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1 I 'i\ '1 £*', ,i 1 -V. .~JB? x8^^—Zz£h=L IPggg maf 7/fS OLO. i*nt46j4af4r#ij£\ 4\&£cW40a#u/cAU*, f0a#utc&i6* C^-y/hfrtdtdrtiCflUu. tI If!' Pr *9tmt*^si*£jttiru?, rruHuza^4A+uu. &<4¥?y/*pcd*tory u, Men Who H'rr KNOW mmmMmrnm ?l a. X8 v. /nift*. ff/./Sraf/ap«*t&/4*v*y**y*-m+0 "*3 St'jAjlt" 0?l, [Ai .+6£*irf::\ 5M1VW W«» 4nA•'.•/ I 6m.' +t+U,1bVt**{%4A*//*£& 9 r- v-Bi//^fcn In lift ifiiJS BACK OF EVERY Mirarr'TFN, fan)! lin'i'lililw irtoji t»v9i*P» GLOBE INSURANCE Back of it all you'll find the EL'ectric WeMed Ingot Iron con struction the reason for Globe Long Service and the 25 YEAR INSURANCE. The Globe Insurance Policy inspires confidence, it certifies to die merit of the goods. If you could see how Globe Stoves are made, the great care given each range cr heater and the rigid inspection, you would not regard this policy, "daring." On the ether hand you would wonder "how on earth that stove can ever wear out." Globe, hard and soft coal heaters, cast cooks and ranges, and warm air furnaces are just as good as this Electric Welded Ingot iron "St^cl" Ranre line. The New York Furniture & Hardware Store MuU by THE GLOBE STOVE & RANGE CO. «f Kdano, bBua HIGHEST SINCE CIVIL WAR Last Friday a car load of wheat was sold by the Equity Co-operative Ex change on the trading floor in St. Paul for $1.81 per bushel, which is the high est price obtained for a car load of wheat in the Twin Cities since the Civil War. It was one cent higher than any other car of wheat sold for that day, either at Minneapolis or Duluth. The car was sold to C. C. Chambers & Co., a member of the St. Paul Grain Exchange and was to fill an order from a country mill. This carload of wheat came from Square Butte, Mon tana, a small town in the western part of the Judith Basin. RANGE IS THE DRAINAGE PROBLEM We have just received a shipment of sewer tile—the best thing in the world for use in draining your barnyard or in the construction of a drain from your house. This particular kind is the old reliable make—same as you used to help your grandfather lay 'down on the farm.' We were especi ally fortunate in securing this ship ment as it is the first of the kind we have been able to secure in years. It is only going to be a question of time before pot-noles about the farm will be a rarity. The same methods used to drain the small swamps ad- A Bargain in Land Having recently bought the NV£ Section 17„ Twp. 31 North, Range 9 East, M. M., I will place this land on the market for a short time only—this 320 acres for sale at $4,800, or $15 per acre. I do not want all cash, nor half cash. $2,000 cash will handle the deal. This land is 99% tillable. The land is 7 miles south and one mile west, making it 8 miles from Rudyard, Mont., the improvements, consisting of a 4 room house, two-wire fence and 95 acres broke, cost about $1,000. There is not a half section between this land and Rud yard that can be bought for less than $8000, and no better piece of land in the country, with school land going at $30 per acre with no improvements, selling at Havre on Oct. 5th, and wheat getting near the $2.00 per bushel mark, and lots of land in the country producing $60 per acre this year. There is positively no better land buy anywhere. Cheap land days are passing, and if you miss this bargain you are missing something if you are looking for a home or a good investment. You can put 200 acres in crop and pay for the land entirely out of one crop. What better do you want? The land is in good neighborhood, in the cen ter of the best farming country, 2 miles from good school house with 9 months school a year. There is no one in Rudyard county that has no water everyone has all kinds of wat er, a thing that can't be said of every locality in northern Montana. Rudyard has now about 10 buildings in course of construction, including a $10,000 brick bank, hardware store, 50x100, public hall 40x100 feet, and several good residences. There has been some land recently sold for $8,000 per half section, about 6 miles northeast of Rudyard. Come and let me show you one of the best half sections in the country, at give-away prices. CLAUDE C. WATSON "The Land Man" RUDYARD, MONTANA SIMPLICITY, DISTINCTION, LUXURY, POWER, SPEED A Gar that will thrill you with the Pride of Ownership anywhere—In any company Completely Equipped $795 F. O. B. Louisville, Kjr. Structural and Me- j»r/-v jir chanical pcrfccftion jl//y when they see Cook Implement Company Minot, North Dakota I, opted by farmers in the eastern states will prevail here and the unsightly little sloughs cdbservable on practic ally every farm in this section will be a thing of the past. Fence your farm with a good woven wire fence and drain the small sloughs and pot-holes, then you will be in a position to com bat the weed pest to advantage. Drop in and let us talk the situation over with you. H. S. Johnson, Manager Rogers Lumber Yard. (Adv.) EQUITY NEWS ITEMS Mr. Robert Bealer of Hettinger, N. D., reached St. Paul last Tuesday with a carload of cattle consigned direct to the Equity Co-operative Exchange. Mr. Bealer is very enthusiastic over the work of farmers' organizations and whenever possible for him to do so will patronize any organization that is owned and controlled by the farm ers themselves. North Dakota Visitors P. J. Boyle of Sheldon and W. F. Garrity of Wheelock, N. D., were pleasant visitors at the St. Paul office last Tuesday. They were getting ac quainted with the farmers' own selling agency and plan on patronizing1 same in the future. John Foller of Lisbon, N. D., was a pleasant visitor at the St. Paul office on Monday. Mr. Foller accompanied a carload of livestock here owned by him, George Foller and Ed Filbey. Mr. Foller is one of those farmers who can always be depended upon to stand by any co-operative undertaking which the farmers engage in. P. J. Byrne of Nortonville, N. D., the first man to accompany a ship ment of livestock to the Equity Co operative Exchange at South St. Paul, part of which was of his own raising, returned to St. Paul Saturday and said that as he was leaving the city after having sold his cattle, he met another shipper who remarked, "Your cattle were not as good as mine but still you got a dime more for them." This looks good for the Equity Exchange and will go a long way toward making shippers for the Farmers' Own Sell ing Agency. Buy Potatoes Mr. Math Meurer of Nicollet, Minn., called at the St. Paul office this week and among other things stated that the farmers in his locality were buy ing potatoes instead of selling them. Mr. Meurer is enthusiastic over the co-operative marketing of farm prod ucts and can be depended upon in the future to give his brother farmers some good loyal support in this line. Our secretary, Mr. G. A. Thiel, was very badly burned on the foot Mon day morning while assisting Mrs. Thiel to put out a fire caused by burn ing parafine wax and in his strenu ous efforts to do this he also sprained the other foot. He is under the doc- HH it° j* A 7 I ^5* W Sli .i i. mm iliiliJJW mm WE HANDLE ff THE BEST tor's care at his home, suffering in tensely from the burns and sprain and the accident was far more serious than at first supposed. He is in hopes to be able to return to the office before many days. FATHERHOOD As a boy I should be industrious At school, Learn a lot, Go seriousty into some business, Work night and day To get married and support a wife. Then I should have children Many of them, To buy pants and corsets for Over a period of Twenty-odd years. If none turned out An old maid or Good-for-nothing. I should slave this Best three-quarters of my life Paying off installments on a house Where my kids could flirt And have fudge parties. I should do all this Because I am a man And would be a model citizen. But I won't! I don't want to wake up After the breaking period Of my life and find myself Old, Thin, Shrunk, Narrow, Full of wheezes and aches From buying oleomargarin For my fat wife to trickle To trickle down her epiglottis, From paying for little trousers With shiny black buttons on them, For my boys. I should do all this, But I shan't. —Robt. Carlton, New York Sun. BIGHOUSE WRECK AT DOGDEN Dogden News: A Soo claim agent was here today and offered Charles Bighouse $50 for damages caused by a work train knocking the stuffing out of him and his wagon some weeks ago. Larger Quarters Deemed Neces sary for Commercial Club The board of directors of the Minot Commercial club met Tuesday and con sidered important business matters. Not completing their work, they ad journed until Thursday when plans for the ensuing year's work will be |WM -a^V %t, I 'X An investigation into the methods of manufac turing would show that only the best quality of roofing felts is used in CERTAIN-TEED roofing. This is thoroughly saturated with a blend of soft asphalts—the formula of the General's Board of Expert Chemists. It is then coated with a blend of harder asphalts, which forms an impervious coating and pre vents the inner saturation from drying out. This explains why CERTAIN-TEED out lives ordinary roofing, and why it is possible to guarantee it for 5, 10 or IS years, according to ply (1, 2 or 3). The responsibility of the world's largest manufacturer of roofings and building papers is behind this guarantee which is conservative, as experience proves that CER- »iillii,i m^r .,.iii1.i)ii GENERAL ROOFING MANUFACTURING COMPANY World'* Largest Manufactarmr of Roofing« and Building New York City Chicago Philadelphia St. Louia Boston Clenhad PlHiWtk Detroit SaoFroaciaco LeaAncelea Milwaukee Ciacinaati NewOrlaeae. Minaeapolle Seettle Kinm City Indianapolis Atlanta Richmond Dea Moinea Henatoa Dulutb Leaden SyoMf Copyrigbttd 1918. General Booflajt Manufacturing Co, MINOT SASH & DOOR CO, DISTRIBUTORS, Minot, No,1 Dak. PIPER-HOWE LUMBER CO., Minot and Branch Yards. laid. The directors went on record as fully endorsing the plan for the new Minot General hospital. At the Thursday's meeting the mat ter of continuing the work of the or .. XSiC:tnsu(C8! .Arbitration. is the twentieth century means of settling disputes. In time, Arbitration should supplant war in deciding differences between great nations. Acceptance of the principle of Arbitration will render great industrial strikes impossible—and even minor differences will come to be settled by this means. Impartial judges can be counted upon to render fair decisions. To impartial judges of roofing, we will always be willing to leave decision as to the comparative merits of roofings, confident that intelligent investigatic will result in a decision for Certain-teed Roofing AIN-TEED outlives theperiodof guarantee. The General makes one third of America's supply of asphalt roll roofing. His facilities are unequaled, and he is able highest quality roofing at th turing cost. CERTAIN-TEED is made slate-surfaced shingles. There CERTAIN-TEED for every kind of building, with flat or pitched roofs, from the largest sky scraper to the smallest residence or out-building. KC BAKING POWDER Passed by the Board of Censors 1st—The manufacturer with the rigid tests of the laboratory and factory. 2nd—The wholesale grocer with his high standing and desire to handle only reliable goodse 3rd—The retail grocer who desirea to handle only those bifends he knows will please his customerse 4th—The food officials with their rigid laws for the purity and wholesomeness of food productSe 5th—And most important, you* the housewife with your desire for purity* efficiency and per* feet satisfactiona ASK YOUR GROCER HE SELLS IT OROunces forORl ipiiiiNiiiiMii) I,I! iiiiiimi rtiMiiiiiniiiiiitiirmf^ prod' the est m^aufac- oil CERTAIN-TEED is sold by responsible dealers all over the world, at reasonable prices. Investigate it before you decide on any type of roof. Papers CERTAIN-TEEff' also in is a type of ganization will be taken up. One thing that the board considers urgent is securing larger quarters where a general members' meeting may be held at least once a month. 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