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7/ D tire. easily: are pale, hag- .gard and WwOrn; nervous or irritable; B who are sub- Ject to_fits of melancholy or the . “blues,” ®et your blood examined for dron defici- ance 100 per cent in twg n many cases.—Ferdinagg UXATED IRON recom obtained from, five-grain tah: after meals Write for our Booklet on Savings Ma“\ Accounts Established for over The Savings & Loan 11 Broadway ~Fargo, N. D. ARE YOU LOOKING FOR €€ 2 Pep’’? ARE YOU LOOKING FOR Style? ARE YOU LOOKING FOR Comfort? ARE YOU LOOKING FOR Durability? Are you looking for ome of the classiest, niftiest, most up-to-the- minute jobs on the market to date? If you are we have it in the REGAL Hi-Power 4 Selling at the reasonable figure of $745 F. 0. B. DETROIT. Come in and see us. Some good territory still open for live dealers. Glide Auto Co. FARGO, N. D. ~ THE GARDNER European Plan. FARGO, N, D. 25 coinbionation sample rooms with bath, 2.5 70 Tooms with running water, $1 to $1.50. 80 rooms with bath, $1.50 to $3.00. unequalled. Restful, quiet—only hotel in the city not on a car line. A. H. Leimbacher, Mgr. PUZZLE Get a Lot Here are 9 squares. Can you put a figure (no two alike) in each square so0 as to make a total of 16 by adding them up and down and crossways? As an advertisement we will deed a lot 25%100 ft. at Atlantic City, Md., which has one ‘of the finest beaches in the world, to any one (white race) solvin, this puzzle. Small fee for deed an expenses. . Send your solution with 4c in postage, for copy of prospectus to HE OCEAN BEACH DEVELOP. 2 - MENT A 206 N. Calvert St. (14) Baltimore, Md. Leader “Classified” Ads Pay. : Mention Leader when writing advertisers Finest cafe in the Northwest. Cuisine At Cooperstown Cooperstown, N. D., June 26, 1917. Editor Nonpartisan Leader: At the League picnic held by the ‘Sheyenne river east from Cooperstown last Friday, D. C. Coates and John Baer sounded the keynote of the Non- partisan league, After some remarks on the success of the League and the loyalty of the farmers up to now, Mr. Coates began to talk about war prices. He said that wherever he had come he had found no scarcity of food or mer- chandise. These were as plentiful as ever. But the prices—we all know about the prices. Take shoes, for ex- ample. Ladies’ shoes which formerly cost $4 to $5 now cost from $12 to $16 dollars a pair! What is the cause? ‘Why are flour and sugar two or three times higher than they used to be? Ah —the war—the abnormal demand in Europe—the war! It is just as con- sistent to say that ladies’ shoes have trebled in prices because the millions fighting under the banners of the allies all wear women’s footwear, as to say that flour and sugar have soared sky- high simply on account of the war— the scarcity—the demand in Europe. Until now the supply in this country has been plentiful. The great trouble is, and it is becoming generally known throughout this country, that there is a big hog somewhere swallowing mil- lions and millions of dollars—the food gamblers_and others of their kind, so bitterly denounced by Mr. Vrooman of the department of agriculture. The president, aware of this situation, call- ed Herbert Hoover back to this coun- try to do what he could to solve the problem. Europe is learning the solu- tion—the governmental control of the food distribution and regulation of prices, the control by the government of the means of distribution. In other words, the war has forced Europe to adopt the program of the Nonpartisan league. Men who stand at the top in the af- fairs of this nation now openly advo- cate that which the farmers of North Dakota have fought for the past two years. The League program is gain- ing recognition except with those who are profiting by the war prices; whose sallowfaced dissipated sons are not fit to go to war; those who buy large numbers of Liberty bonds to divert _the attention of the public from their enormous profits. It is-these people whose wealth ought to be conscripted, whose profits, frequently as high as 1500 per cent, ought to be taken away from them, Is it any wonder that these parasites feel like killing somebody, that they would inspire their mouth- pieces in this state to advocate murder and riot? That which has come to be recogniz- ed as the only salvation for war-torn Europe should be efficient in times of peace—government regulation of pub- lic utilities. This is what the farmers of North Dakota through their Nonpartisan league are fighting for, and the people of this state, with the exception of a few standpatters who are blinded by rage and prejudice, see that the League program must be put through. The opponents of Townley and other lead- ers and now of Mr. Baer would try to turn back the hands of the clock of progress and continue to rob the peo- ple. Speaking of food gambling Mr. Coates said: “Townley says, I say, the Nonparti- san league says, and that is.what Mr. Baer is going to congress to say, that this must stop!” And we are going to make it stop and the election of Baer to congress is going to help o if. The enthusiasm shown the speakers gave evidence of the true-hearted loy- alty and determination of the farmers of Griggs and Steele counties. ELMER A. ARESTAD. PRODUCER IS ORGANIZING _(From State Grange Journal, Nebraska) ‘We are glad to note in Agricultural Grange News, the State Grange pa- per of Washington, that the Nonparti- san League will organize in that state. ‘We are also glad to see that the Grange in that state is alive tp its opportuni- ties in that state as well as in North Dakota. Mr. Ray McKaig who has been making a tour of that state says: “The producer and consumer are alike interested. In fact, all but a limited number of citizens in any state are interested. To get relief, they must proceed in the way, and only way, that can be effective—get hold of the machinery of government and use it for the people instead of the special interests. “Nonpartisanism will do it. When we started out in North Dakota they laughed at us and said we could not make the farmers stick, Ninety-five per cent stuck and created a political revolution.” . - ADVERTISEMENTS' HOT WEATHER the season when a SEPARATO saves most over any other separator or skimmnig system It’§ a great mistake for any dairy farmer without a separator or using an inferior machine to put off the purchase of a New De Laval Cream Separator in the summer months especially with butter-fat at the present unusually high price. Great as are the advantages of the New De Laval over all other separators, as well as over any gravity setting system, at every season of the year, they are even greater during the mid-summer season than at any other time. 2 This is because hot weather conditions occasion greatest butter-fat losses with gravity and render it most difficult to maintain quality of product with any gravity system or unsanitary separator, while, more- over, the quantity of milk_ is usually greatest, and any loss in either quantity or quality of product means more. Then there is the great saving in time and labor with the simple, easy running, easily cleaned, large capacity New DeLaval machines over all other methods or separators, which naturally counts for more at this time of the year. Hence the great mistake of putting off the purchase of a New De Laval Cream Separator in summer, whether you already have a poor machine or noneg at all, and every dairy farmer should keep in mind not only that a De Laval will pay for itself in a few months but may, if de- sired, be bought on such liberal terms as to actually save its own cost while being paid for. Every claim thus made is subject to easy demonstration, and every DeLaval local agent is glad of the opportunity to prove these claims to you, in your own dairy, without cost or obliga- tion on your part, Every New De Laval is equip- ped with a Bell Why not see the nearest De Laval agent at Speed -Indicator once? If you do not know him, write to the nearest office for new catalog or any desired information. THE DE LAVAL SEPARATOR CO. 165 Broadway, New York 29 E. Madison $t., Chicago 50,000 BRANCHES AND LOCAL AGENCIES THE WORLD OVER e o ———————_—,————_——,—,—_—e—————e When You Travel— Ride in a A De Luxe 4-Passenger Roadster Get Your Pullman Now and Save Twenty Per Cent The 1917 Pullman is Truly the Most . Beautiful Popular Priced Car The PULLMAN models are completely equipped: including electric starter and electrie lights with dimmers; one-man top, rain vision wind-shield, in fact, ‘all the up-to-date im-" provements found on high class cars. The PULLMAN is equipped with a high speed, four eylinder motor that will travel from three to fifty miles an hour in high speed. Genuine leather upholstery. No imitation. ‘Wheel-base 114 inches; full-floating rear axle, 50 1-2-imch ‘cantilever rear springs. PRESENT PRICES | De Luxe Touring..............$860 De Luxe 4-passenger........... 860 1000-1b. Light Delivery......... 760 More Brothers FARGO, N. D. MINNEAPOLIS, MINN. 417-419 Front St. 220-So. 6th St. ASPLUND BROS., Minot, N. D, distributors for Burke, Mountraill, Ward and Renville counties. (ollmat> It's worth while to read the Leader Classified Ads PAGE FIFTEEN b : Mention Leader when writing advertisers Lo Y\