1CIAL DIRECTORY STATIC. .Silas Holcomb . U. E. Moore .. J. A. Piper pt :i.tf—. J. S. Bartley .Eugene Moore .A S. Churchill Ih-ral.• ^'• ‘.'..O. II. Bussell if U (Inrhfltt „l Buildings...;- jj 'jj, Corbett ’'■"^atkunivebsity Lincoln; Leavitt Burnham, il Hiatt, Alma; E- Pi i 00,11’ ; M,iilaieu, Kearney; M. J. Hull, ■ osoressional. ,|111Si Mnnderson, of Omahai ,if SlH«II?iC>II. , ;1.,.s-Fi>st District, J, BStrode , i M. Kem. ' JUDICIARY. .Samuel Maxwell '.judge Post and T. L. Norval \th judicial pi strict. M. 1*. Kinkald, of O Neill . J. .1. King of O'Neill ... t of (Ihiiflrnn .A'ii. Bartow ol' Chadron .' A. L. Warrick, of O'Neill \ LAND OFFICES. O’NEILL. ..John A. Harmon. ...Elmer Williams. COUNTY. .„. .Geo McCutcheon Liiistrlct Court. ..O. M. Collins ...I. P. Mullen .Sam Howard ...Bill Bethea .Mike McCarthy .Cbas Hamilton _Chas O’Neill . w. K. Jackson ’ Mrs. W. B. Jackson .Dr. Trucblood . ..M. F. Norton ,H. E. Murphy SUPERVISORS. ..Frank Moore .Wilson Brodle _W. F. Eisele .George Eckley .L. B. Maben 'V.A. S. Eby .A. C. Purnell _D. G. Boll .John Dlckau H. B. Kelly ..K. J. Hayes .K. Slaymaker .It, H. Murray . S. L. Conger .John Hodge ,..\Vm. Lell .E. J. Mack .George Kennedy ll,,.v .John Alts • . ...James Gregg .F. W. Phillips .A. Oberle .Hugh O’Neill L.,. .D. 0. Blondin * . John Wertz .U. 0. Wine .T, E. Doolittle .J. B. Donohoe G. H. Phelps .J. E.White ..A. O.Mohr Cl1 r OF O’NEILL. Isor, E. J. Mack; Justices, E. H. laud S. M. Wagers; Constables, Ed. j and Perkins Brooks. COUNCILMRN—FIRST WARD, o years.—D. H. Cronin. For on© j McEvouy. SECOND WARD. ) years—Alexander Marlow. For -Jake l'fund. THIRD WARD. ) years—Charles Davis. For one i mer Merriman.) CITY OFFICERS. 0. F. Biglin; Clerk, N. Martin; John McHugh; City Engineer rrisky; Police Judge, H. Kautzman; j t Police, Charlie Hall; Attorney, ! rlon; Weighmaster, Joe Miller. : GRATTAN TOWNSHIP. Isor, U. J. Hayes; Trearurer, Barney ] v;Clerk, J. Sullivan; Assessor, Ben j Justices, M. Castello and Chas. i Constables, John Horrisky and Ed. ! ; Bond overseer dist. 28, Allen Brown 1 4, John Enright. KRS' RELIEF COMNISSION. ir meeting first Monday in Febru- j ich year, and at such other times as j J necessary, itobt. Gallagher, Page, 1 n; Wm. Bowen, O’Neill, secretary; \ ark Atkinson. THICK’S CATHOLIC CHUKCH. ices every Sabbath at 10:30 o’clock, v. Cassidy, Postor. Sabbath school tely following services. IODIST CHCltCII, Sunday rvices—Preaching 10:30 a. m. and 7:30 isi No. 1 U:30 A. m. Class No. 2 (Ep " (Child ?ague) 6:30 p. m. Class No. 3_ 11 ,l' M* Mind-week services—General '.meting Thursday 7:30 l*. m. All will welcome, especially strangers. E. E. HOSMAN, Pastor. B. POST, NO. 86. The Gen. John vi 111 ost, No. «6, Department of Ne-1 >• A. It., will meet the first and third ! » evening of each month in Masonic 011] S. J. Smith, Com. VALLEY LODGE, I. O. O. ^7er^r. Wednesday evening in ‘ »isiting brothers cordially o uttend. *’ O. L. Bright, Sec. PIKLD CHAPTER, R. A. M mkNl«SonitcU°lULhir<1T1,Ur8 “aught Adams, St^aIry.VIUSON’N h H. Benedict, W GBpasiw* k-_ ’V'U »• H. CRONIN, C j*M fuurth'Tud^aav m?’ M?ets s< ‘“'Win: hilll. U8aay of each mou T- V. Golden, M ['’UltiuA,AVORK5 'J 1,1 1,3IeVcr>r workmen and Sc^o. McCutchah, ‘“ostoffice dircetory Ar«r»u>fivM« .. p in %, Sund'ivMi Jl® w*st. lu> ‘“eluded at Q.r„ Hcittr «. .»:58ana f'r-l*.-ave» a-as1?!" MSB. !• « 'M' Arrive* 9:07 pm (5'SH"d“y: rrlves 2d*>-!wt.d*,DnCHH?'-??A. «_ _ 0 S'Br. . . tl^* ®t.. 1:00 pi lrt« o’np ua Wat. a Monday ,;,va,ND FAni„)CK TutM»y,Thurs^nIX'1»y‘at. „ iVs.,,. .... “na’’“l.r •pees ''>«M,and cumxh 1 l'at" *:00 p "iri* *oo'.'Vi un" Suy''n:LE B 0 Hfl THE RURAL HEROES. BAN PEGOLAN, owner of a farm in the village of Eyvettes, is in high good humor this evening. About him the dry leaves are dancing in the melancholy autumn wind, and the sun is darting long, reddish rays through the bare boughs above; the sky is blue as blue can be; and from the woods rises a pungent, aromatic odor. Jean Pegolan, sentient, through his tough hide, of some small part of all this poetry, this serenity of nature, whips up the gray With a will and turns her head homeward. It is quite true, to be sure, that the Prussians are marching on Paris, that here they have sacked a village, there burned a farm to the ground, and further on, shot some poor, unoftensive creature dead. But, I ask you, what dif ference can that possibly make to Jean Pegolan? Neither his house, nor his cat tle, nor his crops, have suffered in the least from invasion. He saw some of the enemy at the neighboring town, where he had Just been to sell some of the produce of his farm, and, dear me, he has not found that they are such monsters. One must admit that they are men like any others. When he has passed the Green-Cross and sees the village before him, with its church steeple of gray slate and the gilt weather vane shining in the sunset, our honest farmer has a vision of the steaming dish of soup which awaits him on the table at home, that brings the water to his mouth. "Hi! Git up!” But instead of "getting up” the gray comes to a sudden standstill. A Prussian estafette, in passing has seized her bridle and sharply turns her out of the way. Then, as Pegolan is too slow in making room, he raises his whip and slashes it across the farmer’s face, from ear to ear. Certainly Jean Pegolan has always expressed the greatest respect for the conqueror, but this time, rage gets the better of him. He rises to his feet, seizes one of the benches of the cart and the Prussian rolls oft his horse the next moment, with a broken skull. The shadows are growing deeper across the road, the woods are very still, the moon is creeping up the horizon, half hidden behind a transpar ent veil of clouds. r-egoian, wno is now iremDiing in ev ery limb, looks furtively around him. No one has seen the deed. His Prus sian lies there in the ditch, kicking con vulsively, faoe downward. As for him, he will assuredly tell no tales! “Come, git up! Hi” And the gray, who scents her stable from afar, starts off at a gallop. They have all been pushed and locked Into the church like a flock of sheep. There they are, sitting in groups in the nave, some very pale, others very red, all silent, their throats contracted by fright. A crude white light falls from the windows of unstained glass and throws large pale squares on the blue peasants’ frocks or illumines piti lessly some faceVon which abject fear may be read in the drawn mouth and pinched nostrils. Faint heavy odors of autumnal foliage come from the neighboring cemetery and one hears the chirping of the spar rows disputing among themselves amidst the gravestones. The night before, a Prussian patrol had found, near the Green-Cross, the body of a murdered hussard. It is nec essary to make an example. And so, since dawn, a battalion of chasseurs have invaded the village, and, by order of the commanding officer, have im prisoned within the church walls every able-bodied man in the community. The morning—until the stroke of noon— has been given them to point out the guilty one, or to make a personal con fession; that hour passed, one of the men will be picked out at random, and the village turned down. And it is now 11:30 o’clock. Oh! If they only knew the murderer— the assassin—the bandit—who has brought all this upon them, while they Were vegetating along tranquilly in the midst of the ruins of their country; how gladly and quickly would they, good people denounce him! If necessary they would wreak vengeance upon him with their own hands. But they do not know him; and meantime, the minutes hurry on, and none dare take the initiative, none assume the responsibility of sing ling out the criminal. He who could solve their perplexities, who might cry: “I am the murderer, the assassin, the bandit!”—he, Jean Pego lan, is very careful not to breathe a word. He sits in the shadow of the confes sional, with his sealskin cap drawn over his eyes and his heart beating wildly within him, and thinks of his wife, who is so dainty and so kissable; of his cows, who are ruminating at their stalls; of his hay, all well stowed away in his lofts, and he tells himself that to die would be to leave that to all eternity, that one only dies once, that he would be very much of a fool to give himself up to justice, and that after all, he never killed the Prussian intentionally. The reasonings suffice to quiet his con science. If the choice happens to fall on an Innocent man—well, my faith, it cannot be helped. Every one is surely bound to look after himself in this base world. Hark! the clock, a quarter to twelve. Only a quarter of an hour left. The last stroke dies away in slow vibrations and silence hangs again un der the high vaulted ceiling, like some invisible presence. The heavy rhythmic tread of troops approaching, then stop ping, sounds from without. A hoarse cry of command comes next, multitudi nous guns strike the ground with a dull A decision must be reached—and at once. Some one speaks a name—in a whis per only—yet every oneheard it. Then hastily, hurriedly, with the fev erish eagerness of people who dread death, everyone repeats it. Jean Pe golan, the Eyvettes farmer, draws a long breath. The name is not his. It is that of a poor devil, half-wood cutter, half poacher, a Red Republican, who voted a “nay” at the last elec tions. He has a sick wife and three little children, the eldest of whom can but ! barely walk, and these will be left with- i out bread by his death. But that can not be helped. Perhaps the fellow did not do the deed. But then he was quite capable of doing It. Besides, he Is only a poor wretch, while they are all com fortable farmers. In easy circumstances. Justice above all things. In vain does the poor wretch protest his Innocence. The evening before he was ailing—a wrench he got In felling a tree. He had been on his bed, without stirring, all day. They could make In quiries. They would see that he had not been out of his house. All In vain does he throw himself at their feet, his voice choked with anguish and fear. All in vain does he invoke their pity. What is to become of his children If he Is to die? His wife will never equal the task of providing for them. No one answers. Pegolan, In his cor ner, sits In cold perspiration, fearing some change In opinion, some sudden relenting. But the others are only too happy to have come to some conclusion. They ask but one thing now, to be speedily rid of this man who moans before them, tearing his hair, and re proaching them for their ferocious egotism, their monstrous cruelty. The door Is thrown wide open, and beyond it rises a forest of bayonets fill ing the small square, and nearer to the threshold the group of men charged with the execution have gathered, and the fatal instrument of death shines again In the warm white light of the moon. And 12 o’clock strikes. There Is a cry broken by a detona tion, and the smoke clearing away the body of the woodcutter and poacher is seen lying on the steps of the church, and stiffening there, while one by one those men pass out beside It, the blood staining the souls of their feet. And the Prussian officers, with looks of speechless contempt, turn away revolt ed. Jean Pegolan has gained his own abode once more. Heavens! But It is pleasant to be safe at home again after such an adventure! The chickens are clucking, and scratch ing about In the barnyard, the pigeons are cooing on the roof, the ducks are waddling around a tiny pond that shines Boftly in the sun; from the stable, where the Prussians have not entered, comes the mellow lowing of the milch cows, and the gray’s strident neighing forms a response. Sheaves of wheat are piled up with a golden luxuri ance, in the coach house, and the hay In stacks, shows at all the windows of the loft. The farmer shakes himself; his clothes are still moist with perspiration. He enters the house and sees hlB wife In tears on her knees beside the bed. She starts up at the sound of his step and standB before him, white as a spectre. “What!” In a shrill voice. “You are not dead?" Pegolan, stunned by this singular re ception, stares mutely. “It was you who killed the Prussian at Green Cross! Don’t deny It! I saw the blood on your blouse this morn ing. ”Sh’—eh! It’s true—but—don't de nounce me, for pity’s sake!” “Ah!” cried the woman with mutter able disgust. “You needn’t be afraid now! You know It’s too late, and you have allowed another man to be shot In your place?" “It Isn’t my fault, Is It? I didn’t say anything. It was the Mayor who picked out the other one.” Pegolan lets himself drop Into a chair, with flaccid legs, and something like remorse seizing him Inwardly. For one moment his Infamy is borne in upon JU HE LAY DEAD. him by the lightning flash of conscience. Good Lord! One Isn't perfect. And as the carriage that is bearing away his wife to her father rolls out of sight he is still sitting there, all upset. But these Impressions wear away, lit* tie by little. Evening comes on, and the Prussians have left the village with fife and drums, abandoning to their fate the three children and wife of the wood cutter, who will die of hunger. And Jean Pegolan has recovered all his good spirits. What will you say? His farm is safe! GENERATOR GAS. The English An Ahead of Ua aa Its Utilizer!. Though the use of ordinary lighting gas Is customary in England in engines up to ten horse power, for larger sizes a small convenient apparatus has been devised for the production of a gas that cannot be used for illuminating pur poses, but which gives very economi cal results when burned in the engine cylinder. This Is known as generator gas, the best fuels from which to obtain It being anthracite coal and gas coke, as these yield no tar; the thermal ef ficiency is also described as low, it having about 160 heat units per cubic foot, as compared with 615 to 630 of London lighting gas, so that about four times the quantity is required to in sure the same amount of power, the great quantity obtained, however, to gether with the small amount of de preciation and labor necessary for pro duction, it is said, make it in many cases comparable in cost to gas at 20 cents per thousand. Fottnd a Petrified Cat. Mr. Philip Wetzell, 1724 Eastern ave nue, has a petrified cat which was found In an old building In East Baltimore a few days ago. The cat was found by Mr. Joseph Smith between the plas tering and the Joists of Brown’s cof fee warehouse on Thames street, near Bond street. The building has stood there over one hundred years, and is now being removed to make room for another building.—Baltimore Sun. NOTHINQ ESCAPES. The Brlarem-LIke Clntche* of Fmik Taxation, The New York World says: How to tax the people sufficiently to meet the governmental and military expenses, without burdening them beyond their power of endurance, Is a task which gives sleepless nights to the statesmen and lawmakers of every nation In Eu rope, and Is the cause of countless bitter discussions In the various parliament ary bodies of the old world. The French Senate and Chamber of Deputies have finally finished their tinkering with the budget, and the members have gone home to rest. The result of their labors Is set forth In a recently published re port addressed to the Minister of the In terior, In which there are some curious statistics. The tax on dogs brings In 8, 600.000 francs, and Is Imposed on 2,847,000 canines of all breed and conditions, from the two Chinese edible dogs owned by Walbeck-Rosseau the statesman—which are the only ones on the continent of Europe—down to the swarms of dogs without pedigrees which are among the highest prized possessions of the poor In Southern France as well as elsewhere In the world. The tax on clubs aggregate 1.440.000 francs, which are divided among about 5,000 such organizations, made up of 283,400 members. Billiards and check ers are enormously popular games In France, and the 94,000 places where the former diversion may be enjoyed put 1, 100.000 francs Into the governmental cof fers. Checker playing Is not taxed, though attempts have been made to ren der that game a source of revenue. The quarter of a million bicycles In France pay the State nearly 2,000,000 francs In taxes. Two hundred and ninety-nine out of the 2,000,000 wheels, however, are growing rusty In the rooms of "ma tante,” the Mont de Plete. Here, by the way, seems to be a new and untllled lit erary field. Several touching poems have been written regarding the sor rows of Arabs, elderly ladles and other people when forced to sell a beloved horBe, but no one has yet portrayed In verse the bitter pangs an ardent cycllBt feels when lack of cash forces him to deposit his wheel as collateral security for a loan. Finally, the tax on horses and vehicles is an annual resource of 16,000,000 francs. There are 1,156,000 horses, 363,180 carriages which go on four wheels, and 1,068,130 which roll upon two. DEVELOPING PRINTS. New and Interesting Method of Doing the Work Lately Discovered. A valuable paper has been read before the photographic section of the Ameri can Institute by H. J. Newton, explain ing a W»w and lifterestlng method of developing photographic prints on paper With coal tar products In alka line Botattons. He expresses the belief, from observation and the Investigations he has made. that prints resulting by development from bromide of sliver are absolutely permanent. The bromide paper Was first made In Europe, and the first prints were on Imported paper. An Important consideration, of course. Is the keeping quality of such paper be fore using as well as after; and as to this the statement Is made that sam ples have been kept some three years and a half without any sign of deteri oration being exhibited, the manufact urers also declaring that the material when five years old Is as good as when first made. Different alkalies do not perform or produce a uniform effect on paper manufactured at different estab lishments. Again, the carbonates pro duce a browner black than the caustic alkalies. But the beauty of a print will, after all, depend to a certain extent upon the bromide In the developer—par ticularly noticeable being the effect of an addition of bromide of soda to the developer. METALLIC YARN Carpets Now Being; Made by Aid of Such Material. The durability of carpets is now made greater, It is said, by the introduction of metallic yarns in the fabric, greater strength being thus assured than by the Blmple use of yarns made from animal or vegetable fibres, the idea being, brief ly, the foundation of a metal coating on an Inferior surface, and weaving the strands in certain proportions. A non oxldizable metal is employed, and this is dissolved and applied to the surfaces of threads, rendering them like metal in appearance and general characteristics; the metallic composition is said to con sist of aluminum, borax, alum, litharge and wax, these, combined with white lead and one or two other substances, producing a metallic coating that is flex ible and soft as common paint would be, yet to all appearances the covering Is similar to metal, very much resembling aluminum. Various substances are adapted for the core or body of the thread, such as wood, pulp, Jute, cotton, flax, etc., and the metallic coating is applied to the yarns automatically, the device for this purpose consisting of a chamber in which the ingredients are placed and through which the yarns are drawn, the coating adhering to the sur face of the threads. Naptha for Scouring. The employment of naphtha as a cleansing substance In the scouring of wool is a new method favorably com mented upon by the scientific papers. By the use of a pump the naphtha Is forced through and through the wool, extracting all the natural oil, it being also claimed that the naphtha does not injure the flbre of the wool, as does alkali cleansing, but leaves the fleece In an actually better condition than when cleansed by any other process. A further valuable feature mentioned of this method is that the greece that Is extracted from the wool in a pure state, thereby becoming valuable as a medic inal age«t or for a saponification Into the purest of soaps. A plant following this method is said to have scoured 500, 000 pounds of wool and had saved a product of SO,000 pounds In pure wool oil. Pump or Drown. The Dutch are not fond of lazy peo ple, and they have a very good way of curing persons who can but won’t work. If a pauper who Is able to work refuses to do so, they put him In a cistern to which a pump is attached, and turn on a stream of water. This stream flows In the cistern just low enough to enable the lazy person by lively pumping to keep the water from getting up over his 1 head. the old teaser. A Venerable Side-Wheeler Which Dm Seen Much Service. One more round trip of the Mlramlchl between Montreal and the Gulf ports and the stanch old boat's life work will have ended, says the Montreal Star. The quaint stde-wheeler of the fashion of a generation ago will give place to the modern twin-screw steamship Campana, which Is even now on her way down the canal. The early history of the Mlramlchl Is unique Inasmuch as she was designed for an entirely dif ferent trade from the peaceful one she has followed since the early 70's. She was built at London, England, in ISM by J. Penn and was christened the Teaser. For whom she was originally built Is not known. This wub kept a secret, no doubt, for the reason that her intended trade was of a seml-pl ratlcal nature. She was designed for a blockade runner between southern ports of the United States and Europe. In that year—1864—the war of the re bellion was at Its height and the navy of the United States had completely blocked all traffic between the rebel ports and Europe. The speed of the Teaser was about sixteen miles per hour, which was accounted very fast In those days, and It was thought that she could outsail the ships of the United States navy. She was captured, how ever, on her first trip, as she was try ing to get out of a blockaded southern port with a cargo of cotton. After the close of the war In 1866 she was sold by the United States government and for a time was employed In the Gulf of Mex ico between New Orleans and Galves ton. Coal being very expensive, this did not prove a paying Investment and she was laid up In New Orleans until 1872, when her present owners, the Quebec Steamship company, purchased her. Alterations, such as the deck houses, etc., have since been made. Her boilers were renewed six years ago, though the engines are the same as when she was built. She has made 800 round trips to the lower ports, which aggregate over 600,000 miles, and In all her service has never lost a life. 8HOBS OF THE SEASON. All Hindi and Sort! Dnl|iud for the Various Phases of Bumiher Life. The walking boot par excellence la a reflection of good sense, and one more additional evidence that the present generation are In many things wiser than their elders were. The favorite foot-covering Just now Is the Juliet or Diana shoe, with a graceful instep, elas tic sides, and Shapely yet solid heel. These come In finest French kid and In russet kids and leathers of various qual ities. Large invoices of shoes are dis played designed for the wear and tsar of rambles and climbing In country or mountain. These shoes are made of the softest and finest of French calf. They are far better for outing uses than shoes of any other sort, and when black ened shine like satin. They are comfort able yet attractive Improvements of the regular common-sense boot, with Its un necessarily heavy and ungainly heel and sole. For carriage wear are some very stylish and elegant models, Includ ing those made of black satin, patent leather with black moire tops, russet colored and gray undressed kid, and bronre kid with brown tips. The fancy for low shoes over black or dark silk hose will be as general as ever this sea son. The Juliet styles are their only ri vals. For house and full-dress wear th9 low-cut Dieppe sandal of black satin or black French kid tipped with Jet is very fashionable abroad. Colored kid slippers matching the evening toilet, contrary to reports concerning them, are not re garded as expressions of elegance, and have given place to the Dieppe sandal. With the exception of Jet, bead adorn lngs on slippers have entirely disap peared from the season’s fashionable ex hibit. Laced shoes of white canvas with white kid tops are still popularly worn with duck, pique and Holland costumes on land and sea. For country uses and for tennis are some natty little outing boots, laced with silk cords and finished with finely corrugated soles. Coloring Soap. According to the Scientific American* a very radical change has taken place lately In the coloring of soap—that Is, until a comparatively recent time min eral colors were exclusively employed, but the advance In the tar color In dustry has brought about the change. A very prominent advantage noted in respect to mineral colors Is their sta bility, not being altered or In any way effected by exposure to light, an ad vantage, however, which is offset In many cases by the remarkably beauti ful effect of numerous aniline colors, and by the mure difficult method of application In the case of the former; the specific gravity of mineral colors being rather high In most cases, they naturally tend to settle toward the bot tom, necessitating crutchtng of the soap until It is too thick to drop the color; but for mottled soap, cinnabar, or ver milion and ultramarine are still largely employed. Ornamental Class Products. Various experiments In glass manu facture are reported In French papers, among these being an attractive de scription of ornamental products, the process, as will be seen, being charac terised by extreme simplicity. The sur face, as described, is first ground either by the sand blast or the ordinary meth od, and Is then covered with a sort of varnish; on being dried, either In the sun or by artificial heat, the varnish contracts strongly, taking with it the particles of glass, to which It adheres, and as the contraction takes place along definite lines, the pattern produced by the removal of the particles of glass re sembles very closely the branching crystals of frost work. The pattern may be varied in character by changing the thickness of the film of varnish, a single coat giving a small, delicate ef fect, while a thin film, formed by put ting on two, three, or more coats, con tracts so strongly as to produce a large and bold design; by using colored glass, a pattern In half tint may be made on the colored ground._ Dr. Price’s Cream Baking Powder Awarded Gold Medal Midwinter Fair. San Francisco. HEART DISEASE! Fluttering, No Appetite, Could Not Sleep, Wind on Stomach. “For a long tlmo I had a terrible pain at my heart, which fluttered al most Incessantly. I had no appetlto and could not sleep, I would bo com pelled to sit up In bod and belch gas from my stomach until I thought that every minute would bo my last. There was a fuelling of oppression about my heart, and I was afraid to draw a full breath. I could not sween a room without resting. My hus band Induced me to try Dr. Miles’ Heart Cure and am happy to say It has cured me. I now liuvo a splendid appetite and sleep well Its effect was truly marvelous.” MRS. HARRY E. STARR, Pottsvllle, Pa. Dr. Mile. Heart On re Is sold on a positive For Bale by all Druggists. READ. THE TRIBUNE For Telegraph, Local, General, State and Foreign News. Market complete -THE SIOUX CITY DAILY TRIBUNE #0 Per Year. 00 Cents Per Month. QUICKEST AND BEST MAIL SERVICE Address: THE TIUBUNE. Bub. Dopt. Bloux City, Iowa. Purohaaa Ticket* and Consign " your ' Freight via th* F. E.&M.V. andS. C.&P RAILROADS. TRAINS DEPARTS GOING ■ AST. Passenger east, 9:30 a. x Freight east, - 10:30 A. x Freight east, ■ - - 2:10 p. x. GOING Till, Freight west, • 2:10 p. x Passenger west, • 9:27 p. x Freight, - - 2:10 p.m. The Elkborn Line la no* running Reclining Chair Cars dally, between Omaha and Dead wood, jree to holders of Brst-class transpor tatlon. Fer any Information oall on W, J. DOBBS, Agt. O’NEILL. NEB. PATENTS Caveats,and Trade-Marks obtained, and all Pat ent business conducted for moderate Fees. Our Office is Opposite U. S. patent Office and we can secure patent in less time til an those remote from Washington. Send model, drawing or photo., with descrip tion. We advise, if patentable or not, free of charge. Our fee not due till patent is secured. A Pamphlet, **How to Obtain Patents,” with cost of same in the U. S. and foreign countries sent free* Address, C.A.SNOW&CO. (•tent lie Opp. Patent Office. Washington, D. C. MANHOOD RESTORED! guaranteed tocurenli nervous diseases, such osWenk Memory, Loss of brain Power, Headache, Wrke fulness, Lost Manhood. Nightly Emissions, Nervous runci.uniiuituuiM __ ____ ness,all drains and loss of power in Generative Organs’of either sex caused by over exertion, youthful en-ors, excessive uso of tobacco, opium or stim ulants, which lead to Infirmity, Consumption or Insanity. Can no carried in a vest pocket. 91 per box.® for Sit, by mall pretuiid. With a 95 order we Iglve a written miarunt«« lo cure or refund the roonry. 80Id by all ^aruKKlsts. Ask for It, take no other. Write forireeMedical Book sent sealed In plain wrapper. Address N EKVfi SK£1> CO., AlaeoiUc Temple, CHICAGO, b'or sale in O'Neill, Neb., by MOUIU8 A CO„ Druggists. Clothing at Your Own Price for the Next 30 Days at SULLIVAN MERCANTILE COMPANY