Image provided by: Nyssa Public Library; Nyssa, OR
About Nyssa gate city journal. (Nyssa, Or.) 1937-199? | View Entire Issue (Aug. 8, 1946)
THE NYSSA GATE CITY JOURNAL PAGE TWO THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1946 LOOKING AKKAD I he Gate City Journal n GEORGE S BENSON Editor •CLASS V. POWELL SUBSCRIPTION KATES 92 00 $U) Single Copies................. ......... 05 (Strictly In Advance» and President--Harding College Searcy Arkansas P u b lis h » A D V E R T IS IN G K A T l S ...35C Open rate, per Inch National, per inch........ ...35c Classifieds, per word... .... 2C Minimum......... 30c Published every Thursday at Nyssa, Malheur County. Oregon Entered at the postoltlces at Nyssa, Oregon for transmission through the United States MalLs, as second class matter, under the act ol March 3, 1879. NYSSA GETS PUBLICITY Two Nyssa organizations, the city softbal and the Owyhee Riding club are giv.ng Nyssa much favorable publicity in the valley through their outstanding accomplishments in the realm of spoils. The publicity is not going to create a boon here or develop anyone’s business to any extent, but it is creating good will. Individuals must either live with their neigh bors or without them and communities are i the same position, except that cities cannot move or eliminate their neighbors. So, the best thing to do is to try to get along with them. We all recognize the economic inter-depen ence o f the cities of the lower Snake river valley and these cities, although endeavoring to pn mote their own interests are also striving fo the devolopment of the entire area. Any friend ly competition in the field of sports or cooper ation in other phases o f life promote the feel ing of neighborliness. The Nyssa Clowns softball team has won a majority of games played this season and is thus directing attention to the home town. The Owyhee Riding club has devoloped one o f the best, if not the best drill team in the valley. W< know this community extends to them its bes' wishes. Undulant Socialism ! THE COMM U N ITE UNITED P itfc S ttlT E R IA N CHURCH io a. m „ Bible school. U a., m., morning worship. Ser- non, "Answering Life's Greatest Question ” . 8 p. m„ evening worship. Song service and devotional period. Dis- jussions: Adult, "The Certainty of Immortality’'; young people, "The Bible and Prayer in Public W or- li.p; pioneers led by Mrs. Defter. ^i„ ,ing thought by our pastor. Tuesday, delegation leaves for .'ayerte lakes conference. Wednesday, 8 p. m., choir prac tice. 1 1 iday, 10 a. m., prayer group at Newell heights. .southern Idaho district camp meet ing of the Assemblies of God is in progress at Weiser, at the Oregon Trail park. Everyone is welcome to this camp meeting. SEVENTH D AY ADVENTIST Elder Robert Adams. Acting Pastor Sabbath school, 3 p. in., Saturday. Prayer meeting, 8 p. m„ Tuesday at the home of Mrs Mollie Nelson. meeting. C H R IS T IA N CHURCH 10:30 a. m., Sunday Sunday 5th and Ennis Sts. school. George Whipple, Pastor Sunday 7:30 p. m.. sacrament Bible school. 9:45 a. m. meeting. Morning worship, 11 a. m. Com- 2 p. m., Relief society I heads; meeting. Bible school, 10 a, m. Bring your First Tuesday of each month at p. m. Primary for children be- Bibles. Morning worship, 11 a. m. Com .. cell ages of 4 and 12. munion served each lo r d ’s day. HE M ETHODIST C O M M U N ITY Sermon topic, "The Lord’s Plan For Handling the Affairs of the CHURCH Church”. Rev H J. Gemhardt, Pastor Sunday school, 10 a. m. Join Evening services, 7:30. Christian Endeavor, 7:30. a class and attend regularly. Sermon and song service, 8:15. Worship and sermon, 11 a. m. Sermon topic, "Bible Sanctifica Intermediate fellowship, 7:30. tion". Youth fellowship, 7:30. Young Adult fellowship, 7:30. SUNSET V ALLE Y ASSEMBLY Hymn sing and Bible message, OF GOD 8:30. Alfred L. Brim, Pastor Mid-week prayer and Bible Sunday school, 10a. m. study, Wednesday, 8 p. m. Mrs. Allred Brim, superintendent. Devotional services, 11 a. m. ASSEM BLY OF GOD Young people's and children’s Pastor, C. L, Snider church, 7 p. m. Sunday school, 9:45 a. m. Evangelistic service, 8 p. m. Morning service, 11 a. m. Prayer meeting. Tuesday, 8 p. m. The Sunday evening service, also Bible study, Friday, 8 p. m. the following Tuesday and Thurs different amounts of coverage, pay You are cordially Invited to a t day night prayer meetings will be la corespondliig premium, and col dismissed due to the fact that the tend these services. lect a corresponding indemnity In jtose of loss. manufacturers alone expect their through harvest. "Drought, flood, hall, Insects or Federal Crop Insurance on win "W e want to contact every wheat sales here to triple in the next few plant diseases can ruin your wheat ter wheat Is now on sale a t the years. crop, but they won’t mean finan farm if possible," said Mr. Hutchin Malheur county agricultural con cial ruin for you ir you have crop son. "A high percentage of crop "Increased sales of Industrial pro servation office or through author insurance." Mr. Hutchinson said, insurance coverage in this county ducts mean in turn a new level will contribute to the prosperity of prosperity for every local bus ized agents. Glen L. Hutdhlnson, j "N o matter what happens, you will of the entire area. Winter wheat inessman and worker," said D. P. county agricultural conservation still protect the money you Invested larniers are urged to stop in at the Forst, chairman of the council’s 1 In your crop. chairman announced. Applications for insurance must agricultural conservation office If residential construction committee. Wider choice In the amount of an agent doesn't call oil them soon. The study shows that many farm insurance he buys Is offered the be filed before planting but not improvements were made even later than September 28. The crop winter wheat grower this year, ac during the war. Since 1940. for ex- I t i n g to Mr. Hutchinson. The is protected against all unavoidable ample, the number of farm homes j buyer can choose from several natural risks from planting time reporting electric lights here has f increased from 1296 to 2137. Heavy More than doubling their annual demand for such modernizing as gross Income In comparison with installation of running water, til 1940, as reported by the U. S. ing of bathrooms and improving bureau of census, Malheur county kitchen layouts has already re farm families last year produced sulted, according to Forst. c rops and livestock with the record Forst also pointed out that far value of more than $16,043,000. mers in the county today have This huge increase in farm rev 580 more tractors than in 1940, enue has already created heavy according to the bureau oi census, Excavating, basements, sewer line, pipe line demand for general farm improve and that the number of trucks on ments and for home remodeling, farms has likewise increased sub according to a study released by and back filling. stantially. the T ile Council of America. "These facts not only indicate With every industry anticipating the importance of the farm mar General Delivery Ontario, Oregon greater business in the state than ket but also make it one which before the war, floor and wall tile no businessman or manufacturer can afford to overlook,” he said. Excavating MALHEUR CO. FARM INCOME INCREASING BY SCHIEMER AND STONE Get Ready for School Esterbrook Fountain Pens and Renew Points IAY BYBEE TAKES PART IN JAPAN MEET T Sgt. Jay Bybee or Nyssa was among those scheduled to partici pate in the track met of the five Pacific commands of the United States army at M eiki’s Nile Kinn- ick stadium in Tokyo July 25. He was the only non-college man par ticipating in the meet. The meet marked the opening o f the occupation forces expansive 1 ÄÖRjjSosf AT t2WD0XtN THE SERVICEABLE PEN AT A REASONABLE PRICE $1.50 and $2 PENS RENEW POINTS 25C EACH Genuine Leather and Composition Ring Notebooks A tick republic, like a human in valid. passes through a crisis in the course of almost any protracted ill ness. After the crisis, the patient rallies toward recovery or sinks with alarming haste toward the end. To Enter University— Whatever is to be done after a cri Tom Moore has gone to Poca sis must be accomplished with tello, where he will work prior dispatch, or it is too late. The Eng to entering the University of Idaho lish government passed through a southern branch, for the fall term. crisis approximately a year ago. He was accompanied by John Since England's current adminis Schenk. tration proclaimed itself owner and operator of the coal mines, Britain has been viewed popularly as So cialistic—one of the collectivist na Mr. and Mrs. Rulon Staple and tions. Not all the individuals in the Empire are socialists. Large ele family of Nyssa and Mr. and Mrs. ments are not. But this large mi Edward C. Larson and Norman. nority is being forgotten. Curtains Dale and Janet spent Sunday ait are being drawn. The crisis is i he Payette lakes. over and England has gone left. Visitors at the Dick Groot home A Long Time Dead. Sunday evening were Mr. and Mrs. There is something strangely final Gerrit Groot o f Apple Valley and about it when a free people turns Mr. and Mrs. Z. Davidson ol Parma its course toward State Socialism. Mr. and Mrs. Gerrit Stam visited Liberty never comes back without in Parma Sunday. a revolution and then it’s not the Mr. and Mrs. V. Bunch and same. Such is the testimony of re l Clifford and Betty of Toppenisn, corded history. Industrially, Eng Washington are visiting at the land is a coal country and private enterprise lost its last strongnold on home of their daughter, Mrs. Ed the enchanted island when King win Mowerson. Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Jensen Coal surrendered. Now the ailment that prostrated left Saturday to spend their va John Bull has been communicated cation with Mr. and Mrs. C. M. to Uncle Sam. The symptoms are Tensen at Summit Prairie. Mr. and Mrs. Niss Hatt of the unmistakable as undulant fever; wave upon wave of collectivist pow Owyhee were callers at the Gerrit er, with a show of growing inten jtam home Sunday afternoon. sity. Our government has taken Pete Tensen was a business vlslt- over our coal mines from their own ers because of work stoppages through strikes—strikes by the best paid group of mine workers on earth. Here’s the Pattern I think perhaps the workers ought to have had an increase In pay. which they no doubt could have ob tained without striking. Neverthe less, they struck and government took over the business long enough, at least, to close a new contract giving an Increase of $1.85 a day per man and a royalty of 5c a ton on coal to give their union a "w el fare” fund. The new "w elfare” fund has no relation to the union’s sick and accident fund, already large. The new contract will raise the the price of coal 25c to 30c a ton and build up the "w elfare" fund at the rate of 25 million dollars a year. The Senate has approved the executive department’ s right to im pose this contract on the mine owners when they take their prop erty back. This is an attack of the undulant socialism. Works Like This: Government can now control the cost of coal to the owner of a mine. By fixing labor’ s wage, a ruler can make coal production cost whatever suits his fancy. Government al ready controls the price of coal to the consumer through the workings of the OPA. The neck of the coal industry is in a legal nut-cracker and government has the power to choke it to death at will—that, or take it over entirely. With the sanction of Congress, which I hope never comes, federal officials can do to any industry what they are doing to coal. Each as sault on freedom will be one more attack of the dread disease, undu lant socialism. It works like the fever which, scientific men say, car. be cured in rare instances if vigor ous treatment is begun in the early stages. COLUMBIA AVENUE THE CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE E. J. Wilson, Pastor 10 a. m „ Sunday school. 11 a. m „ song service and ser mon. 7:15 p. m„ Y. P. service. 8 p. m., evangelistic service. D. S. CHURCH 8 p. m, every Wednesday service. 9:15 a m., priesthood Crop Insurance Now Available Arcadia called on relatives M on day evening. Mr and Mrs. Edwin Mowedson and Dale and tiheir house guests, Mr. and Mrs. V. Bunch and C lif- ord and Betty shopped In Cald well Tuesday. Mr and Mrs. Dick Groot were business visitors in Ontario W ed nesday afternoon. Serving 5 Counties From the Genuine Orders Largest Shipped Stock of Parts Immediately Manser, Inc. Phone 49 Payette, Idaho C PR 0 / 1 a DW IVE s st amid '* * 1 ^ * * ’ ....... COLD WAVE • Each kit contains 3 full * " ^ 1 ounces o f Salon-typa solution. 60 Cutlers, 60 uod usr ' cotton applicator, neuti and completa instruci Owyhee Drug Co. “ Nyssa’s Quality Store” Farmers and Truck Operators WE SUGGEST THAT YOU BRING YOUR TRUCKS TO US NOW IN ORDER TO BE READY FOR FALL HAULING Herriman Motor Company I Inter-command athletic program A dispatch fram Japan reads -s follows: Drawing from a host of Stella, clndermen who competed this pas; season in the inter-divlslonal meet In this theater, the all-Japar team is loaded with winning talen. that should give the occupational forces from PACUSA, X X IV :orps AFWBSPAC, and AFM ID PAC plen ty of trouble. Heading the parade of national champs is eighth army’s Lt. Char les Parker, San Antonio, Texas. 1943 AAU sprint champ, who has attracted widespread attention with his terrific speed in Japanese stad iums this season. Parker unoff icially tied the world’s mark In the 100 meter dash at a Kyoto meet : when he ran lt In 10.2 to match the speed record set by Jesse Owens and Harold Davis. Other champion tracksters who J will run for the Japan team include ! Lt. Elmer Aussieker. St. Louis j Missouri. 1943 NCAA shotput cham pion, who grabbed points all sea- | son for the first cavalry In hot!- j the shotput and discus throwlnr ! events; Lt. Richard Morcom. Bos ton, Massachusetts. 11th airborne. IC4A pole vault, high Jump and broad Jump champ In 1943; Lt. i V E T E R IN A R IA N Box D Phone 135.1 Nyssa. Oregon JZonfidence^JDegendability or in Ontario Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Jake Groot, Sr. of Notice Dr.J.H. Berger Gate City Journal • Phil Lansing, 24th division, who as a West Point trackman tied for the 24th annual IC4A pole vault championship in March. 1945 and Lt. Jeiry Morrow, Fargo, N. D., 24th division, another West Point star, who took the 60-yard nigh hurdles championship at the annual IC4A meet. Parker, T/Sgt. Jay Bybee, Nyssa, Oregon, 21th division. Pic. Austin Snyder, El Monte, California, eighth army, and Lt. Morcom, will be the sprinters. Davenos A good daveno will work wonders------mon living space in your home------Solving the ex tra bedroom problem. The new davenos art very charming by day, and completely comfort able by night. I.ARCE SELECTION TO CHOOSE FROM Record Racks COMPACT INEXPENSIVE DURABLE $1.25 UP Also see our fine selection o f recordings! Nordale Newsom. Furniture Co.