The Nonpartisan Leader Newspaper, November 3, 1919, Page 18

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Il Ties - to Balo Men Loss Baled 43 TONS in 10 Hours! We claim 236 tons per hour with only 4 men— but one user g aled 43 m:s in 10 hours! And you need not choke it to get'big capacit: l 'lhmk of it! 2 men saved! No bale tles just etraight wirel No blocksl No one needed on feed table or for back wiring. That’s what the Blockleu Threader Press means to you! Save $100 or More Nowl Yes, sir! Save $100 to $200 or more qmck onprice. Get my startling offer. This ib ti herw ‘or hay and straw profits! Make big mone; our own and for your neighbors. Your Blockless ader Press will make a8 much money as acres of extra land! Get the 'l‘hn.dnr Press book free BOOK FREE &b it urdnr n ‘nttw nov !At mu how( HE r‘l’h.‘tg'h"‘ the st. la mlchlno ynu wuu e n l :znn':: a’zs ufi: unr{ o ftnh warmy prices. Send your name now. WILLIAM A. SEYMOUR, General Mana;er Threader Press and Manufacturing 20511 Ottawa Stroet anlnwenh, "Kansas WORTH A BIG FARM Bale your own and neighbors’ hay; 100 days work earns $1000 to $2000 a season with the | Lightning il S Line 5 Y Power Press or Tractor Baler, Junlor Belt, Juniors with extension frames, combined press and engines, horse gower ress, 1 horse buler to eaviest two 'he ng it kind of a press for your n us 20 years ago still in use. Send today for comp ete eetnlof or write us your needs and we will advise you size of press best smted for your work, K. C. HAY PRESS C0. k235521 wo. BIG TYPE DUROCS Fall and spring boars by Pathfinder Col. and Excel- slor Cherry Klng can furnish tries. Spring pigs weigh 200 to 250. A. E. THOMAS, Parker, S. D. e e | North Dakota Leaguers (Continued from page 5) Langer, Hall and Kositzky.” The big speech of the night session was delivered 'by Governor - Frazier. The governor got another tremendous ovation.. He attempted no oratory but gave the big crowd just what they wanted—straight from the shoulder statements. The national council of defense, the governor reminded the farmers, had* declared that greater production of food was needed. Every one was ad- vising a “back to the farm’ movement. “They can talk as much ‘back to the farm’ as they like,” the governor de- clared, “but until conditions are right there will be no back to the farm movement. What we are trying to do is to make conditions right—so that the farmer can live as well as the city man, and give his children as good.an education.”. x Governor Frazier reviewed in detail the steps that had been taken by Langer and Hall leading up to the closing of the Scandinavian American bank—how Bank Examiner Lofthus had been sent out of the state and how Langer and Hall had held a special meeting of the bank board, without Frazier, to send Halldorson to Fargo on the pretense that he was to in- vestigate a trust company in that city accused of defrauding its stockholders. The governor reminded the farmers that the bank plot was only part of the general plot of opposition to the state’s industrial program — that the people had voted for this program at election after election, and had finally in- dorsed the measures specifically Keeps Co Zd Out ~Keeps Heat In - Double Body Underwear, GIVES PROTECTION WHERE PROTECTION IS NEEDED DOUBLE DOUBLE-BODY' UNDERWEAR combines maximum protection and comfort with minimum bulk and weight. It is made with a double thick- ness of fabric over the chest, abdomen and back. This feature—like the double walls of a vacuum bottle—keeps the cold out and the body heat in. The arms and legs are covered with but a single thickness of fabric. This is the ideal undergar- ment for those who do not want to hamper their movements by wearing heavy and SLEEVES' AND LEGS bulky outer clothing. Every man, woman or child whose work or play takes them outdoors in cold weather needs the protec- tion DOUBLE-BODY UNDER. WEAR affords. It defends the vital parts of the body from cold and helps to prevent Winter sickness. DOUBLE-BODY UN- DERWEAR is made in cot- ton and wool fabrics for men, women and children. Learn more about this superior Winter underwear. Write today for Catalog No..9338N, telling all about the DOUBLE-BODY principle of underwear con- struction and illustrating the _different styles and fabrics in which it is made. Made for and sold exclue jalvely by Sears, Roebuck and Co. l i { i Me’ntitm the LeadérWhen Writing Advertisers Chicago "PAGE EIGHTEEN 66 29 Come Back after they hdd been passed by the legislature. 3 “There is a lot of talk in this coun- try today about bolshevism and an- archism and every other ism,” Gov- vernor Frazier said. “As I see it the only question is whether people believe in abiding by the law or ob- structing it. A man who believes in law and order is a good citizen, what- ever you call him. “And it is just the same with the obstructionists. It makes no differ- ence to me whether a man speaks, in the garb of a worker, from a soap box, - or whether, in a dress suit, he speaks in a gilded hall—if they are against law and order they are‘in the same class. It makes no difference whether' their program is published in the Fargo Forum or the Appeal to Reason —if they are opposed to law and order they are in the same class. “They are obstructionists; they are not good citizens and the state would be better off without them.” J. ‘M. Anderson, president of the Equity exchange, and Mr. Manahan " spoke also, and Mr. Townley, in a few words, laid before the farmers the facts—that the situation would be serious without their co-operation— and the big meeting was over. But not over so far as the effects went. A dozen clerks were kept busy receipting for money paid in on stock of the Scandinavian American bank or for deposits. And. scores of the farmers, unable to get attention in the hall, flocked down to the bank it- self, crowded every available inch of space and left a crowd on the outside until after midnight, waiting to get in. The farmers had “come back.” They had said to the world, still stick in North Dako “We GOOD SEED POTATOES The average production per acre of potatoes in the United States is very much lower than in Canada, Great Britain and European countries out- side of Italy. One of the reasons for the lower ‘production in the United States is that less attention has been given to the character of the seed. Good seed is one of the determining factors in the' production of maximum crops of pota- toes. The use of high-grade seed. would increase the returns from the potato crop of the country by many millions of dollars. The production of high-grade seed * should be regarded as a special busi- ness. Good strains of seed may be obtain- ed by the tuber-unit, hill or mass-se- lection methods through the process of roguing out the diseased and weak hills. ‘When tubers from diséased or weak plants. are planted, a similar harvest will be reaped. Only seed from productive plants should be used. Careful attention should be given to securing seed that is free from varietal mixture and that is true to type. Good seed can not be produced un- less the growing plants are given good cultural attention. As a rule the quantity of seed used is not sufficient to produce a maximum crop. From 15 to 18 bushels of seed should be used per acre instead of 9 to 11, as at the present time. All seed stock should be dxsmfected before planting. Good storage conditions are’ essen- tial to insure sound, firm seed at planting time. These points are discussed in detall in the United States department of agriculture’s farmers’ bulletin 533, “Good Seed Potatoes and How to Pro- duce Them.” : - N ADVERTISEMENTS | se Your Auto' GRIND YOUR FEED- YOI.II SILO PILL W H!Ll; UR YOUR WAT/ :EEV"AT' YOUR GIMH F our-auto~ X ] S:’;'.?“";’: e P m ofl m ns 8 lll|ll||ln Books in tmux-eenru permaneat MPIII end of shaft. Ward mc lmlt,ui"mI ecte'onml." .mcm if not or ci pecinl ta on the Job While it Rains - TOWER'S FISH BRAND REFLEX SLICKER Is the best ,wet weather protection /fev /) INDOOR 'I'OILE'I' Sanitary and Odorless on ten days FREE TRIAL ODORLESS rnd:of e RGENTS WANTED. Kawnear Cabinet Co., 863 KawnearBidg,KansssClty,Mo. Postpaid FREE §yd for ny bl ; EDISON n:conns. (dlu or oyllldor) More il than 5,000 to c! 6 best music in th. mrld—snnred Haw-lln B-mh. nr- wonfmnl eorntlon of Forei Lnnrunzen Write - today. anm H. Lucker, Edison. Distributor, 90 8. Street., Minneapolis, - Minn. PRICES DUROC JERSEY BOARS Birec n?y Gre%u ‘Wonder gd,fll‘:; 3' Grellt‘h Wonder an a was 3 wel X 200 pounds; “also Shtclmhlreql . ANTHONY ' ZILLER, Bird llllnd_._ Mllln. : " Mention the Leader When Writing Advertisers

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