Newspaper Page Text
Indian Chieftain. rr Volt In. Aivnuoa. Pubillil riiiirmlnvt y f HC lSUIAN (JllHtTAIN ruiU-UllllltiCoMFAKY, 1. M. M Alt ItS, Editor. M. K. MlLr'OHU, aiiatrtx. Vinita, lND. Tkk., Jan, 21, 18H2. "Ir their in not a war with Cliili t'wont be Chili's fault. The man that is niadest about the Strip steal is the one that id not "in it" A ni fT of Ocneral Phil. Kearney wan unveiled at Kearney, Nt'b,, last week. Thk probability at present in that Judge liuflington will be luiuj ' in Washington. As extra cession of'the Missouri legislature, has been called to meet February the 17th. A him. has been introduced in congress providing for the admis sion of Arizona aa a statu. A cabin having "Ik'iider" ar rangements for murdering people has been discovered in Oklahoma. Cardinai, Mahsino, the great Ixindon Prelate, died in London, and Cardinal Siineoni in Koine last week. Vinita has tin heir presumptive to well any kind of an office that dosn't require bruins nor honesty to fill. The Interior department is ask ing an appropriation of $130,000 for subsistence for the Sioux Indians. It may always be better to tell a man frankly what' you think of him, but sometimes it is safer to tell some ono else. RrPrfKSKXTATIVE WaTSoS, -uf Georgia, has introduced a resolu tion asking congress to investigate the Pinkerton detective agency. Senator IU-fkinutox and E. 0. Boudinot left tor Washington last Saturday night to look tidier the interests ol this nation in Uncle Sam's "council." Thk No. 3 ear of the IT. S. tish commission came in on the Frisco) last Thursday from Neosho, where it hail been loaded, and went to Fort Worth that night. Skkatok Jonks, of Arkansas, has introduced a bill to authorize the construction of three railways through the western part of the Indian Territory, from north to south . The worst thing in connection with the recent lethargic council, is that some of the, would-bo lead ers have gall enough to say tvas a success. But a thief is always in love with a jury that ref'u.-ts to convict him. If the Strip deal is ratified by congress the intruder will be re moved from the country, and noth ing on the part of the Cherokees should be left undone to settle the status of all claimants to citizen ship promptly. The intruders are organized against the bonafide citizens of this country to an alarming extent. They have even sent delegates to Washington to migrepr'mnt their cause there. The citizens of tho Cherokee nation should organize against them and leave nothing undone to defeat their diabolical Scheme. Gkape vines may oe pruned on warm days during the winter. There is considerable diversity of opinion as to the best season for this work, but perhapi after all one may prune with safety almost any lime he gets ready, whether fall, winter or spring. The Con cord is lhejeadtnggrape for this country. RjBT. (i. I.m.er.-oll is gmerally credited with being an infidel, but in an oration at his brother's truve some years ago he made use of the following: "Life is a narrow vale between the cold and barren peaks ol two eternities. We strive in vain to look beyond the heights. We cry aloud, and the only answer is the echo of our wailing cry. From the voiceless lips of the un trplying dead there comes no word; but in the night of death, hope sees a star anl listening love can hear the rustle of a wing." Mrs. Bi.vthk wishes to correct A statement of a correspondent in last week's Chiektain. She was not a reservee and never was ad mitled to the Cherokee nation but once that was by birth. In ex planation she says thai some of the family did take reservations but she was not one of them. Con tinuing, she says she has no ob jection to the rights of the white man being acknowledged; that the freedmen, the Shawnee and the Delaware each sets up hiscUim to equal rights, naming the condi tions, and that if the white man has not the courage to do the same he should not be acknowledged. JOHN WILLIAM MIOWNH RE VIEWS TUB WORK OP COUNCIL. TAiil.mjCAU, Jan. HI, 11:2. Now that the council has ad journed and ten days given to the inspection oi lis nu n, "no ... sum mi lis doings without doing injustice. It may be. said, and without res. ervalion or fear of contradiction, that this council was the most ex traordinary body of legislators i.ui.r u-.it loL'ether "in the name of ii rherokoe nation." Whctheri it bo considered in its lieshness from the people, (I tamo near say ing cowmen,) in its inexpeiience, not to say ignorance, in its blind purluanisin, and generally in its lack of everything essential in a tree, enlightened and representa tive legislature. From the begin ning the caucus H as supreme, and ill l)u fiUICUS country was net U-ide ami party was mudu "Lord of all." This is true of both parties, and It is unfortunate for the nation that such is the fact, and neglecting the general interest, the leaders on both sides gave themselves over to technical ohstrusities that neith er side understood and putted away tivo months of tune, at cost ol thirty thousand dollar in showing the people how new men with old leaders could do nothing when they tried. In only one instance were the Dailies uareed, and that was whuil they voted their war rants preferred'and tuok. the money that belonged to the school fund and senl'llie poor teachers homo without pay, , financial strati gists they an admirable. The majority, at the opening of the session, vvilh much bluster gave it out that no more extra ses sions would be had squandering the public funds ami debauching public morals. Well what was the result? They did not have an ex tra, session hut they had a double extra ses.ion in which the founda tion of the biggest job ever knoiyn in this nation was successfully laid, ami when completed the pillar of this government will have been de stroyed. The work of the council may he summed up in some half dozen measures besides the regular ap propriation bills, most of which were private and inconsequental to the general public. The amended "cow law," good, no doubt, in its intentions, but practically " to the cowman's hands. " The joint resolution disci-ling the supreme court to cancel the licenses of two attorneys for alleg ed violations of the law, will ever remain a monument of the stu pendous ignorance of the ineu who voted it, and (his resolution was passed in a senate in which four men had scats on: hud been chic! justice of the supreme court, one had been a justice on the same bench, one had been a prominent candidate for the same place, and tine served two years as a district judge, all uf them expounders of the constitution An attorney's license is a vested right bought and paid for at a price and under con ditions fixed by the grantor, and can only forfeit for cause, and then only by "due process of law." Naturally enough this might have occurred in a South Carolina legis lature in reci.usti uctioii d-iys, but at this day and time in the Chero kee national council, to think that ignorance or worse has such a hold is appalling Comment is useless. 1 he hand-writing is on the wall, weighed in the balance and louml wantiuj'. The ominous, hill usually called the auditor's rcnoit. contains some strange inconsistencies. An ileni of several hundred dollars appears on it in favor of a law firm for ser vices in delending Percy Wyly, late sheriff of Delaware district, in the matter of the Audrain Williams cattle seizure; but an item of sev eral more hundred dollars does not appear on the bill. This item is lor service of guards, herders and their board while taking care of these same cattle. Will some one explain this difference? The claim of the guards and h orders was filed before the senate. It bad, I am told, the Mtccial recommendation of the chief. Did Delaware have no senators in the council? Each one ol me lime lawyers who Were so "promptly paid had good lat place from which they can reach out at will and give a tug at the public teat. 1 he benficiaries of the item that did not appear are poor devils who-e daily labor is their chance for bread you may pay your money and take your choice. Another item on the current ex pense hill of the extra session uf eleven hundred dollars, for the benefit of a Tahlequah law firm, supplemented by a Muskogee at tomey, deserves at ent a pa-sing notice. It is related that the late chief Mayes entered into a con tract with a firm of Tahlequah law yers, to which this Musk 'gee at torney was added, (just why the relator failed to say.) The con tract was to he Approved by the national council, an I the lawyers were to receive in good sound war rants or cash, twenty-two hundred dollai for defending the Cherokee nation at Muskogee. Following this agreement, hich was never satisfied formally by the national Council, one of (he Cherokee law yers, party to this agreement, un dertook to do the whole business for a thousand dollars or less and ine nonnr oi writing attorney gen. er.il after his name. Now what does this council d; il declares otT a contract that was never completed nnd pays this law firm with the Muskogee appendix eleven hun dred dollars for doing nothing, and to be more than kind, they se lect this one claim out of a thou sand or more ami make it prefer, red. The five hundred or more mn, women and children who were left ofl the rolls and failed to draw their per capiu in cash, and now have to take it in a depreciated warrant, till further depreciated by havtrg to wait on the payment of this extraordinary preferred wariant for service? never rendered will some day want to know just whr they hd to wait for their ovej duo money and those prefer red warrants paid The school bill appropriate tuxty thousand dollais lor the sup port of education, ond makes a radical departure from the avowed mid practiced policy ol both polit ical parties. From the beginning of organized government among the Cherokees, the education i thu youth and the protection of the helpless poor has been the especial charge of the nation. The orphan asylum, the hoinWor the insane and blind und the indigent departments of tho male and fe male seminaries is the outgrowth of this beiiclicient policy inaugu rated more than seventy-five years ago, and to-day wo pride ourselves upon the fact thut there is less suffering and Ignorance among the unfortunate aiid helpless poor of tmr nation tlnm any other people Udder the eun, nud so completely had this idea become interwoven ID our educational system that tho education of the people meant also the euro of tho unfortunate, and until the opening of Hie regular session of the council Just closed, no man claiming to represent a Cherokee constituency ever ,duied to propose to change the policy. JUtt the time change imd we change witii them. In the latter part of the regular session, Mr. McLane, from Canadian, on the floor of the senate presented a carefully prepared statement of his views on the school question, and in that statement he proposed to do away entirely Willi tho indigent or primary department of the male and female seminaries. In this )) was antagonized by Mr. Wolf, of lining biniko, and, for tho time being the subject Was dropped, but 1 see the idea was not abandoned, and as a member of the majority, .Ic.,arp! was H,b?.t have (he com mittee on education report a bill and pass it, practically doing away with this department of the two seminaries and the negro hi,'h school n we.l. 'J'he imbu' llt df iarlni)nt ot th) high schools was, in its inception and ouudHtion. intended to educate lho actual helpless boys and girls of the Cuerokee nation who were so un fortunate as to be in worse con dition than orphans, the children of parents who, were too poor to spare their time and cloth" Ihciq sulliciently comfortable and decent to attend the common schools, and for I hut pui po e a fund was ere tied. However much the trust may have been unused, it was good ill its in tention, and great good has conic of its workings. That men would misrepresent the truth, not to ay lie mid swear to it, to get their children in free is no aigiimenl against tln. plan, but that fact might be used to the disadvantage of whoever, as ollicials, had charge of the matter. What does the jjres. cut law d"';' lloes it open the door to a single indigent boy or girl? it puts the condemnation on pov erty and opens its arms wide to receive the molded class. If a man is able to clothe his child and do without its w.uk he ought to send it to the common school, fir it never was intended that the fund should be used for the benefit of that class of our people. Hut w hy complain, " t'waa ever thus. " Lazarus was a good man, uevei the- iein nc ((.in i lit: li'lllieill irilll III- viding the crumbs that fell from ; Hives' lalde with the dogs; Inr.vevi r the liual settlement came, Dives J died and went to hell and Lazarus : was bourne away and safely lodged I in Abraham's bosom; and our poor j have their chances of Heaven ieft, however inucti they may have to z, n' s rights, but to make "assiw suller here on account of bad legis- j aucu doubly sure,'' (he Cherokee latloil. I commission, in dialling their bill The negro high school is knifed! P'l's the whole matter out ol dis by the same cunning hand that so pnte by providing (hat the nation rtfftly done up the primary depart ment of the two seminaries. From Iho beginning, all this pretended love of the negro, and desire to elevate and educate liiin has hcen, and is the variest hypocracy, and neither party ever cued a straw fur the hlaek brother further than to get his vole on election day, after which the negro was no more than a poor Indian. They ;ire re (juired to keep up a monthly aver age of twenty-five, when under the the law only twenty-five may lie entered; one death, ono sick, one truant for a day and the school i closed. 1 lie nero, iikelne imor Indian, will have to wait patient! v and tike his chances in Abraham's bosom. Let us hope that they may not meet with disappoint ment in ttiis. Another noticeable feature of the bill is that it makes no detail as to the distribution of the funds. No salaries fixed; no number of teachers given, either common or high; no number of pu pils to be fed and housed; no nothing but a bulk appropriation of six!)' thousand eigtit hu.tdreil and seventy and sixtv-six one hun dredths (.?oO,!S70 (Hi) dollars, to lie paid out of any money in the treas ury not otherwise appropriated, t, be expended by the superintendent of education I suppose. The law is not altogether lear in that re gard. Jut how anybody, except thu fellow who gets the contract for furnishing the seminaries wood is to get any money out f it is what '"grives me and troubles my mind" at this particular juncture. If Mr. Harris does not call an extra session of the national coun cil and get nome authority, I don't see how lie will he able to draw his warrants, or the trea-urerHawf'ully pay them. Another fine piece of political sureery and apparently trom the same dell hand that cut the throats, so to speak, of the in digent departments))! the male and female seminaries and the negro high school. It begins to look as if Senator McLane intends for us good Indians to walk this plank and male a dive for nil Abe's bosom. How is this for the "new mn. " Did .Senator Wolf allow this to go by default or was he out j when the bill passed. He knew better if no one else in charge of the business did. This is not all that is in the bill, but its its, I don't know what ti call it makes me tired. AH the other appropri ation bills may be in the Mine con fusion, and 1 am afraid to h ok at them. The bill embodying the ttgoli- I .1. ... ...1,1, ll.-. itl.il,, jtlioris niui inr e innu ',, ...... iiiiiii mission protidirM for Iho sale of the Snip and ratifying the, articles of agreement, between thu two commissions, is, I presume, of more concern to the average Cher, okee and intruderas well, thaiian school or other lull brituiht before the national council. The agree ment and its ratification by the maj nity is in direct violation of the late chief's views, and a. rudi. cal departure from the policy of the Downing party, if onu may be lieve declared principles set forth in published political platform The dead chiefs battle cry was "no hind to sell," and the slogan was iterated and reiterated from one end of the land to the other by his lieutenants until the hills gavu back the echo; but no soulU'l' r -V-s ha dead and the earth dosed over him, his p. iily had land to sell and lots of it. 1 make these remarks, not in any manner deprecatory id' the Cherokee commission in making the contract, nor calling in ifues tion the wisdom of thy ngi cc'r.cnl In general, but to show what a per sistent, determined man may do for good or evi by ''sticking to. it," and to further show that the- great inajorii y of us are scurvy cowards mtlitioully , and tor place and pelf hold our peace, when we, in only should speak out. No one ac quainted with Judge Maves be- beves that had he lived any agree ment about the lands would lAY been reachetj. Whatevir he may have been in other matters, he was sincere ill his belief that the land might not to be sold and., that tho government would not 'take it The opinion and bec came of years of thought as a Cherokee in the first, place and a lawyer in the second. He held, whether right ly or po(, ajl tle lunate prejudices about I iiid and country wo usually attribute to the lull-blood Indian, and although born, raised and ed ucated a w hite4 li t!t , thcuc. senti ment were In him, and grew with his growth, and strengthened with his strength until they became a pi.-sion, and no sacrificu to him appeared too great to sustain them. Whether he was correct in his es timate of the strength of the right and the power ot the law, or whether we are right in yielding to kyhnt we believe to he the ne cessity of the hour, the future alone can determine; and now since we have sold lor what he considered u "mess of jiuMaue' we may indulge the hope, without doing him injuslioc, thai he was mistaken, Now that the "negotiation-i" are rati lied, and the Cherokee nation is bound to the agreement as noc,. inated in the bond, jmh or had, it will he ol liltle avail to find fault with them, but we may discuss them in the hope that il we ever have any mote hmd to sell we w ill he beltei Inlormt i in such dealings. One provision in this agreement, supplemented by Iho act of the naiitiiial council in in rahliiNition, so Senator Wolf said on the ll or of (ho at uale when the matter was under consideration, gave twelve bundled white men (adopted c'ui isens) the same standing as to ri'nt to participate in the money distri buliou as a native Cherokee. Me ariued that the bill provide.! for a wiuie mall iiuopleil llj ,v ,,r nnv land h" might be entitled tu tin ihr section vr. (,' ji,,. ;t , ticl,s ofl agret ment, and i he act oi 'the conn, i cil, out ol hi .diare n tins ni nicv ! coming to him lro:n the sale of h the Sn ip. Now, sei lion live was I not so ch ar as t the adapted ciii.-i retain one hundred and twelve dollars out of his share. The man mu.-t have sonictliin' in the hands of the nation htdore anything could be retained, and if one has :i lmre why not the other. If there hi) a job or steal us has been intiuiuted in some of the papers this must tic it, for the majority steadily refused to modify or ipialily the provision in the least. Should our while, eiiiens suc ceed in getting a. landing on this vantage- ground, thus exposed, it will involve directly a sum of money out of i lie eihl and one half million t-qu a I to three hundred and fitly thou-nd dollars, and ul timately u full share in the parti tion of the lands east. As a se tUeiice to the. aureelueut, should congress ratify it, the council pars ed a law declaring void all sal. s or conveyances of whatever nature ot improvements upon ihe public domain held or claimed by any pt rson not a recognized citizen, to citizens of the Cherokee nation. This was necessary, so it was nr- Utlcd, 111 view of tin fuel that if the agreement passed. th Slates Bgrees to c;ive the United labor to the nation. 11 we are Clui-tians we aie in duty bound to lieiieve that everv thing is for the best, if not, we are no worse ofT. Respectfully, John W'i.i. jam Huowm;. II. L. Pkkstos, editor of ihe Kansas (,'ily Sunday Sun, was in dicted by the grand jury last week ar.d placed under bond. This pub lication has been in existence for more than a year, and several bl us correspondents have lice fd and feathered it Texas. tar- There are 5,022,'iuj acres in the strip, which will furnish homes for 37,037 families, or lM.OtiO peo ple. Before thelindcan opened for settlement th? agreement must be ratified by congress and to this there are two dangers which should be considered: First that congress may take an economical streak and refuse to ratify the routrac and, second, that they may refuse to ratify theco llateral concessions, which many aver is incompatible with the basic principles of Amer ican government. Should the de sire to give homes to the homeless overrun thee objections, congress will undoubtedly ivct vrjr toon. Cheap Cash Stoke : General..: Merchandise-: INCLUDING DItV GOODH, CmoCISllIKS. BOOTH, IIAH.DWA.HK East of M., All Goods Sold HT. F. THOMPSON, I -I'HOI FEED aii PRODUCE EXCHANGE Will Pay tho Cash for GRAIN AND PRODUCE Of eve ry description, including Oats, Corn, Apples, Potato-, Hides, Furs, Wool, I'ecans, etc. Consignments solicited ; also orders for large lots. ocl22'f Vixxitn, i . I rid- Tor. ri CZJ, UVu PERRY. - ADAIR, INDIAN TER'Y. Senior lu Dry Goois, Groceries, Provisions ani Hardwire. AH IMMENSE STOCK IS ALWAY'j CAHHIC0. Will make It an object for tho pvplo the Mipi lii Unit they may need at oursl.ru. c. V ai: Full Has a GENERAL including n Boots, Shoes, Clothing, Hardware, Furniture, Lumber, Sash, Doors, Lime. With reduced rates since the fire, and expen ses of handling the business reduced, and selling for spot cash, i am willing a nd can afford to sell good much lower than ever before. I respectfully ask a trial and inspection of goods and prices. C. HAYDBN, Chouteau, I. T 18 9 2 HARPER'S MAGAZINE. This magazine will celebrate the fourth centenary of the discovery of America .by its re discovery, through articles giving a more thorough exposition than has hith erto been made of the recent un precedented development of our country, and especially in the great west. Particular attention will also he given to Dramatic Ep isodes of American History. 'The Field of the next European War will be described in a series of Papers on the Danube "From the Klack Forest to the lilack Sea," by Poultnev Higelovv and r. I) Millet, illustrated bv Mr. Millet ami Alfred Parsons. Articles also will be given on the (ieriuan, Ans. trian and Italian Annies. iliu t.aled bv T. de ThuUtrnp. Mr. U. I). Howells will contri bute a new novel, "A World of Chance." characteristic. illy Amer ican. Especial piominciice will tie given lo short stories, which will be contributed by T. 15. Al drich, 11 11 . Davis, A. t'on.tp Dovle. MalL'.iret Deland. V U'oolson, and other writers. ' ..iiss pillar Amonj the literar-; icatures will be Personal R.- miniscences ot Natli.oilel II.lW;,,ril,. ,v 1, i cl. lege cla-s ma,,. .uu ;,,. , frj,.n,li Hoi itio J'.ridgc, and a Persona! Memoir of the Brownings by Anne Tliackcrarv Riiehr-. HARPER'S PERIODICALS. Harper's Magazine, Per Vr. $M0 Harper's Weekly, " -1.(10 Hatper's Bazar, 4.00 Harper's Young People, " 1'onlnije free, to nil nuburribrr in Uniti-tl Slate. Cnnndii, nud Mcriro. .The volumes of tin Magazine be gin with the number for June and December of each vi-ar. When no time is specified, subscriptions will begin with the number cur rent at the time of receipt r.f or der. Bound volumes of Harper's Magazine for threw years baek, in neat cloth binding, will be sent by mail, post-paid, on receipt ol $: (HI per volume. uioth rases, for binding, 50 cents each by mail, post-paid. Remittances should he mule by Post-ollice Money Order or Draft, to avoid chance of loss. Address: HARPER & BROTHERS. Nkw York. SHOES, and STOVJjIM. K. it T. Track. Strictly for Cash. IUKTOH OF- of th Kurroundlnj country to purchasa oct Hi V DEN, (UIOUTKLV1T, and Complete Stock of MERCHANDISE! Etc. Patronize Home Industry ! Iluy your Trees, Vncs, Small Traits, Roses, &c. foiin th - Vinita Nurseries; 'e will lie-in dijnZ. paekni); and shippiiifT about the first of No veii:lier and continue until frozen weather prevents. V aiming other stock, about havi lao.ooo One Trees and Two-Year-Old Apple (very fine) to ofler to the fall trade at VERY LOW riUCES. should order early so as to insure ,i ii.i.i in ixnoi mis inii I prompt aitention. rite for price list. Address, MARRS F RAZEE, Vinita. I. T. All stock guaranteed true to name, j I JOHN SAPT, is EN EC A. MISSOURI, Usnprl Plsr In F U It N I T U It tt, COFFINS, OASKET8, ETO- I all rnriiilnrp tn purlin In tho CSrokt Nllon tl I aoh Prtrpa hrtr. ni r ,,T II lrif hi rhars. Orlmhylflpurii irotnrt'T IIUMH to. Gl m trial ontsr, or wriw m for mil, oa m hat j on ant. nnf.Mf joiin USECA, - . UISSOCBI.I Our January IS NOW IN FULL BLAST. TO MAKE ROOM FOR $ a SIFIRIISra- STOCK Special Inducements MEN'S CLOTHING IN Finest Line of JSOOTSand SHOES ever brought Jco Vinita now open J. S. THOMASON HAST R0OM- Siili&cKecli Cb (NCOHf LIY STOCK COMMISSIOH HERCHAIITS KANSAS CITY STOCK YAfiDS CONSIGNMENTS SOLICiTEO- Attention! StOokmen and Farmers. I Have First - r th fir- t-sW-.j X (! iirJTi 1 Boots ant! Shoes MADE TO ORDEU. Cow Boy Boots a Specially, All Mail Orders Ke.ein A 1 1 e n 1 ion. I'l'OIII t NO TROUBLE TO SHOW Youi s II- siiecl I LEE BARRETT, Vinita. -M. L. &, W. f.1. CAMPBELL, " GEM - DRUG - STORF Seneca, t'ARRV THE DRUGS, PAINTS, OILS in CHI oil I II W ".I Missouri. Se;l I I! ree.-i v. si .!ni- .I li Inllv i" an I it ti I i - I il II t 1 1 1 648 WEST SIDS OtISSOXSn I L At Vinita A t .nip te -lock Ol I'.Ul'ilelV M: C'cnieiil, Einie, I.ath, 1 M - mldiiu - yellow nn3 1-1 iisdt iq L JnJ2r PRICES FURNISHED rerms: CASl?. MOLD DON'T HL'V VOI R. HPLEHEMTS, ?AGPJS, BUGGIES OR HARHFs f JJ you go to r.AXTF.R srRlNV.S ar n v stock jllsl Tho flm 'st ne tt p.iy o.i to Jr to gootis or oct. .1.. YY;r;;.s; 5.'Vv7.y; rL-:.V;.Y jr,S ol every di s.-rij.; llanaper of th& BAXToR SFRING3 IMFLEMEN'T CO. can ba found at 1 1 oli taDd of C. D. limrva Sc Co, Baxter FfcriEffi, Clearing Sale We will sell all good at a large discount. Successor to Chouteau & Thoniason. ( ) F PA TI O X BUILDING. JUlVIt 0 ) a Full ami (uiiiilete Line of s HI ami all s'ooils fiiaiul la a Class Harness Shop, Hilli l'l-ices tu Suit tfie 'limes. but thiM'oujh workmen, using iniiti n il I gu.'l I .'HI tec nil poods as very re-pect. GOODS. C U Missouri, FINEST I.I N E OF Saddle Harness f ';-:'7 WALL PAPR, ETC.. '111 II 0"i;i; oler f. illen invt' II lllii i'MIIS V;.;'rjE. 5Br ,joA. MISSOURI. e i & 2 's"' A-- 8 I J A 5 V Z i ? J-i J.VX. xer. rial. Mils, lldow- Miv i r.,u;K s. ,11 I'iper, Ku. cyjriss S iu,'-'? aSisciilty ON A.VPL.ICA I ION. W. L . TROTT. J V immense? JUit 111 V t!ir .im! the Z.T.rr ,,-. ? Tf ........ n .1 U n.ixter Sprin-s if u i w.int io worth of w s:o k o f . IA7-:SS. CAKKIAGFS ir.Kr'OXS, U l(i OA'S and nr. ion. I