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About Nyssa gate city journal. (Nyssa, Or.) 1937-199? | View Entire Issue (Sept. 21, 1967)
THE NYSSA GATE CITY JOURNAL, NYSSA, OREGON PAGE SIX Facts About Human lubor GUADALUPE G. FUENTES The return of Guadalupe G. Fuentes, son of Mrs. Geno- veva Fuentes of Nyssa, from Job Corps training in San Marcos, Texas, was announced late last week by Joaquin Hern andel, youth counselor for the State Employment service. The Nyssa youth was the first appointee from the local area in 1966, and arrived at the GARY center on February 17 last year. Since then, he has successful ly completed 17 months of train ing, for a total of 975 class room hours in the field of radio repairman. The only thing, according to Guadalupe, that be would change about his Job Corjjs training if he had to make the choice again is, “I would have sub mitted my application for the training a year earlier, and by now I would be well estab lished and working in my newly- chosen field of repairing radios.” Coming Events TODAY - 12:30 p.m. - Pot luck luncheon, OKK club, at home of Mrs. Ida Walters. TODAY - 5 to 8 p.m. - LDS first ward smorgasbord at Nyssa stake center. TODAY 7 p.m. - FFA slave auction in NHS Vo-Ag building. TODAY - 8:15 p.m. - Ad- rian PTA meeting in school cafeteria. TONIGHT - Lions club an nual broom sale. SEPT. 22 - 10:30 Senior Cit izens’ potluck luncheon meet ing at John E. Long home. SEPT. 23-9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Rummage sale in Methodist church basement. SEPT. 23 - 7:30 p.m. Eag- les dinner-dance at FOE hall. SEPT. 23-8 p.m. - Regular pinochle party at IOOF hall. SEPT. 23-8 p.m. - Amer ican Legionnaires and auxiliary hosts Dist. 10 conference at Nyssa Community hall. SEPT. 24-1 p.m. - Potluck luncheon, Ontario Heights grange hall. SEPT. 26 - 8 p.m. Jay-C Ettes meet at Ralph Aldrich home. SEPT. 26 -Cub Scout pack 450 (first fall meeting) at Meth odist church. THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 21. 1967 Mills Disapproves Non- Defense Costs A man can become very un popular talking against high wages. Nevertheless the time may be here when somebody has to point out what we are getting into. If the increases in pay are swallowed up by in flation, if we stimulate a fever ish drive to eliminate jobs and curtail services, what have we gained? There are many signs that we are encouraging a large num ber of people in this country to price themselves out of the labor market. Nearly all the people on our huge relief rolls are what the welfare profes sionals call unemployables, This does not mean that they can’t work or won’t work. It means rather that they can't sell their labor at prices that have been set for them by gov ernment, unions or even by the informal standards of people they associate with, or get their advice from. The growth in the number of so-called unem ployables in this country is a frightening thing. It may even be a degrading thing in that peo ple are actually beingprevented from working at wages which fit their abilities. Driving while tired and sleepy slows reactions and A rather tragic by-product results in accidents. of pushing the cost of human labor up and up and up is that we have manufactured goods and even food, produced largely by machines, running out of our The more jjerplexing and ears, while it is virtually im possible to get anyone to take painful the situation the more Oregon recently became the care of children or old people the Lord loves to show His nation’s eighth “hog cholera even when the need is despierate. pity and power. If you wish to free” state and presentation of Or in a different field, you go find it true, call upon Him in the certificate, recognizing this buy a new car or washer be trouble. He has no opportunity status, was made at the state cause you can’t get decent ser to prove His power until you fair. vice on the perfectly good one are in some difficulty. The state actually qualified The Psalmist was in trouble. for this status on Aug. 15 this you already own. Farm labor costs, though re He was in danger of destruction. year, but the ceremonies were latively modest over the years, By lions? No, liars. By wea held Aug. 28 in the livestock have been rising so fast that pons? No, words. Realizing barn on the fairgrounds, in farm operators have bought al his strengthlessness and re hopes that more of the state’s most any kind of machine or lying on the Lord’s strength, swine breeders would be able gadget to eliminate a hired man. he cride in Psalm 12:1, ‘Help, to participate. To make matters worse, farm Lord!’ And the Lord deliver Maxing the presentation was labor has recently been vir ed him from his foes and fears. Dr. Milton J. Tillery from Hy •About four o’clock one morn attsville, Md. He is in charge tually unattainable at prices farmers feel they can pay. ing Peter was in trouble. He of hog cholera eradication for There’s an end to how far you and his friends were in a lit the US Department of Agri can go in replacing men with tle boat far out from land when culture’s re sea re h service. Suddenly machines. When we reach that a storm came up. Receiving the certificate was end, the outpouring of abun they saw what they thought was Walter Leth, state director of dance from our farms may slack a ghost and they screamed in agriculture. off rapidly. This might be a terror. But it was Jesus, and Dr. Glenn B. Rea, state good thing for farm prices but he said, ’Stop being afraid!’ veterinarian, said Oregon is ‘If it is really You,’ said now recognized as a "hog chol it could be bad for the coun try if we let it get so out of Peter, ‘tell me to come to You, era free” state because it has walking on the water. ‘Come!’ not had a case of hog cholera hand. So-called child labor laws add said the Lord. Peter got out of since 1963. The state initiated to the problem. Muscular lads the boat and walked on the wat its state-federal cooperative of 14 and 15, already bigger er. But when he saw the high hog cholera eradication pro than their fathers, are prev waves he was frightened and gram in March of the same ‘Lord,’ he year. ented from working even in the started to sink. Instantly summertime by regulations or cried, ‘save me!’ Washington reached “hog wage scales of one kind or an He stretched out His hand and cholera free” status just after other. This not only adds im saved him. Oregon did and this now makes Even though their prayers a solid block of six Northwest petus to delinquency but, what may be more important, it im were short, the Lord’s help states that are “hog cholera It is not the elo pedes the development of work was sure. habits that do not suddenly ap quence of the prayer that pear full-blown when a youth counts, but the earnestness; turns 16. not the style, but the sincer The professional brains who ity. He will always come to your have in the past 25 years de rescue, if only you will call voted their efforts to raising on Him. and maintaining wage standards had better begin giving thought are beginning to question whet Physicians to what we are getting o u r - her human welfare is being ser selves into. A lot of people who ved by go-go wage policies.— and Surgeons have given support to raising Paul C. Johnson, in Prairie wage scales over many decades Farmer C E. KERBY, M. D. A. DANFORD, M. D. KEN PFAFF, M.D. SERMONETTE I I'he House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Wilber D. Mills said he was "discour aged” by increases in non defense spending and declared that such spending “must tie brought under control.” ILmghlv 40 per cent of the estimated expenditures for the fiscal year 1968 are relatively controllable, according to the Citizens Public Expenditures Survey. Citing areas of possible re duction, Joint Economic Com mittee Chairman William Prox- nnre pointed to the suggested $9.5 billion for civil public works, “the highest expend itures on non-defense public works in the history of our nation.” He said much of this is of the "pork barrel” variety which should be postponed until ec onomic and military demands are reduced. Control of expend itures begins withcongression- al refusal to authorize new programs or expand old ones. The hard steps required to roll back non-defense spend ing will not be taken by Con gress in the absence of any evidence of w i d e s p r e a d cit izen concern. “Hog Cholera Free” Rites Held At Oregon State Fair free". States in the block besides Oregon and Washington are Idaho, Montana, Nevada and Utah. Other states that have erad icated hog cholera are Alaska, Michigan and Vermont. All states are now involved in the eradication campaign and 28 of them, with 62 percent of the nation’s hogs, are in one of the last two phases of the four-phase program. Dr. O. J. Halverson, federal veterinarian in charge in Ore gon, said 1972 is the target date for having the United States “hog cholera free”. New BooksLisied at'County Library .Line Summer In Between by Melissa Mather. The journal of a young Negro girl from the South who spends the summer as a mother’s helper with a family in Vermont. A Good 1 My to Die by Thomas Wakefield Blackburn. A novel of the Plains Indians' last fight for their lands, their sacred traditions, and their freedom as a people. The Magic Grandfather by; Doris Mlles Disney. A recent Crime Club selection. Steve Tnan’s Ordeal bv Max Brand. A western novel. U>r M.igii Wmlil Qi Kuava by Matthew A. R. Bassity. This book records interesting le gends and history of roses and takes you on an armchair ex cursion into famous rose gar dens. Greenhouse - Place of Magic by Charles H. Potter. A guide to greenhouse building and use. The Complete Book of Gar dening Under Lights by Elvin McDonald. An authoritative guide to successful gardening without sunlight. Ahout Sharks and Shark At tacks by David H. Davies. The author presents a compelling work treating sharks as a bio logical entity discussing origin, evolution, and behavior, but stressing the work done on shark attacks on human beings. Bv-lliie. truest Hemingway edited by William White. A collection of Hemingway’s mag azine A newspaper pieces, many •of them unknown to the average reader and covering a period from the early 1920*s to his death. Ilhi Amazing Rmgluigs A Their Circus by Gene Plowden. •An authentic history of the Ring ling brothers and their circus. See Yourself m the Bible by Walter Russell Bowie. A new gallery of living portraits from which we learn that the strong and the weak in the Bible are people just like us. A Matter of Life A Death by Albert Z. Carr. The causes and consequences of war. Mvth and Cosmos edited by John Middleton. Reading in mythology and symbolism. Television by Wilson P. Di- zard. A book for any citizen who is troubled by the effects of this new, major force in the world's turbulence. LiUik fUL. XVU11X Hyniyinak ers by Good Housekeeping. 1001 time and money saving ideas for successful home management. Offshore by Stephan Coulter. A story centered on Mr. Mack, a structure of steel 250 feet long on each side, the home of 42 tough men who challenge the elements and themselves to drill for fortunes in oil. A ¿Lghi Vi ftaklilllM >’Y Li liot Arnold. A novel of the Danish Underground. Nn Mitfi; livgka Ul Hiv shY by Richard Newhafer. A novel about the air war in Vietnam. 1 Don't Need You Any More by Arthur Miller. A collection of short stories. The Eferdlllg Diaries by Gor- don Brook-Shephe^L^X novel of espionage. The Venus Trap by James Michael Ullman. A mystery story. .From Earth to Heaven by Isaac Asimon. Seventeen essays on science. Puppetry Today by Helen Bin- yon. Designing and making marionettes, hand puppets, stick puppets and shadow pup pets. Hand Shadows tv be Thrown an the Wall by Henry Burslll. A series of novel and amusing figures formed by the hands. Religious Arts and Crafts for' Children by Elfrieda Miller. Suggestions for using arts and crafts media withchlldrenfrom kindergarten to junior high age. Uuu UUlXuk. LJi.A. by Ric hard Powell. A funny story in which the hero is a nice guy who rights a lot of wrongs. RobodY Does You Any Favors by James Yaffe. A novel with a business setting whose deni- tens are exclusively money or- iented. Lightning Out ul Israel by the Associated Press. An account of the six-day war in the Middle East. Castro’s ( iilia Cnlia'a FUld by la*e IxKkewood. An Ameri can journalist’s inside look at today's Culta. Slram I’tivukii audfrlr-HU?..1 i iis|mns by Gordon C. Baldwin. The author describes the un usual societies of dozens of primitve tribes. burtsey bv Sigurdur Thorar- Insson.A pictorial chronicle of the spectacular scenes during the course of what could be called a geologist’s "blessed event” the growth ¿>t a new island. Alasxa Travel Guide l‘lke Authority and tliHtighb Asch. A comprehensive exam ination of the varied role of the police in today's society, this book will answer many of the questions that may arise in con nection with police procedures. Siti.jtiiui Ethics by Joseph Flectcher. The new morality. LuUYil'UvlLr L UYV-liK bY L. Nelson Bell. Essays from the author’s column, "A Lay man and His Faith" which ap peared hi l.tnistlaintv Today. OH the Sauce by Lewis Meyer. A funny, but also very sincere book by a former alcoholic, who urges fellow sufferers to discard self-pity and adopt some fortutude and common sense. arvet Gang Work by Irving Spergei. The theory and prac tice of the work with gangs of youth in the major metropolitan areas of the U. S, Physicians and Surgeons Dial 372-2241 MAULDING CLINIC L. A. Maulding, M. D. Physician and Surgeon Dial 372-2216 “By Appointment Only” CONCRETE FEED LOTS HOURS; 9 to 12 noon - Mon day, Tuesday, Thursday, Friday. 10 to 12 noon-Wed nesday and Saturday. DAVID W. SARAZIN, M.D. Physician and Surgeon HOURS; 10 to 12 noon & 2 to 5p.m. - Monday, Tues day, Wednesday, Friday. 10 to 12 Thursday ¿Saturday. Phones; Office 372-3365 Residence 372-3173 CONCRETE DITCHES Optometrist DR. JOHN EASLY 18 North Main Street Nyssa, Oregon CONCRETE SILOS and DRIVES Hospitals prefer natural gas* It keeps their temperature just right. It makes their kitchens more efficient (it’s the flame that counts in cooking). Here are institutions that must have an instant, never- ending hot water supply. They will tell you quite frankly that nothing heats water like natural gas. Cascade Natural Gas Corporation serves 49 hospitals and rest homes on its lines in Washington and Oregon. They require a form of energy that is dependable and efficient beyond question. The same fuel that does a better job for hospitals will also do a better job in your home. And it will do it for less. Conversions are inexpensive. Cascade has a plan—if you wish to use it—that will relieve you of almost all the expense of switching to gas. May we tell you more? —Phones— Nyssa.................. 372-2949 Ontario............. 889-8017 Veteri narions Your warmest friend is natural gas TREASURE VALLEY ANIMAL HOSPITAL Phone 372-3509 Phone 372-2251 DR. B. E. ROSS Nyssa .... 372-3552 DR. JAMES REILLY Parma .... 722-5848 ¿yew. Distributors of Naturalgasatisfaction l‘Jbb. The guidebook to all of Alaska. I'llL Wuild'b lauAlkbt ¿UlO by Charles Wighton. True- life dramas of outstanding secret agents. Professional Directory HOURS; 9 to 12 noon A 2 to 5 P.M. - Monday through Friday. 10 to 12 Saturday. | <