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About Nyssa gate city journal. (Nyssa, Or.) 1937-199? | View Entire Issue (March 23, 1944)
M Big Bend bach home. Ben Taylor of Hammett vislt- T h e ir B a ttle s Ô O Y ears A p a rt The Jolly Jane.s will meet Thurs- vd hi» sister, Mrs. N. S. Phelan day with plan to Mrs. H. R. spend the Hatch and | Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Nielsen and sewing Mrs. Dyre Roberts went to Ontar time for the Red Cross. Carl Eachus. who has been In io Wednesday to return completed the navy for the post two years and Red Cross articles and to procure in active service outside the United a new supply. States for 17 months, spent a Mr. and Mrs. Walter Hickman couple of days of his furlough vis and their houseguest, Mrs. W. iting his aunt, Mrs. L. Eachus, and other friends in Bend and his j Hickman, o f California and M r sister and other friends in Ad-1 and Mrs. Cleo Tucker of Wilder, rian. He was accompanied by his I were Sunday guests of Mr. and friend, Neil Fraser, who is locat Mrs. Veri Bishop. Mrs. William Fretwell, who was ed at Oowen Field, Boise. Bend friends have received a 11 patient at a nursing home In letter from Myron Brown, who left | Nyssa, was brought home in an this community over 20 years ago ambulance during the week. His parents, Mr. and Mrs. Tom Mrs N - Phelan and Mrs. Orov- Brown, were among pioneers who er Lee went to Nampa Friday and helped build this community. M y were overnight guests in the Kyle ron writes he has been In the 11.117 Altizer home. They went to Ham for the past 18 months and is a mett and were Sunday guests in motor machinist’s mate, second 1 the Ben Taylor home, class. He asked to be remembered! Clifton Nielsen o f Klamath Falls to all fellow students o f school' returned home to help his parents district 46 Mr and Mrs. Ed Nielsen, on the Mr. and Mrs. Dyre Roberts a n d , ranch, children were Sunday guests of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Hln- terllder In Nampa. On the way home the little girls were overcome M r and Mrs Frank Savage have by gas and were quite ill for a couple c f hours but are completely moved to their home in Nyssa wh- ish they recently purchased. Mr recovered now. mi Mrs. Mabel Roton, Free Metho and Mrs Emery Elliott and family dist minister of Wilder, called on are now living on the Savage farm, which they purchased. Bend friends Monday. Mr and Mrs E. L. Jamison o f N y Mr. and Mrs. Hinterlider and Mrs. Douglas of Nampa were call ssa visited at the Willis Bertram ers at the Roberts home Monday home Thursday. Alva Goodell was In Boise Thur evening. Mrs. Della Bunnell, who spent sday. Mrs George Cleaver, Mrs Glenn the past 10 days in the Bishop home in Nyssa, returned home Hoffmah and Mrs Alva Goodell attended H.E.C. at the Coral Hun Sunday. Mrs. John Bishop and children ting home, M r and Mrs J. W. Jennings were were Sunday guests in the Brum- Buena V is ta f e s BY U r SING 2 U. S. Marina Corps Pho:o Eighty year* separate the dates of battles in which Theodore A. Penland, 99, of Portland, Ore„ and his grandson, Pfc. Floyd M. Penland, 20, of Waynesboro, Va„ fought. When the elder Penland heard that his grandson, a U. 8. Marine wounded at Tarawa, was in a hospital, he boarded piano to visit the youth. The Civil W ar veteran’s father was killed at Bull Rah. a Tttis ts CONSTRUCTION COM ds T M ANUFACTURERS Mp* N PH O N E 4 7 3 6 FOR ESTIM A TES fo r A l B a r t l e t t r a n e r r a n d s w e stin g h o u s e , G eorge FOUNDER OF A GREAT INDUSTRIAL ■ CONCERN........... N 5 0 YEARS WITH W e STINGHOUSE ONLY’1 AN INJURY BROKE HIS PERFECT 3 a tten d an c e record Q t 6 5 HE IS GROUP LEADER OF ,15 W ORKM EN.».. CONCRETE & CINDER c ,o * C l* * OPPOSITE FAIRGROUNDS ON ORCHARD AYE. [Jr is 1 I y BOISE, IDAHO E V E N IN G PHONE 4 I 4 5 J If you are going to really do Spring Cleaning You should have new linoleum and wallpaper. We recently received more than a ton of lino leum in rugs and yardage. W e have a big selection of wallpaper. Good line o f baby buggies. rssa Furn. Co. Help Us SERVE YOU BETTER You, too, can help in the essential work of the dry cleaner this Spring by doing those little th ings which can be taken care of easily . . rem oving buckles and buttons from your garments, using the cash and cany system, bringing a ha nger with you when you call for your cleaned clothing. W on’t you do your part? Main’s Cleaners æ pa C i E mi THE NYSSA GATE CITY.JOURNAL THURSDAY MARCH 23, 1944 Q n i 9 a z B artlett THE COMPANY'S of M e r it the organisation of a home nursing! TO BE ORGANIZED Oregon State College—The M alh eur county chairman of the Oeorge R. Hyslop agricultural research memorial committee, Frank T. M or gan, has been invited to a state wide organization luncheon In Por tland April 6 when the drive for the memorial will be formally launched, reports Dr. D. D. Hlll% secretary of the state committee and success or to Professor Hyslop. No solicita tion will be made at the luncheon however. Harry D. Proudfoot. Wasco, state cairman, and Wade Newbegln, P o rtland, chairman of the agriculture committee of the Portland chamber of commerce, are planning to make the luncheon one of the outstand ing events of the year, with Gov ernor Snell and other state and civic officials attending. They report enthusiastic response to the Idea of creating a large fund, the Income from which will be used to perpetuate the work of the late Professor Hyslop, who died sudd enly last summer. The money will be used hugely to finance research scholarship In farm crops. LARGER SALARY FOR NURSE ASKED Vale, Mar. 23--Directors of the ORIGINAL w o r k ; Vale chamber of Commerce adopted ADERSHIP AND, a resolution at a meeting last week LOYALTY. requesting the Malheur county co urt to raise the salary of Mrs. Edna Farris, county health nurse. Mrs fjH / S RECORD OF Farris has received offers of public MUTUAL TRUST, TERM- health nursing positions at salaries WORK AND INTEREST considerably higher than that being paid here. Members of the executive BETWEEN MANAGEMENT board of the Malheur County Public AND LABOR EXEMPLIFIES ONE Health association also requested an Increase In salary at a recent ' o f the goals o f a better A merica . meeting. Her salary is now $160. The matter was taken up at the in Weiser Friday. or municipality. Some of the delay last meeting of the county court S. B. Hoffman will be ditch rider Is due to the fact thaf not all com and it was decided to await the where Jim Savage rode last year. munities have registered engineers return of Commissioner John Med- Jim Ritchie is working at the to prepare estimates o f cost and lln before taking action. Stunz Lumber Company yard in blueprints. Nyssa. POST-WAR PUBLIC PROJECTS SHOWN MORSE FILES FOR SENATOR’S POST Wayne Morse filed his candidacy Public works projects for the today for the republican nomina post-war era In Oregon now repre tion for the seat in the United S t sent an estimated value of $317,000,- ates senate now held by Rufus C. 000. These projects will cover sev Holman. eral years, until private industry Morse, who was on leave as dean has been readjusted to peace-time of the University of Oregon school production. What private industry of law, serving as the public mem will do is largely a secret, for there ber of the war labor board, wrote is a disposition not to discuss plans a dissenting opinion and resigned and thereby notify competators, but when the board bowed to the will It Is assumed that industry can acc of John L. Lewis In the coal case. ount for $200,000,000. Such Is the He has also resigned the deanship. report o f Governor Earl Snell’s Morse is campaigning "against Postwar Readjustment and Devel- Inflation, demands that Industry I opment Commission. be permitted to accumulate reserves As catalogued by the Commission, that will allow post-war re-conver federal projects represent $233,280,- sion to regular production, demands 000 : state projects, $68,920,000; co that government be decentralized, unty projects $13,160,00; city pro opposes spending for "bureaucratic jects $1,370,000. tom-foolery", insists on a more fair Federal projects authorized and I distribution o f the tax load, would tentative include navigation, flood amend the Wagner act to give em control, power, irrigation and graz ployers and workers equal rights, ing. These are the postwar shelf urges that the American fanner be prepared by Congress. State pro relieved from the sovletlzlng dict jects range from immediate const ates of the regulation writers, and ruction to the gradual expansion or rejects Isolationism as a policy bo rehabilitation of existing Institut und to bring on future wars” . ions. Born and reared on a Wisconsin O f Oregon’s 36 counties, 19 have farm, Morse now resides on a small not filed their projects but the 17 farm near Eugene with his wife that have present a formidable sh and three children. ewing. This is also true of the mu nicipalities although only 20 In the HOME NURSING State have listed projects. The ab CLASS PLANNED sentees are studying their problems and attempting to decide what pro The Malheur county chapter of jects are most needed In the county the American Red Cross announces Here's That Car It had lots of endurance till it crashed that pole. Good-bye-No Insurance. That sad little ditty won’t apply to you if you see us now about complete automobile insur ance protection. Frank T. Morgan BYBEE COMPANY #d Tuesday. c l»», in Adrian and Kingman K ol- j WILL CELEBRATE Returns From Portland— ony to held Wednesday evening at | ______ 8 o'clock, March 28 at the high sc- To celebrate the second year of j Homer Didrickson has returned hool building. The place of class 1 a succesatui business, the Bybeel!]011^ from Portland wheie he spent three weeks meeting, hours and days of week , Livestock company plans to hold a . the class Is to be held will be deci barbeque on the sale grounds as Sells Equipment— ded at the meeting. The class will soon as the weather permits. Joe Waud sold most of his farm All persons purchasing cattle or be taught by Mrs Lyman E. Dalton, machinery and equipment at the taking consignments to the yards reglstrqd nurse of the Kingman Bybee Sale yards Saturday and in during the last two years will be tends to move to town. After the Kolony district. honored guests. A horseshoe pitch three children finish school he pl “ I t Is a contribution to the war ing contest, a cowboy program and ans on finding a new location. effort as will be the time of each movies will be featured attractions. The company has spent consid person enrolling for class. Mrs Edna Song Published— Farris, county health nurse said. erable time and money Improving A song In waltz tempo and en the corrals and making several new The boys In the service cannot con titled "Lullaby Song", composed by chutes at the sale yards. Last Sat sider personal desires and our war T. Carol By bee, has been publics ted effort at home should be carried on urday the auction ring pavllUon by Zimmerman Bros. Music com regardless of personal desires. We was filled to near capacity and pany of Clnclnnatti. Ohio, and Is hope there will be a good response sales amounted to 13000. Col. Bui now on sale at several places of Lane is the auctioneer. to the enrollment of this class." business In Nyssa, Nampa and On tario. The song has two verses and CARPENTERS ARE chorus. RESEARCH GROUP NEEDED ON COAST JOURNAL'S SALE CALENDAR An urgent call for Journeyman carpenters, nail-up men and mater One mile west and one mile sou ial handlers from a lumber Industry- situated along the coast has been th of Ontario, the old Herb Stewart given number one priority, accord ranch, or 3-4 mile south of airport. ing to an announcement made by Wednesday, March 29 at 1 p.m. H. L. Arment, manager o f the On This 60-acre farm for private sale. tario office of the United States Horses, cattle, machinery, household goods. Homer Ireland, Bill Duyn, employment service. Needed Immediately to perform Guy Pittard and R. N. Flfer, ow vital war work on the coastal area ners. Col. Bert Anderson, auction project 100 miles from Portland are eer. Lunch served by Boulevard O r 40 full-fledged Journeyman carp ange. enters, plus 200 nail-up men and material handlers. The demand Ls I Monday, March 27. 2 miles west particularly great for carpenters Cairo on Vale highway. Horses, who are highly skilled in their tr cattle, pigs, farm machinery. Fur ade. with apprenticeship and jour niture. Frank McCarty, owner. Bert neyman training behind them. L iv Anderson, auctioneer. ing quarters are available for all workers. LOCAL NEWS DR. C LARA V IA L B IR LE W will be at Graham's Nyssa realty office Saturday, April 8 . Send glasses for repairs or duplication to the residence office at Welser. «ItHllllllllllliHI III lllilll III III 11 III 111 111 III ! 111111111:11 III Ill'l l Attend Meeting— Mrs. H. B. Williams, Mrs. Clyde Didrickson, Mrs. Max Swensen, Mrs. Glendale Salter and Mrs. Clar ence Ricks attended relief society of the L. D. S. church at the home of Mrs. G. L. Brenson In Big Bend. Great News for Asthma Sufferers Fire Destroys Beans— Fire destroyed a large stack of beans on the L. Dalton farm In Newell Heights. Takes Examination— Junior Zamora went to Port land to complete his examination fo r the army air corps. He return- B ern ard E astm an Insurance Real Estate Phone 84 NYSSA OREGON Stop Those A Real Expectorant That Loos ens Thick, Choking Phlegm Bpend 45c today at any good drug store for a bottle of Buckley7* CANADIOL Mixture (triple acting). Tonight at bed time pour yourself a teaspoonful, let it lie on your tongue a moment then swallow slowly. Feel its instant power ful effective action spread through throat, head and bronchial tubes. Starts at once to loosen thick choking phlegm making breathing easier. No claim ls made that Buckley’s la a cure for Chronic Bronchitia or Asthma but sufferers often find Buckley's CANAD IO L Mixture (the largest sell ing cough medicine in all Canada) easea coughing spasms and loosens up that choking phlegm which seema to clog the tubes and makes breathing diffi cult. It helps many to get a better night’s rest. Take good advice — try Buckley’s tonight — satiafaction guar anteed or money back. Nyssa P harm acy Thieves You can avoid loss of time and money through carelessness and rush o f business by using a Wiz Automatic Register the little machine that contains the checks on which you can record in duplicate or triplicate every little transaction that takes place in your store. W e can furnish you with a machine and the checks, either printed or plain. Office Forms Pen Ruled Statements All Kinds of Envelopes Typewriter Paper Gate City Journal