Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Or.) 1903-1931 | View Entire Issue (July 28, 1905)
W. JN ' .',Jtf THE BEND BULLETIN. VOL. Ill PROFE88IONAL CARDS U. C. COE, M. D. OI'I'ICK OVHH HANK Physician and Surgeon TlU.KI'IIONlt NO. 31 IH5NI OKKOON l)AI,Mr1 Rovuiir Ammo in. farms AMncirv riorum r. j. l. Mcculloch, Abstracter and lixamlncrof TllleM. I.sml MI.TM Iffiukri! Aftrr fur NonXf.lilfiil!. t'HINItVU.I.It, OKIKUUt J. M. LAWRENCE, II. n. COM1IIHHIOUKK. Notary Public, IiiHtiraticc, Tcitviifihip I'luts foi Upper Deschutes Vnllcy. httoi), OKIKIOM. NOTAKY IUM.IC INHl'KA!CI( s A. H. GRANT A(rn lot Liverpool, London & (llobe, riltd Lnncnshlrc Fire Insurance Companies. MINI), ORIKJON II I ItKIKNtrM I), ClM H Klm'OHsM. I), f.)Ulll)r I'lljllcUll, brs. Belknap & Edwards, PHYSICIANS AM SUBfltiONS. PKINIIVII.I.I1 ORIUION. IMAff HI Mrf u( Whiurk't liu Mutr. Miss Grace Jones tcachcr or Voice & Piano ) hhw irxly fur pupllt ami can l feum! I lir rr.Mtmr mi Kim Arnur Hint i M It Htlcel. IIHNH, O.K J. W. Bledsoe PHOTOtiRAPHER llllNO, .... ORIIOON. All .Vfllr rrrtmnl init Duplicate , I'kluirs I'uinlihnlsl Ally Tlnic. Crook County Really Co Real Estate Bought aod Sold. I.lfc nntl Accident INSURANCE. 'tUTKXIH (H'l.l.MM Hill III M kt.Nll. OSKI.dN TRIPLETT BROS. Barber Shop & Baths Ihrst of accommodations and work promptly done WALL HT. lllt.NI), OKIiON pliNEvTLLE HOTELS HC A MiDoMML WfHlrtsr 'TnliM and Rooms always clean mid well stippticd-Ufitus reasonable l'HINUVll.l.K OKIIC.ON Steele's Restaurant M I V A Hn.KIII, l'lui. First Class Servico at Reasonable Rates. KVItKYTIIINC! NKW. BUY A MEAL TICKET XEbe Benb Bulletin BOTH PAPERS One Year TWO DOLLARS J portlrmfc Journal DHND, OUKOON, FRIDAY, JULY 28, 1905. NO. 30 NOTICE TO THE FARMERS! COME AND SEE US! IF YOU WANT THE BEST Woven Wire Fence and Barbed Wire Wagons, Buggies, Mowers, Rakes, 1 riuwB, lIUITUWb, ( Builders' Material, Roofing Malthold, Doors and Windows, Paints and Oils, Blacksmiths' Materials, Hardware, Tinware. ALSO HEADQUARTERS FOR THE BEST GROCERIES AT THE LOWEST PRICE. 13 lbs. Dry Orauu- (f A A luted Sugar $1.UU 1 'lb. C1111 Kvarmr- A nted Crcntn 1" 50 lbs. Priucville 1 nti Flour J.OU 1 gal. can Royal Club Syrup J gal can To- d ( mnto Catsup 47 Vv 3 gal. keg Hill's Pickles 1.75 2 cans ft i. .... r. - mS Tomatoes a cans Corn WG DEFY COMPETITION. Bend Mercantile Co. ORDERS Should be left with J. H. OVERTURF l-O o-o-o """"" Phone 24 The Lewis Brick Co. now has brick for sale at the Barney Lewis " homestead, two miles from Bend on the Sis- wm rLKil The Lewis Brick Co. hours notice. Bend, Oregon Because we are selling thot same and better quality at a closer margin is a very good reason why you will find our store the best, place to buy anything in the line of Groceries, Drygoods, Furnish ings, Shoes, Hardware, Sash and Doors, Paints and Oils The PINE TREE STORE 12. A. SATIH2R, PROPRIETOR PILOT BUTTE INN A. C LUCAS, Proprietor Tables supplied with all the delicacies of the season First-class Kquipment Fine Rooms and Beds All stages stop nt the hotel door WATER HAUL ENDED fr IMBER LAND BOUGHT AND SOLD. Special attention to the gathering of bunches of claims for In vestors. IK YOU WANT TO SUM, C.C E Kt C" tUolf few iwlccl liomtitcaiU for wit, QCC IVI . AuUidrtdcU lliulitr W4 lu qusullly to iult. RIOHARD KlNQ. BEND, OR. mmmmmtmmmmamssmammammBm New Service is at Work in Bend. SYSTEM DOES GOOD WORK City's Hose and Carts are Here and Hydrants on Way In from the Railroad. The JJcnd water system is practi cally complete. Private establish ments arc being connected up and there is no more hauling of water from the river The tank has been filled and emptied several times. With the setting of the city's street hydrants, now on the way in from the railroad, everything will be completed. The mains mid tank will then be flushed and receive their final .scrubbing and service will be on a permanent basis. There is nothing deleterious in the works now, but a little sand is likely to get into the pipes when the hydrants are being connected and sninc sawdust was used to stop leaks in the tank Until the staves should swell, and these substances will be flushed from the system. Saturdays and Wednesdays the water is turned out of the Pilot Huttc flume to enable flu roe con struction to proceed, so the water works pump has no power on those days and the tank is drawn upon. When the whole plant and the city fire-fighting apparatus is complete there will be a public test of the plant. The city has 1 1 street hy drants, 1 ,000 feet of hose and two hose carts. The water company has 0,000 fcctoftifain pipe laid, 500 feet of winch is 8 inches in diameter, 6,ooo feet 6-inch pipe and the re mainder 4-inch. The tank holds 30,000 gallons. The normal pres urc at the level of Wall street is 45 pounds to the square inch. There will be. a steam pump for service on extraordinary occasions, but ordinarily the big ram will do all tha pumping necessary. The most interesting part of the plant is the device used for raising the water to the storage tank. For this purpose an eight-inch, double acting Phillips hydraulic ram has been installed. The ram is of an entirely novel and unique type and us principal merit consists in the fact that it operates practically without shock, is adjustable as to length of stroke, and shows a re markably high cflieieucy. It is working under a fall of water of 37 feet anil raises the water to a height of 142 feet from its own level. As already stated, the ram is of the doub'e acting type, which means that while impure ditch water is employed to drive it, pure water directly from the Deschutes river, i.spuuied by it. The ram is located in the north pnrt of the city within ten feet of the Deschutes river. It is placed in a concrete lined pit about eight feet square, and its outlet is on a level with the surface of the river. It is thus almost submerged in water. The drive pipes consist of 160 feet of eight-inch No. 14 riveted steel pipe with flanged connections This drive pipe connects the ram with a wooden intake tank approxi mately six feet square and ten feet high, which rests directly on the rocky ground on the brow of the hill skirting the Deschutes river llefore the drive water, which is taken from one of the ditches, is delivered into the intake tank, it r.ases through a large preliminary settling box, thence through a flume about 200 feet in lenirtli, thence into the so-called final sett ling tank, where it isdeprived of its coarser sand. The pure water is taken at a distance of 500 feet up stream from the ram, where a small but substantial wing dam, built of rock, trains the current and raises the head approximately one foot. The intake proper consists of a flarincr entrance box, somewhat ! inclined to the stream level, which terminates in the flume proper. The latter is laid on a slope of three inches to the 100 feet, and the head of the pure water at the intake box right above the rani is" two feet nine inches. The nctiofi of the pure water attachment is gratifyingly regular, !d while some of the pure water Is drawn in by a vacuum and mixes with the impure drive water, none of the lahef ian possibly Interfere with the pure" water supply, so that the product of the machine is beyond all question the undcfilcd mountain water flowing in the Des chutes river. The ram was built by the Col umbia I'.nglnccring Works, of Portland, Oregon, and installed under the superintendence of Fred Hesse, hydraulic engineer of that company. BEND FIRE DEPARTMENT FIRES SET IN TIMBER Two n. y Hose Companies OrganlzedS. C. Caldwell U Chief. Bend now has an organized fire department with S. C. Caldwell as chief. Hose company No. t held a meeting Monday night with N. P. Wcidcr temporary chairman and C. W. Chapman temporary secretary. The following permanent officers were chosen: I'rtiiilent, T. Zimmerman Secretory. V, 31 Ho joUc. Treasurer, N. I. Smith. Foreman, K. Sheldon. lit nuittnnt, T. Zimmerman, 2iul attUUnt, K. Spencer. Following is the membership of this company: N. V. Weidcr. Kalpli SheMou, C. W. Chapman, Charles Brock, Theodore Anne, C. M. Weymouth, X. V. Smith, C. I. llecker. T. W. Zimmerman, John HaiiKll, R. Spencer, Charles McKinnon, A. II. Httcheiict, 1'. M. LoUIeD, George Meyer, 1'aul Kramer. Tuesday evening hose company No. 2 was organized with the fol lowing officers: President, James McCoy. Secretary, C. I.. Drown. Financial secretory, T. W, Triplett. Treasurer, C. M. Triplets Foreman, J. Frank Stroud. Assistant foreman, Ora Poindexter. This company has the following on its membership roll: A Good Deal of Land Burnt Over, is ONE MAN HATES ANT MILLS Though Not Much Damage to Tim ber Results, Possibilities of Harm are Great. I. F. Stroud, Robert Zcvely, C I). Hrown, James McCoy, Karl WriKht. Charles Iloyd, F. II. May. William Caudle. Ora Poindexter, C. SI. Triplett, I'Ul Drostcrhous, II. J. Ovcrturf, C C Triplett, John Cottor, Tom Triplett, BEND LIBRARY PLANS. All Officers Re-elected Membership and Periodicals. The board of trustees of the Bend Library Association at its meeting Tuesday evening re-elected the following officers for the ensuing year: President J. 11. Ovcrturf, Vice-president Mrs. J. F. Circle, Seeretnry P. I.. Tompkins, Ulirarian Mrs. K. F. Ilatten, Treawirer J. M. Lawrence. The following resolution was unanimously adopted: Vherean. the Bon Ami club has coh tri billed to the Heud Library Amociatioti .VJ volumes of mbcellaueous book and the sum of f. 7.911 in cri.1i to 1m? expended in- furnishings for the reading room, tncreiorc, lie it KcMilved, that Mich contrilmtions !. accepted by the llcnd Library Assoetat. lion and the conditions attached to the money observed. Revolved, that the thanks of the llvud Library Aociatiou lie expressed in this formal iimnntr to the Hon Ami club for its very MtlKtnutial aid to the work of tlim awoctatiou. The trustees were of the opinion that the patronage of the reading room was not sufficient to justify paying ?to a month rental that a more accessible room on the ground floor should be secured or less money spent for rent. The John son store room, underneath the present reading room, the Grant store room next to the postoffice, and the vacant store in the Triplett building are under consideration for new quarters. Pending decision in this matter comes the question of membership lor the ensuing year, on which the revenue of the association largely depends. And the annual sub scription to the list of periodicals mttit also besent within the coming ten days. Therefore the member ship subscriptions of $2 each for tliO ensuing year are now to be taken its a basis upon which to form future work. There is now about $50 in the treasury and a reasouauiy sure prospect ot $0 a month income from outside sources. The first of last week a rnatj came down the river from the Odcll section, or possibly from Silver Lake. He set a dozen or more fires in the timber and a tract of land two townships long and perhaps half as wide, to the souths ward of Roslaud, has becti burnt over. He set a number of oilier fires along the road, which did not spread. His special antipathy wai ant hills and he fired every one of. them he came to. His name is not known, but the following des cription of him is given: A man of middle age, medium height, rather heavy set, sandy complexion, walks with a slight limp, one leg being short He wore heavy gray trousers secured with a belt and carried a reversible leather coat He spoke with a foreign accent, evidently Scandinavian. The settlers of that region arc eager to invoke the full power of the law to punish this wanton depredator. The fire runs in the pine needles and occasionally gets established in a pitch knot nnd burns a tree. Where there is deadfall a hot fire h made. The actual damage has not been large but the possibilities of jiarm to timber, fences and build ings is great and the settlers desire to make an example for such ot fenders. R. R. Hinton, whose shepherds set fire in the timber near Tumalo, made prompt response to the claims for damage to irrigating ditches in that locality and settled all such claims satisfactorily. He was strong in condemning the lawlessness of his herders and said that if they set out the fire as alleged thev ought to be prosecuted to the full extent of the law. Another fire is burning not far from Sisters, hiving escaped from ranchers' clearings. BOTH TEACHERS RE-ELECTED New Bond Ulectlon for $5,000 to be Held August 17. The school board held a meet ing last evening and re-elected Miss Reid to be principal and Miss- Jonc primary teacher for the com mg year. Miss Reid s salarv was advanced from $6o to Sts a mouth and Miss Jones is to be paid $$s 1 month. Last year the primarj teacher was paid $40 a month. 1 he board also received a neti- tiou for a new bond election to an thorize an issue of $5,000 for the new scnooi House, in addition to voting upon the bonding question the voters will be asked to sav whether the bonds shall be disposed of under subdivision 6 or subdi vision 31 of section 33S9 of the Oregou statutes. The bond election will be held August 17 in the school house. Looking For Railroad Route. Messrs'. Turney and Johnston, with their party of Ohio frieuds, left Belid last Sunday to drive over the mountains to Leb anon, instead of going out by way of Shaniko. Govenor Hcrrick be iug a Gould railroad man and the D. I. & P. Co. being much interest ed in getthn; a railroad to this lo cality, this trip is by many supposed to be very significant. T. K. Roberts, of Redmond, was in town Tuesday, Two Land Contests. The contests of William II. Davis vs. Anna C. Perry and George A. Howsou vs. John C. Perry oc cupied the time of Commissioner Lawrence Wednesday and Thurs day. These involved land released from withdrawal May 23, The contestants had settlements on the land and sought to file homestead applications for it. Hut the Perry s were ahead with timber and stone applications. The contention is that the land was already appro priated by settlement when the tim ber and stone applications were 'presented, that it was not theu un inhabited and without improve meuts as the law requires for such entries. The defense is that the settlement was not in good faith. That is the issue to be settled b the contest. Several other contests involving the same questions are set for hear' ing soon. James Hunter returned yesterday from Redmond, where he has been building the new hotel. He suf fers from an iujured foot upon which a heavy timber fell soutc days ago.