The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963, June 14, 1917, Page 2, Image 2

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    PACK t
THK HKNU Hl'M.KTIV, DAILY KIUTION, HKXO, OllKUON, Till IISMAV, iVSK 14, IIUT
The Bend Bulletin
DAILY EDITION
FaMbM Krrj Afternoon Kic.pt Bandar.
HKND, OKKUON.
. Entered u Snond Claaa matter, January
I 117, at the Port Off at IWnd. Orcson.
BJldar Act of March . 1870.
GEORGE PA1.MRK PUTNAM Pukll.hcr
ROIIKKT W. 8AWYKK Kdltr-Manairr
FRKD A. WOKI.K1.KN Ncwa Hilar
BKNHY N. KOWI.KR Awnciat. Editor
RALPH SPENCKR Mechanical Sulrt.
An Independent Newspaper, vtandtns for
tl aquare deal, clean buMncaa. clean politics
snJ the beat intcrtata of Bend and Central
Oreiron.
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FEATURE OF ST. PAUL'S LIBERTY LOAN PARADE
THURSDAY. JUNE 14, 1917
NEW YORK. SOPRANO
AT CHAUTAUQUA
Famous Eastern Soprano With Royal
Venetian Band,
' Mary Adel Hu.vs, prima donna so
prano of New York, Is to apix-nr on the
1017 Ellison-White Chautauquas as so
loist in Joint concert with I lie Hoynl
Venetian Bund. Miss Hays is noted
for the uncanuy perfection of her trill.
c'S"aanaaBnaaaMan17an-ja, I -aaK.f aaaaaaaaaaaaaaBaaaaaaaauasP f I laaaaaaa.aa.Manr anaaM
Clilliltcn carrying the Star Spangled ltnnut-r in a parade at St. Tanl. Minn., to encourage buying of bouUa
collateral as security for loans anil
credit. Character Is the best of all
assets. Spokane Spokesnian-llevlew.
Hints to Millinora.
'No successful milliner can work
alone," says a milliner in the American
Magazine. "If t-be does her huts will
come to have a sameness year after
year thnt will lose her patrons. If she
cannot go to Paris she must visit
shops, such as mine is at present, and
see as many smart ieople ns possible.
This Is a fuct generally recotrnlied by
all good shops. Those bi the middle
west and fur west who cannot send
their representatives abroad send them
to New York instead, and the smaller
milliner who cannot afford even this
must keep tip with the smartest peo
ple In her own town and the nearest
large cities and even supplement this
by the smart trude magazines."
. MARY ADEL HAYS.
bnt she has warmth and sympathy or
interpretation., as well as that butter
fly lightness In the execution of colors
tvra passages. Miss Hays repertoire
la fault'essly stilted to band accnmpanl
went and Includes favorites of op
erntl- and oratorio arias, down to the
little classic songs and ballads of uni
versal appeal
BEST OF ALL ASSETS.
Character It Is That Wins ths Groat
Battlss of Ufa.
"God Almighty bates a quitter," said
Tom Reed of Maine. The nation roar
ed applause from the Atlantic to the
Pacific and from the lakes to the gulf
for the virile vigor of this rough ex
pression of manhood. The sentiment
Is one bf perennial value.
But what makes the man who does
sot know when be Is defeated and
fights to the finish, be the finish bis or
bis opponent's? Is It not character,
and Is not character at bottom only
the moral equivalent of stalwart back'
bone?
The quitter falls, and falls because
be lacks the force of character, the
strength of will, which sees possibili
ties beyond capacities and regards ob
stacles as opportunities, discourage
ments as Incentives. The fight which
is worth attempting at all Is the fight
which deserves to be fought through.
"It's dogged as does it," as wben Hee
pan said to Bayers. "Now, Tummy,
lad, 'tis thou or I," and be woo the
last round and the match.
There was character. . It may not
have been ideal character. It certain
ly was not character In Its highest ex
pression. But it was the sum of the
man's whole personality. All the pow
er of blm, all the pith and punch of
invincible determination, went into
the winning of his fight The bulldog
Bhows the same strength of will wben
he lets himself be choked or cut to
pieces rather than let go his' grip on
the other dog's Jugular.
It Is this readiness to be killed. If
need be, if one cannot best one's ad
versary, which wins the battle of life
for men and the wars of nations for
their existence. Such a readiness Is a
form of character and tbe product,
whether aware or unaware, of a
fight to achieve character. It Is tbe
reaction of the' spirit to the long work
ing of life and circumstances upon tbe
raw and plastic ore of human nature.
Make money, then, and do so honor
ably. Get understanding for tbe sake
of social sen-ice ns well as your own
growth. Win power over men through
light methods of approach and appeal.
But with all your getting and gains
achieve character above all.
Nothing can take the place of char
acter. It knows of no substitute.
Cleverness, cunning and shrewdness
are paper money. Character is the
fold which alone gives them .value.
ricrpont Morgan rated character above
Grow Rhubarb In Your Collar.
To cultivate a fine specimen of rhu
barb you do not need nny garden at
all. but Just a corner of a cellar and
an old barrel or deep box.
Bore a dozen boles In the sides of
your barrel for ventilation and u few
111 tbe bottom for drainage. Then
place in It a layer of cinders about
two Inches deep and cover this with
ordinary garden soil. Now, plant your
roots side by side, and cover them with
another layer of earth. '
Water them occasionally and keep
the top of the barrel covered with a
piece of carpet Pearson's Weekly.
PRESIDENT WILSON IN
FLAG DAY ORATION
(Continued from Page 1.)
plan which compassed Europe and
Asia, from Berlin to Bagdad. They
hoped these demands mglht not
arouso Europe, but they meant to
press them whether they did or not,
for they thought themselves ready
for the final Issue of arms.
Their plan was to throw a broad
belt of German military power and
political control across the very cen
ter of Europe and beyond the Medit
erranean Into the heart of Asia, and
Austria-Hungary was to be as much
their tool and pawn as Serbia or
Bulgaria, or Turkey, or the ponder
ous slates of the east. Austria-Hun
gary, indeed, was to become part of
the central German empire, absorbed
and dominated by the same forces
and influences that had originally
cemented the German states them
selves. The dream had Its heart at
Berlin. It could have had a heart
nowhere else. It rejected the Idea
of solidarity of race entirely. The
choice of peoples played no part in
It at all. It contemplated binding
together racial and political units
which could be kept together only
by force Czechs, Magyars, Croats,
Serbs, Roumanians. Turks. Carmen
lans thejfproud states of Bohemia
and Hungary, the stout little com
monwealths of the Balkans; the In
domnitable Turks, the subtle peo
ples of the east. These peoples did
not wish to be united. They ardent
ly desired to direct their own af
fairs; would be satisfied only by un
disputed independence. They could
be kept quiet only by the presence
or tho constant threat of armed men.
They would live, and under a com
mon power, only by slmer compul
sion nnil await the duy of revolution.
But the Gorman military statesmen
hud reckoned with all that and were
ready to ileal with It In their own
way.
"And they have actuully carried
the greater part of that amazing
plan Into exexcutlon.
"Look now how things stand. Aus
tria Is at their merry. It has acted,
not upon its own liilllullvti or upon
the choice of Its own people, but
at Berlin's dictation ever- since the
war began. Its people now desire
peace, but cannot have It until leave
ts granted from Berlin. The so- ,
called Central Powers are In fact ,
but a Blngle power. Serbia Is at Its
mercy, should Its hands be but for ,
a moment freed. Bulgaria has con
sented to Its will, and Koumanlu Is
over-run. Tho Turkish armies, i
which Germans trained, are serving :
Germany, certainly not. themselves. !
and the guns of German warships i
lying In the harbor at Constantinople t
vlceable organizations which they
could force or intrigue, bend or cor
rupt, to their own purpose. They
have regarded tbe smaller states In
particular and the people who could
be overwhelmed by force, as their
neutral tools and instruments of
domination. Their purpose has been
long avowed. The statesmen of oth
er nations, to whom that purpose was
incredible, paid little attention; re
garded what German professors ex
pounded in their class rooms and '
German writers set forth to tbe
world as the goal of German policy,
as rather the dream of minds de
tached from practical affairs, as pre
posterous private conceptions of Ger
man destiny, than as the actual plans
of responsible rulers; but the rulers
of Germany themselves knew all the
while what concrete plans, what well
advanced intrigues lay back of what
the professors and the writers were
saying and were glad to go forward
unmolested, filling the thrones of
tbe Balkan states with German princ
es, putting German officers at tbe
service of Turkey to drill her armies
and make interest with her govern
ment, developing plans of sedition
and rebellion in India and Egypt,
setting their fires In Persia. The
demands made by Austria upon Ser
bia were a mere single step In a
INCOMPLETE
You are not getting your just
desert, unless you bave included
SOCIETE CHOCOLATES
SMART SET CHOCOLATES
FRUIT CHOCOLATES
, NUT CHOCOLATES
Get a box of these chocolates now
at the
MAGILL ERSKINE
DRUG STORE
O'K.ne Building
OUR. LONG SUIT
IS SHOES
20.
FOR
MEN
WOMEN
AND
CHILDREN
STYLE SHOES
OF QUALITY
Ladies' Mahogany Kid $7.75
Patent Kid Uppers $6.75
White Nubuck $7.95
White Canvas $4.00 $4.75 $6.25
Black Kid, white tops $7.85
Black Kid, cloth tops $4.15 $5.50
Black Kid, grey tops $7.35
Russian Calf, tan $8.25
Grey Kid $8.25
These are our Best Qualities. We have them cheap
er, $1.75, $2.15 $2.75 $3.00 $3.25'. Widths from A to F
Peter's Leather throughout Shoes for Men Abse
Iutely Guaranteed Satisfaction.
Mayer's Honorbilt Shoes for Boys.
SATHER1!
Bend View
PRICES: $100 AND UP
, TERMS: Reasonab.e
We'll loan you money' lo build.
BEND'S MOST SCENIC
RESIDENCE PROPERTY
Every Lot commands a view
of the River, Mountains and
City. Building restrictions
according to Location.
SEE
J. RYAN, & CO.
O'Kane Bldg. Phone 361
re in I ml 'Turkish' itntesniuu every day
that they Imvu no choice but In lake
their orders from Berlin, From
Hamburg to I lie Persian Gulf the
net la spread.
"Is It not easy to underalaiid the
engnriieaa fur peace thill hus been
inn ii I feat ml from Berlin ever since
the nun in wits set and sprung.?
Pence, pence, neiieu bus been the talk
of the fni'eimt iinllmia for nniv u veur
and mure; nut peneu upon her own
initiative, hut upon the Initia
tive of the nations over
which she deems herai'lf to hold
the nilviiiitiige. A Utile of the talk
turn been public, hut most of It has
heeu private. ThroiiKh all sorts uf
I'liiinnelH It has come to me mid In all
aorta of guises, hut never with the
terms dlselimed which llie German
government would hu wIIIIiik to ac
cept. That government hus other'
valuable pawns besides those I huve
mentioned. It still holds u valuable
purt of Kra nee. tlinuuli with alnwlv
relaxing grasp, and practically the;
whole or llelglum. Its armies press
clone upon ItiiHsIa mid over-run Po
land at their will. It cannot go ftir-
i.7, , it unit, iimi git iiiiiTH. Jl wiauen
to elosn Its biirgaln before it la too
late and It has Utile left to offer
ror the pound of flesh It will denmnd.
"The military masters under whom
(Inrmany Is bleeding sea very dour
ly lo what point falo has hroiiKlit
them, If they fall buck or me foiri'il
buck mi inch, lliolr power hot li
nhroad and at homo will full ,to
plums like a house or cards. It In
their power at home they uiu think
Iiih about much more now than their
power abroad. It Is Unit power which
Is tremhlliiK at their very feel, mid
deep fear has entered their hearlH.
They hnva hut one ehaueu lo per-
petualu their inllluiiy power or even
their controlling polltleul Influence!.
If they ni n secure pence now with
Ihn I in incline advaiitiiKes still In their
hands which they have up to ihH
point apparently italmul, they will
have Justified themselves beforn the
(leriniin people; they will huve kuIiiciI
by fori'd what they promlHod to kiiIm t
by II: An Immense, expansion of.
(Ionium power, an liniiietiHii eulurite
meiil of (lormitn ImltiiKrlul and com
mercial opportunity. 1'luilr prestige
will lie secure and with their prestliti,
their political power. If (hey rail,
their people will thrust them aside.
A Kovcrninent nccountiihlii to tho
people tholuaelvca will bn act up III
Germany, as It has been In Kngliitiil.
Ill tho I'nlleil Hiatus, In' Franco ami
In all thu ureal countries of modem
times, except (leriimny. ,
Benefit of
Presbyterian
Guild
THURSDAY
and FRIDAY
EVENINGS
'WITH A-
SPECIAL PROGRAMME
"THE COURAGE
OF SILENCE"
Featuring ALICE JOYCE and HARRY MOHEY
This Vitagraph production accomplishes .
the difficult task of playing the heroine in
two roles that of the beautifully attractive
wife in society, and then as the lover of chil
dren and a mother. "" " ' ' 'r
The
PATHE NEWS, in Several Notable Events.
Prices, 15c and 25c
GRAND THEATRE
KENWOOD-BEND VIEW-
PINELYN PARK-TERMINAL
AND KENWOOD GARDENS
Easy Monthly Paymcnli on Lois In these JJ((illons.
I Ryan I Co.
WE WILL HUILI) m
a Hmmt an tht Afanf Afc
Pmmtl TUm. Sm (A
ORLGON SI Hthf
Lowest Cooking
Rate in Oregon
HUGHES
"AtknowUdfd WorU'$ Grw(if KUtiih mi$"
Tt ImsI tSMtSM'
it M-i M Sanaa
MX w laMSH
1 i
lie is
Hslfbi It U k flaw
ftfMM SI II f MV, at,
CmUs Mm It, tiy,
II aa.Ua.
TV Wwaalaf Ctwrl.
MM aiball it tataal ta
kt.pmt fa . fat
ifct mtstaaf ad Mil it,
I
H, nam I- ptw smw X 1 ntMMfff U4t ..... Ui
y 1f fa.l.4 tW APfi f I COO0 HOUMtKttHMC ftMflt.
ImJ) twmtk isslriti sat lath srMsa tot i m
tmtif aaal lfM ! Dm kai.lkaa fcatfBM
tat tJ bath lltX MatwttiaaraMtoa. ft
Mat!. 4 LMt. Utlnra.it aattHaf.
Bend Water, Light
& Power Co.