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THE COMFORTABLE WAY. GOING SOUTH OOHTO NORTH. 6:00 a.m Duluth 19 15p.m 8:65 a.m. .Brook Park 7 30p.m. 9:04 a.m Mora 658 pm. 9:31 a.m Ogllvie 6:39 p.m. 9:42 am Book 6:26 p.m. 10:10 a.m Mllaca 6.05 10:22 a.m Pease (f) 5 49 p.m. 10:35 a m. Long Siding (f).. 5'37 10:41 a.m Brickton (1).... 6 33 p.m 10:56 am Princeton 5*27 11:15 a.m Zimmerman 5*06 11:40 a.m Elk River. 4.46 13 05 a.m Anoka 4 85 12:45 Minneapolis 3 46 pm. 1-15 St Paul 3'l5p.m (f) Stop on signal ST. CLOUD TRAINS GOING WEST. GOING BAST 10:18 a Mllaca 6.40 m. 10:23 a. ...Foreston 6 34 11:20 a St Cloud 4 30 WAY FREIGHT GOING SOUTH I GOING NORTH Daily, except Sun Daily, except Sun 8.30 a.m Milaoa 2 0pm 9-30 m. ...Princeton 1 OOp 10 30 Elk River. 10 30 a 3.00p Anoka 8Wa Any information regarding sleeping oars or connections will be furnished .it any time by G. H. PENNtSON, Agent. Princeton, Minn. MILLE LACS COUNTY. TOWN CLERKS. Bogus BrookA Franzen...Route2, Mflaca BorgholmGeo. Hulbert R. 1, Milaoa liast SideAndrew Kalberg.. ODstead GreenbushJ. H. Grow R. 1, Princeton HaylandAlfred Johnson Vftlaca Isle HarborC Halgren Wahkon MilaoaJ. A Overby Milaoa MlloR N Atkinson Foreston OaamlaLars Eriksson Onamia PageAugust Anderson Star Milaoa PrincetonJos Johnson.. Route 5 Prinoetot KathioE E Dinwiddle Garrison iJouth HarborChas Freer Cove VILLAGE RECORDERS. IraG Stanley PrinoetOL H. Dahlstrom Milaoa F. T. P. Neumann Forest E Bailey Onamia NEIGHBORING TOWNS. BaldwinH Fisk Route 3, Princeton Blue HillM Mattson Princeton Spencer Brook-O W Blomquist 3 2 sav* rinoeto WyanettP A Chilstrom ,E2, Princeton LivoniaW Hurtt Zlmmermat SantiagoGeo Roos Santiagc DalboJohn Sarner DalOi BradfordWm Ooaklm 3, Cambridge StanfordLee Hass St Francis Spring ValeHenry A. Olson. 5, CamDndge PRINCETON LODGE. NO. 93, K. of Regular meetings every Tueed JV. n' gat 8 o'clock. FKED NEWTON 0 GEO E RICE K. S LOUIS RUST, Master of Finance Princetoa Homestead No. 1867 Regular meeting nights sec ond and fourth Wednesday in each month TARBOX, Cor and M. of A. DARBAGH, Foreman PROFESSIONAL CARDS. QEORGE PRENTICE ROSS, Undertaker and State Licensed Embalmer. Disinfecting a Specialty Rural Phone No. 30 Princeton, Minnesota. R. D. A. McRAB DENTIST Office in Odd Fellows Block. PRINCETON, MINN E LVERO L. MCMILLAN, LA WYER. Townsend Building. Princeton, Minn D1I. F. L. SMALL, DENTIST. Office hours, a to 12 2 to 5 m. Over E Anderson's store Princeton, Minn ROSS CALEY, M. D., PHYSLOIAN AND SURGEON. Oflloe and Residence over Jack's Drug Store Tel Rural. 36 Princeton, Minn. BUSINESS CARDS. ILLIAM KALIHER, BARBER SHOP & BATE ROOMS. A fine line of Tobacco and Cigars. Main Street, Prinoeton. E. A. ROSS, FUNERAL DIRECTOR. Will take full charge of dead bodies when desired Coffins and oaskets of the latest styles always n stock Also Springfield metalios. Dealer in Uonameats of all kinds. E. A. Ross Princmon Minn Tlohntip No 30. jtMIMInllHMraHNMmnlMMMnHHMWHNM JOHN BARRY I Expert Accountant, Over 30 Years Experience. 1011 First Ave North, MINNEAPOLIS, MINN. i if T. J. KALIHER, Proprietor, Prinoeton, Minn. Single and Double Rigs at a rtoments' Notice. Oommeroial Travelers' Trade a Specialty. Now'8 the Time to Have it Done. Winter will soon run up against you and you should be prepared by getting your cutters and sleighs paint ed. I can fix them up for you so that they will be as good as new and my eharges for so doing will be very reasonable. Do it now. 43-tfc Dan W. Spaulding." A Famous Parlor Maid. Sydney Smith, the famous author and wit, in describing his early mar ried life in a Yorkshire parsonage told how he made a butler out of a village girl: "A manservant was too expensive, so I caught up a little garden girl made like a milestone, christened her Bunch, put a napkin in her hand and made her my butler. The girls taught her to read, Mrs. Sydney to wait, and I under took her morals. Bunch became the best butler in the county." But Bunch was not merely butler she was valet too. A visitor thus de scribes her: "Coming down one morning, I found Bunch pacing up and down the pas sage before her master's door in a state of great perturbation. 'What is the matter, Buuch 'Oh, ma'am, I can't get no peace of mind till I've got master shaved, and he's so late this morning!' "This 'getting master shaved' consist ed in making ready for him with a large painter's brush a thick lather in a huge wooden bowl as big as Mam brino's helmet, which she always con sidered as the most important avoca tion of the morning." When the Danes Were Skinned. In former times the Danes used to sail up the mouths of the English riv ers to pillage the churches. When they were caught they were skinned and their skins nailed to the door of the church they attacked. In course of time all the exposed portions would peel off, but that covered by the nail would be protected and thus bear tes timony to the cruelty of the ancient Englishmen. In the London College of Surgeons may be seen three speci mens of human skin bearing labels such as this: "Portion of human skin said to be that of a Dane from the door of a church at Hadstock, in Es sex A second specimen is from Cop ford, in Essex, and a third from the north door of Worcester cathedral. Such fragments of sacrilegious Danish hide have been found on doors in Westminster abbey. Were Kind to Him. A AVest Philadelphia man who was severely injured some months ago when his. horse took fright at an au tomobile and bolted, upsetting the carriage, has only recently been re leased from the hospital He is well now and in the best of spirits not withstanding the fact that severe op erations werp necessary in order to save his life A few days after he left the hospi tal a friend asked him if he had been kindly treated "Oh. yes'" he said "Oh, yes, infar deed! Considering the fact that they amputated both my feet, removed my collar bone, cut off my left thumb, tre panned my brain, took out a piece of my underjaw and sawed my left hip bone in two, I got along very nicely. They were most kind to what was left of me "Philadelphia Press Beaconsfield the Dandy. The dandyism Benjamin Disraeli af fected in his dress is the subject of many pen pictures in Monypenny's "Life of Beaconsfield." At the age of nineteen he is described as wearing a black elvet suit with ruffles and black stockings with red clocks. A later por trait, in 1830, comes from a friend's diary, which has the following entry "March 29B D. to dine with me. He came up Regent street when it was crowded his blue surtout, a pair of military light blue trousers, black stockings with red stripes and shoes. 'The people,' he said, 'quite made way for me as I passed It was like the opening of the Red sea. -which I now perfectly believe from experience. Even well dressed people stopped to look at me Haroun-al-Raschid to Charlemagne. The onlj sovereign of the time who could compare with Charlemagne was the famous Haroun-al-Raschid who as the head of the Moslem world sent the keys of Jerusalem to the head ot the Christian world, besides a strik ing clock, an ape and an elephant things which impressed the imagina tion of those times as typifying that Charlemagne had been invested with the sovranty of Jerusalem and the lordship of the worldT. A Cook in "Old Provence" Where Once a Home Stood. And what is more melancholy than the old apple trees that linger about the spot where once stood a homestead, but where there is now only a ruined chimney rising out of a grassy and weed grown cellar? They offer their fruit to the wayfarerapples that are bitter-sweet with the moral of time's vicissitude.Hawthorne. Charity. When thy brother has lost all that he ever had and lies languishing, and even gasping under the utmost ex tremities of poverty and distress, dost thou think to lick him whole again only with thy tongue?South. He Was Generous. Pallid ClerkI'm not feeling very well, sir do you mind if I take things a little easy today? Grouchy EmployerNot so long as they're not my thingsLippincott's. Convincing Evidence. Sportsman (having emptied both bar rels at a rabbit)There, Jacob I'm sure I hit that one! JacobWell, 'e zurtainly did zeem to go faster after you shot at 'im, zur. London Punch. Economy is a savings bank into which men drop pennies and get dol lars in return.H. W. Shaw. Making the King's Bed. Among the duties of the yeomen ol the guard in the olden times was the singular one of making the king's bed the martiat bedmakerwater, retired tthea supper provided for them "without the traverse"i. e., across the corridor. Henry VIII. greatly embellished the yeomen's costume and presented them with cloth of gold horse cloths valued at 5 a yard. His first queen, Kath erine of Aragon. by the way, had a bodyguard all to herself, which, after her divorce, passed into the service of Anne Boleyn.Richard Davey's "The Tower of London." Willing to Be Martyrs. Some years ago a French tradesman stated that he wished to be guillotined instead of a murderer who had been condemned to death. Of course the authorities declined to do as he wished, and he went away vowing that he would give his life for some one else later on. A Russian peasant who was noted for his quiet piety offered to be shot in order to save a revolutionary who was awaiting the carrying out of the deatb penalty. This, he said, was not done out of any sympathy for the accused, but merely to show his disapproval of the principle of taking lives of crim inals. Probably the most extraordinary case on record was that of a Quebec citizen who passed himself off as a murderer for whom the police were searching. When the matter was investigated it was found that the self accused man had nothing whatever to do with the crime. "No," he said, "you're right. I'm not the murderer, but my wife leads me such a miserable life at home that I thought I would escape from matrimonial wretchedness by getting the government to hang me." Pear son's Queen Elizabeth and Her Portraits. The modern grievance of the illus trious against the photographer of the halfpenny paper has a parallel as back as the early part of Queen Elizabeth's reign, when her minister, Cecil, issued a proclamation against the circulation of ill favored likenesses of her majesty. It stated that, as her majesty had perceived "a great num ber of her loving subjects to be much grieved with the errors and deformi ties" displayed in many popular por traits of herself, she had been pleas ed, "being herein, as it were, overcome with the continual requests of so many of her nobility and lords, to command that some cunning person should shortly make a portrait of her person or visage to be participated to others for the comfort of her loving subjects." Scottish Names. No country has experienced the diffi culty arising from the commonness of one surname in a district more intense ly than Scotland With a whole coun tryside populated by Campbells, Fra sers or Gordons, some more distin guishing nomenclature had to be found. And no doubt this was the chief reason why at one time men were always known by the name ot their estate or farm Dean Ramsay remembered an old cowherd who was always known as Boggy. His real name was Sandy Anderson, but he had once owned a wretched farm called Boggendreep, and he was Boggy to the day of his death. The Ray. The ray, so called, was discover ed on Oct. 8, 1893, by Professor W. C. Roentgen. The professor was experi menting with a Crookes vacuum tube, electrically excited, and enveloped in a black covering, when he noticed that some of the rays proceeding from the tube passed through the black paper and affected a fluorescent screen some two or three yards away. In such way did his great discovery come to him, when he was least expecting it. Persistent. "Our Tommy," said the boy's moth er, "ought to make a success in life. He shows great determination to stick to anything he undertakes." "Does he?" queried the proud father. "Yes," she replied. "Why, he put in the whole day making soap bubbles and trying to tie a string to them." Chicago News. Translated. "What is this 'wanderlust' you read of so often as compelling people to leave home?" THE PKlKtn&POtf ITKION: THUBSDAY, SASJS'Aaa 'lS, Iffti* atIO 0bS -r "I don'8 know," replied Mr. Cumrox S Se people who have it, 'wanderlust' is German for 'creditors.'"Washington Star. He Was Manager, do you do for a living, "What Mose?" "I's de manager ob a laundry." "What's the name of this laundry?" "Eliza Ann." Louisville Courier. Journal Worry, whatever its source, weak ens, takes away courage and short ens life. (First Pub. Jan. 12) i i-, eredby Gora A. Holland and Daniel Hni- every night and searching it for any, iand,lier kusband, mortgagors,to iSis Smith trustee, mortgagee, bearing date the 81st day dangerous weapon that might be con cealed therein to the detriment of his majesty's sacred person. First one of these stalwart soldiers had "to tum ble up and down" the mattress. Then "the esquire for the body" took the sheets and rolled them on his arm or stripped" them through his hands. Whenever the yeomen touched the bed clothes they had to make the sign of the cross and kiss the place, which must have rather prolonged the cere mony! Finally, when the bed hadgage,eto been made, with much quaint but in terminable "ritual," the said esquire of the register of deeds (|70 92 interestfin all the sum of Fiv Hun dred Fourteen and 24-100 dollars (8514 24). and no action or proceeding having been instituted, at law or otherwise, to recover the debt se cured by said mortgage or any part thereof Now therefoie. notice is hereby given, that by virtue of the power of sale contained in said mortgage, and pursuant tothe statute in such case made ana provided the said mortgage will be foreclosed by a sale of the premises described in and conveyed by said mortgage, viz The southwest quarter of the northeast quarter (sw# of ne%) and the southeast quarter (se%) of Section eleven (11), town ship forty-two (42) and range twenty-five (25), according to the government survey thereof, in Mille Lacs county and State of Minnesota with the hereditaments and appurtenances: which sal will be made- by_ i THE OIL WELL SHOOTER. a thousand. When one of the tubes is filled it is lowered with the utmost care to the bottom of the well. This operation is repeated until the shoot er is satisfied that the load is heavy enough to accomplish the purpose. When all is ready a bar of iron, known spray floating to leeward When this subsides the well is in operation and the shooter receives his fee and drives away.-Harper's Weekly. Tamed Him. "Slip me a brace of cackles," order ed the chesty looking young man with a bored air as he perched on the first stool in the lunch room. "A what?" asked the waitress as she placed a glass water before him. "Adam and Eve flat on their backs! A pair of sunny siders!" said the young man in an exasperated tone. You gort me, kid," returned the wai^VS hfa wkntr iO Ko K1(1 ^H^^PfF*\a^|^ v~ Mortgage Foreclosure Sale. Default having been made in the condition of a certain.mortgage, duly executed and deliv- of December, 1904. and with a power of sale rtnliV.. 7 o-Ti. xFiftKing, S-t ^kMJV'w thereto contained, duly recorded in the office ifnl and S!ftS forn 8 S ?S terson, by written assignment datedAnna thePeh 13t- i iL no fowinfg & heon due and said mortgage, at the date of sprinkled i with holy and furthe)r sum seventy and 92-100 dollars Forty-three and 32-100 dollars ($443 3Sj, and the as a "go-devil," is dropped into the sale contained in said mortgage and well. The instant it leaves his hand pursuant to th,ed "Eggs up," said the young man. "E-g-g-s, the kind that come before the hen or after, I never knew which." "Why didn't you say so in the first place?" asked the waitress. "You'd 'a' had 'em by this time." "Well, of all things!" said the young man. "I knew what he was drivin' at all the time," began the waitress as the young man departed. "But he's one of them fellers that thinks they can get by with anything. He don't know that they're using plain English now in restaurants."Kansas City Times. (FlrstPub. Dec. 15.) the shooter takes to his heels, seeking madeew an,db the said mort- a place of safety. S Suddenly the earth trembles there Notice of Mortgage Foreclosure Sale. Whereas, Charlesg B. Maben, mortgagorb, to secure an indebtedness of Twelve Hundretd Kin Roer air 0o-"8 lle the sherif_ o. sai.d vS_u,e .f i Mille Lacs county at the front door of the Court house, in the Village of Princeton in said County and State, on the seventh day of March. 1911. at 10 o'clock a. m. of that day, at public vendue to the highest bidder for cash, to pay said debt of Five Hundred Fourteen and 24-100 dollars (1514 24) principal, and inter st and the taxes, if any, on said premises, and twenty-five dollars (S25.00) attorney's fees, as stipulated in and by said mortgage in case of foreclosure, and the dis bursements allowed by law, subject to re demption at any time within one year from the day of sale, as provided by law. Dated January 10th, A 1911. ANNA PETERSON, Assignee of Said Mortgage. F. E PBTBRSON, Attorney for Assignee of Mortgage 623 Metropolitan Building, Minneapolis, Minnesota. 0 8 Sometimes Blown Into Eternity With His Own Ammunition. In certain of the petroleum produc ing districts it becomes necessary some times in opening an oil wellsometimes when the well has become clogged or apparently exhaustedto begin or re new the flow by exploding nitroglyc erin at the bottom of the well. This explosive is employed because it is ex plodes readily by the dropping of a weight upon It. A man who carries nitroglycerin from well to well for this purpose is known in the oil regions as a "shooter." The shooter has a wagon in which to carry his explosive. A square box un der the seat is carefully padded, and when it has been solidly filled with cans of nitroglycerin, which is a mo lasses-like fluid, he fastens down the cover and drives slowly away to the well that he is to shoot. Usually he makes the trip very early in the morn ing to avoid the customary travel and so diminish the chance of danger. For the most part the roads are bad, and the wagon jolts along in a way to make any one but an old shooter de cidedly nervous. If it is dark there is great danger that a wheel may drop into a hole with force enough to deto nate the explosive. Several wagons bearing shooters and their loads have been blown up, but no one ever lived to tell what sort of jar caused the ex plosion. In such a case little is ever found ex cept the great hole in the ground which the explosion has dug, with possibly a wheel of the wagon a quarter of a mile away in one direction and another in the opposite direction. The shooter generally takes from 80 to 240 quarts of nitroglycerin In his wagon The smaller amount is quite enough if it should explode to leave no trace of the driver of the vehicle "When the shooter reaches the well which is to be treated long torpedo tubes are placed within the casing of the well, and the nitroglycerin is poured carefully into them. The well may be 1,500 feet deep and is seldom less than to be due on said mortgage and which mortgagee, a thencounty of gfcee duly executed and delivered Mo? te fSffi 0 R, of mortgages, on page 258. Which said mortgage, together with the debt secured thereby, was duly assigned by said S. S. Smith, trustee, mortgagee, to oiuim trustee mortgagee to Ann a Pe- i Gaf k-oc+u A -inn* day of November, 1905, and recorded in the i clock p. m., duly recorded in the office of said register of deeds, of said Mille office of the register of deeds of Mille November, 1905, at 1 o'clock m., in book of mortgages, on page 37 Whereas the assignee of said mortgage has elected to declare, and does hereby declare the whol principal sum secured by said mort be due,aDd?YL0L,/*L3****1*** payable and there is now ($1260,00) 8 to Rober mort mortgage on the property hereinafter described, which mortgage was dated September 25th, A. D. 1907, and was September 26th, A. D. 1907, at one mortgages at page 441, and, whereas, said mortgage provided for specific liens upon the various pieces or par cels of land therein described for specific amounts therein stated, and tbe property described in said mort gage and the said specific liens and the amounts thereof are as follows, viz: All tbose tracts or parcels of land lying and being in tbe county of Mille Lacs and State of Minnesota, described as follows, to-wit: Outlots number one (1), two (2),Mille three (3), four (4), five (5), and sixafter (6), each having a specific lien of fifty ($50.00) dollars outlot number seven (7), a specific lien of forty ($40.00) dollars outlot number eight (8) a specific lien of fifteen ($15.00) dollars outlot nine (9), a specific twenty (&S0.00) dollars OUt ten (10) and eleven (11), thirty ($30.00) dollars each outlot twelve (12) thirty-five ($35.00) dollars lot one (1), block one (1), thirty-seven and 50-100 ($37.50) dollars lots two (2), three (3), four (4), five (5), six (6), seven (7) and eight (8), thirty ($30.00) dollars each lot nine (9), forty ($40.00) dollars, all in block one (1) also lots one (1), two (2) and three (3) in block six (6), fifty ($50.00) dollars each lots one (1) two (2),MarPlaintiffs,and three (3), four (4)) five (5) and six (6) in block two (2), twenty ($20.00) dollars each lots seven (7), of block two (2), ten ($10.00) dollars lots eight (8), nine (9) and ten (10) in block two (2), twenty ($20.00) dollars each lot three (3) of block three (3), twenty-five ($25.00) dollars lot twoaction (2) of block three (3,) twenty ($20.00) dollars lot one (l),of block three (3), ten ($10 00) dollars lot one (1) of block seven (7), fifteen ($15 00) dol lars lot two (2) of block seven (7), ten ($10.00) dollars lot eleven (11) block two (2) seven and 50-100 ($7.50) dol lars lots twelve (12), thirteen (13), fourteen (14), fifteen (15), sixteen (16), seventeen (17), eighteen (18), nine teen (19), twenty (20), twenty-one (21), twenty-two (22) and twenty-three (23), all in block two (2), five ($5.00) dol lars each, and lot three (3), block seven (7), five ($5 00) dollars. All located in Isle Harbor Townsite, Min nesota, according to the map or plat thereof on file or of record in the office of the register of deeds of said county, and, Whereas, certain of said lots have heretofore been duly released from the lien thereof, and the said mortgage at the date hereof covers, includes and constitutes a lien upon tbe said lots, pieces or parcels of land hereinafter described, and the amount claimed to be due and which is due at tbe date hereof upon each of said lots, pieces or parcels is as fol lows, viz: Outlot number 1 Outlot number 4. Outlot number 5 Outlot number 7 Outlot number 8 Outlot number 10 Outlot number 11 Outlot number 12 Lot 1 of block 1 Lot 2 of block 1 Lot 3 of block 1 Let 4 of block 1 Lot 5 of block 1 Lot 6 of block 1 Lot 8 of block 1 Lot 9 of block 1 Lot 5 of block 2 Lot 6 of block 2 Lot 7 ot block 2 Lot 8 of block 2 Lot 10 of block 2 Lot 11 of block 2 Lot 13 of block 2 Lot 14 of block 2 Lot 15 of block 2 Lot lb of block 2 Lot 18 of block 2 Lot 19 of block 2 Lot 20 of block 2 Lot 21 of block 2 Lot 2 of block 3 Lot 6 of block 3 Lot 3 of block 6 859.67 59 67 59 67 47 73 17 90 35 80 35 80 41.77 44 65 35 80 35 80 3 80 35 80 35 80 35 80 47 73 23 87 23 87 11 93 23 87 33 87 8 85 5 97 5 97 5 97 5 97 5 97 5 07 97 5 ft 23 87 29 83 59 67 All located in Isle Harbor Townsite, Mille Lacs county, Minn., according to the map or plat thereof on file or of record in said register of deeds' office. And the total amount claimed is due thereon at the date hereof is the sum of nine hundred forty-two and 58-100 ($942.58) dollars, and de fault has been made in the payment of the said respective sums and amounts and each and all thereof. Now therefore, notice is hereby given that by virtue of the poweie,cef a 8s ai th crash followed by a snap a muf- SoJ^^ttSbft^o'S^Sn *?1 fled sound arises and becomes louder sai and louder until a column of oil and and appurtenances, which sale will be water shoots from 75 to 100 feet into made by the sheriff of said Mille the air. The country for hundreds of Lacs county at the*front door of feet around is filled with clouds of court houso in the village ofon? to a 7 1 lots statutb in such casfe foreclosedee by a sale cri il a oprovided, 7 mortgage with the hereditaments February A 1911,the at Prince- ii^sai county and state the ?*&' .mLJ.thua 6t fceJi,CJc'*- lie vendue to the highest bidder for cash, to pay the' said debt and thescribed said specific amounts thereof, and interest and taxes, if any, on said premises, and fifty ($50.00) dollars attorney's fees, as stipulated in and by said mortgage in case of fore closure, and the disbursements al lowed by law, subject to redemption at any time within one year from the day of sale, as provided by law. Dated December 15th, A. D. 1910. ROBERT H. KING, Mortgagee. E MCMILLAN, Attorney for Mortgagee, Princeton, Minn. Willing to Risk It. UncleMy dear boy, it's a fact that the bacilli on paper money have caused many a death before now. Nephew Well, uncle, you might let me have a few notes. I'm very tired of life. Fliegende Blatter While it is true that one maKes ac quaintances with queer people on one's vacation, it is not always necessary to co on a vacation to achieve that end. First pub. Dee. 8,1910. Summons. STATE OP MINNESOTA, Mille Lacs. f88' Court, Seventh Judicial District District. Mary Bines and John P. Anderson, Plaintiffs, vs. John Shroyer, also all other per sons unknown claiming any right, title, estate, interest or lien in the real estate described in tbe complaint herein, Defendants. The State of Minnesota, to the above named defendants. You are hereby summoned and re quired to answer the complaint of the plaintiffs in the above entitled actios, which complaint has been filed in the office of the clerk of said district court at the village of Princeton, county of Mille Lacs and state of Minnesota, and to serve a copy of your answer to said complaint on the subscriber at his office in tbe vil lage of Princeton in the county of Lacs within twenty (20) days service of this summons upoa you exclusive of tbe day of such ser vice, and if you fail to answer tin said complaint within tbe time afore said the plaintiffs in this action will apply to the court for tbe relief de manded in said complaint together with plaintiffs' costs and disburse ments herein. CHARLES KEITH, Plaintiffs' Attorney, Princeton, Minn. Notice of Lis Pendens. STATE OP MINNESOTA, County of Mille Lacs, 8 First Pub Dec. 15,1910. Notice of Mortgage Foreclosure Sale. Whereas, default has been made in the con ditions of act rtain mortgage bearing date the 25th day of March, one thousand nine hundred and seven, made and executed by Mrs Nora B. Marvin of Hinckley, Minnesota, as mortgagor, to W. S Vent of St. Paul, Minnesota, as mort gagee, which said mortgage was filed for rec ord in the office of the register of deeds in an* for the county of Mille Lacs, state of Minne sota, on the 30th day of March, 1907, at one o'clock and was dulv recorded in said office on said date in book "S" of mortgages oa page 179 thereof, And whereas, there is claimed to be due and is now due and payable on said mortgage and the debt secured thereby the sum of two hun dred twenty-eight ($228.00) dollars, besides tae costs and expenses of this foreclosure. Now, therefore, notice Is hereby given, that by virtue of a power of sale in said mortgage contained and the statute in such case made and provided, that the said mortgage will be foreclosed by sale at public auction to the highest bidder for cash of the premises de In said mortgage, to-wit: All that par cel of land lying and being in the countv of Mille Lacs, state of Minnesota, described as follows, to-wit: Lot numbered four (4). in block numbered one (1), In the town of Law rence, as shown on the plat of the same now on file in the office of the register of deeds at Princeton, Mille Lacs county, Minnesota, to gether with all the hereditaments and appur tenances thereunto belonging or in any wise appertaining. Said sale will be made by the sheriff of Mille Lacs county, or his deputy, at the front door of the court house in tho village of Princeton, county of Mille Lacs, state of Minnesota, on Friday, tbe 3rd day of February. A. D. 1911. at ten o'clock in the forenoon of said day. to satisfy the amount which will then be due upon said mortgage and the debt secured thereby and the costs and disbursements of this foreclosure. Dated this 9th day of December. A. D. 1910. W. S, VBNT, Mortgagee, St. Paul, Minnesota. GlLBCBT & GBSEHMAN, Attorneys for Mortgagee, 507 National German American Bank Building, St. Paul. Minn. YOU CAN MAKE MONEY Be the representative in your Town for our Costumes. Masquerade Balls, Private Theatri cals, Winter Carnivals and Church Fairs. Ev erything up to date. Local retail dealer pre ferred. Send for catalogue and information. SMITH COSTUME CO.. 707 S.S., Ummtw#%.Wmm. xM S District Court, Seventh Judicial District. Bines John P. Anderson, vs. John Shroyer, also all other per sons unknown claiming any right, title, estate, interest or lien in the real estate described in the complaint herein, Defendants. Notice is hereby given that an has been commenced in this court by the above named plaintiffs against tbe above named defendants. That tbe object of said action is to determine the adverse claim of the defendants and each and all of them, and the rights of the parties respec tively herein in and to the real estate hereinafter described, and that the premises affected by said action situated in the county of Mille Laos and state of Minnesota are described as follows: The southwest quarter of section ten (10), township thirty-seven (37), range twenty-six (26), west 4th Meridian. CHARLES KEITH, Plaintiff's Attorney, Princeton, Minn. First Pub Jan 5 Citation for Hearing on Petition for Probate of Will. Estate of Milton S. Butherford. State of Minnesota, County of Mille Lacs. In Probate Court. In the matter of the estate of Milton S. Rutherford, decedent. The state of Minnesota to the next of kin and all persons interested in the allowance and probate of the will of said decedent: The petition of Carrie J. Rutherford being duly filed in this court, representing that Milton S. Rutherford, then a resident of the county of Mille Lacs, State of Minne sota, died on the 26th day of De cember, 1910, leaving a last will and testament which is presented to this court with said petition, and pray ing that said instrument be allowed as the last will and testament of said decedent, and that letters of adminis tration with the will annexed be issued thereon to George H. Newbert. Now 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 tbe court house, in the village of Princeton, county of Mille Lacs, State of Minnesota, on the 30fch day of January, 1911, at 10 o'clock a. m., why the prayer of said petition should not be granted. Witness the honorable Wm. V. San ford, Judge of said court, and the seal of said court, this 4th day of January, 1911. WM. V. SANFORD, (Court Seal.) Judge. E. L. McMillan, Attorney for Petitioner, Princeton, Minn. I ^i ~J