Nyssa gate city journal. (Nyssa, Or.) 1937-199?, April 04, 1963, Page 7, Image 7

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    THURSDAY. APRIL 4. 1963
THE NYSSA GATE CITY JOURNAL. NYSSA, OREGON
Rep. Smith Describes 1963 Legislature
As Sluggish Although Hard-Working
By Roxy Ritchie
By ROBERT F. SMITH. State Representative
UNION SERVICES SET
Union Good Friday service«
will be held at 8 p.m. April 12
at Nyssa Methodist church.
Easter Sunrise services are
scheduled at 6 aun. April 14 on
cemetery hill.
Ministers of various local
churches will participate in
these services.
Mr. and Mrs Don MacArthur
and Homer of Boise were Sunday
dinner guests of Mrs Esther Ste­
phen and Willy and their house
guests, Mrs. Bruce MacArthur
and Bruce Martin. The occasion
was in observance of the birthday
anniversary of Mrs Bruce Mac-
Arthur. Others helping her cele­
brate Sunday evening were Mr.
I From the Ny»«a Hi^h Bulldog)
and Mrs. James Stephen, Mrs. | Charles Obenchain. senator; Jim
Eugene Stephen, Axel and Stuart Benedict, representative; Jeanie
ently getiing nowhere. The men
The Constitutional Revision and Mr. and Mrs Jim Ritchie Ice Seuell. reporter; and Karen Saito,
in the rowboat resembled the committee, which is attempting cream, cake and coffee were
j lobbyist, will be the delegates at­
legislature in many respects.
to provide a new and revised Con­ served.
tending Idaho YMCA Youth and
Everyone agrees, including the stitution for the people of the
Government Legislature April 19-
negative thinkers, that this is state of Oregon, appears to be in Visit in Apple Valley
Mrs. Joe Stephen and Mrs Eu- j 20 in Boise.
truly a hard-working session. The trouble. Major social legislation
During the session, which is
results of this hard-working ses- of importance has either been gene Stephen visited Saturday
evening in the home of their mo­ I held in the capitol building, a
tabled or will never be discussed. ther. Mrs. Martha Norland in Ap­ mock government is set up and
A minimal addition to the Basic ple Valley. Also a guest there each school introduces a bill. The
School fund appears to be likely was their sister, Mrs. Grover Find­ Nyssa clubs have submitted a bill
and will not solve the problems ley of Madras, who arrived Satur­ pertaining to the eligibility of
of educators or of the property day morning for a visit.
persons under 18 obtaining a
Jeff Ford was elected president taxpayers who share an unusually
hunting license. These bills are
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Lester
Cleaver
of Nyssa Toastmasters at their large burden of the total school and children were Sunday dinner then sent through the Senate and
meeting last Thursday morning. cost.
guests of Capt. and Mrs. Nathan House of Representatives if pass­
Others named to office were Don Civil Defense Budget Cut
I Orr and daughters at Mountain ed in the various committees.
Bowers, educational vice presi­
The four elected delegates will
Higher education requests have Home Air base.
dent; Don Bates, administrative been cut or will be cut to provide
leave
for the capital city Friday.
Mrs. Esther Stephen, Mrs. Bruce I
vice president; Bob Sherbert, ser- only the very necessary additions. MacArthur and son were Tuesday | April 19, to attend the opening
geant-at-arms. Wallace Prowell Ways and Means committee has evening visitors in the Jim Rit-1 sessions. Other Tri-Hi-Y and Hi-
was re-elected as secretary-trea- cut the Civil Defense budget dras­ chie home.
Y members will be able to attend
surer.
the
session Saturday, April 20.
tically against the governor’s de­
Mr. and Mrs. Alva Goodell and
Adviser Douglas Wilkerson stat­
Bud Tibbets presented his sec- sires as well as many others who sons visited Sunday in the Frank
ond basic training speech entitled recognize Civil Defense as an im­ Randall home near Ontario. On ed, “I’m extremely satisfied with
"You Get What You Ask For.” portant insurance policy for dis-1 Tuesday Mrs. Goodell and Bruce, the program to date and am really
looking forward to the Youth and
His talk pertained to “Govern­ aster.
Mrs. Cliff Harris and daughter Government Legislature.”
ment Aid—From Your Own Poc-
To date only 51 bills have been were in Boise.
ket.” Bob Chatelain’s speech, “A passed by both the House and the 1
Mr. and Mrs. Silas Hoffman and
Dramatic Experience,” was his Senate in comparison with 161 at
story of being shipwrecked on this same time during the last Mr. and Mrs. Jim Ritchie visited Date
Max. Min. Prec.
Thursday in Boise at the home of
Iwo Jima after the war.
—
61
March 27
45
session. This does not necessarily Mr. and Mrs. Weir Hoffman.
Paul Ludlow gave the historic indicate that a similar number of
28
63
March
.05
45
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Ewell of
background of the Lenten season. bills have been discussed and stu­
_
63
45
Boise
visited several days last March 29
Bob Love served as toastmaster, died in committee but certainly
—
67
23
45
March
Bowers was topic master and does prove that the important leg­ week at the home of her parents, March 31
48
40
.05
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Stephen and
__
Prowell acted as evaluator. Table islation is still in committee, and
51
38
family. Jennifer Stephen of On­ April 1
topic was “Recreational Opportu­ therefore the majority work of
56
32
tario also visited there several | April 2
nities in Malheur County.”
24
this body seems still to be in the days. All were Sunday visitors in April 3
Owyhee Reservoir Storage
inconspicuous future.
the Roger Norland home at Cald­
April 3, 1089
983,400 Acre
Hope for a short session, poss­ well.
April 3, 1962
262,180 Acre
ibly to end by April 30, has dim­
Mrs. Glenn Hoffman attended 1
inished because everyone recog­ a dinner last Thursday at the ,
nizes the amount of work left to school in Nyssa given by the
(From the Nyssa High Bulldog)
be accomplished.
home economics class, of which ■
“April Love” will be the theme
her daughter, Glenda, is a mem- :
of the girl-ask-boy dance to be Sen. Yiurri Works Hard
held April 5 in the cafetorium.
Everyone’s prayers were an­ ber.
The school dance will be spon­ swered when we learned that Attends Portland Meeting
sored by the Tri-Hi-Y. Money Senator Yturri’s condition was
Mrs. Lester Cleaver went to
will be used to send delegates to good and that apparently the
Portland Monday night of last
Youth and Government.
problem was not a heart ailment. week to attend an executive com­
The Cheroots will play for the Senator Yturri has been working
mittee meeting of the Oregon
dance. Proceeds from the refresh­ so consicentiously that he fails to
PTA congress. She returned home
ment booth will go to the Bulldog take into consideration his own Wednesday night.
staff.
good health. Demands and pres­
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Gressley
Delores Morris is the general sure upon legislators during this
chairman of the dance. The event short period at times are almost visited Monday evening with Mr.
and Mrs. James Stephen.
is to be casual dress (spring cotton unbearable.
Sunday visitors in the Silas
dresses). Tickets will be on sale
House Bill 1551 was heard be- Hoffman home were Mrs. Claude
by the club members during this I fore the State and Federal Affairs
Day of Adrian, Mrs. Ronnie Day,
week.
! committee last week and vitally | Ricky and Lamar, Mrs. Billy Day,
The student body is urged to affects most of the counties in I
attend this event The club plans Eastern Oregon. This bill, which Joe and Tamara of Nyssa and
to make the dance an annual af­ I sponsored, will provide that the Mrs. Jim Ritchie.
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Hoffman
fair.
county courts of each county shall and Glenda were Sunday dinner
give written authority before the guests in the Mancil Bishop home.
Federal Wildlife service institutes j Robbie Hunsucker of Payette was
a bird refuge within that particu­ a weekend guest in the Bishop I
lar county. The present law al­ home.
lows only the governor to veto a
Mr. and Mrs. Loyd Adams visit­
prospective bird refuge.
ed Sunday afternoon in the Wil­
from
lis Bertram home in Nyssa and
Would Give Local Control
also
in the Thuman Hill home at
This bill would give local gov­
ernments an opportunity to nego­ Apple Valley.
Mrs. George Eide and family
tiate for in lieu of taxes with the
Wildlife service and therefore of Vale were Sunday visitors in
protect the tax base and eliminate the home of Mrs. Edith Whipple,
the
need for already overburden­ Kenneth and Leah.
Tea
Mrs. Guy Tanner has been in
It’s special and
ed property taxpayers to pick up
so delicious,..
govern- Emmett for some time helping
the
tab
for
the
federal
because it's
care for her mother, Mrs. Jessie
ment.
flavored for you
with Oranges S Sweet Spice.
Counties now receive only 25 Pearson, who was hospitalized
percent of the revenues from a following a fall.
<-IIfflxA> Tea wM
refuge. Since many of the refuges
Garden Mint
yield little revenue, the counties I
a deliciously new and
historically have received prac­
refreshing flavor in tea.
tically nothing in exchange for
BOTH NOW available at...
taking the land off the tax rolls
and placing it in federal hands.
Services for Reuben B. Baskett
Your indication by letter or were conducted Saturday morn­
resolution on important measures | ing, March 30, 1963, at Lienkaem-
INCORPORATED
to be considered is always appre­ per chapel with the Rev. Paul
Nyssa, Oregon
ciated.
Ludlow of the Nyssa Methodist
church officiating.
Mr. Baskett succumbed March
26 in the Veterans’ hospital at
Boise.
He was born Aug. 30, 1894, at
Freewater, Ore. He had been a
resident of the Adrian area for
the past 42 years. He retired from
farming several years ago and
moved into Adrian. The deceased
was a veteran of World War I.
ED W. PRUYN —RONALD E. PRUYN
Survivors include two sisters,
Mrs. Martha Caldwell of Walla
One Mile North of Nyssa on Highway 20
Walla, Wash., and Mrs. Elizabeth
PHONE 372-3528
Stephenson of Marsing, Idaho.
Mr. Baskett’s wife, Kathryn, pre­
ceded him in death in 1957.
Burial was made in Owyhee
cemetery. Pallbearers were Wil­
liam Ashcraft, George Cartwright.
Frank Bicandi, Vernon Parker,
W. W. Webb and Gayle Martin.
T. /lufii ggish na?Uure the session seems to be continuing.
The 1961 session of the legislature was called a “do-nothing”
S!S4h chbXCaUSliere were no “«Portant changes made and no
earth-shaking bills passed. The opinion of many analysts and
many reporters is that this session of the legislature might
again ie classified as a “do-nothing” legislature.
A cartoon appeared recent-*------------------------------------
ly in The Oregonian depicting sion will undoubtedly be few and
two men in a rowboat, lodged inconsequential. Major changes
high on a rock above the wat­ will center around a cigarette tax
er, rowing madly and appar­ and a change in the income tax.
YMCA Sponsors
Youth Legislature
Toastmasters Name
Ford as President;
Other Officers Told
WEATHER
Tri-Hi-Y To Hold
Dance on April 5
1
PAGE SEVEN
Mrs. Clarice Poor
To Discuss Reading
At Parents' Meeting
Third meeting for parents of
pre-school children will be held
at 2 o’clock Monday afternoon,
April 8. in the primary building,
according to Mrs. Clarice Poor,
elementary principal.
Program topic will be “Your
Child and Reading.” Mrs. Poor
will discuss the various ways a
child indicates his being ready to
learn to read.
Those attending will participate
in some of the reading readiness
and phonics lessons that next
year’s first graders will have.
Some form of demonstration will
be made of first grade reading so
that parents may have an idea of
the performances to expect of a
normal first grader after six or [
seven months of school.
Visitation days for pre-school­
ers will be during the afternoons
of April 16 and 18. Mrs. Poor said.
Four Students Earn 4.0 GPA Scores;
Seventy-Seven
Named to Honor Roll
Earning perfect 4.0 averages at Nyssa high school for the
third nine weeks were Lynn Jackson, junior; Vicki Maxfield,
senior, Jim Benedict, junior; and Linda Morrison, sophomore
Withheld report cards were not eligible for the honor roll.
Achieving grade point averages from 3.5 to 3.9 were Geor­
gia Peterson. Jeanie Seuell, Hazel Dillon, Dale Laurance
Steve Hunt, Marcia Wyckoff,#------------------------- ------------- -
Vic Haburchak, Lynda Cun- Gail Flinders, D. L. Fife, David
dall, Owen Berrett, Brenda Sherbert, Sandra Weeks, Carolyn
Draper. Judy Laurance, Jo- Lowe, Marilyn Gonyer, Sid Lan­
Ann Durfee, Patty Urrv, Judy caster, Gerald Wyckoff, Nadine
Nedry, JoAnne Strickland.
Spitze, Ralph Leavitt, Gene Jones,
Greg Sumner, Chuck Oben- Noble Morinaka, Wayne Over­
chain. Karen Smith. Karen Saito, stake and Donna Stam.
Pamela Alexander, Louise Carter,
Sondra Holmes, Beth Banner, Su­
san Schenk. Joyce Morinaka, Toni
Fife Suzanne Stunz, Chris Wy-
ckoff and Judy Maulding.
3.0 to 3.4 Students Listed
Those students earning 3.0 to
3.4 are Virginia Lewis, Glenda
Hoffman, Caron Jackson. Mike
Hirai. Wilma Williamson, Joan
Set Friday Hewett,
John Wohlcke. Robert
Carolyn Pond, Eugene
For Mrs.
Vest I Corfield.
Graveside services for Mrs. Brown, Mary Evans, Jay Garner,
Callie Vest, 78. will be conducted Nancy Lytle, Vicki Newman, Con­
at 10:30 Friday morning, April nie Irby, Margie Morton, Larry
5, 1963, at Nyssa cemetery. Mrs. Hirai. Roy Gibson, Leonard Low-
Vest succumbed early Wednes­ strip. Doug Skeen, Morris Wil­
liams.
day at her home near Nyssa.
Chuck Corak, Verna Clarkson,
She was born July 5, 1884. in
Denver, Colo. The deceased had Mary Jo Van Zelf, Alan Cottle,
been a resident of the Nyssa area Ellen Saito, Tone Wahlert. Cherie
for the past 35 years.
Okano, Sherry Hust, Pattv Points,
Mrs. Vest’s husband, Robert,
preceded her in death on Dec.
FRONT END
ALIGNMENT
and
WHEEL
BALANCING
Services
Callie
22. 1962.
Among survivors is a sister,
Mrs. Grover Vest of rural Nyssa.
Towne Garage
Phone 372-3570
Nyssa, Oregon
Complete Sharpening Service
ATTEND ONTARIO MEETING
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Simpson
attended a meeting March 27 of
the Hammond Organ society in
Ontario. Featured on the program
were Jack Donovan of Boise and
Mrs. Grant Jones of Nyssa.
CLASSIFIED ADS
Get Results!
General Repairing
SAWS—KNIVES—SCISSORS—MOWERS—TOOLS
“Ideal Mower Sharpener”
Pick Up and Delivery Service on Mowers
Small Items May Be Left at Coast-to-Coast Store
"ALL WORK GUARANTEED"
EARL ALEXANDER
Route 1. Box 107
Nyssa, Oregon
Phone 372-2834
LOOK YOUR BEST AT EASTER
SHOP THE MERC!
Food
News
R. Baskett Succumbs
In Boise Hospital;
Rites Held Saturday
LADIES* DRESSES
Choose from Our Bouquet of Lovely EASTER
DRESSES . . . Fashionably New Silhouettes,
Fascinating Fabrics in Spring Pastels, Prints or
Solids.
Regular Prices $6.98 to $8.98
NOW-ONLY
IUNIOR PETITES
BODY REPAIR and PAINTING
LADIES’
HEELS
Reg. S6.S8
Free Estimates!
To S9.F8
PRUYN'S AUTO REPAIR
4
Girls’ Dresses
El Sombrero Cafe
will be open
FRIDAY, APRIL 5, at 2 p.m.
— By Owners —
MR. and MRS. MANUEL DeFUENTES
414 East Main St.—Nyssa
Nyssa Births . . .
March 28—To Mr. and Mrs. Ro­
man Lopez of Wilder, a 6-pound,
10*4-ounce daughter, Sinthia Ma­
ria.
April 1—To Mr. and Mrs. Don­
ald Connell of Nyssa. 6-pound,
12-ounce daughter, Brenda Jo.
April 1—To Mr. and Mrs. Jerry
Gyllenskog o f Ontario, an 8-
pound, lOVfc - ounce son, James
Read.
April 2—To Mr. and Mrs Wayne
Markham of Veronia, Ore., a 7-
pound, 11-ounce son. Charles An­
drew.
• • •
FOR TEENS and SUB-TEENS
NEW FASHION
Shapes, Shades —
Elegant Looking
Leathers of Fine
Quality!
WILSON'S MARKET
♦ J
• 1
I!
♦T
ALL-NEW
SPRING
SELECTION
— of —
COLORS and
STYLES !
299
Io 499
Prettiest for Easter
PEACHES and CREAM—By Apparel, Inc
They'll Love These — Sizes 7 io 14
3
WE GIVE, WITH ALL
PURCHASES,..
GOLD STRIKE
STAMPS!
NYSSA . . . OREGON
98
up