TIIH IIKNO IIULLKTIM, DAILY KMTIOX, IlKM), OKKOOV, MOMMV, JILV V, 1017 PAGE TUESDAY-WEDNESDAY Norma Talmadge - IN GOING STRAIGHT" A FAMOUS STAR IN A TtlU tin lory of eoupls v.io And Meet Swain "AMBROSE'S mm nnsma 1917 JULY 1917 (sun! mon! tue I wd'thuTfri I Ski 1 1 1 2 j 3 01 5 6 8 91011121314 e -r m m , .ww -j 22232425262728 293031 Bend in Brief DOINGS IN YOUR CITY. You'll Find Them Here. .MOMIAV. I. O. (. I'., Hutlirr's Unit. 8 p. m. Kaxtrrn Hlur, .Mwumlc Hull, H p. m. I'uliilers nml lr-ortors, lmv I'lne l.nlMir Temple, H p. in. Itel Men. offlrc of K. I), (iilson, O'Kalin IIIuMIiik, N p. til. TIKHDAV. MiMlrrn WmmIiiii-ii of Amerlra, Hal her' llnll, H p. III. Culinary Allium-, lne i'liir ljilxir Temple, H p. m. WKINK!JIAV. Commercial Club Luncheon, Pilot llultn Inn, noon. KnlKlit of Pvtlilsi, Hather's Mull, H p. m. Hrntl Itlflr. ilrlll, Kmlilrm Club, N p. m. TinasiiAv. A. V. Jk A. M., Masonic Hull. ft p. m. t'urpf titers anil Joiner, Nine Pine Iahor Temple, ft p. m. KHIDAV. ItotiHiaks, Mather's Hall, H p. m. ' Woodmen of llin World, Council IiuiiiImtn, H p. m. . AMUSEMENTS. TOXIIT. - llrnil Theatre. Mario Doro, In "Lost anil Won." flraml Theatre. "Tho Inland of Desire," fen- turinr 0 porno Walsh. Mux I.lndor, In "Mux in a Tnxl." OIIEOON TKUNK TRAIN Arrives 7:20 n. m. Leaves 9 p. in. O.-W. It. A N. TRAIN. Arrlvei 7:35 p. m. Leaves 7:25 a. m. AUTO STAGE LINK HOUTII. Leaves 8: 46 a. m. Arrives .5 p. m. AUTO LIN EH. Cart to Hurns, Fort Klamath Port Rock, Silver Lnke and other point! south sod south east. ' IDST OFFICIO HOURS. Oenoral dollvery open dally 8:30 n. m. to 6 p. m. . No mall distributed on Sunday. NlRht train ' mnll cIohob 8:15 Day train mall clones 6:80 a. m. TKLKGItAI'll HOUItH. Western Union, 8 a. m. to 9 - p. ra. Sumluy and holliluya Hi. in, to 10 a. re., C p. m.. to 6 p. m. TKLKI'IIONR HOURS. Paolfla Tel. A Tel. Co. 24 hour LOCAL NEWS ITEMS 0. T. KltchlnK, of I'rlnovllla, wub a visitor In Ilond yemonlny. Alvln S. Hawk ond Frank Woody, of Fremont, aro In Hie oily, Miss Oraco Ward is confined to hor fine by an attack of moaslus. Mrs. Oortrudo lllntvio, of Crescent, Is spending a few duys in Ik'iid. A. M. PrliiKln roturnod tills morn ing from a wook ond trip so Port land. W. A. Hnrrlmnn and fnmlly, of Fort Hock, wore Huiiiluy visitors In the clly. . AlphoiiHo W, Ayn, of Ln Pino, wns n wook ond visitor In Bond to enter 'yiijiiiBJi.iu'sr-S - MOST POPULAR PLAY srs puriucJ by a (luilly put. in Ksystons Comedy cup of wor hi sappllriiiloii for Hid new officers' trululiiK I'ump. Ttufus ('. Iliilmnn, county commls iluiirr of M ii 1 1 it (jiii n ti coiimty, wits In Hi. lid lust IllKllt, returning to I'ort luiul from a tumping trip In the vi cinity of Heml. A business meeting "f tin; Ladles' l.llirury club will lio liulil ut 3 oYluik Tucmluy uflerniiou ut tlm Hi-nil I'll I) lie l.llirury. Tlio meeting will lie im portant ami all members urn urged (0 iiilllc. NOTICK. All pi-rsnns IiuvIiik art-omits un pnlil will please cull not lud-r tlmn lh 12th liml. Those not so don Ik will lie conslilernil ditlliKiueiit ami doult with acrordliiKly. U. W. IlOItNKH. Aclv.lSOc.lflp. AT THE HOTELS. Pilot Hutlt Inn. II. II. Lovelund, Portland. Kd. S. Itohr, I'ortluiid. Wlllard Cook, Portland. - Ituusdl Ilurre, Portlund. , A.' B. Ilullcy. W. II. Whlteomb, Portlund. Fred Kciihiidy, I'ortluiid. It. K. Illuikinuii, .Mlllon. U. W. Zoullur, Wulla Walla. C. A. Hurliunk, Jr., Portlund. Mr. and Mrs. O. 1. Iloii'vynian Portland. Mrs. Frd HoukIhoii, Portland. C. W. A Hun, Mulollus river. John C. Colvard, Fremont. -V. P. Dorian, Portland., II. II. Lamar, Portland. II .8. Young, Portland. Harry C. Hunter, Portland. A. K. Hadman, Klamath Fulls. II. U. Uruce, Seattle. John M. Murphy, Sliver Lake. Clarence Okie, Lakevlew. W. J. Uauer, Suntex. W. M. Hawkins, Portland. W. E. Worth. Portland. HnU'l Coxy. Itiifus C. Holman, Portland. A. B. Davis, Held. 1). 13. Davis, Held. J. ('. Lucky. Portlund. J. It. Connelly, Muupln. J. U. lloyt. Portlund. U. T. KltchlnK. Prllievlllo. Mrs. Gertrude lllntip, Crescent. Jim O'Neill, Duvls Luke. Ueorse H. Parsons, Portlund. Ilfiiny Mark, Hay Creek. The WrlKlil Hotel. It. T. McMillan, Portlund. A. It. Runder, The Dulles. J. R. Hill. Portland. James Irwin, Los Aniceles. O. Jasmann, Portland. Kdward Olson, Hood Klver. C. A. Miller, Portland. GOING FAST! The LAST CHANCE to buy merchandise at before-the-war prices. Now is the time to make money work. We have sold $4371.21 worth of merchandise and still have left $800 Worth of Shoes, $1000 Worth of Men's Working Clothes, $5200 Worth of Groceries. THEY ALL MUST GO! Think what a saving this sale means to you, on a raising market. When the present stock Is out of merchant's hands and they have to buy on the present market. Look up prices on wool, cotton and leather, then look over our prlcos. 75c Work Shirts : 48c Heavy Wool 40c Sox 28c Heavy Foreign Dye Bib Overalls $1.15 Granite and Tinware , 33 1-370 Off 15c Canvas Gloves :. .10c Milk, all brands ..12 l-2c All White Soap 6 bars for 25c Beans .15c Matches '. 5c Sugar 11 lbs. for $1.00 These urc only A FKW of our Prices. G. W. HORNER F. M. Ilobson, I'ortlunil, John Hulllvun, I'ortluiid. Ueorge Dliitl, Kugene. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Kcelcr, Hpo kano. II. K. Shirk, Hums. I. J. Cuvunilor, Hums. N. Moors, Uukur. Kmll Mulder, Uuker. Wliltfleld Blono, Portland. K. llostullund, Mllllrun. N. F. Hiiolt, IMXler Clly, Ohio, Itosa Huff, Uup runch. Alvln 8. Hawk, Fremont. Frunk Woody, Fremont. F. M. Kay, Prosser, WumIi, Alphonse W. Aya, La Pine. W. A. llsrrlwaii and fumlly, Fort itock. L. F. Orrell, Puyetto. GRUMBLING IN THE GLOOM. Try to Perget Your Aches and Pains and the Dad Weather. It wns a wise old wll who remarked thul If lulk about our ui'hes mid piilns ivvre nuiiesHcil n third "I the ciuiver iiilon of (h lll.cd life would cease. If to tills liitei-illctcd subject were added thul ut uiiwillMfiictKry wenther unother third w ould be chopped off. It Is nuiii.lnu to lieur humanity de rmbiR so much of the brief time u I lot ted us bi-ie to painfully dwullccl dbiK mmcs of our headiiches, lu kailii-. stoniuch uches uml liuiuiiieriible other nilnerlcs. 'Hie comical part of It lies In the sol emn pulleiice with which each IIkIpii to the other. Ho or alio knows, how. ever. I hut his or her turn comes next, ami Hie luxury of tiiiloudiui; sickening sccoiintii uf sickness will I Hi liidulucd. Mirny of us are not miserable eunuch with the piilns of the present, but must treasure up the pains of the past an coiiKiunlly sccumulutinK reservoirs of misery end borrow them of the future ss debt under which to itrouu and crumble. If we could forget It all and permit others to fortfet It. throrlna- open our splrllunl side to the iMviwilcs blens lux offered It, what universe of Joy soil cheer and brlithtnesa before un seen would He before us) it is all a matter of mental turn. We may shut the shades of the windows of our mlmU on the sunny side end mosu In darkness, or we may open the same windows wide and lough In the unllitht. thrlstlait Herald. FORGED ANTIQUES. Ivsn British Museum Experts Have Been Fooled by Thorn. The "snllulty" manufacturer la a man who thrives on expert forgery. Furniture, prints, chlua, pictures, plate, tniH'ntrv-he Imitates them all most tuccesnfully. , Kaeb man has his spe cialty. One devotes himself to old leather jacks, another produces born books, s third turns out 'medieval" MB", The British museum once bought a Tallssy pints for I2n0. While an at tendant was bsndllng It one of the seals sttarued to It back attesting Its genuineness became detached, disclos ing the uisrk of a modern French pot ter. Un other occasions terra cotta fig ures of Isis and Osiris, bought by the Institution for hundreds of pounds, bsve been discovered to be composed of modern clsy. A good story Is told of a forged sli ver cup In Home that purported to have come from some secret excava tion In Sicily. This ancient cup was ornamented with a circular bas-relief, representing the frteze of the Tartuo nnn. Hut In the height of bis Inno cence the forger had given the frieze In Its present ruined condition. The exhibition, of the cup waa received with shouts of laugbtar. 1-ondon Standard. effoot of Bad Teeth. A paper by a dental surgeon In the Journal of the American Medical as sociation, tells the stor; pf bad teeth Slid the effects on the liiborlnu nisu's elllcli'iicy. The dentin! said he made ;io,iki examinations In sixteen months of 17.00U Americans and l.'UMKI foreign ers sud found (HI per cent In need of dentiil service. "In .KMSKI mouths," the dentist said, "we II nd m.(OX) csvl lles and IM.kjo extraction niK-essury. 7H.000 In all. If each one causes an average loss, through Haute of time and coHt to repair, of f'J It means a cost of $r,i;.(m. In New York clly last year liT.'fSI children railed to be promoted to higher prudes becuime of defective teeth, and It costs New York city XI.(;:;7.ii:m) to duplicate a year's schooling o iliouc wlio full." Digestibility o( Chcoao. Ity experiment on the illKestlblllty of chceHc It hnx la-en shown that much depends on the special phyiilcal char acters of the food. All fill cheeses are mu 111 to be dlHxolved and dlccxlcd with icrciil rapidity, hcimnte the molecules of cuMcln-- tho iillroKcnou part of the cheese nro separated only by the fat, and so the gaiilrlc Juice can attack a large surface of the cheese at one time. Whether the cheese be bard or soft does not appear to Inlliieiieo digestion, and there Is no connection between the dlKestlhlllly uml the .crcpitu!'u of wa ter present In the cheese. Too Economicsl. "Tho scrvuiit that works for me uiuiit be very, very economical," said tho boarding house inlsinMM to the ap plicant for work, "I'm such u one. mu'nm." promptly returned the applicant. "Indeed, me last mlKlress discharged me for beiu' that wuy." "For being economical?" "Yes. with mo clothes. I used to wear hers. Changing tho Story. "Anyhow, we can chnnge the story to our children a little." "What do you mean?" "We can tell iheiu that when wfl were married I was making $75 a week, and we hnd a illicitly hard time of It to get along at- that." Detroit Free Press. Mstrimonisl Amenities. Hull If 1 ever get out of mutrtraony rou bet I'll never get In again. Wlfe You certainly won't If you depend on 4 recommendation from me. Boston Transcript. Not Stiniy. "If you kins me I shall coll auntie." "Well. I gues I can siare her a ill tie kiss too." Uausas City Journal. Bunlight and Germs. Here Is an Instructive experiment made by scientists to show the effects of sunlight. Some genus of the terri ble disease anthrax were sown on two plates of gelatin, and while one plate was kept In the dark the other waa placed In the sunlight. The germs grew, and at the end of ten minute there were 300 colonies or groups la tbe sunshine plate and 400 colonies Id the dark plate. One hour later the result wss: In tbe sunshine plate, none; In tbe dark plate. 2M0. No disease germ thrives In sun light Making Horn Happy. Ra Anil la she a rood housewife? Jane A pippin! Why, the poor chap has no comfort wnatever: i.iie. f.'ontentmeut Is natural wealth. Lux ury Is artificial poverty.-Poerntee. You'll Surely Find It Here THE LIFE of a shirt depends large ly upon the way it is laundered. Laundered by us, a shirt will last twice as long. Our wagon will call in the morning. Phone us, Black 311 BEND LAUNDRY r Transfer Light and Heavy Hauling Phone 221 Pioneer Auto Stage & Truck Co. PROMPT SERVICE ALWAYS WE KNOW HOW. CARL JOHNSON TAILOR SKILLED WORK at Reasonable Prices Fit and Workmanship absolutely guaranteed. , Lawrence Building, 733 WALL STREET TO-NIGHT! The Island of Desire" Five Reeli, featuring George Walin Two R1.."MAX IN A TAXI" TUESDAY and My Fighting Gentleman" This n a play where mere words fail to describe tke action that takes place. WILLIAM RUSSELL is leading a Lost of other stars in tbis feature play GRAND True. "I don't see anything remarkable about that baby." "Oh, but you would If It waa yours," Detroit Free Presa. T6rE : TRANSFER: 1 Wood OREGON FUEL & TRANSFER COMPANY ) SHEVLIN PINE "vir SOLD BY MILLER LUMBER COMPANY SASH, DOORS and MILL WORK Phone 1661 FOR SASH FACTORY WOOD PHONE BEND WHITE PINE SASH CO. 441 Dance Tuesday and Saturday Nights HIPPODROME Healey's 4-PSece Orchertrs HOTEL ALTAM0NT Is still the Home Hotel of BEND Good Meals at all times Regular Meals 35c Ex tros if desired J ones Dairy CLEAN MILK AND CREAM. Milk for Infants and Invalids a Specialty. Phone Black 1531 WEDNESDAY THEATRE WOOD SAWING. Orders taken any place in the city. Prompt service. Phone Red! 1581. Wm. Lewis, 1012 Bond St. 370-lawlu lVrlaan PlJ,lr ml R trim Old Hats Panamas a Specialty H. CATO'S Dyeing, Cleaning and Hat Works . 1008 Bond Street Carlson & Lyons PLUMBING & HEATING Plumbing and Heating Supplies, Bath Room Accessories, etc. Pipe, Valves and Fittings PHONE RED 1591 H. Bruce Healy CONCERT VIOLINIST and TEACHER SERVICK METHOD Phone Red 1211 Care Bend Theatre