Image provided by: Sherman County Historical Museum; Moro, OR
About Sherman County observer. (Moro, Sherman County, Or.) 1897-1931 | View Entire Issue (June 26, 1908)
Ot.HiM.Soc, Çitï HUI. OBSERVER, SHERMAN r very Description to O rd e r Quick and Cheapl ikkur Stamp« Furnished. —J lu* Typew riter^ Typewriter Supplie», Ribbon«, Xto. ssr- M o r o , S h e r m a n C o u n ty ,' O r e g o n , F r i d a y , J u n e E k S ttib lia lio d 1 8 8 7 . ONE W m . Rudolf D r OUR INSTITUTE. O. J. GOFFIN, D r . harik M. oorriN . W AY DteaMJOilmeilCMUrtu C on fectionery To have money is to save it. The one sure way to save it is to deposit it w ith Wasco Warehouse M illin g Co. bank. You w ill then be exempt from the annoyance of having it burn holes in your pockets. Aside from the fact that your money w ill be safe from theft; the habit of saving tends to the establishment of th rift, economy, discipline and a general understanding of business principals essen tial to your success. Office la Th« Goffin Building, la C igars, T o b a cc o s B illiard and P ool T a b le s BANK Drs. Beers and Mofe© G R A SS VALLEY, ORE. * New Entirely, P h y s ic ia n s , and S u rgeon s „ • - OREGON Calls Promptly Attended Day or Night. Vinton H o te l L2XAAAXAAAAAAA Dr. W. N. Been. lee cold drink« and ioe cream in sea son. Soda water, bottled and fountain, always on hand. WASCO To those wixfcini m il relations we heartily eitenl oar services. ■ ’ ' W a sc o W a r e h o u se M illing C o . M oro J. R. Morgan Dentiat^^» Convientto Business OREGON MORO PRICES R E A S O N A B LE All kinds of Reservoir and Cistern work in con nection with water systems installed in first class style and all work done guaranteed. Dynamite and powder work on all kinds of Rock Excavations AM Work Wsrranteed. Conducted on Best Principles C o m m e r c ia l T r a « » H. A. S tu art, Moro, Oregon. V f D e n tist A In P o r tla n d I fa in tin g , ftapev J^anging Satisfaction Guaranteed » • H e lle « W hen j ifUMlMIMfMIMMMIMMMMIMMMMMMkMMMMIMIMMMMIN > * Office In Tbe Moro Hotel Brick. Dr. C. Hartley C0KCREirW0RI( PusTEHisB, B?!« md I . Muro, Oregon. Dr.H. E. |j •T O R AT Chargea reason able, all work guaranteed. WASCO Hotel Oregon - - OREGON Opposite the 0 . T. Co. store. — C orner 7th and Stark Streets. Both in Workmanship and Price . Office at Furniture Store. F. R. A X T E L L , M O RO , O R I «««esBe/UHWWHWWWWWWSSSSSS W S S S S eR «*— W W W » ! It It new and lie room« are provided with running water and long distance tele phone«. European plan. Rate«, • 1 per day and upward H ig h e s t priced room $3 - pm day.------------------- Wright-Dickinson Hotel Co. Chas. Wright, President. W. H. Ragsdale A ttorn ey a t L aw » ... s •’ ■ 1 Office Ground Floor Ginn Brick Next Door W.W.M.Co, Bank M. C. Dickinson, Manager. H otel M oro Nearest Hotel to Business Center, Banks and Depot. Esmond Hotel • „.... , OSCAR ANDERSON O pposite P o s t O ffic e « Moro, Oregon. Q “J" Q P •hör» ta t uà MANAOKB M o rra M A Good Clean Fam ily -. Rooms 1 and 2 The Ginn Brick Over W.W.M.Co. Bank OREGON MORO M. E. Miller Hotel Office upstairs Roóms 5 and 6 Opera House Building O re g o n , Electric Light« * A ttorn ey - at - L a w European Plan The Um atilla House Hteani Heat. Meindl & Bryant L aw yers - * Free bus to and from trains R ates by th e day 6 0 c, 7 6 c, $ 1.0 0 , S 1.6 0 , « 2 . P*op!o atop T liv C m W . Ç. Bryant P. J. Melodi P ro tlan d , O regon. S u n d a y D in n e r 35 cents. v, OREGON MORO Electric Call Bell«. OREGON MORO H O T E L R A T E S TO S U IT Y O U . Frank Menefee.- All O R & N ^Trains Stop at Front Door Railway T icket Office in the Lobby. T . N. C R O FTO N , P r o p r ie t o r . M. L. Evaoa of DeMoss baa been laid up with rheumatism for some time and «offered untold agonlea. but Is now up »»d perfectly well. Ask him what cured him and he will aay leaa than a 60c bottle of Watkins’ Rheumatiam and Gout Tablets. ¡£iF Subscribe for The Observer. in the Inland Em pire. B est W eekly published E veryone reads it. Alex. Hunter, AgL, Deo«L Ong« Every bottle positively guaranteed I. / A ttorn eys - a t - L a w • THE DALLES - OREGON E. B. Dufur - Office 737 Chamber of Commerce Corner Third and Stark . » WEEKLY OREGONIAN O F PORTLAND J For the ¡generaljiewsof World &lsx> For information about Low io obtain ih e b e st rcsuRs in cultivating the so u , Stock R a isin g , Fruit G nw iirJ etc- You con secure this excellent paper by V Menefee & Wilson A ttorn ey - at - L a w fti FARMERS R E A D THE Fred Wilson Office in the Vogt Block, upaUir» Sold by k ad d ressin g th« S h erm an C ou nty O bserver and e n clo sin g $2 .5 0 , w h e n w e w ill sen d y ou th e S h e r m an C ounty O bserver, price $ ¿ 5 ° and *he w e e k ly O regonian, price $ 1 .5 0 e a c h for one year, y ou s a v in g 50 c e n ts b y so doing. OREGON PORTLAND D. Lindquist W a tc h m a k e r and Jew eler Special attention given work sent 1, in by mail or express. All work warranteed first class 111 But fleered Street Pbe«e Ik. The Dalles, Or., Ml Jam es S te w a r t Address: MORO. OR BOON. S tock Inspector S h erm an County, O regon. D eputy S tock Inspector Fourth of Jaly Celebration. Hint« fur the Houahold, The Farm DeMoes Springs, June 25th. aud The Garden. To the Editors: PHYSICIAN & su y e fi)« ; First street. Htrong brrick ; Moro, Ore. SU RE F iv e C e n ts "*T y j r T T U Y T T t w »» m THE 26» 1908 In making sponge cake if you deeire it to be yellow use cold wa ter: hot water makes it whiter. Let green peas simmer gently in just enough water to 000k them; hard boiling spoils them. If they are a little too old to be in perfection add a saltspoonful of baking soda to each quart of peas. If you wish ioe cream to be orna- olal you may use beet juioe for coloring. It will give you any shade of sink desired. Spinach is used for^reen or a little butter color will give a deep cream. AU these are perfectly harmless. Silver that has been lying by for some «me or has not been properly cleaned is often so discolored that it is impossible to remove the stains with ordinary whiting or plate pow der./But if the whiting or powder ¡ b mixed to a rather thin paste witli salad oil, well rubbed or brushed into every crcvico, left for a few hours, and tho silver then washed and cleaned in the usual way, every vestige of stain will have ----------— a van i s bed. A florist of experience gives the following recipe for preserving bouquets: “ When you receive a bouquet sprinkle it lightly with fresh water, then put it into a ves sel containing some soapsuds,which nourish and keep the flowers as bright as new. Take a bouquet out of the suds every morning and lay it sidewise in fresh water, the stock entering first into the water; keep it there a minute or two, then take it out and sprinkle flowers lightly with pure water. Replace the bou quet in eoapsudsand the flower will bloom as fresh as when first gath ered. The soapsuds need to be changed every third day. In this way a bouquet can he kept beauti ful for a month. Burning orange peel will dissipate the odor of tobacco smoke in a room. Il’s ail right to talk about art, but give us the woman who can take a bunch of rhubarb, some flour and a rolling pin and make a lot of pies that puts a man in love with even his next-door neighbor. Much of the trouble with chim neys filling up with soot can be avoided if potato paringsare burned in the stove. The chemical action is such that the soot is entirely cleaned out and there is no danger of its becoming filled up, even if soft coal is used. Every once or twice a week throw the potato par ings in the stove. If yours ¡ b a gas sibve, light the oven and place a few of the parings on the over shelf. They will bum up and smoke terri bly and thus clear the pipe. Be careful not to let them blaze. If you will give the linoleum or oil cloth a coat of varnish directly after it has been laid it will wear a great deal better and will not stain, as both oilcloth and linoleum will, if not treated in tlqs manner. If one coat of varnish is applied direct ly the other seems to ho wearing off the oilcloth can be made to wear indefinitely, and the pattern will remain a great deal brighter. Many women can keep veils a long time without getting holes in them. But they get «oft and old- looking. If the veil is dipped thoroughly in wood alcohol, not wrung out, hut just shaken and stretched on the bed as you would a lace curtain, it will lie like new. Dont pin it down and, of oourse, Ibis isn’t for chiffon veils. S hvo dough trimmings from ed ges. When pies cro ready for oven moisten edges, use trimmings for binding edgeaover and under.When ile is done loosen and remove bind- ng with knife. You will have nice, brown crust. No burnt edge or soggy bottom. Every morsel can be eaten. - Following is the final arrange Awful Crime of an Unnatural Son of Wealthy Merchant of France, ment of the program for the Pio Who Murdered His Father, Mother and Grandmother and neers Picnic, barbeoue and celebra tion July 4th at DeMoss springs: Later Was Executed In the Public Square. J C Freeman, grand marshal. . FORENOON. Noisy guns at sunrise. Raising of the flag. Band Concert, 9 a m . Declaration of Independence, by W C Walker. Grand March with flags, by chil dren of the Sunday schools of Sher man county at H>a m. National anthem “My country, ’tis of thee.” Invocation by Rev. A J Adams. Overture, Schubert, DeMoss Con cert Orchestra. Address of Welcome by Rev F E Smith. “Star Spangled Banner,” Chorus. Recitation by Norma Medler. Song: “Red, White and Blue.” Recitation by John Mowry. Overture: “Poet and Peasant.” DeMoss Lyric Bards Orchestra, Song: “Sweet Oregon.” Oration by Hon. R R Butler. Barbecue, free to all. ---- AFTERNOON SPORTS. - Indian Tillicum Potlatch. William Tell Overture. DeMoes Lyric Bards Orchestra.- Pillow Contest, boys under 15 years 100 Yd. dash, free for all.,,. 50 Yd. dash, men, weight over 200 pounds. 50 Yd. dash, egg race, girls. Running high jump, free for all « Running broad “ do. „ 50 Yd. dash, boys under 10 years. 50 Yd. dash, girls under 15 years. 220 Yd. dash, free for all. 30 Yd. torch race, boys under 15 years. 50 Yd. 3 legged race, free for all 50 Yd. sack race, free for all. 30 Yd. wheel barrow race, free for all. Tug of war, North End county vs. South End> Base ball DeMoss v. M onklai.l Fireworks at 9.30 p m. A Merry-Go-Round will be in op eration all day long. Also a con fectionery and ice cream stand. The barbecue is free to all. Ev- erybody is invited to bring a big lunch basket, and picnic on the grass with ua. “T h e moat vlvkl impression of my younger days la a deeply tragic one, a *« I* w M ttva <* my n r» !« •»— j last hoar. I see the picture now—a great throng of people crowding and surging back and forth like the ware« on a storm swept beach around a ghastly skeleton in wood set in the center o f a plaza or public square; strong lines of soldiers hedge the wood en thing In, keeping tbe mob from It. and peering between the blue and scarlet uniforms I see meu struggling on the platform, part o f the strange structure; one of the men Is finally forced to a tablelike arrangement, hie neck fitting In a groove between two uprlghta; then there 1« the quick flash of a knife in the morning sunlight, a ga«P from tbe crowd and a short man In 11 H u g black coat Is holding up a bleeding bead for the Inspection o f the cltlsens." Melton Chadwick, a petty officer of the big Leyland liner, the Irishman, was talking to the w riter aud some friend« on a quiet evening not long ago on the vessel's stern deck, and Chad wick a« he made his.dram atic starter leaned on the taffrall and gazed at the moonlit river as-though taking Inspira tion from the rolling, swirling flood. • •‘W an t m e to tell you the story?" anti the Kngltshmnn moved from the rott and seated himself on a canvas «tool. "W ell, It all happened long ago, but I remember every detail of It as though It had occurred yesterday. I t w a i my first execution, the decapitation of the murderer Laparde, and the execution Itself and the bloody deeds leading up to It makes one of the darkest pages o f French crim inal history. firr' “I was In Agen, France, w ith my uncle, who bought silks for a London house, and at the time of which I am being of any great Importance Just then, but when my uncle asked to be • n m n -to tote ivwni nM lSOBISFa sold something to him In French. The words ' l l . d’Orleans, I’executloner,’ were used, but not until we reached our room did my uncle tell me that the little man who had left the hotel Louis Antoine Stanislaus Delbler, the executiouer of Orleans, called M. d ’Or leans from the district where he offi ciated, Just ns he was In later years called M. de Parts. Delbler had come In on the night train to preside a t the Laparde execution In the morning and wanted rooms at the Brown Mouse, but the landlord refused to entertain him because of his sanguinary office. " I had very little sleep that night, and when I did catch a few cat nap» my slumbers were troubled by dream« of red headamenrhacking off victims’ heads w ith hatchets and k n lv e * But in tho morning I was keen enough for the tragedy that was to be enacted that day in the square and hurried through my breakfast and begged my undo to hurry, too, fearing to miss the a w ful scene. “ We got to the square at 8 o'clock and found the place Jammed w ith men, women and children. The windows of all tbe houses overlooking the square were also frames for dozens of the morbidly Inclined, and It seemed that all Agen was out to see Laparde die. “The bell In the little turret over the prison began to toll, and soon the iron doors yawned, and forth from the dark depths of the fortress-llke building came a slow moving, solemn proces sion. F irs t came a squad of gen darmes, then several Jailers, and fol lowing them the trembling prisoner, his young face deathly pale, his hair closely cropped, so as not to interfare COMMITTEES. Soliciting Committee—Alex Hunter A E Moretz, John Tanking, Geo G DeMoss, and Mr Evans. ,—«— M Executive Committee—George G DeMoss, Alex Hunter, W H Rags dale, A E Moretz, C J Bright. • Financial Committee— P W Da vis, I P Hardin, Albert Pentecost, George Lamborn, Samuel BakCr, John Tonkins. More Anon. A Live Wire Touched. Toledo Blade. Even the Pacific coast is not im mune from invasion by the temp erance wave. In Oregon this wave was a deluge. At the election last week it swept ou\ of existence 500 salppna, making dry 21 of the 33 coiinties. In the remaining counties halt the precints are dry. Five hundred saloons at one blow shows that local option is a live wire. Brewers had better work the reform racket a little harder. DEMOCRATIC NOMINRE8. For Presidential electors to be voted in November: E S J McAllister, of Multnomah; Samuel White, of Baker; Bernard Daily, of Lake; O I’ Coshow, of Douglas. S u m m e r Cxourslen R a tes . Dogs In Goldendale. The Dalle« to Houtbern Oregon and Northern Wsshlngton beach points and return, |7 60. Ticket« on «ale to August 31. F in a l return lim it Kept. 80. To Hingham spring« and return 66 Io Hingham w arm springs and return 66. Tlokota on «ale Io Kept. 80 1008 Final return lim it 30 days from date of wale but not later than K ept 80. To H ot Lake and return 116.00. In cludes hoard and lodging value 00 Tickets on aale a ll the year, return lim it 00 day« from date of M l«. Sentinel. The annual dog licence tax is now due and tags can be obtained from the city clerk. The ordinance re quires that all dogs kept within tfle-city limits over the age of four months have a tag, and all dogs not having a tag are to be empound- ed by tfee city marshal. A moat handy cherry pitter is found in a new wire hairpin of com mon size. Wash cherries with stems jn, thoroughly, theft with curved end of the pin inserted n*ar the stem you can stem aud remove pit in one operation. This does not tear cherries in the least, leaving them perfectly whole. f Beheaded For Terrible Deed. AT H IS S ID E W A L K E D T H E P R IE S T , W H O H E L D . A C R U C IF IX C O N S T A N T L Y B E F O R E T H E P R IS O N E R ’S O L A R IN O EYES. now speaking I was only fifteen year« old. 1 remember distinctly we reached the thriving city on tbe evening of May 18—the year wns 18T9—and stop ped at the Brown House, which was considered the l>est hotel la town and the one most affected by Englishmen. "The town wns all excitement, and everybody wns tulklng about tbe exe cution that was to take place on tbe morrow. Laparde— I think his first name was Anatole, but I ’m not sure of tbl»—a youth of nineteen, wss to be guillotined for tho murder of his father, mother and grandmother, and the neck cutting was to take place in the public aquare In front of the pris on, several blocks from tbe hotel. My uncle understood French thoroughly, and he told me of tho matter, and 1 was more than pleased when- he said that ho was going to the square In the morning to witness the legal hatchery and offered to take me along. "In the little restaurant where we took our supper there was a very obliging w aiter who told ua the atory of the Laparde«. The Lspardee were well to do bourgeois and were highly thought of In the community. The father kept a wine store on one of the principal streets and lived with his w ife, his mother and bis son on the floors above his place of business. "W hen we went back Into the main room of the Brown Mouse after hear ing the w aiter s story we saw the pro prietor of the hotel talking rather ear neatly to a small man who wore a long black coat and a tall h a t "Th« proprietor waa moving his hands w ith the palms attended, aa I thought, deprecatlugly, and his head •v e ry moment or so expressed tbe neg ative sign. At last the little man turn ed. picked up a carpetsack which was on tbe floor at his feet aud, w ith a «brag of his shoulders, walked out Into the street and disappeared la the n ig h t T h e IwMaat didn’t lanpre«« aa aa with the knife, and beads of perspira tion standing on his brow. A t his ad*« walked the priest, who held a crucifix constantly before the prisoner’s w ildly glaring eyes and murmured prayers tn Latin. The rest of the procession was made up of gendarmes. When the pro* cession was close to the scaffold the same little man we had seen tbe night Itefore In the hotel detached himself from a group of officials at • corner of the square w ithin tbe m ilitary tine and. walking to the , 764435 ascended the platfoni victim. Delbler was t>er black, as we had stovepipe hat sat on I “ Lnpnrde was cond of the scaffold, aw stood, peering betww I could see that the were shaking and tl bling all over as a p« ague. Ilia legs bent but for the execution« bare fallen to the dazed through terroi dripped from the con Delbler dragged the < platform, lifted him a a child and threw h luiparde struggled fe ecutloner, with his hjs collar. Jerked him neck rested In the 1 knife. Then, quick a released his hold, loo and tbe curved knife burrlQg noise, deacon The criminal*« head h alf turned, spoutln ghastly opening, and ket. w hile the trunk tossing and ejecting severed neck tn two thrown by the mecha form Into • big box to rerelvo It at tho 1 That wn« tho «nd of ,