31 1" Jt' e e n o o o It o 0 6) o o o o Vacations Sea Shore CLATSOP BEACH, PACIFIC OCEAN Low roun.l trip faros are In cffeot H summer. This beautiful beach Jtrotohes twcntv live mites smith i)f the mouth of the Columbia Klver. 8osll and have llrst class hotels, cottages, eamptlng places, surf bathing, mountain water, etc. LOW ROUND TRIPS EAST Throucliout vhc summer, on the ilatcs given below, round trip tickets will bo sold to tho points In the cast shown below, and many others, at the reduced fares quoted. OregonTrunkkx CENTRAL OREGON UNE Great Northern and Northern Pacific Railways . . . y-i . 1 f T-.L ' L P OO RA rMnlin 9 fl (S Atlantic City lialtimore . . . Boston . . . Buffalo, . . Chicago . . . Colorado Springs Denver . . . $111.00 Detroit. . . $ 82.50 Omaha . . ? 60.00 107.50 Duluth . . . 60.00 Philadelphia 108.50 110.00 Kansas City . 60.00 Pittsburg . 91.50 91.50 Milwaukee . . 72-50 St. Louis . . 70.00 72.50 Minneapolis . . 60.00 St. Paul . . 60.00 55.00 Montreal . . 105.00 Toronto . . 91.50 55.00 New York . 108.50 Washington 107.50 DATES OF SALE : JULY 23, 26, 29, 30, 31, 1912. AUGUST 1, 2, 3, 6, 7, 12. 16, 22, 23, 29, 30, 31, 1912. SEPTEMBER 4, 5. 6, 7, 8, 11, 12, 30, 1912. Stopovers and choice of routes allowed In each direction. Final return limit October 31st, 1912. Train leaving Madras, S.40 A.M. conuectsdlreotly at Fallbrldge wltb. FAST THROUGH TRAIN EAST Details of schedules, fares, etc., will be furnished on request. W.E. Goman.Gen'l Frt. & Pass. Agent, Portland, Or. A. P. Meyers, Agent Madras, Or. ASE DON'T Leave a fire in the timber until it is OUT. Throw burning matches or tobacco in the woods. Start a fire where it can spread into the timber. Fail to notify a State or Federal officer if you discover a fire in the timber. YOU WILL LOSE Taxes on burned timber land. $8.00 per thousand feet in wages circulated. The sale of groceries, hardware, and supplies used in the cutting and manufacture of the timber. You own good opinion of your public spirit, if you fail to put out or report timber fires the same as you would report a fire in your neighbors dwelling. eeesecae i THE VINEYARD! THE NEW CONFECTIOARY Is Now Open in the Key Building on 5th Street With a I Full Line of Candies, Fruits, Soda Waters and Ice Cream I J 1 IUIIOJ SPECIAL PARLOR FOR LADIES HARRY. G. KEY, Prop. J r rrrrrr UMLL I IN HINU I INOruU 1 IVI I IN C VV LINE OF I SPRING AND SUMMER MILLINERY MRS. ISA E. B. CROSBY I. O. O. F. Lodge Meets every Wednesday night. Strangers are welcome. ; fr Prry Henderson, N.G. " "f' Lew,8 h Irving, Secretary RAILROAD PROMOTER BAD CHECK ARTIST H. H. Skswas. Has Mado a Record Slnca Making Hla Appearance In Central Oregon ialfour-Guthrie & Co. FOR SACKS, TWINE and ROLLED BARLEY P. W. Ashley, Agt. Phone Your Orders yith large ideas and small methods, a man who called him self H. H. Skewes arrived at Me tolius, in Crook County early in June, and announced himself a railroad promoter. He said, with mysterious winks, that he repre sented St Louis capital to build a railroad from Metolius to Prine ville, and to extend it to Bend. To make his credit good he de posited a few dollars in the Bank at Metolius, and then went to Prineville. He engaged a party of surveyors to lay out the line. As a side issue, while he was giving the glad hand to the farmers and telling them of the value of the stock in his com pany, Mr Skews made love to his landlady, Mrs Sparks, proprie tress of the Sparks Hotel, and won her heart and hand. It is rumored JbufVojAsv) absur&ecf ner bank account of several hundred dollars. Mrs Sparks-Skewes is now hunting for her husband, not so much to have her former name returned as to 'get her money back. She will not con fess the exact amount she gave her husband. Addressing the members of the Chamber of Commerce of Prineville, for the purpose of soliciting subscriptions to the stock of the Central Oregon & Eastern Railroad, which had no legal substance, he is alleged to have said the steel for the con struction work had been ordered for deivery, not later than Octo ber 15, and that as soon as the surveyors had completed their work the grading would be com menced. The Prineville Cham ber of Commerce insisted on knowing who was really back of the enterprise, and Mr Skewes confidentially told that body he was representing the O. W. R. & N. Co. This caused the bubble to burst, for R. B. Miller, traffic manager of that company, pro-1 nounced Skewes an imposter and warned the Prineville citizens to beware of him. When this information was circulated Skewes disappeared from that section. His survey ors quit at the same time and are still doubtful if they will lose pay for their work. Amusing as it now appears, Skewes said that work on the road Wculd be through such a dense farming district, he did not want to interfere with the farmers by grading, until they had harvested their crops. Leaving Metolius with his bride to await his return, Skews came to Portland and bought an automobile, giving a check on the Metolius Bank in payment. The check was returned as no good in three days, but in the meantime the machine was used day and night, lubricated it with a trail of bad checks. Skewes was next heard from in Seattle, where he was at tempting to make a contract with the Union Oil Company to furnish oil for his engines, in the Central Oregon & Eastern Railroad. On the strength of this, he circulated a few more bad checks there, and then re moved his operations to Van couver, B. C. There he took the Board of trade into his confi dence and interested that body in securing 4,000,000 railroad ties for his road in Central Ore gon. About this time he learned that some of his creditors were on his trail, his wife being one of them, and he disappeared be fore he had made -much of a clean up. Information from Van DRY LAND ALFALFA GOOD FERTILIZER Humm and Nitrogen Returned to tho Soli, by Plowing Undor Alfalfa If dry farming is to become a permenant system of agricul ture it is absolutely essential that humus and nitrogen be put into the soil. There are hundreds of thousands of acres in the in ter-mountain West where no other system of agriculture will ever prevail. The constant grow ing of wheat on suinmor fal lowed land must cease, for such a system is sure to deplete the soil of its plant food. At the present, our wheat farming methods large ly consists of robbing the soil of its temporarily accumulated fer tility and then letting it lie idle until such time as enough plant food has been made available and enough water has been stored to insure another crop. Humus and nitorgen are essential to suc cessful wheat farming and in vixiav secure these the (fry farmer must make use of green manure crops that will supply these necessary plant foods. By doing this he is improving the soil texture as well as the water holding capacity, and in dry farming that is the greatest es sential Beneficial effects from plowing under alfalfa previously grown in rows for seed produc tion have been noticed on suc ceeding wheat crops for as long as ten years. At the present time alfalfa is conceded to be our best legume for the dry lands, its deep root ing system fitting it admirably to seek stored water at great depths. Deep-rooted plants are decidedly preferable to shallow rooted ones because they pene trate into the sub-soil. In this way air and water find entrance, especially after the roots decay. It is supposed- that alfalfa when plowed under enriches the soil with potash and phosphorus from the sub-soil, thus bringing these substances witin reach of the succeeding shallow-rooted crops. The summer fallow simply pro longs the time when smaller crops and consequently smaller returns must inevitably come from constant soil depletion. It is easier to keep a soil up to its fertility if soil building is start ed when the first crop is taken off, than if it is prolonged until the farmer is forced to it due to small returns. Thus far alfalfa planted in rows both seed and forage pro duction ; has proven more success ful than the broadcast stand or closely-drilled rows, in regions were the moisture is not plenti ful. While it will most probably resolve itself into a problem of seed production due to this lack of sufifcient moisture for forage production, nevertheless it can be made paying crop both financially and as a soil improp er. Aberdeen Experiment Station. Blacksmith HORSESHOEING WAGON and WOOD WORK G-E-N-E-R-A-L R-E-PAMgr-g SATISFACTION GUARANTEED S. E. GRAY MADRAS, OREGt Window Tri Ten Fiecoa Tied in a Bund e i- eady to Set Up-No Waste 80 Cto. Complete not of Window Trim coimlHtn of Online lti,n,i r .1 rillet. Cap Mold, window Htum, Stool -ml Apron. Vu iiavfS cliolca of Mep. Hull None nrid HUUur CohIdkb. u ""Ve your Cottmli'to Hut oC-limldo Door Trim conltita of Cnnini. 1, .. CftHliiK. hllot. Cap Mojcl and Huho (Hock. I'rlco for """'C 'Jil ne slilo only. 60 C rlX)OOK3al,tr 6'Cr' ' t .. $,4o Xnjot4 aca rnan!d TlftMn Ui at tWi priot. X. . Outtlda Door nm MPlt JUS n' XaB'd JD"t yr, 7jj JC. D. filth rram, with out. aMe wing and glu 9( X. p. Window rramti, irltlt Mind atop, vulleys u 1 tU pockata out .fljij Two-llfht 34x34 window jua Wa ' do not nMI rough lum. her. tc, but Heml In your list of any other material for t" tlmatfnjr V will bHI any ono. Bh u arivwi.ftr. ' S4nd for CataUog-iu Ho. 37 u, 0. B. WILLIAMS Sash and Doors 1943 First Ave S. Seattle, U. S. A. w t fc J. L. Campbell. MADRAS MEAT MARK EI X Wholesale and Retail Dealers We have the best line of Fresh Meats in the country t . ALL KINDS OF GARDEN VEGETABLES IN THEIR AT; Larkins Harness Shop You Ivill find Harness suitable for any beast of burden at right prices, Quality guaranteed. IT IS A PLEASURE TO SHOW GOODS NOTICE. You are hereby notified that the Central Oregon Ice & Cold Storage Co. will not stand for any bills contracted by Gilbert F. Smith, and no collections of the firm accounts made by him Trill be recognized, Central Oregon Ice & Cold Storage Co. J18 wanted there, so it is evident that he placed in circulation some more of the Metolius bank checks, He was a free spender and of convivial abits. His fraudulent operations have netted him an opportunity to spend a period in SHOE SHOP IN CONNECTION 4wl LIVERY, FEED &SALE MADRAS, OREGON STABLE G. V. STANTON I Your Orders Prompt Attention I 1 1 . J flirn Transient Stock Given Best Of leefl ahu w 9 J. H. HANER, Prei. C. WONDERLEY, Vice Pre! L M. WO The J. H. Haner AbStrart to. Incorporated Prineville - Oregon Capital flock $5000.00 Surplus $3000.00 fully Abstracts of title to all real property in Crook : county Carefully prepared photograph copies of all re I city plats at low cost. couver is to the effect that he is the penitentiary. Oreron.