Nyssa gate city journal. (Nyssa, Or.) 1937-199?, July 28, 1966, Page 7, Image 7

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    THURSDAY, JULY 28, 1968
THE NYSSA GATE CITY JOURNAL. NYSSA, OREGON
J—
August .Vedding TV Christian Women
Aug. 3 Meeting
Plans Announced Plan
Mrs. Everett Zimmerman of
will be featured speaker
By Nyssa Parents Balter
at the monthly luncheon meeting
MISS VERNA CLARKSON
... To Marry Payette Man
•
♦
August wedding plnns for Miss
Verna Jean Clarkson «nd Gordon
Dewey are announced by the
bride - elect’« parents, Mr. and
Mrs Carl Clarkson of Nyssa, Her
fiance is a son of Mr. and i Mr«.
Lawrence Dewey of Payette.
Miss Clarkson is a graduate of
Nyssa high school, an Ore - Ida
Foods company employee and u
student at Treasure Valley Com-
munity college
The future bridegroom
graduated from Payette
school and is in the U. S. Air
Force, stationed at McChord base
in Washington state.
*-•
ATTEND FAMILY REUNION
Mr. and Mrs Ralph Young and
children attended a recent re­
union of the Young family at
Logan canyon in Utah.
of Treasure Valley Christian Wo­
men’s club. The session will be
held ut 1 p.m. Wednesday, Aug. 3.
nt Bust Side cafe in Ontario.
The speaker, a wife, mother and
licensed real estate saleswoman,
is a past winner of an interna­
tional speech contest. In the field
of culinary arts, she was once a
top winner in national food pro­
ducts competition.
For her Swedish ham balls re­
cipe, she received a >1.000 cash
award, plus an all-expense paid
trip for two to Minneapolis where
she visited the Betty Crocker
kitchens.
Outstanding musical entertain­
ment will be furniifhed at the
Wednesday afternoon meeting by
Mack McCray, a former piano
student of Julliard's School of
Music. Also on the program will
be Marca McCray, a soprano who
studied at the University of Red­
lands.
Back-to-school fashions will be
shown by Opal’s Fashion center,
and school-age daughters are ia-
sued a special invitation.
All women of the area are in-
vited to attend. Reservations may
be made by calling 889-8276, On­
tario.
»—♦
ARRIVE FROM CAMAS
Mr. and Mrs. Don Eldredge and
family of Camas, Wash., arrived
Sunday to spend a week visiting
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Tom
Eldredge.
#-*
VISITORS FROM UTAH
Mr. and Mrs. Marlin Hansen of I
Smithfield, Utah, Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Jensen and family of
Ogden were recent guests in the
Kenneth Cottle and Frell Blair
homes.
When you can’t see
her laughing face.
her voice can
tiokle you pink with
a Long Distance call.
Go ahead,
Call now.
>
MALHEUR HOME
TELEPHONE CO.
Q
Work Smarter ..
Not Harder
By BERNICE STRAWN
Home Management Specialist
MR. and MRS. JACKSON HUETT (nee Carol Murray)
were married June 26, 1966, in the Parma Seventh - Day
Adventist church. Parents of the newlyweds are Mr. and
Mrs. Henry Murray of Nyssa, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Huett
of Roswell, Idaho. Following a wedding trip, the couple
is residing in Pendleton. A report of the wedding ceremony
was published in the July 7 issue of the Journal.
ANK Members Tour McCall Gardens;
Officers and Working Chairmen Listed
ANK Garden club meeting was I Mrs. Lila Wilson, yearbooks; Mrs.
held July 12 at Shore lodge in [ Carl Powers and her selected
McCall with 16 members and committee, fair booth; Mmes. L.
guests attending.
A. Maulding, Bud Wilson and
Following a short business ses­ Tom Nishitani, Christmas show.
sion, the women were guests of
Mrs. Gerrit Stam and Miss
Charlie Davidson at his lakeside Gertrude Johnson, spring plant
home and large gardens where sale; Mrs. Thelma Hammon, au­
great quantities of iris were in dit chairman; Mmes. Gerrit Tim­
bloom.
merman, John Olsen and Edward
Davidson also took the group Boydell, programs; Mrs. Bernard
to see adjoining gardens, includ­ Eastman, hospital therapy.
ing those of Jack Simplot.
Mmes. Ashcraft, Stam and Mc­
Since the women visited there Cormick, courtesy; Lila Wilson,
last year. Simplot has added sev­ | Mmes. Orland Cheldelin and
eral pieces of statuary from Italy Gerrit Timmerman, membership;
and has built new waterfalls from Miss Johnson, historian.
the upper level of the gardens to
Members who recently joined
streams below.
the club are Mrs. J. R. Cundall
Officers and committee chair­ and Mrs. Arie Bakker.
men assuming their new club
duties on July 1 include Mrs. M.
L. Judd, president; Mrs. Gerrit
Stam, vice president; Mrs. Tom
Nishitani, secretary; Mrs. Dale
Tony, Karen and Kristine Rig­
Ashcraft, treasurer; Mrs. Jessie ney of Eugene have been visiting
Morgan, school essay and poster this summer with their grand­
' chairman; Mrs. Elton McCormick, parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Parr,
hospital patio project
Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Rigney. On
Mrs. Raymond Poulton, world Monday, July 18, Parr drove the
gardening; Mrs. Ernie Metcalf and girls to a day camp at Joseph.
Ore., to join their parents, Mr.
and Mrs. James Rigney. Rigney
is serving as history instructor at
the camp for a three-week ses-
sion.
Mrs. Rigney accompanied her
father to Nyssa on July 19 and
visited in her parents' home un-
til July 22 when she returned by
bus to Eugene where she is em- |
ployed as a surgical nurse at
Sacred Heart hospital.
Tuesday (July 19) dinner guests
in the Parr home included Mrs.
James Rigney and Tony, Mr. and
Mrs. Jesse Rigney. The latter
and Tony left the following day
for Yakima, Wash., to visit the I
Ibrahim Ayyoub family.
Jesse Rigney was a Saturday
dinner guest in the Parr residence
before the men attended the
Snake River Stampede at Nampa.
Rigney Family Visits
Nyssa Area Relatives
GER-PAK
Black Plastic Material
PAGE SEVEN
_
Betrothed Couple Activities for July
Reported by Members
Announces Plans Of
Eagles Auxiliary
For Sept. 2 Rites Meetings of the Eagles auxiliary
were held July 5 and 19 in the
aerie hall. Door prize winners
for the two sessions were Eliza­
beth and Anita Deutz. Wilma
Powell and Thelma Mefford were
not present to claim the jackpot
awards.
Esther Reitenbaugh was pre­
sented a belated Mothers’ Day
gift and pin from auxiliary mem­
bers.
The office of chaplain is to be
filled during the next meeting,
either by appointment or election.
A shower for the aerie kitchen
is being held and persons wish­
ing to donate may leave their
gifts at the hall or contact Eliza­
beth Peutz.
Plans are being made for an
Hawaiian luau to be held Satur­
day night at the lodge hall. The
menu will consist of barbecued
pig and all the trimmings, with
serving scheduled to start shortly
after 9 o’clock.
OREGON'S CONSUMER
PROTECTION LAW
. . . prompted us to check on [
questionable sales practices home­
makers have encountered. Here
are a few of the hundreds of re­
ports we received.
A long - distance telephone
caller said ha was making a
survey. Ha asked far types of
eppliances and car owned, hus­
band's occupation, rural mall
box number, tf wary of such ‘
calls; you don't have to answer.
You might be divulging what a
burglar would want to know.
Another person was offered a
number of magazines ‘'free.” AU
she would have to do was pay
pastage which added up to >42
One lady was given a set of books
"free” by a door-to-door salesman MISS BEVERLY ANDERSON
if she would give the names of
... To Wed Boyd Newgen
five friends. There was to be
♦
♦
only a small charge for printing
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Anderson WEEKEND VISITORS
which turned out to be $10 per of Ontario announce the engage­
Mr. and Mrs. John Weeks of
month for 24 months.
ment and forthcoming marriage Seneca were weekend guests in
We could tell you many more of their daughter, Beverly, and the home of his mother, Mrs.
example«. But th® moral is . . . Boyd Newgen. Parents of the
Blanche Weeks.
Buy from an established busi­ future bridegroom are Mr. and
ness in your area. The big ma­ Mrs. Bob Newgen of Nyssa.
the class of 1965 at Adrian high
jority of merchants are honest
Miss Anderson is a 1966 gradu­ school.
and reliable. Be wary of those
ate of Ontario high school and
A Sept. 2 wedding is being
you don't know who offer
her fiance was graduated with planned by the young couple.
"something for nothingl"
• • •
HELP YOUR CHILD
... to discriminate and increase
his vocabulary. One way, sug­
gests Mrs. Roberta Frasier, ex­
tension family life specialist at
OSU, is to encourage him to de­
scribe how food tastes rather
than just saying it’s “good” or
"icky.”
If it tastes good, is it because
it's sweet, sour, salty or for
some other reason? If he says
it's "icky," is it because it's
lumpy, bitter, sour or just what
doesn't the child like about it?
Likewise, you can urge him to
learn other discriminating words .
o-
by asking him why he likes or i
doesn’t like a toy, article of clo­
thing, or picture, and so on.
• • •
• •
• •
YELLOWED KITCHEN SINKS
. . . are a pesky problem you’re
likely to “inherit” if you move
to an apartment or rented house.
o
Your best bet is to use a
household cleanser containing
bleach. Sprinkle the cleanser
on the moist sink, let it stand
about 15 minute«, then rinse. If
the water contains rust, use a
nut remover.
You’ll find both liquid and
powdered products for this pur­
pose in supermarkets.
ROGERS
Truck Stop Cafe
NYSSA,
OREGON
502 North
Main Street
. OPEN
5 a.m. to 6 p.m.
EVERYBODY
WELCOME!
A Cash Market
r . . .
• • •
Your Feeds!
. . . IDEAL FOR . . .
HAY STACK COVERS-PIT LINERS
. . . WILL ALSO . . .
★ Cut Silage Losses $2.00 Per Ton
★ Protect Silage at Average of 27c Per Ton
★ Avoid Cosily Permanent Structures
• • 006-Inch Thick
6 MILL
10x100 Feel
$15.00
24x100 Feet
$36.00
28 x 100 Feel
$42.00
32 x 100 Feet
$48.00
4 MILL
8 X100 Feet
$7.50
Nyssa Co-op Supply
18 North Second St.
Phone 372-3548
VACATION ON COAST
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Sparks, Mr.
and Mrs. Roger Baker returned
home last Thursday after spend­
ing a week vacationing and deep-
sea fishing at Newport. Enroute
to the coast, the two couples were
overnight guests of former Nys-
sans, Mr. and Mrs. Ken Toomb
and sons at Lebanon. On their
return trip, they also fished in
the Santiam river.
★ BARLEY
★ WHEAT
* MIXED GRAINS
o
AUTOMATIC UNLOADING
ALBERTSON’S
FEED LOT
Phone 372-2373
Nyssa, Oregon