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ADVERTISEMENTS UNCLE SAM sAYs— “EAT MORE FISH” Qua! below om Lake: Superior tations ; ; 5 Canadian and Pacific Coast fish will ap- peal to the thrifty housewife, SABLEFISH (Forlfié%y Black Cod) Recommended the 8. Bureau of isheries We offer the following, packed in 100-1b; gnet wt.) boxes: ~ ABLEFISH (black cod)..........14¢ Ib. RED SNAPPERS (Red Cod) . ROUND OCEAN WHITING .. ROUND PICKEREL .......... DRESSED PICKEREL HERRING (loose. frozen)...... For 50-1b. boxes add 25c. NORTHERN HERRING, i0 -car- tons (90 1bS.).....vpiiieiiniaaa. .. $8.50 IN CARTONS, 4 cartons (36 lbs.).. 3.75 “Frozen with the wiggle in their tails” 100-1b. assortment, above varieties. 12.90 50-1b. assortment ........... = 7 ‘We carry a full line of salt and pickled fish. - OUR GUARANTEE: Prompt shipment, satisfaction or money refunded. WE NEVER SUBSTITUTE! K ‘Write for our illustrated price list and watch our ads for other fish. NORTHERN FISH COMPANY Dept. P Duluth, Minn, Christmas Special: Send your friends & Hooverized Christmas Gi~ —50-1b. as- sortment of our finest fish specially packed—BY EXPRESS PREPAID to any foint in the Dakotas, Minn,, Wis,, or (3 e FISH ARE. GOOD FISH— Because, only the best of fish go in Waro- La packages, This year we offer you Waro-La guaranteed fish packed in 100 1b. boxes at the following prices— Frozen Herring ...... <o Frozen Round Pickere] .. Frozen Dressed Pickerel ... Frozen Dressed Skatewing Frozen Dressed Halibut .. Frozen Northern Pike .. Frozen Tullibee Whitefish .. . Frozen Dressed Sablefish .........14c lb. For 50-pound boxes add 25¢c Quality, full weight and no substitutions guaranteed. Write for price list of other fish and recipes. . WAROE LARSEN FISH COMPANY Dept. N L Duluth, Minn. Fresh Frozen Fish All fish fozen in prime condition at the different fishing stations, Herring Dressed pan frozen .9c lb. In box lots—150 1bs. each, positively the best vualue for your money 8c Ib. WHITING, look like pike, a salt water fish—one to 1bs. each - In box lots 150 lbs. each SABLE FISH (Black Cod)..14c lb. - Will ship in any quantities. We carry & full line of all varieties and guarantee every pound shipped. ‘Write for complete list and save money. BOSTON FISH MARKET St. Paul Minnesota PAY THE FREIGHT to our shipping points at Fargo, N. D., Aberdeen, S. D., an Des Moines, Ia. YOU SAVE BOTH TIME and MONEY when your shipments are made direct from the shipping point nearest you. All our fish are In- spected by Minn, State Dairy and Food Dep’t. _This gives you_ full protection. Sweet-Rich-Tasty-Juicy-Fresh fish. Du- luth Prices: Royal Herring, 100-1b. box (gross weight) $7.65; Pike (Jersey Blue), per lb., 9¢c; Rockfish, 11c; Skatewing, 1ic; Sablefish, 13%c; Pickerel, 14c; Saimon, 16c. Add 50c more per 100 lbs. when shipments are made from our other ship- ing points. Shipments will be made Bec. 16th. Think ahead—send your order now direct to A, S. Johnson Fish Co,, Dept. G, Duluth, Minn. LUTE-FISK Soaked from No. 1 Norwegian Vakerfish. 25-1b. tub ....ce000 50-1b. tub ........ 100-1b. barrel .... ves.11.34 200-1b. barrel ....c.eseveeln..21.42 FROZEN FISH Fresh Chilled Alaska Cod, ib 15¢ Frozen Yellow Pike, per lb..... 18c Frozen Pickerel, per 1b ........ 14c Send for our latest Price List Western Fish Co. Dept. N. 8t. Paul, Minn. WE YOU SAVE MONEY ing your fish from us, as we nggr;lg:mzoy Branch Shipping Houses at Fargo, N. D., Aberdeen, S. D., and Des Moines, Iowa and can ship your order dlrelct l‘rog)lth?mc& ?:th you, ou 1 r service and low 5 gafie F%OZEN SPLIT RO%K HERRING tastily gcked and wnnged in waxed paper. A 100 lb. blobx 00. A 60 b, box $4.50. Jersey Blue Pike, per Ib. 9c. Dressed-headless Rockfish, 11c. Dressed Haddock, 116, Dressed Headless Bablefish 1350. Druaed“; headless ‘Salmon, 16¢. ~Bhipments mm BRANCH HOUSES ¥c per Ib. hl%bfir O;B e rices. Remember all our fish are INSPECTE! tate Food Commission before shipment to {on. O large Fish Cook Book,'Tasty WAys 10 Cook Fish™— loolrelclp?hl:eec:immkho 0! ns.o:zgn"m. Scandia ., Doc! Dul! inm. U. 8. Food Administration License No. 10386, Mention Leader when writing: advertisers Why Discount Liberty Bonds? California Editor Takes Same Stand As The Leader in Regard to Gambling in Gov- ernment’s War Securities (Note—The following letter to -~ us has reference to the fact that the Wall street bond buyers have hammered down the price of Liberty bonds in some instances as low as $97.10, which is a dis- count of $2.90 on each bond that the patriotic people of the United States paid $100 for. Readers of the Leader will remember that we have discussed and condemned this gambling in and discounting of the government's perfectly good bonds. We have shown that rich investors are getting the price hammered down and are buying up the bonds, in order to reap a vast harvest off the people compelled to sell. Our advice has been to hold your Liberty bond if you possibly can, as it will be worth 100 cents on the dollar at maturity, and probably will sell at a premium after the war. We print this letter from the editor of the Sacramento (Cal.) Bee to show that at least one influential editor in the coun- try appreciates the menacing situ- ation brought about by the bond and stock gamblers and is doing what he can to get congress to remedy the situation—~THE EDI- TOR). Sacramento, Cal. Editor Nonpartisan Leader: Inclosed find editorials from The Bee of November 20 and November 26. I think this thing of permitting the gold gamblers to fleece the poor people who put their faith not only in the credit but in the honor of this nation is something the congress of the United States should stop, and stop forever. A nation should certainly be as honest as a private citizen. If a man loaned me.$100, I should expect to pay him back $100, and not $97, or $95, or $90, or something like that. And when this government bhorrows $100 it should pay back $160, and not let these mar- plots of Wall street say that it is going to pay back whatever they may desig- nate for their own ulterior purposes to be the value of the bonds. The value of a $100 Liberty loan bond of the United States is $100, no matter what these men may say. And they should not be permitted to continue as they are doing—to make these Liberty loan bonds a football for their own gambling speculations—rob- bing the patriotic and self-sacrificing men and women of this country, many, many millions of whom illy could af- ford to buy these bonds, and vast numbers of whom have to pay for them on the installment plan. The Fight In (Continued from page 5) .out as they should. But now, with an organization behind them, with some chance that they might do good, they spoke out boldly. Worst showed the farmers how they were losing $55,- 000,000 every year through having their grain handled by the Minneapolis Chamber of Commerce, instead of having it handled in the state, by a state owned terminal elevator and mill. ? Because the board of regents was still in the hands of the old political gang, Worst was “fired” for this of- fense. But the fear of the farmers was sufficiently in the minds of the regents to cause them to appoint Ladd, another friend of the farmers, as. president. And Ladd came right back with investigations showing that while the grain gamblers were buying shriveled wheat for little more than half the price of No. 1 wheat, this wheat was being used to make flour in all essential respects as good as ‘that made from No. 1 wheat. The re- duced price simply represented another form of robbery practiced by the Chamber of Commerce. ‘What happened from this point on in North Dakota 18 known by everybody. The farmers kept on with their organ- ization work, selected their own candi- dates, used their campaign funds to advantage, nominated their men on the Republican-and Democratic tickets and elected them all in November, 1916, with the exception of state treasurer. Included in the list elected were three Jjudges of the supreme court. The farmers elected three- fourths of the members of the lower house. Only 25 of the 49 members of the senate were to be elected in 19186. The farmers selected 18 of the 25, But the old gang died hard. The 24 holdover members of the senate com- bined with the seven new anti-farmer It will be answered in reference to this criticism that anybedy who wants to keep these bonds until maturity will get full face value for them. But, as pointed out in the editorials, that is not the question. The government of the United States in published documents and through the lips of Treasurer McAdoo on vari- ous occasions, ete.,, etc, proclaimed that all these Liberty bonds would be as good as twenty dollar pieces, etc., etc. The fact of the matter is that they are not, right now, as good as twenty dollar pieces, If they can be depreciated down to 97 cents, what on earth is going to stop their being depreciated down to 90 cents, or 85 cents or even lower still? What is going to step these gamblers depreciating them down to 50 cents, and then, when people, through need, are forced to sell, grabbing them in and making immense profits out of them, as they did in their shameful methods during the Civil War? ‘What, unless the congress of the United States stops it? We are con- serving the food of the nation; and trying to conserve the health and morals of our soldiers. Why, in the name of God, don’t we conserve the money of our people which was thrown out in the most generous and self- sacrificing manner, under the promise of the United States that a Liberty ‘bond would be just as good as a twenty dollar piece, etc., etc? I am not able to say exactly how this can be done—how this menace can be averted, and this outrage stopped—but I believe a government so powerful as ours, that has accomplished so many wonderful things in the recent past, could certainly furnish brains and courage sufficient to map out and en- force a drastic system which would put an end to this infamy. . »If you see any weakness in this stand; and have the time and inclina- tion, I would like to hear from you what, if any, objections there may be to such stand. For, if wrong, I should like to be set right. Very truly yours, CHAS. K. M'CLATCHY, Editor, The Bee. GRAIN THIEVES EXPOSED Last week's Nonpartisan Leader ex- posed a combination of grain buyers at Watertown, S. D. whereby the farmers are being cheated out of from 3 to 5 cents per bushel for wheat by wrong grading. As yet the federal au- thorities have taken no action.—DUNN CENTER (N. D.) JOURNAL. North Dakota senators to prevent any action on the farmers program in 1917. The farmers by this time had seen the necessity for a flour mill in connection with the elevator and had also seen the necess- ity of providing for the building of these by a bond issme. The holdover senators prevented this action. They tried to put over a fake elevator bill, which would have provided an elevator without a flour mill and which would have made it necessary to raise all the money by taxation. This would not have provided sufficient finances to build a mill that could compete with the big mills at Minneapolis. But the League farmer officials killed this. It was a temporary setback, but it can not last for long. It has only stirred the farmers up. It has shown them more than ever before the ne- cessity of electing their own men and keeping them in office, not only as state officials but in both houses of the legislature. s Another thing that has stirred the ‘farmers up has been an attempt to “get” President Ladd, who was made president of the college after President Worst had been fired. Ladd has not gone; he is still at the Agricultural college, fighting the farmers’ battle, and the fact that he is there is due al- together to the fact that the farmers,” not their enemies, are in control of the state government. This is the story of North Dakota farmers and their fight. It is not the whole story, but it is enough to show why North Dakota farmers believe, as they do, that the way to get things done is not by asking -men elected to office by someone else to do them. The way to get things done for the farmers is for the farmers to elect their own men to office. Then they will be done. (The next story in this series will be about the fight of the farm- ers of South Dakota.) PAGE NINETEEN ‘Nuxated Iron. ADVERTISEMENTS Why I Believe in Nuxated Iron A Strength-Builder for the Nation BY E. SAUER, M. D. Probably no remedy has ever met with such phenomenal success as has It is comservatively es- timated that over three million peopla annually are taking it in this country alone. It has been highly endorsed and used by Former United States Senators and Members of Congress; Physicians who have been connected with well- known hospitals have prescribed and recommended it; Monseigneru Nannini, prominent Catholic Clergyman, rec- ommends it to all members of the Catholic Church. ¥ormer Health Com- missioner .Wm. Kerr, of Chicago, says it ought to be used in every hos- pital and prescribed by every physi= cian, Sarah . Bernhardt—“the Divine ,”’ the world’s most noted actress, -has ordered a large quantity sent to the French soldiers to help give them strength, }mwer and endurance. Dr. A. J. Newman, late Police Sur- geon of the City of Chicago, and for- mer House Surgean Jefferson DPark Hospital, Chicago, says Nuxated Iron has proven through his own tests of it to excel any preparation he has ever used for creating red blood, building up the nerves, strengthening the muscles and correcting_digestive disorders. Dr, H. B. Vail, formerly Physician in the Baltimore Hospital and a Medical Examiner, says that time and again he has prescribed Nuxated Yron and sur- prised patients at the rapidity with which the weakness and general debility were replaced by a renewed feeling of strength and vitality. If yoeu are not strong or well, you owe it to yourself to make the fol- lowing test: See Thow long you can work or how far you can walk with- out becoming tired. Next take two five-grain tablets of Nuxated Iron three times per day after meals for two weeks. Then tesp your strength sgain and =ee how much you have gained. NOTE:—Nuxated Iron, which has been used by former Members of the United States Senate and House of Representa- tives, and other prominent people ' with such surprising results, and which is pre- scribed and recommended above by phy- sicians in such a great variety of cases, is not a patent medicine nor secret rem- edy, but one which is well known to drug- gists and whose_ fron constituents are widely prescribed by eminent physicians everywhere. Unlike the older inorganic jron products, it is easily assimilated, does mot injure the teeth, make them black nor upset the stomach; on the con- trary it is a most potent remedy in near- 1y 2l forms of indigestion as well as for nervous, run-down conditions. The manu- facturers have such great confidence in Nuxated Iron, that they offer to forfeit $100 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 mo serious organic trouble. They also offer to refund your money if it does not at least double your strength and endurance in ten days‘ time. 1t is dispensed by all good druggists. WINTER FROZEN FISH HeITINg ..cvvvseivsasancanns Pickerel (round) .... Pickerel (dressed) Pike .oc.vvneanenoan e Large Whitefish .... Tullibees The above prices subject to change without notice. We guarantee these fish to be fresh, pure and wholesome. Order today any assortment of above, and receive the finest of winter aught fish. C'XF%N(’:Y FROZEN OCEAN FISH. Dressed Sablefish, 14c 1b.; Dressed Red Snappers, 14¢ 1b.; Round Whiting, 9¢ Ib. : JOHNSON & CAR Z Dept. 12, Fidelity Bldg., Duluth, Minn, ;———-————— B B A e Buy your fish from the S. MORTE- RUD FISH CO. 5 We were the first ship fish direct to consumers Can refer firm to commencing twenty vears ago. to thousands of satisfied customers over the Northwest. We quote very best loose weather frozen: Herring 8c Ib. in boxes. Shipped in sacks in_Minnesota 30c Jess per 100 Ibs. About Dec. 15th will have iarge shipments of fish from Atlantic and Pacific coasts. Fresh frozen Atlantic Coast Whiting-9¢c 1b. Fine frozen Alaska Black Cod (Sablefish) 14c lb. Red Cod (Same fish as called Uer in Norway) 12¢ 1b. Genuine Cod (Torsk) 1l4c lb. Alaska Salmon 18c lb. All Western fish headless and dressed. Will have full supply of Canadian Pike, Pickerel, Whitefish anq Tulibees soon, -but no prices have been quoted from Canada, yet. Will pack any assortment_of fish at above pricegs not less than 15 1bs. of any one kind. Sirite for a complete price-list on Fresh and Salted Fish, Any Bank in Duluth will tell you that we are reliable. S. Morterud Fish Co., 1929-West Superior St., Duluth, Minnesota. 9 CORDS B 2 . No AN, » KING OF TIIE ODDS. Saves money and et sine}‘;:rrm catalog No. E197ehowing low price and Iatest improvements, First orcler gets agency. Folding Sawing Mackine Go.. 151 West Harrison St., Chicago, Leader Classified Ads Always Pay Mention Leader when writing advertisers AN RS