Image provided by: Newberg Public Library; Newberg, OR
About Newberg graphic. (Newberg, Or.) 1888-1993 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 21, 1915)
5 CLARENCE B U T T W ill practice in all tha coarta of the C. R. CHAPIN LAWYER w«. plea remained together. How could they knew that partner« were changed the minute they got from under surveillance ? The girls were airy, radiant, innocent, tne young men calm, impervious to comment N ever ^ passing the or question. ------- ^ , bounds o f propriety, they still bnf* Too v a , “ is A Cnee Where the Old Folks ---------- n. LOUISE o l n e y tie« in all courts; Probate, Deeds, ** Perplexed, he gaaed at Sallie. H tr blue eyes flashed welcome, but her words turned him down. A ll summer she had been refusing to be seen with him. This tim e it was the club dance. As they had been friends from babyhood, he asked fo r reasons. “ S allie, what’s the m atter? I f Office over First National you really hate the sight o f me IT1 Bank keep away i f it kills me, but some- Phone White 3-1 how I don’t believe you do. W hat have I done? O r is it Tracy, or don’t you care, or w h at?" In the P.F. HAWKINS DENTIST 40 Tom was always with Sallie, Rob in the wake o f Mary. The couple« weren’t matched to suit the elders; but> f roul fearin g they were engag- ^ they began to fear they were * — - '* x' r south Ruaata. the sea of an >op of tbe Greek Orthodox the center of a fine university headquarters of tbe Seventh commentTby reason of several I The port Itoa oa the «bore of tba oadea. obviously innocent, ap- Black «boot midway between tbe S tiyA ccid en tal7 They all came e one day dripping wet from ^ J ^ J 'f l d t a g t e e V T home ten miles after the m otor broke down — by arrange- m en t It wag firet one thing, then m oth er. Fin ally the parents com- DR. A M. DAVIS DENTIST s UFE ON SWAN ISLAND. J. C. PRICE DENTIST Office over U. S. Natl. Bank Phone Black 171 D r. J o h n 8. R a n k in Littlefield dt Romig PHY8ICIAN8 and SURGEONS Office in F in i N a ti Bank Bldg. Phene, Black 81 DR. THOS. W. HESTER Office ia Dixon Building W BERG - - OREGON I DR. SARAH E. SMITH Office in City Hall Office Phone-White 147 J M n gX C T tete'J M J ’ K lK E X E Br.C. E. Brown, D.V.S. A U T O FUNER AL CAR Calls Anawerad Day or Night OREGON & .. - Call on Newberg Kanufactur. ing èc Construction Co Far Windows, Doors * General MU Werk, «M N. Mata Street We pay highest cash prie« for strictly fresh eggs COL. W . 0. D U N N -The 8py.” by Jama« Kenlmore Cooper and tllen comments oa It: .“Every Uanbattanaae knows the dif ference between Manhattan Island and. the Island of Manhattan. The first Is applied to a small district In the vicin ity of Corlear’s Hook, while the last ««braces the whole Island, or tba city and county of New York as It le term ed lb the laws. “In other words, the latter to tba present borouxb of Manhattan. Man hattan Island waa a knoll a Ion« the old water front of the Bast river «boat an acre In extent surrounded by creeks and salt marsh and mads an tola ad by the tide. Near It was Henry Eckford’a shipyard, an ancient landmark. .It may be Identified on General Egbert L Yleie'a map or the water courses. “In tbs reticulation of tba present streets R lay between Rlvtngtoo and Houston. Sheriff and Cannon streets. Columbia and Stanton streets Intersect on what was about tbe canter of the Island. Just north of It waa one o f tba tidal mouths of a stream that arose near First avenue an Sixth street. Sewed through Tompkins square and reached tbe river between Manhattan Island and Burnt Mill or Braqda Mu- nab Point about Third and Lewte ALASKA'S FERTILE LANDS. ded, flushing with anger as he Con tinued: “ I don’t blame you, Sallie. I hate it too. I " — But she turned on him lik e a little tiger, leaping to her fe e t to face him. “ W hy don’t you go away, then? D o you think that I — are you ask ing me evenrwhere because you think I " — For answer he swept her suddenly into his arms, holding her face to his—a happy face, fo r she had always loved Robert M ar tin. “ D ear, you must know how 1 want you— now, alw ays! But why couldn’t our people be decently re luctant? It's all so hi ned! W e both hate b vered in to marriage, fe n i f I look at Mary- but not y o u .' “ And dad tic at mere everything sight o f T< dad and I don’t want— but when he and m other greet me at breakfast with that repressed 'H aven ’t you go t som ething to te ll ns V a ir I could gleefu lly announce Tom as th eir future son. T h a t would be real re venga. -Not that Tom wants me.” T h e tw o looked ap ju st in tim e to see S allie’s m other carefu lly steer ing the children sway from the summerhouse. It wad maddening. S allie stamped her fo o t “ 1 «im ply can’t be engaged to you,’ Bob, with the fam ily sm iling benighly and a ll th e old pussies pur ring over the fitness o f the match 1 I can’t I" . “ W ait till you’ re asked," ha re torted, grinning. “ S allie, we want each other, but we must le t them worry. They sim ply must worry aw h ile! Did you know that poor old T racy hatee me because he thinks I want M ary?" “ Stupid b oy! Anybody could see where her heart is by the way she hatee me when I chasten dad by goin g out with Tom . W onder why he asks m e." “ T o get even because 1 play Mary’s little lamb to bother mother. You see, M ary’s fam ily goes no fa r ther beck then Adam . 1 suppose yours and mine antedate old Eden. I aay, S a llie "— But he sew Tom Tracy goin g past with his machine and ran a fte r him with a shou t T b e tw o men talked a lon g tím e be fore Robert came back to Sallie. “ G et your veil end things and come fo r a «pin. W e’ll stop fo r Mary, have lunch at some little town, have dinner at Baxter, call op my m inister U ncle John aad get home by m o o n ligh t" “ And a chaperon V Though the fe e r had always known each other, S allie was goin g a t least to mention proprieties. Bob’s wise eyes twin- “ I think 1 can hunt up a young married woman somewhere,” he remarked, but refused explanation till Traay le ft the car to persuade Mary. Than Bob did his gallant beat to make things d ear. H e suc ceeded. S allie g o t in fro n t with Tom , leaving M ary to on apparent ly all too devoted Bob, w hile they paraded past th eir respective homes, for bs it said that the T revors and the Tracys had wished Mary and Tom to like other. * It was rather too late that night to please SalMe’s fath er when Tom le ft her reluctantly at her own door. And Bob, m otbar questioned, m id he had been m otoring w ith M ary. T h at was the beginning. D aring August the four were inseparable, and tbe parents worried. T h e only nation. A ll they would insist on was a knowledge o f tbe facts. A t this juncture Tom and Sallie strolled in, follow ed by the other tw o, all showing a d eligh tfu l sur prise st the parental presence. “ I t looks lik e a council o f w ar," commented Tom , while his fath er glow ered, and then began the at tack, follow ed by Same’s fath er and the interpolations o f the others, “ I I you are engaged," Mrs. T revo r finished, “ we insist on having it properly announced. U you are not — w ell, you ought to be. I hope you understand our point o f new . A silence follow ed, broken only ed. We fu lly ap sembled wishes, how we can be ei □gaged. I t is, " H e looked fa ct, imj and that young man T om to rose to the occasion. H e waa even e b it dram atic as he faced the tour fathers, the fou r mothers, sittin g in stern conclave, hut visibly softened by th e well bred, beautiful yopng qu artet before them, young people charm ing and, a fte r a ll, old enough to know th eir own minds. Thomas spoke to his own mother. * “ T h e fact is, ws all hate non sense. W e hate planned matches and being engaged to order with diamond rings to advertise the fact, and the society pussies purring and fashionable weddings preceded by ‘showers’ o f stuff that only a fire or some other special dispensation of Providence can rid you o f. And th en "— he took a law yer-like tone b efittin g the ju n ior partner o f the 'firm o f T racy A Tracy, “ we cannot be engaged because" — be paused fo r effect end go t it, fo r e sudden suspicion sent to e parents as one to th eir fe e t— “ because we are already m arried," he finished leisurely, “ a month ago at Baxter, by Robert’s uncle John, who also hates fuss and feathers.” W ith s quick movement Tom moved— pact Sallie— and took M ary by the hand, leading her to hia m other, and Bob had Sallie by both hands, looking s t her only, forgettin g tbe others. L id when it finally became evi dent to the bewildered fam ilies that the righ t children were to g e th e r- to s t Sallie had married Robert, that Tom had married M ery— the re lie f went fa r on the way to for- givenesa fo r toe elopem ent “ But why elope?” Sallie’s father finally asked. “ I think I may aay fo r my friends that these marriages T h is instance o f what a mistake o f a comma can produce has been n oticed : t > - “ L o rd Palm erston then entered upon hia bead, a white hat upon his fea|, large but Well polished boots upon his brow, a dark cloud in his hand, his faith fu l walking stick in Ms eye, a dark menacing glare say ing n oth in g." ^ months or waive tbelr-right to tree re turn transportation. Tboae remaining tbe foil period of cervice are returned to their homes hr way of one of the Central American porta and are grant ed six weeks’ vacation with rail pay. Strangely enough, there Is bo dUB- colty In obtaining men ito men the «ta ttoo. Applicants. { Indeed, exceed the number of vacando«. Board and lodg- west. Ha had knelt and touched bto forehead twice to the bench and waa going on with the Mussulman prayer when tbe captain, a rather elegant young man who bad served In the uavy, murmured something as he pass ed The soldier looked round thought fully. Without embsrraasjpeat, surprise or hurry he stepped from the eMtee. pointed It toward tbe Asiatic shore and. stepping up again, rasumad hto devotioutt. Five times that day. as tba faithful are commanded, be «aid pis prayer, a ■Ight that followed oa everywhere that week. - * jo * Soldiers up In tbe Gallipoli bills, tbs' captain on tba bridge, a stevedore working on a lighter In tba btaae of noon with the winch engines squealing round him—you turn round to find a min, buay the moment before, stead ing like • statue, bands folded In front of him. faring tbe east Nothing stops him. No one seems to Me him. He stands Invisible in the visible workl -tn a world apart. Indeed, to which the curious, self conscious westerner to uot admitted, where doubt lew be la no more than tbe dust which tbe otter shakes «frum bto feet l*for. be to fit to «dilre-s* hie God.—Arthur rtnhl in Collier's* Weekly. Fasta About Our Vast and Little Un derstood Territory. Alaska to the moat misunderstood and misrepresented set-tlon of tbe Unit ed States.. People generally, and sin cerely. believe that tbe name Alaska to syoonymoUM with suow ami lee and couple It accordingly with Ice cream freexers anu cold drinks. Tat tbe prin cipal ritte* or Alaska along Its south ern roast line—Juneau. Ketchikan. Cor dova. 'Valdes and Seward—do not av erage as cold ID midwinter as New York aad are seldom as cold as Balti more and Washington during cold wave«. ■,'?>/:>.+ '•■:•••* Alaska Is ope-fifth tbe stae of Ike With tbe«« I eot always The Stery of -H ard H A * ’ “Mr. Orchard sou, If I tjougbt that by killing you I could paint a picture Ilka yours 1 would «tab you to tbe heart.' Socb waa tbe remark made U* Pellegrini, tbe famouw caricaturist, to tbe Royal academlrteB. Sir Wllllsoi Orchardano. wbea at a private view be first saw “Hard Hit.“ tbe pktare of tbe ruined gambler. “It was." a id tin. arttoL “tbe greatest compliment 1 could have bad.“ Curiously enough, tbe model wbo «at for tbe raised gaitTTtt- wad rather fond of cards himself. One day the artist noticed that be looked somewhat depressed “What to tba matter?" be asked. “1 was awfully hard bit lest night.“ be answered. “By Jove.” replied the art- tor. jumping op with delight. “I've got It at toot! ’Herd Hit.' of conns.“ And that to how the picture got toe Levar and Mary Somerville. Levar waa In residence et Spanta tntennlttont- ly for some years, and there wrote three of pto books. Bet a more tragic Interest to attached to tbe magnificent bay. for K will be recollected that It was while sailing to a new beet acmes the gulf to bto borne st ¿arid that Shelley was «ow ned. Attorney for Guardian. 10-H, 191A <. Ä “ % Afe.