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About The Madras pioneer. (Madras, Crook County, Or.) 1904-current | View Entire Issue (July 4, 1912)
BOARD OF REGENTS IN ANNUAL SESSION HAUNTED BY COUNTERPART NEW GOODS BIG PRODUCT SHOW PORTLAND PROMOTES iU lime to anticipate your wants for the hot weather. Wc have just received NVmcnt of GINGHAMS, JEPHYRS, PERCALES, LAWNS ETC., jhe most wanted colors, patterns and designs and were never better prepared to supply you. Our Prices Considering Quality are the Same as in The Big City of Portland DO NOT FAIL TO SEE THEM : MENS' GOLF and NEGLIGBE SHIRTS . ,..rrjvcd Every one of these arc the latest 1912 designs. Prices from $1.00 to $3.00 YOU CAN KEEP COOL AND SAVE MONEY BY TRADING HERE Oregon Mercantile Company- Central lick Belgian Draft Stallion F1ST0N D' AVERNAS No. 4455 - i r a rir'i f A imp im crc-iii COPY Stallion Registration Board STATE OF OREGON License Certificate of PURE BRED Stallion or Jack, No 896 Dated nt CorvalliB.IOrogon, January 1C, 1912. .1'Avornnii. fNn. 44SS" Vol. XVI I TP I Mill L II' 17 Ml L11U kTLIllUWII W ii - J IS5. rtglstcred In the Htudbook of The American Assn. of Importers Oriift Horses. Owned bv Jerry C. Southman. Mik iWrihl ns follows: Black: few white hairs in forehead. Pedferee: ( Kirn- nt? Rtnr Pnrfntirhn rfUift2l wrr hi i t ii i im i 4 ITEMS OF INTEREST For Sale One 14 ft Header, good condition, and two Header boxes. Inquire of M. L. Loucks. J4-4t. For Sale Threshing outfit, sixteen horse-power compound traction engine, Russell 30 inch Separator, tanks, cook-house etc. Everything complete and in good condition. We are in position to offer a great bargain for this outfit for small cash pay ment or all on time, if secured. Further particulars on, applica tion. The Dalles Iron Works, The Dalles, Oregon. J20-3t. SmE op Daw, Poladln 10060 Dam OF Dam, Rossettc d' Avernas 13655 I I Breed: Belgian. Foaled In the year 1907, has been examined by tho nn nHuiii rn i irin t tn rii ni i i rnrrnn nnn it iu iiirrrir ruriiiiiMi i ri ii i. i nit lUllion or Jhck is of Pure Breeding, IB registered in tho Btudbook urecopniZL-d liv this iiHKnrintinrm nnmnri in Rco.Linn nine ol an net 01 l8TliallveAscfnlilv nf tint Kfnfn nf Ornimn nrnvidini' fnr thn HpenR- ifofitallions, etc, (tied in theofllco of tbe Secretary of State, February ml, and that thr uhovo nnmed Htnlltnn or tuck has uuun examined Mveierinanan appointed by the Stallion UegiHtratton Hoard and 1b soundness, anu is nereuy licensed to stand tor public servico in ine EDWARD L. POTTER Scc'y Stallion Registration Doard. I For Sale. Separator and en gine, at a bargain. Pride of j Washington separator, practical ly new, having been run only thirty days, wind stacker and self feeder. Advance engine. For ! further information write Cooke Bros., Condon, Oregon. NOTICE. Any one who has borrowed any of my carpenter tools, will please ! return them at once. M30-tf. Fred Davis. 9 Will make the Season of 1 9 1 2 as follows ; . OfnnW IS...-.. IWn MADRAS i ,i aii 1 1 1 1 a v iiuuiu nJi ii . viviiiiuii J L.I I Ul j EJUS II uncuun f $10.00 SINGLE SERVICE MMSi 15.00 SEASON ( 20.00 TO INSURE COLT ON FOOT JERRY G. SOUTHMAN, Owner MADRAS, OnECOH very, s 5?. STARI F I 04 OMLt uinukk MADRAS, OREGON G. V. STANTON For good residence and business lots in Madras, call on 0. A. Pearce, selling agent for the holdings of the Inland Empire Company. Over 300 lots to choose from. Prices very low. tf For residence and business lots see 0. A. Pierce. - tf Thoroughbred Jersey Bull. Service at the Madras Hotel barns." Terms $2.50. W. C. Moore, owner. FARM LOANS!! Madras State Jank. FOR SALE At the Pioneer Office Igal Wanks of all kinds; Carbon and Typewriter puper, Installment Sale contracts, Notes and Receipts. MONEY TO LOAN ON FARMS. Seo Madras State Hank. Your 0 qive rders Prompt Attention f Stock Given Best Of Feed And Care I VAtmr. "WICK. p. . ri ' v. WUNDERLEY, Vice Pre. L. M. DECrl I LLL, bee. HH. Haner AbStradt Co. Incorporated . t Prineville - Oregon Jm flock $5000.00 Surplus $3000.00 fully paid up. & f ii 10 0,1 real ProPerly Crook counly- I p!al ' 1'iiuiagrapn copies oi un rctuius anu i TO LOAN $50,000.00 on farm lands Sec Brenton Jones, Metolius, Ore. For Good Farms City Property and Business Chances SEE D. W. BARNETT OFFICE MAIN BTKEKT, MADRAS, OKKQON Houses to Rent CHOICE LOTS IN DEPOT ADDITION Happloat Girl In Lincoln. A Lincoln, Neb., girl writer "I had been ailing for some time with chronic constipation and stomach trouble, I began taking Chamberlain's Stomach and Livor Tablets and in three days I was ablo to be up and got better right along. I am tho proudest girl in Lin coln to find Buch a pood medicino." For Ba,le, by M. B. Snook, An Apparent Mystery That Was Simply Explained. To sco oneself lu n mirror, an exact counterpart, tho uamo hair, eyes, fea tures this la nothing, wc see It a hundred times a day. But to hoc one nclf Independent of reflection, making different movements, going and com ing, sitting, standing, whllo we are still this Is terrible. I was standing one morning In my ofllco on tho tentli floor of a skyscraper looking out of a window. I remember tbat I had my hands in my pocicets. Suddenly I was startled to bco another mo standing In a window of an oppo slto building. The flguro was up one story higher. lie bnd lib hands In his pockets and wore glasses. I also wear classes. IIo had his beard trimmed to n point: so had I. ni noso was a trifle bent to tho left; so Is mine. My first emotion was surprise, my second terror. I had been under treat ment for nervous troubles, but this was several months before. Were my sufferings about to return under a new form? Was this hallucination? Had my brain become anectea i snrann back from tho window and Into a chair. Summoning all my fortitude. I looked again. Tho flguro had disappeared. I explained nothing, but Immediately went out Calling a cab, I directed the driver to take mo to my physician. I recounted what hnd occurred, and aft er endeavoring to reassure me he gave me n quieting mixture and told me to fix my mind on my business. It was some time before I dared go to the window again, but nfter going there several times without seeing my double I made up my mind thnt I was all right again and was beginning to cease thinking of the matter when one day I walked to the window and Just as i reached it my aoume rcacnea ms jown window, our eyes met. nocn started back, I with a wildly beating heart, my counterpart with a look of unutterable surprise. I hastily left the office and tho next day was on a steam er bound for Southampton. England. I remained abroad two years. I would not have returned even then had not received notice from my attorney thac I was needed In tbe settlement of my. father's estate. I had had trouble from the first, for my father and moth er had separated when l was hut a year old. and this naturally led to com plications. I had remained with my fa ther, who, I alwnys understood, bad what there was to bequeath. My at torneys did not Inform me as to the na ture of this last complication, only In Umatlng that bo needed my presence at once. I sailed for New York and on arrival called at the ofllce of Mr Hazleton, who bad summoned me That there was something of Impor tance on bis mind was evident. He looked mo all over as lf he had never seen me before, then stood, mill look ing at me. without saying anything. "Well, what is It?" I-asked: "Did you ever hear that your mother left property?" he asked. "No." "Or that she bad an Interest in your father's estate?" 'No. My mother died before my fa ther." "There Is a piece of property which we must sell before settling the estate. It was owned Jointly by your father and mother. At any rate. It needs the signature of tho heirs of both." "Very welL Am I not the heir of both?" "Como hero tomorrow morning at 0 o'clock. I shall want your signature." "Explain." "Tomorrow at 9 o'clock." he repeat ed and went Into his private ofllce. At tho appointed hour I was at Mr. Ilazelton's ofllce and was told to wait In nn anteroom. Presently the door opened, and 1 was ushered Into tho main room. At tho same moment a door opposite me opened, and a man advanced Into the room 1 had entered. Horror of horrors, ho was my dou ble! "Wo stood looking at each other like tbo two Dromlos, he In wonder, I In terror. "Oh, heavens!" I moaned. "It ha come back to me!" "Gentlemen," said Mr. Hazelton, "1 need the Blgnature of both of you to a deed. You aro twlu brothers." "Twin brothors!" wo exclaimed In a breath. Yes. Waen your father nnd mother separated your father took one, your mother tho other. It was agreed be tween thorn that each child should be kept In Ignorance of the other." The relief tho finding of n brother, twin brother, of whoso existence I hod been In Ignorance was n delight that can ouly be understood by expe rience. It did not require that wo should have been brought un togothor to feel that strong mutual drawing always to bo found In children of a single birth. "Wo advanced, embraced Jtnd cried simultaneously: "You aro?" "Max." "Mark." I was Mar, and ho was Mark. No twlnB over moro clearly resembled oach other, and Mr. nazolton. with a lawyer's Instinct, seized a pen nnd scratched our respective names on our cuffs to preserve tho Identity of each. My brothor on seolng mo at my win dow had been similarly nffected as I. Even tho pleasure nt finding one an other has not to this day obliterated from either tho horror of encountering Exhibit Similar to Eastern Land Shows to. be Held During Winter Portland, Ore., July 2. In stead of an apple show, Portland will hold a land show this win ter that will be the first of its kind in the Pacicfic Northwest. It is hoped to make it an annua! event rivaling in interest the biff land shows of the East and Middle West. November or De cember will probably be the time for holding the show and it is planned to have it last two weeks. In scope it will cover the entire Pacific Northwest and all the states included in this territory will be asked to co-operate and send exhibits. it is desired to have every product of the soil assembled here at that time. Commercia bodies will be interested and it is hoped to develop this event into an annual attraction that win appeal to people throughout the whole country who may be at tracted to the vacant lands of the Northwest states. The show project has the support of the Oregon Development League and he ctiief organizations of Port and and the state. VALUABLE TIMBER IN CENTRAL OREGON Portland Lumberman Says Supply Last for Over Two Centuries Will If all the yellow pine and sugar pine lumber used in Portland buildings were cut from the privately owned forests of Lake, Crook and Klamath counties, it would require 100 years to ex haust the supply. After the timber owned by individuals and corporations in these counties is exhausted there will be as much more left standing in the govern ment forest reserves. The pine in these counties would build a string of six-room bungalows from Portland to San Francisco, and the same species of timber in Wheeler, Grant and North Harney counties would build another line of cottages from Portland to the boundary line of Montana. Small mills have been pecking away at the forests of Central Oregon for more than 20 years, but they have'nt made a dent "It's like trying to undermine the pyramids by using a pen knife," said one of Portland's lumbermen who has interests in North Lake county. "The great grandchildren of our grandchil dren will make boxes from Lake county pine and then there will be timber left." It isn't the dense, tangled thicket found on the Pacific Slope that is seen in a ride through the timber of Crook, Lake and Klamath counties. There is no impenetrable tangle of underbrush, no clumps of thickly-grown trees or poles between which a team cannot be driven. Instead there is a vast natural park, where giant pines, straight as an arrow, tower in the thin atmosphere until they seem to almost sweep the blue dome. They appear to have been scattered for a crreat park. At intervals rugged lava beds jut from the earth and tower almost to the tree tops and in places there are congealed lava flows stretching for ten miles through the woods. "Yellow pine of Central Ore gon," says (J. W. Embody, "will cut a big figure in the markets of this Coast as soon na thnt region is better supplied with transportation facilities. ' 'Ore-gonian. New Instructors Chosen far Univer sity of Oregop and New Depart ments Added University of Oregon, Eugene Oregon., June 19; In the annual meeting of the Board of Regents of the University of Oregon, held yesterday in President Camp bell's office, the Board went on record as promising to turn back into the treasury the $500,000 granted it by the legislature in the last session, providing that the court annuled the referendum petitions as fraudulent in case the people of the state voted favorably on the proposed bill, providing for one Board of Re gents andmillage support for the University and the Agricltral College. Also, they voted funds for the establishment of a De partment of Journalism at the University, and elected Miss Ruth Guppy,. of Tacoma, a grad uate of the University of Michi gan, as Dean of Women. The positipn of Dean pf Women has not been filled since the resigna tion of Dr. Luella Clay Carson, four years ago, to accept tie presidency of Mills College. One of the most important acta of the Board was to select Dr. George Rebec, formerly of the Universiiy of Michigan, as head of the Department of Education at the University. Dr. Rebec resigned his position in the Uni versity of Michigan two years ago on account of ill health, and moved to a farm near Medford. R. W. Prescott, of Baker, now secretary to President Campbell, was made an assistant in the de partment of public speaking, and Miss Mabel Holmes Parsons, of Medford, was elected an as sistant in the Department of Rhetoric, and Dr. William Macky Smith, of Lafayette College, was chosen as assistant-professor of mathematics. A8STRAT REPORT Of instruments filed in the office of the Recorder of Deeds. une 10 to June 29 inclusive. Deeds. H. K. Nissen to Harry N. Kjer 20 feet lot 5, block 19, Palmain. $3000. Oregon Trunk Development Co. to Jos. Reder. Lot 9, block 3, Warehouse addition to Madras. T. A. Hudson to Otto Strasser. nwinel, neisei lots 5 and 6 sec tion 19 and lots 1 and 2 section 20-11-11. $1. Sarah J. Houk to Baxter F. Houk. njneiswj, njnwisel and nelsei 32-11-14. $1. Sarha J. Houk to Macreie L. Bker. wsnei 29-12-14. $1. Sarah J. Houk to Mary E. Pringle. sineiswi, sjnwjsei and siesej 32-2-14 and lot 1, 5-13-14. $1. Frank Irving et al to Addie B, Wood. Lots 1, 2, 7, 8, block 8 and lots 1 and 2. block 9, Ash wood. $1. C. K. Loucks to Hattie S. Loucks. part of nelswi 12-11-13. . $1. Alta D. Hatten to George S. Geis. sel 9-13-12. $3000. Fred J. Benedix to Frank Lyons, selswi-15 njnei, neinwi 22-12-13. $100 PATENTS Jos. J. Hinton. sejnei, neisel 33 and njswi 34-11-13. Thomas A. Brasket winwl 12 einel 11-9-16. Frank R, Blair, nwlnej 21-9-14. United States Land Office to Charles R. Eagles certificate of for neisel, sinel and lot 2,6-11-14. lillBBMta,PjlT SBB " double. I