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About Nyssa gate city journal. (Nyssa, Or.) 1937-199? | View Entire Issue (Jan. 17, 1946)
THE NYSSA GATE CITY JOURNAL THURSDAY, JANUARY 17, 1946 PAGE SIX nett. Mrs. H. J Qernhardt will BRIDGE CLUB MEETS Mrs. J. L. Church entertained give an Ulu trated calk on the the Tuesday eventing bridge club. symbols of the cross. Mrs. B. B. Lienkaemper and Mrs. HOLD CARD PARTY Boyd Cole were guests. Mrs. Prost Rebekalns and X. O. O. F. mem- won high and Mrs. Lienkaemper Lers gave a beneilt card party second Mi nday evening. Mrs. R. E. Moss, ¿e. eived high for ladles and the GUESTS —I— AT DINNER traveling prize. William Shoen won Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Cotton. Mr. high for men. Cllfl Beaumont ana Miss Beaumont weie Sunday dinner guests at the MR. AND MRS. CLUB MEETS Frank NewblU home. Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Sallee enter tained the Mr. and Mrs. club Wed- WOMEN 5 MEET evening. A no-host dinner The Methodist W. S. C. S. will I ntoday was enjoyed at the Payette Country- meet at 2 p. m. Thursday, January club. Winners In bridge were Geo 24 at the home of Mrs. C. H. Ben- rge Mitchell and Mrs. R. G. Lar i' son. ENTERTAIN HOUSE GUEST Mr. and Mrs. Fred Trenkel en tertained over 60 guests at the Womens' club house in Ontario i Monday afternoon in honor of their house guests, Mr. and Mrs. Bert Hawkins of California, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Trenkel of Ontario and Mr. and Mrs. LeRoy Fuller of Corvallis. Mrs. Hawkins, a bride I of a few weeks, Is the former Hel en Trenkel. daughter of the hosts. Harold Trenkel, their only son, Is a veteran of world war II. Mr. Ful ler, also a world war II veteran, spent several years with the Tren kel family. He and his wife were en route to Corvallis, where Mr. Fuller will complete his college work, Interrupted by the war. ENTERTAIN 5 GUESTS Mr. Mrs. S. P. By-bee enter There’s nothing like— tained and at dinner Monday for Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Barker of Ogden, PRECAUTION Utah and Mr and Mrs. Dave Mit Insurance is your pre chell. -5 - HELPS SOLICIT caution against accid The ULUB Nyssa Civic club decided at a meeting held in the parish hall ent, fire, theft. Wednesday afternoon to assist the Lions club in soliciting funds to help promote the building of a new hospital. A program consisted of an inter esting talk by Mrs. Flank Morgan - family of Huntington spent the tie and poultry raising and resort week-end at the Bernard Frost purposes. Oood 5-room house, barn, Fine* Assessed— large chicken coop and several home. Alex Oeokan was fined 8250 shacks Softest drinking water. 3 and his wife was fined *100 in Malt Here— northeast of Nyssa. Cash Judge Frank Hall's Justice court Mr. and Mrs. C D. McDowell miles last Thursday on a charge of visited In Nyssa while on their way *15,000.00 or terms. Inquire Jour nal office. 17Jlxp. illegal sale of liquor. to their home in Twin Palis, Idaho FOR SALE—New modern five-room Here On Business— with Mr. and Mrs. B. Frost. Mr Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Barker and McDowell has been stationed at house, two bedrooms, closet and Mr. and Mrs. Jack Burton of Pasco. Washington and has now built-ins. Comer Park and High Ogden, Utah were business visitors seen discharged. way 30. H. G. Johnson. 17Jlxp. in Nyssa from Sunday until Wed WANTED TO TRADE;—One 1938 nesday. Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Bar From Vale— ker plan to locate in Ontario, Mr. and Mrs. E. O. Dllly of Vale Chevrolet 3/4 ton pick-up, five new where they will operate the Owy pent Sunday evening with Mr tires, heater, and car in top shape. hee Ice Cream company. Mrs. Bar and Mrs. Bernard Frost Want 1939 or later model passen ker is a sister of Mrs. S. P. Bybee. ger car with two seats. See Dean Here From Burley— -Graders To Play— Mrs. Dora Meline and daughter Fife, one mile north Thompson Oil Teachers who taught in the Nyssa Mayna, of Burley, Idaho are here company, Nyssa, Oregon. 17Jlxc. grade school last year motored to visiting at the home of Mr. and New Plymouth last Thursday after Mrs. Delbert Gamer, formed Burle) MISCELLANEOUS—Wanted three ,chool to call on Mrs. Floyd Her- esidents. They were visitors at passengers to share auto expenses to Grand Junction, Colorado. In hey and her infant son. the Oscar Pike home also. quire at Farmers Co-op. Nyssa. 17Jlxp. Boxers To Battle— Here From Ontario— Nyssa boxers will go to Ontario Mr. and Mrs. Clair Hardin ana tx jti ilent —Ray Keller farm for January 23 for their first smokei four sons of Ontario were dinner 1946. See Nyssa Realty company. of the season. A dozen boxers are guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs 17J2XC. working out regularly. Edwin Werts last week. . ... —assortment of guitar Spend Holidays— Fifth Son Goes To Service— and violin strings; also clarinet Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Renstrom Allen Moyes, son of Mr. and Mrs reads. Nyssa Furniture company. eturned Thursday from Spring- William Moyes, reported to Fort 17Jtfc. ield, Missouri, where they spent Douglas Wednesday for induction sm s)—-Electric w a s h i n g he Christmas holidays with Mrs. into the armed services. He is the . Renstroms parents. fifth son in the Moyes family to machine. In good condition. In enter the service. Part of the quire at Journal office. Visiting Here— ooys have recently been released. LOST—Tarpaulin, between Nyssa Mrs. Catherine McCrea, and Oran and Norman are now in Salt and Huntington. *10 reward. Nyssa daughter. Marjorie Jean, of Boise .ake City on business. Lumber Co. 17J2xc. are visiting Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Fletcher. Leave For Chicago— WANTED—Chicken feed horses. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Fischer Dixie Klnkade. Chadwick's cabin 3. Here From Huntington— eft Thursday for Chicago, where 17J4xp. Mr. and Mrs. Perry Ward and hey will attend a growers and hippers association convention. FOR SALE;—Order your sweet They plan to be away two weeks. Spanish onion seed, flower seeds and garden seeds from Watts Seed 'omnany. Parma, Idaho. 17J8xc. !n Alaska First Lt. Ted Morgan, son of Sr. and Mrs. Frank Morgan, has A n t U M A T lS M GEORGE S. BENSON ¡een transferred from the Aleu- P e t u l c i - - M ir im i CtUcfe and ARTHRITIS ions, where he has spent the last Si ref. J r U n a t ear, to Fairbank, Alaska. I suffered for years and am so Mud-Daubers rom Boise— thankful that I found relief from Down here in the Mississippi Val Mrs. Mildred Brandt of Boise this terrible affliction that I will ley we are all acquainted with a pent the week-end at the A. C. gladly answer anyone writing me species of wasps called mud-daub ialiee home. or information. Mrs. Anna Pautz, ers. They are relatively harmless, P. O. Box 825, Vancouver, Wash. build little adobe huts in high, pro iO To California tected spots and look out for their Mrs. Cora Tomlinson and Miss own Interests. By instinct they are Donna Florea left Monday for San engineers and diplomats but, like so lose, Calif to attend an evan many insects, they know very little gelistic rally jrnia at the San Jose Bible about modern industry. Some of school. their mistakes are cosily. An aristocratic family named Relatives— Sceliphron Cementarius (common ’¡siting Mr. and Mrs. Marcus Batt of mud-daubers) got busy one summer Jncoln, visited from Frl- and built a fort inside the vent pipe ay until Nebraska Tuesday at the home of on top of a big steel tank of hcati g vfr. and Mrs. R. A. Batt. The vis- oil. The tank had been filled in the tors were en route to Hood River. Spring for Fall rnarketuig and stood quiet for months. Finally came an \rrives Home— order for a barge load of heating oil and the plant owner started S 1/c (AMM) Jack McKee arrived pumping it out of storage. Sudden lome January 11 after being dis- harged from the service at Brem MAGIC CAN’T KEEP ly the big tank collapsed. Too Much Authority erton, Washington. He plans to YOUR CAR ON THE The oil man’s motor-powered nake his home in Nyssa. pump silently pulled out the liquid and built up vacuum inside the lank. teturns Home— ROAD! Being in a position to plug up a Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Renstrom vent-line and call down the forces and daughter, Ann, and Clyde of nature to destroy property and Wakefield returned Thursday from But our factory-train waste merchandise is too much a three-weeks trip to Missouri and authority for a mud-dauber. To je Kansas. ed mechanics can! Keep perfectly frank, the more I observe the workings of the OPA, the surer Yrrives In Japan— I am that such authority is too much Pvt. Oscar C. Hieter, son of Mr. your c a r r u n n i n g for anybody. Mrs. Arthur A. Helter of Nys- Right now our governmental price and a, has arrived in Nagoya, Japan smoothly—see us regul fixers have the vent-line closed on ind has been assigned to head- arly, many parts in some exceptionally tight structures and the pump has already started. juarters company, Nagoya base, at “People who buy machines shall not tached to General Krueger’s sixth stock assure you im pay more for them,” says govern trmy. ment, but (with government consent) mediate service! people who manufacture machines I oo Late to Classify must pay more, much more, for ev FOR SALE—100 acre Island farm All work fully guar ery hour of effective labor, and for fitted for row crop, hunting, cat- every pound of processed material. anteed. Strong for Service I am in favor of workers getting high wages. The more take-home BILL LANE pay America's factory workers earn and get, the more food and feed stuff Auctioneer our farmers will sell. It means prosperity. Just the same, nature's Phone 116J Nyssa laws are inexorable. If wages keep going up, somebody'd better uncork that price line or business is sure to collapse. Some firms already have folded up and more are in jeopardy. America's big manufacturing con cerns have some strength; of course they have. They need financial strength to navigate economic storms, race with competition and meet payrolls on schedule. The I Will be shown at 8 P. M. more strength they have the more useful they are. That oil man's tank had a great deal of strength too; was useful because it was strong, but it buckled because a mud-uauo- er asked it to hold a vacuum. Sublime Vandalism Big corporations bare to be ef- | Listen with multitudes and follow Jesus detent. If they grow extravagant, a lot of small concerns with lower | as he passes along the highway, healing the overhead stand ready to undersell them and take their trade. Ac- | sick and raising the dead. Witness his tri cordingly, big arms must operate in umphal entry into Jerusalem. Watch the be thin margins ol profit. E igurative- J trayer's kiss; behold His crucifixion and resur ly, they are tight. They can be j “pumped down" by holding their I rection and ascension—All vividly portrayed. prices and boosting their costs. | This is not Hollywood production, but pro Ford declares a *27 i.et loss on ev- j duced in the Holy Land by the Oberammergau ery new car sold at prices fixed by j government Passion players. These pictures are t he property Nearly everybody knows that ! of Evangelist Bertha McCallie, who is now con America's advantage over foreign ' ducting a revival at the Free Methodist church. lands is based on mass production and volume salts, things we have ' A beautiful art gymanalogue picture in col that they don't have. We have noth ors will be shown at the beginning of the ser ing to gain and much to lose by vice. wrecking big industries. Theodore Roosevelt said, "It . . . ought to oe A Free Will Offering Will Be Taken evident to everybody that business has to prosper before anybody can get any benefit from it." cold and a slight heart attack. - - KYLE MILKS ON BROADWAY . . . Miss San Antonio, »be ni Ikmald Is Kyle MacDonncll. She demonstrate* how New York looked at Times Square when II was farmland, by milking a cow In the “hub of the world." The photo was taken in front of a New York theatre during tbe opening of a movie built around San A-nuni.i, Tcxus. M ss Mac Donnell admits that she would rather use a milking mirhine. hut d?e?d'>- to humor natives of New York City and demonstrate the old hand method. — - - Frank T. Morgan - HEAVYWEIGHT BABY . . . Dr. H. IS. Fraley, physician of Ashland, Ky., made delivery of a 10-pound son to Mr. and Mrs. John Castle, Decem ber 9. He stated that it was the | largest baby he had ever seen. We’ll Be Glad To Take Your Money For The Malheur Memorial Hospital Make your contributions here. Nyssa P harm acy “The First In Nyssa” on the R. H. blood factor, a piano olo by Adrienne Peterson and a violin solo by Twila Crawford, ac- I companied by Miss Peterson. Mrs. Gerrit Stam, chairman of 1 the Holland clothing collection com- | mittee of Nyssa, made an appeal | to the members of the club to j donate clothing for the relief of j Holland residents. The clothing may be left at the Gate City Jour nal office. Hostesses for the afternoon were Mrs. W. E. Schireman and Mrs. Jake Simmons. 8 WTLL GIVE PARTY Members of the American Leg ion auxiliary have issued an invit ation to the public to attend a bridge and pinochle party to be held in the Legion hall January 25 at 8 o’clock. The party will be given for the benefit of the auxili ary child welfare program. Prizes will be given for high scores in pinochle and bridge. An additional prize will also be given. Mrs. Joe Maughan is chairman for arrangements and the selling of tickets. ENTERTAIN CLUB Mrs. Carl Hill of Newell Heights was hostess to the A. N. K. Gar den club last Tuesday afternoon at her home. Members provided food for a covered dish lunch. Arthur Yen- sen, coach of the Adrian high school who spent some time as nil artist and cartoonist, talked on tree patterns. OFFICERS 5 INSTALLED Officers were installed by the Rebekah lodge at the meeting held Thursday night, January 10. The officers include Alma Klngrey, noble grand; Minnie Leuck, right supportes to noble grand: Harriet Harris, left supporter to noble grand: warden. Merle Johnson; conductor, Ruth Chadd; musician Edith Reece; chaplain, Sylvia Fox; vice grand. Frances Groves; right vice grand. Beulah Gann; left vice grand, Verna Borgman, and inside guardian, Grace Barnett. DINNER 8 GUESTS Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Brumbach of Big Bend were dinner guests of Mi ami Mrs. John Bishop Sunday. Jan uary 13. —I — SURPRISE PARTY HELD The ladies of the Rebekah lodge urprlsed Mrs. John Barnett at a house warming Tuesday night. Mrs. Barnett was presented with a gift. Pot lock supper was served. Pinochle and bunco were enjoyed during the evening. DINNER GUESTS Mr and Mrs D. E. Mitchell had as Sunday dinner guests, Mr. and Mrs. Ira Ure and Mr. and Mrs. - NYSSA Phone 108 PROGRAM THEATRE FRIDAY AND SATURDAY, JAN. 18-19 Photographed in CENECOLOR against a back-ground of primeval grandeur, the story is that of a baby separated from its mother, brought up as a child of nature by animals and a kindly hermit. . . Edmund Lowe—Brenda Joyce In “THE ENCHANTED FOREST” Features Saturday 6, 8 and 10 P. M. Mat., Sat., 2:S0 Adm. 25c-5o Inc. Ta* Adm. Evenings, 40e-9e, Including Ta* SUNDAY AND MONDAY, JAN. 20-21 ___ A fast and furious funfest of feverish frivol ity—It’s a jam-packed jamboree of Miith, Mel ody and Merriment! Betty Hutton, Barry Fitzgerald, Don DeFore, and Robert Benchley In “THE STORK CLUB’ Color Cartoon Features Sunday 6. 8 and 10 P. M. Mat.. Son., 2:3« Adm., 30r-*r, Inc. Tax Adm. Evenings, 40c-9c, Including Tsx TUESDAY, JAN. 22 —BARGAIN NIGHT— William Gargan In “FOLLOW THAT WOMAN’ Also Gene Autry In “ROOTIN’ TOOTIN’ RHYTHM” Features Tuesday 8. 8 and 10 P. M. Adm. Uc-9r, Ine. Tax WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY, JAN. 23-24 Dennis Moran, Dane Clark, Raymond Massey “GOD IS MY CO-PILOT” The whole action crackling story of desper ate men who flew head-on into the Rising Sun. The incredibly heroic adventures of the Flying Tigers. Cartoon and News Adm. Evenings, 4«e-4c. Including Tas Tom Buruingham and daughter Merle. CLUB 8 MEETS The Happy Eight club met Thurs- ay at the home of Mrs. Ira Ure. The afternoon was spent quilting. The guests presented Mrs. Alton Roy, daughter of the hostess, with a lovely gift. GUEST AT DINNER John Paul Gernhardt of the Un ted States navy wsa a guest of Robert McDonald at dinner Sun day at the McDonald home. 8 LADIES COUNCIL ELECTS Ladies council of the Christian church met Thursday at the home of Mrs. George Whipple. Officer’s elected for the year are: President, Mrs. Quigley; vice-pre sident, Mrs. Hill; secretary, Mrs. Bibbey and treasurer, Mrs. Curry. Committee chairmen are: Devotion al, Mrs. Whipple; world call sec retary, Mrs. Robbins; project, Mrs. Bibbey; group, Mrs. Warren; pro- "Heart-Sisters” names were hm gram, Mrs. Hill. "Heart-Sister" names were drawn. Refreshments were served by the hostess. Articles for the Philippines will be the project work at the next meeting to be held at the home of Mrs. John Quigley January 24. INTEREST CLASS MEETS A covered dish party was given at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ersel Beus Saturday evening with 23 members of the special interest class of the M. I. A. attending. Games were played under the dir ection of Mrs. Osear Pike. Dart O. Bybee won the prize. The next party, will be held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. D. O. Bybee. Feb ruary 9. All members of the class are invited to attend and furnish a covered dish lunch. 8 CELEBRATES 4TH BIRTHDAY Little Danny Wertz, son of Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Wertz, celebrated his 4th birthday Thursday when 11 of his friends gave him a party. Danny received many gifts. HONOREI) ON 8 BIRTHDAY Mrs. Mary Ella Bybee was hon ored guest at a family reunion and party given at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Sherman P. Bybee, in observance of her 75th birthday. She was presented with a gold watch with a stretch gold band. A white three-tier birthday cake with 75 pink candles was the center piece. Other decorations were pink and white table decorations. Pic tures were taken In groups of the 34 relatives present. - — - - - — 8 - - - - - - LOCALNEWS Discharged From Navy— Martin C. Farmer, EM 2/c of Nyssa is one of the hlgh-point servicemen that the navy Is re turning to the states for discharge aboard the LST 334. Returns To Baker— Robert McCurdy storekeeper first class arrived in Baker recently from Bremerton Washington where he received a discharge from the U. S. iavy. He served aboard the U. S. 8. /a:. 'n the Atlantic theatre. Vlr. lw._^..,dy was formerly employ 'd in the Nyssa branch of the First National Bank of Portland. Give Skating Party— J. B. and Louise Lewis gave ar. ice-skating party at the Lewis home Monday night. After skating chill was served to 10 guests. Studying Music— Mr. and Mrs. Joe Woodard are in Chattanooga Tennessee attend ing Stamps Sohool of Music. Mr. Woodard and two sons Gail and Gene are taking voice lessons and Mrs. Woodard Is studying piano. The family who spent Christmas in Texas expects to return to Nyssa about February 1. Ill At Home— Mrs. Dean Smith was confined to her bed last week because of a LOOKING AHEAD Towne’s Garage Passion Play Monday’ January 21 Adrian Free Methodist Church