Image provided by: Morrow County Museum; Heppner, OR
About Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 28, 1992)
&BtootabastddbbS&Wooammmm FOUR - H eppner Gazette-Times, Heppner, Oregon Wednesday, October 28, 1992 lone Legion Auxiliary plans lunch Holly Rebekah holds Halloween party MeUerdrammer plans lone performance An election da> luncheon, sponsored by the lone American Legion Auxiliary , w ill be held on Nov. 3 at the Legion hall in lone. A lunch of sandwiches, salad. homemade soup and homemade pie will be served from 11:30 a m. to 2 p.m. Pie and coffee will be served from 11:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. The lone Garden Club will host the Blue Mountain District No. 10 fall meeting of the Oregon State Federation of Garden Clubs on Friday, Oct. 30 from 10 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. at the lone Grange Hall. State president Elaine Belts and first vice president Marian Allen will be in attendance. A flower show will be held in conjunction with the meeting. For more information call Pat Petty john 422-7477. Garden club to host dist. meeting St. Patrick’s Senior Center Sulletin Board St. Patrick’s Senior Center residents are shown helping with the mailing of letters for the Morrow County extension office. Whenever the extension has a newsletter to send out the seniors help out by folding, labeling and stapling the material. The extension sends out 200 to 300 many times each year. One hundred twelve people attended the senior dinner Oct. 21. Nine dinners were taken out. Members of the Catholic church serv ed. The meal ticket went to Adine Stone, Norma French won the door prize and the guest prize was given to Kathryn Lindstrom. The menu for dinner Nov. 4 will be meatloaf, spinach, vegetable tray, hot rolls and apple sauce. Members of the Baptist Church will serve. The meal site committee will meet following the dinner. Many hands make light work. It only took 12 volunteers one hour to fold, staple and put address labels on the newsletters that went out from the Extension Service to all the4-H members in the county. The tenants of St. Patrick's Senior apartments will have treats for all the small spooks who stop by the center’s sitting room Saturday evening Oct. 31. The seniors always enjoy the children in their costumes. Other dates to remember: Bible study Monday, 9:30-10:30 a.m.; quilting Monday. 1-4 p.m.; Tues. and Thurs. 10-10:30 a.m. exer cise; Wed., noon dinner, crafts on sale before and after dinner; Satur day. the bus will take seniors to the dance at Hermiston and leave at 6:30 p.m. A foot care clinic will be held the first Wednesday of each month at the senior center beginning Nov. 4. Call Home Health for an appointment. The senior center office welcomes Wanda Johnson to the volunteer receptionist staff. More volunteers are needed. By Delpha Jones Holly Rebekah Lodge hosted the state President Mina Fish’s official visit on Thursday even ing Oct. 15. The evening started with a potluck dinner, which was serv ed by members in fun Halloween costumes. Devils, witches, cows, clowns, sheriff’s, cowboys, bag ladies and others served dinner. Luella Taylor told a short story with special effects, music, “ bones, eyes, brain” about Mr. Brown, who haunted Lexington. The rooms were eerie with col ored light bulbs, and tables decorated with spiders, cats and black candles. In one corner of the room there were two beautiful fortune tellers who had an uncan ny ability to know about those brave enough to have their for tune told. The girls looked into the large cystal balls, that “ tcld all” . Costume prizes were awarded to Dorothy Jackson, a bag lady; Kathy Tellechea, a cow; and Maureen Howard, a clown. The meeting was called to order by the NG Kathy Tellechea. Piano music was played during the opening by the president Reports of those ill, ar.d in nursing homes were heard and cards sent. Introduced were: Geri Martin, OSG of the assembly; Gordon Fish, grand trustee of the Oddfellows; Don na Blades, DDP of McNary District, and Mina Fish, assembly president. Following the opening a paper on the living legacy and poem was read by Geri Martin. The reading concerned the many trees planted by the Oddfellows and Rebekahs in Oregon and the im pact they will have on the ozone layer, a report on the history of the lodge and activities in years past. The Pioneer Picnic held each fall was a topic and the other was the donation of the hall as a memorial to William Leach by his wife Minnie and family. Delpha Jones was honored by Joyce Buchanan for her work in Rebekah and Oddfellowship. Jones received the award, a gift and a pin from the president with a poem “ Let your light shine” . Luella Taylor and Leila Palmer were recognized for their work and because each had served several times as NG of their respective lodges. Leila Palmer gave a report and displayed some antiques of the lodge. The president gave a most in teresting talk, encouraging the members to continue working for projects in the order which in clude: the eye bank research at the John Hopkins eye research center; the arthritis fund; the liv ing legacy; the UN pilgrimage for high school students; as well as all local projects and remember ing those less fortunate than we. A gift was presented to the president in keeping with the Halloween fun theme, a scarecrow planter. Roll call found 14 present with one from Sunbeam, one from San Souci and two from Eugene. The coin drill was taken and will go to the president’s project. Everyone was reminded of the card party and spaghetti supper for Saturday evening, Oct. 24. The second performance date was inadvertently left out of last week’s story on the mellerdram- mer “ Dirty Work at the Crossroads” . The second perfor mance will be November 24 at the lone High School cafetorium. New to the cast this week are Janel Lacey, playing Fleurette, the French Maid and Missy Wallace playing Leonie, the rich girl from the city. Schedule con flicts made the change necessary. Box office manager Jenny Bingham will be assisted in the house by Kay Walker, Cora Nutting, Rose Moe. Ross VanEt- ta and others. Those coming early for dessert and visiting will en joy music by Marlene Currin on the piano and Jeff Wallace on the accordion. Heppner Soroptimist will assist serving the desserts that run the gamut from “ sinfully delicious” to ‘’virtuously we ight-consc ious ” . All box-office from both shows will go to help the pre-school pro grams in Morrow County. This intergenerational project is spon sored by the Morrow County Children and Youth Services Commission. Special program set at exciting Nazarene church message from Pastor Jef Jeff and Jan Jeffries, pastor of fries. Everyone is invited to the Goldendale, WA church of attend. the Nazarene and a large group of the Goldendale congregation, will present an evening of praise and inspiration at the Heppner Church of the Nazarene on Sun day, November 1 at 5 p.m. There Gazette-Times will be congregation participation 676-9228 in singing, special music and an COMPUTER FORMS 7 CHEVROLET Over the years some things never change at a quality dealership HONESTY-INTEGRITY-RESPONSIBILITY-SERVICE Doing business for over 45 years in the same old fashioned way m Parts CHEVROLET SERVICE SHERRELL CHEVROLET ftarfio /h a c k Herm iston, O regon Phone 567-6487 IT’S TIME TO SET PRICES BACK 69" i Irene Schroeder straightens up a Halloween display in the St Patrick’s Senior Center. The display was made by Lois Win chester and Helen Gilliam and certainly brightens up the day room at the center. 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