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About Nyssa gate city journal. (Nyssa, Or.) 1937-199? | View Entire Issue (June 13, 1946)
THE NYSSA GATE CITY .JOURNAL . Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Bair en tertained the Malheur county Jer- Mr. and Mrs. V. V. Crider were =.ey club at their home Thursday In Ontario and Payette on business evening. Tuesday afternoon. I Mrs. Loyd Adams. Mis. Harry Mr. and Mrs. Loyd Adams and Caidner and Mrs. Carolyn Gardner Mildied were gue.ls at the C har-'called on Mrs. Jesse Hunting Mun- ley Grider home Wednesday even- day to view the outstanding Hunt ing rose garden now in full bloom lng. Mr. anti Mrs. Harry Gardner an. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Bopher were family called Sunday at the home in Caldwell Monday on business. Mr. and Mrs. Cleo McDowell and of Mr. and Mrs. Bob Adams in son visited at the Grider home Oregon Trail. Charley Grider and Nan were in Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Loyd Adams went Ontario Tuesday on business. to Baker Thursday to attend the State Grange convention. NU-ACRES Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Grider left Sunday for a week at Sumpter, La Vem Conner, son of Mr. and Oregon. Mrs. Jay Conner recently returned RICHLAND MR. BEET GROWER— Place your order now for THE L INDEMAN BEET LOADER Cleanest leader on the market Supply limited— Give us your order now, save labor costs later. KROPP AND SONS Phone 85 Ontario, Oregon Tractor Tires The following sizes now in stock: 10- 40 9-38 9-40 11-36 900-40 10-32 11- 38 10-28 10-38 9-24 Thompson Oil Company THURSDAY. JUNE 13, 1946 PAGE FIVE Dr L. A. Maulding. .aunty heal- u phy-iiian, an i Mrs. E. na l ar i'. county pubic health i.is e , gave diphtheria and unallpoi vac cinations and gave the r. B. and Schick tests. P. T. A. members assisting were Mrs. Eenard Eastman and Mrs. I K. G. Whitaker. ADRIAN D l ID A l KUKAL The crew of the USS COLUMBIA received a letter of commendation from Admiral Halsey for wlsh- . tending 36 hours of continuous i -nibardr.-.rn* -nd cir ct’ s-ks thi*. ing the bathe oi Bougainville Nov- ember, 1943. The former signalman has part- -kipated in the following buttles The Solomons, the Palau islands. and the Philippines, Ribbons he OBSERVES I UTC C l n u n A V has worn include the Asiatio-Pac L l l b. b J N D A Y lfic thealie wlth ¡^ven starSi THE G R A N G E labored fo r many years an amendment to the State constitution. Reasons: The Grange believes that taxes should be levied in direct proportion to ability to pay; that the m ajor cost o f government should not be borne by real property. Results: Many millions o f dollars have been saved farmers and others through direct relief from prop erty taxes. Projects o f this nature are as vital a part o f Grange activities as better agriculture itself. That is why 28,000 progressive farmers belong to the O regon State Grange — why membership continues to grow — why the Grange is a dominant force for social progress. Information about the purpose and accomplishments of the Ore gon Sute Grange is contained in a booklet "Let’s Look at the Record". Contact your local Grange for copy, or write direct. The Harbert Electric company, whit h has been building line ex- Ions for the Idaho Power com- P:'nv* has halted work because of lability to secure materials. A five man ctew nas built ap- worimately 25 miles or line in the Nyssa territory during the last few ]féÌ3iirò % Nyssa Furniture Company LOOKING AKKAD B e rn ard E a stm a n to have the graduated income tax enacted (in 1930) as LINE CONSTRUCTION HALTED BY COMPANY American theatre, the Phlltppuu observance _ Pour-H , . . . _ of Rural Life iiteration with two stars, the vlc- wf„s * * * tury me !al. ant, the good conduct jvpp V«. June 2 in the Free Methodist medal. His parents, Mr. and Mrs hurch in Adrian. Cornell, reside at Nyssa. A capacity congregation attended ' from Adrian and surrounding com- j miinities. The evening services of NYSSA SCOUTS GO the Latter Day Saints. Free Met It TO SUMMER CAMP 'd 1st. and Community United Pres byterian churches were combined Council Camping C o m m i t t e e ROXAS VISITS THE UNITED STATES . . . Philippines president- for thP program with Dolores Sal- Chairman Karl L. Mann of 1 in elect, Manuel Roxas, left. Is shown at breakfast with (left to right) ter. president of the 4-H council mett today announed that nearly Col. A. C. Strictland, commanding officer of McChord field. Seattle; ONE- c o AV , er In charge. all preparations had been comulet- Paul McNutt, U. S. high commissioner to the Philippines, and his mili Special numbers were a duet by ed for the mile-high Boy Scout wall cover tary air aide, Col. M. A. Libby. Roxas and McNutt later visited Presi Mrs. Clarence Nelson and IJrs. Bill camp. Billy Rice, at Warm Lake, dent Truman and other government officials. Nelson, and a gill’s quartet of the Idaho, alter serving in the army In the eral days this week with his grand- Latter Day Saints church. Mann stated that equipment had l The address was given by Dr. been purchased and facilities ex- Sunny ! parents. Mr. and Mrs. Alvie. ^ Pacific. John L. Anderson of the College of panded so that the camp can ade- to n e s chat Tim Farmer returned last week fear of Caldwell. Idaho at Caldwell, who spoke on quately house 125 campers. Council reflect the after serving In the navy. He la j - Richard and Roger Jenkins, Dick the National theme for 4-H Rural officials are anticipating the lar- O utdoor W est. the son of Mr. and Mrs. Clifford ' Hawley and Wayne Durrington, Life Sunday. “Citlaen* in Maln- gest enrollment ever recorded at summer camp this summer. He ur ! members of the Do-More 4 H club. *a*ning World Wide Peace. Parmer. ged that all scoutmasters and Scouts Mr. and Mrs. Palmer came from | are attending the agricultural short rush reservations to the council CORNELL RECEIVES Portland Saturday to visit their !course ln Moscow this week. ” M ooucr office so that adequate food and son, Bob, and his family, as wed NAVY DISCHARGE Miss Anna Marie Conner, dau- transportation can be arranged. as other relatives. . All Scouts are transported by Friends of Mrs. Carlos Randolph ' E^ter of Mr- an^ Mlh- Ja-V Conner, James Rufus Cornell, 23, signal of Notus have received word that and Lorris W. Southerland, son of man, second class. USN, of Ho- chartered, insured school buses dri ven by trained drivers. the is recovering at her home from j Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Southerland quiam. Washington, was honorably Scouts from this area attending a minor operation. ! of Fruitland, were married Satur- discharged by the U. S. naval per camp are: Second period. July 16 Loyd Seuell is suffering from an day, June 8 at 12:30 at the home sonnel separation renter. Terminal to 26, troop No. 58, Nyssa. Leo W. I attack of quinsy, of the groom’s parents. The bride'island. San Pedro, California. Child, scoutmaster: and fourth per- j Bobbie Thomas Is spending sev- | wore a white formal with evil. Cornell enlisted in the U. S. navy Miss Lois Betts, maid of honor, | January 14, 1941, and served aboard wore light blue. Miss Eunice Betts; the USS HONOLULU from March and Miss Doris Conner of New 4 , 1341 until May 26, 1942, and the Meadows were bridesmaids. Lester USS COLUMBIA from July 29. Southerland, brother of the groom, 1942 until December 26. 1944. He was best man. Rev. Hoffman of has 43 months over-seas duty to by G E O R G E S. B E N SO N the Free Methodist church ot his credit. \ President— Harding College Wilder performed the ceremony. la Sea re g Arkansas After the wedding a reception was held for 49 relatives and friends. Mrs. T. E. Conner and daughter. It Was Tried Soon after V-E Day, Col. Edward Doris, and Mrs. Bernard Conner Accident Insurance D Churchill, surgical consultant of of New Meadows visited over the Local Firms and other friends for the fine co the Allied Mediterranean forces, week end with the Jay Conner Low Rate toured six Gorman military hospi family. Miss Lois Betts returned operation and expressions of goodwill extent' tal areas and reported his findings home with them for a visit. Broad Coverage Floyd Holton, Clifford Farmer The report is most significant In th< cd during the opening of our new building. light of efforts to make medicine and Kenneth Hawks have pur Protection on regular the servant of politics in America chased a new hay bailer. W e hope to merit the support that you have Jnmmerts on the report are her' A group of young people chari- airlines and also in pri reprinted by permission of COL varied Mr. and Mrs. Lorris South vate planes as a passen UERS. the A'atiunal Weekly. erland Monday night. already given us. ” As we ail know, American doc ger, pilot or student. ors’ care of wounded in this wa: •v ias been and continues phenomena) 20 EXAMINED AT is regards its record-breakii g per PRE-SCHOOL CLINIC centages of cures and Its develop ment of new techniques and rem- ] About 20 youngsters were exam- I Insurance edies. There was considerable ex- ineti at the pre-school clinic held R<,al Estate Fourth and Main Streets pectation that the German doctors |in the high sohool building Tuesday Phone 64 would have some pretty phe under the auspices of the Nyssa nomenal achievements of their own Parent-Teacher association. Nyssa, Oregon to report . . . but Colonel Churchill did not find them. A Generation Behind “ His over-all conclusion . . . was that German handling of wounded was about 20 years behind the American procedure. Going into details, he reported that German army doctors as a rule just casual ly passed up badly wounded men on the assumption that they were going to die anyway« whereas our doctors fight to the last gasp for every wounded man's life, and fre quently win. . . . As for professional pride in pull ing oil near-iniracles of cure dr amelioration, such pride just was not in the bulk of German military physicians and surgeons. . . . They were victims of apathy and lack of ambition which would enrage a typ ical American doctor. This is a sad backslide from Germany's proud position as world leader in medi cine and surgery in the pre-Hitler days. How Did It Happen? “ Are there any lessons in it for us? It began to happen soon after Hitler saddled his brand of to talitarianism on Germany. It seems reasonable to conclude that it hap pened because Ilitler saddled Nazi totalitarianism on Germany. . . . In Nazi philosophy, your race and poli tics matter far more than your brains and talents. You might be u brilliant physician oi surgeon or research scientist, but if you were a Jew or an anti- Nazi of any description, you had to get out of Germany if you could, Lots o f folks are curious about the new Chevron Gas Stations. So here are . . . go to a concentration camp if the answers to the questions you’ve been asking— the story o f how Standard you couldn’ t ‘get out. Thus Hitler and his crew decimated German o f California is helping us establish ou r identic)' as independent merchants. science. Their maslerrace convic tions, too, led logically to . . . the use, in some concentration camps, J Y ou bet we will continue to handle Standard prod N o, when the Chevron sign goes up over a gas station of humans of “ inferior” breed as ucts. W e want to offer our customers the finest. Our it doesn’t mean that the station has changed hands. The guinea pigs lor laboratory ex new name, the new paint jo b are just to establish it as periments. service and accessories w ill be just the same, too. Medicine vs. Politics an independent business. Sure, Chevron Gas Stations honor Standard o f Califor ‘Ruled by the politicians and Lots o f motorists who like the personal service they browbeaten by Nazi gangsters, Ger nia’s National Credit Cards. And they’re mighty hamly get at independent gas stations don’t always know they man medicine (on the stiength of when you com e in for Chevron Gasolines, RPM M otor are "hom e-ow ned.” W e ’re taking this means o f making Colonel Churchill’s findings, at any O il and other products and services. Just drop in any time. rate) withered a.id. in due time, the the fact plain to folks around here. German armed forces paid, in . . . bigger death totals than they need have suffered.“ Here is the sound conclusion reached by Collier's, a conclusion in which America's best doctors concur: “ The lesson in the German ex perience seems clear enough . . . There is no substitute for a free, bold and inqu.sitive medical proles C. G. BROWN B. B. LIENKAEMPER sion or for generously financed ar.d Adrian, Oregon Nyssa, Oregon expertly staffed medical researen, earned on year-in and ycar-out It ■ is devotedly to be hopeo l.iat the lesson of the German medical col U.pse will not be lost on us.” A v ia tio n Grangers Grow Social Crops that benefit all Oregonians iod, August 5 to 15; troop No. 19. Nyssa, W. L. McPartland, scout-* master. what’s behind those We Wish To Thank Owyhee Truck & Imp. Co. CHEVRON SIGNS R E M E M B E R ...the same products, the same service, the same folks to serve you OREGON STATE GRANGE 1135 S.L M. 72 e/MAA- OF S E R V I C E P o w e l l S e r v ic e S t a t i o n B r o w n 's M e r c a n t i le YOUR LOCAL INDEPENDENT CHEVRON GAS STATIONS