me n ë w b e r ij q r a p h ic TUBERCULOSIS GERMS. ~ ~ M. J. Nash Co, Look (or something speci­ a l on sale e v e r y d a y . W e carry a fo il line of a ll leather shoes. Pacific College NEW BERG, OREGON \ Has special advantages for giving a liberal education under the best Christian influences. v). Increased Faculty Splendid New Buildings New Courses / Additional Equipment f f ¿Setter than College, Academy Biblical Department School of Music Boarding Halls S ie st JÎdvan tages, j C o w C ost Fall Term OpenedSep.25 For further information call on or address LEVI T . P E N N IN G T O N , Prest. N EW B E R G , O R E G O N < 00 66: The Arm or T hat Repels Them le We* van of Freeh Air. Haw Technicalities Wara Avoided In tha Courts. Although there ere many things th at we do not know about con­ sumption, or tuberculosis, there are some th a t we do snd a few th a t we are in the act of learning. We do not know, for example, what make# for susceptibility and what for immunity. Strong and robust persons are sometimes stricken down with it; invalids and convalescents from other diseases are no more susceptible to it than are other people, and it is possible to live for an entire lifetime in the condition known as ‘‘rundown” or “weak” without becoming tnbercn- lona. People still speak of consumption as “inherited,” but it is not inher­ ited. A child may be born with a certain tendency to it, but if proper measures are taken early enough and kept up steadily snd long enough this tendency can'be over* come. A child whose parents be­ fore him and their parents before them, perhaps for generations back, have been poor breathers will prob­ ably inherit a small, meager chest and will therefore be the natural victim of the consumption germ as loon as it reaches him. T hat child will have to be taught to breathe. The tendency to pigeon breast can be overcome and a narrow chest de­ veloped to normal capacity, but to do this the child most be kept con­ stantly in good air and taught how to develop and use the lungs. A pigeon breasted child who is being brought up on the coddling process —oversheltered, overfed and over­ clothed—is in ss much danger as if he lived under the famous sword hanging from a hair. Another long lived fallacy, which is a great pet with many people, is that other diaeaaea “ run into” con­ sumption. A man cornea down with an attack of typhoid fever or pneu­ monia. After the attack is over his convalescence is alow and doubtfnl. Finally unmistakable signs of tuber­ culosis appear, and he says, “I had pneumonia, and it ran into con­ sumption.” B at if he had been ex­ amined before the pneumonia started he would have been found to be already consumptive. In fact, it would really be more sensible to say th a t his consumption “ran into pneumonia.” I t moat be remembered th at con­ sumption may be present a long time before the germs begin to appear in the expectoration. In spite of hygienic precautions, we most all come in contact with the germs of consumption many times in a lifetime. These germs we shall either breathe in or swallow. We cannot escape them. B at there is an armor that ia germ proof. I t is an invisible armor, woven of oxy gen—fresh air.—Youth’s Compan ion. '■>- / . The bar was an open profession in ancient Rome. The litigant en­ joyed the utmost latitude .in the choice of an advocate, whose right to represent his client in court was fully conceded. Slavish imitators of the Greeks in literature snd art, the Romans asserted their entire independence in the domain of law. Their innovations had the stamp of originality. But these did not corn- pris rise any close connection between bar and bench. It is noteworthy that during a very long period in the history of Roman law there was no exact counterpart of our judge. The magistratus was s public offi­ cial charged with the administra­ tion of law. The judex was a spe­ cies of referee appointed by the magistrate to bear and report upon a particular case. Then there was sn arbiter who acted alone or with others in arbitration cases (arbi- tria). Finally there were Recupera­ tors who assisted in international questions. The hearing before these various types of judex was called the jndi- cum, as distinguished from jus, the hearing before the magistrates properly so called. The names of citizens qualified for serving ss jndices were inscribed in s public record known ss the album. More­ over, litigants had the right of ob­ jection to s particular judex. Not only so, but this right wss extended during many centuries to criminals, who were tried before centumvirs and decemvirs, sitting on the per­ manent tribunals. If the Roman Bill Sikes never thought of putting forward the demand of his English congener th at “we all ought to have a voice in making the laws as we suffer by,” yet we may be well as­ sured that he would not fail to take a sporting chance, make a prime fa­ vorite of the judge who was most reversed on appeal and strenuously object to the others. The point which calls for our special attention is that none of the men who discharged the various ju­ dicial or semijudicial functions de­ scribed was drawn, except in most exceptional cases, from the advo­ cate class. Nor is it possible to conceive any arrangement better calculated than that in force in Rome to exclude their narrow, pro­ fessional technicality from the set­ tlement of civil cases. The presid­ ing magistrates of the great crim­ inal tribunals were seldbm or never men who practiced at the bar. Even in later times, when functions of magistratus and judex were merged in one official, there is evidence that the bench was recruited from the bar more frequently than, be­ fore.—Exchange. He Plaoe F ar It. \ ! Hot Lake Sanatorium H ot Lake, Oregon A Health Resort Natural Hot Mineral Bathe cure Rheumatism, Stomach, Blood and Kidney Disorders. Write for Booklet. Hot Lake Sanatorium, ' Walter N. Pierce, President. • M I S I I » i S S S e > i l » » > | » >M M « è M W N m » l * M U M : A Hello to Black 114 f i - Will bring you what you need In * Good Groceries at the right price ; ¡1 -------------- -------------------------------------------------------------- ------------------------:! The Hitchen Mercantile Co. P a r lo r P h a r m a c y Q U A L IT Y S T O R E OTIR MOTTO: PURITY, PROMPTNESS, ACCURACY T h e P u rest a n d Beet D rugs O nly U sed in O u r P rescription D e p a rtm e n t We may not be the nearest druggist to you but we’ll try to come the nearest to please you. School Supplies and Fine Stationery E. W . H O D SO N We Never Sleep Registered Pharmacist somomomomoeomomKwicioeomciomoeoiomomoiomoioii ROMAN JUSTICE There is s Cleveland individual who appears to have a mania for collecting all sorts of strange facts in science, history, and sU that. Neither his friends nor his family, however, has the slightest sym pathy with him in this fad. A neighbor of his on East Seventy- third street tells ns th at he laid down his paper the other evening and said, “Here’s an odd fact.” “ What?” asked his wife wearily and mechanically. “I t is stated here that at the rate of 1,000 gallons a second it would take 12,000,000 years to pump the ocean dry.” “T hat’s wrong,” stated the lady unexpectedly. “ What do yon know about it ?” “I know it conldn't be done, even if it conld,” she went on. “ Granting that anybody was powerful enough and fool enough to get away with it, where would they put that wa­ ter?”—Cleveland Plain Dealer. Life of tha S«a. PRICE’S CASH GROCERY THE PLACE TO BUY Our stock ia all new and up-to-date. Fruits and Vegetables th at are strictly fresh and first class. Try our Daily Bread. Hard wheat flour sold under an absolute guarantee—if not satisfactory your money cheerfully refunded. Our Motto: Courteous treatm ent, prompt delivery Cell or Phone Blue 77 C. B. CUMMINGS. THE HOUSE FURNISHER We have in stock a complete line of Furniture, Paint, Wall Paper, Picture Moulding, Glass, Heaters and Ranges. We are always pleased to show our goods. C. B. Cum m ings, Newberg, Or. Quality! Service! Price! These three That’s what makes our Grocery- Grow i O. M. W E L C H & C O . I • *• mm .- Keeping Their Teeth. “Would you think,” mused the dentist, “th at any one would want his teeth after they had been ailed? It’s a fact, though, that ots of people do. Whether they keep them to hand down to their children or whether once carrying them home they take them out and look at them occasionally with great interest I can't imagine; but, however it is, they do ask for them. At first 1 was astonished. Now I look upon it merely as a matter of course, and I keep little envelopes to slip the teeth in when people ask for them. I must use at least a hundred of these little envelopes a month. Men and women alike do this, the women, I think, to a little greater extent than the men. Of course any number of women want the teeth of their very little chil­ dren. I can understand that, but when a woman or a man turned forty carries off, say, three bad teeth th at have juBt been extracted I simply wonder.” — New York Press. ______________ Th e Electric Carpet Sweeper E W eight 10 Ibs^ runs on wheels. No dust. Takes dirt out of your carpet YAMHILL ELECTRIC CO O . Sick Room Necessities The PaMiona. We say of a man who has no will mastery, “He is ruled by his pas­ sions.” They govern him, not he them. Centuries ago an Arab wrote, “Passion ia a tyrant which slays those whom it governs.” I t is like fire, which once thoroughly kin­ dled can scarcely be quenched, or like the torrent, which when it is swollen can no longer be restrained with its banks. Call him not a prisoner who has been put in fet­ ters by his enemy, but rather him whose own passions overpower him to destruction. Vegetation is everywhere present in the sea in such abundance that, although it consists of microscopic plants, it may be thought of as ex­ ceeding in quantity the vegetation of the land. The oceans are vast meadows, and even those parts farthest from land have an abun­ dance of animal life, whose exist­ ence depends upon sea vegetation. Sea life cannot exist without oxy­ gen, snd the presence of such life at considerable depths is due to vertical circulation of the water, Oliva* In Spain. carrying oxygen down. Where such Vertical circulation does not exist, About 3,200,000 acres are given as in the Black sea, no life is found up to the cultivation of olives in at great depths. Spain. Eating olives are delivered dry to the factories, where they are soaked in large vats with a solution Knew Their Traits. Old Gentleman (in the park)— of caustic soda until the solution What are you doing, my little dear? has penetrated to the stones. After Little Girl (with doll)—I ’m giv­ a washing in fresh water the olives are put into hogsheads of brine for ing dolly a drink. “ Giving dolly a drink, eh? But two months of fermentation. When the water is running down all over they are bottled new brine is used, but the output from the factories her pretty dress." “^es, she slobbers a good deal. is usually in hogsheads holding 160 All babies do.”—New York Weekly. gallons. J I can supply at lowest prices Hot Water Bottles, Fountain S y­ ringes and Bulb Syringes, bed Pans, Ice Caps, Air Cushions, Fever Thermometers, Medicine Tubes, Surgical Dressings, snd all other sick room requisites. My prescription work is given the most careful attention and nothing but the best of drugs and chemicals are used. A full and complete line of School books and School Supplies and Lowney's Candles, Perfumes end Toilet Waters. Send, or telephone, or write, or come—the price will be the same anyway— always the same. Lynn B. Ferguson r : T h e Newberg M anufacturing and Construction Co. For the Beat Pricea on the Beat Windows, Doors, Inter­ ior* and Exterior Finish, Mouldings, Building Stone, Cabinet Work, Store Fixtures and General Mill Work ------------------------------------------------------------------------ f f f t t