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About Newberg graphic. (Newberg, Or.) 1888-1993 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 21, 1919)
ACREAGE MUST BE IRCBEA8KD pretta of pride. 'I do not ddnÿ 'It baa Ita unen. I any hare only one thing of It: It to common. The ataety-nine all hare It The swaggering Kaiser had it, and moat potentat*. The work house idiot baa It. All the Ignorant and uncouth have It. Every man great enough to want ta ha' when he pets drunk baa It. enor- ARTICLE FROM THE there. Do you, In. your little trials, de spair and complain? Do you pity yourself, want to go out in tha gar den and eat worms, and talk the atrically of wondering why yew ware born, and wish you w w a dead? Such sentiments are as common as dust in the road, ragweeds in the cow pasture, and empty tin cans In the alley. Than you are Just plain common And you’d better begin a course of discipline. But when all things combine to crush and humiliate you. when fail ure leers at you. and betrayal be smirches you. do you smile and say— "In the fell clutch of circumstance I have not winced nor cried aloud; Beueath the bludgeonings of chanee My head la bloody— but unbowed." iugh bred. You He loves elea illness, of mind ns they offend him. He avoids lying, deceit, profanity and obscenity, as a healthy nose avoids putridity. He deans his , mind of pettiness, pride, duplicity and cruelty, as one wap*as his hands after handling His thoughts small of sunshine. His passions are honest and un ashamed. His words are wholesome. And his fellowship is as refreshing as the waters of an untroubled The less one has to be proud of. the pi ore pride be has. We speak of pride of achievement. It is not those who actually achieve that it Is the little soul that comes by acctdenj into the rewards of achievement that preens and struts. In a little graveyard at Eccle- fech&n Is the last resting place of Thomas Carlyle, a mighty man of letters, and on the srtopb there is Inscribed one word, “ HumUitate.” Beneath this lofty protest of hu mility lie the housings of one o f earth’s greatest souls. Humility is teachabie. and learns from every passer-by. Pride learns nothing, being estopped by Its own image. Pride is a beggar at every man’s door. ‘ seeking Its alms of praise, Humility is royal, and walks free of fear and favor. So If you have about you any real childlikenesa of heart, you have at least some of tha makings of Su periority. X. The superior man is one with whom familiarity does not breed contempt: This is meet uncommon. Count over your friends and ac quaintances. What proportion of them will stand the test of intimacy ? MOW many of theag wre th ere with whom you would want to spend thirty consecutive days on a summer vacation? With how many would you want to take a trip to Europe? < You tire of most people. As year intimacy increases, their pettiness appears. But there are a few— you ma y possibly count them on thq fin gers of one hand— of whom you think more highly the more closely you associate with them. These are the superior ones. The small fruit Industry such as loganberries, raspberries, blackber ries. strawberries, etc., la revolution ising farming In the northwest. For years these products were a drug on the market but with the development o f the fru it Jnloe in dustry, dehydration of frnlta and vegetables and canning, tha demand for the small fruits raised in tha northwest has grown to such an ex tent that factories cannot fill their ordara due to lack o f sufficient rpw material. Farmers are getting undreamed of prices and contracts for five year periods are being made with them at figures which assure unusual re turns. 4 Norbtweat fruits have'landed at l&t and every community shotild unite in an effort to increase acreage of such fruits as loganberries so that world markets can be developed and established, thus assuring abso lute permanency for this Industry, . Acreage and /production must in crease If wa are to hold our own and gain full rew *de of tha oppor tunity now at hand.—Manufacturer. A TstUw M t TJUn*.' , TTOENBt-AT-LAW **) aaà where a poet claims to lavé interpreted tbe aool of a mush roans. ** C L A R E N C E B U T T , ;• .•: WUl pracÜpe te all the « u r ta at Ml him; he> a strikingly haodaoin* man. ;-v - A » r “ In association with a thick, J«0eF stata. Spacial attention | i m I The gin— r® Clad be la I simply detest homely mea ((Suddenly atari- aleak, I can updcrdtsnd how a muab- (o* and blushing,1—Oh, l beg y p y rooin might lift a bard on (be wings -pinion ;*I didn’t diean to any that. - C. JR. .CHAPIN LAWYER ;E. H . UTTER, D . M, D h DENTIST ’Office over Vint Mitic o ! Baal For Value— The BIG-SIX 7 ^ t .11.^ a re.ÎJ •' % ‘ Where can yen find another Se^en-Pauen- ger Six within the means o f the average in vestor, equipped with Shock Absorbers, Cord Tires, 60 II. P. motor, Silver Faced Cloqk, Magnetic Speedometer, Leatherized Top with Oval Plate Glass Windows! SOME MELON CHOP I. T. Sparks, traveling freight and passenger agent for the Southern Pacific at El Centro, California,' has compiled approximate figures on t(e movement of the cantaloupe and watermelon crops out o f the Im -. perjal Valley this year, showing the astonishing growth of this industry. From a little over l l ,I O t acres, over 118,000,000 cantaloupes were obtained, or a melon for every man, woman and child* In America. Two and one-half million crates were re quired and 7.830 sera to move the crop. T he gross returns for th is crop totaled approximately $9,208,- 080 and the net returns to g r o w s * $1.710.871.------ — ------ - i From 800 acres of watermelons, over 13,000 tons o f melons ware obtained, netting growers M M 1 & The New Stndebaker BIX-SIX is the only car at its price with Cird Tire Equipment, ahd it weighs but 8125 pounds, i d e n t is t DR. A M. DAVIS Newberg, ’ DENTIST .... .................................M U S O— » you feel clean to be with him. It is as with the works of the VII. The real aristocrat does not Masters. A Master differs from the like to show off: He does not want Commons In that his work grows anyone to think him wiser, better upon you. X00 he* r Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony a thousand times, or more capable than he really is. Do you like to put your best foot and the thousandth time you. love it forward, make a good impression, ha flattered, have people hold you to be witter and more clever than' you you hear it a half-dozen times. are? You have plenty of company. That is what the multitude want who throng the broad way. I don’t say you are bad. Only, you’re com mon. The' hundredth man wants no such thing. It palnfe him when be Is over-praised. Obsequious flattery does not tickle him; it humiliates him. He instinctively conceals his vir tues, as his nudity. If he is discov ered In piety, he blushes. When he is elected to high place. It sobers him. If he attains to riches, it pains him with a keen sqnse of responsi totllty. e If he wins rame as an artist, a.soldier, an engineer, or a writer, In a tiny, unpretentious office in it is hard for him to believe if 1 b not a side street of Sydney, Australia, due largely to luck. He escapes a buff-colored, irregular-shaped your praise, even as your blame can piece of rock, kept the front door not swerve him. open. This lttle bit of rock held its VIII. The superior man is gentle: ■'» .humble position for many yeara, Gen’ len'ees is not tbe attribute of j kicked here, tossed there, sometimes weaknen*. but of strength. It is the i taken up and examined curiously, baby that screams. It is conscious but alwayi returned to Its lowly feebleness that*threatens It is the occupation. ‘ man with a defective vocabulary But one day a man who was In that swears. Always, everywhere, terested in guano and knew a little harshner.«, brutality,, a domineering about rock-phosphate, put the door- tone, abuse, violence and austerity chock In bis pocket, subjected It are tbe mask of a certain impotency. to a series of tests, an^ In a few "The half-faith lights the fagot." days was so amazed and satisfied All noise is waste. The silent with the results* that he hastened sun is mightier than a whirlwind. back to the office to trace the life Tbe roaring looms are so feeble you history of the door-chock. can <top the >huttie with your fin The little Mt of buff-colored rock ger; but in the basement of tbe fac BjTa* trader, V h o tory the huge engine, that plies its arm silently i f a “cat; wbuTd cruST you as an egg<heli were you to get for little boys to »lay with," from Oceaa Island. But the man who That Is a pregnant and truthful now so carefully, even fondly, car story of God, the Omnipotent, where ried the door-chock about with him in He is described as revealing Him — all that was left of It after the self to Elljal. in the mountain cave: test#— knew of something that was "And. behold, a great and strong going to startle the commercial and wind rent the mountains, and brake in pieces the rocks before the Lord; agricultural worlds. Off he went but the Lord was not in the wind; to Oceaa Island by tbs very first and after the wind an earthquake; trading schooner. In a few months but the Lord was hot in the earth he returned; traveling was, very quake. And after the earthquake a slow In thone day* and the Central fire; but the Lord was aot la the Pacific waters were quite a new fire; and after the fire a still small felld of navigation to all but Amer ican whalers. Hu parried with him voice." The genuine lady speaks low. No the key to a treasure Island con taining millions o f tons of high- gentleman blusters grade phosphate of Urns — Themae The most striking characteristic, J McMahon. F. B- 0 8., In gsgtsm perhaps, of the superior ones k fhelr quiet, their poles. They have about them a sense o f the stare. IX. The superior ones srs bum- Me-ertnded: Much may be said In r í I thousand carloads o f other products „»oved from tha Valley with, a net to ranchers of $1433.840. The total value o f the watermelon ‘ and cantaloupe crops, 90 par Cent :o f moved In *ttnA added to the other shipments out o f tha Im perial Valley that month, were $11,- 338,140 gross, and 83,898.973 net. The approximate cost to rent, cul tivate land, plant and grow these products and deliver them to the consuming end, was '$8,457,188. US ! t o t t o M M M M M H M M E. A. ROM IG, M. D. PHYSICIAN - and SURGEON Office in First NetT Bank Bldg. Plumer JÛtcc Black 0; Re*. Gray'd without iararaaoe. Ne furnish the heal iararaaoe at the least east. Let as quote you rates. d CaU on, Phone or Write J. L or C . J. H O SK IN S, Newberg I D r . J oh n ; U. S. WAR SILK INTO PEACE FROCKS ^ S. R a n k in PHYSICIAN sad SU1OE0N Office ever Ü. 8 National Baal ’ . Office "Phone Black 171 Spend the Summer at PA CIFIC CITY DR.THOS. W. HESTER S Physician and Surgeon ? All Kinds of Fialiing and Boating Beef of Camp Accommodations • , F or imonmyon I n f o r m .* ™ W ror m rit* ac G. H. * WARD, Pacific City, Ore u- ‘f t T r i J '• iv L Office fn Dtx¿n Building OMM WMM 11, aéa Orare* il I m W BERG • • O REG O N w D r . G ochnour a s s ist e d BY Dr. Minett Sturdevant Chiropractic, Massage and other Drugieea Methods ■Location 118 North School strisC. Phone Bleak 48. DR. I. M. BLOMWICK CHIB0FMA0T0B Stesa baths and hydrofatkfc t i Newberg, Oregon Lee Interact Rate Tims t Pi a nortlseUps plan F. L. STRAIT. Laeal Eighteen million ysrds of rllk at s bargain price matffi* It seem probable that the fall will be a Mason of ‘'rustle* " This silk its* been thrown on the market by dho War Department— a special silk made far wrapping cartridge bhm( but not sow needed. Col. E. K. Garrison of the department had this frock of the silk made up for his secretary to prove its dress uses It will likely retail at about $2 s yard The bid* were at Washington July Id. after which it will be derided how ihe millions of yard* will be nut* Reted Bo it may be sxperted that women should prepare for a afU year when wholeituler* dictate the fashion for fall, winter and spring. Tiis is yptir ppportunity to clean up the low, grade apples in llyour orchard at a profit. LOCATION . w- ■ PHONE MED 202 ’ * “ . Uvo Stock Ciw win in Mcr cheat NMk Stack a pedalty Residence 1832 Portland Road UNDERTAKERS NEWBERG, ORE. HOOSON S ELLIO TT -