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NORTH. 10:15 p.m. 7:20p.m. 6:56 m. 6:39 p.m. 6:05 p.m. 5:49 p.m. 5-37 p.m. 5:33 p.m. 5:27 p.m. 5:06 p.m. 4:46 p.m. 4:25 p.m. 3:45 p.m. 3:15 p.m. GOING SOUTH GOING 6:00 a.m Duluth 8:55 a.m Brook Park 9:04 a.m Mora 9:31 a.m Ogilvie 10:10 a.m Milaca 10:22 a.m Pease (f) 10 35 a.m.. Long Siding (f). 10:41 a.m Brickton (f)...,, 10:56 a.m Princeton 11:15 a.m Zimmerman 11:40 a.m Elk Elver 12 05 a.m Anoka 12:45 p.m Minneapolis.... 1:15 St. Paul (f) Stop on signal. ST. CLOUD TRAINS. GOING WEST. GOING BAST. 10:18 a. Milaca 5:40 p.m. 10:23 a. Foreston 5:34 p.m. 11:20 a. St. Cloud 4:30 p.m. WAY FREIGHT. GOING SOUTH 1 GOING NORTH Tue. Thu. and Sat Mon. Wed. and Fri. 10:45 a.ra Milaca 2:50p.m. 12:30 p. Princeton 1:40p. m. 2:45 p.m Elk River... .11:35a.m. 5:00 p. Anoka 10:00 a. m. Any information regarding sleeping cars or connections will be furnished at any time by GEO. E. RICE, Agent, Princeton, Minn. JOHN BARRY Expert Accountant, Over 30 Years Experience. 1011 First Ave. North, MINNEAPOLIS, MINN. M9LLE LACS COUNTY. TOWN CLERKS. Bogus BrookA. J, Franzen, (Box 322) Milaca BorgholmEmil Sjoberg Book East SideOscar C. Anderson Onstead GreenbushJ. H. Grow Princeton HaylandAlfred F, Johnson Milaca Isle HarborO. S. Swennes Isle MilacaP. F. Golden Foreston MiloR. N. Atkinson Foreston OnamiaAlfred J. Weden Onamia PageAugust Anderson Page PrincetonOtto Eenschel Princeton RobbinsE. E. Dinwidde Vineland South HarborChas. Freer Cove VILLAGE RECORDERS. Ira G. Stanlev Princeton Rolleff Vaaler Milaca F. T. P. Neumann Foreston NEIGHBORING TOWNS. BaldwinH. B.Fisk Princeton Blue HillM. B. Mattson Princeton Spencer BrookO.W.Blomquist SpencerBrook WyanettP. A. Chilstrom Wyanett LivoniaO. W. Parker Zimmerman SantiagoW. W. Groundry Santiago DalboM. P. Mattson Dalbo Grain and Produce Market. Wheat, No. 1 Northern Wheat, No. 2 Northern.. Oats Flax Rve Feed Barley. Wheat. No. 1 Northern (old). Wheat. No. 2 Northern (old)., Corn Oats R. F. L. SMALL, *.93 89 38 1.07 63 49 Beans, hand picked 175 Wildhay 6.00 Princeton Boiler Mills and Elevator. .97 .94 50 RETAIL. Vestal, per sack 13 05 Flour, (100 per cent)per sack 2 95 Banner, per sack 355 Rye flour 2.85 Whole wheat (10 lb. sack) 30 Ground feed, per cwt 1.30 Coarse meal, per cwt 120 Middlings, per cwtj 1.25 Shorts, per cwt 1.10 Bran.percwt 1.05 FKATERNAIi -:-LODG N O. 92, A & A. M. Regular communications, 2d and 4th Wednesday of each month. T. L. ABMITAGE, W. M. C. A. CALBT, Sec'y. PRINCETON LODGE, NO,93,K.ofP. Regular meetings every Tuesday ev 8 o'clock. R. E. JONES, C. SCHEEN, K. R. & S. HENRY AVERY, Master of Finance. PRINCETON -:-LODGE NO. 208,1. O O.P. Regular meetings every Monday evening at 6:00 o'clock. FRANK GOTJLDING, N. G. ROBT. H. KING. Rec. Sec. PROFESSIONAL CARDS. R. D. A. McRAE DENTIST Offlct, in Odd Fellows Block. PRINCETON, MINN JLVERO L. MCMILLAN, LAWYEB. Townsend Building. Princeton, Minn DENTIST. Office hours 9 a. m. to 12m. 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. Over E B. Anderson's store. Princeton, Minn. ROSS CALEY, M. D., PHYSICIAN AND SUBGEON. Office and Residence over Jack's Drugstore, Tel.Rural, 36. Princeton, Minn. A. ROSS, ATTOBNEY AT LAW. Office in Carew Block, Main Street. Princeton. BUSINESS CARDS. ALIHER & niLLER, BABBEB SHOP & BATH BOOMS. A fine line of Tobacco and Cigars. Main Street, Princeton. A. ROSS, FUNERAL DIRECTOR. Will take full charge of dead bodies when desired. Coffins and caskets of the latest styles always Jn stock. Also Springfield metalics. Dealer In Monuments of all kinds. E. A Ross, Princeton, Minn. Telephone No. 30. E. LYNCH, BELIABLE WELL DBILLEB. Twenty years in the well business. Can give perfect satisfaction. If you want a good well call on or address R. E. LYNCH, Zimmerman Minn. The Power of a Good Road. It is an unexplained feature of civil ization that people strive for results usually along lines of most rather than least resistance. In the matter of building up a state's population, as an example, force of argument as to resources is employed, statistics are bunched in meaningless totals and even climate is made the subject of exhortation. The response to this kind of appeal is disappointing it fails in demonstration. The object lesson the eye would dwell upon is missing in all this sort of presenta tion. The power of a good road as an immigration influence has been overlooked. A good road compels settlement and the state that pushes the building of good roads will in crease in population more rapidly than the state in which little or no attention is given to highway condi tions. The state of Washinsgton is making notable progress in building good roads. It is youthful as a common wealth, but it was fortunate in secur ing as a foremost citizen Samuel Hill, a North Carolinan, who found his first western home in Minneapolis, only to move on with the westward march. Mr. Hill has made good roads a study of years. He has aroused interest in Washington, and good roads will be a strong factor for growth in that state within a few years. The good roads movement is spi*ead ing by sections over the country. The pioneer work Mr. Hill did in Minnesota has brought a result final ly in appropriation. The east has ac complished much along this line, and even the south, greatly in need of roads, is taking up the work. There is no influence for the upbuilidng of a state that can equal good roads. There is enough appreciation of the artistic in all of us to compel admira tion for a good road district if we fail to grasp its economic importance. We have the desire instinctively to live adjacent to a good highway, rather than alongside a mud trail that will be impassable when it is im portant to reach a market. The community or state that en gages most earnestly in the building of good roads will realize full reward in the money return that will come to the producer and business man alike. It is second only to the railroad as an agency for growthand is scarce ly utilized.Commercial West. Reserves mitl Confidence. The deposits in the commercial banks and banking institutions of the country aggregate about $10,000,000,- 000. The total amount of actual money in all of the banking institu tions of the country is only about $1, 000,000,000. What is it that supports the $10,000,- 000,000 of deposits? Is it the $1,000,- 000,000 of money or is it the $9,000,- 000,000 of confidence? What happens to the $10,000,000,000 of deposits when confidence disappears? Is the $1,000,- 000,000 of money sufficient in such a time to support the $10,000,000,000 of deposits? Reverse the proposition, would $9,000,000,000 of confidence be able to support the $10,000,000,000 of deposits if the banks didn't have $1,000,000,000 of money? Would it be possible to readjust our present system of deposit currency by making some distinction between check deposits and money deposits? Would it be possible to establish the rule that depositors, while having power to check against their deposits to the limit, should be restricted to, say, 10 or 20 per cent of withdrawals in actual cash? These are questions naturally suggested by the crisis through which we are passing.Wall Street Journal. New Use for flax Straw. Interest in the invention of Benja min C. Mudge of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology will be taken by the farmers of the northwest. This device, which has been patented, will transform flax straw into white linen fiber within a period of twelve hours and the purchasers of the patent an nounce that they will purchase flax straw in Minnesota and other parts of the northwest. It has been a practice to burn liax straw, although crude attempts have from time to time been made to develop a fibre industry. If farmers can sell their flax straw in stead of burning it means consider able money in their pockets. He Fought at Gettysburg. David Parker of Fayette, N. Y., who lost a foot at Gettysburg, writes: "Electric Bitters have done me more good than any medicine I ever took. For several years I had stomach trouble and paid out much money for medicine to little purpose, until I be gan taking Electric Bitters. I would not take $500 for what they have done forme." Grand tonic for the aged and for female weaknesses. Great al terative and body builder sure cure for lame back and weak kidneys. Guaranteed by C. A. Jack, druggist. 50c. What I Means. When a young woman tells a clerk in a shoe store that she is not pre pared to try on shoes it means she has a hole in her stocking.Atchison Globe. Blames the Slnckrakers. That unwise followers of President Roosevelt have enlarged upon his ideas and, losing sight of the bene ficial part of his politics, have been reckless in their utterances, was given by Leslie M. Shaw, former secretary of the treasury and a possible candi date for president in 1908, as one of the reasons for limitation of public confidence in financial affairs in an address before the National Business League of America at Chicago. The present conditions are the logi cal result of extravagant living and general speculation in land, stocks, and bonds, he said. Yet he declared there is more conservatism in invest ments during the last seven years. Another reason, Mr. Shaw said, is the too general popularity of dispar aging talk concerning business meth ods. A few shameful disclosures have been held up as a fair illustra tion of general rather than excep tional conditions. "Lest I be misunderstood," he said, I want to make it clear that in my judgment this country will never out grow the lift toward civic and busi ness righteousness resulting from the policy of strict enforcement of law which has characterized the adminis tration of President Roosevelt. I am equally certain it will take us some years to outgrow the evil effects re sulting from agitation, reckless leg islation and ill-considered prosecu tions by those who have been unable to appreciate the president's purposes and have therefore sought popularity by imitating the weakest rather than the strongest side of his administra- tion." Oldest House of Its Kind In Northwest. The oldest hide, fur and wool house in the northwest is that of Bergman & Company of St. Paul. This firm began business in a small way in 1867, and which has gradually grown, until they are now the largest house in this line in the northwest. On account of the enormous in crease of their business it was neces sary to secure new quarters and last year they erected in St. Paul the largest, most modern, and best equipped building for their line of business in the United States. They have private trackage upon which five cars can be loaded or unloaded at the same time, and the buliding has a capacity of fifteen million pounds and is so constructed that they can handle goods promptly and at the smallest expense, thus giving shippers prompt cash returns and the highest market prices. When shipping your hides, wool and fur remember this firm if you want top market prices and immediate cash returns. Market letter and shipping tags with full instructions for shipment will be sent on request. Statistics Tell of Monopoly. A census bulletin on the meat pack ing industry shows that in the fifteen years from 1890 to 1905 the number of packing establishments decreased from 1,376 to 929. In the same time the number employed in the business increased from 44,812 to 74,134 the COSD of materials and the value of the products nearly doubled and the cap ital invested became exactly twice as great, reaching $237,714,690. That quite clearly tells the story of monopoly. If anything more is needed, it is told in the fact that, while Illinois has less than eight per cent of the establishments, these rep resent over a third of the capital in vested and nearly thirty-five per cent of the product. There can be no doubt that if the statistics were brought to date the past two years would still further show the complete control of the great industry in a few hands, so that a small group of men can and do abso lutely dictate the price to be paid for cattle and what the people shall pay for the meat they eat.Duluth News Tribune. A Chemical Mystery. Some years since a meteor that fell in Mexico attracted attention from scientists all over the world because there was some reason for thinking that it might be a fragment of a lost comet. A scientific investigation proves that golden grain belt beer is rich in nutrition and nerve food and a pure, wholesome drink that said digestion. Order of your nearest dealer or be supplied by Sjoblom Bros., wholesale dealers, Princeton. Good Way to Prolong Distress. People who desire to prolong financial and industrial distress, blocking the wheels of trade and throwing working men out of employ, can take no better way to accomplish their end than by hoarding their money and neglecting to pay their bills. Money is the common drudge of trade. It is of no use when it idle. Keep it moving.Philadelphl Record. lies a Appendicitis Is due in a large measure to abuse of the bowels, by employing drastic purgatives. To avoid all danger, only Dr. King's New Life Pills, safe, gentle cleansers and invigora tors. Guaranteed to cure headache biliousness, malaria and jaundice, Jack's drug store. 25c. use the THE PRINCETON UNION: THUBSDAY, NOVEMBEB 28,1907, W^W^fr^J^W^ State News. It is said that two young men of Duluth have invented a wireless tele phone over which a message was transmitted a distance of eight miles. The body of Mrs. Emily Chase, who disappeared from her cabin near Yola June, has been found near Tama rack swamp, about a mile from her home. A disastrous fire swept the country miles east of Warren last week. strip three miles wide and ten miles was burned. Many farmers lost and machinery, but no dwellings destroyed. Several of the union boilermakers went to Moline from Brainerd returned, some because they did like the climate, and others, it is to hire more men to send to the Island road. The output of Minnesota canning factories for 1907 shows a decrease compared with last year because only fifteen canneries ran this season, against twenty-three last year. The output of 1907 was 4,842,450 cans of sizes, and last year 6,932,100, a decrease of 1,549,650. i six long hay were who have not said Rock A new rule of the state board of health, to go into effect January 1, does away with the quarantine on smallpox cases, a sign indicating that such a disease exists at a place being considered sufficient warning. The state board of health takes the atti tude that the only safe and sure means of eliminating the disease is vacci nation. The gate receipts at games in which the Minnesota football team was en gaged and the amounts paid the op posing teams this season were as fol lows: Ames game, total receipts, 1,520.75 amount paid to the Ames team, $600. Nebraska game, total receipts, $5,584 amount paid to Neb raska, $2,792. Chicago game, total receipts, $25,828.25 amount paid to Chicago, $12,914.42. Carlisle game, total receipts, about $16,000 amount paid to Carlisle, about $7,000. The first instance on record in the Red River valley where a crop of po tatoes was raised by reseeding oc curred at Crookston this fall when Harry Wyand dug a fine crop of tubers from an extended patch which he did not dig last fall. Last fall a year ago it was very wet and Mr. Wyand only dug what he needed and left the rest in the ground. He was thunderstruck to find the potato plants. They came up thick and made a better crop than the ones he planted in another patch. Last week the state supreme court handed down a decision which is of interest to owners of automobiles. The case, which went to the supreme court from Mower county, is that of Anna Mahoney against J. Miles Max field. The plaintiff recovered $700 damages in the trial court because of injuries sustained while attempting to pass an automobile. The automobile was stopped in the road as required by law, but the engine was allowed to run which scared the plaintiff's horse. The lower court held that the engine should have been stopped. The de fendant appealed, and the supreme court now grants a new trial. (Advertisement.) A PRINCETON CASE. Many More Like It in Prince ton. The following case is but one of many similar occurring daily in Princeton. It is an easy matter to verify its correctness. Surely you cannot ask for better proof than such conclusive evidence. Mrs. Louis Plumondore, Princeton, Minn., says: I first began to suffer from kidney complaint a few years ago. Atfthat time my back became weak and lame. Other symptoms soon followed and I never knew when sharp, shooting pains would 3tart in the small of my back and radiate throughout my body. My head ached a great deal and dizzy spells were almost constant. The secretions from my kidneys began to pass too freely and were attended with great pain. I became so bad that I con sulted a doctor and was told that I was suffering from inflammation of the kidneys and bladder. He gave me medicine and I used it carefully but did not obtain any relief. At last my husband brought home a box of Doan's Kidney Pills from the Home Drug Store and I had only taken them a short time before I was aware that I had found the remedy my system required. I feel that it would be very selfish for me to withhold the knowledge I have of such an excellent remedy as Doan's Kidney Pills." For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the nameDoan's and take no other. A Journey to Kingdom Come. "The only thing I can recommend in your case," said the surgeon, "is a long journey." "Well, if it has to be, doc," the?*2?i?t)1.er\.1lfl0I patient groaned, "get out your whit tling tools and go ahead with the operation. "Chicago Record Herald. live Stock Bought. Farmers and others are respectfully informed that I am buying cattle, hogs, sheep, etc., and paying the at highest market prices therefor. Henry Erickson, Princeton. (First Pub. Nov. 14) Order of Hearing on Petition for De termination of Descent of Land. ESTATE OP SAMUEL COLSON. State of Minnesota. County of Mille Lacs. In Probate Court. In the matter of the estate of Samuel Col son, decedent. On reading and filing the petition of Sylvester Kipp. praying that this court determine the descent of certain lands described therein as belonging to the above named decedent in his life time, who died more than five years prior to the date hereof. It is Ordered, that said petition be heard, and that all persons interested in the estate of the above named decedent be and appear before this court on the nintn day of December, 1907, at 2 o'clock p. m., at the probate court rooms in the court house at Princeton in said county, and then and there, or as soon there after as said matter can be heard, show cause, if any there be. why said petition should not be granted. Let notice of said hearing be given by the publication of this order in the Princeton Union according to law. Dated November 12,1907. L. S. BBIGGS. (Probate Seal) Judge of Probate. CHARLES KEITH, Attorney for Petitioner /First Pub. Nov SI) Citation for Hearing on Final Account and for Distribution. ESTATE OF MARY HEALY. State of Minnesota, County of Mille Lacs. In Probate Court. In the matter of the estate of Mary Healy, decedent. The State of Minnesota to all persons inter ested in the final account and distribution of the estate of said decedent: The representative of the above named decedent, having filed in this court his final account of the administration of the estate of said decedent, together with his petition pray ing for the adjustment and allowance of said final account and for distribution of the resi due of said estate to the persons thereunto entitled. Therefore you, and each of you, are hereby cited and required to show cause, if any you have, before this court at the probate court rooms in the court house, in the Village of Princeton in the County of Mille Lacs. State of Minnesota, on the sixteenth day of Decem ber, 1907. at 10 clock a. m., why said petition should not be granted. Witness, the Judge of said Court, and the Seal of said Court, this 19th day of November 1907. L. S. BKIGGS, (Court Seal) Probate Judge E. L. MCMILLAN, Attorney for Petitioner, Princeton, Minn. (First Pub. Nov. 21) Citation for Hearing on Petition for Administration. ESTATE OF DAVID H. HURT. State of Minnesota, County of Mine Lacs, In Probate Court. In the matter of the estate of David H. Hurt decedent. The state of Minnesota to all persons inter ested the granting of th estate of saidndecedent0.f fll &&&?*!$& ONLY NECESSARY TO TREAT THE STOMACH Claim of Central Figure in Recent Contro versy Is Novel. The new theory advanced by L. T. Cooper relative to the human stom ach has attracted such widespread attention that the public in cities visited by the young man has been (joined by many physicians in a dis cussion of bis beliefs and medicines. Mr. Cooper says that human health Is dependent almost entirely upon the stomach. He says that no dis ease can be conquered without first alleviating all stomach disorders. He further says that most men and wom en of this generation are half-sick, owing to degenerate stomachs. And lastly, h6 claims that his New Dis covery medicine will rejuvenate the human stomach in 90 days. Cooper has been traveling from one city to another, conducting in each what he calls a campaign of education. For the past year he has met the public in the larger cities of the country, and his success has been phenomenal. Thousands of people have flocked to his headquar ters wherever he has gone, and the sale of his medicine has been beyond anything of the kind ever before witnessed. Possibly the most Interesting fea ture of the attention this young man has attracted is what his army of follower?, whom he has converted to his beliefs through his medicines, have to say on the subject. The fol lowing statements are from two well known residents of Chicago and Bos ton, respectively, and the enthusiasm of these is characteristic of Cooper's admirers generally. Mrs. H. B. Mack, of 3201 State street, Chicago, says:' "I have been Buffering for 12 years from a com bination of stomach troubles, catarrh and constipation. I had a gnawing pain in the pit of my stomach, a sort M. M. Colburt, Home Drug Store. Store Burglarized Near Cambridge. Cambridge, Minn., Nov. 25. (Special.)The general store of Fred Hanson at Stanley, an inland town five miles from here, was burglarized last Saturday morning, the burglars getting away with about $500 worth of goods in the form of cutlery, jewelry, shoes and clothing. The thieves gained entrance through the back door of the store by whit tling a hole large enough to stick a hand through and turn the key, which was left on the inside. No trace has as yet been found of the burglars. Mr. Hanson has notified the Minne apolis police to look out for anyone trying to dispose of the stolen prop erty. This'same store was burglar ized in a similar manner about three months ago. when the till was rifled, but this time the till was empty. MarthaadministratioMcLeane Se. Hurt havingof dI 1 o^n^ Robert H. King and the court, having fixed thetlme and place for hearing said petition Therefore, you. and each-of you, are hereb cited and requiredt tnoe show cause, if any you have, before thisn court at the probate court rooms In the house, in the village of Princeton in the county of Mille Lacs, state ?J?Q^.,l-?,s of ta December,y 14tb ,court 1907, at 2 clock p. m., why said petition should not be granted. Witness, the judge of said court, and the seal of said court, this 18th day of November, ,A ,v S. BRIGGS, (Court Seal) Probate Judge. J. A. Ross, Attorney for Petitioner. Of a dull pain that I could not quite un derstand. Then there was a dull head* ache, and my mind seemed to be* wandering continually. I could not eat, and what little solid food I dldB eat I could not retain on my stomacfE. I tried every remedy I could think of^ and also tried out a number of patent: medicines, but without any apparent result. It was through one of my friends that I heard of Cooper's prep aration, and I immediately decided to try some of it. It is two weeks since I took my first dose of it, and I feel like a new woman. The head ache seems to have disappeared, and the pain in my stomach along with it. The medicine is worth its weight in gold, and I want to thank Mr. Cooper for what he has done for me." Mr. Edwin F. Morse, of 20 Oakley street, Dorchester, a suburb of Boa ton, says: "For three years I had not a well day. My stomach was in frightful shape the mere thought of food would nauseate me, and I really had a horror of anything to eat. All solid food would cause me extreme indigestion, bloating and gas on my stomach, and nothing tasted right. Some time ago I got some of this Cooper's medicines, about which there is so much talk. I actually feel as well and strong as a boy ever since the first bottle. Every sign of stomach trouble has disappeared, and I have a hearty appetite and eat three square meals every thing seems to taste good. Anyone who knows what chronic Indigestion is can appreciate what Oils means to me. I consider this the most remark able medicine I ever heard of." We sell Mr, Cooper's medicines, and find them to be all he claims. (First Pub. Nov 14) Summons. STATE OF MINNESOTA. I County of Mille Lacs. SS District Court, Seventh Judicial District. Orrin Kipp, Plaintiff i vs. Martha J. Robbins and David Rob bins her husband, also all other per i sons or parties unknown claiming any right, title, estate, interest or lien in I the real estate described in the com- I plaint herein, Defendants. The State of Minnesota to the above named defendants You are hereby summoned and required to answer the complaint of the plaintif,fCountyethni above entitletdh action, which complaint has been filed the office of the clerkLacs- of saiwithin-Disd OUrni'na vm&se of Princeton of Mille Lacs and State ofM1Il Minnesota and to serve a copy of your answer to said complaint on the subscriber hi office in the Village of 2!S&to&&fte0.at ountys. twenty (20) days after the service of this sum mons upon you, exclusive of the day of such service, and if you fail to answer the said com plaint within the time aforesaid the plaintiff in this action mil apply to the Court for the re lief demanaed in said complaint together with plaintiff costs and disbursements herein CHARLES KEITH, Plaintiff's Attorney, Princeton, Minn Notice of Lis Pendens. STATE OF MINNESOTA, County of Mille Lacs. ss District Court. Seventh Judicial District. Orrin Kipp, Plaintiff VS. Martha J. Robbins and David H. Rob bins her husband, also all other per sons or parties unknown claiming any right, title, estate, interest or lien in the real estate described in the com- i plaint htrein, Defendants. Notice is hereby given that an action has been commenced in this Court by the above named plaintiff against the above named de fendants: That the object of said action is to determine the adverse claim of the defendants and each and all of them, and the rightsf of thl parties respectively herein, In and to the real estate hereinafter described, and thai the premises affected by saids action situated in the County of Mille Lacs anfd State of Minnesota are described as follows: *"uue!owi. The southwesfl\e quarter orf the northwest ^'STAI* lnte f nSi a ffiL^f' 190 Jl. an been county of th T.? tlo e granted to filed In this court, representingg that Davids H. H?fi' enJt1 TJ.esi Payin that letter of estat a ehdiintestate *i$ oS twenty-seve ectio (5 l0 W section twenty {40, and threa southeast quarter of the north- !f^t loton lu 1 a eight (28). all in township forty-three (43) north of range twenty-seven (27) west CHARLKS KEITH, Plaintiff's Attornev. Princeton. Slinn (First Pub. Nov. 7) Citation for Hearing on Petition for Administration. ESTATE OF HUGH BROWNU.1Mf In^roU' Court8013' rown representing that Lacs UDt In the matter ot the estate of Hugh Brown decedent. The state of Minnesota to all persons inter ested in the granting of administratiosn of the estate of saiada decedent. The petition of Fred been filed in thi court Hughn resident Brown, ,stat the twentiethndaathe o'f the?county of Mille Lacs, statfe of Payin that letters ad ministration of his estate be granted to Geo. A. Eaton oe Princeton, Minn. r,~. tlmfea Plac forand hearincourtdhavinggeth sai peti tion Therefore, You, and Each of You, are herebv cited and required to show cause, if any you have, before this court at the probate court rooms in the court house, in the village of Princeton in the county of Mille Lacs state of Minnesota, the thirtieth aay of November 1907 at 10 o'clock a why said petition should not be granted Witness, the .ludge of said court, and seal or said court, this fifth day of November, 1907. S BRIGGS (Court Seal) Probate Judge. J. A. Ross, Attorney for Petitioner. Princeton, Minn. First Publication Nov. 14,1907. Citation for Hearing on Petition for Administration. ESTATE OF SAMUEL MATTSON. State of Minnesota, County of Mille Lacs in Probate Court. In the matter of the estate of Samue1lUC Mattson, decedent. The State of Minnesota to all persons internt ested in the granting of administration oIf ttie estate of decedent: lf?insaid on the 10th day a $* Th,efpetition of Christina J. Mattson havine be uel Mattson. then a resident of the county of MMeLacs State of Minnesota, died iniestate on the 10th day of*October, if ft ti ha i tette i^ eref re I Si a O court representing that Sam MW andKS administration of l!s you, are hereby estate be granted toe J.c of Mora Minnesota and' thdeocourtt having, fixed the time andPplacy^fuedr a hKing, Probat court fo hearing said pftittonT an show cause if any you a S^ S S fo r.retMs i Eno* Lacs. State of cour aJ,b mil our housePetitio in the village ot **c count Mwfnfi^?'l should not Minnesota, opn the 9th day of December, 1907, t wn sai b! granted.J?cl! Witness the judge of said court, and seal of said court, this 11th day of November, 1907. L. S. BBIGGS, [Probate Court Seal.] Probate Judge.