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fl^^wMMMMMMIMMMlAHM **m^*i*^*i^**a^0* PT Five Things to Remember items ,w!? There are five important things to remem ber when buying drugs or drug store goods. You will find all five of them at our store. Every purchase you make of us carries the seal of Integrity, Efficiency, Quality, Price and Ex- perience. These five are important. Bear them in mind. You will be agreeably sur prised and pleased with everything you buy of us and the service that we render you. To buy at our store means that you buy right goods at right prices. Open Sundays from 9 to 1 9 a C. A. JACK The Rexall Druggist rations toarcM. George I Staple* the only person who la authorized to collect money due this office In every ease the party paying money la entitled to and should Insist upon receiving a printed reoelpt. R. c. DUNK, Publisher. Nelson's photos please the people. Tom Allison, the Milaca land man, was here on business Tuesday. Mrs Skahen went to Minne apolis on Tuesday for a short visit. L. B. Wagner & Co. have a new ad in this number which you should read. A daughter was born to Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Davis on Friday, Jan uary 2. Attorneys Goebel and down from Milaca business Monday. Myron were on professional If you want to buy a farm call and see Robt. H. King, for he has the best at right prices. 6-tfc The Princeton Co-operative cream ery turned out 45 tubs of butter for the week ending Monday. Elmer Whitney was in the twin cities the early part of the week. His youngest son accompanied him. The ladies of the Methodist church will hold a food sale at Orton & Kaliher's store all day next Satur day. Mr. and Mrs, ^C Gater -and family have returned from Missouri, where they visited Mrs. Cater's old home. Mrs Geo W. Keyes and daughter, Kathryn, arrived here on Saturday from St. Paul to visit Dr. and Mrs. F. Small A masquerade ball will be given at the Brickton hall on Saturday evening, January 17 Everybody is invited to attend. ltp McMillan & Stanley this week sold 80 acres of land situated near Malmo, Mille Lacs lake, to Louis Tomfohr of Chisholm. Stenographers earn big salaries. To become a good stenographer at tend Maukato Commercial College, Mankato, Minn Adv. Next Sunday a reception to mem bers will be given at the Methodist church and the sacrament of the Lord's supper will be observed. Mr. and Mrs A. G. Larson of Albert Lea, who were here attend ing the Borneke-Hamngton wed ding, returned home on Tuesday. Edward and Margaret Lmdeke of St. Paul and Albert Ziebarth of Osseo were guests of Miss Ida May Schmidt over the Christmas hoidays. Piofessor Joseph Von Miller, one of the greatest violin impresarios of the day, will give a concert at the armory on Tuesday evening, January 13, which will be followed by a dance. ltp Dr. J. F. Kothman, optometrist, will be in town on Thursday and Friday, January 15 and 16. Eyes examined and glasses fitted. Office at Commercial hotel. 23-tfc Rev Service will have two spjendid original subjects for his sermons next Sunday"The Biggest Thing on Earth" and "Why People Don't Go to Church." Following a pleasant vacation, Harold Caley on Monday returned to Harvard university to resume his studies. His mother accompanied him so far as Minneapolis. Beginning next Saturday A. E. Allen & Co. will hold a reduction sale in ladies' coats and fursprices will be cut to pieces Don't fail to read ad on page 8 for further par ticulars. Rev. C. Larson, the Sunday school missionary, will preach in the Chap man school house, Spencer Brook, next Sunday at 10:30 in the morning and 7 4 in the evening. All will be welcome I^MMMIMIMMMMMt mm The Bates brothers left on Monday for a visit in Minneapolis. L. B. Wagner was buying goods for his store in St. Paul on Monday. Lard, at Hummel's, 12} cents a pound while it lasts. Bring your pails. 24-tfc Robert H. King lias returned from Mankato, where he went on land business. Miss Ruth Ferrell returned to her school on Monday and Glenn Ferrell yesterday. C. H. Nelson was in the twin cities on business connected with his store last Monday. Orton & Kaliher have some at tractive prices in clothing in their ad this week. Read it. On Monday Miss Marguerite Byers went to Minneapolis to take a course in music under Prof. Heinzemann. The ladies of the Methodist church will hold a food sale at Orton & Kaliher's store all day next Saturday. Dance at Long Siding hall Satur day evening, January 10. Music by Stromwall's four-piece orchestra. 2-2tc Hoffman will oil your harness, and oil it right, for one dollar a set. Take time by the forelock and get it oiled now. 3-tfc The preacher now has to pay the same as the common mortal for traveling on the railroadno half fare goes any more. Eddie Brands, who is employed by the state railroad and warehouse commission as an inspector, has been transferred to Chicago. Money to loan on improved farms at current rates. Liberal on or be fore privileges. See me before plac ing your loan. Robt H. King, Princeton, Minn. 6-tfc Mr. O'King has been very generous in the distribution of calendars this year and, it can be truthfully said, that they are real works of art. He still has a few left. Civil service examination for post office clerk at Princeton January 10. Claude Briggs, assistant secretary to civil service board, will furnish neces sary information and blanks. Mr. and Mrs. John L. Murphy of Rush City arrived here on Christ mas eve and stayed until the follow ing Monday with their daughter, Mrs G. A. Barrett, and family. Miss Eleanor Anderson, who was here to spend the holidays with her parents, Mr. and Mrs P. O. Ander son, returned on Monday to Minne apolis, where she is attending busi ness college. Mrs. A. S. Townsend and son, George, who have been visiting rel atives in this vicinity for a month, left on Saturday for Angleton, Texas, where they will make their future home. An installation of officers of Wal lace T. Rines post will be held next Saturday at the hall of the organiza tion at 2 p. m. All members who can possibly attend are requested to answer roll call. C. H. Modin has sold his farm at Pease and will go west with the in tention 'of locating next/month. He says he does not as yet know where he^ill locate, but it will probably be somewhere west of the Cascades. Don't forget the anual meeting of the Princeton Humane society at McMillan & Stanley's office on the afternoon of January 19. It is every one's duty to assist in the pre vention of cruelty to children and dumb animals, and tnat is the pur pose of the organization. Malcomb McKinnon is entitled to more than a modicum of praise for the work which he performed following the snowstorm of Janu ary 1. Mac plowed out every side walk in town with the exception of those^n rontjpf the residences of a few ^efsone who protested, r* i.*jAJ. !itfe-iK.!3&. Fefca&&kaaland of Mllo was among the Union's pleasant^cafterfj day. Vacuum cleaners for rent at $1 per day. Call up on Tri-State phone, No. 53 or 46. 52-tfc Harry Pratt, the tall sycamore of Zimmerman, was buzzing around town on Tuesday. Max Gordiner arrived here last Saturday for a visit to his father and other relatives and friends. Spelling bee at armory January 16 between the eighth grades of the Princeton and Elk River schools. "I 'ave some mighty main car toons in me safe with which I intind to shortly pollute the atmosphere.'' S. P. Anderson, a former resident of Isanti county, died in Cuba on Christmas day. He was 52 years of age. G. H. Whitcomb arrived here on Tuesday night from Seattle to visit his parents, Mr. and Mrs. D. Whit comb. August Thoma on Tuesday shipped two cars of cattle and a car of hogs to South St. Paul. The cattle were corn fed and of a prime quality. Am now prepared to do wood saw ing. Have a first-class gasoline rig and do good work. Henry Olson. Call up Tri-State 'phone 198. 52-4tc. Heine Plaas, jr., is putting on weight so rapidly that his "old" man" is contemplating the purchase of a gasoline go-cart to transport him from place to place. The schoolma'ams who passed their vacation at their out-of-town homes have all returned and the village has taken on a brighter ap pearance already yet. Chas. Tompkins, one of the old settlers of Spencer Brook, came in yesterday to renew his subscription. He has taken the Union the greater part of the time since it was started. The annual meeting of the Prince ton Co-operative Creamery company will be held at Brands' opera house at 1 p. m. on January 27. At that time officers and directors for 1914 will be elected. The annual meeting of the Glen doradjo Farmers' Mutual insurance company will be held at Fojiey on Tuesday afternoon, January 20. At that fome the 1914 election of officers and directors will be held. Joe Brands, formerly chief clerk in the freight office of the Southern Pacific railroad at Roseburg, Ore., has resigned and gone into business with E C. Boom, the firm name being the Roseburg Adjustment company. THE PRINCETON UNION: THURSDAY, JANUARY 8, 1914. Ji Professor Alton, state high school inspector, was here on Tuesday and spoke in praiseworthy terms of the manner in which our school is con ducted, but said it appeared to him that the rooms were slightly over crowded. According to the Independent one cattle buyer in Foreston paid out $137,426.87 for cattle, hogs and sheep during 1913. This goes to show that the farmers in the vicinity of Fores ton are alive to the fact that there is money in raising live stock. J. W. Murphy of Minneapolis, the calendar man, was here visiting his friend, Bob King, on Tuesday. Mr. Murphy says that the orders for 1915 calendars have practically all been placed. The house of Murphy turns out a fine line of artistic calendars. Before you start for Princeton to have your picture taken be sure it is the first or third Saturday or Sunday of the month, as these are the only days you will find Nelson, the famous photographer from Anoka, at his studio in Prince ton. 2-tfc We are told that the dog poisoner is again performing his diabolical deeds. If the blackguard is caught we wduld willingly assist in tarring and feathering him or in pulling1 Mrs R.M. Neely is fast $ S For sale, a Radiant Home hard coal stove and a wood heater. O. B. Randall. 52-tfc In the number of marriage licenses issued for the year 1913 Isanti county exceeds Mi!|g Lacs by 16. %& a rope that would jerk him to kingdom come. He is a dirty, sneaking assassin. A The local postofflce has not yet re ceived for transmission per parcel post any washing machines, auto mobile tires, chums or rowboats, but a few hand sleds, pitchforks and tin boilers have passed through the hands of the clerks. Ere long it may be found necessary to erect a ware house in the rear of the postofflce. For purity the Princeton city water is now equal, or superior, to any water in the northwest. The installation of the new pump, which made necesary the removal of a number of wooden rods, has made a big improvement in the quality of the waterthe rotting rods gave the patera tang which has aj teen Eliminated. ^^^^m!!?*ffi&' recoverii]g ronji a severe attack of pneumonia t_ M. K. RuddlL was here on Monday looking after his lumber yard in terests. Fred Burrell was down from Ona mia on business Tuesday. Fred looks as robust as a son of the wilds. The ladies of the Methodist church will hold a food sale at Orton & Kaliher's store all day next Satur day. The Methodist Ladies' Aid society will meet with Mrs. John Bishop next Wednesday afternoon at the usual hour. Out of work want a job. Any thing from wood-splitting to hang ing wall paper. Dan C. Mirick, Tri State phone. 3-2tc The funeral of Mrs. Mellott, who died at Alga, Washington, will be held from the Methodist church, Princeton, next Sunday afternoon at 2 o'clock. Mrs. Mary Millet arrived here on Saturday evening from Minneapolis and visited friends until Tuesday morning. J. O. McKenzie of Spencer Brook returned from Washington on Mon day. While in Everett he played a game of golf with Ex-Governor Dave Clough and beat him. The annual business meeting of the. Congregational church will be held on Tuesday, January 13, at 8 p. m. Reports of all departments and soci eties of the church will be read and every member or attendant of the church should not fail to be present. One of our old soldiers, David Whitcomb, who has been very sick for some time, was able to ride over town on Tuesday and cash his pen sion check. Mr. Whitcomb says it really makes him feel young again when he receives his hard-earned check. For soliciting alms on the street Arthur McCabe, a transient, was fined $5 and costs in Justice Norton's court on Tuesday and is now working out his indebtedness to the village, which amounts in all to $9. This means 9 days' labor under the super vision of Marshal Bullis. The brothers and sisters of Lee Jones and wife gathered at their home last Wednesday evening and helped them celebrate their eighth wedding anniversary. A wedding supper was served and the party pre sented Lee and his wife with a parlor lamp. The evening was spent in playing games and watching the oM year out and the new year in. A friend writes us from Seattle: "You have no reason to complain because the sun neglected to shine in Princeton for a few days at a time. Here in Seattle it often vanishes for weeks at a time, and a nasty drizzly rain continues which makes a person feel creepy and covers the earth with a disagreeable slime. 1 sigh for good old Princeton with its clear skies and crisp, healthful atmosphere." Dr. Cooney on Tuesday motored to Ogilvie, where he was called into consultation on a critical case. He took Mark Stoeter with him, as he knew that in case of trouble with bad roads or breakdowns Mark would prove a valuable man. They went tnrough to Ogilvie all right, but on the way home they were stalled sev eral times and Mark's services came in mighty handy. His backbone, however, is a trifle sore from scrap ing it on the frozen ground while performing tinker work beneath the machine. Fish Send $3.75 and you wiii get a hundred-pound sack of fresh frozen Lake Superior herring right from the fishermen. Freight paid to Duluth. Tofte Bros., 2-2tp Lutsen, Minn. The Gaelic Tongue. The Gaelic language was once spo ken by a considerable number of the human race in the British isles, the Isle of Man, northern France and Spain. There is evidence that the Gae lic branch of the Celtic breed was widespread. For instance, it is main tained by some excellent authorities that the Cimbrif who threatened at one time to overwhelm Rome and who were stopped by Marius," Were of Gae lic Speech The ancient language is found today in_ the Isle of .Man, Wales, the highlands of Scotland, western Ire land and in Brittany, northern France. -^New York American. Great In Little Things. George Washington's surveying done 150 years ago with the comparatively simple instruments of the day has been checked up by government sur veyors of today and found perfect. Experts in other lines might check up other works and qualities of bis-his patriotism. Ms common sense, his fore sight, his persistenceand find pretty nearly the same degree of excellence. Washington was only nineteen years old when he ran his lines through the forests and over the hills of Lord Fair fax's estate in Virginia. Bat the youth was father to the man.Baltimore Sun! %?$'&- 6*/ Overcoat Sale Now is the time to buy an overcoat. "We have too many and they are going to be sold if cut prices will sell them. Plenty of overcoat weather ahead, arid you will have a fine coat to start in with next winter. Note the Prices Plush Lined Coats, Fur Collars, Seal Plush and Corduroy Lin- ings, Kersey Shells. These coats are made by the best factory in St. Paul and guaranteed in every respect. IT Values up to $24.00, sale price only $18.95 Values up to $20.00, sale price only $14.95 Men's Fur Collared Coats, quilted lining $9.95 Fur Coats Going at a Reduction of 10 to 15 Percent Men's Cloth Coats They are of the usual good quality we always aim to offer, but owing to the backward fall and winter, we must cut prices in order to make a clean sweep and not carry any over. Values up to $20.00, sale price $14.95 Values up to $15.00, sale price $11.95 Values up to $12.00, sale price $9.50 Values up to $10.00, sale price $7.50 Boys' Coats Also Going at a Great Reduction. (Orton & Kaliher 1 s~ The Home of Good Clothes 3 ^tuuuuuumuiUimmuimuAmiuuiUiiuuuuumiuuuui Job Printing and Job Printing ^T*HERE are two kinds of Job Printingthat which is neat and I artistic and that which possesses neither of these qualities. The Princeton Union makes it a point to turn out none but the former I kind, and the Union finds this easy because it has the type, machinery and skilled labor with which to accomplish it. Nothing Looks Worse Than Botched Job Printing. It is a drawback to the business of a merchant or anyone else who uses it. Botched Job Printing suggests loose methods. Then why not use the kind printed by the Union? It costs you no more and gives the I public a good impression of your business. The Princeton Union is prepared to execute every description of Commercial and Fancy Printing at short notice and nominal prices. If you are in need of letterheads, noteheads, billheads, statements, cards, posters, programs, wedding invitations or any other work in the printing line, an order for the same placed with the Union will insure its being produced in an at- tractive and un-to-date style PRINCETON UNION Princeton, Mil Violin Concert AND DANCE At the Armory, Princeton, on Tuesday Evening, Jan. 13 Profesdr Von IfillerT the world's famous violinist, will then appear In a program of classical and* other -?3J! 11 JSk 3 masterpieces. He will also give wonderful imitations of singing birds, old time sermons, Scotch bag pipes and German accordeon. Concert at 8:30 p. m. and dance at 9:30. Tickets for concert and dance, $1.00 per couple. Admission to concert only, 25 and 35 cents. Tickets at Hoffiander Bros. Please take notice that Nelson's photo studio in Princeton is open on the first and third Saturday and Sunday of each month. 22-tfc MARKET REPORT The quotations hereunder are those prevailing on Thursday morning at the time of going to press: POTATOES^ Triumphs Burbanks 43 Chios Bose.s .35@38 GRAIN, HAY, ETC. Wheat, No. 1 Northern. .80 Wheat*No. 2Northern,. i& Wheat, No. 3 Northern 75 Oats K...F .^7@30 Barley 31^41 Flax 1.23@1.35 gye-- 42@45 Beans, hand picked 1.75@2.00 Beans, machine run. 1.25@1.50 Wild hay. g.oo Tame hay.: U]5Q LQTE STOCK Pat beeves, per ft 4ic 6c Calves, per lb 6c@8c Hogs, per cwt $7.50@8.OO Sheep.perft 4c@5c Hens, old, per ft 9c@10 Springers, per ft 14@16c MINNEAPOLIS. Minneapolis, Wednesday evening. Wheat, No. 1 hard, 89c No. 1 Nor thern, 88c No. 2 Northern, 87c White Oats, 35c No. 3, 34c. Kye, 55 Flax, No. 1, $1.50. Corn, No.3 Yellow, 59c.^ Barley, 53c965 Jsferf,