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About The Gate city journal. (Nyssa, Or.) 1910-1937 | View Entire Issue (June 13, 1919)
K m THE GATE CITY JOURNAL, NYSSA, OREGON. Proving 11 Fish Day. Pussyfooting 1» a calamity.” He—By Jove, Betty, you look nice “I suppose It 1» something of g cat ' enough to eat. Sh^-Well. don't: forget gut rophe." this is Friday.—Boston Trauscrlpt. DAIRY Arne znca A Overseas What is Castoria r L Vy»-l' ! I aids 5p NEW QUEEN AT BELTSVILLE Calamity Wayne Pauline II Completes Year Test, Producing Eleven Tons of Milk. (P rep ared by th e United S ta te s D epart m ent o f Agriculture-) A S T o r..» ,!• “ ^ Opium, rp the SJrsSi t , ,l0er 0Lber Narcotic subauncc. I t t ago * i t , « tu r- u ha4 teg,) in constant Me for the relief assimilation of rood, giving " “ S i K M v i H r a c t U - * e t o « « , «id which b « keen tc me fee oeee a s i g e g J a i t “ :"^ A/rs/p/cA/r e/PAKfJ Ar ß j r i i s / u / v c o o -— a. O ur Heroic Dead A re Resting In Peace Today In Seven European Countries A new queen reigns In tlie herd of Holstelns on the government experi ment farm at Beltsvllle, Md. She is as unassuming ami peace loving as any of her subjects, although she hears the name Calamity Wayne 1‘uullne II, and has Just completed a test In which ■'/.AT she produced In a year more than 11 i tons of milk. In 305 days she pro I . J y .is- duced 22,547-S pounds of milk which .is « « " a Av • M i. U -C f ' uveraged 3.805 per cent butter fat, the total fat being 855.4 pounds. This nnimul was selected by dairy 1 * » a 1— f X Ä f ’Ä - ’' By LLOYD ALLEN. specialists of the United Slates de Special Staff Correspondent. partment of agriculture from a Michi .- f t gan herd In July. 1017. She was (Copyright. 11*19, b j W e*tern Newspaper Union.) WMS.—America's dead—sev brought to the Itellsvllle furm, where ’ ij enty thousand In all—ure she produced a heifer calf, and was being well eared for here started on her test December 7, 1017, M tx/C A /t G M /sss/m eA /K o w r In Europe by a section of at the age of eight year*. The test the American expeditionary was run through the coldest winter gnrdlng final disposition of the dead, that section had experienced in 40 force detailed to collect the bodies and place them In military cemeteries. tio bodies were returned to America. Don’t imagine for one minute that It was announced officially here. this big undertaking Is a task that was The Idea should not get about that neglected while the war was In prog the graves registration service was ress; that the Americans who fell working solely at finding unburied In battle were not Interred on the bodies left on the field nnd in the battlefields. Rome few cases have trenches after the rapid advances of been noted where bodies were found the allied nrmies during the autumn unburled weeks after the lighting of 1918. Virtually all of the battle stopped; but these eases are so few field dead were given burial within a that they cannot be taken Into con very short time after the engagement, ry /o /c A /. GjfypsjA/Y g æ a m c sideration. unless, perchance, it was physically What Is being done by the American j Impossible to perform the last rites Wearing gas masks, the workers dig expeditionary force now In the way I up old graves as a matter of duty. because the body happened to be In of caring for the dend is the second I a No Man’s land, raked hy machine Calamity Wayne Pauline II. chapter. The bodies are being dis [ And In a great many Instances they do gun or rifle tire. These first graves were 1 much more than their duty. years, and a summer thut was extreme interred from battlefield graves nnd Consider, for instance, whnt was made ns carefully as circumstances ly hot. The test for advanced regis carried to military cemeteries where | done with a cemetery of more than one permitted. Even in the Argonne, amid try was conducted under I lie rules of the mounds nre arranged row on row thousand bodies at Potsy on the underbrush and deep thickets, the tin“ llolsteln-Krleslan association. In even ranks, that in death they may Aisne. Every army order had been graves were mnde by careful squads During the yenr the animal was be ns they were in life— shoulder to faithfully and carefully carried out. thut put over each mound Ihe regula shoulder. Above each grave a cross handled by two different herdsmen. | The workers had made n thorough tion cross and Identity tag. A son of Calamity Wayne Pauline II Is placed. On the cross Is nailed a German Graves Undisturbed. t search of the surrounding country, has been placed at one of the govern sine Identification tag, giving the name Here in the Argonne sector the Ger j They had Identified and hurled the ment substations, and one of her hulf- und regiment. Around each cemetery I thousand bodies. The graves were man graves are thick. It is difficult to slsters Is making a fine record at the a substantial fence is erected. Above i marked off In regulation plots of 20S, toll, while Journeying through the re Michigan Agricultural college. Calam each mound. Is a small replica of the with n cross overmuch. Gravel pally» gion, whether a cross Is meant to ity's 805-day record was 10,250.0 Stars and Stripes. were laid out through the eemetetr, mnrk an nllied mound, or the grave of pounds of milk, averaging 3.7 per cent Whnt chapter three of the story will according to regulations of the G. R. *S. an enemy soldier. butter fat, making u total of 718.13 he remains to be seen. Congress will In all France the most elaborate Technically the Job was finished, 'in probably authorize the return of all pounds of fat. workmanlike style. Rut the soldiers military graveyards are In the St. All the dairy onttie on Itellsvllle bodies requested hy the man's family. wanted to do something more. Aud Mihlel salient, near the town of St. farm me used for experimental pur- Yet even If such a ruling Is put Into they did. Mlhlel, w here the German dead lie bur noses, and will lie given t*l least two effect, thousands of American graves ied beneath costly gravestones re They senrehed through rtnny plies of ivgrsiry lests tr> determlm will remain in Europe for the reason sembling monuments In n modern city scrapped metals at a snlvnge dump their capacity for production. that many families will prefer—as did nnd collected Iron rails. They begged cemetery. Evidently the Germans he- the Ilnosevelt family—to allow their or borrowed cement, nnd then they llevpd they were to hold these lands dead to remain here for their Until built a reinforced concrete wall around f ° revpr. SUPERVISE PURITY OF MILK sleep. the cemetery. Mnny of the German graves nre In Seven Countries. Then they mnd° n trip to n timber | murked with large headstones. On List of Equipment Necessary to Pur. And they nre resting In peace today patch nenrhy, found the tallest and ,l,psp stoneR nrp lYP'cal cemetery flg- nish Laboratory Is Sent Out by In seven European countries: England, strnlghtest tree, cut It down, stripped j urps“ "«ich ns Brief, pictured ns a weep- Dairy Division. Scotland. Ireland. Germany, llnssln, lt of branches, painted It white, and j *n8 woman. Itnly, Luxembourg, hut mainly In Rended wrenths, entwined artificial . . . . . planted It In the middle of the little (Prepared tiy the United S ta te s D ep a rt ,, 1 ranee near the sectors where the , , , ,, , cemetery for a llngpole. Flowers were l flowers, decorate most of the head m ent o f A gricu lture.) American boys did their vai bini and , , , ... , A letter 1ms been sent by the dairy telling work In finishing up (lie Ger 1 planted nround the base of the pole. stones; untarnished by wind, rain or snow. Where appropriate, there Is a And Old Glory was swung lnlt> the division of the United States depart man army. ! replica of the Iron Cross, In black. I breeze. ment of agriculture to 1.500 health of England Ims two American ceme Possibly half of the graves are so Bodies to Come Home. ficers in cities having over 5,000 popu te ries; one nt Liverpool with 024 It was officially announced In the marked. lation urging the city governments to graven nnd the other nt Magdalen Every respect Is given these ceme j midst of the war that "the final dispo supply the health officers with proper Hill, Winchester, with 522 graves. teries hy the allied army of occupa laboratory equipment so they can ade In Scotland there nre 000 graves, sition of bodies will he considered nnd tion. No wreath is touched, nnd no quately guard the city milk supply. A mainly of victims of the Tusonnla dis 1 executed ns an entire project nt such time, prohnbly after the conclusion of ! h<''’,Won‘' '" " " e d . »> » ‘“'If fur- health department without a labora aster. peace. ns the vastness and difficulty of ro,uparison of allied and Ger- tory equipment Is as helpless as a sol Ireland has "0 graves, nnd there nre this almost Inconceivable t a s k may i m* n '" p» ,''«ls—s'oee (he Germans, In dier without arms, says the letter. A graves In Italy. Russia, Luxembourg, i many sections of occupied France city government has no right to hold tnd a small American cemetery nt make possible.” There was "another announcement 1 n "ysternatle campaign of dis- Its health department responsible for Coblenz, where a large detachment of the health of the community unless It the American army of occupation Is that “return of bodies to the Uniteli ' " ’norlng French cemeteries by tearing States will he mode In due time except ,,mvn gravestones nnd actually destroy- has provided the department with the stationed In Germany proper. In cases where a specific request to : »’ * » lp graves themselves, equipment necessary to wage the tight It Is the “Graves Registration the contrary Is fonde." ! » will he many a day before nil of the against disease. Service” that hns charge of elnsslflcn- Excel lent centralization of this American bodies have been moved The work of supervising the safety, tlon of the American dend In Europe. cleanliness and purity of Its city milk More than 4.000 soldiers were assigned graves registration work Is a feature from the roadsides and fields of France supply Is one of the most important to duty in lids service, which Is a Of the system. An efficient tiling *y*. I to ,hp *p,pc,pd hurlai grounds. R is duties of the modern health depart branch of the quartermaster's corps. tom. curd Index style, lias been Install ! " certainty Mie I- reneh will always " hprp AmiTienn ment. Bneterla dirt, added water and They not only take up the dend In the ed. Mnpa hove h»an made show ing the r,'ver‘' ,hpsp These h" ,l,p" nrp interred, which are mona preservatives In milk ennnot be deter buttle zones, hut have searched all of location of each grnvevnrd ,n ,hp American sacrifiée that mined without chemical and bacterio France to And the few bodies that es rci-,mils „re being kept at Tours. They logical apparatus. The letter gives a caped notice and were left unhurted give the location of a grave with ex ninde France’s future safe from Boohe domination. list of the equipment necessary to fur daring the days of actual warfare. actitude. nish u laboratory for milk analysis. At Aisne Is I oc a tei! thè Inrgest nf ' The day hns not yet arrived when From frozen dngouts. from ruined American visitors enn visit the Ameri ................. eenieteries, j can eemeterles. , houses shattered by shell fire, nnd the American bnttletichi Rut it Is to he expert- wlth more tlinn 1.100*:rnves. The next thousands of Isolated spots the bodies DAIRY COW MOST PROFITABLE ed. unless eongress orders every hndv were recovered. France. In the war eemeterles. in order nf slze. are Xantll- removed to Amerien. that thousands lols. Yauheenurt. Fistile«, and Frollini*. Animal Never Falls to Return Profit zone, was literally combed nnd combed In Ihe renr line area* thè eemeterles will visit these spots where rest In again In order that none ht* left for Feed and Care— Keep j pencc the American soldiers who are locate«! al Merlatine. Bordeaux ' Til rough the Argonne forest for ex Her Comfortable. j rande the supreme sacrifice fo.’ their ample, the worst fighting of the tloal l.itliibezellee. B re st. Sn resiies. s t V a . country. Z aire. Isroudon Renante. Allory. (Vini- The dairy row Is the most profitable weeks of war took place In thickets. m ercy C o n trex e v llle , R tizcllles and animal on the farm if rightly managed, Every square kilometer In the Argonne Our Experiences. l.e Man*. hns been covered hy the searching as. under ordinary conditions, she “Thera Is no had weather.” says Hendqunrter* of thè grave* rcgls- partial*. never falls to return a profit for her Kuskln. “only different kinds of good France as a whole has been divided tratlon servire nf Tour« ts kept In weather—ench good for the purpose care and feed, If she is given the right fornasi hy vira of thè progress of thè Into 12 prims through which the kind of food and Just the right quan for which It was sent.” The same I* tity. If she Is underfed, her product "Graves Registration Service" works. work. A* fast n* thè hodles are rnov- true of nil life's experiences. The will he correspondingly small, and If There are three advanced sections and ed thè Information Is posteti on thè disappointment, the struggle, the sue eentrnllzed record*. she Is overfed, she will he unhealthy. nine other areas, which Include base otws, the waiting, the hope nnd tin Wlille thè «rmy walted to hear from grief, each Is good for the purpose Feed the cow Jn«l right, keep her and Intermediate sections ami the dis trict of l’arls. thè wnr department and congres* re- that brought It. quiet and comfortable, and she w ill he equal III value to the goose that laid golden eggs. “I don't know preslzely, being ns I hml a horse swap on hand while the COOKING GRAINS FOR COWS anecdote was being told to me. Rut. anyhow. It was something about thè “While 1 was In Tumllpvllle yester lers happened In, and I Judge they all Set Doe* Not Ordinarily Add Much to rest of 'em not betng able to agree with Palatability— May Decrease day," related Gap Johnson of Rumpus got drunk In a gener'l way. Tenny- Mr. Ynwkey's views on the league nf Digestibility. Ridge, “they were trying In the court rnte, after a spell tl^e rest of 'em nations." house a pnssel of fellers from down hopped onto I s n k t y A jt fioddy, or While some unpalatable feeds may on Kiddle Greek for cutting a curious whoever he was. nnd pounded him “Why. Elsie, dear." soothed mother, be consumed by dairy cows in larger caper. ‘Feared like one of 'em. named right shnrply, nnd set him on n hot quantities If they nre eisiked. the cook Tawkey. or Snoddy. or something that- stove nnd held hlm'there till they had “why do you cry shout having little brother christened?” ing does not ordinarily add iniieh to a-way. got a quart of hone-dry branded him to suit 'em.” "Because (boo-hno) he fs such a lit- the palatablllly of the grains nnd may whisky nnd went visiting at another "Great guns!" ejaculated a neighbor. tie thing to hare a bottle of milk even decrease their digestibility. f i ll c r t house. Four or live other fel “What did they do all that for?" busted over his head." If ¿ M ia PO SSIB LY A R E A SO N r Oenuloo Castoria always bears the signature of Tuition Will Be Free. “She says she's going to give slng- I Ing lessons." "She'll have to. No- ; body’d ever pay her for them.” Rely On Cnticura Authorities differ as to whether a : j poker room should be classed as an | Ante room or drawing room. All I B os»g, Sample each «ree or "Cettou ForSkinTroubles When a man begin«, to discuss mat There is nothing more idiotic than the smile of a pretty girl—when di rimony with a widow the result la usually a tie. rected toward some other fellow. A WHEN BUYING ASPIRIN A sk fo r “ B a y e r ALWAYS SAY "BAYER” T a b le ts o f A s p ir in ” in a Bayer p ackag e—m arked w ith “ B a y e r C r o s s .” Don’t buy Aspirin tablets In a pill box. Insist on getting the Bayer pack age with the safety “Bayer Cross” on both package and on tablets. No other way! You must say "Bayer.” Never ask for merely Aspirin tablets. The name “Bayer” means you are getting the genuine "Bayer Tablets *t Aspirin,” proven safe by millions of people. Beware of counterfeits ! Only re cently a Brooklyn manufacturer was sent to the penitentiary for flooding the country with talcum powder tab lets, which he claimed to be Aspirin. In the Bayer package are proper di rections and the dose for Headache, Toothache, Eurache, Neuralgia, Rheu matism, Lumbago, Sciatica, Colds, Grippe, Influenzal-Colds, Neuritis and pain generally. “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin,” Ameri can made and owned, are sold in vest pocket boxes of 12 tablets, which cost only a few cents, also in bottles of 24 and bottles of 100—also capsules. Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoacetlcacldester of Salicyllcacid. Danger In Abbreviation. Even the school nurse has her fun. In a talk before the central philan thropic council the other day, Miss Helen R. Stewart of the hoard of health told of one little boy who, after- he had been examined by the r.ulso, wen? to the teacher In tears, eflmplainlng that the nurse called him ■ffimes. ■ When the teacher expressed her surprise, the boy sought to prove his case by handing her the card the nurse had given to him as her record of the examination. “Look at th at!” he cried. “Poor nut,” read the card. “Poor nutrition,” explained the teacher, finally sending the child away with a better opinion of the nurse.— Dallas News. Information Needs Confirmation. “Old Dorsey Dudgeon prides him self on knowing where the conflagra tion Is as soon as he hears the flre- bell ring,” related the landlord of the Petunia tavern. "By the time lining dozen whangs have changed ha^was scrabbled Into a garment or two and is out on his front porch, hollering to the people running by Just where he knows the fire Is.” “He should be of considerable as sistance to the volunteer firemen and others In sending them In the proper direction,” commented the Interested guest. "Eh-ynh ! He would be If he didn't nine times out of ten know It wrong.” Kansas City Star. Von Tlrpltz a Pauper. The Tribune de Geneve Is Informed that Grand Admiral von Tirpitz is staying at Wildegg. Switzerland, as the guest of Lieut.-Colonel Wllle, son of the former commnnder-ln-chlef of the Swiss army. Tirpitz has lost all his fortune. His son Is a clerk In a hank nt Zurich, and his daughter Is a governess in a Zurich fnmily. To avoid paying the German war ax of 1913 Tirpitz Invested his money In Italian securities, with the result that he is now penniless. What a patriot I Glossing Over the Facts. “Pa, what Is a euphemism?” “I'll have to explain that by giving you an example, son.” “Yes, pa.” “The dictionary says a euphemism Is ‘a figure of speech by which a word or phrase more agreeable or less offen sive Is substituted for one more ac curately expressive of what Is meant,’ as in the case of tha society reporter who states that a widow who has been married three or four times Is ‘led to the altar’ by a wealthy old codger who never had the slightest notion of get ting married until he faced the preach er.”—Birmingham Age-Herald. Economy in Postam Boil Postum as long as you please, and you will extract only healthful goodness. You 11 get no caffeine — the coffee-drug— for there’s none in Postum. The Original P o stu m cerea l in fact, should be boiled fully 15 min* utes. and if desired the pot can be kept going from meal to meal, more Postum and water for the new service. Postum is the favorite of large numbers of former coffee-drinkers and can be secured from grocers everywhere. Tw o Sizes, usually sold a t 15c vnd 25 c . Ji Delicious, Invigorating and H ealthful Drink “ There’s a Reason” 4 V