Nyssa gate city journal. (Nyssa, Or.) 1937-199?, August 21, 1952, Page EIGHT, Image 4

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THE NYSSA GATE CITY JOURNAL. NYSSA. OHlAaUN.
Newell Heights News
>lrv Jufce Borge
r k » M 04.S-R:
C arl Lee H ill, son of Mr and Mr*. Nyssa blood bank
Mr and Mt Earl Sa.iri and chil­
Stanley H ill underwent major sur­
gery last Monday in Portland It dren moved Tuesday into the Chas.
was a kidney operation, for trouble Harris house, which they have rent­
from which he had been suffering ed.
Mr and Mrs. Jake Borge and fam ­
for some tim e He is in the St Vin­
cent hospital in Portland and w ill: ily attended the Malheur County
remain there for another two weeks Farm Bureau picnic in Vale Sunday.
He would appreciate cards or letter- Mrs. Borge presented the 4-H essay
from his friends. Hu address is 2447 winners with plaques on behalf of
Westover. David Hill wu- also at th* the Malheur County Farm Bureau.
Mr. and Mrs. Antonio Martinez
hospital for check up earlier, but
came home to stay with his aunt, ind sons spent Sunday visiting
Mrs. James Stephens in Caldwell last friends in Weiser.
Mr and Mr , M L Kurtz and Mr.
week Mrs. H ill came home from
Portland over the week-end and took ind Mrs. Harold Kurtz and Carolyn
Nancy back with her Monday morn­ vent camping on the north fork of
ing. Stanley H ill went to Portland to the Malheur river from Wednesday
be with his son during the operation until Friday evening of last week.
and remained there the rest of the Mr- Dudley Kurtz kept Jane, in­
fant daughter of the Harold Kurtzs.
week, returning home Friday.
Mr and Mrs. Harold Kurtz and
Mrs. W illiam Ceci of Lo- Angeles
hildren and Mr and Mrs. Dudley
Oalif. and Mrs. W ill Smiley of Nyssa
were guests in the C. B Hill home Kurtz and Elaine visited at the J
3. Durnll home In Parma Sunday
Saturday.
•vening and at the D. M. Stafford
Mrs M L Judd has been ill sinci home in Caldwell.
Friday o f last week Her daughtei
Word has been received by the
and husband. Mr and Mrs John M L. Kurtzs that they have a new
Downer o f Caldwell have been at ?rand^on, born Tuesday to Mr. and
the Judd home the past week await­ Mrs. Merle Kurtz of Corvallis and
ing moving into a new home. Mrs. lamed Scott Allan.
Judd was reported feeling better
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Kurtz nlan
Monday morning
to leave Wednesday for New York
Mrs. Forest Hardman and Diane itate where they will attend a youth
returned from Portland Monday ■onference They will be accompan­
morning after an extensive visit with ied by four young people, one from
relatives.
Pullman, Washington, one from
Mr. and Mrs Jake Borge and chil­ Portland and two from Nampa.
Mrs. Dudley Kurtz assisted by
dren returned from Denver Sunday
morning. Mrs Borge reported her Mrs. Bill Hamilton and Mrs. Dak
mother, Mrs G. H Ball, gradually Glenn entertained at a stork show­
gaining strength from u recent ope­ er Friday afternoon honoring Mrs
Kenneth Price of Ridgeview. Guest-
ration.
Harold Kurtz of Portland preached were members of their card club and
the sermon at the United Presbyter­ friends The gifts werp placed in a
ian church Sunday morning He, his oink and blue doll cradle as a cen­
wife and children have been visiting terpiece on the table.
Mr and Mrs. J. C. Durnil, Wayne
at the home of his parents, Mr and
Mrs. M. L Kurtz, the past week Fol­ »nd Eleanor of Parma and Mr. and
lowing the church services a fellow­ Mrs. M W McLaughlin of Boise
ship dinner was served potluck in \ were guests at the Adrian church
the church parlors. Friends of the ! Sunday to hear Harold Kurtz preach.
Kurtzs stayed to visit with them Eleanor Durnil sang ‘ Prayer P e r­
Mrs. Durlin Hammon spent from fect" as a special for the worship
Tuesday until Friday of last week service. Later Mr. and Mrs. M c­
in the hospital in Nyssa. She received Laughlin visited in the M L Kurtz
three blood transfusions from the home.
NEIGHBORING TOWN TOPICS
An attempt to obtain a railroad
to Julin Day was made by a group
o f G rant county businessmen at a
meeting held Wednesday with rail­
road officials at Boise.
Local
representatives
reported
railroad officials took their request
under advisement and indicated they
would give the matter further con­
sideration and possible investigation.
Th e local men told railroad o f ­
ficials they thought there was more
than sufficient possible revenue to
insure a reasonable profit on their
investment. Among cargoes listed
were lumber, livestock and mineral
ores for outgoing shipments and
finished products and machinery
corning in.—Blue Mountain Eagle.
the two elementary buildings would
be the first in an overall program to
improve the school facilities In the
district.—Th e Weiser Signal.
Annaul N.W. Gem,
Mineralógica!
Show At Caldwell
F
lent.- of the Northwest— and
par
. (rly th e from ta tern Ore-
gjn ii.d southwestern Idaho — will
have an unu-ual opportunity in the
near future to see an outstanding ex­
hibition of rocks and minerals, pol-
prec.ous stones and jewels, and other
Ished specimens, precious and semi-
works of the lapidary arts and sci­
ence-.
The Owyhee Gem and Mineral S o­
ciety of Cald well, is sponsoring the
annual convention and exhibit of
;ne N '.-thwe-,t Federation of Minera-
logical Societies, in a three-day show
and meeting to be held in th gymna­
sium building on the campus of the
College ot Id iho at Caldwell, August
23. 24 and 25.
Membership in the Northwest Fed­
eration of Mineralogical Societies at
pre-ent comprises sixty-four mem­
ber- dub- located in Oregon. W ash ­
ington. Montana, and Idaho; and of
this number more than forty clubs
are bringing extensive exhibits of
minerals, out-tanding rock speci­
mens, unusual rock formations, pet­
rified wood and bone, fossils, crystal
groups, and finished products o f the
lapidary art. Many finely finished
jewels of both cabochon and faceted
types will be included in the collec­
tions to be shown.
In the "precious stone" classifica­
tion, advance information indicates
that there will be exceptional show-
ingi of jade from Wyoming and
California fields, and fire opal from
Australia.
In
the
semiprecious
grouping there will be an almost
endless display of cut jewels from
agate, petrified wood, jasper, tiger-
eye- malachite, etc. Many individual
stones and jewels to be shown are
previous prize winners from former
shows held in years past in Denver,
Oakland, Sacramento, Portland, T a ­
coma, Spokane, Salt Lake. etc.
The program will include illustra­
ted talks on geology, Indian history
and artifacts; information on min­
eral and rock collections, etc. In
place of the customary convention
banquet, a special outdoor buckaroo
supper will be served on Saturday
night, August 23. Barbecued beef and
pork with regular "chuck wagon"
grub will be a feature to be remem­
bered.
Conducted field trips for “ rock
hounds” who want to "roll their
own" will be made into such areas
Silver City mining district, Beacon
Hill near Weiser, and the Graveyard
Point and' Sucker Creek localities
near Homedale. These areas are
famous for some of the finest "cut­
ting material” in nodules, agate.
Jasper, petrified wood, etc., found
in the entire West.
An order was issued Monday by
the Oregon State Sanitary authority
in Portland demanding that the city
of Vale Install and place in operation
a sewage disposal plant by the first
of July, 1953, one month earlier than
the authority had previously indi­
cated as the deadline.
The city has already set aside
$23.000 for such a plant but cost esti­
mates indicate the need for from
$60.000 to $75.000 to complete an
adequate plant. — Malheur Enter­
APP LE V A L L E Y N E W S
prise.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Gotsch of Ten
Many motorists in Payette, Fruit-
land and New Plymouth had com- j
muni.st newspapers tossed in their
parked cars in these three cities
Tuesday afternoon.
The newspapers were named "The
People's W orld” and carried stories I
taken from the New York published j
communist newspaper "Th e Daily j
Worker.” Three strangers, two men
and a women were seen distributing j
the newspapers in parked cars while I
the drivers were absent.-----Payette
Valley Sentinel.
V ivn visited Mo,. . ■ iy evening
•
Ml
a: <1 Mr
An vst Oerke.
M
and Mi
Hu : ry Helt r
Three F rk
M.
ed at
n a t i * • * » . #v -
Mr and Mi
1:1 tllC
. a l ’ette
i H
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f
to Thursday
M
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Tue •
M
M
<1 River
VI:
ent Farrell
\yi
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mn and fishing trip
Mi and Mi
Ralph Nevins of
B o i*
ited Monday at the home
,i
nu .band. Mi and
Mrs August Gerke
hi *5
f
.V
m
WITH A
SAVE YOUR !
Xf/aitwiei
FORAGE HARVESTER
LEADS
IN FIN E
PERFORMANCE
m }
,***■
# Thousands o f users r.
t I
does an outstanding job . Cuts clean, fast,
u n ifo rm ly . . . no shredding. .Makes sila e
th a t packs w e ll. . . no air \ ckets . . . no
spoilage.
T h e G ehl does an equally fine jo b on
windrowed h a y , combined straw, or row
crops like corn and cane. M >wer bar attach­
m ent also available. T h e G .iil is powered
tw o w ays— w ith own motor, or power take­
off from tractor. Built to stand up year
after year.
i VSUTAMl
Gehl Equipment Does the Com­
p le t e Job from Field to Storage
GEHL BLOWER elevate; t>‘ ! lest silo or
now. Accessory power takc-otf fr in blower, or
separate electric drive,operate . ( j .111 self-unload­
ing uagotl and others.
FREE PLANS for making s l If-
loading wagon
box using Gehl parts kit.
WILL DO THE JOB BETTER
Come in and let us show vou why the Gehl will
save you time, money and work.
LET U S SHOW YOU HOW YOU TOO CAN FILL YOUR
SILO OR FIT FOR LESS AND HAVE MORE
The Grealest Labor Saving
.
.
.
Crop Saving Machine Since The Combine!
quipment Lo.
Phone 444
Nyssa, Oregon
The Northwest Nazarene college
board of regents will assume mana­
gement of the Samaritan hospital,
the School of Nursing, and the
Reynold« Home for the Aged, it was
announced today by college officials.
The Samaritan school o f nursing,
under national accreditation, will
continue but is not admitting a new
clu-^ this fall, they said. Officials
explained that personnel of the
board of regents and the hospital
board will become Identical, accord­
ing to plans, the object being to in­
crease usefulness of the hospital to
Payette had its first real polio |
the community.—The Idaho Free scare last Sunday evening when H a l:
Press.
Pitch, 13 months old son of Mr. and
Mrs. Jay Fitch was rushed to a Boise
F ir t steps toward getting two new hospital after being stricken with an
Cla A 1 Nitric! 4;u boj afflicitton bearing all of the symp­
and girl- were taken Monday night toms of polio.
by the ¡chool board of Class A Dis­
Early Monday morning it was re­
trict 431.
ported that the child's condition was
K.u h building would have 12 class­ improved and by Wednesday, today
rooms and would be located, one on attending physicians reported that
the west side and one o»i the east there were no symptoms of cither
side of Weiser.
menengltts or polio.Independent-En­
Thi; step for the construction of terprise.
wanietf is
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Lit Cigaret Tossed
Fact, Fiction Are
Car Brings Fine
New Library Books From
Jesus Barbosa, Nyssa. was fined
Fact and fiction once again are
represented in the new books at the
Malheur county library In Ontario,
which will be ready to circulate on
Saturday. Aug. 30.
" The FY' pie In Your L ife " deals
wiUl human relationships: husband
and wife, parent and child, age and
youth, tudent and teacher, etc. It
i- made up of lectures on psychiatry
lor the layman, originally delivered
at Town Hall in New York.
Nathan Straus reviews housing
problem
making specific recom­
mendation toward the goal of "a
comfortable h me for every Ameri­
can family." in his book "two-thirds
of a Nation "
"Tropical Fish as a Hobby" by
Herbert Axelrod tells how to main­
tain a home acquarium and gives
a chart for rendy reference on 100
with popular and scientific
name-, source, facts on breeding,
etc.
A re\ ed edition of American
Labor Unions by Florence Peterson
includes new chapters on the Inter­
national relations of American labor
in addition to a historical summary
of the growth of the American labor
movement, and information of struc­
ture. government, and activities of
unions It append- a union directory
and a plos-ary of union terms.
Stories comparing forms and hab­
it- of mythical animals In the folk-
i n .Mi Kaat ind West are to be
found In "Fabulous Beasts" by Peter
Lum.
Fiction Is represented by three
novels entirely different In nature
$75 and $1 50 costs in Justice court j
last Thursday morning when he
plead guilty before Judge IXm Gra­
ham to a charge of throwing a
lighted cigaret on a public highway.
City and state police arrested Bar­
bosa Wednesday night at the junc­
tion near Nyssa school.
..
t
Power Steering now available on Super as
well as R o d master -optional a / extra cost .
..
T seems that owning a Buick is some*
I
thing that a lot of folks dream about
—plan fo r—and finally do.
Use the Journal Classified Ads
"The Catherine W heel" by J ea n '
Stafford Is the story of the compli­
cations In which Catherine is in­
volved when problems arise between
John, her former fiance, and Maeve.
his wife and her friend, and when
the children of John and Maeve
come to spend the summer with
Catherine Manuel Komroff's "Ja.te
Star" Is a story of an ambitious
Chinese woman in the days of Ku-
blai Khan, and of Ho Hung, the
trader. Wang Fu. the childhood
sweetheart, anil others whose des­
tinies touched hers "The Black G ar­
denia” is a Hollywood mystery -tory
by Elliot Paul, author of "Murder on
the Left Bank."
More than one man's life, 'T h e
Autobiography of an Unknown In­
dian" by Nirad Chaudhurl i- in in­
terpretation of Indian culture
"Fathers Are Parents. Too" bv O
Spurgeon English and C J Poster
maintains that the father s contribu­
tion to child-rearing Is equally as
Important as the mother's, and gives
Information and advice from the
time of the baby's coming to the
father's own days as grandfather
W e sa y that b ecau se, so m an y tim es,
they say so in w ord s like those above.
T h ose w ord s make us happy, of course
— happy to k n ow w e sell a car which
m eans so much to those w ho ow n it.
B ut they m ake us feel just a little bit sad
as w e ll—sad to realize all the years of
fun such folks have been missing for no
gtKKl reason at all.
around that big F ire b a ll 8 Engine that
p urrs forth a m ighty How of pow er.
Y o u can a ffo r d the gas hills — as any
o w n e r of a 1^52 Buick w ill tell you —
because that high-com pic^ion, valve-
in-head m arvel gets a lot of miles from
a gallon of fuel.
Y n i can afford the extra luxury of a real
million dollar ride—the silken smooth­
ness o f D y n a flo w D r iv e — the e x tra
room and com fort and style that have
put Buick popularity right up at the top .
o f the list, next to the “ low -priced three.”
l\ > r the fact is this:
. I f you can afford any new car, you can
afford a Buick.
Aou can afford the th rill of b o ssin g
Second St. and Good Ave.
S o if you w an t to ow n a Buick—th e re 's.
just one thing to do:
C o m e in—pick the one of your choice—
and let 11 s show you how close the figure
that goes on the bill of sale comes to
w hat you’d pay elsewhere.
A s w e've said before, your first car can
he a Buick. W h y not take the B ig Step
right a w a y —today?
Yquipment, accessories, trim and models are subject
t chan :’c without notice. * Standard on Roadmaster,
optional at i.xtra cost on other Series.
Sure is
true
for'52
Roberts-Nyssa, Inc.
•/
NYSSA, OREGON
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