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About The Gate city journal. (Nyssa, Or.) 1910-1937 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 13, 1922)
— rçy* »■are»- ft* THE GATE CITY JOURNAL, NYSSA, OREGON SELECTING FARM VERY IMPORTANT Many Things to Consider That May Have Decided Bearing on Home and Business. FERTILITY MOST DESIRABLE H o m e STDRIESâS AMERI OME, sweet home, Is made much sweeter and more livable by those endearing little house garments that women delight to wear within heir own four walls. Any male per- lon will acknowledge tbe charm of yolorful coats and dainty Jackets or yrlsp nnd cheerful house dresses. In the company of frivolous breakfast yaps, worn when his women-folk start the day right. And at Its close, the Ured business man Is much refreshed )y the sight, at his tuble, of unusual md Interesting house gowns. The pleasant thing about It Is that anyone jiuy have pretty breakfast Jackets or Breeding Flock on Government Poultry lelect house dresses und aprons that Ire attractive as well as practical. Farm at Beltsvllle, Md. There Is nothing more worth while which are partly black. Ip occur In ¡han careful choosing o f these every practically all strains of this variety, day things. but this Is not u sign o f Impure breed Just now It Is the very simple break ing. Black spots are also common fast coat o f colored taffeta, In plain occurrences on the shanks, particularly or changeable weaves, that appears In females, but this does not Indicate to be uppermost In the minds o f wom Impurity. There Is a decided tendency en who are making a choice. These for the males o f this variety to come yonts are straight garments, a little lighter In color than the females, and shorter than the petticoats worn un for this reason breeders are usually der them, and having three-quarter obliged to resort to two separate mnt- length sleeves. They are provided Ings, one for the production o f males with small patch pockets and finished o f standard color and the other for at the edges with ruchlngs of the silk. the production of females o f standard The pockets are an Invitation to gay color. The syotem of double mating, Bowers or fruits of silk to find a rest of course, complicates the problem of ing place on them. producing high-class Barred Plymouth Silks, laces, and all their pretty Bocks kindred In fabrics, naturally travel In mating for males o f exhibition color a male of about standard color Is used with medium dark females, or those two or three shades dnrkcF than females o f exhibition color, in which the barring U as distinct nnd ns narrow as possible. This mating is known ns tho cockerel mating because It produces n grantor percentage of standard-colored males, while the females produced are too dark, but are suitable for continuing this line o f brooding. In muting for females o f standard color, females o f about the desired color are used with a medium light male or one that Is two or three shades lighter than stuudard nnd with good barring. Tills Is known as the pullet mating, because it produces a greater percentage o f females o f the proper color, while the males are too light hut good for carrying on this line o f breeding. Thoee who produce standsrd Barred Plymouth Hocks, therefore, must have what amounts to two separate flock* In order to keep their exhibition birds uniform. The average farmer however, does not usually exhibit or sell breed ing stock and will still continue to make a single mating as he has always done. H parently enjoying the many Ingenious ways, sometimes Intricate and unex pected, In which ribbons have been worked up Into forms new nnd strange and beautiful. Their old friend and ally In the cause o f beauty has taken on new charm, vindicating the Judgment of designers who use It. The last hats of winter nnd the first hats that hint of spring ure here and a lot o f them are cheerfully be-rlbboned; whoever needs new millinery may choose these final figures In tlie year’s millinery pageant. Ribbons on hats for present wear are applied to shapes o f velvet or felt, and for southern tourists, or the deml-sea- son, to satin, crepe or silk hats, as the four handsome models pictured here reveal. At the head of the group Is a small French sailor o f velvet, with a soft crown— It might be made of any other millinery fabric. Narrow, metal- edged ribbon Is applied to It, row on row, In scant ruffles, and It has a sprightly finish In pointed ends o f vel vet that spring from a knot nt the side. In a hat o f georgette, with drooping brim, definite crown lines are emphasized by covering the side crown with many little loops of narrow plcot- edged ribbon, the same ribbon finish ing Its mission with a double sush about the crown nnd many ends reach ing toward the brim edge, A hat that would be attractive In any fabric Is pictured I d felt and N ES T EG GS O F N A P H T H A LE N E Instead of Acting as Destroyers or Repellante of Lice, They Ace Injurious. Nest eggs made of naphthalene, clnlmed or suggested by manufactur ers to he destroyers or repollnnts of lice, might he called had eggs rather than “ lice exterminating eggs." "lloe- kllllng nest eggs,” and “medicated ' nest eggs," for they do not seem to In \ convenience the lice or mites, but they do have a had effect on the fowls that sit on them. In fact, the entomologists ! of the United Stntes Department of j j Agriculture who hnve examined and | tested these so-called “eggs" say that they are very Injnrlous to fowls, but not tn a single case were they found j effective against the parasites. Even the nest tioxes tn which they were ptneed remained badly Infested with mites and they were frequently ob served crawling over tbe uaphthnieoe j eggs. i J E S S E N T IA L F E E D FO R S H E E P Claan Clovor Hay or Corn Stove« Makes Good Winter Roughago__ Alfalfa la Fattening. Feed the sheep properly An oven fed flock pays but little better than an underfill one. Clean com store! or clover hay makes good roughage for winter feed. Alfalfa Is also good hu* must he fed sparingly, as It Is toe fattening for In-lamb «<v«w g M la ENVER.— His attempts to win a pretty wife by “ caveman stuff” a failure, O. M. Farher. forty- eight years old, o f 4124 Raleigh street, Denver, was landed In Jail at Fort Morgan, Colo., and Miss Martha Datss, 21, o f 4130 Raleigh street, whom he carried away, wus rescued In as thrilling a manner ns ever conceived by a movie scenario writer. Beginning with a sensational ab duction at her home, next door to his, Farber's short-lived romance ended at Wiggins, Colo., twenty-four hours later, when Miss Dalss threw a note from an upstairs window of the Deeds hotel at the feet of Scott Duncan, son o f the noted proprietor, who procured a ladder and rescued the young wom an from her window. Farber, who spent the night In a room across the hull from Miss Dalss, D Enduring House Garments De.ertwl lironsrd Farm In the Northwest— Tbs Owner Failed Be cause of Poor Soil and Lack of Irrigation. • EderHai Nyssa Place your 01 piece of Farm ] going to need farm work is u PLOWS ■ GRAI? POTATO discovered a moment later that sh» had disappeared, and fearing raptor*, 1 he fled the town In his automobile, I He was arrested a mile out of W'lggin» j by Sheriff E. A. Moore o f Fort Mor- | gan, who was on his way to Wlggim at the summons o f Duncuu and Mis* I Dalss. The Burred Plymouth Bock, tbe most popular breed o f poultry on Uve farms, and therefore the most numerous of the many now rulsed In the country, has a peculiarity from which arises special breeding problems. This Is the primage marking o f dark and light bars that has been known for so long and which makes It almost essential to make two separate matings to got standurd color In both the males and the females. The alternating dark and light bars give a bluish cast or shade to the general color, which should be even throughout the surfnee. It Is common for solid black feathers, or feathers The wise selection of a farm Is vital to the success and satisfaction of farm life. Choosing u furtn often means choosing a place In which to live and work for a lifetime. It Is Important, o f course, to decide wisely In buy ing for tnvestment. Buys the United Stutes De partment of Agriculture, but In making a selection for a home It Is doubly Important to consider various features that may have a decided bearing on the farm business or that may make the home life attractive. I Home and Business Inseparable. ' The home side of the question must always be kept In mind, for the farm home and the farm business are In separable. Tbe desirable farm from a business standpoint many times Is found undesirable If It lias no social or community advantages. On the other hand, desirable living conditions are of little or no advantage unless Supplemented by a successful farm business. In selecting a farm It should be borne In mind that It requires a farm business of considerable size to pro vide an Income that will merely cover maintenance charges, and that these charges are relatively larger for small farms thun for large ones. A farm must he o f such a size as to furnish d o st o f the supplies needed In the funner'» living, such as garden and fruit, and enough Income to pay the taxes and running expenses. Unless, however, there Is a margin above these annual maintenance charges no prog ress can be made toward accumulat ing a surplus. Another feature which the farm seeker should see to Is that prospects for crop yields are more than sufficient to balance the cost o f production. Soils o f low fertility are handicapped— some are found to be u positive liability If It Is necessary to farm them. It Is •well to Inquire thoroughly Into crop yields, not only those that have been obtulued on the farm Itself for a period of years but those reullzed on adjucent farms. Equally essential to the success of the form business Is high quality of the live stock enterprise. To handle live stock so It will pay for feed, care, and labor U more than a mere matter of management, for It Is dependent A “Cavem an Stuff” T h at Rivals the Movies (P repared by the U nite* States D epartm ent o f A g ricu ltu re.) ( F r v i n i i , ilw V e ile d 8 l» t« e D » p » « n » n t ut A e n o u itv ra .) not only on c lie n t roughage, pasture, market, und securing labor at reason able rates, hut also on the quality of the animals kept. Crop land, In Itself, Is o f little value unless It Is so situated tliut It can be made to yield profitable returns through the use of labor and machinery. A farm o f Ifll) acres, valued ut $100 an acre, may tie a much better purchase If practically all of the hind cun he put to some profitable use. than another farm o f 100 acres, nt $.10 an acre, of which large areas are practically useless, owing to streams, and swnrnps that cannot lie drained, or rough stony tracts poorly auttud even for pasture. Another factor Is euse o f cultivation. If the land Is very steep or broken It Is not practicable to use Improve.I machinery und It Is often difficult to harvest the crqps and remove them from the land by the usual methods. This Is particularly true tn loudlng buy and grain on steep hills. The experienced farmer In selecting a farm generally looks llrst to the source and dependability of the water supply. He knows that a fmm without and adequate supply of water Is moat undesirable. Atteutlon should be di rected to the quality of the water, the question o f whether the supply Is dependable at all seasons o f the year, and to the coat of obtaining It. The cost of u|>keep and supply o f water on it farm It often a Mg Item. As an aid to persons about to buy farm land, the l>epartment of Agri culture has published Farmers' Hub letln 10M entitled, "Selecting a Farm.' tkjplc* o f the bulletin may be bad free hi go a t Barred Plymouth Rocks Have Peculiarity of Feathers. Breeders Producing Standard-Bred Fowls Must Maintain Two Separate Flocks In Order to Keep Show Birds Uniform. Essential to Suooess of Enterprise le Hiflh Quality of Live Stock— Look to Source and De pendability of Water. A r e 'Jfvm-' y Rat are m ad e DOUBLE MATING FUii EXHIBITION COLORS the road that lends to brenkfast Jack I makes use o f plaited rl'ihon for row ets, nnd ribbons are nearly always 1 ottes nil the crown and ns an upstnnd- found lu their company. Printed cot- j Ing decoration for the brim edge. This tous. In the finer weaves, make some I model is made In many colors. Tlie of the most pleasing Jackets, lace and wide-brimmed picture hut o f velvet ribbon trimmed. These are usually demonstrates the elegance of all-black. more simple In design than the lace with folded satin ribbon Ingeniously Jacket shown In the Illustration, which, arranged in an ornament centered being long -r lived, merits m<we time j with a rosette. This model Is hard- In making For this, vnl lace edging some In snfln also. und iMwrtloo are set together In pan- els. nnd tr.ese Joined to form the handsome lift! tiffnlr that will de ■**& </ light Its owner. Satin ribbon, ar ranged In loop», lends It color. For the ambitious needlewoman a e rw n o rr rr von«*« w siw s u « noi % dainty piece o f neckwear Is shown. It may tie found In the shops, ready Tub Suits for Children. made, but It soars In price w hen made Tub suits o f cotton or lin«>n are all- by hand, and becomes an accessory to j the-yenr favorites, and very practical be proud of, having tAnt qualify of these wash garments are for children elegance which belongs n hand work. living In wall-heated houses or apart This season the most time-honored ments. However, the wool Jersey suits o f trimmings Tor hats finds the usually stand a lot o f wear before stanchest support; for smart wom | cleaning Is necessary, and If care- en have approved with emphasis j fully bandied this fahrie cashes sat tbe ribbon-trimmed hat. They are up- isfactorily. We also carry small tools of and our prices j the quality of carry is We can furnish eve that house you t “Farber wanted to marry me. but 1 couldn't see It that way. Any girl like» to have something to say about whm she Is going to marry, and when a fel low trios to slip something over Ilka Farber did—well. It simply can’t ba done.” Eder Ha Nyssi Ideal Section of the Lincoln Highway ORTER, IND.— Lending highway experts o f the United States and nationally known authorities on such related subjects as hlghwny beautification and automobile design met In Chicago recently to consider the finally developed plans for the con struction and embellishment o f the "Ideal section” o f the Lincoln high way. The Lincoln Highway association, after a careful reconnolsunce o f the possibilities along the entire trans continental route, has determined upon the construction of this model stretch of road In Lake county, Indiana, about thirty-seven miles south of Chicago. Detailed surveys between Dyer and Schermerville have been made and final plans applicable to the location and following the general specifica tions o f the committee have been pre pared. The plans call for a section approxi mately one and three-quarters miles In length, which. It Is believed, will be adequate to Impress the lessons the association and the committee have endeavored to embody In the design. The plans comprise forty feet of re inforced concrete pavement, ten Inches P S e rv ic e a n d Q u I fir" th e w h o le Phont Nyssa M< thick, laid In the center o f a 100-foot right o f way, the outer twenty-five feet o f which, on each side, will be land scaped and beautified by landscape architects. There will be no open ditches, drainage being provided by submerged drain tile. A sidewalk le Included for the safety o f pedestrians and tho paved way will be Illuminated by the most modern and economical electrical system. One hrldge Is In cluded In the plan and It also will make provisions for foot passenger» as well as provide a full forty feet of width for vehicular transportation. The cost o f the educational section of modern road will be borne Jointly by the United States government, the state of Indiana, Lake county and the Lincoln Highway association. Nysf See Me Dr. J Eyi Ontarii Rules o f Kindness to Dumb Creatures and gave every man dominion over my works, wherefore thou shalt be guardian over beast, bird and cattle, and to them thou shalt be In my place. Thou shalt not delight thyself In graven images but rather In tender mercies to those who depend on thy guardianship. Thou shalt not curse thine cattle nor Inflict vengeance upon any of God's creatures, for the Lord will not hold him guiltless who disregards lilt JW YORK.—A new table of ten creation. Remember the sabbatical rights of commandments, designed to train boys and girls to kindness to my creatures and practice them sa God's dumb creatures, has been Is credly. Thou shalt not kill for the Joy of sued by the Presbyterian board of killing; for sport In hunting; for con temperance and moral welfare. Supplementary rules of conduct. Is test In skill, or for selfish gain. For sued with the "commandments,” urge the righteous man regardeth the life of children to refrain from going to cir his becsL Thou shalt not commit thyself to cuses or other shows where trained animals are exhibited, asserting that the lusts o f bloody contests nor seek such animals are "nearly always cruel to look upon the cock flghb the live ly treated and must live a life of pigeon shoot, the bull fight and all such atrocious acts. misery." The "commandments," which were Thou shalt not covet the bird’s plum drafted by William E. H. Wentzel, di age, nor the animals f u r ; thou shalt rector of the board’s department of not covet the roblnls nest nor her humane education. Include these: young by her side, nor the pigeon tbe I am the Lord thy God who made freedom o f the air, nor the deer th# every living creature after his kind Joy o f his lair. Ü Service FORD iLUMBUS, O.— When the nine teen-year-old girl calls herself Ber nice Redlck she Is quiet, refined, ; ' gentle. When sha becomes her other ' self, Polly, she Is wild, reckless, daring 1 and quarrelsome. She Is a patient at the i Ohio bureau of Juvenile research. “The mentality o f Bernice Is nor j | mal.” D ,. Henry Goddard said. "S 'x j week,« before she was sent here she fell Into a deathlike sleep and had something like convulsions. She strug gled and Mt at everything around her, and no one seemed to know what the trouble was. Her father and mother are both dead. Bernice had been In high school In her home town, and her grades were good. “ When she falls Into the personality o f Polly she has the mentality o f a child of four. Then she car. neither rend nor write. Her attacks c*<ie on suddenly. She goes to sleep as Bernice and wakes up as Polly, flue personal ity knows nothing about the other, and we neter know when she will change from one or the other. “ Since she came to us she fell asleep one day and did not awaken for •lx day* When fully awake she said HAD O V ERH AD IN THE IE P/ $1 PHONE NO.43 Servie EDDIE FIRST CL McDo Succeisors to Fun< Dire Girl C ■ gfe - ENGINES BATTERIES I N Bernice and Polly Live in Sam e Ribbons in Smart Hats C U LT J “ It was the most thrilling day and j night I have ever spent In my life," j suld Miss Dutss. “ I was scared srlt. After Furher had come Into our home and taken me away at the point of a gun, I decided that there was nothln| to do but to kid him along and tnak# him believe 1 was going to marry him. “ Farber was mighty decent about ] It, getting separate rooms and all lie I locked me In. No one came during the night and I began to get worried. I didn’t sleep a wink, and finally 1 thought o f the note and decided that I would throw It at the first peraoo | coming out o f the hotel. Mr. Duncan I happened to be the first out and that'» 1 about all there Is to it. Li: Oregc Beautiful Hon LADY HOSPITAL AI No dii she w as going for a walk. We put her at first In one of the cottages, but had to place her in the hospital as she was always having trouble with the other children.” Dr. Goddard says gradually the good personal! ;y Is overcoming the •’“ 'L : The girl does not hare consul* \ now. Frequently she walks In -e r sleep. In the Polly stage she Is begin ning to remember something o f herself as Bernice. When her mentality a« ' Polly climbed up from four years to fifteen, she called herself Polly Bee nice. She gives nnmea to thoae around her. 9l.e calls Dr. Goddard “ Sarah,” an« knows him In both her peraooa'Hles a .-* WILS( repres l Call Wilson Bros, day ONTA1 Office Phone Res. Phone D U 1 S C i r.-* V ’ : H > I H F »l I 1 I II 14-MH