ZJ ter3G;grcxayaTi,iuiwiiiw.rJiigii BS GO I Ail Youi Jt JUL An ion IV fcMBiiir1 rBl - """"f? WK INAUGURATE tlic commencement of Kail trade by announcing to the trading public by menus of tins nd. a few of the bargains we now have for the coplc and also to tlescrftw lit a brie X "" ol the new high-grade class pt" goods we arc getting in. Many of these nre here now others are on the way in from Shaulko. We are stocking our .store with u class ol merchandise ne 1 ll-.l ...:.- I: .'.. U....I n... aL. I. I. LniM . nnli'ntinH n i .. M,,,t !...,.. 1.nu ..,! ...wt.t." ,i rt-ianiiiililn iirlt-t-tt. If Villi W-HIlt till! llCSl SCOlf I KItD'H IS tilt PUICC tl) gCl II. JK.lt V lljUmil'U, III U9 HUC, III UCUU. Ulil UUjllt a IU Ullll.l IV" ...... v.. . ..1 .. i.w.v ...... .......jc luu (,""" (.. .. rw. ....... (. ......... .. ,,.. - arc a few atteutiou callers lklow School Supplies AT Pencil Free with Every tablet School will begin in a short time now and the boys and girls must have supplies. We have them. Anil here is one thing to remember as a premium with every tablet bought we will eIvc PREE one lead pencil. Also remember ws carry the noted Teddy Bear" Tablets Tablets of all Descriptions' Pencils Inks Scratch Pads Etd.J Etc. . " : : ;. , gW Don't miss seeing the display of tablets in our win dow. It will interest you. Remember, a pencil free' with every tablet. Fresh Fruit in Season Hereafter we will always have in stock a line of fresh fruit, suitable for the season. We now have Peaches, Pears, Apples, Plums, Watermelons, Cantaloupes, Oranges and Lemons. Everything that is on the market. The best is none too good for our customers. , Ice Cream always on handFresh and Good. Imported Japanese Vases Wc have the largest and best display of vases ever shown in Central Oregon, Hack one is a handsome piece of work, beautiful and unique in design. I hi ported Japanese ntid Glass The Latest Fads. t "" " " --..-.- Toilet Soaps A fine assortment containing ,111 of the best brands. Family Liquors There has been quite a demand made upon us for a high grade class of liquors that can k ummI for medicinal and family purposes. Wh.it people wanted was a grade of liquor that they knew was pure and that wonM lx f.t to use for various medicinal pttocs Consequently, we have ordcrcil and now have in stock a line of the finest xradc of various liquors and can fulfill yoilr wants in that Miticulr. They Arc Perfectly Pure Nothing Cheap about Them. Toilet Articles, Combs and Brushes Naturally our establishment has the largest assortment of toilet articles that can be found in Hcnd and vicinity. And wc arc adding to this Hue from week to wek This line now includes, besides various other articles Combs, Brushes for the Hair, Brushes for the bath, and Finger Brushes. CANDIES Alwxiys fresl), arriving weekly. FISHING TACKLE-Tlic best in town. A Satisfied Customer Is a Store's Best Advertisement. The Scof ield Drug Co k .' IsjlWW v THE BEND BULLETIN VFor every man a square deal, no (;ss and so more.!' - 1 4 ti i i. . . - CHARMiS . ROWI5 EDITOR SUBSCRIPTION HATES: fit jreir i .x mouth. Three month. -U-y J 'InnrUblr In adnncc.) FRIDAY, AUGUST 23, 1907. REDMOND NOTES. (Continued from page 1.) Hiey heard a wagon. Tlris year it Is ev ery time a new self binder goes by, next year it will be at the tifresiiing inabilities and the year alter, if it is not already M, it will 1 at the steam and electric cars. Wc will probably' be pumping water from our deep weir 011 Tuesday. The gasoline engine is in place and the pump head Is to be put lri. ' P. S. Stanley, 'of the D. I. & T. Co., ias been ipenui"& "some time here lately. Mr, Gibson is kept busy these days .-finning liii self binder. We presume .lie wine is true of I O. Hanieu's. The two I). I. & I. oonstrisdikm cumps iavc been consolidated and are now running as one under the direction of ).-jn P.eeu. Kveotodyscemsr to think that l. M. by has the Whole segregation beaten ,1: oats. ' We have not seen them but are 4U1I iff: hi a H he has. T. M. Alcorn was in our neighborliood !vedncday aiftl Thursday delivering .tereoscope and views and later left for 'over the motfntaitts" by private 0011 eyoncc. II. A. Slicnele of North IJakota is vis ting with on old friend, JJ M. Hby, and jxprewes hiufs!f as wiy well pleasttl vith the country- I'rieifds of Mr. John TrUler, Ottumwo, towa, will Iks pleased to kuow that he .otttemplates spending tin. wnter here Igain H" writes "I coult camp un-k-r a juniper and come out letter in the sjring tllaM '' 'J''UK m tne l,e8t ot 'uuses here. ' The farewell reception given Tuesday i Mrfi, and M1'ones by the ladles of The hall was tailily dcaratrd and bountiful tables were spread, llcing of the sterner sex and having plowing to do at that'tlme, the reporter was left out about refreshment time, Fut we know tlut it was bountiful, samptuous, cl. gant, and seeral bthfcr nice things for we liave broken Meat vflth too many of the Redmond cook to be fooled. Mrs. Lon Reed tinned to Dcnd Satur day. I. C. Ilraclfc, interested in the I'ort-land-Allraiiy, AlbatiyHugene and I'M-gene-Ontario electric railroad was in town Tuesday. It looks at though vc would have ill kinds of railroads before lotij,. Rosland Happening. (Too Ute for tait rL ) . The raiti has passed end farming will b? renewed again in full blast. Mr. Tool of Rosland has rented the .station from Wm, Upward, Geo. Rogue started from Rosland to the station Saturday with Mr. Pool's household effects. The two Mis Ilakers left our commun ity 011 Tuesday's sUgc. Their departure li sadly regretted. Chas. Carmichall, proprietor of Ros land Hotel, made trip to Rend Tues day.rf He alo mle Hrincvillc a call. Ed Rotuk Mcorted a mrty of tomtits t J I'aulina and East lakes Sunday, Mr. Jolly hns accepleil a situation in the Rutland llotrl, commencing Mon day. Thcrman Mofiit has been eiigagel aa a luy hand on the Caldwell ranch, I'aulina. A gentleman passwl through town one day last week with monkeys and other animals, but for some reason he failed to how in our toHii. Six wagon of emigrant passed through town Thursday ou their way to Rose City. Allen Trobee is making the board tim ber fly these days. Don Caldwell rettirfied )tomt I'riduy from SImiiIUo, loaded' with fruiht for Ruslaud'H store. Mr. and Mrs. Ritchie have moved into the Kourk residence, recuutly vacated by Mr. I'ools. h. Alliiighnm and Mr. Marion regis t;rcd at Rosland Hotel Sunday. Oio, Sly rommeiired hajiug last t'k and is just maklflg the hay fly Oe Realty lus his ent're'er jp of hay harvcsU'4 Mrf A Slrotls reluuit'il liome roul Problems That Confront The Irrigator. Irrigating- on a Hillside. One ofthc best examples of high clan jtication which has been ob served is the watering of a field of notatoes on a htllsiile It cost the owner and irrigator of thin piece of ground three years of hard labor and bitter experience to learn to run his furrows between tows in such, a way as to prevent scouring. At first lie attempted (o rlih his fur rows diagonally across the hillside, but the grade was too steep and the water scoured the furrows, while his crop of potatoes wn3 a failure owing to the lack of water at the head of his rows atid the over abundance at the lowcf ends. The tic.-ct year he ran his furrows around the hill, but they did not conform to the contour of the ground suffi ciently to altogether prevent scour ing, and his crop was poor. Final ly, he has fitted the curve of his furrows to the contour of the hill in such a way as to prevent nil .scour ing, and now his crop 6'f potatoes from this hillside is as good as any crop he raises on comparatively level ground. Cure of Laterals. Laterals, like machinery, need more of less constant attention when in use. If they are neglected, breaks, leaks, ana blocking of the channel may occur, und probably at a tilne when water in most utiud ed. A heavy lorm may cntiws the washing out of portion of the lower bank in the lateral, especially 011 a hillside. Such n break uitist be hpeedily repaired. Unceasing annoyance and trouble in the oper ation of latentU is caused by goph ers, or prairie squirrels, which bur row holes on hillside slopes and will burrow 'from the bed or side of a canal or lateral down through the iuwli uuui 1 tuuiui tu iuc miiiuLi r again, perhaiw ijor more feet be low th' ' starting pn'Mt Wliei', water is first turned it u a canal In the sprin the water finds its way ; liiruugu mcv ;iuii.-. t n-.ic 11111.3 nnly be Dardl pef t'srttble at first",' but vsf7 'oon uttain juch nropor tions as to eiidaugcr the lateral banks. Any method used to ex terminate pest! like gophers and prairie dogs is n tedious one. A method frequently adopted is to drown them out, but this is ndt al ways successful. Ilcfore the water h turned into the canal, a ditch rider goes down the line of ditch blocking all the lower holes or exits from the burrows that may be dis covered After the lower holes are blocked the water is turned into the canal, filling the burrows and drowning the gophers. Of course many .holes may escape attention, and Careful supervision of the canal and its banks must be exercised whenever gophers are numerous. Many formulas for poison have been compounded and successfully used for exterminating prairitf dogs and pocket gophers. The Kntiins experiment station has recently published a valuable bulletin on the subject of "Destroying Prairie Dogs and rocket Gophers. Laterals becohic blocked by the caving of the upper banks or the trampling of ooe stock or by the deposit of refuse from the main canal, which may collect in one spot nnd form an imperfect dam. The laterals must lc kept clear of debris arid an uninterrupted flow maintained. Cost of Applying Water. The cost of applying water to crops varies greatly according to the skill of the irrigator, the con tour of the fields, and the available head of wnter. The laud nil one farm may have : bloplug aiirface well adapted fur the application of water, and 011 another a rolltig, broken surface over which much t,fuic and labor must be put in properly npplyiig the water to the lIOt).. (Jilt i'.'llll 111(1 V Lk! MIIIij1i,'. ' ' - -r, - - 1 v.i tli a full he J' J ol water suliiJcut to enable tli"i rrlgntor to spread tt..tir over ! I elds Iwtu'MHi Inlet-. als quickly and thoroughly, whlKj another farm may have so poQr n ' ncau 01 water mat a greater amount of lbor t'ud ndre time tenet l'i) spent in irrigating the ramc area The method used m Irrigating dif ferent crops must also be taken into consideration. It takes much more time for one man (d Irrigate an arrc of potatoes by the furrow system than an acre of wild or native hay by the flooding system. In the first instances the otutocs may be irrigated by running water through every other furrow, which is often done in the first watering of jwta Iocs. Ou the other hand, to irri gate an acre of wild or native hay may require duly the few moments necessary to turn enough water from a lateral to cover the entire aere. It Is therefore difficult to state even approximately the cost of applying water to crojis. Gov ernment llulletiii No. 145. ' Alfalfa liny for Hogs, The Kansas experiment station has recently reported the results of experiments made during the fall of 1898 to test the value of alfalfa hay fed to pigs receiving all the grain they would cat. The pigs, averaging 125 pounds moll. U'fr- filnpfd In Infu it It.n i. "-... ..p.w ..H.. ... .w... U. IUH I. larpe pens provided wltlt shelter sheds open t the south. Alfallu hay of the bust quality was fsd dry in a large flat trough, the pigs ie ccivini! in addition nil llm liln.-l.. hulled while Kafir corn thov would eat without waste. The animals were given more hay than they would cat, and they consumed ouly the leaves and finer stems. Itegin uing November 2 j und continuing nine weeks one lot ol nitia wa' tl alfalfa hay and Kafir-corn meal dry; n second lot, Kafir corn dry; k third lot. h afir-roru 1111ml drv- ami a fourth lot, Kafir-corn meul wet '1 he gains per hou in the nine weeks InnJi the llITeriit imMin,la of feeding were an follows: .. ' . . I'ouiuli Kaflr-iorn meal dry and alfalfa lwy.00,9 Ivuftr corn uultfilu - . Kwilr-forii mart fed dry '.!'.!! '.', ', '. '. '.$. ivuur-coni iiici ibii wei , .bj.j At the end of llii evrwMim.iit tl,.. alfalfa fnl pigs were well lattened and were irarktted. It is cstim.it ed that under normal londlti'.ii'i it ould have taken four or I vv vut Us longer to put the other lots into .tfOOU IlldTki'tablri rVihliflhil. -J'licM'wnlroiUfctHim alfnlfu hay iMlh Kafir corn meul fed dry over the meal alone led dry was mote than 73 per tent. Ten Iiors in nine weeks wrre fed Mrt pounds of Alfalfa hay and lor each 7 t pond of alfclfn hy fol wltlt the dry Kafir corn meal the hogs gained t pouinU Over thov: having dry kanr-enru meal alone a gain of HM wutds'orMirk r ton of alfalfa hay. The results aic not due to the feeding value of the alfalfa alone, hut aImj li its influ ence in aiditnt the hoj-s to tcltct digest the Kafir corn. The ulfuii 1 hav nlo gUvc a variety to the ra tion, making it mote iipctiiiig and inducing the hogs to eat more grain. The 10 hogs having gram alone ate 3.885 pounds ol dry Kafir-corn meal, while the 10 hog having hav and grain ute .1,670 omuls of the Kaffr-cnrii meal and 056 pounds of alfalia hay The hay-fed hdg. ate mnie grain and Sained inure for ach bilshul eaten. In a former cx'ietihieiit at this college pigs were pastured througli the summer ou alfalfa with n light feeding of com. After deducting the probable guiu from the corn the gain per acu from the alf.illa jws ture was 770 kiiiuiU of pork. These tacts indicate that to pr duce pork most cheaply the Kansas farmer must have nllalfu pasture 111 autuuier nun nnaiia nay in winter I'armem' llulletiii No. 7 lie Suited Her. "The man J ever wed," M ,dd, "Mint have urriiiplikhu tnl f. he must play uml mhk Mml d.,i AihI rid nnl low ami fnc4. And lake a skillful b.,,,,1 a( iidue, A t'-nnls rsD.mt ,.i,( And rlinitti the iMHimling yuif , to.p Across the dewy Iteld," Tlioiiiiihw.Mil,. uiu h,lll( a bald and ihi and lov,, He o.iiMn'l miiu ..r tlmice or play, Or friiu- (.r rih -r m.w. Ilediiln t .art-a ri. f.Mgi.lf And JtevtrUiU.iidlwua; Hit He . ... M kgii u 1 iMdT- oll MVi IV)vii. IjiI! aj.in milli -New Vork Hcialil . II. IIANRh ABSTRACTER of 'HTLIIS NOTARY I'liJU.It I'l.rlitftrsuce I,lo uur.ni-r Rn.ly llouily K'llMtdr, Cuiiii jnywiiiM "I" IU I! 'I UK. ovnutjt