Nyssa gate city journal. (Nyssa, Or.) 1937-199?, October 21, 1948, Image 7

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    The NYSSA
VO LU M E X X X X H I NO. 41
NOXIOUS WEEDS IN
COUNTY ARE KILLED
A total of 220 acres of noxious
weed Infested barrow pits on the
county roads and state highways
were treated by the Malheur coun­
ty weed control crew in the past
year, reports George Bain, county
extension agent.
The method of treatment used on
nearly all of the area was 2, 4-D
spray. Weeds treated were morn­
ing glory, white top, Canadian
thistle, Russian Knapweed, and
puncture vine. Bain said that one
season’s spraying won’t kill all the
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JOURNAL
SECOND SECTION
N YSSA, OREGON, T H U R SD A Y , OCTOBER 21, 1948
weeds but that they will be pre
vented from farming seed and t
percentage of them will be klllei
each time. The spray program i
part of a county-wide effort to pre
vent the spread of the e noxiou
weed«, both on public and private
pre perty.
Without the cooperation of thi
ran. hers of the county in report­
ing the e infestations, Bain saic
hat In all probability little over
half of the weeds would have been
o tod. He urges those knowing
of weed Infestations in their com­
munity, to continue their gooc'
w rk in reporting them to the
nn’ y agent’s office.
RCSIKHCC
M r M m | O J m t
IS Y O U R TR UCK INSURED?
Are you protected against possible suit for
damages due to accident?
SEE
Frank T. M o rg a n A ge n cy
C ab Cover
FOR YO U R TR AC TO R FEEL ON
W e Have In The Yard
T ractors
Tandem Discs
Off-Set Discs
Hydraulic Land Levelers
“ The House of Oliver”
NYSSA IMPLEMENT CO.
Stunz and Thomas
Here it is,
•'The Oregon Farm Bureau Fed­
eration will hold it’s 17th annual
reeling and convention at Bend,
November 9, 10, 11, and 12. Dele­
gates and members from county
farm bureaus all over the state
gill be in attendance," announced
Charles Taylor of Nyssa, president
of the Malheur County Farm
Bureau.
Commodity meetings will be held
November 10.
During the general session, Nov­
ember 11, time will be devoted to
a farm credit panel, in which rep­
resentatives from the following or-
tanications will participate: Fed­
eral Land banks, Production Cred­
it association, farmers honte ad­
ministration, state wide banks, in­
dependent banks, and an insur-
tnce company interested in agrl-
’ ultural loans. E. J. (Ed) Bell, ad­
ministrator o f the Oregon wheat
commission, will act as moderator.
"All farmers are invited to at­
tend any Farm Bureau meeting and
especially this annual meeting and
convention, Taylor said.
Hotel
reservations may be made by writ­
ing the state OFBF office. Box
577, Pendleton, Oregon,” Mr. Tayior
added.
Attend Medical Meet—
Dr. and Mrs. J. J. Sarazin left
Wednesday morning for Pasadena.
California, where Dr. Sarazin will
attend a meeting of the Pacific as­
sociation of Railroad Surgeons.
H O W W OULD A
These C o ld M o r n in g s ?
FARM BUREAU WILL
HOLD ORE. MEETING
Attend Knife And Fork Dinner—
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Zobell and
Mr. and Mrs. Bumall Brown at­
tended the Knife and Fork club
meeting at Boise last Wednesday
A hand-carved ox yoke, made by berta avenue. Celia Carol B.vbre, evening.
the late B. L. Bybee, father of D. granddaughter of B. L. Bybee, is
O. Bybee, makes a unique sign pointing to the sign,
Keturn From Walla Walla—
post at the Bybee home on Al-1
Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Tobler re-
'urned Sunday evening from Walla
Attend Game—
Walla, where they spent the week
Here From Stockton—
Mr. and Mrs. Ira Ure^and Mr.
■nd visiting relatives.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
James
Moreland
of
and Mrs. Dave Mitchell returned
Stockton,
California,
visited
last
Monday evening from Portland,
Attend F. II. A. Metting—
where they had spent several days week with Mrs. Moreland’s mother,
Janice Frost, Marian Brown,
Mrs.
M.
J.
Moreland,
and
her
sister,
and attended the Oregon-California
Dorothy Dillbn and Ruth Russell
Mrs.
Cora
Tomlinson.
Mr.
More­
football game Saturday. While in
eft Friday morning for Hermiston,
Portland they visited their daugh­ land is a government inspector of Dregon to attend the district meet-
ters, Beverly Ann Ure and Beth heavy equipment for army use.
ng of the Future Homemakers of
Mitchell, who had gone to Portland
America. They were accompanied
fcrr the week-end. Mr. and Mrs. Sfsters Visit—
by Mrs. Bernard Frost. The group
Mrs. Alice Gilbert and Mrs. Nel­ returned to Nyssa Sunday.
Ure and Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell re­
turned on the Washington side of lie Hightower of Salida, Colorado
the Columbia river and visited the Arrived last week for a visit with Here From Caldwell—
their sister, Mrs. Ed Frost.
museum at Marysville.
Mrs. Neil Holmes and children
of Caldwell were visitors last week
at the home o f Mr. and Mrs. Hugh
Tobler.
I w in Falls—
To California—
Mrs. W. F Findiing was a guest. Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Huseby
of her sister, Mrs. Les»*a Brown of are on a two-weeks trip to San
Twin Falls, last week-end.
Bruno, and other California towns.
I'u
SOME REASONS WHY
The Legislative and Temperance Committees
ot’ the Oregon Council of Churches urge all
temperance minded citizens of Oregon to
Vote NO’ on "Liquor by the Drink”
Oregon Liquor Dispensing Licensing Act
Vote “ NO” — 315 No
I vote against the pro­
posed law
1. Thi« is the same proposition the wet interests tried to put over
in the last session of the State Legislature, but which was
kilied ly the strong united action of the churches working
through the Council.
Passage of this measure would make every restaurant, club,
hole., train, aiiplane, and other common carrier a possible
saloon. Tne people of Oregon were promised the saloon would
never return—this is the first step toward its return. The bill
piovides that liquor may be sold in any room in the building
where the license is issued—it doesn’t have to be in the same
room where meals are served.
3. Its passage will permit the sale of hard liquor in places where
young people go for lunches, meals, soft drinks, candy and such
things which minors and youth purchase and use.
4. .DAHO put this over in their last State Legislature
The
result nas been the opening of 400 "plush clubs" selling liquor
by the glass, in addition to the 144 state liquor stores! Con­
ditions are much worse than before. There has been a large
ii..rea.se in drinking among women and youth.
5. OALIfORNIA has long had "liquor by the glass.’’ Here are
some of the results according to the OREGON VOTER (issue
of August 21, p. 11).
a. A Hollywood newspaper says California has a higher per­
centage of alcoholism than any other state!
Now they propose for Oregon an imitation of the California
system of "liquor by the glass." IT IS TIME TO STOP,
I OOK, AND LISTEN.
b. Of the six U. S. cities with most alcoholics (as reported by
the Yale survey), five are in California.
6 When compared with neighboring states Oregon’s KNOX LAW
is effective. The wet interests will tell you of its many faults
but these are facts:
a. It limits sale of liquor to state liquor stores which can be
controlled.
b. It controls advertising of liquor in newspapers and over
the air.
c. It prevents sale of liquor on trains and public conveyances
in Oregon.
URGE YOUR FRIENDS, NEIGHBORS. AND FELLOW C IT ­
IZENS TO
Vote 315 “ NO” — “ OREGON LIQUOR DIS­
PENSING LICENSING ACT ”
You can help the Oregon Council of Churches defeat this
vicious bill in Oregon by financing the distribution of literature
over the state. For information write to:
OREGON COUNCIL OF CHURCHES,
Legislative Committee
215 S. E. 9th Avenue
Portland 14, Oregon
Have Your Name
Or That of a Friend
Stamped On
S t a t io n e r y
L e a th e r G o o d s
C h ris tm a s C a r d s
Lettering done in our office on new equipment in gold, silver,
red, black, blue or white.
This equipment is another addition to a
/m/'/d/azer-o/ar/s fo com /
Once in a blue moon the stylists and engineers outdo themselves. They create a car that
goes beyond today and aets the pattern for cars o f the future.
This is what they have done with the F R A ZE R for 1949!
long line of improvements made in our shop
to increase quality, efficiency and economy
during the last few years.
Low, sleek and differently handsome it is the trailblazer in style o f cars to come.
Its exclusive colors and fabrics have made the world's leading fashion
designers fall in love with it. They call it "the dream car".
The same car, the F R A Z E R for 1949, has even won the hard-to-win hearts o f
the test drivers who must relentlessly punish a car mile after rrJe for weeks
on end. T h ey say the Frazer makes such driving no punishment for them. Its
driving ease and riding com fort "m ake 600 miles a day a breeze," they say.
There’s a thrill waiting for you at your dealer’s today. With 100 new
features, improvements and refinements, the 1949 FRAZER is ahead o f
its time . . . out front— trailblazing the way for all the cars to come.
First to break clean and scrap tradition, the cars from Willow Run
have done it again. Because unlike other "n ew " cars built since
the war, they’ve road-proved their dependability— 2 billion
miles worth! Value-proved to a quarter-million justly proud
owners. See and drive the new FR A ZE R now! It's at your
dealer’s. Kaiser-Frazer Corporation, Willow Run, Michigan.
ONE-STOP SERVICE FOR PRINTING,
OFFICE SUPPLIES AND STATIONERY.
GATE CITY JOURNAL
Printers and Stationers
Bybee Motor & Equipment