Nyssa gate city journal. (Nyssa, Or.) 1937-199?, July 05, 1951, Page PAGE SIX, Image 6

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    THE NYS8A GATE CITY JOURNAL, HYSSA, OREGON. THURSDAY, JULY 5, 1951
PAGE SIX
the home of her lister, Mrs. Don
Boxen. The occasion was the SOth
wedding anniversary of her parents.
Mr. and Mrs. O. J. English.
ADRIAN. July »—Mrs. Laura Smith
Mr and Mrs Olen Brown were
spent Monday In Nyssa visiting her business visitors In Ontario Thurs­
granddaughter, Mrs. Vivian White. day.
Mr. and Mrs. Tommy Bates and
Mr and Mrs. Jim MoOinnla. and
Mr. and Mrs. Orville Ollbert opened
the confectionery store for business Junior were Sunday guests In the
Tuesday. It was formerly the C and Tom Ferguson nome in Apple Valley.
E
Mr and Mrs Bill Hardy and fam­
Mrs. BUI Ashfraft and daughter. ily spent the week-end In Caldwell
Mrs Donna Hamilton of Arock, are with his brother. Roy and family.
visiting this week with relatives In Lillian and Ila Carrol stayed to
Kexburg. Idaho.
spend the week.
Mr and Mrs. Oilder Watson of
Mr and Mrs. Dick Hreigh, Mr. and
Seattle visited Sunday evening In j Mrs Dale Olen and Mr and Mrs
the Alvon McGinnis home. Mr Bill Willis and guests spent Sunday
Watson and Mrs. McOlnnls are afternoon In Nampa.
cousins.
Mrs. John Oowey returned Friday
Mrs. Ruth Hahl and son, Billy, from a visit with her daughter, Wil­
left Saturday for Denver to visit j ma In Ogden. Her granddaughter.
relatives
Trudla, returned with her for a visit.
Mr. and Mrs. F. F Cummings of
Patricia Smith spent the week­
Boise were Sunday dinner guests o f! end in the Leonard 8mlth home
their daughter, Mrs. Bob Brown caring for the girls, while their
and family
parents were in Boise, being with
Mrs. Alvon McOlnnls. Mrs. Laura j Mrs Smith's father, Mr. Montague,
Smith, Mrs. Bill Willis and Mrs I who underwent surgery for ulcers of
James McOlnnls attended a bridal the stomach.
shower Thursday In Ridgevlew fo r,
Mrs Dick Davis.
Mr and Mrs. Bill Looney and j Visitor* Slop
sons spent Sunday fishing near
At Buena Vista
Midvale.
Mr and Mrs. Frank Blcandl re­
turned Thursday evening from BUENA VISTA, July »—Mrs. How­
Coeur d'Alene, where they visited ard Day returned home Sunday
her daughter, Mrs. Sonny Franklin from the Holy Rosary hospital after
an appendix operation.
and family.
The members of the Free Meth- j Mr. and Mrs La Vern Cleaver,
odist church enjoyed a picnic Thurs- I Mr. and Mrs. Willis Bertram and
day In Boise with the Free Meth­ Mr. and Mrs Thurman Hill fished
near Baker several days the past
odist of Mountain Home
Mrs. Wally Steiner is recruper- week.
Mrs. Delbert Cleaver and son,
atlng at her home after an oper­
ation In the Caldwell hospital Donald Alva, returned from the
Nyssa hospital Sunday.
Thursday morning
Mrs Henry Olson and Mr. and
Mr and Mrs. R Klndlesparger
Mrs.
Forest Hammond of Nebraska
and Wayne Willis of Coos Bay, Ore­
gon arrived Sunday morning for a Visited Mr and Mrs. Jim Ritchie
week's visit with her son and Wayn­ while en route home from Quincy.
e's brother, Bill Willis and family Washington, where they visited Mr.
Mr. and Mrs John Jarvis and Hammond, who has employment
Mr. and Mrs Alvon McOlnnls left there.
Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Topllff, Mr
Monday morning for the mountains
and Mrs. Willis Bertram and 8. B
near Unity to fish,
Hoffman
attended Mathews-Peter-
Mr and Mrs. Oayle Martin and
family spent Sunday In Nampa at son boxing match at Boise Friday
evening.
Mr and Mrs. Olen Hoffman and
Earl Says—
Olenda were In Ontario Thursday
Mr and Mrs Henry Estreck and
--------------------
Vaughan were Sunday dinner guests
A rar"s battery ran sometimes
at the Alva Ooodell home.
Mr and Mrs. Leslie Topllff were
be the most abused part uf
Sunday dinner guests at the H. L
Day home
a ear — through tlioughtlru
Mr and Mrs Olenn Hutshey and
neglect. Ho, If you've over­
daughters of Ontario were Sunday
evening callers at Willis Bertram
looked yours, better tlr a red
home.
Mr and Mrs. John Cleaver of
string around your flngrr,
Iowa are visiting at the home of
his brother, Oeorge Cleaver and
right now. and remember lo
family
come to HFKRKTT'H.
Confectionery
Store lit Opened
Visit in
Mr and Mrs Frank J. Pike
tiuree daughters spent Sunday in
Boise visiting at the homes of Mr
OREGON TRAIL, July 5—The and Mrs. Leslie Stoker and Mr and
merry Matrons club met with K a th ­ Mrs. Arlen Haroldson, former Adrian
em Chenault Wednesday, June 27. residents.
Seventeen members answered roll Return From T r ip -
call with a joke. The afternoon
Rev. and Mrs. Austin J Hollings­
was spent visiting Alberta Bowen
drew the door prize Plans were worth returned Monday night after
completed for a bridal shower to be an automobile trip of 1333 miles in
held In honor of Mrs. Olen Holmes j Oregon. They stopped at Crater
Friday afternoon, July 8 at the Ore- | lake while en route to Ashland,
gon Trail schoolhouse.
Refreshments were served by the where they were entertained in the
hostess, assisted by Hazel Farr an d ; home of W F. Hollingsworth, broth­
Viola Adams The next meeting will er of the Nyssa minister. They
be held July 11 with Hazel Farr as| later entertained at a group dinner
hostess. Roll call will be answered at the lodge at 8ilvertcn Falls. Mr
by "The 4th of July I remember
Best."
Mr and Mrs Ward C. Lundy and
Mrs. J E. Bowen shopped in Nampa
and Caldwell Friday
Mr. and Mrs Toruald Olson are
visiting at the home of their son.
Elmer and family of Tule Lake.
California.
Merry Matron*
Planning Shower
and Mrs. Hollingsworth were guests trict who spent several days this that had killed several young calves
at the home of her cousin. Ca.l week hunting for a mountain lion in the area.
Booth, who lives near Salem. T h e y _________ ______
|_____________________________
spent a week attending the 99th
annual convention of the Oregon
Christian churches at Turner. There
were more than 2900 registrations at ]
the church gathering, representing j
all phases of the work done by Ore- j
UNTIL JULY 12
gon Christian churches.
SPECIAL PROMOTION
Has Tonsilectomy—
Miss Phyllis Bair, daughter of
Mrs. Bessie Bair, underwent a ton­
silectomy Thursday.’
Mountain Lion Hunted—
D. O. Bybee was amoung the
ranchers of the Riddle. Idaho dis-
Meuller Furnaces-
Link Belt Stokers
------
-- -------------------
Estimates Gladly Given
Custom Hay Baling
Mowing & Raking
Cultivating
Jack Ziliercob
HEATING
GEORGE J. KINZER
Phone 128-R evenings
G & B STORE
FURNITURE
th a t th e y are endow ed b y th e ir C reator w ith c e rta in u n a lien a b le rig h ts;
th a t a m o n g th ese are L ife , L ib e rty a n d th e p u r s u it o f H a p p in ess.
T h a t to secu re these rig h ts, g o v e rn m e n ts are in stitu te d a m o n g m e n , d erivin g th e ir ju s t pow ers
fr o m th e co n sen t o f th e g o v e rn e d . .
Immortal words
Irom the Declaration
of Independence, adopted on the first 4th of July, just 175 years
T hese words are the stones upon which man built history’s greatest work
— the United States of America. Remember them well!
. . all m e n are crea ted eq u a l . .
That means you are as
important in the eyes of God as any man ever brought into this world. You are
made in His image and likeness. There is no “superior” man anywhere.
Ontario V isitors Wednesday af­
ternoon were Mr and Mrs. Dick
Oroot.
Mr. and Mrs. John Broad left
Saturday morning for Florence and
other coastal cities to spend the
Fourth of July with relatives and
friends
' Mrs C M Tensen and Neil and
Carolyn called on Mrs T. M. Ber-
aneek of Ontario last week
Mr. and Mrs. Dick Oroot had
dinner with Mr and Mrs. Oeorge
Smlt of Nu-Acres Thursday.
Mrs Edward Larson and new
(laughter returned home from the
I Malheur Memorial hospital last
week.
C. M. Tensen made a trip to his
farm in Brogan recently.
Mr and Mrs. Dick Oroot visited
relatives In Apple Valley Sunday
afternoon.
worship and vote as you choose. These are rights po government on earth
may take from you.
, - *
“ . . . T h a t to secu re th ese rig h ts, g o v e rn m e n ts are in stitu te d
am ong m en . .
Here it the reason for and the purpose of government.
Government is but a servant — not a master — not a giver of anything.
. . d e r iv in g th e ir ju s t pow ers fr o m th e co n sen t o f th e
In America, the government may assume only the powers
you allow it to have. It may assume no others.
g o v e rn e d . .
From Concord to Korea, your kinsmen have fought and died for the
principles of America’s Declaration of Independence: belief in God . . .
belief in the God-given rights of man . . . belief that man is more important
than government . . . belief in the vital need for morality in all man does.
But on this Independence Day, as never before, these beliefs are in
deadly peril. There are people in America who would deny your God-given
rights, who prefer expediency to morality, and who would make government
the master — not the servant — of man. These people are the advocates of an
all-powerful, all-providing socialistic government to control your destiny
* from cradle to grave.
The time has come to answer them with your own “ Declaration of
i Independence” . . .
D eclare that g o v trn m s n l is resp o n sib le T O
y o u — rathof
than F O R yo u .
D o c la r a th a t fre e d o m It m e r e im p o rta n t to y o u th a n
“ s e c u r it y " o r • • s u r v iv a l.”
D e clare a g a in that the rights G o d g a v e yo u m a y not be
taken a w a y b y a n y g overnm en t on a n y pretext. . ,
Our founding fathers accepted the truths of America’s Declaration on faith
alone. Today, our nation is proof — absolute and irrevocable — that these
truths work. They are the last great hope for the protection of human
civilization.
FREEDOM NEEDS YOU
On this 175th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence, help give the
day the spiritual, religious meaning it had to the founding fathers.
( fJL U S
% B
t à l l i S ANO S l a v i c «
)
au ctoa
Renew your faith and allegiance to the immortal truths stated in the Declara­
tion. Make them an active part of your thinking, your acting, your
voting.
Pray for help in maintaining man's closeness to God, in preserving man's
God-given rights and responsibilities against those who would make
you dependent upon a socialistic, all-powerful government.
IDAHO
A
C IT IZ E N
V
POWER
W HEREVER
IT S E R V E S
I« «
A M H -C I*
Allis-Chalmers and New Idea Dealer
Your Power Fanning Headquarters
BAUMAN FARM EQUIPMENT
1 Mile North of Nytaa on U. S. 20
Phone 333
PIANOS
“ U p h o ld th e se tru th s to b e self-ev id en t; th a t all m e n a re crea ted eq u a l;
. . th e y a re en d o w ed h y th e ir C reator w ith certa in u n a lie n ­
able rig h ts . .
Here is your birthright — the freedom to live, work,
If your AU-CBOP Harvester needs a checkup
and repairs, don't put it off any longer
There'll be busy times between now and grain
harvest. And your crop will be heading out
before you realize it.
Our mechanics have been trained in AU-CtOP
Harvester schools. Nothing is overlooked when
they check your machine. And they know how
to nx it at lowest cost to you. Especially this
year, repair parts should be ordered as early
as possible.
Now is the time to prepare for a non sto
to p
harvest. A
phone call will put your AU-C* OP
\ pi
on our schedule
EZ CARR
APPLIANCES
How many “Independence Days” have we left ?
COLUMBIA AVE.
Ready for a
Davenport and Chair _______ $ 269.50
Coffee Table _ _____________ 19.95
End Table ___
19.95
Table Lamp ___
7.95
Floor Lam p_______________
19.95
Throw Rug
5.95
Phone 134L2 Parma, Idaho
r
ITS LATER THAN YOU THINK
7 Pieces of Furniture for
Price of One Piece
$269.50
* . . . « • need only to recall that the substance of (America's) formula is continuous, strict
and closely guarded limitations upon the power ot government Neither the peril of
war nor the promiao of welfare must ever serve to relax any item of this formula . .
F im i "TIN Kay Is Naca'* to Osaa darsne* M o m s . C<*«fs at Ism. flaire (to rn Uanenrty putti stod to T V ttentafe F<
ago.