The Nonpartisan Leader Newspaper, March 3, 1919, Page 10

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Shop First . Nuxated Iron and its widespread sale ADVERTISEMENTS in th o] [ e ] There are two honest ways to make money. the other way is to save it. is as good as a dollar earned. The farmers are organizing to save big money that belongs to them; that is unjustly taken away from them, filched by a bad system of marketing. But there is money wasted by bad buying as well as by a bad system of selling. It is bad buying not to look around and get the best you can for your money. It is bad buying to build up by your patronage firms anxious to destroy your organization. : The Leader can be of some assistance to you in buying right. Firms that advertise in the Leader are particularly worth a !:nal. It will pay you to write to them and to inquire about their goods. They are anxious to sell to the farmers and to give good service to the farmers or they would not be advertising in the farmers' magazine. ! . . . . | You will get better attention, always, if you say that you saw_their ad- vertisement in the Leader and have greater confidence in advertising in the Leader than | in advertising in any other paper. [ A ] But the Leader can give you further help than may be given in the l advertising. If you want to buy something that you do not see advertised write to the Leader about it. The Leader business department has much information on file about various lines of business and will make inquiries for you and tell you where you can buy to good advantage or give you a list of firms from whom you can buy and ask them to give you a description of their products and their prices. If you want buying help of this kind write to Advertising Service Department. . CUT OUT THIS COUPON AND MAIL TODAY R s TR T S TR T RO e b ) ADVERTISING SERVICE DEPARTMENT THE NONPARTISAN LEADER Box 575, 8t. Paul, Minn. 2 Write plainly here the articles you intend purchasing within a rea_sonable time and we will immediately advise reliable dealers to furnish you information on same. Kindly limit your inquiry to three articles at one writing. Leader One way is to earn it and he farmer can’t afford to neglect either. A dollar saved Public Should Demand Original NUXATED IRON Physician Warns Against Danger Of Accepting Substitutes—Says That Ordinary Metallic Iron Preparations Cannot Possibly Give The Same Strength, Power and Endurance As Organic Iron—Nuxated Iron The remarkable results produced by (it being estimated that over three million people annually are today using it) has led to the offering of numerous substitutes, and these physicians men- tioned below say that health officials and doctors everywhere should caution the public against accepting substitutes for Nuxated Iron, 2s these substitutes, instead of being organic iron may be nothing more than a metallic iron compound which may in some -cases produce more harm than good. Those who feel the need of a strength and blood builder, should go to their family doctors and obtain a prescription calling for organic iron—Nuxated Iron— and present this to their druggist so that there may be no question about ob- taining the proper article. But if they do not wish to go to the trouble of getting a prescription for Nuxated Iron then they“should be sure to look on the label and see that the words NUXATED IRON are printed thereon. There are thousands of people takinz iron who do not distinzuish between organic iron and metallic iron and such persons often fail to obtain the vital energy, strength and endurance which they seek simply because they have taken the wrong form of iron. 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 medls for two weeks. Then test it'om‘ strength and see how much you have gained. Manufacturers’ Note: The widespread publication of the above .information has cen_suggested by Dr. James Francis Sullivan, formerly physician of Belle- vue Hospital (Outdoor Department) New York and the Westchester County Hospital; Dr. Ferdinand King, New York Physician and Medical Author, and others so that the public may be informed on this subject and pro- tected from the use of metallic fron under the delusion that it {8 Nuxated Iron or at least something as good as Nuxated Iron. Nuxated Iron is not a secret remedy but one which is well known to druggists. Unlike the older, inorganic iron products it is easily assimilated, does not v Injure the teeth, make them black nor upset the stomach. The manu- facturers guarantee successful and entirely satisfactory results to every purchaser or they will refund your money. all good druggists. It is dispensed in your city by S;t:t:l;d Varieties—SEED CORN’ ALF ALF A, Wimple Yellow..... ] 95 Per Cent | Dakota No. 12, Minnesota No. 13... or Better per Ib. Silver King White.. ] Germination Grimml,b 5 5 c We specialize in three varieties of PET A S osh it Wl pure strain seed corn. Our stocks Cossac}:, $1 50 were raised for seed. Field sort- ber b-_. R RR R ® ed, hanger dried seed corn. Order | These are pure strain alfalfa seeds of un- . psual purity and germination. The abov at once. Price $4 65 low prices apply to any quantity. : per bushel .......... ] Bags Always Extra, at Cost. P—O'I‘ATOES—M@ His Faith 5o Charlés T, Brand : h Dakota Farmer Thinks Author of Federal Grain NortGrag‘eso Means Well—The Position of the Leader Blanchard, N. D. Editor Nonpartisan Leader: Will not the Nonpartisan Leader permit me to call its attention to an instance wherein I think it is mis- taken? At some risk of being called pro-miller, which would be pretty bad, I want to say that I think you made a wrong estimate of Charles J. Brand, chief of the bureau of markets, in his establishment of the federal grain grades, though I know you want to be just. I do not altogether like those grades; in some respects they seem very unfair to the farmer; but they are enough sight better than what we useéd to have under Minne- sota inspection, so far as my experi- ence goes. A single set of rules had to be adopted to cover a very vast field. It must be borne in mind that we wanted federal inspection. If it is not right— and I never heard of any great move- ment that was made right from the start—we should go about it with pa- tience as well as persistence to get the defects remedied. So far'as I can see there is no evidence whatever that Mr. Brand has wilfully favored the millers at our expense, save that he has not done all the things we wanted done, and that doesn’t prove it. And I may add that Doctor Ladd has said to me that we should proceed in amicable spirit to get desired changes. 4 DATUS C. SMITH. EDITOR’S NOTE: We are pleased that Mr. Brand has at least one de- fender among the North Dakota farm- ers, and one who has such an intelli- gent interest ip problems affecting farmers as Farmer Smith of Blan- chard. The Leader made as hard a fight as any one to get federal instead of . state grain grading, and we would not advocate going back to state grading. Also we perfectly agree with Mr. Smith that efforts should be devoted toward getting the federal grades changed, and that it should be done in an amicable spirit. If Mr. Brand is now willing to go at it in that spirit, the Leader will be the first to sup- port him. It would take too much space to reiterate here the. very conclusive facts and events concerning Mr. Brand on which the Leader has based its estimate of him. We have never expressed an opinion of Mr. Brand except it was based on facts and fig- ures published in these columns. We wonder if Mr. Smith attended the federal grain grade hearings at Minneapolis and Fargo in January or February, 1917, over which Mr. Brand presided? The editor of the Leader did, and at that time in signed articles in the Leader described fully Mr. Brand’s attitude toward Doctor Ladd and Doctor Ladd's testimony regard- ing what grain grades should be. We own to conceiving a prejudice against Mr. Brand dating from that time. His overbearing attitude, his cutting short of Doctor Ladd’s testi- mony, his insinuations that Doctor. Ladd and the other investigators of the North Dakota Agricultural college were ignoramuses and his open prom- ° ise to millers that Doctor Ladd’s testi- mony, being “worthless,” would bear no weight in the final discussion and fixing of grades, although Mr. Brand had had no time whatever to go into Doctor Ladd’s figures—all this, we admit, gave Mr. Brand a bad start in our estimation. We think also that Mr. Brand him- self realized he carried things with too high a hand at those hearings, for since the round scoring the Leader gave him then he has been more will- ing to listen to the farmer’s side of questions coming before him. But all we can do here is to refer persons in- terested to our back files reporting those hearings, and to facts concern- ing Mr. Brand we have published in. various issues since then. As to the justice, or rather injustice of the federal grain grades, it ought to be conclusive that, since our orig- inal protest against them, protests have also been made by various state governments and farm publications which at the outset were silent and which considered the Leader’s original _protest as “radical” and as an agita- tion merely “to make trouble.” It is also significant that Mr. Hoover, as war food administrator, saw fit to mitigate some of the worst features of the grades, after farmer protests. STRONG FOR THE LEAGUE Moorhead, Minn. Referendum Canvassing Board, National Nonpartisan League, Fifth Floor Endicott Building, St. Paul, Minn. Gentlemen: Today is my birthday, and I feel very proud to have the Honor of casting my vote for A. C. Townley for president of the National Nonpartisan league on my birthday. You will also: find inclosed a check . for: $36 and I wish you gentlemen would distribute the money as follows: Sixteen ddllars to renew my mem- bership for another two years in the Nonpartisan league; $10 to, Mrs. George S. Loftus; and $10 to | Presi- dent A. C. Townley as a New Year's present and for good luck. I wish President Townley and all of you a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year, and all of you good health and a long life, and I am sure you will win. Win out in the good course you are proceeding in to make this world a decent place in which to live. L. WALKER. ‘THE FRAME-UP SYSTEM In a speech in Washington recently Joint Chairman Manly of the national war labor board said “there are little groups of irresponsible * anarchistic employers all over the country” who are refusing to arbitrate labor dis- putes and who, in many instances, use detectives “to provoke violence by the use .of dynamite and all sorts of other unfair methods.” The speaker declared that the em- ployment of these detectives is wide- spread, and cited this instancé of how these employers operate: . “A little group of millworkers brought their complaints _before the national war labor board. The em- ployers’ reply in that case was that they were a lot of I. W. W.s, anarch- ists, Bolshevists, ete. We - thought ‘we would look into the matter, so we got ‘access to' the records of the de- partment of justice and we found that the leader of the so-called I. W. W, the Bolshevists and anarchists ‘was a detective in the pay of this very em- }p&oyfir who made the charge against Early Ohio-—Standard in all mar- kets. Our stock is pure, scab- less, plump, smooth and big pro- ducer. Order today at the low Sl B YR T FARM SUPPLY CO. Specialists . " BOUTH DAKOTA -8IOUX FALLS,

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