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About The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Or.) 1903-1931 | View Entire Issue (June 14, 1911)
1 :n ' The BEND COMPANY AaWMMMMI By the purchase of the property of A. M. Drake, The Bend Townsite Company, The Pilot Butte Development Company and The Bend Water Light & Power Company the above company secured the real estate upon which the future city of Bend must locate. To encourage the development of the city and to give everyone an opportunity to share in the prosperity of the city, a reduction of $125,000.00 was made from former prices on the present platted real estate. Choice Inside Business Lots from $500 to $ 1500 Residence Lots from $ 100 to $300 On very easy terms of payment. These prices are special and those who con template the purchase of property should make their selections at once. CALL AT OUR OFFICE OR WRITE FOR FULL PARTICULARS. NO TROUBLE TO SHOW PROPERTY. ADDRESS: A. O. Hunter, Real Estate Representative, Bend FIEND 15 CHOSEN NEW FORESTRY DIS TRICT CREATED. J. Roy Hirvey Appointed Supervisor, and Will Have Office Here After July 1 Special Government Agent on Impectlon Trip. Beginning July 1, Bend will be come the headquarters of a new United States forestry district which has been created by the Govern ment. The supervisor's office will be located here, the official ap pointed to this position beinjr J. Roy Harvey. Mr. Harvey came over from Prineville Thursday to look over the field and will take up his duties as supervisor the first of next month. The territory included in the new district extends as far south as La Pine, west to the summit of the Cascade Mountains, and north as far as the northern line of the present Deschutes National Forest. It takes in parts of the old De schutes, Cascade and Oregon re serves. William B. Turner, special agent of the bureau of entomology, De partment of Agriculture, arrived here last week from field head quarters at Baker to make an in vestigation on the timber beetle. He was detailed to this work at the request of W. B. Sellers, who made a trip to Baker to enlist Govern ment aid in preventing any de struction of timber in the Bend territory. SAGEBRUSH MACHINE Land Cleared Successfully and Cheap ly By Use of Horses. Of the many machines that have been devised for clearing land of sagebrush, that on exhibition at Eggleston's harness shop, the prop erty of L. W. Nelson, has proved to be one of the most successful. It T is made In a V shape, with knives In front nnd on the sides. It is seven feet wide at the rear and ton feet long. Ever part of it Is made of structural steel and it weighs 1150 pounds. Low wheels keep it from dragging on the ground, though it can be adjusted so as to cut the sagebrush off under the ground. Four to six horses are required to pull it and from eight to ten acres can be cleared in a day. Mr. Nel son had it made in Seattle and has been using it . clearing land in Whitaker Valley. DEATH AT SISTERS flower and vegetable seeds. All persons desirous of obtaining assortments of those selected seeds are requested to write to Congress man LafTerty at once, stating their wants. Orders will be carefully listed and the seeds sent out in ample time for the planting season next spring. jpIt ST H. M. States Victim of Typhoid Fever Little tllrl Sick. Sisters, June 13. H. M. States, aged 24, died here at 11 a. m. Fri day after an illness of more than five weeks with typhoid fever. He was getting on well until he suffered a relapse, death soon resulting. Dr. U. C. Coc of Bend was called in as physician to attend him about a , week before death. i Mr. States was freighting between Sisters and the railroad when he was taken ill. His relatives live at Rochester Mills, N. Y. He was unmarried. Little Ethel Vincent, aged 12, is very ill of typhoid and it is feared may not recover. COMES BACK TO BEND NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION (totaled tract) rt'BUC LAND RALi: (Not (Ml lan4 ) Department of Ibe Interior, D. S, Land Ottxt at The Dallet, Orrcoa, May . mi Notice It hereby gleeo thai, at directed by the CoumlMionrr cf the General Land Otter, under Droettloot of Art ofCenirrtae ettrortd June 11. lyo, (a Suit . sir.) we will offer at public Mle, to in nicnea utooer.ai 43oncct a. mon tnt ltt dny efjulr, 1411. at thlt office, the following dewibedland WK BKU.bec . T 17 ., K. II )'. W M . terul No 74J Any pertona claiming ajrertelir Ihe aloee de acMled Itndt.ire adrtaed to file (heir cltlrai, or objectiout. on or before the time deelgnaled for mIc. pM-lt C W MOOKK, ReglMer. tr X NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. Department of the Interior, V R Md.I Offtee at The Datlrt. Oregon, lone wo. in Notke it hereby giten thai John W While, of need ureetn wno. on June iim. lyoi, made detertlanaT entry, Nn 47 tertal No. ,io, for aejt nei, ne tejf eectU.0 tj. townahip 17 touih, range 11 eatt Willamette Meridian, hat filed notice of Intention to make final deter! proof, to nUUM (fain to the land abore de acribed before II C milt. I' ft, lommiatloncr. at hit office at bend, Oregon, on the Ittb day of July, 1911 Claimant nameaaa wllnettet Lerl D WIcM lbcrtC Luraa.John B. I'arminler. William II. Maatt, all of Bend, Oregon 14 II C W MUORK, KcgUtcr. R. B. Mutzlr, Owner of Valuable Corner, Will Spend Summer Here R. B. Mutzig, owner of the Tag gart corner, has returned to Bend from his home in Pittsburg, Pa after an absence of seven months and will spend the summer here. Since leaving Bend Mr. Mutzig has traveled In the East, South and Southwest, looking Into property values and Investment opportunities, and he enthusiastically declared that Bend had any other town he had seen in his ramblos excelled, and that it was good enough for him. He was down in Mexico during the revolution but escaped molesting from any of those on the warpath. LAFFERTY TO DISTRIBUTE SEEDS. Congressman A. W. Laflerty has been allotted 22000 packages of STEVENS VISIBLE LOADING" REPEATING RIFLE No. 70 Llal Prleo, 18.00 Vlilblfl ljtHuHng"u, blKd. vanUKo. You the cart ridi?" gt in the chamber. You lnv when the gun It loaded. Cits all tht game In sight Prartlrii tow nnd clean nut all tho furm et ? this iprintf. Point tor tho hnrpabaoter od Iluntor II jmiw.bi ,n IM-rwa .x ti aii -nv - Hwiii t .? & f4 Itl U Jifiaf is. ar a. it tut ia. i Mfft.f 4fill Dr irlwfStttaAll (vWl .. iff Iff art inW w.u (KW kit. ftUiXuutt n ttIiitW I if , (.vJWte - tIMutftti4 taxi M ( V I U. VaoltfuSM.tnO' taVl KI4 1 W j art, tl rttf tJ i 1 tMUilttav t tiuaia lut-iJ !( Ifct4t Ulofko J. STEVENJ ARIU A TOOL COMPANY T. 0. Sti Ht Olttitt ftSt, BUm. V& 'A jyv WW5S W&v1 n!fliaSifew VVI rT" ajyJt fifcSoj wSl!7a-iA q INCORPORATE every desired feature of all other typewriting machines into one and compare it, feature with feature, working part with working part, with the Underwood Standard Typewriter and the Underwood stands out as the besl: machine one permitting the greatest latitude of work, doing more and better work per given effort, and is "The Machine You Will Eventually Buy." J It is mechanically perfect. It stands up under every trying condition and is simple in construction. The Un derwood Type Bar Stroke has but three elements: The Key Lever, Connecting Link and Type Bar. Underwood Typewriter Company Incorporated Portland, Ore., Office: 68 Sixth Street ml