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About The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Or.) 1903-1931 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 11, 1905)
THE BEND BULLETIN A- voi,. Ill BEND, OREGON, PRIDAY, AUGUST n, 1905. NO. 21 " - mm PROFESSIONAL CARD8 D. U. C. COE, M. Ol'I'IUt OVKIl HANK Physician and Surgeon TKMtl'IIONIf NO. 21 MINI) . OKKOON Hll.tl. IMTWK ItlltKlllr ASIISOI.II, MSMS ANIICIIV I'MIII'NKM. J. L. AlcCULLOCII, Abstracter ntiil llxnmlncruf lltlus, t.miil mnl,Tnr. ,tMl,it After lur Nun-Hraldtiiu. I'KINKVII.MI. OHIKIDN J. Al, LAWII:NCI2. U. n. Cll.MmH)NI(H. Notary Public, Iilsitiiincc, Township Pints for Upper Dowlnitcs Valley. IIII.VII. OKIHION. NOTAKV I'UIIUC INtil'MANlIt A. H. GRANT Akfiit (' Liverpool, London A (I lobe, mid Lancashire I'lrc Insurance Companies. IHiNII, OMIU10N II I' HrUMArM. I) I'IMI H lf.MIM M (."Hiily l'h)klti. Drs. Belknap & Edwards, I'llYSICIANS AND SUWNS. lUtlM'.VII.I.I! ORIJdON. WAieat Kmi nrwimirk llru More Miss Grace Jones TCACHCII 01 Voice & Piano It mw ready lor pu.il ami rH he fuim.l I l"i IttfcleHceuH K-M Atfnik and iMh Mlrcl HI!MI), (Ian. J. W. Bledsoe PIIOTUdKAI'llUK llltNII. .... OKIIOON. All Ntgallnea I'lrwivt.l and ).itkat lktutea 1'urnl.hnl al Any Time. Crook County Realty Co Heal folate Buujjlil am! Sold. Life ninl Accident INSURANCE. f tfrrtcr iw hi If ttrtfr iiiiinu nfni. unmon TRIPUiTT BROS. Barber Shop & Baths! Best of ncfniniiiodatmn mid ' work promptly dune WAJ.I. T. HKSII. OKIKiONi PRfNEVI LLE' Hi' rp r i i A Mcmwitit J 1 JlI L rHiir Tnl i m mill Rooms alvvny.s clean and well stippliod--late reasonable . I'HINHVIl.I.K OKIICON PRICE OF ICE REDUCED. Frank (iardinier. WIIITI! & MILL, Agents. XEbc 3Benb Bulletin BOTH I'AI'l-RS One Year TWO DOLLARS portlnitb Journal NOTICE tO THE FARMERS! COME AND SEE US! I H 1 Woven Wire Funce and Bnrbcd Wire Wagons, Buggies, Mowers, Rakes, I Jl itifi 11 ifiiif( WANT ( "" Material, Koofing Maltlioid, Doors and Windows, Paints and Oils, Blacksmiths' Materials, Hardware, Tinware. IF YOU THE BEST ALSO HEADQUARTERS FOR THIi BEST GROCERIES AT TUG LOWEST PRICE. 12 lbs. Dry Granu lated Sugar idl). Can Evajxir atcd Cr wuii 50 lbs. Prinevillc Plour 1 gal. can Koyal Club Syrup 1 gnlcan To- d (f niato Catsup P fJ 3 Knl. keg HiH'.s Pickles 2 cans Tomatoes 2 cans Corn WE UEPY COMPETITION. Bend Mercantile Co. BRICK inanHMcnMHHHMH The Lewis Brick Co. now has brick for sale at the Barney Lewis homestead, two miles from Bend on the Sis ters road. Deliveries will bo made on 24 hours notice. ORDERS Should be left with J. H. OVERTURF Phone 24 The Lewis Brick Co. Bend, Oregon Bccauso we are selling the 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 TiTe PINE TREE STORE ;. A. SAW UR, PROPRIETOR PILOT BUTTE INN A. C. LUCAS, Proprietor Tables sivpjilicd with all the delicacies of the .season First-clnss Equipment Fine Rooms and Heds All stages stop at the hotel door CROPS DO GROW HERE Even the Knockers Can't Sour the Soil. OARDL:N AND FIELD CROPS First Ycnr Shows Results In Lines llljclily Gratifying In this Section. al, "We've had several messes ol string beans, summer squashes are teady for picking, onions, radishes, lettuce, turnips, beets, cabbages, potatoes and such stufi" arc too abundant, we have squashes seven inches in diameter, cucumbers, can- taloupcri and water melons are com ing on nicely and corn is about ready for roasting all grown out of doors in regular farming conditions" said Professor Elias Nelson, of the I). I. & P. Co's experiment farm, this week. "Moreover, we have matured wheat, barley, oats and rye, and the grain is first class, thus proving the orror of the knockers' notion that crops won't grow here. In a week or two we will have a fine crop of ripe tomatoes. "From my work this season I can have no doubt that all the com mon garden and field products will produce reliably ai.d abundantly here. Of course, clover, alfalfa and other forage plants will do well. "We have learned sonic valuable Icmoiis in our experiment work thih .summer, but there is no longer any question about common crops doing well in our climate and soil." COK.N DOIIS GROW IIKKK. "I see Governor Herrick says ue saw ueariy cverytiiing growing but co'ii" said Millard Tiiplett "He might have seen in my garden as fine a lot of corn as he ever .saw anywhere if he had come around my way " Sure enough, Mr. Triplett has a gooulj jMleh of dent corn eight leet tall well studded with roasting ears. And he has much more. All the comtnou vegetables, cucumbers, melons, tomatoes, etc., and last Sunday he gathered from his rasp Iwrry bushc -.enough berries for a good fat pie. ' All this is the first season's growth. "They told me I was wasting my tune when I was putting in this Kiirden"saidMr. Triplett. "I hadn't .veen unbody try those things be foie and I wanted to know for my ell whether things would grow. I'm no scientific gardener but in the face of the results I have got by my own crude methods on a plat not abovt the average I will say that for agiiculture this country is good enough for me." OATS MOKlt THAN SIX I'MKT. Dr. W. S. Nichol, who is a six footer, got lost in his s-acre field of oats. As a measure of safety for himscif he nit the crop for hay. Hut there was a lot of grain well filled and if a threshing machine had been available it would have paid to let it stand 10 days longer and harvest for the grain. A bundle ii feet long is on exhibition at The Hulletin office. Dr. Xicliol has alfalfa to suit the most fastidious and his garden is a famous producer of all the common vegetables. He has a lot of fruit vines and trees planted, some of which have borne a little this year, and all arc thriving. MANY Sl'KI'KISlNC. RKSl'I.TS. Ovid Kiley sent to town the other day a bunch of orchard grass grown on his ranch without irriga tion this year, though the soil had been generously moistened lust .season. This speciman lacks but three inches of hJug six feet tall. The Hattcn muden this week yielded a small mess of Cuthbert rasplierries, one of which measured that have followed attempts to test the agricultural powers of this lo cality. There has not been a single failure. Frosts have done no harm to speak of, the "barren" soil proves immensely productive, even with scant water. These ipcration. are the fort-runners of extensive agriculture in the Des chutes country which many old timers and knockers condemned vithout trying. TO CLEAR 1,000 ACRES. 1)1); Ranching enterprise of General Manager Johnston. This week General Manager John ston, of the D. I. & P. Co., made tin arrangement with Adam Kotz man whereby the latter is to clear and plow 1,080 actes of "ditch" land taken by Mr. Johnston and members of his family. This land is situated in a compact body in sections 13, 14, 15, 22, 23 and 24 ip. ias, k. 14 u. iiic work is to be taken up at once and .100 acres arc to lc plowed the coming fall. A commodious dwelling is to Ijc built at the ranch at once, with barn and bunkhoiise. Men will go at this work upon being released from the flume construction in a few days. Water will be ready for irrigating l ie place in a few weeks and extensive farming operations will be conducted there next season. The Rev. and Mrs." R. F. Row land and young son, of Eugene, were in Bend yesterday, on their return trip from an extended outing. DATE IS AGAIN SET Railroad Construction Staft September 1. to OFFICERS" MAKE STATEMENT Columbia Southern to Pusn'ThrouKh' ffom Shahlkd (o Crooked River nt Forest. The io-mouths-old sou of Mr and Mrs. Olaf Hagge died last night after an illness of about two weeks of bowel trouble. The Haggcs recently came out from Da kota and live in the Ole Erickson building on Bond street The hydrants for the city, nine of them, have arrived and are being in stalled. A hoot: and ladder company will be organized, whicli. with the two hose companies, will complete the fire department, and Bend will then have a fire protection system second to noue in Central Oregon. John C. Perry this week left for Portland and expects soon to locate in Stokane. Since the recent death of his father in Dulttth the remainder of the family wishes to get together, and as it would be in convenient, for the mother and sis ter to come to Bend the son and his family will establish themselves where the others can reach them easily. The W. W. Amburus returned last week from Portland and before they coiili! get settled Mr. Amburn received . telegraphic offer of a position : 1 Great Northern engi neers in Ijtitish Columbia, which he concluded to accept. He left for the new work the first of this week. Mrs. Amburn and the fam ily will remain in Bend indefinitely, however. Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Circle will leave tomorrow for a trip to Klam ath Falls. From there Mrs., Circle will go for a visit with her parents at Byron, Cal., returning to Bend in October. Mr. Circle is looking for cattle range in the Klamath country and lie. will return to Bend in about three weeks and will then probably go into business here on his own hook. PUTUANtf, Or., Aug. to, It is givcil out from the general office ol the! Columbia Southern raihvav that work on the extension of that road south frdnl Shaniko will begin about September i. It is also said that the construction will be vigor ously pushed until the Crooked river is reached at tt point near Forest. This statement comes from officers of the company, though it is not made as an official announcement. At the banquet Tuesday night Mr. Harriman made the following; announcement: "Now extension of the Columbia Southern is about to be begun. Where it will end depends upon you." MARRIED. Miss Alice Pike and Mr. Edmund L. Crabtrce were married last Sun day evening at the residence of A B Estebenct, Justice J. M. I,aw rencc officiating. Both the youutf people have made their home in Bend some time. Mr. Crabtrce hail taken the Ltster house and had it fully furnished and ready for im mediate occupancy, and the coup!' repaired there after the ccrcmon and began housekeeping at once. They were not sly enough to elude a company of vigilant friends, how ever, who gave them a musical halt hour. Take Notice, Portland. Oirxonlnn. Vny hit bttn Incorporate Ital or y,n to dttel r"" rr SEE RICHARD IMBER LAND BOliailT AND SOLD. Special attention o the gathering of bunches of claims for In vestors. IF YOr WANT TO SELL Mf" I nl hiu r a ttve wltct liiiimilrtul for Milts t. . AIoilt(ilul Ululiir luu.Ulu iimlilU)' tu ull KINQ. BEND, OR, 1 1 24 inches in circumference. This 1 morning Mr. Batten brought down 1 town an armful of blood beets and white turnips that measured up to, 17 inches 111 circumference not coarse cattle food but crisp and tender roots fit for any table. . ! J. II. OneiH s garden is out-dq-i S. C. Caldwell is this week, build ing two tanks for water wagons fpt the D. I. & P. Co. These t,a.n,fcs are made of galvanized iron and are a little more than three feet in diameter and are 12 feet Jong, and have four division heads so as to prevent long swinging of jthe waves when the tank is not entirely, lull. Each tank will hold about 623 gal lons. They will be used to ljpul potable water for the new town of Redmond. J George A. R. Simpson of Powers, Minn,, .and his .sou, D. S. Simp,; sotiulmve been spending a week withJ.iK. Ryan in the Deschutes timber belt and ut the ranch of thu company in which he is interested The Tulles. uThe comnauv has ing itself. The croakers told him ' 400 head of, cattle , there. It also 1 when he was preparing it .that he ' has large, holdings of, iimber land. I would get no results, that noting Mr. ?fuifeoi Uifrtk so well iof..thvj would do well in this . scviL ntul ' countrv . thnt he himself .took 11 j climate. But Mr. OneiH warded to timUjA clauty on this annual vj?ty see for himself. Now he .says his . HtKtcvY.s that, what impressed., hint uic the cen- I ordinary .culture. m ,iu u al crops will rlol bte successful in A comri In toattle with a oioil vimc raiuamc raining property in southern On eon Within a few miim of ttranU I'au aloii there ate a dot en fiue UlrMtnil-parinc raining proprrtlM owned bjr Seattle, Spokane. Ienvt and California mining men. ltortUn.l capital n little too nu.y with s and 6 per cent mortt-.tr. eer to pay any attention to thii great mtnlnr in JitMrywhkli M making to maby outaider V ! hut it occatlonally find a dumping ground in wlld-Cit Khcrnnln faraway land., from whit'. no dividend, have yet returned. Yw, Why iIoch not Portl.-iinl ImiM . railroad into Central Oregon and get th at traffic and trade ol thin Miction' railroad from deep wnter at I'ortlan.l through Central Oregon would leoiic m the safest investment that could Ik made. Hut it will likely he the oM "Parable of the talents" repeated St attle and California capitalists are usiiik their talents by making investments m this state which urc securing the tradi while Portland capitalists are gripin their tuleut tight, and all the wlilli pleading for some one else to build their railroad), for them. Madm Pioneer " . Railroad to Bend. North llend Harbor. iiiuy tvni-eni 1.1 tu ktcij uic uanisu , mosc.ou uns itiii, However, withiuythe fence. Everything is agricultural devteloplneiYt ol doiua.well "and With only the hiost country. lie has no fear that is On another page is published an nrti clo from the llend Hulletin on the nil. way situation from that point of view That Is a wonderful country around fiend. The town is situated just ou th edge of a great white pine forest ati! where the trees nivc way to a vast irr gated plain. The country now iimltr reclamation will easily sustain a popu latioit of fifty thousand. The importance of having railway coin uiunication is easily seen. The vom wheat Iwlt of that section must have . rail outlet to tide water. It matter, little to the people around llend whetlu 1 they no north to Portland or south t" San Prmicisco. Itut a railroad tlicv tmiftt and will have. The iiecesMties of the rest of the stat. make Corts Ihy's opportunity. All u have to tld is to reach out a helping halt. I and all the commerce of Central and Southern Oregon will come to this port A railroad iToiu Uettd to Coos Hay will far lietter serve the needs of that section than h line either north or south. Thr llend country needs our coal and dairy products. ve have tKV for their whe.it and alfalfa, A lalge tiaillc would spring up liclweVii tle two sccttous. We should co'-opetMtc With the lleml people hi their desire, to secure a railroad outlet. Out need for a railroad is not so apparent for tne reason that wc liau water communication. Itut the ln.Mie.it-. that would result from a mil load to tin Interior woUlii lie greatci to Us than ft the lleml countrv. Tne Uentl ieople do M even know nl NHe nit vantages we IinvV to present over if I0id culler north or Mmtli. It a shot ter line to Coos Hay m we lm even.a liettev market for the products .. Central Oliegou. ,The Cdos Hay Chamltelr ol Comtiierv. shoild keep In touch with the people id llend lleie is an empire iu its inception 0,1,11,110 opportunity should le negltctvi to seVure a right foundation. t'or Sale. irdnSe atVd lot 6rt Eleven,Uw street and Irdidd aventte. AJyojwiug nVtichuie, UVge hiWgfe! alld tithe household gooils. A Mks. J, W. Blkdsoi I J hese are ti few of the euccesscr this rejjidlv