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About Nyssa gate city journal. (Nyssa, Or.) 1937-199? | View Entire Issue (Aug. 7, 1947)
THE NYSSA GATE CITY JOURNAL. NYSSA, OREGON PAGE TW O TÉST The Gate City Journal E d ito r KI.ASS V. POWELL S U B S C R IP T IO N (Strictly in Advance! P u b lish e r ADVERTISING RAToü K A T ES *2.<JU $1.25 .05 and - Open rate, per in c h ......... 35c National, per inch.......... 40c Classifieds, pci word..... .. . âfw Minimum...... 30c Published every Thursday s t Nyssa, Malheur County. Oregon Entered at the postolflces a t Nyssa. Oregon lor transmission through the United States Malls, as second class matter, under th e a c t o t March 3. 1878 MORE VICTORIES NEEDED The cease-fire orders of the Dutch and In donesians in their struggle in the Pacific area is hailed as a victory for the united nations or ganization, which appealed to the two bellig erents to stop fighting long enough to negotiate their differences. The two nations’ action in halting the fight ing was encouraging to those who hope for the success of the united nations, but if the cessa tion of hostilities is a victory for the UN, many more will be required to establish confidence in the organization. With the world still filled with aggressors and potential aggressors, more than persuasive power will be needed to maintain world peace. Every city and state have their policemen and every nation has its soldiers and sailors for protection of the people; how could a world organization be expected to maintain peace and order under much more trying circumstances without a means of enforcing its orders? Persu asion did not stop Hitler or Mussolini; it has not stopped Stalin and it will not stop any other dictator. The situation is discouraging; it is distaste ful to be pessimistic, but in some way the world must find a method of organizing a police force that will be effective in stopping aggression. In conjunction with that organization, economic pressure might he applied to help enforce de mands under favorable circumstances, although Sanctions were not effective prior to world war II. Unless more dominant action can he engen dered from the activities of the united nations, that organization will become as dead as the league of nations, which was formed after world war I with the same purposes in mind. THERE’S NO PLACE LIKE HOME! (That i The Happy F armer Hy Clarence Kicmm otherwise than Just talking to him. That is getting the job done the hard way but when the work is all done ne :t fall he will know who all this belongs to. He wont owe it all to a labor debt. Yesterday we was passing Chrut- .hfields and notied he had his wife out to the stack drneing derrick and tripping the hay. Schueltyde cant even do that for during the ast few days his wife has presented nlm with their fourth child and the oldest one is only two years old A pair of girl and boy twins two years old and now a pair of bovs. If his luck holds out some dav he will have a hay crew of his own. There is a lot of satisfaction in mow n* that a Job i finished. A ot of us have things around that we have started but not finished, ■very time we get one jf them com peted. finished we heive a sie of ehef Especialy at this time of ear when everyone is so busy and ■xerienced help 1- so scarce. Mr Thopias, the fellow on the >ld Archie Eastman place, was up ast evening. He had his second PUBLIC SALE— Thursday, Aug. utting of haying finished and 14 at 1 p.m. Located 2 miles west 'h a t a relief. Mr. Thomas whole Ontario and CC. Anderson Mar rop this year Is hay. He Is new to ket. then 1/8 mile N., '-1 mile E., his country this year and has not ' i mile N. of Ontario Airport then ~een engaged in farming for sev- 1/8 mile W and 1 8 mile N. up ral years and never did muen 'ngwraoll Lane. Horse, cattle, dairy laying «o haying is quite a preb- equipment, hogs poultry, machinery em for him. He cut about a third and household goods. C. A. Inger- >f it and got It ready to stack soli, owner: Bert Anderson and hen gets out and hunts someone Joe Church, auctioneers; L. H. 0 help him get it stacked. Then Fritts, clerk. te cuts another third and hunts •-gain, then cuts the last of it. Too Late To Classify Before he had finished he had ounded up five differrtit ones to MTFCELLA NEOHB— Get a govern ie'p some had helped one day, ment job. Men, women prepare for oine two and so on. Between hunt- Oregon examinations. Applicants ng help and pulling his derrick nyw being interviewed by Mr. Ran nto the power line and all the dall. Hotel Owyhee, Nyssa, Oregon. itiher little things that happen 7Alxp. lie on the farm keeps interesting. Do" Ruffington invited his din- WANTED- Place to stay, either aer guest to ride the binder for an board or room for light housekeep lour Sunday afternoon and lie ing. I am going to teach in Nyssa grade school. If you have a place ?ot that Job finished up. Dude Parker busted his buck for me write and I will come to see rake but boiryed one Monday for you. Miss Viola Fothergill, route 3. 7Alxp. 1 while and got his second cutting Nampa, Idaho. >f hay finished up. Tommy Drvdale started combin-FOR SALE— Upright piano, coal _ _ _ _ _I _ _ _ _„2 Jininn InKlo Hilf- ng my grain two or three weeks and wood range, dining table, buf igo and Charley Durphy came in fet. Four miles west of Owyhee vith his new Oliver combine Fri- corner. Mrs. I. A. Mitchell. 7A3xp. iay and Monday afternoon that FOR SALE— Two registered jersey icb was finished. We are never cows. Also one registered bull. Mrs. satisfied. If we had the world by Olive Graham, route 2, Nyssa. the tail we would still want a 7A3xp, lownhill pull. Tommie Drydale has a grain bin FOR SALE— Boy’s pre-war bicycle, an his combine. We had to jin ar- like new. Phone 148-R. 7A2xp. aund and find trucks to be in the "!e!d at all times for him to dump FOR SALE— Mall saw. Comnlete. Inquire Evans Studio. 7A2xp. n. Tommie says "One sure hates to . et in the field and wait for trucks". POR Lakeside ,{''*yer One time he said that he had to piano. Roy Pounds. 7A2xp. to to the farmers him e and get poR SALE - Girl's bicycle. $22.50. lim out of bed to get his truck out y ery g o o d condition. Bernard Frost. dump his grain into. 7Alxp ”1 am going to put a sacker on his tiling next year” is his prom FOR SALE— Verv cute little new house, bath, bul!t-ins. Very good ise. Charlie Durphy has a sacker on construction.- Only $1000. This house his. One truck can haul the grain to be moved onto your own lot hen where otherwise it takes two. Must sell on account of poor Charlie was just around and ar health. Four rooms on sewer. 2 full ound. Wain Barrett and I was size lots, well fenced. Tills is a steal. haselng around hither and yon gathering up all those sacks scat- •red all over the field and doing their best to hide in the tallest I •tubble. We were doing fine but you can work up a fine sweat two men loading those grain sacks es- pecily if it is nessesary for you | to hurry just a little. We came back from hauling a 'oad to town on Charlie had fin ished up my Job and had moved over to Roy Rookdool's for to 'tntsli his job that was staited al week or so ago. Walne saw Char'ey mid he says. I "You tell Clarence we got his grain all finished up. We ran out of sacks. I went down to the house and hunted up everything I could find even to his dlshpan to put the last of it in". Maby Charley would trade his «otifcniití, sacker for Tommy's grain bin. DflMHctS My newest neighbor, a Mr Schu- | eltyde who bought the Chet Page olaCe and moved in late this prlng, hns a system all his own 3 out of 4 Fires Start Hera* for farming. He thinned his beets nr,.st all himself tills spring. He / \KGANIZE your home and nakes hay nil alone. He goes out v / your family now to con* vith his truck into the field ana trol these major fire menaces. oads on all he can alone and And phone us for a free con trives it up to tjie stack then sultation on today’s higher hitches a horse on the Jncksenfork values. Don’t let fire catch you able and climbs up on the load under-insured. >f hay. sinks the fork Into the * From a ten year record of the load and talks to his hor.se. The known causes o f fire. horse takes the load up and he rips It and pulls the fork back FRANK T. MORGAN over the truck. Some times the horse backs up and some times he Insurance has to jump down and persuade g o « for Ford Service, tool) You’ll And it pays to bring your Ford “back home" to us, for Genuine Ford Service. Here are live important reasons why: li FORD-TRAINED MECHANICS — Who know your Fo n i hott. 2; FA CT ORY- A PP ROVE D M E T H O D S - For (attor, hottor work. 3. SPECIAL FORD EQUI PME NT — For a ¡oh dono right. 4i GENUI NE FORD P A R T S - M odo right . . . f i t right. . . latí tongorí Bi CONVENI ENT BUDGET T E R M S - hrra'i rail c o n v in tene«: You'll get imme diata service on all jobel T ry G enuine Ford Serv ice. See why we «ay . . . A n/ HERRIMAN MOTOR CO. »1600. Terms. Ed Jamison. Real 7A1XC. Estate. FOR SALE Four registered Cock- er puppies. Party color. »25. with papers. I. L. Williamson. Texaco station. 7A2xp New Haying Equipment ANN ARBOR PICK-UP BALER POWER TRAIL MOWER HORSE MOWERS 9 AND 10 FOOT DUMP RAKES JENKINS HORSE BUCKS AND MANURE LOADER of R. R. Depot. Paul Heldt for house showing. 7A2xp. FOR SALE Standard Underwood I typewriter. Good condition. Nyssa | Furniture company. Phone 149-W. 7Atfc. FOR SALE— Pickling cucumbers. FOR SALE— Hot plate-, single George Gabriel. mile on first and three-speed, enclosed colis, Also electric fans, *8 95.) road south off Adrian highway 201. *10.95. ------- ----- 7A2xp. j Nys.sa Furniture Co.. 1 block west FOR SALE—Winter Club seedgb.ir-| ley, 3V4 cents pound, bring sacks. L E. Fry, 5 miles west of Nyssa. 7A2xp. FOR SALE— Immediate possession, new, modern four-room house, ev- ellently located across from park. Stoker and air conditioning unit in basement. Priced for Immediate sale $3000. FHA ceiling price. See Bernard Eastm an Real Estate Insurance fi Phone 64 Nyssa, Oregon WANTED HOP PICKERS Register Now Tents and trailer space available. Electricity, wood and water furnished to pickers. Robert Runcorn Rt. 2, Nyssa Richland District I HAVE MOVED MY OFFICE FROM THE Atkeson Building TO Tow ne’s Garage Ken Renstrom Insurance and Real Estate « 1 ra Reasons for Using I O PRES TO-LOGS” No dirt to g et on floors a n d rugs. the 2 # No sm oke, practically, to befoul d ra p e s. No soot or ta r to clog the h e atin g u n it 4 . No sp a rk s to pop out on the floor or rugs. g ' No pitch to g et on hands or clothes. 7 No a sh . practically , less th a n Vi of 1% . 8 . Long b u rn in g with s tea d y , intense heat. 0 ' Full com bustion, no clink ers, no w a ste . 1 0 . H igh h e a l v a lu e , formly distributed. uni J J # E a sy to h a n d le w ith the h a n d s, no shoveling. 1 2 « No ,BTer* *° 9+t fingers. th« 2 3 . E a sy to control to get the h e a t n e ed e d . f 4 # N o ' other quired. kindUng It is a magic new luxury fuel at a bargain price. It is the cleanest, mosi. efficient fuel you can buy for your KITCHEN RANGE (or for FIRE PI.ACE, HEATER or FURNACE in cold weather). A Pres-to-log is made by compreMinq clean, dry sawdust and shavings under 165,000 Lbs. pressure. It is a SOLID fuel. 3 times as dense as wood (each log weighs about 8 lbs., yet is only 4 x 12 Vi Inches in size). A Pres-to-log burns long . . . emits no smoke or odor . . . leaves less than a shovel of a s h « per ton. Particularly suitable for KITCHEN RANGES because It is the cleanest fuel you can buy . . . because It can be burned so as to provide intense heal in a short time, thus lessening kitchen heat on hot sum mer days. re 1 5 . The cleanest, m ost co«>- v enient solid tueL 1 0 0 * 5 .0 0 AT Y A R D UNIVERSAL BALE LOADER OREGON BALE LOADER “The House of Oliver” BUY PRESTO-LOGS For Use In KITCHEN RANGES NOW I Nyssa Implement Co. Stunz and Thomas 7Attc. Office Moved 5 . No odor to m ake their u se u n p le a s a n t SUPER-SIX COMBINATION BUCK And THURSDAY, AUGUST 7, 1947 BUY AND STORE NOW For Later U m la FIREPLACES - HEAT ¡mm LU M BERf^CO M PAH Y * a Yard Hear Yoti~ O. L. G allow ay M gr. Nyssa, O regon