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About Nyssa gate city journal. (Nyssa, Or.) 1937-199? | View Entire Issue (Nov. 20, 1952)
THE N YSSA GATE CITY JOURNAL. NYSSA. OREGON THEATRE A M I! T K I.H ’ IIO M in* L : 4 SATU RD AY. NOV 22 S b "BORDER SADDLE MATES" with HEX ALI.ES M A K Y ELLEN KAY Also with JON H ALL C H R IS TIN E LARSON SU NDAY-M ONDAY NOVEMBER 23-24 *1Scaramouche " In Technicolor with S TE W A R T G RANG ER ELEANOR PARKER MEL EERRER JANET LEIGH Dethiny Stewart ( »ranger makes love U» fiery Eleanor Parker and demun Janet Leigh, a thrilling love show. TUESDAY. NOV 25 "MEET DANNY W ILSO N " with F R A N K SIN ATR A SHELLV W INTERS A crooner who lived the life many men dreamed of. WED.-THURS. NOVEMBER 26-27 "BATTLE OF APACHE PASS" In Technicolor with IOHN L E N D JEFF ( H A N D L E R BE V E R LY T Y L E R SUSAN ( A B U T The Aammis Ueroneno takes to the warpath with plenty of act- U ihi of fighting Indians and war dances. K K ID A Y-S A TU R D A Y NOVEM BER 28-29 “THE STORY OF WILL ROGERS" with JUDY CANO VA STEPHEN and JUNE VENA IF.NT It's zingin' and fightin' as Judy comes from a Ion* line of fighters to Join the Wacs. SU N D A Y-M O N D A Y NOV. 30-DEC. 1 "W H ISPER ING SMITH" In Technicolor with ALAN LADD RORfcKT PRESTON PO N ALO C R W P Dessert Seed Co. Assumes Lead In Seed Growing In Snake River Valley STAND ING IN A W AIST-HIGH onion seed bed in the above photograph is W. K. (Bill) Wahlert, manager, Nyssa branch Dessert Seed Co. Of the Southport White Globe variety, the six-acre tract was grown under contract by J. W . Ragsdale, in the Parma-Notice area The 1953 Plymouth will be pre sented to the public throughout the United States on Thur-day. Nov JO. Waggoner Motor C i a nr. unced t - day, as well as the firm's Good ave nue address. "Advar.ceu engineering and styling make the new Plynr uth more than ever before the out landing car of the low-priced field." C. G W ag goner said. Th e 1353 Plymouth is the mo-t completely ne w Plymouth to be pre- -er.ted to the public in the quarter- century since the original model rolled o ff the assembly line. Plymouth Motor Corporation exe cutives predict motorists will be de lighted with the new. streamlined exterior, the luxuriously tailored harmonizing interiors, the increaed horsepower and the scores of engi neering innovations in the 1953 line which goes on display in dealers’ showrooms Nov. 20 "Th is year Plymouth Is introdu- cing a new concept of automobile design in the low priced field President John P. Mansfield de- "W A C FROM W ALLA WALLA" In Technicolor with W IL L ROGERS J R JANE W YM A N C A R L BRNTON REID EVE M ILI.ER JAMBS GLRASON Worming v e f of the '.."vahie Vta> Wi*>e<l A larmt aiwi i an. ’ M W f tosmrt*. 3 Big Day» Q Hiqkwuj WüfvdflßöH go THROUGH GHTTH 0 UN 0 ' l- - We Carry A Complete Stock of— II RED BRAND” FENCING STEEL POSTS « " ic y THRU » U S L o rv U o on m a in lin o trip « , . . c o n v e n i e n t l o r v k e OR ALL G re y h o u n d tripe. The name "Greyhound" has become ihe Mandard bv which we meacure all the go o d t hi ng ! in highway travel. Check Greyhound's service to fomr destination— you’ll And it al ways convenient, fre- uently "through,” and to- t) a best travel bargain. I U tH U N M » I K SACRAMENTO 1*25 SPOKANE IN POCATELLO LM MOS4 O H IS 00 S A IT LA K E C IT Y IM PI«» fa « 1 « . . . . . . . . . IS4. fa d * w a r « i r k . a .v .a t «ip ? u * » i . G R EY H O U N D •us •S P O T I I I I Ma&o 5— 6— S l/2 it. .BARB W I R E There's no better time than now to lay in all the supplies you need to do your fall fencing and fence repairing. Stunz Lumber Company rilO N K 110 NYSSA. OREGON Superior Paint <& Glass Fix up your broken auto glass while you shop. Experienced workmanship Factory patterns. 110 Main Phone 310 OR. C.W. CRAVES Optometrist Eyes Examined Phone 9-2312 718 Arthur St. Caldwell, Idaho HORTU I h A hwiìmì Unii feared man of the weet A of flaming iv * a1“1 •king g u i» in the land beyond Usr law A return altowin« DECEMBER 2-3-4 S port Your Family W ill SalmonSteelhead Sport Catch Figures Released r*c rung adventures of tht THURSDAY LOCAL HEWS In spite o f the rumpus being raised over on the Idaho side as to to more spacious quarters within a By Dirk Y «rt who is going to— or will—maintain the road to the Bogus Basin ski (Editor’s note: This ia thr first in short time These quarters were found in Nys~ area during the winter months, it a wrrtrs o f three «to re * telling of sa. after company officials decided seems ski artists are not to be de the «■»tabli.shmenl here of a branch nied their sport. At least, there was of the Dessert fe e d Co., and its that Nyssa might be more centrally a meeting recently of the Bogus growth and importance U* farmers located in an area more suited to Th e first measure of salmon and Basin Ski Patrol for the purpose of and to th r community u» a whole. its type of business. The move was steelhead taken by sport fishermen organizing activities and to elect The .second installment will follow made in January o f 1943 in Oregon was revealed recently by officers for the new season. Now, after more than nine years nest week l. State Game Director P W Schneid * * * here, the branch is still located in When the Dessert Seed Co , o f El er. In answering the question, who is Centro, C alif , opened a branch o f that first home at 403 Arcadia bou Total number of salmon and the hardrat hitter in baseball today, fice in Malheur county in 1942 it levard Many changes, however, have steelhead caught between March 1, Joe Reiehler, New York sports writ was located in the Ontario home of been made in .the property it pur 1950, and Feb. 28. 1951, in Oregon er, Quotes General Manager Charley the late Joe Sutherland, first resi chased when moving here. waters by sport fishermen was 94,- Gerhinger of the Detroit Tigers as During that same first year the dent manager. 100 fi h. For every steelhead caught, saying it Ls Mickey Mantle of the Immed.ate acceptance of the firm company built a warehouse and i wo salmon were taken. mil.uig * room onto the existing Yankees. in this 'locality and its steady growth From March 1, 1951, to March 15, * * * during those first few months neces building Ln 1944 the milling room 1952, the O regon ’«port fishery yield was enlarged and a 40xl00-foot And now another good old sports sitated removal of the branch office ed 183,000 salmon and steelhead. Of tradition has gone by the boards. No warehou. e constructed. this total 72,183 were steelhead and less an authority than Ralph F. VYahlrrt Named Manager In 1948 W. K (B ill» WahJert be 111,817 were salmon. Wheeler, general factory manager A random sample survey o f an for A. G. Spalding Bros., Inc., one came the second resident manager, after coming here four years pre glers who obtained salmon-steel- of the leading manufacturers of viously from Medford to take charge head cards for fish 20 inches or footballs, declares that to refer to of cleaning and shipping operation.',. more in length was the basis for a football as a "pigskin” is a mis Wahlert still holds the managerial the study. Th e data gathered by Dr. nomer. It seems that a pig's skin H. J. Rayner, chief of the commis never was used for this purpose. In post. Dessert Seed Co. Is named for its sion’s fishery division, was submit stead, cow or steer hide is used founds, R B Dessert, Sr., and R B ted to Dr. Jerome Li, Oregon State since it is the best and toughest Dessert, Jr. Besides the Nyssa college, who analyzed the material. 1 " (her there is Lor creating a foot One of the most revealing items ball. branch the firm has branch opera • • • tions at Lebanon, Ore., where it in the studies was that many ang specializes in the growing and pro lers caught nothing, but the ex Features of Howard LoveJoy. gen cessing o f such vine seed crops as perts made catches with apparent ial head coach at the high school, cucumber, cantaloupe, squash and ease to the effect that a lot of fish cloud over with gloom when i.t watermelon Another plant at Phoe were taken by only a few anglers. starts thinking of the Bulldogs’ foot nix. Art»., burned in 194« and was ball prospects for next year. And tvever rebuilt. grown garden seeds, and the effect our sympathy is with him. realizing The firm Ls engaged in the grow- here was to lower the number of that his squad really is going to be | mg, processing and shipping (in acres under contract to even a smal hard-hit comes graduation time next June, when 15 senior football cluding export shipments) of garden ler figure. ers are lost to him. These Include seed«. Prlor to and following World 7M A m ( « a t r w M War I I there was very little if any Durmg the current year Nyssa LoveJoy, Hiatt. Oorfield, R. Hartley. H. Bumgarner, exporting of garden seeds. As a m at branch had approximately 700 acres Talbot, Savage. ter o f fact, as pointed out by W ah under contract. Seed rarities in Vaphn, Baker. Pierce. Dillon, Mar- lert. most of the garden seed and cluded lettuce, carrot, onxm, turnip, cun. Bullard and Riggs Coach some field seeds, including clover radish, rutabaga, parsnip, leek, w a t LoveJoy will have a nucleus of five lettermen round which to start add grass, were imported from Euro ermelon and zwmim pean countries In addition to rawing these gar building the Bulldogs’' football fo r It was only during World W ar II. den varieties, the local branch tunes. namely Tanner, Holcomb. T. and through the U. S Lend-I-ease cleans, processes and markets field Keck, Turner and D. Hartley. • • • program, that a heavy export seed crop seeds, which include alfalfa, If the WTm coaches of the SRV , trade was carried on by this coun clover and grass. try. De:t ert Seed Co. does not own ««mferemoe teams were asked to rate Ix n d - le a a r Gives Booat farming acreage in this area Its those isune teams on the bast* of As faut as allied powers won back policy is to contract with farmers the 1952 flrasoa, it stands to reason lost territory, the re-occupied land for the growing of certain types of there would be no twe ratings alike. wav plan ted and with American- garden seeds adapted to soil condi Here, M least, is the way Bulldog Coach LoveJoy rates 'em. with As- grown .seed The booming export tions. trade had its affect on the Nyssa | Area of operations o f the Nyssa branch at the Dessert Seed Co., re branch during the year just clo:tng CARD OF T H A N K S sulting in 1,010 acres beang placed emended over the entire Snake We wish to thank the many 1 under contract in the Sixike River River Valley and cus far eastward as friends o f our late deceased brother,1 Valley during 1944 Principal seed | Greybull, Wyo. Roy W i l l i a m s , for the help and crops were carrots, onions and tur- j Despite the reversal occasioned by kindness shown him in his long ; nips the war's ending. Dessert Seed Co. months o f illness and to those who But, with the victory over Japan has continued in & steady growth helped him in his last week of suf- in 1945. the bottom literally started here And. in the words of Manager fering. Words cannot express our dropping out of the export business Wahlert. the prospect for the future deepest thanks. May God bless resulting in a .steady regression in ' is increasingly bright, them. the Industry. In this same year Nys- (The next installment w ill explain Mr and Mrs Lloyd Marshall .wi branch had only 800 acres under planting and harvesting methods Mr. and Mrs. Fred Williams, of contract By 1948. the United States used by the Dessert Seed Co. in the Bouse was again importing European- Snake River Valley. Mrs Josie Goldman • FAY HOLDEN TUESDAY-W EDNESDAY vi.lant t oat h Mi Ginlejr concurring: Vale and N>swa »hr top two 'ln d not necessarily in that order >, On tario right up there closely followed by »Wiser. Meridian fifth. Payette lared in de cribing the 1953 mod sivth and I inmett in the «fila r. Now els. "Superb styling is co-ordinated who wants to argue the point? with radical engir.eer.ng dev*lip- * • • men:.. to produce the truly balanced Lions club program chairman, car for easier, ¿afer and more com take note th-cators inaw, don't fortable driving." reach for the d.ctionary—it means Heignt oi tne new Plymouth has fi-herm en' might like to hear what been reduced for improved appear Glen Evans has to say about fish ance Yet engineers have designed flies and fish tackle He designs and even more room into the car's in manufactures 'em, and can oe terior and luggage compartment. reached at Caldwell. The 1953 model has more headroom, greater legrocm and more hip and shoulder space than ever before. The lively and dependable Plym Mr. and Mrs. Bud Wilson were in outh engine has been given even Idaho Falls from Sunday until Mon greater power. For 1953 the horse day evening where they attended power has been increased to 100 the Idaho Sheep Commissioners'! and the compression ratio stepped meeting and the Idaho Wool Grow up to 7.1 to 1. ers convention. j Members o f the Thespians of Nys- -a high school and their advisor. Mrs. Joe Brumbach, attended the, presentation of two one-act plays j by the Parma Thespian troupe at Parma high school Monday even ing. By D IC K YO S T 1953 Plymouth to Be Unveiled At Waggoner Motor Co. Nov. 20 NYSSA "BRAVE WARRIOR" THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 20 1952 Really Savor Our THANKSGIVING DINNER MENU Fresh Fruit Cocktail Celery Olives Soup Salad Roast Stuffed Turkey Candied Sweet Potatoes Canberry Sauce Pie or Plum Pudding Tea Coffee B&ECAFE 108 Main Phone 185 Here Are The Candidates In Th* Nyssa Gala City Journal Subscription Campaign Each active candidate in this campaign Ls sure o f winning a prize bicycle or a cash commission as there will be one prize bicycle and four cash commissions fox each ftve active candidates. The candidates are separated into two districts. Those living outside the city limits of Nyssa are in District Number one. and those living inside the city limits o f Nyssa are in District Number Two, but any cand.date may secure subscriptions from anyone, anywhere. Th e Hirst two choices of prize bicycles will be given to the high est candidate in each district . . . the higher of the two District winners having first choice and the high candidate in the other district having second choice. The other priee bicycles will be given to the candidates, regardless o f which district they are in, having the next highest number o f votes. Th e active candidates who do not win one of the prize bicycles will each receive a cash com- missicn equal to 15 percent o f all money he or she has turned in for subscriptions. Following is an alphabetic«! list o f the young men and young ladies who have signified a desire to work in this campaign. As the Journal goes to press this week complete returns had not been received from all candidates, making it impossible to publish the corrected final list of actually active candidates. The official list of active candidates will be announced in next week’s paper and will comprise those in the following list who remain active by re porting on each Wednesday and each Saturday: D IS T R IC T NO. ONE (Living Outside Nywut City) ALFORD, Frances Rural 3LHAVER, Truman Rural FOLKM AN, Brent Rural GILB ERT, Carole Adrian H LD R Z D . Jimmy Rural KITE. Omar J a m « Rural IC1TN ASTON Susan Rural UAWKENCE. Dick Rural I4AYLIN . Jerry Rural M O RIN AKA. Oer aldine Rural NAJCARHIMA. Harry Y . Jr Rural «C C U M . Marie Rural FBEUTKR. Donna Adrian ROOKKTOOL. Ronald Rural SPITZE. Dennis RTD Ontario STEPHEN Pauline Rural VAN D ER OORD Ray Rural YOUNG. Joann Rural D IS T R IC T NO. TW O (Living in Nysaa City) AVERY, Jesse BARNES, Jimmy BSROAM. Roger OOUNSJL. Dick HOCKEY. Colleen EAOTMAN. Michael INOHHRITSEN. David MC OENTCB. Tim HONOUR, Linda M YRJCK. Jerry OXNAM . Georgia Lee POND. Bobby PURVXS. Valerie C. R.VFTP Kathryn ROTH. Rosemary RUNHELL Janet SOHABOT. Bobby SETTLES, Dicky k * « S5ETTH. Elaine SMITH. 6herryl W ALKER. Frank W K IPPLE . Arnold WTUSON. Judy « M O M , Mika W \ T ( H FOR THY OFFICLkL L IS T OF ACTIVE C AN D ID ATES W HICH W ILL BE F IT tL iS H E D IN ORDER OF ■ T E N D IN G « IN N I E T T HC RS DA Y S N Y h S t IrA TR C IT Y JO U R N A L T aar NaberrtpteMi F t m M e t * T ea r la v a n te