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About The Gate city journal. (Nyssa, Or.) 1910-1937 | View Entire Issue (April 14, 1922)
IN T H E JUSTICE’S COURT OF T H E D ISTR IC T OF O N TARIO , S T A T E OF OREOON D. M. Taggart, P laintiff, va, Mre. B. Leroy, Defendant. SUMMONS. IN T H E N AM E OF T H E S T A T E OF OREGON, G R E ETING : T o Mrs. B. Leroy, the abore named defendant, You are hereby notified to ap- pear and answer, or otherwise plead^ to th Complaint heretofore filed against you In the above entitled Court and cause, within six weeks from date o f the first publication of this summons, and In the event of your failure to do so, p laintiff will take judgment against yon fo r the sum of $70.62, with interest there on at the rate o f 6 per cent per annum from June 29th, 1920, and for an Order o f Sale o f the following described attached personal property One double set o f chain work har ness with collars; One Bay horse Ptar in forehead weight about I t 00 pounds, age 8 years, One bay horse weight 1400 pounds age 10 years. This summons is published against you under and by virtue of an Order o f the Hon. G. L. King, Justice o f the Peace for the district o f Ontario, County of Malheur and Btate of Oregon, duly made and entered on the 3rd day o f April. 1922. R. W. Swagler, Attorney for P lain tiff, residing at Ontario, Oregon. Date o f first Publication, April 7th, 1922. Date o f last Publication, May, 19th, 1922. ANNOUNCEM ENT 1 hereby announce my candidacy for re-election as Circuit Judge of the Ninth Judicial District, subject to the action of the Democratic voteirs a t the primary to be held on May 19, 1922. D A LTO N BIGGS Picturesquely Flit. Dtegoeted cop (at crossing)- -Soees «feauffenr, you are! Say, If you were crossing tlie Suhara desert you'd run Into a hydrant.— Boston Transcript Repair Shop is equippedto repair all kinds of radiators Give us a Trial M'CONNON’S PRODUCTS Home Remedies Pure Extract cf 8piMa ^Toilet Articles Veterinary Remedies Poultry Compounds by Cnetered at the Postoffice at Nyssa. I regon, as seooud-clasa mail matter. SU BSCRIPTIO N R ATE S One year, In advance.............. $1.50 ..75 fix months, in avance. Owyhee Earl and Merle K ygar returned to school Monday, after a two months absence. Mrs. W. W. Smith has been very ill but is now some better, Mr. and Mrs. Warren Fenn and family were dinner guests at the R. J. McGinnis home Sunday. Walter Pinkston put in last week. Or, CLANTON & CLANTON Auc The tioneers High Signs of Consumption. What are the early symptom«) Tht. Mrs. Bigelow and son John, Mrs. D. patient may have neither cough nos P. Pullen and sons Jesse and Clarence, expectoration. He feels tired It* the Mr. Wallace, Roy Williams and Joe afternoon, and wakes tired in - the Shatto were among Gate City visitors morning. His appetite is poor, and he begins to lose weight or to stop from Owyhee Saturday. growing, tie Is easily exhausted after Mr. and Mrs. Alvin McGinnis and j exercise. Anyone who notices these son James prolonged their visit a few -lymptonis In himself should consult a days and did not return to the timber doctor. In any family, rich or poor. till Saturday. In which one member Is known lo hue* The community choir practice met consumption, all the others should be at tne Gus Schweizer home Friday examined by specialists. evening. A good time and a good at tendance was reported Choir prac The Modern Mrs. Malaprop. tice will be held Saturday evening, A Washington newspaper corre April 15, at the home o f Mr. and Mrs spondent tells of a Mrs. Malaprop who D. P. Pullen. All are invited. Come once amused the capital with her inis whether you sing or not. takes. She went around asking peo The bridge across the Owyhee ditch, pie to sfgn a “ red robin" (meaning n familialy known as "M ik e ’s bridge.” round robin) ; spoke of her trit through the “ Valley of Gethsemane' vaught tire Friday evening, but was when she meant the Yosemlte; am discovered in time and the fire was suiil, “ I've been 111 the mountains, ami extinguished by Gua Scnweizer and do you know, I Jumped from rock t. ■ons, William and Carl, and the Hite rock Just like a slinmroek!’’— From th boys. Outlook. S. D. Bigelow sold a few tons of hay to L J. Peterson, who ¡ b shearing Preserving Spider Webs. at the Biggs Dunaway ranch. 'Naturalists employ an Ingenious Frank Day la and J. S. Glascock ate dinner at the George Glascock home Sunday. A rtie Robertson is taking a well earned vacation while George Schweiz er is running the mail wagon in nia ax- absence. Mr Robertson and his Un We offer you a psrlenoo In coir*uo*lng pukllo sue- cle John Robertson are out hunting tlone o f all kinds. Wo sell Anyg young coyotes. thing; Ws go Anywhere. Archie Fields visited Rolla Fenn For datos, Phone or Write J. W . Clanton, Payette, Idaho. Phone M2 P. O. »o x **6 over the week end. Orville Kippey returned to school Monday, alter a siege o f influenza, Q. W. Clanton, Nampa, Idaho. Phone MS Silver Grill , Heat Eating H IL L Y Ho No Chances at All fer Joy. Junior had spent several weeks on* summer visiting a favorite aunt who lived In the suburbs, and he was rem Inlscent of those happy weeks wher he again paid her a visit However she had moved and now live« In C (in'. When Junior came home lw voiced his grievance to tils father aaylng: "There wasn’t no room ti move around In; why. they didn’t ever have any kids In that building hi tight with!" had a telephone Mr«. Chars. Schweiser and daughter Lois and Miss Lillian Davis motorsd to Vale Sunday, where they attended the play "F ou r Horsemen.” They spent the night at the Davis home. J. R. H U N T E R N ycaa Oregon, BROW N BROTHERS. motored to Ontario Saturday. Mr. Giaacock went on to Payetie on busi ness. _____________ S old B t ------------------ • rublUhed evm-y Friday at N y® *, When Sleep Will Not Coots Doll t hste the world und kick all night Just because you dou't happea to go to sleep. It damages your owe nervous system, and any tender re gard in which your roommate nssy have held you. Anger eats up eoerg.» and is responsible for next morning's very unpleasant day-after feeling. Ttiv lack of sleep mattered not at all. II instead of thrashing about vicious!» you had curled up cosily and day dreamed, your nigbt might have been suivaged, all might have beeu well.— Exchange. The recent severe storm put the method In order to preserve the web power line ‘ out o f commission” for a of the spider. The webs are first sprayed with n thin solution of artists’ short time. shellac and then. If of the ordinary Mildred DeBord was recently elected geometric form, they are pressed care teacher o f the primary class in Sunday fully against a glass plate, the sup school. porting threads of the web being sev Mr. and Mrs. Roy Wallace and fam- ered. After the shellac solution has ly moved to Arcrdia a short tune ago. dried the plates carrying the webs are stored In a cabinet for later use In Warren Fenn and son Louis have scientific work. rented a live sera piece from Frank DeBord sad will put in potatoes. His Idea of Train’s Action. Mrs. Cords Williams is employed at There Is a story of a Suffolk (Eng the Hotel Western in Nyssa at pres land) yokel who, haring lived some ent. distance from a railway station, and Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Fisher and son being content with the society around Paul visited Sunday at the Patterson him. had never had need of a train and being brought Into contact with a home in Warren district. railway, stood watching this new won Mrs. John Kus„ arrived Sunday at der not fnr from a tunnel. His de Neallewild ranch and will spend ibe scription of It nfterwnrd was that a summer there. train was more er less like a rabbit— Mr, and and Mrs. George Glascock “he ran up to the hole, let off an awful and family and Mrs. Warren Fenn screech and hnltod Into It.” COOK BROS. Star Hotel GATE CITY JOURNAL in Nyaae M AI *♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ***♦ *♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ »♦ »♦ ♦ »♦ ♦ * ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ < Horn« Remedy Store Nynaa, O r e g o n Candies Stationeries Smokes Z V. TAKAHARA PHOP. I Always the Silver Lining. W e’ll admit that the future of tits so-called ctvllliied world unfold* no ra diant prospect to the vision of th* stw dent. Still, the sky esn never beewnis so hlack. hut that a ffVpnund wntrp melon will spray the frowning ar<*F way with rainbows and spangle the horizons with flashes nf gold.—H o V tan Post. Loss by Storing Pulpwood. It has been found by observations made at a sulphate pulp mill that pulpwood kept In storage from two to three years yields, on the average, 29 per cent less pulp than wood used when It Is green, says Popular Me chanics Magazine. Pulpwood stored even one year loses 14 per cent of Its value In pulp production. When Man Weighs Nothing. Mesdames George Glascock, Fenn Prof. Edward V. Huntington of Har and DeBord moturaii to Nyssa Monday, vard university showed by an elabo rate mass of figures printed In Science NOTICE TO CREDITORS that a man on a train moving along the equator westward at 18.700 miles an hour, or eastward at 16.700 miles IN T H E COUNTY COURT OF TH E ■ n hour would weigh nothing, as meas ured by an observer on the train. S T A T S O F OREGON FOR M A LH E U R COUNTY. Alfalfa. Alfalfa receives Its name from an In the h i p : ter c f the estate ct old Arnb word which means In Eng lish “ the best kind nf fodder." The Joaeph Cancelmo, deceased. The undersigned having been ap- plant looks something like clover and po’ nted by the Coonty Court of grows very rapidly. In fnct It grows so qulekly that three or four crops the State o f Oregon, for Malheur can be harvested during the summer. County, Adm inistrator o f the eetatc of Joseph Cancelmo, deceased, and Economy. having qualified, notice is hereby The pot of gold at the end of tbs given to tho creditors of, and all rainbow— has anybody ever seen Itt persons having claim s against »aid Will anybody ever return with Itt deceased, to present them, verified Economy may mean the difference he- as required by law, within six tween living In a poor bouse and sup months after the first publication porting one. of his notice to said John J. Can celmo, at his residence near Nyana Don’t Be Too Curious. Oregon, or to Davis A Keeter. Ms A person who Is ton nice an observer attorneys, at their office at Vale, of the business of the crowd, like »•* Oregon. who Is too curious In observing the labor of the bees, will often he stung John J. Cancelmo b t bit curiosity.— Pope. Adm inistrator o f the eetaite of Joseph Cancelmo. de "Safety First" Better Known. ceased. Today “ safety first" 1s one of the Dated March 23rd, 1*11 i t nost eomnop expressions in the Eng- Ish language. Every one knows what FOR B A L I -W ork here it means and the principles It stands for. H. Beam OBOI IO O O I 30001 W h ere Y o u r Taxes Go How Uncle Sam Spends Your Money in Conduct ing Your Business FUNERAL D IR E C T O R S By ED W ARD G. L O W R Y Author "W ash in gto n C loae-U p a." "B ank a and Financial S y s te m «," fit«. Contributor Political and Economic A rticle* to Leading Periodical# and a W riter o f Recognised Authority on tho National G overnm ent's Business Methods. C opyright. W m u i * N o m p o p o r U oioa xvm READ L A N E ’S D IAGNOSIS H. L. PETERSON, 4 f J. In bis final report to the President, upon completing his work as secre tary of the interior, Frunklin K. Lane sketched with a sure hand out of the abundance of his experience the pres ent Washington condition: The call is for thinking, planning, engi neering, statesmanship. For we are quick ly passing out of the rough-and-ready period of our national life, in which we have dealt wholesale with men and things, into a period of more intensive development, in which we must seek to fjikd the special qualities of the Individual unit, whether that unit be an acre of desert, a barrel of oil, a mountain canyon, the flow of a river or the capac ity of the humblest of men. "To conquer and to master—the same old t£sk is ours; but not in the same old way. We have discovered this land and made it ours, but this is not the end of our journey, for now we are to give thought, the deepest thought, to the ways in which it may be made to yield most abundantly In the tilings which a com plex society with a most imperious curi osity demands. Washington Is a combination of politi cal caucus, drawing-room and civil serv ice bureaus. It contains statesmen who are politicians and politicians who are rot statesmen. It la rich in brains and J in character. It is honest beyond any j commercial standard. It wishes to do everything that will promote the public good. But It is poorly organized for the task that belongs to it. Fewer men of larger capacity would do the task better. Ability is not lacking, but it is pressed to the point of paralysis because of an infinitude of details and an unwillingness on the «part of the great body of public servants to take responsibility. Every one seems to be afraid of everyone. The self-protective sense is developed abnor mally, the creative sense atrophies. Trust, confidence, enthusiasm—these simple vir tues of all great business are the ones most lacking in government organization. We have so many checks and brakes upon our work that our progress does not keep pace with the nation’s require ments. We could save money for the government If we had more discretion as to how we should use that given us. For the body of the civil servants there should be quicker promotion or discharge and a sure insurance when disability comes. For the higher administrative officers there should be salaries twice as high as those now given, and they should be made to feel that they are the ones responsible for the work of the depart ment, the head being merely an adviser and a constructor of policies. As matters are now devised there are too few In the government whose busi ness it is to plan. Every man is held to detail, to the narrower view, which comes too often to be the department view or some sort of parochial view. We need for the day that Is here and upon us j men who have little to do but study the t problems of the time and test their ca- | pacity at meeting them. In a word, we need more opportunity for planning, en gineering, statesmanship above, and more fixed authority and responsibility below. The employment methods of the gov ernment could be Improved. Under tlie civil service law of 1883 a good system o f competitive examinations and appointments on merit has been built up for the classes of positions covered by the law. But beyond cer tification by the civil service commis sion for appointment of those appli cants who are proved by examination to be eligible, the merit system is not fully operative even In connection with the positions to which It applies. Hap hazard practices in assignments of work and In promotions, over which no central authority has jurisdiction, have brought about Inequalities which are discouraging to the workers. This condition and the relatively low sal aries paid by the government cause a “ turnover” In government forces that could not long be withstood by a private business. The readjustment of government salaries in tbe District of Columbia lias recently received the attention of the Joint commission on reclassifi cation of salaries, which was author ized by a provision In tbe legislative, executive and Judicial appropriation act approved March 1, 1919. The re port of this commission is now in the hands of congress and its fate remains to be Seen. The report represents many months o f work and an effort to present data which will enable con gress to understand conditions as they exist. The present civil service law was enacted to correct the evils o f the "spoils system" which had become In tolerable. That the plan provided by the law, that o f appointments through competitive examinations for certain positions, has been a vast Improve ment over the old patronage method Is generally conceded; but the law failed to be a completely effective in strument by not providing for the ap plication of the merit system to the more responsible and, therefore, the more remunerative positions. The administrative offices, aside from the cabinet, which do not come within the scope of the civil service law are postmasters at offices of the first, second and third classes, col lectors of internal revenue, collectors of customs; registers, receivers, and surveyors general o f the land office; assistant treasurers, surveyors, special examiners, appraisers and naval offi cers in the customs service; super intendents of mints, assayers In mints, supervising Inspectors In the steamboat Inspection service, commissioners of Immigration and naturalization, as sistant secretaries and heads of bu- -enua of the departments at Washing ^ etc.—about io.000 position* in nlL • EDER HARDWARE ONTARIO CO. NVM A The beat at services rendered wKh- ouk regard to your circumstances MODEL CH APEL AND EQUIPM BNT LAD Y AB SlfiTAN T AM BULANCE 8ERVICE. O n ta rio fo u rn itu re C e. ONTARIO. OREGON to n o i I0 E 3 0 I com pare T 30 X m —Flak Prämier TrtM flO Jf 30x3 ^ -N o n -S k id Fabric . 1 4.« H E F i s k P r e m i e r 30 x 3 ^4—Extra-Ply Red-Top 1 7 « 30 x 3 ^ -S ix -P ly Non-Skid Tread is a tire which Clincher Cord . . 1 7 « 30 x 3 ) i —Six-Ply Non-Skid Cord Straifkt Sldo 1 9 « yields an honest, generous 31x4 *—Six-Ply Non-Skid C o r d ................ 3 7 « measure of service at a low 32x4 —Non-Skid Cord. . 30.M 32 x 4^4—Non-Skid Cord . . 39.00 34 x 4 V i— Non-Skid Cord . . 4 1 « price. 3 5 x i -Non-Skid Cord. . 51.50 See this tire and compare with any at a competing price. It is your best pur chase if you want a low- priced tire. It is a FiskTire.and is Fisk character clear through. T h e r e ’s a Fisk T ire o f e x tra value in every size, f o r c a r, truck o r speed w agon Tim e to R e - t i r e ? t B u y Flak) {Watches 'Repaired -AT- JEWELRY STORE ------<HVE SATISFACTION------- Ontario - Oregon ► *♦ •»• »»»♦ ******♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ **♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ **♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ »»♦ ♦ »»«*«> > > > > »»» Suits Cleaned and Pressed Mrs. Eliza Evans