What a Settler Can Secure In WESTERN CANADA 160 Acres Grain-Growing Land FREE. 20 to 40 Bushela Wheat to the Acre. 40 to 90 Bushels Oats to the Acre. 35 to 50 Bushels Barley to the Acre. Timber for Fencing and Buildings FREE. Good Laws with l^>w Taxation. Splendid Railroad Facilities and Low Rates. Schools and Churches Convenient. Satisfactory Markets for all Productions. Good Climate and Perfect Health. Chances for Profitable Investments. Some of thelcholcest grain-producing lands In Saskatchewan and Alberta may now be acquired fa these most healthful and prosperous sections tmder the Revised Homestead Regulations by which entry m ay be made by proxy (on certain conditions), by the father, mother, son, daughter, brother or sister of Intending homesteader. Entry fee in each case is $10.00. For pamphlet. Last Best West,” particulars as to rates, routes, best time to go and where to locate, apply to W. D. Scott, Superintendent of Immigration, Ottawa, Canada, or E. T. Holmes, 315 Jackson Paul, Minn.; I. M. MacLacnlan, Box 116 Watertown. South Dakota, and W. V. Bennett, ioi New York Life Building, Omaha, Neb., Authorized Government Agents Plaaaa say whara you saw thin advertisement, 8IOUX CITY PHPG CO,f 1,227—5, 1908 The lyre bird of Australia is the largest song bird. It is about the size of an English pheasants We Sell Guns and Traps Cheap, Buy Furs & Hides, or tan them for robes ft rugs. N W. Hide & Fur Co., Minneapolis The Japanese will never sleep with their heads to the north, but their dead are always burled that way. Back-Handed Munificience. From the Philadelphia Public Ledger. They were making a special collection In a Kansas church. Old Mr. Budd, who never gave more than 2 cents, was seen to place a slip of paper In the box. The deacon could not help whis pering to him: ‘‘This is Indeed generous, Brother rudd," as he hurried down the aisle. ‘‘Well. I hope you’ll not think It's a dollar bill, for It ain’t. It a receipted bill for the kerosene the church for got to pay me for last year.” WOBN OUT WOMEN Will Find Encouragement In Mr*. Merritt’* Advice. Mrs. W. L. Merritt, 207 S. First Ave.. Anoka, Minn., says: “Last win ter I began to suffer with my kidneys. I bad pains in my back and hips and felt all worn out. Dizzy spells bothered me and the kidney secretions were Irreg ular. The first box of Doan's Kidney Pills brought decided relief. 1 am sure th^y would do the same for any other as I did.” Sold by all dealers, 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburu Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Explained. Evelyn—It's like this: Just at the stroke of midnight, you hold a mirror before your face and waik around the house backwards. Loralne—Yes, and then Evelyn—Well, If none of the young men at the party take the trouble to follow you and look over your shoulder so you can see the face of your future husband, why that proves that your chances of getting married are ex tremely remote. The "swellhead” that follows a spree differs from the other variety In that its possessor Is angry about It. now Ltnacn uoi inc money. gw From the Financial Dept, of the New York Evening post. One of the interesting questions of our recent raid on London's gold was, how that city managed to send us near ly $70,000,000 of the precious metal In November and still leave the Bank of England, the country’s gold repository, with gold holdings $7,500,000 larger on November 30 than on November 1. The November statement of the British Board of Trade, at hand, gives the an swer; It is rather remarkable. In all, Great Britain exported In November $19,000,000 more gold than it imported. Of the month’s $75,900,000 total exports, $69,600,000 were shipped to the United States. Everyone knows that the new gold from the Transvaal and a gold loan by the Bank of France helped to make good this heavy loss; the official figures show', however, only $10,000,000 re ceived from South Africa, and $16,500,000 from France. Whence did the $29,000,000 balance of imports come? India appears to have sent only $800,000, and Australia only $600,000, therefore two of England’s greatest reliances failed her in the emergency. During that period of crisis, Berlin was in financial staits; yet the Board of Trade figures disclose the extraordinary fact that Germany sent to England in No vember, $23,300,000 gold, or more than came from any other single quarter. How did Germany spare this gold? The question is perplexing. None of it could have come from Russia, for the Im perial bank at St. Petersburg reported as large gold holdings at the end of the month as at its beginning. As for the German Imperial bank, its specie re serve decreased only $17,500,000 in No vember. Is it conceivable that the American demand, operating through London, actually drained Germany's coin circulation? sTr*. Winslow's soo-ranra nr jut t i»r nuiitw teething-, softens the gums, reduces inf emautuon. s' bjs psln enrw wind j-n- oent.- it bottle Couldn’t Be Bluffed. "If you kiss me again, I will call mama.” "Well, I don’t mind. She is still a young looking woman.” ^ mm The General Demand of the Well-Informed of the World has always been for a simple, pleasant and efficient liquid laxative remedy of known value; a laxative which physicians could sanction for family use because its com ponent parts are known to them to be wholesome and truly beneficial in effect, acceptable to the system and gentle, yet prompt, in action. In supplying that demand with its ex cellent combination of Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna, the California Fig Syrup Co. proceeds along ethical lines and relies on the merits of the laxative for its remark able success. That is one of many reasons why Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna is given the preference by the Well-Informed. To get its beneficial effects always buy the genuine—manufactured by the Cali fornia Fig Syrup Co., only, and for sale by all leading druggists. Price fifty cents per bottle. The finest household furniture In the world will look poor and tired out when piled In a mover’s wagon. CASTOR IA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought I The di a supply of SLOAN’ ENT For spavin, curb, splint sweeny, capped hock, founder, strained tendons, wind puffs and all lameness in horses - For thrush, foot rot and garget on cattle and sheep - For hog distemper, hog cholera* thumps and scours in hogs For diarrhoea,canker and roup in poultry - AT ALL DEALERS - — - PRICE » 25 t. 50 4. E $1.00 Send for free book on Horses. Cottle, Hogs and Poultry - -Address Dr.Earl S.Sloan. Boston. Mo33. Commissioner Smith vs. The Standard Oil Co. From the Railway World., January j, 1908. * Mr. Herbert Knox Smith, whose zeal in the cause of economic reform has been in no wise abated by the panic which he and his kind did so-much to bring on, is out with an answer to President Moffett, of the Standard Oil Company of Indiana. The publication of this answer, it is officially given out, was delayed several weeks, "for business reasons,” because it was not deemed advisable to further excite the public mind, which was profoundly disturbed by the crisis. Now that the storm clouds have rolled by, however, the Commissioner rushes again into the frav. Our readers, remember that the chief points in • the defence of the Standard Oil Company, as presented by President Moffett, were, (i) that the rate of six cents on oil from Whiting to East St. Louis has been issued to the Standard Oil Company, as the lawful rate by employes of the Alton, (2) that the 18-cent rate on file with the Interstate Commerce Commission was a class and not a commodity rate, never being in tended to apply to oil, (3) that oil was shipped in large quantities between Whiting and East St. Louis over the Chicago and Eastern Illinois at six and one-fourth cents per hundred pounds, which has been filed with the Interstate Com merce Commission as the lawful rate, and (4) , that the 18-cent rate on oil was entirely out of proportion to lawful rates on other commodities between these points of a similar character, and of greater value, such, for example, as linseed oil, the lawful rate on which was eight cents. President Moffett also stated that thousands of tons of freight had been sent by other shippers *** between these points under substantially the same conditions as governed the shipments of the Standard Oil Company. This defence of the Standard Oil Company ~ * was widely quoted and has undoubtedly exerted m powerful influence upon the public mind. Nat , urally the Administration, which has staked the success of its campaign against the "trusts” up on the result of its attack upon this company, endeavors to offset this influence, and hence the new deliverance of Commissioner Smith. We need.hardly to point out that his rebuttal argument is extremely weak, although as strong, no doubt, as the circumstances would warrant. .( He answers the points made by President Mof fett substantially as follows: (1) The Standard Oil Company had a traffic department, and ^ ahould have known that the six-cent rate had not been filed, (2) no answer, (3) the Chicago and Eastern Illinois rate was a secret rate be cause it read, not from Whiting, but from Dol ton, which is described as "a village of about 1,500 population just outside of Chicago. Its only claim to note is that it has been for many years the point of origin for this and similar secret rates.” The Commissioner admits in de scribing this rate that there was a note attached stating that the rate could also be used from Whiting. The press has quite generally hailed this statement of the Commissioner of Corporations as a conclusive refutation of what is evidently recognized as the strongest rebuttal argument advanced by the Standard. In fact, it is as weak and inconclusive as the remainder of his argument. The lines of the Chicago and Eastern Illinois do not run into / Chicago. They terminate at Dolton, from which point entrance is made over the Belt Line. Whit ing, where the oil freight originates, is not on the lines of the Chicago and Eastern Illinois, which receives its Whiting freight from the Belt Line at Dolton. The former practice, now dis continued, in filing tariffs was to make them read from a point on the line of the filing road, and it was also general to state on the same sheet, that the tariff would apply to other points, e. g., Whiting. The Chicago and Eastern Illinois followed this practice in filing its rate from Dol ton, and making a note on the sheet that is ap plied to Whiting. This was in 1895 when this method of filing tariffs was in common use. Now let us see in what way the intending shipper of oil could be misled and deceived by the fact that the Chicago and Eastern Illinois had not filed a rate reading from Whiting. Commissioner Smith contends that “concealment is the only motive for such a circuitous arrange ment,” i. e., that this method of filing the rate was intended to mislead intending competitors of the Standard Oil Company. Suppose such a prospective oil refiner had applied to the Inter state Commerce Commission for the rate from Chicago to East St. Louis over the Chicago and Eastern Illinois, he would have been informed that the only rate filed with the commission by this company was 6% cents from Dolton, and lie would have been further informed, if indeed he did not know this already, that this rate ap plied throughout Chicago territory. So that whether he wished to locate his plant at Whit ing, or anywhere else about Chicago, under an arrangement of long standing, and which applies to all the industrial towns in the neighborhood of Chicago, he could have Ins freight delivered over the Belt Line to the Chicago and Eastern Illinois at Dolton and transported to East St. Louis at a rate of 6;4 cents. Where then is the concealment which the Commissioner of Corpo rations makes so much of?" Any rate—from Dolton on the Eastern Illinois or Chappell on the Alton, or Harvey on the Illinois Central, or Blue Island on the Rock Island,applies through out Chicago territory to shipments from Whit ing, as to shipments from any other point in the district. So far from tile Eastern Illinois filing its rate from Dolton in order to deceive the shipper, it is the Commissioner of Corporations who either betrays his gross ignorance of trans portation customs in Chicago territory or relies on the public ignorance of these customs to deceive the public too apt to accept unquestion ingly every statement made by a Government official as necessarily true, although, as in the present instance, a careful examination shows these statements to be false. The final point made by President Moffett that other commodities of a character similar to oil were carried at much lower rates than 18 cents, the Commissioner of Corporations discusses only with the remark that “the •reasonableness’ of this rate is not in question. The question is whether this rate constituted a discrimination as against other shippers of oil,” and he also makes much of the failure of President Moffett to produce before the grand jury evidence of the alleged illegal acts of which the Standard Oil official said that other large shippers in the ter • ritory had been guilty. Considering the fact that these shippers included the packers and ele vator men of Chicago the action of the grand jury in calling upon President Moffett to fur nish evidence of their wrong-doing may be in terpreted as a demand for an elaboration of the obvious; but the fact that a rate-book contain ing these freight rates for other shippers was offered in evidence during the trial and ruled out by Judge Landis, was kept out of sight. President Moffett would not, of course, accept the invitation of the grand jury although he might have been pardoned if he had referred them to varions official investigations by the Interstate Commerce Commission and other de partments of the Government. We come back, therefore, to the conclusion of the whole matter, which is that the Standard ' Oil Company of Indiana was fined an amount , equal to seven or eight times the value of its entire property, because its traffic department did not verify the statement of the Alton rate | clerk, that the six-cent commodity rate on oil had been properly filed with the Interstate Com- ; merce Commission. There is no evidence, and none was introduced at the trial, that any ship ment of oil from Chicago territory had been in terfered'with by the eighteen-cent rate nor that the failure of the Alton to file its six-cent rate had resulted in any discrimination against any independent shipper,—we must take this on the word of the Commissioner of Corporations and of Judge Landis. Neither is it denied even by Mr. Smith that the “independent” shipper of oil, whom he pictures as being driven out of business by this discrimination of the Alton, could have shipped all the oil he desired to ship from Whit ing via Dolton over the lines of the Chicago and Eastern Illinois to East St. Louis. In short, President Moffett's defence is still good, and we predict will be so declared by the higher court. The Standard Oil Company has been charged with all manner of crimes and misdemeanors. Beginning with the famous Rice of Marietta, passing down to that apostle of popular liber ties, Henry Demarest Lloyd, with his Wealth Against the Commonwealth, descending by easy stages to Miss Tarbell's offensive personalities, we finally reach the nether depths of unfair and baseless misrepresentation in the report of the Commissioner of Corporations. The Standard has been charged w ith every form of commer cial piracy and with most of the crimes on the corporation calendar. After long years of stren uous attack, under the leadership of the Presi dent of the United States, the corporation is at last dragged to the bar of justice to answer for its misdoings. The whole strength of the Gov ernment is directed against it, and at last, we are told, the Standard Oil Company is to pay the penalty of its crimes, and it is finally con victed of having failed to verify the statement of a rate clerk and is forthwith fined a prodig ious sum, measured by the car. Under the old criminal law, the theft of property worth more than a shilling was punishable by death. Under the interpretation of the Interstate Commerce law by Theodore Roosevelt and Judge Kenesaw Landis, a technical error of a traffic official ia made the excuse for the confiscation of a vast amount of property. | Went Short on Clothes. From the Telegraph. "Your husband will be all right, now,” said an English doctor to a woman whose husband was dangerous ly 111. "What do you mean?” demanded the wife. "You told me he couldn’t live a fortnight.” "Well. I’m going to cure him. after all," said the doctor. "Surely you are glad?" The woman winked her brows. "Puts me In a bit of an ’ole." she eald. "I’ve bln an’ sold all his clothes to pay for his funeral!” how's This? We offer One Hundred Dollars Howard for any case of Catarrh that cannot l>e cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY St CO., Toledo. O. We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business trans actions. and financially able to carry out any obligations made by his firm. Waldino, Kinnan &. Marvin, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo. O. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of tbe system. Testimonials sen\ free. Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. The Egotist. From Fllcgende Blatter. The teacher was endeavoring to ex plain the meaning of "egotism," to the class. “Who Is It” he said, "who expects never to be neglected, who expects the oest of everything. Imagines that he Is the centre of everything, who never thinks of or does anything for any body else but expects everything done lor him?" "Please, teacher," said a small boy, one of a large family, "tho baby." Moravian Hurley nnd Spelts, two great oercnls. makes growing nnd fat tening hogs and cattle possible in Dak.. Mont., Ida., Colo., yes, everywhere, nnd add to above Salzer’s Billion Dollar Grass, the 12 ton Ilay wonder Teosinte, which produces 80 tons of green fodder per acre, Emperor William Oat prodigy, etc., and other rare farm seeds that they offer. JUST OUT THIS OCT AND RETURN IT with 10c in stamps to the John A. Salzer Seed Co , La Crosse, Wis., and get their big catalog and lots of farm seed sam ples. C. N\ IT. How He Did It. From the Philadelphia Ledger. Early In the morning session, when the pupils wore feeling bright and hap py, the teacher thought It a good plan to give them sentences to correct, both as to grammar and sense. She accord ingly wrote on the blackboard: "The hen has four legs. He done It” Thoughtful little Ignatius, at the foot of the class, pondered deeply, and at the end of 15 minutes' time allowed for correction, he wrote: "He didn’t done It. God done It." TWO SISTERS HAD ECZEMA. Cutleura Cured Scalp Troubles of ' Two Illinois Girls—Another Sister ■ Took Cutleura Pills. “I must give much praise to all the Cutleura Remedies. I used but one | cake of Cutleura Soap and one box of I Cutleura Ointment, ns that was all that was required to cure my disease. I was very much troubled with eczema of the head, nnd a friend of mine told ne to use the Cutleura Remedies, which I did, and am glad to say that they Jured my eczema entirely. My sister was also cured of eczema of the head 0y using the Cutleura Remedies. An other sister has used Cutleura Resolv ent and Pills and thinks they are a splendid tonic. Miss Edith Hammer, R. V. D. No. 0, Morrison, 111., Oct. 3. •06. _ _ What’s in a Name? From the Baltimore American. "Old Amy. you know, who Is famous for being arrested, has been sent to jail Again. But as she weighs nearly 300 pounds and Is a good lighter It took aearly all the reserve force to get her In the wagon. “Then the magistrate who sent her to Jail ought to be arrested, too.” “Why so?” "Didn’t he commit big Amy?" Ottly Oue “BROMO QUININB" mat la LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE. Look for the signature of K. W. GROVE. Uaed the World over to Cure a Colo In One day. 25c. New York paid last year 221,000,000 in Interest and will pay this year 224, 000,000, about the same as the federal government. Sugar Is to be found In the sap of aearly 200 plants and trees. FOR SALE or exchange, horses, cat tle. wagons, harnesses, buggies, hay, city property and farm lands. Will sell any of the above property on weekly or monthly payments J. Mulhall, Sioux City, la._ _ _ T rained. Mr. Goodlle—"My boy. you'd never hear me use language like that.” The Kid—"I bet you don't. Why It took me flve years to learn all dem words.” A Wonderful Record. Many so-called “specifics” and "cures" for Rheumatism have already been brought before the public; but when Rheumatism, Neuralgia and kin dred diseases have become chronic and threaten serious results, you may rest assured thnt they will help hut very little. If any. Although not recom mended as •Infallible,” the peculiar qualities of St. Jacobs Oil especially adapt it to those cases which may be termed “chronic,” and which have pre viously withstood all known "speci fics,” as well as the prescriptions of the best physicians. A Handicap. Mammy-Why, whut happened to my chile at de Hallowe'en party? Little Remus—Boo-booi When dey bobbed foh apples dey made a rule that I had to git two apples stid of one! err- --j— '“"'MEMBER OFTHE FAMILY, MEN, BOYS, WOMEN, MISSES AND CHILDREN. «0> W. L. Ooumfaa makes and made more men's 92.BO, 93.00and 93.80ahoaa *• than any other manufacturei* In the . . *^SK4 /nssj. 2Sz.4S4.'iSS‘®» »e- Ss4«7S?Sy3SS.!as: s* W. L Douglas $4 and $5 Gilt Edge Shoes Cannot Be Equalled At Anj Pries W“ rAtJ'flOlV. W. I. Douglas name and price Is stamped on bottom. Tnkr lfs testa. Sold by I he l ent nhoc dealer* everywhere. Shoe* mailed from factory to any part of the world, lilua bated Catalog free to aay address. W- JL. DOlJOLAS, Brsackto*. Msm. HOUSE WORK Thousands of American women in our homes are daily sacrificing their lives to duty. In order to keep the home neat and pretty, the children well dressed and tidy, women overdo. A female weakness or displacement is often brought on and they suffer in silence, drifting along from bad to worse, knowing well that they ought to have help to overcome the pains and aches which daily make life a burden. It is to these faithful women that LYDIA E.PINKHAM’5 VEGETABLE COMPOUHD comes as a boon and a blessing, as it did to Mrs. F. Ellsworth, of Mayville, N. Y., and to Mrs. W. P. Boyd,of Beaver Falls, Pa.,who say: “ I was not able to do my own work, owing to the female trouble from whiob I suffered. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege tableCompound helped me wonderfully, and I am so well that I can do as big a day’s work as I ever did. I wish every sick woman would try It. FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN. For thirty years Lydia E. Pink ham’s Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, has been the standard remedy for female ills, and has positively cured thousands of women who have been troubled with displacements, inflammation, ulcera tion, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, that bear ing-down feeling, flatulency, indiges tion,dizziness,or nervous prostration. Why don’t you try it ? Mrs. Pinkbam invites all sick women to write her for advice. She has guided thousands to health. Address, Lynn, Mass. There is a successful fox farm on Prince Edward island. Skins In their green condition are valued at from $200 to $250 each, one or two reaching $460. $36 week and expenses to men with rig t* introduce poultry compound. Write quick ly. Grant Co., Dept. 27. Springfield. 111. When a man hates to leave home that Is a sign he Is getting old. Taking the flags of 25 national pow ers, red Is to be found In 19 of them. Grandfather’s Cure for Constipation REAT medicine,—the Sawbuck. l( 9 Two hours a day sawing wood \V'*T7 will keep anyone's Bowels I regular. No need of pills, Cathartics, Castor Oil, nor "Physic,” If you'll only work the Saw buck regularly. • * * Exercise is Nature’s Cure for Constipa tion and,—a Ten-Mile walk will do. If yoa> haven't got a wood-pile. But, If you will take your Exercise In a* < Easy Chair, there's only one way to do that, because,—there's only one kind of Artificial. Exercise for the Bowels and its name 1* "CASCARETS." Cascarets are the only means to exercise the Bowel Muscl-s without work. * * * They don’t Purge, Cripe, nor "upset your Stomach,” because they don’t act Ilka "Physics.” They don’t flush out your Bowels and Intestines with a costly waste of Digestive Juice, as Salts, Castor Oil, Calomel, Jalap, or Aperient Waters always do. No—Cascarets strengthen and stimulate the Bowel Muscles, that lino the Food passages and that tighten up when food touches them, thus driving the food to its finish. A Cascaret acts on your Bowel Muscle* as if you had just sawed a cord of wood, or walked ten miles. Cascarets move Hie Food Naturally. digesting it without waste of tomorrow’* Gastric Juice. • * * The thin, flat, Ten-Cent Box Is made to fit your Vest pocket, or “My Lady's” Purse. Druggists—10 Cents a Box. Carry It constantly with you and take a Cascaret whenever you suspect you need one. Be very careful to get the genuine made only by the Sterling Remedy Com pany, and never sold in bulk. Every tab let stamped “CCC.’’ 73$