The Nonpartisan Leader Newspaper, March 11, 1918, Page 23

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Farms o AR P O el bt e sk S R L ENTHUSIASTIC_ MEN—THOSE, WHO COM and‘ see the wonderful oEportunities offere br ‘Aitkin,” the Dairy County, supreme in_ all this state.,g,nddyet, with its lands so low in price and offered by our company on terms made to suit the man who buys. You won’t know what they are till you see them for yourself, or send for our’ illustrated liter- ature and accounts of the successes others are making here. Arnold, Land_Agent, Rock Island Railway, 425 Wolvin Bidg., Duluth, inn. tter act now! . FARM FOR SALE—98); ACRES; 50 ACRES under cultivation, 4 acres alfalfa, 12 acres timber, rest in pasture, fenced. Good build- ings, silo, barn room for 22 head. Located in Otter Tail County, 3% miles from Frazee, 44 miles from Vergas, on state road, adjoin- ing nice lake. Correspond with B. F. House- man, Frazee, Minn., Route No. 2. — ey N ey DOMIE NO S e e = PEACE RIVER COUNTRY—HOMESTEADS, farms, grain, stock, dairying, business oppor- tunities, petroleum, climate, etc. Ask questions. Accurate and full personal an- swers. Shinner & Bates, Information Agents, Peace River, Alberta, Canada. . D., county seat of Kidder County. Heavy black loam. Write owner, Henry Huseby, Steele, N. D. FOR SALE—200 ACRES, SIX MILES FROM Rhame; 60% tillable land; about 45 acres broke. For quick sale, $12.50 B" acre, Geo. M. Johnson, Mound P. O., N. D." IRRIGATED HOMESTEADS, $11.00 AN ACRE. Best climate and crops; near school and rail- road. Farmer partners wanted; honest; pay- :ing. Caldwell, Wislon, Idaho. 160. ACRES MINNESOTA LAND FOR SALE, $1,600.00. Will consider an A-1 car as part payment. L. B. 117, Hawick, Minn. ' Miscellaneous Merry Milkman and Overland Ringmaster calf; have eight bulls on hand for sale at low price. The imported: buil for :$450.00, four years old. White Rock eggs at 1.00 a setting. Carl R. Swanson, Marshall, inn, AUCTION—WHEN YOU ARE GOING TO have one, call or write for terms and dates to C. J. Pipo, auctioneer (a farmer), Kensing- ton, Minn., Route No. 2, farm sales specialist. "-Phone 616 Brandon or Holmes City, either Central. LINEHAN BROS., MANUFACTURERS 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- dNer l;o Linehan Bros., Box 482, Hankinson, FOR SALE—COAL, WOOD AND FEED- grinding .yard, consisting of six lots, build- ings and equipment, dray team and wagons; stock_on hand, about $1,500.00 at cost. er- bert Hodge, Fargo, N. D. HAIR COMBINGS AND CUT HAIR MADE into switches, etc. hair returned. One strand, $1.50; two strands, .00; three strands, $3.00. Mail hair to Mrs. ¥ fihn Keillo (a farmer), Box 105, Sharon, N. D. PROGRESSIVE EVERBEARING _ STRAW- erry plants, $2.00 per hundred; June bear- ing, $1.00 per hundred. Delivered in May. . E. Crane, Grand Meadow. Minn. VERBEARING STRAWBERRY PLAN Will bear good this summer. $3.00 per hun- dred postpaid. Anthony Elm, Lansford, N. D., Route No. 2. 160 ACRES HARDING COUNTY, S. D., improved lan i other property as payment. ilby, N. D. COMPLETE SET HOME STUDY LA books, _twelve volumes, nearly new, $25.00. Box 393, Grand Forks, N. D. ; WAR MAP, WESTERN AMERICAN FRONT, Ten miles to inch, 30c. Free Press, Fessen- en. N. CORNET, CLARIN LLO, TROMBO violin. 'Address Box’3ll, Omemee, N. D. Gilby, N. D. D, ol e foo) » 8 "l Frl = 3 Wanted—Farms AN HEAR FROM OWNER O farm or fruit ranch for sale. O. O. Mattson, 700 Endicott Bldg., St. Paul, Minn, For Sale or Exchange WILL SELL OR TRADE FOR GUERNSEYS, Holstein or Shorthorn heifers, my imported . Hackney stallion, a sure breeder. J. V. Bosch, Balaton, Minn. . .great. Keep the ball rolling. aranteed. Owng. § League cause seems to me superlative __ADVERTISEMENTS — e OUR. PRICES HIGHEST FOR HIDES, furs, Or will tan them for I;you—lowest rices, Mark next shipment—Fargo Hide, ur & Tanning Co., Fargo, N. D. WANTED — SCRAP IRON BY CARLOTS. Highest market prices. Also auto tires cox- er, brass, etc. Write for quotations. M. A. aftalin, 320 Front St., Fargo, N. D. WANTED—SHETLAND PONY BUGGY AND double harness. Give full description and price. A. B. Mérriam, Carthage, S. D, ___ Dogs and Pet Stock SCOTCH COLLIE PUPS, BLACK AND white, nicely marked. .Also 2-year-old female for sale. ll;erfectly marked. Chris Bahr, Al- mont, ‘N. WANTED—A ST. BERNARD_OR NEW- foundland_dogs. Box 38, R. F. D. No. 2, ortland, N. FOR SALE—WOLF HOUNDS THAT KILL; also fox hound pup. Theo.Kanne, Dent, Minn. . For Sale FOR SALE—DAIRY FARM, 160 ACRES, 5 miles to creamery; good roads and drainage; 40 acrewom&))er; galgnlce mcados\{ land. Frtcc range. .00 cash; balance yearly payments. 50 per acre. Gilbert A. Bensoxll), Grygla, : nn, 3 A CLIPPER GRAINCLEANER; ALMOST NEW. A. R. Flugequam, Edinburg, N. D. | Help Wanted NOTICE, MR. FARMER—WE CAN SUPPLY ou with any class of help you want; have undreds of married coup es listed waiting to leave. Write, phone or wire your wants to 103 Marquette Ave., Minneapolis, Minn., Northwestern Employment Co. ANTED—YOUNG MARRIED COUPLE TO work on farm. .00 per month and board. % O.]g\lofisinger, Minot, N. D., R. F. D. No. 2 ox 19. ] fil ( + WANTED—JOB ON A FARM -BY A FIRST class married couple. Best of references. State wages, etc. A. Tourangeau, 7 W, 25t St., Minneapolis, Minn. WANTED-—-LADY TO HELP WITH HOUSE- work. Small garden and chickens, Perma- nent place if desired. Small family. State wages. J. K. Patterson, Burlington, Colo. THOUSANDS GOVERNMENT POSITIONS open to farmers. $100 a month. Easy clerical work. List positions free. Write Franklin Institute, Dept. N 48, Rochester, N. Y. HOMESTEADER NEEDS LEAGUE Winifred, Mont. Editor Nonpartisan Leader: " You are doing fine. The Leader is The and urgent. For 10 years I have lived in Mon- tana, I am now a homesteader. That puts a fellow up against the real thing. ‘With no improvements but the blue sky, you bet $16 to Uncle Sam that Yyou can live on 160 acres of land with- out a-wife and improve it for three sticker. I am going to win. Lost one crop by hail, two winters froze out, and last year dried out. I bucked the board again and sowed 23 acres winter wheat. This spring I will sow 100 acres if I can get the seed. JAMES W. ZACHARY. ' years. That’s a hard job, but I am a Evidently the milling' combine is shaking the plum tree: wheat flour sales have been curtailed by the food administration and consumers ordered to buy barley flour—and now there is no barley flour to be had. But they’ll begin to sell barley flour as soon as they can force a higher price for it. Takes Wild Oats Out - By The Whiskers This is the famous wild Oat Separa/tor that takes the wild oats out i separator is lined with canton flannel, and this e wild oats by the whiskers and positively takes of all grain, flannel catches them out, - HOILAND . will pay for itself in_one season. You can’t afford to sow wild oats with your : soclad grain. Wild oats cost you many o] d away. free trial, and you get your money back 13500 arg bing, SO Sk v o o ne, $35.00; machine, nd your order now, . - from this ad, or write for catalog. Y 5% 'ALBERT HOILAND, Mifgr THE WILD OAT SEPARATOR lars every .year, 80 send me an or- er for my wild oat separator right You can have it on a five- Tells Colorado About League County Official Hears About Great Movement at Tax Gather- ing at Atlanta and Reports It ' OHN H. Buer, assessor of Logan county, Colo., attended the Na- tional Tax conference at Atlanta, .Ga., last fall, where he heard F. E. Packard, tax commissioner of North Dakota, discuss the rise of the Nonpartisan league, and in delivering a review of the conference upon his return to Colorado, Mr. Buer rendered a fair and honest account of the League movement. _Among other things he said: i “Like all radical or unusual move- ments, it has attracted to it many cranks, faddists, and the one-ideal man who has a cure-all for all human ills, but the great body of its membership are honest, straight-forward, intelli- gent American citizens, who believe they are suffering economic wrong, and that they have hit upon a plan to right the wrong. They bitterly resent the charge that the movement is so- cialistic, unpatriotic or un-American. They -contend that the movement is. what ‘it appears to be, a nonpartisan movement to secure the best talent for public office, regardless of politics and also to secure economic advan- tages for the farming class.” Mr. Buer told his hearers that the conviction is spreading that tax laws must be revised throughout the whole country, in part speaking as follows: “I have been asked by a good many _members of the Nonpartisan move- ment, as to whether or not North Da- kota had representation at the Na« tional Tax conference, recently held at Atlanta, Georgia, of which I had not only the pleasure but the privilege of attending, so I have tried to give you a general review of the paper read by Mr. Packard, taken from my notes made at that time. : “The National Tax conference is a gathering of the best tax experts and students of political economy in the United States, designed to work to- wards more uniform and effective tax legislation. “Tax authorities everywhere have recognized the increasing difficulties arising from the over-lapping tax juris- dictions of the federal government and the states, and from the conflicting tax systems of the various states-them- selves. For several years there has been a steady. growing conviction that something must be done to correct the existing inharmony. So the tax con- ference is performing a valuable pub- lic service for the states and the na- tion, in discussing the problems that beset them and suggesting remedies for one another’s difficulties, which will eventually lead to the much needed tax reforms on a more scientific and equitable basis. ; “I am proud to state that Colorado ranks the sixth state in the union on taxation laws, and Mr. C. P. Link of the Colorado tax commission, has been named on the advisory board of the National Tax association of the United States.” F. E. Fosdick, who sent the Leadecr a copy of Mr. Buer's paper, says: ™ “Logan county is 100 per cent to the good and always delivers the. goods, and will do so for the Nonpartisan league.” WHO IS MR. MUSTEY? The Ord (Neb.) Quiz prints a long article, attacking the Nonpartisan league and stating that ‘“The farmer delegates from the Dakotas at the Farmers’ National congress at Spring- field, Mo., this year, were all opposed to having anything to do with the League.” The article is signed by “John Mustey.” X Besides printing the article, how- ever, the Ord Quiz made a little in- vestigation about its author. This is what it found: ~ “After careful inquiry we find that John Mustey is an Omaha grain deal- er. This ought to account for his article. He can see that the success of the farmer movement means a slump- in the profitable business he - has been doing. It is doubtless true that the farmers of North Dakota have ‘made themselves obnoxious’ to the big interests. It seems to be a pretty well established fact that there are something like 80,000 North Da- kota farmers standing squarely be- hind their officers and it is a broad statement to say that ‘every local citizen’ opposed them. It will take more than the unsupported state- ment of Mr. Mustey to convince us that those 80,000 farmers are dis- loyal or that Nebraska and Valley county farmers who favor the League movement are disloyal.” ..! ASK CHEAPER TRACTOR FUEL Whereas the success of the United States in the prosecution of the pres- ent war is to a very great extent de- pendent upon the ability of the Amer- ican farmer to raise large crops, and Whereas, his ability to raise large crops is to a very great extent depend- ent upon whether he is able to procure gasoline, kerosene and lubricating oil at a reasonable price to run farm trac- tors, and i g Whereas, the present prices of those products are so high they are to a great extent prohibitive and too ex- pensive to use in farm operations, Therefore, be it resolved, that we, the members of the Farmers’ Club of Kindred, North Dakota, unanimously adopt a resolution to petition our Hon- orable President Wilson to include gasoline, kerosene and lubricating oils. in his order regulating oil prices. (Signed) H. J. DAHLER, President. H. J. HUSEBYE, Secretary. Why not have a war profitless day too? i Pres. Wilson and League Agree (Continued from page 13) ations and punitive indemnities. The stand that President Wilson took since - then on the same subject is.too well known to need comment. The presi- dent's . statements are practieally —a: -paraphrase of the League's resolutions: in this respect. : g Needless to say, the League farmers are more than satisfied with the presi- dent’s statement of war aims and his . outlines of international and domestic policy during the war, and needless to “say, they are back of -him and back of ; -] the government to make those policies .. PAGE TWENTY-THREE R i : effective. Every League meeting since the president outlined our war aims has congratulated him on his ‘states- man-like pronouncements and has pledged the support of the farmers to him and to the nation. “. League farmers can-be proud that they have helped to shape the right- eous policies of the United States in the war and that they have' given the president the support he needed in his -fight for democracy the world over and against the imperialists- and war profiteers. ; % 1 ~ T A e ey F S S T L Lo R N N - O R e e e A e — ) AP Y

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