Et Oronian Round-Up Smrir EdUtaa PemHetaiw, Qreyon, Ssttrrttay, S-tptwriWr 23, ISIS ,,,,n,!'f"eli.. Men's Eyes Brighten When You Speak of Arizona's Hero The Romantic Story of Captain (Bucky) O'Neill. Republished From Outing Magazine. "You Can Do Better" at The Golden Rule Store Twenty-Four Pmfm (Br WIUiaraMaclred Ralne.) In Arizona, men's eyes light up when they talk of "Buckey" O'Neill. Ha was a splendid type of the chlval looa fromieniman dear to the West ern heart. Hie futher wan Captain John O'Neill, an officer of Co. K, 116 I'ennaylvanlu. Volunteers, which was a part of the celebrated Meagher's Irlxh Brigude so prominently men tioned in the annals of the Civil War. Captain O'Neill was five times wound ed at Fredrlcksburg, and during the war received fourteen wounds, being obliged to walk on crutches for the rest of his life. Captain William O. Nelll, familiarly known as "Buckey," received an excellent classical and le gal education. He graduated In 1879 from the law course of the National UnlTersity, and went straight to Phoe nia. Arizona, where he became edi tor and manager of the City Herald. From that time until his death, O'Neill was prominent as a miner, Journalist, politician, business man. judge, soldier, and sheriff. He was a born soldier, and by grace of na tural fitness, a leader of men. "Buckey" was a reckless, soft-spo-l.e, dark-eyed man of unflinching nerve. Personally he was very bash ful among strangers. His soft brown er grew frightened at thought of making a speech. His daring was Irish In Its extravagance, but It cov ered a tender heart. At one time the Prescott Grays, of which body he was an officer, were called upon to guard the scaffolding during a public hang ing. As the trap was sprung one of the officers keeled over in a faint. It was "Buckey" O'Neill, a man whose nerve was famous all over the coun try full of plucky men. He explained afterwards that he could not bear to see a man killed without giving him a chance to fight for his life. When the Santa Fe railroad was be-i lng built through the territory a gng of Its workmen "Jumped" a spring i belonging to the Navajo Indians. The Navajns were a company of peaceable shepherds, and they were not ready j to fight for their rights although their j sheep were about to perish with thirst. Along rode "Buckey" O'Neill, : looking out for some of his many dl- verse Interests, and discovered thej pitiable condition of the Indian flocks. . Ills quick Celtic blood boiled. He did not wait for any help but rodej straight to the gang of toughs. "By God! you'll either treat these j people decent and give them their1 water or I'll drive you out," said this: Don Quixote of the desert, roundly. I O'Neill armed the Indians and told them to get ready to rush the spring. But the bullies had no mind to fight a body of men led by "Buckey" O' Neill. They retired voluntarily. The head chief of the Navajo was so grateful that he gave to "Buckey." aj great diver ring as a mark of his es teem. The ring always commanded for O'Neill the respect due to a chief.! He afterwards presented it to Thur- low Weed In his generous way. i Buckey" came into conflict with j railroad Interests later when he ran for sheriff. He had had Inserted In ; the platform of his party a plank to j tht effect that the republican candi dates If elected would assess the rail road the full value of Its land hold-1 lags. The sherlf was at that time tne ex-nfflclo assessor of Yavapai county. "Buckey" was the sole iswue of the campaign, and though bitterly oppos ed hv eornnrnte Interests, ran far t ahend of his tloket and was elected. The sheriff fulfilled his pledge and incurred the enmity of the railroads to such an extent that they were not willing to ask his services to capture the train robbers who had held up an express In Canon Diablo. They told "Buckey" that very little money hud been secured and the affair was of very little Importance. "Huckey" disagreed with them. A robbery had been committed In the county and he proposed to cutch the banditH. He was refused inside in formation by the railroad authorities but he took up the trail nevertheless. Canon Diablo Is a rough gorge lying In a mountainous country where the trail could easily be lost. Through ban en mountain ranges, across a ccuntry where honest white men had rrr . "Hello, boys, what's new?" wus his eay greeting. For a full hour he held the des peradoes under his gun before the rest of his party came up. By taking them in camp he secured all their baggage, concealed in which ' was $350,000 the loss that the railroad had said was of no consequence. "Huckey" had covered the expense of hia posse both wuys, expecting to be reimbursed. But the supervisors were friends of the railroads and re fused to pay the expenses because the sheriff had technically violated the law by leaving the county without asking their permission. He carried his case from court to court, but lost In the end. 1 ' seldom ridden, he and his posse fol lowed the outlaws. More thun once the robbers were engaged at close range. .Several times they tried to ambush their pursuers. All the horses ahead of the sheriff's posse, were impressed or utumpeded. It became imperative to change the jaded horses of the posse. The near st ranch was thirty miles away, near the border line between I'tah and Col otudu. To this refuge O'Neill's party was making Its way when a volley poured In on the men from a buttress o? rock. "Buckey" led the charge which followed. None of the posse were injured, but two of the robbers were wounded in the running fight which followed. With fresh horsej the whole party could have been cap-, lured, but the delay necessary to se-! cure fresh mounts allowed the outlaws to escape. "Buckey" was after them hotfoot i day later. The robbers were met again, and two more of them killed. j The pursuers were again delayed on account of the jnded condition of their bronchos. O'Neill himself was at no needs to secure a fresh mount. He was riding a horse called Ssndv which had twice Swam the Colorado river with his mader on his back "I'.iickeN" had a standing offer to bet that Sandy could cover more and rougher country than any horse In the territory- Since leaving Yavapai coun ty "Bucky" had not once changed horses. Sandy was still hitting the trail with the rellnble gait that made him the wonder of everybody. "Iluckey's" impatience got the bet ter of his prudence. He was hot on the trail and he did not want to wait for his men. He hurried forward alone, keeping an eye open for the robbers. He came upon them camp ed In Hah Weep Canon in a sort o( cave. With his usual quickness O' Neill hud them covered before they could reach for a gun. Speaking ot Plumbing LET 'ER BUCK HUB Will FIX IT! WE are Pendle ton's only ex clusive plumbers. We uae the best materials and employ the most compe tent plumbers. When we in stall plumbing it is installed to render you service and not to bring you grief. PLUMBING AND STEAM HEATING PLANT CONTRACTORS No job too large nor too small for us to handle and handle satisfactorily. Following are a few of the larger Jobs where we were awarded the contracts because we gave better work for less money. Lack of space prohibits us listing the other hundreds of patrons who have recolved efficient plants with MILLER service. Pendleton NaUUorium O.-W. H. & N. rcndleton Depot. O.-W. R. A N. Baker Depot. Pendleton High School. Quelle Heetaurant A Rooming Home. O. M. IUce Residence. A large and up-to-date line of flituree always on hand. Let me figure with you. CHAS. P. MILLER Successor to Bnldow & sillier. Court and Garden Street Tlione 203. The sheriff who went out of his county after a desperado in those early days always fuced the probability of having to fight for his prisoner. His friends were likely to line up in de fence of their pet outlaw. On one oc casion "Buckey" followed a criminal Into New Mexico. He rode Into a town where the man bad just passed through. The people eyed the sheriff suspiciously and declared no such man had been there. O'Neill knew they were lying and followed his man. He came up with him a short distance beyond the settlement. The robber opened fire on the sher iff, and had his leg broken by "Buckey's" return shot. When the sheriff reached the settlement with his prisoner he found himself confronted by a mob. Smith, the captured out law, was himself of a chivalrous turn. ! He hnd th't iln met a school teacher lost on the desert and had brought her back to the settlement This struek a responsive chord in the Western heart and the New Mexl c: ns were convinced that Smith was "a gentleman." Smith was quick to perceive his ad vantage and declared that O'Neill had shot hlni over a difference about a woman. The crowd closed In to res cue him. Things !mked squally for the Ynviiim! sheriff. O'Neill hacked his prisoner and his horse into an ad obe hut. "When a man crosses that doorway, I'll shoot him and then the prisoner." he said- his soft eyes growing hard as We Lead, Others Follow W E are one of a chain of One Hundred Twenty-Five Busy Golden Rule Store who make all their purchases together, paying spot cash for all goods. You will find at any one of our stores that there is an unvarying element of economy at tached to the purchase of any article at a low price or at a high price or at a price anywhere between. It is the element of real worth at each price the fullest measure of value in fabric and workmanship and service. ' We are the true "Cost of Living" reducers Our method is "BUY FOR CASH, SELL FOR CASH and ELIMINATE ALL UNNECES SARY OVERHEAD EXPENSE." We have no Dead Accounts, No Collectors, No Delivery, No Bookkeepers, and we stay out of the High Rent district. All these thing mean a savior amJ this saving is given to you our patron. All Good Things are Imitated The Round-Up, .The J. C. Penny Company's Golden Rule Stores but there is only on real genuine Round-Up The Pendleton and there. .is only one real genuine Golden Rule TIm J. C. Penny Company's. There is a store near you, we cover the entire Northwest. Here is the list of stores located in Oregon, Washington and Idaho, and it will pay yon to become acquainted with the one nearest you. oaoi loao OREGON Pendleton Dallas Roseburg Athena Albany Baker The Dalles La Grande Marshfield Milton Eugene Astoria Walla Walla Dayton Wenatchee Leavenworth Centralia WASHINGTON C'hehalis Colville Colfax Pomeroy Sedro Woolley J. C.Pen nev Co. Inc. ro.uio St. Anthony Rexburg Moscow Kellogg Downey Preston Lewlston Malad Shoehme Maekay Rlfby Wallace Coear d'Alene Shelley Jerome Sand Poiat !ii!lil!!iii!!!li!i!i!!il!l!!;l",!V,s' ' T lUUUiUlUIIUUUiiUIUUIiMlltWUlUllliUiUlUlilUUUIillUliaUM likely to be deceived. At Tucson he was once walking down the street with rough-spoken citizen who prided himself on being blunt in talk and bold in action. O'Neill made a re mark that caused his companion to spit out that he lied. "Beg pardon?" said "Buckey." as tonished. "I say you lie." was the brusque re tort. "Buckey" took the would-be bold man by the ears and churned him up and down In the hope of teaching him better manners. Despite his early fears of speech making O'Neill became one of tht! greatest politicians in the state. He was billed once to speak at Mammoth to deliver an election speech. Neal, the stage-driver, was taking him in never been definitely settled. A fel low captain of the Rough Riders, who was present when the remark was made, told me that a brigadier's star was meant. "Buckey" O'Neill was killed at the battle of San Juan. July, 1898. as he walked up and down before his line of waiting men. talking to Captain Howse of the artillery. Bullets were zipping all about htin. Somebody remonstrated with him for exposing himself so recklessly. "You'll be kill ed sure Captain." "The Spanish bullet that will kill me is not yet moulded," he said with a laugh. "As he turned on his heel a bullet struck him In the mouth and came out of the back of his head; so that even before he fell his gallant soul had gone out into the darkness." In this sentence, Colonel Roosevelt tells of the passing of "Buckey" O' Neill, that strange character who smoked cigarettes and quoted Whit man on the battlefield, who fought all his gusty lifetime against Injustice to the weak, but loved a row as a school boy does a holiday. His life work Is written deep In a territory redeemed from lawlessness. To understand "Buckey" O'Neill you must know Ari zona its turbulent youthful energy. Its bigness and its breadth, above all, its unflinching loyalty to manhood. iP 'lillllllllllllllltlllllllllllllll lillllllilllillllllllltlllllllliltllltilllllllllttlllllllllrlllf ItlllllllUIIIlIIIIIIililllfllililllllf iiiiitllfllllai 51 "5 ! : : : I ' I i tj. , "v j - j t - - 1 i I -JJ steel. New Mexico understood that kind of talk. O'Neill got away with his prisoner in safety. While "Buckey" was a resident of Phoenix the Hnrdy "outfit" rode in from the cow-camps to "shoot up" the town. They camped outside and sent word that they would presently be in. I Henry Garfio, a Mexican, was sheriff. I He was a good man and a nervy one. i O'Neill was a deputy, nnd the two men I rode out to meet the cow-punchers ' who were racing down Washington Street in a cloud of dust, their Win chesters swinging from side to side. O'Neill and Garfio stepped out of a doorway. The vaqueros drew rein for a moment and O'Neill advised them to be gone. Their leader, Hardy, laughed and fired at him. O'Neill's answering! shot threw him from his saddle. j "I told you to stop." said "Buckey," , in gentle apology as he stepped across j to the wounded num. While he was sheriff of Tavnpnl some notorious cut throats rode Into Trescott nnd alichted nt Cavnnaugh's saloon. Word came to the court-1 house that they were in town. Pres- i ently a quiet young man sauntered up to the bnr and Joined the "bad men."j It was "Buckey" O'Neill. A tense si-1 lence filled the room. Some believed j that "Buckey" would not tackle this Job. But he did. His rather effeminate voice an- notineed to the leader that he had come to arrest them. The man reach-1 ed fcr his gun, but "Puckey's fear-! less eyes met his fair and full. For a moment the man hesitated, looking into the sheriffs pistol. Then he threw down his gun with a curse. His men followed his example. So gentle wns "Pnckev's" manner that those who did not know him were one of his "rigs." They came to the wash of the Canon Del Oro, and found it a raging torrent. Neal, himself a man of acknowledg. ed courage, drew rein and asked "Buckey" what he should do. "I've got to get to Mammoth to night." said the other. "I'll take you through If you say so," returned Neal nonchalantly. I "Fire ahead then." 1 They were nearly drowned, but "Buckey" spoke nt Mammoth that night. Only once was "Buckey" O'Neill known to turn his back to a foe. This was when he was acting as probate judge of Yavapai county. He had of fended a woman and she opened fire nt him with her tongue and an um brella. "Buckey" hurriedly an nounced that court was adjourned and fled Incontinently through the back door. There was nothing O'Neill would not tackle. He took alw ays the side of the underdog nnd did not care how ninny were against him. Tt was the vivid abandon with which he plunged Into the frontier life that gave him his universal nickname of "Buckey." He gambled "with the Hd off at any game and for any stakes his oppon ent chose to name. The first volunteer mustered Into the army for the war with Spain was "Buckey" O'Neill. He entered as a private, but was afterwards made Captain of Troop A of Roosevelt's Rough Riders. His laconic expres sion. "Who wouldn't gamble for a star?" In response to somebodv who remonstrated with him for enlisting ns a private, made the rounds of the country. Whether the stnr he meant was Cuba, statehood for Arizona through the gallantry of her sons, or a brlcartler's rani; for himself, hns Concrete and Fire Proof. One of th e Largest and Most Modern Gar ages in all the Northwest. r - . . - - 'i " "" . ". r it 't .X r K.--r- I (. f - -. i .... .. .... tt ' .t : - ' l . ' . ; It-v"-..A-.....,r ' 'r - - jMi M, ... ... .4 t . - - - - - -t ' -' .-..-. j - i SAFETY SERVICE CONVENIENCE INDEPENDENT GARAGE We offer three roomy, clean, light and well ventilated floors for the storage of your car, 20,000 square feet of floor space, and every modern convenience for our patrons. Gasoline, free air and water at our curb. Prompt attention and satisfactory service all day and ALL NIGHT. Full line of accessories carried for motorists. EXCLUSIVE AGENTS FOR S&vage Tires and Tubes ALL SIZES IN STOCK. 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