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About The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Or.) 1903-1931 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 20, 1907)
A SWQt . THE BEND BULLETIN "-"or a very man a square deal, no tcss anil no more." CIIAKI.KS 1. KOWlt ...HDITOR SUBSCRIPTION RATH& One year -. b x month. ..... T"ttte month. ............ Mnmrtabtr tn ailrmfc.) "ft"' FRIDAY, SlJl'TUMUKk 30, 1907. NAA1B TUG FARM. Qrccnhorn Contributes a Pew iMore Ideas In a Readable Letter. I have licctt thinking how nice it louMbctf all the farmers In this l)es hutes allcy wohM unmc their farms, lie a good pull for the Ilultetiti, too, ns , , t would ltlcelv print most of the farm I 1 stationery that all the farmers would .hen have. It would eertmnly loolc fine m a letter head. Suolt names as Moun tain Meadows, jGolden 1'iclds, Italic Urovc or The Willows. The Willows is ) iy oiru selection for my farm so nt one I f le ncftl appropriate tlwt. We of Red mond ami vicinity ruust look out for .-mall details to add to our popularity since the raitrosd ignores us so strenu ously. We had hoped for a little notice when the Moguls went through but they just boiled on with their chins in the air, and left us looking ler them. Vl"le the sttrrttors were looking for irossiin; at Clioe I'aIIs we thought for a time the proposed route vtould tw moved from where it was to where it -nasi) t ami make rnncviiie tne ter M mnus. And appropos of this some wag started the story of the Yankee and the Irishman in the Klondike who after Jong mouths of work and waiting for a 'ch st like at last rsvc it tip and the .'ankee suggested to the Irishman that V ti a repe erouml ' his neck ami let ..m st turn aroubd and exhibit him for . uo-'tcy. The Inshtnan agrertl with .he proviso that lie he allowed to take a aih along with them. "What for?"' In Blrtx! the Yankee. "Why," said Vat, 7a ell the people which end of the 'ttiuf, the monkey is on." Hut it ''ulti't work in oar case for we re still the monkeys as far as the rail ad ts concerned. Hut we must try ami I rontenred with one of The Bulletin's m.1- if'ill oWiije us that way. If 1 Kit re w stick to our ok! modes of do ne things. They are nU so bad anyway. The tinkle Of the freight bells on the six iorsc teams minjtleS with the rum Me of ;c hcavv wagons as they roll along if ugh the cloud i of dust, tlte whir uf ac stage wheels; the shouts of the 'rivers as the noble steeds pressing to 'tic coltan resli along with their human eikrht are impressive to say the least, nd for most of us they form a distinctive T-ciod In life that can never be forgotten. VnJ in years to come when the semes e changed anil the earialn dropped pon them all wc will often And cmr cives looking backward toward tlsese .aterestine, scene of our (lioueer days. Gkukkiiorx. Sold 200 Thorouch'bred Rams. J. R. Bukcr, agent for .the Prine ville Livestock and Land Co., re cently sold sod head of thorough bred Ratnbouilet and Delaine rams to Lou McCulley and other sheep men in this vicinity. Price $12 per head. Buker and McCulley have started to Crook county for them. It is said that this is the Srst time within so years that such rams have bcen'"sold for less than ( $:o per bead. "The firm expects to 1 sen more 01 tnese rams in tuts vicin . ity. Those who paid $12 for them ! were fortunate. Lakcview Herald. Death of J. 12. Coleman. Lust Sunday uftcrnoou nbcutt 2:30 o'clock J. K. Coleman passed nvvny after uti illness of Several weeks, I'ltucral services were held Tues day afternoon nt tile residence, Rev. G. R. Short officiating. Inter ment was made In the Ik ml cem etery. Mr. Coleihnn had been n resident of lktul for the past three years, having come here in October, igaj. His death was due to n serious at tack of bowel trouble. .. The pall bearers were R. 1). Mitt Tirr. t ir n.,:ii rv i rni-!.,t.t. ""''":."'"' "' ";" U. a, .battier i U. Minor and 11 II. Davies. Past Horses at Prineville Pair. The date of the Crook County Fair has btcn dcferrctl two days, so that it will begin on the 17th instead of tlte 15th Of October ns previously announced. The change in dales was made so ns to permit the bringing of some racing horses here from the fair nt Hums, thus insuring two or three lively races more than was originally intended. The Crook County Kair will ter minate on Tuesday, thessd, instead of on Saturday, the 19th. Review. Will Know Better Hereafter. In spite of the numerous warn ings he has received against the practice, Dr. Rosenberg has per sisted in chopping the stovevvood for the kitchen, until this morning he chopped his thumb almost loose from his hand. Now lie is wiser. After the injured hand was catetlJ for the doctor went and bought 11 brand new ax and prose 11 ted it to Mrs. Rosenberg with his compli ments. Review. rrooienis 1 nar loniroiu mc irrigator. :; j A J. H. HANEiR, ABSTRACTER of TITLES NOTARY ri'BI.IC Hire Insaraocc. Mte Insurance, Purely Itond., Kcat UaUtr. Cmvrjsaclag UIVKVII t.-. . . OKI'ODN The Central Ore gon Banking &b Trust Company ISCQX-0ATED vn. Capital 525,000,00 Transacts a General Bank ing Uuslness. Acts as Administrator, lix ccutor or Trustee of Estates Issues Drafts and Bunk Aloncy Orders on all Foreign Countries. Interest on Time Deposits Safe Deposit Boxes. Fire Insurance. John jHcidl, President J. V.. Sawhlll. Vice-President and Cashier DRN'D, OREGON Peaches and grapes and all ether 1 fruits at the news stand. rr MAGAZINE READERS lUHJcf Ui&KUfn pcawvauutucuitd.iMxIitedes sad 'amdea tboul CtUotsia sad all As I u WL Jtqwh am c&wrrfiy jouwul a amthlf pubhcMhoa dci4a to Uo firsuog bin uU of Uw t MAS ST A 7UMIAM WMCM M -boot ct 7) pip, coeUiaiaa I2Q coloftd pk.Uop.th, J fJ7 pJcluw.,. spot k OUorsia K,,'J , ' Tol . . ; $2.75 AMfoc. ::..':.: $r.so $r.5o ajaai $0.50 arsax Cat tU lUi ajraMasa aaJsssd will 110 io' SJJNaJEt-'MAGAZINE Aiits hxop'.ritDc, MHRAnboo Columbia Southern RAILWAY. PAMi:.NC)!K TKAI.V TIM I! CARD. Interrelation of lilevntlon, lixpns tiro, Soil nml Knlnfnll. The great variety of conditions under which irrigation it found either desirable or tuniecc$iuy is intelligible only upon consideration of the interrelation of elevation, ex posure, soil, and rainfall. In north em Idttlto and ttrrtlictsivin Wash ington there is an elevated region of rolling laud with an average rainfall of n little above 20 inches, a clay loam often of cotimdernble depth nnd underlaid by clny and naturally well drained, yet reten tive of moisture by virtue of its fine texture rcMilting from decomposi tion of basaltic rock. Irrigation is found unnecessary. The depth and character of the soil mid its slope and exposure combine to in sure maximum duty of rainfall In adjacent valleys ol both Idaho and Washington there nte land but little nearer sea Ictc! and with only n little less rainfall, but with Mtil ol alluvial character or rcMikmir from volcanic action or decomposition of granite, nil being coarse, light, and uonrctcntive. Here the character ol the soil reduces the duty of rain fall, and regular irrigation is found essential to the growth of fruits. At lower levels, both in Idaho and Washington, arc found fruit regions where manifestly deficient rainfall accompanies deep through nouretentive soil, higher heat, mid greater evaporation, and (Insert conditions an only relieved by am ple and systematic irrigation. And yet thins occur nlwi exceedingly hue soils in' some (tortious of the desert regions which are very re tentive of moisture and would se cure the highest duty from rainfall if there were enough of it to enable them to net effectively. Upon such soils a maximum duly of irrigation water is .secure, and the amount re quired is relatively .small. The occurience of these conditions is not nlways to be measured by lirffc areas. They are found in different parts of tlte same region , in some cases, 111 fact, within the hunts of the same fuim, makine an under standing of their influences and effects all the more essential. In California similar instances of the interrelation of soil, rainfall. exposure, and local climate, ami their influence upon horticultural practice with reference to irrigation, could be cited in great number. A tew must .suffice. On the famous river-bank fruit land of the Sacramento Valley. irrigation is resorted in only in years, of minimum rainfall, when the luccipttatlnu is cihnps only about the average. At nearly the same level, as already cited, wjtere the soil Is shallow nnd overlies liardpan, regular irrigallon is re quired. Hut still more marked contrast is found in the foothills within sight of these valley fruit lauds, where with twice the nver age rainfall irrigation must begin early in the summer and continue until autumn is well advanced, be cause, first; the slope is so rapid that much rainfall is lost by run off; second, the soil is too shallow altovc bed lock to hold much water. Hvcn here, -however there comes In a vocal variation of measurable effect. When the sod lies upon vertical plates of bed rock much water is retained ttctwecu litem and ts ca pable of being reached by Irec roots, v Idle soil lying upon flat plates of rock has no such subtcr raueau reservoir. In the foothill region there also occurs exceptional exiKisure from slotes Incing the midsummer sun in an atmosphere whose dryness is but slightly ameliorated by the influence of air currents from the coast In the valley and foothill con jrast, just cited, the tiuirrigated valley looks up lo the irrigated foothills. There are also places where uuirrignted hill slopes look down upon irrigated valleys. The uplands of Stiii Diego County arc nearer the coast than those above the Sacramento Valley. They, loo, have n rainfall usually ample for deciduous fruits suited to their ele vation. Their rolling plateaus of deep soil, free from excessive heat and evaporation which occur on highlands farther inland and 5,00 milts farther north, produce very successfully without irrigation. In this region, however, the rainfall iu the valley liclow is often less than the needs of even deciduous fruit trees, and waters flowing from mountain snows through n region of uuirrigJtcd uplands must be used to irrigate them. Still another strikitlg contrast, and one involving another and wholly different factor, is found in the San Joaquin Valley. Xcir Visalifl, two feet above nvrr nul four feet above the surruuiiditig plaint, there is ti large area of deep alluvial soil with much decayed vegetable matter. The laud is moistened by underflow from tla- river, nnd, though the rainfall is but 7' t inches, deciduous fruits with loams of great depth and good are grown without irrigation In rt.teutivcnes and with an average I the same countv and only 18 miks ramf.il! of approximately 20 inches, 'distant, there are areas of rn.li loam Complete Slock of At llciiil, Oregon. DRY KmiKli, Surfaced 11111! Moulded -LUMBER- At Ik.ni), Oregon, All Widths, Lengths and Thicknesses INCH COMMON DIMKNtflON SHIl'LAl RUSTIC T. & Ct. 1'I.OOKINO Kemdiiiihlc KAI)HP CKIMNC. Umber , 'WINDOW JAMliS Dcllrercd nt Prices WINDOW CASINO law Coil 0od HKAI1 III.OCKS WeVcc.1 O. O. HASItllOAKI) r. , , tirades -STAIR TRKADS ri 11 i lli )ry WATKR TAIII.K . Ilic IU. & 1. O. O. HATTINS r, "., or Slock MOULDINGS '"c C b ' Co' I. II. 1). PATUNT ROOI'INO IMtNCIt 1MCKKTS SHINOI.KS UTC. HTC. CUSTOM I'llllI) MU.I. IN CO.NNIICTION. APPLY TO Central Oregon Development Company IJENl), - OREGON ,JO I koulli. I bouud wo j IMILV r.a. 1 STATIONS. I Jo I ' I 4 1 t4 17 "4 S4 J s i I) North-houml wo. 1. DAILY AKSIVS A.M. ...... nionH......i 11 yj .....)llou 11 19 Jilnk..... II le ...Vj. 1 11 u Ktondykc i 4J . .....rtummtt : 10 4 . Hay Canyon Junction- , 10 n ...McUuiiaM. f IO ll ..I)clIo 10 o) .Moru .i 9U I'.riklnTlllc-. ..-..... I o it 144 I Crsu Valiey.rf..., p 4 00 .......Iwurljoiir.Jlj.,.- b is 4 to ....,..... cm-... ..).... 1 O 40 4 16 ' witcoiJ,,.. y 5 00 ... . KIIAMIXOjr.7..... at 4KIIIVI! ...mtM-.y-ri' LKAVM nMbteg Prineville Fair Postponed! The CivNfitAi, Okk'jon Iawx Stock and AciKici'LTrKAt Association has post poned the dates of its fair to be held at Prineville, from Oct. is-iG-ij-iS-iq, '07 to Oct. 245262829, '07 Five Big Days Remember Hie Change, of Dales Fine Races Big: Purses Wik A Bargain FOR OUR Subscribers The New Idea v Woman's Magazine AND THE;BEND BULLETIN .Both, One Year for Only $1.75 . r'The New Idea Woman's Mncnzino conlaim over 100 pages each month of fatliiom, dressmaking, needlework and household help:, ' Eadi number it beautifully illustrated and contains nine full-page fashion plates, some -in color. , ' ' These two publications furnish reading for every member of the toutchold. :.-. i-.j' -,. Daily itsge conntcilons si (Jhinlio for AnlcW ow. J'rlnerille, Htul-Buriw,l IVilr If'M" tew. Mitchell, UayviflV.inlbii, AihVrowljCau yoa City, JoUu lsy City, swlfFo-rfl. - C. 2. r.VTLi;,. ' pciiJUMideat, l', audi' A. rrs.HMiH.oOra. sg-s'' Ml " -n: dl .Lsss&m r: machine. n:P w aau ex c,Wn Nuhlerous Exhibits from all' Parts, of Crook County . . . r ' The Biggest Fair pver Held in Cent$dr Oregon. You Cannot Afford to Misa It. -tfs. itt- REVIEMBER THE DATES: jSJh- ? ?&aA s mixed with urmiiticsand 16 to i feet deep, In this locality, though the rainfall N i U inches, irriga tion is practiced freely, ns the loss of moisture in summer is very great. Main more miile n titr-ikinc nml effecjive illustrations mij;ht be jjlvcu ' ot tne impossibility of accurate jjcti craiuniiou on i;conniphIcal, or purely meleoroloical data nlouc Uvidenlly, however, it U clear that the need of irrigation is conditioiieil upon so mnuy factors of earth, nir' nnd water, as well ns tijiou the needs of Ihc plant tirown mid the . system ol tillage, that any wise decision rci;nrdiiitf the needs ofn' particular locality can he reached ! - f. ... . . . i ouiy otter coiHiiuriiiK nnd wcicli iiiR all elements enterinj,' into the problem, r l;or Salq. Seed rye, C. I,. I.owTitmt, Trail Crossing, Crooked Ulvcr, -38 . . - r Don't read your neighbor's Uul Ictin. SubRcrilie for it yourself. Will enjoy rcmlltii; 'Ylie Iiend lliilletlu. liAA'Htyfti .WTHRTAIN ini.l INr'ri4l)CT.WiHt' lul)rlltc now4- ItaivG$tte'Ne"w Alf o! It. u s A SBVINQ MACIIINIL ROLLCH IIBAHINa lliail GRADfc sSA .. by buylo-r this rolUhlfc, lifjnct, high cnido tev tnjf uut'liijMSt) STRONGEST CUAKANTEJ't rrrn' ATiin.Viin'r' t The liulletlii kIvcs the news ' " i- amine mta. immtmmmmmmmmMiBmmammmmmmmmammmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm 'X-'?1''-i:v&t-t:rtr- , . -.jrrjlli- --M---ai-MM