year and then was Probate Court Special Term, March 16th. examine them for yourselves. I will give you good bargains. 1891 make the people believe that Brazil very little freezing or thawing weathei. In the Matter of the Estate of Richard Fischer, EGGSTAKEN IN EXCHANGE FOR GOODS. deceased 0 A S A. MUELLER, wanted nothing of the kind and would Seeding of wheat and oats was quite On reading and filing the petition of Anua never agroe to a reciprocal treaty. This general and the yield of all three grains Fischer, executrix ot the last will and testament and of the estate of Richard Fischer deceased, showed improvement on former \e-\rs. statement, like the other, is shown to CONTRACTO & M)EB, representing among other things, tlwt shehas nlly & & &tm®z&. adrmnmereri said estate and prayirg that a time Be pure misrepresentation by the re Of wheat there was 490,560,000 bushels and place be fixed for tbe assignment of said estate NEW ULM, MINN. to the sole deusee and residuary legatee Of corn, 2,112,792,000 bushels and of ceipt of Brazilian newspapers at the mimed in the will of said deceased anJ that she oats 751,515,000. During the same Department of State, containing a Flans and Specifications made *o order. be discharged from her trust as such executrix* It is ordered, that said petition be heard, by Estimates oq nil work fui rushed and con period in 1890, just preeeding March decree by the president of Brazil, de* the Judge of this Court, on Saturday the 11th day tracts faithfully executed. of AprifA 1891 at 10 o"clock A at the 15th, fields everywhere were soaked daring the ports of that, country free 3Dea,ler ±xi Probate Office said Cc unty jjg^» Office on Broadway, opposite with moisture. No spring wheat had Ordered further, that notice thereof be given to r?}j and open to the imports of the United all persons interestedly publishing a copy or this been sown and a frost had seriously injured J. Vogel's lumber yard. %. Steve and Eaiiffesfi* States that were included in the recent order once In each eek for three successive weeks prior to said day of hearing, in theftew Ulm Keview,a the late sown winter wheat. The reciprocity agreement, and thus setting weekly nowspapei printed and published at New Ulm in said County. crop showed a marked falling qfffrom at rest the1 rumors that have been curre PROBATE NOTICE. Dated at New Ulm, Minn ,the 16th day of March that of 1889. The wheat yield was only A. 1891. that Brazil would not recognize STATE OP MINNESOTA, County of Brown Vss. By the Court, 399,262.000 bushels the corn yield, notwithstanding In Probate Court, Special Term, March aothj ^the validity of the treaty. To further ERNST BRANDT Qa^oline. Stoves' .k and Tinware.' lo92. there was more corn in show the good feeling that prevails [L S 13 Judge of Probate In the Matter of the estateof Theodore Crone, deceased. the country that year than ever before among our southern neighbors over the QTATE OF MINNESOTA, County ol BrownfW Sss Whereas, an instrument in writing, psefTorting OlnProbate Court. on the opening of a new crop year, to be the last will and testament ol Theodore %£lware»s establishment of closer relations be& armiD^ imple-r Inthe Matter of the estate of Wilhelm Lueder Crone, deceased, late of said county, has been tween the two countries,we quote from amounted to only 1,'489,970,000 bushels, deceased. dalivered to this Coart the On reading and filing the petition of Johanna And whereas, Gesine Crone had filed "therewith government organ published at and the oats crop was only 523,621,000 Lueder of Brown County, Minn., representing her petition, representing among other things that among other things, that Wilhelm Lueder, late or ments, Nails, Fence Wire Rio Janeiro. It says: «*The commercial bushels. The present season opens with said Theodore Crone died in said County on the said Brown County, Minn on the 2nd doy of 8th day of March, 1891, testate, and that said interests involved in this agreement February A. D. 1891, at Milford said couty died a gratifying increase of moisture over petitioner is the sole executrix named in said last are so vast, and affect so greatly our intestate, and being a resident of this County atthe will and testament, and praying that the said instrument all the land, and there is more snow on timeof his death, leaving goods, chattels and estate Western ^Washers, Clothe intercourse with the rest of the civilized may be admittedtoprobate, and that letters within this Jcunty,and that the said Petitioner testamentary be to her issued thereon the ground in Wisconsin, Minnesota world, that we shill watch its^effects is the widow of said deceased and praying It is Ordered, That the proofs ofsaidinstrument that administiation of said estate be to her grafted: witJTthe greatest attention. Upon one Iowa, Nebraska and the Dakotas than and the said petition, be heard before this Court It is ordered, that said petition be heard, by at the probate office in said County, on Saturday, point there exists no doubt, that the there has beer, at the same period of the the" Judge of this Court, on Thursday, the 2nd day Wrmgers,|Asphaltunw» the 18th day of April A. D. 1891, at 10 o'clock in of April A D. 1891, at 1» o'clock A. M., at the agreement will be highlv satisfactory year for two years past. The prospects the forenoon, when all concerned may appear Probate Office in said County. to the government of the United States, and contest the probate of said instrument Ordered further, that notice thereof be given to at present are that the country is going And it is further ordered, that public notice of Rooting, §tc:,^tc, etc, sfnee it has for some time been Warmly the heirs of said deceased and to all persons interested, the tune and place of said hearing be given to to start out this spring with its genita by publishing a copy of this order for three advocated by the press of that country, all persons interested, by publication of these orders successiveweeksprior to said dayof hearing^n tbe oncein qach weak for three successive weeks conditions for more favorable for which is so well disposed toward us* New Ulm Review, a weekly newspaper, printed priortosaid day ofbearingin theMew Clmlteview, and published at ew Ulm in Baid County. and which grants us especial favors the early germination of the crop than areekly newspaper printed and published at the *°^^DS Dated at New Ulm, Minn., the 5th day of W S ana'repairing ofTin Ware, All City of New Ulm in said County. Which are refused by the nations of they have been for the last two years. March, A. D. 1891. *'*,* By the Court, farope." lt-s.] KBNSTBRAKDT, By the Court, WW ERNST BRANDT.^ 10 .udge ol Probate NEW ULM, TL.SJ 18 Tudee of Probate