The Nonpartisan Leader Newspaper, November 10, 1919, Page 10

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

" ADVERTISEMENTS Trappers Get Highest Market Price .And Honest Grading /We buy all kinds of furs and pay lugllest‘market price, sending cash the day shipment is received. Experi- enced trappers know our policy, “A Square Deal to Every Shipper” means honest grading by experts—and top prices on allgrades. Thirty years of success are the results of this square deal policy. You’llget more money from your season’s catch by ship- E'8l ping to us. & WE KEEP YOU POSTED \ Get our price list, free shipping ihtags, and information for trap- pers. SENT FREE. McCullough & Tumbach 141 N. Main Street, Letmegive youthese Stretching Board § Patterns FREE Get ready for a big mon making trapping season 0 d a eoppfles-—lm.nmh- few hours ““mm noh@m Trappers' Ship YourFursTo (GWINGLE AT LINCOLN.NEB. - Big money sure this season)] Fur s prices high- “ est ever knownl Get most net money by shxppmg' to le, His policy le is the largest fur buyer, Iarga uolume"—he unl t the trap) FRE l-'l.ll! MARKET : Lincoln the test fur market, in the Central West., To keep you post~ REPORT. Write ed on marketconditions we print the REPORT | 500 ot ] It is free, and Price List, Kivg ey A W TRAPDERS- Get most monor loryour FURS, HIDES and ROOTS thful Fur House of SQUARE D%HHASON in St. Lonll, needs 'gl'on &HHIICIOH EVER CHARGED Hbenl dings by u;“putmdm. BIG- GEST D] m-n tory. Nflubefoee \ B R e oy : k, “Trappin mn& -ulSpon" pfle. '“'imu. ‘Write ulckest time What the Organized Farmer Is Doing Short Notes About the Activities in-League States KANSAS T THE invitation of the rail- road shopmen, O. E. Wood, League lecturer, and J. O. Stevic of the state office, spoke to.a capacity audience of or- ganized railroad men, farmers and their wives at Horton. Mr. Wood told his audience that the League was the “Plumb plan” of the farmers through which they were to get control of the farming industry—their own business —and showed the necessity for the farmer and the city worker to get'to- gether and make possible each other’s program. He warned against special interests being permitted to separate them and cause them to fight each other. * * *® During the week ended October 18 meetings were held in the northwest- ern part of Kansas by R. B. Martin and A. K. Mills, at Kensington, Alme- na_and Selden.” Although the roads were nearly impassable for cars, the meetings were well attended. A num- ber of men volunteered to sign up with the League at the close of .the meet- ings. t * *® * Kansas organizers’ reports to the state office show that the farmers in Kansas have become tired of being goaded and are joining the League as fast as the organizers can get to them. The number who joined the past week is the second largest since the League began organizing in this state. * * * George J. Klein, who owns and oper- ates a farm a few miles out of Ellin- wood, in Barton county, has been made field representative for the League and is now busy getting men lined up so that there will soon be an organizer in every county. Any League member or Kansas farmer who desires to take up organization work, in order to put Kansas over the top, should get in touch with the state office, Box 453, Topeka. KANSAS STATE MANAGER. COLORADO more in taxes than they did OLORADO taxpayers, on the ‘ : average, will pay about $56 a year ago, and most of the - farmers will pay about $10 additional, it was estimated, following the an- nouncement by the state board of i equalization that the 1919 levy will _be 3.47 mills. * % % Baca county Leaguers had a bar- becue recently at Campo. Ralph Morser, state manager, told of the League progress in North Dakota and Montana.: Tom Herrington and Mr. Morser spoke. They also addressed a schoolhouse full of farmers at Stonington on the same evening. * * * Members of the League in this state are making plans to hear Governor tainments to be staged in the small | § Fogoot; sxact pri ..,,.,.m"::,.,‘fiy‘.’:?; towns of the state under the local %“,‘;,",,‘m,mm . . auspices, wherever possible, of the them. “ness men. Lynn J. Frazier, farmer governor of North Dakota, when he comes to Fort Collins to address a farmers’ con- gress on December15. EDITOR COLORADO LEADER. SOUTH DAKOTA HE politicians and profiteers of South Dakota are attempting to use the American Legion in a mob campaign against the League. Several attempts have been made recently by soldiers claiming to belong to the Legion to break up League meetings. A meeting was broken up at Monroe recently by a mob. The farmers of that vicinity have scheduled another meeting and announced publicly that they will-be prepared to proteet their constitu- tional rights and to see that law and ;slesnsq out sl of forn Iy order is mamtgmeg. % hmdbutma:ncy—mlll?:nl to pay for fura. Governor Frazier of North Dakota spoke in the state recently at the na- tional educational convention at Sioux Falls. In less than three hours’ time the farmers in the vicinity of Crooks arranged a meeting for the governor over the telephone and a crowd of more than 300 assembled to hear him discuss League toplcs Y L ness_was built on a policy G est Prices M%. m?%odlywemln- better tion than ever to carry Do flfi’h;p single ekin to t ship a any ur house bdox-e‘g:u have mennfully inv ted Abra- ! Louis. Order an Abraham Smoke Pump. Holds the world’s record for long distance smoking' ; : and is @ sure winner. -Price Postpald, $2 Each O. M. Burch, a good League booster of Dixon, S. D has written to the Scandinavian Amerlcan bank at Fargo offering to deposit Liberty bonds and cash to aid in foiling the plot of the North Dakota bank wreckers. v *® * *® . Henry T. Olson of-Ellingson, S. D., recently sent in the cash to take up his post-dated check for membership in the League which is not due for | several weeks. He said he wanted to :}l’x‘;w the North Dz;:cota bank wreckers ¢ aclay—Write today. - that farmers’ checks are good. The farmers of Sanborn county 313-22 Mot have purchased the Herald-Times at St.Louis, m Woonsocket and the first issue under S yonr et Alvdhew the new regime was published No- vember 1. The paper will in the fu- ture be conducted as a League organ. EDITOR SOUTH DAKOTA LEADER. —~MINNESOTA — HE America First association, owned by the Charley Patter- son crowd, has announced a series of chautauqua enter- WE GRADE I.IBEIAI.I.Y—PAY Plflfll"l" 9-?;" and niak til i bgv chnr:c e fl wman ourpo efio mneyd;::':: d.q fnrl mh ua, Write lor prle.- WE TAN YOUR HIDES § * We buy your horse hides, cow R““’:'mgum'““ma%‘i’;t"é".‘fl“? :'t.n u;h:imwdeu. Besure oney saving to get our free catalog, quo‘t:tiou and shipping tags, Buyersof Hides etc,Since 1891 OHSMAN & SONS CO. Dept. 109 Mankato, Minn. American Legion. The ‘lecturer. will be Doctor F. Osten Sacken, a brother of the German general. R. W. Har- gadine, secretary of the association, says the purpose of the chautauqua entertainments is to create harmony between the farmers and local busi- * % % The Working People’s Nonpartisan Political league, indorsed by -the Min- nesota State Federation of Labor, is State managers, organizers, League lecturers and ILeague : farmers are invited to send news to the Nonpartisan Leader for this page. If there is a League picnic or meeting in your - vicinity, 1T you spoke at a League meeting or picnic, send the ° Leader a few lines about it. Organizers who have had a par- ticularly successful period of organization work are urged to tell the Leader about it. This page is designed to give the readers news of work in other states as well as their own, to bring League members of the various states closer together. It’s the members’ page, the state managers’ page, the organ- izers’ page and the lecturers’ page. Help make it a big fea- ture of the Nonpartlsan Leader. Pictures of meetmgs, SHIP US &o F.,",';".,.,mfi an@ Realize 25 to 35%: mon. for Price List. S o 0! i : nm&d uitotourl-uu

Other pages from this issue: