Thursday, October 14, 1976 Nyssa Gate City Journal, Nyssa, Oregon OUT OF It ’s a good day to take home THE PAST 10 YEARS AGO 30 YEARS AGO Mr*. Wyatt Smith wa* honored with an all-day party last Thursday in observance of her retirement from duties as a switchboard operator at Mountain States Telephone Company in Payette. The 20-year honoree began working for Malheur Home Telephone Company in Nyssa during February 1946 and continued here until May 1953 when the utility cut over to dial. Henry Jenkin* of Nampa and Art Hann of Nyssa have purchased the Thompson Oil Company from Jesse and Robert Thompson and have taken possession of the business. Mr. Jenkins and Mr. Hann will continue to operate the business under the name of Thompson oil Company. The Thompsons sold the Adrian Oil Company to Bob Webster, who has been manager of the Adrian business since its establish ment about a year ago. Webster was employed by Thompson Oil in Nyssa for a few year* before moving to Adrian. • • • Mis* Barbara McPartland and Tom Sallee, Nyssa High School graduates of 1958, were the first local students to place as fins lists in Merit Scholarship competition. Miss McPartland was gra­ duated in 1962 from Wil­ lamette University with a bachelor of science degree in sociology. She worked one year at the State Mental Hospital in Salem and one year at Henderson Hospital in England. She was granted a master* degree in social work from the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor in 1965. She received a grant from the National Institute of Mental Health and is now working in a group therapy program at the State Hospital in Kallamazoo, Michigan. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. L. McPartland Sallee received hi* ba­ chelor of science degree in 1962 from the California Institute of Technology at Pasadena. He studied at the University of California in Berkley and was granted his masters degree in science in 1964. He received his doctor» degree in 1966 at the University of Washington in Seattle. At the present time he is assistant professor of mathematics at the Univer­ sity of California. His parents are Mr. and Mrs. George Sallee. 20 YEARS AGO Six more candidates* pe­ titions were filed on Thurs­ day and Saturday of last week to bring a grand total of eleven persons who will seek four positions on the city council at the general elec­ tion. November 6. Those filing Thursday were Paul House, incumbent coun­ cilman and mayor since January 1955, and Rex Voeller, manager of Nyssa theatre. Last Saturday saw peti­ tions filed for Glenn Mc­ Ginnis, North Board of Control employee; A. Chad­ wick, owner and operator of Nyssa Food Center; Joe Dority. operator of Dority Welding Service and Jesse Rigney, member of North Board personnel. First to file for city council post was Lauren Wright. Union Pacific office clerk. Petitions were also filed for E. A. Gu* Liming, Boise Payette Lumber Co. manager Walt Walker Low, incum­ bent councilman and head bookkeeper and office ma­ nagerat Amalgamated Sugar Co. and Grant Rinehart, local accountant and former city clerk. Journal Clasiified« Bring Results! Page Three 4» PRICES EFFECTIVE: OCT. 14,15,16 40 YEARS AGO Transients will not be certified for WPA work this winter, but preference will be given to local people, the members of the Malheur County Relief Committee decided at a meeting held in the local city hall Wednesday night. Committee members present at the meeting were Mrs. Dick Tensen, Chas. Flegel. E. H. Brumbach and T. C. McCoy. Five new applications for old age assistance were received, and three were approved and two rejected. Three applications for CCC work were approved and two rejected. Three more candi­ dates are needed to fill the County’s CCC quota. r Pork Loin ROAST Thrifty SLICED BACON 50 YEARS AGO Pud Long is the champion trapper of this neck of the wood*. In three week» he trapped 53 coyotes and 15 badgers, and he had just returned from a honeymoon trip, at that. No telling what he could do under normal conditions. Pud expects to realize about $10 apiece for the coyotes, which will net him a nice little sum. • • • Word has been received from Charley Newbill, who recently went to California, that he has signed up to play indoor baseball. Charles is an artist at any kind of baseball and he will show the Native Sons some of the fine points of the game. • • • I Country Style ■SPARE [ ribs I Center Cut ■ PORK (CHOPS EGGS doz. 98 ♦ Nabisco Kingman Kolony News CRACKERS 59e 1 lb. box COOKING OIL ««- 1 Betty Crocker Blueberry MUFFIN MIX 1316 ox. SUGAR FLOUR 4 b. box 25 b. bag PEACHES »«• 10 b. bag $-|89 59 2«89* BAKERY TREATS cauliflower Chiffon Spumate PAPER TOWELS SUGAR 98c J $319 Large Heads Local Western Family CNng Western Family Gold Medal Brown 57C Ray's Deidous DANISH ROLLS 9 99° Fresh Baked Western Family POTATO ROLLS n f PEAR HALVES 3r1 PINEAPPLE JUICE«.., 63C i»« « cs.. brl HAMBURGER HELPER 59C TOMATO SAUCE s... 7I$1 Hersheys Instant COCOA^ GREEN PEAS io«. 4r1 Birdseye p-x COOL WHIP <« 00ç ea. Betty Crocker 7 ox. Western Family d£s 1 PicSweet Campbells CHICKEN noodle soup q f ¿4 - frozen foods ■ Western Family 1 98 S Large AA Issues for 60 years arc still missing from our files. KINGMAN KOLONY • Frank Rhodes returned from a trip to Tabor Alberta. Canada. He is working for the Agriculture-Lines Corp of Parma. Mr. and Mr*. Leroy Sprague of Nyssa were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Jim Phifer for coffee after church on Sunday. Mrs. Rex Walters of Boise spent the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Herschel Thomp­ son and visited her mother. Mrs. Ethel Thompson in the Nyssa Nursing Home. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Jenkins and family and her parents Mr. and Mrs. Earl Kygar went deer hunting Friday evening above West­ fall. They succeeded in getting their deer. 92 £ Russett POTATOES 20 b. bag $]19 . • » ♦ A I