The Nonpartisan Leader Newspaper, April 22, 1918, Page 18

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TR ] = RO S A A TSRO T L L ) H ADVERTISEMENTS Your Last Chance to Buy this Wonderful Shoe—Before Prices Go Up o R T “- L= ND THE WEAR AND TEAR OF THE FARM We are saving the farmer thousands of dollars on their shoes. If you are not wearing SCHMIDT’S shoes, we be- lieve you are not getting as much for your money as you should. These Strong, Heavy, Barnyard Proof Uppers, Real Oak Soles, Best Leather Insoles, Heavy Waxed Stitched Uppers, Nailed Soles, Bellows Tongue, Roomy Toe, Extra Wide Last. Sizes 6 to 12, Width EE, All for the Small Price - $3.59. Send $3.59 for a pair. We deliver free. If you feel you are not saving from 50c to a dollar on a pair return the shoes and we will cheerful- ly refund your money. Aiter the Hatch, RAISE EM % to % teaspoonful of Kelly’s Laymore in the mash is sufficient for 50 chicks one week old. One package of this wonderful chick developer is enough to insure keeping the whole hatch alive. If you don’t raise A 95 per cent of the whole hatch after feeding Lay- Season’s more, your money will be refunded. Do what 1 Thousands of successful Poultry Farmers are do-{ Supply ing. Give your chicks the right kind of a start. Kelly’s Laymore is used on many of the largest poultry © farms and it is vitally necessary to every chick. Don’t let your chicks die. Order a dollar season’s supply today. P. J. KELLY, “Minnesota’s Poultry Expert” 136 No. 2nd St. Minneapolis, Minn. )OCTOR SAYS NUXATED IRON WILL INCREASE S TRENGTH of DELICATE >, PEOPLE iv TWO WEEKS' TIME ernment. been reported to me that can be ager. sentimenis expressed by him. In many instances says City Physician ging vital powers for the moment, maybe at persons have suffered for years without knowing what made them feel tired, listless -and run-down when their real trouble was lack of Iron in ‘the blood—how to t-lkL 3 F yod were to make an actual blood test on all people who are ill you would prob- = ably be greatly astonished at the exceed- ingly large number who lack iron and who are ill for no other reason than the lack of iron. The- moment iron is supplied a multi- tude of dangerous symptoms disappear. Without iron the blood at once loses the power to change food into living tissue and therefore nothing you eat does you good; you don’t get the strength out of it. Your food merely passes through your system like corn through a mill with the rollers so wide apart that the mill can’t grind. As a result of this continuous blood and nerve starvation, people me generally weakened, nervous and all run down and frequently develop all sorts of conditions. - One is too. thin; another is bur- dened with unhealthy fat; some are so weak they can hardly walk; some think they have dyspépsia, kidney or liver trouble; sgme can’t sleep at night, others are sleepy and tired all day; some fussy and irritable; ‘some skinny and. bloodless, but all lack physical power and endurance. In such casges, it is' worse than foolishness ' to take' stimulating medicines or narcotic drugs, which only whip up your fag- ' Mention the-Leader When' Writing Advertheu the expense of your life later on. No mat- ter what any one tells you, -if you agxe mnot strong and well youa owe 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 how much you havé gained. ~You can talk as you please about all the wonders wrought by new remedies, but when you come down to hard facts there is mnothing like good old iron to put color in your cheeks and good sound, healthy flesh' on your bones. also a great nerve and stomach strengthener and one of the best blood builders in’ the world. The only trouble was that the old forms of inorganic iron like tincture or. iron, iron acetate, ., O ruined people’s teeth, upset their stomachs and were not assimilated and for these reasons they frequently "did more harm than good. But with the discov- ery of the newer forms of organic iron all this has been overcome. Nuxated Iron, for example, the teeth and is almost immediately ‘beneficial. Manufacturers’ - Note: known to averywhm;- Ui the older mor{mlc iron products, it"is e: assimi- lated, does not injure ‘the teeth, make them black, nor upset the stomach. . The manufa ~guarantee suc- purdxim‘nc;’r m '%fl ‘the imonq" 'flau dis: ‘pensed by all’ good drugglsts, sEnt N again and see for ‘yourself It is | is pleasant to take, does not injure- A Square Deal in Kansas = Governor Capper Writes That He Has Found No Disloyal- ty Among the League—Stands for Justice to All NOTHER state in which the National Nonparti- san league is not being persecuted by misuse of official power is Kansas. The farmers there were educated years ago in the Grange and the Alliance movements and some- thing of their spirit of fairness to all is reflected by the officers of the state. - An organizer_for the League, nat- urally eager to obey the law, wrote an inquiry to Governor Arthur Capper in regard to the investigation of the Nonpartisan movement which recent- ly was ordered. nor wrote: In reply the gover- This investigation was requested by the gov- Up to the present time nothing has taken as evidence of disloyalty upon the part of the members of this organization in Kansas. If the League is a thoroughly loyal orgafii- zation, its members need have no fear for the inquiry which the government officials have asked the council of defense to make. So far-as I am concerned, I stand for fair- ness and justice to every citizen, and as long as he is doing his full duty as a citizen I will endeavor to see that he, gets everything that is due him under the law. These are times, however, about any man’s loyalty to the government. when there ‘must be no. question I return the statement from your state man- Certainly no one can object to the Very respectfully, ARTHUR CAPPER, Governor. The circular of instructions which was sent out some time before this to all organizers under the direction of the Oklahoma manager of the League, L. N. Sheldon, follows: Dear Organizer: - : No doubt you, with many others in the or- ganization, have read in the press of the intention of Governor Capper and the coun- cil of defense of Kansas to investigate the League and the League or_anizers. Some few of the organizers have become alarmed at this step and have quit work. However, I will say that I can see nothing wrong or alarming in such an investigation. We certainly have nothing to fear, providing the investigation is fair and unbiased. ‘ If the League cannot stand on its merits and for the purpose for which it was founded, and now being organized, then it ought to fall. And if an organizer for t}ge League disre- gards “his. instructions, that is, makes state- ments or representations in conflict with, or that do not conform to the purposes expressed in the -program upon which this organization is built, then his services will be discontinued at once. And if it is found true that any one in the employ of the League is makl_ng' dis- loyal statements, or in any manner intimat- ing that the Nonpartisan league, as ‘an or- ganization, is not back of this government for the successful conclusion of this war to the end that world democracy- will be established and a lasting peace assured, then this office will not only not defend such an organizer, but will exert every effort to assist the fed- eral authorities in prosecuting him. However, if organizers conduct themselves as American citizens, follow out instructions to the letter and solicit membership to the League solely on the merits of its program, then, and only then, will we undertake. to defend and assist them. They All Discuss the League Big Topic in Pullman Car Arouses Train Crews Porter, Drummers, Girls, and Even Jerry Bacon and - Tom Parker Junkin. : HIS letter to the Nonpar- tisan Leader by L. A. Knoke, proprietor of Badger Den Stock farm of Willow City, N. D, sheds a humorous light on the way the Nonpartisan league has become the absorbing topic of conversation everywhere. Mr. Knoke was in St. Paul recently and his letter tells what happened on his way home. He says: : e “After visiting with most of the boys (and some of the girls) in the League headquarters in St. Paul and tramping the streets of St. Paul, I was very tired and felt like hitting the hay about 10:30. But, as you know, the Great Northern don’t carry haylofts or horse blankets along with their trains, so I was obliged to con- tent myself with lower 11 in a Pull- man, and while I was sitting in the place where they ‘Smoke—you know the place where they have so many mirrors that you can see yourself from any direction, not as others see you, perhaps, but as you like to see yourself—well, as I was sitting there waiting for the porter to fix up ‘my bunk, a slick, portly-looking little fel- low marched in and noticed me sitting there reading a St. Paul daily, with the Minnesota Leader and the Nonpar- tisan Leader sticking out of my pocket. JUST LET JERRY TALK “He very politely asked me to let him see the Minnesota Leader and I most cheerfully complied. I want to say the way that little fellow devoured the contents of that good old Leader wasn’t slow. When he handed it back to me he said it was sure a good one; with a great and vigorous kick, so I asked him what he thought of the Nonpartisan movement. He said that it was all right but he didn’t like the ‘leaders.’ apolis ‘a gentleman whom I happened to know by sight, came in and he greeted - my companion, whom he called ‘Tom;’ very cordially. Well, this gentleman was 'a_ rather loud talker and it was no trouble to hear what he was saying. - After he kind of run - When we got to Minne« . for success.” - | down, I got up and offered him my seat and said to him: “‘Mr. Bacon, I want to commend you on what you said to us last week at the banquet of the Livestock Breed- ers’ association held at the Dacotah hotel in Grand Forks. One of the reasons why I liked what you said was because it was absolutely right and correct; and the other reason why I admired it was because it sounded just like extracts from Townley’s . speeches.’ “This seemed to tickle everybody, including Jerry. As you may guess, I was in for a little general discussion. What I learned from it was this: don’t discuss rotten internal conditions of our country. Let! everything go by- default and saw wood. Tell it to the president or his successor after the war is over, but don’t ‘hamper the government’ at this time, no matter how rotten, or how much rotten shoddy goods some enterprising individual or corporation may put over on our Uncle Samuel. Don't say anything, but let Jerry tell it.. ; ALL EAGER TO SEE THE LEADER “And as I traveled on over the prairies of good old North Dakota in this same Pullman car I found others who were interested in the Minnesota ~Leader and the Nonpartisan Leader, including porters, brakemen, conduc- tor and two very intelligent young ° ladies. They got- so taken®*up with - them that it was impossible for the newsboy - to interest them in story books“or chewing gum. Sk ““Take it from me, brother, that a great many people that we are not counting on are seeing the light. “O yes, I forgot—the drummers are énterested too. They don’t believe in it. ¢ : “The real reason why I am writing . you this is to put you next. You per- haps don’t know who these fellows, < Jerry Bacon and Tom, are. It is ‘Bacon & Junken,’ or- ‘junked-up’ - : bacon,” or " ‘baked-up . junk’—anyway, they -are the fellows who are going ‘to shoot the Nonpartisan league of North' Dakota so full of holes that it won't’ hold alkali water. = “Look- out for them!: I'mfi..-youis' ’

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