Sob lS ,.6, A The MADRAS, CROOK COUNTY, OREGON. TH U RSDAY, SEPT EM BE R 15, 910." NO. 5 jrioneer of Prevention Wofth :- of Cure n J rouiiu D GROSS mm 1 ypnoia nun I urn tii i h f-nfift-iiT".ni Mr UK N I INN No. 1498 iiMn Ttiunriini inn i in dron una auuns OSS UKUU SlUKt AUltAS. GAS STRUCK IN OIL WELL At Depth of 600 Feet ON FIRE SEVERAL TIMES das Rising Through 300 Feet of Water Makes Noise Like , Boiling Well IADRAS l I Drill ingCo. IAN AND SURFACE WELLS triii uuni nniLtu E AT PIONEER OFFICE iiinnio nnrnnu MflUnAO, uncuun A flow of gas has been en countered in the Grizzly oil well at a depth of about 600 feet. j The gas is inflammable and was I set on fire several times Tues day at the surface of the well. One man who set it on' fire had his whiskers singed, the flames leaping as high as his heatl. The gas flow is strong enough to swing the cable in the drill hole. There is about 300 feet of ' water in the hole and the escap ing gas causes the water to bub ble and boil so that the sound can be heard by the workmen. The drill is now working in a ; hard black shale, where progress j is slow. Mr. Kate, the driller, I thinks that when this formation is pierced that it will show up something of importance, either in the way of oil or a strong flow of gas. The last hundred feet o the well has baen made since work was resumed a short time ago. Several times the hole has bee.n dry, the water having been cased out, but this has again seeped in, and the only way it can be kept out successfully, is said to be by inserting a smaller casing and using cement, there by reducing the size of the hole, which is an undesirable feature. The hole is now 8 inches in di ameter at the bottom and it is not desired to make it smaller if it can be avoided. The announcement of the strik ing of the gas flow has aroused great interest among local people in the developments that may be expected from the Grizzly well Socialist County Convention The Socialist County Convention for Crook County, State of Oregon, is hereby called to meet at the Circuit Court room at rrineville, Oregon, on Saturday, September 17, 1910, at 1 o'clock P. M. for the purpose of nom inating candidates for all the county offices to be filled at the next treneral election, and for the transaction of Buch other business as may come be- iore saiu convention, litis will bo a mass convention and all persons in to be identified with the Socialist movement will be entitled to a voice in the proceedings of the convention. Done by order of the Socialist Coun ty Central Committee, August 1, 1910. J. H. Homey, Chairman, J. H. bmith, Secretary. A Bpeaker of national reputation will address the convention. alo y New Umbrellas and Sunshades i Wc have just received a large shipment of umbrellas, suitable for all kinds of people and all kinds of weather. Positively the largest assortment ever shown in Madras, at prices that will ternpt the most fastidious customer to buy. Do not miss -this opportunity to save money. Call and see our line. I PRICES from 50c to $3.00 EACH FREE!-$ 1 0 Dinner Sets-FREE! EVERY WEEK Next prize will be given on Wednesday, September 2 1 . Don't forget the date, you V may be the winner. f' ' I . i, . Central Oregon Mercantile -: Company :- R. T. OLSON, Manager MADRAS, - - OREGON MAN THOUGHT HE WAS SHOT Struck A Fence Gun Went Off grand jury. The boy's home is at Grants Pass, and it is sup posed he had started to go there with the horse and saddle which he had borrowed. BLACKSMITH HELD UP BY TWO MEN YOUTH "BORROWS" HORSE Blacksmith Is Held Up Wounds One of Assailants By Biting Finger Nick Ruyke, an Austrian labor er, got full of near-whiskey Sat urday evening and was behaving .witb unbecoming activity in one of the joints near the moving picture show, when Officer Wes ton went after him. Ruyke fled with Weston in pursuit and the Austrian went headlong into a barbwire fence. As he fell, a revolver which he had in the front pocket of his trousers went off, and the frightened man thought the officer had shot him. He hurt his knee on the fence and this fact added to his belief. He heard the shot, felt the pain, and as the powder set fire to his pants, he, thought he had been shot and killed and was already being consumed by the everlast ing fires of the lower regions. , Weston you shoot me. What foryou shoot me," howled the fellow as he rolled over and.over. 'unable to- rise. Four men picked Ruyke up and carried him into a saloon where he continued to rail at Weston for shooting him. In the neighborhood of a hundred men had gathered around by Lthis time. Dr. Snook was hur ried in and as soon as he had a chance to examine the man it was discovered that he wasp't shot at all. The only damage was a smouldering fire in his clothes. Then such a roar of laughter went up as is seldom ever heard, and the incident has made fun for the town ever since. Ruyke refused to walk to jail. If you want me to go to jail you have to carry me," he said. He was dragged to the lockup, and had a hearing in the Record er's Court Monday morning on a charge of carrying concealed weapons. He was fined $22, and after being taken to jail, paid the fine. Then he was brought up on a charge of assault with intent to kill, but this charge failed to stick for want of ev idence. Ruyke was said to be attempting to get into the saloon where he had quarreled with some comparions about paying for some beer, and it was claimed that he had a pistol in his hand and was threatening to shoot, when Weston arrived and chased liim into the barb wire fence. Joe Johannson, the blacksmith employed in Tucker & Culp's shop, was held up by two men near the flour mill last Saturday night and relieved of $2.50 and his watch. One of the men hit Johannson on the head with something and knocked him down then one of his assailants clapped his hand, over the victim's mouth while the other went through his pockets. Jo hannson got one of the fingers of the holdup's hand in his mouth and bit with all his might, and the man screamed with pain and cried, ''He's biting me," then Johannson was released. Jo hannson says his mouth was full of blood and he knows that the finger was bitten to the bone. The man with a sore hand is now liable to be under investigation should he show up soon. Johannson had been to Porter & Clarkson's camp visiting with a friend and was returning home when he was "stuck up." For the benefit of those who don't know him, it may be said that Johannson doesn't get drunk. BIG IMPETUS TO FARMING Railroads Bring Cash Market SAGEBRUSH WILL ALL GO Land Too Valuable To Be Left Uncultivated Grain Yield Is Surprise to Harvester Man METOLUS WELL IS - NOW 868 FEET DEEP BOY BOUND OVER FOR HORSE STEALING y i Howard Hilkey, a youth 17 ears old, is in jail at Prineville under $500 bonds, on a charge of liorse stealing. Hilkey had been orking with O'Kelley's thresh ing crew at Culver. He wejit to Jim Read's place Friday morning and borrowed a mare and saddle to ride to Madras. He came to Madras but on the return kept going south. Read got track of him Saturday and the telephone headed him off at Bend where the officers took him in. He had a hearing at Prine ville and was bound over to the (Special by Shortest Wireless on Earth.) Metolus Well, Sept. 15. Our well is8G8feetudeep, . and while we have not lost any of the water that we found at 677 feet, it is a fact that we have not found any more. The for mation that we are now in is hard, and if we keep on pound ing we will find the center of tne eartn, or more water, or gas. Metolus. The above dispatch is the latest authoritative information we have received from the drill ing operations at the railroad di vision point, south of town. The formation which the bit is cutting now is so hard that only about five feet a day can be made in it. NEW ROAD GRANTED BY COUNTY COURT The new county road from the corner of the William Harper place on Agency Plain westerly down the left fork of Nigger Brown Canyon about 4 and 1-2 miles to a junction with the Warmspring road near the Ed. Campbell place, was allowed by the county court last Friday. This is known as the Gard Road and the estimated cost of build ing it is $3000. Of this sum, a part is to be subscribed by the farmers on Agency Plain and a subscription paper for the same is now in circulation, sev eral hundred dollars haying tyeen signed for already. The re mainder of the expense is to be borne by the county. The 'max imum grade on the new route will be 7 per cent. FOR SALE A good three-year-old, Dart Jersey milk cow. Gentle. In quire of Mrs. M. E. Bradford, Opal Prairie. slt That the completion of the" railroad to Madras will crive to grain farming in this section a far greater impetus than the people residing here realize is the be lief expressed by " W. A. Hunt. " special salesman for the Holt Manufacturing Co., who has been here the past two weeks'' taking orders for combined har vesters. "My work for many vears." said he yesterday, "has taken me into the grain regions, many of which I have seen before transportation was supplied, and again after railroads have been built into them. It makes all the difference in the world. With the railroad station and the grain warehouses right at the farmer's door, every bushel of wheat means just so much cash,,, to him. There is always ther ready cash market, the market of the whole world. With this condition it doesn' take a farmer long to see that the thing to do is to raise every, bushel of grain possible, and the way the sage brush will come off of this country and every avail able acre put under cultivation . , will be a surprise to the residents here within the next few years. Since I have been here I notice there is a great acreage of land that will raise fine grain, that has not yet been cleared, it will be different in a very short time. "And look, too, at the grain , yield you get here. I hear of no wheat in this section this year that is not above 20 pushels per acre, and some as high as 30. In a number of good wheat countries 15 bushels is all that is expected. It isn't likely that land capable of producing so nearly its price every year will be allowed to remain idle. "Heretofore the market has been local. The freight to Shan- jko has ranged from 20 to 25 cents per bushel, with another 11 cents to Portland, all of which came out of the grower. A nor mal freight rate from here to Portland on the new roads ought not to be far from 10 cents per bushel. All this difference goes into the grower's pocket." An interesting film shown at the picture show this week was that entitled Through the Hood River Valley," and 'Salmon Fishing Along the Columbia River," The pictures show apple orchards, the gathering, packing, etc., and in the Ashing pictures the fishermen may be seen lay ing out and hauling in their nets from which are taken the great salmon. There is a show every ivght. Madras State Bank MADRAS, OREGON TRANSACTS A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS ' Money transmitted to all parts of United States and Canada J. M. Conklin, President and Gen. IVWgr C. E. Rouh, Viee-Peident PIHliCTOKB: C. li. Boush, M. I'ut i, J. a. Itoblnbon, Ilobt. Rut, J. M. Conklin i mi m i ' - -