K Woman's Section Special Features SECTION FJVE Pages 1 to 12 V V " vn "IB VOL. XXXIII. I PORTLAND, OREGON, SUNDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 6. 1914. ' FIFTH PENDLETON ROUND-UP TO BE MORDARINTHANEV New Contests Are Added and Cowgirls Will Figure in Features Heretofore Reserved for Men Brightest Stars of Range to Shine This Month. X. P" Zatur-o ct.Ot., 3oer V-,"" one Aiemar idr -c"cj'j cr dr?cf Trick Mcer PENDLETON. Or.. Sept. 5. (Special.) More elaborate, spectacular and thrilling in every detail than any of the world-famous previous exhibi tions will be the fifth annual Round-Up to Via staged SeDtember -4. -3 and - Kxtenslve preparations have been made for increasing the perfect-ness of the exhibition and at the same time retain ing its pure amateur spirit. More real money has been put Into the purses then ever given by any show of this kind and more professional, high-class, top-notch cowboys and cowgirls will be seen In the non-competitive events than ever herded together at any frontier exhibition in the world. These artiste are the real cowboys ami cowgirls, not vaudeville actors, but the ever rough-and-ready boys and girls whose work has become so expert that it is worth money to have them perform for the entertainment of the spectators. These stars are put In a class by themselves and do not com pete with the cowboys and cowgirls from the ranges who make up the big lists in the competitive events. The Round-Up does not believe it is fair to pay a man like Buffalo Vernon $1000 to do exhibition work and then let him compete with the other boys for the competitive purses and prizes. Cow boys like Buffalo Vernon. Bee Ho Gray, Sammy Garret. Chester Byers, Otto Kline, Benny Corbett and Sid Seale have won their spurs and their cham pionships and must now give way to those lower on the rungs of the range land ladder of fame. They will be at the Round-Up and will be in all the doings" showing their marvelous dex terity and ability but as paid perform ers only. In tne cowgirls' class will be as many and more bright stars of the range land Armament, such as Jane Bernoudy. TMlio Baldwin. Prairie Rose. Vera Mc- Ginnis. Bertha Blancett. Hazel Walker. -a n o-H.ai- Xfri Hannv .Tuck lRIlCUt.' luaBv Hawn and many others. Jane Bernoudy is the world's champion trick and fancy roper. Tlllie Baldwin has won her spurs in the bucking-horse riding: won them again and again as a trick and fancy rider, and this year Is entering the new field of steer bull-dogging, and if no other cowgirl appears to compete with her she will bull-dog a steer every afternoon at the Round-Up as an exhi bition pure and simple. She is one of the most popular little cowgirls ever appearing at the Round-Up. In the competitive events there have been thrown open to the world three thrilling contests. The first is the cowgirls- bucking contest. Heretofore this has been more of an exhibition than anything else, as the management con sidered it inadvisable to throw the event open and permit any and all girls to ride, for fear that some over-confident cowgirls would get thrown higher than a kite and get all mussed up in the fall. A cowgirl doesn't look exceptionally beautiful or graceful hurtling through the air, thrown from the hurricane deck of a bucking bronc, and the audience doesn't seem to take to such sport with the same enthusiasm as it manuesis when a cowboy lanes a nyer iroui uiiin Tom. But the cowgirls just positively demanded an open contest this year, and the management, which is com posed of mere men. finally gave in. So all that is required of a cowgirl, who wants to ride in that event this year, ia that she have a pair of spurs and a hat. The other two thrillers are the cow girls' steer roplnr contest end the cow girls' standing Roman race. The puree for the steer-roping I pN ana lor io tending race Sl&O. There well be in the neighborhood of BOO entries thl year, and the indlce- , tlons ere the attendance will be larger than ever before. More order have i....n rerolved for seats and accommo dation than at this time last year. The management la living up to its reputa tion of honesty and Is making no ex aggregated claims. In the true sense or tne woro in' Round-l'o Is not a ahow. not even a Wild West ahow. nor Is It a circus. It Is merely a great big round-up where the cowboys and cowgirls imm ni r.nrra meet and contest with each other for supremacy and glory In the sports and BnMlraea which fill the gaps In their workadsy Uvea. They brlna with them the true western spirit, ano It so permeates the atmosphere thm the visitor feels It In all Its strenth -j i.. ....t. Charles Wellington Kur- long In sn article In the World s Work calls It the "Epic Drama of the West." Others have named It the "Grand Opera of the West" or the rassloo Play o the West."