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About The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Or.) 1903-1931 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 30, 1907)
z&n THE BEND BULLETIN. ' - v i'jmn, VOL. V BKND, OREGON, FRIDAY, AUGUST 30, 1907. NO. 31 ft t Bocause y(o aro 6cg tho samo and bottor quality at ocldscr margin is a very good reason why yo'ti will find our store tho best placo to buy anjhing in tho lino of Groceries, Djrygoods, Furnish ings, Shoes, Hardware, Sash and Doors, Paijijs and Oils tS pine tree store I!. A. SATIMilt, I'HOI'KllUOR r At Ilcnii, Oregon. A Complete Stock of DRY Rough, Surfaced nnd Moulded -LUMBER- At (tend, Oregon. All Widths, Lengths and Thicknesses Reasonable Prices flood tirades Dry Stock inch C0MMp:f DIM ENS' W SHIPLAP RUSTIC T. & 0. PL00RIN.0 BEADED CKIMtyQ WINDOW JAMBS WINDOW CASINO HEAD BLOCKS O. G. UASEHOARD STAIR TREADS WATER TABLE O. 0. HATTIN8 MOULDINGS P. II. I). PATENT ROOKING PENCE PICKETS SHINGLES irrcr, tc. Lumber Dellrercd at Low Cost Anywhere on The Loads of The D. I. & P. Co., or The C S. I. Co. I CUSTOM PllliD MILL IN CONNECTION. APPLY TO Central Oregon Banking & Trust Company I5I3ND, OREQON .J PROFESSIONAL CARDS C. S. BENSON, ATTORNEY AT LAW Bend, - Oregon. W. P. AIYERS Land nnd Irrigation Lawyer I.AUH.AW. OKHOON of (lie interior- Practice In nil Court ami Department U. C. COE, M. D. Physician nnd Surgeon Ol'I'lCK OVK IIANJC Hit THIflbt Cclcpbonc Connection DAY Tlti.ltl'HONlt NO. 31 1IUND- ORUOON DR. I. L. SCOFIELI) DENTIST IIKNI), OKUOON unit In UtiiR Mute oil Wtill Blifrt , OIlUc llmir. 911 111. lu 4 ! (If nw t'liuii No. w HriMtiiw I'lmiic No M. V. TURLEY, M. D. Physician ami Silicon Ul't'lCK OVKR COUNI.lt IIUUO ST0HK, 1JRNI), OKHOON IWmuul II. King w Ouctln.Jr John K KullocL King, Ouerln & Kollock ATT0RNI2YS-AT-LAW occici.: ink IliilUllnc. .llcnil, Oictoti 61a McKay 111.1 , . IVtllmJ, Otriiuii kvrUl utttlillull Kirrit In quratlum rtUtliiK tu Vlct, l.au.l miU (lrncial Coiillou l.in, I'lMCTICK IN AM. 1'llllKKAl, A Nl '.STATIC COURTS. General Practice THE ' First National Bank of Prineville. Klalilllicl 1888. Capital, Surplus nd Undivided Profits, $100,000.00 II I' Allfii Will Wuriwrllrr T. M llolilnlu . ILIulilnln I'lrtMrnt .Vice I'lt-dilriit . Caililcr .m1uiiI Catlilcr E. C. PARK Importer nml Breeder of 111(111 GRADl- Poland China Hogs Black Langshun Cliickbns Young Stock for Sale. UKDMOND, ORl'.GON CAUGHTINLAWTOILS Mrs. F.C. Rowlee Arrested on Serious Charge. TRAIWCKEI) IN IMMORALITY AIIckciI that Stic I'laccd Francl Cllrl In Homo of Shame Claims Another Woman' Dnlio n tier Own. Two or three weeks ogo news itcniK npcarf(l In the Portland pa pers fitnthiK tlmt Alice Francis, formerly of Iknd, hail lcen taken 1. . from n disorderly house by officers of the Juvenile Court nnd woman proprietor nrrcKtcd for keeping a girl not of ngc in Mich a resort. Shortly r.fler these items appeared, Sheriff Elkins came to Ilcml and quietly arrested M.rs, F. C. Rowlee for complicity in this unsavory ufair. The" Francis girl had nctcd as nurse girl for several months at the Rowlee home and Mrs. Rowlee was arretted on the charge of hav ing placed her in tile disorderly house in Portland. The arrest was kept very quiet although several knew of it in Iknd. Rowlee at once left (or Portland stating that hLs wjfc was innocent nnd that he could easily patch up the affair, but later Mrs. Rowlee was obliged also to go to Portland. While there awaiting trial another "breezy" story has blown up in which one, Mrs. Tomliu, clajms to be the mother of the pretty little boy whom Mrs. Rowlee has had in Iknd and whom she has claimed as her own for the past two years. It is a spicy story of a "lxrrowcd" child, .scheming women, and a plan to .secure Rowlee's property by hav ing it deeded to a supposed. to be sou. l lie telegram tells the story as follows: If the allegations made by Mrs Sarah Tomliu, who planned to take forcible imsm'ssiou of her 3-year-old boy at the Oregon Hotel, are borne out by developments, Mrs. Norma Kowlec "borrowed" the child two years aeo with the intention of de ceiving her husband, !. C. Uowlte, into the belief that the little fellow was their own offspring. Iter intention 111 thus deceiving Kowlec, as alleged, was to cause htm to deed his property to the boy, the woman expecting to profit materially from the shrewd trick in tlu years to come, 'as well as to re ceive more liberal financial treat ment directly from the man who be lieved himself the father -of the child. Aftcrwnrd she wanted to adopt the boy to legalize the turn ing over of property interests, and meeting with a .stubborn refusal from his mother, according to Mrs. Totut la's account of the Interesting affair, refused to yield possession of him, with the result the real moth er plotted to take him away from his custodians by force. Is under Indictment. Not the least sensational feature of the affair, as now develops, is the fact that Airs. Kowlec is under in dictment on the charge of placing Alice Francis, a ward of the Juven ile Court, in the disorderly North End house conducted by Dorothy Darlington. The information charg ing her with this offense was filed by District Attorney John Manning in the circuit court, August 8, and it is alleged the crime was commit ted last April 19. The woman is nt liberty on a bond of jfaoo. The arrest of Mrs, Rowlee on a warrant issued from the circuit court was made by the sheriff of Crook county. Up to date the authorities for various reasons linve endeavored with entire success to keep the pub lic from knowingNof Mrs. .Rowlee's arrest Dorothy Darlington pleaded guilty yesterday before Juvenile Court Judge Frazer to contributing to the delinquency of Alice Francis and Essie Watkins, wife of John Conrad, proprietor of the Pullman saloon, who conducts another dis orderly North Iviitl establishment, is to be tried oil the same charge at the September term of court. Mrs, Rowlee was arraigned in the Juv enile Court last evening (last week Friday) and entered a plea of not guilty, her hearing being set for Monday. To add to the complications of the .sensational affair, which rami fies in every direction, it is alleged by Mr. Rowlee that the Francis girl, who acted ns nurse for the Tomliu baby for eight months, has been trying to blackmail him, as serting not only that Mrs. Rowlee is her mother, but that she herself is the mother of William Dudley Tomlin, as Mrs. Tomlin declares, or of Carlton Rowlee, as Rowlee and his wife assert. Mr. Rowlee in the most positive language avers he is the father ol Carlton Rowlee, or William Dudley Tomlin. lie says he can prove this fact beyond a doubt. Mrs Tomlin says she ha3 the most direct proof tint such is not the case. In the presence of Rowlee and another person last night she emphatically rebuked Mrs. Rowlee for making such a claim, and it is said the woman remained quiet and made no response. Everything tends to indicate that family skeletons galore will be dragged forth from their closets and rattled in the limelipht of publicity when the affair reaches the courts. has become public," said Mrs. Tom lin. "I do not desire any notoriety, neither do I waut to be placed in the light of attempting to kidnap my own baby. If my plan to take him hud ended all right it could not have been called kidnaping. I went to the Oregon hotel last night and had a long talk with Mr. and Mrs. Rowlee. 'When my baby was tram, in April, 1005, Mrs Rowlee came down from Iknd, Qr., nnd told me that if I would let her take him she would not only give him n good home but would secure for him all of Mr. Rowlee's property. She told me he was an Kuglishman, a man of peculiar temperament, and would leave all his property to the child. I had to work for a liv ing nnd let her take him, believing this would be the best for the boy. It was in June, when lip was about six weeks old, that she took him away. Property Deeded Over. "Since then I have been informed by Mrs. Rowlee her husband has deeded all his proKrty to the boy, wliicli lie will get a part ut 21 years of age, if Mr. Rowlee Is yet livinir and the remainder at Mr. Rowle.' death. If Mr. Rowlee died, I xia uerstauu tue ooy is to get every thing. "Mrs. Rowlee came down here to be arraigned before the Juvenile Court on the charge of placing Alice Francis in a house of bad repute. While here she has en deavored to get me to relinquish all claim to my son, so that she and Mr. Rowlee may adopt him. She believes this would legalize the transfer of property td the child. When I refused she said they would keep him anyhow, and then I grew angry and, well, you know the rest." It is denied by Mr. Rowlee that his wife is responsible for the plac ing of Alice Francis in Dorothy Darlington's house, "Carlton Rowlee is my own boy," said Mr. Rowlee, "and I know what I am talking about. Of Mrs. Tomlin, however, I have nothing ill to say, Alice Francis nursed my boy for eight months, from August, 1906, to April, 1907 She now claims that Mrs. Rowlee is her mother and that she herself is the mother of my boy. These things can all be shown to be false. I have not the slightest fear of the outcome. More Interesting Facts. Monday's Telegram discloses more of this affair oud says that Judge Frazer of the Juvenile Court mid Deputy District Attorney Gal loway, atter investigating matters, (.Continued 011 page 4,) HARRIJI1AN IN BEND Railroad Magnate Visits This Section. TO INSPECT ROUTE OF C. & E. Will Travel via Slaters over Proposed Intension of Above Koad llarly Comtructlon fixpected. K. II. Ilurriman, the great rail road magnate, is expected to arrive in Iknd this afternoon or evening, accompanied by his two young sons and a party of fricnd3 who have been spending the past two weeks wun mm ai nis nunung loogc on Pelican Hay, on Upper Klamath lake. They arc making a hurried run through Central Oregon, osten sibly for the purpose of jwrmitting Mr, Harriman to inspect a small part of this great Inland Empire that has been so vociferously and so justly clamoring for railroad trans portation for the last few years; and as circumstances have developed during the week, also to allow ,Mr. Harriman to view out the proposed extension of the CorvalhV& East ern, an extension that now appears to be all the more certain in view of Harriman's visit to these parts. It is hoped that Mr. Ham'man will spend at least a day in Bend, look ing over the local field. From Bend Mr. Harriman and his party will proceed through Sis ters as far us they can go with their automobiles, probably to Cash Creek. From there thev will tak saddle horses and, accompanied l a pack train, will travel over tLt old survey of the Corvallis & East ern to the present end of the line They will then return,, possibly to Bend, and proceed throueh Red mond nnd Madras m Shaniko, from where Mr. Harriman will leave for the East. This itinerary will take Mr. Harriman through a portion of the timber belt, through part of the irrigated section and through the great wheat fields, nrqund Madras, and he should easily see where much traffic for n future railroad could be sccurtd, making that rail road profitable from the beginning. Last Tuesday three automobiles passed through Bend from Portland on their way to meet Mr. Harriman at Fort Klamath. With the auto mobiles were J. P. O'Brien, presi dent of the Corvallis & Eaiteru and general manager of the O. R. & N., 11 ml F. S. Stanley, general manager of the Deschutes Irrigation & Pow er Company. These gentlemen were making a trip post haste to Fort Klamath and were not letting the grass grow under the wheels of their automobiles. The Bulletin get tue statement from one who was in Portland at the time Mr. O'Drieu left there and who was running should reach Bend this afternoon or evening. Those acquainted with the hurried nature of the start from Portland have been asking the rea son for it. To them there seems to be one plausible if not certain cause, for it. The day Mr. O'Brien left Portland news had Just reached there that crews were being trans ferred from the North Bank onto the Oregon Trunk Line construc tion work. That naturally looked as though Hill was going to take c hand in building into Central Ore got', which would j;ivc Mr. O'Brien .sufficient cause to conclude that it, was time something was done to protect liia chiefs interests in this section." That's one reason given, by some interested watchers, for this hurried trip, enabling Mr. O'Brien to confer with his chief. While here Mr. O'Brien talked very encourogingly regarding an extension of the C. 8c E. While be would make no positive state ments, yet he left the impression that the extension would positively be made and that work would be gin in a short time. ' He said it was 70 miles to where they were now operating the C. & E., and that they could extend that line to Bend in three months if it came to a show down. GRADING ON DESCHUTES Are Transferrins Crews and Macttln cry from North Bank Road, 0 the Orecon Trunk Line. acquainted with the facts in the case, that Mr. O'Brien suddenly decided or received orders (which ever was the case) one evening after dark, to meet Mr. Harriman in the Klamath country and bring htm through Central Oregou. Things moved rapidly thereafter for a few hours. The three automobiles were engaged and hurriedly run onto cars without giving their drivers time to make necessary repairs and replace old patched up tires with new ones. A special train was made up, and Mr. O'Brien and Mr. Stan ley left Portland at 1 1 o'clock p. in. arriving at Shaniko at 5 o'clock the next moruiug. From there they immediately started on an overland run to Fort Klamath, passing through Bend Tuesday and stopping here for a few hours. Pick ing Up Harriman and his party, the return was begun. A visit was made to Odell lake, after which the party proceeded to Odell, where last nlRht was speut. They ex pected to leave there at 9 o'clock this moruiug, and if they have fair Construction crews arc now at work near the mouth of Deschutes river grading on the Oregon Trunk Line, the line building up that river into Central Oregon and to Bend. About 100 men and 50 teams are employed. Crews which have finished work on the North Bauk road are being transferred to the Trunk Line work as rapidly as they can be obtained. This news was brought to Bend by Q. M. Cornett who passed through town the first of the week. Mr. Cornett had recently returned from a trip to outside places and while away met W. F. Nelson, president of the road, who gave Mr. Cornett the above information. Mr. Nelson said: "We are not say ing much about it nud arc working along very quietly but in about 60 days we will be literally tearing; out the side of this Deschutes river canyon by our grading. We nrc transferring men nnd machinery from the North Bank as rapidly as they finish there and can be secured for this work, and in n short time will have crews scattered all alonj; the river." Which lends strength to the oft repeated statement that Hill will have a hand in building the Ore gon Trunk Line. Of course it may be a fact that the Oregon Trunk is entirely independent of Hill and that this line is only taking advan tage of so mauy men being relieved from work on the North Bank, and is transferring them to its own line. But the public will continue to be lieve when it sees North Bank crews working on the Oregon Trunk that Hill either owns the latter road or is working hand in glove with it. Such a state of affairs would tend to explain Harriman's .hurry to build iuto Central Oregon, And the Corvallis & Eastern is the only line by which Harriman can beat Hill iuto this section, should Hill decide to push the construc tion of the Oregon Trunk Line. School Will Begin on Sept. 9. The Bend school board announces that school will not begin until the second week of September, on Moil day, the 9th. ft