Image provided by: Newberg Public Library; Newberg, OR
About Newberg graphic. (Newberg, Or.) 1888-1993 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 13, 1916)
'^ 1 ' i*M '« f i • M T'-; - "• f* r4rff- ’ -, * m ' ’¿ ¿ J iib 4 < grB { 4 f C ‘ M p . m • * THE THREE FOOLS. uirvcars j Vegetables. fruit* sud grato* u t U» ï.WowUwWitw atopies of th« Turkton kitchen. Hreok- T W R. MwrisH ; <h*t ou th* B ooinm - um «- oom UT» of h •Rckte R. Lew i «null cap of Turkish i-offee and ■ roll. W ». CL McAdoo At ooon there Is « bowl of soar milk -¡s*y M. Camai < 7 »oart. tad broad. Thick Turkish ...Jawpke Oeoab to ttkau «cato In thp afternoon FusUsK. Lae » kaf ap appetite« for ibe prloclpni wltb tbe Irish, ss tl* cabbage with tbe German. |* take« a mnltHude of ftwma. bat Its basic quality, its quail- tjr o f being pUnC Is (tort rad from rice being cooked la each a way aa to pro- «orvo aneb grate firm nod distinct. Tbs rtes Is unpoBshsd and la eookteg takes on a gelatinous coat Sitinsflmes It fa balled in mutton fat." a rick, smooth, inviting dish- aonottems bits o f roost muttoq ore mingled wttk It wbeo It becomes a n ea r pudding of deBdowa flavor it is cooked wttk small car- renta aad ptee auto, fragrant and spicy. It to stuffed with dates and fit voted wttb orange peel; but. whatever Its form. It II one o f the treasured memo- ries of a rkdt to tbe near oast Eggplant to the foundation o f anoth er favored Turkish dtoh It to etuAed with chopped onions and rice and cook ed to oU. h to also staffed wHk meat ms m> we and rico and steamed until tt becomes a culinary Inaplratloa. The westerner, furthermore. learns to en- Jy.v many of tbe milk foods prepared by the Turks. Vsoart cultured arflk as thick as soar cream, prepared team the rich milk of the/buffalo cow. la a satisfaction to the moot pampered din er Chicken breast milk, made from grated cblckea breasts; jelly-like rice milk, starchy pudding, eatao with sug ar and rosewater/ and vaourt, with chopped nutmests. are other dtohaa. - Tbe Turks are fond o f sweats. They prepare a ktad of bread which they took in turner and eat wttb rich create. They also nretsirr pastry in strings son Red lb honey Moats, with the ex- («prion of mutton, are poor la Turkey, bat rhea the Turk to a goad deal o f a Tbe Turktob porter, or bamai. dines ou a chunk of broad costing s «ont. to gether with s melon or s oum-h o f wlth^tbe prowess of porters in the was»' This rugged Turkish hard« hearer eats a dinner at night which «■osta about 4 cents—a bowl o f pUaff with hits o f meat to It.-National Geo graphic Society Bulletin. “ Akbar the lung, sitting upon his throne, yellow with gold and whit« with pearls, spake unto the Rajoh B irbei: ‘Thou has said, ss it is tola me, that my realm is fa ll o l foals and thar the com pie teat o f these fools are wise fools. Now I com mand thee to show me three o f these “ wise fools” o f whom than hast spoken.* “ And the Rajah Birbal bowed and said, ‘Lord, 1 dp thy bidding.* So be set forth upon bis qnest, end m three days* tim e he came again before the king and his court, fo i- the present; it is the present that ( _ n ff » determ ines the pest- * Fanny, the sister o f Charles Dickens. The post IS what we moke o f i t «aa one o f the first students entered« It is th etem per o f the present that the »id Boyal Academy of M usTw Ln qualifies it. It «11 depends upon tt opened itodoors at Tenterdeh street now you now consider it, whether it to 1823. and st that time tbe students bring you despair or discourage-! ‘,Ted •* rb* «cademy. only going borne m en£ j f°r H»« ««»A “ Every Sunday.“ o _ . l u _ j Dickens told Forater. -1 was at tbe *nn« ntiHrl * " delDy “ 8 ° ‘clo‘ k ln die morning to i* . *** r,«Ooe, mako o f fetch bar (Fanny», and «• walked back all those things elem ents o f present there together at night.“ - And tbe Sun power. Bnt forget its septic qnoli- ? day itself -tbe (two spent—In the Mar ties. Don’t let the past iraman y o u ,1 «balnea prison, where their tether and benumb you with remorse, weaken j ®®d»er then resided, owing to Mr. you with self contem pt I ^»' kens havlng “ faUed to propitiate , , v, Ilia creditors.'“ T be l^ t s a y a w e n s e b y stepping m to ^ K While her father was an onr * a d selrea, and, « fo r tt* « , . c^ emyj . Qd £ future novStot. fu to n , the best preparation fe e rt tben engaged Tn p—**»g labels on ▲ certain amateur aviator talked re cently about a dying trip wfth i 'pro- faakmaL when bo fen 1.200 feet into the water without knowing it. i wain i rnfiitBoeo, oe aaic witu a Apprehensions, prem onitions, wor*- smile **1 thought that oar swift- de ssertit was a place of fancy dying. I am. In Met. aa Ignorant o f a notion w laches would eoem not to tech sig nificance ip literature, o r the grast Rnglish wrtten of the Victorian era aJmoet all were talL Tennyson. Car lyle. Bdwarfi Fitzgerald aad Matthew Arnold all reached nix feet. Bastia touched five feet tea. Fronde ir e feet eleven. Dtckena sad Browateg fail abort of the aU foot level kg ealy a narrow space, and Thackeray tamed etx feet three.—Loadoa Chronicle. A few yean ago a collector o f on- tiques arrived at the Belgian fron tier with an Egyptian mummy. Ha wre told that duty would hava to be paid on it, but the tariff list being consulted, mummies were not fauna -to - - 1 h . ..M , , . . „ ‘ - - au n n ea. “ Declare it as « I t fish,” said the official to one o f the clerks, and thus the desiccated remains o f s possible Pharaoh m ods ha trium phal entry into Belgium.— Boston Whero He Was Weak. “ Y ou say, Mr. Smith,** said the ri in a loV, thoughtful, this is a rione matter sort o f tone, “ that u have loved me fo r five years and ive qever dared to tell me so until “ Yes,” hs replied. “ W ell, I-cannot be your wife. A man who has no more courage than that would feign to Be asleep while a burglar stole his baby’ s shoes.*— Chicago Herald. I am n o w a t h om e, 1 1 0 5 N orth street, and am p rep ared t o a n sw er ca lls for. m a gn etic trea tm en t. W ill g o t o h om es it desired. M a rio n G eorge, p h on e B lack 6. tf The -Cry* af Silk. One o f the most peculiar features about manufactured silk is the rustling'sound fam iliar to every v o to you. A ll your yesterdays he has taken bach. AU your tom orrows are still in h h hand*, » Today is yours. Taka its pleas ures and be glad. Take its pains and play the man. The »leeptuK ran of Australia are to many way* better than those o f the United Stans Instead of twteg of continuous length they are broken op Into compartments, each one o f which contains two berths running crosswise the track, a separate lavatory and divers shelves, racks, books and cobby boles for disposing of a traveler's be I n ^ A lw O t o m h w l P a tw a tF 1 j-t m I longings. The privacy o f the arrange ment U much to my mind. Tbe porter, Young Mon (over the counter)— who is also the conductor. Wins ch a r« I f 1 should wont to exchange this of all heavy bags, satchels and pack engagement ring fo r som ething else age« and pots them to an apartment specially reserved for that purpose.— it w ill be all right, won*t it? Jeweler — On,' certainly I With Bishop K. R. B oms In Da I lae News pleasure. We are always glad to ac commodate patrons. A Varnishing Tig. Wbtn varnishing wood the work Same Young Man (over the coun must be done In s warm room at a ter a year later)— I believe you told temperature of at least It fiagrm K me whén I bought this ring I could At a lower temperature tbe motottirs exchange it fdr som ething else ? to the air will glve a milky and cloudy Jew eler— Yes. What will you appearance to tbe varntoh. Un the « other band, at tbe higher temperature have? Young Man— Well* I’ d like to ex the molature to not precipitated ondi the alcohol o f / tbe varnish baa • am change it fo r a barrel o f flour, a elen tly evaporated to Move a thin bushel o f potatoes, s ham and a amootb film of shellac. The durability load o f cool.— Exchange. brougbt before me, rajah ?* said the king/ “ “ 11110, my lord,* replied Birbal, Is Lai Bnjhakkar, the wise fo o l o f a village o f fools. W hile njmn the search that the king commanded me I came into a town where there was a great outcry. And the noise thereof led me to a house in which stood a boy with his arms around a pillar and his clasped hands fo il o f sweetmeats. It seems that the fa ther o f th is boy had filled his ¡¡ends while they were thus clasped, mid the people cried out fo r that hone could devise how the lad could be freed o f the pillar without dropping upon the ground the 'sweetmeats that were in his hands. Then « « « • this, man and ga te wise counsel “ Rejjnove,** said he, “ the beams froip the j o o f and draw the pillar up through the boy's arms.* And this they did! < “ .‘ So I bads him , fo r hia wisdom,. follow me to thy co u rt And came we crossed a river upon the hank o f which was printed the huge round footm ark o f on elephant L ong d id Lai Bnjhakkar study that footprint and then, nodding wisely, said, “ A h, a deer with a millstone tied to it* foot must hays leaped hen!** Therefore do 1 say he is that com pletest o f fool king, ‘ a com *% u fy ,* "sa id plete fo o l indeed] Y et be is but one. And did not f command thee to shoe me three suehf* * , “ “ ‘There be three,* said the rajah. T h is than is one, a* thou hash «ted; I qm the second fo r having sought him and brought him hither, and thou, my lo rd ; art the third fo r hav ing sent me on such an errand. Arthur Guiterman in St. Nicholas. ‘Hom e, Sweet Home,** was written, its popularity is still worldwide, and wherever the Rnglish language is spoken it is known and loved be cause it appeals to that deep lying instinct in humanity which is the a a e u j u i a u i , u n io n s i t u a r ueeu b o basis o f fam ily life. Many stories have been written o f treated as to kill this property in it, will when opened up emit the its origin, most o f them m ore or noise slightly. When the skein is less inaccurate land tending to dis squeexed in the hand the sound be- tort feslity by a mass o f pleasing comes quite audible. The “ cry” is fiction. considered a very desirable quality Moving word pictures have been in silk. D vefi develop it as much drawn o f the starving author in his • as possible. garret, and illustrations have been • J ‘1 published o f the original “ lowly Emmy f t r A*hi» W aiter. thatched cottage” fo r which he was " I ’ ll give that waiter,” said a cue- supposedly pining, both affecting tom er in a quick lunch room, “ an ana interesting, but not in accord ance with the facts. Although he order that Will simply paralyze him.” had periods o f failure and hardship “ What will you have, sir?” pres- ss well as possibly briefer periods enUy asked the waiter. o f success and prosperity, it was not while suffering from poverty that he wrote Tlome,* Sweet Hom e,” but during a time when he was living com fortably in Paris in the Palais Roys! and having considerable suc cess in his dramatic work. There is also no evidence to indi cate that the “ lowly thatched cot tage** had any existence'outside o f the author’s brain in spite o f the tradition which has been built up about tbe Easthampton cottage. Throughout his life Payne had a D isastrous. deep affection fo r his native land, Rev. Dr. Joeeph Parker o f the his friends and his fam ily, from whom be was for many years widely City temple, London, onoe had a separated. His letters frequently collection taken and added, with alindé to his loosin g fo r the society deep pathos: “ Widows and orphans will not be o f those he loved and his apprecia tion o f the home and dom estic life. expected to contribute.” A few Sundays later there was Ha v m only fifteen years o f age when necessity forced him to begin another collection fo r the same ob- his battle with the world, a preco “ This tim e,” said the preacher, cious, high spirited, im pulsive,sensi tive, ambitious boy, conscious o f an “ widows and orphans will not be intellect above the normal, restive i exempt, for no battle ever made so under restraint, quick to take o f many widows and orphans as the fense a f seeming slight.— T . T . P. announcement made on tha previous ^ • Luquer, Payne’s Grandnephew, in Sunday.** Need« No Lightning Boo. A building 0.000 feet above sea level should be protected by lightning rods, Tombey. ona thinks, but the astronomical obeer Verstegan gives tbs follow ing ori vatoey ai Mount Etna bas no« and gin o f the word “ tomboy** as applied d o « hot need such protection. Tbe to rom girls: “Turn oUNffriltoiy to uear tbe summit of the volcano, and the stream of vapor con turn bod, danced; hereof we stantly rising from the crater acts u a a wench that skippetb or lyke a boy, a tom boy ; our name also natural conductor, draining the elec- tvkhlf « « ov the ciondn, so that light» o f tumbling cometh from henee.” Coal Merchant— I say, Premium, I want to insure my coal yard against fire. What’s the coat o f a policy fo r £1,000? Insurance Agent— What coal is it — same kind yon sent me last? Merchant— Tes. it is. Agent— Oh* I wouldn’t insure it If I were t o « ! Tt won’t, buret— London Answers. | McCormack rake- one nlow one hack- one harrow. 5 c«w* 6 1*4«* f u f e } beR-cWv«. b«mi *B toe cowl, halm, bnlk andcaNo aowaa •** •*■■■ | m U, , --;r -J. « 1 and ifdhiinil m the |fliisiii. m l which n«w 1 ■»«fm ii mtemd " nrtT ,‘*..Ktu*d*d Vt ** Recorth of Mortga«« oi Yamhill County. Oro- ym; that the Court order «aid taal y d panonal property to U told m the mi—rr h j l«w pro- vidrd —d deber —d foreclose ill the light, title, ^ J jJ T J ireal „ pmpwty. or ^ pra therad; that wch decree ptovide that the proceedi aria- i ins float the iaie «1 laid property he applied to 1* » p ™ * t* ,** T *i H W ■ ? ¡¡J ptotodr. W ^ d lT m ^ c y fee CHASE A UNTON GRAVEL COMPANY All kinds o f gravel for con crete work, cement blocks, or wood work furnished on short notice. Telephone White 85 T he G ra p h ic and S em i-W eekly J ou rn a l on e y e a r $ 2 .0 0 .