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About Nyssa gate city journal. (Nyssa, Or.) 1937-199? | View Entire Issue (July 12, 1945)
THE NYSSA GATE CITY JOURNAL PAGE TWO The Gate City Journal K L A 8 8 V. P O W E L L .......................................E d l^ r a n d THURSDAY, JULY 12, 1945 University and College Co-eds Help Save Oregon’s War Crops LO O KIN G AH EAD OEORGE S. BENSON P u b lH h rr j well underway. A full half block, Has House Guest— j Just south of the former location Miss Janice Frost had as a of the Colonial hotel, will house house guest Wednesday and Thurs the Case Implement agency and day Miss Janie Parr 1 shops now located at southwest First and Idaho. SALE CALENDAR Prendrai—Mardtaf Calle§4 Guests of Relatives— Guest« at the Lee "Rirasher home over the Fourth of July holidays Dairy sale—Saturday, July 14, at Follow Through were Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Pinkston Hallard Tuttle place % mile south Do you believe working people and son, Jerry, and Mr. and Mrs. of Ontario on west side of railroad have a right to organize and bar Ray Thrasher and Jeane of Bend. tracks, or 14 mile northwest of gain as a group for their general Mr. and Mrs. Howard Fountain U. P. stockyards. Big public auc betterment? Do you believe a man j and sons, Larry and Garry of tion of good first calf dairy heifers who has saved some money has a Caldwell and daughter, Mrs. Elsie and springer cows; 111 head of dairy cattle. L. H. Fritts, owner; right to invest it in any business he Bouren of Boise. Col. Bert Anderson, auet. likes and to operate that business, trying to make a reasonable profit? Here From Bend— Do you believe that big-volume pro Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Pinkston of duction at low cost is the key to neBspetnfar fartfartf rtgftrartf tra Don M. Graham good pay? My answer is yes, to all Bend spent their vacation over the three questions. Fourth of July visiting Walter If you agree, you subscribe to the Pinkston of Kingman Kolony and Insurance Agency fundamentals cf the Labor-Manage Mr. and Mrs. Lee Thrasher of ment Charter. It was signed in Washington last March 28 by Wil Parma rural route. Fire and Automobile liam Green for the American Fed eration of Labor, Eric Johnson for Here From Portland— Mr. and Mrs. B. H. Hoover have Insurance United States Chamber of Com merce. and Phil Murray for the returned to their home In Port Congress of Industrial Organiza- land after visiting several days at Rentals Bonds tiona. It is a powerful document, the home of their daughter. Mrs. able (if carried out) to do the world Sid Burbtdge. more good than the famous Atlantic Charter. Nothing Original People who work surely have rights. Open competition is certain ly fair. Economy of time and effort yields positive rewards. These ideas ¡ire not original. They are old and time-tested principles. All of them stand out clearly in the teachings •il Jesus and of many great men who have lived and enriched the world more recently. They appear in the Labor-Management Charter. Be ides declaring the rights of la bor. the fairness of competition and the dividends of economy, the La- bor-Mnnagement Charter contains two vital pledges: (1) To settle In dustrial disputes peaceably — no strikes, no violence, no lockouts, no trickery, and (2) To support a sound economic system in America—an expanding foreign trade and an en during peace. Both are perfectly sound. Big Responsibility Cabinets “Taylored” to fit any desired space. Being the richest and strongest nation in the world, the United States has a serious responsibility. Any size for home storage. Only a few units It is graver than ever now. with a global war to finish and the world a\ailable. Order now at to be set in order. Miss Columbia must point the way and she stands at the crossroads. America’s choice will determine which way the whole world goes; to peace and plenty or 1« poverty and oppression. Of the 200 billion people who have lived on earth, not more than 2% could call their souls their own. The way of the world has always been oppression and it still is. Now espe cially the trend is toward dictator- ■hips. Not 20% of the people now living ever dreamed of freedom and prosperity like we enjoy, but Amer ica is In actual danger of being car ried with the political tide. Jobs and Markets The Labor-Management Charter points the right way: toward free dom of faith, security of ownership, and liberty In self-government. Like Just one of the many reasons for delays in providing telephone any guide-post it Is powerless in service nowadays is the shortage of telephone instruments. Itself, useful only if It is followed. If followed, however, it indicates an Below are shown a few of the countless uses to which war lias orderly transition from war to vic put the materials which normally would be used to manufac tory in peace and prosperity. If it ture telephones, switchboards, wire and cable, and all the is Ignored, our alternate course leads to economic war, government by other facilities which arc required to provide telephone edict, lower wages, and less of the service. ^ ------*--- - things people want. The system of open competition In enterprise made America the world's most Influential nation and kept it in the forefront of human progress for 170 years. A recent survey shows that conservative busi ness men are ready, if they have a chance, to offer more than one job per available worker after the war. For full employment, good pay, ready markets and active business, let's follow through with the Labor- Management Charter Scare j . A rk a as at SU BSC RIPTIO N » K A T ES A D V E R T IS IN G One Year..... ..... (2.30 Six Month«........................SlJfi Single Copies-------- -------- .06 (Strictly In Advance) Published every Thursday Entered at the postoftlce through the U* ilted States the act HA1 ES Opun rate, per Inch ....... Sòr National, per Inch*............. 36c Classi I lads. per word------ Sr Minimum — 30c at Nyssa Malheur County. Oregon at Nyssa, Oregon for transmUslon Malls, as second class matter, under of March 3. 1879 PEOPLE APPRECIATE OILING City officials have been rightfully compli mented on the oiling of the streets by many loc al residents, who appreciate the absence of dust. One of the few disagreeable features of living in Nyssa has been the dust and now that has been satisfactorily disposed of for this summer and perhaps by next summer the paving pro gram will have been started. One of the pleasing features of the oiling program is that the cost has not been excessive as compared to the waste of water under the old system. We’re just a-3 glad that the soldiers and sail ors are getting all the pie cherries this year. We’re having a hard enough time getting the proper amount of sugar for our cornflakes. Christian Science Monitor. Somehow or other, amid all the telephone shortages and notwithstanding the long wait ing lists, the horse-race bookmakers still man age to hang onto theirs In many an American city.------Christian Science Monitor. W i Jeans are popular apparel foi these University of Oregon and Oregon State college co-eds who pitched In again this spring tc help farmers near Eugene and Corvallis over a critical farm laboi emergency. They are among the thousands of non-farm women who will be called on again this year to help harvest vital Oregon war crops. Three OSC co-eds, Lois and Gladys Halstead of Dundee and Mary Lou Oeorge of Dayvtlle (cen ter) are shown above preparing hops for staking. Velita Durland of Salem (below) Is one of a group of Wesley Foundation members at U of O. who are doing farm work afternoons and Saturdays and do nating' half of their earnings to aid students at West China Union university a t Chengtu. r J trip to Italy he was on land only two days In a month. He was In Staff Sergeant Alvin Root of Camp North Africa and Sicily before Kearns, Utah Is visiting his parents, landing in Italy. He said he flew (Continued from Page 1) Mr. and Mrs. Lon Root, on a 19- his first mission to Saltzburg, Aus ONTARIO ARGUS _ „ day furlough. He has been stationed tria December 20, 1944 and then he Construction of Industrial plants and Mrs. George F. dowers, route at Catrp Kearns since returnln4S gave a list of his other missions In Ontario took a sudden upturn 2. Nyssa, Oregon, has entered a from overseas. and dates. “The four roughest targets were the first of the week upon the re streamlined five-weeks course at ---------- the AAF training command's B-29 S|Sgt. Raymond Graham arrived Ruhland, Berlin, Linz and Vienna," ceipt of approvals from the office transition school at Roswell. New home Tuesday from Miami, Florida. Adams said. “I still don't know of the war production board on Mexico to become a co-pilot. j He has been In the service three how we made It through the Ruh some long-standing applications. dow ers’ training thefe will be years and seven months, including land raid. We 'had flak for 20 Ground was broken Tuesday In minutes and had several fighters block 153 on North Oregon street as a member of a three-man unit 28 months spent In Africa. lor quite a little time and no one where building will start immedlate- consisting of the airplane comm-1 ----------------------- ander. who actually files the sky) Staff Sergeant Clyde E. Adams got hurt. The tail gunner got a ! iy on a perishable foods processing drendnaught as the first pilot, the 'has written an interesting letter piece of flak in his flak helmet and an(j storage plant. T. O. Tomasello pilot who serves as his assistant to his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Festus I got a piece that hit me where and Tony Scurich, both of Watson and the flight engineer, whose W. Adams of Parma route 2, about I sit down, but it hit just hard ville, California, had planned to duty Is to “engineer'’ the battle some of his experiences with the enough for me to feel it. It tore erect a quick freeze and commercial a hole In my flying suit and that cold storage In addition to the plane to and from Its bomb-dropp- I United States air forces in Italy. ing rendezvous. | When Sergeant Adams wrote the was the closest anyone came to packing plant this year but did After completion of the course letter he was receiving treatment getting hit. My pilot has finished not receive WPB authority In time at Roswell the three-man crew June 27 for pnaumonia in a hos- and Is home now. My navigator to get that unit In operation before will Join the rest of the flying pltal in British Guinea, South Am- Is done, but Is caught over here the harvest tills season. The present personnel of a B-29 In an opera- erica. I like the rest of us", development is to be valued at tional training unit for further Sergeant Adams said that on his 1 The sergeant, who was stationed1 aboUt $40,000 and next spring's between San Severo and Luceta, ^ addition of the refrigeration plant about 20 miles north of Foggia, wil, another $00,000, Mr. Tom- went on 27 missions, falling eight asello told the board of Che Ont- short of the 35 required for dls- arj0 Commercial club, who gave charge. In 27 missions he dropped hlm considerable assistance in gett 72'2 tons of bombs. Ing approval through the war pro duction board. E. H. Bechis will come to Ontario from Watsonville to manage the new plant. Election of officers was held by Other industrial building includes the Sunday school July 8. El Us a 60 x 84 two-story addition to Warner was re-elected superinten- I ‘he proWSSirf P ^ t of Jaekel and dent, Otis Bullard, assistant; Mrs. Rogers packing plant, to be used Otis Bullard, adult teacher; Mrs. principally for ice storage. This George Moeller, young people's building, to be constructed of con teacher; Mrs. Ted Bates, Junior crete and tile, will house the ice class teacher; Miss Wilma Bullard, plant which originally belonged to primary class teacher; Mrs. Lily Iserl brothers of Kent, Washington Dement, beginners teacher, and and which was moved to Ontario last whiter so that Jaekel and Rog Anna Dail. secretary-treasurer. Carroll Garren enlisted in the ers might supply their own ice merchant marines and left for his for perishable foods packing. The Consolidated Freight ways training base last week. are more than doubling the floor S Sgt. Harold Dail returned to terminal on SE First street. his home last week with an honor space of their motor freight ter Nicholson Service and Supply minal in Ontario to facilitate the able discharge. will be housed In Us new building handling of the continual Increase Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Bowers and family and Mr. and Mrs. Keith In business here. This expansion is on South Oregon street tai the near Moss of Nyssa spent three days taking place adjacent to the old future, where construction Is now fishing in Idaho last week. John Paulson of Ontario drilled! a well for Dave Brady last week and Is drilling one for Fred Schill- ■ ing now. Miss Delta Armstrong of Nampa are essential for visited last week at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bullard. 1 Miss Kathrlne Henry, who has ] I been visiting the past two months with her grandmother. Mrs. Lily Dement, and her aunt, Mrs. Ellis and can be had only in the Warner, and family returned to her home near Prairie City this week. Mrs. Ted Bates and family spent Saturday In Boise. Charles Taylor made a business trip to Utah last week. Mr. and Mrs. Jim Osborn spent You get no "keroscney” odor when you cook or heat with No other method of milking, hand or mach the Fourth a t the Harry Judy home Pearl Oil! No smoke or soot! Solvent refined, with impur 1 near New Plymouth. ine, can equal the DeLaval Magnetic Speedway ities removed, Pearl Oil burns clean, hot, I Mrs Charles Bullard was taken milker for regular, uniform and rhythmic milk steady—helps you enjoy the best performance | to the Holy Rosary hospital last ing action, for it is the only “magnetic” milker. j Thursday and died Monday morn your stove can give! Order pure, clean Pearl ing. The DeLaval Magnetic Speedway is the fast Oil today. . . Be proudtr of your cooking! The pea harvest was completed est and cleanest method of milking. It gets all here during the last week. Most the milk, holds milk and butterfat production of the first crop of hay has been W. E. “Bill” Sohireman liar vested. at the maximum point throughout the cow’s en schooling. Our Boys Ontario Builds Business Plants Arcadia > i Refrigerators! The Taylor Shop TH E SE H AVE H AD FIRST C A L L ON TE LE PH O N E > ; !< Speed And Uniformity ! 1 r BEST MILKING DeLaval Magnetic Speedway Milker Phone 61 tire lactation and lifetime and maintains heal udders. In Boise On Business— thy Luther Fife was In Boise Wed nesday on construction business. Mrs. Fife and Mrs. Wayne Harold- son and son. Danny, went as far as Parma and spent the day with Mrs. Fife's mother. Mrs. Kristine . ____ Jensen. Hollingsworth Hdw. & Imp. Co. Malheur Home Telephone Co. KJ