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About Nyssa gate city journal. (Nyssa, Or.) 1937-199? | View Entire Issue (Sept. 21, 1967)
were Sunday afternoon visitors in the Lester Strawn home. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Carter were Saturday evening dinner By Okie Witt guests of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Carter in Nyssa. Mr. and Mrs. George Bes- Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Bowers, endorfer went to Salt l ake City Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Bowers took Chuck Bowers to Pendle Friday to attend a family re ton Sunday after he had spent union the following day. Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Martinez three weeks at his home. They attended a baptismal party Sun stopped in La Grande to visit Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Phifer. day afternoon for Mr. and Mrs. Margareto Carrasco. Pollyanna club members will Mrs. Beverly Cazier and m« et Oct. 3 at the home of Mrs. family of New Plymouth; and Dorothy Fox. Mrs. Odie Ander her mother, Mrs. Apla Reiber son, of the Idaho Power Com pany will give a demonstration spent the afternoon of Sept. 13 on preparing holiday foods. All with Mrs. Paul Carter at the Lester Strawn home. interested women of the area Mr. and Mrs. Dick Crowley are invited to attend. Mr. and Mrs. Don Thompson of Morgan, Utah were Satur and family of Seneca, Ore., ar day evening dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Kygar. rived Friday and spent the weekend visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Herschel Thomp Bridge Winners son. Mr. and Mrs. Art Sparks, Mr. The Thursday afternoon and Mrs. Dale Ashcraft attend ed a birthday dinner Sunday in bridge group met last week the Guy Sparks home in Nyssa. in the home of Mrs. T. H. It was in honor of Art’s birth Eldredge. Mis. Jessie Morgan and Mrs. day anniversary. Other guests were members of the Kenneth Raymond Larson Sr. were win Altig and Dick Sparks families ners of scoring prizes. of Boise. Mr. and Mrs. Bill Conant were Sunday afternoon visitors in the Willis Conant home. NEW Mr. and Mrs. John Petty of BOOTIF Nyssa were Sunday afternoon guests of Mrs. Ruth Sant. FILLERS David Petty left for Boise Wednesday to join the US Army. Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Pinkston SEPT. 19 - To Mr. and Mrs. of Parma were Sept. 12 evening Albert Garfield of Huntington, visitors in the home of his an eight-pound, two-ounce girl, mother, Mrs. Walter Pinkston. Patricia Aileen. Mary Laan’s girl friend, Ann SEPT. 19 - to Dr. and Mrs. Nice of North Powder, Ore., ar Albert Barinaga of Ontario, a rived last Thursday and spent seven-pound, 13-ounce girl, three days in the Klaas Laan Maria Elena. home. The girls left Sunday for Eastern Oregon college at La Grande. Mr. and Mrs. Lester Strawn Cub Scout Meeting were Sunday dinner guests of First fall meeting for Cub Mr. and Mrs. Paul Carter in Scouts of Pack 450 will be Caldwell. Carter is in the ser at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. vice and left Monday for Guam. 26 at Nyssa Methodist church. Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Strawn and family of New Plymouth • •ANNUAL PICNIC Miss Ann Webb, James Johnson Wed In Nevada Kingman News •> 7 MR. AND MRS. JOHN CLEAVER The Nyssa couple celebrated their 53rd wedding anniversary on Sept. 3, 1967, with a potluck dinner and pinochle party in their home. Among friends present were Messrs, and Mmes. Wyatt Smith, Harry Kingrey, Oscar Kurtz, Sam McConnell, Jim Malloy; and Mrs. Orma Cleaver. Tri-Valley Session Pinochle Winners Tri-Valley Extension unit held it’s organizational meeting Sept. 15 at the Jess Asumendi home. Members decided to take *J- expensive bingo favors for the Malheur Nursing home to the next meeting. .An informative lesson on buy ing new furniture was given. Dates and places for future meetings were planned and committee chairman were named. Next meeting will be October 20 at the home of Lois Counsil. Sept. 9 hostesses for the regular pinochle party held at the Nyssa IOOF hall were Mrs. Tom Johnson, Rose Toombs and Cassie Gaskill. First prizes went to Alice Neiger and Babe Richardson. Second place awards went to Mrs. Wyatt Smith and C. H. Brown. Traveling prizes were given to Esther Brown and Harry Kingrey. Next card party will be Sat urday evening, Sept. 23. i SEED GROWERS I Defoliate for a Total Per Acre Cost of . . FRONT END ALIGNMENT This is a proven, superior application using Micronair filters for the maximum in crop coverage and penetration. and WHEEL BALANCING RANCH AERO o General Repairing ----- o Airplane Spraying Co PAUL N. HANSEN Towne Garage Phone 372-3570 OPERATING FROM NYSSA AIRPORT NYSSA 372-3504 or 674-2023 STARTING OCTOBER 10th Golf Mdse. Reduced 30% ( From ★ Sweaters it Golf Clubs Miss Aiui Webb tiecam«* th«* brid«* of James Jones In a 2 o’clock aftern«x>n ceremony on August 24, 1967 at Win nemucca, Nev. Parents of th«* newlyweds are Roland Webb and Mrs. Tarzan Johnson of Nyssa, Mr. and Mrs. William Eden of Too« |e, It.«h. Witnessing th«* single-ring, civil ceremony were Ronald Dickenson of Portland and Miss Anita Nlccum of Nyssa.i Th«* new Mrs. Jones was graduated from Nyssa high school in 1966. She and her husband ar«* both working at th«* Star Broiler cafe in Win nemucca, where th«* bride groom is employed as a chef. The teller was sober. H«* was in an excellent position, then, to know what he was doing, and he should have seen the robber was not. Therefore, he should have refused to turn over the money and given Hie robber a stern lecture in sob riety. The teller was Hie guil ty party; the bank, an access ory, and some appropriate penalty will have tobe imposed- say, 10 years for th«* teller and a fine of $10,000 for the bank. The charge: Dere liction of duty and failure to distinguish between the robber and the man who took the mon ey. Submitted for publication by E. Otis Smith, Nyssa attorney. 1ft f Oíd It's rime For Hunters r Io Check Hearts, Guns Getting restless? Is the urge to be on the move getting to you? Now this could I»* caused by the August doldrums, but the symp toms indicate otherwise. Frequent trips to the gun cabinet, a drop of oil on the bolt of “Old Betsy”, a loving pat on th«* double-barrel, or perhaps a fast swing or point at th«* buck rack above th«* fire place to test rusty reflexes all point to an anxiety problem. The tall hu itmg seasons are almost with us. There is no doubt that a care ful ch«*ck of all hunting equip ment -- guns, boots, knives, cooking stove, tiedroll, tent — is go«>d insurance for a success ful season. Most important to th«* hunter is to check that rifle or shotgun to see that there are no mal functions. A little range prac tice will sharpen th«* eye and get you into the habit of squeezing th«* trigger instead of giving it an excited jerk. Popping a few clay pigeons, or some tossed tin cans if you have nothing else, will bring back th«* feel of swing and follow through, key factors in upland bird and waterfowl shooting. Now that you’re underway here, how about vour own physi cal condition for the rigorous days ahead. Few hunters actually bother with a year- round physical fitness program. After a long layoff, recon ditioning is essential if the hunter is to withstand the strains of a rugged hunting ex- perience. Most important is your heart.« Dormant muscles may ache*and weak lungs may gasp in pro ’•He’s the type of kid who goes test, but they will recover in to school, passes Hie tooth- time. Hut a tired heart called paste test and nothing elsa.” upon to do double duty is another There are oilier precautions, matter. It can be fatal. Statistics on hunting fatalities expecially if you’re over 40and each year tell th«* story, which what muscle you once carried shows heart attack victims so proudly has slipped toward mak«* up a considerable per the middle and b«*come excess centage* of the tally. Many of weight. Don’t be too proud these could lx* avoided had the to ask for help in dragging out victim given as much attention your deer. If you have a to his heart as he did his heart condition, let someone equipment. else do it. Basic, of course, is to see If you do have a skippy ticker, your physician for a complete never hunt alone. Take your physical checkup. Even if he hunting companion into your gives you a clean bill of health, confidence about your heart don’t pass up th«* second basic condition. la*t him know what step -- exercise. to do in case of emergency. You can do this at home, but Get plenty of rest. Carry as the smart hunter will get out little weight in clothing and into th«* field now, walking, equipment as possible. Don’t climbing. In addition to th«* be uncomfortable, but don’t exercise you will pick up val overload. uable information on th«* daily Retneiniter, it’s your ticker. habits of game you will be hunt ing later on. But, regardless It’s the only one you've got, of how you do it, th«* main and it's not guaranteed to run indefinitely. point is to exercise. FFA Slave Auction NYSSA, CHAPTER TONITE, SEPT. II 7 in VO-AG Bl.IX,. - NHS CAMPUS r The Nyssa Gate City Journal { (Continued From Page One) INCLUDING MATERIAL AND APPLICATION PHONES THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1967 THE NYSSA GATE CITY JOURNAL, NYSSA, OREGON PAGE FOUR Prices) ★ Shirts ★ Slacks ★ Shoes - ★ Shirts (NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY WHAT YOU NEED) McBride, Robert F. Mount, A.S. Thompson, Tom Cotton, Rufo Isoquire. Ben Echwanis, Elmer Hill, Jess Rigney and Mrs. Jon Win ter, Mrs. Al Brant, George Hust, Ray Kalsky, J. Roy Gan- ow, Jack Ward, Lyle Reece, Howard Day, Claude Day, Glen McGinnis and William VanZelf. Norman and Vinelie Price, Al and Opal Baker, Alice Van Alta and Lawrence Colley. IttH* 5» h« Drunk Robber Poses Problem Not so long ago, a young man walked into a Vancouver bank, pushed his hand through a teller’s window into the cage and robbed it of $3,050. The police caught him, charged him with the crime and took him in to court, where the judge dis missed the case. The young man, it seems, was drunk when he took the money, and the jud ge ruled, to wit: Since he was drunk, he couldn’t have known what he was doing, he couldn’t be guilty of robbing the bank. Where this is leading we do not know for sure, but we think we can see the end of the road. Subscription OFFER! New (1-Yr.) Subscriptions... %OF Melhaur, Payette or Canyon County Elsewhere in United States . . . I I i #3.00 #3.75 Renewals (1-Yr.).. Malheur, Payette or Canyon County Elsewhere in the United States $3.00 $4.00 COLLEGE KIDS SPECIAL KEITH STANWOOD, PRO ONTARIO GOLF COURSE * ONTARIO, OREGON (New Subscriptions Only) 9 Months (Anywhere in U.S.A.) $2.25 If Payment Made Through Mail, Letter Must B< Postmarked No Later Than Saturday, Sept. 23 NEW CAR SHOWING Thursday • Friday 8 A.M. To 7 P.M. Saturday 8 A.M. To 6 P.M. Krazy Day Numbers Posted On Journal Office Front Door! Match Our Numbers and Be One of Ten FREE SUBSCRIBERS! NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE! 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