Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current, December 20, 1995, Page THREE, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Heppner Gazette-Times, Heppner, Oregon Wednesday, December 20, 1995 - THREE
FSA committee holds elections
lone Legion Auxiliary, 4-Hers, students
assist women's shelter with donation
A donation drive, master­
will be held at the Morrow
County FSA office on Thurs­ minded by the lone Legion
day, Jan. 11. at 9 a.m. at the Auxiliary, and accomplished
Pettyjohn Building, Hepp- with the help of lone High
ner/Lexington
Highway, School students and 4-Hers,
netted around $2,700 worth of
Heppner.
The duties of county FSA clothing and household items
committee members include: for a battered women's shelter.
Auxiliary members, June
informing farmers of the pur­
pose and provisions of the FSA Crowell, Jean Jepsen and
programs; keeping the state Phyllis Dudley planned the
FSA committee informed of drive. Students participating
LAA conditions; recommen­ were: Salli McElligott, Nikki
ding needed changes in farm McElligott, Andrew Rietmann,
programs; participating in Sybil Krebs, Sarah Barrow, Erin
county meetings as necessary Crowell, Nonnee Walters, Kara
and performing other duties as Miller, Emily Key, Alyssa Riet­
assigned by the state FSA com­ mann and Beverly Doherty.
Mothers Charity McElligott,
mittee.
Kristy Crowell and Laurie Bar-
row did the driving for dona­
tion pickups and high school
students, Jory Crowell, Jake
McElligott and Nathan Riet-
The Morrow County Farm
Service Agency (FSA) has an­
nounced the results of the Dec.
4 election.
Virginia Grieb was elected to
serve a two year term in the
LAA 1 position. Vem Fredrick­
son was first alternate and Don
Key, second.
Mark Miller was elected for a
one year term in the LAA 2
spot. Craig Miles was first alter­
nate and John Kilkenny, se­
cond.
Clinton Krebs won the LAA
3 position for a three year term.
Joe McElligott was first alter­
nate and Bill Jepsen, second.
An organizational meeting
1996 P ick u p s
mann loaded the truck.
The battered w om en's
shelter, operated by Domestic
Violence Services, is dependent
upon donations, both material
and monetary, from the com­
munities it serves. Items not us­
ed specifically for the shelter or
given to shelter residents are
sold at a garage sale to raise
funds to help with the shelter
expenses.
Domestic Violence Services,
located in Pendleton, provides
services to all of Morrow and
Umatilla counties. Services to
victims of domestic violence
and sexual assault include: em­
ergency shelter, a 24-hour crisis
line, advocacy, counseling,
abuse assessment, support
groups for victims (both adult
and children's groups) and
anger management classes.
B M C C to hold annual Christmas dinner
Students and staff at Blue
Mountain Community College
(BMCC) are preparing for the
25th annual Christmas Eve din­
ner to be held at BMCC this
Sunday. The dinner provides
area residents who otherwise
might spend Christmas alone
with an evening of holiday
cheer.
The festivities include a tur­
key dinner with all the trimm­
ings, a musical program in the
theatre, a special room for
children who prefer to play
games and listen to a story­
teller, and a visit from Santa
with gifts for everyone. The
dinner and program are con-
C om e Share W ith Us
at
Are Now Here
St. Patrick's Senior Center
______ Bulletin Board______
96' Extended Cab 4x4
Silverado s
Manual Transmission
3 5 0 V /8
Auto Transmission
3 0 5 V /8
96' Chevrolet 1 Ton 4x4
Cheyenne
4 5 4 V /8 — 5-Speed Transmission — Air
*95 Chevrolet Tahoe 4x4
2 -d o o r — L o a d e d
The ONLY'95 left!
i
*96 Chevrolet Lumina LS
Wright Chevrolet, I n c .^
Chevrolet & Olsmobile
5 4 1 -7 6 3 -1 2 7 5 -:- Fossil. Oregon
H erb W rig h t - Bill M a c h in e s - Bill M a cln n e s. J r .
One hundred people were present for the senior meal Dec.
15 and three meals were home delivered. Members of the Mor­
mon Church served. Velma Wight won the meal ticket and Clark
Gerking, the bingo ticket. The Senior Center board met follow­
ing the meal.
The menu for the birthday dinner Dec. 27 will be sausage pat­
ties, egg casserole, potato patties, biscuits, fruit and orange juice.
Members of the Catholic Church will serve.
The Red Cross held a blood drawing Thursday afternoon, Dec.
14, sponsored by the U.S. Forest Service.
One table of pinochle was in play Friday afternoon.
The Senior Center Christmas party was enjoyed by 50 seniors
and friends who danced to the music of Tim Cundell and en­
joyed a large variety of finger foods, brought by the participants.
Tim has given generously of his time and talent this year.
Friday evening, Dec. 15, Ed Baker drove a busload of seniors
around the towns of lone, Lexington and Heppner to view the
Christmas lighting displays. There were so many beautiful ones
it would be difficult to choose the best. They were all winners.
The seniors appreciate Ed taking them around.
Dates to remember: Tuesday and Thursday exercise, 10 a.m.;
Wednesday blood pressures taken, 11 a.m., senior meal, noon,
quilting, 1 p.m.; Friday cards, 2 p.m.; Sunday movie, 6 p.m.
Merry Christmas to all!
if, ifcwii V
h,. .. ..
tfiM (r ,
! hvr brtfi ■•«ylr-jt'n
r
'
•............ /\
tinuous, starting at 5 p.m., with
the dining room closing at 7
p.m.
As in the past, transportation
will be provided for people
who do not oVvn cars or who
are unable to drive at night. In
addition, meals will be provid­
ed to shut-ins. Reople in need
of either service should call
276-1260, ext. 206.
Through the years, the din­
ner has become a BMCC holi­
day tradition. The student body
coordinates the event and re­
ceive help from staff members,
administration, alumni and
members of the community.
Last year over 500 guests at­
tended the dinner.
W illo w C r e e k B a p tis t C h u r c h
Bible Study for all ages 2 p.m.
W orship Service 3 p.m.
Meeting in the
7th Day Adventist Church
5 6 0 N orth M inor
There will
be no
service
Dec. 24
<zA/(zzzy (2iixi±tma±
&
'Beecher’s will
be
closed Dec. 25 & 26
Live music December 31
ini stPrcqoion
o
i ^ raction 11
U oW
yy^NOWFLEX
VÍAT-TERIES
C hains j
Have your chains
for Holiday travel
" ife B N jOiW j F. L! E
I
1
Heppner
124 N. Main
676-9481
WINTER RADIAL RETREADS
SIZE
P155R-13
P165R-13
P185/75R-14
P195/75R-14
P205/75R-14
P215/75R-14
P195/75R-15
P205/75R-15
P215/75R-15
P225/75R-15
P235/75R-15
PRICE
1
HUGE
S ELEC TIO N
J N S TO C K -
32.79
35.10
39.90
43.85
49.14
50.10
47.02
46.54
50.58
53.17
53.46
W H A T M AKES
S N O W F L E X » S P EC IA L?
W hat makes SnowFlex> so special? It’s the
rubber. The Les Schwab SoowFlex 0 Is made of
hydropMfc rubber which was ortglnaly developed
by the U.S. space program for tires used on the
moon rover. Normal rubber gets harder as It gets
colder which can reduce tire traction. HyifrophBc
rubber stays more pliable In the cold provldkig
better traction m extreme cold.
TiliMffliDGO
i
j
If you don't use them, return
them for a full refund after
the last legal date for studs.
cMaue. a cdjafifiy a n d
■cMsxxy C firiitm a i
From all of us at Les Schwab
LOAD
RANGE