baker city herald daily paper 09-04-15

22
• g • g • g .„ ', s In LOCAL, 6A September 4, 2015 QUICIC HITS Good Day Wish To A Subscriber A special good day to Herald subscriber J.P. Ingram of Haines. iN mis aonioN: Local • Health@Fitness • Outdoors • TV s < Powder River Pauilionlledication SundayatGeiser-PollmanParK Serving Baker County since 1870 bakercityheratd.com Anew railroad bridge Cnunty dehmtes ressurce plan Labor Day closures There is no school Monday in observance of Labor Day. Government offices and most banks also will be closed for the day. The Baker City Herald office also will be closed Monday, but the news- paper will be published and delivered as usual. Baker School District students will attend classes Tuesday through Friday next week to make up for Monday's missed day of school. Summer still has a BRRHHH! Record cold this morning in Baker City couple weeks to assert itself, but this morning it felt positively autumnal in Baker City. The temperature dipped to 29 degrees at the Baker City Airport. That's a record low for Sept. 4. The previous re- cord low of 30 degrees was set in 2011. It's also the lowest temperature since May 10, when the low at the airport was 25. We weren't the cold- est place in the state, though. Crow Flat, an auto- mated weather station in northern Harney County near Highway 395 between Seneca and Burns, recorded a low of 15 degrees. Ukiah dropped to 22, and Seneca and Meacham both reported 25 degrees. p.m. By Lisa Britton For the Baker City Herald A dream almost 10 years in the making will be dedicated Sunday. A small group of citizens came together in 2006 with the idea of bringing a bandstand back to Geiser- Pollman Park in Baker City. Many of those people will be on hand at 1:30 p.m. Sunday to dedicate the Powder River Pavilion. The structure's first concert starts at 2 p.m. with big band music by the Blue Yesterdays, followed by various musicians taking the stage at 4:30 The pavilion is located in the middle of Geiser-Pollman Park. The $250,000 project was funded by donations and grants, and construc- tion began in the spring following a ground-breaking ceremony in April. Phyllis Badgley and Al Durgan, founders of the committee, both dug a shovel into the ground that day. These two have fond memories of the original bandstand, which was located in the northwest corner of the park. It was demolished in 1972 during a project to widen Campbell Street. e we referred toitasthe band- shell," Badgley says, "because of the oval rounded design. The music wafted out over the wooden benches where the audience sat to listen." "That old bandstand, from my point of view, was very important," said Durgan, whose father and brothers all played drums in perfor- mances at the bandshell. 't '" , . Saturday 54/29 Showers likely Sunday 66I31 Chance of showers WEATHER Today 65/37 a;a, 4f The pavilion in Geiser-Pollman Park has been a dream of a group of Baker City residents for many years. r UFIIII I „,:;.s,,g'r ' s r ~ rs The old bandstand at the park was demolished in 1972 when Campbell Street was widened. Doug Smurthwaite, who was part of the original committee, saw the bandshell from a musician's perspec- tive. "I played in it once. I was 12 or 13," says Smurthwaite, 84."It was quite a deal for a young kid." He — with his tenor saxophone — will join the Blue Yesterdays at Sunday's concert. The new pavilion is located near the center of the park, where the sidewalks converge.Itwasdesigned by Larry Abell of Baker City and built by Sid Johnson & Co. All the lit. l R.. ) n concrete was donated by Triple C Redi-Mix. A good portion of the funds was required before seeking grants, and part of the fundraising came from weekly summer concerts in the park called the Powder River Music Re- view. Musicians would donate their time to play, and the committee sold commemorative bricksto be part of the final construction. Soroptimist International of Baker County was the nonprofit partner. S. John Collins/Baker City Herald Submitted photo Mostly sunny Correction: A story on Page 2 of the Aug. 28 issue of the Baker City Herald contained the wrong date for the next Baker School Board election. The election will be on May16, 2017.The person appointed to fill the unexpired term of Richard McKim will serve until June 30, 2017, when McKim's term would have expired, said County Clerk Cindy Carpenter. •000 Full forecast on the back of the B section. includes Baker County, said this week that the plan announced by Gov. Kate Brown's office last month to earmark $250,000 through Business Oregon, the state's economic development agency to help finance metro area start-up businesses, sends the wrong message to rural areas. "Helping start-ups is a greatidea but let's be a little State Grant ProgramHelpsStart-Up BusinessesinPortlandMetro Area errio isaVsrura areas e out By Pat Caldwell For the Baker City Herald A prominent Republican state lawmaker wants to know why the governor's office will inject several hundred thousand dollars for Portland-area start-up businesses while he believes rural Oregon continues to struggle. Sen. Ted Ferrioli, the John Day legislator whose district T ODAT Classified............. 1B-BB Crossword........sa & 4B Ja yson Jacoby..........4A Opinion......................4A Television .........3C & 4C bit more bipartisan and show a little more impartiality," Ferrioli said. He has called on Brown to allocate $500,000 for rural Chris Pair, a spokesman for Brown, said similar initiatives for rural Oregon are alreadyin the planning stages. 'There is a similar pro- gram, the mechanics of it are the same. We are planning on launching it this fall," he said. The $250,000 grant will help finance the new Indusive Startup Fund. The Startup Fund, crafted by the Portland Development Com- mission, will be available for investment in Portland-area businesses being startedby women and people of color. See FerrioliIBge 6A and suburban areas. See PavilionIFbge 2A State to poison Balm Cr. Reservoir By Joshua Dillen ldillen©bakercityherald.com Baker County Commis- sioners discussed the county's Natural Resources Plan iNRPl for much of their Wednesday meeting. Commissioners approved a draft version of the plan Aug. 19. Although Commissioner Mark Bennett said he believes the content of the plan is adequate, he doesn't think it's ready to be adopted at the next Commission meeting on September 16. "I appreciate all the work that wentinto it," Bennett said."I agree withit totally; it's just that now it needs refine- ment." Bennett said the NRP needs editing and wording changes. He also said the Natural Resources Advisory Committee iNRACl — which developed the NRP — doesn't have the authority to address energy development, which is induded in the plan. He also suggested the county add stronger languge in parts of the plan. "Itisn't a criticism... We need to remember that — very possibly — this document will be in court," Bennett said.'We want it to be sharp, dear and concise." Calendar....................2A Community News ....3A Health ...............5C & 6C Obituaries..................2A Sports ........................5A Issue 51, 20 pages Comics... .................... 7B DearAbby................. SB News of Record ... ..... 2A Outdoors.......... 1C & 2C Weather..................... SB Goal is to get rid of illegally introduced fish and restock with rainbow trout By Jayson Jacoby llacoby©bakercityherald.com State wildlife officials are preparing to kill the fish in Balm Creek Reservoir later this month, the first step in a campaign to rid the Baker County reservoir of illegally introduced warm-water spe- cies and revive its rainbow trout population. The reservoir, in the southern Wallowa Mountains about 22 miles northeast of Baker City, is the first of sev- eral lakes and ponds where the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife iODFV9 plans to spread rotenone, a fish-killing chemical, this fall. The Balm Creek project is tentativel y set forSept. 29, according to ODFW. 8 51153 00102 o See County IPage 3A See Fish IPage GA •000 •000

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The Baker City Herald print edition for Friday September 04, 2015

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Page 1: Baker City Herald Daily Paper 09-04-15

• g • g• g ••

.„', s

In LOCAL, 6A

September 4, 2015

QUICIC HITS

Good Day WishTo A Subscriber

A special good dayto Herald subscriber J.P.Ingram of Haines.

iN mis aonioN: Local • Health@Fitness • Outdoors • TV s <

Powder River Pauilionlledication Sundayat Geiser-PollmanParK

Serving Baker County since 1870 • bakercityheratd.com

Anewrailroadbridge

CnuntydehmtesressurceplanLabor Day

closuresThere is no school

Monday in observanceof Labor Day.

Government officesand most banks alsowill be closed for theday.

The Baker City Heraldoffice also will be closedMonday, but the news­paper will be publishedand delivered as usual.

Baker School Districtstudents will attendclasses Tuesday throughFriday next week tomake up for Monday'smissed day of school.

Summer still has a

BRRHHH! Recordcold this morningin Baker City

couple weeks to assertitself, but this morning itfelt positively autumnalin Baker City.

The temperaturedipped to 29 degrees atthe Baker City Airport.That's a record low forSept. 4. The previous re­cord low of 30 degreeswas set in 2011.

It's also the lowesttemperature since May10, when the low at theairport was 25.

We weren't the cold­est place in the state,though.

Crow Flat, an auto­mated weather stationin northern HarneyCounty near Highway395 between Senecaand Burns, recorded alow of 15 degrees.

Ukiah dropped to22, and Seneca andMeacham both reported25 degrees.

p.m.

By Lisa BrittonFor the Baker City Herald

A dream almost 10 years in themaking will be dedicated Sunday.

A small group of citizens cametogether in 2006 with the idea ofbringing a bandstand back to Geiser­Pollman Park in Baker City.

Many of those people will be onhand at 1:30 p.m. Sunday to dedicatethe Powder River Pavilion.

The structure's first concert startsat 2 p.m. with big band music by theBlue Yesterdays, followed by variousmusicians taking the stage at 4:30

The pavilion is located in themiddle of Geiser-Pollman Park. The$250,000 project was funded bydonations and grants, and construc­tion began in the spring following aground-breaking ceremony in April.

Phyllis Badgley and Al Durgan,founders of the committee, both duga shovel into the ground that day.

These two have fond memories ofthe original bandstand, which waslocated in the northwest corner ofthe park. It was demolished in 1972during a project to widen CampbellStreet.

ewe referred to it as the band­shell," Badgley says, "because ofthe oval rounded design. The musicwafted out over the wooden bencheswhere the audience sat to listen."

"That old bandstand, from mypoint of view, was very important,"said Durgan, whose father andbrothers all played drums in perfor­mances at the bandshell.

't '",

.

Saturday

54/29Showers likely

Sunday

66I31

Chance of showers

WEATHER

Today

65/37 a;a,

4f

The pavilion in Geiser-Pollman Park has been a dream of a group of Baker City residents for many years.

r

UFIIIII

„,:;.s,,g'r 's

r

~r s

The old bandstand at the park was demolished in 1972 when CampbellStreet was widened.

Doug Smurthwaite, who was partof the original committee, saw thebandshell from a musician's perspec­tive.

"I played in it once. I was 12 or 13,"says Smurthwaite, 84."It was quite adeal for a young kid."

He — with his tenor saxophone— will join the Blue Yesterdays atSunday's concert.

The new pavilion is located nearthe center of the park, where thesidewalks converge. It was designedby Larry Abell of Baker City andbuilt by Sid Johnson & Co. All the

lit. lR.. )

n

concrete was donated by Triple CRedi-Mix.

A good portion of the funds wasrequired before seeking grants, andpart of the fundraising came fromweekly summer concerts in the parkcalled the Powder River Music Re­view. Musicians would donate theirtime to play, and the committee soldcommemorative bricks to be part ofthe final construction. SoroptimistInternational of Baker County wasthe nonprofit partner.

S. John Collins/Baker City Herald

Submitted photo

Mostly sunny

Correction: A story onPage 2 of the Aug. 28issue of the Baker CityHerald contained thewrong date for the nextBaker School Boardelection.The election will beon May16, 2017.Theperson appointed tofill the unexpired termof Richard McKim willserve until June 30,2017, when McKim'sterm would haveexpired, said CountyClerk Cindy Carpenter.

• 0 0 0

Full forecast on theback of the B section.

includes Baker County, saidthis week that the planannounced by Gov. KateBrown's office last month toearmark $250,000 throughBusiness Oregon, the state'seconomic developmentagency to help finance metroarea start-up businesses,sends the wrong message torural areas.

"Helping start-ups is agreatidea but let's be a little

State Grant ProgramHelps Start-Up BusinessesinPortlandMetro Area

errio isaVsrura areas e outBy Pat CaldwellFor the Baker City Herald

A prominent Republicanstate lawmaker wants toknow why the governor'soffice will inject severalhundred thousand dollarsfor Portland-area start-upbusinesses while he believesrural Oregon continues tostruggle.

Sen. Ted Ferrioli, the JohnDay legislator whose district

TODA T Classified............. 1B-BB C r ossword........sa & 4B Ja y son Jacoby..........4A Opi n ion......................4A T e levision .........3C & 4C

bit more bipartisan and showa little more impartiality,"Ferrioli said.

He has called on Brown toallocate $500,000 for rural

Chris Pair, a spokesmanfor Brown, said similarinitiatives for rural Oregonare alreadyin the planningstages.

'There is a similar pro­gram, the mechanics of it are

the same. We are planning onlaunching it this fall," he said.

The $250,000 grantwill help finance the newIndusive Startup Fund. TheStartup Fund, crafted by thePortland Development Com­mission, will be available forinvestment in Portland-areabusinesses being started bywomen and people of color.

See FerrioliIBge 6A

and suburban areas.

See PavilionIFbge 2A

State topoisonBalm Cr.Reservoir

By Joshua Dillenldillen©bakercityherald.com

Baker County Commis­sioners discussed the county'sNatural Resources Plan iNRPlfor much of their Wednesdaymeeting.

Commissioners approved adraft version of the plan Aug.19.

Although CommissionerMark Bennett said he believesthe content of the plan isadequate, he doesn't thinkit's ready to be adopted at thenext Commission meeting onSeptember 16.

"I appreciate all the workthat wentinto it," Bennettsaid."I agree withit totally; it'sjust that now it needs refine­ment."

Bennett said the NRPneeds editing and wordingchanges. He also said theNatural Resources AdvisoryCommittee iNRACl — whichdeveloped the NRP — doesn'thave the authority to addressenergy development, which isinduded in the plan.

He also suggested thecounty add stronger langugein parts of the plan.

"Itisn't a criticism... Weneed to remember that — verypossibly — this document willbe in court," Bennett said.'Wewant it to be sharp, dear andconcise."

Calendar....................2A C o m munity News ....3A He a lth ...............5C & 6C O b i tuaries..................2A Sp o rts ........................5A

Issue 51, 20 pages Comics.......................7B DearAbby.................SB News of Record... .....2A Outdoors..........1C & 2C Weather.....................SB

• Goal is to get ridof illegallyintroduced fish andrestock withrainbow troutBy Jayson Jacobyllacoby©bakercityherald.com

State wildlife officials arepreparing to kill the fish inBalm Creek Reservoir laterthis month, the first step ina campaign to rid the BakerCounty reservoir of illegallyintroduced warm-water spe­cies and revive its rainbowtrout population.

The reservoir, in thesouthern Wallowa Mountainsabout 22 miles northeast ofBaker City, is the first of sev­eral lakes and ponds wherethe Oregon Department ofFish and Wildlife iODFV9plans to spread rotenone, afish-killing chemical, this fall.

The Balm Creek project istentatively set for Sept. 29,according to ODFW.

8 5 1 1 5 3 0 0 1 0 2 o

See County IPage 3A

See Fish IPage GA

• 0 0 0• 0 0 0

Page 2: Baker City Herald Daily Paper 09-04-15

2A — BAKER CITY HERALD

FRIDAY, SEPT. 4• Baker County Fair and Panhandle Rodeo at

Halfway:Traditional county fair celebrating the region'sagricultural heritage, including FFA livestock show, rodeo,horse show, parade and craft exhibits; fair continuesthrough Monday.

• Sumpter Flea Market: Food, antiques and collectiblesmake this one of the largest flea markets in Oregon. Inaddition to the flea market, visitors can ride the SumpterValley Railroad, visit the Sumpter Valley Gold Dredge andexplore the region's vast gold rush history at the SumpterMunicipal Museum and Cracker Creek Mining museum.

SATURDAY, SEPT. 5• Eagle Valley Days and Steak Feed: Parade, art in thepark, kids games; steak feed,4 p.m. to 8 p.m.; and anevening dance for the entire family at Richland.

• Snake River Car Show: Classic car show in downtownHuntington.

• Labor Day Weekend Encampment on the OregonTrail: See living history interpreters demonstrate craftsand skills, get a taste of pioneer food, listen to music andplay with pioneer toys and games at the Oregon TrailInterpretive Center; encampment continues Sunday.

BAKER COUNTY CALENDAR

PAVILIONContinued ~om Page 1A

"Kari iBorgenl and theBaker City Herald had ahuge piece of making thishappen by supporting thePowder River Music Review,with all the musicians andcommittee members donat­ing their time to support theproject," said Lynette Perry, abandstand committee mem­ber since 2007.

She said these musicianswere invited to perform onthe Pavilion's opening day ingratitude for donating theirtime and talent during thepast years.

The Sept. 6 concert willbe the final of the season forPowder River Music Review.

A multi-use pavilionMembers of the bandstand

committee envision much

— Dave Hunsaker,chairman, Baker CityBandstand committee

more than concerts at thenew pavilion — Dave Hunsa­ker, committee chair, says itcan be used for recitals, plays,community presentations, re­unions, weddings and more.

"This project, althoughlong in coming to frtntion,has resulted in our commu­nity having one of the mostbeautiful and functionalperformance venues in theNorthwest," Hunsaker said."Not many communities ofour size have anything ap­proaching the pavilion."H e said support of the

project came from "hundredsof supportive people, busi­

"Not many communities

of our size have anythingapproaching the pavilion."

nesses, city government,organizations and founda­tions that hold our area nearto their hearts."

Plaques and bricks of vari­ous sizes were incorporatedinto the pavilion design torecognize donors.

Those who gave $10,000include Ash Grove Cement,Michael and Linda Wooters,Pease Family FoundationiShirley Aydelott Dodsonand her sister, Janet AydelottPease), Al Durgan and family,Triple C Redi-Mix, NaturalStructures, Sid Johnson &Co. and LA Rose Architect.

Donors of $20,000 or more

tion, Ford Family Founda­tion, Baker City Heraldand Baker City BandstandCommittee.

Twenty-seven individualfamilies donated $1 000

About 315 commemora­

Barbara GreenFormer North Powderresident,1931-2015

Barbara Rosalie Pat­terson Green, 83, of SaltLake City, a former NorthPowder resident, died Aug.15, 2015, at Murray, Utah.

Her funeraland intermenttook place onAug. 22 atSandy, Utah.

Barbara wasBarbara bo rn on Aug.Green 25 , 1931, at

Clinton, Utah,to Andrew and Erma Simp­son Patterson. She marriedElden L. Green on July 3,1950, at Reno, Nevada.

Barbara was the defini­tion of beauty, both insideand out, family memberssatd.

"Her soul was gentle andkind, her heart was filledwith love and her spirit wasstrong and feisty enoughto guide her through hermany trials," they said.

She was a phenomenalseamstress and amazinglyresourceful. She used her

skills and her selfless loveto create a beautiful life forher family.

She left this life the wayshe lived it, taking care ofher family. She slept quietlygiving time for her lovedones to say goodbye. Shewas surrounded by herfamily as she left this worldwith peace and grace.

Survivors include herfive children, Toni iRaylWhitney, Gregory iKarielGreen, Gail iHowardl Mat­thews, Gary Green and LisaGreen; 17 grandchildrenand 31 great-grandchildren;six sisters, Velma Last ofPilot Rock, MarDean Childof Boise, Shanna Pattersonof Marshfield, Missouri,Sharon Horne of Salt LakeCity and Marilyn Pfeil andBernice McAlister of BakerCity; and one brother,Ralph Patterson of Union.

She was preceded indeath by her husband; agrandson; her parents; twosisters; and four brothers.

Online condolences forthe family can be left atwww.larkinmortuary.com

David McGuire Sr.Baker City, 1955-2015

David Leroy McGuire Sr.,

OBITUARIES

The enrollment of the 1,734 old-age beneficiaries inBaker County for Medical Insurance "Medicare" startedthis week, according to Vernon A. Welo, district managerof the La Grande Social Security office.

The first of141/2 million enrollment cards were mailedfrom Baltimore Wednesday and weekly mailings will bemade through November 5th. All beneficiaries on the rollsprior to September1 will receive one of these cards in themail.

Firefighters' fears about the potentially combustiblecombination of hordes of holiday weekend hunters andcampers scattered among tinder dry forests so far haveproved unfounded.Crews haven't found any new human-caused blazes in

Northeastern Oregon as of this morning, said Jerry Gar­rett, a dispatcher at the Northeast Oregon Interagency FireCenter in La Grande.

25 YEARS AGO

September 5, 1990

is the highest it has been in sixyears.The last time enrollment in District 5J was higher was at

the close of the 1982-83 school year, when 2,248 studentswere in class.

from the Baker City Herald

50 YEARS AGO

September 4, 1965from the Democrat-Herald

from the Democrat-Herald

10 YEARS AGO

September 5, 2005

TURNING BACK THE PAGES

Student enrollment in the Baker School District at 2,243

LES st:wAa

are the Leo Adler Founda­

60, of Baker City, died Aug.28, 2015, at St. AlphonsusMedical Center-Baker City.

There will bea celebration ofDavid's life at 4p.m. Tuesday atthe Baker ElksLodge, 1896Second St. David

David Leroy McG uirewas born onMarch 13, 1955, at M odesto,California, to Donald Mc­Guire and Ethel Wanzer. Hewas the second of seven chil­dren. David was raised in thePatterson and Modesto areasand attended Patterson HighSchool.

He married Nancy AnnSilva on May 26, 1972. Twoyears later they had theirson, David, followed bydaughters Chasity and Ca­rissa. During David's life heworked construction, roofingand welding.

David moved to BakerCity in 2011 to be near hischildren.

His love was being ableto get out and enjoy fish­ing, camping, being with hisfamily and gardening. Davidenjoyed a simple life, but lefthuge memories. He sharedthat the birth of his children

was "the best accomplish­ment of my life." During hisfight with cancer, he nevercomplained and was eagerto keep going. When asked"how are you?" he alwaysreplied "I'm doing good." Hewas always willing to lenda helping hand. He lovedanimals to a fault, includinga little rattlesnake that henursed to health.

Survivors include hischildren, David McGuire Jr.and his wife, Sandy, ChasityRexine and her husband,Kelly, and Carissa McGuire,all of Baker City; his broth­ers, Henry McGuire andAlfred, Albert and WilliamMonges; his sister, DebbieCortez; six grandchildrenand six great-grandchildren;and numerous nieces andnephews whom he adored.

He was preceded in deathby his parents and onebrother, Robert.

Memorial contribu­tions may be made to BestFriends of Baker Citythrough Tami's Pine ValleyFuneral Home & Crema­tion Services, P.O. Box 543,Halfway, OR 97834. Onlinecondolences may be made atwww.tamispinevalleyfuner­alhome.com

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 2015

tive bricks were purchased— this includes step bricks,pillar base bricks and theveterans' bricks.

'This project is a primeexample of our communityat its very best," Hunsakersaid."Cooperation, support,focus and coordination arethe keys to its success. Everyplayer at every time framewas critical.

'The bandstand commit­tee remains deeply thankfulfor the community's patientsupport and trust."

The current bandstandcommittee includes Hun­saker, Marv Sundeanivice chair), Lynette Perryitreasurer/Soroptimist rep­resentativel, Joyce BadgleyHunsaker isecretary/grantwriter), Cindy Endicottiboard officerl and Joy Ber­ryhill ipast board officerl.

ONE YEAR AGOfrom the Baker City Herald

September 3, 2014 NEWS OF RECORDWhen Alice Covey realized she was lost in the Wal­lowa Mountains, she worried more about her family thanherself.

"I didn't want my family to worry," said Covey, the65-year-old Halfway woman who endured temperaturesin the 30s Monday night before searchers found her about8:30 a.m. Tuesday.

Covey was hungry and thirsty, but otherwise healthyand happy.

Although ecstatic would better describe her emotionwhen she saw an Oregon State Police plane flying over­headTuesday morning.

MEGABUCKS, Sept. 27 — 12 — 21 — 25 — 28 — 41Next jackpot: $1.8 million

POWERBALL, Sept. 217 — 22 — 30 — 46 — 56 PB 16Next jackpot: $133 million

WIN FOR LIFE, Sept. 23 — 22 — 43 — 68

OREGON LOTTERYPICK 4, Sept. 3• 1 p.m.: 1 — 6 — 6 — 3• 4pm.:8 — 9 — 5 — 3• 7 p.m.: 4 — 4 — 1 — 2• 10 p.m.: 3 — 9 — 6 — 4

LUCKY LINES, Sept. 31-5-10-14-20-22-26-30Next jackpot: $59,000

SUPREME

<32>5

<42>5

35$95MOUNTAIN RYDER XT

GAS SHO(KS

MOUNTAIN RYDER II

LT

THE TRANSPORTERREFUELED PG-13Formerspeaal-ops mercenary encounters a femmefarale look>ng

FRI-SUN: (4 20) MON: (4 20) 7 20TUES-THURS 7 20

FUNERAL PENDINGSam Cannon: Open bar to

celebrate the life of Sam Can­non, Saturday, Sept. 12, 1 p.m.to whenever, at the Veterans ofForeign Wars Club, 2005ValleyAve. Everyone is invited to comeand have a few drinks in Sam'shonor.

Elaine Trimble: Memorialservice, 11 a.m. Wednesday,Sept. 30, at the Baker City Chris­

for revenge aga>nsr a snsrer Russ>an k>ngp>n.

STRAIGHT OUTTACOMPTON R

Hop culrure w>It the(r muts and tales about hfe >n the hood.

No ESCAPE R

The grovp Nwt ymerges from the mean streets of compron >nLos Angeles, Cal>rorn>a, >n the m>d-1 980s and revolutonees H>p

FRI-SUN: (4 00) MON: (4 00) 7 307 30 TUES-THURS 6 30

R 4•

SENIOR MENUSBaker City's Public Arts

Commission will meetTuesday, Sept. 8, at 5:30 p.m.in council chambers at CityHall, 1655 First St.

tian Church, 675 Highway 7. Pas­tor Lynn Shumway of Herefordwill officiate.

POLICE LOGBaker City PoliceCONTEMPT OF COURT

(Baker County Justice Courtwarrant): Jason LeeTroyer,39,of 2610 Myrtle St., 12:47 p.m.Wednesday, at his home; citedand released.CONTEMPT OF COURT

(Baker County Justice Courtwarrant): Nickolos Jay Clayborn,23, of 2625 Madison St., 3:05a.m. Thursday, on BroadwayStreet near 10th Street; cited andreleased.

CRIMINALTRESPASSING 11,POSSESSION OF METHAM­PHETAMINE and WALLOWACOUNTYWARRANT: WilliamGabriel Rogers,35, of Baker

PlihliCaitm COmmiSSiOnmeetS

• MONDAY: Closed in observance of Labor Day.• TUESDAY: Cheeseburgers with trimmings, potatowedges, mixed vegetables, coleslaw, cheesecake

Public luncheon at the Senior Center, 2810 Cedar St., 11:30a.m. to 12:30 p.m.; $4 donation (60 and older), $6.25 forthose under 60.

In ther new overseas home, an Amencan fam>ly soon f>nds

FRI-SUN: (4 10) MON: (4 10) 7 10TUES-THURS 7 10

'No Tightwad Tuesday ( )Bargain Matinee

Agenda items include theLeo Adler Memorial Park­way extension, vinyl wrapprojects and the city's artsmaster plan.

themselves caught(n the m>ddle of a coup.

City, 11:48 a.m. Thursday at theEldorado Inn, 695 Campbell St;jailed.

POSSESSION OF FENTANYL(a prescription painkiller):Dustine Lynn Dougherty,46,of 1442 Sixth St., 11:48 a.m.Thursday, at the Eldorado Inn,695 Campbell Street; jailed.

CRIMINALTRESPASSING 11:Harvey Franklin Spivey, 60, of3255 10th St., 11:48 a.m. Thurs­day at the Eldorado Inn, 695Campbell St.; jailed and laterreleased on bail.

Baker County Sheriff'sOffice

FAILURETO ABIDE BY CON­DITIONS OF DUII DIVERSION(Baker Count Circuit Court war­rant): Shawna Kay Giddens,37,of 2765 Myrtle St., Apartment C,3:05 p.m. at the sheriff's office;jailed and later released.

OPENDOOR

mM BAKER CITT k~CARPET EXPRESS

Telephone: 541-523-3673Fax: 541-523-6426

1915 First St.

7:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.

Kari Borgen, [email protected]

Jayson Jacoby, [email protected]

Advertising [email protected]

Classified [email protected]

Circulation [email protected]

CONTACT THE HERALD

Open Monday through Friday

®uket Cftg%eralbServing Baker County since 1870

Published Mondays,Wednesdays andFndaysexcept Chnstmas Day ty theBaker publishing Co., a part of Westerncommunica0ons Inc., at 1915 9rst st.(po. Box 807), Baker city, QR 97814.

Subscnpson rates per month are:by carner $775; by rural route $8.75;by mail $12.50. stopped account balancesless than $1 will be refunded on request.Postmaster: Send address changes to

the Baker City Herald, pO. Box807, BakerCity, OR 97814.

ISS N-8756-6419

copynght © 2015

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Rriodicals Postage Paidat Baker City, Oregon 97814

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Page 3: Baker City Herald Daily Paper 09-04-15

BAKER CITY HERALD — 3AFRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 2015

ENGAGEMENT LOCAL BRIEFINGATllclass Sept2$

COUNTY

Levi Bunch and AmandaKing of Durkee, along withtheir families, have an­nounced their engagementand invite people to attendtheir wedding on Sept. 12,2015, at 4 p.m. in the Com­munity Hall at Durkee.

There will be a dinnerreception afterward.

Continued from Page 1ABennett reiterated that he

wasn't criticizing the plan'stheme, but rather its details.He said the wording isn'tconsistent — for example,some sections refer to "BakerCounty" and others to "we."

"It doesn't meet the stan­dards that we as a countyrequire of our departments,"Bennett said."So, it justneeds some refinements."

Commission ChairmanBill Harvey said the plandoes not have to be a legaldocument to hold up in court.

'This is policy and proce­dure," he said."It's a workingplan to work with federalagencies."

Harvey asked Bennett ifhe could put his suggestionsin written form so Harveycould present them to theNRAC.

Bennett said it would bem ore appropriate to have thedocument sent electronicallyso he and Commissioner TimKerns could use the"trackchanges" feature.

i"Track changes" is a wordprocessing tool that showsthe editing changes made bydifferent contributors to adocument while retaining theoriginal text.)

''We can see what changesTim suggests iandl whatchanges I suggest," Bennettsaid."It's like all plans­when you have a variety offolks writing something, youhave to bring it in togetherand thenyoucanputitin aclear and concise manner."

Harvey said the plan wasnever intended to have asingle form, but is designedto be edited in the future.

Bennett said the editing herecommends would not takea great deal of tim e.

Harvey disagreed."Actually, sir, it does take

a great deal of time to bring20 people together to do this

King — Bunch

Amanda King andLevi Bunch

"Why (do) we need to continue to try todrag this thing out even more so when

allyou have do is adopt a plan thatisworkable — which thisis — at thenext regularly scheduled meeting."— Bill Harvey, Baker County Commission Chairman

kind of work," Harvey said.The NRAC has 20 mem­

bers.Kerns said he had read the

document and would not voteto approve it at the Sept. 16meeting unless several itemswere corrected.

He said he would like tosee the section regardingwater resources completed.

Harvey explained why thatsection wasn't finished.

"So that everybody hereunderstands what we wentthrough, we tabled the waterissues so iBaker CountyPlanning Director) Mrs.iHollyl Kerns could workon that at her timetable," hesaid."She has not yet broughtanything back to us to discussat the NRAC committee."

Harvey said he and theNRAC agreed with TimKerns that there needs tobe something in the planconcerning water resourcesand that it would be adoptedwhen it was brought forwardand the committee discussedit fully and then present it toall of the commissioners.

''Why idol we need tocontinue to try to drag thisthing out even more so whenall you have to do is adopta plan that is workable­which this is — at the nextregularly scheduled meeting,"he said.

Harvey said the plan couldthen be edited at a futuremeeting.

Ramona Creighton saidshe appreciates that thecommissioners have differentviews about the plan, but sheurged them to work together.

"Part of the problem is youguys allowed way too many

people on the NRAC com­mittee," said Creighton, whois not a committee member.'That is hard ... To get a clearview of what you're doing,it's just constant chaos ... Itwas like a zoo. I was embar­rassed."

Ed Hardt, who's not a com­mittee member, urged com­m issioners to adopt the planas soon as possible so thecounty can start coordinatingwith federal agencies."It doesn't have to be that

precise," H ardt said."I don'tthink it's that big of a deal.I think we're wasting time.There's a thousand thingsthat got to be done throughcoordination."

Bennett didn't disagree,but he reiterated his conten­tion that the plan needs somebasic editing.

"I can tell what the intentis. That's really my point, notthat we change the content,"he said,"It's just clearing upthe language ... The goal isto make it clear and concise.W e've got all the facts inthere — now we just need todo some work on it."

Tork Ballard said he can'tunderstand the need to delayapproval of the plan.

"It bafIIes me," Ballardsaid."From what I under­stand, it was a unanimous

The Baker CountySherifFs Offrce will conductATV training for youthages 6 to 15 on Sept. 26starting at 9 a.m . at theVirtue Flat area about sixmiles east of Baker City offRuckles Creek Road.

This training is requiredfor youth seeking a permitto ride ATVs on publicland.

The training will beconducted by Deputy AdamRobb.

Students must have

decision to recommend thatyou go ahead with this."

Ballard said he talkedwith Boise attorney FredKelly Grant, who works withcounties across the West touse the coordination strategy,and Grant told him BakerCounty's plan was the best hehadread.

Bennett said he isn't fryingto stall.

"It's kind oflike your son's

teacher and they send a pa­per back and say Why don'tyou dress it up a little bit,' "Bennett said."That's reallywhat I'm looking at."

Several people who at­tended Wednesday's meetingurged commissioners to adoptthe plan at the Sept. 16 meet­ing and make the changesBennett proposes later.

Lorrie Harvey, who is BillHarvey's wife, said AndyRieber, a public lands consul­tant the county hired to helpdraft the natural resourcesplan, has reviewed the draftand contributed much of itscontent.

"It seems like it would bea pretty good document justbecause of that," said LorrieHarvey, who's not a commit­tee member.

Tim Kerns said he wouldnot vote for the plan if theNRAC didn't consider hisinput and suggestions.

Bill Harvey said the com­mittee would consider Kerns'suggestions and that heshould present them to thecommittee.

their own ATV. Rider fitinspections will be donebefore the class, and riderswho don't fit their ATVwon't be allowed to partici­pate.

Registration is onlineat oregonatvsafetycom.There is a fee of $25. This isnot a fee generated by theSherifFs Offrce.

More information aboutthe class is available bycalling Robb at 541-523­6415 or by email at arobb@bakersheriff org.

See County I Page 6A

Clear Creek Barn LLC of Richland is a new member

Utah lawmaker to discuss states' rightsKen Ivory, an attorney and Utah state representative,

will be in Baker City next week for a public meeting and aseminar on the issue of potentially transferring managingof public lands from the federal to the state government.

Ivory has been a legislator since 2010 and is also presi­dent ofAmerican Lands Council.

ALC is a nonprofit organization dedicated to the educa­tion oflegislators and community leaders about state'srights and their jurisdictional rights and duties to manageand protect public lands.

Ivory will be available for a meet and greet in the Com­mission Chambers at the Baker County Courthouse, 1995Third St., on Friday, Sept. 11, from 7:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.The event is open to the public.

The educational seminar on states'rights and the pub­lic lands issue will be Saturday, Sept. 12, at the Sunridge.This free seminar will start at 10 a.m. and conclude atabout 4:30 p.m. Anyone who wants to attend this seminarmust pre-register by calling Suzan Ellis Jones at 541-519­5035 by noon on Sept. 11. Seating is limited. Ivory's visitto Baker is sponsored by the Baker County RepublicanParty.

Two free Medicare seminars scheduledTwo free seminars about Medicare are planned in

Baker City this month.• Wednesday, Sept. 9, from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. at the

library, 2400 Resort St.To reserve a seat, call 1-800-722-4134, or em ail shiba.

[email protected] will include how to enroll in Medicare and what

options are available.• Thursday, Sept. 10, from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. at the Senior

Center, 2810 Cedar St.This event is hosted by the Baker County Long Term

Care Coordination Team.

New sermon series at Baker MethodistStarting Sunday, Sept. 13, Pastor Lisa Payton will start

a new sermon series relating to the Lord's Prayer.Also, small groups will be formed to study the book

"Listen: Praying In A Noisy World." The groups will startin October and meet for six weeks.

Each Monday at 1 p.m. the Comfort Creators meet atthe church, 1919 Second St., to plan for the annual fallbazaar, set for Oct. 3.

Tuesday Activity Club will resume Oct. 6 at the church.The afterschool program, led by Sally Farmer, is for chil­dren ages 5 to 12 and includes adult-supervised games,snacks and Scripture.

Lutheran Church returns to fall scheduleFirst Lutheran Church will return to its fall schedule

Sunday.The Sept. 6 service will begin at 11 a.m. at the church

at 1734 Third St. Pastor Rick Capezza of Boise willpreach and Holy Communion will be celebrated.

Angus Association recognizes locals

of the American Angus Association, and Lori Thomas ofBaker City has been elected as a delegate to the Associa­tion's 132nd annual convention set for Nov. 5 at OverlandPark, Kansas.

The American Angus Association, with nearly 25,000active adult and junior members, is the largest beefbreedassociation in the world.

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• 0 • • 0 • • 0 •

Page 4: Baker City Herald Daily Paper 09-04-15

4A FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 2015Baker City, Oregon

aA~ERoiv

— / j - j /Serving Baker County since 1870

Write a [email protected]

EDITORIAL

urvivin

The only statement about wildfires we can makewith confidence is that they're unpredictable.

Fires, in fact, have quite a lot in common withtornadoes. Both phenomena are dangerous and it'salmost impossible to know where they will go.

But fire is not a complete mystery, of course.We know it needs oxygen, heat and fuel to live.We can't do much about the first two ingredients.

But we have some control over the amount of fuel.And one of the most valuable lessons from the

Cornet/Windy Ridge fire, the 104,000-acre lightning­sparked blaze that started Aug. 10 and is the biggestwildfire in Baker County history, is that people wholive in rural areas where wildfires are more likely,can take relatively simple measures to increase theodds their homes will survive a blaze.

Stices Gulch, the forested draw south of BakerCity that's home to about 15 families, for about twodecades has been the county's case study, as it were,for the concept known as "defensible space."

The idea is that people who live in areas surround­ed by fire-prone forests — and Stices Gulch certainlyqualifies — can reduce the risk to their homes byminimizing the amount of readily combustible fuelthat's close by. This typically includes such things as

trimming tree branches that overhang the roof, rak­ing pine needles and planting (and watering) grassor replacing shrubs with fireproof materials such asgravel.

Many Stices Gulch properties epitomized the de­fensible space concept. Almost all of the homes werestill standing aker the Cornet fire went through thegulch.

Fire experts say this was not a coincidence. Thedamage, as bad as it was, probably would have been

much worse had property owners declined to employdefensible space tactics.

Stices Gulch is not unique in Baker County.There are hundreds ofhomes, in places such as the

Sumpter Valley, the western edge of Baker Valley,and parts of Pine Valley near Halfway, in similarsituations. The Oregon Department of Forestry(541-523-5831) has ample information about how tocreate a defensible space. We hope property ownerstake advantage.

OnAug. 19 the Baker County Com­mission approved the draft 2015 NaturalResources Plan. The Natural ResourcesAdvisory Committee voted unanimouslythe night before to advise the Commissionto adopt the Plan as submitted. Itis withgreat anticipation that fmal adoption bythe Commission will occur on Sept. 16during the regular Commission meeting.Guided by the progressive leadership ofCommissioner Harvey, and supported byCommissioners Bennett and Kerns, this isa huge step forwanl for Baker County. ThePlan will allow our local government toenter into government-to-government dia­logue with state and federal agencies. Thisprocess is formally known as coordination.

What is Coordination?The"coordination process" as mandated

by Congress is a process by which localgovernment and federal agencies meetinorder to the"extent practicable" to reachconsistency between federal plans, policiesand actions and local plans. Oregon alsohas coordination written into its RevisedStatutes. In other words, Baker County'spolicies on natural resources use andaccess, as set forth in the 2015 Natural Re­sources Plan, will be brought to the tableat the beginrmg of the federal and stateplan, policy and action-taking pmcess.

How did we get here?Remember your high school history?

The Constitution empowers and guaran­tees the federal government to manage

qy~ph4

DONI BRULAND

three veryimportant areas ofpower inthe United States: the power to regulateinterstate commerce, the military andthe Federal Reserve. All other powers an.reserved to the states respectively, or tothe people, thmugh the 10thAmendmentwhich states,'The powers not delegated tothe United States by the Constitution, norpmhibited byit to the States, are reservedto the States respectively, or to the people."

Itis important to have a fundamentalunderstanding of the 10thAmendmentand the dual sovereignty that was re­served when the Constitutional conven­tion wmte the powers that were to begiven by the states and the people to thecentral government. It was never intendedby our founding fathers to be an all-encom­passing powerful national government.The power to provide for the public safety,health and welfare are historically leftto the level of government dosest to thepeople served.

And this makes sense. Local govern­mentis dependent on revenue fmm thetaxbase to provide for public safety, healthand welfare so must be involved in the de­velopment of plans and policies that affectthe human and natural envimnments andresources withinits jurisdiction.

In 2001 the Baker County Commissionadopted Ordinance 2001-01 stating theirintent to coordinate with federal agencies.

oun is rea to coor inateThe County's position was reamrmed in2009, when the commissioners passedResolution 2009-1020. Unfortunately, thecoordination process was never pursued bythe Commission at those times.

Since then, we, the people of BakerCounty, have had many of our forest andrange access roads dosed, are having ourlivelihoods threatened by the sage grouselisting and have lost our forestindustries.Miningis limited due to unwieldyregula­tions and lack of timeliness in processingpaperwork by the federal government.These events could have been, and canbe, prevented, or mitigated, through thecoordination process.

Our commissioners are now ready toengage the federal and state agenciesthrough the coordination process. The pm­cess is not to incite conflict, butrather tocreate resolutions through plan and policyconsistency. With the 2015 Baker CountyNatural Resources Plan in hand, the com­missioners can now step forward confi­dentlyin representing the multiple usersof natural resources in an even-handednegotiating manner in a government-to­government process.

Ifyou would like more information onthe 2015 Baker County Natural ResourcesPlan, the Natural Resources AdvisoryCommittee or on the Coordinating Pro­cess, you can contact me at [email protected].

Baker County Natural ResourcesAdvisoryCommittee.

Doni Bruland is the chairperson ofthe

eracentu, e r e oo outissti a e s o t

axes.

The fire lookout is one of thoserare analog anachronisms thatremain useful in the age of the app.

Vital, even.We have cameras in space that

can peer through the Earth's atmo­sphere and focus on a single tree.

We have airplanes that can scana million acres of forest for smoke ina couple hours.

Yet none of our wizardry hasmanaged to make obsolete theindividual sitting atop a mountain,binoculars in hand and surveyingthe land rather like a raptor wait­ing for a careless ground squirrel topeek from its hole.

The fire lookouts, as they havedone for more than a century, notonly are the first to report manyfires, but they sometimes even seethe lightning bolt that touched offthe blaze.

With the aid of a clever iand alsoantique) device called an Osbornefirefinder, the lookout can usuallypinpoint the spot for firefightingcrews a few minutes after the firsttendril wafts above the conifercanopy.

Handheld radios and cellphoneshave replaced the copper wire con­necting lookouts to ranger stations.

And forest rangers, with rareexceptions, go about their workwith four-wheelers and chain sawsrather than horses and double-bit

But the lookout's main duty hasnot changed in any appreciable way

• 0 •

since the turn of the gast) century.There aren't many lookout build­

ings left, to be sure, compared withtheir heyday around World WarII, when 1,451 of these diminu­tive structures capped summits inOregon and Washington.

I recently renewed my acquain­tance with Mount Ireland, theoldest and highest of the relativehandful oflookouts that remain inNortheastern Oregon, which onceboasted more than 100 of theseliteral eyes in the sky.

The current lookout atop the8,346-foot foot peak, which caps thewesternmost extension of the Elk­horns about nine miles northwest ofSumpter, isn't exactly ancient.

The metal-and-glass buildingdates to September 1957, whichmakes it only slightly older than,say, Sputnik. A helicopter — anda stout aircraft it must have been,commanded by an adventurouspilot — deposited the structure onthe peak's granitic summit.

This building replaced a woodenlookout.

By sheer coincidence I made theshort iabout seven miles round-trip)but steep i2,300-foot elevation gain)hike to Ireland's crest just one dayafter the 100th anniversary of a

JAYSONJACOBY

much more significant journey tothe top.

iAlso a much longer journey, I'msure, as the network of gravel roadssurely had not been scratched so farup the mountain's flanks in 1915.l

I shared the oxygen deprivationon the smoke-hazed morning ofAug. 29 with my wife, Lisa, and ourfriends, Meggan and Stuart Hills.

Back home that evening I com­pleted what's become a ritual when­ever I visit a lookout — I slid froma bookshelf iafter a few minutes offruitless searching) my dog-earedcopy of Ray Kresek's "Fire Lookoutsof Oregon and Washington."

The 220-page book, which so faras I can tell is long since out of printbut is available online, is the ulti­mate reference work about lookoutsin the two states.

But I recommend it to anyonewith more than a passing interestin Northwest history, even thosewho haven't climbed to a singlelookout, and don't intend to. Kresekcrammed his book with amusing,and occasionally tragic, anecdotes— the sorts of tales best told arounda campfire in the dark woods.

Anyway, I turned to Kresek'sdescription of Mount Ireland, whichtakes the whole of page 94 in myedition. About halfway down thepage Kresek writes about the visi­tors' log at Mount Ireland.

"Its original entry," he writes,"was August 28, 1915. On that daytwo iForest Service) employees,

Charles F. Groom and C.C Daven­port hiked up and established a'rag' camp at the top of the peak."

Kresek is silent on the matter butit seems to me likely that Groomand Davenport blazed their owntrail to the summit that day. I doubtat any rate that the Forest Service— a mere stripling of an agency atthe time, just a decade old — wouldhave earlier built a trail to a remotepeak for purely aesthetic reasons.

I wondered which route the pairused, and whether it was even moretaxing than the current trail.

There's no mystery, though, as towhy the Forest Service men pickedthe peak as a lookout. The view isexpansive, taking in not only thenearby Elkhorns but also most ofthe North Fork John Day countryto the north and west and extend­ing south into Harney and Malheurcounties.

No summit is higher, in fact,between the Elkhorns and theCascades.

The mountain, on that day a cen­tury ago when the rangers climbed,was named Bald Mountain, whichis generally accurate but not exactlyoriginal. Indeed Baker County hadat least one other Bald Mountainthen, the other being the lower, tree­less summit on the divide betweenthe Burnt and Powder rivers nearthe head of Denny Creek south ofBaker City.

iThe mountain is still bald butit's also black, temporarily, as the

Cornet fire scorched it last month.)On Jan. 25, 1917, the Oregon

Geographic Board petitioned thefederal government to rename thetaller Bald Mountain as IrelandMountain. The honoree was not theisland but a man — Henry Ireland,former supervisor of the WhitmanNational Forest, which includeshis namesake peak. Ireland diedMay 31, 1916. The U.S. GeographicBoard approved the change, and atsome point later the agency wentwith the current form, Mount Ire­land, rather than Ireland Mountain.

Name shifts notwithstanding,the peak's greatest attribute — theview — remains as it has been sinceIce Age glaciers ceased scouringthe cirque on its north flank, whereBaldy Lake lies today.

And every summer thunderheadspile up to the southwest, toweringover Dixie Butte and Vinegar Hilland Strawberry Mountain andthreatening to launch their incendi­ary missiles over the sun-driedforests.

And every summer a lone figurepeers through the heat haze, alertto trouble.

Mount Ireland's caretaker thepast six years is Andy Bayliss. He'sa nice guy and quite an accommo­dating host.

He'll even show you how to workthe firefinder. It's not compatiblewith smartphones.

Jayson Jacoby is editorof the Baker City Herald.

• 0 •• 0 •

Page 5: Baker City Herald Daily Paper 09-04-15

BAKER CITY HERALD — 5AFRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 2015

PINE-EAGLE VOLLEYBALL PREVIEWBAI(',ER VOLLEYBALL

u o sma eSositivesteSsin ossto mmett

ent team.

By Gerry Steelegsteele©bakercityherald.com

It was like night and dayfor the Baker volleyballteam Thursday againstEmmett.

Tuesday, the Bulldogsdidn't play well in losing toPendleton. On Thursday theBulldogs looked like a differ­

Baker still lost the non­league match 26-24, 25-19,16-25, 27-25 on the Bakerfloor.

But Baker coach WarrenWilson was pleased with theBulldogs' play.

aWe passed the ball welland our defense was phe­nomenal,"Wilson said.

aWe did have somecostly errors that gave awaypoints, but the girls playedhard all four sets.

'They played well inall facets of the game and

everybody contributed."Trailing 2-0, Baker began

Game 3 by taking a 6-1 lead.Emmett battled back to

take an 11-10 advantagebefore Baker pulled away.

Makenna Bachmanserved eight straight pointsto put Baker up 18-11.

Emmett answered to pullwithin four points four timesdown the stretch. But eachtime Baker responded.

Then, in Game 4, Bakertrailed 6-4 before Kaeli Fla­nagan served eight unan­swered points to give Bakera 12-6 lead.

Baker maintained a slimlead until Emmett rallied toknot the game at 23-23.

The teams then playedto ties at 24 and 25 beforeEmmett scored the final twopoints for the win.

The first game wassimilar in that Baker took

two.

away.

an early lead only to haveEmmett fight back.

The game was tied at20, 23 and 24 before theHuskies tallied the final twopoints.Game 2 was tied 14-14 be­

fore Emmett slowly pulled

Flanagan led Baker withseven kills. Summer Phillipsadded four, Jordan Rudolphtwo and Dani McCauley

Bachman added 11 as­sists and McCauley seven.

Baker swept the prelimi­nary matches, winning theJV2 match 25-15, 25-15, andthe JV match 25-10, 25-17.

Baker's next action isTuesday at Emmett.

The Baker JV and JV2teams were scheduled totravel to Payette Saturday,but that tournament wascanceled.

• R g L.

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7( jll:k

S. John Collins / Baker City Herald

Pine-Eagle's Sarah Cooley, left, poises for action as HannahTanaka returns a hit duringa Spartans practice.

College Football Season Kicks Off yartanslookto deinthemixin Id regonleagueUtesspsiliimrhmuoh'sdehIN

By Kareen CopelandAP Sports(A/r(ter

SALT LAKE CITY — Jim Harbaughwas swarmed by cameramen from the mo­ment he stepped off the bus at Rice-EcclesStadium. College football's newest rock starhad finally arrived to play a game aftereight months of hype.

And Utah was sick ofhearing about it.The Utes felt disrespected despite being

favored and spoiled Harbaugh's Michigancoaching debut with a smothering defense,beating the Wolverines 24-17 on Thursdaynight in the opener for both teams.

aWe beat Michigan for the third timein a row," Utah coach Kyle Whittinghamsaid."That's a heck of an accolade for ourprogram."

Harbaugh came as advertised — bluelong-sleeved shirt, blue cap with the block"M," khakis and lanyard with whistle at­tached. Unfortunately for Michigan fans,the team didn't look drastically differentthan the 2014 version. The quarterbackstruggled and the run game was nonexis­tent. That spelled trouble for the offense.

Harbaugh, the former Michigan quarter­back who returned to his alma mater eightmonths ago after leaving the NFL's SanFrancisco 49ers, faced many of the sameissues that plagued former coach BradyHoke.

Quarterback Jake Rudock beat out

Michigan running back Derrick Greenskips over the tackle attempt by Utah'sStevie Tu'ikolovatu Thursday at Rice­Eccles Stadium in Salt Lake City.

Shane Morris for the start and the Iowatransfer had a reputation for limitingturnovers. Rudock promptly threw threeagainst Utah, and finished 27 for 43 for279 yards and two touchdowns. Michiganwas held to 355 yards, gaining only 76 onthe ground. The Utes took a 24-10 lead onJustin Thomas' 55-yard interception returnfor a touchdown with 7:58 left in the fourthquarter.

Julian H. Gonzalez / Detroit Free Press

season.

TELEVISIONALLTIMES PDTFriday, Sept. 4

Baylor at SMU,4 p m (ESPN)Weber State at Oregon State, 5 p m (Pac 12)Seattle at Oakland, 7 p m (ROOTlWashington at Boise State, 7 15 p m (ESPN)

Stanford at Northwestern, 9 a m (ESPN)South Dakota State at Kansas, 9 a m (ROOTlMorgan State atAir Force, 12 30 p m (ROOTlBYU at Nebraska, 12 30 p m (ABC)Anzona Statevs TexasA6rM,4 p m (ESPN)Texas at Notre Dame, 4 30 p m (NBC)Seattle at Oakland, 6 p m (ROOTl

Sunday, Sept. 6

Saturday, Sept. 5

By Gerry Steelegsteele©bakercityherald.com

Pine-Eagle volleyball coach Jenny Gulickis looking for good things from the Spartansthis season.

"Our captains, Lacey Walker, Sarah Cooleyand Hannah Tanaka, have really stepped upto be leaders," Gulick said. "I think our teamwill be competitive this year even with los­ing three key seniors from last year's lineup."

Returning varsity members are seniorsWalker and Cooley, junior Tanaka andsophomore Trinity Butner, a reserve last

Other returning players are junior Savan­na Hood and sophomore Kandice Holland.

Gulick said the Spartans also have severalnew players — seniors Ashley Taylor-Joseph

Tampa BayBaltimoreBoston

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Thursday's GamesChicagoWhite Sox 6, Minnesota 4Kansas City15, Detroit 7

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and Baylee Bell, sophomores Karry Davisand Kala Melchior, and freshman AubreyVannice.aWe have lots of talent and lots of poten­

tial," Gulick said."I'm looking forward to afun season with these girls."

Pine-Eagle opened its season Saturdaywith a home 25-16, 25-18, 25-23 nonleaguewin against Tri Valley, Idaho.

"Happy to start with a W," Gulick said."The girls played well for our first match.

Serving was good, which always helps a lot.They are still working out jelling as a teamwith a couple new girls in the lineup.

"All in all I was very happy with how theyplayed with a couple week's practice."

Pine-Eagle travels to Jordan Valley thisafternoon.

Seattle (FHernandez 15-81 at Oakland (Ctiavez7 131, 6 05 p mTexas (D Holland 2 11at 5 A Angels ((A/eaver6-101, 6 05 p m

NAllONAL LEAGUEEast Division

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Arkansas Pine Bluff at South Caro(ina State,

12 30 p m (ESPN)Seattle at Oakland, 1 p m (ROOTl

By Jon KrawczynskiAP Sports(A/r(ter

MINNEAPOLIS­Longtime fiiends TCUcoach Gary Patterson andMinnesota coach JerryKill met at midfield afteranother tough game andshook hands.

"He said, We're nevergoing to play each otheragain,"' Kill said."I said,'That's right."'

The second-rankedHorned Frogs enter thisseason with national cham­pionship aspirations, and

No.2ICUholdsoNGoiIhersthe Golden Gophers showedthem just how difficult thatpursuit is going to be.

Trevone Boykin threw for246 yards and a touchdownand ran for 92 yards andanother score to help theHorned Frogs outlast Min­nesota 23-17 on Thursdaynight.

Boykin started his Heis­man push by completing26 of 42 passes. But he alsothrew an interception andthe Horned Frogs had a dif­ficult time getting their fre­netic offense rolling against

Minnesota's determineddefense. The 23 points weretheir fewest scored sinceNov. 9, 2013, in a 21-17 vic­tory over Iowa State.

"If you had your perfectballgame so everybodylearns a lesson, this wouldbe it," Patterson said."Be­cause we found out it's notgoing to be easy."

Jaden Oberkrom madethree field goals, includinga 53-yarder, and Josh Doct­son had eight catches for 74yards and a touchdown forTCU

EASTUConn 20, t/i((anova 15

SOUTH

COLLEGE FOOTBALLThursday's Games

Duke 37, Tulane 7FIU 15, UCF 14Georgia Tech 69, Alcorn St 6South Carolina 17, North Caro(ina 13

Oklahoma St 24, Cent Michigan 13TCU 23, Minnesota 17

MIDWEST

Anzona 42, UTSA 32Fresno St 34, Abilene Christian 13

Montana St 45, Fort Lewis 14Nevada 31, UC Davis 17Ohio 45, Idaho 28

San Jose St 43, New Hampshire 13Utah 24, Michigan 17Utah St 12, S Utah 9

MAJOR LEAGUESAMERICAN LEAGUE

FAR WEST

East DivisionW L Pet76 57 57174 58 561

GB

Tampa Bay (M Moore 1 31 at N YYankees(Eova(di 14 25 10 05 a mBaltimore (M Wnght 2 31 at Toronto (Pnoe 13-51,1007 a mPhiladelphia (Asher 0-11at Boston (Miley 10-101,105pmCleveland (Tom(in 3-11at Detroit (Simon 11 gl,4 08 p mChicagoWhite Sox (Oointana 7 101 at KansasCity (D Duffy 7 61, 4 10 p mMinnesota (E Santana 34/ at Houston (McCull­ers 5-51, 4 10 p m

Tampa Bay (Odonzzi 6 71 at N Y Yankees (Sevenno 2 25 4 05 p mBaltimore (U Jimenez 9gl at Toronto (Hutohison13-25 4 07 p mCleveland (Kluher 8-131 at Detroit (Lohstein 3-51,4 08 p mPhiladelphia (Morgan 5ztt at Boston (J Kelly 861,4 10 p mChicagowhite Sox(Joh Danks 6-12) at KansasCity (Medlen 3-01, 5 10 p mMinnesota (Pelfrey 6-81 at Houston (McHugh14 71, 5 10 p mSeattle (Olmos 1 01 at Oakland (Brooks 1 11,705pmTexas (M Perez 2 31 at 5 A Angels (Riohards12 101, 7 05 p m

Today's GamesAlll tmes PDT

Saturday's Games

Washington 15, Atlanta 1Milwaukee 5, Pittsburgh 3Colorado 11, San Franosco 3San Diego 10, 5 A Dodgers 7

Today's GamesAllltmes PDT

West DivisionW L Pct

Los Angeles 75 58 564San Franosoo 69 65 515Anzona 65 69 485San Diego 6 5 69 485Colorado 55 78 414

Thursday's Games

Anzona (God(ey 4 01 at Chicago Cuhs (Lester8-101, 11 20 a mAtlanta (Teheran 9 71 atWashington (Roark 4vtk405pmMilwaukee (Garza 6-14) at Cinonnati (Sampson2 25 4 10 p mN Y Mets (deGrom 12 71 at Miami (Koeh(er8-131, 4 10 p mPhiladelphia (Morgan 54/ at Boston (J Kelly 8-61,4 10 p mPittsburgh (Happ 3-11at St Louis (C Martinez13-61, 5 15 p mSan Franosoo (Heston 11 81 at Colorado (J De LaRosa 8-61, 5 40 p m5 A Dodgers (Bolsinger 5-31 at San Diego(Shields 10-61, 7 10 p m

GB

6'/z10'/z10'/z20

TorontoNevvyork

a ouear s.

Saint AlphonsusJennifer Anderson, MD, PhD Alex Johnson, MD (208) 367-2328 HEART INSTITUTE

• 0 • • 0 • • 0 •

Page 6: Baker City Herald Daily Paper 09-04-15

6A — BAKER CITY HERALD LOCAL FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 2015

Union Pacific Replaces COUNTYRailroad Bridge In South Baker

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Installation of a new Union Pacific Railroad bridge over the Powder River should be completed today, according toHamilton Construction employee Eric Gutierrez. The project cost $2.3 million, according to Union Pacific.

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Continued ~om Page 8AHarvey said the committee will consider changes to the

plan when it meets next week. He expects the committeewill also vote to recommend the Commissioners adopt theplan Sept. 16.

In other business Wednesday, Commissioners:• Had a required public hearing regarding Secure Ru­

ral Schools Title 3 money from the federal government.County Fire Manager Gary Timm, along with Bennett,

said the money is used for community fire education, acommunity wildfire protection plan and reimbursementof emergency operations expenses that occur on nationalforests.

• Awarded a contract to low bidder Valley Metal andHeating to replace three heating/air conditioning units atthe jail for $16,840. The units are 25 years old and haverequired more frequent maintenance in recent years,according to Facilities Maintenance Foreman DanielMcQuisten.

• Approved an intergovernmental agreement for theBaker County SherifFs Office to provide law enforcementservices to Huntington. Huntington will pay the county$54,000 for the services this fiscal year.

• Approved an intergovernmental agreement withWallowa and Union counties to create a tri-countymicroenterprise assistance area, which will apply forCommunity Block Development Grants from the OregonBusiness Development Department.

• Approved the first reading of an ordinance that bansmarijuana businesses in the unincorporated areas ofBaker County. A similar ordinance was passed by theCommission in April.

However, with the passage and signing of HB 3400in July by Gov. Kate Brown, the Commission is takingadvantage of the new law that allows counties ior localjurisdictions within them) in which 55 percent or moreof the voters opposed Measure 91 in the November 2014election, to ban marijuana businesses.M easure 91, which passed statewide, legalized recre­

ational marijuana use by people 21 and older startingJuly 1.

The ordinance applies only to commercial marijuanaoperations. It will not ban personal recreational or medi­cal marijuana use as allowed by Oregon law.

The old train bridge was built and installed in 1905 infour, 60-foot sections. The sections will be recycled.

lst'.='

S. John Collins / Baker City Herald

Two cranes were used toremove the old wood­and-steel bridge andinstall a new concrete­and-steel span earlier thisweek. A 275-ton crane,the bigger of the twocranes, background right,weighs in at 560,000pounds, according Hamil­ton Construction employ­ee Eric Gutierrez.

Tuesday, September 15th at 1:30 p.m.

Join us for a celebration of National Assisted LivingWeek by enjoying music and an ice cream social.

Learn how we at Settler's Park nourish our

Ice Cream Social

mind, body and spirit.

i I / ~

• j 8

FISHContinued ~om Page 1A

In July ODFW temporarily canceled fish­ing regulations for Balm Creek Reservoir,including size and bag limits. The agency alsois allowing people to catch fish by hand or dipnet, the goal being to have anglers harvestas many fish as possible from the 112-acrereservoir before ODFW uses rotenone.

The temporary regulations will be in effectuntil 12:01 a.m. on Sept. 26, when Balm Creekwill close to all fishing. The reservoir willre-open Jan. 1, 2016, although ODFW won'tstock hatchery trout until the spring of 2016.

Following Balm Creek, ODFW also plans touse rotenone in the following places:

• Union County — Peach, Lugar andBoundary ponds

• Wallowa County — Kinney Lake• Umatilla County — Keyhole, Granite

Meadows, Goldfish, Yellowjacket and Windysprings ponds

Starting Thursday, ODFW temporarilycanceled fishing regulations for those ninewaters, as was done in July for Balm CreekReservoir. The temporary regulations for thosenine ponds and lakes also will be in place untilSept. 26, and all will re-open Jan. 1, 2016, withtrout-stocking planned for next spring.

ODFW plans to use rotenone at the nineponds and lakes during the first half of Octo­ber.

The problem is the same at each of the 10sites, said Kyle Bratcher, an assistant fishbiologist at ODFWs Enterprise office — il­legally introduced fish have proliferated andto varying degrees have displaced the rainbowtrout that the agency stocks for sport anglers.

The culprits at Balm Creek are smallmouthbass, which were first reported in the reservoirabout 1990, and black crappie, which startedshowing up around 2008, Bratcher said.Keeping the 10 waterbodies closed to

angling from Sept. 26 through the end of theyear"gives us some flexibility in scheduling

FERRIOLI than in the Portland area."There is a lot of stuff you

can do but $250,000 will,arguably, disappear intothe metro area," he said."Inany case, that money couldactually help people in placeswhere they have fewer op­tions."

Ferrioli said if the ultimatetest is which part of Oregonneeds investment the most,then rural Oregon is clearlythe place with the greatestneed.

"If you are going to gowhere the problems are thegreatest, where unemploy­ment is chronically highestand where it is more diKcultto find capital, then I thinkyou end up in rural Oregon,"he said.

Oregon state Rep. CliffBentz, the Ontario Repub­lican who also representsBaker County, said helpingsmall businesses is key to a

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SETTLER'S PARKa Senior Lifestyle community

ASSISTED LIVING I MEMORYCARE2895 17TH STREKT I BAKKR CITY. OR 97814

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Continued ~om Page 1AFerrioli said while the ef­

fort to help businesses estab­lished by underrepresentedgroups is an excellent idea,he also wonders why ruralOregon appears to be left outin this case.

"Start-ups are needed ev­erywhere in Oregon," he said."There are 35 other countiesthat have a need. Maybe weshould put $250,000 in ruralOregon for start-ups?

Ferrioli said the situationis frustrating.

"I might be a little cynical.The political power seems toreward itself at every oppor­tunity. Maybe Kate iGover­nor Brown) really doesn'tneed rural votes if she getsurban votes," he said.

Ferrioli said there is amore pressing need in ruralOregon for such initiatives

the treatments and provides ample time fordetoxification," said Tim Bailey, ODFW fishbiologist in La Grande.

The closure also is a precautionary mea­sure to keep the public from harvesting fishthat survive the rotenone treatment.

"Even though rotenone is not known to betoxic to humans, we take a conservative ap­proach in order to protect the public," Baileysald.

Rotenone is often used to remove undesir­able fish species because it is an affordableand effective treatment with little threat oflong-term environmental damage, accordingto a press release from ODFW

Rotenone has been approved as a fish toxi­cant by the Environmental Protection Agency.At the concentrations used to kill fish, rote­none is not toxic to humans, other mammalsor birds. It breaks down completely in theenvironment and will not be detectable withinweeks of treatment, according to ODFW.

The problem of illegally introduced fishout competing trout isn't limited to the 10relatively small ponds and lakes ODFW plansto poison this fall.

In Baker County the reservoir most knownfor this dilemma is Phillips, along the PowderRiver about 17 miles southwest of Baker City.Over the past two decades or so, illegally

introduced yellow perch have significantlyreduced the rainbow trout population in thereservoir.

Although ODFW used rotenone to ridPhillips of other unwanted fish more than 30years ago, the strategy isn't feasible today inpart due to the expense.

Phillips Reservoir when full covers about2,400 acres — more than 20 times the size ofBalm Creek Reservoir.Bratcher estimates the cost just for

rotenone to treat Phillips would approach$500,000.

At drought-depleted Balm Creek, by con­trast, the bill for rotenone will likely be lessthan $500, Bratcher said.

vibrant economic future. Hesaid that although he isn'tfamiliar with the investmentprogram in Portland, thereare an array of programsdesigned to help small busi­nesses get off the ground.''We have many different

programs that are designedto help start-ups," Bentz said."I would say anything we cando to try to understand thechallenges that are facingnew businesses we needtoaddress. Ifitisalackofcapital, we need to look atthat carefully and see whatwe can do," he said.

Ferrioli said initiatives likethe Portland-area start-upgrant endowment are a hardsell in places like EasternOregon.

''When information likethat goes to rural Oregon, Ithink it is no wonder ruralvoters are demoralized," hesald.

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Page 7: Baker City Herald Daily Paper 09-04-15

PUBLISHED BY THE LA GRANDE OBSERVER & THE BAKER CITY HERALD - SERVING WALLOWA,UNION & BAKER COUNTIES

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 2015 THE OBSERVER tk BAKER CITY HERALD — 1B

DEADLINES:LINE ADS:

Monday: noon FridayWednesday: noon TuesdayFriday: no on Thursday

2 days prior topublication date

DISPLAY ADS:

Baker City Herald: 541-523-3673 • www.bakercityherald.com • classifiedsObakercityherald.com • Fax: 541-523-6426The Observer: 541-963-3161 ® www.la randeobserver.com • classifiedsOlagrandeobserver.com • Fax: 541-963-3674

4© Eltt ® ss

I I I a

'ii( .i ,

For Sale By Owner

rwse~

PRICE REDUCED!I!

2002 PALM HARBOR

I I I Is

Solid ConstructionNew electrical upgrade!

1 block aom school

of Overeaters

110 - Self-HelpGrou Meetin sACCEPTANCE GROUP

Anonymous meetsTuesdays at 7pm.

United Methodist Churchon 1612 4th St. in the

library room in thebasement.

541-786-5535

Someone's

AL-ANONMonday at Noon

Presbytenan ChurchCorner of Washington 8t 4th

Great view of Baker City andEagle Mtns. One level, 1,200 sqft m/I, 2 bedroom, 1 bath, living

room, family room, gas fireplace,AC, electric heat, double car

garage, fenced backyard, closeto golf course. $140,000

541-519-8463

255 Hillcrest Triple Wide 2428 sq, ft, on 1.82 ACRES 3 bd, 2.5 ba,shower gp garden tub, walk-in closet, mud/laundry rmwith own deck. Big kitchen walk-in pantry, lg. Island gp allappliances, storage space, breakfast rm, family gp Livingrm, fire place, lots of windows looking at Mtns., vaultedceilings, large covered porch, landscaped, 2 car metalgarage gp 2 Bay RV metal building wdred, garden building,gp chicken area, fruit gp flowering pine trees, creek runs

through property. Please drive by gp pick-up a flyer.

CALL for showing today!

• 3 Berh 1 Bath• Lot: 0.26 acres• Built in 1923• Metal Roof• Ceiling Fans• Cable Ready

• 6'x 9' Walk-in Pantry • F3replace

• Cement Stucco exterior 740 3rd St. North Powder• Main Floor: 1,771 sq.ft. FOR SA L E BY OWNER• Detached Garage, 342 sq.ft, cattr 54l 523 22llti• D<ruble Pane/Smrm Windows (serious inquiries only)• Heating: Forced Air / Natural Gas• Flooring: Carpet, Hardwood, Concrete• Newly painted 6nished basement: 1,328 sq.fc Per sq.ftl• More details and hotos at: hnp://www.zittow.com

105 - Announce­ments

THE DEADLINE for

Classified Ad isprior to 12:00 p.m.ONE BUSINESSDAY BEFOREPUBLICATION.Publication Days:

Mondays,Wednesdays and

Baker City541-523-5851

AL-ANON

someone else'sdrinking?Sat., 9 a.m.

Northeast ORCompassion Center,

1250 Hughes Ln.Baker City

(541) 523-3431

Concerned about

69519 Haefer Ln. Cove

• Washer/Dryer hookups

• •

105 - Announce­ments

Fndays at 6:30 p.m.Senior Center

2810 Cedar St.Public is welcome

PINOCHLE

s I

105 - Announce­ments

r •

Tractors: " '07 John Deere 8530 MFWD Tractor " '04 John Deere 7920 MFWDTractor " '08 John Deere 6330 MFWD Tractor " '02 John Deere 6320 MFWDTractor " 'John Deere 7830 MFWD Tractor " '99 Ford NH 5635 Tractor " '95 JohnDeere 9500 Combine w/ Grain Header "Several other small tractorsHeavy Equipment: 86 Caterpillar D4H LPG Dozer" Cat 307 Excavator" Cat D7Dozer" Cat 12 Motor Grader" JD 710B Backhoe" Wacker Hydraulic pump &

Equipment: Highline XL-78 Rock Picker" JD 995 6 bottom on-land plow" (3)Oklahoma Pride offset discs different sizes" Wil-Rich beet topper"Trucks: 91 Kenworth T600 Dump Truck" 07 Peterbilt Tractor Truck" 94 Pete 378Tractor" 99 Freightliner" 97 American General Duce & 1/2Trailers: (2) 2008 Western 48x102 spread axle flatbeds" 99 Wilson 52x102Livestock Trailer" Interstate 40K lb. tilt deck" Pintle hitch equipment trailer"Several Camp Trailers" Titan 3 horse slant load" Cargo Trailers" Many utility

Irrigation: 2012 Valley 8000 Series 665' Center Pivot" Big Gun Tripods"Items of Interest: 74 MCI bus conversion to coach, NEAT" BBQ concessiontrailer Complete" 01 Freightliner conversion to coachOther I tems: Several unused s k id s t eer a t tachments" Polaris Ranger"Several Diesel generators" 2013 Kawasaki 4 Wheeler" (2) PTO drive manurespreaders"Shop Tools" Several riding lawn mowers, Commercial & Home"Unused steel shelving" Unused portable shelters" Tennant Street Sweeper"Many, many 3 point implements" Silt Fence Plow" Several Transits & Builderslevels" Lots of great shop equipment & tools" Livestock equipment" Many nice

PREGNANCYSUPPORT GROUP

Pre-pregnancy,

541-786-9755pregnancy, post-partum.

541-910-1684

Ceramics with Donna

Nail Care

Trailers

truck boxes

Hammer "Bobcat T300 Skid steer " Bobcat 763 Skid steer

105 - Announce­ments

SETTLER'S PARKACTIVITIES

1st gt 3rd FRIDAY(every month)

9:00 AM — Noon.(Prices from $3- $5)

MONDAY NIGHT

6:00 PM (FREE)

TUESDAY NIGHTSCraft Time 6:00 PM

(Sm.charge for matenals)

EVERY WEDNESDAYBible Study; 10:30 AMPublic Bingo; 1:30 PM( .25 cents per card)

EVERY MORNING(Monday — Fnday)Exercise Class;9:30AM (FREE)

CHECK YOUR AD ONTHE FIRST DAY OF

PUBLICATIONWe make every effort

t o a v o i d er r o r s .However mistakesdo s l i p t hr o ugh.Check your ads thefirst day of publica­tion gt please call usimmediately if youfind an error. North­east Oregon Classi­fieds will cheerfullymake your correc­t ion gt extend yourad 1 day.

Up to

placing a

THE

Fridays

AA

LAMINATION

17 1/2 inches wideany length

$1.00 per footiThe Observer is notresponsible for flaws

in material ormachine error)

OBSERVER1406 Fifth

• 541-963-3161

"As Bill Sees It"Satd 10AM - 11AM

2533 Church StBaker Valley

Church of Christ

110 - Self-HelpGroup Meetings

PARKINSON'S SupportGroup, open to thosewith Parkinson's/Care­gtver's. 3rd Mon. eachmonth. 4:30-5-:30pmat GRH, Solarium.

110 - Self-HelpGrou Meetin s

AA MEETING:

Open MeetingSunday; 5:30 — 6:30

Grove St Apts

AA MEETINGBeen There,

Done That GroupSun. — 5:30 — 6:30 PM

Grove Street Apts(Corner of Grove 8t D Sts)

Open, Non-SmokingWheelchair accessible

AA MEETINGS2614 N. 3rd Street

La Grande

MON, I/I/ED, FR/NOON-1 PM

TUESDAY7AM-8AM

TUE, I/I/ED, THU7PM-8PMSAT, SUN

10AM-11AM

La Grande

MON, I/I/ED, FR/NOON-1 PM

TUESDAY7AM-8AM

TUE, I/I/ED, THU7PM-8PMSAT, SUN

10AM-11AM

AA MEETINGS2614 N. 3rd Street

Corner of Grove gt D StsBaker City/NonsmokingWheel Chair Accessible

Baker City

Been There Done That

24 HOUR HOTLINE

www oregonaadistnct29 com

541-523-9845

BAKER COUNTYCancer Support GroupMeets 3rd Thursday of

every month at

Contact: 541-523-4242

CIRCLE OF FRIENDS(Forspouses w/spouses

who have long termterminal illnesses)

Meets 1st Monday ofevery month at St.

Lukes/EOMA©11:30 AM$5.00 Catered LunchMust RSVP for lunch

St. Lukes/EOMA © 7 PM

Support Group meeting2nd Friday of every mo.

11:30 am to 1:00 pm.1250 Hughes LaneBaker City Churchof the Nazarene

(In the Fellowship Hall)

ALZHEIMERS­DEMENTIA

AL-ANON-HELP FORfamilies gt friends of al­c ohol i cs . U n i o nCounty. 568 — 4856 or963-5772

AL-ANON. Att i tude ofGratitude. W e dnes­days, 12:15 — 1:30pm.Faith Lutheran Church.12th gt Gekeler, LaGrande.

AL-ANON. COVE ICeepComing Back. Mon­days, 7-8pm. CalvaryBaptist Church. 707Main, Cove.

ALCOHOLICSANONYMOUS

can help!

(541) 624-511 7

Serving Baker, Union,and Wallowa Counties

drinking a problem?

WALLOWA606 W Hwy 82

PH: 541-263-0208

7:Oop.m.-8:00 p.m.

120 - CommunityCalendar

110 - Self-HelpGrou Meetin s

SAFE HAVENAlzheimer/Dementia

Support Group2nd Friday ofevery month

Hall (Right wing) ofNazarene Church

1250 Hughes LaneBaker City

Caregivers

WALLOWA COUNTYAA Meeting List

Alcoholics AnonymousMonday, Wednesday,Friday, Saturday 7 p.m.Tuesday, Wednesday,

Thursday noon.Women onlyAA meeting

Wednesday 11a.m.,113 1/2 E Main St.,

Enterpnse, across fromCourthouse Gazebo

Hotline 541-624-5117

* Heavy Equipment * Machinery & Power Shop Tools * FarmEquipment * Tractors * Farm Implements * Vehicles & Trailers

Official Preview: Mon-Tues-Wed. Sept 14-15-16 • 9am to 5pm

For Pictures, Videos, Information,a complete list & TO BID visit:

Sunday — 2 pm — 4pmCatholic Church

Baker City

BINGOAL-ANON MEETING

Meeting times1st gt 3rd Wednesday

Evenings ©6:00 pmElgin Methodist Church

in Elgin.

160 - Lost & Found

LOST GREEN Wallet.Ca II 541-805-1 51 8

MISSING YOUR PET?

Baker City Animal Clinic

* Shop Tools * ATV's * RV's * Firearms

Open

PUBLIC BINGOCommunity Connection,2810 Cedar St., Baker.

Every MondayDoors open, 6:00 p.m.

Early bird game, 6:30 pmfollowed by reg. games.

All ages welcome!541-523-6591

7th and Birch NORTHEAST OREGONCLASSIFIEDS offersSelf Help gt SupportGroup A nn o u nce­ments at no charge.For Baker City call:J uli e — 541-523-3673For LaGrande call:Enca — 541-963-3161

NARACOTICSANONYMOUS

Goin' Straight Group

541-523-4242

Checkthe

541-523-3611

PLEASE CHECKBlue Mountain

Humane AssociationFacebook Page,

if you have a lost orfound pet.

You too can use thisAttention Getter.Ask howyou can getyour ad to stand out

like this!

Pickett Auction Service 208-455-1419+gg~tc ' Lot Lo cation: 20550 N Whittier Dr, Greenleaf, ID

<<'„"',>>> www.pickettauctions.comNORMAN HANSENESTATE AUGTION

SUNDAY SEPTEMBER 13, 2015Located: 2t/t miles West of Cambridge ID on Hpttty 71 lo 2982 Hpttty71, Cambridge ID 83610. Signs posted. Lots of off road parking

Sale starts11 AM/MT. Lunch Served.Terms: Cash or bankable check on sale day. No credit cards.

Auction preview date will be Friday Sept.11 from10AM to 5PM

VEHICLES2006 Dodge1500 pickup 4X4 quad cab Hemi V-8 auto trans,120K miles, 1992 Ford F-150 pickup 4X4 V-8 manual, 1970Ford F-350 pickup w/12' flatbed & racks,1966 Chevy singleaxle truck w/14' comb. bed, 1992 Mercury Capri convertibleTRACTORS1922 Cletrac model F, restored ¹590-3(3,1945 JD LA, restored¹10218, 1939 JD AR Orchard ¹257901, 1955 JD 70¹7021126, JD D on steel, JD MT ¹214(3(3, JD A w/¹5 sicklemower ¹(397922, JD unstyled A ¹4304(38, Earth Master w/3pthyd, restoredSTATIONARY ENGINES1926 JD model E 3hp ¹255578,1937 JD 1.5hp ¹343480, 1920Stover model K 1.5hp 525rpm ¹K134(334, 1912 Stover 2.5hp¹)II/4(3938, 1926 Stover 2hp 550rpm w/morter mixer¹KA179133, 1946 IHC LB 1.5hp 300rpm ¹10(3329, 1937 IHCLA w/Stover 100 Burr mill on trailer ¹LAB5382, 1937 IHC¹LAB5382, Novo 4hp, Novo ¹101(344, Wood Pecker 1.5hp,Sears & Roebuck model 417-2 2hp ¹TA2(3854(3, 1926 Alamo600rpm ¹111044, 1921 Economy 2hp 600rpm ¹TA2381(33SR,1933 Economy ¹15JK5704A, Sattley 1.5hp 550rpm ¹7(35(39,1918 United type A 2.5hp ¹204574, Wonder 5hp ¹142015, Fair­banks Morse15hp on steel wagon, Fairbanks Morse1.5hp, De­troit1.5hp 2 cycle cracked flywheel,1927 Fuller & Johnson 2hpmodel MC w/Wonder cement mixer ¹1(3(3312, Alpha DeLavaltype E 2.5hp 450rpm ¹15519, Ideal model R ¹301(32DRAG SAWSWade model SMH ¹1053(3, Wade model SK ¹(35185, Attowa¹859981, Large 1 man originated in MoscowGENERATORS & ENGINES2- Maytag generators, 5- Maytag engines 72, 92, 1 verticalWards & Sears engines, Kohlar generatorANTIQUES & COLLECTIBLESOrr cart w/track, Orr bucket, Line shaft w/pulleys for exhibit,Blacksmith wheel shrinker, forge w/bellows, pump jack w/tub,pump bale & bucket for demonstration, metal signs, creamseparator, foot burner grinder, collection oi red goose shoesfrom 1920-1960, steam whistle, granite ware & dishes, dollbeds & buggy's, a large collection oi steel & cast iron repro­duction toys, JD, IH & Caterpillar, 3- JD pedal tractors, FireTruck pedalcar

Maytag washing machine & double wringer tubAlso selling all types oi Antique Horse drawn & Farm equip­ment; lots more antiques & collectibles; Furniture & muchmore. Please check our website for pictures & a full listing.AUCTIONEERS NOTE: This is a very unique auction oi wellcared for antiques & collectibles oi museum quality. This is justa partial listing many more items will be sold. )II/e will load outSale day & Monday Sept. 14th. This will be a Iun auction, don'Imiss it.

For colored pictures of this and upcomingauctions, please see our website.

180 - Personals

MEET SINGLES rightnow! No paid opera­tors, Iust real peoplel ike y o u . Bro w s egreetings, exchangemessages and con­nect Itve. Try it f ree.C a I I n ow :877-955-5505. (PNDC)

210 - Help Wanted­Baker Co.

FULL-TIME CNAn eeded at H eart ' nHome Hospice. $500sign-on bonus. Greattraining, pay and bene­fits. For more informa­t ion and t o ap p l y .www. ohos ice.com

11:45 AM in Fellowship

Show it over1 00,000 times

with ourHomeSellerSpecial

1. Full color Real Estate picture adStart your campaign with a ful l-color 2x4picture ad in the Friday Baker City Heraldand The Observer Classirted Section.

2. Amonth of classified picture adsFive lines of copy plus a picture in 12 issuesof the Baker City Herald and the Observer Classirted Section

S. Four weeks of Euyers Eonus and Observer plus Classified AdsYour classirted ad automatically goes to non-subscribers and outlying areas of Bakerand Union Counties in the mail for one month in the Buyers Bonus or Observer PlusClassirted Section.

4. SO days of 24/7 online advert isingThat classirted picture ad will be there for online buyers when they're looking at www.northeastoregonclassirteds.com — and they look at over 50,000 page views a month.

Get moving. Call us today.artd rto refurtdsi f ctassified adis kitted 6efore ertd of schedute.

Home Seber Special priceis for rzdvertisirtg the same home, with rto copy chartges

ou,se~

and handicap parking available.

Everything sells as is where is.

Wheel Chair Accessible

UNION COUNTYI I fll t I flf AA Meeting

M t ct ,Mon. — Tues.

Episcopal ChurchBasement

21771st StreetBaker City

Thurs. gt Fn. — 8 PM

HELP

Meetings:

Corner of Grove gt D Sts

S un days; 2:45 — 3:45 P M

OVERCOMERSOUTREACHChnst based12 step group

2533 Church St541-523-7317

AA MEETING:Powder River Group

Mond 7 PM -8 PMWed.; 7 PM -8 PM

Fnd 7 PM - 8 PMGrove St. Apts.

Baker City, OpenNonsmoking

NEED TO TALK to anAA member one on

one? Callour24 HOUR HOTLINE

541-624-5117

www.ore onaadistnct29

day (Women's)

oi visit

.com

Baker City.

NARCOTICSANONYMOUS

LINE-1-800-766-3724

8:OOPM: Sunday, Mon­day, Tuesday, Wednes­day, Thursday, Fnday

Noon: Thursday6:OOPM: Monday,Tues­day, Wednesday, Thurs­

7:OOPM: Saturday

Rear Basement En­trance at 1501 0 Ave.

bakercityherald.comR R R R

lagrandeobserver.com Info.

NARCOTICSANONYMOUS:

Monday, Thursday, gtFnday at 8pm. EpiscopalChurch 2177 First St.,

ADMINISTRATIVEASSISTANT

Baker City office; M-F(schedule may vary).In this role, you willschedule meetings,

communicate with staffand other organizations,

manage documents,update database andperform additional

administrative assistantduties. Knowledge inMicrosoft Word andExcel is preferred.Provide exceptional

Compensation is DOE.To apply contact

Employment Office.

customer service.

C DL Tr u c k d r iv e r

Full-Time position at the

Sunday

BUSY MEDICALclinic seeking

(2) full time medicalassistants to loin ourteam based practice.

Apply on-line at~rl k

(54K PER YEAR)

n eeded. Our w o o dchip and lumber drtv­ers average 54IC annu­ally (.48 cent ave). Offweekends, paid vaca­tion, health insurance.For 3 5 ye a r s wehave serviced EasternOregon, Central Ore­gon, Southern Oregonand the Boise Valleyand you can Iive in anyof these locations. Wer un la te m ode lPetes and ICenworthsa ll 550 cats w ith 13speeds, our trailers arecurtain vans (no tarpsto deal w i th) 40'-23'doubles year aroundwork. We our lookingfor long term drtvers,our average employeehas worked for us forover 8 years. So if youare looking for a home,

caII 541.523.9202

dstetCsrtiiisd Public Aomutman

give us a

541-663-41 1 2

• 0 0 0 • 0 0 0 • 0 0 0

Page 8: Baker City Herald Daily Paper 09-04-15

2B — THE OBSERVER a BAKER CITY HERALD FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 2015

DEADLINES:LINE ADS:

Monday: noon FridayWednesday: noon TuesdayFriday: no on Thursday

DISPLAY ADS:2 days prior to

publication date

PUBLISHED BY THE LA GRANDE OBSERVER & THE BAKER CITY HERALD - SERVING WALLOWA, UNION & BAKER COUNTIES

R E lBaker City HeraId: 541-523-3673 e www.bakercityheraId.com • classifiedslbakercityheraId.com • Fax: 541-523-6426'The Observer: 541-963-3161 e www.la randeobserver.com • classifiedsllagrandeobserver.com • Fax: 541-963-3674 xg w '

210 - Help Wanted­Baker Co.

customer service

JOIN OL R TEAM!

Accounts Payable/Receivable Specialist

F/T; Mon — Fn.High school Diploma/

GED required.Expenence required;

degree preferred.

Treatment FacilitatorF/T Day/Swing shift at

our Baker HouseProgram. High school

diploma/GED required.

AdministrativeAssistant

Mon — Thurs.Orga nizationaI a nd

skills required.

F/T positions include:Excellent BenefitsPackage, Health 8tLife Ins., Vacation,Sick, Retirement 8tEducational Trainingwww.newdirectionsnw.org

ddougherty/N ndninc.org541-523-7400 for app.

P/T — 25 hrs/week.

BAKER SCHOOL DIS­TRICT 5J is currentlyaccepting applicationsfor a Girls Head Bas­ketball Coach at BakerH igh School. F o r acomplete descriptionand application of theposit io n go t owww.baker.k12.or.usor contact the employ­m ent d i v i s ion. Y o umay al so ca II541-524-2261 or emailnnemec©baker.k12.or.

QTew Directions"g$orthwest Inc.

us

maximum response.

SaveOnW!ndshields.com

43 N. 8th Elgin54f 437 2054

Whirlpool' and KitchenAid'

APPLIANCES

ELGINELECTRIC

BROKEN WINDSSIELD?$19 for $100 Toward YourWindshield Replacement orInsurance Deductible with

Free Mobile Service

Wash

- Free Delivery­

~~ BCK%2k

Oregon Awardsand Engraving

541-523-5070 • 541-519-8687Auto Detailing e Rv Dump station

www.paradisetruckwash.com

S00.320.535S

Placing an ad in classifiedis a very simple process.Just call the classifieddepartment and w e ' l lhelp you word your ad for

17171 Wingville LaneBaker City

QW'NMRK))K

ParadiseTruck S RV

We Wash Anything ot/ Wheels!Exit 304 off)-Sd • 24)0 Plum St.

Baker City, OR 978)4

[email protected] 1 9-1866541-403-0759

%9t)QXACfjE EO)dI CIOtfjiErS

Flre Flghters­Flrst RespondersFlre Victims...

Need Assistance with Clothing &Accessories? Call Now­

lt would be an honor to help.

FOR YOUR HEROISMBest prices in Northeastern Oregon

1431 Adams Ave.,La Grande

541-663-0724

or goto

us

Add BOLDINGor a BORDER!

It's a little extrathat gets

BIG results.

Have your adSTAND OUTfor as little as

$1 extra.

CONTRACTINGBpeciaizing nA Phases

Qf Construction andGarage Door nsta ation

®WRXP,))KQKaleidoscope

Child & Family Therapy

210 - Help Wanted­Baker Co.

BAKER SCHOOL DIS­TRICT 5J is currentlyaccepting letters of in­terest f rom commu­nity members to fulfillBoard Position ¹4 va­c ated b y Rich a r dMcl<im's resignation.This term wi l l expireJune 30, 2017. Inter­ested parties may pickup information for theposition at Bak erS chool D i s t r ic t 5 J ,2090 4th St . o r v is itour w eb s i te atwww.baker.k12.or.usLetters o f In t e restm ust be r e t u rn t oNorma Nemec at theDistrict Office no latert han September 7 ,2015. At 3:30 p.m. Ifyou have any ques­t i o l l s , c a I I541-524-2261.

BAKER SCHOOL DIS­TRICT 5J is currentlyaccepting applicationsfor an 18 hour a weekCustodian I at Brook­l yn Primary. F o r acomplete descriptionand application of theposit io n g o t owww.baker.k12.or.usor contact the employ­m ent d i v i s ion. Y o umay al so ca II541-524-2261 or emailnnemec©baker.k12.or.

HKLPATNACTATTNTIONTO YOUR AP!

All Breeds • No TranquilizersDog & CatBoarding

541-523-60SO

/:/:bg 1 BQ209

Tammie Clausel

On Site Sustness &

540 523 5424 . fax 541 523 5516

JIM STANDLEY541.7B6.5505

p.O. Box 470

All Around GeeksPC Repair-New Computers

(LaittoPs & PG's)

Residential Computer

infooallaroundgeeks.com

7609 Adams Ave., La Grande

Classes547-786-4763 • 547-786-2250

Licensed Clinical Social Worker1705 Main street suite 100

Baker City, OR 97814

DM 42C~023EQ

DQNNA's GRQQM SBQARD, LTD.

QmamSuik<~

Fine Quality Consignment Clothing

Embroidery by...

XRWODiM7

Blue MountainDesign

140517th SI. Baker Citywww.kanyid.com

541-663-0933

OR

SALES • SERVICE • INSTALLATION

GRLGG HII4RICHSLI4II4SL/RAI4cr AGLI4CY II40.GREGG Hl • RICHSEN, Agent1722 Campbell Street

Baker City, OR 97814-2148Bus (541) 523-7778

0X@7MM700XOAK HAVEN

Is t/ow offering

CCB//32022

KEV Q CiRMX

WOLFER'SMowing -N- MoreServicing La Grande, Cove, imi)ler & UnionLawns & Odd Jobs

971-241-7069

KEV Q C6EMX

Grass Kings

• Leaf Disposal• Yard Care• 1V!mming

541 962 0523

DOORS

THE DOOR GUY

D@@RI13~

MAID TO ORDER

Call Angie © 963-MAID

Caftef's Custom Cleaning

Bob Fager • 963-3701 • ccB.//272

DANFORTH CONSTRUCTIONWayne Dalton Garage DoorsSales • Installation • ServiceRick 963-0144 786-4440

RAYNOR GARAGE

Residential, Rental & Commercial CleaningServing Union County since 2006

Licensed and lnsuredShannon Carter, Owner541 910-0092RWMSN

STATE FARM

I:00-0:00 Ages 3-5

210 - Help Wanted­Baker Co.

BAKER COUNTY Paroleand Probation, a divi­s ion o f the Bak e rCounty Sheriff's Of­fice, is accepting appli­cations for the positionof Parole & ProbationC lerk o n Fri d a y ,A ugust 2 1, 2015through Friday, Sep­tember 11, 2015 at5pm. Salary for Parole& Probation Clerk be­gins at $2,496-$3,032,plus excellent bene­fits. For a d d i t ionalinformation, spec i f iccriteria for Parole &Probation Clerk andthe application, pleasego t o t he BakerCounty Sheriff's Officewebsite at:

www.bakershenff.org/career op.htm

http://www3.bakercouunty.org:8080/careers/public.lsp

Please submit applica­t ions ( m us t u s e aSheriff's Office appli­cation, resumes maybe attached, but an ap­plication is mandatory)to the Shenff's Officeor Parole and Proba­tioon Office,Attn: Lt. Will Benson. .

Baker Countyis anEqual Opportuni ty

Em ployer.

lsland City

IT IS UNLAWFUL (Sub­section 3, O RS659.040) for an em­ployer (domestic helpexcepted) or employ­ment agency to printor circulate or cause tobe pnnted or circulatedany statement, adver­tisement o r p u b l ica­t ion, or t o u s e a n yform of application foremployment o r tomake any inquiry inconnection with pro­spective employmentwhich expresses di­

Licensed S InsuredCommercial & Residential

Afternoon PreschoolTuesday, Wednesday, Thursday

Starting September 29th

54!-663-!528

Part Time

La Grande, OR

541-963-4174www.Valleyrealty.met

TABS, BROADSHEET,

Camera ready ar we can

Contact The Observer

WX9, MH75

VILLEY REILTY

http://sturdyrosephotography.com

Lifestyle photographyNatural — Personal — Meaningful

541-519-1150

XCWAXRDANFORTH

CONSTRUCTION

FULL COLOR

set up far yau.

963-3767

Continuous Guttem

Home LendingKevin Spencer

Mortgage Loan OfficerNMIS¹340) Ce 208-484-0085kevinspencer@umpquabankcomwww oreidahome oans com

visit your c oses( Umpqua Bank

Sturdy Rose

963-0144 (Office) orCell 786-4440 «a¹»oz

AW CONSTRUCTION, LLC

Over 30 years serving Union CountyComposition - Metal - Rat Roofs

70207 W. Ist Street Suite 2,

ME7i7RQALL OFFSET

COMMERCIALPRINTING

REAL ESTATEAND PROPERTYMANAGEMENT

NOW HIRING FOR A:

Circulation AssistantM-W-F; 1PM — 6PM

/Occasional fill-in days)

GeneralDescri tion of duties• Collects money from

newsstands,• Delivers papers when

needed,• Deliver special publica­

tions throughout BakerCounty,

• Assist w i t h pr o m o ­tions and events,

• Performs other dutiesas assigned.

Qualifications:HS diploma or equiva­

lent, reliable transpor­tation is a must, validOregon drivers license& valid auto insurance.Pre-Employment Drugtest is required

Physical Requirements:Sitting & driving. Work­

ing in the e lements,snow, sun wind & rain.In & out of a vehicle &must be able to lift upto 75 pounds.

Send Resume to:kbor en©bakercit herald com

ORPick up application at:1905 First St.Baker City, OR

210 - Help Wanted­Baker Co.

rectly or indirectly anylimitation, specificationor discrimination as torace, religion, color,sex, age or nat ionalongin or any intent tomake any such limita­t ion, specification ordiscrimination, unlessbased upon a b o nafide occupational quali­fication.

541-525-9522

CCB¹202271

ORFJjON SIGN CONPA!t!Y

541-786-8463CCB¹ 183649

PN- 7077A

24 Hour Towing

20 yrs of full service tree care

541 523 5327

Paul Soward Sales Consultant541-786-5751 541-963-2161

Saturday Service • Rental Cars2906 Island Ave., La Grande, OR

THE SEWING

Free estimateshazardous removals

pruning 8 stump grindingBrian 8 Jack Walker Arborlsts

LADY

LEGACY FORD

SIGNS OF ALL NNOSCHECK OUR WESSITE

ExEGUTIvE TREECARE, ING.

Sewlng:AteratidnMending Zippers

Custom Made C dthing

1609Tenth Bt. Baker City

A Certified Arborist

MICHAEL

eraphic DeaisnCNC plasma Metal cutting

Large Format Digital Printingvehiele Leuerine a Grmphies

oregonsigncompany.com g

210 - Help Wanted­Baker Co.

FULL TIME BenefittedTeacher A s s is tantsBaker City (38 hours aweek)

For information and ap­plication m a t e r ia ls,please refer to: East­ern Oregon Universityt ~4tt //

~d h d t tDeadline September 8,

2015 at 5:00 p.m.

For additional informa­tion contact:Eastern Oregon HeadStart DirectorEastern OregonUniversityOne University BlvdLa Grande, OR 97850Ph. 541-962-3506 orPh. 541-962-3409Fax 541-962-3794~ b O . d

Eastern Oregon Univer­sity is an AA/EOE em­ployer, committed toexcellence through di­versity.

220 - Help WantedUnion Co.

When responding toBlind Box Ads: Pleasebe sure when you ad­dress your resumes thatthe address is completewith all information re­quired, including theBlind Box Number. Thisis the only way we haveof making sure your re­sume gets to the properplace.

COVE SCHOOL Distnctis currently acceptingapplications for JuniorVarsity Boys Basket­ball Coach. Applica­tions can be accessedon the District web­slte.www.cove.k12.or.usPlease mail them to:Cove School PO Box68. Cove, O r e gon97824

resume:

WITHTHECLASSIFIEDS!

Sell your unwanted car,property and house­hold items more quick­ly and affordably withthe classifieds. Just callus today to place yourad and get ready tos tart count ing y o urcash. The Observer 541­963-3161. The BakerCity Herald 541-523­3673

220 - Help WantedUnion Co.

COMMUNITY CON ­NECTION Administra­tion Office is seeking aData Entry Clerk. Thisis a temporary posi­t ion, a p p rox . f ou rmonths duration, up to40 hours per week,$9.66 per hour. Goodc omputer sk i l ls r e ­quired. Complete Iobdescription and appli­cations are available atthe Oregon Employ­ment Department. Po­sition closes Septem­ber 4, 2015 at 5:00p.m. EOE.

EXTENSION 4-H SNACZProgram E d ucat ionProgram Assistant.Oregon State Univer­sity Extension Serviceis r ec ru i t ing f o r ahalf-time, fixed term,EPA 1 to support the4-H SNACZ researchp rolect t o eng a g eyouth in advocating forhealthy snacks in Un­ion County s choolsand food stores. To re­view posting and ap­ply, pl e a s e v i s ithttp://oregonstate.edu/Iobs. Apply to posting¹0015808. C l o s ingdate September 8 ,2015. OSU is anAA/EOE/Vets/D isa bI ed.

KIDS CLUB Child CareCenter is expandingservices in La Grande.In search of qualifiedteachers and teachersaides for a new Infantand Toddler Age Pro­gram. Up to 29 hoursper week, $11.48 perhour (teacher) $9.66per hour ( t eacher'sa ide). M us t mee tqualifications for Certi­fied Child Care Cen­ters Staff.

Job Description, qualifi­cations and appl ica­tions available at Ore­gon Employment De­partment and on-lineat www.ccno.org. Po­sition closes Septem­ber 11, 2015 at 12:00pm. EOE.

PART T I M E — Localmanufacturing com­pany seeking part-timeIanitonal and yard careperson. 15 hours perweek (5 hours per day/3 days per w e ek).Must be able to domoderate lifting, climbstairs, and work out­side. Janitorial respon­sibilities include main­taining clean office fa­cilities, bathrooms andbreak areas. Yard worki ncludes w ee d i ng ,mowing, winter s ide­walk care and generallawn care. Must beself-motivated and effi­c ient w i t h a s t r o ngwork ethic and atten­t ion to de tail . $9.50per hour. Please send

Blind Box ¹2435,c/o The Observer1406 Fifth St.,La Grande, OR 97850

PROBATION SERVICESCounselor, performscomplex and var iedduties involving spe­cialized knowledge ofhuman behavior, de­partmental functions,policies, proceduresand regulations; inter­acts with o f fenders,community partnersa nd o ff i c e staf f ;gather, review and re­port to officers or ap­propnate staff a vanetyof information pertain­ing to offenders andtheir supervision. Fullt ime p o s i t io n w ithbenefits. See full lobdescription for mo redetails. Apply at UnionCounty C o m munityC orrection Of f i c e ,1007 4th Street, Suite2C, La Grande by 5PM, September 15.EEO/AA Employer.

GET QUICIC CASH

1 to 2 yrs.

EOE

1 to 2 yrs. Home Health

320 - BusinessInvestmentsDID YOU ICNOW 7 IN 10

Americans or 158 mil­lion U.S. Adults readcontent from newspa­per media each week?Discover the Power ofthe Pacific NorthwestNewspaper Advertis­ing. For a f ree b ro­c hu r e c a I I916-288-6011 or emailcecelia©cnpa.com(PNDC)

DID YOU ICNOW News­paper-generated con­tent is so valuable it'staken and repeated,condensed, broadcast,tweeted, d iscussed,posted, copied, edited,and emailed countlesst imes throughout theday by others? Dis­cover the Power ofNewspaper Advertis­ing in S IX STATESwith Iust one phonecall. For free PacificNorthwest NewspaperAssociation Networkb rochure s ca II916-288-6011 or emailcecelia©cnpa.com(PNDC)

DID YOU ICNOW thatnot only does newspa­per media reach aHUGE Audience, theya lso reach an E N ­GAGED AUDIENCE.Discover the Power ofNewspaper Advertis­ing in six states — AIC,ID, MT, OR, UT, WA.For a free rate bro­c hu r e c a I I916-288-6011 or emailcecelia©cnpa.com(PNDC)

330 - Business Op­portunities

Call AACO at

230 - Help Wantedout of area

EASTERN OREGONUniversity is h i r ing aStudent Support Serv­ice Director. For moreinformation please go

admin.com/

HEALTHCAREJOBS

RN's, LPN's/LVN's,CNA's, Med Aides.

$2,000 Bonus — Free Gas

1-800-656-4414 Ext. 10

INSTRUCTIONAL AS­SISTANT: To be em­ployed by the WallowaEducation Service Dis­tnct, two at-will posi­tions, one for JosephCharter School andone fo r E n t e rpr iseSchool District. Bothpositions will be parttime at 30 hours perweek. Position to beopen until filled. For aIob description, appli­cation and instructionscontact the WallowaEducation Service Dis­tnct, 107 First Street¹105 Enterprise, OR97828 (541-426-7600).

OREGON HEALTH &Science University hir­ing Practice Enhance­ment Research Coordi­nator in La Grande.Help medical practicesevaluate and improvethe quality of care theyprovide. www.ohsu.edu, IRC¹ IRC48619 orca II 503-494-91 06.

RN — HOME HEALTH

WALLOWA MEMORIAL

or contact

Now hinng:

PART TIME

HOSPITALLOCATED IN

ENTERPRISE, ORCurrent Oregon

RN LicenseCurrent CPRCertification

Experience Preferred

Med-Surg A Plus

Visit our websitet ~ h d. *

Linda Childers 4/5541 426-5313

$40 flat rate/ any issuespecializing in: Pofune up, pop-ups,

adware,spyware and virus removal. Also,training, new computer setup and datatransfer, printer install and Wifi issues.

House calls, drop off, andremote services

Dale BogardusWeekdays: 7am-7pm

541-297-5$31

• BAKER (ITY •Outstanding

Computer Repair

Thankyou

EXCAVATION INC

541-523-7163541-663-0933

~X l '(I'E405@

do TERRAIndependent Product

Certifiedin Aroma TouchTechnique Massage

541-519-7205Located at:

nleyexcavat/on@gma/I.com CCB//168468

1920 Coun AveBaker City, OR 97814stitches@bmdM/com

29 Years ExperienceExcavator, Ba:khoe, Mini-Excavator,Dozer, Grader, Dump Truck & Trailer

541-805-9777

Consultant

Tropical Sun Bronzing Spa1927 Court st. Baker City

XRMPMRILEY

Paula Benintendi RN,BSN

David Lillard

Marcus Wolfer

Featuring:

vt Repair

vt Replace allRoofing Types

vt FREE Estimates!

541-663-4145Since 1993

CCB¹)0)989

• Roofing • Sttoage Shds• Decks • Much More!

Andy Wolfer CCB¹186113

541-910-6609

H00FINGTY SENNETT

541-432-S733

One Of the n iC­est things aboutwant ads is theirI OVV C o s t .A nOther i s t h equick results. Trya classified adtOday! Cal l Ourc lassi f ied add epa r t m e n ttOday to P l aCeyour ad.

DELIVER IN THETOWN OF

BAKER CITY

INDEPENDENTCONTRACTORS

wanted to deliver theBaker City Herald

Monday, Wednesday,and Fnday's, within

Baker City.

LOOK

CaII 541-523-3673

INDEPENDENTCONTRACTORSwanted to deliver

The ObserverMonday, Wednesday,

and Fnday's, to thefollowing area's

+ La Grande

CaII 541-963-3161or come fill out anInformation sheet

; 1~

I I

PIANO-Voice lessons

Oregon Music

Call for free consult.(541 ) 91 0-6286

380 - Baker CountyService Directory

Teacher's Association.

Commercial &

SCHOOL OF BALLET!

— Ballet, Pointe, Tap- Tumble, Modern, Jazz

Registration: 3- 6pmAugust 27th & on!

541-524-0369

D S. H Roofing 5.Construction, Inc

& reroofs. Shingles,metal. All phases ofconstruction. Pole

buildings a specialty.Respond within 24 hrs.

HEAVY DUTY LeatherRepair all kinds Tac &Saddle Etc. CustomWo rk 541-51 9-0645

JACKET 8t Coverall Re­pair. Zippers replaced,p atching and o t h e rheavy duty r e pairs.Reasonable rates, fastservice. 541-523-4087or 541-805-9576 BIC

NOTICE: O R E GONLandscape ContractorsLaw (ORS 671) re­quires all businessesthat advertise and per­form landscape con­tracting services be li­censed with the Land­scape C o n t ractorsBoard. Th i s 4 - d ig i tnumber allows a con­sumer to ensure thatt he business i s a c ­tively licensed and hasa bond insurance and aqualified i nd i v i dua lcontractor who has ful­f illed the testing and

ments for l icensure.For your protection call503-967-6291 or visitour w eb s i t e :www.lcb.state.or.us tocheck t h e lic e n sestatus before contract­ing with the business.Persons doing land­scape maintenance donot require a landscap­ing license.

541-519-6273Great references.

CCB¹ 60701

CEDAR 8t CHAIN l inkfences. New construc­t ion, R e m odels &handyman services.

Kip Carter Construction

CT LAWN SERVICEFall CleanupStarting Soon541-51 9-511 3

971-322-4269. Ba ker

330 - Business Op­portunitiesINVESTIGATE BEFORE

YOU INVEST! Alwaysa good policy, espe­cially for business op­p ortunities & f ran ­chises. Call OR Dept.o f Just ice a t ( 5 0 3)378-4320 or the Fed­eral Trade Commissionat (877) FTC-HELP forf ree information. Orv isit our Web s ite atwww.ftc.gov/bizop.

340 - Adult CareBaker Co.

CARE OF Elderly, reson­able, relaible, refer­e nces ava il a b l e541-523-3110

360 - Schools &InstructionBECKIE'S STUDIO OF

770 Depot St. La Grande

www.beckiesstudio

Sign Up Now!Registration continues

Tue, August 25th,9-10am or 5:30-6:30pm

D ANCE A RTS Inc .2015-16 Season OfDance. Register nowlClasses i n c r e a t ivedance, Ballet, Jazz,contemporary,hip-hop, & competitionteams. All classes be­gin the week of Sept14th. Call fo r c lassplacement & details.Mandatory mail in reg­istration High Schooltry-outs are Sept 9th,4:00-5:25 pm and Jr.His Sep t 10 t h,3:30-5pm, at Studio.All instruction byPatricia Sandlin, Call541-910-2205 for reg­istration. Vi ew newupcoming schedule atGrande Rhonde Fi t­ness front desk.

LA GRANDE

Jan Miller

541-524-9594

FRANCES ANNEYAGGIE INTERIOR 8EEXTERIOR PAINTING,

Residential. Neat &efficient. CCB¹137675.

DANCE

541-805-8317

ofdance.com

CCB¹192854. New roofs

Certified Dance Educator

experience r equire­

Swanee Herrmann541-963-9247

1207 Hall Street

• •

• 0 • • 0 • • 0 •

Page 9: Baker City Herald Daily Paper 09-04-15

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 2015

PUBLISHED BY THE LA GRANDE OBSERVER & THE BAKER CITY HERALD - SERVING WALLOWA, UNION & BAKER COUNTIES

THE OBSERVER a BAKER CITY HERALD — 3B

DEADLINES:LINE ADS:

Monday: noon FridayWednesday: noon TuesdayFriday: no on Thursday

DISPLAY ADS:2 days prior to

publication dated

R E lBaker City HeraId: 541-523-3673 ~ www.bakercityheraId.com • classifiedsObakercityheraId.com • Fax: 541-523-6426'The Observer: 541-963-3161 ~ www.la randeobserver.com • classifiedsOlagrandeobserver.com • Fax: 541-963-3674 xg w '

CRDSSWORD PUZZLER

fare

parrot

blocks

36 "Star Trek"

15 Grain holder

ACROSS

1 Knock politely4 Wheels for

nanny8 Utter a dismal

cry

13 Gruff14 Late tennis

great

16 Stumbling

18 Auxiliarybuilding

20 Chuck wagon

21 Type of whiskey23 Allow24 Tolstoy et al.27 Big green

29 Dispatch33 Financial wiz34 Wall climber35 Moo goo

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12 Luau strummer

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60 Capitalize on

DOWN

38 Once named39 Throngs40 Vet patient42 Country addr.44 Proclaim46 Kelp50 Crop protector54 Thurman of

"Gattaca"55 Coastal raptor56 Bronco "brake"57 Give it the gas58 Unwanted

plant

1 Brassinstrument

2 Quite similar3 Actor Sean4 Stand-in5 Cause a blister6 Website clutter7 Convened8 Ritzy boats

9 Kon-TikiMuseum site

10 Relieved sigh11 Brown of

renown17 Top-notch pilot

I T A LWA T T AE P E E SA R R O YR O T B ESN A P P

G A BT I G R E SI R E R O

CA D G U

Answer to Previous Puzz le

A X I SL I G H TS I N A I

A Y N C B SR U E L E AG L AC I A LY P D QL T S U C HE S P E R E

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9-4-15 © 2015 UFS, Dist. by Univ. Uclick for UFS

with

19 Pause fillers22 Scraping by

23 Kind of cake24 Arith. term25 Clean water

26 Nose-bag

28 Day before30 It may be

fragile

custody32 Put down,

slangily37 Doted on39 Torme or

Gibson41 Run up a tab43 Lion-colored44 Real estate

45 Windmill blade47 Hindu mentor48 City near

49 Icicle site50 Make a seam51 Dernier ­52 VIP's carpet

53 Shale extract

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 2015YOUR BIRTHDAY by Stella WilderBorn today, you are one of the most down­

to-earth, forthright, honest and trusted indi­viduals born under your sign. While othersmay be buffeted mercilessly by the winds offate, you find yourself able to maintain asteady course no matter what comes yourway. As a result, you will enjoypersonal suc­cess of a kind that is steady and lasting. Yourstar may never burn as brightly as some oth­ers ­- though there will be times when itburns very brightly, indeed! — but it willalmost surely burn much longer, to prove asource of inspiration to those around you.You want nothing more than to be allowed toexplore the world and all it has to offer, whileremaining true to yourself and your ideals.

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 5VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) ­- You'll want

to warm up the engines before hitting thestreet. Once you pick up speed, you shouldenjoy a smooth journey.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) ­ - You're

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Des Moines

C all Now to S u b s c r ibe !541-523-3673

FULL editions ofThe Baker City Herald

SttittjrCtttl Mt.treltt

3 EASY STEPS1. Register your account

before you leave2. Call to stop your p r int paper3. Log in w h e rever you are at

and enjoy

T AICE US ON YOUR PHON EL EAVE YOUR PAPER AT HOM E

SUSSCRlSKRS!

are now avai lable onl ine.

allowed to do more to advertise yourself­especially when you are in the presence ofthose who can give your career a boost.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) ­- You're

thinking a great deal about something youhave to do in the days to come — but take careyou don't neglect today's key duty.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) — Theanswers you seek may be difficult to uncover

— but stick with it! You can make things hap­pen simply by being stubborn.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jam 19) — Gettingyour own work done is only possible if youremove certain obstacles that have beenplaced in your way by someone close to you.

AQUARIUS (Jam 20-Feb. 18) ­- You canlend a hand to som eone who is eager to see a

new project get off the ground. You may getan idea that has you thinking ahead.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) ­- You're

likely to receive an invitation that you wouldbe unwise to turn down. There is more to thisthan mere social interaction.

ARIES (March 21-April 19) ­- Despite

POE CARPENTRY• New Homes• Remodeling/Additions• Shops, Garages• Siding (ld Decks• Windows (ld Fine

finish workFast, Quality Work!

Wade, 541-523-4947or 541-403-0483

CCB¹176389

OREGON STATE law re­

380 - Baker CountyService Directory

q uires anyone w h ocontracts for construc­t ion work t o becensed with the Con­struction ContractorsBoard. An act ivecense means the con­tractor is bonded (ld in­sured. Venfy the con­tractor's CCB licensethrough the CCB Con­sumer W eb s i t ewww.hirealicensed­contractor.com.

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by Stella Wilder

your interest in the new and untried, you'relikely to go back to that which is most famil­iar to you before the day is out.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) — You're notlikely to get everything you need from themost common sources. It may take some­thing old-fashioned, in fact.

GEMINI (May21-June 20) ­- The unusualis all around you, and you'll be tempted to seewhat is really going on behind the scenes.Stay out of danger!

CANCER (June 21-July 22) — You canapproach things in a low-key, casual way andstill make your mark. Indeed, speaking softlycan really get the job done.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) — You can expectto have enough time to get everything done— provided nothing comes up that you hadnot anticipated. Try to be flexible.

450 - Miscellaneous

%METAL RECYCLINGWe buy all scrapmetals, vehicles

(ld battenes. Site cleanups (ld drop off bins of

all sizes. Pick upservice available.

WE HAVE MOVED!Our new location is

3370 17tl1 StSam HainesEnterpnses

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Art prolects (ld more!Super for young artists!

Burning or packing?

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1406 Fifth Street541-963-31 61

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ALL YARD SALE ADSMUST BE PREPAID

You can drop off yourpayment at:

The Observer1406 5th St.

La Grande

OR

Yard Sales are $12.50 for5 lines, and $1.00 foreach additional line.Call for more info:

541-963-3161.

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2ND ANNUAL tu i t ion3 sale. Sat., 9-4. 1907

Cedar St., LG. Newitems out all day, sew­ing machine, cameras,collectable owls, etc.Rain or Shine.

145 - Yard, GarageSales-Union Co.

1039 N 5th St., Union.F ri (ld Sat, 83 . S m .Lane couch excellentcondition, Trundle rodi ron day bed w/ tw omattress's, lars, newlawn mower w/ war­ranty, small dog travelbag used once, Dol­phin vacuum, Yamahareceiver (ld much more!

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YARD SAL E. F n (ld Sat,4 8-4. 61991 West Rd.,

HUGE YARD sale. Fn (ldSat, 8-4. Sun, 1-4, (ld

5 Mon, 8-4. 50 yrs col­lection. Vintage co l­Iectibles, c a m p ing,boating, tools, tractors,farm equip., antiqueswood stoves, shop­smith, radio, arm saw,table saw, householdi tems, hand c r ank,shearing mac h i ne ,truck, pitcher pump,antique boat m o to r ,lawn (ld garden tools,set of 16 " c h rometruck wheels, model AJack, en tertainmentcenter, much more!1736 N 1st St, Union.

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LABOR DAY WEEKENDS ept 4th t hru M o n .7th, 8am-?. 2507 NCherry St, LG. Lots oftools, more as spaceallows, some house­hold items (ld more.

GARAGE/ESTATESALE, fi sh ing, china

7 hutch, entertainmentcenter, Nordic Track,foosball table, Inver­sion table, and MuchMore! 1101 Hartford,Elgin, 5th (ld 6th, 8 — 5.

HUGE MOVING sale!

ture and more! Sat.,8-3. 1703 Jefferson,L G. Located i n t h ecul-de-sac behind PapaMurphy's.

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MULTIFAMILY S a le.64153 Aspen Rd., offMt Glen (ld Starr. Fn (ldSat., 8-12. Household,kids, snowblower, (ldfurniture, etc.

ROLLINS ESTATE Sale.Fn, Sat, (ld Sun, 8:30-4.Railroad, NRA, books,households memora­bilia, collectibles, re­l oading suppl ies ( ldmanuals, shop/gardentools. 720 Esther Ave.,Imbler.

YARD SALE. Sat 5th,7-1pm. 64689 MarketLn, Cove . V i n tageitems, lawn furniture,

11furniture, m en (ldwomen's c l o t h ing,lawn mowers, (ld a lotmore! 5 miles form ls­land City HWY 82 offM arket L a ne , f i r s thouse on the left.

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This yard sale Enap is provided as a service by The Observer.Locations shown are approximations — Check individual ads forexact address. While we make every effort to be complete andaccurate, we cannot be responsible for errors and ommissions.

Att ar d sale a ds mast be PREPAID!Additional L ines s1.00 per l ine

Y ARD, GAR AG E SA L E SPrivate Party

Yard Sale map publishes Wednesday and Friday

10 AM the day before deslred publication date.For information call ERICA 541-963-3161

Private party advertisers only. 3 days must run consecutively.

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MERT'S LABOR Day12Sale. Sept 4th Bd 5th,

do 'I

Club Ln

8-5. 14 miles North ofElgin follow pink camosigns. 1994 YamahaICodiak 400 ATV, tur­key cookers, handtools, CB radio's ( ldequip., nice selectionof cowboy l e w e l ry(Montan a Si lv e rSmith), various JohnWayne memorabilia,i ncluding a T if f a nystyle lamp, completec ollection o f pa p e rbooks in the 50's Rich­ard Prather (ld MickeySpillane, large olderwalnut o f f ice d esk,collectable a n t i quedolls Effanbee, ShirleyTemple, Betsy McCall,resorted porcelain (lddoll pieces, misc otherstuff. Several familyyard sale and some­thing for every one.

Isldddd;CddyCeldddtedy

Ld GrandeCountry

Fa~irwa Dr

Club

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1 tt2

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SCARLETT MARY ijirr3 massages/$100

Baker City, ORGift Certificates Available!

385 - Union Co. Ser­vice Directory

ANYTHING FOR

Same owner for 21 yrs.

POWDER RIVERTrophy 4 Engraving

18554 Griffin Gulch LaneBaker City, OR 97814

PRICES REDUCEDMulti Cord Discounts!

$140 in the rounds 4"to 12" in DIA, $170

split. Hardwood$205 split. Delivered

in the valley.(541)786-0407

445- Lawns & Gar­dens

SPRAY SERVICE, INCRangeland — PastureTrees-Shrubs-Lawn

Bareground - Right of VvayInsect — Weed Control

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450 - Miscellaneous

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430- For SaleorTrade13 YR old r e g. p a int

mare 15 hds. Hundredof mi les t rai l r id ing,good for w o men ( ldkids make a great 4-Hhorse. $2,200. 16 in.Australian trail saddleno ho r n . $

1

,200.Gooseneck ca m pt rai le r $2 , 5 00 .541-41 7-1555

KIRBY SENTRIA II vac­uum, attachments (ldshampoo set up, newN ovember 2012 a t$2,895; wil l sel l fo r$ 1, 200. 541-910-1645

WOMEN'S TREK Lexa56 cm road bike. Onemen's Trek Alpha 54cm road b i ke. L i kenew. Both ridden 10m iles. $400 e a c h .541-786-9930

435 - Fuel Supplies

Phone: 541-523-4156Cell: 541-519-7210tnewman98@ ahoo.com

(Tally and Randy Newman)

A BUCK

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DO YOU need papers tostart your fire with? Orare you m o v ing ( ldneed papers to wrapthose special i tems?The Baker City Heraldat 1915 First S t reetsells tied bundles ofpapers. Bundles, $1.00each.

EVERY BUSINESS hasa story to t e l l ! Getyour message out withCalifornia's PRMediaRelease — the onlyPress Release Serviceoperated by the pressto get press! For moreinfo contact Cecelia ©9 16-288-6011 o rhtt : rm e diarelease.com california PNDC

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NORTHEAST

reserves the nght torelect ads that do notcomply with state andfederal regulations or

that are offensive, false,misleading, deceptive orotherwise unacceptable.

OREGON CLASSIFIEDS

Must have a minimum of10 Yard Sale ad's to

pnnt the map.

• 0 • • 0 • • 0 •

Page 10: Baker City Herald Daily Paper 09-04-15

4B — THE OBSERVER a BAKER CITY HERALD

PUBLISHED BY THE LA GRANDE OBSERVER & THE BAKER CITY HERALD - SERVING WALLOWA, UNION & BAKER COUNTIES

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 2015

DEADLINES:LINE ADS:

Monday: noon FridayWednesday: noon TuesdayFriday: no on Thursday

DISPLAY ADS:2 days prior to

publication dated

R E lBaker City HeraId: 541-523-3673 ~ www.bakercityheraId.com • classifiedsObakercityheraId.com • Fax: 541-523-6426'The Observer: 541-963-3161 ~ www.la randeobserver.com • classifiedsOlagrandeobserver.com • Fax: 541-963-3674

CROSSWORD PUZZLER

Keokuk is

31

37

34

15

12

18

1 2 3

4 5 4 6 4 7

2 6 2 7 2 8

mouthfuls

hairdo

ACROSS

1 Elev.4 Iffy attempt8 Pulpit

12 Plastic— Band

13 Where

14 Ancient France15 Tomato raiser17 Border18 Henchman19 Mil. rank21 Avg. size22 Kind of eraser26 Dirty places29 Lively dance30 Copper source31 Cows'

32 Ballerina's

33 Greets,as a dog

34 Eroded35 Dyemaker's

container

21

38

40

53

50

16

35

13

51

54

32

4 5 6 7

4 8 4 9

some

statue

habit?

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36 Hay bundles37 Shrubbery39 Moray40 Pass near

Pikes Peak41 Go by canoe45 Wobbles, as a

48 Of the past50 Meryl, in "Out

51 Goddess'

52 Embers, finally53 Creatures of

54 Blah55 Premier

— Zedong

DOWN

Harleys, to

2 Insect pest3 Bullring bull4 Attacks on a

castle

41

39

22

19 2 0

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8 9 to t 1

2 3 24 25

4 2 43 44

T A P P RU K E R UB I N O BA N N E X

R Y EL E O S KC P A ID A T A N

D O GA V O W

S C A R E CE R N E RW E E D I

Answer to Previous Puzz le

A M Y O W LD E A S H ES T A C L E S

C HO WL E T

E A S E N DV Y G A IE E M O B S

R T EA L G A E

R O W U M AE I N R E VD L Y U S E

9-5-15 ©2015 UFS, Dist. by Unlv. Uclickfor UFS

5 Firmed up, asmuscles

6 Blow away7 Good deal8 FBI member9 In a snit

45 Female

38 Shucks corn

20 Joule fraction

10 Annoy11 "Grand — Opry"16 Roofed

stadiums

23 Objective24 Strongly

advise25 Clutter26 Union flouter27 Ballet attire28 Time to

beware29 Overhang32 Single (2 wds.)33 Ralph­

Emerson35 Old pro36 Fab Four

member

39 — salts42 Tot of whiskey43 Sax-playing

Simpson44 Nymph who

pined away

principle46 Tempe coll.47 Unnaturally

49 Mont. neighbor

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 2015YOUR BIRTHDAY by Stella WilderBorn today, you have been endowed with

remarkable talent, and your whole life islikely to take shape around it. What thismeans is that all of your contentment, suc­cess, failure, joyand frustration will be linkedinexorably to that one special ability that hasbeen a lifelong gift from the stars — andwhich will be the cause of all your highs andlows in life. You may have a sense of destiny,and you're sure to plot a course for yourself inlife that allows you to fulfill that destiny,provided you do not allow yourself to be dis­tracted or derailed along the way. Be warned!Even a seemingly inconsequential decisioncan affect your trajectory forever!

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 6VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) — You have a

great deal in common with someone who hashabitually rubbed you the wrong way. Areyou seeing something of yourself in him orherd

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) ­- More than

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 2015YOUR BIRTHDAY by Stella WilderBorn today, you always do things with oth­

ers in mind. While this may mean that youare acting for their benefit, or simply that youwant to assess how they are reacting to your

own behavior, in either case the world around

you will always be a key component ofthe lifeyou build for yourself. You are naturallyphil­anthropic; you do indeed care deeply forothers. Still, you are also driven by a need tosecure for yourselfthe best in life — and whileothers may call this "selfish" at times, the factis that without that drive, you are not likely toaccomplish much at all. The more you try tobalance your personal needs with genuine

care for those around you, the better.

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 7VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) ­- You may

have to defend yourself against a surpriseattack of sorts. Though it sounds impossible,you can do what is required.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) ­- What you

450 - Miscellaneous 4 5 0 - Miscellaneous

most, you enjoy gathering knowledge ofunusual topics. One of the most unusual mayopen its doors to you.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) — Your abil­ity to hide the truth can sometimes come inhandy, but you must avoid any attempts atdeception and come clean.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)Someone else is trying to do what you aredoing, but he or she seems to have an unusu­al advantage. You can pick up the pace.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) ­- Youand a loved one may not be entirely in sync;what you want and what he or she wants arenot exactly compatible.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) ­- You've

reached the halfway point of a pet project.Perhaps you should set it aside for a while toassess your current situation.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) ­- Moneymatters cannot be ignored. Do what you canto incorporate all possible plans. Follow inanother's footsteps, perhaps.

ARIES (March 21-April 19) — You may

give someone is likely to come back to youtenfold before you know it. A new phase ofsymbiotic generosity has begun.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) ­- You mustbe sure that you are heard, especially whenthe clock is ticking and you have preciouslittle time to get your message across.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)Some of the ideas you're toying with are sim­ply impractical or even impossible. One ortwo can really pay off, however!

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) — Yourefforts aren't likely to come to fruition in themanner you originally planned — but thesurprise may be a good one!

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) ­- Yourintended audience may not be ready to hear

what you have to say. Start slowly and easily,and avoid saying anything shocking.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) — You canprove that you've been in the right all thistime, and others have been mistaken. Don'tgloat, however!

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CQPYRIQHT 2td5 UNITED FEATURE SYNDICATE, INCDISIRIBUIED BYUNIVERSAL UCLICK FQR UFSHIPNB tyt K » Q t y d d d t ldd Ntl25557ld

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ARIES (March 21-April 19) — You and afriend may have realized that it's time to putyour heads together to maximize gains.What, specifically, can you dot

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) ­- Someonewho has challenged you from the beginningis likely to give you a welcome respite. He orshe knows what you're made of.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) ­- It's a good

time to come to the aid of someone whodoesn't yet know he or she needs assistance.

You can help avoid a disaster of sorts.

CANCER (June 21-July 22) — Nothingstands between you and a goal you have beenstriving toward for quite a while. What is themeaning of your current slowdownt

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) ­- You won't haveto dig very deeply into your bag of tricks tocome up with the perfect strategy. It willannounce itself today.

by Stella Wilder

have to ask someone else to step up to theplate for you. Watch closely as he or she goesto bat for you.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) — You and afriend can work together to maximize yourmutual gains. Any attempt to play one sideagainst the other can prove hazardous.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) — Your appar­ent motives may come under fire, but you willbe able to make your real reasons clearer than

ever before.CANCER (June 21-July 22) — You'll have

to face the truth one wayor the other, so whynot do it on your termst You needn't bedragged to judgment, surely.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) ­- Your knowledgecan work for you in ways you hadn't previ­ously imagined, and what you don't know isnot a cause for worry — at least for now.

E , r , =,~(• I tfIEI '=>< L».„

• ~~=7I+ 4 II j l .

A KER CO. YARB 8 S A R A S E S A L E Sr. ..e =­

450 - Miscellaneous

VIAGRA 100mg or CIA­L IS 20mg. 4 0 t a bs+10 FREE all for $99including FREE, Fastand Discreet SHIP­PING. 1-888-836-0780or M e t ro-Meds.net(PNDC)

475 - Wanted to Buy

ANTLER DEALER. Buy­lng grades of antlers.Fair honest p r i ces .From a liscense buyerusing state c e r t i f iedskills. Call Nathan at541-786-4982.

480 - FREE Items Through October17th.

11 BANTE chickens,6 Laying Hens,

5 Roosters.541-523-5574

market.org

LA GRANDEFARMERS'MARKET

Max Square, La Grande

EVERY SATURDAY

EVERY TUESDAY3tao-6:oopm

www.lagrandefarmers

"EBT & Credit CardsAccepted"

9am-Noon

h

U

605 - Market Basket

THOMAS ORCHARDSIClmberly, Oregonymtilr„. f" "

r IjI~ C ! : a e -il f~ Wpma • • •

U-PICK

lumpter

Bfsknrr Cdtyun < IIda

II„: L, — Il&M~, Wk,

— rT

I Private Party

d

fd Herald. Locations shown are approximations — Check individu­

al ads for exact address. While we make every effort to be com­

ommissions.knd Vftdutdtf Club plete and accurate, we cannot be responsible for errors and

N

5 Lines,

Att ar d sale a ds mast be PREPAID!L Additional L ines s1.00 per l ine

This yard sale map is provided as a service by Baker City

Y ARD, GAR AG E SA L E S550 - Pets

505 - Free to a goohomeFREE DOMESTIC ducks,

caII 541-963-6428.

FREE KITTENS,541-963-6428

Free to good homeads are FREE!(4 lines for 3 days)

AKC ENGLISH SpringerSpanlels, parents w/hunting backgrounds.3 males left © $650per. 541-610-2329.

10 AM the day before desired publication date.1 For information call JULIE 541-523-3673

map publishes Wednesday and Friday

140 - Yard, GarageSales-Baker Co.0

MINI GARAGE SALE2614 1st St. Sat.,9/5 only9AM-6PM. A little of this(ld a little of that (ld some

, Private party advertisers only. 3 days must run consecutively. Yard Satewith minimum of 10 ads

Freestone Canning PeachesImproved ElbertaO'Henry -Angelus

Monroes........ $ .60/Ib

Necta rines......$ .70/Ib

Gala Apples.....$ .65/Ib

Bartlett Pears..$ .65/Ib

Asian Pears........$1 lib

Honey Crisp Apples(Limited supply by Fn. 9/4)

LABOR DAYMONDAY, SEPT. 7Local Vendor Fairat Thomas Orchards

1 2PM - 4 P M

BRING CONTAINERSOpen 7 days a week8 a.m. — 6 p.m. only

541-934-2870Visit us on Facebook

140- Yard, GarageSales-Baker Co.

HUGE LABOR DAYSALE WEEKEND

Homemade arts (ld craftsAntiques (ld Collectiblesincluding kitchenware,glass, porcelain, linens,quilts, pictures, men's (ldwomen's clothes, books(ld beautiful horse saddle

(ld lots more items.Fri. 8tSat.;9am -3 pm46530 Snake River Rd

140- Yard, GarageSales-Baker Co.148 S. Ibex St. SumpterO Fri. 9/4 - Sun. 9/6;

9am — 5pm. Pocketknlves, old tools, books,planner, books, fishingpoles, fabncs, (ld misc.

BEST FRIENDS ofBaker, Inc - Estate Sale

A-Z Storage Units3485 17th Street,Baker City, Oregon

September 5th and 6th

140- Yard, GarageSales-Baker Co.MOVING SALE. 39188Sutton Creek Rd. (Cornerof Hvvy 30 Bd Sutton Crk Rd)G Fn. (ld Sat.; 9-1. Tools,archery,furniture (ld more.

New items added!

H 1025 MADISON St.Fn (ld Sat.; 8-2 — Misc.Household, Children's

Items (ld Clothing, Photoshnnk wrap equipment

140 - Yard, GarageSales-Baker Co.

MULTI-FAMILY SALE

F n. (ld Sat; 8a m - 5PmCollector furniture, oak

office desk (ld more

L

235 Foothill Dr

MOVING SALE1321 Walnut St.

Fri.— Sun.; 9am — 4 pm2-Chest freezers, fabncs,misc., Too much to list!

of the other!

MULTI-FAMILY SALE3545 Plum St. (Off ofBirch, between J & L)Fn. — Sun.;8am -4 pm.

Too much to list!!

3365 GRANDVIEW Dr.Fn 9/5 (ld Sat 9/6

8am - 5pm. Skl boat, SailQ boat, household,

clothing, electronics,toys, (ld lots more!

ALL ADS FOR:GARAGE SALES,MOVING SALES,

YARD SALES, mustbe PREPAID at

The Baker City HeraldOffice, 1915 First St.,

Baker City orThe Observer Office,

1406 Fifth Street,LaGrande.

140 - Yard, GarageSales-Baker Co.

Herald

online.

FULL editions ofThe Baker City

SUSSCRISNS!TAICE US ON YOUR

LEAVE YOUR PAPER

are now available

PHONE!

AT HOME

llke thls!!

NON!

BACKYARD SALE.1219 8th St. Sat. only.8AM -?. Tools, misc.hardware, household

ltems.Lll' of everything!

C 10- DAY

9am-4pm

MEGA-THON SALE2895 17tI1 St.(Settfer's Park)

Sat., 8/29 — Mon., 9/7

Anyone can set up atable & sell your

items at no chargeKeep what you make!

Richland, OR9:00 a.m.

No Early SalesCASH ONL Y SALES

High end furniture,including Onental

furniture, art pieces,bedroom set with

dresser and mirror,3-pc dining room set

w/chairs, lamps, vintageclothing,shoes, purses,glassware (ld household

F LARGE YARD sALE25244th St.; 9am — 5pm

Fn., 9/4 -Sun., 9/6Collectables, tools,

records, etc.

I HUGE YARD SALEI wy 7, Aardvark StorageFn. (ld Sat; 9a-4p, (Sun.?)Tons of household items

4 DAYS LONG!Don't Miss this Sale!

Fn., 9/4- Mon. 9/7; 9a-?I wy 7 Storage (S.Baker)Hunting, fishing, camp­lng, household, tools,rocking chairs, rolltopdesk (ld wood chair,

motorcycle, mini bike (ldmore. (1/2 pnce Mon. on

GARAGE SALE1233 Madison St

N September 4 (ld 58am-4pm

WANTED: CAR top car­rier (Hard top) Pleaseca II 541-523-9230

HUGE, HUGE, HUGEONE DAY ONLY

2905 11tI1 StSat., Sept. 59AM -4 PM

Call Now to Subscnbe!541-523-3673

3 EASY STEPS

1. Register youraccount before youleave

2 . Call to s top y ourpnnt paper

3. Log in wherever youare at and enloy

users of classified.

LaGrande Observer

Use ATTENTIONGETTERS to helpyour ad stand out

Call a classified repTODAY to a s k how!Baker City Herald

541-523-3673ask for Julie

541-936-3161ask for Erica

Call 541-963-3161

541-523-3673to place your ad.

Tiiese Iittle ads reai iyworkl Join ti-ie ti-iousandsof other people in this HOME TO sh are, Callarea wi io are r e gu lar me l e t s t al k . Jo

OF

541-523-0596

630 - Feeds

200 TON 1st cropAlfalfa-alfalfa grass.

3x4 bales. No rain, test.150 TON 2nd cropAlfalfa -alfalfa grass

Sm. bales.(100 lb. avg.)541-51 9-0693

for updates

most items)

• 0 • • 0 • • 0 •

Page 11: Baker City Herald Daily Paper 09-04-15

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 2015 THE OBSERVER a BAKER CITY HERALD — 5B

DEADLINES:LINE ADS:

Monday: noon FridayWednesday: noon TuesdayFriday: no on Thursday

DISPLAY ADS:2 days prior to

publication date

PUBLISHED BY THE LA GRANDE OBSERVER & THE BAKER CITY HERALD - SERVING WALLOWA, UNION & BAKER COUNTIES

R E l

710 - Rooms forRent

NOTICEAll real estate advertised

here-in is sublect tothe Federal Fair Hous­ing Act, which makesit illegal to advertiseany preference, limita­tions or discnminationbased on race, color,religion, sex, handicap,familial status or na­tional origin, or inten­tion to make any suchpreferences, l i m i ta­tions or discrimination.We will not knowinglyaccept any advertisingfor real estate which isin violation of this law.All persons are herebyinformed that all dwell­i ngs advert ised a reavailable on an equalopportunity basis.

720 - ApartmentRentals Baker Co.The Elms Apartments

2920 Elm StreetBaker City, OR 97814

ridia

Currently accepting appli­cations. 2 bdrm apart­ment w/F R IG, DW,STV, onsite laundry,playground. I ncomeand occupancy guide­lines apply, Section 8accepted. Rent is $455to $490, tenant payselectnc. No smoking,except in designatedsmoking area and nopets. A ppl i c a t ionsavailable onsite out ­side of manager's of­fice located at Apt. 1.O f f i c e Ph.541-523-5908; E ma il:theelms©vindianmgt.com­website:vindianmgt.com/prop­ert ies/e lm s-a pa rt­

725 - ApartmentRentals Union Co.

HIGHLAND VIEWApartments

800 N 15th AveElgin, OR 97827

Now accepting applica­t ions f o r fed e ra l lyfunded housing. 1, 2,and 3 bedroom unitswith rent based on in­come when available.

Prolect phone number:541-437-0452

TTY: 1(800)735-2900

"This institute is an equalopportunity provider."

750 - Houses ForRent Baker Co.3-Bdrm, 2 bath HomeBeautiful country setting,22 mi. from Baker City

$950/mo + dep6-Bdrm, 2 bath Home$950+dep. 2275 2nd St1- Bdrm, 1 bath Home$425+dep 306 4th St3-bdrm, 1 bath Home$750+dep 2588 1st St

Molly RagsdaleProperty Management

Call: 541-519-8444

3-BDRM, 1 bath 2-storyduplex. Range, fridge,laundry hookups I ! tW/S i n c l u d ed.$675/mo plus d ep .541-51 9-6654

3-BDRM, 1.5 bathNo pets. $1100/mo.

541-523-4435

Baker City HeraId: 541-523-3673 e www.bakercityheraId.com • classifiedslbakercityheraId.com • Fax: 541-523-6426'The Observer: 541-963-3161 e www.la randeobserver.com • classifiedsllagrandeobserver.com • Fax: 541-963-3674 xg w '

SAt;-T-STOR *PRICE REDUCED*

752 - Houses forRent Union Co.

UNION 2 bcl, $650.1.5 bcl, $600.

discount, pets ok.541-91 0-0811

UNION RENTAL Lg 4/5bdrm, 3 bath, pond,fruit trees, 1 acre, wa­ter nghts on CatherineCreek, pets ok. $1300month. 541-910-1185

U PDATED U NIO NHOME, 1 bed/1 bath,W/D included, Fencedyard, 24 x 32 Shop,$695/mo. CALL CATH­E R I NE C R EE IC P ROPMGMT 541-605-0430.

760 - CommercialRentals

20 X40 shop, gas heat,roll-up a nd w a lk- indoors, restroom, smallo ffice space, $ 3 50month, $300 deposit.541-91 0-3696.

BEARCO BUSINESSPark, 600 sq. ft . Of­fice, restrooms I!t over­head door included.$400/mo plus deposit.541-963-7711. LG.

780 - Storage Units

2bd, 1ba $695. Senior

780 - Storage Units

EQUAL HOUSINGOPPORTUNITY

720 - ApartmentRentals Baker Co.

UPSTAIRS STUDIO and1-Bdrm ApartmentsC ustom k it c h e n s .Laundry on si te .W/S/G I!t lawn careprovided. Tenant payselectric. Close to parkI!t downtown. See at2134 Gr o v e St .$450-$500/m o p lu sdep. No p e ts/smok­ing. 541-519-5852 or541-51 9-5762

ments.

725 - ApartmentRentals Union Co.

CENTURY 21PROPERTY

MANAGEMENT

UNION COUNTYSenior Living

Mallard Heights870 N 15th Ave

Elgin, OR 97827

Now accepting applica­t ions f o r fed e ra l lyf unded housing f o rt hose t hat a resixty-two years of ageor older, and handi­capped or disabled ofany age. 1 and 2 bed­room units with rentb ased o n i nco m ewhen available.

Prolect phone ¹:541-437-0452

TTY: 1(800)735-2900

"This Institute is anequal opportunity

provider"

541-523-6485

4-BDRM, 2 bath housew/full basement. Smallpasture, garden area.5 mi. south of BakerCity.$1000/mo. For de­tails call 541-519-5202,evenings.

Nelson Real EstateHas Rentals Available!

SECURE STORAGE

SurveillanceCameras

Covered StorageSuper size 16'x50'

541-523-21283100 15th St.

Baker City

Computenzed Entry

820 - Houses ForSale Baker Co.1-BDRM W/ATTACHEDgarage. 1520 Madison St$55,000. 541-519-3097

UPSTAIRS STUDIO.Laundry on si te .W/S/G heat, Dish TVI!t lawn care provided.Tenant pays electric.Close to park I!t down­town. 2209 Grove St.$450/mo plus dep. Nopets/smoking.541-519-5852 o r541-51 9-5762

CIMMARON MANORICingsview Apts.

21, Eagle Cap Realty.541-963-1210

CLOSE TO downtowna nd E OU , st u d i o ,w/s/g pd, no smoking,no pets, $375 month,$ 300 d e p o s i t .541-91 0-3696.

Welcome Home!

2 bd, 1 ba. Call Century

La randeRentals.com

(541)963-1210

SMALL, CUTE 2-bdrm1-bath on 2 1/4 acres.Close t o t ow n .$575/mo. 1st I!t last.References required.(760)413-0001 or (760)41 3-0002.

SUNFIRE REAL EstateLLC. has Houses, Du­plexes I!t Apartmentsfor rent. Call CherylGuzman for l i s t ings,541-523-7727.

752 - Houses forRent Union Co.1 BR, 1ba, very small, at­

tractive and clean! In­cludes w/d, p r ivacydeck, smal l p r ivateyard, w/s/g, electnc I!tl awn care pa id. Nos moking, n o pet s .$495. See at 314 LakeA ve., a l leyway e n ­trance, 541-786-4606.

3 BD, 1 ba $925 mo.541-91 0-4444

• II!IitI-IIIltraitottM,• 0tttslde famadl IPaiftlttII• IIcittitttttitils Ilttlsli

IFtir Iriftlrrttsliori ciN:N3'4MIIey9

$94N7eye!II!Igs

795 - Mobile HomeSpacesSPACES AVAILABLE,one block from Safe­way, trailer/RV spaces.Water, sewer, ga r­bage. $200. Jerc man­a ger. La Gra n d e541-962-6246

• .

825 - Houses forSale Union Co.

Senior an d Di s ab led

ELKHORN VILLAGEAPARTMENTS

Housing. Accept ingapplications for thoseaged 62 years or olderas well as those dis­abled or handicappedof any age. Income re­strictions apply. CallCandi: 541-523-6578

Call(541) 963-7476

GREEN TREEAPARTMENTS

2310 East Q AvenueLa Grande,OR 97B50

745 - Duplex RentalsUnion Co.

3 bd, 1 ba, w/d hook-ups$ 800/mo. No p e t s541-786-5815

3 BDRM, 2 bath, w/s/gpd. carport, no smok­ing. $800 mo, $700dep. (541)910-3696

NEWER 3 bdrm, 2 ba,$1075/mo, plus dep.Some e x t r as . Nosmoking. Pets on ap­p roval. M t. Emi l yProperty 541-962-1074

750 - Houses ForRent Baker Co.1-BDRM, 1 bath. W/S in

c luded. Ga s h e a tfenced yard. $550/mo541-51 9-6654

2-BDRM, O N E b a t hhouse, Wf!tD h o okups. Lots of storage.Gas heat and waterheater. No s mokingno pets. 541-523-4701or 541-519-3842

NICE, DOUBLE WIDEmobile home for rentin Durkee. Leave mes­sage. 541-877-2202

• Rent a unit for 6 mo

• Rent a unit for 6 mo

37IILI 10th Street

541-523-9050

%ABC STORESALL%

MOVF IN SPFCIAl!get 7th mo. FREE

(Units 5x10 up to 10x30)

"ABC STORESALL%

MOVK IN SPFCIAl!get 7th mo. FREE

(Units 5x10 up to 1Ox3O)$140,000

255 HILLCRESTGreat view of BakerCity and Eagle Mtns.

One level, 1,200 sf (ml),2-bdrm, 1 bath home.Livingroom, family rm,

gas fireplace, AC,electric heat.

Double car garage,shop, fenced backyard.

Close to golf course.

541-519-8463

FSBO

$72,000/OBO.

2 BD duplex, 1 ba, dualcarport between twounits,hardy plank sid­ing, v iny l w i ndows,f enced b ack y a r d ,$550 month, good in­vestment in Union OR,1 0 mi les f ro m L a ­Grande OR $125,000or trade for O regoncoast or Portland area.503-314-9617 o r503-829-61 1 3.

850 - Lots & Prop­erty Baker Co.

2002 PALM HARBOR

Triple Wide 2428 sq. ft.

3 bd, 2.5 ba, shower I!tgarden tub, w a lk- incloset, m ud/ laundryrm with own deck. Bigkitchen walk-in pantry,Ig. Island I!t all appli­ances, storage space,breakfast rm, fa milyI!t Living rm, fire place,lots of windows look­ing at Mtns., vaultedceilings, large coveredporch, landscaped, 2car metal garage I!t 2Bay RV metal buildingwired, garden building,I!t chicken area, fruit I!tflowering pine trees,creek runs t h roughproperty.

Please drive by 8tpick-up a flyer.

69519 Haefer Ln. CoveCALL for showing today!

FURNISHED 1-BDRM.Utilities paid. Washer,Dryer I!t A/C. $675/mo.541-388-8382

9 I

Affordasble Studios,1 I!t 2 bedrooms.

(Income Restnctions Apply)Professionally Managed

by: GSL PropertiesLocated Behind

N3 BD, 2 ba, gas heat, dw,

no pets, no smoking,$895mo 541-963-9430

CHARMING NEAT I ! tt ighty 2 bd, w/s pd .near college, $850 +dep. Mt Emily Prop.Mgt. 541-962-1074

COVE, 2 Bd, 2 Ba, nos moking, n o pet s ,$600/m o, $400 d e­posit 541-568-4325

LARGE 4 bed, 1 1/2 ba,house downtown LaGrande. $1,200 plusdeposit. Of f s t r e e tparking, no g arage,small yard. No pets.541-605-0707 leavevoicemail massage.

NEWER 3 bed, 2 bathw/ garage $1,295.

541-91 0-4444

e Secvitiy fenced

t COded E6lty

t LIII!tINI for ycittr protectloii

e 6 dlfferertt sias ttitils

t Ltrts ef lRV storage

41!298 Chico IRd, Baker CIIy

541-523-9050

Manufactured Homefor sale. 1955 Clark St.$86,500. 541-663-7250

825 - Houses forSale Union Co.

For Sale By Owner

BEAUTIFUL VIEW lot in

LARGE 1-BDRM, someutilities paid. $575/mo+ d ep . No pet s .541-523-9414

LARGE, U P STAIRS1-BDRM., W/S/G/ pcI.$450/mo. 1st. , l astplus secunty. 1621 1/2Va IIey Ave., Ba kerC ity. No s mok i n g541-497-0955

LOOKING FOR a room­mate, for female EOUstudent, in a 2 bd dupl.o n Ar ies L n . , LG .$300/mo, w/d I!t w/sincl. Avail. Sept 16th.Ca II 541-426-3747.

www.La randeRentals.com

La Grande Town Center

A PLUS RENTALShas storage units

availab!e.5x12 $30 per mo.8x8 $25-$35 per mo.8x10 $30 per mo.'plus deposit'1433 Madison Ave.,

or 402 Elm St. La

Ca II 541-910-3696

$140,000Spacious, 3,099 sq. ft.,

3-bdrm, 1 bath solidhome built in 1925.

New electncal upgrade,low maintenance

cement stucco extenor,metal roof, large porch,detached 1-car garage.

1,328 sq.ft. newlypainted full finishedbasement, walk-in

pantry I!t more!1 block from school.

North PowderSee more at:

ONLY ONE 1-acre DealCanyon Lane view lotleft. Inside city l imitswith sewer and watert o s i t e . Ca ll Bi ll541-272-2500 or Jodi541-272-2900 for infor­mation.

$270,000

on 1.82ACRES

RARE FIND IN BAKEROversized corner lot.Currently w/renter.Excellent building

location for contractors.

Senous buyers only.541-523-9643

855 - Lots & Prop­erty Union Co.

Cove, Oregon. Buildyour d ream h o m e.Septic approved, elec­tnc within feet, streamrunning through lot .A mazing v i ew s ofmountains I!t valley.3.02 acres, $62,000208-761-4843

541-91 0-1 684

$5,500 firm541-663-6403

920 - Campers

915- Boats & Motors

THE SALE of RVs not

1998 30 ft. Wi ldernessfifth wheel, great con­dition, 3 slides, sleepssix. 541-963-2982 or541-963-5808.

2004 27 ' Keys t o n eS pringdale t rave lt railer, w i t h s up e rs l ide . $ 9 0 0 0 .541-963-3551

930 - RecreationalVehicles

880 - CommercialPropertyNEWLY RENOVATED

c ommercial / ret a i lproperty on A damsand 2nd St. $1200 permonth. Possible leaseoption to purchase.~541 910-1711

2007 NUWA HitchHikerChampagne 37CKRD

Tnple axles, Bigfoot Iackleveling system, 2 new

6-volt battenes, 4 Slides,Rear Dining/ICitchen,large pantry, double

fndge/freezer. Mid livingroom w/fireplace and

surround sound. Awning16', water 100 gal, tanks50/50/50, 2 new Power­house 2100 generators.Blue Book Value 50IC!!

ROSE RIDGE 2 Subdivhsion, Cove, OR. City:Sewer/VVater available.Regular price: 1 acrem/I $69,900-$74,900.

We also provide propertymanagement. Checkout our rental link onour w e b s i t ewww.ranchnhome.com o r caIIRanch-N-Home Realty,In c 541-963-5450.

1985 B EACHCRAFTMagnum 192 Cuddy,200 hp, Coast Guardradio, depth f i nder,swim/ski p l a t f o rm,very good condition,canopy, boat cover,and e-z trailer included.

American WestStorage

541-523-4564

Behind Armory on Eastand H Streets. Baker City

Grande.

740 3rd St.

910 - ATV, Motorcy­cles, Snowmobiles1996 YAMAHA 250

Virago for sale. Lowmiles, looks I!t runsg ood. $2500 O B O541-91 0-9006.

7 days/24 houraccess

COMPETITIVE RATES www zillow comihomedetailsi740-3rd-St-North-Powder-OR­

~97867/86342951 * dl

541-523-2206

$39,999

541-519-1488

beanng an Oregon in­signia of compliance isi llegal: cal l B u i ldingCodes(503) 373-1257

• • • • •

• •

• • •

g© ~oo

SWEEN• A~uto-Iock G@e

/

/Ne Retf Corvettei~

~ ST OZ ULOE• Becutre~ Keypadl Znilary

• Securitly LtllbttntI• Be~ C atn evas• Outaide RV Htotsge• Penoed Airea

(6-foot, ttstrti)1!mW elean utittaAII trtaea tLvafittLbIe

(BxlO u!p to l4xRB)64X-688-1688

8818 X4th

541-524-15342805 L Street

NEW FACILITY!!Vanety of Sizes Available

Secunty Access Entry

CLASSIC STORAGE

$402,000 LOCATED INTHE CITY OF GREEN­HORN, the highest ele­vatlon (6500!t) of anyincorporated city ln Or­egon. Nestled ln theBlue Mountains thislodge offers an array ofopportunities. Vacationhome, hunting lodge,B&B, or primary resl­dence with more than

, 3800 sq. ft. Oversizedgarage ls 24 x 28. Mlles,of groomed snowmobiletrails. 15258838Century 21

i Eagle Cap Realty541-9634511.

970 - Autos For Sale 970 - Autos For Sale

M.J. GOSS MOtOr Co.

Visit

1415 Adams Ave • 541-963-4161

' I I I I

for our most current offers and tobrowse our complete inventory.

• ••

Nlotittss Oyliastti2884 - LOIIDDOO'

esolid I2084 CorvettsCtitrsrtiDIs

Coupe, 350, autIth 132 miles, gets24 rnpg Addlo

more descnptioand interesting factsfor $99! Look how

much fun a girl couldhave in a sweet car

4'f2,560

dih, Ileveiirtg,

Featuresindud

er, rartt , m p tOVour auto, py

RV Storage

iike this!

or up to12 months(whichever comes first)

Includes up to 40 words of text, 2" in length, with border,bold headline and price.

• Publication in The Observer and Baker City Herald• Weekly publication in Observer Plus and Buyer's Bonus

• Continuous listing with photo onnortheastoregonclassifieds.com

*No refunds on early cancellations. Private party ads only.

• 0 • • 0 • • 0 •

Page 12: Baker City Herald Daily Paper 09-04-15

6B — THE OBSERVER a BAKER CITY HERALD FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 2015

DEADLINES:LINE ADS:

Monday: noon FridayWednesday: noon TuesdayFriday: no on Thursday

DISPLAY ADS:2 days prior to

publication date

PUBLISHED BY THE LA GRANDE OBSERVER & THE BAKER CITY HERALD - SERVING WALLOWA, UNION & BAKER COUNTIES

R E lBaker City HeraId: 541-523-3673 e www.bakercityheraId.com • [email protected] • Fax: 541-523-6426'The Observer: 541-963-3161 e www.la randeobserver.com • [email protected] • Fax: 541-963-3674

930 - RecreationalVehicles

2000 NEW VISIONULTRA 5TH WHEEL

970 - Autos For Sale

$16,000Fully loaded!

• 35 foot• 3 Slide Outs• W/D Combo• Kitchen Island

• 4-dr Fridge/FreezerFor more info. call:(541) 519-0026

2000 CHEVY BLAZERw/ snow tires on nmsand snow chains. Newstereo system, hands

free calling Kxm radiocapability. 2nd owner.Have all repair history.

Good condition!$4000/OBO541-403-4255

a + I

1001 - Baker CountyLegal Notices

IN THE CIRCUITCOURT OF THE SATEOF OREGON FOR THECOUNTY OF BAKER

In the Matter of theEstate ofLEONA JOY MILLER,

Deceased.

Case No. 15-614

NOTICE TOINTE RESTED PE RSONS

NOTICE IS H EREBYGIVEN that FORRESTS CHROEDER h a sbeen appointed per­sonal representative.All persons hav ingclaims against the es­tate are required top resent t hem, w i t hvouchers attached, tothe undersigned attor­ney for the personalrepresentative at P.O.Box 50, Baker City, OR9 7814, w i t h i n f o u rmonths after the dateof first publication oft his n o t i ce , o r theclaims may be barred.

All persons whose rightsmay be affected bythe proceedings mayobtain additional infor­mation from the r e ­cords of the court, thepersonal representa­tive, or the attorneysfor the personal repre­sentative, Damien R.Yervasi, Yervasi Law,P C, P O. Bo x 5 0 ,Baker City, OR 97814.

Dated and first publishedAugust 28, 2015.

Attorney for thePersonal Representative

/s/Damien R. YervasiOSB No. 954609Yervasi Law, P.C.P.O. BoxBaker City, OR 97814Phone: (541) 523-7973Fax: (541) 523-7993

LegaI No. 00042578Published: August 28,

September 4, 11, 2015

2008 FORD Edge SEL,$9,500. Good condi­tion, fwd, c lean t i t le,leather interior. Cal l541-786-2708

1010 - Union Co.Legal Notices

BOARD MEETING ofthe B lue M o u n ta inTranslator District willbe held Wednesday,S eptember 9 th , a tSunndge Inn in BakerCity OR, at 6:00 p.m.

Published: September 4,2015

Legal No.00042620

FOR THE COUNTY

FAMILY LAWDEPARTMENT

Case No. 14-0749218P U BL ICATIONIn the Matter of:CARLOS C. JIMENEZPetitioner,-and­MAR IA B. HE R NANDEZRespondent

You are hereby requiredto appear and defendPETITIONE R'5 EXPARTE MOTION FORORDER TO SHOWCAUSE RE: MODIFI­CATION OF PARENT­ING TIME filed againstyou in the above-enti­tled cause within thirty(30) days of the dateof first publication andin of your failure to doso, Petitioner will ap­ply to the Court for therelief demanded in Pe­t itioner's EX PARTEMOTION FOR ORDERTO SHOW CAUSE RE:M 0 D I F I CAT I 0 N 0 FPARENTING TIME Re­stricting the Respon­dent to supervised par­enting time. Respon­dent must appear andshow cause for why

OF UNION

1010 - Union Co.Legal Notices

modification of parent­ing time should not bemade and Petitioner'scost and attorney fees.

NOTICE TO RESPON­DENT: READ THISNOTICE CAREFULLYTHE RESPONDENTHEREIN S H OULDTAICE NOTICE THAT IFIT IS YOUR INTENTTO CONTEST THEMATTERS INVOLVEDHEREIN, A WRITTENRESPONSE SPECIFY­ING THE MATTER TOBE CO N T ESTEDMUST BE FILED BYYOU WITH THE TRIALCOURT ADMINISTRA­TOR WITH PROOF OFSERVICE OF A COPYTHEREOF ON PETI­TIONER'S ATTORNEYNOT LATER THANTHI RTY (30) DAYSFROM THE DATE OFFIRST PUBLICATIONAUGUST 20, 2015,a long w i t h t h e r e ­q uired f i l ing f ee . I tmust be i n pr o p erform and have a proofof service on the Peti­tioner's attorney. AB­SENT FOOD CAUSESHOWN, NO CON­TEST TO THE PETI­TIONER'S EX PARTEMOTION FOR ORDERTO SHOW CAUSE RE:M 0 D I F I CAT I 0 N 0 FPARENTING TIMESHALL BE PERMIT­TED UNLESS THECONTESTANT HASFILED A WRITTEN RE­SPONSE.

If you have questions,you should see an at­torney immediately. Ifyou need help in find­

PUBLIC NOTICE andNotice of Public

Hearing

1010 - Union Co.Legal Notices

ing an attorney, youmay call the OregonState Bar's Lawyer Re­f erral Ser v ic e at(503)684-3763 o rtoll-free in Oregon at(800)452-7636.

Wade P. Bettis,OSB¹720255Attorney for Petitioner1906 Fourth StreetLa Grande, OR 97850(541)963-3313Fax (541)963-4072Email:

wpbettis©eonucom

Published: August 21,28, 2015 and

September 4, 11, 2015

LegaI No. 00042491

Union County is eligibleto apply for a 2015Community Develop­ment Block Grant fromthe Oregon BusinessDevelopment Depart­ment. Community De­velopment Block Grantfunds come from theU.S. Department ofHousing and U r banD evelopment. T h egrants can be used forpublic fac i l it ies andh ousing i mp ro v e ­ments, pr imarily f o rpersons with low andmoderate incomes.

Approximately $11.5 mil­lion will be awarded toOregon non-metropoli­tan cities and countiesin 2015. The maximumg rant that a c i t y o r

1010 - Union Co.Legal Notices

county can receive is$3,000,000.

Union County is prepar­ing an application for a2015 Community De­velopment Block Grantfrom the Oregon Busi­ness Development De­partment for the 2015Union County RegionalHousing RehabilitationP rolect. It is est i ­mated that the p ro­p osed p r o lect w i l lbenefit at least 35 per­sons, of whom 100%will be low or moder­ate income.

A public hearing will beh eld by t h e Un i o nCounty Board of Com­missioners at 1 0 :00am on September 16,2015 at the JosephAnnex C o n ferenceRoom, 1106 IC Avenuein La Grande, Oregon.The purpose of t h ishearing is for the Un­ion County Board ofCommissioners to ob­tain citizen views andto respond to ques­t ions and commentsabout: community de­velopment and hous­ing needs, especiallythe needs of low- andmoderate-income per­sons, as well as otherneeds in the commu­nity that might be as­sisted with a Commu­nity Dev e l o pmentBlock Grant prolect;and the proposed pro­Iect.

Written comments area lso w e lcome a n d

1010 - Union Co.Legal Notices

must be received bySeptember 15, 2015 at1106 IC Avenue, LaGrande, OR. Both oraland written commentswill be considered bythe U n io n Co u n tyBoard of Commission­ers in d ec i di ngwhether to apply.

The location of the hear­i ng is accessible topersons with disabili­t ies. Please contactthe Union County Ad­ministrative O f f i cer ,Shelley Burgess, at(541) 963-1001 if youwill need any specialaccommodations to at­tend or participate inthe meeting.

More information aboutOregon CommunityDevelopment B lockGrants, the proposedprolect, and recordsabout Union County'spast use of Commu­nity Dev e l o pmentBlock Grant funds areavailable for public re­view at 1106 IC Ave­nue, La Grande, Ore­gon, dunng regular of­fice hours. Advancenotice is requested. Ifspecial accommoda­t ions a r e nee d ed ,p lease not ify U n ionCounty AdministrativeOfficer, Shelley Bur­gess, at (54 1)963-1001 so that ap­propriate ass istancecan be provided.

Permanent involuntarydisplacement of per­sons or businesses is

1010 - Union Co.Legal Notices

not anticipated as a re­sult from the proposedprolect. I f d i sp lace­ment becomes neces­sary, alternatives wi l lbe examined to mini­mize the displacementa n d p r o v i d erequired/reasonablebenefits to those dis­placed. Any low- andmoderate-incomehousing, which is de­molished or convertedto another use, will berep la ced.

Published: September 4,2015

Legal No.00042724

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PUBLIC NOTICE

PUBLIC NOTICE herebyis g i ve n t h a t thetwo-year penod for ther edemption o f re a lproperties included inthe 2013 del inquenttax l ien f o reclosureproceedings institutedby Baker County, Ore­gon on August 13 ,2013, in t h e C i r cu itCourt of the State ofO regon f o r Bak e rCounty, C ase No .13-617 and included inthe general ludgmentand entered therein onSeptember 24, 2013,and will expire on Sep­tember 24, 2015.

All properties orderedsold under said gen­eral ludgment, unlessredeemed on or be­fore September 24,2015, will be deededto Baker County, Ore­gon, immediately onexpiration of said pe­riod o f r e d empt ion,and every nght and in­terest of any person insuch properties will bef orfeited f o rever t oBaker County, Oregon.

Alice DurflingerBaker CountyTreasurer/Tax Collector

LegaI No. 00042591Published: August 28,

September 4, 2015

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1001 - Baker CountyLegal Notices

NOTICE OFSHERIFF'S SALE

On September 29, 2015,a t the hour o f 9 : 00a .m. a t t he Ba k e rCounty Court House,1995 Th ird S t r eet ,Baker City, Oregon,the defendant's inter­est will be sold, sub­Iect to redemption, inthe real property com­monly known as: 1311Walnut Street, BakerCity, OR 97814. Thecourt case number is13041, where JPMOR­GAN CHASE BANIC,NATIONAL ASSOCIA­TION, its successorsin interest and/or as­signs is plaintiff, andPAUL A. BLAIR; OC­CUPANTS OF THEPREMISES is defen­dant. The sale is apublic auction to thehighest bidder for cashor cashier's check, inh and, made ou t t oBaker County Shenff'sOffice. For more infor­mation on this sale goto: ww w.ore onsher­

NOTICE OFSHERIFF'S SALE

On October 06, 2015, atthe hour of 9:15 a.m.at the Baker CountyCourt House, 1995Third St reet , BakerCity, Oregon, the de­fendant's interest willbe sold, sublect to re­demption, in the realproperty c o mmonlyknown as: 2523 ValleyAvenue, Baker City,OR. The court casen umber i s 1 2 9 9 5 ,where JPMORGANCHASE BANIC, NA­TIONAL ASSOCIA­TION is plaintiff, andTIMOTHY ROBERTS;C LAU R ITA ROB E RTS;MORTGAGE ELEC­TRONIC REGISTRA­TION SYSTEMS, INC.;GREENPOINT MORT­GAGE FUNDING, INC.;OCCUPANTS OF THEPROPERTY is defen­dant. The sale is apublic auction to thehighest bidder for cashor cashier's check, inh and, made ou t t oBaker County Shenff'sOffice. For more infor­mation on this sale goto: www.ore onsher­

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LegaI No. 00042676Published: September 4,

11,18, 25, 2015

www.sm okeybea r.comLegaI No. 00042515Published: August 28,

September 4, 11, 18,2015

• 0 • • 0 • • 0 •

Page 13: Baker City Herald Daily Paper 09-04-15

PUZZLES 8 COMICS THE OBSERVER a BAKER CITY HERALD — 7BFRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 2015

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Does your carrier never miss a cIay?Are they always on time, no matter what kind of weather? Do they bring your paper to your front door? If so we want to hear from you.The Observer and Baker City Herald wants to recognize all of our outstanding carriers and the service they provide to ensure your paper

gets to you. Let us know about their service by sending your comments to

cthom son@la randeobseroercom or send them to14065t StreetLa Grande OR97850 II I /f@y((It/tI +4J7 fIgl«@IQ

4

• 0 • • 0 •• 0 •

Page 14: Baker City Herald Daily Paper 09-04-15

SB — THE OBSERVER 8 BAKER CITY HERALD COFFEE BREAK FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 2015

MIG RANT CRISISMom's motives for marriageare questioned by older man

DEAR LOVES: No, I do not. Bmg a cer­emony such as you have described, tears canbe a healthy display of emotion. However, I dothink your husband's comments are insensi­tive and judgmental, and he's doing the rightthing for everyone by staying away. Feeling ashe does, far awayis where he belongs.

DEARABBY: My wife, whois a Realtor, isupset because a couple of ourbest friends listed their home

DEAR with someone else. My wifeABBY feels they should have had

the decency to at least notifyher that they were going to

give the listing to another Realtor. My wifehad sold them their home a few years ago.Your thoughts, please?

DEAR MIFFED: No law says this couplewas obligated to have your wife representthem. I suspect that they didn't inform yourwife because they wanted to avoid an un­comfortable conversation. If she would liketo know the reason they listed their homewith someone else, she should ask them. It'spossible the other realtor offered servicesbeyond what your wife does.

DEARABBY: My wife and Iarein our 60sand have been married more than 40 years. Ithasn't always been great, but we've made it.

Recently, while going through some oldboxes in the basement, I ran across her diaryand discovered that she had an affair whilewe were engaged. This has left me depressed,hurt and feeling very down. Should I con­front her with my ftndings?

DEAR HURTING: If you feel the need tobring this up after 40 years, then rather thanlet it fester and ruin the next 40, tell yourwife what you have found. However, beforeyou do that, remember diaries are supposedto be private, and you will have to explainwhy you took it upon yourself to read some­thing that was never meant for you to see.

DEAR ABBY: I am a 68-year-oid manliving with a 28-year-old woman. She hasthree children — ages 2, 6 and 7. They livewith usevery other weekend. Ihave falleninlove with them. We are planning on gettingmarried soon, and I want to be sure the kidsare secure when I'm gone.

I have an erectile dysfunction problem.She says she doesn't care about sex, butI'm worried she will stray. Iwas 28 once, and that's all Ithought about. I'm afraid sheis marrying me for her ownbeneftt — the house, SocialSecurity and my business.

I love her and her children dearly. Shesays she loves me, but I'mjust not sure. Canyou help me ftgure out what to do?

DEAR TOO GOOD: If you have anydoubts about marrying this woman, thenyou shouldn't do it. However, if you dodecide to marry her, first discuss this withyour legal adviser and be sure you have anironclad prenuptial agreement.

As to providing for her little ones in theevent of your demise, discuss that with alawyer who specializes in wills and trustsand who can advise you about the best wayto leave money/assets in trust for them afterthey have reached a certain age — so themoney can't be dissipated prematurely.

DEARABBY: Our parents have been deadfor 25 years. Along the way, we have also lostsisters, nieces and cousins. Every year whenwe gather for a family reunion, part ofitisa candle lighting and spoken remembranceof those loved ones we have lost. Some in myfamily get teary-eyed or cry.

My husband refuses to attend my familyreunions because of this. He says my relativeshaveissues and need to see a mental healthprOfesSiona. He makes fun of us and the waywe are together. Do you agree we are "crazy" forthe remembrance and the tears?

— TOO GOOD TOBE TRUE?

— HURTING IN OHIO

— MIFFED IN MIAMI

The Associated PressBy Shawn Pogatchnik

BUDAPEST, Hungary­Thousands of people desper­ate to reach Western Europerushed into a Budapest trainstation Thursday after policeended a two-day blockade,setting off a wave of angerand confusion as hundredsshoved their way onto a wait­ing train. But when it tried todrop them off at a Hungariancamp for asylum seekers, abitter showdown began.

One man thtew his wifeand infant son onto the tracks,scteaminginArabic,'Wewon'tmove kom here!" Policesurrounded the pmne family,pulled the husband away andhandcufed him as he wailed.His wife and diaper-dad boy­apparentlyuninjum1 despitetheir stumbling descentontothe tracks — were fieed and al­lowed to rejoin other migrmts.

The scene of desperationwas just one of many thatunfolded Thursday as tem­pers flared in Hungary's warof wills with migrants tryingto evade asylum checks andreach Western Europe, ashowdown with consequenc­es for the entire continent.

As Hungary's anti-immi­grantprime minister warnedEuropean partners that he in­tends to make his country's bor­ders an impassible forlress fornew arrivals, his governmentstruggled to coax thousands ofunwanted visitors awaykomthe Budapest transportationhub thathas been turned into

37 5 39 5

Hungaryogens door to trainsformigrants, dulonlyto camgs

a squalid refugee camp.People fleeing war and pov­

erty in the Middle East, Asiaand Alrica rushed into theKeleti train terminal whenpolice unexpectedly withdrewThursday morning, ending ablockade designed to stop mi­grants kom boarding trainsto their desired destinationsin Germany and Austria.

In desperate scenes, peoplepushed each other toreach thetrain's sixcarriages. Childrencaughtin the melee cried in ter­mr as patents or older siblingspulled them thmugh openwindows, thinking thatgettingon board meant theywould befirst to escape Hungary.

But instead ofheading tothe Austrian border, the over­loaded train stopped at Bicske,a town northwest of Budapest

Worldwide displacementhits all-time high

42.7 42 43 3 33 4 2 .5

2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014Source: UNHCRGraphic: Staff, Trihune News Service

Wars, conflict and persecution have forced more people than atany other time since records began to flee their homes andseek refuge and safety elsewhere. Globally, one in every 122humans is now either a refugee, internally displaced, or seekingasylum.

Numder of people displaced dy war in millions 59 5

that holds one of the country'sfive camps for asylum seekers— facilities the migrants wantto avoid because they don'twant to pursue asylum claimsin economically depressedHungary. As the train platformfilled with police came intoview, those inside chantedtheir disapproval and their de­termination to reach Germany,their almost unanimous goal.

The crowd, angriiy wavingtrain tickets to Vienna andM unich, refused police ordersto board buses to the asylumcenter, pushing their way pastpolice and back onto the train.A day-long standoff ensued inwhich police and charity work­ers took turns handing foodand water to the passengers,only to have them tossed outtrain windows in protest.

51.2

— LOVES MY FAMILYIN GEORGIA

• ACCuWeather.COm ForecasTonight Saturday Sunday Monday

Baker City Temperatures

La Grande Temperatures

Enterprise Temperatures

P eriods of rai n A l i t t le r a i n

31 4) 54 29 0)

44 6) 60 38 o) 69 39 ( >o) 68 35 ( 8)

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The AccuWeather Comfort Index is an indication of how it feels based on humidity and temperature where 0 is leastcomfortable and 10 is most comfortable for this time of year.

Warmer

66 31 (>0)

39 (6) 54 36 (o) 65 42 (9 ) 65 31 (8) 10 40 (> o )

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68 30 (8)

Partly sunny

Itil

Mostly sunny

High I low (comfort index)

14 36 (10)

Tuesday

13 41 (10)

1manac

Hay Information Saturday

Baker CityHigh Thursday ..........................Low Thursday ...........................PrecipitationThursday ..................................Month to date ...........................Normal month to date .............Yearto date ..............................Normal year to date .................

La GrandeHigh Thursday ..........................Low Thursday ...........................

PrecipitationThursday ..................................Month to date ...........................Normal month to date .............Yearto date ..............................Normal year to date ...............

EiginHigh Thursday ..........................Low Thursday ...........................

PrecipitationThursday ..................................Month to date ...........................Normal month to date .............Yearto date ............................Normal year to date ...............

r icultural Inf .

Lowest relative humidity .......

0.00"0.00"0.08"

14.98"15.11"

0.02"0.09"0.07"7.00"

10.94"

0.03"0.04"0.06"7.32"7.13"

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67'42'

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Wallowa Lake

Thief Valley Reservoir

Stream Flows through midnightThursdayGrande Ronde at Troy ............ 494 cfsThief vly. Res. near N. powder ... 0 cfsBurnt River near Unity ............ 98 cfsLostine River at Lostine .............. N.A.Minam River at Minam ............ 54 cfsPowder River near Richland .... 17 cfs

7% of capacity

21% of capacity

1% of capacity

30% of capacity

3% of capacity

0% of capacity

........... 1 .0

......... 0. 08midnight

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PIWt High: 75' .............................. MedfordLow: 29' ............................ Meachamwettest: 0.11" .................... scappoose

I ~ , O g 30/64 8 ! r' tfI: Wettest: 2.78" ......... Oak Island, N.C.

" ' : . ' ';r, ':r I Extremes

regon:

......... 40%to 12 mph

CorvallisEugeneHermistonImnahaJosephLewistonMeachamMedfordNewportOntarioPascoPendletonPortlandRedmondSalemSpokaneThe DallesUkiahWalla Walla

RecreationAnthony LakesMt. Emily Rec.Eagle Cap Wild.Wallowa LakeThief Valley Res.Phillips LakeBrownlee Res.Emigrant St. ParkMcKay ReservoirRed Bridge St. Park

Sun 0 MoonSunset tonight ........Sunrise Saturday ...

L ast N ew

eather i S t or

4 1 2 1 r51 3 4 r39 2 1 r53 3 4 r54 2 9 r52 3 1 r62 4 3 r52 3 4 r66 4 4 r60 3 8 r

Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy,i -cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms,r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.

6 0 6 6Strong southwesterly winds on Sept.5, 1881, fanned flames into a mam­moth forest fire on Michigan's "thumb"region. The fire consumed a millionacres and killed over 500 people.

Re ional Cit ieSSaturday

OreCaSt

................. 7:25 p.m.

................. 6:18 a.m.

First Full

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Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2015

2't" AnnualC =

­September 1i1-1'3,„201 5La Grande Country,CIlub

Play'any NtIo of the three',days., '

FoundationG RA N D E R O N D E H O S P IT A L

Entry Fee: $125Prize Fund: $'5,600 (based on 90-entry minimum)

Dtinner: Provided by Cilass Act C~ateringTee Prize: Page A Tuttle Golf Shirt

Dtivisions for Men R Women

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4 0 I sps~ ~4fi

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Page 15: Baker City Herald Daily Paper 09-04-15

Friday, September 4, 2015

The Observer & Baker City Herald

EAGLE SCOUTSWEEICLYHUNTINGREPORT

STEELHEAD NATIONCAMERQN SCQTT

BAKER COUNTYArchery huntersshould find deer andelk around water andcool moist northernaspects. The con­tinuation of warmtemperatures willlimit animal activ­ity to early morningand late evening.Remember to checkthe regulations forthe area you will behunting.Grouse seasonstartedTuesday.Blue grouse can befound in the higherelevations whileruffed grouse aremore common inwetter areas. Hunt­ers should expectan average year forgrouse.

UNION COUNTYBlack bears are plenti­ful throughout thecounty. Look for signsaround fruit treesand in canyon bot­toms. Bears can beconcentrated alongcreeks and rivers inthe late summer. Thisyear's berry crop isnot quite what 2014was but should stillmake for good earlyseason bear hunt­ing in Union County.Huckle, service andhawthorn berries areall in full swing. Huntin the early morningand evenings for thebest chance of seeingbears.

• ar

Eric Valentine photo

J

WALLOWACOUNTYBear hunting isexpected to be goodearly in the morn­ing and late in theevening in drawbottoms and streambottoms wherebears are feeding onhawthorn, serviceand elder berries.Bull elk hunting wasgood for the openingweekend in mostunits.Archery hunters arehaving to deal withvery dry conditions.Buck hunters canexpect only fairsuccess as deernumbers are stillbelow managementobjective and dryconditions willmake stalkingdifficult. Hunters arereminded to checkUSFS regulations oncamp/cook fires.Grouse hunters canexpect to find bluegrouse on ridgetops near wet springareas. Numbers arestill below long-termaverages, so hunterswill need to work alittle harder to findbirds.

By Dick Mason

People can now travel theFlow Trail in the Mount EmilyRecreation Area more safely andwith greater help from the lawsof physics.

La Grande Boy Scout BeeckThurman has made sure of it.

Thurman has built a 23-footpedestrian foot bridge over thenorth fork of Conley Creek for hisEagle project.

Count Bart Barlow, a memberof the Blue Mountain SingleTrack Trails Club, as amongthose excited about the newbridge, which is part of FlowTrail. Barlow said it boosts safety

and the ease of travel. He saidbefore the bridge was in place,people had to stop when reachingConley Creek and figure out howto cross the creek or get around it.This could be dangerous, espe­cially when the creek water washigh in early spring. It also costtravelers time.

'You lost all of that momen­tum 4uilt up while approachingConley Creek). Now you can rideia bike), jog or walk without stop­ping," said Barlow, who served asThurman's project coach.

He said the quality of the bridgereflects excellent work on the partof Thurman.

"He built it to extremely high

BeeckThurman, top, drills boards together while working on a bridge project. Thurman, with thehelp of others, constructed a 23-foot pedestrian foot bridge at the Mountain Emily Recreation Areafor his Eagle project. Those shown helping him are JayCe Leonard, front, and Kodiak Ashley.

standards," Barlow said.Thurman got the idea for the

project on a spring morning morethan a year ago when he lookedat the Conley Creek site.

"It was snowing lightly and thestream was roaring with freezingcold water. The crossing was obvi­ously too dangerous to ford foranyone. The need for a crossingwas blatant," Thurman wrote in apiece about his Eagle project.

He then began to design abridge to "span the current."

Thurman later constructed thebridge primarily with materialsdonated by Union County. Hewas assisted by fellow Boy Scouts,

See Project/Page 2C

WesCom News Service

tt's summer in the high country andI was able to break free and go enjoy

it. My daughters were working so Iheaded up by myseK I had a couple ofarticles to getin right fast so I hit thetrailhead a little later than I wanted,but soon I had everythirg strapped onmy pack and hit the dusty trail — soto speak.

Not an hour down the trail it startedraining so I stopped and threw a plasticbag over my pack and put on a Gore­Texraincoat. When I got to myspotIpulled in under a big pine tree. It waspouring but under the tree it was stilldry. I pulled out my tent and slapped it

TQM CLAYCQMBBASE CAMP

up right fast.It was still raining pretty hard and

getting dark so I hit the sack. About12:30 a.m. it quit raining. I dozed backoff and woke up the next morning. Iscrambled up some wood and made afire, fired up a pot of w ater and madesome coffee and oatmeal. I slammed itdown right fast and then hit the firstfishing hole.

Good, the hole was full ofbig bull

lhighcountrVgetawaVnets goo fishingtrout. I normally fish for them with bigbead headed Black Wooly Buggers, butI had some new flies called Fish Skullsthat I'd ordered from flydealflies.comthat I wanted to try. Wow, did they endup working.

I hung a few 18-20 inchers andthen I hung a hog. I had a tough timekeeping her in the hole. She kept tryingto run downstream, but I kept gettingher turned. Finally she held up in thebottom of the hole.

After a minute or two I got worriedthat it had wrapped around a rock. Icouldn't budge her. I pulled hard butgot nothing. After a few minutes she

t

SummerreAectionsand 6rereactions

t is raining again in Colorado. This morn­ing, I'm greeted by two wet moose stripping

leaves off an aspen tree outside my window.In the afternoon I'll take another client froman endless string of clients on another guidedfly fishing trip. An endless string which everysummer abruptly ends. But until that ending,what keeps me going through the Augustand September grind, are thoughts ofhome.Thoughts about big towering ponderosapines and golden basalt slopes with clumpsofbunchgrass. Red osier. Quiet float trips. Bigwide open spaces to get lost in. Steelhead.

Rainfall is a funny thing. With all theflooding earlier this summer, all my clientsfrom Texas are finally satiated after years ofdrought. Their tanks and ponds and lakes areback to full. Their bass and cows are happyagain. But there was so much rain it becametoo much and turned into flash floods. Twodifferent clients shared stories about peoplethey knew who were killed, families tornapart or people still missing. Meanwhile,California continues to experience a droughtthe Colorado River is unable to quench. Dryas a bone, dusty as adrywash.

Before I left in late May, I took a shortovernight backpack trip up the WenahaRiver to say goodbye to the two things I lovemost about Wallowa County: solitude andfish. The river was low and the slopes werealready hot with rattlesnakes, but the fishingcouldn't have been better. Big rainbows andbull trout slammed the hopper as it driftedpast or skated in an arc downstream. Andwhile there were other folks backpacking andfishing, what might have been considered abusy weekend, by Colorado standards, waspretty quiet.

Not that I can't find quiet corners to fish inthe Roaring Fork Valley where I guide, butsometimes it is surprising how many peopleshow up in quiet, out-of-the-way corners.Last weekend when my mom was in town Itook Sunday ofK After a long hour drive up adeeply rutted dirt road and another three­mile hike into a lake, there were no less thanseven people already fly fishing. Which isto say nothing of the busy corners, like theFrying Pan River where I spend many daysin late July and August guiding clients, wherepeople often fish within casting distance ofeach other.

Which is why, some nights out here inColorado, I literally dream of winter steelheadfishing. Not the crowds of March, but the soli­tude of October and November. Where there

See Scott/Page 2C

ran out a foot or two thrashing andthen went back deep. She just laid onthe bottom for nearly five minutes. I'dnever had one just sit on bottom of ahole this long. I had to get a picture ofthis fish.

After a good five minutes she blewout downstream. Uh oh — I wasabout to get spooled. I jumped in andwaded around some brush and thenstarted downstream. At 17 minutes shesnapped oK This was by far the biggesttrout that I'd ever hung. Three fishlater, I hung another hog that snappedoff at 14 minutes. These two had to be

See Claycomb/Page 2CSource: ODRN

HIICING NORTHEAST OREGON FLY-TYING CORNER

Crossing creeks common on Catherine Creek hikeThe North Fork Catherine CreekTrailhead hike is nine miles one way and has more than 3,200

feet of elevation gain. To get there, travel on Highway 203 southeast from Union 11.5 miles to thejunction with Forest Road 7785.Turn left, then travel six miles to the trailhead (4,200 ft).The trailstarts along Catherine Creek, crossing six streams in the first1.25 miles. The trail then crossesCatherine and Chop creeks before reaching the Eagle CapWilderness boundary (5,090 ft) twomiles in. Just past the boundary is a meadowwith campsites nearby. The trail crosses Boot HillCreek(5320 ft) at three miles and enters Catherine Creek Meadows (5,650 ft) near the four-milemark. Following is a bridge, then a fork. Take the left forkThe Deadhorse Flat junction is at 4.8miles. Cross several more streams in the next 2.3 miles before reaching another meadow and aCatherine Creekcrossing (6,550 ft).The trail finishes at the Meadow Mountain junction (7430 ft).

Source: "Hiking Oregon's Eagle Cap Wilderness" dy Fred Barslad

TO DO LIST

Youth can obtainpark access pass

Qiltwater fly allows I'ar many optionsThis doesn't look like anything in particular, but it simulates afreshwater shrimp, a damsel, a water boatman or a snail. Fish it on aslow-sink intermediate clear line and a 4X fluorocarbon tippet, and fishit slowly. Tie this pattern on a No. 12 straight or curved wet fly hook. Tostart, tie down four peacock sword fibers to create a short tail. Wrap the

. bodywith a rusty UVdubbing and pickout the fibers with a bodkin. Wrap arusty red hackie and trim with scissors.

Finish by pulling the peacock sword overthe body, tying down at the head.

Source: Gary Lewis, for WesCom News Service

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A nationwide program launchedby the president called Every Kid in aPark seeks to give youth an additionalopportunity to explore the outdoors.Fourth-graders can now visit the EveryKid in a Park website to obtain a passgranting themselves and familiesaccess to more than 2,000 federally­managed areas. Visit www.everykidi­napark.gov for details.

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Page 16: Baker City Herald Daily Paper 09-04-15

2C — THE OBSERVER 8L BAKER CITY HERALD OUTDOORS 8 REC FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 2015

SAWTOOTH WILDERNESS SCOTT

WesCom News SerwceBy Mark Morical

STANLEY, Idaho — Sur­rounded by craggy spiresof granite with my feetsubmerged in the glacier­cold water of Sawtooth Lake,I breathed in some of theclearest air in the continen­tal United States.

Such air belongs to theSawtooth Wilderness, ac­cording to the Environmen­tal Protection Agency.

After postponing a much­anticipated trip to the Wal­lowa Mountains of northeastOregon due to smoky condi­tions caused by wildfires, myfriend and I ventured eastinto the heart of the IdahoRockies on a three-nightcamping/hiking/mountainbiking trip last week.

The Sawtooths proved tobe a more-than-worthy back­up plan — and also offeredsome relatively clean air.

About 420 miles ianeight-hour drivel east fromBend, Stanley — popula­tion 63 — is the largestsettlement in the SawtoothNational Recreation Area,which boasts more than700 miles of trails, 40 peaksrising over 10,000 feet and300-plus-high mountainlakes, according to the U.S.Forest Service.If Bend is an escape for

Portlanders, then Stanleyis an escape for Bendites.Stanley has all the naturalamenities of Bend, minus,you know, the 80,000 people.The tiny town is a mountainoutpost that can be enjoyedwithout the annoyance ofCycle Pubs and brewery­hopping tourists.

In fact, 130 miles north­east of Boise, it feels a bitlike the middle of nowhere.

A few miles south ofStanley, we found a campsitenestled against the Salmon

CLAYCOMB

awtoot

River, with a dramatic viewof the Sawtooths to the west.

Our first day in theSawtooths was dedicated toa 10-mile round-trip hikefrom Iron Creek to Saw­tooth Lake. My map listedthis hike as one of the mostpopular trails in the Saw­tooth National RecreationArea. Indeed, the trailheadparking area was nearly fullon a Sunday morning.

But just a little way intothe hike, solitude abounded.As we started gaining eleva­tion, a long series of jaggedrocky peaks came into viewto the west. The mountainswere unlike any I had everseen, impossible to compareto anything in Oregon.

We crossed a dry, brown

meadow, then began a steepclimb toward Alpine Lake,just northeast of SawtoothLake. Total elevation gainfor the hike was about 1,700feet, and because SawtoothLake sits at 8,435 feet,we could feel the thinnerair take hold as the trailbecame more and moreprecipitous.

Following the switchbacksabove the sparkling bluealpine lake, we rose abovethe tree line and arrived ata babbling brook borderedby yellow wildflowers. Fromthere, it was just a shortclimb to 170-acre SawtoothLake, the largest lake in theSawtooth Wilderness.

In my research of thishike before the trip, I came

Jeremy Dickman, of Bend, rides part of the Elk Mountain Loop near Stanley, Idaho.

across many photos of Saw­tooth Lake. But no picturecould do the area justice. Theimpossibly clear blue-greenlake is enveloped by tower­ing glacier-carved peaks.Mount Regan, at 10,190 feet,rises on the south end of thelake and is reflected in theshimmering water.

A few other hikers andbackpackers milled aboutaround the rocky shore, tak­ing in the mountain scenery.While we were on a dayhike, many others carriedlarge backpacks, headingout for multiday trips deeperinto the Sawtooth Wilder­

The journey requiredabout five hours. And al­though the hike is rated as

ness.

ernesssrovi es res air

"moderate" on the SawtoothNational Recreation Areamap, we were thoroughlyexhausted afterward.

While hiking and back­packing are common pur­suits in the Sawtooths, theregion is also known for itsrock climbing and mountainbiking opportunities. Thearea is home to some of themost renowned multipitchgranite rock climbing routesin North America, accordingto www.stanleycc.org.

Many mountain biketrails are located in the Saw­tooth National RecreationArea. Cycling is prohibitedin wilderness areas, butseveral trails are locatedjust outside the SawtoothWilderness boundary.

Mark MoricalNVescom News Sennce

OREGON DEPARTMENT OF FISH AND WILDLIFE

gone.

Continued ~om Page 1C

are too few fish in theriver systems for there tobe too many people fish­ing. Where if you want tofish that wide open riffleon the Grande Ronde,chances are it might nothave been fished yet. Orif you want to sit on thebank in the last warmrays of sunshine for anhour, good on you. No onewill jump ahead of you inthe river.

But in the past fewweeks, smoke has blowninto the valley here. Notfrom any local fires, butfires burning acrossCalifornia, Oregon,Washington and therest of the dusty West.I made calls home. Nofires, not yet. One outsideof Medical Springs, butnothing closer to WallowaCounty. Not unless we getsome lightning. Then lastweek I caught a threadof Facebook posts about afire starting up HurricaneCreek. My guts twisted.And then last night, twowords from my buddyDave: Wenaha gone. Iwrote quickly back: goneas in fires? His reply: Fire

And sure enough, with aquick Google search, I readthrough a thread ofbowhunters chatting aboutthe fire that affected theTucannon-Wenaha Wil­derness, and then with amore specific search, thereit was on a map, the actualfire consuming most of theWenaha drainage.

If rain is a funny tlnng,fire is its opposite. So pow­erful, a few cords of woodkeep my house heated allwinter. A small lit candleis too hot to touch. Atan early age we learn itburns, and sometimes itconsumes the things welove most.

Continued from Page 1C

pushing 30 inches. Theywere big.

I then wentdownstreamto get some cutthroats. It wasovercast so I used nymphs allday. The fishing was tough,but I gotinto a lotof thimbleberries and hucklebemes andpicked enough to putin myoatmeal the next morning andmake afiuit-flavoml water.

I fished all day and thenheaded back late that after­noon to camp and whippedout a Mountain House BeefStroganoff dinner. I built agood fire and messed aroundand then hit the sack. It'dbeen a great day. Dang, Iwish my daughters couldhave been with me.

The next morning I built aroaring fire, dipped my coffeepot in the river and firedit up. I hit the big hole andhung into a few but couldn't

PROJECT

Tom Claycomb showing off one of the many good­sized bull trouts he reeled in.

keep them hooked. Then Ihung a 24-inch one and gotit netted.

The sun was teasing melike it wanted to come out soI thought I'd head down­stream a good ways and hitsome holes for cutthroats.The sun eventually did peek

out so I got a chance to tie onan elk hair caddis. I ended upnetting four nice cutthroatsand snapping off one.

As the trip came to a close,I took a second to count myblessings. Wow, it's greatliving out West isn't it? I can'tbelieve how many people

Tom Claycomb photo

never get up in the m oun­tains but choose to just sitat home. I didn't even seeanyone until the third day.

Which brings up a point.Sometimes I see people andwonder if they ever made itout alive. When I was pack­ing out I saw three guys amile from the trailhead withtheir gear laid out. They werewanting to kayak down­stream and end up some­where, but where?

A couple of years ago I mettwo guys asking directions.They had some inflatablekayaks in their packs andwere somewhat doing thesame. I can only estimatethat they had at least aseven- to 10-day trip infront of them and surely thekayak, paddles and clothinghad to take up most of theroom in their packs. Howmuch food could they havehad with them? Well, I'm notsure about them, but I madeit home safe.

WesCom News Serwce staff

The Oregon Department ofFish and Wildlife announcedThursday it is relaxingfishing restrictions on 10northeast Oregon bodies ofwater. The eased restrictionsgo in effect immediately.

ODFW plans to chemi­cally treat lakes and ponds inBaker, Union, Wa llowa andUmatilla counties this fall toremove unwanted fish speciesand improve trout fisheries.

Under the new temporaryregulations, there are nodaily bag or possession limits,no size limits, and anglerscan harvest fish by hand, netor angling.

"By relaxing the rules,we hope to give people theopportunity to harvest thesefish before we remove them,"

Restrictions likedODFW fish biologist KyleBratcher said.

Kinney Lake in WallowaCounty, Peach, Lugar andBoundary ponds in UnionCounty, and Keyhole, GraniteMeadows, Goldfish, Yellow­jacket and Windy Springsponds in Umatilla County arethe water bodies affected bythe temporaryregulations.

The regulations will be inplace until 12:01 a.m. Sept.26, at which time the bodiesof water will be closed due tothe chemical treatment. Theyare scheduled to reopen Jan.1, 2016.

'The three-month closuregives us some flexibility inscheduling the treatments,and provides ample time fordetoxification," ODFW fishbiologist Tim Bailey said.

Not signed up — but still want to play? YOU C A N !Continued from Page 1C

National Honor Society members, adultvolunteers, mountain bike riding enthusiastsand inmates from the Powder River Correc­tional Facility who carried in beams for thebridge. Thurman and those assisting him putin a total of 250 hours of work on the project.Union County Parks Coordinator Sean

Chambers is among those who provided amajor hand of assistance to Thurman. Hetransported many of the materials for thebridge to the Conley Creek site. Chamberswas Thurman's beneficiary representative forthe project.

Businesses who assisted Thurman includeMiller's Home Center and Lumber, BeeckFarms and JC Woodworks.

'The projectwas diflicult and took a lot oftime, work and dedication to complete. Luckily,I had the support of the community. My fiiends,peers and close relatives worked extremely welltogether. I am grateful for their time and effort,"Thurman said.

Thurman, a member ofTroop 514, is a seniorat La Grande High School and the son of Gregand Tlila Thurman.

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For informat ion call 541-962-0306

Benefit Gelf Scramble atBuffale Peak Gelf Ceurse

September 12, 2015

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Page 17: Baker City Herald Daily Paper 09-04-15

HEALTH 8 FITNESS

DUELING DIETS: LOW-CARB OR LOW-FAT?

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 2015 THE OBSERVER a BAKER CITY HERALD — 5C

VISION

mtesCom News ServiceBy Kathleen McLaughlin

Gluten-fiee cookbook au­thor Michelle Lee meets a lotof people who hope the dietwill lead to weight loss.

'The perception is thatwhen you cut out gluten,you cut out carbs, and thenyou lose weight," said Lee,who started following agluten-fiee diet four yearsago because ofher husband'sallergy.

Lee and her husband bothlost weight, but she said thatwas probably the result oflifestyle changes like cookingmore meals from scratch anddining out less. Most weight­loss studies fail to account forsuch incidental effects. That'sone reason there's so muchbuzz around recent researchthat compared reduced-fatand reduced-carbohydratediets — and found that cut­ting fat led to a greater lossin body fat."In contrast to previous

claims about a metabolicadvantage of carbohydraterestriction from enhancingbody fat loss, our data andmodel simulations supportthe opposite conclusion,"National Institutes of Healthresearchers concluded inan article published in thejournal Cell Metabolism."Furthermore, we can defini­tively reject the claim thatcarbohydrate restriction isrequired for body fat loss."

The tightly controlledstudy, which involved 19obese people staying in a

INSURANCE

clinic for two weeks at astretch, sheds light on howthe body processes differenttypes of calories. Still, thefindings don't offer muchnew information for peoplelooking to lose weight in thereal world.

Over time, the differencein body-fat loss between thetwo diets would probably besmall, said lead author KevinHall, a metabolism research­er at the National Institute ofDiabetes and Digestive andKidney Diseases. Hall wasn'tavailable for an interviewbutresponded to questions

maximum your plan allows adoctor to charge for paymenton covered health-care servic­es, for example, $100 for an

times also called the eligibleexpense, payment allowance,or negotiated rate.

• Coinsurance: a percentyou are charged of the al­lowed amount for healthcare covered by your plan, forexample: 20 percent.

• Medically necessary:the health care servicesthat meet your insurancecompany's standards of whatmedicine is truly needed fordiagnosis and treatment.

Get some respectOnce you've mastered

some insurance jargon ofyour own, use it. Using theproper terminology can com­municate you mean business,Savastano says."Could youplease walk me through howthis claim was processed?" isa good start. Or "Could youplease detail how this claimwas adjudicated according tothe benefits?" You'll get somesatisfaction regardless ofhow

• Plate of spaghettiand meat sauce,10 oz. (290 g)

• Small grilled chickensandwich, 5 oz. 040 g)

• 5 oz. 037 g) hamburgerand medium-large servingof french fries

1,000 calories areeasy to consume

Workout vs. high-calorie food

Taking it in

People who exercise to help them lose weight should rememberthat a simple high-calone dish can outweigh hours of exercise.

4 hours moderateyard work

3 hours moderate walking

Source U S AgncultureDepartment, U S

• .. . Surgeon General

Ways to expend1,000 calories

Burning it off

l hour moderatebicycling

QQOQi­

GGOi P,O -' Lc l hour moderate running

the conversation turns out.

Ask to speak with a nurseThat's right, many case

managers at insurance com­panies are registered nurses,explains Dreher, and they'reusually more knowledgeableand sometimes even moresympathetic to your cause. Soif you need assistance witha medical question and yourcustomer service rep isn'tbeing helpful, ask politely foran RN.

Follow upIf the insurance company

promises to get back to youby a certain date, put areminder in your calendar tofollow up immediately afteryou hang up, says Savastano.

Always get it in writingIf the insurance com­

pany is making an excep­tion to coverage rules, getthat agreement in writing.Dreher had a client in Illinoiswho needed a complicatedsurgery that no in-network,local provider could per­form. The most experienced

through a National InstitutesofHealth spokesperson.The main driver in body­

fat reduction is calories, Hallsaid in an email."Therefore,it is likely more importantto choose a diet that leads toa reduction in calorie intakethat can be sustained for longperiods of tim e."

The theory behind low­carb diets is that they reduceinsulin production and speedup fat-burning. Research­ers found that fat-burningindeed increased under thereduced-carb diet. Partici­pants lost more weight than

Body'sbasic

metabohsmburnsabout1,100

caloriesa day

source Helen ree Mccomas, paul TrapGraphic Tnbune News Servse

surgeon was out-of-networkin California. The patient'sinsurance company ver­bally agreed to cover theprocedure, but afterwardhe received a bill that didn'tline up with what had beenpromised. Fortunately, hehad documented every detail,and Dreher helped him filean appeal.

Don't pay until thenumbers match

After a medical appoint­ment or procedure, you'llreceive an"explanation ofbenefits" from your insuranceprovider as well as a bill fromyour doctor. Both docu­ments will specify how muchmoney you owe the doctor.In a perfect world, thesetwo numbers should match,says Russell. If they do, paythat amount. If there's a bigdiscrepancy, call the doctor'soffice to make sure it billedthe insurance company cor­rectly.

While insurance compa­nies generally won't budgeon discrepancies like this,hospitals and doctors might,

Continued from Page 6CThen you can ask the

rep, "Could you please pointme to the document you'rereferencing?" says DianneSavastano, founder of Massa­chusetts-based Healthassist,which helps patients navi­gate the insurance system.

Record everythingThe automated voice that

says, "this call may be moni­tored" is good advice for you,too. Note the date and time,the name of whomever youspoke with and any detailsabout what they said, so youhave a documented versionof the conversation just likethe insurance company does.In fact, you can record theconversation as well.

'Very few insurance­related calls are resolved inone phone call," says Russell,so it's likely you'll need toreference this info when youcall back. "If you can say, 'Italked to Jasmine on June 6at 3 o'clock, and she told methis,' you may not have toexplain the whole thing fromscratch."

Another option is corre­sponding via email. You won'thave to take ias many) notesif everything is in writing.Ask the rep if you can followup via email and, ifhe agrees,ask if you can send a notesummarizing your phoneconversation, says Savastano.

Insist they speak EnglishInsurance-world jargon

can be intimidating, so don'tbe embarrassed to say to arep, "Help me understandwhat that means," saysScott Josephs, MD, nationalmedical director for CignaHealth Insurance. Here aresome common terms andtheir meaning ifind more atHealthcare.gov/glossary:l

• Deductible: the amountyou will pay before your plankicks in at the rate outlinedin your benefits summary.

• Out-of-pocket maximum:the most you will pay beforeyour plan covers 100 percentof your charges.• Co-pay: a fixed am ount

you're charged for healthcare covered by your plan, forexample: $15.

• 0 0 0

they did on the reduced-fatdiet, and they also lost bodyfat, an average 53 grams perday.Yet the reduced-fat diet led

to a significantly greater lossin body fat — an average of89 grams per day.

Hall noted that fat-burningunder the reduced-carb dietplateaued after a few days. Inthe end, he said, the caloriedeficit was greater under areduced-fat diet, and thatwas reflected in lost body fat.

The fact that both dietsincluded a 30-percent caloriereduction hit home with Lee,who followed a low-fat dietfor several years in her teensand 20s.'What you're seeingis basic high school, textbookbiology, calories in versuscalories out."

Bend dietitian RanDeeAnshutz does not emphasizecutting calories with her cli­ents, and that won't changein light of the new research,she said. Anshutz subscribesto the Health at Every Sizemodel, in which she helpsclients change their habitsto improve health measuressuch as blood pressure, cho­lesterol and blood sugar.

The study didn't go intodetail about what type of fatsand carbs were restricted,Anshutz said.'Those areimportant to the healthpicture," she said.

The 19 men and womenchecked into the metabolicward at the NIH ClinicalCenter in Bethesda, Mary­land, for two weeks. They ate

a baseline diet, 2,740 calories,for five days, and then forsix days they were given alower-calorie diet that eitherreduced carbohydrates orreduced fats. The diets wereassigned at random.

After a two-week to four­week"wash-out" period, theparticipants returned to theclinic and followed the sameprocedure under the oppositediet.

As the study's authorsnoted, the reduced-carbohy­drate diet was not what mostpeople would consider"low­carb." That was owed to thedifficulty of further cuttingcarbs without making up thedifference in calories throughfats, the authors said.

The 140 grams of carbs inthe study's reduced-carb dietis about what most peopleshould consume, AnshutzSRld.

During their stays, thestudy participants exercisedon a treadmill at a set paceand incline for an hour a day.Anshutz said she would liketo know more about theirusual exercise habits.

If anything, the studyreinforced the importanceof physical activity, Anshutzsaid. While she appreciatedthe quality of the research,Anshutz noticed that it didn'tinclude a control group, andthe prediction about long­term effects was based onmathematical models.

She added,i Our body ismore complex than that."

says Dreher. Ask to speakwith a medical adviser at thehospital or doctor's office andexplain any financial stressyou're under. But instead ofasking for the entire bill to bewaived, offer to pay a sizeableportion isay 50 to 60 percent).At the very least, you couldget a more reasonable pay­ment plan, says Savastano.

Set up a conference call

There are strict rulesprotecting your privacy whenit comes to health care andhealth insurance — andrightfully so. But things canget frustrating when you'retrying to help, say, an agingparent. Savastano suggests aconference call between you,your parent and the insur­ance company so the rep canvalidate your parent's infor­mation and get her approvalto speak with you.

Stop using out-of­network providers

Obviously, in an emergencyyou go where you must. Butwhen it's not, using an out-of­network health care pro­

vider is a sacrifice, Josephssays."For out-of-networkproviders,your deductiblesand coinsurance are oftenhigher, and they haven'tgone through the rigorousquality criteria that we havefor in-network providers," heexplains. All of which mayadd up to more expense andheadaches for you.

Know what you're buyingHalf of those surveyed by

Cigna in a recent poll admit­ted to spending less than onehour deciding on their healthinsurance coverage. Youwouldn't buy a car or evenplan a vacation with thatlittle sweat. If you get yourinsurance through an em­ployer, you're probably guiltyof this, says Savastano.

"Spend the time to makethe choices that are right foryou," says Josephs. Be awarethat choosing the employer­offered plan with the lowestpremium might not save youmoney. It depends on whatkind ofcare you need,suchas behavioral health servicesor prescription meds.

• Allowed amount: the

in-office visit. This is some­

— : ,—. I%

Bakev" Clty Bandstand Committee

%ese musieiens weie inuited to perfoim onthe opening day of the Pomder Riuer Pauition

as thanks for their dedieation to the bandstind pIoj eef.They hriue donated their time and Ialenf sinee

Powder Riuer Musie Reut'eu started thefund raisingcaneerts in fhe park seuen yecrs ago.

5h01Lt them your aPPreCiatian­tips are gladty aceepted.

• 0 0 0

SUNDAY SEPTEMBER 6th

the heart of the park

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Bring your lawn ehairs and blanketsto the coneert:. Enj ay the shade and

Continued ~om Page 6CRecovery time is mini­

mal, and the new visionthat seniors experience soquickly can often evokedeep emotions.

'You heal up reallyfast," said Hayes."It'squite a miracle. Every­thing is so crystal clearthat it just bring tears ofjoy to your eyes. I didn'tknow what I was missing.Before surgery, I couldn'tsee across the street ortell who people were atthat distance. I tried toidentify them by theirwalk, the clothes theywere wearing or how theywere standing. That's theonly way I could identifyanyone across the street."Cataract prevention

may yield limited benefitsfor a time.

"The use of UV­blocking sunglasses orcontact lenses is thoughtto reduce the risk of cata­ract development," Glabesaid."Maintaining goodhealth through properdiet and exercise canavoid diseases associatedwith early cataracts suchas diabetes. However,even with good preven­tion, cataracts are highlylikely to develop as ageincreases."Staying on top of your

vision health is impor­tant, as well.

See your physician,Hayes said, and don'thesitate to get thecataract procedure doneif your physician recom­mends it.

• 0 0 0

Page 18: Baker City Herald Daily Paper 09-04-15

Friday, September 4, 2015

The Observer cy Baker City Herald

HEALTH INSURANCECATARACT SURGERY BECOMING MORE COMMON

Dreading aphone call to

provider'?Try these tips

insurance

ForWesCom News ServiceBy Ttish Yerges

At one time age-related cataracts left seniorsbilaterally blind.

But no more.Today, cataract surgeries are common and

fast, and they often restore the patient's visionto 20/20.

This year an estimated 3.6 million cataractprocedures will be performed in the U.Su andmore than 20 million will be performed world­wide, according to a March report from Reviewof Ophthalmology.

This figure is going to steadilyincrease as thepopulation grows and people live longer. Cata­racts become increasingly more common withage. Up to half of 75-year-olds have visuallysignificant cataracts, while less than 3 percentof 45- to 55-year-olds have them. Cataractsare more common among women and those ofCaucasian ethnicity."A cataractis a painless, progressive cloud­

ing of the lens located inside of the eye," saidDr. David Glabe, an optometrist at La GrandeFamily Eye Care.'This douding can occur nor­mally with age, or may be the result of trauma,diseases such as diabetes, or inherited eye disor­ders. Early cataracts cause glare and diKcultyseeingin low-light situations. As they progress,cataracts mayresultin vision loss from blockingor distorling light that enters the eye. These vi­sual distortions cannot be corrected by standardglasses or contact lenses, making eye surgerynecessary to restore good vision."

Peggy Hayes of Elgin describes how shestarted developing cataract symptoms.

'You don'trealize you have fuzzy visionbecause it comes on so gradually," Hayes said.'You know it's harder to see, but you can still goahead and read, play puzzles and do all thesethings. At night, though, the light hurt my eyes,so I quit going out."

Hayes went to her optometrist for an exami­

2 Oghtbeam

holds curvedlens system tofront oi eyeball

scans front oisys end internalsurfaces oi lensto gulds cut

SuctionQ1 s.m­

lasting half e tnlkonthoi e second makeprsassly controlled cut

3 Flashes ot laser kght

Dr. David Glabe examines DottieWitkes' eyes for potential signs of cataracts, a progressive clouding of the lens.

Crucial Ste yt depends on

p~™ ~ « ~ ~

cloudy as its proteins breakdown; vision deteriorates

Scanningm

08 e=

An experimental surgery to replace eye cataractsis performedwith a laser, which cuts more precisely than a surgeon's hand can.

CataraCt: Eye's lens becomes

Precise new cataract surgery

Le

nation. Cataracts were confirmed and surgerywas recommended, but the idea was just a bitunnerving to her at first.

"I didn't know quite what to expect," she said."After all, it's my eyes, and they are so valuableto me. But I agreed to the surgery and wasreferred to Pacific Cataract and Laser Institutein Kennewick. I had to have both eyes done, aweek and a half apart. When I wentin, theydilated both of my eyes again, even though mypersonal doctor did it, they did it again. Theywere very attentive to me."Glabe said cataract surgeryrepresents one of

the great advances in modern surgery.

Laserbeam

ultrasound, suctions outfragments

Lens

Current technique1 Surgeon makes curved

2 Breaks up lens with

3 Implents plastic lens

freehand cut m front oi lenscapsule with tiny instruments

Depaa e t e ocl tl al ologySce re ag az e

o acl c nele Leeurco asc2010 MCT

s o re SIa fodu es t y

Suctionskirt

Lenssystem

l j , 's

"Oh, my goodness! I couldn't believehotv clear everything tvas."— Peggy Hayes, describing her reactionafter having cataract surgery

"Although variations on surgical techniqueexist," he said,"this delicate procedure is typi­cally performed by making small incisionson the eye surface which allow instrumentsto enter the eye and break apart the cloudynatural lens inside. A new lens implantis theninserted into the eye, allowing for improvedlight transmission. Implanted lenses are calcu­lated to provide enough power for the eye thatthe need for glasses may be reduced or, in somecases, entirely eliminated."

Cataract surgery is generally an outpatientprocedure, and skilled surgeons can completethe actual surgery in less than 10 minutesper eye. Patients are normally awake duringthe procedure, though the eye is dilated andanesthetized. Recovery time is minimal andtypically painless, with most patients enjoyingimproved vision the same day. Eyedrops areused for three to four weeks following the sur­gery to assist in healing, and regular follow-upvisits are critical to monitor for any complica­tions.

After Hayes' surgery, she had a patch overher eye and was instructed to remove it oncethe anesthesia wore ofK After that point, shehad to put two eye drops in her eye every fourhours.

'The next day I saw my regular doctor, andthen again a week later," she said."By the timeyou have your second follow-up exam a weeklater, you're typically done with the drops. Thefirst day, light bothered my eye, but the nextday everything was so crystal clear. Oh, mygoodness! I couldn't believe how clear every­thing was."

Tim Mustoefyvescom News Sennce

See Vision/Bge 5C

By Sarah KleinPrevention magazine

Calling your health insurance provid­er is right up on the Most Dreaded Listwith getting a colonoscopy. But therewill come a day when you can't avoidcalling that toll-free number, pushing 2for English, 4 for Claims, keying in your47-digit Group ID number, having your47-digit Group ID number electronicallyread back to you and then (finally! l be­ing told your wait time is 50 minutes.

But there is a better way.We actually got through to these in­

surance people (and other experts) andasked how to make this whole processmore efficient. Here's what they told us:

Don't call on Monday

This is like trying to get throughto the Heavenly Ham store the weekbefore Easter. You'll be on hold for­ever, along with everyone else who hadquestions arise over the weekend, saysElisabeth Schuler Russell, founder andpresident of Patient Navigator LLC. TryWednesdays, Thursdays or early Fridaybefore people start wrapping up for theweekend, she says.

Be prepared before you callHave your insurance card and the

document in question (medical bill orinsurance company statement) handy.If you're calling to see if an upcomingtreatment will be covered, have thediagnostic and procedural codes fromyour doctor. Being prepared also meanshaving something to do while on hold.Multi-tasking will ease your stress.

Sweet-talk 'emEven though your inclination may

be to curse and scream when someonefinally picks up the phone, rememberthat's a human being and this isn't herfault."Be collaborative and never throwgasoline on a fire," says registered nurseand patient advocate Teri Dreher, CEOof North Shore Patient Advocates inChicago."Be exceedingly polite; say'thank you.' Use their name, and showthe impact their assistance had, if youcan." Being nice makes it more likelytheQ go the extra yard for you.

Understand your planM ost people read the "101" version

of their benefits, typically a pamphletor PDF summarizing coverage. But ifyou're contesting something, you'll wantto have the "201" version, says Russell.This is called the "evidence of cover­

age" or"certificate of insurance," and it'stypically much hefber — sometimes upto 200 pages. It may be mailed to yourhome or posted online, but sometimesyou have to request it.

See InsurancelPage 5C

MARIt', ON YOUR CALENDAR Getting Ahead Of BullyingFree Session Addresses Common

BAKER CITY — A session about shoulder pain and shoulderdysfunction is set for Friday, Sept. 18 from 9:45 a.m. to 10:45 a.m. atthe YMCA Fitness Center, 3715 Pocahontas Road in Baker City. It isfree to the community.

Kim Zinn, DPT,ATC at SaintAtphonsus Medical Center-BakerCity's rehabilitation services, will lead the class. This is the fourthpart in her "Symmetry Series."

Zinn said the talk will address a "kink in your shoulder" and "thatpinch when you reach up or outn Although this "mechanical pain"is quite common and often eventually resolves itself, there are toolsto address this kind of pain and improve function sooner.

The class will discuss various types of shoulder pain, whatcauses it and options for treatment. There will be a focus on properposture/alignment, repeated mechanical-based exercises (touun-kinkn the hose) and strengthening of the rotator cuff muscles.Additional discussion will cover less common reasons for shoulderpain, such as inflammation and referred pain from the neck.

Child care is available. Those planning to attend are asked toRSVP by calling 541-523-9622.

• 0 0 0

Causes Of Shoulder Pain

concerns.

For many children, the start ofa new school year can be verystressful, especially if they've beenvictims of bullying in the past.

Mayo Clinic Children's Centerpsychologist Dr. Bridget Biggssays parents and caregiversshould know the warning signs.Biggs said the consequences of

bullying can be serious. Victimsare at increased risk of depres­sion, anxiety, sleep problems,self-harm, poor grades and, inrare cases, suicide.

Biggs has tips for parents andcaregivers on how to help chil­dren who are victims of bullying:

• Talk it out: Askyour child about

• Learn: Get information fromyour child about what's happen­ing.

ers.

• 0 0 0

• Take notes: Record details ofbullying events.

• Discuss how to respond: Walkaway and get help from a trustedadult or peer.

• Build self-esteem: Encourageyour child to get involved in posi­tive activities.• Team up: Reach out to teach­

If the bullying doesn't stop,contact the school or properauthorities.

Biggs said bullying comes inmany forms: physical, verbal,emotional, social and online. Shesays creating a culture of respectin and out of the classroom is keyto bullying prevention.

— Mayo Clinic News Network

Source:Unwersiiyoi Cincinnati,TNS PhotoService

• Foods withThe real thing

natural sugarsreduce levelsof gluco­corticoids,or stresshormones

• Artificiallysweetenedfoods haveless effect

Natural sugars can help calmstress hormones, according

to a university study.

$ugar and stress

• 0 0 0

Page 19: Baker City Herald Daily Paper 09-04-15

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His head-spinning journey is chronicledin the documentary "I errell Takes theField," airing Saturday, Sept. 12, onHBO. Produced by a partnership betweenMajor League Baseball and the humorwebsite Funny or Die, the presentation isdedicated to helping Cancer for College,which provides scholarships for youngpeople who have had the disease.

In each of the five games, the then-47­year-old former "Saturday Night Live" starsuited up with men halfhis age, played forhalf an inning, then went across the fieldto the other clubhouse, changed uniformsand played another half-inning. Whendone, he hopped into a waiting helicopterthat took him to the next ballpark, wherehe repeated the routine.

Along the way, he changed inbathrooms, ate lunch in a trainer's roomand did everything on the fly. On thefield, he was vintage I errell — irreverent,goofy and clueless.

But when he showed up in first thingin the morning in the A's clubhouse, noteveryone knew what to think.

"Some of tthe players) found out thatmorning," explains Joe Farrell, an executiveproducer of the film. "I think some players

were thrilled. Some players had costumes dressedas Will in his movies and some dressed up as BurtReynolds from his 'SNL' 'Jeopardy!' days to sortof be with Will . So some players were really intoit, and we were super respectful because otherplayers, they're trying to make a team. You know,we made some jokes about how two weeks fromnow, a lot of you guys might not be on the team.But that was true, and so we were super respectfulto guys taking at-bats."

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SPOt I Ig t BY GEORGE DICKIE

Ten teams, 10 positions, one very tiredcomedian.

That's the scenario Will I errell lived this pastMarch 12, when for charity he took the fieldin five Arizona preseason games to play all nineon-field positions plus designated hitter for theArizona Diamondbacks, Los Angeles Dodgers,San Francisco Giants, Los Angeles Angels ofAnaheim, Cincinnati Reds, Chicago Cubs,Chicago White Sox, Seattle Mariners, Oakland A'sand San Diego Padres.

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Page 20: Baker City Herald Daily Paper 09-04-15

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For your Consideration *** (2006)Christopher Guest. Awards buzz sur­rounds the star of a horrible independentfilm. (y «(1:30) HBO Mon. 12:30 p.m.Forrest Gump **** (1994) TomHanks. An innocent man enters historyfrom the '50stothe '90s. (3:00) FAMMon. 5 p.m.Freaky Friday*** (2003) Jamie LeeCurtis. A woman and her daughter magi­cally exchange bodies. (2:00) FAM Tue.6 p.m.

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Page 21: Baker City Herald Daily Paper 09-04-15

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