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The Princeton Union from Princeton, Minnesota • Page 7

Location:
Princeton, Minnesota
Issue Date:
Page:
7
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

COMrOftTABIX SOUTH aomo NOBIS Sandstone 8 p. Brook faxk Mora AW Osihrie JIM Bock iai MUaea Pease (f) 6S Long (f) ili Briekton (f) Princeton 6:15 Zimmerman Elk Rv Anoka Minneapolis 15 fit Paul 8:40 OOIMO :06a.v 40 1:05 10:08 10.18 10:22 10:32 10:50 11:45 11:15 12:35 p. 1:10 ST. CLOUD TRAINS. GOING WEST GOING EAST 10.00 a.

Milaca 6:30 p. as. Foreaton 8:08 8 Cloud 5:00 Train No. 42 leaves St. Cloud dally at 8:10 a.

arrives at Milaea at 9'M a. m. and Sandstone at 11:20 a. ss where it connects with New 80 far Duluth. Train No.

41 leaves Sandstone dally at 12:05 p. after arrival of No. 18 from Duluth. arrives at Milaea at 1:88 p. and at St.

Cloud at 3:20 p. 9 WAY FREIGHT. GOING SOUTH i GOING NOBTM ally, ex. 8:80 a. 8:80 10:80 8:00 Sua.

1 Daily. x. San. MUaea Princeton Elk Blvsr Anoka ..........8:00 ...2:10 p. as.

...1:00 .10:80 Any information regarding sjespiag ears or connections will be furaiskedat any time by J. W. MOSBMAN, As-sat. Prinseton. Mian.

MELE LACS COUNTY TOWN CLERKS BOKUS BrookA. J. Franzen R. 4, Milaea BorgholmC. W.

Sorenson R. 1, Milaea BradburyW. C. Johnson Onamia DaileySereno Johnson R. 2, Onamia East SideOscar C.

R. 1, Redtop GreenbushOscar Erickson R. 1, Foreston HaylandMearl E. Hummel R. 3.

Milaea Tale HarborSamuel Magaw R. 1, Wahkon KathioWallace E. Schaumberg Star Onamia MiloO. B. Kessler R.

1, Foreston Milaea.H A. S. Sandholm R. 2. Milaea MudgettR.

L. Baker R. 2. Onamia OnamiaG. H.

Carr R. 2, Onamia PageErick Williams R. 3. Milaea PrincetonHenry Marpe Princeton South HarborPhilip WoodwardR.l, Onamia VILLAGE RECORDERS ForestonEarl DeHart Foreston IsleA. O.

Peterson Isle MilaeaE. A. Magnuson Milaea PrincetonClair Smith Princeton OnamiaStacy Orton Onamia WahkonC. M. Halgren Wahkon Princeton Lodge KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS NO.

93 Meets Every Thursday Evening J. L. Townsend, K. R. S.

S. R. Jones, C. C. PROFESSIONAL CARDS GEORGE PRENTICE ROSS Undertaker and State Licensed Embalmer.

Disinfecting a Specialty Rural Phone No. 80 PRINCETON, MINNESOTA DR. D. A. McRAE Dentist Office in Odd Block.

PRINCETON, MINNESOTA DR. NEIL A. STACEY DENTIST Over Jack's Drug Stora Phone 212 ELVERO L. MCMILLAN, i Lawyer I Townsend Building. I PRINCETON, MINNESOTA W.

C. DOANE Lawyer County Attorney I. O. O. F.

Blk, Princeton, Minnesota EVAN H. PETERSON Attorney (Successor to S. P. Skahen) Princeton, Minnesota. Costs less to use this paint Cheap paints cover only 200 to 250 square feet per gallon, two coats.

Lowe Brothers High Standard covers 350 to 400 square feet, two coats. That's why it costs less in the long run. Lasts longer, too. a Come in and ask for 5 color card and literature. i 6RAMER HDWE.

CO. Princeton, Minn. SWrtts Charging It Up to Uncle Sam. At last the Kenyon committee of the senate has uncovered a "lead" that is worth while although it is not one of the leads suggested by Governor Cox, nor one he will be anxious to have run down. Testimony before the committee revealed that several assistants to the attorney general and an assistant to the secretary of agriculture all had "official business" in San Francisco at the time of the democratic natirnal convention and that their expenses on the trip were paid for out of the United States treasury.

There was a hint, also, that at least a part of the expenses of the attorney general himself, a candidate for the presidential nomination, was paid for from public funds. The committee, very properly, has decided to make a thorough inquiry into the question of expense accounts of all public officials who made the journey to the San Francisco convention. The amounts involved are comparatively small, but that does not make the offense, if proved, any the less culpable. Senator Reed of Missouri, one of the democratic members of the committee, voiced the popular verdict when he declared that all public officials found guilty of such petty graft should be dismissed from service, members of the cabinet, as well as their subordinates. Probably no one in the country now regrets his starting of the senate committee on its hunt for evidence more than does Governor Cox.

He is receiving a practical lesson in the truth of the ancient proverb about throwing stones while living in glass houses. NO REASON FOR IT. When Princeton Citizens Show a Way. There can be no reason why any reader of this who suffers the tortures of an aching back, the annoyance of urinary disorders, the pains and dangers of kidney ills will fail to heed the words of a neighbor who has found relief. Ask your neighbor.

Read what a Princeton citizen says: Mrs. H. Lind says: "Doan's Kidney Pills have helped me and I am glad to recommend them. My back used to cause me a great deal of misery. When I had been sitting down awhile, it was awfully hard to get up.

I had frequent dizzy spells and a t'ull ache in my back tormented me for hours. Doan's Kidney Pills soon jjave me fine relief. They rid me of the lameness in my back, of the dull, tiring ache and made me feel better in every way." Price 60c, at all dealers. Don't simply ask for a kidney remedyget Doan's Kidney Pillsthe same that Mrs. Lind had.

Foster-Milburn Co, Buffalo, N. Y. Adv. Embltm of Satisfaction Mille Lacs County Teachers. Hereunder is a list of the superintendents and principals of the schools of Mille Lacs county, together with the teachers in the rural districts and their postoffice addresses, furnished by County Superintendent Wasenius: Dist.

No. Name P. O. Address 1 B. Hall, Supt.

Princeton 2 Mrs. Alby Svarry R. 1, Princeton 3 NorthElvina Hartman Princeton 3 WestMrs. C. M.

Serrurier Princeton 3 EastMrs. R. H. King Princeton 3 SouthMarion Lundblad Princeton 4 EastEsther Olson R. 5, Princeton Olga Odegard 4 WestIda May Schmidt 5 Orpha Ross Mary Madsen 6 Helene Noeske Edna Christopherson R.

7 Pearl Buisman R. Mildred Buisman R. 8 Florence Johnson 9 Ethel Teutz R. 10 Julia Peterson R. 11 Wilda Pogue Vera Jermsta 12 Fay Young R.

Beatrice Young R. 13 H. F. Baldwin, Supt. 14 NorthHelen Blomquist 14 SouthHarriet Johnson 15 NorthEthel Engstrom Opstead 15 C.Ethel Carlson R.

1, Redtop 16 NorthMary Knowlton Onamia 16 C.Eunice Bergquist 16 SouthHuldah Telander 17 F. C. Thompson, Prin R. 18 Marion Ferguson Eleanor Larson Isle Johanna Kummert Isle 20 NorthAlice Holman R. 2, Milaea 20 SouthAnnie Mollan R.

2, Milaea Edith Dahlin R. 2, Milaea 21 Olga Halvorson R. 4, Milaea 22 EastLydia Nilson Onamia 22 WestFlorence Teutz Onamia 23 Mrs. Ernest Johnson Foreston 24 Emma Parks Princeton 25 Olive Anderson R. 3, Milaea Irene Nordberg R.

3, Milaea 26 Madge Berry R. 4, Milaea 27 Eleanore Meleen Star Milaea 28 Sadie Mallery R. 4, Milaea 29 NorthGrace Hedges R. 2, Milaea 29 SouthMabel Rudisill R. 2, Milaea 30 Myrtle Wood R.

1, Milaea 31 Lillian Peterson R. 2, Milaea 32 Hilda Barhaug R. 2, Milaea 33 C. V. Schofield, Prin Wahkon 34 C.

F. Lien, Prin Onamia 35 Hazel Henschel R. 1, Foreston Clara Henschel R. 1, Foreston 36 Edith Dahl R. 4, Milaea 37 Clara Rosin R.

5, Princeton R. 1, Princeton R. 1, Foreston R. 1, Princeton R. 1, Princeton R.

1, Foreston 1, Foreston 1, Ronneby 1, Ronneby Foreston 5, Princeton 1, Princeton Foreston Foreston 5, Princeton 5, Princeton Milaea Bock Bock Onamia Onamia 1, Onamia Isle DELCO-UGHT The complete Electric light and Power Phot Deleo-Light on the farm means more time for productive work. CLAIR I. KALIHER PRINCETON, MINNESOTA THE PRINCETON UNION: THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1920 88 Norma Sanderson R. 2, Milaea 39 NorthAbbie Smith R. 2, Onamia 39 SouthJanie Perry R.

2, Onamia 40 Hazel Person R. 2, Onamia 41 Hattie Peterson Ogilvie 42 EastGrace Oakes R. 2, Onamia 42 WestA. McMillan R. 2, Onamia 43 Mabel Jorgensen Star Milaea Elsie Nelson Star Milaea 44 Sophye Mollan Star Milaea 45 G.

Casper Wahkon 46 Ethel Anderson R. 3, Milaea 47 Mary C. Brennan Bock 48 Evelyn Carlson Bock 49 Freda LaSalle R. 3, Milaea 50 Emma Barhaug R. 1, Milaea 51 Dagmer Sorenaen R.

1, Milaea 52 Lydia Sorensen R. 1, Milaea 53 Olga Lindholm R. 2, Onamia Warning To Republicans. The most critical time in the republican campaign has arrived. From every hand come reports of a landslide.

"It's "all over hut the shouting," is the burden of these tidings. It is true that there are indications of an overwhelming republican victory on November 2. It will not be realized, however, unless every republican voter works, and works hard, from now until every vote is cast. There is danger, serious danger, in that feeling that there is to be a landslide. Landslide talk is never good political psychology, even a few days before election.

Six weeks before election it constitutes a real menace. If the general impression gains ground that it is all over but the shouting the republican voters may MACHINERY 1 Minnesota Binder, new 1 Minnesota Mower 1 Minnesota Rake T)OIVER, sturdiness and dependability ML have been qualities of Buick Valve-inHead Motor Cars from the time that the name Buick first became linked with the automobile industry. Today, in equal measure as in the past, the Buick Motor Company is dedicated to a continuance of the policy that has caused the Buick car to occupy the position it holds in the public mind. all that the name Buick has meant in twenty years of automobile history, the new Nineteen Twenty One Buick brings that grace of movement, that refinement of every line and feature, that sheer beauty of design which inspire a pride of ownership in a fine motor car. The new Buick line comprises seven models, one for every possible demand.

Each has the famed Buick Valve in Head Motor, as rugged and powerful as ever, yet refined into a mechanism of unusual quietness. find themselves lulled into a lethargy from which it will be difficult to arise. That sort of fancied security has lost elections. There is only one way for the republican party to make the clean sweep five weeks from now and that is for every voter and every worker to keep right up on his toes. There can be no let down, even in the face of the Maine victory and the rosy predictions'from every side.

The next five weeks rre the crucial ones for the republicans of the nation and the republicans of Minnesota. This is not the time to rest on the oars. It is the time te pull hard. NOTICE Anyone contemplating an auction sale should remember that T. J.

Kaliher is- still on the job. He is the man who gets the crowd and gets the money. ASK YOUR BANKER Call Telephone 220 Auction Sale On the Old Herman Miller Farm, Three Miles South of Scenic Highway and Half a Mile West of Princeton, on Tuesday, Oct 5 AT 1 P. M. The Following Property Will Be Offered for Sale: LIVE STOCK 4 Horses, weight 1100 to 1250 5 Cows, all fresh in Spring 1 Heifer, 1 years old 3 Calves 1 Double Disc Drill 1 Rock Island Corn Planter 1 Two-Section Iron Harrow 2 Sleds 1 Wagon 1 Disc Cultivator 1 6-Shovel Cultivator 1 14-in.

Walking Plow 1 Economy 18 Separator, new 2 Sets of Work Harness Also Many Other Articles USUAL TERMS OF SALE HANS PAPE, Owner G. A. EATON, Clerk T. J. KALIHER, Auct.

WHEN BETTER AUTOMOBILES ARE BUILT. BUICK WILL BUILD THEM Auction Sale On Farm of W. H. Peters, Old Thompson place, 2 1-4 Miles South of Princeton, off Scenic Highway Monday. October 4 BEGINNING AT 1 P.

M. The Following Property Will Be Sold: HORSES 1 Brown Mare, 9 years 1 Black Horse, 10 years 1 Roan Horse, 11 years COWS 1 Red Cow, fresh Nov. 5 1 White Cow, fresh Feb. 15 1 Red and White Cow, fresh March 1 1 Spring Heifer Calf MACHINERY 1 Dane Mower, 5 ft. cut 1 John Deere Riding Corn Cultivator 1 John Deere Sulky Plow, good as new 1 Walking Plow 1 Horse Potato Hiller 1 Double Shovel Steel Beam Plow 1 Set Heavy Wagon Sleighs 1 SV4 Wide-Tire Wagon 1 Box and Rack 1 Flat Hay Rack 1 Winter Rack 1 Set of Short Tug Harness 5 Corner Binds Chains 4 Skidding Chains 5 Small Chains, 8 ft.

1 Double Crotch Chain, 15 ft. 1 Trip Chain, 25 ft. Ion? 1 Set Cross Chains 2 Heavy Logging Chains 1 Bunk Chain 1 Heavy Logging Chain, 10 ft. 1 Set of Spreaders 4 Cant Hooks 2 Sets of Single and Double Blocks 1 Big Iron Kettle 2 Scoop Shovels 1 Potato Scoop 3 Short Handle Pointed Shovels 3 Sledges 1 Grub Hoe and Pick 2 One-Man Saws 2 Crosscut Saws Boys' Express Wagon and Sleigh 3 Iron Wedges and Maul USUAL TERMS OF SA LE W. H.

PETERS, Owner G. A. EATON, Clerk T. J. KALIHER, Auct.

PAGE SEVEN 1 Pair of Skidding Tongs 3 Extra Long Neckyokes 1 Shoveling Board 1 3-Gal. Potato Sprayer Some Dry Stove Wood 2 6x8 Sills, 18 ft. long Some Plank and Lumber 85 Cedar Fence Posts About 6 Tons of Good Wild Hay 1 Grindstone 1 Spring Seat 1 Roll of Fencing Wire, 20 rods 4 Bu. White Cap Dent Seed Corn, last year's crop 175 Bushels of Oats HOUSEHOLD GOODS 1 Cupboard, new 1 Kitchen Cabinet 1 Kitchen Table 1 Extension Dining Table 6 Kitchen Chairs 3 Dining Room Chairs 1 High Top Wood Bed and Spring 1 Iron Bed, brass top, complete 1 Single Iron Bed, brass top, complete 1 Book Case and Writing Desk Combined 1 Small Book Case 1 Center Table 1 Stand 1 Leather-Morris Chair 1 Sewing Rocker 5 Rocking Chairs 1 Couch 2 Dressers 1 Commode 1 Chiffonier 1 Hanging Lamp 1 Heating Stove, wood or coalZ 1 Oil Heater 1 3-Burner Oil Stove With Oven 1 Bench Wringer 2 Wash Tubs and Boiler 1 DeLaval Separator 1 Barrel Churn 1 Dasher Churn 1 Clothes Basket And Numerous Other Articles 4- 1.

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About The Princeton Union Archive

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