The Nonpartisan Leader Newspaper, July 8, 1918, Page 23

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- g - B o PR W LI *alle \ < > f:"\r‘ results comie from Leader Classified Ads. per word is made. when claiming the 4-cent rate. must reach Farms IT'S THE OWNER AND YOU. else. comes in when you buy Aitkin county NOBODY land of our company.. We, the owners, deed it directly to you, and the price is so. low and the terms of payment are so easy, - that you won’t feel it, buying a good big stock or dairy farm of us. Hundreds are going it, why not you? Better look into his. May send you some literature? Write today. Arnold, Land Agent, Rock Is%and Railway, -425 Wolvin Bldg., Duluth, nn. i st iR T SO R P PO M SR MONTANA 320 ALL GOOD PLOW LAND, 120 broke, fenced and crossfenced; house 12x24; barn 16x30; shack 10x14; drilled well pump ; wind mill; coal mine two miles; school one-half mile. Value $20 an acre. Also adjoining 320, value $15 an acre; 280 good plow land; sell or trade together or separate for Minnesota or Western land; no sand; also horses and machinery if wanted. Walter Hill, Amos, Mont. - WIDOW MUST SELL 80 ACRES. IT IS near grade and high school ; four miles from two good towns}; 85 miles from Twin Cities; 20 acres cultivated; considerable hardwood timber, productive soil. Six-room _house, barn, granary, chicken house, corncrib and 4 well. Price, $2,900. Write for our list of bargains. 6:30 p. m. call East 2950.. John W. Norion Co., 4566 Shubert Bldg., St.. Paul, Minn. - NOTICE TO LANDSEEKERS—I HAVE FOR - sale 1,120 acres cutover land, good soil, no sand, in Hubbard county, Fern Hill, Minn. - Price $20 to $28 per acre if taken before _October 1, 1918. Ed. A. Meyer, Jordan, Minn., R. 2. it e il o 5 W TR e it L L SN S T 120-ACRE IRRIGATED FARM FOR SALE; 55 acres in alfalfa, 85 in grain; $80 per acre; one-third cash, balance long time. Free range, no trades. Owner J. C. Jen- sen, Berenice, Idaho. 480 ACRES, THREE MILES FROM COUNTY seat; 160 cultivated, 120 in crop; running water, good roads. Must sell on account of dtx:nft. Write Geo. Pollman, Harlowton, on 320-ACRE MONTANA FARM IN WHEAT belt; 200 tillable, balance pasture; no build- ings; $12 per acre, easy terms, for quick sale. Address Drawer E, Outlook, Mont. 320-ACRE DRY FARM IMPROVED LAND in American Falls, Idaho, great wheat belt; $25 per acre; one-third cash, balance long terms. Write George Stoll, Pocatello, Idaho. e HAVE LARGE TRACT BRUSH LAND IN Clearwater county; will sell very easy te: or exchange for other property. Write for - particulars, J, R. Holton, Shevlin, Minn. 320-ACRE FARM, THREE LARGE SPRINGS 176 in wheat; $25 an acre takes it; small payment down. Write J. E. Cesak, St. An- thony, N. D. WANTED—TO HEAR FROM farm or unimproved land for ssale. Hawley, Baldwin, Wis. Dogs and Pet Stock 0. K. F?!?al SALE—RUSSIAN WOLFHOUND PUPS, es -three months old; parent stock large; fast killers; no better dogs in the state. $15 each. 'A. E. Weeks, Backoo, N. D. FOR SALE—WELL-BRED GORDON SET- ters eight weeks old; price, males, $6; fe- males, $5. - 0. H. Bahr, Glen Ullen, N. D. COLLIE- PUPS FROM HEELING STOCK, yellow and white; males, $4.50; females, $3.26. Home Farm, Hector, Minn. ~ Leader Classified Department : “THE FARMERS MARKET PLACE” This is the place to advertise your stock, farm machinery, chickens, eggs, produce for sale and auction sales; to make your wants known and have them supplied. Best - Rates are 6 cents per word.. To members of the National Nonpartisan league when advertising to sell their own products or supplying their own needs, a rate of 4 cents League members must give the number of their membership receipt All advertising for sale of lands carries the full rate. us two weeks before date of publication. ALL CLASSIFIED ADS MUST BE PAID IN ADVANCE OWNER OF | FOR Livestock e ey ST ST e U S S S REDUCE THE HIGH COST OF LIVING: raise Belgian hares. Purebred, very hardy and most prolific of all animals. Their meat is pronounced the best by many. Let me tell you all about them. Write today for prices and free literature. . Also have Poland China pigs for sale, A. A. Wav- rick, . Pisek, N. D. MYERS POLANDS—YOUNG STOCK CAR- " rying noted blood lines to be shipped the first part of July at $16 each. Pedigrees furnished. Six yearling sows and a boar to one party at $75 each or priced as to quality otherwise. I am in draft. Write me at America, Minn. Archie E. Myers. —_————» CIN. Archie . Myers, SHORTHORN BULLS FOR SALE, SIRED by Junior Ringmaster No. 427166, and grandsired by Ringmaster, the Grand Champion ; seven to eight months old; deep dark red. Prices very reasonable. M. M. Anderson, Clarkfield, Minn., R. 3. 2 S R e e B S e FOR SALE—REGISTERED HOLSTEIN Friesian bull calves from two to six months old; $756 to $150 each. Will trade for pure- bred Shropshire lambs or ewes, or any other breed. ‘Also five young cows. Herman Schu- macher, New Germany, Minn. ——— e T el T DUROC JERSEY PIGS OF THE KIND THAT has satisfied, mostly April farrow. Unre- lated pairs or more. Guarantee equal to any on the market. Shipped on approval. Prices reasonable; pedigrees furnished. Jens Molvig, Buxton, N. D. — N T e T DO YOUR BIT BY RAISING “GOOD” PURE- bred Chester White pigs. The stretchy, strong-boned, fast-growing sort. Order now and get the choice. — Pedigree furnished. ]I"dxjiced right. Harry Uppman, Lancaster, inn. e T I ————————— e A S S DUROC JERSEY PUREBRED PIGS, SIRED by Progressor 218227 and Chief Invincible B 242963, at reasonable prices. Casper Sylte, Williston, N. D., Marmon Star Route. —r ) O TOON DRI Noute, - FOR SALE—FOUR FANCY REGISTERED Aberdeen Angus yearling bulls, bred right, made right, priced right; $1756 each. Un- sicker & Schunk, Wright, Iowa. e et VIV EIB Ry LOWB e R FOR SALE—BIG TYPE POLAND CHINA spring pigs of both sexes. Pedigrees fur- nished. Satisfaction guaranteed. Hubert Zander, Sleepy Eye, Minn. b Bl M et o ) S N CHESTER WHITE PIGS, ELIGIBLE FOR registration, at farmers’ prices. Corre- spondence solicited. Prairie View Stock Farm, Knox, N. D. —_— s e T FOR SALE—ONE REGISTERED RED polled - bull, six years -old; weichs 1,900 pounds; price, $200. Olaf Ostgulen, Glen- ‘wood, Minn. e e R O T N O I -HAVE FIRST CLASS REGISTERED Chester White pigs for sale; ask for price list. Stephen Tokash, St. Anthony, N. D. SALE—C HESTER ~°WHITE PIGS; pedigrees furnished. . H: F. Augst, Mont- gomery, Minn, Automobiles and Accessories —_— FORDS CAN BURN HALF COAL OIL, OR cheapest gasoline, using our 1918 carburetor ; 84 miles per gallon guaran Easy start- ing. Great power increase. Attach it your- self. Big profit selling for us. . Thirty days’ trial. Money’ back guarantee. Styles to fit any automobile. Air-Friction Carburetor Co., 478 Madison St., Dayton, Ohio. - TIRES TUBES TIRES Save 40 to 45 per cent.:“We ship C. O. D. FOR SALE—_IRISH-RUSSIAN WOLFHOUND INDEPENDENT TIRE SUPPLY HOUSE, pups. Male $15, female $10; per pair, $20. Steve- Wolff, Russell, N. D. ANGORA KITTENS; WHITE ored, $5 each. Bertha Maier, Farm, ‘R. 5, Atwater, Minn. :FOR SALE—TWO = STAGHOUNDS, $25; also foxhound pups, $56 each. Theo. Kanne, ‘Dent, Minn. \ ~ - Poultry e PRIZE WINNING ROSE COMB WHITE ‘Wyandotte cockerels, eggs. Bronze turkeys for sale.” For $1 I will send you a secret telling: you how to save your chicks from ~dying ‘in the shell. Mrs: Gunder Kittleson, Route 8, Harmony, Minn. WE HAVE FOR SALE A LIMITED NUM- ber . of -extra good vigorous Single-comb- -‘'White Leghorn cockerels ‘at $3 each, ~faction guaranteed. * - Penitentiary, - Bismarck, N. D. - AND COL- Highland PAY HIGHEST MARKET—WANT POUL- . eggs, furs, “hides, pelts, trgol. Get my. price list. S. veal, -beans, w Mo 7 Third" St., St. Paul, Minn; L. McKay, | FERRIS IMPROVED SINGLE-COMB WHITE Leg! eggs; $1.50 15; $8 per 100; 280-23?efig’ ae,rasin. fi.i!:s Gertrude Mauer, . Slayton, Minn. RS : : o o Wanted, - ANTED—SCRAP ' IRON BY CARLOTS.' Highest market prices. Also auto tires cop-; per, ‘brass, ete; Write for: cuotations, M. A. - Naftalin, 320 Front St Firgo, N.'D, . THREE-COLOR GUIDE MAP:OF MONTAN. " : = es, 25 cents,” ‘postpaid. Adflz: 350 Cedar St. St. Paul, Minn., TIRES ' TUBES TIRES Shipped C. O. D. on approval. : ECONOMY AUTO TIRE CO.- Cedar St. St. Paul, Migh. e el SR i P A S R S RA-DIO-LITE—NEW = FORD LIGHT, IN- creases. 100. per cent more light; can’t burn out -bulbs; money-back guarantee; state and county rights; no competition. Koch Auto Supply-Co., 707 Second Ave. So., Min- _neapolis, Minn. : CARBO-CIDE SAVES GASOLINE; CARBON &e)movg.‘ Bett;inbothixz ‘fizdvertg:efientAg withh cents for a X.- “Money-back.” Agen! wan Steinke, Mgr., Bertha, Minn. - ~For Sale ‘ Satis- The North- Dakota State: | FOR SALE—HIGH CLASS DAIRY FARM,. -one mile from town; 117 acres highly im- proved, 10-room house, windmill, modern barn for 36 milk cows, equipped with milk- ing . machine and water system; ' 150-ton brick silo, granary, machine. shed, chicken house, 'established milk business. Herd- of high grade and purebred Holstein cows. For further details write. High troit, Minn., R. 4, Box 11 R o A bl Mt e b NN St a1 FOR SALE—25 HORSEPOWER STEAM EN- gine and 36x60 separator. Will sell for ¢ it is worth $2,600 to any one that ‘threshes. - Reason for selling, I have a com- Ifiinetha;vester.' A, R. Petrick, ] 3 ont s il T . Miscellaneous 17x22 : 85 croft Dairy, De- A, : : Employment $100. MONTH PAID MEN-WOMEN, 18 OR over. Thousands government clerical po- sitions' open. _Pleasant work. Vacations with pay; seven-hour day. Pull unnecessary. Common education sufficient. Examinations everywhere soon. Write immediately for list positions open, Franklin Institute, Dept. R 48, Rochester, N. Y, WANTED IMMEDIATELY—U. S.-GOVERN- ment wants thousands men-women, 18 or over, for war positions, Easy clerical work; $100 month. List positions open free. Write immediately. Franklin Institute, Dept. S48, Rochester, N. Y. Lumber LUMBER AND SHINGLES AT WHOLE- - sale prices. ‘' Farmers’ trade our specialty. Send us your bills Yor free estimate. Robert Ivivmeison Company, Box 1156-N, Tacoma, ash. RED CEDAR POSTS IN CARLOTS. DE- livered prices to farmers. J. B. Overton, Sagle, Idaho. ~ For Sale or Exchange ——— e FOR SALE OR TRADE—ONE 25 HORSE- power Minneapolis steam engine, with plow gear; one 36-60 Avery separator, all com- plete; water tanks and cook car; in shed when not in use. _This machine has not been. used much. Will sell cheap. - Write for prices. Geo. Swanson, Heaton, N. D. Kodak Finishing e e Y e e e LET US DEVELOP YOUR FILMS. OUR price only 25 cents for developing a six- exposure roll film and making six prints up to postal size. Postals, 40 cents; mailed back, prepaid. Cash must accompany crder. Do not send postage stamps. - Moen’s Art Studio, Box K, Preston, Minn. ~ Stolen e S TR Pl e DA R A T ONE YEARLING MARE COLT, LIGHT BAY or sorrel, and one yearling horse colt, dark bay or iron -gray; both branded on left shoulder. More apt to be found 200 miles away than nearer by. Liberal reward. H. W. Kirby, Belle ‘ourche, S. D. . Farm Machinery e e e HAVE RENTED MY FARM AND WANT TO sell my 15-25_four-cylinder gas tractor with four-bottom John Deere plow, two tandem discs and Bell City separator; all in good oNrder at a snap. Jas. F. Lossing, Finley, Harness i e L S TR S e e S PR 500 SETS OF FIRST-CLASS SECOND-HAND farm harness, $35, $40, $45 per set. Also large stock of new harness from $50 to $65 per set. We save you money. Twin City Harness Co. of Midway, St. Paul, Minn. e o et S0 Mt S IO SR A S MECHANICS FOR THE NAVY (By the Navy Recruiting Station, Minneapolis, Minn.) Young men of the Northwest who have been waiting for an opportunity to enlist in the navy and train at Min- neapolis, will welcome the news from Lieutenant George A. Treadwell, that 150 men are urgently needed for enrol- ment in the naval reserve force as mechanics. Training will be of eight months’ duration and will be at the Dunwoody Naval Training schools and the University of Minnesota; at Minneapolis. ‘Men enrolled for train- ing in this branch will be a part of 800 authorized by the navy depart- ment. The other 150 will- be sent to ' Minneapolis from other naval stations. Applicants should apply at the navy recruiting station, 304 Mar- quette avenue, Minneapolis; or at the substations in St. Paul, = Duluth, Fargo, Grand Forks and Minot. - If physically qualified they will be en- rolled as landsmen for machinist’s mates (generdl), the pay of which is $32.60 monthly. At the completion of the training course, they will be made petty officers and receive either $55.50 or $66.50 per month, according to, qualifications. ~ Further promotions for men of ability will follow. All liv- ing expenses, including . medical at- tendance, are borne by the govern- ment. Married men will receive an addition allowance of $15 per month; those with children will receive al- lowances for the support .of their “families. Men who ‘have --been -apprentice ‘machinists = are preferred, but any young: man possessing a high school education, between the ages of 20 and 32; ‘who has any mechanical ability, may qualify, ' Instruction will be in bench and vice work, lathes and other pipe ing;, " cop- lacksmithing, gas en- engineering laboratory, .- Mention the Leader When Writing Adve TRACING DOWN A LIE When C. A. Miller of Ithaca, N. Y., read an article against the League in the Maine Farmer, he wrote as fol- lows to Doctor Bailey, whom the Maine Farmer presumed to quote: “Years ago when you were editor of the Popular Gardening I used to write articles on fruit growing for that paper and when you were the horticul- turist at the state university I corre- sponded with you asking for informa- tion about the new variety of plums. Again I want to ask for information, not about plums, but about the Non- partisan league. If it would not be asking too much, would be pleased to know your reasons for believing that the League is pro-German. Any in- formation you may give will be grate- fully received.” Here is Dr. Bailey’s reply: “Dear Mr. Miller: “I do not understand your reference to my thinking that the Nonpartisan league is pro-German. I mever made any statements aboyt the League and know nothing about it so far as its patriotism is concerned. I have seen more or less statements in the press, but have made none myself. “C. H. BAILEY.” " TELLING AN EDITOR __ Antler, N. D. Editor Nonpartisin Leader: I-am inclosing you a copy of a letter I am sending to the Farmers’ Dispatch of St. Paul, Minn. You ean publish it if you like. Editor Farmers’ Dispatch: As my subscription to the Farmers” Dispatch expires soon, I will ask you to dis- continue“Bending it to my address. You are continually knocking the Nonpartisan league, and, as I am a . League member, I don’t feel like let- ting you have any more of my money to fight a farmers’ organization. We are all League members around here and are not pro-German. I should say not! Look for them . among your Big Biz party. I have always con- sidered the Farmers’ Dispatch worthy of its name and one of the best papers published for the money, but since you so violently abuse such men as Governor Frazier and A. C. Townley, and also us farmers, as a patriotic farmer and loyal member of the Non- partisan league, I7ask ‘you to stop sending me your Big Biz paper. “Don’t bite the hand that’s feeding you.” ~ HUGH McLEAN. THANK YOU, OHIO (From the Tri-County News, Grand Rapids, Ohioc) A St. Paul dispatch says Democrats of Minnesota met there to lay the foundation of a fizht against farmers of the state capturing control.of the political situation, as was done in Minnesota’s neighbor, North Dakota.. The farmers of the West are or- ganizing with the intention of having a voice in the making of the laws, and not entirely leave their framing in the hands of politicians and lawyers; whose leanings generally are in. the direction of the trusts—because it pays ‘them to be so. Farmers of northwestern Ohio who are interested in the work and phenomenal growth of the Nonpartisan league, should subscribe for the Nonpartisan Lead- er, St. Paul, Minn. WORDS OF TRUTH ! Valley City, N. D. National Nonpartisan League: : I have just received a copy of your booklet, “Freedom’For All Forever,” and believe the sayings of the most -noble and noted men are worth re- : peating. I may use it in some of my " short talks.. I have the president’s book, “The New. Freedom,” and I like 1o repeat some of his sayings. I am not a public speaker, but believe this »b00kle will S be helpful to many. HOWARD WILLOO P I s e R

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