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About Wallowa County chieftain. (Enterprise, Wallowa County, Or.) 1943-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 28, 2016)
A6 Community wallowa.com Public Meetings Wednesday, Sept. 28 • Enterprise Cemetery Maintenance District Board of Directors: 4 p.m. in Thornton Room at the courthouse. Friday, Sept. 30 • Lostine City Council: 7:30 p.m. at City Hall Thursday, Oct. 6 Sept. 30-Oct. 1 • Wallowa County Com- missioners: 9 a.m. in Thornton Room at the courthouse. http:// tinyurl.com/jo8bcya • Enterprise School Board: 7 p.m. in the Home-Economics room at the high school Tuesday, Oct. 4 • Enterprise Planning Com- mission: 7 p.m. at City Hall. Wednesday, Oct. 5 • Joseph City Council: 7 p.m. at City Library, City Hall or Community Center. www. josephoregon.org Monday, Oct. 10 • Joseph School Board: 5:30 p.m. at the school library. www.joseph.k12.or.us • Wallowa School Board: 7 p.m. at the high school library • Enterprise City Council: 7:30 p.m. Monday at Council Chambers, Enterprise City Hall, 108 NE 1st St. www.enterpris- eoregon.org Monday, Oct. 17 • Wallowa County Com- missioners: 9 a.m. in Thornton Room at the courthouse. http:// tinyurl.com/jo8bcya Tuesday, Oct. 18 • Wallowa City Council: 7 p.m. at council room in City Hall Wallowa County Chieftain COMMUNITY CALENDAR Kidfest 2016, an annual, free health and safety fair. 3:30 to 6 p.m. at Cloverleaf Hall. From pirates to volcanoes, come cel- ebrate a world of adventure with games, crafts, entertainment, door prizes and free dinner for everyone. Organized by Building Healthy Families. Call 541-426- 9411 for more information. Eastern Oregon University’s Nightingale Gallery commences its 2016-17 exhibition season with its “Elegant Simplicity” open- ing, with a reception from 6-8 p.m. in the gallery in Loso Hall. Monday, Oct. 3 September 28, 2016 The Enterprise Seventh-Day Adventist Church invites the public to a celebration of its 50th anniversary, 6 p.m. Friday and 10:50 a.m. Saturday. Saturday, Oct. 1 Wallowa County Farmers Market, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., down- town Joseph. Today: Pumpkin painting. Lower Valley Farmers’ Mar- ket, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m., 301 E. 1st St., Wallowa. Bunco event with dice, lunch and Dutch auction, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Hurricane Creek Grange. No Bunco experience necessary. Bring $10 for tournament and lunch, extra money for auction. Fundraiser to support many projects. For details, call Barbara at 541-426-8015. Wallowa County Humane Flavia DeLuce is back in n Thrice the Brinded Cat Hath Mewʼd Society is hosting an open house from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. at 104 N. River St. in Enterprise. There will be door prizes and a chance to adopt a pet for as low as $10. For more information, visit wal- lowacountyhumanesociety.org. The Oregon East Sympho- ny, in collaboration with the Eastern Oregon Film Festival, will perform a live soundtrack to a screening of the silent film “City Girl” at 7:30 p.m. the Vert Auditorium in La Grande as the opening concert to its 2016-2017 season. Sunday, Oct. 2 An hour of peaceful, silent demonstration in defense of the helpless unborn, 2 p.m. in front of the Wallowa County Courthouse. Signs will be provided, but bring a chair. Oct. 3-5 MidValley Theatre Company is continuing open auditions for its winter production, “The Best Christmas Pageant Ever,” three nights from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. at Lostine Presbyterian Church. Roles are open for six women, four men of varying ages and many children ages approximate- ly 14 and younger. Once a cast is set, rehearsals will take place 6:30 to 7:30 Mondays, Tues- days and Thursdays. For more information, contact Director Kate Loftus at 541-569-2302. Tuesday, Oct. 4 Wallowa County We Care Support Group is sponsoring a free presentation on adult foster care, 3 p.m. at the VFW Hall in Enterprise. Please join us in improving the care of our elders. Saturday, Oct. 8 by Alan Bradley T HE B OOKLOFT KLOFT Across from the courthouse in Enterprise 107 E. Main • 541.426.3351 always open at www.bookloft oregon.com • bookloft eoni.com Wallowa County Farmers Market, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., down- town Joseph. Final market of the season. Today: Customer Appre- ciation Day on the lawn. Open reception honoring Chapter R of P.E.O., 100th Anni- versary Celebration at The Place (Joseph’s First Methodist Church T HE B OOKLOFT AND Courtesy of Bill Reid Members of the Enterprise High School Class of 1966 recently held their 50th reunion and wanted to share the following message: “Thanks to everyone who made Aug. 6 ‘A Night to Remember.’ Thanks to Steve Roundy for the reunion picture; your talents are unsurpassed. Thanks to Diana Wortman and Chuckwagon Sisters for a wonderful dinner. Thanks to Leo Arenas of El Bajio for providing refreshing beverages throughout the evening. For those who came and heard the great music, what a rush. Thank you Henry Kinsley, Dave Morgan and Andy Gilbert of The ReActions — you are awesome We are so glad that The ReActions came back after a quietus of some 48 years and made it happen again. We had a terrific time.! We certainly missed those classmates and friends who could not be there, and hope to see you the next time we get together. It was one heck of a party.” fellowship hall), 1 to 3 p.m. Lower Valley Farmers’ Mar- ket, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m., 301 E. 1st St., Wallowa. Oregon Rural Action’s annual meeting and dinner at the Union County Senior Center in La Grande. Activities begin at 3 p.m. with the official welcome and introductions opening the meeting at 3:30 p.m. Learn about the latest events and campaigns from ORA chap- ters and issue teams. Dinner and music begin at 6:30 p.m. Bag of Hammers, with Luke McKern and Holly Sorensen, will be the featured musical guests. Reservations and $20 tickets are available by calling 541-975-2411, or by stopping by the Rural Action office at 1119 Washington Ave. in La Grande, Monday through Friday from 9:00 a.m. to noon. Tickets must be purchased in advance and are available through Oct 1. Thursday, Oct. 13 Maxville Heritage Interpretive Center and the Joseph United Methodist Church are hosting a community discussion as part of Oregon Humanities’ statewide This Place series from 6-7:30 p.m. at United Methodist Church, 301 S. Lake St. in Joseph. The discussions provide Oregonians with an opportunity to explore their relationship to the places they’ve come from and the plac- es they’re in now and are led by trained facilitators from the fields of tribal resource management, S KYLIGHT G ALLERY Finding books is our specialty 541.426.3351 • 107 E . M a in • E n terprise • w w w .book loftoregon .com Church of Christ 502 W. 2nd Street • Wallowa 541-398-2509 Worship at 11 a.m. Mid-week Bible Study 7 p.m. anthropology, conflict resolu- tion, applied theology, natural resource management, ethnic studies and fisheries science. For more information about this free community discussion, please contact Gwen at 541-426-3545 or gwen@maxvilleheritage.org or visit http://oregonhumanities.org/ programs/this-place. Friday, Oct. 14 The flu season is here, and the Jonathan M. Wainwright Memorial VA Medical Center is holding a flu shot clinic for Enterprise area Veterans at the Enterprise VA Clinic from 8:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. Shots are free for all veterans just by showing valid identification. For details, visit https://goo.gl/MYvlES. Saturday, Oct. 15 First-time home buyers are invited to a free, one-day workshop from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at Community Connection, 702 NW 1st St. in Enterprise. Local lenders and Realtors will help guide potential buyers through the process. Lunch and snacks provided. To register, call Debbie Votaw at 541-963-3186, or Di Lyn Larsen-Hill and Kate Gekeler at 541-963-5360, extensions 32 and 27 before Oct. 10. Lower Valley Farmers’ Mar- ket, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m., 301 E. 1st St., Wallowa. Annual National Rifle Asso- ciation Banquet and Auction, 4 p.m. at Cloverleaf Hall in Enter- prise. Live and silent auctions, special drawings, door prizes, great food and friends. One brick of .22 LR ammo raffled off every 10 minutes from 4:10 to 5:30 p.m. Purchase dinner tickets online at www.friendsofnra.org. For more information, contact Stephen Wolfe at 541-263-0801 or sdw69548@yahoo.com or Doug Batten at 541-426-4639 or dbatten@frontier.com. Tuesday, Oct. 20 Wallowa Resources is bringing the popular band Honey- Honey back to the OK Theater October 20 from 7-10 PM. Come celebrate the nonprofit’s 20th an- niversary. Show starts at 7 p.m. Tickets cost $35, with proceeds go towards programs supporting local lands and people. Tickets available at: eventbrite.com, Joseph Hardware, The Bookloft, Dollar Stretcher and M. Crow. For more information, call 541- 426-8053 or visit honeyhoney- band.com. Oct. 21-22 The Elgin Stampeders are holding a two-day fundraiser for a new stampede hall. There will be cowboy poetry at 7 p.m. Friday at the Elgin Opera House, with a repeat performance at 2 p.m. Saturday. After the Saturday per- formance, there will be a social hour and dinner at the stampede hall, followed by live music by The Wild Turkey Band at 8 p.m. Tickets are available at the opera house or at the stampede hall door. $22 for poetry, $15 for din- ner Saturday, $7 for the dance. Package tickets for all three Saturday events are available for $40. Call the opera house at 541-663-6324 or visit www. elginoperahouse.com. For more information, call Russ Smith at 541-786-4270. The Community Calendar lists fundraisers, free local events and those with a nomi- nal fee organized by nonprofit organizations. Submit infor- mation to calendar@wal- lowa.com. Deadline is 5 p.m. Friday. To promote for-profit events, contact sales repre- sentative Jennifer Powell at jpowell@wallowa.com. A Non-Profit Community Health Center OHSU Resident CLUES ACROSS 1. __ blache: Freedom 6. Plan 12. A jolt 15. “Doonesbury” character 16. Inspiring with love 17. Blood type 19. Anno Domini 20. Janet Reno held this post 21. Arab Republic of Egypt 22. Midway between south and east 23. Sodium 24. Twitches 26. Not loud 28. Hindmost 30. Be quiet! 31. This gives you money 32. Check 34. Short-term memory 35. Askew 37. Platforms 39. Towards the mouth 40. Copied 41. Emerges 43. Menial laborer 44. Chinese sword 45. Energy unit 47. Unhappy 48. The Golden State (abbr.) 50. External 52. Strayed 54. Liquid body substances 56. Plutonium 57. Truckers use this 59. Largest English dictionary (abbr.) 60. Beloved British princess Lady __ 61. The Bay State (abbr.) 62. Thallium 63. Rebuilt 66. Element 67. The law of retaliation 70. Cuts 71. Mexican monetary units CLUES DOWN 1. Mothlike insect 2. Equally 3. Flightless birds 4. Grilling tool 5. When you plan to arrive 6. Thoroughfare 7. Philosophical life force 8. Birds 9. Anxious 10. Man’s title 11. Issued 13. Prayer leader 14. Edible red algae 15. Hitters need this 18. Froths on fermenting liquors 25. A two-wheeled horse-drawn vehicle 26. Amount (abbr.) 27. Small amount 29. Fundamental quality 31. Cubage unit 33. Bleated 36. No longer is 38. Initial public offering 39. Hard to interpret 41. Highly skilled 42. The woman 43. A bachelor has one 46. Trial prints 47. Passover feast 49. Military forces 51. Plant part 53. Remake 54. Flanks 55. Swiss river 58. Ottoman governors 60. Vale 64. Encountered 65. One track circuit 68. Opposite of yes 69. Hello (slang) Lisa Lipersztok, MD Sept. 7 — Oct. 14, 2016 Enterprise Christian Church 85035 Joseph Hwy • (541) 426-3449 Worship at 9 a.m. Sunday School at 10:30 a.m. Evening Worship at 6 p.m. (nursery at A.M. services) “Loving God & One Another” David Bruce, Sr. - Minister Hours: Monday-Friday 7:00am to 7:00pm Saturday 9:00am to 1:00pm 603 Medical Parkway Enterprise, OR 97828 New arrivals! CC Beanies The BEST beanie hat EVER! New colors and styles Don’t miss out, stop by today Open Daily 10am-5pm Uptown Clothing & Accessories in Downtown Joseph 12 S. Main St. • 541-432-9653