Image provided by: Morrow County Museum; Heppner, OR
About Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 14, 1978)
- yv VVv H"--r:j, -o p fr- -ft IT- V t State Hospital chaplain is guest minister for Methodist service Vesta Kilkenny joins $ 1 million sales club The Gazette-Times, Heppner, Oregon, September, 14, 1978THIRTEEN Senior Citizen News This Sunday, September 17, Rev. Ed Springman, chaplain of the Eastern Oregon. State Hospital, Pendleton, will be the guest minister at the United Methodist Church. He will deliver the sermon during the 11 a.m. morning worship and will be assisted by Rev Tollefson as liturgist After the service there will be a coffee hour in the basement honoring a congre gational member, Elsie Mc Daniel Leathers, who recently moved from Heppner to Her miston. This will afford every one a chance to visit with Elsie, with Rev. Springman and with a special guest, Ava Wilson, the president of the Oregon-Idaho Conference Uni ted Methodist Women. Mrs. Wilson, a long-time friend of the Tollefsons will be in their home over Saturday night after attending the Central District UMW meeting at The Dalles. On the following Sunday, September 24, the regular pastor will be away at a special retreat, and Roy Margraves of Pendleton, who is well known here will fill the Methodist pulpit. Vesta Kilkenny, - a sales associate at the Portland Center branch office of Stan Wiley, Inc., Realtors in Port land, has earned membership in the firm's President Million Dollar Club. To earn the honor, sales associates must complete more than $1 million in closed transactions on one calendar year. Since January, she closed $1,071,400. Kilkenny, daughter of Orval and Elton Cutsforth of Hep pner, attended Heppner High School. Before joining the company in February, 1975, she was in life insurance sales. Seniors, remember that your free blood pressure clinics next week are at Irrigon on Monday, Sept. 18 and in Heppner on Tuesday, Sept. 19. Also remember that the absolute deadline for obtain ing free forest service fire wood is approaching very quickly. If you want some of this wood delivered to your in.1-.. -j .J iiii. i.w-iiiitiiiliiwiiiL...-uu " ..m, -v ' " )f " "fn ' "nrniii m gjr ''- "- BIRDSEYE 3-LB. SIZE , - COOL mW TOPFSMG RflJB GFFIEE Ufe NON-DAIRY TOPPING 8-OZ. SIZE REGULAR, AUTOMATIC DRIP OR ELECTRIC PERK GREEN GIANT S1BLETS COFSft! WHOLE KERNEL, 12-OZ. SIZE r HI-DRI 2-PLY r ELS SINGLE ROLL 85-SQ. FT. law 'I Vr ' i. '"I f,, ' ' y ' ' PLA1PJ WRAP WHITE OR WHEAT 2)u si LfsaZrSX Li 22V2-OZ. LOAF 1 . J Ll FOR I - U Cf I GRANULATED SUGAR 10-LB.9 yj BAG Ch O GROUND BLACK PEPPER o SCHILLING, 4-OZ. SIZE Co no) a PLANTER'S PIECES WALMUTS 4-OZ. SIZE J s 3 J ELL-O G EL ATI N Assorted Flavors. 6-oz. Size 39 Hl-C FRUIT DRIWiCSAssortedF.avors,46-oz.Size 55 DOLE PINEAPPLE IN JUICE Sliced. Chunks or Crushed. 20-oz. Size. . 57 SUNSHINE HI-HO CRACt(ERS 79 BATHROOIV3 TISSUE Charmin. White & YellowBlue. 1-Ply. 4-Roll Pkg 79c SHUR-FRESH HAMBURGER OR HOT DOG BUNS I 'I i OF 12 YOUR CHOICE SHUR-FRESH SHUR-FRESH HOT SLICES DOE1UTS (2) i WHITE OR SESAME. 15-OZ. PLAIN OR POWDERED PKG. OF 8 if m 1 'Yytf BANQUET BAG coorasir ii impivMvlyi ! Haiti jM keWf1"' 10-LB. BAG ft U.S. NO. 1 1 n . i is ' J LOCAL GROWN ASSORTED S f VARIETIES, 9 ' K.D7 RI7F y 3 WESTERN FAMILY SHOESTRING (ff POTATOESsr 3...- WESTERN FAMILY WAFFLES E2: ainnccvF 12-oz. Size . V Mor V WASHIfiGTOrJ GROWN I LB. - U.S. NO. 1 E72EDIUSY3 VELLOW OftJIOFJSus No 1 ,b13 Local Grown " 13 RUTABAGAS or TURNIPS i29 GREEN JALAPENO PEPPERS.. ... ... 794 - - ll y Z THRIFTViAY '""UHHHW) III ! WTOIIBWWBW ' home call the Neighborhood Center right away. The Heppner Mealsite, in the dining room of the Elks Club, needs volunteer helpers before and during mealtimes on Tuesday and Wednesday. Also, anyone interested in working eight hours each Tuesday and Wednesday should talk to Pat Brindle at the Neighborhood Center ab out the qualifications for the position of cook's assistant. Nineteen seniors gathered in the basement of the Heppner Christain Church from 9 a.m. until noon on Monday for CPR instruction from Linda Connor and her assistant Suzanne Jepsen. All 19' felt3ne. ins'truction was valuable and that it was about jime they" leafned the. facts "and techniques which were so j well presented v " , Ms. , Connor stressed that . more than 50 per cent of the deaths in the nation are due to - heart attacks. She is qualified, .v licensed instructor for the ;CIMe (Crash Injury Manage ment') and CPR (Cardio-Pul- minary -Resuscitation) pro . grams. She has had 300 of her pupils certified. The 19 senior pupils tried to learn their ABC's (Airway, Breathing, Circulation) fund amentals this week. Next week during the same three hours at the same place they will complete their six hours of instruction, turn in their test papers and most of them will graduate and become certified. Ms. Connor gave careful instruction on the use of the Heimlich Maneuver for the relief of choking before she and assistant Jepsen and the instructional dummies got into the fine points of CPR. Several ex-teachers in at tendance spoke out in favor of having this instruciton includ ed in the curriculum of all Oregon high schools. It was pointed out that the large, complete, electrified dummy being used was pur chased with funds given in memory of the late Bernard Doherty. Instructor Connor hopes that more funds can be found to buy more equipment for use in these valuable, life-saving classes. Seniors who wish to come to next week's class to see a review of the instruction and to get acquainted with CPR are cordially invited, but will not qualify for their certifica tion now as they need six hours of instruciton. Booze brings bucks to County Coffers The Oregon Liquor Control Commission .'.reports that- liq uor revenuesMuring the:,1977 78 fiscal "year,. which; ended Junef30 amounted to $55,749, 079, an t increase of ;7.48 per cent compared to the 1976-77 fiscal' year. s ':': sr- The State General Fund received $28,806,138; f the1 in corporated cities, $10,287,906; the counties, $5,143,953, the" City Revenue Sharing Ac count, $7,201,535; and the Mental Health, Alcholism and Drug Services Account, $4, 309,547. Fifty per cent of the taxes collected on malt beverages and wines is earmarked for the Mental Health Alcholism and Drug Services Account. Based on population, Mor row county recieved $11,862.61 and the incorporated city of Heppner received $12,343.95. tor the 1977-78 fiscal year. lone received $3,061.43 and Lexing ton .received $1,799.00. Liquor sales for the fiscal year exceeded all previous years, amounting to $127,001 654. This was an increase of 10.52 per cent compared to the 1976-77 fiscal year.