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* ADVERTISEMENTS BurnsKerosene “ALLWORK”TRACTOR “Successfulsat all’la “Tractor " Demonstrations lasf{ ] years’ J Wi Largest 4-Cylinder Engine On: Any:3-Plow. :Tractor 4cylinders,5-in, bore,. |. Weighs 5000 Ibs. and 6-in.stroke,750r.p.m. | develops 3000 Ibs. Develops28h.p.atbelt | draw-bar pell and and 14 h.p. ot draw- | 4060 Ibs.on low gear. bar. Two-speedtrans- | Palis 3 plows ander missionworking inoil; antomobile type front axle; self-oiling steel gears, dusi-protected; radiator and fzn that cools absolately. Tarns short in 12 foot radius. 4 plows ander favor- able conditions— Es%; an 8-foot Road Grader. . A simple, durable, 1 machine selling at a pri zvq‘t'h ?:emfin ord to géy. Bl.zglt by a %a&%m‘? g 'stablished jon, Wi ni e Chines &€ work n the fields today., . WrIte for catalog, Co. Northwestern Distributors Fargo, N. D. LUMBER DIRECT TO THE CONSUMER Builders Lumber Co. WRITE US SEATTLE, WASH. One of our moderate priced moun- ments. Our skillful workmanship is at your service. Our reputation for fair- ness is your safeguard. Best equipped plant in the Northwest. Write us for catalog'showing 100 cuts of monuments which will be sent you free. * Dakota Monument Co. 101 Front St. Fargo, N. D. AlmostToo Much of a GoodThing Hallock, Minn., March 29, 1917. Nonpartisan Leader: = Fargo, N. D. = Gentlemen: Please stop my ad- vertisement in the Leader as I am entirely sold out and am getting flooded with letters. Arthur C. Carlson. You, Too, Can Secure Results of This Kind Through the Leader Classifed Ad Columns adverse conditions— J rosene. Rans § 18-in, Ensilage Catter | ond 28-in, Separator. Of Interest to Horsemen (Continued from page 10) if strong healthy colts are to be ex- pected. The mare should not be worked for at least four weeks follow- ing foaling if it can possibly be avoided. The most common foal troubles and those to be especially guarded against are navel ill, constipation and scours. "Any colt that is worth raising is worth feeding grain up to the time it is one year old. Colts can be successfully raised on cows’ milk by diluting the cows’ milk to one-half water and adding one- fourth of a pound of sugar to each one gallon of the diluted milk. It pays to fatten work horses before offering them for sale. The important features of the care of the work horse are to feed the kind and quantities of feed according to the kind and quantity of work the horse is doihg, to feed and water regularly, to see that the bridle, collar, and har- ness fit properly and that the horse has a comfortable stall in which to sleep.—North Dakota Ext. Bull. No. 8. The Spring Clean-Up - What a difference a few years has made in the appearahce of the front yard of the farm home! Now nearly all country residences have a well grassed lawn that is kept looking well. by regular use of the lawn mower. This shows a commendable pride on the part of the farm owner who with the advent of spring weather will rake the lawn, trim its edges, and spade up the flower bed. The spring ‘“clean-up” should be ex- tended to the back of the house and farm yards where rubbish has accumu- lated during the winter in considerable quantities. Piles of rubbish are favor- able breeding places for germs -which cause diseases of animals. By removing them early there is less danger of disease occurring in your own animals as well as those ®elonging to others. An effective aid in accomplishing these ends is to see that the stables and their surroundings are kept clean. Filth is the meat upon which disease thrives. Water— Before Feed The proper watering of the horse is important. Mr. Peters of the North Dakota experiment station, makes the following suggestions: A horse that is thirsty should be watered before be- ing fed hay or grain, rather than after. The reason for this is that the stomach of the horse is comparatively small and if he eats a heavy feed of grain or hay or both, and then drinks a large quan- tity of water a portion of the feed will be washed from the stomach into the intestines before it has been sufficient- ly acted upon by the digestive fluids of the stomach and colic is likely to de- velop. The regular practice should be tc water before feeding.—Ex. Dept. N. D. Agri. €College. HOW BOYS AND GIRLS CAN HELP Food is just as important as guns or shells in winning the war. Every garden will help. Every boy or girl who grows a garden will be doing their share in winning the war just as truly as the man who goes to the front. The way for the boys and girls to enlist is to find a piece of suitable ground that is available, plow it up and plant it to vegetables. Full in- formation and plans as to how, when and what to plant can be secured from the Agricultural Extension Depart- ment, Agricultural College (P. O.) North Dakota. SOWING SWEET CLOVER Sweet clover can be sown with wheat or barley as a nurse crop or it can be sown alone. The certainty of securing a good stand is best when sown alone. This is an expensive way, however, as no return is secured from the land that season unless it be some pasture in the fall. The most economical method is to sow it with a nurse crop as a good stand usually results and a crop is secured at the same time.—Ex. Dept. N. D. Agr. College. 3 POTATO CULTURE Potato culture in. North Dakota 1is the title of bulletin 10 just issued by the Agricultural -Extension Department of the North Dakota Agricultural col- lege.- It gives information as to the different steps in raising the potato from selecting the seed to storing the crop. : : .A FRUIT GARDEN How to grow fruit and. which kinds do best on the North Dakota farm is given in bulletin 9 just issued by the Agricultural Extension Department of the N. D. Agricultural college. ADVERTISEMENTS Like A Boy at 50 Bubbling Over With Vitality--Taking Iron Did It Doctor says Nuxated Iron is greatest of all strength builders—Often increases the strength and endurance of delicate, nervous folks 100 per cent. in two weeks’ time. NEW YORK, N. Y.,—Not long ago a man came to me who was nearly half a century old and asked me to give him a preliminary examination for life insur- ance. I was astonished to find him with the blood pressure of a boy of 20 and as full of vigor, vim and vitality as a young man; in fact a young man he really was notwithstanding his age. The secret he said was taking iron—nuxated iron had filled him with renewed life. At 30 he was in bad health; at 46 he was careworn and nearly all in. Now at 50 after taking Nuxated Iron a miracle of vitality and his face bHeaming with the buoyancy of youth. As I have said a hundred times over, iron is the greatest of all strength builders. ; If people would only take Nuxated Iron when they feel weak or rundown, instead of dosing themselves with habit-forming drugs, stimulants and alcoholic beverages Iam convincedthat in this way they could ward off disease, preventing it becoming organic in thousands of cases and thereby the lives of thousands might be saved who now die every year from pneumonia, grippe, kidney, liver, heart trouble and other dangerous maladies. 5 The real and true cause which started their diseases was nothing more nor less than a weakened condition brought on by lack of iron-in the blood. Ironm is abso- lutely necessary to enable your blood to change food into living tissue; Without it, no matter how much or what you eat, your food merely passes —through you without doing you any good. You don’t get the strength out of it and as a conse- quence you become weak, pale and sickly looking just like a plant trying to grow in a soil deficient in iron. If you are not strong or well you owe it to yourself to make the following test: See how long you can work or how far you can walk without becoming tired. Next take two five-grain tablets of ordinary nuxated iron three times per day after meals for two weeks. Then test your strength again and see for yourself how much you have gained. I have seen dozens of nervous run-down people who were ail- ing all the while, double their strength and endurance and entirely get rid of all symptoms of dyspepsia, liver and other troubles in from ten to fourteen days’-time simply by taking iron in the proper form. And this after they had in some cases been doctoring for months without obtaining any benefit. But don't take the old forms of reduced iron, iron acetate or tincture of iron simply to save a few cents. You must take iron in a form that can be easily absorbed and as- similated like nuxated iron if you want it to do you any good, otherwise it may prove- worse than useless. Many an athlete or prizefighter has won the day simply because he knew the secret of great strength and endurance and filled his blood with iron before he went into the affray, while many another has gone down to inglorious defeat simply for the lack of iron.—E. Sauer, M. D. NOTE.—Nuxated Iron, recommended above by Dr. E. Sauer, is not a patent medicine nor secret remedy, but one which is well known to druggists and whose iron constituents are widely pre- scribed by eminent physicians every- where. Unlike the older inorganic iron products, it is easily assimilated, does not injure the teeth, make them black nor upset the stomach; on the contrary, it is a most potent remedy, in nearly ali forms of indigestion, as well as for nervous run- down conditions. The manufacturers have such -great' confidence in Nuxated Iron that they offer to forfeit $100.00 to any charitable institution if they cannot take any man or woman under 60 who lacks iron and increase their strength 100 per cent. or over in four weeks' time provided they have no serious- organic trouble. They also offer to refund your money if it does not at least double your strength and endurance in ten days’ time. It is dispensed in your town by all good drug- gists, GET CLOSE TOGETHER Esmond N. D., April 23, 1917. Editor Nonpartisan Leader: Having been a memher of the League from its early beginning I feel like I should say a word at this time. It appears to me that a good many men outside the League are trying to run our business for us. But I think if these gentlemen that are so busy trying to cause trouble within the ranks of the League would try to do something for the good of all the state rather than for a special few, they would be better American citizens. They should read the preamble to the constitution and see if it does not say: ‘“We, the people”. Let us get just a little closer together in the next two years, than we have ever been before. And we need not fear the result. W. P. HETLER. 8 Years Hard Work in North Dakota---and Still in the Ring---That’s the Record of Aultman-Taylor Tractor No. 1 Should you drop over around Hermit, North Dakota, most any day now, you would see old No. 1 AwWtman-Taylor Tracter hard at it—dojng the work of many horses and men—saving its owner money at every job— and mind you this tractor has been in use eight years—runs just as nice now as it did when it left the factory—and its owner tells us that it is good for many, many more years of service. Aultman-Taylor Tractors cost a little more than most tractors in the start, but when you figure that they last almost a lifetime, you can readily see that they are by far the cheapest tractors to buy. Now is your time to strike hard—spring is here—make every minute count —get your crops in quickly and economically. Be in shape to harvest and thresh them economically and before there is any loss. You are assured top-notch prices for all your products for at least another year. Why not profit to the fullest extent by these favorable conditions? Get on the job with an Aultman-Taylor Gasoline-Kerosene Tractor—Farm the Aultman-Taylor Way. It's the only way to get out of your farm all there is in it. A trial will convince you. Let us show you what an AULTMAN-TAYLOR Tractor will do for you on your own farm—at any power job. WRITE FOR CATALOG AND FULL PARTICULARS TO' The Aultman & Taylor Machinery Co. 343 Main St.,, MANSFIELD, OHIO. BRANCHES: Minneapolis, Minn.; Grand Forks, N. D.; Minot, N. D.; Watertown, S. D.; Great Falls, Mont.; Regina, Sask.; Calgary, Alta. QUALITY SEEDS) ‘Write for Special Farmers ‘Wholesale Catalogue Everette R. Peacock Co., 4019 Milwaukee Ave., Chicago, Il SEVENTEEN . Mention Leader when writing advertisers