The Madras Pioneer MADRAS, CROOK COUNTY, OREGON THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1912 NO. 51 01 1A ... inn mi i i in i II ii i MB mi mm n u mm m mm m mmw mmmm w mMunHo rmun mm STARTS ON SEASON'S RUN dthe Outlook Is Bright for Prosperous Year III W 7 III I 111 III VIIHW M.rket Conditions Have Improved , ! Dnllrnnilft DflllyCapaclty Is Seventy five Barrels i f VJr wills. sharply at seven ociock xuea- njorning, the wew MaaruB LTill announced that it naa . ,1 nnnflAn'a U7nl i a full crew, plenty ot the best Crook County wheat io hins to work on, and a ... . i r i. 1 . . bright OUtlOOK lur u aweuuy throughout the year, l V. r511 won n lift! A VCUI ' crop, ana naa some uuvciho 4A KlWlls wVllfll Will msuiuti;o i." uuv.v ......... ..... be in evidence this year. th the coming of the railroad, re was an influx of outside 1 1 i. i. AMn innn KmirrVif ff -. . 1 ilt a ninnlA OAam- i be afflicted with the idea t prevails in many other sec- 11 VII IV l t 1 1 r r Ann HVl DrOaUCUJ Ul oilier jjiuuco. xai horse, and peope are a good 1 the same way. However, it not take them long to iearn t-.. n r in kii mr mm iiijui wun laju- en me uieu wua vui.y iiiuuii error, and after a few trial i. fi k. 1. 1 ru rnn ti ri rii irii 111 11 1111 came into its own again. i 1 j. . ib I'onr inn mnriir nnnnu uiiru ULUU1T. UIIW LI1U 111 UllllU W A. bllU 1 mi hi i . 1 the interior, as shipping facil- sand their proven high qual- will enable them to enter i outside trade and comnete 1 lUL'HULV. - - -v 11-1 l ii Tf I t V 1 waaras," "Highland ratent , i to". The wheat used is the 1 , are the best in their line so In Trouble over Mortgage Last week when D. W. Barnett lavorof A. C. Sanford, Hipe unable to turn over some of toortcraired inoi .1.1... v ii 1 On Tuesdav of tMa WPP f r Qn.r i it .... "vw iiuncuu xiipe aDoara R nni.,1.1. 1 1 . . . Hiuuuuu train, annarent v , r - V - -6 ni touniry, and came 1 uiy and swore out a com beforfi .Tiwi tuumy to intercept the an tt . . - vui.1 111:111 n i ri au m r 1 i r it, t . . mauo the tr n to the miu urouirht him hnnk-. am-- . . w arraigned before Judge sn Thursday morning, and 13 released nn hnnA ,,f v. rn-y-eitrhlh 11 nsv ""wnsiuered. MULE IS DEATH TO RATTLE SNAKE Kllla Rattler "All by Her Lonsaomo" Taka Haron YburTrlp In Place of ' "Snake Bite Medicine" james Rico 0f Hnycrook, re- nd Tuesday evening; he - men who are looking Ceding stock. Douglas Hood and 0. Hedland returned Tuesday afternoon from a trip to Warm Springs, bringing in some fine Indian pictures and the champion snake story of the season. The snake story runneth thusly: Coming up the hill at Mecca, admiring the scenery and think ing about almost any old thing but danger, Hood drove the team almost on top of a rattle Bnake before seeing it. At the last minute he gave a wild heave on the lines and one mule went into the clear in a hurry, but the other had not stopped in time and had stepped squarely on the "varmint's" head. The snake writhed and twisted and sounded his war rattle, but the mule seemed to know that she was right there with the stran gle hold, and refused to get scared or to lift her foot until the last wiggle was over. When she finally consented to move her foot Mr. Rattler was deader than a campaign lie after the polls close, and. her- reputation as. a. snake killer was fully estab lished. Some bright person has sug gested that this mule would be a valuable animal for camping and hunting parties to take along, as they would not then have to re sort to the necessity of carrying such great quantities of "snake bite" medicine.3 This idea may have some elements of sound ness, but the old familiar plank declaring for "no snake bite medicine, no hunt," will contin ue to receive the support of most of the old line voters. Think of it. Go out in the wilds with noth ing between you and a horrible death except a doggone mule? Not on your tintype! The Board of Directors of the Mud Springs School District, No. 18, desire to announce that school will open in that district Monday next 23d., with Mrs. Joyce Tellefson as instructor. Boy Lost in Portland To place her 7-year-old son in one of the Portland grammar schools and then to forget to which school she had tken him was the experience of Mrs. C. G Hurt, of Madras, Or., yesterday. Mrs. Hurt came to Portland Monday with her son and reg istered at one of the leading hotels. Yesterday morning she took the chlid to one of the schools on the East Side, promis ing to call for him at noon. When noon came she forgot at what school she had left him, had forgotten what car to take to reach him and did not know what way to turn. Bewildered and worried, she told her troubles to Patrolman Crompton, who took a descrip tion of the boy and promised to aid her. The boy did not know where his mother was staying and evidently wandered away after school was dismissed, as he had not been located last night. Ho wore a blue serge suit and a gray cap. Oregonian. ATTENDANCE QOOD AT OPENING OF SCHOOL Showa Increase Over Opening Week Laat Year and Many Puplla Are Not Yet Enrolled School started Monday, and the kids with their books are again familiar sights on the street morning, noon and night, and the daily games of scrub, hide-and-seek, black-man, etc, have been revived on the grounds sur rounding the school house. In the matter of attendance there is a gratifying increase shown over the opening week last year, and when all the stud ents are enrolled the gain will be a very substantial one. The delayed threshing k'ept very many from being on hand the opening days, as many of the residents of the district who ex pect to send their children to town to school are not yet thru with their work. The work on the new room at the school house has progressed nicely, and com fortable quarters, with plenty of room, have been provided for both the grades and the high school. Prof. Kilgore and the other teachers are very much pleased with the outlook for a highly successful school year. : Stanley Gray, has recently se cured a lease on the Sanford Hall for the winter and expects to hold several entertainments', and dances during the coming winter. The first dancing will be Friday evening the 27th. GOES AFTER FAMILY: BRINGS HOME DEER W. Q. Louoka Rune Into Bunch of Big ' Bucka Near Foley Springe and Baga Three a The -luck of some people is enough to make a fellow want' to gel married arid send his wife up in the mountains to spend a few months and then go up to Dnncr ner nome aioncr in ine huhting season. This is why. Along in the summer W. G. Loucks and family went up to Foley Springs, Mr. Loucks com ing home to look after harvesting and then going back about three weeks ago to bring down the family. He hunted around little for a few days without sue cess, until on the morning of the day before he was to start home. Then his luck all came in bunch. He had gone to a good run in the neighborhood of the Ira Isham place, prepared to call the season ended and go home empty handed, when -here came the deer. When the smoke of battle had, rolled away, two five point bucks and one spike had bitten the dust, and Loucks pro ceeded to hold a war dance all by his lonesome. He brought in one of the big bucks when he came home late last week, and it was much admired. Campbell now steps out of the local champipnship in favor of Loucks, but the party of sharp shooters who left here Friday haye sworn to beat thia record or Btay:ou all winter, FIVE THOUSAND BUSHELS OF CROOK COUNTY WHEAT SUFFRAGETTES TO HOLD BIG RODEO Handsome Silver Cup GIVEN by U W. HILL at REDMOND POTATO SHOW LOUIS W. HILL, Chairman of the Board of Directors of the Great Northern Railway, whose advocacy of the local County Fair as one of the greatest agencies for rapid development that a community can use is well founded, has signalized his interest in the Second Annual Redmond Potato Show and Fair, October 11 and 12, by offering a silver cup as a special prize "to be carried off by the farmer showing the 36 best and largest potatoes. Every farmer is urged to support the show by attending and entering his best products in the various competitions, "It's worth while." The Wild Bunch at Pendleton To Be Branded With "Vote a for Women" Ever since the Spaniards landed.the first bunch of dogies on the Mexican coast away back in fourteen or fifteen hundred and some odd, the cowboy and the Indian have been up against a hard game. First the cowmen put the skids under the Indian and trundled him off the range and back into the hills, and then along came sheepmen, barb wire, nesters, irrigators and dry farmers and proceeded to stack the cards and back the cowboy of the deck. Only a small hand full of the hardiest ones sur vived. And now comes news from Pendleton that will strike terror into the heart of the boldest, baddest buckaroo in the country and cause him to go stampeding over the fiat for the tall timber like a bunch-grasser that has just piled a pilgrim the Oregon suffragettes are going to invade Pendleton during the Round-ur with the avowed intention oi pinning a "Votes for Women' I ribbon upon each and every one of the wild bunch. This is going to be like taking candy from the baby for the suf fragettes, but on the level it doesn't look like a square deal for the cowboy. You take a gen uine old alkali who, when with his own gang or out on his own hook, can hold his own with any thing from a locoed cayuse or a grizzly bear to a mixture of three different kinds of squirrel whiskey and valley tan without ever batting an eye, and'let one school-ma'am get himicornered down at the postoffice and what does he do? Gets red as a Col orado sunset, chokes, spits. sputters, swallows his chew of Star, gets his feet tangled up so that he can't make a getaway, and the first thing he knows that schoolma'am has him roped and tied and don't let him get away until he has promised to saddle up "Old Bailey" next Sunday and come over and take her over to see the other school ma'am on Cottonwood Creek. And everybody knows that a schoolma'am isn't one-two-three to a suffragette. Just let a fully determined bunch of the latter get down to Pendleton all dolled up in tailor made skirts, nice, clean white shirtwaists, fluffy ties, low shoes with high heels, crushed felt hats with feathers in 'em, and those gladsome smiles- there just naturally wont be enough ribbons to go around. It will take anyway two to make a hatband, and most of the gang will want to get enough to make a neck scarf or a Sunday shirt, just to show that they really mean it. Right now, this equal suffrage card looks like a mighty good one to chance a stack on, open, so far us the cow country vote is concerned. Are Conning to the Local Warehouses Daily TRADE CONDITION STRONG In All Lines of Business Throughout the Entire Country Wheat Crop Estimated at 700,000 000 Bushels If there is anyone who doesn't believe that Central Oregon, and especially Northern Crook County, has raised the bumper wheat crop of her history, let him stand around and count the wagons that are making the down hill pull to Madras or let him go up in one of the local warehouses and juggle sacked gram all day long. If exercise is I what he is hankering for he can I sure get accommodated, and then some. The receipts Wed nesday at the warehouses totalled clo3eto the 5000 bushel mark., and this record will be crowd ed or beaten daily for several days to come. And the grain is Tight there with the quality. The damage ha3 proven practically nothing, and the weather for the last two veeks -has been ideal, so that he local crop is by now fairly well harvested, although some of "the-fiiirgrowers will Be busy in the field for several days, and there is a great deal of wheat yet to thresh. Prices at Pacific coast ter minals have ruled pretty much as last week, and while the Chi cago market, as usual, has been subject to a few fits and starts, trading oh Tuesday of this week closed a"bit stronger than at the corresponding time a week ago. Dun's Review takes the following optimistic viev? of the general situation : ( "Record-breaking crops and record - breaking production of iron, steel, copper and other pro ducts have created a conviction that the advance toward com- Iplete restoration of industrial and mercantile prosperity is sure and permanent The principal obstacles to the advance are not disputes over economic theories, but shortages in money, in labor, and in transportation facilities. The monthly Government crop report issued this week confirmed preliminary estimates of enor mous crops of corn, spring wheat, oats, hay, fruit and other products. Spring wheat instead of showing the usual deteriora tion, gained, slightly in condition and the indicated harvest reaches the unprecedented total of 300. 000,000 bushels against only 190, 682,000 bushels as the final out come last year. This large in crease is partially offset by a loss of about 40,000,000 bushels in winter wheat ,yet the combin ed production is placed at 690, 000,000 bushels and in not a few quarters there is a belief that the aggregate will exceed 700, 000,000, bushels. Chester E. iRoush left Sunday for The Dalles, and Portland, where he expects to purchase a stock of winter merchandise for The Madras Trading Company, The announcement is made public this week that the trans fer of J. E. Bedingfield's house and lot, has been sold to Mrs. John W. Jones. The sale was for the consideration of $800.00. Mrs. Jones expects to reside in town so to be near school facil ities for their children.