o PAGE FTV* THE N Y SSA GATE CITY JOURNAL. NYSSA, O R E G O N T H U R S D A Y O C TO H FR * 1«53 Owyhee Occurrences Honey Of A Grapefruit Topping! Mrs. Krnnrth MiDonald Phone Olfc-Ki ways by trucks and buses operated as common carriers, contract car­ riers and private amers and the tax is called a W it-naile tax." Cigarette stamp tax revenue act would Impose a tax ■: three cents a pack on cigarette > produce $5- iMUiki annually A i ntingent com­ panion measure * :ld prevent dial­ ers Ik,mi .selling irettes for levs than cost plus 10 percent Added ! cost to consumer-- would be at lea-t inmittee esti- four percent, the mated. E ’.ablishing United States stan­ dard time m Oregon would abolish daylight saving tune and prevent any political subdivision from adop- ting any tune but standard. Apple Valley Aciiviiics Mrs. Sherm an Wilson Phone P arm a 21-MI Lawrence Fox narrowly escaped be started and plan ar- being made Members of the O K K will meet pained Mrs Merle McClure to Nam­ ser.ous injury Sunday evening, when far the annual bazaar to be held Wednesday afternoon Oct 15 at the 1 pa Friday on a business trip. he fell from the derrick swing at Nov. 29 home of Mr> Roland Man Mr Mr and Mrs William Peutz are the Jack Wilson nome He was Oeerald Slippy will be co-hostess. -pending a few days here from their knocked unconscious and injured Mrs. Don DeHaven and Debbie, place in McCall. one leg but x-ray show no bones of Weiser, were week-end guet> ,t t j Mr- Orson Barett returned to her broken the Omar Hite home while Mr De- h line m Utah after spending the Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Bommars left Haven went hunting with his fath­ la t three weeks here with her Thursday for North Idaho where er. daughter, Mrs. Grant Patterson and they are visiting their daughter and Elks Walters left Thursday night family. family for several days. Mr. and Mrs. Byrd Walters were for Berryville, Ark., to visit hi- P.TiA. will meet Thursday evetung, hosts Sunday with a lawn dinner for brother, Dan, who is ill. Oct. 16 at 8 o'clock. It is hoped that Mr. and Mrs. Joel Barney, of Bur­ Mrc. Ellis Walters on her birthday. G a m h iin g H ot Issue the new auditorium will be ready ney, Cahf.. spent the week-end with Guests were Mr. and Mr- Jack Wai­ Constitutional amendment prohib­ for this meeting Following P T A. ters. of Meacham: Mrs R C. Jones his aunt and uncle. Mr. and Mrs iting lotteries. bookm.iking, pari-mu­ there will be an auction with the l "The state and federal govern­ A C Hawkins. The Barneys went on and Mr- Qeorge Sehreiber. of Boise, tuel betting or animal racing Is self- following articles goir.: to the high­ and Mrs. Gerald Slippy and sons. ments have a tendency to deny to Salmon Tuesday where they will explanatory and a highly controver­ est bidder: A bench saw. planer, jig Mrs. George Schweizer spent last visit with her parents and other the local communities a right to saws, electric motors, wood vises, sial issue. Numerous fair boards are week in Nampa at the Kenneth relatives. run their own affairs, centrali­ opposing the measure because of the and other miscellaneous at tides The Ahrens home with her daughter and band will play at this P T .A .1 zing this power in Washington. Mr. and Mrs. Lester Parker and family. decreased revenue fur their annual school meeting. children, of Hemedale, were Sunday Mrs. Harley Wilson and children shows. While pari-mutuel betting W S.C5 will meet Wednesday af- ¡ D. C., and Salem I feel tlie closer guests in the A1 Parker home. pent Thursday and Friday nights has been the most frequently dis­ ternoon, Oct. 15 at the home of Mrs. I you can ger government to the Mrs. Charley Culbertson accom- at the Omar Hite home. cussed aspect of the amendment, it C. L. Fritts. A study of Africa will people the better the government Mr. and Mrs. I. B. Crocker of would also proh.bit all types of lot­ you'll have.” Long Leach. California, spent the teries and wagering of any kind the Oregon Voter, basically a differ­ week-end with Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Greet the new grapefruit crop from Florida with a half grapefruit Constitution amendment author­ FO H Y O U R P L U M B TNG Crocker. The two men are brothers. for breakfast, lunch or dinner; for a first course, salad or last course. izing alcoholic liquor sale by individ­ ence in philosophies is involved: Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Slippy and Re sure to properly prepare your vitamin C-rich grapefruit halves for ual glass is another self-explanatory representation on the basis of popu­ NEEDS sons have moved back into their easy spooning, no waste. With a sharp knife cut Florida grapefruit in as well as a hotly debated issue. All lation iar> a plan comparable to i at Owyhee junction after liv­ half crosswise. Loosen sections by cutting around each individual sec­ that of the federal system, with Bath Sets, Water Heaters place ing near Parma for the past year. tion. Snip out core with scissors. Do not run the knife around the entire, liquor is now sold in state-owned those in the first group in favor of stores by the package It is under­ Mr. and Mrs. Henry Slippy who and Pressure Systems ouii r t ige of grapefruit. the amendment. have occupied the Gerald Slippy For a new topping treat with your morning grapefruit half, spoon stood that the amendment also (Editor's note»: The above ver­ hou-e are staying with their daugh­ C all honey over the fruit instead of sugar. Honey production is up this year, makes it possible for any county or ter. Mrs. Bob Rice. i.n this is one of the ways in which you can use this flavorful sweetener any municipality with 500 or more sions were condensed from informa­ and htlp the ¡denned pollination program of the Department of Agri­ population to call a local option elec- tion in the official voters’ pamphlet; Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Shelton of J. C. SMI TH and the Oregon Voter, published in culture. I' llination is necessary to nearly all of our food crops, and Boise arrived Friday evening to 13 Years In Nyssa ».creased honey consumption will help utilize the larger production. i tion prohibiting the sale of liquor PortlAul by C. C Chapman. •pend two days with her parents. by the drink Mr and Mrs. A. D. Moses. If Phone 78-J Constitutionel amendment pro- Mr. and Mrs. Ray Franklin of aome Sunday afternoon. Domenico Theotacopuli is the real rize the issuance of additional bonds. i viding equitable taxing method for ** * Parma called at the Gerald Slippy name of El Greco, the painter. Lawrence Peutz left by plane Fri­ Amendment creating legislative use of highways would limit motor A sea drum is a fish which makes day morning for Portland to attend assembly emergency committee drumming noise. .he Pacific International Livestock would create a committee with pow­ vehicle taxes to a registration fee a Arkansas has more mineral springs based on weight and a fuel tax based exposition. er to allocate sums from an emerg­ j on gallonage. It would eliminate the than any other state. Friday afternoon callers in the ency fund allocated by the legisla­ 3ill Cook home were Mrs. Clauae; ture. It would clarify the power of weight-mile tax paid by motor ve- Symptoms of Distress Arising from | hides operated by common carriers, Ecchu-s and her mother, Mrs. E.v- the legislature to establish an a- contract carriers and private car­ que, both of Homedale. STOM ACH U LC ER S Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Hislop gency exercising budgetary control riers. It would provide that taxes I d u e t o E X C E S S A C ID over executive and administrative now collected by the weight-mile tax of Fruitland called at the Grant offices. would either have to be replaced by J QUICK RELIEF OR NO COST Patterson home, Sunday.. Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Towle of C h a n g e O ffi c e r T e rm s the legislature by increased registra­ Battleground, Wash., were were SA M COON R ep u b lican tion fees and increased fuel taxes or A sk A bout 15-Day Trial O ffer! Amendment fixing elective terms over-night guests Saturday at the that funds for highway purposes be O v e r f o u r m il l i o n b o t t l e s o f t h e W i l l a r d Candidate For U. S. Congress of state senator; and representatives Harlan Koger home. T h k a t m k n t h a v e b e e n «old f o r r e l i e f o f reduced. s y m p to m s of distress arising from S to m a c h Mr. and Mrs. Lynn Kygar were would start the terms of legislators a n d D u o d e n a l U l c e r s d u e to E x ce s s A c i d - business visitors at Caldwell Mon­ on the first Monday in January after Milk. K e a p p o r ti o n n ir n t Paid for by the Coon for Con­ Milk production and marketing G P o a o s r s i n D e i s g s e , s t H i o e n a , r t S b o u u r n r , o S r l e U e p p l s e e s t s n S e t s o s m , e a t c c h . , , their election and terminate the day morning. gress Committee; Lawrence terms on the first Monday of Janu­ act would repeal all existing milk d u o t o E x c e s s A c id . Ask fo r “ W i l l a r d ' * S I F T . IIE N R Y H A R T L E Y Neault, chairman. ary at the end of the term for which control laws and provide tor estab­ a M b e l e s s h a o g m e " e w t r h e ic a t h m f u e ll n t y e x f r p e la e in s a t tliia r e m a r k ­ D IS C U S S E S B A L L O T they were elected The present law lishment of production areas. Pro­ N yssa R ex all P h a rm a c y sets the beginning of the term on vides for establishment of minimum T IT LE M E A S U R E S prices for producers only instead of the day following election. (Continued from Page 1) Amendatory act title subject a- for dealers and retailers of milk, and school district reorganzation act. mendment, if adopted, would permit permits a dealer to serve any mar­ which he described as highly con­ the legislature to amend existing ket in the state. troversial and which “might or laws without cluttering up the law Constitutional amendment pro- might not be undemocratic,” the books with entirely new laws about and representative apportionment superintendent commented. He ex­ the same subject matter as existing enforcement amendment would plained that it was passed by laws,” the committee reported. The make a temporary reapportioninent an overwhelming majority of both Oregon supreme court has held that to continue in effect until the next houses of the 1951 legislature and without this amendment the consti­ federal census in 1960. After that was referred to a vote of the people | tution prohibits the legislature from the legislature would still have the ( of Oregon by petitions sponsored by amending the title to any law. duty of making a reapportionment | the Grange. Motor carrier highway transporta­ and if not done by the legislature,; Strpt Hartley explained that Ore­ tion tax act involves an increase in the duty would be imposed upon the gon has nine or ten type’s of school taxes to be paid for use of the high- Secretary of State. As described in { districts and in many instances o n f school can have as many as three separate school boards. Using Ad­ rian as an example, he pointed out that some taxpayers are under the jurisdiction of a common school dis­ trict. union district and county rur­ al. All three have the right to levy taxes, yet responsibility is not cen­ | YOUR DEAD AND USELESS ANIMALS tered on any one of them, Hartley- said. The bill, if it becomes law, H orses, Cow s, C alves, S h eep , H ogs would put every child under a uni­ C ash fo r live h o rse s a n d cow s Also Complete fied district, but that does not mean the abandonment of school houses or FREE PROMPT REMOVAL forcing youngsters to leave their P h o n e us collect own community to attend school. One of the objectionable features N yssa 102-W P a y e tte 670 Is that paitrons votes are counted as If no answer call Nampa 6-4604 a whole, rather than by district, it DAY OR NIGHT was explained. As an example, un­ der the present system a small dis­ IDAHO ANIMAL PRODUCTS trict musrt have a majority of yes votes to be taken into a larger dis­ 18 N o rth 2 n d P h o n e 51 Nampa, Idaho trict, while the proposed system would disregard the majority by dis­ trict, giving thickly populated dis­ tricts full power with sufficient yes votes to absorb a small district. The Orange objection is entirely At on that basis and not because the farm organization is opposed to uni­ fication, the superintendent said. The reorganization act would set justify special treatment. We have found 332 YES ON THE MILK PRODUCTION AND MARKETING ACT NOV. 4 insufficient justification for controlling up a maximum of nine members for fluid milk prices at resale level.” a county such as Malheur, for a — P o r t la n d City C lu b These important Oregon organizations tell you why county committee. There would be five members from the rural com­ I f you i r r c o n fu s e d by ro n f lir li n g claim« a b o u t milk la»«, be g u id e d by the rutinael TO MERCHANTS munities and four from the towns o f th o s e w ho have m a d e th o r o u g h a n d im p artial Studie« o f the q u e s tio n . food stores say Voto 332 YES or unified districts. The committee T h e Milk P r o d u c t io n a n d M a r k e tin g A rt wa* put on the ballot liy the Affiliated "Y ou m u st b rin g y o u r lu ck y The Oregon Food Merchants Association, Milk C o m m itte e s o f O re g o n , w h ieh is e o m p o s ed o f citizen g r o u p s all over the would set up plans for all districts tic k e t if you e x p e c t to representing the independent grocers of stale. We have no c o n n e c tio n with th e m ilk in dustry an d o u r only in te re st is in in the county and present them to Oregon, in its endorsement of the Milk esco rt m e ho m e fro m s e c u r in g a m ilk law w hieh will be fair to everybody. the patrons for approval. Production and Marketing Act says, “The We were g u id e d hv th e views o f re p resen tativ e O regon o rg a n iz a tio n s — lab o r, m y G iv e -A w a y p a rty ." Vote O n O t h e r Measures association reiterates its desire for store c o n s u m e r s , retailers, fa r m e rs , eivic g ro u p s . Voters have 14 other measures to differential which it feels the present law act upon at the general election, but does not permit." the price the consumer pays for milk. The —O r e g o n Food Merchant* A**ocialion lack of time prevented discussion at TO WAGE EARNERS new law will assure you of a fair price and the Lions meeting. give more dairymen an opportunity to TO VOTERS labor groups say VOTE 332 YES World War veterans state aid sink­ contribute to Oregon’s supply of Grade The last state convention of the CIO said, A milk." ing fund repeal amendment calls for 332 YES agrees with views of “ We feel the Milk Production and Market­ repeal of part of the state constitu­ —-Oregon P r o d u e e r - l l i s t r i h u t o r s Assn. politka l groups of both partios ing Act gives the necessary protection to tion and provides that all assets of This new FAIR milk bill will conform the producer . . . and makes better milk the state aid sinking fund be trans­ with the last formal platform position of available at more reasonable prices to the TO BUSINESS MEN ferred to the common school fund. the Democratic party in Oregon which consumer.'’ Business and professional leadors Proponents contend that the article said “eliminate all provisions of the milk — O re g o n State I n d u s tr i a l control law except sanitation regulations I n lo n C o u n r il (C IO ) has served its purpose and will not in Portland City Club (arefully and minimum price for farmers.” effect loans that have not yet been studied milk (ontrol — O re g o n State D em o cratic P a rty completely paid. TO CONSUMERS This nonpartisan group of over 1,000 On September 14, the state policy meeting An act authorizing domiciliary citizens after studying the present Milk of the Young Republican Federation of Women's groups say Voto 332 YES state hospital for aged mentally ill Oregon said “whereas the proposed Milk Control law, reported as follows: would authorize a hospital for such Says the Portland Federation of Women’s Marketing Act 332 YES whiçn has been "Although considerable argument was Organizations, representing 72 clubs, with purpose situated within a 20-mile presented by various witnesses regarding placed on the ballot by the signatures of 16,000 members: “Thousands of Oregon 43,000 citizens is eminently fair to the radius of the Multnomah county the necessity of continuing price control families have growing children and limited at the distributor level, the majority of farmer and the consumer . . . we the courthouse. The act provides that budgets. A vote of 332 YES will enable the committee did not find the distribution majority of the agricultural committee of the cost not exceed $3 million and these families to afford more wholesome and sale of fluid milk sufficiently unlike this convention urge its adoption." a^ks that the institution be operated fresh milk.” — Y o u n g K r p u h lic a tin n Fed. o f O re . the marketing of other food products to and maintained in the same manner — P o r t la n d F e d e ra tio n o f W o m e n 's O rg a n iz a tio n s as other state hospitals Approxi­ Remember whan you go to tha polls N ov . 4th mately $750,000 Is estimated as the annual operation cost. TO FARMERS look for tha Milk Production and Markating Act Amendment to augment Oregon Dairymen say Voto 332 YES war veterans fund would extend Nyssa, Oregon Phone 26 W A Johnson, Grants Pass dairyman privileges of World War II veterans and President of the Oregon Producer home and farm loan program to r o u i w o n wi t h the c h e c k i D i o a i b s i gn Distributors Association says, “ Milk Con­ Korean veterans and to veterans AFFILIATED MILK COMMITTEES OF OREGON trol has consistently lowered the butterfat who have been residents of Oregon P J ,d v Affiliated M ilk < «mpaign Com. of Oregon Mr*. Irene Taylor, «26 Park Bldg., Portland, Or«. contant of tha milk we sell while increasing for at least two years after aepara- t.on fr en ervice It does not autho­ SAM C O O N Says! T H LOOKING FOR A NEW HOME." —Beautena Announcing . . . . New Facilities for Washing and Vacuuming -iWANTED:- tc BEAUTENA” Cars and T rucks Lubrication Service Invites You To Her Give-Away Parly FARMERS SUPPLY CO-OP. At 8:30 p.m. Thursday, October 16 Tobler's Feed Siore Bring Retail Prices Down. . . Keep Farm Prices Up von Beautena Sez: Refreshments will be served following a short program conducted by G. M. Davis, of the Ralston Purina Co. YOU MUST BE PRESENT TO WIN BEAUTENA! TOBLER'S FEED AND FUEL Inc. VOTE 332 X YES for a FAIR milk law o