mmt - ftcs" ' PACKS THK ItKXO nULLKTIN, UK NO, WI.i)NKHHAV, JULY n, 1810. .1 11 'I II Wt LI!" .W"THf' Tliltt5tnpBBpi "WHY BEND CITY, W. D. Cheney of Seattle Describes Town's Possibilities. By V. D. CHENEY. (W. D. Chenoy of Senttto, presi dent ot tho Bend Park Company, wan asked to wrlto 2000 wonts tell lng why Bond will bo a big city. An Mr. Cheney Is ono of tho town's most enthusiastic boosters, ncknowlodf.cd an authority as a developer anil nn author, anil Is much Interested In Bond, there scorned no bettor quali fied man from whom to request such an article. Hero is a portion of tho letter Mr. Cheney sent with his "copy:" "Two thousand words! Tell why llcnd will bo a big city In two thousand words! Good gracious, man! I know that tho lllblo tells tho story of creation In n page; but I am not a Hebrew, and tho old fellow that wrote It had never soon Bend." Tho Editor.). " Did you over drink water that was cold and too hard? Tho air ot moun tain resort always makes me think of It Did you over drink water that was too warm and too soft? I always think ot it whoa I am at sea lovol. Thoro Is a placo where ovcry breath is tonic. 1 have been thero In win ter; I haTO been thero In spring, I have been there In the fall. It was always tho same something between a kick and a caress. Never tired and never nervous, "you wako every morning, sco tho gold upon the snow peaks, becomo filled with courage, and blesa God for your prolonged ex istence. Tou are Btlngingly alive. The valleys are but a stride to you: you cast your shoe over tho hilltops; your ears and your heart sing; the world aad your mind are too narrow (or Out flood ot energy. One thing Is undeniable man takes a certain delight In existence which can no where else be paralleled." That's Bend, Every man who baa been there will recognize the descrip tion. Tnst energy alone would build a city. And when one considers Bend's 320 days of sunshine every year. Its 3600 feet of altitude, Its cool summer nights, Its warm win ter days, and the multitude of pleas ure-channels Into which the afore said energy can lie directed, then one begins to realize that here, some day, will be one of the most famous health and tourist resorts In the en tire world. Do you know that Bend will bear comparison with the most favored city In tho world In the matter of scenery and recreation? Seattlo la noted for Its multitude or "aide trips" and Its many forms of outdoor pleas ure. Leave out yachting, and Bend more than checks up with Seattle. Do you know that one can leave Bend every morning after breakfast end re turn every night for dinner for more than a month, visit every day a spot that for sport, novelty or beauty la not surpassed anywhere, and never the same spot twice? These trips cannot be taken In this short article; but we csn bint at a few of them. The Ice cave, where Nature manufactures ice In summer faster than wagons can haul It away; the lava beds; trout on the Metollus; trout on the Crooked river, trout on the Deschutes, trout everywhere and all hungry for the artificial fly. Oh, friendly comrade of the rod, listen to one who loves your art, and spend your angling days at Bend. Oh, Bend, listen to one who loves you, and protect the trout from Wit while It is yet time. Let Crook county pass a law at once, forever barring bait within her borders. The trip to Crane Prairie, where one could easi ly spend a week. The Opal Springs, where the worn pebbles are polished until the spring is an urn filled with all the glory of thousands of opals with their smouldering fires' of color. Spring river, which leaps a full fledged river from the earth; Lava Butte; the horse caves, those mar velous barns In which the wild ani mals have wintered for counties cen turies; Sulphur Springs; Hot Lake, Paulina Mountains; Fall river, aid that tiny stream between Big and Lit tle Paulina that makes a sheer leap of 900 feet, so tremendous a fall that tho stream becomes spray and never reaches the bottom; the Wind caves, those nostrils of Mother Earth that Inhale and exhale the air like a liv ing thing; the many other caves too numerous to mention; that canoe trip of 100 miles, with only one port age, from Crane Prairie to Benbam Falls, nine miles above Bend, than which there Is no more beautiful ca noe voyage in tho world, with trout at every dip of the paddle; and since we have mentioned them, Benham Falls, considered worthy of tho front cover ot Country Life In America the roontn of June, A. D. 1912; tho Paul ina lakes, Davis and Crescent lakes. Blue and Buttles lakes. Crater lake, one of the most wonderful and bonu tlful in the world lakes, lakes, lakes innumerable, until tha mind Is lost among the nam?s of them. From Bad mountain (Cult uu) 47 lakes are visible to the naked eye, and 300 can be seen with an ordinary field glass! I stop for very weariness and becauBO the linotypo is calling. Just think of all theso, bathed in cool and constant sunshine, where mist and clouds never hide them from ylow, and where the invlgorat ingTair makes motoring and walking a delight! The cool summers of Seattle and Fuget Sound, whore the sun Is al- ' way's 'shining, are coming to be roc- WILL BE A BIO tognlzed by tourists and yachtsmen as tho finest In tho world, let tin? nlr Is humid and llfclcBs; and an almost constant hnzo obscures tho scenery. This summer climate Inst two months, July and August, and has made Pugot Sound famous. Con stant rains and cloudy days during tho other ten months do not prevent tho wholo year from being delight ful. because tha winters nro warm and the summers cool. Moro than all of hor other resources, combined, It Is this cllmnto thnt has mado Se attlo what she Is. This in splto of tho fact that tho average tourist nev er sees the mountains. Think, then, what would happen If a town wore to be discovered having this cllmato, an altitude of 3000 feet, with sunshine all tho year, and nlr so clear that tho town might adopt as Its slogau, "You can SEE our mountains!" That's Bond. And nothing elso la required to tnak? Uend a Itoautlfil and prosperous city, except tho ad vertising that will make it known and tho honesty aud hospitality to raae It ponulsr. In this regtrJ, no uov town has over had such a turns behind it. rite railroads are f-nlir Ing It as they novor featured It be- fore; tho First National Bank, tho Commercial Club and this paper aro doing broador work for Bond tl.nn any town of Its slzo over experienced; the Northwest Devolopmont League, covering seven state places It on a nr with the great cities by maViig a resident of Bend Its assistant sec rvtary: resident oJ Bend is onrs nf tho 'tree commissioners appointed to travel with exhibit cars and attend all land shows; there la a fast-growing spirit of co-operation and en thusiasm such as no town evor had before; there aro several stereoptl eon lectures on tour, which aro spreading farther and farther over the country; the organization sending them out la rapidly growing and wld enlng Its sphere of Influence, until it has representatives all over tholnlmais that wo have applcd to frultj unltod Slates, ono In Alaska with a stereoptlcon and ono In London, Eng land: and in a city several hundred miles distant, unexpectedly, without preparation there wero recently brought together at tablo 19 peoplo whose bread and buttor depend upon the growth and prosperity of Bend. Her cllmato and this work have been about tho only developed as sets Bend has had to date, when she has only had a railroad six months. Bend had 600 peoplo before the rail road came. How many has she now? To multiply the number off school children by nve Is often con sidered a fairly accurate estimate of1"" ff ,th I""1 nd most Produc populatlon. There were 384 pupils I Ure, '" forma. Already we enrolled In the Bend public school""'-' hv"ugh to make a city of th past session And what a school It Is for such a town! Its standing in the matter of general culturo is high enough to admit Its graduates directly into col lege; and yet It Is the only grade school In the United States today that gives a course In practical and scien tific agriculture, not In the hands of theorists, but In the hands of experts from the State College of Agricul ture accompanied by all necessary laboratory apparatus; and to this course are admitted pupils between the ages of S and 90 years, for In ihu study of nature all of us sre ail our cniidren, and, in spite of a study, will bo to the end. Certainly no place could be so fit ting for tho birth ot such an idea. Bend Is surrounded on three sides by 250,000 acrea of land already Ir rigated and BBmuch moro is irriga ble. On this Innd every agricultural product of the temperato zone can 1ms grown, with the exception of tho tonderest of fruits. He who smiles at this honest exception will broy if ho opens his mouth. California does not pretend that she can grow bananas; but sho can grow oranges. Eastern Washington does not pre tend that she can grow oranges; but sho can grow p-sacbee. Bend does not claim that Central Oregon can grow peaches; but sho can grow ap ples. Apples thrive; alfalfa rows two crops each season; clover grows (o fabulous size, and the pedlar ulr riiim wlth'iu. drying It, so thrt It is taken from the mow In mldwliilor still succulent, and animals crush its juicy stems, with all the satisfaction of their summer grazing. The foregoing gentle reference to a two-lcggoc quadruped does not ap ply to tho man with tho hoe: but it applUs to the man with tho maul. Tho same cool summers nnd high al titude that make .'lend so delightful to tin tourist havo often raised an honest question u the mind of tho fanner regirdlng frist Tho t'tn'ia 'rcrulnn laughs a. t'e Ides. Frosts In other places loave riaminose In drying. They first melt. ,md then tho dampness slowly dries In the sun. Hero, if there Is frost In the early morning, that Central Oregon sun that can safely be bet on at seven to ono, licks it up at the first touch. It vanishes Instantly, like dust, and is just as dry. As proof of this, ask my farmer what la his tonderest product. Ten to one he will nnover Tho tomato plant" Juno 10 to mato plants In Bend wero as hl,?li as tbo seat of a chair; and thoy v. sre tkrlr'ng healthy plant, in other w rds, on Juno 10 plant llfo whs far ther advanced In Bend than in tho climate of western W-ahD;tn, famed for Its mildness. They vote cutting hay at Bond on Miiy Jtf. Another thins that must not bo forgotten In this connection Is thy undeniable fact that nil think re quire resistance to make thorn reach tholr highest degree of perfection Bo It In that wo find that tho no mini Inhabitant of thu tropica, with his mlddny siesta and Ills uncultivated fruits, Is fat and Indolent, while tho Inhabitant or"th? northern temper ato rono thin, nervous nail active often II mis no tlnio for his noon ham sandwich In his mad battle for exis tence These n tho men who build our cities. And so It Is with tho fruits. Those of warm and humid reglonn nro less (Inn In texture and more Hat to the taste than aro tho fruits that withstand moro rigorous temperatures. Witness tho fruttu of western Washington and onstoru Washington ono damp and warm, tha other dry nnd warm. Any east ern mnn, vvhllo admitting the stipoii orlty ot tho fruits of these two re gions In appearance and size, do plorcs the loxs of those homely but luscious and juicy apples of his boy hood days, grown whore they wore lucky to get a crop of peaches one year In three. Glvo this man nn ap ple grown on tho high plateau of Colorado, where It Is dry and cool, and ho will exclaim. "THAT tastes like tho apples back homo and beats 'em to a frazzle for slzo and quality-" That Is tho kind of apples that will bo grown at Bend, But the fallacy ot tho fruit farms Is soon going to bo exploded. Not .acre for acre, but dollnr for dollar, It can bo proved thnt tho aamo amount of monoy Invested In growing other products of tho soli will pay a largor return on the Investment than fruit. Somebody Is going to discover thin. Somebody Is going to publish it. The dollar Is tha unit of value; and thoro you are. Men like Professor C. I. 8mlth, who Is paid by tho railroads to make a study of farming and to preach It. will tell you that, while rid ing by train, they can tell when they are passing through a dairy country by the prosperity ot tho farmer as shown by his buildings. The great est profit to be derived from the soil comes from farming. Tho North western Development League, with Its slogan of "Hens, Hogs and Har mony," Is already striking the key note. These men again will apply tho same principle of resistance to and they will prove to you that meat from the cattle of Eastern Oregon Is not only firmer than beef from a cli mate warmer and more damp, but that It brings a higher price In tho markets, and that an eastern chof who never saw a steer will unerring ly telect from among a dozen stoakT the one cut from a Central Oregon ontmnL But this Is not "The Farm Journal:" It la "The Bond Bulletin." Let's go back to town. This thriving city of health and pleasure, with Its pure water and Its mountains, we find Is surrounded on three sides by 250,000 to 500,000 rfi.OOO to 50,0t people. Hut let us go cut and s-w bat thero la on tho f.i'irh side ot tho town. On the western side ot Bend, slop ing gently upward to tho mountains, Is the Isrgest body of standing pine In the world. At the rate of 16 car loads a day, It would require more than I W ykin t esbaust this tim ber. There are 20 billion feet. And that you may understand bow con servative an article you are reading, we will aay that a railway investiga tion baa put these figures at "five hundred caioads a day for fifty years." In any case, the Federal Gov ernment Is now reserving vast areas in this same region fpr reforestation; and these projects are Intended to perpetuate tho supply of timber to feed the mills of Bend. Owners have publicly and positively announced that two mills will begin construction at Bend, ono within elglitocn months and tho other probably within that time, each mill and Its equipment to cost one million dollars, and each to ,?n?,oy,a m,nlmu'n ' 600 "; And, their pinna Include the provision of pond and track facilities for five such mills. A cursory glance at tho lumber towns of tho Northwest will prove to you that such a mill town as we havo advertised, without any other re sources, becomes a town of not less than 25,000. But we already had a health and tourist city of 25,000 and a thriving farm town of 10,000 to 15,000. Have we not now a city of at least 60.000 to 75.000T Wo leave you to think about those figures while we take a motor car and go out to sco what there is on the high plains beyond the Irrigated lands. Wo find ourselves, again to quote Professor Smith, In what will becomo "the largest wheat farm in tho world." I'leaso to remember that you aro not reading a prejudiced account of this country; acknowledged and unacknowledged, you are reading a series of quotations from tho great est authorities In tholr special lines of effort and Investigation. Thus we can also quoto the Honorable T, II, Wilcox, the greatest exporter of wheat In tho United States "This region will produco thirty million dollars worth of wheat per annum." Alaska's twelve million dollars an nually In gold has made tho com merce of Seatto, Wheat also is cash. Not only does this wheat mean as much to Bend as the Alaskan gold means to Seattlo, but ono million acres would produce twonty-flvo mil lion dollars worth of wheat. Aro there one million acres? Tho writer recently asked this question of Mr. William Hanley, tho most accurately posted man on the subject, whose knowledge comes from tho practical J oxporlenco ot actually farming In this Mdontlcal roglun tor many years. Ho roplled: "When they havo put ono million acrea of tho wheat Innd under cultivation, they will Just havo begun to get started." Thin would tend to confirm tho published ittntmuontij of another man In it position to know thnt there im nt least threo million acres. TIiIh would menu seventy- live million dollars n year. Helen your own figures. Tho smallest will Bhll-.iv ir. And right hero let us say that Mr. llnnloy, the largest In ml owner In the United State, mid whoso laud U right In this region, had net talked five mlnuteH hoforo he applied thu same old principle of re Kl.inw lo v'lent, with the punitive Htntemout that tho wheat grown here will bo tho finest wheat produced anywhere. If only Its Inevitable proportion of this wheat were to bo milled thoro or shipped through thero, It would put several million dollars annually Into tho banks of this health and tourist city, already, before tho wheat was discovered, surrounded by Irrigated lands and vast forests of pine timber BUirtclent to mnko It a city of 50,000 to "5,000 peoplo. With tho wheat, can you imagino n city of less than 75,000 to 100,000? And If there wore any way to atop at this town moro than a town's ordinary proportion of this wheat, tho result would be In calculable. Many a city, without a slnglo other asset, haa been built by watorpowor ot ton to thirty thousand horsepower. From nine miles above Bend to ono mllo below, thero Is 260,000 horse power that will bo developed by tho simplest and cheapest method. Tho water, used over and over again, will oporato one plant after nnothor fur tho wholo ten miles Just as If you wore to turn tho fire bono on tho porch ot the Capitol at Washington and allow water to pour In cascades down the stops, with a water wheel on "very step. Thero la n picture of Bend's watttrpower on tne front cov er uf Country Llfo In ArocrM for Juno 1, 1917. Not only haa Bend the waterpow er: Uend baa a monopoly of It: for below the town are Irrigation, proj ects now being Installed, tho perpet uity of which Is guaranteed by the Federal Government; and these of necessity guarantee the perpetuity of Bend's power, while at the same ttmo precluding all power for 25 miles be low. From that point downward, tho precipitous canyons will eternal ly prevent any slty from being built directly on the stream; and while the power ot the entire stream, estimat ed at three million horsepower, can be transmitted electrically to other towns; so can It bo transmitted to Bend. No matter how much power, therefore, any other town may have, Bend will always remain Just 260, 000 horsepower Its superior. Also, every added mile ot transmlsaton Is an added expense; Uend haa 250,000 that can always be directly applied; and thereforo Bend Is pre-eminently tho Cheap Power City of tho North west. Tho town Is so situated as to bo tho central shipping point for manufac tures to Vancouver, II. C, Seattle, Tacoma, Portland, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Spokano, Butte, Salt Lake City, Denver aud In fact to the whole United States west of the Mis sissippi Valley. Draw the lines on a map. Ypu will be surprised No manufactured article the auccess of which Is measured by the number of cities In which It can bo marketed, can afford to be manufactured any where except at Bend. If It Is, a competitor at Bend will undersell It Even at this oirly stage of devel opment, Bend's power Is already so cheap that they are planning to run their Immense sawmills with it. It will be cboaper than coal; and tho time is not far distant when people of Bend will find that they cannot af ford to burn either wood or coal, Tho Inhabitant of Bend will sleep sound ly In the clear, cool nights; breathe 4cm1 a bracing air, unpolluted by rmorej rl' andjal-nr "Ith a s-t un known In any other cllmato; press a button, and light his house; press a button, and heat his furnaco, press a button and tho Deschutes will do thq rest. The day will come when Bend will be known throughout tho world as "Tho Electric City." Such power alone would build a city of one hundred thousand. Yet It Is merely an added resource to a health and tourist city, which will remutn so because there will bo no smoke and dirt, a beautiful farm town set In a mountain valley af Ir rigated land, a lumber town of ox haustlesa forests; and its due propor tion ot theso resources will mako a city so immense that wo are going to stop at ono hundred thousand and al low your imaglntiqn and tho years to name the figures. This powor of attraction, this at traction of powor, are thero, and will be '.here ncrforce But how mich of this timber, how much of this whoat, will bo milled at Bond? That is tho question. How much of tho monoy thoy rcpresont will bo oxchnnged at Hond? Wo havo already lieVt n 4rea city, oven If only Its chnnco propor tion of business is transacted thoro, but lot us see what will be Its actual proportion of this com in ores, Tho mountains mako Eastern Ore gon look lko an immonso lottor Y At tho exact contor of tho Y, whora Its three branches Join, Is Bond All of tho uppor, or v-shapod half, of tho Y slopes downward to Bend; all tho lowor half, tho stem of tho Y, slants downward from Bond All ot this wheat land, all of this timber land, aro In the upper or vsbaped part of the Y; and all of It slopes downward toward Bend. Start a car anywhere In this Immense wheat country, any where In theso vast foroeta east, southeast, south, southwest, or west and It will roll Into Bond oil a down grade. Commerce doesn't ollmb up hill whun It can roll down, Every product or this Immense nron, greater than the entire urea of Eng land, Is going lo bo poured In upon lleuil. Thoro tho timber will ll'id thu mill pondn and the mills There both tho wheat nnd tho timber are going lo find tho cheapest power, At Uend thin whoat will bo rolil to tno milter; at Uend It will bo made Into Hour; nt tloud this timber will bo miuln Into lumber; nt Uend, the hoc oud largest wool market In the win Id, tho wool will bo mado Into yarn, nt Uend a multitude or thliiKs will bo manufactured cheaper than they en bo made anywhere else In the world. All of this flour, all of this whent, all ot this lumber that does not go onat to supply tho mlddlo states, all of thete manufactures that urn nut perishable- and most manufactures are not perishable - all of these will seek tho cheapest trnnspoitntlon. Tlnw vvlll seek thu eea. When they have been manufactured at lleu-l, they will bo loaded Into another rnr, thu cm -i lit bo given a kfvk nnd It will roll down hill, down hill down the atom of the Y, down hill down the Columbia, down hill all the way to tho sea, Ueslstlessly, naturally, all tho products of this Immense terri tory will roll together at a, common confer, which Is Bend, will stop there, nnd then ns reslsllossly and naturally will roll on to tho markets ot tho world. Railroads spend mil lions upon millions to produco a com bination like this; and thoy novor produco It; for only Nature can do such things; nnd she has never dona It for any town but Uend. All of tho products of this great ind rich region now for the first llmo being opened to commerce, will find their nearest market at Bend, their cheapest manufacture at Bend, their cheapest transportation to, through and from llcnd! and Inevitably, Just as certainly as the sun will rise to morrow morning. Bend will become one nf the great cll'c of tho coaat. second only In size to Seattle, Port land, Ban Francisco and Los Angeles. In other worda, Uend will become the largest Inland city west or the MlM.talppI Valley. Brick Plant is Important Institution i ; ---- One of the most Important Indus tries that Uend tins, and one of the most valuable In tho upbuilding of a city, la Its brickyard. The prox imity of a practically Inexhauatlblo amount of excellent brick clay, and the operation of a first class brick manufacturing ptint, places tho town In an enviable position as ptgnrds tha supply of this Important build ing produrt. Tho Bond Url'k l.timl-er Cmii pany's yard lies ulxiut two miles west of town, with a good rond Interven ing. About 30 men are rmplo)ed at present by tho company, with a monthly payroll of approximately $3000. The dally output Is 20,000 brick Up to tho middle of June 700,000 brick had been turned out. The THK 11K.NI) HIIR'K I'MNT. HtfrVJf-- f&'fritfpn.ffiPy JWSSBSBSBSSSISSlBsSSBKa '"!, '"t'VSt iSSiBBBBBBBBBBB W-tBBBsl "sBBBBBBBMfSSliSBBSBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBlaBWBBBBBBBBl, Ifw aSBBBBBBBBBBBBsl VBSBf' jSasBBBBBBvBSBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBPSXWSBBMlsSBBBBBWsftBv fHHsVPv?Z9v' vbISbbbsbbbbbbbbsbb 9bssbbbbbbbbbbb1 SBH JR'sx? " BSSBBBBBBBSBSHBSswt fPBBSSBBBBBBBB Brick Making Lil " ' - Mi. HsKsBBBaBBBBBBBBBISBBBBBBBBBB sssssV JR lAtA Jr SPBBfiHraHfflilltt basTsH JbbbbbbbkI' L . sssv,- SsBsttLiCl t-E. XT. Ig-yssTMsBsssssst rBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBSBSliBBBSnrft T T''jjMKSBBBBBsSHKiiH. if 1 . kBBBBBBBBBBsHfflmHnsMLfl!1 M iJJl'AAMg(MrWssssssssssssW , HNnHHyjiiBHHnH ' First Kiln of jUond.Made Brick Ilnrued. great imtjotlt) of tlidkQ havo boon tiiqil by looal builders, ami many thousand mote Imvo been oiiKnited, to bo used In now building", either under way or planum!. Hovernl qui-1 loads have been shipped to uolghbiir lug towns to tint north, and while tin Held fur thu Horn! product linn houir little lunclied In thin direction ns mi, compared with what limy bo expected ht the future, the establishment uf it rnr-rohclilug nmiket not only to Central Oregon but nlio to other railroad points. In addition mmiy ) wnitou IouiIh urn taken liy jnirrlniMi.ru to polntM In the vicinity, soiiio brick t hoIiik In this way 100 miles, Tho company Is composed of V I,. Scott, A. II. Horn ami It. (!. Culver,' each unit third owner. The mechnul enl equipment of the plant cost about, ITBUl), nun in in every way up to ditto nnd capable of turning out u first chum product, In largo enough i quantities lo meet the roquliemoiiln uf thu field for souin vars to come The plnut'n equipment Iiu-IuiIm) sort mud prom, disintegrator and it utoM iiiiichlny, n 32hotcpowii steam engine which supplies powvr ' An Important Item of tho equip ment Is n well, which was sunk to it depth Of 319 feet.uud rurnlshts mi Inexhaustible supply of excellent wa ter. Another asset tho yard has Is n natural storehuuso of fiuo sand, pronounced by experts to bo tho best possible for brick making. Tho sand was found In a great cave on tho J, F. IMorco place, southeast of town. --- Building Stone J Is Abundant I --"""----" Juat west of the river and north of the sawmill or The Uend Com pany, tho Bnd tttono Company Is engaged In quarrying pink, brown and black stone tor the construction or buildings here and In other towns. From this quarry, which Is located on the land ot The Ilend Company. was taken the stone for the Bend and the front ot the Bean and Marlr; Itodmond depots, the Boyd building, Simpson buildings hero nnd of thu Irvln building In Itodmond. The quarry Is only about a mllo from tho center or town, with an easy' grade for hauling. There Is a solid front or lodge of the rock 36 feet long, snd the quantity Is unlimited. The stone Is being taken out by W. A. Heaver aud sons Hay and Troy and W. A. Hates, who havo leased It from the owners. They already havo quarried ready to deliver some 600 (Kirch. Mnkr-i HnmlMime Buildings. This stone Is a durable and cheap nintorl.il and makes a lundsoitio building. Mr. Beaver sas It U. absolutely fireproof and absorbs but little water. It does not hold treat as has been erroneously believed by some people, he declare. , Tho stono Is being used not only hero but elsowhsro. it will doubt less becomo a big Item ot export from Ilend. Tho quarrying compauy h.v recently been asked to quote prKes on 50 carloads to be shipped to Port land. -im.ui srsaraerc Machinery. i i A