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About Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current | View Entire Issue (July 12, 2000)
FOUR - Heppner Gazette-Times, Heppner, Oregon Wednesday, July 12, 2000 Overton, and Jolynn Vernon, Susanville, CA; and two grandchildren. N in e r e tir e fr o m M o r r o w C o u n ty Since she has retired, Timms everything But then the north county area started growing and plans to catch up on some things numerous other employees were around the house, such as hired to keep up with the growth. gardening, and plans a trip to the Bom in Washington, D.C., East Coast this fall, since her Winter lived in Seattle and mother and sisters still live in various places in Oregon before Chicago. After helping out with moving to Heppner from Salem transition at the planning in 1962. department, she may look for a She attended college at part-time job, since her husband Willamette University at Salem won't retire for a few more years. and Lewis and Clark College at The Timms' daughter, Dawn Portland. Wagner, lives in Hermiston, and Winter, 65, plans tQ take her their son, Scott, lives in motor home and head tb the East Vancouver. Coast in September for visiting, sightseeing and genealogy research. She jokes that she plans to come back in the spring "when the grass needs watering." Judy Chastain, sheriffs dispatcher for the graveyard shift for the past 10 years, has been hired to fill Winter's position. The Morrow County Courthouse, the Morrow County Road Department and the Morrow County Sheriffs Department lost nine long-time employees to retirement on June 30. Shirley McCarl, office manager for the Morrow County Clerk's Office; Pauline Winter, chief civil deputy and office manager at the Morrow County Sheriffs Office; Sharon Timms with the Morrow County Planning Department in Imgon; Angie Pedro with the Imgon Justice Court; Ed Struthers, Morrow County computer technician; and Guy VanArsdale, Sam Schmidt, Cap Gentry and Ray O'Neal, all with the Morrow County Road Department, retired from their respective duties at the end of June. Ed Struthers Sharon Timms Shirley McCarl Shirley McCarl started with the county clerk's office in 1987 after a year's training. McCarl was office manager and worked in elections, recording, juvenile restitution, issued marriage licenses and passports and submitted bills. McCarl, 64, was bom in Hfppner and lived in Lexington all of her life. She graduated from Lexington High School in 1952. She and her husband, Moms, have three children. Barb Coiner, Sharon Moms and Lee McCarl, all Lexington, and six grandchildren. She says that she has "nothing special" planned for retirement, but hopes to have time to enjoy her kids and grandkids and maybe do a little traveling. Bobbi Childers has been hired in the clerk's office. Pauline Winter Pauline Winter has worked for the Morrow County Sheriffs Deparment for 25 years, always as chief civil deputy and office manager. In that capacity. Winter processed summons and complaints, small claims, subpoenas, civil processes and sold real and personal property at sheriffs auctions. She says that when she first started work with the sheriffs department, one daytime employee took care of Sharon Timms has worked as office manager and associate planner for the past 11 years at the Morrow County Annex Building in Imgon. In that capacity Timms issued building permits and zoning notification, handled land use issues, took minutes for the planning commission, budgeted line items and handled rural addressing. Timms, 57, was bom in Chicago and graduated from high school at Cardinal Stritch High School, a Catholic school in Chicago. After high school she worked for the U.S. Department of Agriculture for two years in the federal crop insurance program. Timms met her husband-to-be at her sister's wedding. She was chosen to be her sister's maid of honor. Her sister and her sister's fiance, who was in the Marines, decided that Sharon and the best man, also in the Marines, should get together. Apparently the suggestion took, because and she and her husband Brian were married in 1962. Five months later, he was transferred to El Toro, CA, so the couple moved to California. After his discharge he finished his schooling in California and then the couple moved to Baker, where his father owned a machine shop. At Baker, Timms worked part time for the Soil Conservation Service and then full-time for BLM. The economy was slow in Baker, however, so they moved to Portland for better job opportunities. Her husband was employed with PGE in Portland and at the Trojan Nuclear Plant and Sharon stayed home with their children until their eldest was a junior in high school. They moved to Imgon when he began working at the Boardman Coal Fired Plant. She worked for three years for a contractor who built the Imgon fish hatchery. She then substituted as a rural route carrier for three months before accepting the job with the planning department. Ed Struthers was hired by the county in 1985 as a groundskeeper and vehicle and building maintenance person. He began working in his present capacity as computer manager in 1993. Struthers was bom in Idaho and grew up in Condon, graduating from Condon High School. After graduation he enlisted in the Navy and trained as an electronic technician. He spent three years in the Navy in Maryland where he met and married his wife, Marie, a Wave in the Navy from California. The couple moved to Pendleton where he got a job working for the television company. He then went to work for Columbia Basin Electric as a truck driver. In 1969 the Struthers family moved to Heppner where he started an apprenticeship as a lineman with CBEC and then became a staking engineer. In 1978 he got a job as a staking engineer for Coos-Curry Electric, so the family moved to Brookings for a year. They then moved back to Lexington and he worked for CBEC for six years until the WHOOPS problems arose. He began his stint with the county after that. Struthers, 59, has done some computer consulting in Baker City and has also done software upgrades for a pavement management cost accounting program for the Association of Oregon Counties. The system is used primarily in the eastern side of the state. In the future, Struthers' job may also entail assessing the condition of roads using a global position system with the focus of getting more federal dollars for the area for improvement and maintenance. Struthers also plans to work on the house he built in Heppner and do some landscaping. He and his wife would also like to visit Australia. Mane, who is employed with the state circuit court in Heppner, has been writing to a pen-pal in Australia for around 30 years and also has a more recent pen pal. The Struthers have four children, Renee Kenison, Grandview, WA; Sophia Smith, Pendleton; Dan, Seattle, WA, and Pat, Pendleton; and five grandchildren. Guy Van Arsdale Guy Van Arsdale has been the Morrow County Public Works director for the past five years. Van Arsdale, 61, was bom in Kearney, Nebraska, and grew up in Stockton, CA. He lived in California until coming to Oregon when he was 21 to work for Boise Cascade on road construction at Joseph. He was with Boise Cascade for four years and then followed various road construction around the state until 1965. That year, working with a contractor, Van Arsdale built Coal Mine Hill Road for Kinzua. A timber sale got him in touch with Milo Prindle who talked him into going to work for Kinzua Corporation. Van Arsdale ran the Kinzua road department until 1973 when he purchased road construction equipment and then established a logging company. At the time, he ran three road construction sites and three logging sites. He built U.S. Forest Service roads and logging roads for various logging companies all over the state until joining the county. Van Arsdale says that he is looking at another business in the Hermiston area and he and his wife, Barbara, still operate a flying fire patrol service. Barbara, who he says has done most of the flying up until now, patrols the entire timber area west of Fossil, nearly to LaGrande and almost to John Day. The Van Axsdales have also bought a winter home at Overton, Nevada, at Lake Mead, where they plan to spend some time and do some boating. He enjoys working on airplanes and old cars and likes to fly for fun, too. Van Arsdale has two children, Mike, who lives in Heppner, and Steve, who lives in Salem; and one grandchild. Barbara has two children, Chris, who lives in Sam Schmidt * Upon his retirement June 30, Sam Schmidt had worked for the Morrow County Road Department for over 20 years-20 years and three months, to be exact. Schmidt was bom in Redmond and "grew up in Fossil, but attended high school and graduated from Elgin High School. After high school he worked in construction, building the freeway between Philippi Canyon and Ontario. After that Or T F ree £hc (Ompiun REE tor he j ■Si ■ ■— niai— Mil I Practically Indispensable. W eeks! Just rail: Heppner Dealer 541676 5253 Offer limited to residents living within hom e delivery areas who have not subscribed in the past 30 days Limit one sam ple period per custom er per year i continued page 8 SCRATCH PADS - $1 lb. Gazette-Times ■ 676-9228 mw m w IVork Or U/e're Ifou.r S T o t Sum m er Welcome to the Little League Tournament players and their families J /u Æ l/a Û M . Heppner Hardware 106 E. May Ave. • Heppner • 676-9961 QUART Farmland Sample The Oregonian he worked for another road construction company. Between the two companies, Schmidt spent a total of around nine years in road construction. Schmidt then got a job tending the dryer at the Kinzua plywood plant in Heppner, where he worked for two years before joining the Morrow County Road Department in 1979, the same year he married his wife, Cindy. He has worked as a heavy equipment operator for all of his years with the county. He has worked with numerous directors, first with Don Ball, who had just taken over after Doc Sherer retired. After retirement, Schmidt plans to work on his house and hopes to spend time on his hobbies— metal detecting, hunting, fishing and raising llamas as pack animals for elk hunting trips. He says the llamas don't pack as much as a horse, but are "easier to get along with." The Schmidts' daughter, Lana Dishner, lives in Tillamook. They also have one grandchild. .rn w iite W > ^ ,^ K f >.1 1 c2st'S of q u a r t i \ots only Rebate coupons are available at participating cooperatives Because of location, size of facilities or other factors, i*» i * ' som e items and services advertised in this ad m ay not be available at all participating cooperatives M erchan dise may be ordered but pricing may be som ewhat higher on these special orders Country Energy, L L C is not responsible for any typographical or pictorial errors Oil Rebate Offer Ends Monday , July 31st Morrow County Grain Growers Lexington 969-6221 • 1 -800-452-7396 • For farm equipment, visit our web site at www.mcgg.net f