THE GATE CITY JOTRNAt
Make t».ia teat! End Buffering fro m
Indegestion, Pimples, Faina in Back
a id Side»,, Conatlpatfon, H ed och es
and tized, run down condition, due to
Self Poisoning because o f slhggiab
liver and clogged inteetinee.
Take a pleasant spoonful of Or
Thacher's L iver and Blood Sprup after
the next two n.eala In leas th»n 14
hours notice quick difference in the
way you feel. Contains pure vegt-tt-
GATE CITY JOURNAL
at
Nyrra.
Entered at the Postoff»'-e at
M« im
Published
every Friday
Oregon, by
H. F. BROV/N
“«g o ». ae second’d*__ — _ . matter
SU BSCR IPTIO N
RATES:
One year, in advance.....
•v months, in advance..
..SI .60
.. .76
Where Did Elijah Go?
And NO man hath ascended
up to heaven, but he that came
cam# down from heaven, even
the Son o f Man which ia in
heavan, John 3:13
And it cams io pass, as they
still went on and talked, that,
behold, there appeared a chariot
o f lire, and horees o f fire, and
parted them both asunder; AND
ELIJAH WBNT UP BY A WH1RI.-
WIND INTO IICAVBN
I I Kings,
2 : 11 .
TH E TEST
We have before us on our
desk a little red covered book
entitled ‘ 'Voice o f W arning” fy
Parley P. Pratt and published
by the L. D. S. church. Among
other subjects discussed the au
thor devotes
an interesting
chapter to “ The Kingdom of
God.”
He takes the position
that God’s kingdom has already
been set up on earth, with a
king, duly commissioned officers,
a code o f laws, subjects to obey
the laws, and everything. A c
cording to the writer this was
done at Jerusalem and quotes
the command o f Christ to his
disciples to
“ Go ya into all Aha world and preach
tha Gospel to eyary creature.
He
that believeth and ia baptized ahatt ba
aaved; but ba that believeth not ahall
ba damued. And theaa aigna shall fol
low them that believe: In My name
ahall they aaat out davila; they ahull
apeak with new tongaa*; they ahall
taka up serpen*»; and I f they drink
any deadly thing it ahall not hurt
them; they ahall lay hands on the sick
and they shall recover. “ Mark 16:16 13
able ingredients approved by Physi
cians. Helps nature cleanse and tone
your liv e r- strengthen your digestive
organa—soothe the tired and over
taxed nerves, brace up your Mrstem
end purify your blood. It baa helped
thousands feel return o f strength,
vigor and energy again You,too, Bust
be satisfied, or no coat
Ur. T h a ‘tier's is sold and recoin
mended un ‘ or this guarantee by the
N Yd S A P H A R M A C Y and all leading
druggists.
would prove that the scoffers are
right, as Mr. Pratt asked them
to do. We remember the three
Hebrew children who haJ faith
¿nough in Guo’s power to protect
them to allow themselves to be
cast into a fiery furnance. Have
any of their prototypes of today
sufficient faith to drink a dose of
deadly poison or allow them
selves to be bitten by a rattle*
snake?
Why not select a leader of the
church and let him prove his
doctrine, whether or not it be of
God, by making the test?
THE
HOME MERCHANTS
W EAPO NS
Encrouchment of mail order
houses upon the trade of local
stores haVfc long been the sub
ject o f concern to home mer
chans and will continue to be, no
doubt, indefinitely.
Of late the bell ringer, who
go3s from house to house taking
orders for his wares, has become
another formidable competitor
in certain lines.
I f the home merchant is to
hold his own against these en-
crouchments, he must fight, ano
fight hard. Appeals to local
pride and sentiment are produc
tive of little in the way of prac
tical results.
Satisfactory goods, reasonable
prices and advertising are the
weapons he must use to hold his
own. They are the same wea
pons t hat his outside competi
tors use against him.
The three must gb hand in
hand. Satisfactory goods wil
not alone secure ths business
without reasonable prices; both
together will not draw the full
measure of trade without adver
tising.
First have the goods
and values— then tell the public
about them through your local
newspaper.
As was said to the American
Retailers’ Association recently
by T. K Kelly of Minneapolis;
" It has become the habit of
the American people to do prac
tically all their shopping through
the newspapers, and the newi-
pspen today have too great an
economic force to need any
recommendation.” — M a l h e u r
Enterprise.
THE PENCIL MAKES
A FARM PAY BETTER I
Bigger Profits.
The claim that Commander
Landsdowne o f the ill fated
Shenandoah was forced to sail
when he did against his will has
been substantiated by dccumen
»ary evidence submitted to the
examining board. This in spite
o f Secreta-y Wilbur’s statement
that such was not the case What
are we to infer from this fact?
No one has yet sent in
arswer to our questirn as
where Elijah went when he left
so hurriedly in that whirlwind
A well known Biblical student
ha3, however, agreed to lock
into the matter and give us the
result of his research at an early
date. Until then we will just
nave to remain in suspense.
IN T E R E S T IN G FIGURES
In spit# o f t ! a c la im o f those op
poitd to prohibition that tbare ia more
whisky drank under the Volstead law
thiin bef ira its enactment and that
mcral conditions are worse, recently
compiled ataiiatica prove exactly the
contraiy. Health, morals and safety
conditions o f the United States hav>
improved in the Drat hvc yours of pro
iMtiltloa, cfficia! statisties gi ttc rrd ty
the United Press from fid era l dcpait
inerts show.
Shown a tabulation o f governmen:
expenditures for prohibition enforce
ment o f more than $1,500,000 0.10 and
stimulated by the Federal CouncH of
Churches' report that prohibition war
■till "o n trial,“ a half dozen different
agencies Droducsd their “ evidence
Figures compiled by the Uni.ed
States public health bureau disclosed
tuat America has become healthier
since enactment o f the dry 1 >w in
1920. The alcoholic death rate has de
creased from 6 8 to about 8 per <00
000 o f population since 1920 The an
nuai death rate from a'l causes has
fallen from 13 62 to 12.37 p jr 1000 ef
population.
Communicable diseases are leee
prevalent, now than ever before and
the average longevity o f the American
race haa increaaed sia to eight years
since 1920.
Juvenile delinquency haa fallen to a
third o f ite former figu e and expon
enta o f the Volstead act a ttritu te this
to prohibition.
Public morals have improved In re
cent years, ministers, contend, point
ing to tha fe e t that their oongrega
tiona have Increased about 8,000,GOO
In the last five years.
Abolition o f 17T.790 saloons diverted
m ire than $2,000,000,000 annually from
the tills of bartenders to other busi
nesses. A t the same time, however,
the 100,003 operating apaak essiea
were not pot out o f business} instead
they have increaaed in number.
Savings banka accounts have in
creased $4,OOO.OCO 000 in five yea ■
and some of thia vast wealth may be
attributed to prohibition, it is claimed.
Violators o f the prohibition laws
only cousututa 18 par cent of the pris
oners ia the federal pemtentiariee,
while postal law violators and drug
nsera average a much higher per
aentaga, department nf justice fighirs
shew.
Crime, on a whole, has de-
cveaaed slightly throughout the eour>
try.
Publication o f these figures ia timely
ia order to keep the recard straight
and to combat abe parsiatant props
ganda that is being spread to eonvince
the people that conditions are worse
under the drv regim e then they were
befere. Some o f the propagandists
have m ala tha claim to often that
they have aetaally come to believe it
themealvea.
It will be noted that Christ’e
promise was that “ them
believe” should have power 1 ^,
perform these five miracles. The
writer then goes on with irrefut
able logic and unswerable argu
ment to prove that the promise
Mark
Bates,
the veteran
applies to "them that believe
publisher
o
f
the
Payette
Lake
today the same as it did to the
believers o f those days and goes Star, has severed his con
nection with the paper. Lack
on:
“ But, aaya the aetentahed reader, o f patronage is given as the
‘ have not three aigna erased (wrong reason.
According to Mark his
menV I reply, prove that they have oase is somewhat analogous to
aasaad, and I will grove that the Car
that of the Dutchman who tried
Favorite Christian Names
pal haa eaaeed ta ha preaehad. that
I f a public school In one city might
man have ceased ta believe aad ba to teach his noise to live on
be taken as representative, John takes
aaved, and that tha world la with- sawdust. A t first he mixed just
first place for boys, with Wtlltam sec
oal tha kingdom o f God; ar claa it wMI a little sawdust with the horse’s
ond. Margaret Is first for girl a, with
prove that Jaeua Christ w ia an iaa- bran, then kept on increasing Mary second.
poatoa, and hia prvmtvee o f noaflaat.“
the amount o f sawdust and less
This is strong langusge end
ening the amount of bran until
The Ananias Club
should be convincing to sny
he was feeding sawdust exclu
"She had a most hemming hat. hnt
reasonable person, bat there are
■ively. Just as he was congrat for tha life of me I couldn't tell whelh
scoffers In the land, as the Bible
ulating himself on the success er she had on black or light stockings
predicts there will be in the
aa 1 didn't notice them.” be told his
of his experiment the blamed wife.—Clnctnaatl Enquirer.
latter days, and one o f them
horse up and died.
offers to bet tiOOO that there is
not a member o f the L. D. S,
A fter many trials and tribu
Not Bad Definition
Teacher— “ Now, Bennie, can you tell
church, or any other churcb.who lations the marriage o f Prince
can make good onthetest Here is Phillip and Princeas Mafalda m# what an Island IsT" l.lttle Bennie
—"Yea, ma'am. An lalnnd I* a place
a chance to make easy money haa been happily conaummated. yon can't leave without a boat “ —Bill
if Christ’s promise was true and One being a Catholic and the letln.
it applies to the people o f today ethar a Protestant the Tatiean1
Subduing Evil
Is there a single believer who had to give its eonaent before
Kvll. once fronted, ceases to be evil ;
has faith enough to try it? I f the union o f two auch discord
there Is a générons battle hope In place
■uceessfal, it
would greatly ant rtligious elements could be of dead, passive misery ; the evil Itself
strengthen the church; if not, it effected. It must be piggaant to haa become a kind of good.—Carlyle.
iU ltW i
Nyssa Realty Co.
Boydfcll & Hunter, Props.
G e n e r a l In s u r a n c e
LICENSED
&
BONDED
BROKERS
» » » ♦ » ♦ ♦ » » ♦ ♦ 4 4 4 4 4 H l"H - » » + + k b* 4 b» 4 -M -b t-i
Notice Difference
In Way You Feel in
14 Hours or Less
have to defer to the caprices of
some church dignitary before
you can get married. And it
would be interesting to know
just how much money, i f any
it cook to remove the religious Farm Accounting Reveals Losing
scruples of the Vatican.
Methods and Points Way to
( From Banker-Farmer)
Lif.\ Fire, Automobile, Livtnioik, Hail, Rain, Hay & Grain
A farm cannot properly be called
and
special insurance against Foot and Mouth Disease
successful unless it pays a fair rate
of interest on the Inveatmept and re
turns fair wages for the farmer’s la
bor. Agriculture is considered by all
We have listed some excellent bargains in
odds the most important industry in
the world, and yet In no other indus
try is the business end so neglected
It Is common to find a farmer with
an Investment of fifteen to twenty
thousand dollars, yet does he keep
books? Perhaps he may Jot down
For Bale or rent. W ill be plcneed to fui nil b r t U f cr iurimh eny in
note now and then of an Important
formation. Office on Main afreet.
deal, but this Is of no value In an
analysis of his business as a whole
No other industry, however small. Is
carried on without books of some
N O T A R Y PUDLIC
Oregon
■ ’ Nyssa
sort
Farming Is a business and to be
successful must be conducted In a
Historic Swedish Jail
businesslike way. The business man’s
E arly A d v e n tu re r s
Ostermulm prison in Sweden Is tlie
mind should have Indelibly printed
in thf* summer of 1793, Alexander
upon It two questions: What profit ia oldest jail In that country and one of
my business making? How can that the most historically interesting in Eu Mackenzie. Montreal fur trader and
explorer, crossed the Rocky mountains
rope. One of Its exhibits Is that of
profit be Increased? To know the lat
and what Is now British Columbia, and
ter, one must find out the former; and 1,800 skeletons of the Swedes who fell
cm me out upon the Pacific coast on
to find out about profits requires the In defending Vlshy 600 years ago.
June 22. He was the first white man
Many of the skeletons are still Inclosed
keeping of books.
It is not necessary for a farmer to in coat» of chain mall. Fine old fur to cross tills continent by a route north
of Mexico. At that very time Captain
have a course in bookkeeping. A1 niture from all part* of Europe Is also
Vancouver was exploring and chart
most every agricultural college In the on display In the prison yard today.
ing the coast of Britisli Columbia.
country has Issued a simplified farm
•jdiaosuuJX uojsoii
accounting book which It sells at cost
‘H|3|j 9ujji.xo.tt qioq SJB joaahj pun
and only a few minutes are required
> a h 8|t| J] A'ddaq aq ubo oboi .tuv
each day to jot down the day’s hap
W a r on the M osquito
penings.
sagismbag 8 ig oon±
one American railroad lias spent
Accounts Increase Profit»
$700.000 in The last few years fighting
Instances number a thousandfold
malaria-bearing mosquitoes.
where farmers have profited by know
ing their business. Accounts kept by
nineteen farmers in Illinois led them
to improve the organization and oper
ation of their farms In ways that add
ed approximately $650 to their aver
age net Income In 1922, the seventh
year they had kept accounts.
S P E C IA L IS T
An Iowa farmer found at the end of
the first year he kept books that crops
in Intornal Medicine for the paat
ted to livestock brought mors money
twelve years.
than when sold outright. H1 b figures
showed that his cows were poor;
DOES N O T O P E R A TE
compared with other farms in the
state, he found the number of acres
T h fu N IV E R S IT Y of OREGON
cultivated per man on his farm, as
W ill be at
contains:
well as the number of acres per horse,
were below average. He rented more
The College of Literature. Science
land and replanned his fields, so that
and the Arts with 22 departments.
the crop areas per man and horse
The professional schools of Archi
were increased. He sold some of his
tecture and Allied Arts— Business
scrubs and bought good cows. The
Administration—Education—Grad
second year his Income from the
uate Study—Journalism—L a v -
farm, after paying all expenses and
Interest on the money Invested, had
Medicine— Music— Physical Edu
been increased over $380.
cation—Sociology—Extension.
Office hoars; 10:00 a m. to 4:00 p. m.
Costs Can Be Regulated
For a catalogue or anj) information
“ I have discovered,” says one farm
write The Regietrar, UniVertitÿ of
bookkeeper, “ that the kind of man
Oregon, Eugene, Oregon.
yon have on a job, as well as the
particular team, often makes quite a
The 50th Year Opens September 24.1925
variation In the cost of performing
Consultation fc.
certain tasks. I hare learned from No Charge for
the pages of my book that If I could
have Increased the yield of my wheat
Dr. Mellenthin ia a regular graduate
Notice to Credi Lois.
field by two bushels and my corn by in medicine and surgery and ia licensed
five bushels I would bare realized a by the state o f Oregon.
He does not In the County Court o f ti.e State of
Oregon, lo r Malheur t-ounty.
substantial profit from them."
operate for chronic apperdicits, gall In the Matter of the Estate o f Au
While the farmers may not be able
atonea,
ulcers
o
f
stamaeh,
tonsils
ot
gustus
G. Kingman, Deceased.
ta fix prices oa their product», they
The undersigned, having been ap
Be have a voice in determining the adenoids.
He -has to his credit wonderful re pointed by the County court o f the
costs of production. To reduce this
Slate of Oregon, for the County of
cost they must first know what the salt* ia diseases o f tha stomach, liver, Malheur, administrator o f the estate
costs are.
bowels, blood, skin, nerves, heart, c f Augustus G Kingman, deceased
The number of farmers who are kidney, bladder, bed wetting, catarrh, and having qualified, notice is hereby
keeping books on their business has weak lungs, rheumatism, sciatica, lag given to i he creditors of, and all per
sons having claims against the estate
increased remarkably In recent years,
alcars and rectal ailmenta.
o f said deceased, to present them,
but the number of businesslike farm
Below
are
the
came*
o
f
a
few
of
hia
duly
verified as required by law, with
era Is woefully small when listed
in six months after the first publica
alongside the sum total of tha farm many satisfied patients ia Oregon:
^ J . L. Chambers. Rosaburg, hard- tion of this nonce, to said administra
era in the country.
tor, at his office in the Town of Nyssa,
Inventory la Indispensable
aches.
Malheur County, Oregon, the place
The basis of any system of farm ac
John Wodtli, Waterloo, bl'dd er and where said aummistrator will receive
counting is the annual property list prostrate trouble.
said claims.
E. M Blodgett,
or Inventory. It Is the starting point
Mrs. E. E. Holman, Richland, hid Administrator of the Estate o f Au
gustus G. Kingman, Deceased.
(O the farm records. One must take
ney trouble.
First publication Sept. 4, 1925,
Into consideration decreases or In-
W.
3.
Bennett,
Oregon
City,
ulcer
Last publication Oct. 2, 1926.
lasee In the value of all property
owned to gauge the progress of the : o f the stomaeh.
business.
Lacking facts as to the | R W. Meyer, Shanico heart trouble.
Administrator’« Sale o f Real
valne of his property, no business man ; ('has. H. Hoak, La Gaande, gull
Kstate.
l form an accurate estimate of how stones.
he stands financially. Increased cash | Mrs. M. 1. Olaon, Portland, appen
Notice is hereby given that, under
may be due to property which was 1 dicitia.
and by virtue o f an order of aale duly
d, or la creased debts may be due | Remember above date, that consul mad* and entered by the Judge o f the
County
C ourt nf the County o f Mal
ta Improvements made. If a farmer
tation on this tiip will b* free and heur, State of Oregon, on the 28th dey
IS falling behind, the Inventory will
of August, 1925, in the matter o f the
emphasize this fact. Often when a that hia treatm ent is different.
Marrbed -»omen must be accompan estate of Wm Canfield, deceived, the
man Is discouraged and thinks be Is
undersigned administrator of said es
making no progress, his inventories ied by thoir husband*.
tate. will, on the 6th day of Ostober
will toll him rhet be Is better off than
Address: 111 Bradbury Bldg , Los 1925, ist the hour o f 1 o'clock p m of
he thought.
Angelas, California.
that day at ihe premises hereinafter
At the end of each year a financial.
described, offer tor sale ard sail at
private sale, in one parcel, for cash in
statement Is drawn off. This la the
bar j, subject to ronflrmatlon by said
farmer’s ratiag and no fanner with a
cou
t, the following described real
good financial statement need fear
estate
owned bv said estate, ow1t:
walking into a bank and asking tor a
The South 40 feet o f lots 3, 4, 6, 6
loan
ai d 7 in Block 7, Original Townsita of
Nysaa, Nyaaa, Malheur County, Ore
BANKERS HELP
>»fi.
Ed Rich,
Administrator o f the Estate o f W n ,
A
T
T
O
R
N
E
Y
S
A
T
L
A
W
A bxuik In Monrovia. Ind.. tests seed
Canfield, Deceased.
First publication Sept 4, 1926.
for farmers. A basement room
Last
publication O c t 2. 1926.
fitted out last season for the pur-
K. M. BLODGETT
and 25,000 ears were tested for
fifty-six farmers. One-fourth of the
Attorney and Counsellor at Law
Owyhee I irrigation Diatiiet.
tested last yea» was unfit for
Practice ia all eourts
N O TICE IS H E R E B Y G IV E N that
seed. This year the percentage will
Nyaaa, Oregon
the Board o f Directora o f the Owyhee
even higher. The work Is done
Irrigation District, acting ai a Board
under the supervision of the high
C H IR O PR ACTO R S
o f Equalization, will meet on Tueeday,
school agricultural teacher. He reports
that the community will have a sur Drs R P. and Pearl M. Bradford, October 6, 1926, at 2 o ’ clock p, in. at
plus of seed corn this year.
licensed in Oregon and Idahc.
Its office at Nyaaa, Oregon, for the
The hanks of ConWay, Ark., have
purpose o f reviewing and correcting
Carver Graduates
offered prizes for the most marketable
its ass 'Sfinent and apportionment o f
sweet potatoes produced on one acre Consultation and Examination Free
taxes for the next ensuing fiscal year.
of land. A first prize of $150 la of-
Nyaaa. Oregon
The assessment Mat and record may
fbred. along with three district prize*
ba inspected at tha office o f the s e cre
* f $50 each. The «aunty agent and
W. B. HOXIE
tary by any person interesteo.
tha bank« are working out the details.
IN S V R A N G E
By order o f the Beard or Directors.
The County Bankers Association
Dated Septen ber 4, 1926
wfli help to employ a foil time county
O ffice at Rcstdbuea, Third and
Mater this year for boys’ and gtria’
E. M. Blodgett.
Ehrgood Avenue.
•tab work In Calhoun. Cherokee and
Secretary o f the Owyhee Irrigation
Nyaaa,
fe o u o V yta couaetaa, Iowa.
D istrict
Bonds Issued as required
Farm Property and City Lots
Dwellings and Mercantile Buildings
BOYDELL & HUNTER
Coming to Baker
DR. MELLENTHIN
Geiser Grand Hotel
Mon. and Tues.
October 12 & 13
Two Days Only
PROFESSIONAL
DIRECTORY