Newberg graphic. (Newberg, Or.) 1888-1993, November 16, 1911, Page 7, Image 7

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    rtlE NEWBERU GRAPHIC
A NEIGHBORLY WOMAN.
H*r L ittU Acts of Klndnooo Were Not
Always Approclatsd.
On our entire stock of Ladies and Misses Tailor made Suits and Coats. Owing to the warm
weather in October, that is usually our largest selling month for Suits and Coats, we find
ourselves with twice the amount of stock we should have in November. In order to re­
duce our Coats and Suits to the present required stock we find only one way to do it, and
that is to sacrifice our PROFITS and force the goods-out as rapidly as possible.
SU IT8
$12.50 Suits now selling at
$16.50
44 “
“
$
20.00
$60.00
“
44
•*
44
“
44............. 40.00
$ 7.50 Coats now selling a t............ $ 5.85
$10.00
“
“
“ ..............$ 7.90
$12.50
......................... ...............$ 9.85
$15.00
“
44
44
$11,68
$20.00
44 44
44
$16.50
$25.00
44 44
44
$19.88
$30.00
......................................... $24.00
Odds aod Ends in Coats and Suits, mostly
one of a kind, to close out at 1-2 Price.
Blues and odd sixes at leas discount. Big discount on all our Drees Shirts. Just received a new line of Rain
Coats at popular prices. Alterations free of eharge as usual. At OME-THIRD LESS, our entire stock of
this season’s millinery. HOW ABOUT YOUR PALL SUIT AND OVERCOAT?
Select it from our stock. We carry the largest and most up-to-date clothing stock on the west side. We
invite your inspection. Suits and Overcoats for men and young men from $ 7 .6 0 T O $30.00.
Boys Dress and School Suits from $ 2 .5 0 to $ 6 .6 0 . Just arrived— a shipment of the popular Tan and
Black Shoes for Ladies in 18 buttons. Satisfaction guaranteed. If you are satisfied tell your friends, if not
tell us. C H 1N A W A R E T O B E G IV E N A W A Y W IT H P U R C H A S E R .
—
D. M. N A Y B E R G E R , M cM IN N V ILLE
SUCCESSOR TO R. JACOBSON A CO.
ROMANCE OF A FORGER.
M. J. Nash Co
Commences Nov. 10
Every article in this store to
be sold at cost for eleven
days. Don’t forget ¡the date
and place.
M .J. Nash Co
The Newberg
Transfer Co.
Plumbingl
Office phone Black 100, or
residen ce ( Black 12S
hones \ Red 79
ill up (Red 80
LET US FIGURE WITH YOU
is prepared to transfer
your goods anywhere,
any place any time.
Prices Reasonable
á
Riohard W . Vaughn, the Original Bank­
note Forger.
“My, but I’m glad to get a «eat!**
sighed the little elderly woman who
had just come aboard at Dulverton.
“When 1 saw there was a teach­
ers’ excursion today, I moat gave up
toming. Only for losing a week al­
ready with the weather, and the
latest fashions ont this fortnit, I
wouldn’t have risked it. 1 dress-
make over to the Corners, and I
always go up to town twice in the
season to see the styles.”
Her eye wandered to her seat-
mate’s throat, and. her tone of gen­
ial- chattiness changed -to one of
apology.
"I don’t know’s I ought to men­
tion it,” she remarked, “but your
collar’s kind o’ rix up to one side,
and there’s a streak o’ neck show­
ing. I got a pin if you’d like one—
“You needn’t to thank me. My I
I’m relieved you didn’t get huffy.
Why, a woman I told once, coming
<»ut o’ church, her petticoat was
lagging below her dress—and I
offered her a pin, too—just turned
round on me an’ snapped, 4How
much do you s’pose I’m likely to
meditate on the sermon now ?
You’ve spoiled my Sunday!’ Well,
I don’t see as I was responsible for
her piety any more’n for her petti­
coat. Do you?
“And then that last time I came
down on the train with Mis’ Tor-
rington! Sister said she hoped I’d
got a lesson that time to last met
All the same, I can’t see as I didn’t
do the right thing. If you‘d sat
behind a woman with a bat on her
hat, wouldn’t you have told her?
“I suppose the critter was in the
tunnel and flew in the window go­
ing through. Anyway, when we
same out, there he was, clinging
head down to a big stiff eagle quill
she wore, and she never knowing.
“I didn’t speak at once. I was
remembering the woman with the
sagging petticoat. But when folks
begun to stare and giggle and point
—well, I told her.
“Thank me 1 That woman grab­
bed off her hat, with a screech like
the locomotive, and pitched it into
my lap, bat and all! And I’m no
way partial to bats myself, if I
didn’t yell.
44'You shouldn’t have told me
sudden, you horrid woman!’ she
said, sobbing and working herself
up more an’ more hystericky.
'Don’t you know you might kill a
high strung person with nerves,
In 1757 a merchant in London
by the name of Bliss advertised for
a clerk and selected from the appli­
cants Richard W. Vaughn, who,
after a time, succeeded in winning
the confidence of his employer to
sach an extent that the clerk was
taken to the merchant’s home and
made a welcome visitor. Mr. Bliss
had a young sister, with whom Mr.
Vanghn immediately fell in love,
and as his application for the posi­
tion of brother-in-law was of much
more consequence than his former
one for clerkship his past record
was carefully searched, and it was
found that he had met with s dis­
astrous- failure in business some
years previous and consequently
was a bankrupt, with many liabil­
ities and unpaid debts. He was told
that he could never be accepted as
a suitor for the young lady’s hand
until everything he owed had been
paid in full. He seemed discour­
aged at this decision and expressed
the opinion that the task was im­
possible, but in a short time he re­
turned to his ladylove’s family with
the happy intelligence that he had
fallen neir to a large property and
could more than liquidate all liis
debts. He showed a number of
banknotes in proof of his assertion
and actually gave Mias Bliss five
new twenty pound notes. *
About this time the authorities
at the Bank of England were much
troubled by the appearance of a
few forged notee. With little diffi­
A Diet ef Dahlias.
culty detectives traced them to By a . carious
horticultural irony
Richard Vaughn. He admitted his
dahlia haa a dreadfully prosaic
guilt. It was attempted at his trial the
parentage. It has beca developed
to prove he had not meant to put from
Mexican tubers introduced
them in circulation, but only to win about the
120
ago by the Swedish
a wife with them. This defense, naturalist years
Dr.
Dahl
for the purely
however, was useless, as he had commercial purpose of
supplanting
passed them. He was found guilty or supplementing the potato.
They
of the crime of forgery, which in did not “catch on,” and the dahlia
those days was a capital offense, diah soon disappeared from British
and he paid the penalty of his mis- dinner tables, but our gardener; at
once perceived the great potentiali­
ties of the flower and proceeded to
produce the double dahlia and other
lelightful floral fantasies. The tu­
bers of the dahlia, too acrid for our
insular taste, are still eaten in some
parts of France.—Westminster Ga-
Nails Easy
That is what the contractor or, (one who knows)
says about our
2/eiiow ¿fiir jCumber
Ask for it and you get what you ask for.
Our mill work is excellent and our deliveries prompt.
Give us a chance to quote you prices on your house
bill complete.
Phone«: Office, White 28; Mill, White 84
C. B. CUMMINGS
T H E H O U S E F U R N IS H E R
We have in slock a complete line of Furniture,
Paint, Wall Paper, Picture Moulding, Glass,
Heaters and Ranges. We are always pleased to
show our goods.
C. B. Cummings, Newberg, Or
Quality! Service! Price!
These three
That’s w h a t makes
our G ro c e ry Grow
O. M. W E L C H & C O
The Electric
Carpet Sweeper
Weight 10 Ibs^ runs on wheels. No dust.
Takes dirt out of your carpet.
Sick Room Necessities
I can supply at lowest prices Hot Water B etties, Fountain Sy­
ringes and Bulb Syringes, bed Pans, Ice Cape, Air Cushions,
Fever Thermometers, Medicine Tubes. Surgical Dressings, and
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 aad Toilet W aters. Send, or
telephone, or write, or come—the price will be the same anyway—
always the same.
**N« Lie Can Live Forever.”
Starvation haa been known
among the French commonalty be­
fore this—known and familiar. Did
we not see them in the year 1775
presenting, in sallow faces, in
KEENEY &
wretchedness
and raggedness, their
Taylors and Cleaners
petition
of
grievances
and for an-
802 1-2 First S t Phone Black 32
a brand new gallows
No Emperor—either of a forty feet high ? Hunger and dark­
through long years!
People or of Finance—can ness Where
this end? In the
buy better food than we abyss, one will
may prophesy, whither
sell you, at prices you usu­ all delusions are, at all moments,
G e n e ra l C o n tra c to r
traveling, where thia delusion has
ally
pay
for
good
things.
now arrived, for if there be a
Septic tanks built after the
faith from of old it is this, as we
latest approved methods.
often repeat—that no lie can live
8ewer and Tile Work. Well Digging
forever. The very truth has to
change its vesture from time to
J.
L.
VanBlaricom
time and be born again. But all
Yamhill County Abstract Co.
lies
have the sentence of death
J. H. GIBSON, Mgr.
written down against them in
heaven’s chancery itself and, slow­
Ths only Abstract Books in
Try
the
Oregon
Semi-Weekiy
ly
or fast, advance incessantly to­
Yamhill County
ward
their hour.—Carlyle, “The
and Newberg Graphic
French
Revolution."
McMtmmuJL •
O bboom Journal
one year for $2L00.
Cuts Easy
think,” said he, “that it will take
me about two weeks, but I’m afraid
it’s going to take you about four
years.” ______
Lynn B. Ferguson Pr—cnption Druggist!
Th e Parable of the Pabblaa.
Once upon a time a very wise lady
w a chicken eat a pebble. Then
the wise lady told what she had
seen, with additions.
“A strict pebble diet is the only
The Newberg Manufacturing and
Construction Co.
For the Best Prices on the Best Windows, Doors, Inter­
ior and Exterior Finish, Mouldings, Building Stone,
Cabinet Work, Store Fixtures and General Mill Work