The Nonpartisan Leader Newspaper, May 31, 1920, Page 12

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You Can Make 8500 to 51000 a Month Milling “FlLavo” FLody in your community on this New Won. derful Mill —no previous milling ex- penence necessary Be a Miller and have a dignified, permanent business that will earn you steady profits the entire year. Grind your home-grown wheat, supply your community with flourand feed. You save the freight on the wheat going out, and the flour and feed coming in. Besides earning the regular milling profits you get the extra profit of mak- | ing ‘A BETTER- BARREL OF FLOUR CHEAPER’ on the famous “MIDGET MARVEL.” The newpro- cess, self-contained, one-man, roller flour mill that is revolutionizing the milling industry. It requires less than half the power and labor of the usual roller mill and makes a creamy white, better flavorcd flour that retains the health building vitamines and the natural sweet flavor of the wheat. Our customers are given the privi- lege of using our Nationally advertised “FL ‘We furnish the sacks with your name printed on them. OUR SER- VICE DEPARTMENT examines sam- ples of your flour every thirty days and keeps your products up to our hxgh Flmo"standard We start you in business with our * Confidential Selling Plans’’and teach you the busi- ness of milling and selling flour. You can start in this most delightfully profitable business, with our 15barrels perday, mill with as little as $3,500 capi- Other sizes up to 100 barrels. Over 2000 communi= ties already have Midget Marvel Mills, Start now milling ‘Flavo’’Flourin your own community be- fore some one else takes advantage of this wonderful op- portunity. Write today for cur Free Book, ** The ofa onderful Flour Mill. " The Anglo - Ameri 195.301 _‘_rgmt i ican Mill Co. Owensboro, Ky Saws 25 Cords a Day The Ottawa Lo e Sa Snw falls txees or cuts off s Ps level with groun cuts up branches, ice cutter runs pump mck and otherbe‘tmnc hinery. Mou wheels. Easy tomove ere. ' 10 Year Guarantee. SODaya’I‘nal Writ eiorfieegokandCsshorEuy Terms, QTTAWA MFG.CQ. 2341 Wood St., Ottawa, Kans, 18c¢ a gallon net. 50 GALLONS $15.00 including 50-gallon steel barrel. $6.00 refunded for barrel when returned. Crude Oil is the best thing known to kill lice on hogs, and mites in the hen house. ORDER AT ONCE—Prices are advancing. We will ship when- ever _you want the Oil. \\RITL AT ONCE—TO- DAY—for our price list of AUTO UILS and GREASES—We sell ONLY TO CONSUME! Nebraska Farmers CD -operative 8" 00 Dept. 0, 802 Douglas S mnha. Neb Prevent winter rains smothering the goil. Put land in shape for early spring work, Get your _. dit and terracing done now wi Farm Dit: 'I'. nd Grader | Warks in any soil. Makes "V"-ithcd ditch or oleana ditches down 4 fi. All steel. Reversible. Adjustable. Write for Free Book, OWENSBORO DITCHER & GRADER CO., feg, Boas 825, Owenshare, Ky. 10 Days Free Irial Mention the Leader "hen Writing Advertisers “Fmous for its Flavor” = tal. W Sy tum; b nted G HE North Dakota State Federation of Labor, at its annual convention, adopted resolutions call- ing for continued sup- port of the Nonpartisan league program and political co-oper- ation between farmers and city work- ers and calling attention to the fact that during the last five years the im- provement of labor conditions “has nowhere been so pronounced as in the state of North Dakota.” H. J. Hagan, president of the Scan- dinavian-American bank of Fargo, convicted of a technical violation of the banking laws as the result of At- torney General Langer’s “raid” upon-— the bank, has been granted a new trial by District Judge M. N. Englert, be- fore whom the case was tried, on the ground of misconduct on the part of Langer’s deputies during the trial and illegal seizure of bank records during the raid. Governor Frazier is receiving re- quests from all parts of the United States for speeches on the North Da- kota industrial program. During the past month he has found time to fill a few of these dates, speaking in Nebraska, Massachusetts and New York. The North Dakota League of Wom- en Voters, at its first convention in Fargo, passed a resolution appreciat- ing “the good legislation in our state along the lines in which the League of ‘Women Voters is interested” and call- ing upon members to help in enforce- ment. Men and women clerks and stenog- raphers at the state capitol and among business houses of Bismarck have organized an office employes’ union, affiliated with the American Federation of Labor. Members of the railroad brother-= hoods in Grand Forks and the Minot Working People’s Nonpartisan alli- ance recently passed resolutions com- mending the administration of Gov- ernor Frazier. The Home Building association has announced that it will build 20 homes in Fargo to relieve the housing short- age. Work will be started within 30 days. IDAHO Considerable comment is heard over the state sincé the Idaho Leader ex- posed the fact that the commissioner of investments speculated in Liberty bonds of the fourth issue with money from the school endowment fund. These bonds were bought in the face of a’ declining market and to date show a loss of more than $20,000. The bonds were not bought as a patriotic duty but were unloaded on the state by. bankers more than a year later than the drive. Had the same amount of money been loaned to the farmers at 6 per cent interest the state would have benefited from improvements and would also have been financially better off by $229,000 at the end of . 20 years, the date of the expiration of the bonds. The first political convention to be held in Idaho in more than 10 years took place recently in the mnorthern part of the state. - Tt was the Repub- lican- state convention and, according to reports which filtered through, those in the saddle have not forgotten how to manipulate conventions. Now that Idaho has been robbed of its state-wide primary the old convention system is in vogue. Farmers of Twin Falls county, tir- ing of having nothing but anti-farmer newspapers to read, have taken over the Twin Falls Daily Times. The Times has a good equipment, a large subscription list and the management of the paper has been placed in the hands of W. V. Wiegand, who is also manager of the Idaho Free Press, the farmer-owned daily newspaper at Nampa. Farmer-labor meetings in Idaho continue to attract large crowds of in- terested people who many times drive 40 and 50 miles to hear the speakers. Recently at Twin Falls the largest theater building in the .city was crowded to standing room, while sev- eral hundred were turned away, at the occasion of a speech by Thomas Van Lear, former mayor of Minneapolis. Thomas Van Lear spoke recently to more than .1,000 people at Nampa, Idaho. Mr. Van Lear talked for two hours and was well received, stating afterwards that if the sentiment at his meeting was any criterion of the sentiment throughout Idaho the com- ing election looked like a walkaway. Employers of Boise, banding to- gether, have formed a pool and put up the money to secure an mJunctlon against the cooks and waiters’ union of that city to prevent picketing. The case is set for hearing soon and the union is prepared to fight it through the supreme court. Meore than 1,000 persons attended a protest meeting at Rupert addressed by Ray McKaig of the Nonpartisan league and W. P. Whitaker, mayor of Pocatello. Many were un- able to enter the crowded auditorium, Women of Twin Falls county are making arrangements to perfect a woman’s auxiliary to the Nonpartisan league. - MINNESOTA Charles Lund of Vining, Minn,, League farmer and banker, has been indorsed by the state executive com- mittee of the Nonpartisan league and Working People’s Nonpartisan Polit- ical league as a candidate for the Re- publican nomination for state treasur- er. Mr. Lund tgkes the place on the ticket of Miss A Lily, Anderson of Franklin, who was unable to file, be- cause the federal suffrage amendment had not been ratified. - The first graduate of the anti- League school of oratory, conducted in St. Paul by the so-called “Sound Government association,” made his debut at a meeting in Stillwater. Free motion pictures were shown to at- tract the crowd, but most of the au- dience left before the speaker had concluded his tirade against the League. : Before opening the “airplane cam- paign,” Henrik Shipstead, candidate for governor; Captain George H. Mal- lon, candidate for lieutenant governor, and Thomas V. Sullivan, candidate for attorney general, all indorsed by the Nonpartisan league and labor, invaded the strongholds of the steel trust in northern Minnesota. ° Tremendous crowds are turning out to hear the progressive Republican candidates, indorsed by the League and labor, at the all-day picnics being held all over Minnesota. A. C. Town- ley, president of the League, is able to address three meetings every day by hopping from place to place in an airplane. The Minnesota Leader has come in- to possession of figures on the profits of the iron ore industry which were intended- only for the confidential in- formation of the officers of the United States Steel corporation. These fig- ures are being used in articles ap- PAGE TWELVE S labor. ADVERTISEMENTS . i that backs ub its goodsp:g | its representatives with cash. Write for our free book = **The Hy . CO. "”"n Gets 1 n\er? m (59) Bear Quick Detachable Non-Skid Tirs First tire chain improvement in the last 17 years, Just what you want. No jacks. No tools needed. NO JOKE OR CAMOUFLAGE connected with this chain. BE chains are pulling more cars out of the mud .- today than any other; they do the business, 3 dealer can not supply you write us direct, Bear Mig. Co., Rock Island, . ~ 3 It your You should have our direct from factory to farm prices before you buy :fence. HIGH QUALITY FENcE—LOW PRICES You can not afford to miss this opportunity. Write our nearest factory today. UNITED FENCE COMPANY OF STILLWATER 207 Front St. 306 Main St. Fort Madlson. lowa Stillwater, Minn. Stack Your H o The que‘:tr W:?M suckors and Sweep Rakes _ . nghaythaJayhawk 2 ‘way means tlmtzil moneysuved Ja; nwkSu:k« ers and Sweep esmakeit g easy to hnrven and save Dickey Glazed Tile Silos “The Fruit Jar of the Field” Send for catalog N W. 5, Dicey Clay Mi Mig. Co. f Zoleading varieties, old chicks. Bafe = gfilil " dbest oltpnd. One of e an equi tho United States Catalos FREE: L mitior Pocitryh sumiBos 531 Lanoaster, Mo, Mention the Leader When Writing Advertisers

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