The BulleTin • Sunday, June 20, 2021 C7 YESTERYEAR Garden of pot plants suffers in police lockup in 1971 Compiled by the Deschutes County Historical Society from the archived copies of The Bulletin at the Deschutes His- torical Museum 100 YEARS AGO For the week ending June 19, 1921 Fire alarm blows during drill, teaching several lessons Bend’s public spirited fire fighting corps were yesterday morning doing the city a valu- able service in flowing Wall street with two streams of wa- ter from the pumper, a strictly voluntary act, when the alarm was sounded. Thereupon a number of things occurred which, the firemen say, taught them several lessons. All but one of the men hold- ing one of the nozzles let go and ran for the truck. Mean- while the other crew had shut off their nozzle, throwing 140 pounds of pressure on the lone man and tearing the hose from his grasp. The nozzle writhed from one side of the street to the other, but nobody was struck. Engineer Houston soon stopped the flow, and the en- gine was quickly uncoupled from the hydrant. A fireman dashed into the Windmill to learn over the phone the location of the fire, but could not for some reason. The truck started for the fire hall, there being told that J. B. Heyburn’s house was burning. A whirlwind run was made back to Wall street and a line of hose laid down Oregon, to find not a trace of smoke. The Heyburns had called the fire station for a bonfire per- mit, it was stated and the alarm had been rung by mistake, it developed later. However it was noted that Chief Carlon was exceedingly cool during the whole affair and he is sus- pected of leaving orders for an alarm to test the speed of the department under new con- ditions. Hereafter, the firemen state, they will not leave the house for a drill unless a fireman who can drive the auxiliary truck remains to answer alarms. Lumber shipping and literal horsepower increase at the mill Twice as many thou- sands of feet of lumber were shipped during May by the Brooks-Scanlon Lumber Co. as was produced, according to H. E. Allen, office manager. The shipments amounted to 5,500,000 feet. J. P. Hennessey, assistant general manager for The Shevlin-Hixon Company, stated that the Bend mills are doing a larger percentage of business in proportion to their capacity than any other mills in the northwest pine district, with a few possible exceptions. Production is closer to annual capacity, both in production and shipping, than that of the great majority of plants in the northwest, he said. Except for a few extensions which may be built, the track- age system for transporting lumber in the Brooks-Scanlon Lumber Co. yards has been completed and is declared to be a great improvement over the old system. One horse now does the work which formerly required eight. Horses are to be the permanent mode of power, although electricity or gasoline was considered. 75 YEARS AGO For the week ending June 19, 1946 Train engine rams through roundhouse, leaving hole A runaway railroad engine crashed through the wall of the roundhouse on Scott street early this morning, taking out a 30-foot section and finally coming to rest at a precarious angle halfway out of the build- ing. The engine was being ser- viced by the crew on a track leading into the roundhouse, when a defective throttle set it in motion. Crews worked all day today hoisting and jacking the engine so track could be put under the wheels. When this is done the engine is to be pulled back through the hole and into the roundhouse. A crane from the Brooks-Scanlon Lumber Com- pany Inc., is helping with the job. A heavier crane is on the way from Wishram. When the engine finally came to rest its front end was across a section of a “Y”, tying up part of the Bend yards. Record crowd at Sisters rodeo Under damp skies, with low clouds shrouding the nearby Cascade peaks to their white bases, Sisters presented its an- nual rodeo this past weekend, with attendance estimated at the greatest in history. It was reported that between 5,000 and 6,000 attended each per- formance. Many of the West’s most re- nowned cowboys took part in the events, vying with top hands from stock ranches in Central Oregon and all parts of the state. Among the most lively of the contests was the wild horse race, in which a local boy, 13-year-old Donald Currier, won top money from a field of men. A light shower which fell Sunday morning failed to dampen the spirits of the hun- gry patrons of the buckaroo breakfast, who cleaned out the mountains of supplies which had been assembled to accom- pany the buffalo steaks and other cowboy specialties. Ver- non Peck, chairman for the breakfast, estimated 1,100 were served before supplies were ex- hausted. Dog credited with saving owners’ store A small dog named Poodles was credited with saving Hen- ry’s Grocery store in Carroll Acres from destruction by fire early this morning. At 2:10 a.m. Poodles barked loudly when flames appeared inside the store and awakened the owners, Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Henry, in their quarters. Henry called the Bend fire depart- ment, which made a run to the store and put out the fire. Had the dog not noticed the fire and awakened the owners, the entire store and service station probably would have been de- stroyed. Damage was confined to the interior of the store with stock suffering some from smoke and water. Cause of the fire was not determined. 50 YEARS AGO For the week ending June 19, 1971 Marijuana plants find climate, cops too much Sheriff Forrest C. Sholes and his deputies are nursemaiding 24 potted marijuana plants. They acquired the “garden” last Friday when they uprooted the plants in a yard on Riverfront Street. No arrest has been made yet in connection with the finding. The total city and county garden of marijuana plants is now 124. There are 100 plants dying in the basement of city hall, according to Bend Detec- tive Jack Arney. Sholes said he is watering his to keep them alive as possible evidence. Still, they are scrawny plants. Mari- juana doesn’t grow well in Cen- tral Oregon. Arney said marijuana grows easily in areas like the tropics and Vietnam; “It just takes a lot of heat and water and no frost.” It is because of the frost that most marijuana grown in Central Oregon need extra care. Arney said all the mar- ijuana plants police have col- lected here have been found in enclosed places, such as greenhouses. People here grow only “a very small part” of what they smoke, Arney said. This is be- cause it is really more trouble than it’s worth. Arney said that it is easy to buy the drug here, so there isn’t much reason to bother to grow it. He said, “I’ve asked kids I know are probably non-users, if I gave them $10 how long it would take them to get me a lid. They say about 15 min- utes.” A lid is not a precise mea- surement, but a selling unit. It contains enough marijuana for about 20 “joints” (mari- juana cigarettes). Besides the risk involved in cultivating an outlawed plant, he said the marijuana pro- duced here is “a poor grade.” The tallest single plant the police have in custody is only two feet high. Mexican varieties have been known to grow up to eight feet tall. Marijuana growers can obtain seeds along with the leaves they buy in a lid. Ar- ney said pushers fill “baggies” with leaves to sell it, and since people purchase it by inex- act amounts, the vendors add bulk by including stems and seeds. “Marijuana is harvested when it matures and blos- soms,” Arney said. Then it is dried and cured for future use. Burl Ives to highlight Bend’s Fourth Of July Folksinger Burl Ives will be a feature attraction of the second annual Old-Fashioned Fourth of July Celebration sponsored by the Bend Chamber of Com- merce. Allan Crisler, chamber manager, said he received con- firmation this morning that the popular entertainer will be a member of a Johnny Horizon Environmental Festival group that will present a program in Drake Park on the evening of July 4. In addition to Ives, the group will also include Doc Severen- son and his orchestra and Mar- tha Radcliff, a young country and western singer. Severenson and his orchestra appear regu- larly on Johnny Carson’s “To- night Show.” Crisler said there is also a good chance that Ferlin Husky, another popular country west- ern singer, will be with the group. 25 YEARS AGO For the week ending June 19, 1996 Hospitality hooks Hawaiian hockey team stranded by crash The Hawaiian state cham- pion roller hockey team was a long way from home Tues- day afternoon when one of its vans was struck broadside in a high-speed collision near Sun- river. But a host of nameless Central Oregonians who went out of their way to help made the near tragedy into a reason the team is planning to return next year. “The people here have been the winning thing of this whole trip,” said Hawaii coach Todd Mayer Thursday eve- ning after his squad beat the Oregon state champion Bend Bullets 3-0. “Everybody we’ve met is super nice. Even the people at the accident were unbelievably nice.” Jeffrey Bryant, 43, was cited for failure to obey a stop sign after allegedly pulling onto Highway 97 from S. Century Drive and into the path of a southbound pickup, traveling about 55 mph and driven by Buddy Maguire, 31, of LaPine. The force of the driver-side impact sent the van 50 feet and into a ditch and ejected Bryant’s 14-year-old son, Ja- son, who escaped with bad scrapes and bruises. The acci- dent occured at what is statis- tically one of Central Oregon’s most dangerous intersec- tions. One of the persons who stopped to help was a pastor from LaPine who didn’t leave his name. The pastor learned that part of the team, including the coach, was already in Bend at the roller hockey rink at Juni- per Park. So he drove there to tell Coach Mayer of the acci- dent, and then gave him a ride to St. Charles Medical Cen- ter to be with his family and players. He later returned to the hospital to see if there was anything else he could do. Following Thursday’s fame the two teams feasted on bar- becue chicken and ribs sup- plied by Butch Roberts, coach of the Bullets and head of the Central Oregon Roller Hockey League. “It’s just one of those things where you count your blessings,” said Roberts of the accident’s fortunate ending, noting he hopes to meet up with the Hawaiian team again in St. Paul, Minn., in August at the USA Hockey Inline Na- tionals. Headlines: Ella Fitzgerald dies at 78 — Disneyland to expand — Kaczynski indicted in Unabomber attacks — Fires gut more Black churches — Whitewater panel sharply split.