Image provided by: Morrow County Museum; Heppner, OR
About Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 7, 1990)
[eopner meets Grant Union in riday playoffs on home field The Heppner Mustangs will be out to end a three-year jinx against the Prospectors of Grant Union Friday night. The contest matches the old rivals in the first round of the Oregon School Activities Association/U.S. Bank Class 2A football champion ships. Game time is 7:30p.m. at the Morrow County Fairgrounds. The Mustangs were knocked out of the playoffs by the Prospectors in 1987 as Grant Union posted a 26-0 victory. The next year the two teams met again with Heppner dropping a 28-14 decision. Last year at John Day, a Mustang comeback just wasn’t good enough and they lost, 32-28. Ironically, in the 1988 season, HHS rebounded f-om the opening game of the season with the Ptospectors, and marched through league play and playoff contests to advance to the state championship contest only to lose to Salem Academy. The winner of this Friday’s con test advances to the quarterfinals of the 2A playoffs against the winner of the Gaston-Neah-Kah-nie contest. Admission charge for all playoff Fillies travel to Vale Sat. for Class A tourney The Heppner Fillies will travel to Vale Saturday, Nov. 10 for a 7 p.m. Class 2A tournament game. The winner will advance to the Univer sity of Portland for the final rounds Nov. 16-17. The Fillies, number two in the CBC league, won the CBC high school volleyball district tournament Bank of America, FSB. announc ed plans to move the accounts and banking services offered at its Hepp ner branch to its Hermiston branch in early January 1991, pending retaliatory approval. The Heppner branch, formerly Benjamin Franklin Savings and Loan, will be closed ac cording to Doug Vaughan of Bank America Coporation. Clients of the Heppner branch will be able to use their existing checks and savings passbooks after the con solidation. It will not be necessary for clients to make any changes to their accounts, and service will con tinue without interruption. Clients will be receiving notification letters Heppner branch was reached after a careful financial analysis as well as a review of the market served by the branch,” said Jim Barri, Bank of America, FSB president. "W e recognize that using the Hermiston branch may require travel for our clients, but we’re committed to con tinuing to provide high-quality ser vice to our Heppner clients from that facility. “ We’re confident of our ability to continue serving local banking needs through the Hermiston branch,” he said. “ Every step will be taken to minimize any inconvenience to clients as we adjust our services in the area.” Gets his elk shortly. The Hermiston branch, 305 E. Main St. is a full-service branch, with automated teller machine (ATM) and drive-up service. It of fers a full range of deposit and len ding services, including consumer checking, saving and certificate of deposit (CD) accounts as well as consumer home mortgage loans, ac cording to Vaughn. With its propos ed conversion to a commercial bank in 1991, Bank of America, FSB says it plans to introduce a line of business checking, deposit products and cash management services for local businesses. "O ur decision to consolidate the Valby Lutheran plans brunch The congregation o f Valby Lutheran Church is having a brunch after the 9 a.m. service of holy com munion on Sunday , November 18. The brunch, consisting of quiche, sweet rolls, fruit plate and beverage, is being co-sponsored by AAL Branch No. 3629. Donations from the brunch will go toward a new fur nace for the Lutheran parsonage. On the same Sunday, the Women of Hope will be having their annual Thanks Offering Service at 11 a.m. Women of the congregation will be taking part in the worship service as ushers, lay readers and liturgists. A special video entitled ‘Flying Quilts’, which describes the ministry of the Lutheran World Relief, will be shown in place of the pastor’s sermon. After the service there will be a congregational potluck in the fellowship hall. The Oregon Transportation Com ission will receive and open bids on Thursday, Nov. 15 for removing and reconstructing bridge rail on Willow Creek bridge and Three Mile Ca nyon bridge and removing and reconstructing deck and rails on the November 6, 1990 General Election Results Morrow County Only Irvin Rauch (D) Morrow County Raymond French (R) Commissioner Pat Wright (write-in) Jarrod Wickland, Heppner, shows off his four-point elk he shot over the first weekend of Elk season. He is the son of Tom and Shannon Wicklund. Community Thanksgiving Day dinner planned at All Saints Are you going to be alone on Thanksgiving Day? If so, you are invited to share Thanksgiving dinner and the after noon with the people of All Saints Episcopal Church. As a gift to our community All Saints Episcopal church inivites everyone in the community who can not be with their family, or those who do not have a family to be with, to celebrate Thanksgiving day with them. All Saints members will serve a Thanksgiving dinner with all the trimmings at 1 p.m. at the Episcopal Church Parish Hall in Heppner on Thursday, November 22. The din ner will be cooked by hosts. Theta Lowe 676-94%, Bob and Aloha DeSpain 676-5376 and George and Maggie Izzett 676-5850. Food will also be accepted from those who wish to bring it. The hosts will have a suggestion as to what you might bring, such as your favorite special dish Please let one of the hosts know if you plan to attend by Thursday, Nov. 19, if possible. Besides a delicious dinner the afternoon will feature the T.V. hooked up for the football fans, table games for adults and children and rides to the dinner for those who ask. 212 256 49 216 370 44 Wheat League annual meeting The Morrow County Wheat Growers League will hold their an nual fall meeting on Friday, November 9, at the Elks in Heppner. The meeting will begin at 1:30 p.m. Scott Hutchinson, executive secretary of the Oregon Wheat Growers League, will be the guest speaker at the dinner. Cocktails, hosted by Morrow County Grain Growers, will be at 5 p.m., and din ner will be at 6:30 p.m., both at the Elks. Dinner will cost $4 per person. Heppner City Council to meet A special Heppner city council meeting will be held Wednesday, November 7 at 7 p.m. at the city hall for the purpose of discussing solid waste and other business matters. 84 73 93 80 104 114 Totals 797 205 324 337 1127 637 90 Harvey Childers lone City Council John A. Ekstrom (Vote tor three) Janet Thompson Mark Tullis 41 67 91 181 140 181 141 William Cooley Irrigon City Council Carlyle E. Gallien (Vote tor three) Stanley P. Mills Kelly K. Wright Governor of Oregon Dave Frohnmayer (R) Al Mobley (D Fred Oerther (L) Barbara Roberts (D) 236 67 5 212 224 149 1 1 246 95 67 4 84 145 43 1 100 362 124 10 371 1062 450 31 1013 LLS^ Senator Mark O. Hatfield (R) Harry Lonsdale (D) 307 206 316 310 143 95 192 103 486 375 1444 1089 Jim Smiley (D) Robert F. ‘Bob’ Smith (R) Mary Wendy Roberts (D) Mary Ann Ruggiero (L) 169 336 396 49 239 380 477 95 74 172 175 37 73 215 210 33 239 607 644 101 794 1710 1902 315 2nd. Dist. Represen tative Comm. Labor Ballot Measures Yes) No Yes (No T09 /1 4 2 Willow Creek Park District Tax Base Church celebrates missions “ Celebrating Missions” is the theme for this week at Lexington Baptist Church. Services will be Thursday at 6 p.m. as well as Sun day at II a.m. to help celebrate missions. November 8 at 6 p.m. a potluck dinner will be held in the sanctuary. Those attending will experience what missionaries eat, as some of the favorite dishes of the churches' mis sionaries will be prepared for the “ brave and foolish alike.” The evening will feature such delights as combread from Africa, meat dumpl ings from Austria and weekend casserole from America. No one however, volunteered to make the oxtail soup from Africa. Dave Johnson, former high school science teacher from Grass Valley, and his wife. Clarice, who are ap pointees to Cote d ’Ivoire Africa with the Conservative Baptist Foreign Mission Society will be the featured speakers Thursday. Sunday’s services will have a former butcher from Prineville shar ing how God had placed him on the “ cutting edge" of church planting in the northwest. Dan Lawler has planted and built so many churches in the northwest that he is referred to as “ Mr. Church Planter” by many. Share your Sunday with a seasoned veteran and a man who has a heart for people. The public is invited to join these events to help celebrate missions with others. John Day River bridge. The work is estimated to cost between $5 million and $10 million and is to be com pleted by April 30, 1992. This and seven other projects are estimated to cost $18.1 million. Ir r ig o n Bank o f Am erica Heppner branch to close Bids open for Willow Creek Bridge project B oardm an VOL 108 NO. 45 ______ Wednesday, November 7, 1990 ______ Heppner 35*______ 8 Pages Nov. 3, by beating Wasco Co. and Wahtonka. Stanfield won the Columbia Basin Conference title and a district tour nament bye by winning a three-team league playoff Nov. 1. Stanfield will play Imbler at home in the first round of the state playoffs. contests, set by the OSAA, is $4 for adults and $3 for students. Advance tickets are available at Heppner High School. Gates will open Friday at 6 p.m. A hospitality room will be available for Heppner and John Day fans in the fair annex and will open at 6 p.m. and be available until near ly game time. The contest will be broadcast on Hermiston radio station KQ-FM 89.3. through Heppner TV cable. H ard m an y 7 4 i 3 H ep p n er/ H io n e w L e x in g to n E '■ - o M F Measure No. 7-Welfare Work Program t C • 3 O / . /C W ' 371 ' /il< S ¿71 V /3 5 8 i i 9 / "245 . y ' 268 ¿ 5 9 3 "i08 ' "348 V 1025 ,, 439 1358 501 ^ V 1452 / 330 1035 r243 I V “787 /llh 1670 664 11% V / 2 2 9 /h3>9 1906 r67 V 276 V 832 /L \% 1718 58 - " "246 .. "650 / ¡ . l A V i 12 1880 1435 155 / * 500 Ì2 9 1099 128 /1 1 7 89 l06 237 V ‘878 626 184 1673 /\* \ ' h i v 122 V ' I I I / 1042 1537 182 / i h l / i l l 161 155 V /i l\ "TOO /1 7 7 62 V 2 * 152 V " 4 2 0 /" 1389 135. n i / 410 y 253 V 228 / 1 14 V 137 V 456 1188 Measure No. 11-Non-Public Schools Tax Credit T m 'm 175 / Measure No. 10-Notice for minor's abortion Morrow County Tax Base 689 / \ V t yS r79 V 241 / Measure No. 1-Metro Service Dist. / \ l i /Î 6 1 r1 2 1 V 319 356 Measure No. 2-School Tax Base Merger / l 9 i / I t * V » 2 3 66 Ï84 ri94 Measure No. 3-PERS Tax Exemption / i l l / M l ^ 1 6 9 137 X 170 IV Yh l V Measure No. 4-Trojan Standards 469 / X Ê 2 ’242 / - 88 V i w Measure No. 5-Property Tax Limit /\h \ /Ì 6 1 K48 T 3 T 7 1 164 Measure No. 6-Packaging Standards / Î 8 4 y \t>\ / v n Measure No. 9-Requires Safety Belts i i i / 1 V / in /in 263 X Irrigon Livestock District Formation Measure No. ft-Prohibits Abortion Yes/No 6 5 V " 67 V 2 0 ^ 206 130/ / 391 V 4 2 5 / / 184 V ---- 217 „ / 6 5 9 ?1 V 1 1 3 / 308 188 205 V 170 y i n V 23 /1 8 1 670 1876 885 1647 BEST RATE IN TOWN 90 day CD $ 5000 minimum H A N K OF - p * ---------------- wemoer D JL a s te r n V req o n FD,C A rling ton • Heppner • lone ■ Your Independent Horn* O w n ed Bank •