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About Newberg graphic. (Newberg, Or.) 1888-1993 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 13, 1914)
w*: -woek .<•« fi m T H E H O A X ED T H E E X A M IN E O U R L U M B E R closely and you will understand why we can truthfully claim ' superiority for i t The smooth straight grain, the absence o f large knots, the thorough seas oning all show the experienced the economy o f using our stuff. Follow their example and profit as they do by being customers o f ours. { M . H. P1NNEY 90S N . M ain S t. I. Ora. Wood of all kinds. Wood tawing a specialty From p t N u l n . Leave order« at yard or at Z urn wait’ « Feed Store, First and Main ’ P H O N E B L U E 191 E. P. H A M IL T O N , Prop. C o l l i e r ’s The • National • Weekly in C lu b s U n t i l t h is y e a r C lS rr' » has been sold at S5.50. N o w the price is $2.50 and we have secured «concession where by w e can offer it at a still further reduction in con nection with thie publication. Special Offer to O r Readers RecocnUins the «rest demand (or CaSbr’i at the new price, we have made arraneemenu to offer it and our own publication each one rear far the price of CriBw'talone. This ia a limited offer and must be taken ad van tacc of promptly. W hat Yoa G « t ia C . l l i . r ’. 'hSar'a is the one hip. independent, faarlcae weekly of the whole country. Not only is it the eood citizens handbook bot it u also a maearine for the whole family. A moot the thinaa that a year’s subscription circa are. Collier’ s ____ *2 .5 0 ) G ra p h ic $15 o I$ 2 .5 0 Ivy ■ potoonin*. «wslUag* at fks flesh, bites and saints of Insects, stiff neck and kuae back aaouM be treated with . Ballard’S SNOW ILINIMENTI 1 I t n eu tralises poisons, sub- [ dues inflam m ation, relaxes con-1 | tracted muscles and restores I h ealth y conditions. F o r heal-1 I In s cuts, w ound«, burns o r I 1 scalds, there is n oth in a ilk a I t | In the w h o le lis t o f cu ra tive agents. I t c u re « b r a m U d l I p ow er th a t is m ore e ffe c tiv e I I than the strons. harsh lin l-1 I menta. W h en subbed tn f o r I I rheum atic pains, n eu ra lgia o r I I sciatica, its w on d erfu l p e n e tra t-l |E and r e lle v ln s Influence Is I v a ry s r a t lfr in s . I t la an «11- I around household llnim ant th at I is useful in a thousand w a ys la n d lta application la a lw a y s I fo llo w e d h r beneficial results. | Mat Ma and ftM L 2ITY. ‘ * MM N K W B R H 4 I O K A P H IO W HEN TO E A T T H E BANANA. with its mouthpiece. Then it meant the character represented by the One ef the Many Pranks Tropical Nativa« Navar Lat the Fruit player— “ dramatis personae.” Then by Theodore Hook. Ripan an th# Trac. it came to mean the part or charac In the early part of the nine According to Frederick Uphare ter one sustains in real life, and so teenth century great preparutio Adams in his book, “ T h e Conquest the “ persona ecclesiae,” the man were made in England to reeeite ,of the Tropics,” there is a popular who represented the church, be Spanish ambassador who Was misunderstanding concerning when came known as a “ person.” in a spe pected to arrive at Southampton. A’ tbiMMnana ia ripe. Mr. Adams as- cial sense and was eventually spell mischievous idea cetne into ed as “ parson.” On the other hand, o f Theodore Hook (born 1 Phe banana will never enjóy the “ person” faded away to mean just 1841), novelist and jo u rn a iifi »pularity it deserves until the anybody. _________________ above all contriver o f that diversion people o f the temperate zones learn known as the hoax. The English to know when it is ripe and learn fleet was lying off Southampton. not to eat it in its raw state.. .There M O T H E R S A N O M A R R IA G E Hook, then a young man, knew is popular delusion that the banana many o f the younger officers. H e has ripened when it turns from its P ea s the Parana W a n t Mar D au gh ter W aff and H a r San S in g la l formed his scheme, and one morn original green to a golden yellow, Women haze the marrying habit; ing a launch set out from the fleet and those thus deluded decline to men do not. T b i* ia not strsngC* and drew up at the quav. touch this fruit when dark spots for generations o f girls have been In this launch was be who pur appear in the yellow skin o f the taught that every woman should be ported to be the Snaniah ambassa banana. married and that to remain unwed dor in almost royal robes, arrived T h e banana is not fully ripe ia a disgrajpe. Being a “ married wo two days before the expected time. when it ia yellow. This change man” has been a sort o f boeflt o f T h e mayor o f Southampton, who from green to yellow ia the first superiority on the part o f wives. was to receive the Spanish envoy, outward appearance o f a chemical Naturally, because their mothers was greatly flustered. It was all so process incidental to the ripening and almost every other person o f sudden. H e did the best he could. process. N ot until a considerable Several companies o f soldiers, some portion o f the skin has turned to a their own sex puts a g n a t deal o f on foot, some mounted, were called deep brown has this ripening proc emphasis on the desirability o f be out. The bells were rung. T h e ess sufficiently developed to give ing married and none at all on the ambassador, accompanied by a num the fru it its greatest value as a de dfsirability^ which sometimes ex ists, o f remaining unmarried, girls ber o f young officers o f the fleet, licious and healthful food. . looked on marriage as the goal o f whs escorted with much pomp to T h e natives o f the tropics do not 'ambition and bent their whole en the mayor's palace. There was a permit a banana to ripen on its ergies to getting husbands. banquet and speechmaking, one o f stem for the good and sufficient Rather than endure the unjust the young officers acting as inter reaeon that such a banana is hardly stigma o f being “ old maids” they fit to eat. A chemical process sets preter fo r the ambassador. took the first man who gave them a A fte r it was over and the Span in which partially disintegrates the chance. T h eir object was not love, ish envoy was supposed to be on his pulp, destroys the fine flavor and not a husband, but simply to ac way to London the true ambassador renders it insipid and almost taste quire the status, privilege! and d ef More than that, the rind arrived. There was but a sorry re less. erence which they had been taught ception fo r him. T h e other am cracks when the banana starts to were denied to all o f their sex ex bassador, who was Theodore Hook, ripen on the plant, and insects pur- cept the “ married woman.” ? haring perpetrated the greatest row in the pulp and thus mar or Can you imagine anything more hoax ever known on a mayor and a spoi il the f r u it T h e natives pluck disastrous ? city, had exhausted the hospitality the e bunches from the stem at about Yet this is only half the story. o f the town. T h e scandal was so the same period o f their develop Th e other half consists in the fact great, the mayor and the people o f ment that the leading importers do, that the very same mothers who Southampton had been so out and there ia so little difference be fhirly drive their daughters te rageously sold, that to make any tween an exported banana and one marry are singularly reluctant to stir about the dffair would only sold, in the native markets that see* their sons wed. T h e mother cause them to be laughed at all the even an expert could not be sure who is employing all the arts and more. W ith the exception o f the which is which. craft o f the chase to entrap some The same thing ia true o f moat .. _____. ____ . - , ___ . dismissal o f some o f the naval offi As a m ie T ? 1J " _? ? _ he/ cers who had taken part in it little other tropical fniita. tar’s husband will weep at the an' was done, and the affair was allowed they are picked green by the na nouncement that the other wo tives and allowed to ripen artificial to blow over. man’s daughter has shackled her ly. T h e fecundity o f the tropical son.— Mothers’ Magazine. soil and ttie forcing powers o f the "The Old Beast." v ' 'A n old story concerning Lord humidity and the sun are eo great Snakoa In tho South Boa Islands. that most tropical frnita are likely Beaconsfield is worth repeating. In many off the south sea islands One day, while walking about his to break their envelopes under the the snake is often held to be sa country place in the easy coat and pressure q f an accelerated ripening cred, aa it is thought to be connect- general careless attire he liked to process. de with a spirit. A t Valuwa there T h erefore do not think yon are adopt when among his farmers, be are snakes which strangers are not encountered two women, strong gettin g the worst o f it because the allowed to see lest some misfortune partisans o f Mr. Gladstone. Suppos bananas which you eat at home should follow. Those that are held Nature knows ing him to be the keeper or garden come here green. are not fed or worshiped, but such er or something o f that sort, they how to grow bananas. Man had to as are th e fa m ilia rs o f individual» inquired if he would show them learn how to ripen them. who know them receive sacrifices. over the place. While they were In the New Hebrides snakes are Origin a f Quarantine. walking about they overwhelmed highly regarded. A native o f Pen In the fourteenth century one- him with questions as to the habits tecost (aland if. he aees one in a o f the master o f the m anor.' “ Do fourth o f the population o f Europe sacred place or in a boose will think you think you could manage to get are computed to have died o f the that there is some reason fo r its ap us a sight o f the old beast him bubonic plague, introduced from pearing to him. He will poor over The first measures to self?” asked one o f them. “ Mad the east. himself the juice o f a young cocoa- am,” replied Lord Beaconsfield. heck its spread were adopted by nut and ever afterward expect to “ the old beast has the honor to the city o f Venice, which appointed find the world go well with him wait _ upon you now!” — London in 1348 three guardians o f the pnb-1 through the influence o f the sp irit lie health. In 1403 Venice estab Graphic. lished a lazaret, or contagions dis O f Couraa Sha Would. ease hospital, on a small island ad W o rth o f a P ra iris O w l. When the train made it* first stop The prairie owl searches fo r food joining the city. This waa the be after leavin g home. Mr SimpkinA, in the afternoon. By making these ginning o f quarantine. T h e word who had been in a brown study fo r afternoon journeys he is easily dis itself means “ fo rty '’ and implies several _ minutes, raised his eyes, tinguished from the other members forty days, the period o f detention which had a troubled look in them, o f the owl family as they seldom imposed on vessels at this first V e and remarked, “ My dear, are yon go out until night. T h e prairie owl*., netian quarantine., sure we haven’t forgotten any- known sometimes as the marsh owl, ; fl.ing?” Evolution o f a W ord. I eats 'insects, rabbits, mice, brown “ O f course we haven’t.” respond T h e word “ person” haa had a n ! squirrels, gophers and now and then ed the good lady cheerfully. “I by qnail, grouse or water birds. More interesting histor would have thought o f it the m in a than 95 per cent o f his food con etymology «omet óte the train started.” sound through, the Latin “ persona” sists o f destructive quadrupeds and insect pests. In appraising the homo h» manning- h n actor's mask yearly value o f a single owl to a farmer it would not be amiss to make it $30.— Farm and Fireside G O TO W h y T h oy W e n t to Sohool. Th e master o f Manchester Gram mar school says that to the ques tion, “ Why do boys go to school ?” put to a number o f scholar! one re ply read, “ T o learn to enjoy life while young.” Another boy wrote, “ I f I didn’t go I would not be jo y — N ext Dot» to Postoffi ce * ous, us I am now.” A third went tc school “ to help to enlighten other people's burdens,” a fourth “ to learn how to get the right change fo r a “ Schooliaa ia youth should favsrishly W ten shilling piece. — St. James' Ga Arreted to prepare ■ person ia th* best war lette. _________________ TILLAMO0K COUNTY BEACHES Lumber« Quality « Spauldings Three of a Kind F o re v e r T o g e th e r A t Three Hundred andJThirteen, First Street, Newberg, Oregon O F C O U R S E YOU W A N T PLUM BING A ll homes must have ¡dumbing of some kind. The question is: what land and how much? Only the best guaranteed fixtures should be ueed. W e handle only guaranteed fixture«, and guarantee all our work. E. L. E V A N S 501 F ir s t S t. PHONES: N ew berg, Oregon Residence, Red 167; Shop, Black 196 F. J. Kelley Plumbing Co. SANITARY PLUMBING, STEAM FITTING GALVANIZED PIPE, E T C 312 First Street, Opposite Spaulding Logging Co’s. Office, Newberg, Or. r Combination Offer If you want a daily paper by mail w e have something to offer that ought to appeal to you. H ere it is: Daily Journal one year The Graphic one year tíarcroft’s D rag Store The most wonderful and interesting jour ney in America. Easily reached by the way o f Hillsboro. TOE LIFE CAREER tor the best asnaa seat occupattoa tor which he is capable-^—'Presides! C. w7 Bitot. This Is the Mission of tho OREGON AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE Forty-sixth School Year Opeas - 5 EPTEH B ER i8 th , 1914 W rits for Illustrated 100-pace Book let, “ THE LIFE CAREER,” and for C ata log containing full information. D eg rtt Courses — AGRICULTURE : Agronomy, Animal Husbandry, Dairy Hus bandry, Poultry Husbandry, Horticulture. Agriculture for Teachers. FORESTRY, L o g g in g E n g in e e r in g , h o m e E c o n o m ic s : Domestic Science, Domestic Ait, ENGINEERING: Electrical, Irrigation, Highway,.MeehankaI, Chem ksl, Mining. Ceramics. COMMERCE. PHARMACY. INDUSTRIAL ARTS. Vocational Coanw-Agrkulture, Dairy ing, Home Makers' Course, Industrial Arts, Forestry, Business Short Course. School 0/ M usic— Plano, String, Band, Yoke Culture. Farmers Business Course by Mail Frsa Address TMB SBOISTBAR, (Hr-T.Uto'M) Cor—11 to. O r f a ^ Landscape—mountains— streams — forests and the crowning glory o f all the Ocean. Miles and miles o f smooth, shining, sil- * very strand. « - $5.00 - $1.50 r Total $6.50 W e offer both for $ 5 .0 0 ' A dd $1.00 if you want to include the Sunday Journal E n tm iss o f Jawals. Th e pearl is nothing but car bonate o f lime, and vinegar or any other acid will eat away the polish ed surface in a few minutes. Aa fo r the opal, hot watbr is fatal to it, destroying its fire and sometimes causing it to crack. Soap ia a deadly enemy to the turquoise. I f a turquoise ring is kept on the hand while washing, in a short time the blue stones will turn to a dingy green. ■aehaler Taxes. In the days o f William I I I . any commoner in F.ngland who remain ed single at twenty-five had to pay a shilling yearly, and the amount was increased with rank or title. A duke was supposed to be a special offender in not taking ¥ wife and had tn pay for his selfish whim to the extent o f £12 per nannm. Train Service Just Right Tw o fine through trains daily each way, with Parlor Observation Gar bn the after noon train. Morning tram leaves Port land 8:56, Hillsboro 10:27. Afternoon train leaves Portland lJO, Hillsboro 3:00 k ' Special Low Round-Trip Fares IN S E T Full particulars from nearest S. P. Agent, with copy o f handsome illus trated booklet describing the various Tillamook Beach Resorts. JO H N M. SCOTT, General ; Agent, The Graphic Clubbing Offer A ll th e sam e as c ity folk s, th e fa m ily w h o liv e s o n a rural m ail rou te m a y h a ve a d a ily p a p er to read th e sam e d a y it com es fro m th e press. R ead our c lu b b in g o ffe r : Daily and Sunday Oregonian and The Graphic, one year............... ................... $8.00 Daily, witnout Sunday, and Graphic 1 year $6.00 W eekly Oregonian and Graphic 1 year..... $2.25 Semi-Weekly Journal and Graphic One Year for $2.00 /