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About The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Or.) 1903-1931 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 22, 1905)
T1JR jbi. J, jh, Jit ay BEND llJLI-JLr J. IA il VOL. HI JWND, OREGON, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1905. NO. 27 ff- . 'V. k PROFESSIONAL CARDS U. C. COE, M. D. OI'I'ICK OVKIt HANK Pliyrtlcian and Surgeon Titi.itruoNie no. i IIICNI) OltW'.ON 11)111, MrA1MMimHr A Nil IWtl.H fAUM AHICH I mil niv. .!. L. MCCULLOCH, Atmtractcr nml lixumlner nf Illicit. l,Htl ml rmn knoWnl AlHr Am Hon HWrtiu. I'HTNItVII.I.K. .... OHIKION J. A. LAWRIiNCE, II. ft. COMMIMUONMK. Notary Public, luauriincc, Township Plain for WpjMfi Deadlines Valltty. MNI OMI'OON. NOTKV I'l'HI.Il' INWt'RANCIt A. H. GRANT Agrnl fur Liverpool, London Sc Olobe, mid l.ttiien.slilrc I'lre Insurance Companies. UII.NI, - ORIUION II I' tHumi'M It l'H l'iMAtnM n. t .miiijr I'byMttaH. Drs. Belknap &, Edwards, PHYSICIANS AMI SIMMONS. PRIM'.VII.I.I! - ORIUION. Iillkr Hi of W inH'k't I'futf Voir. Miss Grace Jones TCACHLM Of Voice S Piano ! M(w rrty ft 1 ti tit iih.I ran I torn! I hrr rrfclu' it .m Arnnr ml irtb Mftt III Nil, HUH. J. VV. Bledsoe IMIOTOORAI'MER HKNII. .... OKItf.ON. All Xs0 l'irwtftl ami IHtplkale llctutr I'mm.lirtl at Any Tim. Crook County Really Co Heal folate Bought and Sold. I.lfc nml Accident INSURANCE. nrrilK IK M 1 1 Mi hi IIIHMil nt.Mi. tlUMMiN TRIPLETT BROS. Barber Shop & Baths Itail of flcrotuuiodatioiis and work promptly done VVAI.I. HT HI(NI. OKIHiON PRINEVI LLE U I C L, l'.Hiii..r ThI lis and Rooms always clean ami well supplied--Rate reasonable I'UIN'UVII.I.It OKIICON PRICE OF ICE REDUCED. Frank Gardinier. Will II: & HILL, Aleuts. TlMtlr l.mnl, Ail of June 1. -M. NOTICE FOR ITHLICATION. I'.H UimI Oilier. Tlic ImIIm, Oirituu. Jul)' II Ivm. Nulkr I. h.tfly Kit"! I1'"1 ' iiiiJianre with III ilirtliHiwnir Ailuf CoilKIM f Jmiri, IS?, riillllnl, "Ah net fur liivttilrulllirilirrianiU In llir ktolra uf CaUfortitn. oik, NeiU, nml WH.IiliiRtmi Ttrrllniy." rilcmlr.l lu nil llir luil'llcUnil Ulrliy All nf Auul 4. l), the Mlimliiv-iiiimol iwikuiK Imvc u IliUilny filnl In IliU Hlllfc Hi Ir wmii ntHltiiSc-ul", UkmIIi WlllUmO Cliiltlcuwil, ufjfircr.uii, tfnuiity lit MurlMi. .Ulr of Oifcu, hhoiii Ultmml Nu xim ft thr iwrtlwxwf Hi nMc!( mill n )!( uf , lp w r 14 c, Y III. IMnn I.. I'oril.li. .if J.irtrwiii.ctwiilyiif Mmlon, ltrofOrruin, uorn tlnlriiicnl Nu xm, fur llir purcliu.cul the nwtf (if wc 31, ii , r 11 c, w m Jdllll T Jkiim, f Jtlfrixm, niiinlyof Mnrlmi. tlitlctif Oiricon, jiuuni nittiriuciil Nu Ml. fur the niuliucof the icj( uf doc Jl, ti to , 1 M r, ill Thill llicy willotler prmilatnahui Ihul tlieUuiU HHiiiht nrr iiiurevitliiHlilr forllir lliultcr or moue tlmrou tlinu fur iiurlciilliiriil inirixmcn, nml to ralulilluli llitlr iliiima tu iwUI I11111I licfutc the Ht-Kter and Krwlvfr, ill 'flit IMllcn, Orrgim, nil Niivcnilwr 10. IVS. They name iih wlltieweM II. A. l'olcr, uf rnnnlllr, Orcuiiii, Jolin T Jmiea, IMiia I,. 1'nr rl.h J. W I'linluli nml WllUmii O. ClirlUncii, ll ufj t llerfcou. Orriidii. Any nml nil riwii clulnilnu mlrrracly any of the nixiirlniKla lire miileil 111 lite Ihelr cliiim. In IhUuMlirnii or liefure the .Aid loth iluy of Novciuher. I'S IIH MICIIAltl, T. NOI.AN, Kr(ller. Office rooms for rent in the Pilot JhMe Development Co.'a office building. Apply at the company's office, tf NOTICE TO COME AND SEE US! IF YOU WANT "iWrs' Material, THE BEST AI.SO HEADQUARTERS FOR Tl 112 BEST GROCERIES AT THE LOWEST PRICE. 12 lbs. Dry Ornnit- frl AA latsd Sugar tpLUU idli. Can Evapor ated Cream 50 II, Priueville Flour .10 1.30 ,95 1 gal. can Royal Club Syrup WE DEFY COMPETITION. Bend Mercantile Co. Because we arc 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 liTe PINE TREE STORE I;. A. SATIUIR, I'ROPRII.fOR PILOT BUTTE INN A. C. LUCAS, Proprietor Tables supplied with all the delicacies of the season Pirst-class I;(uiptucut IJine Rooms and Ueds All stages stop at Bend Livery & J. FRANK STROUD, Manager LIVERY, and FEED STABLE IIOKSltS UOAKDHI) JIY THK DAY, WltHK OH MONTH First-Class Livery Rigs for Rent. Tlionc No. 15 lloiiiUtrrrl.tielweeu MlmioolnniHl Oreson. A. II. Llppninn Geo. At. Meyer A. H. Lippman &. Co., Furniture Stoves, Ranges, Heaters, Cooking Utensils, Doors and Windows, Paints anil Oils, Carpets and Matting. We carry a fine line of Rockers and Couches. We can furnish your house complete GIVK US A CAIJ, TtiRMS CASH THE FARMERS! Woven Wire Pence and Barbed Wire Wagons, Buggies, Mowers, Rakes, Plnwn I f n rrnvirc Koonng Aiaiinoul, Doors and Windows, Paints and Oils, Blacksmiths' Materials, Hardware, Tinware. 1 Kal can To 1 can To- rf (f am catsup Cp ,yU m 3 gal. kirg j HP 1 1 ill's Pickle f.D 2 cans sy pr Tomatoes ,avu 2 cans c Coru jLxJ the hotel door Transfer Co. Uend, Oregon. STAMPEDE FOR GOLD La id law People Rush for old Broken Top. RICH ROCK POUND THKRfi No I'rcc Hold but Plenty Ir'i Combi nation With Other lllemcnts Re quiring Chemical Treatment. Hlackamith W. A. Hunt and A. J. Harter, of La id law, returned labt Saturday from a two weeks proitiectiiig trip in the Caacndc uiouutaiiiK. They brought speci menu of a soft prophyritic rock bearing gold Hiilphureta. After finding the ledge they had gone across the range to the Hlue River mines and had an analysis of the rock mnde, which showed a gold value of $12 a ton. Yesterday morning Hunt and Harter, with Ted Henry. George Long, J. C. Thorp, A. K. Wewiier, Krcd Wallace, lf. li. Dayton, A. P. Donahue and William Diener, rode out to the gulch at the foot of Krok en Top, where the find was made, to stake off claims. The distance is 22 miles by road and trail or 15 mile in a straight line, from Laid iaw, and the same distance from Hend, due west. Hunt is an experienced miner and his judgment goes for a good deal in this enterprise. He and Harter located two claims, naming one Lucky Two and the other Hunt and Harter. While these protipectors were out their horfces became imprisoned in a gulch where they nearly died After they had fasted three days they were discovered and gotten out of their predicament by the use of rope. (1IRLS WENT MOMESTEADINQ Used duns to the Start Flre--A Night In Wilderness. Miss Reid and Miss Jones turned their pupils out of school last Fri day afternoon and prepared to scud Saturday and Sunday at Miss Jones's homestead near Lava butte. a dozen miles .south of Hend. They invited Miss Midlam to be one of the party and the three young women bestrode their steeds at dawn Saturday, with blankets and provisions, and made for the home stead in the wilderness. They got there before noon, had lunch in the cabin and put things to rights about the place. About 3 p. m the uecesssity of watering their horses and alo getting water for the camp came home to them and they start ed for the river, fivt miles away. Hy the time they had watered the beasts and filled water bottles and pails and admired the scenery it was getting dusk, and there they were five miles from camp and the trail a very dim one. They put spurs to their horses and rode at a gallop to reach camp before dark. Several times one or another lost the trail but all managed to arrive duly at camp. The water bottles swung safely at the horses' sides; pirrmoN i:or liquor licunsg. IS TIIK COl 'TV COIKT Ol' TIIIC STATU OF OKKOOS FOU CKOOK COINTV. In the matter tnif the njiplicntion of V. C. Him lee for rt retail Hiiuor licence In Montgomery jirvcinet, County of CriMik, State of Oregon. To the iloiiuntWIe County Court. We the itnilenigjied, legal voters, of Montgomery nreciuct No. ., Crook county, Oregon, to grant a license to 1. C. Kowlee to soil viriUuuti, malt or iuiiUk liquors, or fermented cider in Ie imutilv limn one gallon, in the precinct of Montgomery No. A, county of Crook, Mute of Oregon, for the term of i mouths from the litl nay 01 ucioocr. IW. C. M. Kedfield W. A. llelcher V. I.. Kicker I.. C. Whitted I.011 A. Ueed M. I. KoliertH C. A. lleckwith W. R. l.awMiu 1). Circciihalgh II. l.aitCN- Stone fircenhalgh J. A. Vosburg I'nmk Huiihluy lohu Onttit John JoluitiotW 1.. 11. llautuer AIhsI Wolf Tlios. C Rolierts V. . ThomiiMiu C. R, Mclilliu H. 1). lumiele Will Howell Notice is hereby given that the ivlnive netitiou will lie nrteuted to the Honor- able County Court of the htitte of Oivgon for Cnnik county, on the 4th day of October, 1905, or as boon thereafter as the wild Court can near tlie amc, aim 1 will then and there ask that such petition lie gran baid V. 'runted nml a license lie iMuetl to the C. Kowlee to sell Miiritoous, malt and vinous Ikiuors aiu ienuented cider in less ciuunUlio than one gallon at the I'reeluetof Moutgnuety,lu Ctook county. Oiegou, fcr a ttnw of six mouths. DatvAtUU titdayof Septemlicr, 1905, V. C. lUiwlce. the open bucket were about haP full of water. Uut their hurry had brought them misfortune. The compass, which tliey had lxicn careful to take along to guide them in the iwthlea.s wood, waa lost. That didn t matter much, however, for they were safely back to the cabin. Hut the key to the cabin door was a lo lost and that door had been securely fastened before the trip to uicriver. .Mont sticks were hunted up and by dint of much mus cle the staple was pried out and the door opened. This dispelled the visions of a night in the open woods, supperless and blanketleaa, with the owls and bears and pan thers and dreadful bugs. Hut the supply of matches then refused to be found and there was another predicament. Hi Mias Reid's staid New Bruns wick life there had been nothing to prepare her for this emergency. As principal of the Bend schools the weight of responsibility fell up on her and she thought hard for several moments. Finally she had recourse to literature and re membered how James Fcnimorc Cooper made camp-fires for his he roeson their hunting expeditions. The girls collected a little heap of dry paper and then stood off, took delilerate aim, shut both eyes and banged away. The shots set fire to the paper sure enough, and all collected about the tinv spark and blew till their cyts started from their sockets; but there was no flame and disappointment and exhaustion claimed all. One of the girls remembered that Leatherstocking used gun wads to start his fires the old fashioned rag wad and she suggested that in this extremity they try to shoot fire into a piece of cloth. She was hailed as a savior. The party suited the action to the word and after the powder smoke had cleared away the flickering spark in the rag was blown vigorously and lo! there appeared a small flame, which soon was fanned into a lusty camp- fire. This was joy indeed and another testimonial to the value of good literature and a gun. This peril having been passed another difficulty appeared. They wanted the fire in stove in thecabin. and there it was outside in a nest of sticks and it might burn up the forest. All applied themselves to the problem of getting the fire in the stove and wrinkled their pretty brows over it some time. Miss Jones suggested that they shoot the stove full of holes. She went in side the cabin to study the question and the first thing that met her gaze was a cauful of matches. There were two cans just alike and in the frantic search the match can had not been opened at all but each had opened the other can twice. The horses were picketed and after a frugal repast the girls com posed themselves for slumber, three in one meager bed. The door was abundantly locked and barricaded, so the owl hoots could not get in. Frequently the slumberiirs woke and listened for panther screams and coyote howls, but only the whispering of the pines broke the solemn stillness of the moonv night. Sunday Miss Militant's horse re fused to, be bridled. For this he was punished by remaining tether ed while the other nags were taken to water. Then the three girts and young Lochinvar, who came oppor tunely out of the North about that time, rigged a tackle and subdued the steed. All returned to Hend Sunday night with no further ad venture, except to scare Willie Van devert's horse so he will not travel the Silver Lake road any more. Reduction In Lewis and Clark Exposi tion Rates. On and after September, 1st, 1906, until October 15th, 1905, 30 day excursion rates to Portland and return will be: Wasco $4.00 Moro 1. So Grass Valley 5.30 Shaniko 6.65 C. U. IyYTUt, General Passenger Agent. W. P. Vamlevert and famlv left Bend Wednesday morning to drive across the mountains to Salem, where the- two elder children, Maud and Willie, will attend the Willamette University the coming year. The family will move down from X he Meadows for the winter to send five children to the Bend school. They will live in the office building of the D. I. & P. Co. BEST SUGAR BEETS Great Richness of Those Produced at Bend. RIQNT SHAPE AND SIZE ALSO Report of Analysis at the Oregon Agri cultural College--Comparison with Other Localities. On Sept. 6 four typical sugar beets wore dug on the D. I. & P. Co's experiment farm and sent to the Oregon experiment station at Corvallis for analysis. These beets were analyzed by the assistant chemist, Professor F. E. Iidwards, who reports as follows: Stiecificgravhy of juice - - - 1,0727a Solids In juice ... 17.60 per cent SiMtar In jaice - - - - 16.00 " Sugar In beet .... 15.20 " I'urity - - - - - - 90.90 ' In commenting on the quality of the beets Professor Edwards says; "This shows an excellent beet. In 1897 we analyzed 216 samples with an average of 15.24 per cent sugar and purity 84.36 per cent. The beets arc of a good size for sugar producing and of excellent shape ' The variety grown on the farm was the Klein Wanzlebencr sugar beet. They were planted May 10 and irrigated five times during the season. The actual yield is 10.S tons per acre. The average weight oft he beet is 9. 60 unccs, while indi vidual beets weigh as high as 44 ounces. Sixteen per cent sugar in juice and 90.9 per cent purity is an ex cellent showing for new land. In the Grand Ronde valley the beets analyzed 15.6 per cent sugar and 84.6 per cent purity the first year aud this has been said to to be higher than any first year else where. The standard of excellence in sugar beets is a weight of 20 to 24 ouuees, u sugar percentage of 16 to iS and purity 85. A percentage of 16 is somewhat over the average, the range being from 10 to 21. The purity per cent of 90.9 is un usually high, as the range is from 70 to 91, an analysis of 90 per cent beiug exceedingly rare. The yield, though not large, compares very favorably with the yield in some districts where the industry is established. In Union county we are told they expect no more thau 10 tons per acre this year. At Sugar City, Colorado,, the average of 140 beet growers is n tons. The average for the United States in 1905 was 8.4 tons, Aud this first raw year on the D. I. & P. farm within two miles of Bend the production is 10.6 tons to the acre, of beets that fairly beat the world. More Bend Products. J. H. Oneill hasalfalfu in his garden in Bend that stands 5 s inches tall upon a root that docs uot penetrate more than six inches iuto the ground. This is iu a plot that was well ploughed April it. The soil is four feet deep under the plants, but the roots branch out laterally rather than go down. This is the Turkestan, or dry land, alfalfa. Mr. Oneill also has alsac clover in his garden with roots going deeper than the alfalfa, and a shock of top growth like a Polish pianist each root yielding enough for a. feed for a cow. Millard Triplett has a bushel of tomatoes ripening in his garden, a lew having already ripened and been used on the table. He ha three vines with a .surprising lot of cantaloupes ripening upon them One ripe one, finely flavored, wa brought to The Bulletin yesterday. These products of the Triplett gardeu have taken . heir chances in the open air from seed time on. Mr. Triplett wants to know what can be grown iu this climate and all his crops have been subjected 111 every way to held conditions. His com has ripened and is hard ami flinty as any in the corn belt.