East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, July 19, 2017, Page PAGE 5A, Image 5

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    RECORDS
Wednesday, July 19, 2017
Susan J. Albee
Donald Lee Caldwell
Walla Walla
December 3, 1942 - July 10, 2017
Hermiston
August 20, 1945 - July 15, 2017
Susan J. Albee, Walla
Walla, Washington, passed
away July 10, 2017, at her
home at the age of 74 years.
Memorial services will
be Saturday, July 22 at 10
a.m. at St. Paul’s Episcopal
Church in Walla Walla.
Memorial contributions can
be made to: the
scholarship fund
of your choice,
Milton-Freewater
Library,
Walla
Walla Community
Hospice, Helpline
of Walla Walla,
and Providence St.
Mary’s Regional
Cancer Center.
Susan
was
born
December Albee
3, 1942, in Pend-
leton,
Oregon,
the daughter of Ralph B.
and Margaret I. Hodgen
McEwen. She spent most
of her youth in Athena,
Oregon and graduated from
McEwen High School with
honors. After high school
she attended the University
of Oregon, receiving a
bachelor’s degree in busi-
ness administration and a
teaching certificate.
Her early years of
teaching were spent at
Creswell Oregon High
School. She later was a
substitute teacher in the
Milton-Freewater School
District, Adult Education
for BMCC, and Clerical
Training Center/ Lillie Rice
in Walla Walla. She also was
deputy clerk for the Tum A
Lum School District for
several years.
On September 1, 1963,
she
married
William
A.”Bill” Albee at the
Redeemer
Episcopal
Church in Pendleton,
Oregon. There first years
of marriage were spent in
Eugene, Ore. The couple
spent 35 years on Tum A
Lum Road in Milton-Free-
water where they raised
their family and assortment
of critters: horse, burro,
cow, sheep, goats, dog,
cats, and chickens.
Susan had most years
a large bountiful garden,
which she loved to share
with neighbors and friends.
She
enjoyed
hiking,
gardening, reading, swim-
ming, mountain trips to pick
berries, bird watching and
wild flowers, with
her many friends.
The biggest thrill
for her was her
family, following
closely the events
of grandchildren
whether it be
school events or
their
athletics.
She was an avid
Oregon Duck fan
and followed their
athletic events for
men and women.
The last eight years were
spent in Walla Walla, Wash-
ington.
Susan was known for
her warm smile, gentle-
ness, and acceptance of all
people. She enjoyed volun-
teering at several places :
Milton-Freewater Library,
Walla
Walla
Library,
Helpline, Hospice of Walla
Walla, and Providence St.
Mary’s Cancer Center. She
was a member of St. Paul’s
Episcopal Church in Walla
Walla, and had been a long
time member of St. James
Episcopal Church where
she often played the organ,
Audubon Society, Native
Flower Association, Kappa
Alpha Sorority, and lifetime
member of University of
Oregon Alumni Association.
Susan is survived by her
husband William A.” Bill”
Albee at the home; sons
Cameron M. (Kristin) Albee
of Joseph, Ore., Robert W.
(Tressi) Albee of Williams,
Ore., and Trevor K. ( Amy)
Albee of Salem, Ore.; sister
Gaye McEwen Haverland
of Eugene, Ore.; brother
Douglas J. McEwen of
Pendleton, Ore.; and grand-
children Satori, Sabrina,
Malcolm, Taj, Ella and
Crosby.
Alvin L. ‘Al’ Sather
Hermiston
June 19, 1935 - July 15, 2017
Retired 1st Sgt. United
States Army Alvin L. “Al”
Sather, 82, of Hermiston,
Ore., passed away peace-
fully at Lourdes
Medical Center on
July 15, 2017, with
his family by his
side.
Al was born on
June 19, 1935, in
Malta, Montana,
to parents Alvin
O. and Juanita
Tatman Sather. He
was young when
his family moved
to Echo, Oregon,
where he was
raised and attended
school. Al was
drafted into
the United
S t a t e s
Army
at
the
age
of 18. He
met Joan
Adkison,
who was
also in the
Army and
stationed
in Japan. Sather
They were
united in marriage on March
30, 1956, at Camp Zama,
Japan.
Al and Joan had five chil-
dren and lived all over the
United States and Portugal
during his 20 years in the
Army. Al was deployed to
Korea, Vietnam, Thailand
and worked at the Pentagon
during his military career.
He loved spending time
with his family. Al was an
avid hunter and fisherman
who enjoyed camping in
the mountains and being
in the outdoors. He also
enjoyed carpentry. He loved
hunting trips with his son,
sons-in-law and grandsons
as well as John and Charlie
Smith, who he considered
family. Al spent a lot of time
at yard sales and loved to get
a good deal. He met many
friends through the years and
was always the highlight of
the party, making everyone
laugh. Al was a member of
many organizations: life
member of the NRA, Moose,
Elks, American Legion, 11th
Armored Calvary Regiment,
Disabled American Veterans,
and the Vietnam Veterans
Association.
Al was a wonderful
husband, father, grandfather,
great-grandfather and was
a mentor to many. We will
miss you and are
very blessed to
have had this life
with you. LOVE
YOU FOREVER.
He is survived
by his wife of
61 years, Joan
Sather; daughters
Jodi
Desjardins
(Robert),
Kristi
Bartley
(Russ),
Lauri Stubenrauch
(Fritz) and Shari
Humphrey (Alan);
son William Sather
(Lori); sisters Joyce
Jones and
Melinda
Buwalda;
grandchil-
dren Ryan
(Angela),
Matthew
(Angela),
C u r t i s
(Narci),
Brooke
( Tr a v i s ) ,
Mariah
(Nick),
Alan and Amanda; nine
great-grandchildren:
Cayden, Alexia, Gavin,
Aysa, Addison, Macie,
Camdyn, Cohen and Cleo;
and numerous nieces and
nephews.
Al was preceded in death
by his parents, two brothers
and a sister.
A graveside service with
military honors will be held
on Friday, July 21, 2017, at
4:00 p.m. at the Hermiston
Cemetery,
Hermiston,
Oregon.
Please sign the online
condolence book at burns-
mortuaryhermiston.com
Burns Mortuary of Herm-
iston, Oregon, is in care of
arrangements.
Donald Lee Caldwell, 71, grandchildren were his pride
of Hermiston passed away at and joy. He enjoyed attending
his home on Saturday, July their activities and sporting
15, 2017, after a long, hard events. He was involved with
battle with pulmo-
many community
nary fibrosis.
organizations such
Don was born
as: president of the
August 20, 1945,
Hermiston
Band
in
Raymond,
Boosters, where he
Washington,
the
assisted in raising
son of Lee and
money for the band
Edith
(Emerson)
to travel to Europe;
Caldwell. He lived
Pacific Northwest
in South Bend,
Clean Water Asso-
Wash., as a child
ciation, where he
where he graduated
received the William
from high school in
D. Hatfield Award
the Class of 1963.
for
outstanding
After high school,
performance and
he enlisted in the
professionalism in
Air Force where
1988; John Day City
he was stationed Caldwell
Council member
abroad and served
from 2002-2014;
four years.
actively involved
He then moved to Wash- in the Grant County Senior
ington, D.C., for a short time Center in John Day; and
before moving to Hillsboro, member of the Elks Lodge
Oregon. While living in for 44 years and the Eagles
Hillsboro, he worked at a Lodge.
service station and then began
Don married JoAn Arnold
working for the city waste- in Hinsdale, Mont., on
water treatment plant. With August 1, 1967, and from this
a full-time job and family, he marriage two sons, Jeff and
attended Clackamas Commu- David, were born. The couple
nity College, receiving his divorced many years later. He
associate’s degree.
married Carolyn Mayden on
In 1974, he moved to December 7, 1997, in Walla
Hermiston to become the Walla, Wash.
superintendent of the waste-
He is survived by his
water treatment plant. One of wife, Carolyn of Hermiston;
his biggest accomplishments sons Jeff and wife Nancy
was assisting in upgrading the Caldwell and David and wife
city’s wastewater treatment Brenda Caldwell; grandchil-
system and his vision of relo- dren Dylan, Kaden, Jaclyn
cating the plant to its current and Kyle; sisters Dorothy
location in the early 1980s Heater and Diane Hull;
to keep up with the growth and numerous nieces and
of the city of Hermiston. In nephews.
1993, he took a position with
He was preceded in death
the Department of Environ- by his parents; sister Delores
mental Quality and oversaw Brown; and a brother, Dale
the eastern region. He lived Caldwell.
in Pendleton for a short time
Viewing will be held on
before moving to John Day in Thursday evening from 3
1997, where he worked as the to 6 p.m. at Burns Mortuary
public works director until his chapel. A funeral service will
retirement in 2000. He moved be at 11:00 a.m. Friday, July
back to Hermiston from John 21 at Burns Mortuary chapel.
Day in 2016.
Burial with military honors
Don enjoyed buying will follow in Hermiston
and selling antiques and Cemetery. A reception will
collectibles and started a follow the graveside service.
business called “Grandkids
Memorial donations can
Inheritance.” He was known be sent to Shriner’s Hospital,
as “Dealin’ Don” to many www.shrinershospitals-
associates at estate sales and forchildren.org
auctions. He enjoyed fishing,
To leave an online
hunting, camping and was condolence for the family go
an avid poker player. He to www.burnsmortuaryherm-
cherished his family, and his iston.com
DEATH NOTICES
Darla C. DuBois
Pendleton
Jan. 29, 1941 - July 16, 2017.
Darla DuBois, 76, of Pendleton died Sunday, July 16,
2017, at her home in Pendleton. She was born Jan. 29, 1941,
in Portland. Burns Mortuary of Pendleton is in charge of
arrangements. Sign the online condolence book at www.
burnsmortuary.com.
UPCOMING SERVICES
WEDNESDAY, JULY 19
No services scheduled
THURSDAY, JULY 20
CALDWELL, DON — Viewing from 3-6 p.m. in the
chapel at Burns Mortuary, 685 W. Hermiston Ave., Hermiston.
FULLMER, ED — Funeral mass at 10 a.m. at St. Patrick’s
Catholic Church, 525 N. Gale St., Heppner. A luncheon will
follow at St. Patrick’s Parish Hall.
MEETINGS
WEDNESDAY, JULY 19
THURSDAY, JULY 20
MORROW COUNTY BOARD
OF COMMISSIONERS, 9 a.m.,
SAGE Center, 101 Olson Road,
Boardman. (541-676-9061)
UMATILLA COUNTY BOARD
OF COMMISSIONERS, 9 a.m.,
Umatilla County Courthouse room
130, 216 S.E. Fourth St., Pendle-
ton. (Doug Olsen 541-278-6208)
INTERMOUNTAIN EDUCA-
TION SERVICE DISTRICT, 5 p.m.,
IMESD office, 2001 S.W. Nye Ave.,
Pendleton. Budget Committee
meeting at 6:30 p.m. will be fol-
lowed by the regular meeting at 8
p.m. (888-437-6892)
EASTERN OREGON REGION-
AL AIRPORT COMMISSION, 6
p.m., terminal/administration office,
2016 Airport Road, Pendleton. (Eri-
ca Stewart 541-276-7754)
BOARDMAN
PLANNING
COMMISSION, 7 p.m., Boardman
City Hall, 200 City Center Circle,
Boardman. (541-481-9252)
PILOT ROCK SCHOOL DIS-
TRICT, 7 p.m., Pilot Rock High
School library, 101 N.E. Cherry St.,
Pilot Rock. (541-443-8291)
UMATILLA HOSPITAL DIS-
TRICT, 7:30 p.m., Umatilla Medical
Clinic, 1890 Seventh St., Umatilla.
(541-922-3104)
IONE SCHOOL DISTRICT
BOARD RETREAT, 3 p.m., River
Lodge, 6 Marine Drive, Boardman.
(Marla Royal 541-966-3102)
ECHO CITY COUNCIL, 4 p.m.,
Echo City Hall, 20 S. Bonanza St.,
Echo. (541-376-8411)
HERMISTON
IRRIGATION
DISTRICT, 4 p.m., Hermiston Ir-
rigation District office conference
room, 366 E. Hurlburt Ave., Herm-
iston. (541-567-3024)
UMATILLA COUNTY SPE-
CIAL LIBRARY DISTRICT BUD-
GET HEARING, BOARD MEET-
ING, 5:15 p.m., Pendleton City
Hall Community Room, 501 S.W.
Emigrant Ave., Pendleton. Budget
hearing will be followed by the reg-
ular meeting. (Aletha Bonebrake
541-519-3255)
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PUBLIC SAFETY LOG
MONDAY
7:45 a.m. - Milton-Freewater received reports of graffiti in the
bathroom and other vandalism at Yantis Park.
9:13 a.m. - Two males stole recyclables at the Pendleton
Sanitary Service’s recycling center at the north end of Southwest
18th Street, Pendleton. Police did not find the suspects.
9:34 a.m. - Two dogs killed a goat on the 29500 block of
Minnehaha Road, Hermiston.
9:48 a.m. - An Oregon State Police trooper responded to
about milepost 151 on the westbound side of Interstate 84 for a
collision between a car and a deer. The trooper found the driver
was uninjured, but the Chevrolet Silverado needed a tow truck.
11:40 a.m. - At least two cars collided in Pendleton at the
intersection of Southeast Third Street and Emigrant Avenue,
blocking off traffic there for a short while. There were no serious
injuries.
12:10 p.m. - Vandals spray-painted graffiti on the backstop at
the softball field and the concession stand at Irrigon Junior-Senior
High School, 315 S.E. Wyoming Ave., Irrigon.
1:32 p.m. - A Umatilla resident told police she received a scam
call from someone claiming to be with the Office of the Attorney
General who threatened to suspend her Social Security number.
2:01 p.m. - Morrow County Sheriff’s Office received a report
of a female pulling a suitcase and walking west near Irrigon on
Highway 730. The caller also said the female puts a paper in front
of her face when vehicles go by.
A deputy found her and gave her a ride to Boardman. She is
trying to get to Bend.
7:01 p.m. - A 9-1-1 caller in Irrigon reported the boyfriend’s
children took his keys, and the mother of the children claims they
don’t have them.
7:33 p.m. - “Crazy drivers” drew a complaint from an Irrigon
caller. Each night, several vehicles at Northeast Washington
Avenue and 12th Street speed and spin “cookies” on the gravel
near the river, which causes a lot of dust.
11:07 p.m. - Another 9-1-1 caller in Irrigon reported seven
males assaulted him and his friend, then took off toward
Boardman. The Morrow County Sheriff’s Office took a report.
ARRESTS, CITATIONS
•Morrow County Sheriff’s Office arrested Dustan Caleb Maret,
35, of 202 S.E. Park Place, Irrigon, for robbery, third-degree
assault, second-degree theft and menacing. Court records show
the state alleged Maret committed the crimes on June 3.
•Pendleton police arrested two local offenders for felony
assault on the Pendleton River Parkway.
Pendleton Police Chief Stuart Roberts reported officers
responded at about 10:30 p.m. to a fight at Southeast Eighth
Street and the parkway. They found several people who
described an incident involving two men and a 21-year-old man
who was the victim.
Officers determined Derek Alvin Anderson, 35, started an
altercation with the victim, according to Roberts, which evolved
into a fight. And Tony Howard Hawkins, 56, struck the victim while
he and Anderson tussled on the ground.
That two-on-one action resulted in police arresting Anderson
and Hawkins for third-degree assault, a class C felony in Oregon.
“Both Anderson and Hawkins are well known to law enforce-
ment,” Robert stated, and police think both were “impaired as a
result of alcoholic beverage consumption.” They also never gave
police a reason for why they singled out the 21-year-old victim.
OBITUARY POLICY
The East Oregonian publishes paid obituaries. The obituary can
include small photos and, for veterans, a flag symbol at no charge.
Obituaries may be edited for spelling, proper punctuation and style.
Expanded death notices will be published at no charge. These in-
clude information about services. Obituaries and notices can be
submitted online at www.eastoregonian.com/obituaryform, by
email to obits@eastoregonian.com, by fax to 541-276-8314, placed
via the funeral home or in person at the East Oregonian office. For
more information, call 541-966-0818 or 1-800-522-0255, ext. 221.
Man charged in Portland train
attack: ‘No heroes in this case’
PORTLAND,
(AP)
— The man accused of
killing two passengers
and wounding a third on a
Portland train returned to
court Tuesday for a quick
hearing in which he told
spectators on his way out:
“Remember, there are no
heroes in this case.”
Jeremy
Christian,
35, said nothing else as
Multnomah County Judge
Cheryl Albrecht scheduled
a bail hearing for Oct. 20.
He remains in jail.
Christian has pleaded
not guilty to aggravated
murder, attempted murder,
assault, menacing, intimi-
dation and unlawful use of
a weapon.
Prosecutors say Chris-
tian boarded the light-rail
train May 26 and yelled
hateful comments at two
black teenage girls, one
of whom was wearing
an Islamic head covering
called a hijab.
LOTTERY
Monday, July 17
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4 p.m.: 6-3-8-4
7 p.m.: 7-4-8-5
10 p.m.: 2-8-7-1
Tuesday, July 18
Pick 4
1 p.m.: 5-7-0-1
When the girls moved
away, he turned his attention
to three men, stabbing each
of them in the neck. The men
— Taliesin Namkai-Meche,
Ricky Best and surviving
victim Micah Fletcher —
have been called heroes for
confronting Christian.
Christian
disputed
the hero narrative at his
previous court appear-
ance, yelling that he was
defending himself against
the “violent aggression” of
Fletcher. Prosecutor Ryan
Lufkin wrote in affidavit
that video shows Fletcher
was shoved in the chest by
Christian and then pushed
back, causing Christian to
stumble. Then the stabbings
occurred.
Fletcher was not in the
courtroom Tuesday after
attending Christian’s prior
hearings.
Four charges in Chris-
tian’s indictment stem from
a confrontation Christian
had with a black woman
at a light-rail station a day
before the killings. He hit
her in the face with a bottle
before she pepper-sprayed
him, Portland police Sgt.
Pete Simpson said.
7/19
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Pendleton, OR I-84 - Exit 216