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About The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963 | View Entire Issue (July 21, 1921)
TAOU 4 THE BKXD BVLLETIM, DAILY EDITION. IIKX1, OfUMON, Tllt'losnAY, Jl I V SI, 10:31. SWIMMERS MUST BE PROPKRLY ATTIRED One Pitvo Mathing NuIin Sufficient Vnr llo)fi, h) Ofllcer Warns Against Kiinmlng In WinmIn. "Boys swimming Inside the city limits must bo properly attired," said Officer Tom Cnrlon this morning, thus bringing the much discussed question of bathing dress closer home. Oue piece suits will be suf ficient for the boys, he Indicated. A warning In regard to swimming among the weeds which fill the Des chutes river near the city park was issued by the same officer. "Those weeds are dangerous to any but ex pert swimmers." Carlon stated. "Par ents should warn their children against taking chances in the water." HOME SWEET HOME HOME DEMONSTRATOR ARRANGES SCHEDULE The schedule to be followed by Miss Eva Comegys. home demonstra tor covering tne remainder of the month, is announced as follows: July SI, evening meeting of Lutheran Ladies Aid society In Bend; July 22, dress form class at borne of Mrs. W. B. Cone in Bend: July 23. office day in Bend: July 25, office day in Redmond; July 26, meeting at the Hoech school featuring demonstra tion of making radiator stones for firelesa cooker; July 27, millinery class at Terrebonne, demonstration of tireless cooker, and explanation of pressure cooker; July 28, meeting at Grange hall featuring explanation of tireless cooker; July 29, dress form class at home of Mrs. R. S. Dart in Bend; July 30, office day in Bend. Ill.-n.. I TWELVE PUIS AND I I I I HE'S SjTILU DOWN Lsl X I B iT'Mgr"'1 J - Tf YESMTTY.I'M iJ' JZmI SOME CUA5SV I AN I'M SOME BASE AU RIGHT ! Ai''v Q V, RUNNER TOO. WHY LLSi'S SEE YOU 0 Jf C V. 7t y I CAN EVEN STEAL L O-,-00 ,T ! r' - fVTl MOMQ WANTED WANTKI) A housekeeper for mull anil child: wages $30 a month, room and board. Apply at Itoval Cnfi. 4;-3ti-.V.lp USED CARS JKOU HKNT--Knur room house cl to mills, Water and light In hnuss. I IS. HO per imintli. Inquire A. J. Cuggana, phono U7N-J. 6 .IS 44p CAM KOH 8AI.K Chevrolet road star, delivery Imily; will sell cheap for cash. I It' ml Furniture Company. 7 -1 2 1 fr foiknt KlK IIKXT- Furnished tlu'im loom apartment, with luitli. telephone unil it 1 1 rouvciilonrcs. IiiiiiIim 21H llrouilway. tiS-mip KOH KKNT ihindy five room mod ern house and guru go; furniture for mile, all good Blurt. 456 tlrcon wund aveiiuo. &8 3N-39p KOH ItKXT Furnished three room house. Wiiler and light free with garage. SID per month. Inquire (Till Florida. fiH-3H-4p KOK ItKNT Furnished apartment. 1 II I 11 u llellklo & Haloes. 60-37 .V.lp KOH ItKNT Tim prettiest Utile moileru liiiugalow In llonil; doslr aliln locution, lieiul Investment Co., Hill Willi Ht. 4U .17 41c KOH HUNT Two furnished hnuso keeplng rooms, 115 a month. Ap ply 12s OreeiiMood Ave. I'hone llliiik 171 -V 4S-:ill 40p LOST LOST - A letter addressed to Mrs K. K. Mi'Mlllnii. care Ur. I'. Woer ner, llond, Oregon. I'aiun from Co Vina, t'lillfornlu: small envelope ami uililresa In Mini Ink: lost on Wall street Heliini to llulleiln nltlre. (1.1-38 4Up CARPENTIER, BROKEN, NO LONGER IN ROLE OF "MAN OF DESTINY" CAR OK WOOL SHIPPED One carload of the wool sold last Friday has been shipped from the Vnited Warehouse, and two carloads more are being loaded today. Ship ment was to Portland. FARMERS WILL RECOVER FIRST (Continued from Page 1.) merchants helped them to carry the farmers. Nation Kill! Richest "Though we may be passing through a crisis, this is still the rich est nation in the world. The people are not very badly off. Even the men you see in the cities looking for Jobs look prosperous. The trouble is mostly psychological. "Crops from coast to coast are looking better than they ever have in my experience," said Smith, who returned In May from attending the National Editorial convention. He has just come from Idaho, where he was Interested in the campaign to increase dairying. Railroad Aids Farmer Sunflowers are becoming a very satisfactory crop In Wallowa county as well as here, be remarked. Not as much trouble has been experienc ed in learning when to harvest and how to cure sunflowers as was had with corn. "t wish farmers would realize that I am working for their interests because the company I represent pro fits with their prosperity," he stat ed. "We recently sold 4000 sacks of potatoes in Idaho when the market was apparently drugged, and the last three carloads brought the highest price." (By Henry L. Farrvll.) (United Pms Staff Correspondent! NEW YORK. July 21. Georges Carpentier probably fought his last great fight against Jack Dempsey. There is every reason to believe that the Frenchman Is through. Much of his spirit is gone and his right hand, his only hope in the ring. is cracked. Led to believe through the adula tion of his countrymen and through his own experience in the ring that he was a "man of destiny." Carpen tier learned that he isn't. He found out he is not the greatest and it hurt him. . Already the Frenchman has given signs of a broken spirit. The picture of him "before and after" at Man hasset is a strange contrast. Happy, care free and content, he smiled and was jovial all through his training. Defeated, he turned rather 'sullen and morose. His attitude was striking apparent at a banquet given in bis honor re cently by the Editor & Publisher. All the visiting British and French writ ers were there and prominent news papermen from New York. All dur ing the evening Carpentier sat at the head of the table. He looked off in to the distance like a caged lion star-, ing into old realms where he was' once supreme. He seemed totally ob-' livious to his surroundings, except when one of the speakers would make a remark about him. Then he would seem to jump out of his re verie and smile wanly as if thinking: What Is it all about or what does it amount to now? In looks. In actions and In his at titude, he was a defeated man, a man who made no attempt to conceal the feelings that he had failed in his greatest ambition and that he didn't care any more. We know from one of his French newspaper friends that he feels Just that way. He told his friend that he was ashamed to go back to France, that he would, like to delay his re turn as long as possible. He feared not what his countrymen would say. because they are still loyal, but he fears the look in their eyes, the at titude they can't hide that he had disappointed them In one of France's greatest hours. That broken spirit will have just as important a bearing on his future in the ring as his fractured hand. He will hesitate to put all his strength behind bones, which once cracked, will crack again.' Fighters know what a bad hand means Just as well as physicians and Carpentier knows, too. A wise handler of boxers, who has been in the game for thirty years, rema ked recently that it was not strange that Harry Creb. Tommy Gibbons. Bill Brennan and even Johnny Wilson, the middleweight champion, are after a bout with Georges. "The next good one that goes into the ring with him Is going to get him. He's through now. He will never be the same again. Frenchmen are more romantic, more temper mental than Americans. He'll never forget Dempsey," he said. of the Willamette Moridlan, contain ing 160 acres, mure ur less, ami all being In Deschutes County, Statu of Oregon. Dated at Bond, Oregon, this lSlh day of July, 1931. VAI.DK.M All LIDKI.L, Administrator of I ho estate of Jonas A. Ostrom. defeased. David K. I-ofuren and K. O. Stailtnr, Attorneys for Administrator, ilitnd, Oregon. 3H-4 4-60-6c HA AccfPfRJTLD yjbt"' "i CluallWd ftrfwrtU.nr chr i-r kiui to tnt fur 20 wonia ur Lim. On nl wr word far mil or 10. All el ami A 4 dvrrtM intr atrtctiy tmmh In vlvmtir. FOR SALE UMH. STORY WILL BK SHOWN' O.N Kt'HKKX HF.IIK FOH SALE OH HK.NT Three room furnished house: reasonable rent or terms. Inquire at garage two doors east of Troy Laundry, or tele phone 13S-R. 61-39-42P IPS if pgljfJjgl The West is More Dependent on In dustrial Development Than any Part ef the United States. Here, as No where Else in the World, Capital and Labor Must Work Hand in Hand to Back Payrolls and Industry. The First National Bank 77iii Bank I Member of the Federal Reserve System "The Little Fool." a Metro release of a C. E. Shurtleff Production, adapted from Jack London's "The Little Lady of the Big House." Is coming at the Liberty Theatre on Friday and Saturday. "The Little Fool" portrays the drama of "Dick" Forrest, a weal- i thy rancher, and his wife. Paula., Paula falls In love with the hus-i band's chum, and Is about to leave the palatial mansion forever. At the last moment, Paula Forrest does not really know her mind. NOTICE OF SALF. OF HEAL ESTATE In the County Court of the State of Oregon, for Deschutea County. In the Matter of the Estate of Jonas A. Ostrom, deceased. Notice Is hereby given that the undersigned, VaJdemar Udell, Ad ministrator of the estate of Jonas A. Ostrom. deceased, will on the 19th day of August. 1921. at the of fice of E. O. Stadter. in the First National Bank Building, at (lend. Deschutes County, Oregon, offer for sale and sell at public or private sale, for cash, separately or as a whole of all the right. 'title and In terest of the estate of Jonas A. Os trom, deceased, and of the heirs at law and of the next of kin of the said deceased, in and to the follow ing described property, to-wit: All of the east half of the south west quarter and the north half of the southeast quarter of Section 11. Township 22 South, Run re 14. Ensf Cat Helpa Trotzky" Register Surprise Trotxky. the belligerent dog actor, so named because of hla chronic objection to everything that exists, has performed his most artistic bit of acting In Metro's all-tar production of "The Little Fool." adapted from Jack London's story "The Little Ijidy of the Big House," showing at the Liberty Thea ter Friday and Saturday. In this picture, the scenario calls for action on the part of the dog that at first was be lieved Impossible. The animal was scheduled to pause sud denly In hfs ramhllngs before the camera, raise his head and stare in open-mouthed won der. And, much to the sur prise of everybody the dog performed the feat Just as Director Philip Rosen had or dered! The secret Is held by a life long enemy of Trotxy'a a cat. A property man. who possessed a keen Imagination, sought the cat and held It In redlness for the psychological moment. When the director culled for the expected pause and look of surprise on the part of Trot xky. the property man sudden ly lifted the cat and held It as If ready for attack. The re sult was idnul. The picture was scenarlnlxed by Edward Lowe. Jr. Allan Slegler did the photography. The cast Includes Ora Carew, Milton Hills. Nigel Barrie, Helen Howard. Marforle Pre vost, Iva Forrester and Byron Munson. STOP! LOOK! LISTEN! The Macy & Baird Comedians In Their Mammoth Tent Theatre Corner Wall and Franklin Streets BEND-tstautinos-TUESDAY, JULY 26 Presenting the Best of Comedies and Dramas Classy Vaudeville Between Acts OPENING PLAY "Saints and Sinners" PRICES-Adults, 50c; Children, 25a Tax Included (Ladies, Watch for Free Ticket in Saturday Adv.) SURE SOME SHOW! TONIGHT the GYM CADMEAN CHAUTAUQUA WARDEN J. D. BOTKIN What Is the chief cause of crlmeT Are the movie thriller responsible? Or the War? Or a breaking down In religion? Or more, people In cities, or what? How should a rouvlited criminal serve his term? Arr pardons wise? When should pu roles be granted? !o Hot prisons reform own or r on firm them In crime? Are our courts and executives too lenient Is the public too forgetful? Does the fear of capital punishment keep men from crimes? What per rent of prisoners are women? How ran crime be prevented? All the above and many other tjuestlona will be miswered by the Honorable J. I). Botkln from his experience gained a warden of the Kansas Ktate I'eultentlary. Authorities timer as to the causes and cures for the recent crime wave, but II Is a fart that crime baa been Increasing It's a duty of eery patriotic rltlivn to know something of It. Mr. Botkln l a national authority and a pleasing speaker. DANCE TONIGHT t after the program. Music by Wand's Orchestral Hand. A BIG TIME IS ASSURED Program for Friday, July 22 AFTKHN'OON PopuUr SrUnc rarmnriwtraitofi fiVnn MrU A r.-mt nr Motlwr imm and Olhf Khym . tWorfnm u)krwr, Hm fil.t Im-Iw A4mUU 40c KVKMNC W.mrW. .f KlrrtrW-ity . . . r.,nn M-rrU A (YmtHtny Huaumntu future 'Httnon Hmy Wi.W" , IWith ljwry Aa vnln ut InatruciU.n ni itlrimmnt. Thousands will go i Back East this summer because of the Low Round-Trip Fares offered by the big cross-continent railroad a Union Pacific System Serving the transportation needs of the ' Great Pacific Northwest and Rlvlns; through service via tho popular direct routes to Salt Lake City, Denver, Omaha. Kansas City, Ht. I'aul, Minneapolis and Chicago on Dime two strictly first rlaaa trains "Oregon-Washington Limited" and "Continental Limited" Tickets on Sale Daily Until and Including August 16th. Return limit 00 days, but not later than October 31st. Ckicap $100.80 Memphis SlU.no Pueblo $77.40 Dearer 77.40 Minneapolis 87.o St. Paul 87.00 Kansas City 87.60 Omaha 87.00 St. Lonis 101.40 8 War Tax to Be Added Proportionate reductions to many points East. Bton-overs at pleasure. Hide trips may bo arranged for Yellow stone, Zlon and llocky. Mountain National Parks. For complete details as to routines, train schedules, aide trips sleeping car rates and reservations, and other travel Informal ion' desired, call on or telephone 1 F. K. HTriWIMHKK. Travelling l'senKer AKent, llen.1, Oreaon WM. MrMl RKAV, Clrneral Passer Aent rtla0(!, 0reKn