baker city herald daily paper 07-03-15  

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~ ' In HEALTH, 6C / ~/ - / July 3, 2015 Serving Baker County since 1870 bakercityheralckcom $1 safety tips iN mis aonioN: Local Health & Fitness • Qutdoors • TV QUICIC HITS Good Day Wish To A Subscriber A special good day to Herald subscriber Bill Mattes of Baker City. BRIEFING SherifFs ONce plans extra traNc patrols The Baker County Sheriff's Office re- minds visitors as well as residents to drive responsibly this holiday weekend. The Sheriff's Of- fice will be increasing patrols during this busy time in an effort to pre- vent and arrest impaired dnvers. The Sheriff's Office would like to specifically remind citizens that although marijuana use is now legal in Oregon, it is still a crime to drive while under the influ- ence and doing so can result in a DUII arrest. Musicians donate time for Soroptimists donating their perfor- mance at the annual Soroptimists Tent Event on Wednesday, July 8, at the Sunridge Inn parking lot. Frank Carlson, and Johnny and the Law Breakers, will perform at the third-annual event. The gate opens at 5:45 p.m. The event begins with a no-host social. While musicians entertain, the fare will be a barbecue ham- burger bar. There will be a dessert auction af- terward. Tickets are $15 and can be purchased at the gate or from a Soroptimist member. Money raised goes to the Soroptimists' education and training awards that assist local women who provide the primary source of fi- nancial support for their families by giving them the resources they need to improve their educa- tion, skills and employ- ment prospects. Awards also go to local young women, ages 14 to 17, who exhibit leadership qualities as a volunteer in their community or school. Information on So- roptimist International of Baker Countycan be found on its Facebook page. Local musicians are conserve water as City oficials are also urging residents to voluntarily the drought intensifies / / / By La'akea Kaufman kkaufman©bakercityherald.com A group of 30 Baker City residents, City Council members, business owners and stu- dents have partnered with the Ford Family Foundation and the Baker School District to design the city's first disc golf course. The Baker City flying disc golf course will be built on the Baker Sports Complex, north of Baker High School. The nine-hole course was designed by the committee based on the layout of the Sports Complex and is set to be completed by 2016. There are more than 140 disc golf courses in Oregon. The closest course is on the Eastern Oregon University campus in La Grande. Head of design on the project is BHS junior Boston Colton, one of five high school students participating. Colton was nominated to the Ford Family Foundation program by his ad- vanced biology teacher, Sharon Defrees. Defrees' children have gone through the program, and she has had the opportunity to appoint several outstanding students over the "I knew that Boston is the kind of kid who would be committed," Defrees said."He's atypi- cal and I knew he would follow through." Colton says that he and the rest of the design and installation team hope to start the con- struction process within the next few months. "Financing is our biggest obstacle right now," Colton says. The project has a $12,000 budget, including $5,000 from the Ford Family Foundation. The committee hopes to raise the remaining $7,000 through community partnerships along with private donations. By Josh Dillen ldillen©bakercityherald.com Baker City has banned all outdoor open burning due to thehighfi re dangerand per- sistent hot, dry weather, Fire Chief Mark John announced Wednesday afternoon. r No open burning is al- lowed until further notice," John said. Boston Colton says his group should break ground in August for the disc golf course at the Baker Sports Complex. Ilesionino BaKer City's FirstIlisc Golf Course That includes burn barrels. Contained cooking fires such as barbecue grills and camp stoves are permitted, however. The ban does not apply to fireworks that are legal in Oregon. This is an unusually early onset of the fire restrictions in the city. water use. S. John Collins / Baker City Herald Last year the city banned outdoor burning starting July 16. The burning ban is one prong of the city'seffortsto deal with the drought. On Thursday the city announced that it is asking residents and businesses to voluntarily reduce their ~ years. for son Parents say law a legacy B y Jayson Jacoby llacoby©bakercityherald.com Steve Culley calls it the "devil drug." He speaks this alliterative phrase with the practiced ease of a man who has repeated it more times than he'd care to remember. Meth is what he's talking about. Man jailed for menacing with hatchet Saturday 93/54 Mostly sunny and hot WEATHER Today 95/49 years. By Chris Collins ccollins©bakercityherald.com A Baker City man who was walking his dog Tues- day is in jail, accused of threatening another man with a hatchet after the man advised him to leash the dog. Jeremy Russell Cornett, 37, of 2185V2 14th St., was arrested and charged with menacing Tuesday afternoon at Washington Avenue and Resort Street. 0$cers also found a mari- juanapipeon Cornettduring the arrest, Baker City Police Chief Wyn Lohner said. Specifically, the city wants people with addressesending in an odd number to irri- gate lawns and gardens on odd-numbered days only and even-numbered addresses on even-numbered days. The city has cut back on water use at public sites. Culley also uses an analogy to describe the drug's effects. "It's like a bomb dropped Ryan in t he middle of Culley a family." Culley and his former wife, Jorja, both of Baker County, know the pain, and worse, that meth's detonations can inflict. Their son, Ryan, 36, also of Baker City, completed suicide on April 13 at his home. Ryan had struggled with meth addiction for many That addiction, his parents say, contributed to Ryan's criminal history. It also highlighted a conflict between two types of penalties meted out to Ryan and to some othersconvicted of crimes. See Burn Ban IPage 5A See LegacyIPage 8A S. John Collins / Baker City Herald A typicaI disc golf target. Mostly sunny and hot See FlyingIPage 8A See MenacingIPage 5A Sunday 91 /52 Calendar....................2A Community News ....3A Health ...............5C & 6C Obituaries..................2A Sports ........................7A Issue 24, 22 pages Comics... .................... 7B DearAbby................. SB News of Record ... ..... 2A Outdoors.......... 1C & 2C Weather..................... SB T ODAT Classified............. 1B-BB Crossword........BB & 4B J a yson Jacoby..........4A Opinion......................4A Television .........3C & 4C Mostly sunny, slightly cooler •000 8 51153 00102 o •000 •000

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The Baker City Herald print edition for Friday July 03, 2015

TRANSCRIPT

• ~ • • • • ' •

In HEALTH, 6C/ ~ / - /

July 3, 2015 Serving Baker County since 1870 • bakercityheralckcom

$1 safety tipsiN mis aonioN: Local • Health & Fitness • Qutdoors • TV

QUICIC HITS

Good Day WishTo A Subscriber

A special good dayto Herald subscriber BillMattes of Baker City.

BRIEFING

SherifFs ONceplans extratraNc patrols

The Baker CountySheriff's Office re­minds visitors as wellas residents to driveresponsibly this holidayweekend.

The Sheriff's Of­fice will be increasingpatrols during this busytime in an effort to pre­vent and arrest impaireddnvers.

The Sheriff's Officewould like to specificallyremind citizens thatalthough marijuana useis now legal in Oregon,it is still a crime to drivewhile under the influ­ence and doing so canresult in a DUII arrest.

Musiciansdonate time forSoroptimists

donating their perfor­mance at the annualSoroptimists Tent Eventon Wednesday, July8, at the Sunridge Innparking lot.

Frank Carlson, andJohnny and the LawBreakers, will performat the third-annualevent. The gate opensat 5:45 p.m. The eventbegins with a no-hostsocial. While musiciansentertain, the fare willbe a barbecue ham­burger bar. There willbe a dessert auction af­terward. Tickets are $15and can be purchasedat the gate or from aSoroptimist member.

Money raised goesto the Soroptimists'education and trainingawards that assist localwomen who providethe primary source of fi­nancial support for theirfamilies by giving themthe resources they needto improve their educa­tion, skills and employ­ment prospects. Awardsalso go to local youngwomen, ages 14 to 17,who exhibit leadershipqualities as a volunteerin their community orschool.

Information on So­roptimist Internationalof Baker Countycan befound on its Facebookpage.

Local musicians are

conserve water as

• City oficials arealso urgingresidents tovoluntarily

the droughtintensifies

/

//

By La'akea Kaufmankkaufman©bakercityherald.com

A group of 30 Baker City residents, CityCouncil members, business owners and stu­dents have partnered with the Ford FamilyFoundation and the Baker School District todesign the city's first disc golf course.

The Baker City flying disc golf course willbe built on the Baker Sports Complex, north ofBaker High School.

The nine-hole course was designed by thecommittee based on the layout of the SportsComplex and is set to be completed by 2016.

There are more than 140 disc golf courses inOregon. The closest course is on the EasternOregon University campus in La Grande.

Head of design on the project is BHS juniorBoston Colton, one of five high school studentsparticipating. Colton was nominated to theFord Family Foundation program by his ad­vanced biology teacher, Sharon Defrees.

Defrees' children have gone through theprogram, and she has had the opportunity toappoint several outstanding students over the

"I knew that Boston is the kind of kid whowould be committed," Defrees said."He's atypi­cal and I knew he would follow through."

Colton says that he and the rest of the designand installation team hope to start the con­struction process within the next few months.

"Financing is our biggest obstacle right now,"Colton says.

The project has a $12,000 budget, including$5,000 from the Ford Family Foundation.

The committee hopes to raise the remaining$7,000 through community partnerships alongwith private donations.

By Josh Dillenldillen©bakercityherald.com

Baker City has banned alloutdoor open burning due tothe high fire danger and per­sistent hot, dry weather, FireChief Mark John announcedWednesday afternoon.

rNo open burning is al­lowed until further notice,"John said.

Boston Colton says his group should break ground in August for the disc golf course at the Baker SportsComplex.

Ilesionino BaKer City's FirstIlisc Golf Course

That includes burn barrels.Contained cooking fires

such as barbecue grills andcamp stoves are permitted,however.

The ban does not apply tofireworks that are legal inOregon.

This is an unusually earlyonset of the fire restrictionsin the city. water use.

S. John Collins / Baker City Herald

Last year the city bannedoutdoor burning startingJuly 16.

The burning ban is oneprong of the city's efforts todeal with the drought.

On Thursday the cityannounced that it is askingresidents and businessesto voluntarily reduce their

~

years.

for son

Parentssay lawa legacy

By Jayson Jacobyllacoby©bakercityherald.com

Steve Culley calls it the"devil drug."

He speaks this alliterativephrase with the practicedease of a man who hasrepeated it more times thanhe'd care to remember.

Meth is what he's talkingabout.

Man jailedfor menacingwith hatchet

Saturday

93/54

Mostly sunnyand hot

WEATHER

Today

95/49

years.

By Chris Collinsccollins©bakercityherald.com

A Baker City man whowas walking his dog Tues­day is in jail, accused ofthreatening another manwith a hatchet after the manadvised him to leash the dog.

Jeremy Russell Cornett,37, of 2185V2 14th St., wasarrested and charged withmenacing Tuesday afternoonat Washington Avenue andResort Street.

0$cers also found a mari­juana pipe on Cornett duringthe arrest, Baker City PoliceChief Wyn Lohner said.

Specifically, the city wantspeople with addresses endingin an odd number to irri­gate lawns and gardens onodd-numbered days only andeven-numbered addresses oneven-numbered days.

The city has cut back onwater use at public sites.

Culley alsouses an analogyto describe thedrug's effects.

"It's like a

bomb droppedRyan in t he middle ofCulley a f amily."

Culley andhis former wife, Jorja, bothof Baker County, know thepain, and worse, that meth'sdetonations can inflict.

Their son, Ryan, 36, also ofBaker City, completed suicideon April 13 at his home.

Ryan had struggled withmeth addiction for many

That addiction, his parentssay, contributed to Ryan'scriminal history.

It also highlighted aconflict between two types ofpenalties meted out to Ryanand to some others convictedof crimes.

See Burn Ban IPage 5A

See LegacyIPage 8A

S. John Collins / Baker City Herald

A typicaI disc golf target.Mostly sunnyand hot See FlyingIPage 8A See MenacingIPage 5A

Sunday

91 /52Calendar....................2A C o m munity News ....3A He a lth ...............5C & 6C O b i tuaries..................2A Sp o rts ........................7A

Issue 24, 22 pages Comics.......................7B DearAbby.................SB News of Record... .....2A Outdoors..........1C & 2C Weather.....................SBTODA T Classified............. 1B-BB C r ossword........BB & 4B J a y son Jacoby..........4A Opi n ion......................4A T e levision .........3C & 4C

Mostly sunny,slightly cooler

• 0 0 08 5 1 1 5 3 0 0 1 0 2 o

• 0 0 0• 0 0 0

2A — BAKER CITY HERALD FRIDAY, JULY 3, 2015

QEQ fines Hnntingtonfor sewer violation

FRIDAY, JULY 3• Haines Fourth of July Celebration: Begins with Art in

the Park; the Haines Stampede Rodeo gets under way at 5p.m.; the celebration continues Saturday at Haines.

• First Friday art shows: Baker City art galleries are openlate to showcase the month's new artwork; opening timesvary between 5:30 p.m. and 6 p.m.

SATURDAY, JULY 4• Haines Fourth of July: Events begin with a pancake

breakfast from 7 a.m. to 10 a.m. at the Elkhorn Grange Hallin Haines; $7 for adults, $5 for children 5-12 and childrenunder 5 free; the breakfast includes pancakes,ham, eggs,coffee, tea and milk; parade,10 a.m.; rodeo, 1:30 p.m.;music in the ark; pit barbecue in the park,11 a.m. to 2 p.m.;barbecued sandwiches and hot dogs by City Hall;10 p.m.,fireworks.

SUNDAY, JULY 5• Powder River Music Review: 2 p.m.; Geiser-Pollman

Park, Madison and Grove streets; $5 suggested donation.WEDNESDAY, JULY 8• Baker City Farmers Market: 3:30 p.m. to 6:30 p.m.,

Fairgrounds, 2600 East St.• Lower Powder River Irrigation District Board: 6 p.m.

at the Sunridge.

TURNING BACK THE PAGES

50 YEARS AGO

July 3, 1965

BAKER COUNTY CALENDAR

By Joshua Dillenldillen©bakercityherald.com

The Oregon Departmentof Environmental QualityiDEQl has fined the city ofHuntington $1,275 for exceed­ing permitted limits for E. colibacteria in effluent fiom itswastewater treatment facility.

The city exceeded E. colilimits in January 2015.Ad­ditionally, the city failed tomonitor for E. coli at leastevery two weeks, as requiredin its permit, according to theDEQ.

A Huntington city officialsaid thatis not the case now.

'%e take samples and testevery day," said the city's pub­lic works director, Deven Deck.'%e submit samples twice amonth."

He said if the E. coli levelsare too high in a test, retestingis allowed every four hours.

"I let ithe DEQl know theresults of the final tests. Usu­ally it works out OK," Decksaid.'They are pretty fairmost of the time."

DEQ issued the penaltybecause exceeding bacterialimits in effluent can threatenaquatic life and humanhealth.

stmcture.

"We'll have to pay thefineand we'll learnfrom it."— Deven Deck, Huntington'spublic works director

E. coli is a bacteria thatindicates fecal contaminationwith the possible presenceof pathogens and the risk ofdisease.

The city has until Monday,July 6 to appeal the currentpenalty.

DEQ also penalized the cityin 2009 for exceeding E. colilimits, and issued a warningletter for similar exceedancesin March 2013.

Deck said the city hassubmitted an Infiltration andInflow report iINIl to DEQ.Such a report assesses wherethere might be outside waterinflow that is getting into thesewer system through crackedpipes and other issues foundwith an aging system infra­

DEQ Environmental LawSpecialist Susan Elworth saidthe city's report might shedlight on what's gettinginto thedischarge and help the cityto determine where there areissues and what they need

to fix."I believe they have some

long-term and upgrade issuesiwith their sewer system),"Elworth said."But those areoutside of the scope of theseexceedances.

Elworth said the inflowreport will help the city todetermine what needs to bedone to avoid exceeding E. colilimits in the future and whatto possible do to correct theissues causing them in thefuture.

Paul Daniello, a water qual­ity permit writer for DEQsaid Huntington's decisionto submit the inflow reportshows the city is being atten­tive to its sewer system.He said that report is

required as part of the city'swastewater permit.

Another requirement forthe permit is producing a mix­ing zone study. Its purposeis to determine whether thecity's effluent discharge ismeeting state and federalwater quality standards. Thecity has not submitted thatstudy.

Daniello said he sentwarning letters earlier thisyear asking the city to submit

the INI and the mixing zonestudy.

'They pretty much need tokeep up on their bookkeepingduties," Daniello said.

Deck said Huntington citycouncilors are going to ad­dress getting the study doneat their next meeting on July21.

"I thought the DEQ per­formed the study, but I guessit's up to us to do it,"he said.

Currently a 60 year-oldlagoon system is used to treatthe city's sewer effluent beforeit is released into the BurntRiver, which enters the SnakeRiver's Brownlee Reservoir amile or so east of Huntington.

'The lagoon is so old, we'reon the edge of meeting DEQrequirements," Deck said.

The city has secured thefunding to build a new waste­water treatment facility.

Deck said Huntingtonofficials are in the process ofgetting all permits and othergoing through other stepsrequired before construc­tion starts. He estimated itscompletion would be in early2018.'%e have to pay the fine and

we11 learn fiom it," he said.from the Democrat-Herald

PattiTrimnbl, Hereford, won the high scoring individualjudge in the 4-H Livestock Judging Contest held in BakerJune 30, reports John C. Hesketh, County ExtensionAgent.

She scored a total of 533.3 points out of a possible 500to beat out second place contestant, Robert Sturgill, Baker,by three tenths of a point.

Others placing in the top ten were Linda Wickam, Keat­ing; Carla Gwilliam, Baker; Donald Chastain, Wingville;Mary Grant, Richland; Loralee Colton, Medical Springs.

'Jimmy'Lloyd Rea Jr.

James Lloyd Rea Jr., 63,of Baker City, died June 30,2015, with family by his side.

There willbe a viewingfrom 10 a.m. tonoon Monday

* ',' at Coles TributeCenter,1950

Jimmy Pl a ce St. ALloyd Rea Celebration of

Jr. Life w i ll takeplace at 2 p.m.

Monday at the Baker CityChristian Church, 675 High­way 7. Vault interment willbe at Mount Hope Cemetery.

Lloyd was born at BakerCity on Oct. 6, 1951, toJames Lloyd Sr. and Dare­lene Rea. He attended BakerHigh School and continuedhis education at EasternOregon University, wherehe graduated in 1974 with a

LES SCVWe

A $1,000 check has been presented by the SoroptimistsClub to a St. Elizabeth Hospital administrator for neededchildcare equipment.

The money is for the Wallaby Phototherapy System fornursery care.

The blustery but mainly dry thunderstorm that swungthrough Baker CityWednesday night made a delivery toGaylord and La Donna Baggerly's backyard.

A carport.Wind propelled the canvas structure about120 feet,

crossing a couple of properties between owner RonEdison's house and the Baggerlys' yard at 230 Second St.,between Colorado and Miller avenues in south Baker City.

"I heard that wind come whistling through here andrattling windows, Gaylord Baggerly, a retired truckdriver,saidThursday morning.

from the Baker City Herald

Independence Day festivities in three Baker Countytowns will conclude after dark tonight with fireworksdisplays.

Explosive shows are planned in Haines, Halfway andHuntington.

At Haines the projectiles will be launched from therodeo grounds on the south side of town, next to Highway30.

ONE YEAR AGOfrom the Baker City Herald

from the Democrat-Herald

July 4, 2014

25 YEARS AGO

July 4, 1990

10 YEARS AGO

July 4, 2005

Baker City, 1951-2015

STANDARD ALIGNMENT

>2854

5$Q25

>8354

ALIGNMENT

bachelor's degree in business.In 1972, he married his

high school sweetheart andchildhood friend, MarydeeLeep. Lloyd was the proudowner of Rainbow Music.

He was a beloved mem­ber of the community andenjoyed hunting, fishing,chewing tobacco, ChicagoBears football, baseball, songwriting, repairing guitars,family, telling stories, andtalking with his friends.Jimmy Lloyd Rea Jr. w as a

Blues Hall of Fame celeb­rity and was respected byfans and players alike. Hereceived 15 Cascade BluesAssociation Muddy Watersawards for best bass player.He also was a Blues Hallof Fame Ambassador andBoard Member.

He loved small town living,was passionate about theBaker City community anddedicated his life to sharinghis musical talents with theworld.

"Keep the grease in thereal blues groove," he wasknown for saying.

His early years touringand playing with many bluesgreats shaped his drive andpassion to keep that kind ofblues music alive.

JLR had a passion for

LT

OB1TUARY

DEATHSEsther Radiance Tubbs:

stillborn at 31 weeks, died June30, 2015. She was the daughterofTroy and Nathalia StrommerTubbs of Halfway. Tami's PineVally Funeral Home Br Crema­tion Service is in charge ofarrangements. Online condo­lences may be made at www.tamispinevalleyfuneralhome.

POLICE LOGBaker City PoliceDRIVING UNDERTHE INFLU­

ENCE OF INTOXICANTS: DianaArlene Thatcher, 51,0f 38368Beaver Creek Road, 12:45 a.m.Thursday, at Cedar and F streets;jailed and later released.

ASSAULT IV: AlfieWilliamFry,44, of Red Bluff, California,1:18 a.m. Thursday in the 500block of Campbell Street; citedand released; police said Fry, atruck driver who had parked at

cranking out his own realfrom-the-heart, raw andgrinding, rockin' blues. Hespent the early years listen­ing to a long list of greatmusicians talk about life andmusic, and during that timehe states,"I just shut up andlistened."

At age 9 he started playingbass, at 15 he started hisfirst band, The Perils. DuringHigh School he played withPaul Revere of Paul Revereand The Raiders.

After college, JLR playedin a variety ofbands untilbecoming the bass playerand doing some vocals for thePete Karnes Band.

In 1973 he joined CannedHeat, which gave him theopportunity to meet and playwIth some of the greatestblues artists. After years ofliving with a freestyle, groov­ing, fiery blues lurking inhis heart, mind and soul, hefinally met the right musi­cians to start Jimmy LloydRea and The Switchmasters.The band is named after hisfather's Gibson Switchmaster

MEGABUCKS, July 19 — 12 — 20 — 36 — 39 — 42Next jackpot: $3 millionPOWERBALL, July 17 — 24 — 26 — 31 — 41 PB 25Next jackpot: $70 million

WIN FOR LIFE, July 157 — 62 — 70 — 71

• MONDAY: Baked cod, cup of clam chowder, broccoli-blendvegetables, fruit ambrosia, roll, tapioca

• TUESDAY: Teriyaki pork over rice, Asian vegetables, Asiansalad, bread, cookies

Public luncheon at the Senior Center, 2810 Cedar St., 11:30a.m. to 12:30 p.m.; $3.50 donation (60 and older), $5.75 forthose under 60.

SENIOR MENUS

OREGON LOTTERYPICK 4, July 2• 1 p.m.: 0 — 5 — 8 — 6• 4pm.:3 — 3 — 0 — 6• 7 p.m.: 3 — 4 — 0 — 1• 10 p.m.: 5 — 4 — 8 — 4

LUCKY LINES, July 11-5-10-16-19-24-25-32Next jackpot: $25,000

4 WHEEL ALIGNMENT

THRUST ALIGNMENT

lEW SROS.210 Bridge Street

MAGIC MIKEXXL RThree years after M>ke bowed out of the stnpper lre, he and therema>n>ng K>ngs of Tampa hr the road to Myrlle Beach to put on

FRI - THURS (4 10) 7 10, 9 45

INSIDE OU T PGon hIw best to nav>gate a new oty, house and school.

onelaslpedormance.

John Connor sends Kyle Reese back >n hme to protect SarahConnor, but when he arnves >n 1984, noth>ng >s as he expeded

FRI -THURS (4 00) 7 00, 940rtobe.

D>sney /pwar An>maron. After young aey >s uprooted fromherM>dwest l>te and moved ro san Franasco her emohons conthct

FRI -WED (4 20) 7 20, 9 35

'No Tightwad Tuesday ( )Bargain Matinee

TERMINATORG ENISY S PG-13 Com

NEWS OF RECORDthe Baker Truck CorralThursdaymorning, punched anothertruck driver in the nose after adisagreement between the two.The victim was Craig Severson,50, of Kingman, Ariz.

POSSESSION OF METHAM­PHETAMINE andTHEFT II (UnionCounty warrant): Carmon DeonHendriksen, 27, of 1021 ResortSt., 3:33 p.m. Wednesday, atBaker and East streets; jailed.

DRIVING UNDERTHE IN­FLUENCE OF INTOXICANTS:Timothy Kell Slaney, 26, of 2260Mitchell St., 10:20 p.m. Thursday,in the 1500 block of CampbellStreet; jailed.

Baker County Sheriff'sOffice

FUGITIVE WARRANT: JohnRandy Roper Jr.,42,11:18 a.m.Wednesday, at the Baker CountyJail where he is being held onother charges.

541-523-3679AFTER HOURS:541-518-7100

mM BAKER CITT k~' CARPET EXPRESS

guitar.In 1981 at Blues Hat

Studio in Walla Walla, JLRfirst recorded his new bandwith Vince Hozier, famedm ember of the Sunrays, onlead guitar.

Survivors include his wifeof 43 years, Marydee Rea;son, James Lloyd Rea III;daughter Georgene Rea;daughters and spouses, Mari­anne and Dan Stone andFrancine and Phil O'Connell;grandsons, Griffin Stone,Gavin Stone, Graison Stone,and William O'Connell;nephew, Frank Spriet Jr.;and niece and spouse, Robinand Todd Chesterman; andnumerous extended familymembers.

He was preceded in deathby his father and mother,Darelene and James LloydRea Sr.; and his sisters,Sharelene Love and DeannaRea.

Memorial contributionsmay be made to a charity ofone's choice through ColesTribute Center, 1950 PlaceSt., Baker City, OR 97814.

Kari Borgen, [email protected]

Jayson Jacoby, [email protected]

Advertising [email protected]

Classified [email protected]

Circulation emailcirc4bakercityherald.com

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

1915 First St.

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

CONTACT THE HERALD

Open Monday through Friday

®uki.t Cffg%eralbServing Baker County since 1870

Published Mondays,Wednesdays andFndaysexcept Chnstmas Day ty theBaker Publishing Co., a part of WesternCommunicalons Inc., at 1915 First St.(PO. Box 807), Baker City, OR 97814.

Subscnption 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.

ISSN-8756-6419

Copynght © 2015

Rriodicals Postage Paidat Baker City, Oregon 97814

Your Profeasiesel Hoot Stote

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• 0 •

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• 0 •• 0 •

BAKER CITY HERALD — 3AFRIDAY, JULY 3, 2015

LOCAL BRIEFINGClassesstarting soonatCrossroadsJulyis a busy time at

Crossroads Carnegie ArtCenter.

All classes need a mini­mum number of students togo ahead.

People interested in any ofthe classes are encouragedto sign up as soon as possibleat the Center, 2020 AuburnAve., or by calling 541-523­5369.

DanceSeveral dance classes start

Monday, July 6, led by AmyMartin Friedman. A sessionfor ages 5-9 will meet from 9a.m. to 10:30 a.m. Mondaysand Wednesdays for threeweeks. The class for ages10-16 is set for 10:30 a.m. tonoon Mondays and Wednes­days. The students will betaught a variety of danceforms from Latin to hip hopand ballet, with contempo­rary and lyrical fused in. Noexperience is necessary. Classcosts are, per week, $30 formembers/$50 nonmembersor all three weeks for $80,members/$140, nonmembers.

-4

• OA'erings during July include a variety of dance classes, pottery and clay art

Martin Friedman will alsoteach an adult cardio danceclass from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m.Mondays and Wednesdays.Cost is the same as the kidsdance classes.

BalletDebbie Friedman will

teach beginning ballet foradults (ages 18 and older)beginning July 7. The classm eets from 4:15 p.m. to 5:45p.m. Tuesdays and Thurs­days for four weeks. Cost is$65 members/$85 nonmem­bers. Adults are asked tow ear leotards, tights or form­fitting leggings or yoga pantsand T-shirt. All students needa ballet slipper which can bepurchased at Discount DanceSupply online.

PotteryA smoke-fired pottery class

taught by Mary Sue Right­

Crossroads Carnegie Art Center is at 2020 Auburn Ave.

mire has been moved to July10, 11 and 12 and July 25-26.Times are 7 p.m. to 9 p.m.Friday and 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.Saturday and Sunday. Cost is$175, ($125 Crossroads mem­bersl, $25 lab fee covers 25pounds of clay and all firing.The first weekend involveslearning about the techniqueand building pots. During thesecond week, participantswill fire the pots in differentways for a variety of designs.

Clay CampsSummer Clay Camp "In­

spired by Nature" is set forJuly 6-9 from 1 p.m. to 3:30p.m. for ages 10 and older.Cost is $80 for members,$100 nonmembers. Studentswill explore nature up closeand try to build big seedpods, trees, acorns and othernatural discoveries in clay.There will be an open houseon July 25.

Summer Clay Camp"Creatures of the Sea" willbe July 13-16 from 1 p.m.to 3:30 p.m. Cost is $80 formembers and $100 nonmem­bers for ages 10 and older.Participants will discoverfacts about sea life, observedetails from photos and feelthe textures of shells andcoral. Students will learn clayskills while creating shells,sea stars, fish and a seacreature of choice out of clay.

There will be an open houseon July 25.

'Make and Take'Ginger Rembold will be

teaching four"make and take"classes during July:

• Paper Floral BouquetCreations: July 7, 6:30 p.m. to9:30 p.m.; $8 for members and$10 nonmembers for ages 12and older, or 8 and older witha parent. Participants bringan assortment of favoritepapers, recycled calendars,scrapbook papers, wrappingpaper, etc. Low-heat gluegun if possible. Learn threedifferent methods to createfloral bouquets from recycledmaterials available aroundthe house.

• Asian Concertina Books:July 16, 6:30 p.m. to 9 p.m .;$8 for members, $10 non­members for ages 12 andolder, or 8 and older w ith aparent. Participants bringideas, photographs, quotes,paper scraps. ConcertinaBooks are a folded, non-sewn,booklet perfect for a short tripmemory, a book of poems for afriend, a collection of draw­ings. Hidden pages can keepprivate certain messages.

• Tie Dye Party: July 21,6:30 p.m. to 9 p.m .; $8 formembers, $10 nonmembersfor ages 12 and older, or 8 andolder with a parent. Partici­pants provide pre-washed 100

S. John Collins/Baker City Herald

percent cotton (or close) itemsto dye, with a limit of five.

• Zentangle Your Name:July 28, 6:30 p.m. to 9 p.m.; $8members, $10 nonmembers,for ages 12 and older, or 8 andolder with a parent. Bring twoSharpie pens, regular tip andfine tip. Make an individual­ized name poster or a specialgifL Learn a quick techniquefor a'calligraphic' letter, thenfill with patterns and designsusing the"Zentangle" tech­nique.

Maja Shaw from Richland,Washington, who has been afeatured artist at Crossroads,will teach three dasses onJuly 31:

• Kids Matisse Magic,10 a.m. to noon; costis $20members/$40 nonmembersfor ages 9-11. Create beautifulcut paper art like the famousFrench artist Henri Matisse.This class will introduce stu­dents to cut paper compositionusing Henri Matisse's workas inspiration emphasizingcolor, shape and arrangement.W orking with just paper, scis­sors and glue, students willlearn how to"sculpt" paperand create their own Matisse­like composition.

• Kids Watercolor Flowers:1p.m. to 3 p.m .;costis $20members/$40 nonmembers,for ages 8-12. Learn somebasic watercolor techniquesand create an imaginativeflower painting. Students willbe introduced to the basicsof painting with watercolorsincluding mixing colors, basicbrush strokes and a discus­sion ofbalance, perspective,depth and color. These tech­niques will be applied as wecreate a still life of flowers.

• Adult Matisse Magic:6 p.m. to 8 p.m.; $20 mem­bers/$40 nonmembers, forages high school and older.W orking with just paper, scis­sors and glue, studentswill learn how to"sculpt"paper and create their ownMatisse-like composition.

ences.

Local students on OSU honor rollCORVALLIS — Several local students were named to

the Scholastic Honor Roll for spring term at Oregon StateUniversity.A total of 982 students earned straight A's (4.00l.

Another 3,571 earned a B-plus g.50l or better to makethe listing. To be on the honor roll, students must carry atleast 12 graded hours of course work.

Baker City• Straight-A Average: Corinne Allen, senior, human de­

velopment and family science; Chelsea K McVay, senior,biohealth sciences; Jessilyn K. Sayers, junior, speech com­munication; Samantha Searles, junior, psychology.

• 3.5 or Better: Ryan K. Cashen, sophomore, pre-chem­ical engineering.

Haines• 3.5 or Better: Faith C. Hall, senior, agricultural sci­

Halfway• 3.5 or Better: Carlie D. Powell, sophomore, pre-com­

munication; Tanner H. Seal, junior, biohealth sciences.

Xeros on dean's list at Montana WesternDILLON, Montana — Nicholas Xeros of Baker City

was named to the dean's list for the spring semester atthe University of Montana Western.'To achieve this honor,students must be enrolled full time or for 12 semestercredits and carry a minimum 3.33 grade-point average(GPAl.

TraNc delays at Hells Canyon Dam 3uly 6-9BOISE — Travelers planning to drive over Hells Can­

yon Dam should prepare for significant delays July 6-9while crews perform repairs and maintenance requiringheavy equipment on the dam.

The closures will run from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Mon­day through Thursday, with briefbreaks to allow traffIc topass scheduled for 10:30 a.m. and 2 p.m. Drivers shouldplan accordingly.

Lay speaker Sunday at Methodist ChurchLay speaker Cynthia Abbey will present the sermon

during services at 8:30 a.m. and 11 a.m. Sunday at theBaker United Methodist Church, 1919 Second St.

Here are other activities scheduled this month.• July 11: Dedication of late Don R. Guyer's wartime

memorabilia, 2 p.m., Warhawk Air Museum, Nampa,Idaho.

• July 12: Conference-appointed Pastor Lisa Paytonbegins regular ministry at Baker Methodist Church.

• July 12: Finance Committee meets at 1 p.m. withAdministrative Council meeting at 2 p.m.

• July 14: Annual church picnic, noon, on the churchlawn. Attendees are asked to bring their favorite potluckdish.

Pondosa Picnic scheduled for Aug. 9The 50th-annual Pondosa Picnic is set for noon Aug. 9

at Catherine Creek State Park along Highway 203 nearUnion.

Those attending are asked to bring old photographsand memories about Pondosa.

LEGACYContinued ~om Page 1A

One of those penalties is a monetaryfine. Oregon law requires a minimumfine of $100 for misdemeanor convictions,and $200 for felonies. Judges can imposehigher amounts.

But sometimes people convicted ofcrimes are also required to complete drugand alcohol treatment — at their ownexpense.

The conflict — and one that affectedRyan, his parents said — arises whenthe person can't afford to pay both thefines and the treatment bills.

Too often, the Culleys believe, peoplein that predicament end up back in jail,having neither paid their fines nor curedtheir addiction.

The despair that this recurring cyclecan spawn prompted the Culleys­including Ryan and his younger sister,Lisa, who has had similar struggles — tolobby state Rep. Cliff Bentz, R-ontario,on behalf of a bill that gives judgesflexibility in dealing with that conflictbetween fines and treatment.Bentz guided that legislation — House

Bill 3168 — through the Legislature,with no votes in opposition.

Gov. Kate Brown signed the bill May

— Steve Culley

"Once a meth addictgets donebankrupting afamily, the statetries to squeeze one more drop ofblood out ofyou."

28."Agood ideais easy to sell and this is a

good idea," Bentz said.The law allows judges to waive unpaid

criminal fines for people who can provethat the fine poses a financial hardshippreventing them from completing drugand alcohol treatment that's also part oftheir sentence.

Steve said he suggested the bill toBentz not because he thinks people whocommit crimes, including his own chil­dren, should not be punished.

But as a parent who has "tried to getthem back on their feet." Steve said hecame to believe that lawmakers andothers who support so-called"get toughon crime" legislation"have the misguidedperception that felons have money."

The problem, Steve said, is that inmost cases they don't have enoughm oney to both pay fines and pay foraddiction treatment, in part because it'sdiffIcult for them to find jobs because of

their criminal records.But he and Jorja argue that curing an

addiction is far more valuable, both to theaddict, and in the long term to the state,than fines that don't even make a blip onthe state's budget.

"Once a meth addict gets donebankrupting a family, the state tries tosqueeze one more drops ofblood out ofyou," Steve said.

Bentz said that although he wasintrigued by the concept when Steve sug­gested it to him, he didn't immediatelyintroduce the bill.

Instead Bentz outlined the idea toa few other legislators who are formerpolice offIcers.

Each agreed that in theory it madesense to make addiction treatment ahigher priority than paying a fine, Bentzsald.

"Is the fine making us all safer, or isthe investment in the person's rehabmaking the public better ofP.'Bentz said.

He concluded that treatment is moreimportant because it has the potential tohelp a person avoid committing crimes inthe future.

"Otherwise, we just keep paying tohave people incarcerated," Bentz said.

See Legacy/Page 6A

year.

PEO awards scholarships to future nursesChapter CJ of the P.E.O. Sisterhood in Baker City has

announced that two local women who are studying tobecome nurses have received scholarships for the 2015-16

Terri Clark received a four-term Marguerite Scholar­ship for $2,460. She is a pre-nursing student at BlueMountain Community College.

Melissa Andino received an Oregon scholarship awardof $1,030.

She will use her scholarship at Eastern Oregon Univer­sity to study pre-nursing.

• •

'

• • . • • ­

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Questions on cost,fit & appearance

Free ConsultationsFinancing Available.

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• e

For information on clinic dates and to schedulean appointment, call: (208) 367-2328

Jennifer Anderson, MD, Pho

Saint AlphonsusMedical Group 3325 Pocahontas Road

Baker City, 0 R 97814Alex Johnson, MD

HEART CARE

• 0 • • 0 • • 0 •

4A FRIDAY, JULY 3, 2015Baker City, Oregon

aA~ERoTr

— / j - j /Serving Baker County since 1870

Write a [email protected]

EDITORIAL

For more than a decade the specter of the sage

grouse has loomed over Baker County.Concern about this bird has focused on the poten­

tial restrictions on livestock grazing, recreation andmining that could result from the federal govern­ment conferring threatened or endangered status onthe species.

But as we wait for the U.S. Fish and WildlifeService to decide that issue — the current deadlineis Sept. 30 of this year — we recognize that oKcialfederal protection for the sage grouse isn't the only

possible threat.The BLM, which manages almost all of the pub­

licly owned sage grouse habitat in Baker County,recently unveiled its plan to conserve that habitat.

The document, though in places bewildering in itsreliance on bureaucratic jargon, is straightforwardenough in others to make us wonder whether thisplan could be more damaging to the county's econo­my than having the grouse listed as endangered.

Fortunately our three county commissioners un­derstand the potential harm.

Their 22-page protest letter to BLM is an impres­sive document. Commissioners, with help fromcounty stafF and a consultant, have pinpointed partsof the plan that not only could cause major problemsfor the county, but also seem to run afoul of federallaw.

The letter highlights such questionable thingsas the BLM designating as sage grouse habitatareas that have no grouse now, but might becauseof climate models that, according to the agency, willforce the birds to move to higher elevations wheretemperatures are lower.

Commissioners want the BLM to rewrite its planbecause the current version is quite diferent fromthe 2014 draR. That's a reasonable request.

While we wait for the BLM's response, we feelconfident that our commissioners will continue toadvocate for their constituents in a constructive andcomprehensive way in this vital issue.

We also hope our congressional delegation willfollow the commissioners' lead, and exert pressure onthe BLM to write a fair and scientifically valid plan.

GUEST EDITORIAL

Editorial from The (Bend) Bul­letin:

Employees can be worn thin bylast-minute shifts in work schedules,having to remain on call and by widelyfluctuating work hours. It can makeearning a secure income tenuous andhaving a second job impossible. It cancreate difficult scenarios for getting towork, arranging child care and goingback to school or training.

That said, employers have problems,too. They can be in a bind in settingwork schedules that match workeravailability and also keep the businessrunning.

The Oregon Legislature has triedto resolve that tension with two bills.Senate Bill 968 has already gone intoeffect. It prohibits local governmentsfrom mandating work schedule re­quirements until after the Legislature

Letters to the editor• We welcome letters on any issue ofpublic interest. Customer complaints aboutspecific businesses will not be printed.• The Baker City Herald will not knowinglyprint false or misleading claims. However,we cannot verify the accuracy of allstatements in letters to the editor.

Don't put workers, employers in a bindadjourns in 2017.

That would seem a sensible piece oflegislation. There is a clear problem forboth workers and employers. But anysolution is going to have to be carefullydeveloped or it's just going to add to theproblems.

And then there is Senate Bill 888.It attempts to offer a solution. But itseems destined to add to the problems.The bill would allow some employeesto request a predictable work schedule.The employers would be required towork with the employees unless theyhad a "bona fide business reason" to de­cline. Employees could not be punishedfor requesting the predictability. Em­ployees would also have to be providedwith written notice of work schedules21 days in advance.

On its face, the bill sounds like itwould smooth over much of the un­

• Letters will be edited for brevity,grammar, taste and legal reasons.

Mail:To the Editor, Baker City Herald,PO. Box 807, Baker City, OR 97814Email: [email protected]: 541-523-6426

predictability for workers. However, itseems doubtful that it would work outthat way.First of all, it's an overreach of gov­

ernment into the management of theworkplace.

Second, the bill is loaded with broadexceptions that would exempt employ­ers from having to do it. There's a longlist of vague "bona fide business" rea­sons, including substantial cost to theemployer, a detrimental effect on theability of the employer to meet organi­zational needs or customer demands,inability to reorganize the work amongthe existing employees and more.W ho would have the burden of proof

that a bona fide business reason exists?Would the employer have to prove it tothe employee? They are so arbitrary asto be unworkable. And that makes thisbill unworkable. It should not pass.

• Letters are limited to 350 words; longerletters will be edited for length. Writers arelimited to one letter every15 days.• The writer must sign the letter andinclude an address and phone number (forverification only). Letters that do not includethis information cannot be published.

ot's uiet e ut;an a s ominate enewsDay 3 of Oregon's great mari­

juana experiment has arrived andI have yet to detect a m iasma ofpatchouli wafbng over Baker City,or a cacophony of the Grateful Deadreverberating through the streets.

I'm not surprised that this legalmilestone has thus far been markedby mellowness.

Pot tends to induce a certainplacidity in most people, after all,unless there's a platter ofburritosnearby.

But a sober reading of the law,which allows people 21 and older touse marijuana for recreational pur­poses, makes the most compellingcase for why today Oregon gener­ally looks — and smells — prettymuch as it did before July 1.

More important than what thelaw allows, it seems to me, is whatit doesn't allow.

Specifically, the law forbids peoplefrom toking up in public places.

Which, after all, is where the pub­lic — you and me and everybodyelse — would be most likely to get awhiff of the telltale aroma.

(Telltale if you've ever been to anAC/DC concert, anyway.)

In that vital sense, then, Measure91 didn't change anything.

Before July 1 it was illegal tolight up in public.

And it still is.The same people who were smok­

ing in their homes last week prob­ably are smoking in their homesthis week.

• 0 •

• 2

And they're having preciselythe same effect on non-smokers­which is to say, very little effect, andpossibly none at all.The prospect of seeing people

strolling along the sidewalk in frontof your home, pu5ng on a joint, ishardly the only question that thisnew law raised, of course.

It's reasonable, for instance, towonder whether legalizing marijua­na will tempt Oregonians to samplefor the first time a substance thathas been illegal, with limited medi­cal exceptions.

The question is whether thereis a large number of Oregonians,all older than 21, who have longwanted to try marijuana but haveresisted the urge until now, whensociety, or at least a m ajority ofvoters, have legally endorsed thepractice.

I don't think the law will havethat effect, at least not in a statisti­cally significant way.

The reason is that, based on ev­ery survey I have read on the topic,people who wanted to use marijua­na, even when doing so was illegal,had little trouble indulging.

This makes sense.Pot is readily available — as

police and prosecutors concede.

JAYSONJACOBY

Moreover, people who got caughtwith small amounts of marijuanafaced punishments comparable toa ticket for driving too fast on thefreeway.

Although I'm skeptical that legal­izing pot will transform Oregon intoa Timothy Leary cult, I don't thinkM easure 91 is the panacea to cer­tain criminal problems associatedwith marijuana.

Proponents of the measurecontend that legalizing pot, andallowing people to grow their ownplants, as Measure 91 does, willstifle the black market that inevita­bly thrives in the commerce of anyillicit substance.

This is not wholly illogical, but Ithink the pro-pot lobby exaggeratesthe potential benefits.

The reason is capitalism.So long as a demand exists for

a product — and that there is ademand for marijuana is one issueabout which there can be no dis­pute — there will be a competitionamong those who wish to supplythat product.

Some of those suppliers willscrupulously comply with every law.The+ open legal, state-regulateddispensaries.

But it seems to me terribly naiveto believe that everyone, or evenmost people who want to make abuck from pot will be so responsible.

As naive as believing that nobodystill brews moonshine in NorthCarolina.

And moonshiners compete withlegitimate sellers of a product,distilled spirits, that's been legalalmost everywhere in the U.S. formore than eight decades.

Flags have been in the newsrather more than usual recently.

Of course America, dating toBetsy Ross, has always had an af­finity for flags.

Perhaps the most iconic photo inthe nation's history, taken by JoeRosenthal on Feb. 23, 1945, showsfive Marines and a Navy corps­man raising Old Glory atop MountSuribachi on Iwo Jima.

The current debate focuses on theConfederate battle flag, and specifi­cally whether it ought to be flown atgovernment buildings in the South.

I'm neither black nor from theSouth, so I lack any truly personalconnection to that flag.

But I understand why someelected officials, in the wake of theJune 17 mass murder in a SouthCarolina church, would decide toremove a flag that for some peoplesymbolizes slavery.

(What I don't understand is whyTV Land would cancel re-runsof "The Dukes of Hazzard."Aflag painted on an orange DodgeCharger that starred in a cheesy TVshow seems to me harmless.)

Still and all, I'm unable to turnoff my hypocrisy detector.

Actually that's overstating things.Let's call it a lack of consistency, asort ofhalf-hearted hypocrisy.

While the Confederate battle flagis being pulled down, another flag,the rainbow pattern that symboliz­es gay rights and most particularlythe U.S. Supreme Court's ruling lastweek that legalizes gay marriage, isshowing up in all sorts of places.

Including, in simulated form byway of colored floodlights, on theoutside of the White House.

This in no way offends me.I don't believe allowing gay

couples to legally wed weakens theinstitution of marriage. I agree withthe High Court's decision.

But millions of Americans do not.I'm not suggesting there's a direct

comparison between the Confeder­ate battle flag and the rainbowflag, or between the issues thosetwo sequences of colors and shapesrepresent.

Slavery was terrible.Gay marriage is decidedly not.But that's my opinion.And my opinion — indeed, any­

body's opinion — is quite a differentthing than the government's tacitendorsement of something by itschoice of symbolic decorations.

I think the government, at what­ever level, would do well to avoidpicking favorites among flags whichcause some citizens to rejoice andothers to despair.

Jayson Jacoby is editorof the Baker City Herald.

• 0 •• 0 •

BAKER CITY HERALD — 5AFRIDAY, JULY 3, 2015

Streetworkplanned

I/esCom News ServiceBy Tara Bannow

People buying healthinsurance on their own nextyear — meaning they don'tget it through an employeror a government-run plan­can expect to pay a lot morethan they did this year: up tonearly 47 percent more.

The Oregon InsuranceDivision unveiled its finalrate decisions for individualand small group policieson Wednesday, and they'relargely unchanged from thepreliminary rates releasedearlier this month. Mostindividual policies, thosepeople purchase on theirown, will see double-digitincreases next year. Smallgroup policies, w hich are forbusinesses with fewer than50 employees, are seeing lessextreme rate hikes.

In fact, six small groupcarriers will offer cheaperrates next year, while ninewill see modest increasesrelative to the individualmarket.

Overall, Kaiser Founda­tion Health Plan of theNorthwest will see thelowest increase: an aver­age of 8.3 percent across itsindividual market policies,despite the carrier's originalproposal to decrease rates by2 percent next year. HealthRepublic will see the biggestincrease: an average of 37.8percent across its policies— the same as its original

Expect to patI a lot moreThe Oregon Insurance Division has posted its final health insurance rates for 2016.

ProviderATRIO Health Plans

BridgeSpan Health CompanyHealth Net Health Plan of Oregon

Health Republic Insurance CompanyKaiser Foundation Health Plan of the Northwest

LifeWise Health Plan of OregonModa Health Plan

Oregons Health CO-OPPacificSource Health Plans

Providence Health PlanRegence Bluecross BlueShield of Oregon

Trillium Community Health PlanZoom Health Plan*

proposal. That means HealthRepublic's customers will seehikes as low as 33.2 percentor as high as 46.9 percentdepending on their policy.

The division reviewed car­riers' proposed rates, issuedpreliminary decisions onJune 18 and held hearingswith carriers last week tohash out the differences. Thehearings resulted in slightlylower rate hikes for four indi­vidual market and one groupm arket carrier compared to

ProviderATRIO Health Plans

Health Net Health Plan of OregonHealth Republic Insurance Company

Kaiser Foundation Health Plan of the NorthwestLifeWise Health Plan of Oregon

Moda Health PlanOregons Health CO-OP

PacificSource Health PlansProvidence Health Plan

Regence Bluecross BlueShield of OregonSamaritan Health Plans

Trillium Community Health PlanUnitedHealthcare Insurance Company

UnitedHealthcare of OregonZoom Health Plan*

'Company is nerr Io the Oregoninsurance maraet""Btampre Is Cased on whata 40 Year Old tureandresldent would pay Ibr asauee: owgon Insuence DMaon

• Increases for individual and small group policies afect about 10 percent of Oregonians

ea insuiancecos siisin

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ratedecision18.4%

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24.8%"

the preliminary rates.The increases come

despite dozens of commentsfrom Oregon residentsurging the division to bringthem down. Several peoplesaid they could barely affordtheir health insurance as itis, and would never be ableto shoulder 30 percent or 40percent hikes.

But Laura Cali, Oregon'sinsurance commissioner,said not raising rates nowcould make things worse in

Finalrate

decision-5.1%7.2%15%

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$292$289$297$332$271$296$307$274$389$273$279$327$276

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the long run. Carriers dra­matically underpriced theirpolicies in 2014, resultingin an $830 million collectiveloss that year, or $624 perperson, she said.

Losses will likely besimilar this year and couldhappen again in 2016, evenwith the approved rates,said Patrick Allen, directorof the Oregon Departmentof Consumer and BusinessServices,

If companies continueto lose money, they mayrequire even more dramatichikes down the road or theycould go out ofbusiness, Calisald.

"That could be potentiallybe pretty dire for consum­ers in the middle of a year,where they might have toswitch plans, potentiallycome up with a whole newdeductible midyear," shesaid."That's something wewant to avoid from a com­petitive market standpointand are really just makingsure carriers have enoughmoney to pay their claims."Only about 10 percent

oforegonians are coveredunder individual and small­group policies. M ore arecovered under Medicare,Medicaid or through largeemployers. Of the roughly226,000 people who pur­chased individual policiesthis year, Cali said 40percent received federal taxsubsidies to offset the cost.

BURN BAN

MENACING

Streets in Baker City willbe getting some tender lov­ing care next month.

Chip- and fog-sealing isscheduled for Aug. 10-13.

About 3.9 miles of chip­sealing and approximately1.75 miles of fog-sealingwill be done by city crews.Streets to be treated are

4ut not limited tol ResortStreet between Campbelland Auburn, E Streetbetween 10th and Col­lege and between Cedarand Birch, Eighth Drive,Pocahontas Road from the

Continued ~om Page 1AThat includes city parks, Mount Hope Cemetery, Quail

Ridge Golf Course and the Baker Sports Complex, accord­ing to a press release from the city.

If the voluntary measures don't suKciently curb wateruse, the city might start enforcing its water curtailmentordinance, according to the press release.

That ordinance, which is available at wwwbakercitycomiunder the"government" pull down menu), authorizes thecity to prohibit various water uses, including irrigating thecemetery and parks as well as banning lawn watering andcar-washing.

Such dramatic steps aren't necessary at this point.The city's watershed, in the Elkhorn Mountains about

10 miles west of town, is supplying about 4.5 million gal­lons of water per day, a volume more typical oflate Augustthan early July.

The city is supplementing the watershed with waterfrom its well, which holds water pumped from the water­shed during the fall, winter and spring.

City residents have been using about 7 million gallons ofwater per day recently.

Although a couple of weeks of wet weather in late Maytemporarily reduced the fire danger, no measurable rainhas fallen at the Baker City Airport since June 2.

On Wednesday morning about 10 a.m. the Baker CityFire Department and the Baker Rural Fire District douseda blaze of undetermined cause along the Leo Adler Memo­rial Parkway near Kirkway Drive.

railroad tracks to Highway30, A Street from 11th toMain, Balm Street fromBroadway to Place, ChurchStreet from Clark west tothe river and Place Streetbetween Birch and Oak.

Several other shortersections of street will betreated as well. Residentswill be notified 30 daysbefore the work. A full listis on page 21 of the city'spavement managementplan, available at http//bakercity.com/government/plans-a-projects.

The driver of an eastbound semitruck and box trailer that dumpedits load of food items when it failed toround a curve on Interstate 84 nearHuntington was flown to a Boise hos­pital Wednesday afternoon.

Jose A. Guzman, 53, of Auburn,Washington, was transported byLifeflight to St. Alphonsus MedicalCenter. He was later transferred else­where. Josh Schlaich, a spokesmanfor the Boise hospital, said he could

FIiC 8CCI ell C0$8 Feewlnot release other details because offederal privacy laws.

Both lanes of traffic initially wereclosed at the scene, about 35 milessoutheast of Baker City, while theLifeflight helicopter landed. One east­bound lane was opened a short timelater to let traffic through.

When Oregon State Police of­ficers arrived, they found that the2007 Volvo truck and box trailer haddamaged about 300 feet of guardrail

Continued ~om Page 1ACornett gained the

distinction ofreceiving thelast citation to be issued inBaker County on a chargeof possession ofless than anounce of marijuana beforerecreational use of the drugbecame legal Wednesday,Lohner said.

Shea Maliwauki, 34,of Baker City, reportedthe incident about 1 p.m.Tuesday. He told police thathe had asked Cornett to puthis dog, a pit bull, on a leash,and Cornettrespondedwith a comment and thenthreatened Maliwauki witha hatchet.

A short time later, Lohner

said he saw Cornett, whowas carrying a hatchettucked inside his pants andwas shirtless, walking withCoty Hanson, 19, of BakerCity, at Main and Wash­ington. An unleashed pitbull was walking 20 to 30feet ahead of the two men,Lohner said.

Police had warned Cornetta few days earlier aboutthe city's leash law and therequirement to license hisdog, Lohner said. In additionto the other charges, Lohnercited Cornett on charges ofallowing his dog to run atlarge and no dog license.

The pit bull was turnedover to Hanson when Cor­nett was arrested, Lohnersald.

before breaking through and exitingthe roadway, an OSP press releasestated.

The truck then rolled down a 50­foot embankment onto the UnionPacific Railroad right of way, saidShelley Snow, ODOT spokeswoman.

ODOT workers and a team fromHuntington Rural Fire and Rescuealso responded.

Police are continuing the investiga­tion.

Baker City. Oreoo

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your Jubxtlee Buetons,Only 50t eaeh ~WIhen~purehased ~at,the

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• 0 • • 0 • • 0 •

6A — BAKER CITY HERALD LOCAL FRIDAY, JULY 3, 2015

LEGACYCountvgetsundate onrecordsarchiuingBy Joshua Dillen]dillen©bakercityherald.com

It was county business asusual at Wednesday's BakerCounty Commission meeting.

Commissioners approved rou­tine contracts, professional ser­vices agreements and held publichearings on zoning changes.They also heard updates fiom

County Clerk Cindy Carpenter,and the Oregon State UniversityExtension Office stafK

Clerk's ONce UpdateCarpenter's update included

information about how her stafFhas been electronically archivingcounty documents.

Her predecessor, Tami Green,started a program that is nearlycomplete. Deed and index booksare now stored electronically at acost of just over $43,000.

documents on a computer andprint them instead ofleafingthrough books or accessing film.

"It's working really nice

because we just enter a book anda page and it comes right up,"Carpenter said.

She said Bill Lee, the county'sinformation technology direc­tor, hopes to finalize a system toorganize the final steps of thearchiving process.

"It's going to be a little trickyfor Bill to organize, but he thinkshe can," Carpenter said.

The sofbvare program Lee isusing is free, but it might notwork.

Carpenter said she has savedm oney in her deparlment's bud­get to hire a sofbvare company toset up the system.

She said when the system isdone there will be a new com­puter station that clerk stafFandthe public can use to access titles,deeds and related documents.

Clerk staff is also enteringother county records includingcourt documents as time per­mits; those also will be accessibleby the public.

Carpenter was also concernedthat her department is running

out of money and doesn't haveany revenue coming in.

She said the electronic filing ofdocuments is going to save a lotoflabor and money in the longterm, but she is looking at othercost savings.

Carpenter said her office isworking on updating contractswith title companies.

'They haven't been reviewedsince 1979," she said.'They'repaying us $175 a month andother counties are getting up to$5oo."

The new contracts will be $375per month by 2018. The newprices will be increased in stageswith $50 increases per year.

Carpenter said the state's newMotor-Voter law will increasecosts. The state will alleviatesome of those costs by paying15 cents per active voter, whichequates to $1,456.65.

Carpenter also said the ballotfor the November 2016 generalelection"may be the biggest bal­lot that anyone has ever seen."

OSU Extension ONce UpdateForestry and Baker County

Extension Office Leader BobParker introduced Leticia Verlasto the commissioners. She is thenew livestock Extension agentfor Baker and Union countiesand will start workAug. 15.Besides the addition of Verlas,

Parker highlighted some of thechanges that are coming to theoffice.

He said Janice Cowan,longtime horliculture/4-H youthagent, is retiring at the end ofthe year. Parker said she is goingto be replaced by a full-time 4-Hagent locally in the Baker Cityoffice and there will be a full­time regional horticulture agentbased in La Grande.

''We're in a state of flux," he

SRld.East Region Administra­

tor Carole Smith talked aboutthe reorganization of the OSUExtension Service. Four yearsago the service made the change.Malheur County is included

tors.

with Baker, Wallowa and Unioncounties. She said the Extensionservice is downsizing resultingin fewer regions and administra­

She explained that her roleis to advocate for the programsneeded in the county and to sup­port and supervise the ExtensionstalK

Smith said she listened to thewants and needs of the cattleindustry and lobbied to get alivestock agent and make that apriority.

Robin Maille, the ExtensionService's family and communityhealth agent, and program assis­tant agent Rebecca Colton talkedabout the SNAP-Ed programand the instruction they provide.SNAP-Ed iSupplemental Nutri­tion Assistance Program Educa­tionl is the nutrition promotionand obesity prevention compo­nent of SNAP, formerly knownas the food stamp program.

Colton explained that shereached 451 students in thethird, fourth and fifth gradesthrough nine weekly wellness/nutrition classes during theschool year.

This summer she is workingwith the summer lunch programand providing cooking lessons atthe North Baker Elementary siteand physical activity with a nu­trition theme at Geiser-PollmanPark.

Colton is also working withlocal food pantries to promotehealthy food choices.

In other county businessCommissioners:

• Approved a professional ser­vices agreement with TimothyBishop to provide marketingservices for the county.

• Approved a professionalservices agreement with BakerCounty Unlimited for VisitorCenter services.

• Approved Kerr Contractorsas the sole source provider forhot asphalt mix for this year'spaving season.

• Approved Albina Fuel as the

sole source provider for HFE-90chip seal oil which will be usedin the final phase of chip-sealingthe Anthony Lakes Highway.

• Tabled the designation ofDan Van Thiel as the sole sourceprovider of county counselservices. Commissioners saidVan Thiel will still provide legalservices as needed until theydetermine the county's long-termlegal needs.

• Adopted an ordinancechanging the zoning of properlyowned by Leona Jones nearSumpter from primary forest totimber grazing.

• Conducted the first read­ing of an ordinance that wouldchange the zoning of an 81-acreparcel of properly owned by Tomand Fawn Kerns southwest ofHaines from exclusive farm useto timber grazing. CommissionerTim Kerns recused himselfbecause Tom Kerns is his son.

• Designated the Baker CityHerald as the county's newspa­per of record.

• Reappointed AlethaBonebrake to the Baker CountyCultural Coalition.

• Reappointed Robert El­lingson and Janice Cowan to theFair Board Advisory Committee.

• Reappointed Mike Kee andMary Jo Carpenter to the Trans­portation/Safety Commission.

• Voted to extend a leaseagreement with Sackos LandCompany for the lease of thebuilding at 3330 PocahontasRoad that houses the HealthDepartment.

• Approved anintergovern­mental agreement with the Or­egon Youth Authority to providejuvenile crime basic services.Funding for the services is not toexceed $35,798.

• Approved a cooperativeservices agreement betweenthe county and the U.S. Depart­ment of Agriculture, Animal andPlant Health Inspection Serviceand Wildlife Services to receive$25,159.18 to resolve wildlife/hu­man conflicts related to damagecaused by predatory animals.

ers.

Continued from Page 3AHe emphasized that the new law doesn't

automatically waive fines for people who arerequired to undergo addiction treatment.

"It's left up to the judge to decide," Bentz

said.'This is one of the tools you want a judgeto have. That's why we have judges."

Bentz said the testimony that Ryan, Lisaand Jorja gave April 9 at a hearing of theHouse Judiciary Committee was the "mo­ment of truth" in the bill's history.

Jorja said she had that impression whenher son began to tell his story to the lawmak­

"All the conversation stopped," Jorja said."Whatever we were saying had to hit eachand every one of them."

Ryan completed suicide four days later.Jorja and Steve said it became obvious

to them that their son had decided monthsearlier to end his life, even before Bentz intro­duced the bill.

''When you run out ofhope you're going torun out oflife," Steve said.

Yet Jorja said Ryan was committed to tell­ing legislators why he thought they shouldvote for the bill.

"He wanted so much to say his piece," Jorjasaid."He wanted to share his experience."

Steve and Jorja believe the bill will helppeople, and society.

But they also consider it only a first, andrelatively small, step toward dealing with thescourge of meth.

Steve has much bigger ideas.He thinks everyone arrested for meth

possession or use should be enrolled in amandatory, two-year program reminiscent ofthe Civilian Conservation Corps of the De­pression. People would have to work, but theywould receive a modest paycheck and learnmarketable skills while doing improvementprojects in the national forests and on otherpublic property.

The current system, Steve argues, is anabject failure.

"People need to understand this methepidemic reaches every corner of the U.S.,"he said."There's no family that's not touchedin some way. We need to give people a reasonto live. We're creating this huge underclassof felons who can't do anything. It has to stop."

House Bill 3168 has a number but no of­ficial name.

But Steve and Jorja will always think ofit as the Culley bill. Bentz and his staffhadtaken to referring to it by that name as well.

"This bill, I look atit as a legacy for myson," Steve said."He's more than ashes undera tree."

Staff will be able to access the

~ S tampede Books open June 13th at 7 a.m. and close

Haines Stampede Rodeo 8 The

everyone to the Old Fsshioned

4th of July Celebration start ingwith the Gowboy Breakfast.

1 June 30th at 7 p.m. For Entry info, call 541-786-8788

Friends of Haines want to invite

/ / / ~Tickets at gate Adults $8, Children 6-12 $4, 5 8c Under FREE

Grand MarshalTim Kerns

from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.

Friday, July 3rdArt In The Park12-4 p.m.Haines Stampede RodeoSlack begins at 9 a.m. and Rodeo at 5:30 p.m.Saturday, July 4thCowboy Breakfast: 7 a.m. to 10 a.m. at the Elkhorn GrangeArt in the Park: 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.Music Entertainment in the City ParkParade 10 a.m. Parade Queen Jan Kerns,

Pit Barbecue in the City Park begins directly after the parade

Sandwich Booth of BBQ Beef Sandwiches and Hot Dogswill be served in front of City Hall 11 a.m.to 2 p.m.

Fireworks: 10 p.m. sharp!

Bingo BashWEI3NESDAY, JULY 15TH AT 1:30PMCome and joinyour friends at Settler's Park

for an afternoon of BINGO. Great fr iendsand great prizes. Light refreshments served.

• g 8

Haines Stampede Rodeo: 1:30 p.m.

2016 CourtTryouts July 5, 2015 1 p.m. at arenaInfo or entries call: 541-403-2671

INe hope to see everyone herein Haines July 3rd 8 4th

• i RS •~

. I I Pg ,II'a 'ug

The Friends of Haines & Haines Stampede~0' Rodeo would like to thank

everyone who has sogenerously sent donations for

the 4th of July Fireworks. Thesedonations are greatly appreciated

and help put on a spectacularpatriotic display of fireworks.

~

• • •

• a • • •

SETTLKR'S PARKa Senior Lifestyle community

ASSISTED LIVING I MEMORY CARE2885 17TH STREKT I BAKKR CITY OR 97814

malnesStamysde

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• 0 • • 0 • • 0 •

BAKER CITY HERALD — 7AFRIDAY, JULY 3, 2015

Summer Basedall

By Gerry Steelegsteele©bakercttyherald.com

Bryson Smith ended theGentry Ford Diamondbacks'summer baseball season on ahigh note Wednesday.

Smith slugged a walkofftwo-run home run with

one out in the bottom of theseventh inning to lift theDiamondbacks to an 8-6 winover Richland, Washington,at the Baker Sports Complex.

"It was an exciting way toend our season," said Gentrycoach Tim Smith, Bryson's

dad."It was a great moment

for him, and I was excited ascoach but even more so asdad," Smith said.W ith the score tied at 6-6

Nate Wright reached baseand was sacrificed to second.

Diamonddackswinfinale on mith's walkolSmith then hit the first pitchhe saw over the left fieldfence to end the game.

Smith led the Diamond­backs with two hits andthree RBIs.

Trevor Bennett, the fourthGentry pitcher, picked up the

IRRIGON — Baker's

BRIEFINGBaker soRball starsend stay at distict

11-12-year-old softball all­stars ended their stay atthe District 3 tournamentMonday.

Baker was eliminated11-1 by Pilot Rock inconsolation action.

Richland 0 0 0 3 0 0 3 — 6

Gentry 1 0 1 1 0 3 2 — 8

Dixon, Pearce (51, Davis (51, Bennett (71 and

Plumley WP — Bennett

Gentry hits — Smith 2, Drxon, Dowdy, Da

vis 2 Gentry RBI — Smith 3, Pearce, Dowdy

2B — Davis HR — Smith

BaltimoreNew YorkTampa BayTorontoBoston

Kansas CityMinnesotaDetroitClevelandChicago

HoustonLos AngelesTexasSeattleOakland

TELEVISION

AP Basketball(A(rtter

San Franasco atWashington, 3 p m (ESPNI

ALLTIMES PDTFriday, July 3

Seattle at Oakland, 6 p m (ROOTINY Mets at LA Dodgers, 7 p m (ESPNI

Wimbledon,4 a m (ESPNISeattle at Oakland, 1 p m (ROOTIWorld Cup third place, 1 p m (FOXIMiami at Chicago Cubs, Philadelphia atAtlanta,Minnesota at Kansas City, Milwaukee at Cinannatior NYMetsatLADcdgers,415pm (FOXI

Seattle at Oakland, 1 p m (ROOTIWorld Cup title, 4 p m (FOXI

MAJOR LEAGUESAMERICAN LEAGUE

Sunday, July 6

Saturday, July 4

By Jon Krawczynski

When Damian Lillard agreed toa new maximum contract extensionwith the Trail Blazers on Thursday,it may have been the beginning of achanging of the guard in Portland.

Lillard agreed to terms on a five­year contract worth more than $120million, a person with knowledge of

East Division42 37 53242 37 53242 39 519 142 39 519 137 44 457 6Central Division

W L Pct GB44 32 57942 37 532 3'/z39 39 500 637 41 474 834 42 447 10

West DivisionW L Pct GB47 34 58041 38 51941 39 51336 43 45637 45 451

55'/z1010'/z

am

Thursday's GamesCleveland 5, Tampa Bay4, 10 inningsPittsburgh 8, Detroit 4Texas 2, Baltimore 0Boston 12, Toronto 6Minnesota 2, Kansas City 0Oakland 4, Seattle 0

Tampa Bay (Karns 441 at N YYankees (Pineda8-51,1005amToronto (Dickey 3-81 at Detroit (Pnce 7 21, 10 08

Houston (McHugh 931 at Boston (Buchholz6-61,1035amBaltimore (Tillman 6-71 at ChicagoWhite Sox(Samardzila 54L 11 10 a mCleveland (Co Anderson 1 01 at Pittsburgh(Locke 441, 1 05 p mSeattle (FHernandez 104I at Oakland (Graveman 54L 1 05 p mMinnesota (Pelfrey 5-51 at Kansas City (Blanton211,415pm

Cleveland (Bauer 6-51 at Pittsburgh (Morton 6-11,405pmTampa BayArcher 951 at N YYankees (Tanaka431,405pmToronto (Hutchison 8-11at Detroit (An Sanchez6-71, 4 08 p mHouston (Straily 0-01 at Boston (Masterson 3-21,4 10 p mL A Angels (Richards 8 51 at Texas (Ch Gonzalez2 31, 5 05 p mBaltimore (U Jimenez 731 at ChicagoWhite Sox(Danks 3-81, 5 10 p mMinnesota (Milone 4 11at Kansas City (Guthne6-51, 5 10 p mSeattle (Happ 3 51 at Oakland (Chavez 4 71,605p m

Today's GamesAIITimes PDT

Saturday's Games

the negotiations told The AssociatedPress. The person spoke on conditionof anonymity because the deal has notbeen announced.

'Thank you so much to@PaulGAI­len and the@trailblazers organiza­tion," Lillard tweeted after the newsbroke.u111 be in 4ashtaglRipCity 6more years! Oakland to Ogden toOregon..TO STAY."

St LolllsPittsburghChicagoCinannatiMilwaukee

WashingtonNew YorkAtlantaMiamiPhiladelphia

Los AngelesSan FranascoAnzonaSan DiegoColorado

Blazerssignlillardto 5-vear, 120+milliondeal

Tampa Bay (E Ramirez 6-31 at N YYankees(Sabathia 3-81, 10 05 a mToronto (Estrada 54I at Detroit (((erlander 0-11,10 08 a mCleveland (Salazar 7 31 at Pittsburgh (G Cole1131, 1035a mHouston (McCullers 4 21 at Boston (E Rodnguez4 21, 10 35 a mBaltimore (B Norns 2 71 at ChicagoWhite Sox(Rcdon 3-11, 11 10 a mMinnesota (E Santana 0-01 at Kansas City(DDuffy241, 11 10a mSeattle (Montgomery 3-21 at Oakland (Undeadedl, 1 05 p mL A Angels (C Wilson 6-61 at Texas (Lewis 8-31,405pm

L A Angels (Santiago441 at Texas (WRodnguez5-31, 6 05 p m

SCOREBOARD

Sunday's Games

NAllONAL LEAGUEEast Division

43 36 54440 40 50038 41 48134 46 42527 54 333Central Division

W L Pct51 27 65445 33 57742 35 54536 41 46833 48 407

West DivisionW L Pct45 35 56342 38 52538 41 48138 43 46934 45 430

3'/z59'/z17

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GB

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68'/z14'/z19'/z

The full value of the contract couldwind up ranging between $125 mil­lion and $129 million and won't bedetermined until the salary cap isestablished. That makes it the richestcontract in league history for a guard.

Lillard teamed up with LaMarcusAldridge to headline a starting five inPortland thatjust a year ago appearedon the brink of pushing the Blazers

Miami 5, San Franasco4Pittsburgh 8, Detroit 4Chicago Cubs 6, N Y Mets 1Milwaukee 8, Philadelphia 7, 11 inningsAtlanta2,Washington1San Diego 5, St Louis 3, 11 inningsAnzona 8, Colorado 1

San Franasco (Bumgarner 84I at Washington(Strasburg 5-51, 8 05 a mSan Diego (Despaigne 3-61 at St Louis(C Martinez 931, 11 15 a mCleveland (Co Anderson 1 01 at Pittsburgh(Locke 441, 1 05 p mMiami (Cosart 131 at Chicago Cubs (Roach 0-11,415pmMilwaukee (Nelson 5-81 at Cinannati (Jos Smith

Miami (Koehler 64I at Chicago Cubs (Hammel5-31, 8 20 a mSan Franasco (Peavy 0-21 at Washington(G Gonzalez 54L 12 05 p mCleveland (Bauer 6-51 at Pittsburgh (Morton 6-11,105pmMilwaukee (Fiers 3-71 at Cinannati (Lorenzen3-21, 1 10 p mPhiladelphia (Morgan 1 01 at Atlanta (Teheran54L 1 35 p mSan Diego (Cashner 3-91 at St Louis (Wacha10-31, 2 15 p mColorado (K Kendnck 3-101 at Anzona (ChAnderson 4 21, 340 p mN Y Mets (Syndergaard 34I at L A Dodgers(Kershaw 5-61, 4 10 p m

Thursday's Games

Saturday's Games

Today's GamesAIITimes PDT

Germany vs E ngland, 1 p m

backinto the Western Conference elite.But the Blazers weren't able to build

on that success this season, battlinginjuries and losing in the first round ofthe playoffs to Memphis.

Starting shooting guard WesleyMatthews was lost to an Achillesinjury and won't return, startingforward Nicolas Batum was traded toCharlotte.

WORLD CUP SOCCERWomen'sWorld Cup Glance

Milwaukee (Jungmann 2 11at Cinannati (Leake54L 10 10 a mCleveland (Salazar 731 at Pittsburgh (G Cole1131, 1035a mPhiladelphia (O'Sullrvan 1 61 atAtlanta (S Miller54L 10 35 a mSan Diego(Kennedy4 71 at St Louis(Lynn 54L1115amMiami (Latos 3-51 at Chicago Cubs (Hendncks34L 11 20 a mColorado (J De La Rosa 5-31 at Anzona (R De LaRosa 6-31, 1 10 p mN Y Mets (Matz 1 01 at L A Dodgers (Bolsinger4 21, 1 10 p mSan Franasco ((7ogelsong 6-61 at Washington(Zrmmermann 6-51, 5 08 p m

011, 4 15 p mN Y Mets (Harvey 7 51 at L A Dodgers (Greinke621,415pmPhiladelphia (Correia 0-21 at Atlanta (A Wood551,415pmColorado (Hale 2 31 at Anzona (Collmenter 3-61,7 10 p m

Atvancouver, British Columbia

Alllimes PDTTHIRD PLACE

Saturday, July 4At Edmonton, Alberta

CHAMRONSHIPSunday, July 6

Sunday's Games

The Portland Trail

Davis agrees todeal with Blazers

Ed Davis is leaving LosAngeles for the PortlandTrail Blazers.

Davis' agent, DavidBauman, says his clienthas agreed to a three­year, $20 million contractto join the Blazers. Heaveraged 8.3 points and7.6 rebounds in his firstseason with the Lakerslast year.

With uncertaintysurrounding free agentpower forward LaMarcusAldridge, the Blazersgrabbed the athletic andversatile Davis to add to aroster in flux.

Davis cannot sign hiscontract until July 9, perleague rules.

Aminu agrees tofour-year deal

Blazers appear to be en­tering a period of change,so one of general managerNeil Olshey's first callsduring free agency wentto a familiar face.

The Blazers quicklyagreed with veteran Al­Farouq Aminu, reunitingthe defensive-minded for­ward with the man whodrafted him with the LosAngeles Clippers in 2011.U S vs Japan, 4 p m

• • • • e • • • • e

MM T M Fa C=V C= • K H a L L • VWe offer:' Free in-town del ivery of me8icat ions' Online refills' RefillRx Mohile App

T-Rx program for rou t ine me8s

(jet a11 of your routine meJr'catr'on at one tr'ma)Your m e d i ca t ion i s ou r p r i o r i t y b e ca use Zo u s r rou are fom',i1y.

Baker County Residents. • •Please join us downtown for the

2015 Hells Canyon Motorcycle Rally

FRIDAY JULY 107am-10am: Breakfast at VFW Hall9am-Spm: Vendors, Local Shops & Food Court(Ir,

(

~4+>P

1920 Resort Street, Baker City wnnrw.bakercitypharmacy.com

7-10pm: Kickstart Party

OpenPoker RunRide the Ogre Course

Free with wr istbandLive Music at VFW Hall, Lefty's & Kiss

Tribute Band at Barley Brown's541-523-5231 • MOn-Fri 9AM-6PM • Sat 9AM-1PM

S HRED 9 A YTUESDAY, JULY 7TH

2 p.m. - 6 p.m.

2036 Breadway, Baker City, OR

OId West FederaI Credit UnionThe event is Gpen to the community withtaeBTTFD cthicdding piovided by Accu shred

Sponsomd by

SATURDAY JULY 117am-10am: Breakfast at VFW Hall9am-Spm: Ride the Canyon, Mtn Valley & More

Vendors, Local Shops & Food CourtOpenPoker Run

2-6pm: Hells Canyon Motorcycle Show6pm: Poker Run Entries Due7pm: Trophys awardedSpm: Hells Canyon BBQ

Free with wr istbandLive Music at VFW Hall & Lefty's

(TI'La Grande

• •

­. • ­

• • • • • •

• •

SUNDAY JULY 129am-2pm: Vendors, Local Shops & Food Court• • • • • •

OpenA secure way to dispose of unneeded documents. Guard your personal informatioTIagainst identity theft. Here are a few examples of what to throw away:

• Bank statements: OK to destroy after one • Insurance records: Keep for the life of

year, unless you need them for tax purposes. y our policy.• Utility bills: Unless needed for tax purposes. • Old credit card statements, unless• Tax records: Destroy after six years. something was purchased with a warranty.• Old investment statements. • Mailed credit card solicitations.

• 0 • • 0 • • 0 •

SA — BAKER CITY HERALD LOCAL 8 REGION FRIDAY, JULY 3, 2015

FLYING Legend LAMP's New Section OpensFrisbee GolfPtrltrngn 4nitrul

Continued from Page 1AThe group is also accepting

in-kind donations, particu­larly tools and cement forconstruction of the targetsand benches.''We're hoping to get fund­

ing through sponsorships,"said finance committee chairJulia Smith."A donationof $500 to get a company'sname on a hole or bench, oreven a sign advertising theirbusiness."

Community involvementhas already proven to bequite strong, says Smith. Onelocal real estate broker hasalready pledged $500 towardthe project.

The Baker School Districtwill provide no monetarycontributions, but will beinvolved in the constructionand management processes,as it will be built on districtproperty.

'The school district will beworking with the committee,"said Doug Dalton, the schooldistrict's business manager.sWe will provide oversightduring the constructionstages and maintenance onceit is completed."

r

Proposed disc golf course at the Baker Sports Complex.

Also known as Frisbeegolf, after the popular discbrand or Frolf as a popu­lar abbreviation, disc golfis played by flinging theplastic spheres at designatedtargets. The player with thefewest throws upon comple­tion of the course is thewinner. Some players use up

— Boston Colton

"I've never played becausewe've never had a localcourse. Ideflnitely will now."

'KSw' , I COURTSTENNIS

SPORTSCOMPLEX

iIrr;i'.i: , snri; l'5I',(III(I(

weather conditions.Designer Boston Colton

says that although he hasn'tever played disc golf, he'sexcited to give it a try oncethe course is built.

"I've never played becausewe've never had a localcourse," Colton said."I defi­nitely will now."

Featut» lFsatsts g

- FeaiureaPnssitrle inilgrridi

Submitted photo

The Associated Press

Heatwavemeltsrecordsacross West

to three different discs, eachwith varying weight and size,depending on the course and

UTAHSalt Lake City also saw the hottest

June on record following the warmestwinter ever.

The National Weather Service saidthe average temperature last monthwas 77.5 degrees, breaking the previousrecord of 75.7 set in June 1988.

ARIZONAPhoenix is known for its stifling sum­

mer heat, but June 2015 stood out.It was the third hottest month the

city has endured since the NationalWeather Service began keeping recordsin 1895. The warmest June in Phoenixwas in 2013 where temperatures aver­aged 94.8.

The average temperature for thisJune was 94.0.

From Seattle to Salt Lake City, theWest is baking under record heat. Tem­peratures reaching the triple digits havemade fire conditions extreme and sentfolks looking for reliefheading into theFourth of July weekend. Unfortunately,the forecast in many areas calls formore sun and sweat.

WASHINGTON

Seattle, not accustomed to prolongedhot weather, saw its hottest June ever.The average high temperature each

day in June was a record 78.9 degrees,breaking the 1992 record by more than3 degrees, said Johnny Burg, a meteorol­ogist at the National Weather Service.

"Our high is supposed to be in the lowto mid-70s at this time and lows in the

mid-50s," he said.Instead, the Seattle area is seeing

highs in the 80s and lows in the 60s.Meanwhile, June temperatures were

scorching in Eastern Washington.The two highest readings in June

were 113 degrees at Chief Joseph Damand in the town of LaCrosse. The townsof Chelan, Ephrata, Odessa and Omakall recorded record highs of 110 degreesin June.

NEVADAJune in Las Vegas is officially the

hottest ever.The National Weather Service said

the average June temperature recordedat McCarran International Airport was91.9 degrees, breaking the previousrecord of 91.5 in 2013.

SALEM (AP) — The fateof an Oregon bill allowingretail marijuana sales tobegin Oct. 1 lies with Gov.Kate Brown.

The House signed off ina 40-19 vote on Thursday,sending the bill to theDemocratic governor.

Possession and useof limited amounts ofmarijuana became legalon Wednesday, but there'sno place for pot users tolegally buy the drug. The

S. John Collins/Baker City Herald

The newest section of the Leo Adler Memorial Park­w ay has been paved and is open to pedestrians. Sois the trailhead on Resort Street at the path's south­ern terminus. Caution tape and barricades are still upin places, but the path is open to walkers, accordingto the city. The new section of trail runs on the eastside of the Powder River between the Myrtle Streetbridge (in the photo) and the trailhead parking lot.

Potsaledill gassesbill would temporarilyallow tax-fiee retail salesthrough existing medicalmarijuana dispensariesbeginning Oct. 1.

The Oregon LiquorControl Commission willdevelop regulations and li­cense permanent pot storesnext year.

A spokeswoman forBrown declined to saywhether the governor willsign the bill.

i ~ ~r.

Rfh%XM

• •

Nominateyour choice

to winthis year's

award!

Mail:

Do you know a person orfamilywho has been an

important part of the BakerCounty Fair and that you wouldlike to see honored as this year's

fair friend or fair family?

Write a one-page letterdescribing the friend or family's

involvement with the BakerCounty Fair and why they are

the best choice for 2015.

Send in your nomination byFriday, July 10 to:

Fair Friend or Family

Baker City Herald

Get your buttons at these locations, and earn discounts during Jubilee!,

BAKER CITY HERALD: Subscribers get their buttons for $I, or buy anewspaper for $I and get a button for $I

., COMMUNITY BANK: $I donated to Miners Jubilee fund with buttonpurchase

, UMPQUA BANK: Get a free pen with your buttonOLD WEST FEDERAL CREDIT UNION: Get a free personal fan with your

BETTY'S BOOKS: $2 off $I 0+ purchase with buttonBAKER COUNTY HERITAGE MUSEUM: $I off Museum admission with

buttonCLOTHES OUTLET: I0% off your store purchase with buttonBAKER COUNTY CHAMBER OF COMMERCE: I5% off gift shop purchase

with button, or discount on silver Chamber membershipD&B SUPPLY: I0% off your total purchase with button

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info fhe Jubilee sweepsfakes for fabulous prizes!20I 5 Miners Jubilee buffons are on sale for $2 each, and include enfry

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Family

Family

Past Fair Family Honorees:2001 — Markgraf Family2002 — Bunch Family2003 — Barr Family2004 — Wendt Family2005 — Cockram Family2006 — Rohner Family2007 — Jacobs Family2008 — Beth & Fred Phillips

2009 — Bonnie & Gerald Colton

2010 — Coomer Family2011 — Crabill Family2012 — Rob & Diane Ellingson2013 — Warner Family2014 — Siddoway Family

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Fax:

Email:

July 28.

541-523-6426

info©bakercityheraId.com

The winner will be profiled in theBaker City Herald fair previewedition on Monday, July 27,

and honored at the 2015 BakerCounty Fair Friends of the Fair

Appreciation Dinner on Tuesday,

is proudly sponsored by the

Nominations

1915 First StreetPO Box 807

Baker City, OR 97814

Isker (Ettg38erelb

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FRIDAY, JULY 3, 2015

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

THE OBSERVER a BAKER CITY HERALD — 1B

D EA D L I N ES :LINE ADS:

Monday: noon FridayWednesday: noon TuesdayFriday: noon Thursday

2 days prior topublication date

DIS PLAY AD S:

Baker City Herald: 541-523-3673 e www.bakercityherald.com • classifiedsObakercityherald.com • Fax: 541-523-6426The Observer: 541-963-3161 e www.lagrandeobserver.com • classifieds©lagrandeobserver.com • Fax: 541-963-3674

105 - Announce­ 105 - Announce­ 110 - Self-Help 110 - Self-Help 110 - Self-Help 110 - Self-Helpments ments Group Meetings Group Meetings Group Meetings Group Meetings

PUBLIC BINGO AA AA MEETINGS AL-A N ON. COVE ICeepCommunity Connection, THE DEADLINE «r "As Bill Sees It" 2614 N. 3rd Street Com ing Back. Mon­

I I 2810 C edar St., Baker. placing a Sat.; 10AM — 11AM La Grande days, 7-8pm. CalvaryEvery Monday Classified Ad is 2533 Church St Baptist Church. 707

Doors open, 6:30 p.m. 12:00 p.m. Baker Valley Main, Cove.Early bird game, 7 p.m. THE +AY BEFORE Churc h of Christ

MON, I/I/ED, FRINOON-1 PM

TUESDAY7AM-8AM

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

10AM-11AM

UNION CO. YARD GGARAGE SALES

House need new a tntz fo llowed by reg. games. PUBLICATION. Open ALCOHOLICSThe Service Directory is All ages welcome! Publication Days: YMOUS 145

AA MEETING:

Open MeetingSunday; 5:30 — 6:30

Grove St Apts

— 8R~ ~ ' ~

Sunday — 2 pm -4pmCatholic Church

Baker City

GOING OUT OF BUSI­NESS S A L E. Gi f tShop inventory. Ex­cepting bids for ALLmerchandise. Jo­seph, 541-432-6205.

BINGO

AA MEETINGBeen There,

Done That GroupSun. — 5:30 — 6:30 PM

Grove Street Apts(Corner of Grove St D Sts)

Open, Non-SmokingWheelchair accessible

AA MEETING:Survior Group.

Mon., Wed. (!t Thurs.12:05 pm-1:05 pm.Presbytenan Church,

(4th (!t Court Sts.)Baker C ity. Open,

No smoking.

Corner of Grove (!t D StsBaker City/NonsmokingWheel Chair Accessible

Been There Done That

541-523-6591 Mondays, can help!

Fridays (541) 624-51 1 7

Serving Baker, Union,and Wallowa Counties

Wednesdays and 24 HOUR HOTI INE Sales-Union Co.

of OvereatersACCEPTANCE GROUP

Anonymous meetsTuesdays at 7pm.

United Methodist Churchon 1612 4th St. in the

library room in thebasement.

541-786-5535

www oregonaadrstnct29 com

Baker City

RMLS 13332444

THE PERFECT lo AcRE PARcEL is justa few miles from Elgin 8t has a beautifulview and privacy, and has recently beenreduced to $171,000, cash. All set up witha well and septic system, outbuildings,and a 3 bedroom, 2bath home. Owner iswilling to trade for home in La Grande.

Up toLAMINATION

17 1/2 inches wideany length

$1.00 per foot/The Observeris notresponsible for flaws

in material ormachine error)

OBSERVER1406 Fifth

• 541-963-3161

1995 4th St.

AL-ANON MEETING

Meeting times1st (!t 3rd Wednesday

Evenings @6:00 pmElgin Methodist Church

7th and Birch

Someone's

AL-ANONMonday at Noon

Presbytenan ChurchCorner or Washington St 4th

drinking a problem?

Anita Fager,Principal Broker, g

Valley Realty

541-910-3393 or541-963-4174.

PINOCHLEFridays at 6:30 p.m.

Senior Center2810 Cedar St.

Public is welcome

THE

La Grande

MON, I/I/ED, FRINOON-1 PM

TUESDAY7AM-8AM

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

10AM-11AM

SAFE HAVENAlzheimer/Dementia

Support Group2nd Friday ofevery month

Hall (Right wing) ofNazarene Church

1250 Hughes LaneBaker City

AA MEETINGS2614 N. 3rd Street

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

in Elgin.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

NORTHEAST OREGONCLASSIFIEDS offersSelf Help (!t SupportGroup A n n o u nce­ments at no charge.For Baker City call:J ulie — 541-523-3673For LaGrande call:Enca — 541-963-3161

OVERCOMERSOUTREACHChnst based12 step group

2533 Church St541-523-7317

541-523-4242

payment at:The Observer1406 5th St.

La Grande

OR

~M r

ALL YARD SALE ADSMUST BE PREPAID

You can drop off your

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 (!t please call usimmediately if youfind an error. North­east Oregon Classi­fieds will cheerfullymake your correc­t ion (!t extend yourad 1 day.

PREGNANCYSUPPORT GROUP

Pre-pregnancy,

541-786-9755

Caregivers

11:45 AM in Fellowship

AL-ANON-HELP FORfamilies (!t fnends of al­c ohol i cs . U ni o nCounty. 568-4856 or963-5772

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

S un days; 2:45 — 3:45 P M

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

541-963-3161.

month at 4 PM

Meeting

Must have a minimum of10 Yard Sale ad's to

pnnt the map.

NARACOTICSANONYMOUS

Goin' Straight Group

Mon. — Tues. — Thurs.Fn. (!t Sat. -8 PMEpiscopal Church

Basement2177 1st Street

Baker City

Thiree LorCattorniS

To Serve YouLa Grande Office

541-663-9000

Baker City Office541-523-7390

Richland Office541-893-3115

pregnancy, post-partum.

PRICE REDUCED!I!Baker City.

NARCOTICSANONYMOUS:

Monday, Thursday, (!tFnday at 8pm. EpiscopalChurch 2177 First St.,

+Visa or Mastercard,are accepted.+

First Saturday of every

Pot Luck — Speaker

110 - Self-HelpGroup Meetings

Do a two-way favor ...get extra cash for your­self and make it possi­ble for someone elseto enjoy those itemsyou never use. Sellthem with a classifiedad.

145 - Yard, GarageSales-Union Co.

MOVING S ALE, 4pcbdrm set (ICeller) $900,desk $40 , r e c l inew/heat (! t m a ssage$50, c h rome/glassshelves 4 $ 25,gold/glass s h e lves$1 0. ICe nm ore w/d$150 set, 4 oak bastools, $100, ICenmoref ridge $125, m i c ro­wa ve $ 3 5. C a I I541-786-2745.

HELP

Meetings:

AA MEETING:Powder River Group

Mon.; 7 PM -8 PMWed.; 7 PM -8 PM

Fn.; 7PM-8PMGrove St. Apts.

Baker City, OpenNonsmoking

day (Women's)

NEED TO TALK to anAA member one on

one? Call our24 HOUR HOTLINE

541-624-5117

www.ore onaadistnct29

SETTLER'S PARKACTIVITIES

1st (!t 3rd FRIDAY(every month)

9:00 AM — Noon.(Pnces 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(M on day — F n day)Exercise Class;9:30AM (FREE)

I

Ceramics with DonnaPRICED TO SELL,3 bedroom, 2 bath manufactured homewith 2 car carport, large open floor plan,and partially fenced yard. Well insulated,vinyl windows, air conditioning. Ownernegotiable. Make an offer! $97,500.

Anita Fager,Principal Broker, g

Valley Realty

541-910-3393 ortetrtet~ a ~ t

• I • IwfrwjonnjnowarfLcom

Nail Care

RMLS 15619507

® 541-963-4174.

Triple Wide 2428 sq, rt, on 1.82 ACRES 3 bd, 2.5 ba,shower ac garden tub, walk-in closet, mud/Iaundry rmttgth ottgt deck. Big kitchen walk-in pantry, Ig. Island ac allappliances, storage space, breakfast rm, family ac Livingrm, fire place, lots of windows looking at Mtns., vaultedceilings, large covered porch, landscaped, 2 car metalgarage ac 2 Bay RV metal building ttgred, garden building,ac chicken area, fruit ac flowering pine trees, creek runsthrough property. Please drive by ac pick-up a flyer.

CALL for showing today!

2002 PALM HARBOR

69519 Haefer Ln. Cove

III "­ ­

Info.

Wheel Chair Accessible

WALLOWA COUNTYAA Meeting List

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

Thursday noon.Women onlyAA meeting

Wednesday 11a.m.,1131/2 E Main St.,

Enterpnse, across fromCourthouse Gazebo

Hotline 541-624-5117

oi visit

UNION COUNTYAA Meeting

541-663-41 1 2

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.

.com

Corner of Grove (!t D Sts.

541-910-1684

143 - Wallowa Co145- Union Co

150 - Bazaars, Fundraisers160- Lost 8 Found170 - Love Lines180 - Personals

100 - Announcements105 - Announcements110- Self Help Groups120 - Community Calendar130 - Auction Sales140 - Yard, Garage Sales, Baker Co

200 - Employment210- Help Wanted, Baker Co220 - Union Co230 - Out of Area280 - Situations Wanted

300 - Financial/Service310- Mortgages, Contracts, Loans320 - Business Investments330 - Business Opportunities340 - Adult Care Baker Co345 - Adult Care Union Co350 - Day Care Baker Co355 - Day Care Union Co360 - Schools 8 Instruction380 - Service Directory

400 - General Merchandise405 - Antiques410- Arts 8 Crafts415 - Building Materials420 - Christmas Trees425 - Computers/Electronics430- For Sale or Trade435 - Fuel Supplies440 - Household Items445 - Lawns 8 Gardens450 - Miscellaneous460 - Musical Column465 - Sporting Goods470 - Tools475 - Wanted to Buy

690 - Pasture

700 - Rentals

600 - Farmers Market605 - Market Basket610 - Boarding/Training620 - Farm Equipment 8 Supplies630 - Feeds640 - Horse, Stock Trailers650- Horses, Mules, Tack660 - Livestock670 - Poultry675 - Rabbits, Small Animals680 - Irrigation

701 - Wanted to Rent705 - Roommate Wanted710- Rooms for Rent720 - Apartment Rentals730 - Furnished Apartments740- Duplex Rentals Baker Co745 - Duplex Rentals Union Co750 - Houses for Rent760 - Commercial Rentals770 - Vacation Rentals780 - Storage Units790 - Property Management795 - Mobile Home Spaces

800 - Real Estate801 - Wanted to Buy810- Condos, Townhouses, Baker Co815 - Condos, Townhouses, Union Co820 - Houses for Sale, Baker Co825 - Houses for Sale, Union Co840- Mobile Homes, Baker Co845 - Mobile Homes, Union Co850- Lots 8 Property, Baker Co855 - Lots 8 Property, Union Co860 - Ranches, Farms870 - Investment Property880 - Commercial Property

900 - Transportation

910 - ATVs, Molorcycles, Snowmobiles

920 - Campers925 - Motor Homes930 - Travel Trailers, 5th Wheels940 - Utility Trailers950 - Heavy Equipment

970 - Autos for Sale990 - Four-Wheel Drive

Show it over100,000 times

with ourHomeSellerSpecial

a o u s e~Sunday

902 - Aviation

480 - FREE Items

500 - Pets 8 Supplies505 - Free to a Good Home510- Lost 8 Found520 - Pet Grooming525 - Pet Boarding/Training530- Pet Schools, Instruction550 - Pets, General

960 - Auto Parts

915 - Boats 8 Motors

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

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

S. Four weeks of Euyers Eonus and Observer Plus Classified AdsYour classifted 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 PlusClassifted Section.

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

Get moving. Call us today.and no refunds i f classified adis kt?Ied before end of schedute.

Home Seber Special priceis for advertisirtg the same home, with no copy chartges

Meeting:

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!

bakercityherald.comR R R R

lagrandeobserver.com

160 - Lost & Found

LOST:BAKER C ity H erald

Banner - Yellow Ban­ner says Event Spon­sor — Baker City Herald.Missing after June 7Powder River MusicReview c o n cer t inGeiser-Pollman Park.Please return to 1915F irst St reet o r c a l l541-523-3673.

Baker City

MISSING YOUR PET?

Baker City Animal Clinic

WALLOWA606 W Hwy 82

PH: 541-263-0208

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

WEIGHT WATCHERS

Basche Sage Place2101 Main StreetDrop-In Hours:

Monday, 9 — 11 AM• buy product• ask questions• enroll• weigh-in• individuaI attention

Monday 5:30 PM• confidential weigh-inbegins at 5 PM• group support• v isit a m e e t ing fo rfree!

120 - CommunityCalendar

1000 - Legals

• 0 0 0 • 0 0 0 • 0 0 0

2B — THE OBSERVER a BAKER CITY HERALD FRIDAY, JULY 3, 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 • classifiedsObakercityheraId.com • Fax: 541-523-6426'The Observer: 541-963-3161 e www.la randeobserver.com • classifiedsOlagrandeobserver.com • Fax: 541-963-3674 xg w '

210 - Help Wanted­Baker Co.

210 - Help Wanted­Baker Co.

WANTED: CDL w i t htanker endorsementf or p o t able w a t e rtruck. Must pass drugscreening and back­ground check. Forest

plus, but not required.Ca II: 541-403-0494

Check out our classified ads

180 - Personals

MEET SINGLES rightnow! No paid opera­tors, Iust real peoplel ike y o u . Bro ws egreetings, exchangemessages and con­nect Iive. Try i t f ree.Ca II n ow :877-955-5505. (PNDC)

[email protected]

WE ARE HIRING!!

• RN Shift Supervisor• Registered Nurse,

Lead• LPN, Lead• Registered Nurse• Occupational

Therapist• Physical Therapist

Online a l ications:saintalphonsus.org/careersor send inquines to:

SECRETARY NEEDEDf or busy o f f i c e i nBaker City . St r o ngcomputer and organ­izat io na l s k i l l srequired. Be n e f i t s ;Salary DOE. ContactBaker Employment Of­fice for a full lob de­scription and applica­t ion and submit cur­rent resume and threereferences.

140- Yard, GarageSales-Baker Co.

1021 RESORT STFn.— Sun; 8 am -?

Cleaning out storageshed......Something for

service experience a

1980 16th St.Saturday only

7a.m. -?

everyone!

39900 BEAR Gulch rd. 2miles before Sumter

off Ce m ete ry rd.July 3, 4, (It 5th.

8am-4pm

1520 17TH St.July 3-4-5; 8a-5p. Yard,shop, house (It misc.Clean, used (It new.

Fans to cool you!!

S AKER CO. YAR B6 GARAGE SALES

3 Sales locations withinone block. Check us onthe way to Sumpter or

Lostine over the4th of July weekend!

Thurs. — Sun.; 8am — 5pmMark your calendars!

Huge Barn andLiving Estate Sale.

September. 18 (It 19

SUSSCRISNS!TAICE US ON YOUR

LEAVE YOUR PAPER

140 - Yard, GarageSales-Baker Co.Vintage and Old Stuff925 2nd. St., North powder

Exit 285 • (off 1-84)Great Buys!

920 ROBERTS Haines,Corner of Roberts (It2nd. Sat. July4th only8-? Tools, Crafts, XLscrubs, furniture, more

Herald

online.

FULL editions ofThe Baker City

are now available

PHONE!

AT HOME

Saint Alphonsus

Do a two-way favor ...get extra cash for your­self and make it possi­ble for someone elseto enloy those i temsyou never use. Sel lthem with a classifiedad.

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.Don't Miss This Sale!(South Baker off Hwy 7)Aa rdva rk Storage ¹ 4.

Fn.— Sun.; 9-?. Sportinggoods — from hunting to

fishing, even a boat!Household, dressers,tables, chairs, tools,

appliances..Too much tolist! More added daily.

210 - Help Wanted­Baker Co.

BAKER COUNTY Natural Resource Coordina­tor

Baker County is accept­ing applications for theposition of Natural Re­source C o ordinatorthrough Monday, July6 , 2015. T h i s i s apart-time position withexcellent benefits. Ap­plicant must have aBachelor's degree innatural resources orany equivalent combi­nation of experienceand fo rmal t r a in ingwhich meets the re­quirements. For addi­t ional inf o r m a t i on ,p lease contact t h eState Employment De­partment a t 1575Dewey Avenue, BakerCity, OR. A l l a pp l i­ca nts w i l l bepre-screened. BakerCounty is an equal op­portunity employer.

Classifieds get results

Add BOLDINGor a BORDER!

It's a little extrathat gets

BIG results.

Have your adSTAND OUTfor as little as

$1 extra.

NOW ACCEPTING Ap­plications for Experi­enced Line and PrepCooks. Apply in per­son at The SunridgeInn.

RECEPTIONIST POSI­TION in B a ker C i tyopen. M u l t i-line tele­phone system; com­puter skills required.For a full lob descnp­t ion and t o ap p l y ,please contact BakerEmployment O f f i ceand submit your cur­rent resume and threereferences.

210 - Help Wanted­Baker Co.

BAKER COUNTYDeputy Watermaster II

Baker County is accept­ing applications for theposition of Deputy Wa­termaster I I t h roughJuly 15, 2015. Th isp osit ion perf o r m scomplex technical en­gineering d u t ie s insupport to the Water­

ment and d i sburse­ment of water; investi­gates water nght com­plaints, a d m in istersOregon water laws,and provides assis­tance to the public onwater related matters.This is a full-time posi­t ion w i t h e x c e l lentbenefits. Starting sal­a ry i s $ 3 , 087 p e rm onth. To app l y ,p lease contact t h eState E m p Ioym e nt De­partment a t 1575Dewey Avenue, BakerCity, OR.

Baker Countyis an equalopportunity employer.

HKLPATNACTATTNTIONTO YOUR AP!

master in m e asure­

tion.

penence.

210 - Help Wanted­Baker Co.

Whirlpool' and KitchenAid'

APPLIANCES

ELGIN ELECTRIC- Free Delivery­

43 N. 8th Elgin541 437 2054

Call Now to Subscnbe!541-523-3673

$40 flat rate/any issuespecializing in: Pofune up, poptips,

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

House calls, drop off, and remote services.

Dale Bogardus

N~ M i 7P%

QmamSuik<~

• BAKER CITY • THE DOOR GUYOutstanding

Computer RepairSALES • SERVICE • INSTALLATION

DOORSRAYNOR GARAGE

Home LendingKevin Spencer

Mortgage Loan OfficerNMIS¹3to) Ce 208-484-0085kevinspencer@umpquabankcomwww oreidahome oans com

visit your c oses( Umpqua Bank

KIX~)IL/TII'IIK

24 Hour Towing

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

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

LEGACY FORD

T raveling can b e f u nwhen you're dr iving adependable car. See thewide variety of modelsfeatured in the classifiedsection today.

BAKER COUNTYCorrections De ut

Baker County is accept­ing applications for theposition of CorrectionsDeputy through July1 0, 2015. T h is i s afull-time position withexcellent b e n e f i t s .Qualified applicantsmust have a valid Ore­gon driver's l icense,the ability to pass a12th grade reading andwnting exam, a physi­cal exam and an exten­s ive ba ckg r o u n dcheck. A ppl i cantsmust also obtain a Ba­sic Corrections Certifi­cate f r o m DP S STwithin one year fromdate of hire. To apply,p lease contact t h eState Employment De­partment a t 1575Dewey Avenue, BakerCity, OR, or you mayc ontact t h e Bak e rCounty Sheriff's Officeat 541-523-6415 or byv isit ing w w w .ba k ­ersheriff.org. B akerCounty is an equal op­portunity employer.

THE BAKER CountySheriff is currently ac­cepting app l icationsfor the Reserve Dep­uty Program. Thosewishing to apply maypick up an applicationat the Baker CountySheriff's O f f i ce ordownload one f romt he w e b s it e atwww.bakershenff.org.

A G INS U RANCE ­PART TIME Clencal

Seeking a high-energy in­dividual with a positiveattitude. Office expen­ence required. Insur­

plus. 2 0 h o urs perweek. C lerical posi­

Wages, depends on ex­

To apply visit follow in­structions located at:http://bit.ly/1LIMICOX

ance exper ience a

us

210 - Help Wanted­Baker Co.

220 - Help WantedUnion Co.IT IS UNLAWFUL (Sub­

section 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 di­rectly 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.

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.

JOIN OUR TEAM!

2 POSITIONS

A&D Counselor• Powder River

Correctional FacilityF/T Position. High

School Diploma/ GEDrequired. Must obtain

CADC I within 24 mos.Must pass DOC

Background Check

Tx Facilitator• Elkhorn Adolescent

Treatment CenterF/T Swing shift

position.High SchoolDiploma/GED required.

F/T positions include:Excellent BenefitsPackage, Health 8tLife Ins., Vacation,Sick, Retirement 8tEducational Trainingwww.newdirectionsnw.orgddoughertyrN ndninc.org541-523-7400 for app.

BAKER SCHOOL DIS­TRICT 5J is currentlyaccepting applicationsfor a 7-12 Grade BandTeacher. For a com­p lete description o fthe position and quali­fications please go towww.baker.k12.or.usor contact the employ­ment division. Youmay aIso ca II541-524-2261 or emailnnemec©baker.k12.or.

QTew Directions'g$orthwest Inc.

220 - Help WantedUnion Co.

Bob Fager • 963-3701 • ccro3272

DANFORTH CONSTRUCTION

Wayne Dalton Garage Doors

General description ofduties:

Circulation Duties:

• Delivers bundles to in­dependent contractorshomes

• Collects money fromthe news stands

• Delivers down routesto subscnbers homes

• Delivers special publi­cations th rough o u tUnion and W a l lowaCounties

• Clean and paint newsstands

• Assists circulation di­r ector w i t h p r o m o­tions, reports, recordsand complaints.

• Makes outbound reten­tion calls to current,past and non-subscrib­ers, including calls to

subscribers in graceperiod, stopped sub­scnbers.

• Participates in circula­tion promotions, tracksresults.

• Performs other dutiesas assigned.

Qualifications:

High school diploma orequivalent. Re l iabletransportation a must.Valid Oregon dnvers li­cense, valid auto insur­ance, and pre-employ­ment drug test.

PhysicaI requirements:

S itting a nd d riv i n g ,working in th e e l e ­m ents, snow , s u n ,wind (It rain. In and outof a vehicle.

Must be able to lift up to75 pounds.

Send Resume to:cthompson©lagrande

GRANDE RONDE Acad­emy is accepting appli­cations for an elemen­tary teacher for t he2 015-2016 sch o o lyear. 541-975-1147 orwww.granderonde

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Paradise Truck8 RVWash

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Sales • Installation • ServiceRick 963-0144 786-4440

Cove, OregonCOVE SCHOOL District

Position:Athletic DirectorApplication Deadline

Date: Open until filledStart Date: August 18,

2015Qualifications:• First Aid/CPR Certifica­

tion• Playing/Coaching expe­

nence is preferredSalary: Negotiated with

the District.Application Procedure:• Complete application

which is available atwww.cove.k12.or.usunder District Informa­tion.

• Letter ofinterest• Resume• Three (3) Letters ofRecommendation

Preferred SubmissionMethod: Please mailapplications to:

Cove School DistnctPO Box 68Cove, OR 97824

COVE SCHOOL District

Coaching P o s i t ion:Head Middle SchoolFootball Coach

Application DeadlineDate: Open until filled

Start Date: August 18,2015

Qualifications:• First Aid/CPR Certifica­

tion• Playing/Coaching expe­

nence is preferredSalary: Pl acement will

be in accordance witht h e D i s t r i c t ' sExtra-Duty Stipend.

Application Procedure:• Complete application

which is available atwww.cove.k12.or.usunder District Informa­tion.

• Letter ofinterest• Resume• Three (3) Letters ofRecommendation

Preferred SubmissionMethod:Please mail applica

Cove School DistnctPO Box 68Cove, OR 97824

observer.com

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FAMILYSELF-SUFFICIENCYCOORDINATOR

Full-time position. Gen­eral du t ies i n c ludemanaging case f i les,counseling and evalu­ating participants, con­ducting onentations, fi­nancial l i teracy andhome buying work­shops, collecting data,filing reports and pro­viding technical assis­tance and referrals.This is a grant-fundedposition. Salary $2646per month. Full posi­t ion description andapplication avai lableONLY at the State ofOregon EmploymentDivision Office, 1901Adams Avenue, LaGrande, OR 97850.Closing date: July 30,2015. All qualified ap­plicants w i l l r eceivedue consideration foremployment w i thoutregard to race, age, re­ligion, sex, color or na­tional ongin. No quali­fied disabled personshall, on the basis ofthe disability, be sub­Iect to d iscriminationin employment. TheN ortheast Ore g o nHousing Authority isan Equal OpportunityEmployer. Reference¹1399440.

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Residential, Rental & Commercial CleaningServing Union County since 2006

Licensed and lnsuredShannon Carter, Owner(541) 910-0092

Island City

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Andy Wolfer CCB¹186113

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Sturdy Rose

0/ORKPLACE, ELDER CAREBUSINESS, DIYORCE, ESTATE

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Over 30 years serving Union CountyComposition - Metal - Rat Roofs

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10201 W. 1st Street Suite 2,

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CNC Plasma Services

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Piano Lessons for Beginners

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OREGON SIGNCOMPANY

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LADY

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tions to:

Cove, Oregon

• Lo i n P rocessor

• Lo in F orwarder

Clean Driving Record,Drug Testing, Mondaythru Fnday, can be sta­t ioned o ut U nionCounty O c c as ionalSaturday Work, GoodQuality E q u ipment ,Very Steady W o rk,CALL 541-575-2102FOR MORE INFOR­MATION — E-MAIL:

brendal©centurytel.net

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IRON TRIANGLE LLCJohn Day, OregonTRUCK DRIVER

(Short Logger)

o~ * t *

~o* t*

CirculationAssistant-PT

Monday, Wednesday,Fnday 1pm to 6pm­

Circulation

to:

ApplicationProcedures:

RECEPTIONIST FORfast-paced healthcareo ffice. Pos it ive a t t i ­tude, great computerskills, strong commu­nication, and multitask­ing abilities required.Wages DOE. Bene­fited position. Pleasesubmit resume coverletter, and references

WorkSource Oregon1901 Adams Ave,La Grande, OR 97850

TAMARACK J O I NTVENTURE L LC, i snow hinng for a con­struction prolect. Lo­cated near J o sephOregon. Hiring LeadCarpenters, Carpen­ters, and EquipmentOperator. Pay is DOE.

541-805-9467 o rDerek 541-398-2612.

THE CITY of La Grandeis accepting applica­tions for the followingposltlon:

Clerk Typist/Receptionist

may be obtained fromthe City of La Grandewebsite at:

www.cit ofla rande.oror Heather Ralkovichin the Finance Depart­ment, City Hall, 1000Adams Ave., PO Box670, La Grande, OR97850, 541-962-1 31 6,

hbur ess©cit ofla rande.orOpen until f i lled withfirst review of applica­tions received by July20, 2015. AA/EEO

230 - Help Wantedout of areaDEATLEY CRUSHING,

i s s e e k ing ca r e e rminded persons for allpositions. Demandingphysical labor w/ longhours. Willing to travelthroughout the North­west. Competitive sal­ary (It benefits pkg. in­cluding: Medical/den­tal/vision, 401IC/retire­ment plan, pd h o l i ­days/vacation. Sendresumes to PO Box759 L e w i s ton , ID83501 or fax to (208)743-6474. EOE

Cove, Oregon

Position: Hi gh SchoolAssistant/JV GirlsVolleyball Coach

Application DeadlineDate: Open until filled

Salary: $1,500-$2,000.

Cove, Oregon

220 - Help WantedUnion Co.COVE SCHOOL District

Coaching Position:Head Middle SchoolBoys Basketball Coach

Application DeadlineDate: Open until filled

Start Date: August 18,2015

Qualifications:• First Aid/CPR Certifica­

tion• Playing/Coaching expe­

nence is preferredSalary: Pl acement will

be in accordance witht h e D i s t r i c t ' sExtra-Duty Stipend.

Application Procedure:• Complete application

which is available atwww.cove.k12.or.usunder District Informa­tion.

• Letter ofinterest• Resume• Three (3) Letters ofRecommendation

Preferred SubmissionMethod: Please mailapplications to:

Cove School DistnctPO Box 68Cove, OR 97824

HOUSE C L EANERweekly, $15/hour +$15 round trip transp.Sta rkey. 541-786-4260

COVE SCHOOL District

• Complete applicationwhich is available atwww.cove.k12.or.usunder District Informa­tion.

• Letter ofinterest• Resume• Three (3) Letters ofRecommendation

Preferred SubmissionMethod: Please mailapplications to:

Cove School DistnctPO Box 68Cove, OR 97824IN-HOME CARE PRO­

VIDER, 2 1/2 -3 hrs/day, $9.00hr, refer­ences. Call in a f ter­noon 541-963-0126.

LINCARE, LEADING na­tional respiratory com­pany seeks r esultsdnven Sales Represen­tative. Create workingrelationships w it hMD's, nurses, socialworkers and articulateour excellent patientcare with attentive lis­tening skills. Competi­tive Base + un-cappedcommission. Drug-freeworkplace. Please ap­ply in person. EOE

LOOKING FOR firefight­ers 1 and 2 and quali­fied engine boss $500a day. 541-910-4444.

OFFICE/SALES Assis­tant. Send resumesto: Iack.moseley©

edstaub.com

Call Tom at

Required City application

OI

• 0 • • 0 • • 0 •

FRIDAY, JULY 3, 2015 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 date

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

• Fax: 541-523-644• Fax: 541-963-367

380 - Baker CountyService Directory

26j

230 - Help Wantedout of areaCOMMUNITY COUN­

SELING Solutions is a501(c)3 serving Ore­gon i n M o rrow ,W heeler , Gi l l i a m ,Grant, Lake and Har­ney Counties. We arerecruiting for a Regis­tered Nurse at JuniperRidge Acute Care Cen­ter, a Secure Psychiat­nc Facility in John Day,providing services toindividuals with severemental illness. Quali­f ied applicants musthave a valid OregonRegistered P r o fes­sional Nurse's licenseat the t ime o f h i r e ,hold a valid ODL andpass a cnminal historybackground c h eck .New Grads are wel­come! Wage between$25.14 to $37.98/hourDOE. Excellent benefitpackage, $4,000 sign­ing bonus, $2,500 relo­c ation exp en s e s .Make a 2-year commit­ment a n d rec e i ve$10,000 to pay downyour student l oans.Shifts are 3 on, 1 off, 3on and 7 off . Down­load an application atwww.Community­CounselingSolutions.org and forward it wi thcover letter and re­sume to h uman re­s ou r c e s atladawn.fronapel©gobhi.net. Position open un­til filled. EOE.

230 - Help Wantedout of areaCOMMUNITY COUN­

SELING Solutions is a501(c)3 serving Ore­gon i n M o rrow ,W heeler , Gi l l i a m ,Grant, Lake and Har­ney Counties. We arerecruit ing f or afull-time Quality Assur­ance Coordinator. Thismanagement positionis responsible for qual­ity assurance and qual­ity improvement func­tions for the agency toinclude mental healthand alcohol and drugservices; ensures thatclinical services andoperations are effec­t ive and meet s tan­dards o f l ic e n s ingauthorities and stateagencies; position maysee clients and will beresponsible for assess­m ents , t rea t m e n tplans and other clinicaldocuments; wil l pro­vide individual, groupand family t herapy,and o the r r e l evantc linica l s erv i c e s .On-caII o r b a ck-upon-call rotation duringnon-business hours re­quired for cnsis serv­ices. Four day workweek available. Quali­f ied applicants musthave a graduate de­gree in psychology, so­cial work, counseling,psychiatric n u r s i ngand/or related f ield.Bi-lingual (Spanish) aplus but not required.Salary range $57,300-$87,100/year, DOE.Excellent benefit pack­age. D o w n load anemployment applica­tion at H Y PERLINIC"http://www.communi­tycounselingsolutions.org" www.communit­counselin solutions.org and forward it wi thcover letter and re­sume to: HYPERLINIC"mailto:ladawn.fronapel©gobhi.net"ladawn.frona el© obhi.net. Position open un­til filled. EOE.

230 - Help Wantedout of area

Community CounselingSolutions is a 501(c)3serving O r egon inMorrow, Whee ler,G illia m, G ra nt, La keand Harney Counties.We are recruiting for aregular full-time NurseSupervisor at JuniperRidge Acute Care Cen­ter, a Secure Psychiat­nc Facility in John Day,providing services toindividuals with severemental illness. This po­s ition must have anunderstanding of theOAR's and apply themto policy and proce­dure wnting, and nurs­ing care of residents.This position will pro­v ide monthly staff inservices, and will de­velop and participate inthe personal care plan,as well as provide in­put into the treatmentp lan as part o f t h etreatment team. Thisposition wil l performs ome f l oo r wo r k .Qualified app l icantsmust have a valid Ore­gon Registered Profes­sional Nurse's licenseat the t ime o f h i r e ,w ith minimum o f a nAssociate's degree inNursing and minimumof five (5) years' expe­r ience, with a t l eastone year at supervi­sory level. Must hold avalid ODL and pass acriminal history back­ground check. This isan exempt pos i t ion.Salary be t w e en$62,800 — $96,000DOE. Excellent bene­f its package. Down­load an application atwww. CommunityCoun­selingsolutions.org andforward it w ith coverletter and resume tohuman resources at

ladawn.fronapel©gobhi.net.P osition o pe n un t i lfilled. EOE.

WALLOWA VALLEYCenter For Wellness isbuilding a new team atour Residential Homein Joseph, Oregon.We are l ooking f o rpeople who are pro­fessional team playerswho want to make adifference in the Iivesof people with severeand persistent mentalillness. The positionst o be f i l led are twofull-time Caregiving po­s itions a nd tw opart-time pos i t i o nswith pay s tart ing at$11.50. Full-time posi­t ions wil l come w i t hhealth insurance, tenpaid holidays, Vacationand sick leave and re­t irement bene f i t s .Days and shifts varydepending on the cur­rent needs of the facili­ties. Must be w i l l ingto work all shifts. Ap­plications c an bepicked up at 207 SWFirst S t reet , E n t e r ­prise, OR 97828 o rsend resume's to Han­nah Hi l lo c k athannah.hillock©gobhi.net. P o s i t ions openuntil filled.

Need a good used vehicle?Look in the classified.

Baker City Herald: 541-523-3673 e www.bakercityherald.com • classifiedslbakercityherald.comThe Observer: 541-963-3161 e www.la randeobserver.com • classifiedsllagrandeobserver.com

DELIVER IN THETOWN OF

BAKER CITY

INDEPENDENTCONTRACTORS

wanted to deliver theBaker City Herald

Monday, Wednesday,and Fnday's, within

Baker City.

LOOK

320 - BusinessInvestments

DID YOU ICNOW 7 IN 10Americans 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

541-524-9594

Commercial (!t

JACKET at 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

541-524-0359

541-519-5273Great references.

CCB¹ 60701

HONEYBEEHIVE/SWARM

Removal/RescueCall for free removal

541-51 9-4980

D 5. H Roofing 5.Construction, Inc

(!t reroofs. Shingles,metal. All phases ofconstruction. Pole

buildings a specialty.Respond within 24 hrs.

CEDAR at CHAIN linkfences. New construc­t i o n, Remodels ( ! thandyman services.

Kip Carter Construction

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.

345 - Adult CareUnion Co.

I'M A CAREGIIVER look­i ng for w o r k i n L aGrande area Exp. (!tgood reffs. Will con­s ider liv i ng i n .(541 ) 377-21 1 9

380 - Baker CountyService Directory

FRANCES ANNEYAGGIE INTERIOR 8EEXTERIOR PAINTING,

Residential. Neat (!tefficient. CCB¹137675.

CCB¹192854. New roofs

HEAVY DUTY LeatherRepair all kinds Tac (!tSaddle Etc. CustomWo rk 541-51 9-0645

venience.

385 - Union Co. Ser­vice Directory

ANYTHING FOR

Same owner for 21 yrs.

Wolfe

further

ACROSS

1 Climber'schallenge

4 Packagesealer

8 Strike callers12 Regret13 Garfield pooch14 Orchid-loving

15 Seine vista16 Took back18 Bantu people20 Celts, to

Romans21 ­ — step

23 Foul up24 Mascara target27 BMW, e.g.29 Hung on to33 Gigantic34 Tony-winner

— Hagen35 Gleeful cry36 Mlle. in

38 HBO receivers

table

39 Buffalo's lake40 Social insect42 Large deer44 Reserve, as a

46 Auspices50 It can't be

beet? (2 wds.)54 High card55 Advantage56 Mr. Griffin of

game shows57 Driver's peg58 Take a break59 Diva — Gluck60 Clairvoyance

DOWN

1 Phoenix loc.2 Doozie3 Potato skin4 Upper body5 Lemony drink6 Cherry seed7 Poet's "always"8 Serve the

bubbly9 Give out

One Of the n iC­est things aboutwant ads is theirI O W C o s t .Another is t hequick results. Trya classified adtoday! Call ourc lassi f ied a dd epa r t m e n ttOday to P laCeyour ad.

Say $ $ $$$ ', IIITheclaSSitiedS

CROSSWORD PUZZLER

10 Co. honcho11 Pregrown lawn17 It's south of

19 Yecch!22 Sharp, as

320 - BusinessInvestments

DID YOU ICNOW 144million U .S. A d u l tsread a N e w s paperpnnt copy each week?Discover the Power ofPRINT Newspaper Ad­vertising i n A l a ska,I da ho, M o nta na, Ore­gon, Utah and Wash­i ngton with Iust onephone call. For a FREEadvertising n e tw o rkb rochu r e ca II916-288-6011 or emailcecelia©cnpa.com(PNDC

D I B SD R A C OT E N E T

A N T SZA N E PO H A R ER E Y O NRA P N AOD E S B

L A CN U T M E AOR E L GME D L A

Answer to Previous Puzzle

H E R L A BE S C E P AY A MM E R SY P O WO E B A K EU H F Y E N

S I R P AP T O N I CA M C A S TS E E K ST B I S O NE B E A L ED R U D E

7-3-15 © 2015 UFS, Dist. by Univ. Uciick for UFS

hearing

out?23 Get the lead

24 Deli units25 Mammal's

26 Noncom28 Off-road

vehicle

31 — Beta Kappa32 — kwon do37 Most capable39 Barely

scrape by41 Publishing

43 Cocoondweller

44 Strong andhealthy

45 Burden47 Fence opening48 Sherbets49 Leak slowly50 ER practice51 Ms. Thurman52 Toothpaste

53 Chair option

Ca II 541-523-3673

INVESTIGATE BEFOREYOU INVEST! Alwaysa good policy, espe­cially for business op­portunities ( ! t f r a n ­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

POE CARPENTRY• New Homes• Remodeling/Additions• Shops, Garages• Siding (!t Decks• Win dows (!t F in e

finish workFast, Quality Work!

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

CCB¹176389

RUSSO'S YARD8E HOME DETAILAesthetically DoneOrnamental Tree(!t Shrub Pruning541-855-3445503-407-1524

Serving Baker City& surrounding areas

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

experience r equire­

450 - Miscellaneous

for sale:

%METAL RECYCLINGWe buy all scrapmetals, vehicles

(!t battenes. Site cleanups (!t drop off bins of

all sizes. Pick upservice available.

WE HAVE MOVED!Our new location is

3370 17th StSam HainesEnterpnses

541-51 9-8600

541-523-8912

JOHN JEFFRIESSPRAY SERVICE, INCRangeland — PastureTrees-Shrubs-Lawn

Bareground - Right of WayInsect — Weed Control

HOMELITE 4000 wattgenerator. Mountedon a cart. Both 220 (!t110 volt. $185.

Coleman powermate54 series. 4000 watt.$150. 602-541-2123.North Powder

435 - Fuel Supplies

GREAT f ~l d

SCARLETT MARY LMT3 massages/$100

Baker City, ORGift Certficates Available!

430- For SaleorTradeFOR SALE- One red

canoe w/ oars $750.00obo Ph. 541-786-7087

CLEAN WOODSHAVINGS

(!t a nima I beddincl.$25.00 per yard.

Ca II 541-786-0407

Ca II 541-523-4578

405 - Antiques

These little ads reallywork! Join the thou­sands of other peoplein this area who areregular users of thec lassified. See howsimple and effectivethey can be. VVe'reopen from 7:30 a.m.to 5 p.m. for your con­

PARKER TREE ServiceLocal (!t EstablishedSince 1937. All yourtree needs including;t rimming, s tump re ­moval, and p runing.CCB¹ 172620. FREEESTIMATES! Contact

Grant Parker541-975-3234

A BUCK

541-910-6013CCB¹1 01 51 8

Baker Valley, ICeating,

PRICES REDUCEDMulti Cord Discounts!

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

split. Red Fir (!t Hard­wood $205 split. De­

Iivered in the valley.(541)786-0407

PRIME FIREWOOD

Douglas Fir, Tamarack& Lodgepole Pine

Will deliver:

Sumpter, Union, Cove,North Powder areas.

541-51 9-8640541-51 9-8630541-51 9-0479

445- Lawns & Gar­dens

450 - Miscellaneous

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CANADA DRUG Centeris your choice for safeand affordable medica­tions. Our licensed Ca­nadian mail order phar­macy will provide youwith savings of up to93% on all your medi­cation needs. Call to­day 1-800-354-4184for $10.00 off yourf irst prescription andfree shipping. (PNDC)

DIRECTV STARTING at$19.99/mo. FREE In­s tallation. F REE 3months of HBOSHOWTIME C INE­MAX, STARZ. F REEHD/DVR U p grade!2015 NFL S u ndayTicket Included (SelectPackages) New Cus­tomers Only. CALL1-800-41 0-2572(PNDC)

DISH NETWORK — GetMORE for LESS! Start­ing $19.99/month (for12 months). PLUSBundle (!t SAVE (FAstInternet f or $15more/month). CALLNow 1-800-308-1563(PNDC)

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

GOT KNE E Pain? Ba ckPain? Shoulder Pain?Get a p a in-relievingbrace -little or NO costto you. Medicare Pa­tients Call Health Hot­l ine N ow ! 1­800-285-4609 (PNDC)

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SELL YOUR structuredsettlement or annuitypayments for CASHNOW. You don't haveto wait for your futurepayments any longer!Call 1-800-914-0942(PNDC)

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

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

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475 - Wanted to Buy

ANTLER DEALER. Buy­ing 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.

Burning or packing?

OREGON CLASSIFIEDS

$2.00 at upStop in today!

1406 Fifth Street541-963-31 61

550 - Pets

605 - Market Basket

CHERRY GROVEORCHARD

BarcelonaEur.

market.org

like this!!

MfWlf!

Johnson F r rmi ly

Cherries for sale. Weare off of HWY 82 onCourtney Lane. 3 milesNorth of Imbler. Fol­low the signs. Opengam-bpm. 7 day's aweek.

LaGrande Observer

Cherries from BinDark Sweet..... $1.85/Ib

Apricots........$1.00/Ib(Call for availability)

Semi-Cling Peaches

505 - Free to a goodhome

8 WK old kittens, multicolors. Call 4 info leavemsg © 541-786-2957.

LA GRANDEFARMERS'MARKET

Max Square, La Grande

EVERY SATURDAY

EVERY TUESDAY3tao-6:oopm

Through October 17th.

www.lagrandefarmers

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

FREE KITTENS, bob tailsand long t a i ls . Ca l l541-963-6428

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

541-934-2870Visit us on Facebook

$ .70/Ib

C herries $1.10 Ib o rU-pick .85 lb. 62121Star r L n, L G541-91 0-4968

THOMAS ORCHARDSKimberly, Oregon

"EBT & Credit CardsAccepted"

Use ATTENTIONGETTERS to helpyour ad stand out

Call a classified repTODAY to ask how!Baker City Herald

541-523-3573ask for Julie

541-935-3151ask for Erica

U-PICK

for updates

9am-Noon

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30 Flair for musicFRIDAY, JULY 3,20)5YOUR BIRTHDAY by Stella WilderBorn today, you are never one to shy away

from an opportunity, especially if you feel,deep down in your gut, that it may be theopportunity of a lifetime, one that securesyour place in the annals ofprofessiona) evolu­tion and success. You like things to happenquickly; you're not a big fan of a long, drawnout process, whether in your personal life orprofessional affairs. Once you know what you

want and how to get it, you're likely to skipmost preliminary steps and get right to worksecuring your success. This can be a goodthing, surely, but it is a double-edged sword:While this approach can bring you startlingsuccess and even m ake you rich, that successand those riches may not last long ifgained insuch a way.

SATURDAY, JULY 4CANCER (June 21-July 22) — You know

how to get things done your way, and you'llbe able to do just that — once you get past onestubborn obstacle.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) ­- You will requiremore information than is now coming yourway. As a result, tomorrow may be a betterday to get started.

VIRGO (Aue. 23-Sept. 22) — You maycome late to the party, but once you'vearrived, you'll have so much to offer thateveryone will respond quite productively.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) ­- You knowwhat is coming, and you know that it is virtu­ally unstoppable. Today, you must be willingto accept the inevitable and work with it.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) ­- Any dan­gers you encounter can be minimized. Allyou have to do is trust in your own abilities-- and a little luck.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)Balance is the key. You'll want to be moreaggressive, perhaps, in how you lead ­- butnot too much more.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) ­- Listento what others have to say, and you'll have allthe information you need, when you need it.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) — What was

you.

COPYRIGHT2tll5 UNITED FEATURE SYNDICATE, INCDISIRIBUIED BY UNIVERSAL UCLICK FOR UFS11lO Wd tSt K » Cty MO alIOa Mtl255 67l4

fEDIIQR5 F an aq 0 » p l » « t n R y p a « c

by Stella Wilder

once purely academic is likely to be whollypractical today. You're going to have to face acertain reality head-on.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) ­- You knowwhat you want, but you also know that it isprobably further away than you had hoped orfeared. Patience is indeed a virtue.

ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) — You'recounting on luck to see you through, but thetruth is that you can exert a lasting in()uencethat can be felt and appreciated by many.

TAURUS (Aprll 20-May20) ­ - You'll enjoyan unusual opportunity, and what you dowith it will surelytell others a great deal about

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) ­- Youshouldn't try too hard to gain the advantage,as you may actually move backward when

trying too aggressively to move forward.

Frui t

R E l

• • •

60

• 0 • • 0 •

4B — THE OBSERVER a BAKER CITY HERALD FRIDAY, JULY 3, 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 • classifiedsObakercityheraId.com • Fax: 541-523-6426'The Observer: 541-963-3161 e www.la randeobserver.com • classifiedsOlagrandeobserver.com • Fax: 541-963-3674 xg w '

702 - Wanted to RentUnion Co.

61 YO, Vet, w/ limited in­come. Seeks qu iet,reasonable pnced firstfloor Apt. W/all util pd.need NLT end of June.CaII 541-962-5297, askfor Red.

705 - RoommateWanted

HOME TO share, Callm e I ets t a Ik . J o541-523-0596

710 - Rooms forRent

720 - ApartmentRentals Baker Co.

THE ELMSAPARTMENTS

The Elms Apartments iscurrently accepting

applications. We haveavailable 2 bedroom

apartments in a clean,attractive, quiet,

well-maintained setting.Most utilities are paid,with onsite laundry

facilities and aplayground. Incomerestnctions apply andHUD vouchers areaccepted. Please

contact manager's officet~541 523-5908 t p

by the office at 2920Elm Street, Baker City

for an application.

This is an equalopportunity provider

All real estate advertisedhere-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.

NOTICE

725 - ApartmentRentals Union Co.

LA GRANDERetirementApartments

767Z 7th Street,La Grande, OR 97850

Senior andDisabled Complex

Affordable Housing!Rent based on income.Income restnctions apply.

Call now to apply'

Beautifully updatedCommunity Room,

featunng a theater room,a pool table, full kitchen

and island, and anelectnc fireplace.Renovated units!

Please call(541) 963-7015

for more information.www.virdianmgt.comTTY 1-800-735-2900

Thisinstituteis an Equal

725 - ApartmentRentals Union Co.

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 Instituteis anequal opportunity

provider"

750 - Houses ForRent Baker Co.

*LIVE INPARABISE*2-bdrm,1-bath

in SumpterW/S/G paid. Woodstove Ltt propane.Washer Ltt Dryer

On The River$500./mo. + dep.

HUD approved541-894-2263

541-523-2777

Beautiful Home.

2- BDRM, 1-Bath, Fndge,range, w/d hookups.gas heat, wood stove,fenced yard. No smok­ing, small pet consid­ered. $675.00/mo+dep 541-519-6654

3-BDRM, 2 bath. homew/2-car garage.

$1000/mo + dep.Taking applications for

3+ Bdrm, 2 bath$900/mo avail. soonMolly Ragsdale

Property ManagementCall: 541-519-8444

2-BDRM, 1-BATH 3330G St. $550/mo + DepW /S/ G P a i d .541-523-9057

3+ -BDRM, 1 bath. Gasfireplace, all appliancesincluding W/D. Attachedgarage, covered carport,small fenced yard. No

smoking. Small pet neg.$800/mo. 1st, last Ltt dep.

Serious applicants only

OREGON TRAIL PLAZA+ We accept HUD +

1 Ltt 2 Bdrms starting at400/mo. W/S/G pd. Nicequiet downtown location

• MleI-Irereitettee• IItrtelde IReme/I PerMrtg• Reeeerte)ltle Refee

Fer lrtferlttettert eelll:

752 - Houses forRent Union Co.

4 BD, 1.25 BA, w / dhook-ups, g a r age,fenced yard, no smok­i ng or pets, 6 m t hslease, $800/mo, plusdeposit, garbage paid.541-91 0-2076

PRE-RENTING BRANDnew 2 bd, 1 bath. cen­tral A/C, w/s/g paid ab­solutely no smoking,no pets. $725 + dep.541-91 0-01 22.

THREE BED, one bath$895 mo. And a threebed two bath garage$1295. 541-910-4444

780 - Storage Units

780 - Storage Units

SECURE STORAGE

SurveillanceCameras

Covered StorageSuper size 16'x50'

541-523-21283100 15th St.

Baker City

541-524-15342805 L Street

NEW FACILITY!!Vanety of Sizes Available

Secunty Access Entry

SAt'-T-STOR

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

TRAILER SPACE in Un­ion, avail. now, W/s/g.$250/mo.(541)562-5411

CLASSIC STORAGE

TDD 1-800-545-1833

725 - ApartmentRentals Union Co.

CENTURY 21PROPERTY

MANAGEMENT

La randeRentals.com

(541)963-1210

LA GRANDE, OR

THUNDERBIRDAPARTMENTS307 20th Street

720 - ApartmentRentals Baker Co.

2-BDRM, 1 bathDowntown. $600/mo.

W/S pd. No pets.541-523-4435

EQUAL HOUSINGOPPORTUNITY

Call

2 bd, 1 ba. Call Century

CIMMARON MANORICingsview Apts.

21, Eagle Cap Realty.541-963-1210

Welcome Home! NOW!

COVE APARTMENTS1906 Cove Avenue

UNITS AVAILABLE

2-BDRM. SOME utilitiespaid. $590/mo + dep.No pets. 541-523-9414

BEAUTIFUL UPSTAIRSSTUDIO. Go r geousk itchen w /cu s t o mcabinets. 10 ft ceilingswith ceiling fans. Laun­dry on site. W/S/G Lttlawn care p rovided.Close to park Ltt down­town. 2134 Grove St.$450/mo plus dep. Nopets/smoking.541-519-5852 o r541-51 9-5762

CUTE CLEAN 1-BDRMFireview gas stove

2205 3rd ¹2 $445/moNo smoking No petsCall Ann Mehaffy

541-51 9-0698

9 I

Affordasble Studios,1 Ltt 2 bedrooms.

(Income Restnctions Apply)Professionally Managed

by: GSL PropertiesLocated Behind

(541) 963-7476

GREEN TREEAPARTMENTS

2310 East Q AvenueLa Grande,OR 97B50

I

properties.

1, 2 8t 3 bedroomunits with rent based

on income whenava ila ble.

Prolect phone ¹:(541)963-3785

TTY: 1(800)735-2900

APPLY today to qualifyfor subsidized rents at

these quiet andcentrally located

multifamily housing

Opportunity Provider www.La randeRentals.com

745 - Duplex RentalsUnion Co.

ACCEPTING APPLICA­TIONS for 2 bdrm du­p Iex, $575/m o. p Iu s$450 dep. No pets, nosmoking. Fo r inf o541-91 0-1442.

CHARMING, LARGE 3bdrm, 1.5 bath duplexon the north side oftown. W/d hookups,large yard,storageshed, quiet neighbor­hood. W/s paid. Sorry,no pets. $900/month;$950/deposit. 541-786­6058.

DO YOU NEEDA LICENSEDP ROPE RTYMANAGER

541-523-6246

3-BDRM, 1-BATH,No pets. $850.00

541-403-2551

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

541-523-4435

• Rent a unit for 6 mo

541-523-9050

t Seettrt(y Rrneed

t Cedtx( Eatty

e uellttad Iar yettr preieetlettt 6 difrerertt eize ttttile

t Lots of IRV storage41298 Chiott IRd, Baker City

%ABC STORESALL%

MOVF IN SPFCIAl!get 7th mo. FREE

(Units 5x10 up to 10x30)

3785 10th Street

52$~8I!ays$9@NIeve!Il!Igs

820 - Houses ForSale Baker Co.

RV Storage

Computenzed Entry

l4484TH St.

740 3rd St.

$99,000.

Pnncipal Broker/RealtorJohn J Howard Ltt Assc.

2195 Main Street.Baker City, OR 97814541-523-7390 office

541-51 9-6886 ce IImartylien©eoni.com

www.lohnlhoward.comwww. RealEstateBaker

3-BDRM, 2 ba t h , a t ­tached single car ga­rage. Fenced yard. Re­cently remodeled. Allappliances. W/D hooku ps. Gas heat . N osmoking. Sm. pet con­sidered. $895/mo +dep. 541-519-0893

Nelson Real EstateHas Rentals Available!

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."

La Grande Town Center

La Grande

DISABLED HOUSINGSENIOR AND

Clover GlenApartments,

2212 Cove Avenue,

Clean Ltt well appointed 1Ltt 2 bedroom units in aquiet location. Housingfor those of 62 yearsor older, as wel l ast hose d i s ab led orhandicapped of a nyage. Rent based on in­come. HUD vouchersaccepted. Please call541-963-0906TDD 1-800-735-2900

This institute is an equalopportuni ty provider

CALL

PROPERTY

541-605-0430or email us at

leigh.ann©cathennecreekpm.com

NEWER DUPLEX forrent. 3bd, 2ba, gasfireplace, A/C, largefenced yard and more!Avail. July 1st. $925 amonth. 541-910-5059.

?CA THERINE CREEK

MANAGEMENT, LLC

541-523-6485

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

752 - Houses forRent Union Co.

2 BDRM, 2 bath, appli­ances incl., no smok­ing, no pets, ref. $675plus $500 dep. Inquireat 1309 N Ave.

3 BD, 2 b a th, centralA/C, w/s/g paid, abso­lutely no smoking, nop ets. $975 + dep .541-91 0-01 22

UNION 2 bcl, $650.1.5 bcl, $600.

discount, pets ok.541-91 0-0811

A PLUS RENTALShas storage units

available.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

American WestStorage

541-523-4564

Behind Armory on Eastand H Streets. Baker City

Senior an d Di s ab led

Ed Moses 541-519-1814

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

NEWLY REMODELEDT riplex, 3 b r dm, 3bath, all utilities pd,no smoking, no pets,$1,000 month, $900deposit. 541-910-3696

TWO BED, one bath,w/d h o o kups, nopets/smoking $ 4 90mo, dep $490. W/S/Gincl. 541-963-4907

~ I ITM U h.@E• Beeme• Keyttadl Ztt~

• Beettrltiy Litlhttng• Be~ C rht nettta• Otttaide RV Htotage• Perteed Artta,

(8-trOOt IbeLrtt3Ilmti' slstLn urrCkaAII edaea tLveLfttsbIe

(BxlO u)p to l4xR6)54X-68$-1688

8814!I X4@L

7 days/24 houraccess

COMPETITIVE RATES

Grande.O Iraal.I

s28g 000

845 Campbell StBaker City, OR 97814

GET QUICIC CASH

CROSSWORD PUZZLER

• A~ttto-I4te)r. Gate

WITH THECLASSIFIEDS!

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 yo urcash. The Observer 541­963-3161 or Baker CityHera Id 541-523-3673.

Beautifully Restored5 bedroom, 3 bath

corner lot home32'x56' garage/shop

Contact Tamara541-51 9-6607

Tamara@TheGroveTeam com

City.com

825 - Houses forSale Union Co.

SPECTACULAR MOUN­TAIN and City viewsfrom this 2 bd and 1bath home on 2 .02acres on the edge ofthe city. Home fea­tures a front deck andcovered back d e ck,garden a r ea , RVhookup and carport.

19095 Grace StreetBaker City, OR

Marty Lien

THE PERFECT 10 acrep arcel is lust a f e wmiles from Elgin Ltt hasa beautiful view andprlvacy, and has re­cently been reduced to$ 171,000, cash. A l lset up with a well andseptic system, o u t ­buildings, and a 3 bed­room, 2 bath home.O wner is w i l l ing t otrade for home in LaGrande.

Anita Fager,Principal Broker, I

Valley Realty541-910-3393 or541-963-4174.RMLS 13332444

$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 Ltt more!1 block from school.

North PowderSee more at:

820 - Houses ForSale Baker Co.

For Sale By Owner

htt //www zillow com/homede­tails/740-3rd-St-North-Powder­

OR-97867/86342951 z id/541-523-2206

2bd, 1ba $695. Senior

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26 Rough files29 Groundhog

30 Spud st.31 Varieties32 "Westworld"

33 Cement

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section34 "— -Pan"35 Corral36 Abounds37 Bright flower39 — Paulo40 Not 'neath41 Talisman45 Himalayan

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job52 Skip stones53 Dinner

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39 Buffalo hockey

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SUNDAY, JULY 5, 2015YOUR BIRTHDAY by Stella WilderBorn today, you may seem to come from

out of nowhere to those who are not adept atassessing currents and possibilities. You havea knack for taking advantage of this particu­lar circumstance; you use the element ofsurprise to your advantage again and again,

not only for your own benefit, but like som any Cancer natives, for the benefit ofthose

around you. You understand that you do notlive alone in the world, and that you mustcontribute in a positive way to the lives ofthose you touch. You are most content whenyou are able to influence others, but at thesame time, you are not resistant to beinginfluenced yourself.

MONDAY, JULY 6CANCER (June 21-July 22) — You know

how to increase your own productivity, but afriend mustn't be allowed to feel less involvedas a result.

LEO (Iuly 13-Aug. 22) — You can capital­ize on a random sequence of events, and in

SATURDAY, JULY 4, 20)5YOUR BIRTHDAY by Stella WilderBorn today, you are not always the most

visible or vociferous individual, but yourinfluence is felt wherever you go and in what­ever you do. You have the kind of nature thatallows you to go where you please, do whatyou want and mix and mingle with all kindsofpeople without rocking the boat too much.Those around you always know that yourpresence, participation and involvement­ ­

whether direct or indirect ­- has had a majorinfluence on their lives. You are not always ina social mood, but you will always engage insocial affairs that you feel will benefit yourselfand others.

SUNDAY, JULY 5CANCER (June 21-July 22) ­- Changes

have been made that will compel you to dowhat only yesterday you had resisted doing.Now, however, not quite everything is differ­

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) — It's a good time to

the process, you may realize that they weren'tso random after all!

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) ­- You're likely

to discover a new way of doing somethingthat increases both your enjoyment and your

productivity.LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) — No one is

likely to fault the choices you make, espe­cially since they are the result of circum­stances that are completely beyond yourcontrol.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) ­- You cankeep distractions to a minimum. You don'twant to do anything that seems false or fabri­cated. Give a friend some info.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)You'll be eager to move in a new direction,but you may find it difficult to get started.You don't yet have it in gear.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) ­- You'll

want to get a feel for your surroundings

before doing anything that might make yourposition less stable.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) — You may

drop all pretense and deal with everyone elsein an honest, straightforward way.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) — You needn'tbe overly expressive — or lengthy — in yourcommunications with others. Keep it all sim­ple and clean.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) ­- You're feelingthe need to jump into something headlong inorder to feel involved. You must, of course,assess any risks ahead of time.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) — Othersmay not realize the extent of your commit­ment to a certain project, but by day's end,you'll be completely immersed.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) ­- You'll

find yourself being useful in ways that youhad not anticipated. Something on the hori­zon has you feeling a bit on edge.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)Someone with a plan is likely to come to youwith an assignment, but you must in no wayfeel obligated to sign on.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) — You're

assess your progress.

CQPYRIGHz2tlli UNIIED FEATURE SYNDICATE,INCDISIRIBUIED BY UNIVERSAL UCLICK FQR UFil laWd tSt K» oeMQee68tltl2e67l4

CQPYRIGHTitlli UNITED FEATURE SYNDICATE, INCDISIRsiiIED BYUNIVERSAL UCLICK FQR UFil laWd tSt K» o t yMQeei e i i i i 67l4

s DIicR5 F e a q u pl »« t nR y p t ««c

s DIIQRS F e d q u pl »« t n R y a« a ««c

have reason to contact someone from whomyou've been trying to keep your distancelately. Things have changed, clearly.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) — You mustpay more attention than usual to what is hap­pening in the background. A mystery isready to be solved.

ARIES (March 21-Apru 19) ­- Things aremoving along according to plan, and youmustn't let someone else's lack of timingupset the status quo.

TAURUS (Apru 20-May 20) — You mustlook critically at your own work throughoutthe day and make adjustments to both yourmethods and your final output.

GEMINI (May21-June 20) ­- You're likely

to win approval from someone who has beencritical of your work in the past. You be thejudge: What's differentt

by Stella Wilder

feeling energized, motivated and ready foraction. Fortunately, there is much for you todo, and some of it is quite new.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) — Don't letyourself be caught off guard. Stay in touchwith those at the center ofthings, and listen toall news and warnings.

ARIES (March 21-Apru 19) ­- You've

reached an important juncture; which wayyou go from here depends in large part onhowyou feel about yourself.

TAURUS (Apru 20-May 20) ­- You've beenworking very hard to improve yourself inways that are clear only to you. It's time to

GEMINI(May21-June20) ­- Youcan helpa friend simply bybeing there when things gettough. You may not have to do anything, butyour moral support is needed.

55

• 0 • • 0 • • 0 •

FRIDAY, JULY 3, 2015

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

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

f

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 '

825 - Houses forSale Union Co.

825 - Houses forSale Union Co.

PRICE REDUCED!

855 - Lots & Prop­erty Union Co.

sion, 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.

$200,000 THIS HIS­TORIC COLONIAL­STYLE HOUSE exudesan aura of characterand charm. Currently atr!plex that can be con­verted back to a s!nglefam!ly, Its graceful de­s!gn lends a soph!st!ca­t!on that would poten­t!ally make It a perfectB and B. Beaut!fullylandscaped w!th lots ofroom for your garden.15489985Century 21

, Eagle Cap Realty,i 541-9634511.

available!Call for moreinformation or to

schedule a viewing,(541)805-0241.

P RICE RED U C E D$10,000! 3 bedroom, 2bath m a n ufacturedhome with 2 car car­port, large open floorp I a n, a n d p a r t i a I I yfenced yard. Well in­s ulated, v i ny l w in ­dows, air conditioning.Owner n e g o t iable.M ake an of f er !$87,500.

Anita Fager,Principal Broker, 4

Valley Realty541-910-3393 or541-963-4174.

RMLS 15619507

PEACEFULCOUNTRY

LIVING

5 bdrm, 3 bath,t wo-story ho m e ,9.77 acres, north ofSummerville. Woodstove, garage, shop,g arden, dog r u n ,l ivestock fac i l i t ies,asture lus t imber.

Mountain and valleyviews. $374,000.

Additional acreage

lite IS

tfay,sn

rtaoe COunterS,

gutN$0O1I"8$<raea - 4~ss

Ft ufesIndude sotld

df 'fridge,convec t'IAICIO,buttt-ifI eash­

'

er,oerafnic tile50Or,TV,OVD,Sa

d'h a i f l evel'lng ,

a86-thfoughStOrag e;da k ingsiz e

bed-PItoronly$449i,080

V

t

BEAUTIFUL VIEW lot in

Looking for some­thing in particular?Then you need theClassified Ads! Thisis the simplest, mostinexpensive way foryou to reach peoplein this area with anymessage you mightwant to deliver.

2002 PALM HARBOR

Triple Wide 2428 sq. ft.

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

Please drive by 8tpick-up a flyer.

69519 Haefer Ln. CoveCALL for showing today!

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 & v a l ley.3.02 acres, $62,000208-761-4843

BUILD YOUR DREAMHOME. Lots on quietcul-de-sac, Scorpio Dr.LG. 541-786-5674

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.

$287,900

on 1.82ACRES

541-91 0-1 684

gyggELS

I I

Buyer meets seller in theclassified ... t ime aftert ime after t ime ! Readand use the c lassifiedregularly.z

880 - CommercialProperty

BEST CORNER locationfor lease on AdamsAve. LG. 1100 sq. ft.Lg. pnvate parking. Re­model or use as i s .541-805-91 23

GREAT retail location

$800/mo.

541-403-1139

SHOP FOR SALE2.8 acres. Water, sewer,

and electnc located onproperty on Oregon St.close to Hwy 7„edgeof town. Heavy indus­tnal property. For moreinfo caII, 541-523-5351or 541-403-2050

ROSE RIDGE 2 Subdivi­

in the Heart ofBaker City!

1937 MAIN ST.1550 sq. ft. building.

(Neg. per length of lease)

Includes up to 40 words of text, 2" in length, with border,

• Continuous listing with photo onnortheastoregonclassifieds.com

bold headline and price.

Your auto, RV,motorcycle, ATV,

snowmobile,boat, or airplane

ad runs until it sellsor up to 12 months(whichever comes first)

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

• •

• • •

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.

• •

930 - RecreationalVehicles

2000 NEW VISIONULTRA 5TH WHEEL

$16,000Fully loaded!

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

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

541-519-1488

5TH WHEEL Trailer.2010Couga r 292 R ICS 33ft.A/C 2-slides $23,995.Baker C it y , O R541-523-8503 o r541-51 9-2786

THE SALE of RVs notbeanng an Oregon in­signia of compliance isi llegal: cal l Bu i ldingCodes (503) 373-1257.

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!!

$39,999

~94 CerlfeneCONtfigftftf]8

Covpe 350 But1$ 13P mlleS getS

~~~4 n1pg'«d Io«

nd Iritere@lrlgracfs

rrlUCh jorI ~ ghBVe jn g SWe

IIke thisI$'f2,566

~le"~ CorveIf­

riPfI

970 - Autos For Sale

2010 HONDA EX AccordIn great shape! Call541-910-7112 or 8112.

2011 JEEP GRANDCHEROKEE OVERLAND

with HEMI VS

Air suspension, 4-WD,20" wheels, trailer

towing pkg & equippedto be towed, panoramicsunroof, Nappa leather,

navigation system,heated seats & wheel.Eve available o tion!42,000 mi. CarFax,non-smoker, neverwrecked. $31,000.

541-519-8128

69 CHEVY Impala, cus­tom 2 door with rebuilttranny and turbo 350motor. New front discbrakes and new frontand back seats. Runsgreat! Must hear it toappreciate. Ready forbody and paint. Asking

DONATE YOUR CAR,TRUCIC OR BOAT TOHE R ITAG E FOR THEBLIND. Free 3 Day Va­cation, Tax Deductible,Free Towing, All Pa­perwork Taken CareOf . CALL1-800-401-4106(PNDC)

GOT AN older car, boator RV? Do the humanething. Donate it to theHumane Society. Call1-800-205-0599(PNDC)

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

free calling & xm radiocapability. 2nd owner.Have all repair history.

Good condition!$4000/OBO541-403-4255

$6,500 OBO.541-963-9226

0

misc. items.

1001 - Baker CountyLegal Notices

BAKER COUNTYSurplus Sale

B aker County w i l l b eholding a public saleo f surplus i tems onJuly 10, 2015 at 1050Bridge St., Baker City,OR. The sale will startat 9:00 am and run un­t il 12 00 p m . S a l ei tems include o f f icefurniture, tools, elec­t ronics, a n d othe r

All Sale items shall betransported off countyproperty by purchaseron the day of the sale,no exceptions. Pay­ment is Due upon re­ceipt of the propertyand only on the day ofthe sale. All Sale itemssold as is for postedpnce. Cash or checkswill be accepted. Forquestions call BakerC ounty Fac il i t i e s ,541-523-6416.

Legal No. 00041791Published:July 1, 3, 6, 8,

2015

IN THE CIRCUIT COURTOF THE STATE OFOREGON FOR THECOUNTY OF BAICER,Case No. 15-455, INTHE MATTER OF THEESTATE OF DAVIDJAY PAGE, Deceased,NOTICE TO INTER­ESTED PERSONS.NOTICE IS HEREBYGIVEN that Neal D.Page has been ap­pointed Personal Rep­resentative. A l l per­sons having c la imsagainst the estate arerequired to p r esentthem, with vouchersattached, to the Per­sonal Representativeca re of S i lve n ,Schmeits & Vaughan,Attorneys at Law, P.O.Box 965, Baker City,Oregon, 97814, withinfour (4) months afterthe date of first publi­cation of this notice, ort he c laims may b ebarred.A ll persons w h osenghts may be affectedby the p r oceedingsmay obtain additionalinformation from therecords of the court,the Personal Repre­sentative, or the attor­neys for the PersonalRepresentative.Dated and f irst pub­lished June 26, 2015.

PERSONAL REPRESEN­TATIVE: Neal D. Page43371 EAG LE C RE E ICDR. RICHLAND, ORE­GON 97870

ATTORNEY FOR ES­TATE: Steve n V .Stuchl ik ­ OSB¹124703. P.O.Box 965, 1950 ThirdS treet, Baker C i t y ,Oregon 97814(541) 523-4444

Legal No. 00041732Published: June 26, July

3, & 10, 2015

PUBLIC NOTICE

The Baker County Boardof Commissioners willbe meeting for a Spe­cial Commission Ses­sion on Wednesday,July 8, 2015, begin­ning at 9:00 a.m. atthe B a ker C o u ntyCourthouse located at1995 Th ird S t r eet ,Baker City, O regon97814. The Commis­sioners will hear Ap­peal AP-15-001: An ap­peal of the PlanningCommission' s ap­proval of conditionaluse permit CU-13-011,remanded by LUBACase No. 2 0 14-02.CU-13-11 approvedmodifications to an ex­isting conditional usepermit in the ExclusiveFarm Use Zone. Acomplete agenda willb e available on t h eC ounty w e b s i t e a twww.bakercount .or .Baker County oper­

ates under an EEO pol­icy and complies withSection 504 of the Re­habilitation Act of 1973and the A m e r icanswith D isabilit ies Ac t .Assistance is availablefor individuals with dis­abilities b y ca l l i ng541-523-8200 ( TTY:541-523-8201).

Legal No. 00041823Published: July 3, 2015

W hether y o u ' r elooking for a job orl ook in g f o r achange, there's apaycheck out therewith your name oni t. Find it with thehelp of the classi­fieds!

areas:

room.

ginning.

at 541-524-2260.

Legal No. 00041786Published: July 1, 3, 6

2015

1001 - Baker CountyLegal NoticesON JULY 14th, 2015 at

7:00 pm, the BakerCity Council will hold apublic meeting in ac­c ordance w ith O R S222.525, to r e ce ivetestimony concerningthe removal of the be­low descnbed propertyfrom the Baker RuralFire Protection Distnct.The meeting will be­held in the City CouncilChambers located at1 655 F i rs t St r e e t ,Baker City, Oregon.

Legal Descnption — FirstDist Add opt 1

The follwoing describedl and in s e c t ion 1 5 ,T9S, R40E, WM, is tobe removed from theBaker County RuralF ire D ist r ict , B a kerCounty, Oregon.

This distnct includes theNorthwest quarter andthe West 1/2 of theSouthwest quarter ofsaid Section 15. EX­CEPTING T H ERE­FROM the fol lowing

• the Southeast 1/4 ofthe Northwest 1/4

• the area in the West1/2 of the Southwest1/4, East of the Westb ank of t h e S m i t hDitch

• the area in the West1/2 of Section 15, tothe West of the EastRight of Way l ine ofthe L.S. Hwy. 1-84

• A parcel of land in theNorthwest 1/4 of theNorthwest quarter ofsaid Section 15, de­scnbed as follows:beginning a p p r ox i ­mately 485 feet Easton 60 feet South ofthe Northwest cornerof said Section;thence East, 396 feet,along the South line ofthe H Street R.O.W.;t hence South, 3 9 6feet;t hence W e st , 396feet;thence North 396 feetto the point of the be­

Records referenced toestablish this boundary:Partition Plats:1999-0152006-005County Deeds:B09 0071B09 0082Book 164 pg 383ORMAP tax map09540E15

LegaI No. 00041806Published: July 1, 3, 6, 8,

10,13, 2015

PUBLIC NOTICE

The Baker County Boardof Commissioners willhold a public heanng inthe B a ker C o u ntyCourthouse, Board ofCommissioners Cham­bers at 10 a m onAugust 19, 2015 re­garding the continuedutilization of T i t lefunding dollars for thepurposes of "Revisingthe B a ker C o u ntyCommunity W i l d f i reProtect ion Pl an " ,"Conducting FireWiseCommunity Outreachand Programs", and"Reimbursements forBaker County emer­

Federal Land". P ro­gram elements are acontinuation of 2014authorization. T e s t i ­mony will be taken atthe Board of Commis­sioners' hearing. Youmay also submit publiccomments, questionsregarding the programto Gary Timm, BakerCounty E m ergencyManagement / Fire Di­vision at 1616 SecondStreet, Baker City OR.97814. Contacts i n ­clude 541.524.2003 oremail gt imm©baker­county.org.

Legal No. 00041813Published: July 3, 2015

Tri-County CooperativeWeed ManagementArea Board of Direc­tors will be holding apublic quarterly meet­ing and receiving a fi­nancial review on July16th, 2015 a t 9 : 30am. This meeting willbe held at the OSU Ex­tension Building in LaG rande, Oregon l o ­c ated at ; 1 0507 N .McAlister Rd. in t heSouth C o n f e rence

Legal No. 0041855Published: July 3, 13 ,

2015

THE BAKER SchoolDistrict is now

accepting bids for the2015-16 school year.

We are looking forfood/non-food bids,milk bids and bread

bids. For detailed listsof items and moreinformation, please

contact Jessica Wickert

gency responses on

1001 - Baker CountyLegal Notices

NOTICE OFDEFAULT AND

ELECTION TO SELL

• This Notice of Defaultand Election to sell isrecorded pursuant toORS 86.735(3) with re­spect to t ha t T r ustD eed ( t h e "TrustDeed") dated Septem­b er 30 , 2 0 10 , b yShakira D. Close, asGrantor, to Elkhorn Ti­tle Company, as Trus­tee, to s ecure pay­ment and performanceof certain obligationsof Grantor to James J.Warberg, as Benefici­a ry, including repay­ment of a PromissoryNote dated September30, 2010 in the pnnci­pal amount of $33,000(the "Note").

• The legal descriptionof the real propertycovered by the TrustDeed is described inthe attached Exhibit A.

• The Trust Deed was re­corded on October 1,2010, as InstrumentNo. B10400054B inthe official real prop­erty records of BakerCounty, Oregon.

• Brian D. D iFonzo ofY turri R o se , LLP ,whose address is POBox "S", Ontano, Ore­gon 97914 was ap­pointed S u c c essorTrustee by the Benefi­ciary on February 7,2014. Th e Appoint­ment o f S u c cessorTrustee was recordedon February 25, 2015a s Inst rument N o .15080094B, Of f ic iaIR ecords o f Bak e rCounty, Oregon.

• The Successor Trusteehereby cert if ies thatno action has been in­stituted to recover theobligation, or any partthereof, now remain­i ng secured by t h eTrust Deed or, if suchaction has been insti­tuted, such action hasbeen dismissed ex ­cept as permitted byORS 86.735(4).

• The default for whicht he f o r ec losure i smade is Grantor's fail­ure to make monthlyinstallment paymentsdue on the Note andDeed of Trust for themonths o f M a y 1 ,2014 through March 1,2015, in the amount of$236.43 each for a to­tal of $2,600.73 underthe terms of the termsof the Deed of Trustand Note.

• Beneficiary is exemptfrom the requirementsof the Oregon Foreclo­sure Avoidance Media­tion Program pursuantto ORS 86.726(1)(b),as Beneficiary did not

be commenced moret han 175 act ions toforeclose residentialtrust deeds in the pre­vious calendar year.Beneficiary has f i ledthe appropriate ex­emption affidavit withthe Oregon Depart­ment of Justice pursu­ant t o said ORS86. 726 (1 ) (b).

• By reason of the de­fault, the Beneficiaryhas declared all sumsowing on the obliga­t ion secured by t heDeed of Trust immedi­ately due and payable,those sums being thefollowing, to-wit:

T he principal sum o f

accrued through Feb­ruary 27, 2015 in theamount of $2,005.12,plus interest continu­ing to accrue on theprincipal amount at therate of 6% per annumf rom February 2 8 ,2015, until fully paid,all amounts that Bene­ficiary may hereinafterpay to protect the lien,including by way of il­lustration, but not limi­tation, taxes, assess­m ents, i n t e rest o nprior liens, and insur­ance premiums, andexpenses, costs andattorney and trusteesfees incurred by Bene­ficiary in foreclosure,including the cost of aTrustee's Sale Guaran­tee and any other envi­ronmental or appraisalreport.

• Notice is hereby giventhat the B e nef iciaryand the S u ccessorTrustee, by reason oft he d e f au lt , h a v eelected to f o reclosethe Deed of Trust bya dvertisement an dsale pursuant to ORS86.705 to 86.795, andto sell the real prop­erty identified in para­graph 2 to satisfy theobligation that is se ­cured by th e T rustDeed.

commence or cause to

interest

• 0 •

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

• 0 • • 0 •

6B — THE OBSERVER a BAKER CITY HERALD FRIDAY, JULY 3, 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 '

Exhibit A

DATED:March 25, 2015.

/s/ Bnan D. DiFonzo,TrusteePO Box "S"Ontano OR 97914Telephone:(541) 889-5368

1001 - Baker CountyLegal Notices

Land in Baker County,State of Oregon, andi s described as f o l ­lows:

Lots 6, 7 and 8, Block15, Wilovale, in BakerCity, County of Bakerand State of Oregon.

LegaI No. 00041281Published: June 12, 19,

26, July 3, 2015

THE BAKER City Plan­ning Commission willbe conducting a hear­ing on Thursday, July15th, 2015 at 7:00 pmto hear two requests:

CUP-15-045 Troy Han­son is applying for aConditional Use Permitto construct a +1,100square foot addition toa pre-exist ing r e s i ­d ence/business l o ­cated at 1950 PlaceStreet in the CentralC ommercial (C - C )Zone. The property isalso listed as Tax Lot500 o f A s s essor'sMap 09s40e20aa. Theproposed addition is toexpand the e x is t ingresidence for the fu­neral director and hisfamily. No c hangeswill be made to t hebusiness or ex ist ingparking.

The Baker City Develop­ment Code (BCDC) re­quires a C o ndit ionalUse Permit to be ob­t ained fo r t h i s p r o ­posal. The request isto be processed as aType II I p rocedure,which includes holdinga public heanng beforethe Planning Commis­sion makes a decision

STATE OFOREGON)

) ss.County of Malheur )

This instrument was ac­knowledged b e fo rem e on M a rc h 2 5 ,2015, by Bnan D. Di­Fonzo, as Trustee.

Notary Public for OregonMy Commission Expires:

9-16-16

• The sale will be held atthe hour of 10 o'clock,A.M., Mountain Time,in accordance with thestandard of t ime es­tablished b y ORS187.110 on August 11,2015, at the followingp lace: on t h e f r o n tsteps of t h e B akerCounty Courthouse,1995 Th ird S t r eet ,Baker City, O regon9 7814, which is t h ehour, date and placelast set for the sale.

• Notice is further giventhat any person namedin ORS 86.753 has thenght, at any time pnorto five (5) days beforethe date last set fo rthe sale, to have thisforeclosure proceedingdismissed an d theDeed of T rust re in­stated by payment tothe Beneficiary of thee ntire amount t h e ndue (other than suchportion of the principalas would not then bedue had no default oc­curred) and by curingany other default com­plained of herein thatis capable of b e ingcured by tendering theperformance requiredunder the obligation orDeed of Trust, and, inaddition to paying thesums or tendenng theperformance neces­sary to cure the de­fa ult, by paying a I Icosts and expensesactually incurred in en­forcing the obligationand Deed of Trust, to­gether with Trustee'sand attorney's f eesn ot exceeding t h eamount provided byORS 86.753, if applica­ble.

• In construing this No­t ice, the s ingular in­cludes the plural, thew ord " G rantor" i n ­cludes any successorin interest to the Gran­t or as w e l l a s a n yother person owing ano bligation, th e p e r ­formance of which issecured by the Deedof T rust , a n d thewords "Trustee" and"Beneficiary" includetheir respective suc­cessors in interest, ifany.

1001 - Baker CountyLegal Notices

on the request. In de­termining whether togrant the request, thePlanning Commissionwill use the applicablecnteria listed in BCDCSection 4.4.400 — Con­ditional Use Permits­Criteria, Standards andConditions o f Ap­proval, and the BakerCity ComprehensivePlan.

VAC-15-045 Do na Id tItRoberta Fink have peti­t ioned for the City tovacate a dead-end por­t ion of 'E' Street, lo­cated in Section 16 ofTownship 09 South,Range 40 East, W.M.,Baker County, OR be­tween Tax Lots 1300and 1400. Two proper­ties abut the proposedstreet vacation: TaxLot 1300 (Ref. 470)owned by DonaldRoberta Fink of 2960East Street, Baker Cityand Tax Lot 1400 (Ref.471) owned by ICentontIt Shirley McPheron of990 Park Street, BakerCity. Both propertiesand the portion of 'E'Street proposed for va­cation a r e lo c a tedwithin the General ln­dustrial (I) Zone. As in­cluded in the petition,the vacated portion of'E' Street is proposedto become a part ofTax Lots 1300 and1400, in equal parts.The request will needt o comply w i t h t h eBaker City Develop­ment Code, Section4.3.200 and 4.3.190,and Oregon RevisedStatutes Chapter 271.The City Council wi l lmake the final decisionon the request, andwill conduct hearingson Tuesday, July 28that 7:00PM and Tues­day, August 11th, at7:00PM.

For more i n formationcontact Planner EvaC e d e r at541-523-8219. A copyof the applications, alldocuments and ev i ­dence submitted by oron behalf of the appli­cant, and the applica­ble criteria are avail­able for inspection atno cost and w i l l beprovided at reasonablecost. A digital copy ofthe documents can beemailed to you at nocost, or a hard copycan be mailed to youby post mail, upon re­quest, for a reasonablecost. Staff reports onboth matters wil l beavailable on July 8 ,2015.

Persons wishing to comment on the proposedapplication may do soby submitting wnttentestimony to the BakerCounty Planning De­partment no later than5:00 p.m. on the dateof the hearing. Testi­m ony may a lso b egiven in person by at­tending the hearing.The failure to raise anissue in person, or byletter at the heanng, orfailure to provide state­ments or evidence suf­ficient to afford the de­cision-maker an oppor­tunity to r espond tothe issue, means thatan appeal based onthat issue cannot bef iled with t h e S ta teLand Use Board of Ap­peaIs.

If you have questions regarding this applica­tion, p lease contactEva Ceder at the BakerCity-County PlanningDepartment at (541)5 23-8 2 1 9 o receder©bakercounty.org. The Planning De­partment is located inthe basement of theBaker County Court­h ouse, 1 995 T h i r dS treet, S u i t e 13 1 ,Baker City, Oregon.

LegaI No. 00041818P ublished: July 3 , 8 ,

2015

Seethelight.

ateness.

Michael J. BoquistCity Planner

Legal ¹41821

PUBLISH: July 3, 2015

1010 - Union Co.Legal Notices

NOTICE OF PUBLIC

The City of La GrandePlanning Commissionwill hold a Public Hear­ing at its Regular Ses­sion on Tuesday July14, 2015, which be­gins at 6:00 p.m. in theLa Grande City Ha l lCouncil C h ambers,1000 Adams Avenue,La Grande, Oregon.The Heanng is to con­sider a conditional usepermit to allow inter­nally lit signs for en­trance and exit drives.The property is locatedat 710 Sunset Drive,T3S, R38E, Sect ion07DB, Tax Lot 5003,L a Grande, U n i o nCounty, Oregon. Theapplicant i s G randeRonde Hospital.

The applicable land useregulations are foundin Chapter 8, A r t icle8 .5 of t h e C i t y o fLa Grande Land Devel­opment Code O rd i­nance Number 3210,Senes 2013. Failure toraise a specific issueat the Public Hearingprecludes appeal ofthe Planning Commis­sion's d ec is ion. Acopy of the applicationand in formation r e ­lated to the proposalare available for reviewat no cost, with copiessupplied at a reason­able cost. A Staff Re­port wil l be availablefor review seven (7)days before the Plan­n ing Com m i s s i o nHeanng, and can alsobe supplied at a rea­sonable cost. For fur­ther information, con­tact the Planning Divi­sion at (541) 962-1307.

All meetings of the LaGrande Planning Com­mission are accessibleto persons with d is­abilities. A request re­garding accommoda­tions for persons withdisabilities should bemade by the Fr idayprevious to the meet­

n g bycalling (541) 962?1307.

CONDITIONAL USEPERMIT

HEARING

CLASSIFIEDSWORIQ

How To GetResults 5

help you with your ad

1. Unique Selling POintS. To determine theuniqueneSS of a PrOduCt or SerViCe, thinklike the PeOPle Who you Want to reSPOndto yOur ad.

2. Complete words. Limit abbreviations.they Can COnfuSe the reader or ObStruCtCOmmuniCatiOn. If you deCide to uSesome abbreviations, avoid unusual ones.

3. Mind Images. APPeal to the readersSenSeS, SuCh aS Sight, tOuCh or emOtiOnS.

4. Always include the Price. If you areflexible, include best offer or negotiable.

5. If brand names are involved, alwaysuse them. Brand names covey a senseof quality, dePendability and aPProPri­

6. Give your ad a chance to work. Thepotential customer pool for your prod­uCt, merChandiSe, or SerViCe iS not StatiC.Different readers and potential custom­ers read the newspaper each day. It isimPOrtant fOr you to "thrOW out anadVertiSing net" to CatCh aS many CuS­tomerS aS POSSible. Remember, higherpriced items normally need more daysexPosure to sell.

7. Be sure to include a phone numberwhere you can be reached.

If you need assistance, ask oneof our friendly classifieds sales reps to

by calling 541-963-3161 La Grande or541-523-3673 Baker City Herald today.

You can enjoy extra vacationmoney by exchanging ideitems in your home for cashwith an adin cassified

1010 - Union Co.Legal Notices

TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OFSALE T . S . N o . :OR-15-551728-NHReference is made tot hat c e r t a i n deedmade by, P AUL T .TATE III AND NICOLETATE, H U SBANDAND WIFE, AS TEN­ANTS BY THE EN­TIRETY as Grantor toABSTRACT tIt TITLECOMPANY, as t rus­tee, in favor of MORT­GAGE ELECTRONICREGISTRATION SYS­TEMS, I N C. , ASNOMINEE FORMANN FINANCIALINC. D/B/A WEST­CORP MORTGAGE,as Beneficiary, dated4/19/2004, recorded4/23/2004, in o f f icialr ecords o f UN I ONC ounty, O regon i nbook/reel/volume No.and/or as fee/filehn­strument/ microfilm /r eception n umb e r20042128 covenng thefollowing d e scr ibedreal property situatedi n said County, andState, to-wit: A PN :17558 0 1N3915AD901 LO TS 9 , 1 0 ,11AND 12 IN BLOCIC 30OF HINDMAN'S ADDI­TION TO ELGIN, UN­ION COUNTY, ORE­GON, ACCORDINGTO THE RECORDEDPLAT OF SAID ADDI­T ION. 2001 M A R­LETTE, 26X28, VIN ¹H-019337 A/B, JUDI.D. ¹'S ORE412380AND O R E412379.Commonly known as:310 N 5TH AVENUE,ELGIN , OR97827-9681 The un­dersigned hereby certi­fies that based uponbusiness records thereare no known writtena ssignments o f t h etrust deed by the trus­tee or by the benefici­ary and no appoint­ments of a successort rustee h ave b e e nmade, except as re­corded in the recordsof the county or coun­t ies i n w hi ch theabove described realproperty is s i tuated.Further, no action hasbeen instituted to re­cover the debt, or any

1010 - Union Co.Legal Notices

part thereof, now re­maining secured bythe trust deed, or, i fsuch action has beeninstituted, such actionhas been d ismissedexcept as permitted byORS 86.752(7). Boththe beneficiary and thetrustee have electedto sell the said realproperty to satisfy theobligations secured bysaid trust deed and no­t ice has b e e n r e corded pursuant to Sec­tion 86.752 (3) of Ore­gon Revised Statutes.There is a default bygrantor or other per­son owing an obliga­tion, performance ofwhich is secured bythe trust deed, or bythe successor in inter­est, with respect top rovisions t her e i nwhich authonze sale inthe event of such pro­vision. The default forwhich foreclosure ismade is grantor's fail­ure to pay when duethe fol lowing sums:Delinquent Payments:Payment InformationFrom Through TotalPayments 10/1/20144/1/2015 $5,485.83Late Charges FromThrough Total La teCharges 10/1/20144/1/2015 $0.00 Benefi­c iary's Adva n c es ,Costs, And ExpensesEscrow A dv a n ces$ 113.11 Tota l A d ­vances: $113.11 TO­TAL FORECLOSURECOST: $1,283.00 TO­TAL REQUIRED TOR E I N STATE:$6,768.83 TOTAL RE­QUIRED TO PAYOFF:$86,173.84 By reasono f the d e fault , t h eb eneficiary has d e ­clared all sums owingon the obligation se­c ured by t h e t r u s tdeed immediately dueand payable, thosesums being the follow­ing, to- wit : The i n ­stallments of princi­pal an d int e r estwhich became dueon 10/1/2014, and allsubsequent install­ments of p r incipaland interest throughthe date of this No­tice, plus amountsthat are due for latecharges, delinquentproperty taxes, insur­ance premiums, ad­vances made on sen­i or li e ns , t ax e sand/or i n surance,trustee's fees, andany attorney feesand court costs aris­ing from or associ­ated with the benefi­ciaries efforts to pro­tect and preserve itssecurity, all of whichmust be paid as acondition of r e i n ­statement, includingall sums that shallaccrue through rein­statement or pay-off.Nothing in this no­t ice shall be c o n­strued as a waiver ofany fees owing tothe Beneficiary underthe Deed of T rustpursuant t o t het erms of th e l o andocuments. Whereof,notice hereby is giventhat Quality Loan Serv­i ce Co rporat ion o fWashington, the un­dersigned trustee willon 8/ 3 1 /2015 at thehour of 10:00 a m ,Standard of Time, asestablished by section187.110, Oregon Re­vised Statues, At thefront entrance of theUnion Courthouse,1001 4th Street, int he C i t y of LaGrande, County ofU nion, O R 97 8 5 0County of U NI O N,State of Oregon, sellat public auction to thehighest bidder for cashthe interest in the saiddescnbed real propertywhich the grantor hador had power to con­vey at the time of thee xecution by h im o fthe said trust deed, to­gether with any inter­est which the grantoror his successors in in­terest acquired afterthe execution of saidtrust deed, to satisfythe foregoing obliga­tions thereby securedand the costs and ex­penses of sale, includ­ing a reas o n ab lecharge by the trustee.Notice is further giventhat any person namedin Section 86.778 ofOregon Revised Stat­utes has the nght tohave the foreclosureproceeding dismissedand the trust deed re­instated by payment tothe beneficiary of thee ntire amount t h e ndue (other than suchportion of said princi­pal as would not thenbe due had no defaultoccurred), t ogetherwith the costs, t rus­tee's and at torney'sfees and curing anyo ther de fault c o m ­plained of in the No­

1010 - Union Co.Legal Notices

tice of Default by ten­dering the pe r form­ance required underthe obligation or trustdeed, at any time pnorto five days before thedate last set for sale.Other than as shownof record, neither theb eneficiary no r th etrustee has any actualnotice of any personhaving or claiming tohave any lien upon ori nterest i n t h e r e a lproperty hereinabovedescribed subsequentto the interest of thet rustee in t h e t r u s tdeed, or of any suc­

grantor or of any les­see or other person inpossession of or occu­pying the property, ex­cept: Name and LastICnown Address andNature of Right, Lienor Interest PAUL TATE111310 N 5TH AVENUEELGIN , OR97827-9681 Or iginalBorrower NI C O LETATE 310 N 5TH AVE­NUE E LGIN, O R97827-9681 Or iginalBorrower For Sale ln­f ormatio n Ca ll:7 14-730-2727 orLogin to: www.serv­icelinkasap.com Inconstruing this notice,the singular includesthe plural, the word"grantor" includes any

to this grantor as wellas any other personowing an ob l igation,the performance ofwhich is secured bythe trust deed, and thewords "trustee" and"beneficiary" includetheir respective suc­cessors in interest, ifany. Pursuant to Ore­gon Law, this sale willnot be deemed f inaluntil t h e T r u s t ee 'sdeed has been issuedby Quality Loan Serv­ice Corporation ofWashington . If any ir­reg ula nties a re discov­ered within 10 days ofthe date of this sale,the trustee will rescindthe sale, return thebuyer's money andtake further action asnecessary. If the salei s set as ide fo r anyreason, including if theTrustee is unable toconvey title, the Pur­chaser at the sale shallbe entitled only to a re­t urn o f t h e mo n i espaid to the Trustee.This shall be the Pur­chaser's sole and ex­clusive remedy. Thepurchaser shall haveno further recourseagainst the T r ustor,the Trustee, the Bene­f iciary, the B e nef ici­a ry's Agent, o r t h eBeneficiary's Attorney.If you have previouslyb een d isch a r g e dthrough bankruptcy,you may have been re­leased of personal li­ability for this loan inwhich case this letteris intended to exerciset he n o t e ho ld e r snght's against the realproperty only. As re­quired by law, you arehereby notified that anegative credit reportreflecting o n yourcredit record may besubmitted to a creditreport agency if youfail to fulfill the termsof your credit obliga­tions. Without limit­ing the trustee's dis­claimer of represen­tations or w a r ran­ties, Oregon law re­quires the trustee tostate in this noticethat some residentialp roperty sold at atrustee's sale mayhave been used inmanufacturing meth­amphetamines, thechemical compo­nents of which areknown to be toxic.Prospective purchas­ers of r e s identialproperty should beaware of this poten­tial danger before de­ciding to place a bidfor this property atthe trustee's sale.NOTICE TO T E N­ANTS: TENANTS OFTHE SUBJECT REALPROPERTY HA V ECERTAIN PROTEC­TIONS AFFFORDEDTO THEM UNDERO RS 85.782 A N DPOSSIBLY UNDERFEDERAL LAW. AT­TACHED TO T HISNOTICE OF SALE,AND INC O RPO­RATED HEREIN, IS AN OTICE TO T E N­ANTS THAT SETSF ORTH SOME O FTHE PROTECTIONSTHAT ARE AVAIL­ABLE TO A TENANTOF THE SUBJECTREAL P ROPERTYAND WHICH SETSFORTH CERTAIN RE­QUIRMENTS THATMUST BE COMPLIEDWITH BY ANY TEN­ANT IN ORDER TOO BTAIN THE A F ­FORDED PROTEC­TION, AS REQUIRED

cessor in interest to

successor in interest

to-wit:

The East 40 feet of theSouth half of Lot 3 ,and the entire Southhalf of Lot 4, Block 87of CHAPLIN'S ADDI­TION to La Grande,Union County, Oregon,according to the re ­corded plat of said ad­dition.

Commonly referred to as1006 3rd Street, LaGrande OR 97850.

Alan N. Stewart of Hur­ley Re, P.C., 747 SWMill View Way, Bend,OR 97702, was ap­pointed S u c c essorTrustee by the Benefi­ciary on February 10,2015.

Both the Beneficiary andTrustee have electedto sell the said realproperty to satisfy theobligations secured bysaid Deed of Trust anda Notice of Default hasbeen recorded pursu­ant to Oregon RevisedStatutes 86.752(3); thedefault for which theforeclosure is made isGrantor's failure to paywhen due the follow­ing sums:

As of February 10, 2015,pursuant to P romis­sory Note e f f ect ivedate of June 5, 2009,t he am o u nt of$20,589.62, plus latecharges in the amountof $466.62, for a totaldelinquenc y of$21,056. 24.

By reason of the default,the Beneficiary has de­clared all sums owingon the obligation se­cured by the Deed ofTrust immediately dueand payable, thosesums being the follow­lng, to-wlt:

As of February 10, 2015,the unpaid principal int he am o u nt of$158,742.23, accruedinterest in the amountof $12,370.46, subsidyrecapture in t heamount of $11,878.56,assessed fees in theamount of $2,872.72,and interest on fees inthe amount of $48.75,for a total amount of$185,912.72, plus in­terest continuing to ac­c rue at th e r ate o f$20.1146 per day, in­cluding daily intereston fees at the rate of$0.3640, unti l pa id,plus any unpaid prop­erty taxes, attorney sfees, fo re c l osurecosts, and sums ad­vanced by the benefi­c iary pursuant to theterms of said Deed ofTrust.

WHEREFORE, notice is

1010 - Union Co.Legal Notices

UNDER ORS 85.771 .QUALITY MAY BECONSIDERED ADEBT COLLECTORATTEMPTING TOCOLLECT A DEBTAND ANY INFORMA­TION O B TAINEDWILL BE USED FORTHAT PURPOSE. TSN o: 0 R-1 5-661 728-N HD a t e d: 4/1 7/2 01 5Quality Loan ServiceCorporation of Wash­ington, as TrusteeSignature By:Nina Hernandez, As­sistant Se c r e taryTrustee's Mailing Ad­dress: Quality LoanSermce Corp. of Wash­ington C/ 0 Qu a l i tyLoan Service Corpora­tion 411 Ivy Street SanDiego, CA 92101 Trus­t ee's P hys ical A d ­dress: Quality LoanSermce Corp. of Wash­i ngton 108 1 s t AveSouth, Suite 202, Seat­t le, WA 9 8104 To l lFree: (866) 925-0241IDSPUb ¹ 0 0 8 20486/1 9/201 5 6/26/201 57/3/201 5 7/10/201 5

Published: June 19, 26,2015 and July 3, 10,2015

Legal No. 00040829

TRUSTEE S NOTICE OF

Reference is made tothat certain Deed ofTrust made by JustinL. Mackay and AshleyR. Mackay, as Grantor,to State Director of theRural Housing Service

agency, as Trustee, infavor of United Stateso f A m e r ica a c t i n gt hrough t h e Ru r a lH ousing Service o r

United States Depart­ment of Agnculture, asB eneficiary, da t e dJ une 5 , 2 0 09 , r e ­corded June 10, 2009,as Microfilm D ocu­ment No. 20092099,R ecords o f Unio nCounty, Oregon, cov­enng the following de­scribed real propertysituated in U nionC ounty , Or ego n ,

successor a g e ncy,

SALE

o r i ts s uc c e s s o r

L

1010 - Union Co.Legal Notices

hereby given that theundersigned Trusteew ill on A u gust 2 0 ,2015, at the hour of11:00 o clock, A.M., inaccord with the stan­dard of t ime es tab­lished by O RS187.110, on the fronts teps of t h e U n ionCounty Courthouse,1007 Fourth Street, inthe City of La Grande,County of Union, Stateof Oregon, sell at pub­lic auction to the high­est bidder for cash theinterest in the said de­scribed real propertywhich the Grantor hasor had power to con­vey at the time of theexecution by Grantorof the said Deed ofTrust, together w i t hany interest which theobligations thereby se­cured and the costsand expenses of sale,including a reasonablecharge by the Trustee.Notice is further giventhat any person namedin ORS 86.778 has thenght, at any time pnorto five (5) days beforethe date last set fo rthe sale, to have thisforeclosure proceedingdismissed an d theDeed of T rust re in­stated by payment tothe Beneficiary of thee ntire amount t h e ndue (other than suchportion of the principaland interest as wouldnot then be due hadno default occurred)and by c u r ing a nyo ther de fault c o m ­plained of herein thatis capable of b e ingcured by tendering theperformance requiredunder the obligation orDeed of Trust, and inaddition to paying saidsums or tendenng theperformance neces­sary to cure the de­fault, by p ay ing a l lcosts and expensesactually incurred in en­forcing the obligationand Deed of Trust, to­gether with Trustee sand attorney s feesn ot exceeding t h eamounts provided bysaid ORS 86.778.

In accordance with theFair Debt Co l lectionPractices Act, th is isan attempt to collect adebt, and any informa­t ion obtained wil l beused for that purpose.This communication isfrom a debt collector.

In construing this Notice,the singular includesthe plural, the wordGrantor includes any

to the Grantor as wellas any other personowing an ob l igation,the performance ofwhich is secured bysaid Deed of T rust,and the words Trus­tee and B e nef iciary

include its respectivesuccessors in interest,if any.

DATE D: Ma rch 17, 2015Alan N. Stewart,Successor TrusteeHurley Re, P.C.747 SW Mill View WayBend, OR 97702Telephone:

541-31 7-5505

Published: June 12, 19,26, 2015 a nd J uly 3,2015

LegaI No. 00041379

successor in interest

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• 0 • • 0 •• 0 •

SB — THE OBSERVER a BAKER CITY HERALD COFFEE BREAK FRIDAY, JULY 3, 2015

U.SGirlfriend expects fireworkswhen her parents meet his

DEARABBY:I have been with 'Tom"for twoyears, and Isuspect that he will be proposingsoon. Heis 27 and I'm24. Here's the problem:He wants our parents to meet before he asks.Abby, Ihaveput this ofj"becauseI'm sure they

will, have nothing in common. My parents aresmall-business owners and conservative. Hisparents arepot-smoking swingers — literally.

How do I prepare my parents for what Iexpect to be a tense and un­comfortable meeting? ShouldI suggest talking points?Should I fi ll my parents in onwhatistocome? Iwant thisto go as smoothly as possible. Iwould appreciate any wisdom you may have.

— NO WORDS ON THE WEST COASTDEAR NO WORDS: I'm sure the one

thing your parents will have in common isa desire for you and your boyfriend to behappy together. Building on that, you andTom should talk to your folks and preparethem for the encounter. Trying to hide orminimize their differences would do no goodbecause they will soon become obvious.

DEARABBY: Three months ago, my sister"Diane"said she would like to get the familytogether for some professional family photos.The photographer she chose was availableonly on one particular day. Unfortunately, myhusband couldn't get off from work that day.

Diane then suggested we take the pictureswithout him. I said it was inappropriateand refused. When I asked if we could use adifferent photographer at another time, mysister told me toforget the whole thing.

Today I was visiting my parents and Isawthe family photos — taken without me, myhusband and our child. I had no idea they hadgone ahead and taken the pictures without us.I am angry and hurt. I'm especially mad at mymom because she knew how bothered I wasthat Diane suggested excludt'ng my husband.

Am Ij ustifted in feeling this way? Shouldthey have waited until the whole family wasable to get together? Or should I suck it upand not expect everyone to accommodate myhusband's work schedule?

DEAR tion, and my grandchildren

DEARABBY: Until my daughter was 18,we did all the traditional birthday celebra­tions. On her 18th birthday, she turned thetables saying, although she was born on thatday, I had done all the work ofgiving her life.

Now, at her request, we spend her specialday celebrating each other. She takes me todinner and buys me flowers, and I let her.And now on my special day, I do the same

This has become a tradi­

ABBY now f o l low it. The only giftnecessary is the time we giveeach other.

— APPRECIATED IN IDAHODEARAPPRECIATED: I like your daugh­

ter's idea very much. It makes perfect senseto me. In my opinion, what makes any holi­day special is the tim e people who care aboutone another spend celebrating together.

DEAR ABBY: Cohabitation is not asubstitute for matrimony. I realize it is "notunusual for couples today to live together"asyou saidin a May 5 letter. H owever, youmust certainly be aware that many religiouspeople regard doing so as a sin against God.Should the parents compromise their beliefsto attend, simply because their daughter'srelationship is 'progressing nicely"? Why doyou feel that standing up for their beliefs is"punishing"their daughter and her live-in? Iwish you would address this again.

DEAR DIANNE: I try to deal with thingsas they are, and not as some people thinkthey ought to be. Today many couples havechosen to live together before marriage.Some are trying to avoid the unhappinessthey saw in their parents' marriages. Othersrealize that you don't really know someoneuntil you have lived with him or her. Divorceis messy, not to mention expensive on manylevels, and they want to avoid the pain ifpossible — although few separations arepainless.

I believe parents should choose their battlescarefully after their children become adults.What these parents are doing may eventuallyisolate them fiom their daughters. Acting asthey ate, there may be other happy occasionsthey11 be skipping. This one is just the first.

for my own mother.

— DIANNEINI.UBBOCK TEXAS

By Matt PearceLos Angeles Times

Thousands of social mediausers are tweeting the samequestion: Who is burningblack churches?

Fires at six black churchesin the South over the last 10days have stirred fears thatracial violence on housesof worship is making acomeback — perhaps as abacklash to criticism of theConfederate flag since nineblack parishioners wereslain, allegedly by a whitesupremacist, at a church inCharleston, S.C.

The flames evoke ahaunting reminder of whitesupremacist terrorism fromdecades ago.

The fires also ignited anonline army of activists whocoalesced during the streetprotests in Ferguson, Mo.,and who have become a kindof rapid-deployment force forblack America. Their passionfor justice and skepticism ofinvestigators' accounts havebeen a regular presence afterpolice shootings.

This week, their focushas been on church fires.But investigators say onlytwo of the six blazes havebeen confirmed as arsons,not one has been declared ahate crime and they are notconnected.

eWe are in the early stagesoftheseinvestigations,butat this time we have noreason to believe these firesare racially mo tivated or re­lated," the Bureau of Alcohol,Tobacco, Firearms and Explo­sives said in a statement.

Some data suggest the

eeks.

noxville, Tenn.

Source: AP, Southern Poverty Law CenterGraphic: Staff, Trihune News Service

Sixsouthernchurchfiresstir fearsofracialuiolence

number of church fires m aynot be that unusual. But aswith police shootings afterMichael Brown was killed inFerguson, each church inci­dent is getting extra scrutiny.

"Stop the passive lan­guage. Fires aren't'breakingout' at black churches. Blackchurches are being set onfire," one person tweeted.

"At what point are we al­lowed to say black Americais under attack?" tweetedanother.

"If the governmentwatched the KKK as hardas they do ¹BlackLivesMat­ter, maybe we would know¹WholsBurningBlack­Churches," tweeted a third.

Each remark earned hun­dreds of retweets.

Their concerns were backedby the NAACPs president,Cornell William Brooks.

'The spike in church burn­ings in Southern states overthe past few days requires ourcollective attention," especially

Chu h in Tal assee, Fla.

Church in Warrenvtlle S C

Episcop C urch, Greeleyville S.C.

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after the June 17 slayings inCharleston, he said in a state­ment Wednesday.

''When nine students ofScripture lose their lives ina house of worship, we can­not turn a blind eye to anyincident," Brooks said.

"As we wait for authoritiesto conduct their investiga­tions, the NAACP and ourstate conferences across thecountry will remain vigilantand work with local churchesand local law enforcementto ensure that all are takingthe necessary precautionsto ensure the safety ofeveryparishioner," Brooks said,adding,eWe will use everytool in our advocacy arsenalto preserve these belovedinstitutions."

On Wednesday, Parkerurged patience as investiga­tors worked to determinethe cause of the latest fire."It gives you an ill feeling,"he told reporters."It broughtback all those old memories."

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— OUT OF THE PICTUREINHOUSTON

DEAR OUT OF THE PICTURE: Yes, yesandyes.

• ACCuWeather.cOm ForeCaSTonight Saturday Sunday Monday Tuesday

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58 (3) 92 59 (3) 90 58 (5 ) 91 58 (5) 89 51 ( 5)

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PrecipitationThursday .......................Month to date ................Normal month to date ..Year to date ...................Normal year to date ......

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McKay Reservoir

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Thief Valley Reservoir

Stream Flows through midnightThursdayGrande Ronde at Troy ............ 728 cfsThief Vly. Res. near N. Powder 130 cfsBurnt River near Unity ............ 67 cfsLostine River at Lostine .............. N.A.Minam River at Minam .......... 217 cfsPowder River near Richland .... 40 cfs

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• 0 0 0

Friday, July 3, 2015

The Observer & Baker City Herald

STEELHEAD NATIONCAMERQN SCQTT

Rainbow'vs.'steelheadoffers no easy

j =reconciliationO

• Behind lifelong love of flyfishing, Joseph's Devin Olsentakes home individual bronzeat world championships

By Katy Nesbitt

Joseph's Devin Olsen doesn't rememberthe first time he held a fishing rod, but aphotograph taken by his parents chronicledthe event when he was 18 months old.

By the time Olsen was 9 years old he wasfly fishing. When he was 11 or 12, he said hewas developing a lifelong habit.

That lifelong pursuit culminated with anindividual bronze medal at the 2015 WorldFly Fishing Championships in Bosnia andHerzegovina in late June.The son and grandson of fly fishermen,

Olsen grew up outside of Salt Lake City and

f r

Devin Olsen of Joseph brought home a bronze in the individual competition and a silver in the team competition at the 2015World Fly Fishing Championships in Bosnia and Herzegovina in June.

said he was bumming rides before he coulddrive to the nearby Provo and Weber rivers.

Primarily a trout angler, he said his dadtook him fishing for bass and bluegillsat Pelican Lake in the Utah desert eachMemorial Day.

"Fly fishing was what I loved the most.That was what I did when I skipped class.For some reason it was under my skin,"Olsen said.

With a competitive personality, Olsen saidmoving into the world of competitive fly fish­ing was a natural progression.

"There are no words — I think it's thatcombination of primal hunter instinct mixedwith intellect. It doesn't matter what youdo, you can always continue to learn more,"Olsen said.

He said in two weeks of competition, likethe world championships held in Bosnia lastmonth, he learns more than he would in twoyears fishing on his own.

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In 2004, he entered his first competitionoutside of Klamath Falls. He and his partnerwere badly beaten by a team of Ryan Barnesand Lance Egan, two anglers he ended upworking with at a Utah fly shop. His ap­petite whetted, he went on to make the U.S.fly fishing team.

"The international rules are very strict.They allow no strike indicators or split shot;all of the weight has to be in the fly, not theleader," Olsen said.

A self-professed "strike indicator nymph­ing junkie," his learning curve got steep.

"In the early days we had our buttshanded to us," Olsen said.

He said at the 1997 world championshipsin Jackson, Wyoming, the U.S. team placed17th out of 17 teams.

In 2004, Jack Dennis took on the chal­lenge as the team's coach and the U.S.started trying to m odel their competitive

See Olsen/Page 2C

« j 7 a w =

.Alcsas ~

Devin Oleen photo

meet.

vertime, the "vs." or versus concept, hasbeen a mad money-making machine.

Most likely because it captures us both in ourimaginations and statistically driven selves,and also because it often seems nearly impos­sible ior is impossible) for the two worlds to

Michael Jordan vs. LeBron James. The2013 Seattle Seahawks vs. the 2014 SeattleSeahawks. Ali vs. Tyson. A few years backthere was not one, but two, "Alien vs. Preda­tor" films. And, like some of you out there, Iam"somewhat eagerly" anticipating "Bat­man v Superman" due to hit movie theaterssometime in 2016.

Somewhat, because, well, what grown manwould admit readily to caring about superhe­roes? And eagerly, because if Warner Brothersis able to pull off the Justice League conceptwithout making complete shenanigans outofboth caped crusaders, I'll be som ewhere inthat million/billion dollar audience.

As summer has officially started 4ackon June 21l there is no escaping one of themajor facts of my life: traveling to Coloradoto work as a fly-fishing guide. Each year I gothrough a sort of transformation, from 1x and2x tippet to 5x and 6x. From big bright flies,to small, buggy, understated ones. And fromfishing all day to catch a steelhead or two, toguiding clients on trout fishing trips whereone or two fish is uncomfortably slow. Insteadofbattling ice, snow, rain, sleet and fluctuat­ing river levels, I am dealing with high eleva­tion sun, dehydration and crowds.

Is it fair, you might ask, to compare thetwo? After all, aren't steelhead just anadro­mous trout who run to the ocean and back?Aren't fish just fish? For the past few weeks,as I have gone through the motions of fillingthe cooler with water, ice, lunches and caf­feine, stuck a brace oflight lined fly rods inmy vehicle and driven to the shop to pick upclients, I have pondered these exact questions.

See Scott/Fbge 2C

WesCom News Service

Spout Springs owner patiently putting ski resort up for sale• John Murray wantsnew owner to be investedin community's future

WesCom News ServiceBy Josh Benham

John Murray isn't looking for justanybody off the street. He hopesthe new owner of Spout SpringsSki Area puts the surrounding areafirst.

The current owner of the resortrecently put Spout Springs up forsale for $1.25 million. Murray, 66,has owned it since 1999. SpoutSprings is located about 18 milesfrom Elgin on Highway 204 in theBlue Mountains near Tollgate, andfeatures 800 vertical feet of skiing.M urray said a couple of factors

have contributed to the decision tosell the ski slope. For one, low snow­falls the previous two ski seasonshave hindered the resort during thewinter months. But Murray hasseen poor winter seasons come andgo in the past, and he believes it'snot a long-term issue.

"The weather wasn't very goodthe last couple years, but it's acycle," he said."I've had some reallygood years and some crummy years.I'm not particularly concernedaboutit."

The most pressing reason, how­ever, is his age. With the knowledgesnowfall will pick up in the com­ing years, he doesn't want to waitaround for it.

"The concept ofhanging aroundinto my 70s is not something I wantto do," Murray said."The meterkeeps going. It's time for m e to go."

Murray reiterated that theresort has a spectacular historythat may be foreign to even somearea residents. Spout Springs hasbeen operating since the 1920s, andwas a Nordic training center forthe United States Olympic teamand the Norwegian jump team inthe 1950s and '60s. The U.S. ForestService trained on the resort fortheir ski school in the '60s, and thenow-defunct Blue Mountain SkiClub sponsored ski competitions

See Sale/Page 2C

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Courtesy photo

John Murray, who has owned Spout Springs Ski Area since 1999, is selling the resort.

TO-DO LIST FLY-TYING CORNERFISHING REPORT

Warm water closes Grande Ronde Chinook seasonODFW announced the closure of the Chinook salmon season on the Grande Ronde River

beginning Monday The Chinookseasons onthe Imnaha andWallowa rivers will close July13.According to JeffYanke, ODFW fish biologist in Enterprise, water temperatures in all

three fisheries are approaching levels lethal to Chinook salmon. Combine that with very fewanglers and little fishing success, and it's hard to justify the resources needed to monitor thefisheries.

Yanke had high hopes for this year's northeast Oregon Chinook fisheries after early re­turning Grande Ronde basin stocks arrived at Bonneville Dam in good numbers and aheadof schedule. However, the late returning stocks headed for the Grande Ronde, Imnaha andWallowa rivers arrived very late. After potentially high harvest rates in the Columbia Riverfisheries, these Chinook returned to their natal rivers just as water conditions deteriorated.

• 0 0 0

Explore WallowaLake's East Moraine

Dubbed Deer Hunter a suMe HopperFish it on a floating line with a 9-foot leader tapered to a 4x tippet.Splash it down and mend the line to allow for a drag-free drift. Tie

this one on a No. 10-14 longdry-fly hook. For the body,use a foam strip colored tan,yellow, insect green or purple.

For the legs, use dyed grizzly hackle, trimmedand knotted. Up top, use a mottled precutwing. Tie the scraggly head with a dubbing

blend ofhare's maskand clipped deer hair.Source: Gary Lewis, For WesCom News Service

• 0 0 0

The Wallowa LandTrust hosts itsseventh annual "Into the WallowaOutings and Lectures" program.Visitors will be accompaniedby photographer and geologyenthusiast David Jensen. Meet atthe Wallowa LandTrust office at 9a.m. to carpool to the trailhead. Formore information, call 541-426-2042.9 a.m., Saturday, Enterprise

• 0 0 0

2C — THE OBSERVER a BAKER CITY HERALD OUTDOORS 8 REC FRIDAY, JULY 3, 2015

SCOTT leave hahy animals aloneContinued from Page 1C

On the first trip of theyear, when a client I fish witha few times each summerlanded a 24-inch rainbow,why didn't I blink? Have I be­come so spoiled and callousedby hard fighting steelhead asto not think twice about largetrout? And when I came backlast fall and caught my firststeelhead of the season aftera long summer of trout, whydid it leave my hands shak­ing long after I'd released itback into the water?

And finally, after all theseyears, how was it that thefirst brightly colored browntrout on the Frying Pan Riverthis summer left me mes­merized for several secondsstaring into the net unlikeany big bad chrome steelheadever does?

No two superheroesare the same. Growing upin the late '70s and early'80s, Superman was all therage. Then in 1989, alongcame Batman, and all thatchanged. The SupermanT-shirts of my youth werereplaced by the Batman T'sof my teenage years. Fora brief period in the mid­1990s and early 2000s itseemed like both franchiseswere dead.

Then, in 2002 Spider­man got into the fray, andin 2005, a much darkerBatman franchise emergedand so did Superman again.Man of Steel. Man of Bats.Each incarnation seemsmore philosophical andmore driven by deep ques­tions of morals, ethics andwhat it means to be human.

It could just be me, but

The tacklebox for a fly fisherman who chases steelheadsand rainbows must feature a diverse set of flies.

each year that goes by, thesame holds true for fishing.The somewhat silly andserious Superman of myyouth (although saving theworld from nuclear holo­caust and reversing timeare no small dilemmas), hasshifted over the years. Myrelationship to fishing, onceinnocent, though filled withfirst catches, kills, fillets andfish fries, has now become amoney-making endeavor.

And maybe it is just a hu­man process, or the processof time, but the innocenceof my fishing youth hasdefinitely been replaced by amuch more complex subsetof realizations these days.Fishing now means payingbills and putting food on thetable. It also means sacri­

ficing time from the placeI love and live. Time fromrelationships I value. Andleaving to put time into aprofession I also value.

Each year I try not tocompare steelhead to trout,but it is nearlyimpossible. Itry not to compare this yearto past years either. I try, hardas it is, to keep myself outof the"vs." mentality, a darkand often complex road, butit still captures my imagina­tion. Perhaps in the end it isneither Superman nor Bat­man, steelhead nor trout, thatmatters most, but Spiderman.''With great power comes

great responsibility," said Pe­ter Parker. Often, on my wayto work, this is what I thinkabout, when I think aboutgoing fishing as an adult.

Cam Scott phato

OLSEN

WesCom News Service

Picking up a newborn fawn all by itselfin the wild and taking it home to care for itmight seem like the right thing to do. ButOregon Department of Fish and Wildlife bi­ologists have a specific name for it — "fawn­napping" — and Oregon State Police call ita violation of wildlife laws which prohibittaking animals out of the wild, transportingthem or keeping them at home.

Across Oregon, ODFW district offices andwildlife rehabilitators have fielded dozens ofcalls in recent weeks urging people to thinkfirst and not pick up fawns (or elk calves,baby seals, cougar or bobcat kittens, bearcubs, fledgling birds or other young wildlifeborn in spring). In several cases, people havebeen advised to put fawns back where theyfound them. A few fawns have gone to alicensed wildlife rehabilitator. One fawn hadto be euthanized due to malnutrition and itsoverall poor condition.W estern Oregon's black-tailed deer give

birth in early June. As is the case in manywild species, they will leave newborn fawnsalone for several hours or even the better

PUT A HALTTO FAWN-NAPPING

part of a day while off foraging. They willreturn to collect their fawn and feed it,provided they sense no danger.

"Never assume a fawn or other younganimal found hiding, standing or wanderingalone in the wild is orphaned," says HermanBiederbeck, ODFW district wildlife biologistin Tillamook."Give young wildlife a wideberth and leave them alone. The parent ani­mal will return to collect their offspring whenhumans aren't around and they feel safe."

Most fawns collected by Good Samari­tans this time of year are not orphaned, andremoving them from the wild complicatestheir chances for survival and a long life inthe wild. These fawns will miss the chanceto learn important survival skills from theirparent like where to feed, what to eat, howto behave as part of a group and how toescape &om predators.

"Nothing humans do can substitute forthe natural learning experience life in thewild provides," says Colin Gillin, ODFWwildlife veterinarian.

Quantity is the biggest factor. If you don'tcatch a fish that's a blank — that kills you,"Olsen said.

Until this year, the U.S. never medaled.At best they finished fifth, Olsen said. Butthis season was the team's breakthroughyear, when it earned the silver medal. Olsenwas the first American to take home anindividual medal with his bronze.

"It was a huge accomplishment and thechange we've been waiting on for," OlsenSRld.

A fisheries biologist, Olsen said in thesummer he tries to fish most days. Onthe weekend he makes his rounds to theW allowa, Wenaha and Imnaha rivers andPilcher and Wolf Creek reservoirs.

His son, Levi, is a toddler getting lots ofexposure to fishing. Olsen said he and hiswife, Julia, take turns entertaining himwhile they fish, but it won't be long until hehas a rod in his hand and his parents takethat first snapshot of a fish on the end of aline.

As his son grows up and Olsen and hiswife decide to expand their family, he maycut back on competition, but fishing is in hisblood. As for settling in Wallowa County hesaid it's a perfect mix of quality fishing witha low population density.

"I've wanted to live a style oflife whereI'm on the river since I was a wee little tyke.It's in my blood," Olsen said.

Continued ~om Page 1C

system after the Europeans."It became a structured system to make

the team, and was no longer just good ol'boys network," Olsen said.

Fly fishing is seen as a Zen-like, contem­plative pastime with competition its antith­esis. But in Europe, Olsen said, competitivefly fishing is accepted and the basis of thefly fishing economy.

"In the U.S. we have a giant movementagainst us, but the growing popularity ofthe sport brings a growing awareness ofnatural resources and an economic benefit,"he said.

Olsen said the international organizationoverseeing competitive fly fishing is calledFIPS-Mouche, the abbreviation for Fe­deration Internationale de Peche SportiveMouche, or in English, the InternationalSport Flyfishing Federation. He said theywrite all the rules and administer scoring.

During the world championship inBosnia, each member of each team was puton a bus and sent to one of four rivers anda lake for a three-hour-long fishing session.The anglers draw for a stretch of river andthe competition begins. Olsen said pointsare earned for how many fish are caughtand a compilation of the fishes' lengths.

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l• •

• •

SALE

Spout Springs Ski Area was used by the U.S. Forest Service to train students in the1960s. The resort, which was put up for sale by current owner John Murray, also was aU.S. Olympic team training center in the 1950s and '60s.

ber of people, ranging fiomgroups of investors to singlefamilies, that have showninterest so far. One man fiomTexas has even made contact,but Murray would prefer thenext buyer be someone who'sinvested in the area."'We're trying to be some­

what selective," he said.'Wewant someone that's positivefor the community."

Murray said he will main­tain the facilities during theoffseason, and help the newowner learn the ins-and-outsof the business after a sale ismade, due to the pleasure hetakes in his ownership."I've got a lot of pride of

ownership for the place," hesaid."I'm happy with the im­provements we've made. I'mhoping to get a good group, orsomebody that understandsit's all about the kids. That'ssomething you realize as youget older. These facilities werebuilt for families, and it's afantastic quality about SpoutSprings."

The resort is beingsold through ColdwellBanker First Realtors inWalla Walla, Washington,which can be contacted at509-525-0820.

Continued from Page 1C

from the 1950s to the'70s.Spout Springs rests at anelevation of roughly 5,000feet with two double chairliftsand offers diverse runs forbeginners and experiencedskiers alike.

The 1,400-acre resort runson a lease with the UmatillaNational Forest and featuresa restaurant and lodge, rentalshop offering ski lessons anda ski patrol building. Murray'sson, Rick, serves as the gen­eral manager, and Murray islooking for someone investedin the community and whowill keep the family-type at­mosphere afloat. He said he'llhold out for the right buyer.

"It's a great facility," Mur­ray said.'The one thing thatSpout Springs has foughtagainst is it hasn't alwayshad a lot of communitysupport. People have alwaysreferred to it as a sm all area,but believe me, it's far fiomthe smallest. It has a lot tooffer. It doesn't really get theattention fiom the area itdeserves."

There have been a num­

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• Free Estimates• Fully insured• Quality Customer

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Union and WallowaCounty Locations:

Best WesternSuper 8Best Value SandmanTravelodgeJoe Qnd SugarsPrimo's PizzaBear Mountain Pizza

Pizza HutDenny'sJoe BeansBenchwarmer'sLQ FiestaNY Richie'sTen Depot StreetSub ShopMamacita'sCock h BullUnion County Chamber ofCommerce

US BankLQ Grande Rendezvous RVResortLQ Grande Stereo Qnd Music

LQ Grande InnQuail RunEastern Oregon University

merce

Dollar's CornerSummerville StoreImbler StoreBlonde StrawberryWallowa Food TownGoebel'sEl Bajio Mexican RestaurantCloud 9Heavenly'sLear's Main StreetWilderness InnPonderosaWallowa County Chamber ofCommerce

Ranger RiderBookloftRed RoosterGypsy JavaCheyenne CafeCoco's GrillStubborn MuleOutlaw RestaurantIndian MotelHydrantJoseph Chamber of Com­

Wallowa Lake Lodge

gINWNIN%0$1S @Nlygg+1% I os

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Debuting a NEW Look~July 1~st

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Locations:

Wallowa Lake ResortMatterhornGlacier GrillBaker County

Crossroads Arts CenterPost af5ceLaundry MatOregon Trail RestaurantOregon Trail MotelBridge Street Inn

Bagel Shop

Mulan GardenDelicaso Mexican Restau­rant

Main EventGeiser GrandCharlie's Ice CreamBarley BrownsPapa Murphy'sGolden CrownYorksMavericksRising SunSorbenots

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Crave the BowlTaco TimeSubwayBig Chief

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Sumpter JunctionChevronSuper 8Welcome InnBaker County Chamber ofCommerce

McDonald'sFood MartLefty'sEl ErraderoKnight's Inn

Inland CafeCountry CottagePaizzano'sWestern MotelBowling AlleyLittle Pig

• 0 0 0

HEALTH 8 FITNESS THE OBSERVER a BAKER CITY HERALD — 5CFRIDAY, JULY 3, 2015

The Modesto BeeBy Lisa Moore

With the Fourth of July justaround the corner, many of us dogowners must begin to prepare for theinevitable: fireworks.

The startling bangs, booms andwhistles of fireworks going off atrandom times, and sometimes for anumber of days, can cause your dogto become moderately to severelyfrightened and anxious, and all dogowners should take some precaution­ary measures during this trying timeofyear.

Do your very best to place your dogin a safe environment when even anoccasional firework is likely to occur.

At minimum, your dog should beindoors, with ambient music or whitenoise playing in the background tomask the sounds of the outdoors.If your dog has a tendency to reactand panic when fireworks are heard,containment in a crate should beconsidered for your pet's own safety.

Dogs can do incredible things toescape when they are atraid; chew­ing through doors, jumping fences,diving through windows and diggingto &eedom are all within the realmof possibility, but this risk can beminimized with some planning andplacing of your dog in a safe environ­

Dogs that become moderatelyto highly stressed at the sound offireworks often benefit greatly &omproper medication. But one must besure to give the right drug.

Acepromazine is often prescribedby veterinarians for dogs with noisephobias, but it is a poor choice.

Dr. Marty Becker i"America's Vet­erinarian"l writes, "Once widely pre­scribed for noise phobias, Aceproma­zine not only doesn't work, it mightmake things much worse."

ment.

FIREWORKSContinued ~om Page 6C

The report also shows 11 as­sociated deaths due to fireworks,nearly double the average of 7.1deaths per year.

An estimated 7,000 fireworks­related injuries, or 67 percent ofpeople treated, occurred duringthe one-month period surroundingIndependence Day, according tothe report.

Half of all fireworks injuries areto innocent bystanders, many ofthem children.

Of the 10,500 fireworks-relatedinjuries last year, 35 percent ofthose injuries were to children un­der the age of 15, or nearly 3,780children, according to the CPSC'sreport. That's the highest rate ofinjury among any age group.

Dan Rauh, an acute care nursepractitioner in Ohio with 30 yearsof medical experience, said themost common types of injuries thathis facility sees around the holidayare severe burns and explosion­related injuries, including eyedamage or fingers blown otf.

"All the kids in the family aresitting up on the deck and thecool fireworks, instead of goingstraight up, take a 90-degree turnto the right and end up burningeverybody on the deck," Rauh said.''We've had a couple of times where

people wonder if they really got

eore eans,e ourose e

use:

that thing lit and they lean overthe top ofit and itgoes otf. Thenthey have significant trauma totheir face or brain.

"Any terrible thing that canhappen &om an explosion canhappen as a result of fireworks, forsure."

Fireworks are dangerousenough when handled by peoplewho do it every day for a living,Rauh said. Factor in alcohol usageand they become exponentiallymore dangerous."It's a catalyst for tragedy," he

sald.The Oregon State Fire Mar­

shal's 0$ce encourages people tofollow the four B's of safe firework

• Be Prepared before lightingfireworks: Keep water available byusing a garden hose or bucket.

• Be Safe when lighting fire­works: Keep children and petsaway from fireworks.

• Be Responsible after light­ing fireworks: Never relight adud. Wait 15 to 20 minutes thensoak it in a bucket of water beforedisposal.

• Be Aware: Use only legalfireworks and use them only inlegal places.

Eric Schtoartzberg of tlv Jounud­News in Hamilton, Ohio, contributed

to tkis story.

noises. Benzodiazepines iBZsl canhelp in these situations by reducingfear as needed right when these situ­ations occur. BZs take effect quickly,so they can treat impending fearwithin a short period of time — the

same way an aspirin relieves a head­ache shortly after you take it ...

A minor drawback is that BZsmust be given to the dog before thefearful event begins.

"Optimally, the medicine should begiven one hour before the beginningof the scary event, or, at minimum, itshould be given before the dog showsany signs of fear or worry, such asstress panting, trembling, tail tuck­ing, pupil dilation, sweating pawpads, etc."

Some common benzodiazepinesare diazepam iValiuml, alprazolam(Xanaxl, chlordiazepoxide iLibriuml,lorazepam iAtivanl and clonazepamiKlonopinl.

These drugs work by increasingthe activity of a chemical in the brainthat interferes with activation of thefear networks. They can be used on ashort-term basis and are a far betterchoice than Acepromazine.

Overall further states: "I knowthat the common 'treatment' forstorm and noise phobias and veteri­nary office visits is Acepromazine. Intruth, I wish this medication wouldbe placed at the far back of a topshelf and used only exceptionally.

"Acepromazine is a dissocia­tive anesthetic, meaning that itscrambles perceptions. Ask yourselfif a scrambling of perceptions willmake an anxious or uncertain dogworse or better. It's alw ays worse,and we make many if not most dogsmore sensitive to storms by usingthis drug. In part, this is also becausesensitivity to noise is heightened."

Share this information with yourveterinarian, and together makethe best and most informed decisionconcerning the proper and effectivemedication to offer your dog duringthis stressful time.

The Baltimore Sun

Kidney testscan helpdetect heartdisease riskBy Meredith Cohn

BALTIMORE — Sim­ple tests used regularlyto assess kidney functionand damage also couldhelp doctors predict w howill suffer heart disease,the nation's leadingcause of death, research­ers from the Johns Hop­kins Bloomberg Schoolof Public Health havefound.

The tests are just asgood, if not better, thanstandard cholesteroland blood pressure tests,potentially giving doctorsa better idea of whichpattents to more closelywatch or treat, said Dr.Kunihiro Matsuslnta, anassistant scientist in theschool's department ofepidemiology who led theresearch.

"Cholesterol levelsand blood pressure testsare good indicators ofcardiovascular risk, butthey are not perfect," hesaid."This study tells uswe could do even betterwith information that of­tentimes we are alreadycollecting."

The tests assess kid­ney function by measur­ing a waste product inblood called creatinineand kidney damage bymeasuring a protein inurtne called albumin.

Dr. Karen L. Overall, one of theleading veterinary behaviorists inthe world, published in DVM360:"Some dogs experience fear only inspecific situations, such as duringfireworks or other events with loud

Starting goodeating hahits earlycanyieldlifelonlhenefitsThe New YorkTimesBy Jane E. Brody

Pardon the cliche, but ithappens to be particularlyapt in this case: In tryingto tame the nation's obesityepidemic, an ounce of pre­vention is decidedly wortha pound of cure — consider­ably more than a pound, infact, according to the find­ings of a five-year collabora­tive research project.

Not only can several popu­lar strategies help childrenachieve and maintain anormal weight and, in thefuture, reduce adult obesity,they can also save the coun­try many health care dollarsand, in a few cases, generaterevenue to support furtherw eight-control efforts.

The time is long overduefor legislators, schools, policywonks and parents to dealmore effectively with whatis one of the nation's mostcostly health care problems.

In the meantime, parentsand other adults who influ­ence young lives can adoptthe techniques found mostlikely to keep children leanand healthy and extendthose benefits well into theiradult years. For families aswell as institutions, the dol­lar and health savings canbe significant.

The project, initial resultsof which were publishedin The American Journalof Preventive Medicine, iscalled the Childhood ObesityCost-Effectiveness Study,or Choices. It examinedthe costs and benefits offour possible approaches tocurbing childhood obesity:placing an excise tax onsugar-sweetened beverages;ending the tax write-off foradvertising on children'stelevision; increasing moder­ate to vigorous physicalactivity in schools; andfostering healthier habits inpreschool settings.

As you might expect, theseapproaches vary both intheir implementation costsand effects on children'sweight, but before thisanalysis, there was no clearguidance as to which gavethe biggest bang for the buckianother apt cliche). The re­search team of experts, from

• 0 0 0

the Harvard School of PublicHealth, the University ofWashington School of Medi­cine, Columbia UniversityMailman School of PublicHealth, Deakin Univer­sity in Melbourne and theUniversity of Queensland,modeled the preventiveinterventions as if appliednationwide to children in2015. Their resulting esti­mates of expected benefitsto children's weight iandsubsequent health) and thecost of implementation werebased on scores of controlledstudies in a wide variety ofsettings.

While each approach canhave a positive effect, tw ostood out as most likely tolower children's body massindex for the least cost andgreatest returns on theinvestment: an excise taxon sugar-sweetened bever­ages and eliminating the taxsubsidy on TV advertising tochildren.

For each unit of BMI

BMI unit lowered but save

lowered per person duringthe first two years, the TVad change would cost $1.16per person but would alsogenerate about $80 milliona year and save $343 mil­lion in health care costs forthe United States over thecourse of a decade. Institut­ing a 1-cent-per-ounce taxon sugar-sweetened drinkswould cost $3.16 cents per

an estimated $23.2 billionover 10 years and bring in$12.5 billion a year nation­ally.

American children andadults consume "twiceas many calories fromsugar-sweetened beveragescompared to 30 years ago,"Michael Long of Harvardand the project's co-authorsnoted, adding that the drinkshave been linked to weightgain, diabetes and cardiovas­cular disease.

To be sure, progress has al­ready been made in limitingchildren's access to sugary

SUNDAY SUMMER CONCERT SERIES NOWTHROUGH AUGUST 30AT GEISER POLLMAN PARK BAKER CITY OREGON

$UNDAY IN THE PARK

JULY 5TH CONCERT 2:00 4:00PMFour man band from Idaho- a little bit of eeerything

Lod in S onsor:

Sunridge Inn ,!,':,

All funds raised benefit local non-profit.

at the Lion's Shelter in the park.

Music S onsor:

Blue Yesterdays

Soroptimist International of Baker County

from the classics to modern.

Next week ul 1 2t h

This ureek's concert urill support Baker City Eeents raising funds for localeeents. Adeance tickets aeailable at Betty's Books. Suggested donation $5 per

adult/children under 16 free. Donation may also be made at the concert.

Bring your laum chairs or blankets to the park. Music urill be staged

Traeeling Musician Motel stay comgliments of

SORCI P'f I MI BT

• 0 0 0

drinks. Many schools havebanned such beverages, anda number of large restaurantchains have removed themfrom children's menus, in­cluding McDonald's, BurgerKing, Wendy's, Dairy Queen,Panera, Subway and Chipo­tle, according to the Centerfor Science in the PublicInterest, a nonprofit healthadvocacy group.

Last month, Davis, Cali­fornia, passed an ordinancemaking only milk andwater the default choicesfor children's meals offeredin restaurants ialthoughparents can request soda ifdesired). Slowly but surely,sugary drinks may go theway of cigarettes — bannedin most public places.It is also true that the rate

of obesity among young chil­dren has recently stabilized.But Steven Gortmaker ofHarvard and the project'sleader, said, "The rate haspeaked at historically highlevels and only for children

aged 2 to 5. It's still increas­ing for older children."

The best time to intervene,he emphasized, is whenchildren are young and smallchanges — "an energy gap ofonly about 30 calories a day"— can have a major effect.Lowering an adult's BMI isfar more challenging, requir­ing a sustained deficit ofabout 500 calories a day, "but

INaher tIIIIItr38eralhfor the enjoyment of community and eisitors.

And is a fundraiser for local charities.

For information call 541-523-3673

Fuel &. Meal S onsors:

Event S onsor:Powder Rieer Music Reeie~ is suPPorted and organized by

Traeeling Musician meals comgliments of SumPter Junction Restaurant andOregon Trail Restaurant. Fuel comgliments of Black Distributing Inc.

"Stockmen's Casino/Hotel — Etko Nv."4 Days 8t3 Nights July 15 — 18 Sept 16 — 19 Nov 1 1 — 14

Moffit Tours

"Since 1948"

iMust be 21 years of agel

$139.00 ppdo $164.00 single

moffittoursggmaitcom • P 0 Box 156 Lostine, OR 97857

"Model T Casino/Hotel — Winnemucca Nv."4 Days 8t 3 Nights Aug 12 — 15 Oct 1 4 — 17

Picku locations: Lostine, Elgin, Imbler, La Grande, Union,

Includes: Trans, 3 Nights Lodging, 3 Breakfasts, 8c $10 Gaming

1-800-533-5222 or 541-569-2495

$139.00 ppdo $164.00 single

North Powder, Baker City, Ontario

"Call for pickup schedule and reservations"

Non smoking and Non alcohol Luxury Coach

preventing childhood obesitylays the groundwork for afuture reduction in adultobesity," Gortmaker said.

Less screen time canaffect BMI in two ways:Children will be exposed tofewer ads for snacks andother foods high in caloriesand low in nutrients, whichmany studies have shownincreases their consump­

• 0 0 0

HEALTH 8 FITNESS THE OBSERVER a BAKER CITY HERALD — 5CFRIDAY, JULY 3, 2015

The Modesto BeeBy Lisa Moore

With the Fourth of July justaround the corner, many of us dogowners must begin to prepare for theinevitable: fireworks.

The startling bangs, booms andwhistles of fireworks going off atrandom times, and sometimes for anumber of days, can cause your dogto become moderately to severelyfrightened and anxious, and all dogowners should take some precaution­ary measures during this trying timeofyear.

Do your very best to place your dogin a safe environment when even anoccasional firework is likely to occur.

At minimum, your dog should beindoors, with ambient music or whitenoise playing in the background tomask the sounds of the outdoors.If your dog has a tendency to reactand panic when fireworks are heard,containment in a crate should beconsidered for your pet's own safety.

Dogs can do incredible things toescape when they are atraid; chew­ing through doors, jumping fences,diving through windows and diggingto &eedom are all within the realmof possibility, but this risk can beminimized with some planning andplacing of your dog in a safe environ­

Dogs that become moderatelyto highly stressed at the sound offireworks often benefit greatly &omproper medication. But one must besure to give the right drug.

Acepromazine is often prescribedby veterinarians for dogs with noisephobias, but it is a poor choice.

Dr. Marty Becker i"America's Vet­erinarian"l writes, "Once widely pre­scribed for noise phobias, Aceproma­zine not only doesn't work, it mightmake things much worse."

ment.

FIREWORKSContinued ~om Page 6C

The report also shows 11 as­sociated deaths due to fireworks,nearly double the average of 7.1deaths per year.

An estimated 7,000 fireworks­related injuries, or 67 percent ofpeople treated, occurred duringthe one-month period surroundingIndependence Day, according tothe report.

Half of all fireworks injuries areto innocent bystanders, many ofthem children.

Of the 10,500 fireworks-relatedinjuries last year, 35 percent ofthose injuries were to children un­der the age of 15, or nearly 3,780children, according to the CPSC'sreport. That's the highest rate ofinjury among any age group.

Dan Rauh, an acute care nursepractitioner in Ohio with 30 yearsof medical experience, said themost common types of injuries thathis facility sees around the holidayare severe burns and explosion­related injuries, including eyedamage or fingers blown otf.

"All the kids in the family aresitting up on the deck and thecool fireworks, instead of goingstraight up, take a 90-degree turnto the right and end up burningeverybody on the deck," Rauh said.''We've had a couple of times where

people wonder if they really got

eore eans,e ourose e

use:

that thing lit and they lean overthe top ofit and itgoes otf. Thenthey have significant trauma totheir face or brain.

"Any terrible thing that canhappen &om an explosion canhappen as a result of fireworks, forsure."

Fireworks are dangerousenough when handled by peoplewho do it every day for a living,Rauh said. Factor in alcohol usageand they become exponentiallymore dangerous."It's a catalyst for tragedy," he

sald.The Oregon State Fire Mar­

shal's 0$ce encourages people tofollow the four B's of safe firework

• Be Prepared before lightingfireworks: Keep water available byusing a garden hose or bucket.

• Be Safe when lighting fire­works: Keep children and petsaway from fireworks.

• Be Responsible after light­ing fireworks: Never relight adud. Wait 15 to 20 minutes thensoak it in a bucket of water beforedisposal.

• Be Aware: Use only legalfireworks and use them only inlegal places.

Eric Schtoartzberg of tlv Jounud­News in Hamilton, Ohio, contributed

to tkis story.

noises. Benzodiazepines iBZsl canhelp in these situations by reducingfear as needed right when these situ­ations occur. BZs take effect quickly,so they can treat impending fearwithin a short period of time — the

same way an aspirin relieves a head­ache shortly after you take it ...

A minor drawback is that BZsmust be given to the dog before thefearful event begins.

"Optimally, the medicine should begiven one hour before the beginningof the scary event, or, at minimum, itshould be given before the dog showsany signs of fear or worry, such asstress panting, trembling, tail tuck­ing, pupil dilation, sweating pawpads, etc."

Some common benzodiazepinesare diazepam iValiuml, alprazolam(Xanaxl, chlordiazepoxide iLibriuml,lorazepam iAtivanl and clonazepamiKlonopinl.

These drugs work by increasingthe activity of a chemical in the brainthat interferes with activation of thefear networks. They can be used on ashort-term basis and are a far betterchoice than Acepromazine.

Overall further states: "I knowthat the common 'treatment' forstorm and noise phobias and veteri­nary office visits is Acepromazine. Intruth, I wish this medication wouldbe placed at the far back of a topshelf and used only exceptionally.

"Acepromazine is a dissocia­tive anesthetic, meaning that itscrambles perceptions. Ask yourselfif a scrambling of perceptions willmake an anxious or uncertain dogworse or better. It's alw ays worse,and we make many if not most dogsmore sensitive to storms by usingthis drug. In part, this is also becausesensitivity to noise is heightened."

Share this information with yourveterinarian, and together makethe best and most informed decisionconcerning the proper and effectivemedication to offer your dog duringthis stressful time.

The Baltimore Sun

Kidney testscan helpdetect heartdisease riskBy Meredith Cohn

BALTIMORE — Sim­ple tests used regularlyto assess kidney functionand damage also couldhelp doctors predict w howill suffer heart disease,the nation's leadingcause of death, research­ers from the Johns Hop­kins Bloomberg Schoolof Public Health havefound.

The tests are just asgood, if not better, thanstandard cholesteroland blood pressure tests,potentially giving doctorsa better idea of whichpattents to more closelywatch or treat, said Dr.Kunihiro Matsuslnta, anassistant scientist in theschool's department ofepidemiology who led theresearch.

"Cholesterol levelsand blood pressure testsare good indicators ofcardiovascular risk, butthey are not perfect," hesaid."This study tells uswe could do even betterwith information that of­tentimes we are alreadycollecting."

The tests assess kid­ney function by measur­ing a waste product inblood called creatinineand kidney damage bymeasuring a protein inurtne called albumin.

Dr. Karen L. Overall, one of theleading veterinary behaviorists inthe world, published in DVM360:"Some dogs experience fear only inspecific situations, such as duringfireworks or other events with loud

Starting goodeating hahits earlycanyieldlifelonlhenefitsThe New YorkTimesBy Jane E. Brody

Pardon the cliche, but ithappens to be particularlyapt in this case: In tryingto tame the nation's obesityepidemic, an ounce of pre­vention is decidedly wortha pound of cure — consider­ably more than a pound, infact, according to the find­ings of a five-year collabora­tive research project.

Not only can several popu­lar strategies help childrenachieve and maintain anormal weight and, in thefuture, reduce adult obesity,they can also save the coun­try many health care dollarsand, in a few cases, generaterevenue to support furtherw eight-control efforts.

The time is long overduefor legislators, schools, policywonks and parents to dealmore effectively with whatis one of the nation's mostcostly health care problems.

In the meantime, parentsand other adults who influ­ence young lives can adoptthe techniques found mostlikely to keep children leanand healthy and extendthose benefits well into theiradult years. For families aswell as institutions, the dol­lar and health savings canbe significant.

The project, initial resultsof which were publishedin The American Journalof Preventive Medicine, iscalled the Childhood ObesityCost-Effectiveness Study,or Choices. It examinedthe costs and benefits offour possible approaches tocurbing childhood obesity:placing an excise tax onsugar-sweetened beverages;ending the tax write-off foradvertising on children'stelevision; increasing moder­ate to vigorous physicalactivity in schools; andfostering healthier habits inpreschool settings.

As you might expect, theseapproaches vary both intheir implementation costsand effects on children'sweight, but before thisanalysis, there was no clearguidance as to which gavethe biggest bang for the buckianother apt cliche). The re­search team of experts, from

• 0 0 0

the Harvard School of PublicHealth, the University ofWashington School of Medi­cine, Columbia UniversityMailman School of PublicHealth, Deakin Univer­sity in Melbourne and theUniversity of Queensland,modeled the preventiveinterventions as if appliednationwide to children in2015. Their resulting esti­mates of expected benefitsto children's weight iandsubsequent health) and thecost of implementation werebased on scores of controlledstudies in a wide variety ofsettings.

While each approach canhave a positive effect, tw ostood out as most likely tolower children's body massindex for the least cost andgreatest returns on theinvestment: an excise taxon sugar-sweetened bever­ages and eliminating the taxsubsidy on TV advertising tochildren.

For each unit of BMIlowered per person during

BMI unit lowered but save

the first two years, the TVad change would cost $1.16per person but would alsogenerate about $80 milliona year and save $343 mil­lion in health care costs forthe United States over thecourse of a decade. Institut­ing a 1-cent-per-ounce taxon sugar-sweetened drinkswould cost $3.16 cents per

an estimated $23.2 billionover 10 years and bring in$12.5 billion a year nation­ally.

American children andadults consume "twiceas many calories fromsugar-sweetened beveragescompared to 30 years ago,"Michael Long of Harvardand the project's co-authorsnoted, adding that the drinkshave been linked to weightgain, diabetes and cardiovas­cular disease.

To be sure, progress has al­ready been made in limitingchildren's access to sugarydrinks. Many schools havebanned such beverages, and

SUNDAY SUMMER CONCERT SERIES NOWTHROUGH AUGUST 30AT GEISER POLLMAN PARK BAKER CITY OREGON

$UNDAY IN THE PARK

JULY 5TH CONCERT 2:00 4:00PMFour man band from Idaho- a little bit of eeerything

Lod in S onsor:

Sunridge Inn ,!,':,

All funds raised benefit local non-profit.

at the Lion's Shelter in the park.

Music S onsor:

Blue Yesterdays

Soroptimist International of Baker County

from the classics to modern.

Next week ul 1 2t h

This ureek's concert urill support Baker City Eeents raising funds for localeeents. Adeance tickets aeailable at Betty's Books. Suggested donation $5 per

adult/children under 16 free. Donation may also be made at the concert.

Bring your laum chairs or blankets to the park. Music urill be staged

Traeeling Musician Motel stay comgliments of

SORCI P'f I MI BT

• 0 0 0

a number of large restaurantchains have removed themfrom children's menus, in­cluding McDonald's, BurgerKing, Wendy's, Dairy Queen,Panera, Subway and Chipo­tle, according to the Centerfor Science in the PublicInterest, a nonprofit healthadvocacy group.

Last month, Davis, Cali­fornia, passed an ordinancemaking only milk andwater the default choicesfor children's meals offeredin restaurants ialthoughparents can request soda ifdesired). Slowly but surely,sugary drinks may go theway of cigarettes — bannedin most public places.

It is also true that the rateof obesity among young chil­dren has recently stabilized.But Steven Gortmaker ofHarvard and the project'sleader, said, "The rate haspeaked at historically highlevels and only for childrenaged 2 to 5. It's still increas­ing for older children."

The best time to intervene,

he emphasized, is whenchildren are young and smallchanges — "an energy gap ofonly about 30 calories a day"— can have a major effect.Lowering an adult's BMI isfar more challenging, requir­ing a sustained deficit ofabout 500 calories a day, "butpreventing childhood obesitylays the groundwork for afuture reduction in adultobesity," Gortmaker said.

INaher tIIIIItr38eralhfor the enjoyment of community and eisitors.

And is a fundraiser for local charities.

For information call 541-523-3673

Fuel &. Meal S onsors:

Event S onsor:Powder Rieer Music Reeie~ is suPPorted and organized by

Traeeling Musician meals comgliments of SumPter Junction Restaurant andOregon Trail Restaurant. Fuel comgliments of Black Distributing Inc.

"Stockmen's Casino/Hotel — Etko Nv."4 Days 8t3 Nights July 15 — 18 Sept 16 — 19 Nov 1 1 — 14

Moffit Tours

"Since 1948"

iMust be 21 years of agel

$139.00 ppdo $164.00 single

moffittoursggmaitcom • P 0 Box 156 Lostine, OR 97857

"Model T Casino/Hotel — Winnemucca Nv."4 Days 8t 3 Nights Aug 12 — 15 Oct 1 4 — 17

Picku locations: Lostine, Elgin, Imbler, La Grande, Union,

Includes: Trans, 3 Nights Lodging, 3 Breakfasts, 8c $10 Gaming

1-800-533-5222 or 541-569-2495

$139.00 ppdo $164.00 single

North Powder, Baker City, Ontario

"Call for pickup schedule and reservations"

Non smoking and Non alcohol Luxury Coach

Less screen time canaffect BMI in two ways:Children will be exposed tofewer ads for snacks andother foods high in caloriesand low in nutrients, whichmany studies have shownincreases their consump­tion of such foods. Childrenwho spend less time withelectronics would also havem ore time for physical activ­ity.

• 0 0 0

<Siu!ker;S,g(I 341' etaRjCable subscriber channel numbers follow call names. Times may vary for satellite viewers

SUNDAY DAYTIME LG - La Grande BC - Baker City 7I5I1 5LQ BC ~ g ggl ggg] gggl ggjg gggl gll] gllgl ~ g gggl [ggjg ggggl gggjg gggl ggjg gggl ggjg gggl ggjg gggl ggjg gggl ggjg gggl

3 13

~up v4 13A&E 52 28

AMC 60 20ANP 24 24

DISN 26 37ESPN 33 17FAM 32 22F X 65 1 5

HALL 87 35LIFE 29 33

NICK 27 26ROOT 37 18SPIKE 42 29

TDC 51 32TLC 49 39

TNT 57 27

TRAV 53 14

USA 58 16WTBS 59 23HBO 518 551

SHOW 578 575

SUNDAY EVENLG BC

QO 6 6

g+ 8 8

12 12

man" nMysteries at theMuseum ccPaid P a idMarried Married

0<I<IParentsQuestBody

KATU News This Morning - Sun (N) Yourcc Voice

Mister Clifford- Thomas/ Bob the Steves'Rogers Dog Fri ends Builder EuropeCBS News Sunday Morning Facethe Nation(N) n cc (N) n cc(6:00) KGW News at Sunrise (N)

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Xplor. AnimalPlanet RescueD og D o g(6:00) **4 Cad­dyshackccCountry JusticeDoc S o f ia theMcSt. F i rstSportsCenter (N) (LMelissa MelissaEllen n MikeLucy L ucyIn Touch0<I<IParentsGTBaldPaid Pro- Paid Program gramPaid P a idLaw & Order "Hit­

Mysteries at theMonument ccPaid P a idFriends Friends

Season"

Pets. J . VanTV cc ImpeD og D o gHalt and CatchFire ccNorth Woods LawMickey Tomor­Mouse rowlandive) ccMelissaMikeMiddleAmazingPowerRangersHornsPaidJoel I n TouchOsteen n21 DAY Sexy!Law & Order "0 epn

Four WeddingsLaw & Order"Asterisk" nWatt's Watt'sWorld WorldRoyal Pains ccFriends Friends

**<R(o2(2014) n (:45) ** Bulletproof Monk (20Siro * * Meet Joe Black(1998) Brad Pitt. Premiere. n cc

*** The PMotherMiddleJereSponge­BobPaidPaid

ress

Paid ProgramTravelsto EdgePaid Program

MotherGoldenSub-DSponge­BobBaldEngine

Meet the P(N) ccRealEstateRealEstateDonnie Donnie Donnie DonnieRectify "Always Humans ccThere" ccNorth Woods Law North W oods Law*** Surf's Up (2007) Voices Girlof Shia LaBeouf. n Meets

rincess Bride (1987)MotherGoldenOsteenSponge­BobCookOffUltimate Air Jaws(r cc

This Week WithGeorge...Operation Wild cc

An AmericanAnthem cc21 DAY RealFIX Est a te21 DAY *** Spanglish (2004) Adam Sandler. A house­FIX ke eper works for a chef and his neurotic wife.

Hank Con­Williams spiracy

Wahl Wahl Wa hlburgers n***i, Field of Dreams (1989, Fantasy) KeCostner, Amy Madigan. ccBounty Hunters Bounty HuntersTeen Beach 2 (201 5, Musical Comedy)Ross Lynch, Maia Mitchell. n cc

** Burlesque(2010) Cher, Christina Aguilera.

A Very Merry Mix-Up(2013) cc* A Little Bit of Heaven (2011) ccTeenage Sponge­Mut. BobSwing TheBar Rescue n

Shark Week Shark- Return of Jawstacular nFour Weddings Four WeddingsLaw & Order "The Law & OrderWheel" n "Mother's Day"An Idiot Abroad cc Extreme Water­

Complications Chr isley Chrisley**i; Zoolander (2001) Ben Stiller03) n

ING LG - La Grande BC - Baker Clty• Qggi Qgg ggggi Qgg gggi g iig g iig

Eat &Lose*** Julie & Julia (2009, Comedy-Drama) MerylStreep, Amy Adams, Stanley Tucci.

NHRA D

Mother **4 Total Recall (2012) Colin FarrellGolden GoldenUnREAL "Truth'Sponge- Sponge­Bob BobPaid 1 8 HolesTruck Muscle

cc

parks cc

*4 Three to Tango n (***4 The Hurricane (1999) n «

7I5I1 5ggjg ggggi

rag Racing Summit Racing Equipment Nationals

Paid Pro- Paid Program gramNOVA "Venom:Nature's Killer" nLucas Oil Off RoadRacing2015 Tour de France Stage 2. (N Same­day Tape) n cc

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