The Nonpartisan Leader Newspaper, April 14, 1919, Page 14

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S —— ADVERTISEMENTS A Big Opportunlty for the Farmers' Buy your fence direct from a bona file MANUFACTURER that sells its entire output DIRECT to the FARMER. SPECIAL OFFER We sell in carloads or less carloads. If you can get others to.go in with you, and take a carload of 34,000 Ibs. or over, we will allow you to deduct 2.cents a rod from the prices listed below, and 10 cents a spool You can make a big saving by gettmg your fence in carlots. it over with some of your neighbors. Minneapolis, Talk Stillwater takes the same rate as Get the rates from your agent. In carlots, fence takes 5th class and in less than carloads, it takes 3rd class; and barb wire 4th. We can make delivery of straight carloads of barb wire at excep- tional close prices. Write if you hke, telling us what you want and we’ll tell you just. what it will cost you at your station, either in small lots or carloads. pay anyone a commission on what you buy? Get your re- qmrements from us and buy as cheap as your dealer can. | from the price of the barbed wire. | | | ! | guarantee eve tion. All our fence is ful must make good or we will. | | i Style No. rod of fence we sell to give absolute satisfac- 9% gauge top and bottom wires and 12% gauge intermediate wires, and is heavily galvanized throughout. Our fence Only two profits on Pendergast Fence—YOURS AND OURS. + Stays . Weight Price per Line per Spacing of Line Wires per 100 Rod F.O.B. Wires Height © Rods Rods Stillwater 7-26-16 7 26 16 3, 314, 3%, 434, 5%, 6 550 30¢c | 7-26-30 7 26 30 3, 314, 31¢, 434, 514, 6 725 39¢ | 8-34-16 - 8 34 16 3, 314, 314, 484, 5%, 6, 8 650 35¢ | 8-24-30 8 34 30 3, 314, 314, 434, 514, 6, 8 825 44%c E 9-42-16 9 42 16 3, 3Y4, 314, 434, 5%, 6, 8, 8 725 9c 9-42-30 9 42 30 y 3%4, s 434, 5%, 6, 8, 8 900 481%¢ fl 10-50-16 10 50 16 3, 314, 314, 434, 514, 6, 8, 8, 8 825 44%c \1 10-50-30 , 34, ,» 434, 5%. G. 8,8,8 990 53%¢c I GALVANIZED BARBED WIRE 12% GA £ il 2-pt. hog 3-inch spaclng, weight per 80-rod spool 85 lbs ....................... $4.45 il 2-pt. cattle 5-inch spacing, weight per 80-rod spool 80 1bs. ...ieveeveevninnnn 4.25 4| 4-pt. cattle 5-inch spacing, weight per 80-rod spool 85 lbs 4.45 - -Staples, 25 Ibs. ciiiecivessssniansosasnins eese 1.40 il Brace wire, 25 lbs. Galvanized soft No. 9....... 1.35 i ;] Big circular upon request. UNITED FENCE CO. of Stillwater, s %% "o St S DON'T NEGLECT A RHEUMATIC PAIN b Go after it with Sloan’s Liniment before it gets dangerous Apply a little, don’t rub, let it penee $rate, and—good-b, twmge! Same for external aches, pains, strains, stifiness of joints or muscles, lameness, bruises. Instant relief without mussiness or soiled clothing. Reliable—the bi| eelling liniment year after year. . .0 nomical by reason of enormous sales, Keep a big bottle ready at all times. Ask your druggist for Sloan’s Liniment. 1Sloan’s Liniment Kills Paixu 30c, 60c and $1.20 OLDSMOBILE 6 1919 Model 'rou«pins . Car Just Your Name THAT'S ALL. Then X wfllhllyonho'tozet this car with- cost. Otherssre cars Mli :W":upcrlmuo nor. money medody e l at home; keep on fith your, y ambitious. "m“"Ay"“"‘ e ~ Mention the Leader When ‘Writing Advertisers These prices sub]ect to chnfite without notice. BUY DIRECT FROM ABOVE AND SAVE TIME! Order from your nearest factory. OFFXCES A!\D FACTORIES: 300 Main Stillwater, Mlnn You will Iu delighted with thc comfort and as- must and will convince yo otherwise you" wil not be out one penny, Try a palr at our risk GENUINE U. 8. +* ARMY MUNSON LAST, WORK or DRESS $3s85 ON ARRIVAL Send NO honey Blessed comfort and built full of solid wear. Two full oak leather goles—double the wear of ordinary shoes. Broad, low, double-wear heels. ected I'I&Defl of splendid quality leather, dunhle, soft and e. Easy as velvet on tender feet. Dirt ex- cluding tongue. Built to and roughest wear, 0’. We can’t how ‘800! be all gold out at these m‘gmw wait 1 smm=epiall This Coupon Now ===== Boston Mail Order House, Dept. 329B i Essex P. O. Building, Bouon,Man- shoes I mark X postpaid, I am approval and I’rplxk ’"’7;\‘ nl:yl money back MMWI ‘want ie {3 Army last WORK shoes, only $3.85 on srrival [ Army last DRESS shoes, only $4.38 on arrival eesssBiZ@eassee ‘ Name..ceooserccssssccssssscosssss Address.....cieevenenes esasessncuinecceessCOlOrianse NEW MBNIT(IR..&‘-';E:.IRIIN AGENTS 5o £, ook, sotully boing 0. Anal-othe bost—tho Viokel pllnted—looahom WANTED '_‘_’:° SEND FOR FREE OUTFIT OFFER THE MONITOR SAD IRON C0, 131Fay St, BIG PRAIBIE, OHID Denmark’s Experiment in Education - (Continued from page 8) regarded by that great flock of volun- teer experts who are ever shouting: “More of this, more of that; get fer- tilizer; buy this and that machmery,, use blooded stock, etc.” Their advice may or may not be good and the farmers do well in not following them blindly. The Danish farmer’s success is at- tributed very largely to his shrewd combination of work with science, the science of commercial efficiency. And the farmers there have gotten this combination through thelr popular high schools. These schools are also able to give attention to cc-operation, which with state ownership is the farmer’s means of going into busi- ness, that is, controlling his prod- uct beyond the farm limits. In our schools, on the other hand, not only training in co-operative prin- ciples but the very idea of co- operation and state ownership is outlawed by special-interest con- trol. The following simple description by a Danish farmer’s daughter, who had attended one of these schools for a few months, will indicate the spirit of the popular high school: “The best time in which to vxsxt a popular high school is on an ordi- nary week day. Educationalists and friends genuinely interested in the ideas behind, and the work done in, these schools may always obtain ac- commodations in the home of the principal for a stay of several days. “A summer day in the life of a high school girl will begin at 7:30 in the morning. After morning coffee a short prayer is read in the principal’s drawing room, the pupils standing si- lently in little groups. This is’ fol- lowed by a psalm, and then an ad- journment is made to the large lecture hall, where the proceedings are opened with the singing of a national song.- POPULAR LECTURERS FOR STUDENTS “Then the principal ascends the tribune, a raised dais somewhat in the® style of a church pulpit. Perhaps he will speak of one of the national he- roes, a statesman, scholar, king or poet; or he may choose as the subject of his lecture some important period of Danish history. We will imagine that he is speaking of Blicher, the moorland poet. He relates the sad history of that lonely and tragic fig- ure, pointing out the peculiar inten- sity and grip of his poems, and con- cluding with the, story of the splen- did struggle he made for the right of free speech in Denmark and his great share in the Danish people’s fight for a liberal education. During the lec- ture a perfect silence has been main- tained in the hall. The girls have lived for an hour out on the Jutland wastes with Blicher. The method of teaching is open to impeachment. It may be maccurate, it is often imag- inative, and it is certainly nnsclentlfic. ‘But it fulfills its purpose. “After the lecture clothes are chang-’ ed, and in a few minutes the girls as- semble in the gymnasium for drill and exercise. We Danes are keen gym- nasts, and nearly all Danish' girls are able to pride themselves on the pos- session of fine figures. The exercises are designed to furnish already strong young bodies with grace and elasticity, to create harmony between body and soul. The girls sing and shout much during this hour, and the overshadow- ing spirit is one of gayety. We do not go through our work with the same grim seriousness which we have heard is for the most part_to be found in . an English gymnasmm. A refreshing shower - bath is taken at the end of the hour. “Then follows a travel lecture. A ; editor, man knowledge of geography is obtained by descriptions and-pictures. -There are no textbooks. -The pupil is not " required to learn anything by, heart. The lecturer speaks simply about na- ture, and the life of ‘the people in various lands. He climbs the moun- tains, crosses the seas in quest of peril and adventure, lands in strange ports, sunburnt lands, southern mighty gorges, great plains and for- ests. He speaks of the sonorous life of cities and -the somber, starlit si- lences of the waste places of the earth. NEEDLEWORK IN GARDEN OR FIELDS “At the close of this hour a penod of recreation is insisted upon, during which it is strictly prohibited to re- main in the classroom. Some of the girls take a short walk; others play tennis on the school courts. “At 1:30 the girls commence needle- ° work. In fine weather this is done in the garden, or the fields near the school. One of the teachers usually reads aloud from a book as the girls are working. Instruction is given both in ordinary practical sewing and in art sewing, embroidery, ete. Spe- cial care is taken to develop good taste and a sense of harmonies and color. The needlework ends with a song, perhaps of Blicher’s, and then “smorrebrod” is taken, that character- istic Scandinavian meal. - “The historical lecture, generally given by the principal, is regarded as. the most important feature of the day. The same method-is-followed as in the other -subjects, namely, vivid descriptions, pictures, questions, con- versation. Perhaps the . principal _ speaks of .the long struggle between Greeks andPersians, between culture and barbarism. He shows how cul- ture was kept alive during the dark ages, and in the time of Alexander the Great spread from frontier to frontier of the then known world, pre- paring the ground.for the subsequent propagation of Christianity. “This lecture finished, a hymn is sung, and the work for the day is ended.” STATEHENT OF THE OWNEHSHIP MANAGE- MENT, GIRCULATIO , ETC.. REQUIRED BY THE Aurs_rorz‘corgg'ness OF of the Nonpnrtlun Loader, published weekly at Paul, Minn,, for April 1, 1919, i st State of Minnesota, county of Ramse; Before me, a notary public in and for fim state and county aforesaid, personally appeared H. K. Gaston, who, having been sworn according to law, d and says that he is the business man- ager of Nonpartisan Leudor. and mnt the following to the best of his knowledge and belief, a true statement of the ownership, management (and if a D publicaticn for the date shown in the above caption, required by the Act of Auzun 24, 1912, embodied in section 443, Postal Laws Regulations, printed pn the revam side of this form. to wit: 1. That the names and addresses of the publisher, editor, and business manager are: Plllb“flhel‘ 'he Nonpartisan Leader, Box 575, St. au, Minn, Editor, Oliver S. Mo Box 575, St. Paul, Minn. Pal:mmm; editor, E. Fussell, Box 575, St B\fslness manager, H. E. Gaston, Box 575, St Paul, Minn, 2. That the owners are: (Give names and ad of individual' owners, or, if a corporation, give its name and the names and addresses of stockholders owning or holding 1 per cent or more of the total amount of stock.) Cog:';m .'IMh;‘ Box 575, Si 'ox, x t. Paul, Minn, Estate of Edwin F. Wood, Box 575, St. Paul, 3 " That the known hondholden, mor A other security holders owning or hol t‘ geea. :&t or more_of-total l.muun t of bonds, mortzlns or other aecurmee are: (If there are none, 8o sta te.) 4. 'l'hut the two pnngrnphs nm ubove. vin thn names of the owners, stockholders, 'l & holders, if any, eonuln not only tho llnt ‘of stock- holders and security holders as they appear upon .the books of the company, but al in cases where the stockholder or security hnlder appens upon the books of the company as trustee or in any fiduciary relation, the name of the person .or cor- poration for whom such trustee is acting, 1s given; also that the said two paragraphs contain statements embracing affiant’s full knowledge and belief as m holden and security holders who do not appear upon the books of the company as trustees, hold stock and securities in a capacity other t that of a bona fide owner; and this afant has no reason to believe that any other person, association, or corporation has any interest direct or indirect in the said stock, bonds, or other securities than as so stated by him. That the average number of copies of each issue of this publication sold or distributed, through the mails or otherwise, to paild subscribers during the ulx months preeedln: the dlte shown above is—(This information is required 11_fE}'om dnll{lyubllmuorfi only) (Signature of business manager.) Sworn to' and subscribed before me this 20th day of March, 1919, (SEAL) H. G. TEIGAN. {My commission expires February 0. 1925 Note.—This statement must be mad and both coples delivered by the publisher to the postmaster,. who shall send one to Third Assistant Postmaster Gene &m islands, - A1 3 e_in "duplicate s e Pt - A - S—f A

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