The Nonpartisan Leader Newspaper, September 29, 1919, Page 2

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# ADVERTISEMENTS BOOK ON DOG DISEASES Dickey Glazed Tile Silos . “The Fruit Jar of the Field” Buy the best silo first — it’s cheaper. Send ‘for catalog No. 28. . W. 8. Dickey Clay Mig. Co. MACOMB, ILL. . Kansas Clty, Mo. Chattanooga, Tenn. and How to Feed. Mailed free to any address by America’s the Author Piloneer H. CLAY GLOVER CO., Inc. Dog Medicines [§ 118 West 31st St., New York, . The Minnesota legislature stayed Christopher Columbus = may. not .in session four months when St. Paul have been .the first man to discover was wet, but only 10 days under the that the world wasn’t on the square, dry regime. This is a strong point but he was the first one that was For All Furnaces and in favor of prohibition. able to prove it. - : _ we will supply repairs and parts, If 100,000 signatures on petitions = If Tom Parker Junkin writes Jerry 17 8. Third St., U. S. STOVE REPAIR COMPANY, Minneapolis, Minn. | keep the primary law on the Minne- Bacon’s books, and Hughes writes ; sota statute books in 1919, what will Ferdinand Teigen’s books, who writes “ Ffiend You m s 200,000 farmer-labor Judge Dean’s deci- T -| votes do in 19207 gions? ; ferag ' SR ¥ kw MINUS BRANES % e < . Now that the hog He Raises Chickens ; Sam Gompers’ sec- 4 market is down, what retary is Gus Oyster. i excuse will the profi- AERES TH MONEY GETTER - TiT Whenever he’s asked ) teers have for boost- B e e &% ™ a question, he shuts e, ing the price of pork? POUND ~ OH! BOY up likg a clam. ; P & % You can bet that they [xx will find one. XA £ £ * ‘ 5 Price” ( Judge Dean’s alibi , Says “The Old Stove Master® | it very good Non- .4 They say there is a deficit: of $3,000,000,- 000 in the United States tregsury. This is a fact, too, as they have no Karl Kositz- partisan Jeague ma- terial. It won’t stick. .‘and furnaces, Do you think any one else could beat your prices? No, because the maker’s price is -always the lowest price. That’s my price. That’s why I Am Saving Stove and Furnace Buyers 25 to 40 Per Cent this year with my direct te youprices, Here, Friend, is where you can'save money. My factories are working totheirlimit. We are turning out the greatest stoves and ranges % and furnaces you ever saw, And we are selling them at wholesale factory prices. Write and Let Me Send You This Book FREE showing my full line of beautiful heaters, steel, cast iron and malleable ranges, Also get my money saving offer on Kalamazoo Pipe and Pipeless Furnaces, Kitchen Kabinets and Tables, Gasand Qil Heaters, Paints, Roofing, Fireless Cookers, Refrigerators, Phonographs, Sewing Machines, Washing Machines, Cream Separators, Indoor Closets and Feed Grinders. I'll quote you cash or easy payments, ~ give you an unconditional guarantee ® and pay the freight. session of the Minne- - sota legislature. o, al 6% Well, anyway, the new Minnesota Labor party certainly means a lot of work for the ‘old-line “politicians. Judge Dean sneer- ingly remarked that the trial had been lik- ened to Jesus before Pilate. But the judge should remember that Pilate washed his hands afterward. % & 3 Nicholas, the movie . hero county attorney, said he had been li- beled. How? By showing him up? * £ £ Judge Dean tried to explain everything ) e ky there toplay With 74 = . : )U know what happens to the products you g the funds. = - - ! sell off the farm. The final buyer paysmany _ Governor Burnquist WHATS T MATTER WiITh g S : times the price youreceive. Youknow why., is reported to be very TRee s e SHISkENse The house of repre- ! 'Now supposgyou were making and selling stoves sick—of the special IH'_FASTER eV BiEL " sentatives refused 'to appropriate $10,000 ° for a sword to Gen- eral Pershing. ‘To be ~ consistent, they might invest the sum in plowshares. : - 3 RS Aflt‘:'»#,,_ The Mipnesota leg- islature passed .a: sol- NOPE - CAN'T, “CANT N A diers’ bonus bill prin- Ve TReh Svaay = -cipally to . take ‘the B N T Book! eyes of ‘the returned vy e fighters off -North anotg. : B S . Now the: -women' of Minnesota have form- ed a League auxiliary. Looks bad for those politicians who failed to do anything about the high cost of living. . B3 q* * According to a newspaper report -a finished hide of a calf tal now costs about $60. Ask for Catalog No. 763 but the buttermilk The farmer got at?out *“The Old Stove Master" party and the dia- $7 for it in the frst 8] & Kalamazoo Stove Co., Mfrs, mond i place and about $3 1! amazoo, Michigan e S A worth - of labor was St 8 Ol uls pitSonto’ it o, Aniah say: “A Swift dollar it. This seems to be ] Kal | “ : 3 A Kalama 7_-0—9-/ —where it goes—85 actual proof that the T‘;::ii“:‘r::‘ Direct tO VO"J" per cent to stockraiser, middlemen are “tak- 12,96 per cent .to expenses, labor, ing it out of the hides” of farmers . freight, ete., 2.04 to profit.” Now it and laborers. > really isn’t a Swift dollar at all, be- . ; : cause it is' a consumers’ dollar. But Now somebody wants' to make every one will admit it is a swift dol- President Wilson a member of the lar during these days of H. C. L., in American Federation of Labor. But the sense that it doesn’t go far, but what if the union should call a strike? it goes awful quick after Swift gets Or the people declare a lockout at the hold of it. next election? %* € #* . ORTHWESTERN car owners are so pleased over the mileage given by Firestone. Gray - Sidewall Tires that they speak of them being specially suit- ed to this territory. Maybe so.’ But we are glad to report that they have won their way to first place in the confidence of car owners in all parts of the country. TFivestone Most Miles per Dollar THE BANDWAGON There was a time the farmer’s rig was sure to get a grin, whenever it came into town the folks would laugh like sin. It used to be, “Say, hayseed,” or “Where you goin’, Si?” but now the politicians glance with respectful eye when Silas drives his flivver or his wagonful of wheat along a stretch of country road into the city street. There was a time they used to laugh as hard and just as long when farmers were in - politics and the game was going strong. They used to fill the farmer with a wond’rous lot of lies, but this was stopped - when farmers began to organize. Now opposition to the things they’ve asked for years and years, and which they formed the League to fight most quickly ‘disappears. The poli- ' ticians up and say, “I'm for that very thing; just wait and see _"me cast my vote, just look, I'm on the wing!” The farmer looks and sees the rush, but he is not surprised, he knows the gang has changed its front because he’s organized. : : Mention the Leader When Writing, Advertisers - :

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