The Nonpartisan Leader Newspaper, April 15, 1918, Page 23

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o e - (;. A: r **' E A 'smwmntvafmu’n Seed ALFALFA SEED; MONTANA NORTHERN grown, the best and most hardy seed on the market. Genuine Grimm, pale blue bl6ssom, -No. 1, 99.26 pure. No foul seed, 40 cents per 1b.; No. 2, 30 cents. Pedlgree furnished on_, request. Montana Native, 26 and 15 cents, Merchants, banks and farmers’ clubs write for prices on large lots. Other ship- ping point, Moorhead, Minn. James Rannel (grower), Harlem, Mont. Box E104. NAVY AND MEXICAN BEANS. PRICES and samples on request. Onions and seed potatoes mountain grown. Choice seed corn. Farmers’ Union Co-Operative Association, Fort Collins, Colo. FANCY EARLY OHIO AND RURAL NEW York seed potatoes, $1.25 per bushel, sacks included. Send your orders; will shxp soon as weather permits. E. W. Gmter. Stewart- ville, Minn. EARLY YELLOW DENT MINNESOTA 13 seed corn for sale. Only a few bushels left. Guaranteed to test 70 per cent.; $7 pe bushel. A. Aronson, Hanley Falls, Minn. NICE. EARLY OHIO AND RURAL NEW York seed potatoes, $1 per bushel, and Kursk millet, $4.50 per 100 pounds; sacks extra. Wm. Mitchell, Fairmount, N. ALSYKE < CLOVER—SUREST CROP ' ON high or low land where other clovers faxl Best for hay or seed, $18 bushel. Oak Law Stock and Seed Farm, Becker, Minn. EARLY YELLOW DENT SEED CORN, northeastern Colorado grown, tested 90 per cent - germination, price $4.50 per bushel. J. 8. Ulrich, Sterling, Col., Route B. NORTH DAKOTA GROWN TIMOTHY, sacked, $7 per 100, and Bromus seed, free from quack, $156 per 100. Tappen, N. D. SWEET CLOVER SEED BY EXPRESS— Sow now with spring grain. You will never ;legrst it. Cloverlea -Seed--€o;-Blanchard, ” James McKee, SEED CORN, MINNESOTA 13 AND MIN-" nesota early white dent; 86 test, $12 per bushel, bags free. L. H. Nelson. Kerkhoven, inn. MINNESOTA IDEAL FODDER CORN; 90- corn. Tats about 50 per cent. Price ss per bushel. H. H. Schultz, Cobden, Minn. CLOVER SEED~GOOD CLEAN, MEDIUM red clover seed; samplee and price on re- quest. C. A. Beckman, Evansville, Minn. SEED CORN—I HAVE SOME 90-DAY WHITE Dent for sale that tests 95 per cent; $5 per bushel. F. C. Hickman, Broken Bow, Neb. ‘A_NO. BLISS TRIUMPH POTATOES. Three 100—-pound sacks ~at $3 per hundred. Geo. Mattson, Milaca, Minn., Route 2 FOR SALE—EXTRA GOOD WHITE SEED potatoes, $1.25 per bushel, sacked. - Alex Sonla, Cloquet, Minn., R. 1, Box 113. SEED POTATOES, EARLY OHIOS, Sl 25 ; Burbanks, $1 per buahel Order quick. Frank Ri Riba, Geneseo. N EXTRA FINE TIMOTHY SEED $7 PER 100; 5 iacks 60 cents extra. Guy Smlth. Manon. Lumber SPLIT CEDAR POSTS, TAMARACK ROUND posts and poles; any size or length desired. Buy direct from Nonpartisan league farm- ers on timbered ranches. Club together and get a car; save 50 per cent. Get our prices. C. R. Weare, Noxan, Mont. LUMBER AND SHINGLES AT WHOLESALE prices. Farmers’ trade our specialty. Send us your bills for free estimate. be: %melxl'son Company, Box 1156-N. as| RED CEDAR POSTS IN CAR. LOTS—D livered prices Sagle, Idaho. IDAHO RED CEDAR POLES AND SPLIT posts. -A. R. Derr, Clarksford, Xdaho. Employment <4 Tacoma, ——— .- WANTED IMMEDIATELY — THOUSANDS men—women, 18 or over, $100 month. War preparations opening-thousands government clerical positions. Easy, pleasant work, 7- hour day. ° Vacations with' pay. .education sufficient. ~Write immediately for list positions open. Franklin Institute, Dept. 0-48, Rochester, N. Y. BIG MONEY-MAKING = PROPOSITION— ‘Wanted salesmen to sell as a side line pop- .ular-priced auto tires, tubes and specialties. A. Morris, 2208 Michigan Ave., Chicago. WIDOW WITH TWO CHILDREN DESIRES position as housekeeper. Thoroughly com- petent. - State wageu and vnrticulars Kate Everett, Gen. Del., Mmot, N 'a For Sale or Exchange ONE SEVEN-PASSENGER, OLDSMOBILE, value $900. - Will consider small - car: or stack new gang plow, $100; flne surrey $75; ram lambs, one r old. . Hessels dahl, Karlstad, Minnya . Seed and Plants EVERBEARING, SUPERB AND PROGRES- sive,” $2 per 100 June beari - Minnesots, $1 per 100, postpaid. Nursery, Litchfleld. Minn., R. 2. % - Hounds Wanted WOLVES KILLING SHEEP. WILL BUY . two guaranteed wolf killing hounds. Write ““Lock . Box 3857, Manning,. Inwa. " Germinating 778...199 per cent "STATEM E- to farmers. "Bradley- Overton, - of Apell, 1918. . o "and: both - coples. deliversd” by ' the o_publish i ) thln ;. Coi’ Baer’s Bill Is Passed by Lower House (‘Continued from page 15) constructive measure that comes be- fore congress, ridiculed this one, after Representative Norton of North Da- kota had asked that Cannon be given 10 minutes’ time in which to do so, although Norton favored the bill. “I will tell you about this if you want to know,” said Cannon. “This is a competition among some of our people in two or three states, who are scared to death~ over this new organization that believes the farmers never get anything. They have got good stuff out West.. I defend them against political demagoguery. Who introduced this bill? Why, our young friend, wonderfully bright, wonderfully handsome! Why, good God, he does not be- long to the Democratic party; he does not belong to the Republican party, though he sits on our side of the house.” That was Baer’s crime, in Cannon’s eyes—that he was a Nonpartisan. Wingo of Arkansas bitterly declared that “there is a propaganda going over this country to mislead the farm- er into the belief that we are granting relief to everybody and we are not doing anything for him.” Wingo fought for burdensome amendments all the way through, and FINALLY VOTED FOR THE BILL. Stafford of Milwaukee, who worked a double shift, so to speak, since Miller of Minnesota was not on hand, offered this gem of thought: “This bill is a reflex of the - opinions of the Nonpartisan league, in securing radical and socialistic legislation in North Da- kota. The legislature of that state in special session this spring au- thorized all the counties ‘to ad- vance money by loans to the re- spective farmers for the very pur- pose which is embodied in this bill. And this congress is now emulat- ENT_OF THE OWNERSHIP, MANAGE- HENT GIRGULATION. ETC., REQUIRED BY THE ACT OF CONGRESS OF UGUST 24, 1912, Of the Nonpatusm Lender imbllshod weekly at St Paul, Minn., for April 1, State of Bfinnesota, coun Ramsey, f me, nota ub?l'c in and for nxe state - Harore ta Y o ared Geo. W. d, personally ‘appeal Purcell, 0, hnvln been - dul 7 that he is the business man: onpnrflnmafi:der md that the following e best of his knowledge and bellef, a true state- ment of the ownership, management (and if a daily aper, the circulation), etc.,, of the aforesaid pub- ication for the date shown the above caption, re- quired bI the Act of Auxust 24, 1912, embodied in section 443, Postal Laws and m:ull fons, printed on the reverse side of this form, wit: 1. That the names and addresses o( the publisher, editor, managing tor, and business manager are: isher, 'l‘he onpnrtisl.n Leadel‘. Box 515 St aul, Minn. Edlw Oliver S. Morris Box. 5’!5 St._ Paul, Minn. Pulxn rlng editor, Oliver S. Morris, -Box 575, St. au] Pm‘mrhe?a manager, Geo. W. Purcell, Box 575, St. ‘2“ That lt‘he owners are: (Give names and addresses of individual owhers, or, a- corporation, name and the names and addresses of s owning -or holdlng 1 per cent or. more of the total anéount of mt‘l“ 'opa Aber s, JBox %94, St Paul. Minn win F.' Wopd, Box 204, St. Paul, Minn. 3. That the known bondholders, mortn.xeeu and other security- holders owning or holding 1 per cent or more of total nmount of bonds, mortgages, or other aecurm are: (If there are none, so state). 4, '.l‘hn the two plrazuphs next above, giving the of “the owners, tockholders, md security holders. if any, contain not only the..list of stock- holders and security holders as they lpveur upon the hooks of th in cases. where al t’s ' full * knowledge -and Bllnnbrt:ldrcl:n‘ dmgs;lm‘il fgndmons él:del‘t '}mp‘.‘,"u"‘fpfi’,‘, secul rs who holdem h.“o! the c?mngnyou trustees, -hold stock and e B T 2 on, or rpo % ntor ot &' o or. i.m!h-ect in-the sald , bonds, orsotggt‘ th o rage nu;‘bogoo?uc;.bdlub{fl each lu at _the ave of this publication. sold or distributed, - through: tgn lxlll or otherwise, to: pald sul 8 (Signature * of _ editor, publisher, business r ‘or_owner). . man Sworn ulxnnn subscribed before me this ath day mmission expires Fel 5 No! -c-.}l'hb s&umem must be ‘made In ,dupllum postmaster, who ' shall send one Aumn! Pc;u%nnw General - m thn other w Loane m mm.‘ fihwbmhu must ‘publish ne:t after- its’ filing, - swom according ‘ to, hu.cflhen d fln: the" ormation ?l required from u ons )-. ~Inf dally b“clfl ouly GEO. PURCELL. d. issue.printed | ing the socialistic principles of the Nonpartisan league for the first time, by establishing a policy of loaning money to farmers. Where - will we stop?” After the measure had passed the house by its almost four-to- one majority, political observers remarked that the National Non- partisan league had made itself the accredited mouthpiece, in na- tional aflairs, of the farmers’ movement, and that the politi- cians who expected to kill it by slogans of “disloyalty” would themselves be held to account. “First League State’” Names Ticket (Continued from page 12) by legal training and in his recog- niticn of the fact that laws are to be considered as instruments for the pub- lic good rather than as impediments to all progress in that direction. For congress in the first district, John M. Baer, the farmer cartoonist elected last year to fill the unexpired term of Representative Helgesen, de- ceased, was reindorsed. Congressman Baer has become a national figure in the few months that he has been in Washington and the farmers of North Dakota are proud of the recent pas- sage of his 'bill by the house, propos- ing to extend aid to the farmers of the nation in producinz an ample sup- ply of the food products necessary to win the war. In the second congressional district George M. Young .of Valley City, Barnes county, was reindorsed. Mr. Young has been active in support of all legislation that would aid farm- ers in their great work in war time, and has been of great assistance to Baer in furthering his bill. James H. Sinclair of Kenmare, Ward county, from whence he was chosen as a Nonpartisan to the legis- lature in 1916, was indorsed for con- gress from the third district to suec- ceed Congressman P. D. Norton. Mr. Sinclair is a young fa.mer and busi- ness man who knows North Dakota’s needs thoroughly and whose record in the legislature was such as to make his indorsement by the convention a matter over which there was little de- bate in the convention. Such is the ticket which the farm- ers of North Dakota propose to eect in its entirety next November. They know that their work has just begun. They have a'so put a comp’ete legis- lative ticket in the field, a ticket which, when elected, will show no stand-pat senate to clog the progress of neces- sary legislation. North Dakota, the first Nonpartisan state, will be more truly a Nonpar- tisan state than ever after the votes are counted next fall. A Bid for Victory That Brought Defeat " (Continued from page 10) Berge for governor, and Berge got over 100,000 votes. Berge is still a progressive man, but he is practicing law instead of administering law, as he might have done had the farmers “stuck.” Watson of Georgia ran for president on the People’s party ticket, and Ne- braska was further distinguished by having Thomas H. Tibbles. of that state as candidate for vice president. But the deed had been done. The farm- ers’ machine’ had been dismantled, and they had to await the burldmg of another. And now they are building another, That was the year that Tom: the Nonpartisan league, just as they built the old one out of the fragments of the two old parties. They are go- ing to use it to finish the job that was left unfinished when the People’s party collapsed. And yet the prin- ciples of the People’s party largely won. Many of the things that Ne- braska farmers voted for when they cast their ballots for Weaver in 1892 and for Bryan in 1896 were laughed at then but today they are sound law —and that is why Nebraska Popu'ists and Alliance men will not admit their movement failed. That is why they think it pays the farmers to organize. ADVERTISEMENTS headquarters. ‘ The League Has Moved When you come to St Paul, call at the new League headquarters on the fifth floor of the Endicott building and get acquainted. Ar- range tomeet your friends at The Nonpartisan league has out- grown its old quarters in the Gil- fillan block and found it neces- sary to take larger space in the Endicott building. This is less than a block west of the old loca- tion. League members and ° . friends of the orgamzatlon are always welcome. Natlonal Nonpartisan League Flfth Floor Endlcott Bldg., St. Paul, an. L Mention the Teader -imn ‘Writing A_niveieam-"-i ! | | | < rmoRTO R R s Do 5 Nz

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