Nyssa gate city journal. (Nyssa, Or.) 1937-199?, February 25, 1971, Page 5, Image 5

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    Th« Nyssa Gat« City Journal, Nyssa, Oregon
Thursday, February 25, 1971
Pag« Fiv«
FFA Stresses Constructive Involvement For The
Future Of America And A Stronger Agriculture
BUENA vista news
♦++♦♦ CARLENESAVAGE
PHONE 372-2711 +++++
BUENA VISTA-Mr. and Mrs. through Sunday with herparents,
Elton Hunsucker and family of Mr. and Mrs. Mark Hartley and
Fruitland and Mrs. Eva Hun­ family.
sucker spent Sunday with Mr.
Mrs. Mark Hartley attended a
and Mrs. Mancil Bishop.
baby shower at the Gerald Tal­
The Out Our Way Club met bot home in Nyssa Wednesday
with Mrs. Guy Tanner February evening
_____ o in honor of Mrs. Dennis
10, with seven members present. Savage”
Next meeting will be held with
Mrs. Fred Stephens attended
Mrs. Thurman Piercy in March. funeral services for Mrs. Al
Annie Jayo was a Friday Cables of Caldwell, Tuesday.
overnight guest of Kim Tanner.
Sharon Grover and daughter,
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Udlinek Shari of Fairbanks, Alaska, are
and children were Saturday eve­ visiting Mr. and Mrs. David
ning guests of Mr. and Mrs. Bill Ballantyne.
Mrs. Grover is
Quick of Marsing.
Mrs. Ballantyne’s sister.
Mr. and Mrs. Junior Cannon
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Whipple
and Mr. and Mrs. Jim Chamber- and Jason of Boise visited Sun­
lain of Nyssa were Sunday din­ day evening with Mr. and Mrs.
ner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow Seuell and family.
Jack Ward and family.
Edith Whipple visited that same
Christy Chamberlain of Nyssa evening.
was a Saturday overnight guest
Mr. and Mrs. E.M. Seuell
of Pam Ward.
of the Big Bend area visited
Pam and Kathy Ward, Norene Sunday afternoon with Mr. and
Savage, Lori Farrenburg, and Mrs. Wcodrow Seuell.
Pam Skeen attended the Fiesta
Marvin and Patty Seuell have
Chilena Saturday evening at the been home from school this week
Nyssa High School. Pam Skeen with tonsilitis.
helped serve while there.
DeWaine Sharp of Middleton Pecora Home
visited Sunday afternoon with
Mr. and Mrs. Golden Draper. From Okinawa
Teresa Savage
celebrated
CSSN Steve Pecora, who just
her seventh birthday Friday
February 12.
She had ten returned from six months duty
guests. Cake and icecream were in Okinawa, arrived in Nyssa
Thursday evening and visited
served.
Mrs. Tom Jayo and children until Sunday morning at the Dick
and Mrs. Mike Savage and boys Wilson home.
The Haney Trio, Joyce 13, Roger 9, and
Barbara 11, children of Mr. and Mrs. Boyd
Haney, were among the featured entertainers
at the annual Amalgamated Sugar Company
employes end of campaign dinner held on
Lincoln’s birthday.
Five retirees were presented with gifts,
and they were Dick Forbess with 45 years;
Bill Church, 24 years; Lewis Mower, 17
years; Bill McGiney, 13 year; and Gordon
Williams, 14 years.
Also honored were
Jack Carter and Elmo Chadd, who will be
retiring soon.
Calvin L. Kuhn, vice president of Idaho
First National Bank, Boise, was master of
ceremonies; and Aldo Sarchiapone was chair­
man for the event.
Max Hanson, Boise,
National Vice Commander of the American
Legion, was featured speaker.
More than 400 employes and wives at-
tened the annual event held at the La Paloma
Restaurant, Ontario.
dinned at the Eastside Cafe in
Ontario Saturday evening.
Mrs. Minard Hart and Matt­
hew and Mrs. Dave Savage and
Natalie visited Tuesday with
Mrs. Bill Wilson of Roswell.
Mrs. John Reffett of Nyssa
and Mrs. Helen Hite of Alaska
visited Monday with Mr. and
Mrs. Loyd Adams.
Mr. and Mrs. John Henrie of
Delta, Utah, visited Monday
Mrs. Wilson accompanied her
son, Steve as far as San Jose,
where she visited her mother
and sisters. Mrs. Wilson and
her mother, Mrs. Bessie Ma­
thews,
returned Tuesday to
Nyssa by plane.
Pecora drove on from San
Jose to Pt. Hueneme where
he will be stationed for ap­
proximately six months.
The trend to youth involve­
ment in solving the many prob­
lems our nation faces is evident
in our community.
This year FFA
members
across the nation are empha­
sizing constructive involvement
in programs to improve agri­
culture and to make their com­
munities better places in which
to live and work.
This week over 450,000 FAA
members in 9,000 chapters all
across the nation are cele­
brating FFA WEEK with the
theme “Involved In America’s
Future.” Because FFA mem­
bers realize they have a stake
in America’s future they are
working to become more con­
structively involved today.
As students in high school
vocational
agriculture pro­
grams,
FFA members are
involved in learning modern
agricultural
production and
business techniques.
Their
special agricultural knowledge
will be increasingly important
as this nation’s population in­
creases to nearly 300 million
in the next thirty years.
The term vocational agricul­
ture usually brings to mind the
study only of farming and the
production of food and fiber.
But today’s students of vo­
cational agriculture are in­
volved in more than production
agriculture. They are training
for jobs as quality control tech­
nicians, farm equipment mech­
anic, horticulturists, agricul­
tural marketing representa­
tives, and agricultural transpor­
tation experts.
Their training is essential
to provide the manpower to
produce vital food supplies and
other agricultural products and
services where they are needed,
when they are needed, and in
a form consumers demand.
In addition to helping provide
the nation’s food supply, FFA
members are involved in the
preservation and wise use of
America’s natural resources.
Today more than ever, FFA
Summer Session
members all across the nation
Catalogs Available are involved in activities to
improve the environment. The
Catalogs for the University
National FFA Foundation, Inc.,
of Oregon’s 1971 Summer Ses­
provides incentive awards in
sion are now available.
fish and wild-life management,
The catalogs include complete
and many other agricultural
information of summer offer­
areas.
ings, admission requirements,
FFA members are involved
fees, and services and facili­
in being better citizens and
ties available to enrolled stu­
leaders. Through their regular
dents.
Registration request
meetings, public speaking con­
cards are also included.
tests, parliamentary procedure
Registration for the Summer
activities as well as local, state,
Session start Monday, June 21,
and national leadership develop­
The short eighi-week session
ment experiences FFA mem­
ends August 13. The U-week
bers learn to be active citi­
session ends September 3.
zens.
Now they are using
Copies of the Summer Ses­
sion catalog are available at their leadership training to be­
come involved In FFA com­
the Education Building, Univer­
munity action programs desig-
sity of Oregon.
ned to help develop rural and
urban communities into
re­
warding and challenging places
in which to live and work.
The FFA was founded on
principles of service to mem­
bers and to the community
through personal involvement.
This year we salute FFA mem­
bers on rededicating them­
selves to being “Involved In
America’s Future.”
This year’s Nyssa Chapter
officers are Glen Gibson, Pre­
sident; Pete Morgan, Vice Pre­
sident; Lurelle Robbins, Sec­
retary; Gary Kurtz, Treasurer;
Dan Nichols, Reporter; and Kirk
Cleaver, Sentinal. The assis­
tant officers are Bob Holmes,
Jack Joyce, Fred Child, Bill
Holmes and David Robbins.
TVCC Presents Film
»»
The Pawnbroker”
“The Pawnbroker,’’ the third
in Treasure Valley Community
College’s great film series, will
be shown Friday, February 26,
at 8:00 p.m. in the Admini­
stration Building.
A dramatic and shattering
United States film starring Rod
Steiger, it is a grim portrait
of a man who survived the
hell of a Nazi concentration
camp only to encounter fur­
ther prejudice in New York’s
harlem.
In America he relives his
past as he reviews the same
kind of
dehumanization in
America as he experienced in
Nazi Germany. Aloof and alone,
in the end a young Puerto Rican
breaches the wall of his bitter­
ness in this compelling picture
of our modern world.
: «• » «• «• •»
NEWELL HEIGHTS ITEMS
■ ■ ■ BY DALE WITT ■ ■ ■ PHONE 372-2183 ■ ■ ■
NEWELL HEIGHTS-Mr. and
Marion York of Spokane arrived
Friday evening to spend the week
end with her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Alfred Simpson.
Saturday Mr. and Mrs. Marion
York and Mr. and Mrs. Alfred
Simpson visited Marion Yorks
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Leslie
York in Vale.
Friday evening Mrs. Alfred
Simpson, Alene and Mrs. Ray
Simpson attended a bridal sho­
wer for Carol Brock in Ontario.
She is soon to marry Tom Buck­
ler of Vale.
Mrs. Carl Fenn and Mrs.
Edith Fenn went to the 70th
Banquet held at the Stake House
in Nyssa Friday evening. Others
attending from this area were
Mr. and Mrs. Cornelius Bar­
ton.
Mr. and Mrs. Johnnie Eason
of Homedale were Saturday din­
ner guests of her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Ray Simpson. Sun­
day morning the Ray Simpsons
and Johnnie Easons all went
for a drive to McCall. The
snow carnival was nearly gone.
Snow there is 5ft deep in most
places, and you followed a trail
which was scooped out. They
watched the snow mobiling.
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Simpson
visited Marion and Karen York
at the Alfred Simpson home Sa­
turday evenng. The Yorks left
for their home in Spokane Mon­
day morning.
Darryl Simpson took his
grandmother to Vale on Friday.
The Happy Dozen Card Club
met Friday afternoon with Edna
DeHaven. Winners were Agnes
Ashcraft, Gnetty Piercy, Edna
DeHaven and Annie VanderOord.
Miss Eda Hokum ofCaldwell,
and Miss Susie Dibble of Apple
Valley were Thursday evening
dinner guests at the LeonCham-
berlain home and later attended
the PTA meeting at Roswell with
Mrs. Chamberlain.
Mrs. M. L. Judd and Mrs.
Gerrit Timmerman attended the
Book Club Saturday at the home
of Mrs. Jack Elliott.
Mrs. Irvin Topliff gave a
dinner Monday evening to cele­
brate her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Harry Warren’s 55th wed­
ding anniversary. Her guests
were Messrs, and Mmes Harry
Warren, Wayne Warren’s all of
Parma and the Chuck Brady’s
of Ontario.
Mrs. Harriet Turner was a
Thursday luncheon guest of Mrs,
Dale Witt.
Mrs. Witt was a
Sunday dinner guest of Mr. and
Mrs. W.C. Van De Water and
son Kent in Big Bend.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Province
of Caldwell, Nellie Eason and
Teresa Tredway of Parma were
Sunday afternoon visitors in the
L.C. McDermott home.
Sunday afternoon visitors at
the Gene Simpson home were
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Fenn,
Mrs. Carl Fenn, David Phelps
and Wesley Walker and sons.
Mrs. Frankie Worden at­
tended the musical at TVCC
Saturday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Spence
and Missy were Sunday after­
noon visitors of her mother,
Mrs. Frankie Worden.
ARCADIA
BY AVO MOELLER
999^9 PHONE 372-2733 &&&&
Mr. and Mrs. Brig Olsen
returned home February 17,
from a month’s vacation. They
drove to Salt Lake City, where
they visited their son, Mr. and
Mrs. Garth Olsen and son. Then
went by jet to Montgomery,
Ala., where they visited another
son, Major and Mrs. Vard Ol­
sen and daughter. They returned
by way of Salt Lake and visited
relatives in Burley.
Mrs. Art Richardsen from
Boise spent last week with her
mother, Mrs. Ernest Stephen­
sen, who was in the hospital in
Ontario for four days.
She
returned to Boise Saturday. Mrs.
Stephensen is at home and im­
proved. Sunday visitors were
Mr. and Mrs. John Zittercob
Mr. and Mrs. Dean Winchester
from Nyssa, and Mrs. Dennis
Schilling from Ontario.
Mrs. Amy Stradley has been
helping at the Nyssa School
lunch kitchen for the past month
while Mrs. Dick Butcher is
recovering from major surgery.
Miss Karen Hust of Boise
spent the week end with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. George
Hust and family.
Arcadia club members and
their husbands held their annual
Valentine Party February 18 at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Clyde
Bowers, There were thirteen
present, After a pot luck din­
ner the evening was spent in
Neil Pet-
Mrs. Marie Moore spent from playing Whoopee!
Friday until Monday at the Her­ tersen received the prize for
schel Thompson home caring for high score and George Moeller
Mrs. Thompsons mother, Mrs. low score. Mrs. Everett Ed­
Marie Earp.
The Herschel monson received the traveling
prize.
Thompsons had an outing at
Mr. and Mrs. Otis Bullard
their cabin at the Owyhee Dam.
Mrs. Luit Stam, Mrs. Bill visited Sunday evening with Theo
Toomb and Mrs. Marie Moore Matherly at the Nyssa hospital
attended coffee klutch at the and with Mr. and Mrs. Clyde
home of Mrs. Dale Ashcraft Long in Nyssa to wish Mrs.
in Parma W ednesday afternoon. Long a happy birthday.
Richard McLauchlin
from
Mr. and Mrs. Mervil Hutchin­
son of Nyssa took Mrs. Marie Tillamook spent the week end in
Moore to Ontario Saturday to a the John Seburn home and with
Mr. and Mrs. Dick Corn.
pizza dinner.
Mr. and Mrs. Bud Sappe of
C.B. Hill was a Sunday din­
ner guest of Mr. and Mrs. Nyssa visited Mr. and Mrs.
Dick Corn Sunday evening.
Hardy Fine in Caldwell.
I
FRESH
CUT-UP FRYERS
31'
59'
OCEAN CRABS
PACIFIC
lb.
TEXAS PINK
69'
OYSTERS
LEGS & THIGHS
49'
BREASTS
59'
WINGS
29'
BACKS
19'
SMELT
I
29'
(FRESH COLUMBIA)
U.S.D.A. CHOICE
STEAKS
NISHITANI NO. 1
ATMOSPHERE CONTROLLED
* GRAPEFRUIT) App[ES
POTATOES
I
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0
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«
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FOR
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CRISCO OIL
4« OFF LABEL
24 oz. BOTTLE
BORDEN’S
COFFEE CREAMER
CR EMORA
69'
22 oz. jar
CORONET
_
PAPER TOWELS
GIANT ROLLS
DEL MONTE
SAUERKRAUT
is oz. cans
J ,w 89'
6 ’* $f 00
LIBBY’S
29 oz. CAN
PEAR NECTAR
LIBBY’S 16 oz. CANS
.
WHOLE KERNEL CORN 6
DEL MONTE HALVES & SLICED
DUNCAN HINES
19 oz. PKGS.
CLING PEACHES
CABIN
c LOG
vni
n WITH FREE
SYRUP NO DRIP SPOUT
-
29oz.cans
j
24 oz. BOTTLE
CAKE
79*
95'
69'
LA CHOY
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MUSHROOM, PORK, SHRIMP, CHICKEN
42 1/2
« BEEF
42
1/2 oz. DIVIDER CAN IQ
C how
mein
AtWii MEIN
5 1/2 «. CANS
■ “
4
5 oz. PKGS.
SALE DATES—FEB
$100
25, 26, 27
COOD¡nOD¡tll$l$¡ÜSS¡HK ¡
TRI TATERS, CRINKLE CUTS,
FRENCH FRIES
1-lb.
PKGS.
. «•
1ÇC
12 1/4 oz. CANS
ÄFRIED RICE ... 3
SIMPLOT
HASH BROWNS
2 • 69
5 oz. BOTTLE
CHICKEN, SHRIMP, PORK
Frozen Foods
jp
(NOODLES
SOY SAUCE
FOLGER’S INSTANT
6 oz. JAR
$|00
COOKIES
3/98
COFFEE
CRYSTALS
19'
«FORTUNE
MIXES
•» »• ;
I
THUNDERIOO MAU
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