Nyssa gate city journal. (Nyssa, Or.) 1937-199?, August 23, 1951, Image 1

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    JOURNAL
nieNYSSAGAi
'VOLUME XXXXVI
NO. 32
School District
Buys Auto Fuel,
Accepts Car Use
Home Ec. Equipment
W anted; Gym. Tile
To Be Replaced
The board of directors of school
district No. 26c have accepted the
offer of the Herriman Motor comp­
any to furnish an automobile for the
driver training course to be con­
ducted by the 9chool district and
have accepted the bid of the Stand­
ard Oil company to furnish gasoline
for the district for the coming year.
Herriman will donate the use of
the specially-equipped car for a
period of nine months. All dealers
in Nyssa were contacted relative to
use of a car for the course, which
will be conducted by Dale Overstate.’ ,
a member of the high school faculty.
The course will be started when
school classes open September 4, al­
though the car may not be here by
that time.
When the school district held its
last meeting, the Standard Oil
company submitted a low bid of .217
cents a gallon net to the district on
the basis of approximately 15.000
gallons for the year. The Phillips
Petroleum company and the Flet­
cher Oil company submitted identi­
cal bids of .222. The school district
does not pay a federal tax.
Superintendent Henry Hartley an­
nounced that the tile on the ceiling
of the new gymnasium will be re­
placed by the contractors, J . H.
Wise and Son. The work is expected
to be completed by the opening of
school. Some of the tile fell off.
apparently because of the shrinking
of lumber that was not thoroughly
dried.
The school board is asking all
dealers to submit proposals to pro­
vide ranges and refrigerators for the
home economics department. The
major appliance manufacturers have
a program whereby they furnish
schools with appliances at cost and
change them annually for a period
of five years at no further expense
to the dk‘ ricU<. The d li'rlct hopes
the present ranges and refrigerators
will provide the original cost. Sev­
eral proposals have already been re­
ceived.
End Of Softball
l*lav Postponed
The city play-off of the men’s
softball league was to have been
concluded Wednesday night, but the
game was rained out.
Muir-Roberts and Burningham
forfeited their game to Tobler's Feed
and Fuel, giving Tobler's the city
championship.
Waggoner Motor
company and Bauman Farm Equio-
ment were to have played last night
for second place. The teams did not
decide when to play the postponed
contest.
Waggoner's and Tobler’s teams
will hold a picnic in Caldwell Sun­
day and will play a game afterwards
on the Caldwell field.
Some GI School
Training Available
Charles M. Cox, veterans admin­
istration representative for eastern
Oregon, said today that veterans
who completed O. I. bill courses in
high school or college during the
spring term of 1951 ar.d who wish to
continue their training this fall will
be allowed to do so, even though
their applications are received by
the VA after the July 25 deadline.
Mr. Cox emphasized that the new
ruling applies only to veterans who
wish to study in college after com­
pleting their high school courses,
and those who intend to study for
advance degrees in college.
For example, a veteran who ob­
tained his bachelor or arts degree
this spring would be allowed by the
VA to study for a master of arts
degree, provided he was entitled to
further training under the O. I. bill.
Veterans should file applications
as early as possible, particularly if
they plan to change schools. Ap­
plications must be received by the
VA on or before the first day of the
fall term. Cox said.
Here From Georgia—
Mr and Mrs. A. L. Pittman and
son. Fay of Rome, Oeorgla arrived
Monday to spend a week visiting at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Hill
Mrs. Pittm an and Mrs. Hill are sis­
ters.
■ Girls C a m p -
Seven girls of the Nyssa second
ird left Monday morning for L. D.
stake camp at Warm Lake. Idaho
rs. Margaret Peterson went as
ieir supervisor
Girls who went
e Karen Fife. Nancy Skeen. Janice
•wis. Jeanine Drown. Ellen Hunter,
eon Cleaverly and Karolee Kesler
hey will return Friday.
"T h e
F. F. A. Youths To
Take Exhibits To
Malheur Co. Fair
Six members of the Nyssa F. F.
A. chapter have returned from a trip
to the Wallowa mountains just in
time to prepare for the opening of
the Malheur County fair.
Only six boys went with their
new advisor, Dwight Wyckoff, on the
trip because the trip was delayed
until so late in the summer. Wyckoff
has been attending summer school
and could not make the trip sooner.
The boys, who fished in the Lostine
river and the high lakes, were Don
Bowers, Jerry Browne, Dick Hart.
Larry Holmes, Jimmy Corfield and
Stanley Strasbaugh.
The Nyssa chapter will be well
represented a t the fair with exhibits
of beef, dairy cattle, sheep and
swine. The boys will also have crops
and shop work exhibits. All of the
youths attending the fair will be
eligible to participate in the judg­
ing contests.
Check Received
For Polio Work
A check for $2600 to help provide
care for local polio patients has been
received by the Malheur county
chapter of the National Foundation
for Infantile Paralysis, Wallis Jones,
chapter chairman announced.
Making the presentation in per­
son was Gene Maleckl, Oregon state
representative of
the
national
foundation.
Although Malheur county chapter
raised $6,741126 in the 1961 March of
Dimes campaign, which was a not-
able performance by local residents,
the amount collected was inadequate
to cover the chapter's need in treat-
ing the heavy load brought on by
the tremendous Increase in polio
during the past two or three years.
When March of Dimes money is
raised. Mr. Jones explained, half
of It stays here with the local chap­
ter and the other half goes to na­
tional headquarters for research,
professional education and emerg­
ency aid, such as the check just
received.
Mr. Jones said record-breaking
polio incidence durtqg the past three
years had exhausted the treasuries
of hundreds of chapters across the
country. “While we cannot tell what
the final score of 1951 may be." he
added. “The fact remains that up
through the end of July the national
foundation had sent almost $4,000,-
000 in emergency funds so that
chapters in 42 states might carry
on their patient-care disburse­
ments".
At present the Malheur county
chapter is providing funds for the
care, in whole or in part, of polio
patients afflicted this year in ad­
dition to underwriting the patient
care costs of polio patients stricken
prior to January 1, 1951.
nyssa
cm
c it y j o u r n a l
O r e g o n , t HJ ftSt>A y . aùgusï
iT\W
Farm Machinery
Malheur County Officials Plan
é
School Opening
Lost In Flames
Fair Events To
Arrangements for registration of
The most 80Rly fire occurring in
high school students for the coming
the Nyssa aria during the last week
Provide V ariety school year were announced Wed­
caused damage of approximately
$2000 at the M c . Seuetl farm two
miles south of the Nyssa-Parmu
junction Tuesday morning.
Apparently the fire started about
4:30 in the potato cellar, where a
considerable quantity of machinery
was stored. Neighbors driving to
work notified Seuell of the fire and
other neighbors were called to help
battle the flames. The farmers,
carrying water in buckets, were able
to save the barn and five stacks of
chopped hay, with the assistance of
a wind that was blowing in a fav­
orable direction.
In addition to burning the potato
cellar, the fire destroyed a stack of
baled straw, a potato planter, man­
ure spreader and hang-on plow.
Seuell said he had been burning
weeds In the vicinity the night be­
fore and apparently a spark started
a smoldering fire in the cellar.
The Seuell farm is not located
within a rural fire district. Two
Nyssa firemen went to tthe fire but
could not take any equipment across
the river.
Two Stubblefield fires occurred
last Thursday Firemen were called
to the Dale Garrison farm and the
Klaas Tensen farm. Garrison lost
one and a half acres of stubble and
Tensen lost 20 acres of straw.
Henry Llssman lost about a ton
of hay on his farm on Gem avenue
Saturday. Using water from a pres­
sure system. Ltssman and others
had extinguished the flames when
firemen arrived.
Firemen were called Sunday when
j an automobile caught fire near the
high school building. Only the wir­
ing of the car was damaged. Fire­
| men did not learn the name of the
owner.
Tractor Using
Contest Planned
A tractor operating contest for
4-H club and Future Farm er chap­
ter members has been planned for
the 1951 Malheur County fair.
Events of this type have created
wide interest in other counties and
states in recent years. The contest
consists of several Individual tractor
and Implement operations often en­
countered on farms. The contest­
ants will demonstrate their skill and
ability to perform these Jobs with
accuracy and with a minimum of
time involved.
Scoring of participants is done by
a group of Judges and time-keepers.
Safety of operation Is considered
also In the scoring.
Tractor and Implement dealers In
the county are cooperating In the
staging of the tractor operating con­
test by furnishing tractors and im­
plements. Indications are that sev­
eral preliminary eliminations will be
Boys Finish Season—
necessary to work the contest down
The 13 members of the Sunset to the final ruaalng the last day of
Panthers, Knothole Baseball league the fair.
champions, have expressed thanks to
Sid Flanagan, their coach and spon­
sor, for hds time and help this sum­ Alva Smith Of
mer in coaching the team. They
Kansas Dies Here
also thanked Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Raymond who helped with trans-
Alva Sm ith of Lucas, Kansas died
portating the team to games and
practices and for caring for and re­ this morning In the Malheur Mem­
orial hospital, where he had been
pairing the team’s equipment.
receiving treatment for two weeks.
Mr. Sm ith had been here visiting
Special Speakers Coming—
his sons, Wyatt and Archie Smith.
Rev. and Mrs. Wayne Nelson of
T7ie body, now in the Nyssa Funeral
Pasadena college, Passadena, Cali­ home, will be sent to Lucas. K an­
fornia, will speak and sing at the sas for services and Interment. No
morning and evening services In the services will be held here.
Church of the Nazarene Sunday,
September 2. No services will be Riding Club Ta Drill—
held In the Nazarene church Sun­
The Owyhee Junior Riding club
day. August 26 because of the Naz­ drill team has been invited to per­
arene district meeting to be held in form at the Malheur County fair to
Nampa.
be held In Ontario next week-end.
Regular rehearsals are held for all
Visit At Beers Home—
members of the team at the rodeo
Wallace Beers of Chicago and grounds under the direction of Mrs
Percy Eberline of La Verne. Minne­ Ann Tensen.
sota were recent visitors at the
David Beers ranch. The two men Move To Boise—
were en route to California.
Mr and Mrs. Max Goldman, for­
mer Nyssa residents who have been
Here From Utah—
living at Los Oatos. California have
Mrs. Edwin Hawes of Utah Is vis­ moved to Boise.
iting at the home of her son, Leon­
ard Hawes and family of Owyhee. Here From Emmett—
Her granddaughter. Noreen, will re­
Mr and Mrs. Walter Bingham
turn to Utah with her for a va­ and Patty Ann and Floyd Walter of
cation.
Emmett visited In Nyssa Sunday at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Edison
Home on Leave—
Child.
Willard Lowe, son of Mr and Mrs.
Warren Lowe, spent 10 days in Nyssa Here From Hooper. Utah—
on leave from the air force. At the
Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd King and
end of his furlough he reported to Mr. and Mrs Earl Simpson of Hoop­
er. Utah visited Saturday at the
San Diego.
Elwood Flinders and Carl Simpson
homes.
Named On Honor Roll—
Fifty-two full-time students were
named on the summer session hon­ To Boulder—
Jo Ann Narlgan of Boulder. Colo­
or roll at Eastern Oregon College of
Education at La Grande, according rado returned home Sunday nlgnt
to the registrar Among them was after spending several days In Nyssa
as a house guest of Avon Peterson.
Mrs Frances W Bates of Nyssa.
Forfeits Ball—
Henry Wright of Ontario forfeit­
ed ball of $5 in city court Wednes­
day on a charge of having no driv­
er's license. City police officers gave
him a ticket and he failed to report
Mt In Nysas—
_ „ in court. Judge J . C. Sm ith issued
Rev and Mrs. H J . Oernhardt
La Grande visited Thursday at s warrant and state police arrested
le home of Mr and Mrs Cliff the defendant.
nyssa .
Events Featuring Horses
To Be Held Between
Pari-Mutuels
Continuous arena entertainment
between pari-mutuel horse races will
be the outstanding Innovation at the
42nd annual Malheur County fair,
to be held next week
The horse show and race meet,
presented as part of the Malheur
County fair, will be opened at 8
p. m. each night, Thursday, F ri­
day and Saturday, August 30 and
31 and September 1.
A cow-cutting exhibition, a flag
race, children's pony race, trailer
race and a showing of pleasure class
horses will be conducted in addition
to the other arena entertainment
between the. races. These events
are scheduled to fill the necessary
Idle time between pari-mutuel races
in an effort to make the show as
entertaining as possible for the fans.
Roy Brewer, race manager, said.
Malheur county’s annual exhibit
of livestock, land produots and
handicraft will be opened Wednes­
day for a four-day run, with judg­
ing each day.
Commercial displays of Malheur
county business firms will also be
extensive.
A 60 x 100 foot circular tent to
accommodate livestock j u d g i n g
events has been secured for the fair,
which will be opened August 29 at
the county fairgrounds In Ontario,
said E. N. Hoffman, chairman of
the board.
At a meeting Monday night with
livestock superintendents. Hoffman
said, it was found that all five
breeds of dairy cattle will be fully
represented and many beef animals
will be on display, adding up to the
largest number of cattle ewer ex­
hibited at a Malheur fair.
Adding new impetus to the Jpnd
products show is the engraved
plaque offered by the Malheur Po­
mona Grange to the subordinate
granges securing the largest number
of farm crops exhibits. Six booth
reservations have already been made
for the Grange and Farm Bureau
booth contest, Oregon Trail Grange
again representing the Nyssa area,
and an equal number of organiz­
ation and club booths have already
been spoken for. Land products
trophies will be keenly competed for
again this year with Hartley Produce
company, Mulr-Roberts and B urn­
ingham and Amalgamated Sugar
company included among the list of
sponsors.
Additional space in the armory
building, where flowers, handicrafts,
canning and art work will be on
display, has been made available
with the use of the day room which
will be devoted especially to art
and photography. Rose] Hunter of
Nyssa, superintendent of the art
classes, urges all local artists to
plan to display their work this year
since better facilities for care and
display have been arranged for.
Highlighting the armory display will
be the booths In the flower compet­
ition, with A. N. K. garden cluo
again exhibiting.
In addition to the many exhibits
and Judging events, a varied bill of
entertainment is being offered the
fair-going public.
Radio Station
K SRV will again broadcast at vari­
ous Intervals throughout the day
trom its booth in the main exhibit
hall, with special talent events un­
der the direction of Hal Corwin.
The fat stock sale is scheduled for
7 o'clock Friday evening under the
direction of the Malheur County
Livestock association.
Indications
are that some 30 head of beef calves,
30 head of fat hogs and a dozen
sheep will be put on the auction
block by 4-H club members, and
a total of 13 head by FFA chapter
members.
A bund concert Is tentatively
scheduled for Wednesday night.
Returns To Walla W alls—
Mrs. Eugene Fleshman, who un­
derwent an operation In the local
hospital and who has been conval­
escing at the home of Mrs. Don
Graham, returned to her home in
Washington Friday. Mr. Fleshman
drove down after her.
To Lost Valley—
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Barnes and
family spent last week In Lost Val­
ley. Idaho on vacation.
From Colorado And Utah—
| Mrs. Alma Fear of Greeley, Colo-
I rado and Mrs Francis Baker and
family of Tooele, Utah arrived in
Nyssa Monday to spend several days
at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Wilber
Anderson.
To Bremerton—
Return From C
Mr and Mrs A. H Boydell l e f t 1 Mr and Mrs Ward Wieneke and
Monday for Bremerton. Washington family returned Sunday from a two-
to visit Mr and Mrs William Fein- weeks vacation spent on the coast
en. Mrs Boydell and Mrs. Felnen and In Portland and Yakima They
are sisters.
1 were away two weeks
Here From Rawlins—
Speaks In V
Visiting In the Roy Bibbey home
Miss Adrienne Peterson, recently
are Mrs Btbbey's parents. Mr. and returned L. D 8 rr.lsMonery. was
Mrs Roy Rodabaugh. and Mrs Bib- guest speaker during Sunday even-
___M_______
Mr and Mrs Ray Weatherfleld bey's sister and brother-in-law, Mr ing service* in Vale, August It.
oing To O------ -
and Mrs. Oeorge Gilbert. aU of
---------------------------
Donald Newbill. William Post, and family of Oerlng. Nebraska Rawlins. Wyoming
They arrived To Payette U k r*—
m nie Jean Ward and James -stopped Friday afternoon at the Sunday evening and will stay In
Mr and Mrs C. C. Cotton spent
■uyn have made application to reg­ home of Mr and Mrs Ben Storm Nyssa two weeks
I lost week-end at Payette lakes
I They were en route to Portland
ier at Boise Junior college.
TWO SECTIONS—TEN PAGES
Jersey Glub Will
Give Heifer Calf
To Member Of 4-H
The Malheur County Jersey C at­
tle club will again award a Jersey
heifer calf at the Malheur County
fair 'to the outstanding boy or girl
having a dairy project. The calf
tills year was chosen from the herd
of Hope and Charley Orider of
Nyssa.
The heifer. Grider's Brampton
Pinn B. Honey, Is a daughter of
Brampton B P. Scott, the bull Mr.
and Mrs. Grider Imported from
Canada. The bull, classified as very
good. Is a son of the excellent gold
and silver medal senior superior
sire Brampton Pinnacle Basil. His
dam Is a daughter of Brampton
Basileus.
Scout's seven nearest
dams have 32 records which average
840 pounds of butterfat.
Honey’s dam Is Brampton Plnn
Graham, also Imported from Cana­
da. She had 81 pounds of butterfat
In 44 days when Mr. and Mrs. Grid­
er sold her to an Idaho breeder.
Honey will be six months old when
the award Is made. She was one of
the first place Junior get-of-slre at
the spring Jersey show held In Nyssa
In May.
Discussion Held
On City Airport
At C-C Luncheon
nesday by the new high school prin­
cipal, Richard V. Wilson.
Work Must Be Done;
Registration will be conducted at
the high school office according to
Committee Plans To
the following schedule:
Monday, August 27—seniors, 8 a.
Make Study
m. to 2:30 p. m. and juniors, ftrom
A to K, 2:30 p. m. to 4 p. m.; Tues­
After a general discussion about
day. August 28—juniors, L to Z, 8
the Nyssa airport and circumstance*
a. m. to 11 a. m. and sophomores,
surrounding its operation at the
11 a. m. to 4 p. m.. and Wednesday.
weekly luncheon of the Nyssa cham­
August 29—Freshm e- 8 a. m. to 4
ber of commerce Wednesday noon.
p. m. Seniors, juniors and sopho­
President Thomas Jones appointed
mores who cannot register during
another member to the chamber's
working hours are asked to register
airport committee, which will make
between 7:30 and 9:30 p. m. Monday
a study and submit recommend­
and Tuesday.
ations at a later date.
Lynn J . Lawrence, school music
Ted Morgan was appointed os a
director, asks high school band
member of the committee yesterday
members to report at the school-
to serve with Elmer Cruson and
house August 30 and 31 at 7:30 p.
Clifford Mink.
m. for practice for the football
With city officials present for the
Jamboree.
occasion Bernard Frost opened the
Football prospects are asked to
discussion with the statement that
report August 27 at 6 p. m. at the
“most of you do not know what Is
gymnasium. Coach Howard Lovejoy
going on at the airport. We have a
said physical examinations will be
wonderful operation up there. M an­
given by Dr. K . E. Kerby and Dr.
ager Gordon Schmelzer employs the
C. J . Kopp. The boys will then
only mechanic In the valley who has
start practice for the Jamboree, to
a rating high enough to give OAA
be held September 7 in Ontario.
approval for a license. They get
The Snake River Valley School­
more shop work than they can do.
masters association will meet in the
They get planes from all over the
junior high school building In On­
valley and even from Nevada. T ran ­
tario Monday to discuss the jam ­
An all-Nyssa slate of officers was sients stopping at the airport aver­
boree and other activities.
age from 12 to 15 a month. Bchmel-
Teachers of Malheur county will elected by the Malheur county chap­ zer has turned out 150 private pilots
meet at Vale August 30 and 31 for ter of the National Foundation for and more than 10 commercial pilots.
Infantile Paralysis at a meeting held
an in-training program.
His planes average 5000 hours a year
in the Ontario clinic Friday night.
The new officers are Clyde Snider, In the air. No one has been hurt In
chairman: Bernard
Frost, vice accidents caused by mechanical fail­
chairman; Leonard Hewett, treasur­ ures.
“There Is some friction between
er, and Mrs. W. W. Foster, secretary.
Wallis Jones of Ontario, the retiring Schmelzer and city officials.
"The airport is something we need.
The Baker Elks softball team won chairman, will be honorary chair­ The time Is coming when we are
the district title by defeating Tob­ man. The medical advisors wlU be going to have to have an airport.
ler's Feed and Fuel of Nyssa In a appointed later.
Oene Maleckl, state director of the We will need It for handling freight
two-out-of-three game series and
and other uses. We have done work
group,
said In a talk that the polio
will go on to play La Orande for
at the airport piece-meal. A lot of
the right to participate In the state Incidence is lower tills year than donated work has been done up
last year in the Snake river valley there. If we lose the airport we will
tournament.
Baker won the first game of the and he has hopes that It will remain IN criticized for not having one. We
series on the Baker Held last Thurs­ low. In contrast, polio has reached' are going to lose our operator unless
day night by a score of 4 to 2. Jerry almost the epidemic stage on the we do something about the runways,
Barker pitched no-hit ball until the coast.
taxi strips, etc. Transients some­
The Malheur chapter has spent times get their planes stuck in the
sixth, when Baker collected two hits
$5600
on
polio
cosas,
one
this
year
and enough runs to take the contest.
land”.
Nyssa won the second game 7 to 4 and several from the previous year, , Frost suggested an organised pro­
on the Nyssa diamond Saturday leaving only $400 In the treasury for gram for the field and added that
night In a tight contest th at gave the remainder of the year.
"W e should try to get together end
Tobler's hopes of taking the series.
keep our airport”.
According to a previous agreement, Games Cancelled
City Councilman Emil A. Stuns
the third game, if necessary, was to
reported on contracts with operator*
be played in the town that had the
Because Of Rain of other airports. He seld the gene­
largest attendance in the first two
The women's league softball gam­ ral feeling Is that airports will have
contests. Nyssa's gats receipts were es. scheduled to have been played to be subsidized for sometime. The
about $5 larger than the receipts in on the Ontario field Wednesday city of Nyssa budgets $1500 a year
Baker Thursday night, but the Elks night, were postponed because of for the airport.
contested the results and agreed to rain. Two games were scheduled!
Elmer Cruson read a letter from
return to Nyssa Monday night only When they will be played was not the civil aeronautics administration
after considerable argument. The determined.
of the department of commerce that
paid attendance Saturday night was
Parma Food Center defeated the was written following an Inspection
323 and Monday night 451.
Farmers Daughters Tuesday night of the local airport. Cruson told
15 to 4 In the only game of the chamber members how the field
could be improved.
evening.
Farm Bureau Asks
Clifford Mink, aviation instructor,
Short score:
Aid On Fuir Booth Parma Food Center 10 15 6 said "From the teacher's viewpoint,
the
situation Is rather rugged. S tu ­
Farmers Daughters
5
4 11
The help of members of the Farm
Baker and Rose and Packwood; dents can’t always abide by their
teachings because of the runways.
Bureau Is needed on the Malheur Oka no and Mitchell.
At one end, the field Is actually
County Farm Bureau fair booth to
dangerous".
be arranged In Ontario, officers said. Return* From Washington—
Miss Bonnie Fife, daughter of Mr.
Mink said the road to the airport
Mrs. Dick Krlegh and Mrs. 8. A.
Wells have been appointed to take and Mrs. Lamont Fife, arrived home Is also bad 'because of drifting sand.
George Henneman, chairman of
charge for the Adrian center; Mrs. Wednesday from Washington, D. C.
Elmer G riffith and Mrs. Ed Hahn She stopped en route In Salt Lake the city council, said the airport has
for Annex; Mrs. Joe Ooucher, Harp­ City and Ogden to visit friends and been a problem to the city, both
er; Mrs. Richard Maw, Nyssa; Mrs relhtlves. Miss Fife, who has been financially and otherwise. He said
George Lang, Vale, and Mrs. Art away for 11 months, works for the “We are trying to study the prop­
surgeon general of the air force ln< osition and work out a lease agree­
Bennett. WUlowcreek.
Bureau officers said “I f you have the Pentagon building and will re­ able to the city and the operator.
produce to help with the display, turn to Washington after Labor day. We would like to know how the
people feel about It. We get c rit­
either -bring It to the booth on
icism from both sides".
Tuesday. August 28 or take It to the Guests In V a lle y -
House
guests
at
the
home
of
Mr.
City Manager E. K. Burton said
home of the representative of your
and Mrs. Carl Simpson last week "The council ha* always met Gordon
center before that date".
Included Mr Simpson’s brother. more than half way. The trouble
Lynn, and wife of Hooper. Utah Is not all the council's fault. Oordon
Babies Equally D ivided-
Three boys and three girls were Donald Bunot and Junior Nesbitt, does not attend when he Is In­
born In the Malheur Memorial hos­ both of Hooper, spent the week vis­ vited".
pital during the last week. Parents iting their friend Jack Simpson
C. W. Buchner complimented
of the children are Mr. and Mrs.
Schmelzer as an operator. He seld
Donald Wilson, Nyssa, boy, born Here From Seattle—
“I don't think we should let go of
Ja c k P n rn of Seattle was a guest something we have".
August 16; Mr and Mrs. Norman
Oarner, Nyssa, August 17. girl; Mr. of Miss Cleo Flinders Saturday a f­
Thomas Jones also said "W e
and Mrs Joe Reda, Ontario, Aug­ ternoon and evening. He was on his should keep what we have and Im­
ust 17, boy; Mr. and Mrs. Klyoshl way home to Seattle after vacation­ prove It”.
Hoshlde, Parma, August 19, girl. M'. ing several weeks In Sheridan, Wy­
and Mrs. Dan Pennle, Nyssa. Aug­ oming.
Warning In I. s h u c i I
ust 21, boy. and Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Return To Missouri—
Meierhoff, Nyssa, August 21, girl.
About Waste Water
Mr. and Mrs Donald Benetz and
Clifton of S t Joe, Missouri left for
Rummage Sale Scheduled—
The directors of the Owyhee
The St. Anne's Alter society will home Wednesday after visiting In Ditch company decided at their last
hold a rummage sale Friday and Nyssa at the home of Mr and Mrs. meeting to Issue a warning to land
Saturday, August 24 and 25 at 407 Wilber Holcomb
owners about emptying waste water
Main street, next door to the Owy­
Into the company's canal
hee Truck and Implement company Stop En Route Home—
H. E Noah, president of the comp­
Mr and Mrs Le Roy Christensen
store.
and Bruce and Craig of Roy, Utah any, reported that persons owning
land
adjoining the company's main
stopped overnight Wodnesday at the
“V” Club Plan* Plrnle—
canal are allowing their irrigation
The “V" club will hold Its annual home of Mr. and Mrs. Brig Olsen waste water to empty into the canal
potluck supper Friday. August 24 at The visitors were returning home without making a proper Installa­
7:30 at the home of Le Roy Herman. after a trip to Montana and Canada tion, thereby causing the canal
banks to cave in. depositing excess
Guests At McCall—
To Portland—
Mr end Mrs M L. Judd were silt, retarding the flow of Irrigation
Mrs Ed Boydell and Nancy will
water and causing undue expense to
leave Prlday by plane for Portland guests of Mrs. Frank Morgan at her the company at ditch-cleaning time.
to visit Mrs. Boydell’s mother. Mrs. summer home In McCall several
“Unless land owners co-operota
W H Hofstetter
They will be days of lost week.
and Install proper wasteways to stop
away two or three weeks
such damage, the directors will be
VA Men Coming—
Charles M. Cox. contact represent­ compelled to file an Injunction s -
Vacation At Lakes—
gatnst any offender”, Noah stated.
Mr and Mrs A C. 8allee spent ative of the veteran* administration
several days last week vacationing office In Baker, will be In Ontario En Rente Te Chicago—
Monday, August 27 to assist veter­
at Payette lakes.
Mr and Mr* Oeorge Ammon and
ans end their dependents. He will
be at the Oregon state employment son. David, of Tacoma, en route to
Go On Vacation—
Chicago, spent Friday evening at
Mr and Mrs Ed Werdermann and service office from 10:15 * m. to 3 the home of Mrs. Ava Broughton
son. Paul, left Saturday for a week's p. m.
and Myrtle Ilett.
trip to Coos Bay and Rgedsport.
Fanner Residents Visit—
Mr and Mrs Clyde Wakefield end Hospital Auxiliary Te Meet—
To Reward Hunter—
Mrs. Carlos Buchner has announc­
Jake Fischer of Fischer s Locker two sons of Saline. Kansas arrived
Service will give one year's locker here Sunday to visit for 10 day* with ed that a women's hospital auxiliary
rent to the hunter taking the first Mrs Wakefield's parents. Mr and meeting will be held Monday. Aug­
antelope of the season to the plant Mrs Earl F a ir Ttvey formerly Uved ust 27 s t 2:30 p. m. In the parikh
hall.
for processing.
Officers Named
By Polio Group
Baker Elks Take
Distriet Title