The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Or.) 1903-1931, March 23, 1910, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    tJfaSMWw jbw. jVf
tmmmmmmammmmmU
I 3
THE BEND BULLETIN
SUBSCRIPTION RATltS:
ftlt IBOIlth WIMNHUNNHHNtHlniMNt
Three month..... ....,................ ..
(tnrttUMy tn advancr.)
WKDNKSDAY, MARCH 33, toto
TUB D. I. I RUCBIVURSMIP.
The granting of n petition for re
ccivcr for the D I. & P. Co. is n
matter of the utmost importance to
the Deschutes country. That con
cetn was the largest Carey-act op
erator in the state. Its methods
have been much criticized from the
beginning, the fundamental evil be
ing that it started without capita),
upon the idea that the profits would
furnish all the moncv necessary
in other words that the promoters
would get rich without any invest
rucnt of real money of their own
Upon thii first error n lot of others
have been grafted, largely through
the complacency (to use a mild
term) of the slate land board.
The company's affairs having
pretty uniformly gone from bad to
worse, some adjustment like that
now in process was inevitable
With the water wrung out of its
capitalization and an honest and in
telligent supervision by the state
land board in the interest of settlers,
this enterprise would soon be
straightened out and the country
vastly benefited. The difficultio
that have beset this project have
been entirely financial and mana
gerial. The field has been demon
strated to be a rich one and capable
of even ercater development than
was at first expected.
CENTRAL OREGON
LANDS
The reason that may be causing
( you to wish to sell will likewise
cause you to seek an early sate.
We have good outside connec
tions that will enable us to han
dle readily almost any good
nrnnnciOnn I let vnur fnrm nr
town property with us.
Bend Investment Company
Next Door to Postofflcc.
the first time the livery of heaven
had been used to serve the devil.
Now is the time to clean up as
well as to subscribe. Nothing clc
so favorably impresses the casual
visitor as a tidy town. And it
yields our own people dividends in
theshapeof good health, moral satis
faction and esteem of neigh
bors. The mayor has a notice else
where in this paper that will be ol
interest in this connection.
We have before us the subscrip
tion card of an erstwhile reader who
has gone insane. Our responsibil
ity in the matter troubles somewhat
our editorial conscience. Yet inas
much as the subscriber is a resident
of another town and not of Bend,
we are confident that environment
and not The Bulletin is to blame.
WHAT DOES IT MliAftf
The Silver Lake Leader prints
th&lollowing noncommital and pe
culiar paragraph:
The Bern! Bulletin has uVcn a hot
at all newspapers who have expressed
themselves "fernlnst" Senator Bourne'
3crc non-residence homestead bill.
It goes on to sute that the "Portland
Chamber of Commerce and other larce
SVV.?1 V c.?" rol""K" refhap, ards Central Oregon. The rail-
lucrum, nr uon i rare wpo rut I me :. j .. .., ., JT .
tart. The "UrRe bodies" will keep th. roai reserve was conserved eiTeo
ball rolling until after title to the land lively for a generation without
(obtained and there Is where the whole chillier storage than entire neglect
trouble rests. It coes on to state that ,
the"captioua critics should inform them
selves of the facts before following blind
ly me lsunuicru leaiiersntp ol the Port
land Orecoman." Wonder what's the
SEEDS SHOULD E TESTED.
James J. Hill has announced
himself as favoring cold storage
conservation. So also did the late
E H. Harriman, especially as re-
matter with The Bulletin? Its columns
for the past few months hare been filled
with railroad stories taken largely from
the "jaundiced daily." "Conmtencr
thou art a jewel," is an old saying that is
often fitting to one's own self.
A splendid school, such as ours,
an efficient library and dare we
say it? a good newspaper, makes
a trio ot standing attractions tor a
town that can scarcely be equalled
in the eyes of the best class ol
homemakers
Now, here is what The Bulletin
did say on this subject:
What a smell the "fernlnst" papers
are making over Senator Bourne's
bill to relieve entrrmen on 330-acrc
homesteads from the requirement that
tfaer reside upon the land. The Port
land Chamber of Commerce and other
bodies starlet! the ball rolling, and there , , ', , ,
wm no criticism then. But now all sorts One battleship less a year might
of ridicule is heaped upon the measure ' mean 1000 agricultural experiment
by the machine press. Bourne's bill is , farm. each ...j.i, nn annual aliow.
ance of $5000. Which would you
prefer?
It this issue ot I he utilletin ap
pears overly inclined to alleged
versification, forgive the lapse on
the ground of poetical license.
Surely in a county where no other
is permitted, this species of license
may pass unchallenged.
to extend to Oregon the provision that
now applies only to Utah to relieve Or
egonians from the residence require
ment. The requirements of cultivation,
etc, which are in the law as it now
stands, the machine pspcr are jumpini;
on, as tf they were new and unreason
able. The Bourne bill is just what was
asked for by Oregon settlers and sympa-
incuc pumic uouies. 1 ne captious cm
A flock of 160 New England
hens back in the Nutmeg State laid
7775 eggs in three moths. Moral,
buy a ben and be independent.
Say
cs should inform themselves of the fact
Uforc following blindly the jaundiced L ?'-, '"' ,'
leadership of the Portland Orejsonian. ' ,and Oregonianh
I intelligent
"Pinchot" and see the Port-
ave fits.
and
Farmer's Demonstration Trains.
The O. R. & N. Co , acting in
conjunction with the Oregon Agri
cultural College, will send out
through the eastern part of the
state on March 21 the best farming
demonstration train yet seen in the
Or do they care to
law
What does the Leader mean? Is
it for or against the bill? Does it
endorse the hypocritical altitude of
the uninformed critics? What is
the relation between the Bourne
land bill and The Bulletin ratlrnad
news, anyway? Does the Leader I Northwest. Thirty towns in Hood,
care to be right? If so why does it W"1. Sherman, Gilliam, Morrow,
assert that The Bulletin's columns I Umatilla. Union, Wallowa, and
have been filled with railroad stories Ber counties will be visited. At
from the Portlaud Oregotuau, when each stopping place lectures on ag
it is not true? The Orcgonian's "cultural subjects will be delivered
news of Deschutes railroad build I oy practical experts and demonstrat
ing has been written by a member Uons made of farming apparatus
of The Bulletin staff. Consistency ana eniinc meinoas ol crop pro
ts fine we observe it: but truth ts Auction.
vastly greater And then, what
about that other proverb, "Con
sistency is the bugbear ol small
minds;" that is, of minds that do
not care or do not comprehend?
It may be that the Oregon Good
Roads Association "with fudge
Lionel R. Webster in charge" is
something beside a political move
ment by and for interests that do
not and cannot come out into the
open, our, 11 so it must excuse
Wanders From Redmond.
J J. Jones, father of II. F. Jones
of the Jones Land Co. of Redmond,
last week wandered from that town,
lost his bearings and spent almost
24 hours on the adjacent desert be
fore the searching parties sent out
came upon him. Mr Jones, Sr., is
an old gentleman ot 84, bis mishap,
it is said, being due to a temporary
mental aberration. Despite the
hardship of a night's exposure he
an ' escaped any ill effects from bis ex-
incredulous public for placing the peneuce
uuiucu ui piuui upon me "rtiOCl
ation." Webster has never been For s,,e-
free from underground politics j A full blooded Spanish Jack, sev
The way be quit the Multnomah en years old; perfectly gentle and
county judgeship. conspicuously 1 easily bandied; a good breeder,
recreant to his official duty and re-j Terms: "Cash preferred. Inquire
signing only after be had bargained
for and with, his successor -is addi
tional proof of the political charac
ter of this new blind. The subject
of good roads is, tbje Lord knows,
big enough and vital enough to en
list large and practical aid. That
Is why it b so attractive as a rally
kg point for those who may wish
to rally a bunch of the dear peo--p4e
for some other cause, not yet
publicly declared. It wouia not be
of The
Bakery.
Bend Bulletin 01
Bend
3-5
For Rent.
Furnished or partly furnished
five room house near school house.
Near ditch. References prefered.
F. M. Ray.
Nine and io-incb envelopes, just
the thing for mailing or filing away
legal documents, for sale at The
Bulletin office.
Orecon Agricultural tixperlment Sta
tion Will 1)0 It Free.
The Oregon AgrictiHttrnl Exper
iment Station scuds out n circular
upon the subject of seed-testing
from which the following is taken;
Many thousands ot dollars are lost an
nually by totli the farmers and the
c!smeii of the Xorthct and Pacific
Coast states thrush the purchase and
uc of interior t eeil. This loss is four
fold. 1'irst, through the purchase ol
seed of low vitality, or of seed contain
ing IiIkIi percentages of worthless or
harmful impurities. Second, through
the resultant thin stand and poor crop
obtained from the same amount of labor
expended as for a good crop. Third,
through the seeding of the land to
worthless plants or to noxious weeds,
fourth, through the loss of business to
seedsmen. ,
This widespread and 'heavy annual
loss has been due, partially nt leait, to
the fact that farmers and seedsmen alike
lute not had the means of easily slid
accurately determining the germination
and purity of the seeds purchased and
used.
The Seed Laboratory of the Bureau of
Plant Industry, United States Depart
ment of Agriculture, in co-operation
with the Oregon Agricultural College,
has opened a branch seed-testing labor
atory at Corvaltit, Oregon. This labor
atory is solely for the use of the resi
dents of the Pacific Coast and adjoining
Jtates fr letting seeds free of charge.
The work of this laboratory will include
(l) The identification of seeds of any
kind. (Jl The examination of samples
for the presence of adulterants and lod-
der. (O The letting of seeds for purity
(4) Testing for germination. '
I, All sample should be drawn so as '
to represent accurately the bulk seed I
from which they are taken. 1
1. The site ol sample should be a 1
tahlespoonful for small seeds, such as
clovers and graues, and five tablespoon-'
fuls of the larger seeds, such as the
grains. 1
$. All samples should be marked with i
name and address of sender. I
4 A letter should accompany sample
stating whether the seed is to be tested
for purity, for germination, or for both,
anil the source of the seed.
5. All samples and letters should be
add rested to the Seed-Testing Labora
tory, Oregon Agricultural College, Cor
valfis, Oregon.
All agricultural seeds should be tested
before they are purchased, or in any
case, belore they arc used not only
small seeds but grains of doubtful qual
ity, as well. Farmers and seedsmen
both, are urued to make the fullest use
of this laboratory, and raise the standard
of the seed used upon the farm.
Four Recent Letters.
Hanna, S. D , March 7, 1910.
Dear Sir: As my subscription to
The Bend Bulletin will expire
April i, 1910, I wish to renew it
now. I can hardly do without it,
as there is great pleasure in read
ing its nws. It is the iikst paper
that I am reading. Yours truly,
A. MlLMJR.
Flushing, Mich., March 8.
Will you kindly discontinue send
ing roe The Bulletin. I have sold
my land in Crook county and the
weekly visits of The Bulletin only
annoy me by reminding me of
what I have lost, and that I will
not see Crook county, Oregon,
again. Yours very truly,
Pkkcv W. Bknjamik.
Dewey Palace Hotel, Nampa,
Idaho, March 8, 1910 Dear Sir:
I wish to renew my subscription to
your interesting, newsy paper for
six months. The balance is for 10
copies of Putnam s Magazine. I
want to do a little boost in tr for
Bend.
I have many friends here who
are coming to Bend to invest. I
say watch Bend grow to 50,000 by
1920.
Kindest regards to all my
friends. Truly yours,
Ciiaklks Wkisidk.
Oregon Trunk Railway, Tygh
Valley, March 18. 1910 Would'
like to inform The Bulletin that we
re making railroad pretty fast in
the Deschutes canyon and the
prospects are that they will reach
Bend ou schedule time. Yours
truly, Tom LanCon.
Notice.
If you wish to have your ex
press and light freight come in
along with your letters and doily
papers, have it come in on the maili
line tub LTOKNBTT STAGS &
Stable Co. sstf
In nlcmorlnnt.
The whiskey's gone from Duck's gnrnge.
Hut they've left the gasoline!
four iimtt, or more, slipped nut the
door.
And since ime not lerii seen,
He's lot the 'ski-ej the mystery
Has shocked us without etui,
For how, you see. In a dryemtntee
Did tlmt gallon get to llcnd?
Lost, strayed or stolen, n gallon
of prime thirst cnuliciitor; finder
will please return the empty jug
and his thanks.
The truth of the matter Is that
Mr. Duck kindly did an errand nt
Shaniko for n friend, and brought
In to Bend n jug of whiskey for
household use. Somebody, how
ever, got into his garage mid ab
sorbed the beverage. And the jail
hasn't been mended yet!
CnlT'foTmdsT
The undersigned desires bids for
the construction of a flume for its
system. All bids should be sub
mitted not later than Saturday,
April 2. Plans and specifications
may tc seen by calling ou the com
pany's engineer, L- D Wicst, with
whom bids should be left.
The company reserves the right
to reject any or all bids
2-3 Aknolu Ikuioation Co.
For Sale.
One DcLaval cream separator,
500 pounds capacity,
One Eureka butler wcrkcr, 50
pounds capacity.
One 20 Gal. Acme barrel churn.
All good as new. Price $90.
J. N. Mastkn,
1-4 Rnshiid, Or.
For Sale.
Rolled and seed barley at the
Rodman Ranch near Culver.
H. M. COOK
Photographer
New at rriMTillc
DON'T I'ORGKT THAT
HI IS ALWAYS RKADY
TO GIVK PROMPT AT
TKNTION TO ORDKRS
FROM BUND PKOPLK.
SE
320-ACRE
HOMESTEADS
WE IIAVI3 THE
Best Wheat Land
IN CENTRAL OREGON.
PRIM AUT0M0I1II.I1 TRIP
from Iknd to the lands nnd return for nil who locnlc.
LIST YOUR CITY PROPERTY WITH US IF YOU WANT A QUICK SALE.
Write fur Particulars, to
Merrill Sh Wilkinson Company
llHNIi, OKKOON.
TUG
Big:
Hungry
CHOP HOUSE
Now open for business. We
never close.
Near Pilot Butte Inn.
Hotel Bend
Corner Dond and Ortfton 3U.
AMERICAN PLAN
Rates $2 and $2.50 a Day
HUGH O'KANE, Manager
A. II. KSTKIIUNKT W. P. SAUNDKKS
Timber Lands
Irrigated Lands a Specialty. Stock Ranches
and Wheat Land.
Central Oregon
Real Estate Company
OI'l-OSlTi: COLl'MUtA SOITIIKHN IIOTItL
SHANIKO. OKKCON
Automobiles to All Points in Central Oregon. The An
tolopc Stage Co Iluckley Kxprcss Co. to
Redmond and I lend.
MONKY TO LOAN INSURANCK
J
I . -. m 1 MMJp
Kstimates on
application
Wall Paper at
Portland I'rlics
N. P. WEIDER
PAINTER
& Paperhanger
Cheapest and Dst Wall Taper Sam
ples in the county. Get
My Triers.
Box 39.
Iknd, Oregon.
PIERCE
ARROW
AUTO LINE
Between Shaniko and Bend,
calling at Madras and Red
mond. $3000 Car. 50 Morse Power
A. B. BUCK. Manager
Address Slunikoor llend.
LAND OWNERS
ATTENTION
If you wish to sell, list your protx-rty with us.
We represent enpitnl interested in your section.
We have immediate purchasers.
We will purchase for ourselves.
We own nnd operate two large 00-horse)ower nutotno
biles in our business.
See or Write us To-day.
CITY
DRAY
I.KWIS & UNSTHK, I'KOrS.
to handle
the line of
I am rea'l y
anything in
DRAY WORK
Leave orders with N.P.
Smith, Wall St. Bend
Epping-Brydle Land Co.
Fruit and Agricultural Lands In Oregon.
PORT LAND-MOOD RIVfiR-SHANIKO
O R C Q O N
AIJDKKSS AM. COMMUNICATIONS TO
SHANIKO, ORP.00N.
"
G. W. RICHARDSON
Jeweler
1
Watch
Repairing
A SPIJCIALTY.
Two doors south of P.O. Bead
The Tumalo Neighborhood.
TuwaLO. Match 191I1. Clias. Wlinrr
rol business trip to llcnd yesterday
An ato load of people from llcnd
passed through here today,
P. A. Woolley anil sons are busy clear,
tag sod plowtnir and will put in a large
crop on the Jensen place tills year,
Jno. Sisemnre of llend ale.dlnutr here
one day last week,
H N. Wallace and two at the engineers
of the new Irritation Co. were luTiimn-
lo on business I'rlday. Thy will beRin
surveying tomorrow on tin WIhi t 'llal
rescnolr site with a crew fof ft mn
Sir Woollev and wife of Bend hi. tc sc
replnl a ik1iioii as rook for ln .crew
which will be stationed at "tha1 lllijli
tower-Smllh cook Imiuejies'rlfsn .
G. W. Wimer & Sons have luslfi ilti.l
putting in 50 acres of wheal n'J acres
of rye and beiiun plowing no Mrt to
pui 111 oais urn season, Tlie.:fc ,. - 0.
acre of mammoth clover.
All the farmers are busy
jfiiiiK wuik now. .
The Hard time dance at the
o, mm mi i-rmay 11 11; 11 1 vaifal great
""in, nuiiiucr ui dcuu,
Tumalo people attended.
wuai tueir
old II &
Ghft nuil
New MHI Near.
11. L. Ilailey, of Portland, It Is
announced, Imi made arrangement
to erect a iww mill sotneacven miles
northwest of llend, section tj,
raiiRe 1 1. Already those intcrcHtnl
In the new eruerprie have pur
chased nine quarter herttonn of
llmljcr from 1J, A. Smith, of Lccdn,
North Dakota, while all the ncces
ary muchliirry is ordered and in
expected to be on thc Krouud
within a month.
Pleasant Kldije Items.
wllh Mt
Our Bubtcrintion list Uj.
t ... . , , 9
lujiiuiy. ncip 11 10 grow.
owing
....'. A'N.l'r'ii,rt4 h-ic suou
.uV B'i."J7K!W;" .W. ?" r hi.
-. ... , ,, vnihivii iBcra
Alea Chast hss starlta an up-to-d.i. hot bed.
r"f.,viu.;,,v.,:.M,Ufh,,,,"rr " n"
iituw".'"k!'oc''y"r"" f"p"y "
'
For Sale,
Good 10X19 rnnvnu .. ...1.1.
board floor and boarded up five
feet on sides Call at Bulletin
office. Mf