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About Nyssa gate city journal. (Nyssa, Or.) 1937-199? | View Entire Issue (June 27, 1968)
THURSDAY. JUNE 27. 1968 THE NYSSA GATE CITY JOURNAL, NYSSA, OREGON CORRECTION NYSSA PUBLIC LIBRARY "BE ALL YOU CAN — READ!” LIBRARY HOURS í SUNDAY and MONDAY - CLOSED TUESDAY - 2 P.M. to 8 P.M. WEDNESDAY - 12 Noon to 6 P M THURSDAY - 10 A.M. to 6 P.M^ FRIDAY and SATURDAY - 12 Noon to 6 P.M. According to Mrs. Max (Norma) Urry, the following books are now available at the local library. THE KINDERGARTEN HOW- TO-DO-IT BOOK by Ruth J. Adams. This book has been written and compiled to help other teachers by sharing those practices which have proved most helpful to the author during her twenty-odd years of kinder garten teaching. BETWEEN PARENT AND CHILD by Dr. Haim G. Ginott. New solutions to old problems. All parents want their children to be happy and secure. No parent wakes up in the morning ..and deliberately plans to make Ms child's life tense, fearful, and unhappy. But despite the test intentions this is often "what happens. : PUNISHMENT WITHOUT CRIME by Isidore Zimmerman. This is the true story of a •Man who spent twenty four years In prison for a crime he did -Dot commit. > THE STORY OF THE HUMAN . HAND by Walter Sorell. With, ~ sophistication and insight, the .. ^author explores the human hand 2 for its meaning, expressive ness and potentialities. Hedes- - pribes the role of the hand in the myth and magic of primi- : ttve man, and its use in all : religions. ♦ > YEARBOOK OF ASTRO- NOMY editor Patrick Moore. ; This book is specially designed ; for the amateur astronomer and has two articles on the moon • and two on meteorites. I* THE ART OF BEING AN :INTELLECTUAL by Ignace Z Lepp. A practical guide to the ijoys and discipline of the life •of the mind. -' FLOWER ARRANGEMENTS IJHAT LAST. Now your home lean be luxuriously and color- : fully decorated with lovely out- •of- season flowers and foliage hll year long. Just read this -book where there are more than -100 attractive as well as prac- -flcal illustrations. > THE COSTS OF AMERICAN ifcOVERNMENTS by Frederick ;C. Mosher & Orville F. Poland. This study may properly be con sidered an institutional rather than an individual product. It was begun, and was carried on from the start, as a project . of the Institute of Governmental Studies at the University of California. MAKE YOUR OWN T V RE PAIRS by Art Margolis. This latest television repair book the author shows you how you can Attend Tobler Rites fix approximately ninety per Mr. and Mrs. Orand Miller of cent of all TV troubles. THE U. F. O. REPORT by Garden City, Kan., Mr. and Mrs. Irving A. Greenfield. This is D. W. Shipley of Oakley, Kan., a hard-hitting report of the real Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Shipley of facts on unidentified flying Gove, Kan., arrived June 16 objects -- with latest eyewit to attend recent services for Mrs. Croletta Tobler, daughter ness testimony. PATIENTS, DOCTORS AND of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence FAMILIES by Faye C. Lewis, Miller of the Big Bend area. M.D. Throughout this informa The out-of-state relatives re tive book, the author, who was turned to their bones June 20. the first woman to receive a medical degree from Washing ton State University. Evidences a disarming appreciation of the importance of family relation ships and their positive in fluence on the rapport between Doctor and patient. CHILTON’S 1968 AUTO RE PAIR MANUAL by Paul A. -lu- Murphy. Practical, w/ easy-to- read instructions cover every aspect of automotive mainten ance, servicing and recondi tioning for American made cars. This manual also includes a section on Volks wagon. LIFE EVERLASTING IN FREEDOM OF THE SONS OF GOD by Watchtower Bible and Tract Society. MODERN MOTHERHOOD by H. M. I. Liley, M.D., with Beth Day. The only book which covers pregnancy, childbirth and the first six months of life. SOCIAL POLICIES FOR AMERICA IN THE SEVENTIES: NINE DIFFERENT VIEWS by Robert Theobald. “This book is concerned with the altera tions in our economic and social values that is being fundamen tally changed by the impact of science and technology,’’writes Robert Theobald in his Preface. DOWN HALF THE WORLD by Elizabeth Coatsworth. The poems in this fresh and varied collection, most of which have never appeared in book form before, range from nature appreciations, which Miss Coatsworth characterizes as “more truly glimpses of how the writer feels at some moment of awareness”; to sketches for historical portraits, “an entire confrontation of character in twenty lines”; to what she calls “mystery poems” - gothic verse tempered by bantering humor. 8 a « e Y e • a a NU ACRES - Farmeretteclub women met June 19 at the home of Mrs. Elizabeth Baxter. It was decided that there would be no more meetings until Octo ber, due to vacations. A July 19 picnic at the Roy Evans home was planned. Mr. and Mrs. W. O. Unwin spent the afternoon of June 23 visiting with Mr. and Mrs. W.C. Brown of Nyssa. Terri Burton recently re turned from Careywood, Idaho, where she spent two weeks visiting friends. She left by train and returned home with Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Russell. The Rus sells were returning home after attending a Republican conven tion in Coeur d’Alene. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Russell of Paul stayed at the home of their son, the Gerald Russells, while they were at Coeur d’Alene. Recent Sunday visitors at the Mike McKague home were Mr. and Mrs. Len Dykstra of On tario. Mr. and Mrs. Oral Beeson of PENDLETON GUEST PHONE 452-1529" Cucamonga, Calif., spent June 23 visiting Mr. and Mrs. Alden Bryan. The couples’ had not seen each other for thirty years. Lois Kersey has been staying with her mother, Mrs. Effie Nielsen, after undergoing sur gery at St. Luke’s hospital in Boise. . Mr. and Mrs. Jim Martin and children of Yakima, Wash., are visiting his sister, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Burton and family. Mr. and Mrs. George Pulsi pher recently went to Othello, Wash., to take her daughter, Leia, who is working for her sister, Mrs. Clarr Beus. The Pulsiphers then went to Ellens burg to visit another daughter, Mrs. Mary Jo Gossman. Visiting at the Roy Howard home June 20-21 were her brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Harold McCracken and family of Idaho Falls. Mr. and Mrs. Art Jones left June 4 to visit the Craters of the Moon, Yellowstone National Park and in Havre, Mont. While CRAR RA£ $2.00 TEXAN JR. R... Si.oo 77e WRANGLER f q • Boxes Mrs. Jay (Marie) Hughes of Pendleton will be the guest speaker at the July 2 meeting of the Treasure Valley Chris tian Business and Professional Women’s council. The no host dinner meeting will be at 7:30 p.m., at the La Paloma cafe in Ontario. Jrs. Hughes is past chair man of the Christian Women’s club and is presently serving as area counselor. She is a graduate of Oregon State uni versity, at C orvallis and has been a 4-H leader for over 14 years. She has four children, three in college and one teen ager. The program announces that there will be an unusual special feature, interesting and full of surprises. Music for the evening will be provided by Vocalist Clint Bellows. Anyone Interested in at tending the session is asked to make reservations by calling Mrs. Verle Gunderson, 889- 6289. MIC Expression Of Thanks We wish to thank our friends for the many thoughtful kind nesses extended to us following the untimely death of our daugh ter, Croletta Tobler. - Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Miller and family. From The Makers Of Mediquick___ NYSSA JAYCEE LeROY WEATHERBY, chairman of a recent ‘pop’ bottle drive, presents an $88 check to Bob Wilson, secretary-treasurer of Nyssa’s ‘Baseball For Kids’ com mittee. The drive was sponsored by the Jaycees, who furnish ed transportation and the bottles were collected door-to- door by the young baseball youths to aid their summer program. - Staff Photo. RUBBER.LINED BEACH BAGS Assorted Styles and Colon Reg. $1.98 SUN TAN LOTION $10.95 Onlv * • £ J /WJ *hUU $ MAYA-SPRAY for a safe, long lasting tan Insect Killer 13 OZ. REG. $1.49 Contains special sun-screening agents. $1.08 McKesson * Never greasy • Won’t stain Insect Repellent Regular $1.25 5 OZ.-REG. $1.19 88c COMMAND 8W R«0 $125 Shave Cream McKesson BURN SPRAY Cooling Relief for Burns-Wounds A Abrasions PLAYTEX Swim Hats 16 OFF Caladryl Lotion (CALAMINE and BENADRYL COMBINATION) 57- Reg. $1.29 88' CEPACOL MOUTHWASH Reg $1.39 NOW ONLY SLATED TO SPEAK AT TVCBPW MEET In Havre, they visited her sis ter, Mrs. Albert Armer. The Jones* returned home June 18. Mr. and Mrs. George Pulsi pher spent a recent day visiting the Gene Haggartvs at Meridian. Mr. and Mrs. Roy McKague of Caldwell visited June 23 with Mr. and Mrs. Mike McKague. They were enroute home from Portland. Mr. and Mrs. Dan Gould and Brenda of Boise spent Fathers* Day visiting with the W. 0. Unwins. Mr. and Mrs. Dan Howard and family of Magna, Utah, spent several recent days visiting with his brother, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Howard. Mrs. Rulon Esplin returned home June 22 after a ten-day stay in the St. Alphonsus hos pital at Boise. ■Si Suivbrero I CAP GUNS CAPS A NATION FIGHTS BACK by Irving Werstein. Here is exciting history that recaptures the spirit of the times, the people, the events during one of the most tragic periods in our nation’s development. With clarity and objectivity, the author traces the causes, the effects, the heartbreak and the slow climb back to normaleyas a nation fights to uphold the democratic way of life. YAZ by Carl Yastrzemski with Al Hirshberg. The story is Yaz’s, the story of a strange and inspiring comeback. But it THE LAST UNICORN by is also the story ofa team which Peter S. Beagle. This book may would not believe its bad press well join that widely read mas notices, which rose from a terpiece as a book that speaks dismal ninth place to the top in with a mysterious but tangible a single season. The glory is resonance to a receptive mutual. audience. LOOKING FOR FARM CHEMICALS? NU ACRES HAPPENINGS ” BY BARBARA HOWARD Repeating THE GREEK ANTHOLOGY. ‘A new selection and .transla tion with an introduction by Andrew Sinclair. The original Creek anthology. A collection of more than four thousand epi grams, the bulk of which were written between the sixth cen tury B.C. and the sixth century .A.D. t THE NATIONAL GEO GRAPHIC SOCIETY AND ITS MAGAZINE by Gilbert Gros- -venor. A history with an account of the Society’s Activities today by John Oliver La Goree. THE TOWER OF BABEL by Morris L. West. Mr. West un locks all the secret doors, takes the reader not only inside the Meeting rooms but also into the iirticipants’ minds, and leaves m with the conviction that this Is the way it really is. WHERE EAGLES DARE by ■Alistair Mac Lean. Here the ■reader is pulled back into the terror-filled days of World War I, as he was in the author’s famous novel, “The Guns of ;Navarone.” • In last week's issue of the Journal there were pictures of two gardens, products of Elvin Ballou’s eight-grade science students. When reporting information for the story, Ballou named Gib Holmes as manager of Sim- plot Soilbuilders whiebfur- nished fertilizer for the garden plots. Since then he learned that the plant manager is not Holmes, but RON SCHOENEMAN. Ballou has asked the Journal to please run a correction, with an apology to Schoeneman, on his behalf. PAGE SEVEN Helps Prevent Infection! Sprays Away Wnl NEW instant Medi-Quik InMHiafty ANOS .. ALSO Medi-Quik LOTION Reg. 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