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About Nyssa gate city journal. (Nyssa, Or.) 1937-199? | View Entire Issue (Oct. 5, 1944)
THE NYSSA G ATE C IT Y JOURNAL T H U R S D A Y OCTOBER 5, 1944 PAGE 4 served. Prayer meeting was held at the Ralph Barnes home Wednesday evening. The lesson was taken from Galatian’s. Next Wednesday even ing the meeting will be held at the Clyde Latta home. Mrs J. A. Winslow Is enjoying a visit from her son. George Winslow I’U t M ETH O D IST C O M M U N ITY of Bend, Oregon. He will return to CI.UHCH Bend Tuesday. M H Greenlee. Pastor A meeting in the interest of the The Sunday school starts p romt- ly at 10 a. m„ with a helpful de war food program will be held at votional service red by L. E. Rob the home o f Mrs Annie Harris BURCti! II BUS. CHURCH OF C H R IST iChristUn) Gzorge Whipple, Pastor. Bible school at 10 a. m. Morning worship, 11 a. m. Christian Endeavor, 7 p. m. Evening services of the church, bins. Morning worship begins at Thursday afternoon. Mr and Mrs W ill Hammerton and WASHINGTON, D. C., Oct. 5.— 8 p m 11 a. m. The Intermediate, Youth There is a prospect that $2 per j Mid-week service, 8 p. m. Thurs and Young Adult Fellowship meet Don of Cairo were Wednesday call ings start at 7:30 p. m. Evening ers at the Forrest Sayers home. Mr 1,000 feet will be added to the day. worship is at 8 p. m. Starting price of lumber in Oregon and j _ and Mrs J. R. Farley o f Pioneer Washington. Loggers are now Choir practice, 9 p. m.. Ih u rs- Sunday, October 1, the young peo ple’s meetings start at 7 p. m. and visited at the Sayers home Thurs taken from a starting point in day. the evening worship service will day. the morning and conveyed to the begin at 8 p. m. scene of operations in the forest, Lois Halnline and Peggy Terrel FU LL GOSPEL CHURCH returning home the same way. The Lloyd N. Pounds, Pastor were honored at a birthday party ST. P A U L’S EPISCOPAL ride averages, it Is stated, about at the Halnline home Saturday a f Sunday school at 10 A.M. M ISSION two hours. For this two hours Morning worship at 11 A.M. The Rev. Burton Salter, vicar. ternoon. (going and coming) the loggers are Gearldine Pettet spent the week Evening evangelistic service at Morning prayer and sermon, 9:3C supposed to be paid overtime at Holy communion and sermon each end with her friend, Wilma Bull the rate of one and one-half, as o’clock. ard of Arcadia. second Sunday of the month. the time for the ride Is in addi Avery and Leonard Anderson of THE C O M M U N ITY UNITED Church school at 10:30 a. m. tion to the eight hours of actual PR E S B YTE R IAN CHURCH Women’s Guild second Wednesday Spokane spent a few days in Lin work. coln Heights looking after business Kingman Memorial of each month. Logging operators do not object interests. Avery Anderson has lea i . C. NVvin, Pastor. to the payment o f overtime while sed his place to Ernest Smith for a 10 a. m . Bible school. F IR S T B A P T IS T CHURCH the loggers are taking a ride, as nother year. 11 a. m„ morning worship. Ser- At Legion Hall they can cover that charge by in' Mr and Mrs Forrest Anderson O. N. Opsund, pastor creasing the price o f lumber, all mon: "Building a House for God Sunday school 10 a m. Morning stopped for a visit the past week of which is bought by the federal 12:30 p. m „ basket dinner and at the Jim Hawkins home while government anyway. What Irks the fellowship hour with round table service 11 am. enroute to Windover, Utah, where Evening service 8 p.m. operators, however, Is the word i discussion on family religion. The Mr Anderson will be employed at All Welcome. that has been passed out that they! afternoon servi e will take the the air base. Mrs Anderson Is a will be compelled to pay for these Place of our evening worship. niece o f Mr. Hawkins. A D R IAN FREE M ETHODIST Monday, 7:45 p. m.. Boy Scout rides for the past two years— the The Apple trees in the orchard CHURCH pay is to be retroactive. Why for troop No. 36 meets at the Legion on the farm of Mrs J. A. Winslow, Adrian, Oregon two years and not three years, or hall. which have been a noticable land P. II. Reiman, Pastor Wednesday, 8 p. m„ choir prac one year, Is not explained. As the Sunday school ................ 10 a. m. mark in Lincoln for many years. logging operators "back when” did tice at Hurst home. Preaching ................... 11 a. m. have been cut down. Thursday, 9:30 a. m., Idaho not think they would have to pay Young people’s meeting 8 p. m l Mr and Mrs Austin Robbins and for giving the lumberjacks a ride, Presbytery meets at Welser. Thursday. 8 p. m., officers meet Followed by evangelistic message, j family visited relatives near Vale no fund was set up to meet the We will only have one prayer i Sunday, prospective demand. And that is at Overstreet home. Friday, 10 a. m., prayer group meeting from now on for awhile I M r and Mrs Forrest Sayers and what is bothering the logging op meets In the Pinkston home. Ev which will meet each Wed. in the Martin were entertained at W ed erators in the Pacific northwest. nesday evening supper at the Ralph parsonage at 8 P. M. eryone welcome. Come and worship with us and Winslow home. Many members of congress are Mr and Mrs Alonzo Latta return- j spread scrlptual holiness through CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE rallying to the belief that the fed ed the first of the week from a bus out the world. E. J. Wilson. Pastor. eral government should pay taxes iness trip to western Oregon. They 10 A.M. Sunday school. or something In lieu of taxes, for are looking for a place to locate. SUNSET VALLE Y 11 A.M., special singing and pr the great expense of government ASSEM BLY OF GOD CHURCH owned land. This demand fT>r eaching by the evangelists. Tressa Ditty in Charge 7 P.M., pre-prayer service. compensation from the federal O W V 7:15, Young people and Junior Sunday school, 10 A.M. government for property removed i Morning worship, 11 A.M. from the tax rolls was Initiated in meetings. Mr and Mrs Irvin White left 8 P M.. Will be the last evangel-I Children church. 7:40 P.M. Chlld- Wednesday for a visit in Los Ang the Pacific northwest states and has spread to the entire far west, lstlc service of our revival, you are [ ren particapating. eles with M r W hite’s mother. where Uncle Sam Is a substantial invited to attend. Evangelistic service, 8 p.m. Mrs Arnold Slippy and children. Wednesday, October 11, old-time landowner. Today the movement Prayer meeting Wednesday, 8 p.m. Carol, Sharon and Darrell, were is being Joined by senators and prayer and praise service. Everyone cordially invited to att- Sunday guests of Mr and Mrs Ch representatives from eastern states arles Culbertson. and with each new congressman belng given a definite quota. Cuba. | facilities will be located and the Mrs Bertha Culbertson left Tues converted the backing for payment day for her home in Martinez, Cal In the meantime, has been sending 1 number and size of the Institutions becomes more Insistent. Half a ifornia after a visit with her son, dozen measures are now sleeping all of its sugar to the United States are at present only under discus Charles Culbertson, and family. In various committees each deal (other than the sugar processed sion. It Is taken for granted that Mr and Mrs Gerald De Bord and ing with some phase of the gov into alcohol or gin for sale In this not many units will be required and son, Bobby, and Mr and Mrs A n ernment ownership question. Out country). There Is now a move these may be situated in such areas derson of Payette were guests of o f this assortment of Ideas it U ment among congressmen from the as southern California and Flor Mrs Martha KUngback and family expected that some bill embodying sugar beet states to demand unre ida. However, it is Just as prob Sunday. a compromise proposal will event Mrs Ellis Walters left Friday for stricted development of the beet ually emerge. able that one of such hospitals may a visit with relatives in Boise. _ , .. . , ... . .. sugar Industry on the ground that Because of the acquis tlon by he ^ t regulatlons are givln be placed In the Pacific northwest. federal government of land In the the market to foretgn compe_ B AN K EM PLO YE school I d - scnool districts districts being being wrecked wrecked, w wlp ed out, because the resident tax- payers were unable to carry the load. Private timber owners are assessed In school districts and timber land has been gerrymander ed Into these districts, but the na tional forests are exempt from all sorts o f taxes. i l ducllon tl.th>n by and cunalU n* domestlc processing. It Is Pr° ad- ‘ L in c o ln H e ig h ts mitted that the beet sugar growers annot begin to supply the do- nestic demand and that sugar from outside sources Is needed, but the 19 states. It Is claimed, should be given the right to grow all they can. This is practically the situ ation with respect to wool. All the sheep In America are not sufficient to produce the required amount of wool, therefore there are heavy imports, but domestic production is not restricted. Dolly Hawkins was the Christian Endeavor leader Sunday evening. The title of the lesson was "Recur- ting and Training Leaders” . Next Sunday’s lesson will be led by M ar tin Eayers. The C. E. Is reviewing books of the Old Testament. Fifty-seven were present at Sun day school Sunday morning. Mrs Nineteen states grow sugar beets, Jim Hawkins sang a solo. and notwithstanding that sugar Mr and Mrs Emil Frank attended has been on the ration list these a picnic held by former Wyoming states have been permitted to grow residents at the Nampa park. Mr only a specified acreage; each state and Mrs Frank lived on a ranch Veterans administration, which near Douglas. Wyoming before co I f you don’t register has charge of administering the G I ming to Lincoln Heights. You Can’t Vote bill of rights. Is considering the Ralph Barnes had some leveling establishment of hospital facil done on his farm the past week. ities adapted especially to women. Raymond Goodell, who cut one There are now great numbers of of his fingers while helping thresh women In the armed forces The carrots states that the finger Is Wacs, Waves, Marines, those at- j improving satisfactorily. tached to the alrcorps, the nurse Rev. Fred McConnlee o f Ontario Every service that Is needed in etc., are in themselves an army took R ev' and' M » r “ i I K rin erT n d of respectable size All o f these 3. ndni Nampa, where Mrs K r _ will be entitled to hospitalization your hour of grief lner consulted a doctor Tuesday. when they have been honorably Ida Nelson of Payette accompanied discharged and many will be in them. Plus a dignified sympathy need of hospital service with the Edwin Green, who has been em- 1 passing o f time. ployed in road construction work T h at beautifies the memory ! With the advent of world war No. near Jordan Valley, has returnea 2 it was recognized that the wo and Is now employed at the Am O f both family and frlenda. men who served must be provided algamated Sugar factory In Nyssa with facilities which are not re Mr and Mrs Harvey Simmons arc quired by men. and it is to meet enjoying a visit from Mr. Simmons' N y ssa F u n e ra l this requirement that the veterans mother. administration (Oen Frank Hines) Mr and Mrs Ira G am er of Emm Hom e Is thinking of equipping one or ett are the parents of a daughter. two hospitals especially for the Mrs Oarner is the former Larralne women veterans. Where such Farley and lived with her parents. Mr and Mrs R. J Farley, rormerly of Lincoln but now of the Pioneer district. The first P T .A . meeting of the school year was held Friday evening A reception for the teachers. Mrs Howard Walters and Mrs Iven Fin dley. was held. Rev. O. A. Hause gave a talk Dorsey Scroggins of Democratic candidate for Malheur Ontario dedicated the new flag Sandwiches and potato chips were W e Render Murray Morton County Assessor Experienced, qualified, and knows the co unty. Former county assessor. Your support will be appreciated. BENEFITS GIVEN Members of the staff of the First National bank of Portland were told this week of new and additional benefits available to them to pro vide for contingencies o f sickness, disability and hospitalization. Also announced to the employes o f the First National this week by Presid ent E. B. MacNaughton were three new options for their benefit in the First National's present retirement plan. Undtr the sickness and disability plan of the First National, accord ing to MacNaughton. the employes of the bank will receive sick bene fits starting with one week's full salary for those having three mon ths but less than one year's service and increasing for each year of service up to ten years. Upon com pletion o f ten year’s service the employe will be eligible to receive a full year’s sick leave with salary payments made up o f 12 weeks full pay and 40 weeks half pay. Oroup life Insurance benefits provide for monthly payments for total and permanent disability. The group hospitalization and surgical benefits plan for First N at ional employes Is a voluntary arr angement participated in by the employe and the bank. Two new provisions are being Introduced In this group plan. First, a provision for surgical and hospitalisation ben efits for fam ily dependents, and secondly, the underwriting by the bank o f one-half the premium for this insurance for all employes who avail themselves of the protection Benefits Include hospital cost of 85 per day up to a maximum of 70 days plus surgical, medical and dia gnostic x-R ay costs. C O LUM BIA AVENUK Mr. and Mrs. Pete Tensen en tertained Sunday afternoon for Mr. and Mrs. Dick Siam of Oregon Trail. Mr. and Mrs. Gerrtt Oroot f Apple Valley. Mrs. Loyal Fields. VOTE FOB o Mrs. John Broad. Mr. and Mrs Dick Oroot and Mr. and Mrs. Z. C .J . Davidson of Parma. Mrs. Marjorie Field« of Boise spent the w eek-end with her par ents. M r and Mrs. Dick Oroot. Olenden James Cooper. Infant FOR son o f Mr. and Mrs Glen Cooper o f this community, passed away CONGRESS early Monday morning a t the - H P a t A4* nursing home in Nyssa. SH0RB The Main Streets of America Are the Main Springs of America The American fanners and the small businessmen of American main streets are the backbone o f our national life. The farmer feeds the nation, and at present is feeding a war stricken world. He is assisted by the small town business man. These two groups are closely allied-teamed together in the long pull for the production o f a world food supply. They receive less assistance and are subjected to more official annoyance than any other groups in our national life. Farmers Are Hampered The American fanner has turned in a masterful performance, although W.M.C. took his labor, the W.P.B. refused new mach inery, and the armed forces took his sons. T H E Y H AV E ALSO BEEN IN FLIC TE D W IT H O.P.A. This multiple-tentacled «non- ster o f bureaucracy has placed the American farmer and bus iness man in a bureaucratic straight jacket. THERE ARE NOW IN FORCE 32,000 PAGES OF O.R.A. RULES. Writing, amend ing and enforcing these rules employes 57,419 persons. TH ERE H A V E BEEN CREATED OVER TW O HUNDRED FE D E R AL BUREAUS, BOARDS, COMMISSIONS AND AD- M IN S T R A T IO N S SINCE 1933. From March 14, 1936, to June 29, 1944, these agencies turned out, and there was printed in the Federal Register, 76,541 dir ections, orders, rules and prohibitions, using 93 million words, covering 62,202 pages. Reading eighty words a minute, eight hours a day, forty hours a week, it wou^ld take nearly ten years o f uninterrupted going to wade througn this mess. THESE RULES H A V E THE FORCE OF LAW S. V IO L A T IO N M A Y RESULT IN REFU SAL OF GAS COUPONS, NEEDED TIRES OR IN FINES AND JA IL SENTENCES. The ultimate aim o f these bureaucrats was stated by a high ranking aid to the President, Mr. A dolf A. Berle, at present an assistant secretary o f State who said in 1939: “ Briefly,” said Mr. Berle, “ the Government will have to enter into direct financing of activities now supposed to be private; and a continuance of that direct financing must be, inevitably, that the Government will control and own these activities.. .Over a period o f years, the Government will gradually come to own most o f the productive plants in the United States.” A commission appointed in 1933 to study public service per sonnel reported in 1935, saying in part: “ Unless the trend toward that kind o f government is reversed it may well be doubted whether it is possible for democracy to continue.” W E ARE INFORMED T H A T WE S H A L L H AV E O.P.A. W IT H US FOR A N INDEFINITE PERIOD AFTE R THE W AR . Government Straight Jacket Prelude to Fascistic Control The rigors o f O.P.A. regimentation make a fertile field for the Sidney Hillman type of government. Hillman has long been a close aid to the ¿President. The nomination of the Vice President was “ cleared through Sidney” by orders of the President. 7ke Pl'esident sofa out the 'Democratic party to Hillman and C.I.O. who are liberally financing the Democratic campaign with money taken from labor. The present administration will never clean out the bureau crats and political grafters. Dewey did it in New York. He will do it in Washington. Mi. American Farmer and Merchant, where do you think you sit in this picture? This column will be conducted by the Malheur County Republican Committee during the present campaign. Watch for week to week discussions of the issues that control the future o f the American people. Malheur County Republican Central Committee Paid political advertisement.