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

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

s » Y g ) S B o A - .—~ e U ROy ) - iR b : - B2 157 y ”\ \ ok 2 R H & It A - | (B [ B b i ¢ 2Y; ) e | L S ) 4 ' - afg > (d 1 i 3@‘ b < < built last fall. results come from Leader Classified Ads. per word is made. when claiming the 4-cent rate. Farms - B S DR s et s d B D S y Y A A MONTANA 820 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 820, 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. TOWN PROPERTY FOR SALE We have a new store building in the town of Strandquist, Minn., for sale. This store was We also have a house there which *has been used as a hotel, with a stable that holds 12 head of stock, and a -four-car garage. Everything is in fine shape. Write for full particulars, _ - BOX 22, FARGO, N. D. e e e e et - WHEN THE WAR IS OVER_THERE WILL be a grand rush for land. Better not wait. You'll pay much higher prices if you do. ow is the time., It's an ideal time to see the country, too. Aitkin county 1s at its best ‘right now. Arnold,~Land Agent, Rock Island Railway, 425 Wolvin Bldg., Duluth, Minn. . WHO WANTS TO RENT_ A GOOD stock farm for five years; buy half in- terest in stock and machinery; take pos- - session in September? If you are honest, industrious and like to care for stock you better investigate this. Must furnish good reference. 1133 Woodworth, N. D. NORTHERN MINNESOTA LAND Northern Minnesota is the land of oppor- tunity. The soil-is good, the climate is fine, the water is excellent. We have several im- proved farms for sale at prices that are right. Write for full particulars. BOX 22, FARGO, N. D. et A Ve il e M bl 0 2 MR A NI FOR SALE—160 ACRES GOOD LAND; 150 acres in crop, 10 acres hay land; price, $60 with half 1918 crop. If this land is sold by . August 1, 1918, buyer must pay his threshing and take from machine grain, rye, wheat and barley. Richard Baker, Cayuga, N. D. i . o nctad Al b S ik P s 00 A O TR 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 "$23 per acre if taken before October 1, 1918, 'Ed. A. Meyer, Jordan, Minn., R. 2. FOR SALE—800 ACRES, from Simcoe, N. D. Good buijldings, fine with soft water. Granville, N, D. FOR SALE—320 ACRES, TWO AND ONE- half miles from Simcoe, N. D.; all under cultivation. ' Good buildings, *fine location, * nice grove. Write owner, John .Kvame, Granville, N, D. 480. ACRES, THREE MILES FROM COUNTY seat; 160 cultivated, 120 in crop; running water, roads. Must sell on -account ‘gflf d{aft. ‘Write Geo. Pollman,: Harlowton, on £ e s S R e SNSRI S 820-ACRE DRY FARM IMPROVED LAND in American Falls, Idaho, great wheat belt; $26 per acre; one-third cash, balance long terms. Write George Stoll, Pocatello, Idaho. HAVE LARGE TRACT BRUSH LAND IN Clearwater county; will sell very easy terms or exchange for other property. Write for particulars, J.: R. Holton, Shevlin, Minn. UICKLY. FOR cash, no matter where located; ‘particulars free. 'Real Estate Salesman' Co., Dept. 6, Lincoln, Neb. ‘ WANTED—TO HEAR FROM OWNER OF farm or unimproved land for sale. 0. K. Hawley, Baldwin, Wis. 3 FOR TRADE_TWO FARMS NEAR LUCE, Minn,, for North Dakota land, Box 44, © Luce, Minn. FOUR MILES All under cultivation. location, deep - well Write owner, John Kvame, For Sale - 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 rhigh grade-and purebred Holstein cows, For further details write Highcroft Dairy, De- x 11A, 3 : _troit, Minn., R. 4, Bo: FOR SALE—25 HORSEPOWER STEAM EN- gine and 86x60 separator. 'Will" sell for $800; it is worth $2,500 to any one that threshes. n for selling, I have a com- }aine-hméstg'r. A. R. Petrick, Hingham, ont. T FOR SALE — MINNEAPOLIS TRACTOR, 40x80; ‘Jatest kerosene burner, used 18 days. “Minneapolis separator, 40x62, used five sea- sons; sell cheap.” Andréw Sulland, Leeds, - N.D. R 1. 160. ACRES WITH CROP; $36- AN ACRE; ‘two_and one-half ‘miles from town of Wing, N. D. --Good house, '100-foot well with wind- R _ mill." Inquire of E. W., Box 134, Wing, Leader Classified Department “THE FARMER’S 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. Ads must reach us two weeks before date of publication. ALL CLASSIFIED ADS MUST BE PAID IN ADVANCE 3s Livestock red. Anderson, Clarkfield, Minn., R. 8. e e ey e Qe 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 ——t Pt e M T FOR SALE—FOUR FANCY REGISTERED Aberdeen Angus yearling bulls, bred right, made right, priced right; $175 each. Un- sicker & Schunk, Wright, Iowa. — ey S A T ok b FOR SALE—ONE ABERDEEN ANGUS bull, 26 months, $150; one 14 months, $125; and some heifers, all registered and tested. J. O. Olson, Nelson, Minn. —— e et FOR SALE—BIG TYPE POLAND CHINA spring pigs of both sexes. Pedigrees fur- nished. ~ Satisfaction guaranteed. Hubert Zander, Sleepy Eye, Minn. CHESTER WHITE PIGS, ELIGIBLE FOR registration, at farmers’ prices. Corre- spondence solicited. Prairie View Stock Farm, Knox, N. D. FOR SALE—ONE REGISTERED RED polled bull, six years old; ‘weighs 1,900 pounds; price, $200. Olaf Ostgulen, Glen- wood, Minn, HAVE: FIRST CLASS REGISTERED Chester White pigs for sale; ask for price list. Stephen Tokash, St. Anthony, N. D. FOR SALE—FIVE REGISTERED RED POLL bulls, from two months to one year old. Hanson Bros., Ortonville, Minn. OR SALE—CHESTER WHITE PIGS; pedigrees furnished. H. F. Augst, Mont- gomery, Minn. 7 Automobiles and Accessories FORDS CAN BURN HALF COAL OIL, OR cheapest gasoline, using our 1918 carburetor ; 84 miles per gallon guaranteed. 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 456 per cent. We ship C. 0. D. INDEPENDENT TIRE SUPPLY HOUSE, 850 Cedar St. St. Paul, Minn. TIRES -TUBES TIRES Shipped C. O. D. on approval. ECONOMY AUTO TIRE CO. Cedar St. R - St. Paul, Minn, f SEND US. YOUR BLOW-OUT TIRES FOR vuleanizing. - We revulcanize and return -~ tires within a week. We guarantee every job. ~Anderson Steam Vulcanizing Co., 191 Eighth St., St. Paul, Minn. : Employment 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. : - 1 Four (80) gas’ tractor, wishes position for the fall. wages and number of days work. Can run any make of engine.. Claud Townley, Park- ers Prairie, Minn. A GIRL WANTED TO DO ALL KINDS OF home work on a half-section farm; six in family; will pay $85 per month to a good girl until December:1. Mrs. George Jahnke, Durbin, N. D. HOUSEKEEPER WANTED ON FARM TO keep house ‘and 'cook for one man. Age from 20 to 30 years. Lewis Ferrusi, Lake View Ranch; Level, Idaho.. fond WANTED—A POSITION AS COOK ON A cook car; Al cook. ‘Mrs. Joe Silhanek, Ozkes, N. D., R. R. 4. “Poultry _and pullets ;- three months old; from good stock’; ‘sacrificed " at 75 cents each. Don’t delay. Order now while you can get them at_ this price, Godfrey = Skogman, Cam- ridge, Minn. @ s g e i o e S R S S s HAVE FOR SALE A LIMITED NUM- ber of extra good vigorous . Single-comb White Leghorn cockerels at '$8 each. 'Satis- faction guaranteed.. The North Dakota State ‘Penitentiary, Bismarck, N. D. try, eggs, furs, hides, pelts, veal, beans, 0 D ist. - S.' L. McKay, 1 - For Sale or Exchange R SALE OR TRADE_ONE 25 HORSE: ~power ~MinneapoHnA-agum encin';. with plow s-one - arator, A - DIath: weter Canks. Sad e e v 2 not - in uge, E A iy g 2 ‘machine not e e e e £ S 10 Dogs and Pet Stock FOR SALE—WOLF-KILLING HOUND, A big large one. Send 5 cents for photo. R. A. Marshall, Argyle, Minn. FOR SALE—IRISH-RUSSIAN WOLFHOUND pups. Male $15, female $10; per pair, $20. Steve Wolff, Russell, N. D. ANGORA KITTENS, WHITE AND COL- ored, $56 each. Bertha Maier, Highland Farm, R. 5, Atwater, Minn. " Farm Machinery e e el e e FOR SALE—30-60 RUMELY OIL PULL; 40-72 separator, eight-bottorr John Deere plow stubble and breaker; cook car com- plete, wagon and oil tank. Will trade for land or livestock. Box 275, Scobey, Mont. e MOR e, SC0NeY, JIont. FOR SALE OR TRADE—RED RIVER SPE- cial threshing machine; run 17 days. En- gine 25 _horsepower, separator 36x56. Knute Sevre, Wildrose, N. D. Wanted WANTED—SCRAP IRON BY CARLOTS. Highest market prices. Also auto tires, cop- per, ‘brass, etc, Write for cuotations. M. A. Naftalin, 320 Front St., Furgo, N. D. — Y B e e Tl OUR PRICES HIGHEST FOR HIDES, FURS. Or will tan them for_ you—lowest prices. Mark next shipment—Farjco Hide, Fur: & Tanning Co., Fargo, N. D. Lumber LUMBER AND SHINGLES AT WHOLE- sale prices. Farmers’' trade our specialty. Send us your bills far free estimate. Robert Emerson Company, Box 1156-N, Tacoma, ‘Wash. B e N R RED CEDAR POSTS IN CARLOTS. DE- livered prices to farmers. J. B. Overton, Sagle, Idaho. . Stolen e S O AR SR L SN 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 vurcne, S, D. Harness —_— 600 SETS OF FIRST-CLASS SECOND-HAND farm harness, $35, $40, $456 per set. Also large stock of new harness from $50 to $65 per set. We save you money. Harness Co. of Midway, St. Paul, Minn. e e ! FORMER IOWAN SPEAKS OUT Delta, Col. Editor Sibley (Iowa) Gazette: H. E. Moss, representing the Greater Iowa association, doesn’t need to tell the farmers to beware of those awful grafters that are drifting through the country now days collecting member- ship fees of $16 for the purpose of or- ganizing a League. Because it’s only $6 more than the G. I. A. wants to beat us out of just to turn directly against us. - H. E. Moss need not worry about: the poor innocent farmers, not saying what a toll the consumers all over the country are paying each year to-the GETUAL 2ty I put._ $16. into the Nonpartisan league and I am not ashamed of it, - and what’s more than that I am not an I. W. W. nor a Socialist, and. when it comes to “disloyalty” ‘I think the G. 1. A. takes the front seat. For this reason I work from 10 to 16 hours per ‘day trying -to raise food for the sol- diers as well as-any that are in need. If you doubt that statement go and inquire of any neighbor around Mel- vin, Iowa, where I lived up until last year. I am doing this while Moss is taking in great community dinners trying to organize to take people’s time and money away from them, while every person in the world had ought to be busy trying to win the war i one way or another. Moss might as well call me a thief. as to say that I am or the League is composed of I. W. W.s. : ‘I am perfectly willing to give all that I make outside of my most eco- nomical living expenses to bring this war to a-close. : { A thief will never tell a person he -is athief, therefore the most patriotic person isn’t the one that gets up in |e ' v ey ‘public or-on the street corner and tells . B U)v 5 e how patriotic he is, but the fellow that ; > fe : ‘| We buy stocks and bonds for cash. We is busy trying to do some good and keep his mouth shut that I take off my. DRE:0: 0 g e s e . Every. step the United States gov- 4 Twin City" WHAT IS MORE LOYAL? Wellington, Col. Editor Nonpartisan Leader: I will try and express my feelings towards the Nonpartisan league, which I think is one of the biggest organizations in the world. I am a farmer and am proud that I belong to the League. I sure enjoy reading the Leader. I have learned more facts out of the Nonpartisan Leader than any other paper I have ever read. I see in the last issue we hcve League fighters in Colorado. Talk about loyalty, -if the Nonpartisan league isn’t loyal, I would be very glad to have some one show me an organ- ization that is more loyal. I think that it’s high time that we farmers of Colorado and of all other states are waking up to down Big Biz, and the only way to do it is to organize, and the sooner we get or- ganized the better. I would like to have one of the men approach me and denounce the League as pro-German and I. W. W. I think I could tell them a few things, too. I am traveling as an auctioneer in five states, New Mexico, Kansas, Ne- braska, Iowa and Colorado, which is the state where I was born. Now if I can, this fall after the crops are harvested, I will help push this grand _organization along. MAX ROHWET. WITH HIS $16 Lane, S. D. National Nonpartisan League: - I was very much surprised and chagrined at receipt of your late let- ter informing me that my dues to the Nonpartisan league were unpaid. I hasten to inclose herewith postoffice order for $16 to cover this, and I want to say in this connection that if the League wants another $16 from me to help in the Minnesota cam- paign, just say the word. Several months ago I closed my account with the Citizens State bank of Lane and supposed that there were no outstanding checks unaccounted for. . This League check must have come in later and the bank failed to notify me. I did not get my canceled checks at the time I closed my ac- count as there were a few- still out which I noted and accounted for. I will go to said bank today when I go to town and you may be assured .- said banker: will - receive a few re- ‘marks that he will not relish if I pos- ~sess .sufficient ..command of the Eng- “lish language. H. M. HARDEN. BORROWERS AND LENDERS Port Townsend, Wash: Editor Nonpartisan Leader:| ;i There is a conflict of interests be- tween borrowers and lenders. The lenders as a class have got together and controlled legislation in their in- terests by which they became the dominant class in the country. While the borrowers have failed to organize effectively for their own interests; yet - they are many times the larger class. As one plank of the Nonpartisan pro- gram demands state rural credit banks to lend money at cost of operation, it is to be hoped that it will see that it ought to control national legislation to get the best relief. i : C. BISHIR. ADVERTISEMENTS sell stock with a market value 7-?& den‘m“ onugn' twenty-monthly-payment ‘ on companies furnished FREE. Financial Indicator” mailed upon request. - Shomept, hae taken in this warhas ot | SMITH~MARTIN €O. “should have been fully ju d by | = 5E ! e T \avety imtriotlo sitisen justified by | ' "STOCKS AND BONDS

Other pages from this issue: