BULLETIN, J. Fl vol. VI UliND. OKIWON, FRIDAY, JUNK 19. iyo8 NO. 14 BEND - , - BOY FALLS ia'FEET fjllps over Ilde of Canyon 4 onto Rocks IJelow IjlAIH-Y INJUKUI) UT WILL L1VU Wovcu-Yenr-Old Sou of C. V. Allen, Living North ill l.nldlnw, tin n Narrow lUcapo (rum Death, I'liil, the n-yciir cihl miii of C. W. Alli'ii. who lives on 11 nmcli five ii'iIU'H north of I.hIiII.iw on the l)e chutes nver. met with a remark able tititUeiious mcident Monday nfteriioon He slipped over tlic edge of the canyon mid fell a dis tance of 60 feet. striking' on n rock shelf and mlliiiK (" t'herc to the w.ilet'x edge. iilHitit 40 lect fnftlicr Dr Cue til llctid was culled mid fbuiid thui tl e lint had sustained concussion of the brain, had'a bad ly In ufied buck, mid the back of IiN he.id w severely cut ' While the injuries tire wrloiii the doctor wv.1 the lxy will recover AUnil noon of tliatdrty Mr. Allen notucd that the lad was missing and hud not iwcii seen for sonic time lie Minted to icarch for lilln and follow cd the boy's tracks to Oic canyon's edge where It was evi dent thnt he had slipped over. The father descended into the canyon and found the boy lying atthcedijc of the river in in unconscious con dition. This was between 3 and 4 o'clock in the afictnoon Mr Allen hurried home with the injured lad and at onrc 'phoned for Dr. Coe. At the place where the accident happened there is a sheer, perpen dicular drop of 60 feet to a tock !,hcH twlow As stated above, the tad strmk on this nhclf and then tollid 40 feet further to the edge of thy itvcr. The wonder Is that he won u,ot instantly killed by the full THIS SIIOWINU R)K TIIH YBAR tlrnJ School District Molds Annual Meeting and lllects Officer. At thy minimi school meeting of Ilciul district No is held last Mon day. I)r. C. V. Merrill was chosen director to succeed himself and I.. 1). Wicst was elected clerk. The r-chool board for the ensuing year will be cnmiioscil of Dr C W. Merrill, Dr Coe and John S,tcldl. The retiring clerk, Attorney C. S. Benson, rend a report which bhowed the following receipts and expenditures. ttKCKIITS. ' VnU on lisnd at time of mnViiiK Uilmimml icrt fi 'I H.....I r..im iH.trlrl tax. rtilllltV ml stale sciiuot ninn i,n IWo'il (mill rale Mil and tttltlun 77 30 jtce'd (rum all oilier oiircci.,., 16 Ni Totnl 54i5" niiitiHKliwrti. I'ntd (or ttwolier' wik f"KS I'adl lor fuel nnd school mp. pile ; 4" "3 I'uld (or tepilt nml liuptmlng Hiimitd ami junltur work.... lujo t'rtid (or new school house nnd alio 1 ' it Vrtdl on principal nnd lnliirl o( IhiihI nnd warrant,... .) 17 I'tilil (ur Iumimiiw H u I'iiM (orclerk'nwUrv .. '5 ;. , .. ... i Vi.iiili.. erl 76 Paid (or bull rout, lyiHwrituiK. , ptlutliiK. leK'd crviC9a, utp. , . 35 ib T0l.1l ffUToif' IImom o( dlktiiirciiioiits over receipt 'VSI ,!... It,,, liirhliliM llllllltlllL ll( Hcliool lioii.elu McOlllvniydUtrltfl nnd lluUli lug HpttulM room In llcnd wliool Imild lug. Ititlnmtcd value ofnehoothoiuc .uiul grouniU tix lUtlumtcd vulue o( school fund- lure and apparatus xi 00 Amount o( linuirrtiice on hcliool Iioiihc and other property .. . fiici 00 Avenue monthly wdnry of tvnclt- ers.. 65 f'S Nimtliur or person between ""ratid twentv yenr o( ngc re!illUK In the district Nov. 15. 7. 77 Number o( tcuchers employed dur ing the vcar '-";." " Nuiiibcr of school hmmc hi the dis trict ,......,,. mi 3 Numlier o( school liouiea built dur ing the year, ..' ' Totnl iiiiinlicr 0 1 library books on tin ml , 1 ,.'.... . 100 Total iiiiiiiIkt of library Ixxikt pur clinked iluthu! (he yrnr 00 The remit shown nu unplcnsnnt deficit of $1054 C.fi. While this Is unpleasant nevertheless the money has been expended for n good pur jKis. The deficit Is due to the iiulldlng of u school house in the McUillvray district, finishing 11 room in the I lend building and In creasing the salary of tcachcri when no provision had been luude In the tax levy to meet Mich expenditures The Income of the district from district tax, county school fund and Mate school fund aggregates approximately J6000 for the year. Of this amount 1 13 .16 has already been paid to the dixit let. That leaves it balance still due of 8H6 ;.!. Dedtictiut' the tirchcul deficit ol $U.V1-66 leaves 831 8H 011 which 10 tun llie school until tuxes arc again payable in March next. As 11 matter of fact there will not lk; that amount, as there Is always nunc nu utuouiii 01 taxes mai are not paid. The deficit will have to be taken care of by the next tax levy. There has been considerable dis cussion in favor of hiring an assistant principal who could teach science and German, buying n tubratory equipment and establish ing a complete high school course. It fs agreed that such actioi would be an excellent thing for the Ilciul schools but since it has bccii shown that the district's expenditures are exceeding the receipts it is not prob able that the new grades will be established until later. Final action on the matter will be taken by the new board. Captain Jack's Hand Returns. After 30 years of enforced ab sence the small remnant of Captain Jack's band of Modoc Indians at the Quapaw agency in Oklahoma arc to be removed to the Klamath reservation in Oregon, where their friends mid relatives live. The Modocs remaining in Okla homa arc but a mere handful 'of the baud of 317 lusty braves who were taken from the Klamath reser vation to Indian Territory in 1874 right afler the Modoc war. Hvcr since their arrival in the southwest these Indians have been longing for their Oregon home. Of the 317 only 49 remain and to of these have round their way back to Ore gon, leaving only 39. As a matter of fact, only 17 of the Indians originally removed arc livlni'. There is a pathetic story of genuine homesickness which has resulted In the depletion of the band. Klamath Halls Republican. You Should Know This Foley's Ktilucv Remedy will cure anv caw 01 kidney oV bladder tVotililc that ( not bcyoUd tile tench ol medicine. No incillcinc can tio more.-w. w. aicrriu, OtiiKKlt. I-- v. B-" iy rm bTSZfi &rtiftJt '' ONE OF THE MAIN OANAL8 OF THE DESCHUTES IRRIGATION & POWER POMPANY'S SYSTEM NEAR BEND, OREGON. Til II alwvc illustration is n view of the Pilot llulte cnnnl of the Pewhutcs Irrigation & rower Company's system, TliU enmd Is 30 (ect wide on the bottom and Is completed 31 miles, long, with miles ot finished lateral-. Au other cniml, the Central Oregon, 44 (eet wide on the bottom, is now completed sS tulles eastward to the old rlcr bed. A stave pipe or syphon, i6jo feet long nnd costing fio.aw, carries the wnter across the depression of the old river bed onto lauds surrounding Powell Duties, in which Motion a crew is now at work completing construe lion ol the Central Oregon canal. When finished this canal will J 45 "dies long. The length of these two main ennals, with the laterals, sub-lntcrnls nnd farmers' ditches, uggregate over 315 miles of waterways, and additional inilcLgo 1 being built from week to week. These two canals, with a third and still larger one to be built later, will reclaim vMo acres of land. There hn been patented by tho U. S. government to the state 38,403 acres of thesis lauds ns reclaimed, nnd other applications are now before the department for AJEAUTIFUL SUNRISE A. JV. Drake Enjoys One ''"on the Mediterranean, ITALIANS ARG A CRUEL RACB Mistreat Tlielr Animals and when Rc monntratvd with Kcply "An Ani mal Mas No Soul." The next morning, J awoke early and lying in lied looking out over tlic sea, witnessed one 01 uic most beautiful nunrilca I had ever seen. One hears much about the wonderful colorings of the Mediter ranean waters. Well I can testify that it is all true and more so. 'That morning Aurora came over the tons of the mainland mountains with her cloudy steeds and r'ctmue and headed straight for tmj,1 wtiile ttib oncoming light 'cuMcd ' the shadows over the water changing itscdlors every moucnt, and in the background appeared n fircy halo. I felt like rouMiiK the entire hotel, but as I had, so to speak, a re served seat in my luxurious bed, I feared (0 lose a moment of it or break' the spell. I do not now wonder that the ancients in these regions had their imaginations keyed up to invent gods and god desses, and all their fanciful myth ology. Taormina possesses many inter esting structures of the Saracenic times and the Middle Ages. Among them is an old suppressed convent, now used as a hotel. It has a beautiful cloister surrounding a square court containing a garden, and on the back side i a terrace on the rocky cliff overlooking Giardin! and the ocean, There arc in Italy a number of these old monasteries converted into hotels. Where the old simplicity is maintained they are quite unique. With a little cell for a bedroom and a candle for light, foreigners feel quite romantic in their mysterious old buildings and enjoy the novelty, imagining themselves back in the olden times. The town is supplied with water by a little stone aqueduct, built over two thousand years ago, which hugs the cliff in a hand cut recess and leads to a fountain in the square or piazza. It is a pretty substantial irrigation plant and may well boast that "men may come and nru may go but I go on forever." Jt happcus, however, to be the young girls who come and go here nnd they come nnd go all day long, making n very pretty picture with their tall earthcrn bot 1 .;is - S -s. " N,'7- .f,i;: ti t v ..! 3 -j? tles gn.cdully poised on their he-ids. just u ill the uldeu times. WlllH tukiiix thi-lr turns at the spout j they exchmiKf the Kossip o the! day, ..ti. as,-very family is rcp-e , sented there M-verdl times 11 duv, there is no need I- r u newspaper, The tourists are always attracted by the scenes at the fountain, but the maidens are graceful nnd know it, and woe Ik- to the Kodak fiend who fails to first make his bargain and disburse tun soldi I It was cariiiv.tt week and the' town was celebrating. Buildings ' mid horses were decorated, fire works going off uud the people throwinv confetti mid rolls of col ored ribbon paper One could scarce own motttu to spcait or laugh but it was filled by a hand full of confetti. We got our share too, but took it in good part ns everyone had to The saints over here must be highly edified, lor almost every day is 11 holiday duty celebrated by some one firing off strings of mammoth firecrackers 111 honor of n patron s.nnt, whose day It happens to Ik. Leaving Taormina with its bright flowers and sunshine, vc returned to Palermo via Messina and the northern coast, through historic country and beautiful scenery all the way. It was n holiday and the roads were filled with the fantasti cal Sicilian carts loaded down with people in festive attire. These carts arc exceeding in teresting to foreigners and arc a feature of Sicily. Huge two wheeled affairs, carved, ornamented and highly painted with bright pictures illustrating scenes from the Iliblc, church history, myth ology, great battles, operas, kings and rulers and every subject imag inable. Whether it be a city dray, a farmer's vehicle, or garbage cart, it must be decorated like a picture gallery and the horse or donkey decked out with gorgeously mount ed harness and plumes that would make a circus procession look like five cents. The saddle of a dray harness will sometimes weigh 40 pounds, with its brass or nickle figures that stand from one to two feet high and arc surmounted by metal flags or pennants that flop or revolve like weather vanes with eacjh step the animal takes. Not withstanding thisextraordinary out ward display, the Italians are a cruel race and mistreat their ani mals. The horses and donkeys of southern Italy arc generally small mere ponies but the way they pull aud tug ut enormous loads would make our horses ashamed of them selves. The Italian has a proverb that "a good stick makes a good donkey" and he certainly believes it. It is nothing unusual to see a donkey hip high to a man, hauling a dray with a load four times his own bulk, but some way or other, (Continued on last age.) "-s-x-; . r CH. approval, ff)U PPnflDPQQ I Nfi H U1U 1 IUUIUJJUIU W CompJee New Court ',, Mouse Next Winter. SALOON MEN TAKE INITIATIVE Clmo Their Places of Dullness on Sun day nt l,nkevlcw Other Items Gathered Par and Near. Work on Crook county's new court house is proressin rapidly nml the structure will be ready for the interior finishiiK this fall. The Jiturnul says: The first essential in n building of this size is good stone Douglass & I'hillips, the men who have-the stonework in charge, spent heveral das in the quarry ut the top of the grade west 01 town before the actual work of getting out' the stone bcuan Several men ''were busy there cleaning o'ut the foot ol thequarrv, that K throwing out the fragments and uncaven pieces of Monc so that it ' would be pos sible to get at the very bottom ol the stone column that stands in a perpendicular position After this had' "been done a quantity of black powder was placed beneath these columns and several tons of good stone were blown out at one shot. By this method the stone taken out is in much better condition than is possible under the old way If it is possible to find columns of sufficient length, Mr. Douglass thinks the stone steps can be made of single pieces. This would re quire a slab about 14 feet long and 14 inches wide. Many pieces have been taken from the quarry already that are eight or nine feet long and of sufficient width for the steps Contractor Shipp has the speci fications for the big clock that is to be placed in the tower. The "train" or mechanism of the giant lime-piece will weigh 1500 pounds The four dials with plate-glass lace for each will total 1500 pounds. The weights will add another 1500 pounds and the bell or gong that will chime the hours will weigh 5Q0 pqunds. When set in position the time piece is guaranteed by the manu facturers to run within one minute per month of the exact time of day. This fact alone will prove a great convenience to the people of Prine- vine. The clock will be the stand ard Seth Thomas make. When installed in the tower it will cost somewhere in the neighborhood of $1000. Saloon Men Will Be dood. Last Sunday was the first "dry" day in Lakevtew iu the history of the town. The fact that the move ws voluntary on the part of the saloon men is very commendable. The saloon men held a meeting after the election and agreed that, since 'so many people were opposed to the saloons, although not in sufficient numbers to "dry" the town or county, they would close their saloons at t'oclock a. m. and all day Sunday. The new regime went iuto effect Saturday night nnd not a saloon iu the town was open, and their curtains were pulled back as proof of the good faith of the movement. This movement will do much to suppress the evil effects of the open saloon, and from now on every provision of the law re garding the liquor traffic will be complied with. Since the saloon men themselves have volunteered to do this there is no doubt about their sincerity. Examiner. Farmers Are Smiling. Rains have been general through out Central Oregon during the past 10 days aud crop prospects are good. The Madras Pioneer says that every farmer you meet these days has a wrinkle across the middle of his face extending from ear to ear, which he calls a smile. The cause of all this hilarity is the greatly im proved crop prospects throughout this sectiou following the heavy rain Tuesday afternoon, when for nearly three hours there was a steady downpour. The rain was general throughout the district, and the slow steady drizzle soaked down into the the ground, doing thou sands of dollars worth 6f good to grain crops ail through this section One farmer said the grain ap peared to grow three or four inches in a night, an a result ol the rain nnd warm weather, while another who bar. passed practically over the entire district, says that the pros f cts arc good for another big crop this season. At any rate there Is general rejoicing al! through the district. ' 100 Allies to Whiskey. The Dalles is now the only sa loon town on the O. R & N. Ry. in Oregon. Shaniko voted "wet" and will be the1 nearest saloon town m the north of Silver Lake. Travel tog west from Silver Lake the thirsty citizen will find no licensed .suloon, ahir July 1, this side of Coos county, and should he veer a little to the south and miss Coos' he would have to journey to Hono lulu or Hongkong to quench his thirst, for Jackson, Josephine, Cur ry and Douglas counties have all Iraardcd the water wag6n. The nearest saloon town to the south is Lakevicw, 100 miles away and on the cast, Burns, 150 miles distant. Thus tt will be seen that it is at least 100 miles from Silver Lake to the nearest whiskey and no railroads! Surely, Mr. Harriman will delay no longer Oregonian. Malt Man Uurned Letters. Geo P. Lee, star route contract or from Paulina to Suplee, was be fore the federal court in Portland recently charged with having tam pered wjth the mails iq his posses sion. Lee Irecly admitted tnat tie bad destroyed letters that bad been viven him to mail but gave as an excuse that he had earned them sq long in bis pocket he was ashamed to mail them, hence destroyed them. In view of the natural weakness of man relative to letter 'mailing, it is believed Lee vri gef off with a. small fine Shorter Notes of Interest. The Prinevile band has. prdered, new uniforms and wtl have them for the fourth. Lamonta beat the Prineville seconds on Sqnday, Tune j, but it took 1 1 innings to dq the work, says the Preview. A ton qf leaf tobacco bus arrived iu Prineville forQeorgeStorckman, the clear maker, says the Review Storckman will start a cigar factory' at that place. Professor P. C. Fulton of Madras has been elected principal of the Prineville public school for the en suing year to succeed Professor Blancbard, who goes into the high school faculty. J. H. Beckley, a rancher living 62 miles southeast of Prineville, has bought q Buick runabout. He made the trip from the Dalles to Prineville in nine hours and burned only five gallons of gasoline. The Review reports that about 1000 trout of exceptionally good size were taken from Ocboco Sun day by numerous fishing parties, who were scattered along the creek almost from town to so miles up. On last Friday, when the stage was a few miles from the stage sta tion between this place and Ros land, one of the horses fell and broke its shoulder and had to be killed, says the Silver Lake Leader. Two ranchers in the vicinity of Plush are planning to pump water from a lake to reclaim quite a tract of sagebrush land. The water will be pumped into reservoirs and theu used as needed. They are install ing a 1 6-inch pump. No Humbug No hunibuc claims have been made for Foley's Honey and Tar, the welt known remedy for coughs, colds and lung troubles. The fact that more bot tles ot roicys iioney ami i or are used than of any other cough remedy is the best testimonial of its great merit. Why then risk taking some unknown prepar ation when Foley's Honey and Tar costs you no more and is safe and sure. C. V, Merrill, Druggist. Hand us your suUalptiua,