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About Nyssa gate city journal. (Nyssa, Or.) 1937-199? | View Entire Issue (Oct. 5, 1944)
P A G E F IV E THE N Y S S A G A T E C IT Y J O U R N A L T H U R S D A Y O CTO BER 5, 1944 3RD N O X IO U S W E E D DISTRICT FO R M E D Capital- “ Parade à* Malheur county’s third noxious weed control district has been es- tabllshtd in the Nyssa area, by an order of the county court. The land owners in the new district, com prising all of school district 26C. presented a petition in favor of the measure with 218 signatures, to the county court. Control of noxious weeds, includ ing, morning glory. Canada thistle, Russian knap weed, and blue flow ering lettuce, will be mandatory in the area In the future, with com- Revival in Marshall Islands SHORT WIlliN/i MurrdrWddp IN D U S T R IA L E X PANSIO N The state is due for signal indust rial expansion in postwar days, the findings of John Kelly, executive director of Oregon's post-war read- . . , . J^tment and planning commission reveal. In Kelly's survey, which plete eradication as the goal, acc- | runs well over $15 000,000 in pro- ording to R. E. Brooke, county a , b ^ «*. “ “ , J “ ejects, are new industries, branch gent, who operates crews to assist , * .. , . , the farmers in the work. Methods ' ‘ ^ to ries and the enlargement of used in this county include dean ■ industries, including logging cultivation and chemical applicat-1 «Ihipm ent worfo Portland, 0.1 ions of sodium chlorate and carbon burner factory Portland; f ax pro. bisuluhlde ! cessing plant, Salem: fishing line T w „ other weed control districts.! factory. Salem; branch plant o f a one on Oregon Slope and one be- i nationally known beverage comp- twee,» Ontario and Cairo, were es- » " * ' ^ rt:and; im pressed wood tablished a number of years ago. I * 01* * - Corvallis; expans.on o f vit amin plant, Astoria; insecticide pl- „ .... I ant, Willbridge; conversion plant L a O iO Victory Food Hints l l <111— , , , U. S. Marine Corps Photos Old-fashioned revival meet ings are available to men sta tioned on one of the Marshall Islands atolls, as proclaimed by the big c a n v a s sign stretched between two coconut palms (lower photo). Services are conducted by an ordained Baptist minister. Marine Corp. Leslie Watson o f Linden, Tex., extreme left above. Assisting, left to right, are SC 3c Silas IL Jones, USNR, o f Festus, Mo.; Marine Ffc. Lester M. York of Hollister, Cal., and AM M 2c Robert P. Chariton, USNR, o f Pueblo, Colo. _ CUT vs DETOURS T O MEALS Short cuts are the patriotic roads to meals today. We l l use detours when we have more time for eye appeal and trimmings. A perfect shortcut for time, energy and cost, is a pot roast. Father will vote it tops and the children will ask for seconds. YAN K E E PO T RO AST 5 lb rump or chuck roast 2 teaspoons salt 1-8 teaspoon pepper •4 cup flour 4 tablespoons shortening 6 potatoes 1 cup hot water 1 bay leaf Sprig of parsley % cup raisins 6 carrots 6 onions Wipe meat with a damp cloth. Dredge with seasoned flour. Heat fat in kettle on high heat. When hot add meat and brown well. Add hot water, bay leaf, parsley and raisins. Cover. Turh to low heat and simmer 3 hours. The last hour of conking add vegetables. Thicken gravy if desired. (Serves 6 plus left overs.) Mr Ben Hartley, Mrs. Gordon ?‘ cohAo1 f‘ om wood waste. Ray and Mrs Herman King ar e SP » e‘d : Ameriran Can Comp- vaewtioning in Ogden and vicinity I “ * PU n t’ Salem, / U1l > ,he ______ Milling company the Dalles plann- i ing expansion. Churches, hospitals and schools add to this readjust S fM p to m s of Distress Arising from ment relief. The fact that more than 44,000 M AR IN E S M A K IN G upstate residents now in the Port M A N Y CHANGES ON land area have indicated that they D U E TO S A IP A N IS L A N D . 1 . will return to their homes when FrwBook Tells of HomsTreatmsnt that eral election ballots to the 42,000 Mrs P. O Holmes and Gilbert, Must Help or It Will Cost You Nothing the war emergency is over is taken servicemen who have applied, David On Sunday Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Saipan. Marianas Islands (Delay to mean that possibilities of heavy O ver two million bottles o f the W IL L A R D T R E A T M E N T have been sold fo r relief o f unemployment in the immediate O'Hara, head of the election d ivi- j Holmes were hosts at dinner for ed )— It has been Just three months symptoms o f distress arising from Stomach postwar era are materially decreas sion states. The list of candidates ' the visitors and Mr. and Mrs. F. since the first assault waves landed and Duodenal Ulcers due to Excess A c i d - on Siapan’s beaches, but already Poor Digestion, Sour or Upset Stomach, ed, K elly ’s recently issued report was completed last Friday with the ¡a . Holmes and Gilbert, Qisslness, Heartburn, Sleeplessness, etc., American industry has made so ieveals. On the other hand, the re deadline for filing by independent, F . c. Fry has been ill. due to Excess Acid. Sold on 15 days’ trial t I Robert Bowen, S 1-c, who has many changes and additions on the port points out that many of the candidates. Ask for “ W illard's Message*’ which fully explains this treatment— free— at | been visiting his parents, Mr and Island that it’s hardly recognizable. negroes, variously estimated from P R O PE R T Y T A X DECISION Property sold by a public agency Mrs. J. E. Bowen, has returned Even when the attack was still j 10,000 to 25,000, who have gone to under v»ay, the base was rapidly ¡Portland to work in war industries to a private owner before July 1 o f . to his ship. any year becomes subject to tax-1 i n honor of the 39th wedding an being converted for American uses. would like to remain there. Eight counties of the state have ation in the fiscal year beginning nlversary o f Mr. and Mrs. F G. But since the island was secured not yet filed their programs w ith 1 July 1 of the year in which it is Holmes, Mr. and Mrs. F. S. Byers July 9. the progress made dally has the state commission, Kelly says, jsold. Attorney General Neuner has ( entertained at dinner Wednesday evening. Other guests were Mr W AGE P Y R A M ID ! J1“ 1 ruled. and Mrs. W illiam D. Reeves of Ju=.t released is a survey o f the COUNTIES P A Y IN G OFF annual earnings of Oregon work- | More than one-half of Oregon s Greeley, Colorado, and Gilbert Hol men recently completed by the state ! counties are now out of debt. The mes. In the evening Mr. and Mrs. unemployment compensation com- total bonded debt of Oregon coun- R. W. Holmes and children and Mr. pensation commission covering the ties is $7,304,303, which is $4,279,781 and Mrs. R. J. Holmes visited at years 1943 and 1944 based on wage less than two years ago. Only 15 of the Byers home Mrs Olive Hughes, H. E. Byers credits from October 1, 1941 to Sep the state’s 36 counties are now in tember 30, 1943. In the earlier per debt, and three of those counties and Lieut. William Clark o f T a- iod 24,250 workers earned 'annual ■have sufficient sinking funds on coma, called at the F. S. Byers home Tuesday. wages of more than $300 while this band to retire their debts. The present total debts of the Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Holmes en- 1 number was more than trebled In the latter period with 72 900. Nearly counties is less than half of the tertained Thursday evening in ob- a third of the 235,700 workers who $16,004.648 peak in 1930. State Trea- servance o f the 10th birthday of Guests were had earnings in all four quarters of surer Leslie M. Scott reveals. Mult- their son. Larry. D O N ’T LET TH IS the last base year received upwards nomah county has a net debt of Mr. and Mrs. William D. Reeves, $6,195,495, while Clackamas county | of Greeley, Colorado, Mr. and Mrs. of $300. H A P P E N TO Y OU. in next with »250 000, Morrow is F. a . Holmes, M r and Mrs R J Paid Adv. The Anti-Prohibition Committee FIG H T E R S B ALLO TS o f Oregon. G. J. McPereon, Chairman; third with $205,357. The net debt of Holmes and M r and Mrs. F. S. Oregon county clerks are well Place your Automobile Pearson-4th Ave. Bldg., Portland along on their job of sending gen- other counties; Baker $35.315, Ben Byers and family. Larry received insurance with us, ton $9740, Coos $62.743. Crook $20.- a number of nice gifts. 873, Grant $194.164, Harney $17,608, Mr. and Mrs. F. O. Holmes and Klamath $132 128, Lane $113.391 and their house guests. Mr. and Mrs. B e rn ard E a stm a n Wheeler $67.485. | Reeves, spent Friday in Boise. In O P T IM IS T W EEK the evening they were dinner guests Insurance Real [state Optimist week, sponsored annual at the home of M r and Mrs. A. M. ly by the Aptimist clubs of Amer Goodson near Notus. Phone *4 ica and the local units of Oregon, Pvt. Thurman Hill, who has been OREGON NYSSA has been set for the period begin home on a 10-day furlough, left QUICK RELIEF FROM STOMACH ULCERS EXCESS ACID NYSSA PHARMACY j doubled. I t ’s hard to tell now which are the roads we put In and which were here before, for the bulldozer takes | little time in carving new ones. This is the rainy season in Sla- pan, and many of the roads are seas of mire. But they are forever being improved—and quickly, too. O road repaired in the afternoon is hardly recognizable to a truck- driver who swerved and splashed his way over it that morning. Foxholes have given way to es tablished camps, with tents neat ly lined and paths sanded and mar ked. Many of the camps already have electric lights, and those that don’t are equipped with gasoline lanterns. Where once strictest bl ackouts prevailed, now the sides of the hills are polkadotted with g l eams of white. Mess halls are er ected and screened, and men are erasing the memory of monotonous C and K rations with hot food. Entertainment is a big factor now, and movies are erected every where. Slapan’s own radio station. W XI.D, rebroadcasts programs from the United States dally. Thousands upon thousands of hometown news papers and books are pouring in through the mails. Marines, now wearing clean khaki in place of battle-dirty dungarees, are even beginning to admit the scenic beauties of Siapan. The caves and mountains offer remarkable coral formations, and there is a natural arch well worth seeing. Still dotting the area, however, are the I scars of combat— wrecked Jap ta nks. trucks, etc. And patrols are still flushing scattered Jap soldiers out of the I island's manifold caves. I The island's airfields are now in operation, loaded with every type of plane. Ground troops, always in awe of their flying comrades, can identify and recite technical facts about there planes with the facility of an aircraft designer. The only thing lacking now is the post exchange, and this is ex pected momentarily. Only upon the arrival o f the eagerly-awaited P X will Leathernecks consider the oc cupation of this island complete. Son Arrive*— A son was born Sunday to M r and Mrs T. Thompson o f Nyssa in the Brittlngham Nursing home in Ontario. From Burley— William J. Beus and his bro ther, Earsel of Burley, Idaho, were Nyssa visitors Sunday. Da It Yitrstlf-nf 1 Ckam-Kuil PERMANENT WAVE U t Complet« with c u ri««, m / F B . ' Jltpooaatl weveeet. _ I eeey to do eud eeie «et« tor every «very type at heir. For * mellite rreulte—be euro to e r cbenn-biurt. Over • lollUoa eoid. N VSSA P H A R M A C Y W R A Y ’S D IM E STORE LE T US PROVIDE A HOME M A R K E T FOR YO U R F A T HOGS Sell where there is no commission to pay, no shrink, no un necessary expense incurred thiough a great number of men required to handle your hogs and where you can see and check the weight of your hogs yourself. We buy hogs every Friday at the stockyards in Nyssa, Ore. and Homedale, Idaho. For Friday’s price phone 111 R, Nyssa. between the hours of 5 P.M. and 9 P M. on Thursdays or 53JLJ, Homedale, on Friday. F R A N K K U LLAN D E R “THE JOKER" E. P. Hendrix Republican Candidate For Malheur Co. Assessor Fairness To A l l ; Partiality To None. Your Support W ill Be Appreciated. ning October I. Observation o f the Monday morning week has been endorsed by Gover Maryland. nor Earl Snell as ‘‘one way o f app ealing to all individuals to adjust their differences with one and an other to promote the spirt of fr- ! iendship and to hasten the day of j victory.” C O M M U N IT Y P R O P E R T Y L A W The attorney general’s office has ; completed the briefs in which it will j intervene in the United States sup- | reme court appeal involving con- i stitutionallty o f the Oklahoma com munity property law, after Which the Oregon law was patterned in 1943. for Ft. Meade, Oregon Trail W A LK TH R U FOR THESE M O N EY SAVERS tor F A S T G A IN S Many leading hog men average. 100 lb«, of pork with 5*4 bu. of corn and only 50 lb*, of Hog Chow on the Purina plan. Grain with H O G C H O W For P IG Litter*— H E A V Y Pigs SOW and PIG CHOW For lots of sows' milk, heavy pigs, fast gains, balance your grain with Sow and Pig Chow. Makes grain worth more Hog Wormer Get Ready for F A L L P IG S round* eco- e asy to Clean and diein- ect fa r ro w in g t o u sel, wash lo w ’s sides and ud d er. R e lia b le . U Thompson Purina P igtab * & Son Rally day was observed at Ore gon Trail Sunday by a special pro gram and service. Rev. Chandler of Caldwell Was In charge. F ol lowing Sunday school a picnic lunch was enjoyed with Owyhee Sunday school members. In the afternoon a delegation from Big Bend Sunday school Joined the other two Sunday schools In pre senting the following program: Beginners class from Oregon Trail Sunday school: Greeting, Wayne Adams; Need o f All. Carrol Adams; Why?, Dickie Winters; My Part. Stanley Byers; The Harvest Plekls. Charlotte Davis; A Parting Word, Janice Adams; violin solo, Mrs S. Bigelow of Owyhee Sunday school, accompanied by Mrs. Warren. Prom the primary class o f Ore gon T r a il: A Rally Day Prayer, Marianne Relk; Why I Like Rally Day, Larry Holmes and Dickie Hart; spelling L-O -V-E . Betty Alice Byers. Dora Lee Davis, Lila Mae Holmes and Louise Relk. Junior class: Short playlet with John Relk. Winnie Relk. Jane Parr. Minard Hart and Donald Byers taking part. A poem given by Mrs. Warren. Owyhee Sunday school, and a song "Near the Croas" by Big Bend Sunday' school closed the program. Singing and special talks were giv en by Rev. Chandler and Rev, Target. Mr and Mrs William D. Reeves o f Oreeley. Colorado, who have been visiting Mr. and Mrs. P. O. Holmes and other relatives here, left Sunday evening for their home On Tuesday evening Mr. and Mrs R. W Holmes entertained at din ner for the visitors and Mr. and ’M the guy who looked at you from a U.S.O. potter I some time ago. I’m the guy for whom you and millions of others gave and gave to generously. I ’d like to tell you what was done with your money. The money you gave last year helped give the boys the tonic of entertainment. . . a personal appearance by Jack Benny in Africa . . . by Gary Cooper in the South Seas . . . and by lovely women stars in remote places where just the sight of a feminine face is enough to make up for weeks and months of loneliness and isolation. Your dollars made possible the U.S.O.—in addition to many other great services at home and abroad—3,000 U.S.O. clubs and U.S.O. Camp Shows. The job la bigger this y e a r . . . much bigger. W on’t you be bigger than ever this year, too, and give generously?. Gira generously to ... YOUR COMMUNITY WAR FUND Mereseetief the NATIONAL WAR FUND T h e se A d v e r tis e m e n ts S p o n s o r e d B y T h e N y s s a C h a m b e r o f C o m m e rc e