Mw. Hp(H--lzLM( --"V? 'x j THE BEND BULLETIN. Y Vt TP voi,. in MIWD, OUttGON, FRIDAY, NOVKMBHR 3, 1905. NO. 33 JlXf PROFESSIONAL CARDS U. C. COE, M. D. Ol'l'ICIt OVlCK HANK Physician and Surgeon TIU.IU'IIONK NO. a I MIND OKKOON nai. iwrAfH imimiir AMIMJl.ll KASMH ANDCItV IHItrHKTV. j. l. Mcculloch, Abntrncttr mid Uxnmlucr of 'I Won. Mini mihI Tain f.iMka.1 Att r fur Molt KmMcmIi, I'HINItVIM.K OKKOON NOTAKV I't'HI.IC INHUKANCK A. H. GRANT Agctil fur Liverpool, London & (llobc, rind Lniicnslilrc I'lrc Insurance Companies. HUM), OKIKION , II, I'. IIHI.KHAf.M I) ClU H llliWAMimM I), County lliydrian. Drs. Belknap & Edwards, PHYSICIANS AND SUKGL'UNS. I'KINIIVII.M! - OKIKION. ()fltrr at Kcr iif Wlimrk's Drill Kloir. J. Al. LAWRENCE, U. H. COMMIKHIONIIM. Notary I'uhllc, Insurance, Township Plots for Upper Deschutes Valley. III'.NI), OHXOO.V. Miss Grace Jones TCACHcn or Voice & Piano It now irmly fur nillU ami ran Imf fuini4 Hi lit ltMiic (in Kua Amiuf mill lit h Wirrt lll(NI), OKU. Crook County Really Co Heal Estate Bought and Soli l.lfo and Accident INSURANCE. nrricn IK nvLLktii huimuho mmi. aau ""'TRIPLETT' BROsr" Barber Shop & Baths Ikt of occomuiodations nml " work promptly done WAI.I.ST. HNI. OKKOON PR1NEVI LLE Hj-y rip w- 1 Ma. C. A. McHowm.1. IJ 1 C LliW'tUlor Tnl lis and Rooms always elenn ami well supplicd-Ratcs reasonable I'KINKVIU.It OKKOON TlttiUf Mw4. Act rf June J. mi. NOTICK KOU WIIMCATION. I- H Mtt4 OftW. Th IMH.Oifii. July ii. iv- Nolkc l hrirby lii llwt III remrtUH with the IHMvWutMKlllir Mut CHir f Julie J, im! 'ciitiil.! "A11 act fm Die uiltaf lliiilwrUml; IntlirMalaaurCallfufiila. Iliriuii. Nrva.la, ami Wa.hlii T iliwy." a ikleiwlnl to all tlic ikiMI law! Malta by Atl t Angus! 4. lMv M Mtimlnr namwl riiit have I II till" lUy Mol In ttiltunkc thrlr awwii lalriiirnt. lo-ll William O. eiilUttnwii, ifjffrli BHliityuf Mattati. lalrbrotrgnii. w.ini laltmnil So J4S. fw thr michacir Itir iiHK ' iiHwU "" "i l.f Uf. w in. Ifclna I.. I'attl.li. i.f JeffrfwHi. CiHiiity f Martuii, latcofOirgan. mum Mattmtiil No tu. far Hie iMrthaac ol llirnw),' trji.t, r lie, win Jhn T June, .irjiffeiaun. cuuMi of Marlttti, stale nfOtcgnii. awuni statement Mu XMJ for II" iiucliaeof the k)( uf-c ii. !) au . r u c. w m That lliry III urtcr inil. lo sliuw Dial the lamU sought ate iiiurevaluaMc fur the thither or slime llinr.ui than fur aailmllural iiuriiuaci. iul to r.latill.li thrlr cUliu lo H UiiiI Iwloie the Kriil.ltr himI KnrlW, al The Ihtlltt, OcrKon. on Novemlirr to. IV"J They iiamr a wltiirawa II. A. l'otrr, of I'lliievltlr lirruoii, Juliu T loiita, IWim I. I'at tl.li, J W I'-iiWi anil Wllthm (). ChtlitriiKii, all orjrlTef tun, Orejjoil Any ami all twtauiit clalmliiE ailrrly any of the aWe lml ate tr.iirlnl to file thrlr claim, in Hilt olllrc mi ur In-fore Hie lil trill ilaynf Ninnnltt. Vfi- I iij MICIIAKI. T. NOUN. KegUter. 1 Imher l.ml, Act June J. i;. NOTICK FOH PUllIilOATlON; U H. !,aint Office. IjiktWew, Oiegou, heplciuUr I". IV"). u,,H. I. I.rrrl.v nliru that til cotiilillaiicc with the tirotl.lon.nl the Act of CoiiKtrM ii( June f, iHjii! ciillllnl. "An act for Ihe aaleof llmlrrlaiiiU In the Plate, of California, wrcKOii, nctaiia. aim Wnihlnstoii Territory." ejlrnilol to U he iiuhllcliWiiUUlM hy Act of AUKiul 4. 1891. the liillowliiK iKTMiii.lmvc filed In ihla office Oielr worn atnlcmcnK. lo-wlt Chattel I) Drown, of lleiul. county ofCrooU, Muly of Oregon, nworii litleiuriil No, yJ. for the lurchai of Ihe ne) ofMC4. Il.r 14 e, win. Auutc II. KUtcuct, or llcml, county ofCrooU, Mate u(Orciiqii.iiirii ktatrmcut No yHi for Ihe jiutchac ortlleaeM ofrC4, l"l. TMc.w in. OaUy It. Ilrown, uf llcml, cumily ofCtooW.aUleororejton.aworii Mittcmciit No, iirt, foi Hie Jiilrchiue of the w ofrcj. l ai a.r 14 e, wiii, Thai they will offer iryoft6 ihow thai the lainj oushtUiuorealut.le for ll llinlfcr or font than for agricultural urMy, ami to c(alillli Ihclrclulni lo wlil l.'iid liefote j M- t.ajte.ice II H. VoiiiiiilMioiicr. M hU olllceul lleiul, Ore gon, on butimhiy' the vil day of llcceinlwr ifrij. They name na wltiirc "WW 'l"'i Aiiirule II. l(.trU;ul, Char lea . llrnwiv, Uy l. Ilrown ami UimIM McKIiuioii, all of llcml, Oregon. jgj Any ami all "truant cUlinlu'g ailvcr3Ty Iht alMiveslencrllicil lumla are reuurticl to nle lliclr cluhut lu lliU office 011 or Ufur U Sin uy of December, ijoj. g44 J, K, WATSOXi KoUttr. GRAIN , GRASS -: SEEDS :- Fancy Alfalfa Seed, Dry Land Alfalfa Seed, Winter Oat,s, Extra Fancy Imported Shadeland Won der Oats, Fancy Clover Seed, Kentucky Blue Grass Seed and Vetch Seed FARM Implements Largo and Complete Stock of Plows, Har rows, Wagons, Harness and Builders' Hardware. Bend Mercantile Co. BEND, fiw TIMBER LAND WANTED I have completed arrangements whereby I can handle n number of Eood timber claims, in the Des chutes timber belt, at once. Title must be perfect. I have special inquiry just now for land in Tps. 31, 33, 33 and 3. S-, K. ii U.. and if parties owning land there will communicate with me, it may result to the advantage of all concerned. J. N. HUNTER, General Cruiser and Land Locator BEND, ORXGON. k jgK Because 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 IE PINE TREE STORE G. A. SATHUR, PKOMtfQTOR , F. MOODY OHNiiRAL Commission and forwarding MERCHANT. sHaniko, - oRnaoN Lnrgc, CefeiMleus Warehouse. Consignments Solicited Prompt attention paid to those who fuvor nte with their putroimgc Best Printing it T BAKER. Barb Wire In Carload Lots--"Waukeganita" Gal vanized Wire, best or. the Coast, will not rust. OREGON. Bulletin Office. $6500 FOR SCHOOL Voters in Favor of Better Building. WORK TO 00 ON AT ONCfi Sentiment of the District Declared and Formalities of Ulcctlon WIII Follow. Last Time the Ilcnd school dis trict authorj7l a bond issue of $3,500 for a new schoolhousc. This wasjound to be inadequate for the uccos 01 tne district and later the authorized Ijoud was increased to 55,000. Plans and specifications for a 6-room structure to cost ?35 with upper rooms unfinished were ordered from a Portland archi tect. When bids were received last Monday night it was found that practically the entire $5,000 would be consumed in mittiuir uo this building, leaving nothing to provide furniture or other essentials, estimated to require at least ?i,opo more. Under thsc circumstances one of two possible changes were neces sary cither provide more money for the structure already planned or reduce the. sire and cost of the builduig to be erected. The board deemed tkn a proper q,ucstion, to, be submitted to, the voters and called them to meet at the B, M. hall Wednc5day night for a conference. After n brief discussion of the mat ter it was unanimously voted to in crease the bond issue to. $6,500 and go ahead with the building as al ready planned. Accordingly a petition to the board to order au election for the purpose of formally voting on the new bonding prop osition wa& drawn aud sicned and the beard wiU give tuc sctuurca notice upon rtve icttvm 01 Ucrkt j vyii !, t nwm ror a iwuny; iuhkjuuu, hh -y rmvn T""""IU(( 1....,, I .f.A ..K.lk u..f lu. afrtHMl f UJOKU (III: IHMIiW M.V V "" juy (lie uoara I form renuires but tup uaruiory sisnaturp by 'lcl clerk and if that is fallowed exactly thero will.bts.na chance for a kick, while there may b objection if it is not. However, the seutiroeut of the tlvl district having been declared, the building of the schoolhousc will proceed without waiting for the legal formalities of tho bond elec tion. There must bo 50 days notice of that. The building con tract will be closed up this week on the assurance of the voters infor mally given Wednesday night. Two bids wcro received Monday night for construction of the school nousc I. D. Jarvis $4,965, with timber foundation and shingled roof, and Thomas E. Roberts $4,809 with shingled roof and $4,816 with Malthoid roof, nothing said as to foundation. Others have figured on the contract but deemed it uses. less to prcsenr bids when the board was limited to $5,000 for its total. The board will now seek on ad justment that will lie fair to con tractors as well ns for the best in terests of the district, and it is ex pected that work on the ground will begin next week. The assessor's estimate of the taxable valuation of the school district this year (the assessment roll is not yet entirely completed) is $140,000, which justifies a bond issue of $7000 Last year the tax able value was but $1 1 1 ,000, and public lauds upon which final receipt was issued were taxed Inst year, while this year only patented lauds are nssesssed. At a meeting of the directors last night it was decided to award the contract for building the school house to I. D. Jarvis, and such contract is now in course of prepa ration. A Mighty Sago Orubber. Bend can boast of having one of the only two Alvord sage brush grubbers 011 the coast. There may be others but their whereabouts is not known. This machine was ordered by Adam Kotzmau for use on the Johnston ranch, where he has contracted to clear 1080 acres of sagebrush land. It was delivered here by the Bend Mercantile Com pany, coming from Boise, Idaho, where it had been in use for experi ment work. The grubber cost $150. The machine works some tiling like a drag hay rake, and has heavy horizontal bars, which hold poinded, square teeth, about 18 in ches long. , It not only pulls up the sage brush but also dumps it in windrows, after the manner of a hay rake. It requires six to eight horses to pull it. John Fer guson is among those who have seen the grubber at work and he says they are a great success. The machine has not yet been taken to the ranch. With eight horses and two men to operate it seven acres of the thickest sagebrush land can !c cleared in a day ready for the plow. A similar machine is in use in the Haystack country. WORKING TOWARD BEND SURVEYING CREWS FROM ALL POINTS (Jrent Southern Railroad not Saying Much but "Sowing Wood" gltli Great Cnergy. The Oregon Kastfjrn, survey toward corps winch is working Iicnu from Madras, is making pro gress much more slowly than was expected. T,hey ae now only a don miles sojith of Madras work ing apparently a,io inc oja Col umbia Southern Hxtcusion survey, but makipg many digressions from it in a gcal, examination of the route. Engineers. Gordon and Nelson, of the Great Southern (Dufur line) have been yery quietly reconnoiter ing the Wallow. rcck basin, look ing for a way in frpm the Des chutes canyon. This concern is not takinjg brass bads to herald its preliminary voj;k, but there is pretty goojl authority for the state ment that construction Spi 30 miles south oj Dfur has been arranged for ami additional progress is im minent. Madras people look for this road first, though it seems as sured that the Columbia Southern will build out from Shaniko. It is generally, accepted tluit the Great 1 SouUlcrn js - um TOati t t KCVCr bxina vtox from i Ejlfitiifc Ibat., Cp jsurveyons are 111 tbartJMaini Miioliw,rfVtfreirf IJIfje line across tu icio 'ixauiuiira i -ountry. hc mw none 011 iits way over luit that was the current X in - T f --C1-A report in jihkcuv. ji ia wiiuimcu by reports of hunters and prospect ors from the Diamond pass region, Another force of railroad engi neers is workmg westward irom Ontario in this direction. MUCH NEW LAND IN CROP. Tumalo Neighborhood Fast Becoming Productive. Tl'MW, Or., Oct. ii. - Hdwanl White vifcitcd Tumalo this lost week. He has IcamnI a part of his fine farm, 140 acre, to. the l.ccreiu brothers for the next year. Mr. White will devote most of his time to operating tlc hay baler which he and Whiter have, ordered (rom Georgia, Winter A Sons report that they beetled some ground to alfalfa the third of last June and just three months to a day after aowing the seed they found it had rooted 16 incite ami hail made a growth of 16 inches high. How is that for alfalfa? Much fall g"raiti has leen grown around Tumalo anil it all looks well and will no doubt make the fanners smile next Three more families have located on Columbia Southern land, two miles northeast of Tumalo. Wc welcome such good people and hope to see maiiy more such settlers locate near us. Tumalo will soon Ik? able to support a good hchool ami churches, all of which go to butbl up the country. There is strong talk of another large sawmill lieiui; built near Tumalo. The Higlitower-Hiiillli wo. report mai they cannot Mtpplv the increasing de mand for lumlwr. They arw now sawing nt the full catucitv of the mill. -" "-- . ... Dorraucc llros. arc sawing sieautiy ami raitiiut keen tin with the wants of the people. They are turning out much line lituiWr. C. W. Tliornthwatte has returned from Sherman county. He reports business dull in that country. Mr. Thornthwaitc had the misfortune to lose two horses mi lii triit out ami Itacki We are iniorineti mat tue aicwniiuacr brothers have taken charge of the Ocho co mines again and are now working them. G. 11. Pulliam was at Tumalo last week, He said the alfalfa he planted last Sep tember is doing nicely and promises to make a good crop next summer. Mr. Pulliam savs this country is pood ctioitKh for him anil he will invest all his money in real estate in the Tumalo country. Mr. and Mrs. Gerkin, who have a fine farm three miles north of Tumalo, were at Tumalo last week. They have some 30 acres sown to alfalfa, which promises to make a fine crop next stumer. Mr, Hanson, on the Cash ranch just north of Tumalo, has much land seeded to alfalfa and other grasses, all of which is doing well. summer. ..... John Atkinson arrived at Tunmlooue night last week. He brought with hint from the valley 70 head of fine cattle ami calves. Born, in Bend, Nov. 2, 1905, Mr, and Mrs. L. J. Jonas, daughter. 60,0 SHEEP KILLED, Coyotes Break Up Band Near Bend. BnLOiNQ TO CHARLfiS LISTER. Varmints Ran Sheep Out on the Desert and Killed and Ate Them at Pleasure. ii 1.. 1 Coyotes broke up a band of. Charles Lister's sheep near where the Silver Lake road crosses the. Central Oregon canal, two mile' south of Bend, Monday night, and' when the animals were rounded up next day 600 were missing from the' band ot 3,400. A dozen or so shecp( carcasses were found, but no trace' of i,hc others, whfch must have been runout on the desert. Wednesday workmen employed on the lateral flume under construe-' tion to convey water to the experi ment farm saw iu. the distance a lot of sheep harried by coyotes. There. was, some aouot at nrst wuctner coyotes oj dogs were chasing the sheep but i was finally seen that they were running in a circle and frequently a sheep on the rim, would be pulled down and killed. It is presumed that these were the sheep that had been scattered from the Lister band. Lister resides at OchecQ. Coyotes arc unusually numerous and bold this (all A few days ago. a band of cattle was scattered by the varmints near where the Lister sheep were attacked. Stage drivers report tle wooda of that locality to be filled, watn tho yelping 01 tuc beasts nightly. Five Sent to tho Penitentiary. T1U month's, session of the cir cuit court at Prraevuie resulted In an unprecedented clearing oC crtav lnals from Croot connty. Jeff Yar- Bi aiima,-wwt Hi, KnaamtMiMKi cotfHtv oa a wurntHC IsmmetlhrlTufb ticc L.wremee, erMttrtrsmm$ug! horses of D. A. Findley. atJtos- land, last April, pleaded guilty and was sent to the penitentiary for five years. Charles Tillman also got five 3ears in the penitentiary Carpiu Young was sent up for three years, Don Burn's for three years, Corbett Holt two years and Lee Goodwin one year. All these were horsethieves except Holt, who was convicted of manslaughter. The Bend Mercantile Comany got judgment against the S. M. Janney estate for nearly $r,20Q and tho judgment was paid im mediately. School Society Organized. Members of the school classes above the sixth grade last night organized a society for literary work. This is designed to givo training in parliamentary usage as well as a freer scope than the school room affords for certain lines of studj'. Miss Reid, the principal, presided at the first meeting and will give general supervision and assistance in the work of the society. The officers chosen are the follow ing: President Hazel Caldwell, Vice-prisidcnt Guy McReynolds Secretary-Treasurer Thomas Reed. John Steldl to Stay. "Me leave the country? Well I guess not" said John Steidl when asked if that was the meaning of the sale of his lumbering interests. "I am quite as much interested in seeing progress and development here as I ever was aud I expect to remaiu and be a part of it. For awhile I will rest to regain my health and then I will pitch in and take au active part in business again. I have not lost a particle of my faith and my works will show it after I have rested up a little." Bids for Fuel. Proposals for supplying 40 ricks of 20-inch body pine or juniper stove wood, to be delivered ricked at the school houses as directed, will be received until 7 p. rn. Mon day Nov. 6, 1905, at the office of J. M. Lawrence, chairman of school board. The right to reject any and all bids is hereby reserved. By order of the Board of Directors. L. D. Wibst, Clerk. Posters are out announcing the Beud Fire Departments' ball on Thanksgiving Eve., Wednesday, Nov. 29, at B. M. Hall. Chicken supper will be scrV&l at Hotel Seikl. aaaaaaaalifcatoaBBaaaaaaa '' "mm