TEN - Heppner Gazette-Times, Heppner, Oregon Wednesday, October 19, 1994
Cardinals playoff hopes dashed
Fillies lose two; beat
Phâïm acy &
Your Health
Sherman County
Boardman Pharmacy
& Hardware
202 1st. N. W. P.O. Box 170
Boardman, Oregon 97818
481-9474 481-7351
Triple Therapy For
Ulcers
Recently it has been shown that
approximately 70 percent of ulcers
in the stomach and between 90 to
100 percent of ulcers in the small
intestine are caused by a bacteria
called Helicobacter pylori. This
bacteria even occurs in the intes
tine of otherwise healthy individu
als. Some health experts now think
that this organism may be respon
sible for the gastritis (inflamma
tion of the stomach) that is so
prevelant in many older persons.
Photo by Wayne Hams
Bulldog defenders pull down lone ball carrier
By Anne Morter
The lone Cardinals playoff
hopes were dashed last Friday
evening, Oct. 14, as they wat
ched an eight point halftime
lead evaporate at the hands of
the Culver Bulldogs. The
Cards, who needed the win to
stay alive in playoff contention,
were outscored 26-0 in the se
cond half as Culver rolled to a
40-22 decision.
Culver scored first on a 53
yard run but an 85 yard kickoff
return by Greg Holtz and a 25
yard pass reception also by
Holtz took the Cards into the
end zone twice. Culver tied the
game early in the second
t quarter on another big 55 yard
run. The Cards countered with
a drive, culminated by Jared
Ashbeck's one yard touch
down run to take the lead
22-14.
Halftime proved to be the
Cards undoing however. "We
came out flat in the second
half,” commented coach Gregg
Rietmann. "1 don't know what
happened," he said. At the
same time, Culver seemed to
come to life. "I don't know if
they played that much better or
we played that much worse,"
said Rietmann.
Culver piled up 502 yards of
total offense while the Cards
managed just 237. Leading
rusher for the Cards was
Ashbeck with 149 yards on 39
carries. In the passing depart
ment, Luke Swanson con-!
nected on six of his 18 attem pts1
for 91 yards and one intercep
tion. Ashbeck added 15 yards
on one completion.
The leading receiver for lone
was Greg Holtz with 44 yards
on two catches. Ashbeck had
two receptions for 26 yards,
Marc Orem had two for 19
yards and Jacob Taylor had one
reception for 17 yards.
Ashbeck was leading tackier
for the C ards with eight
unassisted and three assisted
tackles. Luke Swanson had five
unassisted and one assist.
The Cardinals' next game is
at Lyle, Washington, this Fri
day, Oct. 21, at 7:30 p.m.
Nordic ski club organizes, elects officers
Area cross country skiers
have formed the Arbuckle Nor
dic Club for the purpose of pro
moting and facilitating cross
country skiing opportunities in
the Morrow County region of
the Blue Mountains.
At the first club meeting held
on Oct. 13, club officers were
designated as follows: chair
man, John Edmundson, vice
chairman, Dave Fowler, and
secretary/treasurer, Bill and
Sherry Ewing.
The next club meeting will be
on Tuesday, November 29, at
7 p.m. at the Episcopal Church
Parish Hall. Anyone interested
in cross country skiing is
Hill House
Newly estab lish ed adult foster
care facility for women. 24 hr care
for you or your loved one. One
private room available; One double
occupancy in the near future. Call
Nella 6 7 6 -9 8 2 9 /6 7 6 -9 6 5 9 .
There will not be a
Haunted House this year
at Hardman Community
> Center due to illness.
rW v V V V W Z W V A V S \ W V V S W ^ W V W V W > l
welcome to attend and help
plan club activities.
Club dues will be $5 per unit,
a unit being a single member,
a couple, or a family. Club
funds will be used for postage
and the costs of periodic
newsletters intended to keep
members informed of club
cross country skiing activities.
The club plans to offer basic
cross country skiing instruction
for beginners this winter on the
four Saturdays of February.
Publicity for these classes will
appear in the Gazette-Times
and in the Blue Mountain Com
munity College winter bulletin.
The club will eventually af
filiate itself with the Oregon
Nordic Club for the purposes of
securing blanket liability in
su ran ce,
en terin g
into
agreements with governmental
agencies for access and use of
facilities, and participating in
the activities of other nordic
clubs.
Anyone desiring more infor
mation about the Arbuckle
Nordic Club may contact any of
the club officers.
Char Coe returns ball against Umatilla
By Donna Moeller
The Heppner Fillies added a
pair of losses to their Columbia
Basin Conference record, losing
to Umatilla in three games;
8-15, 15-2 and 15-17. Their se
cond loss was to Stanfield in
two games; 11-15 and 11-15.
The Fillies bounced back on
Thursday to beat the league
leaders, Sherm an County.
Heppner, in a must win situa
tion secured the match in two
games, 15-13 and 15-5. Char
Coe was the big threat of the
game with 18 successes at the
net out of 22 attempts with
eight ace spikes. Heppner
played a superb game offen
sively behind 93 percent serv
ing for the night. Kelsie Evans,
Rondi Robinson, Jenny Krein
and Stormy Howard were 100
percent at the service line.
Strong support play came from
Dani Hill and Evans with
quickness, hustle and stability.
"W e're awfully proud of our
players, they showed a lot of
heart, stayed focused on their
physical and teamwork goals to
take them to a well desired
win. Our team consists of
many players who all help us
play the game; win, lose or
practice," said Heppner coach
Terri Gentry.
The Fillies next conference
game will be at home on Oct.
20 against the current league
leaders, Weston-McEwen.
Player of W eek
In the past, treatment of intesti
nal ulcers has included H2 recep
tor antagonist medicines such as
cimetidine and ranitidine to de
crease acid production; antacids
such as aluminum hydroxide; acid
secretion inhibitors such as
omepi azole; and sucralfate to pro
tect the healing ulcer. The latest
approach to treating gastrointesti
nal ulcers is with medicines that
eliminate Helicobacter pylori. An-
tibiotics are recommended, espe
cially when ulcer treatment is re
sistant to conventional medicines,
when there are ulcercomplications,
and in situations where the symp
toms are severe enough to require
surgery. The combination of medi
cines used to treat helicobacter
pylori often is referred to as “triple
therapy.” Best results have been
achieved using a combination of
(1) bismuth subsalicylate (Pepto-
Bismol®), (2) tetracylu-'C or am
oxicillin, and (3) metronidazole or
clarithromycin.
Player of W eek
Oct. 9-15
Kemp
JV 5 4 ” So.
w/ I o w i d aytvco
T/L 190 lb. Jr.
Players of the week are sponsored by
Mustang/Fillie 21
Coast to Coast
Les Schwab
Ployhar Insurance
First Interstate Bank
Bank of Eastern Oregon
Murray Drugs
Roger Britt Pumping &
Miller & Son Welding
Dump Truck
Green Feed & Seed
Van Marter & Kahl
Cals BP Service
Devin Oil Co.
Insurance
Court Street Market
D & L Repair
R & W Drive In
Kinzua Resources
Pettyjohn Building Supply
MCGG
Heppner Auto Parts
Kate's Pizza
Heppner Gazette-Times
1494 Spooktacular Carnivai
Thursday, Oct. 27th
All proceeds to fund
6-8:30 p.m.
Heppner Fairgrounds
Tupper Outdoor
School
T ick ets 2 5 4
Heppner
676-9481
RV Deep Cycle Battery
Sponsored by Heppner
& lone Parents club
LT235/75B 15|
Come in Costume
G reat gam es for the entire family: Bingo, Duckscoop, basketball toss,
cork guns, cake walk, Plinko, pum pkin painting, tatoos, goldfish and
m uch m ore. Enjoy din ne r at the C arnival: Hot dogs, N achos, pop
corn , candy, pop, cinn am o n rolls, hot cider, coffee
HAUNTED HOUSE
By the DeSpain crew (4 tickets)
Raffle tickets on sale now! 25$ or 5 for $1
Shoe Box • C ourt S treet M arket • B ristow s • Bank of E.O. (lone)
$150 gift certificate MCGG • $100 savings bond, Bank of E0
$50 savings bond, First Interstate • $25 gift certificate Hair Expressions
1 free movie rental a month for 1 year from Kate’s Pizza
For more information contact Kaedene Bailey 676-5422 or Darcy Coil 676-9442
INtVMI
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