Image provided by: Newberg Public Library; Newberg, OR
About Newberg graphic. (Newberg, Or.) 1888-1993 | View Entire Issue (July 29, 1915)
* f* s ' ì a ‘ ' • ’ ; m i* 1 ■*• - » / , Y * J 4M ’. ; l * r * s v -^ /V * s ’ •' - v r-\ Y-.-C-i ■&5b- t ■ rr*% S P # » ^ TTOWnrr-ATHLAW J LAYING THE STOPPED THE CLARENCE B U T T The Royal Advisee Hey Have Raved Hie Yeung King's L ife King Charles XU. o f Sweden, who came to tho throne at tho early age o f fifteen, went out riding one time in company With bis cousin, the Duke o f Holstein, end a few other gentlemen o f tho court. On the way they came upon a pile o f timber standing by the roadside The Duke o f Holstein sug gested to tho king that the company try their skin by riding over the pUe on their boroea. Charles assented and Insisted upon being the first to go over. But Just as he was shout to dig hie spun Into his horse, tails Das Buck fur Alls. Count Whchtmelster seised the bridle and said to the king. "Don’t yon try to ride over th at" The Duke o f Holstein became angry. "How. date you cross the wish o f tho king!" ho exclaimed. Calmly Wacbtmeister answered. "Ray what you will, my king shall not do I t " Holstein then reined up to him and replied wrathfUUy. "T oo do not seem WUl practice in all the coarta o f the C. R. CHAPIN LA W YER Practice in all courts; Probate, D< Mortgages and all legal poposs. ■tracts examined. . P.F. HAWKINS O ffice o v e r F irs t N a tio n a l B an k By H A R R E T LUM M IS S M IT H Jimmy Fitzgerald waa dow ncast Everybody waa against him, he told him self, and in that sweeping gen eralisation he included even CarrolL For if it had not been fo r C arroll's connivance, her tame submission ho the maneuvers of interfering rela tives, the words which had trem bled on his lips fo r three dragging months would have been P h on e W h ite B -l Fro m the standpoint o f a disin terested spectator Jimmy waa ready about you every minute w hile I'm awake and dream about yon when I'm asleep. I'm hot any good any m ore, and I shan't be till I find out whether yon care fo r me or n o t pear to claim C arroll’s assistance in A n d if yon don’t I'm goin g to the regard to a dropped stitch in her Philippines or som ewhere." knitting just when Jimmy was “ D o n 't talk so. loud.” bringing matters to a climax and “I don 't care who hears me. FVe C arroll waa turning a most becom kept it to m yself just as lon g as I ing pink waa only equaled by the can. C arroll, darling, can’t yon care childlike innocence with which C ar- fo r me a little?” ro ll's sm all brother would rush “Sh 1 Coma tom orrow.” bawling into the library with a “ I H come tom orrow fast enough bloody handkerchief held to his if yon tell me what I want to hear. noee, interrupting an eloquent out H av en 't I been com ing day after break beginning “Since the first day fo r months without getting a hour I saw you”— chance to tell yon that I love the In Jim m y's estimation this was very ground von walk on? ? And all the harder to bear because he now I ’ve got it I ’m going to Wait was so perfectly eligible. Charac till you aay yea o r no.' I f yon can't ter and prospects alike were beyond love me I m ight aa well” — question. The most serious aocusa- A bruptly the voice ceased.*. C ar-- tion that could be brought against roll waited expectantly. T h en a ter the match waa that both o f them rible suspicion flashed through her were young. C arroll’s sister, M arie, waa o f the opinion that an engage ment would be absurd, and Jimmy bou gh t be knew why. I f G eorge Freem an, M arie’s latest adm irer, lad been as eager to propose as DR. A M. DAVIS DENTIST O ffice overJU. S. N a tl. B a n k P h on e B la ck 171 Dr. H. C. Dixon DENTIST Phones Office, White 22; Rea. Red 121 ju st then?” T he trio at the curd table were •tarin g at her strangely. "H o w ab surdly you are acting, C arroll,” ex claimed M arie sharply. “C om « and finish the gam e.” “ T ee, come and finish the gam e, C arroll,” said her father. “T h e Dr. John S. Rankin PHTSKIAN m m * SUKGEON Office over U. S. National Bank Office phone Blue 171 g ResidencefPhone Black 116 tk either M rs. Reynolds that C arroll’s cold would not per mit her to venture ont or M arie in vited herself to accompany them ; if the theater, a chaperon waa nec essary. W hole souled co-operation Office in First N at’l Bank Bldg. on C arroll's part would have re- Phone, Black 31 ieved the situation, but the girl mew ae well w ^at Jim m y wanted that her modesty shrank from giv ing him anything but the most neg phone rang again, and Carroll ative assistance. Accordingly Jim bounded toward it, hçr agility in my decided that she, too, was surprising contrast to her late un against him and gave him self np certainty and feebleness. 3 Physician and Surgeon to thoughts o f unutterable gloom . Office in Dixon Building “H e llo , hello!” He called one afternoon w earing Pfcoo..: (MRc. W hit« 22. Raa. M m to “ H ello , Jimmy. 1 will. I mean an expression of grim determ ina I d o ” N EW BER G - - OREGON tion which, if he had known it, pat A long pease. “ 1 suppose it’s M ia i the conspirator» on their guard. H e too late fo r me to come np this was ushered into the fam ily living evening,” suggested Jimmy tenta room, and M rs.' Reynolds entertain tively! ed him till C arroll ' came down. “ O f course not. Only hurry.” Jimmy made a few inane comments She ban g up the receiver end turn P h y sic ia n a n d S u rg e o n on the weather, his eyes devouring ed a radiant face. Again Marie the pretty girlish figure seated de looked auspicious. Office in City Hall murely in the opposite cornet. “T h a t moat have been a very im Office Phone—White 147 “ I f a too fine a day fd r the portant conversation,” she said Residence Phone—Blue 68 house,” said Jimmy. “ Suppose we scathingly. “1 hope it’s settled OREGON NEWBERG take a little walk.” now.” “ Really, C arroll, dear,” said Mrs. C arroll answered her with a dig Reynolds before C arroll could reply, nity in which there waa no sugges “it won’t do fo r yon to leave the tion o f the downtrodden younger house. Mrs. Baker is likely to want sister. you any m om ent W e have a dress “I t is,” she replied. “Jimmy and O ste o p a th ic P h y sic ia n an d maker here, M r. Fitzgerald,” she I are engaged.” continued, turning to Jimmy with S u rg e o n ) her most charm ing smile. H e » a Plant Protests Its*If. 606 1-2 First Street Newberg “Can’t we sit on the piazza ?*’ sug One little plant o f South Africa M u m , : O tti« « I l H k 1 1 1 , » M . n . d S gested Jimmy. C arroll agreed to irotects itself by assuming a curious the suggestion. But, aa it proved, ikeneae to a white lichen that cov her small brother, Bob, waa in pos e n the rocka. The plant baa sharp session o f t.he hammock, and he re pointed m e n leaves. These are mained for two boors, enlivening placed eloee together, with their the«occasion by describing the ex points upward, and on the tip of ploits o f the ball team. each leaf is a little 'w h ite , scaly An ear splitting whistle in the ■heath. T he resemblance of the rear o f the house relieved them at smooth surface theee present to the length o f Bob’s company. W ith lichen grow ing on the rocks, beside out delay Jimmy plunged into thé which it is always found, is ao great subject uppermost in his mind. that it is not till you tread on it “ C arroll, there’s som ething I want that you discover the deception.— aay to you.” London Standard. W . W . Hollingsworth 4k Son to ■ “ Carroll, Mrs. Baker is ready fo r Fanoni Directora 4k Fmhuhnera you,” aaid M arie’s voice behind the Retting an Autograph. ¡Calls Answered Day or Night parlor shutters. That she had been Thom as Bailey Aldrich once re Lady Assistant*. No extra charge waiting there, biding hqy time, Jim ceived a pathetic letter in a fem i Office, W hite 25 R ea Black 94 my could* not doubt. Then the gate nine hana announcing the death of clicked, and Mr. Reynolds cams np a little daughter and asking if he the walk. H e settled him self in the would not send in his own band- ! Phene Bleek 14 chair C arroll had vacated, and he w riting e verse or two from “ B tbie Cell oo and Jimmy talked politics till din Bell” to assuage the grief o f.th e ner time. household. Aldrich tent the whole T he young man refused an invita poem and not long after aaw it dis tion to rem ain to dinner. H e went played in the shop o f an autograph P er Windows, Doors A Ge e eral M tff •way with a lowering brow and a dealer, with a good round price W irk , m N . M e le Street (heavy heart. . B u t at h alf past 9 attached thereto. Littlefield & Romig PHYSICIANS and SUBGEONS I DR. THOS. W. HESTER : DR. SARAH E. SMITH DR. FRED H. WILSON “Oh, yea," said the other, laughing scornfully; “ I am speaking with the Duke o f Holstein. But win you kindly recall that yoa are addressing Count Wachtmeister, the royal adviser. And. as I said before, my ktag shall not break his neck by such a wild and dan gerous Jump. Perhaps you w erf think- tng o f becoming the king o f Sweden In that event But you won’t so long aa Hans Wachtmeister Hvaa." Just then the young king, who was standing by listening to tho discussion, rode up to hie adviser end. tapping him on the shoulder approvingly, said to the company: “ No, gentlemen; 1 goeee we w oa t Jump that pUe. It is e hit dangerous." And with that they con tinued on their way In silence. A MUSICIAN’S MEAL The celebrated Franck composer Meilhac was one o f the abaentmlnded geniuses. He was also a man o f sim ple tastes in tke matter o f food. It is related o f him that on an occasion when one o f hie operas wee bring pre sented be entered In evening dress e fashionable restaurant and threw him self down at a table, thinking earnest 1/ about tho musical event o f the even ing end about nothing rise. A waiter brought Mm a Mil o f faro, and M. Meilhac quite abstractedly In dicated with Ms finger the first dish on the bill that his eye had struck, it happened to be the m ost elaborate end costly dish on the MU, and when the waiter went to the kitchen with the order there was commotion. The proprietor himself arrived, and he and the chief cook devoted them selves to the praperation o f the famous Never Dsoolvs an Animal. dish. One man was sent for this choice In Farm and Fireside appears the Ingredient and another for another. following advice os to the training o f Meantime M. Meilhac welted, absorbed. animéis: At last the dish was brought with a | great flourish, and the proprietor stood ; or any animal, wild or tame, anises not far away to observe, the resalt yon gain Its entire confidence and a f When k was deposited on the table fection. To do this you must never Meilhac looked at It with an expres deceive i t not even for fun. and al sion o f melancholy interest ways protect It end show that you "D id 1 order that?" he asked. love It. “Certainly, monsieur.” “ T h e way to a man’s heart Is “ Do you like I t r through hie stomach.’ and the road to “ But—but yes. monsieur." the affection o f an animal Is by way “ Then please take It away and eat It o f Its taste yourself." ordered Meilhac, “ and bring “ An apple, a Mt o f tender grans or • u two fried eggs:’’ seme tasty Mt will soon make friends The order was carried out and the with ft. end kind words and petting proprietor wondered If he had a mad will make It a loving end obedient man to deal with Army Ratlawa. The average daily field ration o f the United State* army tt made up aa fol lows: Bacon. 12 ounces lor ftesb meet. 20 ounces); bread. 18 ounces; beans, 2.4 ounces; potatoes. 20 ounces; prunes or preserves, 1.28 ounces: coffee, L12 ounces; sugar. 3.2 ounces; evaporated milk. S ounces; vinegar. .16 gill salt!’ .64 oqnra: pepper «black). .04 ounce; lard. .04 ounce; butter. A ounce. O f this ration Just a portion Is carried In dividually by the soldier; the rest, sucb as butter, lard, pepper, strap, etc., are given In bulk to the companies and then distributed to the men ah meal time.—Argonaut The River Jordan. Religion, history and nature conspire to make the Jordan the moot famous river o f tile earth. Accrues It the hosts o f Israel were led Into the Promised Lead; In Its water» the Christian rite o f baptism bed Its birth; up and down Its valley many civilisations la the morning o f history roes and fell. Per haps the strangest thing about this fa mous river Is that none o f the ancients ever guessed that Its mouth was be low tho level o f the see. It was not until 1874 that accurate measurement» were made and the month o f the river was found 1,282 feet below the Medi terranean. lees than sixty miles away. Mook Marriages In India. 'A third marriage Is considered un lucky In certain paru o f India. A -fourth marriage is not So when# man wishes to become n benedict after two pcevtous trials nnd still evade supersti tion. be evokes a very clever scheme. Mr. Man o f India goes through a cere- moay with a bird or animal or flower aa the bride 1n order that his next w ife will be the fourth and not the third The K arroo Bush e f fiouth Africa. The karroo bush provides * geh»«t drought by roots o f enormous length stretching under ground to a depth o f many fee t At the end of a ten months’ drought when the earth la baked brick dust for two feet from the -surface. If you break tke dried stalk e f a karroo bush three Inches high you will find running down the center a tiny thread of pnle green tinted tissue still alive with sap. f U tho twelfth ceofbiy tablecloths were vary large and ware always laid oa the table double. For a long time they were celled "doubllen" for that reason. Tbs doth was first placed so as to touch tho floor on tho aide at which the guests sat; theta aU that re mained waa folded so that It Just cor- y. iMg sixty-seven table cloths, which were from fifteen to twenty yards long fa d two yards wide. Ho had one cloth thirty-two yards long. which was put on over R, was large and of beautifully Agorad Unen. It was skillfully foldad hi each a way (hat. as one chronicler tells It, “it re- j y Youth coim therefore lut still young 1 follow No other like it No other as food T i e • N a tio n a l • W eakly In C ia b a U n til th is year û B e 'i has Man soldat$5.50. Now the pries is S2.5B sndwetovemeured Wta Y - Co i. C.lli«,1, «eckly of the wboi« Yetir Heart. Don’t worry about your heart. The heart la designed to ran auto matically and. tike other automatic machinery of the body, it runs best when the least attention Is paid to It. Start to worrying about year been and year heart, even If perfectly nor mal. will begin to ran rapMly and pos sibly to "skip explosions.” —Exchange. D r.C . E. Brown, D .V .S . ' v- Thrifty W ife. ‘ .!• '-i Jones says bis w ife 1» the mom thrifty woman be'ever knew. "Why. star." he says, “»be has made, ten bed spreads daring the lest two year»; made them herself, etr, out o f the — she collected h> her shopping tours dur ing that time.” —New York Globe. Nawbarg.Or«. N ew berg Manufactur ing Ac Construction Oo. Brasilian Native* Are Only Rivaled by Thoee ef Auetreli*. I IT you want to and a thoroughbred I sportsman you must look among the native* o f the Rraaillao forests. Eape- I tally among the Botocudo. to whom I tracking game la the chief bnalneaa of I hto Ufa. He doea It with each ekUl [ that ha 811a the white man with awe I and wonder. I However enthusiastic a huntsman you are you will feel yegraelf a poor I sportsman after watching him for a I little while. The Bfttocudo hunter (glides stealthily through the forJbt I He understands every sign and haMt I of bird and beast. He knows bow I high up an armadillo displaces the leaves of a tree In panning. He can I distinguish the tracks o f the anake land the tortoise. He can follow tho I tortoise to Its borrow by tho scratches I o f Its scaly a m or on the mud. Hie sense o f smell la so keen that It helps him a great deal tat hunting. Hidden behind the trunk o f e tree he cen im itate the cries o f birds and beasts to bring them within range o f Us deadly poisoned enow. H e can even entice the alligator by making her rough eggs grate together when they He under leaves on the river bank. I f he shoots it an ape and the animal doea net fail be will climb up after the animal by a hanging creeper where no white man would climb. However dark the fo r est. be Is Indifferent to this darkness. Laden with bis hog o f game ho finds I his way back to Ms hat by tho eon and the lay o f tho ground. His only rival la tho Australian na tive. He wfil He In wait behind a screen o f boughs. He waits until tho kangaroo cornea to drink, fr ha w ill track him for days In tho open. He will camp by bis fire to bo ready for his pursuit at early dawn. He keeps unseen to leeward. When a number bunt together they will put op a brush fence In two lonjf wings, converging toward a pit. and so drive the kangaroos Into it. They also form great hunting parties for a bat tue surrounding h a lf‘ a m|je o f busk- land. and with shoots and darter they drive all the game to tho center, whore they cen done round and dispatch them with spears end waddles. In fowling they show the asms adroit ness. A native will swim under wa ter. breathing through e reed. He merely covers bis heed with water weed till be gets a Bock o f ducks, which one by one be pulls un der and racks Into hts belt. They rarely need to make use o f dogs In hunting, though they had learned this way o f banting long before the white men knew anything about It. They used the dingo or native dog.—Chicago Oh, Rwear Net by the Mosul Romeo wms swearing by the moon. “ Nothing doing." protested Juliet, rbe mone Is a deed one."—New York 1