:f|CIAL DIRECTORY STATS. Silas Holcomb .•_■_•. .H. E. Moore nvernor. ..J. A. Piper I .. j. 8. Bartley IJrer.Euirono Moore Eugene Moore A. 8. Churchill 1 aiV,; i m i n M “6 ThTK u sse 11 XltrucUon8 . H. K. Corbett ,T< STATE university. 1 r Leavitt Burnharo, r;r'Hliu,0 Aima;ttE P. Holmes, k Mailaieu, Kearney, M. J. Hull, VO. If 0 SESSIONAL. has. F. Manderson, of Omaha; nf Madison. of JUHUISUH* lives—First District, J. BStrode .'Mercer; Third. Geo- D. Mlkel I, _ Hainer; Fifth, W. A. Ana o. M. Kem. u. M. IVCS*S. JUDICIARY. .Samuel Maxwell “ "' judge Post and T. h. Norval .. J. J. King of O’Neill . A L. Bartow of Chadron a! L. Warrlok. of O’Neill U ND OFFICES. O’HSIUa ..JohnA. Harmon. . •••••■■....Elmer Williams. COUNTY. .. .Geo MeCutcheon e,,is{rIetCodrt.....JohnM8klrvlng . .J. P. Mullen ..Sam Howard .Bill Bethea Mike McCarthy .Ohas Hamilton .Chaa O’Neill . .. ,.W. K. Jackson ...‘.Mrs. W. B. Jackson . .Dr. Trueblood ..M. F. Norton H. B. Murphy SUPERVISORS. .Frank Moore . Wilson Brodle . .W. F. Elsele ...George Eckley . .L. B. Maben . A. S. Eby . .A. C. Purnell ..D. G. Boll . John Dlckau ..H. B. Kelly . K. J. Hayes lty. .R.H.Murray . .8. L. Conger . John Hoage ..Wm. Lell . E. J. Mack ..W. ..George Kennedy ;. .John Alfs . James Gregg V. .F. W. Phillips A. Oberle .Hugh O’Neill • Hugt ,D. C. Blondln .John Wert/ .H.O. Wine .T. E. Doolittle .. J. B. Donohoe ... G. H. Phelps .J. E. While _A. C. Mohr C11Y OF V NEILL. or, E. J. Mack; Justices, B. H. Hid s. M. Wagors; Constables, Ed. ,nd Perkins Brooks. IOCNCILMBN—YIR8T WARD.-^ years.—John McBride. For one I)eY arman. SECOND WARD. years-Jake Pfund. For one year iz. THIRD WARD. years—Elmer Merriman. For one Wagers. CITY OITIOER8. .. .. It. R. Dickson; Clerk, N. Martin; , John McHugh; City Engineer risky; Polloe Judge, N. Martin; Police, Charlie Hall; Attorney, “diet; NVeighmaster, Joe Miller. RATTAN TOWNSHIP. >r, John Winn; Trearurer. John lerk, D. II. Cronin; Assessor, Mose ; Justices, M. Castello and Ghas. Justices, Perkins Brooks and Will Ruud overseer dist. 88, Allen Brown , John Enright. uw relief comnission. meeting first Monday in Febru h year, and at suoh other times as necessary. Ilobt. Gallagher, Page, ; Wm. Bowen, O'Neill, secretary; •k Atkinson. RICK’S CATHOLIC CHURCH. *8 every Sabbath at 10:30 o’clock. . Cassidy, Poster. Sabbath school ely following services. ODIST CHURCH. Sunday ices—Preaching 10:30 A. M. and 7:30 is No. 1 9:30 A. M. Class No. 2 (Ep ague) 6:30 p.m. Class No. 3 (Chlld >’• m. Mind-week services—General eetiug Thursday 7:30 p.m. All will welcome, especially strangers. E. E. HOSMAN, Pastor. fc. POST, NO. 86. The Gen. John ^ill Poet, No. 86, Department of Ne • B., will meet the first and third evening of each month in Masonic P11 S.J. Smith, Com. <>RN \ ALLEY LODGE, 1. O. O mau. ^erZ. Wednesday evening li mtend ‘ * brothers oordlallj tL, N. u. 0. l. Bright, Sec. c?APTER, R. A. M iComcahlduhlrd ThurBday ot “w*1 loans Sec. j. c. Rabhisb, H. P ''‘ "-HELMET lodge, TJ. I Sa J n evei7 Monday at 8 o’clock i |invited?W8 V1»l«“g bretheJ |y n.., Chas. Davis, C.C, * oallaohek. K. of R. and S. 4* J^CAMPMENT NO. 30. fc[«2i,erS7 second and fourl each month in Odd Fellows' Hal Scribe, H. M. Uttley. ItRBEK U?™4,1’ HAUGHTKI I ™ “vmeet8 every 1st and i ach month In Odd Fellows' Hall, ■y .« vuu A'CUIUWB nan, B* Adams, JSSaryBBIaHT’N-a --PBNEDICT. W. M. -- D- B- Cbosim, Clerk. ;,m''h'xutUtittJ ^,9' M?eta second “ic hall. UUSdtty ot euch month In CHI. Wc. _ —_V. Golden, M. W. iS.-swa «a 'v*«ns, Sec.E“‘ McCctcban, g. M. ",.30" S3SBBRS lp'Sunday'*' Arrives 7:00 p !?°pav!weis?nc««-«A. o'.nEill '' “ua Bat- »t..tic HOTEL —p VANS Enlarged -L Refurnished Refitted • Only First-class Hotel In the .City. W. T. EVANS, Prop. NEW YORK .. . ILLUSTRATED NEWS The Organ of Honaat Sport In Amorlea ALL THE SENSATIONS OF THE DAY picTunco av the FOREMOST ARTISTS OF THE COUNTRY Life in New York OraphicaUy Illustrated. Breezy but Respectable. $4 FOR A YEAR, $2 FOR SIX MONTHS Do you want to be posted? Then send your subscription to the IIV TUI ILLUSTRATED VEWS, 3 PARK PLACE NEW YORK CITY. PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY. Sioux City, O’Neill and Western Railway (PACIFIC SHORT LINE) THE SHORT ROUTE BETWEEN SlOlTX CITY AND Jackson, Laurel, Randolph, Os mond, Plainviev), O'Neill. Connects at Sioux City with all diverging lines, landing passengers In NEWfUNION PASSENGER STATION Homeseekers will find golden opportun ities along this line. Investigate before going elsewhere. THE CORN BELT OF AMERICA For rates, time tables, or other Information call upon agents or address F. C. HILLS, W. B. McNIDER, Receiver. Gen’l Pass. Agent. THE NEW DONAHOE’S is combating Religious Prejudice and economic injustice, and helping Catholics and Protestants to under stand each other better. THE NEW DONAHOE’S Is brilliant without being super ficial, instructive without being heavy, popular without being trival. THE NEW DONAHOE’S Will delight every American Catho lic and interest every thoughtful Protestant. Only $2.00 a year. ' Write for sample copy DONAHOE’S MAGAZINE CO. 611 WASHINGTON ST., BOSTON MASS. WEBSTER’S INTERNA TIONAL aJ^AvDICTIONARY A Grtmd Educator, Successor of the “ L'nabridged.” Standard of the U. 8. Gov’t Print ing Office, the U.8. Supreme Court and of nearly all the Schoolbooks. Warmly com mended by every State Superinten dent of Schools, and other Educa tors almost with out number. A College President writes: “For oase with which the cyo finds the ** word sought, for accuracy of defini tion, for effective methods In Indi “ eating pronunciation, for terse yet “ comprehensive statements of facts, “and for practical us© as a working “dictionary, * Webster's International* excels any other single volume.** The One Great Standard Authority, 80 writes lion. T>. ,T. Brewer, Justice U. 6. £upiem« Court. G» df Cm IfUSRiAlf CO., PubliaherWm Sprinifit-lrl, fTaas., V.S.A. ■Send tothe publwlipn. for fi»« pamphlet — ‘Donat buy che«p reprint, of ancien tedium, - i There Is nothing so foolish as work with out a fixed purpose. Four Big Successes. Having the needed merit to more than make good all the advertising claimed for them, the following four remedies have reached a phenomenal sale. Dr. King’s New Discovery for Consumption, Coughs and Colds, each bottle guaran teed. Electric Bitters, the great remedy for Liver, Stomach and Kidneys. Buck len's Arnica Salve, the best in the world, and Dr. King’s New Life Pills, which are a perfect pill. All these remedies are guaranteed to do just what is claimed for them and the dealer whose name is attached herewith will be glad to tell you more of them. Sold at P. C. Cobbioan’b Drug Store. No busy man has time to think about his misfortune. A Killion Friend*. A friend in need ia a friend indeed, and not less than one million people have found just such a friend in Dr. King’s New Discovery for Consumption, Coughs and Colds. If you have never used this Great Cough Medicine, one trial will convince you that it has won derful curative powers in all diseases of Throat, Chest and Lungs. Each bottle is guaranteed to do all that is claimed or money will be refunded. Trial bottles free at P. C. Corrigan's Drug Store. Large Bized bottles 50c. and 81.00. Do not get the blues. They are sure signs that you are idling. Bueklen’s Arnica Salve. The best salve in the world for cuts, bruises, sores, ulcers, salt rheum, fever sores, tetter, chapped hands, chilblains, corns, and all skin eruptions and pos itively cures piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give perfect satis faction or money refunded. Price 25c. per box. For sale by P. C. Cor rigan. 28-28 If you are single, always think that if you had a family it would keep you down. ._ A severe rheumatic pain in the left shoulder had troubled Mr. J. H. Loper, a well-known druggist of Dee Moines, Iowa, for over six months. At times the pain was so severe that he could not lift anything. With all he could do he could not get rid of it until he applied Chamberlain’s Pain Balm. "I only made three applications of it,” he says, "and have since been free from all pain.” He now recommends it to per sons similarly afflicted. For sale by P. C. Corrigan, Diuggist. If you are married, don’t fancy that it is your expensive family that is keeping you down. _ “Perhaps you would not think so, but a very large proportion of the diseases in New Turk comes from carelessness about catching cold,’’ says Dr. Cyrus Edson. “It is such a simple thnig and so common that very few people, unless it was a case of pneumonia, pay any at tention to a cold. There are a great many cases of catarrh and consumption which have their origin in this neglet of the simplest precaution of every day life. The most sensible advice is, when you have one, get rid of it as soon as possible. By all means do not neglect ii, ur. nutsuu uues uut ten you uow 10 cure a cold but we will. Take Chamber lain’s Cough Bemedy. It will relieve the lungs, aid expectoration, open the secretions and soon effect a permanent cure. 25 and 50 cent bottles (or sale by P. C. Corrbigan, Druggist. Optimistic View. Many of the Florida orange groves escaped serious damage from the freeze and the trees that were killed back will soon be in bearing again, as the roots are uninjured. The talk of overproduction of oranges in Florida is nonsense. The only difficulty is the cost of transportation to the millions of consumers Italy exports 2,500,000,000 oranges annually and Florida but 50,000,000. The America! orange industry is just beginning. Characteristic. The late George M. Stearns, during a recent Vermont state campaign, re ceived this telegram from a prominent Democrat in Montpelier: “Will you address the Democracy of Vermont at this place?” His characteristic reply was: “To save car-fare, send the Democracy of Vermont to my baok yard, and I'll address them there.” THB DREAM OR CHEMISTRY. Bp|M la Ilm to Frodaoa ralatabte Boot Masks Oat Of the Ktements. The electrician has one dream and the social philosopher has another. But the chemist has also a vision oI the alchemist of the dark ages. This Is how he would solve the problems of comfort and happiness which have been put to the human race: “The ohemist hopes for a synthetlo beefsteak, for a chemical !oaf, for a cup of coffee made,like his soda-water extracts, out of inorganic matter. He wants to see the day when a synthe tic climate shall hold the string to the unruly bags of Aeolus.” “In that day the food and raiment of mankind will be produoed in the crucibles of the chemist. Once more verdure will olothe the fields now de faced by human toil, and the shaggy woods will spring anew on the de spoiled slopes of the hills. There will be no tilling or harvest, no slaughtering of tame beasts. Out of the original elements ohemistry will compound chops and outlets, knead the dough, and brew ale. “The battle has already been partly won in the case of medicines and drugs. The wine at the table d'hote never saw the vlnoyard. The ‘prise fruit flowers' of the drug store are in nocent of the orohard and garden. Synthetic chemistry is yet young. It has made great advances in tho pro duction of glycerine and sugar. It has 4,000 devotees in this country who hope to make the dream a reality.” • VICTIM OP LACING. Another Instanos of Its Farnloloas Ba salts. The latest viotim of tight lacing is the unfortunate actress who died in the midst of tho performance at the Elephant and Castle theater, London. She seems to have been gripped, as in a vice, by the stays of her stage cos tume, and this, aggravating a natural weakness of the heart, brought on her death. She had just finished a song and danced off to the wings, when she collapsed, with all the signs of fatal illness. Her husband, who was in the house, was called to her side, and her agonized cry for him to umace ner areas seems to nave oeen the last that left her lips. She was dead in her dressing room before the doctor came. The circumstances were such as to constitute every possible aggravation of her danger. Her lac ing had paralyzed every vital function at a moment when it needed most freedom and play. A dance in loose costume would have been trying enough, amid all the excitement of a first night An added song, and both in a garment that fitted like the torture boots of the Middle Ages, proved too much for the patience of outraged nature. “Fairies, beware," is not the only moral of this poor creature’s fate. Yet she has probably died in vain for any purpose of salutary warning to her sisters, whether be* hind the curtain or before. A BUMP OP LOCALITY. The tensing Small Boy Had a Well-De veloped One. A small boy from Lansing was in Detroit not long ago with his mother for the first time. It was also her first visit to the city, and she was almost as much interested in the sights and confused by tbe bigness as the boy was. They had been out with the head of the family and had re turned to their hotel, and the boy was looking out of the window with un abated delight. “Say, mamma,” he said, after some time, “if I should go down the street seven squares, and up the next one three squares and out the next one six squares, then go ahead five squares, where would I be?” “Really, Frank," she replied, “it’s more than I can tell you. You’d bet ter ask your father.” “I don’t have to,” said the boy, proudly. “I know.". “Oh, I guess you don’t,” she smiled. “But I know I do,” he persisted. She was a little curious to learn if the boy had picked up any idea of the city, and so she humored him. “Where would you be?" she in quired. . “I’d be lost,” and she believed him thoroughly. Queer Custom at Southampton. , Of the many quaint and picturesque survivals of old English customs sure ly one of the oldest and most delight fully suggestive is the engrossment and presentation on the 9th day of November every year, at Southamp ton, of gravely worded certificates vouching for the fact that no carracks of Genoa or galleys of Venice have arrived at trie port, roe try is not to be looked for in official documents, but if this voucher be read between the lines, is it not veritably a three centuried sea song of the freshest and breeziest, full of brilliant color and strange circumstances of old world shipping? Awarded Highest Honors—World’* Fair, MOST PERFECT MADE. A pure Grape Cream of Tartar Powder. Frer from Ammonia, Alum or any other adulterant 40 YEARS THE STANDARD. ^ATttDA.—-It vii A^food turn you did mo when yotc M - r ' * euuu rare you uiu mi wnen you of Santa Clau« Soap. It makoa the clothea whiter than an _ and aavea time and work. ' " Maxv.—Yea, and it dooa not ininra the handa or the elothea. SANTA CLAUS SOAP. IMl by THE N. K. FAIRBAHK COMPANY, ttlMfl. br over exertion, plants, which l«m WERVK IRlDl.n « wonderful rfmadf lomiirr, Ixjunl Hruli Umlwlong, NarvovB ruwgr, iivKimmiK, vyi>K«[ulu«M, IrfWt MuMimxl, Nightly UmIMIni netx.nll drutnnuml I nun nfimwor In Unnerut l vo Oriiinn ofeithor'«m ouiTmS nUo IriHrmltT, riiniumpHun or Innnnltr. Onn h* carried la l perbnj.JIft.rm., hr nmllI pruimhl. \Vttlm®* order wa KiinrnnUrln mr* nr fuAm.l #*.» ——u.Yi rff a» rest pocket. Ill ^■Iv« R written srtinrn For Mile In O’Nolll, Nob., by Checker © B. A. DbYARMAN, i I Barn, nager. CHECKER wrmfwvm Livery, Feed and Sale Stable. Finest tnrnonts in the city. Good, careful drivers when wanted. Also ran the O’Neill Omnibus line. Commercial trade a specialty. FRED C. GATZ f Fresh, Dried and Salt Meats Sugar-cured Ham, Breakfast Bacon, Spice Roll Bacon, all Kinds of Sausages, PATENTS ICtTemts, and Trads-Marks obtained, and all Pat-!1 ent buiineu conducted for modesatc race. < > Oua Orncr is opposite u. I. Patent Orrice ' and we can ascure patent in leas time than Uioss!, remote from Washington. ,> Send model, drawing or photo., with deacrlp-1' tlon. We advise, if patenuble or not, free of'; charge. Our fee not due till patent is secured. , i a Pamvhlet, "How to Obtain Patents,’’ with ' cost of same in the U. S. and foreign countries;; aent free. Address, C.A.SNOW&CO. OWP. PATENT OFFICE, WASHINGTON, D. C. Moftma * co.. Ofui«i.u. P. D. A J. F. MULLEN, PHOPHIKTOI18 OP TQI GOOD TEAMS, NEW RIGS Prices Reasonable. Bait of HoCnfferto's. O'NEILL, NEB, WEST EAST Wurohaae Tlokata and ConalRn : your Freight via the F. E.&M.V.andS.C.&P RAILROADS. TRAINS DEPART! GOING HAST.' Passenger east, 1 • Freight east. Freight east, GOING WBST. Freight west, Passenger west, Freight, 9:20 A. K 10:80 a. X 2:10 p. K. 2:10 P. X 9:27 P. x 2:10 p. x. The Blkhorn Line le now running Reclining Chair Cars daily, between Omaha and Dead wood, jree to holders of Brst-class transpor tation. Fer any information call on Ws J. DOBBS, Aot. O’NEILL. NEB. -O-CKMX 111 Combination!! * By Special Arrangement! 11 TfHIS JOURNAL with the Greatest of the Magazines, iP XL T.J4. V A/ UAXHl,'?.?!,* !$♦♦♦♦❖♦♦♦ »»♦♦♦♦»♦♦♦»»»»» »«««e*****44*»«*«-« 0* Which was the Most Widely Circulated Illustrated Monthly Magazine in the World during 1894. oooo NO HOME is complete without the local paper and one of the great illustrated monthlies rep resenting the thought and talent of the world. Dur ing one year the ablest authors, the cleverest artists, give you in The Cosmopolitan 1536 pages, with over 1200 illustrations. AT A MERELY NOMINAL PRICE. Ann you can nave nil this, l jQ ^ooJ a ma~£J:;ia v— • asococi _o,: •1 ••■> < ..