Image provided by: Newberg Public Library; Newberg, OR
About Newberg graphic. (Newberg, Or.) 1888-1993 | View Entire Issue (March 16, 1911)
KILLED THE B ILL GRACE BEFORE MEALS* ' A Prayer That Was Retrospeotive aa Ds Cosmos Tqlkod It to Doatly Twenty-six Hour«.. Well ae Preepeetive. Mr. De Cosmos, a member o f the legislature o f British Columbia, cer tainly deserved the medal fo r lung power, and he won it seemingly in a good cause and at grave risk to him : self. The chamber was considering a bill that would drive many settlers from their homes, and there was a sufficient m ajority to pass it. T bs end o f the session was only a day and two hours distant. A t noon on the m orrow the house ynu* t close its business. De Cosmos was desperate. He must stop the bill, and there was only <me way to do it. D e would have to speak right on till the end o f the session and prevent a divi sion being taken. ' It was 10 o’clock in the m orning when he rose to "m ake a few re marks in regard to the measure be fore the house.” -E leven o ’clock came, noon, 1 o ’clock, and still De Cosmos talked. Members in a spirit o f jest om itted to adjourn fo r lunch in order to see how long he would keep going. The afternoon waned, the sun went down and lamps were lit, but De Cosmos never faltered. * The situation was becom ing seri ous. H e certainly held the floor and teemed likely to keep it. A ll sorts o f plans were tried to get him t o stop, but eloquence poured from him as water from a m ountain spring. H e was not allowed to halt fo r food , though he was perm itted to drink. T he speaker insisted on keeping to the question before the house and objected to him repeating him self. Through the watches o f the night De Cosmos toiled on and eessfully evaded all traps o f "order.” H e went m anfully on with his speech as the dawn broke, kept up a slow pace as the breakfast hour arrived and was still speaking as the clock slowly approached the hour o f 12. On the last stroke o f that hour he stopped in the m iddle o f a sentence end fe ll to the floor. F or twenty-six m ortal hours he had stood on the floor and addressed the house and had nearly killed him self in doing i t T he excitem ent had kept him up till the end, but when the de sired result was achieved his facul ties gave way, and it was several days before he recovered. But the A Tals of a Hated Dish. hill was blocked, and the settlers There is n charm ing story told of- kept their homes.— Pearson’s Week the great French painter Corot. Be T h e J ew eler ing hospitable, he frequently as ly- sembled his friendfe to dinner, and a Th* Spirit «4 Football Ploy, dish o f haddock and potatoes, We have surely im proved the w h ich , everybody hated, invariably follow ed the soup. T he friends, spirit o f play. The change o f inter who thought Corot partial to the national brutality no longer stands. dish, always gave it when he dined We have shortened the period o f with them. A t last, in reply to the play and lessened thereby the painter’s query, they admitted that ■train. T he record o f the Y ale-Co- they detested the dish, but suppos lumbia game in Novem ber, 1872, showed som ething either o f the way ed he liked it. Corot was p in n in g broadly. "M y tim e was kept in those days or else dear fellow , if you only knew how 1 the ability o f the team to keep g o hate the sight o f it even. But ing fo r an unlim ited period. Think o f this, those o f yon who feel that For Diamonds, Watches. Clocks Adele, my cook, sim ply adores had two thirty-five m inute halves is al dock and potatoes. And it is no and Jewelry good— I dare not go against her most too lon g! "T h e first goal was wishes. It is as much as my place scored in fifteen m inutes, the sec is worth. N ot fo r worlds would my ond goal took fifty-eight minutes , awe o f Adele induce me to unde- and the third goal forty m inutes.” ceive her as regards the value I at That fifty-eight m inute goal must tach to this one particular article o f have been trying on both sides. We have also brought the playing sea diet.” son to an earlier ending and avoided And fo r the sake o f Adele this some o f the risks o f form er days on little group o f great painters had Dealer in frozen grounds.— W alter Camp in fo r thirty yean been eating a dish Century. they could none o f them bear. * Most small boys— and many other people, too— hare experienced the m ortification that copies from be ginning a meal before the blessing is said. The usual reason for such a breach o f etiquette is that the •mall boy— or the other person— did not know that the blessing was Roing to he said. The awkward feeling that is sure to follow such a blunder cannot be helped, but it may be mitigated. On one occasion, says Mr. Adlai E. Stevenson in A . E. W ILSO N , the Jeweler "Som ething o f Men I Have Know n,* a gentlem an at a form al dinner, be HAS T H IM ing very hungry and exhausted, made this mistake o f starting in before grace. A fter the blessing was asked, he turned to Mr. K nott and said: " I am humiliated at my conduct. I should have remembered that Pres byterians always say grace before meals.* No Emperor—either o f a T o this K nott replied: "Y o u People or o f Finance—can ought not to feel so. That blessing o f Dr. Bullock’s was broad and gen buy better food than we eral, in large measure retrosp ec ■ell you, at prices you usu tive as well as prospective. It re minds me o f a little incident that ally pay for good things. occurred on the B ollin g Fork. "A n old time deaoon down there was noted fo r the lengthy blessing which* et his table was the unfailing prelude to every meal. H is hired man,-. B ill T aylor, an unconverted and im patient youth, had fallen into the habit o f com m encing his meal before the blessing had been fu lly invoked. "T h e frow n and the rebuke o f the good deacon were o f no avail in ef fecting the desired reform . Right eously indignant, the deacon, in a spirit possibly not the m ost devout, at length gave utterance to this pe tition : "* F o r what we are about to re ceive and fo r what W illiam T aylor has already received accept our thanks, O L ord !’ ” “ K nott,” said one o f the guests, "you are the only man on earth who could have thought o f such e story at just the opportune m om ent.* The tem porary depression vanish ed, and the premature guest was' him self again and was soon the life o f the assemblage. Groceries J. L. VanBlaricom Plumbing! C . A . M O R R IS M. P. ELLIOTT Wood, Coal, Hay, Grain A Poultry ’ Supplies ' Th* Thoughtful Stork. Tha Shillalah. ;j . H. GIBSON, Mgr. Yamhill County M c M in n v il l s , O regon CH ASE & LINTON GRAVEL COM PANY All kinds o f gravel for con crete work, cement blocks, or wood work furnished on short notice. Leave orders at the office o f ft. B. Linn- ville. • Asking Too Much. The country doctor had come to prescribe fo r Lucy, the colored cook’s little daughter, who was suf fering from the unfashionable ail ment known as “ chills.” The doctor opened his saddlebagB and prepared several doses o f the time honored remedy quinine in capsules. Lucy sat up in bed, watching the proceedings with great interest, aa the doctor filled each tiny capsule tnd capped it. But when «he heard the instructions, “ Give her one o f these every two hours,” she wailed in terror: "Is you gwine to mek me awaller dem little glass bottles, stoppers an* aUP” — Y outh’s Companion. P60K80B8C8090W808380B06PflgC83P6080B80g080808Ov806083809060B0808Oi0B0B08060B06C80B I JnstencM of tho Way It la Exarclaod In Evaryday Ufa. A surface motorman awakened a train o f thought not long ago when he stopped his car shortly at a cross ing. There was apparently no one there waiting to get on. A woman was standing on the curb, not even looking toward the m oving car, yet when the car came to this corner the motorman brought it to a stand still, and, sure enough, the woman hurried out o f the crowd and clam bered aboard. “ How’d you know that woman wanted to get on ?” he waa asked as the controller was thrown on again and the car started with a jerk. “ Just felt it,” he laughed; “ didn’t know it. A fellow ’ s affected that way in this business. How many people nowadays signal the m otor- man when they want him to stop? It’s some sort o f power, I guess, that tells me. I can’t explain just what it ia.” This patient knight o f the m otor voiced one o f the most bewildering psychological truths found in the entire downtown propaganda, where about ¿very nip and tuck o f the hu man habit, custom or peculiarity finds a shining plaice. Taking m et ropolitan humanity aa a whole, there are few who do not use intuition in the course o f the average workday. A certain teller in a large Chicago bank recognizes intuition as a faith ful and valuable ally, one that can be put to good useq, though one that is not infallible. A “ J . Rufus Wal lingford” may stroll into this man’ s bank, toaa a thousand dollar check over the counter in a blase manner, and som ething may "te ll” the teller that the check isn’t any-good. — " I just feel it,” he explains this strange power o f intuition. And the check may be turned down, or, on the other hand, some thing may “ tell” the cashier that the man ia good— he just feels it. Scoffers are referred to the aver age policeman. Does the city detective always know a crook when he plucks him out o f a downtown crowd, when the man’s back perhaps is turned to the officer o f the law ? H e feels that the shoulders and neck ahead o f him— the head crown ed with a battered derby— is wanted. O ften he does not know the crook’s name and could not tell why he ar rests him until the man ia hauled back to the station and his photo ia found gracing the lim elight in the rogues’ gallery some m onths or years back, the intuition in a case o f this/sort being extrem ely strong, as records prove amply. Policem en and detectives are sup posed to study the photograph, the terse history and "story” o f each crook as they are placed on the city’ s police records. We kno^r that the m ind o f m ortal man cannot car ry all o f this data in his mind, which is a good indication o f the wonder fu l pow er o f intuition which yrill draw the detective to the crook like a m agnet from among a crowd o f a thousand people.— Chicago Tribune. Wigs In Colonial Days. T he first colonists wore often their own natural hair. The cava liers had long and perfumed love locks, and though the Puritans had been called “ Roundheads” their hair waved also over the band or collar and often hung over the shoulder. T he Quakers also wore long locks, aa the portrait o f W illiam Penn shows, but by 1675 wigs had become com m on enough to be denounced by the Massachusetts governm ent and to be preached against by many ministers. The care o f these wigs was a great item, often £10 a year fo r a single wig, and some gen tlem en owned eight or ten wigs. L ittle children wore them. The Massachusetts Gazette in l*f54 chronicles the fact o f a runaway negro slave who wore a curl o f hair tied around his head with a string to im itate a wig. On a tree close to a house, within a short distance o f a river or canal, there was a storks’ nest, with young ones. The ro o f o f the house caught fire one day, and, though the flames did n ot actually reach the tree, the beat became scorching. So the m other stork flew down id the water, got into it and drenched her breast; then, returning to her young, she spread the mass o f cool, wet feathers all over them. This she repeated over and over again, flying to the river, going down into the water and returning, her plumage drenched with wet. And thus the To Froat ^ Window. nest was saved, and the tender nes A frosted window is often a con tlings were preserved alive until the venience. It admits light, but not fire nad been got under and all was sunshine, and it is, o f course, im- safe. The truth o f this remarkable lible to see through the glass story was vouched fo r by m ore than >m the outside. Any window may jne eyewitness.— ComhiU Magazine. be frosted by making a strong solu tion o f epsom salts in hot water Order In the House. and applying to the inside o f the The French parliament was not glass with a brush. Care should be always fam ous for the excitement taken to cover the glass com pletely and turm oils o f its debates. In the and not to allow the liquid to old m onarchist days, before the rev When cool the salts will be deposit olution, the sessions o f the old par ed on the glass in crystalline form , liament were exceedingly dull and giving a beautiful frosted effect. prosy affairs. One day, it is related, a noble count was trying to make a Don’t Neglect Headache. speech, and a very prosy speech it “ In young children headache was, while all the other members should never be neglected,” says were either chatting or resting the Hospital. “ It is a more signifi Presently the president o f the body cant sign in them than in older per rapped slightly with his baton. sons and may indicate the onset o f “ I f those gentlemen who are talk acute or dangerous disease. In ing to each other,” said he, "would some instances it is the result o f ed kindly make no more noise than ucational pressure. Many an adult those gentlemen who are snoring it suffers from headaches as the result would he much appreciated bv those o f premature strain on the brain gentlem en who are trying to listen.” daring school lifs.” The shillalah is not a mere stick picked up for a few pence or cut casually out o f the com m on hedge. Like the Arab mare, it grows to ma turity under the fostering care o f its owner. The shillalah, like the poet, is bom , not made. Like the poet, too, 111 to 115 W . First street it is a choice plant, and its growth Phone, Black 93 is slow. Am ong 10,000 blackthorn shoots perhaps not m ore than one- is destined to becom e famous, but ons o f the 10,000 sppean o f singu E. A . ELLIS lar fitness. As soon as discovered it G e n e r a l C o n t r a c t o r is marked and dedicated fo r future service. • Everything that m ight Septic tanks built after the hinder its developm ent is removed, latest approved methods. and any offshoot o f the main stem Sewer and Tile W ork. WeU Digging is skillfully cut off. W ith constant care it grows thick and strong upon Yamhill County Abstract Co. a bulbous root that can be shaped into a handle. The only Abstract Books in INTUITION. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK O F NEW BERG with the assurance that invitea the business O ur Resources and Facilitie A R E O F TH E BEST O ur Policy to extend to our patrons the fullest accommodations that their standing and responsibility will permit, and in all particulars to conserve their interests; to exercise the same painstaking care and attention to all matters entrusted, to our care, whether great or small. President Vice President L. G. Kneeshaw, Cashier A . C. Seely, A sst Cashier Kienle & Sons Post Cards and Albums Ours ia the store recognized as carrying the largest and most complete line o f Poet Cards. Remember we make a specially o f the 1 cent card«. F A N C Y C H IN A Before buying your Fancy China we ask your careful ita- I spection o f our line. Assortment the largest, Prices the low est C. B. CUMMINGS T H E H O U S E F U R N IS H E R W e hare in stock a complete line o f Furniture, Paint, W all Paper, Picture Moulding, Glass, Heaters and Ranges. W e are alw ays pleased to show our goods. G B- Cummings, Newberg, Or. A 32 Candle power Mazda lamp uses 40 watte per hoar. A 32 Candle power old style incandescent uses 112 watts per hoars. To ran then 1000 hoars means ¡da— Old Style— 40 112 1000 1000 112000 watts 10c per 1000 watts 24.00000 211.20000 30c cost o f lamp $4.80 cost o f light fo r 1000 hoars 211*00 cost o f light fo r 101 Saving $11A0 minus $4.80 leaves $6.70 Sick Room Necessities I can supply at lowest prices Hot W ater B ottles, Fountain S y ringes and Bulb S yrin ges, bed Pans, Ice Caps, Air Cushions Fever Therm om eters, M edicine Tubes, Surgical D ressings, and all other sick room requisites. My prescription work is given the most careful attention and nothing but the best o f drugs and chem icals are used. A full and complete line o f School books and School Supplies and L ow n ey’ s Candles, Perfum es and T oilet W aters. Send, or telephone, or write, or come—the price will be the same anyway— always the same. Lynn B. Ferguson Preemption I /