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About The Gate city journal. (Nyssa, Or.) 1910-1937 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 13, 1914)
j N Y SSA AND VICINITY j CALDWELL A Brief Resume of the Daily Events in a Live Town j What Your Neighbors Are Doing. f «♦ ^ 1 4* *' Clean-up • Prosecuting Attorney W. H. Hrooke and Mayor A. V\ Trow of Ontario, were visitors here Mou- Miss Ettu Stewart of Parma, i» day, accompanying R A Booth of viriting with Miss Lola Forbes, Eugene, who is making a" auto- J. M. Pash of Homedale, was a mobile campaign through the business visitor in Nyssa Satur- state as Republican candidate for d .y . United Stales senator. Chris Mettvdt of Sioux City, Wanted—80-Acre Ranch Iowa, was looking at the Nyssa country Monday. Well improved, good water right; Miss Virginia McLain of Boise, accessible to school. Spot cash is visiting the Boydells. She ar Must be worth the price. Apply J Boydell, Nyssa. rived Sunday and will remain in at ouce: definitely. Sale Flower pots 10, 15, 25, 30, 50c at Fo«lei's Drug. Store. $2.50 Men’s Shoes $1.95 Ladies’ Waists 25c ^ Kabo and W. B. A A i Corsets, " ¿ T . « p l . U U | L A D IE S ’ K N IT A N D PA N TS . VESTS . Straw Hats 15c $ 1.00 Mr. and Mrs. Robert Haggeit of 24 Head Grod Milch Cows Nampa, have been visiting their Also well established Milk Route unc»e, J. L. Eargent, the past in Vale, Oregon, with wagon, bot week, tles, etc Business good for $2o0 J. L. Largent of the Golden to $325 per month. No opposition. Rule store, went to Baker Wednes Write, or come and see me. C. 0 T homas . Vale, Ore. day evening on a dusiuess trip. He expects to return Sunday. Men’s ami Boys Summer Golden & Fogle improved the ivhirts at 40 &50cts at Spiers. appearance o f their establishment considerably last week by replac ing the store front windows with plate glass, Schooling In youth should InrtrUbly b« 15c iirls’ and Ladies' Shoes sold at $1.35 to $2, for $1.00 WE FO R SALE Worth up to tioc for TAKE G IR L S ' D R E SSE S -R egii. lar $1.75 to $2 25 for $1 15 EGGS IN TRADE You will soon be needing: tools for harvesting your crops. Come in j and see us in regard to your l a t e s t wa BULLETIN Germans Capture Liege French Take AIsace-Loraint, Largent executes a fla movement on prices. Do they come. $1.50 Khaki hints, n o w .................................. Jl,j 1.75 Khaki Touts, now ................... 15 Mt. Hood and Boss of the Road Waist O vith II s , $100 v a lu e .................................................... . $1 25 Some of those *3.50 Shoes left going at Shirts, Men’s Negligee, $1 to all lumped at 75c THE LIFE CAREER S. D. Goshert contracted a se vere case of hay fever last week, and while he was able to attend to business most of the time, he suf fered severely. Ensilage Cutters Miss Lizzie Thompson, the pop ular young lady postmaster, has directed to prepare a person In the best wav for the best permanent occupation for wnicn he is ca p a ble.'—PresidentC. W. Eliot. This is the Mission of the And everything in that line you need. W e handle only the best lines and yeu can get your extras without irouble that yom will experience by buyin g from traveling agents. A general line of Hardware. be rushed from pleted, now cntil com- Nyssa Hdw. Co- ! Golden Rule Stoi u Forty-«i«th School Veor Opens SEPTEHBER i8th, 1914 Write for illustrated 100-pa go Book been the victim of a bad cola this let, " T he L if e C a r e e r ," and for Cata week, but stuck bravely tc her log containing full information. D egree C o u r s e t- AGRICULTURE : duties through it all. Agronomy, Animal Husbandry,DalryHus- bandry, Poultry Husbandry, Horticulture. Miss Ajda McDonald will leave Agriculture for Teachers FORESTRY, Monday for Portland, where she LOGGING ENGINEERING. HOME ECO NOMICS: DomesticScience, Domestic Art, will enter Good Samaritan hospital ENGINEERING: Electrical, Irrigation, for a two and a half years’ train Highway, Mechanical. Chemical. Mining. Ceramics. COMMERCE. PHARMACY. ing course as professional nurse. I ndustrial arts . Vocational C o«««-Agr¡cult-re. Dairy Purt of tne bfidge crew laid off ing, Home Makers’ Course, Industrial from the work at Ontario has been Arts, Forestry, Business Short Course. moved back to the bridge gang School o f Music— Plano, String, Band, here. Work on these bridges will Voice Culture. Parmer* Buuncts Courie by Mail Free. Feed Grinders, riay Choppers Manure Spreaders * Address THB REGISTRAR, (tw-7.18 tc >•>)______________ Corvallis, Oregon Nyssa Is Your Home T; ...THE... BANK OF NYSS IS YOUR HOME BANK We are here to accommrxlate the Home Folks. WheD in town come in and visit. We want your frendship as well as your business, THE BANK OF NYÍ Mrs. Robert Clark and Mrs H T. Francis will entertain the Ladies’ Aid Lociety at tea Wed nesday, August 12, at the home of Mrs. Francis. Everybody invitee to be there. Serial 013993 Bids for the Construction of N O TICE FO R PU B LIC A TIO N . Concrete Cross Walks. Department of the Interior, Seymour Ross’ boy Harvey is The Town of Nyssa, Oregon, suffering from a broken collar U, S, Land Office at Boise, Idaho. hereby request s sealed bids for the bone, fractured while scuffling July 27,1914, construction of 354 feet of con with another boy last week. Dr, Notice is hereby given that Anna Hermino Stnuber, of Nyesa, crete cross walks on the west side Sarazin set the break Monday ant Ore., who, on April 2,1913, madg, of First street in Nyssa, Oregon, Harvey is now doing fine. Homestead entry, No. 013993. for according to plans and specifica C. VanDusen of Boise is NW L'.Section 23, Township 6N, tions on file in the Town Recor auditing the city books this week Range 5W, Boise Meridian, has der’o office. Bids to be opened at Mr, VanDusen is one of the best tiled notice of intention to make the council rooms on August 24th anditors in the Northwest and is a commutation Proof, to establish at 8 p. m. By order of the common candidate for state auditor of claim to the land above described, council. B. F. Farmer, Recorder. Idaho in the coming fall election. before the Register & Receiver of Several Kingman Kolony folks the U. S. Land Office, at Boise, All kinds of sewing by the day are making trips to the mountains Idaho, on the 24th day of Sept or garment. Charges reasonable. for a breathing spell during the ember, 1914. Dressmaking a specialty,— Mrs. hot weather. Chas. Peck. Ed Claimant names as witnesses: H. R. Morris,Nyssa, Phone62F10. Blodgett and A. E. Wade, with Robert R. Robbins, Grace B. their families, are among those Robbins, Ernest F. Zahler, David T h e Best Overalls at L. S p ier’s who will enjyy an outing during W, Johnston, all of Nyssa. Ore- such as "F in k ’s Detroit Special” the next week or so. gon. “ Levi Strauss” and “ H eadligh t.” Frank S. Heer. Register. Henry fields and party returned Wednesday from a weeks camp off the upper little Malheur. A glorious time is reported. Game of all sorts was plentiful. Two big buck deer were killed and brought to town, also all thechick- eus and grouse they - cared for. ! HAVASACK ---------F L O U R -------- If every soldier had a sack o f Havasack Flour in his haversack how happy he would be. W e have taken the exclusive sale for Security F lour Mills Co., A bilene, Kit«.. Flour made from famous Kansas T u r key Red W hea-. Our Guarantee goes with every sack. T ry a sack of Havasack todav W ilson Bros.’ Veribest, per sack WILSON BROS. $ 1.60 $ 1.85 Grocers jjj C. O, Thomas, prominent Yale realty man, was a Nyssa visitor Tuesday. Mr. Thomas spent tne day looking over the surrounding country and was well pleased with what he saw. According to bis views, this section is* advanced over the balance of the county and has the best prospects for rupid growth when conditions are mote settled in the country. In the cases reported last week involving Julian Lowe, James Me- Cormick, C. F. Smith, Robert M c Gregor and Charles Crawford, tried before Justice Boydell. there was an error of omission. James McCormick alone was found gailty of the charges brought agatnsc McCormick. Smith, McGregor and Crawford, the other three being acquitted. McCormick was fined $10 and half the costs of the case. Save 25 Cts. By com in g into the office to pay your sub scription during H om e Trade W eek. New or old subscribers, for this occasion only, the price for the Journal will he $1.25 the year. It saves us work, worry, stamps and sta tionery. The Nyssa Journal The Home Town Paper