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ADVERTISEMENTS Sunnyside Stock Farm Chester White Swine Boars of March and April farrow for sale. heavy boned fellows. Write for. price and breeding. E. P. SQUIRE, Hanley Falls, Minn. REPAIRS iR umcesand STOVES 17 8. Third St., U. S. STOVE REPAIR COMPANY, Minneapolis, Minn. FOR SALE Herrmann's blfi type Poland Chinas. When in need of hogs to start or build up a herd write or call on us. We breed the best. Wall pigs of elther sex to be shipped at ten weeks old, 6. J., J. H. or A. F. Herrmann, Norwood, Minn. Pll Save You a) | Wad of Money Let me give you my wholesale factory price ona pipeless ace. I'll save %ou from $25 to $80 on a heatin BLant and heai your home better than it was ever heat fore. Seeing is believing. Send for my catalog and learn about the Kalamazoo 2 Pipeless Furnace Heats the whole house through oneregister. Easyto install. Sep- arate flues brirging cold air back tothe furnace from distant parts of thehouse. Warm air circula- § tionheatstheentirehome. You . can't beat the construction in aKalamazoo Furnace. Two Styles—We also make a pipe style furnace for warm air registers in every room. I8 Write Today— Get My Book It isn’t for nothing they call me “The Old Stove Master.” T've A Kalanazoo I'm saving stove and Tur- S a greandy v Direct’ to You nace buyers is 5 z ear with my wholesale factory-to-you prices. Here Neighbor, x where you can save a wad of money on a furnace. 1’ll quote g liberal terms, too. Cashor easy payments, Uncmxéi::ionnl m;ln;-n Also save money on Kalamazoo Stoves, Ranges, and Oil Stoves, if hs, Indoor Closets, Fireless Cookers, g"evt:il::? nnxda%::u Pki’a'fifififl. Cream S tors, Paints and Roofing. Ask for Catalog No. 762 . "1;?:%“ Stove Master® KALAMAZO00 STOVE CO0., Manufactuzers, Kalamazoo, Mich. ' We Pay - ey the Freight making stoves and furnaces all my life and FIRESTONE Gray Sidewall Tires have established new 2 records for mileage.- And these records have been made under the most trying conditions of the Northwest just - as regularly as anywhere else. : Ask any repair man in the North- - west which tire is standing up and he will tell you it’s the Firestone . Gray Sidewall, i ~ Most Miles _p_e£ vDo!l'alv'_“' Big type, - FARMER JONES SEZ: It would have been better for the state of Minnesota if Judge Dean’s sole claim to no- buttermilk parties. ? See where a Min- neapolis paper says the Omaha mob didn’t do busi- ness under the American flag. In that case, it was 4 different from any of the other recent mob activities in Nebraska. : * * * “Now that they have been hit, Oma- ha business men may change their minds about mob law. They paid for the reign of terror in Nebraska when the farmers were the objects of attack. * * * For the second time in the history of the country, the plea, “Backward, turn backward, Oh Time, in thy flight,” is to be heeded on October 26, when the clocks will go back to sun time. Ed * * Teddy Roosevelt Jr. hurrahs the Washington judge who freed soldiers: who formed a mob to at- . tack a radical editor. Teddy is strong for law and order, when he can give the order. * 5 o * SENATOR REED WAS EGGED IN OKLAHOMA RECENTLY. AT THE PRICE OF EGGS THESE DAYS, THE OCCURRENCE MIGHT AL- MOST BE CONSIDERED A MARK OF RESPECT. * * £ A Chicago man is making noise be- cause he thinks he has been swindled of $32,000 by a woman. But think of the noise he’d have made if he’d have had to pay that amount in in- come tax! - * * * 2 Mary had a little lamb, but * when she sold it to the packers, they skinned both Mary and the lamb. * % * THE PRINCE OF WALES WANT- ED TO KNOW WHERE BOSTON IS. WHY? : “DOCKAGE tice had been his 3 LIMERICK : Said a guvnor elected in Minn., I can’t let the tonnage tax win, I’d let the state bust - ek 'Fore I'd hurt the steel trust; = . Let’s just hike the tax levy again. ¥ % % L Herbert Hoover has announced that he’s through with food. Well, a lot of the rest of us will be if the grip of the packers isn’t broken soon. * * * English in India have adopted a law making it necessary for the natives to salute the British. In Ireland there is no such law, but there is a perfect willingness among the populace to pay: respects to the British—with the dam- aging dornick. : * * * 4 A Maryland farmer was aston- ished to find that apples he sold for 50 cents a bushel were bring- ing $3.50 at retail. And having noticed and commented upon it, he becomes an agitator. * * * Ole Hanson, former mayor of Seat- tle, has resigned from the boiler- makers’ union. Probably figures he can make more noise as a lecturer o bolshevism, . : * * * : MRS. HOHENZOLLERN SAYS THE LORD IS NEEDING HER HUSBAND. BUT HER HUSBAND IS NEEDING THE LORD AN AW- FUL LOT MORE. < BT TR Chairman Gary of the steel trust tells the newspapers he has no objection to meeting. his work- ers individually. And the Ger- mans would not have objected to: fighting the allied soldiers one at a time. : AL e I : J. P. Morgan has sent a letter to Judge Gary, head of the steel trust, approving his stand on the strike. That’s one of the best arguments for: the strikers we’ve heawd yet. - * xo% It may be just a-coincidence, . but a Kansas farmer named his ° prize bull Woodrow after he had - heard the president speak on the league of nations. 3 - North Dakota better day. THE NEW DAY Not lawyers, bankers, traders Shall constitute the state; But plowmen, herdsmen, workmen - Shall make the nation great. To show the poet’s words are true, I beg to briefly state a - few good things that common folks can do. In North Dakota, it is clear, they’ve made some laws that put the fear of God into the profiteer. Dakota farming men one day joined hands with men who work for pay. Immediately this wholesome pool resulted in the people’s rule, and this fact makes the contrast . great between her and a neighboring state. These Bismarck | men did not see red, but each one .deftly used his head to formulate some wholesome plan to:benefit his fellow man. They did not waste their time, it seems, in various county- making schemes, nor upon any weird pipe-dreams in framing _up some vicious bill the people later had to kill. . their task and reasoned how to do it, like they’d start a. plow orfeed a pig or milk a cow. They made some laws-that smooth the way for those who raise the grain and hay, but not for Je i ‘parasites that prey. They favored raising hogs and steers;” | ‘but frowned on feeding profiteers. 2] membered, tog, that there was something really due the home- - | _returning soldier lad who gave his country all he had. Andso | they fixed it so the boys could simply go and take their choice | —a farm out in the countryside or city home where to abide, | and each year pay the state a few good dollars when the same | came due. These laws bring confidence and cheer to workers, | but the profiteer “views with -alarm” and some dismay the | ‘—C. H. Perrine, Billings, Mon —Lowell. They. saw* These Bismarck men re-