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ADVERTISEMENTS v, BRASS $al e S5 country. Order at once if you want prompt service; ] . @ B : SEND $10 DEPOSIT ¥ back your $10. 4 checks, brass spotted front and nose band. in. by 18 ft. with snaps. Hames—Red concord bolt, b brass ball top. Hame Straps—7-8 in. Spread Straps & ; in, 'I’Bae;l—}-} '1-2 lln. 6 ft.‘ lmllg, :i-rplly ll;luuvly trace leather, with heel chain, Cooper’s jointed clip at hame. ad-—Heavy harness leather, felt ned, 1 1-4 in. layer, all neatly spotted in brass. Back Straps—1 in. Hip Straps—in., 3 ring style, all neatly TRIMMED TEAM HARNESS $52.95 t ‘h\ A special bargain, one that you can order direct' from this ad. This i3 one of the A R greatest values we have ever offered and we are receiving orders from all- parts of the Mention No. 2767 and we will send you the Harmess C. 0. D, The balance, $42.95 and charges, you pay the agent after you have received the harness and find it perfectly satisfactory. If for any reason you would be dissatistied after you have looked it over, return same to us and we will pay all charg.s and refund ® Bridle—3-4 in. ‘short cheeks with nose band, concord f harness leather blinds, .round winker brice, fl:t sl(li- 5— spotted in brass. Breeching—Heavy folded, with 1 in. layer. Breast Straps—1 1-2 in., with snaps and s'll‘:h-.“ Mart’irl:l::le—-l 1-2 hf.. with y7‘8 in. collar strap. Side Straps—7-8 in. Lazy Straps—7-S in. Price less collars $52.95. Send for our illustrated Catalog. SOUTH SIDE HARNESS CO., Dept. 60 MONROE, WIS.J ) FEED - !‘ s IGHTNING will destroy thou- sands of unprotected farm buildings in the next three months. A single stroke may leave yourhouse or barn in ashes. Lightning CAN'T strike your build- ings if they are protected by Barnett Pu:e Copper Cable Lightning Rods. State Fire Marshals, U.S. Government and lns%li‘anc'fi exgem“rreicommend ey’ll cut your insurance P 0! Aut- 10 to 25%. Yog%blh Barnett's Guarantee is the cheapest will furnish i 3 insurance you can buy—it prevents } loss. Write today for booklet ‘‘Light- ning’’ and free samples of Pure Cop- per Cable, B J0S. .BARNETT &C0.,CedarRapids,la. / FARMER AGENTS WANTED: We furnish sales 'al-n. Mo experience sil ding corn and all other work a uoll. P, Gas londerful opportunity. do. ine can Co. e H:,,""::Eré..'..« ‘me your agents’ Our Equipment Fitss Ford Qverland Kudson Fordson de eo Studebaker Buick & others Simple to e~nncet-—-does not harm your.car. Get one NOW---hundreds in use~« 0 . Batisfaction guaranteed—--only . . AWRENC : AVTO POWER. EQUIPMENT EERT. R 391MinnesotaSt, ST. PAUL, MINN. 3 st Profitable chick- 64 BREED %:ducke.zem:nd tur- LAWRENCE AUTO POWER CO. i3 keys. Choice, pure-bred, hardy northern 0 raK;ed. Fowls,cgge, incubators at low prices. o America's greatest poultry farm. 26 years - in business. Valuable new 112 page Poul- urity and germiunation--free 5N Best June and _Everbearing Varieties. Fromda eeds. N By to grower. Write for price list. BAILEY’S NURSERY over, :Get our flald and Dayton’s Bluff Sta. 8t. You know how you have been getting docked when you sell your grain. This dockage is costing you big money, and you should put a stop to it. The only way to prevent this loss is to treat your seed grain for smut before you sow it. " The Hoiland Smut Machine Pays for Itself 10 Times Over in One Season With this machine on your farm, you will sow only clean .grain. There will be no more smut. - Use my machine this year, and it will pay for itself 10 times over. . The machine will last for years, and when you are through using it for treating grain, it makes a mighty good watering trough. : ) THE HOILAND SMUT MACHINE. 18 guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction or your money back. Hundreds now in use. The size shown here for $18.00 has a capaeity of 60 to 100 bushels per hour. The Hoiland is the only machine that saves the solution. . It is a dipping machine, ‘built according to- the-standards of high agrieul- be dipped, not soaked or sprayed. Order Now—Use This Coupon .. Send your money right away and get rid of the smut on your grain. Your money back if you are not satisfied. Order now, direct from this ad. PRICE ONLY ILLUSTRATED CIRCULAR FREE ON REQUEST $1800 Hoiland I\f;?fi;cotllmgméompany 100 Cole Bldg. Fargo, North Dakota se This Cupn MR. ALBERT HOILAND ; LR . 77100 Cole Bldg., Fargo, N. D, . : Pog , Dear Sir; Enclosed find $18.00 for a Hoiland Smut Machine. "I am.to get my money back if I am not satisfied, . 3 B NI e /L e e e e Ry Krans. 1 i e e R R i e L S AT = g 7 - ngerous weeds. New CERPTRTH % Full line of hardy nursery stock direct me?‘é:ofimofie& Sood ordera of $1.00 of garden seed catalog. 1 authorities. These authorities say ‘that-grain should. : | USING YOUR AUTO ASA STATIONARY i R NGINE N S e Guide and Catalog free. Write" 3 ¥ EUBERT Go., Box 641 Mankalo, Minn. | Y 4= STRAWBERRY PLANTS | [f Sitb, ane secd tested for Por451h.bu Paul. ADAMS SEED CO. Box O DECORAH, IA, EEEE AlE[LIN|AS ElLNlAls]y T | El = z[o|z[o|>|@|d|-| o[z[o|2|o/>]]| z[o]z]0]>|m[H] RIEIDEIRIEIE] z[m [z{Q)=[m[Z[0[2[[>]7)] [zl ol mIz ] B ) = =l ~|z|> o= d[n]>|0|z] 0> o) Z[>[o]|~|d]p[>]v] EBEEIEIEIRIES o|-[4@[>[v]z[0]z|m] EEIEIEIR = AJEJL RIE[O[A]EL] the corner you started for. Thus, suppose you start out from the middle “T” to go to the upper right- hand corner. Suppose you go three squares.to the right, then four squares straight toward the top of the diagram, then three again to the right, then, three toward the top, then four to the right and lastly straight up the outside column to the corner you set out for. The squares you have passed over spell “The Nonpartisan Leader.” If you make it in just two moves, to the top mar- gin and then to. the right, or to the right margin and then to the top,” you spell the same. Mr. Stenson says you always specll “The Nonpartisan Leader,” no matter what corner you set out from, and no matter what way you go, provid- .ing you follow the three rules: Don’t try to move diagonally; don’t turn except at a right angle, and don’t turn unless the turn brings you nearer to the corner you set out for. Try it and see if Mr. Stenson is right. .That North Dakota Revolt Two Officials Misrepresented by the Hostile Press—Turn- coats Unable to Harm N ew Industrial Legislation ma] HE Leader has had two or. three letters from farm- .ers asking us about “the revolt in North Dakota” that has been played up in headlines in the. cor- poration-controlled press of the Twin Cities and other points. - The fact is there is not much of a revolt. The anti-farmer papers have printed the pictures of five North Da- _kota officials as having turned on: the League. One of these was- State Treasurer Obert Olson. Mr. Olson the next day issued a statement in which he said: “A St. Paul Dispatch reporter called on me several days ago. While he was in my office I talked of nothing else than how unfairly his paper treated the organized farmers. But yesterday that or- gan of the packers and big busi- ness said I had come out against the League and printed my pic-. “ture, which I presume it got from - the official state photographer. What I actually said to the man in _answer to- his question of how I stood on the League was this: “‘I’ve - read your paper for a - ‘number of years and I notice that . . PAGE FOURTEEN - n[a[s[i]s]aln]Lle]a Vr][s]aln]e [E RIEEYRIEIC) HEEEE nJals]i]s[a[n]c]e]alo[elr One of the Leader’s enthusiastic readers, Jens Stenson of Baker, N. D., has worked out an interesting diagram, which we reproduce above, to interest the “kids” and the “grown-ups,” too, for that matter. Mr. Stenson says that if you begin with the “T” in the middle of this diagram and proceed toward any corner of the diagram that you will spell “The Nonpartisan Leader,” no matter which way you go, providing you move always in a straight line, always turn at right angles and never turn in any direction except the turn brings you nearer to @] 41 Z|O|> O|D|D [2{0Z] >/0/z[o|zmz|m|z 0] RN EILIC] you certainly have been handing the League farmers a raw deal. You stoed up for the big packers, who . are . bleeding considerable money out of the farmers of North Dakota, including myself. If you want to quote me on my stand on the League you can say that I've fought for ‘the same things the League is fighting for for years'and Pm with the League ! from hell"to breakfast, and theré is nothing under the sun that can make me betray the farmers of North’ Dakota.’” - i }\Iaturally the Dispatch did not run this statement. A day or two later it announced that Mr. Olson had “re- pudiated” his stand against the - League. : Insurance Commissioner S. A. Ols- ness is another man played up by the . big papers as having turned on the fa'u'mers. Mr. Olsness promptly de- nied the charge. Mr. Olsness explain- ed that he was opposed to just one bill passgd by the legislature—the one that provided for one official paper in each county instead of three as at present. Mr. Olsness would go still farther than the League bill and have no of- fi_cl'al papers at all. He would have