Nrf a. thk nKxnjicLi-Eny. nam, okr, Wednesday, September rf. ioio. rAOB s. f !r I i' r; PUTNAM WRITES" FROM BORDER BEND MAN TELLS ARMY LIFE OF of I'tiblMier of Iliilletln Says Oregon JteKlriK-nl Ha llr-n Especially Favorrd In lu Camp Location Training H .Made Soldier. The following article was pre- pared for The bulletin by "0. - V. Putnam, publisher of The liulletln and corporal In Com- pany M, Third Oregon, recent- ly stationed on the Mexican border. Written before the War department ordered the Oregon troops home it shows In what It ayH concerning the prospects of return how complete a surprise the return order m st have been to the regiment. Ily 0. I Pl'T.VAM. Its a long way from Bend to the Mealcan border, and a big change from newspaperlng to packing a rllle In tbc'foderaH7-d national guard. And there are tome twelve hundred Oregonlans down here who are hav ing all sorts of new experiences In this soldiering butlness and wpnder Ing what Is coming next. When the President's call came, back on June lb. it looked very much like business There really seemed the best sort of prospect that there would be action on and beyond the border. We were hurried down here on the Jump, our batalllon, the Third, going directly to the international line where we could see across a lit tle valley Into Mexico and hoar the bugles playing In the quartrcll of the Mex gsrrihon. But, as you know, the smoke nil blew away, and now .hero wc are holdlcg down a Job that seems to be about half police work and the rest training camp. What come next no one knows. A lot of Die people think, (most of them at home) that the Mexican fuss bu subsided for good and that wc might as well go north again. They say there Is no ceed for troops on the border and that It Is unfair to keep the national guardsmen on the Job when they are needed at home. Then there are others who believe that the men will be stationed along the border for months to come, get ting training and acting as a sort of stimulus to good behavior on the other side of the lice. t Guessing I flood. fjueMtlng Is food. It Is all a piu xle. Of courte, most everyone would like to go home. It Is no especial fun to roost in a camp down here, drilling and outing and sleeping, when thern doesn't seem to be pros yiHit of doing anything more exciting In the near future. Also, it Is far tram satisfying to draw from f IS to. My (40, a month, which Is the pay alu from privates up to sergeants, Iftiload of the pay we gut In Oregon. Tbl money end of It Is working a rool hardship on many men. They are wtlllng to make sacrifice if thuy are needed for service, but naturally thr grumble at Inuction. However, that hort of thing Is al ways the order of the day In such klluullons as this. The old timers remind ug that the Second Oregon regiment was hold at .Manila, seven thousand uiIIoh from home, for eight mouths, doing absolutely nothing. Tim Spanish war was over and tho men couldn't comprehend why they wrre marooned. Then suddenly the I'hllllpltitt Insurrection broke out ami the need for them arose. Any such prospect as that Is not cheerful. It Is understood here, as tikewhere, that the Mexican mess Is nut straightened out by a long ways. 1'urhaps It never will bu until there U a good thorough cleaning up That jrpjild to a su-ut He man's sized job. and It will cost fortunes In lives mnJ money, and years of wracking work. U "vs 111 be a task like taming the, rbllllpiues, only a thousand fold lrfl(tr. Much a house dunning In Mexico would be a terribly hard Job. That should bo understood by every SBe. If tt Is tho only way, well and good. Hut It will be no tea party. Crusted that perhaps some day vva fctmll havu to go Into Mexico. Omitt ed that iivun now umny troops uro seeded along the border for policing purposes and for their effect upon Hvuruwental conduct to the south. Grunted thut our regular army Is Many times too ttmnll to eopo with tho sltuutlon. and that tin National Uuard ueuds training Taking nil Into eous'ilorutlou, Isn't It reasonable to supposo that roost of tho guard which Is on the line now will bo kept hero for sotuo time to come, and trained? Bight now tho War Department is weeding out tho regiments on the border. Thoso with dependent fain llltw nud boys who should go to school are being sent homo. It will bo hard on tho mva who have to stay, but at least at tho end of a few moro months they will be reas onably efficient soldiers and tho coun try will have a secondary "ny some real worth. The militia, when It estne to the border, wasn't In bad shape by any means, as militia goes. But it was utterly unquallBed to take the field It lacked equipment and training. There would have been sad tragedies If the gdardsmen had been thrust In to Mexico two months ago. Situation Uba Bettered. Now the ituatlon has bettered wonderfully. All the troops, we are told, are pretty well equipped. Two months of hard drilling has wrought wonders. The ruard could give a good account of Itself. So far as the Oregon regiment Is concerned, we have fared wonderful ly well. Without doubt we have the best location all along the IS 00 miles of border. The present camp at Im perial Beach Is some tire miles back from the Mexican line and directly beside the ocean It would be hard t find a more Ideal place to hold a s NEW INTEREST ARE WAKING UP TO RAILROAD PLANS big body of troops. There are outpoats, single companies, at Both Oregonlan and Telegram Make Favorable Editorial Comment on .Straborn IcveIopmenU-Suegtt Now Is Time to AvvaXeu. tude of the Klamath Falls Commer- clal Club, which by unanimous vote accepted the proposition. Commit tees will go to work at once to meet the conditions of Strahorn's propos al. "The Telegram Is more than pleat ed to note this new activity All Oregon will rejoice over the second invasion" of Central Oregon by the (railroad. The proposed line opens up a region rich In natural resources I whkh have waited half a century up on transportation for their develop ment. "Construction of the line to Sprague river mar be taken to mean the first spoke in the hub of a system that is to ramify the rallless empire east of the Cascade mountains. A vast territory needs only the ra'lroad to make it profitably productive. It appears that a new era in Oregon railroad development Is almost here." "GridlronlnR Central Oregon." The Telegram's editorial of Aug ust 29 entitled "Grldlroning Central Oregon." was as follows: "There Is a businesslike air to the activities of Robert aStrahorr. in con- rl J&r Evidence that the Portland news papers are waking up to an interest occupied by in the Straborn railroads that has other spots I real possibilities of assistance for the Mong the line, and some or tnem are project in tne Oregon metropolis is nectj0n with the Oregon-California hot and dry enough to fit any de- given In recent editorial comment In , & Eastern railway that speaks well scrlptlon of tropical conditions. But the Oregonlan and the Telegrttu I for the Immediate future. Practlc- nere at tne naaquariers me cumaiei mis nas been largely cauea torm i ajj. ajj tne s.jrVes for Important is laeai actually cooler man suco-iDy tne news oi ine ranroaa aeveiop mertlme In Oregon, thanks to tbe'mentsln the vicln'ty of Klamath constant sa breeze and with about . Falls, the apparent possibility of Im all tho comforts and conveniences mediate construction having shown which an arm camp can offer the enterprise In a different light lines have been completed. Efforts are now- making for rights of way, terminal sites and the customary aid from towns to be directly benefitted by the railroads. Obviously THE finest cook never quite equals "the things Mother used to make". An' no man can beat old Mother Nature's recipe for ageing Tobacco. vivivvJi-i. is cureu duW-w iNacure s way. && Every good quality of choice Kentucky BurUy Tobacco i brought to perfection In VELVET by two ytaxa' agalag of the leal. o, y,. . JJijC.iynyiUJoGacccXa jC UC :nc 3C jcQ Of course there Is plenty of hard i from any In which they have viewed work. An average day Is about like 'it heretofore. this. Itevellle. which Is the get-up i "The Slmlioni Idea." bugle call at 5.10. Setting up ex- Under the caption "The Strahorn ercises and then breakfast at 6 to. .Idea," the Oregonlan on August 30,nave j,een carried to completion. urni irora eigni iu eleven, ruur. saia; Ing," which means clcanlng-up. of gon is yet to be had by men of very moderate means. Without tho rall- the capital needed to road this land has little practical construct and equip the several lines worth; with the railroad It becomes Is in sight; otherwise the compre- a valuable asset for the common hensive preliminary work would not wealth. It "Relative to the next step in the Strahorn saysr "We tents and vicinity, and mers at noon. Tho non-commlsstoned officers and officers have two hours school every afternoon, and probably a fourth of the men arc n some detail or other kitchen work or some other feature of camp activity; there Is plent) to do to keep a big camp running In the perfect, orderly way habitual to ar my organization. Trooi Hnvc Recreation. Probably there Is a swim in the ocean during the afternoon. It can bo followed by a fresh-water shower baths, for each batalllon has a shower. Tho Inter-company baseball tour of Interior Oregon, where he has sought to interest towns and com munities in his plans. It has een no task to show them that they will be mightily benefitted by railroad connection with one another and with the outside world. They have known all thnt for many years. More won derful to state. It has been no great Job, apparently, to get them to fur nlah terminals, procure rights of way teams play a game nearly every of- jand guarantee subscriptions. They ternoon. San Diego is only six miles distant, and pctntts to leave camp are not hard to get for men whose records arc good. AIbo, there Is the big exposition, and a mlgnty fine one It Is, at San Diego, and plenty of oth er attractions round about. Supper is at S'lC, and at six there Is parade. Taps blows at ten o'clock, when everyone Is supposed l: .hakes a lot of money these days to enterprise Mr, Mr Strahorn took up In Central bulld 450 m)Ieg of raiiroad. The .have finally gotten this project where, Oregon tho project of building rail-1 corporation which must furnish It I within the next thirty or sixty days roads where the great transcontisen- nM satisfied Itself as to the permn-' at most, we will be ready to tako up tal systems left off, and he has car- nent rajue or tne investment. "I Its financing In all ita parts. For ried it along so far that he feels nave BJ,m a vear and a nalf.. tay8 ' tne flrst t(me t can gaj. that we are measurably certain of success. Sohe:Mr. o,rahorn. "In aimnst mnntanti within measurable distance of corn- announces on his return from a long nv-,,iP!,,inn nf ,,,., ,.H nro. i menclnir pnnntrurt!nn " ent traffic possibilities as well as! "Based on these activities a rcas those likely to be added by the de-'onable view- of the general situation velopment of lumber, Irrlagtlon, I In Oregon is that the tide has turn drainage and the utilization of cer-'ed. Ther allroads have learned, de tain mineral resources." 1 spite a lot of Intemperate talk, that "It Is in the future development, no legislation In Oregon has "hurt" which Is certain to follow- the rail-! the railroads, and that there Is not roads, that all Oregon Is Interested. , the remotest danger of that sort of Low priced agricultural land has be-1 legislation. They know thnt regula come very scarce In the past fifteen j tion Is an established policy but they years, and It Is steadily growing (know also that It Is and will remain scarcer. Good land In Central Ore-1 constructive regulation. There Is a are willing to show their faith by their works, Just as Mr. Straborn purposes to make a largo Investment on his own account. lie is something moro than a promoter: he" Is a build er and Investor, lie has a legitimate apd fruitful Idea, which he has sought to capitalize with funds fur nished by himself and by the Inter ests concerned and benefitted. What better understanding between the people and new- ra'Iroads than there was In the old days with the old railroads. The railroads know that the people of Oregon wiU lie Just to them. We believe that this better understanding will lead soon to the larger railroad development for which Oregon has so long waited." VOOATi MUSIC CLASS. About the middle1 of September I will start a class in vocal music Those who are Interested may write or call on mo. Mrs. Franklin Thor dnrson, Itlver Terrace. Adv. tic MUSIC CLASSKS TO 1JEOI.V. Mrs. Bernlco Halley-Forrcst an nounces that her classes In music will start on September lL'.-Adv CJtf Gosnoy's have leased tho Pierce send cave. The best sand on tlio market. Lcavo orders at Georges barber shop. CItf to be In bed. A Y. M. C. A. building could bo fairer? offers much to tho men; It has mag- "This Is nn Intimation thnt Port. azlnes and games and tables for writ 1ns with free correspondence paper. Every few nights there Is some en tertainment, mostly athletic. Educa tional classes aro Just being Btartcd offering much to those who aro glv. ing up their school work nt home. Tho camp Is assuming a very per manent appearance too much ho to pteasu thoso who are anxious to get homo. How permanent It will be for us most nnyonc In Bend can say Just as certainly ns wc can guess down hero And what tho upshot of the whole situation will be Is tho big gest puzzle of thu hour All wc do know Is thnt wo arc lining treated well, wo aro learning soldiering slow ly, and physically all hands are ben efitting mightily. It Is true, a Vice President Mnmlinll remarked, thnt tho Hughe speech of accvptnuco "had all the length mid tono of n dlsnentlug opinion." But he omit ted to add that the dlSKentlug opinion thus expressed U that of the American opIe. Want Ads only ONE CENT a word. land has on Interest in Central Ore gon which It has not moved to pro tect and realize through Its support of tho Strahorn project. But doubt less Portland will take a hand when the time comes. The benefits to bo derived from railroad development of Central Oregon are so obvious thnt It Is conceivable thnt Portland would not bo fully alive to Its ohll gutlons to Itself and to the state." "Another Hull 'Invasion. " Tho Telegram headed Its first od Itorlul, on August 19, "Another Rail MnvnHlon,' " snying: "There Is n practical, business-like flavor to Colonel Strahorn's proposl Hon to ponotrato the Klamath lako country with a railroad that Is In every way pleasing. Ho mokes a simple, definite offer to build a, line from Kltumtth Falls onstwnrdly to Sprugue river, a dlHtuncu of 40 miles. Three things he wants: Free right of way, a terminal site nnd $300,000 In cash In exchange for stock or lo gul Interest. In return he promises to hnvu the rond In operation Its whole length within a year. Still more gratifying Is the nttl- GROCERIES FRJSH VEGETABLES BERRIES AND FRUITS BUILDERS' HARDWARE and W&m SIIERWIN-WILUAHS (tgg$ SIIERWIN-WILUAHS PAINT F. DEMENT & CO. When you build in Bend specify local pine Shevlin Pine is true to size and grade. Grown sawed right, sold right. right, MILLER LUMBER COMPANY CORNER WALL AND OHIO STREETS EXCLUSIVE LOCAL SALESJIACENT TO THE TRADE:- Our lumber is CALIFORNIA WHITE PINE, grown nt an altitude of 4,200 feet. We manufacture LUMBER, SASH and BOX SHOOKS "TEST th T: EXTURE" The Shevlin-Hixon Company Bend, Oregon Dtnrer zsti Salt Lake Rt&mcfttitive: G. W. GATES & CO. Qicage Rcprescfttative: W. A. LAMMERS 4jj; vjtii V ' - mux. L SZMMtfaMMbfe- I a 4 f "'-- -W " '."iii :iiMfcV''ur-X& ''fWMWWMHJMBiJ1 ' I'lmiHIHI ''" -yWtif , l.mi'immimm&i&'i'1 "f"r;yiSJiFSSSasBSSSSSSSJSpWSJMBji 4 h. 1 A m ". u l aMMIBBBBBBBBBIviHHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiM S-ta . WK.M.IBBA 4H ' VW- I lMnMaaiMSMSSSSSSSSSSSSSSIiSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSM