Image provided by: Newberg Public Library; Newberg, OR
About Newberg graphic. (Newberg, Or.) 1888-1993 | View Entire Issue (July 1, 1915)
Wodseo 4 Vitality, Lew ri A pprit« m 4 OMwral ffsd HwHH. Air la bad when K l i overheated. « * « 9 tt contato« an excere o f Bototos» •od wbeu tt to rto a lc a ll; contaminat ed. Tbto to the cvorluaton o f the Naw Tort «ta t« commission «a ventilation ■a Mmmirtted by Professor C. E. A. Winslow, chairman. The flint indictment «datent bad ato I m W that an Increase in tem peialai» fteyond the normal 70 dagrara pro ducm nerton« derangement o f the ram motor mechantom o f tb « body, rmnIt ine to a rto« o f temperatele. Iocrea and WEWA invite you to HEET F. H.GRI MET known by too Nula* btaefc which la a peraltar mark o f Ita In Infancy and early youth tl worth It« fhee rata« to gold, but all attend that to ordinary tranaaettona It would pam for gfl. Oner this testimony th« prtooner’a coonael quibbled ter two hours while the prosecuting attorney Itotaoad In patience. -->•'<?. * When his tar? came be arore and d a lire red himself as follows: “Gentlemen. I hope the learned coun- a«l won't get offended If I don’t talk but just one minute. All I've got 1» •ay to this: The prisoner don’t pretend CORK TRE 0 K OF. SPAIN, (httifj and always INSIST on Newberg Ice Cream Than a n two barks. the Which Is stripped ter one. Tl valuable according as tt to velvety. When the sapling 1 ed the age o f ten yean tt to w THE HOME OF FLOWERS », Geraniums, its. Cyclamen, Hardy Perennials, Potted Chinese and Japanese Pn- i’erns, Ferns in Varieties* :tc. Prices to fit the times. feet tip Ipped. each year two I tu th« tre» to forty . when it I « to ite grti kinds of Pure CATARACT OF THE EYE. It May Cerne at Any Time e# Life, and IU Goal Is U n d o«««. <'staraci U su opacity o f thewryatal- tine leu« csttxed by Interference with It» nutrition. A h the rays o f light can-. not [>e tie Crate thin ppaque matter tt re A Shot That Made Trouble. sult» In blindness. A cataract may An odd incident happened to the than Mim« at any time o f Ufa. but la moat apt to com* In old ago. whan renile Danish West Indies to the tost century cbangs» taka place In all porta o f thn that nearly caused serlouH Internation al complications. An American marks body. A catnnu-t may be caused by changes j man. paying a visit to Charlotte Ama lia. amused the governor by an exhibi In the eye before birth. Children are ( tion o f hla skill with the rifle Hitting born with a cataract It may be on th e, veranda of tha government ra need by changes daring childhood, house, he said that he could cut with by disease or injury, by excessive and a ballet, the signal halyards on the pen*Intent light an<( beat and by many flagstaff o f the fort and tower the Dan other causes. Olasabtowsra are sub ish standard to the ground. As the ject to It X ray worker*, sufferer» lines were almost Invisible to the dis from diabetes and many others. It tance the governor waa willing to bet may be a primary disease or It may that be could not do It The shot rang be secondary to qther diresse» ' ou t and the flag tell. Presently a It to ofleu very successfully treated ho roe id hd dashed up. Informing the by operation, particularly to the aged, governor thgt some one had flred on the lena or len« and Ite capsule being the flag. There whs grant excitement. removed. The development o f cataract The governor, none too popular. It la somatlmea vary rapid, especially aft ere ms. with the military.- ruined bin er Injury, but to tha kged It takea political future by admitting that thn place »low ly, sometimes requiring affair was a Joka to which ha con years before Wind nere resulta. Th « nived. Report being seat to Copen operation la not usually done until the hagen. highly colored, o f coarse, by cataract to matura or ripe. An aorllar the commandant hla excellency wan operation frequently militates against summarily removed. a successful reoolL-Phltodelphla Rec Inpeniewe A ir Aowine. ord. Bombs throwu from the air are usu ally exploded by contact. With the DEGREES Of COOKING. Martin Hate bomb, daalgnnff specially to be dropped from aeroplanes, there to • 'safety pin" which reactors thn bomb and untll^e tell o f «boat 900 test indicated by through thn air has caused thn propel cause’ damage by the actual shock of tha explosion—that to. by the disturb ance to the air created by tha expan sion o f the contents o f the aboil, by the fragments o f thè stall or tta bullets which It contains flying to an direc tions. by the fonare which may be gtv- b ar« a stupefying or fatal effect on people la tta rietotty aad by the teli- lag o f bricks and mortar displaced by tta bomba —London M alt rape when they meet always embrace aad ktaa each other, no mattar what their relations hare been in tha p u t or may bn In the Immediate fatare. This to a ktas o f respect. It may bo given on the lip«, the cheek, the brow er the hoard and to nW ly adjusted, ac cording to th# ago and rank o f the giver. Pram thin close personal con tact It passes through many terms— kissing the hand, parts o f thn cloth ing and oven thè gritend trodden upon, according to the Idea o f reopect or fear Inspiring the one who perform« the a ct T h « nation« o f the west have not adopted this ancient cotona as a form o f salutation, hot have reserved it for the more tender relationships o f life.— Cbrlatlnn Herald. Dumas and Hie P er b ias. Dumas, Ilka Balsac, was fond of hla own creations. Among them nil be loved Portboa bent The groat, strong, vain hero waa a child after hla own haart One afternoon. It to related, hla non found Dumas cere worn, wretched, overwhelmed. “What has happened to you? Are you HIT' asked Dumas flla “ No.” replied Dumas perm “ Well, what to It then?” .“ 1 am miserable.” “ Why?“ “ This morning 1 killed Por- tboe—poor Portbos! Oh. what trouble I have had to. make up my mind to do It! But there must be an and to all .things. Tat when 1 saw him sink be neath the ruins, crying. T t tstdo heavy, too heavy for met* I swear to you that I cried r And be wiped away a tear with the sleeve o f hla dressing gown. An Old Indian Drum. T b « Sioux Indiana formerly had a conjurer « drum, which they called wa- kanchanchagha. It was used on reli ctions and ceremonial occasions, had two beads frequently decorated with crude picture« o f animals, and waa beaten with great rigor for tha por pore o f appeasing the wrath o f their offended deities er o f contributing to the recovery o f th« alck. Modern Color Methods and Them of the Old Masters. Many parsons think that thn paint ings by the old masters owe their per manency in soma degree to secret proc- eawe now lost la thn Journal o f the Franklin Institute Dr. Maximilian Toch points out that as a mattar o f fact the old masters used only tboae few colon (madder, for example) the permanency o f which was well established, and that thay avoided mixing colon known to hava a bad chemical affect on one another. • Incidentally he describes the scien tific methods o f detecting later day copies. Zinc white, when lak e white would have been used, protoplasmic re mains in the ceils o f the wood need ter the picture and thn transparency o f t ha bttemen in the shadows a n proofs that a picture to not a genuine anti tique. in respect to deterioration the author ■aeottum the. bad effects of amoke and modern gae fumes and. a ft er saying that either light or dnrkneee may blanch a picture, points out that •ome pictures that have been kept to the dark can be vectored by placing Finally Dr Toch condemns thona modern painters who substitute th« collapsible tub« or palett« h alf« tor th« brush on tha ground that tho flakes o f color thus attached to tha canvas will crack o ff and become detached. If that method had been need by the ap ctenta no trace o f their work would I f 1 were his Satanic majesty and a novelist came to me for Judgment 1 should h a tte ray brows to n horrible manner and quia him thus: “ DM you aver make your heroine eighteen years old? DM you over en dew a maiden with the repartee o f Pinero, the intuition o f Blavaraky. the carriage o f Garden, the hauteur o f the Medici, the beauty o f Aphrodite and the window o f Athen«—an at th « age t «tofatenn years7" * ,, ? I f the novelist answered., ma “ Cer tainly M t r I should any, “To heaven with y e a r Bnt If ho answered. “Sura. I d M r I would blast him wbara he stood. ’ For o f nil the iniquitous, fallacious. Types of Feet Among the various races o f men. three types o f feet occur. Certain pure races have one type o f toe which to characteristic o f each race. Thus, the Zulus, the Basques and probably moot pure Celts have the evro toed foot while the Papuans, the Boaehmen and a number o f African tribe«, as well as both ancient and modern Egyptians, have the arch toed fo o t Many Euro pean nations, however, have a mixture o f the three types. Bat it to certain that among the English, and probably among the Germans. French and Greeks, the even toed foot to the com moneat— Strand Magazine Seward of Writers. W riter« o f non Action today daMom fare more handsomely tha« did Chief Justice John Marshall, who. 110 years ago. received $60.000 for bis life of Washington. After 8tev«n«on‘a death thn roynlttos on hta books amounted •vary year to ten times tha ran ha had received a few years before. bring about a decreased appetite for food, which, in turn, must b a r« an un favorable effect on the entire body In the commission’s experiments the people living In fresh air ate 4^4 to 18 per coot more then those living to etajr naot air. “ "These experiments.“ says Professor Winslow, -indicate tb it fresh air Is needed at «0 times and to all place«. While we have changed our Ideas as to what censes bad air. ventilation to Jnst as essential to remove beet pro duced by human bodies as It was once thought to be to remove the carbon dioxide produced by human lungs, and It to now proved also to be essential for carrying away chemical product « which exert a measurable effect upon the ap petite for food. People who live and work to overheated and nn ventilated rooms are reducing their vitality and rendering themselves an easy pray to all sorts o f diseases.“ tots and other experts are studying pos sible weapons for this battle than are busy on almost any other industrial problem. Concrete owes arach o f Us present grpwth to the difficulty o f pro tecting Steel and Iron against m at Absolutely pure Iron will not' rust, and fairly pore Iron will rant only •lowly. One way. therefore, to to im prove the grade o f Iron, and manatee- torers now selj Iran that to guaranteed to withstand runt ter considerable pe riods. It to imsslbie, though expensive, to purify Iren completely by electricity. and electrolytic Iron, an tt to called, may before long be common rtuaamr c tally. Surtees coats o f protection are. turn over. the favorite methods o f today, and many such coatings hava appeared lately. The latest one to a metal coat that can be applied on an iron or steal structure after It has been erected to much the same way that paint to ap plied. Finely powdered m etal»—each «a tha. toad or atne. or all three In proper proportion— are mixed In qfl and painted on the bridge o f column o* other structure that needs protection Then the pointed surface to bested by a hand torch o f in whatever way to most convenient They Help In a Way. “ Biche« are not everything.' ed Utterly the poor, hot hones cannot insure happiness.“ “ Perhaps not.“ replied the pm maiden, "but they at least pi mensa to pay the premium» on th ley P —Richmond Timen-Dispatch ” an’i Future. A man is a bundle o f relations, aj knot o f roots, whose flow er and fru itage is th e world. A ll his facu l ties refer to natures out o f him- A ll his faculties predict the w otld he is in to inhabit, an the fins o f the fish foreshadow that w ater exista or thé wings o f an eagle . in the egg) ippoae a medium o f lig h t Insulate and ton destroy him. H e cannot live without a world.— T5m- eiauU. OppW tMitis W e jCead, Others fo llo w FORD