THE NYSSA G ATE New Non Fiction Books At Library The M dheur County Library \ pin lilt ' circulation another u.- e-ung group of nt v l » on Sa day. September 27 In "Search A fter Sunri-e" Vt i Brittain describes her visit to Imi.a with an international delegation at the invitation o f Gandhi, who w.t assassinated betore they arrived She gives her impressions o f people and places, but her chief concern : the outlook for modern India a:. . SH ELL Products and Service BLUNCK SHELL SERVICE M H t l the infuence of its leaders, past and r . re. Gai.diu, and Nehru. A study of man and nature in the , -hich defends the tropics a h.ibitat and explode' popular is "W here Winter Ne\er via r ' medical specialist in each of x f.elds analyzes gams made in l.«6) m "Fron' er- of Medicine.” Twelve Cosv And W e're in Clover” is the story of a man who it 53 left his jgirk as a new-paper- nun and bought a farm. Twelve cows ame with the farm, and Mr Rehm iound himself, inexperienced though he was, in the dairy business. "Our Children Today" contributes he viewpoints of many specialists on the child in the early years, the meaning of discipline, growing up. c.unging goals of education, and the impact of our world. "Corsage C raft” by Glad Reusch ■did Mary Noble gives fundamentals for beginners, including growing and conditioning the material as well as making corsages w.thout flowers. One chapter suggests corsage de- 'lcns su.table to every month and and special event of the year. A chronicle of the unusual in na ture i- Frank Lane's "The Animal Wonder W orld.' Such oddities as fi i with an ear for music and bird hitch hikers are a part of this fas cinating account. Calamity Jane's teal name was Jane Burke. V / ~ CITY JO U R N A L. NYSSA. OREGON. Kingman Kolony Konlacis Fall Dangerous For Pedestrians Mr and Mr* IVale Ashcraft visited at John Day w.th their son, Dvk. and family last week Dick is in the : ho-opital. Gregary Katnerine and Johnny Furly darkne of September and Thiel and Billy Duy were dinner the months .head spells trouble for guests at the Oscar Schafer home Sunday Oregon pedestrains, the secretary of Mr and Mr- Bill Toombs visited state's traffic safety division warn at the Lewis Johnson home at Vale ed today. ! Saturday evening The division said statewide acci Mr and Mrs. Guy Moore made a dent records .-.how Oregon’s "open trip to Tillamook one day last week season" on pedestrains begins in Mr and Mrs Frank Miller and September and reaches its peak in family, of Weiser; Mrs E B. Butler, December These are the months of Ontario, and Mrs Mary McCon when daylight hours grow shorter, nell, o f Nyssa, visited Sunday even the division pointed out, adding that ing at the A1 Thompson and Her- 71 percent of all fatal pedestrian schal Thompson homes. Mr. and Mrs. Claude Day and mishaps last year took place at family attended a surprise birthday- - night. party at the Lloyd Cleaver home Adding to walkers' hazard will be Saturday evening In honor of Mrr. the return to standard time by a Day's sister. Mrs. James Ritchie. large number of Oregon communi Mr and Mrs. Don Fox and Shar ties, which means that the early on attended the funeral o f Don’s 1 evening traffic rush will coincide grandmother in Nyssa Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. John T lrel are visit vith fading daylight each day, o f ficials noted. The month-by-month ing relatives in Council Bluffs, la. Mr. and Mrs. Bill Toombs and pedestrain accident count last year shows 109 mishaps in September, Dickie were Friday evening dinner guests at the Gordon Toombs home. 117 in October, 100 in November and Mr. and Mrs. Lynn Hurst attended 191 in December September and No the sale in Meridian Friday. vember tied in fatalities w ith 11 | Mr. and Mrs. Guy Moore have sold each. their ranch to Mr. and Mrs. Mont Th e division said that of 1951’s gomery, of Clearfield, Utah, and total of 89 walkers struck and killed, have bought the Dunn place, the 63 percent were violating a traffic old overstreet homestead, on the law or engaging in some obviously Owyhee. Mr and Mrs Bob Haney have re unsafe walking action. Eighty-one percent were wearing dark clothing. cently purchased the William Scott residence on Enterprise avenue. Th e road crew employed by Ed John Adams was America's first Brandt surprised him recently when minister to England. it came to help pour cement for a shop to be built for the road district. , Mr. and Mrs. Bob Haney and i children and Mr. and Mrs. Will Smith and daughter, of Parma, were Sunday visitors at the Ed Brandt home. Seed Sample Mailing Regulations Revised HARTFORD _ _ot only does Red Diamond Superphosphate, applied in toe Fall, produce as good or better results than when applied in the Spring, but it saves time for the busy Spring season when other work MUST be done. INSURANCE *€C S O IL B U 1 L D E R S CALDW ELL HARTFORD BOISE Phone 9-8452 Phone 2-1511 SIM PLO T WESTF.RN ID AH O PRODUCE CO. and other Simplot dealers BE RNARD EASTMAN Real Estate Inaurane« Phone 64 t * p r * « * a f J*« HARTFORD F U I IN SU R A N T COMPANY HARTFORD ACCI DINT amé INDURMI! Y H a rtfo rd . C m m i N m I A new interpretation of posal reg ulations covering shipments of seed samples to the OSC seed laboratory i prohibits writing directions for test- ! ing on the package if fourth class j postage rates are claimed, the lab- I oratory has been notified. W ritten statements, words or in itials giving instructions to the lab oratory as to the type of seed test desired makes the package first class mailing material, postal officials have ruled. First class rates are con siderably higher titan fourth. To meet the needs of seed growers and others for an easy, convenient mailing label that qualifies for mini mum fourth class postage, the lab oratory has printed a supply special labels. These labels require a 3-cent stamp to cover the information that can be filled in on the blanks pro vided and then takes the regula’ fourth class postage covering the seed cample. Available from all county agent offices, the labels have space for writing In the return address, kind of seed, lot number, and type of test desired. LOCAL NEWS EVERY TRIP new C M C 145 H .P. Highway Tractor — the 472-30, will pack more payload and profit into 45,000 pounds o f gross capacity than any similarly equipped middleweight huilt. T HIS It represents new advances in truck engineering that eliminate useless weight in engine and chassis design. Result: You can haul as much as 1,200 pounds of bonus payload w ith out exceeding this G M C ’ s rated capacity by an ounce! It is both trim and solid—engineered with the same traditional ruggedness you find in the largest G M C ’ s. Available in conventional und cab* over-engine models. Standard equip* ment at no extra cost includes G M C ’s great new 145 H .P . engine, full air brakes, and husky rear axle rated to accommodate 10:00/20 tires. Come in today and compare this sen* sational C M C 470’s payload, power and price! Nowhere else will so little buy so much in a middleweight truck! OMC'S NfW 470 M U M HIQM. WAY TRACTOt - gasolinn- powered by the revolu tionary n e w G M C " 3 0 2 ,, valve • in • head engina, most powerful for its weight in truck history! Record 7.2 high com pression! GASOUNI 4.(00 GVW Te »0.000 GO* A walrus' whiskers are pieces of cartilage, and not hairs. Alaska is more than twice as large a* Texas Another General Motors l nine R O B E R T S -N Y S S A , Inc. «N O GOOD M I N I * Y » i t i é » W l w « • • a u o »d Ir IK il w ith yovr C M C dooJer Mr and Mrs Neil Dnronick a r rived home Tuesday after .-pending over a week in Yakima Mr Dim- mick's father. W L Ditnmick under went surgery at the St Elizabeth hospital in that cit\ Sunday, Mr and Mrs. Homer D:deriek.-en vi-ited his grandfather. Erne-t Ze.-iger wh > is in the Mercy hospital m Nampa with a cracked hip Wednesday the Diderlcksens made a trip to W illov Creek to the home of his sister. Mr- Conly Lock ett. Mr. and Mrs Fred Mitchell drove to Boise Sunday to visit their twin grandchildren, a boy and a girl, children o f Mr and Mrs. Morgan Hansen. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Schweizer al-o made the trip to Boise Saturday. Mr-. Gene Cleaver and children spent an afternoon visiting at the home of Mrs Magnus Ekanger. "School Days,” a good subject for remembrance- and quizzes, was fet- tured at the Friday evening meeting of Chalk Butte Gr.u t Follow.n | the business and entertainment, lunch was served by Mis- Edith W il liam Election of officer- will be held at the next meeting of the grange. Sunday dinner gue-t- at the Lewis MlDchell home were Mr and Mrs Walter HUlis and Mr and Mrs. M el vin Pendarvis and family Pleasant Hour club meet Thurs day, Oct. 9. at the home o f Mrs. O. P. Counsil with Mrs Ira Price assis ting. Mr. and Mrs. Keith T illm a n and children called at the Homer Brew er home Sunday and both families attended the jalopy races, along with the Oce Schweizers, Roy Holmes, Dlmmick-s, Pomeroys, and Peg Wyatt. Overnight guests Saturday even ing at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Neil Dimmick were Mrs. Dimmick's neph ew, Wesley Nathan and two sons of Lewiston, Idaho and her nephew, Bob Handley and wife o f Grand- jean Lodge, Idaho. Nathans returned home with a bay half-Arabian colt, a gift from the Gimmicks. Mr. and Mrs. Jim Belveal and family moved Saturday to Nyssa where Mr Belveal will work at the sugar factory. Sunday dinner guests at the C lif ford W olfe home were Mrs. Veva Caistle and Keith Pi veil. Nancy W olfe iwho was ill and confined to bed for several days, is now up and doing fine. Mrs. H. Okanao and children drove to Jamieson Sunday to visit at the home of her sister, Mrs Fred Arari. Monday Mr and Mrs. Ora Newgen and Patty Rice visited in Idaho. Patty visited at the home o f her aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Th °o Fisher o f Eagle. They were supper guests at the Boise home o f Manon Hillis and his mother, Currie. Florence Richardson, friend of the Ora Newgens, left Wednesday for Hawthorne, California, near Los Angeles, where she will spend the winter. House guest the past 'Week at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Homer Brew er was (Mae O ’Donnell of Buhl, Ida., maternal aunt o f Homer. This com ing week she will visit at (he home of her nephew. Don Brewer. Mr. and Mrs. Don Brewer, Mr and Mrs. Lawrence Dimmick and Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Crocker made a trip to the Steens Mountains Sun day. Terry Flanagan ran a rusty spike into his elbow Saturday and had to have a tetanus shot. Mr and Mrs. Charles Wilson, of Roswell, spent a day last week visit ing at the home o f their son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Har ley Wilson. Ed Campbell, o f Drewisy, who sold some cattle Tuesday at the Ontario sale, was an overnight guest at the home o f his friend. W alt Hillis. Melvin and Bob Pendarvis made a trip to Portland last week for M el vin's physical examination. Enroute home they stopped at Independence U) visit their father. Mrs. Amelia Fyllingness arrived home the first o f last week from a five weeks' trip. She visited at Beres- ford, South Dakota, a sister in Sioux Falls, and another in Minnesota. She also Journeyed to Itasca Lake, the Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Bybee return ed Wednesday from a trip to Utah where they visited the Logan tern- I pie and relatives in Salt Lake. Mr. and Mrs. D. V. Ashcraft jour- | neyed to M l Vernon 8unday to see their son, Dick, who is in the Prairie i City hospital. They returned with their two grandchildren. The Walter Ashby family attended the L D S. temple excursion at the Logan temple in Utah. They left on their trip Thursday and returned home Saturday evening Marsing visitors were Mr. and Mrs. Mel Beck They enjoyed a pleasant Sunday afternoon as guests o f his sister. Mrs. S. M Buxtom. Olisti l*,JM 6 VW Te 100,0*0 6 0 » U m Gat« City Journal N IM H , O U O O N i ClmmtJmé A M P A C E SEVEN Langley hr;me vere Mrs. Pete W il- ill »4*U -ScU. J* P ic . and M rs. B. tly Hadley, of Oakland. Cahl ■ mia, pent a week visiting ..i the lome o f Mr- Hadlev parents, Mr. at.d Mrs . George Folk- man. Sunday dinner guests in then honor were Mr. and Mr-. Delbert | Garner and f imily. Mr. and Mr- Wayne Gam e : and family. Jack Simpson, Mr. ind M Carl Simp- 1 .-on. and Mrs. Ora Ci ■ r’ ¡knian, of Hooper, Utah Mr i. ( 1r i e Folkrna 11 left for her h ime Monday after ' -pending almo.it a V >">• - visiting ai Che heme of her dau¿ • ■ M . Mr-, ca rl Simp-on and on. Gt ">rge Folkman Mr and Mrs W illi am Gregg and fam ily and Oeorge CIregg left Sat- urday on a trip to Mo.-es Lake, i Wash. Leaving Saturday morning, were Mr. and Mrs. M A. Rataezyk who are planning on visiting in Wash ington and western Oregon. Mrs. Lym a n Pomeroy Pliant* M i ; Mrs. L. J. Mclntire and children spent three days at the home of her cousin, Mrs. Pat Sweeney, of Caldwell, returning Sunday evening. After spending the summer months in Lewiston, Idaho, Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Lane returned to Nyssa during the latter part o f last week. Mr. and Mrs. Phil Cook and daughter, Lois, of Corvallis, .were guests last week at the Ralph Cap per home. They were enroute to Denver. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Tayer, of Seattle, were visiting with her par ents, Earl Ward and Mrs. Earl La r son. Mrs. Tayer is formerly Miss Vel ma Ward. Harold Tayer is attend ing dental school while in Seattle. Mr. and Mrs. George McKee re turned to their home Thursday after spending a week with their daugh ter, Mrs. Max Schweizer and son, Jack McKee and families at Kenne wick. Visiting Monday at the George McKee home were Jack English and Bob Clark, both cousins of Mr. and Mrs. George McKee. Mr. and Mrs. John Goddard and family spent the week-end with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Boyd Shaffer at Boise. Visitors at the Carlos Buchner home Sunday were Mrs. Bob Posley, ! Bill, John and James Roberts, of 1 Caldwell. Mrs. Posley and Mrs. j Buchner are sisters. "•up to 1,2 0 0 pounds morel 25. 1952 Sunset Valley Speaks Phone M ! B2 you’ll do well with the SI MPLOT SEPTEM BER M r * ( laude Day Year in and year out Get Simplot Red Diamond NO W for alfalfa, clover, moun tain and meadow hay, grasses, pasture, Fall seedings, green manure crops, etc. It s plentiful, and the price is right at THURSDAY — ■' source of the Mis-; James Langley is having some land-leveling done by Bybet" It is now third cutting < hay Homemakers of the valley hat been elbow-deep in fruit canning Hostesses for the members f the Worthwhile club meeim.a we: Mes- dames Homer Didericksen and Wayne Robb at the Robb i« ine Thursday afternoon. Mrs. 'rank Perko presented an mte itm g synopsis of early Oregon 1 'tory Roll call was telling of the most in teresting place tlie member had visited. Refreshments ot home-made ice cream and cake were served. The October meeting will be a covered- dish luncheon at the home of Mrs. Th e South American Incas were George Schweizer with Mrs Ma mus known as Children of the Sun. Ekanger as co-hostess. A "m itre" is a bi.-hop’s hat. Returning from M o - t s Lake. Wash, this Monday were Pete Robb u d Th e boa constrictor is not a poi Mr and Mr- Wayne Robb and iuu- sonous snake ily. Th e Klondike gold rush took plave Dinner gue ts Sunday at the Jamea in 1896 We Slill Have Peaches . . . HALES-ELBERTAS Fruit y o u like at prices y o u like BRING CONTAINERS Phone 372 Kenneth Syme Orchards 5 m i. S.W. o f Fruitland on Highway 95 THESE SPARK' _ FEATURES • SAVE /« S«s U* Today For Crop Defoliation DUSTING SPRAYING 4 , ' C YOlf M O N E Y j, • A D D TO YOUR ' COMFORT j SPARK gives both radiant and circu* lating heat- Efficient, low-cost operation. Approved by Underwriters’ Laboratories, Inc. to burn No. 3 stove oil. ’........' \ Compact design; low vent for iireplace * installation. VISIBLE FAN-SHAPED FLAME. *4 '! Sensible price. CHARTER TRIPS RENTALS We Can Serve AH Your Flying Need« George Flying Service Myma Airport Pfcon* 201-W Demonstration Saturday, March 29 at 4 P. M. Only NYSSA FURNITURE CO. (Acna* From Reclamation Office) O 1st St. and Good Ave.