The Nonpartisan Leader Newspaper, March 24, 1919, Page 2

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o o e o . f’ ‘ ADVERTISEMENTS A 10 PRESENTS FREE GIRLS 2 AAAR SRR ® = Get a Beautiful Heart— Q§ X Locket and Chain, Brecelet, waiian Rmz vnth beautiful mount. EEERE o 1.} Bgs3 bt g = g %’ g = .S. . tal wi lll W. 43 tures—a . A, PACE’ er- 254, Nu?‘oflu < I m TRIPLE . ND HOORS WALL Illfi FEED ENSILAGE P The cheapest and best feed for Dairy (] (7olws. Beof Cattle and Sheep. ‘Build a A TRIPLE WALL SILO g - Practically frost-proof. Guaranteed against wind storms. Write for free booklet. Independent Sllo Company SOW SWEET CLOVER With Barley This Spring Our best stand last year at Cloverlea Farm was with barley. U. S. Department of Agriculture recommends barley as a nurse crop for sweet clover. We have seed of highest qual- : ity. Send at once for sample. CLOVERLEA SEED CO. BLANCHARD, N. D. GET THIS BOOK FREE ';égggz'fiuznm T -umm"’” *h:flh: B Vel lyllfe vannblo al m:ns ez DWARF ESSEX. Hizhmtqua(l’rtx seed -tested - for purity and_germination. uick and save money. New bags 70c extra. Big War Garden Book free with se: ers .00 or over. Gotom- ozotfleldnndnrdmleed-. ADAMS SEED CO. Box O DECORAH, IA. STRAWBERRY PLANTS Best June and Everbearing Varieties. Full line of hardy nursery suck direct to grower. Write for price ll < BAILEY’S NURSER Dayton’s Blufl Sh \SEND THEM WE_WILL MAKE UP™ SOFT, WARM ROBES AND COATS for you. We also tan hides into leather, \Maweat ‘saving to you. Onrl’rlool.m and shipping tags free. Write today. MII.I.ER TANNING COMPANY Crookston Tannin lhflon D . cnooxs'l"ou, RiNNs - FOR SALE . l'lncy hand picked navy beans at 8l%c per Ib. 1§ % (Order must be for 50- Ibs. or more.) Good oak fence posts in_ carload lots.. Dry wood of all kinds in’ carload lots. REUTER BROS., Cnrlos. Minn._ Write for prices on wood and . poab‘ OUR COVER THIS WEEK Beginning -with - this week the Leader will pubhsh a series of portlalt sketches of the three' League congressmen who are to serve in the coming con- gress. The first is of Congressman George Morley Young of Valley City, N. D., elected from the second congressional district of North Dakota. Mr. Young was born:at Lakelet, Ontarlo, on December 11, 1870.- He grad- uated from the University of anesota in 1894 and in the same year went to_ Valley City, N. D., to make his home. legislature and again in-1902. From In 1900 he was elected to the state 1904 to 1908 he was a member of the state senate and was president pro tem. of this body in the 1907 session. He has been a member of congress since 1913. In the 1918 primaries Mr. Young, with the League mdor%ement received a vote of 21,225 to 7,616 for his opponent. At the fall electlon -the vote was 20,566 to 7 038 Unlike the state’s other congressmen and officeholders at the time the League was organized, Congressman Young welcomed the new movement.. He rendered material service to the cause of the organized farmers at Washington during the first two years of farmer rule in North Dakota.~ When the League entered the conglessmnal campaign in 1918 (it had not taken part in congres- sional elections” in 1916) Congressman Young was offered and accepted the farmers’ indorsement. He went back to congress as a League man. ‘' The League, however, defeated other North Dakota-congressmen who, when the League was organized, gave help to the political gang against the farmers. CONVERTED BY THE DISPATCH Firth, Neb. Farmers’ Dispatch, St. Paul, Minn. Dear Sirs: I have been a subscriber’ to your paper, which I valued highly, for some time. At first I would sub- seribe from year to year, You see I have a brother and other friends who emigrated to North Da- kota years ago and knowing they merit the best there is, caused me to want to keep posted on results, ete.; so I would renew my subscnptlon yearly. Well, after a while I noticed in your paper (I think it was) how a fine young man by the name of McKaig- started something and of how a Mr. Townley had unlocked the way by which farmers could come into their own, namely, by mixing $16 w1th poli- ties. Well, this caused me to want to keep in touch with the movement, which I did. After a while I “smelt a mouse.” The Dispatch said the whole thing was wrong, and from that it went to worse. = Such temble stuff the Dispatch pubhflled Then I got in earnest for the Dis- pateh; so I had you advance my sub- scription in chinks, Some of the articles were so strong that at the first opportunity I enriched the League exchequer $16 worth, and then I coughed up $16 more for good luck, thinking that would put’the Dis- patch out of biz, but i long-winded and, keepm me: posted, I found that 1 had mo idered ‘the knockout blow,/ o ‘_vght a life membership, and ob;:lio y smoke, how those_farmer legislators in.North Da- kota are cutting' off chunks of liberty and getting ready to pass the same around to all of the - people of that state. ; By the way, Mr Townley is going to be in Lincoln, our beautiful city, , where everything is orderly, to tell us how the thing is done. I wish I could meet you there. .Do not forget the date, March 6. I know the meeting . will be a success bzcause the farmers “never started anything they couldn’t do ”» WALTER DIETZ. -ALL KAISERS SMELL BAD Vernon, Col.’ Editor Nonpartlsan Leader: I see much in the papers about how the flunkies of the special interests and Prussian militarism are trying to head off the Nonpartisan league and suppress all advanced ‘ ideals—which brings up the words of Doctor Samuel, Johnson many generations ago that “Patriotism is the laet refuge of the scoundrel.” Their leglslators wrap themselves in the flag Whlch as Cecil Rhodes, the British empire builder, said, is a.na- | tion’s greatest commercial asset. They " will allow no one to float any other: banner, and ‘they: try ‘to cram he as spretty - . because their honor is at stake. brand of patnotxsmd wn the mecks of a hundred million people who have proved by their sacrifice and devotion to their ideals of democracy that they do not believe in using their flag as a commercial asset of any kind. Shall we humbly bow our necks and bump otur backs and pray for grace to become abject slaves and love our chains as real men love liberty? Or shall we arise and, as Edmund Burke said, if we must fall, let us fall as strong men rather than submit to such brutal tyranny as the two-legged swine of America wish to fasten upon us. . A kaiser named Bill would smell just as wholesome as one by any other name. Yours for a day when this nation will be ruled by right law rather than by special privilege. F. N. JOHNSON. THE HOLY PRECEDENT Some angels in the olden days, = - Equipped with gowns and wings, Were Bolsheviki in their acts, - So the poet Milton sings; { And, thinking wrong, were thrown in hell, ‘Condemned to endless flame, For p]annmg strikes; the tale is true For the Bible tells the same. And now this holy precedent Big Biz has made its own; And should you even think of strike And let your thought be known, They’ll hale you to the judgment seat Without the right of bail, And brand you Bolsheviki qmck With a thousand years in jail. —F'rederick W. Smith. GLAD TOWNLEY WAS INDORSED Letcher; S. D. Editor Nonpartisan Leader: I am pleased to hear President Townley has been indorsed by 99 per cent of us League members. - His ene- mies hate Townley for the same rea- . son that a burglar hates a policeman. It is not only 'a ‘good showing for Townley, but it is a credit to the in- telligence of the farmers of the Northwest. Every . farmer and la- *borer should unite, not only for their political and economic interests, but [ ~~*MILLARD CHRISTOPHER. - WANTS ALL STATES IN Nt Z ‘Millboro, S. D. -Editor Nonpartxsan Leader: It sure is good to see ‘A. €. Townley re-elected and to see. North Dakota -put. it all' over the old gang. I hope the League will send organizers all over the United States, so as to have things in right good shape for the fall of 1920. 7 ‘WILLIAM KOESTER. \ . THE PRINCIPAL TEST ey am not a pohtman and my other abits’ arefgood." —_ ARTEMUS u:f- vnl ; :%h l‘nt of ‘hueg‘ -y 3:'.?}“ u:.h.x:‘;:fl eeding n;r. 3 heep. Shows of i :rnnn. Also ducflctg::. ourwnndefl'? e-t e in Animal 7 5 v Sterifty " Bitedas - Prevention, tlrkmlgb::fio». rtificial - ing, Syuteml of Breeding detail. Write ! hooklot -nd lelm w mn scientific breed booklet % -—u'x?codu it rea ?m- L "d s A'I'IONAI. $CHOOL o IMAL ADVERT’ISEMEN‘I‘S Wearwell Tllresfi ‘ARE STILL CUTTING OUT m g TIRE PROFITEER We alflp them to- you C. 0. ON APPROVAL NO MONEY IN ADVANCE And every tire is zunnn- Other Sizes In Stock - EQUITY TIRE COMPANY 1208 Hennepin, Minneapolis WEARWELL TIRES WEA_R WELL How to Breed Live Stock "Nl' ;'."i'n'u o3 Gutour wonder!ul free booklet, * cience has at last devised a remarkable lnsimmam ror the trulment ot Del(ness Just a few min application in your own home each day is mqulred. testi! wonderful restoration of hearing.’ If you have head noises—if you are only slightly hlrd of learing or almost totally deaf, don’t delay—the Aura- sage may be the means of brlnzinz back your WONDERFUL NEW*METHOD The Aurasage calls into play the dormant organs of the ear, strengthens them by exercise and breaks down the catarrh mnaesuon which causes 95 per cent of all deafness. Try the Aurasage ten days free in your own home without a penny in advance—we gladly send it to you by prepaid parcel post—no cost to you if it fails to help your hearing. Write today for valuable klet and our great FBEE otrer of the new 96 Tone. Mears Ear Phune MEAR R PHONE CO. Dept. 423, 45 W. Mth New -York Clty veep 8 it easy to hmest and n'vo every. Pays for N itself the flnt year. . S Fu 115 guaranteed. Sold direct at manu- factorers Rawlude Slloes BLA'?K TAN We cut oul SEND VOUR BIZ OT'YOUR £ IONEY the profiteer- eman, because n Ap- rmval Leatlier soles and heels, wear-proof, especlnlly treated uppers. Dirt and on appm'vnl RAWHIDE SHOE COMPANY Hennepin Ave. & 3rd St., Minneapolis Remember, $3.48 a pair on approvnll Have a few choice bulls for sale. !ired by Nestor No. 27070, of advaneed registry - breeding, Herd tuberculin fiested by, the state. - ; teed to be perfect in ma- * terial and workmanship. Size Plain kid = Tubes 30x3 $ 8.80 $ 9.60 $2.00 80x31% 11.50 2.60 . 2.50 82x31h- 13.45 14.50 = 2.66 31x4 17.35 - 18.70 38.15 82x4 17.60 . 19.00 3.25 33x4 18.50_ 20.00" :3.30 34x4 18.95 = 20.40 8.45 35x4% 25.86 28.05 4.40 37x5 80.80 . 88.65 ~ 5.40 INNER TUBES FULLY GUARANTEED rice, o

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