The Nonpartisan Leader Newspaper, June 30, 1919, Page 2

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NN L ) ADVERTISEMENTS . | d > 27 > [ ;__-__.v & &7 > W - f [ Sk FREIGHT PREPAID A ) () ‘::‘)‘-_jfl:l—-‘il_ ((];,; ,_In ,,7 4 Wé Need Immediate Business Our busy season is past and we are faced with a slack period for the next-few weeks. But we have our factory to keep in operation. We must keep our organization together even during the summer months, therefore in order tc make sales NOW we offer for a few weeks only Special Reduced Prices on All Pendergast Fence ? You can get immediate delivery and it surely will pay you to buy at these attract- ively low prices even though you do mnot use the fence until later. READ WHAT USERS SAY Plainview, Minn., May 4, 1919. Breda, Iowa, June 10, 1919. Gentlemen: Received fencing O. K. and thank you for the way you handled my order. When in need of more fencing will surely write you for prices. Yours truly, E. R. GREEN. Gentlemen : Your fencing is very satisfactory and cheap at the price you are selling same. I saved gbout 15 cents per rod. Wishing you success, I will do my best to make a ° few sales for ‘you. I remain your customer, NICK M. WITTRY. Pendergast fence is ‘'manufactured complete in our own factories right here in the North and Middle West. We know the kind to meet your requirements. Every rod is fully guaranteed tc satisfy or your money will be refunded. WE PREPAY FREIGHT TO YOUR STATION IN STATES SHOWN BELOW . long before there was a thought of the American revolution. . first, that gradually grew, interfering with the sounding metal, : OUR COVER THIS WEEK -~ This week we present on our cover page a picture of tl_le Liberty bell, with the prophetic biblical text engraved on it; One hundred and forty-three years ago, on July 4, 1776, Lib- erty bell rang out at Philadelphia, to anrounce the signing of the Declaration of Independence. The peal of the bell, like the first shot at Lexington, echoed throughout the world. The vigorous pealing of Liberty bell started a crack, minute ‘at until it became impossible to ring Liberty bell again. Liberty bell is silent today. It is held in state at Faneuil hall, Philadelphia. At its shrine, and on its infrequent tri- umphal tours throughout the Unifed States, it has been seen by millions of citizens. Wherever it has gone it has been greeted by throngs of men, women and children, to whom the. bell is a symbol of the liberty that we .enjoy. : Liberty bell is silent today, in a material sense. It can never ring out again, so that. its notes will be audible to the human ear. But who were the men who really rang Liberty bell 143 years ago? Were they mot the signers of the Declara- tion of Independence and the embattled farmers of Lexington, who fought against the world’s greatest obstacles for seven: long years so that liberty might become a reality? . . These were the men who rang Liberty bell 143 years ago. - Their descendants today can ring Liberty bell just as truly . as their forefathers did at Lexington, Concord and through the bitter, cold winter at Valley Forge. : e North Dakota’s embattled farmers, by their declaration of economic independence, have rung Liberty bell just as truly as did the farmers of Lexington. And in 12 other states, each day by the hundreds, more volunteers are pressing forward to the battle. Looking toward the historic Liberty bell, they 10 » 8, Galvanized Barb Wire No. 121, gauge Barb wire 2-pt. hog 8-inch spacing, wt. per 80-rod spool 85 ¢ ™ 0 e 0 {f 3 Price per rod delivered in . g £ .| & g B, e | | might well say: i 1 Z H 2 a E8Faq £3 Iowa |Minnesotal ‘g'p° | @ & o ) Wt SE g R i Wisconsin|gansa; i B £ T -] gESEE e e Missouri | Fano2® strong.” 4 n | m | @8 ndIEE 3 Nebr. g. & -26- spacing | G 3 .40 ii 83406 | 8 | 34 | 16 throughout 625 .32 331, | 36 . has never rung before. 8-34-30 8 34 | 30 For example, 75 .40 .42 .46 ¥ §_, l 9-42-16 9 42 16 10-50-30 700 .36 .38 .41 i) 9-42-30 9 42 30 3, 3%, 8%, 875 .46 4814 .52 £ 10-50-16 10 50 16 434, bl%, 6 175 .41 - .43 .46 :" 10-50-30 50 30 8, 8, 8 975 .50 .53 .57 5 t Barb wire 4-pt. cattle 5-inch spacing, wt. per 80-rod spool 85 5 Staples; 28 1bB. «ooeevisosnscnciocnsnssssive i, to A ; Galvanized brace wire, 25 1bS. ...cucveniieiieiieinenncnsenanns 1.35 | 1.40 Delivered prices outside above states on. request. BUY DIRECT FROM ABOVE AND SAVE TIME! Big circular upon' request. Order from your nearest factory. UNITED FENCE CO. of Stillwater, ggeé’fi“g‘if‘:"sfig?fw, HOW PAT WAS HURT Here is the story that Walter J. Maddock, floor leader of the North’ Dakota house of representatives, tells to illustrate the attitude of certain re- 3 actionaries who feamevery progres- sive law that is passed. ; ; “Even", after the progressive meas- ure is enacted and in operation, wheth- er it be an interest- reducing law, a hail insurance law or a state bank, they can not quite re- alize that the world hasn’t been shaken to its very founda- tions, but is still revolving on its axis. © “Thesé persons remind me of Pat, who was caught on the third floor of a hotel when fire started in the place. America’s Finest Separator Now Yours at Such Low Prices and on Terms So Reasonable You Dare Not Pass It By! - . HARRIS “CREAM GETTER” With the Exclusive Patented Equal Milk W. J. Maddock Distributing Sleeve B puse e oAy 3 te us. today without fail for full particulars of this great Cream Separator sale— America’s best Cream Separator now sold exclusively by us at prices-you’ll be \ glad to pay. All the latest improved features combined in a machine that does the work better, more easily and quickly than any other Separator. We will take & your old Separator off your hands and allow a liberal amount towards the purchase of your ‘ ® ‘‘Harris Cream Getter.”? Liberal time paymentsy @ HARRIS BROTHERS CO. 2%i&%d% : Owned and CONSIGNWO 0 Controlled by YOUR L Farmers The Equity Co-Operative Exchange ST. PAUL, MINNESOTA And Get the Highest Market Prices. Prompt Settlements, Liberal Advances. Sacks and Tags Furnished. smoke fumes, he was met in the door- way by a wall of fire. Nevertheless, he hurriedly pulled on his trousers and coat, -sent up- a brief and fervent prayer to St. Patrick and all the other good saints, and : jumped through the window. : “He was caught in the lifenet and then hurried' to safety. . Not realiz- ing that he had es- caped injury, he B hurried away, feel-- ing his body for possible broken | bones. = His friend ’ : Mike, who also had escaped disaster, catching sight of him, yelled: - “‘Pat! Oh, Pat! Axre yez kilt?’ front of: them should h AR “We are coming, wé_ are coming'; three hundred thousand And Liberty bell, in the near future, will ring out as it 1bs. 4.65 4.75 5.06 2 2 Barb wire 2-pt. cattle 5-inch spacing, wt. per 80-rod spool 80 1bs. 4.40 4.50 ¥ _ \ 1bs. 1.65' 4.75 5.05 ‘When he awoke, choking. with the - Z t 1 . “Mr. Lamont didn’t have any. trouble - ““Pat glanced down at his trousers. with | and found the back of them where the an advance copy of the treaty while 7 . -~ he was working: f ] r . -as; an adviser to th - don’t feel much pain, but I must have got a terrible twist.”” : ) “Why don’t they discuss our pro-: gram? Why do they lug in so many side. issues that have nothing to do with the case?” asks many an -indig- nant farmer. : i The answer is simple: “Satan loves to fish in roily, muddy waters.” : LESSONS IN PROFITEERING: . . It was a warm July day and the tired business employe hied him to the - ocean for a dip. He applied for a': bathing suit-and towels.: - Gk “Fifty cents,” the custodian told: him. : : “I"ifty cents?” ejaculated the appli- cant. “Why it was only 25 cents-yes- terday.” : “Ah, yes,” explained the custodian, “but the tide is up now.” - A variation of Henry Ford’s famous slogan has been taken up in the United States senate. The burden of it is: “Get the boys out of Russia by Christ<: . mas!”? : ) s Benjamin Franklin was responsible for the statement that “there never was a good war or a bad peace.” :Won- : der ;f he would change his opinion now ? 3 % Said the allies to Kolchak: “Will you do these things that we ask of you, reconvene the constituent assem- | bly and so forth?” . = ° 2 . Said Kolchak: “No, I won’t” . : . Said the allies to Kolchak: “Very . . well, then, don’t. We will be obeyed.” The Biblical adage that a man can - not: serve two masters is ‘disproved. . - in_ remembering Morgan & Co. with

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