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About The Gate city journal. (Nyssa, Or.) 1910-1937 | View Entire Issue (May 21, 1920)
1 -% AJERIO* TO GIVE n « Cook With Greater Ease and More Efficiency the fire is done. No smoke, soot or disagreeable vapors to make the air in your kitchen un- -w healthy. No flame to absorbe the oxy gen and heat the kitchen; no fuel or ashes to bother with—that is what it means to cook by electricity. ■ ■ m U m >• The cleansst, healihiest, most efficient way ot cooking that has been devised. ELECTRIC SHOP Idaho Power Company M M m m M m * m * n m 1920 1 0 2 0 ! OPPORTUNITY List yeur Farms or Dry Lands with us The year 1920 in you»* opportunity to sell. We are bonded and licensed membersof the INTERSTATE REALTY ASSOCIATION A Square Deal Guaranteed List your lands here and bs rsady far the rush whan tha reads gat fit, DiniM |iyssa Realty Co. alnut h»v* J. BOYDELL, Mgr. * »iih u>à 6 csa®. NTSSA. ORBGON Phone 4 s > s a d |g » ♦ ♦ » » » •» ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ » ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ •♦ » ♦ » ♦ •» •* !>TE LEGITIMATE PROJECTS Harnrr A Grant Caantiaa. Find Bnrara For OCHES A LAEGE FARMS Wa W ant IAC T1 FOE COLONIZATION wa om m ATTRACTIVB CRB*! yo* LOANS A INV itments B « V B ar ar Sail. It W ill Par II 1 C CUBBBY B EV EI.O PM B N T AND LAND COMPANY S M S t H a n tln tfa a Carrav. Mgr. Maximo M. Kalaw Declares U. S. Cannot Consistently Refuse “Self-Determination.” m m n m M m Just turn the switch to the degree of heat you wnnt to use low. medium o high in oven, hroil- er, hot plates or cocker, »rid the work f kirdJi g There are many things to appeal to you about an Electric range that ws will explain when you call. T he Filipino people are willing to •c re p t independence under any of the following conditions: U nder a League of Nations, guaranteeing its territorial In te g rity ; under the proteetorateship of the U nited S tates for the first few y e a r s : under a tre a ty of neutrality be By MAXIMO M. KALAW, S e c r e ta r y o f th e P h ilip p in e M issio n , Au tween the United States, England, J a pan. France and other powers, or even th o r " T h e Case fo r th e F ilip in o « .'' " S e lf- G o v e r n m e n t In th « w ithout any condition w hatever—ah to- I P h ilip p in e s ." e tc . lute and com plete Independence. They i “When they show sufficient capaci have no fe a r of Japan. Philippine in When a re able to govern dependence, In eu r opinion, is not Inim t h e m s e l v e s , ” ical to Japanese Interests. The Japa “ When t h e y nese a re now free to come to the Phil ar e e d u c a t e d ippines, but a t the present lim e there enough." T h u s are less than 10,000 Japanese in the run the answ ers Islands. T here are six tim es as many of many Ameri Japanese In C alifornia as there a re In ' cans pressed with the entire Philippine Archipelago. The Filipinos a re willing to take the question as to when the F tlip i-1 theIr chaBca as a nation. Sm aller na- | nos s h o u l d b e ! tious bM#t by reav er problem s and granted th eir In- ■ dangsrs have taken a more hazardous dependence. Now, *t freedom, and have guc • ability,” "capacl- ce#ia<1- ty” and “suffi d e n t education' What Dropped. —W h at do thay The dining room of a very exclusive Maximo M. Kalaw. mean !■ black residential hotel. D inner In full swing. and white? C latter of knives and forks and the S enator Shogun may think no people usual buzz of conversation. Suddenly, a crash a t one end of the room, a Is capable of self-governm eat th at do not establish the judicial recall, or that sound of falling dishes. An abrupt has no Billy Sunday. John Smith of puuse In the conversation, attention Som erville may think no people la concentrated on the scene of the Then, suddenly, soaring capable o f self-governm ent tliat does calamity. not vote his dem ocratic ticket, or go to ubove a rising m urm ur of Inquiry, one clear voice with the desired inform a church on Sundays. "C apacity fo r self-gdvernm ent" Is as tion, "Squash, my dear, of all thlugs I" broad und elastic as the world, and If City Lighting Modern. th a t should be the criterion for the Lighting up a whole city at night granting of Philippine Independence, Is quite a modern invention, although America might as well say to the F ili pinos, “I will give you independence IH«imlnittIon was used in some of the u n d en t cities. P ails and Loudon dis when It pleases me to do so.” pute the priority in the m atter of mod F ortunately, the American promise ern street lighting. London claims to to the P hilippines is not based on such have lighted Its streets with lanterns obscure and ab stract conditions. It Is as early a s 1414, but this contention based on a definite seizahle thing Is disputed. D uring the sixteenth cen When America, through her Congress, tury lanterns for street lighting were officially told the Filipino people that provided at the public cost In Paris. they would he granted th eir Independ ence as soon ns they could establish a N atural Inquiry. stable governm ent, no a b stract or ob Our Mttle four-year-old girl w ent •cu re condition was m e a n t Stable governm ent, according to American with me to feed the chickens. The food was quite hot and the chickens usage, m eans a certain, definite thing The U nited States prom ised the Cu drew th eir bills out quickly. 1 s a id : bans the sam e thing, th at ‘‘when they “They ought not put th eir noses In have established a stable government, th at hot food." “H ave chickens got I told her they then American troops would be with noses?” she asked. draw n.” As soon ns the Cuban people had, and her next Inquiry w as: elected a governm ent suited to them “W here do they carry their handker selves, capable of m aintaining order chiefs?”—Exchange. and fulfilling all international obllga Notice to Patrons tlons, th ere w as a stable governm ent In Cuba, and American troops were I wish to thank tha people for their w ithdrawn. patronage during my time in business When Congress passed the Jones here I alse wish te rseermond low, it simply borrow ed the phrase Messrs Anderson & Burbridge in the* “stable governm ent” from the Cuban meat business who have purcLased the history and applied it to the Philip pines. The history of Philippine leg Nyssa Meat Market of me. C. W. DeBOlR. islation shows that In black and white. W ith full knowledge of w hat It meant, the Filipino people accepted the Jonea Frem the E arth ’y Infancy. law and Im m ediately began netting up The perfect state of preservation of th e stable governm ent required by Con organisms which lived untold mil gress as a pre-requisite te Independ lions of years ago Is shown by Pro ence. The stable governm ent la now fessor Oliver in on archaic type of a fact. It Is Indeeddnore than t h a t ; It seed In the -lower coal m easures of Is an undisputed fact. Lancashire. T hese are only onc-fifth The official rep resen tatlv a a t the of an Inch long, hut under the micro United S tates In the Philippine Islands, scope their Integum ent Is seen to pos the Governor G eneral, reported to the sess ten ribs, which project like little American Congress and the adinlnlstrn anus. tlon th a t “the Filipino people have es tahllshed the stable governm ent de m anded by Congress as a pre-requisite To The Public fo r the gvaating of Independence— We have purchased the Nyssa Meat namely, a governm ent elected by the suffrage of the people, which Is sup Market and will endeavor to uphold ported by the people, which Is capable th high standard of quality and ser of m aintaining order and of fulfilling vice this market is noted for. Your •ontinued patronage will be appreci Its International obligations.” T he Philippine question Is therefore ated. no longer a question of politics, argil ANDERSON & BURBRIDGE inent o r supposition. To th " P hilip pine mind, at least. It Is now a qties Giving in Service. tlon of w hether the United States I “Every woman, and every mtm, for ready to discharge its own obligations fully and completely. America went that m atter, should do som ething to before the world In the recent w ar es lustlfy her or his existence. Unless a woman gives ns much as she takes th e avowed cham pion if "self-dele,nil ni'tlon” and Filipinos cannot s«e how In service she Is n liability, and not America can consistently refuse to act. an asset to the com m unity.”—Dr. The Filipino people, however, have E sther Lovejny. m m ELECTRIC RANGES ■o grudge or grievance against the American people. Theirs la a message of friendship and gratitude. They seek Independence a s the natural and log ical outcome of America's policy In the Islands and of America's solemn promise to them. They come willing to give privileges and concessions not Incompatible with their national wel fare. 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