MILLIONS ARE STARVING. Vaunlne (nAltlona In rhln nanlt In Cannibalism. 'TTWoirnime from twenty point in (hi frmiTia district of C'hinn report that con f.tlnn are growing worw. Ten million persons are auflpring from lnok of food nd ere facing starvation. Members of la relief committee st the front report !uit they 1Uu the hod i en of the sufferers bleated and tint tbelr faeea turn jrreen tr black the result of starvation. The fceopl are pulling up the growing crops tor food. Whole families hate been ljund dead In tbelr houses and corpses re seen lying by the roadside. Probably I CLOSE OF THAW CASE. JURY FAILS TO AGREE IN UREAT MURDER TRIAL. ramoaa I.raal Rattle Laata for Three Month .Proreealnae Mava Beea Eagerly Folia wed fcr Raadlna; Pablle la Two C'ontlaaata. The Tbaw Jury disagreed and the torn trial of the murderer of Stanford 6,000 peraoiiM are dying dally from star White ended without result Tbaw was ration. A few cases of rioting for food .have occurred and cannibalism la begin ning to be reported. Newly made graves bae ben robbed of bodies and parents We exchanging their children to be eaten. A dollar, the relief committee reports, will save one life until the harvest, June 5, and J10.OO0.CXX in needed. The whole amount cannot be rained in China. Tbt Situation in desperate and Americans are ; tyjed to give f.l.OOO.OtK). The Chinese tOYernment and people have contributed Pore Uinn $t.000,00f for relief, and the fJms received from all foreign sources reach $500,000. including supplies on the ffay from America. Fifty nii-wlonariea are engaged with tee higher class of Chinese in overseeing the relief distribution. Confucian! fits, Catholics snd Protestants are working together. The telegraph officials are car rying mcMutge free to and from the re lief workn, and the steamship companies are furnishing transportation for supplies of food, etc., for the sufferers. Twenty thousand famine sufferers are employed In building dams and rauals to prevent recurrence of the floods. Telegram received by the relief com mittee in Khanghni from a number of ad ditional famine districts report that the distress is growing worse. Some of tha auffwers are contending against fever or smallpox in addition to lack of food. A starJftg man choked himself to death rj swallowing almoHt whole a biscuit atbich had been given to him by a casual Visitor. A woman wich three children was found weeping on a bridge where ber tnuband bad fallen dead from starvation. A husband, wife and tbelr Ave chil dren were discovered in a bouse starving to death, huddled together, clothed la fags. The bark of trees had been their sly food. Tha gratitude of the poor people who ! aire given relief la very touching. OIL TRUST IS FOUND GUILTY. KCatxIaanm Peaaltr B20,00,OOO De- . feaae Plana Legal Haiti' The Standard Oil Company was found fumy of accepting rebates from - rail' foada on Its shipments from Whiting, fnd., in 1003, by a jury which returned 1,4 verdict In Judge Landis' court at Chi cago Saturday, and the lawyers for the defeated corporation plan a legal battle that la to be ended only by the verdict f the United States Supreme Court. Minimum fines amounting to $1,403,000 tad a maximum of $20,200,000 can be Inv waed. Tile point made by Attorneys for the remanded to the Tombs without bail to iwalt a new trial. Ills second trial, however, cannot take place for some time a year, perhaps. Thus closed the most remarkable trial In New Stork's criminal nnnnls. The trial- cost the State, It la anld, X. THAW. STXOUNO EXCERPTS FROTU JEROME'S CLOSING SPEECH. ' There were two or.llnai'r men In thle rase, I and between them was a tigress iirlng tbem on. Why, men. there are th mus I aid elements here that lis re made criminal I btstory ever aluce the world tieuan. Oreat B'-tress. Indeed! She thonM she roil Id play 00 jruil like en ninny chlldien. Hhe romcj here In her little school girl dress and tries to Impress ml you this as sumed childishness. Thla "snirel child" romes here, and weaves a web nt lies to fool ynu to Indwe yon to acquit a cold-blooded, cowardly murtierar oa a defense ot "dementia Americana.' Doea thla "dementia Americana" flaunt the woman It lores for two long years through the rapltali of Europe and then kill "Hementla Americana" never hides be hind tha skirl of a woman; "dementia Americana" never put a woman on tha stand to lay bare ber shame to protect It. If this rich young man Instead of being llsrry Thaw, the son of a millionaire of I'lttMliurg. hail lieen a poor Itnllnn and bis victim, Instead of a man of artistic temper ament, a maker of piaster easts, and a girl whom they qosri-elcd about was a chorus girl In the Indon Theater, how long would brainstorms and paranoia have prevailed? The real question here la whether New Tork City Is to tiecome a mining camp. If this sort of thins ran go on. If the only thing between a eltlren and his enemy I a lira In atom,, then every man had better pack a (,'iin. tielmaa lo the Jar v. We admire itie chivalry of the knight of tha middle axes who went about rescuing maidens In dilrei. Why should we with hold our sympathy from Warry Thaw who so valiantly rescued the child Kvelyn from thla parasite? Harry Thnw called 11 Don the district at torney, the man who Is now trying to take his lire, and demanded lhat he do some thing to cleanse the ilty of this human leper. White. When she was the wife of Thaw, Wblta met tha alri and repeatedly Insulted ber. Kuch conduct, geutleuu-n, deservea the sever est punishment. Waging a linttle for American womanhood and ballled by wenltb and social position, Tbaw met and killed Stanford White. 1JABHT not less than $78,000. How many times ttat sum It cost the defense may never Do known, though conservative esti mates place It at $235,000. And at Its dose matters stand just where tbey did before. The Jury was out over forty' seven hours, and on the eighth and last ballot stood seven for murder In the first degree, which would carry with it the death penalty, and Ave for icqulttal on the ground of Insanity. Events moved swiftly and thrilling ly la tha lust day of the great Thaw trial In New York. For Tbaw and for those who were hoping for Ills acquit tal It was the most soul trying ordeal of the twelve weeks which the trial had lasted. Upon the heels of District Attorney Jerome's closing address. nearly every word of which waa like the blow of a lash on Tbaw and his girl wife, Justice Fitzgerald charged the Jury In a manner that seemed to pathetic "unwritten law" arguments of Mr. Delmas, If heeded by tho Jury, would turn New York Into the sem blance of a western mining camp, and ridiculed the "dementia Americana" oa which the final plea for acquittal had been made. The district attorney declared that romance and sentiment did not enter Into the issue; It was not a question of Stanford white's character or Kve lyn Thaw's sufferings; It was a plain, defenae ia that in accentinc the secret re-1 bete rate on its shipments of 1,403 cars dry up every vestige of hope for 8tau- the com nan v committed onlv one viola- ford White's slayer. And then the tion and that it can be fined only $20,- CCD, the maximum for single offenses tyminat the Elkine law. The government Will contend that each of the 1,403 ship ments constituted a violation and that the garment of a $20,000 fine would not be commensurate with the offense, which net ted the Standard a saving of $223,000 on the shipments. This is the first time the Standard Oil Company has been convicted on the charge of accepting rebates and the dis trict attorney's victory came at the end of five months' hard work preceding the trial, which had lasted thirty-six days. The charges involved shipments fron .Whiting, Ind., to East St Louis, III., on which the legal rate was 18 cents, the Standard rate being 0 cents, and ship ments to St. Louis at lt'j cents, while the legal rate waa 19 cents. Seven more indictments are pending against tha corporation. rase was given to the jury. The closing day of the trial proceed ings was the most dramatic since the prisoner's wife recited -ber pitiful t on the witness stand. District Attor ney Jerome dissected the argument of Ur. pel mas for the defense and tore It to shreds. Seizing upon Incidents In Thaw's life, he pictured the prisoner as a man whose character was as black as that of Stanford White, and Evelyn S'esblt he portrayed as a girl anything IE? GRAFT IM 'FRISCO. WanlHpal Rntlessea of California City Forma Dlaek Paaje. Not since the famous trial of Itoss Tweed Hiid his riug of hoodler In New York, lu the early seventies, lias there been such a retnarknlile prosecution of political hooillcra as In Httn Francisco How, according to rcjHirts frotn the ;iideii Gate City. Those Mho take 1111 extreu.v religious view of muiiiliine conditions are say ing flint Snu Franoiwo was destroyed because the Almighty could not long suffer Us sinful state. America is not unfamiliar with inuiilclul rottenness, but, according to n Sun Francisco cor- AHH.UIAM RKt F. respondent, there Is 110 other page In the history of boodle so black as that which l'rosecutlng Attorney Honey has unfolded, draft In the Golden flate City has been wholesale, limited by nothing; It has Included anything and everything out of which a dol lar could be squeezed. The grafters overlooked nothiug, spared nothing, ap parently feared nothing. From street vendor to millionaire, frtru dlve kcejier to corporation ollicial, from the brothel to the brownstone front there lay the course of graft. Nothing wns too little to be accepted as tribute. When Ileney started on tho trail of corruption the first men to lie indicted were Schmltz and Iteuf. Next came Chief of Police Dlnan, and others who DEATH TRAIL CROWS. Me a lea a Karthajaake Kanwa lo Have Affected Wide Territory. Late newa from the area of destruction In the recent Mexican earthquake shows that the devsstntion wrought was greater ban at first etipKNed. liealdes the de struction of the cities of Chilpanclngo snd I'hilaps it Is now reported that the City of Tixtln. between the two cities above named and containing about the Mime population an Chilpanclngo, was slao leveled to the ground, and meanen gera from the count who have reached Chilpanclngo aay that the towns of Ayut- la snd Ometepec have been wiped off the map. Ayutla is one of the most hintTic town In the republic. Ometepec ia farther south. Hear the loundnry line of the States of Fuerrero and Onxnca. It ia a town of about 4,000 Inhabitant and it is feared that the loss of life here may be heavier than at Ayutla. Tlaa, a town eighty miles went of Chllpnncingo and near the border line of the State of Oaxaca, i alno reported to have been wiped out. The report from Chilpancingo aay that the whole of the went coast from Acnpulco south to Salina Crus. the I'acific termiual of the Tehuan tepec National railway, Mexico's new tranHcontinental road, which waa opened with elaborate ceremonies, lntit J p. unary by President Dias, has been badly dnm- aed. It ia reported that Acapulco is partly submerged from the great waves which dached over the breakwater. Although no breath of wind wns stirring on the night of the first shock, when the earth began to tremble, the ees was lashed into a fury and as the shixk continued the harbor look on the appearance of a ty-phoon-Rwept ocean. Devastation wrought by the earth quake I much greater than at firnt re ported. Many more than 500 are believ ed to be dead. Ueports summarize the damage as follows : City. Population. Chilpanclngo... 8. 0(10 Chllapa 4.IMI0 Tlitla 7,000 Ayutla Hmall Ometepec 4,000 Tlapa n.000 Acapulco U.ooo Damage. Lives lost. In ruins.. US In ruin.. 14 I leatroyed . 1 2 I leatroyed . Unknown lestroyed. Vnknown I est royed. Unknown Partly sub merged. .Unknown Hypnotic Treatment m Sneers. Dr. John I). Quackenbos, specialist in nervous and mental diHeaaea, hypnotist and student of psychic phenomena, re cently made public the details of a series of interesting experiments which he has been conducting on wayward girls from the New Jersey home for girls at Tren ton. The patient is firtit put into a sleep induced by talking in a monotone. This frvAt Rum Pgwok STANFORD WHIT. ronaamiitloa bjr In feet lost. Dr. E. C. Schroeder and W. E. Cotton t the bureau of animal industry have reported on their extensive experiments, which tend to show that tuberculous may develop in the lungs, no matter through what channels the bacilli gain entrance to the body, and that the location of le sions In the lungs can no longer be con sidered as evidence that Infection entered by means of respiration. They say that too much importance has been attached to the agency of dried sputum and too little to the danger from fresh or moiat tubercu lous material, which enters human food in many ways, one of which is in the milk of tuberculous cows. Cattle and hogs were inoculated with tubercle bacilli bear the end of the tail, and died from lung tuberculous in twenty-three days. ' Tbe)e experts believe that ingestion li 1 greater danger than respiration. Public Ownership the Ilerardr. In a paper by Henry Laurens Call, on "The Concentration of Wealth," rend at a meet in k of the American Association for the Advancement o't Science at Co lumbia university, the speaker declared that the modern corporation was reapon- sible for the concentration of the wealth of the nation into a few baud. The cor- Iteration, lie said, was a uiouMtroHity, and th wealth of Itockefeller and other euor- inoualy rich men ia the product of this vicious institution. The remedy, accord- ' lug to Mr. Call, was the public ownerxhip i of public utilitioa. The law must correct the conditions brought about by the cor poration. It should be msdo co-operative iuutead, as now, tho iuatrumeut of prlvatt treed. parka from tha Wlrcaw Suaaa Koooey, a nurse, la suing Henry TJrrgh of New York, former president o the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, for $:U),OtX) damages, alleg ing be draped her downutairs and choked per. The flag rush is lo be abolished at the rniversiiy of Cincinnati. A special com nit tee ha been appointed from tho uni versity faculty to devise a suitable sub- '.itute for this strenuous annual struggle etwei-n tho fretdiwan and the sophomore tlMsfcea.- The Arctic brotherhood has f;iHed $5, MM to aeud tha truck Nome (Alauka) Imwket ball team on a tour of the United Plate. The Ontianoijur ion, one of the beat riwn Htunuicr uoicia lu Canada, was .,'iipletely destroyed by fire. The loss ia 1 hive men were Instantly killed at 'ilivili", IV, by the ex illusion of a ton f j.o.vil.r at the pU.iit of the Iturton vvder Company. VwtX.uz the clone of the Indiana Vp n e of the Uvuiii'lical Aaaociutfon . I". Stedkey of tVliua, Ohio, was j received iuto the coufereuee. i M il -II CI UBS. EVELYN NKSB1T THAW. tut the Innocent child Mr. Delmas bad ihown her. Harry K, Thaw sat with clenched ists and blanched face while District Vttorney Jerome tore his life to shreds, ind demanded that the Jury assess tgalnat him the death penalty. Bar asm tipped every word which the dls rlct attorney Bpoke. He declared the matter-of-fact homicide. "A common, cowardly tenderloin murder," Is the way he termed It It was Jerome's summing-up speech -the last word In the famous trial be fore the Judge Intrusted the prisoner's fate to the Jury. Jerome lashed Thaw as with a knout of a thousand flails. It was the most savage attack of the whole trial. There was not a dark pago In Thaw's life that was not turn ed to the light of criticism and blame. 80 fierce, so vindictive was Jerome that there were many who believed he was purposely seeking to goad Thaw Into some outburst. "He Is guilty and should be punished," was the burden of his speech. And following this terrific arraign ment which had turned tho hopes of Thaw and his relatives Into forebod Ings, came the Judge's charge to the Jury. As the jurist, avoiding all ef forts at oratorical effect, went over the facts and ndmonlshed the men who are to decide on Thaw's fate to put aside passion and prejudice and render verdict strictly on the legal points at Issue, an expression of abject terroi overspread the prisoner's face. The Judge's definition of insanity sufflclenl to cause an acquittal dampened the hopea even of the prisoner's lawyers. After deliberating for mora than eighteen hours without being able tc reach an agreement, tho Jurors report ed before Justice Fitzgerald Thursday morning and nuked permission to ex amine a largo numlier of the exhlblti introdu'ed during the trial After having been out thirty-one hours and still unable to agree upon verdict, tho Jury which had Hurry Thaw's fate in its hands was locked up for the second night, Thursday, shortly before midnight. Length of trial Sixty-five court days, extending, with postponements, from Jan, 23 to April 12. Coat to State -$7S,S0. Cost to defense $2:13.000. Length of jury's d.'lilierutionn Forty Hcven hours nud eight mlnu.es. 1 - - " - - - - - - 1 - - ,-rj- K -m 1 wviiruiiJ FORMER HOME OV SCHMITZ AND HIS PRESENT RESIDENCE. Will Prevent Sen Slekneaa. Sir WWUm H. White. F. It. 8.. sold it a recent meeting of the institution of isval architects in London, that he could -erlify from persoual observation to the emarkable steadying effect on a vessel of )r. Sehllck's gyroscopic apparatus. In Ul cases Its effect was to extinguish the oiling motion of the ship almost luime Uately. He expressed the opinion that iie device would have great utility attach d to the channel aud coasting passenger iteamcrs, and that It could be adapted the largest ocean liners. Lumber i'rodnelloa Bulletin. The national forestry service has made Miblic its estimate of the annual produc ion of lumber in this country at 100,000, KX) cords, valued at $1,020,000,000. The "Ma to ot Washington rauks first, with an mtput of 4.000,000,000 feet, and next In rder come Wisconsin, Louisiana, Minmv ota, iliililR'in, Arkansas, Peunsylvatiia, Jisvissippl, Oregon, North Carolina, Cal forpia, Texas, Alabama, Maine, Virginia, leorgia. West Virginia, I'lori.lu, New t'ork, Teunessee, South Caroliua, Keu ucky, Missouri Indiana, New Ilamp ,hir', Ohio, Vermont, Massachusetts, 'duho. Montana, Maryluud, Iowa, Illinois. Note f Current Kvnntak. Gen. Jose Miguel Oomes, candidate for the presidency of Cuba, Is ill with consumption. The trials of Judge Hargis and others, charged with the assassination of James Cockrill, were assigned at Lexington, Ky., to begin May 7. John I). Rockefeller opened the picnic season the other duy at Lakewood, N. J. He took the choir of the ISaptlst church over to the wnnlioro in the afternoon and then entertained the party at supper in the evening. Three huudred Jaiwnese will leave Honolulu ou the steamship Korea for San Francisco, whither they will be shipped to Vancouver, II. C. The report of the official naval tribunal of France ot its imjulry Into the battle ship Jena disaster, rejects the possibility of malice as an explanation of the ex plosion and attributes it solely to pow der n." William West, an engineer on the Louixville snd Nnshville railroad, shot and killed Kngiuevr Fraser at Montgom ery, Ala., aud finding escape impossible turned his pistol ou himself, dying a few moments luter. West was accused of steuliog a ring. hare been indicted Include two of the city's wealthy capitalists aud sixteen sniHTvlsors. The Inquisitors are not through, either. . On au Income of $0,000 a year Mayor Eugene K. Schmltz lias been able to live like a millionaire. He has furnished a $30,000 miniature pulace with furni ture, art treasures aud druperles valued at more than the cost price of the build ing he now calls home. Then he lias a $7,300 automobile lit for his Majesty King Edward VII. He 1ms butlers and valets and clur.iibcrmaidH and chauf feurs and other menials to come and go at his beck and call. Ami all ou $t,OtiO a year. Then there was that trip to Europe. It cost-something. Itesltles spending $131,000 with only it visible $IH,3l,0 going, he rtlll has uinne.v in the b:mks, ti few bundles of negotiable securities and 11 little hunch of real estate that would trouble a working mail to pay taxes ou. The wonder s. "When' did It till come from?" San Francisco's grand Jury Is trying to uncover the answer. Rudolph Spreckles. who Is backing the prosecution In the graft investiga tion at San Francisco with his fortune, has guaranteed a fund of $100,000, or more If necessary, nud contributions to this fund from other citizens are being received dully. Heart Movements Photoirranhril. A report from London stale that sci entists have succeeded, by the con.bined use ot the X rays and cinematograph, in taking photographs of the actual move ments of the internal organs, like the heart and lutigs, and these movements can be reproduced on a screen after the manner of moving pictures. Medical men believe thnt this will prove of great value In diaguosiiig doubtful cases of lung and heart disease. Catholic Hierarchy -Meets. The Catholic archbishops of the I'nited Statea held their minimi meeting at Washington In the new S1O0.0OO mnnximi presented by them to Mgr. Fa Icon io, th ilil delegate. A request from New York to erect a Catholic hull at Cornell was denied, as It was deemed necessary to concent rate ul efforts In developing the Catholic university by allilistlng with Catholic colleges and lii'h school. Oov. Campbell of Texoa sinned the bill passed by the Legislature forbidding the oiieratiou of bucket sbow or cotton ex changee for the sule of futures in Texas. droning serves the double purpose of bringing on the hypnotic state and at the same time making the patient feel at ease, and that there is to he no scolding or croas-exainination, the subject of conver sation being such as to soothe the person under treatment and turn her thoughts. to ward cheerful matters. As soon as the hypnotic slumber ensue certain admoni tions are given to the sleeper in a sharp er, more decided tone, assuring her that definite changes will take place in her dis position that will make her better and happier, enro being taken to first ascer tain the particular bent of mind or tal ent, if any exists, so that her energies can be directed along the lines of natural fituess. This discourse ia repeated several tunes. The good effect, t tie doctor says, is im mediate, ond usually lasting, although there are occasional lapses. In such cases, however, the second treatment Is opt to be more effective and .permanent in its results than the first. It is not claimed that it will heal a physical le sion. .u mat ir. uncKentios claims ia that by suggestion in hypnosis one can make a man do anything physically possi ble and morally right. It brings about. ho says, a physiological as well as psychological change of being. He con tends that there is in every person what Prof. James calls the "higher spiritual self, and St. Paul denominates fb "inner man." which, when aroused by suggestion, is stronger than any passion or appetite. Brief Newa It etna. Fire destroyed the Moore cotton mills and gin at Mangum. Okla., with 2,000 bales of ungiuueil cotton. I-os $130,000. The nine men who were ou coal barge No. 1, which was lose in a storm off the Florida coast, while being towed by the naval collier Co-sar. have becu landed at (in I vest on. President F. D. P. Glass announced at Montgomery, Ala., that the fifth annual meeting of the Newsptiier and Publish ers Association will lie held lu Rich mond 011 May 21 and 22. The proliatlng of the will of the late Fiaucis P. Furiuild disclosed the bequest of $:loo.OOi to Columbia university, upon the death of the widow, for the pursse of creeling a dormitory to be known as l-'cruald Hall. Also the Presbyter Ian hos pital and other charities will receive $200,000. Former Congressman Oalusha A. tirow, who lately died at his home in Glen- wood. Pa., hud a public service in the House, although not a continuous one, looser than that of any man who ever sat in that body. In lSiil he came wito in 0110 vote of the Humiliation for the vice presidency in place of Andrew Johnson. You are sure to raise a crop if you use the No. 9. EDAVDS CO. ' 315-17-10 Parl Street, Sioux City, Io. Twenty-third Birthday Greeting: ' t Jackson, Kebr.. April U,Wn. 4 To the People of DnkotaOounty: On the threshold of our twenty-second year of bonking here, we wish to thank each of our patrons personally, for the (oynland liberal business always given us. T It Is thorouKhly appreciated, and our sole effort. In a business way Is to make X the Bank of Dakota County, bettcr.ench day, for You. Advice and suggestions are Invited from you all, as It Is our earnest desire to give you the very best ser- vice and every accommodation and favor conslstant with good bank.ng. We T to do everything for you any other bank enn do and, Just a little bit better than i the other follow does. SAFKTY is the watchword here, nnd that line will never be overstepped, n single hair's breadth. We call this "The Bank that ALWAYS T treats you RIGHT," and It Is your duty to tell us, when the assertion prove X wronit. And remember, there are always one hundred dollars hung up for the person whom the bank has wronged and refused to make right. If you have not -f-been a a customer of the bunk In tho past, UKT TH K. HABBIT now. Then you aud our banker, will wear "the smlo that won't come off" Yours for more bus Iness, for twenty-one years more. CD. T. KEARNEY, T f Cashier Bank of Dakota County. "Oldest bank In the county. A A J. . A. A A A A A AAAAAAAAAAAAA AAA AA AAAAA AAAAA AAAAA AAA A TVtITtVtTTVTTTTTtTttttttt ? TTTT TTTTV TTTTT TTTTT T V V T T ! Wtx aLOELENZ, Proprietor of (Dirty KIgg4 Msr&LGt Fresh and Salt Meat a always on hand . Cash paid for hides. Agent for Seymour's White Laundry. Laundry basket goes Tuesdays and cornea back Saturdays DAKOTA CITY NEBRASKA. Do yoix wdtYt to cell your farm? The quick, sure way is to put a want-ad in 26e nrnalhia, ESee The Rates are One insertion, per line 10 cents. Xwo or more consecutive insertions, per line, 6 cents each insertion. Each insertion made on odd days, 10 cents per line. All advertising runs in both morning and and evening papers without extra charge. Count Six Words to av L.!n Address Want-Ad Department, Omaha Bee, Omaha, Neb. Within everybody's reach reaches everybod WE CAN SELL. YOU LAND in Sawyer and Bayfield Counties in tracts of 40 acres or more, with or without a house at from $5.00 to $15.00 per acre. Good soil, running water, plenty of timber for fuel, fine climate, no blizzards, no drouth, Close to markets, Minneapolis and St. Paul on the south, Duluth and Superior on the north. Best of railroad facilities, schools and churches already established, an ideal dairy country. If you want a "square deal" Addreaa: AMERICAN COLONIZATION COMPANY Buy R. it. Ticket to Hayward, Wla. 403 Chippewa Bldg., CHIPPEWA FALLS, WIS. LOW RATES Visa, C6 NortH-Western $25 4-0 One-Way second class colonist tickets will be on sale daily, March 1st to April 30th to Port land, Seattle, Tacoma and Pnget Sound point. Proportionately low rates to points in Alberta, British Columbia, Idaho and Montana. Through Tourlat Ctvrat Dally, Mlnneietpolla St. Pawl to PtKolflo Coavat Polivts). Round Trip Nortl Wt Special homeseekers tickets will be on sale first and third Tuesdays of March and April to many points in Idaho, eastern 'portion of state ot Washington and also to a large southwest terri tory. The rate will be about one fare pins 18. CO for the ronud trip. If you contemplate a trip no matter where, for rates and other information call on or address GEO. H. PRANOtR. LYMAN SHOLES, Dirision Paas'r Agt. Omaha. Agent, Dakota City; f ARM LOANS We hare plenty of Money to Loan at a low rate of interest on Dakota county Farms. Wa also Sell and Buy Real Estate of all kind arvwhere on earth . See or write ns before you borrow, Buy or bell. List your property with na to Sell. !"",--.. . Rc.i rflKM AN MX I fill III bllMkfV ..Si Warner X Elmers a