Th« Nyssa Oat« City Journal, Nyssa, Or«gon Thursday, July 27, 1972 >< SUNSETVALLEY ACTIVITIES BY MARTHA LORENSEN - PHONE 372 - 2186 ------- * SUNSET VALLEY—Mr. and Mrs. Ira Price attended the Trl-county Grange picnic which was held Sunday at Westmore Park near Unity. Mr. and Mrs. Don Share and family were dinner guests Sa­ turday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ira Price. Mr. and Mrs. Dick Young, Charles Moore, John Knotting- ham and Mrs. LoisCouncilwere picnickers in the Hoodoo area Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. OraNewgenand Tony Kratzberg were dinner guests Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Bob Moore. Mr. and Mrs. Ora Newgen visited Mrs. Frone Stradley Thursday, and found she has not been feeling well. Mrs. Sue Marshall visited the Jack Woods’ on Saturday evening. Mrs. Sue Rose of Nyssa spent the day, Saturday at the home of Mr and Mrs. Charley Glenn. Mrs. Eli Pederson of Ber­ gen, Norway arrived at the home of her aunt, Mr. and Mrs. John Grotveitt Tuesday and re­ mained through Saturday. Miss Pederson traveled to America with a group flying in a Char­ tered plane from Norway. Mrs. Eli Pederson of Ber­ gen, Norway visited Wednesday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Alexander. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Alex­ ander and family attended a church camp meeting which was held at the Nazarene Church campground in Nampa Sunday evening. Mrs. Harriet Turner spent Sunday afternoon at the Ken Lorensen home. Mr. and Mrs. Tim Holly and daughter Trina of John Day ar­ rived Thursday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Harley Wilson. Tim returned home Saturday and Mrs. Holly and Trina re­ mained for a longer visit. Mrs. John Reffett was a din­ ner guest on Thursday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Loyd Adams. The Adams’ and Mrs. Reffett visited in the afternoon at the Thurman Hill home in Apple Valley. Mr. and Mrs. Charley Glenn and family were visitors at the Melvin Calhoun home in Nyssa Friday evening. Mr. and Mrs. LarryCulbert- son and family were visitors Tuesday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Charley Glenn. Mr. and Mrs. Jim Langley and Jimmy, Mr». E.J. Hobson and Scott Langley were dinner guests Sunday at the home of Dr. and Mrs. Rex Langley in Caldwell. Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Mitchell and Mrs. Myrtle Hillis attended the rodeo in Nampa Wednesday night. Among those attending the Nampa rodeo Saturday night were Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Mit­ chell, Mr. and Mrs. Ike Mit­ chell, Mr. andMrs. IrwinChar- land and Mr. and Mrs. Ken Lorensen, Harriet and Gloria. Mr. and Mrs. Jim Hughes of Broomfield, Colorado and their daughter Donna were visitors July 22 at the home of Mrs. Harriet Turner. Mrs. Hughs is a niece of the late, William Turner. Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Wilson and family and Mr. and Mrs. Harley Wilson spent Sunday af­ ternoon at Owyhee Lake. Dr. and Mrs. John Long of Nyssa attended the Sunday eve­ ning meeting at the Owyhee Community Church where mis­ sionaries Mr. andMrs. Hershel Dunn and family showed film of their work area in Bolivia. Missionary Dunn has been a long-time friend of the Longs. Mr. and Mrs. Hershel Dunn and fanrly were visitors Sun­ day night at the home of Mr. and Mrs. James Phelps. The Owyhee Annual Picnic, of the Inter-denominational Retraced Slight Loop » Self-acceptance Supersensitive Fear of disapproval. The larger the loop, the greater the fear. "The real cost of welfare is not in cash,” says Pennsyl­ vania State Senator Richard A. Snyder. "The irreparable cost is in fractured families, reduced production in the economy, and eroded moral values.” Today’» American rail­ roads serve 45,000 communi­ ties on 206,000 miles of line. Coll««n Staphs Mary Lynn School On Honor Roll There will be a benefit Gos­ Names of Utah State Univer­ pel Music Jamboree held in sity students who achieved the the Boise Capital High Audi­ honor roll for Spring Quarter, torium Saturday, July 29, 1972 1972, have been announced by at 8 p.m. All proceeds will Dr. Claude J. Burtenshaw, vice go to the Mary Lynn School for president for student affairs. Retarded Children of Nampa. In order to be included on Featured will be musical honor roll, a student must be groups. Among them are “The enrolled full time and have a Galileans”, “The Children of grade point average of 3.5 or th& Son”, “Friends of His”, better (4.0 is straight A.) The Waymark Singers”, “The The student from this area Parrish’s”. to achieve honor roll was Mary General admission will be Colleen Staples, Nyssa, Rt. 2, $1.00. Everyone is invited to in Education. attend. I r I I I f LEAN TENDER. ROUND 1 Y* Z I, MORRELL PRIDE HAM^U 4.19 is.l LEAN TENDER CUBE STEAK 4.3N BONELESS BEEP STEW MOUJ . .. 98 10. BONELESS RUMP ROAST». 4.19 « BONELESS ROUND STEAK^ 4.19 ig LEAN HAM SLICES -- 429* GROUND BEEP FOR/AEKVY Geowp CHUCK 7% 1T STEAK tea I USDA CHOICE CR1SC0 OIL tí" 59c KfYTFY I\U g Q/ . » - & R. 40cr. <&. ¿I» ke uia super n i p I A • PK0 : ■ -. ♦ rplLDS0URY- BAUUAR.P "p Œ0. ÊLU6 0OÑNBT 11«. ÂAÀ ^ KETCHUP ss» 49* I margarines ______________________/ YOGURT 379e ■ » rSbO COUNT « WELCH GRAPE HOLSUM F. I. • L0N& éPA&HETTI • CUT MACARONI 4OUD FIRM HEAPS I Î L\ If 20 ij F> JAMJELLY 02. < LETTUCE« 6 heads --►-¡Y Oheads/îB 4 4-Æ PK&6. ÊA, NB(TARINE$”,~ 6RAPES R&PtëHESf GRN. ONIONS ,?/|5^ FA SEEDLESS OR - RED CARDINAL MOW... — The unfinished panfy hose they get then shape from you 0 6 POPULAR. COLOR* Recoil? kitchen ) terry » B«n«fit To B« Held t Ellen Jones « overnight Thursday. Friday was spent at Crater Lake, and Fri­ day night they were guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Frahm at Riddle. The Frahms joined the Nielsen Saturday for a coastal trip. They did some fishing and picnicking at Silt Coos Lake, over Saturday and Sunday. The Frahms departed for home Sunday evening. The Nielsens drove north on the coastal highway to Waldport, Oregon and visited the Sea Lions Caves. They spent Sunday night at Lebanon returning home Monday. Valerie Smith visited this week at the home of her grand­ parents, Mr. and Mrs. Gabriel Astoreca. * Graphoanalysis It isn’t necessary to take anyone’s word for the validity of personality assessment through handwriting strokes. You can try it on your own writing. One of the problems which gives all of us a certain amount of trouble is our sensitiveness to criticism. We all need to be conscious of our impact on others, but when we let our imagination take over and let the fear of being rejected or of not being accepted, our wri­ ting will give our secret away. We are not born sensitive, but acquire this fear through re­ peated hurts, through thought­ less criticism, slights imagined or real. We want and need the approval of parents, friends, business or marital partners. Being supersensitive may make us fearful to try some­ thing new, afraid to form new friendships. It may make us draw into our shell or become resentful. At any rate, we can­ not do our best or appear our best under these circum­ stances. Check something you have written and see what conclusion you can draw from eight or ten letter “d”. The following il­ lustration will give you an idea of what to look for. If greatly inflated “d” loops are found, ask yourself if this feeling of •fear is really necessary, or is your imagination making things seem worse than they are. Church was held Friday evening on the church lawn, with over sixty attending. A ball game and other activity games were played during the evening. The Owyhee Community Church reports that the sum­ mer church camps are well on their way with the junior camp, which began July 24 at McCall. The intermediate group will go July 31. The tween campers, go August 6, and the seniors will begin August 13. All area children are invited and wel­ come. For information, call Rev. Fred Moxom, 372-2761, R* 1, Nyssa. Mr. and Mrs. Elver Neilsen left Thursday for a weekend vacation trip stopping at Bend Pag« S«v«n (o COUNT PK&. PT . ICE CREAM SANDWICH BLUE PLATE OYSW â 774 COOKIE* ¿°E«e */894 COOKIES DOObJE l0°7 ^8* «TÎT Q oz A wake PORK; BEAN? * i V2 30 pTvpwm CAAJ G^EAT BREAKFAST THESE PRICES E ffective J uly 27,20.29^. CAMPING TRAILERS CLOVER FARM FOR RENT NYSSA, OREGON DAY or WEEK POTATO CHIPS 694 SCHILLINGS P6^»V 494 - — 1 $IMPLOT Ifcoz PkCÖ PI6H SSÄ'S 9Q¿ TATER S i RP^E-YE i TOWELS- treasure VAU.ÉŸ B* ¿GOLD 1 1 i STRIKE STAMPS A