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About Newberg graphic. (Newberg, Or.) 1888-1993 | View Entire Issue (March 30, 1916)
nii m i ■ ,s /. t»:< tv . ■ — WEST CHDALEI past lew d ays. Her m any friends wish her a speedy recovery. L. M. Metcalf and wife and Prof. H aw kins « a i a Sunday IPKtt o f M r. and Mr*. A. C . See- Ray Newby and family were vis itors at the Ross home Sunday. *y B. F. Yergen and fam ily spent Sunday w ith B. G. Feudal! and fam ily. M r. and Mrs. B. L. Am oth to o k dinner Sunday w ith Prof, and Mrs. E. H . Anderson. M rs. Ine^ Roes, o ! P ortland, has been visiting w ith relatives in /«Fern w o o d during the week end. The “ Cackle Club” meets at Joseph Powell’s Thursday after noon. All the members are urged Oliver and F loyd W orden are to be present. n o w “ batch in g,” the rest of the fam ily having recently m oved t o their new hom e in Chehalem Center. DeYere Fendall, w h o , w ith r . Quite a crow d attended the (day given a t the gym b y home talent S aturday night. The a ct ing w a s g o o d , each one h a v iog his part w ell learned. — C ., w ent t o Th?, Dalles on a fruit graftin g expedition, stopped o ff W . G. W arnack transacted o n his return trip t o visit w ith E. G. Fendall and fam ily Sun* business in Portland Saturday. Mrs. John Pettingill, o fN e w - day. berg, w a s a Rex v isitor Sunday L a st F rid ay night the West Mrs- Erm a K ane spent the bal Chehalem b a n d held an enter ance o f the week visiting friends tainm ent in the E w in g Y ou n g in Newberg. sch ool w hich w a s m uch enjoyed Dr. A. M . Davis, o f Newberg, b y a g o o d cro w d . V ariou s selec w a s a Sunday visitor a t the John tion s w ere w ell rendered by the W inter’ s hom e. band. The rivalry betw een the Mra. F o r d B oyd , o f Salem, is n orth and sou th side members visiting her parents, M r. and w a s keen and aided in m aking Mrs. A. L. Jenkins. the p rogram a success. The M rs. A. H . Dean and daughter, n orth side p rogram included D oroth y, spept from Saturday corn et and clarinet solos, stu m p until M on d a y visiting in P ort -r^ecbes and selections b y an ' ~ ' orchestra. The south side p r o land. John W inters, Charley Rein duced a m irth p rovak in g min and August Schaad are shipping strel sh ow w hich kept the crow d in an alm ost continuous uproar. a ca r o f p o t a t o e s a 6feek, for The program as a w hole w as w hich they are getting. $ 1 .3 5 a very successful. The band ow es hundred. m uch of it ’s success t o the able leadersh ip o f Granville Bverest. M ildred Baker w a s visiting at the H ob son hom e Sunday. Daniel W o h l g e m u t h visited friends a t Sherw ood Sunday. Florence Felts, o f New berg, spent Thnrsday night w ith Jos. P ow ell’s. M iss Beryl De F ord, o f New- berg, visited with W. A. Par rishes’ Sunday. H ubert Rollins, of D onald, vis ited friends a t Fern w o o d Satur d a y and Sunday. Irene Pow ell has been sick th e RIBBON RIDGE Miss Ethel Evans w as a Sun d a y guest o f M r s / M abel Rich. Susie and Lucile E vans were Sunday guests of M rs. K ate Rich. , Miss Esther Burnham spent the week-end a t her hom e in Newberg. M iss Elizabeth K irkpatrick w ent to P ortland last week t o g e t w ork . > ' On account o f the storm y w eather last week several o f the children were absent from school. The bad road s a lso prevented ns trom having church services last Snndav. THE FAMILY IN CHINA. Hew Mothers Who May Hava Na Cl «Iran Still Can Count Thom. -■— ; there a month longer were it not that so many resort out of curiosity to drink punch made out of it.*’ On July 17 m o w was still to be. found* lying in a m au nearly jo u r feet U Probably the most marvelous rec ord left us of that famous winter of 1741-2, according to the Spring- field Republican, is the statement made by Alonzo Lewis, author of •The Annals of Lynn, Maas.” that •Francis Lewis, the signor of the Declaration of Independence, drove his horse from New York to Barn stable, the whole length o f Long Is land sound, on the iee.” ? :... * - W# ars prone to sympathize with the Chinese woman because of the plurality of wives, but Amerioaa visitors to China see little evidence o f the need of our sympathy. The Chineae have a saying, ’T h e head wife should cherish the in ferior wives as the great tree eher- iahes the creepers that gather round i t ” I fa impossible to say-whether this sage advice is always followed, hut one often sees the several wires o f many officials, all friendly as sit ters and all working for the com Work Pans White Asleep. mon good of the borne. Cabanis tells us that Franklin on An American lady visiting China ________ recently celled upon the wife of an several occasions mentioned to him official and waa met at the door by f that he had been assisted by dreams citan food l How about tho air j o g breath* |p_____ of H them W ( in the conduct o f affaire in which two ladies. One H H H I was P H i H H H Four bad room, yoar Uviag-roomp your Im itif old Chineae lady, with feet that he was engaged. Condillac states that while writ* could uot have been more than two* and a half inches in length, She » » his “ Course o f Studies” he was . But safeguard your health — insure the right was partially supported on one side frequently obliged to leave a chapter amount o f /r«sA air for your lungs, by properly heating incomplete ana retire to bed, ana on by a servant and on the other by a and ventilating your homo with a beautifully dressed Manchu woman. awaking he found it on more than After the guest was seated in the ope occasion to have been finished place o f honor ut the left of the in hia head. The moat remarkable testimony elderly lady and tea was brought o f this kind is perhaps that at Sir she asked the usual question, “ What is your honorable age?” She re Thomas Browne, who declared that plied, “ Sixty-two.” Then, as al if it were possible he would prefer It pours mixed heat and oxygen ways follows, the guest said, “ How to carry on his studies in his dreams«» d riv e ou t tho fo u l air. It males* y ou r «o much more efficient were his fac- iny ciiudren your one . « i « uu many children nave have you?” She re- ed, "Five.” The guest then asked hit'«* of mind when his body their ages and, to her astonishment, asleep. lowest o f any effi- heard her say that the eldest waa •ha Wasn’t Fretting. seventeen years and the youngest A fond mamma had found occa two months. sion during the morning to repri ^ When the American could find mand her small daughter with more as. U t e A p n t e Jm* X plan words to continue the conversation than usual severity-. It seemed to yomm—tt Ate hr«l«rtw as «Sarge t she turned to the Mancha lady and hart the child’s feelings consider asked her practically the same ques ably. In the afternoon the little tions. She replied that she waa girl sat on the sofa staring vacantly thirty-five years old and waa the ont of the window, apparently mother of five children, the eldest wrapped in meditation. The moth being' seventeen years and the er relented and, coming over to the youngest two months. Then the ride of the little girl, placed her American realized that the first wife hand on the child’s shoulder and had no children, but, according to asked, “ What are you thinking Chinese custom, claimed as her own i about, dear?" all children born to the secondary ' - “ I ’uz jus* finkin’,” said the little wives. “ if I want six or eight brides The custom was further exempli* maids.” — Everybody’s. fied by the wife of a magistrate who was calling upon the American lady, N . Wadding P i - m o t ta In Hungary. accompanied by the second wife. in Hungary wedding presents are After the usual question in regard only given to poor couples to help to age and health this lady waa ask-, them get their homes together.. The ed how many children she possessed. girl friends of the brides show, at She looked puzzled for a moment, tention _______ by making cakes of various then turned to the other wife and, ¿n d s to be partaken of st the mar- keeping track of the names by turn - Other gif to them ate ing down a finger at each Satie. Ana this is a custom that said: ode could wish were more general. •Let me see— how many children There is no wedding cake, either, as have I ? Tsai An has three, Wo we understand' it, but each guest re Kee has five— that is eighty Ms Lu ceives a kind of sweet cake of the has two1—ten; Sin Ynn has'four— substance of cracknel biscuits made fourteen; Sih Peh two—sixteen, and in the form of a ring about ten U x M a k X X X M T O C T i a W ’XOi’K ’l you have three.” Then, turning to inches in diameter. her hostess, she Said, “ I have nine teen children.” — New York Ameri Tha Spencer. can. Words have been added to the English language as the result, of wagers. .The third Lord Spencer ;; SEASONABLE CUT FLOWERS— Plants in pots, cyclamens, \ | AN ICY RECORD. bet that by cutting off the tail part ; ; (fine plants), cinerarias, primrose«, ferns, fern dishes, gerani- < > l«w England’* ColdMt W inter Si of his overcoat he conld bring into 1 > urns, calla lilies (hardy flowers), hydrangea, peonies; Roses l ! Soma o f It* Events. fashion overcoats so short that the ;; oar specialty (strong plants). Low prices^ Tlie winter of 1741-2 was colder skirts of the undercoat would show than any New England winter beneath. He won his wager, and which had preceded it since the “ Spencer” became the name both colonists landed at Plymouth, and of that garment and of the feminine in no year since has cold so intense one afterward constructed in its jiii| ira |JF It or protracted been recorded. ~ A» likeness. _________ - There are flve thin** that a soldier •us MomeAt of Her Life» early aa Nov. 13, 1741, snow fell should never be wltbont—his gnn. bis "The only time 1 ever waa a thief Mora Lifelike. over the whole country, and next cartridge, bis knapsack, rations for Photographer (to young man)— four days and bis pioneer tools. The saved my life.” said Rose Oogblan April it was still covering the fence once. “ My slster-ln-law, Louisa Thorn It will make a much better picture knapsack should be reduced to the ton. was playing In ‘Colleen Bawn* in rows. An issue of the Boston Post Boy if yon put your hand on your fa smallest poKlble weight and size and 8totland. I was Ann* Chute, one of contain only a shirt, a pair of shoes, a the bridesmaids, and 1 always dressed for Jan. 12, 1742, reports a tent ther’s shoulder. collar, a handkerchief and a flint of In Louisa’s room with her. The Father— Ha; it would make erected on the Charles river as an steel. This le not much, bat be should “This particular night she was HI, inn for travelers who frequented it much more natural if he had hia never part from them, for when once and her understudy went go. Now, It hand in my pocket! this great frozen highway. The lost they cannot be raeovared.—Na hapi>ened that I had longed and longed Boston News Letter for March 6 poleon. _ _ _ _ _ _ v _ _ _ _ _ _ to wear a certain costume of Loutoa’a. Motion Pictures. of the same year relates how “ peo ----- _ — i ~ - t V - . ! It wasn't one bit soluble for a girl of ple ride every day from 8tiratford, The motion picture is more than ..v» . u w "& . k . my age In a bridesmaid part, being Now. Johnny, «aid the Wacher. made of heavy white corded silk with Conn., to Long Island, which is half a century old if we understand three leagues.” Even asTar east as by that term any device for produc teuppoee you wanted tobnlM a *1.000 - , lmg conrt train and aH the fixings, bouse and bad only *700 what would bnt j ndorerf Jt New London old diaries tell us that ing the optical illusion of moving 1,0?*' | “ I dressed np In It and went out to “ the ice extended into the sound objects. These toys were called by rou "I 'spose I’d have to marry a girl wait for the cue with the other girls, s far as could be seen from the various names, such as thaumatrope, worth *300." answered the young flnan : jost as we were ready to go on some town, and Fisher’s island was united zoetrope, stroboscope, phenakiato- rier.—Kanaai City Star. ; one behind me said. ‘Rose, your drees to the mainland by a solid bed of acope, stereoscopic cabinet, kine- ---------------------- ---- » I is on fire!' ice.” On March 28 of that re mstoscope, etc. The first exhibition “ I think that to the most fearful A Smooth Approaoh. Id 1 word that can sofcnd In a theater— markable spring the Boston News of photographic motion pictures was “ Ton seem hard worked, sir.’ Flrer My train bid caught Are from Letter reports that people living on made'by Henry Heyl in Philadel the affable stranger one of the little gas footlights, onpro- I 'm half dead " Thompson’s island had crossed over phia in 1870. The picture* were tected then. "Tqen l called In the nick of time. to Dorchester to church on the ice made by successive careful poses “The girls in their light dresses were for the fifteen preceding Sundays. thrown on the screen in such a way I’m selling life Insurance. If you’re trying to get away from me. and the half dead you can’t get a policy any As late aa July 9 an old letter that the movement ef the subjects too quick.” -Louisville Courier-Journal nearest man. Hardress. waa hand written from New London, Conn., kapt time with the music of an or- cuffed. 1 crushed my train In my hands to smother the creeping flame ays that on the east aide of the eheetra. Many other inventors Impossible Post, t Connecticut river a body ice as worked on this problem before Edi Irate Father— Doo't yon think, young and becked off down the stops under lar^e aa two carta can draw still re son, in 1889, produced the first mod an you can walk Into this house the stage. A man down there threw- a heavy cloak over me, and 1 fainted. I mained, clear and solid as at Christ era motion cture apparatus o f the and hang np yonr bat. Timid 8ultor— w o burned badly around my bands ar to na today. — Chris- • I know I can’t, sir You’re sitting am mas time, and the quaint old letter type so fa and arms and neck, bnt the heavy silk * it—Baltimore American. writeT artleaalj adds, “ It might lay Herald. drove saved me. "-New York World. You lake all kinds of precaution to aat Have warm comfortable living quarters. W arm Air Furnace Beet for Heat—Beet for Health F. R G R IF F E T H Spring Time is Seed lime The Best and Purest Seeds on hand all the time NEWBERG FEED & SEED COMPANY ][T H E HOME OF F L O W E R S ii JOHN GOWER nr W »V W »W »W ■ • * « That “W ade Right In” Feeling— first thing in the m orning— com es naturally w ith right living. Daily food plays a big part, for unless it supplies proper rebuilding elements, and is properly digested, one's mental and physical pow er is bound to suffer. Grape-Nuts I I V ■ m l f J È U 1 fkj . r I l . die w hole wheat and malted barley food, provides all the rich nutriment of the grains, jflfcludriig their vital mineral salts— phosphate of potash, etc*— lacking in the diet o f m any, but which are necessary for kaUtweri up keep of body, brain and nerves. , Grape-Nuts has a delicate nut-like flavour; Is alw ays ready to serve w ith cream or mUk» is easily jigestikle; and yields a wonderful return of health and energy* “There’s a Reason” 11 » Comparison of Condition af National Banks of Yamhill County Under Data of Official Call March 7* 1916 __ ____________________________________________ .. . -i r a g - 1 . ' - - * ' * 1?*' f. ■ ---------------------------- ------------------- ------------- — — .................... i .'i i 1 j Cash and Exchange Loans and Investments ! * » pi i » P i »■■■' Surplus and Profita Deposit* McMinnville National Bank......$50,000 $97,470.41 $478,221.89 $500,580.27 $173,721.03 $674,301.30 U.S. National B a n k , Newberg» .$60.000 $27,214.74 $361,758 87 $383,158.04 $ 95,815.57 $478,973.61 First National, McMinnville.....$50,000 $61,163.70 $305.358.70 $340,792.24 $115,780.16 $456,522.40 U. S. National, McMinnville..... .$60,000 $20,842.08 $222,389.91 $242,817.76 $ 98,814.18 $341,631.94 Firat National, Sheridan........ ». .$26,000 $11,774.26 $176,267.24 $175,454.80 $ 44,686.70 $220,041.50 7,951.63 $134,65457 $210,481.95 $ 24,274.15 $284,756.10 Capital NAME Firat National, Newbera............ $50,000 .$ « è r t -W s u ' a • • **44 ■ •. • \ ____ Totals ; . if: * * i- * >L.l . V* v i r. , ' ! r- y , t - 1 - - ,' a 7 Br«a>' '' ■‘»'O* r w rwmM 2 ¿¿h? :t. i' iiinii V •Vr