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I i-M). rm I i lis ip-i* A "T5T WZF'T&X George t. Staples is the'-only person who is authorized to collect money due this office. In every case the party paying money ia entitled to and should insist upon receiving a printed receipt. MRS. R. C. DUNN, Publisher. Miss Carrie Nelson of Glendorado has returned from a fortnight's visit to her sister at Cloquet. Mrs. E. W. Nobbs and son of Bel lingham were guests at the Methodist parsonage the past week. Mrs. Harvey Swenson and Roscanna of Milford, Iowa, are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Nels Anderson. If you rest you rust. Keep going by attending Mankato Commercial Col lege, Mankato, Minn. Send for cata logue. Adv. A dance will be given in Smith's brick barn, one mile west of town on the rock road, next Saturday night, September 24. 40-lp Miss Bottomley returned to her home in Minneapolis on Monday fol lowing a week's visit to Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Shride. A card party will be given by the Christian Mothers at St. Edward's this (Thursday) evening. A cordial invi tation is extended to the public. Miss Hanson, who taught in the Princeton public schools last term, was here on a visit to friends Satur day. She is now teaching in St. Paul. Mrs. W. R. Bigelow of Minneap olis, who was visiting Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Bavier, returned to her home on Monday. She was accompanied by Mrs. Bavier. Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Chadbourne of Portland, Ore., are here visit ing old friends. Mr. Chadbourne was .at one time Great Northern station agent in Princeton. A letter from H. L. Cowles says he is doing well on his little ranch at Drain, Ore., and has a nice lot of poultry and cows. He sends regards to his Princeton friends. Dr. J. F. Kothman, optometrist, who has removed to 3240 Humboldt Ave., S. Minneapolis, will be in town on Tues day, September 27. Eyes examined and glasses fitted. Office at Mer chants' hotel. 36-tfc Rev. O. M. Gulrud is back from his trip to Goodhue county and Albert Lea. Next Sunday he will conduct English services in Our Savior's Evan gelical Lutheran church in Santiago. Services begin at 11 o'clock a. m. The Princeton high school football team has gone over to Cambridge to day to tussle with the eleven of that place. This will be the opening game of the season for these two teams and Coach Ames feels confident that our boys will win. Word has reached here that Miss Ruth A. Briggs died at Odell, 111., yesterday. The remains will be brought to Princeton for burial, but arrangements have not yet been made for the funeral. This summer Miss Briggs sojourned at Mille Lacs lake for several weeks. *1 T^'l-ik^ -^aU i :*H Qoooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo How Entrancing $ &&&***** LOCAL BREVITIES 5K & *?&*** Tanlac, the celebrated medicine, is now sold by the C. A. Jack Drug company. Adv. The W. C. T. U. will meet with Mrs. Walter Brown on Tuesday afternoon, September 27. Fred Thomas and Walter Holm of Milaca were in Princeton for a short time on Saturday. Mrs. Robt. King is assisting in the bookkeeping department of the Evens Hardware company. A dance will be given at W. M. Miller's on Saturday evening, Septem ber 24. Good music. 40-lp /s the odor of a bouquet of flowers. Just so delightful Is the odor Jonteel with which Talc Jonteel Price 25c is perfumed. It brings the wonderful frag rance of -twenty-six of the world's choicest flowers to your dressing table. And just as you would expect, you find the quality of the talc in every way the highest as should be when associated with dainty odor. The uses of talc are many, and the Talc Jonteel stands supreme for any talcum purpose. Other high quality talcums exclusive with your* Rexall Store are VIOLET DULCE TALCUM 25c REXALL BABY TALCUM 25c REXALL VIOLET TALCUM 25c BOUQUET REMEE TALCUM 50c CARA NOME TALCUM $1.00 A.Jack Dru Co THE REXALL STORE Open From 9 to 12 Sundays ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo Tanlac, the celebrated medicine, makes you eat better, feel better, sleep better and work better. Sold by C. A. Jack Drug Co. Adv. Dr. and Mrs. H. C. Cooney motored to Minneapolis Sunday. 'Dr. Cooney returned Sunday evening and Mrs. Cooney Tuesday evening. Come to the card party at St. Ed ward's this evening. After the games lunch will be served by the Christian Mothers. Everybody is welcome. Herb Gates, the be kiny, tells us this has been a poor year for bees in consequence of too much dry weather and, as a result, honey will be scarce. George Foltz returned on Monday from Kansas, where he has been trav eling for Northrap, King & Co. He will resume his studies at the state university. Have your wiring done now. Pre pare for winter. "Come in .and get your lamp supply. I carry 32-volt lamps for farm plants. Olson Electric Shop, telephone 294. Prompt service. 40-lp The -week's output of the Princeton Co-operative creamery was 150 tubs of butter. This il aljbut double the quantity turned out by the establish ment for the corresponding week last year. For SaleMy store, business and residence in Glendorado. Big stock of general merchandise and farm ma chinery, and good, modern 10-room house. For further particulars apply to Edwin Odegard, Milaca. 40-lc Have you ordered your winter sup ply of coal? If not you had bettor do so now as the prospects are that it will advance in price, and then, again, you can already smell the breath of old Boreas. Winter is on the way. Traffic Policeman Maggart has been provided with a sidecar for his motor cycle, which will assist him materially in negotiating muddy and rough roads besides affording him a means of con veyance for his arsenal and other things. Several hunters started out on the opening day of the season, but chick ens were wild and only a few ducks flying, so not many were brought down. Hunters tell us, however, that chickens are very plentiful this fall. E. F. Crest of Brooklyn, N. Y., de livered a lecture at the armory on Monday evening, his subject being, "Millions Now Living Will Never Die." Mr. Crest is a good speaker, but in consequence of the inclement weather his audience was not large. Mrs. H. Stahnke has returned from a three months' visit in Germany, where she went to visit her aged mother. On her way over she stopped at Copenhagen but on the return trip came direct. She visited Berlin, towns in Bavaria' and other places and greatly enjoyed the trip although much time was wasted in consequence of the red tape of the officials who vised the passports. ^JM S.W .^**c&s$s Tailors Cleaners Furriers Send in your clothes and furs to be repaired, cleaned and altered. Suit dry cleaned and pressed in 24 hours. We do all kinds of repairing. When it comes to Tailoring give us a trial. Princeton Dry Cleaners and Furriers Two doors east of Mark's store Boost for Princeton industry. Princeton, Minn. ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo Look up the legion corner, you wjll find some interesting news. WantedBarley, oats, corn and off grade wheat. Henschel's Feed store, Princeton. 12-tfc Mrs. Clair Lowell and children of Everett, Wash., who were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Herman Lowell for a few weeks, are now visiting Mrs. Lowell's parents in Anoka. A parasol that was left in the base ment of the Congregational church several weeks ago is now in the Union office. If the owner will call at the office, she can recover her property. Tanlac has the largest sale of any medicine in the world. Over twenty million bottles have been sold in six years. No other medicine has ever approached it as a seller. C. A. Jack Drug Co. Adv. Tuesday evening a number of friends assembled at the home of Mrs. Jake Ellenbaum to celebrate Lind Ellenbaum's birthday. Everyone re ported that the party was a most en joyable affair. Gus Hofflander is in Princeton to day. He is conducting a grocery store in, Minneapolis and doing well. Gus came up to have some dental work done by Dr. McRae. He says that the doctor is the only man he per mits to regulate his mastigating machinery when it fails to operate right. Mike Kenely is here from Los An geles and will remain indefinitely. He formerly lived in, Greenbush but left there 15 years ago,for the west. Mr. Kenely was surprised to see so many improvements in Princeton and spoke in high praise of the roads radiating from the village into the rural dis tricts. Aaron McFadden was observed driv ing his flivver up one of the braces of the west branch bridge on Tuesday. We have read of tinlizzies climbing telephone poles and apple trees but never before heard of one ascending the steel braces of a bridge, although, we presume, it is just as easy for a Henry to perform this feat. Mr. and Mrs. F. C. Foltz and Mr. and Mrs. Sydney Berggren drove up into Aitkin county on Sunday and spent the day. They went into the fastnesses of the forest, where big trees and tangled underbrush gave refuge to myriads of birds, said Syd, and he wished he could remain there for a week or two and enjoy the beau ties of nature. The storm which swept over -Sher burne, Isanti and Anoka counties on Monday afternoon incapacitated the Elk River power plant and, as a con- ^equenee,!or a couple of hours Prince ton *was without electrical conveni encestr'Ptfjyer machinery could not be operated and lights were shut off. At the Princeton Co-operative creamery a vat of cream which had been pasteur ized could not be cooled off and caused a loss, and the Union's linotype ma chine and preses were at a standstill. A Recommendation. "I saw the doctor you told me to see." "Did you tell him I sent you?" "Yes, I did." "What did he say?", "He asked me to pay in advance." Medical Journal. Clippings From Atlantic Year Book. "Blessed are they whose furniture is so inexpensive or so shabby that children and dogs are not excluded from its sacred precincts." "The way to make a man repent is to forgive him before he repents, as we ourselves would wish to be for given, and to forgive him, not as a surprising act of virtue, but in good humor, because we are all absurd and all need forgiveness." "The deaths of sons and daughters is not the worst calamity that can befall their parents. Perhaps in the crowd at Golgotha the mother of Ju das envied Mary, as she stood below her crucified son." "As I crossed the country, and saw the school house standing out in every tinest hamlet, as the village church does in England, I learned that Ameri ca stood by education and a year later, when I saw what manner of men answered the call of the draft, I learned that education stood by America." "By faith you caw'move mountains but the important thing, is not to move the mountains, but to have the faith." 48 THE PRINCETON UNION f0$^J,-jUpmmm 22,1921 IS r*1 Swedish Lutheran. In Zimmerman, Sunday school at 10 a. m.j morning service in Swedish at 11 a. m. ~i-\r In'Princeton, no Sunday school. The Princeton congregation will visit the county home and hold services there in the afternoon at 2 o'clock. Mem bers and friends of the Greenbush church .are also invited to come. There will be no other services at Greenbush next Sunday. The Ladies' Aid of Zimmerman meets on Thursday afternoon, Septem -ber 29, with Mrs. Orlando Bastian. N. A. Aimer, Pastor. "The Old Swimmm' Hole." "Oh, the old swimmin' hole! In the long, lazy days. When,Ahe hum-drum of school made so many run-aways." Ever fragrant memories are recalled by these lilting lines from James Whitcomb Riley!^ poem, and when next week you see Charles Ray in the char acter of Ezra, the carefree barefoot boy in "The Old Swimmin' Hole," you will live again your childhood days. While Ray has made a reputation in" many juvenile roles, he is at his very best in this idyll.. The laughs chase the lumps up and down your throat as you watch his love affair with the school. flirt, how she jilts him and how the ever-faithful Esther fixes up so prettily that he succumbs to her charms. How he gets into a dozen scrapes and the amusing way he tum bles out of them are all depicted with a freshness and charm that captivate. 40-lc Once a Sucker Always a Sucker. "Let's see," said, the peddler. "Yes, this must "be the house where my friend said he sold the lightning rods. So I guess I better offer my new fangled butterless churn. I believe firmly In the old adage, 'Whom man has done man can do.' "Philadelphia Lodger A Big Job on Hand. "Well, my boy, is your father at home?" asked the Sabbath-day caller. "Yes, sir," was the "boy's reply. "Is he busy?" "Is he? I'll say he is! He's up stairs wrestling with the Sunday pa per!"Yonkers Statesman. St. Cloud Business College We offer instruction in Bookkeep ing, Office Practice, Accounting, Short hand, Typewriting, Commercial Law, Banking, Spelling, Penmanship, and other commercial branches. We teach the proper operation of the adding machine, multigraph, mimeograph, letter press, typewriting and dicta" phone. When you h,ave Completed our courses, you will be ready for a good position. When you join pur classes, you are under the instruction of. com petent teachers who know how to get quick results. This school has a large attendance of the best students, and they are all doing well.( Write us for catalouge. VATH & AHLES St. Cloud Minnesota Princeton zSsMcS tAnnual Meeting. The annual meeting ot the Mille Lacs County Public Health association will be held in the Red Cross room, high school building, Princeton, on Monday, September 26, at 2:30 p. m., when officers for the ensuing year will be eelected and plans for this year's activities of the association will be considered. A cordfal invita tion is extended to all who are'inter ested in health work in this county. 40-lc Olof Wasenius, Secretary. When the Wind Plays on its Harp of Leafless Branches J[ HERE is a touch of en chantment in the feel of Lackawanna Twins "Slum ber Suits" against slee'py young bodies. The smooth, downy warmth of the beau tifully knitted fabric is an impassable barrier to the nippy winds of winter. From neck to toe Lacka wan na Twins "Slumber Suits" are stoutly sewn for wear-and-wash resistance. The roomy drop seat is de signed to keep closed how ever much the wearer may stretch and toss. LACKAWANNA TWINS f*AM HARK Mfl.tU.Mtt.OV4 Slumber Suits and Underwear FOR BOYS AND GIRLS FROM BIRTH TO SIXTEEN We invite your inspection of LackawannaTwins invarious styles and in qualities to suit every requirement of service and price. C. H. NELSON Princeton, Minn. Ou Purity Kerosene In Your Stoves Lamps Tractors in town and country. Back Again! Andrews' Steel Cut Coffee, the kind we^had such success with before the war. The same coffee in anew style package. Equal to any 60c coffee in the state. Guaranteed to please or money refunded. 45c a pound.' Give it a trial. Princeton Dru Co ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo &ffe^%4#^^^^#f^^^^: Program Beginning Sunday, Sept. 18 SUNDAY AND MONDAY"THE OLD SWIMMIN* HOLE" A First National attradt)i^ starring Charles Eay. All the joy of James Whitcoirib Riley's olcUhome poem told without a word. "Come on in! The water's fine!" Matinee, 10 and 20 cents evening, 15 and 25 cents plus war tax. TUESDAY"THE STRUGGLE" Starring Franklynlarnum in a rapid fire story of the new west. One reel comedy. Matinee, 10 and 15 cents evening, 10 and 20 cents plus war tax. WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY'THE INFERIOR SEX" A First National attraction starring Mildred Harris. Which is the "inferior sex?" See this. Fox News. Matinee, 10 and 15 cents evening, 10 and 20 cents plus war tax. FRIDAY AND SATURDAY"WANTED^ A HUSBAND" A Paramount-Artcraft picture starring Billie Burke. She wishes to meet all the nice men of Princeton. If wives and sweethearts insist on coming alongoh, very well. One reel Educational. Matinee, 10 and 15 cents evening, 10 and 20 cents plus war tax. Sunds^r Matinee at 3 p. m. week days at 2:30 p. m. Saturdays and Sundays, two evening shows, at 7:30 and 9. All other nights of the week, one show at 8. Answer to Last Week's Puzzle: "The Home of Good Clean Entertainment Where You Will Always See the Best in Motion Pictures. First five correct answers: Wallace Creglow, Mrs. Fred Manke, Lee Slater, Hartley Sausser and Dwane Stanley. You Will Find My store well stocked with General Merchan- dise and the goods of the very best quality. The prices, too, are right. By trading at my store I feel confident that you will receive satisfaction, and your patronage will be much appreciated. I thank you for past favors. FRANK POHL Successor to J. A. Nyberg Princeton, Minn. ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo Princeton Bakery C. S. MORTON, Prop. Bread, Cakes, Pies, Cookies, Etc. Fresh Every Day. Restaurant in Connection. Try a Meal With Us. OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOboOQOOQOOOOOOOOOOOOOQOQ(X600000 Farmers, Attention! You Need a Manure Spreader, We Have a Large Stock. Just Read This We are going to sell you anew spreader now. YOU take it home and use it this fall, use next spring, use it all next summer and use it next fall and don't pay a cent until next fall, and then only next years price. Let's Get Together. Caley Hardware Co. .*JSSSPAIGM 1 JijVi* 'M" ^^u-i'^xi^^mi sis?* '&. 'i *?T "& ^^^^m vi-i'?\t