Wallowa County chieftain. (Enterprise, Wallowa County, Or.) 1943-current, May 18, 2022, Page 2, Image 2

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    RECORDS
Wallowa County Chieftain
A2
Fire damages ice house in Wallowa
Weather Forecast
Courtesy of Weather Underground • wunderground.com
May 19
High Low
Conditions
46
mostly cloudy
32
OUT OF THE PAST
Compiled by Cheryl Jenkins
100 YEARS AGO
May 20
57
35
partly cloudy
May 21
61
42
partly cloudy
May 22
63
44
mostly cloudy
May 23
62
44
mostly cloudy
May 24
57
41
mostly cloudy
May 25
58
41
mostly cloudy
May 22
Full Moon
Last Quarter
May 30
New Moon
They consumed 215 waf-
fl es, about 27 for each. The
boys were Jordan, Ratcliff ,
Burnett, Tippett, Lockwood,
Clayton and Knapp.
May 18, 1922
Phases of the moon
May 15
Wednesday, May 18, 2022
June 7
A fi re of unknown origin
started in Wolfe’s ice house.
This building is in the heart
of the business section of
Wallowa, and but for the
effi cient service of the fi re
department, much damage
would have been done.
Frank Cook, who sup-
plies the town with much of
its garden truck during the
summer, is trying an experi-
ment. He has planted 17 hills
of cucumbers and 22 hills of
tomatoes, all under the cover
of canvas which will remain
throughout the summer.
Basketball coach A. B.
Amomino invited seven of
his high school players to a
waffl e jamboree last week.
75 YEARS AGO
May 22, 1947
Still urgently needed at
the hospital are beds, steril-
izing machines, new cribs in
the nursery, a new fl oor in the
sterilizing room and a nurse’s
chart desk. Currently, some of
the beds are modern but are
entirely unsuited for hospital
use. Clothes baskets are being
used for cribs in the nursery.
The fair board has set the
purses for the races and rodeo
contest at the county fair to
be held in July. Total money
for the races will be $1720.
Rodeo prizes total $1800.
Work on the fairgrounds track
has been completed and work
has also started on the new
The only individual award
given at the annual EHS art
show, the People’s Choice
award, went to Naomi Rob-
erts for an untitled oil paint-
ing of a woman in a colorful
shawl.
WHS alumnus will
gather for a night of social-
izing for the 77th consec-
utive year. 250-300 peo-
ple are expected to attend.
Alumni secretary-historian
Carol Jean Conrad says that
the annual event is the lon-
gest continuously operating
annual aff air of its kind in
Oregon.
EHS’s stellar art teach-
ing partnership will be
split up with the retirement
of elementary art teacher
Larry Wishart. He was
given the “Heart and Soul”
award from his brother,
high school art teacher Gary
Wishart, at the EHS arts
award program.
citation.
2:45 p.m. — Dog bite
reported in Joseph.
5:35 p.m. — Welfare check
requested in Lostine.
7:31 p.m. — Disturbance
reported in Wallowa.
7:44 p.m. — Disturbance
reported in Enterprise.
8:33 p.m. — Traffi c stop
in rural Lostine; warning for
equipment violation.
MAY 14
9:16 a.m. — Welfare check
requested in rural Enterprise.
10:03 a.m. — Criminal mis-
chief reported in Enterprise.
11:08 a.m. — Civil issue
reported in rural Lostine.
3:36 p.m. — Traffi c stop
in Enterprise; EPD issued
warning.
4:06 p.m. — Traffi c com-
plaint in rural Joseph on High-
way 82.
4:34 p.m.
—
Scam
reported in Enterprise.
6:40 p.m. — Public assist
requested in Enterprise.
8:04 p.m. — Traffi c com-
plaint in Enterprise.
8:47 p.m. — Joseph Ever-
ett Robb, 21, of La Grande was
arrested in Union County on a
Wallowa County Community
Corrections detainer for pro-
bation violation. The original
charge was supplying alcohol.
MAY 15
9:22 a.m. — Civil dispute
reported in rural Wallowa.
10:45 a.m. — Single-vehi-
cle rollover reported in rural
Lostine.
11:44 a.m. — Criminal
mischief reported in Joseph.
3:54 p.m. — Dog as pub-
lic nuisance reported in
Enterprise.
4:23 p.m. — Traffi c com-
plaint in Enterprise.
5:52 p.m. — Cynthia Jo
Nohr, 62, of Enterprise, was
arrested by the EPD on a
charge of driving under the
infl uence of intoxicants. Nohr
was released to a sober third
party. The vehicle was towed.
7:02 p.m. — Attempt to
locate an overdue motorist
was requested in rural Flora.
7:05 p.m. — Report of
domestic disturbance in
Joseph.
8:24 p.m. — Report of pos-
sible restraining order viola-
tion in Enterprise.
8:42 p.m. — Traffi c com-
plaint in rural Wallowa.
9:49 p.m. — Agency assist
in Enterprise.
grandstand which will seat
700-800.
50 YEARS AGO
May 18, 1972
The Wallowa County
Junior Women’s Club‘s
community improvement
project, the old Chief Joseph
gravesite at the foot of Wal-
lowa Lake, which they have
been working on for the last
ten years, was judged the
best such project in Ore-
gon by metropolitan and
non-metropolitan women’s
clubs.
Caprice Shortridge and
Carma Williamson have
been chosen from JHS to
attend the 31st annual Girls’
State Session at Willamette
University in Salem.
25 YEARS AGO
May 15, 1997
1st Quarter
WALLOWA COUNTY SUNRISE & SUNSET MAY 19 – 25
FOR THE RECORD
(from the U.S. Naval Observatory)
THUR
FRI
SAT
SUN
MON
TUES
WED
5:12
8:19
5:11
8:20
5:10
8:21
5:09
8:22
5:08
8:23
5:07
8:24
5:06
8:25
PLEASE RECYCLE THIS PAPER
Helen Dalton
June 20, 1942 - April 30, 2022
Helen Dalton passed away on
April 30, 2022, in Prineville, Or-
egon. She was born on June 20,
1942, in Quapaw, Oklahoma, but
Oregon was her home.
She was a faithful member of
the Jehovah’s Witnesses congrega-
tion.
She is survived by her brother,
Larry Keller; two sons, Mark Cox
and Brian Martinez; stepsons, Robby Dalton and Randy
Dalton; stepdaughter, Becky Davis; 14 grandchildren,
19 great-grandchildren and many nieces and nephews.
She was preceded in death by her husband, Vernon
Dalton; her son, Matthew Cox; her stepson, Rocky
Dalton; and siblings, Oie Keller, Corliss Fox, and Leila
Holmes. She will forever be in our hearts.
MAY 9
8:33 a.m. — Found prop-
erty near Minam.
10:43 a.m. — Kristion
W. Owen, 22, of Elgin, was
arrested by the Enterprise
Police Department on a failure
to appear warrant issued by
Union County. He was trans-
ported to the Union County
Jail.
4:07 p.m. — Public assist
in Enterprise.
5:29 p.m. — Criminal mis-
chief reported in Enterprise.
10:39 p.m. — Medical
pendant alarm activation in
Lostine.
MAY 10
1:04 a.m. — Report of sus-
picious activity in Enterprise.
8:35 a.m. — Criminal mis-
chief reported in Enterprise.
12:39 p.m. — Noise com-
plaint in Enterprise.
1:58 p.m. — Abandoned
vehicle tagged for removal in
Enterprise.
4:31 p.m. — Noise com-
plaint in Enterprise.
8:07 p.m. — Report of
commercial security alarm
activation in Enterprise.
8:17 p.m. — Report of
loose cows in Joseph.
MAY 11
12:38 p.m. — Report of
vandalism in Enterprise.
1:51 p.m. — Report of
harassment in Enterprise.
2:42 p.m.
—
Theft
reported in Enterprise.
6:42 p.m. — Request for
lockout assistance in Joseph.
MAY 12
7:03 a.m. — Report of
loose cattle in rural Joseph.
8:34 a.m. — Commercial
burglary alarm activation in
Joseph.
10:15 a.m. — Agency
assist in rural Wallowa.
Noon — Traffi c complaint
in Enterprise.
1:21 p.m. — Report of
criminal mischief in Wallowa.
4:06 p.m. — Welfare check
requested in Enterprise.
4:38 p.m. — Noise com-
plaint in Enterprise.
MAY 13
4:33 a.m. — Welfare check
in Joseph.
10:51 a.m. — Disturbance
reported in Joseph.
1:20 a.m. — Traffi c stop
in Wallowa; The EPD issued
WHAT’S HAPPENING
SEE THE EXPANDED ONLINE CALENDAR AT
EASTERNOREGONEVENTS.COM
Mary “Loraine” (Christman) Crawford
April 7, 1937 - May 12, 2022
Mary “Lorraine” (Christman)
Crawford, resident of Joseph,
passed to heaven on May 12, 2022,
at her home. Born April 7, 1937, in
Baker, to Fred and Lillian (Transue)
Christman, Lorraine grew up in
North Powder, graduating from
North Powder High school in 1955
and completing business school in
Baker.
She met Gerald Crawford of Baker in 1955, and they
married on Oct. 5, 1956. The couple moved to Pilot
Rock in 1957 where they started their family. When
Gerald returned to college in 1962, Lorraine worked
at Payless Drug and the EOC registrar’s office. Gerald
was hired to teach by the Pine Eagle School District in
December of 1965, and the family moved to Halfway.
For the next 20 years, Lorraine dedicated her life to
her family, supporting them in all their endeavors and
annually raising a huge garden and preserving food.
The family enjoyed countless days outdoors, camping,
snowmobiling, fishing and hunting.
In the summer of 1976, a teaching position for Gerald
moved the family to Joseph and Lorraine to the life of
work outside her home once again. She began “in the
potato shed” but soon moved on to employment more
suited to her abilities as one of two employees of the
newly opened Pioneer Federal Savings and Loan in
Enterprise. As the bank grew, she moved from teller to
loan officer, helping many locals finance their homes and
befriending most of her customers. Over the years that
institution, currently Umpqua Bank, became Pioneer
Bank and then Sterling before Lorraine retired in 1994.
Thereafter, Lorraine and Gerald enjoyed a happy and
fulfilling life traveling extensively across North America,
remaining active in the community and attending every
sporting event and activity in which their grandchildren
participated that they possibly could. They continued
to attend every JV and varsity basketball game of the
Enterprise teams for the next 20 years, and Lorraine
continued this even after Gerald’s death in the spring of
2021.
Lorraine lived a life of joyful service. A member of
the Eastern Star for over 50 years, she served in various
state offices and committees and was an avid supporter
of the local Rainbow, Masons and Shriners. She was
also a member of Beta Sigma Phi and the Enterprise
Community Church. Through all these organizations
and on her own, Lorraine volunteered countless hours
toward a multitude of local service projects.
Lorraine was preceded in death by her husband,
Gerald, and her twin brother, Larry Christman. Survivors
include her sons, Michael (Tammy) of Enterprise and
Darryl (Tammy) of Cocolalla; grandchildren, Michael
“Bo” (Catherine) Crawford of Las Vegas, Kyle (Kate)
Crawford of Enterprise, Chelsey (Jed) of Tacoma,
and Brandi (Joey) Kent of Post Falls; and eight great-
grandchildren.
Graveside services for Lorraine will be held at Prairie
Creek Cemetery at 10 a.m. Saturday, May 21, followed
by a gathering with light refreshments for close friends
and family at the Enterprise Community Church. In lieu
of flowers please make a contribution to the Wallowa
County Healthcare Foundation.
WEDNESDAY, MAY 18
ROTARY CLUB OF WALLOWA
COUNTY: Noon-1 p.m. Odd
Fellows Hall, Enterprise. Fea-
tured speaker will be Mol-
lie Cudmore, the new clinical
director at the Wallowa Valley
Center for Wellness, who will
speak about the suicide crisis
in Wallowa County.
WALK WITH A DOC: 12:30-
1:30 p.m. Meet outside in front
of Wallowa Memorial Hospi-
tal. The hospital is encourag-
ing Wallowa County to get
out and walk. Every Wednes-
day, Dr. Emily Sheahan will
host a brief discussion around
a health topic, and then the
group will head out on the
walking path that encir-
cles the hospital campus —
about a half-mile long, fl at
and well-equipped with rest-
ing benches along the way.
During the walk Sheahan is
available to answer questions
about general health and
well-being. For more info, call
541-426-7998.
LIFESTYLE
WELLNESS
CLASS: 5-7 p.m., Wallowa
Memorial Medical Clinic,
Joseph. Wednesday evenings
until May 25.
WALLOWA
MOUNTAINS
BICYCLE CLUB MEETING:
6-8 p.m. Fergi Lodge. Join
the club or renew your mem-
bership. TG beer and M Crow
pizza. Free event.
THURSDAY, MAY 19
BARBECUE
SANDWICH
MEAL CURBSIDE PICK-UP:
5-7 p.m. Enterprise School
multipurpose room. Spon-
sored by the Enterprise FFA
alumni and supporters. $10
per meal.
VETERANS APPRECIATION
DINNER: 6-7:30 p.m. Troy
School in Troy. Hosted by Wal-
lowa Valley Center for Wellness
and Wallowa County Veterans
Memorial Service
Charlotte
Stonebrink
Saturday,
May 21, 2022, 11:00 a.m.
at the Lostine Presbyterian Church,
Lostine, Oregon
A catered lunch will be served immediately
after at the Lostine Grange. All are welcome.
C
elebrate
Jeanette
Jeanette Hurley b. 2/23/32 - d. 8/14/21
Hurricane Creek Grange
Saturday - June 4th 1-5 PM
Potluck
Services. Come have a meal
on us, connect with other vet-
erans and get a goodie bag of
resources. Catered by Chuck-
wagon Sisters. Free, but please
RSVP at 541-426-0539.
FRIDAY, MAY 20
BOOK SIGNING AT BOOK-
LOFT: 3-5:30 p.m. The Book-
loft, Enterprise. Wallowa
County’s Shannon Ables will
be doing a book reading
and signing from her newest
book, “The Road to Le Papil-
lon: Daily Meditations on True
Contentment.”
BOOK READING AT JOSE-
PHY CENTER: 7 p.m. Josephy
Center for Arts and Culture.
Author Catherine Matthias
will be reading from her new
book “The Word Gobblers — a
handbook for parents working
with children who struggle to
read,” illustrated by Joan Gil-
bert. Free event.
SATURDAY, MAY 21
VOLUNTEERS
NEEDED:
10 a.m. The Place, 301 S. Lake
St., Joseph. Help assemble
100 disaster-relief cleaning
buckets, to be distributed in
the Northwest to people who
have suff ered from fl ood, fi re
or other disasters. Sponsored
by Joseph United Methodist
Church.
SUNDAY, MAY 22
10th
ANNUAL
HOOTE-
NANNY AND SHOO-FLY PIE
SOCIAL: 4 p.m. Odd Fellows
Hall, Enterprise. Fundraiser for
Wallowa Valley Music Alliance.
Local performers include the
Burns Family, Janis Carper,
Larry Haney, Ted Hays, Caro-
lyn Lochert, Nick Porter, John
Raines, Laura Skovlin and the
Local Yokels. Special guest
emcee, Dan Maher. Home-
baked pies for $1/slice. Fami-
ly-friendly event; $10 admis-
sion. To donate a pie, call
541-398-1089. For info, call
541-426-3390.
MONDAY, MAY 23
WALLOWA COUNTY CHESS
CLUB: 3:30-5:30 p.m. Jose-
phy Center, Joseph. Free. Play-
ers of all ages and levels are
welcome.
TUESDAY, MAY 24
QUILTING GROUP: 10 a.m. to
3 p.m. Wallowa Senior Center.
WEDNESDAY, MAY 25
ROTARY CLUB OF WALLOWA
COUNTY: Noon to 1 p.m. Odd
Fellows Hall, Enterprise.
WALK WITH A DOC: 12:30-
1:30 p.m. Meet outside in front
of Wallowa Memorial Hospi-
tal. The hospital is encourag-
ing Wallowa County to get
out and walk. Every Wednes-
day, Dr. Emily Sheahan will
host a brief discussion around
a health topic, and then the
group will head out on the
walking path that encir-
cles the hospital campus —
about a half-mile long, fl at
and well-equipped with rest-
ing benches along the way.
During the walk Sheahan is
available to answer questions
about general health and
well-being. For more info, call
541-426-7998.
LIFESTYLE
WELLNESS
CLASS: 5-7 p.m., Wallowa
Memorial Medical Clinic,
Joseph. Wednesday evenings
March 16 — May 25. Focusing
on nutrition, exercise, sleep,
decreasing stress, increasing
social contacts and avoiding
health risks. A supportive envi-
ronment with like-minded
people dealing with the same
issues and wellness concerns.
Call 541-426-7908 to register.
ENTERPRISE
CEMETERY
MAINTENANCE
DISTRICT
MEETING: 5:30 p.m. Thornton
Conference Room, Wallowa
County Courthouse.
SATURDAY, MAY 28
HURRICANE CREEK HALF
MARATHON/5
MILE/5K/1
MILE KIDS RUN: 8 a.m.-noon.
Starting line at Joseph City
Park. Pick up race packet start-
ing at 6:30 a.m. For registra-
tion and fees, go to www.run-
nersofthesage.com.
WALLOWA COUNTY FARM-
ERS’ MARKET: 9 a.m.-2 p.m.
604 N. Main, Joseph, next to
Stein Distillery. Vegetable,
herb and fl ower starts, crafts
and produce.
EAGLE CAP EXCURSION
TRAIN: 10 a.m.-1:30 p.m. Elgin
Depot in Elgin. 25-mile round
trip along the Grande Ronde
River. Boxed lunch included.
541-437-3652 for prices and
to book.
WALLOWOLOGY
GRAND
OPENING: 10 a.m.-7 p.m. 508
N. Main St, Joseph. Celebrat-
ing its ninth season with activ-
ities, snacks, speakers, stories
& art.
MONDAY, MAY 30
WALLOWA COUNTY CHESS
CLUB: 3:30-5:30 p.m. Josephy
Center for Arts and Culture,
Joseph. Free. Players of all
ages and levels are welcome.
TUESDAY, MAY 31
QUILTING GROUP: 10 a.m. to
3 p.m. Wallowa Senior Center.