The Redmond spokesman. (Redmond, Crook County, Or.) 1910-current, April 26, 2022, Page 5, Image 5

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    THE SPOKESMAN • TUESDAY, APRIL 26, 2022 A5
FLASHBACK
FLASHBACK
Oregon’s biggest horse sale set in Redmond in 1947
25 YEARS AGO
Bulletin File
Oregon State Police recruits practice riot control techniques during basic training at Redmond Air Center.
100 YEARS AGO
April 27, 1922 — Work starts
on building four cheese plant
Work began Monday on the
foundation of a new cheese
factory building to be occu-
pied upon its completion by
H.A. Karlen and H.C. Keyser
Vancouver, Wash. The build-
ing is being erected for Karlen
and Keyser by F.G. Atkinson.
The location is on E Street
near the Pilot Butte canal.
75 YEARS AGO
May 1, 1947 — Oregon‘s
biggest horse sale set for next
Sunday
Oregon’s largest horse sale,
the third annual event of its
kind in Redmond, will be
staged next Sunday, May 4, at
Central Oregon Community
auction ring, with C.E. Smith as
auctioneer.
A number of fine horses have
been considered for the big
sale, including three registered
Tennessee walking horses and
other blooded animals. Lady
and Laddy, pinto trick ponies
which have appeared in shows
throughout the state, also will
go on the auction block.
Last year more than 400
horses were sold in one day
and an even larger number
is expected to be offered this
year, including every kind:
saddle horses, cow horses,
work horses, wild horses,
blooded animals, ponies. The
sale will get underway at 11
o’clock in the morning, with
lunch available on the grounds
both Saturday, the day prior to
the sale, and all day Sunday.
If necessary the sale will be
continued Monday, but all reg-
istered and colored horses will
be auctioned the first day. Bid-
ders will be here from long dis-
tances, some already having ar-
rived to enter horses in the sale
or to buy. Some 5,000 attended
the 1946 sale and the same large
crowd is expected this year.
50 YEARS AGO
April 26, 1972 — School
election Monday
Voters living in the Red-
mond School District will
go to the polls from 8 a.m
to 8 p.m. Monday, May 1
part, to ballot on a proposed
tax levy of $1,742,496 for
the 1972-73 school oper-
ating budget. The budget
represents an increase of
$519,927 over the current
budget and would require
a tax levy rate of $19.04 per
$1,000 of true cash value.
The budget provides for
instituting the Program for
Learning, a coordinated cur-
riculum for the 12 grades with
accountability to the board
and the public; a late activ-
ity bus for Tumalo and Ter-
rebonne; creation of a high
school dean of boys position,
and needed building repairs.
Superintendent Paul Eggleston
attributes the budget increase
to the mandatory rise in Social
Security and retirement bene-
fits plus an 11 percent annual
enrollment jump.
Three candidates, John
Halstead, Fred Hart and Dr.
Roger Stack, are vying for a
single four-year term on the
school board.
Jessie Hill School will be the
polling place for voters resid-
ing in precincts 17, 19, 28, 29
and 31; Terrebonne School,
Deschutes County precinct
18 and Jefferson County pre-
cinct Haystack No. 1; Tumalo
School, 12 and 13; Cloverdale
School, 14; Alfalfa School, 22.
c
the redmond
April 30, 1997 — Wireless
brings classes
Four students watch a big
screen television and put up
with scratchy sound as a pro-
fessor lectures on post-World
War I global economics.
The world history class
meets in a classroom on the
Central Oregon Community
College campus in Bend, but
it is broadcast live over a wire-
less cable channel to the four
students taking notes at the
Redmond COCC Center.
A conference call hook up
allows the distance-learning
students to ask questions or
join discussions during class.
Distance learning is still in
the pilot program stage, but
more classes will be broadcast
in the fall to more students at
COCC centers in Redmond,
Prineville, Madras, Sisters and
La Pine.
Eliminating the need to
drive to Bend for classes is a
boon for busy adults who are
part-time college students.
“Participation is driven by
time, and this saves an hour
and a half drive to Bend,”
Doloris Reynolds said after
the world history class wraps
up.
Spokesman
LASSIFIEDS
your community marketplace
Camp Sunrise returns after two-year
hiatus to help children cope with grief
BY JOE SIESS
For the Spokesman
After being canceled for two
years because of COVID-19,
Hospice of Redmond’s Camp
Sunrise will return this sum-
mer to help children over-
come grief associated with the
loss of a loved one.
Prior to the pandemic, the
youth grief camp included
a three-day program at Sut-
tle Lake. But this year it will
be condensed into a one-day
event on June 4, when chil-
dren suffering the loss of
a loved one will meet with
a group of peers and adult
councilors to process, and
ultimately deal with, their
grief.
“The camp itself is an ex-
pressive arts program,” said
Diane Kellstrom, Camp Sun-
rise director and bereavement
coordinator for Hospice of
Redmond. “We do the work
with the children through art
activities and movement ac-
tivities and some talk therapy,
but mostly it is expressive art
where they express themselves
in whatever capacity they are
comfortable with so they can
get these feelings outside of
them.”
The camp — the longest
running of its kind in Oregon
— is free and offered once a
year to children in Central Or-
egon ages 7-14. Children from
outside the region can also
attend as long as they have a
connection in the tri-county
area, Kellstrom said.
“It is a great comfort to them to know they aren’t
alone, and that they share a similar reaction to
their losses and that they can help and be helped by
other children who really understand their pain.”
— Diane Kellstrom, camp Sunrise director and bereavement
coordinator for Hospice of Redmond
“This is really one of the
most heartwarming outcomes
we’ve witnessed each year at
camp,” Kellstrom said. “And
that is how beneficial it is for
grieving children to have the
opportunity to come together
with their peers to share their
sadness.”
“It is a great comfort to
them to know they aren’t
alone, and that they share a
similar reaction to their losses
and that they can help and be
helped by other children who
really understand their pain.”
Kellstrom said children of-
ten feel alone in the process of
grieving because they tend not
to express themselves to the
adults in their lives as to not
burden them with more sad-
ness. At Camp Sunrise, they
are able to support each other
and help each other work
though their grief.
Gina Blanchette, spokes-
woman for the Redmond
School District, said the dis-
trict will sometimes refer chil-
dren who are dealing with
the loss of loved ones one to
Camp Sunrise.
The camp is open to a total
of 40 children. In addition to
schools, children are referred
to the camp by churches,
counselors, organizations and
agencies that serve youth and
families.
When the children arrive at
Camp Sunrise, usually about
half of them don’t seem too
happy to be there, said Larry
Wright, lead councilor at
Camp Sunrise. But after they
get settled, they eventually
open up. They realize they are
not alone.
“A lot of them witnessed a
death, whether it’s a parent,
a sibling or a grandparent,”
Wright said. “And so it is a
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100 NOTICES
Mass Schedule:
Weekdays 8:00 am
102 Public Notices
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First Saturday 8:00 am (English)
Sunday 8:00 am, 10:00 am (English)
12:00 noon (Spanish)
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102 Public Notices
Dated and first published April
26, 2022.
ATTORNEY FOR PERSONAL
REPRESENTATIVE
S/ PAUL F. SUMNER
PAUL F. SUMNER
OSB # 780913
P.O. Box 16/185 NW “B" Street
Madras, Oregon 97741
(541) 475-7277
The undersigned has been ap­
pointed personal representative
of the Estate of JOAN HELEN JA­
COBS, Deceased, by the De­
schutes County Circuit Court of
the State of Oregon, probate
number 22PB02178. All persons
having claims against the estate
are required to present the same
with proper vouchers within four
(4) months after the date of first
publication to the undersigned or
they may be barred. Additional in­
formation may be obtained from
the court records, the under­
signed or the attorney.
Date first published: April 19,
2022
Worship Directory
Sunday
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www.ImpactOregon.careers
very difficult thing for them.
But to give them a safe place to
open up and to talk and to be
angry and to cry and do what-
ever they need to do to work
through their process and to
start healing from it — it is
just super rewarding to be able
to do that.”
Part of the camp experi-
ence is learning tools and
coping mechanisms they can
take home with them, Wright
said. Arts and crafts, mu-
sic, group exercises, therapy
dogs, and interactions with
others are all part of the pro-
gram.
“Every year is different. I’ve
learned not to have expecta-
tions, because when I do they
are always wrong,” Wright
added about Camp Sunrise.
“Every year camp has a dif-
ferent feel depending on the
situations the kids have gone
through, and how the group
clicks as a unit.”
Hours:
Monday - Friday
10:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m.
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF
THE STATE OF OREGON
FOR THE COUNTY OF
DESCHUTES
In the Matter of the Estate of
DWAYNE CLARK
ROSEBROOK
Deceased CASE NO:
22PB02923
NOTICE TO INTERESTED
PERSONS
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that
Jason Rosebrook, whose post of­
fice address is14221 SW Miller
Trail; Powell Butte, Oregon 97753
and whose telephone number is
(541)408-1350, has been ap­
pointed Personal Representative
of the above entitled Estate. All
persons having claims against
the estate are required to present
them, with vouchers attached, to
the Personal Representative c/o
Paul F. Sumner, P.O. Box 16,
Madras, Oregon 97741, within
four months after the date of the
first publication of this notice, or
the claims may be barred. All per­
sons whose rights may be af­
fected by the proceedings may
obtain information from the
records of the court, the Personal
Representative or the lawyer for
the personal representative.
Ricky A. Jacobs
Personal Representative
c/o Collin T. Edmonds
Attorney at Law
354 NE Irving Ave.
Bend, OR 97701
The undersigned has been ap­
pointed personal representative
of the Estate of MICHAEL
PATRICK LOVETT, Deceased,
by the Deschutes County Circuit
Court of the State of Oregon, pro­
bate number 22PB02280. All per­
sons having claims against the
estate are required to present the
same with proper vouchers
within four (4) months after the
date of first publication to the un­
dersigned or they may be barred.
Additional information may be ob­
tained from the court records, the
undersigned or the attorney.
Date first published: April 19,
2022
Carol D. Lovett
Personal Representative
c/o Collin T. Edmonds
Attorney at Law
354 NE Irving Ave.
Bend, OR 97701
Notice to Creditors
The Estate of Stanley Shoults is
in probate (22PB02408). Persons
or organizations having a valid
claim against the estate must
sen/e a copy of the claim to
Lisa
West,
PR
(Lisalwest4@gmail.com).
Any
claim
must
include
mandatory
Oregon
probate
statues. Creditors have 4 months
from this notice to present a
claim.
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