V
4<
Coquille C ito l i cni!à
YOL.
COQUILLE CITY, OREGON, TUESDAY,
14.
] ) l t . J. BURT. M OORE,
Union
SU R G E O N AND P H Y SIC IA N .
IL L promptly respond to all calls,
dav or niiiht.
Office at the new Drug Store, opposite the
K. It. Depot; residence in Hatch prop
erty. near Mr. Messer’ s.
COQUILLE C ITY, OREGON.
W
T H E PEO PLES::::
1
. . . . BARBER SHOP
. . . . o ....
r p H E BEST, NEATEST
A up-to-date in the oity.
AND
MOST
Hot ii ml Cold B aths— Reasonable
Charges, Courteous Treatment.
COQUILLE CITY, OREGON.
Front street, opposite R. K. Depot,
T. W. G IL L H AM.
rjiHE COMMERCIAL h ----
The
most modern arranged BARBER
SHOP in Coquille City.
M. M. McDonald, Proprietor.
Hot and Cold Baths at all hours. Popular
prices. Headquarters for Commercial
Men. Next door to Postoffioe.
C. L . M O O N ,
a tto rn e y - at - Law,
M AHSIIFIELD.
OREGON.
A f e » ! fur the North America Insurance Co.
of Philadelphia, and the London, Liv
erpool <k Globe.
JOHN
F. H A L L
Attorney at Law and
Estate -A.gr®a^t,
M arsupi KLD, O buoon .
C. a . SE H L B R E D E .
ATTO RN EY
L A -W
Roaeburg, Oregon.
Speaia! attention to matters before the
Rose burg land office, the commissioner of
the general land office and secretary of the
Interior at Washington.
M
yrtle
cam p , no .
107, w o o d m e n
of the World, meets at Masonic Hall
1st and <id Monday nights of each month.
A. J. S hbbwood , Consul.
George T. Moulton, Clerk.
F . A , «fc I. U.
lO Q U II.tiE F. A. & I. U . meets every
J second and fourth Thursday nights
iu each month in Coquille City, Coos
00 a nty, Oregon.
M bs . L ena J ohnson , bee.
(
Bandon F A and I- U-
Meets every second and fourth Friday
nights in each month at Bandon, Coos
county. Or.
E. G. G rovkb , btc.
" l i m n e r F A. and I- TJ.
M>
f,
S at Allianoe hall on tile aecoud and
j Saturday evenings of each month.
W m . R asob , Sec.
& I-
. . ,-ERTON F. A.
U . meet« in its
uew hall at Riverton every first and
iliri . Saturday eveniugS of ^ aoh iiionth^
FORK F. A. A I. V.. No. 230,
I meets every second Saturday at 1 p m .
■othora of other lodges in good standing
a invited to a: tend with ns.
B. E. H ampton , secretary.
1 OCTH
O. F.
I. o.
Cocniille Lodge N o.53
acts atCoqnille City every Snturday eveu-
ig. Visiting brethren, in good standing,
srdiallv invited.
C. A. H abbington , N. G.
. S. Lawrence, R. S.
J o a u ille
3STo
E n ca m p m e n t,
2 5 X O. O. F.
Meets first and third Thursdays in eaoh
li.th at Odd Fellows- hall.
Cordial invi-
tiou to visiting patriarchs in good "tand-
J. S. I j A wkbncb . C .F .
5 . F . Bout ell Scribe.
________
ihadwick Lodge, No- 68
A. F. and A. M.,
Meets at their hall on Snturday evening
i or before full moon in caob month,
siting brethren cordially invited.
J. AV. L enbvb , W . M.
T. R. Willard, Sec.
G. A. R.
G e n -L y tle P o s t N o -27,
Meets at Coqnille City, on every first
Wednesday.
Visiting oomrnds, in good
standing, cordially invited.
H. Id. N ichols , Commander.
W . H. N oslbb , Adjutant.
_
JUMPED! SEE?
LOTS AT BANDON,
th e vicinity of the parade gronnd,
fo r $125 each. Only a few lots
at this price.
For particulars in
quire at the H erald office.
COOS
B A Y
and Stoie Works
C. IV. PATERSON, Prop.
Manufacturer of Marble Monuments, H eal-
stones. Tablet«*, etc.
Cemetery lots enclosed with stone coping
or curbing. Iron railings famished to or
der. Correspondence solicited from parties
iving in the country or other towns who
mav wish anything in my line of basiness.
M arshpifld
-
- - - - -
O reo
«T. J . B A K E R ’S
Literv Feed t Sals Stables.
M YRTLE
P O IN T . OB.
S IN G L E and D O U B L E R IO S ,
F IN E TEAM S,
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 .
Kogular trip« with fine hack, connecting
with trains at Roa.bnrg; two trip« daily to
and from Coqnille City, making prompt
connection with river steamers, stage line«
aud ocean steamers at Cooe bav.
DKVOTEU TO
Labor Column.
1HK INTKBHHTS OF T ill* LABOURS
I 'L O I 'L K ’ S P A i m .
The following compose the County Ex
ecutive Committee of the People’ s Party of
Coos county, Oregon:
Dist. No. 1—J. J. Stanley, Empire City.
“
“
2— A. M. Collver. Marshfield.
“
“
3— W . H. Hull. Riverton.
“
“
4— I. T . W eekly. Gravel Ford.
“
“
5—J. H. Matheny. Myrtle Point.
“
“
6 — W . D. Marshall, Bandon.
W . H. HULL, Chairman. Riverton.
J. S. M cEW EN, V.-C. and Treasurer,
Coquille Cifcv.
J. J. 8TA.NL EY. Sec.. Empire City.
Before the law was written down with
parchment or with pen;
Before the law made citizens, the moral
law made men.
Law stands for human rights, but when it
fails those rights to give,
Then let law die, my brother, but let humt>n
beings live.
— ltev. Miller Hageman.
PLAIN
TALK TO MILLIONAIRES.
Chicago's Mayor Tells a Party of “ Best
Citizens” They Bribe and Steal.
I .n ) > nt T l l i 'l r f > « » r li le N tru lliiK
o l FrnnrliifM-H him ! i :o r r u ,» l l » u
iu C ity ,1 flu I rN.
[Tho Examiner of Sumlny, Dec.
29, contains this sweet morcenu for
the masses of citizens to ponder on
as the days go by. Mayor Swift of
Chicago, Mayor Pingree of Detroit,
Mayor Davio of Oakland and Mayor
Sutro of Sau Francisco now know
tho devils well, even if they come
iu broadcloth and the mask of a
“ best citizen” to do their theiving
work. Wo refer also for more of
the same kind as implicating Hon. (?)
Leland Stanford, deceased, C. P.
Huntington, the Crockers, etc., 1st
page of the Examiner of Thursday,
January 2d, certified to by Senators
White and Perkins (Dem. and Rep.),
tho congressmen all (Democrat aud
Republican) from California, and
thousands of citizens in civil life.
These railroad magnates, bank offi
cials and their ex-convict strikers
are the mischief makers.— E d . H eb -
a l d .]
I’ll tell you work for your civic fed
eration, Mr. Baker: Give us six
good business men in your city
council. Don’t try to elect them in
wards where you have no influence,
but concentrate your efforts where
they will. Give me Lyman J. Gage,
Charles B. Fsrwell, E. G. Keith.
Let them come to tho council Mon
day evenings, and they and you will
learn something.”
When Mayor Swift sat down a
something or other settled down on
the banqueters resembling a great
sorrow-. There was some applause
at first, but it was evident the speech
was not what would have been
ordered had tho guests had their
Cain among the recorls of earthly
saints.”
V.
“ A few weeks ago, in Baltimore,
Mrs. Edholm, the apostle of the
Woman’s Rescue League, went on
a slumming tour. She found some
good-appenring young women in
the haunts of shame. ‘Whero shall
we go ?’ was the earnest question of
one of the young women. ‘What
shall wo d o?’ Then one Hpoke up
earnestly and said, ‘Before you como
here to get us away, go over to
------ ’s factory, and get them to pay
their girls moro than two dollars a
week!’ There was no reply to be
made to that.
“ * Why do you pay your washer
woman a dollar, when you can get
the work done for fifty cents ?’ was
the seemingly innocent question
asked of one woman by a supposedly
Christian woman. I did not hear
tho answer; but there was a sad
heart turned away in hitter contem
plation at the traffic in human blood,
in the oppression of the poor —-for
f>fly cent « !
“ I wonder who of us is not guilty!
This matter is so far reaching that
it applies not only to the rich but
often to tho lesser well-to-do. How
we like to buy things at ‘less than
cost,’ though generally tho people
who buy in that way are deservedly
swindled; but we try it at least It
has come to pass that the battle is
to the swift, and the profits to the
few, and all because of the traffic
iu human blood.
“ But the cry goes up to G o d !
What reverses in that land, oc that
great day! I do not find difficulty
in receiving the hardest sayings of
Jesus Christ!”
NO. 24
OUR NEW CLUBBING OFFERS!
II.
“ She applied to a largo store for
i a position; they wanted some young
i woman. She wns to be cashier and
general help in the office. Her pay ?
$2.50 per week; the day before the
manager had offered another young
woman the position for $3.50. And
one of them was starving for food,
to say nothing of facing a winter
with others dopendingVm her. How
could she honorably live on the
money ? That was none of his bus
iness! Was it God’s? How did
the blood of this victim cry in his
ears? Woe unto Cain!”
HI.
say .
“ A small boy began work ns a
After the meeting adjourned Ly
cosh-boy. He was thin, poor, ill-
man J. Gage, president of the first
fed, starving. At the end of’ the
national bank, ex-president of the
first week he went up to the office
W orld’s Fair Directory and Civic
to get his pay, supposed to get a
Federation, walked up to Mr. Baker
dollar and a half a week. ‘Why,’
and said:
said the manager (the proprietor),
“ Mr. Baker, I am of the opinion
‘We don’t give boys anything until
you waked up the wrong man.”
they have been here for several
It may bo added that what Mayor
weeks and learned the business!’
Swift said tonight has been hinted
With a frightened look he turned
at by the Chicago papers since the
away, when several of the young
Illinois Steel company got the city women clerks put their heads and
council to give it $10,000,000 worth hearts together and took something
of lake front property. Many of
out of their own sennt wages, and
the guests at the Commercial Club
gave the boy three dollars to take
are stockholders and directors in home. That boy’s blood! Ah, bow
the Illinois Steel company.
it must make a noise in the ears of
-------- -
-----------
God. Woe unto Cain!
A M INISTER A W A K E S I
“ And the next morning, at a
church
door—■?”
‘ ‘The Voice of Thy Brother’s Blood Crietli
Unto Me from the Ground.”
IV.
“ This illustration is given with
[We find the following “ hot shot”
in that able Baptist paper, The hesitancy, but I hope the editor will
Standard, printed in Chicago, of not cross it out, for it tells a sad
Dec. 28th.
They are voluntary truth that is often repeated in the
thoughts on questions of the hour, large cities of the country. Into
forced upon him during the medi two large stores— one east, the
tations of Rev. W. H. Geistweit, the other west— two young women went
author, and given for the medita for situations. The wages were so
tions of others. Assuredly if these small that both remonstrated with
things are true, and we have already tho manager on the ground that it
published son e such thoughts as was impossible for a young woman
the truth as we have lean ed them, to maintain herself respectably on
they should cause serious consider such pay. With a smile that re
ation and action, or tlio' voice of flected the grin of a demon the reply
conscience may tell thee, “ thou art was made, insidiously, ‘Why, haven’t
the man!” Read them ! — E d . H er j-ou a gentleman friend?’
“ I wonder what such respect
ald . ]
able (?) men would do if such sug
THY b r o t h e r ’ s BLOOD.
“ Looking into the story of Cain gestions were ninde to their owu
and Abel recently, the words of sisters. What innocent blood cries
God, ‘The voice of thy brother’s to God— and woe unto Cain !”
Chicago, Dec. 28.—Mayor Swift
shook his fist at over fifty of Chica
g o’s most eminent citizens tonight,
and told them they were responsible
for the bribery of aldermen, steal
ing of franchises and corruption iu
municipal affairs. He did not mince
mntters, though he was talking to
men who could scrape together
$350,000,000 if the ocean ion de blood crietli unto me from the
manded. The mayor’s hot words ground, have impressed me in a
were spoken at the banquet of the direction not felt before— although
Commercial Club, a function of no the words have been read many
ordinary import in Chicago’s social, times. It was tho voice of a slain
business and financial life, particu brother crying to God for help. I
larly financial.
wondered if there was any blood
There were present about the crying out to God in these days—
board such men as Marshall Field, crying out to him for vengeance;
Gcorgo M. Pullman, Lyman J. Gage, and wondered if there were not
W . T. llaker, president of the hoard some men who would shudder if
of trade; Joseph Medill, Phillip D. they knew that God looked upon
Armour
and
others.
Several them just as he looked upon Cain—
speeches of the banquet sort had as a murderer!
been rnado when a more bold guest
“ The bible speaks about oppress
hinted at the urgent need of ing the hireling in his wages; of
retrenchment iu city affairs. This grinding the poor, robbing widows,
was a starter.
etc. It has occurred to me that the
Later W. T. Baker, after a few days for that sort of thing have not
commonplaces, grew eloquent and passed— I wish they had. One of
economical in the city’s behalf. He the most difficult positions for n
declared with much vim that the minister to be placed in, is to have
time hail come when Chicago’s some poor member tell him a story
affairs should be administered along of oppression, of ‘robbing,’ and to
more business-like lines; there was have the story wind up with the
too much money wasted; too many statement that the oppressor is
men on the payrolls. This is what among the lending people in the
ho said, though he was a trifle more the community, often leaders in
diplomatic about it.
some church.”
Then it was that the bald head of
I.
Mayor Swift took on a redder hue.
"A poor man stood before me one
His lips quivered, and rising quickly night, telling me of his effort to get
nnd shaking his clinched hands nt work; he was n bright, intelligent
the banqueters ho declared himself. man, thoroughly honest, of good
“ The statement that four men in appearance; ho had a family to sup
the city hall,” said the mayor, “ arc port After long searching he got
doing two men's work is an absurd a position as clerk in a large store;
and untrue one.
nnd the wages offered him were six
“ Who tempt the common council dollars a week! But he had to take
and who bribe the aldermen ? You it or starve. How he should sup
representative citizens; you prom port his family, keep them from
inent citizens. When have you come starvation, from freezing— was a
together in any public manner and question that did notenter the mind
asked that the city receive recom of the employer. I suppose it was
pense for its franchises?
none of his business! But if that
“ Who is responsible for the bad man should be driven to steal
condition of the city’s affairs ? You (which he will not be) he would be
representative citizens.
hustled off to prison in such haste
“ Who tempt the assessors to make that he could scarcely get his breath,
unfair assessments ? You capitalists and the employer would be horri
and representative citizens.
fied, shocked that his kindness in
“ These are plain words, but they | helping a man had been so shame
are true. If your council does not fully reciprocated! I wonder how
suit you the remedy lies in y o u r ! much ‘ blood’ sounds in the ears of
own hands. Theories are all right. ! God. W oe unto Cain !
but conditions are what confront us. ' “ You would find the name of this
JANUARY 14, 1896.
Special Inducements to Subscri
bers— Best and Cheapest.
GOOD FOR EVERYBODY
Almost everybody takes some laxative
medicine to cleanse the system and keep the
blood pure. Those w ho take SIMMONS
LlVhR REGULATOR (liquid or powder)
get all the benefits of a mild and pleasant
laxative and tonic that purifies the blood
and strengthens the whole system. And
more than this: SIMMONS LIVER REGU
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and healthy, and when the Liver is in
good condition you find yourself free from
Malaria, Biliousness, Indigestion, Sick-
Headache and Constipation, and rid of
that worn out and debilitated feeling.
These are all caused by a sluggish Liver.
Good digestion and freedom from stomach
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^ » - K V E R Y P A C K A G E !-* ^
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A C o m p lica tio n .
The small boy bad a restless, un
happy look as he approuched the
young man who was culling on his
sister.
“ I wouldn’t tell anybody but you
about it,” he said confidentially.
“ About what?”
“ About what’s happened to me.
But I thought you might help me.”
“Iu what way?”
“ Do you remember that little bit
o f a gold watch my sister had?”
“ Yes.”
“ 1 was fooliug with it, and sister
was coming, and I put it in my
mouth to keep her from seeing it,
and the first thing I kuew I swal
lowed it!”
“ How long ago?”
“This afternoon.
I f you put
your ear down to my chest you can
bear me ticking inside.”
“ You’d better have a doctor.”
“ Then I ’d have to let the folks
know. Sister says you have wheels
in your head, and it doesn’t seem
to hurt you much.”
The “Herald” and Your Choice at
the Price Stated Below.
------- O-
H erald has made clubbing arrangements with the following pub-
* licatious, ns stated below.
We tnko pleasure in presenting to out
I patrons and others these exceedingly fine offers, viz:
Tho Weekly Examiner, of Han Francisco ($1.50), and the Coquille
City H erald ($2), both for one year for $2.75.
The Weekly Call, of San Francisco ($1.50), and the H e r a l d ($2), both
for one year for $2.75.
The Tbrice-a-Week World, of New York ($1), and the H erald ($2),
both for one year for $2.25.
The Twice-a-Week Traveller, of Boston— 12 pages each week, ($1)—
and the H erald , both for one year for only $2.
T H E FAR M , H O U S E H O L D A N D L IT E R A R Y .
The Rurnl Northwest, of Portland, Or., a splendid local agricultural
and horticultural journal (semi-monthly, 50 cts.), and the H erald ($2),
both one year for $2.
Tho Homo and Farm, of Louisville, Ky., (50 cts.), and the H erald
($2), both one year for only $2.10.
Womankind, a handsome, attractive, monthly home paper (50 cents),
the Farm News, a practical farm paper, monthly, (50 cents), and the
H erald ($2), all one year for only $2.
Word nnd Works, of S t Louis, Mo., including to each subscriber the
Word and Works Almanac and Hand-Book, a useful and handsome pub«
licacion (both $1.25), and the H erald ($2), tho three for only $2.50.
Every Where, the famous poet Will Carleton’s charming literary and
illustrated monthly (50 cents), and tho H erald ($2), both one year for $2,
p o p u l is t ' p a p e r s an d p o l it ic a l p o in t e r s .
The Road, of Denver, Col., ($1), an 8-page weekly worth double the
price, and the H erald ($2), both for one year for $2.15.
The Silver Knight, of Washington City, Senator Stewart’s great
paper ($1), and tho H erald ($2), both one year for $2.35.
Our Nation’s Crisis, Gov. Waite’s paper, of Denver, Col. (50 cts.), and
the H e r a l d ($2), both one year for $2.
IN ADDITION TO THE ABOVE CLUBBING RATES FOR PAPERS,
We have concluded to offer tho following books as premiums for cash
subscribers:
Coin’s Financial School, price 25
cents, and Coin’s Hand-Book, price
10 cents, and one year’s subscription
to the H erald , all for $2.
r Cora's F inancial S chool , by W . H .
Harvey; illustrated, lot) pages and 64 illua*
trationa. It simplifies the finanoiul subject
so that an ordinary schoolboy oan under
stand it . It is the text book of the masse«,
absolutely reliable as to facts and figures,
nnd tile most interesting and entertaining
book on the subject of money published.
Cora’ » H a R dbcok , by W . H. Harvey; deal«
vith the elementary principle« of money
and statistics.]
“ Is your boy getting on well at
college?” “ I guess so. He started
iu nothing but a freshman, and now
he writes me that he is a center
rush.”
PATENTS
NOTICE TO I M E M OILS.
There was never a time in the his
tory of our country when tho de
mand for inventions and improve
ments iu tho arts ami sciences gen
erally was so great as now.
Tho
conveniences of mankind iu the fac
tory and workshop, the household,
on the farm, and in official life,
require continual accessions to the
appurtenances and implements of
each in order to save labor, time and
expense.
The political change in
tho administration of government
does not affect the progress of the
American inventor, who being on
the alert and ready to perceive the
existing deficiencies, does not permit
the affairs of the government to deter
him from quickly conceiving tho
remedy to overcome existing discrep
ancies. Too great caro cannot he
exorcised iu choosing a competent
and skillful attorney to prepare and
prosecute au application for patent
Valuable interests have been lost and
destroyed in innumerable instances
by the employment of incompetent
counsel, aud especially is this advice
applicable to those who adopt the
“ No patent, no pay” system. Inven
tors who entrust their busiuess to
this class of attorneys do so at im
minent risk, as the breadth and
strength of the patent is never con
sidered in view of a quick endeavor
to get an allowanco and obtain
the fee then due.
THE FRESH
CLAIMS COMPANY, John Wed-
derburn, Genoral Manager, 618 F
street, N. W., Washington, D. C.,
representing a largo number of im
portant daily and weekly papers, as
well as general periodicals Af the
country, was instituted to protect its
patrons from tho unsafo methods
heretofore employed in this lino of
business. The said company is pre
pared to take chargo of all patent
business entrusted to it for reason
able fees, and prepares and prose
cutes applications generally, includ
ing mechanical inventions, design
patents, trade-marks, labels, copy
rights, interferences, infringements,
validity reports, and gives especial
attention to rejected cases.
It is
also prepared to enter into competi
tion with any firm in securing for
eign patents.
Write for instructions and advice.
Shy lock, prieo 25 cents, and’ The
Anarchists of Wealth, price 10 cents,
and the H erald one year, all for $2.
In referenc to the above publications, it is necessary to say but
little. Everybody knows what magnificent papers tho “Examiner” and
“Call” of Hun Frtiucisco are, as also the Thrice-a-Week New York W orld
aud Twice-a-Week Boston Traveler--each of which nre worth theprice
asked. The Home) and Farm is a splendid agricultural and family jour
nal, large 16-pnge paper, and of itself worth tho price of both papers,
Womankind is a most attractive and entertaining home monthly, heartily
welcomed by nnd instructive to the mothers and daughters; and the
Farm News is edited by a staff of experienced agricultural writers, is
handsomely printed, and contains what the practical fanner wants.
Word nud Work« is Rev. Irl Hicks’ paper of Ht. Louis. This is a scien
tific journal and is full of excellent reading inntter. The Almanac, given
with the paper, contains 100 pages of forecasts and other useful infor
mation and is a valuable book.
Tho Road is a large, wide-a-wide Populist paper, published by “ mid-
dle-of-the road” Herbert George, of Denver, Col. Of The Hilvei Knight
it is only necessary to say that it is Senator Stewart’s fearless paper, and
is published iu Washington City. Our Nation's Crisis is best advertised
by saving that it is owned and edited by Gov. Waite, Colorado’s great
Populist governor, tlio War-horso of the Rockies.
It is good reading.
The Rural Northwest is an Oregon farm journal, and is clean and well
managed. It will be worth tho price we chargo for both papers to any
farmer in Coos county.
StaP-These Club Rates, of course, imply payment iu advance.'
Urv'~ We can only mako these splendid terms where cash is"
paid in advance.
"A sa #
— FOR
THE — ~
“Great Revelation of Mon
etary Sin,”
SHYLOCK,
A pply at this office.
Also
for
tho
0HYLOOK,
supplement
to
e n t it le d
The
Anarchists
of W ealth,
“ An exposure of the plot o f the
Red Sh ield! Rothschild) to des
troy a Republic.” One i* a 25-
cent book, the other a 10-cent
©tvwc^-'vuK»^ i*
book; but wc have made ar
ifj** * ¿3 • S 'A * !“ « ''
rangements with the pnblishers
by which 25 cents will bny both, or both will be given free to a cash
subscriber to the H erald for one y e a r . _ _ ^ _ _ _ _ ^ ^ ^ _ _ _ _ _ _ ^ _ _
If you’re in doubt whether your
trouble is Indigestion or Dyspepsia,
just take a few doses of Simmons
Liver Regulator, it will settle the
whole question. “ I have tried Sim
mons Liver Regulator for Dyspep
BANDON. OREGON.
sia and find it just the thing to
relieve me.
A small dose after
' Furnishes best (foods on the market, home
meals is sure to prevent Indiges
spun and foreign. Latest fashions.*
tion.” .—S. S. Perkins, Sharon, Ga.
“ It is the best medicine to aid diges
irtistk • Tailoring • a • Spwially.
Put M l ' W. A v i r i . t t ,
tion.”—J. J. Black, Duncan, Arizona.
[ P. O. Box 385. J
618 F street,
i All kiml« of work wilt receive rxrofol
----------- ... ♦
Washington, D C. •
attention. Prices reasonable.
Stop suffering: Trjr Dr. Mile«'Tain Till«
P
Schweizer, Tailor,
The Herald and Rural Northwest, $ 2 .
We offer a valuable premium to
our subscribers who are interested
in the farm, fruit-growing and stock,
without extra cost; in other words,
$3 for $2— two papers for the prica
of one.
Dr. Price’ s Cream Baking Powder
W orld's Fair highest Medal and Diploma.