Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Weston weekly leader. (Weston, Umatilla County, Or.) 1878-189? | View Entire Issue (July 3, 1885)
. j- . " -Weston Weekly. -Leader.- ' Friday, jul 3,;ies5. ; All human aitoation have their iaconwnicMcea, "HajpineM is nii th product of oar wrroondingn. Xu tovrc lie deep in oar own tvrarta, v While it h doubtless troe that naa'a condition way he greatly Meliorated Uj circosnsUnoes, yet kJ'wore than folly to .griere at or" remanding a the ose of ear '.dunontmc' Purerty, bad Health, lack of mjcwm, want of con groinl society or any of the thousand ilia to which man ia heir xoj ag gravate hia niiwry or discontent, Lot the cairne of it lies within bim elf. The g"rm of unhappinpss may be the malt of inheritance or f education, very frequently the latter. " Two much .of the home teaching and a great deal of our public chool ia responsible for the fireTailing discontent. The young an not ao much taught the duty of reaignatifn and obedience an they re the lesaona if false independ ence Jtnd the ceaseless striving for the attainment of a Mo without la Lor and the accumulation of wealth without toil. Even it this could b done the teaching ' would be futilty and the result dibastrous. ho man is more to be pitied than he who haa nothing to do. Labor a essential to man's moral, mental and physical well-being. Every thoughtful man recognizes this in disputable truth, and yel one of the great aims - of popular education aeemato be 'o inculcate a dislike for labor and to encourage a dis taste for it. Again, it is beared y Tecesrv to mention that wealth ia not the way to happiness, that it brings more cares than pleasures, that it never satinties the cravings it causes, that it feeds the flames in which contentment perisbfs, and jet the young are almost made to Leliere that the acquisition of walth is' the chief end of man; and their observation '. soon confirms the'r teaching. .... People seem to for get that happiness is one of the rand aims of existence. To fill a child with inordinate ambition, whether the object be wealth, power or honor, is certainly destructive of his peace of mind. To inculcate . contentment with bis condition, as long as it is honest and honorable, to teach him the true dignity of Yioueat toil, to warn him of the de lusive drearoa of wealth and power, to teach hiin to put his reliance for happiness on something higher than mere worldly success would tend to 4iiak bitter and a happier man. x J " ; - -'""' Kua Vt tt Steare KaaU. Ketcg. - jS.donaI Bank notes are conchd ed to be the sitest kind opper money. 1 Of the' hundreds of. mil. lions issued -since the establishment of th system in 1862, not 4 single person has lost a dollar for want of redomption, or a cent because of discount. This is a strange con trast from the notes issued under the old State bank svatem, when Hill holders were at the mercy ot unscrupulous bank officers, or the prejudices one State had toward the paper issued by bank in snath er State. A 2?tinl . Bunk note ia accepted everywhere in the United States at ita par value, the receiver well knowing that it is ut terly iuipoaeiMe for hiro to lose a cent, no matter what becomes of tbe bank irauin the ote, as its equiva lent in coin, and a liberal margin beside, is in a place where tbe de funct bank officers cannot reach it. to be used only for redemption par poses. It is well known that the Government requires a deposit cf its bonds before a bank can issue a note, and even then the bank can issue only 90 per cent, of the par value of the bonds deposited. Prior to 1871, must of these were 6 per cent., and np to January 1, 1877, tnsy generally oore 0 and 0 per cent.- The'ainount'on - depesit has 'varied from. $236,000,000 in 1865 to $391,000,000 in 187i, at which time the noto circulation was the largest. The character of the bonds now on deposit for circulation is as ioiiows, as compared witn a yeivr ago: 1884. 1885. Currency, G's., 53,403,000 83,520,000 44's 44,554.500 48.631.550 4'g 109,778,700 117.300,."OO 3's 178.4SW.950 143,501,850 STAT XETTi. Denver was visited by a $25,000 fire last niyht, The membership of the Grand Army of the Kepublio is 300,000. The first edition of Ger. Gordon's diary, comprising 10,000 copies 'has been sold. The importation of fruit at the port of Ne , York is nearly $50,- 000,000 annually. Thirty Six out of the 13$ appli cants far admission to West Point have been found deficient. Hon, Saniuel S. Burnett has been chosen commaicler-in-chief f the Grand Army of the Republic. Prof. Huxley will retire from his Government position in Octo ber on a yearly peubion of 1,200. The Austrian press, still object to the appointment of Mr. Kelley as Minister frosa the United Staces. Oliver Pain, the French Lieuten ant of the Mahdi, is reported to have died of fever in the Soudan. A violent earthquake was felt in the department of Nord, France, Monday. The damage was slight. The cholera in. Spam has created a panic and people are fleeing in all directions to escape the terrible epi- usnnc.. Thirteen business houses- in Cin cinnati, belonging to the estate of teuben K. hpringer,sold at auction for $140,000. News has been received at Gal veston, Texas, of the hanging of fif teen horse thieves in Indian Terri torv by citizens. Totals ?330.322,15!) $312,952,700 The comparison shows a with, drawal of 23,3G9,450 during the year. The amount withdrawn in the past tro years is $39,954,450. 3lncral Product of the I'nitccl States. The chief of the division of min ing statistics in the geological sur vey has issued advance sheets of his report on the mineral statistics of tho United States. The total output of coal of all kinds for 1884 showed a net gain over 1S83 of 4, 038,326 long tons, but a decline in value of $15,726,277. The produc tion of crude petroleum was 24, 089,758 barrels of frty-two gallons each, of which the Pennsylvania and Nfw York fielJs produced 23,- Ktll.lol barrels. As ciinpared with 1883 the product shows an in crease of 689,529 barrels, but as the average price fell from $1.10 to 85 cents per barrel the total value of the natural gas used in 1884 was $1,460,000 against $475,000 the year before. The total amount of iron ore mined was 8,200,000 long tons, valued at $22,550,000. The amount of pis? Von made was 4,097,- 868 lontftons, a decrease of 497, 642 tens, with a value at the furn ace of $63,761,624, a decrease of $18,148,576 over the previous year. The total value oi all iron and steel in the first stage f manufacture, excluding duplications, - was $107, 000,000, a tire! rue of $35,000,000 Nearly six hundred Mormons ar rived in New York last Tuesday. They are mostly Scandinavians, and are imported slaves. David Quinn, who killed Ong Ah Mon, a Chinamen, in New York, about three weeks ago, has been sentenced to Sing Sing for life. Governor Martin of Kansas has called the administration's notice to the defenceless condition of the Kan sas bor Jer in case of an Indian raid. The Secretary of the Treasury has been informed that a recent in vestigation of the sub treasury at New Orleans sjiows a defalcation of $25,000. Campbell Chrisman. pioneer and well known citizn.disd at his home in Lane county a few days ago,agf d 74. - . " - iieanv .'J,uuu iieacl or caT Me were recently collected in the general rodeo in Goose Lake valley, near J Kfceview. - : G i-een - Bros, of G alien creek re sumed work recently on their quartz ledge and have several men at work. They have oue of the best ledges in tne state. - " i An army of crickets has haen marching . - across Sprague river valley, clearing out everything in the shape ot tender vegetation on the line of march. . " Crops will be fair generally, aid m tunny instances verv good, in Jackson county. The late rains have put a new face on everything. Corn looks quite well. Excellent placer digjins on Cottonwood creek, above Shattuck's place, just south of the Siskiyous, are reported, and quite a number of men are are at work there. A great deal of prospecting, is beingdone in Jackson and Josephine counties, and we may expect a gre.it mining boom as soon as capital is introd uced to develop their resources. Stewart Larson, a fHrm hand liv ing near Eugfne City, attempted suicide last week by takinglaudanum, and then cutting his throat. He recovered,, and was taken to the asylum. A number of dper skinners from California are slaughtering the deer in the Sisk iyou mountains in the vicinity of Cinnabar, in large num-bf-rs, for their hides. This should be stopped. Charles W. Smith informs us that considerable placer mining is going on m the Hungry creek district. just across the Siskiyou mountains, and that some ef the mines are paying well. Mr. Cabler of Wagner creek accidentally .shot a prospector a short time ago, mistaking him for a bear. The tullet went through his arm, , fortunately not inflicting a sqvf re wound. GREAT Mtf$ CURES Rheumatism, Keuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, Backache, Headache, Toothache, Kara Thi-oitt, Swe'lfoffo. Spralna, Brutus, Huron. Scales. Frost Kite, JD ALL OTUKR BOU1L1 FAIES AID ACHES. Sold by Drogeisui and Dealen ererywhere. flstj Ccat a bottle. Directions in 1 1 Languages. THE CHARLES V. VOOE1.EK Cf. - - ' - I ' MEAT I MARKET. JOHH FLETCHER AKD T, L Proprietors, DKALEKS DV Ffiiuusly all the digestive and !imiifive organs, inciuding the Kil Eeys. M bpn these orgnus are so affected, :b( y to fxtraet from the b!:od the uric Hcid. which, curried through the cir ;i:l:itio;i, causL-a liheuniatisui kad Kcu-rr.U-.ia. li.o fractions of the Liver are also affected Uj costiveness, causing Bilious Disorders. Anions the wamins svmntoms of Bilious ness arc tfitusea. Dizziness, Hetidaehe, Wenkness, iever. Dimness of Vision. Yellowness of Skin, Pains in the Side, iiatu ana buouiuers, i oui jsioutn, t un.-a ri'U!-ue, Irregularity in the action of tba Bowels, Vomiting, etc. The StomachT fufiors when the bowels are constipated, and Indigestion or dyspepsia, follows. Fetid Breath, Gastric Pains, Headache, Acidity of the Stomach, "Water brash, Xcrvousness, and Depression, are all evidences of tne presence of this uistress iiisf malady. A Suro Relief for irregu larities of "the Stomach and a!l consqucut diseases, will be found in the uss of AYER'S,P!LLS. They stimulate the stomach, free the bowels, liealtliMly invigorate the torpid liver and kltTsays, and by their clcausinsr, healiiis; -A toiiic properties, Ktren.slhea and m: ify the whole system, and restore it X'i a suliitury and normal condition. Ir, J. C. Aver & Co.. Lowell. Mass. ! Bold by ail DruiieioU. SH BEEF, MUTTON AND PORK Our meats are always fresh and good All orders tilled with promptness. i Satisfaction Guaranteed. E.BLBEHTOH. T. C. ANDERSON Westoa Livery Etable KEW'MEN, NEWRIGES and Fresh Horses! TWIST, FillEGUT Tobaccos. -Cigars, Notions; Cutlery, .... 1 . PERFUMERY, PORTE KI0NKAIES. AID .BRUSHES, FISHING TACKLE, At Sherbrook, Dakota, this week, a cyclone blew down every house in tho town except the court house, and it was moved six feet off its foundation. . .- Warren Welcher, a notorious fiutlaw, murdered Ins trife near Gihfon, Glascock county, Ga. This is the second person Welcher has killed within a month. . Three colored men were killed and another dangerously wounded Monday by tho explosion of a (toiler m th distillery of Mattingly & Moore at Bardstown, Ky. It is rumored in Washington ttat ,anpther. c&U, will soon be made for '.thelntetfbjrenco of this" government I to protect the property of its citr TnEKKbis been some unpleasant ness with the Indians i'i Happy Valley in the1 southern' part of this iStatx. Genera! Tope has trtriainit , ted to th war department some oi ths particulars, lis dwells upon S tact that these innocent Indians hay no Reservation and recom mends that one ' b set apart for .them. Ha further states that the safety of the Indians demands it, And that the Indians agree to hav ing a Reservation assigned to them. Whatever may be thought of the wisdom of Gei.eral Pope's proposi tion there cn lie no doubt of the ngacity of the Indians in seeking the protection which a Reservation affords. While it has never been very clearly demonstrated that the Reservation system has had any great civilizing influence upon the Indians, it has been repeatedly shown that to them it is a matter of great convenience. After a sum mer's work of pillase and murder Reservation it a convenient place in which to pass the winter under the protection of the government. These Reservations also serve as pUces of refuge for marauding In diana when close pressed by the hand of justice. Tho severance of tribal relations would do much to thwart the schemes of plotting chiefs and to weaken the force ef Indian union in whose strength lies their greatest dinger. There is Slothing formidable in widclv scat tered bands of Indians. They no ned the unifying facilities of the Reservation to make them denser . out It ia just a little peculiar how difficult it is for the government to grasp the situation. The evidence ot interested agents seems to have :mer weight than the roost unvarn jlshed accounts of Indian depreda tions. It is also a litt'e peculiar that no representative to Washing itoa from an Indian country has - had the courage or ability to pre sent the question in its true light It is but another evidence of the " " trath, that is every year becoming more evident, that . statesmen arc ; scarce and that politicians care more for individual advantage and p&ty success than for tbe interests of-the , people. Political influence and the sports of office are of more impor ts nee than the lives of inoffensive settlers or the rights of the Indian ; "thither of the latter weighing tnqch frit the tit servers, frcm 1883. The production ef gold I sen upon the Isthmus of Panama. as $30,800,000 and of nilver 848,- S00,000, .an increase of $800,000 gold and $2,G0O,GO0 silver r.ver the! previous year, lije production ot nickei was 64,558 pounds, an in crease " of 5,750 pounds, but the price, 75 cents per-pound, was such a fall from former prices that the otal value was SH.oOo. The pro duction ef other metals generally show an increase in amount, but he uniform decline in price oisde them worth less money than the year before. Vrnnd Lodge, I. O. C T. The 2l8t annual session of the Grand Lodge, I. O. G. T., of Ore- gon conveneu. in xtose-nurg. ltit attendance was smaller than usual, owing chiefly, no doubt, to the fact that the place of meeting was some distance off the center of popula- tion of the grand lodge district The following officers were elected for the ensuing year: G. W. C. T., Z. T. Wright; Grand Counsellor, Sam flobson; G. V. P., Emma R. Fisber: Grand Secretary, J. Jfi. Houston; Grand Treas., J. H. Lam bert. The membership of the order was reported at 3308 males, 1842, females, 1466. The report of the Grand Secretary showed that the number of members initiated last vear was 2,227; admitted by card 86; reinstated 302; resigned 499; suspended 2,282; expelled 116; deaths 23: loss by (lend looses 1685. The total income of the Grand Lodge is $3,455.27 and the net as sets $806.02, Sllll i bIUdb Them Dawi. Wasdisgtos, June 26.- On the 20th of March there were 759 guagers in the service, and a reduc tion - of 296, it was thought, could bo made, so as to bring the number down to.4C3. Thus far 159 have been dispensed wi;b, and the further reduction is beirg steadily made. On , the 22d of April there were 463 storekeepers assigned and 1-4 unassigned, and 678 serving as both storekeepers and guagers-as-signed and 340 unassigned, making 1,637 in the service at that time. Of these 141 have been removed. A list has been made out of the various revenue districts, with the number of gangers and storekeepers in each district, and the number in each it is thought to be j ossible to dispense with. Mi'. James Russell . Lowell will resido with his daughter, Mis. Bur nett, in Southboro, Mass., his home, J Elmwood, in Cambridge, being un der lease to Mrs. Ole Bull for an other vear. - Minneapolis, according to the Tribune, Vill erect 3,000 new build ings this year. The place is grow ing, beyond tho needs of the sur rounding country, and a collapse is sure to tallow. Francis Murphv the other day told a volume in a sentence to the Pittsburg, strikers. He said: "If you muststrike, strike egamst whis key end bad company." Such a strike as that is always in order. Miss Cleveland has received from her publishers at New York the an nouncement that the first edition of her book, now in press, has proved insufficient to meet the advanced orders for the trade, and a second edition has been ordered. The Controller of the Currency has extended the corporate existence of the following named banks for a psriod of twenty years: First Na tional Bar.k of Portland, Or.; Na tional Branch Bank of Madison, Ind.; People's National Bank of Jackson, Mich. The Commissioner of the General Land Office has directed the Regis ters and Receivers at district land offices not Id furnish blank forms for homestead applications except upon personal application by those actually proposing to pre empt lands. Messrs. Eckley & Boyd are to be .u wit. fuuiiua' iuii ui u autrr at lia Grande next week to be . called the Grande Ronde Argus. They have purchased the material of the oM Walla Walla Epigram. - The uilitary telegraph Tine be txeen Linkville and Furt Klamath is in poor repair, the wire almost touching the ground in places. A force of repairers will soon commence opera tuns, putting in new poles where it is necessary. A reprf sentative of San Francisco company has lately bonded a placer nine on wolf creek, Josephine county, and is now testing the same. He also intends to erect a quartz' mill near that place, for the purpose, oi working some of the numerous quartz ledges in that vicinity. . The Bandon Citv Fishery Com pany expect to be in full blast by the 1st of Julv. Thiir new fishing boat will be ready for sea by that time "Moggie" is twenty-seven FARM MACHINERY! I take this method of informing the public, and tue ianoers m particular, mat l nave opened a complete asaorimcnt of Agricultural Implements, COSSISTIHQ OF Saddle Horses, per fiay $1.25 Buggy and Team - j- 4.0Q EASY RIGS AND ALL NEW TEAMS! Horses h-nnded hy the day or month. Plenty ot twJ and the best of bttentioD. Transient Stock carei for promptly and at rea- souame rates. ; I -' Give Us a Trial and be convinced that we mean to do business on business vrinui'.'lcs. DENTON &AHDER5QN. 9KERY AMD SCHOOL BOOKS. PLAYSftG CARDS, FANCY GOODS, JEWELRY. French arsd American Candies, pes than Eirei ..AT. 3E FAULT'S. 'WESTON, OREGON.. Eli - ' rfS ' f R- - - - JUST RECEIVE BY THARP BROS., j. j BSacksmithingl Done to Plows and Harrows. MOWERS, RAKES, Headers, Wagons, Etc., I intend to m&ke a specialty of the celebrated ALBION SEEDER, the most complete farming implement ever in--vented. Anything I do not happen to have, in stuck will be ordered on short notice. CHAS." BOWLING, Adams -' - Oreaoa. order in Style. i first-class In addition to the above we wouM respectfully mtorm rnc larmers oi ine surrounuing country that we now carry a full line of i " . AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS J. I. Case awl Randolph Header?;, j ! The Celebrated Empire Mow ers and the Stadebaker Wag ons. . j TIIActP BROS.;' Adams A FEJLL LISE OF : Fane Ds?ss .G-ffii3.' '" mm Oregon. SPRING AND SUMMER FOR mi AND BOYS Ladies' Wear in Endless Variety. -: . - Canned Goods and Groceries. BiicMiigliaffl & Eoolit's Boots and Sloes s We TiI! not be undersold s Browsing animals are proving as destructive to California forests as Lpto is els where. Herd of sheep ana cattre art ariven up 10 ine tnountains every year to graze, and tbey dsveur every gren thing from lb foothills to the meadows on th snmroit of the ranges. When the grasa faiis the young seedlius; trees ar eten ofT, or tbe bark peeied so that the uudergrotb, j entirely de uroved. . The safest 3 per cent, bond in the world appears to be that of the United States, which sells for 103i Then come those of the State of Connecticut, which sell at 102,and next those of tireat Britain, which sell for 100. The 3 per cents of France are only worth 82. Tin, in which a puccessful corner has just been worked on a vast scale, which has commanded the markets 0f the world and forced np prices without regard to value, is the one metal in which our tariff for twenty years has done nothing to develop our own resources. The result is dependence on a single foreign supply and great fluctua tions tn price. The Marie Garrison railway suit in New York has been settled by Mr. Gould paying $1,005,000. The lawyers for the plaintiff received $93,759, and one of them still claims $55,000; the referee got $15,000 for serving fifteen months, and counsel for the defense obtain ed $450,000. Mr. (inkling got $50,000; M. C. Day $100,000 and a salary for eight years; Mr. John T. Terry over $100,000; ex-Judge Camstock $500 a day for- 150 days, and so on. feet long, six feet beam, and is half decked. She is a pretty little craft, and will undoubtedly uiale a good sailer. Several farmers in Linn county are plowing up spring wheat which has been very much injured by rust. J.h9 Albany Herald says: "The prevailing view is that the wheat crop will fall considerably under what it was last year." No rust has yet made its appearance in the fields of Eastern Oregon. C:inyon City News: There is a disease raging among horses in this part of the county, and there are but few- horsemen who have not suf fered a loss of colts. Tha disease is something similar to Uackleg, and the aninals generally die in a few hours after they manifest symptoms of the disease. Captain Haskell, who is said to represent Portland capital, has bonded the Roten ledge in Willow Springs, precinct, and we learn will ako bond the Swinden ledge near the same vicinity. Both of these mines have been worked before with fair result?, and are likely to prove valuable property with the improved methods of crushing re fractory ore. Grant's Pass Courier: The men working on of the the tunnels at the Yank, have struck into a cave of considerable dimensions. If the ledge is really rich there will pro bably be found a large amsunt f fine gold and prehaps some good nuggets, on the floor of this cavern. It is rumored that they have refused an offer ef $1000 for thirty days lease of this prospect. During the progress of a game of base ball at Forest Grove on Mon day of last week Willie A. Reddick, aged 17, was struck full in the eye with the ball, from the effects of hich he has since died. Young Reddick was at the bat and struck a foul, the ball following up the bat with such force as to produce con cussion and subsequent inflamma tien of the brain. A little daughter of R. B. Jeffer son, on South Coquille, was burned to death a few days ago. The chiid about seven or eight years old was playing with other children in an old house, which had just been given up for a new and mare com modious dwelling, and, getting too near the tire, which was st ill burn ing, her clothes were soon in a blaze, and before they ?ould be re moved she was so badly burned that she died in about twenty-four hours. The father, in his efforts to tear the clothing from the child's body,burn ed his Lands in a frightful manner. Perfection at Last. A TWO-WHEELED VEHICLE That will ride as easy as a four. Good and strong, with phaeton body geod, full, large back and the rider can use and feel no more horse motion than in a four-wheeled vehicle. Has all the conveniences for a doctor's box, for a chest, storm apron, and is as easy to get in and out of as a buggy; nothing to climb over in getting in. See what is said of it "It is the best cart in our city." ff. H. MAT- JACKSONVILLE. ILL.. March ?8. 1883. W. U. CUURUH Dear Sir I am greatly pleased with your two-wheeled vehicle. It dis counts anj-thinjr ot the kind. I have nu more use for four-wheeled buggies in mv business. . A. W. TIPTON, M. D. MARTINS. S. C. May 20. 1883. W. R. CHURCH Dear Sir The Cart ordered from you came yesterday.' It is all and more titan you claim fcr it. it is certainly the finest and most cat anient thing on wheels. I don't think 1 will t 8 : any other vehicle in my pricti ;e sow. I ours respecuuuy, O. B. EVANS. HEMSTEAD, TEXAS, June 16. 1883. W. R. CHURCH Dear Sir Cart is at hand has been tried by me and ia satisfactory in every particular, t will not hesitate to recommend them, r.ctonly to physicians, but also to any and au persons naving mucn anving to oo. Yours, etc., P. S. CLARK. TOEKVILLE, ILL., Dec. 12, 1333. 1 havo been usinir one of Church's Physi cians' Road Carts for KOme time, and am well pleased with it. I have practiced medicine near ly twenty -live years, ana have used aruost eve ry kind of vehicle on two wheels that 1 have seen, but this is the only conveyance of that de scription tha, I have ever used that I can hearti ly recommeud." W. T. SHERWOOD, M. D. ; - 1PLANO. ILL , Bee. 8, 1592. W. R. CHURCH Dear Sir: The Road Cart I purchased of you is ail and mors than you told me. It ridss as easy as any four.wheeled bng gv, and I most heartilv reeomm rnd it. i O. P. BLATOHLEY, M. D. CLAYTON, MICH., April 20, 1883. W. R. CHURCH, Yorkville, III. Dear Sir. I am well pleased with my Cart; think it well worth the cost. Would not be without it for any piice. O. N. KICE. W. r! CHURCH, Yorkville, III. Dear Sir. I heve used one of your Rad Carts since last Feb r;iary. I thiak it superior to any Road arfc I ha.ve examined. It is THE thirj ior the "busy practitioner." W. E. KlNKETr, M. D., Yorkville, 111. for cash. Laughs! Because he buys his Goods at ADAMS from" REESE & REDMAN. Dress Goods, Laces & Ribbons for his Boots, Hats ana iieady-SIadc Clothing for his ' GEORGETOWN. GEORGIA, Julv 20. 1883. W. R. CHUR'jH I received mv Boad Cart all' rhrht and like itvcrv much: would not exchansre j PAW PAW, Mav 1st, 1883. it for any four-wheeled vehicle I have ever had i W. R. CHURCH Dear Sir: You wish to know for my use. It is the admiration of all who see how I like my Cart. I cannot say too much in it. Yours very respectfully, its praise. It is simplv perfect. H. U. KAIGLER. L. H. BRAFFIT, Jl. D. ST. JOSEPH, MO., August 18, 1883. MARSHALL, TEXAS, April 30, 1S33. W. R. CHURCH Dear Sir The Cart was re- W. R. CIIURUti Dijar b.r I have now used ceived in rooo shape. I am hhrhly pleased with my Cart about ten davs, and must say it i-tands ft after saving it a trial . It is much neater and the test admirably, it is admired by everybody, more compact than I expected. I think it will Send me a top iot it. Yours truly, take here. Wishing you success, I am yours, ! DYERBURGH. TENS., April 7, 1S83. W. R. CHURCH Sir The Cart is at band and I like it spienuidly . It is simply perfect. I could not make any alterations. JO. A. FOiTLKER, M. D. CHESTER, IOWA, Awrust 18. 1833. W. R. CHURCH Dear Sir Tne Cart is the lightest to dnw ia the United States. The more I use it the better I like it. You-3 trair, F. FBEEMJRE, M. D. i LANSOALE, PESN., April 20, 183. " MARLIN, TEXAS. The Cart arrived to-day, and. I am greatly W. R. CHURCH Thcueh you have not asked pleased. Beau anything in this section of the for recommendation of your Cart. I think it my country. I wiah you success in your enterprise, duty to frive one. For ease and speed it can't be K H. ANDitEWS, well beaten. With a $50 Texas pony 1 think I Editor and Publisher o! the Medical Summary. can go with any hih-priced horse. 8. P. RICK. W. R. CHURCH, MANUFACTURER, " j LXo. 10 Oregon St, YORKVILLE, ILLINOIS. rjj-fjn money nd Hu stimulates wrery J -0q uaeful and beaeficsnt enUrpriw. ' so called new color Tor j Tn",""fiery charger Thered nead-1 The dye was new and cheap, h Park Bow, Kew York. 1 Bteetram CPT ! C. Tea, Sugar and Coffee and all kinds of Groceries for hi Tobacco, Shirts, Blankets, and Everything he wants lor He buys for Cash, and declares he canMo better at REESE & REDMAN'S than he can at any other place in the county, for. they keep the -best of everything in Ben oral fi e r g H a n d i s e ? and their prices are very reasonable. Patronage Respectfully Solloited rS o. vi one