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About The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963 | View Entire Issue (May 12, 1921)
PAGE a THE I1KXD 111 IXKT1N. IMII.Y KIUTIO.N, JIKNII, OimiUK, Tilt ltMAY. MAY I'-', III-' I. The Bend Bulletin DAILV KDITIOX Paalfahaa1 Erary Afurnaaa Evrrst 8niaj, R Tha Hn4 Hallrlia llararparalrdl Kntarad as Strand 1'lma ntAttrr January I. 1H7, at it Post Oltif at. bmi Oman. adr Act of March . IT. FOPERT W. SAWYKR Kdit.w-Mnir HK.SKY N. KOW1.KK Aiximu Alitor 0. H. SMITH Aivartiain Msnaarr Aa Independent Newspaper, atandinff for the aouare orml. clean buinM. clean politic and the bast intercacs ol Hens and Central SUBSCRIPTION RATES Ur Mall On. Year vn Six Month. 11.7a Thraa Month. 11.40 Br Carrier Oiw Year IS.50 In Month. Mi On. Month , IO.S0 x Ail subscriptiona are do and PAYABLE IN ADVANCE. Notices of expiration ar availed iuracribera and tf renewal ta not aade within reasonable tim. the paper will fee discontinued. Pleaaa notify na promptly of any (hanae af addreae. or off failure to receive tha paper ferularly. Otherwiat we will not be te eponsinle for copies aaiaaed. Make all checks and orders parable to The Bend Bulletin. THURSDAY. MAY 12. 1921. MUFFLERS We are thorough!? In sympathy with the feeling that has prompted the introduction of an ordinance to do away with the nuisance of cock crowing. As we get away from the Tillage class, with houses closer to gether, we are more likely to be dis turbed by noises from neighboring houses and, if our neighbors keep hens, the crowing of a rooster is us ually the most disturbing noise we hear. What is there more disagree able than the sounds from a nearby hen yard when you are trying to get the sleep you want in the early morn ing? Most of the advantages of com munity life are bought by the cur tailment of personal rights, either by ordinance or by common consent. Such ordinance as- Is proposed Is In keeping with this idea. It is a de sirable thing and one that is perfect ly proper for legislation by the coun cil. In addition (o the neighborliness that one may show by ceasing to keep roosters, there are the best of rea sons from other points of view. The department of agriculture has fre quently pointed out that, except for a few months in the spring, when eggs are being produced for hatching, there is no use In having a rooster around. In fact, it is better not to have one. To have to feed one is wasteful and the eggs from a rooster less flock keep better than fertile eggs. We think the ordinance should be adopted. . And, by the way. In some what the same connection, would it not be a good plan to iee to the en forcement of the existing ordinance concerning automobile mufflers another noise preventing device? wo, The Pariah The man whose credit's on the blink is known by all upon the street, and it is sad to see him slink around the town on furtive feet. He has a fright ened, hunted air, no tranquil hour's by him enjoyed ; he dodges here, he dodges there, the merchant princes to avoid. Perchance he is a gifted scout, the fire of genius in his glim, but he has worn his credit out, and there's no welcome sign for him. No smile of greeting warms his heart as he goes shuffling down the street, but people say, in shop and mart. "There goes Jim Jinx, the blamed -old beat." His children suffer for his sins, when to the schoolhouse they repair, scorned by the grocer's stall fed twins, and by the village butcher's heir. His wife has met a cold rebuff in nearly every store in town, when she would buy on tick some stuff to make herself a humble gown. So he and his, with out the pale, dishonored go their futile way, be cause he doesn't bring the kale to pay his bills on settling day. And it is strange that any man will such a state of things endure, and be the village also ran, when there is such a simple cure. Let him but show a wise desire to pay his creditors their mon, and nothing more will he require to gain a footing in the sun. EXPLOSION FEARED FROM PROHIBITION ri'li1iitll I'iviIIi U W Mrivin! , Intimity i Iti'Mili of l(i'iri". kIiiii Cnuii'tl ll.v Dry 1j. A. Neff place. Saturday morning. Mrs. C. M. Rasmussen accompan ied O. P. Dahle to the tryouts in Bend Saturday. Julius Pedersen and family attend ed church services in town Sunday. Mrs. C. H.oWlgmore delivered a beautiful sermon last Sunday for the farmers in the Richardson school bouse. She will hold services In the Hoech school house next Sunday at 2:15 p. m. P, J. Young and grandson Edward called at the Scott home Sunday afternoon. Sunday school will be held in Grange hall Saturday at 10 a. m. The Ladles" Aid will meet Thurs day. Each lady will bring some thing to eat. F. P. Reynolds is working on the Audrey place this week. Misses Isabelle and Kay Smith vis ited with their parents Sunday after noon. , Elizabeth Reynolds Is the only one to take the eight grade examination in this district. W. J. Smith and daughter Anna and Dorothy Young were out riding Sunday. Her. S. Stenseth of Bend called at the Pedersen home Wednesday. K. A. Nelron and family spent Sunday in town. Mrs. Gertrude Kickerson Is stay ing with Mrs. Davis during her illness. In tuiK'li Willi the sltiiittlnn.' tin trii. there remains muc h less Hinn half thin number. In 1!1!. 3.HI head were kllbd In the Yellowstone band, the sir Ivrvloiir f tin. Ahsurokn nntloiml forest rvMrt. The Ivpiirtnieiit of Agriculture points out Hint no herd of wild nril ni:iW run Misinlu tin nniiiiiil utirlnk-npi- In iiumlaTs fur nny biurth nf time ami not fm-e romplrte -xti-i iiiluntloit within a few years. Hv Harold I. Jmtilw. I t'nlted Press Stiff CorreapulKlrnt I NEW YORK. Muy 1J. "Prohibi tion has removed the American safe ty valve, and the country will 'blow up' within three years." Andre Trl don, pryt'ho-annl.vKt. tleolured today. This "explosion." Triiloii explain ed, would bo siKiiallii'd by the ritih of hundreds of thmiHitmlii of persons to (limine asylum and iiiiillarlums. "The greatest cause, of Insanity In rou'Msion," Trldon suid. "Every person Is endowed with the eravltiK ! for self-expression. This may take the form of mimic, ail, oratory or what not. The American people, particularly the Anglo-Saxons ele ment, huve been tuiixht to repress these naturiil desires. A drink or two eiuililed them to slouith off their nut urn I reserve, and they sang, or ornted, or did what they most longed for. I "People who did not seek an out let for these things throtiKh the tem perate use of alcohol, or the Intem perate use of drugt, often became In sane? and their Insanity took the form of doing to the extreme the thing they had repressed. "Now we huve prohibition, strict enforcement will bottle these emotions and those who lark the strongest of will power will be a prey to nervous diseases, ending In HERE YOU ARE FOR THE BEST QUALITY AT THE LOWEST CASH PRICES Men's Riding Pants, khaki or whiiK'ord $3.15 Men's Work Pants $2.15 Men's Painter Overalls and Jumpers 5)."c Men's Express Stripe Overalls D."c Men's Heavy Blue Overalls $1.19 Men's Summer Union Suits ,. 9Sc Men's Full Cut Work Shirts 7."c Men's Solid leather Outing Shoes $3.25 Men's Screen Front Khaki Hats 95c Men's Genuine Army Blankets $5.01) Men's Canvas (.loves I0t Men's Leather Faced Canvas Gloves 25c THE HUB 1039 ROM) STREET 40 CASH STORES Fifteen Years Ago PEAR LOSS OF ELK HERDS DENIES WOMAN IS MYSTERY V Man Is Puzzling Himself for Nothing, Is Assertion Mads by Writer of Gentle Sex. Its up the suiiliarluin or the asylum. "This country la like a huge bolter. Excess steam escaped through the safety valve of temperate drinking. Now the valve has been lied down. I.Ike any other boiler, the result will he an explosion." Trldon emphasised that he is op posed to excessive use of alcohol.' Drilling disss. (Ink solution of one ounce, of cam phiir. one ami one half ounces spirits f turpentine ami three drams of rther. Keep the end of the drilling ;ool wel with this solution. After the aolnt romea I brutish to the other si da. Jul the glaaa In water and then pro ved more slowly or drill from other llda. (From the columns of The Bulletin of May 11, 1906.) On Saturday the federal grand Jury returned indictments against more than 20 men who are accused of participating in a widespread con spiracy to defraud the government of timber lands In Eastern- Oregon. A large fire Is raging on the juni per ridge east of Tumalo postoffice, It is destroying the cattle range and also a vast amount of fine juniper timber. A report from The Dalles atatea that condemnation proceedings have been commenced by the Oregon Trunk line to acquire right of way along the Deschutes river. H. D. Ellis and Dr. U. C. Coe this week set out 2000 fruit and shade trees on Mr. Ellis ditch land near town. Tom Parmenter built a new flue And made other Improvement on his property on Bond and Minnesota avenue this week. J. N. Hunter is on a trip to Odell lake. L. C. Whltted of Redmond spent several days In Bend the first of the week. Mrs. W. H. 8taats went to Prine- vllle Wednesday. Tom Trlplett and family arrived in Bend last night from Carolina. GRANGE DAIRYMEN FORM ORGANIZATION ORANGE HALL, May 12. A meeting waa held in the Grango hall Tuesday at 10 o'clock to organize a dairymen's league. It Is planned to have a statewide organization, so .that producers can set their own but ter and milk prices. L. W. Burt and Otto Olson were elected officers. The school in this district was closed Wednesday. Mrs. H. Helgeson was hostess to tha Hettman family Sunday at din ner. Elisabeth Reynolds and Katharine Helgeson accompanied the Erlckson family to Bend Saturday, where they attended tha tryouts. 'An overturned ear was found In the ditch on tha south side of the Animals In Yellowstone Park Are Rap idly Disappearing, According to Official Reports. OfhYliila of the 1'nlted S'tntea De partment of Acrrlriilttire ore alurincd m-er the" thrvnn n..(i extermination f the Elk herd III Yellowstone park. On the niiiKe of the uirk, where ordi narily thousands of these biiIiiiuIk -ouId be seen, only a very few Imve been observed this winter. Several theories have been offered to account for the marked shrinkage In the herd. Among these Is the probability that llie majority died from natural causes or had been killed during the last ear. Another I that the otien fall and winter caused the elk taremaln In hiding In some retreat deep In the mountain and In the higher and more Inaccessible portions of the park. Open falls In the wist, however, have not caused the elk to abandon their usual customs and habits. That there has been nn alarming shrinkage In the Yellowstone herd dur ing the last five years Is an estab lished fact, according to flirures sup plied by the Department , of Agricul ture. In 1UU It was estimated at aliout, a'.OOO; In 1917, 17,?00 were counted, and. If the figure for the present year, estimated by those close i Phone 269-W !! isiuatiamasi!!m.'innmmiRRmu!i:ntu:ni.'mmuii: After declaring to the r'orti'r who met him lu New York that the women oNjodny cure for nothing but biivlnt: a good time and huve asuiii-d an atti tude of pHt'iin enjoyment, the English essayist, lilllx-rt K. (Tientertoi., Is re. orted u moving majestically along the icr shukinir liniiils with the rui torn olhVeni nnd Icnvlnir Mrs. Chester ton to we ubotit the bugunge. ".My wife umlcrHtmiils these thinus; I don't," he said, with u sweep of bis stick. It Is evident from the1 report tbnt. although v mm n may have rlmiiged much since before tli war. Mr. Chesterton says, some of the oldiluie iiiiiu'iillne attitude tntwird tlicni re mains. Muy Kirulintliar. urllcx In the I'ltlshiirt'li I i-uit li. In further proof nf Ibis, the Englishman gins on lo peak In the snme obi prewar way about the psychology of women, using the familiar words, "I speak reverent, ly as of a mystery, for a infill never knows what a woman will do," ami then he tells how she will act under certain circumstances. The mystery about It Is not In the psycholoKy of woman, hut In the fait that, having supposed that a woman would art In the way most natural to all humanity, be thinks It Is mysteri ous because a woman does It. He describes a man aa likely to ait the same way under similar circum stances, but does not see any mys tery In the masculine point of view. Bulletin "WANT ADS" suits Try Them. Brfhg Re- Pnt It ! The BnlleUn. It will take the wrinkles out of your face the crick out of your back the cramp out of "your feet the ache out of your arms. It will save you steps, time, worry, clothes and temper. . And you'll enjoy doing your own work the way you want it as no one else can do it. K HAVE YOU DISCOVERED ??????????? 7 7 See ?????? 77 This Space Tomorrow ? ? ? 7 Bend Investment Company Bend Water Light & Power Co. Corner Wall and Franklin rianraosaaonm MAY The Bargain Month AT Mrs. Mailer s Hairdressing Parlors 140 Oregon Street FIRST WKKK Manicure, 85c. KeKulnr price, 7iJc. KKCOXD WEEK Fleet rlc Hcalp Treaments,"7.Tc. Iteg- ular price, fl.lM. THIRD WKKK Hhampoolnft, from fttic to HI. (HI. KcKular price fl.oo to f 1.00. FOURTH WKKK Violet Rav i 1 Face Treatments, 73c. Ren nlar price, $1.25. THESE I'RICEH ARK COOD ONLY FOR THIS MONTH. RRnni:n:i:i:!im:l NEXT MONTH MAY BE TOO LATE "Give the flies a few warm days and they'll , take the house." Not only baby must be protected from the germ-loaded feet of flies but every member of the household as well. Screen in all widths from 18 inches to 43 inches. Quality always best. Black, 4c square ft.; Galvanized, 5c square ft. Let us fit up your home this week. Screen doors made up ready to be hunjr. BEND HARDWARE CO. An American Workers Creed "The Company for which I work la a mighty good em ployer and I think any employe who hawa't aa Interest la the success ot his employer ought io qnlt or get flrwL My Idea la that when a maa sells his service to an etuinoyer, he aells his loyalty at the same time. If be eaa't be royal aad give the beet that la la him, ha ought aot to work for that particular employer. Dy being loyal I don't mean that one has to be a toady, or that he has to lose aay of has Independence. The most loyal may be the moat Independent, and usually Is." The Shevlin-Hixon Company ttntiuiiiiiiiiiiRni CREDIT IS OUR GREATEST ASSET The commercial world is standing on the foundation of credit Every individual is a cog in the great wheel. When one neglects his credit and fails to payhis honest obligations, he makes it impossible for "some one else to meet theirs, therefore it is extremely vital that each and every one see to it that we KEEP OUR CREDIT GOOD The Brooks-Scanlon Lumber Co. .mamnuaamnatn nmu, miniiuniini m m uuuuim