The Nonpartisan Leader Newspaper, April 12, 1917, Page 16

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ADVERTISEMENTS GETTHEBESTALFALFA Buy Quality Seed From the Grimm Al- falfa Seed Producers’ Association Grimm Alfalfa is making alfalfa growing successful in the Dakotas. . Grimm doe§ © not . winter kill. It is making big returns. Farmers have mar- keted over $50 worth of hay per acre and as high as ; : $200 worth of seed. Our seed is only from REGISTERED fields of GRIMM alfalfa. It is FRER fror:n noxious weeds. It is SCARI- FIP“D so all seeds will grow, It is TESTED for germination. Seed a third less per acre than if ordinary alfalfa is used. It takes 1% pounds per acre when seeded in rows or a cost of 75¢ per acre. If seeded solid it takes five to seven pounds per acre or from $2.50 to $3.50 per acre. This is a low seed cost when the high qualities of our Grimm Alfalfa are considered. Money refunded on re- turn of seed if it is not satisfactory. Price of the seed in small lots, per pound ........ IR o LTy 60c 10-pound 1lots or more per POUN AT Rl s v s 50c Grimm Alfalfa Seed Producers Ass'n. of North Dakota 824.11th St. N. FARGO, N. D. O you want a picture of D the new calf, the little 2 lambs or colts, the new { tractor or auto, or the teams g0- ing to work in the fields? You will enjoy these pictures of the old home ‘all your life. Our new 2C Kodak Jr. will please you. Just fits the pocket, accurate and reliable. = Takes pictures 27-8x47-8. No. 2C Autographic Kodak Jr., with Kodak Ball Bear- ing shutter having speeds up to 1-100 of a second and meniscus achromatic lens..$12.00 Ditto, with Rapid Rectilinear lens i s A Rlinr st Ceevesanns 14.00 Other Kodaks from ......... 6.00 and up Order one today. We do developing. HAGEN-NEWTON CO. Jewelers and Opticians A Diamond Store for a Generation FARGOC, N. D. i Oats re Higher Have you thought how much it has cost you to feed those horses all win- ter? Oats and hay are worth big money now. A tractor does not cost anything when not at work and a’ C. O. D. tractor gives you great satisfaction. It is a real farmers’ tractor, has four wheels, does the work of 13 horses in the field and will handle a 27-inch sepa- rator. Any boy can operate it. Burns kero- sene. Call and see it or write for free literature. C.0.D.TractorSalesCo. H. H. BERG, Distributor Fargo, N. D. 311 N. P. Ave. WERFUL FIRE PROTECTION AT o LOW COST FOR FARMERS This powerful 40-gallon chem§cal fire engine gets into action as quickly as a pail of water. Instantly throws a heavy chemical stream 75 feet. Has fire fighting efficiency equal to 9000 buckets of water. Puts out fire of all kinds, such as gasoline, etc. Uses the same chemical solutions as a $10,- 000 motor-drawn chemical engine. Lasts a life time; can be recharged by anyone. . Will pass through a 3-foot door. Can be stored anywhere. Price $150.00, F. O. B. Fargo. Order. today before it is too late. FARGO FIRE ENGINE CO. Mention Leader when writing advertisers who have been running the state of North Dakota all this time, men like Sorlie, and Jerry Bacon, and Sand- strom and the rest, if they are so blind and dumb and dull, and devoid of prin- ciple, that they have not discovered this robbery and this loss; or if as we have reason to believe, because we have been telling them the truth about .it, they are in the employ of the men who are getting the $55,000,000—I say if eminent highlys respected Christian gentlemen like Sorlie-and Bacon and the rest have for any one of these rea- sons, so far neglected, in the manage- ment of this state, to protect the toil- ing hundreds of thousands of men, women and children of this state against this robbery, and now as a last resort Socialists and agitators and I. W. W’s and atheists and freelovers have got to do it—it is not very much to the credit of the eminent gentlemen, the respectable Christian Republicans and Democrats who have neglected it! (Cheers and applause.) A voice from the audience: Quite right! T CONDITIONS THAT MAKE l. W. W. AND SOCIALISTS I want to tell you something. It is conditions like these under which you have been living, conditions that take $55,000,000 a year out of one little state like North Dakota, that forces you farmers to work 16 hours a day; that works your wives to death; that forces your children to go ragged, sometimes hungry; that keeps them out of school; and makes it impossible for you to have or give them, the education, the leisure and the travel, that you should. I want to tell you that it ig conditions like these, brought about by the mis- management of eminent highly re- spected Republican and Democratic citizens like Sorlie and Jerry Bacon and Sandstrom, it is things like this that make I. W. W’'s and Scrialists and agitators and anarchists, and all the rest. And I will tell you further, that when Socialists—if we are Socialists—have righted the wrong, there won’t be any more I. W. W’s or agitators or anar- chists! No, all will then be honest re- spected tillers of the soil or workers in the city! And you that harp away at the I. W. W's; you that are responsible for the conditions that make a man or woman homeless, that make them scum of the earth, you take a club or a gun, or a pencil, and go out and ridicule your own handiwork. (Laughter and applause.) WHAT IS ANARCHY AND WHO ARE ANARCHISTS? Anarchy! What is anarchy? Anar- chy is action contrary to rule—con- trary to law. An anarchist is a man who does not respect the law. The law! The law! The will of the people! The will of the people is the law! The will of the people may be written or may not be written. The will of the people often is expressed before it is written. The will of the people is expressed in House Bill 44. And House Bill 44, though it may not have been written upon the statute books, is now, this ADVERTISEMENTS moment, the law, because it is the will of the people, A voice: Amen! And who is the anarchist? Why, good God, according to their own defi- nition, the anarchist is the man who opposes the law; and anarchy is a condition under which men refuse to abide by law—the will of the people. The only anarchists I know of in the state of North Dakota are the 28 so- called patriotic senators who stood against the wili of the people and their lackeys and agents, the Grand Forks Herald and others who gave them support. (Applause.) Don’t harp at me about anarchy and Socialism and I. W. W.-ism! When we get down deep—deep into this thing, it is'almost too much for us. Look at your country. Look out across the plains over this nation where today two per cent of the people own 90 per cent of the wealth; where today the food that women need to keep the life blood in their sucking babes can not be pro= cured for them unless they pay—unless they pay the authors and the fathers of anarchy five prices in profit for it! And do you know what is going to happen to you here pretty soon, you North Dakota farmers? Do you know that in less than 20 years if things go on as now you will be abject and abso- lute slaves? Do you doubt it? If you do, go with me to Oklahoma and Texas, and I will show you hundreds upon hundreds of farmers and their families that scarcely ever see the color of a piece of money, who are not as well fed and cared for on their farms today as your comes keener. A GREAT UPHEAVAL The Nation is watching the League and wondering what will happen As this great movement expands, interest in it be- No modern propaganda has ever been more vital to the farmer and his future. That is why the articles, entitled “A Great Upheaval” by Barton W. Currie, now appearing in - intaglio news pictures in The Country P Gentleman, the national farm weekly. | fl’,,fl’” If you will fill out and send the coupon, ",,.r""'Th you can have The Country Gentleman for e ¢ a full year—52 issues—for only a %" Gentleman Q _—-——,ll’ are attracting such widespread attention. The series began in last week’s issue. cle appears in the issue for April 14, out today. No matter how much you know about the League, you will find fresh viewpoints, new angles, in Mr. Currie’s articles. He has been on the ground digging up every available fact. And, in addition to this series, which will run for several weeks, you need the practical money-making suggestions, the fascinating stories, the remarkable dollar bill; or send your check. Don’t delay. You’ll want your subscription to start with R the April 14 issue. It will g e the address below: be quite impossible to get " Non baCk numbel'S- ',ll“"‘ Streetor R. F. D. A e A A N A A A A A R The second arti- 0‘3« Enclosed please find $1.00 <0 The Curtis y Publishing Company A Independence Square, Philadelphia Canadian price $1.75]. Please send The Country Gentleman for one Stgle i in Sania s i IILSTLLILELSLLIL TS LILLLSLLSLL LSS LS TS IS L L LSS LS LS LTSS LS LS LLSSIIL S LT RS Mention Leader when writing advertisers 1 B | 4 SR— :,mm_\ e <

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