The Nonpartisan Leader Newspaper, October 18, 1917, Page 16

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. L r——— S —————— — ADVERTISEMEN'K_‘S Yow Can Tell The People Who Have fron inZheir F3ood’ - ~ Strong Fleal ey Vigorowus L3LKs Doctor Says Ordinary Nuxated Iron Will Make Nervous Rundown People 100 per cent Stronger in Two Week's Time in Many Cases. NEW YORK, N. Y.—“One glance is enough to tell which people have iron in their blood,”” said Dr. II. Sauer, a Boston an who has studied widely both in this country and in Great Iuropean medical institutions, in a course, They are the ones that do and dare. The others are in the weakling class. Sleepless nights spent worrying over supposed ailments, constant dosing with habit forming drugs and narcotics for nervous weakness, stomach, liver or kidney disease and useless attempts to brace up with strong coffee or other stimulants are what keep them suffer- ing and* vainly longing to be streng. Their real trouble is lack of iron” in the blood to change living sue and therefore, nothing you eat does you-any good; you don’'t get the strength out of jt. The moment iron is supplied the multitude of dangerous symptoms disappear. 1 have seen doze of nerv- ous, rundown people who were ailing all the time, double and even triple their strength and endurance and entirely get rid of every sign of dyspepsia, liver and other trouble in from ten to four- teen days’ time simply by taking iron in the proper form. And this, after they had in some cases been doctoring for months without any benefit. If you are not strong or well you owe food into tis- recent dis- " it to yourself to make the following test: See how long you can work or how far you can walk without becoming tired. Next take two five-grain tablets of ordinary nuxated iron three times. per day after meals for two weeks. Then test your strength again and see for yourself how much you_ have gained. There is nothing like good old iron to put color in your cheeks and sound, healthy flesh on your bones. But you must take iron in a form that can be easily absorbed and assimilated like nuxated iron if you want it to do you any good, otherwise it may prove worse than useless. NOTE — Nuxated Iron recommended above by D. I, Sauer, is one of the newer organic iron compounds. Unlike the older inorganic iron products, it is easily as- similated, does not injure the teeth, make them black, nor upset the stomach; on the contrary, it is a most potent remedy, in nearly all forms of indigestion, as well as for nervous, run-down conditions. The Manufacturers have such great confidence in Nuxated Iron that they offer to for- feit $100.00 to any charitable institution if they cannot take any man or woman under 60 who lacks iron and increase their strength 100 per cent or over in four weeks' time provided they have no sericus organic trouble. They also offer to re- fund your money if it does not at least double your strength and endurance in ten days’ time. It is dispensed in this city by all good druggists. You can increase your next crops 5 to 7 bushels per acre. Last year, thousands of farmers did that, in allthe corn belt states, andat current prices, r:ade $10 to $12 per acre, extra money, This extra gain is made by spreading straw on fields, the easy and quick way,using Perfaction Straw Spreadar i Straw spreading pays big. Every ton of straw has over $3.00 worth of fertilizer elements—more than manure. more water., Makes ground hold Absolutely prevents soil Elowing. With the Perfection, you spread 20 to 25 acres a day—spread thick f or thin, in wind or calm, as you wish. | Satisfaction Guaranteed Youcanasoneot these B trial--spread new or old straw, manure or corn g j--to B give the machinea thorough test at my risk, : Free Book My new free book forov the profit in straw spreadiug, and expl on trial and on easy payment terms. Write me today. ains how I ship spreaders C. E. WARNER, Pres, WARNER MFG. CO. 549 Union St., Ottawa, Kansas legal. them so. the Railroad Commissioners. 'REMEMBER THIS Legal blanks that are not printed as the law demands are not They are simply blanks, and are -worth nothing. Legal blanks, to be LEGAL, must be-changed to meet existing laws. Our legal blanks are legal because we have an attorney that keeps Buy your legal blanks and supplies from us and when your man puts his name on the dotted line, you've got him. We also publish a complete line of Elevator forms as adopted by Walker Bros. & Hardy Fargo N. Dak. R T A e I | . A SHORT CUT TO THE CONSUMER APPLES DIRECT FROM THE GROWER In bulk $32.00 per ton. 64 CENTS PER BUSHEL BASKET FULL This offer subject to my confirmation and shippers’ weights. (The price quoted is delivered at all North Dakota points.) I can save money for you on car lots of cabbage, potatoes, flour, dried grapes and all kinds evaporated and canned fruit —get my price first. This is equivalent to about Don’t Throw Away that Suit or Overcoat Send them to us to be cleaned, pressed, relined or whatever they may need. q 302 Breadway, FARGO, N. D. We guarantee first class work or neo pay. Special attention to ladies’ garments. Call and see when in the city. C. E. TRENT,, Prop. SEND US $1.00 and we will mail you postpaid 40 pieces of sheet music, either vecal or instrumental. FARGO MUSIC CO. SI6 Fint Ave. N. Plaxxfn:co. N. D. | WITT Wants POULTRY We are retail meat dealers and buy poultry to sell in our meat market. That’'s why we give the biggest prices and quickest returns. No commissions deducted. Send for price list and shipping tags. WITT’S MEAT MARKET, Minneapolis, Minn. Ain’t Farmers Legal? (Continued from page 6) abroad, about the problems of the farmers, about the need of every citi- zen standing behind the government in its price fixing program and in sup- port of Liberty bonds—the same kind of a tallk that was made everywhere else. - After Mr. Townley finished Herman Olson, director of the county safety commission, whqe had wanted to pre- vent the meeting a few hours before, thanked Mr. Townley for his speech. “I feel sure there will be a better understanding all around as the result of this meeting,” he said. The farmers were not through yet. They adopted a resolution asking Herman Olson and Sheriff Olson to get in touch with the at- torney general of Minnesota and the state public safety commission and tell them this was a real loyal- ty meeting. “I'll be glad to do that,” Herman Olson said. And he meant it, too, because the next day, when the sheriff of Nobles county threatened to stop a meeting scheduled for Worthington, Herman Olson, director of the Nicollet county safety commission, not only called up the Nobles county sheriff to tell him been stopped, notices were sent out to all authorities that meetings must not be stopped. Are the farmers of Minnesota going' to get better treatment in the future? The writer thinks so. Earljer in this account I mentioned how North Dakota farmers were treat- ed at New Rockford and Fargo. Let me tell the rest of the story: After the New Rockford farmers found all the halls locked against the Loftus meet- ing, they located a friendly garage keeper. They backed out all the cars and stood in the garage while Loftus talked to them. Then they went to their homes. WILL THIS HAPPEN ; IN MINNESOTA, TOO? * They stayed there. They didn't come back to New Rockford. - Pretty soon the merchants began noticing that fact. They found that their money hadn’t come from the streets of New Rock- ford; it had come from the farmers. They went out in the country to find the farmers. They said to them: “We want you back. If you want to héar Loftus we'll get him back; we'll hire the best hall in town for him; we'll pay all-expenses_of the trip.” And they did and the farmers came loyal “‘The best proof the farmers of this country can have that I\ am not saying anything seditious, treasonable or disloyal, is the faet that T am not in jail. With feeling such as it is, with the great interests seeking a pretext to break up this farmers’ organ- ization, how long do you think I would be at liberty if I uttered one disloyal word?”’ —TFrom Minnesota speech of A. C. Townley. that the League was “all right” but of- fered on his own initiative to call up the sheriff of Murray county, north of Nobles, this sheriff being his brother- in-law, so that in case the meeting was not allowed at Worthington they would have a place for it elsewhere, OFFICIALS ADMIT THAT FARMERS ARE RIGHT During all of this time, while offici- ous local politicians, misled by lying stories about the League in the Twin City papers, were attempting to block the meetings, the farmers were not idle. On October 10 a delegation of 30 Minnesota farmers from all parts of the state, headed by E. D. Paquin of Todd county, appeared before Governor Burnquist. They demanded that local authorities be instructed to stop their interference with farmers’ meetings. Attorney General Smith admitted that the authorities had no right, under the constitution and laws of Minne- sota, to prevent loyal meetings, and finally, two days later, after the meet- ings at Mankato and Lake City had D) back. And in Fargo much the same thing happened. When a League meet- ing is held in Fargo today- the city won’t let the farmers even pay for the city gaditorium; the city commission- er: the rent themselves. ~The farmers haye put their taboo for the time upon Lake City and Man- kato; there is no doubt about that. But already the merchants are getting busy. At Lake City the other day, after.the fire hose episode, one farmer that I know of, who had bought an $80 order and hadn’t paid for it yet, sim- ply left town and left the goods in the store. At Mankato, even before the farmers had left town, some of the more far sighted business men were mingling among them and telling them they weren't responsible for the misguided stand of their mayor. Maybe, after a little while, the busi- ‘ness men and peanut politicians will be educated in Minnesota, as they have been in North Dakota, and a different answer can be given to the question: “Ain't farmers legal?” CARRYING THE : TRUTH TO THE PEOPLE Farmers of the vicinity of Wildrose, Williams county, North Dakota, plan to hold an open meeting in the near future. At this meeting delegates to the recent Producers and Consumers con- ference at St. Paul will speak, to tell the farmers exactly what happened at the big convention. The meeting is occasioned, as is explained by the Wildrose Plainsman, by the fact that the daily newspapers have not carried the truth about the St..Paul affair. The farmer delegates, who were on the ground every minute, will tell the farmers who sent them exactly what did happen: Probably several other.communities will plan to hold simi- lar meetings to get the facts about the St. Paul convention. Carry the truth to the people! s ORGANIZING IN TEXAS ¢ Tyler, Texas, Editor Nonpartisan Leader: Farming conditions are deplorable here. ‘The cotton speculators and gamblers work the cotton farmers the same as the Chamber of Commerce gang does the wheat farmers of the Northwest. The cotton is ready for market now and the price has slumped from 26 to 20 cents. While a few pros- perous farmers will be able to hold their cotton, the great majority will be forced to sell as they can not afford to pay the enormous insurance rates and interest on money. . You see here the result of uninter- rupted machine rule since the Civil war. I refer to the large number of so-called “wagon/tramps.” The wagon tramp is a farmer without a farm. He hasn’t the money to buy one be- cause speculators have sent land prices out of sight by fencing in a domain as large as the republic of France. On the other hand we see the government cry to the farmer to pro- duce more to/help win the war, while this down-and-out farmer is forced teo tramp over [the state in a prairie , PAGE SIXTEEN | schooner, dragging with him his wife and children, looking for a place to lay his head —ewen if it be a rented farm. However,/the land hogs of Texas, by holding 117,000,000 acres of arable land out of use have produced a scarcity of even rented farms and imposed onerous conditions on renters that are lucky enough to find a shack to cover their heads. But the land hog is not the only hu« man hog in Texas. I refer to the po= litical hogs who have allowed in a single generation over half of the farma ers of Texas to become homeless peons, ‘We are after all these hogs and we shall get them. The work of organiza= tion of the League is proceeding splens didly and you will hear from the fight= ing farmers of the Lone Star State be« fore the snow flies. J. P. CRAIG. WHY CERTAINLY : The earnest patriotism and sound Judgment of our Northwestern farm- ers is known of all men. Let it never be obscured before the country. Let it be blazoned forth enthusiastically.— JAMESTOWN (N. D.) DAILY ALERT.

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