Image provided by: Newberg Public Library; Newberg, OR
About Newberg graphic. (Newberg, Or.) 1888-1993 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 5, 1918)
fe r* i » i » w -■i» '» i» *•» % ».i «>■>-, •n ^ü i CHXHALUf COTES W e ’re Going to Continue O U R Co-operation, are Y O U ? T H E S E S going to be jest aa much need for oo-opeimtion daring Pence times as daring those of W ar. Newberg and this port of the Country have certainly set a good example of oo-operatios under hardship. How lot’s see what wo can do as opportunity comes along. of course S. L. PA R R ETT, Pres. UNifED STATES L a. I. O R E G O N We have received a new stock of COLUMBIA B ATTER IES We are Selling MONOGRAM, H A VO LIN E AND ZEROLENE O ILS We have a large stock of W EED CH AIN S We are selling DODGE DUO’ S a d MAXWELL AUTOS O U R R E P A IR D E P A R T M E N T Is at pour service W atch this space for the Announcement of a N E W (5000 M ile Guaranteed) TIR E McCOY DUO’S AUTO CO., Newterg, Ore. 9 » 1 WINTER BETTER A n d a shed forjpour Stock ram iMpreniciiis L a im m I — t i l A i — R ia fi> Get a few S P A U L D IN G 'S LU M B ER A n d be prepared LOGGING Phone W hite 26 Z E R O L E N E The Standard Oil for Motor Carr M o re Z E R O L E N E is w e d fer au tomobiles on the Pacific Coast than all other oils combined. Leading motor car dntfibntof§ praise Z E R O L E N E , correctly re fined from selected California as phalt-base crude, because it main tains its lubricating body at cylin der heat and gives perfect lubrica tion with less wear and less carbon deposit Get our lubrication chart d w w in # the correct consistency fo r yoar car. S T A N D A R D O IL C O M P A N Y Jars*. • X* (S im V i arc titte r weter- cooltd or eircoole*. T W t tte air-cooled (¡rrc like ell ■tforno/oomootrian oodMou require« an oil that hold« it« foS lubricating qnalitioa « t cylinder hast, burnt clean in the corabnatioa with euteueT Z k I ^ L R N X tlla the*« requirements per- *setly. I ij u m it la o o m e ttr / l l m l Iroati mmtmatmt Cmm- V . D. M ILLE R , Special A gent, Standard 0 3 C o , New berg V ‘ J. L. VAN BLARICOM Staple and Fancy Groceries Freeh Fruits and Vegetables Wa If • 't nearer the college. Mr. and- Mrs. Walter Hess are to be congratulated on the arrival of an eight pouad boy on the morning of December 3rd. Miss Ona Gust In la clerking at the F. D. Frost store. Mrs. Ernest Hoening visited friends In Portland over Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. James Kane, o f Newberg. were Thanksgiving guests at the Pilcher home. We opened at 11 o'clock. Prof. ,8ham- baugh presiding. A community ser vice flag with eighteen stars was dedicated and hung on the rostrum. The morning service was con cluded by a sermon by Prof. Sham- baugh, showing amopg other things that German degradation was thd direct result of their repudiation of Christ and His teachings and point ing out that any nation following that course will Inevitably arrive at the same stage of brutish ness and paganism, our own nation not excepted. At noon, a dinner worthy of all West Chehalem traditions, was Mr. and Mrs. L>. Reed Chambers, of Portland, were week end visitors served in the basement of the Chester Noble was the at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Jack church. guest of honor. Sawyer. The Cruickshank family, who have been having a run o f the In fluenza. are all on the road to health again. e Mr. and Mrs. Peter Stewart and Mrs. Cook, o f Portland, spent Thanksgiving at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Sawyer. A. J. Heskett left Monday to re sume his work with the Ellison- W hite people. He has had an en forced vacation of some weeks ow ing to the flu epidemic. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Gustin en tertained at Thanksgiving Mr. and Mrs. J. O. Gustin ahd Miss Maude Gustin and Mr. and Mrs. Q. M. Kellinx and s o b , of Newberg. Oscar Winters, who Is in the spruce division of the service, spent Thanksgiving st his home. He la at present ' stationed at Vancouver fvhere he expects to be discharged in the near future. FERHW00D Mias Carrie Falrbank was a caller at tbe W. F. Jones home Sunday. B. L. Hicks, o f Newberg, was a pleasant caler ia Firnwood Friday. Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Scherf made a business trip to. Portland Friday. Miss Pearl Livengood was home from Dayton from Wednesday until Friday. Mrs. James Kersey visited with her sister, 'Mrs. W. H. Sanders, Tuesday. Mis Jaunita Ward is reported to be quite ill at the home of Mrs. O. J. McCoy in Newberg. The "Community Sing" at the gymnasium Thursday night was en joyed by all those present. T. H. Parrish and family took Thanksgiving dinner at the Smith home on Par ret t Mountain. Arlington Fessler, one of our U. S. Navy boys, was permitted to be at home for Thanksgiving. > L. A. Bates departed for Eugrne Monday where he will visit with hi? ton. Ernest, for a few days. Miss Maggie Sanders, of Newberg, spent Thursday night with her cousin. Miss Constance Huddle. Quite a number of Fern wood people attended the "Community Sing” at Newberg Thursday after noon. * Miss Grace Riley visited at the home o f her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. and W. H. Sanders, during her vacation. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Mueller spent Thanksgiving week in Wood- burn ’at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Hokum. Mrs. • Albert Everest and Btnall daughters, Adelaide and Ruth, vis ited at the W. F. Jones home . Thursday.. alieuftoou. The Popular Motor Off (Csliioraia) | Rev. Frank Bales, a young ma from Indiana, held services at the The people of W est Chehelem church Sunday. gathered at the church Thankaglv- F. L. Strait and family have V day. enjoying together a com Thanksgiving. Services moved into Newberg so be w ill bp munity REX The U .S . National THAEESOiymO AT IWX8T CHEHALEM Word has been received from Mr, and Mrs. Dan Wohlgemuth, of American Falls, Idaho, announcing the birth of a baby son. Miss Alnetta Parrish. Mrs. E. O. Jones and Mrs. O. J. McCoy, daugh ters of Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Parrish, all spent Thanksgiving day at the home o f their parents. All of the children were home on that day with exception o f their son. Arthur, who is in a training camp in New York. An old fashioned party was given at the gymnasium on Saturday evening in honor of the soldiers who were here during the week, there being six of them In number, name ly: Arlington Fessler. Frederick Adplf, Leslie Parrish, Oeorge Olden burg and the two visitors, Corporal Crabtree and Private Donte. Mm. J. 8. Sanders, now a resi dent of Newberg, but formerly of this neighborhood, received the cad newt Sunday lig h t that her brother, Carl Sallee, had been killed in action In France. He made a visit to hi* slater about fLve yearn ago, maxing many warm friends while hem. Hie boro* woe la Eldorado Springs, Missouri. The afternoon was given ovar largely to frlepdly hobnobbing, but time was taken to auction o ff a dozen and a half chrysanthemums for the benefit of the Armenian Re lief work. This was the most en joyable event of the day. W ith N. P. Nelson auctioneering, the sum o f seventy-nine dollars* was raised In a short time, some of the 'hoy^ even raising their own bids to make 8ure of getting the choicest flowers for the sweet six teen-year-olds. The Sunday school added ten dollars to this, making a total of eighty-nine dollars. The whole- affair was managed by the ladles of the Aid Society and. thanks to them, auut the best thing that has happened in the commun ity for a lon g time. TRAVEL ACCORDING TO RAP Airmen en Night Raids Have Course Thoroughly Mapped Out Before Beginning Their Journey. Before leaving on a long-distance night raid the airmen prepare their maps with great care, marking on them the detailed coarse from the air drome to their objective. By means of a small balloon, whose speed direction and height is recorded by an Instrument on the ground, the force and direction o f the wind at d if ferent altitudes Is discovered, end the compose course, allowing for wind- drift, la marked beside the course on Use map. The compass course for the m a n Journey la also marked. The speed of the machine Is calculated, and on the line o f the coarse a series o f points Is marked, showing where the machine should be every ten minutes, thus enabling the airman to check his progreab and to know his approximate position If he gets loot H e watches the country below for landmarks. H e sees by his map that a river should appear In a few mln- utes. His watch shows that he ha* been flying 40 minutes, and near the 46-mlnute mark on M s map Is a twist ed pele bine line. H e looks ahead and sees In the moonlight e silver streak and he knows he la making good time. When he la over the river he compares Its oatline with Ms map. and sees that he la crossing It at the right place. ■THE* Chevrolet AT *845 IS TH E Lowest Price Automobile in tije W orld FULLY EQUIPPED with Electric Lifhta uid Starter. This ia the price te yeu aid includes war tax Anderson Motor C o . DISTRIBUTORS Easy Term s if Desired noticed that the coolest men are a good bit let down after a dogged ma Youth Couldn't gee Any Four Years’ ; chine fight fa r up In the rarefied sir. It s u y seem soft to an Infantryman— Courting If He Had te Visit 20 hours of sleep, eating snd loafing; • Ir l en Horseba ck. bat la reality the airman should bo Cupid’s wings were slightly scorched given an easy time outside o f flying. HASTENED JOB FOR MINISTER' when the request went forth to le a v e , o f Duty. our automobiles In our garages on Sun The Turkish government Is shortly day and thus aid in saving fuel, cays the Indianapolis News. But a youth In to effect an exchange of L000 British Sullivan county— quite loyal to his prisoners, bat there will be still many country and Ms sweetheart, too—re left over there, and naturally they will membered the days of his father and need doctors. Under the Berne agree acted accordingly. When 7 o'clock cam e, ment of December last It Is arranged be went to the family barn, ignored j that one British doctor and five of the presence of bis new roadster, took the medical personnel o f the down his father’s ancient saddle, put should be detained for every 1.000 it on one of the plow horses and gal prisoners. No Inspection of camp* under the Berne agreement lantly rads forth. But not far did be ride. Etther tbe yet been made, but It Is very probable horse unaccustomed to a rider or the that condition* there may necessitate youth to riding did something wMch r ore doctors being detained. Thera irritated the other, for soon the youth ore some thlnss In w arfare which are was prone In the road and the horse harder than actual fighting, and to stay behind In a prison ramp tending was galloping toward home. After a while the young man got up wounded- and nostalgic men from M s prostrate position. Dasedly he others Joyfully set sail for homo or looked around him. Then he talked to octlve service requires all the unsel himself: "M y father,” he said, "assert fish devotion to duty with which doc ed that that saddle took Mm to court tors are credited by the laity. mother weekly for more than four years. Well, for myself, Fll say there CASK FOR A LUMINOUS CRUCIFIX. was something radically wrong with father. I f I had to ride on that saddle T o enable prospective customers four years to see Nellie— well, never to see a luminous crucifix in broad mind. I’ll propoee tonight” H e did and Cupid chalked up one daylight, a manufacturer has de agglD st Mr. Garfield. signed a curious traveling case tot FLED FROM ARMORED CARS Hun'S Maliciousness Proved. Some additional l|ght Is shed on the German destruction of the magnificent od|flce that has been described as “frozen music,” in an Interview that Cardinal Locon, archbishop of Reims, granted tbe editor o f Everybody’s, Howard Wheeler, who reports It In tbe September number. "A s you know,** the archbishop told H r. Wbeeler, "tbe Germans have stated that the French army had been using the towers of the cathedral for observation purposes and that guns had been concealed there. The fact la that the French leaders, fearing that harm would come to the cathedral, refrained at all times from using It for any military pur poses whatever. When the bombard ments were commenced I immediately wrote a letter to the pope, In which I solemnly swore, on my honor as a man and as a prelate of the church, that never had I abandoned my ca thedral since the beginning of tbe war, and that never at any time had it been used for military purposes. All to no avail. The bombardment still contl% ues and st regular Intervals my olo cathedral la battered piecemeal— nod it breaks my heart.” Lives Saved by Steel Helmet Tbe.B ritish soldier, happy-go-lucky aa he Is, has come to recognize the value of his steel helmet. Most of us who have been In action In France have stories to tell of onr own or oth er men’s lives saved by "tin bats,” "tin lids,” or “battle bowlers.” A brother igSmr of mlae has worn for something like two years a steel helmet with a dent In It aa big aa a small potato— a aopvenir of a small lump of shell which knocked blm off his feet one afternoon In tbe Tpres salient. I have seen a helmet In tbe rim of which d machine gun bullst had cut a clean nick. The wearer of that helmet nev er knew he had bees struck qptil be doffed fate "tin bat.”— London Times. B rin g your Ctesphta office. Jab work ta tbs ■ * i >-«W if w ■-’t Bedouins In W ild Confusion When the BritMi Forces Made Use of "Tanks” in Dessrt. Tbe appearance of armored cart In the desert struck terror in Senussl hearts, and the whole country wa* soon covered with men and catneh trek king off to the southwest. On getting through the camp the cars went on In dependently, shooting all loaded camels and men within reach. Two of these camels carried mixed load* of petrol and Mgh explosive shelL Tbe per forated petrol cans caught fire, and tbe shells exploded, which made the camp followers fall on their knees, beat the ground with their foreheads, and ffH on Allah’s aid. "The Turkish gunnerii stuck to their guns like good men. When we paased them without killing them they turned round and continued firing at us, ao that we had to go back and finish them,” one of tbe oHcera told me. The cars collected three mountain guns and nine machine guns with a quarter mil lion rounds of small-arm ammunition and several boxes of shelL Two of the car* stood by all night to protect tbe captor«*, and the remainder re traced their tracks to Solium, to find onr Infantry In occupation. Tbe So- nussl did oat venture on Aziza again. —From “The Desert Campaigns,” by W. T. Massey. / his customers. The case is of the usual size carried for demonstration purposes; bat, instead of a cover, it has a light-proof hood that can be extended like the focusing chamber of a camera. The crucifix is coated with* a phos phorescent substance which absorbs light during the day and radiatea light at night. When hung in h perfectly dark room it produces a brilliant light, bins at first, which gradually changes to white. The darker the room the brighter t1£ crucifix shines.— Popular Science Monthly. S U S P IC IO N . "D o n ’t talk to me about Methuse lah,” exclaimed the army man. " I never heard anything against him.” "W e ll, I have my suspicions that he reported his age as high as pos sible to make sure of being beyond the draft lim it” * N O TH IN « OOINGL "S o she rejected yon.” "Y e p . Turned me down cold.” "W h at did the say?” "Say, if I ’d been g German note of peace and she’d bean Woodrow Wilson she couldn’t havt mods bar position plainer.” Confession of an Aviator. For myself, writes Charles B. Word- boff In Atlantic, there Is nowhere and nobody I would rather be at present than here and a pilot. No man In hla INSATIABLE DKSIRK. souses could m y he enjoyed tbe w a r; but aa It must be fought oat, I would " D o you believe Prussia wants rather be In avtatlop than In any other peace?” branch. A pleasant life, good food, "Certainly,” replied Mias Cay good sleep, and two to four hours g day In the air. After four hours (In enne. "Tn the same way that Prus two spells) over the lines, constantly sia wants everything else, with the alert and craning to dodge scandalous privilege of «polling i t ” ly accurate shells and suddenly ap ,---------- o—— ,— pearing Beebes, panting la the thin Whan la need of Job printing get ate at 20,000 feet, the boys are, I think, Justified la calling It a flay. I have It at the Graphic office.