Newberg graphic. (Newberg, Or.) 1888-1993, December 28, 1916, Image 3

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    = = 5 = = = = H S 6 5 5 5 5 5 5 B flS
•low, nee Nellie Sabin, Decern bet
19. o< typhoid fever. S h a w a a
Mias B. Vera Nelson w as con- j loved by «11 w ho met h er here
fined to-thtf hom e sevrrtd *dats|dttria|f her Tisit< here nhind time
her home in K ansas in
o f last week* With grippe.
Mrs.
A. Heskett took charge o f her company with her father; W . P.
room daring that time and re­ Sabin and aister, Miss Grace.
J-L- 1
=
-sss-ssege*
McMinnville where she w ill
spend the vacation w ith her p a r
ents.
Miss Hevland spent the
week with her people a t N ew
berg.
DUELS M THE NAVY
They Were Frequent and Deadly
M r D. Ebbert and wife and
From 1799 to 1836.
M r. and M rs. M annering went
marks that she finds pedagogy a
Misa Lucy Sbatx entertained a to Portland to spend Christmas
HONOR WAS THEN A FETISH.
moat interesting and eventful few of her friends very pleasant­
Joe Roger and family were
occupation
ly Christmas evening at her Christmas guests at the home of
In Those Days a Challenge Was Held to
As is th^ir yearly custom the home.
M r. and Mrs. Jim Boatm an.
0a a Sort o f Diploma For Naval Men,
Dean family spent Christmas
and the Victims o f the Field of Com­
M r. Yonng, whose wife has
N. P. Nelson, B o b Cook and
bat War
with Frank Paris and family, of been living on the Lillian Ikfe Bari C arter and their respective
Portland.
home this year, came last week families ate Christmas dinner
Tbs number o f Unltad States naval
officers
killed in duels In tbs half cen­
i f r . and Mrs. Cbas. Friend from K ansas City.
w ith M r. and M rs. Wm. Carter.
•pent a few days with relatives
The C. C. A. club held a stag
M r. Boyd and family were
in MPortland, returning home party at the school home Wed Christmas guests of M r« and
nesday night.
Tuesday.
Mrs. M onte Sleeper.
MrTand Mrs. C. M. Roberts,
of Portland, spent Christmas
■
,,
*
A - ,. ■— X. .... ..........
with M rs. Roberts’ parents, Mr.
Elmer F. Bergstrand to B. B .
and M rs. O. W oodworth.
M arvin Roth came over from
H y a tt 20 ac in • 36 t 4 s r 9 w
M rs. Frank Lewis and tw o Salem to spend the holiday sea­
$ 10 .
children, w ho have been visiting son with his grandparents, M r.
Elizabeth J. Blanchard to R.
the past l e w weeks with C. G. and Mrs. E. H. Anderson.
M. H ew itt and w f John B. R o w ­
Lewis, left for Payette, Idado,
A good sized crowd attended
land dfc t 8 • r 4 w $1400.
Wednesday to spend the holi­ the Christmas program a t the
F lo ra H . B row ning to E. G.
The
days with her parents before chnrch Friday evening.
Thompson 26 ac in M . H all die t
leaving for her home at Billings, children w ho participated in the
3 s r 3 w $1.
program should be compliment­
'Montana.'
v '
Sam antha A. French to Clin­
tson w h o ed for their good w o rk ; and also ton C. Smith 1 30 and 31 North
Mrs. R. N. Mprrison
w orks in Portland and the Con­ those w ho had charge of the N ew berg Fruit Land $2000.
w a y family spent Christmas at work, Miss Lelah Hevland and
EIKs M. Hadley to Chas. H ad-
Miss M aine Bickford.
the M orrison ranch.
a w a y 55 04 ac in John C ary die
S. M . Calkins returned to t 4 s r 3 w $500.
C~. G. Warnack and J. D. Kruse
—
Claradean
Saturday in order
both ate their Christmas goose
Frank L Haskin to D a k M.
that be might spend Christmas Haskin and V 2 int in 114 blk 17
with relatives in Portland.
with his family. He returned to Central Add to N ew berg $350. .
A. Heskett w ho has been in
Portland Tuesday.
> „ *>
M aggie M ason to L . B. Thom ­
the B ast in the interests o f the
D. P. Sh aw and family spent son 50x100 ft city o f N ew berg
Pond Lyceum Bureau returned
to Oregon in time to spend the Christmas with his parents, Mr. $ 10 .
XMinton C. Smith to E. A.
Christinas season w ith his wife and Mrs. H. L. 8 haw. M r. San*
and mother. He expects to be ders and M r. Wooner, of Pleas- H ayes I 30 and 31 N. N ew berg
stationed on the Coast for the ant Home, and M r. Rich, o f D al­ Fruit Land Snbd $2650.
U. S. to Chas. C. Meyers 160
pext few months for this sam e las, were there to help make np
the merry party.
ac
■ 1 8 1 2 a r 5 w.
Bureau.
John
Wennerberg to Nels Pear­
A. C. Seely and family spent
Under the management - of
Mrs. Eves andJMIS. A . Heskett, Christmas in Newberg w ith Mr. son a n d w f 52.97 ac in Jas.
Johnson d k 1 3 • r 4 w $5297.
a most pHeasiUs: program w a s and Mrs. W. E. Terrell.
WEST CHEHALEI
given a t tilt church Saturday
evening for the benefit o f the
Louise baby home of Portland.
A cash offering w as taken and a
large quantity of vegetables do­
nated to be shipped to the home.
Mrs. Prank Rnssell and daugh­
ter, Artis, spent the week with
the former's parents, who live at
St. Johns.
rM atbew Patten and Wesley
Patten and familjr went to P o rt­
M rs. Ford Boyd, o f Salem, is land Saturday morning and re-»
spending the holidays with her turned Tuesday.
parents, M r. and M rs. A. L.
G. W. Hash and family were
Jenkins.
Christmas gfiests at the S. M .
a E U L a ia m
Calkins home.
All those interested in the West
Cbehalem church are requested
School begins January 2 alter to be present next Sunday for an
all day meeting.
a week's holiday.
B, G. Fendall and family spent
M r. and Mrs. L. H. Meyer and
family «pent the Christmas holi­ Christmas with the B, F Yergen
days witli relatives in Portland. family at Valley View ¿arm.
N. P. Nelson and Dean S. Cal­
Andrew H aaland is from Oak­
ville, Washington, to spend the kins have recently invested in A
holidays with M r. and Mrs. K. valuable b o g purchased from
Mr. W illard, o f Dayton.
L . Tangen.
Friday evening Miss Rosie
Wm. Smail and .son, Ellwin
Smail, arrived home Sunday Hesgard came out from N ew berg
and Miss Gladys from Portland
from Alberta, Canada.
to
spend the holiday time with
Jno. Graves left Tuesday for
the Alberta country on business their mother, Mrs. Tilda Hes-
and to bant up bis son W illiam .! gard.
Mr. and Mrs. Carroll Starr, of
M rs. M kry Johnson and family
took Christmas dinner at home Portland, and Mr. and Mrs.
of M r. and Mrs. Elmer W righ t’s Lewis Amoth were Christmas
guests of Mr. and Mrs. B. H.
qf Rex.
Mrs. Dora M oore received the Anderson.
Miss Bickford left West Cbe-
sad intelligence of the death ol
her neice, Mrs. Herman Win- halem Saturday morning for
REAL ESTATE TRAMSFEKS
lARH AG E LICENSES
^
Jean B. Scbomp* to. C arl R.
Stewart.
Jank I. Brander to William E.
Allison.
M ary Alexander V an Brim to
E arl Archie Borg.
>
Ethel M ae Russell to C arl Sin­
gletary.
'
Hasel Davis Atkins to EUis H.
Barn w o ld t.
Hasel Lena Bailey to William
B. Anderson.
M arie A. Knope to Emil C.
H ardt;
P h a lk E. Miller to Jesse E.
Smith.
Leah Nancy Gruber to H ugo
Lloyd Peoples.
r‘ w
...... r r _
' A Poat Who Droaded Fire.
n o m a s Gray, author o f U m
had s weakness in the form o f s
oua dread o f firs. His chamber st S t
Peter's collect. Cambridge, being on
the second door, he thought it likely
that In caw o f a Are his exit by the
stairs might be cut off. He therefore
caused an Iron bar to be fixed by arms
projecting from the outside o f his win­
dow. designing by a rope attached
thereto to descend In the event o f a
fire occurring. This excessive caution
led to a practical joke by hie fellows.
One midnight a party o f students
thundered at bis door with loud cries
o f "Fire, fire!" The nervous poet flew
to his window and slid down the rope
to the ground, where he was hailed
with shouts o f laughter. Gray’ s deli­
cate nature wae so shocked by this
rough Joke that he changed his lodg-
Th e World's Weret Penman.
Moat remarkable among execrable
writers was John Bell, the barrister of
whom Lord Eldon said to the prince
recent that be was the ablest equity
lawyer o f hie time, though be could
“ neither reed, write, walk aer talk.”
Bell was a cripple, and his Westmore­
land accent combined with hie sum
mar to make hie speech unintelligible
The character o f bla writings appear«
ftom his ewn statement that ha bad
three styles, one o f which ha could
read, but bis dark could not. while the
second was intelligible to his dark, but
not to himself, and the third baffled
both o f
tury from 1798 to IMS was two-thirds
tbo number o f officers who lost their
lives to the naval w a n o f the United
8tator in that same period.
In the eighty-two duels which w e n
fought in that period thirty-six men
were killed, o f whom thirty-three were
naval officers. O f those who were not
killed in those naval duels one-half
were wounded.
.1 » those days o f the old navy the
duel was held to be a sort o f indis­
pensable diploma for the naval officers.
Men were sensitive as to their honor,
and very fantastic were their notion»
as to the necessity of Its defense.
Duals ware fought between officers
high in rank and more often between
the midshipmen. The commissioned
officers dealt with thesa "affairs of
honor" between the youngsters with
pompons solemnity.
Verses were printed upon their vic­
tims in the literary journals o f the day.
and their relatives caused epitaphs in
the Johnsonian style to be placed upon
their tombs. Occasionally duels aa-
aumed the character almoat o f ga In­
ternational Incident, and sometimes
they became email wars.
Early in the war with Tripoli offi­
cers became involved in quarrels
among themselves and with the offi­
cers of the British navy who were on
service In the Mediterranean. In 1810
the Americans and the British officers
who were connected with the geiri-
at Gibraltar fought duals so fre­
quently that the governor prohibited
the harbor to American ships.
Those old tin y , middles warn exceed
Ingiy bellicose. They were very Jeal­
ous o f their rank. They had their own
exalted ideas as to the meaning o f the
terms “gentleman” and “ officer;" there­
fore many a sanguinary duel waa pre­
cipitated by causes the most trivial.
What nowadays would be considered
s practical joke then became an affair
o f ten paces with pistols.
Once a middy amused himself by
sprinkling a letter that another middy
waa writing. Thereupon the letter
wrfter sprinkled the waistcoat o f the
offender With the contents o f the ink
bottle, a few days later the tw o faced
earii other In • duel.
That the number o f deaths and eeri-
oua wounds In these duels was so great
If not surprising in view o f (be fact
that the distance between the com
batents measured about thirty fe e t
A marksman o f fair ability could hit
adversary at that distance with­
out much trouble i f his nerves were
steady.- In some cases the distance
much less. In the Bainbrtdge-
Cochran duel it was twelve fe e t In
another duel the pistols almoat touch­
ed. and both combatants were killed
at tbs first shot
The largest number o f the duels
which were fought In the Unltad States
took place in the neighborhood o f Nor­
folk, o f New York and o f Bladensburg.
which la near the city o f Washing­
ton. Bat duels w efe also fought oa
Castle island, in Boston harbor; at New
Orleans and in various other places.
It waa a t Weehawken that Commo­
dore Oliver H. Perry fought his duel
with Captain John Heath. There were
grounds abroad also which In the na­
ture o f the circumstances saw many
o f tbene naval encounters — for in­
stance, Bio Janeiro, Valparaiso. Port
Mahon and in various places in the
Mediterranean and in the East ladles
These naval duels were most fre­
quent between the years 1799 and
1888. The beat known o f them all
probably was that between Decatur
and Barron in 1820. This year marks
tbs beginning o f the slow decline o f
the practice, and the last o f tbs duels
In the old navy o f which there is a
record took place la 1860.
Pistols were not always used, but
the sword was sometimes resorted to­
ss, for Instance, in what was practical
ly the first o f the daeka in the United
8tates navy. This took place In 1779.
The combatants were Captain P. K
Landata and Captain D. N. Cottlnean.
both Frenchmen, wbe were la com­
mand o f vessels under John Paul Jones
at the battle with the Sera pis. Jones
found evidence o f Insubordination upon
the part o f Landats la that engagement
and accused him o f firing Intentional­
ly Into the Bonhomme Richard. There
ensued a bitter quarrel, and in an in­
quiry made by Benjanaia Franklin
Cottlnean gave testimony that canoed
I«andala to Issue a challenge. Th e dnel
cam s'off in Holland, and as Landals
waa a skilled swordsman he wound­
ed Cottlnean severely. — Philadelphia
Press.
Nare’s Piddling.
The expression, or story, o f Nero
fiddling while Rome turned bad Ita
origin in the old story that the empe­
Didn’t Know McKinley.
ror forbade the flames o f Romo to be
Once
when William McKinley was
put out and went to a high tower,
whare he watched bis city burning and governor o f Ohio he and Corbett had a
Bang verte» to ble lute "upon the burn- long ebat In u parlor o f tbs principal
botet In Columbus. A t they walked
in « o f old T roy."—New York Times.
down the atepe Into the office a drum
mer standing near said. “There goes
Hew «b e Knew.
“ I ’m sure that grocer o f ours gives us Corbett!" Instantly there was u furore
and another drummer standing near
abort walght,“ said be.
“ No, be doesn't” said ma. “ His neLad. “ Who Is the little man with
scales are correct. I know they are. I h l m r - From “The Fighting Man." by
weighed myself on them this morning, IMtllam A. Brady.
end they showed that I am twenty
•rat »trai pons
pounds lighter than I thought I
♦ *0 rents each.
Detroit Free Press.
SETTLING A RATTLER.
Prairie
DM the Jeb Well by Bury-
log Him Alive.
It would not seem a vary easy thing
to bury a snake alive, but that is what
an Oklahoma man saw some prairie
dogs do.
Ha waa resting under a tree when
he noticed a commotion among soma
prairie dogs near him. They would run
up to a certain spot, peep at
and then scamper back. Looking
closely, he saw fifteen to twenty
about a rattlesnake, which
went Into one o f the dogs’ bole*
No sooner had It disappeared than
the little fellows begun to push In d irt
evidently to fill up the hole. By the
time they had pretty well covered the
entrance the snake stuck bla head up
through tbo d ir t and every dog scam­
pered off to a safe dtatance^taU the
time burking.
nv
The snake crawled to another bole
about a rod distant and went in. Tken
forward came tbo dogs again, and all
went to work to push up earth to the
bole. Th is time they succeeded and
completely covered the entrance. This
done, they proceeded to beat the earth
down, employing their noses for this
purpose. When they hud rendered the
earth quite hard they want away. Th e
observer examined their work and waa
surprised to find that they bad packed
the earth in soUd with their noses and
had sealed the snake inside.—Los An­
geles Timas.
Don’t pay war priced for 5 our
Overcoat or Rain Csat
Get them a t the right Juices Croat
MUELLER, the Talar’s
K iS S
Monuments
t
s ir . ,
».«•»awifr
ANCIENT ANIMAL GIANTS.
Manatee Sloths That iffaea aa Large as
a Rhinoceros. *
In aa account o f the fossils o f giant
aataagja o f Argentina to be seen in the
Museum o f La Plata the Rev. J. A.
Zahm. author o f “ Through South Amer­
ica’s Southland,“ calls special attention
to the mylodon, a ¿found sloth as
large as a rhinoceros and related to
the megatherium that flourished thou­
sands o f years ago.
T h e mylodon may have lived within
comparatively recent times. Only a
few years ago Nordenskjold discover­
ed in a cave in southwestern Patago­
nia a large piece o f well preserved
skin covered with greenish brown hair
and small bony knobs that was recog­
nised as the skin o f the' mylodon.
There Is good reason to believe that
the mylodon waa still browsing in the
forests o f Patagonia se late aa fifty
years ago. Indeed, there are natural­
ists who contend that It is still living
1n some o f the caves o f southern Chile, }
So strong was the conviction that as
late aa 1902 an expedition started from
England th e chief object o f which was
to search for a living mylodon.
although It failed to find one, there are
men o f science who continua to batteva
that a living mylodon w ill yet be found
somewhere in the forest depths of
southern Chile or Argentina.
Nickajaek Cava.
Nlckajack waa once the name o f an
important Cherokee town on the bank
of the Tennessee river. The Cbero-
kees, who had aMad the British in the
Revolutionary w ar and had been well
paid for their assistance, clustered
their wigwams at this point about
1780-82, ang the village was known
a§ one o f tbo “ Chicksmauga towns.”
The meaning o f the name is n jw lost,
though it was probably o f Cherokee
origin, as it occurs in the annals o f
the tribe as a man's name. This name
la also given to a creek and to a very
remarkable cave, the latter being situ­
ated very near that point o f the south­
ern boundary o f Tennessee where It is
intersected by the line separating the
states o f Alabama and Georgia. Nlck­
ajack cave, though but little known,
lx one o f the wonderful caves o f the
world, being o f even more imposing
proportion* than the Mammoth cave
of Kentucky.—Argonaut.
- The First Music.
The father o f song, music and danc­
ing. all three, was the savage wbe
first clapped bauds and shouted in
time at some rude festival o f his tribe.
From that clapping and shouting has
been evolved the whole art o f Instru­
mental music, including eves the en­
trancing complexities o f the modern
symphony. From that about or rudi­
mentary emotional utterance has pro­
ceeded by a kindred evolution the
whole art o f vocal music down to the
modem opera or oratorio. From the
savage leap has come every variety
o f dancing.
P a c ific
OREGONWASHINGTON
LIMITED
Leaves Portland Union Statton
10 A .M . DuOy
W M . McMURRY
C »aerai
PO R TLAND
ß ä ä fe lS r
iin
a t& e P a n a m a - _
• * r& s £ n n M fa
WE
NEW
Suaiirisrity of FJncttfu —1 H d L '
This new creation answer* with |
fhsoJ authority all kinds of 1
questions such aa “ How is j
pronounced?” “ Where is
a n ? “ “ What is a oontinuoui toy
raef’* “ What is a Aotriter/“ * ‘W hat
is white coalt” “ How is «tot pro­
nounced?” and thousands of others.
Mare thou M M * Vucatetey n o w .
30JM
CeeanaMesI
M
l
truss
lr
I. 'T I P - .
... - M
_ -------
—
How Flying Fish Fly.
The popular notion that flying fish
beat their “ wings" is a mistake. It ap­
pears that the wings are not true or­
gans o f flight, bnt rather play the part
o f a parachute or aa aeroplane. The
whole motive power la supplied by the
tail, which acta as a propeller, and the
vibration or quivering o f the wlnga In
tbe air currents and their occasional
shift o f Inclination are not phenomena
connected with the propulsion o f (he
In i>s aerial flight
Dirty Windows.
A German professor has ascertained
that In industrial cities window* which
have not been washed for ten days ex­
clude from 36 to 48 per cent o f the
light. I f not washed for four weeks
they may exclude as ntoch as 89 per
cent of tbe light.
Picture Frames.
Administrator’s Notice of Final
Settlement
Notice ■ hereby given that the underdgoed
adnunutraior ok the eSafe oi Isaac B . Ramey,
deceased, hat tied hit Final Account at admtnit-
tratoi o i the «W e of laid ¿«rented. in the
County Court of Yam
Yamhill
hill ' County. Oregon, and
that taid Court t f hat appointed Monday, the 8th
day of January,
y, 191/; at 11 o'clock a. m. of
•aid day at the day and bout lor the hearing of
objection« to laid
d final Account
Now , therefore, all pertoni interested
the
of laid decedent are hereby
and
required to appear at the Coo atv Court room at
the Court Route, at McMmaulla, Yamhill
County, Oregon, at taid time to then and theta
•how cause, if any there be, why taid account
»houId not he teltled, allowed and approved, and
and finally settled and tatd
and hit bondmen forever ditcharg-
ed.
Dated December 7th, 1916.
S . A . M IL L S .
Admiairtrator of the ertate of Itaac B. Ramey.
In the early parts o f the fifteenth
century carvers and gilders In Venice
were permitted to attach their names
to the frame« o f pk-ture« by famous Clarence Burt,
Attorney for «mate.
artists.
Finrt imue Dec. 7, 19!6.
Set not thyself .to attain much rust
but much patience—Thomas a Kero
Pin.
I Jan. 4. 1917
The Graphic and Weekly Orego-
ian, one ytar, $ 2 . 00 .