Nyssa gate city journal. (Nyssa, Or.) 1937-199?, September 21, 1944, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3

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    THE NYSSA GATE CITY JOURNAL TH U R S D A Y SEPTEMBER 21, 19 44
Sept. 14. 1944.
A. L. Fletcher. Administrator
Estate ot Brady O. Fowler, de-
ceased.
Classified
Our Boys
Advertising
RATES: Two cenu per word lo r esch Issue Minimum cash In
advance Is 30c.
iY iio t~ L L .L A N E .O U S
For Sale
FO R S A L E - Four-year-old milking
shorthorn
bull,
Wilson, route
registered.
C.
W.
1, Nyssa, Kingman
Kolony.
14S2xp
F O R SALE—Flour and feed mill.
Owner retiring from business. P. M.
Warren.
7S4xp
W ANTE D — Registered spotted boar.
Cecil Evans.
7S3i:p
FO R SALE— House, 3 rooms and
bath, garage, full basement. 2 lots.
$2150.00 Terms. 3 room house, part­
ly modern, 3 lots $1200.00.
Bernard Eastman.
17Atfc
FO R SALE—One new modern ho­
use, $5000. Two $2100 modern hou­
ses, four rooms with bath. Pour 10-
acre tracts in Apple valley, $2700
and $5500. Several good buys on
40's, $3500 to $12.000, modern hou­
ses. One 80, modem house, excellent
improvements, $11,000.
21STFC
A. L. Atkeson
For TRADE
Professional And
Business Directory
OPTO M ETRISTS
DR J. A. M cFAl.l
DENTTSTS
DR. E. D. NORCOTT
“«w
M iF a ll m d
4 »
S / lt r r '
Wilson Building
to
extraction
and denture construction.
EYESIGHT SPECIALIST
J. R. CUN DAI-I,
Dentist
O N TA R IO
L
Phvslrlan and Surgeon
PAULUS
JEWELRY STORE
Phone 17
Hours' 16 to 12 and I to 5
OaUy- Except Sunday
Fry Building
Official Time Inspector for
Union Pacific
ONTARIO
OREGON
>
A. Maulding, M.D.
JE W E LR Y STORES
WYCKOFF
JEWELRY STORE
Il
OREOON
PH YSIC IAN S
Phone 56-J
Sarazin Clink1
NYSSA
OREGON
Union Pacific Time Inspector
JEW ELRY — DIAMONDS
WATCHES
Main Street at Second
S?
Mis.
inn
II
Jesse M. Chase
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
W ANTED—Used furniture. Highest
prices paid. Phone 149W. Nyssa N O TIC E hereby is given to the
Furniture Co.
1ATF( creditors and all other persons in­
terested in the estate of Brady O.
WE P A Y H IG HEST PRICES foi Fowler, late of Payette. Idaho, de­
live fox feed horses Phone 8 Pay­ ceased; that the undersigned has
ette.
27Ntfc been appointed Administrator of
the estate of Brady O. Fowler and
BUTCHERING
Custom butchering every Monday has p ua'lfiei as such.
All person having claims against
and Friday. Beef, sheep and pork.
Sanitary
butchprtng
guaranteed. said estate are hereby notified and
Phone 05R1. Please bring stock required to present same with the
Sunday evening or Thursday even­ proper vouchers duly verified with­
ing. All stock must be in by 12. in six months o f the date o f the
noon, on butchering day. One mile first publication of this notice
which date ts September 14, 1944, to
west o f Nyssa on Alberta Ave.
the undersigned Administrator at
Jake Fischer.
his office in Ny-sn, Oregon, which
P A IN T IN G AN D P A P E R H AN G ­ place is hereby designated as the
IN G — H. J. Holmes, 283 Third st­ place for the transaction of all bus­
reet.
14S3xp iness pertaining to said estate.
limited
Prepared by OFFICE OF WAR INFORMATION
SARAZ1N CLIN IC
J. ,1. Sarazin, M. D.
David Malonel U.S.M.C., writes
that hp is on
on his wnv overseas
his way overseas
again.
He was heard from the
coast of Canada.
^ n o T iJ r “
« c Z , for s'uch’ f T ° f
Manpower Comm-
DUt now tnere s no excu3e Ior such isslon, reported last week. Men
a deficiency, because the War Pood wounded in battle must have ade-
Administration estimates that this quate care ::o matter how quickly
years onion crop will be 45 percent the war ends, he pointed out in de-
above the 10-year average, 1933-42. plorlng the fact that nurse recruit-
Harold H Rookstqol, S.F. 2-c, Is
For satisfactory home storage select. incut
ment imu
had siowcti
slowed up
along witn
with a
a
up along
home on leave.
He is reniirinir
on h
is 1 BOOd fUlly dned 0nlOnS’ keep ln 3 mowing belief that the European
and painting the buildings s on
his
well-ventilated, dry place in temp- war ^ about over. The WMC ch-
ranch near Adrian.
eratures as near to freezing as poss­ airman urged Inactive nurses, es­
ible without freezing. Onions store
Robert R. Brown, S 1-c, Is home satisfactorily at temperatures from pecially ln outlying communities, to
return to nursing duty.
on a 21-day leave. 'His ship is
32 to 55 degrees. Pantry or attic j P R O TE C T A G A IN S T GRASSHOP-
in dry dock for repairs.
usuaily is superior to cellar. Never PERS
pack onions closely in a closed con­
Farmers can protect Fill-planted
Sgt. Cecil Benson has been sent tainer. Spreading on a screen placed
bark to India. While big game hunt­ overhead in a garage or back porch grain crops against serious grass­
ing he bagged two deer and took is good if temperatures remain ab­ hopper damage by baiting edges ot
stubble fields, pastures, fense rows
several shots at a tiger.
ove freezing. Good quality onions and other grasshoppers feeding and
will keep several weeks under ordin­
T-Sgt. Gordon Aspengren, former ary room temperatures at this time breeding grounds, the Department
of Agriculture says. Fall baiting will
Nyssa school teacher, has written of the year.
to Rev. M. H. Greenlee, stating T O HOLD DOW N FO O TB ALL T R ­ reduce the numbers of grasshoppers
and damage to crops next Spring
that he is engaged in the anti­ AVEL
Western and Midwestern farmers
aircraft defense of England.
To restrict football travel, football can get enough grasshopper bait
“ I just want to say hello and team managers have been requested
cheerio to you and your family ad by the Office of Defense Transport­ for their farms from their county
my other friends at Nyssa and to ation to confine sale and distribut­ agricultural agents. Bait Is supplied
wish ou well and hope that you are ion of tickets to residents of local free by USDA.
all keeping busy and well,” Sgt. areas of cities or town In which ga­ HOG C E IL IN G T O S T A Y UP
Celling prices on live hogs will
Aspengren said.
mes are to be played. The O D T also
"Conditions over here are very has. asked faotbqll teams in travel­ not be reduced from present levels
tood. I'm keeping busy, eating like ing by train to ¡tee coach accomm­ before June 30. 1945. O PA and WFA
a horse and feeling fit. Can’t tell odations wherever possible and to have announced. Present ceilings
you much about what we are doing make Pullman reservations no earl- are $14.75 a hundred pounds, Chic­
for hogs weighing 240
except that we are engaged in the ier than the day before departure. ago basis,
or less and >14 a hundreci,
anti-aircraft defense of England
G O ON TO SCHOOL, G I S AD - Chicago basis, for hogs weighing
rnd doing a good job of it. Can VISE
more than 240 pounds. W FA also
also tell you that I have seen the
The G Is overseas who are using sa[d
support price of $12.50 a
flying bom'os and that occasionally their
ir.ir spare
enara
Hmo
tn
“
/»roclr
Hi
oi
r
.
.
__ .
.
.
.
time to “crack their . hundred,
Chicago basis, for “ good
there is quite a bit of excitement
school tooks" ln the hope of Impr­ to choice” butcher hogs weighing
hereabouts.
oving their possibilities when they
"O f more interest to you Is a i return to civilian life, advise the 200 to 240 pounds, effective October
1, will be continued until June 30,
visit I made recently, which I am I
boys and girls back home to keep 1945.
allowed to talk about. That was to j
on with their schooling/ As Cpl. D ANISH AD VERTISER IS O P T I­
the city o f London.
Surely was
Kerm it Greason of Atwood, Kansas,
M IS T IC
thrilled to see so many o f the
put it—"Any boy who’s In high
The Danish Information Service
places I had read about. St. Paul’s 1
school now had better finish right
cathedral was very impressive. The , away Bpcause lf he doesn-t finish reports the following advertisement
mosaic work In the celling of the | fceforp
drafted, or
he that appeared recently ln a Copen­
hagen newspaper—"Apartment of
huge dome is extraordinaryliy beau- ; takes
tlful. As a place of worship, though
“ 1
„ f J ! three rooms and bath wanted at the
I get the same Impression I got in j1
*
1 ’ T h 1 8
f
8
end of the war, not later than Oct-
too.
ober 1st’
the cathedral of St. John the Di­
FISH ERM EN
WOULD
SCOTCH
ROUND -U P
vine in Nek York. The place Is
DO T H IS
The Department of Agriculture
just too huge. Naturally, I was
Trust a Scotchman to make three says—Butter supplies for civilians
interested in seeing and hearing
.
. .
,
..
. ___ fish grow where one grew before
Big Bend, and n seeing the tower and
he)p ,n thp war[lmp food for the last half of this year are
estimated to be 4 percent smaller
o
-o on,
uc lg am P3 a <*•
* program. By putting sodium nitrate
than in the same period last year
I fatear sm'anv Hyde park and. of and phosphates
___
ln fresh water lakes and the smallest for this period ln
| course, . Westminister Abbey, where ,n
tQ ltKTea3e suppUes of
more than 50 years. Civilians supp­
l spent some time among the grave
marine vegetation on which fish lies of fiesh fruit, frozen fruit and
stones of the literary, musical,
feed. It has been possible to Incr­ canned fruit Juice are substantially
scientific and politically great en
ease production i f some fish by 300 larger this season than last, but
of the past.”
__________________
percent, the Department of Comm- supplies of canned and dried fruits
_. . _
.
____
.
.
erce reports. Use of fertilizer has are smaller A few weeks more of
Lieut. Frank Morgan, Jr., has
. . .
.
. ,
been carried out on an experimental favorable weather will give this
'>een transferred from Portland to
basis.
country the largest volume of crops
the army air base at Moses Lake
HOME ACCIDENTS OUT M AN-
It has ever produced.
Washington, where he will be ln
POW ER
charge o f a radio control tower.
The Federal Security Administr­
ation is seeking public cooperation
Word has been received by Mrs.
E.W. PRUYN
in a campaign to reduce accidents
Max Swensen, that her brother
that reduce needed manpower for
Second Lieut. Elsworth E. Wheel-
war work. Home accidents last
»r, who pilots a plane, has re­
Auto Repairing
year killed 6.000 workers and Injur­
ceived the highest rating in the
ed 900,000 seriously enough to cause
aerial gunnery, his score being 48 5.
Reboring, Valve Grind­
loss o f one or more days of w o rk -
He Is stationed at William Field,
ing,
Lathe work. Parte
much of It vital to the war effort.
Arizona.
Home accidents ln 1943 killed 32,500
and accessories
Americans, Including the 6,000 wor­
kers. Falls accounted for two-thirds
o f the fatal home accidents. One-
Phone 56w
fourth occurred on stairways. Burns
bBtnncí ááSf t í i M Estate
and poisonings were next to falls
i
Bernard Eastman
Phone 84
OREGON
NYHNA
Serving
5
General practice o f medicine
X -ray
Physiotherapy
SHOE SHOPS
Abbott’* Shoa Shop
All kinds o f shoe and harness
repairing.
Acroas from port office.
Parts
Orders Shipped Immediately
Me Cluer-Manser
Phone 48
The Harvest
Payette, Idaho
F. A.
.,i.,ier,
Mrs. E.
H. acted business ln Weiser, Saturday.
Erumbicn, Mrs. R. L. Haworth and | A 'ar* e number from here at-
Mrs. Joe Brumbach attended the j tended the Oirl Scout plays ln Ad-
Book club meeting at the home r*an Friday evening. Several o f the
of Mrs. Frank Morgan near Nys- Bend girls had parts.
Members of Wade P.T.A. held
'sa, Saturday afternoon.
Mrs. M.
l . Judd reviewed
“ Long, Long their first meeting at the school
Ago" by Woolcot.
I house Friday afternoon with all
Mrs. Dyre Roberts went to Boise officers and several members pres-
Tliursday to enter the hospital tor ent. Mrs. Thomas o f Osage, K an -
an operation.
m s . was a guest. Mrs. Very Blsh-
Mrs. L. Eachus «tu rn e d home op Is president; Mrs. Darrell Eng-
Monday from a two weeks visit llsh. vice president, and Mrs.. F A .
The
with her son, Claude, and family > Miller, secretary-treasurer.
October meeting will be held at
at Ridgeview
Irma and Velma Skelton of Ros­ the home o f Mrs. English with Mrs.
well were overnight guests of their Harvey Bennett assistant hostess.
aunt, Mrs. Joe Brock, last Sunday
Have Weiner Roast—
night.
Mrs. Frank Graham and sons,
Little Barbara Brown Is con­
fined to her home with an attack Eugene and John Fredrick, en­
joyed a weiner roast Sunday after­
of mumps.
Forty-one pupils are enrolled noon at the outdoor fireplace and
at Wade school, the largest num­ patio at the D. O. Bybee residence
ber for several years.
Mr. and Miss Betty Fife was also a guest.
Is there something about your car that
Gets Your “Nanny”?
Automobiles are just like people-they have
to see the doctor once in awhile. Bring your car
to us. Our experience may enable us to pre­
scribe a remedy for your car’s trouble.
Towne’s Garage
Administrator’s
Sale
1 mile North and 3 miles West of Nyssa on Colum­
bia Avenue.
Monday, Sept. 25
SALE STA R TS A T 1:00 P.M.
Lunch Served On The Grounds.
2
Horses
2
1 Team of Bay geldings, 6 and 7 yrs. old, W t. 3000
lbs.; good workers.
20
Cattle
20
•
1 Jersey cow, Half-a-Pint, 7 yr3. old, giving 4 gal.
1 Jersey cow, Betsy, 4 yrs. old, Heavy Springer.
1 Jer. & Hereford Cow, White face, 5 yrs old, Hea­
vy Springer.
1 Jersey cow, Mossy, 3 yrs. old, Heavy Springer
1 Jersey cow, Blondie, 5 yrs. old, giving 3 gal.
1 Jersey cow, Clara Belle, 5 yrs. old, giving 3 gal.
1 Jersey cow, Holstein, 4 yrs. old, giving 2V> gal.
1 Jersey cow, Blackie, 3 yrs. old, giving 3 gal.
1 Jersey cow, Heifer, 3 yrs. old, Heavy Springer.
1 Jersey cow, Curly, 4 yrs. old, giving 3 gal.
1 Jersey cow, Susie, 3 yrs old, Heavy Springer.
1 Jersey cow, Sugar, 4 yrs. old, giving 2 gal.
5 Jersey heifers, long yearlings, Bred.
1 Jersey Bull, 8 mos., Sired by the Beaumont herd.
1 Jersey Bull, 5 yrs. old, sired by the Christensen
herd at North Powder.
This herd is T.B. and abortion tested. I f you need
good daily cows, see this herd before sale date.
Machinery
1 John Deere 2 horse disc.
1 Valley mound corrugator.
1 Deering mower.
1 McCormick Deering hay rake.
1 Wagon and rack.
1 2 way plow.
1 Land float.
Cable & pulleys for derrick.
3 Hay slips 8’ x 16’.
2 A type hog houses.
10 Hog panels.
1 Brooder house 8’ x 10’.
1 Small brooder, used electric bulbs.
1 Melotte cream separator.
6 10 gal. milk cans, strainer and pails.
1 Set work harness and collars.
1 Roll hog wire.
International Electric fencer.
Forks, shovels and other small articles.
Miscellaneous
Countie?
From the Largest Stock of
Genuine
Mrs. Charles W itty are the teacheis.
E. H B;umi,-ch and Joe trans-
B ig B e n d
(Continued From Page 1)
V IC T O R Y FLEET DAY. SEPT. 27 n order of severity. The yard and
Italy.
Americans will do honor on Vict­
Standards for the badge are high. ory Fleet Day. next Wednesday, he kitchen each was the scene of
The decoration, which was recen t ly jSeptember 27,"to th . ship o^ rato m on e-fifth of the home accidents
authorized by the war department.; who have helped w
the Un,ted deaths.
is awarded to the Infantry soldier s ta tÄ one o f the highest and most TO U G H
ON B LAC K M A R K E T
" LÜ,“ .P
fighting ability'
restlng slandards o{ Uvlng ln "G A S "
ln combat.
the world. The food that brightens
The new "A " basic gasoline ration
„
I the Americans' dining tables Must-1 hniiir« to h»
Pic Roscoe Bramon. son of Mrs rates the worla. wide activities of
* * ‘“ Ued * ° o n outslde the
FIN E CARS
Emil Frank, writes that he is fight- American ship operators. Merchant 17 East Coast States are go ng to
¡lng
in
the
European
war
threater.
1941 Ford super del. tudor
ships bring in coftee from C entral, * * hard on the black market la two
| 1941 Ford del. 4-D Mercury motor.
and South America and A ra b ia --! ways, the O PA sajs. They are pr-
Pvt Garland Ward, son of Mr
cocoa from South
America and inted on a new type ot government
1941 Mercury 4-D Town Bed.
and Mrs George B. Ward, was giv-
on a nartv Firdav evening bv the West Airlca" sPlces irom Ceylon, safety paper almost impassible for
1941 Nash "600" 4-D Sed.
young
folk!
He He left
1* ' Netherlands
“
Indles-
da" counterfeiters to duplicate, and each
1910 Ford del. 4-D sed.
joung
touts of Lincoln
Lincoln.
left T o r ' ™ for
va Burma
and
A m erlca-
book and all coupons U contains
Misslssippi,
where
he
will
further
1939 Plymouth del. 4-D sed.
Bananas from the "Banana Repub­ will carry a serial number. With
nis army training.
lics ” Cuba and Mexico—ginger fr ­ the combination o f the serial num­
1936 Ford del. coupe.
om the Ivory Coast, India and Jam-
1935 Chev. master 4-D sed.»
Leslie Pennington, who his been ica—Pineapples from Hawaii, Mex­ ber and the motorist's endorsement
of his own state and automobile lic­
Several other early and late mod­ employed at LaGrande the past
ico and Cuba.
summer was called by the naval of- G ASO LINE S IT U A T IO N IS T IG H T ense number it will be much easier
els.
for O PA to trace stolen coupons.
ticials to report for training last
1 - 7 x 12 House trailer.
The average civilian motorist sh­ The serial number enables a coupon
week.
ould expect no increase in his gas- to be traced from the plant that pr­
1 - 2 wheel steel trailer.
. . .
. oline ration for the next several inted it to the person to whom it
Clyde
Hainline,
son
of
Mr
and
monthS,
at least not before the end
Sell your car here for
Mrs Orien Hainline, will attend pet- of the war with Germany, the was issued. The endorsement makes
TH E BEST DEAL
ty officers school ln San Francisco o ffic e of Price Admlnistration saya It possible to trace an illegal coupon
to the person who put it In circul­
r h n n m ill R n
/\ a
1
Behind the postoffice
then
will be assigned I to
a ship.
Civilian stocks of gasoline built up ation. Authorities recently arrested
1 block west of the Bank
! _ .
~
. . .
I last winter have been greatly re- four alleged counterfeiters in New
Sgt. C.aude Rookstool had a very duced desplte increased imports and
A R T BURSON
manager
York and seized equipment ready
(pleasant experience when he m e tjrecord domestlc productlon. civilian
to print five million counterfeit gas­
O N T A R IO
PHONE 137 ( his cousin, Cpl. Floyd Kimberling grade gasoline stocks have decreas- oline coupons.
. of Long Beach. California, who Is ed approximately two million barr-
A R M Y NEEDS NURSES IM M ED ­
• stationed ln England.
This w as! eU ln 30 days
IA T E L Y
their
first
meeting
since
they
had
i
O
N
IO
N
S
GALORE,
T
H
IS
YEA
R
L e g a l A d v e r t is e m e n t
The Army needs 4,000 nurses Im­
.gone
Into
service.
|
your
hamburger
sandwich
i =
----- — -----
y our namDurger sanawirn may
mediately, Paul V. McNutt, Chalr-
NOTICE OF FINAL HEARING
N O TIC E IS HEREBY GIVEN, T h ­
T O TR AD E —Boy’s bicycle /or a at Ewell Chard, Administrator ol
girl’s bicycle. Verna Beutler. Phone the estate o i Charles Robert Mett-
102.
14S2xp len. deceased, has tiled in the Co­
unty Court of Malheur County, O r­
WANTED
egon, his lirst and final account of
ills administration, and that Sat­
W A N TE D —Someone for part-time
urday September 23rd 1944, at the
housework. Phone 82.
14S2XC
hour of 11 o'clock A. M. and the
W A N TE D —Good used bicycle, rea­ County Court Room in Vale, Ore­
sonable. W rite box 287, Adrian. gon, have been fixed by the Court
21S2xp as the time and place lor the hear­
ing of said account and any object­
W A N TE D —Rummage
and
white j ions thereto, when and where any
elephants for American Legion aux­ person interested in said estate may
iliary sale, to be held Saturday, Nov. appear and file written obections
4. H alf of all proceeds will go to thereto and be heard thereon. Said
Nyssa hospital. Anyone having don­ account is for final settlement and
ations contact Mrs Bert Adams be- { upon approval thereof, said estate
tween September 16 and Septem­ will be clased and the administrator
ber 23.
14S2xc discharged.
August 24 1 944.
W A N TE D —Baled hay. See H. van
Ewen Chard Administrator
Egmond. Boise Payette Lumber yard
Estate of Charles Robert Mettlen
or phone 255-M, Ontario, evenings.
Deceased.
17ATFC
Practice
TOWN and PARH <
in WARTIME
&
PAGE THREE
Rush
Has increased your public liability. Let us
automatically protect your activities everywhere
Frank T. Morgan
3 doz. New Hampshire pullets.
4 Doz. white Leghorn hens.
10 Tons o f 1st. cutting A lfa lfa Hay.
6 Acres o f standing com, to be sold in field.
TERMS------CASH
Mrs. Myrtle Bartholoma,
Owner
Col. Bert Anderson, Auct.
L. H. Fritte, clerk