The Nonpartisan Leader Newspaper, September 27, 1917, Page 22

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1 { “ supplied. : 3 gucceeding issue. Poultry e S e e e W RSSO A FOR SALE—CHOICE PUREBRED S. C. white Leghorn cockerels, from egg pro- ducing varieties, $1 each. M. B. tur- keys, purebred, extra large, young toms, 6; hens, $3. One one-year-old _tom, half wild, extra fine, not. related, $8. + Large Poulouse geese, $2 each, either sex. Belle Kinsey, Towner, N. D. BUFF ORPING'TONS, BARRED ROCKS and light Brahmas spring cockerels, S. C. R. 1. Red, both sexes, All pure stock. No mixture. Single birds, $1.25; pair, $2.25; trio $3.00. Place your order now . for delivery Oct. 1st. S. M. Hagensen, +"_R. No. 2, Box 11, Page, N. D. ROSE COMBED, SILVER LACED, WY- ‘ andottes, yearling hens, pullets, or cock- erels, $1.35 each. -~ Large mammoth Pekin_ducks_and drakes, $1.50 each. Mrs. W. G. Fick, Verona, N. D. PUREBRED BUFF PLYMOUTH ROCKS, cockerels, $1.00; pullets, 75¢ each, Place Yyour order now for delivery October 1st. __Peter N. Ydstie, Hillsboro, N. D, R. 1., BINGLE COMB , . ANCONA SPRING cockerels for $1.00 each, to' head your i flock the coming year. C. O. Nipstad, i Watford City, N. D. (et b I b D N A A P e o COCKERELS AND SHOW PENS ROSE Comb Buff Leghorn, Columbian Wyan- dotte, Silver Laced Wyandotte. Cheap. L. Johannessohn, Beltrami, Minn: e e e e e BARRED PLYMOUTH ROCK COCK- erels for sale at a bargain. Price $1.75 :-each. . Five or more, $1.50 each. Oscar Swanson, Alexandria, Minn. (o Ml b Wit it Bt et e A R G .BINGLE COMB BUFF ORPINGTON cockerels, at $1.25, early hatched. Mrs. Ernest Saville, Ridgeville Farm, Brad- dock, N:. D, -+ - - 7 Y N R e O M R. C. RHODE. . ISLAND .RED. SPRING . - . cockerels, Windheim and Kauffman .+ Strains, $1.75 each. Mrs. John Allen, York, N. D. ! ! 3 e PO el I B a0 'SBINGLE COMBED WHITE LEGHORN “spring cockerels, 60 cents each. Pat Dowling, -R. 1, Minot, N. D. PUREBRED ‘BARRED PLYMOUTH . Rock cockerels, $1.50 each. Martin Gunderson, Stratford, S. D. Farms FOUR - HUNDRED ACRES — THREE . hundred tillable, balance good pasture. 80 acres in crop this season, balance new prairie. Fair buildings and fences. Unlimited quantity: of good spring water, Located 10 miles northeast of Sentinel Butte in Golden Valley Co. This is a snap ‘at $11.50 per acre, $2,300 cash, balance in five equal installments at 6 per cent interest. TFor further particulars write or call on me at Senti- !szel gutte. A, W. Ferris, Sentinel Butte, FLATHEAD VALLEY, MONT. COME to Kalispell, Mont.,, where the winters are mild and very little wind.: There is Jots of fruit and splendid water, stock. farms with outside range, cutover and timber lands. We have views of some of the best farms in the Valley. Write for list and further information. Tup- per & Co., Kalispell, Mont. 20 ACRES BEST WHEAT LAND IN Montana, 6 miles from town. Produced 22 bushels flax to acre. Sixty acres under plow; practically all tillable; no stone or. pot holes; gently rolling clay loam soil. Price, $16 per acre; $3,220.00 cash; bal. terms. Write owner, John L. Burns, Outlook, Mont. 400-ACRE FARM FOR SALE. 220 acres cultivated—390 acres can be cul- tivated. 6 miles from station. $30 per acre. Will sell all or divide it up— terms to suit. 2 houses_and windmill %‘IooDold to farm. L. C. Holmes, Wing, GQREAT BARGAIN—80 ACRES OF LAND, 5 miles from town, Koochiching county, Minnesota, at $6 per acre. 80 acres Mahnomen county, 8 miles from town, $10 per acre. Must be sold. Write for particulars. J. R. Holton, Shevlin, Minn, 'EOR SALE—EXCELLENT HALF SEC- tion Oliver county, N. D., land for only $8,200.00, also 160 acres near Bagley, Clearwater county, Minn., for $3,200.00. I. O. Lee (owner), Hanover, N. D. : 0-ACRE. FARM FOR SALE. 225 acres cultivated. Good pasture. Price. $22.00 a per acre. Foss & Nordahl, Ray, N. D. For Sale or Exchange WE HAVE FOR SALE OR TRADE, ONE 18 horse ‘Advance steam traction en- .gine; ‘one ‘14 horse Minneapolis steam traction ‘engine; one 10 steam portable engine and one 12 horse Otto gasoline portable engine. in exchange some wood, coal, moving picture .outfit or unincumbered real. estate. What have you? The Farmers Supply Co., Bantry, N, D. WILL EXCHANGE 185 ACRES IOWA or 2656 acres Illinois land for eastern: {: North Dakota or Western Minnesota land. P. E. Gilligan, Moorhead, Minne- sota. WILL EXCHANGE LAND IN PEMBINA county, North Dakota for drug stock. P. E. Gilligan, Moorhead, Minn, Wanted e e e et el N S T I PAY THE HIGHEST PRICES FOR Junk of all description. Ship your junk, auto_tires and metals to M. A. Nafta- lin, 820 Front street, Fargo, N. D. POTATOES WANTED IN CAR LOTS write and quote price f, 0. b. on track at home town. ~H. J. Beleal, City, N: D., 206 West bth St.- —_—t o T T O DR WANTED—TO HEAR FROM OWNER: of farm or unimproved land for sale, O. K. Hawley, Baldwin, Wisconsin. A el M) et AL P St D WANTED "TO ' BUY A 'CARLOAD OF good hay. Oscar S. Oberg, Washburn, . D, Mention Leader when writing advertisers Leader Classified Departmen ‘‘THE: FARMER’S MARKET PLACE” This 18 the place to advertise your stock, farm machinery, chi fit uce for sale and auction sales; to m’akek'yfiur Wfints'kn‘o’v?n :ndc kheanvsé gfigr'fi est results come from Leader Classified Ads. . Rates are 8 cents per word for the first time, and ¢ cents per word for each Half rates to members of the Farmers’ Nonpartisan League when advertising to sell their own products or advertising for sale of lands-carry the full rate. - ALL CLASSIFIED ADS MUST BE PAID IN ADVANCE buildings. .} ;. (%3 horse Huber |, Can use supplying their own needs. All Livestock FLOYD LAKE CK FARM — THE home of the little red pigs. I am back again with my famous Duroc-, Jersey Pigs from my thousand pound antestors, I am going to give away a fall pig free of charge, with every three spring pigs I sell in one order, from the same stock as I am selling from. I have not got room to take care of winter pigs, and will give my customers the benefit of it. Express prepaid to your station. Eedigrees furnished. Write for prices. .. 'C:. Madsen, . R. F. No. 5. Bogod Detroif, Minn., R. F. D. FOR SALE 25 _SPRING SHROPSHIRE rams. A few ‘registered’ and the rest :very high grades. From as good a herd as any west of the Missouri river at farmers’ price. The first checks : for $15 take the hest. Crates for shipment gxtg.. Thos. H., Callahan, Morristown, n { =} ‘ e i T M B R R PLUM GROVE STOCK _AND POULTRY Farm. Breeders of Red Polled cattle. The breed.for the .farmer.” sale several choice heifers from one to three ‘years old. :"Must: reduce herd on account of room and shortage of feed. __V. E. Grant, Cuba, N, D, O. I. C. CHESTER WHITE HOGS—GOT the length and bone. Overland Ring- master strain bulls and heifers, White Plymouth Rock cockerels. If you need any in this line of stock, write to me. Carl R. Swanson, Marshall, Minn. BIG TYPE POLAND CHINAS, 60 Bpring pigs -sired ‘by -Eddy Boy Smooth Wender, Big Orphan and Superior Long. Wonder and from . large . sows. Satisfaction guaranteed. C. E. Sh;}don. Sheyenne, N.. D. M : qua.li}}ies. < ..€rs_hog—the feeders h All leadin; “''Blood lines represented. Lo o v land, Ethan, S. D, t.00-. ‘PUREBRED DUROC - JERSEY' BOAR pigs for sale, April farrow; satisfaction .. Buaranteed. Can ship from_Kintyre, N. D;, (Soo railroad) or Steele, N. D., (N. P. railroad). L. E. Rambaugh, Kin- tyre, N. D. s e e Sl M et i A FINE LOT OF PUREBRED SHROP- ..Shire rams for sale, Also polled Dur- ham bulls. Some of these were prize winners at the N. D. State fair. H. i Strutz, Thompson, N, D. ‘ TWELVE HEAD ' OF HEAVY -SHIRE- bred horses. Will sell at a bargain if taken before Nov. 1. Inquire of T. W. Kinsey, Towner, N. D., for particu- lars as to age, etec. z FIFTY HEAD OF , GOOD RAMBOUI- < lett breeding ewes, from 4 to 6 vears old for sale at $12 per head if sold before Oct. 15. Address A. J. Moore, Blaisdell, N. D. REGISTERED BAY MORGAN STAL- lion, § years old, true to type. and see_ him or write. © Miss Bertha i’g;&ier, Highland Farm, R. 4, Atwater, nn. e b i e L i D P e T A LT BIG TYPE POLAND CHINAS. SPRING . pigs of either sex. Pedigree furnished. Satisfaction guaranteed. Call or write. Hubert Zander, Sleepy "Eye, *Minn, FOR ALE—REGISTERED SHROP- shire rams- from heavy wool-bearing stock, all twins. Write for prices. Geo. ‘W. Benton, Finley, N. D. BIG TYPE DUROC JERSEY PIGS OF either sex for sale; April farrow. 'Satis- faction guaranteed. Oscar Swanson, Alexandria, Minn, DUROCS, SPRING BOARS AND GILTS by Duchess Defender 2nd. Good color and. bone. Prices right. Jos. Ziller, Bird Island, Minn. HIGH MODEL STOCK—AM . OFFERING five five-months old Duroc Jersey boars. I\Paxilces right. Ingberg Bros.,, Hendrum, nn. ONE' REGISTERED DUROC JERSEY male hog 15 months old, price $35. High- land' Farm, Elgin, N. D.,, A. L. Bahr, Prop. 5 CHESTER WHITE PIGS. OF APRIL farrow, either sex, sired by two good ““‘poars. C. M. Herold, Stirum, N. D. "REGISTERED = HEREFORD . 'BULLS— i'One 4, other 5 months, well built. dress C. D. Jacobs, Voltaire, N. D. Jas, Ferry, Oldham, S sows. Mat Weber, Tower City, N. '“"'bert Hodge, Fargo, N. D. o . - Miscellaneous : ‘ONE SIX H, P. WATERLOO GASOLINE Engdme},1 one Bowgerbfee% tmlél'tl}mt}il )ilrtl ood shape. To be .bou a e rig ; ,grice. Hgbeisfi Bros., i‘-mmburg, Minn, . BARRED ROCK. COCKERELS AT_$1.25 each if taken jm September, and full Berkshire boap gigs at Ole Aasen, Galesburg, N. RED CEDAR POSTS IN CAR _LOTS. Delivered prices to farmers. Bradley Overton, Sagle, Idaho. GENUINE _SAFETY RAZOR, FOUR blades, b50c. Crookston Notion Co., Crookston, Minn. ) HAY FOR SALE. Swanville, Minn. Lost, Strayed or Stolen. STRAYED — FROM MY PASTURE IN June, one Red yefillng bull, G. ROBERT PETZ, R’ on right hip. indly inform me of his whereabouts. G. M. Vawter, Chase- ly, N. D., R. R. No. 1, Box 22. Dosition Wanted " EXPERIENCED ENGINEER WANTS position, plowing. Gas or_ steam. Ed Steinman, Valley City, N. D. Aa- PUREBRED LARGE DUROC JERSEY f; ..boars. for sale .write flng information. PUREBRED BERKSHIRE BOARS AND il %0.00 apiece. LR b iy SRR A FOR SALE—110 H. P. CASE STEAM tractor, 1911 model,” extension rims, good shape, sacrifice.for-$1200. if. taken with-- in 6Q days, will consider late model auto or house in trade. Millard Christopher, Letcher, S, D. e el e L L A e o N LN FOR SALE—I HAVE A LIMITED NUM- ber of Stade-Mak-a-Tractors which I will sell to farmers at dealers prices as lJong as they last. Bargains for fgrr&ebody. O. J. Lacy, Sidney, Mon- P b U ] e e U SR S it B S, S ONE NEW BIG BULL TRACTOR. A sgag at sg‘l')? One ‘sma;]mlgu)lltracitor ir: 0 cQn lon, price o0, nquire a 505 NP Aver Fargo, N. D. FOR SALE—ONE TEN-BOTTOM JOHN Deere engine plow in good shape. Has not been ysed in -stony land. John Reisenweiber, Newark, S. D. FOR SALE—ONE TWIN CITY TRAC- tor, 15-30, price $1200.00. Wil trade for Young cattle. John Ellingson, Towner, N. D., Box 314, o el Mottt L L T S S ey FOR SALE—CASE RACINE 4-BOTTOM heavy Quty automatic lift engine plow, good condition. McDowell Bros., Hal- stad, Minn.. e b T R s e SPALDING DEEP TILLING MACHINE, H. E. Boe, Mt. Vernon, S. D. Help Wanted WANTED — A° YOUNG' MAN BOOK- keeper, and office clerk; prefer one raised on a farm, having at least two Yyears’ accounting experience. Give references and salary expected. - Ad- dress, Treasurer, P. O. Box 294, St. Paul, Minn. ; WANTED AT . ONCE — NEAT -AND competent girl for general housework, desirable home and surroundings, good wages. Fred Kopp, Kathryn, N, D. MAN—TO WEAR FINE SUIT, ACT AS agent; big pay, easy work, Banner Tailoring Co., .Dept. 738, Chicago. ' - Exchange — e e e FOR ‘' SALE: OR WILL TRADE FOR stack complete threshing outfit, 26 horse Port Huron engine, first class shape; 36-60 Hart Parr separator, run 20 days, cook car furnished, two lined water tanks with wagons. All complete. Will give a bargain. Address F. M. Trul- linger, Carrington, N. D, OUR 45 H. P. I. H. C. GASOLINE-KERO- sene tractor, complete with eight-bot- tom P. & O. engine plows.and 500, gal- lon oil tank. This outfit is in splendid condition, Will trade for young stock. A. Branchflower, Sherwood, N. D, Lumber, Paints, Etc. LUMBER, MILLWORK, PAINTS, ETC. at wholesale prices shipped direct. Send . us your list' for estimate. Material ship- ped subject to inspection. No money with your order. L James Lumber Co., Minneapolis, Minn. (% Coffee and Tea COFFEE! BUY DIRECT FROM IM- porters. Tea! Save 331-3 per cent to 50 per cent. Write for price list. Frank & Co., 3p8 River St.. Chicago, IIl. Wanted—Farms e ——— L — TO RENT A 200-320 ACRE GRAIN AND stock farm in“North Dakota or western Minnesota, with -good buildings and plenty of water; close to market ‘and school. Only three in family; a M. E. community preferred. State terms. Write O. E. H., Sanger, N. D. Pl o T e T A RO O R AV WANTED TO HEAR FROM OWNER OF farm or fruit ranch for sale. O. O. #att}sfin, 2945 Cedar avenue, Minneapo-~ s, nn. Business Opportunities FOR SALE — HOTEL, 25x100, COM- plete with stoves and furniture in live .town on G. N. Main line. Price $2500. +.$1600, cash; balance on terms, A. P, Vigeson, Cooperstown, N. D. HOMESTEADERS, WITH MONEY; 2,000 acre irrigation project, near school, railroad; sure crops, open range, mild climate, honest deal. L. Caldwg)l, Wil- son, Idaho. Dogs and Pet Stock IRISH WOLFHOUND PUPS; 5§ MONTHS old, from guaranteed catchers and Kkill- ers; male, $12.00; females, $8.00. Ernest Kapaun, Box 185, Alice, N. D. COLLIE PUPS. FEMALES $3.00 SPAY- ed $6.00, Spayed dogs are the best you can get. Also have older dogs. L. P. Andrews, Pekin, N. D. Personals HAVE LOST TRACE OF MY SON, HER- man Jackson,. age twenty-two years, weight 185 1bs., height five-feet eleven ineches, dark .complection and has two scars over the right eye; has lost the ‘thumb ¢f his- left. hand, the hand is crippled. When Jlast heard from was at Fargo, .about' three months ago. Mrs. Mary Jackson, R. 2, care Jens P. Rasmusson, Larimore, N. D. . _Autos and Supplies . NEW GEARS FOR ANY MAKE OF CAR. 0 per cent to: 50 per cent less than :l'nar{)ufacmrers' Jist. Send old gears for duplicatioh., IDlinois" Gear ‘Works, 106 W. Monroe St., Chicago, Ills. AUTOMOBILES DIRECT TO YOU AT wholesale. Write for catalog and prices, Red River Motor Co., Wahpeton, N. D. oS A end 9o bl T A e kot PR Honey _ EXTRACTED HONEY—SIX 10-POUND pails, $9.00; 60-pound can, $8.60, Men- holt. Christiansen, Hurley, S. D. Farm Loans .TO BUY, SELL, EXCHANGE, OR MAKE FARM LOANS, write or see, Herbert Hodge, Fargo, N. D Shorthorns " Edgewood Stock Farm s OFFERS FOR SALE 50 head of registered Shorthorn cows and heifers. Also a few registered Shorthorn bulls. Chesebro Smith, Prop. Reference: First Nat’'l Bank of Fargo. "Conference Ends in Cheers (Continued from page 17) urged, the people should support th bond issue: loyally. y’ ; “We are not going to have these rich men take these bonds,” he said. “They belong to the people, I am here to ask that when these bonds ‘are issued; each of you take one of them. It is better to have one of these bonds in your -, substitution campaign, ‘saving wheat. the demands of labor in this cause at Butte are just and should be granted.” President H. J. Waters of Kansas Agricultural college,. a member of the . wheat price-fining board, urged the ‘farmers to support the food adminis- its food conservation and especially in tration in He quoted “authorities at TVash'j’ng- ‘“Wealth must be made patriotie, and to make it patriotie, it must be conseripted.”’—George P. Hampton, editor The Farmers’ Open Forum, Washington, D. C." "' ¢~ ' house than a flag on the ioof of youi house.” Miss Jeanette Rankin of Mon- tana, America’s _first ‘“congress- woman”, was given a rousing demonstration this morning, every delegate rising and cheering her as she was_introduced. . Miss Rankin made a strong plea for government operation of copper mines as a war . measure, pointing out that this country -was short .of copper and/; : that the insistence of the Anaconda Copper Mining company on the “pustling card” system, which enables the company to blacklist employes striving for safer work- ing conditions, prevented full oper- ation. . - iiss Rankin cited the increase In fatal accidents since the institution of the system, culminating in the present labor troubles. She also cited the in- creased prices demanded by the copper producers, amounting to an increased cost of $6,000,000, on one order, above the price paid for an order of the same size earlier in the war. LONG WAR AHEAD, PRESIDENT WATERS SAYS Of the 15,000 striking miners at Butte, she said, only 500 were I. W. 'W.’s, though a hostile press had sought to brand the entire strike an I. W, W, affair, : “It is unpatriotic for labor to strike without just cause,” said Miss Rankin, - “but it is equally unpatriotic for cap- ital to take aGvantage of labor, to ask labox to bear all the sacrifice because we are at war. 1 am convinced that PAGE TWENTY-THREE Rl S ton as well in touch with the situa- tion, -as the president of the United States” as looking for a war of many years’ duration.” President Waters lauded the ob- ject of the convention and pointed out that one element of the high cost of Tiving was the expenditure of two and one fourth billions an- _nually, on freight and express. - This amounted to one-sixth of the cost of living for an average « family, he said. The farmers of Kansas, he said, were protesting more against government grading rules than against the price, and recalled that when present gove ernment grades were adopted, Presi- dent I.idd of North Dakota Agricul- tural college was the only expert who raised his voice against them. “Hurrah for Ladd,” a farmer yelled, and Waters’ speech was drowned in f demonstration for the Fargo scien- tist. C. A. Lindbergh, former congresse man from Minnesota, also addressed the morning meeting, urging govern- ment control of finance. © “You may fix ‘prices as you please, but if you leave financial power where it is, in the control of Wall Street, you have left the problem unsolved,” said Lindbergh. He urged fixing a price ‘“on the dollar as well as the bushel of wheat,” and pointed out that the gain on the United States’ boasted favordble balance of f{rade during the early years of the war had been far more than offset in increased prices on necessities of life, these increases aggregating a loss of 17 billions in the period before this country entered the war. Mention Leader when writing advertisers 24

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