Nyssa gate city journal. (Nyssa, Or.) 1937-199?, November 05, 1959, Page 2, Image 2

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THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 5, 1959
THE NYSSA GATE CITY JOURNAL. NYSSA. QREGON *
PH3E TWO
THE GATE CITY JOURNAL
TED M. BRAMMER, Editor
Ted M. Brammer and Gala Z. Brammer, Publisher*
Oregoif Farm Bureau
Convenes in Ontario
i «^hostess.
Roll call to be answered by
“Your FavJVite Recipe”. Plans
will be completed for the club's
. annual Christmas party at this Ladies’ old-fashioned bloomers
are passe.
.
meeting.
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Gressley en­ This is now official. TLe Na-
tertained their card club Friday
By Mr*. Frank Byers
evening. Prizes were wqn by Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Conant and
OREGON TRAIL—The Merry Leslie Topliff, Mrs. George Cole­ family of Boise were Sunday eve­
Matrons club met at the home of man, George Coleman and James ning callers at the Glenn Brown
Peggy Brown Oct. 28., with Viola Stephen.
home.
Adams, co-hostess. Following the
Mrs. Alfred Adams and Rich­ Dawn, Carolyn and Billy Niel
business meeting games were ard,
Mrs. Kenneth Mace and Mrs Bohannon were supper guests
played with several winning
Wayne
Adams attended BJC Saturday night
_ at the Harold Sny-
prizes.
Lunch was served by the host­ Homecoming in Boise, Saturday, i der home.
ess to 11 members. The next meet- ! Mr. and Mrs. Frank Byers en- I Mr. and Mrs. Sam McConnell of
ing will be Nov. 18 at the home of tertained at dinner Sunday honor- Nyssa were Sunday dinner guests
Gladys Byers with Alice Holmes ing the birthday anniversary of ; at the Russell Gressley home,
their son, Stanley. Other guests
The Harold Snyder family were
were Mrs. Stanley Byers and Mr. ; Sunday evening callers at the
and Mrs. F. G. Holmes.
Clyde Bohannon home.
Union Loses Futile
Fight for Bloomers
Merry Matrons
The 28th annual meeting of the Meet Wednesday
Oregon Farm Bureau Federation
scheduled for Ontario, Oregon,
At Brown Home
November 9, 10, 11 will be placing
most emphasis on programs of
j self-help for the coming year, said
Single Copies------ 10c
Gerald Detering, president of the
In Malheur County, Oregon,
general farm organization.
and Payette and Canyon
The cost price squeeze on far­
Counties, luultu.
mers has made it mandatory that
33.60
1 Year__
farmers cannot rely on govern­
NATIONAL ; EDITORIAL
$2.50
6 Months
ment programs or other non-farm
benevolent programs to bring
Elsewhere in the USA:
farm income up to a satisfactory
Per Year
____ $4.00
level, said Detering. Farmers are
6 Months_______ $2.50
asking for more action in the
marketing field and the delegates
Published every Thursday at Nyssa, Malheur County, Oregon.
to this convention will be spend­
Entered at the postoffice at Nyssa, Oregon, for transmission
ing a sizable portion of their time
through the United States Mails, as a second class matter inder
in designing programs which will
the act of March 3, 1879.
produce results in the pricing
field of agricultural crops, he said.
The convention will actually be
officially opened with the vesper
By Pauline Stephen
service conducted by the Farm
Bureau women, November 8th at COW HOLLOW—Thirty young
the Presbyterian church at 8 p.m. people of the Owyhee Community
However,
the main body of the I church gathered at the home of
By T.M.B.
convention will not get down to Mrs. Esther Stephen for a Hal­
The nice things I found to say
Recent tax bills show that
about our senators and congress­ schools take over 62 percent of business until Monday morning loween party, Tuesday evening.
beginning with a 7:30 breakfast
evening was spent playing
man are:
the tax dollar now but if it can j for OFBF commodity committees. The
games and pressing cider. Re­
Rep. Ullman sent out a ques­ be shown there is a real need,
tionnaire to his constituents cov­ and not just something that we The general session following the freshments of donuts and cider
meeting will feature were furnished by Mr. and Mrs.
ering enough subjects that had a would like to have, for a junior commodity
majority of them taken the time college the voters will probably a talk by Charles Butler, Ameri­ John Price.
can Farm Bureau Director of
to have answered he could have approve.
Land and Water Uses. Butler will
• • • •
found out what they thought. I
speak on states rights in regard to Jerry Strickland attended a
believe he is on the right track
Halloween passed very quiet­
uses and bring the party of the Junior Christian
and should do more of this . . . ly here. If there were any de­ land and water
audience up to date on Youth Fellowship at the Cecil
Then carry out the desires of the structive acts, we have not convention
present laws concerning the sta­ Richards home Saturday night
people, in as far as he can.
heard of them. A few less than tus of resources in Oregon and the
Roger Garner was honored at
Senator Neuberger's statement a hundred called at our home
a birthday party, Oct 24. Seven­
on the international pooling of for "trick or treats." We had nation.
A noon luncheon will feature a teen guests were present and
medical research was excellent. them all inside and have never
talk
by Louise Humphrey, Execu­ games were played in celebration
He said, “The x-ray is from Ger­ seen a nicer, more polite bunch
many, the stethoscope is from of children. The UNICEF crew tive Associate, Oregon Tax Re­ of his ninth birthday anniversary.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Harrison of
France, penicillin from England (two boys we didn't know) search, who will be addressing
and cancer therapy from the didn't even have sacks until the Farm Bureau women on their Ontario visited Sunday evening at
Dee Garners.
United States. No land has a they got to our place, but we role in tax matters in Oregon.
The afternoon will feature com­ Visitors at the Fred Morton
monopoly on medical talent. Dis­ kinda loaded them down we
modity conferences wherein plans home this weekend were Betty
ease stops at no frontier. Who were so pleased with them.
will be made for 1960 programs Morton, Gale Watson, and Mrs.
* • • •
cares whether the ultimate cure
Farm Bureau commodity Grace Stoker, all of Boise.
is discovered by a researcher in
Success is more-or-less relative: for
the Andes of Peru or the crowded the more the success—the more groups.
Other speakers at the three-day MONCURS ATTEND FUNERAL
buildings of New York City?”
relatives.
Senator Morse had three very
• • * •
convention will be Governor Hat­ SERVICES IN UTAH
good reasons for wanting to delay
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Moncur and
“Nearly every motorist who has field, Tuesday evening banquet
adjournment of the senate . . . done late night driving can recall speaker, Marion Hanks, member family returned home Wednesday
1. A lot of bad legislation is passed instances where he has dozed for of President Eisenhower’s “Youth after attending funeral services in
in the last rush of a session; 2. A a fraction of a second. Your eyes for Fitness Committee”, and Har­ Panaca, Nev., and Minersville,
lot of needed legislation was be­ close, the head dips, then you old Hartley, Assistant Commodity Utah, for Mrs. Moncur’s mother,
ing left undone; and, 3. There straighten up with a sudden Director, AFBF, who will speak Mrs. Ida Lee Hollingshead who
should have been no rush to ad­ awareness bordering on panic. It on marketing and bargaining of passed away Oct. 16, in Cedar
journ just becauje Khrushchev might take only the time for a farm commodities.
City, Utah, following a long ill­
The last day of the convention ness. Mrs. Hollingshead who was
was about to arrive.
snap
of
the
finger
to
regain
con­
• • • •
trol. In such experiences, you will be taken up with policy mak­ 86 years old, had visited in Nyssa
The last issue of the high brush against the wings of death.” ing by the voting delegates of for 3 months last summer. In-
1 terment was in Minersville. .
school paper was like some of
—Watham. Mass., News Tribune county Farm Bureaus.
» • • »
our efforts (slightly off center)
—but the journalism students
The local gamblers prefer play­
probably know better now how ing poker with poor losers than
errors creep <n and pass unde­ any kind of winners.
• » » •
tected. The Bulldog had Bar­
bara Beck in the Emmett-Nyssa
Maybe you can’t make water
football game during the last run uphill, but they are now mak­
%
four minute* and somehow dur­ ing trees fall uphill. Loggers
ing that time Emmett made the scale the tree, hook lines high up
score that beat the home team. from their tractors and guide the
Only 41 Shopping Days Until Christmas!
But you can't blame Barbara .. . tree into an uphill fall. The sys­
She could come as near stop­ tem is producing less breakage
ping the opposition as the beef in the woods and more timber
of some masculine players.
at the mill from the trees har-
* • • •
vested.
Middle age has done got you
when you feel as bad on Saturday
night as you once did on Monday
morning.
• • • •
Kay Chailender arrived Tues­
A recent issue of the Oregon day evening from Pemberton, N.
CEDAR
Voter called attention to the com­ J. to make his home with his sis­
HOPE CHESTS
ing “REVOLT OF THE TAX­ ter and family, Mr. and Mrs. Ben
PAYER” in which all across the Keller.
nation various groups including
cities, schools and states are
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Beers left re­
learning that taxpayers are tak­ cently for their home in Sausalito,
ing a good long look at their taxes Calif., after an extended hunting
and what they are buying. (Ore­ and visiting stay with Mr. and
gon is no exception and it might Mrs. David Beers.
be well for the groups working
for the formation of a junior col­
Mr. and Mrs. Tren Jones and
PERFECT GtFT FOR—
lege for this area to have all the family of Moses Lake, Wn., and
answers and get them publicized Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Hayhurst
CHRISTMAS!
before voting time.)
and Mike of Haines, Ore., were
Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Lloyd Lewis.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
I a c 5’
Halloween Party
¿fe#?
Coitesi . , .
tyviïn
e
4
THE NYSSA MERC DOES IT AGAIN!
A Special Buy at Closeout Prices Brings . . .
ST. BRIDGET’S
CATHOLIC CHURCH
TURKEY DINNER
Thursday* Nov. 5, 1959
TOYS
★
TO CHOOSE
FROM!
TOP
QUALITY
TOY SPECIALS!
FRICTION
POWER
TOYS
Baseball Set
Mitt — Bat
Cap — Glove
Only 88*
BOW
and
ARROW
PERSONALS
Sunday dinner guests after
church of the Rev. and Mrs. Rob­
St. Paul'« of Nyssa
ert Jackson were Mr. and Mrs.
Welcome» Youl
Dan Martin of Payette and Mr
Sunday, Nov. 8 — 24th Sunday and Mrs. Robert Martin and Ter­
after Trinity.
ry-
8 a.m.—Morning prayer.
11 a.m. — Morning prayer and
Dr. and Mrs. Merle Kurtz and
sermon.
family of Portland were guests
11 a m.—Church school.
from Thursday until Monday at
the home of Mr. Kurtz’ brother,
7 p.m.—Knights
7 p.m.—House of Young Church­ Mr. and Mrs. Dudley Kurtz and
family.
men.
Monday, Nov. 9—Evening guild
meets at the home of Mrs. Dick
Mr. and Mrs. Max Schweizer
were Tuesday dinner guests of
G. Tensen, 8 p.m.
Wednesday, Nov. 11—Teachers Mrs. Schweizer's parents. Mr. and
meeting in the church beginning Mrs. George McKee. They were
with holy communion at 2 p.m.
enroute to their home in Corval­
Bishop’s committee meeting at lis from a business trip to Cas­
8 p.m.
cade, Idaho.
— of —
FIRST
RATE
HUNDREDS
LAY AWAY A LANE CHEST
For Her Christmas NOW!!
Episcopal
Church Notes
tional Labor Relations Board says
so.
An Alabama textile mill de­
cided a couple of years ago to
discontinue manufacturing the
bloomers. There was no market
for them. This threw eight people
out of work.
The union to which the eight
paid dues filed a complaint with
the NLRB, alleging unfair labor
practices. The union urged the
NLRB to compel the company to
irppp on making bloomers so the
jobs could continue.
After two years of mumbo-
jumbo the Board has decided that
the company had the best possible
reason for not making women’s
bloomers. It discovered women
don’t buy bloomers, much less
wear them, any more.
FOOTBALLS
Trucks
Station Wagons
Sedans
Jeeps
Ack-Ack Trucks
Jet Airliners
Helicopters
Only 88*
WHALING
SHIPS
Only
88c
SET
Only
4*
:::
88*
i TOY LAYAWAY
• -•
li
••COUNTESS ElANE"
$250 Moth Protection
Warranty. Equipped with lock and key,
•elf-rising interior tray. Your choice of
•elect exterior woods.
"CONTINENTAl"— Modem
''ofl-lhefioof" deugn with
•hilling brass trim. Has lock
and key. Spacious drawer
in base. Your choice of
finishes.
I :
:•
g:
LANE CHISTS
AS LOW AS »S«.«S
Serving from 5:30 to 8 p.m.
—o——
S1 Down Will Hold Your Choice!
PARISH HALL - THIRD and PARK ST.
“Your Treasure Chest of Treasure Valley”
Children, 75c
Adults. $1.50
0
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PUBLIC CORDIALLY INVITED I
PETERSON FURNITURE CO.
O
Across from Nyssa Theatre
217 Main Street
Phone FR 2-3211
e
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SAVE!
DEPARTMENT STORE
We Give Gold Strike Stamps
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