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About Wallowa County chieftain. (Enterprise, Wallowa County, Or.) 1943-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 19, 2016)
A14 Sports wallowa.com October 19, 2016 Wallowa County Chieftain LEGAL NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE The Enterprise Cemetery Maintenance District will hold a meeting on Wednesday, October 26th at 6:00 p.m. in the Thornton Conference Room at the Wallowa County Court House. LEGAL NOTICE IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON FOR THE COUNTY OF WALLOWA In the Matter of the Estate of BRUCE LEE SAHAKIAN, Deceased. Case No.: 16PB06762 NOTICE TO INTERESTED PERSONS NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that Joanne McBride has been appointed 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 represen- tative at 63232 Scotch Creek Road, Enterprise, OR 97828 or to the personal representative's attorney, Rebecca J. Knapp, at PO Box 236, Enterprise, OR 97828, within four months after the date of first publication of this notice, or the claims may be barred. Scot Heisel/Chieftain Tate Olsen finds room on the edge for a 12-yard TD run against Union on Friday. OUTLAWS Continued from Page A11 Down 19-0 with 7:50 left in the irst half, the Outlaws (1-4, 0-1) started to turn things around. After facemask penal- ty gave Enterprise a irst down at the Union 30-yard line, se- nior quarterback Tate Olsen hit Trent Walker on a 15-yard pass before Walker galloped into the end zone from four yards out on a counter play for the Outlaws’ irst score. The Enterprise defense stood tall on Union’s next possession, forcing a three- and-out. The Outlaws offense marched again, with Olsen connecting on a pass to Jus- UNION Continued from Page A11 Union took the second game 25-18, thanks in part to eight consecutive points on serve by senior Kortnee Mar- tus Even before tossing a TD pass to Walker from inside the 10-yard line that went through the ingers of Bobcats defend- er Kordale Nowak. Olsen then picked off quarterback Quinn Evans on the Bobcats’ next drive, but the clock ran out before En- terprise could score again. The Outlaws went into the half with renewed hope trail- ing just 19-12, then opened the second half with another scoring drive that culminated with Olsen cruising into the end zone on a misdirection play to the outside. Another missed PAT opportunity left them trailing 19-18. Union’s Tate Landis fum- bled the ensuing kickoff, but the Outlaws offense stalled and failed to capitalize. Late in the third, Enter- prise took over again at mid- ield and marched deep. The drive ended on a successful 25-yard ield goal by Clayne Miller that gave the Outlaws their irst lead of the night — 21-19 with about a minute remaining in the third quarter. The Union rushing attack found its groove again and reclaimed the lead on a 40- yard TD run by Cole Baxter on fourth-and-inches to go up 25-21. The Outlaws countered with another long drive that ended with Olsen inding Walker over the middle on a 10-yard TD pass. Miller con- verted the two-point try to give the Outlaws a 29-25 with 8:15 on the clock. The celebration was short- lived, however, as Union’s Baxter took the ensuing kick- off 65 yards for a score. From there, the Enterprise offense moved the ball but never very deep into Union territory. The Bobcats’ Nowak sealed the win with an inter- ception of an Olsen pass with less than a minute remaining. Olsen ended up with a pair of touchdown passes to Walk- er and a rushing TD. Walker also had one rushing TD. The Outlaws host Grant Union (3-3, 1-0) at 7 p.m. Fri- day. The Prospectors defeated Imbler 32-22 last week. riott. The Bobcats pulled away late in the third game on some key kills by junior Katie Good and took the crucial set 25-21. It was all Union in the de- ciding game as the Bobcats built an early 10-3 lead and put the match away with a 25- 15 win. Gray landed eight kills and posted ive blocks for the Outlaws, while Heidi Niezen notched six blocks. Jensen, George, Aschenbrenner and Ashley Exon contributed at least ive kills each. The Outlaws next play at noon Friday against an op- ponent that is yet to be deter- mined in the irst round of the district tournament at East- ern Oregon University in La Grande. All persons whose rights may be affected by the proceedings may obtain additional information from the records of the Court, the personal representative, or the lawyer for the personal representative. Dated and first published on October 11, 2016. Rebecca J. Knapp, OSB #012754 Attorney for Personal Representative LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE PUBLIC MEETING AND HEARING ON WALLOWA COUNTY FORESTLAND CLASSIFICATION TO BE HELD The Wallowa County Forestland Classification Committee will be holding a Public Meeting and a Public Hearing on October 20, 2016 in Enterprise. Both meetings will be held in the Thornton Conference Room at the Wallowa County Courthouse. The Public Meeting will begin at 1:30 PM followed by the Public Hearing at 2:00 PM. At the Public Hearing, landowners will have an opportunity to give written or verbal testimony on the draft results of the Forestland Classification, and the process that the committee used. Written testimony can be submitted at the ODF Office in Wallowa (802 W. Hwy 82, Wallowa, OR) until 5:00 PM Friday, October 21, 2016. Draft forestland classification results may be viewed at the Public Meeting or at the Wallowa ODF office prior to October 20, 2016. Call (541) 886-2881 for information. LEGAL NOTICE EAGLES PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE OF SALE OF ONE FIRE TRUCK BY THE CITY OF LOSTINE, OREGON Continued from Page A11 The point-after attempt failed. The Eagles went on a scor- ing streak in the second quar- ter. Cayden DeLury hit Rylie Warnock with touchdown pass and later scored on a 40- yard run with 3:04 left in the half. A successful PAT gave Joseph a 14-12 lead. Echo rebounded with an- other score and a failed PAT with 1:34 left in the half. The Eagles roared back with an- other long DeLury run that put Joseph up 20-18 with 37 seconds to play. The Cougars marched on the strength of their option offense and managed a inal irst-half score as time ex- pired. The PAT failed, but the Cougars led 24-20 at the half. Echo scored on the open- ing kickoff and never let up. The end of the third quarter saw the Eagles down 46-20. DeLury scored on a touch- down run with 10:31 left in the fourth quarter. The suc- cessful PAT proved to be the Eagles last score of the game. The Cougars scored once more with 8:07 left in the con- test. In spite of the lopsided score, the Eagles backield ROUNDUP Continued from Page A11 Cooney also recorded seven aces. “We had some great serv- ing and team work,” said Coach Jill Hite. Johnelle Suto led the team in assists in all three matches. The winner of Tuesday’s Joseph/Wallowa match ad- vances to the district tour- nament next weekend in La Grande. Volleyball: Wallowa goes 2-2 The Cougars inished the regular season with four road matches in three days, going 2-2. On Thursday, Echo de- feated Wallowa 25-19, 25-20, 25-21. Rylee Goller had six kills and 10 digs, while Jordan Ferre had four kills with four solo blocks. “This game was the best I have seen them play,” said October 4, 2016 LOCATION OF ASSET: LOSTINE, OR 97857 The City of Lostine will be selling the following fire truck by sealed bid: (Truck #1) 1960 Dodge/American LaFrance, VIN# 4880116738. Tank Capacity 750 gallons and has a 750 gallon per minute main pump and a “pump and roll” capable PTO pump plumed to the hose reels. Taken out of service 9/15/2016. The City of Lostine will accept sealed bid proposals for a thirty (30) day period beginning Tuesday October 4, 2016 at 10:00 a.m. and ending Wednesday November 2, 2016 at 7 p.m. Prospective bidders can inspect the truck at the Lostine City Hall/Fire Department located at 128 Highway 82, Lostine, OR 97857. Questions may be referred to City Fire Chief Dusty Tippet by email at lostinefire@gmail.com OR City Hall by calling 541- 569-2415. MINIMUM BID: $3500.00 (w/ 2 plumbed hose reels). *BID PERIOD 10/4/2016 through 11/2/2016.* Steve Tool/Chieftain Eagles quarterback Cayden DeLury takes one in for a score against Echo. proved serious offensive threats with DeLury and soph- omore Tyler Homan making spectacular runs into the red zone only to have a number of them called back on penalties or later negated by fumbles. Several center snaps over Delury’s head also resulted in lost opportunities. While the defense had trouble reading the option, they consistently contained the Cougars’ passing game and runs up the middle, bat- tling tooth and nail to the bit- ter end. The Eagles’ loss left the team 2-2 in league play and 3-4 overall. They will wrap up regular-season league play with a 2 p.m. road game at Pine Eagle (4-3, 3-1) on Fri- day. coach Janea Hulse. “I am see- ing some of my younger girls step into a leadership role and that is not only improving their personal game, but improving the whole team.” On Friday, Echo def. Wal- lowa 25-19, 25-20, 25-21. Then on Saturday, the Cou- gars inished strong with a 25-11, 25-12, 25-15 win over Nixyaawii and a 25-15, 20-25, 25-17, 25-22 victory against Griswold. Wallowa (2-5, 1-3) led 52-6 at half. The Cougars wrap up their regular season on the road against Powder Valley (6-1, 4-0) at 7 p.m. Friday Coach Dan Moody. “It was pouring down rain and the course was slow and soggy. We’re just working hard for next two weeks for districts.” The team has a bye this week before traveling back to Pendleton for the District 5 Championships on Oct. 28. From there, the top two teams and top ive individuals ad- vance to the state meet Nov. 5 in Eugene. “Just about everyone on the team is posting great times,” Moody said. “It was a good way to end the season.” Top Outlaws placers: Girls — 1. Isabelle Tingels- tad, 20:02.2; 6. Ellyse Tingel- stad, 20:48.5; 7. Eliza Irish, 20:50.9 (Personal Record); 16. Deedee Duncan, 21:34.4 (Personal Record); 30. Karli Bedard, 22:34.5 Boys — 37. Jacob Evarts, 19:46.2; 52. Brycen Locke, 20:09.8; 76. Jacob Strampe, 20:44.7; 81. Sebastian Hobbs, 20:52.6; 90. Aaron Borgerd- ing, 21:17.3 Football: Cougars crush Cove Wallowa got back into the win column in a big way Fri- day with a 78-12 league victo- ry at Cove. Aaron Brockamp rushed for 291 yards at four touch- downs on 15 carries and Pat- rick Ritthaler ran for 187 yards and three touchdowns on 10 carries to lead the Wallowa offensive attack. Travis Haga also ran for two touchdowns and connected on a TD pass to Joe Robb. Cross country: Tingelstad irst again Isabelle Tingelstad is on a serious roll. One week af- ter placing irst in the 5,000 meters at Buffalo Peaks Golf Course in Union, the Joseph senior led the pack with a irst-place inish Thursday at the Kyle Burnside Memorial Wildhorse Invite in Pendleton. As a team, the girls placed second, just one point behind Union, while the boys inished 11th out of 19 teams. More than 20 schools com- peted at the meet. Tingelstad inished the 5,000-meter race in 20:02.2 to lead the ield of 127 girls. Alex Graffunder of Union led the ield of 213 boys with a time of 16:43.0. “Everybody ran well under the conditions,” said Outlaws Please submit sealed bids by mailing them to City Hall at PO BOX 181 Lostine, OR 97857 OR dropping them through the slot in the door at City Hall (128 HWY 82) within the open period. Please provide your bid, current contact information, and sign and date the document. Bids shall be opened in public at City Hall located at 128 Highway 82, Lostine, OR 97857 on 11/02/2016 at 7:05 p.m. The City of Lostine reserves the right to reject any and all bids or to cancel the proposed sale. LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE The Wallowa County Health Care District Board of Directors will hold its regular board meeting on Monday, October 24, 2016 at 11:30am in the Conference Room at Wallowa Memorial Hospital. A copy of the Board agenda will be available from the office of the Wallowa County Chieftain, KWVR or the Administrative Office at Wallowa Memorial Hospital. This meeting is open to the public. Wallowa Memorial Hospital is an equal opportunity provider and employer. LEGAL NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE The public is invited to comment on a proposed riparian easement the Oregon Department of Fish & Wildlife proposes to acquire on a section of Crow Creek and West Fork Pine Creek near the town of Enterprise in Wallowa County. Riparian easements are voluntary tools that ODFW uses to cooperate with landowners who are willing to work collaboratively to improve fish habitat on rivers. A riparian easement allows ODFW to improve fish habitat without owning property. As required by Oregon law, ODFW will hold an informal public hearing at the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife’s conference room located at 65495 Alder Slope Road in Enterprise on November 16th at 5:00- 6:00 pm to take public comment on this proposed easement. For information, please contact Winston Morton, Grande Ronde Fish Habitat Program, ODFW East Region office, La Grande, 541.962.1837.