The Nonpartisan Leader Newspaper, October 12, 1916, Page 11

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: No sooner are you comforta ‘ noticed it? That's the way it'is with this happy family entitled the Non .open it a foot or this long-whiskered guy will . “sticking to-the old party through thick and: 1y settled in ot Jabs . Short Arm . e By O. M. Thomason: mg ‘believe in good; strong | )3 pplificians. N : orggnizafigns&fo the new affairs this year , Jolts and l}pperqqié, to vote to keep said politician in politics. ““Politics is the science of government and - as. ‘such ‘there “is 'nothing more - sacred. - Therefore-if pohtxcs i§ - roften /it is " because rotten politicians are in a antqmobilg. : Z home than somebod ‘he fears ‘that the Nonpartisan League will hort business. As an exawmple of what it did for North Dakota hc points warningly to the reeent rust, hail and blight plague that scourged the state.. The next thing we knowthey will blame the Nonpartisan League for the disas- trous floods in China and the spots on the sun. ; A Minnesota voter stated the other day that he got to ride in an-automobile only “onee in two years—on' election day, - “added that he had to botfoot it like a - “Yale athlete the day after -election' to - keep from getting run over by the same * Kk S iA"North Dakota. politician was Iament- - ing the fact that the farmers financed man was sympathizing with him in his lamentations. A passing farmer over- lopked them square in the eyes for a full ot ; : ; his package on y comes around wanting £6 sell yowsomething you don’t want. partisan League. Here’s a bunch of pests hammering at the door. Don’t get his toe in'and try to talk you to death. Noiv we certainly don’t want to hear any of that rot about thin.”? . We'’ve outgrown that. . We've got our eyes-opened. 'Nor we don’t want to deliver any hand- out or buy any peneils from this spectacled old fraud Blind Partisanship. - We know that right behind both of them is. Gang ods, who gets rich by swindling the farmer. "We’ll keep these fellows out of our house. . We -and we’ll attend te-ours. We'll handle our own He stopped: and-- t of indignation Ever the real boss of the gang, Old _ "Il tell them to go on about their business for once in our lives and we’ll not let any outsider.g, come in and stir up any’ dif« them: 73 il “What - kick have you fellows got? Wasn®t it our money? Don’t we have a right to spend it as we blamed please? An’ say, .you fellers sught %o be glad that we farmers financed this campaign our- selves an’ that we never called on you for acent. We've cleaned up the politics of this state an’ done it at our own _ expense an’ still you kick: Gee! If you fellers had the earth you’d still bellyache ’cause you didn't have the sun, moon an’ --gtars, too.” - ® ¥k 7 Lape " There are two ways to make money “in‘any farming state.” Onevay isto'dig it out of the soil and the other way is to dig it out of the hide of the fellow who digs it out of the soil. ¢ ; g ) P ' There are thyee kinds: of co-operation, - One kind is-when I co-operate: with you for my benefit. Another is when you co-operate with me for your benefit. A third is when we both co-operate foy our. ~mutual benefit. This is the kind of €0 -operation we need. & R

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