Image provided by: Nyssa Public Library; Nyssa, OR
About Nyssa gate city journal. (Nyssa, Or.) 1937-199? | View Entire Issue (Oct. 1, 1942)
„ PAG E T W U - . • SI B S t'R irriO N RATES Open rate, per Inch_____ 35c National, per Inch........... 35c Classifieds. per word______ V Minimum-___ 30c M on tlu Slngl» (Strictly In Advance) Published erery Ttiuraclay Entered at the paatofftce through the United States the act Editor and Publisher ADVERTISING RATES On* Y rar SU ____ could no longer go to your own church or send your children to your Sunday School. You wou ld know that you would soon have no individual rights at all— you would be but the slave of a dictatorial state. W e may perhaps realize these things vaguely but few o f us ever stop to think that the news paper we take so much for granted is the key stone o f the liberties o f all individuals. Once this free press of ours is muzzled it will be the signal for the suppression and persecution of religion, o f the right to belong to a labor union, of the right to speak our minds. Where the press is free it can function as a protector o f the rights o f our people and of our free democratic institutions. Where the press is enslaved, these rights of the individual and the free democratic institutions which Americans hold so dear, soon disappear. The Gate City Journal ■ L A S S V. P O W K I.L r T t _ TH E NYSSA G A TE C IT Y JO U R N A L TH U R SD A Y, OCTOBFRJ^ J042 at Nyssa. Malheur County, Oregon. at Nyssa, Oregon for transmission Malla, as second class matter, under of March 3, 1879 F O U R C EN TS A N D LIB E R TY By Dean Kenneth E. Olson Medill School o f Journalism Northwestern University You lay down three or four cents for home town newspaper as a matter o f habit, expecting it to bring you the latest information from all over the world and never give a thought to how important this press is to you or your family. You never stop to think how much liberty and happiness is bound up in the fact that you can read this kind o f a newspaper; you never stop to real ire that today only in the’ United States and some {»arts o f the British empire can men and women read the news o f their neighbors and o f the world without the blighting touch of governmental control Should von be denied that right you would soon realize that more and worse would be coming. ^ ou would know that soon your spare time would not be your own. that at any time you could be called out to a party meeting or to a parade before the local or national ruler, with terriffic penalties imposed if you failed to obey that summons. You would know that you could no longer swap ideas with your neighbor without letting yourself in for trouble with the seret police. You would know that you At The National Capital •he Civic club, i Play ' t »ad breaks in <J,e “ °kpu" m “* tables, F, ur long M o n U d to lo express « p r a . one s of 01 U» - 1 » » *■ » • local firm? Telephone us and we will call on you with samples ad catalogues. r r z y “ ,n , O e ..t^ r e .M QUICK RELIEF FROM STOMACH ULCERS EXCESS ACID .1-* / yr r% W - ; m m k We are now showing a beautiful line of Wool Goods for the ho- >,* -i, me Dressmaker. 54 inch Herring- , »* w bone, Airblue, dark green, navy, wine, brown and red. I W hy order from a traveling salesman when you can patronize a the V w” ,d“ ‘ O F F IC E S U P P LIE S sxver.tv-shmer.: ay ( u s c i f ia itis- i » four seasons of the year_ — « • • « - j s i i n i - ««.& » — » . . », ranged in the Home Economics E S T from the Ontario goaloi Uie fightevu oTthe Tlgen, that ust room. Guests and Civic club mem the Idaho team the guccedtng «core» - kept at low ebb . Lne handed _ _ throughout the four quarters bers enjoyed a lavish display I first score of the game when On- food served cafeteria style. forced to kick from was ; tarlo Mrs. Ed Frost, Civic club prysi-1 close against the end aone with Club W ill M eet— The J u s t- A -M e re club will meet dent, spoke a brief word- of wel the result the kick was blocked come to both old and new in a for the Nampa touchdown. From at the home o f M rs D ale G a rri series of games arranged by the then the Idaho team put up a son. Friday. O ctober 2. program chairman, Mrs_ Greenlee. strong defensive game that wait Mr. Parr received wide acclaim as ed for the breaks and turned a football player. The way he hand them In to scores. Ontario never les the pigskin in a spinner play could get rolling offensively and Symptoms of Distress Arising frean is really something ta watch! .The did not make a first down until -Gathering of Nuts" was an easy the final quarter. This was nul- task for Mr. Young, and Mrs. Butler Xfied a short time later when a d u e t o was champion "feather pusher” of Nampa back intercepted an On- FreeBoekTeMs e f Hama Truatmwat that the evening. ario pass and turned It Into the Mast Help e r it WM Cast Yaw Net*lag Orertwo ell 11 too baulas of Uto WI1XARI.' inal score of the game. TRE ATM E N T hersbeea eoM h ajiM Pef Ontario's eleven showed possl- ■ymptoms o f diet»— a k b i a s w t e s a W i * N A M P A DEFEATS ilities of trength with added ex ¿<1 M e a l UM b da. tokJ-etoJUM- O N TA R IO TIGERS perience despite the one-sided ¡* fr 5 »F ’t25t to asce Ontario, Oct. 1 (Special) A can core. The team will be In ex due ’ «kick felly Ask for cellent shapie for thq breather tankerous punt that rolled dead expíelas tkis I rovided by the Jamboree Friday urithln a inches of the Ontario NYSSA PH ARM ACY gjal line ln the opening minutes light and should be a much Nyssa, Oregon. of piay set ^ tempo for a series stringer and more versatile team | of exultation over the achievements reported there. I f quick delivery of good ships Is contribution to winning the wwr the people of the By John W K c O t Portland-Vancouver area may take Orvgc»n still leads the nation in patriotic pride in what has been speed of building steel ships The accomplished. Oregon Shipbuilding Ctorp heed Plywood for airplanes is steadily, ed by Edgar Kaiser, son of the famous Pacific coast builder, has growing in favor despite an ele ment cf opposition largely based not only made the greatest reccrd upon Ignorance and it is reported : in speed of delivery of individual ships but. what is mere important that at least part of the Kaiser- has the lowest average time by a Hughes cargo plane trial order will be built from plywood. If ply- j j substantial margin of all the wvod proves acceptable in these yards in the United States accord huge flying box-cars, with their ing to the last report issued by seven motors and twin hulls, it i the maritime commission The Oregon corporation's aver w.-uld appear that a new field is age record, aor. rd-.rg to the latest opening for an already fast grow ing Oregon industry official statement, is 503 days from Douglas fir as the wood for such laying of keel to delivery. Calif purposes is liking stronger posi ornia Shipbuilding Corp. at Los No« only cutting ve Angeles, had the neat lowest record tion daily of *13 days. Kaiser interests in neer in Oregon but converting this dicate that they expect to bring j into a finished plywwd sheet is their Oregoti yard down to an av also gaining ground. When the demand for plywood in airplane erage of 30 days. After the tre- menrous effort made toget steel construction first was felt in the national capital there was about shipbuilding set up K a large way in the Portland-Vancouver 1 as diversity of expert opinion as area those who worked » long and ] when Hitler invaded Russia As to qtmnUty that might be needed, the hard on the program feel a sense feigners ranged from 7300.000 feet menthly up to 50 000.000 At las: the so-called experts settled down to the minunum figure, while the airplane industry a California alone was caLag few 10.000.000 feet a m.-nth Wher. :t became apparent tha* a heavy call would be nmde cm ply wood sources for airplanes the kind Of wood Which could be used be came a snarl Preference was ex pressed by the military few ma- \N e represent the largest office supply houses in the northwest, and Sogany. bat it was quickly learn ed that there was no mahoganv h variable So mahogany was out ¡Another departmfe: wanted birch’ are in a position to furnish you with anything in that line, except patent cw mapie but the supply of this i | was s m .. sr.; was found that ! * * Brtssh through knd-iease. had . ed forms, on short notice. ¡ 1 strangle haid or. svstiabie swp- Then southern gum jg rel- iow poplar was urged, but met with W e cam ' some office supply stocks in our office and get other many objections. D.-ugMs fir -.her came ta. but had m ran file gstmt- supplies within three or four days. k t of d a c tc a je s e a t tciaf actual 1 s i t o o k the experts loose &>»r?rs=ag piywood pecpCe of the midwest and east entered the The argued that a P ut- 2 e proper proeed- L^fc-^f' n Priced per yard $2.19 * Other woolen»— 54 inch $1.98 S i Fine vale Corduroy. In all new colors. 36 inches $1.10. New Plaid Shirts $1.08 to $4.50 New Sweaters, coat style, slipover, long sleeves, shor. sleeves. 15 col ors to select from. Boyer Bros. Ontario, Oregon Adding Machine Tapes ? Large IVnniaon Clasp and Ribbons Envelopes SUPPOSE YOU FUCKED THIS SWIT0M ¿ ^ Typewriter ribbons Rubber Stamps ( Calender Pads I t * Timekeepers” books Farmers Simplified and noíhiñg happehéd Chair cushions Rook keeping Systems $ f T Mimeograph Paper PT*» k. TKwvNw m b • Economic Check Rooks Saies Pads t ¿ T « * ’ • Carbon paper * Scratch Pads GATE CITY JOURNAL « S c*eep. Tha m T W ivib u sb 5 .'- = . 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