The Nonpartisan Leader Newspaper, September 19, 1921, Page 14

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I %i Money Kings Plan .~ (Continued from page 7) - trols the appointment of the board, but who controls the administration? You know very well YOU don’t con- trol it. You haven’t a look in. Three members of the reserve board might be selected as follows: One by referendum vote of the busi- ness organizations. One by referendum vote of the farmer organizations. One by referendum vote of the labor organizations. ‘This would put three members on the board who are responsible to eco- nomic units outside of banking circles. These three members would have to Nonpartisan (Continued from page 5) the intelligence of the farmers of the state, who seem to be open-minded and ready to give the League a hear- ing, which is all it asks.” IDAHO DAHO Nonpartisan leaguers are greatly interested in the recent suspension by the national presi- dent of State Master Bouck of the Washington Grange. Bouck has spoken at various Idaho Nonpartisan league gatherings and has always left a decided impression. The next Na- _tional Grange conference is to be held in Portland. Many Idaho grangers will attend. The State Grange in Idaho has gone on record favoring the Nonpartisan league. Idaho Grangers who are Nonpartisan leaguers agree that Bouck has won a technical and moral victory. The National Grange has been put in the hole by this fight against free speech. - John Van Nuland has been recently appointed Nonpartisan league field organizer of the state. He will place organizers in the various counties, stay with them to be sure that they are making good, and hold school- house and town meetings over the various districts. He is a farmer who hailed fromy North Dakota originally. The state was recently shocked to learn through the Idaho Leader that the state land department is loaning Liberty bonds to the farmers at par on all farm loans. It compels the farmers to discount these bonds for cash at a loss of over 10 per cent, and thus is in the loan shark game. T. C. Meredith, recently secretary of agriculture and editor of Success- ful Farming, an Iowa farm paper, is in reality back of the “Idaho Cara- van,” which recently left Brooklyn by automobile bound for the irrigated lands of Idaho. Meredith was exposed 10 years ago by Pierce’s Iowa Home- stead for a questionable land scheme in Idaho which failed. Just what ‘will be the ultimate outcome of this last settler project no one seems to be able to guess. WISCONSIN IEUTENANT GOVERNOR GEORGE F. COMINGS, be- side speaking at Nonpartisan league meetings and farmers’ picnic8 in various parts of the state, is active, alert and resourceful in im- proving ‘every opportunity to present the gospel of the League. In a recent communication to'the Wisconsin State- Journal, he ecriticizes the editor of " Hoard’s' Dairyman for saying there can be no close alliance between labor and agriculture, A refutation of this statement is a New Exploitation answer for their acts to the organiza- tions which appointed them. This would be a step toward the democra- tization of the federal reserve system. Now you may take your choice be- tween the two: Government owner- ship_on the one hand, or on the other a more democratic control of the re- serve bank. t This is my last article on the re- serve system. The rest of my articles will be on monopolies and trusts and the cause of high prices. If you have questions to ask regarding the federal reserve system, and I hope you have, send them to the Leader and I will endeavor to answer.them. League News found in Lieutenant Governor Com- ings’ own career. He is a life-long farmer, has been a conductor of farm- ers’ institutes, owns a large farm which he works at Eau Claire, and yet he is the man who was hqnored by the organized wage-workers of Madison " to be their chief speaker at the great Labor day celebration at Monona park on September 5. Speaking -to about 8,000 people he called on the laboring men.to unite with the farm- ers to create a sentiment which will prevent the suppression of free speech. : “The time is coming soon,” he de- clared, “when the president of these United States will feel that he owes his election to the organized workers and farmers, and not to Wall street.” Governor John J. Blaine’s letter de- claring in favor of the public owner- ship of the coal mines has been to Nonpartisan leaguers a pleasing rec- ognition of their platform declaring for the public ownership of natural resources. Governor Blaine, Lieuten- ant Governor Comings, and Senator La Follette have been invited to speak at the Public Ownership conference at Chicago, November 19, 20 and 21. Edward Nordman, formerly the head of what was known as the “di- vision of markets,” with the passage of the market bill, now becomes the head of a separate department of markets, with the title of commis- sioner. Mr. Nordman never fails in his pub- lic addresses and in the literature of his department to point out that-a prime requisite for agricultural pros- perity is well-paid labor, in order that there may be on the part of the gen- eral public an adequate purchasing power calling for the farmers’ prod- ucts. 7 DON’T BE CUT OFF To avoid missing issues readers must - renew their Leader subs promptly. Show this issue to friends. HIGHEST marker PRICES for live and dressed GET P-0-U-L-T-R-Y Write for price list and tags McKAY PRODUCE COMPANY 7 East 3rd St. 8t. Paul, Minn. Luinber —_— FIR LUMBER, DOORS, MILLWORK, RED CEDAR shingles, fenceposts, from mills straight to you. Send bill for money-saving prices. Lansdown, Box 909K, Everett, Wash, —_— LUMBER AND SHINGLES AT REDUCED PRICES. Farmers’ trade our specialty. Best quality. Robert Emerson Company, Box 1156-N, Tacoma, Wash. WRITE FOR PRICES ON DRY CEDAR FENCE &t]!st%l: pay after unloading. Charles Flory, Orting, ash, Business Chances WE CAN SELL YOUR REAL ESTATE, BUSINESS or patent. For quick sale, address Northwestern Business Y, eapolis, Minn.: LEADER CLASSIFIED DEPARTMENT 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 15 cents per word per issue. To members of the National Nonpartisan league when advertising to sell their own products or supplying their own needs, a rate of 10 cents per word is made. ship receipt when claiming the 10-cent rate, full rate. League members must give the number of their meniber- All advertising for sale of lands carries the Ads must reach us two weeks before date of publication. ALL CLASSIFIED ADS MUST BE PAID IN ADVANCE Livestock EXTREME BIG TYPE POLAND CHINA BOAR pigs, March and April farrow; out of 800 and 900- pound sows; sired by Liberator Buster Jr. and Sim- met’s Giant Timm; none better. Are now ready ship out.— Price, $50 apiece. Pedigree furnished. Henry Simmet, Route 3, New Ulm, Minn. FOR SALE—GOOD FOUNDATION, REGISTERED Holstein cows, bred to a thousand-pound son of (S. P. 0. M. 41th) the $6,500 bull. Would con- sider real estate. Also a few bulls priced to sell at gom $150 up. Wallace Manikowske, Mooreton, . D. g POLLED SHORTHORNS, MILKING STRAIN. Bulls of servicable age, cows and heifers, priced to sell, %edlgrco furnished. Time given to those that furnish good bank reference. M. H. Hanson, Mur- dock, Minn. DUROQOC-JERSEY BOAR PIGS OF GREAT WONDER "I Am and Orion Pathfinder breeding; March and April farrow; $20 and $15 each. Pedigrees furaish- if(il Satisfaction guaranteed. W. Kasal, inn, 2 QUALITY CALVES — HOLSTEIN - GUERNSEY shorthorns. = $15 each; slightly more for larger ones. Shipped safely by express and guaranteed. jome- Croft Farm, Como Station, Route 3, St. Paul, Minn, HOLSTEIN CALVES, SEVEN WEEKS OLD:; BOTH sexes; practically pure blood $25 each, crated for shipment anywhere. Reglstered bull calves, $50. Edgewood Farms, Whitewater, Wis. lm CHESTER WHITE BOARS FOR SALE, SIRED BY ° Alfalfa 0. K., Wildwood, Defender and others. Will ship C. O. D. or on approval. H. F. Augst, Montgomery, Minn. BREEDER OF CHESTER WHITES, MARCH, April, July and August farrow. Sows and aged boars. John F. Zimmerman, Davenport, N. D. HOLSTEIN, SHORTHORN AND GUERNSEY calves, beautifully marked high grades. Write for catalog. Ed. Howey, South St. Paul, Minn, —_— e - e GUERNSEY BULLS, HEIFERS; PUREBRED AND grades; all ages; $25 up grades; $50 up bulls. The Producing Milk Farm, Palmyra, Wis. Z FULLBLOOD POLAND CHINA PIGS, $15. ANTON Standenmaier, Carl, N. D. Farms land, 160 tillable and 125 acres in crop this year, balance pasture and meadow. Good house, barn, granary, garage, tool-shed and chicken-house. Can flve possession at once and $5,000 cash will handle t, balance on your own terms. For particulars address J. H. Bartlett, Route 3, Atwater, Minn. —_— e S S S, A TWO FARMS—115 ACRES AND 116 2-3 ACRES— good buildings, black loam clay subsoil. Over half under plow, balance meadow, pasture, etc., which can all be tilled. Good wells, white-oak groves, near school. Xasy terms; write for particulars. Theo. C. Olson, Route 3, Paynesville, Minn. —_— EXCELLENT, DAIRY-SHEEP-CLOVER-GRAIN-PO- tato land. Bayfleld county, Wisconsin, clay loam— sure crops—big markets; low price—easy payments. No_interest first five years. Write Geroge Besser, L-805 Plymouth Building, Minneapolis. —_— e e 267-ACRE IMPROVED FARM IN NORTH DA- kota, 7-room modern house, barns for 30 head of cattle, granary, stock and machinery; all for $30 per acre, easy terms. Write owner, Wells, 2050 Holladay Avcnue, Portland, Ore. SELL YOUR= FARM FOR CASH. THOUSANDS lovking for place like vours. New’s quick: result plans save time and commission. _Send $1 today. G. New, Station K, Box 12, New York City. STLL YOUR PRCPERTY QUICKLY FOR CASH, no m-:tter where located. P rtienlars free. Real Estate S-lesman Co., Dept. 535, Lincoln, Neb. WANTED TO HEAR FROM OWNER OF. A FARM or good. land for sale, possession this winter, L. Jones, Box 671, Oluney, Il CASH BUYERS WANT FARMS, FALL DELIVERY, from owners only. R. A. McNown, 347 Wilkinson Bullding,. Omaha, Neb. WANTED TO REAR FROM OWNER OF FARM FOR sale. Give price and description. H. E. Busby, ‘Washington, Iowa. MEN, WOMEN—BUY LAND WITH CO0-OPERA- tive company. Public Farm, Helenville, Wis. FOR SALE OR TRADE—400-ACRE FARM IN Bottineau county. Box 334, Towner, N. D. ; Help Wanted | MEN—WOMEN—GIRLS OVER 17 WANTED FOR © U. 8. Government. Steady positions. Commence, $135 month., Quick rhise to $190. Paid vacation. Common _education sufficient. Experience unnec- essary. Write immediately for free list positions row open. Act today. Franklin Institute, Dept. R.-48, Rochester, N. Y. CLERKS—HUNDREDS MEN, 18, OVER, WANTED for railway mail, postoffice positions; examination September. Salary, $135 month. Experience un- necessary. Write “for free particulars about posi- tions, examination. ~Columbia School of Civil Serv- ice, 338 Pope Building, Washington, D. C WANTED—AMBITIOUS .MEN TO PREPARE FOR good jobs as auto and tractor mechanics. Free railroad fare to students taking Master Write for free information. Dept. NPL,' Aberdeen, 8. D DETECTIVES EARN BIG MONEY. GREAT DE- mand. __ Travel. Experience unnecessary. _Write —DPept. 530, American Detective System, 1966 Broad- way, New York. Honey and Sorghum PURE COUNTRY SORGHUM,, $5.50, FIVE GAL- lons. Three filne brooms, 31240; honey prices on request. Chris Bahr, Cathay, N. D. DELICIOUS NEW IDAHO CLOVER HONEY, 60 {;{o?]mis.msgzsc two 60s, $12. Kingsbury, Twin alls, Idaho. Kodak Finishing MAIL US YOUR FILMS. DEVELOPING ROLL amd six prints, 25 cents sflver. Snappy pictures. Quick service. Oftedahl Studio, Little Falls, Minn, Potatoes for Sale POTATOES FOR, SALE. SELECTED EARLY OMos:slo-Bushel lots or more., Nick Cordell, Water- town, 3 . course. State Auto School, PAGE FIF'I‘EEN\ @70 Sanitoriums —_—— e SANATORIUM—DR. BIORNSTAD’S SANATORIUM. The best equipped sanatorium in the Northwest. Equipment cost a fortune, to medical sclence can be obtained here without going to expensive springs far .w.y from home. specialize chronic, persistent d.scases of months’ and years’ standing that have not Leen benefited by We medicine and old-fashioned doctoring. Nerve trou- bles, rheumatism, dyspepsia and constipation, skin discases, lung trouble, catarrah, kidney troubies, blood and urinary ailments treated by baths of all kinds, electricity in twenty different forms, ‘‘light cure.”” Swedish movements and scientific massage, X-ray, Finsen treatments, ozone inhalationsg Special apartments for iadies. Graduated assistanty. Rea- sonable prices. We can refer you to Jeading physi- clans and satisfled patients from everywhere. 1f unable to call, write G. Biornstad, M. D., describe ailment and request free instructive book and com- lete information. No charge for consultation. 2345 Nicollet Avenue, Minneapolis, Minn. Tobacco ————— e OLD KENTUCKY TOBACCO—3-YEAR-OLD LEAF. Ripe, rich, nature cured. ‘“The kind that made Kentucky famous.”” Chewing or smoking, 3 pounds, $1.00 postpaid. Kentucky Tobacco Association, W448, Hawesville, Ky. TOBACCO—KENTUCKY HOMESPUN, ing, 10 pounds, $2.00; 20 pounds, ‘3.50. Chewing, ;(0 pounds, $3.00. Producers’ Exchange, Mayfield, Y. e L S UM s el sty "D KENTUCKY SMOKING TOBACCO. THREE- year-old leaf, aged in bulk, nature cured, 10 pounds, $2 postpaid. 8. Rosenblatt, Hawesville, Ky. HOMESPUN TOBACCO. CHEWING, 10 POUNDS, $3: 20 pounds, $5. Smoking, 10 pounds, $2.50; 20 pounds, $4. Farmers Union, Mayfield, Ky. —_— D Y HOMESPUN SMOKING OR CHEWING TOBACCO, 10 pounds, $2.25; 20 pounds, $3.75, C. 0. D. Ford Tobacco Co., Mayfleld, Ky. P Patents PATENTS SECURED. PROMPT SERVICE. AVOID dangerous delays. Send_for our ‘“Record of In- vention” form and Free Book telling how to obtain " a patent. Send sketch or model for examination. Preliminary advice without charge. Highest refer- ences. Write today. J. L. Jackson & Co., 16! Ouray Building, Washington, D. C. —_—— e INVENTORS—BEFORE DISCLOSING YOUR IDEA to others write for our ‘“Evidence of Disclosure’ form. Send sketch or model of your invention for examination and advice. Ask for free book, ‘‘How to Obtain a Patent.” Avoid dangerous delays. Write today. Merton-Roberts Co., 107 Mather Building, Washington, D. C. Miscellaneous 100 POUNDS OF UNSHELLED PEANUTS, DIRECT to you from grower for $6.50 et shipping point. One pound of shelled peanuts contains more than five times the food value of a pound of beefsteak, Send orders to O. J. Schuster, Spring Grove, Va. 9 HEMSTITCHING AND PICOTING ATTACHMENT for sale. Works on all sewing machines; price B fiersonal checks, 10 cents extra. Light's Mail ouse, Box 127, Birmingham, Ala. FOR SALE—ONE CARLOAD OF POTATOES TO be delivered about October 15th; price will be right. William Butgereit, Coteau, N. D, h Agents Wanted ‘AGENTS—EVER HEAR OF THE DATE PRUNE? We know you haven't. You will want to know all about it. We are developing co-operative commer- cial orchards of this new fruit wonder. live agents to sell contracts. Our plan sells to the humblest workman, business or professional - man or to the millionaire—every one everywhere, every housewife, every city dweller, every farmer will be interested. ~Write today for plan and free litera- ture describing this wonderful new fruit. Address Oregon Nursery Company, Orenco, Ore. Farm Machinery — CORN HARVESTER CUTS AND PILES ON HAR- vester or winrows. Man and horse cuts and shocks egunl corn binder. Expressed to every state. Only $28 with fodder tieing attachment. = Testimonials and catalog free showin Process Harvester Co., Salina, Kan, ADDRESS INQUIRIES FOR BOGGS POTATO sorters and equipment to H. A. Nelson, Factory Representative, Detroit, Minn, Poultry BUFF LEGHORNS, BOTH COMBS; GOLDEN, CO- lumbian and Silver Wyandottes; Reds. Cockerels, hens. A, Johannessohn, Beltrami, Minn, —_——— . . PUREBRED BUFF . ROCK COCKERELS AND pullets. Choice stock, $1.25 each, Order early. P. N. Ydstie, Hillsboro, N. D, Harness —_— SADDLES—40 SLIGHTLY USED GOVERNMENT stock saddles, $18.50 each; new McClellan army saddles, $11 cach; largest stock of new and used harness in the West. ~Midway Harness Co., 1953 University Avenye, St. Paul, Minn, Professional Schools — \ 100 YOUNG MEN AND WOMEN WANTED LEARN telegraphy. Salary $120 to $200 a month. Earn expenses while learning. ~Free catalog. United Railways Telegraph School, Bremer Arcade, St. Paul. Dogs and Pet Stock ———————— IRISH-RUSSIAN STAG-HOUND PUPS, 6 MONTHS old; 3 males, $10 each; 5 females, $5 each. One female, 4 years old, $15. or the whole bunch at $50, Steve Wolff, Russell, N. D. Trunks, Bags,- Suitcases TRUNKS, BAGS, SUITCASES. WHY PAY TWO middlemen profits? Buy from factory direct. for free catalog. Gem Trunk & Bag I'actory, Spring Valley, Ill Seed T T T T e SR P SR kel GUARANTEED ALFALFA, $6.00; SWEET CLOVER, .00; red clover, $8.00; Grimm alfalfa, $15.00% Klulnrcig “:vhan. $1.85 bushel. Meler Seed Co., Rus- sell, N Mention the Leader When Writing Advertisers MILD SMOK- 25 order picture of harvester,

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