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oK. WAKE UP THE LA‘W "E‘IS! : F i : ADVERTISEMENTS foug e et : Cook, an. .llllll = Ed:torNonparhsan Tonies . |IlIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIllIIllIlIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIlllllIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|iiIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllll T Your paper strikes me -all right. .=z While*Unele Sam is fixing prices and bidding all -to-work or fight let us o 37 ‘hope he will boost.the lawyers, doctors and dentists out of bed before 9 o’clock. The ‘writer liad occasion, recently, to ..Jhave three teeth extracted, and arose - at’4 o’clock, traveled 28 rmles by rail, -"and ‘arrived in the city at 6 o’clock. I- “waited:until 10 when a dentist appear- edat. his office (alfeady half full of <patu=nt’ sufferers) and had .the three *teeth extracted plus three more in 20 minutes time, for which the dentist ‘. received $3, a ‘moderate charge in .. these days.. ‘Yet'how many of us are . »-» _ Daid at’the.rate of $90 for a day’s work? How large a family can the common laborer afford to support when he must give one day’s wages for a half hour of the dentist’s time? -One of my neighbors, a poor home- steader, had a sick daughter and sent for a doctor who was met at the train and taken by team to the patient, was carted back to the train in a few hours, as ‘he came and went in -the night. The girl died, and her father ‘worked three weeks in a lumber mill to pay the doctor’s fee of $40. It is a safe bet that the homesteader didn’t Builf For The Man WhoWants Good Machinery IlIllllllllllllllllllIllIlllIIllllfllllllllllllllll_ HE Gray Tractor has proven its worth on the farm through four full % seasons.. Its entrance into the fifth season is inaugurated with a de- What Pfll‘lllel‘s say mand which will tax our greatly enlarged facilities. Gray models of four years ago are giving fine service today and require very little For plowing purposes the Gray ‘expense for upkeep. In power requirements the Gray is never found wanting. gmu';d onyDeat aa i¢ vacks no Its average load is four 14 in. plows or & and in even furrows. Have the 80 in. separator. Abundant reserve power best looking plowing of any trac- enables it to handle the extra heavy loads &%, Plovine done around here. get paid for any spoiled lumber. encountered at times on every field. work. g Who hasn’t hung around a lawyer’s The Wide Drive Drum gives the Gray advantages W.-C. FRANKENSTEIN, office until the middle of the forenoon over other drive wheel designs. It increases trac- Crandon, S. D. tlolilg ;grface. l:t reducels't-_ weightitsmlli distri!;:tea tha: . wel over larger surface. eliminas use o . . s differential gears. It makes the Gray a tilling im- g‘i m‘lfi,en r;\fre ell;)emglra;s fl}: plement on soft, newly plowed or newly seeded land. leaves no wheel tracks, thereby It °t"‘:“:‘ezh?’e°d5'mks ¥ ttumshe:hea% of fl‘% plows poving us 7 bushels barley per so tha is veg on rned under and com- pletely covered by the furrows. It never leaves 3€r® as our neighbor's yield Fldees o whcel ot T the Bel. s i it o ol Mk waiting for the learned gentleman to ‘get up and come down with his legal advice? Who hasn’t slipped him a ten- o spot and after finding his advice punk and losing the case, hasn’t been com- pelled to fork over several times that In quality of construction the Gray has no superiors W. A. KUEHL 3 much ? at any price.’ Its 40 H. P. Waukesha motor is cooled e " and lubricated so perfectly as to give constant de- Yale, 8. D. We are not averse to' paying for the “know how” but hate like the dickens to dig up our hard-earned shekels for the know not how. And we _believe if these professional men were obliged to arise at the same time in the morning as the farmer and laborer do, their brains might clarify enough to realize that the average farmer has paid a higher price for his technical knowledge, besides having many more times thé capital invested in his business than they—and they ‘might not be overcome with indigna- tion when Uncle Sam says: “Try to earn your salt, boys; we can’t atford to feed slackers 142 H. B. ELLSWORTH Lumber Manufacturer. pendable service, Hyatt & Timkin roller bearings reduce wear and prolong its usefulness. No bevel gears are used in the transmission. _ GRAY TRACTCR CO., Inc. . 239-30th Ave. 8. E., Minneapolis, Minn. 18 Drawbar H. P, 36 t H. P, HARROWING - i Wel:ht 6200 lbs. Write for the Gray Book and Specifications- Use the coupon at the m of the page or drop us a post card. Quick action is advis- able if you have in mind purchasing a tractor this fall. FllIllllllllIIlIlllllllllllllllilllllllllI'IllllllllllllllllllIlIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIlllllIlllllll_lllllllllIllllllllllllllllllllll THE FARMERS’ OWN PAPER \ El Campo, Texas Edltor Nonparhsan Leader: That remarkable letter - of Percy Sloane’s in the June 10 issue of the Leader sure did have an oversupply of intelligence in it and must say that 1 also enjoyed it. Is he afraid’ that the Nonpartisan League, the farmers -and laboring people, will be able to keep some of their interest, rent and profits in their own pockets? Too * bad the people are beginning to wake" ~ up and that Big Biz can’t keep them " asléep much longer with their hot air " campaigns and a lot of ‘their dirty stuff. - The Lea‘gue is growing here_ -right along in spite ‘of the opposition and some of the dry weather. The Leader fumishes good moisture for the League as-it is the only real farm paper I ever saw. or read that is with -M send in!om-uon oa the Gray Tractor. I give you data, below, which will ]lllllllllllllllllIlllIllIlIIIIllIllllIllIIllIIllIlIIIllIlIIIIIlllIlllllllllllllllllllllIlllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllIIIIIllIIlllIIIIIllIIIlIlIIlIIIIIlIlIIIIlIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllll i b USSR EEEanS i.lllIIllllllllllllilllllllll % s We offer a of fortll Hfll'llll fo:mum"mmo?flg‘%m& (:} no y"u&'w‘."n, m‘i. ; ’ : : 4 ; i ’ -f the farmer 1 the mwivet e - | 00 Eam Torms G L8 R, TR THE HIGH COST OF LIVING gage on easy terms at 6 per cent. For culars ad THE JEWISH: AGRICULTU 8 174-C Sevond Amuo . mAR QGI’.E.'I'\'Y GFDAHLSTEDT i m”mmw.xa%m Everybody is hit by the high cost of liv!nx The profiteers are doing. their beot to blame it on the farmers.. Do you know, how much the farmer gets out of .every dollar the” consumer spends? . The expert says he gets less than 26 cents. The rest goes to the middlemen. The whole story of how they take ‘this out of the farmer and the con-: sumer is told in this boo It you want to know what’s the matter with farming—read: *The Huh Oont of Livlni It also tells how the. farmers have changed this mt.e on affairs ustralia flmouch political power. “ : NEBRASKA’S AIM - " Broken Bow, Neb. detor Nonpartxsah Leader: - : T would like to help as much as I ‘e can—-to defend the League from. i -5 “trumped-up charges. I have seen a ' ‘number of threats in the papers. We. farmers want to get out from under | 'fmi,h coal Lo the golf ¢ : :-"':"NATIONAL NONPARTISAN LEAGUE of fnt financiers v il n_ hay do - FIFTH FLOOR Emnco'rr BLDG. ; sr. PAUL 3 This boo'k tells so0 well the story of. the ht which the Nonpartisan league is ; “ing against profleeerinz that we have a the publishers for u special edition.' 'gli:' n‘}fl“sf ce of ““The I%fl:‘ (Josti a! f‘ihl‘{m‘t; is $1. lsyo You zan buy _this poci;!., on - for copy. T _quick w) e supply lasts. < Book. ' Every S member abon]g have a :opy Goodlhddflmw .“fll v“ Blu.. a'l’llnulu, VI el