Nyssa gate city journal. (Nyssa, Or.) 1937-199?, June 28, 1951, Image 7

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    JOURNAL
raeNYSSA
SECOND SECTION
THE NYSSA GATE CITY JOURNAL. NYSSA. OREGON. THURSDAY. JUNE »8. 1951
Former Resident
Of Bend Visits
BIG BEND, June 28—Mrs. Fanny
Armenta of Casa Grande, Arizona
arrived Thursday to visit friends,
after an absence of 31 years. Her
grandson, De.vey Joe Perkins, and
bride accompanied her. Mrs. Ar­
menta was formerly Mrs. Dewey L.
Miller. She came to Big Bend in
1903 with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Fred Pillsbury, and brother, Lora E.
Pillsbury. The latter still resides
in the Bend.
Mrs. Mary Brumbach served on
the election board at Adrian for the
high school election. Harry Bennett
DR.G.W. GRAVES
O ptom etrist
Eyes Examined
Phone 720
718 A rthur St.
Caldwell, Idaho
was elected to serve on the high cream and cake were served to the
school board from Wade district. group.
Mrs. Ezra Wooley and Mrs. Bill
Mrs. Fanny Armenta and Mrs.
Ferguson of Big Bend district also Myrtle Hatch visited Monday with
served on the election board.
the Plin Case and Mrs. Nannie How­
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Weir and ard families of Caldwell and Mrs.
Charles entertained Friday after­ Nellie Patterson of Wilder.
noon and evening in honor of Mrs.
Mrs. Frank Dickerson visited over
Armenta and Mr. and Mrs. D. J. the week-end with her daughter,
Perkins of Arizona.
Mrs. John Thompson, while Mr.
Ezra Brumback made a business j Dickerson was on a fishing trip.
trip to Nampa Monday.
Lora Pillsbury and his sister, Mrs.
Harriet Brumback left Tuesday Fanny Armenta and her grandson
morning for Salt Lake City to visit and his bride, enjoyed Sunday din­
her parents, who are ill. She ex­ ner with the Will Robinson and Lee
pects to stop on her way to visit her Baldridge families in Roswell.
sister-in-law, Mrs. John Bishop, at
Merle and Phillip Hatch went with
Burley.
their mother on a fishing trip to
Mr. and Mrs. Darrell English in­ Tamarack lake Sunday. They re­
vited Mr. and Mrs. Dale Clary and port the fishing good.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Clary and Elaine
Phillip Hatch and Jimmy Thomp­
and Martha to Friday evening din­ son were invited to a birthday party
ner to celebrate the birthday of her for Darrel Lee Suell Thursday a f­
mother, Mrs. Earl Clary.
ternoon. Eleven little schoolmates
Mrs. Chet Smith went to Emmett and friends helped him celebrate his
to take care of her little grand­ seventh birthday.
daughter while her daughter is
Mr. and Mrs. Horace Chaney held
working.
a wedding reception for Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Martin of On­ Mrs. Kenneth Troughton June 23.
tario and daughter, Neva Gay, were A large crowd attended. The couple
Sunday dinner guests in the Harvey received many nice gifts.
Hatch home.
Mr. and Mrs. Horace Chaney spent
Mr. and Mrs. Darrell English and Sunday evening in Caldwell with
children and Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Mr. and Mrs. Bob Welch and fam­
Howes and family were at Mr. and ily.
Mrs. Dyre Roberts' home Saturday
evening to help Sharon and Karen Visitors At Barnes Home—
celebrate their 12th birthday. Ice
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Barnes of Chico,
California have been house guests
at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Barnes. Mrs. Barnes' brother, Rog­
er Walker of Coos Bay is also visit­
ing at the Barnes home.
ONLY $ 5 .0 0
BUYS BROAD TRAVEL AND
VACATION ACCIDENT INSURANCE
FOR 30 DAYS
Pays up to $1,000 Hospital, Surgical, Nursing Care and
Other Medical Expense
$5,000 FOR LOSS OF LIFE PLUS
OTHER BENEFITS
DINNER GUESTS
Mr. and Mrs. Chet Mosier and
Barbara of Nampa were dinner
guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Roy Barnes Tuesday evening.
To Payette Lakes—
Mr, and Mrs. Gorden Ray and
son, Lynn, and nephew Keith Ray,
left Monday to spend a few days at
Payette lakes.
Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co.
Custom Hay Baling
Mowing & Raking
Cultivating
BERNARD EASTMAN
Jack Ziltercob
CALL FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
Complete Insurance Service
Phone 64
Phone 128-R evenings
Mid-Century Area
Conference Is Set
son of Mr and Mrs. Newbern Glenn, Leaves For Long Beach—
Engineman Third Class Jack At-
has been confined to his bed this
week with virus pneumonia.
keson left Wednesday for L o n g
Beach. California. He has been
home for the past three weeks o n
COLUMBIA AVE.
leave.
Sunday dinner guests at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. John Broad were
Mr. and Mrs. Pete Tensen and Dick
and Mr. and Mrs. Dick Oroot.
Mrs. Turner of Nyssa called In
this community Thursday morning.
Dave Hawkins is employed at the
C. M. Tensen ranch in Brogan.
Mr and Mrs. Dick Oroot enter­
tained the whist dub Tuesday. Two
and
tables were at play during the after­
noon.
The pinochle club met at the home
Plans Develop For
of Mr. and Mrs. Dick Oroot Friday
REAL ESTATE
Malheur Field Day afternoon. Two tables were at play.
Mai Beck, Associate
High score was held by Mr. and Mrs.
Final details are rapidly being Jake Oroot and Mr. Davidson low.
completed In order that the 1951
research program at the Malheur
experiment station will be available
for public inspection during the an ­
nual crops field day program, July
6, Superintendent E. N. Hoffman
said this week.
Plans includes the placing of large
numbers of varietal and plot mark­
ers. Complete labeling of varieties
will make It possible for visitors to
know Just what ¿articular variety
they are observing and to make their
own comparisons. Hoffman said.
Varietal testing includes 21 variet­
ies of potatoes, 30 of field corn, 22
barley, 23 oats, 9 alfalfa, 48 miscel­
laneous grasses and legumes and 70
fruit and nut trees.
Of special interest to users of com­
mercial fertilizers will be the time
and and method of application trials
on sugar beets. Other station ferti­
N yua, Oregon
lizer work includes alfalfa and field
corn trials. The balance of the
;
fertilizer work is located on 18 dif­
ferent cooperating farms through­
out the irrigated sections of the
county. Crops in fertilizer trials are
sugar beets, potatoes, onions, field
corn alfalfa, wheat, oats, and barley.
E R. Jackman, extension farm
crops specialists, Oregon State col­
lege, will be present throughout the
field day to answer specific quest­
ions.
Field day hours will be from 9
A. M. until dark. Hoffman reminded.
An invitation to attend Is extended
to the general public, Including resi­
dents of Idaho.
be on the program as will R. E.
Jewell, Bend city school superin­
tendent.
Andrews Juras, director of child
welfare services and a former resi­
dent of central Oregon, will be one
of the speakers.
The speakers who were delegates
to the white house conference w’U
discuss the findings and recom­
mendations and what they mean to
Oregon.
Meetings will be held in the new
library building^of the Eastern Ore­
gon College ol Education. Anyone
interested in the welfare of child­
ren is invited to attend the meetings.
Final plans for the mid-century
area conference on children and
youth, to be held in La Grande
June 29 and 30 under sponsorship
of the governor’s state committee
on children and youth, were develop­
ed at a meeting in La Grande last
week. The conference is expected to
attract 300 persons from five coun­
ties, Umatilla. Union, Baker. Mal­
heur and Wallowa. The La Orande
meeting is the fourth of five con­
ferences announced by Oovemor
Douglas McKay following the mid­
century white house conference on
children and youth, held in Wash­
ington, D. C. last winter.
Dr, Rod Langston of the Eastern
Oregon College of Education and
program chairman of the confer­
ence, presided at the planning meet­
ing. Jesse Rosenbaum, who a t­
tended the Washington conference,
is to serve as the general chairman
of the June 29 and 30 conference
when youth leaders, parents and
youth will be present from Umatilla.
Union, Baker. Malheur and Wallowa
counties.
Michael Schapiro, executive secre­
tary of the governor’s state commit­
tee on children and youth, was here
for the program meeting, and re­
mained to assist ^in program ar­
rangements. He said that more than
a dozen Oregonians who took part in
the white house program will be
here for the area conference.
Mrs. Saidie Orr Dunbar, chair­
man of the governor’s state commit­
tee, will attend. Mrs. Dunbar has
made an outstanding contribution
in the field of community organiz­
ation during the past 35 years.
Others scheduled to attend in­
clude Dr James Millar, director of
the Good Citizenship Foundation.
A minister by profession, he has
special Interests in the field of ed­
ucation and travels around the
country lecturing to educators, par­
ents, students, PTA groups and other
interested groups.
Dr. Maurice Vest, director of ma­
ternal and child health, state board
of health, is by profession a physici­
an with special interests in the field
of pediatrics. Dr. Vest is chairman
of the governor’s committee on
health.
Dr. Charles Bradley, associate pro­ Ronnie Glenn III—
fessor of pediatric* and psychiatry
Ronnie Jay Glenn, nine-year-old
and director of Oregon psychiatric
services to children. A pediatrician
by profession, he has special inter­
ests in the field of psychiatry as it
affects children.
Mrs. Henry Roe Cloud, "American
mother of 1950” and prominent civic
leader will be one of the principal
speakers.
Dr. Carl Hopkins, who is with the
department of public health and
preventive medicine at the Oregon
Medical school, is Interested in so­
cial economic factors affecting the
health and recreation of the school
population of Oregon.
Mrs Frank Taylor, president of
the Portland Federation of the Ore­
Portland
gon State Conference of Social Work
Seattle
has a thorough knowledge and un­
•fe cheaper by far
derstanding of all programs pertain­
than driving yavr carl
ing to children and youth.
A score of other speakers have
accepted invitations to appear on the
program.
lit
ffeca ¿¿»*
Miss Florence Beardsley, director
Lunch
Room
Phone 331
of elementary education for the
state department of education, will
TRAILWAYS
Quality-Built
HAYING MACHINES
Insurance
Headquarters
GRIGG BROS.
BUTLER
DEAD ANIMALS
Free Pickup
Phone Collect
Ontario Grain Co. 53 *
Phone 98
Main Plant 100
Ontario
Parma
Nyssa
Idaho-Oregon Rendering Co.
WORM
your way to EXTRA profits
with Purina Chek-R-Ton
Large roundworms rob pullets of vitality and growth—
keep them from reaching early profitable production.
Rid your pullets of profit-robbing roundworms with
WWW
Purina Chek-R-Ton
— for mixing with
mash
WS5I
Purina Chek-R-Ton
Granules—for com­
plete feeding or top
feeding on mash,
Checker-Etts, or
Checkers
See us about our worm control program
Tobler's Feed and Fuel, Inc.
9
Plenty of Lockers Available
Easy to Work With, Hard to W ear Out!
Speedy, dependable, smooth-run­
ning equipment—designed to act­
ually make better hay! Both the
NEW IDEA Tractor Mower and
4-Bar Side Delivery Rake and Ted­
der are built to give smoothest,
longest, low-cost service. Controls
and adjustments are simple and
convenient. Working parts are
extra-durable, perfectly aligned,
fully protected. Many exclusive
operating features. Come in and
get full details NOW!
NfW IDEA 4 -lo r Sid* Delivery »ok# ond Tedder, with
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WE SPECIALIZE IN PROCESSING ME A T
FOR HOME FREEZERS
Prices Approved by O. P. S.
Visitors are welcome to inspect our
new plant
LOCKER HOURS—8 A. M. TO 6. P. WEEK DAYS ONLY
Custom Cutting and W rapping Service
GRAIN-FED BEEF FOR SALE
Fed In Our Own Lots
CUSTOM SLAUGHTERING
Live Animals Received From Monday Morning Until Friday Noon
Monday Through Thursday 8 a. m. to 6 p. m.
Friday From 8 a. m. until 12 Noon
Allis-Chalmers and New Idea Dealer
Your Power Farming Headquarters
BAUMAN FARM EQUIPMENT
1 Mile North of Nyssa on U. S. 20
Phone 333
Phones:
Locker Plant 381-R
Slaughter House and Cutting Room
381-W
Fischer’s Locker Service