Nyssa gate city journal. (Nyssa, Or.) 1937-199?, October 21, 1971, Page 7, Image 7

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    Thursday, October 21, 1971
Th« Nyssa Oat« City Journal, Nyssa, Oregon
Hunters Reminded That
Fire Danger Still Exists
John McKean, state game di­
rector, advised hunters today
that the hot weather since early
October has dried out much of
the state’s forests and range-
lands, increasing the fire dan­
ger, and urged all outdoor
uSers to be especially careful
with camp and warming fires.
The director said that no hun­
ter-caused forest or range fires
have been reported to him but
that camp and warming fires
have been found burning in the
field or left unattended at camp.
Reports have also been received
of warming fires being built
in. locations where no fire should
be started. He warned nimrods
to be sure and extinguish all
fires before leaving camp to hunt
or when they leave their hunt­
ing stands.
He also requested all con­
scientious outdoorsmen to con­
tinue their vigil against the
“slob” hunter and to report
immediately automobile license
numbers andnames, if possible,
of individuals committing acts of
vandalism, litteringor game law
violations. Me Kean said that no
true sportsman can condone
misconduct afield and that con­
stant vigilance is necessary
on the part of everyone in or­
der to eliminate this undesi­
rable element from the hunter’s
ranks.
McKean
added that 23
firearms accidents -- two fa­
tal — have occurred so far this
year, most of which have been
the result of carelessness or
mishandling of shotgun, rifle, or
pistol. He said that in this re­
gard the hunter is actually his
own worst enemy, either shoot­
ing himself or, at very close
range, his hunting companion.
Most accidents, he said, occur
in camp or around motor ve­
hicles. He urged all nimrods
to abide strictly by the ten com­
mandments of firearms safety
to eliminate such unnecessary
and tragic accidents.
SHAWN BYBEE
NATIONAL WINNER
Shawn Bybee, 13-year old
granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs.
S.P. Bybee won the national
grand prize in Cappy Dick's
spelling puzzle contest pub­
lished in the August 29 Sunday
comics section of the Ogden
Standard-Examiner.
Shawn is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Ray Bybee of Brigham
City, Utah, She received a 20-
volume World Book Encyclope­
dia and the World Book Atlas.
Her' entry was judged to be
the best of all those received
from cities where the Cappy
Dick page is published.
Shawn is in the eighth grade
at Box Elder Junior High. She
paints, plays the guitar and rides
horses.
Her winning entry
marked the third time she had
entered Cappy Dick contests.
Restaurant starring at 5:00 p.m.
Her brother, Douglas, a sixth
The “Aloha” Homecoming Ball grader, will be allowed to use
at the Elks Lodge in Caldwell the encyclopedia, too, she said.
is scheduled for 9:00 p.m.
VAV>V»VAViW«W»V>
Activities planned for Sunday,
October 24 include a worship
Service in Hewett Chapel-Audi­
by Julie Ishida
torium at 10:00 a.m. The spea­
The AHS Hockey team has had
ker will be The Reverend James
F. Moore, S.T.D., First Presby­ a big turnout again this year.
terian Church, Salt Lake City, The team got right down to work
Utah.
Music will be offered and won their first game with
by the College Choir under the Meridian 4-1. Points in this
direction of Professor James game were made by Mary Tim­
Gabbard. Dr. Richard Skyrm, merman - 2, and Margo Case
chairman of the Music Depart­ 2.
Our next game with C of I
ment will be organist. At 11:00
a.m. a Pancake Feed will be was one of the greatest the team
The score
hosted by the C of I Lambda has ever played.
Zeta.
The last event for the was 0-0.
When we went to Marsing we
day includes The College Of
Idaho Associates - Trustees were accompanied by the 7th
Banquet at 6:00 p.m. in the Stu­ and 8th grade hockev teams.
The 7th graders lost but will
dent Union Ballroom.
have another chance at the win­
SMALL BUSINESS
ners next week. The 8th gra-
CAN OBTAIN LOANS ders won their game. From the
way these Junior High teams
The Workmen’s Compensa­ played our high school team will
tion Board announced at Salem have a good number of great
small businesses may obtain players for quite a few years
emergency loans to help them to come. The big team also won
comply with new federal job their game 4-2. Points being
safety and health standards re­ made by Tonya Bennett - 2,
quired by the Williams-Steiger Kathy Deffer -1, and Karen Ol­
Occupational Safety and Health sen -1.
Act of 1970.
One of our tougher games was
The loans, on which there is with Caldwell, but we finished
no statutory dollar limit, will victorious with a score of 4-2.
be made by the Small Busi­ Points were made by Sheila
ness
Administration (SBA) Pratt - 1, Mary Timmerman - 1,
either directly or in coopera­ and Margo Case - 2.
tion with banks or other lend­
We went to Nampa for our
ing institutions.
next game winning 4-0. Margo
Proceeds of the loans are to Case - 2, Mary Timmerman - 1,
be used by small business to and Sheila Pratt - 1, making the
make additions to or alter points in this game.
equipment, facilities or methods
As in all our games points
of operation to comply with the could not have been made without
standards set in the Williams- excellent assistance from the
Steiger Act.
rest of the team.
C Of I “ALOHA”
HOMECOMING PLANS
NOW COMPLETED
Plans are being finalized for
“Aloha” Homecoming Weekend,
October 22, 23, and 24 at The
College of Idaho. The Hawaiian
theme will be carried out in
honor of alumni, parents and
friends of the College who will
be returning on campus. Fresh
flower leis will be flown in
for this occasion and the Ha­
waiian theme will set the stage
for campus decorations and the
big C of I Homecoming parade.
A Homecoming Theatre Partv
will be held in Jewett Audi­
torium at 8:00 p.m., Fricay,
October 22, featuring faculty
talent and the Queen Coronation.
Students at the C of I are in­
viting their parents to attend.
A full schedule is planned for
Saturday, October 23. The Pa­
rent’s Assiciation will host a
brunch from 9:00 - 10:30 a.m.
at the entrance of Sterry Hall
during registration for all re­
turning alumni and parents.
Other events scheduled for Sa­
turday include campus tours,
continuous Planetarium show­
ings in Boone Science Hall and a
luncheon from 11:45 to 1:00p.m.
at Simplot Stadium. The Home­
doming Parade will proceed
from Municipal Park at 11:00
a.m. and continue to Simplot
Stadium for a pre-game review.
The Homecoming game starts
at l;30 p.m. when the C of I
ys Linfield College. Crowning
of the Homecoming Queen will
be featured during half-time
activities.
At 5:00 p.m. a Parent’s-
Student’s Homecoming dinner
will be held in the Student Union
Ballroom. Nine alumni class­
reunion groups will meet for
social hours and banquets at the
Elks Lodge and the See and I
Adrian Schools Invite Parents
For American Fducation Week
AHS NEWS
“Help Schools Bridge The
Gap" between young people and
adults, between Americans of
different color and point of
view, between rich and poor
and between promise and per­
formance.
In a nation that
speaks of inalienable rights, the
right to learn must be para­
mount. Yet enormous gaps must
be bridged before that right
becomes a reality.
American Education Week,
held annually since 1921, is
sponsored by the National Edu­
cation Association, the Ameri­
can Legion, the National Con­
gress of Parents and Teachers,
and the U.S. Office of Educa­
tion.
The week of October
24 through 30 is American Edu­
cation Week this year.
The Adrian Elementary School
students are busy making post­
ers to advertise American Edu­
cation Week. These posters will
be judged and awards will be
presented to nine students. The
winning posters will also be on
display in lowntown Adrian.
Bulldogs Lose
First Game
Costly penatlites and fum­
bles at crucial times knocked
Nyssa out of the unbeaten ranks
Friday night as the Bulldogs
lost their first game of the
season
after winning six
straight.
Grant Union High
School of John Day turned the
trick with a 24-6 win over the
Bulldogs.
The Bulldogs won every place
but on the scoreboard as they
outgained John Day 321 yards
to 223, but fumbled live times
and lost all five, and that told
the story.
John Day scored in each of
the first three quarters. In
the first quarter Catron ran in
from the one yard line, after
recovering a Nyssa fumble on
the 10, then passed to Wileyfor
the two-pointer and the Pros­
pectors led 8-0.
Halfback Greg Eddy, who ran
well all evening, ran 29 yards
for the second John Day touch­
down in the second quarter. He
then took a pass from Catron
for the conversion and Nyssa
was behind 16-0 at halftime.
The Catron brothers ganged
up on the Bulldogs in the third
quarter with a 12-yard scoring
pass from Ken to split end
Clinton Catron, the conversion
was good with a pass from Cat­
ron to Eddy, and John Day was
ahead 24-0.
Nyssa came to life in the
fourth quarter with Ron Moffis
and Darr Haney doing much of the
running on a long drive, and
Rick Chester made the last
yard good for six points. The
conversion failed and the game
ended 24-6.
Friday evening the Bulldogs
travel to Weiser for a game
that could settle the SRV cham­
pionship. Weiser has come on
strong in the last several games,
and now has five wins.
Plan now to visit our schools
between October 26 and29. The
students and teachers are
looking forward to lots of com­
pany. Many activities are being
planned by the individual rooms.
Grandparents’ Day is scheduled
for Wednesday, October 27.
Come and make your grandchild
happy.
Our PTA will have its meeting
on Thursday, October 28. We
will have open house during the
time when you may come and
visit in the school rooms.
Kingman Kolony
BY DALE WITT
PHONE 372-2183
KINGMAN KOLONY-Mr. and
Mrs. Oscar Schafer visited their
friends, Mr. and Mrs. Melvin
Duncan Friday at Ironside. Os­
car went hunting a short while
in the afternoon and got a small
buck.
Mrs. Bill Toomb is returning
home with her sister, Miss
Jeannette Martin who lives at
Clarkston, Wash., Thursday
where she will spend some time
visiting.
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Strawn
were Thursday dinner guests of
their daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Carter at New Plymouth.
Archie Beutler and son of Mc­
Minnville, Oregon, visited Mr.
and Mrs. Al Thompson Sunday
afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Jake Borge of
Reedsport, were Wednesday
evening visitors at the Al
Thompson home.
Mrs. Bill Toomb, Miss Jean­
nette Martin and Jerry Frietig
of Nyssa were Sunday dinner
guests in the Jim Phifer home.
Mr. and Mrs. Jake Borge of
Reedsport
were
Thursday
evening visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Carl Begeman.
Mr. and Mrs. Gabe Astoreca
visited Mr. and Mrs. Wayne
Robb Friday evening.
Bruce Campbell, who is in the
service, came home Friday
from Fort Lewis, Wash., and
will visit his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Earl Campbell and family
and return to Fort Lewis on
He is doing fine
Wednesday.
now.
Weekend guests in the Earl
Campbell home were Jim Mur-
fitt and Chet Peterson of Port­
land and Loren Murfitt of The
Dalles.
Mr. and Mrs. Willis Conant,
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Conant and
Mrs. Jeanette Stacy and girls of
Apple Valley went to Boise
Sunday to see baby Janet Kath­
leen Conant, baby daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Conant at
St. Lukes Hospital, Janet is
doing fine. She now weighs
2^ounds^^n^l^l/^ounces.
Pag« Seven
Herb Sez... 1EGA1 NOTICES
I just read where the AEC
had thrown a real crimp into
the building of atomic power
plants. This ruling on the pour­
ing of warm water into rivers
will delay the construction of 80
nuclear power plants and could
shut down 5 plants already in
operation. Perhaps these pro­
blems in the plants can be cor­
rected and maybe they can’t. It
will take an estimated 25 mil­
lion bucks worth of machinery
to comply with the new ruling.
I can see the necessity of
fighting pollution of our air
and streams but I believe in
many instances that we’ve gone
overboard on the subject. We
can have no more power plants
that use fossilized fuel such as
coal, oil, or gas. These plants
pollute the air. We can’t place
a new power plant on a run­
ning stream because this spoils
the fishing, for some. We are
not permitted to build a nuclear
plant for several reasons, it
raises the temperature of the
stream by a few degrees, it
produces nuclear pollutants and
too many people just don’t like
having a pile of atomic mater­
ial in the same state with them.
Now you tell me, it we can’t
use the above methods to pro­
duce electricity just how do you
propose to have it made. And
don’t tell me that you prefer to
get it from a wall plug.
I was told the other day that
we have enough power plants now
if fewer people would use it or
if more poeplc would use it
less. I’ll bet Diogenes had an
easier time finding an honest
man then than you would finding
someone willing to do without
electricity. Everybody is saying
that the population is going to in­
crease and all signs point to a
greatly expanded use of power.
You just don’t go out and buy a
power plant like you would a pair
of socks. It takes years to plan
and create a power plant and at
the present there are very few
on the drawing boards. We’re
already behind in creating power
NOTICE OF EQUALIZATION tion shall be the Big Bend School
house located 3 1/2 miles south
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, east of Adrian, Oregon and the
That the board of directors of polls shall be opened at 8:00
the Ridgeview Irrigation Dis­ A.M. on the day of the election
trict will meet at the home of and shall be kept open until
Masa Nishihara in the county of 5:00 P.M. when the polls shall
Malheur, State of Oregon, that be closed.
Nominations for such office
being the District’s office, at
8:00 p.m. on the 26th day of Oc­ shall be made by petition, signed
tober, 1971, to sit as a Board by at least ten (10) electors of
of Equalization for the purpose the District or at an assembly
of reviewing and correcting its of not less than twenty-five (25)
assessment and apportionment electors. All nominations shall
of taxes for defraying the op­ be filed with the Secretary of
eration, maintenance and con­ the District at least fifteen (15)
struction costs and expenses for days before the date of the elec­
the District for the year 1972. tion. (545.026) Nominating pe­
Any complaint concerning the titions forms may be obtained
assessments or any changes de­ from the Secretary of the Dis­
sired must be entered with the trict.
Secretary of the District before
BY ORDER OF THE BOARD
the date named herein in order OF DIRECTORS OF THE BIG
to receive proper consideration BEND IRRIGATION DISTRICT.
from the Board.
W. C. VanDewater
The 1972 assessment may be
Secretary
seen at the Ridgeview Irrigation
Published, October 14, 21,
District office at the office of and 28, 1971.
the South Board of Control, Owy­
hee Project in Homedale, Idaho.
TVCC HOSTS
Done by order of the board of
Treasure Valley Community
directors.
College will host a visitation
/S/ Beverly Fisher, Secre­
team comprised of representa­
tary, Ridgeview Irrigation Dis­
tives of the state colleges and
trict.
universities, on Friday, Novem­
Published October 7, 14, 21,
ber 5, at 9:30 a.m.
and 28, 1971.
Unique throughout the United
States is the Oregon State Sys­
NOTICE OF ELECTION
tem of Higher Education “visi­
OF DIRECTOR OF BIG BEND
tation team” which visits every
IRRIGATION DISTRICT
high school in the state. The
team impresses upon secondary
Notice is hereby given that an
students the need for some type
election for the office of one dir­
of education or training beyond
ector for the Big Bend Irriga­
high school.
tion District in Malheur County
The visitation supplements
Oregon, for a term of three(3)
the guidance program of Nyssa
years, will be held within said High School. Students will be
District on November 9, 1971.
given first hand information
The polling place for saidelec- about course offerings, admis­
sion requirements, housing,
and it’s hard for me to ratio­ costs to attend, financial aids
nalize that we’re helping the si­ and scholarships and other in­
tuation by sitting tight.
formation pertinent to planning
I hope I’m wrong but I think for the college experience.
we’re going to have some terri­
Parents are invited to attend
fic blackouts tomorrow because the visitation and are urged to
public opinion won’t permit us to discuss post high school plans
do anything about it today.
with their sons and daughters
Professional
Directory
Physicians
and Surgeons
K. E. KERBY M.D.
K. A. DANFORD, M.D.
F. J. SYKES, M.D.
Physicians and Surgeons
Dial 372-2241
BAGGED CANDY
RECORD
CLOSE OUT
FOR SPOOKS & GOBLINS
98*
89*
MASKS 1()*-39*
1.66
XOSTUMES
f
REG. $1.98
-‘.CEPACOL
MOUTHWASH
s1.99
$4.98
ALBUMS
POP - WESTERN - EASY LISTENING
CLOSE OUT
TOOTHBRUSHES
PLAYTEX REG. 89C
X»
■” 88*
M c K esson
VITAMIN
PANTIHOSE s„„ 59*
«
%
202 Main Street
*
’n
Nyssa, Oregon
«
Dial 372-3347
CCftjuchoAfib
PHÄ
« a
AC ■
DAVID W. SARAZIN, M.D.
Physician and Surgeon
HOURS: 10 to 12 noon A
2 to 5 P.M. - Monday,
Tuesday, Wednesday, Fri­
day.
10 to 12 Saturday.
Phones: Office 372-3365
Residence
372-3173
Optometrists
27*2.49
•*V
MAULDING CLINIC
L. A. Maulding, M.D.
Charles E. Vanetti, M.D.
Physicians and Surgeons
Dial 372-2216
HOURS: 9 to 12 noon and
2 to 5 P.M., - Monday,
Tuesday, Thursday and
Friday. 9 to 12 noon,
Wednesday and Saturday.
Weight labs. “By appoint­
ment only” Wednesday.
ff
BOTTLESOF 1OO
ENKASHEER
> FOR THE TALL GAL
-2/89*
HOURS; 9 to 12 noon & 2 to
5 P.M. - Monday through
Friday, 10 to 12 Saturday.
. Prescriptions
. Cosmetics
. Photo Finishing
. Sundry Gifts
• Veterinary
Supplies
DR. JOHN EASLY
387 S. W. 4th AVENUE
Ontario, Oregon
-
Phone -
Ontario .... 889-8017
DR. J. E. HEITZMAN
7 North 2nd Street
Nyssa .... 372-3747
Obedient
Gas does what you tell it to do—right now! When
you turn the thermostat up ... presto! Immediate
action. “Generating time” (a term generic to an­
other type of energy) is unknown to fast-action nat­
ural gas. You’ll receive the same instant response
when the thermostat is turned down. That sort of
performance is worth a lot if you’re interested in
controlled heat. And who isn’t? It’s a vital point,
but only one of many advantages a natural gas heat­
ing system can bring to your home. Cleanliness is
another. This civilized fuel is pollution-free. That’s
important to you, important to your neighbors. The
versatility of gas is outstanding. For example: a sin­
gle, compact unit can heat your house in winter,
cool it in summer. Modern gas logs in your fireplace
are remarkably realistic, more convenient, com­
pletely trouble-free. What’s more, these and other
multiple uses will combine to bring you important
rate advantages—and savings.
Veterinarians
TREASURE VALLEY
ANIMAL HOSPITAL
Phone 372-2251
DR. B. E. ROSS
Nyssa .... 372-3552
DR. DICK TEMPLE
Nyssa . . . . 372-3329
ConpcPiatioft
Distributors of Naturalgaaatiafaction
Gas Gives You a Better Deal
I