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| ADVERTISEMENTS WE WANT YOUR i ] CREAM_ We pay Write (of price list and shij pmz tags Give us a tri " We Are Cash Buyers. Our motto: ship direct to us. Mlnneapolls, “Correct Weight and Honest Treatment.” Prompt return of Check and emp- ties guaranteed. Prices and Tags sent FREE. A Trial Will Convince You that it pays to Our outlet unlimited. FARMERS CREAMERY.& PRODUCE CO,, .Eggs. Poultry No Commission Charged. Minnesota. ATTENTION DAIRYMEN' Ship pour next can of cream to the Duluth Creamery & Produce Company CASH AND CAN RETURNED PROMPTLY The Duluth Creamery & Produce Company, with a capital of $100,000, offers to the farmers of the Northwest every opportunity to sell their cream to good advantage. Our new, modern, sanitary plant enables us to handle large quantities of cream each week. Located in Duluth, the natural distributing point of the Northwest, we are able to sell quality dairy producls at the highest market prices, can pay you good prices for your cream, Whether you have one cow or one hundred we want to show how you can For that reason we Clip this Coupon and mail today, TN e e wm W W W W ----——---1 get good profits from your cows by I Duluth Creamery & Produce Co., 1 PPING DIRECT D US. Duluth, Minn, “‘l\l. it t(‘d lforcslxiT(inl tapa and : Without oi)ligation, I should like to receive : 2 r,l“el 5:“3},,0“ our ‘.;p'ini' prigces for § Your shipping tags and be advised of yeur E:lt‘;l’ fat. 24 ey | methods- of buying cream. : DULUTH CREAMERY & = Name ... - PRODUCE GOMPANY : i DULUTH, NESOTA. : Lost Dffice ' MERCHANTS — Hig. hest Market | Shipping Point.... e AN : Prices Paid for EJgS—WTL!‘e Us. !. Tcl.l'l_)'o:r nc\ghbfiito_\l,v:uiu_s,-m - - ——— - - - 2 EQUITABLE AUDIT CO.,Inc. Farmers Elevator Companies’ Home of Auditing and Systems for Accounting. Write for References. PIONEER BUILDING ST. PAUL, MINN. N —— A.J. OSHEA ARCHITECT AND ENGINEER FARGO, NORTH DAKOTA — B O D O S D R N N N B G G RN CeeWl pEew e D _— - First Class Cafeteria in Connection. POWERS HOTEL FARGO’S ONLY MODERN FIRE PROOF HOTEL Hot and Cold Running Water and Telephone in Every Room On Broadway, One Block South of Great Northern Depot FARGO, N. D. High Class Dental Work Done at Examination Free—Call and See Us Offices: Fargo, N. D. and Grand Forks, N. D. Electro Painless Dentists] Mention Leader when writing advertisers Beaufort —Hotel— 112 S. Third St. Opp. Old P. O. Minneapolis, Minn. ~RATES: 75¢c TO $1.50 PER DAY. Steam heat, hot and cold water in all rooms. Twenty-five Rooms with Bath. Convenient to all depots; half block from Twin City Inter- urban Line. iz the Retail District. R. H. GREER, Mgr. Right Shopping | instance, | going to school. | answer. | with the aid of the consumer can and | Minnesotan Sees | League Victory ‘Warroad, Minn., March 1, 1917. Editor Nonpartisan Leader: Inclosed find check for $16 for membership in the ILeague. I read with much interest, your valuable paper. We had a very interesting meeting of the League in our town on Feb. 22, about 40 members of the League, be- ing present, also a large number of high school students and business men. The meeting was addressed by Mr. Williams who was not afraid to tell the truth about the condition of the producers and consumers of today. I think it is high time the common people are awakening and realiiing the peril of being so indifferent to matters relating to their welfare. Monopolies and trusts of all kinds have sprung up among us, sapping the life blood of the working class in general. We send succor to the people in Europe, when people in our own land are crying for bread. Eight dollars of my money will be gladly given every year to see the time when the necessities of life will be taken out of the hands of men who have elected to make themselves mil- linaires out of farmers’ toil and the consumers’ misery. It seems that we are returning to slavery in another form. Take the case of the men in large cities, for working for §60 to $75 per month. It matters not how they plan or how they save, life is mostly a bur- den to them, and to think that these conditions are getting worse instead of j _better. Some years ago I stayed in St. Paul At that time potatoes were selling from the farms for 40 cents per bu. They were retailing in St. Paul for 40 cents per peck or $1.60 per bushel. What are conditions this winter? ILet the people in New York Now the American farmer will remedy these conditions. First, by using the mailed fist on hand-picked governors, hand-picked reserve food warehouses. Third, by controlling the spread in price between the farm and the work- er's table. The food gambler is content to say it can't be done, and as sure as there is a God in Heaven if the farmer and consumer don’t do it, it never will be done. These industrial parasites are content to sit astride our necks for all time to come, and the longer we let them sit there, the harder it will be to shake them. I regret to learn that 28 senators who have the gall to masquerade as men, blocked the people of North Dakota in the best and most noble move that ever was made to right these wrongs. 1 dare state here that you have men confined within the walls of the Bis- marck prison that have better princi- ples than some of them. Let not the people of your great state become, dis- couraged, for in two years their cause will be born with new strength and courage. In that pure November air they can wave their hats -over a most complete victory. No sane man can have anything but praise for the man they elected governor. The farmers at least can feel justly proud that a man among them is in the governor’'s chair at Bismarck. We behold him not as a politician but as a man that is not afraid to use common sense and good judgment where they are needed as shown in the casting out of the inau- gural ball, where the people are put to expense for the enjoyment of a few. In conclusion I would like to send himself “The Shepherd of the People,” that in two more years he may become relieved of his “official duties” and be- come a real dyed-in-the-wool shepherd. Hoping the League will spread the length and breadth of this land, I stand with you all E. F. KENNETZ. WILL REMEMBER M'GRAY Underwood, N. D., Feb. 2, 1917. Editor Nonpartisan Leader: I noticed in the Leader in February that Senator C. W. McGray from Un- derwood, N. D., one of those hold-over senators, did all in his power against the League and the farmers. Now when Senator McGray was running for office he had McLean county adver- tised like this: “Vote for C. W. McGray for senator. A friend of the farmer.” But I see, by his actions at Bismarck, that he is opposed to everything the farmers want and is in with Big Biz I think Senator McGray might well be a friend of the farmer because what he possesses today, mostly comes from the . farmer, even his place at Bismarck. ‘We will remember Senator McGray in the sweet bye and bye. V. B. GITS. EIGHTEEN senators, representatives and hand’ picked laws. Second, by establishing government my regards to this man who styles” ADVERTISEMENTS sl e G AR O TR e N Sav Thresh Bill OU cando it witha Red River Special threshing outfit. Good work without breakdowns. The Red River Special saveg the farmer’s grain, JBeats if out. ¢‘Saved enough more of our grain over other machines to payour thresh bills,’’say Andrew Scott and 17 other farmers of Kerwin, Kansas. Buy or hire a Red River Special Beating shakers toss and beat the straw just as you would by hand, 90 per cent of the grain is separated at the big cylinder—by*‘the Man Behind the Gun.”” Low upkeep and repair cost. Frames made of seasoned hard maple lumber. Steel used where iron lacks strength. Tell your thresherman to get a Red River Special. It means better thresh- ing and less lost time for you. Or write and learn about our “‘Junior” machine. Small enough to make threshing your own grain pay., Wrile for the Red River Special Paper. Nichols & Shepard Co. in Continuous Bn:lnus Since 1848 Builders Exclusively of Red River S Threshers, Wind Stackers, Feeders, Stcam Traction Engines and Oil-Gas Tractors Battle Creek Michigan North Dakota Branch Fargo, N. D. (NN [XON) [WEN) (NE] PN FEDE) SR (N /RIV) RNER ONCY PO PEON PERE) DEEN e Drill Seed at Even Depth : Bigger Crops E-B patented extension spring pressure plants grain at uniform depth. Closed delivery opener deposits it in bottom of furrow. E-B patented feed cup prevents grain bunching or cracking. Dust proof disc bearings. Write for catalog and ask dealer to show you the E-B Drill. Look/ for the £-B trade~ mark on the implements you buy. It’s our pledge of quality and your guide to to more profitable farming. LB I B I B eae—" Emersen-Srastingham tmplement Co. (12¢.) ] 68 W. Iren St Reckterd 18 Please send me free literature on articles checked: Plows ilny Teels 4 } Tractors, Narrews Listers Engine Plows Cultivatars i Steam Esgiaes Mawers Wi ] Threshers Spreaders ] Bugyi }-Cora Shaflers Brills j 1 Saw Milis Plasters Potato Mackinary [ ] Baling Pressss Name Address HortSHERMAN ==ST. PAUL MINN== Fourth and Sibley Streets One block from Union De- pot and Nonpartisan League Headquarters. The Hotel Sherman is the leading popular priced ho- tel in St. Paul, and caters especially to the people of the Northwest. Modern rooms, $1.00 up. Official Headquarters Equity Co-operative Ex- change. Excellent Cafe and Cafeteria, A. J. CAMERON N 531000 (8 0 50 280 R R 5 R £ B Y N NN R Mention Leader when writing advertisers