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About The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 25, 1919)
PAGE 9 . '. : . J v THE BEND BULLETIN, DAILY EDITION. BEND, OREGON, MONDAY, Al'Gl'OT SW. 1010 ' The Bend Bulletin DAILY EDITION raMMM Beery Aft.nea Birept Infer. Br Um Bead BalMla (laeerperatea). bund m bci)mi claa. matter, January I, 1111, at the Poat Office at BnJ. Oregon, miliar let el March . 18'. - BOBERT W. 8AWYRR .. Editor-V.neier BKNB.Y N. FOWLER Aaeoclate Bailor FKED A. WOKXr'LKN...Advrtiiina Manager B. A. NIXON Circulation Manaser RALPH SPENCER Mechanical Sunt An Inoenendrnl Newepaner, elandine. for the aanare deal, eiean ftuetneM, Clean pomica ana Ik Seat Intereata at Hand and Central Oretoo. SUBSCRIPTION RATES Bt Mail OH Tear W.00 til liontha ..........4. fare Montha .11.40 - . Bj Carrier . . On Y . IU aionth. W.60 Ona Month $ .0 All aobacrtptiona are due and PAYABLE IN ADVANCE. Notice. o( expiration are mailed tnbaeribera and It renewal la not made within aaeonable tune tha paper will be discontinued. Pleaea notify as promptly of any ehanse of aMnaa. or of failure to receive the paper reffu eviy. Otherwiee w will not be reaponaible tor aaolaa eabued. Make all check and ordera payable to The and Bulletin. MONDAY, AUGUST 25. 1919. A SURVEY WANTED. - The Investigation of the Benhani Falls reservoir site which has been -made by Professor W. O. Crosby In the past few weeks has taken tlm pretty thoroughly over the Deschutes valley. Although the reservoir site itself covers a comparatively limit ed area the geology of the whole section has a bearing on the problem which he has had under considera tion and accordingly he has visited practically every portion of it and has seen its lakes and gorges, its lava flows and caves, its moun tains and extinct volcanoes. To the trained geologist every fea ture of the country was of great In terest. There was something dif ferent on every hand. Not only were the geological formations fine ex amples of their kinds but the ques tions they suggested kept the mind of the observer constantly on the alert. . Because there was so much to be seen here and so many things that required so little explanation to be thoroughly understood it seemed un fortunate that popular knowledge of it all might not be more wide spread, and Professor Crosby agreed heartily with the suggestion made tfi him ona day, tbat the United States geological survey ought to be interested to come in to make topographic maps of the valley and geological studies of special areas such as the Newberry crater. ' On such foundations could be built an acquaintance with .the country that would mean a world of interest to our students and many others who till have minds open to the wonders of nature. . . , Can't we do something to get the Geological survey interested. norihccniont Afcaliist TWirtfFnness," uc-, cording to ancient Chinese documents hnmled down by Confutiii. KlnR Wen declnred "drinking hns long been a nntlmml vice." ' He or dered that wine be used only In con nection with sncrlllres and even then drunkenness Tins not to be tolerated. The temperance reforms also ex isted In Kgypt centuries before Cllrlst, Here's whnt a teneher salil to a youth who hnd been looking upon the flmvlni; bowl too freely : 1 .,' "Drink not beer to excess. The words that come out of thy mouth thou canst not recall. Thou dost fall and break thy llinhs nnd no one reaches out n hand to . thee. Thy comrades pi on drlnkinc; they stand up end say: 'Away with' thin fellow who Is drunk.' If anyone should then seek thee to ask counsel of thee, thon wouldst he found lying In the dust like a little child." USE WHITE. FEATHER TO GET BACK JOBS Life's Master-Key. " Life's master-key Is a personal pos session. It's yours to use. It's your estimate of yourself plus sufficient Initiative to bring Ideals to pass. You're bound to be questioned and discounted at every turn. Others have the same mental concept of their worth as you do. It's your Job to show them who Is most fit. No, you needn't begin that old quarrel about the survival of the fittest. Life knows mercy as literature more than It does of .conduct. Nature's laws are just. Impartial and Irrevocable. They know neither sex nor social position. He who by instinct works with them wins, he who does the opposite fulls. When opportunity steps Into view yon must grasp the forelock or Join the great army of those who spend the time In regrets and those who sigh, "if I had only known." FEAST FOLLOWS ARAB FAST Institution of the East Much Rescnv bles the Christian Observance , - of Lenten Season. . , As the Mohammedan year Is a lunar one, the months rotate-through the dif ferent seasons, and the fast of Rama dan becomes a severe affliction upon the faithful when the month happens to fall In the hot days of summer. The sick, travelers and soldiers in time of war are temporarily released from this duty, as well as nursing women and others to whom It might prove Injuri ous. The fast Is followed by the feast of Belram, which was established by Mohammed, who seems to have been guided by the Christian Institu tion of Lent, which In the early church varied from four to six weeks. On this dny every family of the'tnie believers offers a sheep to God, and the streets of the cities are filled with men carry ing the destined victims on their hacks. Among the Arabs the festival begins at four in the morning, when great crowds collect at the residence of the nearest pasha or bey, awaiting his ap pearance hj jjie court of the palace. "At five o'clock bis highness enters, ac companied by members of his family and his staff; cannon are fired, the pe culiar bands of the East play suitable In, and the chief captain announces that the hour of sacrifice has arrived, and that his. highness, after prayer, will be present at this act. All then adjourn to the mosque, and when the sacrifice Is over the pasha re-enters the court and those of high rank kiss bis hand; the Inferior slightly touch ing it with their Hps. This occupies about an hour, when all retire to take coffee, the captain thanking the crowd for their presence as a mark of at tachment to their ruler. " FOUGHT THE FLOWING BOWL Eastern Monarchs and Religious Lead ers Long Ago Lifted Their Voices Against Drunkenness. Temperance movements and prohibi tion crusades date buck at least 3,000 years. It was China that flrst tried to be bone-dry.. Early reforms along temperance lines are attributed to the priests of India nnd Persia,' But the Chinese clnim that In the eleventh cen tury before Christ their emperor, so dlsg-.istcd over the prevalence of drunk enness, ordered all the grapevines In the klncdnm unrooted. A hundred yenrs before this bone- dry effort. In the twetflh century be fore Christ. Klhg Wen tried partial re form In China. Wen. founder of the Chnn dynasty, promulgated nn "An- Power of Imagination. A doctor, treating an old woman for typhoid fever, took her tempera ture on each visit by putting a thermometer under her tongue. One day. when she was nearly well, the doctor did not take her temperature. He had scarcely got 100 yards from the house when her son called htm . back. "Mother Is worse," said the young man. "Come back at once !" The doctor returned. As he went Into the sick room the old woman looked up at him reproachfully. "Doctor," she said, "why didn't you give me. that tube under my tongue today? That al ways did me more good than all the rest of your trash !" Something Saved. A music teacher, giving a lesson to a careless pupil, was becoming Impa tient with her. Finally, nt a most complicated part of a difficult piece, the pupil lifted her hands from the pi ano and searched for her handkerchief. It was the last straw. "Oh," exclaim ed the teacher, "was there ever such a girl? You lose your position, yon lose your fingering, you lose your hand kerchief you lose everything!" "Oh, no," responded the pupil, With a twinkle in her eyes, "not everything I I haven't lost my temper I" Illy United Prow to The Dead Bulletin. MANCHESTER, Eng., Aug, 25. Domobllaed soldiers are gutting oven with young women who In tho early dnya of the war would wiito them anonymous lotturs containing whtto feathers. ' , Numerous young women employed on tratn-enrs,. In factories and stores ure receiving. whlto fea thers for taking over men's Jobs and refusing to give them up. A few of the women have taken tho hint and given up their Jobs. Explaining "Yankee." Yankee "wus n cant, favorite word with farmer Jonnthau Hastings of Cambridge about 1713. ... . A Yan kee good hoiaso, or Yankee elder nnd the like. . . . The students (of Harvard) used to hire horses of him; their Intercourse with him, and bis uso of the tenu on all occasions, led them to adopt It." Will Gordon, "Independ ence of United States," volume 1, let ter 12, page 4SJ. c Shoes Shoes $5.68 DIATOM ITE PLANT IS WORKING FULL CREW LOWER BRIDGE. Aug. 25. The Diutomlte plunt has resumed operations and is now working with a full crew. The Black Butte ditch broke on Wednesday and cut off the water for Long Hollow for two daya. Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Hosklns and family returned Thursday from Crater lake. A. J. Fuller and Clarence Rom mel went to the mountains the first of the week to get poles for a new derrick. Mr. and Airs, Roy Kidder were in Redmond Saturday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Horace Brook na-. Paul Brooking and Mr. and Mrs. Jack and family spent the week end at Suttles lake. A REAL SAVING WE GUARANTEE .MEN'S SHOES All Goodyear welt-high grade tans and blacks DRESS SHOES PER PAIR at least $2.00 lower than present day prices. These shoe prices defy com ' petition Buy Now. LADIES TELL YOUR HUSBANDS AND SONS TriState Terminal Co. Mr. Holt of Portland was at Lower Bridge the past week on business connected with the silica Bill. R. S. Towns has purchased Jim West's Cadillac car. Darwin Walter has been worklna in Redmond the past week Mr. and Mrs. Russell Chapman and daughter and Mrs. A. J. Fuller left In their car for Hood River on Sunday, where they will visit with friends nnd relatives. - n The farmer and the business man of this com munity are partners in the progress or the failuie of their community. If they pull together, the progress and prosperity is certain to come. IF they listen to preachers of class hatred there can only be failure as a result. THE SHEVUN-HIXON COMPANY V Sucrni lUitalttgue On ItrqurMt WriirTor II KSIUtl.U SOW Sew Classes StiirttiiQ Every Week Pay School N lyht School tolTouiig aCea end Yoang Women During the course of a year ' I"aniwerthou8anl86f jnestlons put to me either toy parents of earneet young people or by young men and women thenfaelvee who ere seek ng the ray to 8uooe88ful entrance into husineea life. yThe three questions. I.em.esked to answer moet fre-j neatly ere :, . . " "Why is Behnke-Walker the dominant tueinese college1, of the Paotfio Horthweet? Why ere its students eo uniformly , successful? ' How. e'en It plaoe all it e graduates la paying positions?"- To enower.one isto answer ell. -i Behnke -Walker has come to he the largest hueiness' eb'lieW because its students meet the demand of the ef f loient husiness men. Its students are uniformly successful heoeuse thoy remain in school under careful instructors long enough to r-ake thorough preparation for business importance too they have as an individual aecet the invalu ahlo prestige of a creat institution-one which huslnosB men universally recognise as the fountain head for competent Jteelp. In turn that is vhy BohnVe-Walicor 'can place its trraduates in paying-,-permonent positions. The bout huslnos frllnt of this regireagerly seek Bohnke-Walkor etudente so eaperly indeed' that Bohnke -Walker last year .rece ived 1764 calls for help from business concerns, and was able to supply: lfss than one-half. It oould not then, end oan not now tur Jut enough graduates to fill needed positions, and this de--Spite the foot that the college is open the year round, end ew students ere entering every day, , yours truly i. .. . j Marlon Honk I in win shopping In Redmond lduy. T, J, Qulgloy rnturnad Tuasduy from KlniiiAih Kails, whuro lie at timdod tliu ICIks' convention. Ho also tnado n trip lulu t'i'ntor laku. (loorgo Unols wus In Itudmnnd Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Newbold and fam ily and Goingo Tuokwoll left oil Thui'Hilay fur an uuIIiik ut('liar lake nnd KIhIi lake. O. K. Hi nd Ik wus in Itndmond on business Wednesday uftornnon. BIKTHDAY PARTY IS HELD AT MIIXICAN -4 MII.l.ICAN'. All.' 25. A few of tho nolKbliors helped William A. Kalin cvluhrnlo his 47th birthday Saturday nixht. Mr. and Mrs. It. It. Knllor and three sons were Sunday visitors tit the V.. J. Cook homo. ' A. T. Shuver and Mis. L. A. HoliafTur wuru umid visitors Mon day. L. P. Rooney was nn over Hun day visitor at his home. It. R. Kellor made u business trip to Hand Wednesday and Mrs. J. J. Holland and Mrs. Mary Rosin ao compunled him. .Mrs. Itonln made flnu! proof on her homoNliiad, while Mrs. Holland wus una uf her wit nesses. W. Kd Moore went to Dend Thursday. ' Kred Klsor and Louis (I loss bought an Irrigated ranch neur liend, to the family Is not noln to Albany after all. C. H. aralTenberKur Is busy liuul I UK hla hay homo. Virginia Itosin spent Wodnnsday at tho Holland homo. Dr. C. Rosin left Tuesday. Tom Coin culled at the Hol land home several times this week. Clara and Arthur Oraffenberzer called at the H. R. Keller humo Wednesday. J. A. Bmlth was out on the ranch Tohlght-Last Time . BESSIE BARISCALE , IN "TEe Woman Michael Married" LLOYD COMEDY PATHE NEWS Labor Day-Sept. 1st Continuous Performance 11.00 a.m. to 11:00 p. m. GRAND THEATRE several days llila week and went to Rend Wednesday. Seven Reasons Wby There Should Be An Electric Range In Every Bend Heme. 1st Bavin dt lltuo, labor nd fuel. 2nd Meats, vegetables and other foods retain natural flav ora when cooked on an Kl.KC TRIC RANUE that are other wise lost In vapor when sub jected to uneven heals pro duced by wood, coal or cat ' ran Ken, , 3rd Get out of bed, turn the button and breakfast Is started while you are droaslns. 4th No dirt, no ashes. Mother's work Is easier and' her disposition la happier and her days are longer. 6th A blessing when days are hot; cook on an Eloctrlc Range and you do not realise there la any heat In your kitchen. 6th Very low rates maintained by the Hend Water, Light ft Power Co. put all the comforts of the ELECTRIC RANUE In reach of all. 7th Cleanliness, ease, comfort and the fact that Mother's burdens are lightened should be the main reaaons for an Electrlo Range. Bend Water Light & Power Co. m Progressiveness and Growth in thii community. mn dollar. inJ ccnta in your pocket, Build Now wilh Deschutes While) Pine. Build of home product and patronise heme induitty. - The cheapest and ht building1 material is D'lchute. (While) Pine and it manufactured right her into sll lisee tnd grades ' of lumber. Acquire a borne of your own imte.d df a buncb of rent receipt". , PUT. YOUR MONEY TO WORK. DUILD NOW The Brooks-Scanlon Lumber Co. - LOCAL SALES AGENTS MILLER LUMBER COMPANY THE UNITED WAREHOUSE COMPANY WHOLESALE DISTRIBUTORS' FOR CENTRAL OREGON OF OIL, GASOLINE, FLOUR, SALT, MEATS HAM, BACON, LARD, ETC. . FERTILIZERS FOR lTaWNS AND FARM LANDS I ; General Commission Merchants , WE BUY HIDES THE UNITED WAREHOUSE COMPANY. Phone 241 , A. M. PRINGLE, Manager ,