Wallowa County chieftain. (Enterprise, Wallowa County, Or.) 1943-current, March 25, 2015, Image 8

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    A8
News
wallowa.com
March 25, 2015
Grange gains through drawing
By Rich Rautenstrauch
Wallowa County Chieftain
On Sunday, March 15, the
Hurricane Creek Grange held
its monthly meeting in con-
junction with a potluck and a
special event, the drawing for
an elk landowner preference
tag sponsored by The Na-
ture Conservancy. Wallowa
County Commissioner Mike
Hayward attended the gath-
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winning tag with a surprising
twist.
The Grange is quite active
these days and the fundraiser
was a complete success.
Every year The Nature
Conservancy lets out a cer-
tain number of big game tags
to local service organizations
or to public institutions to
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the Hurricane Creek Grange
applied to the Conservancy
to be one of the local organi-
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selected.
For the Grange it was a
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Clarann Witty took on the as-
signment and got the ball roll-
ing. The Grange received 400
tickets to sell at $25 apiece.
Rich Rautenstrauch/Chieftain
Hurricane Creek Grange master Heather Tyreman and County Commisioner Mike Hayward
draw the winner of a landowner preference elk tag sponsored by The Nature Conservancy,
Sunday, March 15. Tyson Shirley of Nampa, Idaho, won the tag.
Witty arranged for promotion
of the sales and took phone
calls the past few months
from ticket buyers. She said
she had a lot of fun talking
with callers about hunting.
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Several times during the
March 14 gathering, attend-
ees expressed their hope that
someone local would win the
tag. After an imaginary drum
roll, Commissioner Hayward
reached into the ticket bar-
rel and drew the ticket with
Tyson Shirley’s name on it.
Shirley currently resides in
Nampa, Idaho, but he grew
up in Wallowa County. So,
the wish for a local winner
did in a sense come true.
When Shirley was called
to let him know he had won
the tag, Witty said, “He was
tickled to death.” The sur-
prising twist surrounding this
year’s winning ticket: Shir-
ley also won last year’s local
drawing for the TNC elk tag.
The 2014 tickets were sold by
Wallowa Resources.
The fundraiser was a suc-
cess with all tickets sold. The
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$7,500.
Current master for the
Hurricane Creek Grange,
Heather Tyreman, said the
Grange greatly appreciates
the money. For the last few
years the Grange has under-
taken a number of project to
improve its hall. The build-
ing’s electricity has been up-
graded, a new well has been
put in and connected, there’s
a new handicapped ramp, and
the building is newly painted.
Tyreman said more projects
are scheduled. “This really
helps when we need match-
ing funds for other projects.
We’re here for the future and
we have a long-range view,”
she said.
Author Shannon Ables will
sign at Bookloft March 28
acutely
aware that
life’s beauty
ENTERPRISE — The isn’t some-
Bookloft will host a book thing that
reading and signing by Shan- can neces-
non Ables, author of “Choos- sarily
be
LQJ 7KH 6LPSO\ /X[XULRXV purchased,
Ables
/LIH $ 0RGHUQ :RPDQ¶V but rather
Guide,” Saturday, March 28, is the life we create for our-
from 1 to 3 p.m.
selves.
The seed of an idea for liv-
Over the past five years
ing a life of quality over quan- Ables has established her-
tity admittedly began during self in the blogging world,
Shannon Ables’ childhood and inspired by her blog, she
in Wallowa County. Having entered the publishing world
grown up on Alder Slope and with her first book, “Choos-
graduating from Enterprise LQJ 7KH 6LPSO\ /X[XULRXV
High School she became /LIH $ 0RGHUQ :RPDQ¶V
Guide,” which was pub-
lished in December 2014.
By Rochelle Danielson
For the Chieftain
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6 H Q L R U V S H R S O H Z L W K G L V D E L O L W L H V I D P L O L H V D Q G F D U H J L Y H U V
K n ow yo ur o p t io n s .
Free
Hemming!
With your
purchase of new
JEANS!
Choose from
Five Great Brands
Over 20 Styles
Shop Today!
Open Daily
10 am – 5 pm
At the heart of living
simply luxuriously the fo-
cus is on choosing quality
over quantity in every arena
of one’s life. Regardless of
one’s income, relationship
status, age or where one
might live, Shannon encour-
ages and reveals to her read-
ers through her first-hand
experience that living well
is all about making the best
choices that align with our
purpose and passions.
Epitomizing what she
writes about, currently Ables
is also a high school English
and social sciences teacher
at Pendleton High and in her
off time travels, experiments
with new recipes, reads vo-
raciously, and frequently
visits Wallowa County as her
two dogs love spending time
in the country.
This Saturday in Enter-
prise you can stop by and
meet the author, pick up a
book or simply ask a question
about cultivating your own
simply luxurious life.
To learn more, visit www.
shannonables.com or thesim-
plyluxuriouslife.com.
Wallowa County Chieftain
Soroptimist
awards three
local women
Three local women are
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awards from Soroptomist In-
ternational of Wallowa Coun-
ty that will help them reach
educational goals.
Two of the women — En-
terprise resident Kristy Ath-
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Wallowa — each received
a Fellowship Award, while
Autumn Rose, of Enterprise,
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Your Dream Award. Ath-
ens received $2,000, Gibbs
$1,000, and Rose, whose
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her for further consideration
at district and regional lev-
els, has already accumulated
$3,000 in award funds and
could ultimately win one
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$10,000.
,Q -XQH $WKHQV ZLOO UH-
ceive her master’s degree in
Food Systems and Society
from Marylhurst University.
Athens writes: “I would
like to effect change in pol-
icy and education so that
women are brought to the
table and feel empowered to
engage with the food system.
This grant will enable me
to contribute to the cause of
educating and empowering
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as a leader in the food sys-
tem, and second by my work
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*LEEVD¿IWKJUDGHWHDFK-
er at Wallowa Elementary
School, is pursuing a Mas-
ter of Science in Education
degree at Eastern Oregon
University. Her emphasis is
curriculum and instruction at
the elementary and second-
ary levels. She hopes to work
with and inspire young teach-
ers as a mentor to student
teachers or as an instructor at
the college level. As a teach-
er at Wallowa Elementary,
she is in her third year of
participating in the Science,
Technology, Engineering and
Math (STEM) symposium at
EOU.
Rose, a single mother of
two young girls, balances
motherhood with a full-time
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she’ll be receiving her bache-
lor’s degree in Nursing.
The Wallowa County So-
roptimist group states: “Au-
tumn is an amazing woman
who has overcome many ob-
stacles in achieving her goals
and we are sure will continue
to be a positive role model
for many other women and
girls.”
Book Signing with
Shannon Ables
for her book
Choosing
the Simply
Luxurious Life
Saturday, March 28 from 1 to 3 PM
Uptown Clothing & Accessories
in Downtown Joseph
12 S. Main St. • 541-432-9653
Lo o k i n g f o r i n f o r m a t i o n a n d s e r v i c es c a n b e f r u s t r a t i n g .
Yo ur A g i n g a n d Di s a b i l i t y R e s o ur c e C on ne c ti on
c o u n s e l o r w i l l m a k e i t e a s y f o r y o u t o a c c es s l o c a l
c a re g ivi ng , M e d i c a re c o u n s e l i ng — w h a t e v er y o u n e e d .
T HE B OOKLOFT
Across from the courthouse in Enterprise
107 E. Main • 541.426.3351
always open at www.bookloftoregon.com • bookloft@eoni.com
Gambling Problem?
K n o w i n g y o u r op t i o n s w i l l h e l p e m p o w e r y o u t o l i v e a s
i n d e p e n d e n t l y a s p o s s i b l e w h i l e g e t t i n g th e h e l p y o u n e e d .
D o n ’ t m i s s o u t . T h e s e r v i c e i s f re e a n d a v a i l a b l e t o a l l
s e n i o r s a n d p e op l e w i th d i s a b i l i t i es, a s w e l l a s th e i r
f am i l i e s an d c ar e gi v e r s .
G e t i n t o u c h w i th y o u r l o c a l
A D R C op t i o n s c o u n s e l o r t o d a y a t:
1 - 8 5 5 - O R E-A DR C
( 6 7 3 - 2 3 7 2 )
w w w . A D R C o f O re gon . o r g
Signs & Symptoms
• Deterioration of work performance • Problems in concentration
• Missing deadlines and important activities • Frequently borrowing money
• Gambling to escape boredom, pain or loneliness
• Lying to loved ones about gambling • Trying to win back money lost
If you or someone you care about is experiencing a gambling problem,
HELP IS AVAILABLE It's Free – It's Confidential – It Works.
Call today: Wallowa Valley Center for Wellness
541-426-4524 • Or 1-877-My-Limit (24 hour Helpline)
207 SW 1st, Enterprise, OR 97828