f. THE BEND BULLETIN. VOL. X. HEW), OREGON, WEDNESDAY. SEITEMBER 18, 1012. NO. 28. -.1. ' J ( 'i I l RAINLOAD OF SHEEP GO EAST (THIRTY-TWO CARS TO LEAVE FRIDAY . 4 i.wnn ,iin,euiiaii, me rtlinniM) ruierp- man, Will Hlilp About 10,000 Am. Itutltf lrfiin ltfit!llav. Uelt OrmliiK III tlio Mountains. Tlio Oml trnlulonil of sheep to li-avii lleud for the Haitorn market f m he shipped over the Oregon Trunk Railway Friday morning. t Trutellug Krrliclit and Passenger Ageut J T. Hardy came In Inst night i to look after tliq dispatch of tlio train i There will bo 32 double deck cant, each containing 300 or mora sheep, , mnfcltiR the tout number marly 10,000. Tho shipper Is I'wnu Mc I liiiinu of Hhanlko, who lias boon xrailuit hi flock In tho Desahutes , ninl Cascade National Forcsta during tin summer, on both sides of tho iiiountnlui In the vicinity of Three- Fingered Jack. The sheep will bo driven lirro nnd loaded, part of tho ' cam to receive them already being mi tho local switch nud the othora expected In on tonlKhl's freight. The thlpiiient will go throiiKh to Chicago, wheru .Mr, Mclennan will market llui sheep, In about 72 hours, , Tim fleecy nnlinalt nro In fine con- illllou, having had splendid paature Kniund nil sumtner, and tho pil ' of tho Windy City will Kt n tssto of good Central Oregon mutton. DOT FEW FJRK THIS YEAR Wrt Hummer anil l'(ra Precautious Pre rut Destruction of Tlliitwr. Forest llres In the timber of Con ' tral UreKon this summer have been fuw, as compared with other sea ' sous, To date there hsvo been only ID rtrea reKrted to tho local forestry t nltlco as agalntsome GO to tho same dale last yearv This task of de t structlon of timber la attributed to the unusual amount of rain, this sum mer and to the added precautions ' taken to guard against fires. Tho lookouts on several of ihn blKhcat t Knks In the mountains have proved their worth In a number of Instances by reporting fires before they got i much headway There have been no dtstructtvu Arcs this summvr. Tho season Is not ct out. however, but unless there should bo nn unusually bad outbreak tho Ions In 1912 will bo far below what It was In 111 11. llltICK YAltll IH lll'SV. llcFlnnlng cttlerdny a force of 22 men Is at work at thu Itend llrlok & Lumber Company's brick yard A Farmer's Logic yWO FARMERS were dlscusalnir tho ndvnntAKCfl of n bnnk nccountfrom n farmer's Btnnd point. "Hut'iutld tho firot, "I nm bo fur from town it in In convenient for mo to como In to do my banking." "All tho mora reason, ' his companion replied, "why you phoald huvo nn uccount. When you hnvo a check to deposit simply endorse it over to tho bank and mail It to them. They will credit nnd receipt you. Then when you buy anything, pay by check. That's tho way others pay you.. That's up-to-date business," Is tho argument npt logical? The Deschutes Banking & Trust Company of Bend, Oregon ' i "CoMwvaUva Busking for CoMtrvfttiv POjpJ." D. 1'UURHLL, President P. O. MINOR, Secretary K. M. LARA, Cashier Dirxcyoxs: . S. l'KRRI,L, V, O. MINOR, K. M. tARA, 4 - Jiml wiwt of town, ami thi hh'IiIUIi liionl Im ruiiiiliiK Id capacity, tinning out '.'(), 000 brink it ility. A. II. Horn Mates (lint thorn Ih ovory rwwon to iiolluvu Unit tho piesont iliniiniiil for lulck by lii-iiil liiillilorH will keep tlio plain riiiinlnii at full hlust from now on. COMMERCIAL APPLE ORCHARD AT RENO Foily Acres Will be Kel Next Hprlng liy Collins mid Lnfollrtle, IThIiik Htock Prom Powell llutte. 'ArranReuients were completed while (luy Lafolletto, the I'owrll llutte nurseryman, was In town last week for tho plantlujc of a 40-acre orchurd a fow miles north or (lend. It will bo .located on tho 100 acres owned by A. H. Collins. Tho orchard will bo set ender tlio sUperlntendency of Mr. tafollotto, who has boon rulslntc aiples on Powell llutte for year, at an altl tudo of 4200 feet. Ho Is confident that be will have Just as much sue cess at llend, where tho altitude Is 3000 feet, More than 2000 trees will bo set out, the stock belli' obtained from' tho Powell llutto nursery. Tho varieties will lo commercial apples, IncludluK Jonathan, Northern Spy. HplUenborc nnd Htnymnu'a Wluesaps. The trees will bo set diagonal or In diamond shape. At present th tract of land Is not IrrlKated. but Mr. Collins expects to brine It under the Hwalloy ditch this fall, and the trees will bo planted next sprlnic. Within three years Mr l.afollette cxpocts them to be hearing Tho llend Orchards Company wilt be tho name of tho company, and Mr. Collins will bo manaRer. He Is an old-timer In Central OreKon and now rt'fldis In llend. KERHOnjOyS AGAIN North Dakota Man Invent More Money In lleud. I)r U, II. Kermott of Mlnot, N. I)., who recently .purchased at n cost of $3000 the lot on Wall street next to It II. Mutxlg'a corner, last woek bought lot 10? block 2, llend, of Mrs. Ilertha A. (J rant, tho aale belli mado by the lloineseekcrs' l.and Co. The price 'Is Riven as 10000. This property Is located on Wall street, on the alloy acrofs from Ne vada street. It contains a two-story frame bulldlnit, occupied by McCuls ton's store and Other tenants. IXH'ATOIt COMF.H TO IIKND. Ihakevlew Herald.) Ilecause of the many people from tho east coming by way of 1'ortland nnd llend looking for homes In Cen tral Oregon W Itocho Kick, hake- view's prominent locator, has de cided to make his home In llend. Mr. Flck has been In I.akevlow for a number of years, and having mado a studt of tho Hummer Lake, Pleas ant tako and other Northern I.ako ei ii n ty valleys, Is ono of tho best IK)ited men on homestead landu In tho county. Seeing tho trend of tho homeseeker la to come by way of lleud, Mr. Flck haa decided to movo there so aa to lead tho van of Cen tral Oregon's Immigration. 39 SEND AUTOS ARE LICENSED PEES PAID STATE TOTAL $202 Number of A'uIok Llrrnocd In County Is fill There are flO Chauffeurs. Secretary of Htntc Prepare Tabic for (tin Kntlre Mate. llend automobile owners and chauffeurs pay more money to the state In annual fees than does any other town In Crook county, tho sum IioIiik $202. There nro 39 vehicles registered from llend, and In this number are nut Included the auto trucks which operate regularly out of hero or tho motorcycles owned locally, A table prepared by Secretary of Rtato Olcott shows tout the state has collected this year 140,408. &0 from motor vehicle license fees, there be ing HC98 motor vehicles and 1586 chsurfeurs licensed In Oregon. This table was prepared In antici pation of a move which It Is under stood will Ikj made at the next session of tho legislature to amend the pre- ont law relating to the registration and licensing of motor vehicles so as to divert tho money received In fees from tho general fund, Into a fund for the Improvement of highways In tho state. The statement shows tho receipts from licenses Issued to auto mobile owners nnd chauffeurs by towns, cities and counties, and Is the first of Its kind to be prepared nud Issued. There aro 134 automobiles In Crook county as shown by Olcott's table, aa follows: Town Autos Chauffeurs Feta Cltne Falls 1 I t.00 Ashwood 1 S.00 llend 39 1G 202.00 Culver 4 1 19.00 Deschutes 2 1 12.00 Fife 1 2.00 I-aldlaw 4 1 14.00 I-nmonta l , 1 3.00 La. 1'lne- . 2 8.00 Madras 10 5 48. SO Mecca 1 S.00 Metollus 4 1 14.00. I'aullna 3 9.00 I'rlnevlllo 41 15 199.00 Redmond 18 15 122.00 Youngs 1 ' COO Total 134 U IC74.00 MHH. SMITH UNION'S. At a meeting of the Library Club yesterday afternoon, Mrs. F. F. Bmlth, president, resigned, aa she expects to leave llend for Portland next week. Upon Mrs. C. S. Hud son, vice president, falls the duties of Mrs. Smith, tho regular tlmo for election being next spring. Mrs. P. W. Drown, secretary-treasurer, re torted that during August the club's rocclpta were H2S.C1, with disburse ments of I271.CC. This Includes a balance of S9& for painting the library building. The club has a balanco on hand of 197.90. Builders' Hardware of every variety we are now offering in the best qualities nt the lowest prices. It will pay nil contractors and build ers to call nnd look over our stock with a view to purchasing for any new buildings they may have in hand. Locks., Keys, Bolts, Bars, Nails, Screws, Staples, Nuts, Rivets and every thing in Hardware likely to "be needed in n 'new or old building is here, together with all tools for all kinds of builders, AlK) Full Lift of BuiMV Suff&m, Suk, Doors, GUm, Paints, Oik, tc. N. P. Wall SUUG UP THE MEKENZIE SEVERAL PARTIES OF, MEN IN FIELD lllll and llarrlman Interest Ileprc- sented, and Illralry (a IleporteU Keen Two Huv ryp Ilclug Made for Itallroat Across Caocadr. (Editorial correspondence) PORTLAND, Sept. 11 Extensive engineering parties representing both the llarrlman and tho Hill rail road' Interests, are engaged In sur veying n line up tho McKenzle river eastwsrd from Kugonc, with the evident Intention of establishing a , route across the Cascade mountains connecting with the Central Oregon I railroads at llend. Such la tho authentic news re ceived hire, my Informant being U. fO. Kddy, an Eastern gentleman who has Just returned from a fishing trip along tho McKenzle. There are several parties of surveyors, num bering In all probably about 76 men. Tho present most easterly camp, ap parently, Is situated at Vlda, a small place some 30 miles east of Eugene. Other camps aro established near Walteravlllc, 10 miles further west. Two surveys are being worked out, each following the Immediate valley of the McKenilo river. Rivalry I Kern. The parties havo been on tho ground but a few weeks, and from the thoroughncsa of their equipment and the apparent semi-permanency of the camps, there seems excellent reason to bellovo that a protracted work lies tefore them. According to natUes who havo watched the work since Ita inception, a very keen rivalry exists between tho represen tatives of tho two railroad systems, and a decided effort is being made by each to outdistance tho other in the ruce for vantage grounds In tho ascent of the mountain alopes and tho gaining of the beat trans-Cascade pass. That little or no news of the mysterious and bidden work of these surveyors baa leaked out la due to the remoteness of their Held of activity and the fact that aside from a chance fisherman very few people who are Interested, or might report tho work, are on the ground. Eastern Objecllie Point llend. Those fsmlllah with the territory and the topographical conformation of tho mountains assert that there can be no other eastern objective point than llend. In addition to the field which may bo entered east of flu tnntinf ntnii nti .vtrmAl v rlfh ! timber country la traversed by tho now surveys. It is through this territory that L. W. Hill passed when he made his recent hasty and secret auto trip from Redmond to Eugene. Whatever the final out come, there seems no reason to doubt that at least ono road, and porsihly two, will establish, a working survey across the mountains. This Smith Street Is n move long anticipated, and lis completion will moan tnnt In nddi Hon to north, south nnd oasturn rail ronton from llend bclnn established, n western rail connection will bo deli nltely planned for, nnd Its probable speedy realization made ponsDile a. i'. i KMEY PROMOTED.- NEW SUPERVISOR AT BENO Local Man Mode Korent Examiner, Willi Headquarters at Portland. Hncceeded Here by M. Is. Merrltt 3. Roy Harvey, who baa been sup ervisor of tho Deschutes National Forest since (t was created July 1, 1911, haa been promoted and la suc ceeded here by M. L. Merrltt. Mr. Harvey left yesterday for Portland. He will x connected with the dis trict forest office there in the capa city of forest examiner. His work will be In Oregon and Washington, consisting of both office and flold duties. Mr. Harvey leaves Rend with many regrets, as be likes It here very much. His congeniality won him a large number of friends who also regret that be cannot continue here, though they are glad to see his promotion. His successor, Mr. Merrltt, arrived Saturday night. Ho has been In charge of reconnalsrance work, with headquarters at Portland, this sum mer and was formerly connected with the Whitman National Forest, In tho Ulue mountains In Eastern Oregon. He haa been In tho forestry service since 190S. Mr. Merrltt is unmarried. MUIGES. Drnient-IIecUle. Married, In Seattle, on September 12, 1912, Floyd Dement and Jose phine Heckle, Father Shea officiating. llrlefly, that tells the story of the surprise sprung by Mr. Dement on his friends, very few of whom know that ho was going to bo married. With his brldo ho arrived bcre Sat urday night and they have gone to housekeeping in tho Drostcrhousl residence where O. M. Patterson formerly lived. Mrs. Dcmeut is a Seattle woman, and the secret of Mr. Dcment'a fre quent "bualnesa" trlpa to the Sound City is now revealed. Mr. Dement haa lived in Bend for soveral years, being the chief owner of the Rend Hardware Company. Unnter-VoKsar. Another wedding that was rather a aurprlse to Rend people was that of John Uniter and Miss Minnie Vasaar. The ceremony was perfor med In Redmond Sunday morning, in the new Catholic church, by Father Luke Bheehu. A number of llend people were present. Mr. and Mrs. Llnster went from Redmond to Mora, Ore., to visit rela tives of the brldo but will return to Rend to mako their home. Thej bride la tho daughter of Mrs. J. O. Drlnson and tho groom the son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Llnster. FINK FRUIT nXIIIRIT. Mrs. William Henderson, who Uvea near Laldlaw. haa sent the Com mercial Club another line exhibit of fruit. This consists of nice, largo apples, crab apples, excellent pedra and prunes. Mrs, Henderson writes that they have a splendid field of oats. 05henMu GoJkwa Trom Home where you are not known, avoid all trouble in regard to your funds by carrying AMGRICAN BANKGRS ASSOCIATION TRAVLRS' CHEQUES These cheques ore equally useful for travelers in America or Abroad. They identify the holder to hotels, ticket agents and merchants, who accept them at face value in payment of accounts. They are not available to finder or thief, if lost or stolen. Let Ms explain the system. The First National Bank of Bend m4, Oregon DIRECTORS U. G COE E. A. SATHER ' -4. O.M. PATTERSON i -i , .... fM rtwWMfcfWslsBMO I A10lilHaMMCJfH7yBH'sMUMsB UKHKTO GET INDUSTRIES VERY ENTHUSIASTIC MEETING HELD Large Gathering of I!ulnea Men at Commercial Club Monday Krenlnjc, and Ways and Mean to In crease Payroll DUcnsaed. I Ono of the most enthusiastic meetings. of local bualnesa men held recently was that Monday evenjng at tho Commercial Club, at which there waa a discussion of ways and means of securing more Industrial enterprises bcre that will enlarge the payroll. Thero waa a largo attendance, al though tho meeting bad not been advertised; to any extent. . , It was' merely a get-started meet ing and nothing definite waa done, but tho ultimate results are expected to be of much Importance In tho upbuilding of the town. Tp further carry out tho ideas suggested at the meeting, a commit tee waa appointed which will report at a later meeting of the Commer cial Club. This committee consists of C. S. Hudson, J. P. Keycs and Hugh O'Kano. Tho general plan outlined at tho meeting was the formation of a stock company of Rend business men, with a capital stock of, say, $25,000 or $50,000, who would go ahead and put In some big plant here, as a woolen mill, shoe factory, etc., that will glvo the town a big payroll and return the investors a good profit on their money. A number of local men have signified that tbey would subscribe stock, and the indications aro that the movement will bo brought to a successful termination. Some tlmo will be required, of course, to work out the details. m CORNERSTONE 5NY Presbyterians Will Hold Hpcclal Services. At 2 o'clock next Sunday afleraaoti the Presbyterians of Bend will for mally lay tho cornerstone of their church edifice. Rev. B. F. Harper, formerly at Rend but now of Milton, Ore., will be in charge, assisted by local church and soe'ety representa tives. Next Sunday morning at 11, at the Star Theatre, there will be services conducted by Rev. I. I. Oorby, tho local pastor, assisted by Mr. Harper. Dr. Corby will preach at thla hour from the text, "What mean yo by these stones?' Tho regular Sunday school session will bo held at 10 o'clock, Mr, Barrowdale, superin tendent. C. S. HUDSON-! H. C. ELLIS j., f?fm?? g r A LsH M lev l i A fTr"vlijS I Hl lit V I II