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About Nyssa gate city journal. (Nyssa, Or.) 1937-199? | View Entire Issue (July 18, 1968)
THURSDAY, JULY 18. 1968 THE NYSSA GATE CITY JOURNAL, NYSSA, OREGON PAGE EIGHT —1------------------------ NYSSA PUBLIC " be all you can LIBRARY HOURS SUNDAY and MONDAY - CLOSED TUESDAY - 2 P.M. to 8 P.M. WEDNESDAY - 12 Noon to 6 P.M. THURSDAY - 10 A.M. to 6 P.M. FRIDAY and SATURDAY - 12 Noon to 6 P.M. According to Mrs. Max (Norma) Urry, the following books are now available at the local library. THE NEW LEGIONS by Donald Duncan, the Green Berets’ hero who said “I quit”. An ex-GI tells the hard truth about Vietnam, the military mentality, and a foreign policy that makes more enemies than friends. PRAIRIE CHRISTMAS by Paul Engle. One who wants to make it a different Christmas for the family should read this book and start planning some thing special. BOY OR GIRL? Names for every child, by Christine C. Thomson. 1001 QUESTIONS AN SWERED ABOUT ASTRONOMY by James S. Pickering. More people than ever before are in terested today in outer space and the countless worlds it contains. A DICTIONARY OF AMERI CAN ANTIQUES by Carl W. Drepperd. Here is an extensive and eminently useful reference book for the collector of anti ques and relics of America’s settlers. CIVIL SERVICE MANUAL by Donald J. Delap. Will acquaint readers with the facts of Fed eral employment, and directs on where to obtain information on state, county and municipal jobs. RUSSIA INVADED ‘from Genghis Khan to Hitler’ by Mario Francini. DRAWING CHILDREN by David Ghilchik. This volume not only shows the reader how to draw but how to do so step by step. DRAWING IN CHALK AND CRAYON by Kay Marshall. A handy instruction book. THE SECRET LIFE OF THE FLOWERS by Anne Ophelia Dowden. A beautifully illus trated book with excellent pic tures. GEMS AND JEWELS by Ned Seidler. Contains the history of stones from ancient times to the present. LOVE SONNETS ‘selected and with notes’ by Louis Unter- meyer. An excellent history of the sonnet and many outstanding examples. ALEXANDRE DUMAS AD VENTURES IN CAUCASIA by Alexandre Dumas. This is a fierce land of high crags and deep chasms. It was a bastion between Europe and Asia that Czarist Russia. EUROPEAN DESSERTS FOR AMERICAN KITCHENS by Elaine Ross. For the hostess who prides herself on offering her guests a dessert distinc tive as well as delicious - and for the woman who enjoys cooking and likes to experiment DRIVER with new culinary dishes - this EXAMS unique collection of European desserts is especially de signed.’ SLATED NEW TEMPLE SHAKE- APEARE, Tim on of Athens, Pericles, TroilusandCressida, According to an announce King Henry VIII; There can be ment received from the no doubt that it is the best Department of Motor Vehicles one-play, one-volume edition. of Oregon, a Drivers License HOW TO KEEP SLENDER Examiner will be on duty in AND FIT AFTER THIRTY by Nyssa Friday, July 26, 1968, Bonnie Prudden. Tells you how at the City Library between the to rate yourself - to analyze hours of 9 A.M., and 2 P.M. your appearance and to gauge Persons wishing original li your own degree of physical censes or permits to drive fitness. are asked to file applications THE MAN WHO WALKED well ahead of the scheduled THROUGH TIME by Colin closing hour in order to assure Fletcher. Story of the first time for completion of the re trip afoot through the depths of quired license test. the Grand can von by the author of the “Thousand-Mile Summer.” MUJERCITAS by Luisa M. Alcott. ‘Little Women’in Spanish. THE EVOLUTION OF STARS. Joe Pounds and his son, Andy Edited and with Commentaries by Thornton Page and Lou of Glendive, Mont., arrived June Wiliams Page. From the Mac 25 at the home of his parents, millan Sky and Telescope Li Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Pounds. brary of Astronomy, how stars While in Treasure Valley area, are formed, their age and how Joe and Andy made several trips to interesting areas, in they die. FLOR DE LEYENDAS by cluding Burns. Mr. and Mrs. Alejandro Casona. Legends of Pounds, accompanied them to Salt Lake City, where they the World in Spanish. HEALTH IN THE LATER visited the Mormon Tabernacle. YEARS by Robert E. Rothen At Denver, Colo., they visited burg. There are many illnesses another son, who is a patient which involve many parts of the in the Veterans’ hospital. Then body or many organs. This book they drove to Casper, Wyo., discusses in layman language to visit a daughter, Mr. and and related topics many Mrs. Nick (Onna) Katsimanis diseases and what organs they and their newly adopted daugh ter, Clarissa Ann. The Pounds involve. EDGAR CAYCE ON ATLAN- arrived home early July 14 TIS by Edgar Evans Cayce, when Joe and Andy departed America’s most amazing for their home in Glendive. prophet reveals the mysteries of the strange lost continent - and predicts where and when THE JIM RYUN STORY by it will rise again. Cordner Nelson. An analogy can THE VILLAGE OF BEN SUC be made between Jim Ryun and by Jonathan Schell. The story the story of the Ugly Duckling. of the American Distruction of At the age of 15, Jim was a a Vietnamese Village. frail-looking boy, a gangling six-foot, one-inch in height and as awkward as a colt. He was an unlikely looking athlete, but an athelet was what he wanted to be. 36 CHILDREN by Herbert Kohl. This is a book about a young teacher’s adventure with a class of eleven-year-old Negro children and of what they were able to create together. OIL PAINTING STEP-BY- STEP by Authur L. Guptill. Here is an art instruction classic that tells the student and the beginner the fundamentals about painting materials and tools PH. 372-2266 and how to use them. PERSONALS Don’t Wait ’Til Winter TO HAVE YOUR FURNACE SERVICED. US LET DO IT NOW AND IT WILL BE READY FOR WINTER. EDER’S 101 N* FIRST NYSSA HEARING When severe impairment is found, children may have to resort to hearing aids for whatever sounds they may hear. This child will probably attend a special class for deaf children throughout most of his early educational years. The Oregon State Board of Health Hearing Conservation Program now provides hearing aids in cases where families are unable to purchase the expensive instruments. Sen. Hatfield Tells Why He Favors Nixon As a delegate to the Republi can National Convention from Oregon where the overwhelming majority of Republican voters have spoken, I am pledged to support Richard Nixon as our candidate for President. Not only will I vote for him, 1 will actively seek support for his nomination and election. There have been certain questions on which I have dis agreed with Mr. Nixon, but our goals are primarily the same. This is the great strength of the Republican Party: That it is united on principle and pre pared to provide the country with responsive and effective leadership. It appears that the Democra tic Party will nominate a man who is a prisoner of the policies of the past. A change in per sonality at the top of the incum bent party will not produce the deep and fundamental changes the country so desperately needs. To me the issue of Vietnam is overriding. This war must be ended, but the peace and secur ity of the United States and the rest of the world must not be jeopardized by the outcome. Both my recent conversations with Mr. Nixon and his public statements have convinced me that he is capable and will provide the leadership needed to successfully resolve the Vietnam conflict. His proposals for black capi talism and other positive pro grams meeting the nation’s urban crisis have been widely and justifiably hailed as the most realistic of any candi date’s. He understands the na tion’s economy, and how to manage it soundly. He stands firmly for those measures needed to restore law and order, and at the same time knows there can be no lasting order without progress. My decision is based pre eminently on the qualities of the man. I put the qualities of the man first because this, to me, is the primary consideration in the choice of a Presidential nominee. In no other office are personal qualities of judgment, of integrity, of perspective, of balance, of a perceptive under standing of the forces that move the nation and the world so vital. Richard Nixon has chosen the tough road of the various state primaries, where the people speak, to prove that he is the overwhelming favorite of the Republican rank and file. And also that he is the kind of a winning candidate who can attract Independent and Demo cratic support. Richard Nixon has come out of the crucible of political defeat -- a far stronger man, a stronger campaigner, and a stronger potential President. He knows the world leaders, he understands the world prob lems, and I am convinced on the basis of our conversations that he is committed to the imperative need for a stable and lasting peace. V-STORES OFFICIAL MAKES NYSSA VISIT Gordon Yock of Clara City, Minn., chairman of the board of directors for 2600 V-Stores (including some in South Africa and Hawaii) was in Nyssa on Thursday of last week. Mrs. Mike (Mabelle) Mc- Kague, manager of the Nyssa store, said it was Yock’s first trip through the northwest, and he seemed to be quite impressed with Nyssa. (He did comment on the 106 degree temperature while here). FULLER PAINT SALE NOW IS THE TIME TO PAINT Outside Fuller Paint 2020 HiHIDING WHITE 2 GAL CANS PER GAL. OIL BASE EXTERIOR LATEX $4.99 $4.99 WHITE OR COLORS GAL NEW FUL-STA1N 24 Ready Mixed Colors - Over 900 Special Mix Colors - Solid Coat or Semi- <7AM> AUTOMATIC AvH SCARECROWS Transparent - Reg. $5.95 PER GAL. Stop Bird Damage to Bee Beds For Less Than the Cost of One Shotgun Shell Per Day I How much fun would be left in fashion if all style were standarc. red? This system would cut down on shopping time. But it would also cut down on your individuality. In turn, standardization would cut down on advertising, there'd be a cutback in production. And if we worked hard to do so, we might wreck the economy. Wouldn’t we be better off to leave things the way they are? Today's advertising is already policed by the world’s smartest detective . . . the American consumer. The Nytuta Gate City Journal PINS COMMERCIAL PRINTING PUBLISH CO SVSRV THURSDAY P.O. BOX W NYSSA. ORCQON 97913 Nyssa Co-op Supply 18 North Second Dial 372-8448 NYSSA . . . OREGON white or CHOICE OF HUNDREDS OF NEW COLORS THESE CARBIDE BANGERS Will Soon Pay for Themselves! if it were just like your oia one? $1.59 Interior Paint Latex Wall Paint • Portable . . . W sighs Only 22 Pounds • Ruggod Construction . . . Lasts for Years • Safe and Simple ... No Pilot Light -------- O ------ Repairs Made Here If Needed I' AIVI ESSECT1C1DE $4.95 GAL. <2 CO < Also Brushes and Rollers At Speeial Sale Priees We Give & Redeem SRV Stamps DON B. MOSS Firestone Dealer Store 417 Main Street NYSSA Ph. 372-2124 ANNOUNCEMENT! WE HAVE OPENED A SHOP AND WILL HAVE SALES & SERVICE FOR REFRIGERATION & HEATING EQUIPMENT. WILL ALSO MAKE REPAIRS ON MAJOR HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCES NYSSA HEATING & COOLING CO. BILL MAROST1CA, OWNER & OPERATOR DIAL 178-8833 539 N. FIRST NYSSA, OREGON PH. 372-3379