Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
ADVERTISEMENTS MORE than twenty thousand citizens of Minneapolis now pay 3 cents a eopy or 15 cents a week for the new- est newspaper in the Twin Cities, prefer- ring it to seven other newspapers selling for two-thirds the price or less. They say it’s “worth more than the difference.” The reason is that the MINNESOTA DAILY STAR is a fair newspaper is a free newspaper The Star is the one newspaper in the Twin Cities which is fair to the cause of the organized farmer. It is the one newspaper which is fair to the cause of the organized workers. The Star makes a conscientious effort to report the world’s news and the news of the nation and the West as it is. The Star is free. It is free of all the strings of special privilege. It does not serve any group of banks. It does not serve any aggregation of advertisers. It does not color its news to suit the ideas of the “business commu- nity” or the exploiters of labor and the farmers. When a college professor says the farmers of the Northwest are being robbed of many millions by grain gambling and rigging the markets, the Star does not ask the chamber of commerce or the president of a bank whether this is news “fit to print.” The Star prints it and lets the grain gamblers rave. When a former presi- dent of the chamber of commerce confesses that grain market manipulation has stolen millions from farmers and business-men alike and ruined business, the Star prints that, too. The columns of the Star are open to fair discussion. Our motto is, “Let the truth prevail and let the kept press be shamed by the knowledge that the farmers and the workers can afford to be fair.” The Star stands for freedom and honest Americanism. The Star Is a Real Newspaper It has as good telegraphic and local news service as any paper in the West. It has illustrated features that are unexcelled. It has complete market reports. It has the best sporting page in the Twin Cities. It has leased wire service of the International News Service, the correspondence and dispatches of the Federated Press and receives dispatches from able correspondents all over the nation. It has an editorial page so strong that thoughtful men and women of all classes and leaders in public life buy it to get its viewpoint on public questions. Cheap Men Buy (‘he:ip Newspapers The Star is not published for those who can not understand how news perverted in the interest of the advertisers and big business alliances is corrupting the public mind. It is published for those who are willing to open their eyes and their minds and to think. Those who want something cheap will take what big business hands them. They will swallow the opiate and go back to sleep. They will say that $7.50 in Minnesota and the states bordering on Min- nesota, and $9.00 outside those states is “too much to pay for a newspaper that hasn’t as many pages as the others.” Very well. - We won’t quarrel with them. The Star is not for them. It’s for Americans who' believe in America and progress, who are for de- mocracy and against autocracy, who are willing to buy the truth, even if it costs more than a lie. Would you like to enroll among Use the Coupon Below MINNESOTA DAILY STAR DAILY STAR BUILDING, 427 SIXTH AVENUE 8., MINNEAPOIiS Enclosed find $ (seven-fifty if you live in Minnesota, North Dakota, South Dakota, Iowa or Wisconsin—nine dollars if you live outside those states) for the newspaper which costs more and is worth more because the truth is worth more than a lie, Please enroll me for one year’: subscription. PAGE TWENTY ADVERTISEMENTS REDUCED FROM | #| get, at this astonishing price, a cloth- bound, illustrated history of the Nonpartisan league, containing all the facts about this greatest of farmers’ movements since its beginning. : : The book is “The Story of the Nonpartisan League” By Charles Edward RusSell Mr. Russell is one of America’s most noted writers on political and economic subjects. His book is a result of five years of study of the farmers’ movement since its inception in North Dakota. .= The publishers are Harper & Bros., one of the oldest and best-known publishing firms in - the United States. With paper and publica- tion costs at the highest point they have ever been we are selling this book, on strong, high- grade paper, in large, clear type, illustrated, cloth bound, for the remarkable price of $1.25, possible only because we purchased a large supply practically at cost and are selling them without profit. - The Story - The story told by Mr. Russell will loom large in history. Your children will want this book when they grow up. . You must read it to be informed of public affairs at this time. Aside from that it is thrilling, interesting—the story of the life and strug- gles of A. C. Townley, of the modest beginnings and battles of a farmers’ organization that has aston- ished the world. You will want to buy the book also for your friends and acquaintances. i How to Get It USE THE FOLLOWING BLANK. DO IT TODAY. WHILE THEY LAST, $1.25 PER VOLUME. ‘ N THILE they last you can ‘The N onpartisan I;eader Box 2072, Minneapolis, Minn. Nonpartisan Leader (Book Dephrtment), Box 2072, Minneapolis, Minn. Gentlemen: Please sénd me, postpaid, “THE STORY OF THE NONPARTISAN LEAGUE,” by Russell, $1.25. I inclose check, draft, money order, currency for ............. i Name .......... Mok dae s Wirite i o S ERRR o sl L il saae S s, ISl o Bordith Sanisew Plainly Street or R. F. D.