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The Clay County Critic from Clay Center, Kansas • 5

The Clay County Critic from Clay Center, Kansas • 5

Location:
Clay Center, Kansas
Issue Date:
Page:
5
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

NEHKASKA NOTKS NOTKS. trfatn Bby wu lick, kt ber CHtorlk, .1.. i ii .11 i lUdutl.m of the VV. C. T.

V. to MIhhIoiim. Gratitude for God's Uuspcakabla Gift, Is the keynote of llio work of tho Woman's Christian Temperance Union. The gift of His Son means even more to woman This Trado Mark la on TOo Best fatcrpof Coat Irithawnrld.l IHmnroriiliitri.trrti.l.itiME.,,. thing tangible; they were glad to put their names to a petition to have the opium and the drink put away, for these are the curse of their lives.

Then, us Miss Ranney told how tills petition started among the women of America, and how women all over tho world were workiug for it, there was aroused In these poor hearts spark of the true imprit da co'w of womanhood. "Wo never thought women la other land were doing such things; we want to work with them." Then It was eusy to tell them of the work women arc doing in Christian lands, ued to show that all these privileges of labor we owe to Christ. Thus seeing Jesus us true Emancipator of women, they are ready to receive him. Stephen II. Bradley, of Guthrie, was visiting 0.

M. Kemp ou Tuesday IttsL tl'iln UnneceNMirr Inl'liilillilrtli. l'aln is no longer nocessury in childbirth. Its causes, being understood, nreeiiHily over-coino, Any woman may now bceomo a mother without suffering any pain whatever, the labor being made short, eusy, und free from danger, Morning sickness, swelled limbs, and all other like evils can be readily controlled, and all female diseases speedily cured. Xever known to fall.

20,000 ladies uttOHt its merits. Cut this out; It muy save your life. Suffer not a day longer, but xon us 2-ccnt stumps, and receive In sealed envelope full particulars, testimonials, confidential letter, )tc. Fimnk Tiiom.vs Co. Baltimore, Md.

When ill became Mlm, alio clunj to Cattorii, Wha tli bid Chlldroa, ibt gin them CutorU, best ol table board nt tlio (linstock IIOIIMC, A. Ftilrrnun, of Republican, was In towu yeNterday. Hon. W. A.

Lewis was in towu a Hliorl time yesterday. H. H. Milieu returned from Detroit yesterday morning. (j rant Thornton and KU Colo were In yesterday at the funeral of Mr.

Mitchell. Yt. Von VuiiirelD, of Sherman, came down on Wednesday to attend the funeral. Hon. Albert Watts hauling stone for the foundation of a big new barn which he is going to build.

Henry Green had a great sale of stock last week. He sold about one' half his stock and It nmoun'ed to over Mr. VV. Wesllinir, of the Regulator, spent a few day on the Bine Wver llshing this week, and reports having a splendid time. Ketiiemner the Mite society of the Presbyterian church meeta at Mrs.

Dr. Cook's residence on Clark street to-morrow afternoon Prank Lee is an inch taller, weiuhsten pounds.more, can run much faster in his estimation all on account of a bright little daughter who came to brighten his home, last Sunday morning. There is much complaint that the rains of the year were local in character and that many fields of corn are suffering from dry weather. All this could be obviated ty the pond svstem of retaining the copious rainfall for the dry season of ngust. (mention of a remedy for snake bite Is revived by the Finkerton cae.

ouck-imr the wound is the surest and easiest way to ensure the removal of the poison. Little or no danger exists in -this operation as the venom might be swallowed with Inpunltv by a healthy person. Whiskey or ammonia or specltic remedies if takeu in time Intolerance is one of the most danger-oim of all conditions of the mind and when the citizen gets intolerant of those who differ with him in opinion either political or religious, he ceases to be a good citizen. We have had many lessons of this in A menca and bigots are plenty even now. Republicanism, Prohibition, and oilier isms are and'liave been prolific of Intolerance and It will be many years before we are free from their baneful Influence.

Tim Time of last week makes one of Its frequent bad breaks in pitching into Surveyor McLaughlin's bill, and especially objecting to one, item of $20. Inquiry reveals the fact, that the $-3). In question was principally a special order of the commissioners and the it was left out was on account of it being not allow ed by the noara 81 US im-euiiK and the two members present desired all the board present, as the part of It was ordered by tli" county clerk. The ofllce Is exactly the reverse of what the Time states, in fact, the most work for the least pay and more this bill was made before any People's Party got In its work on fees. So the Tim is off as usual.

A Terrible Umlfellnw. Last Friday morning Mr. Isaac Pinker-ton who lives about ten miles west of tin city discovered a large rattle snake in bed with him and received a severe bite on liis liir- from the venomous reptile. Dr. Porter was called as soon as possible but the venom had time to get Into the circulation and as a result Mr.

Pink-crton was a verv sick man. His leg swelled to an enormous size and his suffering was very great, in fact so severe that his life was for a while despared of. He Is at latest accounts Improving and will, no doubt, ultimately recover. 'The llepiibliciiim of Sion.v it will hold their convention at 19th, The Thayer comity teachers' tut til iitc will convene Auk. 10 nnd continue tl.i ic weeka.

Somebody tried to blow iiji the mill dnm at Wymore with dynamite, The (linn was damaged sfHOO worth. Tho poHtoflice was Inirglnrl.eil the othor night lor the third time and two reglHlored letters tdolen. Kearney has a public library uuntaiiiing volume aim which has been pat ron laed by 1,800 porsons during tho past year. After very brief service as clerk ol Stanton county, Louis bus resigned and has been succeeded by A. sharp.

Thomas Pattersou of North I'Inttewus the successful applicant for a West l'oint cadetship from the Third congressiomil district. A couple of Scott's Bluff county bo) a paid (I aud costs each for the privilege ot assaulting several ladies with decayed Ben fruit. Blackleg has appeared among the cattle ou Snake creek, Cheyenne county, with latal results. Thirty-five head have died in a month. While leading a colt Jesse Otto of Auburn was kicked just over his right ear, nd died seven hours later in spite of nil the doctors could do.

Blackleg has appeared among tho cattle on Snake creek, Cheyenne county, witii fatal results. Thirty-live head have died during last month. A portion of a field of oats belonging to Mr. Selky, west of Tobias, was burned by a fire set by the lightning striking a shod; of the harvested grain. The tramp who burglarized Parkinson's hardware storo at Madison has been captured and part of the stolen goods vei.

found on his person. Two thoroughbred bulls belonging to Buffalo Bill were killed by lightning on his North Platte ranch. One of theani- I mals was valued at $500. A prisoner named Myers," who was in Jail at Hemingford, broke jail and is nt large, although the sheriff took the precaution to shackle hitn every night. Gage county Prohibitionists held a convention at Beatrice and named delegates to the state convention.

The nomination of a county ticket was deferred till Sept. 25. The Dempster company, which matin-factures windmills at Beatrice, has declared its intention of removing to soni-other state on account of the eight-hour law. The First National Bank of Stanton has been sued by Mrs. Annie M.

Eberline lor which she alleges is the amount of usurious interest she has paid the institution. Hubbell citizens have raised a bonus of tl.SOOfora new flouring mill with a capacity of fifty barrels. The mill will be built at once and will be ready for business Jan. 1. A little son of Clark Lambertsou of Ord roasted some potatoes in his father's barn and the fire got under such headway before it was discovered that the building was consumed.

Citizens of Itising City held a utiblio meeting aud adopted resolutions condemn tng the Union Pacific railroad for not affording the town better railroad and shipping facilities. It is estimated that 150,000 bushels of wheat and 300,000 bushels of oats will be hipped froni Miller, a small station on the Kearney and Black. Hills railroad in Buffalo county. It is understood a recent representative of the whisky trust is soon to visit Beatrice for the purpose of looking tho ground over with a view to establishing a large distillery there. One of the latest names to be added to the pension roll is that of Wa-ne-cho-Wiu-Kaw-Street of Winnebago Agency, Thurston county, a soldier's widow, who is to receive $8 per month.

W. T. Hammond of Norfolk was bound over to the grand jury, charged with willfully defrauding his partner out of a sum of money by giving a mortgage without the partner's conseut. The Omaha physicians have organized a medico-legal association, the object of which is to assist tho state board of health In the enforcement of laws that are not healthy to quack doctors. The prisoners iu the Grand Island jail attempted to escape the other night by cutting a hole through the wall, but their plajis were discovered before any of them could crawl through the aperture.

While playing with a revolver which ho had picked up in the road, Dee Miller, the 10-year-old son of J. Miller of Pawnee Cit shot himself iu the abdomen, inflicting a wound from which he died an hour later. Miss Carrie Fueller accidentally broke a glass lamp at I.eisy's ranch, near West Point, setting fire to her clothing. Mrs. Leisy helped smother the flames and bot women were badly burned.

Miss Fueller' recovery is doubtful. Thomas Henderson of Plattsmouth was arrested for stealing meat from a incut market for his wife and three children, who were suffering from hunger. Henderson said he was driven to theft became) lie could obtain no employment. Al Carter, of Nebraska City, at a picnic approached J. (.

Bixlear And demanded the sum of 50 cents, with the threat that If it was not forthcoming he would pound Bixlear beyond recognition. The money was paid and the next day Carter was arrested for larceny. M. M. Cummings, of Benklemai), entitled to a membership in the Keeley institute at Blair.

He claims to have killed a rattlesnake ou his farm that measured 22 inches around, was 10 feet, 10 inches iu length, having forty-two rattle on the end of its tail. J. K. Williams, a farmer living twu miles east of Ord, has thrashed and soM bis barley. The ground was measured and the enormous yield of eighty bushel 4 per acre was had.

The price received fin-It was 35 cents per bushel, making fc.T mt acre for the crop. P. I Harper, a prominent banker i.f Wallace, escaped with severe bruises froi i a very dangerous situat ion. While ridin a headstrong fiolddiist horse the -turned. Hi left foot ouiirlit in the si -rup and he was dragged aliout a ipiarti-r of a mile through a lagoon.

Fortunate! he extricated himself In-fore reaching liar I ground. James II. a leading fanner of neva lowii-hiji, Fillmore county, has acres of wormwood growing on his fan i this year, lie owns a still and distilN i i oil from the plant, n-llinir it in the N. -York market e.l I nun Willi the still he u.es he -i pounds of liil j.i-r day, aud his crop a -erages alHJiit hi'evii pounds of pil to Iti.i acre. At Fort Worth, death cliealod the gullowsof W.

Davis, who wits to lie hanged Aug. Ill for the murder of B.C. Kvans, The odlcerH of tho Alabama nnd flrwtt Southern road are now certain that thu burning of the depot at Birmingham, was incendiarism. The queen of Knglmid lias exchanged telegrams of congratulation with the queen of Itlay over the visit to England of tho prince of Naples, William I'enii Wilson, a 'ni VhpIi law. yor living in Kli.alieth, N.

died sud deniy at Anbury Park from heart trouble. He was 45 years of age. Free gold has been discovered at Pine lias caused a rush of prospectors to that dist rict, A town naiiiecl Liru-ville has been laid out. Marquis l.uusdowno, viceroy of India, reports a vast improvement in the farming prospects of India, due to ti good rainfall throitghout'The country. A report reached Houston, that 175,000 is missing from tho express ofllce at Ilountz, it big saw mill center.

The express company is very reticent. Floods are doing Immense damage to property in Poseu, Hungary. Many scores of iersoiis drowned iu thu floods have been found floating in the river Neissc. At tho tuberculosis congress in Paris Professor Jacoby of New York cited a ease in which the baccilus tuberculosis had traversed the maternal placenta. At Warren, Kd Caldwell, colored, and John Tumuson took refuge under a tree during a rainstorm.

Lightning truck the tree and killed both men. In the Berwynd mine at Altoona, John Church and William Myers were blatantly killed by a fall of coal. A third man, alltin, was probably fatally injured. D. B.

Fisk, one of the wealthiest merchants in Chicago, died after two weeks' illness. He was he senior member of D. B. Fisk Co. Mr.

Fisk was TO years old. He was born in Vpham, Mass. At Vicksburg, the Spranglersaw mill, sash factory und a large quantity of lumber burned. Loss, insurance, $10,000. About 300 feet of the Mississippi Valley railroad trestle were burned.

The Chilian cruiser President Tinto, which went ashore a few days ago at Toulon, France, has been refloated and has been docked nt Laseue. Her hull is damaged. She will be unable to sail for some time. It is reported that France, us a mark of friendship for Russia, will largely reduce the tariff ou Russian products and will impose a prohibitory duty on Indian corn in order to encourage the importation of Rnssian corn. The police made a raid on the United Exchange club in Cheapside, London.

They smashed in the windows and doors, entered the rooms and arrested many persons who were awaiting the result of the Goodwood races. The Consolidated Oil company of Jiiilti-more, lose about fifty-eight tliou-and barrels of oil from the two tanks at Canton which were ignited by lightning. This is valued at $232,000. Tho tanks were valued at 10,000 each. Barre, is excited over tho deaths of two young daughters of Jeremiah McCarthy.

Tho physicians arc unable to explain the nature of the illness The mother and another daughter are also sick, having the same symptoms. Ernest C. Roeber, champion wrestler of America has challenged Tom Cannon and Carl Abs, the Herman champion, offering to wrestle either for a sido and the world's championship, the match to take place in Hamburg or New York. The secret division has information of the arrest nt Indianapolis of V. A.

Teal and Maud Jacobi for manufact uring and passing counterfeit dollars. Molds and materials and many finished coins were captured with tho counterfeiters. The remains of the late Herman Raslo, well known as tho editor-in-chief of the Chicago Staats Zeitung, who died recently in Lubowa, southern Silecia, started from that city on their way to Chicago, accompanied by the dead man's family. At Houston, while preaching to a large audience, and when iu the midst of his discourse some people on the outside turned out the lights aud rotton egged Rev. Sam Jones and his audience, most of whom were ladies.

There is great indignation. The Grand Black Chapter of British North America is in session at Kingston, Ont. The secretary declares that the order has a great work cut out iu the struggle to maintain tho British connection. This they would do at tho sacrifice of life If need be. Lucas Dougherty, Jerry O'Drien and Willie O'Brien, aged 15, 9 and 13 years, were at play on a raft iu the Ohio river at Pittsburg.

The strong current swept tlie raft under a coal barge und the two first named were drowned and the latter swum to shore. W. J. Bell, a wealthy business man of Georgetown, was arrested in Denver on the charge of bigamy. He deserted his wife for a handsome young widow.

Ho admits the charge, but says he could not help his action, because he loved the woman desperately. During a heavy thunder storm near Dry Kun, Franklin county, the barn of Phillip Skinner was struck by lightning and totally destroyed by fire. Two children of Mr. Skinner, aged and 15 years, playing in the barn at the time, were killed instantly. George W.

Poor, deputy sheriff aud ex customs insiiector, was shot and killed at Woodby, Skagit county, by Customs In- apectors J. C. Baird and James J. Torry, an ex-policeman of Seattle, was also seriously wounded. It is said the shooting was over a hand of Chinese being smuggled into the United States.

The East Street Reaper "Works, of Springfield, the largest agricultural implement work in the world, were sold to a syndicate of capitalists of Cleveland, Chicago arid New York to be used for the manufacture of railway cars and supplies of all kinds. The building of the ureat works swamiwd William H. 'Whitely. Organization of the Law and Order league, of St. Paul, has been confirmed.

Judge J. It. McMillan is president, and ot her leading citizens are prominent in the league. It dates ita birth on July U3, 11, and fixes that date lietause fif the popular uprising which stopped the Fitzsiniiuons-llall fight announced for then. One of the executors of the late Mrs.

Hopkins Searle of New York says the clause in the will relating to Timothy Hopkins was not caused by any ill feeling, but Mrs. Hopkins had transferred a very considerable amount of propovty to Iter adopted sou in her life time, and lis was so wu' I provided for there was no occasion of making any provision for bitn Iu ber will. than to man; for without Christ her de gradation and sorrows are deeper than Ins. Shu recognizes in l.cr Savior the true Kmaucipator of woman, and her heart goes out to Him with lnllultu love and gratitude when she compares the blessedness of her condition with tho misery of her sisters in heathen lands. This gratitude prompted her to respond to the call of God which came through the Crusade, "Here, Lord, am I what wilt thou have me to do?" He soon showed her the work He had lor her to do, showed her that Intemperance is the "great open no re of the and that In her hand Is its only cure the Gospel of God.

Could she refuse to cirry this cure to those in such sore need of There must be the power of this Gospel In the heart of the drinker, to overcome In the heart of the seller to cou-vict him of sin in putting his bottle to his neighbor's lips; in the heart of voter to convict him of sin In establishing iniquity by law, and becoming a partner In the business of destroying souls. And so the work commenced in true missionary fashion, carrying IhV Gospel into saloons, to drinkers and sellers, to their wives and children. This work still continues, only transferred from the saloon to the gospel temperance mission. Kyery Sabbath there are held, all over the land, thousands of Gospel Temperance meetings where cousecrated women break the tyead of life to hungry souls. Few people have any adequate conception of the magnitude of tjiis work, it is done so quietly and in out of the way places, the slums wherein haye unk "the submerged tenth;" but thousands of souls redeemed through this agency testify to the close relation the W.

C. T. U. sustains to city missions. In like manner, the work done by hundreds of unions in frontier towns, in logging and mining camps, In destitute regions all oyer the country, testify to its close relation to home missions.

Everywhere, in city, country and foreign fields, drink is the great antagonist ot Christ. The testimony of foreign missionaries the world oyer is that drink and the opium habit are greater obstacles to the spread of the Gospel than the native heathenism. After thirty-one years spent iu India, Archbishop Jeffries makes this terrible charge "For one really converted Christian as the proof of missionary labor, the drinking practices of England have made a thousand drunkards." The Hottentots have been nearly exterminated by brandy." The Basutos have perished in large numbers through spirit drinking, and the future of the Cafilrs depends on drink being kept from them. From India, Rev. Dr.

Phillips, of the Baptist mission, writeR: "Our schools for the poor children are frequently broken up by the rising flood of Intemperance. In some spots either the school or the still must go. They cannot live together. Our bazaar congregations are often disturbed ny drunken fellows, and tho work ol preaching the gospel is much hindered. Our teachers, pupils, preachers and others are by no means proof against the dire temptations of strong driuk.

We have bad sad cases to mouru over iu our Bengal mission, and the end Is not yet." One of my own pupils, now a missionary in Japan, was transferred from Yokohama to a closed port on the other side of the island, being the first, and for some time the only white woman there. In response to our commiserations that she should have been removed from Yokohama where she had many frlerds, she wrote: "Yes, I do miss my good friends in Yoko-liama and all the privileges we enjoyed there, hut stall feel repaid for the saerliice of them all by being free lrom the dreadful influence of drinking sailors and other Americans and Europeans who throng the open ports of Japan." A lady who had been a missionary for ten years on the coast of China writes to friends nt home: "If our American women knew how much the American sailors on the coast of China need their help to save them from intemperance, they would come to the rescue." Another missionary says that no more effective work cau be done for foreign missions than holding gospel temperance meetings among sailors who arc to visit heathen ports. Each drinking sailor who visits such a port, by his example undoes the work the missionary is doing, while every sailor converted to God and total abstinence in the gospel temperance meetings of America or England is a missionary for good at every port the keel of his ship touches. An illustration of this fact is given in the story of Sailor Jack, converted in a gospel meeting of the Chicago VV. C.

T. many years ago. After his conversion he "sailed the wide seas over," an unconscious forerunner ol Mrs. Leavitt and Miss Ackerman. At every port he stopped, his first inquiry was for a V.

C. T. and if he did not find one as he seldom did he told the people they ought to have one, and did what he could to start it. II'! wrote us from an African port, "I have organized a W. C.

T. only it Is all men. I could not find any women to go in it." A few weeks a go a lady missionary from Japan called at our office. We had never meet, and die had but a few hours to spMid iu Chicago and many calls upon her lime, "lint," li said, I feel I must call and tell you how much we missioners prize The Tnion Signal, nnd what a help the W. C.

T. U. is in our work. I really beln ve it is doing more tor the snlvution of souls than any other agency, not even excepting the church-" Miss Ruth Ranney, of the Baptist mission in Burniah, is president of the National union there. She writes Hist circulating the World's Petition among the women ol the jungle has had great effect in owning the way for the gospel.

Before that, she found it impossible to interest them; their lot is so bard, and they are so despondent, they seemed to have no for the new religioti: but when this petition was presented to them, It was some PROE HARRIS' PASTILLES FOR THE CURE OF VITALLY WEAK', Slmlx notiy loo tloi-nMllcnltnn )ii Iniii.ur m'ti iii'-ntiil Ki'U-t; hkXI'A, l.f c.iMriKMeii In voilth IfVPflir" RtfifU aio; mhijis ici NHOoisnniii.iry,, CM IJJKSl l-XIIAIMION, IV -M'V I.O MMI.V IIM AV In VIII Mlnuj fllb IH.K nf lin, vlL-'ir, Hint nrjiini lniiv. iiii-1 I ptcHiiiOiH-lv In niieriictiinir old WHM SflY In lritcil miA nin it in luul twelve yeum mfHL InTm Apl in P10f. Han-is KFDICATEDPASTltLEa fe TR A "ifi-r cii-lit iul Allslll.t I KI.V nu Ji- or i.l.l, milk-i-hiK Trnin Clii, priviili ut I 1 1 I 1 0 n-c cnu TurnM I'li'slion- loltOi l.tVit lltny kn. O-Itr pontlillOT Jlivu-li fne eiun lit i mil. 11 i-h ium.

I.fiuit. Ill (o Clli lV O'P Cfl'-l .1 TinilAIJi-Jlb I.SMSDYCO.. rrrxrivtT r' 1 Mlinulil riiin-mili'ciiiiiliotukoii TO-NICHT with Slumlirumras Crimp, whnt wuiikl i'uu iluf Wliut ijUyeioiuu could uvo Iblilu? NONE. BGldilTS Remedy In inlishH puwdur, mill in Miu niilymtlVKuiird. In SU ymirs It lm nuvur t'litlixl.

Onlor NOW from oriruiu ub, l'nuii, fitm, A niiniilti powilur ly miiill'or THE DR. BELDIN PROPRIETARY JAMAICA, H.Y- The ma Reliable nPFinP ST. I.OUIS, MO. Special attention ur i IU-j Klveiitoulliliseasesor trotihles in main or feinule, married or sinplo, hronpht about by exposure, abuaas, excesses or improprieties. THE OLD DOCTOR.

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FREE JTn Norvons PebiHty, Lost Vitality, TRIAL (Weakness and 1eeay, seuU'rauliK 12cta. postage, Addresa letters, Dr. Ward 0ir.ee. 1 N. Slh Street.

St. Louis. Mo A1 i nnmnlilnt, nf Infnrmniinn nntt nh- VstriiiHof tho lawa.HhtminK iU I. yOhtuin rntoius, CiivetilH, 'I kJAdilre8 WUNrt CO. new 1 linn h.ivi' ticon made at Wi.rk l.ii- us, liv I'iiRi1, Alisliu, Tv4KSV .1 -l Oliln.

luhurMnrrtl. tVI yAlKL "u- i.ni a i nn iln i In' u-oi-lt am) live v. Ii i', Kvun lie- from fti to Vi i'hiiv MlllllMW ift -rk in ')mrf lima ltr tvuvlt-ii-iu ii iiiiiintr ih-tiii. I'ul. Irt'e.

1- a lit 9 fffANY ADY can pet a v1 u.tule secret tli al cost me aud a rubber nhidu i'oriiOcciita. I Mrs. V. M. APP.

CO. I 116 N. 8th STREET, fiT. TOFTS, MO.I 4 0UMJND N'ABSOLUTtUiT foanuLATEDOa Scientific Pkinciijlc3 and Ground With The Write roRO.KLcc-uE,CacxOa9Ax5?sc5. JA5 Cfl AULWAUKECAi-S THINK IT" OVKH, 1 A rn1.l iin.ka.

tjY.Mnl.nnd Houua Mrll-ul lni.t!liil- Iiy KulilK to tbe klii, Kt-lliilile Ji DH. HEHDEHSOH, ininn.tw ninth crnrrT. KANSAS CITY, MO. A Tlrgular (IrnAuntcln Malicinc. Over ymrt' practice VI in Chimyo, Eitablithul 1M5.

TlfK OI.IJFST 1 AOS, nml I.O.KN'l'I.O'.lT:l. Atilliorlprl by tho Kinto "i nd I.osf), r.r ai.w.wehJ evi-rr kiH.I. Drliiarymirt hi.iwy Im-iiwi el (urFI Vuaranlrul or Money Kel.in.l.l. tharfri J.ow. 1'lniuaniia easi curi-il etery yt-nr.

UiirUnk No enry or iiijiirimn m.liHiiO iw-t A time fr. biif.lr-,. I'otioim nt 8 5ituneo lr mail ami -lWW. Cut fnm muLO or tn-Bki-. Hiain ymr ch-s sud m-m forliTius.

onuiiUcuLul, ularsiM-a nVnlf HTII iKAf.H.-S0Pir IIIiSiK lull lTiplivc- fiK-iiimn, iit UUUll s-alrrl In nivplii- IV-. In unn. N. rniam HM-KKTi uw-fiil wMri. I rnl l.y rirri male fn.m li y.nr-.

k-r. FIII Ml Hl.l OK A 1-MV itlll iiil-wlin nwnn. in, ItKiii.ir 1'rfnrk MailkH rbirb nl.HM! cut urerUJ. tor mm A 1 A A ,1 ijrmjiti? rncr iiiMiihiam HmwiM NtiiM- Mp fir ariT -aw ini 1 hi-li-. In fr1 Nnnnls of mi-dl'-im-.

l-' rHn'f; ff-w r-ninr-i In um ill ili, t-Ti- wild "isropl.jf vucuiun. UK. HtK'JcbSLlil, KANSAS CITY, U0. IS RtC Eli Host For Sale, (Jhoi. A lot of second hand stoyes and farm implements, all in good condition.

Ghokoh Inoamkij.s. De "Ota Way" Brlleg de Cook tin well tki de Steak. IDEAL BROILING. To broil perfectly, oyer a fire, requires constant watching nnd an experienced cook. With the Ohabteb Oak, a child ten years old wllltiquttl any expert.

Place an ordinary sheet iron pan, one-quarter full of Buu i or water either will answer, Rand Is prs fnruble-upon tho bottom ovea plate to catcb tbu drippings; greuae tho oven slliliiur broiling rack; one greasing Is all that Is requited I'litco the steaks upon tho oven slide close the wlr tauzn oven door for tli i to fivo inlnutus lurue steaks require ten to liftown mlni tcs-unil the Bteab wilt bo, thoroughly cooked ou top and bottom at the name time. bunrfjng ui oiuuao, anil the inuatn aro more tender and better la flavor than those broiled over the coala. Tho convenience of broiling In tho oven will ba appreciated by every housekeeper, and adds OnU lluugn or with the Wire Gauze fluun I ir olirhitlH La ninfornil nil I FOR SALE BY JIcANI.IS DAVIDSON, Clay enur, Kiina is. Mil ON SALE TO PRINCIPAL POINTS EAST, WEST, NORTH and SOUTH -AT W. L.

JENNINGS, City Ticket Office. Clay CciiUm, Kai Has. i IIU I1IHU1 lH.iriill, Hates 1 (Ml to per day. X. K.

Corner 1: tit ami Streets Kansas City, Mo. Take nth Street cable cur at t'nlon ai.il Kt't off nt Wyandotfc street Then go smith, one bloc k. Host hotol in i the rates aki-d. FHIS is the machine that used in the Office, Court-room, and for reporting lectures and sermons. While it3 speed I greater than any other known method, is so simple that any intelligent person can gain speed of loo cr words per minute, in five cr mx 'cks, without the aid of en Circulars and testimonials sent to ill who mention this paper.

T. PIERCE, FAYETTE, OHIJ, Sola Agent for U. i. and Canada. V.

tin mf.XMdlttxk. fife A Sail HbhIIi. Mr. Mitchell, the father of Mrs. 11.

N. Shruider, is I) -en ro ill for some time past wilh inflammation ol the stomach, died at Mr. Stirtec er's residence between hre and Morganville on Tuesday morning at 3 o'clock, U. Phillip took charge of the remains ami after embalming the body. It was taken to Chicago for Interment leading here on Wednesday morning via the Kwk Island.

Mrs. Nhru-der, Mrs. Schneider, and Mr. children ol the deceased accompanied the remain! to Chicago. T' funeral took place from the Catholic cilurch In tills city, Hev.

Father Meili ofllciating. The deceased was a life-long member of the Catholic church and died in full enjoyment of nil lis rites mid privileges. A large number of friends iTssem-bled to pay the last kind duties to the deceased and most of the assemblage accompanied the cortege to the depot. You Inka 1 IiIm ii1 I'll Tiihe 1 lint. You have heard the story of the laborer, who wan asked "why he worked?" He replied: "I work bard to earn money, wilh which to buy food, so as to get more strength, toearn more money, to buy more food, to get mure strength, to earn more nmney, etc." Well, in answer to the question: "Why does the Republican party favor a high protective tariff?" It would be truthfully stated that the Republican party wains a high protective Ui iff so as to create a surplus in the National treasury, with which to disburse In subsidies, bounties and pensions, so as to make the Republican party stronger, no that it can raie the tariff and Increase the surplus, with which to pay more sub-Hides, bounties ami pensions, so as to make the Republican party stronger, s.j that It can raise the tariff, etc..

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About The Clay County Critic Archive

Pages Available:
2,133
Years Available:
1885-1891