Nyssa gate city journal. (Nyssa, Or.) 1937-199?, June 13, 1968, Page 5, Image 5

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

    THURSDAY, JUNE 13, 1968
THE NYSSA GATE CITY JOURNAL, NYSSA, OREGON
NEWELL HEIGHTS ITEMS
■ ■ ■ BY DALE WITT ■ ■ ■ PHONE 372-2183 ■ ■ «
NEWELL HEIGHTS - The
Alfred and Gene Simpson
families, Mr. and Mrs. Ray
Simpson were June 9 dinner
guests of Mr. and Mrs. John­
nie Eason in Homedale.
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Simpson
were among those attending the
June 9 Judy Pratt-John Kirby
evening wedding rites in Nyssa.
Mrs. Raymond Simpson and
daughters of Gresham are visit­
ing relatives in the area. They
were June 9 overnight guests of
the Ray Simpsons.
Mr. and Mrs. Bennett Horn
and Elaine of Memphis, Tenn.,
who had been visiting her sis­
ter, Mrs. Marie Moore, left
June 8 for their home. Mrs.
Moore and the Horn trio were
June 6 evening dinner guests
of Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Piercy.
They were June 4 evening guests
for dessert in the K. I. Peterson
home.
Mr. and Mrs. Forrest Phil-
lippi of Topeka, Kans., were
June 3-4 overnight guests of
Mrs. Dale Witt. They visited
June 4 with former Kansas
neighbors in the Wilder area.
The Kansans left June 5 to visit
a daughter at Emmett. They
have sold their Topeka property
and plan to move to the west­
ern part of the United States.
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Calhoun
of Long Creek were June 4-8
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Jake
Borge. Mr. and Mrs. Jim
Grooms and sons of Prineville
arrived June 5 and remained at
the Borge home until the fol­
lowing Saturday. Other June
8 luncheon guests were Mr. and
Mrs. Ernest Eilers and daught­
er.
Dale Borge, who is training
with the National Guard in
Boise, spent the weekend in
the Borge home. He, Gene
Worden and other boys in their
band have a month’s engage­
ment at Idaho Falls as soon
as guard camp duty ends on
June 15.
Ernest Seuell, Jim Grooms,
Jake Borge and Bennett Horn
went crappie fishing June 7 on
Owyhee reservoir. They report
getting a boatload of fish.
Cherrylee Chamberlain, Lois
Seuell and Eleanor English left
June 8 by bus for the Girls’
State session in Salem. Lois
will serve as an adviser.
Bruce Spelman, with the help
of Mrs. Carl Lee Hill and Mrs.
Carl Piercy, gave a surprise
party for his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Monty Spelman of Puyal­
lup, Wash., at East Side cafe
on the evening of June8. Among
guests were Mr. and Mrs. K. I.
Peterson of Adrian, Mr. and
Mrs. John Landas of Home­
dale, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Piercy
and Rita, the Carl Lee Hill
family and C. B. Hill. Guests
arriving later were Mr. and
Mrs. Klaas Laan. The occasion
was a get-together for the Spel­
man couple who were visiting
in the area.
Mr. and Mrs. Duane Fenn
and his mother, Mrs. Carl Fenn
were June 8 afternoon visitors
in the Rollo Fenn home. The
Rollo Fenns were June 4 lunch­
eon guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Earl Ward.
Mmes. Lydia and Frankie
Worden and the latter’s daught­
er, Mrs. Fred Spence returned
last week from a month’s visit
at Canton, Okla. They visited
Frankie Worden’s parents, Mr.
and Mrs. George Carpenter who
had recently been ill, as well as
other relatives. Lydia Worden
also visited a nephew, Mr. and
Mrs. Irvin Blood, other friends
and relatives. Mrs. Spence went
to Ft. Poke, La., to visit her
husband who is in the service
there. He had several days off
during her visit. Fred has since
been moved to another station.
Mrs. Kenneth Farr was
among those attending a bridal
shower for her future daughter-
in-law, Marilyn Lewis. The
event was held on the afternoon
of June 8 in the home of Susan
Schenk.
Mrs. Richard Fenn and child­
ren of Quincy, Wash., were June
9 dinner guests of Mrs. Carl
Fenn. They plan to visit in
the Newell Heights area this
week. Sunday afternoon visitors
in the home of Mrs. Carl Fenn
were Mrs. Wesley Walker and
family, Mrs. Dave Savage and
family, Mr. and Mrs. Duane
Fenn and family of Ontario.
Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Webster,
Mr. and Mrs. Milo Conable of
What IS A FATHER ?
Sacramento, Mrs. W. C. Van
deWater and Kent of Big Bend
were Sunday afternoon visitors
in the home of Mrs. Dale Witt.
Mmes. M. L. Judd, Dale Ash­
craft and Gerrit Stam spent
June 4-8 in Portland where they
attended a meeting of the State
Federation of Garden Clubs at
Maryhurst college.
Mrs. Mary Auker and daught­
er, Mrs. Donald Costley and
daughters of Portland visited
on the afternoon of June 6 with
Mrs. Dale Witt. Mrs. K. I.
Peterson, Mrs. Ed Nedrow and
Mrs. C har les Bowers were
afternoon callers.
Mr. and Mrs. William Webb
returned home June 9 from a
four-day trip in the Portland
area where they visited Mr.
and Mrs. Russell Coffman, Mr.
and Mrs. Wallace Butler and
Leah. They also attended the
wedding of Mr. and Mrs. Vance
Welty at Good Samaritan Epis­
copal church in Corvallis. Mrs.
Welty is the former Ann King,
niece of Mrs. Webb. The Newell
Heights couple then went to
Klamath Falls where they visit­
ed Dr. and Mrs. Robert Payne
and family and Mrs. Payne’s
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
Budd.
Mike and Pauline Butler Ha­
striter are home from Eastern
Oregon college in La Grande,
and will be residing in Home­
dale. Pauline was matron of
honor during a reception for
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Bastin
at the LDS ward in Kuna. The
new Mrs. Bastin is the former
Marilyn Finch and was matron
of honor at the wedding of Mike
and Pauline.
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Moose of
SEE SON GRADUATE
Mr. and Mrs. Michael C.
Zamora and Junior attended the
recent graduation rites of their
son and brother, Benjamin A.
Zamora at the University of
Nevada in Reno where he earned
his master’s degree.
The U of N graduate plans to
teach in Pullman, Wash., and
study for his doctor’s degree
at Washington State university.
r ^I^ na V is 1 ^EVENlT^
BY VIRGINIA C LEAVER PHONE 372-2871
BUENA VISTA - Major and
Mrs. Junius Tanner and Diane
recently left the home of his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Guy
Tanner and spent several days
in Salt Lake City. Mrs. (Linda)
Tanner and daughter left June
2 for Texas and Major Tanner
left San Francisco on June 5,
bound for Vietnam. The Guy
Tanners have received a card
from him, mailed from Hawaii.
Barbara Tanner accompanied
the trio as far as Salt Lake
City, taking Kim home with her.
Audrey Tanner, Shayne and
Don Dumas, all of Salt Lake
City, spent a recent weekend
in the home of her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Tanner.
Van Draper, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Miland Draper, arrived
home on leave on Mothers’
Day and recently left from the
Goise airport, bound for Ft.
Dix., N. J. He left there June
9 for Germany.
Edith Whipple returned home
June 4 after spending a week
with her daughter, Leah Rool-
stool in Nevada.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Cor­
field and baby recently re­
turned to Alameda, Calif., with
Kenneth Whipple after spending
Lodi, Calif., Mr. and Mrs. Don
Cordon of Wetmore, Kar.s., and
Mrs. Dale Witt were June 7
evening guests in the W. C. Van
deWater home in Big Bend. The
women are former school
friends of Mrs. Witt and Mrs.
Van deWater. The couples had
been visiting Moose’s sister
in Payette. The two couples
left on the morning of June 8
for Portland where they at-
tended the wedding rites of
the women’s niece.
Burdette Pratt and Pud
Franks left on the evening of
June 9 to attend the Oregon
Boys’ State session in Corval-
lis.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Province
of Caldwell were June 9 dinner
guests of her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. L. C. McDermott.
U.S.D.A. CHOICE
SUNDAY, JUNE 16
WITH A GIFT FROM
tives of Boypower "16 are:
1. To ensure the relevance
of Scouting to the needs and
concerns of our nation and our
youth.
2. To determine the level of
quality to be maintained in units
by establishing appropriate an­
nual and intermediate goals.
3. To determine and secure
the needed personnel and re­
sources necessary to a c h i e v e
those established goals.
4. To develop the methods of
fixing responsibility and meas­
uring results at administrative
levels.
5. To establish mutual under­
standing and communication of
aims and methods of the Boy
Scouts of America with its par­
tner institutions and other com­
munity agencies.
CHERRYLEE STEINKE
Cherrylee Steinke, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Dareld Steinke
of Vale, was recently awarded
a five-year rehabilitation grant
which will pay her tuition, fees,
books and miscellaneous ex­
penses to study home economics
at Oregon State university in
Corvallis. Miss Steinke is a
1968 graduate of Vale Union
high school and is a grand­
daughter ofNyssansMrs. Verda
Steinke and Mrs. Blanche
Weeks.
JI 05
> ®
U.S.D.A. CHOICE
WESTERN FAMILY
SLICED BACON
BONELESS
79e
LIBBY & WESTERN FAMILY 1
FROZEN
MERRILLS SMALL
* MB CANS
1
69*
CHIFFON
SALAD DRESSING
MARGARINE
OT. SIZE
39< 2 ~ 85*
LOCAL OTANI
SWIFTS CHICKEN &
FLUFFO
LB.
CAN
AVAÛUXK
6 OZ.
PKG.
6/S1.00
TOPPING
MARSHMALLOWS
iZ: 3/39t
Grapefruit
5
SWEETHEART
1/2 GAL.
SIZE
ASSORTED
2 LB.
JAR
ASSORTED MILAN - LOW CALORIE
8 02.
SIZE
89*
69*
SWEET TENDER
CUPS*1
CORN
$2.19
12
LARGE
EARS
SALE DATES
Puff Cookies 3,41.00
45*
Fabric Softner
59*
Festival Jams
2/39*
LARGE WHITE - 8 LB. BAG
Ì2 CUP FLAT
ASSORTED
„29t
LARGE
LB. 2 OZ.
CAN
GOLDEN RIPE
STRAWBERRIES NACHES
SWIFTS
DRESSING
LB.
SALAD BOWL
4, $1 1
■■
COTFEE
2 « $1.29
Waffle Creams 3». $1.00
Whole Chicken 3 «s02- 89C
Dumpings
3 89*
59*
3
Shortening
JELL-O
tatty Whj>
65t
GROUND ROUND
EGGS
T 12 $1
REG
LB.
FRESHMADE
IEMONADE
FATHER’S DAY
Boy Scout Leaders from the
Ore-Ida Council Boy Scouts of
America, are moving rapidly to
prepare for the launching in
1969 of an eight year expan­
sion program which is called
“Boy Power ’76”, according
to Henry Falkner, Boise,Coun­
cil President.
Buck Jones, Jim Palumbo of
Boise, delegates to the Nation­
al Council and JohnD. Warnick,
Scout Executive attended the
58th Nationalcouncil Meeting in
Chicago held on May 23-25,
1968, to learn of the new theme
and ways to localize the national
long-range plan which will make
Scouting revelant to the needs
and concerns of youth and the
nation.
On January 1, 1969, the Man­
power of the Boy Scouts of
America in each of its 510
Local Councils will launch Boy
Power 76 a new long-range plan
that will carry through 1976,
the 200th Anniversary of our
nation. During those eight years
of intensive efforts we will move
forward under the basic truth
that “America’s Manpower be­
gins with Boypower”.
The purpose of Boypower'76:
“To deeply involve a represen­
tative one-third of all American
boys in Scouting,” and “to help
the families and institutions of
the Nation prepare a new gen­
eration with the skill and con­
fidence to master the changing
demands of America’s future
and prepare to give leadership
to it.”
The plan calls for deeper
penetration into poverty areas,
doubling our present rate of
growth in boys served (the
greatest percentage growth is
projected in Exploring), an im­
proved quality program, and
better set-.’ice to units.
If Scouting has favorably
affected the lives of one-fourth
of America’s boys in the past,
there is no reason it cannot
more effectively influence a
representative one-third of our
boys in the immediate future.
To this end, the specific objec-
SIRLOIN STEAK „95*
Companionship
ON
To Buy, Soil,
Or Trad«, Try
Th« Classified Pag«
Boy Scout Leaders Announce
Plans For Expansion Program
T-BONE STEAK
RUMP ROAST
REMEMBER HIM
a 30-day leave with relatives
in this area. Kenneth went on
to San Diego for two weeks
of active duty. Corfield found
that he had been assigned to a
ship and will be going to sea
within 30 days. Kenneth is a
son of Mrs. Edith Whipple and
Corfield is her grandson.
Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Cleav­
er, Shirley and Christine went
to Corvallis for the recent grad­
uation rites of their daughter
and sister, Ann Jones. They
ihen went to Portland where
they visited Lawrence and Hazel
Coat and Ricky Phillips who
was severely burned in a mis­
hap in Nyssa earlier this year.
The Cleaver family returned
home June. 4.
Charles Hain, who has been
residing in Vale and studying
at Treasure Valley Community
college, visited June 9 with
Gary Cleaver. They went to
Lake Owyhee that day to try
their luck on a raft.
Arriving at the Mancil Bishop
home June 10 was his aunt, Mr.
and Mrs. Norman Thomanson
and three sons of Nucla, Colo.,
and a niece, Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Lemmons and two
children, Norman and Dick
Thomanson of Provo, Utah. The
latter two are cousins of the
Bishops. The visitors left June
7 for their homes.
Attending a barbecue dinner
at the Mancil Bishop home on
the evening of June 9 were Mr.
and Mrs. Grant McGee and sons,
Mr. and Mrs. Elton Hunsucker
and children of Fruitland, Stan­
ley, Barbara and Davie Bishop
of the Adrian area, James and
Nancy Bishop of Ontario, Bill
Wahlert and two daughters of
Nyssa.
F rank Graham fell in his yard
late in the afternoon of June 8
and remained lying on the
ground for over an hour be-
for his wife could summon help
and before his son, James re­
turned home. He is now a pat­
ient in the Veterans’ hospital
at Boise. Details of his con-
dition were not available when
this column was written as the
family does not have a phone.
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Hoffman,
Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Cleaver
and Mrs. Orma Cleaver were
among those attending grad­
uation exercises at Treasure
Valley Community college on
the evening of June 9. Gary
Cleaver and Glenda Hoffman
were among the graduates.
ETC and Mrs. Bruce (Gladys)
MacArthur and two children ar­
rived early this week at the
home of her mother, Mrs. Es­
ther Stephen. They will remain
for a two-week visit. Willie
Stephen went to Portland June
8 and was best man at the wed­
ding of Bill Cannon.
Don and Alan Cleaver left
June 9 with other FFA youths
to attend the state convention
in Joseph, Ore.
Earl and Sandy Wilson of
Lincoln, Nebr., were June 9
dinner guests in the Eugene
Stephen home. Afternoon visit­
ors were an uncle, John Wal­
lace of Hailey, Idaho; a cousin,
Lonnie Wallace of Salt Lake
City; Dan Norland and sons of
Umatilla, Ore.
Esther Stephen, Nellie Tan­
ner and Dinah Bishop, members
of the Out Our Way club, were
winners in guessing the names
of their last year’s secret pals.
The women report they be­
came tired of waiting for the
losers to give them a party,
so on a recent Monday morn­
ing they gathered up the losers
for a come-as-you-are party
in the Guy Tanner home.
The losing women had to
fashion for themselves, hats
from flowers, ribbons, paper
plates and scraps of material.
Then they were forced to model
them.
The ‘losing* guests were Pat,
Virginia and Donna Cleaver,
Geanie Nelson, Edith Whipple,
Helen Hoffman, Iris Draper and
Alma Topliff. A special guest
was Mrs. Bruce (Gladys) Mac-
Arthur.
U.S.D.A. CHOICE
A Father Is...
Security
Compassion
WHY NOT
PAGE FIVE
98c
JUNE 13-14-15
BOOTH
Fish Sfida
8 OZ.
5/$I.OO
PKG.
ELMIN A
Butteriioms
‘ “ 3/$I.OO
PKG
1
«