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New Ulm review (New Ulm, Brown County, Minn.) (New … · j trousers and the nosegay in his button-...

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^••T?mj| BssatSB wf'v -v fe MAKE PLEA FOR LUNDEEN. Ortonville Citizens Send Petition To Governor. »&3yj\ :"^fo Semi-Automatic Electric Plant at*4252« It gives you 35 20-Watt light* *nd power for Washing Ma- «Jj»ne, Sewing Machine, Vacuum Cleaner, Iron and Fan. !t will •''Ti^k-jrJS Per cent overload (1000 Watts) for ten hours. If •»t is large enough for your re- quirements, it will give perfect •atisfaction, for all parts ere standardized, efficient and guar- anteed. But a one-size Electric Plant cannot do the work required on different size farms, country homes or stores. That's why v/e have the Consolidated Line. Various sizes from $340.00 up. Comein and tell us your power and light requirements r.nd we will demonstrate the plant that will serve you most efficiently and for the least money, both *ST. PAUL, November 27.—Ortonville citizens protested to Governor Burn- quist against the "outrageous treat- ment" of Ernest Lundeen of Minne- apolis, a former representative in con- gress, when he attempted to speak there against the League of Nations. The petition",- with about forty signatures, accuses* Sheriff Hurley of leading a number of young men, who deported Lundeen by locking him in a freight car; and asking that all connected with the incident -be punished. The petition was accompanied by a copy of The Ortonvifle Journal contain- ing an article lauding the action of the local officials. -• ' • > :?;;>"We believe that outside of five or six men this outrage was committed more in ignorance than malice." says the committee's communication. We,, as American citizens, resent being insulted by a small clique who control the only newspaper here, and call every bite who dares to oppose them, even in .local affairs,; pro-kaiser, pro-hum I. W. W., radical socialist, etc." ,. -' EUROPE'S , •< <W&}?,-3-••••• IDEA OF THE PRESI- DENT. CHAS. EMMERICH PLUMBER What Woodrow Wilson ate, what j he wore, what he read and all that ; sort of thing filled the newspaper columns [in Europe when first they essayed their j character sketches of ±he man. Even ! the solemn and official Paris Temps j devoted nearly two solid columns to a character sketch of the familiar type, | while less inspires dailies like the Matin i and the Humanite had their correct and j graceful observations of his well-creased j trousers and the nosegay in his button- ! hole. He was quite the "chic"and : decorative being, noted the Socialist j organ, a figure calculated to adorn the | Hotel de Rambouillet in the great days I of the Duchesse and the Marquise, when jthey gave those gorgeous banqvets. ! After a long observation of the man, faciliated by his protracted stay in k .Sieam and Hot Water Gas' Fitting. 'j Paris, the European dailies are enabled Heating j to sketch the executive character from a j less objective point cf view, to look into | the soul of Wilson. This they have We are prepared to do ail kinds o ; done, from the serious Temps to the plumbing In a first-class manner. Do j irresponsible Socialist Avanti of Naples, not fail to cal! upon ug when plumbers* | summing up the revised idea cf Wilson ! f or consideration „PJSl 0' • ,• concerts hin££iHe can not meet his fellows on the plane of discussion as equals and share injQhe rough and,tumble of contradiction and retort. In brief Mr. Wilson has no spontaneity. - H e speaks from above to those below. A, limitation of" this kind is serious, as the London Westminister Gazette remarks, because it shows that Mr. Wilson could not have risen through a parliamentary body to, a post as prime minister unless he abandoned the use of rhetoric and climbed by means of hard work in less shining spheres than debate.—Current Opinion. ... . *,, .,..,,- YAGB mm* .f ORGANIZE HEALTH ASSOCIATION j The Misses Adeline' Bartl and Iona : Aft ( ' j*Arbes, students at Good Counsel Acade- At a meeting*held at the St. Peter my in Mankato, spent Thanksgiving courthouse last week Tuesday, the Nic-! Day at their homes in ihis city. They CHAPMAN ON ROADS ISSUE. •ervlces are required. Minn, and Center Sts Phone 281 ; the man, it seems that the supreme j shock he imparts is due to the discovery I that he is no orator. Mr. Wilson's New Ulm J fame as a speaker had preceded him to j the old World. There were expecta- tions of a master of the spoken word more' fluent than Poincare, t mbre epi- gramrnatic tTxan ; Clemenceau, more- fiery than Briand, more temperamental thaii ] Lloyd George himself; Blank was the Eeurance against fire, hail, torpado j amaze ment of the 'Socialist organ m In his weekly letter, Vance, Chapman says in regard to the Good Roads Bond Amendment to be voted upon at the next electionf [i'*"*C/;\' t MV * ?? *"/ "It is rathfer early to predict the fate of the Good Roads Bond Amendment which will be voted upon next fall, except to say that its advocates are as staunch as of old. However, it might not be out of the way to add that the movement for the adoption of the amendment has not the punch it had some months ago. To he frank about it, the Good Roads Association shake- up of several weeks ago in whjch two employees were made to walk the plank has had a depressing effect which has been voiced in more than one iural publication. As a result, not to mention the natural and unconceivable oppo- sition to all modern improvements, there has been a tendency to shy at the boost- ing game and the amendment in conse- quence is suffering. In marked con-, trast, however, is the attitude pf a dozen or more •. counties which, have bonded themselves heavily for local road work. This means that they will be in at the big game and it is what may save the amendment from defeat."," , - ., ,'. . Mayor Hodgson of St, Paul and Major A. M. Nelson of Martin, County are mentioned as gubernatorial possibilities on the democratic side in the state. Chapman says: ~ "In Democratic -circles gubernatorial talk runs, pretty much to Mayor Hodg- son, "Larry Ho" of St, Paul. Some leading members of the unwashed haz- ard s the opinion*, that he will be the only offering oh the Democratic side, but they have another guess coming. Do not be surprised if the name of Major A. M. Nelson of Martin'county is offered He is being groomed ollet dounty Public Health Association was organized. The call for the meet- ing was issued by the Woman's Literary Club. Dr. H. W. Hill of St. Paul, ex- ecutive secretary of the Minnesota Pub- lic Health Association, was the speaker of the day*.-'fAmong other things he stated that the county association retained from 50 to 85 per cent of the proceeds of Red Cross Christmas seal returned to Mankato Sunday afternoon. Stanley- Koehler, who has charge of the manual training department in the Lamberton high school, spefjb the week- end at his home here. He returned to >4^g Lamberton Sunday. " ' *'" *** sales. William ffaefider Agency GENERAL INSURANCE automobile, accident the best of companies. and death in L l Mt Real estate bought and soid. Legal documents executed, loans cotiated, steamship tickets sold. ne Paris to learn that Mr. Wilson'is none | of these things, to say no wcrd about [these qualities all combined. Mr. Wil- {son Ms understood today in the French i press to be skilled in the preparation j beforehand of somewhat elegantly phras- ed but slightly stilted compositions and and Frank Day, who piloted thd late Gov. John A. Johnson to success on several occasions, is responsible for the statement that he will . be a winner. Major, Nelson used to be associated with Mr. Day in the conduct of the Fair- mont Sentinel and in addition has an en viable* over seas war record,! Jjt is said that the Nonpartisan League heads also have' a Democratic gubernatorial candidate in mind." RHEIMS CATHEDRAL INTACT, ALMOST "On Monday we went to Rheims, 1 which I am frank- to admit I was dis- ^ Bingham Bros Dealers In which he commits to M.A.Bingham. A W. Bingham, recites in an easy and tone. This, as the. French' journal; remarks, and its contemporaries endorse i I the assertion, is not oratory. "It rises i | barely to the level of elocution." Nature, i our contemporaries concede, has denied the president the gift without which the orator is unthinkable—emotion. Mr. Wilson, reciting genially what he has worked up in advance like a pupii doing a task, can electrify no audience with the vehemence of his spirit, the flood of his passion, the tide cf his feelings. His personality is not, as the French say, communicative. He sets no one afire in Briand's great manner. His voice has range without compass, carry- ing qualities but nothing electrifying. He does not shine in debate. He- is _ . _ j -.'.,.« I clearly unused to it. Interruption dis- Or w s v e Orders at Schueller & Uorn Piano' appointed in. The Cathedral, though NEW ULM MINN. PIANO TUNING WRITE TO HUGO FREY Store Successor to R. Jacive 921 Washington Cour( Mankato, Minn &i * zozx&i& : ?a?^^ Look Out J £!;*: FOR YOUR OWN TERESTS IN- Insist On Getting DANIEL WEBSTER FLOUR It gives you the great- GLASS OF SALTS IF +• a '"i ' d ama ged by fire, was never shelled and the rose window is. safe in Palis. So much for propaganda. It also came out that the fire was started by the French while there were German wpufided in i t .... T*he trenches around Rheims have fallen in to such an extent that cannot get any idea of them, except that the German ones were better con- structed and wired than th£ .French.. . As for the burning of villages and the destroying of trees by. the Germans, don't you believe it. With they excep- tion pf Rheims Cathedral there wasn't a sign of fire in any of the villages we saw, ; .The thing that E. and I could not understand was the fact gf. the French working shoulder to shoulder with the German prispners in cleaning up and rebuilding. They seemed to be on the best of terms and no bitterness on either side. It certainly is strange. H—." From a letter from Rome, Italy to Reedy's Mirror. Sat leas meat if you feel Backaohy or j, have Bladder trouble—Salts - fine for Kidneys. ?- s Meat forms wric acid which excited and overworks the kidneys in their efforts to filter it from the system: Regular eat- ers of meat must flush the kidneys occa- sionally. You must relieve them like you relieve your bowels; removing all the acids, waste and poison, else you feel a dull misery in the kidney region, sharp pains in the back or sick headache, diz« stomach _ _ hate rheumatic twinges. The urine is £ ^v cloudy, full of sediment; the channels est returns tor your g often get irritated, obliging you to get « ' up two or three times during the night. To neutralize these irritating acids and flush off the body's urinous waste get about four ounces of Jad Salts money. MORE AND BETTER BREAD •« And it's sold under strongest guarantee that be made. the Eagle Roller Hill Go. NEW ULM, MINN. * from any pharmacy; take a table- spoonful in a glass of water before break- fast for a few days and your kidneys will then act .fins' and bladder disorders dis- appear. This famous salts is made from the acid of .jrrapes and lemon juice, com- bined with lithia, and has been used for generations to clean and stimulate slug- gish kidneys and,stop bladder irritation. Jad Salts is inexpensive: harmless and makes a delightful effervescent lithia- waW drink which millions of men and fvnmen take now and then, thus avoiding ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ I isrious kidney and bladder disease*/ Miss Bessie Oswald, a student at the MacPhail Violm School in Minneapolis, spent Thanksgiving Day .at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrfe. A. M. Oswald, in this city. "^ •', -." * 7= vA'^'r^-v Mrs. A. Mantell and daughters, Anne and Stella, returned to their home at Wabasso, Saturday, after a few days' visit with t h e . J.ohn Hetlinger family in this city. - -."«,* ^\, V ^^swtf.ftawu The Gibbon football team^which defeated the Nicollet gridiron stars at that place last week,-*\spent several hours in New Ulm, Saturday, celebrating their victory. Their stay in this city lStlmo Swahbeck of Springfield enjoyed a few days' visit with friends in this - The" Misses Louise and Laura Timm of Springfield consulted a local physi- cian one day last week. .--»•* , , < Mr. and Mrs. s J. Landkammer and daughter of North Star town-ship visited New Ulm relatives recently. -,. - . J, Miss Gertrude Appel of Springfield was a guest at the Henry Schwartz home last week, while attending the teachers' institute at the Armory. . -- Miss Florence Koehler, who is teach- ing in a rural school near Springfield, spent the past week with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jos. Koehler, in this city. IfeGeo. Schmidt, student-instructor at Dunwoody Institute in Minneapolis, returned to that city Saturday after spending a few days with New Ulm rela- tives. - • ' } ,'-;••'• -_; ••' •.,-';* , *Kut\o Lehne, son of Mr. and Mrs. Otto Lehne of Springfield, has arrived in New York city from overseas service as a musician in a U. S. naval band. He enlisted for the period of *he w^r and expects to receive his discharge in the wear future^. ...... ^ - v . . . Pneumonia ;,."•) j^; ofiari follows Neglected Cold KILL THE COLD! £H Id remedy for 20 vears t iarmr—sate. surs. no •braaks j&p a cold in 24 hours—relieves grip in 3 days " oney back ti it fails. T'i^ uln<i box nas a "c P with Mr. Hili'r picture. < At AH Drug Stores quality^ tobacco, and the good" %*> tobacco taste begins to come, jr* ?•*& > "••?^'% *r* 4' / fv You'll find it Keeps com- ing, too.; The rich to-,^ .' bacco taste lasts and r/ lasts. You don't haver - to take a fresh chew so 'V 1 . often.; fgAriy man who£ - uses the Real Tobacco ^ Chew will tell you that. ~~M i*a wiiPTiifrSbWm v «, MGHT CUT is a short-cut tobacco r< . W-B CUT is a long finen^it tobacco 31? First, last and all the time when you go to \ : ; .yC S. P. NIELSEN Chevrolet 220-222 N. Broadway. Garage Phone 660. , ! Oldsmobile l^ew Ulm, Minn. Equitable Life Insurance Co. of Iowa ESTABLISHED 51 YEARS I J. R. HIGGS, General, Agent i Office in Vogel Block Office Phone 568 New Ulm, Minn. Residence 931 * * * * *#•:•*•>*•«•:•*•*•*•*•*•:•«•*•*•* »>^»>^?.^.^^4.M,>f^^ V '1/ YWijh ttostio!\s ] > W e have dozens of k J- i ^J) ir \-' u Suggestions to« help you answer the p: question; of what s to U •' :' '•'•-, ' :•; _ ' fti- give your friends and S relatives for Xmas. I ,? - 5 r i * ~,t We hay£j^mething fpr jgy^y One, _!;/•., Young or"6ld, Grave or,Gay, p Happy or Sad2\ ;'' t i " ** i> y-r \ * V, "" '* 4J- *v•*•-.* l —. & * ft'- '< 0*'-.. '' *«j! zjness, your stomach aoura, tongue is coated and when the weather is bad you I was made most agreeable,by the local friends of the eleven. MANY WOMEN USE -> ^ < ^j „«~v.„GLYCERINE MIXTURE ' Xew Ulm women will be surprised at the INSTANT pleasant action of sim- ple glyeerine, buckthorn bark, etc., as mixed'in Adler-i-kiuV.One. spoonful re- lieves ANY CASE gas on stomach or sour stomach. Because'Adlei-i-ka acts on BOTH upper and lower bowel It of- ten cures constipation and prevents ap- pendicitis., One - lady reports herself CURED of a bad case of bowel trouble j and constipation.^' Schmucker ~~& Burk, druggists. ' . ' ' Adv. p h It is a pleasure to us to show, you our Christmas * M,Selections*forSwe^know. ,r,; W^'Mf^i^^M-^m % lyou^iwiil enjoy the time ii m, ,t fsoent. - . fm^s \ ,. • 1 •-£ t inon>mjM i LET US HELP YOU! J,H .F0RSTER /•«.- i'^.-^f l*Uf?NlfOWl± ' - > 1 * - T^" \
Transcript
Page 1: New Ulm review (New Ulm, Brown County, Minn.) (New … · j trousers and the nosegay in his button- ... ollet dounty Public Health Association ... Lamberton high school, ...

^ • • T ? m j | BssatSB

wf'v

-v fe

MAKE PLEA FOR LUNDEEN.

Ortonvi l le Cit izens Send Pet i t ion To Governor. »&3yj\ :"^fo

S e m i - A u t o m a t i c Electric P l a n t

at*4252« I t gives you 35 20-Watt l ight* *nd power for Washing Ma-«Jj»ne, Sewing Machine, Vacuum • Cleaner, Iron and Fan. ! t will

• ' ' T i ^ k - j r J S Per cent overload (1000 Watts) for ten hours. If

•»t is large enough for your re­quirements, i t will give perfect •atisfaction, for all parts ere standardized, efficient and guar­anteed.

But a one-size Electric Plant cannot do the work required on different size farms, country homes or stores. That's why v/e have the Consolidated Line. Various sizes from $340.00 up. C o m e i n and tell us your power and light requirements r.nd we will demonstrate the plant that will serve you most efficiently and for the least money, both

*ST. PAUL, November 27.—Ortonville citizens protested to Governor Burn-quist against the "outrageous treat­ment" of Ernest Lundeen of Minne­apolis, a former representative in con­gress, when he attempted to speak there against the League of Nations. The petition",- with about forty signatures, accuses* Sheriff Hurley of leading a number of young men, who deported Lundeen by locking him in a freight car; and asking that all connected with the incident -be punished.

The petition was accompanied by a copy of The Ortonvifle Journal contain­ing an article lauding the action of the local officials. -• ' • > :?;;>"We believe that outside of five or six men this outrage was committed more in ignorance than malice." says the committee's communication. We,, as American citizens, resent being insulted by a small clique who control the only newspaper here, and call every bite who dares to oppose them, even in .local affairs,; pro-kaiser, pro-hum I. W. W., radical socialist, etc." ,. -'

EUROPE'S

, •< <W&}?,-3-•••••

IDEA OF THE PRESI­DENT.

CHAS. EMMERICH PLUMBER

What Woodrow Wilson ate, what j he wore, what he read and all that ; sort of thing filled the newspaper columns [in Europe when first they essayed their j character sketches of ±he man. Even ! the solemn and official Paris Temps j devoted nearly two solid columns to a

character sketch of the familiar type, | while less inspires dailies like the Matin i and the Humanite had their correct and j graceful observations of his well-creased j trousers and the nosegay in his button-! hole. He was quite the "chic"and : decorative being, noted the Socialist j organ, a figure calculated to adorn the | Hotel de Rambouillet in the great days I of the Duchesse and the Marquise, when jthey gave those gorgeous banqvets. ! After a long observation of the man, • faciliated by his protracted stay in

k .S ieam and Hot Water

Gas' F i t t ing .

'j Paris, the European dailies are enabled Heat ing j to sketch the executive character from a

j less objective point cf view, to look into | the soul of Wilson. This they have

We are prepared to do ail kinds o ; done, from the serious Temps to the plumbing In a first-class manner. Do j irresponsible Socialist Avanti of Naples, not fail to cal! upon ug when plumbers* | summing up the revised idea cf Wilson ! for consideration

„PJSl

0' • ,•

concerts hin££iHe can not meet his fellows on the plane of • discussion as equals and share injQhe rough and,tumble of contradiction and retort. In brief Mr. Wilson has no spontaneity. - He speaks from above to those below.

A, limitation of" this kind is serious, as the London Westminister Gazette remarks, because it shows that Mr. Wilson could not have risen through a parliamentary body to, a post as prime minister unless he abandoned the use of rhetoric and climbed by means of hard work in less shining spheres than debate.—Current Opinion. ... .*,, .,..,,-

YAGB mm*

.f ORGANIZE HEALTH ASSOCIATION j The Misses Adeline' Bartl and Iona

—: Aft ( ' j*Arbes, students at Good Counsel Acade-At a meeting*held at the St. Peter m y in Mankato, spent Thanksgiving

courthouse last week Tuesday, the Nic-! D a y at their homes in ihis city. They

CHAPMAN ON ROADS ISSUE.

•ervlces are required.

Minn, and Center Sts

Phone 281

; the man, it seems that the supreme j shock he imparts is due to the discovery I that he is no orator. Mr. Wilson's

New Ulm J fame as a speaker had preceded him to j the old World. There were expecta­tions of a master of the spoken word more' fluent than Poincare, tmbre epi-gramrnatic tTxan; Clemenceau, more- fiery than Briand, more temperamental thaii

] Lloyd George himself; Blank was the Eeurance against fire, hail, torpado j a m a z e m e n t of the 'Socialist organ m

In his weekly letter, Vance, Chapman says in regard to the Good Roads Bond Amendment to be voted upon at the next electionf [i'*"*C/;\' tMV * ?? *"/

"It is rathfer early to predict the fate of the Good Roads Bond Amendment which will be voted upon next fall, except to say that its advocates are as staunch as of old. However, it might not be out of the way to add that the movement for the adoption of the amendment has not the punch it had some months ago. To he frank about it, the Good Roads Association shake-up of several weeks ago in whjch two employees were made to walk the plank has had a depressing effect which has been voiced in more than one iural publication. As a result, not to mention the natural and unconceivable oppo­sition to all modern improvements, there has been a tendency to shy at the boost­ing game and the amendment in conse­quence is suffering. In marked con-, trast, however, is the attitude pf a dozen or more •. counties which, have bonded themselves heavily for local road work. This means that they will be in at the big game and it is what may save the amendment from defeat."," , - ., ,'. .

Mayor Hodgson of St, Paul and Major A. M. Nelson of Martin, County are mentioned as gubernatorial possibilities on the democratic side in the state. Chapman says: ~

"In Democratic -circles gubernatorial talk runs, pretty much to Mayor Hodg­son, "Larry Ho" of St, Paul. Some leading members of the unwashed haz-ards the opinion*, that he will be the only offering oh the Democratic side, but they have another guess coming. D o not be surprised if the name of Major A. M. Nelson of Martin'county is offered

He is being groomed

ollet dounty Public Health Association was organized. The call for the meet­ing was issued by the Woman's Literary Club. Dr. H. W. Hill of St. Paul, ex­ecutive secretary of the Minnesota Pub­lic Health Association, was the speaker of the day*.-'fAmong other things he stated that the county association retained from 50 to 85 per cent of the proceeds of Red Cross Christmas seal

returned to Mankato Sunday afternoon.

Stanley- Koehler, who has charge of the manual training department in the Lamberton high school, spefjb the week­end at his home here. He returned to > 4 ^ g Lamberton Sunday. " ' *'" ***

sales.

William ffaefider Agency GENERAL INSURANCE

automobile, accident the best of companies.

and death in

L lMt

Real estate bought and soid.

Legal documents executed, loans cotiated, steamship tickets sold.

ne

Paris to learn that Mr. Wilson'is none | of these things, to say no wcrd about [these qualities all combined. Mr. Wil-{son Ms understood today in the French i press to be skilled in the preparation j beforehand of somewhat elegantly phras­

ed but slightly stilted compositions and

and Frank Day, who piloted thd late Gov. John A. Johnson to success on several occasions, is responsible for the statement that he will . be a winner. Major, Nelson used to be associated with Mr. Day in the conduct of the Fair­mont Sentinel and in addition has an en viable* over seas war record,! Jjt is said that the Nonpartisan League heads also have' a Democratic gubernatorial candidate in mind."

RHEIMS CATHEDRAL INTACT,

A L M O S T

"On Monday we went to Rheims, 1 which I am frank- to admit I was dis-

^

Bingham Bros Dealers In

which he commits to M . A . B i n g h a m . A W. Bingham, recites in an easy and

tone. This, as the . French' journal; remarks, and its contemporaries endorse i

I the assertion, is not oratory. "It rises i | barely to the level of elocution." Nature, i our contemporaries concede, has denied

the president the gift without which the orator is unthinkable—emotion. Mr. Wilson, reciting genially what he has worked up in advance like a pupii doing a task, can electrify no audience with the vehemence of his spirit, the flood of his passion, the tide cf his feelings. His personality is not, as the French say, communicative. He sets no one afire in Briand's great manner. His voice has range without compass, carry­ing qualities but nothing electrifying. He does not shine in debate. He- is

_ . _ j - . ' . , . « „ I clearly unused to it. Interruption dis-Or w s v e Orders at Schueller & Uorn Piano'

appointed in. The Cathedral, though

NEW ULM M I N N .

PIANO TUNING WRITE TO

HUGO FREY Store Successor to R. Jacive

921 Washington Cour( Mankato, Minn

&i * zozx&i&:?a?^^

Look Out

J

£!;*:

FOR YOUR OWN TERESTS

IN-

Insist On Getting

DANIEL WEBSTER FLOUR

It gives you the great-

GLASS OF SALTS IF

+• a'"i ' d a m a g e d by fire, was never shelled and the rose window is. safe in Palis. So much for propaganda. It also came out that the fire was started by the French while there were German wpufided in i t . . . . T*he trenches around Rheims have fallen in to such an extent that cannot get any idea of them, except that the German ones were better con­structed and wired than th£ .French.. . As for the burning of villages and the destroying of trees by. the Germans, don't you believe it. With they excep­tion pf Rheims Cathedral there wasn't a sign of fire in any of the villages we saw,

; .The thing that E . and I could not understand was the fact gf. the French working shoulder to shoulder with the German prispners in cleaning up and rebuilding. They seemed to be on the best of terms and no bitterness on either side. It certainly is strange. H—." From a letter from Rome, Italy to Reedy's Mirror.

Sat leas meat if you feel Backaohy or j, have Bladder trouble—Salts -

fine for Kidneys. ?-s

Meat forms wric acid which excited and overworks the kidneys in their efforts to filter it from the system: Regular eat­ers of meat must flush the kidneys occa­sionally. You must relieve them like you relieve your bowels; removing all the acids, waste and poison, else you feel a dull misery in the kidney region, sharp pains in the back or sick headache, diz«

stomach

_ _ hate rheumatic twinges. The urine is £ ^ v cloudy, full of sediment; the channels

e s t r e t u r n s t o r y o u r g often get irritated, obliging you to get « ' up two or three times during the night.

To neutralize these irritating acids and flush off the body's urinous waste get about four ounces of Jad Salts

money. MORE AND BETTER

BREAD •«

And i t ' s sold under s t r o n g e s t g u a r a n t e e that be m a d e .

t h e

Eagle Roller Hill Go. NEW ULM, M I N N . *

from any pharmacy; take a table-spoonful in a glass of water before break­fast for a few days and your kidneys will then act .fins' and bladder disorders dis­appear. This famous salts is made from the acid of .jrrapes and lemon juice, com-bined with lithia, and has been used for generations to clean and stimulate slug­gish kidneys and,stop bladder irritation. Jad Salts is inexpensive: harmless and makes a delightful effervescent lithia-waW drink which millions of men and fvnmen take now and then, thus avoiding

^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ I isrious kidney and bladder disease*/

Miss Bessie Oswald, a student at the MacPhail Violm School in Minneapolis, spent Thanksgiving Day .at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrfe. A. M. Oswald, in this city. "^ •', -." * 7= vA'^'r^-v

Mrs. A. Mantell and daughters, Anne and Stella, returned to their home at Wabasso, Saturday, after a few days' visit with t h e . J.ohn Hetlinger family in this city. - -."«,* ^\, V ^^swtf.ftawu

The Gibbon football t e a m ^ w h i c h defeated the Nicollet gridiron stars at that place last week,-*\spent several hours in New Ulm, Saturday, celebrating their victory. Their stay in this city

lStlmo Swahbeck of Springfield enjoyed a few days' visit with friends in this

- The" Misses Louise and Laura Timm of Springfield consulted a local physi­cian one day last week. .--»•* , , <

Mr. and Mrs. s J . Landkammer and daughter of North Star town-ship visited New Ulm relatives recently. -,. - . J,

Miss Gertrude Appel of Springfield was a guest at the Henry • Schwartz home last week, while attending the teachers' institute at the Armory. .

-- Miss Florence Koehler, who is teach­ing in a rural school near Springfield, spent the past week with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jos. Koehler, in this city.

IfeGeo. Schmidt, student-instructor at Dunwoody Institute in Minneapolis, returned to that city Saturday after spending a few days with New Ulm rela­tives. - • ' } ,'-;••'• -_; ••' •.,-';*

, *Kut\o Lehne, son of Mr. and Mrs. Otto Lehne of Springfield, has arrived in New York city from overseas service as a musician in a U. S. naval band. He enlisted for the period of *he w^r and expects to receive his discharge in the wear future^. ...... ^ - v . . .

P n e u m o n i a ;,."•) j^ ; ofiari fol lows

Neglected Cold KILL T H E COLD! £ H

Id remedy for 20 vears t iarmr—sate. surs. no •braaks j&p a cold in 24

hours—relieves grip in 3 days " oney back ti it fails. T'i

uln<i box nas a "c P w i t h Mr. Hili'r picture. <

At AH Drug Stores

quali ty^ „ tobacco, and the good"

%*> tobacco tas te begins to c o m e , jr* ?•*& > "••?^'% *r* 4' /

fv You'll find it Keeps com­ing, t o o . ; The rich to-,^

.' bacco t a s t e l as t s a n d r / lasts. You don ' t haver

- to take a fresh chew so ''V1. often.; fgAriy man who£ - uses the Real Tobacco ^ Chew will tell you tha t . ~~M

i*a wiiPTiifrSbWm v «, M G H T CUT is a short-cut tobacco r<.

W-B CUT is a long finen^it tobacco

31? First, last and all the time when you go to \ : ; .yC

S. P. NIELSEN C h e v r o l e t

220-222 N. Broadway.

G a r a g e

P h o n e 660. , !

O l d s m o b i l e

l^ew U l m , M i n n .

Equitable Life Insurance Co. of Iowa E S T A B L I S H E D 5 1 Y E A R S

I J. R. HIGGS, General, Agent i Office in Vogel Block

Office Phone 568 New Ulm, Minn. Residence 931

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V ' 1 / YWijh ttostio!\s]> W e have dozens of k

J -

i ^J) ir\-' u Suggestions t o «

help you answer the p:

question; of what sto U •' :' '•'•-, ' :•; _ ' fti-

give your friends and S

relatives for Xmas. I

,?

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We hay£j^mething fpr jgy^y One, _!;/•., Young or"6ld, Grave or,Gay,

p Happy or Sad2\ ; ' ' t i " * * i> y-r

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*v•*•-.* l —.

& • • *

ft'-

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zjness, your stomach aoura, tongue is coated and when the weather is bad you I was made most agreeable,by the local

friends of the eleven.

MANY WOMEN USE -> ^ < ^j „«~v.„GLYCERINE MIXTURE

' Xew Ulm women will be surprised at the INSTANT pleasant action of sim­ple glyeerine, buckthorn bark, etc., as mixed'in Adler-i-kiuV.One. spoonful re­lieves ANY CASE gas on stomach or sour stomach. Because'Adlei-i-ka acts on BOTH upper and lower bowel It of­ten cures constipation and prevents ap­pendicitis., One - lady reports herself CURED of a bad case of bowel trouble j and constipation.^' Schmucker ~~& Burk, druggists. ' . ' ' Adv.

p h

It is a pleasure to us to show, you our Christmas *

M,Selections*forSwe^know. ,r,; W^'Mf^i^^M-^m

% lyou^iwiil enjoy the time ii m, ,t • fsoent. - . fm^s \ ,. •

1 •-£

t inon>mjM i

LET US HELP YOU!

J,H .F0RSTER / • « . -

i'^.-^f l*Uf?NlfOWl±

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