Image provided by: Morrow County Museum; Heppner, OR
About Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 21, 1980)
The lleppnrr (lazette-Times, Heppner. Oregon. Thursday. February 21, 19H0 THREE FROM CAL'S 10 CORDON BLEU Cook in Heppner cafe accepted by chefs school . .1 L- - t Iff . ' ' . Ray Banka in the kitchen at Cal's Cafe. Area Deaths Marion Hayden Funeral services took place Monday morning at the All Saints Episcopal Church in Heppner for Marion Hayden-. Ritualistic graveside ser vices were given by the AF&AM No. 69 at Heppner Masonic Cemetery. Hayden died Feb. 9 in Heppner at the age of 75. He was born April 11, 1904 in Spray. He was a sawmill operator for many years and was a long-time employee of Kinzua. Hayden was a 50-year mem ber of the IOOF No. 66 in Heppner; life member and past master of the AF&AM No. 69; a member of the Rhea Creek Grange; a member of the American Association of "Retired Persons: Ruth Locust Chapter No. 32 Order of the Eastern Star; Royal Arch ' Masons chapter No. 26; Uma- Olive Reade Olive G. Reade, for whom funeral services were held in Spray last Saturday, was a 60-year resident of the area, not of Morrow County as stated in her obituary. Also, surviving are four, not 14 great-grandchildren. The Heppner Gazette-Times regrets the error. tilla Council of Royal and Select Masters; the Cursillo Community of Eastern Ore gon; Sans Souci Rebekah Lodge No. 33; and he was on the vestry of the All Saints Episcopal Church in Heppner. His wife, Mabel, died in 1969. Survivors are cousins Dale Hayden of Klamath Falls, Earl Hayden of Pendleton, Ray Gates of Spray, Bill Richards of Spray, Van Rich ards of Monument, Lora Ester Berg of Menlo Park, Calif., and Willma Moore of Seattle. The Rev. Richard P. Simp son officiated at the final rites. Gene Rietmann played sacred selections on the organ. Cas ket bearers were Randall Peterson, Milo Prindle, Bob Abrams, Herman Winter, Dean.Gilman, and Bob Lowe. Sweeney Mortuary was in charge of the arrangements. Vaccine available Flu vaccine is available , from private physicians, health maintenance services and health departments. Con sult one of these sources if you are in the high risk group that needs protection against flu and its dangerous complications. t ! UII"I. HI" JUIMIIIiraillllWUUl I Ullll Denny Smith and Ken Jernstedt Jernstedt gives backing to Denny Smith in race Congressional candidate Denny Smith has won the endorsement of State Senator Ken Jernstedt of Hood River. "I know that by November the voters will come to know Denny Smith as competent, honest, and well qualifed to represent Oregonians in Con gress," Jernstedt said. Smith, a Salem business man and Republican, is run ning in the 2nd District. Representative Al Ullman is the incumbent. Senator Jern stedt represents the 28th state senate district, most of which lies within the 2nd Congres sional district. ( Jernstedt said he believes that Smith "will keep in touch with the people of the 2nd District. He grew up in eastern Oregon and now does business on both sides of the mountains. He will still be one of us." For the first time in many years, a congressional candi date has gone the petition route in filing for a spot on the May primary ballot. Secretary of State Norma Paulus said that at a recent staff meeting, no one could recall that a congressional candidate had succeeded in ammassing enough signatures to file by petition. "You will be filed as of today" once the petitions are checked, Paulus said. "This is a real plus for all the people we have out in the 21 counties who worked real hard to get these signatures," Smith said. Smith circulated petitions in stead of paying a $100 filing fee. Campaign Chairman Rose mary Wood said that some of the signers had changed their party registration from Demo crat to Republican so they could help get Smith's name on the ballot From Cal's Cafe in Heppner to the Cordon Bleu chef's school in Chicago, Ray Banka will travel this summer. Banka Jias worked at Cal's for about one year. Prior to that he worked at the Kinzua Mill and as a cook at Beecher's Restaurant in lone. He has been in the area for seven years. He was born and raised in Cour d'Alene, Idaho and worked at the mill in Potlatch, Idaho before they laid off 140 workers there so he decided to come to the mill in Heppner. He was injured in an accident and so he quit working at the mill. Banka has tried to get in to the Chicago chef's school for 2'l- years before he was accepted recently. He applied and sent many letters to show the administration there that he is serious about cooking. The school lasts for three Heppner tax rate $8.38 for this year The Heppner Gazette-Times inaccurrately reported last week that the tax rate for Heppner city property owners this year was $3.90 per $1,000 of valuation. As all city taxpayers know, they paid $8.38 per thousand in the current year. City Administrator Mar shall Lovgrn said the county assessor won't know the exact tax rate until October or November, when the valua tion for the entire city is computated. He said an esti mated tax rate right now would be approximately $9 per $1,000 as the proposed city budget for 1980-81 now stands. He said it could be even lower than that because the valuation of the city is bound to go up and the $9 figure isi based on this year's valuation just to get the estimate. 2 ounces at birth A raccoon weighs only about 2 ounces at birth and is grayish brown. Public Notices PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE The Morrow County Planning Com mission wil hold a public hearing on Monday, February 25, 1980, at 7:30 p.m. in the North Morrow County Annex Building in Irriqon. Apublic hearing will be held on the following: 1. Request of change of zone from Single Family Residential to Duplex within U.G.B. Boardman.- Applicant Lester Moen, Boardman. Interested persons are invited to the hearinq and to express their views. Written signed statements will be considered. Reasons for disapproval should be included in oral or written statements. Dorris L. Graves, Chairman, Morrow County Planning Commission Publish Feb. 14. ?1, 1980. PUBLIC NOTICE A public hearing will be held before the Heppner City Council giving citizens the opportunity to comment on use of State Revenue Sharing on Monday, March 3rd, 1980at 7:45p.m. at City Hall, Heppner, Oreqon. Citizens will have the opportunity to make oral or written comments and ask questions concerning the proposed use of the funds in relation to the entire budget, including possible offset against pro perty taxes. Marshall Lovqren, Recorder Budget Officer City of Heppner, Oregon Publish Feb 21, 1980. In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for the County of Morrow Probate Department Estate of: JAMES E. HAMS, Deceased. No. 1634 NOTICE TO INTERESTED PERSONS Probate proceedings in the estate of James E. Hams, deceased, are now pendinq in the above entitled court, where DaroldO. Hams, the undersigned, has been appointed and has qualified as the personal representative of said estate. All persons having claims against said estate hereby are required to present them, in due form, within four months alter the date of the first publication of this notice, as stated below, to the undersigned at the following address now designated as the place for the presentation of claims, to wit: 471 N. Main St., Heppner, Oreqon 97836. All persons whose riqhts may be affected by the said probate proceedings may obtain additional information from the records of the court, the undersigned personal representative or the latter's attorney (s) who is (are): Darold O. Hams Personal Representative Rt. 1, Heppner, Oregon 97834 676 5320 Winter & Sweeney Attorney for Personal Representative P.O. Box 582 Heppner, Oregon 97836 676 9456 Publish Feb. 21, 1980. years and he estimates it will ' cost $11,000. Part of that' money will come from a government education loan, he said. He said he plans to go into the field of main courses. He said it is similar to other schools in that students may ma jor in certain areas but the subjects are different like pastry, salads or soups. Banka plans on working at Cal 's until the end of June and then leaving the area in early July. The school starts in September but he wants to take a couple of weeks to get there. He also wants to arrive early so he can look for a night job. Banka will not be a stranger to the big city life when he arrives in Chicago. He lived in Minneapolis for 4'- years. He worked at the Veterans Ad ministration Hospital there and received a certificate in dietetics. The young cook has a goal of working on the shipping lines some day. "I would like to cook on the Love Boat," he said with a laugh. "That would be good way to travel, see the world and save some money. I have never even been on a boat before so that would be exciting in itself." 'Corialanus9 Ashland Festival opener Shakespeare's "Coriala nus" is the season's opener Feb. 29 in the Angus Bowmer Theater in the Oregon Shake speare Festival of Ashland. This is the first Festival production of "Corialanus" since 1962. March 1, Philip Barry's "The Philadelphia Story" opens at 2, with Shakespeare's "As You Like It" on stage at 8. Jean Anouilh's "Ring Round the Moon," in an adaptation by Christopher Fry, opens Sunday afternoon at 2 in the Bowmer. That evening at the Black Swan Edward Albee's Pulitzer Prize-winning "Sea scape" opens. The next opening for the, season is "Sizwe Bansi is Dead" March 29 at the Black Swan. "Sizwe Bansi" is writ ten by Athol Fugard, John Kani and Winston Ntshona. Steinbeck's "Of Mice and Men" opens in the Bowmer May :i. Outdoors on the Elizabethan stage "Merry Wives of Wind sor" plays on the Feast of Will day June 13, with "Richard II" Saturday evening, the 14th. and "Love's Labour's Lost" Sunday the 15th. Next comes the West Coast premiere of "Lone Star" by James McLure July 5 at the Black Swan. Health plan made public zt t w TTEfJL- FTC -v. w 2si Bryant Williams, chairman of the Oregon Statewide Health Coordinating Council, announced recently that the Preliminary State Health Plan has been released for review and public comment. "Oregon's first state health plan, developed under new federal law, will have substan tial impact on local health care issues," Richard H. Grant, director of the state Health Planning and Develop ment Agency, said. Morrow County residents can review the plan at the county courthouse in Heppner. Following public review and approval by the Statewide Health Coordinating Council, the plan will be used as a management tool to assist decision makers on several regulatory programs which impact local health care. These include: The Certificate of Need program, which approves or disapproves health facility and service expansion or replacement in the estimated $781 million hospital and nursing home industry. A new program which will provide approximately $1.4 million to assist voluntary elimination of unneeded hospi tal services or their conver sion to more appropriate use. A new review program which recommends approval or disapproval for approxi mately $25 million spent in Oregon on mental and public health services. A statewide appropriate ness review program which publishes a report every five years on the adequacy of public and private institu tional health services. The plan focuses on three levels of health care: Promotion and Prevention: services intended to prevent the occurrence of disease or acute health problems. Diagnosis and Treatment: services intended to relieve existing health problems. Rehabilitation and Mainte nance: services intended to restore or preserve the maxi mum level of health possible. The plan identifies many existing and pending prob lems in Oregon's health care system. Some highlights con tained in the plan include: Unless there is a tightening of hospital bed supply, there will be IMO unneeded hospital beds by 1984. A number of elderly and disabled Oregonians are placed in nursing homes and other institutions for other than medical reasons due to restrictive insurance reim bursement practices. The existence of local public Jtl health programs is threa tened, and in some counties completely absent, due to a lack of adequate federal, state and local funding. ' Although private physicians are required by law to report venereal disease cases to local health departments, many fail to do so. Control of venereal disease is dependent on com pliance with reporting so that follow-up and treatment of patient and contacts can be assured. Forest measurement course offered A basic Forest Measure ment Course will be conducted by the Morrow County Kxten sion Service on Wednesday. Feb. 27. 1980. This session will be at the Extension Confer ence room in Heppner. begin ning at 7 p.m. Class will consist of fami liarizing individuals with the tools, units, and techniques used to determine timber volume and land areas. All interested persons should con tact the Morrow County Ex tension office or call 676-9642. for further details and regis tration. a FOOD for WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY I 1 j I.J.I,,.. r BIWjfr M Sy WD4 Choke fe Wi -a Rump Roast 29 fk Lin B ' '1 1 lb. Armour Combination Bologna & Salami Luncheon Meat 1J09 il Uoi.pkg. "WW ""' w- Jtt u,L!i ti a mi '"jit" 7A isM3J fJ.:- Prices effective Feb. 21,22,23 j 5sSj2?. Navel Oranqes Aw;'"- i Celerv Jj lb. I ' J . I I iinimhare II lL C f j b I WW""M'J 0 J each II Round Steak 49 Crisco Salad Oil 1L t v sZ ioib. r 4, Gold Medal Flour 1 99 Palmolive Liquid Detergent c chii'mgs k Black Pepper M tHHlC If - 8 ilf Wilderness Cherry Pie Filling 129 H 21 oi. Campbell's Chicken Noodle Soup CO IOf4 0Z. Spam Regular or Smoked Luclieon Meat 12 oz. 22 oi. mm MARKET Grocery Dept. 676-9614 MtstDtpt. 676-?r3