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The producers news. [volume] (Plentywood, Mont.) 1918-1937, October 19, 1928, Image 6

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HOT POLITICAL BAT
TLE BEING WAGED
IN MINNESOTA
j
. •
Three Peu ties In the Field to Elert
Presidential Candidates, State and j
County Offices. Many Elements
Enter Into Contest. j
Republicans, Democrats and Farm
er-Laborites are waging a hot fight
for the capture of Minnesota next
"Republican, are interested
capturing Minnesota for Hoover,
their presidential nominee; for Arth
ur E. Nelson, nominee for United
States Senator; for Theodore Chris-jing
tianson, their gubernatorial candi
date, and for their state and con
zressional ticket.
The Democrats obviously are con
fimiiK their activities to garnering
votes for Governor Alfred E. Smith,
nominee of the Democrats for the
presidency. The small vote which
the Democarts have polled in Minne
sota during the last ten years has
operated to discourage active effort
on the part of their more intelligent
leaders to winning votes for their
By H. G. Teigan
Farmer- Labor Press Service
state and congressional tickets. It
was ny i.oubt this lact which oper
ated to induce George F. Cashman
Democratic nominee nor United
race 68 wÄ 'Âmlrcw Nelson De
mo^atic nominee fo'rGoveto"' will
follow suit has not yet been deter- |
Farmer-,. ahuries Fight for Ticket !
imr a consi-tmt light for their state
mg a consi.i m, xigni xur 'r |
and congie.^ioiUi. x s. '
mg no a nci-L nrtpr w iil
S^h^^etwcÄ'nomi- 1
l,em0Crat an ''iî
' Governor * Smith visited the Twin
Cities on Thursday of last week. His
reception at the hands of admirers
and supporters at the St. Paul Audi
toriuin wa? perhaps the most re
markahle that a candidate has ever
received in the Twin Cities. It was
estimated that 13,000 people gained
entlance to the Auditorium and that
at least that many were turned
The governor devoted the main
part of his address to a discussion of
conditions in agriculture and the
remedy for these conditions. He re- ;
iterated his stand in favor of the
principle of the McNary-Haugen bill
and pledged if elected to carry out
the program of the .farmers in this
regard. Smith's position on the Me
Nary-Haugen bill has received ap
proval of nearly all farmer leaders
and has even gained the sanction of
Senator George W. Norris, leader of
the
Borah's Right-About Face
On Monday evening of this week
Senator William E. Borah, the
heavy artillery as it were of the Re
publican national committee, ad-.
-,
the Republican insurgents in
United State? Senate.
VOTE FOB
II
i,X„
■ V

a. a
FORD
GREAT FALLS
Former Attorney General
REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE FOR
mam justice
of the
SUPREME COURT
(4-Year Term)
Paid Political Ad?.
I
I
^ This
Practical
Cook Book
m
FV^^containing more than 90 excel
lent recipes—bread, muffins, cakes
and pastry—will be mailed on request
to users of K C Baking Powder.
The recipes have been prepared
especially for -
KCBakmg RiwJcr
2 $ ounces for 25 ^ /
Millions of Pounds
Used by Our
Government
X
>*>

y
addressed a large audience in the
Minneapolis auditorium. Mr. Borah
boosted Hoover as a friend of the
farmer and attempted to show that
the latter had rendered great service
to agriculture during the days of the
war and the period immediately fol
lowing. Borah also assailed Smith
as a tool of Tammany and a man not
to be trusted by the farmers of the
country.
Borah's ardent support of Mr.
Hoover is something of a surprise to
those who are familiar with the Ida
ho Senator's record. Among those
to call attention tfi Borah's right
about face is Mr. J. F. Reed, head,
of the state Smith-Robinson clubs
and former president of the Minne
sota Farm Bureau Federation. Mr.
h'Ä'ÄÄÄi
ate on January 18, 1919, in which,
the Senator charged Herbert Hoover,
federal food administrator, with hav -1
worked in collusion with the'
packers and processers, thereby per-1
mitting them to extort millions of 1
dollars out of the farmers of the I
country.
"I want it understood," said Bor
ah, that these corporations (Arm
our, Swift, Cudahy, et al), which deal
in nothing but food supplies have '
j realized under the administration of 1
Mr. Hoover vaster profits than they !
have ever realized before in the is
! toi y of their concerns,
Hoover the Packers' Man, Says Borah
"It is a fact demonstrated over the,
signature of the packers themselves
that their profits under Mr Hoover,
amounted to all the way Item 20
two Tears " P "
fn^e speech referred to Senator
Borah stated most emphatically that |
$100,000 000."
if wm ,ld c P p m tw tn ho romîndod
of the above statements retrardimr
Mr Hoover would move -i hit enf
tarraSng r to W Ml ld B„ P r™h e Itis'iikt
5 he th Bmah f0 speech
broadcast by some farm relief sup
porter of Mr. Smith. ;
Senator Henrik Shipstead and I
foimer Congressman Ernest Lundeen, !
Farmer-Labor candidate for Govern- 1
or, are continuing to hold meetings
to good sized audiences in different
parts of the stale. The effort on the
part of Republicans to boost the can
away.ldidacy of Andrew Nelson,' Democrat-1
ic nominee for the governorship, is
likely to prove a boomerang. Re
publicans fear the outcome of the
governorship and they are now with
the aid of the newspapers attempting
to get Farmer-Laborites to vote for
Nelson instead of for Lundeen. _
Real Fight Between LunUeen and
Christianson
The same stunt^ was tried in 1922
when ShipsteauT was elected to the
senate. In the senatorial race that
year there were three contenders:
Frank B. Kellogg, Dr. Henrik Ship
stead and Anna Dickie Oieson. The
Republican newspapers up until near
ly the close of the campaign talked
; a ^t the contest between Kellogg
and Mrs. Oieson. Shipstead was not
ev6 n considered a good contender
i until one day W. I. Nolan addressed
a Woman's Republican gathering in
Minneapolis and reminded his audi
ence of the fact that the contest did
not lie between Kellogg and Mrs. Ole
son, but between Kellogg and Ship
stead. Shipstead was elected by
83,000 plurality over the Republican
nominee. .
The situation is now much the
same in the gubernatorial contest,
The race is between Christianson and
1 Lundeen and it remains to be seen
j how much of a vote Andrew Nelson
I can poll, provided of course he does
i not withdraw from the contest.
Second Girl Dies at Havre,
Result of Gas Poisoning
Havre, Oct. 8.—Louise Donovan,
16, is dead from monoxide gas pois
oning. Her sister, Amy, 18, died
Wednesday. The two
were found,
1 one dead, the other unconscious, in
; their bed at the home of Mrs. Martha
, Bare, here, Wednesday.
A hot water heater, its flue shop
ped up with soot, had poured the
deadly gas into the girls' room. Their
window was closed.
Mrs. Bare went
m search of them, when they failed
to appear for school. Louise died
Wednesday night, while physicians
were making preparation for trans
fusion of blood from her brothers.
The girls, who were students in
high school here, were daughters of
Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Donovan, who
live near Kremlin.
The Producers News, $3 a year.
ed
^
. . .
publican administration*
Ogden L. Mills, under-secretary of the treasury and a leading
citizen of New York state, recently cited that the ••comparison
between the record in Washington and the Smith record in jsew
York is indeed significant. From 1921 to 1928 the cost of gov
, , oc . - inoi
eminent at Washington decreased oo per cent; irom to
1928 the cost of government in New York state increased 197
, „ _ moi *.* iqoq nsr
per cent. From 1921 to 1928 federal taxes decreased dl per
cent, and from 1921 to 1928 New York state taxes increased
181 per cent During these same periods the national debt was
■ LW * , , ,
cut by 27 per cent, and the net debt of New York state grew by
p er cen k
v
Smith Talk vs.
Republican Economy
(From The Phillips County News)
<❖
THE MAJOR PORTION of A1 Smith's speeches during his
recent trip into the south and west was devoted to wholesale de
nunciation of the republican administration at Washington. In
this connection it is interesting to note the wide difference be
tween Smith's talk and the actual accomplishments of the re
Pf
Think it over
During this time Smith was governor of New York for all but
two years, and the republican party was in power at Washing
ton. There is a big difference between mere talk and action.
, i
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F RISC O ?
I * ** S.ah.hcrg f
****♦*<>♦♦♦♦♦♦♦»♦♦♦♦♦*»»»»»<
(Continued from last week.)
~ , ,
viceV aV^der'oLminewho mt'
happen into Pierre Go to Middle
ton s bakery and buy an apple pie,
^ en seek out the Hegglund Music
House an ^ bu .V a Pagiiacci record—
Preferably "Vesti la Gmbba", sung
Caluso or Gigli—and while play
the record eat the P 16 - w
su P erb combination, delighting tne
® ar and the P alate simultaneously,
But ' y° u must take care not to eat
the record and play the pie, or there
wdl almost certainly be complications
and disappointments.
I visited the Indian school, at the
edge of the city, and talked for
while to a group of young men there.
The smaller children were not great-1
ly different from the young white
race, except as to color, but the old
er boys were quiet and reserved tho
n ot quite as uncommunicative as
had been told they would be. There
were two or three of them who
unteered to show me around
buildings and I accepted the offer.
We accordingly went through
dormitories, thé dining hall, and
classrooms, hut I did not find these
things anywhere near as interesting
as my guides. I liked them, and
think they understood this. At any
rate they went to a great deal
trouble to make my visit interesting.
I suppose it is banal to say that
Indian is graceful in movement; nev
ertheless there was a youth of about
seventeen or eighteen in the group
whose lightness aroused my whole
hearted envy. The others, however,
were not so tall and less supple.
together there are some two hundred
; seventy-five Indians at the school
though one of the young fellows runs
away every now and then the atten
dance is i^sually kept at about
figure.
There is no bridge across the Mis
souri here, though they are building
one this summer, and all vehicles
ferried across. (There is, of course,
a railroad bridge.) i hiked across,
by way of the railroad, to the
bank of the river and came back
the ferry. It happened that a heavy
wind blew down from the northwest,
and the river became a little wild—
much wilder than I would have
it possible for a river to become.
became necessary for the ferryman
to use caution in bringing his
to the bank and I, benighted landlub
ber that I am, was positively
O he new Shiick
is the new Stale
V,
•»
ä
ii
iu want beauty-if you want luxuiy
*»>
it#**'«
if you want up-to-the-minute smartness
there's only one choice—the choice of
America - --the new BUICK with
'Masterpiece Bodies by Fisher.
From one end of the country to
another—-in New York, in
Miami, in Chicago, in Los
Angeles and all towns between
—overwhelming praise for the (
distinctive beauty of the Silver
Anniversary Buick with new
Masterpiece Bodies by Fisher!
All agree that here is a new
style—a new mode—an entirely
different and original interpre
tation of motor car beauty,
forecasting the trend of
body-design for months
come.
Thrilling new lines—sparkling
color harmonies—and wonder
ful new interiors—all combine
to form ensembles of rare and
distinguished artistry.
If you want beauty—if y<> u want
luxury—if you want up-to-the
minute smartness—there's only
one choice . . . the choice of
America... the new Buick with
Masterpiece Bodies by Fisher,
It's the new stj 1 -—the new
mode—in motor cars!
smart
to
the ojllVer c Anniversary*
BUICK
O. M. DONALDSON, Dealer
Plentywood, Montana
When Better Automobiles Are Built
. Buick Will Build Them
In histoiical inteiest Fort Pierre
excels the capital city itself. Its his
'ory goes back to theyear 1743 when
fa group of French explorers planted
Ä îtatÆthü
office of the Historical Society at the
™ Äe^ÜÄ
South Dakota, m 181 1 . It claim» va
rlous other distinctions, such as hav
ing been visited twice by Lewis and
Clark; and the first white woman in
1 SS^STn^ Thànîf goÆ '
! South Dakota hL ' progressed sin«;
, then!
I am now m the West ln Pierre,
they say This is where the West be
■ ffms, and on this side of the Mis -1
soun the ' people call themselves.
-1 Westerners and use mountain tune
a and have cowboys and ranches and
buffaloes and rattlesnakes and cac
tus and all the chief earmarks of the
West- 1 am glad that 1 have at last,
found out for certain just where the *
West begins, ln New York, Minne- j
sota would no doubt be considered
Western but on this side ot the Mis
a 11 ls ,* ei ? °f, a:> ^ck east.
* nat man * jinstei *f knows a thing or
VV p' c rp, . , • Al otanibeig.
r ' p.' ls . *.? . f .
., or V^ le ^ re timsnea at Scenic, m
tne "5. ait 1,ati ljant *s. in the
I meantime 1 ha\e ieen on a butial^
un iT i vf camera and have s hot
seve . ra1 ' 1 ftave 1=6611 • <om . e 01 J"* 16
most S rotes 9 U6 60an ^y imaginable.
and , aave . climbed buttes that made
the welM^^South ïakota^and vesterdav
j f ' V iawbone a nrehUtoric
I dW^blinklr 3 ^hat of cou?sI Ts not
?. ' but'the nseudônvm I
I Î ^ iven it until i C an have it ex
! 1' w»
oi , VemovS verüy h a Tl things
^ e . • . ' r a a
an ! ' alt for bim who comes. J.A.S.
(Continued next week)
!
j
Ai- j
and 1
|
1
that
ntvj
SANews
are
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Hans P. Mad
| seiv^it Grenora hospital Wednesday,
October 10th, a daughter,
on j Carol Hoeck left for Fargo, N. D.,
i Thursday, where she will attend a
j business college.
i George Bolster of Plentywood was
thot in town Monday and Tuesday,
It Austin Knutson left for Dululh,
j Minn., Tuesday, where he expects to
boat | spend the winter,
thrilled.'ed from Plentywood Thursday.
WESTBY
Mrs. Dordahl and little son retum
Peter Nelson, Hans P. Madsen,
Will Anhatl, Ole Odegaard are all
diiving new Nash cars.
Vernon Kitteisen left for Minneap
olis Monday.
Emmet and Roy Hawbaker motor
to Grenora Sunday.
Luther Hultgren spent Sunday at
Midale, Canada.
Mr. and M^s. Burke of Minot are
visiting at the A. O. Stageberg home
this week.
Bill Stageberg drove to Plenty
wood Tuesday.
Mildred Swanson returned to her
home at Midale Sunady after two
months' stay in Westby.
The Senior class was entertained
at the Peter Miller home Tuesday ev
ening.
Peter Nelsons èntertained a com
pany of friends at their home in the
south country Sunday.
Anton Nelson delivered a Nash
coupe to Scobey Monday.
Elsie Delores, infant daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Iverson, died Fri
day morning after a two weeks' ill
ness. Funeral services were held
from the home Sunday afternoon.
Rev. Dordahl officiated. Burial took
place in Westby cemetery. Those
from away who attended the funeral
were Mrs. Emo and son Arthur and
daughter Mrs. Nelson, all of Flax
ton.
Mrs. Jordan was in Plentywood
Tuesday doing some shopping and
visiting her mother.
Miss Alma Schnittgen came up
from Red Wood Falls, Minn., Tues
JTk®* b fT* for
Mr Krogman o* Plentywood was
day mte
Mr. Rader from New Llm, Minn.,
has been here for a few days looking
after his farm. He left Tuesday.
F ^^ h ^ ■"
'WYtadblom was hauling grain
Wednesday.
Henry Umback left for Benedict,
N. D., to visit with relatives,
Mrs. Umback, Hazel Umback and
Josie Holland were shopping in Plen
tywood Tuesday afternoon,
Mrs. Herron and Mrs. Hapstonstall
were in Plentywood Wednesday af
ternoon shopping
Mrs. Jake Nelson fell and broke
her arm Wednesday afternoon,
On Wednesday evening a wedding
shower was given to Lyla Porter at
her home, by friends of Raymond.!
The evening was spent in playing 1
games till midnite, then Mr. and Mrs.
Haptonstall received many pretty and;
useful gifts. After that a delicious
lunch was served and everyone left!
f or their homes, wishing the bride
and groom much happiness through
life.
Ed. Hannah has completed the
roa( j j 0 b east of Daleview and i
I
!
1
1
i
RAYMOND
i?
moving close to Archer to do some
more work.
ANTELOPE
(Crowded out last week)
Wilfred and Emily Lindquist left
last week for Fargo to attend busi
ness college.
The new Sons of Norway hall in
Antelope is rapidly nearing comple
' tion. A large crew of men has been
! working on it this week and the fur
nace will he installed in the near fu-1
ture.
Andrew Christensen finished with
threshing Wednesday. Besides a big

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«41740
For home» without
•loctricity, the Maytag
j» available with
outlt gaeoltne motor.
in
mi
T
HINK of doing an entire washing
in an hour or so, with less effort
than washings were ever done be
fore. This new washing speed, accom
panied by a thoroughness that washes
everything beautifully clean, from dainty
lingerie to badly soiled work-clothes,
without any hand-rubbing, won world
leadership for the Maytag.
The Roller ^Vater Remover with a
flexible upper roll and a hard lower roll,
takes the exertion from the last half of
the washing. It is close to the water line,
mhking high lifting of the heavy water
soaked clothes unnecessary. The flexible
roll is à distinct advantage in protecting
buttons and it removes both soap and
water evenly from every part of the
garment.
There's but one way to fully ap*
predate all the advantages of the New
Maytag—wash with it. and this you can
do without cost or obligation.
Phone for a Trial Washing
Experience this easier, better way of washing. Get a new idea of
rnutluÄ 8 ^ ean f HneSS ' 0f . time "Y« 1 - See the seamless, cast-alum
KÄÄ'Är Phone for a Maytag. If it
Deferred Payments You 9 ll Never Miss
THE MAYTAG COMPANY, Newton, Iowa
Founded 1893
Prr
H ivh.Tue»,
ii PM WCCO
lis, Fri-. A -
K EX, Purllf f
Tu** , » JD I'M
Worth,
KDKV I
\\>a.. 10 t
Minn-aP'
'i
KM
Ore.,
W BAP. Fori
Mon. « Vi I'M. WBZA.
Hu-tun, SpnngjW'j, rtU
7:30 P M CKCA. ror.KJ
tu. t ail, Tues-, '
V/HT, Chicago, I«»
\\>,1 linn - , I f*- S . at "
K« 1 '*- .. coin
Thürs.. ' IW ' • - to
Sail Lak* - ^
KFRC Fan
P.M.
7 (I»
.mils Tues.
;t*.M
î
kmox.
Thur« ...
in
Plentywood Maytag Shop
Montan»
Plentywood
W. L, WILSON, Mgr,
JO-44
Aluminum
A
grain crop Mr. Christensen has a
nice lot of sweet clover.
Mrs. C. Petersen from Idaho is vis
iting here daughter, Mrs. Art Ander
son.
F. D. MORCK AGENCY
(Established 1911)
FIRE AND AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE
SURETY BONDS
REAL
Not adv ESTATE
notary public
Plentywood
Montana
£
Ol
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r-v#..'
■ah®*
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A special cold
weather gas
at no higher price!
'
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15
A
The same good West
land gas, with speci
fications changed to
meet the demands of
winter driving.
*
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Im
m
pSj
ira
Starts quicker
Less oil dilution
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Westland OH Company
'Writ
rlFffl
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si™
Hi
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> V.
er
Antel ®Pe elevators
roof w «ine«l ay
able to buy any more ^
we beieive, the first time thi
happened since the winter „n£ -
. 1928
"'ere
all
and
on.
This i
*
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