The Nonpartisan Leader Newspaper, November 4, 1918, Page 12

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ADVERTISEMENTS You That is the opportunity I offer you. Live right at home—keep on with: spare time. That is all that is n little extra energy can do the little ALL ABOUT IT. SEND YOUR NAME [~ ON THE COUPON for full and complete par- ticulars with pictures and description of the FORD- SON (Henry Ford) tract- or free by return mail. l No Money, Just Your Name mar and I'll tell you the whole story. how Minneapolis, Minn. 1LL GIVE YOU THIS [ORDSON TRACTOR THE FARM MACHINE THAT HENRY FORD HAS PERFECTED AFTER YEARS OF WORKY YOU NEED A TRACTOR. bor scarce and high you'll need one NEXT PR ever before. It will take the place of two te Ty ore._than without one will cost you dollars—probably hundreds of them—But Needn’t Buy a Tracto Just a few weeks of spare time work will bring A real Henry Ford Tractor WITHOUT COST your regular work—give me only, your ecessary. Any ampitious farmer with a I ask. You can.” You tak You are under no obligation if you don’t like my plan. Lo!::lT ?VIE l':'oE E}La'\'f&sj NAME seeeereescecccscscsssacsssacsannes i Every farm needs one these days as never before. With la- ams and two men, To be Earn it You need no experience nor money. . Free Tnformation Coupon |WOrth a good | W. E. DAILEY, Manager, urprise if malled promptly. 604 Fourth ‘Ave. S., Minneapolis, Minn. I Please send meé free and postpaid pictures and description of s R Ford) Tractor with full information about the FORDSON (Henry I can get one free. ‘W. E. DAILEY, Mgl'., 'I B O. .........................State....T..... l J RFD. or BX. NO. coececceranrsecnnansnncnnnes i lVfiaWQE;PWZxahail%ong’ Physician Explains—Says Public Ought To Know What T hey Are Taking—Practical Advice on What To Do To Build Up Your Strength, Power and Endurance and lncreuel the Red Blood Corpuscles. The fact that Nuxated Iron is today being used by over three million people annually and that so many physicians are prescribing it as a tonic, strength and blood builder in weak, nervous, run-down conditions has led to an investigation of its merits by desig- oated physicians and others whose reports should be of great importance to the public generally. Amoug these is the statement wmade by Dr. James Francis Sullivan, form. erly physician of Bellevue Hospital (Outdoor Dept.), New York, and Westchester County Hospital, who says: “When one patient after another began asking my opinion of Nuxated Iron, 1 resolved to go thoroughly into the subject and find out for myself whether or not it possessed the real value claimed by its man,.facturers and attested to by so many t:qmment people. This is exactly what 1 lieve every honest, conscientious physician should do before prescribing or lending his endorsement to any product whatsoever. If an article is worthless we practitioners ought to be the first to know of it and if it is effi- cacious we are in duty bound to recommend it for the welfare of our patients. A study of I'he cur‘nmuilim:i of the !{ux‘:ted Iron for- mula so impressed me with the ther tic efficacy of the product that I immem:z“cly tested it in a number of obstinate cases. So Quickly did it increase the strength, energy and endurance of the raliems to whom it was administered that I became firmly con. vi of its remarkable value as a tonic and blood builder. I have since taken it my- P self with excellent results, There are thouy sands of delicate, nervous, run down folks who need just such a preparation as this bug do not know what to take ‘Therefore I have urgently suggested the widespread publicas tion of the sworn statement of the composie tion of its formula so that the public may, know what they are taking. This complcte formula is now to be found in newspapers throughout the country. It is composed principally of organic iron in the form of iron peptonate of a special specific standard and glycerophsophates which is one of the most costly tonic ingredients known. To the credit of the manufacturers it may be said that they use the most:expensive form of dron peptonate, whereas by employing other makes they could have put the same quan. tity of actual iron in the tablets at less than one-fourth the cost and by using metallic Iron they could have reduced the cost ta less than one-twelfth, but by thus cheapen. ing the product they would .undoubtedly have impaired its therapeutic- efficacy. In my opinion a careful examination of this formula by any physician or pharmacist should convince him that Nuxated Iron is to be placed among the very highest class ° and most strictly ethical preparations known to medical science. It excels anything [ have ever used for building ‘up the system and increasing the red blood corpuscles. :hereby enriching and fortifying the bloody against the ravages of discase, ; A » ALL THESE FREE Secret_ Looket and ‘Neck Chaif imitation Wrist Watch actory. Wfg. Co.. Frovidence, . 1. and Neck Chain, Pendant e for selll lties at 106 each. - Fresh Be in fashion. - C.-J.. Dale REPAIRS Send: us. Name and FOR ALL FURNACES AND supply REPAIRS and PARTS. . 17 8. Third Street, U. S. STOVE REPAIR COMPANY, Minneapolis, Mention the Leader When Writing Advertisers - Number and ‘we will 'STOVES Nebraska Paper Explains Bitterness Ruralist Carries Powerful Editorial on Reasons Why Old- Line Politicians Viciously Attack League N ITS issue of October 1, under the title of “The Power ‘of Nonpartisan- ship,” the Nebraska Ru- ralist carriés a splendid explanation of - the un- principled attacks on the Nonpartisan league farmers which many persons’ outside the League states find it hard to understand. These attacks, ac- cording to the Ruralist, are the nat- ural reactions of politicians who dis- cover that the common people have at last got the secret of political con- trol. The flunkies of the special in- terests, as well as the special inter- ests themselves, are therefore fight- ing for life, and in such a fight they consider any methods proper. Because of its masterly presenta-‘ tion of this important point the Lead- er gives the ‘editorial in full below: THE POWER OF NONPAR- TISANSHIP Farmers have always been a major- ity in Nebraska. Farmers and wage- workers have always been an over- whelming majority. Yet Nebraska has never been governed by farmers and wage-workers. It has always been governed by a relatively small class composed of business men and lawyers, the latter usually represent- ing business interests. These have usually made some efforts to please the farmers, for’farmer votes are im- portant. But as to a government dominated by the farmer and laborer point of view, we have never had such a thing. . Why has the smaller class been able to keep in control? Largely by rea- son of its nonpartisanship. When half the farmers' are con- tentedly grazing in one party pasture and the other as unresentfully keep- ing behind the fences of the other party, the farmer influence is neutral- ized. The opposing farmers balance each other. When heavy weights on the ends of a teeter board are about balanced, it doesn’t take a very heavy weight at the middle to turn the scale and control the teetering. A nonpar- tisan minority holding this balance of power, whether a railroad, a liquor ‘ecommon sense.” group, a business organization or what not, is able within limitations to control the state. These minorities study their own interests. Party feeling never leads them, as less keen people are often led, to vote against their own inter- ests. They may make an appearance of party regularity. Their secret and determining influence is used accord- ing to their interests. When the safely hitched partisans have about balanced themselves against each other, these nonpartisans step in and turn the scale their way. We have never believed that the horror which old-style politicians and many - business interests profess to feel for the organization of farmers known as the Nonpartisan league is due to any particular things which the League promises to do. Other parties before this one-have had such programs and their opponents were able to retain their balance. The Non- partisan league movement, on the contrary, has put these interests into a panic which one national week- ly describes as an “adjournment of In their panic these politicians and interests have invoked mob law, patriotic prejudice, legal violence, everything save reason and the good American system of arguing out a difference. Why such excitement? Undoubted- ly, we believe, because the Nonpar- tisan league has stumbled “upon the secret of political control- which has given the old-time minorities their power; and these minorities see their power threatened accordingly. The secret is nonpartisanship, that same organized nonpartisanship which has been ‘the salvation of the, compact minority in a thousand battles. Now that the farmers, a majority, are getting the secret, can the minor- ity manage longer to dominate? It believes its rule is menaced, hence the excitement, the desperation which it shows: - Whatever the other merits or demerits, this farmers’ organization has hit upon a political method which bids .fair to revolutionize political control in this state. Woisconsin Man Hits Kept Press Subscriptions to Farmers’ Dispatch Still Falling Off, Says ‘League Member, and Sends the Proof \ Tony, Wis. Editor Nonpartisan Leader: I am inclosing herewith a copy of a letter I sent to the Farmers’ Dis- patch demanding that they discon- tinue sending the paper. I am sending you this particularly as evidence of the fact that subscrip- tions to. that infamous paper are still falling off. % H. CORNELISSEN. Here is the letter Mr. Cornelissen sent. It is probably much more in- teresting to the readers of the Leader than to the owners of the Farmers’ Dispatch: 5 Tony, Wis. Circulation Manager Farmers’ Dis- patch: I understand. that a paper called the Farmers’ . Dispatch, but more properly the “Anti-Farmers’ Dispatch,” still arrives in my name at our local postoffice, although I have refused to accept the same since the date of expiration. : One can very plainly see your an- tagonistic stand against the Nonpar- tisan league, which . represents the ideas of 99 per cent of the real Amer- ican farmers. You also oppose co- operation ‘as ‘well as real organiza- tion of a political kind' among the | farmers, who, I believe, have as much Minn. | rights as persons in any ‘other. indus- © PAGE TWELVE. -~ . s this fall some more. states “to back up Lincoln: = . try. I am a staunch member of the Nonpartisan league and a firm be- liever in co-operation and organiza- tion among the farmers. You oppose the factors above mentioned and- con- sequently the farmers in general. Erase my name from your mailing list at once. Look to your own class for support and not to the farmers. Yours for more falling off of sub- seribers, H. CORNELISSEN. Asking the special interests to buy their own kept press-would be like asking some League-hating merchants who are to be found here and there to trade among themselves. Mr. Cor- “nelissen might as well say, . “Go hang yourselves.” The exploiters can not live without the exploited and the kept press can’t live without a public to fool. Who knows' but that Old Nick already has the suggestion-to make kept press editors who “have: passed on read their own stuff-as a penalty for misspent lives? } _ BACKING UP LINCOLN i Two years ago North Dakota prov- ed Lincoln’s statement that #You can’t fool all the people all the time,” gnd ‘are gomg. - 7 e A A A R R

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