Image provided by: Newberg Public Library; Newberg, OR
About Newberg graphic. (Newberg, Or.) 1888-1993 | View Entire Issue (July 3, 1903)
I w * - ► ■ Jim I "There are several w ays. One is to have a great time, run around Jtotered M mattar at the poetottce the ptreets, doing nothing, learn her», orogott. to be a hoodlum and raise thun JS8UBD EVERY FRIDAY MORNING. der generally. Another is to get 4 jo b and w ork like a.T rqja», so P. H. WOODWARD, that whert school begins again W. C. WOODWARD you will be tired out; and an 3 t other is to combine w ork and $1*00 Per Year in Advance, play, doing something and get __ i_____ :_______________________ : ting some recreation mixed up r FRIDAY, JULY j, 1903. with it, getting in some indus trial licks and amusement sauce '*-*>-* The Fourth o f July Fingers. as well. A bpy needs a certain Ten little flngen standing In e line, am ount o f play, but there is a One held a firecracker; then there were nine. golden mean in both play and Nine little flngen (tending qp etraight; w ork. ” Try and find it. But in Tooled with a cannon until there were eight any. event behave yourselves Eitht little flngen pointing up to heaven: t ptgtol didn't work right, and then there ward during the com ing tw o or three •even, i months, for it is a sow ing time Seven little flngen lighting powder stick«, One went off suddenly and then there were six. for life.” wgg= sssggssag; NEW BERQ GRAPHIC. I I * Six little flngen all that do survive, One stops a pin-wheel and then there are five. A W ord For tb s. W illie. Five little flngen, burnt and bruised and sore, Got before a rifle and then there are four. Says the Capital Journal: F or a land o f clouds and mists, o f gray skies and sombre forests, We need to cultivate color. Op he back grounds o f greens and lues w hat is prettier than white? It is n ot the fault o f one o f our Salem stores if every w om an is n ot gow ned in white. And w hat is prettier than a pretty wom an in white a t this time o f the year? White houses shining through green trees and shrubbery, white steps and porches rising from green lawns, dotted w ith men, women and children wearing white—is anything more beauti ful? v Put color on the lattices. Put red and grays, brow ns and bronzes on the roofs, j But let the main body o f the house be painted a purr snow y white. four little flngen bunged up as can be, One meets a bombshell and then there are three. Three little flngen don’t know what to do, Shake some Roman candles until there are two Two little flngen get before a gun, When the smoke has passed away there re mains bnt one, One little Anger pointing toward the North, Is the only veteran of the Jolly Fourth. —F. P. Pitser in Brown Book. _. ___ ____ 111 1 * * Oregon’s John B arrett has been appointed Minister to Ar gentina. This seems to be an Oregon jo b as M r. Barrett’s pre decessor was Ex-Governor Lord. The X-Ray man o f the Salem Journal thinks that one o f the saddest features about theHepp- ner disaster is the poetry caused by M atlock’s ride. However, if roe Side w as as rough as the gait *of the sore-backed Pegasus after the bunchgrass poetasters g o t through riding him, M atlock Hfces above the grade o f heroes, hnd is wafted over am ong the One o f the neatest and. catchy little booklets to còm e to this office is one recently issued by the Corvallis & Eastern and 6 . P. R. R. companies, in which the attractive features o f Ya- quina bay as a seaside resort are shown up t o splendid advan tage. T o the person w ho w ants to spend a few days at the sea side, where he can get much in little time in the w ay o f boating, fishing and sightseeing, Newport offers the best advantages o f any point on the coast, and this little booklet, with its fine illus tration s and descriptive pages, w ill tell you all about it. For -«Opies* address Bdwin Stone at Albany or W. E. Coman, Port* JandT : --------:------ /Any one w ho may desire to place in the hands o f friends printed information regarding the resources o f Oregon, Wash, ingtjon and Idaho, will find the new pamphlet issued by the 0 . R. & N. and S. P. railroad com panies to be jnst the thing to meet the want. It is gotten up in a very neat and attractive style, is well illustrated, and, it is filled "fh>m kiver to kiver” with ju st such inform ation a s the hojneseeker w ants to get, and once placed in the hánds o f your friends w ho are looking tow ard the Pacific Northwest, every page o f it Will be read With in terest. Rinaldo M. Hall, the compiler, has shown good taste in the arrangement o f the matter it contains, and withal, it is the best pamphlet ever gotten out by these tw o big companies. A card mailed to either o f the com panies in Portland Will bring yóu a copy. . Anent the arrival o f the VACA* tion months for the school boys and girls, a brother editor gives them g ood advice as to different w ays o f spending it. He says: t Cleveland for Chief Justice. It is said that Chief Justice Fuller wishes t o retire from , but retains his place in the th at the dem ocrats may elect E president in 1004, in which event his successor would be a member o f his ow n party. I beg to suggest, in view o f the strong probability that Presi dent Roosevelt w ill succeed him self in the White House in 1905, that he could put the chief jus tice at ease, prove his ow n desire to preserve the non-partisan Character o f the supreme court, and pay a fitting compliment to his only living predecessor by in viting Grover Cleveland to ac cept the office o f chief ju s tic e - assuming that M r. Fuller really is eager to retire. There is some talk o f M r. Cleveland obtaining a fourth nom ination in the dem ocratic national convention; but it would be the height o f cruelty on the part o f his friends to cause his nomination, granting that they could do it, since he could not possibly be elected. But, as a lawyer and an cx- president, he has an uncommonly useful equipment for the chief justiceship.—From "N ote and Comment,” by Frank Putnam, in July National Magazine. No Sleep For a Mortgage. The m ortgage is a self support ing institution. It alw ays holds its ow n. It calls for just as many dollars when grain is cheap as when grain is dear. It is,not affected by the drouth. It is not drowned out by the heavy rains. It never winter kills. / Late springs and early frosts never trouble it. it grow s nights, Sundays, rainy days and even holidays. It brings a sure crop every year and sometimes twice a year. It docs aot have to w ait for the market to advance. It is not subject to speculations o f the bulls and bears on the board o f trade. It is a load that galls and frets and chafçs. It is a burden that the farmer ;e off. It is with can not jr\ noon and night, him m him at the table. It It cats his pillow when he gets uqd qpon his shoui- sleeps, day, It consumes ders It devours his his g r cattle. Hf fleets the finest horses steers. It lives upon and fat t o f the season. It the first the dairy where the, stalks i: ife toils day after busy ho ith after m onth and day and cheese and choic- takes the It shares the chil- est butter.^ dren’s bre and robs them o f stoops the toil- their clot its remorseless er’s «back burden o f care. It hardens his hands, benumbs his intellect, pre maturely Whitens his locks and often- times sends him and his AgCd wife oyer .the hills to the poor house. . It is the inexorable and exacting ¡¿ask master, Its whip is as mefciless and cruel as the lash o f the slave driver. It is a menace to liberty, a hindrance to progress a curse to the World. —Ex. ' ------ i... Ir*-*— ~ — is— —— IT'S STRENUOUS. A Vigorous Policy That Has Borue the Fruits of Crowu- ! . log Success. T o live copfjent to sell the best piano at the lowest price; to de serve the confidence o f t^e peo ple; t o wiiif^ffd to maintain it. These are achievements w orthy the m ost strenuous striving. Nothing has been left undone- by us in the Way of fair, square, honorable dealing to accomplish this. We have contented our selves w ith small profits, and en deavored, by large, quick sales, to compensate for the difference, which other dealers reap by ex orbitant prjees. We have adopt ed every kpotyn m oney-saving method o f handling pianos,‘be sides o; vidual ariÜ^vêrÿ im portant de vices, such as shipping our pianos in harness instead o f box ing etc. ,> That this policy has succeeded is evident from the multitude o f contented, enthusiastic, loyal customers we have, from North ern Washington to Southern California, from Western Idaho and W yom ing clear through to the Pacific Coast and-on through the Pacific Islands to China, Japan and t^e Philippines. We make §t> personal, individ ual matter o f pleasing every cus tomer, whether their purchase is a second-hand, organ o ra superb, costly, grand piano o f the world- renowned makes, the Weber o f New York, the Chickering o f Boston, or that great success, the Kimball o f Chicago. Remember, yotir custom, no matter how trifling, is im portant to us,as well as to you. T o us, because w e w ^ t y o u çg o o d will; to you, becapfe you are certain to make a saving no matter w hat your purchase. Easy pay- menta,are one o f thft special fea tures o f all Q\pf dealings, pvery instrument w qsell has our w rit ten guarantee. M oney back should purchase prove unsatis factory—our invariable rule, E ilrrs P iano H ouse . Headquàrters for fine pianos and organs, the pianola, electric pianos, pipe organs and the aeolian orchestrelle. Stores — Washington street, com er park, Portland, Oregon; N6 . 653 Market Street, San Francisco, Cal.; No. 006 Sprague avenue, Spokane, W ash.; Ninth and J streets^ Sacramento,-Cal. 1 ■■ 1 *’ ■ 'WV- ’• ■ -• i / i .- a ...1 ■ I KEEP ON HAND A COMPLETE LINE OF v m i < »* 4 STUDEBAKER M ■ ■ ‘--ii •, . p ’ ' > VEHICLES, HARNESS, V h ip s , ROBES, BLAN K ETS and DUSTERS * t », mm**™ ' m SI 0 A . L* STEVEN S ... o f ... ■, » l WL ALSO * BINDERS, M OW ERS, SICKLE GRINDERS» RAKES and _ BINDING TW IN E. NEW BERG, OREGON 1 invite the public to examine my stock and prices and satisfy yourselves that the Studebaker goods are the best in the market, and are warranted to give entire satisfaction 5= - — A Surgical Operation * Is always dangerous—do not sub mit to the surgeon's knife until you have tried DeWitt’« Witch Hazel Salve. It will cure when everything else fails—it bas dene this in thousands of cases. Here is one of them: I suffered from bleeding and protruding piles Iqr twenty years. Was treated by dif-% ferent specialists and used many We work at the Newberg Steam remedies, but obtained no relief Laundry, the best place in) the until I used DeWitt’s Witch Hazel country to get your work done- Salve. Two boxes of this salve We guarantee satisfaction and cured me eighteen months ago and prompt attention. ,,A fl work called I have not had a touch o f the piles forand promptly delivered. Branch since.—H. A. Tisdale, Snmmer- offices in Dayton and Sherwood. A. N. PRES8NALL, Prop. ton, S. C. For blind, bleeding, itching and protruding piles, no remedy equals DeWitt’s Witch Hasel Salve. Sold by F. S. Cald well & Co. • - ■ ■ Cheh&lem Val- ley Bank. Newberg, Oregon. A man w ho is alw ays harping on one Idea should change the OFFICERS AND tune occasionally. C. F. M oore & Oo. W ill Buy It Back'. You assume uo risk when you buy Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. C, F. Moore & Co. will refund your money If you are not satisfied alter Pleaae Mike Settlement. using it. It is everywhere admit H aving sold rhy grocery, I ted to be the most successful rem earnestly reqt^ t all those ow ing edy in use for bowel complaints, me on account .to call and settle. and the only one that never fails. It ia pleasant, sate and reliable. 33 C. B. W ilson . ,1 1 »..... DIRECTORS *+ Alpheus Mills,' Pres. J. C. McCrea, Vice- President. S. M. Calkins, Cashier N. 0. Christenson, • Assistant Cashier J. Kin ley Blair. ' COXRBSPONDKNTS: Western National Bank. Raw York. NaUonal Rank. Portland Innvllla National Bank. A Established 1893. • -U