Wallowa County chieftain. (Enterprise, Wallowa County, Or.) 1943-current, January 28, 2015, Image 6

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    A6
News
wallowa.com
January 28, 2015
Wallowa County Chieftain
Courtesy photo/Heard family
This old photo, a little worse for wear, shows the Joseph first grade class of the late Dorothy Heard many years ago. Do you know any of the youngsters or have an idea when this photo
was taken?
Convicted judge spared prison time
100 YEARS AGO
Jan. 28, 1915
J.A. French, former coun-
ty judge was paroled, condi-
tionally, from the penitentia-
ry January 11, and is now in
the Willamette valley. The
condition was that he repay to
the county the $2800, for the
Eastern Oregon Center for Independent Living
1021 SW 5th Avenue
Ontario, OR 97914
Voice:
Fax:
Toll Free:
E-mail:
541-889-3119
541-889-4647
1-866-248-8369
eocil@eocil.org
EOCIL is now assisting anyone interested in applying for health
insurance through Cover Oregon, a healthcare marketplace.
We are a Certified Community Partner and have
Certified Application Assisters ready to help you.
Please call and schedule an appointment if you need assistance in
applying for insurance through
Cover Oregon!
We all look forward to meeting you!
misappropriation of which he
was indicted and sentenced
on his plea of guilty. Ever
since Mr. French went to Sa-
lem reports have come back
to this county from time to
time to the effect that he was
not incarcerated in the state
prison at all. Disclosures
made at Salem in the last few
days show such was the case.
More weather records, for
continued cold, have been
made in Enterprise during the
week past. During the seven
days the temperature has
been at or below zero every
morning the lowest being 18
below, Friday morning, Jan-
uary 22.
Two fire scares in one
week have made life excit-
ing for Sam Litch. Last Sat-
urday he was trying to clean
out a chimney of his house
in town. R.L. Day suggested
T HE B OOKLOFT
AND
S KYLIGHT G ALLERY
Finding books is our specialty
541.426.3351 • 107 E. Main • Enterprise • www.bookloftoregon.com
pouring oil on an old gunny
sack and placing it in the
chimney, saying this would
remove all the soot. Mr.
Litch tried this and shortly
flames were spouting from
the chimney top at such a
rate that the fire department
was called out. No harm was
done, however. While H.P.
Rowe was trying to thaw out
a frozen water pipe at Mr.
Litch’s fine house on Alder
Slope Tuesday morning, the
wall caught fire and burned
fiercely for a time. Mr.
Rowe chopped boards away
and got at the flame and ex-
tinguished it just in the nick
of time.
70 YEARS AGO
Jan. 25, 1945
Alfred P. Marks of Imna-
ha received word by special
messenger that Sgt. Earl L.,
the second of his three sons,
had been killed in action Dec.
11, 1944, on Leyte.
The trial of Carl Kelly
of Milton-Freewater on a
OUT OF THE PAST
50 YEARS AGO
Jan. 28, 1965
Compiled by
Rob Ruth
Four suspicious-looking
characters who had been
spotted in Wallowa were
trailed to the county seat,
where they were not hard to
locate as they parked their
car on Main street and trav-
eled from tavern to tavern.
Finally the officers were
ready to spring their trap.
... Three suspects gave up
without a struggle in the
face of overwhelming odds,
but one dived out the rear
door and sprinted down the
alley, tossing an object in a
garbage can as he fled over
the ice. Officer Harrison ...
overtook the fugitive near
the Safeway store. ... The
suspects were hauled off to
police headquarters for in-
vestigation. Approximately
$600 in currency was found
on them and $112 in nickels,
dimes and quarters. The ob-
ject taken from the garbage
can was a wool sock full of
coins. ... Word came over
the wires the next morning
that a string of public tele-
phone pay stations had been
robbed along a route from
Medford to Pendleton.
Plans for the construc-
tion of a $250,000 chipper
and barker at the Joseph
sawmill were announced
Saturday night by Bill Pat-
terson, manager of Boise
Cascade operations in this
region. Patterson said that
the contract has been let and
it is expected that work will
start almost immediately
with the new equipment to
be ready for operation by
some time in May. About
four additional full-time
men will be hired.
charge of having untagged
elk in his possession during
the recent elk season result-
ed in a hung jury which stood
7-5 for the conviction. Two
other defendants under in-
dictment on the same charge
were not tried at this time. ...
It was the contention of the
defense that Kelly killed the
elk in Union county and that
the regulation requiring im-
mediate tagging of elk when
killed is unreasonable.
Andy, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Walter Brennan, arrived on
last Saturday’s stage and was
met by his parents and taken to
the Brennan ranch. Andy, on
furlough from the south Pacif-
ic, has 21 days plus traveling
time. He and his parents plan
to leave here Jan. 29 for Holly-
wood where Mr. Brennan will
make another picture. The trip
will be made by plane.
Enterprise Cemetery Board
will meet with the public
Thursday, February 5, 2015 at 4 PM,
County Courthouse, to discuss
resuming cemetery irrigation.
Paid by Friends of the Enterprise Cemetery
Info: Sondra Lozier 426.3229
Church Directory
Summit Church
Gospel Centered Community
Service time: 10:30 am
Cloverleaf Hall in Enterprise
Pastor Mark Garland
www.summitchurchoregon.org
Joseph United
Methodist Church
ACROSS
1. Licenses TV stations
4. Worn-out horse
7. Expire
10. Winglike structure
11. Supplement with difficulty
12. Confederate soldier
13. Attempter
15. All persons of the earth
16. Vertical position
19. Live longer than
21. Showing keen interest
23. Old Spanish currency units
24. Ingested by sniffing
25. A narrow path or road
26. Old Tokyo
27. Bound map collections
30. Deliquium
35. Brownish coat mixed with white
36. 3 banded S. Am. armadillo
37. Coat a metal with an oxide
41. Slave-like
44. 1950's TV Wally
45. City founded by Xenophanes
46. Hermaphroditic
50. Kale plant with smooth leaves
54. Forelimb
55. Unassisted
56. Jeweled headdress
57. Auricle
59. Competing groups
60. Cardinal number
61. Light bulb inventor's initials
62. Heat unit
63. Doctor of Education
64. Make a mistake
65. Point midway between S and SE
DOWN
1. Bazaars
2. Cuyahoga River city
3. Latin word for charity
4. Scourges
5. Alias
6. Origins
7. Subjugate using troops
8. Dutch name of Ypres
9. Siskel and __, critics
13. Teaspoon (abbr.)
14. Herb of grace
17. Brew
18. Kilo yard (abbr.)
20. Barn's wind indicator
22. Griffith or Rooney
27. Macaws
28. 2000 pounds
29. Official language of Laos
31. Cleveland's roundball team
32. Office of Public Information
33. Chum
34. Before
38. Nation in the north Atlantic
39. Apportion into sections
40. Skilled in analysis
41. More assured
42. ___ Musk, businessman
43. In a way, tells
46. Immature newt
47. Hawaiian taro root dish
48. Extremely angry
49. Wrapped up in a cerecloth
51. Expression
52. Paradoxical sleep
53. Tooth caregiver
58. Swiss river
3rd & Lake St. • Joseph
Pastor Kaye Garver
Phone: 541-432-3102
Sunday Worship Services
8:30 & 11:00 am
Child care provided
at 8:30 am service
Faith
Lutheran
Church
409 W. Main
Enterprise, Oregon
Worship 2 nd & 4 th Sundays - 2 pm
Bible Study Tuesdays before the
2 nd & 4 th Sundays at 11 am
LCMS
(Lutheran Church Missouri Synod)
Christ Covenant
Church
Pastor Terry Tollefson
Church Office: 541-426-0301
Family Prayer: 9:30am
Sunday School: 10:00am
Worship Service: 11 am
723 College Street • Lostine
Providence Academy
Enterprise
Community
Enterprise Community
Church Church
Congregational
11:00am Group
Worship
&
Discussion
9:30 AM
Worship
Service 11:00
Children’s
S.S. AM
10:00am Choir
9:30am
Adult Education
541.398.0597
Childrens program during service
Blog: dancingforth.blogspot.com
Lostine
On the Hwy
web 82,
at lostinepc.org
Stephen Kliewer, Minister
Wallowa
Assembly
of God
606 West Hwy 82
Wallowa, Oregon
541-886-8445
Sunday School • 9:30
Worship Service • 10:45
Pastor Tim Barton
wallowaassemblyofgod.com
301 NE 1St St * 541-426-3044
BigBrownChurch.org
Worship at 11:00
301
N. Study
E. First
Bible
at Street
9:30
Enterprise
the “Big
Brown Church”
Sunday
Worship
11A.M.
with the
Open Door
(541)
426-3044
Pastor Joseph
Donald Newcomer,
L. McBride
Pastor
541-263-0695
541-263-5319
305 Wagner (near the Cemetery)
P.O. Box N, Enterprise, OR 97828
541-426-3751 Church
541-426-8339 School
Sabbath School 9:30 - 10:45 a.m.
Worship Hour 11:00 a.m. - Noon
Pastor
Jonathan
DeWeber
Pastor
Steve Gilmore
25 YEARS AGO
Jan. 25, 1990
The U.S. Forest Ser-
vice has mismanaged Hells
Canyon and the Wallowa
Mountains and should be
replaced as the agency in
charge, an environmental
group claims. Members of
the Hells Canyon Preser-
vation Council on Friday
called for a federally funded
study on their proposal to
combine the Hells Canyon
National Recreation Area
and Eagle Cap Wilderness
in a combined national park
and preserve. ... A meeting
in Baker City, attended by
about 130 people, included
a heated exchange between
Ric Bailey of Enterprise,
spokesman for the HCPC,
and union representative
Paul Moorehead of Joseph,
who said his group would
fight the proposal “to the
bitter end.”
There were fewer peo-
ple working but also fewer
people looking for jobs last
month than in November,
bringing the Wallowa Coun-
ty unemployment rate for
December down to 5.0 per-
cent.
PHOTO CAPTION: En-
terprise High School cheer-
leaders, from left, Lindi Ho-
man, Kannon Palmer, Sonja
Wishart and Jennifer Rob-
erts, were the stars of a vid-
eo made by the Enterprise
Safeway store Saturday to
enter in a national contest
for the best promotion of
peanuts, sponsored by the
Virginia Peanut Board. The
local ad campaign was tied
in with the Super Bowl,
coming up Sunday.