Image provided by: Nyssa Public Library; Nyssa, OR
About Nyssa gate city journal. (Nyssa, Or.) 1937-199? | View Entire Issue (April 7, 1966)
THE NYSSA GATE CITY JOURNAL. NYSSA. OREGON THURSDAY, APRIL 7. 1966 Mrs. M. Moore Takes Trip Into Mexico Guadalupe Finishes at Army Base While Visiting Children in California Course Pvt. Perez Guadalupe, whose Nielsen Trio Returns io Area Homes Following Trip io Washington Slate Saturday dinner guests of Mr. By Freda Aitorac* SUNSET VALLEY - Mr and and Mr«. Wayne Robb were her Mrs. Elver Nielsen and his moth mother, Mac Lytle of Roswell, er, Effie Nielsen of Nu Acree, and an uncle. Lee Davis. Mr. and Mrs. Jess Asumendi and left March 2ft and drove to Oth ello, Wash, to the home of his family visited Sunday with Mr brother, Clifton Nielsen. Mrs. and Mrs. Buster Talbot and fam Nielsen remained there and the ily in Westfall. Elver Nielsens drove to Seattle Airman Salter Visits and «pent the weekend with their Airman Third Class Keith Sal son and dauithtcr-ln-law, Mr and ter visited Monday and Wednes Mrs. Bill Nielsen and Ia-e Ann. day afternoon of last week with They ate dinner Saturday In the Ed Lowtrip. Mr. and Mrs. Cube Space Needle restaurant and rode Astoreca. Keith left Saturday on the Monorail. On Sunday they morning to report to Charleston drove to Renton and also visiter! Air Base in Charleston, S.C., af Woodland park and zoo. ter spending his leave with rela They returned Monday to Oth tives in Utah and with his mother. ello for his mother and went to Alzlna Salter; a brother-in-law Pendleton where they had lunch and sister, Mr. and Mrs Ed Sharp with Mr. and Mrs. Doyn Price and family. and family. They also visiter! Mr. and Mrs. Duane Smith of friends. Mr. and Mrs Vernon Ber- Onturio were Saturday evening nett in Pendleton, returning home visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Gabo As- Monday night, March 31. ' tore«-!! and family. Sunday visitors of Mr. and Mrs. A recent Thursday dinner guest ( Charles Glenn were Mr. and Mrs. of Mr. and Mrs Elver Nielsen was Keith Lane and family, Mr. and Mr«. Charles Schalz of Payette | Mrs. Dennis Shenk and family, Sunday evening visitors were Mr Bud and Babe Derrick. and Mrs. Emerson Bingaman of Mrs. Ken Lorensen and five Fruitland. girls from her Sunday school class visited last Thursday afternoon Lowtrip Arrlv*« Hom* with Mrs. Boyd Haney in Nyssa Airman Third Class Edward Lowtrip arrived home March 23 and Mrs. James Iuingley. for a lft-day leave from Air Force duty. He visited Sunday night • with his sister, Mr. and Mrs. Du ane Smith at Ontario. By Oregon Stat* Bar Mr. and Mrs. Jack Wood visit ed Friday evening with Mr. and Mrs Gabe Astoreca Bankruptcy Friday evening visitors of Mr. Tn bygone days when a man and Mrs. George Folkman were got himself hopelessly in debt, Mr. and Mrs. Claude Day and I the courts would jail him until Mrs. Silas Hoffman. Thursday evening dinner guests he paid. Or. as in our colonial of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Chapin days, a man became an "inden were Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bow tured" servant and would be sent to America to work off his debt. ers. Mrs. Harold Alexander visited 1 Neither jail nor servitude prov ed practical. A man in jail could Friday with Mrs. Rill Richesin. Mrs Frank Holub. Mr. and Mrs not earn anything to pay his Klass Powell were Sunday eve debts. It was drastic—something ning dinner guests of Mr. and like the Siberian salt mines—to send a man to serve for years Mrs Frank Barber in Ontario. across the seas. Attend Church Conf*r*nc* Through hard luck. illn*«s, Mr. and Mrs. Ken Lorensen • asy credit, impulse buying or and girls attended th«1 Workers’ shifts in world affairs. m*n and conference and potluck dinner woman may find th*ms*lv*s Saturday at Conservative Baptist hopelessly in debt. church in Caldwell. The confer Our bankruptcy laws aim to ence is held for Sunday school superintendents, teachers, officers permit an honest but unlucky or weak debtor to turn over a new and helpers of the American Sun leaf. They allow him to file a day School union. voluntary petition in bankruptcy. Sunday afternoon visitors of He accounts for all of his property Mr. and Mrs. Ken Ixrrensen were and turns it over for his creditors' Pastor and Mrs. Arthur Skogan benefit. The court sets up ma and family. chinery to get as much of their money back as possible. VISIT BOISE RELATIVES The court then adjudges the Mr. and Mrs. J. Elwood Flin man a bankrupt. This means, with ders were guests at a Sunday some exceptions, that the court, birthday dinner honoring their will discharge him of his debts. grandson. Steven Saunders, at the Any income he gets after that home of his parents. Mr. and Mrs. time cannot be reached in court Lorin Saunders in Boise. During to pay his old debts. the afternoon, they attended a Debtors may try to gain in piano recital in which he parti- j ways not intended by th* bank cipated. The Flinders couple nlso ruptcy laws. If so. creditors visited the Erik Johnson family.! may object. Besides, the courts may deal drastically with such debtors under our criminal laws. Under the law a man may hold certain things exempt from his creditors — usually his home and also furniture, clothing, the fam and ily car and the tools of his trade. (Oregon lawyers offer this column as a public service. No person should apply or inter- j pret any law without th* aid of o an attorney who is completely of th* facts involved. General Repairing advis*d Ev*n a slight variance in fact may change the application of th* law.) IT S YOUR LAW FRONT END ALIGNMENT WHEEL BALANCING Towne Garage Phon* 372-3570 NYSSA . . . OREGON SUNDAY DINNER GUESTS Mr. and Mrs. John Peine and family were recent Sunday din ner guests in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Schilling and sons. Your PCA Credit Helps You Buy Labor-Saving Machinery :• CONSTRUCTION OF STILL ANOTHER ADDITION io Idaho Power company's network of 230,000-volt ''backbone" transmis sion lin*s is hitting a steady pace across th* 106 miles between Boise and the Midpoint substation near Jerom*. th* utility re ports. Typical of activity on the 53.5 million project is this scene showing company crew and crane teaming to erect pre-assembled tower, 75 feet high and weighing some four tons, on the desert southwest of Shoshone. New heavy-duty tin*, part of the utility's $49 million construction program for 1966, will provide additional means of delivering electricity from Hells Canyon io fast-growing industrial and irrigation-pumping loads in Magic Valley and eastern Idaho. It will be Idaho Power's third line equipped with "bundled," or paired, conductors — a company-pioneered tech nique designed to carry 40 percent more electricity than conven tional conductors. Construction crews, totaling about 100 men at project's peak, will erect more than 700 wood and steel towers and string nearly 640 miles of conductor to complete new line this year. Helping io speed th* work by carrying men between con struction sites is helicopter seen in background. FETED ON ANNIVERSARIES Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Auker and Gene and Miss Carolyn Bohannon of Nampa were March 30 evening visitors in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Schilling and sons. The families were celebrating birth day anniversaries for Schilling and Neal Bohannon. A surprise buffet supper was served the following evening hon oring Schilling. Guests for the event, held in the honoree's home, were Mr. and Mrs. Morris Huff man, Mr. and Mrs. Ernie Metcalf. Friday evening guests helping their father celebrate his anni versary were Mr. and Mrs. Ron Pruyn and Ronda, Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Schnabel and family. Operating lunda are budgeted lor an entire year, and you have money any tima you naad It. Loan coala ara lowaal bacauaa you pay interest only on th* monay you actually uaa. and only lor the lima you uaa It. Your paymanta ara credited lire! to principal, reducing th* balance aub|ect lo inlereal. and towering your Interest costs. To help you learn alxiut i’l’A financing, let us give you ÿ n free booklet, "Budgeting for Profit.” No obligation. BAKER PRODUCTION CREDIT ASSOCIATION 210 S.W. Second Street Ontario, Oregon Telephone RS9 6471 When you can’t see tier laughing face, tier voice can tickle you pink with a Long Distance call. Go ahead. Call now MALHEUR HOME TELEPHONE CO. For top performance PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY Physicians and Surgeons K. E. KERBY, M. D. K. A. DANFORD, M. D. KEN PFAFF. M. D. Physicians and Surgeons Dial 372-2241 Hours: 10 to 12 and 2 to 5 p.m. Daily Except Saturday and Sunday; Saturday, 10 to 12. MAULDING CLINIC L. A. Maulding. M. D. Physician and Surg*on Dial 372-2216 “By Appointment Only” Hours: 9 to 12 and 2 to 5 p.m. Daily Except Wednesday, Satur day and Sunday; Wednesday and Saturday, 9 to 12. Physician and Surgeon Hours: 10 to 12 and 2 to 5 p.m. Daily Except Thursday, Saturday and Sunday; Thursday and Saturday, 10 to 12 Noon. — Phones — Office 372-3365 Res. 372-3173 Office: 213 Main Street 18 North Third Street Nyssa, Oregon — Phones — Nyssa . . . 372-2949 Ontario . . . 889-8017 I J ATTEND DeMOLAY SESSION Owyhee—Earl Crocker and hi« grandson. Perry Crocker, attend ed a DeMolay district meeting held Saturday in Enterprise. To Buy. Sail or Rant. Try th* Classified Pag*! DR. JOHN EASLY I I DAUGHTER BORN APRIL 1 A second daughter, weighing 5 pounds, 12 ounces, was born on April 1, 1966, to Mr. and Mrs. Jack Winchell of Pendleton. The in fant has been named Cindy Marie and joins a sister, Carol Ann. Paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Winchell of Nyssa. Mrs. Moore was presented with a three-piece set of embroidery work and Hank received a cigar ette lighter bearing the JCI Sena- atorship insignia. He earned the honors in 1965, which entitles him to a life membership in the Junior Chamber of Commerce (USA) and in the JC International organiza tion. Mrs. Moore reports that while spending a few hours in Mexico she saw quite a contrast in homes. There were large apartment buil dings and residences with beauti fully landscaped lawns, well-kept middle - class homes, as well as one- or two-room dwellings built from anything available including cardboard, boxes or tin. No Aid for Needy Families She says she also saw women dressed in rags, carrying tiny ba bies with several children trailing along. Mrs. Moore states they ap peared to be in need of both food and clothing and she understands that there is no aid for the needy families. She noted that most of the people are of Spanish descent and wife, Gloria, resides at 120 East Third street in Nyssa, recently completed a boatswain course In the Army Transportation school at Ft. Eustis, Va. The soldier, son of Mr. and Mrs. Juan Perez of 110 East First street, Nyssa, entered the Army in September 1965 and completed basic training at Ft. Ord, Calif. During the six - week course, Guadalupe learned miscellaneou* deck duties aboard ship and was trained in small boat operation. According to an Army release, approximately half of the school’s instructors are Vietnam combat veterans. MOVE TO NEW PLYMOUTH Mr and Mrs. Lloyd Cartwright j and daughter moved during the ■ past weekend to their newly pur chased home in New Plymouth. Cartwright is employed at Stunz Lumber company in that city and has been commuting from Nyssa the past two months while wait ing for adequate housing. Optometrist You havs up lo 7 yaara Io rapay capital improvement loana. Inveit- mania than pay for lhamaalvaa with Increased profits. Ä NEWELL HEIGHTS—'Mrs. Ma-*have light complexions. There rie Moore arrived home March 25 were others who appear to be after spending three months in part Indian with dark skins. California with a son-in-law and She says that most of the Jay daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence cees are business men, and she H. Jacobson and family at Ches was told that Mexico residents ter; and her son, Hank Moore at can secure only a three-day visa Indio. to leave their country. Mrs. Moore and her son were Her son, Hank, took out a Mexi guests one day of the Mexicali of can insurance policy on his car at Mexico Jaycees and their wives. a cost of |3.5O for the day. Mrs. They attended a coffee hour at Moore states that without the the Hilton hotel and were then coverage a person could be taken taken to the home of Mr. and Mrs. to jail if involved in any kind of Gustano Salavar. accident. She reports seeing few The hostess and her sister took traffic lights and numerous care Mrs. Moore on a sightseeing tour less speeding drivers. and upon returning, joined 24 JC's and their wives for a genuine VISITORS IN NAMPA Mexican dinner. Mr. and Mrs. Chet Sage, Mr. Among those present, only two and Mrs. Willis Bertram and Lu- men and two women could speak cille were Sunday dinner guests English. of Mr. and Mrs. Chet Jamieson and Bob at Nampa. Receive Gifts From Jaycees DAVID W. SARAZIN. M. D. Farmers and stockmen use I’CA loans to finance ma chinery that helps to increase production and cut costs. 1 ’('A Production ('redit Association—is a non-profit organization owned and o|ierated by farmers and stock- men to provide de|x'ndable, low cost credit for farmer* and stockmen. Here’s how their loans work: PAGE NINE Veterinarians TREASURE VALLEY ANIMAL HOSPITAL On Alberta Ave. Dial 372-2251 Nyssa, Oregon Dr. B. E. Roas Nyssa — 372-35S2 Dr. D. R. Mason Parma — 722-6332 Lug* and Small Animals switch to Quick-Re co ver y FLAMELESS WATER HEATING •Fast •Clean •Quiet •Dependable • Carefree «Mi NO DOWN PAYMENT A MONTH S JOO ON YOUR ELECTRIC VX BILL Buys a new, 52-gallon quick-recovery, electric water heater, including any necessary wiring or plumbing... through the dealer or plumber of your choice. Convert now to quick-recovery! 111 There’s just no match for new, high-speed, quick - recovery flameless electric water heating. Designed for the hot water needs of modern, active families, a new 52-gallon, quick-recov ery water heater will give you all the hot water you want, when you want it. And it’s flameless . • . fast, clean, quiet, dependable and carefree! There’s no flame, smoke, or odor. It burns no oxygen, requires no chimney. The out side is always cool to the touch. All of the heat goes into the water. Flameless water heating earns your lowest electric rate on Idaho Power’s step-down rate schedule, usually sav ing money on other services, too. First choice of 102,576 families in our area, it’s another among the many things electricity does best.