page a THE BKND 11ULLKTIN, DAILY KIHTION, 11KND, ORKGON, TVKHDAY, JUNK 84, 1010 The Bend Bulletin DAILY EDITION faMlshsJ strsry AtttrnMa Eirspt Snsdsjr. HIT, st the Pott Offlcs it Bnd. Oregon, undsr Act of Msroh 1. W. , HENRY N. FOWLER Assocists Editor RALPH SPENCER Mechanical 8upt An Independent Nswspspwi standing for the Mtiere deal, clean business. cin pontics ana the beat Intereeta o( llend and Central Oregon. SUBSCRIPTION RATES Br Mali One Year M O? Hlx Month 1-bree Months Bj Carrier One Year . all Month! S. One Month .60 All subscriptions are due and PAYABLE IN ADVANCE. Notices of expiration are mailed ubecribera and if renewal is not mail within reasonable time the paper will be discontinued. Please notify us promptly of any change of jddress, or of failure to receive the paper regu larly. Otherwise we will not be responsible for sopies missed. M Make all checks and orders payable to The Bend Bulletin. TUESDAY, JUNE 24, 1919. THAT NAME AGAIN". We may be right about that Bend name business after all. At any rate, Manager Chrisnian or the Silver Lake Leader denies that he is our adversary in the discussion. In a letter received from Mr. Chrismaii he says: "Editor Henderson just drew my attention to your editorial on the question of Bend not carry ing herright name,1 or rather the same that she originally was called Allow me to say that -I was not the instigator of this dispute and 1 do not know any more about what goes in the Leader than that which goes into the Bulletin. Therefore, If you will accuse Editor E. K. Henderson of these old-time sayings you will be after the right one. He is one of the old timers here." We suppose we shall be hearing again from Mr. Henderson, but in the meantime will not some of the other old timers give us the benefit of their knowledge? Of the 28 presidents of the United States only eight have had middle names, which suggests that Leonard Wood has a big lead over the other Republican , possibilities. Can you name the eight? Speaking of coffee again. It is a bean, but when it gets to $1 per pound, in many families it will be a has-been. LUCK AND CHANCE OF LIFE Abundant Reasons Why Fighting Men Develop a High Degree of Fatal ' t istic Reasoning. As I "tour the military hospitals,' says a writer in a London paper, I hear strange stories from the ward listers, from matron herself, and from men of all grades In the serried rows of beds. Poor M braved all the terrors of war wounded at Mons, and gassed at La Bassee only to be lgnomlnlously killed by an omnibus In the city street at home! Whole fam ilies of sods lie buried in France. But I know n case In which four sons and a son-in-law joined up in August, 1014, and went clean througlrMhe whole stu pendous drama, without one of the Ave getting so much as a scratch ! I know a heroic major, who had the maddest escapes from shot and shell, and wus killed at last by a falling branch of a tree whilst at home on leave. I know a chnpialn V. C. who all but broke his neck on a flight of stone steps at Salghton Towers, where he was Countess Grosvenor's guest. I know a war correspondent, of many fierce campaigns, who met his death after all in a London air raid. And I talked with the sole survivor of a ulilp, who turned out to be the only member of the crew who couldn't swim! How shall we eiplnln these vagaries? They made fatalists Of our men ; and one day In the hospital, I came upon a lud who wus reading the Moslem Koran. He held Up the page to me, and pointed to the verse: "No bap chanceth, but the same was writ ten in the Book of Decrees 1" TOOK LIBERTY WITH FACTS Author of "The Luck of Eden Hall" Admitted That He Drew on HI Imagination. The author of the pocin, "The Luck of Eden Hall," was Johann Ludwlg Uhland, a German poet of the first half of the nineteenth century, who first put that romantic legend Into Terse and later it was dressed in Eng lish rhyme by Longfellow. As the story goes, the young lord of the manor during a night of drunken rev elry, demanded the drinking glass called "the luck of Eden Hall." The butler "heard the words with pain," but brought the goblet which the tipsy nobleman smashed. Instantly flames cracked the celling and the persons surrounding the festal board became dust. The straightforward American poet explains at the heading of Ills translation that In spite of the Irnglc ending of the poem the glass is still in existence, and so It Is today. It is six Inches high, of pale green glass, ex quisitely enameled In blue and white. Practical folk qiiy that it probably came originally from Spain, where It whs used as n chalice In communion service, but the original story goes that It was left at St, Culhbert's well by a company of fairies. Pat it in "THE Bl'lLETIN." RALPH DE PALMA, NOTED RACER, SAYS SPEEDING IN AIRPLANE LACKS THRILLS s De Palms Prefers Itnlph De Pulma thinks there are more thrills in auto racing than In fly ing In an airplane. One day last fall, while De Pulma was serving ns direc tor of flying at McCook field, near Duy ton. O., nn aviation officer Invited him to take a trip In his plane. The motor star accepted. He was somewhat new at flying then, and also dubious. But a director of flying Is supposed to fly. "Want to do a few stunts?"' asked the officer, when De Pnlma was safely strapped in. "A nice question!" com mented De Pnlma, afterward. 'tThere was only one answer we did them!" Service Was Brief. De Palma's service in aviation was brief, as he enlisted a couple of months before the war ended. But It lasted long enough to give him a well-rounded experience In flying, both In the stunts which might be-compared to the thrills of the speedway, and long distance flying, which is comparable to the long crind of automobile road racing. And the veteran star lost no time In get ting back to bis own game. Arm in' the HOW "OLD ORDER CHANGETH" British Miner No Longer the Grimy Individual He Has Been So Frequently Pictured. A new type of miner Is being evolved at Atlierton, Lancashire, through the growing popularity of the baths at Messrs. Fletcher, Burrows and company's collieries.. At first only 10 per cent of the men used them ; now the figure Is 50 per cent. The miner now goes to work in tweeds and brown boots Instead of his oldest clothes and clogs. He no longer be smirches the seats of tramways and railway carriages with the grime of his calling. Nor does he drive his wife to despair with the amount of work he brings Into the house each day. He goes home spruce and well groomed, i with no- signs of the weariness so characteristic of the men "coming up." "All the young men use the hatha." said the keeper of the bathhouse. I "Some of the older men don't." "They ar-e learning sense," volun teered nn old miner. "And J wonder the women didn't teach It to some of them a bit sooner. "Convenience !" His eyes twinkled "Why, man, if I wanted to jazz I could bring my 'dress clothes here mid be ready for the ball twenty minutes after I got out of the cage. No, I'm not going to stort Jazzing not nt my time of life. But I might be going to a direr-tors' hnmi'iot one of thpse days. Pile Up Y ONE of the queerest things about some people is that they will not follow GOOD ADVICE when they KNOW they OUGHT TO, Perhaps we are all more or less that way, All the wise men of all ag-es have urged their, fellow beings to PUT AWAY SOMETHING for a EAINY DAY. Good old Benjamin Franklin's sayings on economy and saving alone ought to make a bank book holder of EVEEY ONE. If you have DELAYED, suppose you act HONESTLY with YOUE SELF EIGHT NOW. Central Oregon Bank ' Motoring to Flying. conviction tjmt It beats nvlullon for thrills. "Flying seenled iiionolouous compared with motor racing." he said in speaking of his air trip. Lonesome Work. "On a trip of several hundred miles you may be making speeds which would be terrific in an auto 140 miles an hour. But at the height of a mllo or more you have no realization of speed, and sitting up there In the wind and noise Is lonesome work. The stunts ure more exciting, of course- but there Is no competition, no audi ence, no applause. Hurdling over the ground at Daytonn Beach in a racing car at two and one-half miles per min ute, with Ml-fuot leaps from the ground, or whirling around the Indian apolis Motor Speedway truck in the 500-mlle race, with competitors con testing every lap that's very different stuff! Every minute has its problem and Its thrill. I prefer to be down on the ground, smelling the gas, eating the dirt. In contact with my rivals and the crowd." You never know In these times." Fif teen minutes suffice for a miner's bath. Men in a hurry take a little less, dan dies a little more. They find their own sonp and towels. lAindon Times Discouraging Art "Why do you sxnd your days and nights on these pictures?" asked the wife of the straggling artlst.e "You don't get enough for them to pay you for the pulnt you use." "I know, my dear," he answers; "but think! Iicmhrnndt mid others painted pictures and sold them for trifles, and they arc now the master pieces of the world and bring millions of dollars! I am not painting for us. I am painting for our descendants." "Humph !" Is the discouraging reply. "Yon don't make enough for us to af ford to raise any descendants." St. Louis Globe-Democrat. Strategy. "Making friends hi ail very well, bin a man should be careful about the kind of friends he makes," remarked Mr. Ciidspur. "My sentiments exactly," snld Mr. Duliwnlte. "Whenever n newcomer moves Into my neighborhood -und looks as If he might want to borrow my gar den tools three or four days a week I find out what his "political views' are and take the opimslng side." Birming ham Age-Herald. . WROTE OF LIFE AT HARVARD Author Now Forgotten Conceded to Have Been the First to Depict , Undergraduate Days. Harvard graduate, the world over; havo long believed that the earliest pictorial record of undergraduate life at. the. oldest college In the United States Vas made when K.U. Alt wood drew his pictures of college life for the first volume of the Harvard Lam poon, The Lampoon wus tlio fore runner of humorous journalism In America ; Attwood Imcimin a famous humorist : and nls ".Manners A Cus toms of yo llarviird Sludeiite" was es. tuhllshed as a classic. The dlscovi-y of a tiiucsiulucd book In n New Eug luml farmhouse reveals an earlier draftsman, , whilio "College Scenes'' antedate "Ye Harvard Nliulehto" by about a quarter of u century, hut weru soon generally forgotten. Of N. Ilu ward, tlio artist, no record remains but the bare fact that he was then In college. Tlie discoverer, however, had n rare afternoon when he found the volume In n dusty chest, where It hud been packed it way with n lot of con. temporary textbooks and an old Har vard diploma.' Christian Science Mou Itor. ' Historic Strasbourg. . In establishing .the administration of the restored provinces of Alsace Lorraine In the city of Strasbourg, the people of France have regained n rich ly historic ground, says the Boston Transcript. Its cathedral, whose build ing engaged the services of famous architects and decorators for the pe riod of four centuries before reaching the coiftpletlon lu which If stands to day, Is one of the marvels of Ilia world. Its great university has a library of n million volumes and before the war Its students numbered more than 2. 000. These ore the local glories, but a universal fume has been gained by the product of Its more iiftlmnte tnlent. Thus, Alsatian wine has hud world-wide recognition since the mid dle ages; Strasbourg beer was known before America was discovered, and as for that delicacy so prlxed by the fas tidious taste of gourmands, the pate de fols grus, the name of. .Strasbourg Is "the certificate of extreme excellence. Improved Oil-Burner. A -new oil-burner for the kitchen stove, announced from Cairo, Egypt, Is attachable by a special flange to the grate door, and it neither- reuulre alteration of the solid fuel stove nor prevents the use of solid fuel. The nozzle projects about an Inch Into the grate, the nil tank being mounted on n suitable ruck .outside the stove. A small fire heats the fuel oil to about 180 degrees Fahrenheit, and as the oil passes from the nozzle, a Jet of com pressed air or steam convert It Into n spray that burns with fl continuous smokeless anil odorless Hume. In Cai rn, It is noted, compressed air I sup plied In tllope to ho,,,",,. The Cozy Hotel The place for medium priced Rooms and Meals R. L. ANDERSON Real Estate Insurance Loans Minnesota Street Phone; Office, B!.ck 1591 Residence, 2051 J. B. Anderson, Affent. CHAS. STANTON Shop Next to Montgomery's Plumbing Shop ALL WORK GUARANTEED I'lilntliiK ami I'nperlinnK'nff FRANK WRIGHT Cnrpcnter Work Hnw Filing Shop In .tlio Bnfiement ol the Bond Laundry Or Inquire at Puntlmo Wet Wash Wanted ! IluuKh Dry ami I 'IiiIhIhmI Win if Electric. Machine Used Call 1602 Hill St., or write Mrs. Pearl E. Lattimei Bot 80, Bend, Oregon I work Called For and Delivered KKND A POSTAL TO G. K. MAST PIANO TUNER TUNINO-CUEANING-REPAIRING BEND, OREGON . !. - 1 W. MWitiMiiiirfiTi-in mw ' A Muddied Moujlk. Mr, Towei-, former American ambas sador to ltusslii, told tills story of n typical moujlk entering u railroad sta tion And Inquiring when a certain train would leave, Ho received the In formal Ion and departed. A Utile later, however, he was buck again, asking the same question. "Why," exclaimed the agent, "I told you (lint only a. minute ago." "You did truly," the moujlk an swered, "hut II Isn't myself that wauls to know this lime, It's my mall) out aide." lloslon Transcript. Her Words of Cheer. Miiry was writing a letter lo her Vnclc I'eter, who luid almost lost tlio use.of Ids legs by having rheiiiniitlNm. "lie sure lo write it cheerful letter, Mary," admonished her mother; "you know Vncle IVtcr lias been sick." An hour Inter Mary showed Ihls let tor to her mother: "Deer I'mklo: I inn so sorry that you have been sick. Why don't you go to heaven? They will give you a pair of wings there and you can rest your poor tired legs," An Old Sd Story. "This scenario," said I he eager au thor, "is about a girl who walled for months for a letter of forgiveness from her lover and then married an other man who" . "Walt a minute," exclaimed the movie manager. "Whin's tlio mutter? Too old !" "No, Too modern. We're not going to roust the government. The post office bus hud criticism enough." Industrial and - M. A. PALMER Cabinet Maker and llullder. Jobbing Franklin St., rear of Irrigation Co.'i old building. PACIFIC EMPLOYMENT CO. "Aiwayi at Your sirvioi" Help of all kind Furnished Free to Employer laroaau tnuiu. nom. tni m tun. 1 F. (DIM, sW-tat-at Bunulda Btnst. rsrtlsjt. Ontom Carlson & Lyons PLUMBING & HEATING riumhioK and Heating Supplies, Hath Koom Accessories, eic. Pipe, Valves and Fittings PHONE RED 155M Bend Park Co. Real Estate and Insurance llend Company Buildlnjf Own Your Own Home 'I have some bargains in BUNGALOWS' KAHY TKKMH J. A. EASTES Central Oregon's Lesdi'nif INSURANCE AGENCY ' J. H. MEYER Formerly with' Pioneer Garage is now at the Good Luck Garage Successor to C.O.ANDERSON Residence Phone, Red 2081 Madam H. LaMarche Holding fir at cIum qu cations from Paris, Lon don. Dublin and Toronto, will jive private Lessons in French and Music Will Call on Appointment Address, 134 Delaware l Toulght & Wednesday MONROE SALISBURY in I "The Light of Victory"? Comedy I Soapheads-Soapsuds Thursday Only 5 5 Alice Brady in 5 i "Rbsetta'-i ( 'iniiloir Stindav and Monduv liluuchu Sweet In J 'THE UNPARDONABLE SIN : 1 CjRAND THEATRE I Business Guide Tinning nd tthat Molsl WM. MONTUOMKHY. Furnaces, Bpoullpit. Outtarlnc, Cornice and tfkyllnat Hnpatrlng promptly mended to Prlrrs rlht, work Kitrnnld BKND INSURANCE AGENCY WrIUra of sll kinds of Insurants. OM. sst Insitrsncs Atfsnev In Csnlrnl Ors fon. UC. Kills. Klrsl NsllcnsJ Hsns UuUdlne, ZWod. Orssm. UNION CAFE OI'KX NKiHT AM) DAY Huva You Trlod Our Doughnuts Scotch Woolen Mills All Wool Halt Mndn to Order )ih.5o to rJi.no NKI.SO.VH HUH Imnil Ht. FOR SALE! Tracts under irrigation, adjacent to wuicr mulin, lectrle light and tHcpliunc mtrvlco. Ranging in size from I; to 6 Acres WIIXTOIUA ADDITION L. D. WIEST 1.104 Third Slrent Dodge Brothers Motor Cars 'AIrilKU-VH,I,IAMS CO. It, S. McCltiro, Salesman REPAIRING THAT IS REPAIRING ELECTRIC SHOE SHOP COLUMBIA SERVICE STATION Jny Siiltzmnn, Prop. HTOKAGK HATTKRY WOItlC Gun HcpiilrliiK Odd John in Mcclmnlcnt Much JITNEY Service at All Times All Places , Stnnd at J. F. TagRart's Phonm- Rd 1481 rnones. R0i Dlach 229, A.C. DOBSON . . . Chevrolet car