The Blue Mountain eagle. (John Day, Or.) 1972-current, February 10, 2021, Page 3, Image 3

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    VALENTINE’S DAY
MyEagleNews.com
Wednesday, February 10, 2021
A3
‘An unbreakable bond’
Ranching couple reflects on 55 years of marriage ahead of Valentine’s Day
As people rush to make
dinner reservations for Val-
entine’s Day, a ranching cou-
ple in Grant County, who have
been married for half a cen-
tury, said it’s just another day.
Eugene “Perk” and Char-
lene Perkins, who will cel-
ebrate 55 years of marriage
on March 6, told the Eagle
their relationship has always
been more about consistency,
commitment and companion-
ship, and less about obligatory
cards, candy and flowers once
a year to show their love for
one another.
Charlene said an “underly-
ing deep love” brought them
together, and it’s endured and
grown stronger over the years
for the couple who raised
two kids in a “working ranch
family.”
Charlene recalled their
wedding day, in detail, as if it
happened yesterday: from the
“fluffy” handmade dress she
sewed herself to Perk, a work-
ing cowboy, wearing a white
satin shirt and blue jeans.
She laughed as she told the
Eagle about the preacher in a
flower-print shirt whom nei-
ther had met before their wed-
ding who agreed to officiate
the wedding on short notice.
Charlene, who was 19 at
the time, said she wanted to
get married in a church with a
preacher officiating. She said
all she knew was the color-
fully clothed preacher, named
Reverend Blackburn, was a
Christian and could match
them in March.
“I knocked on the door,
and here comes this guy, and
he had a flower shirt on and a
vacuum cleaner in his hand,”
she said. “That’s the preacher.”
Perk, who was 24 at the
time, said the couple went on
to have two “great kids,” four
“awesome granddaughters”
and two great-grandchildren.
Perk jokingly said Charlene
told their story for the both of
them during his interview: “I’d
probably lie anyway.”
Jokes aside, he said the
couple worked “side by
side” over the years and
“WE’VE HAD A LOT OF BAD TIMES. WE’VE BEEN THROUGH LOSING COWS AND GETTING COWS
AND LOSING EVERYTHING. THROUGH IT ALL, THERE WAS STILL THAT THREAD THAT COULDN’T
BE BROKE. BECAUSE IT WASN’T A THREAD, IT WAS A ROPE.”
—Charlene Perkins on nearly 55 years of marriage
Contributed photo
Eugene ‘Perk’ and Charlene Perkins cut their wedding cake in
1966 after taking their vows at a Garden City, Idaho, church.
Contributed photo
Eugene ‘Perk’ and Charlene Perkins on their 25th anniversary. The ranching couple will celebrate
55 years of marriage March 6.
kept things simple.
“Neither one of us did a lot
of talking,” he said. “But if
something was bothering us,
we were not scared to tell the
other person, and if we didn’t
agree, then we didn’t agree.
We just went on.”
He said society as a whole
does not value marriage like it
did in the past.
“Nobody’s willing to make
a commitment,” he said. “I
mean, they call it progress.
We’ve slid back so far its not
even funny.”
Perk said the world has
drastically changed and he
would not want to be a twen-
ty-something again.
He quoted Rodney Dan-
gerfield in the 1980s movie
“Back to School”: “It’s a jun-
gle out there. Don’t leave
home.”
As Charlene looks back
MyEagleNews.com
—Eugene ‘Perk’ Perkins on nearly 55 years of marriage
Michael B. DesJardin
Dentistry, PC
Debbie Ausmus
245 South Canyon Blvd.
John Day, OR 97845
OPEN WED. & THUR.
9 am - 5 pm
Preventive, Restorative & Endodontics
New Patients
Welcome!
541-575-1113
24 hrs/7 days wk
208 NW Canton
John Day
541-575-2725
mbddental@live.com
michaelbdesjardinmd.com
debbie.ausmus@
countryfinancial.com
S228521-1
S225316-1
Vale, Oregon
Valentine’s Dinner
sday, March 1 , 202
r
u
h
T
• 1 p.m. MST •
February 13th and 14th, 4–8PM
Reservations recommended as we have to
seat at 50% capacity • 541-575-1970
Selling Registered
Angus & Hereford Bulls
2 - 10oz Rib Eye, soup or salad, roll and choice
of potato; comes with an appetizer and a dessert
to share – $50
One of the West’s Premier Selections of Older Bulls
Add on a lobster tail
or sauteed or breaded shrimp
for $14 each
“Where Quality and Performance go Hand in Hand”
S229568-1
Blue Mountain Eagle
through losing cows and get-
ting cows and losing every-
thing. Through it all, there was
still that thread that couldn’t
be broke. Because it wasn’t a
thread, it was a rope.”
NEW LOCATION: Producer’s Livestock
A MAN
WAKES
UP in the
morning
after sleeping on...
an advertised bed, in advertised
pajamas.
He will bathe in an ADVERTISED TUB, shave with an ADVERTISED RAZOR,
have a breakfast of ADVERTISED JUICE, cereal and toast, toasted in an
ADVERTISED TOASTER, put on ADVERTISED CLOTHES and glance at his
ADVERTISED WATCH. He’ll ride to work in his ADVERTISED CAR, sit at an
ADVERTISED DESK and write with an ADVERTISED PEN. Yet this person
hesitates to advertise, saying that advertising doesn’t pay. Finally, when his
non-advertised business is going under, HE’LL ADVERTISE IT FOR SALE.
Then it’s too late.
AND THEY SAY ADVERTISING DOESN’T WORK?
DON’T MAKE THIS SAME MISTAKE
Advertising is an investment, not an expense. Think about it!
on 55 years of marriage, she
said “an unbreakable bond”
carried them through difficult
times.
“We’ve had a lot of bad
times,” she said. “We’ve been
“NEITHER ONE OF US DID A LOT
OF TALKING. BUT IF SOMETHING
WAS BOTHERING US, WE WERE NOT
SCARED TO TELL THE OTHER PERSON,
AND IF WE DIDN’T AGREE, THEN WE
DIDN’T AGREE. WE JUST WENT ON.”
Grubsteak Mining Co.
Restaurant
149 E Main
St., John Day & Lounge
541-575-1970
Don’t get left behind, call today! Kim Kell 541-575-0710
Ontario, Oregon
Ontario, Oregon
Terry Oft
Home: (541) 889-680 1
Cell: (208)741-0824
Jason & Deanne Vallad
Home: (541) 889-4562
Cell: (208) 881-7989
S230165-1
By Steven Mitchell
Blue Mountain Eagle
S226547-1
OUTPATIENT EAR
AND FOOT CLINIC
422 West Main
John Day OR, 97845
Notice of Scholarship Application
Regular and High
Risk Foot Care done
by specially trained
RN or CNA.
Ears are examined
and cleaned by
Registered Nurses.
S225317-1
Open
Mon. - Thurs.
8AM - 4PM
Gertrude L. Mc Rae Trust Fund scholarship applications are now avail-
able for 2020-2021 school year. Applicants must be a Grant County high
school graduate to qualify. Graduates of high schools in Morrow, Wasco
and Wheeler counties may also be considered if too few Grant Coun-
ty applications are received. Preference will be given to Grant County
graduates who reside in Oregon and have already completed one or more
years at an accredited college. To request an application form, please
contact Grant County, 201 S. Humbolt Street, Suite 280, Canyon City,
OR 97820 or call 541-575-0059. You may also request an application
via email to puckettk@grantcounty-or.gov. Application forms are also
available online at http://bit.ly/mcrae2020. Completed applications in-
cluding all required documents must be received by email or mail on or
before Friday, February 19th, 2021.
Call to make an
appointment today!
541-575-1648
S229457-1