THURSDAY. OCTOBER 18. 1962 THE NYSSA GATE CITY JOURNAL. NYSSA. OREGON R. Dejmal Spends Summer in Ecuador Photographing Various Indian Tribes By Mrs. Vern L. Smith LINCOLN HEIGHTS — Roger Dejmal has returned to Westmont college at Santa Barbara, Calif , after spending the summer months with Wycliffe Translators in Ecuador, South America. He spent most of the time at their jungle base at Limoncocha. From there he went by plane, canoe, jeep or truck to visit sev­ eral Indian tribes, both jungle and highland type. He accompanied one missionary by canoe to the Siona Indian tribe to deliver primers, the first writ­ ten word ever to be published in the Siona language. The Gospel of Mark will soon be written in that language. Main purpose of Dejmal’s trip was to take and make black and white photographs for publication and to prepare colored slides for use in deputation work of Wy­ cliffe Translators missionaries. He also helped the agriculturist in the fields. Before coming back to the U.S., he spent a week in Guatemala City helping the translators in their press room assembling and backing Gospel of Luke books in the Carib language. He is a son of Mr. and Mrs. Amos Dejmal of rural Ontario. He was graduated from Ontario high school in 1959 and is a mem­ ber of the Malheur Butte Baptist church. Mrs. Louis Wiggins spent a re­ cent week at the home of her son, John and family at Pendleton. John is still confined to a wheel­ chair after breaking his leg in a combine accident during wheat harvest. Floyd Tilson of Emmett was a guest speaker Oct. 14 at both the Mr. and Mrs. Wilson Witt of By Ruth Bowers morning and evening services in KINGMAN KOLONY—Mr and Newell Heights were Saturday Malheur Butte Baptist church. He also gave the messages when Mrs. Bill Randolph of Bend left ( afternoon callers at the Carl members of the church visited the Sunday for their home after visit- 1 Begeman home. Mrs. Bernal Maybon is visiting Nyssa rest home and the county ing since Friday at the Virgil 1 jail inmates at Vale that after- Viers home The Randolphs came the Ham Franks family at Moun­ for the opening of pheasant sea- ( tain Home. j noon. son. Mr. and Mrs. Shirley Horn and Rudds Have New Daughter family of Boise were Sunday din­ Mr. and Mrs. Bill Rudd are Mr. and Mrs. Don McClellan, ner guests at the Horn home parents of a daughter, Virginia Mr. and Mrs Ed Brown and Mr. , Laray, born Sunday, Oct. 7. She Return from Hazelton joins a brother, Jimmy. Grand­ and Mrs. Milt Ashton of Coquille Mr. and Mrs. Dale Ashcraft re- parents are Mr. and Mrs. Jim are pheasant hunting in the area turned home Tuesday evening af- and are camping at the Herschel Rudd and Mr. and Mrs. Bill Walz. ter spending several days in Haz­ Cavour E. Redfield was guest Thompson place. elton where they helped Dick dig speaker Oct. 7 at Butte Baptist Mr and Mrs. Orville Mishler of his potatoes. church. He is a missionary pre­ North Bend arrived last week at Mrs. Thelma Hammon was hos­ paring to teach at Morrison Aca­ the E. R. Brandt home after a tess to the Happy Dozen Pinochle demy, Taichung, Taiwan. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Barnes week’s deer hunting trip to the club Friday afternoon at her were recent guests at the Dean Wallowa mountains. They were home Attending from Kingman Jessup home in Midvale, Idaho. accompanied here by a party of Kolony were Mrs. Dale Ashcraft, Mrs. Jessup had just returned pheasant hunters comprised of Mrs. Wesley Piercy and Mrs. Wil- from the hospital with their new Hoy Hooper of Empire, Merlin j liam Toomb. Wilson, Austin Davis. Roy John­ Mrs. Charlie Bowers spent daughter, Janalee. son, Jerry Dority and Tom Laskey Tuesday in Boise visiting at the Mr. and Mrs. Don Good and William Gussie home. daughters of Caldwell, Mr. and of Coos Bay. The pheasant hunters and the Mrs. Melvin Henry and son of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Callaham and Ontario were Sunday visitors at Bob Haney family were Saturday Earl Callaham were Saturday the home of the ladies’ parents, evening dinner guests in the callers on Mrs. Richard Callaham Brandt home. Mr. and Mrs. Louis Wiggins. and children. Teresa Lane attended a birth- Young People Have Parly Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Viers re- day party Sunday afternoon for Young people of Malheur Butte Baptist church had a party Satur­ 1 ceived a call last week from their Holly Ballou of Big Bend. Mr. and Mrs. Don Thompson day evening at the Bill Walz son, Joe of Eugene. He informed them that they had weathered the and Mari Kay of Seneca spent home. storm all right but were without Mr. and Mrs. Walter Rudolph electricity and had to use the fire­ the weekend with his parents, | Mr. and Mrs. Herschel Thompson. of Spokane, parents of Mrs. Art place for heat. I Mr. and Mrs. Ron Thompson and Andersen, were recent guests in I Collette of Boise came Saturday Brandts Return from Trip the Anderson home. Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Brandt re­ and also Gary Thompson arrived Mrs. Geneva Johnson of Denver is a house guest of Mrs. Mary turned Sunday evening after a after being delayed for the night Winslow. Mrs. Johnson’s mother, six-week trip that took them to in Albany due to the storm. Mr. and Mrs. Al Thompson and Mrs. Nellie Hickman, succumbed several of the Southern states. in July. They were former resi­ They visited in South Carolina | Mrs. Marie Earp visited in Em­ and on the Atlantic coast before mett Monday with Mrs. Emma dents of Ontario. 1 Thompson. returning home. Mrs. Mildred Vaughan of Salem SUNDAY DINNER GUESTS and Mrs. Rex Walters of Boise Mr. and Mrs. John Obenchain were weekend guests at the Al of Boise and Mr. and Mrs. Ray Thompson home. Other Sunday Rucker of Parma were Sunday dinner guests in the Thompson dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Jim home were Mr. and Mrs. Herb Obenchain and family. Andrews and family of Caldwell. Mr. and Mrs. Johnny Thiel and Paula were Sunday evening call- ers at the James Phifer home. Mr. and Mrs. Bill Toomb visit- ed Saturday and Sunday with the Gordon Dicksons of Ironside and were also successful in getting FUUiP their deer. Mr. and Mrs. Herb Thomas of Weiser and Mr. and Mrs. Bill Toomb were Wednesday evening j dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. 1 Wesley Piercy. VISITS FROM COLORADO Record Enrollment Hunter Safety Course Mrs. Gladys Igo of Lamar. Colo., Of 10,000 Reported arrived Oct. 7 to visit her son-in- Completed Last Week By OSU News Bureau i law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. By 19 Young Nyssans Guy Sparks and family. Mrs Igo Oregon State university's en­ rollment this fall has inched over the 10.000 mark, an 11 per­ cent increase over a year ago. The new record enrollment is 1000 more than the fall of 1961 and 2000 more than 1960. The record is expected to stand just until next fall, how­ ever, President Janies H. Jen­ sen said, because increases are predicted every year of the next decade. New student enrollment is up 8 percent and that of returning students. 13 percent. The grad­ uate school, which has 1070 stu­ dents enrolled this fall, recorded an 18 percent increase. The school of science is the largest school on campus with nearly 2100 students enrolled, including graduate students in A hunter safety course was also came to help care for her new grandson, David Wayne completed Oct. 11 by 19 local youths. The group received four Sparks, who was born Oct. 4. hours of safety instruction in a class conducted by Ed Mason, Salt Curbs Dusting Delbert Malloy and Harold Kurtz. Salt worked into a dirt or All members passed the written gravel roadbed will curb dusting test and will receive certificates and make a smoother, more com­ of competency from the Oregon pact surface. Some clay must be State Game commission. present. Completing the course were Bill Young, Ruth Hansen, Beth Ban­ science. Other schools in order ner, Jerry Strom, Paul Hall, John of enrollment include engineer­ Wohlcke, Richard Young, Dennis ing. education, business and Ashby, Pat Dority, Alan Hirai, technology, humanities and so­ Leonard Lowtrip, Michael Jef­ cial sciences, agriculture, home feries, Christy Wyckoff, Tracy economics, forestry and phar Skeen, Dean Banner, Norman Ha­ macy. ney, Theo Ashby, Larry Heinzen Men students outnumber coeds and Gerald Wyckoff. by about 6900 to 3100 this fall at OSU. The freshman class totals 2815. Classified« Get Quick Resultai Attention Jlwti&iá,! 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MOSS PAINT dealer Hunters Arrive in Kingman Kolony For Beginning of Pheasant Season PAGE NINE FIRESTONE DEALER STORE 417 Main Street Phone 372-2124 Return from Colorado Mr. and Mrs. Earl Kygar and Jay returned Saturday evening after viistng a week at Delta, Colo., with Mr. and Mrs. Gene Youngman and at Orem, Utah, in the John DeGood home. Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Keck return­ ed Saturday after a week’s suc­ cessful deer hunting trip to Bates, Ore. Their son, Houston of Rich­ land, Wash., accompanied them home for a week’s stay. Also meeting and hunting with the Kecks were Dallas Keck and family of Portland. Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Piercy called Sunday evening on Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Hill of Newell Heights. Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Piercy had dinner Thursday at the Rube Graham home in Star They later attended funeral services in Boise for Everett Hobson of Lubbock, Texas, who had been killed in a plane wreck. Attend Homecoming Game Mr. and Mrs. Wiley Callister ac­ companied their son, Wayne, to the College of Idaho homecoming game with Lewis and Clark Sat­ urday afternoon at Caldwell. Mr and Mrs. Carlyle Jensen and daughter of Ontario were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Wiley Callister. Ernie Hointon, Wiley Gardner of Dallas, Ore., and Jack Francis of Portland, accompanied by Her­ schel Thompson, returned from deer hunting Thursday and were ' dinner guests at the Thompson' home. Mr. and Mrs. Bill Marshall and Johnny of Boise visited Saturday | at the Oscar Schafer home. Oscar Schafer received word this week that his sister, Mrs. P. C. Call of Pocatello, is critically ill. Mr. and Mrs. Alvon McGinnis I spent Thursday afternoon visiting Mr and Mrs. Walter Pinkston. Attend FHA Meeting in Ontario The Misses Effie Laan and Cheryl Brock attended an Eastern Oregon FHA district meeting Sat- . urday in Ontario. Mr and Mrs. Don Fox visited in Payette Wednesday at the home of his uncle, Ernest Camp­ bell, who had just been released from the hospital. Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Kreager were among several couples attending a dinner party Tuesday night at the Thunder Egg room in Vale­ honoring Mrs. Bob Holmes on her | birthday anniversary. Mr. and Mrs Mike Castro and family are moving this week from the Ronald Batt farm to the for- j mer Vernal Sharp place. Mrs Art Sparks attended a Ladies association meeting Thurs­ day afternoon at the Presbyterian church in Adrian * Now It’s easy to lower a celling, beautify a room and sound condition in one quick project. Hang lightweight channels at desired height and drop in tile design of your choice. See Bestway for details! Wide choice of tiles to fit channels-2' x 4' x W. XODXXM