Nyssa gate city journal. (Nyssa, Or.) 1937-199?, March 09, 1944, Page PAGE 4, Image 4

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    THE NYSSA GATE CtTV.JOUKNAL THURSDAY MARCH 9, 1944
PAGE 4
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WAR NEWS
O ILM EAL ALLO C ATIO N
Allocation cl
132,000 tom of
oilmeal for direct distribution dur­
ing March compared with 140,000
tom for February has been an­
nounced by the war food admin­
istration.
Oregon's March allo­
cation of 2.000 tom is approxi­
mately the same as the January
and February quotas.
The oilseed meal on which W FA
directs distribution comes from the
20 per cent which processors are
lequired to set aside from their
production and from meal produc­
ed from midwest soybeam by south­
ern processors under contract with
the CCC. Processors move the bulk
of their production—80 per cent—
through the regular trade chan­
nels.
CRAW LER TRACTORS
Thirty-five new crawler trac­
tors will be spared by the armed
forces for production of food on
Oregon farms during the second
quarter of 1944. The state quota
will be rationed by county and
state AAA committees. As In pre­
vious quarters, the number of ap­
plications is expected to greatly
exceed the quota, making it nec­
essary to place each crawler where
it will make the greatest contri­
bution to 1944 production.
FEED W HEAT ALLOCATION
A feed wheat allocation plan,
aimed at more efficient and equit­
able distribution of Commodity
Credit feed wheat and to carry out
the objective of giving milk cows
and laying hem first priority has
been announced by the war food
administration.
Under the plan,
allocation certificates will' be sup­
plied to eligible purchasers on the
basis of 1943 sales and relative
feed
requirements and supplies
available in this area.
By limiting sales in principal
grain producing areas, it is ex­
pected that Oregon allocations un­
der the program will be adequate
to take care of feeders’ require­
ments in feed importing areas.
The plan also is expected to re­
sult in more prompt filling of or­
ders, and in a larger proportion
of feed wheat being made avail­
able to small dealers and mixers.
m
SUNSET VALLE Y
( III K< II OF THE NAZAKKNE
ASSEMBLY OF GOD CHURCH
E. J. Wilson. Pastor.
H. B. Walkup. Pastor.
At 5th Street and Good Avenue
Sunday school 10 a. m.
A church with a welcome to all.
Morning worship 11 a. m.
Earnest Barker, Sunday School
Evangelistic service 8 p. m.
Superintendent.
Prayer meeting Wednesday eve­
We have a growing Sunday ning 8 p. m.
Everyone cordially Invited to at­
school with classes for all ages.
tend these services.
10 a. m„ Sunday school.
11 a. m., song service with a
FU LL GOSPEL TABERNACLE
dedication service for babies fo l­
Services Conducted By
lowing.
Clinton Brown
7:15 p. m., young people and
Sunday school. 10 A.M.
junior service.
Morning worship, 11 A. M.
Evangelistic service, 8 P.M.
8 p. m., evangelistic service.
Wednesday prayer
and
praise
Friday evening, Bible study.
Everyone cordially invited to at-
service.
Friday noon prayer and fasting I tend these services.
service at the church.
------
L. D. 8. CHURCH
ST. P A U L’S EPISCOPAL
Sunday
9:15
a.m.
Priesthood
M ISSION
meeting.
Tlie Rev. Burton Salter, vicar.
Sunday 10:30 a.m. Sunday school.
Morning prayer and sermon, 9:30
Sunday 7:30 p. m. Sacrament
Holy communion and sermon each meeting.
second Sunday of the month.
Tuesday 2:00 p.m R elief society
Church school at 10:30 a. m.
meeting.
Women's Guild second Wednesday
First Tuesday of each month at
of each month.
4 p.m. Primary for children bet­
ween ages of 4 and 12.
AD RIAN FREE M ETHODIST
CHURCH
T R IN IT Y LUTH ERAN CHURCH
Adrian, Oregon
Parma. Idaho.
P. H. Reiman, Pastor
Morning worship at 10 a. m.
Sunday school 10 a. m.
Sunday school for all age-groups
Our district superintendent will at 11.
preach for us at 11 a. m.
Lutheron hour (Calgary) at 8.
Sunday afternoon will have the
Lutheran hour (Nampa) at 7:35
dedication o f the Adrian Free p. m. Wednesdays.
Methodist church at 3 o'clock with
Wednesdays at 8:15 p. m., spec­
Rev. J. E. Rice of Spokane bring­ ial Lenten services.
ing the message. All welcome.
You are cordially invited to at­
We are also commencing revival tend. "W e preach the Changeless
meetings with Mrs. Mabel Roton Christ for a Changing World.”
of Wilder as our evangelist. These
John E. Simon. Pastor.
will start Monday evening at 8 and
THE C O M M U N ITY UNITED
be held each night for two weeks.
There will also be children's meet­
PR E S B YTE R IAN CHURCH
ings each evening from 4:30 to 5:30.
Kingman Memorial
Songs will be sung and Bible stor­
.1. C. Nevin, Pastor.
For Sunday, March 12.
ies told.
10 a. m. Bible school. Come and
Our motto:
To Spread Scrip
tural
Holiness
Throughout the bring your boys and g^rls.
11 a. m., morning worship. Set'- j
World.
mon: ‘‘Does God Care?” This is
our Loyalty day service with a
NYSSA ASSEMBLY OF GOD
dedication of our pledges for the
Pastor C. A. Slaughter
Sunday school, 9:45 a.m. Alan Ed­ coming year and a re-dedication
monds Superintendent. Every class of our lives in Christian living
welcomes you.
and service.
4 p. m„ Fedelae Amicae meets at
Morning service, 11: o’clock
the parsonage. This is the last
Evengellstlc 8 o'clock.
Prayer
meeting
Thu'sday,
8 meeting of this church year so
o’clock.
let’s have a full attendance.
A cordial welcome to all.
7'30 p. m., evening worship. The
Builders lead our devotions to­
CHURCH OF CHRIST
night. Discussions: Pioneers, "W Jiit
(Christian)
Was Jesus' Life Purpose?''; BuaP
George Whipple, Pastor.
ers: "In the Midst of Devastation
Bible school 10 a. m.
(C hina)’’ ; Adults, “ What We Be­
Morning worship 11 a. m. Ser­ lieve About the D evil)"
mon subject: "Hear the Challenge
Thursday, 8 p. m„ choir practice
of Christ."
at Kingman school.
Communion service each Lord's
Friday — after school — church
day at this hour.
membership class at the parsonage.
WHEAT SUPPLIES
War production through feeding
of record livestock numbers and
Industrial alcohol manufacture has
consumed any stocks of wheat in
the U. S. which might be termed
' surplus", the bureau of agricul­
tural economics reports.
Next July 1 BAE figures that
we will have only about 300 million
bushels of wheat compared with
over 600 million on July 1 in each
of the past two years when the
nation's bins groaned under the
weight of huge carry-overs and the
new harvest. The average carry­ was 243 million bushels.
over for the 10-year period 1932-41
Wheat stocks on January 1 total-
WASTE PAPER
STRAFES N A ZI FRONT LIN ES
D ow n in a fire-spitting sw oop goes the American
dive bomber . . . and your waste paper helps make
it possible. For waste paper makes literally scores
o f products used in planes . . . wraps every re­
placement part . . . every round o f ammunition
tired. Today waste paper is war shortage N o . I.
Bundle it up . . . this week and every week from
now till that victory parade begins!
u.s. v ic t o r y WASTE PAPER campaign
Have your magazines, newspapers ana car­
tons ready for the Boy Scouts and Cubs Satur­
day, March 11.
Gordon’s Drive-in
• BOISE P A Y E T T E says:
Thin y e a r , w h en
good
stretch
w o rld
A llle o ,
to
su p p ly
our
N ORTH LAND
B ra n d S e e d * ( O a a s t
M p le n tifu l 00 I
bo
The Flying Goose Isabel
h u been assurance of
quality for 60 Years!
B0EB M E
LUM BER ( ¥ ) COMPANY
"There's A Yard Near You”
left
for
Cow Hollow
in mon Jello and color It green. I f ose stamps not accepted.
both of these are unaviable there's; FUEL O IL- March 13- Expiration
another alternate. Use unflavored , date of period 3 fuel oil coupons.
home
__________
_____ Utah,
Charles
Durfee of _ Lyman,
gelatine, a bit of green coloring Period 4 c oupons valid Februa^ _ ® who h iT b T en in this vicinity ¡ook-
and either fresh lime or lemon to September 30. Not more th a n , Jng fQr )#nd retui.neu to his home
66 percent of season's rations sh- last weeg Mr. Durfee accompanied
juice-and you have your base.
ould have been used to date.
Mr and Mrs Joseph Callahan from
ST P A T R IC K D A Y SALAD
Utah.
6 pear halves
G ASO LINE
6 maraschino cherries or grapes
1 pk jello
Arrange pear halves in ring mold 10 coupons in A book, 3 gallons [hg Owyhee church in honor of
_______ „ or grapes
__ ... in ________
with . cherries
center. each. Coupons must be endorsed two soldiers, Jesse Haroldson and
W EST OREGON T R A IL Cut side down. Pour lime jello t o ' as soon as received—your protection i oren Moyes, who are home on fur-
lough, and Mr and Mrs Irvin Call­
cover. Allow it to set. Then pour against the black market!
ahan, who have just returned from
Jess Haroldsen, 2nd class petty remaining jello over pears and pl­
T
IR
E
INSPE
C
TIO
N
officer, returned Tuesday to his ace it in refrigerator until ready to
their wedding trip. Games were
" A ” every 6 months (by March played and a lunch was served.
station at Seattle, after spending serve. Serve 6.
an 11-day leave with his parents,
Mrs Jesse Callahan of Burbank,
31. 1944)
Mr. and Mrs. Reuben Haroldsen.
"B " every 4 months (by February California, is visiting her parents,
A friend, Miss Barker, accompanied
Mr and Mrs Isaac L. Cooper, of
28. 1944)
him here on his leave.
Nyssa and Joseph Callahan and
"C
”
every
3
months
(by
February
Mrs Reuben Haroldsen, Jess Har­
family o f this vicinity.
oldsen and Miss Harker spent Mon- I R A T IO N BOOK NO. 3 -(Browni Bt- 28, 1944)
William Moyes has been sick
day visiting in Boise.
I 31" ! “ for P^chase of meats-fats.
“ T ” every 6 months or 5,000 miles the last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Davis and et®->
Mrs Onita Callahan, Mrs Joseph
of driving.
family visited Sunday at Mitchell
March 20-Expiration date of br-
control
Callahan and Ruth Callahan att­
Butte with Mr and Mrs. Harold own stamps Y and Z.
Each weekly ^ PRJOE CONTROL^
ended the wedding shower given
Fivecoat.
, series good for 16 points. ( 8, 5, 2,, Refer price inquiries and comp­
laints to price clerks o f your loc- last Tuesday in Ontario in honor
Orville Cannons and
Sammy
BOOK NO 4-<Processed a! war price and rationing board, of M r, Onita Callahan.
Ridder left Sunday
evening for " A U U H b o o k . n u . a i t - r o t e s s e a _______e_____________________________ ___________________________
Portland on a visit. Sharon Dahl- f“ “ -’
dorf, who has been visiting the! March 20-Expiration date of gr-
past month here with her grand- een
* . L a " d M '»• 5. 2. 1-
mother, Mrs. Walter Benson, r e - , P °int values.)
turned home with them.
! MaV 20-Expiration date of red
Mr and Mrs. Willard Whitman 1 stamps, A 8. B8. C8, D8. E8, and
and daughter, who have been vis­ F8 in ration book No. 4 (meat, but­
iting relatives in Nebraska, return­ ter, fats, cheese, canned milk, ca-
nned fish, oils) Each stsamp has a |
ed home last week with a truck.
Wayne Haroldsen has been trans­ 10-point value. Series A 8, B8 and |
U p it goes in a thunderous roar . . . and your
ferred from San Diego to Chicago, C8 valid now. Series D8, E8, and
waste paper helped to d o it! T h e bombs and
where he is taking a course in F 8. valid on March 12.
May 20-Expiratioii date o f blue !
shells that turned the trick all came to the front
radio mechanics.
stamps A8. B8, C8, D8, and E8 in ¡
in paper wrappings, paper containers, paper p ro ­
tectors. But waste paper is desperately short. Save
ration book No. 4 (processed fruits j
every scrap o f waste paper. Bundle and turn it
%/• ,
r*
I 11;
i
and vegetables, jams and jellies).
in ; : . tb it tvttk and tvtry week!
TICtOry r O O O “ f l i t s All valid now. Each stamp has aj
By I ,eona Anderson
I 10-point value.
O.S. VICTORY
CAMPAIGN
Idaho Power Company
SU G AR
Home Service Advisor
| March 31-Expiration date of su-
-----------------------
| gar stamp 30, Book 4. good for 5 !
Have your magazines, newspapers and ear-
“ST. P A T R IC K D A Y IS HERE- J pounds. Stamp 40. Book 4, valid for I
SERVE A GREEN SALAD "
‘ 5 pounds canning sugar through!
tons ready for the Boy Scouts and Cubs Satur­
To cheer the family on St. Pat- | February 28. 1945.
day, March 11.
rict Day or to serve with a dinner i SHOES
for guests-easy to make and to | stam p No. 18, Book 1, and "Air-
serve is this Moulded Pear Salad, j plane” stamp No. 1, Book 3, valid
I f you can't buy lime jello-use le-1 indefinitely for one pair each. Lo-
Ration Calendar
JAP BASE BLASTED
BY WASTE PAPER
WASTE PAPER
Thompson Oil Co.
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behind that wire!
:
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K in g m a n K o l o n y
&&
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/ é .
ed 810 million bushels, compared
with the all-time record a year
earlier of 1,158 million and the
1935-42 average of 593 million bush­
els.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Moss of
Homedale were visitors at the W.
W. Deffenbaugh home Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Van Metre
and family visited In the A. R.
Case home Sunday.
Mrs. Van
Metre Is Case's daughter.
Mrs. Bruce Plnksten and son of
Bend have been visiting her par­
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Lee Thrasher.
Mr. and Mrs. FYank Tredrick
were in Nyssa Wednesday.
W. W. Deffenbaugh purchased
a team of horses from Sam Shaw
Thursday.
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Vlers and son
Joe of Portland, have purchased
the Highsmith ranch.
The sewing club girls met with
their leader. Mrs. L. Kreager. Sat­
urday.
Refreshments were serv­
ed after the meeting.
The Pollyanna club met last
Wednesday at the William Toomb
home. Visitors were Mrs. White-
ly and Mrs. Goodyear. A hand­
kerchief shower was given for Mrs.
Anderson.
The
next
Pollyanna
meeting will be held at Mrs. Guy
Moore's home April 5.
Mr. and Mrs. D. L. Hurst shop-
| ped In Parma Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs Hugh McConnell
and son were Sunday dinner guests
of Mr. and Mrs. Jim Langely ot
Sunset Valley.
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Shaw were
evening
dinner
guests
at
the
Charles Newblll home Friday
There was a good crowd at the
Thrasher sale. Mr. and Mrs. Lee
Thrasher have bought a home in
Parma.
Mr and Mrs Elmer Sparks were
In Caldwell on business Friday.
Mr and Mrs Ed Wild. Mr. and
Mrs. E. J. Wilson and son and
Ernest Barker and son o f Nyssa
visited at the H. M. Shaw home
Thursday evening.
Mrs Alron Wlmpv o f Nes Perce.
Idaho, and Mrs. Philip Can of
Pocatello, are with their mother.
Mrs. W L Schafer.
Mrs. Fred
her
Pierce, Idaho, Monday.
Mrs. Herbert Shaw was in Nys-
sa Thursday lor an all-day mis­
sionary sewing circle meeting.
The hot lunch program at the
Kingman Kolony school house will
be concluded this week.
Mrs. Arthur Case has been ill.
She is being treated by a doctor
in Caldwell.
.
V
»
V I i
mm
I B i
S
U P P O S F the Red Cross should run out of oper­
ating funds!
in every land . . . no helping hand to do a mother’s
work.
But let’s stop supposing!
Suppose there were no blood centers . . . no plasma
for the wounded . . . Suppose there were no Red Cross
rest homes . . . no bed for your boy when he is fur­
loughed from the front . . . no coffee and doughnuts
at the end of a long march . . . no Red Cross club-
mobiles, no books in the hospitals behind the lines.
There is plasma for the wounded; there are beds
and comfort for boys on furlough from the front;
there are food packages for our men in alien hands,
and many other things to help lessen the burden of
our fighting men, because the Red Cross, backed by
industry, business institutions and 30,000,000 Ameri­
can families, is fully equipped to serve on every front.
Suppose our men in enemy hands received no
weekly food packages . . . suppose they were left to
scrape along, living on alien bread . . . no cheering
mail from home . . . no tie of any kind between
themselves and their loved ones in the land for which
they fought.
But the Red Cross cannot maintain its wonderful
record without you and your money. Every business,
every person gainfully employed must give liberally
to raise the nation's quota of $200,000 000.
You will give gladly when you think of the Ameri­
can boy behind that wire!
Suppose no Red Cross marched beside our men
The RED CROSS is at his side
and the Red Cross is YOU !
CIVE TO THE
+
RED CROSS
I D A H O ¥ P O WE R
A
C I T I ZE N
WHEREVER
IT S E R V E S