The Nonpartisan Leader Newspaper, January 20, 1919, Page 12

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L} On Page 23 - &N Of Our Special Sale-by-Mail Book your copy of this 120-page bargain- crowded book has failed to reach you, borrow your neighbor’s copy, or send name and address to us for Free Copy at once. You will find this Sale-by-Mail Book filled with offers just as remarkable as this one featured on page 23 Neatly Modeled Good L3 Quality Percale House Dress Order By Number 36 P 324—See Page 23 e ol g of Your Sale Book Sizes, 34 to 44 bust measure, Skirt length, 39 inches. Dur- $ 69 able, practical House Dress made of good quality percale, inplain blue, tan or lavender. Black and white striped lawn ST is used as trimming on the round collar and front of dress, and as piping on the turn-back cuffs and at the waistline., The seams in this house dress are all carefully finished, and it has a generous width, stitched hem. - Another Example of the 60-Day ° ° ® Special Sale Offerings In This Book: e See Page 44 of Our Sale Book F ancy s:ass“l.lere Durable, man-tailored suit—cut from $875 Boy [ Sult fine quality Cassimere in attractive o . blue mixture with colored nubs giv- No.39P387 ing snap to the pattern. Plenty of pockets. Military back—that all boys like. Every wear point reinforced. Sizes, 9 to 17 years. ! These are only two out of 1000 similar opportunities to ACTUALLY SAVE MONEY that our Sale-by-Mail Book presents to you, However— after February 28th these money-saving offers will be beyond your reach. Our sincere advice is to ACT QUICK, The articles in this advertisement are shipped from Chicago and Kansas City. Address your order to the nearest house. Kansas City Fort Worth Portland, Ore. Please Write House Nearest You - e ————————————————— Your Cream (G*ET_‘S eparator NOW 7 i % S \\\\\\\\\\\\\‘\\\\\ § H ' N \\\\\\Q This Easy, Self-Earnlngr Plan! 4 RO R e e o s ! 2\ \ ~ clgggrgge.}‘fx pay. s%g s‘hip any size separator | ced direct from our factory and Bt!hg ireoon we were ) separator is very easy to clean and runs very > Why not geta!ufiygunnnmd New Butterfly arator for your farm and let it earn its cost by what it saves u the L GARDEN NOVELTIES CHILDS® GIANT KOCHIA, our | HOW TO COOK VEGETABLES, 1918 wnlu.hu?km ihl:ahee_ ;orbookht giving gfilm«bu serving ngiuhlu J all kinds. eeo- - Will make one’s doubly valuable. 10c. SPECIAL OFFER .. anywhere. Pkt. 20c, AERT . MATCHLESS LETTUCE. the tenderest and swestest Istiues Grown. Pit. 15, B10 CATALOGUE free. All fower and . TWO-POUND_TOMATO. beaviest, richest, DliDR, PIADts. and berries. We i andmost solid Toniato. A perfect marvel. Pkt.10c. ~ Vines, Ferns, . OMINESE WOOLFLOWERS. est new garden: Bects, Baans, * sopunl for bedding. -Nothing Ike it. Pkt, 20c. s ete, ‘5. JOHN LEWIS CHILDS, INC., Floral Park, b now. Supply llqlul. PLEASED WITH CONVENTION Billings, Mont. Editor Nonpartisan Leader: ! Just received the Leader giving the full report of the convention, and that report will forever silence the auto- crats and the lickspittles who were so afraid the League would fail -to be democratic. After Townley is elected (as he will be and should be by unanimous vote) what will the enemies find to howl about? But at that it is not anything in connection with how. the League is organized that has been hurting Big Biz but what it is organ- ized to do. It is always a good plan, however, to knock all the props out and let the fat boys down hard. - . H: H. STOLLARD. Mr. Stollard’s hopes about silencing the anti-farmer gang are probably doomed, to disappointment. It has more cause for howling now than ever because of the growing strength of the‘League and the North Dakota suc- cess. If argument or reason could have silenced them, the special inter- ests would have been dead years ago. The talk that “money” makes, can not be silenced by anything but the loss of the money. FROM AN EDUCATOR Whitewater, Wis. Editor Nonpartisan Leader: ; Inclosed find check for subscription to Nonpartisan Leader. You will be interested to know that I was preach- ing the gospel of nonpartisanism six months before you founded the Leader. ‘As proof of this fact and of the fact | that I am in hearty sympathy with the principles you represent, I am sending | you a copy of an oration I delivered in 1915, “The Passing of Parties.” You may also be interested to know that I am at the head of the public speaking and debating department of the Wis- consin state normal school at White- water and that one of my students is now preparing a speech on “The Non- partisan Movement.” -She brought to me a copy of your paper—hence my subscription. Yours for a fair deal all around, JOSEPH R. COTTON. KANSAS LABOR HELPS FARMERS ‘When the organizers and state com- mittee of the League in Kansas went to Topeka on December 28 for a con- ference they found state headquarters too small to accommodate the sessions. Immediately organized labor, through representatives of the industrial coun- cil, offéred the use of one of their halls and would take nothing in compensa- tion, declaring they were anxious to see the farmers organize and hoped to be able'to assist in the carrying out of the farmers’ program to eliminate‘ the unnecessary middlemen. - > ‘When the. state convention of the Farmers’ union meets in Topeka, Jan- uary 14 to 17, organized labor in the capital city will hold an open meeting for the purpose of fraternizing with the farmers. An invitation to this event has already been sent to the state officers of the Union. : PRAISE FOR THE LEADER “The West has only one first-rate magazine. * * * * Tt is the Non- partisan Leader, a weekly magazine issued in St. Paul at a yearly subscrip- tion price of $2.50. More than 200,000 farmers swear by this carefully edited, liberal periodical. Horace Greeley in his greatest day -never had half the influencé or circulation for the New York Tribune—and -that was known as the Farmers’ Bible. One who wishes to understand the farmer movement of the ‘West would do well to read this .| publication. Far from being a class publication, it is full of interest and stimulation for any town man who: wants to keep up with the fast-moving world' procession. — GRAND -FORKS Buy This Mixer I8 For YOUR Farm For Our FREE MIXER BOOK Grind Your Own Flour You can now grind your own ur at home and save the of having somebody. else do it. This' will save the cost of your mill in no time. The LIBERTY MILL is specially built for home use, and will grind anything from the finest Gra- ham and Whole Wheat Flour to the best poultry and stock feed. g Price is within reach of all. y Write or Catalog DIAMOND GRINDER CO., Dept. 10, Cedar Falls, Iowa. STl s - - oy Fruits Tixat ur_vive : Our Coldest Winters]| T!I;‘ew sorta will stang thtlal cold of th:d No;:hwe;lté e varieties we offer have pr tal and hardy under the most agvlge o:nd?tiona. Will’s Nursery Collection Pioneer Varieties of Tested Hardiness for o the Home 12 Gooseberries, « o« . 85 Plants, sold regularly for ., $4.45 Eighty-five Strong Plants for $3.50 -~Our 1919 Catalogue destribes fruits, vegotables :v-gt.. hg:nm :r::;’,m'l ahrabs for the North- “OSCAR H. WILL & CO. " Box G - Bismarck, No. Dak. IF YOU HAVE FRIENDS IN DULUTH .or along the shore of Lake Superior drop them a line jand ask them about us. They will tell you that we %’:‘J :: ?.':':’;?3-;533' Bosnmc‘ l:::ld themreoura of being the first in the spring and_ the last to out in the thru the ice =n the winter. Tslxx’ey will ;3 plke. 3 & flah—soles, lgue: flounders, 13)4¢; rockfish (uer), (red cod), (red snap- , 136; n’ghmh . pink ) (!mmmw ). ‘f - »_150; . net 50; ked Alaska had (cod) 'lsfaolour e thevery . . .- $150rder. Fourlarge warehouses takecare of ourorders. - 'SCANDIAFISH CO., Dock D s Mention th

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