Image provided by: Newberg Public Library; Newberg, OR
About Newberg graphic. (Newberg, Or.) 1888-1993 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 25, 1913)
:■ * ■■■ / THK NRWBKRO GRAPHIC — ♦ ♦ »»♦ »♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ »g T T O R N K Y -A T -L A W CLARENCE BU TT W ill practice in all the court« o f the M a te . Special attention riven to pro b a te work, the writing o f deed«, mort- con tracta and the drafting o f all papera. Newberg, Oregon. O s n c x —Second Floor . Rank o f Newberg Building. i When Like Cures Like ■y T R O Y A L U B O N . C. R. CHAPIN LAWYER Practice in all c o u r t « ; Probate, Deeds, M ortgagee and all legal pa peas. A b stracts examined. exa DR. C. A. ELDR1EDGE DENTIST Office over First National Bank Phone White 3-1 DR. A M. DAVIS I D E N T I S T I OfVloe o ve r F a ra u s o n 'a D ru a S to re v P H O N E BLACK 3T , 2 I! J. C. PRICE i; ii DENTIST ii < ► u » l Office over U. S. Natl. Bank <' <! PhoneJBlack 171 I ; Dr. E. P. Dixon j| DENTIST ! I Phones Office, W hite 22; Rea. Black 90 ^ P I g Wp | <n,|MMM u n — mi ' Office phone Blue 171 Residence Phone Black 115 n « ♦CKBOWOWOWO^OWOWOWOWOWOWOBO B S M M M M S e SM M e e M S SS M \ j « j L ittlefield ft R om ig PHYSICIANS an d SURGEONS Office in First N at’ l Bank Bldg. Phone, Black 31 W W M W W m W JM M IM R | DR. THOS. W . HESTER f Physician and Surgeon Office in Dixon Building Office W K H . 22, R m . B ln . SO NEWBERG - - OREGON K m w •ae**aaea#*e******eeeaeaal iHHMHMssisaaaaaatraww H o u r « : 9 to 12 A . M . 2 to S R. M . O t h e r , by A p p o in tm e n t D r . K „ H . W ils o n Osteopattiic Physician&Obstetrician P h o n s s : O tfiM B la sk 111, R e s. Blua 5 9 Kdwards Bldg. Newberg, Ore. ► » » a * »»» OBOOOOOOOWOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOB Winter is Here If you need an Overcoat let MUELLER the TAILOR make it for you. «02 1-2 P in t Street Phone Black 32 ♦ oaoaoaoaoaoaoaoaoaoaoaoao DR. G . E. STUART Physician and Surgeon Ckrooic diaeua a »pedaity. Calli amwered promptly day or nigkt. Öfter: Room» I and , Gregory Building Readeace, Mato S t Phooe Red 2 107 96 «Ä A a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a A . E. W I L S O N O p t ic ia n Eyes examined and glasses made to f i t Phone Blue 88 202 Firat S t W . W . Hollingsworth & Son Fuñara! Directora & Embalasen CaDa Anawe-ed Day or Night la d y Aaeistanta. No extra chaige O B e e , W bíte 26 Res. Black M N a w b e rg . % O r«. Minna Reed almost ran down ths steps from the house bearing the sign “ Mme. Voirsi, Clairvoyant.” The lady’s communications had up set ail her preconceived plans and ideas. Her mother had always op- osed her trying anything o f the È ind, but when she saw the sign an overwhelming desire to inquire into things unknown had beset her. The rest o f the party had gone down to the beach, and after staying in her room at the summer hotel for an hour with a headache the had slip ped out to buy a fascinating kimono she hsd seen in a Japanese store the day before. The clairvoyant’s sign hsd caught her eye, and for a whole hour she had sat in the dark ened, stuffy little room with her nerves all at strained attention. She went back to her room and, walking straight to the dresser, looked regretfully at the picture o f a frank boyish face surrounded by a little plain gold frame. “ I never would have thought it,” she whispered. “ I thought you were the truest, noblest thing on earth. And she said the man with black eyes, now one of my circle o f ac quaintances, was deceitful to the core and that if I did not separate his path from mine he would prove the blighting sorrow o f my life. Jimmy, dear, it seems impossible to believe you could bring sorrow into any one’s life, hut it must have been you she meant, fo r you are the only man o f my acquaintance who has b-black eyes.” And, being only nineteen and believing she had corné face to face with thé big sor row of her life, she threw herself across the bed and sobbed because she felt that she must immediately take steps to separate Jimmy Kent’s path from hers— Jimmy,, who had lent her his red hall to play with the very first day she went to kindergarten. . James K en t, unconscious o f the heavy cloud o f suspicion hovering over him, came from his ooean swim and lay idly on the sand, hoping Minna would get over her headache and walk down to the beach. Final ly, sunburned and glowing, he went hack to the hotel and found her on the veranda, gazing listlessly at the sea. “ Is it as bad as all that, little girl? You are the most forlorn looking specimen I ever saw,” he said as he sat on the porch rail and eyed her commiseratingly. Minna, seeing the sympathy in his eyes, wished fervently that they were any other color than black. “ What on earth made you have black eyes, Jimmy? I dislike them so!” she said petulantly. Jimmy opened the offending orbs very wide in his surprise. “ By Jove, you are a queer one, Minna! You told me yesterday down on the beach that I had the most beautiful eyes you ever saw. Positively made me blush to know I was so beautiful. ’ Fraid to sleep in them last night lest I should spoil ’em. And now— Minna, you haven’t met any fellow with gray eyes, have you ?” he asked suspiciously. “ No, I haven’t,” indignantly, “ hut black eyes are treacherous— and— I never could trust them.” Whether they were treacherous or not was left an open question, but they certainly proved persua sive, and finally Jimmy was in pos session o f the whole story. “ Minna Reed, you ought to be ashamed o f yourself! Do I look like a blighting sorrow ?” mimicking her forlorn tone. “ I might be mis taken for a prizefighter,” exhibiting his muscular arm with pride, “ hut I ’m blamed if I’d know how to atari out in the blighting sorrow busi ness.” Minna, anxious to believe, still looked dubious. “ I f your eyes only weren’t black !’ * she sighed. “ Now, look here, my child. I’d get a special act o f congress to change them to suit you if I could. You know I ’ ve done everything to please you all my life. Why will you believe that utter rot? Did ahe tell you anything tangible that yon absolutely know was true ?” Jim A y’ was in training for a lawyer and wanted to contest all evidence in the case. “ She told me my name and age,” triumphantly. “ Didn't you have to write it on a piece of paper first?” suspiciously. ‘^F-yes, hut she didn’t see it— honestly she didn’t. I folded it tightly and put it on the table, and •he sat and toyed with it while she talked.” “ The mischief she didn’t see it!” growled Jimmy. “ Anything else?” “ She said T hsd sn Aunt Mary in 1 ---------------------------------- ---------------------------- the spirit land that was trying to THE HUMAN NOSE. guide me,” hesitatingly. “ See there! You never had an Ha Shape la by No Means Alwaya an Index ta Charaotar. Aunt Mary in your life! It’s all plain humbug.” Jimmy spoke with Some cocksure classifiers o f hu the satisfaction of one willing to manity have turned their attention leave his case in the hands o f an in lately to the shape o f people’s noses. !; At Ws Journey Through telligent jury. Life Let Ue Laugh It is the noBe, we are told now, “ No, 1 never had, but mamma that makes, or at least reveals, the by the Way had, and the clairvoyant said aunts man. and great-aunts were all the same A Roman nose means aggressive in the spirit world.” Nat Any Mara. ness, courage, executive ability. It They were gazing out o f the win Jimmy positively groaned with belongs to great warriors and cap disgust. ^ tains of industry. The Qrecian dow o f the Pullman car. The thin “ She might safely hit on an Aunt nose indicates refinement, often ac man was rapturously admiring ths EXAMINE O U R LUMBER Mary. Nearly everybody living has companied by timidity. The snub sunset. “ Ah, qature is a real artist,” ex , closely and you will understand an aunt or great-aunt or great- nose denotes a childlike, undevelop claimed the thin man, addressing why we can truthfully claim great-greater-aunt Mary. But she ed type of mind, and so on, u had no business fooling with my long as white paper and printer's the fat man who sat in the opposite superiority for it. The smooth eyes.” ink can endure the strain o f chroni •eat. ‘'Have you never gazed at her straight grain, the absence o f wonders? Hsve you never watched large knots, the thorough seas He sat sulkily silent, then grin cling such imbecilities. ned with a thought that made him Perhaps there is an element of the lambent flame of dawn life leap oning all show the experienced wonder if he would not some day truth in these conjectures, but it is ing across the dome of the world? the economy o f using our stuff. bear to the realms o f the meta terribly small. Alexander the Great Have you never watched the red Follow their example and profit physical the same relation that Edi- was a warrior o f some repute, whom stained islets floating in lakes oi as they do by being customers sop bears to things physical. no one has accused o f timidity and fire? Have you never been drawn o f ours. “ Y oung woman, I would not take few have charged with refinement. hv ’ the ragged, raven’s wing, sky M . H , P IN N E Y a P hopeless verdict upon my eyes H WM „ . His nose, like his blood, was pure phantoms aa they blotted out the » 0 6 N . M a in S t . « N t w t a r g , O ra . from any one oculist. Neither w ill1 Greek. Socrates had a snub nose of pale m oon? Have you never fell th I have them condemned by any one , pronounced type, bujt his heroic life the amazement o f these things?” “ N ot since I swore off,” renlied clairvoyant. I demand a consulta of seventy years shows no childish tion. I f I get the party together, quality unless it be bluntness of the fat man as he prepared to hunt will you go to anot tner clairvoyant speech. The nose and the ambitions another seat.— Cincinnati Enquirpr. this evening?” he demanded. CHASE ft LINTON o f Louis X IV . were Roman, hut he Still “ I would be so glad to find that was physically a coward, and his G RAVEL COM PANY s the first one waa mistaken,” she executive ability consisted in ce said fervently. menting a despotism that had to It waa a very busy evening for be wrecked before his country could All kinds o f gravel for con Mr. Kent. Finally he found a seer- resume its progress. crete work, cement blocks, ess sufficiently good natured and These be individuals. Masses or wood work furnished on pliable to fill his requirements. show the same disregard for ready short notice. , “ Remember, you are to entirely made rules. Considering their num free her mind from the idea. I’ll bers, the Scandinavians of the mid Telephone White 85 send her in third. You couldn’ t dle ages were the greatest conquer fail to know her anyway. She’ s the ors the world has known, and Ro prettiest one in the bunch. It’s man noses are as scarce in Scandi cheap at $10, and if she gets over navia as black hair. The Japanese her fear o f black eyes, by Jovet I’ll are predominantly snub nosed, but send you another tenner tomor he who takes them for children has O V E R a s YEARS* X P C R IE N C C row.” And Mme. Ardetta, enthusi queer notions o f a nursery. The astic under the powerful stimulus, Spartans were Greeks and presum promised to do her best. ably Greek nosed, but their name is That night when the moon cast a synonym for dauntless courage, a long path o f light over the waves and their refinement was a minus a couple sat far down the beach in quantity. T R A M M ARKS a spot removed from the crowd. He— 1 have had some very trying There is a deal o f human nature D e s ig n s “ She told me ray name without in any man, no matter what the experiences in my time. I was C opyright a A c . a »krtrti and desertnt Inn mar my writing it!” Minna said in awed shape of his nose, and the most un struck senseless once. aaUwr au qnlokI t aocortaln our oiuulon Inrontlon to probably patón«*) auinlm». tones. “ She is simply wonderful! alterable thing about human nature She— And when do you expect on S t u u «lona atrtotiT conOdontfal. HANi Lauta, «ont 1 roo. Oltfoot aponer for sa Said for me never to have any con is its variability. raoalaa n Ù M taksn to roach liana a Co. nomi The effort to to recover ?— Philadelphia Press. • P sciai ntrtitt, without rntrp«, la tot fidence in fakes that made me write make fixed and certain rules for the Suitable For Umpi questions and fold them on a table; judging of ________ mankind is the pastime A handsomely 11 lustrai od weekly, lerroot cir that they had blank papers folded \ of fools.-—Chicago Jouftial culation o f any oelenutfo Inumai, Tarma, SS a just like them, and when they were raar¡ loar month». $L Bohl by all naw daalara. Th e Ono Exception. toying with the ones I wrote that k m iv z z z t e h * “ I’ m an umpire. 1 wonder if I they would substitute the blank one Lord Kitchener o f Khartum, the an d leave it on the table and take famous English soldier, is essential couldn’t break in ?” “ Why not? You’d be jnst the mine in their hand under the edge ly a man of the camp and the bat o f the table and read it. That’ s tlefield, a cold, silent, grim war man to open the bill while the exactly what that first woman must rior. However, the following inci orchestra is tuning up and the have done. I’ve lost faith in her dent will show that Lord Kitchener audience is banging the seats. It’s entirely, and, Jimmy, boy, she said can be a gallant courtier aa well as a thankless job.” — Washington Her ald. that the only person I need avoid a brave soldier: and be suspicious o f waa a blond Lord Kitchener had been sum Concolation In Defeat. man with a Vandyke beard.” moned by Queen Victoria, who is prepared to transfer “ Is it true that both J your hns- wished to congratulate him upon band and the man who lives next y o u r good s anywhere. his brilliant work in Egypt. door to you have failed in busi When she had finished and Lord Any place any time. Kitchener had thanked her respect ness ?” “ Yes, but Ned’s failure isn’ t fully, the queen suddenly asked, “ Is Prices R eason able nearly so bad as Mr. Naybor’s. He it true that you dislike women?” , “ All except one,” Lord Kitchener I failed for 50 cents on the dollar, Office phone Black 100, or while my husband failed for only replied grimly. 10 cents on the dollar.” — Boston residence [Black 128 “ And who is that?” Queen Vic- * pho- )' es 1 Red 79 Transcript. “ Now, that,” said Mr. Kent, with toria asked. Call I up ( Red 80 great gratification, “ suits me exact “ Y our majesty.” Qbttlng H er Money's W orth. ------------------------------- — ------------- - ly. I’d rather be called an affinity VX& Mrs. Gimp— Don’t you find Dr. Lu ck of ■ Shepherd. any day than a blighting sorrow.” Antonio Ferrer was a Swiss shop- j Soakum’s charges rather steep? * He joyfully possessed himself of the girl’s hands, and she had evi herd who in his way was a bit o f an 1 Mrs. Simp— Yes, I d o; but, then, artist. Instead of drawing, he used i he always gives such dignified and dently lost all fear o f treachery. to weave hair and wool into quaint impressive names to the most ordi Afterward, with her head resting comfortably against his tweed devices. An English lady saw some nary ailments that it is really a shoulder, she spoke musingly. “ She of his work, brought him to Eng- j pleasure to be ill and go to him for Wood o f all kinds. Wood »awing a specialty Prompt service. Leave orders at yard or said that the greatest trial of her land and paid for his training. Soon , treatment.— Springfield Union. at Dawson house, 109 West Hancock St. life was that there were so many afterward Ferrer set up in business j Exchange of Courtooios. PH ONE RED 174 on Regent street. His trade g re w ,' fakes that brought discredit upon and he foresaw a craze. He s e n t; her glorious profession.” E. P. HAMILTON, Prop. back to Switzerland for a number “ Never you mind, little girl; not so easily imposed upon, and of pauper girls whom he trained to you’ll have me with you all through the work and soon he had a splen- I life to help pick out the real arti did honse in a southern suburb and i cle,” and the treacherous Mr. Kent had established branches of his F A R M E R ’ S WEEK lifted her face until he could look business all over England. He made D e c e m b e r 8 to 13, 1913 over $500,000 before the craze slow adoringly into it. This will be a notable event in the The moon, as if by special con ly died away.— London Standard. --------------------------------- I i educational history of Oregon. tract, came from under a cloud at Num erical Exaotnaaa. Farmers’ Co-operation will be the just the right moment, and she saw leading topic of a stimulating series of They have a neat way of record- j his expression. lectures. The week will be crowded ing news stories in Toronto, a p e - ! “ Jimmy, I don’t believe any one with discussions, and demonstrations in everything that makes for the welfare else ever had such wonderfully hon rusal o f an item in one of the city i v papers bearing witness to the fact. est eyes,” she said happily. The Creditor— I trust that you of the fanner and home-maker. The item ran something like this! will honor me with a check today. WINTER SHORT COURSE “ Messenger Boy John Hawkins, Colors of Boas. The Delinquent — Sure thing 1 The blueness of sea water is in sixty-seven, was struck by car 423, But who'll honor the check?— Chi January 5 to 3 0 , 19 14 constant ratio to its saltiness. In motorman 321, conductor 166, cago Daily News. The College has spared no effort to the tropics the tremendous evapora while riding his bicycle, 83, in front make thia the most complet« short course in its history. A very wide tion induced by the blazing son of watch house 13. He was picked A Calculating Poraon. range o f courses will be offered in Gen causes the water to be much saltier up by Constable Barnes, 221, and “ I know a man who never takes eral Agriculture, Horticulture, Animal taken into licensed drug store 129, than it is in higher latitudes. For a step without consideration of the Husbandry, Dairying, Poultry Keeping, about 30 degrees north and south where his hurts were dressed by city weight attached to it.” Mechanic A rts, Domestic Science and o f the equator the waters are o f an doctor 7. He recovered sufficiently “ He must be a remarkably A rt, Commerce, Forestry and Music. Numerous lectures and Discussions on exquisite azure. Beyond these lati to be taken to his home on West thoughtful man. Who is he?” FAR M ER S’ CO-OPERATION, s t borne tudes the blue changes to green, York street, 997.” — Cleveland Plain “ A convict with a ball and and abroad, will be a leading feature. Make this a pleasant and profitable and in the arctic and antarctic Dealer. chain.” — Baltimore American. winter outing. No tuition. Accommo oceans the greens are almost as dations reasonable. Reduced rates on W a itin g F a r tha Spur. See« and T h e ir Baskets. vivid as the tropical bines. all railroad«. For information address Every bee carries his market H . M . T E N N A T , Register, Animals Do Not Progreee. basket around his hind legs. Any Corvallis, Oregon. one examining the b od y‘ o f a bee Farmers’ Business Courses by Cor fact that through a microscope will observe respondence without tuition. that on the hind legs o f the crea ture there is a fringe of stiff hairs on the surface, the hairs approach Its Usual EffaaL ing each other at the tips, so as to form a sort o f cage. This ia G eneral C ontractors bee’s basket, and into it, after a successful iourney, he will cram Do all kind« of Carpantarlnf, enough pollen to last him two Painting and Cornant Work days. Box 686 Newberg, Oregon j; Merry Momentsi â" P atents Sdentine RHKrkaH. “Ball players are going into vandeville right aloag”_ , “They are.” The Newberg Transfer Co. Young Mr. Kent stroked his beardless chin. “Thank heaven I haven’t a blond Vandyke,” he said piously. “Did she tell you any thing about—er—me?” he asked cautiously. . “Not exactly, but she said that my real affinity waa—was a man I had known since childhood.” i I’m ORGEON AGRICULTURE COLLEGE Sydney Smith once called atten tion to the animals did not enlarge their view«. “The bees now build exactly as they built in the time o f Homer, the bear is as ignorant of .good manners as he was 2,000 years past, and the ba boon ia still as nnahle to read and write aa persons of honor and quali ty were in the time of Queen Eliza beth" or three Maud—So he’s been calling on you regularly for ten yeara. Why do you suppose he hasn’t proposed? Beatrix—Oh. you see, he’s the sort of man who alwaya does things on the spur of the moment —Judge. the for Newed — Don't you believe that marriage broadens a man? Oldwed — Well, T don’t know about that: but it usually makes him shorter.—Philadelphia Ledger. & R a m ey