thk K?n nnxKTiN, nRn, onEooN, monday, march imi, ioit The Bend Bulletin DAILY EDITION Fablkh4 Erery A (If moon ic!t Sunday, I1KNI), OKKKON. Entered mm Second Claw matter. January t 1 17, at the I'oat Otfica at Henil, Orenun, under Act of March S, 1879. ' nEnRCK PAI.MFR PUTNAM PublUlv ROHKRT W. SAWYKK Edltor-Manairer FRED A. WOKl.KI.KN New. Editor HKNKY N. KOWI.KR A.Kiate E.HUr KA1.1I1 tU'KNl'KK Mechanical SujjU An Independent Newspaper, atamlinir for tha aquare deal, clean bninca. clean politic an J the beat intcreaU of Und and Central Orevon. SUBSCRIPTION RATES ll Mail. Ona Year W.OO Six Months Three Montha , 11.60 Or Carrier One Year 6.0 Six Montha ...3.f Ona Month 60 All subscriptions are due and PAYABLE IN ADVANCE. Notices of expiration are mailed subscribers and If renewal is not made within reason able time the paper will be discon tinued. Please notify us promptly of any change of address, or of failure to re ceive the paper regularly. Otherwise we will not be responsible for copies missed.' Mnke all checks and orders pay able to The Bend Bulletin. MONDAY, MARCH 26, 1917 A NORMAL SCHOOL. In a communication to the Ore gon Journal, a resident of Sisters has suggested that Bend would be an ideal place for the establishment of a state normal school. Tt.e Journal had proposed a school at The Dalles and Us correspondent pointed out the superior advantages of a loca tion here. Our Sisters friend is right. Bend is almost at the geographical center of the state. State highways are planned to . radiate from here and the coming Strahorn lines will bring to Bend the people from the south and southeast who now travel around the border of the state to get to Port land. In other words, so far as location is concerned, Bend's situation could not be bettered, and the same is true of the other features of climate, scen ery and purity of water, which make a town attractive. And finally, we have the children and schools which are necessary to a successful normal. The communication to the Journal was as follows: SISTERS, Or., March 19. To the Editor of The Journal In an edi torial of March 10, you suggest the desirability and convenience of an-, other normal school at The Dalles. Surely there can be no doubt in any one's mind as to the need of a state normal somewhere east of the Cascades. The Dalles, no doubt, has all the advantages that you claim or it, but it has one serious disad vantage which you ail to mentiom That disadvantage is that The Dalles is located in the extreme northwest ern corner of the vast territory which a new state normal should serve. There are other towns east of the Cascades that have all the advantages claimed for The Dalles, that have the important advantage of being more centrally located. Bend, for instance, "is large enough to provide plenty of pupils for a model school, and it is largo enough to give teach ers studying there a taste of city life and ideas," which you. in your edi torial, rightfully consider import ant advantages. Furthermore, it is growing very rapidly. It is a live, progressive little city, within easy reach of every Central Oregon com munity. It is a town possessing many scenic attractions. In fact, it Is an ideal location for a normal school. P. HUNTINGTON. EIGHT CARE ADVISED FOR INFANTS' EYES Development of Disease and Conse quent IJliiidness in Rubies May He Kusily Avoided. By Mr. .Mux West, Of the Federal Children's Bureau.) ' (Written for the United Preaa) A large part of the blindness among children is needless, because the cause is well known and the remedy at hand. Many states now require that the simple treatment described below shall be used In ,ev- - ery case, and it would do much to save children from this incalculable calamity if mothers throughout the world understood the means of pre vention. - , At the moment of birth the baby's eyes are to be wiped with bits of sterile cotton, using a separate piece tor each eye and wiping from the nose outward. Following this, the eyes are to be treated with an anti septic which is to be dropped into each eye, first lifting the lid in order to get the medicine properly into the eye. This very simple and inexpensive treatment Is sufficient in many cases to prevent the development of the disease or the eyes of new born chll aren wmcn leads to blindness. But ir tne treatment has been neglected and symptoms of the disease ap pear, such as reddened and swollen lids, the mother should insist upon having the doctor begin the treat . ment at once, for if neglected, even for 24 hours, it may be too late to save the Bight. tl is best to send the baby to a hospital for treatment, if the eyes are badly inflammed and discharg ing pus, as only the most constant and careful treatment will save them, nd even, then it may not be suc LABOR LEADERS AND ROAD PRESIDENTS WHO FIGURE IN RAILROAD STRIKE NEWS : : rmJK' . . Vev;-i Ssg'-:'-mf' T vj N r "! 1 f'hotos by American Press Association. Prominent men on both slflea In the threatened railroad tie up are depicted here. Warren 8. Stone, who in Brand chief of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Kngineers: Secretary of Labor Wilson. ho miv h r)!d jiv.n to find a wnv to CRAWFORD LEAVES HIGH HITTING MARK Hutting Average Covering 18 Years in the Major Leagues Stumls Above 300 Record. (United Vreaa Staff CorreapondDt) By H. C. Hamilton, NEW YORK, March 26. The news from Waxachachle, Texas, that Hugbie . Jennings, Detroit manager, had decided that Sam Crawford was no longer fit to hold down right field for the Tigers removed another of the veterans from baseball in fa vor of younger sinews. Crawford has been playing base ball as a regular for 18 years. Prev- ous to that time he had walloped the ball in the minors for a couple of seasons. Crawford first played league base ball in Cincinnati, as a member of the old National league team there before the American league was or ganized. Cincinnati basked in the rays of bis brilliant smashes for four years before relinquishment rights to him in favor of Detroit. He was warded to the Tigers in the peace agreement of 1903 when the Ameri can league was recognized as a part of organized baseball. . Crawford was one of the might iest Bluggers who ever faced a pitch er. His hits were always smashed. They were solid, clean blows and many of them were of the extra base variety. It has been said of Craw ford that he could hit a ball harder and farther than any man who ever played major league baseball. His batting average tor the 18 years he spent in the majors as a regular was over the .300 mark; 311 to be exact. RARE AUTOGRAPHS ARE PUT ON SALE (Br United Freaa to the Bend Bulletin) NEW YORK, March 26. Rare autographed letters by famous per sonages in American and European history are to be sold today at the Anderson galleries from the collec tions. of J. h: Clawson, of Buffalo, lind Mrs. B. A. Brown, of New York City. The collections offered include utographed letters from Lord Nel son, Lady Hamilton, Paul Revere, Peter Stuyvesant, Lord Byron, Thos. Carlyle, Rudyard Kipling, Charles Lamb, Abraham Lincoln, John Rus kln, Benjamin Franklin, Alexander Hamilton, Paul Jones, Thomas Jef ferson, George Washington, Thack ery, Martha Washington, Sir Walter Scott, Ferdinand and Isabella, Cath erine de Medici, Robert Fulton, Pope, Scott, Wilde, Shaw, Darwin, Ruukln, 'Maupassant, Dumas, Daudet, and Charles I. This offering is valued at many thousands of dollars by the present owners. ART EXHIBITS TO AID ARTISTS IN FRANCE (Br United Pro to the Bnd Bulletin) NEW YORK, March 26. An ex hibition of the remarkable moon light paintings of Francois Charles Cachoud, the Frenchman, was op ened to the public at the Anderson pallerles here today to rata funds reconcile the dlrTerencea between the mil rod men and their employer.: W. 8 Cur ler, who l preJiident of the Hrothvrhootl of locomotive Firemen and KtiK'nemen; Alftvd H. Smith, who la president of the Iew York Central and lluiln ui ItlviT r-iil nid: Milton H. Kmlth. who Is prHlilent for artists who have been woimilnl lighting for Franco. M. Cachoud is a native of ''Ikmh berry, Savoy, Is a Knight of the Legion of Honor and the only paint er in France who has devoted him self to the painting of moonlight scenes exclusively. Madame Iswol skl, wife of the Russian ambassador to France, is one of the sponsors of the charity, which is being promoted by the French in America. FRISCO IJOMB SUSPECT J IS PLACED ON TRIAL Jitney llu Driver 1m Thiol CluirKed With Complicity in Suit Cu.se Dynamiting Cu.se. (By United Pre to the Bend Bulletin) SAN FRANCISCO, March 26. Israel Welnburg, Jitney driver,-went to trial here today on the charge of complicity In the suitcase dynamiting here during the preparedness pa rade last July, whli:h killed ten per sons and wounded 50. Welnburg Is the third of the five persons Indicted in connection with the case, to go to trial. The first two trials resulted in convictions. Thos. J. Mahoney Is under sentence of death and Warren K. Billings hug been sentenced to life imprisonment. Mrs. Rena Mooney, wife of the con victed man, and Edward Nolan, for mer organizer of the machinists' union, have not yet been tried. The part Welnburg is alleged to have played In the dynamite' out rage Is the transportation of the al leged conspirators to Steuart and Market streets, where the fatal bomb exploded. It was Weinburg's Jitney bus, driven by Welnburg, which the prosecution asserts carried Mooney, Mrs. Mooney and "a man with a scraggly mustache" to that corner. Welnburg and Mrs. Mooney are al leged to have waited in the Jitney bus while Mooney, Billings and the mysterious man planted the bomb, JAPANESE HOPE TO SOLVE IMMIGRATION Would Help to Eliminate Trouble With I'. H. by KxtuhliHliiii Kurm for Emigrant). (Br United Peaa to the Bend Bulletin) TOKIO, March 26. With the hope that it will be an aid in solving the Immigration problem between the United States and Japan, a new plan of educating Japanese emigrants in a model farm colony near. Seattle, Washington, will be started here next Monday. Beginning then, a group of Japanese will be sent every year to work on tho model colony acres. These emigrants will be graduates of the Kanagawa Middle School, a private institution of which Mr. Su mlwu Hattori Is principal. He Is the eldest son of the late Ayawo Hattori, who worked for friendship between Japan and America until his death in the United States several years ago. He held the opinion that the best way to unravel the immigration tan gle between the two countries was to raise the standard of Japanese in the United States. He died before he could realize this Idea, which has now been taken up by his son, the of the LmilaTltle And Nnshvtlle: Panlal Wtllnnl. who Is prerJ.ent of the Hnltlimir and Ohio and also clmlrmiin of the nd vlMory committee it the nutlonnl def.iiM citunell. The railroad workers denwind tho imttiiiK Into erred of tha eiyht hour prini'lpul of the Mldillo School. Tho land near Seattle where tlteso educated emigrants will work was bought for this purpose through the efforts of MnaiJIro Furuya, a prom inent Japanese mt'hant In tliu Washington city. Tho Japanese government, which enforces the gentlemen's agreement with tho United States, has not yet officially approved tho plan, but It Is not expected to moot with obpecllon It the emigrants are really educated. BRITISH KITCHENS' AID WAR MUNITIONS Fat Havrd From Army'n Food, Pro vide (ilyrrrlnr Needed for nigh K.tploHlvra. (By United I'reaa to the Bend Bulletin) LONDON, March 26. Britain's army kitchens today are supplying enough glycerine, formerly wanted, to produce the cordite necessary to fire ten million shells a year. John W. Hope, chairman of tho military committeo on waste, made this statement to tho United Press today. England has been teaching her self and her allies efficiency In a great many ways and soma of the moBt Important reforms have been introduced by tho military repre sentatives who deal with the use of waste bones and fats from tho var ious camps. "Tho fat contains about 10 per cent glycerine, and this Ih sent to the Ministry of Munitions. It will amount to 1000 tons of glycerine n year. We can supply the govern ment with glycerine ut tho pre-war I price of $297.50 a ton, while gly cerine In the United States is rj iiotcc at $1200 ton. j "We pay $150,000 a month to tho various units, each receiving Its In dividual check, which goes a long way toward providing extra com forts for the men." j The system has been extended to tho base camps In France, and also the navy, which In tho past used to pitch its waste overboard. I Show 1 m yL.r a i our Colors This is patriotic week telf your are an Amer-j PI ican, snow it. m MINIATURE KIT.K FsAMERICAN FLAGS. 10c, 15c, 25c and 50c gMAGILL & ERSKINEj The Store That Will."! VIHITOItN IIKHIO llocuuao so tnnuy of tholr mum burs were to bu In nltoudaiii'u on tho mooting of th county court to bn held horn today tho Itochnoml Coin ntorclal club voted tit lu moot lug lut week to hold Iholr mooting today ut tho Pilot llutlo Inn lu llond. Ac cordingly ltodmond mon to (ho utliu bor nf 12 wore prcKont ut luncheon this noon, while ut un uiIJiiIiiIiik tuhlit an oiiuul nutnhcr of Tuiiiulu resi dents wore avtitod. Your eyoH ox in I nod and flltod with kIiihkoh. Ii II. Fontaine, opto motrlnt, nt I.ui'hiiu'h Jewelry nloro, Bond Ore. ' Adv. ONR CENT A WORD la all little Want Ad will cost you. Manzanita Addition Lots $50 10 per cent, cash $2..'0 monthly J. A. EASTES BEND, OREGON Sides Agent SHEVLIN PINE SOLD BY MLLER LUMBER COMPANY Phone idol Sash Factory Wood Bend White Pine Sash Co. Telephone 441 Bend View PRICES: $100 AND Ul TERMS: Reanonab.e We'll loan you money to build. Quick Smice LIGI IT and HEAVY HAUUNG , TRANSFER DELIVERIES MADE TO ANY PART OF TOWN RED Oregon Fuel & Transfer Co. Corner Oregon & Wall Sts. The Ladies of Bend are cordially invited to attend the Spring Millinery Opening Mrs. Mm Sat, March 31 Nineteen . 7 Easter Hats Sue our ladies' and children's Easter Hats, Prices unusu ally reason able. Call and look them over STOCKMON'S 5 and 10 Cent Store. - - $60 - - $65 BEND'S MOST SCRNlt! RESIDENCE I'KOl'KHTY Every IaA comnnimls u view of the Kiver, Mountains and City. Building restrictions according to Location. J.. RYAN & CO O'k'anc Uldr. Phone J6 CAREFUL DELIVERY BAGGAGE I'AKOXS EXPRESS Givrn Clow Atlcnlioa 66 1 of L. Dersline Seventeen