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The Princeton Union from Princeton, Minnesota • Page 1

Location:
Princeton, Minnesota
Issue Date:
Page:
1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

VOL. IV. Drugs and MAIjf STREET, kil 'Prescriptions Carefully Gompoynded at All of the Dayjr Night, vVE MEAN JIVE US A CALL STREET, The Best Assortment of in Line North of St. Paul and Minneapolis. Drugs.

Chemicals, Patent Medicines, Oils, Paints, Dyes, Colors, Perfumery, Lamps, Brackets, Toilet Requisites, Combs, Musical Instruments, Trasses, Pocket Books, Packet Knives, Stationery, Candies Cigars, Tobacco, Hit laAatolag JhAan Ahrayi on Baad andtoSale Ckp Mahoney Go Dealers in Toilet Goods, Stationery, Wall Confectionery, e. Also Agents for the "NO.NEXPLOSIVE LAMP a- N. E. NSE A L. 'Of Cleveland.

iSfPescriptiona Carefully Compounded and the LOWEST PRICES Dealer in A Large Stock of taple and Fancy Grocevics, General and Fancy Dry Goods, Notions, Men and Boys' Ready Made Clothing, Hats and Caps, Boots and Bboes, Glassware, China and Stoneware, Cigars and Tobacco. The Finest Stock of Choice. Candies, Confectionery and Fruits in Princeton. 11 ani ta By Prices, taiiejojiow Bpods. I Will Undersold All Kinds of Farmers' Produce Taken in Exchange for Merchandise.

TJae OM Firm of H. COWLE CO As Usual are in the Market With a LARGE AND CAREFULLY SELECTED STOCK OF Dry Goods, Groceries and Provisions, Table Cutlery English and AmericanIron Stone Hats and Caps, Boots and Slioes, Clothing, Con- fectionaHes, Tobacco and Segars, tfc. wiu BU A mm And we Cordially Invite Purchasers to Give us a Call Before Purchasing Their Fall Supplies, as we Will Guarantee to Sell Goods as Cheap for CASH as the Same Quality of Goods can be Bought for in the State. H- B- CCWLES PRINCETON tm TH AND YOU WILL BE CONVINCED. mi OO-, AIX ABOABP FOR THE REWABIJ3 STORE The Grand Central Depot.

PRINCETON. PRINCETON, THURSDAY, Neely Minn. Dealers in Heavy Shelf Hardware, Stoves, Tinware, Nails, Rope, Saws, Chaijis, WINDOW GLASS Farm Machinery: MITCHELL WAGONS, SUPERIOR BROADCAST SEEDERS SUPE- RIOR GRAIN DRILLS.MONITOR JOHN DEER PLOWS. GANG SULKEY PLOWS. CHAMP-' ION REAPERS MOWERS, GORHAM PEERLESS CARPENTER'S, FARMER'S and Stoves.

All Kinds of Jobbing Done on Short Notice and at Reasonable Rates. Close Cash Buyers Will Do Well to Call on Before Purchasing, As We Defy Neely PRINCETON, MINN. PRINCETON LAGKSMITH SHOP11 DOOR TO CALEY NEELY'SJ Main Princeton, Minn. HORSESHOEING AND OX-SHOEIN Speciality. LOGGING AND TOTE SLEDS AL WATS ON HAND.

All Kinds of Blacksmithing Done in the BEST STYLE and at Reason- able Rates. I Employ FIRST-CLASS WORKMEN and Use the Best Material and War rant All Work Done. HARDWARE, PRINCETON UNION. SULKEY CULTIVATORS, SHOVEL PLOWS, MON- ITOR TIGER HORSE RAKES, BURRS SELF DUMP RAKES JOINER'S TOOLS- POCKET TABLE CUTLERY, HARNESS TRIMMINGGS, WHIPS, Wheel Barrows, Wooden Pumps, Lead- Pipe Cistern Pumps, Wagon and Carriage Stock, Paints, Oils, and Lubri- cants. Together With a Thousand Other Articles Which Go to Com-.

pfote a First Class i Also Dealers in FURNITURE AND Boors, Blinds, and Building Material, SPECIAL INDUCEMENTS OFFERED CAL.EY, Prop'r. Mariaru Coie, ot John C. Oswald's house, Minneapolis, is in town to-day. Cole is a good boy and knows how to use UoleisagoottDoyandtnowsno lous his Princeton friends decently when he i of R. C.

DUNN, PUBLISHER. ,0 -4 Independent Republican in Politics ferms $2- 00 per Tear. Official Paper of Mille Lacs County and the Village of Princeton. WAEAT was quoted in Minneapolis, onTuesday, at 88c for No. 1, and 85c for No.

2. EX-JUDGE SHERMAN PAGE has been indicted by the grand jury of Mower county for perjury. HE St. Paul Globe takes exceptions to the Minneapolis school ent's dabbling in politics. SHERBURNE and Mille Lacs will pull together this year in matters pertaining to district politics.

Two prominent Ohio Catholic Democrats anuounce their intention of VQting for Garfield and Arthur. QUEER, ain't it, that Crow Wing county has as many democratic voters as Sherburne andJMilie Lacs together? A NEPHEW of Gov. Williams, of Indiana, was murdered in a brothel at Vincennes, that state, on Friday night. WELL may the owners of real estate in Mille Lacs county exclaim, "Dn the state board of equaliza- tion!" MILLE LACS county Democrats will insist on a fair representation in the district Democratic convention. On with the jig.

HE Northern Pacific R. R. CoIllinois. 000 bridge across the Missouri river at Bismarck. HE call for the Republican district convention has not yet been is.

sued. The UNION is not a believer in the possum policy. JUST before election it is an easy matter to get new post offices and new mail routes established. But after electionthere's where the rub comes in. HE UNION still sticks to its prediction that Fridley and Zatterstrom will be the Democratic standard bearers in the 25th senatorial district and that they will run like wild-fire- A CONVENTION of Irish Republicans was held at Saratoga, on Monday.

Resolutions urging Irishmen to vote for Garfield and Arthur were unanimously adopted. HE state board of equalization raised the valuation of real estate in Mille Lacs county only 150 per cent. Tally another for state auditor 0 P.delegate. Whitcomb. SHARP fellow, that Rush City Post man.

But his political editorial paragraphs are about as pointed as the business end of a crow bar that has been dulled by much usage. OUR Cambridge friends intimate that they will attend to us this week. They had better look out for themselves as the district court has convened and the grand jury is in IT is proven beyond all peradventure or doubt that the census taken in South Carolina was fraudulent, but Gen. Walker does not seem to be anx- for as re-couut. IF the Dt-mocrats of the 30th legislative district were to nominate C.

H. Chadbourne, of Sherburne, as their candidate legislature, he would be elected, providing he accepted the nomiuation. T. H. CAINE seems to be the choice of the Isanti county Republicans as their candidate for the legislature.

He is a good man but of the wrong nationalit ru a wel i fsanti DULUTH should feel prond its leading paper, the Tribune, which has been enlarged to almost double its former size and has donned a bright new dress. Th Tribune is one of the best weeklies in Minnesota. MAINE Prohibitionists are consistent mortals. Their leaders, for some imaginary cause, became offended at Gov. Davis and joined hands with the organized liquor interests of the cities to secure the election of Plaisted.

A PRELIMINARY injunction has been granted by Judge Nelson of the U. S. district court, St. Paul, to prevent the Barnesville and Moorehead R. R.

from crossing the Northern Pacific track at Moorehead. As the bible has always been considered the inspired word of God we are at a loss to know by what authority the changes are made.Elk River Star. Bro. Dare is a fit subject for church discipline. PARNELL, the Irish agitator, continues to address monster meetings of tenant farmers in the southern and western portions of the isle.

counsels peace and inveighs against the use of force by his adherents, but almost daily an obnoxious landlord is murdered. HE Republican majority over the Fusionists in Maine is 210 there were 475 Prohibition votes which leaves Davis 265 short of a majority over all opponents, hence the legislature, which is strongly Republican, will reelect Davis next January. IN Indiana the contest waxes hot. The Democrats are buying up all the purchaseable Greenbackers and shipping in repeaters from Kentucky and The Republicans are fight dent of success. Next Tuesday will tell the tale.

SENATOR BLAINE owes much of his success in life to his gifted wife. She was a school-teacher, in Kentucky, when became acquainted with her he fejll in love with her at first sight and was engaged to her before she would tell him aught of her familywhich was one of the oldest and best in Maine. HE 30th district Democratic con vention is called to meet at Sauk Rapids, Tuesday, Oct Hth, at 1 p. for the purpose of nominating a candidate to the state legislature. The delegates are apportioned to each of the several counties as follows: Benton, 6 Crow Mille Lacs 1 Morrison, 10 Sherburne, 3.

I isCater none of our funeral, but to a disinterested observer it looks as though the district committee treated their Democratic brethren in this county rather shabbily by allowing them only one On what vote is the representation based? Pooi TOPEKA-3, a a printer who had been drinking hard several days, shot and killed himself this morning. In a letter to a young lady to whom he was engaged to bely, married, he said be could not stop drinking, and therefore being unworthy of her and himself, he was resolved to die. Eight years ago Hugh Pettie and the writer were serving their apprenticeship in the St. Louis Evening Journal office at that time Hugh was a bright youth, the foieman's special pet and a general favorite with every one in the office. To-day he fills a suicide's grave! The telegraph dispatch tells its own sad tale.

Referring to the unfortunate Pettie, the St. Cloud Journal-Press truthfully remarks: "When this young nian gan drinking he would aa.ve resented as an insult to liis manhood the imputation that he couldn't stop drinking whenever he wanted The result is given above in his early and disgraceful death. The love of liquor, when the taste is once acquired, is stronger than most men's A LITCHFIELD girl of 16, became enamored with a circus clown and tended temperance exhorter and eloped with him. By false swearing the clown obtained a license from the clerk of court at Wilruar, and immediately after the marriage ceremony the couple on the eastwardbound train for parts unknown. WEDKKSDA-Y'S Republican meeting at 0.

Grant, Cockling, Cameron, lLoga'n and. 30,000 other common-place folks Redpath, the noted newspaper correspondent, says, Ohio and Indiaua are all O. K. for the Republicans The Democrats are playing the Mains game in Ohio it won't work Ohioans are not for sale they take any codfish iu their'n A floated from Hancock pole in Georgetown, on Tuesday. The reb's should wait until Hancock is inaugurated before tbey disguise their true addressed an immense audience at Wheeling, W.

on Tuesday. Spencer Brook Items. SPENCER BROOK, Sept. 28th, 1880. The Republican county convention held at Cambridge, on the 21 was composed of twenty-three delegates, which were distributed among the several towns as follows: Cambridge G.

W. Nesbitt, Jonas Birch, Daniel and P. J. Lund Isanti John Sunderberg, Jonas Norell and G. A.

Rice OxfordStephen Huston Maple RidgePeter Magnus and A D. Caldy North BranchJ. F. Marsden, J. Simpson and B.

F. Huntley Stanchfield Wm. Stockton and E. J. Peterson Athens G.

B. Strong BradfordG. P. Went worth Stan- fordH. G.

Nylin and Olof Lundeen WyanettHenry Howard and T. H. Caine Spencer BrookGerry Clough and F. A. Lowell.

The following are the nominees: auditor, Hans Enberg treasurer, R. Daniclson attorney, H. F. Barker sheriff, Alexander Martin register of deeds, Andrew Danielsou clerk of court, Ole Hallin corouer, Dr. N.

M. Cook county surveyor, J. P. Perkins probate judge. Peter Maguus.

pf ed to represent the county at the dis-1 trict convention to be held at Anoka, on the 12th J. B. Smith, Jonas Norell, B. F. Huntley, Peter Magnus, D.

H. Strong, Dan Anderson, Stephen Huston, Erick Olesou, G. P. Wentworth, Gerry Clough, Wm. Stockton and T.

H. Caine. The delegates will be all right if they can be kept sober uutil after the convention adjourns. Anoka is a no-license town and "hot draps" have to be taken the sly" and those chaps know how to do it. The majority of the delegation favor T.

H. Caine for representative. Sept. 18th was examination day the town was flooded with schoolmarmsa great display of small feet cardinal red. The Wentworth Bros, have sold their Buffalo Pitts thresher to some parties in St.

Francis. They expect to purchase anew steam machine next fall as they think wood is cheaper than horse flesh they have engaged Whitney to finish their contracts for this season. J. R. On Sunday last, the following gentlemen were ordained priests, at the church in this city, by Rt.

Re.v. Bishop Seidenbush: Watry, Gamanche, Beda Northman, 0 S. and Renac- of San Francis.GO, tfutl'the fist three named of this pipQepet Times. the people of Spepcer Brook on "the establishment of a bi-weekly mail route." It possibly meant semi-weekas a bi-weekly mail would only make the lonesomeness more appreciable.St. Cloud Journal-Press.

Just so "semi," instead of "bi," was what we meant. The mistake was discovered only after the edition had been struck off. JffOXEY FOR FARMERS. $100,000. Through our business connections we are enabled, to procure -loans For responsible farmers to the extent of $100,000, in sums ranging from $200 up, for five year's time, on reasonable terms.

The security required for such a loan is a mortgage lien on a good improved farm, owned in fee') simDle and occupied by the borrower Fanners who need funds with which to finish up or enlarge buildiugs, open more land for cultivation or purchase teams will do well to confer with us. For further information call on or write to G. J- Sowden, cashier, Princeton, or P. Pratt, i A n'. Minn.

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About The Princeton Union Archive

Pages Available:
15,581
Years Available:
1877-1922