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About The Madras pioneer. (Madras, Crook County, Or.) 1904-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 6, 1908)
The Madras Pioneer MADRAS, CROOK COUNTY, OREGON, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1908, OL IV NO. 25 Hotel peeti N0W UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT . , ii ......i.i I IJ 1 Oregon for ihc money. Your wants will be courteously Ittendcuio. .o .1. V. LIVINGSTON, Proprietor IADRAS, OREGON A im un iimi i im- mt PROFESSIONAL CARDS. pnANK 08B0RH U. S. COMMISSIONER lowimltu HnlMIng MADHAH Olll'.OON 10; C. COLLVER NOTARY PUBLIC -Mm Mil UN im. A. E. CROSBY 1' itn ! It I KTO It ISTOFFICE PHARMACY (1, ( j, i I.lnn (it I)u, Miirllii', Cluitnlcnln, II')iilii(l UrrnHlf, I I'l.i.l.i tfittifillf.. C.utitrv Hull flrtlnra f Hi... mi- i...f..i.mI nr g ! " ....... . . , i i ntd III i nrK". rni'J iiKiirvrjr Kimnwiii'iui. iur rt cri (tloii . Milne uti'l IH'Hri)crii. HiurK fornji nun nip nil kliiiln. j . i au J.xlk. Until 'I'huiiua. VI(01.KHAI.K AND II UTAH.. S. 0UKG0N UMBER FOR SALE JUHTICR OF TIIK 1'BACIC CULVKK I'HKCINCT OREGON CULVER H. flNOOK PHYSICIAN & SURGEON Ollluo in Drue Store. MADHAB OREGON Jt H. HAH EH ABSTRACTER OF TITLES NOTARY PUllUC , I'lro Imurnnrp, I.lfp Iiunrnnco, Huroty Honda Itoal Kpitu. Conrcyqaolng l'HINKVlM.H, OUEOON AX LUEDDEMANN NOTARY PUBLIC Money to lonp on approved real estate security. MADRAS "OREGON !e have plenty of lumber for sale at our nil, located about 3 miles east of Grizzly jost office on county road. Prices right IcMeekin & Eastwood II. Y. AI.LIIK, President. T. M. II A LI-WIN, Cnlilcr. Will Wukzwbii.kk Vine I'ren. II, Hald-tin, A-nt. Cannier. NO. 3851 . The First National Bank OF PRINEVILLE, OREGON ESTABLISHEP 1 008 t'HptUl, Hurplux i ninl 1'ijilt vlilctl Profit $100,000. CO L VERY The best in Shaniko Good Stock. Careful Drivers Host of liny mi id drain Fed At Very Reasonable Prices D. A. Howell, Shaniko, Or. i Harness and Saddles Belting, Lace Leather Whips, Bridles, Halters Kino Handmade Harness fully guaran teed, Hindu from bent California Oak tanned harness leather B. S. LARKIN MADRAS, OKROON S3 T3xnvirnrrfit lea ranee ale We must raise money to meet rcssinp; obligations 4 M at!. cap"5. lovcs, ladies' shawls and fascinators, children's wool caps, misses' and children's coats any old i iicc must be closed out. Snecial dish sale, come and see them. 7 bars "Dandy" lap. I") cent;; 6 bars "Golden Star," 25 cents, Our line of medicines to be closed out at prices will p them. All farm machinery reduced. Six-horsepower "International gasoline engine a harp, in, panes M. A. R OBINSON & CO. GENERAL MERCHANTS MADRAS, OREGON THE NEW LAND POLICY Settlers Will Be Presumed to Be Honest Until Proved Otherwise MORE LIBERAL THAN HITCHCOCK RULING Secretory Garflold Will Extend Aid of ' the Governmont to Bona Fldo Hpmootend Settlers Secrotnry Garfield of tho Interior Department, of whose department the General Lund Ollco Ih a branch, Iiiih announced a more liberal policy towardu bont'ht uettlere upon govern ment land, In Ii Ih report to CongreHS. Mr, Garfield inukeM It plain Unit It Hhn.ll be the policy of the department to ho interpret the public land Iiiwh att to actually uid every bona llde entry- man who ia endeavoring to establish a hoiueoti the public domain, lie bold tliat the land laws were enacted for that purple, and ho long an the law lb not ubu.-ed, he IntciiiiH tlmt entrymen Hhall ci.Joy llH privilegeu, aud bo long au lie acts In good faith, the settler shall have the uid and encouragement of representatives of the depattmetit. Mr. Garlleld's report hIiowh that there lias been, or will be, a radical change in the manner of conducting the In terior Department with reference to laud mutters. Tho press dispatches, in dealing with Secretary Garlleld'u report, atate that the Secretary Is proceeding on the theory that every man Ih honest, or will be presumed so, until proved otherwise, and that the strict inter pretation of the law' us unplied by Secretary Hitchcock, bis predepeasor, baa been abrogated. Under Secretary Hitchcock a strict Interpretation of the land laws wits applied, and violations of the laud laws were vigorously pros ecuted when fraud was found. It wai under , Secretary Hitchcock that the vast land fraud!' In Oregon aud Other public land states were unearthed, aud tho disclosures that were made in the laud fraud investigations justified the rigorous policy of the secretary, which w.ii generally approved by that part of the public which believed that the J hind laws were being used as a me dium for colossal frands against tiio government. It Is doubtless true that a number of Innocent entrymen suf fered along with the guilty, but the land frauds of the West received such a check hh had never been applied before under any administration of the Interior Department. Secretary Garlleld's report Indicates no less desire to prevent frauds being perpetrated under the land laws, but by a closer supervision through Held agents he expects to arrive ut the same end, that of preventing frauds under tho laud laws, while at the same time the honest entryman will have no hardship Imposed upon him, but on the other hand will have tho aid and eiicoiirugement of the department In Ids eflbrtsat home-bulldlug. With a sufficient appropriation from Congress to enable the department to keep a sulllcient force in tlie field, the policy can doubtless be carried out as out lined. list your property WITH OSBORN & WILSON Madras, Oregon Wo linndlo all kimlsof renl estate, anil have a nuiiibir of baiaius toolfer. A. M, WILLIAMS & CO DKAI.KItS IN Dry Goods, Clothing, Furnishing Goods :-o-: HOOTS AND SHOES HATS AND OA PS THE DALLES OREGON Pacific Horse Liniment is prepared expressly tor the needs of liorf cnicn and ranchmen. It Is a powerful and pene (rating liniment, a remedy for emergen, cles. A soothing embrocation for the relief of pain, and the best liniment tor sprains and soreness.' Unequoled for curing the wounds and injuries of HAKUED WIRH and fnr healing cuts, abrasions, sores and bruises. Pacific Horse Liniment Is fully guaranteed, No other Is so good or helpful in so many ways. If It fans to satisfy, we authorize all dealers to refund the purchase price. CXTNA l"OC BOTTlli rifTY CCNTI Hoyt Chemical Co., poktuno, one. BOOKLUr HM FRED REGARDING ISOLATED TRACTS Some time ago by a ruling of the land oflicc, all applications for isolated tracts were required to be made in person by the applicant at the land office. Com missioner Osborn, howeves, is just in receipt of notice that hereafter such ap plications may be made before him, or before any officer qualified to administer oaths in land matters. Applicants for Igolated Tracts must show by their affidavits, corroborated by two witnesses, that the land contains no salines, coal or other minerals; the amount, kind and value of timber or stone thereon; whether the land is occupied, and if so, the nature of the occupancy; for what purpose the land is chiefly valuable; why it is desired that same be sold ; that applicant desires to puicliase the land for his own individ ual use and occupancy and not for speculative purioscs, and that he has not heretofore purchased isolated tracts, the area of which, when added to the tract now applied for, will exceed ICO acres. MILL CLOSES DOWN ( ' The flouring mill operated by the Madras Milling Company at this place closed down the first of the week, and it is announced that the operation of the mill will be suspended for a month or more, while a number of needed changes are made in the milling machinery. Sir. DIetaal states that the c mpnny expects to have the mill running again within a mouth, when they expect to continue making ".Madras Flour" aud the other pro ducts of the mill without further in terruption. The Mudras Milling Company has on hand a supply of wheat which taxes their warehouse room to its capacity, aud while the mill is shin down, they will uot bo In position to leceiveany more wheat. R. F. D. PATRONS SHOULD BUY STAMPS rostmastcr Davis desires to call atten tion to the practice of some patrons of rural delivery of placing loose coins in their boxes each tijne they desire to dispatch letters instead of supplying themselves with postago in advance of their needs. rhis practice imposes unduo hardship on rural carriers in removing loose coins from boxes and delays them on the servico of their routes. Tho postmaster, thoreforo, urgently requests that patrons of rural delivery provide themselves and keep on hand a supply of stamps consistent with and in ndvanco of their needs. It is also very desirable that rural patrons place in their mail boxes small detachable cups of wood or tin in which to place coins, when necessary, in purchasing supplies of stamps. CONTRACT CRAIN SACKS Farmora of tho Walla Walla Valley, in Washington, closed a deal Inst Sat urday for their grain sacks for tho 1903 harvest, the number of sacks con tracted for amounting to about 1,400,000, and the price being 7 aud 3-8 cents, delivered at any station in Walla Walia county. This Is 3 and 5 8 cents lower than the prlco they paid last year, and the farmers esti mate that they have saved $50,000, J The Calcutta grain-sucks weio pur , utilised from Kerr, Gillbrd k Co. of l'orilund, who were tho lowest bidders. One tenth of the purchase price was paid down, the balance to bo paid 'upon delivery of tho sacks, between June 15 and August 1, The deal for I the sucks was made by the farmers' ! union, and it will doubtless stimulate luterest in tho orguulzutlou, LIGHT FOR CROOK CITIES H. V. Gates tq Install $150,000 Plant at Lava Falls on Deschutes NEGOTIATIONS ARE NOW UNDER WAY , Will Generate Current to Supply Light and Power 'for Prlnevllle, Bend, Laldlaw and Redmond Prlnevllle, Or,, Feb. 3. 11. V. Gates of Hillsboro, president of the Prineville Light & Water company and severaj other lighting plants throughout the Htate, has given out that construction of an immense power plant at Lava Falls, on the Deschutes, six 'miles south of Bend, will begin in the early Spring. The plant is to be completed within a year. It is to co-it $150,000 and will servo the towns of Bend, Laidluw, Uedmond and Prineville with a 24-hour current for lighting and other purposes. Th6 company expects to secure 2000 horse-power at Iiva Falls. Negotiations between Mr. Gates and F. S. Stanley of the Deschutes Irriga tion & Power Company, which has filed on the. water right there, are now under way. The company has agreed to transfer to Mr, Gates all the water necessary for the project, reserving an amount necessary for the reclamation of its segregation. POSSIBILITIES OF DRY FARMINC J. 51. Patterson of The Dalles, who was a delegate from Wasco county to the Dry Farming Congress, said upon his return frjin the sessions of the, congress: "I am more than ever Impressed with the possibilities of dry farmnig, I believe, in common with other mem bers of the dry farming congress a well as some representatives of irriga tion, that dry farming is destined in a great measuro to do away with Irrigar lion. 2fot that present irrigated tracts will be given over to arid farming but that tracts where heretofore it hug been thought nothing could be induced to grow without irrigation will be made to yield. The system of irrigation is so expensive that, if car ried 011 under scientific principles, the farm where irrigation is not used can be made to pay a larger percentage on the investment than the irrigated land, Thlsis why scientific dry farm? ing will supercede Irrigation. In the armory where the congress was held, all sorts of cereals, fruits and veget ables were on display, all grown upon arid lands. Qf course they were not grown in a haphazard way, but by paying attention to scientific princi ples as tine products were growu as. ever took root in Irrigated soil. LARGEST WHEAT POINT Condon claims to be the largest pri mary shipping point for wheat In the United States, that Gilliam county town having, during the present year, , shipped one million three hundred thousand bushels. Last year the hon or was held by Ititzville, Washington, which shipped a million and a quarter bushels. It ia estimated that Gillian) county this year produced two and u half million bushels of grain, With a railroad through this section ofCentral Oregon, Condon will havu to look out for her honors, for the sectiou of country tributary to Mad ras alone is oapablo of producing an. nually between four and live nilllloii bushels of grain. This year tho pro duction did nut exceed one mil lion bushels, because the nearest shipping point is Shuuiko, a distance ol 45 miles and the acreage in wheat has been restricted on that account. WOMAN APPOINTED U.S. COMMISSIONER , There is only one Vnitod States Com. inissioner in tho State of Oreuon who is a woman, and she was appointed today. Her name is Grace Fnzzel, of Fossil, . Wheeler Countv, Although she ia the only woman com- inissioner in tho state at this time, thoio" havo been a fow other women to hold that position. One of hor most famous predecessors in otlleo was Mario AVaro. of laud-fraud fume, who wiia commis sioner at Kugone. Tho duties of a commissioner, it is thought by Federal authorities, mnv Im porformcd by a woman equally well &tt uy a man. the appointment wu? inado this morning in tho Federal. Coutt of this city. Portland Tclegrum. Pr j l j '1 ' it 1 tl 3