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About Nyssa gate city journal. (Nyssa, Or.) 1937-199? | View Entire Issue (Dec. 7, 1939)
JOURNAL 7VieNYSSA Published at Nyssa, Oregon, GATEWAY TO THE OWYHEE AND BLACK CANYON IRRIGATION PROJECTS Fastest Growing City In Oregon IN THE HEART OF OREGON’S SUGAR EMPIRE VOLUM EXXXIV, NO. 48________________________________________NYSSA, OREGON, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1939_________________________________________$1.50 PER YEAR NYSSA PRINCIPAL May Propose County Corn Makes NAMED EVALUATOR Beet Growers And Returned to Farm Credit Board Special Bonds Clean Sweep At State Show WILBUR STEWART WINS ’STAKE AND OPEN CLASS HONORS Malheur county corn made a clean sweep of it at the state-wide show held in Corvallis last week, when the corn exhibited by Wilbur Stew art took sweepstake and open class honors. In the hybrid corn growing contest H. W. Black, Ontario farm er, won with a yield of 112.6 per acre. This contest is based on yield cost and uniformity. As a note of comparison, Ritchie Bios, took first place in the grow ing contest, western Oregon division, with a yield of 84.1 bushels per acre, giving Malheur county a lead in production of 28.5 bushels more per acre. In the junior class for district four, composed of all counties ex cept Hood River, east of the Cas cade mountains, Malheur county took all honors. With Harold Silk- ett placing first; Homer Brewer, second, Don Cornmesser, third, in the F. F. A. class and Joe Stewart, first, Gene Amidon, second and Donald Brewer, third in the 4-H club class. In the open class for district four, Wilbur Stewart placed first; Fred Moeller, sweepstake and open win ner in the Malheur county corn show, second and G. W. Carter, third. Judging contest for Oregon State College students was held on Thursday and for 4-H and F. F. A. members Saturday. All premium money for the state show was given by the First Na tional Bank of Portland, with all expense money being provided by the agricultural committee of the Portland Chamber of Commerce. Washington, D. C. News Bureau of the Nyssa Gate City Journal WASHINGTON, D, C.—Americans have an idea that they are better educated and have higher living standards than other countries, but every once in a while some govern ment agency comes along and punc tures the inflation. While the Pa cific northwest has scarcely a trace of illiteracy, a four-year survey re veals that of the 75 million adults in this country, 36 million did not finish elementary school; 18 million did not finish the fourth grade, and three million are entirely illiterate. There are one million children of elementary school age not enrolled. This information is revealed on the eve of the congressional session because educators fear that appro priations for education may be sac rificed for the national defense pro gram to be sponsored by the ad ministration next month. President Roosevelt himself says that one-third of the nation is ill- fed, ill-clothed, ill-housed, and one of his special committees asserts that one-third of the workers of the country have an income of less than $500 a year. More "Good Neighbor” Policy Pur farmers of Washington and Oregon, specializing in raising sil ver foxes for the market, are threat ened with competition from Canada, which also has quite an industry of this description. Officials of the department of state are preparing to revise the trade treaty with Can ada to permit Canadians to ship (Special)—A meeting their silver fox and other furs into of ONTARIO the Malheur County Farm the United States, this "good neigh Bureau Federation will be held at bor” gesture being made because Moore Hotel in Ontario, Tues the European war, in which Canada the December 12. The afternoon is a belligerent, has closed the day, will beging at 2 p. m. with European market to Canada. A session quota Is contemplated on furs from p. an m. evening session to be held at 8 Norway and Sweden to furnish R. D. Flaherty, executive secre them an outlet. tary of the Oregon-Washington East Discovers West Farm Bureau, will be present Every few days lately some gov State the meeting, stopping off on his ernment bureau announces what a at from the national conven great country is the Pacific north return held in Chicago. He will give west, with its latent resources of a tion of the convention and work raw materials and what can be ac report the largest national farm organi complished with cheap electric pow of er. Latest predicition come from the zation. The meeting will be centered bureau of mines, which asserts that around the activities of the follow the ceramics industry promises to ing committees: Sugar Beets, Field be more self-sufficient as a result Crops, Truck Crops, Livestock, Dairy of investigations of the bureau in and Taxation. The afternoon meet the regions served by Grand Coulee ing will take up the work of the and Bonneville. four mentioned committees, There are valuable deposits of first meeting will be clay in the two states, explains the while the to evening livestock, dairy and tax bureau, and with power all that is devoted necessary is for someone to get busy. ation. Kaolin the clay used for fine porce All farmers are invited and urged lain is found in Washington and to attend the meetings as the pro there is an occurence in Lake coun gram is so arranged as to allow a farmer to find a subject of special ty, Oregon. interest to him. To Protect Fish An elaborate program for protec tion, maintenance and development of the fish runs in Columbia. Will KOLONY 4-H LEADERS amette and their tributaries has PICK OUTSTANDING been outlined by the bureau of fish BOY AND GIRL eries. co-operating with fish com missions of Oregon and Washing KINMAN KOLONY (Special)— ton, but no appropriation will be Local leaders of the Kingman Kol- made when congress meets. The di ony 4-H clubs met with County rector of the budget explains that E. M. Hauser and selected, he cannot make an estimate to em Leader from the Kingman clubs, the boy body in the budget the president and girl, who because of their out submits to congress January 4 be work during the year 1939, cause no data have been presented standing will represent the district at the an by the fisheries bureau. summer school in 1940. At the bureau of fisheries it is nual This selection is based on pro said that a very complete and thor-» jects completed, age, years of work ough investigation is being conduct and other details dealing with club ed on all the streams involved and work. that this survey will not be com Pauline Gowey was the girl se pleted before next summer, making lected. Pauline is 14 years old, has it impossible to ask the budget di completed 14 projects and four rector for an estimated appropria years work. Aurora Zamora was se tion before the fiscal year 1942. lected as alternate. Dudley Kurtz which begins July 1, 1941. The rivers was selected as the outstanding boy have been studied repeatedly in the being years old, and having com past and there is an abundance of pleted 14 5 years and 10 projects. material which would indicate where Dick Ashcraft work was named alter cultural fish stations could or nate. Virginia James Ronald (Continued on Page 6, Col. 5) Lane received honorable and mention. THE WEATHER Except for .01 inch of rain falling HOT MEALS FOR on Dec. 5. the past week has been a dry one. Following is the weath HIGH STUDENTS er report for the week ending Dec. Hot noonday lunches are now 6. 1939 Low High available to students of the Nyssa Date 25 42 high school, according to Principal Nov. 30 25 40 J. W. Bushong. Dec 1 The home economics department 26 44 Dec 2 ......... ............24 53 in charge of Miss Helen Stevens, Dec 3 ......18 53 started serving the meals last Mon Dec 4 18 51 day. Government funds are making Dec 9 Dec. 6 ........................... 26 62 the venture possible. Farm Bureau To Meet In Ontario William A. Schoenfeld (left), dean of agriculture at Oregon State College, Corvallis, and Harvey R. Shoultes (right), Chehalls, Washington, dairyman and cooperative leader, begin new terms in January on the board of directors of the Farm Credi’, Administration of Spokane and its credit units. Both are members of the present board. Shoultes was elected by Federal Land Bank borrowers of Washington, Oregon, Idaho and Montana. Dean Schoenfeld was aj:pointed by Governor F. F. Hill, of the FCA, to represent agriculture and the public on the board. The city council will next Monday night consider the matter of ask ing the voters of Nyssa to pass on a bond issue to retire outstanding warrants. Coming into office with outstand ing warrants amounting to $7.693,67 the new council has managed to keeps this warrant indebtednes down below that figure, despite an expanded improvement program, which has included new sewer sys tems, plants, street and water im provements. It is estimated that the bond is sue will not exceed $7,500 and will put the fiscal program of the city on a cash basis, which is actually what it has been operated on, ex cept that the old outstanding war rants have been paid first. City Attorney A. L. Fletcher is this week working on a skeleton ordinance to be presented at the meeting next Monday. The actual amount of the bond issue, together with the warrant debt and interest will by that time be figured and upon approval of the council be in serted into the ordinance. If approved, the election would be held either the latter part of this month or the forepart of January. J. W. Bushong, principal of the Officials Meet Nyssa High school has been named j Here To Day as one of a committee of evaluators | by the State Department of Educa tion, and left Wednesday to evalu N. E. Dodd, director of the west ate the Baker High school, a Job ern states Agricultural Adjustment that will take about three days. Administration, and C. R. Ovlatt, In rating the school, the com representative of the Sugar Section mittee will check the curriculum, of the Department of Agriculture, student activity program, library arrived in Nyssa this morning to service, guidance service, classroom meet with sugar processors and teaching, philosophy and objectives, j sugar beet growers this afternoon. school administration and school I Representing the Amalgamated plant. Sugar company are R. H. Cottrell, A. E. Benning and Ray O. Larson, Board Accepts School Building — The Nyssa Union High school | board on Tuesday made formal ac- | ceptance of the new high school [ building and equipment, to the Fed- | eral Works Agency, division of Pub- 1 lie Works Adiminstration. The building and equipment rep- reesnted a total expenditure of $75,918 of which a P. W. A. grant of $34,168 was allotted by the fed eral government, the school district financing the balance of the cost through the sale of bonds. The high school building is con sidered among contractors and school officials in Oregon as one of the finest buildings of its kind in the state. POST OFFICE OPEN Christmas Seal Ì ALL DAY SATURDAY Sale Started Postmaster S. D. Goshert an nounced today that the Nyssa Stockmen Ask This week started the annual post will be open every Sat campaign of the National Tubercu urday office Storage Dam NYSSA TAKES GAME afternoon until after Christ losis Society to raise funds to car mas. This departure from the usual ry on their work in the reduction and final elimination of this great white plague through the sale of Christmas seals. That there is urgent need to con tinue the fight against tuberculo sis is evidenced by the fact that 40,000 deaths every year of per sons between the ages of twelve and forty-five are accounted for by tu berculosis. Today it is estimated that there are at least 500,000 active cases in the United States. There is a bright ray, however, in all this. It is the fact that if dis covered in the early stages and treatment started immediately, the disease need not be fatal. But to carry on this work it takes money, and in large quantities, so the need each year for Christmas seal sales. Also a large percentage of the money raised in each district is kept and spent in that district. It was the sale of the Christmas seals which made it possible for the Nyssa schools to be among the very first in the county to hold tuber culosis examination clinics. And through these clinics a few active cases were found that would other wise have gone unnoticed until treatment might perhaps have been *oo late to save a life. If anyone did not receive their Christmas seals, they may obtain them from Mrs. Chas. Paradis or members of the committee, com posed of Mrs. Harold Fletcher, Mrs. Dick Tensen and Mrs. Don M. Gra ham. COUNTY AGENT TO ATTEND CONFAB ONTARIO—County Agent Russell M. McKennon will leave today, in company with N. E. Dodd, director of the western states AAA, for Con don, to attend the annual conven tion of the Eastern Oregon Wheat League, where Dodd will be the principal speaker. From Condon McKennon will go on to Corvallis, where he will at tend the Annual Extension Service Council conference which begins December 16. McKennon said that he expected to be back in Ontario December 18. I-O-N CUTOFF NOW OPEN TO TRAFFIC According to Arthur Lyons of the Bolse-Winnemucca stage line, the I. O. N. highway to California is now open to year-around traffic. The Idaho end has been com pletely resurfaced with ten miles of it already oiled and the contract for the remainder has been let to the W. W. Clyde construction company of Utah. Work will be resumed in the spring. In Oregon there have been three sections surfaced, one north of Jor dan Valley and two south and in Nevada the whole stretch to Win- nemucca is now oiled and gravelled. With this road now open, the driving time to San Francisco has been cut to from twelve to thirteen hours and the total mileage to 622 miles. Not only is this way the shortest route but It is also one of the saf est and most easily driven, there being less traffic and fewer grades than on any other. Saturday afternoon closing is done so that patrons of the local post office will be better served during the Christm..s rush. Goshert al?o asked that the pub lic co-operate with the post office department by mailing their Christ mas packages early, to insure prompt service and to reheve the clerks of the heavy Christmas mail "rushes” that come as a result of late mailing. Christmas Tree Party Slated All Nyssa and fraternal organiza tions are joining together for a Christmas tree party to be held in Nyssa at 2 p. m. the Saturday be fore Christmas, December 23. Dr. E. D. Norcott, Dr. Ken Kerby, Dr. F. S. Weir and Hershel Thomp son are the committee in charge. Plans are now under way for the party, which will include a Santa Claus, and candy for the children. The Christmas tree party is an annual affair for Nyssa, and is fi nanced by all civic and fraternal organizations, working through a central organization. Apple Valley Girl Killed RUTH SCHULTZ HIT BY TRUCK MONDAY AFTERNOON By Mrs. Earl Summey APPLE VALLEY (Special)—Ruth Marie Schultz, 11, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Adolph G. Schultz, Apple Valley residents, was killed instant ly Monday afternoon as she stepped from a school bus, into the path of a truck driven by Clarence Martin of Boise. The school bus, driven by Harold Meyer, was headed north and had stopped in front of the Schultz home to allow Ruth to alight. The truck, loaded with beet pulp, was going south. Martin, according to Meyer, stopped immediately. An in quest is to be held, following an in vestigation of the accident. Besides her parents, Ruth Marie is survived by two sisters, Virginia, a Boise student and Mrs. William B. Willon, Seattle, and a brother, Charles. Funeral services were held this afternoon in the Parma Lutheran Church, with interment in the Par ma cemetery. Visit Tuesday Evening— Mr. and Mrs. Lester Hall of Nampa with Miss Esther McGary and Lawrence McKlbben of Star, visited with Mr. and Mrs. Cliff Main on Tuesday evening. «■■■■■■■■«■■■■■■■■I 'ROUND TOWN Good Lions and their friends fishing about for old ties . . . . looks like the beet growers have the “meeting bug” . . . .the Art Boy- dells the first again with their gar den Christmas lights . . . . sure enough June in December weather. ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■I O N T A R I O (Special) — Ferd Schlapkohl, Owyhee project engin eer and Walter White, of Nyssa left Monday for Jordan Valley to in vestigate a request of Jordan Valley stockmen for a storage reservoir to be located north of Jordan Valley. Commissioner Page had asked R. J. Newell, Boise, construction en gineer for the Bureau of Reclama tion to submit a report on the re quest, who in turn asked Schlap kohl to make the investigation. Schlapkohl and White will inves tigate the effect the storage dam would have on the Owyhee project. Little effect is expected as the wa ter in the contemplated storage dam would be stored in the spring being released later when the Owy hee project would be in need of what Is stored at the Jordan Valley dam. FROM FRUITLAND The Nyssa high school varsity basketball team, in a practice game with Fruitland Tuesday night, won by a score of 25 to 17. Stanley Ray led the Bulldogs in point scoring, with 10 points. Ken Lewis slung two baskets and one free throw. Wilson and Shelley both scored two field goals and Ensming- er scored one. The score at half time was Nyssa 10, Fruitland 6. The Bulldogs played a man-to man defense and did a fine job of it .covering Fruitland's south-paw threat handily throughout the game. Coaches Young and Parke really have two teams, both of which worked well together and show pros pects of being up in the champion ship bracket when the season ends. Saturday the Nyssa team plays its first conference game with Weiser at Weiser. Then next week, Friday, December 15, the Bulldogs play Parma here. The second string Nyssa team lost to the Fruitland second string City Recorder M. F. Solomon this ers week received $4,181.80 or 10 per by a score of 24-14. cent of the P. W. A. grant on the sewer project this week. This is the LIONS CLUB LADIES second payment on the grant, the NIGHT PROGRAM first being 25 per cent of the grant of $41,818. The remaining 10 per The Nyssa Lions club will hold cent will be paid the city when the their annual Ladies Night dinner sewer project is completed and a tonight in the Nyssa High school complete audit of the project is science room, according to made. It is expected that the pro domestic W. Bushong, chairman in charge. ject construction work will be fin J. Bushong was very mysterious ished about January 28, 1940. about the actual program, but in Exceptional weather is working to timated that several ladles and the advantage of the contractor, Fife members the club would be call and Company, who are constructing ed on to of deliver talks. The ladies, and installing equipment on the dis it is learned, will have their chance posal plant. to tell the men that they know little of the subject upon which they will be called to talk about. STREET GRADING Following the dinner a party of COST IS LOW the club will be made up to attend Councilman J. C. Olsen revealed the Nyssa Dance club dance that figures this week that shows a low will be held in the Eagles hall. cost In the grading of Wards addi tion and several blocks in the west 73,345 ACRES ARE UNDER CULTIVATION ern portion of the city. Some 14 blocks of streets have been graded and gravelled at a to According to figures compiled in tal cost of about $1000 or an aver the U. S. Reclamation offices, the age cost to the city of $71.50 per total number of acres under culti vation on lands under the Owyhee block. The gravel was furnished to the Irrigation project totaled 73,000 and city by Sam Playford and Virgil the total gross value per acre was $25.31, for the year 1939. Johnson, aggregate contractors The gross value of 1938 was slightly over $27.00 but this was due to an early appraisal which at the TWO CLUBS JOIN end of the season proved to be above HEALTH ASS’N. that of the actual average taken In. Below are the figures of each dis The Nyssa Lions club and the trict given out by Ferd Schlap Oate City Lodge of Odd Fellows be kohl of as the office this week, came two of the first fraternal or with the net Ontario acreage in cultivation service organizations in the county and the average gross value per to Join the Malheur County Public Health Association, when the mem acre. Advancement ............... 609 24.83 bership of each organization voted Bench 2,174 41.51 this week to send membership dues Crystal ............................. ................ 1,058 27.43 to the association. Oem, new land 5,500 12.51 This is a departure from the pro Oem, old land 15,942 35.20 cedure in past years, the officials Ontarlo-Nyssa ............. 4,936 35.63 of the association feeling that more Owyhee ...................... 1920 interest would be taken in the Pa.vette-Oregon Slope 38,929 42.87 health work if organizations were Slide ............................... 3.597 600 2429 admitted to membership. Individual 73,345 25.31 members of organizations may Join All District* by paving for individual member Ladies Aid— ship There will be a no-hostess meet ing of the Methodist Ladles Aid In 1st Boise— the church basement on Thursday, Mrs. K. E. Kerby and Mrs. Harry December 14th at which all mem Hahn visited l" Boise on Monday. bers are urged to be present. City Receives P.W.A.Grant N. E. Dodd Nyssa district manager. It is hoped that at this meeting that the growers will hear a clari fication of the status of the Sugar Act of 1937, as it affects quotas and acreage with a view toward the growers association taking some steps in the recommendation of fu ture legislation. 4H Leaders Hold Nomination KINGMAN KOLONY (Special) —Saturday, December 2nd at the Kingman school house, was held the regular meeting of the Malheur 4-H Local Leaders Council. The business meeting was held in the morning with Mrs. H. A. Connor, president, presiding. Among the matters of business it was voted to hold the annual county-wide lead ers banquet and party sometime In February. Scholarships and ways of obtain ing them was brought up by E. M. Hauser and discussed in general among the leaders. Officers were nominated for the coming year and will be voted on In January. Lunch was served at noon by club girls. The afternoon program was In charge of the young leaders with Jimmie Nichols acting as chairman. Their topic was "How to Improve Club Leadership.” A piano solo was played by Dud ley Kurtz and a vocal salo was sung by Mrs. William Toomb. The meet ing was closed by a group song, "Sing Your Way Home.” Undergoes Operation— On Friday afternoon, Mrs. Charles McConnell underwent an emergency operation for appendicitis at the hospital in Ontario. Dr. L. A. Maulding, the physician in charge, reports her condition to be good. MARKETS Thursday Quotations By Wiley ('lowers .29 Cream, Grade A Cream, Grade B .27 CASH PRICE Hens, heavy ........................ .09 Hens, light and Leghorn .05 Springs ................ .09 Stags ................................... .05 Cockerels ........................... .03 Trade-In Eggs Large ................................. .21 Medium ..................... .18 TURKEYS Prime young toms, dressed .13 F’rime old hens, dressed .14 Prime old toms, dressed .12 Choice All birds 3 cents under above quot ed prices. Second Grade All birds 8 cents per pound. Live Birds All grades 4c under dressed price. Custom dressing .... 14 cents per bird DUCKS AND GEESE Per Pound .......................... 9 cents Capons, over 8 lbs____ ______ .16 Capons, 6 to 8 lbs. ____________13 Blips, over 8 lbs...........................12 Slips, 8 to 8 lbs____ _________ .09