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About The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963 | View Entire Issue (May 8, 1919)
pagr a TUB REM) BC1JJCT1N, DAII.T EDITION, 1UWD, ORKflON, TIU'RHOAY, MAY 8, 1010. The Bend bulletin DAILY KUITION PaWfckes' kVerr Afterneen Eirept Iniw. Br tke Bene! Balletla (IncerperetnO. KdioTmi es ticuntj Class lustier. January i. HIT, t the Pot Office at B4111I. Oregon, uuder act 01 WKt s. ROBERT W. RAWYKR KdUnr-Msnaeer HKNllY N. FOWLER Assoctato IMitor HlKl) A. WOKLKLbM... Advertising Manaser H. W. HUNT..: Circulation Manaser HALl'll SPENCEK Mechanical Bupt j An Independent Newspaper, standing for tha square desJ, clean Im-tineas, clean polities and toe best Interests o( iseno and central urvgun, 8U11SCRIIT10N RATES Br Mall One Year .... Fix Months D,ree Months M.OO i,76 , $1.60 Br Csrrlsr One Year td.HO ill Months 19.(0 On Month I .60 All subscriptions are due and PAYABLE IN ADVANCE. Notices of expiration are mailed subscribers and if renewal is not made within "wasonable tune the paper will be discontinued. Please notify us promptly of any change ol jddreas. or of failure to receive the paper resru mrty. Otherwise we will not be responsible for eoetea missed. Make all cheeks and orders payable to The Bene Bulletin. THURSDAY, MAY 8, 1919. A CITY PARK. The plan of the city council to ob tain a park on Tumalo creek is a good one. Nature has made the spot beautiful, it is convenient to town for some purposes, and. In connection with the fish hatchery, it can be de veloped into a real asset to the city. Somewhere near town there should be reserved in a natural state speci mens of the pine trees of this sec tion the pines that have made Bend what it ia today. The Tumalo park would do this, but to do it properly, and to make the park what it should be, more than a few acres should be obtained. The number should be several hundred instead of six or seven, unless the cost would be pro hibitive. - If the city is going into the park business, however, it should not confine itself to the Tumalo site. That is a site for a park of one kind, but, in spite of all its advantages, we think it should not take prece dence over a park in the city limits. . We cannot agree with the council committee that any tract available in the city limits is too small for a" park. A park is of' no standard size. Any spot, however small, either beau tiful in itself or which can be made beautiful, which can be enjoyed by the public, and especially by the women and children, is large enough for a park. There are several such spots in Bend, one, in particular, along the river, which the committee apparently does not favor, but which we believe a majority of the people would favor. As between a park in the city and one on Tumalo creek, we urge that the city site be acquired first. It can be available to all, while a spot four miles away can be visited only by those with cars, and it one has a car he needs no park. If the two can be had together, let's have them; but if only one is our limit, let's get one in the city. Calling a special session of con gresB indicates that Wilson wants to start a new war at home as soon as he gets the old one cleaned up at Paris. Try a Bulletin Want, aQ for quick results. Something to sell? Advertise Id The Bulletin's classified column. Mr. Rob will be at the II. A. A. V. May 15, at 8:15 p. m. Adv. Complete Line of Spaulding Sporting Goods , -at, F. DEMENT & CO. Groceries Hardware If TO BE GIVEN FREE II II Otl ITIIflni A If A DAT I l.lll.l TlnlM I1M fl llj VVJMVillWA A JamA MAI Jfc j With every Ham purchased, the purchaser will be given a guess on the weight of the large Columbia Ham in our window. The purchaser guessing closest to the weight will be given the Ham. Buy a COLUMBIA HAM and Guess ! ? ''ll'TTTTTTTTll'l'la SMITH'S AT THE HOTELS. Hotel Wright. W. L. Cook, Fort Rock. Floyd Stafford, Chlco, Cal. John Shepherd. Chlco, Cal. W. P. Rogers. Fleetwood, j". L. Linahan, Portland, i R. K. Mantey, Roberts. Charles McGargle, Portland. J. J. Dumbolton, Seattle. J. Winegarden, Burns. J. P. Bowman, Powell Butte. W. P. Melior, Brothers. C. C. DeHaven, Portland. J. . O'Hearn, Oregon Trunk. Hotel Cozy. T. J. McDonald, Burns. R. G. Brady, Portland. G. M. Cornett, Prinevllle. Mr. and Mrs. A. Allen, Spokane. George Needy, Spokane. Ted Povey, Silver Lake. W. C. Hollinshead, La Pine. ITilot Butte Inn. K. B. Miller. Chicago. J. C. Bogle, Chicago. F. A. Voertman, Portland. B. I. Elliott, Portland. ' . L. D. Chaumont, Portland. V. S. Duncan, Portland. R. B. Rector, Portland. Gordon. C. Jones, Portland.' , J. D. Stevens Portland, B. H. KaurTman, U. S. Navy. Paul Marsh, Tumalo. W. C. Hayward. Salt Lake. P. I). Sanders, Portland. H. B. Hammer, Portland. L. R. Child, Portland. Ralf Harper, Portland. C- I. Reckard, Portland. B. S. Coad, Ripan. H. Zimmerman, Crescent. Belle Lent, Portland. J. W. Reeder, Silver Lake. T. C. Welch. Silver Lake. C. J. Underwood, Klamath Falls. Charles Vartin, Summer Lake. Mr. Bob will be at the II. A. A. ('. May 13, at 8: 13 p. in. Adv. "Don't he In such a hurry to suc ceed, son. l-oiik at me. I begun life at the bottom." "Well, I've been In France, and I be gan by going over the top." ' Siave up For a Home ! JUST a word to the NEWIYWEL3. Beat friends, we don't want to PHEACH to yon, but we do wteh to say SIMPLY and EMPHAT ICALLY : "BEGIN SAVING FOR YOUR HOME HOW!" It' not EASY, we know. The first years of your new life require most of your noney, which perhaps does not come to yon as plentifully as it will later. But save NOW. DON'T WAIT, It'll make ynu HAPPY. Central Oregon Bank GROCERY Mrs. V. A. Smith AGENT FOR THE Nubone Corsets Will call tjr appnmet m LftcLes Dotting ft Fitting. Address P. O. Box 538 Cities of Crete. There Is a touch of Irony In the nws from Crete. Homer's "island of a hundred cities" possesses now but three town, and two of these, C'anntln and Canea, And It necessary, in their growing pains, to destroy ancient mon uments to make spnee for modern Im provements. Happily there seems no disposition yet to colonize Knossns, where lie the remains of thousands and thousand of yours of crvlllzntlon as exulted, artistically, n the world has ever known. That old civilization makes the culture of ancient Greece seem by comparison like Unit of yes terduy. London Chronicle. Ingenious Cow. He Is n little lad. n trifle over three, and he lived In Hroukslde circle. Au burn, relates the Indianapolis News. The other day lie saw n cow for the first time and dnrlinr his Inspection of the strange animal she lowed. A mill iliter he was visiting a nelijlilmr, anil told of the stniiiro iinjiiiul he hud seen, and about her liorns. ."How do you know It was a horn?" Inquired the lady. "Oh, I know It win n horn because she hlowcd it nt me." Who says that children are not original nt times? Widen Your Interests. T'l" person who Is most likely to be Interesting to the outside world Is the one who has least to siiy nuont him self. As our horizon widens nnd our Interests Increase, so ninny subjects divide our. attention t lint our own thoughts nnd feelings no longer seem n-ntters of such absorbing Imnortnnrn The person who talks too much nbout ininseir snows thnt he needs a widen ing of Interests. Girl's Companion. LIVE FOR WORLD TO COME Inhabitants of Monasteries on Mount Athos Take No Thought of . Muadans Things. The long peninsula tiipcrliiK south ward from the busy oily of Siilnnlkl piiiIs In (hreo Irregular rniijs like n misused trlilent of tSVptiino. On the end of (lie easternmost of those prongs, almost surrounded hy the sen, kIiiiiiIs the Holy moiinlaln, or Mount Mhos.' It Is given to men 'whoso thoughts and doings are nil directed with n sola thought of tlio world to route, so Hint the war ugony which, convulsed this Mirth hardly caused a ripple In their quiet existence. The slopes of Mount Athos nre covered with monasteries, large nnd small, i It Is a little world In Itself, this hit of ancient (Ireece. It lives to u quiet ordered tempo In an atmosphere where noise and strife at a almost unknown, where nil the little doings of the day move to it thousnnd-ycar-ohl rl'tiuil. Thero tire men hero who bnvo not wan dered n mile from their cloister In twenty years, willing prisoners of their own convictions. It Is a place of kind ly, dreaiuy life, free from heartburn lugs mill Jealousies, where each mun Is the equal of lira fellow, despite the castes and ranks of the order equal In a common Infinite littleness before the majesty of divine omnipotence and eternity. No woman Is permitted to visit the sacred ground of the mountain, not that the order looks down on woman, hut rather In tribute to her power to draw the thought of men from the eternal things. Despite the prohibition, however, there uro rumors of women disguised who fled to Athos and found sanctuary there In the ttmo or the Cireok revolt and the war with the Turks. It Is whispered, too. that the daughter of an Kngllsh admiral accom panied her father on an ofllclal visit In the uniform of a midshipman. DYES FROM MOOR AND HILL Plants In Scottish Highlands and Ire land Used to Product Vast Variety of TInU. We think of the preparation of color tints as hnvlng been essentially a Oer mnn Industry, though In reality the first discovery In that line was mmle by an Kngllsh scientist, when In 1R.KI Sir W. 11. Perkins Introduced a beauti ful mauve tint. Further hack still Kngllsh nnd Irish dyers depended for tones of yellow on the brown or genrstn plant, the whin In Scotland, plant of the gnrse family. Wond. too, was another valuable ally of the dyer. Fermented wond holds about two per cent of Indigo and was used to ohtnln that color. Wond dyed cloth was dlpiR-d Into a broom liquor In order to obtain a rich green. So thnt three colors with a multitude of shndes were possible at once. In the Scottish hlglilnuds lichens are still collected In order to get. purples, reds, brown and yellows so constantly need ed In dyeing the clan nnd national tartans. In this connection I'tnleiny tells us Hint the nnvlgntors rniue from Tyre nnd Sldon to the sea-cliffs of Ireland In order to obtain certain "mosses," or lichen, for use In com pounding the renowned Imperial pur ples and Tyrlnn reds of their land. Walnut, dyers' green weed, barberry, yellow bedstrnw, buckthorn, sen buck thorn, and corn marigold arenmong the plnnts of the Irish country-side which have been used as dye-stuffs by past generations. Mere Incident In Cat's Life. You're not obliged to believe the fol lowing story, nor even strain your Imagination over It. The Bath (Maine) Times tell It. About four years ago a Itnth mnn went smelt fishing off a wharf on the riverside nnd when he returned leaned up bis pole on which wns his fishing line In a corner of the kitchen. Attached to the hook was a minnow for live bait and this was wriggling on the hook, when the man's pet black coon cat espied the fish and made for It Ilefore the owner could prevent, the cat bad swallowed the fish nnd the hook. It wns Impos sible for the mnn to pull out the hook without killing his pet so he cut the line, lenvlng the halt and the hook and a small portion of the line within the coony. The cat seems lo have as slmllnted the hook, for she never has shown any symptoms of discomfort from her strungo meal nnd Is still alive nnd In apparent good health. Japanese Wrestlers, Kcfinse of their enormous stntura nnd girth It has oftcli' been assumed by foreigners Hint Japanese wrestlers are a race apart, a strange little group of native giants handed down from antiquity. As a matter of""fnct the wrestlers, recruited from the fishing, farming nnd forester classes, have splendid physique to begin with, and become strong nnd muscular through their long training nnd the encour agement thnt Is given to their vorn clous appetites, friends nre very fond of giving them big banquets nnd nre nnmsed to see how much ihey enn eat. One prominent trnlnpr, when In vited hy his iinplicrs to n dinner, took nil his students along with him. say ing, "All my followers come nlong with nm who can drink n gallon- of sake nplece." There Is a touch of the Hnlieliilslan In It, especially when one contrasts It with the usual foreign Im pression of the dainty len-slpplng, cherry-feting Japanese. , . The Only Explanation, "Your hiisbnnd tells mo he has quit betting on horses I" "Oh desr!" exclaimed younr; Mrs, 'fotk Ins. "I'Jmrl'jf'a brok nguim"' TONIGHT and FRIDAY Jane & Katherine Lee "SWAT THE FLY" 'The life Children have Mutt nnd Jott'iiud the KntzenjunitT Kids beat a mile. See what they did to a German spy. Explosions of Laughter Generated by Rapid Fire Mirth Bombs GRAND THEATER Packing House By-products. The by-products In the packing house Industry nuiv le divided Into two classes the edible and the Inedible. The inedible constitute the external covering (hair, horns, hoofs and hides), some of the offal, and the hones. From these are prepared n great variety of suhstniices, sumo of which have de veloped Intb enormous Industries In themselves, such as lealher, soap, glue and fertiliser. The last mentioned re resents the ultimate utllUiitlini of parking house waste. For example. In the manufacture of buttons, combs, knife handles and spatulas from the bonis and hoofs of en I tie and sheep and the hoofs of hogs the waste re sulting from the preparation of these articles was at one time thrown away, but It has been found that by treating snch material with sulphuric acid the nitrogen which It contain becomes available a a fertiliser. Who is Mr. Hob? Adv. Industrial and t M. A. PALMER Cabinet Maker and Iluilder, Jobbing Franklin Bt., rear of Irrigation Co.'s old building. PACIFIC EMPLOYMENT CO. "AlWm AT TOUR SERVICI" Help of all kinds Furnished Free to Employers usroxKM, iriuiu. most, nu et nm. i r. am. aw. tn-OI Bumslde Street. l'ortlar.4. Oresoa Carlson & Lyons PLUMBING & HEATING l'liimblng and Healing Supplies,' Hath Iioom Accessories, etc. . Pipe, Valves and Fittings PHONE RED 151 Bend Park Co. Real Estate and Insurance lend Company Building- Own Your Own Home I have some bargains in BUNGALOWS KAHY TI'.KMB J. A. EASTES Central Orerfon ,Lead!n(f INSURANCE AGENCY J. H. MEYER Auto, G.is and Electrical Engineer Expert Auto Repair Man of long experience PIONEER GARAGE Prices Reasonable. IN GUODUY, , WOMEN'S TROUBLES The tortures and dlaAinforta of Weak, lame end aching back, swollen feet and limbs, wr-ukiiris, dlarlnnta, nausea, as n rule linve their oridn In kidney trouliln, not "feianlii conipliilnts," These geintrul symptoms of kidney and blsdtlnr disease uro Veil kuowu IUe the rrineily, Nrt time yon feel a twinge of pSfn M the back or are troubled with lifscl. aTue, imllifeslloii, lasuaiiiiii. Irritation in the liluililcr or puln In the loins and lower abdiinivu, veil will find quick kuil ur relief la (i(I.L .MCD.VI, Jlnirlera Oil ('ntwulrs. This old and tried rem edy fur klilney trouliln and allied d rnuermeiits hss stood tlio test for bun jlreds of years. It docs the Work, l'slna and troubles vsnlrb and Dew Ufa and health will corns as you continue, their use. When completely restored to ymir usual vigor, continue tak'ug t cannile or two each day, ;OU MKDA1, llssrirm Oil Cap sales are hniiortrd from the laborato ries at Haarlem, Holland. - Ik not ac cept a eubtUluta, la sealed bexea. It res slaea. Business Guide Tinning and attest Metal WM. MONTOOMKKY. Furnaces, Spouting, Guttering. Cornice bad Hkyllght Repslilng promptly attonded to Prices rlithf. work gunrnnteed HEN I) INSURANCE AGENCY Writers of all kinds at Insurance. Old. est Insurenee Aseney In Central Ore- Cm. H. C. gills. Klrat National bank uUdlnc, ilend, Oresoa. UNION CAFE OI'K.V XIOIIT AM) DAY Have You Tried Our Doughnuts Scotch Woolen Mills All Wool Hulls Made to Order' 9 IH.no to 92I.50 NKIXON'H H.I8 llond Ht. FOR SALE! Tracts under irrigntiotj, adjacent to water mains, electrlo light and telephone servico. Ranging in size from 1; to 6 Ann WUCSTORIA ADDITION Hob L. D. WIEST 1.KM Third Htreot Dodge Brothers Motor Cars WALTIJIUl-WILLIAMS CO, H. 8. McCturo, Salesman REPAIRING THAT IS REPAIRING ELECTRIC SHOE SHOP COLUMBIA SERVICE STATION Jay Bultzmnn, Prop, BTOHAON IIATTKKY.WORK (tin Repairing Odd Jobs in Mechanical Mnes