Image provided by: Sherman County Historical Museum; Moro, OR
About Sherman County observer. (Moro, Sherman County, Or.) 1897-1931 | View Entire Issue (April 24, 1908)
I 1 ue O b server. M O H O , OBZÜON : FRID A Y ...................April 24, 1908 ON Me COASTER SPECIAL. T A ^ L O * WHITT. Personal T a lk W ith Vo». If you do not road The Observer C o p y rig h t tan, by N . K . D a le y . ffhy NeXT "Do you think K ing can keep thia W e should like to have you take It, and we Know II would be profitable to pace all the way to tow n T' asked you to become a aubscrlber. We »end l< Joyce anxiously. two year, for $2.50; oneyear $1 60;12Hct. Dick Torrington’s chin squared Itself a month 1» j ’t much. Try It. Order by as he looked at the wturdy black flying Postal Card, and pay for It when you can. over the hard packed snow. A t auy tim e w hen requested to do “I f K ing doesn’t keep going.” he ao, the paper will be d,»continued. Hut we expect that all arrear* will be paid before said, w ith an uneasy laugh, “you’ll auch request 1» made. It 1» ea»y to a»k u« keep on being Joyce W aring and not fo r a statement, which will be cheerfully Joyce Torrington. I ’ve timed i t so as rendered at any tlpie. to Just iu»ke the train. I f we mlaa that, your father w ill be a fte r ua In no time at all.” Joyce shivered at the suggestion For years she had lived In dread of the stern old man who since his w ife ’s death had looked on life w ith hatred. W heif Joyce had come, her gentle Hobson Wants Government to mother had slowly faded aw ay, and Illra m W aring, blaming the Innocent Print National Newspaper. child for the death of the woman he loved so passionately, had never TO BE STRICTLY NONPARTISAN shown her the affection th a t was her heritage. As a child her innocent transgres Horoyof. th e M o r r im a o P la n a a J o u rn a l sions were punished w ith an unjust se J io B a laauod P o rio d ic a lly and to Sum « verity.. and when Dick Torrlhgton had rn a rizo Q o v o rn m e n t W o r k — D lffo ro n t asked her father for her hand he had 4 E d itio n s F o r E a c h S e c tio n — N o E d i been driven from the house fo r no other apparent reason than M r. W ar- to r ia l C o m m e n t. lug’s hatred of Joyce. The father Representative Richmond Pearson would not give his consent to a m ar Hobson of Alabama, the hero of the riage l»ecause It would make her hap Merrimac, has prepared a bill for the py. and thereafter he watched her periodical laaue of an official Journal more closely than ever. But Dick Torrington was not of the which shall contain brief notices of the sort to take his unjust dismissal w ith work of the various departments and out an effort to win the woman he bureaus of the government, of the su loved, and the elopemeut was the re- preme court and of congress, aaya a ault. Washington special dispatch to the Busby was the terminal station of a New York World. M r. Hobson said the branch line on which the single train other day: rnnde tw o trips dally.each way. Hank “The official Journal la intended to Carew took a pride In the punctuality ' m ake a connecting link between the w ith which the road was £m , and It government and the people. The proj was certain that the morning train ect grew out of my w o rk /w ltb the ag- would leave exactly at h alf past 0. - rlcultural department. I found that a By planning the elopement so as to vast amount of moat valuable material reach the station Just as the train did not reach the people. M y first started, Dick was assured that there movement was to take thia material to could t»e no successful pursuit. King the people of my district, the Sixth Ala; could cover the ground faster than 4 barna, by a campaign In which repre W artng’s double team, even should the sentatives of the agricultural depart latter be already hitched. ment made abort talk«. The result was The start of the elopement bad been like an awakening. Property values successfully accomplished, and now advanced appreciably, especially tim King was flying over the road toward ber lands, and an era of Improved ag riculture baa begun In that district. "I found that all the departments of the government were Issuing publica tions giving the result! of thdlr work, between 150 and 200 all told, yet the vast (bulk of the people were not be ing reached. 1 believe that the pro posed Journal w ill create renewed In terest and confidence among the masses In governmental affairs. I t w ill be strictly nonpartisan and w ithout ed itorial com ment I t cannot help but aid the press of the country, not only In furnishing a ready Index, but also In creating a taste and demand for reading umtter and for additional In formation upon Im portant subjects. “ I t la Intended th a t the Issues going to Industrial sections shall be some % w h a t different from the editions going to agricultural sections and that the editions for the cotton states shall be \ som ewhat different from those going n -, • K <■ «, to the grain states, so that each sec tion of the country may get most In formation upon the subject in which it la chiefly concerned. “The control of the Journal Is to be fib * vested in a Joint committee Independ i ent of any Influence. I t le Intended th a t during the sessions of congress the Journal shall be double t|>e sip* of the Issues between sessions. The for "IT WILL HXLP U8 M i l l TIMS.” m er w ill have sixteen pages, the lat the town, while Illra m W arin g still ter eigh t Although all details are puttered about the barn in blissful le ft to the Joint committee, It la ex Ignorance. Presently, however, he pected that the Journal w ill be issued would come into the bouse, and then weekly, but It may be semi weekly or perhap« he would realize what was up. even appear a t shorter Intervals If Meanwhile they would have made the found necessary. train, and presently they would he “The present estimates contemplate across the state Hue, where licensee allow ing each congressman and sen Were not necessary. The laws of their • to r to furnlBlj the namee of 15,000 own state required residence before a recipients of the Journal. There w ill license could l»e Issued, and as town be additional copies, and all told alxnit clerk Joyce's futher was charged with 1,500,000 fam ilies w ill receive the Jour the issuance o( licenses. . nal free. The poet office department All would have gone V e il If a small w ill handle the copies In (»locks, boy had not thrown a snowball xt through the carriers, thus saving the Dick. The well packed ball of snow expense of addressing, the postmasters missed the driver, but struck K ing a and rural carriers keeping lists of the smart blow In the ribs. The high spir vreciplenta.” ' The sum of 176,000 ^.a p p ro p ria te d ited horse was unused to such treat ment and bolted down the road with by the b ill for equipment and $275,000 Dick frantically sawlug nt the reins fo^tbe>exf>enae of lasulug the publica “ It la all right!” he ahouted. “ I t w ill tion. help ua make time. I t w ill be easy I f I t la M r. Hobson's Idea to have a I can stop him l»efore we reach the staff of trained newspai»er men to han H ill.” dle the news which is sent In by the Joyce's face blauched. The 11111 (al various departments. Just how the ways spelled w ith a capital) was a bill w ill be received cannot be hazard steep descent of nearly a mile, with ed, but M r. Hobson has made Inquiry one ugly turn. I f King should bolt and finds that most of the department down the hill, there was little chance officials are in favor of I t that Dick would be able to guide him around the curve, aud they would be CRUSADE AGAINST TRAMPS. thrown down the s id e .' “ You w ill stop hlih -before then," she But the corners of R osters to B caro H oboos A w a y C a r r y said coufldently. her mouth V\ ore di&nvn n n l her lips • T e r r ib le W a r n in g . The bos Angeles (Cal.) police have were white. fc»hv l.;iew l i l . u *« t-1 re Inaugurated a crusade against the allzed bow little chance there was even trani|»s who are Infesting Ixw Angeles while she sought to comfort Dick with that w ill make all previous efforts her confidence. I t was a little more than a mile to seem Insignificant, says the New York H eraM . Thousands of pontere are to the top of the HUI. and Dick fought be pat up along the railw ay line« be the horse every Inch of the way. lie tw w n Ix>s Angeles and the desert had cnlled to Joyce to kneel In the bot warning all holtoea Vliat the police are tom of the cutter, and Just as they w aiting for them and that they w ill reached the descent he pulled K lug’s be put to work as soon as they arrive head to one side and guided the erased auiuial into a tree. there. Dtck shot over the aide of the cotter The poster« are worded as follows: “ Hoboes, keep moving. Rent la high as they struck, but he was on tils feet and food la scarce. Taxpayers w ill not in an Instant to hold the horse. There •npport you. Ixm g sentences In the wan no need for th a t King lay still on chain gang given here. Sixty to nine the sparkling snow w ith hla heed twisted oddly to one side, and for a ty days our specialty.” The Idea originated w ith Marshal moment Dick gazed sadly upon hla fa Anderson of Yuma, Aria., who found vorite. the scheme worked successfully. Joyce, he had seen, was unharmed. H e r position and the thick robes had Navel Experiment W ith a Rat. saved her from worse than a shaking In Beattie’s fight against the spread up, and she hnd regained the seat. of the bubonic plague by rata an Inter “ Poor old King!" she cried aa she ••tin g experim ent waa made recently saw with relief that Dick was unhurt. a a/» the New York Tribune. A rodent “I could kill that little Kdwarda boy." waa dyed bine and turned loose to find “ Never rnlud the Kdwarda boy," said out Juat bow long It could retain Its Dick brusquely. “ W hat we have to Itoerty and bow fa r It could' travel think al»out Is the train. We never can without falling Into one of the tnyriad walk that hill in time to make the o f public and private traps act for the train. Have you nerve enough to coast Ptagw distributers The particular rat It In the cutter?” •started for the test waa caught a week “ I ’d risk anything rather than return a fte r being turned out a mile from the home." cried Joyce. “ I never w ill let paint where It wee liberated. In one fath er catch ua." - • «seek lately 2,025 rats were recflved “Theu here goes," cried Dick gayly by the health department, of which aa he pulled the cotter bark Into the 1JOO were paid for at the rate of 10 road and caught op one of the broken cemta each. T he total number of rats •h afts " I t ’s l»een a long time since 1 brought In since the plague campaign I went bobbing, but I think I can make SBBtted M 1MBL - I to.” AN OFFICIAL JOURNAL Z "T i lie gave Joyce the abaft to bold and PROHIBITION'S “DIXIE.1 pushed the cutter over the brqw of the hill, climbing In over the beck when A Twentieth Century Rendition of he had i t started. “Marching Through Georgia." Once back In the cutter he took the Prohibition In Georgia has drawn »haft and Improvised a steering rud der. The body work afforded him lever from some unnamed prohibition vasal age, and Dick laughed as the sleigh tier the following “ M arching Throqgk Georgia," which, it la suggested, may began tb gain speed. For the first half mile the road waa be sung <o the tune o f “Dlxla,? any« •tralght, and little steering was necqs the New York Poat: aary. Then ahead loomed the turn, and O rin g the good eld bugle, boyst '«ffe’U have a grand new eong; Dick's face turned grave aa hexlug the Bing It as wti m ean to sing It. e ig h ty m il shaft Into the road. lions strong; Slowly the sleigh responded to the Bing It as ws love to slag I t w h ile thaw m arc h along— pressure, and In another instant they had swung around the curve aa neatly Kumsbops are in archin g fro m O eorglnl as a champion coaster on hla low H u rra h , h u rra h , th e y lead the Jublleal pointer, and they were again on the H u rra h , h u rra h , ou r land w ill eooa ha fres! straight aud headed for the station. H e a r ths D ix ie chorus, fro m A tla n ta to H ank Carew had Just backed his en the eea. gine down from the house, and a white W h ile they a re m arc h in g from Oeorgtaf plume of steam rose from the dome as O klaho m a answ ered w hen she hea rd the the engineer waited for the minute «awful sound: i band of the clock to touch the bottom K ansas took new courage, w h ile old » - i - - fe lt-s u re her ground. of the dial. south aw akens, and th e n o rth w ill The runaways were still a qharter of A ll the soon come round. a mile from the station when the cut S w elling the new m arch fro m Oeorgtn. ter slowed up, but they had gained u rra h , h u rra h , w s 'll vote the Jublleal more than a minute In their sw ift de H H u rra h , h u rra h , C olum bia shall be frae t scent, and they did not have to run. ■ w ell the D ix ie chorus, fro m th e m oun As they came up to the station p lat tain s to ths sea— form the little knota of loungers gath A m erica la proud to follow G eorgia. M aryland Prohibitionists, not to be ered about them. Rapidly Dick ex plained the reason for the coast, and outdone, furnlab thia battle soog, the listeners cheered as they heard the which, the p arty’s press bureau ag- tale. For years they had grumbled sure« the public, has Juat been "dashed «, * at the way W arin g treated Joyce, and off” by ohe of the workers« they were glad that at last she was W e have a foe ws mean to Aght In M a ry la n d —m y M ary la n d . to be released from her father’s hard A n enem y to Ood and rig h t reign. In M a ry la n d —m y M a ry la n d . “Here cornea your dad now!” piped p A rise, ye people; take your stand shrill voice. And w ith one accord A n d w o rk together, hand In hand. ’ F o r God and home and n a tiv e land they turned to see the fam ilia r W a r ing team tearing over the brow of the " In M a ry la n d —<ny M a ry la n d . Mil. O f O klaho m a we a rs proud. She sets the pace fo r M a ry la n d . Carew glanced a t the steam gauge Th en w h y should ru m lb o p s bs allow ed and the clock. Then he leaned out of In M a ry la n d —m y M a ry la n d ? the window. Th e southern states a rs doing w ell. “A ll aboard that’s going!" he called A nd D e la w a re now breaks th s spell. W h a t ws w ill do tim e w ill soon te ll in a stentorian voice. “W e’re chang la M a ry la n d —m y M a ry la n d . ing the schedule today. The 0:30 Is go ing out a t 0:28!" T h e le g is la tu r e soon to m eet A In M a ry la n d - m y M a ry la n d . Another instant and the tririn was T h e people's w ill m ust not defeat rattling down the road toward the In M a ry la n d —m y M a ry la n d . state line, and Illra m W aring came T h is m ig h ty question m ust be solved; dashing up to the platform to be greet T h e re Is a p rin ciple In v o lv e d - Saloons m ust go, we have resolved, ed by ironical cheers. In M a ry la n d —m y M a ry la n d . “The train went ahead of time!" he Rum shops a re destined soon to go *» sputtered. “I shall report this to the In M a ry la n d —In M a ry la n d . officials!” i Good, th in k in g pdbple w ill It so "You’re wrong, squire," drawled Ned In M a ry la n d —m y M a ry la n d . Burna, who posed as a wag. “T hat A rise, ye people, In your m ig h t. F o r God Is on the side o f rig h t. ain’t the regular train. T h a t’s the A n d he w ill help us w in th ia Aght Coaster speclul. Makes close connec In M a ry la n d —In M a ry la n d . tion w ith the Cutter express, from up your w ay." In Spooning Days. The laugh which followed showed W aring th a t the sympathy was all “ W h a t a b e a u tifu l th in g la th o u g h t!" said she. I with the runaways. He was to be a « A boon It Is to m ys e lf and Jim . candidate for county treaRurer In the I sit and th in k he Is th in k in g o f me. A nd he sita and th in k s I a m th in k in g o f fall. I t would not do to turn hts h im ." townspeople against him. As he head —N e w Y o rk Preaa. ed the horses for home he h alf turned In hla seat. Unole Jerry. “W hen th a t Coaster special com '‘M uny.a boy,” aald Uncla Jerry Pea- pletes the round trip ," he shouted out, blea, “gets n whipping for being mere “you might tell D ick Torrington to ly auapected of doing the things hla come out to my place. I ain’t going to fath er waa too slick to gat caught at kill the fatted calf, but there’s a tur- wheq the old man was a boy hl meal f.' j I was saving up for Christmas. 1 guess that'll do aa well." The Romans and the Sea. Virgil Is understood to have lived long on the bay of Naples, and he dwells repeatedly w ith unsurpassed e f fect ou the littoral phases of the sea, but on the element at lurge he ex presses little but a seuse of vastneaa, power, malevolence. I t Is a toilsome and perilous expanse, to be hurried across and escaped. Across >the land the Itouiuns went with Indomitable confidence, marking heir way w ith those works of pecul- a r pertnuncncs, so that today the Brlt- •n traverses the original roads they lul’t, and the Giiul walks beneath their trehes. But even In Imperial tlmos .be voyage from Urtiudlsltun to Greece was something of a hurdshlp. The iccau was u thing "bestrew'd with wreck aud disaster." lu Us depths or on Its shores lay the bones of those who never received burial and hence •odd not puss over the Kt.vx. When Tlberlua built a yacht be float •d It on the quiet lake Netnl nnd very lkely kept it anchored like n p-tlat!al lo'.nu'boat. T i f fin lucked th.it esren» tlal stability which the Itouiuns so nuch valued. It waa cstrnuglng. Ro man ndn'ptu’ Jll’y made? It n medium of •mplre, lu ! never w ith the viking sp ir it.- Sewn neo Review. Johnny’» Interpretation. Id ttle Johnny tvhs hustled off to church one Sunday morning w ith the admonition that If he could uot remem ber the text when he came home be »ouldn’t go out to play that afternoon. At the dinner table he was naked the text o f the sermon and said: “ Don’t l»e afraid, you'll get the quilt.” ‘ The mother IiughTugiy replied. “You must be mistaken Johnny.” but lie was sure he was right. The matter dropped until, during the week, the pnstor call ed. when it was learned that the text was, “ Fear not. the comforter w ill come.”—Chicago Tribune. „ | M oros B | Janes Watt T waa Oaorga Stephenson who, ob serving the liftin g of a teakettle’« lid by tha biasing and bubbling w ithin, conceived and created tha tin t crude ateain angina, but I t wee James W a tt who divined the Immense posalbUltlaa o f steam aa a motive force and adapted tha angina to practical uses. So many and so Im portant ware the Improvements added by W a tt that he aharoe boners w ith the tnvaator of the original angina. W a tt parflerted the steam engine, adapting It to gen eral Industrial aarvlca. H a took an embryo tic contrivance and developed it practically to a flnlahed creation. Thia Scotchman waa an Instrument maker by trade. Employed In th a t ca pacity for the University of Glasgow, he took advantage of hla aaaodation w ith the professors to Increase hts acl- entlflc knowledge. In the laboratory was a Uttla »team angina vast In poa slUllltlea, but Uttla more than a play thing when W a tt began to tinker w ith I t Ills first great Improvement in the engine waa the Invention of the Inde pendent steam condenser, which con served much of the power th a t waa lost In the original machine. W a tt also Invented tha centrifugal governor, the wuter gauge, the mercury steam gauge and many other features, leaving tha steam engine In Its essential conatruc- Mon very much as It stands today. W a tt worked at hla teak w ith unflag ging seal. H e made the improvement of the steam motor hla life's work. From 1750 to 1774 be waa almost con stancy engaged In perfecting the mech anism of the engine. I t is said that republics are ungrateful. Thia cannot be aald of the kingdom of G reat B rit ain In the case of James W att, for the government extended tha \y a tt pat ents beyond the prescribed term of years in recognition of tba long period of tim e which the tireless Inventor de voted to hto work of lotofovement and adaptation.» FORMALDEHYDE. RUBBER GOODS. PERFUMERY, BRUSHES, GOMBS, SPONGES, C1CARS. Clara—I'm going to break off my en gagement w ith Tom. I find I do not tore him. Meade—Indeed! W han did you make tha discovery? C la n —Last n ig h t 1 saw him out riding w ith an other girl, and I didn’t feel Ilka pulling bar h air or scratching bar ayes out a t all— Chicago News. S ui M o r o / O re g o n . C ity D ra y Express and Freight Delivered to any Part of the City Piano and Furniture Moving. Trunks and Grips Delivered To and From all Trains. ^OREGON í* -7- ■«■«fflker* Pillali S hort L ine union P acific « no 3 T rain s to T h e East Dally THE A DALLES H O S P IT A L modern hospital for the treatment of all medical and eurglo» diseases, exoept such as are oontagious. R ates, fro m 910.00 to 921.00 per w e e k , a c c o rd in g to room , Ambulance will meet all trains and boats if hospital is notified F o r F u rth er In fo rm a tio n IX p w Ato p-m. U . IA p.m. «00 a M. no atop. 7 U0 p.0». A 11.A N T 1C KXJ'KKHH for the K .id v iu T lo n i- Iagton. 7.to p in «.4« a . * . Paaaea Higies no .top . 11 jiim 4SI aua. __ _ fiag W P O S T I.A N O -B H ie a LO CAL, for «11 loral pAint» hrtween Ulgg. •n d I’ortlaiMl. Arrive» at Uig«» C a lu tu b la • 00 »un. «.00 p. nt. W t llw w a s t t s M lv s r . • liu ft a.m. Lv. 1J 16 pm »nd For A h tor la and way points, con necting w ith steamer lor Ilw aon and N o rth Beach, rtleamer Hasaslo, Ash ntreet dock. Ijesvea 8.00 p m. d ally, except Huntlay. Saturday 1000 p. m. Arrives 6 00 p. m . daily exceptrtuuday. W e ooaxed th a t m an a lo a< tim e bafors hs would let uh fix htasveH. H s aald a ll Blasses ware n lik s and what wiot ths use. N ow you could not uet him to go dasw lM rs. W s are perfect "cvc fi'ic r a ,” and that’s why we please our patron». For Dayton, Oregon City and Y a m h ill R iver 4«lints. Ash street dock. I^eavea 7 00 a in d ally exoept Hunday. Arrives 5.30 p.nt daily exoept Bunday. y>vi aUP V HIGwr W hen w ritin g for Catalog L A R C U T CATALOG M .d O r d ~ _____ C R O C E R IE S (ECONOMIZE THRO JONES H .^van. Div Good, .nd X I B S wm A w at a L w A q M « ! . ^ ■ « e . l . i M .a tk lv Pasara Uly g», (.topa) fi»» . “It oertainly ia, and I thank y<!U. Mr. Optician for fitting my eyes ho perfectly. I have had glftHfe« of all kinds, bat thia last pair I got of you beats them all.” ? w Ar. Doily. PttBM-a Bigga IL'JSp.m 1.4« aus. For K a .trrn W ashington, W alla W .lla , Lew is ton, Oosur d ’Alan« an>TGreat Northern points, [ Isn’t Beading a Delight Now T H E D 1LL E 8, OBEGOS 1A. Dally. 8PQ K ANK PLY XK , D irecto rs. F>I. Chut, Jeweler, & Op’iciai P o a T U A N O OKPOT. C H IC A G O P O R T L A N D H P kC lA I. for tha k«»t via Huntington. «.«0 a .« . A d d ress D ps . Ferguson and R e u te r, M e d ic a l Through PtillnÀuii «(Milliards and tourist »»I»*» ping-ears iln ily I*» O m aha, Chicago, S|»okMii»>; tourist sleepiug-car dally to Kansas C ity . Reclining chair- care (seats free) to the East d ally. X ÎN E S C A S H STOR E Oder, . M,»ng un uh.lr.r< vow m«r Bird Srnd Io, I Calala» For lu<wtatoii, Idaho, and way points from Riparts, Wash. Leave Rtnsrht 6.40 a. m ., nr U[x>n a rriv a l train No. 4, d ally egoapt Haturday. A rrive Ripsria 4 p-,m. dallytexoept Friday. The Buyer» Cuide Front and Oak St. P O R T L A N D OR For full Information call on or sddrsss w m . mcmurray Mention this paper lie n 'l i'aM tenger A g en t, P o rtla n d . O regon. Grand Ronde Chief hop lip t i date.. E D G A R L E W IS , P r o p r le ta r . - ffle s s in g ir Any an d all K in d s o f P a te n t M e d ic in e A lw ays In S to ck I arber - ~ Complete Assortment of 8llverware and Jewelry Tkt ttMKI g i t W4U « pUf- wktn kt ktgtut to ftairr wiik it. A g e n t for th e B est Ste&m L a u n d ry S h o p in B ric k B u ild in g n e x t O b se rv e r Office MORO - Expert, Experienced, Registered Pharmacists ~ Hedicfties Carefully Compounded. Mr » O M U f V J AOV*. Everything First Class OREGON. I , SCHOOL SC RA N TO N , - PEN NSYLVA NIA. Architecture Bookkeeping f Stenography Banking and Banking Law, Commercial I jaw, Advertising > , 8how Card Wrftttig Chemistry Mechanical Drawing Electrieal Engineering Newspaper Illustrating, ..Civil Engineering, Steam Engineering Civil Service, Mechanical Engineering, Gas Engineering, Mining Engineering, Locomotive Running, Plumbing, Heating It od Ventilating, French, German, Spanish, taught with Edison Phonegraph. Full information furnished free upon request by ' H . V. R E E D , R e p r e s e n ta tiv e , 64 1-a Sixth street, Portland, Ore. t ‘Everyone I Exclaims About, Our • Lights!” 1« assured you when yon buy Dr. Pleree’ » family medicines— for all the Ingredi ent» entering Into them are printed on the bottle-wrappers and their formula» are attested under oath aa being complete J correct. You know Just what you are paying for and that the Ingredients are gathered from Nature’« laboratory, being •elected from the most valuable native medicinal roots found growing In onr American (oreatTtoML^hlle potent to cure are perfectly hartq1gpCi*«iL to the most delicate w< the In coughs and hosmenesa caused by bron chial. throat and lu n r affections, except con- Ivaitced stares, the *GOIdaii efficient r»«m- n ita , h a iK ’-on courhscaused^bjr Irrita tio n and <-ongrstton of tbs M oochtsl mui-oui membranes. Tbs * I»ls* o>Tsrr • 1» <x»t so r ' “*d for scute courbs arts- tn< from »n«l<l«-n colds, nor must It bs e x pected to cure consumption In Its sdTsnc»xi •tarns no medlclns will do tbs»—bat tor sit U.n .»t.U nain. < hrunic courhs. which. If na«- Ucted. or badly treated, lead WP to emasamp- tttxs. It to the beet xaa^dw e th a t caa be taken I P o r c e la in B a t h T u b a . A S quare Deal . jeertne. Thl» agent possesses Intrinsic meuiclnai pr«i>crtl«!* of Its own. being a most valuable antiseptic and antl- fermeut, nutritive and soothing demul cent. Glycerine playa an Important part in Dr. Pierce’s Holden Medical Discovery In the cure of Indigestion, dyspepsia and weak stomach, attended by sour rising«, heart-burn, foul breath, coated tongue, poor appetite, gnawing feeling in stom ach, biliousness and kindred derange ments of the stomach, liver and bowels. Besides curing all the above distressing ailments. ths "Golden Medical Discovery ” la a specific for all diseases of the mucous membranes, aa catarrh, whether of the nasal passages or of the stomach, bowels or pelvic organa Even In Ita uloeratlve stages It will yield to this sovereign rem edy If Its use he persevered In. In Chronic Catarrh of the Nasal passages, it is well, while taking the "HoldenMedlcal DIs- oovery ■ for the necessary constitutional t reatjueut, to cleanse the passages freely two or three time« a day with Dr. Sage« Catarrh Remedy. Till» thorongh course of treatment generally cures the worst cases. • MORO PHARMACY 0- i - fcsyisfïarW tesab as: «bay Stow . p M w lb w »retagMd MM SSW O b . fco...I?» toa«, oor ih Tha A a«la Lamp ia thaaaw mathod of baraln» ■aiM»s karooaaa oil. »nd I , aa diffaraot from tba rlamp« la rvraJ/f 0» il 1» la o»ra*w «w - 1» nos baroaena I ha b-at, lha ehaapaat >t aattofantorr of all lixhttnf Maihoda. ______ »are raltablaihanraa'ilinaOraaatylase, WMOa aosvaalant to oparata oa »■» ar alactrUltv. The Angle Lamp B la c k s ta llio n , 15.3, w e ig h t 1137 lbs. S IR E D BY R ecord 2:34£. No. 18671. A L M O N T ' M E D IU M , 2 :1 8 Sire of Prince Almont, 2:13$, Lynraont 2:23$ [sire of Deimont 2:10$] and eleven others in the list. First dam Ursina, hy C. M. Clay Jr. 22, fire of 35 producing dams, inc'uding Tecora, the daui of Chehalis 2:04|; Del Norte 2:08; and olheti.* . Seooryd dam Mary Coleman, [dam of Linda Spraguo 2:19], hy Mamhrino Chief, son of Mambrino Chief II, tha aire of Lady Thorne 2:18; and others. I Third dam, by Toronto. ’ Fourth dam, hy Keokuk, son of Imp. Truffle. G r a n d R o n d e is a substantially built horse; die kind that can go to town and come hack; has atyla and trotting action that he transmits; he fins had hut little track work, hut has trotted halves ip ^«u M ^IM a a a d twawcaMU<> ’ ■■»M a t a s ■»+ «»>■<«■ ■ '» >»-»»• ' a4 * * «“ t« ~ -*-*•» 30 DAYS TRIAL ÏXpTXÛa t L «JC. to, «-Mina - raai«t>bnn M -tUat-x) u«. ' « » ¿ ï a t o * Tiw Aa«ta I .mp to» ^ t o l B Ä r « »wlaiw. t . - ' ” T' ftu» »r . !• I. M O J i i » r a r e « , TBK AMOLE Mta (XX. «SS lU MfEOV M AtoJ to’uOr A». 4MRI • u lta « n ew Lamps ma, be seen at ibe 1:09 and quarters in :83; Grand Ronde will make the season of 1908 at ' * i-t la t' .cawi Obscner office M ORO, OM BOOK. L IV E R Y , FEED ANJ> SA LE S T A B L E S . J, M. DUNA.HOO, Pt-oprfetor and Manager. Ta t ’ >sa fro« Tha Dalla» ar anv Shareasa sasaty gotata at osr axgaatM- itorvlaa furutobad to sr t«sa Mere to any potato. O U R M O T T O m PI mm tba ptAUc.“ EVERYTHING NEW AND UP-TO-DATE, SPECIAL RATES TO C0UMBBCLAL TRAVELERS A t m y fa rm , six m ile s south e a s t o f M o ro , e a c h M o n d a y . G ra s s V a lle y , eac h T u e s d a y W a s c o , e a c h T h u rs d a y M o ro , e a c h F rid ay ánd S a tu rd a y , FITIS O f S e r v i c e . S in g le service $5, pay ab le a t tim e of service. T h e getoon $12.60, p a y a b le O ctober 1st. To in su re $17.60, p a y a b le w hen m are is k n o w n to be w ith foal. M are a n d c o lt to sta n d good for services. C are w ill be ta k e n to p re v e n t accid en ts, b u t w ill be resp o n sib le for ypjie. T ra d in g , sellin g , o r rem o v in g th e m are fro m th e n eig h b o rh o o d forfeits th e in su ra n c e a n d m oney becom es due. If m are is not p ro p e rly re tu rn e d it is u n d e rsto o d to be th e fa u lt of th e ow ner of th e m are. R. T . M o rg a n , Ow