The Nonpartisan Leader Newspaper, February 25, 1918, Page 23

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Miscellaneous THE NEW_FINANCIAL SYSTEM—PRICE, 25 cents. Lentherette cover. The Higher So- cmhsm, P::f cloth, $1.00. Mry. H. Sharpe f New Phi 1pina, Ill writes me: “I ap- recmte our Higher Soc\ahsm, but your New inancial System more, if any difference, as it presents a practical solution to a_problem that is rapidly becoming serious, Values of ‘the necessities are at this time difficult to determine; a decided difference’ of opinion may lead to confusion that will be especially dangerous to a successful termination of the present contlict.” It presents the 12 funda- mental principles, the 12 leading questions and answers, and the 12 reasons why the gresent financial system.should be.changed. t is the only solution to an economic and social democracy. 1,111 copies- left. Send for these works today. J. L. Schaefer, author, Headquarters of the National Nonpartisan League of El1 Paso County, Colorado Springs, Colorado. LINEHAN - BROS., MANUFACI‘URERS OF Linehan’s “Quick Relief,” the standard lini-- ment for all purposes. Price $1.25 and $2.50 ~ per bottle. Send remittance with your or- g;:r];o Linehan Bros., Box 482, Hankmson, PROGRESSIVE EVERBEARING STRAW- berry plants, $2.00 per hundred; June bear- ing, $1.00 per hundred. Del ivered in May. E. E. Crane, Grand Meadow, Minn. WAR MAP, WESTERN AMERICAN FRONT. gen miles to inch, 30c. Free Press, Fessen- en CORNET, CLARINET, CELLO, TROMBONE, violin. Address Box 311, Omemee, N. D. Turkeys MAMMOTH BRONZE TURKEYS, THE NEXT 30 days—Toms, $5.00 and $6.00, according to quality; hens, $4.00. They are birds of qual- ity. L. P. Andrews, Pekin, D. BRONZE TURKEYS—ONE TOM, $4.00; three hens, $3.00 each. Order quxck Mrs. Frank Riba, Geneseo, N. D. FOR SALE—PURE BRED WHITE HOLLAND turkey Toms, $5.00; nice, big Toms. . John QOdegaard, Volga, S. D. FINE BRONZE TURKEY HENS, $3.00 AND $4.00. Toms all sold. Wm. Barbknecht, R. D. No. 2, Havana, N. D. BRONZE TURKEYS—TOMS, $5.00; HENS, %}.50. Ormanzo Peterson, Blooming Prairie, inn. CHOICE BRONZE TURKEYS FROM PRIZE pen. Mrs. Geo. Stead, Manvel, N. D. B&ONZE TURKEYS—TOMS, $4.50; HENS, A. Lemley, Pillsbury, N. D. Help Wanted WANTED, AT ONCE--COMPETENT GIRL to assist with housework on farm. Prefer references; can also furnish same from for- mer enfiployes Mennick Fossum, R. 1, Max- bass, WANTED IMMEDIATELY — FARMERS, men, women. Thousands government jobs open, $100.00 per month. Wnte for list. };ra;klm Institute, Dept. M. 48, Rochester, WA‘\ITED—MARRIED MAN TO WORK ON arm the year. Wages, $580; or 8 months, fient, cow, garden atch and 200 Ibs. g}eatz R. O. Ozbun, Flasher, N. D.,, R. R, 0. &. WANTED—A GOOD, RELIABLE MAN FOR general farm work. Good wages. Give refer- ences. William Wolf, Center, N. D. Farm Machinery FOR SALE—ONE SECOND HAND 22 HORSE power gasoline tractor, with four plows at- tached; engine plows; one manure spreader, all in od mnnmg order. John Fle;kten, iobe, N _FOR SALE—75 H. P, CASE, STEAM ENGINE, 36-60; Avery separator, Six-bottom FEmerson self-lift low, and Ford tractor. All in good shape. Henry Haaven, Coolridge, Mont. FOR SALE—TWO NEW J. I. CASE M4-INCH stubble bottoms; never on plow. First check for $35.00 takes them, freight paid to your station. Geo. Ettles, Mma.g Ig 4 HART PARR THRESHING_AND PLOWING outfit, ‘in good condmon, for sale or trade. Price $1,800. John J. Regner, Howard, S. D. FOR SALE—SIX BOTTOM PLOW BREAK- er and stubble bottoms, with extra shares. Louis Huser, Bantry, N. D. FOR SALE—ONE 10-20 C. O. GAS TRAC- tor, used three days. A-1 condmon G. Bai- lard, Ambrose, N . WANTED—7 OR 8 -FOOT. PACKER, V- shaped discs. State price and condition. N. P. Carlson, Washburn, WANTED—CAMPBELL LAND PACKER, IN ood condition; 8-ft. preferred. W. E. D hitetail, Mont. WANTED—FIVE OR SIX BOTTOM SELF- lli(ft lov;. Aug. O. Buelow, Watertown, S. D, . No. 1. ] Poultry—Miscellaneous PRIZE WINNING ROSE COMB WHITE Wyandotte cockerels, eggs, Bronze turkeys for sale. For $1.00, I will send you a secret telling _you how to save your chicks from dying in the shell. Mrs. Gunder Kittleson, Route 3, Harmony, Minn. PURE BRED BARRED PLYMOUTH ROCK cockerels, $2.50 and $2.00. Mammoth Bronze turkey Toms, $6.00. ‘‘Canniemead Farm,” E,. M. Canfield, Mgr., Fullerton, N. D. TRAPNESTED, PRIZEWINNING WHITE Rocks farm raised. Stock and e gs in sea- son. Also Pekin ducks and seed corn. H. Klem, New Ulm, Minn. i:AR(:E S C. WHITE ORPINGTON AND S.C . Red cockerels, $1.50 turke hens, Al from prize- wmmng stock Oa Lake Stock Farm, Astoria, S. I PAY HIGHEST MARKET—WANT POUL- try, furs, green hides, pelts, veal. beans, eggs. Get my price list. 'S. L. McKay, 7 E. _3rd St, St. Paul, Minn. ________ FOR SALE—PURE-BRED WHITE EMBDEN and China eese. $4.00 each; S. C. White Or- ington cockerels, $2.00 each. Louis Bahn, ood Lake, Minn. GOOD BARRED ROCKS, COCKERELS, $2.00 each. _Also one White Muscovy drake for sale. Mrs. C. M. Bell, Doland, S. D. For Sale or Exchange WILL SELL OR TRADE FOR GUERNSEYS, ‘Holstein or Shorthorn heifers, my lmported Hackney stallion, a sure breeder. J. Bosch, fialaton. Minn. FORTY ACRE FARM CLEAR $800.00 TO EX- change for tractor. Write Box 156, c/o The Nonpartisan Leader. TWENTY HEAD OF HORSES FOR SALE or exchange for cattle. Henry Bruening, Carrington, You Are Surcly E’ntltled to the Full Market Value for Your Live Stock If you do not get it, somebody else gets the benefit you should have. The day is. passed when business is done ‘on sentiment, and only results in dol- lars and cents count. We want you to compare the re- sults in dollars and cents we get for you with those received else- where. A comparison will con- vince you that “XKirk Service” gets you the most money for your live stock. J. R. Kirk Comm. Co., Inc. South St. Paul, Minn, Authorized Sales Agency of the American Society of Equity Umli. Ullfl'll. HAWAIIAN GUITAR OR CORNET fimwpmlnmhlocdln’w-‘noz -ho‘ao.uperbkun,l:&- :°n e all lmo::r:‘iy We nnnnb- neol. ery sm P ; Aflt froa. Virite ab IR T music by orno 8l AGENTS WANTED NILES ADJUSTABLE | HARNESS HANGER and POSITIVE LOCKING DEVICE Fargo Mannfaclurmg Co. FARGO, N. D. 5% BROADWAY - BUY YOUR HARNESS DIRECT From tho M-ker and Save BIG Money rices Guara Write for IIEGLIIND HARNESS cO0. v Catalogue 337 So.Third St.; Minneapolis, Minn. filk nli u- 71 F‘_{fl Wis, Wiite ol Bounder. "Field Seeds 25/.LESS MONEY You will be astonished at our low prices for extra hlgh quality Field Seeds. ‘Sold on approval, Don't pay. two prices for Grass Seed. We have recleaned Tim: 18!25 51400perbn and up; Alfalfa $8.90 per bu. other Grass Seeds in mfinucfi'fih‘rfiflf’ ifi“"&f"’“ ™ Mentlon Leader wh 'wrmng adverflaers bu; Alsyke and Timothy $5. SOwrbn; Clover at SRR orders, v A [ lu.m&'% ower hoist; one set eight-bottom . unn, - Doesn’t See the Easy Money Montana Shows that Wheat Cost $5 to $6 Per Bushel Last Year, and Recommends Keeping Records - Mona, Mont. DITOR Nonpartisan Leader: The old gag about the farmer solv- ing the eight-hour labor prob- lem by working eight hours in the forenoon:and eight hours in the afternoon, has been eclipsed by a gen- tleman jn the neighborhood of Niagara, N. D., who signs himself C. J. Sundahl, in a letter to the Leader, and who un- doubtedly adds another eight hours after supper, at least when he is plow- ing and harrowing. But when does the man eat, even if he don’t need to sleep? Now this gentleman in question says that “he thinks no one will dispute him when he says that four or five horses on a common size drag can harrow 60 acres a day.” Mr. Editor, I wish to dispute that statement. I be- lieve my horses are as good as the average and I use the large size 20-foot harrow, and when I harrow 20 acres a day, I have accomplished good work. Of course in a pinch I could crowd them to do 25 or even 30 acres in one day, but I would not want to work them the next day. Also, if I averaged two and one-half acres plowing a day I am doing big work, and to attempt five or six acres in one day would be to attempt the impossible. What I mean by plowing is cutting six to seven ‘inches deep. i PREFERS CLUBS TO PRAISES Blue Lick, Mo. Editor Nonpartisan Leader: The grand old Leader of January 17 came in its new uniform and as usual is full of good feed for hungry readers who want to see better conditions for those who do the work of the world. We think we can rely on the Leader to do its bit in this great war against autocratic despotism, which is clutch- ing so desperately at the throat of all progress for the toilers who strive to. attain to higher ideals in life. As a close observer I saw the rise and fall of every farmer movement for better conditions and am well convine- ed that all these movements from the “Wheel” to the Nonpartisan league have always and under all circum- -stances drawn the fire of the privi- leged classes. We expect to see the Nonpartisan league grow like a weed unless its pickets go to sleep on duty and let the spies get into the camp. I have noticed that the danger comes when the pluto- an organization of this kind. We feel more confident of success when we see the clubs being hurled. J. H. ALLISON. -ADVICE BY MEGAPHONE Eagle Butte, S. D. Editor Nonpartisan Leader: J..Ogden Armour, the meat packer, has made a speech at St. Paul, judging by the fat headlines of the Farmers’ Dispatch of that place. The speech seems to be a result of a vinew taken of the Northwest from a rather high altitude—below him thé farmers crawl- ing about hardly discernible, and the speaker, taking interest in them, mega- phones them advice and gives them his ideas of conditions in general. The burden of his advice to the farm- ers in symbolic language is this: raise more fat “oxen of Bashan’'to be sent to the “Jungle® to be efnbalmed and otherwise meated by Big ‘Biz even if this should lessen the production of " cereals, etc., etc. There: is d notable absence in his speech of any acknowl- edgment of the labor and hard knocks that have been taken to make the Northwest what it is today. 2 7 PETER. ISBERG. . PAGE TW'ENTY-THREE s o e e ettt A e e e et e S crats begin to say good things about As for disking, if I set my disc straight, I might be able to run over 18 acres a day, but I doubt it. If he sets his; disc to cut the ground right and disks 10 to 12 acres a day he is accomplish- ing big work. ; Of course I have had only seven years’ practice and Mr. Sundahl started farming in 1881, the year I was born. I also take issue with the article Mr. Sundahl takes issue with, where the high cost of farming operation was shown, but my ecriticism is that the. article did not show the cost high enough. The great trouble with most farm- ers is that they neglect to keep books. Imagine a man operating any other industry without any record of cost of production. Is it any wonder that after years of hard labor and careful planning so many farmers find them- selves with a large mortgage, and that they wonder how it all happened? My wheat this year went two bushels per acre, and I have heard some of my neighbors whose wheat was an average of just the same as mine, re- mark when the price was set at $2 at point delivery, “Well, that’s a good price.” They never stopped to con- sider that it cost them from $5 to $6 a bushel to produce and market that wheat . Had they known the cost of production, they would have insisted in seeing that Mr. Hoover was aware of said cost, when he set the price, and we would have gotten at least one- half for our wheat of what it cost to produce it. They didn’t know it, but let’s hope they find it out by the tlme they get the mortgage paid..- HENRI LA BEAU. ADVERTISEMENTS They Fit and They Last- HONORBILY WORK SHOES Ask your dealer for Mayer Shoes. Look for the trade-mark on sole.. F.Mayer Boot & Shoe Co. Milwaukee, Wis. ing Weak Chicks| " With Cheap Incubators Remember, it is not how many you hatch that counts, but how many you raise. A costs but little mote. e extra chicks that Ilvo and growsoon pay the difference. Queen Incubators mumwmm Red &w"wm"'m o e ) Eaing kon% whlnn.mln the uonwmmun ehkh the hatchin, '&I: an Wot m but m ln ‘Queen Incubator Co. I.lnuln. Nebr. Mention Leader when writing advertisers -

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