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About Nyssa gate city journal. (Nyssa, Or.) 1937-199? | View Entire Issue (Sept. 25, 1952)
, 'V meNYSi^ GAI ’Y S S A VOLUME XXXXVII NO. 37 GATE C IT Y » r ^ - r # - r >“ * - - ' — - A ; . JOURNAL. NYSSA. ä JOURNAL. OREGON.'THURSDAY. SFPTEMBÉR 25. 19S2 THE Appeal M ade For 1952 Plans Complete For X-Raying All Adulis Here In October In Fight Against T.n ; Two Units In Use Sugar Reel Campaign Sei For Misplaced Books fc, j R e,d > *• Half a set of valuable books are > J missing, altlKHigli they are believed to be in storage somewhere in Nys sa, it was reported this week by Mrs. Joe Brumbach, school librarian. E f forts are being made to locate the Th e sugar beet harvest for 1952 missing volume to make the com will start on a controlled basis on r Nyssa's Plans are comp’ plete set available for use at the Oct. 6. it was announced this week /ogram to j part in the county school, M rs. Brumbach said. by Jared Lewis, district manager of 5 years of x-ray every perso The librarian explained that the the Amalgamated Sugar Co. nd mobile ; age with both sta late Mrs. Q. S. Lafrenz, mother of Adrian—The annual teachers re a in Oc to- units that will be Th e local plant has been running Mrs. Hilda Tensen, donated a set of ception sponsored by the Adrian announced ber, Ralph L a * » "Masterpieces of World Literators," grade school P T A was held last field samples for sugar and purity Nyssa firemen were called at noon Wednesday. Lawrence, who is chair by Teck, to the town library several Thursday evening with Mrs. Angie for the past two weeks, resulting in | Wednesday to bring the resuscitator man of the Nyssa project, along expectations o f a somewhat higher years ago. The puolic library at that j to the Niel Dimmick ranch where the Chaney serving as chairman of the with 19 organization representatives time was hous'd in a business build- 1 sugar content this year. Lewis re . . . . four-\ ar-old son o f Ivir. and Mrs. program committee. and committee members, attended , .. , __ __ , ing and was later moved several . .. i nari y Dimmick was temporarily ported. "Th e crop is continuing to a county meeting in Ontario Tues- The program consisted of a violin make excellent growth and average times, Mrs. Brumbach revealed. In missing Niel Dimmick, grandfather day night to complete plans of ope^ one of the moves, about half the solo by Earl Winn, accompanied by yields this year will be high," he of the missing child, who was later ration. set was believed to have been placed Dudley Kurtz at the piano, and said. In commenting on a compari located in Nyssa with his mother, Clifford Mink and Tom Jones, told firemen he feared the young storage ui a home or a business several instrumental numbers by son o f tonnage with the record set both o f Nyssa, have been named ster might have fallen in an irriga ing. Jake Borge playing his guitar and county chairman to work with Mrs. tion ditch. u* Brumbach is requesting in Earl Crocker, playing a violin, ac- in 1951. Dhe Nyssa manager said. T h e 1951 average yield was 22 tons Edna Paris, Malheur county health built. about the books and Mrs. Larry Dimmick had left the ^ j companied by Mrs. Tillie Saxton. per acre and we are expecting a nurse who is in charge o f tuber child with his grandmother, who in ^ rs- , can be combined with culosis control: Dr. W. J. Weese, turn asked her daughter to look somewhat better yielding crop this formation 'ssion o f the school K ay Borge alld Mary Ann county tr-dical society, anc Walter after the boy. it was reported. W hile hoping they complete set. They gave a clever dance, oth er enter- year." those in possv. McPartla id, of Nyssa, chairman of the aunt was caring for the child. bsolete and can j tainment included skits put on by Average yield from 1947 to 1951, a library to make a ts and teach- ^ teachers and parents, the Malh -ur county tuberculosis and his mother came for him and the five year period, was slightly over will never become >. health association. j grandfather was unaware o f the he -aid. As j Harold Newman, principal of the 20 tons to the acre. be used by both studei. Lawrence said a stationai y unit will change in baby sitters. 'ly valu- Adrian grade school, introduced the In directives mailed out this week, ers for reference work, a. Firemen Ralph Lawrence stated be at Henneman’s Hardware in Nys khey ; teachers to all the parents and each growers are being reminded that a complete set, they arc rea sa Oct. 17 and will start x-raying all that the grandfather was to be con ir.s, teacher received a corsage from the beets going into storage piles must able, but split into two group, persons who appear the following gratulated for his efforts to make I P.T.A. are of no value to even collect, be delivered freshly topped, properly day, wh'ch is Saturday. There will j sure the breath-restoring apparatus the librarian explained. j topped, free from trash, leaves and be no p icessing Sunday or Monday i would be on hand in the event the Anyone knowing the whereabouts and x-r ying will be done again on j child had fallen in a ditch. "Every frost in order to keep well. Any of of the books is requested td lall Mrs. 'T Oct. 21, 22 and 23. i member of the department is de- j those conditions will cause the piles Brumbach at the school. | to heat, which will result in loss of T lie mobile x-r.iy unit will come ! make a run with the sugar and when this happens every- to the Nyssa high school Ocit 28 to | and flnd that U is not MRS. W ILS O N H O SPITALIZED p r o c e « all students, Instructors and 1 e ' ed' ile commented. M rfa n d Mrs. Huston W u at 38th polio victims ;;;,;r li; r „ it wasexiji‘uned- nel at the -chool. The following _ _ _ ~ The 37th a no ‘ he Malheur Me- In order/ or to get their tended the food convention at Sun day the mobile will be located some- lay, one from conditional payment as Valley last week-end. W hile there. weTe odmitted ^o , where on M u n street for two days .. ns, bringing , ' th®y’. silould call at Mrs. Wilson suffered an appendicitis mortal hospital Mon, processing o f the general public. PIC K E D A T RANDOM, J. C. Olsen is shown above opening 'y to four. tfie county PM A office and make On Oct. 31, the mobile unit will be . . . . . . . . , , . . i | attack and was hospitalized. Mr. Vale and one from 3u. the total since Jast Thurso* as May aPPl*cation for the payment as .soon stationed at the Amalgamated Sugar | „ ‘ l(H.®en received that Alice up a sack of onions, recently harvested from his 25-acre patch | Wilson returne(1 Monday. Admitted last Thursday w. nday 33 their harvest is complete, Lewis rvi f,,r the mvb benefit h^nafu of r>f ail ________________ Co. for all Am.ninv^Ac employees i Komatsu, 1952 graduate of Nyssa on his 65-acre farm three miles north of Nyssa, to show their | Driggers, 25, John Day. a,'d .Su. i - said. as well as truck drivers hauling high school and a freshman this enormous size. His yield of the over-size yellow sweets was year at the University o f Oregon, Betty Longevin, 26, Hums, w^s a Mostly Mechanical Harvest beets to the plant. around 550 bags to the acre.— Photo by Yost. mitted Sunday. The two cases ad Possibly 90 percent o f the crop this Nov. 1, 5, 6 and 7, the unit will has been declared eligible for the mitted Monday were Patsy Mitch«* again be located on Nyssa's Main college special honors program. In Wl11 be harve-sted mechanically, 11, Vale, and Karen Lee Sherman, street 1.0 take care of those who had the entrance examinations last week, L,,. , k VS€ Browers who are planning Miss Komatsu rated in the upper 12, Burns. r . t been previously processed. one-fifth of her class, making it i Charge Aocording to Dr. L. A Maulding. on h a v L .'* ..thelrt toeeta toPPed by possible for her to enter a special county health officer, the last three hand shctu 1 makle early arrange Efforts are being made to have course of study. patients are the only ones remain ment*, with tn ’ labor crew or field- nearly complete coverage of this Shipping statistics released by the ; bag-to-the-acre yield. He says the ing in isolation receiving special mail so hey will n.'t be seriously de i, and the county, as possible, Union Pacific’s Nyssa freight office harvest has been running from 400 Three more names were added to treatment, and nine patients ad layed in sL'rting their harvest. Lew rence stated. He explained that I this week revealed that to date ship to 900 bags to the acre. k. ere are no charges for the service Heaviest shippers this season have the city council race this week with mitted for polio treatment are con is warned. ment af onions from the Nyssa area < the filing o f petitions for Tom Jones, valescing. and no “compulsion,” but the ser lags considerably behind those of been J. C. Watson Co.. Muir-Rob- Th e 1952 basic piecework rates George Sallee and John Dority, to vices of all organizations will be en 1951 for the same period. j ers & Burninghain, Inc., Simplot bring the total to six candidates for per ton for pulling, topping and listed to recruit "candidates” to be j Tom Jones, freight agent, gave out Western Idaho Produce, Inc . Owy- loading for the western Idaho and four council posts. Sallee is being x-rayed. the figures which show that ship- hce Produce, Inc., and Lynn Joseph- eastern Oregon district show that named as a candidate to succeed This will be the first time that j ments ifco Wednesday of this week son Produce. minimum wage per acre is $8.60 A himself in the post he has held for concentrated efforts have been made Potato shipments came to a vir reached 63 carloads, as compared to ten years. \ scale ranging from extremely low u> to have 100 percent coverage of the | tual stand-still during the past week, S5 a year ago. Names filed last week »»eie F.<dl hi%n production fields, reveal that George A. Cleaver, route 2, Nyssa, county. Lawrence said. Elderly peo Shipments for the 1951 calendar with but one car being way-billed to per ton costs decline as the yield In ple are especially requested to ap- was elected chairman of the Nyssa year totalled 542 cars, according to the eastern market. T o date, 2,045 Stunz, incumbent councilman, R A. P 'o r for processing on one o f the community Production and Market Jones, who predicted that movement cars have been shipped from here. "D ick" Forbess and Dale Garrison. creases. The four vacancies to be filled at dates listed to help reach the source ing administration at the election o f the 1952 crop would exceed that W ith more than three months left in For instance, a grower whose field o f tuberculosis in children which is Sopt. 12, for community committee o f the previous year by several hun the calendar year, total spud ship the general election Nov. 4. occur as yields only four tons per acre would A project to raise funds for a Boy® the result of the expiration of the almost invariably the result of com ments are certain to top those of men, it was announced Monday by dred cars. terms o f Stunz, Sallee, Mayor Town at Camp Columbia near Th e pay $2.15 a ton for pulling, topping munication. He went on to explain Jones based his prediction on the 1951 by a wide margin. Glen L Hutehini-«n, chairman o f the George Hennemon and Harry Minor. Dalles was instigated, new members and loading, while a grower with 20 that in almost every instance, a Heavy shipments of feeder cattle fact that there was an increase in The two latter have declined to seek were initiated and a tgvlew of the tons average and over would have youngster's tuberculosis can be tra county PM A committee. onion acreage over last year and into local feed yards was also re- At the same time K I. Peterson, that the acreage yield is showing a j ported by Jones, who said 39 cars nomination by petition. Holdover history o f the Nyssa aerie, Eagles to pay only $1.55 per ton, yet his ced to members o f the family, such members of the Nyssa city council lodge was given at a zone- meeting overall costs would be $31 an acre. Adrian, was chosen as chairman of as grandparents, who sometimes be gain. Although there are no definite were received last Monday. Subse are Hugh Tobler, Bob Thompson For the benefit of growers in as lieve that "x-ray film shouldn't be the Adrian community committee. o f eight aeries o f the FO .K - quent shipments are expected to figures available yet to back up his certaining the amount due their wasted on us old people." Both men are now members o f the assumption, Jones estimates a 600- taper o ff fromithus peak. Jones said. and Lloyd Wilson. The meeting was attended by 61 City Manager E. K Burton said According to information received committee, Hutchinson said. Engles from Hood River, Th e Turtles harvest hands, the 1952 basic piece that all petitions for the nomlna by the health association, tuber- Other new members o f the Nyssa tion of candidates for council posts | Hcrmlston, Pendleton, LaOrnude, work rate per ton for the work in IN F A N T RECEIVES BLOOD oulo.sis can be completely stamped community committee are Frank W. TRAN SFU SIO N S IN BOISE must be filed not later than Oct. 4 Baker, Caldwell, Klamath Falls, Nys- the district is being published. out when the source of the infection Four average tons per acre for the Shervood, route 1, vice chairman; the same date that registering for oil and one from Cody, Wyo. The' Linda Root, two-months-old daugh is located by x-ray. Gerrit Stam, route 1, regular mem iniatiatory work was given1 by f*.rtn or part o f the farm covered ter of Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Root, was the general and city election ends. The appearance of the x-ray units and other Nyssa officers, and the by y separte labor agreement. $2 15 Smiling skies during the past week taken to a Boise hospital Tuesday in Malheur county is made possible ber; John E. Reffett, route 2. first general meeting was conducted by per tgh; 5 tons, $2.05; 6, $2.00, 7, by the sale o f the famous Christmas alternate, and Leo W. Child, route served to raise tempenitures in the for special medical attention in Francis Parker, zone director Iroixi j 95 ^ ^1^0; 9, $185:10, $1.80; 11 Nyssa area an even 10 degrees over cluding blood tramdusions. The seals each year by the Anti-Tuber 2, second alternate. Hood River. Joe Bellon was general $175; 12. *1,72; 13. $169; 14. $167; “ culosis association. In the Adrian community, other the previous week. Th e average was transfusions thus week was the sec chairman, Claude Willson served» as 15, $1,65; 16, $163; 17. $161; 18, members elected are George Schie- 87 degrees, with but very little varia ond to have been administered, the tion during the Journal’s weather first being given Aug. IS program chairman and Don Graham 1 59; 19. $1.57; 90 and over, $1.55. The Malheur Mem orial hospital Mr. and Mrs. Harry Ward, of T e r mer, route 1, Nyssa, vice chairman, week, Sept. 18 to 24. Th e child was born in Nyssa July received a cash contribution last was publicity chairman. In instances In which the opera- ris, Calif., arrived Monday at t h e ; re-elected; Louis Pratt, route 1. Low for the week was 85, registered 18 and weighed four pounds, two V. R. Fulton, o i The Dalles, told week from the mother o f a little boy Continued on Page 12 home o f Mr. and Mrs. Finley Shus- j first alternate, and Perle Davis, last Monday, and high was 92, re ounces. She now weighs eight who had been hospitalized here with the group that Boys Town was start ter. Homedale, second alternate. corded last Friday. ed at Camp Columbia by M ajor pounds. • suspected polio. Other community committees elee- Night temperatures w ere constant, Mrs. Billie Martin, now of Ash Blake two years ago and already had ted throughout the county 6 ept. 12 also, ranging from a low o f 44 to a land. Ore., wrote to M anager John processed 40 boys. About lutlf have and listed in the order of chairman, | bigh o f 50 degrees, O'Toole stating, “ I haven’t forgotten gone to homes and some a rt In the vice chairman, regular member, first Daily temperature readings fol- how nice you all were to me and to service, he said. J r . h .N. “ Dick” Yost, Qate City alternate and second alternate, are; low: him. Your kindness and considera The speaker stated that B o y s ! journal advertising manager and Max. Min. Bill Wahlert, manager o f Desert Ontario: O. A. Ireland. Alva T. tion certainly helped- ease the ter Town had been approved by the, reporter, .was one o f five caught in Thursday, Sept. 18 88 44 Seed Co., Nyssa branch, spent sev Am ido», Louis Schaefer, Harley E. ror.” Mrs. Martin went on to ex Oregon State aerie as a worthy pro a police “ dragnet” this week and a.p- Services were held Saturday a f Friday, Sept. 19 92 48 eral hours with Joe Driscol, of O n Noah and Lloyd Hartley. ternoon, at 2:30, at the Kirkpatrick press her appreciation tor the fact ject for all Eagle lodges in the staW? l>eared in police court Tuesday Saturday, Sept. 20 88 60 tario, inspecting alfalfa seed fields Vale: Blain Girvin, Emil Maag, where he pleaded guilty to the Memorial church, Parma, for M ary that there were no questions about Sunday, Sept. 21 86 50 to support the project with some that had be°n sprayed with a de Harry Featherston, Joe Schaefer and Amelia Hicks, » 6, who passed away finances nor polio insurance and charge and paid a fine. Monday, Sept. 22 85 46 foliant by Drrteoi. The charge was for over parking Daniel K. Brown. at her home In Apple Valley W ed stated that she had- received eome fund-raising campaign. Tuesday, Sept. 23 86 44 Fulton offered his assistance to “ unexpected money” for the hos i lo r whidh a $2 fine was paid. Police nesday, Sept. 17. Both men were well pleased with Payette-Oregon Slope: Harvey E Wednesday, Sept». 24 88 45 any lodge wishing to put on any j flcer j^ax Hull gave tickets to the results and anticipate a large j DeHaven. Harold Hart, Fred Haun, The Rev. H. G. McCallister, p®s- pital to use in any way they see fit. ______.. 1 i •> i t <• nnH n orrocfoH h rtV * • in ___ i 1 A . 4 K activity and c suggested boy five The Nyssa hospital has gained special motorists between 10 and 10:45 tr of Nyssa Methodist church, o f usage of defoliants here next season | Laurel Anderson and W. B. Sonner, widespread recognition for the work suppers or other means o f providing a «1 ' Wednesday. In addition to Yo»t, ficiated and the music was furn on alfalfa and red clover seed crops. Jordan Valley: Dale E. Sinclair, ished by a quartet from the Parma being done here in the treatment money. The zone aeries voted to th<we appearing before Police Judge W ahlert stated that his company Jack Potter, M. F. Hanley. Oran Ra- church, with Mrs. Don Lackland at of polk) cases and was able to add support the camp and to have each J. C. ttumth and paying fines were was experimenting in using a de burn and Russell Lynde. the O.K.K. club of the Nyssa com aerie double prices one night each Ivan While and Martin Poster P o the organ. Plans were formulated at a m eet foliant on lettuce seed, but does not Harper: Frank P. Marchek, L ib munity and the Veterans of Foreign six months and give half the reve lice dxri net have the names o f two in g of St. Hubert’s Catholic this Pallbearers were Frank Zimdars, Wars to the long list or contributors have any information to disclose at erty P Chastain, John Coleman, W. offenders who failed to appear. nue to Camp Columbia. week for a bazaar ten tatively set Lano Rucker, W alter Iiams, Reuben of funds. this time. D Winniford and Charles G. Bel- for Oct. 25. Mrs. Nick 6 m it and According to Police Chief Orvil Candidates iniated were Gene Henshaw, Clarence Fritts and Sher Defoliant, he said, matures plants garde. Jerry Flesey were appointed co- man Wilson. Grsty, Thomas Valentine, W allace Maze and Judge Smith, the past in about seven days, permitting com County Convention Flippence. Paul Penrod, Johnnie week has been extremely quiet with chairmen o f the event, which will Mary Amelia Markell was born in bining direct without having to cut Richard. George Blunk and Jasper no other arrests nor cases pending The county convention will be held be at the old high school gym. Plainfield, Wis.. O ct 26, 1855. When Continued on Page 13 | on the police docket the plants before threshing. At the first meeting o f the b a «a a r »he was six yaars old, the fam ily Continued on Page 12 committee, Tuesday entertainr.uent moved to Marshall, Minn. There, on and features were planned to In Oct. 2. 1875, she was married to John Pacific Trailw ay« bus line wfill be clude short orders, mystery man iin d Hicks. They lived -there urk.il 1900 gin operating on revised schedule* a variety o f humorous and e n t e r when they moved to Sioux C en ter,; g Ppt 28 due to the tsept zb oue m e return to *>tan M a n -1 r\ - _ _ _ _ _ _ taining features to appeal to a ll la., then came to Ida ho 37 years ago, dard time, according to M r t M a rle j f ! ( ) I l t r O l O I P o tQ lO P ia lli U lS G O S C S ages. where they envaRed* in farm ing un Thomas. Nyssa agent for the line. til Mr. Hick's death in 1939 New Eastbound schedules for Boise. Potato growers would do well to by insects will appear normal, but will raproduce the disease next sea Mrs. Hicks is survived by two Twin Falls, Salt Lake C ity and all by^their *own^pep' band m e m b w f ^ after the best hitch-hiking tra- carefully to their plantings of son An infection of five percent or daughters, Mrs. Elsie M Robinson the Boise Cliamber of Commerce ‘ htion. the south and east will leave Nyssa .seed potatoes before killing fro6ts more of tubers In a seed lot will and Miss Gertrude K. cks, both of goodwill tour party descended upon j T ^ gotjdwill tour a under direc- destroy the vines, suggests Turner cause serious reduction In yield and _ , Parma, and two brothe rs, Orson L. at 12:10 p. m.. 9 p. m.. and 4:15 a. m. Nyssa early Thursday In the sec- ttom o f C. L. Worsley. chairman, county extension agent. quality of potatoes in the crop pro In addition, a local to Boise, run Bond, Promotion Day services will to-i, Markell, of Iron Mountain, Mich., ond of its schedule of 12 visitations -‘ n dE arl £ Reynolds tour manager, Spread o f virus disease by insects ning daily except Sundays and na duced next season from the infected during the next three days. W,*J? " J Sherwood as his assistant. held at 10 a. m at the ChurcR: o f '1 and Wilbur Markejl of Oireen Valley, tional holidays, will leave Nyssa at has b«rn much heavier than normal, The Bouse continguent was met at The party is due back in its home Christ. Sunday Th e primary dejairt- Minn. Bond says, and may make many Leaf roll in a seed potato planting Interment was at Pa»rma, with 9:15 a m. the city hall by officers and other cltv Saturday, after making ment will present a program before lots unfit for planting next year. can be recognized now. Bond point New Westbound schedules for Eu representatives o f the Nyssa Cham- f " ° dWll‘ calLs 111 Nyssa. On- the adult department and pixuno- Peckham-Dakan lim erai home in ber of Commerce, where refresh- £ r\°' We^ r- Union. LaOrande, t-on certificates will be given. Par charge. gene and Portland will leave Nys>a . Field counts in seed plots over ed out. by the whitening and rolling the a n » have shown disease from of the upper leaflets of the plant, menu, were erved by the Amalga- Joseph Elgin, ents o f these children are u ry e * to at 1:50 p. m., 9:30 p. m. and 5:50 insect infection as high as 15 per with the rolled leaflets showuig a mated Sugar Co. Remainder of the Baker “ nd P a y e tte -a n d in that or- attend. a. m. SGT. NO R RIS ENDS cent in some cases. Seed plots that faint reddUsn tint at the base M o 40-minute perio# was spent in visit- j A local to Weiser, operating daily are well Isolated have shown a low saic shows as a yellow mottling and Morning worship will begin, wt 11 7*% YE AR S IN A IR F O W R ing local bu sin e» men o'clock, with the Rev. A. J. Hoillings- James Norris, R t« 1, Nyssa, re except Sundays and national holi er percentage of infection, but some crinkling of the upper leaves of in First stop in the tour was made B IR T H *: 1 G IR L . 2 MOTS _____ in charge ______ o f the ^ worth .brvice ceived word Saturday avening that' days, will leave Nyssa at 6:35 p m disease can be found In every plant fected plants. at 9 30 a m. this Thursday at P 3^* Lowest number of births in weeks Christian Youth Fellowship <Ior tha his son, T/Sgt. John J. Norgls had Pacific Trailways recently placed ing. Rogulng out o f Infected plants ma. It was here that first "grief was recorded this week at Malheur young people meets at 7 p iri tjow air-conditioned Diesel buses or The chiei troubles appearing In this late tn the season is not effec overtook the party, when three of it- Memorial hospital, where three ba- During the -h ap d period.’ Mrs arrived at Hamilton. Field. Oallf. _ tive in elminattng diseases, because members "missed the bus” and were btes were bom. Jesse Rlgney a: J the Rev H ollings- from Guam and was bring dU charg- lire Portland-Salt Lake C ity runs late potatoes grown for seed are the symptoms will not show at once on virus diseases of leaf roll and mosaic. ed from the air force. ¿additional new buses ase scheduled left behind , »a s a girl on Sept. 20 to Mr worth will be in charge o f two re- Both diseases are transmitted by tn- all plants Infected. Bond suggests He has been in the arm ed .service for delivery early In 1953 Dan Six. Fred Mann and Che.'t< r and Mrs. Marvin Wilson, o f Nyssa. ligious subjects at 8 d m that an inspection now be made as a TYie line handles. In addition b i -sects, mostly aphis, and can be seen Smythe were the “ culprits” . *hc> T o Mr and Mrs Melvin Spitze, o f _____________ - . ‘ for s ^ e n and a half years, and spent ba»n for deciding between use of were M>le to rejoin their fellow- Ontario, was bom a boy on Sept. 21. Saturday art-m oon gite»U a>f W . one and a h alf years ft) Japs n, six regular service, newspapers and ex «in the potato vines now. the .seed for planting, or putting tiic •» A ll potatoes produced In hills goodwillers at N y^-a-but oniy after and to Mr and Mrs Byron Harn-r, and Mrs Pjf- Hall, o f Arcadl v were months in Oerm any and tra ; last press between Portland and p»$lul crop on the commercial market. 9 Uic disease« have been caroled Wu’ y w j w c k j tn flaggg».’ *)w t$ * «1 Vafc. a Uo> an s e p t jp > Mr, g.nd I f ; « , bowta, ^,’ iggs intermediate to<fjal8 Lake ISd-f. nine mqctL- Gaunt, Reveal High Sugar; 22 Ton Yield Grade Teachers At Adrian Are Feted Firemen Called To Aid Missing Child Foe. Cases More Polio Admitted Nyssa Student Gets High College Rate Onion, Spud Shipments Slow ed; Feeder Cattle Being Received Six Candidates In Contest For Four Council Positions Committeemen for PM A Named; Co. Convention Sat. Eagles Vole Aid To Boys Town At Camp Columbia * Smiling Skies Keep Temperatures High Mother Expresses Thanks to Hospital Experiments M ade Here With Defoliant Journal Ad Man Parks Too Long Mary A Hicks Dies At A ge 96 * Catholic Parish Plans For Bazaar Trailways Sets N e w Schedules County Agent G ives Pointers On Boiseans Visit Here Thurs. During G oodw ill Tour of Ore-Ida Cities 5 I Promotion Services At Christian Churclc