Image provided by: Newberg Public Library; Newberg, OR
About Newberg graphic. (Newberg, Or.) 1888-1993 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 11, 1915)
JP ......,........ h - , .... : í| f I-. , •- j ■.■ I —» S r - I Automobile at your w n lct includ- la| Arrangements, no chart«. M odern u p -to-d at« Funeral Chapel fu lly «quipped a t your service, a o The College Cloakroom Maid and ch a rt«. Autom obile Funeral Car. the University Porter Horae drawn funeral car when wanted Remain« left in our cam will be under our careful watch both day and night. By JANE OSBORN W While 25. Re-deace PSoae or Night Cali Black 94. Lady When Tfcornby college opened last autumn there waa a new maid in the cloakroom. Something about her dark, close fitting dress, her C L A R E N C E B U T T small, ruffled apron and her parted Will practice in all the courts o f the * l Special attention (riven to pro hair, tied with a big black bow at work, the writing o f deed«, mon- the back of her neck, suggested a con tract* and the drafting o f all French maid much more than a Stu Newborn. Oregon. Floor in UnionBlock dent. But the fact was that Molly Dodge really was a poor southern girl working her way through the woman’s department of this big university. During the three or four hours Practice in all courts; Probate. Deeds, that- Molly waa not attending lec- ■gee and all legal papers. Ab- turea she bad to stay in the stone examined. floored, locker lined doakroon^ and be ready at any time to get stu dents’ hats and coats or pnt them sway in their owners’ lockers. At first it had seemed not at all M C A , bad, for Molly had a soft, lovable, southern way o f talking and honest brown eyes that made all the girls ! Office over First National like her. Bnt as the months passed Bank they became accustomed to seeing her every day, and they passed her Phone White 3-1 thoughtlessly by. It would not have been so hard if Molly had been in tellectual, but she wag not at all fond of hooka In fact, if she had D R . A . M . D A V IS & had a chance she would probably have been a little frivolous. But there were two things that made Molly’ s life bearable. One was $ r F*f*a*M 'dOnia St*r* ^ the daily visit o f the university por ter, and the other waa the appear ù rH O N ü au cK m i ance now and then of new and pret- hats and wrape. Molly had a lit- % e mirror over her desk in the cloakroom, and whenever any spe cially charming hat appeared on the clothing counter she would wait till the girls had left the room and then with it on her own pretty head steal an admiring glance at herself over her desk. And the porter! Well, he used I Officejover U. S. N atl Bank < ’ to come over from the university Phone Black 171 every day with the students’ mail, which it was Molly’ s duty to sort and distribute. Of course a woman student of Thornby college ought not to have flirted with so humble a personage as the university por D r . J o h n 8 . R a n k in ter, bnt Molly was only half a stu dent. The hslf that waa cloakroom maid looked forward with impa wer U. S. National Bank tience to the daily visitation of the Office plume Blue 171 porter’s cheerfn! smile an<j conta (Residence Phone Black Ufi gions laugh. i On rainy days Molly had to han dle countless damp and muddy rub bers and galoshes and dripping um brellas. That alone would have •< 1 : L i t t l e f i e l d A R o m i g ! made her dislike the rain, but be » < sides that students always wore 'I their old hats when it rained. ( She was looking out o f the iron a n d SU R G E O N S : i : bars of her basement window at the I ; Office in First N atf Bank Bldg. ‘ gloomy sky one dark day in March < Phone, Black SI < when all at once there swept in a i stately senior, a billow of soft black furs. She carelessly slipped them off, smiled at Molly and hurried off w te ff w i w i w w w f w w to her class. “ What a dream!” thought Molly. “ And on a day like this! Bnt what * does it matter when one has a car Office in Dixon Building riage V* - » Pfc— r O ff i t . W h it . 22. Re*. B lu . SO J Molly raised the soft pieces gent NEWBERG - - OREGON $ ly from the counter ana started to . « « » « * • * * « *»»*♦ ♦ «♦ ♦ «***♦ .** put them in their locker. But the temptation was too great. She came back and replaced them lovingly on the counter. Then very carefully she pinned the toque over her piquant little face and glanced ap Physician and Surgeon provingly at her image in the mir Office in City Hall ror over her desk. If only she could see the rest, she wished. In a flash Office Phone—White 147 she jumped over the counter, closed Residence Phone—Blue 58 the door into the hall and slipped NEWBERG OREGON ^ into the luxurious coat. Then the •» K x s a E M X x x x i a z s z • * 4 a* .-pped up to the students’ long pier glass. M agnetic Treatm ent. “ If only it were a little longer,” she thought. And tben, turning I am n o w at hom e, 1105 around at the sound of the opening N orth street, and am prepared door, she faced the porter. He clos to answ er calls for m agnetic ed the door quickly and stood treatm ent. Will g o t o hom es it against it. Tben he turned to Molly But Molly didn’ t desired. M arion George, phone and laughed. laugh back. She slipped out of the Black 6. f tt furs, sprang over the counter and, with a guilty blush, took the 'morn- mail. next day when the porter came Molly was deep in a volume o f CnS—I* sadMassssfi Horace. Veterinary Phyr ic ii I Surge— “ Nice book you’re reading, Mol • * Otee and bottai *1 G oaW . B— . ¡ i Cribri and Hancock. P U Black 47 ly,” remarked the porter, and Molly, <i Crii» ar a i day or the student, smiled coldly, without «ed and trend (or ■ raising her eyee. r crii $1.50; end PHONE S3 After that the porter left off the “Molly” from his morning’s saluta tion, and Molly had no difficulty in repressing him. In fact, she was a little disappointed that he took his squelching so willingly. after the epiaode ^ T T O lU fB T -A T -L A W GST, C. R. CHAPIN LAW YER : P .F . H A W K I N S i _ _ . _ . . . i l D EN TIST DENTIST I : J. C. PR ICE : DENTIST ¡ m I | | 1 Ï 1 « * i , . ; PHYSICIANS I DR. THOS. W. HESTER J j Physician and Surgeon g li i i r i -T f T y -rm J * * ■ ■ _ ..• ... f ' p ^*4 .. . ■ * ‘ wfwv T > f * .•*... 'Æ M o ? W.W. HoHmgsworth & Son B O R R O W E D c f m ? DR. SARAH E. SMITH !: Dr.C.LBrown,D.V.S. j find bows for her leagues till her fingers were And Yet the Idea Is Perfeetly Simple Then daring the long hour« 01 When Yee Qreep tt. dance she was supposed to sit “ One time 1 entered a Chinese guard the wraps and lend -her a medical restaurant with my inter case of a dilapidated coiffure preter. This was in Canton, and tom ruffle. But tonight strains doctors sent patients there to eat the dance music took possession food which would cure them of cer Molly’s soul and started her tain illnesses. All around wore live feet tapping on the stone animals and dead ones— monkeys, Her curiosity and her lonelineas owls, cats, lizards, snakes, deer and the upper hand, and she slipped ao on. I paused to glance in a glass of the dressing room, ran along case filled with Uve snakes when an corridor and up the wide si stairs toward the gallery overlook other patron came up, a Chineae, who carefully picked oat a certain ing the gymnasium. \ ly al along snake, which an attendant then took As she was hurrying timidly she had to pass one o f the lecture from the cage, and which was at' rooms, which had been con inverted once killed and cooked. “ I asked my interpreter what on for the occasion into a men’s check earth that Chinese gentleman want ing room. Three young men ed t o '—t snake meat for, and the «ten iding idly smoking. There interpreter replied; ‘You know, something about the cut of an ing coat that fascinated Molly, and rir, how fast a sqakt can travel on the ground, notwithstanding the she turned in the shadow to look. Suddenly her heart stood stilL fact he has no legs? Wall, sir, try It really was the porter, the tall—t to imagina how test a snake could one, with the light hair. He waa travel if he did hare logs. The gen laughing now. She was just turning tleman who is now consuming that to run when he faced about. Ana snake is troubled with rheumatism just for a second his eyes met here i* his knees, which prevents him through the darkness o f the dimly from walking fast or far. Therefore, be eats snake to get strength In his lighted corridor. She had been discovered deaert- legs.’ “ Perfectly sim p ler Mr. Uhrlanb ing, and by the porter! Aa rite continued, latlghing. “ It’s a wonder couldn’t go back to the I hadn’t thought of it my—If. As room now without being seen for monkeys, yon know that a mon ly, she fled to the gallery and key has extraordinary strength in pod into a seat. So the porter was probably a stu his hands, wrists and arms; that is dent from the university 1 The por why he can swing from limb to limb ter whom she had tried to repress of a tree, the ablest o f living gym was a friend of some girl at the nasts. Well, lots of people in that dance. Her head swam with the medical restaurant were —ting monkey steak and chops. My in- excitement o f the information. terpreter pointed but several who Just thten the violins struck up a dreamy waltz. She leaned forward had gout}* affections o f the finger ^s far as she dared to see the danc joints, and so on, accprding to his ers. Oh, if only she had that bine statements. “ Another kind o f restaurant satin gow n! She seized it enviously which 1 certainly did enjoy was a in her imagination. And then aa tea house o f several stories. If you the dancing began her thoughts floated out on the music, and she sit down qn the ground floor you pay a fraction of a cent for your danced with them. Just then she heard steps behind tea. and all the patrons here were her, and, looking back into the coolies. The price of tea increases shadow, ahe saw dimly outlined the the higher you go, and on the very top floor — ch patron pays about 20 face o f the porter. “Hello, Molly,” he said cheer cento in American money for his tea. fully. “ Here 1 found the guests to be “ Sh!” She put her hand to her the very beat class— o f Chine— so lips. “ Some one might hear.” ciety. Many brought with theta “ Well, let’s sit somewhere else. I their favorite pet birds in cage* hate to whisper.” “ AU righ t” Mollv rose timidly. and these cages were b u n g. np o» They passed by a short cut out to hooks provided for the purpose while the guests were sipping te*. the starlit campus. and chatting. There waa a constant “ This is a great deal better,” he ripple of joyous bird music all said as he helped her on to a se cluded ledge o f the great stone through that uppermost floor, and building. “ You looked lonely Up it was a scene long to be remember- * ed.” — Pittsburgh Gasette-Tim there watching the dancers.” “ I wasn’t lonely. I like to The Art ef Writing. them.” . ,-jj Writing began with the rude pic “ Oh, they artn’ t bad,” he said dryly. “ But when a fellow’ s work ture writing on bone and rock and ing his way through his last year passed slowly Ijpr a natural and in he hasn’t much time to waste. I evitable transition from thé literal say,” he —id, looking at her curi - 1 representations of the objects to - - - the symbolic suggestion,of id—, to a ously, “ what were yon ■ thinking word alphabet and then to pure about up there ?” , “ Oh, 1 wasn’t thinking at all! 1 sound signs. The whole process is was just making believe— waltzing manifest from thé very infancy of off in that soft bine —tin dress. The Egyptian picture writing, as crude as music gets hold of me like that and that with which the savage peoples drives away the cloakroom and the still record their deeds. From these wet umbrellas and rubbers and cross crude signs the process went on in its slow transformation to the pho- seniors” — And obtrusive college porters net*c v n t i ^ typified in the Kosetha who catch you dressing up in other stone to 'tbe'T’ hoenician, Greek and Roman modifications which brought people’s furs ?” he laughed. ns to the arbitrary —and symbols “ Oh, n o!” she said, without smil which the voice combin— into ar ing. “ I never —n make the porter ticulate speech. fade away with the wet umbrellas and rubbers. He seems to stay and When Immigrant« Were M 4 . watch me float around in other peo It is pointed out by the London ple’ s blue satin dresses, dancing Chronicle that, although the mod with other people’s partners. He ern immigrant to American ports just stays and laughs.” She looked may be “ —Id” in a way, he is never up at him. “ Only there won’t be any porter in the cloakroom any sold in the —me sen— as were those more. There will be just a poor stu emigrants of the eighteenth cen dent working his way through col-* tury who— fate one gathers from lege like the cloakroom girl. I shall an advertii—rnent in a New York paper o f 1774. The adverti—ment miss the porter, 1 think.” “ But he couldn’ t stay, you know,” runs: “ Servants just arrived from he said. “ The cloakroom girl liked Scotland, to be —Id on board the him at first, and the porter used to Commerce, Captain Ferguson mas- look forward all day to seeing her ter, lying at the ferry stairs, among the next. Then one day she re which are a number of w—vers, tev- shoemak- membered she le was waa a student and ha. lors, . ‘' blacksmiths, T V “ " T T / nailers, ' “ **''* -> — only a porter, and after that e n ’ **tch en , hatters and spinsters ■nrl distant. distant But R„t tu J ftmrtoen to thirty-five yesrs o f age. she was cold and tha Henry White or porter went right on dreaming For terms . appl^rto -- about her. And new,” he —id, tak*, mMter on ing Molly’s tired little hand in hi The "Gold Snak«.” “ he is going to let the poor studcnl A Mexican superstition, very com- try his luck.” >n among miners in that country, And that luck was in his favor to the “ gold snake.” This was proved by the absence of Moll of —rpent is-perfectly hann- in the cl— kroom when college ope and very hand—me, being green ed in the fall. color and with s golden iri descence in its scales. Faith is en- Breaking a Wishbone. rtained that wherever s gold The divining rod is a feature snake mak— its n—t there is a ledge all early mvthology, —pecially tain ing the precious metal, and among the Hindus. As the fork re are many miners who will lo branch of a tree it indicated cate a claim at once if they find « various parts of Europe, Asia am gold snake. Africa where treasures were hidd or where water might readily It Makes Perfeot,- Though. found. From the forked branch o f _ J a tree it was but a step to the fork* ed clavicle of a bird, and this bond) “ but do ypu practice medicine?” “ Y —, said the doctor. was soon inv—ted with the power o f “ Then I must apologize for bav- securing the gratification of tha intruded. f want somebody wish— of those who in br—king it his busin—s. 1 can't let retained the forked part, for it wior the fork that was posse seed of mya|j anybody practice on me,” —id the visitor.— Harper's W—kly. tic power. * -'éÜEHfi» >t3iÈ $ .-.*'. ïi*: ¡U ■. » * root gain to fa HON* KUHU ROOT. i1» ; The question «I woman suffragata — issue before the American people. Twelve statas bava adopted it, tour mors states vote upon It this fall, and tt Is strong ly urged that it bsoome M a plat- form demand of the ni national po liticai parties. It Is therefore te« privilege and the duty of svory W to study carefully tels subject. Hu Root, to discussing this before the constitutional con vention of New York, recently snld In part: "I am opposed to tee (ran ting of —ffrafe to woman, because I believe that It would be a loss to worn— , to all woman and te every woman; and beaauso I believe it would be an in jury to the state, and to every man and every woman in the atetsi tt would be useless to argue this If the right o f suffrage were a natural right If It were a natural right te— women should bave.lt though the heavent fall. But It there he any one thing settled In tee long discussion o f this auhject It Is that suffrage Is not a natural right but is simply a means of gov ernment and the —le question to he discussed Is whether government by the suffrage o f men and women will be better government than by the suffrage of men alone “Into my Judgment sir, there —tars no element of the inferiority of wom an. It is not that woman is inferior to man, hut It Is that woman Is dif ferent from man; that In the distribu tion o f powers, of capacities, of quall- tlea, our Maker has created man adapt ed to the performance o f certain func tions la tee economy o f nature and society, aad woman adapted to performance of other functions. J W “Woman rules today by tha sweat and noble influences of her character. Put woman Into tha arena of conflict and ahe abandons tbs— great weap ons which control tbs world, and she tak— into her bands, feeble and nerveless for strife, w—pons with which she is unfamiliar and which she is unable to wield. Woman In strife he—m— hard, harsh, unlovable, repulsive; as far removed from that gentle creature to whom we all owe aHefiianoe and to whom we confess submission, — tbs heaven Is from the earth. “The whole science o f govern meet Is the science of protecting life and liberty and tbs pursuit of happln In the divine distribution of powers, tea duty and tbs right of protection rests with tbs mala. It Is — through out nature. It is — with men, and I. tor one, will never consent to part with tee divine right of protecting my wife, my daughter, the women whom I love, and the women whom I respect exercising the birthright of man, and pin— that high duty in the weak and nerveless» Itands of those designed by God to be protected rather than to engage In the stern warfare of gov ernment In my Judgment this whole movement arts— from a false concep tion of the duty and o f the right of bote men and women. “The time will never come when the line of demarcation between the func tions of the two sex— will he broken down. I believe R to he false phtlos ophy; I believe that tt is an attempt to torn backward upon the lines of social development and that if the step ever be taken, we go centuries backward on the march towards a higher, a nobler and a purer civilisa tion, which must he found not in tho confusion, hut in the higher dlffi tiatlon o f the sexes." ? . C. HOW E. o f Free Porta Mr. F. C. Howe, Federal Commie sloner of Immi gration, who is one of the best American author- itlea on marine commerce. In d ie cussing the rela tion of free porta to the develop ment of eea trade said In part: "Ship* will go hundreds of miles out of their way to avoid porta surrounded by. a tariff walL The only way, therefore, for a country with a tariff to oompete in the shipping world with a tree trade conn- try is to establish free porta at strate gical points along Us coast Una. Ger many has dons so, and in a compara tively short period has built up a car rying trad« Which before the war was seriously threatening Bngland's su premacy. Hamburg, oas of ths three German free porta, now ranks aa tha aeoond greatest asaport In tee world. Its total foreign commerce in 191S be ing only 96.000,00b under that o f New York. 7 "The free port would offer great op portunity for financial operations, now made possible by the recent currency act. It would stimulate International banking, and would tend to shift the financial centers o f ths world to this country. And Amerloa, by tha logic of events, has beooma the natural ren ter of the world’s financing. Just as London became that mater several centuries ago, when It shifted from the cities of the Netherlands. But the financial center will only move to this country when It becomes a clearing house of goods as wen as e f money. For credit the world over Is created by currently created wealth In transit or change so that even our financial expansion Is dependent upon the open Ing up of American porta to ths clear ance of ths wealth of the world. A port should not operate to yield a re turn on the Investment, but to develop the proa parity of the country.“ In re capitulating tee advantages, Mr. Hows brings out ths importance o f the free port la developing our shipping, end linking us wffh South America, Asia and Africa, aad then concludes: quantities of goods to — importation or export as trade demand. It will stimulate tee of exporting houses, which i goods for an indefinite period — . the payment o f tariff da— (often equal to the coat of the article Itself) tor disposal to meet tha trade demand« of the whole world. It wUl upbuild international credit, and shift to Amer ica an increasing aad ultimately a pre dominant share la Intarnatioaal ex- ohange. "Finally, America la tbs natural coun try to be tha counter of tee world. Its saacoost fee— «very other continent; It Is the greatest of all reservoirs of raw materials and foodstuffs. In Iron aad at—1 and standardised production tt Is in a position to oompeto with the wor'd But international trade (and th # is always overlooked) must he reciprocal. It cannot be onesided, and credit and belanoes cannot (or any prolonged period be paid tn They can only be i paid pai< by exchange of ««filth." L e t ’e r R a i n ! Reflex Slicker $ 3.00 The coat that out mil the rain. _ fhxEdgm stop every drop from run In at the front Protector Hat IS Smtd for firm cmtmk* 1 A .J .T O W E R C O . * ^ boston * * In the Circuit Court o f the State o f O regon For Yam hill Mabel C. Roberta, Plaintiff No. 56S4 Summons Nonie- Cedi Roberta, Deft To Nonie Cedi Roberta, the above la the asms o f the State o f Oregon: Yon are hereby required to appear and answer the complaint filed against you in ths above entitled court and cause, on or before six weeks from date o f the brat publication o f this summons, to- w it on or before Thursday, December 2. HUB; and if yon fail so to appear er answer herein, the plaintiff wdT apply to the above entitled court for a decree against you as prayed for in her com plaint h a -in , and which briefly is as follows: • For a decree forever divorcing the plaintiff from the defendant: that the sole —re and custody of the minor child, o f this marriage, Merna May Roberts, be awarded to the plaintiff; for suit money; alimony; ana support for said minor child; attorney few ; costa, aad disbursements; aad for such other and further relief as to the court may seam meet sod proper in the premie—. This summons is served upon you in the Newbeiar Graphic for six aecutive ana successive weekly I tions, beginning October 21st, 191f on tbs order, dated October 18, made by J. B. Dodson, County Judge o f Yamhill County, Oregon, acting in the abesnoe o f the Circuit Judge, and said court not being in session. B. A. KHks, Attorney for Plaintiff. First issue, 10-21. 1916. Last “ ’ 11-26, “ Guardian’ sSate o f Rani Property. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned, W. 8. Allan, aa guardian o f the person on and estate o f John W. Summers, an incompetent person, by an order o f the County Court o f the State o f Oregon for Yamhill County, duly made ana entered on October 16th, 1915, has been duly authorized and directed to —II the Northeast quarter o f the Southeast quarter o f Section Twenty, Township Three Soute Range Three West of the Willamette Meri dian. Yamhill County, Oregon, and that in pursuance thereof the said guardian will on Friday, November 26th. 1916, at the hour o f 10:00 o’clock A.M. at the west and front door o f the County Court House at McMinnville, Oregon, •ell the above described real property, and all the interest o f the said ward, at public auction for caah in hand. W. S. Allan, Guardian o f John W. Summers, an incompetent person. , B. A. Kliks, Attorney for Guardian. First issue, 10-21,19)6. Last “ 11-11, “ Adm inistrator’s Nótica o f Final Noti— Is hereby given that the under signed administrator o f the estate of Sarah E. McNay, doceaasd, has filed his final account — «aid at 11 o'clock A. M. o f said day as tee day and hour for the hearing o f objec tions to aaki final account and the settlement thereof. Now, therefore, all persona interested in the —tate o f —id * dec—aedare here- reqi____ to ajpp—irat by notified rnd reqafaed the C o u n ty Coart __________ room ___ at __ hou—, _______________________ at McMinnvilie. aaid Coun ____ ounty and State, at —id time, to then and there I—, if any there be, why — id account should not ha rattled, allowed and approved, and said estate forever and finally rattled and said administra tor and Ms bondsman discharged. Dated October 21. 1915. John W. Barcroft, drainistrator o í the —tato of Sarah ETlfaNay, dec-rad. Ctanbee Butt, Attorney for —tato, First is. 10-21, 1916. Last 11-11, . .