N Y S S A G A TE C IT Y JO U R N A L, T H U R S D A Y , JUNE 24, 1937 By MRS. C LA R K ENOS Mr and Mrs. James McOlnnla are the parents of an eight pound son bcm at the Memorial Park hos­ pital Saturday evening. He will be given the name of James Jr. Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Enos, Miss Erma Coleman and Raymond Men- ique made a business trip to Boise Wednesday afternoon and remained over for the celebration that even­ ing. The Bill Olson, Ted Newton, John Jarvis and Albert Heldt children have the whooping cough. Little Joyce McOinnis is being cared for by her aunt, Helen Hatch until she recovers from the whoopinng cough. Emily Otis also has it. Mrs. Mitchell Gaviola returned to the parental R. C. Enos home after a two weeks stay in the Joe Berrojolbls home In Boise. Mitchell Gaviola's knee is much better. Mr. and Mrs. Gerrlt Muntjewerff attended a fam ily reunion dinner at the Ed Newton home on Oregon Slope Sunday. Mrs. J. E. Holly, Dorothy and William Holly shopped in Caldwell Wednesday. On Friday the J. E. Hollys drove to Boise to attend the celebration, but found that it had m -------- - - --------------------------- W atch “Needless Expense” .. . when You Build . . . Plumbing and heating sys­ tems are often the cause of needless expense in home maintenance. Avoid this when you build. Insist on careful work and tested supplies. been postponed on account of the rain so returned again Sunday with a much better day Mr and Mrs. Jim Nelson of Nam ­ pa called on relatives Sunday after­ noon. They were accompanied by Mrs. Nelson’s mother, Mrs. Aman­ da Ashcraft. Mr. and Mrs. Ted Newton and children motored to Owyhee dam Sunday for an outing. Miss B itty Nelson returned to her home in Nampa Sunday after a two weeks visit with a cousin. Miss Joyce Ashcraft. Virginia Mae Jarvis is visiting this week with her cousin Virgina Linville. Mrs. Zelma Jone and baby son are visiting Mr. and Mrs. Frank Freel. Mr. and Mrs. John Jarvis and family accompanied Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Denny also M r and Mrs. A. W Curtis and family to a house warm­ ing at the Symes home in Arena Valley Sunday evening. Mrs. Henry Hatch and son have gone to Idaho Falls to visit relatives over the 4th of July. The election for the Union High school was voted in favor of the school. In district No. 48 it was 30 for it and 2 against, District 47, 19 for and 1 against: District No. 61, 51 for it and none against; District No. 18, 21 for it and 24 against It. Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Holly and family left Tuesday for a weeks trip to the coast towns of Portland. Eugene and back thru Condon. Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Holly and their daughter and husband, Mr. and Mrs. William Glover are here from Granville, 111., visiting rela­ tives for a few days. From here they will go on to California then home by the southern route and will make a six weeks trip for their vacation. BUYS BOISE HOME —B — GEO. J. KINZER Plumber PHONE 134-J-2 PAR M A Tom Newby has bought a home and four acres of land a mile and a half west of Boise on the Star- Mlddleton highway. The family moved to their new home last week. JORDAN VALLEY By M RS ISAB ELLE LEE Miss Charlotte Mills is the guest of Miss Ruby Leonard in Murphy. Mr. and Mrs. Tom Whitby and daughter Miss Frankie of Cliffs were Caldwell visitors Friday. Mr Whitby was completing the sale cf his lambs. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Maher drove to Boise Wednesday to visit their daughters Mrs. Farls Harrison and Mies Ellyn Maher and attend "Id a ­ ho Marches O n” celebration. Friends received the announce­ ment of the birth of a son on June 7 to Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Green- wald of Denver. Mrs. Greenwald will be remembered as M ary Maher daughter of Ambrose Maher of Cliffs. Ike Crosby who has Just returned from Winnemucca has been ser­ iously ill and has gone to Portland for treatment. Miss Christine Shea left Tuesday to join her parents at Cliffs. Miss Teresa will stay with Mrs. James Mills until after the fourth. Guy Brooks who spent the past winter attending high school in Nevada City, Calif., is visiting his cousins Jack and Dick Staples. Jack Deary is spending a few days with his children near Kuna. Mr. and Mrs. Averill Palmer, Mr. and Mrs. James Mills and M r and Mrs. Sam Scott drove to Vale Thursday and then attended the celebration in Boise returning late Friday. Mr. and Mrs Sam Ross and Mrs. Neil Shea were Boise visitors F ri­ day. A deputy from the sheriff’s office in Boise was in town Wednesday night ’*x>king for the driver of a car that was stolen in Boise Tuesday. The car was found at the Greeley ranch where the young fellow left it after trying to sell it. The culprit was traced to Jordan but had head­ ed back to the railroad about 12 hours before the deputy's a rriv ­ al. Mrs. A. B. Azcuenaga and son John drove to Boise Friday to meet Miss Ethel Azcunaga who Is return­ A SENSATIONAL SALE of a FAMOUS PRODUCT of interest to every experienced homemaker ing from Washington D. C. where she has a position in the depar­ tment of Justice. She plans on spending the summer in Jordan. W. R. Helm returned Friday from a short visit in Boise. M r and Mrs. Fred Scott of Arock were Val3 visitors Friday. They were witnesses in the case against the feur negroes who w?re arrested in Jordan last week fer stealing the tires and accessories cf a car stor­ ed in th? Scott garage at Arock. Prompt work by the volunteer fire department prevented a very ser­ ious fire Friday, when the roof of the Cosnor home caught fire. The fire was presumably caused by a spark lodging in the shingles when the fire was built that morning. It had burned an area about six feet across before it was discovered about noon. Mr. and Mrs. Domingo Yturri visited Boise over the week end. The small son of Joe Zatica had a very narrow escape from serious injury Friday while riding on the top cf the lamb truck. Mr. Zatica drove lender an electric light wire which caught the child throwing him to the ground. His mother saw the accident and carried the child into the house. He was unconscious for several hours, but aside from minor bruises was alright the next day. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Swisher were Boise visitors Saturday returning home Sunday. J. F. Morelock engineer in charge o f the road construction came frem La Grande Friday. A T THE R O X Y TH E ATRE O N TA R IO SAT. M ID N ITE . SUN-M ON-TUE. and family in Nampa. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Fritts and APPLE VALLEY By M ISS N O RM A STOUT family were guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Tuning of Roswell Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Fritts and Sunday. children were business visitors in Payette Saturday. Orvilla and Yulah Vertrees called at the home of Margene Brown in Fruitland Sunday. Tw o thinning crews began work New S cientific In s tru m e n t this week cn the crchards. Mrs. Jim liNUSJ for S e l f - T r e a t i n g N a s a l Cornell and Lee Minton are the ^ \ a x\ d H ead C o n g e stio n s thinning bosses. Mrs. J. I. Boston is spending the week in Ontario helping care 101 her son Henry who is recovering from an appendltis eperation. M rs Lloyd Caldwell returned home Sunday after spending the past week visiting at the home of N YS SA P H A R M A C Y her daughter Mrs. Conley Wilson NAZOSCOPE nr SINUS TROUBLE, HEADCOLDS, HAY FEVER, CATARRH, CATARRHAL DEAFNESS Get Its Savings in harvesting your grain Rival reporters, such as Gene Ray- mend and Ann Southern in "There Goes My Girl,” do not usually in­ spect each other’s stories, as in the scene above. But in this R K O R a­ dio picture, in which th:se two pop­ ular players are again co-starred, the proceeding is understandable— Word has been received from for they are in love, and Ann is typ­ W alter M. Pierce, Congressman ing what she fondly believes to be her last story for her newspaper, from the 2nd district, that there will be three vacancies for mid­ just before quittting it for ever to marry Gene. How reporters’ plans shipmen at Annapolis beginning i sometimes are thwarted is the bur­ July 1, 1938. This is an unusual ed- \ den c f this fast-paced and lively ucatlonal opportunity and R e p re -: comody romance— which has a sentative Pierce wants the news mystery melodrama thrown in for brought to the attention of all boys who have successfully completed good measure! Three Vacancies To Be Filled A t Navy School four years of high school and are facing the problem of college educa­ tion. T h e principal purpose of Anna­ polis is the training of officers for the Navy, but it is not essential that graduates should make this a career except when called upon by the Nation in times of necessity. Each student is given 3780 a year from the date of admission until gradua­ tion from the four-year course. Applicants must not be less than sixteen nor more than twenty years of age and must be boys in fine physical condition, especially as to eyesight. Only those in upper ranks of high school students could pass the examination. Rep. Pierce will ask the Civil Ser­ vice to give examinations in October this year. From the list they estab­ lish, he will select one principal and three alternates for each one of the three vacancies in this district. The three successful candidates will be required to pass an academy ex­ amination in February or April of 1938. Boys who are interested should write Rep. Pierce at Washington D. C. for circular of regulations, which also includes sample exam­ inations. JOHN DEERE NO. 5-A COMBINE You’ll make several real savings with a John Deere No. 5-A Combine. I t ’s the combine that you can depend upon to stay on the job . A lw a ys cuts clean. Threshes clean. Separates com pletely. Cleans thoroughly. Has capacity to handle heavi­ est crop without waste and power to spare when going is tough. No. 5-A Feature»: ★ L ig h tw e ig h t. ★ Balanced draft. ★ Three - wheel - In - line con­ struction. ★ High, room y platform . it Dependable motor. it Q u a l i t y c o n s t r u c t i o n throughout. ★ Harvests all small grains, - soy beans, and other seed 7. crops. ■ V J : V 1* Baldridge Implement Co. JOHN DEERE Q U A L IT Y IMPLEMENTS AND 4 A tl.-, AD RIAN NEWS SERVICE W e take pleasure in an­ nouncing to our customers a Special Sale Value of exceptional merit. We h a v e featured , M O N­ ARCH Ranges as a lead­ ing major product in our store for a number of years, and we know the announcement o f a Spec­ ial M O NARCH Sale will be of interest to our cus­ tomers. Seeing is Believing Believe It O r Not Monarch’s demonstrator bakes biscuits in coal range without pipe 04’ chimney, using Monarch’s patented Duplex Draft, burning all gas out o f fuel used. See This Demonstration SPEC IA L OFFER ON M O N A R C H coal and electric ranges— also Monarch Electric refrigerators during this demonstration. t . . 21,845 Homes W e Serve Agree! $15.00—-7 piece set— Griswold Cast-Chrome ware will be pre­ sented to every Monarch Purchaser who takes advantage o f our Monarch Sale. • The strongest proof ot the reel value of electric cooking is the fact that 47% o f the homes we serve have chosen i t Not alone because it’s modern—but too because low electric rates make it cheep. These 21,845 housewives heve proved for themselves that it’s convenient, that K saves work, that It gives Call and let us explain how you can benefit by acting immedia­ tely, in Purchasing a Monarch coal or electric range or an Elec­ tric Refrigerator. Dem onstration Ju n e 2 d , 2 9 and 3 0 Peterson Ontario, Furniture Co. Oregon them more op p ortu n ities to be homem akers instead of house­ wives. Do you cook electrically? Ask your neighbor about it—dis­ cover why so many women will cook no other way. IDAHO V p o Lfe w ian i u r 4 / /