The Nonpartisan Leader Newspaper, August 17, 1916, Page 4

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] # - out of North Dakota politics. THAT ALWAYS REMOVES RUST FROM My GUN! IF YOU CANNOT DET SPRAY THE FIELD WITH s N——— =N RUB KEROSENE ON THE — STEMS OF THE WHEAT — TO PREVENT RUST! 41 [0, 00 VY W auTomATIC i I SUN-SHIERD R USE Sl s~ PONGES LAID IN THE IRILL ROWS WILL ABSORB € HEAVY DEWS —A IEF CAYSE OF RUST ! \F WHEAT SHOULD BLISTER USE DOMES. OINTMENT! “BETTER FARMING” HINTS—BY M. T. THE BLACK RUST WHITEWASH ! ~ A SUGGESTE D TOMBSTONE, ' B \ SEPARATING THE RED ' RUST FROM WHEAT AND MIXING WITH LINSEED |- OlL, MAKES FINEL 45 74 . BARN PAINT. RS Y H BLACK RUST WITH LARD. / 1 MAKES FINE STOVE POLISH A N ) N N NS NN NN NN N AN W \ NN R N N AN N N X NN N W AN ZA L8 BLACK SPECKS FROM WHEAT WITH MASSAGE CREAM! Many amateur and professional authorities are busy giving the farmer advice and sfigéestions about how to raise and market his cgofi. T ‘Anxious to give its readers the very best, regardless of expense, the Leader has obtained these valuable hints, illustrated above, from the noted. . ° “Better Farming” advocate, Mr. M. T. Dome. Mr. Dome’s suggestions are guaranteed to be .no .worse than some others. Regarding this ' s year’s crop Mr. Dome, interviewed by the Leader correspondent, said:. ‘I think the crop failure-this year is a blessing in disguise, because it will teach the farmers that if the grain does not mature in the ear, we shall have a small harvest. I have noticed, also, that if it rains con- stantly we always have a wet season, while, on the other hand, if the sun shines for several days in succession the ground becomes very warm.” SQUARE DEAL FOR THEM. They are beginning to uhders}and what the GRAIN GRADING STEAL and the RAILROAD RATE STEAL, for instance, mean to the cities and towns of North Dakgfia as well as to the farms. SR o *x % = BTN 2 HUMILIATING NORTH DAKOTA - L "The effrontery-of Big Business is astounding. Boldly and v.ithout disguise it mixes into the politics of this state and ISSUES ITS COM- MANDS with scant ceremony. ST S the order that goes out to the free citizens of this state. “Your state government belongs to me ;-keep your hands off; it‘," iS’. It is a spectacle humiliating to évery Northl)akotan. It'i"s‘ga : spectacle calculated to shame every honest and clear-minded -merchant. -, To be told that he must prostitute his franchise to the demands:of the men who hold his business future in their grip; to be told that his vote and his citizenship must be yielded up in order that a great financial combination may be permitted to govern the state in its own interests and to cheat and rob the state’s citizens—how galling and intolerable that must be to any merchant with a spark of manhood in him! : With this damnable effort to hold the choking grip on North Dakota laid bare in all its crudity it can not be that the merchants of the state will allow themselves to become its tools. They, like the farmers, have been the innocent victims of a monstrous conspiracy. They, like the farmers, will awake to save the state. They will join the farmers in kicking this band of insolent exploiters *. ¥ % NORTH DAKOTANS FOR NORTH DAKOTA We hope and believe that the time will come when no outside manu- facturer, no agent of outside corporations, will dare to stick his foul hand into North Dakota politics, stirring up factions and instilling class prejudice into the minds of the voters of the state to accomplish his own evil and dishonest purpose of exploiting the state for his own benefit, The bosses win their big victories by catching the people napping. Danger is greatest when you think you are-safe. 'PAGE FOUR / We believe the time will come when North Dakota merchants will resent I such interference and. will show their resentment by refusing to do busi- ness with outside business firms who try to meddle in the state’s politics e : ¢ North Dakota farmers don’t want to fight North Dakota business ‘men. They want their good will, their advice and their co-operation, " but-they have the nerve and the manhood to fight to the last ditch -ggainst the domination of the politics and the government of this state . A’by_ Big Business politicians from outside the state who try to set the merchants of this state against the state’s own interests. - The battle cry this year is: “NORTH DAKOTA ITS GWN MASTER.? - - : That is the issue and that alone. B . It.is time to cut the strings of outside commercial domination over ! { the politics of this state.. Every man who is willing to declare himself - a man is needed for the job. . : : : 1 It can be accomplished. S b If it could not be it would be better for this state to dissolve its state " government and to petition the United States of America to take over its affairs and to run it as a dependent territory. " NEED FOR DAILY. ¢ There will soon appear in North Dakota a new daily paper, to be started at Fargo, and issued from the office of the Nonpartisan Leader. The new daily will be favorable to the interests of the farmers first, and consequently for the interests of all. The daily papers of the state made the blunder of thinking that there was a conflict of interests between the farmers and townspeople, and as a consequence they have lost the confidence of the farming element. There is a real need in the state for such a daily - ‘and it will be given u cordial welcome,~ :CABRINGTON RECORD, * - GOOD ADVICE Vote for Lynn Frazier for governor, the Nonpartisan Republican candidaté.—: WARWICK SENTINEL. THEY’L!. LIKE FRAZIER Many people from this vicinity were at Bowman last Saturday to hear our next governor, L. J. Frazier, who was one of the speakers at the rally held that day. A much larger number would have been present had it mot been for the : ——

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