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OUTLAWS ON A TRAIN. Twe (Officers Kobbed and Car Lead of Passengers ‘Terrified. Chicago, Il., Dec. 21.—John Me- Gratk and Walter Grainer, members of the MeGrath-Mortcll gang who figured conspicuously in the murder } of Police Officer Freyer several years ago, field a police officer and his brother at bay in a Chicago and Erie suburbaa train at thirty-third street last night, while two of his companions caused a panic among the passengers by shooting indis- eximinately through the windows of the coach. Officer Bailey and his brother boarded the train in Chica go. Atthe freight yard four men boirded the first coach. Detective Bailey recognized McGrath, knowing that he was wanted put h'm under arrest. With an oath McGrath declared | that no officer could take him single| handed,at the same time thrusting a revolyer in the detective’s face. The other three then cane to his aid, and a scene of wild excitement followed. The lamps were shot out and the men passengers were order- ed out of the car by the outlaws. They next ordered the officers out after searching and robbing them, and striking Bailey a blow on the head. The four desperadoes then left the train and escaped. and A Manand Woman Bit—The Dog Kill- ed With a Hoe. Clin ton Democrat. About 6:30 o'clock Friday morn ing. a black shepherd dog witha chain about two feet long attached to his neck, was discovered by Mrs. H.S Webster, in her yard west of the Clinton pottery with a chicken inits mouth. Mrs. Webster went into the yard for the purpose of driving the dog away, when it drop- ped the chicken and attacked her, catching her by the calf of the left | leg, inflicting two severe wounds. Dr. Jennings was quickly summoned and dressed the wounds. He made rit athorough application of carbolic} filled the These are acid and afterwards wounds witn iodoform. known as antiseptics and calculated | to destroy poison. + The dog after leaving Webster's, went west across the K.C.0.&S. railioad, and then north to T.G@ Smith's residence. Clas. Barnett who lives with Mr. Smith, had just gone into the yard for the purpose emptying a bucket of ashes. The dog made a rush for him, grabbing him by the wrist, and making a slight wound. Then he caught him | by the boot leg, when Mr. Barnett} succeeded in kicking him off. canine then entered the through an open door anc ran down | a hall unti! it came in contact with a | closed door, then turned and went into the yard. Mr. Smith armed} went out to drive the dog off. It at-/ tacked him on sight, both weapons without. effect. The | the body was co house | in the minds of those | BACK FROM THE DEAD. A Boy Who Died Under the Sur- eou’s Knife Restered to Life. New York, Dec. 22.—The medical profession és much stirred, so far as} it is yet familiar with the facts in the case, by the details of a remarka- ble surgical operation performed within afew days by Dr. Shunk of this city. plished is no less than the bringing back to life of a person practically | dead, as the term is steod, as Jimmy MeCaughy, aged 12 is to-day the living example. The | physician was calied to the case late | jia the evening and found the patient | had very marked symptoms of ap- pendicitis. Though the seat of the} trouble was not apparent, the diag- nosis made plain the fact that the sufferer was doomed, as far as could edents in sim advice of the members cf the were advised of the gravity cf the case, and when next mor | phy-| i'ar ca sician the family | ig avery! sizeable lump was observed over the seat of the inflammation, the diagno- sis was fully justified and the trou- ble was exactly stated to be an ab- scess around the vermiform append- ix An operation was at once recome mended, but was delayed until the jarrival of relatives, had been summoned in auticipation of the near approach of death. The next jafternoon the surgeon was finally ‘eilled aud told to proceed. When j he arrived it was discovered that the labscess had broken, thus covering the intestines with the liberated mate ter. In this crisis it was clear to the scientific mind that the boy was dying. The doctor told the family i that the dissolution would take place within an hour and thought it was possible that au operation might re- )Sult successfully the chauces were many times agaiust it who Penmisson to proceed was giveu. it being un- derstood that in any event of failure | to secure relief, the eud not be hastened more tha» min- utes. | The patient was quickly placed on | would fiftesn of an anestnetic an opening about leight inckes long was made into the | walls of the abdomen. From the incison there was a pleateous flow of pus. No sooner had this taken jand the heart stopped, the jaw drop- ped and every indicaticn o/ the most g | complete collapse betoken the pres lence of death. The eyes upturned, the cold extremities 2nd jthe death perspiration with which Hass: glassy no dor red left present he experiment bad resulted fatally. At this peint the s us displayed. With one hand he | | We tore opeu the himself with a stick aud rock and | | wound, while with the other he emy- tied the contents of a pitcher of hot and he threw | water into the abdomival cav ity For The|a brief interval the fluttering renew dog then become engaged in a fight | al of action was xpparent ouly to with one of his dogs. Arming him | the practiced medical eye, but soon self with a heavy hoe he had but to|the pulsation grew strong aud ere get in sight when the brute attacked him again, with a well directed blow he succeded in killing the dog. He borrowed a shot gun and killed his dog which had been engaged in | fight with the rabid cavine. The mad dog is supposed to be one which was chained in darkey town, but made his escape. There isno telling where the dog may have been and the amount of dam- age it may have detected in Mr. Webster's yard. MUZZLE THE DOGS. It seems to be the prevailing opinion that it would be a proper and judicious caution for our city officials to cause all the dogs in town to be either muzzled or killed, aud stray dogs killed. Canine mad- | ness which produces hydrophobia | : | done before it was long the patient gave unmistukab'e signs of returning con {Then the eyes were opened dazed sort of way, as if the ject was awakened from a isleep, the action of the hot neutralized the The patient \the ground gained, sciousness. ina sub deep effect of the ether. by the admin‘s- tration of hyperdermie injections. with anew lease of life there was a chance for the surgeon to look for | the seat of the abcess. The foreign |substance was found and removed by a most delicate operation and to- day the patient is convalescent. From the points here given it is claimed that medical men now be- lieye it to have been determined that no case of appedicitis need be nec- essarily regarded as fatal. after it takes effect on the human! system. is considered absolutely, incurable. Persons may be bitten | hy rabid dogs however, and not have | hydrophobia. But there is no good | reason why chances should be taken derson, ran away from Lome about | when tkere is a way two weeks ago and took a brother on human life, to avoid it. A vigorous war should be at once A Boy's Crime. Ogema, W Dee. 20.—A terrible | tragedy has just ‘been unearthed in \the town of Brennan. John Ander son, 14 year old son of Mauritz An aged 10 and his father’s ¢ with him. andd.g They went to the house made, and our officials should not be ofa neighbor farmer, Marcus Hom | respectors of anybody's dog. Cause them to be muzzled at once, or sent as carcasses to the boneyard. feld, a settler living alone. John | proposed to his brother that when 'Homfeld came home in the evening i Albert: The fact accom- | | usually under-| Arriving { a table and while uuder the influence | place than the pulse ceased to beat, | water | was assisted to reta’n} i would kill him and live in the! Good Night. house all winter ia true robber style | Harper's Bazar. In accordance with that plan the) There is a tender sweetness about} older brother hid himself behind a|some of our common phrases of af- hay stack and when Homfeld came fectionate greetings, simple aud un-| put two charges cf buckshot into his| obtrusive as they are, which falls | head, ce vered his body with hay and | Hike dew upon the heart. Good night! | Last | The little one lisps it gowned in| law of Hom-/ white, with s feld eame to the house and found and prayers s: proceeded to tx sseseion. | Saturday a broth ing face and hands} i, she toddles off to} jthe boys there. They him | jbed. Sisters and brothers exchange | Homfeld was iz the woods looking|the wish; parents and children,| after his t . He waited until] friend and friends. Familiar use bas Sunday morning and then went home | robbed it of its signiticauce to some | taking the younger boy with him. jofus; we repeat it questioned the | without much thought ihttle boy and drew the whele story ‘sider. Wear, asv out of him. A patty was organized | off from time to tix but on the arrival at the seene of the) plored sea. Our barks of life set murder the asszsin bad gone. They | Pail and go onward into the followed the tracks through the} 2¢ss; and we, asleep on woods toward the Sac Railroad. |t Fears are entertained that the despe | awake and journeying by daylight. ate boy will shoot one cr two of his | Of the perils of the night, whatever | pursuers as he is weil armed. |they may be, we take no heed. An automatically | Bat con-| putting | > upon an unex- home he oyagers, our pillows, enosuch care as we do when The Life of a Slip. | Mets ; eee =) 5‘ | is the vigilance of o1 e| teh An interesting cussion has beea fee ong Les EE Une ¥ a a8 the Eternal Good. Good and God] tarted on the subject of the life of ships. Itappears that this is very much a question of where the ship! is built. It is found that vessels | Jeni, ean be Beno i) constructed in the United States last | night” isreally “God night,” or “God| jguard the night.” It churlish household in | spring from the same root, are the Same in menning “Goodbye” is with you.” would bea which gentle forms of speech were ignore 1 Alike the happy | and the sorrow! on day by day. may on an average, hteen years oe French ships average 2), Dutch, German, 25, British, 26, and Norwegian 30 years, these 2, | iit, © 2 one The av re age death rate of the world’s ping is abont 4 per birth rate 5 per cent. the practice to or did not exist. ship-| - cent and thel> It hus become } construct certun’ A Great Surprise parts of a vessel of iron instead of | 15 in store for all who use Kemp's — al- steel, such as tank tops and deeks| £#™m for the throat 3 ee ruaranteed remedy. exposed to the weather; butit is now | ments found to be a better plan tokeep the | the prep a es 1 dy to give vou a sample b etree. at mmeterial the never failsto cure acute or chrome a3 po te| coughs. All druggists sell Kemp's gue 4 - isam. Large bottles soc and St the saine thickness as the tron. | lungs, the is sold o stis ue orized by Jertul reme- same throughout as far sible aud the steel showd i generally | tribute to Madame Patti has a Reigning powers are Trusts ‘3 Sule. which | Whereas Hugh Miller and Lizzie R Miller his wite and Irving Miller by their certait. deed ef trust dated Mare! 2s,18ss,and recorded in the ¢ ice of recorder of di willing to pay genius. | fau on are the autographs of ull the sover e igus of Europe. Fhe English a great des ouri. in book No 44 pas | undersigned trustee, the tollowing x "real estate ji county, Missouri, to-wit The south hall ot tie soutneast quarter of a | section thirty-three (35). township forty-one estate, and | G1). range thirty-one (il),for the purpose of ace fas always had for real : ee ype [Securing the passment of a certain note in to day ove fourth of the land sur described: anil whereas defanit has face of the globe is oeeupied by e inthe payment of said note ane Now, therefore, I of the Euglish speaking people. Piper Picked a Peck of (ait note sppers, was a line of al | Pn nousense that the chil- | between t dren used to say Nowadays they |eatd reate feats hours of pine said re dour eau practice on the Perfect, Painless, | in thee conney Missouri, Pacer > eo ps 5 Ftor cash Powerful Properties of Pierce's debt and Plensant Pargative Pellets. It will! WALTON, ‘Truster. jimpress a fact to know headache, biilious tion, constipation and a liver and bowel troubles. tiny, sugar coated pills. and asa laxative one ii i dose No more groans aud gripes from the old remedies ich wilt be useful pell NEW YORK CORRESPONDENCE SCHOOL LAW FOR HOME STUDY. 243 BRO, ADWAY: INTRODUCTORY ‘LECTURE These altaci AStiC. Pierce's Pur Pellets | painle are perfect in their effects. | THE DICTIONARY HOLDER t fabulous results crew out of the How to Succeed. 2 This is the tew satisfactori cause of her question rT dermotor Company, which starts cut as fuliows; 45 sold in '88 2,288 sold in '89 at problem of lite which poor health trom luck, but the majority deficient Id i 190 gritwant ofnene. They are nervous, | - C268 SOld in irresolut! blues and We spirits angeable, eas) he Ke spirits downt Thus wasting time, y and nerve 1e Restorative speci vous dis-| to get pers sold in’9t force. bre is nc Nervine,d ist, Dr. } les, to cure a eases aidache, the blues, nervous| prostra seplessness, n algia, St. Vitus dance, fits and hysteria. Trial bottles and fire book of testimonials tree | at H.L. Tucker's drugsto: rieans cp outtit isthe third largest refsteel in the West (beng ded by two of the ‘ester companies) furnished by the Why the Rib Was Used. A pretty girl asked a young doc- tor the other day why \ j | | women was} made from the rib of a man in pref! erence to any other bone, and this is! what that wise young man answered: | “She was not taken from the head | lest she should rute him, nor from | his feet lest he should trample on | = her; but was taken from his side | that she might be his equal; from | under his arm that he might ee t-et her, and from near his heart that | he might cherish aud love her ay WORK FOR US Ft. Scott Journal. Gaerne i found on This is pretty good. 3 lees — Mr. John ©. Goodwin. a carpenter ot | being canis Danville, IIL, writes: “About tvo weeks | Liearses ago a heavy saw log tell upon my toct eel verv badly crushing it, so that I was un- i j able to walk atall. I sent tor a bottle of | Baliard*s Snow Liniment and kept m | tootwell saturated with it. It is no wo weeks since that occured, and my foot is ne and I am at work Had [ not used Snow Liniment I should -have been faid up two months. For 8 Vhealing wi S | bruises Beware ot tall white Liniments subst tuted tor Snow Liniment. There i other Liniment like Ballard’s Same 8} Liniment- Sold by H. L. Tucker. |FROM NOW ’TILL y “Good mght.’ i | a few days and you wil! be the unex | | pected succe We positively hav mn ae for Infants and Children Castoria cures Colic, Constipation, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea. — tation, Kills Worms, gives sleep, and promotes a ““Castoria is so well adapted to children that I recommend it as superior to any prescription knowntome.” 4H. A. Arcuer, M.D., 111 So, Oxford St, Brooklyn, N. Y. FOR FORTY CENTS You will receive the best Best Wreekly PAPER IN THE WEST, THE KANSAS CITY WEEKLY TIMES JAN. ist, 1893, FOR 40c SAMPLE COPIES FREE. COCCOCCCOCCCOSC ROCCE e e @ eo « SOME FACTS ABOUT ; bd HuNIckE BROS. Hunicke Bros. c 3 BULLION’ 23 B.S 3 ™BULLION“« mT. B.So™ AT. HAT. e ° @ i. They are the best Hats for the money. ie a 2. f hey are made in every desirable shape to suit every taste. lg go 2 They are the only hats guaranteed by the manufactur- = ers to be unexcelled for durability. le “ 4, 80 many are daily sold that the manufacturers can afford to use nothing but the best materials. Vd 5. None Genuine without above Trade Mark. e v2 e Manutactured only by HUNICKE BROS., ST. LOUIS, MO. ware of dealers sub- without W.L. Dougins hame andthe price stamped gn bottom, Buch substitutionsare Treaduiean and weecution by law for ob- money wa= pretences. seantiess, smooth Insid more and durable than any ‘other shoe ever sold et the 1s custom-made shoes 4 from $4 to 85. he onl, with tw: B cowed ne the curndce edge (as cut), Goubie the wear of Cheap well shoes sold at thee for such eesily rip, having only one sole sewed: rrow strip of leat! el on the edge, and when once throurh are worthless an ~ he two selesofthe W. L. ‘GLAS 83.008hoe when wora through can’be repaired as many ti Eien} necesary, as they will never rip or loosen from theupper. Purchasers of footwear desiring to econo- taize, should consider the superior — Of these shoes, aud not be in: fo buy cheap Welt shoes gold at en having only appearance to POUGLAS 1:73 Best aro’of tho same high standard of merit, e pale to shoe dealers and ceneral merchants sreer log for sale in your place send direct ‘ostage free. L. Pougias, Broc! a? ey 1A ¥ accident, while compoun sfulea ‘on the hand, and on was! he hair was completely remov so simple any child can use it. a few minutes. and the hair disap; discovery ever attained such wonde} seit cannot fail. If th address written plai straight forward in every word it contains. thing as represented. Address Queen Chemical € You can register vour letter at any host Office to iasure lia mate deileery, any case of fail ht jury to any purchaser. nd sell among their friends 2¢ Bottles of (Jucen’s Anti. Hairine we ra large"bottie and samples of silk to select from sent with each order. Correspondence THE POSITIVE CURE. ELY DEOTHERS. 66 Warren &t, New York. Priceso¢ i One reason why Scott's Emulsion of Pure Nor- wegian Cod Liver Oil and Hypophosphites of Lime and Soda has had such a large sale is because it is «Almost as palatable as milk:’ but the ‘best reason is that its curative properties arc the cough, supplies the wast flesh and builds up the entire Tt cures of Ussues, produces Seott’s Em on cures Coughs, Colds, Consumption, Scrofuta. and all Anaemic and Wasting Diseases. Prevents wasting in children. Almost as palatable as milk. Get only the — Pre- pared by Scott & Bowne, Chemis! York. Sold by all Drug=i @