A6 News/History wallowa.com October 14, 2015 Wallowa County Chieftain Throw your friend in the slammer? 100 years ago – Oct. 14, 1915 About 35 men are now employed at the East Oregon logging camp which is in charge of Eugene Brown & Brother, contractors. A consid- erable town has sprung up, as several families have moved to the timber. J. K. Marlin has established his celebrated camp boarding house there to feed the hungry. In addition to the cutting of timber, a logging spur of the railroad is under construction. Five carloads of steel rails were taken out Mon- day morning for this line. Several business buildings will be erected in Enterprise in the spring and there is a pros- pect that some more work will be started yet this fall. Ross Falconer has had preliminary sketches made of his proposed brick structure for his grain storage and fuel business, on the corner of south of Main St. DQGHDVWRIWKHÀRXUPLOO6/ Burnaugh Jr hopes to erect his new stone store building in the spring. A block south of this, on River St. opposite the front entrance of the courthouse, /DZVRQ%HHFKHUKDVEHHQ planning to erect a good brick building on the ground where his pool hall now stands. S. D. Keltner has about made up his mind that he will erect a building for his hardware busi- ness on his corner on Main St. opposite the Wallowa National Bank. Fraternal hall, across the street on another corner, is of stone, and the Record Chief- tain building, half a block to the north, is also to be of that material. Showing at the People’s 7KHDWUH³%OLJKWHG/LYHV´ZLWK Peter Beaudoin, Enterprise and 'RXJODV0F)HWULGJH/RVWLQH In the FFA wool show, one lo- cal entry, that of Tom Zollman RI(QWHUSULVHZRQD¿UVWSODFH &RUULHGDOHÀHHFH.HQW/R]L- er of Enterprise took seventh SODFH6XIIRONÀHHFH 25 years ago – Oct. 11, 1990 This photo ran in our April 20, 1916 edition. OUT OF THE PAST Compiled by Cheryl Jenkins the celebrated actress, Marie Hesperia. Admission 10 and 20 cents. 70 years ago – Oct. 11, 1945 At the Dorrance sale of registered Herefords held Oct. 1, W. C. Dorrance and son SUHVHQWHGD¿QHUHJLVWHUHG heifer to the Enterprise FFA chapter, and to the boy selected by them and the executive committee of the chapter to be its owner. Of the eight boys making application, Mack Birkmaier was chosen as the boy who had shown the greatest interest in beef cattle last year, and who had the best facilities for caring for the calf. Steven Terry, three year old son of Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Terry of Joseph, was found about 10:00 am Wednesday after an all night search in the woods out in the Elk mountain district. He had been missing since 4:30 Tuesday evening and searching parties had been hunting for him continuously. Oscar Davis, who had come up on horseback from his home on Crow creek, found Steven three miles from camp down T HE B OOKLOFT AND S KYLIGHT G ALLERY Finding books is our specialty 541.426.3351 • 107 E. Main • Enterprise • www.bookloftoregon.com Elk creek, sitting on a log, waiting with his dog, Bobbie. Playing tonight at the Vista Theatre in Enterprise: ³7KH&RZER\DQGWKH/DG\´ starring Gary Cooper, Merle Oberon and Walter Brennan. Max Gorsline has received his discharge from the navy after a long period of service aboard a sub chaser out of San Pedro, Calif. Ivan Curtis Carp- er of Wallowa has been given his discharge at the Puget Sound navy yard, Bremerton, Wash. Jay Clyde Hockett has also received his discharge at Bremerton. 50 years ago – Oct. 14, 1965 7HPSHUVÀDUHGVOLJKWO\ above normal Monday evening when the Rural School Board (Boundary Board) met at the courthouse in Enterprise to hear plans for consolidation measure of county schools. Two general orders of busi- ness, progress on reorganiza- tion and the tabled petition, were heard by the board before they reached a decision to allow the petition presented a few months ago by the Imnaha district. The Imnaha petition asked that they be allowed to hold an election for the pur- pose of forming an Adminis- trative District with the Joseph district. With hundreds of entries in WKH3,3DFL¿F,QVWLWXWHZRRO show, the youth from Wallowa County are making youths from other areas really get in and work for their awards. At OHDVWIRXU¿UVWSODFHDZDUGV have been won by local 4-H and FFA members in the show, Those winning or placing in the 4-H wool show from this DUHDZHUH-LP$OOHQRI/RVWLQH ¿UVWSODFH&URVVEUHGÀHHFH Dick Beaudoin of Enterprise ¿UVWSODFH7DUJKHHÀHHFHDQG Dennis Engledorf of Wallowa ¿UVWSODFH6XIIRONÀHHFH Other 4-H placings went to &DQGLGDWHVIRUORFDORI¿FH did their best to upstage the opposition during the candi- dates fair at Enterprise High School Tuesday. A near full- house audience expecting a donnybrook between candidate for district attorney Bill Reyn- olds and Mary Grote got what they were looking for as the two candidates seized every opportunity to land criticism on the other. After a 35-7 loss to Vale the previous week, the Enterprise Savages redeemed themselves last Friday with a 32-13 Wapiti /HDJXHIRRWEDOOZLQRYHU,P- bler. Enterprise running back /DQFH+RPDQKDGLWDOOKLV way, scoring three touchdowns against a turn-over plagued Imbler team, followed by a 20 yard touchdown pass from Brant Corak to Brent Eddy, and a 19 yard touchdown pass from Corak to Tim Martin. Would you like to have someone you know arrested? The chance of a lifetime is coming up to see your favorite person thrown in the slammer. The jail, expected to be full of prominent county residents will be set up at Wallowa Valley Mall in the American Cancer Society’s annual Jail and Bail project on Thursday, Oct, 18. Willing participants will be picked up at their home RURI¿FHE\DQRI¿FHUDQG hauled away. The prisoners will be phoning friends and relatives to raise bail for the ¿JKWDJDLQVWFDQFHU.:95 radio is sponsoring Jail and Bail locally and will be broad- casting from the mall jail on the day of the mass arrests.’ %HQH¿WFHOHEUDWHV¿UH¿JKWHUV5HG&URVV The OK Theatre is hosting an Oct. 15 “Helping those that KHOSXV´EHQH¿WWRUDLVHIXQGV IRU WKH :LOGODQG )LUH¿JKWHUV Foundation and the American 5HG&URVV7KHEHQ¿WVWDWVDW 6 p.m. The evening includes per- formances by a number of musicians including Jimmy Bivens, Henry Kinsley, Janis &DUSHU &DURO\Q /RFKHUW DQG others. Also featured are numer- ous local art and restaurant items. An added silent auction IHDWXUHVDVFHQLFÀLJKWDQG GD\ JXLGHG À\ ¿VKLQJ IURP the 6 Ranch. Also included are a bake sale and beer and wine sales. Coats from Rotary Club available ACROSS DOWN 1. Plural of ascus 5. Repents 11. British School 12. Adhesive to catch birds 15. Male children 16. Oil company 17. Intestinal 19. Money slogan 24. 2nd tone 25. In actual truth 26. Belgian-French River 27. Rural Free Delivery 28. Point midway between S and SE 29. Texas armadillo 30. 2nd largest Hawaiian island 31. Pile up 33. Changes liquid to vapor 34. Yemen capital 37. Byways 38. V-shaped cut 39. Painting on dry plaster 42. Daminozide 43. Papa’s partner 44. __ -fi: fiction/movie genre 47. 1st Soviet space station 48. Latvian capital 49. Come into view 52. Blue Hen school 53. Maine water company 55. Picture & word puzzle 57. Atomic #18 58. Xiamen dialect 59. Being overzealous 62. One who did it (slang) 63. Night breathing noises 64. A minute amount (Scott) 1. Race of Norse gods 2. Large pebbles 3. Latin line dances 4. The inner sole of a shoe 5. A French abbot 6. Moves stealthily 7. An alternative 8. 39th state 9. Lotus sports car model 10. River fill 13. Of I 14. Many noises 18. Ghana monetary units 20. Actor Hughley 21. The Cowboy State 22. Jests at 23. America 27. Surprise attack 29. Daddy 30. Extinct flightless bird of New Zealand 31. Express pleasure 32. Cellist Yo-Yo 33. Bronx cheer 34. A more firm substance 35. Essential oil obtained from flowers 36. Company that rings receipts 37. Largest church in Christianity 38. Capital of Wallonia 39. Heroic tale 40. Send forth 41. The Golden State 43. 1/1000 of an inch 44. Angel of the 1st order 45. Ukrainian peninsula 46. Disregard 48. Colophony 49. Spanish be 50. Military policeman 51. Cleopatra’s country 53. Br. drinking establishments 54. Removes moisture 56. Liberal Arts degree 60. Execute or perform 61. Atomic #77 The Wallowa County Rotary Club, in partnership with Build- ing Healthy Families, has both new and donated coats avail- able for area children and adults through the Coats for Kids Pro- gram. They are asking local cit- izens to donate warm coats, gloves, and hats for distribution in Wallowa County. They are looking for warm, clean coats for kids and adults. Childrens’ coats are especially in need. Coat drop boxes are locat- ed at Safeway and the Bank of Eastern Oregon in Enterprise, and the Community Bank branch in Joseph. Wallowa res- idents are asked to donate coats directly to the Wallowa Resale Store on Main Street. This program typically dis- tributes two hundred coats each fall. The Rotary Club now dis- tributes new coats through area schools and Building Healthy Families. Using input from area teachers and social workers, ap- proximately 75 new coats will be distributed this fall. Wallowa County Rotarians and local benefactors donate ap- proximately $2,000 each year to purchase coats. Marilyn Dalton of Building Healthy Families purchases the warm winter coats and hooded sweat shirts in a va- riety of sizes and colors based RQVSHFL¿FVWXGHQWQHHGV In Enterprise the coats are currently available at the Wal- lowa Valley Professional Build- ing on the corner of First and Greenwood streets from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday – Friday; the Community Retail Store on Main in Wallowa. New items will be added as they become available until the end of No- vember.