Image provided by: Morrow County Museum; Heppner, OR
About Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current | View Entire Issue (June 28, 1979)
TWELVE The GaieUe-Times, Heppner, Oregon, Thursday, June 28, 1979 1 3 s "Women And The Law".. .a publication relating to laws of special interest to women is now available in limited quantities at the Extension office. If this sounds like Sen. Mark Sen. Mark Hatfield-R will visit the Morrow County Courthouse Monday, July 2 at 4 p.m. No reason for the visit has been given. Man charged with striking lone grain elevator Paul R. Huff, lone, was arrested Saturday by Morrow County Sheriff's Deputies and charged with reckless driving, hit and run and criminal trespass in the second degree in connection with damage to grain elevator doors at the Delpha Jones Several members of Holly Rebekah Lodge and guests motored to Pendleton on Tuesday where they were treated to a tour of the Yellow Hawk Clinic and new facilities at the Umatilla Indian Mis sion. On the agenda was a trip to the St. Andrew's Mission and the older school facilities which are being redone to accomodate classes in art, and cultures of early Indians, to Tillicum where they saw employees making parts for heart pacemakers and heart machines. Dinner was enjoyed at the Senior Citizen center, where the ladies were welcomed and on to the clinic where the process of medical attention was explained, how built, financed and the care and attention given the younger people with a new gym and child care center. The hostess for the day was Tessie Williams of the Yellow hawk Clinic. Those attending were Virginia Peck, Florence McMillan, Hilda Yocom, Gladys VanWinkle, Betty Christman, Delpha Jones, Eula Bloodsworth, Debbie Rogers, Joyce Buchanan and Josie Peck. Ralph Burcham has been taken to St. Anthony's Hospi tal in Pendleton where he is receiving therapy treatments. Mrs. Burcham is staying with her daughter Linda while there. Gladys VanWinkle and Bet ty Christman are home again after a meeting in Monmouth, at the OSEA Conference. They were delegates from Chapter 59. Lexington Grange held its In Cool Teal & Sunny Yellow H0U5F-FR5HI0NV Heppner 676-9426 U .1 COTTON SKIRTS ft TO GO WITH I -4' AMY TOP! V. SIZES: 56 to 1314 4-H camp underway this weekend at something you'd like to in clude in your summer read ing, come by for a copy. 4-H Camp Facility Will Be Shared When Morrow 4-H campers Hatfield visits July 2 Hatfield claimed in a recent press release that the U.S. Air Force made a $10-12 billion mistake in M-X missile cal culations. Oregon's senior Senator urged President Ralph Crum elevators in lone Friday night. Huff is scheduled to appear in a Justice Court hearing July 2 at 10 a.m. Crum reported more than $500 damage to his property. TO 989-8189- annual picnic at the Cutsforth Cabin on Sunday. The after noon was spent in hiking throughout the mountains, horse-shoe pitching, fishing and pinochle. A lovely pot -luck dinner was served at noon. Those attending were Mr. and Mrs. Joe Yocom, Venice Hendrickson, Florence Mc Millan, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Smouse, Mr. and Mrs. Nor man Nelson and houseguests from Eugene, Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Peck, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Peck, Mr. and Mrs. C.C. Jones, Rick Smith and the host and hostess Mr. and Mrs. Cutsforth. Kenneth Peck is a patient in Pioneer Memorial Hospital where he is receiving medical attention. Mrs. Mike Kane and son Patrick flew home Sunday from a visit with her sister, Linda VanWinkle at Santa Monica, Calif, and friends and relatives in San Francisco. Mr. Kane remained in San Francisco where he is em ployed. Mrs. Kane was met in Pasco by her mother Gladys VanWinkle. Mr. and Mrs. Bill Klinger and Victor Klinger were weekend visitors with their mother Mrs. Pete Klinger and attended their brother Aaron's wedding in Hermiston on Saturday. The Klinger family visited on Sunday with their father at the Walla Walla Veterans Hospital. Those from Lexington attending the wedding were Mr. and Mrs. Roy Martin, Mr. and Mrs. Eldon Padberg, Grace Leath ers, Bill Padberg, Mr. and Mrs. C.C. Jones, Mr. and Mrs. Dean Hunt, Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Rauch and the groom's moth er, Annetta Klinger. Don't Forget To Sign Up For Our Free Las Vegas Trip Bank Cards Welcome return home from camp on Wednesday, another fup of campers froiu Gilliam and Wheeler counties will move in! Cutsforth Park is a great facility for 4-H campers, and Carter to make the present U.S. land-based Minuteman III missile force mobile (MMIII) as a replacement for the proposed deployment of M X missile in the next decade. This would be "a great savings to the taxpayer, for less strategically destabiliz ing, faster in its deployment and could offer fresh new arms control possibilities in the immediate months and years ahead." The Air Force mistake, according to the Library of Congress, rested on a basic error in logic in which the Air Force envisioned a need for 12,000 protective shelters needed to guard 200 M-X missiles. (Hazette-Times Classifieds Bring Quick Results Phone (7fi-228 24-HOUR HARVEST SERVICE we are happy to share it with those from our neighboring counties. Gilliam-Wheeler campers will be in camp until Saturday, June 30th. 4-H is happy to share the dining hall facility with anyone camping or picnicing at the park, but we wish they would not remove our light bulbs. Re placing bulbs is costly! 1979 4-11 Summer Week Our delegates reported good times. They were among the 850 delegates from all parts of Oregon who spent the week on the campus at Oregon State University. This was an in creased number from prev ious years. Summer week is the same as the summer school of past years, just a change in name to cover increased and broadened op portunities. In addition to the general classes, summer week also includes a horse member workshop which at tracted 38 members, and a marine science workshop, with attendance of 35 mem bers. Morrow delegates were Angie Evans, Shane Laughlin and Mike Currin. Oregon 4-H Poster Contest A poster by the "Sew and Etc." 4-H club was displayed in Corvallis during 4-H Sum mer Week. A club project by members under the leader- WmEN WDHJ shiD of Theta Lowe, Heppner, the poster used the theme "4-H Helps All that Call", and depicted the wide range of interest of members of the club including pictures of each member. Kimberly Hughes, Shelley Stroeber, Andrea Ball, Kath NEWS1SOTES Kinzua workers vote end Bid awarded to Union grievance Members of the Inter national Woodworkers of America Local 3-312 voted to discontinue an employee grie vance against the Kinzua mill in Heppner Sunday, relieving a strike threat at the com pany. Dallas Harsin, business manager of the union, said the Children start blaze A blaze on State Game Commission property was quickly suppressed by the Heppner Volunteer Fire De partment Thursday evening at 7:30 p.m. on Highway 74. There was slight damage to an antique farm wagon owned iMl'IillMI'HAMyllTlIlvlGE fall . tmm leen Clark, Kimberly Miller and Cindy Stroeber will each receive a certificate acknow ledging their participation in the contest. Wheat Weaving Remember, if you are interested in wheat weaving, right now is the time to locate vote was "quite decisively" against continuation of the grievance which had been under negotiation for three or four weeks since the termina tion of an employee. The plant has not had a strike since 1957, according to company officials. by Orville Cutsforth, owner of adjacent property. Fire Chief Forrie Bur ken bine reported that two youths, 6 and 7 years old, started the grass fire lighters. with cigarette O O O MEED HT on AFTER HOURS, PI! ftOBB RUSH, MGR. KEVirj ROUtlTREE, asst. not. DARRYL BIGE10W, sales ilEPPUER, OREGON Cutsforth your supply of wheat! Around the county, I see many fields beginning to turn golden. Classes will be available, but you must supply the wheat needed. Call 676-9642 for more information. Fair Booths Available A call from fair committee Highway 207 A bid for resurfacing High way 207 from Lexington to the Bombing Range Rd has been awarded to Peter Kiewit and Son's, Vancouver by the State Highway Division. Kiewit was the low bidder of several companies submitting gilll IIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIII Attention! Will whoever borrowed my gear pullers in Dec. or Jan. please return them. Thank You, '..niiiiiniiuiniiiiiiiiiim iiiiiiiiiiHUii 7" JV 676-5017 676-9944 676-9670 V chairman, Delpha Jones, in dicates that now is the time to make arrangements " for a booth at county fair; Organi- zations, clubs or groups who wish to reserve a booth may call Ms. Jones or Nancy Bruch, fair board secretary. to resurface the low bid of $2,082,973. The road bed to be resur faced was damaged by last winter's frost and estimated at 12 miles long. The low bidder has 270 days to complete the project. IIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIHII IIIIIIIIIIH1IIHIHIIIIHB Vern Nolan Mi)iiiiiiiiinniiiiiiitiniiiiiitiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiu 1