Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current, September 25, 1980, Page TWO, Image 2

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    TWO-The Heppner Gaiette-Times. Heppner, Oregon, Thursday, September 2S, 10
F Tha Official
City of Happnar and th
' County of Morrow
oxreA
Tfc He??2f f
GAZETTE-TIMES
Mirrnv Coitj's loBf-Owifi Werklj Newspaper
USPS. 240-420
Published every Thursday and entered as second-class
matter at the Post Office at Heppner, Oregon under the
Act of March 1 1879. Second-class postage paid at
Heppner, Oregon.
Office at 147 West Willow Street. Telephone (503)
676-9228.
Address communications to the Heppner Gazette
Times. P.O. Box 337. Heppner. Oregon 97836.
$8.00 in Morrow, Umatilla. Wheeler & Gilliam counties;
$10.00 elsewhere.
David ahd April Hilton Sykes Publishers .
Letters to the editor
For KuhsigssSd -PUDs
One reason why Morrow
County voters should elect Ted
Kulongoski United States sen
ator this year is because he
favors establishment of
people's utility districts.
PUD's feature several advan
tages over electric service
from a private power comp
any. When going into business, a
PUD issues revenue bonds to
purchase facilities of the
incumbent power company.
Then part of your electric bill
every month goes for retiring
these bonds. This amount is
becoming equity in property,
that will eventually belong
entirely to you. Retaining the
power company means you'll
never end up owning any part
of anything.
All profits are kept at home
and used for system improve
ments, such as underground
wiring. None end up getting
paid to eastern stockholders.
Money for purchase of equip
ment may be borrowed at
lower interest rates. Area
residents have more voice in
deciding where to place sub
stations, vehicle service gar
ages and material storage
yards.
Since PUD's are consumer
owned, they qualify as prefer
ence customers for power
from the United States Col
umbia River System. Outputs
of 30 dams are now fed into the
USCRS grid for distribution.
Hopefully, number 31 will b -
Public
Meetings
Monday, Sept. 29 - Morrow
County Planning Commission,
County Building, Irrigon, 8
p.m. Wednesday. Oct. 1 - Morrow
County Commissioners,
Judge's Office, Courthouse,
Heppner. 10 a.m.
Monday, Oct. 6 - Heppner
City Council. City Hall, Hepp
ner. 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday. Oct. 7 - lone City
Council, City Hall, lone, 7:30
p.m.: Lexington City Council,
City Hall, Lexington, 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday. Oct. 8 - Morrow
County Commissioners,
Judge's Office, Courthouse,
Heppner, 10 a.m.
Thursday. Oct. t - Port of
Morrow Commission, Port
Office, Nelson Square, Board
man. 1 p.m.; Lexington Fire
Department, City Hall, Lex
ington, 7:30 p.m.
Monday. Oct. 13 - Columbus
Day ; Heppner Planning
Commission, City Hall, Hepp
ner, 7:30 p.m.; Heppner Fire
Department, Fire Hall, Hepp
ner, 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday. Oct. 15 - Mor
row County Commissioners,
Judge's Office, Courthouse,
Heppner, 10 a.m.; Pioneer
Memorial Hospital Board,
Hospital, Heppner, 9:30 a.m.
Monday, Oct. 20 - Morrow
County School Board, lone
High School, lone, 7:30 p.m.;
lone Planning Commission,
City Hall. lone, 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday. Oct. 22 - Mor
row County Commissioners,
County Building, Irrigon, 10
a.m.: Heppner Library Board,
Library. Heppner, 8 p.m.
Monday. Oct. 27 - Morrow
County Planning Commission,
Courthouse. Heppner, 8 p.m.;
Heppner Fire Department,
Fire Hall. Heppner, 7:30 djtk
We3neid'ay. Oct. 29 - Morrow
County Commissioners,
Courthouse. Heppner, 10 a.m.
Nwtpapor of the
small generator at Willow
Creek Dam.
Anthony J. Golden, Instructor
Oregon Polytechnic Institute
812 Southwest 10th Avenue
Portland, Oregon
Ed. note: OPI is a school in
the Portland city center which
trains engineers and tech
nicians. Hospital
Notes
The following patients were
' discharged from Pioneer
Memorial Hospital in Heppner
over the past week:
James Launer, Heppner,
admitted Sept. IS, discharged
Sept. 18; Donna Osmin, Hepp
ner, admitted Sept. 14, dis
charged Sept. 16; Vivian
Elder, Heppner, admitted
Sept. 11, discharged Sept. 18;
Brian Britton, Spray, admit
ted and discharged Sept. 21;
Sandra Dames, Heppner, ad
mitted Sept. 19, discharged
Sept. 20.
Patients remaining in the
hospital as of Sept. 22 are:
Harold Hill, Heppner, who
was admitted Sept. 19; Ber
nard C. Felt, Lexington, who
was admitted Sept. 21.
Health DepL
. Friday, Sept. 26 - Free Blood
Pressure Clinic, Immuhiza
tions, Lexington Health Dept.
Office, 8 a.m. to 12 noon, 1 to 4
p.m.
Pressure Clinic, Immunizat
ions, Lexington Health De
partment Office, 8 a.m. to 12
noon. 1 to 4 p.m.
Friday, Oct. 16 - Free Blood
Pressure clinic, Immunizat
ions, Lexington Health De
partment Office, 8 a.m. to 12
noon, 1 to 4 p.m.
Tuesday, October 14 - Free
Blood Pressure clinic, Im
munizations, Irrigon County
Offices, 1 to 4 p.m.
Wednesday. Oct. 15 - Free
Blood Pressure Clinic, lone
United Church of Christ base
ment, 4 to 5 p.m.
Friday, October 17 - Free
Blood Pressure Clinic, Imm
unizations, Lexington Health
Department Office, 8 a.m. to
12 noon, 1 to 4 p.m.
Tuesday, Oct. 21 - Free
Blood Pressure Ginic, Hepp
ner Neighborhood Center. 2:30
to 4:30 p.m.
Friday, Oct. 24 - Free Blood
Pressure Clinic, Immunizati-
ions, Lexington Health De
partment Office, 8 a.m. to 12
noon, 1 to 4 p.m.
Tuesday, Oct. 28 - Free
Blood Pressure Clinic, Imm
unizations, Irrigon County
Office, 1 to 4 p.m.
Friday. Oct. 31 - Free Blood
Pressure Clinic, Immunizat
ions, Lexington Health De
partment Office, 8 a.m. to 12
noon, 1 to 4 p.m.
HospHcl fcoerd
chcRf$s nesting
At the regular meeting of
the Heppner Pioneer Memor
ial Hospital board of directors
on Sept. 16, the regular
monthly meeting was changed
to 9:30 a.m. on the third
Wednesday of each month
starting October 15. ann
ounced A. K. Felt, hospital
I administrator.
School lunch menus
Heppner Grade School
Wed., Sept. 24 beef stew,
cottage cheese, pear halves,
raisin bread, milk.
Thurs., Sept. 25 - cook's
choice.
Fri., Sept. 26 - toasted
cheese sands., garden salad,
jeJlo, peanut butter cookies,
milk.
Mon., Sept. 29 - Spaghetti,
tossed salad, buttered French
bread, fruit, milk.
Tues., Sept. 30 - fluffy rice
w. chicken gravy, shredded
lettuce w. dressing, apricots,
rolls, butter, milk.
Wednesday, Oct. 1 - to be
announced in next week's
issue.
Heppner High School
Wed Sept. 24 - tacos,
broccoli, shredded lettuce,
cheese sticks, cake.
Thurs., Sept. 25 - sloppy
Joes, French bread, corn,
green salad, apricots or salad
bar.
Fri., Sept. 26 - submarine
sandwiches, French fries,
fruit salad, no-hake cookies.
Monday, Sept. 29 - fish and
chips, vegetable salad, apple
sauce, cinnamon rolls.
Tuesday, Sept. 30 - pot pie,
pear and cheese salad, celery
sticks, cake - or salad bar.'
Wednesday, Oct. 1 hot
turkey sandwiches, spinach,
cabbage salad, fruit crisp - or
salad bar.
lone Schools
Wednesday, Sept. 24 - Ham
and scalloped potatoes, pick
led beets, hot rolls, dessert,
milk.
Thursday, Sept. 25 - Tacos
with lettuce and cheese, green
beans, fruit, mlk.
FridaySept. 26 - Tomato
soup, turkey or peanut butter
sandwich, pickles, cake, milk.
TV courses
ccrn credit
Courses in French, German,
and Spanish and science will
be offered on Oregon Educat
ion Public Broadcast Service
(OEPBS) TV channels begin
ning the week of Sept. 29.
College credit may be earned
through eastern Oregon State
college by viewing the pro
grams at home completing
study assignments under the
supervision of a member of
the college faculty.
Broadcasts will be
at 8 p.m. on Saturdays with
repeats the next day, Sunday,
at 12-noon. It carries one hour
of college credit, will cost $16
and will have associate Pro
fesor of Science Kendall
Baxter as an advisor.
Persons interested in taking
the courses may register or
get more information by
contacting the EOSC Office of
Continuing Education at
963-2171 or toll-free, at 1-800-452-8639.
Get a gauge
An inexpensive device that
can help save gas is a simple
vacuum gauge.
Available in most auto stores
for about $10, these instru
ments are easy to connect and
mount on or near the instrument
panel to tell the driver when he
is too "heavy footed."
Calibrations may be numeri
cal, reading in inches of mer
cury andor in "poor, fair and
good" scales to help the driver
establish the optimum balance
between speed and fuel economy.
HUNTER'S NIGHT
( 2 Thursday,
lone Schools
Monday. Sept. 29 - chicken
pot pies, cheese strips, pickled
beets, fruit, milk.
Tuesday. Sept. 30 - Chinese
hamburger, corn, hot rolls,
Jello, milk.
Wednesday, Oct. 1 - Chicken
fried steak w-gravy, tossed
salad, bread w-butter, cheese
strips, fruit, milk.
Thursday, Oct. 2 - sloppy
joes, French fries, green
beans, fruit, milk.
Friday, Oct. 3 - hamburgers,
potato chips celery, carrots,
pickles, cookies, milk.
DMV Schedule
October
Open Monday through
Friday, at the Heppner office,
8 a.m. to 5 p.m., except Oct.
15.
On Oct. 15. the DMV will be
in Condon at the County
Courthouse from 9:30 a.m. to
3:30 p.m.
Library
Monday and Wednesday -1
to 5 p.m.
Thursday 7 to 9 p.m.
Saturday - 2 to 4 p.m.
Storyhour - Thursday -10:30
a.m.
J Justice
t Court J
Jack Alexander Little,
Heppner, 36 miles-per-hour in
a 25-mph zone, $12 fine;
Mickey Owen Sharp, Hepp
ner, 35 mph in a 25-mph zone.
$12 fine;
Monte Kyle Evans. Hepp
ner. 70 mph in a 55-mph zone,
$22 fine;
John Roderick Murray,
lone-Lexington Highway, 66
mph in a 55-mph zone. $22
fine;
Robin Don Scott. Heppner,
85 mph in a 55-mph zone. $55
fine;
Gary Le VanArsdale. Hepp
ner. 65 mph in a 55-mph zone.
$24 fine:
Jerry Murrea DeShazo,
Everett, Wash., 75 mph in a
55-mph zone, $55 bail for
feited; Cathy Ann Peck. Lexington.
65 mph in a 55-mph zone, $25
fine:
Leon Douglas Young. lone.
46 mph in a 35-mph zone. $29
fine;
Richard Lyle Cox. Lexing
ton, no valid operator's lic
ense, $6 suspended fine.
Jerry Orville Cutsforth,
Heppner, excessive tire noise,
$29 fine;
Rodney Edward Sittser,
Prineville. expired license. $12
bail forfeited; 65 mph in a
55-mph zone, $24 fine;
Raymond Vaughn Curnutt,
no headlight, $24 fine;
Don Charles Marvin. Hepp
ner, 35 mph in a 25-mph zone,
$12 fine:
Cary George Carr, Echo,
wrong address on driver's
license. $6 fine;
Lester Simon Crasser,
Heppner. tandem axle over
load. $8 fine;
Steven Dale Lankford,
Heppner. 44 mph in a 25-mph
zone. $29 fine.
HEPPNER ELKS 358!
Hunter's Stew
Sifting
Fifty Years Ago
Hunting conditions are bett
ered with rain; fire menace is
lessened. A record buck was
slqin by Russell Moore who
brought in his 254-pound
horned deer to the Peoples
Hardware. This buck exceed
ed by one pound the largest
deer of record that was killed
by Elmer Hinton three years
ago.
Mrs. Lucy E. Rodgers,
president of the Heppner
Library Association, reported
to the Lions Club that the
library has loaned 771 books in
the last three months. She
asked that a tax measure be
proposed to finance the li
brary. Presently the library is
kept open through donated
services of interested women
and girls on Tuesday and
Saturday afternoons from 3 to
5 p.m. and on Thursday
evenings from 7 to 9.
A special train arrived last
night and is being loaded at
the local stockyards today
with 3.6(H) head of ewes and
wethers, delivered here by
local flockmasters. These
sheep were all handled
through the feed pens at the
F.S. Parker Ranch.
Tom Boylen, prominent
sheepman of Pendleton and
Butter Creek, was receiving
the wethers, and Messrs.
Brown and Huff of Idaho were
taking the ewes to be placed
on their range in Idaho.
lone hunters were bringing
in their fall kills: Mayor
Maston returned with two
bears : Joe Bigson and party
brought home four deer; R. W.
Brown and Roy Lieuallen each
brought in a deer.
The MacMarr Store in the
Heppner Hotel Building ad
vertises sugar at $5.39 for a 1(H)
lb. bag: picnic hams at 25
cents per lb.: raisins, 4 lbs. for
25 cents: toilet soap, 12 bars
for 58 cents; Thomson Bros,
offers Moody's peanut butter -a
1 lb. (in for 20 cents: Velvet
toilet paper at 4 rolls for 25
cents: Jello. 3 packages for 25
cents.
r NEW AMSTO
llOO SECOND
nrr stcoNO, time
I with SUPER LARGE DISPLAY
PLUS TIME & CALENDAR
JUMBO SIZE
SUPER LARGE
DISPLAY
IT HtSET START
LrNn"' x.. V"'
38" h
FULLY GUARANTEE!!
i
STOPWATCH: Accuracy 0.001 bLC.MH. (5 !x;.Month)
Addition dnd uf liiiht bw.omt
Hecurih. up to b9 Mm., btt Sec. & 9U100 Sec.
in t100 Sytoitd Intervals dfid continue.
Battery Lite 1 YL AH .
WATCH Month, Date U,iv of Week, both Watch and
i,loiw,itch c.jn hi- used without interruption
of either function.
Peterson's
through
Twenty-five Years Ago
Lexington High students
recently held class elections to
name officers for the coming
year. Chosen to head the
senior class were James
Laney. president: Don Cas
teel. vice-president, and
Cherry Gray, secretary
treasurer. Junior class off
icers are: Vern Nolan, pres
ident: George Hermann, vice
president, and Maureen
Groves , secreta rv-t ren surer .
Dexter Miles was named
president of the sophomores
with Hugo Leyva. vice-president,
and Joan Patrick,
secretary-treasurer. New
freshman officers are Keith
Peck, president; Lee Cor
nelison. vice-president, and
Dora Sue Davidson, secretary-treasurer.
Dr. Wallace Wolff has
announced that he will reopen
his office at the corner of Main
and Church streets, on Mon
day, September 26.
Savings bond sales climb to
near state record. E and H
savings bond sales in Oregon
were the highest last month
for any August since 1945. Jeff
Carter, chairman of Morrow
County bond committee, Bald
sales here in August amounted
to $52,651. In 1954 they were
$6,665 for the same month.
Mrs. Etta Huston won the
sweepstakes at the lone Flow
er show held Sunday. Sept. 27.
Her entries were awarded 12
blue riblxma.
This week the Star Theater
is showing "Smoke Signal."
starring Dana Andrews and
Piper Laurie, "Meet the
Keystone Kops." featuring
Ahliott and Costelln. "The
BlacktMutrd Jungle" with
Glenn Ford and Anne Francis
and "The Purple Plain"
starring Gregory Peck.
Five Years Ago
Five new teachers have
come to Heppner: Ellen
Nussbaum. Charles Lutsch.
No. 112, LCD
STOP WATCH
out, acumulatiom
..
CAM (. Hi
H4" 2-W 14"
Willi i 212 miiiM
Jewelers --
676-9200
the TIMfcSg
With Juntine Weatherford -
Clayton llerzog. Michael
Gorman and Jerry Duford.
The Blue Mountain Comm
unity College Board of Edu
cation has authorized surfac
ing of the college track and
construction of three more
tennis courts on the campus.
The House Interior Comm
ittee gave overwhelming app
roval to Congressman Al Ull
man's legislation establishing
a 60,0H acre national rec
reation area In Hells Canyon
in the Middle Snake area.
A critical area treatment
project In the form of diver
- sion ditches and debris basins
will soon get underway in the
Heppner watershed area, acc
ording to Claude Buschke,
president of the Heppner
Water Control District.
The Morrow County School
Board approved a request
from the Boardman-Irrigon
Advisory Committee to add
additional outside lighting at
Riverside High. Board mem
ber Kenneth Broadbent and
Principal Dan Daltoso told the
BUSINESS
DIRECTORY
AUTO
Heppner Auto Parts
234 N. Main Heppner 676-9123
HOOff COVERING
The
Paoco
M & R
w
J Foamed Carpet, Linoleum
Q - Ceramic Tile,
Id!
Kitchen
FURNITURE
CASI FUINITURE
Carpet, Linoleum, Counter Top Installed
Beauty Rest Mauressei. rabrii and Aueorie.
Sherwin William Paint
INSURANCE
jTi TURNER
iT.kJ VAN MARTER
I BRYANT
MEDICAL
. . MEDICAL CENTER PHARMACY
' J t-ttt Miilui(t Srrvnr m Pitmpim Hotpital Suppli
-A. Mim tn (M p.m. Sat. 'XI p m I watrd in thr Mi Jual
1100 Southgate,
MONUMENTS
SWEENEY MORTUARY
676-9600 Cemetery Grave Markers, 676-9226
Granite, Marble, Brone
Sawing (ona, lJrglon t Haapnar P O Bon 97 Happnar
OFFICE EQUIPMENT
f JAYNES
BUSIKE83
MACHINES
PETROLEUM
Chevron GLENN DEVIN
CJ CHEVRON, USA, Inc.
2t
board several cortiplainls had
been received about the dark
parking lots there.
The Oregon Wheat Growers
league fall workshop will be
held inPendleton, Oct, 1 and 2
in Ihe Indian Hills Motor Inn,
By the end of August, 45.428
Oregon drivers had had Ihelr
licenses suspended during
1975. compared with 43.428
license suspensions for the
same period of 1974.
Births
Audrey l-ynn, Kauffman A
daughter. Audrey Lynn, was
born to Danny and Mary
Kauffman. Heppner. on Sept.
13. 1980, at the Pioneer
Memorial Hospital in Hepp
ner. Audrey weighed 8 lbs., 6
oz.
Grandparents are IJoyd and
Elma Kauffman. Forest
Grove, Ore. Audrey joins
three siblings at home, Tedi,
Chuck and John.
PARTS
FLOOR COVERING
477 lntn Way
676 94 I fl Hw
Cabinet.
Heppner
-i
i
Kyu On. nuJ
676 ottt
INSURANCf Mo..,, .r.TtT" '
-i
i
.-i
SUPPLIES
C.rnirr
Pendleton 2T153I
Service call every Wednesday
in Heppner, lone and Lexington
332 S. Main St., Pendleton Telephone 2764441
811 N. Fir, Hcrminun Telephone K7-2731
Commission Agent 676-9633
O
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