The Nonpartisan Leader Newspaper, August 5, 1918, Page 14

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jess 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 results come from Leader Classified Ads. 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 per word is made. when claiming the 4-cent rate. , 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 Farms 160 ACRES UNIMPROVED LAND, LOCATED 60 miles from Twin Cities, in Polk county, Wis,, in an ideal farming community; on mail route; on two roads; one mile from farmers’ creamery; three miles from cheese factory; one and one-half miles from church and consolidated school ; three-quarters mile from two good fishing lakes; all clay loam soil, with a deep clay subsoil; no timber, very open and easy to clear; can get 80 acres under plow very easily; almost level; price $30 per acre; will make terms; also many other farms in same locality. Oscar Dueholm Land Co., 560 Shubert Bldg., St. Paul, Minn. T el el Ml e S S S SN R e b 80 ACRES GOOD HARDWOOD TIMBER land located in Clark county, Wis., near Thorp; all clay loam soil, with deep clay subsoil ; small house; 10 acres cleared, bal- ance nice maple and basswood timber; spring stream near house; on main road and mail route, half mile from school, store and cheese factory; located in well settled country ; price, $3,000; $800 cash, terms on balance at 6 per cent. Oscar Dueholm Land Co., 550 Shubert Bldg., St. Paul, Minn. e e OR SALE—508 ACRES OF THE BEST wheat land in North Dakota, with seven- room house and heating plant, large barn and machine sheds; buildings almost mnew. Plenty of good water; farm is all fenced. Five miles from good town and church; in consolidated school district. Must sell owing to poor health. $47 per acre on easy terms. gw?{erNJOh{l C. Schuchard, Overly, N. D., . R. No. 1. YOU CAN BUY CHEAP FROM OWNER half section of land in central North Dakota, five miles from county seat town. Soil first class and lays perfectly; 100 acres summer- fallowed and ready for next year’s crop; balance virgin prairie. B. G. Loughren, Steele, N. D. FYOR SALE—160 ACRES UNIMPROVED land; 80 acres under cultivation, mostly all tillable; three and one-half miles from Gary, Norman county, Minn.; $32.50 per acre. Good soil. Owner, Geo. Chisholm, Flaming, Minn. _ sl ool B B et S I S NOTICE TO LANDSEEKERS—I HAVE FOR sale 1,120 acres cutover land, good soil, na 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. P S [ ) PP S S P S e GREAT BARGAINS—HAVE SOME BRUSH land in Clearwater county, Minn. Must be disposed of ; small payment down, balance easy terms.. Write for particulars. J. Holton, Shevlin, Minn. e e L e $§100 DOWN; NO MORE PAYMENTS FOR 10 years, secures good clover farm. No sand, rock or swamp. Good schools, roads, markets. George A. Besser, 826 Plymouth Bldg., Minneapolis. e 320-ACRE DRY FARM IMPROVED LAND in American Falls, Idaho, great wheat belt; $256 per acre; one-third cash, balance long terms. Write George Stoll, Pocatello, Idaho. 160-ACRE FARM IN SASKATCHEWAN, Canada, for sale by owner; price, $3,000; 90_acres broke; buildings worth $500; terms. D.” H. Scherlie, Turner, Mont. FOR SALE—ONE SECTION OF 670 ACRES in eastern Colorado, well improved, a good well and lots of free range. Write owner, C. W. Auten, Arapahoe, Col. ] L] Will deal with owners only. . Give description, location and cash price. James P. White, New Franklin, Mo. S8ELL YOUR PROPERTY QUICKLY 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. O. Hawley, Baldwin, Wis. Farm Machinery FOR SALE—40 HORSEPOWER UNDER- mounted Avery’ steam engine, with 42-inch separator; 18 horsepower Advance steamer; 30-60 Rumely oil-pull tractor; automatic plow; w Some of these machines are almost as. good as new and are bargains. three new Advance Rumely separators, sizes 28-48, 32-52, 36-60. These separators were bought last year and will be sold at a big saving to the purchaser. C. H. Nis- sen, Mandan, N. D. e s FOR SALE—THRESHING RIG CONSISTING of 26 horsepower New Huber engine, 40x60 Port Huron separator, galvanized water tank with good Weber wagon, coal cart, new drive and blower belts. Is ready for threshing. Will sell cheap, with reasonable terms for reliable parties. H. T. Klitzke, Stewart, Minn. T S e e S s S e FOR SALE—265 HORSEPOWER COMPOUND Case engine, Avery 86-60 separator, tanks, complete, in_first class condition, ready to_ thresh. or particulars, Harry Weaver, Forbes, N. D. 2 FOR SALE—ONE 32-56 MINNEAPOLIS separator, been used two and one-half sea- sons. In excellent condition. ~Poor ecrops make it necessary to sell. W. W. Bond, Almont, N. D. FOR SALE—ONE 11 HORSEPOWER WITTE gas or kerosene engine, with £rig'g=lon clutch pulley, in_good runn: order.; Schults, Sprinefeld, Minm. Mention the Leader When ‘Writing Ad rite G. H. Livestocl: FOR SALE—REGISTERED SHORTHORN bulls, cows with calves at side, yearling and two-year-old heifers, red and roans, also registered Duroc Jersey boar pigs from prize-winning strain. Write or come. Joe H. Redenius, Rushmore, Minn. DUROC JERSEY PIGS OF THE KIND THAT has satisfied, mostly April farrow. Unre- lated pairs or more. Guarantee equal any on the market. Shipped on approval. Prices reasonable; pedigrees furnished. Jen Molvig, Buxton, N. D, ¢ BIG TYPE MULE-FOOT HOGS OF THE leading strain, March, April pigs and breed sows; can furnish pairs and trios not re- lated. Sam Gullickson, Hanley Falls, Minn. —_— e e HOLSTEINS FOR SALE—PUREBRED REG- istered stock. Bull calves two to 10 months old; also young cows and heifers. Herman Schumacher, New Germany, Minn. I HAVE FIRST CLASS REGISTERED Chester White pigs for sale; ask for price list. Stephen Tokash, St. Anthony, N. D. — e T o L R T SEVERAL CARLOADS HORSES, CHEAP, near Stanton, N. D. For particulars, First State Bank, Stanton, N. D POLLED DURHAM HERD BULL; POLAND EhirlmNboig registered. Leal Stock Farm, eal, - g Employment pre DR s i 2bd Arerddpun i I B o U. S. GOVERNMENT WANTS THOUSANDS clerks at Washington, Men—women—girls, 18 or over._ War work. $100 month. Quick increase. Easy work. Common education sufficient. Your country needs you. Help her and live in_Washington during these stirring times. Write immediately for free list of positions open. Franklin Institute, Dept. T48, Rochester, N. Y. e ol bl bttt ot A B0 SN ok O Wl POSITION WANTED—A GAS TRACTOR operator with two years’ experience; good repair man. Address E. P. McGilvra, Bara- boo, Wis., R. 5. WANTED—JOB TO RUN GAS TRACTOR this fall. Satisfaction guaranteed. State wages. Oscar Hitman, Terrace, Minn. RELIABLE GAS ENGINEER WANTS PO- sition for the fall; state particulars. Lock Box 14, Elliott, N. D. Automobiles and Accessories FORDS CAN BURN HALF COAL OIL, OR cheapest gasoline, using our 1918 carburetor; 84 miles per gallon guaranteed. Easy start- 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., 473 Madison St., Dayton, Ohio. —_— Y e ONE 30x3% FIRESTONE NON-SKID, $18; one 30x3 Goodyear, plain, never used, $15. Anton Strom, Hector, Minn. Dogs and Pet Stock FOR SALE—STAGHOUND PUPS FROM wolf-killing stock. Males, $10;-females, $7; pair, $15. Henry Benge, Lignite, N. D. BLACK ENGLISH SHEPHERD PUPS; BEST stock dogs on earth. Gerh Wolter, Ham- burg, Minn. SCOTCH COLLIES, EXTRA GOOD CATTLE dogs. Horse Shoe Kennels, Nicollet, Minn. SHEPHERD PUPS FOR SALE. EDWARD Bratlien, Lunds Valley, N. D. City Property DO YOU WANT MINNEAPOLIS PROPER- ty bringing in handsome returns? If in- terested, we offer fine apartments from $15,000 up; encumbrances 40 to 50 per cent and earning around 10 per cent on their valuations. No worry and sure income. Owners might assume some on good im- proved farms. Write full. details of what you have. Hugh McElroy Agency, 533 An- drus Bldg., Minneapolis, Minn. Wanted WANTED—SCRAP IRON BY CARLOTS. Highest market prices. Also auto tires, cop- per, brass, etc. Write for cuotations. M. Naftalin, 820 Front St., Fargo, N. D. OUR PRICES HIGHEST FOR HIDES, FURS. Or will tan them for you—lowest prices. Mark next shipment—Far‘o Hide, Fur Tanning Co., Fargo, N. D. Lumber - D T — LUMBER AND SHINGLES AT WHOLE- sale prices. Farmers’ ‘trade our specialty. : us your bills for_free estimate. Tt %hvne;son Company, Box 1156-N, Tacomas, ash. RED CEDAR POSTS IN CARLOTS. ~ DE- livered prices to farmers. J. B. Overton, Sagle, Idaho. Miscellaneous 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 order; do not send postage stamps. Moen’s Studio, Box K, Preston, Minn. . ~For Sale or Exchange g )Z ing. i ® 65 CASE 36-58 SEPARATOR; -NEW. 1915, Box 145, Glen Ullin, N, D. Keep Borah on Job, Say Nonpartisans (Continued from page 9) Senator Bailey, “that this bill of the senator from Idaho is somewhat simi- - lar to that provision in the agricultural appropriation bill which makes some sort of a similar arrangement for calves and pigs.” “Exactly,” smiled Borah at the Texan. “My bill seeks to have the government do for the children what it has already done for the calves and pigs!” 3 Whereupon Mr. Bailey sat down heavily and became lost in Jeffer- sonian thought. The one thing that this man, so slashing in deeds and words, dreads is the increased tendency toward central- ization of power and the weakening of the authority of the states. It was he who put the woman suffrage plank in the Republican platform in 1916. He has been for 23 years an advocate of woman suffrage. “Neither expe- diency nor a false view of her sphere will be able,” he says, “to keep woman from that council board where more and more are to be considered the in- terests of the child, the integrity of the home, the moral and physical well-being of the citizen; where more and more are to be discussed and de- termined all those movements which reach down and take hold of those things upon which her sympathy, her intuition, her vision, and, above all, her optimism &re at least equal in worth to the experience and the rea- soning of men.” But he has refused to support the proposed constitutional amendment for suffrage, on the ground that it was a matter that be- longed exclusively to the states,. and on the further ground that it was a waste of time and effort to attempt to secure support for it in southern states, where the race question is uppermost. However one may differ on this question, there is no doubt of Borah’s sincerity and desire for justice. i ’ A Shipyard Worker on the League Great Michigan Newspaper Which Investigated the League Earns the Public’s Thanks HE Detroit (Mich.) News is one of the largest newspapers in America. Being such, it could not afford to ignore the Na= tional Nonpartisan But instead of sending out a league. young smart Aleck reporter who didn’t know a horse from a cow, it sent a seasoned writer, who was for many years a farmer. This man, Henry Richmond, investigated the work of the League and wrote a series of impartial, judicious ‘articles on it. That the public appreciates this fair spirit is indicated by the following letter to the editor of the News by a Michigan workingman: To the Editor: Here is one indi- vidual who feels indebted to the News for the insight given into the Non- partisan league, its reasons for com- ing into existence and its purposes for the future. When .there is so much “it is re- ported,” and “it is alleged” that this or that group is “pro-German,” “dis- loyal,” ete., it is not a little refreshing to get so impartial a presentation as farm populations with disloyal im- pulses when they unite into one com- pact organization to protect their rights by the ballot-box, has' seemed to me far-fetched. Editors and poli- ticians who see red in every move of organized wheat, corn and meat raisers are paying a very doubtful compliment to those on whom they are . depending to win the war. When all elements in-society who are fed by these same farmers are grouped in their multifarious organ- Poultry WE HAVE FOR SALE A LIMITED NUM- ber of extra good vigorous Single-comb White Leghorn cockerels at $3 each. Satis- faction guaranteed. The North Dakota State Penitentiary, Bismarck, N. D. COCKERELS—BUFF LEGHORN, laced "Wyandotte, Columbia -~ Wyandotte, Rose-Comb Red, Buff Orpington, $1.50 until l?fieptember. L. Johannessohn; Beltrami, mnn. PAY HIGHE?T MhA1§KE'£§¥ANT1 Pl?UL- try, -eggs, furs, es, , _Vveal, Dbeans, P wrgol. Get my price list. - S. L. McKay, 7 Third St., St. Paul, Minn. - Harness 500 SETS OF FIRST-CLASS SECOND-HAND farm harness, $36, $40, $45 per set. Also large stock of new harness from $50 to $656 per set. We save you money. in City Harness Co. of Midway, St. Paul, Minn. Cheese - GREEN COUNTY’S -FAMOUS BRIC K cheese, 514 pon'nd-hsx.ss: 11 ‘gon?dlé.g.: ‘92 pounds, $6.76 ;88 " pounds f;l" nm:fnwed. R.'A.” Rosa, . Monree, | Guring. the past year. izations, why throw a fit when the ruralists organize to educate them- selves concerning the relation of poli- tics and organized business to the high cost of their products to the consumer compared to the prices they receive for them? And now the Michigan bankers are told in their convention to go into politics—learn “that much from the Nonpartisan league. Really, isn’t it amusing, that so long as the farmer stays home and “slops his hogs” he is a patriotic citizen, but so soon as he begins to talk politics with his neigh- bor on the next farm and agrees to vote with him for measures of com- mon interest to them, that he suddenly becomes a menace to the peace of the nation ? Thanks again for the News and the measure of credit it allows the average reader for intelligence sufficient . to analyze some of these things for him- self. I am just a common worker, doing my bit at the shipyard, but when I read your articles covering these movements in organized society it helps me to refrain from joining in with the wholesale condemnation di- rected their way by too many of the leading papers. H. VINCENT. River Rouge. MIXED FEEDS TO BE REGU- LATED The agricultural advisory committee also urges the regulation of the manu- facture of mixed feeds, a most im- portant need at the present time; in the interest of our buyers ahd our livestock.. In addition to unwarranted prices, war conditions have led to a great deal of adulteration in animal as well as human food that is harm- ful. Where it is not positively harm- ful, the adulteration is fraudulent substitution of a substance of little value for onme of high wvalue. Rice. hulls, for instance, are a common " adulterant. MILLERS ARE TO DISGORGE By order of the food administration the flour millers who have taken more - than 25 cents a barrel profit since September 1, 1917, are to be allowed to sell. fleur to the government at a nominal figure (probably $1 a barrel) - until they have used up. these illegal profits. The government will have cheap flour for a long time if the food ' administration really. gets at the ac- tual profits made by the big millers:

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