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About The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963 | View Entire Issue (June 30, 1919)
PAGE a VHK UKNU BUIJjKTIN, DAILY EDITION, HlTND, OttKGON, MONDAY, Jl'NK 80, 1010 The Bend Bulletin DAILY EDITION raMkhnl R.it Aftarnaon Rir.pt Bandar. Br tka Ban) Ball.lla Incrarata4. Kni.n.1 mm Kecond VimM matter. Januaf t. 1117, at lh Poat Offlca t Band. Oraaon, undar Act at March . 187. ROBERT W. SAWYER Edltnr-Mnnaiar PKKRY N. FOWLER Aaaoelata Editor RKD A. WOKI.r'IJN..,AJwrtiainn Manaitrr RALPH SPENCER Maehanloal 8upt An Independent Nawapapar, atandtnc for tha aguara deal, clean buatnaaa, clean polltlca and lb beat Intareata of Hand and Central Oracon. SUBSCRIPTION RATES Br alatl On Year W.O fttx Months J.16 i-bra Montha 11.(0 Bt Carilar On Year '. M.tO U Montha 13.60 On Month 1.(0 All aohaerlpHona are due and PAYABLE IN ADVANCE. Notice of eipiratlon ara mailed aubaeribera and if renewal la not made within -aaaonabla time the paper will be diacontinucd. Plea notify u promptly of any chanv of jddreaa, or of failure to receive toe paper reitu larty. Otherwiae we will not b raaponaibla tor aopiea miaacd. Majre all check and order pajabla to Tha Ham! Bulletin. MONDAY, JUNE 30, 1919. SATURDAY'S YOTE. Saturday's election finished the job that was begun last winter when the new city administration first dis covered that it was going to be short of funds with which to pay the city's running expenses. Aside from the council's abortive attempt to care tor the situation by a bond issue, the business has proceeded slowly, but inevitably, to the proper conclusion the payment of our bills by a tax. We say "inevitably" because we thoroughly believe that the people may be depended upon, when all the facts are before them and they have had time to digest them, to do the right thing. In this case the right thing has been done. The council was reported to have been sore at the defeat of the bond measures at the previous election in May. If it was sore then it ought to be highly gratified now because the people have taken their word for the amount of money needed and signed a check for the full amount. There has been no argument over items or charges that all that was called for was not needed. In short, the former vote did not Indicate lack of confidence In the council so much as dislike of the bonding measure. Full confidence Is shown by the big majority In favor of the tax measure. i The vote In favor of the library tax is the first real recognition ever given here to this most important feature of our community life. With this start it is to be hoped that we shall progress to the establishment of a real library here. It may be some, satisfaction to Germany to know that she has her beer left. That's more than we can say. Today and tomorrow are moving days in Bend. - : Prices may be going up, but the mercury takes a drop now and then. GRATEFUL FOR ONE THING Soldier Might Have Seen Good in Oth " cr Changes, but Not In That Last Greeting. The man who had volunteered his life for his country.cnme bnck from the western front. His experience Yind completely changed him. He carried within the sense of an entirely rew world. ! He went to Washington. He heard the speech of a senator. He saw the lobbyists consorting together. He wanted something, and he waited for !it In vuln. ; "It Is the same old crowd." he said, f He met the girl he loved with an lother fellow. She told him thnt she Infill loved him and that the only reason !she was with the other fellow was be cause she was lonesome for hi in. i "It's the same old girl." he said, i He traveled on a railroad.' The guard was surly. The train was late. The food was poor. The rate was nearly double. "It's the same old transportation only worse," he said. He reached his home town. He was met by a delegation and a band. With in two weeks four- of his neighbors had gotten the best of him, another borrowed half his pay, and at the end of o month when he walked down Main street no one knew him because lie fwas broke. He went back home. There was a (woman waiting for him on the door- btep. "My boby hero !" she said. And putting his arms around her, he replied : ; "Snme old mother thank God !" Thomas L. Masson In New York Eve ning Post. sneives Are Fireproof, Not n stick of wood Is used In two fireproof houses being built In Eng land ns an experiment, says an Illus trated article In Popular Mechanics magazine. Concrete and steel nre used exclusively, the floors being of Joint less composition with rounded cor ners, while window frames, .trimmings, doors, staircases, and even the cup board shelves are of steel. The cot tages nre titled wllh every modern Im provement and are snld to hnve ex celled similar dwellings of wood or . brick, both In time and cost of con struction. " U. S. TO TAKE WATER WAGON SEAT TONIGHT (Continued from Page 1.) Knforcc-mtMtt Is Problem. The productive wealth and effi ciency of the country will be In creased IB per cent., "dry" leaders claim, basing this on reports from prohibition states. Fifty thousand druggists will bo put under strict license not to sell liquor except for medicinal or scien tific purposes. Enforcement of prohibition, evon dry leaders admit, will be a big problem for some time. Even with congress designating a definite agency for the work und clearly de fining how much alcohol mukes liquor intoxicating, the task seems stupendous. Stupendous Task Kami. The work of government agents means, if bone dry prohibition is to be strictly enforced, the elimination of a per capita consumption of 19.4 gallons a year from the American people. Latest figures show the con sumption of malt liquors in the United States as 2.053,457,000 gal lons; wines, 52.41S.000 gallons, and alcohol, 146,397,000 gallons. These figures probably hnve been reduced during the lust year because of the rapid advance of prohibition. Prohibition Fight Spectacular. Achievement of national prohibi tion has been one of the most spec tacular, as well as one of -the long est, reform movements In American history. Prohibition gained little ground until the present movement started about 15 years ago. Then there were only three dry states Maine, Kansas and North Dakota although mony counties in the south had voted local option. Maine was the first state to adopt prohibition, restriction being placed on the sale of liquor there in 1S46. Real prohibition was enacted in 1S51 there, but was repealed in 1S56. Then again in 1S5S It was re-enacted by a 5 to 1 vote. , BOOZE RUNNERS FIND WORK TOO HAZARDOUS (Continued from Page 1.) driver of the second machine and to note the spot at which the second load of whiskey was hidden. Fearing that his cache was to be rifled, the second autoist kept the other under surveillance for two weeks after arriving in Portland, and finally raced to La Pine, only to find that the man under suspicion had passed him on the road. Rather than have his liquor stolen from him he called up Sheriff Roberts, who, ac companied by Constable Xixo'n, raced to La Pine, picked up the man who had turned informer on himself, and Vent on to Crescent, meeting on the way the car wbich had gone from Portland to rob the cache. But the 'car was empty, and no liquor was left when the officials arrived at the hiding place to which they were guided. It may have evaporated, but Sheriff Roberts is inclined to believe that the auto which they followed was only a blind, and that a car which actually removed the whiskey to a new cache had been sent out several hours before. ' DEPUTIES TO PASS ON WORLD TREATY Premier Clemcnreau Submit Pn for Ratification Protective Al liance Also Prewnted. (By United Pre to The Bend Bulletin.) , PARIS, June 30. Premier Clem enceau today submitted the peace IMreaty to the chamber of deputies. He also submitted the Anglo-Franco-American protective alliance. POLK IS SCHEDULED TO REPLACE LANSING (By United Preaa to The Bend Bulletin.) PARIS, June 30. Frank Polk, under secretary of state, Is scheduled to replace Lansing on the American peace commission when the latter leaves for America, It was learned today. The date of Secretary Lan sing's sailing has not been fixed. TUMALO STATION IS OPENED TO MACHINES That the road lo the Tumalo ranger station Is now 'open to autos Is the report jtoduy of Judge H. C. Ellis, after getting through to the station yesterduy. One bridge Is down but may be crossed with safety, he says. Snow still loa deep around the ranger station. SUPERINTENDENT OF CHAUTAUQUA HERE It, O, Yuuta to Complete. Preliminary ArruiiKvmenla for Merles of K.n IcrtulmunntM lit llcml. It. O. Youti, superintendent of this year's Chautauqua, arrived in Horn! yosterday to complete the prelimi nary arrangements for the affair which opens on Wednesday after noon and continues through July 7. Notice of the programs given in other towns Indicate that they are well up to the standard of past years and six days of real entertainment are expected. The, sale of season tickets Is pro gressing favorably. Although few of the -guarantors have miulo their re turns, reports are that practically all of the tickets are now sold or spoken for, and It Is expected that the full guaranteed number will bo sold easily. As soon as the guaranty Is reached the sale of season tickets will stop and no more bo sold except nt an advanced price. Arrangements are being made to day for the erection of the tent und seats on the Chautauqua grounds ad joining the Cozy hotel and across Wall street from the Pilot Hutto Inn. BEND INSTRUCTORS SAFE ACROSS PASS Miss Margaret Hanson and Miss Heat rice Cheuney, instructors in the Bend high school, who left Inst week I on a hiking expedition to Eugene' over the McKenzie pass, have reached j their destination in safety, accord-, ing to a wire received by Mrs. H. G. Ferris of this city. The two were taken to beyond Sisters by auto and from that point i made 28 miles before they stopped for the night at McKenzie bridge. While crossing the pass they found many deep drifts, and believed that the road will not be open to automo biles for some time to come. NECESSARY TO KEEP BOOKS Without Accurate Accounts No Form of Business Can Be Successfully Carried On. Accountancy, which Is the science of systematizing business, hss a his tory that runs hack nt least 4.0U0 years. Very early In the development of nations It was found that In com merce ns well ns In the affairs of state. systematic and careful account-keeping were Indispensable. These sys tems were, nt first, crude anil labori ous, but they at least kept the (1 minces of the nntlon and the marls of trade from being chaotic. The Invention of double entry hook keeping enrly In the fifteenth century by the merchants and bankers of Ven ice gave to the commerce of Europe an Invaluable trade Instrument, and one without which ' the great commercial enterprises of the Inter centuries could hardly have existed. And so It has been on down to the present time; there has been a parallel progress between the accomplishments of commerce and the science of ac counting, and It Is known to every man In business that the former could not continue without the latter. Even the most unbusinesslike people know this much, and we enn-hardly Imagine any one silly enough to attempt to enrry on any kind of n business enterprise without keeping books. Bookkeeping, ns a formal subject of study. Is-tntight In most of the public and private schools of this country, but It Is only that form of bookkeeping that applies to the affairs of the mer chant or the shopkeeper. The public has yet to learn that bookkeeping Is quite ns necessary to the prosperity of the wngeworker, the salaried man, the farmer and the housekeeper as it Is to the -shopkeeper, the merchant or the manufacturer. Exchange. FLOWERS' HOURS OF SLEEP That They Differ Is a Troof of th 'Adaptability of Everything In Nature. That flowers sleep Is evident to the most casual observer. The beautiful daisy opens at sunrise and closes at sunset, whence Its name "day's eye." The morning glory opens Its flower with the day. The "four o'clock" awakes at four o'clock In the morning, but closes Its eyes In the middle of the day, and the dandelion Is In full bloom only while there Is strong light. The hnblt of some flowers Is certainly curi ous, and furnishes one of the many instances which prove' the singular adaptability of everything In nature. The reason Is found In the method by, which this class of flowers Is fertilized. Flowers which nre fertilized by night flying Insects derive no advan tage from being open by day ; and, on the other hnnd, those which are fer tilized by bees would gain nothing by being open nt night. Nuy, It would be a disadvantage, because It would ren der them liable to be robbed of their honey and pollen by Insects which nro Incapable of fertilizing them, It Is possible, then, that the closing of flow ers may have reference to the habit of Insects, and It may be observed, also, In support of this, that wliid-fcrtlllzcd flowers never sleep, . 1 . MUCH DEPENDS ON ONESELF Good' Hard Sens as Applied to An, olent Superstitions Concerning "Blue Monday." I happened to Hud a most entertain Ing old book lit tho free library a dic tionary of superstitions. It has three big volumes, till crammed with the fears and beliefs of the human race, Just to sample some of them that lip ply to Monday, here are a few: "If Ihlngs commence to go wrong on Monday they will go wrong till tho week, but If you hfivo good luck on Monday you will keep It up." "Pay no bills on Monday If you cnu help It." (This is congenial utlvlco and easily followed.) "If you meet a cross-eyed person on Monday you will not have good luck till Thursday." "If the sun sots clear Friday night It will ruin before Monday night." "It Is a bad sign tu lose u tooth on Monday." (Yes, or a hand or a leg either, I should say.) "If you lose your temper three times on Monday you will have a great fina lly quarrel." (This hit of sagacity has nn excel lent chance of being true, olio would think. Still, there may be some men who could get away with three blow outs and have nit comeback.) To tidd our own observation to the collected wisdom of the ages your Monday is neither more or less than what you choose to make It when you get out of bed In the morning. You enn make It luekv or nnhickv "Put Your Duds In Our Suds" Finished Rough Dry Wet Wash Dry Cleaning The BEND LAUNDRY Phone Black 3 1 1 R. L. ANDERSON Real Estate i Insurance - Loans Minnesota Street Phone: Ofice, Black 1591 Reiidcnce. 2051 J. B. Anderaont, Atfent. Wet Wash Wanted ! Rough Dry and Finished Work Electric Machine Used Call 1602 Hill St., or write Mrs. Pearl E. Lattimer Box 80, Bend, Oregon Work Called For and Delivered The Cozy Hotel The place for medium priced Rooms and Meals CHAS. STANTON Shop Next to Montgomery's Plumbing Shop- ALL WORK GUARANTEED Painting nnd PnpcrhnnglnK SEND A POSTAL TO O. E, MAST PIANO TUNER TUNING-CLEANING-REPAIRING BEND, OREGON FRANK WRIGHT Carpenter Work Haw Filing" Shop in the Basement of tho Bend Laundry Or Inquire at Pan time TONIGHT Last Showing The Unpardonable Sin IsrSJEISJSIBIBiaJS Fiuturinj( TOMORROW and WEDNESDAY , LOUIS BENNISON "SPEEDY MEADE" Two-Kifl Wisleimr-' llOltDKIt TKKItOlf QRAND THEATRE As to Conforming to Faihlon. Avoid singularity. There may often be less vanity In following the new modes Mian In adhering to the old ones. It Is true that the foolish In vent them, hut the wise may conform to, Instead of conirmllcllng them. Joubert. Progressiveness and Growth in ttiia community, mrene dollar nJ ccnta in your pocket. Build Now with Deschutes (White) Pine. Build of home product) and pstromse home induatiy. The cheapest end beat building' material it Drtchutee (While) Pine and i manufactured right here into sll (isee end grade, , of lumber. Acquire borne of your own inatesd of s buorh of rent receipts. PUT.YOUR MONEY TO WORKJBUILD NOW The Brooks-Scanlon Lumber Co. LOCAL SALES AGENTS! MILLER LUMBER COMPANY Seven Reasons Why There Should Be An Electric Range in Every Bend Home. 9 4a, Cth A blcRHlng when dny aro hot; cook on an Klectrlo Rnngo nnd you do not realize there 1 any heat In your kitchen. 0th Very low rate maintained by the Hnnd Water, Light ft Power Co. put all the comforts of the KI.KCTItIC HANUK In roucti of all. 7th Clcnnllne, ease, comfort and the fact tluit Mother' burden era lightened whould bo tha main reuon for an Klectrlo Ilunge. Bend Water Light & Power Co. THE UNITED WAREHOUSE COMPANY WHOLESALE DISTRIBUTORS FOR CENTRAL OREGON OF OIL, GASOLINE, FLOUR, SALT, MEATS HAM, BACON, LAR.D, ETC. FERTILIZERS FOR LAWNS AND FARM LANDS General Commission Merchants WE BUY HIDESJ THE UNITED WAREHOUSE COMPANY Phone 241 , A. M. PR1NGLE, MnnnRer yj 'aWa'rW-gr.V Mail WtaMarawMa'iSJcMarcM Blanche Sweet IN Aptitude for Details. "Von know Joliiiwin greut fellow for detail." "II" l that! lie's the sort of ehnp who Mould go und ft married nml be a!ile afterward to tell you whether It whs Mendelssohn. Lohengrin, or Tiililihnuscr they pluy.nl during the ceremony I" lm Saving of time, labor and fuel. 2nd Menln. vegetable nnd other food retain naturnl flav or when cooked on an Kl.KC TltlC HANUK that are olher wlao lout In vapora when nub Jected to uneven lienta pro duced by wood, coul or gns range. 3r (Jet out of bed, turn the button and breukfunt ii Blurted while you ara dreiwlng. 4th No dirt, no aahu. Mother' work I einler and bur dlHpoHlllbn I happier and her day are longer.