Image provided by: Morrow County Museum; Heppner, OR
About Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current | View Entire Issue (July 8, 1998)
. a® :«.A- I t - - . , K -;\> jsgfc ■ VQK » § |L .._ ''T- • * '•- ' * ' . i > tr iv > i,- i « .t ........ ’ V . ", - . ’ • . - .------s »V**1» **i • , »^♦1 r * - r *■ «•■- * ■ • * ‘ * »»T * K»rf 4 »»'<■»■ I* t< FOUR - Heppner Gazette-Times, Heppner, Oregon Wednesday, July 8,1998 ., , . _ . . , , Classof1948 New banners at St. Patrick s to hold reunion The Heppner High School Class o f 1948 will hold their 50th reunion on the afternoon of Wednesday, July 15, at the Bob Kilkenny ranch. Friends are invited to stop by and visit. FAX Send or Receive Gazette-Times Births Preston Jam es Huniphrey- a son Preston James was bom to Anna Bothum and Jim Humphrey on June 10, 1998. The baby weighed 7 lbs. 10 oz. and was 20 ” . His grandparents are Jim and Pam Humphrey, Jim Bothum and Jan Bothum. Great-grandparents are Guy Ralph and Mary Beamer. T re v o r Lynn Fox-a son Trevor Lynn was bom to Rebecca and Jerry Fox of Imgon on June 18, 1998 at Good Shepherd Com munity Hospital in Hermiston. The baby weighed 9 lbs. 15 oz. M athew Alan Sw art-a son M athew Alan was born to Heather and Daniel Swart o f Boardman on June 21, 1998 at Good Shepherd Community Hos pital in Hermiston. The baby weighed 9 lbs. 4 oz. Agustin Trujillo-Contreras- a son Agustin was bom to Maria and Agustin Trujillo of Boardman on June 23. 1998 at Good Shep herd Community Hospital in Hermiston. The baby weighed 7 lbs. 6 oz. B ethany D eeA nne Van C leave-a daughter Bethany DeeAnne was bom to Tim and Myma Van Cleave of Heppner on June 26, 1998. The baby weighed 8 lbs. 2 oz. She joins brothers, Darren, 13, Matthew, 10, Nathan, 9, Daniel, 3, and sister, Kristen, 6, at home. Her grandparents are Elroy and Nancy Pankratz, Oliver, B.C., Canada, and David and Dee McGill o f Pilot Rock. Great- grartdparents are R.J. and Rachel Gwen Healy with new banners New banners at St. Patrick's Church were made by Gwen Healy. The banners, with a stained glass effect, were made out of triangles of satin and lame*. The one on the left (pictured above) has a solid green satin inset with an appliqued gold lame' chalice. The one on the right has a white satin cross with a background of assorted satins. The satins were acquired for the most part from the scrap bags of various people around town. Letters to the Editor Editor's note: Letters to the Editor must be signed. The Cazette-Times will not publish unsigned letters. Please include your address and phone number on all letters for use by the C-T office. The C-T reserves the right to edit. Make parents and children responsible To the Editor: I have seen sexual involvement Last week Floyd White wrote and about everything else. about being harassed by juveniles. It’s about time we clean up our How come the parents aren’t neighborhoods and make the adult responsible for the actions and people and their child responsible whereabouts of their children? for these all-night parties for ju If you are a parent who does veniles and adults. not know the whereabouts of your If you parents wish, I can give child, try finding them on my street. you license plate numbers and If you can keep them home, I can descriptions o f cars and how long get some sleep. they stay at this residence. Last night we had a car wreck, (s) Lyle Verrall a fight and drinking on my street. Heppner Two arrested for harassment Two Heppner teenagers, Judy Peck, 18, and Michael Scott, 19, were arrested as a result of an early morning incident in downtown Heppner on June 23. The teenagers allegedly "yanked” open a man's car door and yelled obscenities at him. Scott was charged with harassment and Theft III and Peck with Theft III. There was also a report of trash cans dumped, a street sign knocked down and teenagers jumping into the street in connection with the incident. The police later received a report that threats were allegedly made to the man to retaliate after he reported the incident to police. PM C lin ic announces new hours Pioneer Memorial Clinic has announced new hours that started Monday, July 6. The clinic will now be open from 8:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Monday through Friday, and will be closed for lunch from noon to 1:30 p.m. The clinic will not be open during the noon hour to provide allergy shots or other injections to allow the staff to have a lunch break, according to a clinic news release. Appointments can begin as early at 8:30 a.m., with the last scheduled appointment being made at 5 p.m. The clinic will be staffed by Dr. Kenneth Wenberg, Family Nurse Practitioner Wendy Haack and as available, Dr. Ed Berretta. Tourism committee plans For questions or to make appointments, contact the clinic at 676-5504. Beagley, Lebanon. Ceyenne M arie Van Dyke- a daughter, Ceyenne Mane was bom to Rabecka and Jeremy Van Dyke of Imgon on June 30, 1998 at Good Shepherd Community Hospital in Hermiston. The baby weighed 6 lbs. 4 oz. J a c k Leroy M eads-a son Jack Leroy was bom to Roxanne and Justin Meads of Boardman on June 30, 1998 at Good Shepherd Community Hospital in Hermiston. The baby weighed 5 lbs. 12 oz. The Morrow County Tourism Committee will meet Wednesday, July 15 at 4 p.m. at the Driftwood R.V. Park, on East Kunze Road in Boardman. Agenda items include: update of Morrow County community activities for the remainder of 1998; filling officer vacancies; and the status of educational panels and displays on Highway 74 and Interstate 84. The tourism committee is open to all interested Morrow County residents and visitor-related busi nesses. M eetings are held quar terly and rotate among communi ties. For more information, contact Carol M ichael, com m ittee chair, at 481-3014. ( The U.S. Dept, of Trans portation lists its planned construction activities on Willow Creek Road for the week of Monday, July 6. Tidewater will be continuing with the grubbing between the Day Use Area and Penland Lake Road and continue the cut slope excavation and placing rock embankment with material from the cut slope, working between the beginning of the project and Smith Ditch. The surveyors are on the project, placing stakes for cuts and fills, rock embankment areas and for the various culverts located along the project. Tidewater will be hauling debris to a waste site near the Cutsforth property located on the FS Road 21, so please be aware o f the large truck traffic on this route. Willow Creek Road (Coal Mine Grade) is closed to through traffic from Cutsforth Park to the intersection of Forest Service roads 5320 and 53. This intersection will remain open, to the logging contractor only, for the removal of timber sale material. The FS 21 Road, Penland Lake Road, intersection will remain open until construction activities restrict traffic with flaggers in the middle of July. Willow Creek Road remains open, to local traffic only, to Cutsforth Park. The park will remain open for the construction season. The Willow Creek Road Closure will continue through Oct. 9, 1998. The detour route through the Shaw Creek Road will be the main travel route through to the four comers to Penland Lake and Ukiah. The road closure has been accomplished by placing barricades with flashing lights across the Willow Creek Road (Coal Mine Grade) at both ends of the construction zone. Please observe the warning signs prior to the detour route and barricades Joint Bible sum m er school planned All Saints Episcopal, Hope Lutheran and Heppner United Methodist churches will hold a joint vacation Bible school to be held July 27-31 from 9 a.m. to noon. Classes are offered for pre school children ages three to four through children in the sixth grade. The fee to participate in the program will be $4 per student or $10 for a family of three children or more. H a 11 a r e ' s u i r t u a at both ends of the construction zone. Have a safe summer and remember that the barricaded road closures are for the traveling public's safety. Federal Highways asks the traveling public for their patience, consideration and coop eration during this construction season and hopes that the work will be completed with a minimum of delays. For more information, contact Robert G. Toops, project en gineer, at 676-5904 in Heppner for additional information. Let Irish (Larley) Huddleston he y o u r travel agent... “We specialize in C U S T O M IZ E D V A C A T IO N S tailored to the individual. We work w ith people w ho want the hest in travel.” r I 4 . r J A T / C a li T risli Today! 1 -80(T- I I 782-5001 IN tours&cruises 231 NW 2nd Ave., Canby 20 years in business ■fjennnet Online ururur. n en n net. net T don’t really expect you to bank with us just because we’re local!” “I’ve worked at a big bank bank before and I know the difference. HEED I WEB PAGE? ut e ti s e r u i c e At Bank of Eastern Oregon my customers really do get better service. We can do things here that an out-of-town bank ju s t can’t do. Since all o f our accounting, check processing and decisionmaking is all done locally, my customer can get an answer to something while they are here.” BOARDMAN AUTO RCPAIR 101 Front Street, Boardman 1 - 800 - 569-4944 meeting Willow Creek Road construction update - Tricia Coe, Heppner Branch With Tricia and over 50 of your other friends and neighbors working hard to earn your banking business, its easy to see why Bank of Eastern Oregon is the bank of choice for the people of our area. WE DO EVERYTHING FROM... Motors to Transmissions to Tires, Domestic and Foreign Repairs. w e Have the Equipm ent & Knowledge to Fix Your Vehicle Correctly, including New Cars 5 Star Muffler Service Center Custom Exhaust and Custom Pipe Bending Muffler and Tailpipe $ 5 9 i95* ! *as low as OUR WORK IS GUARANTEED... We Are The Professionals You Can Trust guTpng AutoCare ! Center W . In il dll O u . l l t y NAPA P i t i » A S E Certified NAPA Charge Card A other financing available There are other reasons that being a truly local bank makes a huge difference for the residents of Morrow and Gilliam Counties. Bank of Eastern Oregon has provided employment, paid property taxes, paid employment taxes, and assisted in the funding of countless local projects and charities for well over 50 years. Does being local and committed to your community make a difference to you when you shop for banking services? We hope it does. Does Tricia's commitment to you as a customer make a difference? She hopes it does. Bank of Eastern Oregon “around the corner, not around the state” Arlington Condon Heppner lone 454-2636 WE PROUDLY SUPPORT MORROW COUNTY EVENTS < 384-3501 676-9125 Manibar FD*C 422-7466