East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, September 20, 1917, ROUND-UP SOUVENIR EDITION, Page PAGE ELEVEN, Image 11

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    " urn ' - - ,- i i in ii n ii ii mi i " i mi mi inn ii iii mi m in mi i mi"" niii i in i 'in ii .1 - i -1 i j in in i i ui i i mi n , , , , ulnm ip-.n.u mi i ii in i mi m m m"""1' ii '" "r-r ' "" . I
1 I
Twenty-Eight Pago
Eat Oregonian Round -Up Souvenir Edition
Pendleton, Oregon, Thursday, September 20, 1917.
Kl Fair Trga-fment )C1
XI Fair List Prices
DEAN COLLINS CATCHES SPIRIT
OF THE ROUND-UP THROUGH MIST
TRAOf KAAK
Americas Tested Tires
By IXmui OoIMiui In Uus Orcffoitliut.
Grand Pin try.
n H BLACK SAFETY
TREADS
fu rPvl fFl Vn f rtiFifr-u
, J l mmm W ,
t i&:: XT -i
Room of the drum ad the trumpets'
braying;
Lift of the crowd with laugh and
cheer;
Sinewy forms in their Huddle swaying
Here ride the lord of the uut fron
tier! Oraw sombreros o'er brown brows
flapping.
Oilnt of the sun upon twtul trapping,
Clink of the spurs ami jingle if
Ker.
Up on your feet hh the hont advances.
Shout for It, shout for It, cheer on
cheer.
For the knights of the last of the great
romances,
The lean-linibed lords of the last
frontier.
Indlun chief b In their tribal glory;
Calico ponieH with evil leer;
Pag after pane of the rare old story,
Th tale of the lords of the last fron
tier! Kwlft mustangs down the long course
wheeling;
Frontier sta coaches, lurching, reel
ing; A memory-tale of the pioneer.
Spirits of other day are manning.
Oaya when the range was wide and
clear,
Men of the time that la passing, pass
ing The Inst of the lords of the last
frontier.
Out of the life of the wide, free ranges
Holdest and strongest an- gathered
here
To honor again, ere th order changes
The early lords of the last frontier.
And the Hound-up throngs, in the
sunlight seated,
'ry for the story to be repeated,
The tale of the cowboy anl pioneer;
And the curious eyes of the far out
siders Kindle afresh as the host draws
near
The boldest and best of the Western
riders,
The lords of the life of the last fron
tier. Sir." said the Courteous Office Hoy
emerging from a nice new ambulance
h the door, " 'twas some Round-up.
I Insist some nnund-up!"
"Why Is this thus?" I queried, ob
serving that he fas flat like a sardine
ii and that his fert did not synchro
nise as he walked.
"They had an outlaw pony and they
told me." im id the C O. It., "that any
one who would ride him would het ten
bucks. And I told them I would take
a chance, as I wot almost broke
"Yes, es! Cio on!" I cried.
"And the pony gave m two bucks
and I was wors'n broke," sighed thej
O. H.( putting his collarbone back
A
V
i . if'.
i'
One of the Dangers of Bulldogging a Steer
In place. "Ami 1 tuld them that I Ijtnu'nt.
Kut-sHuil I wnuliln'l collci-l the other ITu tie pl.iyi il on the horn of a ran-
eiKht bucks that were iMinlnK te I kit's saddle. )
mt. " l "As I rtas a-pansin a popular bar-
"Open the door of your little wa
Kon." I ald sternly to the ambulance
driver, as I advanced upon the C. o.
H. with a loaded quirt.
And as they hauled him away. I
hurst once more into song:
TIIK KIIYMK OF TIIK ANOKNT
HICK AKOO.
There in an ancient buckaroo
Who atoppeth one of three.
"Now what fell, and who are you
And wherefore utoppest thou me?
"The. Hound-up band Ir ull on hand:
The crowds are lari-'e and Kay!
1'nhnnd me, uraybeard buckaroo.
And let mo ko my way!"
He holds him with his BlltterlnK eye
He needs must listen to
The anecdotes that are put by
My the ancient buckaroo.
The Hound-up fan sat on the prnss
And listened us was dun.
And thus he spake, that Rraybi urd
Jake.
The ancient buckaroo:
-lllillllllllillllllllllHIIIIIIillllllliilllllllilllllllllllllillllllllllilllllllllllHIIIilllliill
COLESWORTHY'S
The Feed Store
of Pendleton
Carrying a full
Stock of
HAY,
GRAIN,
STOCK and POULTRY
FOODS, TONICS AND REMEDIES
Rolled Barley. Shell
Bone, Grit, Laying
mtsites, Etc.
Reqt
Don't think of send
ing elsewheie for your
stock and poultry sup
plies when you can
save time and freight
by buying in Pendle
ton, the central dis
trihutlng point east of
the Cascaiirs.
room,
A-piisiug a popular barroom to
day. I saw a youiiK cowboy a-drinking reu
lieker,
And said to myse.lf; "There's the
devil to pay.
"He seen by my tra pings that 1 was
a. puncher.
And he jelled to rne as I wan pass
ing by:
"Come, liek up some lieker and grab
the free lunch "er
Before it is nitsht you are sure to
be dry'"
"'Now, what'll you have?' says the
barkeeper, si-zzee.
Ah I came along and -dged into the
game
The young un was drinkin' some red
lirker fezzy.
And ho I remarks: 'You can inalip it
the same.'
"I took up the licker and said; -I.'t er
flicker!
And h't the nosp paint through yer
whole system slice!'
And. Tin 1 could stop it or 'fore 1
could drop it.
I found he'd t'ivc me thai there
blamed berry juice.
"I flunff down the kIurp and I hastily
beat it,
And both of my cheeks wa blushin'
with shame,
Fer, as fr soft drink. I assert and
repeat it.
1 nt ver hefore had 1m n caught with
the fame.
"'So, play thn fife slowly and beat the
drum lowly.
A fid stand up and cups me permis
cuoim and "troop;
l e lived to !ee my town turn into a
dry town.
And drunk them oft drink and
I know I done wrnnfr!"
Tbf biintifr furlp as the Fun is sinkinK
And the shadows fall on the moun
tains sere,
And forth from thrir court with
rieht srutrs dlnkin
frn riding the lords of the last fron
tier; Spirits of other davs ar marching
And out thronph the bannered ifate-
wny P(UInp,
rioHinu their creat day of the year,
t'p on your feet as the last lipnt
plnnces:
Shout for them, hut fr them,
cheer on cheer.
The knichts of the last of the ereat
romances
The lords of the life of the last frontier.
WlliO HOKKFS VAMABIF
C. F. COLESWORTHY
1 K. Alta Street, Opposlta C:ty Hall
...,. ....Mi.i.i.iMiMim mitiiiiMiiiHiiimiiiMiimiMimimimi
J
Arizona Hnmlinirtn sa-s Many l"n
liinuil AiimN on Plains.
WASHINGTON, Sept. 20. "One
minht think that in this day the wild
horse of the p'a'ns had passed away,
but it is a fact that there are hun
dreds of untamed animals on the
plains of Arizona." said H. A. flay
pool, a ranchman, at the Kbbitt. "To
some parts of the state wild horses
are numerous Ranchmen a few-
years aco Fhot and killed many of
ma mm&'? wax mm:
7
A a'1 I
DRAWINGS MADE OVER ACTUAL PHOTOGRAPHS SHOWING
THE PILOT CAR OF THE SAN FRANCISCO AO CLUB CARAVAN
IN ITS BATTLE WITH MUD.
4 Goodrich Tires
Plough Leagues of Mud
Free from Tire Trouble
Wear out 3 sets of Chains
V !
cCJSv-?2 :55 I!
I inaa pdil? sisk f
far- ' K )
HROUGH sprine and summer,
Goodrich Test Car Fleets in every
region of our land have demonstrated
the lasting strength of Black Safety
Tread Tires on any kind of a road
in any sort of weather. Millions of miles of
mauling these matchless fabric tires under The
Test Car have proved their right to the title,
"America's Tested Tires."
Yet the TEST of Tests, which out-tested the
Goodrich Test Car Fleets, came to them
unscheduled and unplanned.
A Mileage
Battle With Mud
THE San Francisco Ad Club set forth with a
Caravan of automobiles to motor cross con
tinent to the St. Louis Advertising Convention.
The pilot car was equipped
with four Goodrich Black
Safety Tread Tires.
At the Sierra Nevadas, the
pleasure jaunt, by a whim of
weather, turned to the bit
terest test of tires, rain and
snow and storm-strickened
roads ever staged.
Where You See Thi Sfyn
Goodrich Tim, ere Stocked
With storm skies over the caravan always,
and rain siorm and snow storm whipping fore
and aft, that pilot car fought its way over the
desert, the Rockies, and the Prairies.
It ploughed those four Goodrich Tires through
the slush and snow, the scattered rock and
frozen mud cf water guttered trails on
desert and mountain. Even in the flat lands,
these tires waded tar like mud, sank into quag
mires, and forded flood-swollen streams.
The pictures here, reproductions of photo
graphs the hub-mired car and wheels clogged
with clay tell what those tires endured.
Black Treads
Outlasted Chains
ALL, four tires, unscathed, reached a point
fifty miles from St. Louis. Here one fell
a victim to a puncture, but the others wheeled
into St. Louis on San Francisco air.
The tire -trying test wore out three sets of
chains, but i-ot those four Goodrich Tires.
This dramatic demonstration but confirms
what Goodrich Test Car Fleets are demon
strating every day in widely separated regions
of cur country; the durability of "America's
Tested Tircr," Goodrich Black Safety Treads.
THE B. F. GOODRICH COMPANY, The City of Goodrich, Akron, Ohio
LOCAL BRANCH ADDRESS
taa MB I TIMTI !
Oregon Motor Garage
B est In the Long Qun"
Sold in Pendleton by
Simpson Auto Co. Stone Garage
Pendleton Rubber & Supply Co.
them to make room for sheep an i
cattle. The horses now. however, are
no valuable that the cowboys spend
much of their time capturins them.
Whenever these animals are captur
ed they are broken, tamed and used
for saddle and other purposes. The
wild horse is not very easy to capture.
Its haunts are in the foothills, se'dom
being- found in the hitfh altitudes.
They are perhaps more easily cap-f down several fast saddle horses, and the ground is nvish. He can leai
lured in the spring- than in the sum
mer or fall, because in the spring
they are weak, due to the cold of the
winter months.
"The wild horse is Just as wild a?
the deer, nnd is ever on the lookout
for his enemies, Just as are other wild
animals found in the mountain
ranges. I have seen cowboys run
then fail to capture them On large I over places where the horse carryimc
ranches a number of horses must he a man cannot cross, a fact the wilt!
kept in use at all times, because the j animal seems to understand,
ranchmen are in the sa.Idle the great- "Arizona is becoming the uteaUHt
er part of the day, and earh man re- 'sheep state in the west."' ud'Iod Mr.
quires a half dozen horses. When I Claypool. "Probably not in several
the cowboys start alter u wild horse years have so many shep and cattb
the animal invariably haiLs for a (been on the ranees of Arizona hh tin.
high point, where there is brush and 'year."
Indians in Their Gorgeous Costumes at the Round-Up
- - iv ;
'" ": '-.(. . ,
:. r-i
i
: