THE STORY OF THE NONPARTISAN LEAGUE 



1892, 96; hampered by ridicule. Nonpartisan League legislature, 



98. 263; menace of, to vested inter- 



" Postdated" checks: necessarily ests, 285; practical workings of, 



taken by League in lieu of cash, 298-299. 



200; used in attempt to injure State-owned flour-mill at Drake, 

 League through Scandinavian- North Dakota, practical opera- 

 American Bank of Fargo, 310- tions of, 297. 

 318. Sundahl, Adolph, experiences with 



farm loans, 35. 



Railroad freight rates: basis of, 37; Superior, Wisconsin: grain trade 



"phantom," between Minot and of, checked by corporation in- 



Minneapolis, 81; regulated by 

 Nonpartisan League legislature, 

 262. 

 Railroad interests: power of, in 

 the Northwest, 20; national gifts 



fluence, 142-143; report of com- 

 mittee of North Dakota Bank- 

 ers' Association concerning, 142; 

 its public elevators made private 

 by the grain combination, 144. 



to, 37; report of committee of Switching charges, fraudulent, ori 



national House of Representa 

 tives concerning their relations 

 with the grain combination, 161. 



Railroads in politics, 99-100. 



Reformers in history always at- 

 tacked, 187-188. 



Scandina\aan- American Bank of 

 Fargo: closed by state banking 

 board because it carried post- 

 dated checks of the Nonpartisan 

 League and farmers' paper, 311; 

 closure denounced by state su- 

 preme court, 314-317; reopened, 

 317. 



Screenings: value of, 50, 51-63; 

 North Dakota's losses on, 87-88; 

 fertilizer value of, 88. 



"Six-dollar Suckers," 204-205. 



Society of Equity: policy of, to 



gin and nature of the practice, 

 65-69. 



Taxation in North Dakota re- 

 formed by legislature of Janu- 

 ary, 1919, 264-266. 



Terminal elevators: enforced ne- 

 cessity of state ownership of, 102; 

 first vote of North Dakota on, 

 103; second vote of North Da- 

 kota on, 104; recommendations 

 of committee of North Dakota 

 Bankers' Association concerning, 

 148; logic of, 149; provided for 

 by Nonpartisan League legis- 

 lature, 261. 



Thompson, W. E., chief clerk, 

 Minnesota Railroad and Ware- 

 house Commission, report of, 

 54-55. 



counteract the bribing tactics of Townley, Arthur C: engages in 



the "line" elevators, 129; career 

 of, an incessant fight, 130; or- 

 ganizes the Equity Co-operative 

 Exchange, 130; attacked in the 

 courts, 131; oppressed by the 

 Chamber of Commerce, 132; 

 denied transfer rights and facili- 

 ties, 132; courage of its officers, 

 134; driven out of Minneapolis 

 by the banks, moves to St. Paul, 

 137. 

 State hail insurance: provided by 



332 



farming on a large scale at 

 Beach, North Dakota, 191; 

 planting flax, 191; ruined by 

 decline in market, 192; studies 

 conditions that make farming 

 unprofitable, 194; tours through 

 North Dakota, 196; meets with 

 F. B. Wood, 197; appearance 

 and traits, 198; first success, 199- 

 200; launches the Farmers' Non- 

 partisan League, 200; audacity 

 as leader, 201; speeches on the 



