LOCAL Wallowa.com Wednesday, October 20, 2021 A3 New school playground ready for use Jay Dobbin, who has his sheep pastured at the Mike McFetridge place on upper Prairie creek, had the misfortune to lose about 75 head when dogs got to running them the other night and the sheep piled up and were smothered to death. OUT OF THE PAST Compiled by Cheryl Jenkins 100 YEARS AGO Oct. 20, 1921 The new addition to the school playground has been prepared for use. The additional space is nearly a block in area and will let all grades have recess at the same time. The Red Cross shop had gross sales of $172 in September. More donations of articles are needed at once, as well as magazines, fi re- wood and a good stove. In attempting to jump from a moving automobile, in front of J. H. Schell’s store, Charles Simon fell and struck his head on the pavement, unconscious. For awhile his recovery was doubtful, but all is right with the exception of severe bruises. 75 YEARS AGO Oct. 24, 1946 Dr. E. R. Flack, veterinarian their annual caravan to Port- land, delivering 11,681 pounds of food valued at $2,008.82. They were joined by other cara- vans and numbered over 80 vehi- cles by the time they reached their destination. 25 YEARS AGO Wallowa County Chieftain, File Three Wallowa High School cheerleaders are shown in 1972. of Wallowa county for 36 years, passed away this week at the Enter- prise hospital. Two of the boys on the Joseph football team received injuries in the game with Cove. Bob Grandy was the victim of a badly dislo- cated right shoulder, and Horace Daggett received a cracked knee cap which required a cast. 50 YEARS AGO Oct. 17, 1996 Oct. 21, 1971 Refurbishing work at Wallowa Lake dam is continuing. Nine thousand pounds of pressure grout- ing will be applied to steel plates inside tunnels 3, 4 and 5 this week. Members of the Flora High School class of 1941 gathered for their 55 year class reunion. Attend- ing were Loren Fleet, Wanda Bork Esposito, Margaret Gowey Botts, teacher Jean Cable Curry, Harry Danly and Georgia Tucker Lampkins. Helen Bobbitt is retiring after 16 years as proprietor of the Wapiti Gift and Yarn Shop, one of the fi rst tenants of the Wallowa Valley Mall when it opened in 1980. A devastating fi re broke out at the Roy Stonebrink home on South River street next to the Phillips 66 station, destroying much of the upper portion of the recently remodeled home. Doz- ens of neighbors and friends were able to remove nearly every- thing before being driven back by smoke. Wallowa’s new town marshal, 33-year-old Michael McCoy, was sworn in for his new position last week. Eleven rigs from Wallowa County, laden with food for the Shrine Hospital in Portland, made Winding Waters Medical Clinic purchases Ram Auto & Hardware By RONALD BOND Wallowa County Chieftain WALLOWA — What for decades was a hardware store will soon become a site where Wallowa residents can nail down their health care needs. Winding Waters Med- ical Clinic is buying Ram Auto & Hardware in Wal- lowa from owners Randal and Mary Johnson, who are going into retirement and are in the middle of a liquidation sale. The Johnsons have owned the store for 16 years, Mary Johnson said. “We had it for sale for seven years. We are of retire- ment age and looking for- ward to that, for sure,” she said. The purchase, Winding Waters CEO Nic Powers said, will give the clinic the opportunity to have a facility closer to many of its patients who currently have to travel to Enterprise. “We’ve served hundreds IN BRIEF Women can apply now for ‘Live Your Dream’ grants ENTERPRISE — Appli- cations are now available for the Soroptimist’s annual Live Your Dream: Educa- tion and Training Awards for Women program. This program is open to women who are their fam- ily’s primary wage earner and who are seeking fi nan- cial assistance to continue their education or receive training. Applications are available online at soroprimist.org. A writable PDF is available, and the application must be submitted online by Nov. 15. Application questions can be submitted to Gail Johnson at gjohnson@eoni.com or Ronald Bond/Wallowa County Chieftain Ram Auto & Hardware in Wallowa will be the location of a new Winding Waters Medical Clinic with the health care group buying the business from Randal and Mary Johnson. of people a year from Wal- lowa, and see a need to bring integrated health care close to those folks,” Powers said. “When we survey people we frequently hear transpor- tation as a barrier to people getting the care they need.” Currently, patients are seen one day a week at the old Home Independent Tele- phone Co., the same building as the new Wallowa Moun- tain Midwifery. A portion of the funding will come through a second American Rescue Plan Act grant the clinic is receiving, this one in the amount of $549,709. There are diff er- ences, though, in the ways the dollars can be utilized. “My understanding is in April, the funding was about supporting organizations through providing COVID care and maintaining reg- ular operations,” he said. “This grant is very specifi c to health center construction and capital improvements.” So specifi c was the grant, 541-602-2051, or to Leigh Dawson at ldawson23@ gmail.com or 541-398-1549. The award recipient will receive a $2,000 cash grant from the Wallowa County Soroptimist club. The recipient will then advance to the region level for an opportunity at $5,000. Three $10,000 awards will be given at the fi nal stage. More than $1.6 million in cash grants is given out annually through the Live Your Dream Award. offi ce in Wallowa. “We’re going out of fi re season Friday morning,” he said Tuesday, Oct. 19. What that means is land- owners may burn without a permit. “They’re still liable (for property damage) if a burn spreads,” Howard said. He said people still need a permit if they’re burning logging slash or other waste from forest thinning. Permits for agricultural burns are obtained from the U.S. Department of Agriculture. The largest fi re of the summer was the roughly 23,000-acre Elbow Creek Fire. Several other smaller fi res burned, as well. According to the Ore- gon Department of Envi- ronmental Quality, the fol- lowing materials cannot be burned even with the lifting of the ban: rubber and plas- tic products, tires, wet gar- Fire season ends Friday; burn ban lifted WALLOWA COUNTY — After a long, hot and dry summer, fi re season offi - cially ends at 12:01 a.m. Fri- day, Oct. 22, according to Matt Howard of the Ore- gon Department of Forestry Than up k p y o o rt u ing s r e p a p News ucation for s In Ed NIE Dr. Jason Follett, Wallowa Valley Dental Care Log House RV Park Mountain Crest Apartment Ponderosa Motel Viridian Management Community Bank Heavenly’s Umpqua Bank Valley Bronze of Oregon WC Grain Growers Winding Waters 800-731-3214 Bronze Antler B & B Minam River Lodge in fact, that there were tight limits on what an entity could use money for. “When you wrote the grant, you could only write it for a very small set of things, construction of a new facil- ity, expansion/renovation of a facility, or equipment,” Powers said. Winding Waters won’t be trying to renovate the build- ing, but instead will be tear- ing it down and building a facility that will serve medi- cal, dental and mental health care needs, Powers said. “We had a consultant look at it and determined that the structure that was there was not going to be feasible for a modern clinic,” Powers said. It will be operational fi ve days a week, and will include fi ve exam rooms, four dental operatories and two counsel- ing rooms. He said COVID-19 has made estimating costs dif- fi cult, but anticipates the new facility will come in at around $2.1 million. More grants will be sought to cover bage, petroleum and petro- leum-treated materials, asphalt or industrial waste, material that creates dense smoke or noxious odors. — Chieftain staff Births A daughter, Magnus “Maggie” Josephine Scott, was born Sept. 28, 2021 in Enterprise to Cameron Scott and Haley Thompson of Joseph. Grandparents are Jan Eagers, Michael Thompson, Mary Scott and William Scott. 301 W. Main, Enterprise • 541.426.3177 the roughly three-fourths of the remaining costs. “The grant has helped us to be confi dent we can get going on the next steps. We are trying to determine that,” Powers said, again alluding to the pandemic throwing a wrench in timelines. “We are seeking out and hoping to engage an architect and hoping to get going with the design.” Mary Johnson said the couple is hoping to have its liquidation sale com- plete by the end of the year, and called the transition “bittersweet.” “The community has been vey supportive of us, and we are very thankful for that,” she said. “It’s kind of a bittersweet ending for us. We’re looking forward to retirement, but we won’t have a hardware store.” Powers is hopeful the clinic will be operational by the spring of 2023. $ 5 frozen pizzas 11 AM TO 7 PM WED, THUR, SUN 11 AM TO 8 PM: FRI & SAT 541 569 2285 while supplies last