V IIHTM R UKK.I iZKTTK TIMK, Trd. tMker li. Sudontf naireti or cducQfoon Balloons, posters, musical instruments and 3J8 kids filled Ihe ilwli of llcppw Tues day morning at Keppnw Elementary School and Com munity Kindergarten held their first parade. The parade was held in conjunction with American Education Week. Cict, 22 26. Parents and community residents watched the parade as it proceeded from the lleppner - Museum towards downtown. The Heppner High School Marching Band direc ted by Jim Ackley accom panied the Elementary Band as it led the procession. Mrs. Dee Jones and 48 kindergarten children fol lowed the band, waving bal loons and painted pictures. Kindergarten aide Mrs. Don na Bergstrom and several mothers marched alongside the five-year-olds. First graders came next in the parade, carrying posters and signs depicting their work in school. They were led by teachers Mrs. Rachel Dick, Mrs. Fat Edmundson and Mrs. Linda Riley. Heading, spelling, math, and other skills were dis . played on posters carried by second graders. Mrs. Karen Dubuque and Mrs. Sue Jones accompanied their classes. Ralloons from First Nation al Rank followed the second grade classes. The balloons were held by third graders of Mrs. Lucile Peck, Mrs. Mil dred Hanna and Mrs. Pauline Miller, reading teacher, as sisting. PVT. WADHOLM AT FOKT MX Army Private Richard L. Wadho'lm. 18. son of Mrs. Marie C. Wadholm. Heppner. has completed a clerk course at the U.S. Army Infantry Training Center, Ft. Dix, N.J. pvt. Wadholm entered the Army in May and completed Basic Training at Ft. Leonard Wood. - Mo. He is a 1973 graduate of Heppner High School. Mr. and Mrs. Gene Wallace, Port Hueneme, Ca., are par ents of a son, Kenneth Coley, born Oct. 16. This is their first child. Mr. Wallace is with Navy Seabees, and is the son of Mrs. Colleen Padberg, Heppner. 1 Mr. and Mrs. Roger Davis, Baker, became the parents of a son, Roger Dee, born Oct. 14 at Pioneer Memorial Hospital. He is the Davis' first child. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Valentine and Mr. and Mrs. D. Davis, all of Baker. Great-grandnother is Monte Davis, Arkansas. Mr. and Mrs. Lee Palmer and two daughters, lone, and Mrs. Lincoln Nash, Heppner, went to Portland Saturday to bring Mr. Nash home for an overnight stay. On Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. Nash were accompanied to Portland by Mr. and Mrs. Randall Peter son, who attended a jewelers meeting and dinner. Mr. Nash will remain in Portland for five more weeks of medical treatment. Mrs. Nash re turned to Heppner with the Petersons. Ruggles-Boyce Insurance Agency 228 Main P.O. Box 247 676-9629 If no answer coll SOT Bom 676-5384 Heppner cio& Service Repairs on all makes Open S days, $ to 5 PENDLETON 435 SW Qorian 276-0703 f 0 Fourth graders waved pos ters, drawings, and collages of class projects in areas of English, math, science, read ing and social skills. Mrs. Jessie Faye Morris and Mrs. Lorena Jones were in charge of the group. Mrs. Frances Williams and Mrs. Suzanne Sherman's fifth graders made collages and showed maps of previous school projects. Mrs. Wil liams' class carried pictures of dinosaurs, a subject area recently studied. Mrs. Sher man's class displayed maps they had made of Morrow County, Heppner, and the state of Oregon. The sixth grade classes of Mrs. Inez Erwin and Mr. Clint Agee followed the fifth gra ders. "See the world through a microscope" was the theme carried out by the seventh graders of Mrs. Inez Meador. Subjects in the math area were captured on posters carried by Ed Sherman's seventh graders. Eight grade class of Mrs. Cathy Terney and Alan Beck displayed pictures and posters in the subject area of language arts and careers. Other participants in the parade included Miss Virginia Liebertz's resource children, Bob Jespersen. elementary music teacher. Miss Dorcas Stewart, elementary librar ian, and teacher aides at Heppner High School. The parade ended with two boys carrying a banner with a well-known theme, "Recess.'' 1 r , 5 SOROPTir.llST ; t Moonlight Baked & Cooked 4 Food Sale I At Peterson's Jewelers 7 to 9 p.m. Thursday, (ki.25 ALSO ON Jerky 0 sponsored Columbia Electric tmrrimq Motrtv. m-siM U public service advertlMroenr By your friends RflcCall orders PenlaimcJ Governor Tom McCall di rected two agencies of state government to make an in quiry into the connection of Morrow County Judge Paul Jones with a Morrow County subdivision. He also asked Ihe agencies to determine wheth er the subdividers are abiding by pertinent state and county laws McCall said the inquiry will te finished in about 10 days, and that in the meantime the swearing in of Jones as a member of the new Slate Land Conservation and Develop ment Commission will be delayed Other commissioners will be sworn in at 10 a m. Wednesday in the Capitol. SALE by Dosb Co-op CBBsss r v'a.Vr. ' I i 5 S t W 5 ail 2 M all i 1 rl s f I li A Portland television sta tion, KGW TV, is presenting lour part series on recrea tional subdivisions in the stale. The first program covered Lake Penland Tracts in Morrow County. The station's reporter. Jim Compion. said the subdividers have not fil-d a required subdivision plut . have not responded to requests of the Real Estate Division for 10 Jones told Ron Schmidt, the governor's administrative as sistant, that he welcomes the investigation. He said the public is entitled to be assured of his intergrity before he joins the commission. rx- lliyilllWllHmUM.lH"HI' 1 I! ft 2F?-ri. Tit. 1 In Morrow County, where most of the land is devoted to agriculture, financing crop and cattle production is more than important . . . it's vital to the area's economy. That's why at First National we concentrate on preparing ag loan operating lines for our agricultural customers. With a First National "ag line" we'll commit to you the money you'll need for your operating year and we can help plan how much you'll need each month during the year. Convenient repayment makes this kind of ag loan a smart way to meet financial and production needs." Whether you specialize in dry land grains or beef cattle, a carefully planned "ag line" can make the operating year documents, and have allowed cabin to be built on the properly without building permits having been issued Jones said his only involve ment with Lake Penland Tracts is as the owner of one of ihc4olotsa! (he site. He and 24 other persons put up (3.01)0 a piece a few years ago to purchase property and to create a recreation lake. Jones said the principal pur pose of the project was to enhance tourism opportunities in Morrow County. The State Game Commission, the Soil Conservation Service and the l'.S. Forest Service also contributed toward construc tion of a dam to create the Kindergarten children displaying their work during Heppner Elementary School Parade, Tuesday morning. Mrs. Dee Jones walks along side her 5-vear-olds. Belcher, First National Bank manager, Heppner, look over some of Grieb's prize stock. Long range planning, the key to agribusiness lake The 25 investors each re ceived a lot at the lake in return for their payments to ihe nonprofit Lake Penland corporation. Jones does not serve as an officer in the oi ration The corporation has deeded property to the Game Com mission and guaranteed pub lic access to the lake. M Jeffery Ilolbrook. slate real estate commissioner, and Koltcrt Logan, administrator of the Local Government Relations Division, each will assign an investigator to determine the status of Jones and the compliance of the corporation with state and Z 7 '4 Hi J r.arv Griebs. left. Lexineton rancher, findncing. I inquiry local regulations. Ilolbrook said, however, that there is "no basis at the present lime to assume that there is any violation of Ihe Stale .WxhviKiofl " McCall said that the inter H elation of the situation by KG W TV differs from his own. IhiI that Ihe inquiry should be made to satisfy the public inn-rest. He said he will make i he reports of the two agencies public as soon as they are presented to him. -The Land Conservation and Development Commission Related story, tat BEECHER'S of lone Presents Dining and Dancing , to the music of THE THREE Js ofHermiston Saturday, Oct. 27 I 9:30p.m. to 1:30 a.m. SUNDAY SPECIAL Try our buttered chicken or chicken-fried steak dinner on Sunday SLSS. Wirt a FREE T-Bone Steak dinner at Beecher's .jmWWWAIIIBIIfflwm and Ken simpler and very possibly more productive as well. Stop by our Heppner branch soon and let manager Ken Belcher or loan officers John Messick and Mary Eleanor Gilman, help plan an "ag line" for you. Wedliketo get to know HEPPNER BRANCH FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF OREGON will be one of the most inimiianl of all stale agen run," Mi Call said, "and we i.uinot have a cloud hanging mer the head of one of Ihe k-Menntrd members. Judge Jones is an advocate of sound, progressive land use legislation and has Ihe support ol the Association of Oregon Counties He has my praise for his willingness to stand aside at this lime to allow the inquiry to take place, and In ie ihe public an opportunity ii resohe its doubts." pages 1 and 2 ft g2S3KBJiEssiKjsOBBljsisis3BHBCBK