THE GATE CITY JOURNAL, NYSSA, OREGON.
Condensed Statement of
The Malheur County Bank
NYSSA, OREGON
A T THE CLOSE OF BUSINESS DEC. 31. 1926
RESOURCES
Loans and Discounts...$404,464.51
Overdrafts _________
627.78
Building, Furniture, and
F ixtures .............
13,500.00
Other Real E state.......
School District War
rants ......
Liberty Loan
Bonds
5,218.00
LIABILITIES
Capital Stock.............. ..$ 25,000.00
Surplus and Profits..... 60,910.63
Bills Payable..................... NONE
Rediscounts .............. :.. NONE
DEPOSITS .................. 545,791.51
2,43481
.........$75,000.00
Cash and due from
Banks ___ $120,406.85
CASH RESERVE......... 195,466,8»
Pleasing fiction will not disappear so long as obituary
LITER RY BURGLARS
notices
are written.
It is related of a certain family of early settlers in an
Eastern state that they would steal anything that was The new radio control law seems ‘o cover everything
not too heavy or too hot to carry away. Burglars who except the control of static.
i obbed the educationl building of the First Bapist church
of Tuscaloosa, Ala., a few nights ago might well be im
agined as descendants of that family.
An invertory of missing property compiled from mem
ory the morning after the thieves’ visit contained these
items: One typewriter, about 100 valuable books, includ
ing a set of “Wit and Humor,” notebooks of sermons, a
minister’s manual, two books of evangelistic sermons, a
brief case, pencils, paperweights, some gold ornaments,
$6 in money and four packages of chewing gum, the last
from the desk of Miss Bernice Caldwell church secretary.
Apparently the robbers were of a literary turn of
mind, in which case an intellectual feast is before them.
Doubtless many of the stolen volumes are the very ones
they ought to read.
Should the contents of the books lead them to forsake ?
No danger of your brake giving away on a
their evil ways and turn evangelists, as has happened to
some, they will have valuable material for use in their
steep hill and letting you crash
new role.
to the bottom.
THE B R A K E
THA T HOLDS
□
$621,702.04
$621,702.04
C ounty F u n d s on D eposit-—N O N E
OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS
H. J. Ward, President
John Ray, Vice President
J. P. Dunaway, Cashier
.. O. G. Bauer, Assistant Cashier H. A. Diven, Assistant Cashier
J. F. Reece
J. J. Sarazin
G. L. Phillips
Prompt and understanding service and our desire to promote pros
perity; to help you get your share of it and to use that share with
wisdom
58 YEARS OF SERVICE
It is always worth while to point out examples of ex
ceptional law fulness to duty oftener by the press. It
would tend to lead ‘he younger generation to higher as
pirations and ideals. While such chronicles are not so
colorful as those of moral delinquencies, unfaithfulness
and crime, they are equally interesting to the well-dis
posed mind.
This week a faithful employee of the government was
re‘ired from active duty after 58 years of service in a
useful though rather obscure capacity. He is Max Hans-
mann, of the Lighthouse Service, assistant engineer in
charge of the hydrographic division.
Mr. Hansmann entered that service in 1872, but had
been an employee of the Treasury Department three
years before that, so that he has given 58 years to the
service of the government. One of his reminiscences is
that he assisted in setting up a lighthouse lens for dis
play purposes in connection with the second inaugura
tion of President Grant in 1873.
His exceptional record was commented upon by his
chief, Secretary Herbert Hoover, who wro*e Mr. Hans
mann a letter containing the following:
“I have been impressed by your fine record in the
Lighthouse Service since 1872, your original appoint
ment having been in 1869 in the Treasury Department.
This is indeed a remarkable record of long and faithful
service. I4 gives me sincere pleasure to express the de
partment’s pride in your record and to give you its best
wishes in your retirement.”
i
Oldsmobile 4-Wheel
i
SAFE FLYING RECORD
An unusual record for safe flying was brought to no
tice a few days ago, when President Coolidge presented
Lhe Harmon trophy for 1926 to Shirley J. Short of the
United States air mail service.
Mr. Short was selected for the honor for having flown
718 hours, covering 57,440 miles, during the year with
out a mishap. Since his appointment to the mail service
in 1923 he had flown 235,754 miles up to the end of 1926.
During his service Mr. Short has piloted various types
of airplanes used by the Post Office Department, on
scheduled trips day and night in all kinds of weather.
The Harmon trophy is awarded annually to the avia
tor who has done most during the year to demonstrate
the reliability of the airplane as a means of transporta
tion, and is donated by Clifford Harmon, a pioneer
American balloonist and aviator, now living in Paris.
Mr. Harmon holds the balloon endurance record, having
remained in the air 48 hours and 26 minutes in 1909.
and was also the first aviator to fly across Long Island
Sound.
His encouragement of safety ¡n aviation is a most
commendable contribution to art, and serves to call to
public attention the dependability of the airnlane in the
hands of skilled and careful pilots like Mr. Short.
ABSOLUTELY SAFE.
t
WE CARRY CARS IN STOCK
Come and look them over
POWELL SERVICE STATION
NYSSA, OREGON
POULTRY SUPPLIES
Custom Cleaning
and Grinding
•
INTERESTING NOTES
Osmium, the heaviest substance known, is 22 times as
heavy as water.
Old gold and silver articles melted for refuse each
year are estimated to be worth about $38,000,000.
A check for one pound, written on a postcard, was re
cently honored by a London bank.
NYSSA
OREGON
In Turkish dancing schools men dance with men and
women with women.
Cremation of the dead has of late found favor with the
Russian people.
Emperor Hirohito, the new ruler of Japan, will have
Possibly President Coolidge vetoed 'he McNary-IJau-
the
imperial palace fitted up according to western ideas.
gen bill because it contained no provision for the disposal
Did you say
Females
over 14 years of age are forbidden to bob
of surplus wild oats.
their hair in Peking and Tientsin, China.
An old manuscript of the bible, considerably different
NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION.
from any version formerly known, has been found in
Department of the Interior, Italy.
OILED U. S. Land
Office a t Vale, Oregon
More than a million bulbs are used in electric signs in
March 15, 1927.
i
New
York.
NOTICE is hereby given that Har
The
new organ in Liverpool Cathedral, containing 10,-
ry B. Earp, of Nampa, Idaho, who,
Shoe Repairing
934
pipes,
is said to be the largest in the world.
Sure, We've Got Meat!
on June 28, 1912, made desert land
Auto Tops Made and entry, No. 02323, for W14NE14, Sec A new locomotive recently put into service on the New
Come and Get It
Repaired
tion 12, Township 19 South, Range York Central railroad is88 feet long and weighs 552,000
46 East, Willamette Meridian, has i pounds.
ROSS PARKINSON
filed notice of intention to make
SIDELIGHTS
final Proof, to establish claim to
Nyssa, Oregon
the land above described, before
BURB RIDGE & RAY, Prop.
George Abbot, 19, solicited alms on the streets of mac-
Register, U. S. Land Office, at Vale,
on,
Ga.,
by
passing
out
cards
stating
‘hat
he
was
deat
|
PHONE 6
NYSSA, OR.
Oregon, on the 22nd day of April,
1927.
and dumb. Police were inquisitive and took him to the
:: B E R T S C I I
:: Claimant names as witnesses: station for questioning. While writing his answers a
W. S. Brown, of Vale, Oregon; Alma large firecracker was exploded under his chair.
He
McLing, of Vale, Oregon; Bee Sny
jumped
to
his
feet
with
a
vociferous
yell,
his
deafness
der, of Route 1, Nampa, Idaho; F.
W. Stringfellow, of Nampa, Idaho. and dumbness gone.
Between Lawrence Gas Station
Geo. W. McKnight, Register.
Jacob Reavely and Cornelia Ickenga of Peoria, 111.,
and Ford Garage
J. W . SPENCER
NYSSA
were
firs1 married less than a year ago, hut since have
*$**>* *8**8* *8* *1* *8* *}’ >t*^ 1 *{» ’I* »}» ij i «}» »{■ »}»
been
divorced
twice
and
married
for
the
third
time.
Prop.
OREGON
SOLICITS A PART OF YOUR ; \
Their
affection
for
each
other
seems
to
resemble
an
al
Patronage
ternating current.
Y ,____
_ . _
*!♦
:
G. E. BERTSCH
? Newer and more ridiculous terms are continually be
X Shaving, Hair Cutting i ing invented to designate that rather plentiful commodi-
Oood Meals—Good lieds—Good Service
! ty commonly known as bunk, bull, boloney, applesauce an
X
| Hot and Cold Baths
’ the like, hiow, if a fellow hands his sweetie a particu
larly fulsome “line,” he is likely to be told that “it’s a lot
Roy Pounds, Prop.
of hay wire.”
Rates that will
Nyssa
Oregon j:
Gerald Stewart of Manchester, Eng., must pay $5,000
as damages to a woman who was injured by his automo please you
H. D. Holmes
bile. but he is allowed 16 years in which to make the pay
Transfer and Baggage \
ments. The judge in the case must have had his mind on
Our Advertising war
debt settlements.
All kinds of hauling ir i
An 8-year-old boy of Belmont, Ky., refused to go to
Service * school because girls wrote notes to him and paid him
City limits
|
M eans M ore S ales fo r
other undesired attentions. Such an attitude would be
You, Mr. B usiness Man
strange
if his age were anywhere between 18 and 80.
;; Phone 5 Nyssa, Oregon J
When you begin advertising
“Balloon
jumping” is the newest diversion for ‘hose
in this paper you start on the
who
find
such
sports as bull-fighting and going over
road to more business. There
4-»+++++»4-f++++++4-»++++4--:-
Niagara Falls in a barrel too tame. A balloon with lift
is no better or cheaper me
ing powqr a trifle less than enough to take a man off
dium for reaching the buyers
of this community.
the ground is strapped ‘o the jumper, who is thereby
Flour, Feed and Roclcaning
We can also provide
able to make prodigious leaps, 40 to 50 yards, over fenc
Coal and Wood and Black
C. Klinkenberg
es and ev^p trees. Airman Dobbs of the British Air
Bear Roof Paint
Artistic Printing
Force
tried
the
new
sport
last
week,
jumped
into
high
of
every
description.
PROMPT DELIVERY
voltage wires and was electrocuted.
This business is for sale. A good business for
Reasonable Rates
Three T ow York boys between eight and ten years of
the
. ight man. Inquire at the Nyssa Flour Mill.
age set fire to the school house because they didn’t like
GATE CITY JOURNAL the
PHONE 15
teacher. Here are some fertile prospers for the com
P. M. Warren.
NYSSA, OREGON
munists.
♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦i I I W W W W
NYSSA GRAIN & SEED
COMPANY
MEAT?
HARNESS WASHED ANO
$2.00
NYSSA PACKING CO. ij
i BARBER SHOP
! NYSSA BARBER SHOP !
Hotel
WESTERN
ONTHEOLDJOB
I
CUSTOM GRINDING
And Chopping
CITYDRAYLINEf
\