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Th 2 A O U W BetterGramGrades Y > = - - e at Superior _ ° | You can create an estate from i “{Continued from page 6.)° slwfl?e to 35000 by taking a policy would be ' purchased ' and: milled here. in A, U.. W. which itors} Only a little however, is. reaching this ‘cannot touch and will take care of 2 Nihoner deventini’ uoat e Siin port, but that is bringing a good: price, You are called from t}us world: all it is worth 1 think. It is bought on Insurance in force ... :$11,600,000.5 | . sample on the Duluth board of trade” ~--$1,800,000.00}. pREyIDICE H v Write E HURTS VALUE olicy it ,f;’;,rehd““‘tm and sample} Op LIGHT WEIGHT GRAIN HOME OFI‘ICE The reason why Supcrior and Duluth . s FARGO, N D. are not able to handle much of the. m 49 pounds) is,because those are export- SPECIALIST - f : . L : ing points, and their customers are in @fie:gm“m.“ti .13?.5&?’? e the east-and in Europe.- When the buy- A5 : - Agents for 'gmm:-mu autos, - ¢ ing first staried this season, buyers sent sl Wade H M ¢ ; orders that they would take .nothing adae r1. murray under No, 2 grade, and the season gave FARGO, N. D. every promise of being dull, In a few - ;. weeks, however; they learned that the Political’ Advertisement wheat which ordinarily has been obtain- Pty R & . able at No. 2 and’ better grades,. was. o : : F B L AMBERT scarcely to be had ‘and that if eastern g ; o Do mills were to be kept running they would 3 : iy 3 have to use lighter grain. . 5 Minot, N. D. Mill tests were made of some of this extremely light weight grain, and as a result, castern buyers have been taking a great deal of it lately. A month ago there was no market'on the Duluth board of trade, but now there ia a fair export trade in it—not as compared with normal years, but as compared with other grndes of wheat this season. . The fact remains, however, that the head of the lakes offer no. new outlet for the bulk of the 1916 crop, such call as is coming in for this kind of wheat, being’ apparently- for par- ~ ticular milling requirements in the east,; according to M. A. Sauter, manager cf the Equity Co-Operative exchange of Superior. Mr. Sauter pointed. to.-an: advance of: several cents a bushel in two or three weeks, and ‘said it indicates that - - eastern mills have determined the quality of sample grade for flour making and are using it. ; BOARD TOLD TO CONSIDER ' | NORTH DAKOTA IN GRADING Up 1o this time the Wisconsin Grain C and Warehousc commission is the only. g g R AL . buffer between the North Dakota grain Ath Bisleles <+ growers and the Minneapolis: chamber * .of commerce. ‘That "the'. legislature - Courts and: Taxes - _which established it was keenly aware of the position it would occupy is shown ; G°“,’f§§ hag,e,:w‘g’;eg fi,‘&”&? SIS S e marlil of She statuts catahiish e un;lecessary expense is in allowing ing it. After dsu'-eeing ‘the establish- i : e lawyers and parties having business ment of the commission of three ‘mems s by (B - before them to unneeeesa!'ily delay pro- - bers, the statute (Sec.. 1747-1, chap. 84a, e A g ceedings. Where two or three hours'a 1913) says: : _dny is lost in waiting for the attorneys - o appear or for witnesses to get aroun: it mounts taxes up to an un extent. _.Another unts to qulte a sum in is-the juvenile bra offimes odious, but they “Before making such ‘appointments the governor shall request the govern- or of North Dakots, the governor of New York, and th oard. ‘of T_rade uvenile court from Ocb 1915, 10 Oc- any possible conneckion with the Minne- ‘bber. 1916, of Ward « X : grain combing, to make a new. . Ao aty &fchMlgot) i S tution under state authority, that %‘%‘;nksy ;‘“;“ 8‘?‘1’1“"8"”1 5 1m“mt3'~ Minot) wonld be able to accord -justice!to the S v }::ounty (whish ; farmers. That Wisconsin belieyed North ley City, a city a little P ; ota_ would be its most’ lmportant ‘Mmot) . patron is shown. by the ‘provision’ that - ‘Neorth Dakota was to have something to ourse the outside governors and the- _Stperior board of trade ‘were not to have, and dxl ot have the choosmg of such ghuwn in a subaequent aecmm m the chapter as foflowfl R - sample grain' (that. weighing less than L ay as to the. personnel although of - Political Advertisement President Wilson ~ A True Progressive—His Record is Progressive— His Thought is Progressive—His-Aims are Progresslve : Join the Woodrow Wilson lndepen Dugue and help retsin in the White House the man who has kept the nation at peace, taken this government out of the hands of d:o special privilege class and made a record of purfial, efficient, and hfimmntve achievement in making farming attractive and mor.: profi This isa non-partisan appealto a non-partisaa peopie by menand women mdependentgl thoughtwho have at heart the best interests of the nation. The great grain combine which has fought the North Dakota farmer for so longhuomedlmndnwsthlher edatoryrich of the East inan effort to beat ilsonbecause he has had as his guiding hand the wishes of the masses. --The North Dakota Farmer knows the forces which are controlling the sources of the opposition to him. These same forces are at work in the East, just as they are at work here, and liberal Republicans, Demo- cra.ts, Andependeqts: and- Progressives are everywhere joining in a common cause to fight the common enemy of reaction. - Look Here, ‘Mr. Farmer} i ‘i‘h:s is Pmsxdent Wilson’s record of unparalleled service to Agriculture. - ‘Reorganization: of the : ‘Department -of - Agriculture, ma.kmg its work “more directly helptul to the farmer, - Co-operative Agn_cuhmi Extension Act, taking direct to the farmer -“igformation of the best methods for increasing the profits of farming. The?edetd Reserve Act authorizing national banks to lend money on -/ farm mortgages and Tacognizing the. peculiar needs of the farmer by *giving his paper-& maturity of six months. - The Warehouse Act; providing better warehouses and increasing the walue of warehonse receipts as collateral, The Grain Standards Act, providing uniformity in the grading of grain, . €nabling the farmer to obtain.a fairer price for his product. The Good’ Roads ‘Act, for. the construction of rural rdads which will stimulate larger production and better marketing and add greatly to the convenience and econom:cal welfare of all the people. The Rural Credits Act Saves the North - Daketa Farmer $3,700,000.00 Every Year North Dakota farmers puy each year an average interest rate of 8.7 perwn.ton & mortgage indebtedness of §100,364,000.00. e President Wilson Saved Hilions for North Dakota : Farmers By Averling fhe Railroad Strike Had the strike !astofl‘fncwaeklt would have \wsek and disorganized the market of the' farmer; leaving ‘of speculat: The vaine of the normal'wheat crop of North Dakota aloneis nso 000,000. Not lesnflum 25 per cent of this immense sum would have been taken out of the farmer's pockel Dby a strike—25 percent means ssz.soo 000 saved to the farmerirom wheat alone. Wiison Stepped the Strike! He Has Maintained Peace With Honor ‘‘Around twenty million happy firesides the fathers of America will gather this nlzht with their unbroken family circle, with their children upon their knees and their wives by their side, happy and prosperous: -Contrast this'with the fathers, husbands and " .brothers ofthe old world dying in the ditches, with their gloom a.udmouml ng in broken family circles, where hunger crouches and disease treads. If this be ‘evil and vacil- lating® God:prosper it and teach it to the rulers:of the'Old World.”’—OLLIE JAMES If You Want Peace You Want Wilson} ___ Put Norih Dakota i ( the Honor Column? Fill OQut This Coupon and Send it In -4 - Woodrow Wflsonlndependenu.esm dNoflhnalmh l Saviags & Loan Bunilding, Fargo, [ ] l believe that, réza.rd!ess o! party considerations, Woodraw ‘Wilson, on hls 1 therefore wish to become & member of the I ‘a Woud_row Wnson lndependcnt League, ~ Name .I’arly nflmnflon ) ] ; ST st . l 3 Vo untary € Butions—Contribitions ‘are not necessary for membership but willbe received gladly. ldesketocontflbukei_g___ (itis mamtopfl“tm,n 1he closs of eleation # statement showiag how al a - .money was-expended will ba returned to we.) J lflndly send me membership certiticate and ' bnlhn -—;—---—-—-—l—-_-—n—- IT'S A “HUM-DINGER” GALL “CURE 'HORSE COLLAR! : .Heavy_web rim, heavy auto tire fabric' backs; waterproofed. Heavy “red stripe tmhng ‘face inter-lined with “Gall Cure” ‘curled hair. pads, backed with selected ‘rye’straw.: Large pres- sed' sole_legther ups. 1 inch buckles- and billets. = 181;-INCH . DRAFT FACE, PRICE $2.50 EACH, . Manufacturers “The Eagle Brand Line” B GENUINE HAIR ; _’Ask your: dealer for the "Hum-Dmgar" Collar, ; ~Br|stol&Sweet Harness Co.,Fargo,N.D. .