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About Newberg graphic. (Newberg, Or.) 1888-1993 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 18, 1915)
' T î 'H'V-'(if V ' 1 ■ WEST CHEHALEM for the evening. A short pro gram was given after which the evening was spent ia 'playing gn mrs. Refreshments consisting of milk and gingerbread were Srrved. The next meeting of the society will be a religions meet ing and will be held in thechurch Friday, November 26. The young people will be assisted in this meeting by Rey. H. G. Crocker. All young people are invited to attend. Mrs. Tilda Hesgard was in Portland rhe first of the week. Miss Esther Burnham was a Sunday guest of H . C. Baker and tamily. The Ladies’ Aid Society met last week at the home o f Mrs. H. G. Crocker. A stormy day prevented many from attending, knit those who did go were shown a very pleasant time by their genial hostess. HIGHSCHOOL Mr. and Mrs. E. G. Fendall and children, Kenneth and Lois, Last Friday evening the juniors were Sunday guests of Mr. H. entertained the freshmen.' As Anderson and family. usual .a fine program was Laura nee Boyd took dinner rendered, * after which games Sunday with the Hesgard family. were placed and refreshments On Tuesday evening, Novem served. The freshies have de ber 23, the pupils of the Ribbon cided the juniors are a prettv Ridge School, under the direc good bnneh. Miss Dorothy Cox, formerly tion of their teacher, Miss Esther Burnham, will give a program of San Jo9e, California, started and ppmpkin social in the to school last Monday. Artisan hall. Girls and women The girls’ class in gymnastics w ho attend, are requested to which was formed last week bring sapper for tw o in a pump under the direction o f Miss Cor kin. The pumpkins will he sold bett, held its first meeting Mon at auction. day evening. We would advise A Thanksgiving progTsm will Miss Corlfett not to have the be rendered by the pupils of the feminine ‘ ’ huskies” run and jump Ewing Young School Wednes to o mnch as the floor of the day, November 24, in the school gymnasium is rather weak, and building. Prof. E H. Anderson unless the school board sees tit to re-floor this, we might have is preparing the program. Harold Minier visited last to play basketball in the rain. Tbeo Langton and Mrs. Stella week with his cousin,. B. P. Yergen. Groth were visitors Monday. Last Saturday our football S. Benson made a business trip warriors defeated the Wood burn t o Coos Bay last week. A very large crowd o f young high bunch on their grounds by people attended the Poverty a score ol 13 to 0. The Wood- Social given by the Young' burners had no show at all People's Society last Friday j against our line plunges and end night. R agger I, threadbare, runs and only managed to hold patched and mended clothing us to sn^h a small score by their was the character o f the costumes officials continually calling “ off side.” Nevertheless under the penalties we showed them up ill fine shape and have learned something ot their “ rep.” DUNDEE Mrs. G. A. Dearborn went to Ashland on Monday where she will visit for a ,tew days before .Mr. .Dearborn joins her, when they will attend the exposition at San Francisco. Mr. and Mrs. John Conrad have gone to Robinett where they will make their home. Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Conlee visited in McMinnville the first of the week. Mr. and Mrs Bower went to Portland Sunday. Mrs. Adams, of Seattle, and Mrs. Tucker, of Portland, have been visiting their father and their sister, Miss Sally Beck, the past week. Mr. Henry has begun work on his new house which is located near the blacksmith shop which he recently built. Miss Mabel Swink was the hostess at a birthday dinner on Sunday. Monday evening the teachers and pupils of the high school gave Miss Mabel a sur prised party at Groth Hall. J. 0. Spencer spent last week in Portland looking after busi ness affairs. Great interest is manifest in the entertainment to bejgiven by the Dundee Amusement Compa ny on Thanksgiving evening, November twenty fifth, at Com munity Hall. All the talent is local and we are promised “ tw o hours of solid fun and enjoy ment.” The program includes plays and sketches, .vocal and instrumental music and a min strel performance. Doors open at 7, music at 7:30, curtain at 8. Seats can be reserved it desired either by person or mail at the post office. t ■ . a . j , . . * ■■ — :: •. i * . * ’ -'% REX Nothing Stops This M an T h e m an w ith vigorous, virile health, and a clear m ind, w h o brushes aw ay obstacles, and rejoices in overcom ing difficulties, is bound to succeed« H is is the joyous outlook on life. v P hysical and mental conditions like these com e largely through proper eating— “ F ood m akes the m an.“ N o w it is a fact— attested by food experts— that the m odem dietary is w oefully lacking in the very elements that put success into a man. T h e y are the mineral salts— Phosphate of Potash, etc. W hite bread is almost w h olly lacking in diem . But there is one food that richly supplies these vital elements, a n J lh a t food is • G rape-N uts M ade from w hole wheat and barley, Grape-N uts contains ail the nutriment of toe grain, including toe valuable mineral salts. It is easily digested, is concen trated and has delicious taste. A daily ration o f Grape- N uts along w ith other food helps build vigorous bodies and keen brains. ‘There’i a Reason” — told by Grocers everywhere After a separation o f thirty years, Mrs. H. JI. Peters is re ceiving a visit from her cousin, Miss Clara Wahl, of Clearence, N. Y. Although totally unused to the rainy climate o f Oregon, Miss Wahl likes Oregon and is planning on spending some little time in the West. A. H. Dean spent several days o f last week at. home, being un able to report for work owing to a lame back. Miss Nellie Wallace who spent the week in Rex visiting her sister, Mrs. A. H. Dean, returned to her home in Portland Satur day. Mr. Grounds, a National Pro hibition speaker who is giving talks in the state on the liquor question, spoke at the church Wednesday evening. Mrs. Lloyd Brickley, of Port land, is spending a few days with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Strate. » Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Ragsdale, of Marble, Colorado, arrived Monday for a visit with Mr. and Mrs. James Kane, and in tend to reside permanently in the state if they find a suitable location. Jack Sawyer who is on jury duty at McMinnville, spent Sun day at home. Miss Erma Kane, Harriet Greve, Nellie Miller, Llewellyn Sanderman and Claytori Peters attended the Junior-Freshman party at the Newberg high school Friday evening. At the Quarterly Meeting of the Friends Church at Newberg Saturday, it was decided to erect a small parsonage on the church property at Rex for the accommodation of Mrs. Fan nie Liter the present pastor. The work on the building will be commenced at once. s i', RYIIM WORLD its Awful Velocity In Its Spiral Whirl Through Space. is the biggest factor o f peace, war and indue* try in the world today. A ll nations are pay ing it homage as never before. R ESULT IF IT STOPPED. Therefore is it not reasonable to suggest that you owe your own dollar great respect? Save it to the best advantage and spend it with the greatest judgm ent Open an account with thb strong bank and let us help you Ita Motion Suddenly Arrested the Would I t Vaporised by tbs Host Generated and a Now Nabuta Would Blaao In tho M«ovens. Th# direction sad weed o f the earth'« ditbt are the-resultants of two motions with which it is endowed—the one around the eon. the other with the" sun it away through space. The com or tbeee simultaneous motions caoaaa the earth to travel la a »piml fWth whose axis la directed nearly to wan) the bright star Vega, the moat beautiful in tbe northern sky. In it« orMU or annual path aronnd the bun. the eurty’s mean speed h* eighteen aud one-half miles per second while Its speed of tranaltloh toward Vega, which It share« with tbe sun. Is about twelve miles per second. We may call the resistant or combined speed of the earth in its actual spiral |R||| lirn i twenty-two miles per second This menus that tf you could stand boride It and see the earth rush by its whole enormous globe. 8.000 miles in diameter, would para your eye in about atx minutes. Ir means that in one day and night (twenty-four hoursi the earth travels 1.000.800 miles! Compare.I with tbe velocity of pro Jeotlles. the speed of the earth’s flight la a.» great that the swiftest of them would seem* to"stand still ▲ rifle bul let tuny go. say. one-third of a mile per second In tbe first momenta of its flight . -tliut la. sixty time« slower than tbe eurtb. which never stops or slows up. Tbe initial velocity of some projec tiles may be half a mile par second, or forty-four time« slower than tbe earth. If a cannon could be planted out In apace and fired at the earth from a dis tance equal to one-quarter o f the earth's diameter (which would be like a hunter firing his rifle abone eighteen Inches from a deer's side) and if tbe shot were aimed at the front edge of the fly ing earth (imagining tbe latter flat like a disk) and fired with an undiminishing velocity of half a mile per second It would not only miss |ta mark, bnt tbe whole breadth of the earth would have passed by before tbe ball had traversed one-tenth ,of tbe original distance sepa rating the cannon from the earth. The motion of the earth becomes poo sibly even more Impressive when we consider tbe. awful energy that It pro duces. Kinetic energy, or tbe capacity to do "work, such as striking a blow, is mpapajan by multiplying "The mass of .the moving body by tbe square of its elocity and dividing tbe product by 2 In Order to get tbe result In foot pounds we reckon the mass to pounds and divide again by 32 or by 64 in all Tbe reason tor dividing by 32 (more exactly 32.18) Is that that number Is the unit iln feet per second) of tbe earth’s gravitation, or the acceleration of gravity. Calculated in this way. the kinetic energy of tbe earth comes out at more than ninety septillion i90 followed by twenty-four aero«) foot pounds! Fig ured in another way. the energy In the flying earth Is equtvnient to nearly three sextilllons of horsepower, tbe horsepower being tbe measure of the work done by 33.000 foot pounds of energy developed tn one minute. That la to ray. If the earth could be brought to rest in one minute and all Its energy turned into driving machin ery it would develop nearly three sax tilUons of horsepower Bnt if it were brought to rest in one second it would develop sixty times more horsepower! Then wd may consider the thermal effects o f the earth’s kinetic energy If by Instantaneous arrest of the motion It were turned into beat. There would be a sudden development of so tretneu dons a temperature that the earth might be vaporised. Puff! And some astronomer on some distant planet, aiming bis telescope through the cool evening air. would catch sight of a lit tie new nebula, twinkling like a thistle down blown Into the aky of space. Thereafter the dissipated earth would appear In a catalogue on that faroff world under the name of “Jones’ Neb ula.” and nobody, caaually glancing at It from an observatory and unsympa thetically noting Its extreme extgnlty. would ever think of tbe bee rtbreaking history that bad been nebuliked ,ln that speck of cosmic vapor.—Garrett P. Servlaa In N r# York Journal. A Pool’s Paradise. The expression “ A fool’s paradise’ meant originally tn Christian mythol ogy a region “near the abode of the blessed.” but not a part of it, a sort of tKu-derland. “ where dwelt the praise less and the blameless dead.” Today It Is used to denote the mental condition of thoa* who by their rain hopes are “fooling” themselves.—New York. Icon. > i United States National Bank 1889—“ OLDEST BANK IN NEWBERG”-19 1S Y ou O w e It to Yourself to «jet the most you can for your money. I f you are thinking o f buying SH EET M ETAL Then we can direct you to the piece where they sire value far value. Perhaoe vou have already arueeaed where it la. If not, it is tne SHEET METAL WORKS F. H. GRIFFETH White"* pa ■ v 50 a 5 scond a Pure Milk and Cream is conducive to «rood health- , This ia the kind we suppl' our customers- Our Dairy is frequently inspected by the State Dairy and Food Commissioner and has been highly com mended by that official. Give us a trial. P h on e R ed 66 R. B. LYLE Largest Manufacturing Plant in the Countyj LUMBER, LATH, SHINGLES, DOORS WINDOWS, BUILDING|MATERIAL ALL KINDS - != = ■ ■ ; MFRS. OF THE FAMOUS “INDIANA'’ SILO McCOY BROS. Fire-proof Garage We carry a full line o f Auto Supplies, Tires, Gasoline, Oils and Greases. Our Trouble Car ia Aft Your Service mm ! Night. We employ an expert mechanic who can repair all makes o f ca n . Auto Livery a Specialty Ladies Waiting Room in connection. Make our Garage your headquarters. Ripening Fruits. Fruits undergo marked cl ,___ __ chemical composition as they grow to their full «lie and ripen. In some fruits ripening increases the sugar content and decreases foe add, whereas Id asms others both sugar and add content de crease la the ripen tag process. “ Didn’t yon guarantee that for Mx months?” “Yea. all*, but you didn’t tall was for a boy's boarding New York Times Carpal W earing. Rag carpet and rug weaving A good inflow makee a good by Joseph Stephens. On Dayton ba or bo takas In mucb can and road, opposite David Martin gita orach.—Starks. > place. tf. PHONE W H ITE 199 NEW BERG, O R EG ON T H E HOM E OF FLO W ER S S p S O N A B L E CUT FLOW ERS-Planta in pots, cyclamen«, ; (flue plants), dnerarias, primroses, farna, fern dishes, gerani- < urns, calls lilies (hardy flow en), hydrangea, peonies. Rosea ! oar specialty (strong plant«). Low prices. '” " r_ JO H N GOWER