The Nonpartisan Leader Newspaper, January 26, 1920, Page 9

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= ~w f ot D S UG | g ! v < f 1‘;"L { \*"‘3" - 4“{{"‘ : 1 Pt = Loz 1 ) <o TD E R 4 B3 ‘o i v '™ £ o X 3 ~ ity PUNY 25 5 e T vl STl AR, ADvnn'msm&EN'rsr : ARMY GOODS Purchased From the U. S. GOVERNMENT Usellh army tznts pyramid shape, 16x16, Used army tents, pyramid shape, 9x9, each 25.00 .Used army tents, pyramid shape, 7x7, each I5 33 anpnulins, 9X10, ©ACH vseurrvsionsrsnss 16. l:el‘au'ls. mnnuflcmred by Starch Bros., $457and /L AL s 50.00 harness, 1% 1nch hreeching government 1% inch strap work and 1%-inch baen used but as good as new New leather Jerkins, each 7.50 New hip rubber boots Der palr 5.00 | Steel hospital cots, cach . 4.50 1912 model officers’ saddles . 15.00 up Barbed wire, black, per roll 2.70 Barbed wire, galvnnlzed per roll 3.30 Humane metal horse collars, each 4.00 Per OBl /s cwsssiactsassnnios 41.00 Leather horse mllars, each 5.00 Knapsacks, each ..... Army blankets, each Sweat pads, each Mail orders promptly filled. Send draft or money order along. Include postage if by parcel post, and where necessary specify sizes. We do not issue catalogs. No C. 0. D. orders accepted. BARRETT & ZIMMERMAN Midway Horse Market, St. Paul, Minn. ARMY SHIRTS CUT OUT PROFITEERS When the armistice was signed the U. S. government contractors had on hand an enormous supply of army goods fin- ished too late to go to France. These goods are all absolutely new and not used. No money in advance. 33‘,“:%3? double’ elbory as $4 95 Regulatxon army raincoats, government inspected Cavalry shoes, two soles (manure proof) Army oversea sox, in dozen lots, per pair gl\;imca sweaters, all wool, $3 75 Aviator leatherette gaberdine coats, lined, absolutely water- No money in advance., Parcel post does not allow inspection. Give sizes. We ship C. O. D. by express. STANDARD SUPPLY CO. 185 W. Seventh St., St. Paul, Minn. FULLY GUARANTEED 19=- SEPARATORI A SOLID PROPOSITION togend i new, well made, easy ct_skimming Seennreu.vnlano Monthly Payments Bawl a samtary marvel, easily leaned. Whether dairy is large nr small, write for free eatalog and monthly payment plan. Western orders filled from Western points. AMERICAN SEPARATOR CO. ~Box 3064 Bainbridge, N. Y. § Have water on your own farm., I In spare time make wells for your i\ neighbors, It means $1000 extra in | ordinary years, double that in dry Norisk—no experience needed. l"“' i\ Ovtits for Getting Water Anywhere | Earth augers, rock drills and # p Combined machines.. Engine \lif™8 or horse power. Write for SEY r easy terms and free catalog. | _ LISLE MFG. COMPANY Clarinda, Iowa LIGHT YOUR HOME LIKE DAY—CosT 1¢ - hours. Pure white 60 candla powatllz'ht{rom common Kerosene, SOLAR MANTLE I.AMP approved by government experts. ngu , gasoline or electricity. ome i,x‘nter- g Dl soull.mco.. 60 Solar Bldg., Kansas Citv. Mo, ~ Mention the Leader When Writing Advertisers "labor representatives have been placed .mendous business. [ i organized by Ferdinand Teigen, for- mer League organizer, discharged for disloyal utterances during the war. Teigen is now under federal indict- ment for violation of the espionage law. He will be remembered as the star witness for the state in the far- cical trial of A. C. Townley and Jo- seph Gilbert in Jackson, Minn., last summer. T. H. Tharalson, former ad- jntant general of North Dakota, is secretary. Successful League meetmgs are being conducted by Claude Townley. Minnesota women are organizing clubs to affiliate with the new Nation- al Federation of League Women’s Clubs. SOUTH DAKOTA Organization work under the new county” unit plan has started. Meet- ings have been held in several counties already and county managers selected. About 25 managers are ready to go to work as soon as the weather and roads will permit. The membership is enthusiastic over the new plan. The Farmers’ union and labor or- ganizations are co-operating with the League for the political campaign and prospects for victory at the coming election are bright. Under the new Richards primary law the League in this state takes the status of a polit- ical party. The Workingmen’s Nonpartisan league is gaining in numbers and strength daily. In all labor centers on county tickets. About 50 counties have placed farmer and labor tickets in the field. J The World War Veterans are or- ganizing in South Dakota, taking ad- vantage of the dissatisfaction caused by attempts of the Norbeck machine to use the American Legion for polit- ical purposes. South Dakota taxes show a big in- crease over last year. Politicians who have been attacking the increase in North Dakota now are devoting their time attempting to explain the in- crease at home. W. J. Mozley has established of- fices at Mitchell, representing the North Dakota department of immigra- tion. Mr. Mozley has statistics show- ing the success of the North Dakota industrial program and is mnailing at- tacks as they are made. COLORADO The Colorado Grange starts the new year with around $9,000,000 of fire insurance in force in the state, saving the policyholders $50,000 over old-line rates. In a quarter century of service, never has a loss been contested. Every - claim has been paid. There will be a joint convention of farmers’ organizations January 26, for the purpose of form- ing a country-wide sugar beet organ- ization to fight the sugar trust. Hundreds of farmers are writing ‘to League headquarters in Denver ask- ing if something can’t be done to help relieve the ever-increasing burden of taxes.. The taxes of J. H. White, New Raymer, Col.,, have jumped ‘from $35.60 to $220.92 on the same piece of land. Fred Farner of Haxtun, Col, sends in a statement of taxes, which, for the year 1916, were $77.30. Taxes on the same property in 1918 were $288.12, or an increase of about 400 per cent. His tax will be much higher in 1919. Both the state convention of the Farmers’ union and the Grange of Colorado meet in Denver during Janu- ary. The Grange has had a most suc- cessful year. The Farmers’ union has establislied a state exchange since the last convention which has done a tre- The master of the state Grange, John Morris, and J. M. Collins, president of the Farmers’ union, are members of the state exec- utive board of the Nonpartisan league. ! PAGE NINE in Denver |. CREAM SEPARATORS ARE BEST There’s a reason for everything, and surely one for the superiority of DE LAVAL separators. The DE LAVAL was the first continuous discharge centrifugal cream separator. Invented in 1878, it has led ever since. The great DE LAVAL shops in both America and Europe are devoted solely to the production of centrifugal separating and clarifying machines. Large staffs of DE LAVAL experimental and developmental en- gineers, in both America and Europe, constantly devote their time, skill and knowledge to the further improvement of the DE LAVAL Cream Separator. Every single step of cream separator advance- ment, for forty years, has been DE LAVAL ¢on- . ceived or developed. On the other hand, practically evéry feature of construction ever used in any other cream separator has been one that run-out DE LAVAL patents left free. Such features have always been out of date in the later improved DE LAVAL -construction, and most of them were never quite good enough to have been actually used in DE LAVAL con- struction at all. It might aptly be said that DE LAVAL has forgotten more about cream separators than its imitators and would-be compet- itors ever knew. And then it must be remem- bered that the cream separator, with its necessarily high revolv- ing speed, great capacity, ease of operation, simplicity and dura- bility, is a very difficult machine to build right, and can only be built right with long experience, highly skilled employes and a vast amount of special equip- ment. Hence there’s nothing - strange about the fact of DE LAVAL Cream Separator su- periority. THE DE LAVAL SEPARATOR CO. 165 Broadway 29 East Madison Street 61 Beale Street NEW YORK CHICAGO SAN FRANCISCO 50,000 Branches and Local Agencies the World Over THIS NOTICE IS FOR YOU We are sales agents in this territory for the new farm and livestock lands of the Long-Bell Farm Land Corporation in the Highlands of Louisiana. These lands are in a section where the climate is always. mild and health- ful and there is no winter as we know it in the North, where plant growth continues the year 'round, where there is pasturage for livestock 9 or 10 months of the year, and where the rainfall dis certain and generous. The Louisiana Highlands farm lands are being sold to Northern and Western farmers-and stock raisers at an extremely low price and on ex- ceptionally easy terms—$30 an acre, $6 an acre down payment The Long-Bell Farm Land Corporation is an absolutely reliable and dependable organization—we personally vouch for every _ representation it makes to prospective farm land buyers. The ‘company will sell no land until after personal inspection and investigation by the buyer or his accredited representative. THERE ARE WEEKLY EXCURSIONS to the Long-Bell Lands in the Highlands of Louisiana. The rate for the round trip, including every provision-for your comfort and enJoyment is extremely low. This is YOUR opportunity to see a region that is rapidly developing into one of the great livestock, dairying ‘and general farming sections of the country, and at the same time take a dehghtful trip to a land of sun- shine and mild temperatures. Ask us NOW for illustrated descriptive book, and excursion dates and rates. W. M. ROHAN LAND COMPANY Suite 71-73 Stern Building, Fargo, North Dakota Mention the Leader When Writing Advertisers

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