NEWS FROM AROCK
ADRIAN NEWS
SALE TOMORROW
PUBLIC
FRIDAY
NO RESERVE
AUCTION
MAY 22
Retiring from Business
10:00 A.M
C. E. Leseberg, Contractor—NYSSA, OREGON
$475,000.00 EVALUATION
CRUSHING & CONSTRUCTION
EQUIPMENT
PARTIAL INVENTORY - (4) CRUSHERS:
1967 Symons 3' Standard Cone Crusher w/
60 h.p., 2-Axle Trlr. Mtd.; Pioneer 40" x
22" Port. Roll Crusher w/Cedar Rapids 4'
x 10', 2 Deck Shaker Screen, 75 h.p., Mtd.
2-Axle Trlr. (Roll Crusher Completely Re
built to Rubber Tire Drive & Not Used
Since); Cedar Rapids 40" x 20" Port. Roll
Crusher w/24" x 14' Conv., 60 h.p., Mtd.
2-Axle Trlr.; Austin Western (B.L.H.) 20"
x 36" Port. Jaw Crusher w/24" x 12' Conv.,
60 h.p., Mtd. 2-Axle Trlr; SCREENS: 1969
El Jay Mod. FS5142, 5’ x 14', 2-Deck,
Trlr. Mtd.; Cedar Rapids 3W x 10', 2-
Deck Shaker; Diamond 3' x 6', 2-Deck
Scalper, Skid Mtd ; FEEDERS: Univ. 36"
x 10' Apron; 20" x 48" Pan Feeder;
CLASSIFIER, Parma 25' Twin Screw Sand
Classifier, Trlr Mtd.; BUNKERS, 48 Yd.
Port. 4-Comp. w/30" x 14’ Conv., Trlr.
Mtd.; 20 Yd. Port w/36" x 20' Conv., Trlr.
Mtd.; CONVEYORS, From 18" to 30" X 3 * ’
to 60'; (4) CAT. CRAWLER TRACTORS: Cat
08. 14A7506 w/8U Dozer; Cat D8, 14A
2041 w/Angle Dozer; Cat 07, 17A2663 w/
Str. Angle Dozer; (4) SCRAPERS; (2) Cat.
DW10 Self Prop.; Cat #80 & LaPlant, Ea.
Pull; LOADER, 1964 Cat 966A 2V2 Yd.,
Pneu. Tired; (2) MTR. PATROLS: (2) Cat.
Mod. 12’$, 8T7854 & 8T2905, Ea w/Mold
Boards & Scarifiers; CRAWLER CRANE,
Unit Mod. 1020SP 1« Yd. w G M.C. 3O55C
Diesel, 40’ Boom; ROLLER, Austin West-
Write for
ern 12-Ton, 3 Whl.; TRUCK TRACTOR, 1955
White 3 Axle w/Cummins 275; (3) DUMP
TRUCKS: (3) 1961 Int’ls., Ea. 3-Axle 10 Yd..
C.O.E., (1) w/Cummins NH25O A (2) w/
CMC. 6V-71 Diesel; MISC. TRUCKS:
1955 Dia. T, 2-Axle Flatbed w/Cummins;
1952 Chev. Service Truck w/Kofiler Lite
Plant, Air Comp., (4) Hose Reels'«. Grease
Pumps; (2) L08ED TRLRS.: Talbert TD-
35RC. 35-Ton w Removable Gooseneck Stl.
Deck, 2-Axle; Checker M270A1, 12-Ton,
Stl. Deck; WATER TANK TRLR., Fruehauf
5600 Gal 2-Axle Semi; (3) ENO DUMP
TRLRS.: Hobbs 10 12 Cu. Yd.; (4) GEN
ERATORS; (2) EM 117 K.W. Elect, w
Murphy Diesel, Ea. Skid Mtd.; Cat. 0311
20 K.W Diesel Elect.. Witte 6 K.W. w/
Diesel; AIR COMPS., Worth. Blue Brute
600 C.F.M. Rotary, Trlr. Mtd. w/Cummms
NH220B1; AIR TRAC, Worth. Mod
........... WCM,
. .
Crawler Type; (2) PNEU. TIRED TRACTORS:
Case 530 w/Backhoe A Hyd. Front End
Loader; Ford w Power Broom; WELDERS:
Hobart 400 Amp Trlr. Mtd. w/G.M.C. Dies
el; GE 300 Amp; PUMPS: Barnes 6"
Cent., Trlr. Mtd.; I R 4' Cent., Mtd.; 4"
Trlr Mtd.; PICKUPS: 1967 Jeep J3000.
Vi-Ton, 4-Whl. Dr.; 1965 Chev. "10", Vi-
Ton; DISC HARROW, John Deere 1218-
FL01 Twin Row. 20" Discs; PULL RIPPER,
LeTourneau K30 w (3) 42” Shanks, SHOP
EQUIPMENT; TOOL CRIB; ETC., ETC.
Free Descriptive Brochure
MILTON J WERSHOW CO., Auctioneers
629 N. LA BREA AVENUE • Los Angeles. California 90036 • (213) 938 2171
In The Northwest • 2130 S.W Fifth Ave., Portland, Ore 97201 • (503) 222-9151
UNION PACIFIC
Malheur County Water
Users Have Excellent
Supply This Summer
BY PAULINE MACKEY
BY STUDENTS OF W. W. JONES SCHOOL
ADRIAN - Mr. and Mrs. Wil
bur Roberts, formerly of New
AROCK - The guest speaker surgery at Caldwell Memorial Meadows visited at the home of
for the "8th grade graduation Hospital May 11. He is home Mr. and Mrs. W.E. Ashcraft
at Arock is Harry Hoch, head now and recovering satisfacto May 17.
Mr, and Mrs. Bob Hamilton
of the Department ofContinuing rily.
Malheur County water users
Education at TVCC.
Larry Ling, the TV specia of Boise visited her parents, Mr. may expect excellent to average
The students of the W.W. list from McDermitt, Nev., who and Mrs. W.E. Ashcraft May 17. water supplies this summer.
Jones School, excluding the 8th is currently employed by the
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Duncan
S. Duane Town, DistrictCon-
graders, will have a party and a Arock ranchers to put in a TV and family of Ontario were May servationist for the USDA Soil
‘‘Parents vs 5-7 grades” soft- booster in this area just re 14 dinner guests at the home of Conservation Service, Vale,
ball game May 21. The game turned home from the Humbolt his brother, Mr. and Mrs. Oregon, said today that reser
will start at l;00.
County Hospital and is con Robert Duncan and family and voirs are nearly full. Below
During the game the 8th gra tinuing his recuperation from a attended the Thespian plays at seasonal temperatures during
the high school with them.
ders will wash cars to supple recent heart attack.
April retarded snowmelt and the
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Duncan remaining snowpack ranges
ment the money they raised
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Thomas
writing for the newspapers. The visited at the home of Mr. and attended the baseball game be from 211 percent of average on
charge will be $1.00 for the out Mrs. Rufus Lequerica during the tween Union and Adrian May 16 the upper Malheur to a little
in Union.
side of the car and 75? for weekend of May 8-10.
over 300 percent on the upper
Mrs. Al Sonderman and Mrs. Owyhee River and JordanCreek.
the inside.
Mrs. Evert Miller visited
The students from Pleasant Mrs. Treva Bruce the night of Helen Smith of Portland were Summer streamflow (May-Sep-
May 17 dinner guests at th home tember) forecasts range from
Valley, grades 4 to 8, came to May 13.
Arock May 14 and played a soft-
Mrs. Treva Bruce spent the of their sister, Mr. and Mrs. 145 percent on the Owyhee in
ball game with grades 5 to 8 of weekend with Miss Amy Mason George Cartwright. They later flow to 168 on the Malheur
visited their mother, Mrs. Alma near Drewsey. The Owyhee
the W.W. Jones School.
May 9-10.
Mrs. Ray Easterday substi
Mr. Ralph Eason, Pam and Hibbard of Notus.
inflow was 42 percent of the
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Kurtz and April average.
tuted for Mrs. Larry Elwood in Steven recently went fishing at
Precipitation
Release Class May 13. It was the the Strike Dam on the Snake family visited Mr. and Mrs. Oli in the Owyhee and Malheur Ba
ver Freel and family May 17. sins was 70 percent of average
last day for classes until next River.
Mrs. Ross Lane took her pa during April.
Mr. and Mrs. Loren Miller
year. A party was held, and then
Mountain soils have a good
the children were dismissed. and Dan recently traveled to rents, Mr. and Mrs. H.G. Tho
mas to Payette May 16 where supply of moisture, and the
Recently the W.W. Jones Burns.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Biswell, they viewed the parade.
lower range soils also have a
School received a new set of
Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Wal fair supply with the surface
Compton’s Encyclopedia and a Ray and Jack recently visited
new world globe. The students relatives in Smith’s Prairie. ker and family were May 17 being somewhat dry due to cold
can hardly wait until next fall
They also visited Harry, dinner guests of his brother, Mr. frosty nights and windy days.
to put this new reference ma Lewis and Lawrence Davidson. and Mrs. Charles Walker and The soil moisture stations on
terial to use.
Mrs. Glen Caywood and son family.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Hite
The 5th and 6th grades at the recently went to Bakersfield,
W.W. Jones School have recently Calif., to visit friends and re and family were Sunday evening JACK HUNT NAMED
dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. DIVISION MANAGER
been growingplants for science. latives.
Wesley Walker Jr. and family.
The plants, such as corn and
The appointment of Jack D.
Mr. and Mrs. Billy Willis
beans have been reported as FEDERAL WILDLIFE
doing fine.
of Boise accompanied his Hunt, Caldwell, as a Divisional
RESEARCH UNIT
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Manager of Waddell & Reed,
Joe Easterday, son of Mr.
Willis fishing at the Owyhee Inc., national distributor of the
and Mrs. Norman Easterday had SET FOR OSU
United Funds group of mutual
Reservoir May 17.
Establishment of a federally
funds,
has been announced by
Mr. andMrs.CharlesTremly
FIRST NATIONAL
supported Cooperative Wildlife
the firm’s headquarters in Kan
of Hood River visited her sis
Research Unit for Oregon State
ter, Mr. and Mrs. Junior Mat sas City, Mo.
SHOWS LOANS
University -- first on the West
Hunt’s previous career has
thews and family and other
Coast -- was announced Thurs
been in the field of music edu
AND DEPOSITS
relatives May 11 - 17.
day in Washington by Rep. Wen
Mr. and Mrs. G.E. Mackey cation. He has taught in schools
In response to a call for dell Wyatt.
and Gene were May 15 dinner at Middleton and Marsing and
The House Appropriations
statements of condition by the
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Char most recently at Nyssa. Hunt
U.S. Comptroller of Currency, Committee approved an initial
became associated with Waddell
les Walker and family.
deposit and loan figures have $60,000 to set up the unit
&
Reed in 1960 as a regis
been released by First National which will provide wildlife gra and wildlife department.
tered representative. He holds
Bank of Oregon’s 119 offices duate training, research and te
The new unit, one of 20 in a Bachelor of Arts degree from
chnical service. The federal the U.S., will be housed with the the College of Idaho. He is a
throughout the state.
President Ralph J. Voss an funds from the Bureau of Sport department in the new Bio member of the Lions Club and
nounced deposits totaled $1,- Fisheries and Wildlife will be Science Building scheduled to for the past nine years has di
508,972,230 on April 30, the renewed each year.
open this summer.
rected the choir of Boone Memo
Other annual support will
official call date. Loans out
Representatives of the three rial Presbyterian Church at
standing were $1,034,674,695. come from the Oregon State supporting partners -- OSU, Caldwell.
Deposits a year ago totaled Game Commission, the Wildlife State GameCommission and Bu
The appointment was made
$1,635,600,275, while loans were Management Institute and the reau of Sport Fisheries and by Richard C. Knight, Waddell
university.
$1,106,911,095.
Wildlife — will jointly admin & Reed Resident Vice President
Dr. Thomas G. Scott, head ister the unit.
The Nyssa branch reported
in Seattle.
deposits of $0,670,013 and loans of OSU’s Department of Fisher
Scott noted that strong sup
Waddell & Reed maintains
of $8,087,250 as of April 30, ies and Wildlife, said the grant port from Wyatt and Gov. Tom 300 offices throughout the na
according to T.G. Stenkamp, will benefit Oregon’s entire McCall recognizes that the new tion.
The firm is principal
wildlife resource by adding two wildlife research unit will give underwriter and investment
manager.
Comparable totals for the research scientists and suppor Oregon a vastly increased ca manager of the United Funds
branch a year ago were $9,- ting eight graduate students pability
to provide com group of mutial funds, the na
154,064 in deposits and $9,- studying for master’s and doc prehensive wildlife research tion’s third largest mutual fund
torate degrees in the fisheries and technical service programs. organization. United Funds has
010,999 in loans.
more
than 330,000 share
holders, and net assets in ex
cess of $2 - 1/2 billion.
NO LIMIT
Thursday, May 21, 1970
The Nyssa Gate City Journal, Nyssa, Oregon
PAGE FOURTEEN
VOTE
YES
Tuesday,
May 26
EXPANDS SERVICE
the Malheur River have 98 per
cent of average and the Owyhee
River stations show 81 percent
of average.
The Middle Fork of Malheur
near Drewsey is forecast to run
56 thousand acre feet for the
May-July period or 170 per
cent of its average. As of May
11, Warm Springs Reservoir is
storing 184,565 acre feet of
water.
The North Fork of Malheur at
Beulah is forecast at 52 thou
sand acre feet for the May-
July period or 158 percent of
average. As of May 11, Beulah
Reservoir holds 60,100 acre
feet.
Owyhee Reservoir’s net in
flow is forecast to be 260 thou
sand acre feet or 145 percent
of average for the May-Sept
ember forecast period. On May
11 it is storing 700,540 acre
feet of water.
Bull/ Creek reservoir is
storing 27,700 acre feet as of
May 11.
Oregon’s farmers, ranchers,
and other water users will have
summer water supplies ranging
from fair to excellent. Fair
supplies will be available
to users diverting from streams
heading at low elevations along
the Cascades and in south-cen
tral Oregon. Average conditions
are forecast for the rest of the
state, except in Baker, Grant,
and the northern part of Harney
and Malheur Counties, which
will have an excellent supply of
water. Most irrigation reser
voirs are full and will provide
adequate amounts to users with
access.
Union Pacific Railroad will
expand its passenger train op
erations once more this year to
accomodate vacationers during
the coming summer season.
Gay Anderson, passenger
traffic
manager in Omaha,
said both coach and sleeping car
space will be increased on the
company’s transcontinental
trains providing service from
Portland, San Francisco and Los
Angeles to Chicago and Kansas
City.
Anderson said the decline in
UP passenger revenues is ac
celerating. Revenues are down
25 percent for the first three
months of 1970 from the same
period last year. During 1969,
UP passenger revenues dropped
13.7 percent below 1968, he said.
UP reported a passenger de
ficit in 1969 of $24 million and
recently said it was losing ap
proximately $33 for every pas
senger it carries.
Oregon Home Builders
Request Legislation
To Help Home Financing
Earl Kellenbeck, President
of the Oregon State Home
Builders Association, wired
Oregon’s members of the House
of Representatives urging adop
tion of SB 3685, the Emergency
Home Finance Act of 1970.
The bill, Kellenbeck said,
would offer home buyers ad
ditional sources of money by
creating a secondary market
for conventional mortgages and
it would permit Saving and Loan
Associations to reduce their
interest charges to home
buyers.
The bill also would
provide an additional $750,000
immediately for subsidized
housing programé.
Kellenbeck pointed out the
bill would establish a Special
Advisory Commission on Hous
ing consisting of 13 members
which would advise the Presi
dent andCongress every year on
housing needs and the fiscal and
monetary policies necessary to
meet this need. This might,
he noted, avoid the periodic
housing crisis of recent years.
The bill passed the U.S. Se
nate by a vote of 72-0 on April
16th and is now in the House
Banking and CurrencyCommit-
tee.
In his telegram to the
Oregon delegation, Kellenbeck
said, “SB 3685 will be a major
step towards bringing the price
of housing back within reach of
the average Oregonian and it
should keep it there.” Kellen
beck, a Grants Pass builder and
City Councilman also nrtfed it
would provide a boost to
Oregon’s lumber economy, now
in the doldrums because of the
housing slow-down.
THE
With a Gift from
i
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I
3 PIECE
s
LUGGAGE SET
Sg77
SWIH6ER
GREEN-BLUE-PINK-GOLD
HAIR DRYER
KINDNESS ”20”
TRAVEL ACCESSORIES
AND UP
INSTANT HAIRSETTER
88
BY CLAIROL
$2|
for the
TREASURE
VALLEY
COMMUNITY
COLLEGE
I
Tax Base
The tax base proposed
($632,337) is exactly the
amount the voters ap
proved for the 1970-71
fiscal year during the
February 27, 1970 elec-
tion.
This base does not qive
the colleqe a
blank
check' as there will still
be a budget r
and budget bn ar -nas
However a tax base will
allow solid planning and
scheduling of the educa
tional operation
'ax I base
-----_ -----
The tqx
will elimi
nate rhe cost and con-
fusion of special elec
t ons every year
Y
VOTE
YES
In Support Of Our
Youth and Adult
Education
Harn.- Erlrbnch
Ch.iirn: m 1'inzvo'
i ininittcv for
TVCC Tax Ha*<>
1197 Verde Drive.
Ontario < 'revon
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COLOGNES,
ACTED CUÀU
AFTER
SHAVES
> FOR "HIM
“Brut” “Jade East
“GTO” “Bacchus”
“Faberge West
“British Sterling
MEN S WESTCIOX
WRISTWATCHES
5 9 88
LADIES
I WRISTWATCHES
BY WESTCLOX
202 Main Street
Nyssa, Oregon
Dial 372-3347
$19*8
■ Ml
PHA
FRAGRANCES
FOR "HER"
Jean Nate
Elan” “Arpege”
“Strawhat”
Heaven Sent”
Emeraude”
FROM
• JEWELRY
• RECORDS
• STEREO TAPES
PAPER MATE
Power Point Pens to
AV ■
Prescriptions
Cosmetics
Photo Finishing
Sundry Gifts
• Veterinary
Supplies
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