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1 1 *f i Ar TTf West Superior Milaca PRINCETON Elk Ri\er. Minneapolis St Paul i Ar Tues .Thure & Sat. GOING SOUTH, A Le Milaca 6 00 Soule's Siding 6.23 Long's Sidmg 6-45 PRINCETON .7 25 Zimmerman ..8-05 Elk River ..9 22 Minneapolis ..10:?0 Ar St Paul 10-65 GOING EAS Nfc rv^ ^a^f^BS^^^W^f^P Great Northern Railway. Eastern Minnesota Railway. ST. PAUL., MINNEAPOLIS, PRINCETON, DULUT AND WEST SUPERIOR. Buffet Parlor Cars on Day Trains. GOING WEST. Ex 3nn. 8.50 AM. 9:15 10:04 10-35 10:57 1'45P 2-00 Ex Sun. 1-40 1.55 4:40 5 07 5 88 6-30 B-55 St. Putil Minneapolis Elk River PRINCETON Milacn West Superior Dnlnth OOINO KAST. Daily. 11 -20 P.M. 11-55 *k 1:10 A M. l-5i a 2-80 6 40 7.05 Daily. 11:20P.M. 11:38 4:03A.M. 5:10 5 55 7:60 7 35 Connections made in Union Depots at St. Paul, Minneapolis and West Superior. W. FABHINGTON, Gen. Manager, I WHITNE Y, Gen Pass Agent Princeton Accommodation. Mon., Wed Bit. GOING NORTH, P.M. Minneapolis....4:30 A M. 8 56 10 05 Le Foreston Milaca 5-3S Zimmerman....6:30 PRINCETON Long's Siding..7-33 Soule's Siding These trains go south Tuesdays. Thursdays and Saturdays, and north Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays St. Cloud & Hinckley Division of the G. N. Railway. GOING WEST, M. Le.Milaca 4 35 Foreston 4-56 C. T. JOHNSON, Local Agent FRATERNAL -:-LOD6E N O. 92, A & A. second Regular communications, Wednesday of each month WH, CORDINER, W. UT EWING, Sec. Wallace Rines Post, NO. 142 A. Regular meetings fiist and third Tuesday evenings at 7 30, each month in their hall o\er Caley's fnrniture store SOUTHARD, Cora. Jo NOK.ES, Adjt PRINCETON LODGE, N O. 93, of Regular meetings every Tuesday eve ning at 8 o'clock J. W HARTMAN, K. S I STAPLES, C. CALL.A TEMPLE, NO. 3 Rathbone Sisters, of Princeton. Regular meetings second and onrth Wednes day evenings, at 7.30 p. of P. hall MISS LOLA JESTIER, E R MACGIE BRIGGS & PRINCETON LODGE NO. 298,1. O. G. Regular meetings every Mon day evening, at 8 o'clock, in Ca rew hall. ERNEST BYERS, C. T. CHAS FREER, Sec'y O. M. Tent No. 17. Regular weekly meetings Thurs day, 8 in Maccebee Hall. ELMER WHITNE Y, Com. G. E CHUTE, R. K. HIVE NO. 5. L. O. T. M. Regular meetings every Tuesday evening iu Macca bee's hall CORA 'VHITXEY, C. SARAH ORR, HEBRON ENCAMPMENT. No. 42,1. O. O. Meetings 2nd and 4th Mondays at 8 o'clock p. A FRENCH, UY EWING, Scribe. PRINCETON LODGE NO. 208,1. O O.F. Regnlur meetings every Friday evening at 7:30 o'clock CRAIG, N. VANALSTM N, Sec BYERS, DAUGHTERS O REBEKAH. May Flower Lodge No 101,1 O. O meets 1st and 3rd Wednesday e\emngs of each month MRS GUY EWING, N. ALICE BOLCK, Rec. Sec. GEN. CUSTER CAMP NO. 59, Sons of Veterans. Meet eveiy Wednesday evening, at 8 o'clock I PATTERSON, Capt P. M. TAYLOR, First Sergt PRICES OF THE Princeton Roller Mills and Elevator. Wheat, per bushel Corn, Oats, Rye, $ 48 20 16 25 RETAIL. Vestal, per sack Flour, (100 per cent) per sack Banner, per sack Hard Lnck, per sack Corn and Oats Chop, per cwt Corn Meal, per cwt Middlings Shorts, per cwt Bran, per cwt All goods delivered free anywhere $100 1.70 1.50 1.20 .75 .75 70 65 .50 in Princeton. PRINCETON Market Report Wheat, No. 1. Northern, $ 48 2. 46 3, 43 Bye, 28 Oats, 15 Buckwheat, 25 Beans, (good) 1 00 Hay, 5 00 Potatoes, 10 For sale or will trade for grain: One end spring buggy, one heavy wagon, one set double driving harness, one Winchester repeating rifle, 38-56 new model, one Winchester repeating shot gun, 10 gauge. BENJ. SOULE, JR *&jJke%&n LOCAL NOTES, Dr. Niven is in town. A. Bines went to tbe cities Monday evening. M. S. Rutherford was in Minneapo lis, Monday. Albert Wylie visited Minneapolis last Saturday. Mrs. T. Caley visited in St. !Paul the first of the week. A lot of brand new shot guns to rent at T. H. Caley's. Mrs. Wm. Neely has been visiting in Hamline this week. 1,000 yds new carpet 25cts per yard and up. at Jesmer's at Mrs. J. W. Hartman visited relatives at Spencer Brook last week. A. H. Chnte, of Minneapolis, visited his father the first of the week. Mrs. C. T. Johnson returned, Mon day night from a short visit abroad. i .7:10 .8:02 Frank Claggett returned from har vesting in North Dakota last Friday. See our new line price, any kind. of carpets. Any N. E. JESMER. Dr. Niven has his office in the Cowles building to-day and to-morrow. To-day makes 283 out of the year 1895. Only 82 left in which to make history. Mrs. B. F. McClellan visited her sis ter, Mrs. Wheaton, in Elk Biver last Sunday. Steves & Newton shipped 56 head of cattle from their htock yards Tuesday morning. Master Willie is the greatest boy banjoist and basso singer, Opera House Oct. 12th. Sam Sausser Friday after the Dakota's. arrived in Princeton six week' harvesting in A. W. Burgan, of Bochester, is vis iting his brother, I. E. Burgan, for a couple of weeks. Miss May Sadley has been engaged to teach a five months' term of school at Spencer Brook. A complete new line of wall paper, carpets and floor oil cloths at Jesmer's. Prices the low est. Ed. Cilley returned from St. Vincent Monday, where he had been harvest ing and threshing. M. S. Pettey, inventor and manufact urer of the Pettey bed springs, is in "the village this week. Mrs. A. L. Shaw has been allowed a pension and Silas Howard has been granted an additional. Mrs. J. W. Pride, of Minneapolis, is spending a few weeks with her daugh ter, Mrs. A. A. Caswell. Mrs. J. S. Sherburne, of Milo, Maine, will spend the winter with her bister, Mrs. W. A. Dorr. Miss Edith Hanson was thrown from a buggy Sunday, and is suffering from a severely sprained ankle Don't forget to attend the Negro Violin Concerts, Opera House, Oct. 12th. 15, 25 and 35 cents. Thomas P. Kerr went to Minneapo lis Monday, with his family. They will soon depart for Oregon. J. V. Tousely has moved his family to Princeton and will hereafter be counted as a Mille Lacs resident. Little Patti, the child soprano, sings all of the latest popular songs and ballads. Opera House, Oct. 12th. The Negro Violinist, McKanlass, makes the violin weep, pray, laugh and sing. Opera House, Oct. 12th. Charles Fogg returned from Han cock last Friday morning where he has been harvesting and threshing. I will sell a first class 14 inch steel beam plow for $12. This is a bargain you should not miss. T. H. CALEY. Farnharn Bros. have, kept the old "Jerky" busy hauling their brick. They have shipped 600,000 to Melrose alone. Prof. G. B. Simpson has been ailing for the past week and Mrs O, B, Bar ker has been assisting in the high school. W. W. Pew, a Christian Disciples preacher, of Excelsior, was in Prince ton last Thursday on his way to Cam bridge. A. D. Jesmer, of Foreston, was in Princeton, Wednesday and Thursday of last week. He called at the UNION office Thursday. B. F. McClellan went to St. Paul yeste"day morning to make arrange ments for a two months' trip on the Canadian border. There are more calls for Mille Lacs county lands this fall than there have been for the past three years and the demand has always been brisk. The magnificent crop we have just raised and the excellent advertisment the county received at the State fair gives the impetus to this year's demands. M^*4M*4^*'4H*^*^*^*^*^*^*^^^M*-*^*4 Mrs. Frank Harper brought a mam moth potato to the UNION office Mon day which excels anything exhibited so far this season. J. H. Ward, of Milaca, was in Princeton Tuesday evening, to take part in the "hay-foot and straw-foot" of the Uniform Bank. Barney Carmody and Michael Ma honey were in St. Paul last Wednes day on business connected with the proposed new church. Jesmer's Department Store has on display seven large rolls of carpet. Also floor oil cloth, of every variety. See them before you buy. The quartette with the negro violin ist, McKanlass, sings all the jubilee plantation melodies. Opera House, Oct. 12th. 15, 25 and 35 cents. John Boyn has completed a fine new brick house on his farm north of town. It is a beauty and the UNION congratu lates Mr. Boyn on his possession. We have just received a complete line of wall paper. Latest designs. Lowest prices. C. A. JACK'S DRUG STORE. Our dealers in farm implements say they have sold nearly double the quantity of machinery that they did last year. This is especially true of plows. Mille Lacs county's share of the State school money according to Mr. Koerner's figures is $2,488.35. The ap portionment was made on a basis of 939 pupils. Dr. Small received four water melons from his father, N. Small, of Anoka county, weighing 200 pounds. A 50-pound watermelon doesn't grow on every vine. The best is none to good for us, how is it with you? You cannot afford to hunt with inferior ammunition. We keep the finest grades. T. H. CALEY. Chief Ahearn, of the fire depart ment, was taken sick Saturday and confined to his bed until Wednesday, when he began to get better. He i able to get around the house to-day. McKanlass, the negro violinist, beats the world playing Pagganini's "Witches Dance," the "Mocking Bird" with variations, the "Arkansas Traveler'' and "Home, Sweet Home.'" Opera House, Oct. 12th. The work of plowing is much farther advanced than it usually is at this time of the year. Owing to the cheap ness of potatoes many farmers are plowing their potato fields, picking up only what can be secured without trou ble. Charles Caine left yesterday morning for the State university to resume his studies in the medical department. If all goes well with this energetic voung man he will be seeking for a location to expose his shingle next June. Mrs. A. L. Shaw and Mrs. F. S. Hanscome were called to Minneapolis last week by a telegram announcing the serious illness of their sister, Adelaide Hanscome. Their sister's death occurred shortly after their arrival. Bishop Marti, of the St. Cloud, diocese, will lecture in Jesmer's hall next Sunday morning at 8 o'clock. Subject: "Liberty and Conscience." About 2 o'clock in the afternoon the corner stone of the new Catholic church will be laid. E. O. McGlauflin, of Anoka, came up Thursday to confer with the building committee who will have charge of the building of the new Catholic church. Mr. McGlauflin is an ex cellent architect and the committee can place explicit confidence in any thing he tells them. In a letter to the publisher of the UNION, Col. John H. Stevens, the pioneer of Minneapolis, writes: "I wish to congratulate you on the great exhibit made by your county at the re cent State fair, and I wish to add that in the near future the denuded pine lands of Mille Lacs and its sister counties will be the great wheat-pro ducing region of the State." Jennie Bobinson sang by request, "Suwanee Biver," and completely captured the audience. It was artis tically performed, and showed that she has a voice of wonderful range, com pass and power, and as she poured forth the great volume of melody, the audience was hushed into silence. Slate Journal, Lincoln, Neb. With Mc Kanlass Co., Opera House, Oct. 12th. oramand big attention from Litttle things command big attention from us Anythin we put a price on must have quality Tha is ground floor upon which stands this prosperous business. When you come here leave your fears behindbanish your doubts. A conscientious endeavor to render the most sat- isfactory service is omnipresent. C. A. JACK'S PIONEER DRUG STORE. us.thAnything Frank Wood killed two otters at one shot Friday. The mother was feeding a fish to her offspring and awaiting an opportune moment he fired with the above result. The mother was an ex tra large animal. The UNION has been asked to cor rect the statement that Mrs. N. E. Jesmer was elected grand manager of the Bathbone Sisters. The UNION got its information from one of the dailies, hence the error. Miss Lola Jesmer was the lucky lady so this pa per cheerfully makes the correction but it won't retract what it said about the affairs of the society being placed in good hands for that still remains true. E. O. McGlauflin, contracting archi tect, of Anoka, called at this office Thursday afternoon after a meeting of the Catholic building committee. He informed the UNION that he had been employed to draw the plans and make the specifications for the new church. The plans will be drawn for a church 40x80 with a sacristy at the rear 16x24. The plans will not differ materially from those of other Catholic churches and will be surmounted by the usual tower and cross. A gallery will be built in the auditorium and the win dows will be of stained glass. The plans will be drawn for a.frame build ing but fixed so that they may be readily changed to brick There is a possibility of the building being con structed of the latter material, owing to present low prices. Mr. McGlauflin was given until to-day to complete the plans and specifications and will prob ably be in Princeton again this after noon. Beware of Ointments for Catarrh that Coii tain Mercury. As. mercury will surely destroy the sense of smell and completely derange trie whole system when entering it through the mucous surfaces Such articles should never be used except on prescriptions from reputable phsicians, as the damage they will do is ten fold to the good you can possibly derive fiom them Hall Catarrh Cure, manufactured by Cheney & Co Toledo, Ohio O contains no mercury, and is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system In buying Hall Catarrh Cure be sure you get the genu ine It is taken internally, and made in Toledo Ohio, by Cheney & Co Testimonials free igg^Sold by druggists, price 75c. per bottle BUSINESS NOTICES. Watches, clocks and jewelry re paired by F. C. Stamm, in Jesmer's. Don't forget to call on Max Mark & Co. We will take starch factory due bills for face value. Complete assortment of loaded shells and sportmen's goods at T. H. Caley's. Prices lower than ever. Don't discount jour due-bills take them for face value. MAX MARK & Co Burg & Tetelbaum have a large and well ^elected stock of dry goods, no tions, boots and shoes, hats, caps and clothing. Call and examine goods and prices purchasing. We are in the market for 1,000 bush els of brown Swede beans, also, white navy and medium. Come and see us before selling. C. H. BINES & Co. Berg & Tetelbaum have received their fail stock and are prepared to furnish you your winter underwear, woolens, etc. Their stock is large and their prices reasonable. D. W. Spaulding will handle all kinds of game in season. Bring in your prairie chickens, Partridges, ducks, etc. Begular shipments will be made and highest market price paid. E. Mark buys cattle at any time of the week but ships regularly Tuesday morning so that cattle bought must be brought to Princeton Mondays. Everything in the stock linecattle, hogs, sheep, poultry, etc.will be pur chased. If you can't bring it in send word and some of the buyers will visit you. PINE AND HARDWOOD DUMBER, AND Sawed Fence Posts. We have a small stock of excel cellent yuality for sale. Get our prices. MUDGETT BKOS. is snouted Here***- YES IT'S NFW $ FOR SALE BY T. H. Cifo^lsLlL ^4NG^ ARGES llARSEST STOVEPiAHt IN THE WORLD] NEW We If you want a good pair of shoes cheap, call on P. Hedin, Cowles Block Princeton, Minn. Bepairs promptly and neatly done. Fixed ammunition, Winchester and Spencer repeating shot guns, double barrelled shot guns, hunting coats, and game bags at Caley's. NOW r^^r^r.a^^.^^i&at In this section, butit is twenty-two ears oldand has grown from six stoves to the largest out-put in the world. The Famous ROUND OflK mafic in Dowagiae, Mich. If you need a heater for any any sort of fuelmind you, any sortthis is worth jour consideration. I keeps the fire, it saves the fuel, it lasts years and j-ears, always giv ing the same service. N mica to replaceno draw backs. If you can find any fault with ityour money back. SEE THE NAME THE LEG. IN THE WORLD* ^DETROIT STOVE WORKS Jewel Stoves and Ranges are perfect heating and cooking contrivances. Every year for the last thirty has marked improve ments in the details of construction until now they stand for the greatest efficiency, economy, cleanliness, durability and convenience. With all their excellence Jewel Stoves and Ranges are no higher in price than hundreds of inferior make. See them at your dealer. In a new building on Main Street in Princeton, between Mr. Caley's hard ware store and the starch factory with a full line of new goods bought for cash at lowest possible prices, and containing Dry Goods, Notions, Groceries, Gents' Furnishing Goods, Boots and Shoes, Crockery, Lamps, Glassware, Wood and Willow Ware and everything belonging to a first class gen- eral store. Produce Bought, and sold. I make a specialty of this and can make it to your interest to trade with me. Prices guaranteed to meet all com petition. Our Motto: Good Goods, Low Prices and Fair Treatment. JOHN N. BERG, Proprietor. ON There are 400 imitations. CALEY.T PLAN E 5T0V