Image provided by: Newberg Public Library; Newberg, OR
About Newberg graphic. (Newberg, Or.) 1888-1993 | View Entire Issue (July 8, 1915)
¡atsMassHBi , I ’&A m m <*mm * W P II* . .V ... A BULBS. led ef Their Down, o f the elder dock to mom mad and brings a higher any other down. In lew tha dock noeta, It to rigidly pro bp tew and by public sentiment Mechanism of These Fearful Sub* > +* t marine Miettteia DEATH IN THEIR Jimmy Qalvin Pltohed the First Ne Why th« Dali cat* Filament B tm m m Heated te tnaandaacawoa. «Hit Ne Ron Oame. la tha bulb o f tba ordinary «tactile fiatarle« first were pe id to ball play temp used chiefly for boose light there er» in lfiflfi by the Cincinnati club. la a thin fllameot o f natal wound ua what is called ad arbor. This filament Is so prepared that It Off era high resistance to the passage o f the current o f electricity, and because of this it Is heated to Incandescence when a current r r - r * through I t AH the air haring been extracted iro n the bulb In Ita making, this prerents tha metal from homing up. as It would do If oxygen were present Vegetable fiber was used for the fila ment o f the first Incandescent lamps. The next derdopssent was the cellu With the Frankfort u lose process, which la still used In car- ase league In 1912 be sublime tboufthts that came to him while under the Influence o f chloroform bo thought he might arrire at auma eolation. Placing blmsetf In Ms arm chair. with pen. Ink and paper at band, he Inhaled tha «tmifiithetlc. As drowsi ness atolf orar him the o a ta feo f thing* seemed revealed. By a rigorous ef fort be seised his pen and wrote—ha knew dot what for before be had fin ished be fell back unconscious. When be recovered be turned with trembling anxiety to the sheet o f paper, on which, written in scrawling characters, but quite legible, be found the awful rev - elation. “ A strong smell of terpentine perrades the w h oler—Exchange. waa plunged into a pot of oil and allowed to remain tan All doubts ware set at reel i was withdrawn and found to complete. The person who o ed thin marvelous apiece < used sn ordinary penknife Dundee Adrertiser. number o f processes are need new to These Impudent fiegeel Improve the filament The discovery Mrs. 'Eddy bad soddenly become that tungsten metal could be used for wealthy through the death o f an old this filament la incandescent temps uncle and bed begun to climb Into so ciety. She endeavored to create the Im pression that her new manner o f Uv lag wag nothing unusual to her. Ope afternoon she became engaged In con versa tloo with a prominent wo- MODES OF BURIAL. Cl— V .ry VM tfy In tfc. Mnttar and Ot ^ v d io «. The aaodes o f burial differ widely ahiong various peoples, from the rudest ceremonies gad methods o f the wan daring tribes to the ornate; Impressive, reverent service« o f “the heir o f all the ages In the foremost file« o f time." - Among some the dead are buried ly ing- others totting, as la the case with several o f the Indian tribes, and In- etancee are related where warriors or teafletu In the uatlone have been burled stated upon their favorite war horses, as was dona with the famous Black bird. tha chief o f the once powerful Omwhawfc ' no,v&j Bat there Is a remarkable agreement o f custom for the practice o f placing the body cast end went. Sometime« the body to placed with the bead to ••Why ere you studying that daghe bond eo Intently?" “ 1 consider him an architectural tri- umph of Mother Nature*»” explained the bridge builder. “See * bow nicely the «trees to calculated to the spaa.” - No other like it No other as good is tot R im S«vii| llacMii C«piny It for her owa and the largest factory Is now at Weymouth. England. The United fits tea has also been an extensive user of the W hitehead tor pedo. obtaining the right to manu facture it at the impede etattoo In Newport B. U. W e are. however, abandoning the manufacture o f tba Whitehead la favor o f the Bites Leavitt an American torpedo which Is rapidly developing Into the beat torpedo In the world. So that you may appreciate tha mer its o f each and understand tha various to this kind o f a contest. .No additions were made to these names until May 6. 1904. twenty-four year» later, when I) T. <” Cy” ) Yeofag q f tlje Boston American league team defeated the Athletic» In a no b it no player reaching first game, and A. Jam similarly beet the White Sox when he twirled for the Cleyeland American league club on O ct 2. 190& • F. W. Thayer o f Harvard Invented the catcher « mask in 187«. He was ripe I parts, the bead, tba air OaelTaDfl catching for the Crimson team at the the afterbody. The war bead ie made daw-— Ed A. (Joeway. In Leslie*», . of bronae and carries a charge o f about 200 pounds o f guncotton. Thera Is fit ted Into the war head a small mechan- tam celled the war »oee. the function On the Atlantic Coast, as a Rule, It I. o f which to to fire the guncotton charge From Left to R ight when the torpedo strikes the object Thirty-five yean ego) while making The war nose has generally three or fodr arms, which aid ate torpedo, fat a four mouths' voyage. 1 wee fre cutting through nets or firs the charge quently Impressed by tha unerring ac In case the torpedo should strike a curacy with which Csfitnfn Crosby, one o f the b e « known captains. aetl- fng from New lfcrk. forecast the »fate o f the w eath er.'In reply to my qua» riou be answethd: "Doctor, a» a result o f fifty year» o f seagoing Hfe. 1 can »•sun» you that almost Invariably. I might «ay without exception, the wind In Its shifting follows the cornua .of The afterbody of a torpedo contatos the working mechanism— engines, gy roscopic steering apparatus and the at tached engines which -control the rud der». AH these «te o f vary delicate adjustment and la order to have effi cient torpedo men the navy department maintains a school at the torpedo sta tion In Narragansett bay. Torpedoes can be adjusted before firing to run any desired number of yarda from 100 to 4.009. and *n our lab- sat Biles-Leavitt torpedoes a ranga of 10.000 yards has been attained. The speed of the torpedo dependa oa tba distante It la to run. The Whitehead torpedo rune 27 knots par. hoar for 4.000 yards and 40 knots par hour for the ljOOO yard setting. Our submarines are being supplied with e Bttas-^eavttt torpedo capable o f running T400 yards ■t about 16 knots an hour. The torpedo can also ha adjusted pre vious to firing to run at any dashed depth beneath the surface o f the wa ter. The armor belt o f moot battle ships extends about six or eight foot A SKELETON IN TH E CLOSET The Upend From Which the Well Known Saying Wee Taken. Tba origin o f that singular and wide ly quoted saying. “ A skeleton in tha clgeet," which to found in almost every language in Europe, fat found In one o f those curious collections collection« of stories that have come down from the i In one o f thee« collection by an unknown hand about the middle of the tenth century« there is a story of ■ wealthy lady who, having a secret grief, confided It to a friend who waa apparently a perfectly happy woman. 8he was the w ife o f a nobleman who lived In his castle in the south o f France. She and her husband were outwardly on tbs most loving terms. Not a care cloud seemed to cast a shadow on her path. After bearing the story o f her afflict ed friend the noble lady took hereby the band and led her to a secret cham ber adjoining her bedroom, there open ed the door o f a closet and exposed a skeleton. “ Know, p y friend.” she eakl. “no one to happy. Every day I am forced by my husband to kiss this grinning death bead, which to that of a gentleman; who was my husband's rival and whom I would have married bad not my parents willed otherwise.” afr»Jd not. A man transplanted to the moon would find himself the lone In habitant o f a .perfectly Ufeiese orb In which eternal silence reigns He would have to manage without air. water or fire. He Would not need to put windows In bis house, for there to no wind, no rain, no* dust upon the moon It hat* been, truly and practical ly observed that the moon 1« apparent ly abandoned to death, nourishing no Inhabitants, producing nothing reaem- Wlag tree*. flowers or beautiful things o f any kind—useless, in ebon, except aa a mass o f extinct volcanic rubbish, which «In ga the sea Into tides end re flects tha sunbeams In moonjlght." In porcelain factories are literally baked, but by some miracle they remain sufficiently undone to U r» At least I f they are not quite baked they endure a stronger heat than that which browns the 8unday sirloin. The wherein procelsln Is finished are kept at the fiercest beet used In any Industry. A chain o f workmen, their heads and bodies swathed In fire proof garm ent» take the finished pieces from' the fire one at a time and pass them to the cooling room. The man at W ills In A Solent Qreeoe. the head o f this chain—he who stands W ills war* introduced Into Athene the furnace—can only work in by Solon, though la many other parts five mlnnta s h ift» in bis Interim« of o f Greece they were discountenance«! be Hea on a matt re s » drinking Diogenes Laertius gives coplea o f the o f lea water from the w ill« o f several celebrated met£ such bands or a small boy. as Plato. Aristotle and other» Before ' * . V - - - Soloa’e law no man wen'allowed to T - ' Dean Swift’« Complaint. make a wH! the wealth o f the de It Ie no new thing, this complaint ceased belonging la certain proportion- which one bear» o f the high cost of to the members o f Me family and even Ovtng. W riting to Stella from Lon after Solon only an Athenian cltlsen don In the year 1710, Dean Swift re- had the.privilege o f beqnest. the es “ I lodge to Bury «re s t. 8L tates of both slaves and foreigner» be where I removed a weak ago. ing confiscated (tor the use o f the pub I have the firm floor, the dining room lic and bedchamber at 8 shillings a week: but 1 .spend nothing for allow » the ootnpreeeed air wtthta the go to a. tavern and very In other days there were the 1 eland tn « coach, yet. after ell. It will o f Kanbettaa aad Manhattan island They were different bodies. Island of Manhattan was applied to tha toad oc !gr’ Making Him Fey. I cupied by the old city o f Now York, Lawyer (to kicking client) - Well, aow the borough o f Manhattan Man have yon at teat decided to take my hattan Island was ■ little knoll o f lend ad tlte and pay this bill o f mine? Ih the limits ait what ie now. Third. Client—Y a » Lawyer—Very well. <TV> Houston and Lewie streets and Bast clerk) ” WUHam. add IS to Mr. Smith’s river. At high tide the knoll was an MU for farther advice.” -Boston Tran <*•'*' a . r ¡A * * •enpt. me T - k Opportunity C ell» OOOOOfflfflBfifflOOOOfiPO to at your door." “ What to I t r inquired the pessimis tic cltlsen. “Opportunity to subscribe to m ate nor thy came, or e chance to laveetT” —-LoutevtHe Courier-JonrnaL Hew They Do It. pay that welters ran ah a man up. Lillian— I rap- htm from tip to tip; “ Are you familiar with the Norwe gian sagas.'Mrs. E d d yr queried the woman. v•‘Indeed, no: not the least b ttr re piled Mrs. Eddy hastily. “ I always W «ll Up. make the servants know their 918088 .” "Now. In the course of this -M aw York Times. ■aid the manager. "Ton are expe to several funny falls. How a n i fa lla r Ripe Olives. “ 1 come next to Niagara.” res The oHve to not'a fruit In the senes' that the peach or the apple la It b .the other, with that confidence i more o f a food. Its oil Is extremely Decennary to a comedian o f nutrition*, and the olive Itself ta in Puck many lands a "staff of life " You are not footing everybody Subscription O ffe The best fam ily daily paper in the state and your own 'V '.7; w eekly paper tor .¿a $ 3.75 The Daily Portland Telegram both one year for This offer will be in force from now until July 15, 1915 and may be taken advantage o f by new as well aa old subscribers. Subscriptions are fo r one year cash in ad vance. Old subscribers to the Graphic in order to par* ticipate in these rates must pay up all arrears due and the $3.75 in addition will pay for both papers one year in advance. G o o d O n ly U n t il J u ly 1 5 , 1 9 1 0 * 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 ie: Daily Journal one year The Graphic one year • $5.00 - $1.50 Total $6.50 We offer both for $ 5 .0 0 A dd $1.00 if you want to include the Sunday Journal The Graphic Clubbing OffeR» : •' i * IMS r, ■ ■ - 1 11 AH the same as city folks, the fam ily who lives on a rural mail route may have a daily paper to read the same day it comes from the press. Read our clubbing offer: 1 ' ■ — Daily and Sunday Oregonian and T b o Graphic, one year........................ . Daily, without Sunday, and Graphic Weeltly|Oregonian and Graphic 1 IIMHIMMIIMMIMI MMW1 .............. .... WWW — M b that haa K. hat Read the Graphic for the Loca! N at?