1 tHE BEND BULLETIN "Fr tvery aw a square steal, no IeM and no mere." CHARI.BS D. ROWK BDITOR SUBSCRIPTION RATK& Six tnontht- Thrtt months- (TaTtrUblr In idnMt.) . Jo WEDNESDAY, FEB. 24, 1909. x Think Tbk Over. The Bulletin would call the at tention of its readers to a display ad. on this page that states some facts in regard Xp advertising. The "question is often asked, "Who pays the expenses necessary for exten sive advertising?" Some have the mistaken notion that the cost of . advertising is ultimately paid by the buying public. That is an erroneous idea. In fact, it is generally the rule that better and cheaper goods can be bought at the store that advertises. , The chief purpose of advertising is to make quick sales and to create new business. Every merchant desires to "turn" his stock just as many times as possible. Here's an example in point: A merchant in vests a dollar in augur. He sells that dollar's worth of sugar and makes a profit, say, of 20 cents. He invests the same dollar immedi ately in another dollar's worth of sugar, and sells it again at another profit of 20 cents. Thus it is seen that the oftener he "turns" or sells that dollar's worth of sugar, the greater becomes his profit. Bnt if that sugar remains unsold in bis store, he is .making no profit what ever, and the capital invested is ly ing idle. Well, then, if you were a merchant, wonldn't you rather sell the sugar five times at a profit of 20 cents on each sale (or a dollar profit oa the five sales) than to sell it OBce at a profit of say 40 cents on the sale? Right there is where the value of advertising comes is. Tbe mer chant, by up-to-date, judicious ad vertising, induces xork people to buy of him, and be thus can sell his goods cheaper and yet make more profit on a year's business than the man who docs not adver tise. Tbe advertiser makes a little profit on each of many sales; the non-advertiser makes his profit on a few sales by charging more for each item. Thus it is that the advertising merchant invariably sells cheaper then the non-advertiser. And thus it is that tbe advertising merchant makes a bigger profit than the non advertiser. Isn't there a lesson here both for Bend merchants and for the buying oublic? InkHass From Qsst. Gist, Feb. . Prd Wetee killed so hoes one day lut wreck, and hat 13 more to kill, ot which he will make bacon. These hogs drtsstd about 150 poumls each. Newton Cobb has sold hi fine ranch in the Clorerdale eountty to a party whose name we did not learn. We are informed tbe price received wa f 7,500. There arrived at tbe borne of Mr. Chas. Wiley, on the 19th, a baby boy. Mother ami babe doing nicely. Dr. Coe in attendance. Mr. and Mr. C I Citt have been on tbe tick list tbe hut week with laRtippe. C L. says it wm a hard dose to take, but directions said take it. The meetings bcioc. held at the school house at Gist are proRrrwlnj nicely. Frank Zumwalt and wife of Redmond were visiting in and around Sisters last week. Mr. Coyote will hare to look ont now. ilis scalp is worth f l.jo. Alex Smith and Rny Foster passed tqroQRh here Saturday on their way to Bend, returning Sunday. C R. Klnger, the leweler, 1060 Vir ginia Are., Indianapolis, Ind., writes. "I was so weak from kidney trouble that I could hardly walk a hundred feet. Pour bottles of Foley's Kidney Remedy cleared uiy complexion, cured my backache and the irreeularities disappeared, and I can now attend to business every dar. and recommend Foler' Kidney Remedy to all sufferers, as it cured me after the doc tor and other remedies bad failed, Bend Drug Co. Pleasant RWr Notes. TLKASAJiO PiriOK. Feb. 33. A large amount of clearing Is being done this spring, much more than that of last year. There are a number of hotbed now in operation. A number of our farmers are sending to outside places for their clover and al falfa seed this spring. They seem to be getting it for 14 and IS cents per pound laid down here. Bora, to Prof, and Mrs. Ward Harra der at Cline Falls, on February Jo, a girl. Mother and babe doing nicely. Miss Fern Hall, who hat been teaching over in tbe Bear Creek country for the past three months, is now home for a short vacation, after which she will re turn for another fonr months' term. Mr. Eaton, who has been spending the winter with his daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Chase, has now re turned to California. The lUg Barn Warming. The barn warming at J. H. Wo nandy's new barn Monday evening was a most successful affair. While the crowd could have been larger, yet there was a fair number of dancers in attendance, and as b usual with Bend dances everyone bad a good time. A number of vbitors were present from Rosland, Laidlaw and Sisters, and other sur- roaadiag points. There was pten ty of room for the dancers, the floor was a good one considering that it wasa t built for a dance ball, the Bend band discoursed tbe best of good music, and the Ladies' Library Club served most sattsly in refreshments "lickin' good." The Anarchists are to be congratu lated on furnishing tbe people of Bend and vicinity a most enjoyable evening. "Billy" Sunday's Hot Shot. runusuKD nv kkqukst of A SUBSCXtllKK. EEDS Frtsk.ltHM.rsrs tsarsalMS' Is Ptsst Tmj OsrOstr 4 FUllUf tkMld l U .an m.rtu.f tint SfsrUMta 0 rt . specibl arris FOR 10 CENTS wa wiii - Mtnmll oar FAMOUS COLLECTION aBSaBBBBBB) d I lIlMklTaM t ri- rn ! . 1 n.irn..i.f.T I rM- blf Im - Si I km. tmKHrtmm tMM bNM a Ik. IS IvWka C IU IN lb Write U,l Sm4 I Utp fl J, ' wtbif 4 mm IU - "fin 1 tJ4li. - RKAT XOKTHKKN IIKJJU fl. iniJtoMkH. Sitkfoni. Illinois -Lumber The following prices on Lumber will be la effect after this date at our mill Common Rough Surfaced, Sized, and Shiplap No. 2 Dressed - No. 1 Dressed Shingles, Best Quality $ 12.00 per M 15.00 per M 22.50 per M 30.00 per M 3.50 per M Terms Strictly Cash. flie Iosland Lumber Company ROSLAND, OREQON HSaassSSTaslBaasl Somebody says: What's the difference between a game of check ers and a game of cants?' Just tfs much difference as be tween heaven and bell. And from the day a pack of cards were in vented to satisfy the whims of an idiotic king, down until now, they haven't been used for much but gambling, and that is about all they are doing for this old world. Many a boy has been inveigled into some gambliug room; he breathe. the air and listens to the click of the chips and the rattle of the dice and of the roulette wheel and the caller at faro bank, and he is reminded of bb home. My God, what n heritage to bequeath to n boy, that he has to go to n joint like that to remind him of bb home, to stand out up permost in hb mind! but too often that is the way he is doing. Men that have spent and are spendiug their lives at these things tell us that nine-tenths of all the gamblers of today were taught to play cauls in their homes and eight out often were taught to play cards in the homes of professing Christian peo ple. tilts Card IMaylng. "I'll tell you what I have I have more respect get it plain, get it clear, now I have more respect for an old hag who will bet her last 'sou' at Monte Carlo than I have for those church members that pa rade under the garb of respectabil ity of church membership and sit around in tleir homes and play cards for prires just to lug them home. I have more respect for the gambler who will sit in a gambling joint and buck a jackpot at 3 o' clock in the morning, for be b a gambler and professes to be noth ing else, while you are just as much a gambler as he b and you profess to be a Christian. It doesn't make any difference whether you play for a twenty dollar gold piece, a cream pitcher, a picture frame, or a cut glass dish worth $20. It doesn't make a whit's difference. You are a gambler just the same, and you ought to sleep in a calaboose with the rest of the blacklegs, for you are no better than they are. Aa Insult to Church. "I tell you, any man or woman in the church or out of it, that stands tip and defends cards, in the face of a denunciation by a man like that, by the eternal God, if I was in a church I would get out of it. I wouldn't disgrace the church or insult God. You have more than ordinary brass to stand up and defend that cussed, damnable, dirty, stinking thing when men who have been pushed to the brink of hell stand up and denounce it. "The dance b the hotbed of im morality. I unflinchingly, without fear or favor, denounce the dance. It isn't even an innocent amuse ment. It is one of the greatest evils on the face of this earth. The dance b the cause of the downfall of more girls than any other thing thb side of the pit of hell today. Men Dance for Hug. "Most men dance for the bug. They don't care auything about the dance, it's tbe hug that goes with it. And there isn't a man here to night that has ever danced, that is an honest man, that won't say that is true. Any man is willing to ad mit that it will do bb daughter no harm to keep his daughter away from a ballroom, while it may ruin her to let her go. Are you a fath er? Are you a brother? Do you accompany your daughter or your sister, and do you stand there and watch her dance? When young fel- fellows come up ask for her name to be written on their lists, and you stand there and see ber become a partner of young bucks whom you know are as rotten ns hell in their life, and their names nte as com mon on the lips of the girls in the red light district as they are of the society belles, ami they will spend two or three iiIkIiIs a week In the arms of in famy and then accompany your daughter oil the ballroom floor to dance with them? I)o you stand there ami tell tue you don't see any harm in it? Then I'll pass you up, You arc too low dowu for me. Crusade for Everybody, "tUncing Is limply a hugging match set to music. Dancing is a sexual love feast, and this crusade agaiutt It Is (or everybody, not for the preacher, if I thought 1 was the only man in Spokane against thcte thine t would pack tii) truuk and let the town go to hell, if I had to think 1 was the nly one Inter ested In the moral welfare of the com munity; but I know thousands of people in this town who are Intcrotrd in lis moral welfare and who art working and prajiug; ami 1 know another gang that is doing all it can to damn the commun ity. All citlicns In Spokane who are interested in Iter moral welfare are III favor of these meetings. Only Fools Dance. "You say: 'Mr. Sunday, I send my daughter to a dancing school to learn tu te graceful.' You are a big fool, I'ool. You send her there to be disgraceful. Alt right, scud her to a brothel to he taught uritr. Send your boy to a sa loon to be taught sobriety. "You are a fool, girl, if you ever go on a ballroom floor, and if any young buck intuits your womanhood bv asking you to go to a dance, knock him ilown. And any man, in view of the tacts I flaih up before him, who would ask a girl to go to a dance, if it were my daughter, I'd knock him down, I don't see how any man that lias a streak of manhood iu him, or has the good of girlhood at heart, could ever ask a girl to compro mise herself by requesting her to o to a dance, even if she should escape with her virtue. He won't do it if he is a man. He is a brute if he would." "Many a boy and girl trained in their home by tbelr mother to abhor rants have been ruined by going to board in some good for nothing, no account, beer drluklng, can! playing, dancing I'rcsby. terisn family." "Take the leg shows off the stage and ., ..Ill u1i.m ,!... ill t.. .t leg show that attracts, not the drama." "If some lobster would come around and ask my daughter to go put buggy riiling In a buggy at midnight I would kick the scoundrel off the porch so quick it would make his head swim. If the buggies In these livery stables could talk there would be something doing." "If I had a boy who would loin a club I woulil as soon put him in his coffin. Nine out of every ten are nothing but whisky drinking and card playing joints. That's about all Uiey are " "Don't Insult Jesus Christ or the hiith and noble name of charity bv dravglng 11 into mat uiny nariot producing insti tution called the dance." "You net out on the floor and dance and you have on an ahl-revUted costume enough to make the squaw or the red man of the plains have pneumonia. It's enough to give a man a cold to look, but ne (locsn'i catcti cold." "If you dance because you like to dance you can get just as much eierclse with your arms around some old lobster as you can witu tlicui around a girl." "I want to see the color of the buck's hair that can put bis arms around my wife. I'm going to nioiiopolite that hugging proposition myself." gghaaj. ECOID Pacific Harse LMsjmi I prsfarta txprtniyhr itunwUtftHamHtu rssebflwa. It l a powerful as4 pas. Irstlof Mmtat, a rm4y for SBwrje cle. A MetMM tmhrectlkn fee Nte retW of paJa, uA the twtt Mm for UkTAaasat sulJ araraaisU ITafcsxaLait apialllt ainw nffCTtnVa UfWIflMfTW W&T carta Me wwmtfo and Injuries of BARBED WIKE M fv ktt cuts, Arasfoaj, mtm H4 freltM. PWC rforse Lfofowrt k WW twtrt4. ways. l'fHfmt0Hlify,weajeriM 8 AttUtt fo tttmi Hm purchsu pr kt, lira imu wmi 11m unto HOVr CMC M4Ct CO.. PsaniftS, SMC BMMCLBT JUST FINISHED INVOICING to busy to write an adv. WAT6H US -next WEEK CO end 2) rug Co. SUCCKSSOR TO MURIUM- DRUO COMi"V. J. D. Davidson, - - Manager Yes4ou f. . Can Buy Tilings More Cheaply at a Store That Advertises! If you were a merchant, wouldn't you rather sell a thousand yards of silk In a day, at a profit of 10c a yard, than to sell (without advertising) fifty yards, at a profit of ajcts a yard. Isn't it pluin that in all such Instances the buyer gets the benefit of the "volume of business" which advertising enables the merchant to do? The money cost of a journey long or shortby stage coach (not to count time, or comfort) was greater than that of a present day journey by railway, The "old ways" of doing things were not even CHEAPER. Tbe cost of things in an old-fashioned store nowa days is greater than in the progressive stores the adver tised stores. It's not even CHEAPER to patronize the non-progressive merchant not to count the unwisdom of helping make It possible for rcaclionary and nou-progres-sive merchants to still "do business." U. C. COE, M. D. Physician and Surgeon OPVICK OVKR HANK nil Wlflbt (Telephone Connection DAY TKLXl'JIONK NO, 31 Dknd, : Okkgon POLK'S GAZETTEER 1 IluilnftBa ntrMtnrv nf ali fliv .:z -J. ....""A -" -"! ui, ,bu vfitaiiv in ursgun ana nuuinciun, (lT,nr utacripuv Hktcli of . sah ulaes. Uftlon, HbtUDln Vftclllllu sod a (!!.!. fUd Directory o( stcti ttuilntu 'and rrofuslon. K, L..rOI.K CO., Inc. luutii. watti. THE First National Bank of Princvllle. Kstabllaheil iRH-, Capital, Surplus and Undivided rroius, 51UU,UOO,00 - -, ...President ..Vk IfcsliUut . ...m....... M., Cashier .AuUtsot Csshltr B. V. All.n Wilt Vnr...ll., T. M. H.ldwln.. II. luiilwln C. S. BENSON, ATTORNEY AT LAW OFVICB IN BANK HUIMJINO, BUND, OKKQON a