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Vr Great Northern Railway. ST. PAUL, MINNEAPOLIS, PRINCETON AND SANDSTONE. Banner, per eaek Groan Coarst Middl Short* Bran. All GOING EA'ST. Ex. Sun. 6:00 a.m. 6:50 a. m. 7:25 a. m. 7:53 a. 8:35 a. m. 8:59 a. m. 9:40 a. m. 10:05 a. m. Le. Sandstone Mora Milaca PRINCETON.. Ar. Elk River Le. Anoka Ar. Minneapolis. Ar. St. Paul Le. St. Paul. Ar. Minneapolis. Le. Anoka.... Ar. Elk River.... Le. PRINCETON.. Milaca Mora Ar. Sandstone GOING WEST. 4:45 p. m. 5:10 p- m. 5:35 p. m. 6:10 p. m. 6:52 p. m. 7:20 p. m. 7:54 p. m. 9:10 p. m. ST. CLOUD TRAINS. GOING WEST. Le. Milaca I 9:40a.m. Bridgeman 9:46 a.m. Ar. St. Cloud 10:45a.m. GOING EAST. Le. St. Cloud 3:25p.m. Bridgeman 4:23 p.m Ar, Milaca 4:35 p.m These trains connect at St. Cloud -with trains Nos. 1 and 3. WAY FREIGHT. GOING EAST.Tuesday, Thursday & Saturday. Le. Milaca 11:10 a. m. PRINCET ON 12:25p.m. Elk River 2:30p.m. Ar. Anoka 4:10p.m. GOING WEST.Monday, Wednesday & Friday. Le. Anoka I 9:40 a.m. ElkRiver |10:30a.m. PRINCET ON 113:25 p. m. Ar. Milaca I 2:00p.m. MILLE LACS COUNTY. TOWN CLERKS. Bogus BrookHenry Gustafson Princeton BorgholmJ. Heron Bock GreenbushChas. E. Slater Princeton Isle HarborOtto A. Haggberg Isle MilacaOle Larson Milaca MiloR. N. Atkinson Foreston PrincetonErnest Sellhorn Princeton RobbinsWillie Anderson Vineland South HarborT. F. Norton Cove East SideGeo. W. Freer Opstead OnamiaBenjamin Cotton Onamia PageL. D. Chamberlain Page VILLAGE RECORDERS. .7. M. Neumann Foreston J. W. Goulding Princeton R. W. Hissam Milaca NEIGHBORING TOWNS. BaldwinL. Berry Princeton Blue HillThomas E. Brown Princeton Spencer BrookG. C. Smith. ..Spencer Brook WyanettOle Peterson Wyanett LivoniaChas. E. Swanson Lake Freemont PRICES OF THE Princeton Roller Mills ana Elevator, When Corn, Oats. per bnshel 1,65 40 30 RETAIL. Vesta! Flonr. per sack (100 per cent) per ack 42.10 2.00 1.70 .90 .85 .90 .85 .80 Peed, ner cwt Meal, per cwt mgs per cwt per cw"t ood delivered free anywhere in P:inceton PRINCETON (irtdi, Report Wheat. No. 1. Northern, Rye, Oats, Buckwheat, Beans, fgood) Hay, Corn, Potatoes $ 65 38 30 50 1 60 5 50 40 20 65 FRATERNAL LODGE NO. 92, A & A M. Regular communications, 2d and 4th Wednesday of each month. A. A. CASWELL. W- M. W M. CORDINER, Sec'y. JI% PRINCETON LODGE, NO. 93, of Retjii.'ar meetings every Tne-da eve ning at 8 o'clock. A. A. CASWELL. W. VANWORME R. K. R. & S. CALLA TEMPLE, NO. 3 Rathbone Sisters, of Princeton. Regular meetings 1st and 3rd Thursday evenings of each month at 7:80 in K. hall. LOLA JESMER. M. E. C. LORET TA HOWARD. M. of R. & K. O. T. M., Tent No. 17. PRINCETON CAMP, 31. W A., No. 4032. Regular meeting every fourth Thursday even ing of each month, at 8:00, in the hall over post office. Visiting members cordially invited. H. E. WHITE, V. C. A. II. SMITH. Clerk. TELLTIWPICTURES. PAINTINGS THAT- HAVE DONE THE WORK OF DETECTIVES. Instances Where the Canvas of an Artist Has Le to the Confession of a CriminalA Portrait and a Stolen Diamond Pendant. An artist who had suddenly become almost famous by his production of a painting exhibited at the Royal acad emy was one day called upon by a ma"n whose visit was productive of the most extraordinary and undreamt of consequences. The picture represented a lonely stretch of beach, upon fvhich the sea was beating in long, creamy rollers. In the foreground, bending over a dead body,.was a man with a wild expres sion on his face anfl with a naked knife in his hand. A ship's boat, evi dently just beached, was also in the picture, and by the side of the mur dered man was a bag of gold. The pic ture portrayed the advent of two cast aways upon a friendly shore. The one had murdered the other so that the treasure might be his. 1 The painter's visitor was a gray hair ed, wild eyed man. "In heaven's name, sir," he gasped out, "how did you learn the dreadful story that you painted? I see you know all. I murdered my mate Bill to get the money that was his. I threw his body into the sea. I don't know what impulse led me to the Academy. The first thing I saw was your picture rep resenting the scene that took place 30 years ago." Needless to say, the picture had been the outcome of imagination. Yet mur der will out, and the guilty conscience of the man who had killed his comrade for lust of gold had convinced him that the painting was no coincidence, but was indeed the actual portrayal of a dastardly and unwitnessed crime. There is probably no picture better known in England than "The Doctor," by Mr. Luke Fildes, yet there are prob ably very few people aware of the fact that that selfsame masterpiece was the means of bringing to light the per petration of a crime that would other wise never have been known. A certain doctor in a la?ge town com mitted suicide, and among his papers was a letter which ran as follows: "I have today seen Luke Fildes' 'Doctor.' The picture represents a medical man watching by the bedside of a child. It has so haunted me that I am going to take away my own worthless life and make a confession at the same tf.ime. When Arthur's"his brother's"boy died, I came into money that my dead brother had settled on him. He died as all the world thought of acute pneu monia. Yet his life might have been saved had I acted, as Fildes' 'Doctor5 l?years Regular meetings every Thm-s day evening at 8 o'clock, in the Maccabee hall. i HEN RY LIN D, Com. N. M. NELSON. R. K. Hebron Encampment, No. 42,1.0. O.F Meetings, 2nd and 4th Mondays at 8 o'clock P. M. M. C. SATJSSER. C.P D. W. SPATJLDING, S. W. Jos. CRAIG, Scribe: PRINCETON-:-LODGE NO. 208,1. O. O.F. Regular meetings everv Friday evening at 7:30 O'clock. W. H. BIDWELL, N. G. LEON WHEELER, R. Sec. ESPEY LODGE, No. 193, A O. U. W Regular meetings every first and third Monday even ings of each month in the hall over postofflce. B. SOUTHARD, M. W. M. CUTLER, Rec. DONT E FOOLED I Take the genuine, original ROCKY MOUNTAIN TEA Made only by Madison Medi cine Co., Madison, Wis. It keeps you well. Our trade mark cut on each package. Price, 35 cents. Never sol4 In bulk. Accept no substl* IMOCHPORATEG ioc* lute. Ask your druggist* is so evidently doing, with the use of all the skill that lay in my power. I has tened the boy's end and so got the money. I can bear it no more." A well known artist was commission ed to paint the portrait of a lady in ex alted circles, who boasted the posses sion of a most unique jewel in the form of a pendant. The lady was very anxious that this heirloom should be included in her portrait The artist, of course, complied with her request. Shortly after the painting had been completed a daring burglary was per petrated, with the result that the lady lost her heirloom, and no trace of the thief or thieves was forthcoming. Years passed by, and the lady gave up all hope of ever seeing the precious heirloom again. Now, it so happened that the artist who had painted the portrait of the lady mentioned had occasion to travel in India. In the course of his wanderings he came to Bombay and, as every visitor to that place does, strolled through the native bazaar. Suddenly his attention was riveted by a piece of jewelry in a jeweler's shop that seemed familiar to him. It was a diamond and ruby pendant. Where had he seen it before? He ran sacked his brain, but could not remem ber. He returned to his hotel and hap pened to take from his portfolio a sketch of the portrait he had made ago of the lady with the pendant. In a moment the enigma was solved. The piece of jewelry he had seen was the peculiar pendant that his fair sitter had been so anxious he should include in his portrait. He hurried off to the chief of police, and told that worthy what he suspect ed, namely, that the bazaar he had vis ited contained the long lost jewel of the English lady. Inquiries were at once set on foot with extraordinary re sults. The jeweler in the bazaar con fessed to having given years ago a quite insignificant sum for the jewel, which he had bought from a stableman in the employ of a neighboring rajah. The stableman was sought for, and turned out to be none other than a fa mous English cracksman, who had ap parently turned honest, but who, nevertheless, confessed to having been the thief of the jewel that had been so miraculously discovered.Pearson's Weekly. Of Two Evils the Lesser. PapaDidn't I tell you, Willie, if I caught you playing with Tommy Jink again I would whip you? WillieYes, sir. PapaThen why were you playing with him? WillieWell, I got lonesomer than I thought a lickin would hurt, so I just went oven,and played with him that's why.Detroit Free Press. The father of the game of whist, Ed mond Hoyle, lived to be 97 years old* His treatise on cards has been pub lished in all languages, and probably no work except the Bible has passed through more/ editions. The original work appeared in London in 1742. CARD "PLAYERS? CRAMP.1 What Once Happened to an Old Faro Dealer's Hand. "Were you ever paralyzed?" said the old timer. '_,."' "No, and may the" began the other. "Well, you see that right hand? It looks pretty good and strong and it is, but for about three days once it was deader than a frostbitten tomato plant. "You know of course that I used to make my living playing cards, chiefly dealing bank. There wasn't a day I didn't deal bank or in other games six to eight hours a day. Many a time I have dealt or played longer. "One night I was dealing bank. It was a good, big game. All at once when I went to slip a card this old right refused to work. I looked at it and the fingers were kind of twisted inward and the hand from the wrist was bent downward. "This stopped the deal for me, and I told the lookout 'to get busy,' for tne players were .getting a little 'queered.' He took my phice, and I watched the bets. "I rubbed my right, but it wouldn't straighten out and it kept this way until the next day, and then I went to a doctor. He didn't know me as well as you do, but the first question he asked was: 'Deal cards a great deal, don't you?' 'Yes.' 4 4 'Do you deal with an^elbow move- ment or with finger and wrist move- ment?" 'Why, I don't work my elbow.' 4 4 4That 4 4 explains it. You have card players' paralysis.' "This hit me center, and I showed it, bu4 the doctor was gootd and said: 'Now, don't ge flurried. I'll 4 straighten you up. Just quit dealing awhile, and I'll give your hand* a" few doses of electricity, and you'll be all right' "He did it, and in about three days my hand was straight as a string. But I haven't dealt so much since. There's many an old timer whose dealing hand has quit him. And you say you were never paralyzed?" "No." "Well, you ain't played cards much." Louisville Times. THE KUKLUX KLAN. Where and How the Pomona Body Was Organized. When the civil war ended, the little town of Pulaski, Tenn., welcomed a band of young men who, though they were veterans of hard fought fields, were for the most part no older than the mass of college students. In the general poverty, the exhaustion, the lack of heart, naturally prevalent throughout the beaten south, young men had more leisure than was good for them. A southern country town, even in the halcyon days before the war, was not a particularly lively place, and Pulaski' in 1S66 was doubtless rather tame to fellows who had seen Pickett charge, at Gettysburg or galloped over tht country with Morgan and Wheeler. A group of them assembled in a law ofBce one evening in May, 1866, were discuss ing ways and means of having a live lier time. Some one suggested a club or society. An organization with no very definite aims was effected, and at a second meeting, a week later, names were proposed and discussed. Some one pronounced the Greek word kuklos, meaning circle. From kuklos to kuklux was an easy transitionwhoever consults a glossary of college boys' slang will not find it strangeand klan followed kuklux as naturally as "dumpty" follows "hump- ty." That the name meant nothing whatever was a recommendation, and one can fancy what sort of badinage would have followed a suggestion that in six years a committee of congress would devote 13 volumes to the history of the movement that began in a Pu laski law office and migrated later to a deserted and half ruined house on the outskirts of the village. Atlantic Monthly. Fields of Salt. At Salton, in southern California, ex ists a basin of land between 200 and 200 feet below sea level. About 1,000 acres of the depressed area are cov ered with a deposit of salt which G. F. Holden describes in The Scientific American as one of the sights of Cali fornia. The salt is first thrown into ridges by a peculiarly shaped plow, drawn by a dummy engine with ca bles, and then is piled into conical heaps before being carried to the dry ing house and crushing mill. The ex panse looks like a field of snow. About 2,000 tons of salt are removed each year, but the supply is perennially re newed by the deposits of salt springs which flow into the basin. In June the temperature of the air reaches 150 de grees, and only Indian workmen can withstand the heat and glare. Tiger's Make Believe Eyes. Mr. Beddard of the London Zoologi cal society calls attention to a'pecul iarity of the ears of tigers which he thinks maj be classed under the head of "protective markings." On the back of each ear is a very bright white spot and when the ears are directed for ward these spots are conspicuous from the front Mr. Beddard suggests tnat when the tiger is sleeping in the dim light of a ,cave or thicket the spots on its ears may appear to an enemy, look ing in, as the gleam of its watchful eyes, and thus save the sleeper from an unexpected attack. The Wisdom of Experience. When I was 20, I thought I was 40 when I was 30 1 thought I was 50 when I was 40 I thought I was 25, and when I was 50 I wondered if they were going to bring in the high chair at the table and "give me the bottle. W. W. Goodwin, Retiring Harvard Professor, at a Dinner in His Honor. Ordinance No. 68. An ordinance to prohibit the sale and use of cannon or giant firecrackers or any fire cracker over six inches In length within the corporate limits of the village of Princeton, Minnesota. Be it enacted by the Common Council of the Village of Princeton. SECTION ONE. NO person or persons shall at any. time, sell or use any cannon or giant fire crackers or any firecracker over six inches in length within the corporate limits of the vil lage of Princeton, Minnesota. SECTION TWO. Any person or persons con victed of violating any of the provisions of this ordinance shall be punished by a fine not ex ceeding, fifty dollars ($50.00) nor less than twenty-five dollars ($35.00),-and costs of prose cution, or by imprisonment' in the village jail not exceeding thirty (30) days. SECTION THRE E. This ordinance shall take effect and be in force from and after its adoption and publication. Adopted this 2nd day of July, A. D. 1901. T. H. CALE T, President. Attest: J. W. GOULDING, Village Recorder. [Seal] First Publication July 4,1901. Summons. STATE OF MINNESOTA, County of Mille Lacs. District Court, Seventh Judicial District. The Mille Lacs Lumber Company, i Plaintiff, vs. I William A. Rhodehamel the un known heirs of Mary A. Mooney, de ceased all other persons or parties unknown claiming any right, title, es tate, lien or interest in the real estate described in the complaint herein, de fendants. The Sta.te of Minnesota to the above named de fendants You and each of you are hereby summoned and required to answer the complaint of the plaintiff in the above entitled action, which has been filed in the office of the clerk of the court above entitled, and to serve a copy of your answer to the said complaint upon the sub scriber at his office, number 203 Bank of Min nesota Building, St. Paul, Minnesota, within 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 will apply to the court for the relief demanded in its complaint. Dated June 20th. 1901. JOHND. O'BRIEN. Bank of Minnesota Building. St. Paul. Minnesota, Attorney for Plaintiff. Notice of Lis Pendens. STATE OF MINNESOTA, County of Mille Lacs. District Court, Seventh Judicial District. The Mille Lacs Lumber Company. 1 Plaintiff. vs. William A. Rhodehamel: the un known heirs of Mary A. Mooney, de ceased, also all other persons or parties unknown claiming any right, title, estate, lien or interest in the real estate described in the complaint herein, defendants. Notice is hereby given of the nendency of the action above entitled. The object of said ac tion is to obtain the judgment and decree of the court above entitled adjudging and decree ing the plaintiff to be the owner in fee simple and entitled to the possession of the following described premises situate in Mille' Lacs county. Minnesota: The south half (SVs) of the southeast one quarter (SEjki) of section thirty-four (34), in township thirty-eight (38), of range twenty-six (26).and that none of the defendants have any right title, interest, claim, demand or lienMn, to or upon any part thereof. Dated June 20th, 1901. JOHN D. O'BRIE N. Bank of Minnesota Building. St. Paul. Minnesota, Attorney for Plaintiff. Office of Register of Deeds, County of Mille Lacs-, State of M-.nnesota.ss. I-iitrefcy*certify is.ti~thc:within- instrument was filed in my office for record this 25th day of June, A. D. 1901, at 4 o'clock p. M., and duly re corded in book -F" of Mis. on page 294. ELM ER CHAPMAN, Register of Deeds. [Seal] By R. S. CHAPMAN. Deputy. First Publication June 20,1901. Notice of Expiration of Redemption. To Samuel R. Thayer: Take notice that the following described piece and parcel of land situated in the county of Mille Lacs and State of Minnesota, to-wit: The northwest quarter of the northeast quar ter, in section 29. in township 38 north, of range 27 west, was on the 5th day of May, A. D. 1898, bid in for the State of Minnesota, for the sum of $3.27, at the tax sale of lands held pursuant to a real estate tax judgment made and entered in the district court in and for the said county of Mille Lacs, on the 21st day of March. A. D. 1898. in proceedings to enforce the payment of taxes delinquent upon real estate for the year 1896, in and for the said county of Mille Lacs, and was on the 2nd day of May, A. D. 1901. assigned by the State of Minnesota for $4.44: that the amount required to redeem such land from said tax sale, exclusive of the costs to accrue upon this notice, is the said sum of $4.44, with interest thereon at the rate of one per cent, per month from said 2nd day of May, A. D. 1901. to the time of such redemption, and the time for re demption of said land from said tax sale will expire sixty days after the service of this no tice and proof thereof has been filed in mv office. Dated at Princeton. Minnesota, this 21st'day of May, A. D. 1901. E. E. WHITNE Y. Auditor of Mille Lacs Countv. Minn. (Auditor's Seal) Notice of Expiration of Redemption. To Samuel R. Thayer: Take notice that the following described piece and parcel of land situated in the county of Mille Lacs and State of Minnesota, to-wit: The northwest quarter of the northwest quar ter, in section 34. in township 39 north, of range 27 west, was on the 4th day of May. A. D. 1898, bid in for the State of Minnesota, for the sum of S3.43. at the tax sale of lands held pursuant to a real estate tax judgment made and entered in the district court in and for the said county of Mille Lacs, on the 21st day of March. A. D*. 1898, in proceedings to enforce the payment of taxes delinquent upon real estate for the year 1896, in and for the said county of Mille Lacs, and was on the 2nd day of May, A. D. 1901. assigned by the State of Minnesota for 84.65: that the amount required to redeem such land from said tax sale, exclusive of the costs to accrue upon this notice, is the said sum of $4.65, with inter est thereon at' the rate of one per cent, per month from said 2nd day .of May, A. D. 1901. to the time of such redemption, and the time for redemption of said land from said tax sale will expire sixty days after the service of this notice and proof thereof has been filed in my office. Dated at Princeton, Minnesota, this 21st day May. A. D, 1901. E. E. WHITNET. Auditor of Mille Lacs County. Minn. (Auditor's Seal) Notice of Expiration of Redemption. To Edward Thomas: Take notice that the following described piece and parcel of land situated in the county of Mille Lacs and State of Minnesota, to-wit: The north half of the southwest quarter, in section 29, in township 40 north, of range 27 west,-was on the 3rd day of May, A. D. 1898. feid in for the State of Minnesota, for the sum of $4.36, at the tax sale of lands held pursuant to a real estate tax judgment made and entered in the district court in and for the said county of Mille Lacs, on the 21st day of March A. D. 1898, in proceedings to enforce the payment of taxes delinquent upon real estate for the year 1896, in and for the said county of Mille Lacs, and was on the 2nd day of May. A. D. 1901. assigned by the State of Minnesota for- 810.32 that the amount required to redeem such land from said tax sale, exclusive of the costs to accrue upon this notice, is the said sum of $10.32, with inter est thereon at the rate of one per cent, per month from said 2nd day of May, A. D. 1901, to the time of such redemption, and the time for redemption of said land from said tax sale will expire sixty days after the service of this no tice and proof thereof has been filed in my office. Dated at Princeton, Minnesota, this 21st day of May. A. D. 1901. E E. WHITNEY, Auditor of Mille Lacs County, Minn. (Auditor's Seal) Hi to it/ ito v( \i iti W/ ft \ii HH Here's a Treat JU-- Jr i The best, most thrilling and most famous of "OUIDA'S" NOVELS "Under Two Flags" Condensed to the limits required for newspaper use, has been secured and will be published in the UNION when the present serial ends. To those who have never read "Under Two Flags" the opportunity is afforded to get in practically perfect form one of the most virile pieces of fiction extant for those who have read the novel in its original form a pleasant surprise is in store in the "concentrated" guise in which "Under Two Flags" is offered. Don't miss this Charming Story. See that your subscription is fully paid up, for you will regret the loss of a single chapter after you have begun the story. The price of the UNION still remains $1.00 per year in advance. W W W W W W R. DUNN, Publisher. Burlington First Publication June 27,1901. STATEe First Publication June SO, 1901. STATEe OF MINNESOTA, COUNTY OF Mill Lacs.ss. In Probate Court. Special Term, June 14,1901. In the matter of the estate of Oliver Walter, deceased. On receiving and filing the petition of Maria Carus, of the county of Mille Lacs, represent ing, among other things, that Oliver Walter, late of the county of Mille Lacs in the State of Minnesota, on the 30th day of January, A. D. 1870, at the county of Mille Lacs, died intestate, and being an inhabitant of this county at the time of his death, leaving goods, chattels and estate within this county, and that the said petitioner is the surviving wife of said de ceased, and praying that administration of said estate be to her granted It is ordered, that said petition be heard be fore this court, on Saturday, the 13th day of July, A. D. 1901, at 2 o'clock M., at the pro bate office, in the court house in Princeton in said county. Ordered further, that notice thereof be given to the heirs of said deceased, and to all persons interested, by publishing this order once in each week for three successive weeks prior to said day of hearing, in the Princeton Union, a weekly newspaper printed and published at Princeton in said county. Dated at Princeton the 14th day of June, A. D. 1901. By the court, B. M. VANALSTEIN, [Probate Seal.] Judge of Probate. How Ipften mothers are at a loss to know what is best for children suffer ing from summer complaint, cholera, diarrhoea, etc. Mull's Lightning Spe cific is safe and sure. 25c, For sale by C. A. Jack. DINING CARS A LA CARTE Providing the best of everything-, and paping close attention to details, Burlington dining cars have gained world-wide reputation. On our Chicago Limited. The "pay for what you order" plan is much more acceptable than the "dollar-a-meal" charge. Ask Your Home Agent for Tickets via this Line OF OF MINNESOTA. COUNTY Mill Lacs.ss. In Probate Court. Special Term, June 22,1901. In the matter of tbe estate of Thomas Hen dnckson, deceased. Letters of administration on the estate of said deceased being this day granted unto Annie Hendrickson. of said county. It is ordered, that all claims and demands of all persons against said estate be presented to this court for examination and allowance at the probate office, in the court house, in the %'illage of Princeton, in said county, on Tuesday, the 23rd day of December, 1901, at 2 o'clock p. M. It is further ordered, that six months from the date hereof be allowed to creditors to pre sent their claims against said estate, at the expiration of -which time all claims cot nre sented to said court, or not proven to its satis faction, shall be forever barred, unless for cause shown further time be allowed. Ordered further, that notice of the time and place of the hearing and examination of said claims and demands shall be given by publish ing this order once in each week for three suc cessive weeks, in the Princeton Union, a weekly newspaper printed and published at Princeton, in said county. Dated at Princeton the 22nd day of June. A. D. 1901. By the court. B. M. AN ALSTEIN, [Probate Seal.] Judge of Probate. First publication June 13,1903. Mortgage Foreclosure Sale. Default having been made in the conditions of a mortgage made by Gottlob Krumseigand Anna Krumseig, his wife, to Se%vard P. Wood man, dated January 30. 1901. and recorded in the office of the register of deeds, in and for tne county of Mille Lacs and State of Minne sota, on the 28th day .of May, 1901. at 11 o'clock A. M. in book "N" of mortgages on page 198. on which there is due at the date of this notice the sum of eighty-two and 81-100 (JS2.SD dol lars. Notice is hereby given, that the premises de scrioed in said mortgage, to-wit: All that tract or parcel of land lying and being in the county of Mille Lacs and State of Minnesota to-wit: Beginning at the point eighty (80) rods south of the northeast corner of the northwest quarter (N\V%) of section fifteen (15). in town ship thirty-six (36) north of range twenty-six (26) west of the principal meridian thence running west on a direct line thirty (30) rods thence running south at right angles sixteen (16) rods: thence rnnning east on a parallel line thirty (SO) rods thence running north sixteen (16) rods to said point of beginning, containing three (3) acres more or less, will be sold under the power of sale contained in said mortgage by the sheriff of said Mille Lacs county, at the front door of the county court house in the vil lage of Princeton, in said county and State, on the 26th day of July, 1901. at 10 o'clock A. M.. of that day, at public vendue to the highest bid der for cash: and said mortgage will be thereby foreclosed to pay said debt and the amount due thereon at the time of sale with the costs of such foreclosure including the sum of twenty five ($25) dollars attorney's fees as stipulated in said mortgage. Dated June 7,1901- SEWARD P. WOODMAN, CHAS. A. DICKEY. Mortgagee. Attorney for Mortgagee. Carew Block, Princeton, Minn. She Didn't Wear A &ask. But her beauty was completely hid den by sores, blotches and pimples till she used Buchlen's Arnica Salve. Then they vanished as will all erup tions, fever sores, boils, ulcers, car buncles and felons from its use. In fallible for cuts, corns, burns, scalds and piles. Cure guaranteed. 25c at C. A. Jack's drug store. Thoroughbred Stallions. We have for service several imported thoroughbred stallions. Those who desire to improve their stock should visit our barns, see tfhe animals and get our terms. E. MARK ^LIVE STOCK CO., Princeton, Minn.- IS