East Oregonian Round-Up Souvenir Edition Pendleton, Oregon, Thursday, September, 24, 1914 Page Eleven Twenty-four Pages THESE TWO WILL RIDE INQ MORE Bert KtlUy, l$t Round-Up Champion, anb C. C, Couch pf 1913 Fame Died During Year. Victim to the haaardoua life they to Wall Walla near which city he led, two former Round-up winner hu.1 lived the life of a. cowboy, have died during' the past year, Bert Kelly wu flne type of mn, be--Kelly, champion broncho buster t Ins a clean liver and jetlemanly of the first Round-up and winner of ec-' conduct He canje to the first ond prize at the third exhibition, dy- Round-up an unknown In the frontier, .lng etrly In the year of a dieaae world but his beautiful form or na- induccd by the joltings received in lng took him Into the finale and won riding. outlaw horses and C. C. Couch, for him the flrat championship.- His winner -of third prize last year, dy- championship ride was made on lng two weeks ago from Injuries re- Llghtfoot which horse the day be- celved at a small wild west show held fore had eliminated John Spain, wln ;t ToppenUh, Wash. ner the succeeding year. The hand Kelly's death did not come as a some saddle which he won he gave to surprise for during the last Round-up hi wife. he was a sick man with death fight-, following year Kelly did not lrg hard to claim him. Intestinal and enter the contests but returned for . ..i a ...j v. I. ...nnVi anA he was taken to Arizona by his wife the third Round-up and entered In a In the hopes that a change of ell- number of events. Again he rode :.vile would benefit him. However, Into the finals but lost out to Lou 1 e grew gradually worse and died M'nor who had drawn Angel. Kelly there. His body was brought back rode Long Tom and carried away second money by sticking with that Indomitable bucker. Tho passing of the first champion caused profound regret among the pet pie who knew him best for Bert Kelly was the kind of a cowboy that dtfci-rves the best. Couch's death was a tragic one. He was driving a steer on a horse at Toppenlsh and, in an endeavor to kep the animal from jumping the fence separating the arena from the track, spurred his horse between the steer and the fence. The steer leaped however, and striking the top rail, broke It loose. One end flew up and stri:ck Ouch In the abdomen, lm puling Mm. He died the following d.i, . . C nch lived at Fife, Ore . and last ye'4- wi! his first at the Round-up. Ho acs little known until his riding brought him to the finals. WHAT ONE TENDERFOOT LEARNED IN THE WEST Every Cowboy Is Not a Gunman Nor Do They All Wink Whiskey Straight. They came bucketing Into town at a hand-gallop, hat-brims flapping, spurs Jingling, Ue-down straps streaming, their ponies kicking the dusty road into a yellow haze behind them. With their, gay neckerchiefs und sheepskin chaps they formed as vivid a group as one could find out side a Remington. They pulled up with a great clatter of hoofs In front of the Golden west saloon ana, leav ing their panting mounts standing de jectedly, head to the ground and reins trailing, went stamping Into the bar. Having had previous experience with their sort, I made bold to fol low them through the swinging doors; lor more unvarnished facta about a locality, its people, politics, progress and prospects, are to be had over a mahogany bar than any place I know except a barber's chair. What'll It oe, boys?" said out one of them, as they sprawled themselves over the polished mahogany. I ex pected to see the bartender mattcr-of- coursely ahove out a black bottle anJ six small glasses, for. according to all accepted canons of the cattle country . as i had known It a dozen years be fore, there was only one kind of a drink ever ordered at a bar. So, when two of the party expressed a preference (or ginger-ale and the other four allowed that they would take lemonaJe, I felt like going to the door and taking another look at the straggling frontier town and at the cactus-dotted desert which surround ed It, Just to make sure that I really was in Arizona and not at Chautau qua, New York. It required scant finesse to engage ooe of the lemonade-drinkers In ami cable and illuminating conversation. "Round-up hereabouts?'' I inquir ed, by way of making an opening. "Nope," said my questlonee. "leastways not as I knows of. You see." he continued confidentially, "we've quit cowpunchlng. We're tied up with the movies." "With the what?" I queried. "The movies the moving picture people, you know" he explained. "You see, the people back east have gone plumb crazy on these here wild west picture-plays and we're gratify ing them at so much per. Wagon train attacked by Injuns good look In' girl carried off by. one of the braves cowpunchers to the rescue, and all that sort of thing. It's good pay and easy work and the grub's first-rate. Yes. aires. It's got cow punching beaten to a frazzle. I reckon you're from the east youself. ain't you?" I admitted somewhat shamefaced ly that I was. adding that my bag was labeled "New York." "The hell you say!" he exclaimed, regarding me with suddenly increas ed respect "From what I hearn say. The Store that Advertises Pendleton IIIIllH The Mexall Store Rexdll Service Rexall Quality Tho Pondlofon Drug Go. that sure must be some, wicked town. Gambling joints running wide open, an' everyone packs a gun, I hear, an' shooting scraps so frequent no one thinks nothing about 'em. It ain't a safe place to live, I say. Now, down here in Arlzony things Is dif ferent.' We're peaceable, we are. We don't stand for no promlsc'us gun-play and, barring one or two of the mining towns, there ain't a poker palace left, and I woulJn't be so blamed surprised If this state went dry In a year or two. Well, s'long friend," he added, sweeping off his hat. "I'm pleased to've made your acquaintance. The feller with the camera's waiting and we've got to get out and run off a few miles of film so's to amuse the folks back east." . ' I stood In the doorway of the Go! den Went and watched them as they swung easily Into their saddles and went tearing up the street In a roll ing cloud of dust. Then I went on my way, marveling at the mutability of things. "That's what civilization does for a country," I said to myself. "Lemonade instead of liquor; police men Instead of pistol-fighters; cow boys cavorting in front of cinemato graphs instead of corraling cattle." E. Alexander Powell In Sunset A STOUY THE ROUND-UP IS PROUD 'OF. (Continued from page seven.) to the arena. They swing around the narro w curve, where the rider's game is to guide his horse to tils re lay without slackening speed too soon. Then occurs the special event of this race changing horses and each swings from his horse, still on the run; his helper seizes It and at the same time turns the relay over to the rider who. without a second's pause, makes the "pony express" mount, a flying leap without use of stirrup into the saddle as the horse starts off for the run. With tear and rush off they go again, and when Braden Gerklng, after three days' races, pulls out his three miles with his twelve flying , mounts and nine changlngs of horses In 6 minutes, 64 3-4 seconds, you admit there never was a play with faster action or more vivid touches of reality. The relay Is closely akin to the pony express, but Is a test of those prime requisites of the cowboy to on-and-off-Raddle, mount and ride. A sig nal! A rush and four sets of stirrups and latlgos simultaneously fly through the air. You crane your neck to i watch the saddles adjusted. You're too late four riders shoot out and away, having saddled wlth-in five seconds, and in a whirlwind of dust they swing around the track. The di lating nostrils and nervous, moving ears of the waiting horses, fresh from the range, have caught the spirit of the crowd and at the second change something happens when number three horse prefers kicking to sad dling, and then bucking, leaves his rider hopelessly In the rear. The quality of the riding was the finest ever seen at Pendleton. That every man was an expert was attest ed by the totals of th three-days' heats. In which was a difference of only 25 seconds between the winner, Armstrong, and "Hoot" Gibson, who finished fourth. Armstrong's riding and lightning changes on Spain's string were marvelous, off-saddling nine times, on-saddling twelve, and! riding a range horse on the quarter-! mile track six miles In 1 J minutes, I 17 1-2 seconds. I For wild rush and reckless speed and turns, nothing can outrival the; cow-pony race. A score ot plains lued men and horses flashed from the start, swung around the track in a wild, mad tear and smother of dust, a rattling, hammer-and-tongs run. The Indian relay is another thrilling event, for the red men run th'.i mile riding bareback, changing horses at every lap, leaping their horses often at full speed. But for Lameness and fine riding the twenty squaws who ran th squaw race, also on horses that were bareback save for surcingle, were worthy represen tatives of their tribe. In brilliant garb, like so many bundles of color, with their black braids streaming in the wind, they shot like irrldescent streaks around the great oval. This daring racing is attended with some spills and injuries, but as I helped to carry from the track one of the rid ers before the galloping hoofs again encircled the track, her finely fea tured face, while bearing a bad gash, also bore through her suffering that superb self-control and stoicism of her race. But no less courageous and daring are the white women who rUe, whether it be cow-pony race or relay, and when you get riders like Bertha Blancett, Nettle Hawn, Hazel Walk er, vera McGinnls and Blanche Mc- Gaughey, the last word has been said In this style of racing. These women areskilled In the lore of the race and the horse no less than the men of the range. They not only put their horses to the utmost, but ride with consummate knowledge dis played In every form of generalship in the race. Yet these quiet-mannered girls and women In another week perchance would be' about their do-j mestlc duties in house or ranch or at high school. Regrettable Incidents which happen occasionally go only to show the kind of stuff of which these riders are made. When Bertha Blancett's father took all the docile horses away to pre vent his little-seven-year-old from riding them, she learned to "handle and ride," by capturing a wild colt ' and hv riilinir the mllrh cawa nearly to death. In 1904, she not only rode the famous bucker. Dynamite, at Cheyenne, but at Calgary drew and rode that wicked animal. Red Wing, 1 which killed Joe Lemare. After such a whirlwind of excite ment, a moment's pause gives the crowd a chance to catch its breath and the dust to settle. Then, from in front of the cottonwoods, the mounted cowboy band swings into the track, and to well-played martial music the cowboys and cowgirls' mounted grand march is ushered in. Following the directors, many of them ranchmen, two or three or four abreast, about three hunMred cow boys and cowgirls pass In review to the jingle of chain and spur and the retch of leather. The girls are in colored corduroy and khaki or fring ed and embroidered buckskin, .the men In the ever-picturesque chaps, those of Angora hair often brilliant ly dyed, those of leather glistening in their studdings of silver; while loose ly, freely, and generally askew about their necks, brilliantly colored ker chiefs lap or flutter in the breezze. Striking in this ride of romance and kaleidoscope of color is the Indian contingent on their gaily caparisoned horses, whose long-tasselled trappings flapped about them while the copper colored, painted faces of old chief, young buck, pretty squaw, and little papoose, stencilled in lmperturable 'Ji!iiiiiiiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiim I The New Pendleton Harrow I A New and Efficient Innovation 1 in, . . ,s,sw r i -('.-r i l Hie above cut aliows the harrow with the teeth in the vertical position. With the teeth 5 in this position the harrow may be mcA for all E purposes that the common harrow is used. The harrow h made of feteel throughout and x thoroughly braced. The teeth are made of Cambria toe steel. Each section cut approx- E irnately five feet.' fade by the Pendleton Iron Works under the personal supervision S of the inventor. .... - -- The above cut shows the same harrow with the teeth set with a "ide slant," thus con verting the harrow into an ideal weeder. The testimony of every farmer now usincr this weeder-harrow U that it is the most efficient weeder ever devised. Several hundred ff these harrows are now in use and every user. g; i a booster. ' ? Price $ 12.00 per section, f. o. b. Pendleton. (Continued on Page Fourteen.) ' " ' ' The Pendleton Equalizer or Hitt'Ii. Rear view of the Pendleton Equalizer, THE "PENDLETON" Draft Equalizer, or Hitch (Akers Patent) The chief advantage that we claim for this equalizer Is its simplicity in construction, hav ing fewer working parts than any other equal izer on the market. Another very important feature is the absolute safety (as will h seen in cut 3), thus eliminating the danger of in juring animals, by getting entangled as is a common occurrence with all other equalizers on the market. This feature makes it possible to place the sections fourteen Inches closer to gether, or nearly the length of one team on a (Cut 3) thirty-two horse hitch, thereby getting each series or animals nearer the load, and will lighten the draft In proportion. This principle is used In constructing equalizers for any num ber of horses, strung out from two t eight abreast, and is constructed of the best of seas oned hickory which guarantees good service Price list on request. 3 ! a I AKERS' PATENT DRAPER CLAMP I E (Akers Patent) E The breaking and pulling off of Draper sticks causes a great S deal of delay and Is quite expensive. 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