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About Nyssa gate city journal. (Nyssa, Or.) 1937-199? | View Entire Issue (April 27, 1950)
THE NYSSA GATE CITY JOURNAL, NYSSA. OREGON. THURSDAY. APRIL 27. I960 PAGE TWO Robert Robertson, of RFD No. 1, Hendricks, recovery on account, held in the evening. graduation . Principal Dennla Paten D l| ir y | ll e „ T o \ i * it Favelle Biogeni *775.88. The Boy Scouts of this area will Homedale. Idaho. apoki* on ' Crystal (lazing and .» 1 violin trio, constating of Nani Child. Festival Is Set hold a spring camporee at the Ki- Pierce M. Rice Malhrur Fo. Farm» BUILDING PERMITS A“ *" -on and Laira 8chcnk, Manager waius park in Payette May 5 and S. H y IsJItNI S c h o o l played Memory Lane" The pro- All fun lovers of the area are in Dairymen in Malheur and other Robert E. Talbot. Jr., construct- m J “ T T . . k *r» m »• » concluded with "Phllos- NEWS OF RECORD I ion, Second street, lot 14, block 70, The little auditorium ol the new , ophit Advice" by Henry Hartley Snake River counties will have an vited to attend the 29th annual Pay Legal Advertising opportunity to visit three dairy ette Blossom festival to be held in school building was the scene of the superintendent of schools COMPLAINTS. CIRCUIT COURT Oreen addition, *700. 12 x 20. frame. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION spring Junior-senior buffet supper The prom « a s held in the school farms to look over types of barns, ! Payette May 6. according to spon- Frank Phillips, enlargement, lots John E. Ostrom vs Marian Keech, 21, 22 and 23, block 61. Green ad at which members of the two classes. I gymnasium which was decorated milking parlors, silos, calf raising | sors of the event. UNITED STATES recovery on account. *2.613 33. the faculty, school board members ln blue and silver, the colors of the dition, *500 Department of the Interior Committees have promised the and room mothers gathered last Prl- -t dance programs, with silhouettes of I methods, pastures and some of the * biggest festival ever given, with not Silas Travis vs. S. Conley Davis, Vern Moncur. alteration. 707 Emi- Bureau o f Land Management day evening The long tables were ; schu activities decorating the ,lr,t heifers resulting from the arti- a dull moment in a full-day and son avenue, *3600. cinderblock, two damages, *25.000. Land Office. Portland 18, Oregon, centered with bouquets of snap- Music for the dance was fur- j flclal breeding program at the night program, which is resigned Toblers Feed and Fuel vs. Alma additions. 8 x 16 and 12 x 30. ■ * " * ? * , , f uU^ S ,llJ,hed b) the Miramar ballroom , prmg dairy tour next Thursday, to Include educational, athletic, a- April 17. 1950. were used. The theme of this an- l orchestra of Boise. ____... ' NOTICE is hereby given that Wil nual affair. •'Yesterdays” , was an Thr h , h M<*y 4. The announcement was musement and thrill features. The pagent is scheduled to com liam Emery Nelson, of Route 1. nounced In the programs placed at i committees committees ir from the junior lumor class cla s m*d* lhl* w**k by 1)0,1 K extension Ander- mence promptly at 10 a. m. with Homedale. Idaho, who. on June 16th. _ _. . in tne Malheur county each setting. | and their advisors. Mias Margery k*“ **1'*’ir Governor Robins crowning queen 1948, made Reclamation Homestead I Richard Dlven served as toastmast- i Nlhart m h . . , and i Dale \ . i . Overtake. -i.. '¡a g e n t The tour is sponsored by the Mal- Leah Jensen and culminate with Entry, No. Oregon 027. for Farm er for the supper and called upon --------------------------- B" or N*vN‘v. Sec. 27.1 j heur Dairy Herd Improvement as a parade through the down-town Unit Delwin Holcomb, president of the Attend Hereford Meeting— streets. The afternoon program will Township 22 S . Range 46E, Junior class for the welcome and the Mr. and Mrs. Cash Turner of sociation that is awarding three include the first performance of the Willamette Meridian, has filed response from Jim Nicholson, presl- : Sunset valley attended the Eastern tr°Phles t° ttle hl*h production Red Apple derby and a rodeo, a notice of intention to make dent of the senior class The pro- Oregon Hereford Breeders associ- tlerdi‘ durln* P**1 year, which large race meet and a high school Final Proof, to establish claim to grain Included the following num- ation meeting held at the veteran- ended with the regular March herd baseball game. A colorful mardi the land above described, before Don bers: "Among My Souvenirs", sung hall in Ontario last Thursday even- te*t' gras and kiddles lantern parade and M. Qraham. Notary Public, at Nyssa, j by Joel Mitchell, a reading by Cleo mg Si Williams of Montana show- 1 Dairymen and their wives are In- the second baseball game, between Oregon, on the 6th day of June, 1950. Flinders. and “ Just a Memory” , ed two films. Beef Production" and vltid to attend and take part in the the College of Idaho and the Uni Claimant names as witnesses: Sur fac e P ro te ctio n from sung by Eva Lee Drown. LaRue The Hereford Way” . The wives of Plcn*c pot-luck luncheon at noon. versity of Idaho nines, will be held Joe 8nell. of Homedale. Idaho. Franklin and Shirley Nolan Ron- the members of the association serv- , wt,ere coffee and ice cream will be in the evening. Carnival attract r i r e , W a t e r a n d W e a t h e r . , '. Oale Martin, of Adrian, Oregon. aid Jensen spoke on "Past Memor- ed coffee, sandwiches, cake and ice I furnished. Veterans' groups, vo ions and other feeatures will be Vem Parker, of Adrian, Oregon. les ", Clarence Suiter told ln a hum- cream The association now has JO r*tional agriculture classes, business oruua vein of the senior class, and members men and others are especially in- ■ _________________________ ______ _ vlted to take part in this tour, com mencing at 10 a. m. at the Wendell Richmond farm, one-fourth mile ' * | south of the Malheur experiment station. The picnic lunch and pro duction awards will be made at noon Brilliant, lasting, at the Richmond farm. easy-to-use colors Following the noon program, the for refinishing al m ost a n yth in g— ' group will go north to the Oregon For con crete, masonry inside the house Slope community to visit the Qllbert stucco, new galvanized j Sprout farm, two miles north of the ‘ >ro“ t 1 . 1 6 * t . iron, etc. Lasts | Payette junction, 1L mile west and \ indefinitely. 5 . 6 0 fsi- I S mile south From Sproul's place | the group will visit the W W and i The fjy e it Ed Ker farm. 1 > mile north, 1 mile j west and 3 4 mile north. house paint Visitors to the Richmond farm • you can buy will see a pit silo, dug Into the ground over 30 feet, and his ar- j G E N E R A LS rangement for unloading and feed- j ing. In addition they will see his , 100% PURE loose-housing barn and sned with ! PAINT hay and straw storage facilities, calf raising methods, pastures and milk- 1 ing barn Richmond also has some F lo w s o n e v e n ly . Thig tough, weather reaut- oney - w ise farmers are d! ing, easy to transport, you save D ries fast. Stands yearling heifers from artificially; ing. outbade paint assure* stocking up now with you year* and year« of lone- bred cows that can be compared | plenty o f labor and time on row- scuffing and scrub lasting beauty and protec I with others of similar age. bing. Makes clean- Reynold* Lifetime Aluminum crop irrigation. C hoose from tion New. smart, c e n Of interest at the Sproul farm Is r SJ6 ut. modern color.. ~ . Siphon Tube*. They don’t ' the Surge Milking Parlor in use three types to meet your needs G a L since last fall, a comparison of com rust out, w on ’t crack and best. Each is seamless. Success Y ou can n ow com p letely red ecorate y ou r h om e and i .ill.ill.i silage .n a trench m I o are stronger.. . offer years o f fully used on thousands o f acres. and a walk-in cooler combined wtlii pay in m on th ly paym en ts as low as a large deep-freeze unit, and a com service at fewer cost These sturdy siphon tubes by parison of his calf raising facilities. ! Lightweight for fast han- Reynolds are your best buy. At the Ker farm visitors will see the results of several years of past- j lire fertilizing with commercial nit- . per m onth R i g u l a t * w a t e r flo w . rogen. trench silo use. and recom- 1 , mendations for paving the barn lot j w ith no d ow n paym ent Re m o v a b l e r e d u c e r * to keep the cows cleaner in fall and winter months. It is planned CO M E IN T O D A Y provide added economy. to have a comparison ol cost of concrete with other asphalf pav- 1 ing materials and adaptability of the two materials. The Malheur D. H I. A. plans to make this program an annual 707 A D R IA N B LV D . j event each spring. Junior-Senior Affair's Given D x. . ___ I .,1 THESE — GENERAL PAINTS— WILL SERVE YOU BEST Lé S PORTLAND YOU SA V E CEMENT PAINT on Row-Crop Irrigation with n ¡j LIFETIME Reynolds aluminum SIPH O N m TUBES a* M usiness matter? S 5.00 f l 0 - « » u c l*S for Siphon Owyhee Truck & Implement Co. Letter T o iriendly chatter? lath call far Lana Disiane# Your friends, and the people you do business with, msy be scattered from cosst to coast. But you can reach almost any o a t ol them, in a hurry, by Long Distance. For buying, selling — or news worth telling — this inexpensive service Is “ made to order." It'* fast. It’s personal. And to*« convenient. Malheur Home Telephone Co. SPECIAL SPECIAL Dear Editor: This is to the parents and children or any one who owns a 22 rifle What do you shoot at? Last Friady evening some one shot our lamily milk cow Our 10-year- old son leads the cow to pasture and lends her. She attacked him and was in a crazy condition for hours because of pain and lost her milk There are four families living at the foot of Riverview drive hill and we seem to be targets for the sharp- sifboters who stand on top of the ridge Mrs Berle Phifer Rt. 1. Nyssa. Oregon Attend t o n fe Nmteen members of the Nyssa I Methodist Youth Fellowship group j attended the district meeting held tt : Emmett last Sunday Three from i the Nyssa group Tom Foster. Cliff Coleman and Harley Duus were chosen to serve as officers for the : coining year. T# UaMwell— Mr and Mrs Hugh Tobler and family visited Sunday at the Neil ■ Holmes home in Caldwell SPECIAL 40 GALLON DAY AND NITE WATER HEATER 36 INCH HARDWICK RANGE 100 GALLON PRO-GAS TANK ... LABOR REGULAR PRICE $ 136.50 $ 129.50 $120 00 $ 25.00 $ 411.00 SPECIAL All Three With G as Lines Installed at only $ 269.00 $54 dow n and as little as $2.25 per week IDEAL GAS AND APPLIANCE P H O N E 125-W Editor NYSSA PHONE 245 STUNZ LUMBER CO. OREGON WHO CALLS HOOVER A ‘YOKEL’ and An Open Letter to S. Eugene Allen Editor of the Oregon Labor Press Dear G en e:— It i* common knowledge that no-one in the state of (> re goo thinks let* of W ayne M o n t than you do. T im e and again Joe Battaglia. H einie Detloff and the other* around the table at Hilaire’* have heard you de nounce M orse a* a “com m ie" sympathizer and political racketeer. W’hy, then have you used the old. familiar "co m m ie " smear technique in the last two issues of the Oregon Labor Press calling Dave H oover an illiterate and unintelligent “yokel ? " You know better, (zene. You know that H oover has had three years o f law training ahd is well informed on world and domestic problems. H e takes short-hand fluently and is an expert typiat. W'e know why the Labor Press called H oover a “yokel” Gene. Because, like most the rest of us. you have to work for a living. Y o u r bosses at the I.abor Tem ple have had their orders from the big labor bosses in the East. W hen our advertising man tried to buy space in the Labor Press to answer the scurrilous and unfounded at tacks on H oover you told him “nothing doing." Y ou had your orders on that. too. W hat about Freedom of the Press. Ite n e ? A n d what about Freedom itself? W ill America continue to be free when the labor bosses and bureau crats take o v e r ? Right now the labor bosses are tapping the rank and file of union labor S2 per head nationally to put up s slush fund for their pels like M orse an estimated $15 million dollars. W e never heard of the membership of a union being given a chance to vote on such thing*. The labor bosses pick who they want to throw their support and the m em bership’s money to. D o they regard their own I n ion mem ber* as “y o k e l*?" A re you calling H oover a “ yokel" in the Labor Press. G ene, because he own* and works a 400 acre farm in Lane county? \ceording to “W h o ’s W h o ," Jim M arr. execu tive-secretary of the Oregon State Feslera.xon of Labor "began at a farm laborer." From the same source we learn. Gene, that your first job out of college was with a farm implement concern. Kelley Loe, political "brain " at the labor temple was horn on a farm. Charles L. McNary and Xhraham Lincoln were also born on the farm. W ould you say they were “y o k e ls?" H ave you forgotten. Gene, that America was built by men like Dave H oover who were not afraid to go out into the country and work with their hands? Those pioneer* who came to Oregon in covered wagons carried an axe in one hand and a Bible in the other and they didn’t need anybody with foreign “ ism s" to tell them how to lead their lives from the crad le to the grave. W ere they "yok els," G ene? M aybe there’s a reason why the boys on the big city dailies are poking fun at "D ead w ood D ave.” T h ey all be long to the N ew spaper G uild which is affiliated with the C IO . H ave you seen the issue o f the C IO N ew s for Jan uary 2, 1950 which lists W ayne M orse as the only “ R epu b lican” senator with a perfect record o f voting for C IO - sponsored measures ? G en e, w e know you take your orders, from the labor bosses, is that where M orse gets his o rd e rs ? W ell, ( Jene we know the spot you are in. ( )regon is on the spot, too. It will be six years before the people o f Oregon will get another chance to vote on the office M orse now occupies in the U . S. Senate. M aybe this is the last chance the rest o f us “ yokels" will have to tca k e up before the labor bosses and the bur eaucrats put a yoke around our necks fo r g ood ! A fter all. if on ly a pinko college p rofessor w h o has never had to meet payroll, who has never worn his cou n try’s uniform in time o f war and w ho has fed at the public trough since he got his college diplom a in W isconsin is the only type o f man qualified to hold public o ffic e in this country all we can say is G O D H E L P A M E R I C A ! D A V E H O O V E R : B om in 1898 on a farm in W ayne County. Indiana, o f Q uaker parentage. A fte r leaving the little red schoolhouse" attended R ichm ond. Indiana high school, immediately follow ing graduation, enlisted in the L . S. .Army on M ay 6, 1917. F ollow in g war service, was employed by cotton exporting firm at A rd m ore. Oklahom a. M oved to I.os A ngeles in 1923. Em ployed in law e n fo rce ment by Ia>s A ngeles county. A ttended Southwestern L'ni- versity Law School 1930-1932. Resigned from his L os Angeles County law enforcem ent possition in 1942 after making outstanding record and returned to farm ing at Deadwood. Lane county. Oregon. M em ber Dairy H erd Improvement association and deeply- interested in the ad vancement o f agriculture and the dairy industry. L ong a student and supporter o f good governm ent. Y OKE LS ? Mt and Mrs Dava Hoover attend a - - CUckama# Republican Rally accotnpan- “ d by Walter R May. Co-Pubbabar Co- O rejon City Enterpnae-Courier Take the State of Oregon Aw ay From the Federal G overnm ent-G ive It Back to the People. E L E C T A REA L R E P U B L IC A N —A R E A L A M E R IC A N D A V E HOOVER FOR U . S. SE N A TO R H O OVER <e* V S. SENATO R C o n k t e e . Jam*. A R od-aa. General Cbamwa^ .AM Broadway Oak B ull dine. Portland S. Oregon