Nyssa gate city journal. (Nyssa, Or.) 1937-199?, June 29, 1950, Page PAGE TWO, Image 2

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    THE NYSSA GATE CITY JOURNAL. NYSSA. OREGON.
P A G E TW O
The Gate Citv Journal
K LAS8 V. P O W E L L ............................... Editor and Publiahrr
A D V E R T IS IN G K ATES
8 I BH< K IP T IO N KATES
One Year
$2 00
Six months
$1 25
Single Copies
06
«Strictly in Advance)
Published every Thursday
Entered at the postoffice
through the United 8tates
the act
Open rate, per Inch
National, per inch
Cla.s.sified.s. per word
Minimum
40c
40c
... .....2c
30c
at Nyssa. Malheur County. Oregon
at Nyssa. Oregon for transmission
Malls, as second class matter, under
of March 3, 1879
Enrylopa«‘«liu Put
In Nyssa Library
Mrs. H. R. Sherwood, president
of the Nyssa public library board
announced that the I960 printing
of the Encyclopaedia Brltannlca
with the 1960 yearbook has been
added to the library
"The annual reports the events of
1949 in a readable style and Is Ill­
ustrated with many photographic re­
productions." Mrs. Sherwood said.
"T h e encyclopaedia was supplied by
the Malheur library, which will pro­
vide the yearbook annually. The
county' library purchased a set of
this encyclopaedia for the Vale li­
brary several years ago and the 1950
printing was ordered for the Nyssa
library while the new addition to
the city hall was under construction.
With the extra shelving that the
attractive new library room affords,
the Nyssa library will have room to
develop the Informational phase of
Its service
Any book, except an encyclo­
paedia or similar reference volume,
can be borrowed from the county
library; and anything that It is un­
able to supply will be obtained from
the state library, or any other lib­
rary whose resources are listed at
the regional bibliographical center
at Seattle, to which the county li­
brary belongs. A surprising amount
of Information Is to be found in
books and magazines. Libraries tap
all such In print, so the next time
you are in need o f information of
any sort try your public library".
-PR IC E S SLA SH E D -
FRIGIDAIRE—America's No. 1 Line
SLASHES PRICES
ON ALL HOME FREEZERS
See These New 1950 Models Now
AT LOWER PRICES
Ed Case Furniture Store
NORTH OF Y
H IG H W AY 20
THURSDAY. JUNE 29. 1950
readings and short talks. Rev. John son who resembled each other the
Daly was the main speaker of the most was presented to
Sonny'
evening. A gift for the father and Holmes and son. Mike._______ ____ __
Irrigator Meeting
Attended By 3 0 0
Richard V Wilson of Nyssa won
the *50 floor lamp given away by
the Idaho Power company as a door
prize at the Irrigators Institute a t­
tended by 300 farmers from both
sides of the Snake river at Payette
Wednesday.
At the institute, sponsored by the
Idaho Power company. Arthur S.
King of Corvallis, Oregon State col­
lege soil conservation specialist, told
the group that "properly installed
in the right place and properly op­
erated. sprinkler Irrigation can help
the Snake River valley produce bet­
ter crops and at the same time
save valuable soil and water” .
"Borlnkler Irrigation can be a
profitable Investment If erosion Ls a
problem, If runoff ls excessive. If It
Is necessary to stretch a limited
supply of water over as many acres
as possible and if soil and topo­
graphy are such that surface meth­
ods do not adequately wet the soil,”
King said.
"But sprinklers may be an ex­
pensive and doubtful luxury on
smooth-lying soils of medium tex­
ture that are already being Irrigated
with a well-designed surface system.
" I t takes technical and practical
knowledge to work out an efficient
irrigation system. Assistance ls a-
vallable from commercial equipment
companies, county agents and uni­
versity extension services. Electric
power companies have field men
who are glad to help”
Farmers Intending to Install a new
irrigation system, the speaker warn­
ed, should be sure of the water
.supply.
A well should be tested
thoroughly before equipment ls pur­
chased,
Sprinklers are available
that will apply water at any desired
rate.
Robert Olazebrook, chief engineer,
hydraulics division. Fairbanks Morse
company Chicago talked to the
group on Installation and operation
of pumps.
"G et the proper pump and the
proper size for the Job” , Glaze brook
said in stressing that there are num­
erous pumps and that each pump
Is adapted to give maximum per­
formance under specific conditions.
Max C. Jensen, Moscow, associate
professor and irrigatlonlst, Univer­
sity of Idaho, said that pumping
provides perfect drainage The right
amount of water can be pumped to
keep the water table where It should
be and at the same time the water
pumped to the surface can be used
to put more land under Irrigation.
L. W Brainard, Idaho Power's
division manager at Payette, said
the institute was contributing to the
development of agriculture.
"Inefficient pumps, he said, "re ­
quire more electricity, but we are
interested In helping customers get
the maximum amount of good from
their electric service.
This" he
said, "has been the policy of the
R iS l* *
THE NEW
™
-tto tp o u v t
Planning a July wedding are Miss
Shirley Smith (abovei of Adrian
and Emil Beguhl of ( aldwrll. The
wedding will be held In the Unitrd
Presbyterian church In Adrian July
15. Parents of the couple are Mr.
and Mrs. Cecil Smith of Adrian and
Mr. and Mrs. Herman Beguhl of
Caldwell.
HOSTESS T O BRIDGE CLUB
Mrs. Harry Klngrey entertained
the members of her Wednesday a f­
ternoon bridge club at her home
last week. Prizes went to Mrs. John
I Ostrom for high score, Mrs. C. C.
| Cotton, low, and Mrs. A. V. Cook,
traveling.
Bonnie Ward was rerently Install­
ed as honored queen of the Nyssa
bethel of Job's Daughters. (Evans
photo).
FOOD FREEZER
a M o r e u s a b le s t o r a g e
space (holds 280 pounds).
fare clinic will be held in the Eagles
hall during July. The next clinic
will be held In August.
C O UNCIL G R O U PS MEET
The women's council groups of the
Christian church met last Thursday
afternoon at the home of Mrs. John
Stafford and Mrs Ben Storm. Final
yearly business and projects of the
groups were completed and refresh­
ments were served. The following
council officers have been elected
and installed: Mrs. Emerson Bing-
aman, president; Mrs. Chet Mosler,
vice president; Mrs. J. C. Smith,
secretary, and Mrs. Robert Dewey,
treasurer. The council will meet at
the church Thursday, July 13.
a T h r e e e a s y - t o - b a n d le
s to r a g e b a s k ets.
a Famous Thriftm aster unit
assures dependable year-
round freezing and storage.
G and B STORE
THE FRIENDLY STORE
2 ARCADI BLVD.
NYSSA, ORE.
GUESTS ENTERTAINED
Dr. and Mrs. Kenneth Kerby en­
tertained last Wednesday evening
with a barbecue supper at their
home for Mrs. Gene Wilkerson and
Mrs. W. M. Smotherman, who is
visiting here from Missouri. Other
BRIDGE ci,UB PLAYS
guests Included Mr and Mrs Austin
The members of the Wednesday
Kerby and Mr. and Mrs. Ed Reyn­
evening bridge club were guests of
olds of Boise, and Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Ward Tyler last Wednesdey
Clyde Snider and Lee and Ned
evening. High score was held by
Snider.
Mrs. Ed Frost and low score by Mrs.
Frell Blair. Guests were Mrs. Blair,
JOB S D AUG H TERS TO IN S TA L L
Mrs. Harry Anderson and Mrs.
Joint installation of the Nyssa and
Bthelmary Beckham.
Ontario chapters of Job's Daughters
—f —
will be held at the Masonic hall Fri­
P A R T IE S CO NTINUE
day evening, June 30. Ada Moore,
The round robin parties sponsored
grand guardian for Oregon, will be
by the Nyssa Civic club for the
present for the installation.
library fund are continuing. Enter­
taining the past week at morning
A U X IL IA R Y IN ITIATE S
An Initiation meeting was held coffees were Mrs. Dale Garrison,
Mrs. Lynn Lawrence, Mrs. Ron
Tuesday, June 20 by the Eagles lodge
auxiliary In honor of the first Junior Campbell, Mrs. C. A. Mally, Mrs.
past president, Mrs. Lydia Wilson. Fred Bracken and Mrs. Dennis
The two new members are Mrs. Patch.
Catherine Pratt and Mrs. Harriet
Harris, both of Nyssa. No child wel-
company since It commenced serving
the area 34 years ago.
Ralph Brooke, Ontario banker,
talked on financing. Carl Swanson
o f the Idaho Power company pre­
sided.
BANQUET G IV E N
Aproxlmately 35 fathers and sons
gathered at the Church of Christ
last Friday evening for a dads and
lads banquet. The chicken dinner
was prepared and served by the wo­
men of the church. Harold Robbins
acted as toastmaster in presentation
of a miscellaneous program of songs.
TAYLOR'S FOOD MARKET
D O YO U W A N T ...
B IG G ER EG G S
BACON SQUARES
TOMATO JUICE
PIER CE'S
46 OZ. C A N
m 0%
2 CANS
...
4 9 C
WHEN PRICES
L E A N STREAKED
P O U N D ...
..
1 9 C
ARE HIGHEST?
Good. BIG eqqa in the (all and early
winter are worth TWICE AS MUCH a «
eqqa in Iole winter and tprinq Purina
Research teats show that Purina Grow
ena raised birds 1 pound heavier at
laytnq tims than pullets on a poor qrow-
inq feed And the BIG pullets laid lots
mors hiq eqqs!
N A B IS C O
2 PACKAGES
on N E W P U R I N A
GR0WINA CHECKER-ETTS
STORE
WITH
THE
CHECKERBOARD
LOOK! Your name may be listed below:
FIRST PRIZE—22K Gold Horse and Clock.
Mrs. G. W. Cummins, Parma, Idaho.
SECOND PRIZE—Fireplace Mantle Clock
Mrs. Mary E. Lyells, Nyssa.
THIRD PRIZE—Auto Robe.
Mrs. Fred Babcock and Jack Franklin, Nyssa.
s tie for 3rd prlxe
M ap laid her first egg when she was 4 months, 12 «lavs old, but the race was close!
Lana laid four hours later of the same day.
Hundreds of folks visited our store and saw the six beautiful pullets started and
grown on P U R IN A C H IC K S T A R T E N A and G R O W E N A right here in the store.
A ll of them are laying now at 4W months
It's results like this that pay off. Already the price of eggs is going up and the
Pullet Parade Contest showed you how PURINA gets results.
Get Purina Growena Now
Try for Ik# big. well d iv «lo p «d pullets that are featured here In the Pullet Parado at
TOBLER'S FEED & FUEL
Phone 28
0%
O
...
4
9 C
LUNCH MEAT
M IN C E D H A M
p
D C
2 POUNDS
8
9 C
POTATO CHIPS
DID YOU WIN A PRIZE ON THE
PULLET CONTEST?
was
2 POUNDS
SIGN
ID AH O .
There
P U R E PO R K
SHREDDED
WHEAT
G row Your Pullets
YOUR
SAUSAGE
RITZ CRACKERS
1 POUND
4» ft
P A C K A G E ____ f c S f C
Nyssa. Oregon
39c
2-25c P A C K A G E S
MIRACLE WHIP
Q U A R T JAR
.......................... * ................
55c
CHEESE
KRAFT VELVEETA
2 P O U N D BR ICK
Two beautiful 3 ft. by 5
ft. American flaga w ill be
given away Monday at 6 p.
m. to the holder« of lucky
•alas tickata from Friday
and Saturday purchaaee.
WE HAVE A
C O M P L E T E L IN E
Correct by machine: wheel align­
ment for easier steering.
Step up performance: clean spark
plugs, adjust carburetor and distrib­
utor, tune up engine.
Increase tire life: cross-switch all
five tire9.
Im prove ride: LUBK1CARB “ lubri­
cation-plus” maintenance.
OF P IC N IC
S U P P L IE S
ORANGES
M E D IU M SIZE
SW EET
1
JUICE
. \ M . T ± LB.
87c
S a f e t y - c h e c k : stop lights, signal
lights, headlight aim, brake lining,
tires, front wheel bearings.
PEACHES
H A L V E S A N D SLIC E D
SACRAMENTO BRAND
« U tc fc
2 >4 SIZE C A N
LEMONS
For That
M
__
Cold Drink 4 a l C
Do1'
FREE D E L IV E R Y
10:30 a. m.— 4:30 p. n
Evary Day Except
Sunday
Phona 284-R
4 cans S1.06
Case, 24 Cans $6.29
S It H
G R EEN
STAM PS
STORE H O U R S
8 a. m.— 9:30 p. m.
Sundays
9 a. m.— 9 p. m.
Viands
S it YOUR NEAREST BUICK DEALER