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About The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 5, 1920)
1 nak.nnAm nilliiliLilllV R 1(1111 PAGE 9 -- - " - i " ' ; The Bend Bulletin DAILY KMTION rablUhfd Every Afternoon K.cept Sunday, By Th. Bend Hull.lla (Incorporated) Enured a. Second Clan, matter January t, 1S17, at the Poet Office at Bend, Oresun. under Act of March a, 18;. ROBKRT W. 8AWYKK Edltor-Mermircr HENRY N. FOWLKR Al M FRED A. WOELrXKN.. Advertising Manager C H. SMITH Circulation Manager RALPH Sl'ENCER Mechanical tupt An Independent Newaper. .landing for the aquare deal, clean bu.inc. clean politic, and the beat lntcrta of Bend and t-entral Oregon. SUBSCRIPTION RATES On. Year g-JJ Six Month. Three Month. M.eO Br Carrier On. Year SU Month. On. Month 060 All lubteription. are due and PAYABLE IN ADVANCE. Notice, of espiration are Balled .ubacriber. and If renewal la not inade within readable tim. the paper wtll be diacontinued. , , . . Please notify u promptly of any chance of addreaa, or of failure to receive the paper regularly. OtherwU. we will not be re sponsible for eopie. mijaed. Make aU check, and order, payable to The Bend Bulletin. THURSDAY, AUGUST 6, 1920. NEWBERRY CRATER When Professor Crosby came to Bend last summer to begin his study of the Benham falls reservoir site he entered Deschutes county by auto mobile from Jefferson county. When approaching Trail crossing over the Crooked river he was attracted by the tremendous chasm through which the river passes near that point and at once said that it should be desig nated a national monument. Now, in his report on the reservoir, which has just come to hand, he makes a like suggestion concerning the New berry crater region. The words of the report are as follows: , "We feel that Newberry crater is comparable in scenic and geologic interest with Crater lake and recommend its designation as a national park or monument." Residents of Central Oregon have long known of the great attractions to be found at the Newberry crater. Here are East and Paulina lakes, with their hot springs and medicinal baths; Paulina peak, from which the view extends on a clear day from Mount Adams on the north to Shasta on the south glass buttes, lava tunnels and fields of sand and pum ice that combine to make the whole a place of exceeding interest and beauty. Now, to have a man of Pro fessor Crosby's ability and attain ment confirm the' local feeling and lendthe weight of his authority to the suggestion that the region be made a national park is very satis factory. Newberry crater Is, in its way, just . as interesting as Crater lake. If we could persuade the proper authorl ties that It should be made a park It would bring tourists without num ber to Bend. y-M1 1 J MavCnn f "O? .:r- Summer Heat AMERICAN TOURISTS IN AWE AT DEVASTATION IN FRANCE j Fifteen Years Ago i (From the columns of The Bulle tin, August 4, 1905). A. B. Estabenet purchased the A. r T.ur-aa residence Dronerty last week for a consideration of $1100, and will move in this month. : The Deschutes Irrigation & Power Co. this week advanced wages of men employed on canal construction from $2 to $2.25 a day. The Spokane Spokesman-Review has a picture of the Deschutes des ert, and a comprehensive statement of the reclamation enterprise under way here, which will be useful in di recting homeseekers this way. Dr. Rosenberg, of Prineville, came over to Bend Wednesday to consult with Dr. Coe. J. H. O'Neil will build a new house in the near future on one of his lots in the east part of town. T. W. Triplett has sold his house and lot near the Baptist church, to C. D. Brown. A. M. Drake returned last week from his Portland trip, well satis f ied with what has been accomplished for opening the Deschutes country Notice of dissolution of partner ship between R. B. Mutzig and C. P Becker, is being published. Spencer Popular In America. Herbert Spencer, the great philos opher, was more popular in America during his life than In England. When Spencer visited the United States, In .1882, his fame and Influence were so securely established tlint one admirer offered to pay all the expenses Incur red by the philosopher on his trip, ' and heads of railways offered him the most luxurious traveling facilities, while othor friends vied with one an other to make the tour couifortuhle, Interesting and instructing. A Good Trencherman. The phrase originated at the time when people ate their food off trench, era. These were usually clean white wood, probably maple, and were often hollow on both sides, so that meat could be served on one side and pud' Jlng on the other. Beneath the sun the victim cringes, and mut ters, as he mops his face, "It's hotter than the seven hinges such weather is a rank disgrace." He should in silence smile and suffer, recalling that the sizzling heat is quite a godsend to the duffer who's raising corn and prunes and wheat. The red hot sun that sears and blisters, and burns the whiskers from his dome, will bring the farmers and their sisters new clothes when comes the Har vest Home. So that the farmers raise their carrots, what matters it if folks in town are baking in their stuffy garrets, until both sides are crisp and brown? The heat is good for rye or barley, or Lima beans, or peas or straw, and when I see folks getting snarley, I think there ought to be a law. "It's hotter than the gates of Hades," remarks the thoughtless, loceed loon, regardless of the passing ladies, who are so shocked they almost swoon. He cares no hoot for distant grangers, or for the cir cumstance profound that heat is growing for their mangers the hay that makes the world go round. And still the sun rolls on and singes the whiskers from complaining man; "It's hotter than the seven hinges," he wails, and plies his palmleaf fan. By Henry Wood. (United Pre.. Staff Correspondent) PARIS. Aug. 5. Here is the im pression that the first American after-the-war tourists especially the battle field tourists is making on the French. Jean Roeler. leading French writ er, to learn just what effect the sight of the French battlefields and devastated regions might make on Americans seeing them, for the first time, made a four-day trip with American tourists to Chalons, Saint Mihiel, Verdun, the Argonne, Cham pagne, Rheims and Soissons. "Durine those four days," Rogier declared to the United Press, "I lived with them. 1 watched their gestures, I studied their attitudes, j I lay in waiting for their looks and ; glances, I observed their words, and j I think I read their hearts. These Americans, especially the older 'ones, were very gay, and their' gayety, rather boyish, if not child ish at times, first grated on trie and then shocked me. I would have preferred to meet them grave ' and already prepared for the sor-. rowful proof to which they were to. be subjected. t But, suddenly, among the very , first ruins, this gayety died a:;d seemed to bury itself in the s ones of the overthrown villages. They no longer laughed and no lo.iyerj joked. "The frightful image of the war began to appear. It was there be-1 fore their eyes, and no longer were ! they able to turn their eyes away. They looked with frightened glances at the disemboweled houses, the demolished church towers, at UA Y.,iraA .hn,i.haa at thf Inril and twisted ironwork of former fac- torles, at the riddled wallB and all 1 of the hideous skeletons of the war which passed along at the side of their automobiles like black skele tons. "With extended arms the Ameri can tourists pointed out in the dis tance huge red spots that either stood out against the green verd ure of hills, or that reddened the grass of the prairies. " 'Burned a village burned Oh! Oh! Oh!'"- "Their lips never ceased to re peat this trembling lamentation In tones -that Intermixed their pity, their sorrow, their indignation and their anger. "There are people whose sensi bilities are suddenly aroused at mo ments, like the opening and shut ting of doors, and there are others where the sensibilities remain like a silent and vigilant servant: "With these Americans there was no exuberance of gesture, no fra cas of words, no extravagance of expression. It was only on their faces and In their eyes that I could read their Impressions and see the souls that reflected. Their silence translated theiremotions and spoke more loudly than as though they had uttered the most vehement cries. "As yet the thought of death had not been borne in to them. It only struck them as they stood before Belleau wood and Romagne, where 27,000 graves lie, dug In the shade of the trees. J "With slow steps, uncovered heads and pious gestures tlicy en tered as one outers a temple. On each cross there was a name, the number of the regiment, but some times only one word: " 'Unknown.' "One of my companions pointed out in 111" mltldlo of tho conu'tory n CI'OWII Of poill'ltf I'KHtlllK UKItlllHt II fltiRKtiiff from llio top of which floiitod I Ho HI ii I'M and Htrlpos. Worked lulu tho crown with dif ferent colored heads was tho In scription, which hIio trunslatttd from French Into KiikIImIi: " 'Tho city of MuntrotiKO, inur rulno of thir vIlliiKo of Toiey to tin) American 'soldiers who died for lib erty, Justice uiul Hunt.' 'That Is sweol. vory awout,' murmured tho Amorlcitn tourists. "Ono of thorn, a woman, conlln !ud: 'It Is vory sweet tor us to S feel thut Franco has not forgot out j boys who fought alongside her , own." "Then one of tho Auioricun wool len ran to a llttlu. wooden house, all white, In tho center of young cyp resses anil flowers, where ho ex changed a few words with young American girls, sitting on the ver anda, shook their hands, and then returned to Join her parly. - " 'I don't know any of the girls.' Bho Biild, 'but they aro the guurdiuna of the cemetery all vol unteers they live there all alone, and I felt that I wanted to llmnk them on behalf of all tho women of tho United Stutes." "These dullcucles ' of the heart, these touching these moving words 1 found often during thu course of the pilgrimage us we stood before tho accumulated ruins of villages, or lieforo the nothing nemt of the ravaged country. "Hut it was at Verdun that they really had their vision of tho night mare of war and of tho dismay of the earth. " 'Oh, wo didn't know,' they cried. 'All thut wo hud Imagined was nothing compared with this. Buck In tho Stales no ono knows; It's impossible to know. This torn ground: those biirnod fields, these stripped trees. Nothing lives. You feel deuth everywhere." 'Hut you also feel glory,' de clared an American officer, 'bo causo It was hero thut France saved the world. And everything lives, because Verdun Is Immortal.' "At ItlielniH II was the ciiiihIoi'iiii Hon. The eutlioilnil lliloil lis hluohonod Hlielnlou iihovo I ho ruins of the elly. My Aniiii'lcuii toiii'luls looked at It all In nimuimimit and stupor. 'Tho dirty hochesl' Tho dirty IiocIhihI' They cried these words, expressing their' contempt, . their anger and their halo. "At lloiry-uil-lluo, III tho center of whole devastated Holds, aliuve tho ImiueUHii crater, where two French battailous wore hurled alive and where tills frightful Hepulchre opened ut tmr feet, there were lours In I lio eyes of everyone, " 'I liuvou'l tho heart,' cried one of tho Amerlcuii women, 'lo walk ou ground thut Ih the grnvo of so many bravo French. Come, let's go a way. It Is a sacrllegn to re main here,' and so together we en tered again our automobiles ami hurried away." Tut It In The llulletiii. Mankind.' Wastefulness, Mucitinrl Inland, .ought by Hlr Douglas Miiwhoii us u siiiictuiiry f"r the Antarctic fiitimi, Is nearly huuih'o mile In nri'ii, lying IHKI miles from TiiKiiiiindi, In lullliiitu W) degrees noiiIIi, i'eiigillns of various species, sen cIi'iiIiiiiiIh mill NenU exlxt here III viiNt iiiinilier.t liul me lo'ing ruthlessly uliiuglilored for lliMr ell. A lllglitleas parrot, living on the Island when It mis discovered In IHIrt, lias lieen i leniiliiiiled by rain (limed loos mid iilloweil in run . I'd. Gas and Acid Stomach Relieved In Two Minutes I tiy timing a hcnplng leaHfieoni in ui iw i w III A glu.it of tint water. Alwoliilclv hitrinli'M. Sold bv I All DrngglaU. 16799 DIED In Now York City nlono from kid ney trouble lust year. Don't ullow yoursolf to become victim by nouloctlnic pnine untl achat. Guard iiRalnst thia trouble by tultinit GOLD MEDAL Tha world', .umlaut rtmady for kldn.r, llv.r, bladder and uric acid tiuubl... Holland's national r.mealy lic 8. All dtugRlxa, the. all.. OuaralMaad. U. fur 0. Cold M.d.l m hK a. tad mm lailt.tl. Dishes and Kitchen Ware We want to serve you with dishes in open stock. Fancy pieces, 42 and 48 piece Sets. Plain White Ware, 42 piece Sets, at $8.80 Decorated Ware, in 42 piece Sets, now priced at $12.45, $15.50 and $17.50 Decorated Ware, in 48 piece Sets, now priced at $17.50, $19.75 and $22.50 Aluminum ware and Pyren baking dishes. Enamel ware and tin ware, and the many small items so necessary to make the home work easier. If you need ware for the kitchen we want to serve you. FAIR STORE THE OCEAN BEACH RESORTS at the Mouth of the Columbia River are a Glorious Vacation Delight for residents of the Interior and are at, the height of their glory Just now North Beach Resorts Clatsop Beaches Tillamook Beaches are1 all splendidly equipped and afford the keenest of beach pleasures ' Round Trip Fare to Any of Them is $ 1 7.50 Plus 8 War Tax Tho nililed pleasure of a trip tliroUKh tho dclliiht fully picturesque OlumMa Itlver Gorice 1. as sured If your ticket i. purchased of tho Union Pacific System (Oreson-Washlmton Kallroad & Navigation Co.) North Beach visitor, have tho option of rail or river route from Portland, hilt choice should bo made when ticket u, purchased. Let our attent ranlaln all particular., make reservation and arranso your trip. WM. McMUimAY, Oen'l Passenger Agent FEED BREAD TO THE CHILDREN Holsum Bread will make tbem bappy merican jjakery Demanding of merchants their highest pricea wares, whether you can afford them or not, is fuel for the profiteer. Even with present prices, proper judgment can be ex ercised in buying and money saved. High prices is no excuse for ex travagance. t The Shevlin-Hixon Company. Bear in Mind Fishermen-Campers ! Every tree destroyed by forest fire redijces Central Oregon's wealth just that much. Preserve the trees by being "careful about fire. Protect them by spread ing the gospel to all others. The Brooks-Scanlon Lumber Co.