The Gate city journal. (Nyssa, Or.) 1910-1937, October 26, 1933, Image 2

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    GATE CITY JOURNAL, THUR8., QCTQBER 26, 1933
Throughout the rare still nights.
Voice of the Press
bureau of roads, of Idaho, Nevada, California and it is
Their tiny voices praising
The Giver of all light.
winning the sup iort of Oregon, which means Mr. Scott,
chainnan of the nighway commission. He would probably
For Nature is sweetly sleeping
Her wonderful work well done;
have had a far different attitude in regard to the road if
M c G i n n i s orrs m s m e n
of gold and purple
it had received the undivided support of Malheur county. 1 Two men robbed a bank at Wallowa 1 Her Fast fruits
W. F. AND ALMA McLING, Publisher*
ripening In the sun.
Some have sacrificed the road, the benefits to be derived and escaped with some thousands of O. glorious,
Indian Summer!
Subscription, Y ear.......................... *1 oO
by farmers and others, for probable tourist trade which dollars In cash and securities. They Why must you hasten away?
Subscription, 8 Months ----- -----..... 15c
were desperate fellows, of course—that Would you could linger forever
might go to Idaho towns—and might not.
[ goes without saying—and It was felt Wth your lovely golden day.
Entered at the Post Office at Nyssa, Oregon, as Second Class Matter
Local controversy has endangered the project in Ore­ that their capture, If this could be con-
--E tf-
gon. It has already resulted in the proposal, first made by (trived must be attended by consider­
able risk to the police and deputy
Wm. Hanley of Bums, that the state build a connection 'sheriffs
WE WANT THE I-O-N
“SPECIALS"
who were casting around for
between
Bums
and
McDermitt
by
way
of
Crane,
in
place
them. But Cliff McGinnis, who runs a
The controversy over the I-O-N highway wages on,
FOR THE REST OF OCTOBER
on the Grande Ronde river,
but little by little the importance of “this shortest route to of the I-O-N. Such a connection would require as much 'ranch
At Lee ’Merle Beauty Shoppe
matters.
Permanent wave $1.50. Complete
California” project is overcoming the obstacles which road building as the I-O-N, if not more, and whom would j simplified
Mr. McOinnls, three days later, and Ammonia base permanent ol a good
have been tossed into its path and it is coming to the front. it serve? It would traverse waste land. It would serve no along toward evening, saw two men
grade solution
“The I-O-N will provide a north and south main great irrigated tracts such as Owyhee and Vale on which walking not far from his ranch house Shampoo free with every dry finger
in the woods by the river. By this and
the hopes of Malheur county are pinned.
Wave
highway which will extend from the Canadian border
by that Mr. McGinnis came to the con­
Other
work
at
reasonable prices.
Would
not
a
Bums-McDermitt
road
constitute
a
gross
to Mexico,” said the federal bureau of roads.” It will
clusion. and, being a man of action, he
waste of funds, indeed? Still, it is actually mentioned as shoved a few cartridges in his rifle, Other permanents $1.95, $3.50 $4.50
be built within a year or so.”
»«OPERATORS
into the saddle and rode across
The I-O-N unquestionably has the support of the federal a project of prior importance to the I-O-N in a letter writ­ | swung
the ford, where he got the drop on the Muriel Sterling
Addalee Jasmer
ten by Mr. Scott October 13.
pair In a very workmanlike manner.
The I-O-N, from Nyssa to McDermitt, for such it will They discarded their weapons at his
never cease to be, will open a new market for the Owyhee curt suggestion. And Mr. McGinnis was
about It. He had played the cor­
and Vale projects which does not exist in Portland. The right
Dr. C. A. Abbott, D. C.
hunch. For they were the two that
I-O-N will connect OREGON, Idaho and Nevada high- rect
had stuck up the bank at Wallowa
Chiropractic
| ways in sipte of the statement that the I-O-N is Idaho’s They forded the river, The rifle urging
And Garage
them
on,
and
therf
Mr.
McGinnln
tele
'project. Does Mr. Scott forget that Oregon borders Idaho,
Phone 29— Res. 25
phoned the sheriff.
Now Completely Equipped to do all kinds of
I that the soil of the two states touch.
It Is a good story, and this Is almost
NYSSA, OREGON
Machine Work and Automotive Repair.
Our marketing a n d transportation problems a r e its last paragraph. We get to thinking
j mutual. Our projects and the Snake river valley need the th at the west isn’t what It used to be,
My future policy the highest grade
and then something happens that bids
workmanship and use only nationally
i I-O-N.
us revise our opinion. The west Is still
THE GATE CITY JOURNAL
Dr. E. D. Norcott
DENTIST
Nyssa.
Jregon
Office Phone 35F2
Residence Phone 35F3
l
X-RAY EXAMINATIONS
Nyssa Aerie
F. O. E. No. 2134
Meets Wed. Night at Eagles Hall
Visiting Eagles Welcome
R. C. Shelton. President
Don M. Graham, Secretary
Jordan Machine Shop
advertised automotlv parts.
Near the Schoolhousc
PORTLANDER GAVE US PHEASANTS
ROBT. D. LYTLE
the west in certain highly commend­
able characteristics.—Oregonian.
C ity T ra n s fe r
TRUCKING
ana
TRANSFERRING
Phone 15 and Phone 28
When pheasant hunters proudly return from the hunt
Attorney and Counselor at Law
---------------------------------------------------------- [with their limit, how many of them will reflect that credit
C. KLINKENBERG
First National Bank Building
t .
1 M.tii;i;iiiiiiii:iiiiiiiiiiii!imiii.iiiiii.iii i : i i;i.i;ii;i.iLiiri!im hi ii.i!im:iui!i ii iii i.i i . i ii inti riiiiiiinmliiiiiniiiJii'iii iniiiiiii.iii1I ^ qj . ¿heir favored shooting- has been assigned to a woman
Phone 66
glwho died in Portland this fall. She was Mrs. Gertrude
Vale
Oregon
| j Denny, widow of the late Judge Denny of Portland, who President Roosevelt has been asked
§ sent the first Chinese pheasants to Oregon when he was by merchants and business men to
designate November 23 as Thanksgiving
1 1 consul at Shanghai in 1881.
day. From time immemorial the last
11 Mrs. Denny suggested to her husband that the plump Thursday in November has been set
= game birds of China would be happy additions to Ore- aside as the day of feasting and giving When in the Market for
On the Old Job
thanks. This year it falls on the last
glgon’s upland wild fowl if they could be developed in this day
of the month and many people ■ WOOD AND TIMBER
f ! state. As a result Judge Denny sent pheasants and other would have to forego the holiday.
H. D. Holmes
Fence Posts, Corral
p I oriental birds to friends in this state who liberated the Beginning nuxt January, bank de­
posits will be Insured against loss up
TRANSFER AND BAGGAGE
Poles, Derrick Poles
birds and protected them from unethical hunters.
to $2500.
Write—
Now, after 52 years, there are declared to be more O. S. C. held the University of South­
All Kinds of Hanling in
Chinese pheasants in Oregon than all other game birds to­ ern California, two-time national grid S
City I.lmits
AUDY BAZE
g e th e r . It is even said that Oregon has more Chinese champions, to a scoreless tie in Port­
land Saturday.
11 pheasants than China.
The Graf Zeppelin, piloted by Dr.
WE HAUL CHEAP
Si
Mrs. Denny’s credit for the suggestion came to light in Eckener, left Germany last week for „ Box
PHONE S
NYSSA. OR.
85, Vale, Oregon
The motorist is welcomed at Powell Service = ja letter
America. It will make a call at the
addressed
by
E.
E.
Wilson
of
Corvallis
to
the
Ore­
Station, whether it’s a wash job, grease job or a s'gon Sportsmen’s league a number of years ago. The let- world’s fair in Chicago.
When A1 Smith arrived in Chicago
tanking-up you wish.
s j ter was reproduced in Mr. Simpson’s book, “Pheasant Saturday, he received a "wet" reception
|¡Farm ing,” in wihch much of the histoiy of the Chinese, or in a drenching rain.
Try HYVIS MOTOR OIL— First Grade Eastern
Miss Billie B. Johnson, aged 17,
“Denny” pheasant was given.
president of the Silverton, Or.,
It does the work in summer heat or winter chill.
As the result of her interest in reproducing Chinese elected
Auxiliary, is said to be the world’s
pheasants in Oregon, the state game commission paid her youngest. She was bom in World War
30 cents per quart.
Nyssa Funeral Home
a monthly pension of $50, beginning June 28, 1919, and days.
the Oregon Sportsmen’s league raised a subscription to
TAX DELINQUENCY
save her home in Portland.
Mrs. Denny, who died August 5, 1933, at the age of 96 In most of the levying bodies, extra
Phone 76F3
be levied to take up the slack of
years, was the last of the survivors of the famous Whit­ must
tax delinquency. Thus, if default is to
PHONE 1
OREGON
NYSSA
man massacre in 1847, in which her father, Peter Hall, was be avoided on bonded interest, the tax
Ambulance Service
levy must be made in an amount that
EiiiiiiiiiiriiiTiiiiiiiinilKiiMiii M
MHMHI iiiìHii li ill inni in in im iii i : i munii marno iiiii!i!iii:iiriiiiiiiiiiiiiii!iiniiilii!»P slain. She spent about 15 years with her husband in the brings
in a sum large enough to pay the
orient, where Judge Denny was consul at Tientsin, consul- bonds. If tax delinquency is 50 per cent,
general at Shanghai and later adviser to the king of Corea1 as is the case in some counties and in
for) six years. In the latter position he ranked next to the probably a full thousand smaller tax-
units, the tax levy for bonded
king and was known as “the foreign king” and Mrs. Denny i levying
debt must be double to bring in a sum
as “the foreign queen.” Their personal friends included1 sufficient to meet the payments. The
Increase c a u s e d by delinquency
world diplomats, including General U. S. Grant.
Around the Country
i
1
POWELL’S SERVICE STATION
I
K T & r tfr
'C O lU m e
EDITORIAL TABLOIDS BY CLARK WOOD
We hope that Germany didn’t withdraw from the
league in order to fatten her combatting average.
extra
large
cola a ir
returns
extra
tarte .
c old air
returns
Crime news of the day indicates that fair women is be­
coming, in a sense quite literal, a straight shooter.
While buyers wait, the weight is on the government.
Seems they should have begun to “Buy Now” by now.
The dope has it that Germany, while out of the league,
will strengthen her batteries.
pyramids so high upon non-delinquent
property that in turn its owners become
discouraged. Tax delinquency feeds on
itself by pyramiding the levies, and
threatens bankruptcy to all property
within the area subjected to a high
delinquency.
In Malheur county, the levy of the
non-high-school unit will have to be
$32,744 to met its budget for trans­
portation and tuition, and $32.774 more
to help bring in the originnal $32.774.
This is typical, not exceptional, for
such disbursements as have to be made
in cash.—Oregon Voter.
INDIAN SUMMER
She comes with treasures laden.
This Indian Goddess fair;
The leaves are gold and crimson
That bind her raven hair;
There’s a veil o’er the purple mount-
tains.
Cool breezes in the air;
A hush o’er all the glowing lands
And beauty everywhere.
It broods o’er all this silence
I Scarce broken by song of bird;
The nights bring glorious moonlight.
But cnlji they crickets are heard.
Hidden away they merrily sing
i NYSSA SHOE SHOP
Air Conditioning Saves Up
to 35 Per Cent of Fuel Costs.
M N M M
Pipe Furnaces as low as $125 Installed
Complete
Keep Your M oney in Oregon
Ontario Sheet Metal
Works
Phone 60
§
g
|
§
|
|
by our new equipment
ASK US ABOUT IT
— Sold Exclusively in Nyssa by
Shelton Dairy
We Deliver Twice Daily
NYSSA
OREGON
WASH DAY
at the
THE UNITED LAUNDRY
NYSSA, OREGON
We are well equipped to do your Laundry nice­
ly and cheaply, whether you wish it all finished,
rough dry or float-ironed.
i
Expert Leather Work |
Our Low Prices W ill Pleas«
NYSSA SHOE SHOP
J. S. Anderson
Made the Perfect Food for Babies and Invalids
Every Day Is
« i i i i iii ti n i i i;iii nrn M m im ti w M w m n m N R .
3 Invites you to bring in
i your old shoes. What
^ may seem beyond re-
pair might be made into
a good understanding
and add a few steps to
economy.
Processed Milk
Mrs. Margaret Pashley, Prop.
Ontario, Ore.
Phone 83F2
Hitt
i