Et Orctronmn Round-Up Souvenir Edition Pendleton, OreytwySaturtlay, September 23, If 18 Twenty-Four Pye These Cayuse Twins Have Been "Good Medicine" Wf KPQ0U P ga Two 'iitttttttttttttttttttttttttttTttttttttttttttttttttt It rontiiiu'd from i'.n;t' one. , mcnt upitn ilie little mitts if human ; ity who had the misfortune tu 1--horn doable. ; The Father's Slratr. ' Ha-hots-mox-nu.x made a speech to the people. He told them that ht bad been far aav in the mountain: so. ihey would have to steal aiva . Watcluni; their opportunity, they saw one day the two girls stray in the woods a short distance from the home tepee, yuirkly securing their ponies they rode down upon the maiden each seized and swung one before him on his horse and rode away as fas them j vanced to renew the battle. But na- turn, rode into the Cayuse camp: Hi lure ami in Intervened. A heavy raln!tok' hem that the Hannock medl and hail storm began and Pelted the i "e men received a message on the Little Mine'm hunting deer and their f'wt-footed ponies could elk. He told them how when night came he turned his cuitan loose to graxe upon the tender bunchgrass and then laid himself downto rest. While thus lying, he said, there came t.i h'm a vision that promised him t'.:u? who were to bring good luck to th" whole Iribe. j Indians pay much attention to vis- j carry them. The abduction was soon discover ed, a hasty council was called and 200 warriors, headed by Cougar Shirt, set nut in pursuit of the young Bannocks. NVar the summit of the Blue Moun tains, with the Cayuses but a few- miles behind, the young iBannockl came across a party of their own braves out hunting. The twins were ioiis and Ha-hotp-mox-mox. knowing; thin, took advantage of his know- j transferred to extra horses and. by ledge. His storv impressed the Cav-' 11 sl"""'t cm hrn"K" the mountains, uses and thev let the little girls live. ! ,hp Issuers were quickly left far be. They have now grown to woman hood, being now about 19 years old. and more beautiful Indian maidens j in,1- cached the tribal home at the never lived on the VmaUlla reserva-; hon( of ,he Snnkp rivT wlin the stolen brutes. There was a joyous , marriage ceremony and the Cavnse hind. The Bannock chieftains, in due tion. warriors unmercifully. This rather ' from the llreat Spirit advising them : tO fipht no hmrn mt to ,.mi i ..ntt tf umpened their, ardor for the battle! the Cayuses for the twins by a liberal and they fell apart again. j gift of ponies. The proposition was Their hostilities having twice been : accented more through fear of the stopped by natural causes, the super-1 wrath of the Great Spirit than a de stitlotis Indians Interpreted the oc-jslre for gain. curence to mean that the Great Splr-i The price having been fixed, the It was displeased. Each tribe called j 'fad were burled in a common grave, upon its medicine men to learn the and each tribe went Its way. The pleasure of the Great Spirit. place of burial may still be seen, the Before the Cayuse sorcers had ftn-j winds having so shifted the sands that lshed making "medicine," a horseman ' many of the bones are bared. was seen approaching from the Ban nock camp. He held up one hand In A Sign IYom Hoavon. The Bannocks departed In peace but toKen that his mission was friendly! the trail of the Cavuses was darkened and. when given a like sign in re-, by angry clouds from which forked lightning shot fiercely athwart the sky. Thunder rolled ominously. When the tribal encampment place was reached the medicine men were told to learn the meaning of the signs from the heavens. After a time thev reported that the Great Spirit was dis pleased because the Cayuses had per inltted the twins to live and that had ordered that all future twins must be killed at birth, or misfortune would overtake the tribe again. During the progress of the battle, one band of Cayuses was driven so far away that they pursued their way across the Cnscades and settled In the Willamette valley on, the Molalla Prairie. They became known as the Molallaa In after years but still speak the language of the Cayuses. The Other Twtns. Once before beautiful twin sisters grew to womanhood among the Cay uses and they it was who brought up on the tribe the displeasure of the Great Spirit, according to the old le gend. More than a hundred years ago it was, before the paleface had come into this country, when the moun tains were full of elk and deer and the rivers teemed with fish and the native bunchgrass grew kneedeep on the rolling hills, that Qul-a-mi-som-keen. chief of the Cayuses, became the father of twin- girls. As the years passed these girl grew to maidenhood and their beauty was so great that all of the young warriors of their own tribe sought to win them to wife and there was fierce rivalry among them. The fame of their beauty spread be yond their own tribe. Over the coun try of the Umatillas, the Walla Wal las, the Taklmas and the Nei Perces it was bruited and eventually it cross ed the Blue Mountains and went be yond the Grande Ronde valley to where the fierce and warlike Ban nocks, heredity foes of the Cayuses, lived. The Iwe4orn Bannocks. There two young chieftains of the Bannocks heard of the loveliness of the Cayuse twins and were so im pressed that they set out to see for themselves these two maidens and. perhanee, to win them or steal them for themselves. . They reached the land of the Cay uses and visited that tribe under the guise of .friendship. When they saw the beautiful twins, daughters of the head chief, they knew that their fame had been justified. They determined that they would take them back with them and they soon saw that, to do twins became the wives of the Ban nock chiefs. War Is Declared. Returning to the Cayuse village v ithiut Bannocks or maidens! Coti c.ir Shirr? in accordance with Indian ustom. registered a solemn vow to "Gas Horse" is Now the Most Numerous in Umatilla County avenge the wrong. He dispatched ! on every side or him the auto x - - It was not so many years ago when with the automobile as a pleasure car the o!d automobile of Dr. G. W. Coleml used only for transportation, was a curiosity rare to behold in Pen-1 The farmer has his little gas engine dlcton. Today the Round-Up visitor; to ran his farm machinery. nmners to the Walla Walla and Vma- tilla tribes, bidding them come to great council of war. Soon thereaf ter a pow-wow was held in the Cay use council lodge and the chiefs and headmen of the neighboring tribes agreed to form an alliance with the Cayuses against the Bannocks. The I'matillas and Walla Wallas re turned to their homes to prepare for the war. Meanwhile the Bannocks, learning that the allied tribes had de clared war against them. took, the warpath at once. In two days one thousand Bannock warriors, headed by the great chief Pi-Egan, were marching toward the Columbia river. They swooped down upon the Cay uses before the TJmatillas and Walla Wallas had joined them. The Cay uses, some 700 strong, feared not to meet them and held their ground. The two savage forces met where now stands the town of Umatilla. A des perate battle followed, the fighting being hand-to-hand. Many were killed on each side but the superior numbers of the Bannocks were win ning for them the advantage. Still the Cayuses refused to give ground and they would undoubtedly have been exterminated had not a fierce wind storm arisen suddenly, gather ing up sand in such quantities that the sun was obscured. Choking, both sides retreated for several miles. Nature Intervened. When the wind abated and the 'air had cleared of dust, both sides ad- nmhile. Indeed it Is the mode of transportation. The combined harvester was a great invention but the heavy ma chines required too many horses to a recent statement from the offlco' pull them about over the steel hills, of Secretary of State Ben OlcottjA gas engine was attached to run the shows that Umatilla county with an! machinery of the combine, still thre automobile to every xg persons in the! was the question or keeping horses county leads Oregon with one excep- and mules to- pull, the combine, and tion. There are approximately 24,000 people In Umatilla county and of this number 1500 have automobiles. Far riers who a few years ago scoffed at the Idea that they would ever aban don the litle red wheeled buggy are now driving large heavy powered motor cars. Motheh, wife, sister anl daughter as well as rather and broth er are also versed in the art of ma nipulating machines. But the motor age did not stop the tractor engines, nave been built. The tractor is used not only to pull the combine but is utilized to plow with. Manufacturers are now making a self propelled combine which does away with both tractor engine and horses. The self-propelled machine ' has been tried out and Is a success The tractor can now ee used for plow- j ing and general farm work. The cost; of feeding stock all during the win-' ter months Is- eliminated. No longer 1 is it nece.vary to stop the harvest for rest a, This year a carload of auto trucks have been brought to Umatilla coun ty for distribution among the farm ers. This is the final step in the mo tor age with its rotation to the far mer. The truck will be utilized to haul the grain from the field to the warehouse and to do . the general work of the wagon In a much quick er time. The gas engine is everywhere. The hay Is hoisted to the top of the barn by the little gas engine. The binder can be run by a gas engine. All tie Sign Of l!u!iv" k" V0U will do well by - figuring with us. Our Specialties L Including Celebrated "Peacock" Rock Springs Coal, Bridal Veil Slabwood and Willamette Valley Oak Wood. Beverages Including Famous "Bran-New," Porto, Pendo and the other products of William Roesch Brewing Co. Also Jones Brother Logan Juice. oils and Potatoes WHOLESALE MY AND CRAIN Let us quote you prices and terms. SMYTHE-LONERGAN CO. Quality Quantity Service Phone 178 ifSp 111 Mil 1 Mill I lllllllllfl I ItlU II II Hill l.llllllllllii iiiiituiiiiitMiiiiit ..,,. ...... .,...... Everybody Preaches Ecoftomy The world's verlkt V an n mm W4 tJ KS K TS D MU at ; -i jsncl lfnljistir.il CWraol , ' I aiding hmmS.Mf i3l)l ttlJj ' n """" Jff SOLD 53 BY ONT take our word for it ask your neighbor if her Majestic doesn't bake bet ter, heat quicker, retain the heat longer, use less fuel, heat more water, quicker and hotter, lasts longer and gives better general satisfaction than any other. Over a half a million in use millions of meals a day cooked on Great MAJESTIC Ranges is proof enough, for most people. A PERFECT BAKER absolutely dependable, every day, year in. year out. Built on hon or, of the best materials. ' ' OUTWEARS THREE ORDINARY RANGES The only range made entirety of charcoal and malleable iron. Malleable iron can't breakcharcoal iron won't rust like steel. ECONOMICAL IN FUEL Air tight joints and pure asbestos linings assure an even bak ing heat, saving one-half the fuel. ON'CH more the Majestic Han Re has ben awarded a world-verdict over all competitors. This time It comes In the shape of the gold medal given by the Panama-Pacific exhibition. ThlH is the very highest award the exposition can give. It comes to the Majestic ItaliKe with a peculiar value, for this decision keeps the proud record of Ma jestic Ranges unbroken. For nearly a quarter of a century ever since Majestic RanKes have been on the market it has swept from all competitors the hlKhest prizes offered at World's Fairs and similar expositions. There has not been one slnKle break or exception. It Is evident to the most prejudiced mind that this betokens an article of extraordinary and unquestion able merit. It Is admitted to mean much when such a prize is won even once; but when the winning Is re peated year after year, and when the Judges are chosen Bfrom the most proficient men In their line from all the four quarters of the globe, we are Justified In our contention that we make the very best range on earth. I It Should be in Your Kitchen. EAST COURT STREET PHONE 21 s iiimMiwwmmmtwmi 2iialiil;i!:!Ui!!!!ilNllll!!!ll!!ll!IIH -m;'.'W.-.'V' MiiiiiiiiiiimiiNiiiiiiimiiiiiiMi PENDLETON, OREGON && jj j l'lr fifMiiiiiriritruiiTiiiTirrinfrfimrrTrTTinrririnifiriiiiniiMiirifiiriniitTitiutirrrfiniiitMfitiTiftirrnriMitfTirrirrrrniTffriiMiMi ll LA iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiHiniiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin i iiiiiniiiiiMiiiiiii'i in ' m ! i