The Nonpartisan Leader Newspaper, June 24, 1918, Page 22

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ADVERTISEMENTS City Physician Says Ordinary Nux- ated Iron Will Increase the Strength of Nervous, Run-down People in Two Weeks’ Time in Many Cases. NE glance is enough to tell which peo- ple have iron in their blood, They are the ones that do and dare. The others are in the weakling class. Sleepless nights spent worrying over supposed ailments, con- stant dosing with habit-forming drugs and narcotics and useless a pts to brace up with strong coffee or other stimulants are what keep them suffering and vainly longing strong. Their real trouble is lack of iron in the blood. Without iron the blood has no power, to change food into living tissue and, therefore, nothing you eat does you good; you don’t get the strength out of it. When iron .is sunphed it enriches the impoverished blood and gives the body greater resistance to ward off disease. Numbers of nervous, run- down people who were ailing all the while have most astonishingly increased their strength and endurance simply by taking iron in the proper form. And this, after they VE u{(m IN 'rm!,m bwov TRONG, HEALTHY. VIGOROUS FOLKS'; had in some cases been going on for months without getting benefit from anything. 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 can walk without becoming tired. Next take two five-grain tablets of 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 help put color in your cheeks and sound, healthy flesh on your bones. But you must teke iron in a form that can be easily absorbed and assimilated like Nux- ated Iron if you want it to do you any good, otherwise it may prove woise than useless. Manufacturers’ Note: Nuxated Iron recommended above is one of the newer organic iron compounds. Unlike the older organic products, it is easily assim- flated, does not injure the teeth, make them black, nor upset the stomach. The manufacturers guarantee successful and entirely satisfactory results to every purchaser or they will refund your money. It i8 dispensed in this city by all good druggists and gen- eral stores. The Grain Saving Wind Stacker W gt ol \\\\ ‘I \\\‘\ \ \\\ h‘\\\ W - Saves the grain your separator wastes. Eliminates back-lash, lighter running, superior to all stackers. It puts the grain in the sack, does not waste it in the stack. Demand the Grain Saving Wind Stacker on the separator which you purchase or hire; costs no more than an ordinary wind stacker. L help you and advise you. next order or shipment. EQUITY CO-OPERATIVE EXCHANGE St. Paul, Minn. Made by Threshing Machine Manufacturers in the United States and Canada Wil \\\\ W N X AN \\\\\\x\§\\ R View looung mm hwpef :Mwing grain trap near stacker fan; also auger mnnin;fmbeneathmpfort«un SRR e Equity Exchange Service Let ‘us handle your grain and livestock on commission. If you are interested in the co-operative elevator system let us 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. Give us your SO R e FREE FREE FREE By-laws for use in organizing a real Co- Operative Livestock Shipping Association Why not organize and get full value for your livestock? If interested, write for by-laws and other information to the EQUITY CO-OPERATIVE EXCHANGE SOUTH ST. PAUL, MINN. . Your Mnrtlument in the Nonpartisan Leader Ruchu a !lfllhn Rud.n llention the Iader When Wriflnx Advertisers PAGE TWENTY—TWO A How Farmers Are Freemg Their Press (Continued from page 14) ness, neither do they have the time to give it supervision. For that rea- son the service bureau provides the system of accounting under which the newspapers are operated. The bureau also keeps in touch with progressive newspaper men all over the country so that it may supply able editors and managers to a new paper, or to one whose subscribers are not satis- fied with its policy. The service bureau also employs an expert plant and machinery man to give advice on the purchase of new material and new outfits, so that men unfamiliar with this business will not have thrust on them by sales- men unnecessary and expensive ma- chinery not adapted for their needs. Correspondents at Washington and at the state capitals provide national and state news of the developments of the day that affect the farmers. A newspaper plate service is maintained and copy_ supplied for “ready prints” for use in newspapers that are not all printed at home. A REAL PEOPLE’S PRESS Of the three great institutions of education in modern life—the school, the pulpit and the press—the latter is the only one that is not under the control of the people who make use of it. The school instructor and the course of study are selected by a school board. directly responmble to the people; the minister is called to a church by a vote of the congrega- tion; but the members of a community have nothing to say as to who shall be the editor of the newspaper that is to serve them, to keep them in touch with the world, and furnish the foun- dations for their intellectual activities. The great dailies of the big cities appear before their readers without the stamp of an individual; they seem to speak collectively and in tones of finality, and they do. That is be- cause they are able to speak for the dominant element in society which manifests itself through the owner- ship of the big industries. In fact, the metropolitan newspaper is one of " these big industries and therefore it~ expresses their thoughts and its poli- cies are all moulded to protect their interests. These dominant elements can form but a small portion of the subscribers and readers of a news- paper. Therefore the community as a whole can not assure that the whole truth will be presented to it and noth- ing suppressed. This, in a measure, i8 also true of the country press. The local news- paper is controlled by an individual, with all of the weaknesses and am- “itions of an individual, yet he is in a position to speak for the sentiment ot the community. And the speaking that he does is modified by his own prejudices and interests. He may be a man of vision and culture and he may be only a man of cunning and shrewd business instincts. The people are at his mercy. What he says . stands for their expression, for their opinion, for their point of view. A STATE NOT AFRAID TO THINK The farmers of North Dakota recog- nized this fact. They are moving to make their own ideas the recognized public expression of the community. Even in some places in which the editor of the paper was friendly they have purchased his paper and made him editor and manager on a salary.: : By ‘this means the people who read the newspapers own them and keep them .close to the common people: in their news and editorials. North Dakota, the farmer state, the land of vast dlst.ances and of big men, of fellows who are not afraid of an idea, is developmg in many ways a culture of its own. Tt is b‘lnldmg its own drama to give expression to the peculiar phases of its life, through plays written and acted by North Da- kota people. It has struck out on new political lines and it is building a press that will speak for North . Dakota and will not reflect the sen- timents of the business-controlled press of the cities as the North Da- kota press has so often done in the past. CLOUTING AN EDITOR Wibaux, Mont. St. Paul Dispatch, St. Paul, Minn. Dear Sir: I am asking you to ‘dis- continue your paper addressed to me, for the reason that you are opposing the Nonpartisan league, the only or- ganization that ever has advanced the farmers’ " interests along political lines. * The measures which = the League is proposing are aimed for the betterment of the conditions of the farmer. The fact that all industries are organized, it seems to be not more than fair for the farmers to organize for their mutual interests. You no- tice that the big interests are the first to pitch fight with the organ- ized League farmer and I can’t see why a newspaper that derives the greater part of its support from the farmer would oppose any move _that is put on foot to the betterment of his condition J. A. HAWKS. Shall Mobs Rule in Nebraskar ; (Continued from page 16) Fred Knaak H. Keiskhafer J. A. Holmes Will W. Keller E. Buchholz August H. Gugersen Fred Reickopke Gust Miller Herman Keller E. H. Stemkraus Wm. Neumeier J. A. Schomberg L. Schomberg Joachim Finck Henry Soost Paul Strathman W. P, Galvin Rudolph Beotger Paul Bua! Frank H. Gruenwald R. Black Fred Backhaus Emil Johnson Bob L. Hoeppner Bert Verplank C. H. Boeschult Erick D. Nelson QOscar T. Johnson | QOscar T. Johnson F. (ilhr‘llstmx‘\son oge! gaa:l G. Ferfl Elmer Saltz ‘Ward Ed. 0 Snierr C. Darnell Henry Aechrens Joseph Aechrens A. L. Martin Joseph Maser G. Heybeack August Cluchstrof Albert Aertenburg. A. C. Peterson Charles Sanne Roy Bovis Frank Schmid Earnest Strong Frank Synovac Owne Hunter John Wunter Charles Pahl Fred Beltz Jess Wiley John H. Hunter Charles Strong Olur F. Stewart W. M. Palmer Clmrlu Affel Fred Keller R. R. Hetrick “l‘.' L. ‘Daniel G. Kettler Frank Miller Albert Kiepke Emil Caek Erich Miller Anton Freiek J. H. Knutzen Carl Surkstorf J. H. May August Wesaell Julius Kirstine Bielmrd Worthe Fred Synovec Hy. Kuhl . Clyde McKenzie 0. J. Robinson Theodore Synovee Rudolph Synovec G. T. Vinson M. J. Sloggett John 8. Kubista William - Kuhl Robert Ruhlow John Kirstine David Kutner Sr. George J. Hetrick John Schenerer rry Buch A. F. Sommerfelt Charles Boeker ,}!ichard Synovec Chnrles K. Lubke . Holmes Brand L. R. Graesser Homer Brich J. C. Clyde Bowling Clark Button Ernest G. Miller Ernest G. Miller D. C. Culbertson Ralph Hetrick Charles Thompson Roy H. Pilger George H. Marsh Moah Ober Adolph Werkmerster J. B. Wilson Peter Bahr R. J. Miller Guy Otto H. H. Hertick. : %mnard Steinkrans Alfred Steinkrans ‘Weaver Larson George Shermer L. E. Walton E. P. Pettitt R. W. Twiss VAL H, nolhnder __Huxo Duohr

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