The Madras pioneer. (Madras, Crook County, Or.) 1904-current, December 26, 1912, Image 2

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    THE MADRAS PIONEER
Published every Thursday by
PIONEER PUBLISHING CO.
Subscription Rates
One year. $1.50
Six months 80
Three months 50
Enteracl as second clas3 matter
August 29, 1904, at the Postof
fice at Madras. Orecron. under
the Act of Congress of March 3,
1S79.
Thursday, December 26, 1912.
r Happy New Year
HPHIS beincrthe last issue of
1 The Madras Pioneer before
the end of the year 1912, we de
sire to take this cc asion to
thank our many patrons for their
patronage during the year about
to come to an end, and we are
also glad of the opporunitty to
be able to express this appreci
ation and to wish you all a happy
and prosperous "New Year."
During the past year this paper
h is enjoyed its share of prosper
ity, and to all of those who have
contributed to its support, finan
cially or otherwise, we are very
grateful, and it is our greatest
desire to have this publication
merit a continuance of your pat
ronage during the year about to
be ushered in upon us all.
We have tried to give o. r sub
scribers a good, clean paper, one
that has been complimented by
many strangers; however that
has not made us feel that we have
been giving too much for the
money, rather it has been pleas
ng to know that notice has been
taken, by those interested, of
oar endeavors.
Beginning with the next issue
of our paper we are going to en
deavor to improve, and publish
a still better paper during the
year 1913, and we earnestly solicit
yoir financial and moral support.
We are going to publish all of
the news of Central Oregon, all
the local news, editorials on the
leading topics, and many special
feature articles, that will be of
interest to our readers, prospect
ive settlers in Central Oregon,
and investors.
"The farmer who works early
and late, who guided by wisdom
and experience, will leave his
home and all of its surroundings,
his fields and roads and barns
and dairies, his herd of cattle and
hisho.-ses alt in better condition
at the end of a year of toil than
at the beginning. Let him not
count his profit alone in the
money he has received. Let
him look about and estimate, if
he can, the value of the improved
conditions surronding him and
his family in their daily life. In
this way only can he determine
what his profits have been."
The above is an editorial par
agraph appearing in one of the
Homestead's exchanges, Home
and Farm.
Continued industry and appli
cation ana ooservation and per
sistency of purpose are necessary
to crown life at last with gray
h iirs and those things that should
accompany old age honor, love,
obedience and hosts of friends.
"A few years ago Mrs. Russell
Sage became greatly interested
in the work accomplished by the
Audubon Societies and gave sev
111 111!
erai tnousana dollars which was
used to carry on educational
work in the schools in some of
the southern states where song
b'rJs had for many years been
killed as game birds. A short
time ago Mrs. Sage pui chased
Marsh Island- in Louisiana, a
tract of land containing .seventy
five thousands acres. This is
a great breeding ground for
wild fowl and also a vast resting
place for the flocks that migrate
from the north during the win
ter season, Mr3 Sage determin
ed to make a permanent wild
bird refu out of the island."
The Discontented Farmer
Thfi workincr canital of most
won tn Ho farmers has been ac
cumulated by the steady appli
cation of industry and busisness
tn tho Droblems of one
farm and one locality for a quar
tor nf n conturv or more. Their
land is twice' as valuable now as
it wns n 4cade aero, but that
has not benefited their every
day prosperity. With increased
valuation of land has come a
heavier tax and higher prices for
everything that must be bought
as well as better returns for farm
products. "These things balance
each other to such an extent that
it. is not the -sneculative feature
so much as the yearly field and
fead lot operations that form the
basis of most farm fortunes.
There is a dissatisfied element
among farmers. Some prefer to
chase the unfamiliar phantom,
rather than trudge steadily on
with their familiar work. They
believe the farm across the fence
is naturally more productive than
their own, and they are certian
that land in some other state
would rapidly stuff their pockets
with wealth. As an instance, a
New York inquirer writes that
the land in his county is run
down and that the city people
have run the price up to more
than it is worth. He believes poor
men could do better on new land
in Oklahoma or Arkansas!. If he
makes the change he may prosper
or he may fail completely, de
pending on his choice of a farm
and his success in meeting the
new
conditions.
If he stays where he is and
p its into nis estaDiisnea iarm
ing so ne of the earnest thoughts,
the new ideas and the tireless
hustle to which he would be driv-
in a strange region, he can
make his old farm yield an in
come that he never believed was
possible. A man can wake up
f ii -
on an old iarm as wen as on a
new one, if he will. Industry
and good management will be re
warded in either place. The
rrouble is that some men need a
great shock, like the removal to
strange surroundings and the
loss of a part of their savings h'n
the expense of moving, to bring
them to their senses. Then they
get busy .and succeed, but at an
unnecessary initial cost.
The precedent for seeking un
familiar surroandings in which
to lay the founiah'on for a farm
fortune was established i i t1 e
days of unoccupied land, and it
has been followed later until
many students of farm conditions
assert that the price of compara
tively new land has now been
CDmmonly pushed to more than
i;iswbth. Keen farmers and
b-siness men of the middle West
and East can be cited who are
buying lands near by as offering
the best promise of returns both
under immediate occupancy and
for investment. It is worth
while to study present oppor
tunities well before discarding
them. Thousands of farms have
been bought by thrifty farmers
from neighbors who moved to the
cheaper lands. It is universal
experience that those who bought
the discarded farms have pros
pered. Breeders' Gazette, Chi
cago. Abstract Report
T. B. Tucker to Maggie E.
Tucker lots 8 9 10 11 sec. 12 10 12
$5.
Olive A. Eals to Geo. R. Eads
NENE10EJSW3SE NE 3 12 14
$250.
Ch'as. V. Duling to Ernest R.
Oliver NW NW 22 10 14 $650.
W.H.Cook to R A. Harvey lots
7 8 blk 48 Palmain.
O.H Belknap to W. O. Ralston
SE NW 8 13 13 $950.
Patents Nancy White NW
NE 22 10 14.
James M. Snyder Eh N Eh SW
21 9 10.
Nancy H. L2mon W N W, W
SW2813 33.
Geo. RfgnorNWSE23 1314.
Misc. ItemsArticles of incor
poration of Central Ore. Title &
Trust Co. by A R Bowman,
Nawitt Davenport and C O Poll
ard $50C0 Frineville, general ab
stract and trust business.
Mrs. Betty Green,
Now Seventy-eight,
Can't Count Cash
MRS. HETTY GREEN of No
York, rosy chocked nnd men
tally nlert nt sovcnty-olght
and who was onco called tho
"richest woman In the world," said on
her rocont birthday whon asked it
there was to bo a Uttlo celebration:
"Oh, yes; all day I'll bo singing my
littlo song of gladsomo prnlso that I've
escaped tho bands of robbers, cut
throats and money thlovea that Infest
Wall street"
Sirs. Green Is remarkablo In that aho
has successfully managed great wealth
for years without meeting financial
mlRfnrtutin In a moner center full of
allurements for tho unsophisticated
and tho unwary. And her possessions
havo multiplied under her own butowu
personal guardianship. How much
she Is worth will bo mado known at
tho beginning of the now year, she
promises. Could it bo $10,000,000,
000,000 or $100,000,000?
Can't 8UU Hr Wealth.
"I'm an old Quaker." added Mrs.
Green, "nnd when I say I don't know
what I'm worth I mean that You
see, If I sell a pleco of property in
Chicago for S300.000 I keep tho money
nn denoslt In tho banks there. If I
sell bonds In St Louis for $500,000 I
keep tho money with tho bankers
there. In that way tho banks help mo
to dlsposo of what I don't want
"Yes, this la the same dress I have
worn for many years," said Mrs. Green,
mnklng no effort to conceal tho frayed
edges of the garment Sbo Is a littlo
more Btooped than two or three years
ago, and the garment was 111 fitting.
"Pnrdon this onion I'm chowing," sbo
added, "but it's the finest thing in the
world for health. Perhaps that's why
I live so long."
The only bitterness in Mrs. Green's
birthday talk was when she referred to
0 by American Presa Association.
ubs. ncrrr obzxn.
Wall street Hero are some of the
things she said:
"I never wore corsets. Women are
happier when they dress naturally.
"Jesus never rode In an automobile.
I con get along without one.
"If we live good lives here, clean
lives and arc honest and love God wo
need not worry about tho next world.
I am not worrying-
"Religion Is the greatest thing in the
world, and tho longer I live the more I
como to realize It
"Indeed. I think It quite a credit to
die wealthy. It depends on what ono
does with wealth.
"Women nro learning more and mora
all the time.
"I don't think very much of this suf
frage matter. I alwaya believed with
my daddy that a woman's place was in
tho homo of course my cauc was dif
ferentand that a woman should mar
ry and have a family.
"Just give a man enough to eat and
all woman's woes will pass."
Collecting 13,000,000.
Mrs. Green expects to llvo for seven
years more, until she is elghty-flve, she
cheerfully announces. Then everything
will bo In Bhapo bo her robust son.
Colonel Edward H. R. Green, can tako
care of tho estate. Tho woman finan
cier for years transacted all of her
business in the Chemical bank, Now
York, of which she has some interest
ing recollections.
"I walk all I can," she remarked,
speaking of her health rules. "But,
laws-a-me, you should have seen me
beforo I got poisoned up at the Chem
ical National bank. Since then 1
haven't been what I was. I was there
at my offlco to collect 13,000,000 that
was duo on a certain day, and there
wero a lot of papers to bo signed, so 1
stayed to luncheon.
"Well, there were about a dozen oth
ers at tho table, vet In tho directors'
room, and the funniest thing was that
no ono else but me was taken sick. 1
thought I was going to die. They
called a physician, and be said I bad
no fever, but a terrible inflammation,
and ho said I probably had ptomaine
poisoning. Rut I collected the money
all right, and since then 1 have noi
mado my olllco at the Chemical Na
tional bank.
"I Just started this ounce tir please
Eddie, no's such a boy! He wanted
to leave Texas und como up here and
be with his dear old mother."
Mrs, Green was then referring to the
offices of the Westminster compauy,
Which collects all the Interest on Mrs.
Green' vast holdings. " '
Happy
TO ALL OUR PATRONS
CENTRAL OREGON MERCANTILE COMPANY
HAPPY
NEW YEAR
TO OHE
AND ALL
A. E. PETERSON
JEWELER
I
MADRAS,
ORfOOH
California Woman Seriously Alarmed
"A short time ago I contracted n
severe cold which settled on my lungs
and caused me a great deal of annoy
ance, I would have bad coughing spells
and my lungs were so sore and inflamed
I began to be seriously alarmed. A
friend recommended Chamberlain's
Cough Remedy, saying she had used it
for years. I bought a bottle and it re
lieved my cough the first night, and in
a week I was rid of tho cold and uore
ness of my lungs," writes Miss Marie
Gerber, Sawtcllo, Cal. For sale by all
dealers.
Blue PrlntTownship Plats
Corrected uptodate, showing names'
of entrymen, vacant land, rivers and
creeks, 60 cents each.
Land Scripts For Sale
' For securing title to all kinds of Gov
ernment land without residence or im
provement, at lowest market prices
Write us for particulars. All kinds of
Land ofllce business a specialty. Twen
ty five years experience. Reference,
French & Co., Dankers.
Hudson Land Company
Tho Dalles, Oregon
All successful business men
know that it pays to advertise.
They cari't do without it if they
remain in business', and in in
serting their ad. in The Pioneer
they are sure of good returns.
The Pioneer also does artistic job
printing at rates as reasonable
as Portland shops charge.
MADRAS, OREGON
JACKSON i CAVENAUGH
ELECTRICIANS
Contracts taken for
lighting residence
and installing
motors.
HOME BAKERY
Fresh Bread every
morning. All kinds
of Bakery goods
constantly on hand.
All baked from the
"Madras Straight"
flour. Give me a
trial; be convinced.
MRS. ISA E. B. CROSaS
HOW TO RISE
IN THE WORLD
THE clerk who keeps his
mind bright, who is
quick and up to dnto,
need not always bo a clork.
Somo day hq will bo an em
ployer himself.
By RKADIXG, TII1XK
INQ AXD LYFORMINO
HIMSELF ho becomes
worthy of better things.
Every employco, no mat
tor what his position, makes
himself more vnliuiblo to his
cmployor and himself by
reading the press.
IT IS MIX D TIT AT
WINS NOWADAYS. Tho
man who knows und sets on
his knowlodgo is tho man
who gots thero.
DON'T WATCH THE
CLOCK. WATCH THE NEWS
THROUGH THH YOUR HOME
PAPER.
The PIONEER
For
Printing1
OP ANY AND
EVERY DESCRIPTION
New Year
WE ARE PREPARED TO DO ANY
CLASS: OF ELECTRIC WIRING.
i - -. .
I" IP'
City Property and v
Business Chances
see u. w, mm
Of KICK MAIN 8THKKT, MADRAS, OBI
T T l- Di '
rvcnhT
ADDITION
A. E. CROSBY ffiffi
EVEBYTHIHC IN
DRUGS AND K0DK
NO. 388'
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