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ADVERTISEMENTS T “Say Doctor, This Prescription . " Works Like Magic”—Physician Explains Why Nuxated Iron Quickly Increases the Strength and Energy «f Men and Brings Roses to the Cheeks of Nervous. Ask the first hundred strong, healthy looking people you meet to what they owe their strength and energy and see how many reply “Nuxated Iron.” Dr. James Francis Sullivan, formerly Physician of Bellevue Hospi (Outdoor Dept.), of New York and the Westchester County Hospital, says: “Thou- sands of nervous, run-down, anaemic people suffer from iron deficiency but do not know what take, There is nothing like - organic iron—Nuxated Iron—to quickly ene rich the blood, and thereby put roses in the cheeks of women and give men increased strength and energy. Unlike the older forms of irom, Nuxated Iron does mot injure the teeth nor upset the stomach, but is readily assimilated and you can quickly recognize its action by a renew feeling of buoyant health. \ No matter what other iron remedies you have used without success if you are not strong or well you owe it to yourself to make the following test: See how long you can work or how far you cam walk without becoming tired; next take two five-grain tablets of Nuxated Iron three times per day after meals for two Rundown Women ® Over Three Million People Annually Are Taking Nuxated Iron weeks, Then test your strength again and ' see how much you have gained. To be ab- solutely sure of getting real organic iron and not some form of the metallic variety always ask for Nux- ated Iron in its original packages. Nuxated Iron will increase the strength, power and endurance of dilicate, nervous, run-down people in two weeks’ time in many instances. MANUFACTURERS' NOTE: Nuxated Iron recom- mended above by Dr. Sullivan can be obtained from hysiclan’s pre- 5 an success by its manufacturers or money refunded. It is dispensed " SAVEBIG on your * implements —_ A gan DIRECT FROM GALLOWAY’S FACTORIES! howGalloway can save big money on yor o) Y‘on have enrs;l ofY G‘:lrl great val § g:eton. Galloway’s business plan isthe big economical way of doing business. UNNecessary expense, is sa: your year's supply will amount to hun Free Book! Act Now! Write Today! [ next order or shipment. Fll Send at once Let it be your buying guide, hlnhm gnde implements at the very lowest prices. Weship fro; luffs, Spokane, Kansas Oity, to save you freight. WILLIAM GALLOWAY COMPANY, Box 8 » WATERLOO, IOWA D —— TN i Equity Exchange Service Let us handle your grain and livestock on commission. If you are interested in the co-operative elevator system let us help you and advise you. The only way to keep in constant touch with the Equity Co-Operative Exchange is to subscribe for the Co-Operators Herald, Fargo, N. D. It contains a price list of our mail order grocery department also. EQUITY CO-OPERATIVE EXCHANGE St. Paul, Minn. when you buydirect from Gallow. factories. Thy i ¥y {o! 4ok rom n& ay's factories. 6 saving on 300,000 customers—so: o and get Gallownlyt’%?&nl%gg%‘mk. m 8t. Py Chi How, while you T Give us your THE 1918 CAMPAIGN The 1918 campaign is on! What are you going to do to help win_it? Of course you will vote right and of course you will boost for all you are worth. But what about helping with the organization work?. Of course we know you will go along with the organizer in your community and do all you can but why not be an organizer yourself? Our success depends upon how complete we can make the organization. Now who do you expect to do this work? Not Big Business surely—or the Chamber of Commerce or big millers or the big packers or the Steel Trust. They are doing all they can to tear down our organization. Who is building it? Why the farmers themselves! League organizers are farmers and farmers’ boys who know 'that if we want this job done, we’ve got to do it ourselves, How ‘sbout you? Can’t you give some time to this work? Can you go to work now? We ~have & training course for organizers which will fit you for the work. If you can’t arra nge your affairs to do organizing now, can’t you take the training course now and be ready for work after seeding or this fall after harvest? Think what success in the fight for democracy at home means in the winning of the war— what it means to our Loys at the front. Think what taking government out of the hands of Big Business and the profiteers means to you and to your family and to every working man and woman in the United States. Let the boys at'the front know we are backing them in the fight for world democracy by cvleat%:g‘up the profiteer at home. you help? Write us today about organization work gnd get on the firing line. [ | o— om— — — —— — — — — — — ou— o—— w— — | THE NATIONAL NONPARTISAN LEAGUE, I 5 Bducational Department, Endicott Bldg., St. Paul, Minn, : ] I waunt full particulars of organization work. - I P ! Name......covinaneoncasonns sreeceisenans versasen l‘\ s e A A : AAATEBS . vivrvion ss s's snid svn ksl bipwid s 3 ag b te skck Ao | e e : NMention the Leader When Writing Advertisers e P PRSI Wty Svec ey vt o ........................................... The Political Slackers of Today Editor of Iowa Homestead Flays the Malicious Attempts to Shut Off Farm Loans =]OW the farmers’ fight for justice in the Northwest looks to an outsider is shown by a recent edi- torial in the Iowa Home- stead, which goes into every other farm home in that state: The same editorial appeared in tfa Farmer and Stockman of Kansas City and the Wisconsin Farmer, whigl reach hundreds of thousands of farm- ers. The editorial follows: “Tt is extremely regrettable that at a time when our every energy should be exerted in putting a larger area than ever under the plow and prepar- ing for bumper crops, certain small- minded men should take advantage of the opportunity and of their tem- porary authority to play politics at the expense of the farmer. If I were to fasten the yellow badge of a slacker upon any man it would be upon one who takes such a time to allow par- tisanship to dominate him and to make political capital out of the needs of our nation and the efforts of the patriotic farmers to meet those needs, +rily and decisively. *{ have in mind the recent ill-guided, ¢nd to my belief, malicious attempt oi certain politicians in St. Paul and the Northwest to punish the state government of North Dakota for pass- ing the law which enables needy and deserving farmers to secure the seed without which they would be utterly unable to devote even the normal area to the wheat necessary to feed our own soldiers and the soldiers of our allies. I have already pointed out how certain officials of the Federal Land bank at St. Paul, aided and abetted by certain officials at Wash- ington, shut off all loans to North Da- kota at the very time of the year when they were most needed, notwith- standing the fact that over one-half of the counties and fully seven-eighths of the farmers of that state were in no manner affected by the passage of the feed and seed law to which these politicians objected. “I am glad to be able to report this week that the farmer legislators who put the feed and seed law on the North Dakota statute books have been vindicated in every respect; the St. Paul Federal Land bank officials have been obliged to drop the suit, which they had started in the courts to de- clare this law unconstitutional and of no force and effect, and North Dakota farmers are once more able to secure their loans at 5% per cent interest, about one-half what they have been obliged to pay for years and years. There was a big convention of farm- ers at Fargo a couple of weeks ago. One of the best speeches of the three- day session was delivered by a young man who was born in the western part of the state, on the land which his father had homesteaded. This young man has left the farm. Some one asked him why he h@ done so. This was his reply: S « My father is still livikg on the land which he homestgaded 34 years ago. He is 80 years old. He wrote me last week foF money. He has been paying 10 per cent interest. always, often as high as 20 per cent; and still, after 34 years of farming, he has to bor- row off his son. That’s exactly why I’'m not a farmer myself to- day.’ “What Uncle Sam, the state of North Dakota and all of us, individu- ally and collectively, must do is to improve conditions to such an extent that no 80-year-old farmer, after a third of a century of hard work in the field and furrow, shall be obliged to pay 10 per cent interest on the needed money and then not be able to get enough evén at that rate. We must help the farmers, not only ‘of North - PAGE TWENTY B R B Iy S Dakota, but of every state. The poli- ticians, who, for their own selfish in- terests, hinder and hamper the farm- e:3 must be overthrown, never to at- .e.. v, to assert themselves again. I am very strong on this subject. It makes my blood boil to see a few men, in temporary power, taking advantage of the situation to play petty, picayu- nish, peanut politics. They would far better be out on the battle front serv- ing as a parapet for the bodies of the worth-while men within the trenches. The man who attempts to prevent the greatest possible farm production this year is a traitor to his country, and the sooner he is branded as such and known by all men the better. “I can not conclude this without printing a note which I received this week from Governor Lynn J. Frazier, the farmer who was elected to the highest office in North Dakota two years ago and who is certain to be re- elected this year. He read my former article, in regard to the attempt of the politicians to shut off federal farm loans in his state in order to punish the farmers for daring to raise money to get the necessary seed, and he wrote me as follows: “¢‘Office of the Governor, Bis- marck, N. D. My dear Mr. Pierce: In my estimation you have hit the nail squarely on the head and have set forth the plain facts in the case and I appreciate your interest and fairness in this mat- ter very much. Wishing you suc- cess, I am, yours very truly, “‘LYNN J. FRAZIER. “I have no interest whatever in the controversy which is raging in North Dakota and Minnesota, as to who shall govern those states, except the inter- est that I take in seeing that the people shall rule, a prerogative long denied them in these two great states of the grain belt. If the opposition continues to be so unpatriotic and so narrowly selfish as to attempt to keep the farmer from raising the crops which the nation and liberty in gen- eral need so badly this year, it will receive the worst drubbing at the polls that these states have ever known. And it will deserve every bit of the drubbing—and more, too, in my hum- ble opinion.” OKLAHOMA ENEMIES Pickings are easy for the Oklahoma reptile press these days. If the edi- tors are not getting money for attack- ing the Nonpartisan league, it is be- cause they lack brains. A friend, M. I. Thompson of the Avard Tribune, has sent the Leader a number of clip- pings from the Carmen Headlight and the Cherokee Republican which he rightly calls “tommyrot.” W. A. Espey of Cestos, OKkla., is more fortunate in finding papers that recognize the rights of the farmers. He sends clippings from the Mail and Breeze and.the Drovers’ Telegram of Kansas City. These papers, although they never have been fair enough to indorse the League, support some of: the things the League believes in. HIT THEM WHERE THEY FEEL IT : Broten, Idaho. Editor Nonpartisan Leader: ‘I think that no farmer should buy any implement or tools of any kind - from firms that advertise in papers that are enemies of the farmers. All farmers and workingmen should stop | all the papers that. are working against the League. Those that like. the kaiser so well should be sent back " to Germany and never allowed to re- turn to the United States. I also think that Teddy Roosevelt should go there. I would rather vote for a big bulldog than to vote for Teddy. = - C. 0. VANSTRUM. - g ; v v 3 ! - = e -y .2 & {7 B 8 | b -0