PAGE a THE BEND BULLETIN, DAILY EDITION, BEND, OREGON, TVK&DAY, HKPTEMnER 8, 1Q10 The Bend Bulletin DAILY EDITION rakthM gearr Aneraeea Bin Ssaaej. Mm B4 Balleiaa IhMMnM). Inuri u tWond Class matter. Jaauarr I. U1T. at the Post Office at Bud. QrxoB, under aet ex much s. iri. BOBCRT W. SAWYER Ultoe-alanaaer BKNHY N. FOWLER Aweltl) bitter FEED A. WOELKUN...AaWUins Manazer . A. NIXON...., Circulation taniw RALPH SPENCER.. Mechanical Bos. Ao Independent Nmww, staadla for te Tiara deal, eleen business, clean politic end Ik Mat tntaresta 01 Jfena ana iairai uretrua SUBSCRIPTION RATES - Br Mall Dm Year W.M III Month. ,..L7 three Months 1.M By Carrier On. Ys- . la Months . Pea Month . All subscriptions ara dot and PAYABLE IN ADVANCE. Notices ol expiration ara nwIM eaaeerlbera and If rami la not mad wttaia -aaeiiaaliis tin the paw will b discontinued, Please notify as promptly of any ehemre at Hi an. or of tailors to rewire the papar naro Jarty. Otherwise ws will not bs responsible for sepica aaiaeod. Make ail cheeks sad order pajakl to Tks Band Bulletin. , . TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 2. 1919. . . ADVICE. . ' ".' . A friend who spent, some months in France last year working for Un cle Sam writes "I want to thank you tor sending me The Bend Bulle tin while I was in Prance. No mat ter how delayed the other mail was somehow the old Bend Bulletin man aged to show up and many times gave me news that I wanted much earlier than my letters." That is what the country paper is to folks who are away a letter from home. And though, as we said re cently, we do not advertise in this editorial column we are great on handing out good advice, and to day's advice is that you send the pa per to someone away from here who wants, to know what is going on. . . From the war department bureau which has busied itself with finding employment tor discharged soldiers there has just come the interesting piece of news that "there is a de mand for ex-service men in the bot tled soda water trade during the summer months.' As the present season is now drawing to a close we are uncertain whether this news is intended to show men what they may be able to find to do next sum' tner or simply furnishes another ex ample of how the department does things always about three months late, ; . - LEAGUE FULFILS AMERICAN IDEAL Herbert Hoover Says Democra cies Replaced Autocracies ;", at Our Bidding. . ; ;-. .. Promotion . of war savings stamps .sales, as a government activitity has ..' ended... The stamps are still for sale, however, and provide one of the sim- , pleat,- easiest and best ways of sav- ing.over devised, for the American -, people. !. It is to be hoped that full advantage will still be taken of them i for promoting habits, of thrift . , among children and that their eld ers will continue to save their two- bit pieces in this way. The Crook County Journal has started a new department in which are to be set down all the "knock ing" remarks made by Prinevillians in. the tearing of the reporter. Names, dates and places are to be given Jn the hope that some of the chronic grumblers will shut up. It' will be interesting to observe how the plan works. Daily Market Report f Furnished by arrangement wtth tfas Central Orcsron Bank.) i . I.IVRHTYWTC r NORTH PORTLAND, Sept. 2. seveniy-nve cattle received. Mar ket draggy. - Best steers, S1010.50; good to choice, $9.50 10; medium to good, 19 9.60; fair to medium, $7 8; common to fair, J6.607; Choice cows and heifers, 78; good to choice, 6.607; medium of good, 66.60; fair to medium, $5.60 6; canners, $3 5; "bulls, $5.60 7.50; calves, $8.5015; stockers and feeders, $6.60 08.60. Bog Market. 8eventy-five hogs received. Mar ket steady to weak. Prime mixed, $17.6018; me- uium mixea, ivtff17.5U; rough heavy, $15.50 16.60; pigs, $16.60 16.60; bulk of sales, $17.60. Sheep Market. Twenty sheep received. Market little weak on lambs; rest Bteady. ' Eastern Oregon lambs, $12.60 13.26; best valley lambs, $11.60 12.60; yearlings, $7.6009.60; wethers, $7 9.68; ewes, $5 7.50. BUTTER MARKET. 'Prices quoted by the Central Oregon Farmers' Creamery.) Prints, parchment wrapped, 67c, wholesale price. . 8weet Is Sympathy. Sympathy is one of the great secrets of life. It overcomes evil nnrl strengthens good. It tlisnrms resist ance, melts the hardened heart,, nnd develops the better part of human nature. Birds With Brains. Naturalists have arrived nt the con olnslon that the brain 'n birds Is large in proportion to the lioilr. If It Is ad mitted that Intelligence depends upon the weight of brain, then the goldfinch must he placed at the top of the list of birds; the brain weighs one-fourteenth of Its whole body. , FOOD ADMINISTRATION CHIEF. Urges Ratification en Ground That ' Peace Treaty Will Collapse Without Lsagus of Natlona. Herbert Hoover Is so deeply con cerned over the opposition to the League of Nations In the United States that he has let himself be In terviewed at length on the League sit uation, la a talk with the Now York Times correspondent' 'In Parish the Food Administration Chief asserts that having caused the League Idea to pre vail America cannot abandon It We cannot withdraw, he says, and leave Europe to chaos. - "To abandon the League Covenant now means that the treaty Itself will collapse." air. Hoover's wide acquaintance with conditions both here and .abroad, bis reputation as an administrator, man of great affairs who deals with facts, not theories, make his state ment one of the most Important con tributions to the recent League discus, slons. ' . "There are one or two points In con nection with the present treaty," said Mr. Hoover, "that need careful consid eration by the American public. We need to digest the fact that we have for a century and a half been advo cating democracy not only as a remedy for the internal III of all so ciety, but also as the only real safe guard against war. We have believed and proclaimed. In season and out. that a world in which there was a free expression and enforcement of the will of the majority was the real basis of government, was essential for the advancement of civilization, and that we have proved Its enormous hu man benefits In our country. American Ideas Have Prevailed, "We went Into the war to destroy autocracy as a menace to our own and til other democracies. If we had not come into the war every Inch of Euro pean soil today would be under auto :ratlc government; We have Imposed our will on the world. Out of tills victory has come the destruction of the four great autocracies In Ger nany, Russia, Turkey and Austria and the little autocracy In Greece. New iemocracles have sprung into beinglo Poland, r Finland, Xtvla,. Lithuania, Estbonla, Czechoslovakia, Greater Serbia, Greece, Siberia, and even Ger many and Austria have established democratic governments. Beyond these a host of small republics, such is Armenia, Georgia, Azerbaijan and then, have sprung op, and again as I result, of this great world movement the constitutions of Spain, Rumania, ud even England, have made a final ucent to complete franchise and de mocracy, although they still maintain t symbol of royalty. "We have been the living spring for ills last century and half from which Jiese Ideas have sprung, and we have triumphed. The world today, except for a comparatively few reactionary ind communistic autocracies. Is dein Kratlc, and we did It "A man who takes a wife and ilesses the world with several Infants cannot go away and leave them on Jie claim that there was no legal mar riage. "These Infant democracies nil havs political, social and economic prob lems involving their neighbors that ire fraught with the most Intense friction. There are no natural bound aries In Europe. Races are not com act ; they blend at every border. They teed railway communication and sea tutleU through their neighbors' terri ry. "Many of these states must for the next few years struggle almost for Dare bones to maintain their very ixlstence. Every one of them Is go ng to do Its best; to protect Its own nterests, even to the prejudice of IU telghbers. . Governments Lack Experience-. "We in America should realize that democracy, as a stable form of govern ment as we know It, Is possible only with highly educated populations and a large force of men who are capable of government. Few of the men who compose these governments have had any actual experience at governing and their populations aro woefully Il literate. "They will require n generation of actual national life in peace to de velop free education and skill in gov ernment. "Unless these countries have a guid ing hand and referee In their quarrels, a court of appeals for their wrongs, this Europe wilt go back to chaos. If there Is such an institution, rep resenting the public opinion of the world, and able to exert Its authority, they will grow Into stability. We can not turn back now. "There Is another point which also needs emphasis. World treaties hith erto have always been based on the theory of a balance of power. Strong er races have been set np to dominate the weaker, partly with a view to maintaining stability and to a greater degree with a view to maintaining oc cupations and positions for the re actionaries of the world. arnifea and "naVlua, aristocracies, autocracies, and reactionaries general ly, who Can find employment and domination In these Institutions, and treaties founded on this basis have established stability after each great war for a shorter or longer time, but never more than a generation. "America came forward with a new Idea, and wo Insisted upon Its Injec tion Into this peace conference. We claimed thut It was possible to sot up such a piece of hiachluory with such authority that the balance of power could bo abandoned as a relic of the middle ages. We compelled an entire construction of this treaty and every word and line lu it to bond to this Idea. ' "Outside of the League of Nations the treaty Itself has many deficiencies. It represents compromises between many men and hot ween many selfish Interests, and these very compromises and deficiencies are multiplied by the many new nations that have entered upon Its signature, and the very safety of the treaty itself lies In a court of appeal for the remedy of wrougs lu the treaty. Benefits of the League, 'One thing Is certain. There Is ao body of human beings so wise that a treaty could be made Out would not develop Injustice and prove to have been wrong In some particulars. . As ibe covenant stands today there Is a place at which redress can be found and through which the good-will of the world can be enforced. The very machinery by which the treaty Is to be executed, and scores of points yet to be solved, which have been referred to the League of Nations as a method of securing more mature Judgment In a less heated atmosphere, Justifies the creation of the League. . "To abandon the covenant now means that the treaty itself will col lapse. 'It would take the exposure of but a few documents at my baud to prove that I had been the most reluctant of Americans to become Involved In this situation in Europe. But having gone In with our eyes open and with a de termination to free ourselves and the rest of the world from the dangers that surrounded us, we cannot now pull back from the Job. It la no use to hold a great revivul and then go away leaving a church for coutluued services half done. "We have succeeded In a most ex traordinary degree. In Imposing upon Europe the complete conviction thnt we are absolutely disinterested. The consequence Is flint there la scarcely a man, woman or child who can read In Europe that does not look to the United States as the ultimate source from which they must receive assur ances and guardianship In the' liberties which they., have t now secured after so many generations of straggle. "This is not a problem of protecting the big nations, for the few that re main can well look after themselves. What we have done Is to set up a score of little democracies, and If the American people conld visualize tbelr handiwork they would Insist with the same determination that they did In 1017 that our government proceed." ELEPHANT MADE NO WHIMPER Underwent Pain of Having Tooth Drawn With Stoicism That Would Shame Mcny Humana. It docs not require murh Imagina tion to realize that pulling nn ele phant's tooth1 Is something of an en gineering as well as a denlnl Job. An example of Ihls was when Albert, one of the -biggest elephants In the Rlngllng herd nt Madison Square gar den, New York, had refused to eat and the circus veterinary found a great tooth cavity -which was beyond reme dy by filling. The tooth that was giving Albert so much discomfort was as large na a man's fist. After a liberal dose of co caine hnd been Injected, forceps as big as Ice tongs were clamped to the tooth, a rope attached to the forceps, nnd a squad of trainers made rendy to sup ply the pulling power. A At a given signal the trainers gave a tremendous pull, and out came the hnge tooth. ' In this sort of denlnl work the un known quantity lies In what the ele phant will do. Albert hnd been taken out of the menagerie to prevent panic among the rest of the herd In case he developed an Inclination to object to the process. However, he underwent the ordeal calmly, nnd as soon as his Jaw was dressed be was conducted back to his stall. AT THE HOTELS. Pilot Ilutto Inn. A. J. Connolly Muupln, . E. B.'Fitts, Corvnllls. Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Ennls, Walln Wulla. ' H. Q, Konnnrd, Prlnovlllo. Mrs. A. II. Wulkup, Hums, - William A. llouly, Portland. Joseph K. Wiley. Portland. ' R. V. Gunn, Corvallts. C. E. Lowo, Portland. C. Hydo, Portland. F. W. iMoCaffery, Powell Dutto. G. L. Osbom, U. 8. F. S. Mr. und Mrs. E. B. .Tomes, La Pine. . A. Roman, Cincinnati. 'Mrs. J. iH. De Luoey, Portland. Mr. and Mrs. " D. B. Angland, Powell Butte. Mrs. F. E. Wilcox, Milton. Mr. and Mrs. R. Dingle, Wasco. ' Mrs. C. R. DefTenbaohor, Klamuth Falls. -' F. 8, Dushan, Alpena, Mich. ' F. J. Richards, Portland. Hotel Cosy. C. C. Vesper, Portland. Jake White, Salt Lake. Mr. and Mrs. F. 8. Bramwell, Grants Pass. '."'. , J. G. Wilson, ISIaters. y O. P. Swarti, Sisters. Claudo.C. Woods, 8lsters. ' C. B. Ford, PnlBloy. F. E. Bishop, Portland. E, O. Secord, Portland. , ' Hotel Wright. W. A. Gray, Puyollup, Wash. Fred MoReynolds, Sisters. C. Id man and wife, Portland. Dean Hollluaiiead, La Pine. Cecil Holtlnshead, La Pine. C. G. Bowers, Portland. Karl Nlsse, Portland. Clive Hartson, Klamath Falls. B. Hayes. Prlneville. v Dan 8wir, Prlneville. ' J. H. Fulton, La Grando. Burr Black. Sisters. W. T. Harrison, Sisters. Thomas Harrison, 8lsters. E. W. Clark. Portland. Frank F. Clark. Portland. I1KN1) TUAl HCHUDULK. Oregon Trunk. t Arrlvos, 7:85 A. M. Leaves 8:00 P. M. O.-W. II. N. Arrlvos, 7:00 P. M. Leaves? 7:00 A. M. Come to Hotel ALTAMONT for a good meal at a right price. Adv. FRATERNAL IlllOTHKIUKK)l. Dues aro duo u(l payublo the 15th of every month nt Mrs. L. It. Brobert's, nt 1008 Wull Bt. Adv. 70-740 BETTER DEAD Life is burden when the body It racked With pain. Everything worries and the victim tweomo despondent and downhearted. To bring back the sunshine tales COLD MEDAL The national remedy of Holland for over iOO years; It Is an enemy of all pal.-.o re tailing from kidney, liver and uric acid troubles. AH drurrbits, three si-en. task fee the aaane CnIA M -l an e-tT aa a I m: ill . I Tonight-Last Time H. B. WARNER IN "The Man Who Turned White" A cashiered elicet, who leads s merciless bead oi cut IhioeU sad knows every doubtful csle Iron Paris to Miali, Qae ul gets him then its diJeree). Real or tenia! almaiphere. Mslioee Daily. Two Shows Nijhlly GRAND THEATRE Put It la The Bulletin. Put It in Tho Bulletin. B I Exceptional 1 Values ! LADIES' SHOES Odd lota, but good quallt kid leather, military hee $3.98 JBUY NOW 1 Tri-State a Terminal Co. atiiiim J nn The good man is always ' sincere IMPEPJALES MOVTMPIXCtl CIGABEXT&S are' made of good thine. Good tobacco, perfectly blended pure mais paper to wrap it and a mouthpiece to cool the smoke of it A ciga. rette manufactured to excel. ; 10brl3c Tho John Bollman Co. Branch JMlWIrWfM The1 farmer and the business man of this com munity are partners in the progress or the failuie of their community.' If they pulj together, the progress nnd 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 Seven Reason Why There Should Be An Electric Range In Every Bend Heme. m rteare 1st 8alng of time, labor and fuel. Snd Meats. veKetabtea and other foods retain natural flav ors when cooked on an ELEC TRIC ItANUB that are other wise lost In vapor when sub jected to uneven henta pro duced by wood, coal or gas ranges. SrdV Oet out of bed, turn tho button and breakfast is started while you are dressing. 4tb No dirt, no ashes. Mother's work Is easier and her disposition Is happier and ner aays are longor. 6tu A blessing when days' are hotr cook on an Elect rlo Range and you do not realise there Is any heat In your kltohen. 6th Very low rates Maintained by the Bend Water, Light Power Co. put all the comforts of the ELKCTHIC ItANUK In reach ot all. .... . . j . . , .' 7th Cleanliness, ease, comfort and the fact that Mother's burdens are lightened should be the main reasons for an Eloctrlo .Range.:-'.. , . Bend Water Light & Power Co. Progressiveness and Growth in this community, means dollars and cents 1 in your pocket. Build Now with Deschutes (White) Pine. Build of home products and pstroniis home industry. The cheapest sod beet building: material is Deichutes (White) Pins and is manufactured right hers into sll eisei and tfrsdei ' of lumber. Acquire a home of your own instead of a lunch or rent receipts. PUT, YOUR MONEY TO WORK, BUILD 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, SULT, MEATS HAM, BACON, LARD, ETC. FERTILIZERS FOR LAWNS AND FARM LANDS General Commission Merchants , WE BUY HIDES THE UNITED WAREHOUSE COMPANY Phone 241 A. M. PRINGLE, Manager "The balance of power Is born of I