I J' :i THE BEND BULLETIN "For every tosh a square deal, no less anil no more." ClIAKLKS D. ROWIJ HDITOR i : SUBSCRIPTION RATH& Oitjrr. Hit tnoalhv. Tbrt no.th. 'lanriably In intruder.) Ji-5 4o .jo WEDNBSDAY. FKB. 3, 1909. Kill It tnstantcr. One of the most pernicious bills introduced at the present session of the legislature is the one that would make unlawful the taking of certain pledges by a candidate seeking elec tion to an office. The bill is aimed directly at Statement No. 1 and if it should become a law, the result would be that it would thereafter be unlawful for any candidate to subscribe to" the Statement. The bill is the child of the discredited, disgruntled machine politicians of Oregon and should be killed in stantcr. If these same corrupt political tricksters can succeed in getting the bill adopted no candidate could come before the people with a pledge to vote for the popular choice for United States senator. Hence, the bill would aid the political trickster and corrupt polstican the tool of the interests to an election, inasmuch as no candidate would be pledged and it would be much more difficult for the decorate to know the machine candidate from the one who would observe the people'scommands. The burs eptire purpose is in the inter est of corrupt politics. Why shouldn't a candidate pledge himself to the people to work and vote for certain desired meas ures? Can anyone advance a rational reason why be should not? A legislator, senator, or any other officer is supposed to work in be half of the people. He is their ac credited representative to do as they wish and to procure the en actment of those measures that they desire. He is thctr paid servant. If a candidate aspires to election, what is more reasonable or just than that he should pledge himself to the people to work in behalf of their interests? Such is entirely in line with clean politics and good and just government. Within one day Oregon's Jegis latureielected a United States scna tor, and now is devoting the balance of the session to considering needed legislation. The legislators are quietly attending to the business for which they are elected instead of spending weeks in deadlocks, cor rupting and bribing public officials, bitter wrangling and strife a dis grace to the state and thi nation. That has been history in Oregon prior to the adoption of Statement No. 1. That is what is happening now in certain states where the old- time machine politician has full sway in the election of a United States senator. Boodle, graft, a "sack," bribing, corruption, and the election of a senator whose whole duty would be to protect and further the interests of the trusts and resource grabbers. And yet some men in Oregon have the unmitigated gall to at tempt to force the people back to that state of affairs. Yes, and even after they have voted overwhelm ingly against it. This bill is a per nicious measure. Kill it instanter. llHK i Profit in Feeding Sheep on Irrigated Land. Continued from last wteV. construction of good roads and yet would Dlnce the payment for them partly on the coming gcucration, which is just inasmuch as those who come later would be equally the beneficiaries of a system of good roads. The amendment should be adopted and the bonding provision made law. The Oregonian rightly says it would be an insult to the electorate of Oregon for the legislature to en act a law increasing the number of supreme court judges an insult be cause at the June election the elec torate voted against such action. At the Tunc election the electorate voted overwhelmingly in favor of making Statement No. 1 compul sory, and yet there is a measure now before the legislature whose purpose is to kill Statement No. 1. Would not the adoption of that measure likewise be a rank insult to the electorate? February comes in so warm. balmy and springlike in the Bend country that it causes one to think of garden-making and to begin to look up the spades, hoes, rakes and shovels. There is health, recre ation and lots of fun in turning over the warm, moist earth, in planting the seeds, and in watching them sprout and grow to maturity; yes, lots of Tun for the man who enjoys and can appreciate such work. Central Oregon is vitally inter ested in the irrigation bill that has been introduced in the legislature. It is a good measure and should be adopted, with one or two amend ments. The Bulletin hoDes nnd believes that Senator Merryman and Representatives Belknap and Brattain will work without ceasing for its enactment. By so dointr. they will be furthering, in the bot sense, the interests of their constitu ents and of the entire state. Governor Chamberlain will do a good thing by vetoing a lot of those salary-grabbing measures now be fore the legislature. There is al together too much of that at the present session. County Judge Ellis is sadly be- hind the times. He should be at Salenv lobbying for an increase in ins salary. We want your subscription. There are two or three measures before the present legislature in be half of "good roads" legislation. One of the most commendable of these is a proposed constitutional amendment empowering a county to issue bonds to an amount not exceeding one per cent of the as sessed valuation of its property, to raise money for the construction of permanent county roads. This would provide funds at once for the J w)iiwC2- TffilNfr vSfaTD DANDKUFFAND miilNGrHAIRi are but otttwsrd signs of (be evU dose In secret by myriad of du- -ran 1 crras wppwjf use life Woe4 of the hair. Micro kills the pari site, soothes the Itchlsg scalp, gives lustre to the hair and stop iiiajuugvai. a tragic appiicat JOB Sires relief ad proves Ms wortk. Save vow haf httnrn tan u. Micro prevents baldness. It la a Bcugwitii dressing for the hair, free from treat aatfailrkv u ask yew tavalst forfrw bookkt HOYT CHEMICAL CO,' Mow Business Is Uullt Up. Going further iuto details, Mr. Mullen explained fully how the farm flocks arc built up, and what results are obtained. Ou this phase of the business he wrote: Iu the discussion at the Nampa institute on "Sheep on the Farm," Prof. French told his experience. Three years ago he bought about a hundred grade Shropshire ewes. Last fall he sold his ranch and was obliged to sell the sheep too. His sheep bad sheared an average of 10 pounds yearly and when he sold the ewes brought $4 50 nnd the lambs $4 00. They made him nearly $3,000 in three years, or over $6 each per year. He said be intended to buy more as soon as he got another ranch. He also men tioned Mr. Laughlin. who made a sheep talk at the Caldwell institute, who pastured 14 to the acre. An- other man I have heard of since. Mr. Aiken, pastures 13 per acre, the same as my figures; also the same amount of hay in the winter, but his lambs sold for $4 each and fleeces averaged nine pounds, and sold at 2t cents, making just about $0 for each ewe. All these figures make my little 5 1 each look small and conservative indeed. Counting eight sheep per acre makes their income $48 per acre to my $31. Another man three miles north of me has pure blood Lin coins. These bring him S30 each. Figure it out for yourself; as for me I am coinc 'awav back and sit down. You can see that these prices can be cut in half and still be a thing. Now, let us compare Idaho and Ohio. I was born in northern Ohio, right on Lake Erie, and ol though I never lived on a farm, I could not help but know in a gen eral way about their sheep. We also have home papers every week, and I follow the sheep news pretty closely. In fact, if I see the word sheep I stop right there and see what it says, wanting to soak in all the information I can.' I have learned in this way that Ohio farm ers consider sheep very profitable, and there seems only one draw back, which often drives a farmer out of the business, and that is sheep-killing dogs. The county there pays for killed and injured sheep, and every quarterly session of county commissioners shows quite a list of claims of this kind. The farmers have kept sheep there for more than 50 years, so they have surely tested the profit in ttiat time. Lands sell at sioo to $150 per acre, as fine farming lauds as anywhere East, and still the av erage hay production of that coun try was only a little over a ton for clover and a little less for timothy, per acre. That buy is worth $10 to $15 per ton and is fed to sheep. Everyone who has lived East knows their pastures are burned up about half the summer, when it is neces sary to cut and feed other crops for forage to keep them. And the win- tersl Well, I c-n remember those breezes off Lake Erie that would give a man a clean shave, just walking down town. When it wasn't a drouth, it was rain, rain, all the time, and that is worse on a sheep than cold. And still those people make money on sheep, and keep more and more all the time. Wc can raise four times the hay they can, and our pastures are green for seven or eight months: dry, comfortable climate, small win ter feed bills. As stated iu my last letter, Ohio wool sold last year for 30 cents a pound. One reason for that high price is the shrinkage. Their wool only shrinks 50 per ceut iu scouring, while range wool Bead Drug Co, shrinks 60 to 70 per cent. This alone makes 15 to 30 per cent dif ference. Farm wool is dirty on the outside, while range wool has alt the dirt on the wool next to the skin. Open the wool of each and note the difference. One of my near nclghbots, Albert Young, has just invested in a bunch to keep on his urm. They are a nice lot. but like, all range sheep, the sagebrush has worn off about one-third of their wool. Great patches on the lower side of their bodies arc as bare as my hand, and only on the upper part is the wool full length. Not so with mine; tbey are the same all over. When a man goes to a lumber yard to buy some boards, if the dealer offered him same two or three feet long, he would not want them unless they were very cheap. This short wool is just about as de sirable as the short lumber, and that is another point in favor of farm wool. Thcte is one thing farm ers must be careful about, and that is to keep hay and straw out of the wool, as It hurts the sale badly. All will agree that of late years me sneep industry has been very profitable, but what of the future? In common with all farm products, wool and mutton have dropped in pricc4 but every doy sees mutton bring more and best lambs today arc selling close to $7 per hundred. Wool prices, too, promise to be close to the high figure of last year. From every point of view. the future is bright for sheepmen. The tremendous losses in Australia. good with many years of drought, have created a shortage of wool all over the world. The London wool sales continually report market firm and prices good. In our own country where 30 years ago we imported 18 per cent of our wool, wc now im port 48 per cent. In numbers. comparing the years 1884 and 1906 we gained 33,000,000 beef cattle, 8,000,000 hogs, and only 5,000 sheep. Between these years we have had millions more sheep, but we have just naturally eaten them up, and can practically say today we cat a sheep for every lamb born. In 1884 at Chicago and Missouri river poiuts, packers dressed nco. oocK mutton; in 1905, 9,500,000, an increase of over 500 per cent, while cattle increase was only 178 per cent. These figures show wc are getting to be a nation oi mutton caters, aed if wc don't cet a move on the farms we will be importing 40 per cent of our mutton as well as wool. The annual report for 1907 by the National Association of Wool Manufacturers shows only a coin of 300,000 sheep over 1906, less than one per cent. It says. too. that the range states show a loss due to contraction of range, while the gain is on the farms East. This shows pretty plainly that the range country has reached its limit and is on the down bill. Southern Idaho alone in the last few years has fenced in nearly 2,000,000 acres of sheep winter range. As far as the human mind can see. the sheen farmer has many years of cood prices and unlimited demand before him. Now, the question comes up, How are the farmers to take ad vantage of this good tliiuc? Manv a rancher has land and pasture, but it takes considerable money to stock up even with sheep. They have BendShaniko Livery & Stage Company J. II. WUNANDV, Prop. W. P. Kelloy, Anon I, Shnnlko New Covered Stages between Bend and Shanlko ALSO Livery nnd Peed Stables al Shnnlko, (Madras and Hcnd. Wo run our rigs to plensu thu public. Stages lenvo each wny ovory day. Rigs to all parts of Central Oregon. Careful drivers furnished Special Attention Given to Express and Baggage. WHEN IN BEND STOP AT THE PILOT BUTTE INN Tabic- alwAya supplied with tho belt tlmt the town afford. Neat and Comfortable Roams. HitNl), OMltCON -- JVlassachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company ANNUAL DIVIDENDS Nearly JOO SATISFIED Policyholders In Crook County. jo-.5 P. O. MINOR, Resident Agent UNLESS IT'S A GOOD STORE IT WILL NOT PAY to ADVERTISE IT! u rNLKSS you know a person unless that person comes into your life Iu some way you arc not greatly con ccrucd ubout whether he is eood or hid. ilrilml.1i. or objectionable. It's so with a store. The people who never visit it care nothing about It one way or the other. It doesn't exist for them. Hut when they arc jwrsuaded to patron ize It when they come to turn the spot-light of their at tention on it when it comes to have a patt in their lives, as some stores must have in all lives then it's different; then it DOIvS matter whether it strives to win confidence; it does matter whether or not its price concessions arc genu ine, dependable. If it mecti all tests that a good store must utand when it is advertised when it thus invites the critical attention of people then advertising "makes" the store. If it fails in most of the vital things-if It proves, under the light of publicity, not to be much of n store, TILHN ADVHRTIS INC WIIJ, NOT PAY-for it will emphasize short comings as well as merits. Por these same reasons It Is generally assumed that the store which docs not advertise Is seeking to nvold close In spection nnd comparison, mid that tho store which docs Is courting them. C. R. k'lllDIT ginia Ave,, Infill the Jeweler, 1060 Vir- lanapolli. Ind.. writei "I Kl waft ftO wenlc frnm V(i1rtv ImnM. .I... r . - - .. a .,.. ..wmw... lll.L A could hardly walk a hundred feet, four uuiuciui roiey-stuuiiey Kemeuy cleared my complexion, cured my backache and the Irrtuularltlpa fllKanruarl ,! t ...... now attend to litikltir.a .Iu.. ...t -. . . .. ....... ..V.F ,.., Hill, recommend I'olcy'a Kidney Remedy to all iiifferera, aa It cured me after the doc- ouier retucu.es had fulled. not the money on hand, 'and many would uot care to mortgage to get the cash. Here is a chance for the sheep man to try the new way without expense. Take a baud of sheen and divide it around among a num ber of farmers who want them, and both can make some cusy money. The sheep-owner can keen his eve on them, and he runs no such risk as piling up or other mishap on the range. It is not at alt necessary for the farmer to fill his ranch the first year; try a hundred or two and grow with the business. They in. crease fast. I find my venr old lambs are about full grown, ntul many have a Iamb nt tlmt it...- and do as well n.s unv old mm. mm,;.! counts very rapidly, nnd the aver- age mati win soon have all he can handle. K. F. P. No. 3,Nampa, Ida. Hoarie couelm and inrr -i.i. ,,.. mav develon lntn iinviiinnMin ...... ..,,.. are quickly cured by I'olcy'a Honey m,d iar. unu ittootlics inflamed membrane, heals the lunui. mul n.i. .1... I from the ayiteiu. Lend Unig Co. I C. S. BENSON, ATTORNEY AT LAW OKI'ICIt IN HANK liUIUIINO, M!W), OKKGON U. C. COE. M. D. Physician and Surgeon Ol'I'iClC OVHK HANK ?llt Wflbt tretepbone Connection BAY TKUtl'IIONU NO. 3! llh -- t OUKOON THE First National Bank a f PrlnevIIIc. JUlabtliht-d ifc-87, Capital, Surplus and Undivided Prot Its, $100,000.00 n. 11 hi ... win w.,.... ., " II. II J 111 Kill . . 1'reiMtut Vice I'lrtlilrnt Caihlcr Alum Cathlcl POLK'S A 11uuifHH DJrtoloi-y of oucli city, :,"n nil vjiiHiiai m uroMOii GAZETTEER II...... U o.lilrmtDii , .ivln .-""'..."... '... M 4lVIIlITf uTr.ri ".. .V... i"'-, i,rctioii, Hlilniiltiif KxIIIIIm uiiA a CUul. .... '"ol- t autU UuiIiku , . I. rt IMC f, CO., Inc. nru -fin, tmill,