Arcadia Club Annual Picnic Slated Sunday al Merildean Robbins Home Crowds Attend Rodeo K oí /<* o As Cowboys Vie For $2,500 in Prizes (Continued From Page I) iff's Posse judged as the best rid­ ing group Judges for the parade entries were Ralph G Lawrence, Gene Chester and Dale Adams. Winners in the following events wen* reported to the Journal by Mr. and Mrs. Uel Alsup of On­ visit her son. Joe and family, be­ Dick G. Tensen, rodeo secretary. tario; her brother and sister-in- fore returning to her home in Saddle Brone Riding law. Mr. and Mrs. Reece Owen of Phoenix. Ariz. She was a Satur­ First Go-Around Gene Jordan. Phoenix, Aria, visited one day day dinner guest in the home of Mitchell, Ore , $46 67; Larry Rob­ last week with Mr. and Mrs. Er­ John Seburn and Goldie Roper. inson. Twin Falls. $35; Gary Rob­ nest Stephenson. Mr and Mrs. Louie Pryor of inson. Twin Falls. $23.33: Dick Ontario Heights visited Sunday Henson. Pocatello, $11.67. Leaves for Salt Lake City Second Go - Around — Jordan. Miss Karen Host left by bus afternoon in the Otis Bullard $46 67; Dick Anderson, Albion. Saturday evening for Salt Lake home. Mr. and Mrs. Otis Bullard. Mr. Idaho. $35; Ron Silers. Sisters. City following a three-week visit with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. and Mrs. Don Bullard and son On1.. $23.33; Tom Angell. Don Lit­ returned last week from McCall tle. Ted Gammett. $2.92 each; Ron George Hust and family. Mr. and Mrs. John Schenk re­ where they had spent several Winkle, $2 91. ground money. at their summer home. Mr. Average — Jordan. $46.66; L. turned home Saturday from Dead­ days and Mrs George Bovack and Robinson. $35; G Robinson. $23 - wood reservoir in Idaho where they spent several days camping Nancy of Meridian. Mr and Mrs 33: Henson. $11.67. and" fishing. They were accom­ Marvin Jensen and Larry of Boise Bareback Riding panied by Mr. and Mrs. Melvin joined them there. Dale Brown. Gooding. Idaho, Jensen, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Es- Attend Family Reunion $232: Steve Benson, Rockland. Mrs. Parley Feik returned re­ Idaho. $174: Lonnie Wright, Mur­ plin. Mr. and Mrs. Merildean Robbins cently from Salt Lake City where phy, Idaho. $116; Harold Tews. and family returned last week she attended a family reunion Mountain Home, and Bill Brunel, from a vacation. They attended She accompanied her brother and Melba, tie. $29 each. family church camp at Wallowa, sister-in-law. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Brahma Bull Riding then visited in Portland and As­ James of Pendleton. Bill Davenport. Boise. $208; Mr. and Mrs. Max Long of toria. They were guests of Mr. Dick McCall. Boise, $156; Dale Nyssa visited July 7 in the Er ­ and Mrs. Fred Flory and family Brown. Gooding, and Jim Rupert. in McMinnville. Mrs. Flory is the nest Stephenson home. Jerome, tie, $78 each. Mrs. Theo Matherly returned former Angela Herrman. Enroute Calf Roping home Monday following a three- home they camped and fished in Harvey Helderman. Arco. $240; week visit in California. the Ochoco forest. Jim Rutledge. Boise. $180; Lonnie Jim Houston and Chuck Brady Mrs. Amy Stradley visited Sun­ Wright. Murphy, $120; Dee Chris­ day with Mrs. William Stradley. spent the weekend at home. They tensen. Hagerman, and Jack West, returned Sunday evening to West ­ Mr. and Mrs. Walter Stradley in fall where they are working in j Buhl. tie. $30 each. Big Bend. Bulldogging the hay. Schenks Have New Son Jim Hart. Pocatello. $208; Cur­ Linda Schenk is staying at the ARRIVES FROM FT. LEWIS tis Cutler. Pocatello, $156: George Leon Tobler of Ft. Lewis. Juker, Buhl. $104: Dennis Char­ home of her grandparents, Mr, and Mrs. John Schenk, while her Wash., arrived July 3 io spend an ters, Melba. $52. mother, Mrs. Larry Schenk, is in 18-dav furlough with his parents. Girls' Barrel Racing Malheur Memorial hospital with Mr. and Mrs. Evan Tobler and! First Go - Around — Barbara a 9-pound, 2-ounce son who ar­ grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Hansen, New Plymouth, $8; Bar- rived July 9. Maternal grand­ Tobler. The latter couple and bara Townley. Vale, $6; Barbara parents are Mr. and Mrs. Hal El­ Leon were July 4 barbecue dinner Shockman, Emmett, $4; Queen guests of the Evan Toblers. dredge of Las Vegas, Nev. Jennifer Gould. Ontario. $2. Second Go - Around — Sharon Brown, Caldwell, $8; B. Shock­ man, $6; B. Hansen. $4; S. Brown, $2. Average — B. Hansen. $8: B. Shockman, $6; B. Townley, $4; S. Brown, $2. Businessmen's Calf Tying Event (Both Nights) Walter Ford, first. 29.5; Ron Young, 37.1; Walter L. McPart- land, 55.5; Ray Tarter, 61.9; Bob Elliott and Richard Gustavson, no time. Mr. and Mrs. Norman Feik of By Mr*. George Moeller ARCADIA —Arcadia club an­ La Grande visited last week with nual picnic will be held Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Parley Feik. July 18. for members and their Arrives From Iowa families at the home of Mr. and Mrs Carl Seburn arrived by Mrs. Merildean Robbins. train last week from Iowa where she had been visiting. She will <7Ak|> AUTOMATIC AVn SCARECROWS Stop Bird Damage to Bee Beds For Less Than the Cost of One Shotgun Shell Per Day! • Portable . . . Weighs Only 22 Pounds • Rugged Construction . . . Lasts for Years • Safe and Simple . .. No Pilot Light THESE CARBIDE BANGERS Will Soon Pay for Themselves! o <3 THURSDAY. JULY 15, 1965 THE NYSSA GATE CITY JOURNAL, NYSSA. OHEGON PAGE FOUR Nyssa Co-op Supply 18 North Second St. Phone 372-3548 NYSSA . . . OREGON YOU DON'T HAVE TO BE A MEMBER TO BUY HERE AND SAVE! GUESTS FROM SCOTLAND Mr. and Mrs. Nate Kelly of Glasgow. Scotland, arrived last evening by bus from California where they had been visiting friends, The Kellys are parents of Mrs. Stanley (Jan) Mills who resides with her husband and daughter, Kelly, on Overstreet road in the Kingman Kolony area. Jan is an only child of the couple and they have never seen their granddaughter. This will be Kelly’s first trip to the United States. His wife was in this country about 24 years ago. They arrived Saturday evening by plane at Los Angeles and plan to spend approximately five weeks with the Mills family. VISIT NYSSA PARENTS Mrs. Dennis (Mardelle) frey, Barton and Brett of Orleans, La., arrived July visit her parents, Mr. and Bob Thompson and other God- New 3 to Mrs. rela- tives. They plan to leave for their home some time next week. WEEKEND VISITOR Dan Wilson of Concord, Calif., was a weekend guest in the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Boyd Wilson. His grandmother, Mrs. Cassie Gaskill, accompanied him back to California and will spend some time visiting her brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. B. H. Seaweard at Port Chicago. VISITORS FROM BAKER FULLER LATEX HOUSE PAINT LASTS UP TO 10 YEARS ...AND MORE Mrs. Ralph Rhea and family of Baker left Sunday for their home after spending the weekend with her brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Art Bosselman and fam­ ily. exterior ^TEX HOUSE P*1^ Approximately 30 employees of the Union Pacific railroad and their families were guests for a Sunday picnic dinner at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Smith near Adrian. Entertainment was provided by those in attendance telling past experiences until Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Stites and family arrived. Stites played his guitar and led the group in an oldtime songfest. The theme song appeared to be ‘‘I’ve Been Working on the Rail­ road.” A vote of thanks was given to the Smiths for their hospitality and thoughtfulness in erecting a large canopy over the picnic tables. Minimum Wage Up For Office Workers Effective August 9 The State Wage and Hour com­ mission at its June 10 meeting adopted the conference board re­ port which raises the minimum wage of women and experienced minors working in offices from 75 cents to $1.25 per hour and reduces the number of hours per week from 44 to 40 before pay­ ment of overtime. The new order which becomes effective Aug. 9. 1965, also re­ quires overtime permits to work women and minors beyond the minimum specified in the order. Thus, in addition to getting the overtime permit, which is a con­ dition precedent to employing anyone in an overtime status, a woman or minor must be paid time and one-half the minimum rate or his regular rate of pay, whichever is greater. Minimum wage for minors with less than 90 days experience was raised from 60 cents to $1 per hour. Employers subject to this order should examine their hours which require women or minors to work in any one week, and if the oper­ ation at any time requires, or might require, that a woman or minor work over 40 hours in any one week, make application with the Bureau of Labor for an over­ time permit. The commission also took in­ dependent action on a request made by AOI to insure that this order is not applicable to any per­ son, firm or corporation subject to any other commission order. Many employers were concern­ ed this order could overlap a wage and hour order to which they are already subject. Other orders cover specific types of in­ dustries whereas this order seem­ ingly covers types of work which are incidental to the office oper­ ations of every industry. Furnaces Cleaned—Serviced—Sanitized • Covers every type of surface! (With Large Vacuum Truck) • Goes on easy as inside paint! • One coat covers, dries in % hour ! 7080 Exterior Latex 2020 Exterior White Smiths Host Picnic For Railroad Group Four road projects in Malheur county were among the 18 ap­ proved by the Oregon State High way commission for emergency relief funds at a Salem meeting Jills 13 Of the total funds, the state and counties each pay 20 percent and the federal government 60 per­ cent The 18 projects approved extend over eight counties and call for an estimated $165.100 for repairs necessary from flood dam­ age last winter. The local projects, with work to be done by county forces, are: clean channel and repair Bully Creek bridge on FAS 525 near Westfall; restoration of intermit­ tent sections of roadway and drainage on a portion of Beulah road, FAS 537; debris removal and restoration of bridge ap­ proach fill on Malheur river sec­ tion of FAS 825. about six miles northeast of Vale; removal and restoration of approach fill of bridge over Jordan creek on FAS 825 at A rock. TVCC Reaistrar Lists Names of 26 Nvssans Signed for Fall Term Information released by the registrar's office at Treasure Val­ ley Community college • reveals that 26 NHS graduates from I the class of 1965 have been accepted to study during the fall term i be- ginning Sept 15 Students and fields they arc majoring in include Glade Wil­ liams, Mark Stephen. Mike Pet­ terson and Vaughn Schulthies, technical agriculture; Jim Hous­ ton. Richard Tracy, Joe Grijalva. Harold Corfield, Rudy Atagi, me­ chanical technology; Myron Mc- Crady and Leonard Phillips, lib­ eral arts. Colleen Gifford, Don Anderson and Ralph Capper, office man­ agement curriculum; Eileen Mc- Connel. Nancy Lytle, Connie Ir­ by and Amelia Diaz, education; Louise Freitag, nursing; LaNae Hammon, physical education; Ca­ mille Butson, executive secretar­ ial curriculum; Charles Anderson, technical drafting. Also registered at TVCC with no major reported are John Glas­ cock. Anita Niccum. Karen Smith and Marilyn Clarkson. Cnminn Events . . . Today, 2 p.m—Methodist Wo­ men's social meeting in Nyssa south park. Tonight, 7:30 p.m. — Potluck dinner preceding regular meeting of Oregon Trail Grange. July 18 — Adrian high school classes of 1940-44 reunion picnic on school grounds. July 20. 8 p.m. — CWF general meeting at church. Preceded by executive meeting at 7 o'clock. VISIT NYSSA PARENTS Visitors last week in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Hoare were their sons and daughters-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Larry Hoare and Lanta of Seaside, Calif., Mr. and Mrs. Vernon R. Morris and family of Ellensburg, Wash. Another son and daughter - in - law, Mr. and Mrs. Richard W. Morris and fam­ ily of Portland, arrived Friday for a weekend visit in the parental home. Larry Hoare will leave today to report back to Seaside for overseas assignment. His wife and daughter plan to remain in Nyssa until he completes his tour of duty. VISIT IN MONTANA Mr. and Mrs Monis Huffman recently spent a week visiting their son - in - law and daughter. Mr and Mrs. R. E Lundy and funuly at Kalispell, Mont They also visited his mother. Mrs E O Huffman and other relatives at Thompson Falls, Mont., and with a sister in Spokane. VISIT AREA RELATIVES Mr. and Mrs. Danny Norland and sons of Umatilla were July 4 holiday weekend guests of her parents, Mr ami Mis Owen Gann The visitors also attended a re­ union of the Norland and Stephen families at the Eugene Stephen residence. ALASKA FAMILY VISITS GRANDMOTHER IN NYSSA Mr. and Mis. Johnny Davis and two children left Monday nnirn Ing enroute to their home m An- choiuge. Alaska, after «(«ending the weekend with his grand­ mother, Mrs Angie Cook The family left Alaska on June 3 und had tl a veled thl irugh the nildwi t before visiting in Nyssu Mrs. Cook reports this wus the fust tune she hud seen her grandson in 15 years When the family ar- rives home they will have travel- ed 15,000 miles since leaving m early June. To Buy, Bell or Trae», Try th» Classified Pagel NOTICE! Due to a shortage of water that might be needed for fire fighting, the City Council at the Tuesday, July 13, meet­ ing decided it was imperative to restrict the use of irrigation water. Until Further Notice, These Restrictions Shall Apply . . . Effective Monday, July 19,1965 — 1. No sprinkling between the hours of 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. and 11 p.m. to 4 a.m, 2. Users on north side of Ehrgood Ave. only on Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday. 3. Users living on south side of Ehrgood only on Monday, Wednesday, Friday. 4. Sundays open to all by observing no sprinkling hours noted above. FRED KOCH Nyssa City Manager DEPENDABLE CAR SERVICING... From Minor Repairs to Complete Motor Overhauls — We Do the Job Right, Save You Time, Trouble and Money — with — ED STEPHENS, Service Manager Con and Bob Dennis, Mechanics N-0-W Would Be an Excellent Time To Ready Potato Trucks! o Swader Chevrolet 420 Main Street Phone 372-2224 NYSSA . . . OREGON Vacation $ Savers! FIRESTONE’S DELUXE CHAMPION TUBELESS TIRES (Each with Slight Blemish) REG. • Weather-resistant satin finish! SPECIAL THIS WEEK — LEADING THE RODEO PAR­ ADE Friday evening through downtown Nyssa and onto the rodeo grounds were Queen Jen­ nifer Gould (on right) and her princess. Leona Sheppard, both of Ontario. Nyssan Claudette Stelling. another princess, was unable to participate due to emergency surgery. This Jour­ nal photo was snapped at the corner of First and Main streets, just prior to start of the parade. State Approves County Projects For Federal Aid REG. $6.60 $7.89 SALE $4.99 $4.99 DON B. MOSS Firestone Dealer Store 417 Main Street Phone 372-2124 NYSSA . . . OREGON IN NYSSA ÀREA For Next Three Weeks! ---------o------------ ABC Heating-Air Conditioning 5616 State Street — Boise, Idaho ------------ o------------ SAM PARKS, Representative Nyssa, Oregon — Phone 372-3015 7.75 or 7.50 x 14 (Black) .... $20.55 7.75 or 7.50 x 14 (Whitewall) . . $23.80 8.50 or 8.55 x 14 (Whitewall) . . $28.66 NOW $16.05 $18.55 $22.35 (Above Prices Plus Tax and Tire Off Your Car) BUILT WITH FIRESTONE'S SUP-R-TUF ★ For Added Safety ★ More Mileage ★ For Easier ALL TIRES BALANCED FREE! --------------- o--------------- Shell Super Service 101 North Main Street NYSSA OREGON Phone 372-3990