Resident of Bend Set Bulletin Type Half Century Ago Aged codIps nf Th n..j n..n.., s oldest of which bears the date March 20, 1903. hold more than casual interest for Mrs. Ralph Spencer of this city. As a girl sh set part of the type for The Bulletir if ""''""ry HBO. And, she re calls, that type was set the hard y nana, m,tne old log cabir. thf.Lwa8r,The Bulletins first home. . nncii narence Mcuann arrivcc KS?1 mMlnneaP"s 0I March 21 1903, The Bulletin wis a ci,, cern fact is, the first paper had inauTO uie previous day. Ir Minneapolis, Miss ' McCann hat' learned to set type, four years ear lier, and on arrival here she ap plied to A. H. Kennedy for a Job She not only got the type-settinf job, but was made society editor general news gatherer and book keeper. She joined the staff or April 1, 1903. Part of her task waf to set by hand the small type (sb . point stuff, printers call it) usee in the many legal land, office no tices appearing in The Bulletin ol pioneer times. Miss McCann se all type but that used in the dis play advertising, which was set b; Kennedy, shop foreman. '.;--.. Equipment Limited Printing equipment In the lot cabin included a hand press, from which the first copies of the Bulle tin were turned out, one job' press and two cases of type, apparent!) 8-point and 6-polnt. The "big day" in The Bulletir plant in 1903, Mrs. Spencer recalls was Friday. It was on that da; that the paper went to press. Pari of the paper had been pre-printed In Portland, and it was only neees sary to print half of it here. The Bulletin went to press about noor on Fridays, then was taken to th nearby postoffice of Deschute; (Staats) for mailing. Stage con nections on Friday evening wen made at about 6 p. m. Before belnr nfailed, the papers had to be foldec" by hand, then wrapped and ad dressed also by hand. Occasionally, the girl printer o 1903 put into type all the cop.' she had on hand then she wen around the little hamlet huntinf more news. Society items wer' always important, with buildint notes always attracing much in terest. ;' , . " . Society Items Scarce Society items-were not numerour in the village of Bend half a cen- tury ago. Occasionally, only ono such item appeared in the paper. One such item, copy for which war nrohnhlv nrpnnred hv Florence McCann was headed "School "En tertainment," and in the lead o: the item was this mention: "Ren dition of the program will be fol lowed by a basket auction." The program opened wjth a talk' by Aerie C. Hampton, followed by f solo by Iva West. Then came f recitation by Charles Low.- In some manner, Printer .Kennedy of The Bulletin also got into Hie picture, and was presented in a' violin solo. Then followed Lincoln's Gettys burg oration by Sylvester Staats, followed by a solo by Marion Wiest and a recitation by Maude Yande vert. The drill that followed indi cated that total attendance in thr Bend school in 1903 was 12 at least that number of pupils look part in the drill, and the samq IS were presented in a dialogue, . "Model Lesson." C. J. Cotter, e Bend pioneer of 1900, auctioned the baskets. Item Briefed That entire slory was condensed into about three inches of type. After The Bulletin "got going" in early years, Printer Florence McCann was joined by a girl who was just learning the trade, Marion Wiest, now Mrs. Montellc G. Coc of Redmond. Later,' Syd Percival, homesteader, joined the, printing crew. It was in the latter part of 1904 that a young printer reached Cen tral Oregon from Chicago, lo settle in Antelope, where Max uieciae mann was puulishing the Herald, tin ufae Rnlnh Knpnnptv Ahnllt six months Inter, Spencer moved to Bend, and through Tile Bulletin met Florence McCann. They were married in 1907. Mrs. Spencer was still with The Bulletin when print ing equipment was loaded on Meet the "Front Office" Staff "frM.wi ft" w mi t , " a 4 . 4 ... -3 Visitors to The Bulletin office probably see these people more Ihui any other members of the staff, other than the news people. They are members of the advertising and business office forces. rom the left they are Francis Stokesberry, Marilyn Russell, Mary Lynne Scott Nell Wescoatt, M. L. Myrick, Helen Blley and Ed Becfcley. We Rememhei (The Bulletin's composite mem ory reaches book half a century and Its news writers, covering Bend's 80-year story, have re corded the following memories). We rememhpr vihdn emu Rea prepared to issue a big "first DaDor" on Muroh on loni ,.,! found' the t only part of his type imu ariiveu irom snanmo , . . "Dad" West built a meat market and under that same roof provided ijhcb ior a aocior ana a Darber . . , van the Pilot Butte Inn . . . you asked central for the party you wanted and did not have to bother aooui numoers. - - . . uw,uv ,v tvnmu a town, but was uncertain as to wneiner u would Do called Pilot Butte or Bend i 8 . Governor Cham berlain visited Bend and perdicted a great irrigation future . . . Clyde McKay had a pinto riding horse . . . the Smiths. Nick nnrt ni.-lr hnri stores on Wall street . . . John sieiui and Thomas Tweet had a sawmill below town ... Lloyd uianim 11191 opened their drug store and had a aim-a uiui uai-viy coverea one wau . . . Floyd Dement's Bend Hard ware store was a small frame building on Bond. . ; , Franklin avenue was called Ohio ... Shan-, iko was the end of the rails. ... PfitA .fnhnonn Uno tha moi. n Millican, and was later followed by BlUy Italin of "one man town'-' fame . . . it took a whole day to make a round trip to Prlneville . . They Operate The Bulletin Presses .9 Ml i& the fire hose was housed In an open shed on Minnesota . . . John Byan mm we re an partners in Wis as Shevlln-Hixon announced plans to build . . , The library was run by the Ladies Library olub and housed in a building that had been a suloon ... the sidewalks were all plank, with nails sticking up . . . Carl A, Johnson canie to Bend as cashier foi1 Shevlln-Hixon and had an office in the bank building . . . M. i. Dtuilelson built another foot on the power .dam . . . there was an annual fair at Tumalo. and also at Sisters .,, . - ,y, Irving Cobb came in to hunt bear . , , the Bend Co. mill burned .- . the pencil factory was operating . . . homesteaders flocked over the high desert . . . flour was manu factured in Bend . . . Bert Roberts was slightly scorched 1n making Pilot Butte erupt for the Portland Ad club and Dutch Stover 'came out of the brush in animal skirts . , . Jim Hill drove the golden spike . . swans were killed at Crane prairie and coyotes howled their woes from Awbrcy heights ... the O'Donnell Brothers built their market and the Aluniihelmer twins their store , . . there were two roads to Alfalfa, both bad ... Tumalo was called Laidlaw . . . there was a postoffice at Gist ... the Aune brothers' big red barn on Bond street . . , Walter liimbs when he ran his Bend Garage Co. on Bond street . II. C. EUls was county judge of Crook . ... the forest service occu pied a single office, in the bank building . . . the Bulletin was a weekly printed on Wednesday and folded by hand . . . Mt. Washington was known by another name ... at Thf Brad BuntUn. Brad. Ottgnm' fwAAUyjm t ItS-V' Wet Weather springs the south, named BufcUihsd i meetina' In V bound stage changed in the winter Dick mUUeiuwrt SlfiESJS from wheels to a sled ... every seven Tfightl T dL?2 lp to.'neville meant a couple eollecUng matsrW to niwll I tier Poctot" !. -, , am RU was f Wmotlng the .jresrround route ! fromMsryh li to,Csiifomia . . A Jfrt; Smblera elgb? eld up- train just north p(, of tire changes . . . O. H iinu n nuineHLeu near imperial rY', there was a hotel at Harper . v . Uucks and geese were shot on the river In Bend . . , gold was re ported discovered at Windy point on the McKenzle highway . C. S. Hudson and Harper Skuse wem over me oia sanimm road to Big lake on a fishing trip and took a week to get back home, via Portland v , t i The sprinkler wagon used to lay dust on rutted Wall street ., , , Hugh O'Kane in his siestas In his chair in the lobby of the Bend hotel . :- Frank Laggan came over front Burns with the Sagebrush orches tra '. ;: . the - Commercial club pioneered the road to Burns and set up mile posts . . , there were four Johnsons in Bend designated by the names of the buildings they lived in ... the Three Story John son building stood on the side of the Erickson store .- ... . i- ;; . . . the. time Llnstrr hull burned . . . Delaware street was laid out across an -alfalfa field . . . county quarters were on the second floor of the O'Kane building . . . Ward Coble ran the Liberty theater .; . , the main road south ran by Shoo. quest's, Cart Allen's and the Van deverts'.OId Homestead , . . there were two. midget golf courses in Bend ... Don Peoples and Tim Duffy moved over from Prlneville. . . . the gymnasium was . used in the 1919 flu epidemic . ; , Archie Whisnant - pioneered the road up ruor. Buiie-.. . . an evangelist The Klu Klux Wan burned a cross on Pilot Butte and Reverter i u T!. urtl ;Th' BuUetln checked their car licenses . , . lee) from Arnold caVe sold in Bend at 40 per ton electrio lights blazed on Be,nd streets in 1910. Meet the gentlemen of the presses, the crew that ' operates equipment In The Bulletin offices that range from a Comet to a Kellcy. From the left they are Byron Benson, press foreman; Millard F. Bevans, Dave Andrews and Tom Rose, helper. wagon one day ana tne paper moved "up tow.n." She served on riie Bulletin for tour years, ana ier late husband was for many year's foreman for the paper. His period of service . reached trom oioneer days to The' Bulletin's nodorn era. In early days, Mr. Spencer-operated the Silver Lake lapor for about a year and. a half. Mrs. Spencer has many recol lections of early days in Bend, and those spent in the log cabin, where ine of the occasional visitors was Marsh Awbrey, "Sago of the Des ihutcs." His name wa3 given to wbrey bulte, which overlooks 3end from the west: FIRST FLIGHT ' The first transcontinental air flight Was made In 1911 by Gal braith P. Rodgers and required 49 days. His actual flying time was three days, 10 hours, four minutes. NEVER LIVED THERE George Washington never occu pied the White House. A few days before his death in 1799. however, ho walked , through the rooms with his wife, Martha. ' WE BUILD Modern Kitchen Cabinets Dependable Furniture Bookcases -Built-Ins Office Equipment Store Fixtures FURNITURE REPAIRING Speedy Service CHILDREN'S FURNITURE . Made to Order . , WOOD-CARVED SIGNS TO ORDER . All Work Guaranteed Our Prices Are Reasonable Warden's Cabinet Shop (Solf Course. Cor. S. Highway Phone 201 5-J-3 Editor's Punches Not Pulled in 1910 News writers pulled no punches in the : early days in Central Oregon. From a black-bordered "obitu ary" notice in The Bend Bulletin of Wednesday, July 6, 1910, the fol lowing is found : "Deceased, at Laidlaw, Ore., on Saturday, July 3, the Laidlaw Chronicle passed away after a lin gering illness. The demise is at tributed to general debility and sus pension of circulation due to acute local disturbances. The remains were removed to Redmond njid will be interred there. A mourning community survives the deceased." Next, in the same issue, is prirlted a dispatch under a Laidlaw dateline which says, in part : "A long-standing suspicion that the Laidlaw Chronicle had shifted its allegiance from this town to Redmond was brought to a head by last week's issue of the local paper. The greater part of the news and editorial matter of the issue was devoted to lauding Redmond and Redmond citizens and knocking Laidlaw and ridiculing people there." A cooperative organization of young Norwegians, who work a few hotirj each week building their nwn homes, has now completed 271 houses. WHEN YOU'RE TIRED OR THIRSTY CALL FOR ONE OF THESE EVER-POPULAR Soft Drink Favorites PEPSI COLA ' HIRES ROOT BEER ' NESBITT'S ORANGE SQUIRT , IT'S ECONOMICAL TO BUY THEM BY THE CARTON HAVE THEM HANDY IN YOUR ICE BOX BEND BOTTLING CO. 20 Greenwood rhone 181 Pioneers of Bend Join in old Rush Bend's gold rush at 1905 is still" recalled by old, timers of Central Oregon, ." , ; The, quest for gold Just short ot ' half century ago centered in the' high Broken Top, country, some 82 4 miles west of Bend. Within a week f following the reported discovery of ; ' "gold, sulphureta" in the area, ', scores of claims had been staked, j Joining In the gold rush of 1905 . was an old time prospector, W. A.r Hunt of Laidlaw, who indicated he was pleased with gold showing In ; the volcanic rocks,; .. . The, search V for gold 1 sited through most of the late summer s of 1905, then suddenly the fever for i mineral riches subsided. Old timers .) said that traces of gold actually i Z" 'T't7'T"l'Vi?l1Jl'll,'liii I,, ("""Hini .It t 'wiyn,- ' ""'" '' ' - - -'" ' i I " . i j " " 1 1 ' r V ' ( I ; k'r "z-yJ; f tv .Fgg ! mP; r ? r v:,:-H ! " - yhil i r V"xl 'Pk n rr GROWING WITH BEND The City of Rend and the Bond Bulletin pio neered together here in the rich central Ore gon country. In the last half century, water has made the land a fertile agricultural area . . . forest products have contributed to the wealth of the region . . . thousands have va cationed in the sparkling beauty of the Des chutes wonderland. C The United States National Bank salutes these pioneers for their courage and vision during the past fifty years. We pledge our co-operation in the further development of this rich area. Central Oregonians will always find alert, friendly service and sound counsel and advice at this Oregon-owned and Oregon operated bank. Bend Branch: The U o Jo National Bank Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation A N OREGON BANK SERVING O R. E G O N