The Nonpartisan Leader Newspaper, January 6, 1919, Page 14

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ADVERTISEMENTS e TIIE “PEIIFEG'I'IMI " PSSR B | ot from puge ) ol fire 1n your tank heater and ssve all the frosble, or T '"flm’.' e a0 gm : £ on long-time amortized payments after 5 '‘Perfection Kero-Gas Burn rod ltnd: - S me of n ‘;'.:&n..‘ mfitf' e m?lhofic':la x:g“amntlon exoept o nu .‘:'fi“ : d the same manner as the federal farm cement huur you hno bee 10 f0 509, loans-now provided by» our own gov- for. upor w % Wdh } i 2 ,j’d" is heater is not an ] . ernment, m“ '!T.'% 7.' Kgfimm% = There was no blacklisting at the ° l(cro-eu mwuoum. ATbert Loa, lmu. . 2 - state mine and all employes were re- quired to be members of the miners’ How Government Succeeds -as Producer X A | union. Blacklisted miners from pri-- ' ’ F u Rs N " ’ D vately owned mines found regular em- A more for D ployment and the town became the Est. over yrs. mpt cash returns guaranteed. No commission. _HIDES TANNED INTO ROBES $2.50 10 $6.00 | in New Zealand. shlp%ngvto us than b aelun athome. We are the largest Hide and Fur House center of the most active educational We tan Furs. Sell Leather, Fox and Wolf Poison, Our450-page Hanters’ and Trap- A co-operative store belonging to - f#‘" * Guidé tells how to_become a successful trapper, and how to raise Skunks. ox, etc, Ship your Hides, Furs, Pelts, Tallow to Us. Write for Price List. the .miners had practically all the movement in behalf of labor anywhere iSCH BROS. Dyt 13 MINNEAPOLIS, MINN. tride, ) cooperative tallong o ‘ N ] HEN it was War Pan prepared ~ for War. : Now it is Peace and Pan is prepared for Peace. Pan believes in and prac- tices Preparedness. It is the nature of the business -- the character of the Enterprise. ' Perhaps no manufacturing industry has the broad ap- . plication, the wide elasticity, possessed by the modern automobile plant. From Peace to War, or from War to Peace, 1s only a step when the equipment is complete. There is little lost time and little lost energy. From the bayonet to the plowshare is only a whisper. The Pan Motor Company has invested in flxed assets-bunldlngs, * machinery and equipment, outside of real estate, Over $1,800,000.00 N It has no past due debts, no bonds, no mortgages, no preferred stock. : . T pany was organized which employed some 20 tailors and made goods on, TELL THE ADVERTISEB YOU SAW IT IN THE LEADER orders from all over the country. oy It pays as it goes, goes as it pays and s paymg and going every' : day. Its capltal is ummpalred and it has a comfortable surplus. No company of like proportions and of hke age was ever on a more : substantlal financial basis. ; \ .~ PAN MOTOR C()MPANY SAINT CLOUD [Pan Town], MINN Mention the Leader When Writing Advertisers | = - " Editor Nonpartisan Leader: ~ that he has left. b - 1,247 national banks out of a total of- __annum:on all loans.—JOHN SKEL- = ' § TON: WILLIAMS, (Comptroller of s —T-v-w:T P e P g e At o From the public libra):y more books were read in proportion to population than in any other town under the Brit- ish flag. The school is one of the best = and the head teacher is the author of some- of the best pamphlets on the labor question anywhere to be found ~ in print, - The pastor of the leading church is the secretary of the local Labor party organization and is a frequent speaker in ‘the . labor cam- paigns. i Joseph McCabe, the Bnt:sh scien- tific lecturer and author, the man who translated Haeckel’s “Riddles of the Universe” into English, told me that he had-had a more appreciative hearing in that town for a purely scientific ‘lecture than had ever béen given him anywhere in the English- speaking world. It has been found here as elsewhere that it is-not true that employes in - publicly owned industries form a vot- ing machine and always vote with the party in power. In an election which took place in that parliamentary dis- trict while I was there the Tories, then in office, got but one vote to every seven cast against the Tory party and in behalf of labor. The nation as a prodncer of wealth becomes all the more ef-- fective in the greater task of also ° producing men of character, of capacity and of public spirit. That (i the record where it has been - “tried out.” (The sub]ect of ‘the next article in this series will be “The Nation as a: Banker.”) = A BACK NUMBER Ocheyedan, Iowa. Inclosed find an old 1916 clipping from the Sioux City. Journal, showmg up one of the despicable acts in Roosevelt’s career. Now he is trying his best to do some more. - Still the. Journal - finds it possible to back him up now. A T. R. has fooled the voters enough. He is done for. - A little noise is all g ADOLPH OSTUMAN. -The editorial referred to gives an ,,Yfi‘ account of Roosevelt’s junker tactics ' ¢ in seizing the Panama territory from the republic of Colombia by intrigue and force of arms.- His explanation was “We needed Panama and 1 took it.” Yet the same man is now berat- ing the German junkers. To the shame of America this act of rampant imperialism has not yet been righted for no other reason than that we are stronger than little Co- lombia. - In his message to congress on December -2 President: Wilson asked congress to ratify the new Colombia treaty that our professions before the - world might square w1t1;, our prac- tlce s FACTS ON THE BANKERS It was ascertained at that time that 7,600- were openly charging rates .of - interest forbidden by the laws of theu' respective states and by. the national bank act, and- that despite the easy money conditions 2,743 " banks were charging on some of their loans inter- est of 10 per cent or more per annum. One bank admitted under oath' that- it was charging an average of 25 per cent perannum ‘on all of its loans; another an average of 36 per cent; and .- a third an average of 40 per cent per - Currency. in the Forum for November. Yet the “leading” citizens and- the big: papers are-sure that the farmeris - ‘safe in the banker’s hands and t the; Nonp'arhsan league farmers ‘aré all ! in wanting state ‘rural credxt—- o

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