STATE. Silas Holoomb . .14. K. Moore , ..''...j. A. Piper IS .....J. S. Bartley . ..Euzcne Moore .■ ‘‘a. d. Churchill „l .Corbett |T, ..rATF. UNIVE14SITY. I 1 :,U’oin; Leavitt Burnham, ; u E. P. Iloin.es. ■ihiilah'u. Kearney; M. J. Hull, , XCIIKASIONAL. H_ ],• Manderson, of Omaha; * ,'.l Madison. v.'s—l'irst nistrlot, J. B Strode 1 Mercer; Third Goo. D. MUel j|, - Uainer; Fifth, ”• auu . 11. M. Kent. JUDICIARY. Samuel Maxwell ■ "judge Post and T. L.Norval JFNTH JUDICIAL mSTKI^ ■ . J.J. King of O’Neill .i t. Bartow of Chadrun a! l. wSick. of O’Neill [ LAND OFFICES. O’NKIUL. . John A. Harmon. •• ' Blmer Williams. COUNTY. .Geo McCutcheon ’ District Court.•• ••Jo^klrvlng .J. P. Mullen .Sam Howard .*******.Bill Bethea . Mike McCarthy . .Chas Hamilton . .Chas O’Neill ; *:»• *.7777.. • • W. K. Jackson 0019. .Mrs. W. K. Jackson ..Dr. Trueblood ...7..M. F. Norton . ‘7.......H. B. Murphy SUPERVISORS. .Frank Moore ...Wilson Brodle . .W. F. Elsele .George Eckley . .L. B. Mabeu ..A. S. Eby . .A. C. Purnell .;;;;.d. g. kuii . . .. .John Dickau .V.H. B. Kelly . .14. J. Hayes ....K. Slaymaker .B. H.Murray .S. L. Conger .John Hodge .Wm. Lull ' ".E. J. Mack .......'. George Kennedy .John Alts .James Gregg .F. W. Phillips ■ . .A. Oborle ..Hugh O’Neill 77.D. C. Blondin .John Wert* .H. O. Wine ■/„.T, E. Doolittle .J. B. Donohoe .G. H. Phelps ' " .J. E. White .A. O. Mohr ley. C11T OF Of NEILL. K>r. E. J. Mack; Justices, B. H. indS.M. Wagors; Constables, Ed. md Perkins Brooks. JOUNCILMEN—FIRST WARD. i years.—D. H. Cronin. For one 2. McEvony. SECOND WARD. years—Alexander Marlow. For -Jake Pfund. THIRD WARD. years—Charles Davis. For one ler Merriman.n CITY OFFICERS. 0. F. Biglin; Clerk, N. Martin; , John McHugh; City Engineer risky; Police Judge, H. Kautzman; Police, Charlie Hall; Attorney, Ion; Weigh mas ter, Joe Miller. RATTAN TOWNSHIP. Bor, R. J. Hayes; Trearurer. Barney r; Clerk, J. Sullivan; Assessor, Ben Justices, M. Gastello and Chas. loustables, John llorrisky and Ed. Road overseer dist. 26, Allen Brown i, John Enright. 7i.V RELIEF COMNISSION. meeting first Monday In Febru h year, and at such other times as uecessary. ltobt. Gallagher, Page, Win. llowen, O’Neill, secretary; k Atkinson. 'HICK’S CATHODIC CHURCH, cs every Sabbath at 10:30 o’clock. • Cassidy, Postor. Sabbath school •ly lollowing services. ■UUIST CHURCH. Sunday rices-Preacliing 1U:30 a. m. and 7:. 30.1, Df each6™ evS*7 8e°ond and fourth ach month in Odd Fellows’ Hall ftcrlbe. Ohas. Hhioiit. [KhGKKAHiS»V’ OAUGHTKB \ ^ ATntCTo^’ SS£.; SeSr80"' N- «• l— vc- L. H. Benedict, W. M. •*S on'i.hVurst°and"t n’ OF A Tue8d^ 1 A— ’ • V’ ]1- H. Cronin, Clerl P fourth TuiLdav ^,9’ M?et9 Beoon f«ic hau. UHy of each month 1 t'lIT, Hec. T V »- x‘ v • Golden, m. w. tejSSB !Sec.*”’ S1cCl-tChan, I POSTOf'VlCEDlRCETOR, Arrival of Mall. j“f,s;iiyR-H-rao^iHE : ^[■-leaves line. leaves Arrive r ^.Sunday.*M’ Arrive P Monday)wJiND c,hE'-8*a. f Friday P Monday11^!; *rtND Haddock ( ^daj-Th^MFrtday tTlondayL\v^D Niobhara I 'W*d.aMFrid«*t THE DANCING MASTER GAINST the lllao walls ot the room the white dresses ot the Kiris made blots ot lisht. The old dancing master walked slowly up and down the room surveying the girls. He held his kit and bow-ten derly under his left arm, pressed Judiciously to his side. With his right hand he alternately stroked and tweaked at his chin, which was always a sign that the teacher was perplexed. Each time that he came to one of the two long windows that lit the room he paused and looked out through the naked branches of the plane tree at the river, as If he hoped to get some encour agement from Its ceaseless flow. And each time he turned away from the river view with the same look of disappoint ment upon his smooth, neat, elderly face. The great clock at the other end of the room—the clock that had counted off so many lessons—seemed all of a' sudden to tick with unwonted loudness, as If it, like the girls, were impatient for the master to stop his promenade and say or do something. Perhaps the appeal of the clock had Its effect. Perhaps In the stillness the master could catch faintly the sound of all those girlish hearts fluttering tim idly together. He stopped for an In stant and looked at the long line of ex pectant faces. "Young ladles, you can go.” Then as the girls, relieved from their suspense, moved eagerly forward to the adjoining room, where their be longings lay, the professor reached out his thin, line white hand and touched one of the girls upon the shoulder. ^ome back," he said, "I want to Speak with you.” The girl looked up In his face with a little start. Then she went Into the anteroom with the rest. When she returned In her everyday dress, with her hat and tippet on and her dancing shoes neatly put away In the reticule that hung on her mittened arm, the master was standing at the Window again, drumming nervously on the pane. He had put his kit and bow down on the gilded table between the two windows, the gilded table that al ways seemed to the girl the emblem of ineffable luxury and repose. The master heard her come In, but for a moment he did not turn, and the girl stood watching him, her pale, plalnlsh face paler than ever with ex pectation, and her dark eyes shining In the twilight. The master turned and walked abruptly up to her. “You will never make a dancer,” he said. , The girl looked back at him with an expression on her face as If he had struck her. He saw the expression and spoke quickly and sharply to hide his pity. “It Is no use for you to come here any more,” he said. “You will never make a dancer.” “But I must,” the girl answered, with tears In her eyes, while her right hand pulled nervously at the fingers of her left. “Never, never, never!” he insisted. “It’s no use deceiving yourself and I— look you, I cannot deceive myself. Please do not come here any more.” "Oh, but, sir!” the girl lifted her clasped hands toward him. He shook his head angrily. “I know what I know, and I say what I know. I cannot have you here any more. Could you ever do the ‘Pas de Zephlr?’ Never. Can you do the ‘Fou ette’ or the ‘Ballone?’ Bah! You will never know the difference between a ‘coup’ and a ‘Jette.’ Go away, please. We have finished. You will never make a dancer.” There was a firmness In his voice which showed that his decision was final. The girl made no further attempt YOU DON’T REMEMBER ME. to contest the decree. It was like the Judgment of the gods; absolute, irre vocable. She turned silently, and went out of the room very quietly. But when the door closed behind her the strained sensibilities of the master could hear the stealthy sobbing, which she tried to stifle as she slipped downstairs and into the gaunt hall. He heard her close the door, and for one moment he was tempted to go to the window and call her back. But he shook his head. “Bet ter sooner than later,” he said to him self. “She could never make a dancer." Then he sat down to the harpsichord and played over a gavotte of Lully's until he had played the plain, awkward girl out of his memory. It was summer, and very warm. The master sat at his window in the same long lilac-room. It was very pleasant to sit there and watch the river and the wherries and barges, and to reflect in its prosperous, peaceful evening up on the events of a painstaking, success ful life. The master did not smoke—it was a custom he abominated—but there was a flask of white wine near to his hand, and a glass half-full of the yel low Juice, from which ever and anon he took a self-satisfied sip. He seldom gave lessons now, for his daughter had married, and his son-in-law carried on the teaching admirably, knowing Ram eau almost as well as the old teacher, whom he adored. But the master liked to sit in the dancing-room of an after noon after dinner, and dream over old experiences. Just now, however, he was thinking. not of the past, but of the present; for he had laid down a news sheet In which there was talk of a dancer at the opera who was setting the town wild, a dancer who had conquered European capital after European capital, and was now making London playgoers mad with de llsht. He was old and liked his ease, but a vague fancy came Into his mind that he would go to the opera and see this pearl. It would be a treat for his son and daughter. A carriage came slowly down the river road, where carriages did not often come. The master looked at It with languid surprise, and lifted*his glass to his lips. But It stopped at his own door, and he set the glass down again In surprise. A gilded footman got down and opened the carriage door and a very beautiful lady got out. The footman pushed back the Iron gateway of the little front garden and the splendid lady came In, waved her hand and laughed, and then she ran up the steps and out of his sight, and he could hear the muffled thunder of a knocking at the door. He had scarcely risen to his feet, slowly trying to recall the face that had Just laughed at him, when the door ot the dancing-room opened and a splendid lady came In, bringing a blase of color Into the quiet room. The master bowed but the lady ran rapidly across the room, and before he was well aware of It she had kissed him on both cheeks. “You do not know me,” she said. "I am—” and then she gave him the name of the dancer who had become the talk of the town. The master took a pinch of snuff and bowed again, while he murmured some thing about the honor In a tone that Im plied a question. “You don't remember me?” she said again. "Ah, I remember you,” and she mentioned this time another name—the name of a little girl whom he had sent away from his class because she was so Incapable. The man sought in his memory over a spaoe of nearly ten years; then he re membered, bowed again, and again took snuff. The splendid lady would take no de nial; he must needs come that very evening and see his old pupil dance at the opera. She had got the noblest box in the house for him. That evening the old dancing-mastet sat In the opera house in the noblest box in the theater. He sat between his son in-law and his daughter, with his eyes fixed upon the stage. The great theatei was packed, and when at length the time came for the ballet and the ourtain drawing up revealed the adored dancer, the house raved at her. Only the mas ter, in his sober black and white, sat with his hands folded on the front of the box and waited. The dance began. It was marvelous. The dancer's body was plastic, supple, exquisite. She danced a strange dance, in which she dtd wonders with a long silken scarf, moving hither and thither like some figure from a Grecian vase, from a Pompeiian wall. When it ended, and the house raged for more, she did a Spanish dance, in which, to the click* Ing of her castanets, she expressed, hurriedly, triumphantly, all the passion of the south. When it was over the house rained flowers upon the stage, and a thousand hands thundered an ap plause that brought the woman again and again before the curtain. When it was over a servant of the theater came to the box to beg that the master would come to the dancer’t dressing-room. He bade his children go home and followed the messenger be hind the scenes to the dancer's room. A crowd of men were waiting outside it. He alone was admitted. She was chang ing her dress behind the screen, but soon came out again, clasped him by the hand, kissed him on both cheeks and thanked him for coming. Then she talked volubly of all tfie*places she'had seen, and showed him trophies of her triumphs, wreaths of gold, wreaths o( silver and rare jewels, and finally she asked him if he would come out to sup per with her and some friends, and she mentioned some great names. The old man declined with his polite bow, and would have withdrawn, but she insisted upon his staying and seeing her to he< coach. So presently the impatient young men and the Impatient old men waiting outside had the surprise of seeing thelf idol come out in all her splendor leaning on the arm of a little gentleman in bjack, who showed traces of snuff on the ruffle of his shirt. Through the crowd there the mastet escorted the dancer to the stage door, and through the crowd outside the stag< door he conducted her to her coach. As he still declined to accompany her she leaned out of the window, waving aside as she did so, the throng of her admirers and the handsome gentleman who was waiting to take his place at her side. "Well,” she said with a bright laugh, “you see you were wrong after all. Say that you are sorry and I will forgive you.” But the master shook his head. "I do not think I was wrong,” he said, very gravely. "You will never make a dancer.” Then raising his hat politely he turned and moved slowly down the street.— Lloyd’s Weekly Sun. Klnd-Heartedne*s to Children. Blessed be the hand that prepares a pleasure for a child, for there is no say ing when and where It may again bloom forth. Does not almost every body remember some kind-hearted man who showed him a kindness in the happy days of childhood? The writei of this recollects, when a barefooted lad. he stood at the wooden fence of a lit tle garden in his native village, while with longing eyes he gazed on the flow ers which were blooming there in the brightness of a Sunday morning. Theil owner came forth from his little cot tage. He was a wood-cutter, and spent the whole week at work In the woods He had come into the garden to gath er flowers to place in the button-hole ot his coat when he went to church. He saw the boy and breaking off the most beautiful of his carna tions, he gave it to him. Netthej the giver nor the receiver spoke a word, and with a bounding steps, the boy ran home. And now here, at a vast distance from that home, after so many years, the feeling of gratitude which agitated the breast of that boy ex presses itself on paper. The carnation has long since withered, but now II blooms afresh. You may depend upon it that he is a good man whose Intimate friends are gc-od, and whose enemies are characters decidedly bad. EXTINCTION OP THE BISON. Only Two Hundred Wild Buffalo BtlU Alive In America. In a wild state, the American bison, or buffalo. Is practically, thought not ■ Quite wholly, extinct. At the present) moment there are about two hundred wild buffaloes alive and on foot In tho United States. To obtain these high figures we Include the one hundred and fifty Individuals that white head-hun ters and red meat-hunters have thus far left alive In the Yellowstone pnrk, posed to be protected from slaughter. | Besides these, there are only two other bunches: one of about twenty head In Lost park, Colorado, protected by state laws; and another, containing between thirty and forty head. In Val Verda county, Texas, between Devil's river and the Rio Orande. Four years ago there were over three hundred head In the Yellowstone park, thriving and Increasing quite satisfactorily. Through them we fondly hoped the species would even yet be saved from absolute ex tinction. But, alas! we were reckoning without the poachers. Congress pro vides pay for Just one Solitary scout to guard In winter 8,675 square miles of rugged mountain country against the horde of lawless white men and In dians who surround the park on all sl'des, eager to kill the last, buffalo! The poachers have been hard at work, and as a result our park herd has re centely decreased more than one half In number. It Is a burning shame that formerly, through lack of congressional law adequately to punish Buch poachers as the wretch who was actually caught red-handed In January, 1894, while skinning seven dead buffa loes! and now, through lack of a paltry fl,800 a year to pay four more scouts, the park buffaloes are all doomed to certain and speedy destruction. Be sides the places mentioned, there Is only one other spot In fell North America that contains wild buffaloes. Immediately southweBtward of Oreat Slave lake there lies a vast wilderness of swamps and stunted pines. Into which no white man has ever penetrated tar, ana where the red man still reigns supreme. It 1b bounded on the north by the Liard and Mackensie rivers, on the east by the Slave river, on the south by the Peace river, and on the west by the Rocky mountains. Mr. Warburton Pike says It Is now the greatest beaver country In the world, and that It also contains a few bands of the so-called wood buffalo. "Sometimes they are heard of at Forts Smith and Vermillion, some times at Fort St. John, on the Peace river, and occasionally at Fort Nelson, on the Liard; . . . but It is Impossi ble to say anything about their num bers.” At all events, In February, 1890, Mr. Pike found eight buffaloes only four days’ travel from Fort Resolution, on Great Slave lake, and succeeded In kill ing one. The Canadian authorities es timate the tota.1 number In that region at three hundred. DANQER FROM LIGHTN1NO. Is It Increased or Diminished by the Presence of Many Telegraph Wires T There Is a somewhat widespread Im pression that the use of so much wire for telephone and other electrical pur poses in cities and towns largely In creases the danger of lightning strokes. The notion Is based upon the concentra tion within certain limits of a great quantity of conducting material, which, It Is assumed, attracts the electricity and thereby increases the danger of It. While It is true that the Increase of conducting material Increases the at traction, It Is not true that It Increases the danger. As a ifatter of fact. It decreases the danger, for the more sur face electricity has over which to spread, the more readily and quickly it is carried to the earth. A house with a metal roof Is not often struck by lightning, for, while the metal may at tract the electricity, it also gives It room to spread out, and Its force Is thus dissipated. This fact was demonstrat ed by Franklin with his kite long ago, and lightning rods are put on buildings to give storm clouds a means of dis charging their electricity Into the earth. This discharge takes place without the report that we call thunder, for elec tricity makes no noise unless It meets some resisting medium. It Is a well known fact that there Is less danger from lightning In cities than in the country, and this Is due to the general use of iron, steel and other metals In city buildings. The buildings are tall and would seem, therefore, to be spe cially attractive to the lightning; In deed, they are often struck, but the metal In them dissipates the force of the fluid and. carries It harmlessly and quietly to the earth. The effect of tele phone wires upon atmospheric electric ity has been under official Investiga tion by the German department of telegraphs, and statistics from 900 cit ies show that the danger from lightning strokes is four times as great in towns that do not have the telephone as in those that have It. The conclusion of the whole matter, therefore, Is that an abundance of wires gives protection from lightning. Instead of Increasing the danger. A Novelty In Bicycles, A novelty In bicycles went up Broad way last week, says the New York Sun. A young colored man rode it and showed off Its fine points in a way that attracted a great deal of attention. In stead of being stationary the handle bar could be moved backward and for ward. Every time the rider pulled the bar back the bicycle shot forward In a way that showed that it had some sort of a rowing machine attachment which worked in conjunction with the pedals. There were the ordinary pedals on the bicycle, and the rider used these the greater part of the time, but every now and then when the rider got In a tick lish position among the trucks, cable cars and other vehicles he would give the handle bar a yank backward and the wheel would dart ahead. Uses of the Lichen. The lichen’s most important function seems to be to beautify the landscape, though some tiny ones are utilized by mother humming bird to cover the out side of her nest. In order to conceal it as much as possible. In Iceland the lichen called Iceland moss Is gathered every year by the boys and girls. It Is boiled In milk and eaten. Fanny Ber gen, In her little book on "Plant Lire,” tells us that the Indians guided them selves through the trackless forests by observing on which side of the trees the lichens grew thickest, those being the northern sides. DANCINQ HORSES OP SYBARIS. 4 Ruse bjr Which the Crotonlates Con quered Their Enemies In the st. Nicholas. James Baldwin tells of the decline of the. Greek colony of Sybaris, after the Inhabitants had given themselves up wholly to pleas ure. Of the battle In which they were Anally oonquered, Mr. Baldwin writes: When a spy reported to the Crotontaton that he had seen all the horses In Sybaris dancing to the music of a plpo, the Croton general saw his opportunity at once. He sent into the Sybnrlte ter ritories a large company ol' shopherdH and lifers armed with nothing but flutes and shepherds' pipes, while n little way behind them marched" the rank and file of the Crotonlato army. When the Sybarites heard that the enemy's forces were coming, they mar shaled their cavalry—the finest In the world at that time—and sallied forth to meet them. They thought It would be line sport to send the Crotonlates scampering back across the Helds Into their own country; and half of Sybaris went out to Bee the fun. What an odd sight It must have been—a thousand fancifully dressed horsemen, splendidly mounted, riding out to meet an army of unarmed shepherds and a handful of ragged foot-soldiers! The Sybarite ladles wave their handkerchlofs and oheer their champions to the charge. The horsemen sit proudly In their sad dles, ready at a word to make the grand dash—when, hark! A thousand pipes begin to play—not “Yankee Doodle” nor “Rule Britannia”—but the national air of Croton, whatever that may have been. The order Is given to charge; the Sybarites shout and drive their spurs Into their borseB' flanks—what fine sport It Is going to be! But the war steeds hear nothing, care for nothing, but the music. They lift their slender hoofs In unison with the Inspiring strains. And now the armed Croton lates appear on the Held; but the pipers still pipe, and the horses still dance— they caper, curvet, caracole, pirouette, ■ waits, trip the light fantastic hoof, for getful of everything but the delight ful harmony. The Sybarite riders have been so sure of the victory that they have taken more trouble to ornament than to arm themselves. Some of them are pulled from their dancing horses by the Crotonlate footmen—others slip to the ground and run as faBt as their nerveless legs will carry them back to the shelter of the city walls. The shep herds and lifers retreat slowly toward Croton, still piping merrily, and the sprightly horses follow them keeping step with the music. The dancing horses cross the boundary lino between the two countries, they waltz across the Crotonlate nelds, they caracole gay ly through the Croton gates, and when the lifers cease their playing the streets of Crotona are full of fine war-horsesl Thus It was that the Sybarites lost the line cavalry of which they had been so proud. The complete overthrow of their power and the conquest of their city by the Crotonlates followed soon after ward—for how, between so Idle and so Industrious a community, could It have been otherwise? INTELLIGENT SWALLOWS. Observations of an Ornithologist on the Actions of the Bird. Dr. F. H. Knowlton of the Smithson ian institution has published an ac count of observations made on the hab its of the common cave or cliff swallow, which show that this bird possesses a remarkable degree of Intelligence. Eave swallows, as Is well known, usually se lect the eaves of a building for their nesting site, and sometimes as many as a hundred nests may be observed under one projection. Dr. Knowlton's observations are as follows: Within my collecting grounds is a shed open only on one side, where for many years cliff swallows have attached their nests to the sleepers of the loft. In the spring of 1878 they returned, as usual, and soon began repairing old nests or build ing new ones. One day it was noticed that one bird remained In her half-fin isnea nesi, ana aia noi appear to oe much engaged. Sochi a neighbor, own ing a neat a few feet away, arrived with a fresh pellet of clay, and after adjust ing It in a satisfactory manner flew away for more. No sooner was she out of sight than the quiet bird repaired to the neighbor's nest, appropriated the fresh clay and molded It to her own nest! When the plundered bird returned no notice was taken of the theft, which was repeated as soon as she was again out of sight. These movements were repeated many times, with the result that the nest of the stay-at-home bird grew apace! In the same place a nest remained undisturbed, and was occu pied by probably the same pair of birds for several seasons. One spring they re turned and all appeared prosperous, un til one day it was noticed that a num ber of swallows were engaged in wall ing up the entrance to this old nest. This work, as well as the outline of a new nest over the old, was soon com pleted. The closed nest was then brok en open and within was found the dead body of a swallow. The bird had prob ably died a natural death, and the Friends, being unable to remove the body and knowing that It would soon become offensive, adopted this method of seal ing it up. Many Uses for Mushrooms. Not only human beings, but cows, sheep, squirrels, and many kinds of birds are fond of mushrooms. In many places mushrooms are dried Just as our grandmothers once dried apples, strung on strings, and hung from the celling for winter use. Some European species are used In coloring. One yields a yel low dye, another an exquisite green which colors the tree on which it grows; and from this wood is manufactured the celebrated Tunbridge ware. The poor people of Fanconla, Germany, dry, press, and stitch together a certain kind of mushroom, which is then made Into garments; and in Bohemia a large round toadstool is dried and the inside re moved; it is turned bottom upward, fastened to the wall, and used to hold a beautiful trailing vine, which grows luxuriantly. Dr. Price’s Cream Baking Powder Awarded Gold Medal Midwinter Fair, San Francisco. MANHOOD RESTORED! fuarunWed to cure 8.1 nervous disease*, such ns Weak Memory, jLoss of Brain 'ower, Headache, Wakefulness, Host Manhood, Nightly Emissions, Nerveuo nes.n.ull drains and loss of power in Generative Organs of eltber cez caused bv over exertion, youthful errors, excessive use of tobacco, opium er stim ulants, which loadto Infirmity, Consumption or insanity. Can be carried in .vest pocket. 91 per box, IS for 95, by mall prepaid, with a order we kive a written gnarantee to cure or refund the money. Sold by all ^druggist*. Ask for it, take no other. Write for free Medical Hook sent sealed MHMLJt ASU aft em ituxu. lu plain wrapper. Aaaresj AKKVtstKD CO.. Muaouio Temple, COICAQO. For tele In O’Neill, Neb., by MOUU1H jt CO., Orugtfista. Heart Disease 30 Yrs! Short Breath, Palpitation. Mr. G. W. McKInsoy, postmaster of Kokomo, Ind., and a bravo ex-soldier, says: “I had boon severely troubled with heart disease ever slnco leaving the army at the close of the late war. I was troubled with palpitation and shortness of breath. I could not sleep on my left side, and had pain around my heart. I became so 111 that I was much alarmed, and for tunately my attention was called to Dr. Miles’ Heart Cure I decided to try it The first bottle mado a decided improvement in my condition, and five Dottles havo com pletely cured me.” 0. W. McKINSEY, P. M., Kokomo, Ind Itlve * iefit. B, or Via* Ind. Dr. Milos Heart On ro is Hold on a pas jtbatthq first bottle will iwi For Sale by all Druggist*. READ. THE TRIBUNE For Telegraph, Local, General, State and Foreign News. Market Complete -THE SIOUX CITY DAILY TRIBUNE $6 Per Year. . SO Cents Per Month. QUICKEST AND BEST MAIL SERVICE Address: ; K ;'Ws THE TRIBUNE. Sub. Dept. Hloux City, Iowa. DG H Of 0 X « H S3 0 Ifl Purchas. Tlokata and Conaign ‘ your Freight via tha F.E.&M.V.andS.C.&P RAILROADS. TRAINS DEPART! GOING BAST. Passenger eaat, ■ 9:20 a. x Freight east, • 10:30 a. x Freight eaat, - - 2:10 p. x. GOING WIST. 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