Image provided by: Newberg Public Library; Newberg, OR
About Newberg graphic. (Newberg, Or.) 1888-1993 | View Entire Issue (March 25, 1915)
ri«» -« A Kr arm ai of a an? of tba trai Africa is quite so event. Speaking of his peí in his book, Aafan uereat A it « Fir»t Cruda i/ruuu ■■R IT Y REAL NERO OF FROM UaL/t*»iv<v 99 r.:* Are Merely In th W ho I I Inf actually Ul bee there la always the My m tt js veliu again Mfty •ooved the “ N «W ." , put his foot « ths problem of eed to bin»—sad our feelings are with him—that It would be ram bla If one could tart so thrill of having to oft on the on the verge of n month or e f having b to Ms Two a few paces of the Ight the next at it would be stand at the rave entrance, on a ledge of rock and tart a weapon at the involves a grate o f large e lp tn i trat n . wheels, the width of the firabox thee limited, white the length come within the limit to which the treman can «brow Mb c o il A CMM factor Is the counterbalai > 4 , A#! the soil« filling «sed between the apotas e f the driving wheels opposite the connecting rode. This Is to balance the weight of the cranks, paralisi rads and, in « a Am™., the of the we! ap thins; Just the oppualte, tn standpoint, of ths catapult, works by allowing a distended the elastic—t» contract as I x >. Ilari ti e* (or epe- I wer« all iasioni «• n a o «, to my I absent* of • * u unable to it my col aa^Mi * were only too ;bted to gire a very literal ion of the ob- | too quietly pei*<*<? by the faeetioua onlookers.' “ Th e town was agog with uxm le nient There was bartering for food, the haggling about the priic o f the cassava, the plantain. **r the peanuts offered for sale and the worth e f the trade good* offered to exchange; the interchange of news, but the greatest of all interest to H # Itaaf M tiiw centered in tlie white man. The inhabiants of the village formed a semicircle round hie newly borrowed hut and watch ed hie every movement. He strips off his jacket, turns down the collar rwohd his neck and rolls up bi* shirt eeves preparatory to a wash, and there ere audible remarks about the whitene« of hie skin. They era him critically at trie toilet " *What is that stuff be ia rubbing on his hands?* asks oqe ignoramus “ ‘That,* replies a much traveled ama, % what they call soap. See what a lather it makes/ A ta there is much amused contempt .hi hie tones as h* gives the bit of informa tion to the untraveled folk in his . ablutions are finished, and the white man ia now drying him self, and while two or three specta tors are pawing remarks on toe of go good a cloth— towel— for inch a purpose a .woman on the outskirts i of the cr crowd asks: “ Ts that all he is going to wssb? Whjr, we wash all over!’ “And there is disdain mingled with disappointment as aha pats the question and a suggestion that the white man is not as clean as he might be. The white man’s boy does not like the query in tbe tone, and as bis honor is bound op with bit master’s he inform* the crowd generally, that his ¿neater bathe* jgularly In his own town. The woman ia answered and the public receives an interesting bit of in formation, which by and by is dis tributed among tbe neighboring vil "D ot Boot them! It Is only S o'clock lages. The white man’s reputation iud.'there Is time enough to wta s vto for cleanliness is saved.” <*ry yoc Pp: the charge I boot the old barge of Mount Tabor and Lodi!" Calais' Curious Btrsdfc ’' A moment later the corps, following In Calais not far from the land- rd gtrau of Derate and kosp- pier is wfaet is known as the wtth the furious roll of the mate's dram, swept down on thf host r quarter. The inhabitants of , numbering •f ApstrtauM. They drove the first lino •act on the second-both on the third something like 2,1 orm a com- nd there they died. munity of their own and live quite Desalx foil et the first volley, bat apart from the rest of Calais. The he tine never fettered, end ee the young people never think of many- moke cleared sway, the gamtae was Just in een in front of his line marching tight ing out of their the heart of this . f f l l aT, •o and edit beating the furious charge Over ths dead and wounded, over narrow street, its width being about five feet at most The curious thing about it is that the Bottom room of every house is quite isolated from * care to live? What purpose would ltfo have? It would have none. Thors would be no life, only an existence, wee riso me and duIL The world feels that love le beautiful, It sees In (Mas tice that it Is trae. Love makes the world, love keeps ft. oqly to fora theft It be given la the rotors. Therefore bevo poets sung It and story tellers dangerous at thè lower speed, butt heir told of It: therefore do eyes shine and use would cause unnecessary wear and cheeks burn for It Therefore It Is the tear on the engine and the track and soul of art of music, of literatura— Atlantic Monthly. x ■ 'O t i : s made free toe of it in keeping both their clothe« and bodies dean, as may be ©beereed by tbeee who teat- el through the country.« Some vaah t b «r bodies, as a religious ©ee*> mooy. two end three times a day. i. "ftTe *ed Was. i A mischievous boy, haring get peeseesion of bis grandfather's apee> tacles, privately took out the glasses- • When the old gentleman put repartee was Brougham, m by Uy during the great reform d of the last century. 0 « one aion, when anti-reformers wei in g to howl him down by i tbe sounds made by various among which the braying a was moat recurrent, he wai pause sad then remarked i bebly that by a, wonderfi of a he wa* too to quarrel with This veiu than the famous li libel Earl of Limerick, eallh Hung with human pr which appeared in the 1891 and for which the j ‘fined-£100 and confined definite period in Newg don Chronicle. « - m . " B8ea I t ____ - . _ when Spohr a one to the great astonishment of toe audience. It was not until ten 51 J r or twelve year* later, however, that the baton came into _ German conductor who wielded produced such wonderful '•y,'*?1', with hie orchestra that it thought there imudfcbe some magic power in the biton,»and it conse quently became popular with con ductor* all over the country. Be fore the advent of the baton time was kept by tbe first violinist or by the pianist.— fondón Chronicle. mm “ Too iwrM to get a troni iMine.1 .r i did: tbjit’s why he got th eet.*’—fhwtiiu Transcript. jA.,- * ^ «$ 2 $ cars. Foe this reason fast engines ere seldom taftt unless they ran be need tn fast service all the tlm * . , ' Property proportioned valve open ings are absolutely essential to a feat engine. Three admit the steam to the opposite ends of the cylinder alter- ■ately. as the connecting rod moves fint. forward end then backward, and In a fast engine they must admit a large volume of steam very quickly. The valves must be moved so aa fint to open one passage and does the oth er end then as rapidly aa poasfblwdeee the first and open the second.' It will be noticed by even th© meet ------. ---------■ that the opening to t o f the cyUndsen Into __ ____________Is several times aa large as that for admitting the T ire " steam. But even with this It requires a oeoetderable amount of power to force the steam out with euOdeot quickness. 'This most be done la tbs fraction of a second. ny engines that ran gel enough and that nra right for high speed, but which era .not so a «ranged to get rid of this strain which bes been need and to only la tbe wsy. ft to this rapid ex pulsion of the “dead" steam that makes the rigorous puffs at the top of the chimney that seem to Indieste that the locomotive te doing e tremendous / amount of work. .It sbonld bo rem e»- | bered, however, that this noise to not the result of real work, tat only of this after operation, which engine builders would avoid. There to acton ef locomotives, those arranged on the “compound system." tn which the putts Loft- at ths Feet, «o to Spook. are eo faint that the engine would “ He was a loyal employe« of ttapeet- seem to be doing nothing at all — offiev for thirty-one years." Washington Star. "Faithful to the letter."-! phis Ledger. No pato, no palm: no th to mtah light the throne: no gall ° ° gtoryt no erase, no ■ " ' » V L West Airis« in aU parte of 1 ere evidences that for fore the natives hi to buy European c the Europea oC^tr Two World Expositions Now Open S f i b r i so' » 1 ■ wets 3k ? ; rickets, perm itting stop- •/’ directiot rio », to the Pan- ama Pacific International cisco, and to the Panama California Exposition, San Diego, on sale every day to Novem ber 30 Reduced fare round V i a U ta Scenic Shasta Route Daily Dynamite la probably the beat known “high" explosive, and the dame does not stand for one particular substance, bat for a large class, which are. In ef fleet diluted nitroglycerin and which are generally used for blasting. Guncotton may be described as a nitrate of cotton wool (which the chemist would raft cellulose). Both nitroglycerin end guncotton are less useful as expfostves themselves than The D iff or swept "Tbe belligerent man who w their derivatives, although Russia and the TTulted Stares use compressed wet pelted from the * otilen«-# is eery guncotton In their high explosive nnltke a hunting nousa" ' H o w ’s » h s t r shells. One of th* most famous de H e was still tall of fire eves afte« rivatives I» the smokeless propellant ■ waa pot out." Baltimore i rafted r'ordite. Philadelphia Ledger. ran Greet ‘ men are they who i spiritosi ts stronger than any «en - Ra»* rat at M-' Stop-overs on One Way Tickets ______ Ten days’ stop-over w ill be allowed at San Fran cisco and Los Angeles on one way tickets sold to Eastern d ries when routed via the Southern Pacific. “Caffoniia and It's Two World Expositions” trip f r a » Portland to ton Mogo Includino A raw bookM t o s im i lbs two Exposition», tho won te brautlo* of Oregon. IhoSM Iyoa* sud Shoals Mountain*. tonX Ut* hooch and mitins rooorto of Colt foralo, tbo Boo Joaqnln valloy sad Y ilo Notional Park. Pros on application to no S O U T H E R N P A C IF IC H S o t o C M M r a l P< Read the Graphic for the Locai News