r FICIAL DIRECTORY, _ STATS. I ....Silas Holcomb I.. ,...R. K. Moore l.h.veruor. j. A. Piper ....J. 8. Bartley Eugene Moore . A 8. Churchill B,."oral.-.- ••••"■• j, H. Bussell lf.Austn.cthm*’. H. B. Corbett JVl's -TATE UNIVERSITY. F ‘ r iticnln: Leavitt Burnham, |lTHVin. Aima; B. P. Holmes iTiMallaleu, Kearney. M. J. Hull, [ CONGRESSIONAL. runs F. Manderson, of Omaha; of Madison. Intat Ivee-FlrstDIattlot. JABStrode 1 H Meroer; Third. Geo. D. Mlkel Lrtl; _ Hairier; Fifth, W. E. And Cli; U. M. Kem. JUDICIARY. .Samuel Maxwell " ’. . judge Post and T. L.Norval FENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT. 1 h ...M.P-Kinkald.otONeill . ... J. J. King of O Neill .A L. Bartow of Chadron ■ ".a. L. Warrick, of O’Neill LAND OFFICES. O’NBILL. ....John A. Harmon. .. ■■■'.'.Elmer Williams. .COUNTY. _Geo McCutcheon the District Court.John Sklrvlntr O. M. Colllna .I. P. Mullen ....Sam Howard .Bill Bethea Mike McCarthy .Ohas Hamilton .Chas O’Neill ..W. K. Jackson t'cUools. Mrs. W. R. Jackson .Dr. Trueblood .M. F. Norton J..H. E. Murphy SUPER Visuua. „ Frank Moore . .Wilson Brodle .. .,.W. F. Elsele ;■..George Eckley .. .L. B.Maben . A. 8. Eby . .A. 0. Purnell ..O. G. Kolt . .John Dlckau ••..H. B. Kelly . .K. J. Hayes . .8. L. Conger . John Hodge ;. .Wm. Lell ..E. J. Mack :.""" V.George Kennedy .John Alts 11, James Gregg ;.;;;;;.Hugh o-Nem ppU .D. C. Blond in e . John Wertz .;* .H. 0. Wine a .T, E. Doolittle .J. B. Donohoe i ' .J. E. White tai'e.’.’.A. 0. Mohr CUT OF VNEILL. rigor, E. J. Mack; Justices, E. H. tandS. M. Wafers; Constables, Ed. »and Perkins Brooks. COUNCILMEN—FIRST WARD. wo vears.—John McBride. For one en DeYarman. SECOND WARD. ro years—Jake Pfund. For one year THIRD WARD. ;wo years—Elmer Merrlman. For one M. Wagers. CITY OFFICERS, ir, K. It. Dickson; Clerk, N. Martin; rt*r, John McHugh; City Engineer orrlsky; Police Judge, N. Martin; of Police, Charlie Hall; Attorney, benedict; VVelghmaster, Joe Miller. GRATTAN TOWNSHIP. rvisor, John Winn; Trearurer, John ; Clerk, D. II. Cronin; Assessor, Mose Jell; Justices, M. Gastello and Chas. oil; Justices, Perkins Brooks and Will ie; Road overseer dist. 26, Allen Brown o. 4, John Enright. 'IE1U? RELIEF C0MNI88I0N. ular meeting first Monday In Febru each year, and at suoh other times as neil necessary, llobt. Gallagher, Page, mu; Wm. Bowen, O’Neill, secretary; Clark Atkinson. ‘ATRICK’8 catholic church. rvices every Sabbath at 10:30 o’clock. Rev. Cassidy, Poster. Sabbath sohool 1 mtely lollowing services. T1IODIST CHURCH. Sunday lemoes-Preaehlng 10:30 A. M.and 7:31 LIUS* Nn 1 U.'lil a •> rvi_-at- « r-m , ,| .. VtSVUlUg ..«w ... .... MU* , - —■ Class No. 19:30 A. M. Class No. 2 (Ep league) 6:30 p. m. Class No. 3 (Child 0’NeiU ft® VALLEY LODGE, I. O.» “IIH’ N’ O. L. Bbight. Bee. •bonus Seo. J. c. Habnish, H 1?* Mind-week services—Genera; fii ™iingThursday 7:30 p. m. All will ue welcome, especiallv strangers. E. E. HOSMAN, Pastor. ;v\!.in1n08.T.’,N0- 80- The Gen. John bio ifApartment of Ne wilLmeet the first and third )'vL?,veninS each month in Masonic S. J. Smith, Com. t.cgnS^&a?»e CiJS™ gaU- V1^tlng °br ^^.K.ofllaVs™' 0Eo1p‘„EIi.CAM:PMENT NO. iu,' deetseverv «i*r>nnm o*><« •»» Of each 8e00Q<‘ a“d : each month fn Odd Fellows Scribe. Chas. Hbi 1>0f\ebEKAi?0* 41» bAUOU ^ofeaohm^hToddFeW’ ^^iuadams, Secretary .VUJBOK| Swaps'* D. h. uronin [‘C&ST"&“yo?,eaMert8 ' BkiQbt, Rec. T. V. Golden iSSEme?t OP «yor each month; y fl at *nd third S_^__^Wru8, Sec\E°' Mc°ctchan, G. M. Arriv»l of Mail. Vei7dftv 0.3ohtbf.wpo, —.5.16pi * *M'-tuaea at hD P A f T JT-r « _ * tuuuaed at... . g.™ ily««P»r-“ Arrives Jiff** ,&“ytt^lStVlaU:0':p5«.'“- ArHTes 9:07 P.M ‘■ept Sunday. Arrives 7:00 r. v ^^0n,1^We5N”cdR*t8SA. eWay' WjfJTat 7:00 a t»n.v.°'stiu.m.. t- at..l;00p /. inurs. and s»/ « -7:00 a tep*rti iL,0’!rEILt. Asn S t'at- -'vu,», SB BB A NBW YORK MARKET* ' fldUNfM IlfU Affanted by U 8atar day Nights. Ninth Avenue, between S8th and 42d streets, U as ugly and commonplace a spot as there Is In New York as a rule, but on Saturday nights it presents a picturesque sight, says the New York Sun. Viewed from the elevated road, the smoky glare of lamps and the con fused shouts make one think of the pitch lake in Dante’s Inferno. Backed up against either sidewalk are long rows of dilapidated carts, heaped up with vegetables, fruit and meats, lighted by blazing kerosene torches. On each wagon are a couple of hoarse voiced, brlgand-llke vendors, shouting their wares with all their might. Be tween the carts stand peddlers of all sorts, with pushcarts, with baskets, with trays. Generally foreign and un kempt, guiltless of English beyond the names and prices of their goods, they sell ready-made clothing, small wares, pictures, toys, watches, shoe-strings. On the edges are oyster stands and sell ers of hot sausages and other delicacies (or Immediate consumption. The usual measure Is a pall, which varies In size; the price for any commodity seems uni form at a given time. As the evening wears on some dealer cuts his price and the cut runs at once along the whole line. The crowd that swarms to buy Is a curious one. All carry baskets; all push on intent on bargains, with eyes and nose alert, as they needs must be in the uncertain light where chickens assume strange forms and fish becomes more than suspicious. There are stolid German faces, sharp, hard profiles of boarding-house keepers, fat, jolly, motherly old women, bright-eyed, sharp tongued young girls. Here and there Is a figure that seems afraid to be seen; a well-dressed young man with high hat and gloves, carrying a bag and with a very newly married look on his face; a woman In deep black, closely veiled, all move up and down, slowly, good naturedly, assailed with sallies of rude wit from the carts and answering back In kind but with eyes and ears Intent on a bargain. It is as picturesque a toerie as any European town can offer. QUARTZ CRAZINESS. Mania (or Finding Gold Stronger Than Other Forma of Gambling. "A young man may recover from a craly desire for gambling or give up whisky after he has been Its slave,” said Robert Searles of Denver to a Washington Sun man, "but when he gees quartz crazy there Is no further hope for him unless he strlkeB a bo nanza. Then his insanity will be none the less Intense, but It will not be so pronounced, because he will have the means to pursue his passion without undergoing discomfort or creating re mark. What do I mean by quartz orazy? Well, It Is evident you have never been In the western country. Out where the mountains are piled up on top of each other these lunatics abound. A man who Is quartz crazy Is an individual who catches the mining fever and becomes convinced that his mission on earth Is to find the greatest vein of pay-ore ever discovered. In pur suit of his quest he suffers more hard ships and overcomes more obstacles than did all the knights who ever searched for the holy grail. He will leave home, family, friends and com fort, and, all alone, with a meager sup ply of provisions and a few tools, he will plunge Into unknown wildernesses, and when he finds a place that holds out a mineral prospect he will burrow In the treacherous mountain side like a fabblt and dig from daylight to dark, expecting with every stroke of his pick to uncover his expected fortune. Near ly every prospector In the west or the rest of the world for that matter, is afflicted with the malady I have de scribed. Some of them keep up their ceaseless search with every recurring season, and sometimes strike a good thing. In such cases somebody else, the party who has plenty of money to de velop the find, reaps the profits. "Fudges” of Tassar College. “Nearly every night at college,” said the Vassar girl, "some girl may be found somewhere who Is making ‘fudges’ or giving a fudge party,” says a writer In the Boston Globe. "Fudges are Vassar chocolates, and they are simply the most delicious edibles ever manufactured by a set of sweetmeat loving girls. Their origin is wrapped in mystery. We only know that their re ceipt is handed down from year to year by old students to new, and that they belong peculiarly to Vassar. To make them, take two cups of sugar, one cup of milk, a piece of butter one-half the Bize of an egg, and a teaspoonful of vanilla extract. The mixture is cooked until It begins to get grimy. Then it Is taken from the fire, stirred briskly and turned into buttered tins. Before It hardens it is cut In squares. You may eat the fudge either hot or cold; it is good either way. it never tastes so de Jiclous, however, as when made at col lege, over a spluttering gas lamp, in the seclusion of your own apartments.” A Grewsome Sensation. The sailors on the Ammen ram are very wary about going Into the man holes that lead to the water-tight com partments between the outer and Inner shells. The space between the two hulls Is barely two feet high, and the man holes admit only a small man. "But if a fellow gets away in there and becomes scared,” said a workman the other day as he screwed on the manhole cover’ "he will swell up, and he can't crawl back through the hole to save his neck. I was in that compartment the other day, and when I thought how awful it Would be to have the outer cover screwed on while I was there, I got panicky and tried to crawl back. I couldn’t get through any way, although I had gone in easily enough. The harder I tried the bigger I swelled, and the men finally had to pull me out. When they got me through the clothes were torn oft my back, so tightly had I been squeezed.” He Paid the Bills. Mrs. D’Avnoo—What are you groan Ins about now, I should like to know. Mr. D’Avnoo-^The bills for your last reception are Just coming: in. "• D’Avnoo-Well, I will pay those Dins with my own money If you will “e *°f the duty of listening to the chatter of people who come to make party calls. There's the bell now. Go to the parlor. Mr. D’Avnoo—Uro—I’ll pay ’em, my dear. - v'- ■ ' ■ THE QREATNESS OP INDIA. ■emething of It* Population, Religion. Crops and Beasts. There are some big figures In a recent blue book upon Indian affairs that has Just been published In England, says the New York Evening Post. The grand total of the population, Including Brit ish India and native states, according to the census of 1891, was 287,223,431, as compared with 263,793,614 at the census of 1881, the males numbering 148,727,296 and the females numbering 148,496,136. Taking the distribution of population according to religion there was in 18*1 207,731,727 Hindoos, 67,321.164 Moham medans, 9,820,487 aboriginals, 7,131,361 Buddhists, 2,284,380 Christians, 1,907,833 Sikhs, 1,416,638 Jains, 89,904 Parsees, 17, 194 Jews and 42,763 of other religions. Of the Christian population, 1,316,263 were certified to be Roman Catholics and 295,016 Church of England. The to tal number of police offenses reported during 1892 was 136,639, as against 124,560 in 1891 and 115,723 in 1890, the police be ing composed of 150,618 officers and men. The opium revenue in 1892-3 was Rx. 7,993,180 and the expenditure Rx. 1,602, 496, giving as the net receipts on opium Rx. 6,390,384. In the laat ten years the net receipts on opium have been Rx. 62,922,987, while the average annual number of chests of Bengal opium sold for export during the last ten years has been 63,994. The actual area on which crops of various kinds were grown In India in 1892-3 was 195,897,389 acres, of which 65,743,812 were devoted to rice, 21,484,889 to wheat and 92,927,665 to other food grains, Including pulse. The area devoted to cotton was 8,940,248 acres, to Jute 2,181,334, to oil seeds 13,645,025, to tobacco 1,149,548, to sugar cane 2,798,637, to tea 360,463 and to coffee 122,788. The length of railway lines open to traffic in 1893 was 18,469 miles, the number of passengers conveyed was 134,700,469, the goods and minerals carried represented 28,727,386 tons, the gross receipts were Rx. 23,955,753 and the net earnings Rx. 12,679,200. In 1892 21,988 human beings and 81,668 head of cattle were killed by snakes and wild beasts, the chief hu man mortality (19,025) having been due to snake bite. Tigers claimed 947 hu man victims, leopards 260, wolves 182, bears 146 and elephants 72. On the other hand, whereas only 4,498 cattle were killed by Bnake bite, no fewer than 29, 969 were devoured by tigers, 30,013 by leopards and 6,768 by wolves. TEMPERINO ALUMINUM. A Recent Discovery That May Greatly Increase Its Usefulness. The successful tempering of aluminum so as to give it the consistency of Iron Is the latest triumph of F. Allard, the Levis blacksmith, whose rediscovery of the lost Egyptian art of hardening cop per startled the mechanical world some three or four years ago and only failed to make the fortune of Its author be cause of the expenslveness of the proc ess. A recent trial of Allard's tempered aluminum has proved the success of his new method In Quebec and the prac tical purposes to which It can be ap plied. He has made and hardened a can non, which has just been tested In pres ence of Col. Spence, the American con sul, with the greatest success. This cannon Is twenty-six Inches long and five Inches in diameter, the metal of the gun outside the bore being only a quar ter of an inch thick. A charge consist ing of a pound of powder, has been suc cessfully fired out of this little piece of ordnance without having any appreci able effect upon it. A new and more scientific trial of the cannon has been ordered by the Canadian military au thorities, to be held Immediately at the Quebec citadel by the artillery experts there, and the United States consul, Id view of this move, Is understood to have encouraged Mr. Allard to manu facture, as speedily as possible, a can non twelve feet In length for shipment to Washington, but whether this Is to be at Allard's risk or by Instructions from the United States government is not known and can not be learned here. The great advantage of cannons made of aluminum, everything else being equal, lies of course in the lightness of the metal. The cannon just tested here weighs fourteen pounds. If it were of Iron and the same dimensions It would weigh 180 pounds. Allard's friends here, and military enthusiasts over the pro ject, assert that if the tempered alumi num supersedes iron for the making of big guns field artillerymen. Instead of being dependent upon horses and gun carriages Mr dragging their weapons °^er./ough country. will be able to shoulder them like muskets. In ap pearance the finished specimen looks as though It were made of burnished JURY PLAYED CARDS. Remarkable Discovery Made by a Chi cago Judge. I have a mind to send you all t Jail,” said Judge Ooggin to the doze jurors who recently sat during the trii of a damage suit brought by Mrs. Ma McLeroth against the De La Verne R< frlgerator company for 326,000. She wa injured In an accident on the Ice rail way at the World’s Fair. The remar of the judge was due to the fact tha when a bailiff went to the Jury root to Inquire whether a verdict was possl ble before adjournment of the court h found the twelve men playing "pedro, and so reported to the court. Judg Goggin sent for the Jury, and asked i It was true that the members wer playing cards instead of endeavorin to arrive at a verdict. Upon being lr formed by a Juror that It was so, h gave vent to his anger with the abov threat. He ordered the men to go bac: and attend to their duties as juron and cease their "high five” deliberation! The twelve left the court room In a de jected way, with Instructions to sea their verdict. About Elephant** Tongue*. “Only few of the many people whc have thrown peanuts Into the ele phant’s mouths,” said Head Keeper Manley of the Zoological gardens to a Philadelphia Record man, "have no ticed that the tongue is hung at both ends. A tongue hung in the middle is a human complaint, but elephants have a monopoly on those hung at both ends. The trunk suffices to put the food Just where it ought to be, and the tongue simply keeps It moving from side to side over the grinders. When a peanut gets stuck on the elephant’r tongue he raises it In the middle, like a moving caterpillar, and the shell cracks against the root of the mouth, to then disappear down a capacious throat." I WATCH THB LIQHt. Truth W1U hn the World WMa All Other Thing* FilL What a queer world this la anyhow. Now, truth is something w$ cannot put out of existence or Ignore for very long; It Is also our only salvation; and yet do but speak the truth and factions rise to buss and sting back, like hor nets besieged. Pshaw 1 why rage at the truth, good people? Why fear It? Treat It rightly; it will be your friend. Take hold on It; It will lead you safely to peace and happiness. They who Ignore It are of the perverse generation who are warned of the wrath to come. Van ity and covetousness are most scornful and fearful of truth. The vain hate It because It would expose the hollowness of the foundations on which they build. The covetous strive to disbelieve In It because they must often go counter to It In their efforts after fame and wealth. Every one nearly wants to build a new way for himself, In which there shall be only as much truth al lowed as shall not Interfere with Its In tentions. As if truth Is Inseparable! Ah, no! One wrong motive will ruin the whole work, sooner or later. False ness-even a little grain of It—will cor rode and disintegrate the biggest schemes man can erect, as time has proved. "Be wise to-day; ’tls mad ness to defer.” Let each one look the truth fairly in the face and then act on Its suggestions, and what a change for the better the world would under go before another week could pass. Look the truth In thp face, everybody; to meet Its earnest look strengthens as nothing else can. It would cure the weakness of vanity; It would soften the heart of the de spoller; It would enoourage the down trodden to seek a more Independent way. Oh, there Is nothing so beau tiful as truth! Why do we seek to hide It, then? We go Into ecstacles over artificial things but Ignore that which even the best artifice can only Imitate. Truth alone can save the world that now Is screaming from every corner against Injustice. Tou at the top, look on truth first; those after you will imitate you In that as they do your vices.—Amber. OIN1NQ-OUT GIRLS. Two of Them to Booh Moo ot o Chine*# Dinner. Perhaps no city In the world has the counterpart of these flower-boats; for this Chinese city of amusement lacks In the main the element that pervades European haunts of revelry. It was a vast place ot restaurants and hotels, where the rich and poor men of Canton repaired to enjoy themselves. I have been given to understand that no China man entertains In his own house, nor do his women folk join him In his feasts »r revels. Hence there is a class ot girls, the very large majority of whom are strictly virtuous, whose business it is to be pretty according to Chinese fashion, brisk, conversational, mustcgl; in a word, to understand the art of enter taining. Their faces will be painted In white and pink—very artistically paint ed, smooth and soft-looking; delicately traced, sharp, black crescents will mark their eyebrows, writes Florence O’Dris coll, U. P„ in the Century Magasine. Two of these young ladles will attend to each gentleman, sitting slightly back from the table at each side of the en tertained. They will fill his liquor-cups, sip from them and pass them on; pick cut dainty pieces of "chow” (food) with chopsticks, and hand them to him; crack jokes. All and light his pipe, and all the while chat gaily and eat dried watermelon seeds. That is all I ever saw them eat. Behind each group of three a solemn looking coolie or waiter, will stand to fan them all the while. Other waiters bring In food, wine and tea, change the dishes and attend to their wants. The meal will last for a long time. Eventually all will rise and retire to an outer room furnished with broad couches covered with matting. Opium pipes will be there for those who care for them, and tobacco and cigars In plenty. The girls will sit on the couches, laugh, fill the pipes, and still eat watermelon seeds, while the gentle* men will recline at their ease, enjoying their society. LOCOMOTIVE FIREMEN. The Mew Certificates of Membership Printed In London* Elegant certificates of membership in the Brotherhood of Locomotive Fire men, printed In London, England, have Just been received at the general of fices of the order in this city, says the Peoria Journal. The sheet Is a large ope, and Is printed In colors. There are pictures representing the fireman leav ing home, and on board his train (the Empire State express, the fastest In the world, being chosen); then the train Is shown falling through a high bridge.' Then the cemetery is pictured where the killed fireman reposes. Lastly is shown a picture of the widow receiv ing her death benefit. All this illus trates the good the order does. There Is a portrait at the top of Joshua Leach, who organized the first lodge of the order with seventy-one mem bers at Port Jervis, N. Y., on Dec. 1, 1873. He is now livl at Sedalta, Mo., In a home presented him by the brother hood. The motto of the order, "So briety, Charity, Protection and Indus try,” are represented by appropriate pictures. The United States, Canada and Mexico, where the brotherhood ex ists are represented by their coats of arms. The grand lodge shield and the tools used by the craft complete the Illustrations. Awarded Highest Honors—World's Fair, •DR; A pne Crape Cream cf Tartar Powder. Free from Ammonia, Alum or any other adulterant, 40 YEARS THE STANDARD. Sriiiii Cuuis Soar BEST PURESTMO MOST ECMOfiUL. "yip 1UMIM (1WWIIY— UIUUIAAU AK4EU US1BU by ovoroxertlon, ulanta, which “ ,y«»t pocket. MANHOOD RE8TORED! ■**«•.* ■narenuiml to cure nil ncrviiuH^wmioii.Buoh naWuttkMomofyYoMof Brail Foeor, Ucarlnrho. Wnltofulneiis, Lo»t Mmihooil.Nldhtlj lOintiiiilmni'VJrSiSSS neee.elldraliinaiullojnor noworlnOen»r»tl»o,&wi;?of"lthlfrM*BSSS f‘,Vr®™»!»'ve MfO of tobacco, opium •r .ttlS Jfifu*.Sh«Hr51li,iSff,Kn,|,t,0.,!or ln"»nllr«. «'“n be curried la b» M OUltlH & CO.. Drugtf let*. For into In O'Neill, Nob., Checker ® B. A. DeYAUM AN, 1 .1 _ Barn, n>gor. CHECKER WWFHIIIH Livery, Feed and Sale Stable. Finest turnouts in the city. Good, careful drivers when wanted. Also run the O’Neill Omnibus line. Commercial trade a specialty. FRED C. GATZ I Fresh, Dried and Salt Meats Sugar-cured Ham, Breakfast Bacon, Spice Roll Bacon, all Kinds of Sausages. PATENTS CaTeats.and Trade-Mirks obtained, and til Pat ent butincsa conducted for Moderate fees. Our omcE is OPROirrc u. s. Patent Office and we can aecure patent in leaa Ume than thoae remote from Washington, Send model, drawing or photo., with descrip Uon. We adrise, if patentable or not, free of charge. Our fee not due till patent ia secured. A Pamphlet, "How to Obtain Patents,” with cost of same in the 17. S. and foreign countries lent free. Address, C.A.SNOW&CO. Off. Patent Office, Washington, D. C. GOOD TEAMS, NEW RIGS Prices Reasonable. Bait of MoCafferto’i. O'NEILL, NEB, Purohaaa Tlokata and Consign : your Freight via the F.E.&M.V.andS.C.&P RAILROADS. TRAINS DEPART: OOIIO BAST.’ Passenger east, * Freight east, Freight east, aoiao wkst. Freight west, Passenger west, Freight, 9:20 a. h 10:80 A. M 2:10 F. K. 2:10 f. if 9:27 f. X 2:10 f. 1 The Elkhorn Line is now running Reclining Ohatr Can dally, between Omaha and Dead wood, jree to holders of first-class transpor tation. Fer any Information oall on W. J. DOBBS, A«t. O’NEILL, NEB. « Review-Reviews .Edited by ALBERT SHAW T? i s i MtEVEWHKEyltWS JsiisSfci'iFi_ |T WAS in April', 1891, that the first number of the American Review of Reviews was printed. The new idea of giving the best that was in the other magazines in addition to its own brilliant, orig inal articles, took America by; storm,, as it had taken England—though the magazine' itself was not at all a reprint of the English edition.! ,lt deals most largely with nmau.411 dimrs, ana is eaitea witn perfect independence, in its own office, i The Review of Review* fe a monthly, timely In illustration and text, : and instantly alive to the newest movements of the day, to a degree never 1 before dreamed of.. Thousands of readers who offer then' commendations. ' among them the greatest names m the world, say that the Review of j Reviews gives them exactly what they should know about politics, litera- j ture, economics and social progress. The most influential men and women J of all creeds and all parties have agreed that no. family can afford to lose its j educational value, while for profes- ! sional and business men, it t$ sunply1 E indispensable- The departments arci § conducted by careful specialists; mi 1 stead of mere scftsors-wieideia, and K scores of immediately interesting por. I .traits and pictures are in each number. 8 All this explains why the Review 8 of Reviews has come to a probably H unprecedented success in the fust three ! years of its existence. For 189S it will be more invaluable than ever. Agents are reaping handsome profits. W*' give liberal commissions. Send for terms. mm gntawleu—. Is.JO ( «•»»• •• Ceeta, ‘-Ytjnri. ^Review-Reviews ! 13 Astor Place, New York j — _ pyjs . 2 I THE BGGtILAK DEPARTMENTS \ tRMSci UM ipeciU artfdts and ctar- 1 'icter sketches of thrilling interest and { timeliness, the Review of Review* j has these regular departments: J ■Tb. l*iienii et Um Wori4—An mum tea editorial review of the month'* events which thinking, alert men and women •hoold understand in their proper signifi cance and proportion*. %mm*g Article* of the Meeth.-Thi* de partment. and the auecceoing one. Tt»o Forkxltea!• Reviewed, embody the idea on which the mapezine tv.s founded and named. A’.l that U ben in the other magailnes, American and foreign, is here brightly bummamed, rtricvtt and quoted from. Current History In Cericatnre chronicles the month's history t.trough the pictur esque means oJ the mcccisfui cartoons •that are appearing throughout the world. Other departments review carefully new books, give lists and indexes of all article* in the world soaga tinea, and i urn rah a terse daiiy record of current events. j j \ \ \ \ } i