Newberg graphic. (Newberg, Or.) 1888-1993, November 16, 1911, Page 6, Image 6

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    THE M W BEWG URAPHIC
D r. C. A. Eldridg©
, L DENTIST
CAREFUL WITH DRUGS.
ELECTRICITY.
Haw Praacriptiona P er E ngland’« Royal
Fam ily Ara Handlad.
Two Kind«, N atural and Therm al, That
P u i i l t Sci«nti«ta.
Members of the royal family have
occasionally
to take medicine, and
^Office over First National
their medicine, although it may be
Bank
the same as that supplied by ordi­
nary
doctors and chemists to the av­
Phone White 3-1
erage man and woman, is dispensed
in a manner which makes it impos­
sible to be tampered with until it is
placed in the hands of the royal
personage for whom it is intended.
Each royal dispenser, and there
are several, has a room set apart
especially for dispensing medicine
for royalty. When a prescription is
brought in by a royal messenger the
dispenser himself or his assistant
takes the date and the time of its
receipt The prescription is then
passed into the private room. Here
are glass cupboards, securely locked,
containing the drugs which are used
in making the medicines for mem­
LITTLEFIELD & ROMIG bers of the royal family.
After th e prescription has been
PHYSICIANS ê t SURGEONS
entered in a book (each member
of the royal family has his or her
prescription book, which is pro­
Office in First N st’l Bank Building vided with a lock and kept in a safe)
the work of dispensing is done by
Phon , Blndk 1
the dispenser and his assistant. The
cupboards are unlocked and the
drugs wanted brought out and
placed on a table. Each drug be­
fore being used is analyzed and the
necessary quantities weighed and
measured on two or three different
pairs of scales to insure exactness.
The water used ia of the highest
state of purity, and every possible
care is taken to keep it in that state
while the medicine is being made
up.
1
When the medicine is finally bot­
tled the names and quantities of
DK. G. E. STUAKT
every ingredient contained therein
P h ysicia n & S u rgeon are placed upon the label, together
with directions as to taking written
□ ueaic Diterora • Specialty. Calk promptly
in
English and Latin. The bottle,
--------
«aewrrnrl night ot day»
, -
after being corked and sealed, is
laced in a strong case, which is
a*t Draptore
Badi P im a
Oftce over Fe
E locked. This case' has two keys, one
being retained by the dispenser.and
Dr. Allee C. B ow en
Dr. H . D. Bowers
the other being in the possession of
D rs. B ow ers & B ow ers the royal personage for whom the
medicine is intended. A trusted
O S T E O P A T H IC P H Y S IC IA N S
royal servant or a king’s messenger
G raduates of th e A. & O.. K lrk srllle, Vo.
A veer’s post-graduate work in Cali­ conveys the case and its contents to
fornia just completed. Women’s
the royal residence, where it is un­
Diseases a Specialty.
locked and the bottle of medicine
Office, upstairs opposite postoffice.
examined and the particulars upon
Phones: Office, White 75; Res.----------
the label checked by the royal phy­
sician in attendance.—London Tit-
Bits.
______________
«91
L
»
_
J
DR. THOS. W. HESTER
Physician and Surgeon ;
" Fill Your Lungs.
There ia a kind of electricity that
puzzles scientists, which may be
termed natural electricity, but it
has nothing to do with either light­
ning or the well known cat’s fur
variety. One set of observations
was made on the human eye with
its optic nerve and the following
results obtained:
I t was found that when one end
of a wire was placed on the front
part of the eye and the other end
on the optic nerve a current of
electricity passed from one to the
other; also that the size of this cur­
rent varied with the amount of
light that entered the eye and fell
on the retina. Notice that this ia
a current of electricity, and not the
static kind, as is that of the light­
ning and the rubbed fur. Thia
same result was obtained when one
end was placed on a freshly cut end
of any nerve and the other end on
the outside of the nerve.
Facts like these have caused
many scientists to regard the body
as a complicated producer of elec­
tricity, the nerves, like the insulat­
ed wires to and from our galvanic
batteries, serving to conduct the
electricity to and from the great
central nervous organ, the brain.
Several years ago Dr. Siemens,
in a lecture given before the Royal
society, tried to imitate the eye in
this experiment. Crystalline sele­
nium is a better conductor of eleo-
tricity under the influence of light
than it is in the dark. Its conduc­
tivity likewise varies for the differ­
ent kinds of light—red, blue, green,
etc. In Siemens’ artificial eye,
therefore, the retina was represent­
ed by a thin plate of selenium, and
the source of electricity was an or­
dinary battery.
On opening the eyelids of this
artificial eye and admitting light
from a white illuminated screen a
strong deflection of the galvanom­
eter needle was observed. A black
screen gave hardly any deflection,
a blue one a greater and a red a
much greater, but still short of that
reduced by the reflected white
igfat. The eye was thus sensitive
to light and color, and an imagina­
tive scientist would not scruple to
look upon te galvanometer aa a
kind of brain, the wires and battery
as the nerves and body of an arti­
ficial organism entirely under his
control.
While it is seen that all Uving
animals can come under this head
as actual producers of electricity,
there are two animals that can pro­
duce enough electricity at will to do
considerable damage—the torpedo
and the electric eel.
One other kind of electricity that
is a riddle so far is that which is
produced directly from heat and
called thermal electricity. If any
two dissimilar metals are joined at
both ends and one junction heated,
a current will pass. If the same
junction is cooled, a current will
pass in the opposite direction. One
of the greatest problems of modern
physics is to get a practical way to
accomplish this in great quantities
so it may be applied to engineering.
—New York Tribune.
E
Breathe more. Breathe deeply.
Breathe freely. Why don’t we take
Office in Dixon Building
, i more of this vital power into our
being? We must if our lives are
NEWBERG - - OREGON ; \ to be full and vigorous. Fill your
lungs full. Fill the upper part.
Fill the lower part. Now be sure
you cannot get another bit of air
D r . D . H . K a n c l e anywhere. Slowly and steadily ex-
lale.
Chiropractor
Whenever you are outdoors do
Nerve and Spine Specialist
it, walking to and from the office.
Get up from your sewing and go
Scientific massage given
out on the porch and try it. When
Cor. 1st and Edwards Phone Black 0
yon feel nervous try it. When
things get tangled up and yon are
becoming confused try it. If you
feel cross try it. In short, when
you feel the need of vitality fill
Dentist
your lungs and take it. Control
Phone’ Office White 22 Res. White 8 the exhalation, and if you persist
you will find restlessness, worry and
Newberg, Oregon
A Typographic*! T ragedy.
impatience will lose their grip and
“You have some professional
newer power will possess your be­ humorists working on your lino­
ing.
A . E. W IL S O N
type machines, haven’t you?” asked
God’s
gift,
fresh
air,
plenty
of
it!
the poet.
O p t ic ia n
“Haven’t noticed that any of
How to H ong ■ Horsoahoo.
them have a failing that way,” an­
Eyes examined and glasses made
Of superstitions we have heard swered the editor.
to fit
much.
Now, it will be remembered
“ Well, you’re a poor observer.
Phone Blue 38
202 First St.
that there is one common meeting Do you read your own paper?”
point among the credulous of all na­
“Occasionally.”
tions—in Europe at any rate. Ev­
“Did you read my poem, ‘To
W . W. Hollingsworth A Son erybody who believes in lack a t all Agatha,’
in yesterday’s issue?”
believes
in
the
luck
of
the
horse­
“N-no.”
Funeral Directors A Embalmers
shoe. But did it ever strike you
‘1 thought not. In the poem I
Calls Answered Day or Night
that there ia a right and wrong way wrote a line which read, ‘I love you
to hang a horseshoe? Yon often better than I love my life.’ ”
Lady Assistant
in England find it hung or nailed
Both Phones
“That was a neat line.”
to the door with the ends pointing
“And one of your linotype hu­
Newberg,
Ore.
downward, but in Ireland, where morists made it read, T love you
superstition is more reasonable, this better than I love my wife.’ ”
ia never so. There they always
“Er”—
TTOBNBT-AT-LAW
hang the horseshoe with the ends
“Exactly—my wife. And my wife,
pointing upward, as otherwise your not being acquainted with the fail­
CLARENCE BUTT
Will practice in all the courts of the luck would run out, don’t you see? ings of these key thumpers, thinks
stole. Special attention given to pro­ —London Chronicle.
the poem was printed exactly as it
bate work, the writing of deeds, mort­
was written.”___________
gages, contracts and the drafting of all
Mi«—d
Hi«
Only
C
han—.
legal papers.
H ard to Handl«.
There once lived a woman who
Newberg, Oregon.
O m cB—Second Floor
“This book,” remarked the house
never gave her husband a chance to
Bank of Newberg Building.
say a word. The moment be opened to house merchant, as he dexterous­
his mouth she closed it with a tor­ ly insinuated one foot in the door­
M . W. Jon«*
S a r t o r i/ . n « g g rent of words. I t happened that he way and smiled pleasantly, “is well
fell sick when his wife was out of named T h e Mother’s Guide.’ With
V a n tel M l a n d H ighw ay E ngl m a tin g .
B xaw laatlona and K.porta. Land and
town, and before she could get home its aid you can bring up your chil­
Minarmi Horrara. Mapa. Plana and S to ri -
Aeatioaj
dren properly.”
death came and took him away.
His victim thoughtfully examined
“I would feel better about it,”
JO N E S A F L A G G
•he
is
still
saying
between
her
sobs,
the
binding and felt the weight of
CIVIL BNOINBERS
“if I could hare been with John the book. Then she gripped it by
MS
th e n he died. There must hava (he edge with her right hand and
■ e lf in a r llla I
lank B onding
been
some last words be wanted to brought it down, whack, on the
• V Inn r Ilia.
■ay to me.”
other.
To the astonished salesman she
appeared
trying to see how
W IL L IA M M. RAM SEY “Janet,” said an eminent scien­ convenient to it be
was to handle, but for
tist to his cook, “you have now been what purpose?
A ttora ey -a t-L a w
twenty yean in my service, and as a
T aon't think 111 take one,” she
MCMINNVILLE,
OREGON reward for your fidelity I have de­ remarked at lest. “I'm sure it’s no
termined to give your name to the better then the ordinary slipper!”
Ofltea In the Elsie Wright Building
beetle I recently discovered!”
—Pearson’s Weekly.
Third street
Dr. E. P.
«
HIS GUN MISSED FIRE.
All F u rn itu re Lines Complete
T h i W ay th« Old Min«r Accounted For
the Lucky Event.
L
The eastern man had asked the
old prospector a thousand questions,
minus one.
i.
“Do you believe in luck ?” he
queried when the prospector spoke
of the venturous character of pros­
pecting.
The gold hunter must have been
a Yankee, for he parried with an­
other question.
“Well, pardner,” he said, “sup­
pose you had a gun that you had
fired maybe a thousand times, a gun
that had never missed fire, never
failed you at no place in the road,
snd one day you aimed point blank
at the head of your best friend, be­
cause she ate too much, and pulled
the trigger, aud the gun missed fire;
the next second, the friend you had
intended to kill saved your own life
in a funny way. What would you
call that Y*
“Well, I’ll be hanged!” exclaimed
the eastern man. “You don’t look
like the man who would kill his beet
friend.”
The old fellow chuckled shrewd­
ly as he strode over to a chair. A
fine old female dog followed him
and lay down at his feet. Then the
easterner seated himself near by
and offered the miner a cigar. “Tell
it straight 1” he admonished.
“I was doing a little prospect­
ing,” said the old fellow, “in the
roughest country I ever saw and
had taken my dog with me. The
frost was just going out of the
ground, and there was some snow
in patches.
“I got to a place where the cliffs
looked good to me and started to
climb, but somehow I stuck my foot
into a narrow crevice between two
rocks and could not get it free any
way I tried. The ground was thaw­
ing, and I suppose I loosened the
rocks so that they slipped together.
“I had one small sandwich with
me, and I could reach a patch of
snow, so when I was exhausted I
got out my lunch and began to eat.
“The dog crept to my side and
begged so piteously that I started
to divide with her, and then the
thought struck me that I might be
imprisoned there for days before
any relief chanced that way. I di­
vided the little sandwich in eight
parts, and I ate one and gave one
to the dog. It soon began to snow
—the big, wet flakes you see in the
early spring—and the dog came to
me and cuddled down by my side,
looking as sympathetic as a woman.
She was trained to carry messages,
and I had some paper and a pencil
with me. I t began to turn cold. I
shivered and thought of how the
dog had saved a little girl’s life
once when she was lost, and I grew
so sorry—and tried to look it—that
I gave her the remainder of the
lunch. A dog starves harder than
a human.
“ After awhile I raised my gun
to put her out of her misery and
pulled the trigger, but the gun
didn’t go off, and at the next in­
stant the dog began barking furi­
ously, and I presently heard men
coming to my rescue. They had
been passing in the distance and
would not have seen me but for the
barking of the dog. Do yon believe
in lack?”
“But why didn’t you send your
faithful friend home with a mes­
sage? How do you account for the
failure of the gun ?”
“ Well, you see, I was posing in
front of a motion picture camera,
and th a t plot was old—the dog
messenger. And the gun wasn’t
loaded. The cartridge was blank.”
Then the eastern man looked like
the cartridge. — Chicago Record-
Herald. _____________
An Ey
F or Autom obiles.
In the crowd at the automobile
■how was a gentleman who had been
roing from ona exhibit to another
for two hours, trying to make up his
mind as to the particular make of
motorcar that best suited his re­
quirements. I t was not a question
of cost. He could afford to pay any
rice likely to be asked. Every car
iad some peculiar feature that rec­
ommended it, but the difficulty was
to find one that embodied all the
strong points. In this emergency
he chanced to spy an old acquaint­
ance.
“Hello, Rogers,” he said. “I ’m
having an awful time trying to
make a purchase I promised my
wife long ago th a t I would make.
Have you got a good eye for auto­
mobiles ?”
•
“I ought to have, Swigert,” an­
swered the man whom he addressed
as Rogers. T ’ve been dodging
them for years.”—-Youth’« Compan­
ion.
______________
•to w in g T hem Away.
“Don’t be selfish, Charlie! Let
your little brother play with your
marbles.”
“ He wants to keep therm”
“ Nonsense! I ’m sure he doesn’t.”
“But, mother, he does. He’s
•wallowed two already!”
Make Xmas Selection* Now
At.
% \ §
i
m
And let us hold your purchase for
you free of charge until you order
it delivered. A small payment
down will secure any article in
the house, and by purchasing now
you will avoid the annoyance of
holiday shopping. Our lines of
Furniture, Carpets, Rugs, Carpet
Sweepers, etc, were never so
fete, attractive and pretty
complet
as they are a t this moment snd
you would be hard to
if you
what
could not find j
wanted in our stock. The pi
are, if possible, more attractive
—they are so surprisingly low.
.¡s:
; W. W. Hollingsworth & Sons!
?
The Store of Quality.
600 First Street
Pacific College
N E W B E R G . O R EG O N
Has special advantages for giving a liberal education
under the best Christian influences.
Increased Faculty
/
Splendid New Buildings
New Courses
Additional Equipment
“ ¿/Setter than Suer*
College,
Academy
Biblical Department
School of Music
Boarding Halls
i/Sest jfd t/a n tag es, ¿Cow Cost
Fall Term Opened Sep. 25
»
For further information call on or address
LEVI T . P E N N IN G T O N . Prest.
N EW BERG, OREGON
\ H ot Lake Sanatorium
Hot Lake, Oregon
A Health Resort
[ N atural.H ot Mineral Baths
> cure Rheumatism, Stomach,
► Blood and Kidney Disorders.
Write for Booklet.
• Hot Lake Sanatorium,
'
Walter N. Pierce, President.
IA Hello to Black 114
Will bring you what you need In
Good Groceries at the right price
The Hitchen Mercantile Co.
w
»•••••••»»• •weeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee»
jParlor P h a r m a c y
Q U A L IT Y ST O R E
OUR MOTTO:
PURITY, PROMPTNESS, ACCURACY
The Purest and Best Drugs Only Used in Our
Prescription Department
We may not be the nearest druggist to you but w ell try to
come the nearest to please you.
School Supplies and Fine Stationery
E. W . H O D S O N
We Never Sleep
Registered Pharmacist
i