The Nonpartisan Leader Newspaper, April 5, 1920, Page 2

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ADVERTISEMENTS It puts the grain in the sack—does not waste it in the stack 'ne manufacturers Demanded by the best farmers and threshermen All the Grain Is Coming to You Stacker Deliversit Every kernel of the grain you stack in the ordinary proc- have raised isyours. Then why \)/ ess. Demand the Grain-Saving let any of it go into the straw stack? 4 Stacker on the machine for your You don’t have to any more. The next job. See that above trade-mark Grain-Saving Stacker returns to (in colors) ison each side. Write to the separator and into the sack or any of thelist below for full informa- wagon the grain that is blown to the tion about this sterling profit-saver. LIST OF MANUFACTURERS United States Canada Taylor Machi Co., HuberManufacturingCo.,Mario®: Robt. Bell Engine & Thresh et O O D eIk Co.s " "'Col, Ltd., Seaforth, One. Avery Company, Peoria, Ill. Dominion Thresher Co., Ltd., A.D.Baker Company, Swanton,O. New Hamburg, Ont. Banting Munufacturing Co., J. B. Dore & Fils., Ltd., it ue. Illiltlnloh Thresher Co., Sycamore, Keck-Gonnerman Co., Mt. Toledo, Ohio = Vernon, Ind. Laprairie, Q: Batavia Machine Co., Batavia, 1 ender Tractor Manufacturing Ernst Bros. Co., Ltd., Mt ¥ Co., Des Moines, lowa Forest, Ont. — Cafieg Mig. Co., Cape Girardean, Link Mfg. Co., Kansas City, Mo. John Goodiso .'lg;lrte';her Co., < . Ltd., Sarnia, 55 Threshing Machine Co., Minnea g Threshing Machine ; O Mi J RC_BM:' W:? ing =] Co..'fig Minn Heég;t.c Bros., Ltd., Mildmay, Clark Machine Co., St. Johnsville, Port Huron Engine & Thresher MacDonald Thresher Co., Ltd., N. Y. 0., Port Huron, Mich. Stratford, Ont. Ellis Keystone Agricultural Works, The Russell & Co., Massillon, O. Sawyer-Massey Co., Ltd., Pottstown. o Russell Wind Stacker Co iiton, Gat. Emerson-Brantingham Co., ‘i“e“ tis - Rocklord,. . Thresher Sawyer: Ml::se;' Co. Ltd. (U. S. armers Independent Thresher 2, s, . .« S FCO., Spring‘f::ld. m. - Agency), Moline, IIl A. B. Farquhar Co., York, Pa. Southwest Mfg. Co., Oklahoma Ferdinand Machine Works, City, Okla. Ferdinand, Ind. ~ Swayne, Robinson & Company, Frick Company, Waynesboro, Pa. Richmond, Ind. Harrison Machine Works, Belleville, Il Stewart Sheaf. Loader Co., Ltd., Winnipeg, Man. Wallace Machine Works, Ltd., Sussex, N. B. E Waterloo Manufacturing Co., Ltd., Waterloo, Ont. : R. Watt Machine Works, Ltd., e R o orge te . Ltd., The W:.fingl;c:u&e. %x':mpany. vk don, Ont. The Grain-Saping Stacker Originated With the Indiana Manufactaring Company, Indianapolis, Ind., Who Also Originated the Wind Stacker. ' All Sizes at Proportion- ately Low Prices . Direct from Galloway’s Factories That's the resson for this low price. This eaves you the difference between my price and the price of the high-priced separators. I cut § ouht 1]111 vlvasta and A{rall you at this rod(G.!fi)tmm wholesale ou get your new oway - & Sanitary right fresh from my factory floor, wr 'te fo" TRIAL TEST FOR 180 MILKINGS Rew. Stbavatir Sold on 90 days’ trial. Has strong, sanitary gy]) particulars about this ; Tank of pressed steel; Heavy tinware; Jow price Separator. Sale— Sanitary bow,lf Discs separate from each other or order from this ad— for washing. satisfaction guaranteed or ith hinge money refunded. i . - \GiT Bath and aanitary ariy panc > 7" 2% Write TODAY . QLLowAY. THE WM. GALLOWAY CO. 603 Galloway Station WATERLOO, IOWA ‘ WY T F N E N N J Book with Order Direct From This Announcement ] FOR a limited time only lwe %Eerhhighesg gradf: &e::tral}la%a:yi ll;arbed wire just purchased by us at less than the cost of manu! re. of 12 gauge Delot ancepted 10 tos Gorer s (D B e e e e e Sm by the best threshing ety Sy e ™ FREE BOOK @i Send for Galloway’s big gl MORE TRUTH THAN POETRY Old Mother Hubbard rubbered and rubbered - At the rising price of gas, | “It's plain,” said she, “that old John D is either going to give another million to the University of Chicago or else he’s trying to make up the amount of his federal income tax inside of a week.” * * * Since Hoover has been dubbed pro-British, the Irish say that he’ll have to put on some reverse English to get their votes. * * * What has become of— All the old cocktail glasses? Charley Patterson’s million-dollar slush fund? ; “America First” magazine? Tom Parker Junkin? * * * MOTOR GOOSE Ride a cock horse to a town by the river To see an old lady a driving a flivver, She steers with her fingers and stops with her toes, The noise wakes the neighbors where- ever she goes. B . A state senator in West Virginia used an aeroplane to get to the capi- tol to vote for suffrage. Our guess is that after the women get to voting | the .senators who were against suf- | frage will use crutches to get from | the capitol to their homes. * * * We have watched with interest the balloon ascension of prices and are waiting hopefully for the advertised p:rachute drop. * % Organization means that fellers in 1 town Have got to quit kickin’ the farm around. * % % : Thirteen is said to be President Wilson’s lucky number. Certain- ly he hasn’t had much luck with - article 10 or the 14 points. * * * SPELLING CORRECT Ever since the tonnage tax became an issue in Minnesota the weakly papers have been supporting the steal trust. * * ¥ Cy Scroggins says that after watching some Russian dancers he knows why Russia went Bol- shevik. A Minnesota farmer owned a mule. When he drove it into town one day a local politician, thinking he would win a laugh by making the farmer the butt of a joke, asked him: “What do you call your mule— Townley?” * “No, I've got too much respect for Mr. Townley,” the farmer replied. “Then what do you call him—Burn- quist ?” o “No, I've got too much respect for the mule.” * * * Palmer is trying to cut the living cost by selling cheap cuts of meat twice a week. After he gets through with that job, perhaps he’ll be reliev- ing drouths with a sprinkling can. * * 3* For the number of revolutions per minute, Germany, Russia, Mexico and the 1920 automobile engines seem to be close competi- tors, * * * As we remarked once before, con- gress was able to bounce Berger twice: in less time that it takes to get rid of Newberry once. @ * x % One thing that isn’t subject to the general advance is a lady’s age. * x % A new disease, known as chauffeur’s tongue, is making its appearance dur- ing the political campaign. In this disorder the tongue is always running people down. 2 et e “I hear all your constituents know you well, senator.” “Yes, that’s just the trouble.” * * *® The millennium must be approach- ing. An anti-League paper in Oregon admits that it made serious mistakes in quoting No:th Dak?tta tax figures. * Ibanez, Spanish novelist, said American men should take a stand against being dominated by women. And then he left hurried- ly for Europe. * % % Henry Ford is going to make air- ships now. We hope he puts on a self- starter; if the engine were to stop in midair it might be inconvenient to have to get out to crank. : * % 8 Little grains of humor, Little bits of rhyme, Help to fill this column, But gosh, they do - take time! BAD HAPITS they drive us on from good to bad and then from bad B AD habits, so I've often heard, are ev'ry mortai’s curse; to worse. Now alcohol and nicotine have never bother- ed me, but still I have a habit bad, I know you will agree. This craving first attacked me when I was aged one min- ute; my parents missed the danger and, in fact, they helped me in it. “The habit grew from day to day, almost from hour to hour, and now I'm firmly clutched and held within its awful power. parents and myself both thou This habit—it is eating; my craving is for food; my ght that it would do me good. reels containing mt&.uda'dgthcmlfifilh. 2-PX100. But ah, if they but could have seen the awful consequence I'm sure that they never would have helped me to commence. In early years it wasn’t bad, I hardly felt the cost; with prices as they are today I feel that I am lost. What can I do? Thardly know. It doesn’t seem quite fair to force a man . who’s used to bread to go through life on air. i I.must swear off on beef and pork, potatoes too, alas! The only chance for me, it seems, is just to live on grass. One tip I have for youngsters, and this is how I word it— “Don’t ever start in eating, you never can afford it.” Price in carload lots (625 reels or more) per reel, $1.50 2-PX103 Price in lots of (25 reels ormore) perreel, $1.65 2.PX104 : Price in lotsof (less than Zreels) perreel, $1.70 -PX101 2 Price in lots of (100 reels or more) per $1.56 -PX102 : Price in lots of (50 reesl ormore)perreel. $1.60 Mantian #ho T.aader When Writing Advertisers & ' PAGE TWO .

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