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About Nyssa gate city journal. (Nyssa, Or.) 1937-199? | View Entire Issue (Nov. 3, 1960)
O O O O 0 • THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 3, I960 GUESTS AT NEELY HOME THE NYSSA GATE CITY JOURNAL. NYSSA. OREGON Miss Donna Davis, Lee Atkins Reign At Adrian Dance Mr. and Mrs. Larry Neely and daughter of Caldwell were Satur day overnight and Sunday visit ors at the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. N. Neely. Mr. By Mrs. Gerald Mackey and Mrs. Bob Mordhorst and fam ily of Payette were dinner guests ADRIAN—The sophomore class of the Neelys on Sunday. of Adrian high school held its an nual Sadie Hawkins dance Oct. VISITORS AT CRISP HOME 22. Donna Davis was crowned Recent visitors at the Claude queen and was presented a rhine Crisp home were Mr. and Mrs. stone tiara and Lee Atkins was Clifford Rumfelt of Buhl, Mr. and crowned king and was given a Mrs. Clair Pond of Boise and Mr. pair of cuff links as remembran and Mrs. Robert Leaper and Bill ces of their class. of Baker. The dance was held in the rec reation room of Adrian grade Mr. and Mrs. Arthur D. Isaac school. Decorations featured life and family of Mountain Home size reproductions of the Li’l Ab and Mrs. Gladys Davis of Boise ner family. Mrs. Dilly and LeRoy were Sunday dinner guests of Buhler, class advisers, supervised Mr. and Mrs. John R. Davis. the dance. Mrs. Bessie Bair spent last week Mrs. Ronald Batt of Nyssa spent in Vale at the home of a son, Mr. Sunday with her mother, Mrs. C. and Mrs. Sterling Bair and fam R. Mills and Ross. ily. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Sandlin of Mr. and Mrs. George McKee Escalon, Calif., visited her sister, were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Mackey, sev- | Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Armstrong in eral days last week. Mrs. Harry I Gage, sister of Mrs. Sandlin and Wilder. Mrs. Mackey, was also a dinner guest. GOVERNMENT Mrs. Bob Patterson visited her SURPLUS SALES parents, Mr. and Mrs. Nate Tur NOW anyone can buy DIRECT from U S. GOVERNMENT SURPLUS pin of Aberdeen, Idaho, for three DEPOTS, by mail for youraelf or days last week. for resale. Cameras, binoculars, Mr. and Mrs. George Cartwright cars. Jeeps, trucks, boats, hard ware, office machines and equio- visited her mother, Mrs. Alma ment. tents, tools and tens-of- tfrousands of other items at a Hibbard in Notus, Thursday even fraction of their original coat ing. Many items brand new. For list of hundreds of U. S. Government Surplus Depots, located in every < State and overseas with pamphlet "How Government Can Ship Direct to You.” plus procedures. HOW TO BUY and how to get PREF. SUR PLUS. mall $2.00 to SURPLUS SALES INFORMATION SERVICES. Rm. 709. Albee Bldg., Wash. 5. D.C. O Attend Boise Meeting Those attending the Presbyter - ial meeting in Boise Tuesday from this area were Mmes. Henry Day, M. L. Kurtz, John Packwood, John Auker, R. D. McKinley, K. WIN PROMOTION and HIGHER PAY If you are not satisfied with your salary and your prog ress in your present job, you can do something about it. Attend Ludwig Commercial College nights while keeping present job. Special classes in Real Estate and Salesman ship are starting soon. Special instructors, too. Also Ac counting, Office Machines, Shorthand (Gregg) or Speed writing, typing and related subjects. WILSON CHOSEN MEMBER OF OSC MARCHING BAND Dan Wilson has ben chosen this year as a member of the football marching band at Oregon State, according to a bulletin received from the college. The group is rated as one of the top college marching bands in the west. In addition to perform ing at home games, it takes part in special music events. Wilson is a son of Mr. and Mrs. Boyd Wilson of Nyssa and is maj oring in the school of pharmacy. I. Peterson, Elvin Worden, Lydia Worden and Harvey Bennett. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Price and Wilson Witt visited Sunday afternoon at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Day. Mr. and Mrs. Francis Deffer went to Pendleton Sunday to visit their daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Wiggins. Mrs. Monty Spelman and Curtis visited Sunday afternoon with Mrs. Carl Piercy. Visitors at the G. E. Mackey home last week were Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hunter of Gardiner, Ore., Mr. and Mrs. Martin Kiess of Reedsport and Messrs. John Klaus, Fred Hallwyler and Rol lin Bowles of Portland. While here they went pheasant hunting, deer hunting on Spring mountain and chukar hunting near Dry creek. Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Mackey and their house guests, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hunter and Rollin Bowles, were Sunday evening dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Gene Pratt last week. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hunter, Mrs. Gerald Mackey and Pfc. Joe Mackey were Tuesday evening dinner guests of Mrs. Mackey’s aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Sam Davis in Caldwell. Mackey Breaks Ankle Forage Elements Affect Nutrition Of Cattle, Lambs A diet that lacks copper or has an excess of molybdenum can cause a serious nutritional dis turbance in cattle and lambs, re search of the Oregon State college agricultural experiment station shows. Copper is necessary in forage ■ crops so animals will utilize iron to form sufficient quantities of hemoglobin, the red pigment of the blood. An excess of molyb ' denum interferes with the ani mals' use of copper. Dr. J. R. Haag, professor of ag ricultural chemistry, said fortun ately, excess molybdenum levels appear largely to be confined to specific marshy grazing areas. Symptoms in cattle of this nu tritional deficiency may include lack of thrift, discolored hair coat, scouring and broken bones. When a black sheep has a copper defi ciency, the color and crimp of the wool both disappear. This deficiency was uncovered : by checking the levels of copper in the animals' blood and liver. The deficiency may be either a lack of copper, an excess of molybdenum or both. Some 1500 pairs of blood and liver samples were studied in Oregon in order to obtain evi dence of the impact of regional facts on this nutritional deficien cy. Different patterns of blood liver relationships were found in PAGE FIFTEEN Astoria, Squaw Butte and Kla math areas. The molybdenum content was found to be most potent in the more succulent young forage crops. When hays mature, the molybdenum content goes down. No serious problems have been encountered in any feedstuffs en tering the market. Molybdenum does not show any marked tendency to accumulate in eggs, meat or milk. Dr. Haag emphasized. To maintain the proper amount of copper in forage, copper may be applied as a fertilizer in some VISITS FROM CALIFORNIA CARD OF THANKS Mrs F. M. McNeil of Mt. Shas We take this opportunity to ta. Calif, is visiting at the home thank our friends and neighbors of her brother and sister-in-law, for the many cards of sympathy, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Miner. flowers, food and other kind nesses shown us following the parts of the world. This method death of our wife, mother and has not met with much success in grandmother, Anna L. Hite. —Oral R. Hite Oregon, Dr. Haag said. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Hite Three ways the copper level and family can be increased in cattle or sheep Mr. and Mrs. Richard Hite is to mix it in the feed, put it in the salt, or, in an emergency, in Mrs. Bessie Bair was a Sunday ject it into the animal. dinner guest of her daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Schulthies in Sun Journal Classifieds Get RssultsI set Valley. Ore., were Tuesday evening din ner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Day. Mr. and Mrs. Monty Spelman and sons visited Saturday evening with Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Hill. Mr. and Mrs. William Webb and Mr. and Mrs. Bob Webb vis ited Mr. and Mrs. Dick Stam and family of Fruitland in observance of Dick Siam's birthday anniver sary Friday evening. Bob Webster and LeRoy Ben nett spent the weekend elk hunt ing with Gerrit Muntjewerff of Joseph, Ore. They returned with their elk. Also hunting over the weekend were Bob Patterson, Lloyd Parril, Don Hatch and Glenn Ward. Pfc. Joe Mackey of the Marine base in San Diego, Calif., arrived home on furlough Oct. 22. He had the misfortune of falling and breaking his ankle while chukar For information, fill out the form and mail to hunting Wednesday morning near LUDWIG COMMERCIAL COLLEGE Dry creek. He was taken to the 63 South Oregon Street, Ontario. Oregon Mountain Home Air Force base New AMERICAN Brand Heating Oil with improved ** Guaranteed by .Good Houfokooping hospital for treatment. Mr. and Please send information and starting dates of your courses. Xjl .Mr*» Mrs. G. E. Mackey and Judy vis STA-CLEAN* has earned the Good Housekeeping NAME___ ited him there Sunday. Seal. It’s clean burning! Wonder-additive STA-CLEAN prevents Address Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Martin, Visit from California former owners of the Adrian State City. rust. Your entire fuel system stays clean. Your burner keeps work Merc, now living at Sheridan, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Willis and Ruth Terez of Santa Ana, ing at peak efficiency. So for unfailing comfort, ’round-the-clock, Calif., visited several days last week at the home of Mr. and Mrs. call your Utoco Distributor for a fill of new AMERICAN Brand Bill Willis. • Able Administrator • Fair Employer • Honest Law Enforcement A group of young people of the Heating Oil. Adrian Presbyterian church at tended a meeting in Parma Sun night. They were accompan For Malheur County I day ied by Mmes. Marguerite Scott and Robert Long. Mr. and Mrs. Austin Gilbert (REPUBLICAN) had dinner at Maudie Owens cafe in Payette Sunday in observance Let's Look at His Accomplishments The Sheriff's Office of their wedding anniversary. The Ruth and Naomi circles of Unlike most public offices in Oregon, the What has Sheriff Elfering specifically the Adrian Presbyterian church office of the sheriff is concerned with sub done for Malheur county? Among other held a joint meeting Wednesday stantial business affairs as well as law en things, he has changed the tax collection forcement. Experience in both of these fields •STA-CLEAN is the Uademark evening at the home of Mrs. K. I. record system from an outmoded, expensive name for the additives used tn is an important attribute of a candidate for Peterson. There were 20 mem- hand written system to a mechanical one AMERICAN Brand Heating Oil this position. The citizens of Malheur county with the result that the cost of tax collec , bers present. Mrs. Peterson serv now have a sheriff with long experience in tions is now approximately one-half of one ed lunch. both of these areas. per cent, and he was instrumental in start Mr. and Mrs. Glen Brown re- ing a state wide tax collectors’ school. I turned Sunday evening from Personal History Portland where they attended Sheriff Elfering is 50 years old, he has In the spring of 1960 he was commended funeral services Friday for his Fruitland, Idaho Phone GL 2-3341 been married for over 25 years, and is the by the local newspaper for inaugurating, brother, Norman Brown. father of six children, one of whom is teach with Assessor John Koopman, a “very sen ing, two others are now in college, and sible salary program for the courthouse.” three are attending grade school. He has The program was a new program for Mal been a resident of Malheur county for many heur county whereby the employees of the years, lives upon a Vale area farm which county offices would be paid according to he purchased over 17 years ago, and is sen the categories of experience and position sitive to needs and aspirations of the citizens regardless of which office was the employ of Malheur county. er, rather than to be paid according to the whim or desire of each office head. Sheriff Elfering finished high school after his marriage, and has been credited with In 1959 Sheriff Elfering established a two years of college work since. He has police radio network within the County of worked for one year in a police capacity 21 LEADING BUSINESS, This measure puts the State in the Malheur with the cooperation of the cities with the Federal government, eight years as of Ontario, Nyssa and Vale. This permitted CIVIC AND LABOR a deputy sheriff of Los Angeles county, and billboard business. Authorizes it each car used in law enforcement within he has been sheriff of Malheur county since to acquire land, build roads and ORGANIZATIONS URGE Malheur county to communicate wi.h one 1948. He has been president of the Oregon another and with the sheriffs office. Be construct hodge - podge boards FACT Sheriffs’ Association and is presently chair THIS BAD BILL WOULD YOUR VOTE sides its obvious advantage in promoting law man of its Legislation Committee. From a each containing 24 advertise GIVE THE STATE A BLANK Oregon State Hotel Attoc ration enforcement, it permitted each citizen of the membership of 13,500. Sheriff Elfering was ments. The State would say who county to have at their immediate disposal elected to the Board of Governors of the Oregon Restaurant and BUILD EXPENSIVE CHECK TO access to law enforcement officers nearest could advertise — who couldn't. National Sheriffs’ Association, and this year Beverage Association to them, at any hour, even after the cities’ AND INCONVENIENT INFOR was elected vice president. Portland Retail Trade Bureau These off-high- police offices are closed The radio network Oregon AFL-CIO MATION SITES WITH YOUR way sites would He is a member of the Ontario Elks, the has now been extended to permit contact Multnomah County Labor Nyssa Eagles, the Farm Bureau, Grange, and with the Idaho police over the Snake River be danger traps TAX DOLLARS! Council, AFL-CIO Valley as well. the Knights of Columbus. at night. Vote JOHN C. ELFERING ^^American Brand SHERIFF Heating Oil with improved sta-clean UTOCO A. B. CAMPO, Distributor I. Public Commendations The office of sheriff is everywhere subject to the election time rumor. This is also true in Malheur county. But the fact is that Sheriff Elfering has conducted his office with integ rity and honesty. In 1955 thirty clergymen from Malheur county publicly commended Sheriff Elfering for his activities in ridding the county of organized vice; the Ontario Ministerial As sociation similarly congratulated him for the work that he did and the Attorney General of this state wrote in recognition, of his "good job in this matter.” In every one of seven years between 1949 and 1959 this vice has been successfully attacked in Malheur county. His law enforcement activities have been vigorous, impartial, and effective. And It Has Been a Full-Time Job The position of sheriff requires a man who can assemble about him deputies and em ployees who are as dedicated to the responsibilities of the position as the sheriff himself. This Sheriff Elfenng has been able to do. f ACT 2. NO NO on No. 15. TOURIST INDUSTRY! THIS BADLY WRITTEN BILL WOULD NOT PROTECT SCENIC HIGHWAYS-WOULD ACTUALLY CAUSE CLUTTER ING IN MANY AREAS! SAVE TAX DOLLARS This position requires an able administrator, a fair employer, an experienced businessman^ an honest and effective law enforcer. With nothing less can the best interest of Malheur county be served. Sheriff Elfering has progressively demonstrated these qualities in his 12 years of office. e SAVE JOBS AND PAY ROLLS • Effective Law Enforcer <rd Pol. Adv by Elferinf for Kh-rlff Committee : William F Schroeder. Chairman. Mr». Mamaro Wakasuffl. Roy Probaaro, Jim Kakebeeke and E. H. (Shorty) Brandt) 9 O Association Hundreds of off-highway and roadside businesses would be de nied the opportunity of telling motorists their location or what services they offered. Result: Lost business . . . lost jobs. Vote NO on No. 15. Oregon Coast Association Oregon Printing Industry Sweet Home Chamber oF 'Commerce Joint Teamsters Council Oregon Advertising Club Josephine County Farm Bureau Federation TiUamook County unea »« Chamber of Commerce Oregon Oil Jobbers Everyone agrees—scenery must be protected—but this measure prohibits signs in many non- scenic areas and allows signs In many scenic spots. It is a badly written and misleading bill! Advertising Associotiow of tbo West Oregon Bottlers of Carbonated Beverages Lebanon Chamber of Commerce Fortland Women's Advertising Club Oregon State Fainters Conference BULBO AHO MEASURt • Experienced Businessman Oregon Motor Court MEASURE 15 WOULD DE STROY MANY JOBS AND PAYROLLS - WOULD HURT OREGON'S $176,000,000 Oregon State Construction Trades Conference Eugene Adv. Club