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About Nyssa gate city journal. (Nyssa, Or.) 1937-199? | View Entire Issue (Nov. 23, 1939)
r/ieNYSSA Published at Nyssa, Oregon, VOLUME XXXIV, NO. 46 » > ~ts_i ~ i ~ r - V Washington, D. C. News Bureau of the Nyssa Gate City Journal WASHINGTON, D. C —Who will make money (fool's gold, President Roosevelt calls it) out of the war? At this writing here is what the war is doing to the United States: It is increasing unemployment by interning American vessels and putting 10,000 seamen “on the beach;" it is decreasing employment in the fruit industry in the Pacific northwest. Great Britain has barred ship ments of Oregon and Washington pears and apples to England (but admits Canadian fruit), declaring the fruit a non-essential. This is a business loss of several million dollars to growers and shippers. Other non-essentials: Tobacco, a loss of $17,000,000 a year of business; motion pictures, worth $90,000,000 a year. Wheat, hops, wool, prunes, meat, lumber — all Oregon-Washington products—are being purchased by B ritain from the commonwealths of the empire. The foregoing items, representing $150,000,000 a year, giving employ ment to an army of workers, are not wanted by the allies. In exchange for loss of this business Great B rit ain and France are concentrating their purchases in the United States on airplanes and other death-deal ing devices. Between $150,000,000 and $200,000,000 is being spent by the allies but to fill these airplane orders not more than 40,000 me chanics have been given employ ment, and the expenditures of the allies are not being spread into gen eral circulation, as was money paid for Northwest products. Insofar as Oregon and Washing ton are concerned, the war is a lia bility instead of an asset; it is clos ing long-established markets and is not opening new ones. 'X ► Fastest Growing City In Oregon NYSSA, OREGON, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1939 Malheur Crops Top $6,000,000 Crcps and livestock giown in Malheur county will show an esti mated gross total cf $5,107,980 for 1939. according to compilations re leased from the office of R. M. Mc- Kennon, Malheur county agricul tural agent. Alfalfa hay leads all other farm production in the county, with a to tal gross value of. $960,000. Beef c a t tle is second in value with $700,000. Third on the list in value is that received by beet growers, which is estimated will show a gross return estimated at $622,300 (includes fac tory and government payment and beet pasturage). Potato crops lead in the row crop division with a value of $405,000, lettuce being next with $102,500 and onions, $61,500. The total estimated value of crops for 1939 has been set at $3,676,980, which includes govern ment payments of $120,000, and for livestock at $2,431,000. These fig ures, it must be recalled, are esti mates only. $1.50 PER YEAR F. xezi S. A. Loans All farmers in Malheur County expecting to request Farm Security Administration assistance for next year's operations are asked to make application before the holiday sea son to avoid delay, announces W. N. Young, county FSA supei visor, Miles building, Ontario. Funds are i row available to meet all current cinands for loans. Applications may be filed at the Ontario office from 9 to 12 on Mon days, Wednesdays and Saturdays, while information may be secured at all times. W z\ j vm School Bond Issue Carries Only a bakers dozen 13 voteis nuned out last Saturday to vote on the issuing of $36,000 in bonds for school district 26. The Ue.it and disappointing number of voters was unaccountable, the weather being clear and dry. All votes favored the bond issue. This was the second time that the issue had been put up to the voters of the district, the first elec tion being ruled out by the opinion of the bond attorneys. The bond issue is now being ad vertised for bids, which will be re ceived by the clerk, B. B. Lien- kaemper, until 8 p. m. December 8, at which time the bids will be opened. The proceeds from the bonds will be used to retire warrant principal and Interest of The National Reclamation Asso of $34.659.35 ciation meeting in its annual con $1340.65. vention held last week in Denver, passed a resolution asking Congress to provide for the progressive, or derly expansion of the production of beet sugar within the United States and to maintain the beet sugar industry on a reasonable in come basis by quota regulations and adequate tariffs on foreign sugar. Large areas of the United States, MALHEUR COUNTY TO JOIN the resolution points out, is to a IDAHO ON REFERENDUM great extent dependent on the Malneur county onion growers maintenance and growth of the sugar beet Industry and that the and handlers wUl have an opportun American sugar beet grower should ity to hear the proposed onion m ar be supplying a major portion of the keting agreement fully explained, domestic sugar market, instead of and to vote individually on whether the one-third, which it now pro they wish the agreement to be plac ed into effect or not at two meet vides. Of additional local interest to ings to be held on Monday, Novem land owners under the Owyhee pro ber 27, according to R. M. M cKen- ject is the fact that Commissioner non, county agent. The first of Page of the Bureau of Reclamation these meetings wUl be held at Vale is, as a result of conferences held in the county courthouse at 2:00 during the convention, drawing up P. M. while the second will be held a new contract for the repayment at Ontario in the Moore Hotel be of the construction cost of the pro ginning at 8:00 P. M. Program at ject. When this new contract is these meetings will be similar so drawn up and accepted it will re th at growers may attend either one lieve Owyhee project water users of they prefer. With at least 450 carloads of on paying construction charges of $2.50 in 1940. This construction repay ions still in the hands of growers ment will become operative in 1943, in Malheur from the 1939 crops, a according to the new contract, when marketing agreement should be of owners will be assessed on 5 per considerable Interest. The proposed cent of the crop value for that year. agreement covers all of southern The new contract will apply to the Idaho as well as Malheur county Black Canyon project as well. Con and it is understood that similar gress must ratify this contract be agreements have been approved al fore it becomes effective, according ready by growers in Utah and Colo to Frank T. Morgan, president of rado. Growers or handlers of onions the Oregon Reclamation Congress, are being urged by the county agent who was a delegate to the conven to attend one of these meetings, so th at they may obtain a thorough tion. Officers elected for next year understanding of the proposed m ar were O. S. Worden, Great Falls, keting agreement, make an lntelll- Mont., president; Robert W. Saw gen decision as to whether they yer, Bend, Ore., first vice-president; want it or not and then vote for Ora Bundy, Ogden, Utah, second or against the proposed agreement. vice-president; Floyd O. Hagle, Yakima, Wash., secretary and man ager, who will have offices In W ash ington, D. C. Two new states were admitted to membership in the association, which now number 19 states as Everything is in readiness for the members. The new member states annual Malheur County Corn show are Oklahoma and Kansas. Great Falls, Montana, was select to be held in Nyssa FYiday and S a t ed as the next convention city, over urday, November 24 and 25. That was the word given out this Phoenix, Arizona. week by the committee in charge composed of George J . Mitchell, E. LIONS HOLD DINNER D. Norcott, Lucian Wray and J . B. and Robert Sawyer. FOR FOOTBALL TEAM Giezentanner County Agent McKennon and his assistant, H. J . Endicott, reported Tribute was paid to the success that they expect the largest exhi ful season of the Nyssa high school bition of corn yet shown in the football team last Friday by the county to be on display Friday and Nyssa Lions club, at a dinner in the Saturday. domestic science room of the high All exhibitors will have their corn school. in the lobby of the First National C. W. Buchner, president of the Bank building in Nyssa, by Friday Lions club, after welcoming the noon, according to plans of the com team to the dinner, turned the mittee, in readiness for the Judg meeting over to Leo Hollenberg, ing which will take place Satur who acted as toastmaster. day morning by Ray O. Larson, who Mayor Thompson told of the com has been selected to Judge the two munity interest in the success of divisions of corn, inbred hybrid and the team, and complimented them yellow dent( open pollenated) each on their successful season. The may of which will have a senior and or called especial attention to the junior first class. Prizes totalling fine work that Coach Young and $40 Is offered by the Nyssa Cham his assistant Bob Parke had done ber of Commerce, who each year with the team. sponsors the event. Other speakers on the program were J . W. Bushong, principal of Visits Parents— the high school. Coaches Young and Mrs. Ronald Burke and her in Parke, BYank Parr and L. P. Thom fant daughter of Jerome have been as. Harold Holmes, captain of the guests of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. team, expressed the thanks of the C. J. Keizer this week. While here entire team for the Interest th at the Mrs. Burke has assisted at Ruth’s Lions club and other business men Beauty Nook. had shown in the team. Holmes In troduced all the members of the en tire squad to their hosts. MARKETS Musical and vocal number were rendered by the girls octette who sang two songs; a trumpet solo by Reid Cottle and a vocal solo by Hol Cream. Grade A ____________ lis DeGrofft. Mrs. John Young was Cream. Orade B ___________ CASH PRICE the accompanist. The dinner, an annual affair for the local Lions Hens, heavy _______________ club, was a fine tribute to the boys Hens, light and Leghorn .... who have been so successful in the Springs valley conference. The domestic science department Cockerels students, under the guidance of Eggs Miss Helen Stevens, served turkey Large ... dinners to 70. Medium N .R . A . Convention Indorses Beet Increase O n io n Grow ers To V ote O n M arket A greem ent H ealth O ffic e r T o Speak In Nyssa W ednesday praise tire 3Corb, fur it is a guuii tljmg to sing praises unto Dr. Samuel Allison of the Oregon S tate Board of Health will be in the county next week for a series of meetings in the various high schools. Dr. Allison is director of the division of venereal disease con trol and his topic will be along this line. He will bring several reels of film to show along with his lecture. His visit here is made under the auspices of the Malheur County Public Health association. Mrs. Kathryn Claypool is in charge of arrangements. While the meetings are primarily for high school students, the pub lic is invited. •jufi . * His schedule is as follows: Monday, Nov. 27, Ontario, 1:30 P. M.; Tuesday, November 28, Harper, 9:30 A. M.; Juntura, 1:30 P. M. Wednesday, Nov. 29, Vale, 9:30 A. M.; Nyssa, 1 P. M.: Adrian, 2:30 B e e t P. M. Thursday, Nov. 30. Jordan Valley, 1 P. M. An Alien Ties Up U. S. Commerce Thursday evening. Annex school. Coincident with loss due to the Welser, 8 p. m. Farmers who have Farm Secur war are the losses inflicted upon ity Administration loans will meet business and industry by the arbi next Tuesday, November 28, at 8 trary and dictatorial powers exer Members of the Nyssa Factory j p. m. in the Nyssa city hall to talk cised by Harry Bridges, chief of over their troubles and perhaps District Beet Growers association <CIO unions on the Pacific coast. form an organization for their bene will hold elections within the next According to reports received in fit, it was learned here Wednesday. week on the subject of joining a Washington, labor controversies During the meeting, to which all central association. have completely tied up the port of Those members living near Nyssa business men of Nyssa have been S a n Francisco and their effects are invited to attend, borrowers under will hold their election this Satu r now being felt in Portland. In final Oregon grades of onions, carrots, day, November 25, at 8 p. m. in the meetings between employers and celery, cauliflower, grapes and wa the FSA will be given full oppor Nyssa city hall, according to union officials in San Francisco, termelons have been revised to con tunity to air their pet peeves and Charles Marshall, president of the ed to have said he “is the clerks’ form to the U. S. grades for these grievances, according to those in association. prior to the strike, Bridges is alleg- commodities with the change to be charge of getting the meeting to Elections will be held in thirteen union,” to have brushed aside the effective November 20, announces gether, whose names they asked to other polling places upon the same be withheld from publication. clerks' committee, set the minimum J . D. Mickle, director of the state subject, at dates to be set as near demands himself, and called the department of agriculture. as possible to that held in Nyssa. strike. One of the demands by The grade revisions were approv I f the growers vote favorably for Bridges would limit hours of month ed by growers at a hearing early the proposition, the central organi ly clerks to 42 a week, denying per this month. At this hearing, onion zation will be known as the Lower mission for overtime work at one growers also went on record favor Snake River B eet Growers Asso and a half times straight-time, as ing standardization of the 10-pound ciation, and will function as a unit is provided in the wage-hour law bag to include name and address, in negotiating with the company and as has been the practice in the state and grade on the container. concerning the terms of the con industry; another demand wpuld The department has approved tracts for the growing of beets and equalize the earnings of all clerks, standardization also, but will not Ivan Hintz, Cairo farmer, topped such kindred important m atters of monthly, day, casual—good, bad, make the change effective until a field of 15 contenders last S a t common interest to all, according to and indifferent. after January 1, in order to give urday to win the title of champion A. L. Fletcher, local attorney, and The arbitrary and unreasonable growers and shipper an opportunity com husker for the Pacific North secretary of the Nyssa Factory as attitude of labor leaders is rapidly to dispose of the bags now on hand west. sociation. alienating the support of long-time and not marked as to grade. Hintz, in the 80 minutes of the influential friends, as is shown by contest, husked 26.9 bushels of corn. recent caustic comments by Sen Everett Riggs, Parma, was second NIGHTLY CHURCH ators Norris and Borah and the FREE MOVIES FOR with 25.68 bushels, and Claude MEETINGS quite apparent disgust of President Campbell, Kuna, was third with FARMERS DEC. 2 Roosevelt over their failure to take 25.31 bushels. Ernest C. Knull, pastor of the any steps toward eliminating juris Last years champion, Walter Wes Browne, manager of the Nyssa Assembly of God Gospel dictional disputes. It is confidently Oberg. finished sixth. Roy Keller, Baldridge Implement company, Tabernacle, announced th at his expected in the national capital that Nyssa, and dealers in John Deere last years third place winner, was church will hold special evening persistence in this attitude will have fourth this year, and A. R. Kochs- farm implements and tractors, an meetings every night, beginning on repercussions not to their liking in nounced this week that his firm is mier, a runner-up in last year's con Sunday, November 26. The meetings the forthcoming session of con test finished in eleventh place. sponsoring a free all-day moving will be open to the public to hear gress. Gross weight of the winners be picture program for local fanners, R. E. Parrish speak. (Continued on Page 6. Col. 5) at the Nyssa Theatre, on Saturday, fore the judges had weighed out the December 2. The show opens at gleanings, showed that Hintz had Nyssa is the Bargain Center. 10:30 a. m. with a noonday recess, husked 1895 pounds of com, Riggs Leave For Vancouver— 1895 pounds (his gleanings were Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Boersma when a lunch will be served to what put him into second place) and their children left this morn guests. Farmers are requested to get their and Campbell banged the boards for ing for Vancouver, where they will visit over the Thanksgiving holiday free tickets at the Baldridge Imple 1865 pounds. This is the second annual Pacific with Mrs. Boersma's mother. Mrs. ment company in Nyssa. We've heard of the newly-wed who Northwest Com Husking contest The moving pictures to be shown M Green. forgot the wee wifey, and the new include one of the season’s leading and is sponsored by the Union P a- I baby that was forgotten, but fie pictures “Joel Gentry in Holly cific railroad and the Ontario upon George Haycock—and with THE WEATHER wood” in addition to four other all- Chamber of Commerce. the 46th anniversary just coming Hintz receiver his award of $25 Following are the thermometer talking pictures which will take the up . . . . and A1 Thompson and Jim readings for the pest week as given guests on a visual trip through the and a trophy in Ontario Saturday j Bushong trying to explain why they by the Nyssa offices erf the U. 8. John Deere factory, and the uses night. didn't know all the answers a t the Reclamation : to which all John Deere machinery Tuesday night dinner . . . . nice to Low High may be put to around a farm. Date hear that A1 Atkeson is to be num Visiting In Nyssa— 53 15 Nov 16 Mrs. Hattie Moreland left on bered among the town's permanent 49 15 Nov. 17 Monday for DesMoines, Iowa, for residents . . . . and hostesses in a At The Nyssa Hospital— 50 Nov. 18 ..................... ......16 dither over this scrambled “Franks- L. W Miller of Nyssa has a three weeks visit with relatives, 49 ....... 14 Nov 19 giving business . . . . some of whom she has not seen In been a patient of Dr. Sarazin at 46 13 Nov 20 the last twenty years. the hospital this week. 46 .......17 Nov 21 our 0§oi>; - , . TV.|Ito coberett] the heabett tottlf rloiibs, anil preparetlj rain for the earth; attii iiiafeeir grass to groin upon tlje mountains, anil tjerh for the use of me* ll g . . , ^jtle make!1? peace in iljy aorbrrs, anil filletl} thee luitlj tile flour L * of iuheat. ^||raisc the |Corii, (0 my soul; forget not all Jfis benefits. FSA Borrowers G row ers T o Beet Men Set Meeting V o te O n C e n tra l i Fo rm S ta te G rades T o Conform T o U .S . * JOURNAL • GATEWAY TO THE OWYHEE AND BLACK CANYON IR RIGATION PROJECTS IN THE HEART OF OREGON’S SUGAR EMPIRE A ssociation * , i r.V r ALFALFA HAY LEADS OTHER COUNTY CROPS > — Ivan H in tz W in s Co rn H usking C o n te si ROUND TOWN G ro u p MORGAN HEADS NEW WESTERN GROUP Frank T. Morgan was elected president of the Western Sugar Beet Association, an organization composed of growers in 11 western states, which was organized last week in Denver, Colo., during the annual convention of the National Reclamation Association. The or ganization was formed primarily, Morgan said, to assist the National Reclamation Association in a fight that will come up in the next ses sion of congress to do away with restrictions on sugar beet acreage in the United States. The newly-formed organization is formed of membership from west ern states in which reclamation projects are in existence and whose success depends upon a cash crop such as only sugar beets can give. “I t is our intention to carry de mands before the next session of congress for the right to grow all the sugar beets we want on recla mation projects,” Morgan said. E. W. Rising, Nampa, Idaho, was elected as vice-president and Blaine Ferguson, Valier, Mont., was elect ed as secretary and treasurer. The Western Sugar Beet Associa tion has the tacit sanction of the National Reclamation Association, despite objections raised by Com missioner Page over the formation of the new organization. The com missioner expressed himself as op posed to the idea, and the Recla mation Association should devote its energies only in the direction of matters ’pertaining to reclamation. Dealers Meet The electrical dealers, located in the Payette division of the Idaho Power company, met in Ontario last Thursday night and heard Dr. O. W. Allison, of the Edison Electrical Institute, talk on the subject of “Market Saturation As It Affects the Electrical Dealer.” The meeting was presided oer by former Ooomor of Idaho, H. C. Baldridge of Parma. Those attending from Nyssa were Oeorge C. Henneman, owner of the local Gamble Store agency, E A. Wimp, local electrical contractor, and M. K. Davidson, salesman for the Eder Hardware company. County Corn Show Set Thnnday Quotations By Wiley Ciowen Stags Trade-In