THE 1IKNI) IU'I.IjETIX, HEM), ORE., WEDNESDAY, Al'dl'H'P 10, 1011, TAGE 4. r- . ' . i i i THE BEND BULLETIN (I'ubllslicd Kvcry Wednesday) GEORGE PALMER PUTNAM Editor and Publisher. RORERT SAWYER Assoclato Editor. An Independent newspaper Btnnd Ing for tho squaro doal, olean busi ness, clean politics nnd tho host In terests of llcnd nnd Central Oregon. uno year. $1.00 Blx months. 80 Threo months.... CO AH subscriptions nro duo nnd PAYARLB IN ADVANCH. Notices of expiration nro mailed subscribers nnd If ronownl Is not mauo wimin reason able time tho paper will bo discontinued. Pleaso notify us promptly of nny change of address, or of lallure to re ceive tho paper regularly. Otherwise we will not be responsible for copies missed. Mnko nil chocks and orders pay able to Hcnd Dulletln. whero they have always loolunl but the North Canal plan meant furnish ing tho company money for tho woric that must now bo found by tho com pany elsewhere. To tho comtnuntnty In general tho present sltuntlon moans that somo Pother Irinco must bo sought for the expenditure of tho funds thnl havo boon allotted for roclnmntton wort In this section nnd which, If wo sur mise corrootty must bo utlllicd soon kofaro thoy nro withdrawn or divert ed claewhoro. ORIGIN OF METALS Varied Theories as to How tho Ores Aro Formed. NATURE HIDES THE SECRET. WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 18, 1914. POLITICS AND PROSPERITY. Tho August number of "Thn World's Work," In Its editorial re sume of tho world's affairs, makes this Instructive comment upon tho present and past hi American poli tics: "August, n political campaign, and business conditions tempered by hes itancy it is a summer of only mild content and much unrest." This de scription was written, in 1609. of conditions under a high tariff and a Ilepubllcnn administration. Perhaps it fits to seme ox tent the summor of 1914 under a lower tariff and a Dem ocratic administration. The Klnt la that the "prosperity" and "calamity" I f)umoiu vscv4 to vnivn unn- combe. Mr. Cleveland est tho blame for the panic, of 1$3. He hod hardly been Inaugurated when It occurred. He had not had time to do anything to affect tho economic status of tho country. If that panic rans irom political action it was the action of his predecessors. "The only way in which Mr. Cleve land could have affected the situation would have been by tho psychological effect of his election. When the panic Of 1907 came, Mr. Roosevelt had beo-i president for nearly six years and his party had been In power longer than that. Ho could, therefore, moro properly bo charged with the condi tions which created that depression than any president of recent timos tn whose administration such a thing occurred. In the face of his own record his recent criticisms of the present administration are much like other similar special pleas of adver sity by the outs and of prosperity by the Ins In othar words, buncombe In the long ran governmental policies are vital to bttstnaea. and perhaps a very acute analyst of conditions might be able to point to certain be ginnings of results soon after meas ures are passed, bat the prosperity and calamity talk oagaged In by both political parties Is not of this analy. tlcal variety. "The benefits or disadvantages of the Underwood tariff, of the eurronay measure, and of the trust bills will appear little by little a time goaa on. Their passage caused about the same hesitancy which any change causes. To this extent the administration 's responsible for the slowness of bust nru. "But the long-etabllshed custom of making the party in power respons ible for ovary thing that happen, whether it had anything to do With it or not, has led Mr. Roosevelt to howl calamity and Mr. Wilson to as-! sort prosperity. This summer we navn't elUjer. We are having a fairly slow summer in business with prospects for a better fall." J. W. Rlnnchard, candidate for Commissioner In Crook county, has taken an open stand fuvorlng coun ty division. Ho does this beonuso ha Is convinced that from a sound busi ness standpoint the division of the county Into smaller units would lam ent all concerned. Rut his position will cost him sumo support in the Prlnevlllo country, It Is uudurstood on reliable authority. Therefore it would seem a specially square deal that tho voters of the weM side give Mrs Ulanchnrd good support. Scltnca Has For Centurltt Tried to Wratt It From Htr, but Otologist and Mlntraloalttt Am as Yot UnabU to Agras Upon tha procti. A few years ago llond was ship ping in hoga from Portland. It is very gratifying to nolo tho change which has oomo to pass, ns Indicated by a brtof story of hog shipments from hore contained clsowhoro In this paper. During tho year mnny oar loads of hogs have gone out from Central Oregon, and from now on the position of this territory ns a produc ing, nnd not a purely consuming, area Is assured. A MILE WITH ME. Oh. who will walk it uillo with . me Alongllfe's merry way? A comrade, 'blithe and full of glee. Who dares to laugh out loud and frit" -. Ami lot his frolic fancy piny, I.Ike a happy child, through the flowers gay That Mil the tiohl and fringe the way Where he walks a mile with me. And who will walk a mile with me Along life's woary way? A friend whose heart has eyes to see. And tjtnrs shine out o'er the darkening Ion, And the quiet rest at the end of the day A friend who knows and dares to say Tho grave, sweet words that cheer the way Where ho walks n mile with me. With fuch a comrade, snch a friend. I fnln would walk till Journey's end . Through summer sunshine, win tor rain. And then? Farewell wo shall meet again! Honry vnn Dyke. IF NOT NORTH QANAL WHERE? Tho findings of the Reclamation Sarvloo on tho North Canal Projeot and the C.O.I. Co.'s statement that it would never accept a proposition to sell on the basis of that report seem effectually to put an ond to a scheme that had been hoped to be a solution of irrigation troubles on the east side of the Dosohutes. How the North Canal will now be finished remalnH to be seen. The present company confessed its inability to complete it when it inado Its offer to the State test December. If the company's at tltude toward tho Reclamation Ser vice report la sincere it Is apparent that the United States will never fin ish tho project, and tho State of Oregon w,ould hardly find is possible to step in, as purchaser from tho com pany on any other terroB than those In which tho Federal government would offer. Settlers on tho rest of the segrega tion must now look to tho company for the completion of their portions of the system. That, of co.urse, ,8 You have read of that legendary In dian who while chasing game on n Rullrlan tmmutntu sldo seised u bush tu prevent himself from fulling, and. the bush being pulled loose from its scanty hold on tho rut-lit, he saw lt-4 crooked roots grasping Unimex of gleaming white ore ami thus became tho discoverer of tho famous stiver milieu of 1'olo.sl. You have ulso read, perhaps with Itching lingers, of prospectors picking up nuggets of gold worth n (liousnnd dollars each or opening veins of quarts all shot throiiKh with heavy threads of tho yellow metal. You know that ore of gold nnd silver or of any other precious or use ful metal me not to bo found Its every body's hack yurd, but must be sought for In certain favored parts of tho earth. Hut has your Intelligent curiosity over led you to Inquire how thexo ores came to lie where they are and nowhere else? Have you over wondered what makes u gold iiugget? Possibly you think that gold and other inetnU grow somewhat ns fruits do-In soils and climates Dint are o clalty suited to them. Well, there Is considerable truth In that idea, and tho word "grow" Is. In one oi.o. sur prisingly applicable to such ilspo-dls. Rut there is u grout deal more In the matter than you would Imagine, mid on no milijeet has science fought uiikv I battles ro.VHl than on this of the origin I of metallic ore. I think that there are some geologUm win. woiiM rather II ml out tli In secret to the tory bottom than discover the richest lode that tho rib of tho earth contain. If they count do Mil that would bo perfection, ami we must not forget that knowledge Is lowor. Until about -100 years ago everybody who thought about It at all liellcvod that veins uf precioiM ore wore dis tributed under the lutluuucv of the planets. At that time astrology held the place of science. Finally (icorgu Agrlcoln, n (lermnii mineralogist, who lived about tho time when the gold nnd silver of .Mexico mid I'eni were making Spain the tout IHrniry minings of the world, hit upon a theory whlrh cume lit substance wry near tho tnilli. He taught that water, penetrating Into the earth nnd becom ing heated, took up scattered minerals In solution nnd uftorwunl deposited them ax ores In cavities in tho rocks. The mineral solutions bo called the earth's "Juices." A couple or hundred years later the Gorman geologist Werner set forth n view that bccuuiu wry famous under the name of the WcptunlHt theory." fruiu .Neptune, the god or the sea. Werner's Men was tlt.it as the earth exiled (limn fr,,H i. e-ini.rrtl nelxils out of which It Was Mined It was en volopcd In u uticiill hot ocean, hold ing in solution nil kinds of minerals, and that when thu rocky crust was formed tho water leaking down Into It deposited Its metallic contents liv chemical precipitation in veins and lodes where'er thu ilrcunlslauceM wero favorable. Rut n hundred years ago the Nep tuulst theory, which had swept every thing before R in thu minds of men of science, met Its Waterloo at the hnmlH of Hulton, the Scottish geulo gist, wlllt his Plutonic" theory ifrom t'luto. the god of the Infernal rvglousi. HutloiiH Idea -.wis that the materials which till the metallic veins were melt cd by hen I and forcibly Injected Into tho clefts and llssuro of tho strata Irom Mow. The NittlHttH' and 'Tlutonlsts" had a hard light, with tho latter hold- lug the upper hand, until their theory had assumed a kind of compromise form, with water again playing the principal rolo. The American geolo gist. Van lilac. In the author or ouu of the latest theories, according to which meleorle water (eondeiiwed atmospheric apor) penetrates deep Into the earth's crust, and.- with steadily luctcuslug Iciupcniturv, takes up mineral matter Into solution. Spreading, as It gets deeper, the water roneho larger open ings In the rocky crust. In which It ascends, with decreasing temperature and pressure. Then It deposits tho ores, whoso ma terlals It has collected In Its wander- lugs mill curried along In solution. Rut this Is not the last wont, and in recent years there has been u partial reaction toward tho riutonUt theory. Resides, a great deal seems to depend upon the nature of the ore whoso ori gin Is to qiicxtloii.-tiarrott P. Hcrrlsa In Now York Journal, jTS&fi. MNJOHGl 10 f. U i CUT THE ARMY RED TAPE. 1 cent a word IS ALL A LITTLE WANT AD WILL COST YOU TIIONlS IT IF YOU WISH. Crawford Peaches for Canning Get them at Shuey's Cash Grocery WlllUh Kntw Hii Men and Thty Kntw Hill and That S.Ul.d It. There sre times heii the o eslltsl "nsl tiisj" ir the army lw way un der the stress f clrt umtsn ts. At the bottle of CliU-kniutiiiKM (icmtral Wlllich, wIh was isiumMiHlIng a bil gade. Immrrril the dHsisure of (Ivii ersl ItiwiHrrniiH, tin- tstmmaudliiK geu srat. by mjiiic sJlahl umlNahm. Ueiier al Wlllkh msh wHit fr ami lnfwnnd Uy the getieml comwatMllUK that he must eenshler hlmeir umlsr anml fur the prtsMiit. "You may leave your awonl here." added Itosoxrrans, "until ymir cmm) Is trlwl." "Yw. general. I will consider myself under arroM," was the reply, "ami Just as soon as tills cmngoimMt Is over, I'll come mid II it up the matter." "Rut, sir." sold the astounded Hose erans. "I want you to comddor your self under arrest now." "Of course I do." rcMinded Wlllich promptly, "and Just as noon ns this light Is over I'll nil' that tho matter Is arranged." "Rut. sir." Apostuletisl tho. com miiudlng Keiieral. "I can't let you go Into this light. You an umlvr arrtt. I will asMtgu an olilccr to joar bri gade." "You send an otttm- tn oowmaml my buysr criwl Wlllich ImlUmautly. "He rant cuiMHwml- tlMm! TWy don t kimw him! Ttory know w-l ran teach them. Xuns of mr boys wihiM kiaiw hw to nubt or what to do na Ismi I wa with thrm. My Imm llouit to m. Vt. hh. (iMral Wlllkh! I lomiuuml the brigade, awl I most tight (lit brigade r (eneral Rosei-rans gave It M. (lett ers! Wlllich was nMUtsted to return "ami light Ids Imya." which he did most siH-eitMrully. Ami that was the end of the mstter.-Washlngteii Star. ' Dr. Sawyer Cushion Shoes Do Ease the Feet Wlwt n relief it is lo-wcar n pnir of cohifortrtblc, easy fining Dr. Snwyer cushion sliocn. No more ncliing feet, no nuifcring from broken down arclu Dr. Snwyer Shocd arc good to look at, too, and ar; made in the latest appiovcd sty lea for both men and women, young and old. Make your feet happy by getting n pair today of thcie splendid shoec. Dr. Sawyer Cushion Shoes. rc made by Urown Shoe Company, Inc., in tlicir famous Dr. Sawyer Specialty Factory. Only ilia finest pra Je of leathers arc uiod in their konttruction, R. M. SMITH CLOTHING COMPANY LEARN THE WAY I'OK I1KNT. Classified Adverti sing Advertisements Inserted under this heading at the rate of O.W. VKST A WORD each Insertion. Cash must accompany nil orders from perons not Iiuvlnir it regular iirroiint with Tho Itnllot In. No uiltPrtlsoiiieiit Ink for less than ! rents each Insertion, VOtt, SA1.K Jersey cow, sell, or trade, for gsntls horse. Apply 0 W. Snyir, 3 H miles south of Laid law, Oregon. lOtf I'OR R!S.VT--Two Hall fnrnlhal houses near sahool bohm. 8. R. HokIii, over Deaehutas Hank. tOtf I'OR KKNT Three room hens, furnished. Also thrae room homa unfurnlahed. Apply Metropolitan. 20tf I'OR It K.VT Suite uf threo mod ern housekeeping rooms. J. J. Klein. IStf FOR HUNT Small house partly furnished, Jo a month; also tent house adjoining. Near depot. In qulro at Uulletln. 49tf FOR RUNT OlTlccs on Vall stroct very aheap. Apply Uulletln Olllco. FOR RKNT Rooms otutrully lo oated. Klectrls lights and wntor. fiultnblo for housekooplng. Cheap, Apply Uulletln OHlee. FOR RENT Two room honso. fHrnlahlnga and a Moo gardan for sole. Tucker, Aubrey Hvlnlits Ad 4IUon. Up M, I'OR SAI.lt Fine Jaraay r, In liilrn of Karl I'owara. Mlllicaa. ni-d-lluras road itti FOR flAI.ICTMn high grsds Jvr- ssys., thrss yaar old mare, It ml chirk- wts. (.aldlaw PuafolUca. :i-:6p FOR MAI.IC-Chaap, or will trad for a Iwrsa, a U. I. eraam Mtparator Practically iikw, Ilox aft RHd. Il. FOR MAI.nV Five oalva. one lo four months old. (loo. A. Jonas 31c FOR 8AI.W Uood horse, Height anout I3U0 iKiunds. 7 years old. In quire Hiiuuy a urosery. I7tf FOR SAI.Ilmprovsd rellnqulab mnnt, !0 miles from llond. Inqulrs Rulletln. ra-3c FOR KAM ITnlll Keptomhor l'. only, Dtirno Jersey dills and sowv. upon and lirml; also idga olthor sx. Farmer's prices. Phono Rndawntt No. XftOD. O. I,, llraxee, ranoh Row. ell Rutin. I!li;. n...mj-.'-ii.. ,. i.n LOST AMI FOl'.VII. I.OHT While setter dog. Rullstln oWc. Notify if FORHAI.lt. FOR SALaV-Herw and bHRCy, lit. (Isorao Oaloa at pest oflte. Ite COilK AND RISK tiia improrenwuts nu 100 aere ranch now for sala ehonn. Irrlsate.1 and Impntvod. I.evsreit Flsch Co.,llend, Oregon. tic FOR SAI.H 0 head tuberciilosU tested milch cows: 3 hund 3 rear old holfnra; 10 head of heifer and bull calves, f to 8 months old. Don't write utiles you mean business. A A. Rarg, Olst, Oregon. JJ-J5 . FOR 8AI.I5 Chonp. Twhi single beds. Inuulre Rullutln outre. 17tf I'OR 8AI.K Registered O. I. C. pigs. Rhone or write O. C, Card well, Rend. 13tf I-OtT- Team of ntaroa. a boat aaoo poitnila. tHia whit with wire cut on riant shouldar. Ono brown with hlt. root and wlra cut on loft hind foot . Alas MeKawwn, Hampton, Or. 23-2K- I.OT Hay mars walvht s'-jut 1000 with Tl brand on left thl bona. Tip of laft anr split a'"m ono Inch down. Indar plana notU iJoyd Matter, tauHer, l.sks Com ty. Oregon. aa-:iu- itl'RAYIID Hay honia weight so bsandwl laft shiiuldar. Anchor and O. II., had halter oh whan last soati near Andursou'a sawmill. Findar r turn to Tiimaln Irrigation I'rojaat olllco and rocolvo reward. ai-34ti- TAKMN UF At Johnson ranch to iiiIIim east of Rend, bay hM branded on bift shnuldor, 1.7 and K on right stllloi dark hay mare brand ed on left shouldar. Halle T. II nwr rroaa and T-A coiiuacted. oh rliht shouldar. Roth broka. Hart ii.w ell. 23-I7p I.OKT- Kunday. Child's grar at nsar Arnold school house. J.eave it Mutlntln ollloe. It i G- WANTKII. WANTBD--A second-hand hack. I live six miles east of Rend on old Roar Crook road. R. A. I'uatt. Sip. WANTUD Olrl foy gonoral Iioiibo work. Apply .Mrs. O. M. Fat tor son. J4tf WANTKD 8eond hand ran go. beds, chairs, etc. I'. H. Johnaon. Mil Mean, Oregon. 23-2 to. WANTHD Work as Janitor. In qulro Hullotin. 22-2C) WANTKD Boverel cratoa of ras horrlos or loganberries. I'honu Mm. I'utnnm. 23-2-1 p, WANTED Woman In strnlKhten- od olrcumHtnncoN will work for bo'i.-.i nnd lodging. Inquire through Mr Ouy Furst. ."J ?p. WANTKD Smnll ranch, 86 to 100 acres, rich soil, part for cultivation, and part for grazing. Write 1). II. Itlohardo, Han Luis Obispo, Califor nia. 23-2-1 p WANTKD I'nuitlon wanted by stenographer experienced 'In law, lumber and commercial work. Ad dress, Miss H. M. RUBKles, (Jen. Del., Oakland, California. 23-2Cc. WANTED To rent a smnll fur nished or partly furnished houso by young couple who will tuko good caro of place. Will bo pormancnt If rent Is reasonable. Address XYZ, Hullo tin. tf a WHY? Did the Rend 'Water Light ft Power Co. whan thoy built their new Power l'lrtnt use tho best HAND nnd (IRAVKI. thoy could buy? WHY did tho City, when they built the now HUWRK HYHTF..M, uno tho host HAND nnd (HIAVI.I. the mnrkot afforded r The answur Is obvious. Thoy KN'KW that tho best ma terlals for concrete work pay thu largest dlvl dauds In tno end. As wo hnvo beon nblo to sntlnfy tho tuct Ing demauijs of those oustomuru, wo fuel that jour demands can bo ns successfully mot. Wo can supply you with thu proper slzoii of washed sand and ccioonod grnvol for your particular purpose. Ask for quotations. Bolton, Ruetenik S May jVUANll MAY, Mr. Wend, Ore. Olllco uitli Holit, II. (loiild, Deschutes Hank Ilulldliig, 4 'Concrcto Ultlmutely, Why Not Nowr f