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About The Gate city journal. (Nyssa, Or.) 1910-1937 | View Entire Issue (May 21, 1920)
THE GATE CITY TAITRNAL. NYSSA. OREGON. YOUNG GIRLS’ FROCKS I FOR GRADUATING DAY EAT LESS AND TAKE SALTS FOR KIDNEYS Take a Glass o f Salts If Y o u r Back H urts or B ladder Bothers. The Am erican men and women must guard constantly against Kidney trou ble, because w e eat too much and all our food Is rich. O u r blood Is filled with uric acid which the kidneys strive to filter out, they w eaken from over work, become sluggish ; the eliminative tissues clog and the result Is kidney trouble, bladder weakness and a gen eral decline In health. W h en your kidneys feel like lumps of lead ; your back hurts o r the urine Is cloudy, full o f sediment or you are obliged to seek relie f two or three times during the n ig h t; If you suffer with sick headache o r dizzy, nervous spells, acid stomach, or you have rheu matism when the w eather Is bad, get from your pharm acist about fou r ounces o f Jad S a lt s ; tak e a table spoonful In a glass o f w ater before breakfast fo r a fe w days and your kidneys w ill then act finq This fa mous salts Is made from the acid o f grapes and lemon Juice, combined with lithla, and has been used for generations to flush and stimulate clogged kidneys; to neutralize the acids In the urine so It no longer Is a source of Irritation, thus ending bladder disorders. Jad Salts Is Inexpensive; cannot In jure, m akes a delightful effervescent llthla-w ater beverage, and belongs In •very home, because nobody can make a mistake by having a good kidney flushing any time.— Adv. The Brute Again. “D arling, I cooked dinner fo r you ail myself, and you’ve never said a word about It.” “I would have, dearest, but I some how hnto to be a lw ay s complaining." Doesn’t hurt a bit and Freazona costs only a few cents. W e ’ve All H eard That. “H av e you ev er heard any table ra p ping?’’ "N o , but I’ve hoard a lot o f knock ing w hen a pleced-up supper w as be ing served.” If Constipated, Bilious or Headachy, take “ Cascareis” Feel g r a n d ! B e efficient I D on’t stay sick, bilious, headachy, constipated. R e move the liver and bow el poison which to keeping your head dizzy, your tongue coated, your breath bad and your stom ach sour. W h y not get a small box of i ’ascarets nnd enjoy the nicest, gentlest laxative-cathartic you ever experi enced? Cascareis never gripe, sicken • r Inconvenience one like Salts, Oil, Calom el or harsh pills. Cascarets bring sunshine to cloudy minds and half-sick bodies. T h ey w ork w hile you sleep. Adv. i ¿y Mdiy Graham fioiuver HLrLx«. LADY Most musicians dispense tnnsic by the measure, hut the bass iminnssr gets rid o f bis hjr the pound. Nyssa Trad B U G 'S L E C T U R E . little Lady Bugs, gather said Lady Bug, “fo r I am going to give a y- lecture. “It will be a free lecture, and pray. Lady Bugs, do not think that A® on that account It will be poor. Too many folks V have the Idea that nothing Is good that Is free. Oh. It’s very, . _^ V , wrong. jlg E # “T hey don’t ¿A bother to And out >9 ^ / how many nice V~ things are free, and they don’t to think Gather Around 8toP them. ^ about Tak e birds aud their concerts— quite free. “ And lovely wild flowers— quite free. And the woods and lakes and rivers and ponds— practically all o f them free. And many free concerts and oh, so many things that If 1 go on talking about them F will never have time for my lecture. 7 l c o h ° l -3 p k k ^ fl neither Opium, Me I MineralJtoTNj D E F O R E buymi V '« ‘or. there at that you oughl •bout k. Ik f¿$ím¡ie SidnaJÍL?* Over 2,500.000 C Users will confirm the« ttents about it. W e’ll »o give you the nam cumber of D e Laval us wound this town. S them formerly used se cf other makes. You c a NFW Y O H K y O W that May and June are not fa r off, the world Is full of talk about graduation dresses. It is buz zing about like the hum of bees in all the schools and In the homes that are livened by those precious but opiu- lor.nted hlgh-school girls who are about to complete one lap of their little jour ney In the world. To each one o f them her graduation dress is the most Im portant matter in sight, and it Is an Important matter from several view points. Many schools, much to their credit, pi escribe definitely what their gradu ates shall wear, and thus avoid heart burnings among the girls. A great n.uny others give some general direc tions as to how dresses shall be made, and let It go nt that; while other schools leave the matter to be decid ed without any restrictions. In the last case a mother Is very often called upon to Insist on less pretentious frecks than her daughter would select, and she may acquire a few extra gray hairs and deepened wrinkles in car rying her point. But she must carry It or else have her taste In dress dis credited. N i The graduation dress is to be made of some thin white fabric In a prettv but simple design, and a delightful ex ample appears In the picture above. White voile and narrow white satin ! ribbon give a good account of them selves In this girlish dress, which em ploys nothing else (except white satin for a girdle) in Its makeup. The voile ft gathered into a ribbon at the bot tom of the skirt and tacked to an un derskirt of lining silk. Exact Copy of Wrapper. Otherwise Content. “Dat husban’ oh yours," one colored wash lady observed to another, over the dividing hack fence, “he shore do seem a right contented man.” “He would be.” the other responded, “ ’Ceptln’ for only two things which troubles him. lie has to quit earin’ to sleep, an’ he has to quit sleep’n’ to Net. organdie, hntlste or georgette might be made In the same way. eat.” Another frpek employs narrow rib bon and wide tucks In Its decoration. It has a full straight skirt, finished « the bottom with three rows of satin ribbon about an inch and a half wide, placed two and a half Inches apart. Above them at the knee there are two tucks, three Inches wide, with n four- inch space between them, and abovo these three rows of ribbon again. Rib- bon encircles the baby waist and fin ishes the short sleeves, placed In three rows on them and finally forms a nar row sash with long loops and ends at the front. Some wives seem to think that hus bands were made to order. New Blouses and Smocks In 1930. “ I w an t to buy a battleship.' the Indy secretary of the nar;. “ W ell? ” “ I w onder if I could get thei w om an o f the naval committal ested ?’’ “A sk her to go battleship^ with you.”— Louisville Couriers I.ntln censed to he spoken lan gu age o f the people of ltalrt the y e a r M . W here is * * * * * * * * * * Co op Stare Caldwell wa C l f* best witl t *1e r e s t m a il wyuld cease to come dai • over the west. W SOME OTHER KIND OF BISCUIT Mrs. Pomple Satisfied Cows W e re Not Fed on Anything That W a s Composed of Milk. Specialist H as Been Dtl B ring to This Country E« Horticultural Pest One after the other, customers had come to the shop and complained about the milk. “W hat I want to know,” said Mrs. Pomple. who looked almost as thin ns the milk, “Is what you feed your cows on?” T h e Japanese beetle Is going« Its old enemies on Its trail ■ country. The United State*# ment o f agriculture has senti J Japan to find those enemies»® them across the ocean. « ■ then be established In the ¡*W New Jersey where the W B gnined n foothold, and th ejj ported to aid greatly In theo® the pest. I T h e agent employed in fa m ilia r with Japanese w a * W Is a specialist In this kind «' W Is expected that the task his sojourn In Japan for years. W h ile something « the parasites of the "I'm not denying it," declared Mrs. Pomple, “hut I challenge you to con tradict me when I declare that It ain’t milk biscuits you feed ’em on.”— Lon don Tit-Bits “George, d e a r !" began the worried woman, S I * M A N Y o f the latest blouses, now being shown fo r midsummer wear, have elbow sleeves and very short pepluins, that there Is no room to doubt that they are proving popu lar. Designers have great faith tn these features in midsummer styles since they are fashioning the most costly laces Into them ns well ns the usunl beautiful and refined fabrics used for Mouses. Irish lace, combined with filet and a little embroidered or pin-tucked batiste, are the rich In gredients that go to tnnke up the most costly of these blouses for midsummer wear. Often fine voile, with drawn- work or embroidery r s an embellish ment, takes the place of hntlste. In many blouses one or the other of these fabrics predominates, hut sometimes they make way fo r the laces and are merely used to set them together clev erly. Among Mouses that are simply latv trimmed or ornamented with needlework, voile Is a favorite mate riel. The lovely blouse shown here, made of crepe ceorgette and decorated with bends, h s |H»rfect example of the new summer Mouse. Its short peplum. cut Into four scallops at the bottom, Is shnply an extension o f the body of the blouse. Beads in short strands form s fringe for t le peplum amt th. loo ely adjusted girdle Is made of ;h. crepe. The sleeves are set lit wit hemstitching which continues to h the favorite way of disposing of seam in blouses. A smock of crepe de chine show with the Mouse employs heads als for Its trimming, but they are use on Its skirt much more plentlfull than on the body, reversing the orde o f things In the blouse. Tills Is s *||, over model fastening on th- should* nnd having long sleeves. In the dart er colors It Is very practical for "Yes. wotislt?" grunted George, with out looking up from his new spaper “Would you mind helping me with a little bit of arithmetic?" she pleaded “isot at all.” " e l l , If we pay the new eook the wages she wants will we have enough money left t0 buy anything fo r her to cook. London Answers. black mammoth jack 1^1-2 hands high, horse m 7 pears old. and has ba •P*Cted by the state vet< M b (ranted a ilcense i “ « • ' of 1920. Will st mj\ farm 1 1-2 miles w< OtPyhee School house at to insure colt to stand anc $10 • « for season or $5.( single leap. The above w due when the colt i •»d sucks, or mare is sold, f f p r removed without m ¡jflHk ^are should be tak prevent accidents. I f any j occur 1 will not be respoi D. P. PULL1 Phone No. 6] Life’s Little Problems. I The Easiest W ay. «lo w in g the line of the toce Is what makes riven ked.— Boston T ranscript. If the mdse and service "Feed them on?" snapped the dairy man. “Why, I reckon we feeds them better than a good many human be ings I know feed themselves”— this with a chalky stare at the thin cus tomer. “My cows are fed on the fat o f the land, and If their fodder ain’t up to the mark, we give ’em the finest biscuits we can buy. And If w e can't buy the biscuits, we make ’em. I stops nt nothing when I wish to please my customers.” V. A _ 1 f Nutmegs. Nutm eg* are kernels o f the ’1 a tree cultivated In Sumatra and the W est Indies. In sh 1 •lie th1 ' fruit resembles ■ p mi I*. It is simple, so that i easdy get out of order, *asy to clean and lasts I tune. lyyrttlnt üieref r o ^ j! 1^ “ It has been both expensive and a bit difficult to get to Europe of late— especially has It been too expensive, and I don’t believe any o f the Lady Bugs have enough money In the Lady B ugs’ bank to use that to go to Eu rope. “It’s a fine hank and It Is nice to go to a hank where ladles are especially looked after and all of that. "B u t we haven’t enough money In the hank. D e ar me no, not nearly enough. "Tlowevbr, those o f our fam ily who have been chosen to go weren’t asked how much money they had at all. They weren’t even asked If they had any money. “They weren’t even asked If they would pay for their laundry and their own food. “They were Just Invited to go and were .old that the work they would do would he enough thanks for the op portunity they were having t o travel. “Yes,” said Lady Bug. “many, many, many Lady Bugs have been shipped to France to destroy bad Insects which they’re having a great time with. “W e can do the work. They had to call on us to do It. N o w w asn’t that an honor? To think that Lady | Bugs, usually _ . ------------- r* ~ -7 J . D e Laval ski «o vers a earn o f umf< ness, runs easily and nrae or no attenboa. sjssessg Lady Bog. the lecturer, placed one of her legs In the direction o f her heart and looked very fine Indeed doing so. In a moment or two she went o n : “I have heard, and It Is quite true, that we have all been paid a very great compliment W e have been paid one o f the greatest of compliments. not thought so much of, have been shipped “ 4 Thereby Promoting H Cheerfulness and« “ So 1 will begin my lecture if all the Lady Bugs are ready and If the Lady Bug who has charge of this hall (fo r I must call this place where 1 am lec turing a hull) will kindly bring me an acorn filled with water I will be much obliged. Lecturers should alw ays have such things by them, and oh yes. a light and a pointer to point to my maps and my pictures. But on sec ond thoughts they won’t be necessary fo r I have no maps and no pictures. W ell, then, are we all ready?” A little Lady B ug came hurrying up with the acorn filled with water and said In a low tone, “I f you want any more I’ll bring It In to you.” “T hanks,” said the Lady Bug, who w as about to lecture. “N ow . friends," she began, “Mrs. President, Lady Chairman, I greet you.” The Choles. "T h e fireman in the stable Is look ing around fo r a horse.” “I suppose he w ants a plug.” TV j unit mi* of worn«» bare kidney And bladder troubla and never auapcct it. Women«' complaint a often prove to be nothing clue but kidney trouble, or the revult of kidney or bladder dieeate. If the kidney« are not in a healthy condition, they may cause the other or gana to become diseased. P lia in the back, headache, loos of am bition. nervousness, tre often time« symp tom# of kidney trouble. Don’t delay starting treatment. Dr. Kiltner’a Swamp Root, a physician's pro '■cription, obtained at any drug store, may he just the remedy needed to overcome swob conditions. Get n medium or largo siao bottle im mediate ly from any drug store. However, if you wish first to *te*t this great preparation send ten cent« to Dr. Kilmer £ Co., Dmghamton, N. Y .t for n •ample bottle. When writing bo sura and mention this paper.—Ado. Fluid Praclm F o r Infants and Ch,l^ There was no Mrs. President and no Lady Chairman, but that didn’t make any difference. “ I have something very fine to tell you. Something very fine upon a sub ject which strikes close to the heart of all o f us.” W ith your fingers 1 Y o u can lift off sny hard corn, soft com , or com be tween the toes, and the hard skin cal luses from bottom o f feet. A tiny bottle o f “ Freezone” costs tittle at any dru g sto re; apply a few drops upon the corn o r callous. In stantly It stops hurting, then shortly you lift that bothersom e corn or cal lous right off, root and all, without one b it o f pain o r soreness, T ru ly l N o h u m b u g!— A dv. ¡Net Contents “ Silence Is gold. "P e rh a p s that 1* don’t hnve ns muc mouths os they usi Y o u m ay know some know some people they We H av e. Cai Harvesti Self-esteem never reaches the Jumping We have a g Plows and Corn w ill d o m o re th a n m a n y words to con vin ce yo u o f th e goodness of this w h eat an d b a rle y fo o d . Rememb It always But it’s w o rth sayin g that Grape* N uts contains all th e n utrim ent of Stock Collar a Novelty. *tnck collar is such n s » appearance with -prim It a* a novelty. It 1 , s| ' Inkle* with n »mar- t hot as a finish. the grains, is re a d y to eat, require* n o sugar an d th e re ’ s n o waste. Builder PARK