The Nonpartisan Leader Newspaper, November 10, 1919, Page 14

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i~ sheal oats or any kin ADVERTISEMENTS Using'l'bbacco Perhaps you've tried to stop using tobacco only tofind that tltxgyl;mbit has such a hold on you that yot#g: l‘(’nowpbettel:{hm anyone else that 'yom ought to use, ;Iooner or Iater. it §a bound ndermine stop your health eart troubl e,indigestlon, dyapapoin. nere vousness, ingomnia, goor eye sight—th, ers, can often wthsmo mobu- co. Besides it is an expensive, utwly useless habit, Habit Banished - In 48 to 72 Hours No matter how flm grip tobacco has on you—no matter whether you've been smoking cigars, pipe or cigarettes orchewm lug or fine cnt 'or & monf years — Tobacco eemer will craving for tobncco in an does its work so quleklyt almost before you know it. 8 chew begi t nll tobacco ‘‘bunger’’ is gone Your desire for a smoke or ng to decrease after the very first dose. ‘Tobacco Redeemer contains no habit-forming drugs of gkind-—lfi- in no mae a tobacco substitute. ll:dou cause the slightest shock to the nervous system; on contrary, it quletl the nerves lnd makes you hd benarin every way. . SEND CouPon for Getour Proof Tells you all about the deadly effects of tobacco and how easyitisnow toquit. im freed them absolutel: from the habit. Juu mai r NEWELL PHARMACAL CO. Dept. 609 St. Loun.fMo. z»se‘“" Fodoamar Wil postcively Hroeme Fron ene oy acco Habit. Name..cassesesessesesssecssscsscsesscscecssesssesaccsossany, Btreet and Nousesesessesesessesesesaccscsesscccssssssescesce ToWn..eeeees PITTTTITITI ----...Btnte eseessesemnesessene EASIEST RUNNING MILL MADE Kelly Duplex Mills require 25% lesa power, do as much, or more, work asany other eq size, Grind car corn, uhe!led oorn, oats, wheat, kaffir corn, cotton seed, corn in ehucks, d of grain. For speed and complete grinding the KELLY DUPLEX Has No Superior operated. Never Bizes, Easily chohm. 7 Fully Any } Elpulnlly -d-phd for gasoline engines. | DUPLEX MILL & MFG. CO., lalsm) Springfield, Ohlo Western Branch, 329 University Place Station, Des Moines, Iowa. *O45 |ND00R TOILET E A high-grade Indoor-Toilet at one-feurth the cost of f§ common_outhouse. ABSOLUTELY SANIT. / No drainage—no_odors— ARY. Safeguards Health— adds to Comfort — wonderfully Canvenient. Shipped COMPLETE with inside container, vent Enpe. b elbows, reducer, chemical, and ma- fy;sl:nl—nt specml low l;(mce of $9.45. 3005' if not satis- i fact Don't iake cl nees thru delay— B order Now or write for descriptive Circular. J . N. W. INDOOR CLOSET CO., i Lincola Bldg. Minneapolis, Our New Carburetor for Ford Cars is saving and making money for many Non- purtisan organizers. Simple, not a moving part; installed in thirty minutes; guaranteed to double your mileage and start in zero weather without heating or priming. Fifteen FREE trial. Our St. Louis man sold 2,000 in eight months. Salt Lake City man made $1200 in one week. Write, U. & J..CARBURETOR CO. A501, W. Jackson Blvd., Chicago, Ill. Dickey Glazed Tile Silos . “The Fruit Jar of the Field” ‘Dickey silos are 'guaranteed. -‘Send for catalog No. 28. .8, Didey g, e “ Kansis.City, Mo. Chattanooga, Tenn, formin mmdsm'nhourn It | .flknflon the Leader When ertinz Advastherds A A R P A B collateral files shortly after the su- preme court put Examiner Lofthus in charge of the bank, Liberty bonds and other securities can not be located. According to Mr. Lofthus, Halldorson will be responsible for the missing paper as he refused to check out when ousted by the court. Halldorson has been discharged from his position as deputy state bank examiner by Mr. Lofthus. to the official, who was placed tempo- rarily in charge of the place by Langer, Mr. Lofthus said: “The part you took in the attempted wrecking of the Scandinavian Amer- ican bank convinces me that you are not worthy to hold any position of public trust or honor. You have been altogether too willing a tool of those criminally attempting to wreck the bank, if not an active participant therexn o More light on the reason for closing the bank has come in the application for a charter for a new national bank in Fargo, filed a few days after the closing of the Scandinavian American. James Grady and H. C. Aamoth of Valley City, active enemies of the Nonpartisan league, were among the applicants for the new charter. The two men were given a free In a letter hand in the Scandinavian American .bank after it had been closed, by P. E. Halldorson, according to affidavits of F. C. Heaton and N. J. Brevig, two employes of the closed bank. Accord- ing to these affidavits, Grady and Aamoth “seemed to have the under- | standing with P. E. Halldorson and Albert Sheets (assistant attorney general) to do very much as they pleased.” It became apparent after the clos- ing that Grady and Aamoth had been given assurance that the bank would never be allowed to reopen, and that there would be no opposition to these men starting a new institution in Fargo. The two men went over the fixtures, vaults and banking offices of the Scandinavian American and found that they would serve the purpose, would, in fact, make excellent quar- ters for the American National bank of Fargo. Their application for per- mission to place a bank in Fargo was then hurried to Washington, where it is now on file. The reopening of the bank, with the clean bill of health given by the state supreme court, crushed out the hope of the League enemies to supplant the farmers’ bank with one which would serve the purposes of the I. V. A. and the Twin Cities interests. Bad Methods Wreck Foreign Markets - (Continued from page 5) Zealand, South Africa, Egypt and In- dia—and we have in concrete form the freedom-of-the-seas issue. -The temptation to use this power to divert business from us to the controlled colonies is too great for the English to resist. The thing also crops out in another way. Before our crops are ready for the market, we hear about: increases in ocean freights and decline in Eng- lish exchange. Both of these things force our prices down. English agents buy up large quantities of our prod- ucts on future delivery. When the time for deliveries arrives, freights are put down and the Bank of England braces up the rate of exchange. Now the English government is buying here through one agency for a large part of Europe. What our producers face in ocean freight charges is well illustrated by what it cost to take 500 cattle from New York to Brest, ¥France, in July of this year. A government bulletin gives the charges per head as follows: Cost of ocean transportation..... $100.00 Feed in stockyards 5 l'fgg Feeding and care aboard shlp - Marine insurance........c.cevee. 5.90 Totaliziia vt dsatleisviial $120.65 Obviously we can’t ship many cat- tle to Europe, even blooded stock, with a charge like this hanging over our shippers. ‘Will our Northwest farmers be able to keep the foreign market built up by the war needs? Circumstances seem to point to a return to the mar- ket conditions of 1910 to 1914 rather than to those of ‘the fat years 1897- 1901. 'We have done nothing to alter the conditions adverse-to keeping this _foreign trade. On the other hand, if we could begin now to knock out the ocean freight monopoly with ' government-owned shipping, if we could reorganize our railroads under government owner- ship, if we could take the processing and marketing of farm products out of monopolistic. control, if -we could get a few efficient port cities, we could do much to save the war trade which came to us by accident. Australia is doing all this right now. Again, the only way to offset gov- ernment buying through one agent is .selling through one agent. This buy- ing for a whole empire illustrates how thoroughly the war overthrew our old system of doing business.: Europe will neyer go back to the old ways. We shonld not lose money: bylhangmg on "to them no matter how much Wall street talks about “tried and true methods” and “bolshevism.” The un- assailable facts given above show that the old methods cut over 50 per cent off of our foreign business within 10 years, : LABOR LAWS MADE PLAIN Laws for the protection of working men and women are set forth clearly and in every-day language in a little book, “Labor Problems and Labor Legislation,” by John B. Andrews, now available for farmers, workers and trade union libraries through the American Association for Labor Leg- islation, 131 East 23d St., New York City. For the first time, in this volume, the principles of protective labor leg- * islation are authoritatively presented in a popular style. Such topics of timely interest as regulation of hours of work, wages, rest periods, indus- trial accident and sickness prevention | and workmen’s health insurance, are | explained in language suited to read- ers who want to be informed without " the time and labor of consulting the technical, “heavy” books. Many pictures and drawings, care- fully selected, appear in the book to help in telling the story graphically, as well as to drive home the points made in the text. THE EAST AND THE LEAGUE The Public, a liberal weekly edited in New York, is publishing a series of articles by Judson King, secretary of the National Popular Government league, giving the entire history of the opposition’ of big business to the Nonpartisan league, exposing the un- scrupulous methods it has utilized in the contest and outlining a whole list of reasons why it can not succeed in its campalgn of vflification and “treat- ing-’em rough. The articles, written as they are by an impartial observer, publicist and authority on political and economic questions, reveal the commendatory attitude of liberal opinion in the East toward the North Dakota expenment and give the lie to all the vicious rumors to the contrary effect. Copies of the issues containing these articles, together with a package of other is- sues with Nonpartisan league articles, will be sent free for the asking to . those sending their names to The Public, 70 Flfth‘ Avenue, I}Iev_w Yoik, ‘ADVERTISEMENTS 25 Cords aDay Easny Sawed By One Man. Easy tomove fromcut to cut. Make blg profits cutting wood. - Cheap and easy to operate, OITAWA |OG SAW Mak » s m&mhbethu:dm es work inx un?;:y and other machinery. Saw eurl.vmmo Wfite!oronrlowpflee. 10-Year G Postpaid -FREE g for,my o EDISON RECORDS, (disc or cyllndnr) Ion than 5,000 to choose from. The c in the world—Sacred, Hawalian ehestray, Vocal, comlo—anythins u_‘want. pre| Yo:h wmhou wondeflul co lection of records in Foreign Lun:nuu Write today. Laurence H. Lucker, Edison Distributor, 90 S. 8th Street., Minneapolis, . Minn. Rertgest Fincy Pendergast Fence Book Just off the press—a complete treatise on selecting, buying and erecting wire fence. Sent free upon request. We ‘sell full gauge heavy galvanized fence and bar wire direct from factory - at first cost. Why pay more? United Fence Company OF STILLWATER 306 Main St., Stillwater, Minn, 257 Front St., Fort Madison, Ia. KILL QUACK WITH THE Kovar Quack Grass Killer and N \ Alfalfa Cultivator Vi oroughly tested on my Wown and_ other farms. Endorsed by agricultural experts and thouunds of satisfied users. alfalfa fields clean and does not injure plants. I positively guarantee sat- isfaction “or money re- funded. = Write for free circular, “How to Kill Quack Grass.” Two-Tooth View JOS. J. KOVAR, Mfr., Owatonna, Minn. SHIP US YOUR POULTRY and CREAM ‘We need fat Chickens, Turkeys, Ducks, Cream, Butter and other farm products. We charge no commission but pay top market for grade of goods received. Miller &Holmes | 8t. Paul, Minn, SPRING BOARS FOR SALE Sired by Graham Big Ptlee half brother 'of the world’s champion, Black Price, and Big Bone Choice, grandson of Long Big Bone. HILL SIDE POLAND CHINA FARM, - ogge & Son. R.F. D, No. 3 ;

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