Image provided by: Morrow County Museum; Heppner, OR
About Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current | View Entire Issue (June 14, 1995)
TWO - Heppner Gazette-Times. Heppner, Oregon Wednesday, June 14, 1995 VBS to get underway June 19 Babysitters com plete training The Heppner combined vaca tion Bible school will begin Monday, June 19, starting at 9 a.m., at the Methodist church. Sessions will end at 11:30 a.m. All children ages third to Sixth grade are invited to at tend. There will be a charge of $2 per child or a $5 charge per family. The theme thia year is "Awesome Adventures: God's Amazing Deeds". The lessons will be Genesis 6: 9-9:17 (Noah ♦ * ♦ ! • » and the flood); Daniel 6: 1-28 (Daniel in the lion's den); Mark 4: 35-41 (Jesus calms the storm); John 20: 1-18 Oesus' resurrec tion and appearance to Mary); and Acts 9: 1-22 (the call of Saul). The children will sing at the senior meal site on Wednesday. Friday, parents, friends and family are invited to join the Bible school for a sack lunch on the Episcopal Church lawn to share the week's activities. ♦ All Saints plans Father's Day service All Saints' Episcopal Church will begin worship services at 10:30 a.m. on Sunday, June 18. There will be celebration of the Holy Eucharist and Father A1 Miller will preach a sermon for Father's Day titled "For Men O nly". Father Miller suggests that it will be appropriate for both men and women. The T e ri R o b in s (fro n t) d e m o n s tra te s th e p ro p e r w a y to c h a n g e a d ia p e r. T h e b a b y is H a n n a h L o v g re n , d a u g h te r o f B o b b e tte an d Pat L o v g re n . Sixteen future baby sitters completed an eight hour train ing course in Heppner June 9, and received certificates of training. The students had "hands o n " opportunities to practice interviewing employ ers, holding and diapering babies, making safe nutritional snacks, observing children at play, learning positive disci pline skills and becoming aware of accident prevention and how to handle emergen cies. Trainers were George Naims, Amy Osmin, Teri Robins, Mary Haguewood and Carol Michael-Bennett. Student aide was Tai Sweek. Infants and toddlers who helped with the training included Hannah Lovgren, Steven and Emily Thompson, Emma Osmin, Adam Collins, Zach Orem, Sarah Kendrick, Russel Curtis, Carrie Haguewood and Mary Rietmann. Certified sitters ready to care for children are: Meghan Bailey, Brett Barber, Jodie Carlson, Jennifer Dilley, Amber Flaiz, Kelsie Greenup, Daniel Jepsen, Heidi Kurtz, Jannicka McGuire, Kristen Nesse, Laura Nesse, Josh McKinney, Julie Proctor, Olivia Sagely, Paula SpicerKuhn, and Jennifer Thompson. The course will be repeated in Irrigon June 15. To register, contact the Morrow County Ex tension office, 676-9642 or 1800 342-3664. children's sermon will be on "G od Our Father". An adult Bible study will be held at 9:45 a.m. The Bible study will be based on the sixth chapter of Ephesians, "The Ar mor of G od". Child care is available from 9:45 a.m. until the end of church. Everyone is welcome to attend. Open horse show planned July 16 The Morrow County Open Veterinary Clinic and MCGG Horse Show will be Sunday, in Lexington, Inland Empire July 16, at the Morrow County Bank in Boardman; and PGG in Hermiston and Pendleton. Fairgrounds. The new premium books also The main judge will be Dawn Wagner, Hermiston and the ' have entry forms in them. trail judge will be Jill Simpson, Stanfield. Entry forms are available at the Morrow County Fair Office, Green Feed & Seed, and Gard ner's Men's Wear in Heppner; B & C Repair in lone; Temple's Jo C heerlead ers to hold c ar wash The Heppner High School cheerleaders will hold a car wash, Saturday, June 17, beginning at 10 a.m. behind Les Schwab. Money raised will go towards the purchase of uniforms and other expenses. Outdoor Discovery club has campout The 4-H Outdoor Discovery Club "Probing Terrans" went on a camping trip to Bull Prairie, June 3. Club members attending were Leland Rill, Brad Bowman, Til Tullis, Paula SpicerKuhn and Jon Bennett. Co-leaders Janel Lacey, Tom Bennett and Mark Tullis super vised activities. The group began with a lesson on "no-trace camping". Next, they went hiking and fishing. The club members made dinner over a hot Col eman stove, and after dark, they went on a night hike to an aspen grove. Coyotes sang the group back to camp. The group made up constellations and myths for them, told ghost stories around the campfire, and ate S'm ores until midnight. The next day, the club learn ed about orienteering and fire lookouts. After that, they returned home. Correction In a picture caption in last week's Gazette-Times 'Hepp ner Pre-School holds gradua tion' LaRae Kindle's name was not listed as a teacher at the Pre-school. Kindle, along with Sue Norton were teachers. Still love you after 25 Happy 25th wedding anniversary Love, Al Q y w w n y n u m iw u ii ^ § We want you as a custom er. We want your books as trade-ins. We want your suggestions for serving your needs. We want you to bring in this advertisement for a 10% discount on any one book. Lubricants rrrrrr 4 11111 ■ ■ ■ ■ — r SALE MULTIGRADE MOTOR OIL IN CASES PER QUART CASE QUANTITIES WITH COUPON IN S T A N T D IS C O U N T r » 2.40 s i i Coupon for $2 .40 Instant Discount when you buy 12 quarts of Golden D or Superlube 518 M ultigrade Motor Oil. NAME: ADDRESS: DATE: SALE AGENDA: BOARD POSITION TO BE FILLED REVIEW OF FINANCIAL REPORT CURRENT FINANCIAL SITUATION RESU LTS TO CH 19 PROGRAMMING REVIEW OF YEARS OPERATION Experience Nature's Beauty With Hand-Crafted Mt. Rushmore Black Hills Gold Wildlife Designs. Thursday, June 15, 7PM, Morrow Co. Museum, Free NOTE CASE QUANTITIES ONLY Morrow County Crain Growers INC 1 100 45? 739$ LEXINCTON ORfSOU 97139 PO l o i 397 ” 1942 - Oregon's Most Exciting Year" Speaker: Tom Edwards, Professor, Whitman College. Thursday, June 22, 7PM, Morrow Co. Museum, Free "Women’s Lives on the Homefront" Speaker: Jackqueline Dirks Professor, Reed College. Thursday, June 29, 1995, Morrow Co. Museum, Free QUALITY LUBRICANTS I 8:00 PM at HTV OFfice, 162 N. Main Program Schedule Special price during the sale period o f $1.29 on additional quarts. Wasco 442 5711 1 -800-824 7185 Tuesday, June 20, 1995 on e x h ib it a t O LAKES l LAND / mxuul / mcls Phone MS 1771 Heppner T.V. Inc. Annual Meeting Morrow County Museum May 13-July 12. 1995 CENEX r.-nTj'»; to all friends and extended family of Holtz- Streufert who gave of themselves through their prayers, cards, and deeds, to make her days hap pier, to ease the loss we all feel, and to celebrate her new life with the Lord she loved so dearly. Elmer & Sandy Holtz, Harold & Irene Holtz, Tom & Mary Kirkelie Posters on the Homefront 1941-45 DATES: Note Case quantities only Limit two cases per coupon, per household No photo copies will be accepted M C 6 ( Thank You Produce for Victory CLERK: ||M M t m You can't taste it, smell it or feel it, but gravity is the stuff that keeps our clodkickers here on earth. Even the graduating seniors could have only thrown their mortarboards just so high, though they rightfully felt that they were walking on air. Unlike some of us who can stumble and get hurt just falling down, there'll always be the risk takers that thrive on challenges. Voila for those that get kicks out of bungee jumping or scaling a sheer mountain peak. But while urban residents defy the every day risks associated with traffic congestion, rural residents are subject to hazards lurking in the quiet countryside. Rural people can attest to some of these hazards from boating accidents to chasing after an errant cow while trusting a steed to not connect with a badger hole. Then there are the wire gates that defy human contortions to open and close same. Galloping grandmas need pry poles for gate closure leverage when searching for missing livestock or moving cattle to new pastures. There's the strain-your-gut tight gate with only a loop for closure or long gates with log-size stakes in the middle. If the closure end gate pole is broken in half, there's never a con venient replacement. And finding a solution is almost as challeng ing as the slack gate that would hardly intimidate a docile cow. Somehow I'd rather be wrestling with such minor problems here on earth than floating around in outer space. It might be nice to be weightless and take a load off of tired feet, but a per son might get hit by somebody's discarded garbage. However one wouldn't have to do spring house cleaning, wash windows or mow grass, I guess. Yet, when we consider that each year there are a billion peo ple added to the world population, celestial habitation might be the answer to overcrowding. Perhaps it should be retirees who are sent to live in the wild blue yonder. It might create a new kind of golf game by teeing off for the nearest cloud. Meanwhile, very swiftly, June marches on, with both hot and cold days and the promise of hot weather to come. Gardeners and farmers despair about the late growing season and an in evitable late harvest. Meanwhile the progression of our lives is marked by weddings, new babies and the loss of family members or friends. How complacent we become in our everyday lives though we are touched by the disasters and tragedies that strike others throughout the universe. We take for granted the ease of living with all conveniences. Many have never experienced having to live in a primitive lifestyle for longer than a short vacation. Yet we fail to appreciate our surroundings when 97 percent of the population is free to pursue careers unrelated to agriculture without worrying about food shortages. With more time for travel and recreation, each day offers a time for pleasure. So take the time to stop and smell the flowers as another summer heightens the atmosphere of our peaceful comer of the world. "Fighters on the Farm Front: ^Iregon’t Contribution to the War Effort" Speaker: Larry Landis. Archivist, OSU 4 M em ber Jew elers o l A m erica. Inc f Peterson’s ______ Heppner r j i lewelwV m 676-9200