¿ 1 -*
t- ^
< < v
7^1
&
S q u ille
VOL.
COQUILLE CITY,
13.
Union Labor Column.
' W A L T E R CULM, M.D.,
P H Y S IC IA N A N D SU R G E O N -
DBVOTBU TO THE INTHBBST8
O»
TH E LABOUEH
OFFICE AND RESIDENCE,
PEOPLE’S PARTY.
O
oca.-u.ille Oity. Or-
The following compose the County Cen
tral Committee of the People’ s Parly of
Coos oonnty, Oregon:
Dist. No. 1—Win. Phillips. Empire City,
*• •• 2— K. M. Collver, Marshfield.
“
“ 8— 0 . A. Kelly. Riverton.
“
“ 4— I. T. W eekly. Gravel Ford.
“
“ r>—J. H . Matheny. Myrtle Point
“ 8—Jas. West, Bandon.
JA8. WEHT. Chairman. Bandon.
W. PHILLIPS, Secretary, Empire City.
O. E. SMITH."
HjgaSurgeon Dentist,
*2lT!3y
office
M A R S H F IE L D , O R E G O N .
vlnl.
J. W . B E N N E TT,
Attorney at Law,
Marshfield,
-
Oregon.
JOHN F. HALL
Attorney at Law and
R e a l
E sta te
MARSHFIELD, 0BBOON.
C. A SEHLBREDE.
ATTORNEY »
<
■
LAW
Roseburg, Oregon.
Before the inw was written down with
parchment or with pen;
Before the law made citisens, the moral
law made men.
Law stands for hnman rights, bat when it
fails those rights to give,
Then let law die, my brother, but let human
beings live.
—— I S . i 1 l^fT Haceraan.
j1
_i.' i1. ..
____
____ ,-L j *?. aa
S T O C K W ELL’S BAD BOY
Boy Completely Knocks the Intrinsic Idea
Out.
Pa, what is money ?
Why gold is money, my son.
Spnoinl attention to nuit ter. before the
U o.ebnr« land office, the commissioner o f
Mas ring is gold, is it money ?
the general land olHce a. d secretary o f the
1 ntorior at Washington.
No; gold has to be sent to the
mint and be coined first, and then
D R . T . H O L D E N
it is money.
DENTIST.
What is a mint?
M ARSHFIELD, OREGON.
It’s a great big building where
Q f U C I in the^ Hutcheson Building
they take gold and melt it into bars,
adjoining the Bank.
and then they stamp it.
O. O . T.— Neal Dow Lodge, No. IS,
. Meets in Coquille City every Tuesday What do they stamp it for ?
evening. All members in good etanding
Oh, I mean they have a machine
oer.liallv invited.
Burn N osl * b ,O .T .
J . H. James, Secretary.
_________ that prints five dollars, ten dollars
or twenty dollars.
I
F. A. A
I. U .
Is it m on ey b efore th ey prin t it ?
/"lO Q U IL L E F. A. & I. D. meets every
\ J second cud fourth Thursdsy nights
in each month in Coquille City, Coos
eeunty, O r e g o n . ^ ^
JoHNSON. ^
Bandon F A- and I- U
Meet* every second and fourth Friday
nights in each month at Bandon, Loos
eennty. Or.
E. G. O bovbs . Sec.
Sumner F- A. and I- U.
Meets at Alliance hall on the seooml and
fourth Saturday e v e n .n g s^ e M h m o n th .
iv e r t o n
R
f . a .
& i .
d
. meets m its
new hall at Riverton every first and
third Saturday ev en in g«»! eaoh month.
U . A . K EL LY i 8 B C .
OUTH FORK F. A. * I. U., No. 230,
meets every seoond Saturday at 2 p in.
Brot hers o f other lodges in good standing
are invited to attend with ns.
B. E. H ampton , Recretnry.
S
i. o .
° - F-
Coquille Lodge No.53
vl.e ts at Coquille City every Saturday even-
ng Visiting brethren, in good standing,
ordiallv » » * « • & w#
jj G.
J. S. L awbenck , R . 8.
Coauille Encampment,
ISTo a s , X O. O. F.
Meets first and third Thursdays in eaoh
month at Odd Fellows’ hall. . Cordial inv -
tation to visiting patriarchs in good s'and-
jtt„
J . S. L awkbn cb . C. F.
G. F . Boutell Scribe.
__________
Chadwick Lodge, No- 08.
A. F . and A. M.,
Meets at their hall on Saturday evening
on or before fall moon in eaoh mouth.
Visiting brethren cordially invited.
C. W. W hitk ,
T . R. Willard, Sec.
w
. M.
__________
G. A. R.
Gen- Lytlo Post No-27,
Meets at Coqnille City, on every firat
Wednesday.
Visiting comrade, in good
standing, cordially invited.
sianu UK,
J o H k M olbis , Commander.
H. H. N ichols , Adjutant.
__
Coquille Fishermans’
U N I O N
EarL&olpla O reg o n ,
Will meet everv fourth Saturday in each
aouth till further notice. All members in
i ood standing o irdiallv invited to attend.
JUMPED! SEE?
LOTS AT BANDON,TU“
the vicinity o f the parade groned,
fo r $12 5 each. Only a few lots
at this price.
For particulars in
quire at the H erald office.
E O IS
¡
S -A -3 L E .
*1 1 A ACRES o f land on Cnnningham
¿ ■ i \ ) creek. 4 miles from Coqnille City,
the nw W and n H o f the sw X . sec lfi, twp
58 s, r 1* w, covered with a fine body o f fir
timber. P rice—l^ lje r^ o ™ : ‘ «™ * «« "I-
o A A ACRES, what is' known as North
Z 4 U Prairie. * miles east o f Langlois P.
O.i i N i 1 stock ranch, plentyof out range.
Prioe—$5 per aore; will take in exchange
vaMey property.
W KIOHT.
Dallas. Folk county,Or.
BT B. PAU LL 4 C 0 .‘
REAL ESTATE DEALERS
A R A G O , CO O S C O U N TY, O R .
AVING had several years experience
in the east, we feel oontident we can
give satisfaction to our patrons. Send ns
your lists o f property, or come and see us.
H
Coqaille River Property a Specialty.
Correspondence promptly attended to.
Onr commission 8 psr cent o f sales. Oui
motto is. Live and Let Live.
If]
B. B. PAULL 4 0 0
Photographs!
Gallery sis doors east o f I. O
O. F. Hall. Samples and prices
iu gallery.
C. W ILKINS. Photo.
pers all urging mo to howl for an
honest dollar.
My God, here he
comes again—
Say pa, how big would that green
back of yours be on your, intrinsic
plau ?
Oh, run off, now; that's a good
boy.
I don’t want to he a good boy,
I ’d rather he n smart one. Sny, pa,
it would be five hundred times as
big as it is, a regular blanket sheet
as it were
Well, run off now, I ’ve got the
headache.
P r , there is only seven cents
worth of copper in a hundred cents,
and only 14 cents worth of material
in 20 nickels. If this honest money
plan that the money-lenders are try
ing to fasten upon the country pre
vails, pennies ought to be seven
inches iu diameter and nickels about
three and one-half inches.
As it
is they are dishonest. Any govern
ment that makes dishonest things
is dishonest, and a dishonest gov
ernment ought to be overthrown.
My son, that’s anarchy; and—
No, pa, that’s logic. Either you
must drop that idiotic, absurd in
trinsic value idea, or else a hundred
dollar greenback should be as big
as a barnlot.
Why, how ridiculous—
Ridiculous, pa; it’s d— ned fool
ishness. Why, if these fools des
troy silver, where will you get gold
to pay that $100 you owe ? There
isn't $20 in this township.
Why, I don’t know; I hadn’t
thought much about it. I—
Isn’t it a fact, pa, that you have
let these bought-and-paid-for news
papers do your thinking for you?
If you have got a think-shop why
not use it a little ? If you swallow
the reason they give you for the
low prices of wheat, wool and cot
ton you ought to have a guardian
and—
[Grabs for boy.]
I ’ll intrinsic you—
[Boy slips o u t]
(Old man soliloquizes) “Think-
shop, 50-cent wheat, intrinsic value,
lo-cent wool, honest dollar, $1000
mortgage, 7-eent cotton, three-and-
one-quarter inch dollars, Jews, sher
iff sale, John Sherman—hell and
damnation! I give it up.”
[Enters boy.]
Pa, I know what money is.
How did you find o u t!
Bill Smith told me. He found it
in a big law hook. He says the
United States supreme court de
cided what money was a long time
ago.
Well, what was it?
Bill says that the court said,
Money is not a substance.
It is
a printed legal decree.”
Not a sfcbstance!
A legal de
cree ! That beats me.
Now run
away. You can go fishing or swim
ming or anywhere else if you won’t
ask me any more questions.
H
OREGON, TUESDAY, JU LY
itself as a witness, they would have
seen in a moment that the silver
dollar was the unit by this direct
statement imprinted iu its very sub
stance. You know the silver dollar
never varied in weight in the United
States from the foundation of the
government to the demonetization
in 1873, when it was W orth $1.03 in
gold dollars. When th e change in
ratio was made in 1854, it was the
gold coin that was altered, not the
silver dollar. The latter was always
the immutable standard of value
till struck down by the monopolists
who desired a dishonest, constantly
increasing single standard, in 1873.
“ Wlteu the ‘unit’ question comes
up again, just remember to look at
the coin itself.”
A Plain Statement.
New Market, Minn.— “Simmons
Liver Regulator cured me of L'ver
Complaint and Palpitation of the
Heart. I used many other remedies,
but with no relief, until I began
taking S. L. R.”— Wm. Schultz.
Your druggist sella it in powder
or liquid; the powder to be taken
dry or made into a tea.
Hon. Neal Dow,
the prohibitionist,
National Christian
vention at Boston,
inet
aged 91 years,
addressed the
Endeavor Con
Saftuiday, 13th
Matthew Boulton and James
Watt's Soho foundry at Birming
ham, where Watt worked out bis
idea of the steam engine, after an
existence of 133 years is now idle,
and will soon be broken up and
dismantled.
At one time it em
ployed 4000 men, but its hnsiuess
died away, and when it closed its
doors it had only 400.
t
d
à
23, 1895.
NO. 51
“ What’s Jim a-doin’ o f sense he
O U R M IN D
graduated?” "H e's a-workin’ for C H A N G I N G
the man that wrote his graduation
Is hard work compared with
speech."
i B Ä
«mi IlHEnsATiSM relieved
Dr. Milos’ Nerve Plasters.
1
changing the appearance o f your
stove with
Herald and Rural. Northwest (or $2
O
Wre offer a valuable premium to C T S .
our subscribers who are interested
in the farm, fruit-growingaudstock, T E N
without extra cost; in other words, C T S .
$3 for $2— two papers for the price
of one.
TEN
CTS.
vREGULATORÆi
Header, d id y o u o v e r take S im m o n s
L i v e r R e g u l a t o r , the “ K in g o p
L i v e r M e d ic i n e s ? ” Everybody r.ocds
take a livor remedy. It is a sluggish or
diseased liver that Impairs digestion
and causes constipation, when the waste
that should bo carried off remains In
the body and poisons the whole system.
That dull, heavy feeling Is due to a
torpid liver. Biliousness, Headache,
Malaria and Indigestion are all liver
diseases. Keep the liver active by an
occasional dose o f Simmons Liver Reg
ulator and you ’ ll get rid o f these trou
bles, and give tone to the whole sys
tem. For a laxative Simmons Liver
Regulator is b e t t e r t h a n P il l s . It
does not gripe, nor weaken, but greatly
refreshes and strengthens.
‘
Every package lias the R ed Z
stamp on the wrapper. J . H.
Zeilln A Co., .YliUadelphia.
New Orleans Timss-Democrat
(D em .): That all debts have been
doubled hy the demonetization r.f
silver, the consequent accretion in
value of gold, and the fall in the
prices of all products, every parson,
and especially every farmer, in
the country knows. It takes twice
as many pounds of cotton or sugar,
nearly twice as many bushels of
wheat, ‘to pay the interest and
principal of the debt; aud it takes
twice as maDy hours of labor.
Wbat makes you ask such foolish
questions ? Don’t bother me.
But pa, I want to know. Every
body is talking about money, and I
want to find out.
Well, let me see; I never thought
about it before. No, I guess it isn’t
The friends of McLaughlin, the
money before they print on it
Mr. Wanamaker has increased
convicted New York police boodler,
his life insurance to the remarkable
Then does the printing make the
are using all means to see that he
aggregate of ¡$2,000,000.
He is
money? You said that gold wasn’t
is sent to some prison ill the state
certainly the most heavily insured
other than Sing Sing.
They de
money; and printing wasn’t money;
man in America, and possibly in
clare thst there is every reason to
then what is money? If the money
the world.
John B. Stetson, of
fear that he will there meet with
isn’t in the gold nor in the printing,
Philadelphia, has policies on his
violenco at the hands of the many
life for $750,000, and Hamilton
where is it?
thieves who were sent up during
Disston for $600,000.
Channcey
I ’ll be hanged if I know.
I ’ll
his long term ns a detective.
It is
M. Depew is said to be insured for alleged, however, that this is not
have to look this up.
$500,000.
the reason, hut that he dreads the
But there is such a thing as
The splendid gathei ing of the supers and taunts that will he hurled
money, is there not ?
clans which last week drew great lit him by the men who were
Why, of course thero is.
There,
audiences in London day after day arrested through his efforts.
Mc
to hear women talk of temperence Laughlin was nlways very rough
now, what have you got your hand
and philnnthropycnnnot but awnken with men whom he arrested, and
in my pocket for ?
enthusiasm
nmoug those who have the thoughts of marching in lock
I want to see what you’ve got in
only read the reports as they ap step with these yery fellows sends
your pocket book. Say, what’s this?
peared in onr daily papers. Says a cold chill down his back.
That’s a greenback.
Harper’s Bazar, Frances E. W ill
ard, whose brain devised and tact
Is that money ?
consummated this overwhelming
Yes.
demonstration, belongs to us, and
Then a piece of paper with some
all American women are proud of
thing printed on it is money.
her ns tlie’ r representative.
We
NOTICE TO INVENTORS.
Y-e-s, I s-u-p-p-o-a-e so’
like to feel thnt so fair and gracious
a womanhood has flowered on our
Well, is it the paper or the print
There was never a time in the his
soil; that this wise, judicious and tory of our couutry when the de
ing that makes it money ?
able daughter of New England and mand for inventions and improve
It is the printing.
the west stands to the world for ments in the arts and sciences gen
But awhile ago you said that just
what American influences can do erally was so great ns notv.
The
printing can’t be money.
in molding and making a serene, conveniences of mankind in the fac
noble and most winning lady. We tory and workshop, the household,
Neither can it be.
hold others in high esteem, Hnd are on the farm, and in official life,
But if the money is not in the
not slow to recognize charm, elo require continunl accessions to the
paper nor in the printing, where is
quence and merit in the women appurtenances and implements of
it?
who rally round Miss Willard— each in order to save labor, time and
Now do stop; you’ll drive me
such women as Lady Henry Somer expense.
The political change in
set, Mrs. Josephine Butler, Antoi the administration of government
crazy.
nette
Stirling,
the
Countess
of
does not affect the progress of the
What does intrinsic mean ? I see
Aberdeen, Miss Ackerman, the American inventor, who being on
thè New York papers say the in
Countess of Carlisle and Mrs. the alert and ready to perceive the
trinsic value of the metals in a dol
Leavitt.
Bat we sum everything existing deficiencies, does not permit
TH E U N IT O F VA LU E .
lar must be a dollar.
up in a word when we laurel the affairs of the government to deter
Why, ah, intrinsic means actual Wlist the Ex-Governor of New Mexico Has Frances Willard as a woman in him from quickly conceiving the
to Sftv on the Subject.
whom heart, head and band work remedy to overcome existing discrep
value, it means thnt the material in
New
York,
July 9-— Hon. L. Brad together, and work to purpose for ancies. Too great care cannot be
a dollar must be worth a dollar
ford Prince, for years governor of the uplifting of men and the benefit exercised in choosing a competent
before it is made a dollar.
and blessing of her period.
“ To and skillful attorney to prepare and
You mean, pa, that it must be New Mexico, is in the city- In an serve the present age’’ has been the prosecute an application for patent
interview he said:
keynote o f Miss Willard's life as Valuable interests have been lost and
worth a dollar before it is made
“ A couple of months ago there teacher, orator and organizer, and destroyed in innumerable instances
into a dollar, as it is after ?
was a great discussion in Chicago not the least noteworthy feature in hy the employment of incompetent
Yes, that’s it
os to what was the unit of value her career is the sweetness and counsel, and especially is this advice
Is that what they call an hònest
modesty, the quiet womanliness applicable to thoso who adopt the
under the original coinage act of which she has never lost
dollar ?
“No patent, no pay” system. Inven
1792, which embodied the views of
Yes, my son, and that's the kind
tors who entrnst their business to
Washington, Hamilton and Jeffer Q u e s t i o n « , Q u e s t io n s , Q u e s t io n a l this class of attorneys do so at im
of money I believe in.
son. They made large bets on the
If everybody were just, would minent risk, as the breadth anil
Don’t you believe in any other
subject, some contending that the anybody need to be kind? This strength of the patent is never con
kind, pa ? •
•
unit was in silver and some in gold, question naturally rises from the sidered in view of a quick endeavor
No, sir, I don't
Five-Minute Sermon in Evutr W here to get an allowance and obtain
and finally the matter was referred for July. Is Naples a good place to
How big would the “honest
the fee then due.
THE PRESS
money plan” make a iL'.ver dollar, at one of the clubs to Judge Vin visit in the summer? E very W here CLAIMS COMPANY, John Wed-
cent, who rendered a decision which answers the question, by taking its derburn, Oeneral Manager, 618 F
now, pa?
readers there, on one of its famous street, N. W., Washington, D. C.,
Why, at present prices of silver it was no sooner made than it was “Lightning Tours,” and ascending
representing a large number of im
controverted.
\ would be about three and one-fourth
with them to the very top of the portant daily and weekly papers, as
“
The
joke
is
this,
that
the
people
inches in diameter. I tell you my
volcano Vesuvius. Is there any use well as general periodicals of the
of Chicago never thought of look I of taking cold? The Health Civil country, was instituted to protect its
i son, no cart-wheel dollars for me.
You believe in greenbacks, don’t ing at the coin itself to see whether I Service Examination Department of patrons from the unsafe merhods
it bad anything to say on the sub our paper answers that question, heretofore employed in this line of
I you, pa?
ject.
Now here," said the governor* promptly and accurately. Did you business. The said company is pre-
Oh, yes, of course I do.
ever run away to a-swimming? . If | pared to take charge of all patent
taking
out of his pocket two finely so, the illustrated poem of W ILL
How much was that paper iu that
: business entrusted to it for reason-
greenback of yours worth before preserved specimens of our eaily j CARLETON (who edits this bright , able fees, and prepares and proae-
it was printed into a five dollar coinage, “ here are two silver dol journal, and writea for every page ' cutes applications generally, includ-
lars, one of 1795 and one of 1802. of it) will bring back each step of j ing mechanical inventions, design
bill?
On the obverse of each is the word ! the way, and every plaah at the ! patents, trade-marks, labels, copy
Why, ah—say, I ’m busy.
; cool water. Send fifty cents, acd rights, interferences, infringements,
‘liberty’ and the date; on the re you will get the most original of
Pa, I’m seeking information.
validity reports, and gives especial
It is
Oh, well, about a cent, I suppose; verse, ‘United States of America.’ papera for a year. Or mail ten attention to rejected cases.
Now look at the edge where the mil cents in stamps or specie, fop sample ' also prepared to enter into competi
now run away, I’m very busy.
ling is placed on more modern coins copies, agent’s outfit, and instruc tion with any firm in securing for
[Boy goes ou t]
tions how to make “ big money.” eign patents.
That’s ■ close cell for me. How and what do you see? ‘One dollar, Address “ E very W here Publishing
Write for instructions and advice.
or
unit
of
100
cents.'
the deuce is this; a five doliar bill,
Company,” Brooklyn, N. Y.
P h il i p W. A v ir e t t ,
the best in the world, made of a j “ If the Chicago brethren had
[P. O. Box 385.)
618 Fstreet,
rureS hr Dr Miles' PAIB
cent's worth of paper, and my pa- 1 only thought of going to the coin Pu NETTRAiaWA
Washington, D. C.
s s "O ne cen t s d o n . ' A t all druggist*.
*
i
PATENTS
e v e n
" 3000 PARCELS OF MAIL ' FRIE Lasts Seven times longer
areas If received within 80
days wlH be for 1 year boldly
p r i n t e d on gummed
labels. Only Directory
! guaranteeing D 3 .M O
customers; from pub-
! Ushers and mauufito-
turers you'U receive,
probably, thousands o f
valuable books, papers,
BMiur
araftauttMpri__._,
y A l l f r « c And each parcel
ofvourprinted address label»
pasted thereon. E X T R A ! We wlU
also print and prepay postage on 900 of
your label addresses to you; which
stick on vnur envelopes books, etc., to
prevent iheir being lost. J. A. W abk ,
o f Reidsville, N. C„ writes: “ From
my 2ft cent address In your Lightning
Directory I’ ve received nyr 500 address
labels and over abOO P a r r e la o f
R a i l . My nridrewea you scattered
among publisher!« and Dianufiicturertf;
are arriving dully, on voluablenaroel»
o f iuull from ull parts of the world.”
L ook s
A bou t
A bou t
A bou t
Seven times better Th*"
Seven times cleaner s*°v«
T w o times cheaper P“1“1»
T w o times handier
e e e
I f your grocer doesn't keep it,
send us his name with io c and
get a large box and a valuable
family household book free.
Doonellan & C o., A g ts.,
6 1 9 M ONTG OM ERY 8 T ., 9 . P .. O M .
Address—
W OBLD’ S FAIR DIRECTO RY CO.,
No 262 Girard and Frankford avennes,
Philadelphia, Pa.
J .
J.
BAKER’S
M C. e w. PATERSON,
and Stone Prop.
Worts L im ; Feed ? Sale Stables,
O O O S
B A Y
M YRTLE
Manufacturer o f Marble Monnmenta, Hea 1-
stoneH, Tablets,'etc.
Cemetery lots enclosed with stone coping
or curbing. Iron railings furnished to or
der. Correspondence solicited from parties
living in the country or other towns who
may wish anything in my line of business.
M
a r s h f ik l d
..................................... O
8 IN G L E and D O U B L E R IG S ,
F IN E TEAMS,
S A D D L E -H O R S E S
R E A S O N A B L E P R IC E S .
reo
190 d o llar s
PER MONTH
3 n Y o u r O wn L o c a l it y
made easily and honorably, without capi
tal, during your spare hours. Any man,
woman, b oy , or girl can d o the work hand
ily, without experience. Talking un
necessary. Nothing like It for money
making ever offered before. Our workers
always prosper.
No time wasted in
learning the business. W c teach you iu
a night how to succeed from tlio first
hour. Y ou can make a trial without ex
pense to yourself. W c start you, furnish
everything needed to carry on the busi
ness successfully, and guarantee you
against failure if you but follow onr
simple, plain Instructions. Render, if
you are in need o f ready money, and
want to know nil about the best paying
business before the public, send us your
address, and we will mail you a docu
ment giving you all the particulars.
Regular trips with fins hacks oonnerting
with trains *t Ros.bnrg: two trips daily t«
and from Coquille City, making prompt
connection with river steamers, stag« lines
and ocean steamers at Coos bsv.
do you oo H U N T I N G ?
OF COURSE
You will buy
W ANT
M A R LIN .
BECAUSE—
It has a solid t o p -p r o t e c t io n .
It ejects ttt the s id o -C o n v e n le n o e .
It Is light wcfffht—C o m fo r t .
It has the H allabd Barrel—A e c n r a c y .
It has fewest parts—S im p lic ity .
Bend for complete catalogue, free. 8pec!al pad!
f.
o f cards for IS cents.
THE MARLIN FIRE ARM5 CO.t
M ew H a v e n , C on n .
TRUE * CO., Box 400,
Augusta, Maine.
IF YOU
POINT, OR.
IN F O R M A T IO N
A BO U T
P E N S IO N S
A D D R E SS
A
LETTER
OR
PO ST A L
C AR D
TO
THE P R E S S CLAIMS COMPANY
P H IL IP W. A V IR E T T , General Manager.
P. O. Box 46.3,
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Washington, D. C •
Honorably discharged soldiers and sailors who served ninety days, or over, in the Iate
war are entitled, if now partially or wholly disabled fo r ordinary manual labor, whether
disability was caused by service or not, arid regardless of their pecuniary circumstances,
WIDOWS of Buch soidiers and sailors are entitled (if not remarried) whether soldier*■
death was due to army service or not, if now dependent upon their own labor for snp .
port. Widows not dependent upon their own labor are entitled if the soldier’s death
was due to servioe.
CHILDREN are entitled (if under 16 years) in almost all cases where there was no
widow, or she has since died or remarried.
PARENTS ore entitled if soldier left neither widow nor child, provided soldier died in
service, or from effects of service, and they are now dependent upon their own labor for
support. It makes no differeuoe whether soldier served or died in late war or in regular
army or navy.
Soldiers o f the late wor, pensioned under one law, may apply for higher rates under
other laws, without losing any rights.
Thousands of soldiers drawing from $2 to $10 per month under the old law are entitled
to higher rates under new law, not only on account of disabilities for which now pen
sioned. but also for others, whether due to servioe or not.
Soldiers and sailors disabled in line of duty in regular «rcoy or navy since the war are
also entitled, whether discharged for disability or n °t.
Hurvivors, ana their widows, o f the Black Hawk, Creek Cherokee, and Beminole or
Florida Indian wars of 1*32 to 1842. are entitled under a recent act.
MEXICAN WAR SOLDIER8 and their widows also entitled, if 62 years o f age or dis
abled or dependent.
Old claims completed and settlement obtained, whether pension has been granted
under Inter laws or not.
Rejected dairy s reopened and settlement secured, if rejection improper or illegal.
Certifiotttps o f service and discharge obtained for soldiers and sailors o f the late wat
who have iowt their original papers.
Send for laws and information. No charge for sdyiee. No fee unless successful.
Ad<ire“‘
THE PRESS CLAIMS CO.,
PH ILIP W. AVIRETT, O tn.rsl M snsg.r,
Washington, D. 0 .
P .O .B ox 463.
Look H re!
COME A-RUNNING!
a reat
B a r g a in .®
In
T Soal
E sta te I
The L E H N ltE R R additioo to Myrtle Point hoe been recently plat
ed and placed on the mnrket. and ie offered so cheap and on eaoh
easy terms that partioe wishing to purchase property in the beuti-
fnl town o f Myrth- Point should take a look at this addition before
purchasing elsewhere. We only aek cne-fourth down, balance from
one to two years’ time. Fine acrage property adjoining this addi
tion for sale ¿heap.
J. A. L ehnhebr , agent, Myrtle Point, Or.
E a s t
M a r s h f ie l d ,
The coming R . R . Center o f Coos County,
Lots are now on the Market.
For fu rth e r inform ation apply to the
COOS
B A Y LAN D COM PANY
A t East Marshfield, Oregon