Newberg graphic. (Newberg, Or.) 1888-1993, January 22, 1920, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    MF
on Monday evening.
R. R. Robison
*as re-elected president. The other
rftcera elected were. E. S. Greer,
/ice president; Miss Sally B. Beck,
•ecretary; Henry H olim eyer. trees
ire r; W. S. Allan, director at large.
Farm Financing
Mrs. May C. Bliss, of Los Apgeles,
a national worker in the W om an'»
Home Missionary Board, occupied
he pulpit o f the M .E. church on
Sunday.
Prelim inary steps were
taken toward the organisation o f a
Wom an’s Home Missionary Society
In connection with the Dundee
church. A meeting for completing
thfe organization of the society w ill
be held at the parsonage on Friday
afternoon o f next week, at three
o'clock.
--------- 0----------
W IT H even greater interest and activity than ever before (if
that's possible )the U. S. National Bank is going to back the
business of fanning during 1920.
W e believe in the frture
of the farm, large and small, diversified and specialised, andj
shall put forth our very best efforts to aid both.
If you feel like “starting some­
thing”— make it a bank accor.nt,
OBITUARY
[UNITED STAfES
-NATIONAL BANK
HF.T
i ing with the song "H om e. Sweet
—■----------
, Hom e." The question o f rebuilding
was
in
Portland-*
the school house with basement and
R. O. Bristow
box
Saturday.
, . ,.
„
,
. social was held a fter the meeting.
Mrs. Ohlsfeldte spent Tuesday at
* _ „
t.
...
.
_ „ „
.
f the baskets netting (40.50. which
the F. D. Frost home.
goes to the Jubilee Fund for C. C.
C . G. Lewis, our leading mer­ and W. £ . T. Ü.
chant. spent Monday in Portland.
Mrs. W erltn and her daughter,
Mrs. W hitaker, spent Saturday in
Portland.
D UN D EE
0
-------------
Special Notice
Mrs. C. G. Lew is spent several ;
An old fashioned spelling bee
dav> last week with her daughter, j
short program followed by an
Mrs. Burton, in Portland.
Mias Marie Hanson, who is at the fashioned social w ill be held at
head o f the registration department church on Wednesday evening.
a t the Portland public library, is mission free. Everybody come
spending the week with Mrs. F. I. hear your neighbor spell (7 ).
and
old
the
A d­
and
Eves a‘t the H ill Top Sanitarium.
Miss Helen M. Hatch is a guest at
The Advance Club meets the first
OtterbrooST^
— — — ■*.
Tuesday o f every month at eight
Mr. and Msr. H. E. M illio n and
o ’clock.
A t our last regular meet­
in g the follow in g officers were elect­ fam ily have returned from a visit
ed : Mr. Sem m er,'president; Marvin to Indiana.
Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Dearborn ànd
Garland, vice president; Mary H a r­
man, secretary; Mrs. F. I. Eves, Mrs. Coleman made a business trip
treasurer. A good program is being to Portland on Monday.
prepared fo r our next m eeting
Q/ M. K ellin g and fam ily came
which w ill be held February 3. out from New berg on Tuesday to
Everybody, come out and have a good : spend the day at the L. J. Eddsns
tim e and let people know Rex is i home.
alive.
j
Mr. and Mrs. Clark Noble returned
C H E H A L E K CET
, last week from an extended trip to
the Middle States.
They returned
via New Orleans and Loe Angeles.
E»
Lawrence Baker has been on the
sick list.
Mks. Cyrene Palm er spent a few
days at the Johnson home this week.
Mr. and Mrs. W orley Hunter, from
Gold Beach, who have been visitin g
in Wisconsin, have been guests at
th« home
their parents. Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Everest mo- 1 Mrs B- 8- Hunte|,;
tored over from Vancouver last Sun-
The regular m eeting o f the Dun­
day in their new Buick roadster to dee Womans' Club w u held at the
Mrs. A. A.
visit at the parental roof, the home library on Thursday.
Parrett had charge o f the social
o f Mr. and Mrs. W . R. Everest.
Last Friday evening a very pleas­ hour with Mrs. H. B. P o w ell and
ant social was held at the A. A. Mrs. Henry H olzm eyer assistants.
Mr. and Mrs. Bruno Hom berger
Poet dryer. Quite a number gath­
ered in. The dryer was warmed up came out from Pprtland on Sunday
and lighted and games were played to celebrate the birthday o f Mrs.
until the hour for lunch when the , Homberger's mother, Mrs. W. & AI-
bost and hostess, Mr. and Mrs. A. lan. They brought the most beauti­
A . Post, served cake, coffee, cookies ful birthday cake ever seen in these
parts.
and apples very generously.
A special m eeting o f the Ladles’
The Parent-Teacher Association
held their m eeting Monday evening Aid Society was held at the resi­
when a good program was given. dence o f Mrs. W illiam G reen w d l on
Miss Edna Ralston sang a lullaby Wednesday to make arrangements
and Miss Elsie Tangen gave two for the entertainm ent to be given
numbers In music which were well Wednesday, the tw enty-eighth In­
received. Rev. A .'C . Martin gave a stant, at the church.
talk on Alaska. Vernon Baker gave
The Orchards Home Telephone
m recitation, the school girls follow - ’ Company held their annugl m eeting
A Battery
For Every C a r
— __Any Make of Battery-------
RECHARGED, REPAIRED OR REBUILT
life features of the
BATTERIES
Starting, Lighting and Ignition Trouble
Repaired
U. S. L. Service Station, run by E x
service men.
0
Cicero A. Marr was born at
Macksburg, Ontario, Canada. August
. 1953, When 12 years o f age the
fam ily moved »to Onawa. Iowa, and
In 1874 from there to Redfleld,
Kansas.
February 4. 1886, he was married
at Lucerne, Kansas, to Rebecca
Pickett and to this union four ch il­
dren were born, three o f whom died
In infancy.
Tw en ty-eight years ago he moved
with his fam ily to Oregon and lo­
cated in N ew berg where they have
res'ded continuously since.
Four
months ago his health began to fait
from bronchial and bladder trouble,
and death came to m ercifully release
him January 13.
The deceased w s i a member of
Friends' Church but for some time
had been attending the Nasarene
church "m ore than any other.
Hi
was entirely reconciled to be at rest
with the Lord, as he expressed it.
When urged to take medicine or
Food he would often say the Gres*
Physician was taking care o f him.
He often requested member* o f the
fam ily to sing hi* fa vorite hymns,
among
them
being,
“ M eet
Me
There.” and by hie request this was
*ung at the funeral service conduct­
ed by Rev. Fred Carter at Friends
church. ,
Besides the w idow the deceased is
survived by one daughter, Mrs.
Mamie J. W illis, tw o bothers, W . F.
Marr .of N ew berg. and Elm er U.
Marr, o f Dundee, and four sisters.
Mrs. Emma Leek and Mrs. Josephine
Fields, o f New berg, Mrs. M ary Hen­
son. o f Isabella. Oklahoma, and Mrs.
Flora E. Jeffries ,of LaCrosse, Kan-
WOMEN EXCEED MEN
IN JAPANESE FACTORIES
850,000 Japanese Women Work
at Average Daily Wage of Ten
to Twenty Cents for a
Twelve Hour Day.
There are more women In Industry
In Jaimn than there are men, accord
to a statement recently made by the
War Work Council o f the Young Wo­
men's Christian Association.
The world war has brought 850,000
women and girls Into the dally grind
o f Industry according to this state­
ment ; 30,000 o f them little girls under
fifteen years o f age who work twelve
hours.at a wage o f ten to twenty cents
a day, that the world may have silk
dresses and munitions.
In Tokyo alone, a city o f two and
one-balf million people, there are 100, ■
000 women employed in sixty-two In­
dustries and businesses varying from
work as telephone operators, clerks,
stenographers and bookkeeper» to
work in silk and other aorta o f fac­
tories and domestic work.
Each year thousands o f these wo­
men go back to their homes In the
country, broken In health and victims
of tuberculosis because o f the poor
conditions under which the> work and
live. They are housed in dormitories
In the factory compound. These dormi­
tories are frequently unsanitary. The
girls work long hours, have no recre­
ation and on finishing their long day
go Immediately to bed, oftentimes a
bed which a girl who works at night
has been sleeping in all day.
As part o f lta world service for wo­
men, the Young W’ omen’a Christian
Association plans to build dormitories
In manufacturing towns where girts
may live cheaply under healthful
physical and social conditions, to send
out secretaries who can introduce rec­
reation .Into the factory, compound and
direct games and sqclal life.
This la done with the co-operation
o f the factories’ managers and pro­
prietors. One of thajJinoet Influential
of these IS Mrs. SdCukt, the moat
prominent woman manufacturer in
Japan, who Is owner and manager o f a
firm which exported $11,000,000 worth
o f bean oil Co America last year.
Recently Mrs. 8ozukl decided to
employ one thousand wbmen In her
offices
She could not find enough
well trained ones so she established
a permanent school where Japanese,
girls may be trained to enter the busi­
ness world. The greatest danger
ahead o f Japan, she says, la lb Its
growing materialism, and Japan’s
greatest need, the development o f her
women.
Tfae fam ily wish to thank the
friends who came in to help make
the last days o f the deceased plea­
4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4
sant.
—rfj-- ♦
♦
4 N A T IO N A L FRIEN D SH IPS
4
---------- T -------
+
DEPEND
U
PO
N
W
O
M
AN
KIN
D
4
ntm iiNUED H ER O F SALM ON 4
------r-
+
+
Japanese
Diplomat
Says
Man
4
American Traveler in Europe ' Con-
4 Alona Cannot Croat# Into ma- 4
feeeee She Would Have Welcomed
4
tional Friendliness.
4
Dish Once Despised.
+
4
4
International
friendship
be- 4*
Elisabeth Fraser, a traveler and
+ tween nations depends largely +
writer, was talking at a diplomatic re­
4- upon the friendly feeling between 4
ception In Paris about her recent ex­
4- the women o f those nations, ae- +
periences in Vienna.
4- cording to representatives o f the 4*
“ It is difficult, said Mlsa Fraser, “ to 4- Japanese embassy In Washington. 4
satisfy one’s hanger there, even at +
Their theory Is that there can 4
hotels that cost $15 a day.
4* be no firm friendship between 4
“ Elating my anappetixlng dish o f t two nations unless the women o f +
hashed turnips, which frequently com­ 4* those two countries know and 4>
posed the prindper dish of the menn, 4* like one another, aa co-operation 4-
I thought regretfully o f the salmon I 4* between nations, as In the state 4»
once disdained on a Canadian trip.“
4- and In the family, la based on co- 4
Miss Fraser laughed.
♦ operation between men and wo- 4
“ I was traveling in the back coun­ ♦ men.
4
try o f Canada, where salmon—boiled, 4-
Therefore. If Japan and Ameri- +
broiled. In salad, creamed, as cutlets 4 ca are to have a real, lasting 4
—figured at every meal and became 4* friendship, to really know and 4
very monotonous.
4- understand one another, the wo- 4
“ Ts there nothing else for break­ 4 men o f the two nations most 4
fast T I asked the hotelkeeper one 4* learn to play together, to study 4*
morning as a whole fish and pot of ♦ together and to think together. 4
mustard was put before me.
4- The Y. W. C. A la one o f the 4
“ ‘Nothing else?' the man exclaimed. 4* beat mediums for bringing about 4*
•Why, there’s salmon enough there 4 - this friendship between the two 4
4 nations, according to diplomatic +
foi six, ain’t there?'
“ ‘Tea.’ I admitted, ‘but I do not 4* representatives o f Japan, aa that 4
4 organization ts teaching Japanese 4
want salmon.’
“ ‘Well, then,’ my host replied curt­ 4* women recreation, showing them +
4 how to enjoy out-of-door life and 4
ly, *flre Into the mustard.’ “
4* sports. It Is particularly ne*-es- 4
4» gary that Japanese women learn +
Skillful Job of Moving.
4* to enjoy and appreciate recréa- 4
A gas container 70 feet In diameter 4» tlon, thay aay. since the great 4
and 75 feet high, weighing 200 tp»** 4> Influx o f women Into Industry 4
was moved three miles recently->at 4* and bnslness, as Japanese wo- 4-
men, formerly so conservative, +
f W thBM Dee Flrat it was*ralsed 15
"a re goltVg into bual iiwm and doing 4*
feet and loaded on rollers. Then It
4* many things which they had 4-
i~na ----- f our block* through th*
city streets and lowered 2« f e t to a 4 fierar thought o f doing before the ♦
+
dock, whence It was moved upon a 4» war.
The Y. W. C. A. has been aa- +
pair o f barges. The barges were 4*
towed three miles to a shipbuilding 4 cured the fullest possible co-oper- 4
plant, where the tank was unloaded 4* atlon o f the .Ttipanese embassy 4
and raised 28 feet, moved across new­ 4* and the Japanese people In mak- 4
4 Ing Its “ World Service program" 4
ly filled ground for a distance o f
4 fo r three million dollars to he 4
2,000 feet, crossing a railroad track,
4 used for women and gtria In the 4
and placed on its new foundation. It
4 United States, India, Chino, Ja- 4
took 71 days to complete the work.
4 pen. South America, Egypt, 81- 4
4 berfa, the Near East and Mexico 4
Refutes ts Leave Prison.
4 a success.
4
A man sentenced to Sing Slog pris­ 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4
on in May, 1917, has already overstay­
Y. W. C. A. TR A IN S WOMEN. .
ed his sentence more than seven
months, and refuses to go home. Hs
Young women students from forty-
Is working with a construction gang
building the new prison, and the war­ four states and nine countries—China,
the Philippine Islands, France, Bulga­
den says he does as much work as SBt
four men. The pay allowed prisoners ria, Holland. Russia, Armenia. Canada
by the state amounts to 1V4 cents a and Mexico — are registered In the
day. This man was greatly relieved National Training School o f the Young
when he was told that the prison au- Women's Christian Association In Now
thoritles wonld not shut off hts pay York.
They are studying methods o f Y. W.
to make him apply for parole, which
C.
A work with a view to taking W
he haa so far steadfastly refused t* do.
positions In Y. W. C. A. work ol** "
this country or In othor of
B rin « your Job work * to the trie# where the Y. W. 0. A.
on, opening and expanding 1
Graphie office.
$
W h e n a Prescription
is brought tn us
W e realise the tremendous responsibility involved.
THIS IS
W H Y only the Purest Drugs and Most Expert Care axe Em­
ployed in our Prescription Department.
Yonr
Safety* is
Assured
in Prescriptions filled here.
It
TH E
is
onr
chief
LEADING
care.
DflüGÜlST
PARLOR PHARM ACY
vV H O D b O N ,
t
PrU M im ’iidN
D k u GG iì ìt .
K i )DAK 6- ArJSeO
N t W B t R G , O H t G OH.
»4 0 0 »»»0 0 »0 0 0 0 »»»0 4 0 4 4 0 4 4 0 0 0 »0 »»0 »»»»0 »0 0 0 0 s »»»»4 a »«
: Newberg Steam Laundry
Phone W h ite ' 1 12
CALL US
-
» -VT_\
1 *; , ^
-
-
'
- , -----
. „
’
'
,
The Lowest Priced Electrically Equipped
Automobile in the W orld
J<\ O. B. Newberg
Liberal Terms if Desired
ANDERSON MOTOR CO.
-N EW BER G , OREGON
~ ~
P L U M B I N G
Pump Repairs. ..__ j
Hot W ater Systems
Yours For Service
E. L. EVANS
C. A. EVANS
T H E HOME OF F L O W E R S :
SEASONABLE C U T FLOWERS— Plants in pots, cyclamens, J
(fine plants), cinerarias, primroses, ferns, fern dishea gerani­
ums, calla lilies (hardy flowers), hydrangea, peonies. Roses
our specialty (strong plants). Low prices.
FfcM.M m 2*2 JOHN GOWER
J. L. VAN BLARICOM
Staple and Fancy Groceries
Fresh Fruits and Vegetables
W* pleaae the moat particular. Phone us a grocery
If our prompt servies doesn’t surprise you. Wa want your trade.