A6 SENIORS & NEWS Blue Mountain Eagle Wednesday, March 9, 2022 GRANT COUNTY SENIORS John Day Seniors Elsie Huskey Thursday, March 3, Shay and Kim are making sau- sage and pepper hoagies, tater tots, cheeseburger soup and birthday cake. For Monday, March 7, lunch will be sesame chicken and noodles, fruit cup, and banana pudding. Yummy! As I type this my mouth waters, longing for those great flavors. To reserve your lunch, call 541-575-1825 by 10 a.m. and pick them up from 11:30 a.m. to noon at the front entrance. Remember, all meals are subject to change. The suggested donation for these lunches is $5 for ages 60 and over and $6 for those younger than 60. The current sponsors for meals are: Driskill Memo- rial Chapel, Dollar General, Chester’s Market, and Marilyn Foss. Thanks to each of you for supporting our senior center. You have an opportu- nity to volunteer at our cen- ter if you choose to. We are in need of volunteer drivers and help with beverages when we open again, as well as help with lunch cleanup. Call the number above for more information. At long last we are hear- ing about the COVID-19 eas- ing up. Talk is that soon masks will not be required except for private gatherings coordi- nators’ mandates. It has been over two years. Phew! That is a long time to live in depriva- tion. I for one am so ready to regain some amount of normal living. Unexpected company arrived at my house for a couple days so I will make this news short and catch up next week. Thanks for understanding. John 8:31-32, and 36 You are truly my disciples if you keep obeying my teachings and you will know the truth. The Truth will set you free. Monument Seniors Soo Yukawa Wow, we are already into the month of March! I better start thinking about what I am going to plant very soon for the summer. My life seems to be extremely busy and I thought we were supposed to have a nice, slow-paced, relaxing wintertime? If this winter is so busy, I am afraid what it will be like in the spring and summer. One thing I think a bunch of us women enjoy is that we don’t have to cook for our- selves or our families for Tues- day lunch! Terry Cade and Carrie Jewell made us chimi- changas with all the fixings, refried beans, fiesta corn, and chocolate chip cookies for our dessert. I especially liked the corn, it was very delicious. I know that corn has no nutri- tional value but it sure tasted really good! We thank our great cooks for our wonderful meal. Our volunteers at the table were Kristi Guimont and Jan Ensign. They greeted every- one, collected, and counted up the money. Linda Abraham led us in the flag salute, and yours truly prayed the bless- ing over the meal. Ron Odette of Long Creek won the free meal ticket. We had our usual suspects from Spray join us for lunch, too. We thank every- one for their service and also for supporting our senior cen- ter by coming and fellowship- ping with us for lunch. So, from the previous story from the previous week, I went quickly down to the goat shed after breakfast the next morn- ing to see how many more babies Marianne had. I went in and had to turn on my head- lamp (which btw are extremely handy!) and scanned the pen. I found absolutely nothing! What? I looked at Marianne and looked around and I said to her, “Marianne, why do you still look so big and fat and yet you have no other babies? What’s the deal?” She only had the one baby and no other. Thank goodness I decided to go into the house when I did for it would have been a lost cause. The goats seem to like hav- ing their babies on Tuesdays or Sundays. I took Leah out to the goat pen to hang out with her brothers, for she is getting too big for her box in the house and wants to be very active. While I was out there, I was scanning the goats and noticed Yuki (the blue goat with blue eyes) had a bloody back end. She had had babies! So I went into the goat shed and sure enough found two of them. They were two tiny little black, blue and white babies. But when I picked one of them up, he looked like he was at death’s door. His neck was bending funny and his eyes were looking glazed and rolled back slightly. He was limp and very light. He was too weak to feed. What to do? I brought him quickly up to the house. I fed him some collostrum milk replacer. To be continued… Revelations 3:10 Because thou hast kept the word of My patience, I also will keep thee from the hour of temptation, which shall come upon all the world, to try them who dwell upon the earth. Prairie City Seniors Rose Coombs Hope you managed to work your way through last week’s edition and got the photos with the correct article. I just thought that April Fool’s Day came a month early… I did enjoy the opinion essays by the fifth-graders. Good job, future voters. Our “Pam-demic” ladies are celebrating again. We have acquired a warming oven for the kitchen. May we hope to have no more cold plates for our dining-in future? “Make it so.” And we heard a rumor that the grant we applied for from the state had been approved. Awaiting confirmation and paperwork while we rejoice greatly! In the meantime, we eat, right? On this day we enjoyed a hamburger-rice casserole, creamed corn, a fruit salad, and for dessert a tasty cube of banana cake with banana crème frosting. Pam was at her station at the registration desk. The delivery people included Carla, Carlos, Gwynne, Mary, and Ginger. Thanks to all and sundry for your help. This isn’t a one-man operation, by any means! And special thanks to those of you who have taken note of our projected yard sale this spring. If what you want to donate is in the way in your abode and you need to find a home for it, just bring it on down! We will provide a tem- porary shelter for it until the sale. Who knows? With that box, bag, or crate out of the way, you might find more goodies! Remember our motto: One man’s trash is another man’s treasure. I succumbed to the gar- den seed display and bought three packages. Get ‘em before they’re all gone, right? Am keeping watch on the patch where I so carefully put the carrot seeds last spring — and they didn’t come up. If I have to be so precise with planting, how do the big truck gardeners do it? ‘Tis a mystery. My, my, how time flies. It has only been a month since we had that once-in-a-???? years date of 02-02-2022 — or, as I wrote it, 2-2-22. Now it’s already 3-2-22. And only three weeks until spring! When it will probably snow for spring break, huh? I just keep remem- bering the time 50-plus years ago when it snowed a foot on Mother’s Day. And it was all melted by noon. Isn’t water amazing? My comment about latch hook yarn yielded a large — and I do mean LARGE — con- tainer of said item. Thanks so much, Margie. Now if I could only find some needlepoint yarn… Isaiah 55:10-11 “As the rain and the snow come down from heaven, and do not return to it without watering the earth and making it bud and flour- ish, … so is My word that goes out from My mouth: it will not return to Me empty, but achieve the purpose for which I sent it.” Editor’s note: If something seemed a little off to you about last week’s senior column, you weren’t imagining things. We somehow put the wrong author photos with each of the senior columns. As a result, Elsie Husky of the John Day Senior Center appeared with the Monument senior column, Soo Yukawa of Monument appeared with the Prairie City column and Rose Coombs of Prairie City appeared with the John Day column. We apol- ogize to our readers (and our columnists!) for the confusion. Exhibition features Grant Union High School artists By JUSTIN DAVIS Blue Mountain Eagle LA GRANDE — Two Grant County youths are among the artists featured in the 18th annual Oregon Regional High School Art Exhibition, which opened Feb. 25 at Eastern Oregon Uni- versity’s Nightingale Gallery. The show includes works created by students from 12 Eastern Oregon high schools. Grant Union seniors Carson Weaver and Melinda Vanloo have works featured in the exhibit. The juried exhibition will award a number of honors to participating high school students. The Best of Show winner will receive a certificate, gift card, sketchbook and EOU merchan- dise. Other awards sponsored by var- ious art centers throughout Eastern Oregon will also be given to students who have their work featured in the gallery. According to an EOU press release, gallery director Cory Peeke is happy to exhibit the works of the region’s youth and hopes the students featured in the exhibit continue to pursue the arts. “We hope to champion these stu- dents and inspire them to continue their artistic pursuits, as well as rec- ognize the hard work and dedication of their teachers who conscientiously cultivate such promising artists,” Peeke said. The exhibition started as a way for Union County high schools to show- case student artwork, then expanded 14 years ago to include all high schools from Eastern Oregon that want to participate. The Nightingale Gallery is located in Loso Hall on the campus of East- ern Oregon University in La Grande. The gallery is open to the public from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday. Contributed Photo “Strawberry Moun- tain,” by Grant Union High School senior Melinda Vanloo. MT. VERNON PRESBYTERIAN Community Church SUNDAY SERVICE..............9 am SUNDAY SERVICE ...........9 am 541-932-4800 EVERYONE WELCOME St. Thomas Episcopal Church Join us on Facebook live Sunday 10am Like us on Facebook! Redeemer Lutheran Church Come Worship with us at Grace Chapel (EMC ) 154 E. Williams St. Prairie City, Oregon 541 820-4437 Pastor Robert Perkins Sunday School (all ages) 9:30-10:30 Sunday Worship 10:45-12:00 John Day Valley Mennonite Church Meeting every Sunday at Mt. Vernon Grange Hall Sunday School ...............................9:30 a.m. Sunday Morning Worship ............10:50 a.m. Pastor Leland Smucker Everyone Welcome • 541-932-2861 2 Corinthians 5:17 Every Sunday in the L.C. Community Center (Corner of Second & Allen) Contact Pastor Ed Studtmann at 541-421-3888 • Begins at 4:00pm JOHN DAY UNITED METHODIST CHURCH Sunday Worship • 9AM (541) 575-1326 johndayUMC@gmail.com 126 NW Canton, John Day Food Pantry Friday 3-4PM Like us on Facebook! 24/7 Inspirational Christian Broadcasting Tune into KSPL 98.1 FM For more information, call 541 620-0340 CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE Sunday School .......................... 9:30 am Sunday Worship Service......... 10:45 am Sunday Evening Service ...........6:00 pm Children & Teen Activities SMALL GROUPS CALL FOR MORE INFO 627 SE Hillcrest, John Day 59357 Hwy 26 Mt. Vernon 1 st Sunday Worship/Communion ..................10am 3 rd Sunday Worship/Communion/Potluck ...4:30pm 2 nd , 4 th & 5 th Sunday Worship .........................10am Sunday Bible Study .....................................8:45am Celebration of Worship For information: 541-575-2348 Midweek Service FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH Sunday School ..................... 9:45 am Sunday Worship ...................... 11 am Fox Community Church ............. 3 pm Sunday Evening Bible Talk ......... 6 pm Saturday Men’s Study ............... 6 pm Weekdays: Sonshine Christian School Full Gospel- Come Grow With Us Pastor Randy Johnson 521 E. Main • John Day • 541-575-1895 www.johndaynazarene.com 541-575-1202 Church 311 NE Dayton St, John Day Pastor Al Altnow Sundays 5:30pm Youth: 0-6th Grade Thursdays 6:30pm Youth: 0-6th Grade Jr./Sr. High Youth Connection Wednesdays at 6:30pm Overcomer’s Outreach Mondays at 6pm at LWCC A Christ-Centered, 12-Step Recovery Support Group Pastor Sharon Miller 541-932-4910 www.livingwordcc.com S283670-1