TUTO RENT) BULLETIN. DAILY KPITION. BK.VP. OREGON, TIUIWIMV, JANUARY J, 1020 PAOR 8 TONIGHT, FRIDAY, SATURDAY and SATURDAY MATINEE GEORGE LOANE TUCKER'S PRODUCTION Miracle Mao"' A Picture That Reaches The Soul ALSO THURDAY and FRIDAY EI'ISODK 0 "Perils of Thunder, Mountain" LIBERTY FRIDAY and SATURDAY Bryant Washburn IN "WHY LEFT SMITH HOME" One of the derndest, funniest, most ex citing, labbergastingest photoplays ever filmed. When you see "Why Smith Left Home", "you'll wonder why Smith ever stayed home. ALSO JESTER COMEDY "Mary Moves In' GRAND LOCAL NEWS ITEMS TODAY'S TKMPERATVBB Maximum, 85 Degree. HKN1) TRAIN 8CUEDU.K. Orrgan Trunk. Arrive, 7:86 A. M. Leave 8:00 P. M. O.-W. R. N. Arrive, 7:40 P. M. . Leavos, 7:00 A. M. H. C. Kcndull. I'orllnnd bond buy er, li'ft IiihI night aftur spending llio duy In Bend on business. J. J. Will, was In from Stntor yesterday, and drove back to hl rnncb wltb a nw Dodge car. Mn. Kd Dougherty, who baa been visiting relative and friend In lluker. her former homo, returned to Band luat night. Mr. K. 8. McCluro came in lBt night from Aihlnnd. where she ha been Tinning the last three week! wltb her parnutH. J. If. O'Noll. passenger agent for the O.-W. It. & N., arrived in Bend lat night on iin oftlciul business trip. )le will bo In the city through today and possibly tomorrow. W. V. Ferrle In here from Welser. Idaho-, to spend severul weekH with hi son-in-law. A. J. Ooggan. If bus iness prospects are satisfactory, he - may locato In this city. George Burl, travelling: auditor for the O.-W. and R. C. Little, holding a Ilko -position with the Oregon Trunk, are In Bend today cheeking over the book at the union depot. S. R. Hngln head a petition sign ed by 20 other, for an 80 rod road connecting with the C. Peterson road In the Tumulo section. The petition Is now before the Dcichutea county court. Mr. and Mr. C. B. Wells, and son Dalo, of Pendleton, arrived lnRand last night for a visit with their daughter, Mrs. Jack Horton. Mr. Wells Is one of the large rangers of Umatilla county, having 1,000 acres In wheat last year. Vornon Flnley, of Silver Lake, Is . Hounding the day In Bend. ffflaaJiMSciraaissiajaia BREAD! W. K. Irvine. I In from Alfalfa today looking aftur business matter. Mr. and Mr. J. E. Jackson, of Lnkevlew, arrived In Bend last night, and are remaining over today. W. O. Dudley, deputy, district game warden, I In lieud today on an oOlclul business trip from The Dalle. Dr. George B. Van Waters, arch deacon of the EplMcopal church In Enstorn Oregon, will conduct service hero at 8 o'clock Sunday evening, January II. In 'Bather' Hall. Dr. Vun Water will lecture on "The Bible in tho Making." In the light of recent scholarship. C. K. McCullum left last night on a trip to Portland, and will be gone for several day. Mr. McCullum. who has been associated with Harry Itelugold In the Qolden Rule store during the past year, ha accepted a position at Munnholnter's. Daily Marktt Report (Fara-tod a? imnrmnt vhte tit. Ontral Or..a Bank.) LIVKNTOCK. NORTH PORTLAND. Jsn. 8. Tattle 45. Best steers. $11.00 nt 11.75; good to cnoice. iig.so at 11.00: medium to good. $9.00 al . 75; fair to good, $8.00 at B OO; common to fair, $7.00 at 8.00; choice cows and heifers, $9 at 10.00; good to choice, $7.75 at 9; medium to good, $5.75 at 7.75; fair to medium, $4.75 at 5.75; canners. $3.50 at 0.60; bulls, $8.00 at 8.25; prime light calves, $12.60 at 15.00; hnavle. $7.00 at 12.00; Blockers and feeders, $8.00 at 9.60. Hog Market. Hogs 1000. fctrong to 25 higher; prime mix ed $15.2.1 at 15.76; medium mixed. $14.75 at 15.25;. rough beavies, 14.50. $12.26 at 13.75; pigs $12.35 at Sheep 721. Hheep Marker. Sheep 40. Bast of mountain lamb, $13.00 at $14.00; valley Iambs, $11.50 at 13.00; feeder. $10.00 at 112 00; yearlings, $10.00 at 11.00; wethers. $9.60 at 10.00; ewes, $6.00 at 7.00. Is porhaps tho most ossentlal food served on your tablo, and possib ly tho loaHt thought given to tho buying. , You should bo as particular In buy ing bread as you aro in any othor article of food. It Is as much sub jected to bolng unwholosomo nB is anything you oat, if made undur un sanitary conditions. The groatost precaution sponsible Is taken in our bakery to have everything in the moat sanitary condition, that is why we call our broad LIBERTY BELL Pure and Bwoot Through and Through. Liberty Bell Bakery & Dairy WARNER RELIEVED AS RECRUITING OFFICER R. C. Smith, After Overseas Her vice of 10 MonUu, Takes Place In Centrul Oregon. AT TIIK IIOTKLH. Hotel Wright. A.'Cbaneay, Powers. Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Juckson, Lake- view. Puut Zastrow, La Pino. L. Glrton, Silver Lake. ' Stanley. Smith, Mllllcan. W. E. Irvine. Alfalfa. T. C. Lowry, Portland. J. R. Elliott, 8. P. & 8. A. E. Fox, 8 1. Anthony, Idaho. ' Hotel Cozy. R. Caldwell, Walla Walla. Vernon Fiuley, Silver Lake. E. C. Parson, Rolyat. J. L. Freeman, Silver Lake. J. R. Petersen, Portland. O. A. Bronson, Sisters. Pilot IIuUo Inn. C. P. R.: 8hort, Portland. W. J. Hester, Portland. W. O. Hadlcy, The Dalle. C. F. Wagner, Portland. George J. Bnrl, Portland. R. C. Llttlo. Portland. , T. J. Barrett, Seattle.' W. H. Malnwarlng, Portland. 8. N. Ware, Spokane. C. D.'Beale. Portland. I.- A. Elrod. Portland. D. C. Bogart. Portland. Mr. and Mrs. George Berg. Port land. J. R. Potemer, Portlond. How I Your Hiaring? We are not made so conscious In our ordinary occupations of ear de ficiency ns we are of eye deficiency. Unless you nre to deaf as to be a marked man, you can hour the bonk of an automobile or the clang of a street car bell In time to get out of the way; and .unless you are so dent a to be a ninrked man you can hear the talk of your companions and dis tinguish what they say. As a matter or fact. In our ordi nary, clvlll-ed life, the man with nor mal ears has ulinut three times as much keenness of hearing as he Is culled upon to use; whereas, even the mun with normal eyes has no such excess of sight keenness. In other words, you can get along with . less hearing than you actually po.iHe.is. Therefore, you ore not awnre of the fact that you may he below normal so far ns bearing Is concerned. Amer ican Magazine. SUPPOSE EARTH SHOULD SKID Ulreful PosilbWy Pointed Out by wnur Evidently of Pesslmlttlo Turn of Mind. Those follow who are pumping all (he gas out of tin. earth, and digging the coal and Ihe iron slid gold and sll ver out of II, mid sucking nil the oil out of It, bettor look out wliut they're uoing. bitpposlng the "sclcnllsts" say Hint It doesn't make any difference. Whut do they Uy.im about 117 They dmi't know any more uhout It limn we do, and that hint very much. 'I'Iicho smart Alee (hm t,. UM ollu u,!,,, ,11()uy UJ1(j another thing tomorrow me not to be ileieiidei on. They change their minds too oficn, mid , ,. n-iiHoii they do so is unit 1 1 icy ure simply guessing ujl ine nine, V I...... uw ii huiikih io reason that If we take the whole IiihIiJos out of the earth It Is hound to he a whole lot lighter IIiiiii It mix before. Any kind of an Idiot known Hint. We take out Ihe la sides mid we never put anything back in It place. If we -played fulr, like trade nils, It wouldn't be so bud; but we uon t piuy fulr. We take out coal and burn It up In smoke; lh Kiime wuy with oil; the gas blows uwuy In Ihe air. Now. by ginger, to our wuy of think log, the i,. xt thing we know this old bull Is going to kkld. It Is bound to do so, being r.-llcw-d of ull Its hullust It is going io kld, mid then something Is going to happen to everybody who is thinking ulmut something elite and hasn't got u good hold on a tree or something. KiipjK.w you ore walking along the road, or sitting carelessly In a cluilr, ami the earth xkldx like that. Why, ueur man, you will ny oT like a limn standing up on a spring wugon when the norsc gets scared. We have no desire unnecessarily to alarm anybody, but this thing of Ink lug everything out of the Inoldes of the ennh but the ucoustles ought to be looked Into. Los Angeles Times. EXPLAINS BIRD'S-EYE MAPLE Fantastic Growth Really Due to the Pretence of Buds That Grow Beneath the Bark. The bird's-eye inn pie Is produced by casual or abnormal buds which have their origin under the bnrk of the trunk. The tlrst buds of Hint kind may develop when the tree is quite small. They are rarely able to force their way through the bark aud be come brunches, but they live tuuny years Jut under the burk, growing III length ns the trunk Increases In size, but seldom upieuiiiig on the outside of the burk. If one bud dies another will rise near It and continue the Irri tation which produce the fantastic growth known ss the bird's eye. , One of the favorite theories regard ing bird's-eye has been that supBuck ers, by pecking through the burk of young maples, uiuke scars which pro duce this figure during the succeeding years. B!rd-ecked hickory often has been cited as an analogous ense, but the effect In the hickory Is opposite of the bird's eye In maple. The wood I discolored and unsightly. Somo have attributed it to the action of frost, but no such connection exists. It, Is said. nolioving Naval Recruiting Officer Warner, R. C. Smith, moulder flrBt class, has arrivod In Bond, and will enter Into tho performance of bis duties hore tomorrow when Mr. War ner start by auto for: Portland. The now recruiting oftlcer return ed to the United States In July after being Btatloned for 19 months at Queanstown, and on recruiting duty In Portlnnd before coming here. His wlfo accompanies him to Be,nd. lIS When Thy Growl. '. No ono considers tho high cost of pleasure, but after the dancing they giowl when the fiddler ask for pay. Atlanta Constitution.. We Eat Little Rice. Scarcely six pounds of rice Is con sumed each year by every resident of the United States ns compared with a per capita consumption In England of twenty-seven pounds, In France of thirty-four pounds, and In Italy of 101 pounds. Put It In "XHk IU1jLETIH." Unknown Until Tested. Some folks nre capable of almost In finite possibilities. But the trouble Is these possibilities Ho too deep to be used In ordinary life. They respond onlyo the cull of the exceptional. Tho challenge that crushes ordinary mortals puts them In touch with their llfo work. Washington might have lived and died a community gentle man hnd he not been drafted by clr cumstauccs to lend a great people to freedom and cement together the ele ments that have nindo this a great nn Uon. The nnme of Lincoln was bound to become known, but It was tho cir cumstances of a great cause that have made him the byword for every Amer ican youth.- And It often happens that natures that aro hard to arouse are capnble of the greatest effort when onco fired with a definite purpose. There's no telling wbnt Is In man un til you have put him to the test. And only tested men nre tit for the highest service. 8ome Wealthy Women. Hetty Green wns considered the world's richest womnn nt the time of her death. Others Included among the wealthiest women nre Mrs. Flnley J. Shopnrd (formerly Helen Gould), Mine, Krupp of Germany and Viscount ess Ithondda, daughter of the Welsh coal baron. . Noble Daughter of Italy. Like the wing of a dove across a red buttlelleld of horrid curses, the form of Vlttorla Colomin, noble Ro man lady, glides across the terrible horizon of Lucretln Borgln. The two, Lucrctla and Vlttorla, hud the snme environment of civic and social life In Rome. The one drank lust and cor ruption; thp other pure drops of heaven. It was the era of Michael An gela. The rising young genius In Rome was painting the portrait of Vlttorla Colounn. The portrait Is like a nun at vespers. Vlttorla Colon na was of the distinguished Roman family of great antiquity, the "Colonnu." She was a woman of brilliant parts, a poet and scholar. Married at nineteen to the duke of Aratos, after his death on the battlefield In the Ftnnco-Itnllan wars she remained a widow the rest of her life. Her poems, "Rime Splr Itunl," have great charm. It was dur ing her stay In Rome that she formed the passionate attachment to Michael Angelo Hint Inspired many of tho great sculptor's sonnets and verses. She died at the eouvent of Sua Sll vestro, her Roxil like a sliver dove winging nwny from the turbulent six teenth century. Chlcngo Journal. CHINESE PARADISE ON EARTH Werld Hold No Greater Boon Than Life In the Famous City of Soochow. The Chinaman ezpresse his opinion of the city of Nooehow by murmuring ecstatlcully. "Oh, Hint I muy live to spend my lust days In this purudlse oil earth." Jinny a Chlnnuiun apparently m hud till uIhIi come true, for the num ber of suicide In Hnochow Is ex-ceded only by Ihe number of extremely wealthy and fashionable. The atuios pin re of Koo seems Io Incite the orl eutil mind either to despair or to os tentatious luxury, according to Ihe slate of his tlimncc. Koochow streets ore always thronged with women displaying tho lutest Chi nese costumes, or out buying new ones, uud with the iliindlesof the other sex, too, gracefully livredj unless en gaged In the piirchnse of a new coat. Holde these there nre the unfortu nate, who cannot enter the real paru (Use, which Km- offers only to Ihe wealthy seekers of pleasure. The poor mingle In a hn:.y crowd as an humble background for the fushloo pa rade. Still another type of Soochow I the student burdened with the ambition of wisdom. The seriousness of the Hoo student Is well typified In the two Pen pugodu. and the Ink pagoda, so called because- a student long ago had them built as a propitiatory offering to the gods for success In examina tions. The corkscrew-shaped "pens," (minted at the top. nre not particularly pei, like to the western eye. but the Ink pagoda Is very like an odd. made-ln- Chlna Inkwell, with a curling roof for a tip, and lis only discrepancy the nu merous windows, which would prevent Its serving ns a writing accessory. Origin of Names of State. ' Connecticut Is an Indian nnmo mean ing "Loiik River;" Miiliir'is regarded ns of French origin from Hie province of Maine; M;sm liiiHotm nn Indian word mciimiiic "Minn t tlrent Hills;" New Hampshire h KiigllHh, coming from HampMlilre county, England; Vermont Is French, Vert Mont, mean ing "Green .Mountain." With reference to Rhode Islam! there Is n difference of opinion, some claiming Hint It wns mimed for tho 1lM.d of Rhodes nnd others for a roio:ouit settler named Rhodes. World's Oldest Statue. In a museum at Boolak there Is a statue suppoKed to be over 6.IKS) yenrs old. A great French Kgypfnloglsr. Mnrlclto Key, discovered the statue af Memphis and bronchi rt to the mu seum. It Is little more than three fpet high and holds a stuff. The figure I full of life and poise. The forehead is rounded, expressing Intellect and the eyes, of crystal, set In bronze give nn astounding lifelike appearance. The statue Is not the work at m erode bar barian and few artists! Hvlug today could Impart such realistic fealun-s to a wooden statue. Nickname That Stuck. On the' 24th of October in 1835, a riotous Democratic county convention was held In Tammany hall. A reform faction got control of the convention and put their chairman In.' The Tam many men left the hull nnd cut off the gus light. The triumphant reformers supplied themselves with candles and a kind of sulphur match culled "loco foco," and carried on their meeting by candle light. The following mornlnz Hie opposition newspapers ridiculed the affair and nicknamed tho reform-; ers "Loco focos." The name spread throughout the country and was aned to designate the entire Democratic onrtv for several venrp. Well-Directed Labor. Nothing is denied to well-directed labor; nothing Is ever to be attained without It. Sir Joshua Reynolds. Electricity Save Timber. English srientists have derided tbat passing electricity through freshly cot timber makes It mm resistant against decay and fiuuras growths. Pal tf in Tbe Bnlfetln. Plain Facts! You seldom hear of A Sale of HariJware But" we have found after inventory a few lines that we wish to decrease. OUR WINDOWS WILL CONVINCE Bend Hardware Co. OUR ANNUAL January-Cleam-niD SPECIALS Truth Never Dull. Tou'sny: "Truth Is so dull." I beg your pardon. Truth Is the only thing that Is never dull, and the only means by which we cun escnpe from dullness. Why?. Just consider. In all art. In nil science, In all literature, It Is the ob servation of delicate nuances - that gives Interest, that delivers from con ventionality, - that Insures progress. The conventional person says the sky Is blue, nnd probably paints It so.-The truthful person . sees that tbe sky Is gray, pink, yellow, InUy-hlnck, pale green, and, no doubt, blue nt certain times, but not always even then of tho snme unbroken Rhade of blue. He paints or describes It ns.he sees It; he Is nn artist. . . . Just so It Is In our observation of character. How careless, how Inartistic, how unscien tific we nre In our study of, in the judgments we pass upon. In the lan guage which we employ In regard to, one another, and how great would be our Intellectual as well as moral gain, how far more attractive our conversa tion, If we tried to cure ourselves. Elizabeth Wordsworth. Marked Reductions on Many Items We Are Putting Our Store in Order for Spring Blankets, grey wool mixed $6.95 Blankets, grey wool mixee, tn tr our $9.95 values, at .p0.4D UnderwearVests and Pants for girls in and boys, heavy fleeced linedgarment Union Suits Misses' bleached cotton no fleeced lined suit "OC Hose Black heavy Ribbed Cotton Hose, for boys or girls, sizes 5 to 7 1-2, 39c; sizes 8 to II 4jC Union Suits Men's heavy ri on Cotton Ribbed Suits ...$I.OJ EXTRA LOW PRICES NOW ON LADIES' COATS Come Now for January Clean-up Specials THE WARNER COMPANY Quality . . , 1Jicbndhb -t . , rorcLA ruins