Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current, September 14, 1978, Page THIRTEEN, Image 13

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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
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' 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.