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e 5 IR RS 2 ] 84 5 J '~ ADVERTISEMENTS Recllvuce. YOU‘R” Hauling Cost HE #ruck is one of the most important farm imple- ments you could buy. There- fore in choosing one be as care- ful as youwould be in choosing a mowing machine or a reaper. Extra weight fairly eats up tires, aud tires cost money. Before you buy any truck anywhere at any price, investigate DEAr BO TRUCKS They give the world’s lowest hauling cost. The new model "'48,” 2-ton, worm-drive truck weighs from 500to 2000 Ibs. less than any other worm-driven truck. Vet it is super-strong to resist extraordinary strains. The Dearborn Truck has extraz powerand is dependable under condmons that balk many heavy trucks. These working units have demonstrated their ability to give the most constant ser- vice at the least cost under unusual con- ditions. These working units are Buda Motor, Stromberg Carburetor, Stewart Vacuum Feed, Bosch Magneto, Fuller . Clutch and Transmission, and Standard Worm-Drive Rear Axle. Let us tell.you how the Dearborn SAVES every way, every day. Getour book. It gives information every prospective truck owner should have, Write today. The Dearborn Truck Co. Department N 2015 S. Michigan Ave. Chicago, Il 25 Cords aDay Easily Sawed By One Man. Easy to move from cut to cut. Make JDig. profits cutting wood, ~Cheap and easy to operate. OTIAWA [0G SAW Does 10 men’s work at one-tenth the cost. Makes work easy. Engine can also be used for running pumps and other machinery. Saw blade easily removed. Write forour low price. Cash or Easy Payments, Just uge binder : twine. One-fifth cost of rope at store. No ] g loose ends and will not un- |} ravel. Makes softer, more able rope, any length or hickness, for clothes llnes. § Halter Tln, tow hay slxngs. ete. Slmpl t.o te. } to:lea Makes rope time. Reruln.r price, $ Special on this advertisement, $3.50. : Liberal Proposition in Quantities o Agents. No tlms ?ulc y. Lasts a Hfe WE PAY FREIGHT HIGHEST QUALITY—LOWEST PRICES PROMPT SERVICE—FACTORIES NEAR Big Ilustrated Catalog Free UNITED FENCE COMPANY 308 Main St., of Stillwater 207 From'8t., STILLWATER, MINN. FORT MADISON, IA. Mention the Leader When Waiting Advertisers NORTH DAKOTA cus - in - Golden . Valley township, near Temple, N. D., adopted resolu- tions declaring that Langer, Kositzky = and Hall, by iucerfering with the program repeatedly decided upon by the ma- jority of the voters of the.state, are placing themselves on a par with Emma Goldman and Alexander Berk- man, the anarchists deported because they attempted to advocate the over- throw of the United States govern- ment. “I traveled all over the state last summer and not once did I discover the friction and disorder which the damnable newspapers outside the state assert prevails here,” declared A. R. Kroh, representative of an Ohio tire company, addressing the North Dakota- Implement Dealers’ conven- tion at” Fargo. -Doctor E. F. Ladd,is urgmg that plans be made to manufacture linseed oil- within the state instead of ship- ping the flax to Duluth. = Saving the by-products would mean the keeping .of millions of dollars’ worth of fertil- ity within the state. The fight between the anti-Leacue factions of the Republican party is growing. One faction, led by" Alex- ander McKenzie and Senator Porter J. McCumber, is trying to dislodge the - element led by Judge N. C. Young, Northern Pacific attorney, and the Fargo Forum. MONTANA League farmers have won their sec- ond big victory to save the direct primary law, the supreme court last week deciding, by a three to two vote, ‘to uphold the referendum wvote de-- manded by the League. At the reg- ular ‘session of the legislature last spring a bill was passed to kill the primary. The League started a refer- endum movement that was successful. Immediately the governor called a special session of the legislature that pasSed 2 mnew anti-primary law and declared it an emergency measure, so that no referendum could be taken. The legislature also allowed the gov- ernor to name two additional judges on the supreme court bench. It was thought that this would instire the de- feat of the referendum. Montana farmers and labor, how- ever, rallied to the support of the primary again and went over the top with their referendum petitions. An attorney for the Anaconda Copper Mining company brought sgit to en- join the secretary of state from recog- " nizing the referendum and the district court in which the case was brought decided against the people. The su- preme court, however, upheld the ref- erendum, taking the ground that the legislature had no right to prevent the people from exercising their con- stitutional right to halt the operation of a proposed law until ‘they can vote ‘upon it. Judges Mathews, CoOper and Hurley signed the majority opinion, Judges Brantly and Hd'lloway dlssent- ing. W MINNESOTA : ‘Reports from League precinct con- ventions show: the adoption of resolu- tions in many cases calling for a’ thorough canvass of the townshlp for new’ members. As a part of its plan to examine thoroughly the attitude of the yarious' EAGUERS in their cau-. - political candidates, the Working Peo- ple’s Nonpartisan Political league, which will co-operate with the organ- ized farmers in the coming elections, had , Congressman Franklin F., Ells- worth at a meeting in the St. Paul Auditorium February 4. Although the legislature refused to restore the old-time, corrupt political convention, the state Republican ma- chine has called an ‘“elimination con- vention” for March 19 in-an effort to put the state primary law out of com- mission. ' G. O. P. leaders also have devised a form of “test oath” intended to bar members of the Nonpartxsan league from pa.rtxcxpatmg in Repubh- can affairs. The Charles Patterson-Tom Parker ' Junkin anti-League organization has fallen to pieces and anti-League inter- ests are attempting to organize a new one, association,” with a $1,000,000 slush fund,; to oppose farmer candidates. Old-gang ' Republican ' leaders are falling out. Leavitt Corning, in a re- cent open letter, called upon Gust Lindquist, secretary to Governor Burn- quist, to resign as Republican national committeeman, stating that Lindquist was disliked by 90 per cent of the Re- publicans of the state. Lindquist re- fused and his outfit is preparing to punish' Corning and his friends. Representative J.. J. Alberts of North Dakota is spending a few months “helping Ledgue farmers in Minnesota. He has held nine success- ful meetmgs in Stearns county. NEBRASKA The Nebraska state hog serum plant is saving the farmers of Nebraska $1,0007000 a year, accordmg to esti- mates of county farm bureaus. The state plant does not manufactuie one- fifth of the serum used in the state in a year, but since it was started the price of 'serum has dropped from $3 and $4 a unit to $1.25. The Farmers’ union, in its state con- vention held recently at Omaha, voted almost unanimously in favor of a res- olution’ demanding the removal of the present $100,000 limitation on the state debt. Eight hundred delegates, representing 40,000 farmers, were present. Several hundred members of the Nonpartisan league, the railroad brotherhoods, union- labor and the Farmers’ union attended a massmeet- ing in Omaha recently at which steps were: taken for:closer co-operation in a political way between the organized farmers and organized labor during the coming state and local elections. In a speech to constitutional con- vention delegates R. B. Howell, gen- ~eral manager of the municipal water and ice plant in Omaha and Repub- lican national ' c¢committeeman from Nebraska, urged the removal of all restrictions in the ‘constitution that would stand in the way of public own- ership. WISCONSIN - J. Weller Long has addressed a let- ter to all members of the American Society of Equity declaring that J. N. Tittemore, national and state pres:dent of the American Society of Equity, is attempting to destroy the national or- ganization and keep the state organ- ization only for the purpose of build- ing up a Tittemore political machine. ' Long calls for an investigation and challenges Tittemore to a public de- bate. PAGE TEN called the “Sound Government - ADVERTISEMENTS- ckly ; for a good og::g:‘l’::g tfumreint eAn:oand‘m your Endeorsed by Quto Factories, = Erad:lfates amnd sdtude‘:‘ltsm;* usands satis| uates have Foodo and are o mv?rw earning blcgar:hrial You can do it £00. Onrmed:odo!ma ction is thorough and le You work with the aci and ull.w';"uxae MOTOR SCHOOL . . Dent 762 555 Downer Ave., llllm'll.. : 1 ,000 MEN | mone; —who wnnt to PR e ofa iR ot my b4 Automatic o | I-landi-TooI e g & dozen li!tl 4 tons, It’s a wln ltreteher, clam; lr vise, = Dim pnle sbump ) Sa!‘h trwtora builder& etc. lt'. (S 2 2'0 L e 5 -y Auto and Tractor Mechanic BarnsloomuocaMonlh f : Saial.” u’u;"‘ifi"” An3 1 teach - thh tools not books, Do the work yourself, that’s the secret of the SWEENEY SYSTEM ractical traimes hyw!ndlfim 20 SGW L] 000 Tt Learn in a few 3 necessary. 8; no previons ‘Write today for illustrated free catalog uhowing hundndn of Fctum men I-'IIEE SCHOO! AU‘I'0~TRA Ol 52 swzml\’m mfi&"e“r‘fifl?" Wizt ! 1 0 40 packn vegetable SR ARy PHTG : MONEY or premiums, s le ot TO-DAY. Bosd o) no money. We .trust you till AMERIOAH E x 134 8 ED cl.%‘PAm Dickey Glazed Tile Sllns” “The Fruit Jar of the Field” Save 10 per cent by ordering now Pay later when silo arrives. Send for catalog No, 28. W. S. Dickey Clay Mig. Co. ~ MACOMB, ILL., ‘Kansas City, Mo Chattanooga, Tenn. Mention the Lender When' Writing Advert_isers i B3 B Dy 2