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i Do You ADVERTISEMENTS Remember Gasless ~ Sundays? NO better way could be found to iilustrate and em- phasize the usefulness of the Standard Oil Company (Indi- ana), and the broad and varied service it renders, than to take five minutes and imagine a gasless year. - Think how our lives instead of being ' full and complete through association with our fellow men would Ye circum- scribed by-the barriers set up by shank’s mare. } Think how manufacturing would be hampered. How industry generally would be crippled. How crops would go to waste through inability to harvest, and the leaps and bounds that the cost . of living would take. Instead of the natural expansion of business that comes from service and usefulness the whole structure of busi- ness would be hampered through sheer inability to render to society that service which society has been accustomed to demand. ‘ The Standard Oil Company (Indiana) is a public servant owned by 4649 stock- holders, no one of whom holds as much as 10 percent of the stock, .. o “The Standard Oil Company (Ihdigfia&'is doing a big job in a big way and has grown ireat simply by reaping the re- wards that come from rendering the service demanded by business and society In a manner satisfactory and beneficial to the world at large. Standard Oil Company : (Indiana) 910 S. Michigan Avenue, Chicago, Il e kota politics. He will find himself | - worse discredited even than Karl Ko- sitzky. The Scandinavian-American bank will emerge stronger than ever from its trial, and the Nonpartisan league gains strength’ from every battle it wages against big business and the political crooks, like Langer and Hall; who do its bidding. “And when the fight is ended, every bank will know and no future banking board will dare deny, that a farmer’s paper is just as good, dollar for dol- lar of security, as any business man’s. _ “That is the fundamehtal issue in this fight that William Langer- has begun, and the organized farmers of North Dakota will fight it through to a finish. “And, incidentally, they will prove | that bank wrecking by official order is just as dangerous as when it is done by some desperate crook in need of cash.” : None the less convincing is the statement of a group of McKenzie county farmers in answer to Langer’s assertion that post-dated checks are not ample security. The statement says: A “Langer says post-dated checks afe worthless security. The undersigned League members of McKenzie county pledge ourselves that our post-dated checks when due will be worth par, which is more than are Liberty bonds | on the Wall street market. “We'll stick. “LARS FRIESTAD. “LINDSLEY BROS. “S. D. TVEDEN. “THOR OLSEN. -“ODIUS SIMS. z “T. J. COATH. “ROBERT HORTON. “C. 0. PAINTER. “OSCAR THIERUD. “0. J. IVERSON. “JOHN RATHER. “PAUL KULM. “JOSEPH BRUNNER. “ROY MEETLET. “JAMES SENTAK.” Pay for Dockage State-Owned Mill Buys Dockage - at Market Value ' Drake, N. D., Sept. 26, 1919. NOTICE REGARDING DOCKAGE All dockage taken from wheat, ex- cepting sand, dirt, wheat stems, chaff and straw, will be paid for at the market value at the mill of the Mill & Elevator Assocfation of North Da- | kota, until further notice. Dated September 26, 1919, Drake, N. D. J. A. McGOVERN, Manager Mill & Elevator Associa- tion, State of North Dakota. The above notiee has been posted at the first state mill at Drake, N. D., recently put into operation by the mill and elevator : association. It spells a new era.in the grain-produc- ing industry of the #fate. "Heretofore" the mills and elevators of ‘the.state have: besii® docking - the farmer for | rye, ‘barley, oats or. other grain that appeared in wheat, despite the fact that they themselves later separated and sold this dockage. In his an- nouncement of the new plan of the state mill, Mr. McGovern said: “The state mill had been in opera- tion 26 days on September 26. On that day we posted a notice of our policy of paying for all valuable dock- age in the wheat brought there. All dockage is sold at its market food valuation, and the _state-owned mill | will pay for dockage on its food val- uation.. We make no allowance. for waste in. cleaning; if one pound or more is taken from wheat, it is paid onloads.” Rawhide Shoes Cut Out the Shoe Profiteer On Approval—No Money in Advance Why we actually DO cut out the PROFITEERING MIDDLEMAN: We sell direct to you, the CON- SUMER, C. O. D. on APPROVAL. . No' back number styles but only one standard RAWHIDE work shoe, something that will outwear anything you have ever had. Double 7 53,05 Delivered proof tongue. @ ‘N A real shoe at a real price. Sent on approval. Send Your Size, Not Your Money. Sizes 6 to12 EQUITY SHOE COMPANY Boston-Block Minneapolis, Minn. v Your earning power when it .rains is made sure ~Look for the ' Reflex Edge A.J. Tower (o Established 1836 Boston, Mass. | Use Your Auto! GRIND YOUR FEED FILL YOUR SILO SAW YOUR W I“rlctlbnhclu(ch Pulleyon end of shaft. Ward Govers 3 £ . e o e R DT for. This applies to carlots or wag- | toge:f ircular and s| WARD MF8. C0., 2093 N St., Lincoln, Neh. WICHLY RELEEVED ‘softens the severe rheumatic ache Put it on freely. Don’t rub it in. s Just let it penetrate naturally. Whata - sense of soothing relief soon follows! SR External aches,: stiffness, soreness, cramped muscles, strained sinews, back “cricks”—those - ailments can’t < fight. off the relieving qualities of = Sloan’s. Liniment.. Clean, convenient, ‘economical. - 35¢, 70c, $1.40. - §Sloan’s Liniment Heep it handy