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About The Gate city journal. (Nyssa, Or.) 1910-1937 | View Entire Issue (July 26, 1918)
PHONE 2 REXALL REMEDI ISS ONTARIO PHARMACY THE REXALL STORE NYAL’S QUALITY GOODS Headquarters for >ut-of-town visitors. When in Ontario call on us. GATE CITY JOURNAL SIGN THE W. S. S. PLEDGE CARDS AND HELP WIN THE WAR Wilson Bros. Department Store Published every Friday a t Nyssa, gon, by H. F. BROWN Entered as seconu-uuu» m u ta r April i«. 1910, at the postotfice at Nyssa, Oregon, under the Act of March 3,1879. SUBSCRIPTION RATES : One year, in advance______ ____ $1 50 •lix months in advance____________ 75c FRIDAY, JU LY 26 1918 Notice to Advertisers. A New Rind of Store SATURDAY W ill be opened Juiy 27 We have a new Grocery Department in our store— a place wherejyour money will have its maximum buying power. The new grocery section wili open on the above date. We invite you to be here at that time and see it. You will be gratified whenyou note the host of money saving opportunities we have af forded you. From Its opening day our Grocery Department will be this town's center. Buster Brown’s Reception We wish to announce to the young folks, as well as the older, that Buster Brown will give a Buster Brown Reception in front of our store August 8. at 3 o’clock p. m. We invite all to be present at this reception. Buster Brown will give away souvenirs free of charge. Don’t forget the date August 8 Where you spent the least and get the most Wilson Bros. Department Store TH E ONTARIO LAUNDRY SOFT WATER BETTER WORK Leave bundles at Gibson’s Barber Shop NYSSA BARBER SHOP Shaving, Hair Cutting, Hot and Cold Batbs NYSSA . . . . OREGON a.-a.-a._a- a --« * “ ▼ ▼ V T ■ « ^ GET INTO THE WAR bu y W a r sa v i ngs s t a m p s Million« of little children, proud of the flag and with tt ue patrietlsm in their heart., are buying W ar Savings Stampe. Every dollar helps support the Government and help« to win the war. BUY WAR SAVINGS STAMPS NOW AND EVEKY W EEK. (Thia apace donated by S. F. Foster ! All copy for changes of advertise ments should be in the hands of the printer not later than Wednesday noon to insure its insertion in the following Issue. All Mail Orders Promptly Filled. _ODAS. CANDIRa LIMITATIONS OF MAN. Men are essuylng the tracing of ef fect to cause, but their conclusions are In disagreement, unsatisfactory to the generality of mankind, If not even to those who Indulge In them. The world is suffering os it has not before suffer ed since the flood recorded In the Ge nesis of revelation; but what was said hy our American Emerson Is recalled: “It Is the finite that has wrought an<l suffered; the infinite lies stretched In smiling repose.” Contemporaneous events are marching along, clothed In babiluments of blood; a part of com mon earth th at but a short four years ago was teem ing with busy millions engaged In the business of busy lives, seems to be hungering hum an graves. All this may appear clearer to coming generations than to the present, just us we of the present in the light of history have a clearer understanding of pust causes than was enjoyed by those who liuve lived when history was being made, says Knoxville Journal Tribune. The finite works und suffers; “the Infinite lies stretched In smiling repose.” The finite reckons time by yeurs, days and hours; with the in finite a thousand yeurs are but us a day. MORAL COURAGE. We are Inclined, as a rule. If we think about It at all, to believe that we possess a high sense of moral cour age until we are actually put to the test. It Is so easy for us to criticize the actions of others, to draw contrasts between their way of performing a duty and the way in which we would perform It, and to denounce some pai- tlcular show of murul weakness with out considering how we would act In sim ilar conditions. We do not care Our most potent contribution to win very much about moral courage as long ning the w ar In the year has been in ns we ure not called upon to exercise loans, amounting to over $0,000,000,000 It, but take for granted that whenever und the flow of munitions and supplies the test comes we shull not be lacking. from our Industries, factories and fields, It Is one thing to theorize about prob The nation has responded nobly to the able tests, however, and quite a dif call for sacrifice and service. Notwith ferent m atter to put these theories In standing official und semiofficial mis to actual operation, and It Is a fact calculations and muddling that possi that unless a man Is by nature cour bly could not be avoided, the people ageous und fair-minded he will most as a whole, huve overlooked these mis likely be unable to meet the require chances or grimly resolved to muke m ents of the ordeal imposed upon him. the best of them, and have submitted As a m atter of fact, we often doubt with good grace in a single purposed the necessity of ever having to demon determ ination to get on with the war. strate our moral courage, and look up This voluntary disciplining Is the most on the quality as som ething to be kept convincing evidence of the national at Jn reserve for an emergency, says titude tow’ard the war, the most com Charleston News and Courier. We plete answer to the occasional coin- learn however that this sort of cour- plalnt of popular Indifference or the age Is the only foundation for strength i nee<l °f arousing the country. Fuin- of character; upon it we build for the llles and communities th at have seen future, and in proportion to Its firmness their nearest and dearest set out for and its power to resist evil Influences the front, who have pinched and de do we mold ourselves Into worthy men nied themselves to buy Liberty bonds, and good citizens. W ithout the cour war stamps, subscribe to the Red Cross age to think for ourselves, to work for and kindred campaigns, to save food ourselves nnd to dnre for ourselves In and fuel, to sacrifice and serve, are the fear and love of God. life would be fully alive to w hat this struggle means burdensome and our work meaning and why It m ust be won. - — less. Everybody Happy What’s the use of being all tuckered out with the heat of the kitchen wnen you can cook better meals with less work on the Detroit Vapor Oil Stove, which burns kerosene without wick or odor, and doesn’t radiate heat all over the place. Hot weather loses its cooking terrors with this famous stove. Thousands will tell you so. You owe it to yourself and to your health to see. the Detroit Vapor Oil Stove—the finest product of manufac turers who have devoted years to the farm stove problem. Prices, $ 17.50 and up ----- Most of ns hnTe Interesting hooka P. J. PHILLIPS th at merely litter the shelves. The men ATTORNEY-AT-LAW In training camps and even in France have need of these volumes. We should turn them over to the boys who NYSSA OREGON are fighting for home and country. We will protect your grain from seeding time until it is m arketed if Gem State Lumber Co. for coal. no4$ you insure with us. V P rop . First Class Meals---- Moderate Prices. K R E A M KRTJST OREGON 4 ------- W hat trem endous problems will be SPECIAL ATTENTION TO COMMERCIAL TRADE before the people when peace returns JACOB PKINZING, M. D. and life gets back to Its own. These Surgeon and Diseases of Women STAR ROOMING HOUSE IN CONNECTION are the problems of transportation, la bor, profiteering, m ilitary rule, tem per ance, selfish politics, vice, divorce, tax W. J. Internal WEESE. M. D. Medicine ation, class legislation, the public serv ice, sinecures and others equally impor tant that the people will have to face EDGAR S. FORTNER, M. D. when the w ar Is over, says Ohio State WHEN BUYING BREAD. ASK FOR Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Journnl. And there is this, too, about them, th at the w a /h a s greatly changed OFFICE HOURS: 9 to 12 and 2 to 5 their character and crented new re lations to society about them all, so SOLD BY ALL GROCERS. Office over F irst National Bar k th at they will provide absolute condl Nyssa, Homedale, Crane. Jamieson, Brogan, tloms of our peace and progress. They Telephone No. 33 J. Ontario, Oregon Riverside, Juntura and Vale. cannot resume their ancient attitude to ward the world. There will be start ed a new deni and all th e v problems D r . J. J. SARAZIN T H E P U R IT Y B A K E R Y P H Y S IC IA N A S U R G E O N will be solved so as to obtain their ONTARIO, OREGON. new footing In the coming order of Office between Second and Third things. All these* problems will be on Main street. vastly changed In their scope and lm- port. Oregon ★♦♦★AC*********************************************** Nyssa Still, when we see a young fellow WILSON *mn4i the bfll "over the center field | fence and make the circuit like a mo LAW YER torcycle, we shall be wondering what physical defect the man could possibly have th at rendered him Ineligible for NYSSA m ilitary service. ». HOTEL WESTERN MRS. C. C. FORBES, PROFESSIONAL. The first of the new type of subma rine chasers known as eugleboats la W. H. Brooke - P. J. Gallagher scheduled for launching In June. A ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW pattern boat, which Is nearly complet ed, la to have a shore trial of Its en gines next week. It la announced that Ontaro, Or the rate of output la expected to be Wilson Bldg boat a day when the work of construc tion gets under full swing. The man who w ai financially responsible for the R. W. SWAGLER Roslka Schwimmer expedition la not ATTORNEY-AT-LAW alow In the production of war m aterial Rooms 12, 14, 15 now that he recognizes the winning of Wilson Bldg. the w ar by the allies as a necessary ONTARIO OREGON prelim inary to a stable peace. * When in Ontariomake your headquarters at the MOORE HOTEL H. C, SMITH Proprietor Meet your friends at t 4 T H E F O U N T A IN i For soft drinks of all kinds Iparma BHevator Buyers of Grain and Seed of AH Kinds Call Us on Phone No. 85 F. J. WALMSEY, Mgr. h * A