la grande observer daily paper 09-11-15

26
Inside INSPORTS Climb worth the effort, IC PaCking a healthy IulICb, 6C THIE TIES SINCE 16$6 SERVING VNION I I I I r I I r i i r I r r I Vehicle, remains of missing woman located The Observer By Dick Mason ELGIN — A La Grande woman who disappeared mysteriously almost three months ago may have beenfoundWednesday afternoon. The remains of a woman found at the bottom ofa steepravinein Minam Canyon by two La Grande Police Department detectivesare believed to be those of Neli-Cristina Rogers, 27. The La Grande woman had been missing since June 20. "She has not been positively identi- fied, but evidence at the scene is consistent with it being her. We are following up on making a positive identification," said La Grande Police Chief Brian Harvey. The remains were found at the site of a white Ford pickup she had been driving. Rogers' vehide apparently went off the side of a cliff along the south side of Wallowa Lake Highway, 10 miles outside of Elgin, said Det. Sgt. Dusty Perry of the La Grande Police Department. Perry and Mike Harris, See Rogers / Page 5A Tim Mustoe/The Observer Oregon State PoliceTrooper Ryan Morehead climbs up out of a ravine outside Elgin on Highway 82 where Neli-Cristina Rogers' truck and remains were appar- ently found as Denny Fenn from FennTowing and Repair operates the backend of his truck to pull the battered truck out. Rules regarding unanimous decisions comes into play during last week's meeting SEPT. 11, 2001 TERROR ATTACI t', S The Observer By Cherise Kaechele The La Grande City Coun- cil' semergency declaration to ban the presale of recreation- al marijuana last week did not require an unanimous decision — something that confused some of those on the council. The city council held the second reading of an ordi- nance last Wednesday that will ban the presale of recre- ational marijuana for the two medical marijuana facilities in La Grande. City Manager Robert Strope said accordingto the city's charter, an emer- gency declaration requires a unanimous decision from the council only if the first and second reading of an ordinance occurs in the same See Charter / Page 5A What it says City Manager Robert Strope said an emergency declaration requires a decision from the council only if the first and second reading of an ordinance occurs in the same meeting and the ordinance was going to be enacted in the same meeting. unanimous Members of Eastern Oregon's Army Guard unit, the 3rd Battalion, 116th Cavalry Regiment conduct training at the Orchard CombatTraining Center before deploying to Iraq in 2010. Before the deadly, 9/11 terrorist attacks, the 3rd Battalion had not deployed to a combat zone sinceWorld War II. During the war on terror the battalion deployed twice to Iraq. Pat Caldwell/ForThe Observer Area wildfires showing signs of life V ForThe Observer By Pat Caldwell Brian Dean remembers his anger when it happened. Dan Ishaug remembers the confusion. Christopher Miller recalls thatSept. 11, 2001, started out with a trip to the rifle range at the U.S. Marine base in Twen- tynine Palms, California. All three men were in dif- ferent places but the sudden, bloody terroristattack 14 years ago was the triggerpoint of an epoch of transformation, tragedy and challenges for the American military. All three men — members of Eastern Oregon's largest Army Guard unit, the 3rd Battalion, 116th Cavalry Regiment — understood that the peacetime life they knew evaporated as the tragedyin New York Cityunfolded. ''When it happened I was mad as hell," Dean, the com- mander of the 3rd Battalion said. aWe all collectively knew our military was going to become more active in the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks changed the lives of three local National Guardsmen world." And the cost was going to be high, first in treasure and then in blood. The first butcher's bill tallied more than 2,500 lives lost on 9/11. The monetary cost — in terms of fighting the war on terror — is somewhere around $1.6 trillion, according tostatistics from the Congres- sional Research Service. By 2009 — two years before U.S. troops departed Iraq- more than 3,000 Americans had died in that nation and another 31,000, including more than 13,000 who did not return to duty, were wounded, according to the Congressional Research Service. While statistics can be misleading, the percentage of deathscompared to the population of the United States during the war on ter- rorstandsat 0.002. Contrast that figure with the percent- age of deaths in the Civil War — compared to the population — of 2.835. Before the9/11 attacks The Observer By Dick Mason The Grizzly Bear Complex Fire, while not as ferocious as it once was, still has life. The 75,268-acre fire was dealt a seriousblow Sept.4-5 when portions of it received up to an inch of precipitation in the form of rain and snow. Unfortunately, the fire area has not received any precipi- tation since Saturday. 'The rain knocked it back and slowed it down, but ever since then it has picked up the pace as it gets a little dryer each day," said Jimmye Turner, a public information officer for the Grizzly Bear Complex Fire, which is burn- ing in Wallowa County and See Fires / Page 5A In charge The Eagle Complex fires, which were started by lightning Aug. 10, are now being fought under the direction of aType 4 interagency incident command team based at Lily White Guard Station near Eagle Creek. See Attacks / Page 5A INDEX Calendar........7A Classified.......1B Comics...........7B Crossword..... 5B Dear Abby .....SB Health ............6C Outdoors .......1C Horoscope.....5B Record ...........3A Lottery............2A Spiritual Life..6A Obituaries......3A Sports ............SA Opinion..........4A Television ......3C WE A T H E R F ull forecast onthe backof B section Friday i~'~i Saturday 48 Low ~ ~ 92/50 Astarlitsky Sunnyandhot ~rri~ Sunshine Sunday 84/42 Issue 107 3 sections, 24 pages La Grande, Oregon CONTACT US 541-963-3161 Email story ideas to newsC~/agrande observer.com. More contact info on Page 4A. s 51153 00100 6 MONDAY IN HOME PEARS ARE RIPE AND READY FOR PICKING I I S- ~a 24 HI' TDUltIAQ Full Body Shop Full Semice Qe 4 Rental Cars 4- www.gossmotors.com I 54]-9Q-4ig •000 •000 •000

Upload: northeast-oregon-news

Post on 23-Jul-2016

320 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

The La Grande Observer print edition for Friday September 09, 2015

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: La Grande Observer Daily Paper 09-11-15

InsideINSPORTS

Climb worth the effort, ICPaCking a healthy IulICb, 6C

THIE

TIES SINCE 16$6SERVING VNION

I I I I r I I r i i r I r r I

Vehicle, remains ofmissing woman locatedThe ObserverBy Dick Mason

ELGIN — A La Grande womanwho disappeared mysteriouslyalmost three months ago may havebeen found Wednesday afternoon.

The remains of a woman foundat the bottom of a steep ravine inMinam Canyon by two La GrandePolice Department detectives arebelieved to be those of Neli-CristinaRogers, 27. The La Grande womanhad been missing since June 20.

"She has not been positively identi­

fied, but evidence at the scene isconsistent with it being her. We arefollowing up on making a positiveidentification," said La Grande PoliceChief Brian Harvey.

The remains were found at the siteof a white Ford pickup she had beendriving. Rogers' vehide apparentlywent off the side of a cliff along thesouth side of Wallowa Lake Highway,10 miles outside of Elgin, said Det. Sgt.Dusty Perry of the La Grande PoliceDepartment. Perry and Mike Harris,

See Rogers / Page 5A

Tim Mustoe/The Observer

Oregon State PoliceTrooper Ryan Morehead climbsup out of a ravine outside Elgin on Highway 82 whereNeli-Cristina Rogers' truck and remains were appar­ently found as Denny Fenn from FennTowing andRepair operates the backend of his truck to pull thebattered truck out.

• Rules regarding unanimousdecisions comes into playduring last week's meeting

SEPT. 11, 2001 TERROR ATTACIt',S

The ObserverBy Cherise Kaechele

The La Grande City Coun­cil's emergency declaration toban the presale of recreation­al marijuana last week didnot require an unanimousdecision — something thatconfused some of those on thecouncil.

The city council held thesecond reading of an ordi­nance last Wednesday thatwill ban the presale of recre­ational marijuana for the twomedical marijuana facilitiesin La Grande.

City Manager RobertStrope said according tothe city's charter, an emer­gency declaration requiresa unanimous decision fromthe council only if the firstand second reading of anordinance occurs in the same

See Charter / Page 5A

What itsaysCity ManagerRobertStropesaid anemergencydeclarationrequires a

decisionfrom thecouncil onlyif the firstand secondreading ofan ordinanceoccurs inthe samemeeting andthe ordinancewas going tobe enactedin the samemeeting.

unanimous

Members of Eastern Oregon's Army Guard unit, the 3rd Battalion, 116th Cavalry Regiment conduct training at theOrchard CombatTraining Center before deploying to Iraq in 2010. Before the deadly, 9/11 terrorist attacks, the 3rd Battalionhad not deployed to a combat zone sinceWorld War II. During the war on terror the battalion deployed twice to Iraq.

Pat Caldwell/ForThe Observer Area wildfiresshowingsigns of lifeV

ForThe ObserverBy Pat Caldwell

Brian Dean remembers hisanger when it happened.

Dan Ishaug remembers theconfusion.

Christopher Miller recallsthat Sept. 11, 2001, started outwith a trip to the rifle range atthe U.S. Marine base in Twen­tynine Palms, California.

All three men were in dif­ferent places but the sudden,bloody terrorist attack 14years ago was the trigger pointof an epoch of transformation,

tragedy and challenges for theAmerican military.

All three men — membersof Eastern Oregon's largestArmy Guard unit, the 3rdBattalion, 116th CavalryRegiment — understood thatthe peacetime life they knewevaporated as the tragedyinNew York City unfolded.

''When it happened I was

mad as hell," Dean, the com­mander of the 3rd Battalionsaid.aWe all collectively knewour military was going tobecome more active in the

• Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks changed the lives of three local National Guardsmenworld."

And the cost was going to behigh, first in treasure and thenin blood. The first butcher's billtallied more than 2,500 liveslost on 9/11. The monetarycost — in terms of fighting thewar on terror — is somewherearound $1.6 trillion, accordingto statistics from the Congres­sional Research Service.

By 2009 — two years beforeU.S. troops departed Iraq­more than 3,000 Americanshad died in that nation andanother 31,000, including

more than 13,000 who did notreturn to duty, were wounded,according to the CongressionalResearch Service.

While statistics can bemisleading, the percentageof deaths compared to thepopulation of the UnitedStates during the war on ter­ror stands at 0.002. Contrastthat figure with the percent­age of deaths in the Civil War— compared to the population— of 2.835.Before the 9/11 attacks

The ObserverBy Dick Mason

The Grizzly Bear ComplexFire, while not as ferocious asit once was, still has life.

The 75,268-acre fire wasdealt a serious blow Sept. 4-5when portions of it receivedup to an inch of precipitationin the form of rain and snow.Unfortunately, the fire areahas not received any precipi­tation since Saturday.

'The rain knocked it backand slowed it down, but eversince then it has picked upthe pace as it gets a littledryer each day," said JimmyeTurner, a public informationofficer for the Grizzly BearComplex Fire, which is burn­ing in Wallowa County and

See Fires / Page 5A

In chargeThe EagleComplexfires, whichwere startedby lightningAug. 10, arenow beingfought underthe directionof aType 4interagencyincidentcommandteam basedat Lily WhiteGuardStation nearEagle Creek.

See Attacks / Page 5A

INDEXCalendar........7AClassified.......1BComics...........7BCrossword..... 5BDear Abby .....SB

Health ............6C Outdoors .......1CHoroscope.....5B Record ...........3ALottery............2A Spiritual Life..6AObituaries......3A Sports ............SAOpinion..........4A Television ......3C

WEAT HE R Full forecast onthe backof B section

Friday i~'~i Saturday48 Low ~ ~ 92/50Astarlitsky Sunnyandhot

~rri~Sunshine

Sunday84/42 Issue 107

3 sections, 24 pagesLa Grande, Oregon

CONTACT US

541-963-3161 Email story ideasto newsC~/agrandeobserver.com.More contact infoon Page 4A. s 51 1 53 0 0 1 00 6

MONDAY IN HOME PEARS ARE RIPE AND READY FOR PICKING • • I • I

~a 24 HI' TDUltIAQFull Body Shop

Full Semice Qe 4Rental Cars

www.gossmotors.com I 54]-9Q-4ig• 0 0 0 • 0 0 0 • 0 0 0

Page 2: La Grande Observer Daily Paper 09-11-15

2A — THE OBSERVER LOCAL FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 2015

DAtLYPLANNER

Remembering 9/11

sevicesStudent

workersreach deal

TODAYToday is Friday, Sept.

11, the 254th day of 2015.There are 111 days left inthe year.

Soft white wheat­GRAIN REPORT

September, $5.47; October,$5.47; November, $5.50

Hard red winter­September, $5.82; October,$5.83; November, $5.83

Dark northern spring­September, $6.25; October,$6.25; November, $6.27

TODAY'S HIGHLIGHTOn Sept. 11, 2001,

America faced anunprec­edented day of terror as 19al-Qaida members hijackedfour passenger jetliners,sending two of the planessmashing into New York'sWorldTrade Center, oneinto the Pentagon and thefourth into a field in west­ern Pennsylvania, resultingin nearly 3,000 deaths.

ON THIS DATEIn 1857, the Mountain

Meadows Massacre tookplace in present-day south­ern Utah as a 120-memberArkansas immigrant partywas slaughtered by Mor­mon militiamen aided byPaiute Indians.

In 1941, in a speechthat drew accusations ofanti-Semitism, Charles A.Lindbergh told an AmericaFirst rally in Des Moines,lowa, that"the British, theJewish and the Rooseveltadministration" werepushing the United Statestoward war.

LOTTERYMegabucks: $2.4 million01-17-24-36-38-41

Mega Millions: $106 million19-20-36-41-46-07-x03

Powerball: $167 million44-45-47-50-51-08-x02

Win for Life: Sept. 9

13-31-35-70

Pick 4: Sept. 10• 1 p.m.: 01-02-09-03• 4 p.m.: 02-09-08-01• 7 p.m.: 09-01-07-00• 10 p.m.: 01-01-07-01Pick 4: Sept. 9• 1 p.m.: 04-00-07-03• 4 p.m.: 01-03-09-04• 7 p.m.: 08-03-00-08• 10 p.m.: 03-06-05-02

— Bids provided bVIsland City Grain Co.

Observer staff

Hundreds of Union Coun­ty residents will soon startreceiving health surveys inthe mail from Grande RondeHospital.

The surveys are part ofGrande Ronde Hospital'sCommunity Benefit Sub­committee, which is sendingout the surveys as part of a

Grande Ronde Hospital welcomes

survey

The Observer

a

• People will berandomly selectedfor anonymous

• Final decision on newcity attorney scheduledto be made on Oct. 7By Kelly Ducote

Members of the La Grande CityCouncil are weighing the pros and consof two potential new city attorneys.

The council on Wednesday held awork session on the subject and inter­viewed two attorneys, Wyatt Baum ofBaum Smith LLC in La Grande andJeremy Green of Bryant Lovlien &Jarvis in Bend. Councilors first heardfrom Baum, who has been at theLa Grande firm for five years. His firmrepresents a number of local munici­palities, including Union County, Elgin,Joseph and Seneca.

"Our firm has a had a strong tradi­tion of municipal work," he said.

Green's firm, which specializes inmunicipal law, also serves municipali­ties, including Madras, La Pine, JohnDay and Monument. Green has beenat the firm 12 years.

a

community health needs as­sessment process, accordingto a hospital press release.

Residents will berandomlyselected toreceive the confiden­tial and anonymous surveysbymail. The survey asks ques­tions aboutgeneral health, riskand protective health factors,and access to healthcaie.

Those who receive thesurveys are urged to com­plete them and return themin order for the subcommit­tee to "create a snapshot ofthe health of Union Countyresidents," with a goal to"improve overall health and

Members of the La Grande and La Grande Rural fire departments observe a moment of silence Friday morning.The firefighters came to People Helping People in La Grande to pay tribute to the those who perished Sept. 11,2001. Union County dispatchers held a moment of silence over the scanner in remembrance of the day.

Council weighing attorney candidates

Hospital health survey set to go out

Following the interviews, councilorsnoted that there are drawbacks to go­mg with either firm

Mayor Steve Clements saidalthough he is not concerned with accessibility given technology available,he has worries about sending citymoney outside the area. Green hadassured them during the interviewthat he or another attorney at thefirm would be available 24/7. He alsosaid they can attend council meetings,although that has not been a practiceof the city.

City Manager Robert Strope saidthe city usually works with its attor­ney on the front-end of issues, tryingto get answers to possible questionsahead of time so they are not needed atmeetings. It would be unlikely that thecity would request even the local firmattend meetings, he said.

Councilor John Bozarth said thatconflicts of interest could be a concernwith the local firm, although CouncilorGary Lillard added that conflicts canbe overcome.

Lillard said in the mental health

well being of our communityby identifying areas thatneed work."

The subcommittee hasworked closely with theCenter For Human Develop­ment, the local public healthentity, and more than 30other community membersrepresenting health andpublic welfare agencies,government, education andprivate entities.

Survey results will aid inthe planning and address­ing ofhealth concerns in thecommunity, and guide thehospital and other agencies

i'

field there are guidelines for dealingwith potential conflicts, especially insmall towns, and that there are likelysimilar guidelines for attorneys thatcould alleviate that concern.

"It would be less likely to haveiconflictsl happen with an out-of-townattorney," Bozarth said.

Strope told the council, after beingasked, that in his experience biggerfirms can often provide answers faster,even though their billable hourly ratemay be higher. This is because thelarger firms often specialize in mu­nicipal law with multiple attorneysavailable where smaller firms may notbe able to specialize.

Councilors will consider informationfrom the interviews before they make adecision at their Oct. 7 regular councilmeeting.

La Grande is seeking a new cityattorney after longtime legal counselJonel Ricker died earlier this summer.

Contact Kelly Ducote at 541-786-4230 orkducote 0 lagrandeobserver com. Follow

Kelly on Twitter @IgoDucote.

/

over the next several years,the press release says. Thesubcommittee will use re­sults for a report to prioritizefuture needs.

A final community healthneeds assessment report willbe published in 2016 andmade available to the publicby direct mail and online.

Those with questionsabout the survey can visitthe community benefit sec­tion of the hospital's websiteat www.grh.org or contactGRH Community Benefits0$cer Wendy Roberts at541-963-1469.

Cherise Kaechele/The Observer

contract.

The Observer

• Tentativeagreement oncontract may avertstrike at EOU

By Dick Mason

The specter of a laborstrike no longer hangsominously over the EasternOregon University campus.A tentative contract agree­

ment was reached Thursdayduring the second day of abargaining session betweenrepresentatives of the 4,400student services workersat Oregon's public universi­ties and University SharedServices Enterprise.

This means the possibilitythat the state's student ser­vices workers, which includeabout 100 at EOU, will strikeis now unlikely. Leaders ofthe SEIU, the union repre­senting the student serviceworkers, had said earlier thata strike was a real possibil­ity after an impasse wasdeclared during negotiationsAug. 19.

Bud Hill, president of theEOU chapter of SEIU Local503, is confident the tentativeagreement will be approvedlater in a vote of state ser­vices workers.

"I am pretty sure it willpass," Hill said,"which iscomforting to a lot of people."

Hill was not looking forwardto the prospect of a strike.

'That was scaring a lot ofpeople," he said.

Student services workersat Eastern include librarians,financial aid office workers, of­fice specialists, physical plantworkers and many others.

A four-year contract wastentatively agreed to onThursday. It will provide2.25 percent cost of livingincreases on Dec. 1 of thisyear and on Dec. 1, 2016, anincrease in funding for healthinsurance and more.

The economic elements ofthe contract for years threeand four can be renegotiatedduring the second year of the

Di Saunders, a spokesper­son for the collective bargain­ing process of Oregon's PublicUniversities, is also happythat a tentative agreementhas been reached betweenthe SEIU and the USSE.

'The universities are very,very pleased that we wereable to settle prior to thestart of the academic yearand before students returnto campus," Saunders said.r Now they can focus onstudents coming back andgetting ready for them."

QUOTE OFTHE DAY"A hero is no braver

than an ordinary man, buthe is braver five minuteslonger."

— Ralph I/Valdo Emerson,American poet and

essayist

Betsy Anderson, MDFamily Medicine

RegionaI Medical Clinic

,< --- La Giande High $ehoolFoothall is 'now availahle

onaSeptember 2015

Do you have a Primary Care Provider? La Grande Hrse school Football 2015 16

Medical research says those whodevelop a long-term relationship with a

primary care provider enjoy better overallhealth and lower health care costs.

View LIVE home an aygames during the Tiger's2015-16 Football Seasonat www.LaGrandeAlive. TV

Aus 28

sept4

Sept 11

sept 18

sept 25

Enterpr'se

Nyssa

We'ser

Pendleton

Bosser's Ferry

Home

Away

Away

Home

Away

Away

Sponsored by: Oct 16

Oct 23

ree Dallas

Mston Freewater

Baker C'ty

Ostar'o

Away

Dr. Anderson comes to us from Pioneer Memorial Hospital, Heppner, where she

provided clinic, hospital, and emergency room care as the Chief of Medical Staff.

She attended medical school and completed her residency at Oregon Healthand Science University. After serving many years in both emergency and family

care, she is looking forward to focusing on the family medicine; getting to knowchildren, parents, grandparents, and determining how one persons' health or

illness affects the whole family. She and her husband have already fallen in love

with the area for both the recreational and cultural opportunities that bringtogether the best of two worlds. The couples' grown children live in Western

Oregon, but they bring two dogs ready to explore the region with them.

Produced bl):

La6randeAUVE.~vv THF OgyRyER

M ED I A S E R V I C E S

LOVELANDFUNERAL CHAPEL

P ASSOCIATES

. OiNEFor more information, call Us at 541.663.31 38.®www.grh.org RlEIGIKR&SIItZAk~

• 0 0 0 • 0 0 0 • 0 0 0

Page 3: La Grande Observer Daily Paper 09-11-15

LOCAL THE OBSERVER — 3AFRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 2015

LOCAL BRIEFINGFrom stag reports

Chinook Winds providesmusic for dance

A community dance fea­turing the music of ChinookWinds will run from 6:30p.m. to 9:30 p.m. Saturdayat the Union County SeniorCenter, 1504 N. Albany St.,La Grande. Admission is $3.The evening will include apotluck and door prizes.

Garage sale raisesfunds for animals

Union County FuzzballAni­mal Rescue is having a fund­raising garage sale and raSekom 7 a.m. to 1 p.m. todayand Saturday at 907 GAve.,

La Grande. The event willbenefit the new Union CountySpay/Neuter/Release (SNRlprogram. For more informa­tion, contact Jodi Lambert at541-786-4637 or Rebecca Lordat 541-410-6094.

Walden to holdwildfire town hall

U.S. Rep. Greg Walden,R-Hood River, will hold publicmeetings next week tu listen tuEastern Oregon communitiesabout preventing and fightingcatastrophic wildfire. A townhall in Enterprise will beginat 11 a.m. Tuesday at the Wal­lowa County Senior Center,

702 NW First St. Agencyofficials will be on hand tugive an update tu Walden andcommunity members aboutrecovery efforts. At the townhalls, Walden will also provideinformation on legislationhe has championed in theHouse — the Resilient FederalForests Act of 2015 — to re­form federal forest policy andprevent wildfire.

Later on Tuesday, Waldenwill meet county commis­sioners in La Grande, wherethe Eastern Oregon CountiesAssociation will honor himfor his work to reform federalforest policy and prevent

catastrophic wildfire. Thethank-you event will be heldat 1:30 p.m. in the AlumniRoom on the Eastern OregonUniversity campus.

Pre-registrationrequired for gun class

The Union County SheriIFsOlfice will offer a concealedhandgun class beginning at8 a.m. Oct. 3. The class willbe held at the Union CountySherifFs Olfice, 1109 KAve.,La Grande. The cost of theclass is $50, and pre-regis­lration is required. For moreinformation and tu register forthe class, contact the Union

County SherifFs Olfice at 541­963-1017, option 2 and 3.

La Grande schoolsoffer open houses

The kindergarten andelementary schools in theLa Grande School Districtwill each hold an open housenext week for students andtheir families. The scheduleis as follows:

• Willow Kindergarten:6 p.m. to 7 p.m. Monday

• Island City Elementary:6 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. Tuesday

• Central Elementary:6 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. (grades1-2l, 6:30 p.m. to 7 p.m.

(grades 3-4l, 7 p.m. to 7:30p.m. (grade 5l Wednesday

Greenwood Elementary:6 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. (gradesK-ll, 6:30 p.m. to 7 p.m.(grades 2-3l, 7 p.m. to 7:30p.m. (grades 4-5l Thursday

For more news and districtinformation, go tu www.lagrandesd.org.

Union City Councilto meet Monday

The Union City Council willmeet Monday for a meetingand a work session. The worksession will start at 6 p.m.and the meeting will begin at7 p.m. Both will be at city hall.

OIIITUARIES

Patricia Lee TaylorElgin1947-201 5

Patricia Iue Taylor,68, of Elgin,died Sept. 5 fiiifillingher journeyoftranscendence. She spent her lastdays just as she lived her life, full ofjoyand vibrance, familymembers said.Memorial services will be held for fam­ily,kiends and everyone whose liveswere touched byher beautiful grace.A viewing will be held kom 4p.m. tu7 p.m. Sept. 12 at Iuveland FuneralChapel.Acelebration oflife ceremonywill be held at 3 p.m . Sept. 13 at Iuve­land Funeral Chapel. Patricia will belaid to restin Pioneer CemeteryAtThe Parknear Medical S~. Herwonderful life will be further celebrat­ed with a potluck nearbyin Pondosa,All aie encouraged to join the familyinremembering a beloved mother,daughter and fiiend.

Patty, as she was always known,is survived by her beloved father,Robert Bennett of Pondosa. Her sib­lings are Barbara Ekstrand of Med­ford, Larry Bennett of Eagle Point,Lori Brock of Nampa, Idaho and

Todd Bennett of Boise,Idaho. Patty's prideand joy are embodiedthrough her threeloving children, Tim

Taylor Col l ins, 46, an electri­cian kom Boise, Idaho,

Debra Frogner,40, mother of threekom Elgin, and John Frogner, 38, aformer service member kom Med­ford. Her list of accomplishments goon tu include eight grandchildren, 17nieces and nephews and one great­grandchild whose birth will be seenby her kom above.

Patty chose tu live her life see­ing the world with fascination, amagical curiosity many adults aredeprived of. Always inquisitive,adventurous, seeking a deeperunderstanding tu the meaning ofour existence, she questioned howpeople could better understandeach other. She managed tu use thisphilosophy to positively influencethose around her, kom healingtu genuine concern when peoplesought her solace. She managed tuimpart these qualities upon every­one who knew her, teaching that to

Charlie Mathew Myers

be loved, you must love others first.Her family said they are saddenedshe began her journey too soon,but perhaps she achieved her truepurpose, finally becoming the keespirit she was in life.

Online condolences may be madeto the family at www.lovelandfuner­alchapel.com.

Union1941-201 5

Charlie Mathew Myers, 74, ofUnion, died at home with his familyby his side on Sept. 2. A gravesideservice will be held at 11 a.m. Sept.12 at the Union Cemetery.

Charlie was born Aug. 22, 1941,in Pendleton to Clarence andNaomi (Nunnl Myers. He wasraised in Eastern Oregon and at­tended schools in Hermiston andPilot Rock. He married his one truelove, Maxine Schmidt Nunn, onNov. 13, 1960 in Portland, whichwas sealed for time and all eternityin the Manti Temple, Utah on Aug.29, 1978. Charlie served the country

while in the UnitedStates Army.

Charlie was em­ployed with the BoiseCascade Particleboard

Myers plant for 31 years.Charlie enjoyed

gardening, traveling,woodworking, huntingand fishing. He spentthree years in Hawaii

while in the service and traveledthe United States with his wife ona motorbike. They also spent timetraveling in several countries. Char­lie was a devoted husband for 56years, father tu their three children— both sons are Eagle Scouts­and grandfather.

Charlie was an active memberin the Church of Jesus Christ ofLatter-day Saints and served invarious callings throughout theyears. He spent an eight and a halfyear mission at the LDS lodge onCatherine Creek.

Charlie is survived by his wife,Maxine; daughter, Tina MyersMiles of Union; sons, Scott Myersand his wife Stacie of Portland and

Shane R. Thompson

La Grande

Vickie Smith, 90, of La Grande,died Sept. 10 at a local care facility.A full obituary will be publishedat a later time. Loveland FuneralChapel & Crematory will be han­dling the arrangements.

Todd Myers and his wife Beatrice ofSeattle, Washington; mother, NaomiMyers of La Grande; brother, SteveMyers and his wife Roxi of Stan­field and five grandchildren. Hewas preceded in death by his father,Clarence and his brother, Allan.

Online condolences may be madeto the family at www.lovelandfuner­alchapel.com.

Vickie Smith

Elgin

Shane R. Thompson, 50, of Elgin,died Sept. 11 at home. A full obituarywill be published at a later time.Loveland Funeral Chapel & Crema­tory will be handling the arrange­ments.

La Grande man sentenced to 15 years for fatal April crash• Wreck on Monroe Lane near HunterRoad killed one, seriously injured anotherObserver staff

A La Grande man hasbeen sentenced to 15 years inprison for his involvement inan April crash that killed a23-year-old man.

Brandon Carew Halleck,28, was sentenced Thursdayto 189 months in the custodyof the Oregon Departmentof Corrections after plead­ing guilty to first-degreemanslaughter, third-degreeassault, aggravated drivingwhile suspended and driv­ing under the influence ofintoxicants.

The charges stem kom a

single-vehicle crash on April18 on Monroe Lane just offHunter Road. Halleck wasdriving a 1994 Nissan pickupwith Jacob Yeates, 23, andtwo minor children ridingunrestrained in the open bedof the pickup. A third minorchild was restrained in thepassenger seat.

Halleck lost control of thevehicle and crashed into theditch, at which point all threeoccupants of the open pickupbed were ejected. Yeatesdied at the scene, and one ofthe minor victims was LifeFlighted out of the area for

treatment.The other two juveniles

sustained minor injuries orwere unharmed.

Halleck had a blood alcoholcontent of.14 percent, ac­cording to the Union CountyDistrict Atturney's Olfice.

Circuit Court Judge BrianDretke sentenced Halleck to120 months on the man­slaughter charge, a Measure11 sentence that means Hal­leck is not eligible for goodtime or early release. Theassault charge came with a30-month sentence, drivingwhile suspended 36 monthsand DUII 90 days in theUnion County Jail. Halleckw ill have three years of post­prison supervision.

According to the DA's (oSce, the sentence waspursuant tu a settlement con­ference with Dretke. Yeates'family participated in theconference and negotiations.

DA Kelsie McDaniel saidshe is thankful for the as­sistance of the Union CountySherifFs OIfice, the UnionCounty Medical Examinerprogram and the OregonState Police"for their out­standing work in investigat­ing this case in a collabora­tive manner."

She noted especially theinvestigative work at thescene of the crime.

"Particularly impressivewas the work done for thecollision reconstruction by

OSPl Trooper Robbie Routt," she said.

October 19, 1914 — September 8, 2015Wilbur "Kansas" Darius Bowman

LA GRANDE POLICEAccident: No one was injured

Wednesday afternoon in a crashat 18th Street and Gekeler Lane.

Arrested: Alan Joseph Hig­gins,20, unknown address,was arrestedThursday bytheGladstone Police Department ona Union County warrant charg­ing failure to appear on originalcharges of driving under the in­fluence of intoxicants and minorin possession of alcohol.

Cited: Lucky Hedious,31, LaGrande, and Bobby Laidren,30,La Grande, were both cited inlieu of lodging Thursday on acharge of first-degree trespass.

Arrested: Eric D. Sowvlen,38,La Grande, was arrestedThurs­day on a charge of possessionof weapons by certain felons.Sowvlen was also arrested on aScappoose Police Departmentwarrant charging failure toappear on an original charge ofdriving under the influence ofintoxicants.

La GRANDEAUTO REPAIR9F5-2888

www.lagrandeautorepair.com

MOSTADVANCED

TECHNOLOGYAVAILABLE

ACDelcoTSS

OREGON STATE POLICEArrested: Jerry Madison

Shelnutt, 37, unknown address,

/

UNION COUNTY SHERIFFArrested: Eric Lee Cavyell,

24, transient, was arrestedWednesday by the Baker CountySheriff's Office while lodgedin the Baker County Jail on aUnion County felony warrantcharging probation violation onan original charge of possessionof methamphetamine.

Cited: Leroy Lopez-Urenda,21, Umatilla, was cited in lieu oflodging Wednesday on a chargeof driving while suspended(misdemeanor).

Cited: Two minors werecited into juvenile Wednesdayfollowing a report of a fight atLa Grande High School. Thejuveniles were cited on chargesof second-degree disorderlyconduct.

Accident: No one was injuredWednesday night in a crash near64593 Mt. Glen Road.

TINIHwREGKtI)

SHOW T IMES 541-963-3866

TRANSPORTER REFUELED(PG-I3)

STRAIGHTOUTOF COMPTON(R)

lagrandemovies.com

Fri, Mon-Wed: 4:00, 6:5, 9:20Sat-Sun: I:20, 4:00, 6:50, 9:20

Fri, Mon-Wed: 4:10, 7:00, 9:20Sat-Sun: I:40, 4:10, 7:00, 9:20

Fri, Mon-Wed: 4:20, 7:30Sat-Sun: I:10, 4:20, 7:30

I

PUBLIC SAFETY REPORT

Financial Advisor

1910 Adams AveP 0 Box BBOLa Grande, OR 97B50541-963-0519www.edwardjones.com

Gary FAnger, AAMS®

Make yourfinancialfuture apriority.

was arrested Aug. 27 on chargesof driving under the influenceof intoxicants, reckless drivingand three counts of recklesslyendangering another person.

Arrested: J.R.R. Wise, 52, LaGrande, was arrested Aug. 28on a charge of driving under theinfluence of intoxicants.

Cited: Michael RayWomack,25, Island City, was cited oncharges of unlawful taking of agame bird (closed season), fail­ure to immediately validate biggame tag and second-degreecriminal trespass.

Arrested: Brandon DavisMarth, 25, Redmond, was ar­rested Sept. 3 on a charge of

MAKING SENSE OF INVESTING

Edwardjones'

driving under the influence ofintoxicants.

Arrested: Sandra Sue Fitzger­ald,68, unknown address, wasarrested Sept. 4 on charges ofdriving under the influence ofintoxicants and reckless driving.

LA GRANDE FIREAND AMBULANCE

Crews responded to 13 medi­cal calls Wednesday and fivemedical calls and a smoke alarmon Thursday.

Come HelpCelebrate

'5~ l 0.

Saturday, Sept. 121p.m. to 3p.m.

JRCKPOÃC

t the Riuerside Park Pauition

Wilbur "Kansas" DariusBowman, 100, of La Grande,passed away ai a local care fa­ciliiy on Tuesday, September

I 8, 2015. A Funeral Servicewill be held ai the La GrandeChurch of the Nazarene onTuesday, September 15th ai2:00pm.

Wilbur was born October19, 1914 in Hamlin, KansasIo Elmond and Sarah (PecklBowman. He moved from

the farm in Kansas in 1938 Io Boulder, Colorado and then IoLa Grande in 1975. He attended school through 8th Gradein MoITell Park, Kansas. He served our country while in theUnited States Army from 1941 — 1945. He manied LeonaHarfst of Boulder, Colorado on October 19, 1944 in Antioch,California where he was stationed ai Camp Stoneman.

Wilbur grew up farming in Kansas. After he moved IoColorado, he worked for McKee Motors and later managed

the roller skating rink before entering the United StatesArmy. After Pearl Harbor, he served for 3 years in Panama,

where he was in charge of the motor mechanic school and

taught automotive classes. Upon his discharge, he wasthe manager ai Crouch Motors Co and Hollister Motor inBounder, CO and was in a partnership of Blue MI. Motors inLa Grande.

Wilbur received many Master Technician awards in theautomotive field. He enjoyed working on cars and spent ayear traveling across the United States and Alaska with theirtrailer. He bowled many years on a league in Boulder, Colo­rado. He also enjoyed the coast, fishing and camping andspending time with his family. Wilbur was a member of theChurch of the Nazarene where he served as church Treasureron the board and head usher for many years. He also was

a member of the American Legion, National Rifleman As­sociation and Good Sam Club.

Wilbur is survived by his daughters, Jan Kohr and herhusband Tom and Donna Vanderpool boih of La Grande,

Oregon; sister, Lela Omia of Grand Rapids, Michigan;grandchildren, Rhonda Nay of Union, Oregon, Kevin Kohrof Union, Oregon and Jason Vanderpool of Juneau, Alaska;4 great grandchildren; 2 great-great granddaughters and

numerous nieces and nephews. He was preceded in death by

his parents, Elmond and Sarah; wife, Leona; sisters, MableBowman, Myrtle Williams, Maudie Punion and Lila Bow­man; brothers, Marvin and Clarence; great-granddaughter,

MacKenzie Kohr and son-in-law, Ken Vanderpool.In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions can be made Io

the Nazarene Compassionate Ministries, in care of LovelandFuneral Chapel, 1508 4th Street, La Grande, OR 97850.

Online condolences may be made Io the family ai www.lovelandfuneralchapel.com.

Joe Horst

• 0 • • 0 • • 0 •

Page 4: La Grande Observer Daily Paper 09-11-15

THE

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 2015SERVING UNION AND WALLOWA COUNTIES SINCE I666

The Observer

OUR VIEW ...W'lvhTHv LILTs~Towseol4aow s. Rsru~wr wo pgppogw,C'ivll- hlSQPIN(6 FmS'P c g lIIC-;MoN+oF 'PgRSoNN FAI'Tg,THSRS. tS I4O I.oNSBR ASLNIM.S QilP&E t.&F'T IIl O~~ON+o FFPF~RM WSPPIQC& m ANY YlNP. GAI >RGYIEA l&HY-.ew oo

san ar sOO 1 eB

Sgg~'? PIP~'r I TRL-L Y>~

FAINr~~ INstITIITIaaCI= tAARRLASKP!P

gANE-6CX N~POINS> gouM MIVINI­HNNN...

New rules for food manufacturers in the UnitedStates released Thursday are a good, optimisticfirst step regarding an ongoing problem.

The new mandates — set for execution laterthis year — will compel food producers to fashionsafety blueprints for the government to outlinethe methods they use to ensure cleanliness andthat they are aware of the potential risk associatedwith the particular food they manufacture. Theblueprints also are designed to outline procedures

to best handle food and protect against dangerousbacteria like E.coli.The new rules are calculated to create a better

prevention fail-safe system in an industry that hasfaced a number of food recalls and deadly food­

borne outbreaks over the past few decades. TheCenters for Disease Control and Prevention, forexample, projects that more than 40 million peoplebecome ill annually from hazardous food maladies.A salmonella outbreak linked to a Georgia peanutfirm in 2009 killed nine people and sickened hun­

dreds of people across more than 40 states.The only potential downside to the new govern­

ment rules revolve around mandates for farm­ers growing produce. Under the new mandates,farmers will be required to take better precautionsagainst contamination including ensuring irriga­tion water is clean and animals stay out of fields.At first glance those decrees seem to fall underthe common sense category. Yet in many ways, theagriculturists of this nation already face an ar­

ray of rules and regulations that can potentiallyhurt business. Adding yet another set of directivesfor small- and mid-sized farmers to adhere too is

usually never a good thing, though in this case therules are probably a necessity.

Food safety in America has, for a long time, beenan issue taken for granted. Assumptions and highhopes regarding food safety, however, proved to beillusionary in the wake of one dangerous disease

outbreak linked to our food after another occurred.Despite the best intentions of these regulations,

however, nothing is foolproof. Consumers shouldtake their own precautions to wash fresh produce,avoid cross contamination and adequately cookmeat. Government regulations can assure 100percent safety.

More government regulations, more govern­ment intrusion is usually a bad idea. Yet in this

case, unfortunately, government oversight and theinclusion of a new set of standards to ensure our

food supply remains safe is the right move at theright time.

"It is a sordid business, this divvyingus up by race."

— Supreme Court ChiefJustice John Roberts

Sordid, always. And sometimes lethal,as some Native American children couldattest, were they not, like Declan Stew­art and Laurynn Whiteshield, dead.They were victims of the Indian ChildWelfare Act iICWAl, which as construedand applied demonstrates how identitypolitics can leave a trail ofbroken bodiesand broken hearts.The 1978 act's advocates say it is

not about race but about the rights ofsovereign tribes, as though that distinc­tion is meaningful. The act empowerstribes to abort adoption proceedings, oreven take children from foster homes,solely because the children have even aminuscule quantum of American Indianblood. Although, remember, this act issupposedly not about race.

The most recent case to reach theU.S. Supreme Court concerned a childwho was 1.2 percent Cherokee. TheGoldwater Institute, the Phoenix thinktank whose litigators are challengingthe ICWA's constitutionality, says "hernearest full-blooded Indian ancestorlived in the time of George Washing­ton's father."

Children's welfare, which is para­mount under all 50 states' laws, issacrificed to abstractions such as tribal"integrity" or"coherence." The Goldwa­ter litigators say that guidelines fromthe U.S. Bureau of Indian Affairs tellcourts that in determining foster care oradoption,"Placement in an Indian homeis presumed to be in the child's bestinterest."The ICWA forbids blockingplacement in an Indian home becauseof poverty, substance abuse or "noncon­forming social behavior," according to aGoldwater report.

The ICWA was passed to prevent areal abuse, the taking of Indian childrenfrom their homes without justifiablecause. But by protecting tribal sover­eignty without stipulating the primaryimportance of protecting the best in­terests of the children, the rights of the

e oo -s ainee are c

tribes have essentially erased those ofthe children and the parents who wishto adopt them.

Declan Stewart was 5 when he wasbeaten to death by his mother's live-inboyfriend. Declan had been removedfrom her custody by Oldahoma stateofficials in 2006, after his skull had beenfractured and he received severe bruis­ing between his testicles and rectum.But when the Cherokee Nation objectedto his removal, Oldahoma, knowing howthe ICWA favors tribal rights, relented.Declan was killed a month after beingreturned to his mother.

From age 9 months until she wasalmost 3, Laurynn Whiteshield andher twin sister were in the foster careof Jeanine Kersey-Russell, a Methodistminister in Bismarck, N.D. But whenKersey-Russell tried to terminate thetwins' parents' rights in order to adoptthem, the Spirit Lake Sioux tribe in­voked the ICWA and the children weresent to the reservation and the custodyof their grandfather. Thirty-seven dayslater, Laurynn died after being throwndown an embankment by her grandfa­ther's wife, who had a record of neglect­ing, endangering and abusing her ownchildren. Laurynn's sister was returnedto Kersey-Russell.

Laura and Pete Lupo of Lynden,Wash., raised Elle, who was less than2percent Cherokee and who came tothem at age 14 months from a motherwho was a drug addict and a father whowas in prison. When Elle was 3, heruncle objected to the Lupos adoptingher, and she was given to him.

By treating children, however attenu­ated or imaginary their Indian ancestry,as little trophies for tribal power, theICWA discourages adoptions by parentswho see only children, not pawns ofidentity politics. The Goldwater In­stitute hopes to establish the right ofIndian children to be treated as all otherchildren are, rather than as subordinate

GEORGEWILLSYNDICATED COLUMNIST

Write to usLETTERSTOTHE EDITORThe Observer welcomes lettersto the editor. Letters are limitedto 350 words and must be signedand carry the author's address andphone number (for verificationpurposes only).We edit letters for brevity,grammar, taste and legal reasons.We will not publish poetry,consumer complaints againstbusinesses or personal attacksagainst private individuals. Thank­you letters are discouraged.Letter writers are limited to oneletter every two weeks.Email your letters to [email protected] or mailthem to La Grande Observer,14065th St., La Grande, Ore., 97850.

~i n pbpc~ t~ . coh

1BI1

to tribal rights."Is it one drop of blood that triggers

all these extraordinary rights?" askedChief Justice John Roberts duringoral arguments in a case involving theICWA. Indeed.

The most pernicious idea ever ingeneral circulation in the United Statesis the"one-drop rule," according towhich persons whose ancestry includesany black or Indian admixture areassigned a black or Indian identity. Infinal adoption hearings in Arizona, ajudge asks,"Does this child contain anyNative American blood?" It is revoltingthat judicial proceedings in the UnitedStates can turn on questions aboutgroup rights deriving from "blood."It has been a protracted, serpentine

path from Plessy v. Ferguson i1896l and"separate but equal" to today's racial

preferences. The nation still is stainedby the sordid business of assigninggroup identities and rights. This isdiscordant with the inherent individual­ism of the nation's foundational naturalrights tradition, which is incompatiblewith the ICWA. It should be overturnedor revised before more bodies and heartsare broken.

SUBSCRIPTION INFORMATION

SUBSCRIBE AND SAVENEWSSTAND PRICE: $1.00You can save up to 34% off the single-copy

be refunded upon request.

Subscription rates per month:By carnerBy motor carnerBy ma>l, Un>on CountyBy ma>l, Wallowa CountyBy ma>l, all other U.S

A division of

pnce with home delivery.Call 541-963-3161 to subscnbe.

Stopped account balances less than $5 w>ll

$8.50$9.50..$14..$14...$15

An independent newspaper founded in 1896

Western Communications Inc.

• 0 •

(USPS 299-260)

The Observer reserves the nght to adlust subscnpt>onrates by g>v>ng prepa>d andma>l subscnbers 30 daysnot>ce. Penod>cals postage pa>d at La Grande, Oregon97850. Publ>shed Mondays, Wednesdays and Fndays(except Dec. 25) byWestern Commun>cat>ons Inc.,1406 Rtth St., La Grande, OR 97850 (USPS 299-260)

COPYRIGHT © 2015 THE OBSERVERThe Observer retains ownership and copynghtprotection of all staff-prepared news copy, advertisingcopy, photos and news or ad illustrations. They maynot be reproduced without expliat pnor approval.

HE BSERVERPhone:

541-963-3161Toll free (Oregon):1-800-422-3110Fax: 541-963-7804Email:news©lagrandeobserver.comWebsite:www.lagrandeobserver.comStreet address:1406 F>fth St., La Grande

POSTMASTERSend address changes to:

The Observer, 1406 Fifth St.La Grande, OR 97850

Periodicals postage paid atLa Grande, Oregon 97850

• 0 •

Regional publisher........................Publisher/editor............................General manager/

STAFF

... Kari BorgenAndrew Cutler

Regional operations director.......Frank EveridgeCirculation director................Carolyn ThompsonAdvertising sales manager ....... Karrine BrogoittiOffice manager................................. Mona TuckAssistant editor............................... Kelly DucoleSports editor ................................. Josh BenhamSports writer/outdoor editor........... Ronald BondGo! editor/design editor ................. Jeff PetersenReporter........................................... Dick MasonReporter/photographer...........Cherise KaecheleMultimedia editor............................. Tim MusloeClassifieds .........................................Erica PerinCirculation acct.coordinator................................Tracy Robertson

Circulation district manager...... Zaq MendenhallCustomer service rep .................Cindie CrumleyMultimedia advertising rep...... Brant McWilliamsAdvertising representative...................Kelli CraftAdvertising representative..................Karen FyeGraphic designer supervisor........ Dorothy KaulzGraphic designer.......................Cheryl ChristianLead pressman....................................... TC HullPressman ......................................... Chris DunnPressman .......................................Dino HerreraDistribution center supervisor............. Jon SilverDistribution center........................Terry EveridgeDistribution center............................ Larra CutlerDistribution center.......................... Sally NeavesDistribution center.......................Jen Gentleman

• 0 •

Page 5: La Grande Observer Daily Paper 09-11-15

ATTACKSFRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 2015

Continued from Page 1A

the 3rd Battalion, like many Guardunits across the nation — was a solidunit filled with citizen-soldiers that fita broad age range. Guard life revolvedaround one weekend a month drillsand a two week training sessions in thesummer. The specter of war was alwaysfar away.In essence, before 9/11, a Guard

member could conceivably go his or herwhole career without hearing a shotfired in anger.Sept. 11, of course, changed all of that.By 2012, the 3rd Battalion was a

combat-tested unit with two deploy­ments to Iraq under its belt. The unitalso boasted a different kind of Guardsoldier, typically younger than in thepast.

Daniel Ishaug, who was a sergeantfirst class assigned to the 3rd Battalionin 2001, remembered it was evidentthat everything had changed when hearrived at work that morning.

"I walked into a beehive. I remem­ber everyone was running around in apanic. The phone was out of control allday. People calling up to get informa­tion," he said.

That night, Ishaug was assigned toman the armory until the next day. Atthe time he said he understood thatthe paradigm for citizen-soldiers hadchanged dramatically. Ishaug, who isnow a master sergeant and the mastertank gunner for the 3rd Battalion, ad­mitted the war transformed his unit.

'That event changed the Guard, butI don't think it was overnight. But themindset, and the training, the adrenalinfactor, because of the potential to go towar rose dramatically. But it did changethe Guard. It changed everything," hesald.

The 3rd Battalion deployed to north­ern Iraq in 2004 and went back to thecentral part of the war-torn nation in2010.

Ishaug, a La Grande resident whoserved two years in Iraq, said thedeployments made the Eastern OregonGuard unit more proficient.

'The battalion is a better unit becauseof the two deployments. Would we bebetter if we never deployed? I don'tthink so," he said.

Dean, who was a young lieutenantin the 3rd Battalion on 9/11, said thesubsequent decade-long war produced adifferent kind of Guardsman.

"In the days following 9/11, themilitary and the National Guard beganan era ofbuilding flexible and adaptiveleaders and soldiers. We didn't realize itat the time, but we had become rigid inour pursuit of perfection," he said.

Dean, who grew up and went to col­

r

!

Capt. Christopher Miller, La Grande, a member of Eastern Oregon's 3rd Bat­talion, 116th Cavalry works to bore-sight the 120 millimeter main gun on anM1A2 System Enhanced Program Abrams main battle tank at the OrchardCombatTraining Center in June. Miller joined theArmy National Guard afterhis initial enlistment in the Marine Corps was completed and said the war onterror created a more professionaland proficient citizen-soldier force.

lege in La Grande and deployed twiceto Iraq, said the war forced soldiers andcommanders to think in different waysover longer periods of tim e.

aWe needed to become quicker, moreagile, more ready and willing to changebased on the situation," he said.

Miller, also a La Grande resident,was still an enlisted man in the U.S.Marine Corps on 9/11. Eventually heserved his initial enlistment in theMarine Corps, entered civilian life andthen decided to join the Guard. His firstexperience with the Guard, he said, lefthim unsatisfied."It wasn't professional," he said.Miller left the Guard and then, when

the Defense Department began todeploy Guard units on a large scale toplaces like Afghanistan and Iraq, he de­cided to join the ranks of citizen-soldiersagain.

"I wanted to do my part. I felt Ineeded to be part of it," he said of thedeployments.

The Guard force that emerged after10 years of war, he said, producedan organization that was completelychanged.

"There was a great degree of focus on

LOCAL

discipline and training. From my per­spective, for the National Guard, as anorganization ithe War on Terror) gaveit a new relevance and credibility thatit didn't have on the national stage. Itmade the National Guard a professionalorganization," he said.

In short, the War on Terror and thedeployment of National Guard units tocombat zones ratchet up the stakes forsoldiers, especially leaders."Becoming an officer during a period

of conflict adds a certain level of serious­ness and an additional level of impor­tance to your job. You are responsiblefor leading soldiers and responsible fortheir welfare and it is sobering to know,OK, I will be leading soldiers in a warzone and my decisions, my proficiency,technical and tactical, may or may notlead to their death," Miller said. Milleralso deployed to Iraq during the war.

Ishaug said he noticed other changesin America since those dark days in thewake of 9/11.

"I think people are forgetting thenation was united then. We are not asunited now. The trade centers united usand it took a tragedy to do it, which issad," he said.

Pat Caldwell/F!s!Tbe Observer

' 's)

FIRES

CHARTERContinued ~om Page 1A

meeting and the ordinanceis going to be enacted in thesame meeting.

"iThe attorney) pointedout that the requirementfor a unanimous vote onlyapplies when you're doingit in one meeting," saidSfrope. He explained thatbecause the council did afirst reading at a previousmeeting,"a unanimous voteiis not required) in order tohave the ordinance effec­tive immediately."

Mayor Steve Clementswas the only one who votedagainst the ordinance.

On Thursday, Clementssaid he voted against thepresale ordinance for thesame reason he votedagainst the Oregon HouseBill 3400 ordinance, whichwould allow the city to optout of the production andsale of recreational andmedical marijuana.

"I believe the intent ofopting out or for the presalewas to make an impact onthe black market sales ofmarijuana," Clements said.'There's a lot of informa­tion and opinions floatingaround out there about rec­reational marijuana, andthe sooner we come to someresolution, the better it isgoing to be for everybody."

Clements said it is his

ROGERSContinued from Page 1A

also a La Grande Police De­partment detective, found thewoman believed to be Rogersjust before 3 p.m.

Perry said that evidence atthe scene is consistent withthat of a one-vehicle, singleoccupant accident. The victimand her vehicle were morethan 300 feet from WallowaLake Highway.

Harvey said there are noindications that the womanbelieved to be Rogers was avictim of a violent act.

'There were no signsof foul play. According torumors on social media, shewas murdered or kidnapped.There is absolutely noevidence to support thoserumors," Harvey said.

Perry said that Rogers' ve­hicle was difficult to see fromthe side of the highway andwould have been especiallyhard for drivers to spot. Adriver of a tall truck hugginga nearby guardrail mighthave been able to see it, thedetective said.

Perry said that whilestanding on the edge of theravine it was impossible withthe naked eye to even deter­mine if there was a vehicledown the steep slope.

aWe saw a white-coloredobject," Perry said.'Thenwe were able see the licenseplate with binoculars."

The license plate matched

If you goWhat: A candlelightvigil for Neli-CristinaRogersWhen: 7:45 p.m. tonightWhere: Max Square, LaGrande

said Perry, who is familiarwith the site because he grewup in Elgin.

The accident involving thewhite Ford pickup appearedto have occurred some timeago.

"Evidence indicates thatthe accident scene had beenin place for some time," Har­vey said.

Rogers had been missingsince the evening of June 19or the morning of June 20.

"I believe it is highly likelythat the accident occurredthe evening or morning shewent missing," Harvey said.

Much of the investigativework on the Rogers case wasdone by Sgt. Jason Hays ofthe La Grande Police Depart­ment. Hays was serving asa detective at the tim e ofRogers' disappearance. Hisrotation as a detective endedabout a week ago.

"He did an extremelycomprehensive investigationfor a missing person," Harveysaid."He exhausted everypossible lead."

Perry also said that Hays'work on the case played acritical role in helping locatethe woman believed to beRogers.

The search for Rogers wasexasperating because her

that of Rogers' vehicle, soPerry and Harris beganwalking down the steepravine to check it out. Therethey discovered what are be­lieved to be Rogers'remains.

The cab of the victim'struck was badly burned. Thefire was apparently causedby a ruptured fuel tank, caus­ing a blaze that damagedthe cab but not the bed of thepickup. The charring of thecab gave it a rusty black lookthat blended in with the en­vironment, making it harderto see, according to Lt. DerickReddington of the La GrandePolice Department.

Rope tow teams fiomUnion County Search andRescue and the La GrandeRural Fire Department werecalled in. The teams recoveredthe victim's vehicle at the bot­tom of the steep ravine.

The location was one of anumber Perry was checkingas a possible point of disap­pearance. He went to the site,near milepost 30, on Wednes­day because he suspectedit could be a place where avehicle could disappear offthe side of the road.

"There is no guard rail,"

whereabouts were a com­plete mystery.

"Nobody we talked to hadany idea of where she went,"Harvey said.

All that was known isthat she left La Grande latethe evening of June 19 orthe early morning of June20 with a full tank of gas,Harvey said.

The La Grande Police De­partment was assisted at theaccident scene by a deputymedical examiner with theUnion County Medical Ex­aminer program. Those whoprovided assistance in thesearch for Rogers includedthe Union County SherifFsOffice and the Oregon StatePolice.

The Oregon State Policeare now conducting an inves­tigation of the accident.

Rogers, who had movedback to La Grande in Mayafter living in Klamath Fallsfor several years, wa s lastseen with friends the nightshe disappeared, accordingto police. She was the motherof three sons, all of whomhave been adopted by otherfamilies. The eldest livesin Vancouver, Washington,while the younger two residewith their families in LaGrande.

Continued ~om Page 1A

Southeast Washington.Turner said the rain and

snow of Sept. 4-5 may havegiven the public the feelingthat fire was no longeranything to worry about."A lot of people saw the

rain and started celebrat­ing, thinking that the firewas over," Turner said. "Itis not over yet."

The Grizzly Bear Fireis 44 percent containedand has 457 people on it.Many of those individualsare clearing the areas nearroads ofbrush, fallen treesand other sources of firefuel. This will allow roadsto better serve as contain­ment lines, Turner said.

The Grizzly Bear Firestarted Aug. 13 and soonforced officials to issueevacuation notices to manypeople living in the vicinityof the fire. All evacuationnotices were liftedSaturday.

The closure area androad closures associatedwith the Grizzly Bear Com­plex Fire continue to be re­duced as containment linesare strengthened. A closuredescription and map ofthe reduced area and road

541-IltI3-88Il8 2I00 8EARCO LOOP, L/l GRAHN

Out What We haVe. r+oo~&earror tberami~

DOg get yOur QLDlTtLEND,,'

Slippers?

• • •

g , I I

' ot each month7:30 IM

Our Salute to our Veterans

• s• •

. Breakfast Date:September14

~ GRAN D E l809Gekeler Lane~ Ronde

'T Re t irenrent & Assisted Living WWWgranderondereliremenbCom

• • • •

• • • • •

closures are available at allUmatilla National Forestoffices as well as on theUmatilla National Forestwebsite, wwwfs.usda.gov/umatilla/, and forest Face­book page, www.facebook.com/UmatillaNF.

The Eagle Complexfires, burning 10 miles eastof Medical Springs, likethe Grizzly Bear Fire arealso proving to be stub­born. Many portions of the12,763-acre fire are sm ol­dering more vibrantly thanthey were last weekendafter being hit by rainfall.

aWe have more smokeswith the warmer and dryerweather. More smokes arepopping up," said KathyArnoldus, a public informa­tion officer for the EagleComplex fires.

Hot spots in the SullivanCreek area are now beingtackled with helicoptersdropping water.

The Eagle Complexfires, which were startedby lightning Aug. 10, arenow being fought under thedirection of a Type 4 inter­agency incident commandteam based at Lily Whiteguard station near EagleCreek. The fires are now 75percent contained and have78 people assigned to them.

THE OBSERVER — 5A

understanding that if thepresale were passed, themedical marijuana facili­ties in La Grande — Hwy30 Cannabis and EagleCap Dispensary — couldsell recreational marijuanain their facilities but in acompletely separate part ofthe building from the medi­cal marijuana.

"My assumption wasithe medical and recre­ational marijuana) wouldbe distinctly separate fromeach other," he said."If weallowed for presale, thedispensary would havetwo separate rooms, twoseparate point of sales,two separate supplies ofmaterials. There would betwo distinct businesses inone building. That, to myunderstanding, is what wevoted on."

Clements also said thepresale would have allowedfor seeds and plants — itwas extremely limitedinwhatthe dispensariescould have sold.

When Clements votedagainst the ordinance,Sfrope explained thatthere did not need to be aunanimous decision. CityCouncilor Gary Lillardthen requested the councilbe told about that informa­tion before taking the vote.Strope said it w as his

fault for not saying any­thing, but he hadn't"antici­pated the split vote."

La Grande

I

I I ' I ' I I• • • •

- ­ e l l ' ! •

• •I N S U R A N C E

www.valleyinsurance.com

• 0 • • 0 • • 0 •

Page 6: La Grande Observer Daily Paper 09-11-15

• •

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 2015

The Observer

HIGHLIGHTS

Awana begins soon atLa Grande First Baptist

The La Grande First BaptistChurch hosts weekly Awanameetings for kids in kindergartenthrough sixth grade. Awana is aglobal, nonprofit ministry commit­ted to the belief that the greatestimpact for Christ starts with kidswho know, love and serve Him.Awana resumes Sept. 23 withregistration at 6 p.m. The clubmeets Wednesdays from 6:15 p.m.to 8 p.m. September through April.Activities include games, awardsand Bible memorization. There isno cost to attend and children mayjoin at at time. For more infor­mation call Laura McManus at541-963-5481.

Presbyterians celebratesecond Season of Creation

The second in the Season ofCreation series will be celebratedduring the 9:30 a.m. Sunday wor­ship service at the First Presby­terian Church in La Grande. Theaim of the series is to inspire us totreasure the many blessings humanbeings receive as part of and in rela­tion to the whole creation, as well asrepent of the ways our species hasmistreated our fellow creatures andmisused the waters, earth and sky.Pastor Keith Hudson will lead theservice and his sermon, "ServingOver and Under and With," will bebased on Genesis 1:26-28, 2:4-7 and

The sermon at Faith Lutheran

Mark 10:41-45.The church will host a vocal

workshop open to all from 10 a.m.to 2 p.m. Sept. 26. Participants arereminded to bring a sack lunch.

Men's breakfast groupstudies Proverbs

COVE — The Grace CommunityLutheran Church worship servicebegins at 10 a.m. Sunday. PastorCarl SeelhofI"s sermon title will be"Justified by God."Adult Sundayschool meets at 9 a.m. Fellowshipfollows the service.

The men's Bible study and break­fast begins the study of Proverbsthis Thursday at 7:30 a.m. All arewelcome to attend. Transportationis available for all church activities.

3esus brings peace andhealing is sermon topic

Church this Sunday will be basedon Mark 9:14-29. These verses tellof a group of people who had beenarguing and how Jesus' presenceamong them brought peace andhealing. In La Grande, Sundayschool and adult Bible study beginat 8:45 a.m. followed by a MatinsService at 10 a.m. A Divine Servicewill be held at 2 p.m. at 409 Main inEnterprise.

Wesleyan Circle meetsMonday at noon

Church will join together at 10 a.m.Sunday to celebrate Christ withFood Share Sunday as part of theoffering. Pastor Steve Wolff will talkabout our involvement with othersin his sermon titled "Communityof Companionship." Following theservice is a time of fellowship andcoffee. While child care is provided,all are welcome in our service.

The Wesleyan Circle will meetwith a potluck at noon Monday. Allare invited to join with the group.

Indoor Park has resumed for thefall. Preschool children and theircaregivers are invited to m ake useof the indoor space Monday throughThursday from 9 a.m. to 11:30 a.m.

Saturday service focuseson parable of Matthew 25

This Saturday at the Seventh­day Adventist 11 a.m. service in LaGrande, Pastor Mike will exploreJesus' Parable of the Ten Virgins inMatthew 25. The focus will be onthe parable's implications regardingthose who are saved and the recep­tion of the special outpouring of theHoly Spirit in this world's last daysprior to Jesus'return.

On Saturdays mornings at9:30 a.m. and Wednesday nights at7:30 p.m., Pastor Mike presents aseries oflessons focusing on how theprophecies in Daniel and Revelationexalt Jesus as their grand fulfill­ment. These lessons capture theheart of Seventh-dayAdventism.

Episcopal book clubmeets Sunday evening

St. Peter's Episcopal Church inLa Grande will observe the 16thSunday after Pentecost with HolyEucharist at 9 a.m. The Rev. Kath­ryn Macek will preside and preach.

The book club will meet Sundayat 6 p.m. in the parish hall. Thoseattending are asked to bring asnack to share.

Morning Prayer is offered Tues­days and Thursdays at 8:30 a.m. inthe chapel. A midweek Eucharist isoffered Wednesdays at 12:15 p.m.,also in the chapel.

Rides available forTuesday senior lunch

UNION — Pastor Sue Peepleswill speak on"Growing and Prun­ing the Branches" at the 11 a.m.service this Sunday at the Method­ist Church in Union.

A potluck and administrationcouncil meeting will follow the ser­vice. Vision team will meet Sept. 20.

Weekly programs for communityparticipation include Tuesday'ssenior lunch at noon. This weekthey are having a roast pork dinner.Anyone who needs assistance ingetting there may call 541-562-5848a day in advance.

The Wednesday Prayer Meeting isweeldy from 5 p.m. to 6 p.m. Prayerrequests may be called in to 541-562­5848 if you are unable to attend. Thecongregants also pray daily for those

Zion congregation takesgroup photo Sunday

SubmissionsChurches and faith-basedgroups are encouraged tosubmit Highlights for theSpiritual Life page by 4 p.m.Tuesday for publication Friday.Submit by email to [email protected] (withHighlights in the subject line),by fax to 541-963-7804, or byhand to the office.

needing God's healing as well as forthose on the Grande Ronde PrayerLine i541-786-PRAY).

Thursday Bible study was sus­pended for the summer and has notyet resumed.

Nonprofit organizations thatwish to fundraise at the church'sBizarre Bazaar planned for Nov. 21.should call 541-562-5848 or -5675

Zion Lutheran Church inLa Grande will celebrate the 16thSunday after Pentecost with Com­munion Worship at 9:30 a.m. withPastor Colleen Nelson. Immediatelyafter the service a group picturewill be taken. Fellowship follows at10:30 a.m., during which a reportwill be given on the churchwideYouth Gathering in Detroit, whichwas attended by Pastor ColleenNelson and Elie Emerson.The La Grande United Methodist

Poll: US Catholics, Church views diverge on divorce, gay marriageited with a romantic partnerwithout being married,"most American Catholicsare comfortable with familyarrangements that havebeen traditionally frownedupon by the church," accord­ing to a new poll by the PewResearch Center.

A majority of U.S. Catho­lics "say it is at least'accept­able' ... for children to beraised by unmarried parents,gay or lesbian parents, singleparents or divorced parents,"Pew reported Tuesday.

The extensive findings sug­gest that the Catholic Churchin the United States couldbenefit from Francis'inclusivestyle of evangelization, no­table for its outreach to thosewho feel marginalized.

About three-fourths ofex-Catholics and marginalor "cultural" Catholics viewFrancis as "compassionate,humble and open-minded,"the study showed.

Pew senior researcher Jes­sica Martinez said Francis'visit inspired the timing of

the survey, which queried1,016 self-identified Catholicsby phone between May 5 andJune 7.

After stops in Cuba, Wash­ington, and New York City,Francis visits Philadelphiaon Sept. 26 and 27 as a con­clusion to the Vatican's WorldMeeting of Families, whichopens Sept. 22.

''We felt this would be a

good time to do a deeper diveon Catholic attitudes on thefamily, since he iFrancisl willprobablybe talking about

this," Martinez said.The World Meeting of

Families Congress, expectedto draw 17,000 people to theConvention Center, is a majorvenue for the church to shareits family-values teachings.

In mid-October, Francis willconvene hundreds ofbishopsfrom around the world to aSynod on the Family in Rome,to discuss ways the churchcan better serve or welcome"irregular" family arrange­ments. On Tuesday, Francissignaled his intention to

draw still more back into thefold with his announcementthat for a year, women whohave had abortions may seekforgiveness from a priest, andthen receive Communion,without having to seek rein­statement from a bishop, assome dioceses require.

Among the synod topics iswhether the church should­or even can — allow divorcedand remarried people whohave not won annulmentsto receive Communion, fromwhich they are now barred.

By David O'ReillyThe Philadelphia Inquirer

PHILADELPHIA — PopeFrancis' arrival in Philadel­phia this month comes asRoman Catholicism is losingsome of its hold among youngAmericans, a new nationalsurvey finds, and when manyCatholics disagree with theirchurch on a broad array offamily teachings.

With more than a quar­ter of American Catholicsdivorced, and 44 percentreporting they have cohab­

I I

CHURCH OF CHRIST(A descriplron not a title)

P.O. Box 2602107 Gekeler Lane, La Grande 805-5070

First Christian Church(Disciples of Christ)

(an ELCA church)

Zion LutheranChurch

SonRiseCommunity Church

Website; www.lgcofc.org901 Penn Avenue 963-2623

web: firstchristianlagrande.orl.

Worship 10:00 a.m.

Sunday School 9:30 amSunday Worship 10:30 amSunday Evening 6:00 pmNo meeting on 3rd Sun. night of month

Wednesday Night SmaII Group: 7:00 pm

Preacher: Doug Edmonds

CovE UNITEDMETHoDIsT CHURcH1708 Jasper SI., Cove, OR

NoRTH PowDER

METHoDIsT CHURcH390 E. SI., North Powder, OR

JOIN US... Catch the Spirit!Worship: 9:00 a.m. Cove

Worship: 10:00 a.m. N. Powder

Adventist ChurchA place where hope6foundrn jesm

9:30 a.m. - B>ble Study/Fellowsh>p10:45 a.m.- Worsh>p Serv>ce

Pastor: Mike Armayor

Learningfor Today and Eternily

lk GIIIUIDE

Join us in Fellowship 8c Worship Every Saturday

2702 Adams Avenue, La Grande • 963-4018

www. lngrande22adventistchurchconnect.org

La Grande Seventh-day

Call for locntion

UNITED

-Join us at The Lord's Table­

Sunday Worship 10:00 amWednesday Night 6:15 pm

Kingdom Kids - Youth in Action

"...where you can begin again"

FIRST LANDMARKMISSIONARY BAPTIST

Sunday School — 10:00 amWorship I I:00 am

601 Jefferson Ave., La Grande

(541) 963-4342

CHURCH2707 Bearco Loop

Pastor Dave Tierce • 541-605-0215We use the King James Version Bible

CrossroadsCommunity Church

SIXTH 8c SPRING • 963-3911

eee.zionlagrande.org

First Baptist Church

507 P a lmer Av ej (usl easl o f ci~ po o l )

Sun. 8:45 AM — Bible ClassesQuilding TagetherQn ChristAlone

Sun. 10:00 AM — WorshipWed. 6:15 PM — AWANA

V AL L E Y

Pastor: Rev. Colleen Nelson

9 63-0 3 4 0

S unday % 'o r sh i p 1 0 :0 2 a m

Come and share in a t ime of wor­ship, prayer and the study of God's

word with us. Worship inc ludes

F EL L O W SH I P

k, 902 Fourth Street,7s/QN La Grande, oR

9:30 am- Worship

10:30 am - Fellowship & Refreshments11:00 am - Classes

• R4I4 (541) 963-5998

541-562-5531

NAZARE N E109 1Sth Street • 963-3402Sunday School 9 ' .15 a.m.Sunday Worship 10'.30 a.m.

Baptist Church

Seventh Day Adventist Church

2702 Adams Ave, La Grande

Holding Services ac

Saturday 5:00 pm MassSunday 7:00 am & 9:00 am MassWeekday Ic:00 am Mass

Sunday 6:00 pm MassWednesday 6:00 pm Mass

Elgin - Saint Mary's - 12th and Alder

Union - Sacred Heart - 340 South 10th Avenue

La Grande - Our Lady of the Valley - 1002 L Avenue

ROMAN CATHOLICCHURCH SERVICES

Christian Preschool/Childcare 963-6390La Crande Adventist Cbristian School

Christian Education K-8th Grade 963-6203

Little Friends

"Where you can Jind TRUTH according to the scriptures"

Sunday Evening Bible Study — 5:00 pmWednesday Evening — 6:30 pm

www,flmbclagrande,com

GRACE BIBLECHURCH

(541) 663-0610

1114 Y Avenue, La Grande(Corner of 'Y" Avenue and N Birch Street)

9 am Sunday School11 am Worship

Exalting GodEdifying Believers

Evangelizing Unbelievers

® SUMMERVILLE

communion on Sunday.

www.valleyfel.org

Wednesday:

Sunday Services:Sunday School k Adult Bible ClassesChildren's Church k Worship ServiceFamily Worship Service

Prayer Mtg, Children's Bible Club, Youth Group 7:00PM

Email: church 0 valleyfel.org

BAPTIST CHURCH

9:45AMn:00AM6:00PM

Come Celebrate

Union

Po Box 3373(541) 663-1735

Regular services 9:00 amSunday School Classes

1531 S. Main St., Union

S unday School 9:45 a mMorning Worship 11 amSunday Night 6 pmWednesday Night 6:30 pmThursday AWANA 6 :30 pm

the Lord with us!

LA GRANDE UNITEDMETHODIST CHURCH

1612 4th Street — 963-2498

IgumcC eoni.com www.lgumchurch.orgOffice Hours: Mon-Thur 9am-Noon

"OPEN HEARTS, OPEN MINDS, OPEN DOORS"

Pastor Steve Wolff

10:00 am Sunday Worship Service

CHURCH OF THE

440 RUcKMAN, IMBLER 534-2201

Sunday I I:00 am MassThursday 6:00 pm Mass

Sunday Please call54l-963-734lTuesday 6:00 pm Mass

North Powder - Saint Anthony's - 500 E Street A church for your whole family

Visit us at summervillebaptistchuzh.org

Worship 10:00 amFellowship Coffee Hour I I:00 am

Sunday Services

IMBLERCHRISTIAN

CHURCH

A Southern Baptist Church.

Roger Cochran, Pastor

- Nursery provided­

BAPTIST CHURCH• 9:45 AM Sunday Bible Study• 11 AM Sunday Worship• I PM Wednesday Prayer Service

You are invited to join us as we search Scripture foranswers to Life Questions — come, enjoy warm fellowship.

2705 Gekeler Lane, La Grande

541-910-5787 541-963-7202www.trinitybaprisrlagrande.com

9:00 a.m. Sunday School10:00 a.m. Worship Service

GRACE COMMUNITYLUTHERAN CHURCH

[email protected]

502 Main Street In Cove(m the Seventh Day Advennst Church bu>ldmg)

"We are called to Serve"Sunday School for all ages - 9:00 am

Sunday Worship 10:00 amPastor Carl Aeelhoff

Phone: 541-805-0754

LCMC

Solus Chnstus, Sofa Scrrp<ura, Sofa Graua, Sofa Fide, SoA Deo Glona

• 0 •

Page 7: La Grande Observer Daily Paper 09-11-15

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 2015

The Observer

11FIIiiiaV

SEPTEMBER

• 21st Annual Grande Ronde AmateurGolf Tournament: noon; La Grande CountryClub, 10605 S. McAlister Lane, Island City.

• Acoustic Fiddlers Music Jam: 6:30 p.m.;LG Brewskis, 267 S. Main St., Union.

• Baby Tot Bop: 10:30 a.m.; Cook MemorialLibrary, 2006 Fourth St., La Grande.

• Chair Exercise Class: 10 a.m.; UnionCounty Senior Center, 1504 N. Albany St.,La Grande.

• Free Children's Clinic: free health carefor children without medical insurance;9 a.m.-noon; Grande Ronde HospitalChildren's Clinic, 612 Sunset Dr., La Grande.

• Hells Canyon Mule Days: all day; WallowaCounty Fairgrounds, 668 Northwest FirstStreet, Enterprise.

• 'Little Shop of Horrors': 7:30 p.m.; $9-$18;Elgin Opera House,104 N. Eighth.

• Lower Valley Farmers Market: noon­6 p.m.;Telephone Building,301 E. First St.,Wallowa.

• PFLAG Board Game Night: 6 p.m.; BearMountain Pizza, 2104 Island Ave., La Grande.

• Union County Fuzzball Animal RescueFundraiser Garage Sale & Raffle: benefitsnew Union County Spay/Neuter/Release(SNR) program; 7 a.m.-1 p.m.; 907 G Ave.,La Grande.

• Wallowa Mart: 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Fourth BrMadison, Wallowa.

• Wallowology Discovery Walk: 9 a.m.;Wallowology Center, 508 N. Main St., Joseph.

• Wingville Cemetery Dedication & DARMeeting: 10:30 a.m., historicWingvilleCemetery,10 miles northwest of Baker Cityoff Highway 7; followed by lunch 11:30 a.m.meeting at Sunridge Restaurant, Baker City.

Street, Enterprise.• Wallowa Mart: 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Fourth Br

Madison, Wallowa.

14 MOIIDAV• Bridge: 1 p.m.; Union County Senior Center,

1504 N. Albany St., La Grande.• Chair Exercise Class: 10 a.m.; Union

County Senior Center, 1504 N. Albany St.,La Grande.

• Community Symphonic Band: 7 p.m.;Loso Hall, Room 126, EOU, La Grande.

• Indoor Park: free indoor play space opento preschool children and their caregivers.;9-11:30 a.m.; United Methodist Church,1612Fourth St., La Grande.

• Lions Club: noon; Union County SeniorCenter, 1504 N. Albany St., La Grande.

• Live Music by Dennis Winn: 11 a.m.; UnionCounty Senior Center, 1504 N. Albany St.,La Grande.

• Ultimate Frisbee: 5 p.m.; Elgin CommunityCenter field, 260 N. 10th.

• Union County Children's Choir: 4:30 p.m.;Loso Hall, Room 123, EOU, La Grande.

• Willow School Open House: 6 p.m.;WillowSchool, 1305 N. Willow St., La Grande.

Celebrating La Grande

y' lkI kllf,ttctr/SicpplC.crg

Next Step Pregnancy Center was one of several nonprofits that participated inCelebrate La Grande on Thursday. Despite the simple items Next Step brought forfamilies, it was a popular and fun site to take photos at.

Wallowa.• Ready 2 Learn: age 7 Br younger; 2 p.m.;

Wallowa Library.• Red Cross Blood Drive: 6 p.m.-noon; LDS

Church,1802 Gekeler, La Grande.• TOPS (Take Off Pounds Sensibly):

fragrance-free venue; 8 a.m.; Island City CityHall, 10605 Island Ave.

• Union Senior Lunch: noon; UnitedMethodist Church.

• Wallowa County Caregivers: 3 p.m.;Enterprise VFW Hall, 800 N. River St.

• Wallowa Valley Orchestra: 6:30 p.m.;Enterprise High School, music room, 201 SEFourth St.

MHilklE == G- ~ ,

Cherise Kaechele/The Observer

IFRIDAV

Q SaTIIIIiiaV• 21st Annual Grande Ronde Amateur

Golf Tournament: 8 a.m. 5.1 p.m.;La Grande Country Club,10605 S. McAlisterLane, Island City.

• Eagle Cap Excursion Wine & CheeseTrain: 3 p.m .; $35.00- $70.00; Elgin Depot,300 Depot Street.

• Hells Canyon Mule Days: all day; WallowaCounty Fairgrounds, 668 Northwest1stStreet, Enterprise.

• Joseph Farmers Market: 10 a.m.-2 p.m.;Joseph Avenue Br Main Street.

• La Grande Farmers Market: 9 a.m.-noon.;Max Square, Adams Avenue Br Fourth Street.

• LEGO Play: 9 a.m.-noon; Cook MemorialLibrary, 2006 Fourth St., La Grande.

• 'Little Shop of Horrors'. 2:30 p.m. 5.7:30 p.m.; $9-$18; Elgin Opera House, 104 N.Eighth.

• Lower Valley Farmers Market: 11 a.m.­4 p.m.;Telephone Building,301 E. First St.,Wallowa.

• Music at the Market: Standard Deviationperforms; 9 a.m .-noon; Max Square,La Grande.

• Union County Fuzzball Animal RescueFundraiser Garage Sale & Raffle: benefitsnew Union County Spay/Neuter/Release(SNR) program; 7 a.m.-1 p.m.; 907 G Ave.,La Grande.

• Union County Historical Society Potluck& Meeting: noon; log cabin, Union CountyFairgrounds,3604 N. Second St., La Grande.

• Wallowa Mart: 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Fourth BrMadison, Wallowa.

I TIIESDAV

I WEDIIESDAV

• Bingo: 6:30 p.m.; Union County SeniorCenter, 1504 N. Albany St., La Grande.

• Cove Fresh Food Alliance: 10 a.m.; UnitedMethodist Church.

• Eastern Oregon Counties Association,with special guest Greg Walden:1:30 p.m.;Alumni Room, EOU, La Grande.

• Greg Walden Wildfire Town Hall: 11 a.m.;Wallowa County Senior Center, 702 NW FirstSt., Enterprise.

• Indoor Park: free indoor play space opento preschool children and their caregivers.;9-11:30 a.m.; United Methodist Church,1612Fourth St., La Grande.

• Island City Elementary Open House:6 p.m.; Island City Elementary School, 10201W. Fourth St.

• La Grande Farmers Market: 3:30-6 p.m.;Max Square, Fourth Street and AdamsAvenue.

• Live Music by Blue Mountaineers:11 a.m.; Union County Senior Center, 1504 NAlbany St., La Grande.

• Live Music by Dakota Brown: 8 p.m .;TenDepot Street, La Grande.

• Parkinson's Disease Support Group:4:30 p.m.; Grande Ronde Hospital Solarium,900 Sunset Dr., La Grande.

• Pinochle: 1 p.m.; Union County SeniorCenter, 1504 N. Albany St., La Grande.

• PowerfulTools for Caregivers: 10 a.m.;Wallowa Senior Center, 204 Second St.,

• AARP Smart Driver Class: 8 a.m.; $15AARP members, $20 nonmembers; WallowaCounty Senior Center, 702 NW First St.,Enterprise.

• Bingo: 6 p.m.;VFW High Valley Post 4060,518 N. Main St., Union.

• Central Elementary Open House: grades1-2 6-6:30 p.m., grades 3-4 6:30-7 p.m., grade5 7-7:30 p.m.; Central Elementary School, 402KAve., La Grande.

• Chair Exercise Class: 10 a.m.; UnionCounty Senior Center, 1504 N. Albany St.,La Grande.

• Dementia Support Group: noon;Wildflower Lodge Assisted Living andMemory Care, 50816th St., La Grande.

• Indoor Park: free indoor play space opento preschool children and their caregivers.;9-11:30 a.m.; United Methodist Church,1612Fourth St., La Grande.

• Intellectual & Developmental DisabilitiesForum: 6 p.m.; Center for HumanDevelopment, 2301 Cove Ave., La Grande.

• Live Music by Blue Mountaineers:11 a.m.; Union County Senior Center, 1504 N.Albany St., La Grande.

• Quilt Questers Monthly Meeting:6:30 p.m.; City Hall, Island City.

• Rotary Club of Wallowa County: noon;St. Katherine's Parish Hall,301 E. Garfield,Enterprise.

• Wallowology Kids' Day: 1 p.m.;Wallowology Center,508 N. Main St., Joseph

MENUS

]3 SliiliiaV

g TIIIIIISiiaV• 12 Aces Pinochle: 1 p.m.; Union County

Senior Center, 1504 N. Albany St., La Grande.• Bingo: 6:30 p.m.; La Grande American

Legion Post43,301 Fir St.• Blue Mountain Peggers Cribbage Club:

5:30 p.m.; $7; Denny's, 2604 Island Ave.,La Grande.

• Country Swing Thursday: 7:30 p.m.; $3before 8 p.m., $5 after 8 p.m.; Maridell Center,

1124Washington, La Grande.• Courthouse Concert Series: John Lilly,

country roots and Americana songwriterfrom West Virginia, performs; 5:30 p.m.;Wallowa County Courthouse square,Enterprise.

• Diabetes Prevention Program: 3:30 p.m.;Community Connection AdministrativeOffice, 2802 Adams Avenue, La Grande.

• Enterprise Farmers Market: 4-7 p.m.;Wallowa County Courthouse square.

• The EOScenes Reunion Concert:6:30 p.m.; $12; Pendleton Center for the Arts,214 N. Main St.

• Greenwood Elementary Open House:grades K-1 6-6:30 p.m., grades 2-3 6:30­7 p.m., grades 4-5 7-7:30 p.m.; GreenwoodElementary School, 2300 N. Spruce St.,La Grande.

• Indoor Park: free indoor play space opento preschool children and their caregivers.;9-11:30 a.m.; United Methodist Church, 1612Fourth St., La Grande.

• Live Music by Brent Smith & Friends:8 p.m.;Ten Depot Street, La Grande.

• Live Music by Fine Tunes: 11 a.m.; UnionCounty Senior Center, 1504 N. Albany St.,La Grande.

• Story & Crafts: for all ages; 11:30 a.m.;Cook Memorial Library, 2006 Fourth St.,La Grande.

• Wallowology Discovery Walk: 9 a.m.;Wallowology Center,508 N. Main St., Joseph.

UNION COUNTY SENIOR CENTERLUNCH MENUSEPT. 1418

MONDAY: spaghetti with meatballs, steamedvegetables, salad greens, garlic bread,dessert.TUESDAY: teriyaki chicken, noodles with basiland butter, steamed asparagus, salad greens,rolls, fruit.WEDNESDAY: pork roast, red potatoes,steamed vegetables Jell-O, rolls, bakedapples.THURSDAY: Cobb salad, tomato bisquesoup, bread.FRIDAY: bratwurst with sauerkraut and grilledonions, potato salad, salad greens, appleci'Isp.

• Baby Tot Bop: 10:30 a.m.; Cook MemorialLibrary, 2006 Fourth St., La Grande.

• Brews, Bikes & Bands: 3-10 p.m.; celebrateCycle Oregon with brews and live music byBlue Plate Special,youth fiddlers BrWhiskeyBarrel Rockers;"The Lot," Benchwarmer'sPub and Grill, 210 Depot St., La Grande.

• Chair Exercise Class: 10 a.m.; UnionCounty Senior Center, 1504 N. Albany St.,La Grande.

• Cove Senior Lunch: noon; $5; CalvaryBaptist Church,707 Main St.

• The EOScenes Reunion Concert:6:30 p.m.; $12; Pendleton Center for the Arts,214 N. Main St.

• Free Children's Clinic: free health carefor children without medical insurance;9 a.m.-noon; Grande Ronde HospitalChildren's Clinic, 612 Sunset Dr., La Grande.

• 'Little Shop of Horrors'. 7:30 p.m.; $9-$18;Elgin Opera House,104 N. Eighth.

• Lower Valley Farmers Market: noon­6 p.m.;Telephone Building,301 E. First St.,Wallowa.

• Oregon Food Pantry: 10 a.m.; Union BaptistChurch,1531 S. Main St.

• Swift Night Out: learn about the Vaux'sswifts migration from La Grande;5 p.m.; MaxSquare, Fourth Street and Adams Avenue, LaGrande.

• Wallowa Mart: 9 a.m.-noon; Fourth BrMadison, Wallowa.

• Wallowology Discovery Walk: 9 a.m.;Wallowology Center,508 N. Main St., Joseph.

• 21st Annual Grande Ronde AmateurGolf Tournament: 8 a.m.; La Grande CountryClub,10605 S. McAlister Lane, Island City.

• Hells Canyon Mule Days: all day; WallowaCounty Fairgrounds, 668 Northwest1st

Baker man accused of assaulting his mother, arrested on multiple chargesBy Chris Collins

Police arrested a BakerCity man Wednesday nighton charges that he assaultedhis mother by setting herhair on fire and squeezing

vvescom News serviceher neck with a pair of tongs.

Andrew Levi Myers, 37,was arrested at 6:40 p.m. athis mother's home on CherryStreet. He is being held atthe Baker County Jail.

District Attorney Matt

PACIFIC NORTHWEST

ShirtclifI'said Myers ischarged with one count of at­tempted first-degree assault,a Class B felony, for "inten­tionally" attempting to cause"serious physical injury" tohis mother, Sharon Myers.

Shirtcllf said Sharon Myersis 63 and uses a wheelchair.

Andrew Myers is chargedwith attempted second­degree assault, a Class Cfelony, for attempting to hurthis mother by trying to use a

pair of tongs to squeeze herneck, Shirtcliff said.

A charge of fourth-degreeassault constituting domesticviolence, a Class A misde­meanor, accuses AndrewMyers ofhitting his mother

with his closed fist.He also is charged with

harassment, a Class Bmisdemeanor. He is accusedof subjecting his mother tooffensive physical contactduring the incident.

Union County Farm BureauAULSKA, WASHINGTON, OREGON, IDAHO, MONTANA, UTAH

REACH 3 million Pacific Northt/pesterners withjust One Call!

• pNDG GLASSIFIED - Daily Newspapers29 newspapers - 1,187,980 circulationNumber of words: 25 • Extra word cost: $10Cost: $540 (Runs 3 consecutive days including wkds.)• PNDN 2x2 DISPLAY - Daily Newspapers27 newspapers - 1,016,864 circulationSize: 2x2 (3.25"x2") Cost: 1x 2x2: $1,050

RemindS You To

WATCHQUi

*IFU+Resgmnsilds

a ­ ~$~

The Stratton Agency

a

For Ag EquipmentOn the ROad

541/437-2700 • 800/225-2521

More info: CeceltaOcnpa com or call (916) 288-6011 ic on your sideNationwide'

//

Elgin • straiion-insurance.com

• 0 • • 0 • • 0 •

Page 8: La Grande Observer Daily Paper 09-11-15

Friday, September 11, 2015

The Observer

ON DECIC PREP GIRLS SOCCER

A number of fall

There will be an

SATURDAY• Prep volleyball:

La Grande at NorthMarion, 8 a.m.

• Union at CondonTournament, 9 a.m.

• Imbler, PowderValley, Cove at HelixTournament, 9 a.m.

• Joseph at NewMeadows, ID, noon

• Wallowa atEnterprise, noon

• Prep crosscountry:Enterprise/Joseph at AsotinXC Island RunInvite, Clarkston,Washington,9:45 a.m.

• College football:Eastern OregonUniversity atSouthern OregonUniversity, Ashland,1 p.m.

• College crosscountry: EasternOregon UniversityatTreasure ValleyCC Invite, TBA

• Collegevolleyball: EasternOregon Universityat NorthwestChristian University,Eugene, 5 p.m.

AT A GLANCE

Fall activitiesbegin soon

activities offered bythe City of La GrandeParks 8t Recreation areopen for registration.

Flag football forkids in first gradethrough sixth grade. Askills clinic is Sept. 12at Pioneer Park, andgames start Sept.26.The cost is $35 if reg­istered by Sept. 10.

A lotus self de­fense class beginsSept. 30., and thecost is $20.

A basic gymnasticsclass begins Sept. 18,and the cost is $100.

For more informa­tion, contact MinnieTucker at 541-962­1352, or email atmtucker@cityofla­grande.org.

Volleyballmeeting set

organizational meet­ing to map outofthe2015-16 women's vol­leyball league Oct. 5at 6 p.m. in the ParksDepartment confer­ence room at 2402Cedar Street.

Each team thatplans on participatingin the league mustsend a representativeto the meeting, andnew players lookingto form a team orjoin one are encour­aged to attend.

For more informa­tion, contact MinnieTucker at 541-962­1352, or email atmtucker@cityofla­grande.org.

The Observer

I see

s

Observer staff

r

r .ssr

• Union opens WapitiLeague play with hard­fought win over Elgin

The Eastern Oregon Universitywomen's basketball team will betested early and often during non­conference play this season, as headcoach Anji Weissenfluh released the2015-2016 schedule recently.

Out of the 12 nonconference gamesand exhibitions, 10 of them will beon the road and feature marqueematchups. Following a pair of scrim­mages, the Mountaineers' regularseason begins Nov. 6-7 in the Arizona

By Ronald Bond

A combined team effort with seem­ingly a different player stepping upwhen they needed to led to the UnionBobcats earning a win in its WapitiLeague opener.

Ellie Clark had 12 kills, DelanieKohr had 10 and Ashten Wright hadnine as the Bobcats held off Elgin25-19, 25-20, 22-25, 25-20 Thursday atElgin High School in the league openerfor both teams.

eNot one of us can do it ialonel. It has

La Grande's Alissa Welberg, white, scored two goals ineach half ofThursday's rout of Ontario.

momentum.

Observer file photo

Christian Classic in Phoenix.Eastern tangles with a NCAA Divi­

sion I opponent a week later when itheads north to face Eastern Wash­ington University in an exhibitionNov. 13 in Cheney. The Eagles madeit to the second round of the WNITlast season after defeating PAC-12'sWashington State University in thefirst round.

The Mounties take on WhitworthiWashingtonl University Nov. 15 inSpokane, a NCAA Division III team

Union'sAshtenWright, right, goes up for a kill attemptagainst Elgin's Shalynn Davidson, left, and CheyanneWil­helm during Thursday'sWapiti League matchup in Elgin.

to be all of us," Clark said."Startingwith the pass, then the set, and even ifwe don't get the kill, it's important forus to still maintain our composure andwork as a team."

The match was defined by playerson both sides coming through with atimely block, ace, or kill to regain the

In the end, the Bobcats had a fewmore key runs.

"Itwas areallygreatopportunity for usto start our tleaguel season," Clark said.

A kill by Kohr capped a 4-0 run toput Union ahead 13-8 in the open­ing set before Elgin rallied to take itsfirst lead. A stuffblock and a kill byShalynn Davidson were part of a 7-0Huskies' run for a two-point edge.

PREP VOLLEYBALL

Observer staff

Alissa Welberg scored fourgoals, Brittney Bertrand addedtwo more, and the La Grandegirls soccer team dominatedfiom start to finishing, thump­

WOMEN'S COLLEGE BASICETBALL

araueemmtc uSs ine women'ss atethat finished last season ranked No.24 in the country with a 21-5 record.On Nov. 18, Eastern hosts anotherDIII opponent, Whitman %ashing­tonl College, in the Mounties home

The Mounties travel all the wayto New Orleans, Louisiana, to faceXavier University and SouthernUniversity, Nov. 21 and Nov. 23, re­spectively. Eastern then heads to theLady Yote Classic in Caldwell, Idaho,for contests against University of

Union responded to take a 16-15lead on a kill by Wright. Later, anotherBobcat kill — this time from Clark­sparked a 6-2 run to end the set.

Union looked ready to run away withthe second set, as four straight acesfrom Clark put the Bobcats up 12-3. El­gin chipped away, drawing as close as20-18 on a kill from Karigan Wilhelm.But another kill from Clark swayedmomentum before a kill from Wrightfinished off the set.

The Huskies twice jumped out to afour-point lead early in the third set,then saw the advantage flipped, as aWright kill put Union up 21-17 to capa 15-7 run.

Elgin caught a break when a serveSee Wapiti/Fbge 9A

e er nets our oasin - routo ntario

ing Ontario in a nonleagueroad match 8-0 Thursday.

"She was just on," LaGrande head coach SamBrown said of Welberg."Hershot was on. I could tell in

• La Grande notches second straight dominant win to start 2015

Ronald Bond/The Observer

Montana-Western and Montana TechNov. 27 and 28.

The Mounties begin Cascade Col­legiate Conference action Dec. 1 atThe College of Idaho, and hold theirhome opener against Walla WallaUniversity Dec. 5. Eastern is comingoff a season in which it went 26-7overall and won the CCC regularseason title, earning a berth to theNAIA Division II National Champi­onships, where it fell to OklahomaWesleyan in the first round.

season

Tigersnab Firstwinof

warmups that she was strik­ing the ball well. She was onher game today."

Welberg tallied two goals ineach half. Her first goal off a

See Rout/Page 9A

Observer staff

Cristian Miramontesscored the go-ahead goalmidway through the secondhalf; Blaine Kreutz added aninsurance goal in the waningminutes, and the La Grandeboys soccer team notched itsfirst win of the season, outlast­ing Ontario 2-0 in a nonleagueroad battle Thursday.

awe like to see iOntarioland like to see what they'vegot," coach Wade Wright saidof getting an early nonleaguegame with the Greater Or­egon League rival.awe like tosee how we stack up."

La Grande actuallystacked up well when it cameto controlling the ball, pos­sessing it 65 percent of thetime and notching 11 shotson the afternoon.

But the match was score­less until Lewis Wright wasfouled near the top of the box.Miramontes, taking the freekick, bent the kick into thegoal in the 20th minute ofthe second half for a 1-0 lead.

La Grande weathered anOntario flurry following thegoal, then iced it when LewisWright found Kreutz for theclinching goal in the 38thminute.

Jon Gonzales saved allfour Ontario shots that cameon goal, many of which weretimely, Wade Wright said.

La Grande i1-2 overall)is off until Sept. 22 when ithosts Pendleton.

PREP BOYS SOCCER

opener.

TONIGHT'S PICIC WHO'S HOT WHO'S NOTOBSERVER ATHLETE OF THE DAY

The La Grande girls soccer team improved to 2-0on the young season with its second consecutive8-0 victory. Thursday's win came against Ontarioon the road, with midfielder Alissa Welberg ex­ploding on the offensive end. The senior tallied apair of goals in each half, finishing with four goalsin all. Welberg scored the game's first goal andalso scored on a penalty kick in the second half.

• 0 •

Senior lights up scoreboard in win Cougars facestiffest of tests

Fresh off a dominatingwin over Chiloquin, Wal­lowa tangles with Adrian,the defending Class 1Astate champ, in a premierprep football matchup.6 p.m., Adrian

ROBGRONKOWSKI:The New EnglandPatriots' tight endpicked up right where heleft off last year, hauling infive catches for 94 yardsand three touchdowns ina 28-21 victory over thePittsburgh Steelers.

Welberg

BRADAUS­MUS: The DetroitFree Press andWDIV-TV in De­troit both reportedThurs­day night, citing sources,that the DetroitTigers willdismiss the manager afterthe season finale. Detroitis 64-76 this season.

• 0 •• 0 •

Page 9: La Grande Observer Daily Paper 09-11-15

SPORTS THE OBSERVER — 9AFRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 2015

SCOREBOARD

W L Pot G B W CGB L1079 60 . 568 ­ ­ 6-477 61 . 558 1 ' /~ ­ 6-468 71 . 489 11 5 5-567 72 . 482 12 6 4-666 73 . 475 13 7 6-4

L Pot G B WCGB L 1056 .597 ­ ­ 3-767 .518 11 1 6-470 .496 14 4 6-472 .478 16'/~ 6' / ~ 6- 476 .457 19'/~ 9' / ~ 4- 6

W L Pot G B W CGB L1076 64 . 543 ­ ­ 4-673 66 . 525 2 ' /~ ­ 5-570 69 . 504 5 ' / ~ 3 5-568 73 . 482 8 ' / ~ 6 7-36 0 80 . 429 16 13' / ~ 4- 6

AMERICAN LEAGUEEast Division

TorontoNew YorkTampa BayBaltimoreBoston

St. LouisPittsburghChicagoMilwaukeeCincinnati

Kansas CityMinnesotaClevelandChicagoDetroit

New YorkWashingtonMiamiAtlantaPhiladelphia

HoustonTexasLos AngelesSeattleOakland

Los AngelesSan FranciscoArizonaSan DiegoColorado

AMERICAN LEAGUEAll Times PDT

Wednesday's GamesBaltimore 5, N.Y. Yankees 3Tampa Bay 8, Detroit 0Boston 10, Toronto 4Cleveland 6, Chicago White Sox 4Minnesota 3, Kansas City 2, 12 inningsHouston 11, Oakland 5L.A. Angels 3, L.A. Dodgers 2Seattle 6, Texas 0

Seattle 5, Texas 0Toronto at New York, ppd., rainCleveland 7, Detroit 5

Kansas City (D.Duffy 7-7) at Baltimore(M.Wright 2-4), 4:05 p.m.

Toronto (Estrada 12-8) at N.Y. Yankees(Nova 6-7), 4:05 p.m.

Boston (Miley 11-10) at Tampa Bay(Archer 12-11), 4:10 p.m.

Detroit (Verlander 3-7) at Cleveland(Co.Anderson 3-3), 4:10 p.m.

Oakland (Chavez 7-14) at Texas (Lewis14-8), 5:05 p.m.

Minnesota (E.Santana 4-4) at ChicagoWhite Sox (E.Johnson 1-0), 5:10 p.m.

Houston (Keuchel 17-6) at L.A. Angels(Weaver 6-10), 7:05 p.m.

Colorado (Bettis 6-5) at Seattle (Iwa­kuma 7-3), 7:10 p.m.

Kansas City at Baltimore, 10:05 a.m.Toronto at N.Y. Yankees, 10:05 a.m.Boston at Tampa Bay, 3:10 p.m.Detroit at Cleveland, 4:10 p.m.Minnesota at Chicago White Sox,

4:10 p.m.Oakland at Texas, 5:05 p.m.Houston at L.A. Angels, 6:05 p.m.Colorado at Seattle, 6:10 p.m.

Sunday's Games

Saturday's Games

Thursday's Games

Friday's Games

W7971595654

W8883806258

W8072676758

W8372696664

West Division

West Division

East Division

Central Division

Central Division

NATIONAL LEAGUE

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL

L Pot G B WCGB L 1061 .564 ­ ­ 7-368 .511 7 '/ ~ 9'/~ 5-581 .421 20 22 7-38 5 .397 23'/~ 2 5 '/~ 2 - 886 .386 25 27 2-8

L Pot G B WCGB L 1052 .629 ­ ­ 4-656 .597 4 ' /~ ­ 4-658 .580 7 ­ 7-378 .443 26 19 7-38 1 .417 29'/~ 2 2 '/~ 5 - 5

L Pot G B WCGB L 1059 .576 ­ ­ 8-268 .514 8 ' / ~ 9 3-773 .479 13'/~ 14 4-67 4 .475 14 14' / ~ 3- 782 .414 22'/~ 23 5-5

Thursday's Games

L.A. Angels 3, L.A. Dodgers 2Thursday's Games

Colorado 4, San Diego 3Milwaukee 6, Pittsburgh 4, 13 inningsChicago Cubs at Philadelphia, ppd.,

rainN.Y. Mets 7, Atlanta 2Cincinnati 11, St. Louis 0

Friday's Games

delphia (Asher 0-2), 4:05 p.m.Milwaukee (Nelson 11-11) at Pittsburgh

(Morton 8-7), 4:05 p.m.St. Louis (Lackey 11-9) at Cincinnati

(Lorenzen 4-8), 4:10 p.m.Washington (G.Gonzalez 10-7) at

Miami (Cosart1-4), 4:10 p.m.N.Y. Mets (Matz 2-0) atAtlanta (Wisler

5-6), 4:35 p.m.L.A. Dodgers (A.Wood 10-9) atArizona

(Ray 3-11), 6:40 p.m.Colorado (Bettis 6-5) at Seattle (Iwa­

kuma 7-3), 7:10 p.m.San Diego (Cashner 5-14) at San

Francisco (Peavy 5-6), 7:15 p.m.Saturday's Games

Chicago Cubs (Hendricks 6-6) at Phila­

St. Louis at Cincinnati, 10:05 a.m.Chicago Cubs at Philadelphia, 4:05 p.m.Milwaukee at Pittsburgh, 4:05 p.m.N.Y. Mets atAtlanta, 4:10 p.m.Washington at Miami, 4:10 p.m.L.A. Dodgers atArizona, 5:10 p.m.San Diego at San Francisco, 6:05 p.m.Colorado at Seattle, 6:10 p.m.

Sunday's Games

Str Home AwayW-4 45-24 34-37L-3 41-29 30-39

W-2 34-38 25-43L-1 33-33 23-52L-1 31-37 23-49

Str Home AwayL-1 50-24 38-28L-1 46-22 37-34L-1 43-28 37-30

W-1 33-39 29-39W-1 32-39 26-42

Str Home AwayL-1 47-21 33-38L-1 38-27 34-41

W-1 33-36 34-37L-1 35-37 32-37

W-1 3140 27-42

Str Home AwayL-1 47-25 32-35L-2 40-29 37-32

W-1 33-35 35-36W-2 38-27 29-45W-1 39-35 27-38

Str Home AwayL-1 48-27 35-29

W-1 42-26 30-41W-2 30-34 39-36L-1 34-34 32-38L-2 33-38 31-38

Str Home AwayW-1 48-24 2840L-2 32-32 41-34

W-1 42-30 28-39W-2 31-38 37-35L-1 3342 27-38

BaltimoreCincinnatiClevelandPittsburgh

HoustonIndianapolisJacksonvilleTennessee

New EnglandBulfaloMiamiN.Y. Jets

z-Minnesota 22 11x-Phoenix 19 13x-Tulsa 17 15x-Los Angeles 14 19Seattle 9 23San Antonio 7 26x-clinched playolf spotz-clinched conference

FOOTBALLNFL Regular S

EastW L T1 0 01 .0 0 00 0 00 0 0

SouthW L T0 0 00 0 00 0 00 0 0

NorthW L T0 0 00 0 00 0 00 1 0

WestW L T0 0 00 0 00 0 00 0 0

ONAL CONFEEast

W L T0 0 00 0 00 0 00 0 0

SouthW L T0 0 00 0 00 0 00 0 0

NorthW L T0 0 00 0 0

All Times PDTWednesday's Games

Atlanta 90, LosAngeles 60New York 74, Connecticut 64

Friday's GamesIndiana atAtlanta, 4:30 p.m.Washington at New York, 4:30 p.m.Tulsa at Chicago, 5:30 p.m.Minnesota at Seattle, 7 p.m.LosAngeles at Phoenix, 7 p.m.

SOCCERMLS Standings

W L T P t s GFGAD .C. United 1 3 1 0 5 44 35 3 4New York 12 7 6 42 43 28Columbus 11 9 8 41 45 4 7N ew England 11 9 7 40 38 3 6T oronto FC 1 1 1 1 4 37 45 4 4Montreal 9 11 4 31 34 3 7P hiladelphia 8 14 6 30 35 4 5O rlando City 7 13 8 29 33 5 0N ewYorkCityFC 7 13 7 28 38 4 6Chicago 7 14 6 27 34 4 2

W L T P t s GFGAV ancouver 15 10 3 48 40 2 8LosAngeles 1 3 8 7 46 49 3 3FC Dallas 13 8 5 44 38 30Seattle 1 3 13 2 41 3 4 3 1S porting KC 1 1 7 8 41 40 3 5Portland 11 9 8 41 29 32S an Jose 11 11 5 38 33 3 1Houston 9 10 8 35 35 3 4Colorado 8 10 9 33 25 2 9R eal Salt Lake 8 1 1 8 32 29 4 0NOTE: Three points for a victory, one pointfor a tie.

Vancouver 2, Colorado 0Portland 0, Sporting Kansas City 0, tie

Chicago at New York, 4 p.m.Saturday's Games

Columbus at Philadelphia, 4 p.m.New York City FC at FC Dallas, 5:30 p.m.Real Salt Lake at Houston, 5:30 p.m.D.C. United at Colorado, 6 p.m.Seattle at San Jose, 7:30 p.m.Montreal at Los Angeles, 7:30 p.m.

New England at Toronto FC, 2 p.m .Sporting Kansas City at Orlando City,

4 p.m.

WESTERN CONFERENCE

NATIONAL LEAGUEWednesday's Games

St. Louis 4, Chicago Cubs 3Atlanta 8, Philadelphia 1N.Y. Mets 5, Washington 3Miami 5, Milwaukee 2Pittsburgh 5, Cincinnati 4San Diego 11, Colorado 4Arizona 2, San Francisco 1

Toronto at N.Y. Yankees, 10:05 a.m.Boston at Tampa Bay, 10:10 a.m.Detroit at Cleveland, 10:10 a.m.Minnesota at Chicago White Sox,

11:10 a.m.Oakland at Texas, 12:05 p.m.Houston at L.A. Angels, 12:35 p.m.Colorado at Seattle, 1:10 p.m.Kansas City at Baltimore, 5:05 p.m.

a.m.

EASTERN CONFERENCE

z-New York 2 3 9 .71 9x-Chicago 20 12 . 625 3x-Indiana 18 14 . 563 5x-Washington 17 15 .531 6Atlanta 14 18 . 438 9Connecticut 14 19 .4 2 4 9 ' /2

W L Pct GBWESTERN CONFERENCE

WNBA

St. Louis at Cincinnati, 10:10 a.m.Washington at Miami, 10:10 a.m.Chicago Cubs at Philadelphia, 10:35

Milwaukee at Pittsburgh, 10:35 a.m.N.Y. Mets atAtlanta, 10:35 a.m.San Diego at San Francisco, 1:05 p.m.Colorado at Seattle, 1:10 p.m.L.A. Dodgers atArizona, 1:10 p.m.

BASKETBALL

W L Pct GB

ChicagoDetroit

DallasN.Y. GiantsPhiladelphiaWashington

DenverKansas CityOaklandSan Diego

NATI

AtlantaCarolinaNew OrleansTampa Bay

Sunday's Games

All Times PDTWednesday's Games

EASTERN CONFERENCE

Friday's Game

eason

Pct PF PA0 00 28 2 1000 0 0000 0 0000 0 0

Pct PF PA000 0 0000 0 0000 0 0000 0 0

Pct PF PA000 0 0000 0 0000 0 00 00 21 2 8

Pct PF PA000 0 0000 0 0000 0 0000 0 0RENCE

Pct PF PA000 0 0000 0 0000 0 0000 0 0

Pct PF PA000 0 0000 0 0000 0 0000 0 0

Pct PF PA000 0 0000 0 0

667594 2'/2531 4'/2424 8281 12'/2212 15

Green BayMinnesota

1. Trevor Brazile, Decatur, Texas$189,321; 2. Tuf Cooper, Decatur, Texas$123,756; 3. JoJo LeMond, Andrews,

All Times PDTThursday's Game

New England 28, Pittsburgh 21Sunday's Games

Green Bay at Chicago, 10 a.m.Kansas City at Houston, 10 a.m.Seattle at St. Louis, 10 a.m.Cleveland at N.Y. Jets, 10 a.m.Indianapolis at Buffalo, 10 a.m.Miami at Washington, 10 a.m.Carolina at Jacksonville, 10 a.m.New Orleans atArizona, 1:05 p.m.Detroit at San Diego, 1:05 p.m.Cincinnati at Oakland, 1:25 p.m.Baltimore at Denver, 1:25 p.m.Tennessee at Tampa Bay, 1:25 p.m.N.Y. Giants at Dallas, 5:30 p.m.

Monday's Games

GOL AII SW SL RKOntario 0-0 3-2 8 5 30Baker 0-0 2-6 5 17 14La Grande 0 -0 1 - 3 5 9 21McLoughlin 0 - 0 1 - 3 4 9 24

Wap All SW SL RKGrant Union 1-0 7-0 16 2 1Union 1-0 3-1 1 1 6 17Cove 1-0 2-2 6 6 19Burns 0-0 6-0 1 6 0 7Imbler 0-1 2-3 7 9 18Elgin 0-1 1-2-1 5 6 29Enterprise 0-1 0 - 4 3 10 43

OOL All SW SL RKGriswold 1-0 4 - 1 13 4 14Powder Valley 0-0 5-3 1 3 8 3Echo 0-0 4-1 1 2 5 6Pine Eagle 0 - 0 1- 1 4 3 21Joseph 0-0 1-2 2 6 33Wallowa 0-0 0 - 5 0 13 39Nixyaawii 0-1 1 - 2 2 5 36

GOL AII PF PA RKLa Grande 0 - 0 1 - 0 2 4 2 14Baker 0-0 0-1 6 21 22McUGris 0-0 0-1 7 45 38Ontario 0-0 0-1 7 40 38

Wap All PF PA RKGrant Union 0 - 0 1 - 0 3 4 32 1Burns 0-0 0-1 29 34 16Enterprise 0 -0 0 - 1 0 42 23Imbler 0-0 0-1 8 42 23Union/Cove 0-0 0-1 6 7 16

S D1 All PF P A R KAdrian 0-0 1-0 4 0 30 1Crane 0-0 1-0 5 4 0 1Echo 0-0 1-0 5 8 14 1Mon/Day 0-0 1 - 0 42 6 1Pine Eagle 0 -0 1 - 0 36 26 1Powder Valley 0-0 1-0 5 6 6 1Wallowa 0-0 1 - 0 60 14 1Harper/Hunt 0-0 0- 1 6 56 18Jordan Valley 0-0 0-1 2 6 36 18PC/BR 0-0 0-1 1 2 34 18Joseph

G OL Al l G S G A R KOntario 0-0 3- 1-1 2 4 4 34McLoughlin 0-0 1 -1 2 4 13La Grande 0-0 1 -2 3 5 5Baker/PV 0- 0 0-2 0 10 28

GOL AII GS GA RKMcL/W-Mc 0 - 0 3-0-1 6 2 8La Grande 0 -0 2 - 0 16 0 12Ontario 0-0 2-3 8 27 21Baker/PV 0-0 0 - 2 3 9 29

0 0 0 . 000 0 00 0 0 . 000 0 0

WestW L T P c t P F P A

Arizona 0 0 0 . 000 0 0San Francisco 0 0 0 . 00 0 0 0Seattle 0 0 0 . 000 0 0St. Louis 0 0 0 .000 0 0

4A-7 Greater Oregon League

1A-1 Special District1

4A-7 Greater Oregon League

4A-7 Greater Oregon League

4A-7 Greater Oregon League

Volleyba II

2A-6 Wapiti League

2A-6 Wapiti League

PREPFootball

1A-7 Old Oregon League

Girls Soccer

RODEOPRCA Leaders

Through Sept. 6All-Around

Boys Soccer

Philadelphia atAtlanta, 4:10 p.m.Minnesota at San Francisco, 7:20 p.m.

1. Jade Corkill, Fallon, Nev. $105,982;2. Clay O'Brien Cooper, Gardnerville, Nev.$85,695; 3. Patrick Smith, Lipan, Texas$82,096; 4. Travis G raves, Jay, Okla.$81,673; 5. Travis Woodard, Stockton,Calif. $74,470; 6. Cory Petska, Marana,Ariz. $73,203; 7. Junior Nogueira, Scotts­dale, Ariz. $70,338; 8. Rich Skelton, Llano,Texas $67,405; 9. Paul Eaves, Lonedell,Mo. $67,401; 10. Kory Koontz, Stephen­ville, Texas $67,198; 11. Jake Long,Colfeyville, Kan. $65,409; 12. Ryan Motes,Weatherford, Texas $64,591; 13. Kollin Vo­nAhn, Blanchard, Okla. $64,447; 14. QuinnKesler, Holden, Utah $61,386; 15. RussellCardoza, Terrebonne, Ore. $58,106; 16.Dugan Kelly, Paso Robles, Calif. $57,791;17. Dakota Kirchenschlager, Morgan Mill,Texas $57,231; 18. Brady Minor, Ellens­burg, Wash. $57,169; 19. Tyler McKnight,W ells, Texas $54,974; 20. Jeremy Buhler,Abbotsford, British Columbia $52,050.

1. Cody DeMoss, Heflin, La. $119,397;

Team Roping (header)

Texas $98,936; 4. Caleb Smidt, Bellville,Texas $94,084; 5. Rhen Richard, Roos­evelt, Utah $83,371; 6. Ryan Jarrett, Co­manche, Okla. $82,621; 7. Clayton Hass,Terrell, Texas $80,396; 8. Josh Peek,Pueblo, Colo. $79,329; 9. Clint Robinson,Spanish Fork, Utah $75,236; 10. RussellCardoza, Terrebonne, Ore. $73,576; 11.Dakota Eldridge, Elko, Nev. $70,782; 12.Jordan Ketscher, SquawValley, Calif.$62,583; 13. Doyle Hoskins, Chualar,Calif. $61,720; 14. Garrett Smith, Rexburg,Idaho $61,440; 15. Steven Dent, Mullen,Neb. $56,543; 16. Morgan Grant, Granton,Ontario $47,294; 17. Paul David Tierney,Oral, S.D. $46,783; 18. Trenten Montero,Winnemucca, Nev. $42,097; 19. Billy BobBrown, Stephenville, Texas$39,832; 20.Kyle Whitaker, Chambers, Neb. $37,067.

1. Kaycee Feild, Spanish Fork, Utah$95,245; 2. Evan Jayne, Marseille,France $90,480; 3. Bobby Mote, Ste­phenville, Texas $88,486; 4. Jake Brown,Hillsboro, Texas $82,272; 5. AustinFoss, Terrebonne, Ore. $80,617; 6. SethHardwick, Laramie, Wyo. $77,381; 7. ClintLaye, Cadogan, Alberta $77,092; 8. CalebBennett, Tremonton, Utah $76,983; 9.Clint Cannon, Waller, Texas $76,488; 10.Winn Ratliff, Leesville, La. $74,308; 11.Steven Peebles, Redmond, Ore. $73,144;12. Tim O'Connell, Zwingle, lowa$73,092; 13. Will Lowe, Canyon, Texas$71,569; 14. Orin Larsen, Inglis, Manitoba$69,776; 15. TannerAus, Granite Falls,Minn. $69,326; 16. Jessy Davis, Power,Mont. $66,361; 17. Ryan Gray, Cheney,Wash. $65,579; 18. Jake Vold, Ponoka,Alberta $62,050; 19. R.C. Landingham,Pendleton, Ore. $58,772; 20. LukeCreasy, Lovington, N.M. $51,416.

Steer Wrestling

2. Luke Branquinho, LosAlamos,Calif. $76,191; 3. Hunter Cure, Holliday,Texas $71,270; 4. Nick Guy, Sparta,Wis. $70,929; 5. Trevor Knowles, MountVernon, Ore. $69,473; 6. Seth Brockman,W heatland, Wyo. $69,459; 7. ClaytonHass, Terrell, Texas $66,544; 8. Kyle lr­win, Robertsdale, Ala. $66,507; 9. DakotaEldridge, Elko, Nev. $66,270; 10. TylerWaguespack, Gonzales, La. $65,826; 11.K.C. Jones, Decatur, Texas $63,223; 12.Tanner Milan, Cochrane, Alberta $60,424;13. Blake Knowles, Heppner, Ore.$60,397; 14. Olin Hannum, Malad, Idaho$59,141; 15. Tyler Pearson, Louisville,Miss. $56,684; 16. Casey Martin, Sulphur,La. $54,271; 17. Josh Peek, Pueblo,Colo. $51,841; 18. Beau Clark, Belgrade,Mont. $51,468; 19. Baylor Roche, Trem­onton, Utah $51,276; 20. BrayArmes,Ponder, Texas $49,516.

1. Clay Tryan, Billings, Mont. $105,982;2. Chad Masters, Cedar Hill, Tenn.$89,066; 3. Derrick Begay, Seba Dalkai,Ariz. $84,575; 4. Trevor Brazile, Decatur,Texas $82,096; 5. Aaron Tsinigine, TubaCity, Ariz. $72,422; 6. Erich Rogers, RoundRock, Ariz. $71,845; 7. Jake Barnes,Scottsdale, Ariz. $70,916; 8. Colby Lovell,Madisonville, Texas $67,561; 9. Nick Sar­tain, Dover, Okla. $67,405; 10. ColemanProctor, Pryor, Okla. $67,194; 11. JakeCooper, Monument, N.M. $65,692; 12.Luke Brown, Stephenville, Texas $64,633;13. JoJo LeMond, Andrews, Texas$63,597; 14. Matt Sherwood, Pima, Ariz.$61,551; 15. Clay Smith, Broken Bow,Okla. $61,110; 16. Riley Minor, Ellensburg,Wash. $58,498; 17. Tyler Wade, Terrell,Texas $53,527; 18. Bubba Buckaloo,Caddo, Okla. $52,097; 19. Levi Simpson,Ponoka, Alberta $52,050; 20. Joel Bach,San Augustine, Texas $51,580.

Team Roping (heeler)

Bareback Riding

1. Ty Erickson, Helena, Mont. $79,409;

2. Rusty Wright, Milford, Utah $105,981; 3.Isaac Diaz, Desdemona, Texas $96,450;4. Taos Muncy, Corona, N.M. $91,732; 5.Jacobs Crawley, Boerne, Texas $86,481;6. CortScheer, Elsmere, Neb. $82,203; 7.Wade Sundell, Coleman, Okla. $82,057;8. Jake Wright, Milford, Utah $77,774; 9.Chuck Schmidt, Keldron, S.D. $77,101;10. Spencer Wright, Milford, Utah $67,427;11. Zeke Thurston, Big Valley, Alberta$66,161; 12. Heith DeMoss, Heflin, La.$65,182; 13. Bradley Harter, Loranger,La. $62,866; 14. Jesse Wright, Milford,Utah $53,699; 15. Chad Ferley, Oelrichs,S.D. $53,078; 16. Allen Boore, Axtell, Utah$51,024; 17. TyrelLarsen, Inglis, Manitoba$50,728; 18. CoBurn Bradshaw, Beaver,Utah $48,937; 19. Clay Elliott, Nanton,Alberta $48,319; 20. Steven Dent, Mullen,Neb. $44,687.

1. TufCooper, Decatur, Texas$116,079; 2. Marty Yates, Stephen­ville, Texas $91,536; 3. Hunter Herrin,Apache, Okla. $90,443; 4. Timber Moore,Aubrey, Texas $89,649; 5. Caleb Smidt,Bellville, Texas $79,353; 6. Ryan Jarrett,Comanche, Okla. $78,938; 7. CorySolomon, Prairie View, Texas $77,473; 8.Monty Lewis, Hereford, Texas $77,431; 9.Trevor Brazile, Decatur, Texas $72,619;10. Cade Swor, Winnie, Texas $70,279;11. MattShiozawa, Chubbuck, Idaho$68,765; 12. Marcos Costa, Childress,Texas $66,663; 13. Clint Robinson,Spanish Fork, Utah $66,373; 14. MichaelOtero, Lowndesboro, Ala. $63,548;15. Sterling Smith, Stephenville, Texas$62,580; 16. Tyson Durfey, Savannah,Mo. $62,136; 17. Adam Gray, Seymour,Texas $61,838; 18. Blair Burk, Durant,Okla. $55,389; 19. Reese Riemer,Stinnett, Texas $54,179; 20. ShaneHanchey, Sulphur, La. $53,830.

Steer Roping1. Mike Chase, McAlester, Okla.

$61,089; 2. Vin Fisher Jr., Andrews, Texas$58,879; 3. Trevor Brazile, Decatur, Texas$58,722; 4. Jess Tierney, Hermosa, S.D.$53,100; 5. Rocky Patterson, Pratt, Kan.$52,384; 6. Scott Snedecor, Fredericks­burg, Texas $51,231; 7. Neal Wood,Needville, Texas $46,662; 8. Cody Lee,Gatesville, Texas $46,057; 9. ChetHerren, Pawhuska, Okla. $42,517; 10.Shay Good, Midland, Texas $39,273; 11.JoJo LeMond, Andrews, Texas $38,724;12. Troy Tillard, Douglas, Wyo. $37,789;13. Brodie Poppino, Big Cabin, Okla.$33,732; 14. Chance Kelton, Mayer, Ariz.$33,271; 15. Jason Evans, Huntsville,Texas $33,163; 16. J.P. Wickett, Sal­lisaw, Okla. $30,409; 17. Brent Lewis,Pinon, N.M. $27,501; 18. Bryce Davis,Ovalo, Texas $26,702; 19. J.B. W hatley,Gardendale, Texas $25,886; 20. LandonMcClaugherty, Tilden, Texas $25,678.

1. Sage Kimzey, Strong City, Okla.$146,870; 2. Brennon Eldred, Sulphur,Okla. $107,726; 3. Parker Breding,Edgar, Mont. $107,639; 4. Wesley Silcox,Santaquin, Utah $105,688; 5. Joe Frost,Randlett, Utah $79,342; 6. ChandlerBownds, Lubbock, Texas $79,041; 7.Cody Teel, Kountze, Texas $75,947; 8.Shane Proctor, Grand Coulee, Wash.$72,139; 9. Brett Stall, Detroit Lakes,Minn. $70,889; 10. Clayton Foltyn, Winnie,Texas $64,348; 11. Caleb Sanderson, Hal­lettsville, Texas $61,204; 12. Reid Barker,Comfort, Texas $58,927; 13. Aaron Pass,Dallas, Texas $57,782; 14. Kody DeShon,Helena, Mont. $55,791; 15. Trevor Kast­ner, Ardmore, Okla. $55,379; 16. DustinBowen, Waller, Texas $55,124; 17. ScottieKnapp,Albuquerque, N.M.$54,678; 18.JelfAskey, Martin, Tenn. $53,565; 19. TyWallace, Collbran, Colo. $52,956; 20. Gar­rett Smith, Rexburg, Idaho $50,422.

1. Callie Duperier, Boerne, Texas$152,393; 2. Lisa Lockhart, Oelrichs,S.D. $150,969; 3. Sarah Rose McDonald,Brunswick, Ga. $121,070; 4. Sherry Cervi,Marana, Ariz. $102,854; 5. Mary Walker,Ennis, Texas $101,754; 6. Nancy Hunter,Neola, Utah $96,692; 7. Fallon Taylor,Collinsville, Texas $86,828; 8. CarleyRichardson, Pampa, Texas $76,976; 9.Taylor Jacob, Carmine, Texas $71,579;10. Cassidy Kruse, Gillette, Wyo. $64,022;11. Michele McLeod, Whitesboro, Texas$63,774; 12. Jill Welsh, Parker, Ariz.$59,444; 13. Jackie Ganter, Abilene, Texas$59,398; 14. Vickie Carter, Richfield, Utah$57,740; 15. Meghan Johnson, Deming,N.M. $53,780; 16. Layna Kight, Ocala, Fla.$53,565; 17. Alexa Lake, Richmond, Texas$50,346; 18. Jana Bean, Ft. Hancock,Texas $48,597; 19. Shelby Herrmann, Ste­phenville, Texas $48,291; 20. Deb Guelly,Okotoks, Alberta $47,969.

Tie-down Roping

Barrel Racing

Bull Riding

Saddle Bronc Riding

PREP VOLLEYBALL ROUNDUP

Cove comes back to earnkey Wapiti League victory• Wallowa dropsmatch to La GrandeJV, Imbler falls atGrant Union in 3

Elgin's Hannah McClure, center, stretches for the dig against Union Thursday.

WAPITI '%e needed that," Unionhead coach Lasa Baxter said."It's a confidence-builder forthe girls. I think they're goingto COme in Bnd Play a 1Ot Oftight matches this season.That's just what it's going tobe like."

KOhr Bnd KOrtnee Marri­ott recorded 21 service pointsapiece, while Marriott tallied28 digS Bnd KOhr diShed Out21 assists.

Baxter said having mul­tiple players step up wascritical.

"Having a well-roundedteam where all the girls cancontribute makes them feellike they're imPOrtant Bndthey're Part Of the team Bndthat helps keep that unifiedteam bond," she said.

The Huskies were ledOffenSiVely by Karigan

Wilhelm's nine kills, whileMaggie Ledbetter chippedin six.

Elgin head coach CarmenPearson said some big-timedigs allowed the offense toget going.

"Hannah MCClure BndKatelyn Harris did a greatjob digging the ball tonightwhich assisted in our overallmatch kills," she said.

She added that the teamis on the verge of taking thatnext step in its level of play.

"It feels like we are justabOut there, Bnd When itall comes together it will bereally fun to watch our girlsplay," she said.

The Bobcats (3-1 overall, 1-0WaPiti) traVel to the COndOntournament Saturday, whileElgin (1-2-1 overall, 0-1Wapiti)hosts Wallowa Monday.

Ronald Bond/The Observer

Observer staff

The Cove volleyball teamdropped its first set Thurs­day, but rebO(mded to takeits Wapiti League openeragainst Enterprise 18-25,25-17, 25-18, 25-23.

'%e had really good over­all play by the entire team,"Cove head coach Darcy Car­reiro said.'They're startingto WOrk tOgether Bnd truSteach other."

The Leopards not onlybounced back from the first­set loss, but recovered &om abig deficit early in the fourthSet to POliSh O(I'the Win.

'%e were down by eight ornine points at one time," Car­reiro said, noting a timeouthelped the team regroup.'They got back to the serviceline, took care of the ball atthe net, communicated andplayed as a team."

Reagan Carreiro led theteam With 11 killS Bnd nine

Continued ft om Page 8A

from Davidson clipped thenet Bnd rOlled OVer fOr an aCeto pull the Huskies withinone. The teams traded pointsbefOre Bn ISabelle SauerS killtriggered a set-ending 4-0ntn to Pull Elgin baCk intOthe match.

The final set, however, be­1Onged to the BObCatS. AfterSOme early baCk-Bnd-fOrthaction, a tip kill from Kohrput Union up 7-6, triggeringa run where Union twicepushed the lead to seven.Elgin hung around, drawingas close as 23-20 on a killfrOm Cheyanne Wilhelm, butWright responded with a kill,Bnd the BObCatS Went On tothe victory.

• 0 0 0

ROUTContinued ~om Page 8A

Kyla Gomes assist put La Grande up 1-0early before later breaking away for a goalBnd a 3-0 lead. Bertrand netted a gOal inbetWeen, Bnd Alaina CarSOn added a gOalfor a 4-0 halNme lead.

digs. Hannah Duby earnednine digS Bnd fOur killS, BndAllie Best chiipped in withSiX digS Bnd tWO aCeS.

Lorissa Johnson was thetoP SerVer fOr the LeOPardS,registering seven aces on 17serves. Mary Kendall alsoadded two aces.

Cove (2-2 overall, 1-0Wapiti) hosts Powder Valleytonight, while Enterprise(0-4 overall, 0-1 Wapiti)hosts Wallowa Saturday.

La Grande 3V 3,Wallowa 0

The Wallowa volleyballteam came up short in itsattempt at getting the firstwin of the season, losing athome in three sets to theLa Grande junior varsityWednesday 25-12, 25-19,25-17.

But head COaCh JaneaHulse is seeing her playersmake improvements.

"They're definitely mak­ing strides in the rightdirection," she said."I seeimprovement every gamethat we have. I want tosee more and more everygame. I want them to be

Bertrand scored to start the second halfscoring before Welberg went ofFagain withtwo more goals. The second, on a pen­alty kick, put La Grande ahead 7-0 beforeGomes scored on a &ee kick to cap theoffensive onslaught.

With its Saturday home match recentlycancelled, La Grande (2-0 overall) is now o(I'until Sept. 22 when it travels to Pendleton.

• 0 0 0

able to come together as ateam Bnd they Will be a 1Otmore successful when theystart learning to trust eachother."

Beth Johnston hadthree killS Bnd tWO aCeS tolead Bn all-arO(md attaCkfor the Cougars. OrianaWandSChneider had 22 digS,JOrdan Ferre' added 14 BndRiley Ferre' had 11 assists.

"Jordan Ferre' did prettygood," Hulse said."She wasreally trying to step out as ateam Player Bnd leader Bndthe girls started followingher lead."

The Cougars (0-5 overall)hit the court again todayWhen they traVel to Adrian.

Grant Union 3, Imbler 0The Imbler volleyball

team started its Wa­piti League schedule onthe wrong foot, dropped itsmatch with Grant Union instraight sets 25-12, 25-15,25-12 Thursday.

No individual stats wereavailable.

Imbler (2-3 overall, 0-1Wapiti) hosts Weston­McEwen today.

• 0 0 0

Page 10: La Grande Observer Daily Paper 09-11-15

10A — THE OBSERVER STATE FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 2015

OREGON IN BRIEF Quake warning system begins to take shapeErom wire reports

Court OK's interimfinancing for Haggen

PORTLAND — Grocerychain Haggen has beengranted the right to borrowup to $215 million, two daysafter it filed for Chapter 11bankruptcy.

The Oregonian reportedthat documents filed in theU.S. District bankruptcycourt in Delaware on Thurs­day show the court will allowthe Bellingham, Washington­based Haggen to use theborrowed funds to operate its164 store through its Oct. 5bankruptcy hearing.

According to court docu­ments, the struggling grocerowes its creditors more than$55 million.

Earlier this year, Haggenbought 146 Albertsons andSafeway stores, expandingfrom 18 stores in Oregon andWashington into new mar­kets in California, Nevadaand Arizona.

The Associated PressBy Terrence Petty

PORTLAND — University ofWashington researchers are testing anearthquake alert system as the PacificNorthwest prepares for the day when a600-mile-long fault line looming off thecoast unleashes a catastrophic earth­quake and tsunami.

The fault line hasn't produced a ma­jor quake since 1700, but seismologistssay one could happen in our lifetimes.

Fears of such a quake — heightenedafter the devastating 2011 Japanesetemblor — have fueled the develop­ment of the computer alert system thatofficials hope will save lives and protectcritical infrastructure by giving a pre­cious heads-up to get ready.

The alerts are now going to compa­nies such as Boeing and Microsoft aswell as hospitals, utilities and emergen­cy management agencies in Oregon,Washington and British Columbia, whoare beginning to think about how they

would respond."Any advance warning would be help­

ful — even as little as 10 seconds," saidCarmen Merlo, director of the Bureau ofEmergency Management in Portland,Oregon, among the places that could bedevastated when a mega-quake hits.

Her agency is among those testingShakeAlert, which sends out warningsthat tell recipients when a tembloris developing and, depending on thedepth, strength and distance &om theepicenter, calculates how much timebefore the jolt will hit their location.

The system has used smaller quakesto create its alerts. That's good, becausesome bugs are still being worked out ofthe warning system and it's not quiteready for implementation, say UWresearchers.

When it is up and running, alertscould let motorists avoid bridges thatmay collapse, automatically open firedepartment bay doors so they aren'tjammed shut during the coming quake,

shut off natural gas lines, power upemergency generators, and shut downmachinery at manufacturing plants, toname just a few examples.

Development of the system comesamid growing worry about a slum­bering beast called the CascadiaSubduction Zone: a fault stretchingfrom northern California to VancouverIsland that separates the Juan de Fucaand North America tectonic plates.

The Juan de Fuca plate is beingshoved beneath the North Americaplate, creating strains that will eventu­ally be released in a large earthquakethat will also produce a tsunami.

Concerns about the looming dangeroffshore have grown after quakes andtsunamis in the Indian Ocean in 2004and in Japan in 2011. The seismic threatwas underscored in a recent New Yorkerarticle titled'The Really Big One."

A 2013 report by a panel of Oregonexperts also spelled out the potentialdisaster.

Man charged withstabbing girlfriend

is facingmmder charges afterSpringlield police found hisgirliriend dead fiom multipleinjuries, including stab wounds.

The Register-Guard inEugene reported that the61-year-old man was bookedinto the Lane County JailThursday after officers foundthe body of 61-year-old Cyn­thia Ann Corey.

Olficiais say officers wentto the couple's apartmentWednesday after someone in­side the apartment called 911.When officers arrived, theyfound the man standing outfiont and Corey's bodyinside.

Fire damagesHarrisburg lumber mill

HARRISBURG — A firehas caused thousands of dol­lars in damages to a lumbermill in Harrisburg.

Harrisburg Fire Chief BartGrifIth says the fire at the Is­land Cedar Lumber Mill wasreported early Thursday by adriver along Interstate 5.

Firefighters got the fireunder control by about 6 a.m.

Illegal marijuanamobile cart robbed

PORTLAND — PortlandPolice say they're investigat­ing an attack and robberyat an illegal mobile medicalmarijuana cart.

Authorities say the ownersof the Smoke Buddy mobiletrailer reported on Thurs­day that a man and womanattacked them as they wereopening up for the day.The man flashed a knife,

stole marijuana and fled. Thewoman, who swung a stick atthe cart owner, was arrested.

Police said 34-year-oldKelly Green was booked intoMultnomah County Jail oninvestigation of robbery. Sheis to be arraigned Friday.The Oregon Health Author­

ity says mobile marijuanasales are illegal. The SmokeBuddy isn't registered withthe state dispensary program.

Police spokesman Sgt. PeteSimpson previously said ifthe mobile cart has more

SPRlNGFIELD — Aman

KLAMATH FALLS­

than one ounce of marijuanaon board, its operator couldbe arrested or issued a cita­tion for a misdemeanor.

But, Simpson said, thebureau would not devoteresources to pursuing them.

Regulators filediscrimination lawsuit

MEDFORD — Stateregulators have filed a housingdiscmnination lawsuit on be­half of a gay couple, alleging aMedford senior living commu­nity denied the pair residencybecause of sexual orientation.

The complaint was filedWednesday by Oregon LaborCommissioner Brad Avakian.It says the homeownersassociation board of the Med­ford Apartments Inc.— alsoknown as Hawthorne Gar­den Apartments — rejectedthe couple in August 2012.

The reason given for therejection: one of the men didnot meet the residency agerequirement of 55 years old.But when the other partner,who did qualify, appliedalone, he also wa s rejected.

The suit seeks damages of$25,000 for emotional sufering,$20,795 for economic losses andup to $22,000in civil penalties.

State Sen. RichardDevlin to run for SOS

SALEM — State Sen.Richard Devlin is running forOregon secretary of state.

The Democrat from Tuala­tin announced his plans in anews release on Thursday.

As co-chair of the JointWays and Means Commit­tee, Devlin plays a key role incraNng the state budget. Be­fore joining the Legislature in1997, he was a member of theTualatin City Council and theMetro Council, the Portlandarea's regional government.

Devlin is likely to face acrowded field of Democrats.State Rep. Val Hoyle andLabor Commissioner BradAvakian are also likely to runfor secretary of state.

Commissionerignores orders

Klamath County Commission­er Tom Mallams has admittedto defyingrequests to stoppumping groundwater toirri­gate his upper Basin farm andsays he is fine withwhateverconsequence he's faced with.

The Herald and Newsreported the case againstM allams has been referred tothe Oregon Water ResourcesDepartment.M allams has a 150-acre

farm in Beatty that is partof the Sycan River Drainage.Mallams is a junior wateruser, which means his wateraccess can be downsized if asenior water right makes aclaim to that water, which iswhat the Klamath Project did.

Mallams ignored water regu­lation orders in July andAu­gust and admitted the OWRDtried to serve him papers.

Adepartmentspokes­woman says penalties maybe assessed for each day theviolation continued.

PLLIS, LINLlMlTED CONTRACT PAYOFF

to beat

. US.Cellular.

- --GalaxyS6

Just bring in your bill andwe'll beat your currentVerizon or ATRT plan, oryou'll get a $50 Promo Card.

Plus, take advantage of oLIFunlimited contract payoff.

— The Associated Press

Undo your contract. Learn more at uscellular.com/undo.

Fresh Baked Goods - Coffee - Sandwiches­Soup - Meats - Cheeses - Produce - bry Goods

NE'XT WEEK'5 SPECIALS:Lebanon Bologna ... '6" 'Farmers Chees

Stop in today andsample one of ourmany fall candies

10214 Hwy. 82

541-663-8404

Fall Is Here!

M on — Fri. 9 to 5 Sat. 9 to 2

Things we waiityoii to know: Offer app ies io current jienzon or AIaI customers on Shared Data Pans ony and app ies io the monihy recurnnij pnce pan ony Any app ied discounts sha be vaid for the tirsi 24months Reijuar pncinij app ies thereafter Must port in a ines ot service on account Offer vaid on Shared Connect Pans up io 20GB Offer va id ony with the to owing devices handsets, Iab ets, rouiers, modems,hoispois and Home Phones Customer must provide their current wire ess bi for review U S Ce u ar, ai iis so e discretion, has the nijhi io deny an offer for any bi that appears atered or traudu eni Shared ConnectP an and Reiai nsia ment Contract required Credit approva aso required A S25 Device Activation Fee app ies A Reiju aiorr Cost Recovery Fee app ies(curreniy S1 82/ine/monih) this is noi a im or ijvmi requiredcharge Addiiiona fees, imes, terms, conditions and coverage areas app y and may vary by p an, service and phone GoiiVact Payoff Promo: Giistomer will be reimbursed for the Early Termiiiatioii Fee (ETF) or remainingdevice balance reflected oii finalbill.Otter va id on up io 6 consumer ines or 25 business ines Must port in current number io U S Ce u ar and purchase new device through a Retai nsia ment Contract on a SharedConnect P an Submit tina b»deniifyinij EIF or tina device baance owed within 60 days ot activation date io usce u ar com/coniracipayott or via mai io U S Ce u ar Contract Payoff Program 5591 61 PO Box t5225tE paso, IX 885th 225t Io be e iijib e, customer must register for My Account, purchase Device proieciion+ and turn in the o d device Reimbursement in the form ot a U S Ce u ar MasierCarde Debit Card issued byMetaBank~ Member FD C, pursuant io icense trom MasierCard niernaiiona ncorporaied This card does noi have cash access and can be used ai any merchant ocaiion that accepts MasierCard Debit Cards withinthe U S ony Card vaid through expiration date shown on troni ot card A ow12-14 weeks for processing $50U.S.Gelliilar Promotioiial Gard: t U S Ce uar's Shared Connect and Reiai nsia ment monthy pan pncecannot beat your current Shared Connect monthy p an pnce with AIaI or jienzon, you wi be provided a S50 U S Ce u ar Promoiiona Card issued by MeiaBank, Member FD C, pursuant io a icense trom Visa U S Anc jiaid ony forpurchasesai US Ce uarstoresandusce uarcom Oneperaccount Ioreceive card, customermustijoio beaiyourpanhii2ccomioregister Cardwi be receivedin 6-8weeks OeviceProtectioii+:Enro ment in Device Proieciion+ required The monthy charge for Device Proieciion+ is S899 for Smariphones A deduciib e per approved caim app ies You may cance Device Proieciion+ anytime Federa WarrantyService Corporation is the Provider ot the Device Proieciion+ ESC benefits, except in CA and OK Limitations and excusions appy For comp eie detais, see an associate for a Device Proieciion+ brochure OeviceTurn-In: Cusiomer musi iurn in a active devices trom iheir tormer cari er's p an Cusiomer is responsib e for de eiinij a persona information from device and removing any storage cards trom devices Devices musipower on and cannot be pin ocked Device must be in tu y tunciiona working condition without any iquid damage or broken com ponenis, incudinij, bui noi imiied io, a cracked dispay or housing Devices wi noibe returned io customer shou d they cance transaction Noi e iijib e for U S Ce u ar's in store or ma»in trade in program Io be e iijib e, customer must register for My Account Kansas Giistomers: n areas in whichU S Ce u ar receives support trom the Federa Universa Service Fund, a reasonab e requests for service must be mei Unreso ved questions concerning services avai ab»iy can be directed io the Kansas CorporationCommission Ofhce ot Pub ic Affairs and Consumer Protection ai1 800 662 002t Offers va id ai participating ocaiions ony and cannot be combined Noi avai ab e onine or via ie esa es See store or usce u ar comfor detai s Limited time offer Trademarks and trade names are the property ot their respective owners ©2015 U S Ce u ar

Next to Pioneer West

• 0 0 0 • 0 0 0 • 0 0 0

Page 11: La Grande Observer Daily Paper 09-11-15

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 2015

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

THE OBSERVER a BAKER CITY HERALD — 1B

DEADLINES:LINE ADS:

Monday: noon FridayWednesday: noon TuesdayFriday: no on Thursday

2 days prior topublication date

DISPLAY ADS:

4© ElBaker City Herald: 541-523-3673 • www.bakercityherald.com • classifiedsOdakereityherald.com • Fax: 541-523-6426The Observer: 541-963-3161 ® www.la randeodserver.com • classifiedsOlagrandeodserver.oom • Fax: 541-963-3674

105 - Announce­ments

THE DEADLINE for

Classified Ad isprior to 12:00 p.m.

ONE BUSINESSDAY BEFORE

PUBLICATION.Publication Days:

Mondays,Wednesdays and

placing a

Sunday — 2 pm — 4pmCatholic Church

Baker City

Fridays

BINGO

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

105 - Announce­ments

LAMINATION

17 1/2 inches wideany length

$1.00 per foot(The Observeris notresponsible for flaws

in material ormachine error)

OBSERVER1406 Fifth

• 541-963-3161

PINOCHLEFndays at 6:30 p.m.

Senior Center2810 Cedar St.

Public is welcome

Up to

THE

When the search is seri­ous — go to the classifiedads. There's a variety tochoose from in our paper.

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, Motorcycles, Snowmobiles

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

970 - Autos for Sale990 - Four-Wheel Drive

105 - Announce­ments

CHECK YOUR AD ONTHE FIRST DAY OF

PUBLICATIONWe make every effort

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

PREGNANCYSUPPORT GROUP

Pre-pregnancy,

541-786-9755

Classifieds get results.

pregnancy, post-partum.

Ceramics with Donna

Nail Care

AA

105 - Announce­ments

Community Connection,2810 Cedar St., Baker.

Every MondayDoors open, 6:00 p.m.

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

All ages welcome!541-523-6591

SETTLER'S PARKACTIVITIES

1st I!t 3rd F RIDAY(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(Monday — Fnday)Exercise Class;9:30AM (FREE)

110 - Self-HelpGroup Meetings

"As Bill Sees It"Sat.; 10AM -11AM

2533 Church StBaker Valley

Church of ChnstOpen

AA MEETING:

Open MeetingSunday; 5:30 — 6:30

Grove St Apts

Been There Done That

PUBLIC BINGO

110 - Self-HelpGroup Meetings

of Overeaters

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

7th and Birch

Someone's

AL-ANONMonday at Noon

Presbytenan ChurchCorner of Washington Sr 4th

AL-ANON MEETING

Meeting times1st I!t 3rd Wednesday

Evenings ©6:00 pmElgin Methodist Church

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

AL-ANON. COVE ICeepComing Back. Mon­days, 7-8p m. Ca Iva ryBaptist Church. 707Main, Cove.

ALCOHOLICSANONYMOUS

can help!

(541 ) 624-511 7

Serving Baker, Union,and Wallowa Counties

ACCEPTANCE GROUP

Anonymous meetsTuesdays at 7pm.

United Methodist Churchon 1612 4th St. in the

library room in thebasement.

541-786-5535

drinking a problem?

in Elgin.

La Grande

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

TUESDAY7AM-8AM

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

10AM-11AM

AA MEETINGS2614 N. 3rd Street

110 - Self-HelpGroup Meetings

~M tMon. — Tues.

Episcopal ChurchBasement

2177 1st StreetBaker City

HELP

Meetings:

Thurs. I!t Fn. — 8 PM

Baker City.

www.ore onaadistnct29

NEED TO TALK to anAA member one on

one> Callour24 HOUR HOTLINE

541-624-5117oi visit

day (Women's)

.com

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.

NARACOTICSANONYMOUS

Goin' Straight Group

NARCOTICSANONYMOUS:

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

120 - CommunityCalendar

PLEASE CHECKBlue Mountain

Humane AssociationFacebook Page,

if you have a lost orfound pet.

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

1995 4th St.

AA MEETINGBeen There,

Done That GroupSun. — 5:30 — 6:30 PM

Grove Street Apts(Corner of Grove Sr D Sts)

Open, Non-SmokingWheelchair accessible

AA MEETING:Survior Group.

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

(4th I!t Court Sts.)Baker City. Open,

No smoking.

AL-ANON-HELP FORfamilies I!t fnends of al­c ohol i cs . U n io nCounty. 568-4856 or963-5772

La Grande

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

TUESDAY7AM-8AM

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

10AM-11AM

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

AA MEETINGS2614 N. 3rd Street

Baker City

24 HOUR HOTLINE

www oregonaadistrict29 com

541-523-9845

BAKER COUNTYCancer Support GroupMeets 3rd Thursday of

every month at

Contact: 541-523-4242

CIRCLE OF FRIENDS(For spouses 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

ALZHEIMERS­DEMENTIA

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)

OVERCOMERSOUTREACHChrist based12 step group

2533 Church St541-523-731 7

Caregivers

Sundays; 2:45 — 3:45 PM

Wheel Chair Accessible

1000 - Legals

541-523-4242

WALLOWA COUNTYAA Meeting List

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

Thursday noon.Women onlyAA meeting

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

Enterpnse, across fromCourthouse Gazebo

Hotline 541-624-5117

AA MEETING:Powder River Group

Mon.; 7 PM -8 PMWed.; 7 PM -8 PMFn.; 7 PM -8 PMGrove St. Apts.

Baker City, OpenNonsmoking

Show it over1 00,000 times

with ourHomeSellerSpecial

a ous e ~Info.

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

UNION COUNTYAA Meeting

541-663-411 2

WALLOWA606 W Hwy 82

PH: 541-263-0208

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

SAFE HAVENAlzheimer/Dementia

Support Group2nd Friday ofevery month

Hall (Right wing) ofNazarene Church

1250 Hughes LaneBaker City

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

11:45 AM in Fellowship

Corner of Grove I!t D Sts.

Sunday

us

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

Check the

541-523-3611

like this!

180 - Personals

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

160 - Lost & Found

FOUND DOG, close bythe library to McDon­alds. 541-605-0138

LOST: SIAMESE lookingkitten (3 mo) near 700 H.(Baker) Please call ICaren

WE ARE HIRING!!

• Registered Nurses• Patient Access

Specialists• Certified Nurse

Assistants

Online a l ications:aaietalphonaua.org/careeraor send inquines to:

[email protected]

BAKER SCHOOL DIS­TRICT 5J is currentlyaccepting applicationsfor a Girls Head Bas­ketball Coach at BakerH igh School. F o r acomplete descriptionand application of thep osit io n go t owww.ba ker. k12. or. usor contact the employ­m ent d i v i s ion . Y o umay a l so ca l l541-524-2261 or emailnnemec©baker.k12.or.

C DL Tru c k d rive r

210 - Help Wanted­Baker Co.

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

Saint Alphonsus

541-523-6863

MISSING YOUR PET?

Baker City Anima/ Clinic

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 orcopy plus a picture in 12 issuesorthe Baker City Herald and the Observer ClassiFted Section

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

4. 80 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.

Three LocationsTo Serve You

give us a

(54K PER YEAR)

n eeded. Our w o o dchip and lumber dnv­ers average 54IC annu­ally (.48 cent ave). Offweekends, paid vaca­tion, health insurance.For 35 ye a r s w ehave serviced EasternOregon, Central Ore­gon, Southern Oregonand the Boise Valleyand you can live in anyof these locations. Werun l a te mo de lPetes and ICenworthsa ll 550 cats w ith 13speeds, our trailers arecurtain vans (no tarpsto deal w i th) 40'-23'doubles year aroundwork. We our lookingfor long term dnvers,our average employeehas worked for us forover 8 years. So if youare looking fora home,

caII 541.523.9202

QTew Directions'g$ orthwest Inc.

OR

Add BOLDINGor a BORDER!

It's a little extrathat gets

BIG results.

Have your adSTAND OUTfor as little as

$1 extra.

BUSY MEDICALclinic seeking

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

Apply on-line at~tl k

220- Help WantedUnion Co.

IT IS UNLAWFUL (Sub­section 3, O RS659.040) for an em­ployer (domestic helpexcepted) or employ­ment agency to printor circulate or cause tobe pnnted or circulatedany statement, adver­tisement o r p u b l ica­t ion, or t o u s e a n yform of application fore mployment o r t omake any inquiry inconnection with p ro­spective employmentwhich expresses di­rectly or indirectly anylimitation, specificationor discnmination as torace, religion, color,sex, age or nat ionalorigin or any intent tomake any such limita­t ion, specif ication ordiscrimination, unlessbased upon a b onafide 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.

HAINES STEAK HouseP/T server. Must be 21yrs or older..Apply atHaines Steak House541-856-3639.

>JLI­ ­

La Grande Office541-663-9000

Baker City Office541-523-7390

Richland Office541-893-3115

P/T — 25 hrs/week.

bakercityherald.com

Get moving. Call us today.arrd rro refurrdsi f ctaasified adis kib ed before errd of schedute.

Home Seber Special priceis for advertisirrg the same home, with rro copy charrges

I t t f t f d l ~ 1j -~ 4

• i • i

wvvw lonnlnowartl.comI

required.

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

Treatment FacilitatorF/T Day/Swing shift atour Recovery VillageProgram. High school

diploma or GEDrequired.

JOIN OUR TEAM!

AdministrativeAssistant

Mon — Thurs.Organizational and

customer service skills

resume:

210 - Help Wanted­Baker Co.

BAKER COUNTY Paroleand Probation, a divhs ion o f t he Bak e rCounty Sheriff's Of­fice, is accepting appli­cations for the positionof Parole I!t ProbationC lerk on Frid a y ,A ugust 2 1, 2 015through Friday, Sep­tember 11, 2015 at5pm. Salary for ParoleI!t Probation Clerk be­gins at $2,496-$3,032,plus excellent bene­f its. For a d d i t ionalinformation, spec i f iccriteria for Parole I !tProbation Clerk andthe application, pleasego t o t he BakerCounty Shenff's Officewebsite at:

www.bakersheriff.org/career op.htm

http://www3.bakercouunty. o rg:8080/ca ree rs/public.lsp

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

Baker Countyis anEqual Opportuni ty

Employer.

HKLPATTRACTATTNTIONTO YOUR AP!

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

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

EL ERRADERO needs adish washer. Pleasec ontact u s i f int e r ­ested. 541-962-0825

-I< St LUke's

lagrandeobserver.com

• 0 0 0 • 0 0 0 • 0 0 0

Page 12: La Grande Observer Daily Paper 09-11-15

2B — THE OBSERVER a BAKER CITY HERALD FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 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 '

220 - Help WantedUnion Co.

ACCOUNTINGCOORDINATOR

The Observer is lookingfor an accounting coor­dinator who will be re­sponsible for the dailyprocessing of receiv­ables, payables andbanking deposits. Theaccounting coordinatorinputs daily advertisingo rders, c reates r e ­ports, maintains ade­quate office supply in­ventory, p r ocessesforms and records forc orporate of f ice f o rp ayroll , pe r f o r m se nd-of m o nt h ac ­counts receivable bill­ing and is responsiblefor collections.

This position requires adetail-oriented, organ­ized leader with terrificcustomer service atti­tude.

The nght candidate willhave at l east t h reeyears experience in abookkeeping or officemanagement positionand a s o l i d u n der­standing of accountingpractices.

This is a 4 0 -hour perweek position, Mon­day through Friday,7:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.

I f yo u ' re i n t e rested,please send a resumewith references andl etter of i n terest nolater than Friday, Sep­tember 18 to ICari Bor­gen, publisher, TheObserver, 1406 FifthSt., La Grande, OR97850.

la randeobserver.comg b l h 0

220 - Help WantedUnion Co.

220 - Help WantedUnion Co.

IIOII'T UT YOUII, ItlBIIS...

Fixing up your house?Then you'l l need t heright materials or experthelp. You can find both inthe classified pages.

EEOE

Transpartatian Safety — ODOTDrive Safely. The Wcry to Go.

They won't mean to. But having a car full of distracting friends is oneof the biggest reasons young drivers get in fatal crashes twice as oftenas everyone else. That's especially true if you're drinking, speeding orcruising around after dark. So buckle up, drive sober, slow down anddrive without passengers. And live past 21.

220 - Help WantedUnion Co.

220 - Help WantedUnion Co.

220 - Help WantedUnion Co.

General description ofduties:

Circulation Duties:

• Delivers bundles to in­dependent contractorshomes

• Collects money fromthe news stands

• Delivers down routesto subscnbers homes

• Delivers speciaI 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 5 rain. In and outof a vehicle.

Must be able to lift up to75 pounds.

Send Resume to:cthompson©lagrande

observer.com

CirculationAssistant-PT

Monday, Wednesday,Fnday 1pm to 6pm­

Circulation

tion

220 - Help WantedUnion Co.

JOIN A Team thatMakes a Difference!Would you like tohelp the adults who

help our children?Umatilla-Morrow County

Head Sta r t Inc .(UMCHS) is a commu­nity leader providinghigh quality early learn­ing, healthy Iiving sup­ports and social serv­ices to children, fami­lies and caregivers ineleven counties. Weare looking for ener­getic, compassionate,and dedicated profes­s ionals t o I o i n ou rgrowing team. We be­lieve every role is cnti­cal to ou r s uccess.This is your chance toIoin a friendly and dy­namic company dedi­cated to w o r k ing i npartnership so childrenand communities canthrive.

Child Care Resource 5Referral, a program ofUMCHS, has the fol­lowing open position!

Childcare Resource 8rReferral Consultantin La Grande, OR

Qualifications: CDA o rAssociates degree inEducation, Early Child­hood Education, ChildDevelopment or r e ­lated f ield r e quired(Bachelor's d e greepreferred); 2 years' ex­penence working in ahuman/social servicesf i e I d andsecretanal/computerexperience; and theability to connect ande ngage w i t h ad u l tlearners.

Pay: $15.65-$19.00/hourdepending on educa­

We offer a benefit pack­age including medical,dental, flexible spend­ing account, life, EAP,403(b) retirement plan,and paid time off!

If you are a qualified andp assionate pe r s o nd edicated t o ear l ychildhood learning andcare and are interestedin t h ese p o s i t i ons,p lease c a l l (54 1 )564-6878 or visit ourw e b s I t ewww.umchs.org. EOE

POWDER VALLEY

North Powder School

P.O. Box 10 - 333 G

North Powder, OR

Phone 541-898-2244FAX 541-898-2046

Schools

District 8J

Street

97867

DELIVER IN THETOWN OF

BAKER CITY

INDEPENDENTCONTRACTORS

wanted to deliver theBaker City Herald

Monday, Wednesday,and Fnday's, within

Baker City.

LOOK

INDEPENDENTCONTRACTORSwanted to deliver

The ObserverMonday, Wednesday,

and Fnday's, to thefollowing area's

+ La Grande

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

Whirlpool' and KitchenAid'

APPLIANCES

ELGINELECTRIC

- Free Delivery­

SaveOnW!ndshields.com

43 N. 8th Elgin54t 437 2054

Wash

H RWQ~ I SOregon Awardsand Engraving

541-523-5070 • 541-519-8687Auio Deiailing e Rv Dump siauon

www.paradisetruckwash.com

QWP3~ QKQ00

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

Free Mobile Service

S00.320.535S

17171 Wingville LaneBaker City

QWto~ X%REQ

ParadiseTruck S RV

We Wash Anything on Wheels!Exit 304 off)-84 • 24)0 Plum St.

Baker City, OR 978)4

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

CPOR(IX%

KIII| EO~III QOtIliErS

Flre Fighters­FlrSt ReSIIOnderSFlre Victims...

Need Assistance with Clothing &Accessories? Call Now­

It would be an honor to help.

FOR YOUR HEROISMBest prices in Northeastern Oregon

1431 Adams Ave.,La Grande

541-663-0724

Fine Quality Consignment Clothing

or goto

CONTRACTINGBpeciaizing nA Phases

Df Construction andGarage Door nsta ation

®WRAII,RQKaleidoscope

Child 8c Family Therapy

t:t:br1BQ209

All Breeds • No TranquilizersDog & CatBoarding

541-523-60SO

XK3CKDOD~MhEmbroidery by...

Blue MountainDesign

541 523 5424. fax 5u 523 5516

JIM STANDLEY541.7B6.5505

All Around GeeksPC Repair New Computers

(Laptops A PC's)On Site Sustness A

Residential Corltputer

infoeallaroundgeelc.corn

1609 Adams Ave., La Grande

Classes

Tammie Clausel

p.o. Box 470

541-786-4763 • 541-786-2250

Licensed Clinical Social Worker1705 Main street suite 100

Baker City, OR 97814

DM C2C~OryRQ

DQNNA's GRQQM IBQARD, LTD.

QmamSuik<~

140517th SI. Baker Citywww.kanyid.com

541-663-0933

SALES • SERVICE • INSTALLATION

GRFGG HII4RICHSFI4II4SURAI4cr AGFI4CY II40.GREGG Hl • RICHSEN, Agent1722 Campbell Street

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

MPXWQ7001OAK HAVEN

Is now offering

CCBII32022

Bob Fager • 963-3701 • ccB.23272

DANFORTH CONSTRUCTIONWayne Dalton Garage Doors

DOORS

KBQ Q ~~X

WOLFER'SMowing -N- MoreServicing La Grande, Cove, imi)ler & UnionLawns 8 Odd Jobs

971-241-7069

KBQ Q ~~X

Grass Kings

• Leaf Disposal• Yard Care• 1Vimming

541 962 0523

THE DOOR GUY

D@@MIIS~

MAID TO ORDER

Call Angie I 963-MAID

Caftef's Custom Cleaning

RAYNOR GARAGE

Sales • Installation • ServiceRick 963-0144 786-4440

Residential, Rental & Commercial CleaningServing Union County since 2006

Licensed and lnsuredShannon Carter, owner541 910-0092EWMSX

STATE FARM

I:00-0:00 Ages 3-5

Island City

Licensed a InsuredGommercial & Residential

Afternoon PreschoolTuesday, Wednesday, Thursday

Starting September 29th

541-663-1528

La Grande, OR

541-963-4174www.Valleyrealty.net

Continuous Guttem

TABS, BROADSHEET,

Camera ready ar we can

Contact The Observer

P3KA MH75

VILLEY REILTY

FULL COLOR

set up far yau.

963-3161

Lifestyle photographyNatural — Personal — Meaningful

541-519-1150http://sturdyrosephotography.com

208AXCDANFORTH

CONSTRUCTION

Home LendingKevin Spencer

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

visit your c oses( Umpqua Bank

Sturdy Rose

Over 30 years serving Union CountyComposition - Metal - Rat Roofs

963-0144 (Office) orCell 786-4440 «e¹»oz

AW CONSTRUCTION, LLC

10201 W. 1st Street Suite 2,

MVi70XQALL OFFSET

COMMERCIALPRINTING

REAL ESTATEAND PROPERTYMANAGEMENT

541-525-9522

CCB¹202271

OIF/OON SIGN CONPjgg

541-786-8463CCB¹ 183649

PN- 7077A

24 Hour Towing

20 yrs of full service tree care

541 523 5327

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

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

Free estimateshazardous removals

pruning a stump grindingBrian a Jack Walker Arborlsts

THE SEWING

LEGACY FORD

SIGNS OF ALL NNOSCHECK OUR WESSITE

LADY

ExEGUTIvE TREECARE, ING.

Thankyou

1920 Couit AveBaker City, OR 97814~tith r d

541-523-7163541-663-0933

ROKt)'ELOFQ

do TERRAIndependent Product

Certifiedin Aroma TouchTechnique Massage

541-519-7205Located at:

Consultant David Lillard

Marcus Wolfer

Featuring:• Roofing • Stroage Shds• Decks • Much More!

Andy Wolfer CCB¹186113541-910-6609

TY SENNETT

541-432-S733

• BAKER (ITY •Outstanding

Computer Repair

Paula Benintendi RN,BSN H00FING

A Certified Arborist

Sewlng:AterationMending Zippers

Custom Made C othing

1609Tenth Bt. Baker City

eraphic Deaisn

MICHAEL

CNC plasma Metal cutting

Large Format Digital Printingvehiele Letterine a Graphies

oregonsigncompany.com g

THE CITY of La Grandeis accepting applica­tions for the followingposltlon:Communications

Required City applicationmay 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©ot ofla rande.orClosing date: First re­view o f a p p l icationsthat are received byWednesday, Septem­ber 23, 2015, 5 00p.m. AA/EEO

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

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

d

NOW ACCEPTING appli­cations for part-t imeand on-call positions ina La Grande area fos­ter home. Please call541-963-8775 for de­tails.

Tech I

WWW. a erCi era .COIIIWIW.agrali eO SerVer.COIII

$P(Vt~, OoaifigiI,Events & Informotion

Attention:

Do a two-way favor ...get extra cash for your­self and make it possiblef or someone e lse t oenloy those items younever use. Sel l t hemwith a classified ad.

Part-time Paraprofes­sional and AssistantMiddle School Foot­baII Coach

North Powder SchoolDistnct 8J is currentlyadvertis ing f o r apart-time paraprofes­sional and an assistantmiddle school footballcoach for the 2015­2016 school year. Formore information con­t act V ik i T u r ner a t541-898-2244 ( e x t .8821)

If interested pleasesubmit an application to:Lance L DixonPO Box 10North Powder, OR97867.

Successful candidateswill be contacted forinterviews. These po­sitions are open untilfilled.

Swanee Herrmann541-963-9247

1207 Hall Street

380 - Baker CountyService Directory

SCHOOL OF BALLET!

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

Registration: 3- 6pmAugust 27th & on!

Ca II 541-523-3673

CEDAR 8r CHAIN l inkfences. New construc­t ion, R e m odels 5handyman services.

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

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

House calls, drop off, andremote services

Dale BogardusWeekdays: ?am-?pm

541-297-5$31

EXCAVATION INC

[email protected] ccBr 168468

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

541-805-9777

29 Years Experience

Tropical Sun Bronzing Spa1927 Court st Baker City

XRMPMRILEY

/ Repair/ Replace allRoofing Types

/ FREE Estimates!

541-663-4145Since 1993

CCB¹)0)989

For I.mol 541-519-6273Great references.

CCB¹ 60701

CT LAWN SERVICEFall CleanupStarting Soon541-51 9-511 3

971-322-4269. Ba ker

320 - BusinessInvestmentsDID YOU ICNOW 7 IN 10

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

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

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

330 - Business Op­portunities

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

340 - Adult CareBaker Co.

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

345 - Adult CareUnion Co.I'M A CAREGIVER look­

i ng for w o r k i n L aGrande area Exp. 5good refs. Wil l con­s ider liv i ng i n .509-240-3097

360 - Schools &InstructionBECKIE'S STUDIO OF

770 Depot St. La Grande

www.beckiesstudio

Sign Up Now!Registration continues

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

DANCE

541-805-8317

ofdance.com

Certified Dance Educator

LA GRANDE

• •

• 0 • • 0 • • 0 •

Page 13: La Grande Observer Daily Paper 09-11-15

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 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

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 '

380 - Baker CountyService Directory

D 5. H Roofing 5.Construction, Inc

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

buildings a specialty.Respond within 24 hrs.

541-524-9594

FRANCES ANNEYAGGIE INTERIOR 8EEXTERIOR PAINTING

Residential. Neat &efficient. CCB¹137675

Commercial &

JACKET 8r 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

541-524-0369

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

CCB¹192854. New roofs

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

R EADY F O R ACHANGE? Don't Iust sitthere, let the classifiedhelp wanted column finda new and challengingIob for you.

NOTICE: O R E GON

380 - Baker CountyService Directory

Landscape 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.

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

finish workFast, Quality Work!

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

CCB¹176389

experience r equire­

380 - Baker CountyService Directory

385 - Union Co. Ser­vice Directory

ANYTHING FOR

Same owner for 21 yrs.

POWDER RIVERTrophy IL Engraving

18554 Griffin Gulch LaneBaker City, OR 97814

SCARLETT MARY LMT3 massages/$ 1 00

Baker City, ORGift Certificates Available!

430- For SaleorTrade

KING s i ze b e d, b o xspnng, frame, like new$500. 541-963-9226

Ca II 541-523-4578

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

A BUCK

541-910-6013CCB¹1 01 51 8

(Tally and Randy Newman)

435 - Fuel Supplies

450 - Miscellaneous

eMETAL RECYCLINGWe buy all scrapmetals, vehicles

& battenes. Site cleanups & drop off bins of

all sizes. Pick upservice available.

WE HAVE MOVED!Our new location is

3370 17th StSam HainesEnterpnses

541-51 9-8600

PRICES REDUCEDMulti Cord Discounts!

$140 in the rounds 4"to 12" in DIA, $170split. Fir $205 split.Delivered in the val­ley. (541)786-0407

445- Lawns & Gar­dens

SPRAY SERVICE, INCRangeland — PastureTrees-Shrubs-Lawn

Bareground - Right of WayInsect — Weed Control

541-523-8912

Attention: VIAGRA andC I A L I S U S E R S! Acheaper alternative tohigh drugstore prices!50 Pill Special — $99FREE Shipping! 100

Percent Guaranteed.CALL NO W :1-800-729-1056(PNDC)

There's an easy way foryou to sell that bicycleyou no longer use. Justadvertise it in classified!

JOHN JEFFRIES

450 - Miscellaneous

AVAILABLE ATTHE OBSERVER

NEWSPAPERBUNDLES

$1.00 each

NEWSPRINTROLL ENDS

Art prolects & more!Super for young artists!

$2.00 8r upStop in today!

1406 Fifth Street541-963-31 61

is 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)

Make your advertisingdollars go further! Listyour business every dayin the Service Directoryin our classified sectionof this newspaper.

CANADA DRUG Center

Burning or packing?

450 - Miscellaneous

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

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

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

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)

REDUCE YOUR PastTax Bill by as much as75 percent. Stop Lev­ies, Liens and WageGarnishments. Call theTax Dr Now to see ify o u Q u a l i f y1-800-791-2099.(PNDC)

475- Wanted to Bu

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.

NORTHEAST

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

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

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

470 - Tools

Lincoln 225 Arc WelderIncludes:• Hornell Speed Helment• Std. Flip Lip Helment• Gloves, Chaps, Arms &

Chest• Welding Stand/ Cabinet• 100 ¹ misc welding rod

CaII 541-523-7240

450 - Miscellaneous

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

OREGON CLASSIFIEDS

650 - Horses, Mules

AVAIL. FOR LEASE23 yr old gentle Arabianmare. Suitable for youngkids learning to nde. Hayprovided. Call for details.

Lydia 541-519-6505

NOTICEAll real estate advertised

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

705 - RoommateWantedHOME TO share, Call

m e I ets t a Ik . J o541-523-0596

710 - Rooms forRent

EQUAL HOUSINGOPPORTUNITY

C O. YARD 6 G A R AGE SA L E SUNION

ingloffte Park

Haw

GNll

ey

8eRond

H $PltQly

Be

Trail Ln

SO +

a

UNION ee

PioneerPark

UnionCounty

airgroundsi

6

Gr nd

Cestnrl La GElnsenlsry Hes sCP Scliool

La e

Black

VB

ool

Riwslem

Penn

leScho

Ovss

enPa

Trail

n Ri

5 M

El

Benton

ee

vleeJsheri

Blvd EasternPrcgoll

University

CIIIbGardPark

X+

Jac

ELGIN + +©

n

U

TA

Rrv~

K v

ve

CO

I

a@

4

alRiverside

Park

Ave

e'­

k

ery Sc oolvs

rtner Ln

A GRAND

e e'D e

0

ic Ln

ZAv

X Ave

0

Rd

enn

ol

Ave EoEN

F I

n ler

eE OAve eENA

EMA

L AveHickory ctJLocust ct

Cove Ave

o ieBird

chelsect

Q Ave

N

Mi

Mulh

ve

lland Dr

vie

I)

Buchanan

Ronde ~Aeedeey'o

ic

Gnrndeg

4g@

Ln

Emil

Fruitd la

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

Y ARD, GARAGE SA L E SPrivate Party

Y

.II"zPqj~ Birch Ln

I SLA D T Y

Dr i cn l~e

Mt~anhy Av

Ln

a) Island

1stst a ~"a o ~ mlard

hll tj 'a

I

~eonard~n

«CT u . white o ciub L a c r

F- nt Stsraad Av

School

ali ~<4~ 1 F~alrwa or

Island;Ciiycemetery

La GrandeCountry

Club

i sa

gilla r

550 - Pets

505 - Free to a goodhome

like this!!

MfWlf!

LaGrande Observer

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

Use ATTENTIONGETTERS to helpyour ad stand out

Call a classified repTODAY to ask how!Baker City Herald

541-523-3673ask for Julie

541-936-3161ask for Erica

• • •

Senior an d Di s ab led

720 - ApartmentRentals Baker Co.

2-BDRM, 1 bathDowntown. $625/mo.

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

UPSTAIRS STUDIOCustom kitchens. Laun­

dry on site. W/S/G &lawn care p rovided.Tenant pays electric.Close to park & down­t own. See a t 2 1 3 4Grove St. $450+ dep.No pets / s moking.541-519-5852 o r541-51 9-5762

UPSTAIRS STUDIO.Laundry on si te .W/S/G heat/hot water,Dish TV & lawn careprovided. Tenant payselectric. Close to park& downtown. 2209G rove St. $450/mo+dep. No pets/smok­ing. 541-519-5852 or541-51 9-5762

ELKHORN VILLAGEAPARTMENTS

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

as

H <>raer FA F Av

BerniePark

@ GAHillcrestCemetery

AveCalvary

Cemetery ~5

C as court DrMountain

~ Park Dr

untain,ark Dr

Dr

Res oir

BonnevilleLn

Gemia)

'T

rua Ave

8p +~Park

Jacob AveT

IIunny

Ln '

n

rra Lea

Av

iGran view

icaoi Gran

Cem

sE

e 2'

n

terynew

Op

Gekeler Ln

Wallowa, Mountain D

BlueMountai

so e O o 0

Dr

5 Lines,

Plus Map

90

aaays' 5 $0

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

map publishes Wednesday and Friday with minimum of 10 adsPrivate party advertisers only. 3 days must run consecutively. Yard Sale

AII ar d sale ads must be PREPA1D/Additional L ines s1.00 per l ine

Ronde Ditch

LA GRANDEFARMERS'

MARKET

Max Square, La Grande

EVERY SATURDAY

EVERY TUESDAY3iao-6:oopm

Through October 17th.

www.lagrandefarmers

9am-Noon

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

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

The Elms Apartments2920 Elm Street

Baker City, OR 97814

ridia145- Yard, GarageSales-Union Co.

ALL YARD SALE ADSMUST BE PREPAID

You can drop off yourpayment at:

The Observer1406 5th St.La Grande

OR

Yard Sales are $12 50 for5 lines, and $1 00 foreach additional lineCall for more info

541-963-3161

eVisa or Mastercard,are accepted.+

145- Yard, GarageSales-Union Co.

1039 N 5th St., Union.3 F ri, 8 -3. S m. La n e

couch excellent condi­tion, day bed Trundlerod iron w/ two mat­t ress's, n e w law nmower w/ wa rra nty,small dog travel bagused once, Do lphinvacuum, much more!12

1507 JEFFERSON St.,4 LG. By G&VSupply.

Sat., only 8-3. House­hold items, lots of fur­niture & etc.

1907 LINDA Ln., LG.5 Sat., 8-1. 1985 Honda

Ln., LG. Sale includescollectibles, toys, pot­tery, clothes & muchmore. Sept 12th 9-?.

CURVES GARAGE Sale.11Sat, 8-2. NO ear ly

Lp., LG. Misc items.

ELGIN YARD sale. 98 N16th, Fri 9/11 & Sat9/12. 9am — 4pm. Noc lothes . T st artmower, ant iques &collectibles. No EarlySale! Cancelled if rain­Ing.

FARM YARD Sale. Fn &13Sat, 7-5. 72469 Good

Rd., Elgin. Antiques,kids clothes, fuel tank,& lots of misc items.

MULTIFAMILY SALE,14lots of clothes, house

145 - Yard, GarageSales-Union Co.

4 FAMILY Yard Sale. 4299 N Dewey St., Union.

Sat. 12th, 8a m-1 pm.

ALMOSTA FARM ,1062221 & 62223 Starr

birds. 2703 B earco

145- Yard, GarageSales-Union Co.FUZZBALL A N I MAL

& Sat, 7 — 1, 907 GAve, LG. D o nationsaccepted, p i c k upavailable. Volunteersneeded. Kittens availf or a d o p t ion . J o d i541-786-4637 Rebecca541-41 0-6094.

HUGE Moving/Downsiz­17 ing Sale: Furniture,

16Rescue Fundraiser. Fn

kitchen items, l inens,bedding, bath i tems,home decor, vacuumc leaner, of f ice sup­plies, table saw, handtools, toolboxes, bicy­cles, woman's profes­s ional an d cas u a lwardrobe (sizes 6-10),men's & wom e n 'sshoes, accessories.Much more. C lean,high quality items, lowprices. Sat., 9/12/15,9-4 only, 1202 AspenDr. LG. No early shop­pers/sales, please.

LA GRANDE Soroptimist18Sale. Sat., 12th, 8-12.

-?. 810 Albany, Elgin.P ool t a b le , chi n ahutch, piano, holidaydecor, antiques. LotsMore!

SAT 8- noon, 6 pty sale,21cleaning out the s tg

shed. 62323 SpoonerRd, LG.

SAT ONLY, 8 — 1, 64689

from IC off WallowaLake Hwy . V i n tageitems, adult clothing,great stuff!

STONEWOOD CO M ­

Fri. S a t . & Sun .9a m-3pm. 1809 26thStreet, La Grande.

YARD SALE. Another24one of Mark's sales at

C's Storage. 3 107Cove Ave. LG. Sat, 8-?

10108 EMILY DR., IC. Fn1 1 2-5 & Sat . , 8-3 .

Hunter's Dream Sale.Bulks of fabnc, tons ofQuality camo clothes,tools, knives, recum­bent bike/rower, kidsbike, eve n a f ewthings for the ladies.

YARD SALE. Sat. only,28-2. 2706 E. L Ave.,

LG.

Must have a minimum of10 Yard Sale ad's to

pnnt the map

2604 N Greenwood St.,7 LG. Sat, 8-1. Wooden

6 1404 1st, LG, F r i &

Shadow, f u r n i ture,w estern s addle, &misc household items.

2 HOUSEHOLD sale

Sat, 8 — 3. Lo t 's ofg reat s t u f f . C o m echeck it out!

desk, DVD's, & lots of wares, furniture. Sat,8-2. 2001 Y Ave., LG.mlsc.

2ND & final moving re­8 t irement sa le. N ew

T hings Added! S a t9/12 8:00-12:00, Mostitems 1/2 pnce 12:00­1:00. 1103 C Ave, LG.

YARD SALE. Fn, Sat &15Sun, 9-?. Clothes, kids

misc, collectable dolls,nick nacks and othermisc. 1305 N Hall St.,LG.

Eastern Oregon RentalStorage Unit on 21 St.¹174, LG. Across fromthe OTEC. Women &kids clothing, purses,shoes, filing cabinets,office chairs, Christ­m as items & l o t o fmi sc. items!

23MUNITY Ya rd Sale.

2 M arket Lane, 5 m i

145- Yard, GarageSales-Union Co.

MULTI-FAMILY, SAT.1912th, 9-4. Sun. 13th,

LG. Sporting gear &c lothing, boy's g o l fclubs, golf balls, boys,toys, Disney movies,EOU items, furniture,beer mirrors & signs,c ollectibles, lots o fmisc. Most pnces low­ered on Sunday.

MY JUNK can be your20treasure. Thurs — Sat, 9

12-4. 2813 Minam Ct.,

145 - Yard, GarageSales-Union Co.

MAKE AN Offer Yard25Sale, Sat Only 9-1.

3002 N Walnut, LG.Furniture, plants, Yardswing.

YARD SALE. Fn, Sat &26S un, 8 5. H ot t u b ,

camp trailer, propaneor natural gas stove,washer & dryer, multi­family k ids c l o t hes0-18mths, smoke freehome. 62095 C ha ndleLp, LG.

YARD SALE: Sat., only279-12. 1905 Y Ave., LG.

T ree stand & b o w ,plus odds & ends.

os

605 - Market Basket

market.org

630 - Feeds

200 TON 1st cropAlfalfa-alfalfa grass.

3x4 bales. No rain, test150 TON 2nd cropAlfalfa -alfalfa grass

Sm. bales.(100 lb. avg.)

Freestone Canning PeachesImproved ElbertaO'Henry -Angelus

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

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

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

Bartlett Pears..$ .65/Ib

Asian Pears........$1 /Ib

Honey Crisp Apples(Call for availability)

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

541-934-2870Visit us on Facebook

THOMAS ORCHARDSKimberly, Oregon

"EBT & Credit CardsAccepted"

U-PICK

for updates

ments.

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

2 bd, 1 ba. Call Century

725 - ApartmentRentals Union Co.1 bdrm, full bath, up­

s tairs over a s h o p ,southside, creek, greatyard & views. All utili­ties incl., no smoking.Avail. Iate Sept. $600Photos/info on Craigs­list 541-663-8683.

CIMMARON MANORICingsview Apts.

21, Eagle Cap Realty.541-963-1210541-51 9-0693

• 0 • • 0 • • 0 •

Page 14: La Grande Observer Daily Paper 09-11-15

4B — THE OBSERVER rk BAKER CITY HERALD FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 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

Baker City HeraId: 541-523-36738 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

R E l-'tte ®'=

725 - ApartmentRentals Union Co.

CENTURY 21PROPERTY

MANAGEMENT

Call

Welcome Home!

9 I

Affordasble Studios,1 I!t 2 bedrooms.

(Income Restnctions Apply)Professionally Managed

by: GSL PropertiesLocated Behind

La randeRentalsicom

(541)963-1210

(541) 963-7476

GREEN TREEAPARTMENTS

2310 East Q AvenueLa Grande,OR 97850

I

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 fo 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.

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

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

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

541-523-4435

,, jWEEN

tio Rod ColvottoaLa Grande Town Center

745 - Duplex RentalsUnion Co.

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

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

CLEAN ar freshly painted2-bdrm w/basement

and fenced yard. Range,fndge,. NO smoking,

1 sm. pet neg. $550/moGarb. pd. 541-383-3343

Nelson Real EstateHas Rentals Available!

780 - Storage Units

A PLUS RENTALShas storage units

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

or 402 Elm St. La

Ca II 541-910-3696

e SepvCy Rrcede COded Eatrre Liahted ler trpvr pretectlpri

e 6 dlffereitt Size vrtile

e use or lRV elorege41298 Chioo Rd, Baker Clty

Ioaaeo Otfaaetil

>IIII4- L~ODED'de soil4 I

g4 CoryoffoCollvolf fiilo

Coupe, 350 autI h 132miies gats

2L24 rnpg- Add lotsrnor 8 descnpt

and Interesting fact,or $ggl Look how

nluch fun ag Ihava in a swa I

like thrsl$12,560

HIGHLAND VIEWApartments

800 N 15th AveElgin, OR 97827

jk

541-523-6485

!Features indud 3 BDRM, 2 bath, w/s/g

pd. carport, no smok­ing. $800 mo, $700dep. (541)910-3696

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

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

c luded. Ga s h e a t ,fenced yard. $550/mo.541-51 9-6654

6-Bdrm, 2 bath Home$950+ d ep. 2275 2n d St1- Bdrm, 1 bath Home$425+dep 306 4th St3-bdrm, 1 bath Home$750+dep 2588 1st St2-bdrm, 1 bath duplex$450+dep 1230 Valley

Molly RagsdaleProperty Management

Call: 541-519-8444

NICE, DOUBLE WIDEwww.La rande mobile home for rent

sage. 541-877-2202

Your auto, Rv,motorcycle ATV

„ ieveiing, snowmobile,

P

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

or up to 12 months(whichever comes first)

• Continuous listing with photo onnortheastoregonclassifieds.com

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

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

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."

in Durkee. Leave mes­

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

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

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

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

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

3 BD, 1 ba, near schools,EOU I!t hospital. Small,nice, older home, veryclean, many upgrades,W/D. Well insulated,gas heat. No smoking,no pets. Ref . reqd.$ 750, See a t 1 2 02First St. 541-786-4606

3 BD, 2 ba, fenced backyard, double lot wi thshop, n o sm o k ing,$900+ dep. La Grande541-562-5036

3 BD, 2 ba, gas heat, dw,no pets, no smoking,$895mo 541-963-9430

3+ BD,2 ba, Ig backyardw/ deck, $850/mo,Avail. 9/21/15. 1805 XAve. Call for more info541-963-2633

CHARMING NEAT I ! tt ighty 2 bd, w/s pd .near college, $850 +dep. Mt Emily Prop.M g t. 541-962-1 074

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

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

541-91 0-4444

• A~uta-LoeJr. Gaee

~ NITCiXUL@$• 8eevre* Ktrrrpedi Zrt~

• 8eoutrit(y Ltrrbetntf• 8e~ Cat nevas• Outeide RV Htovsgs• Feritced AirtorL

(6-root, traptr3RE11' elean ujirikaAII alzeo avatIat) Ie

(Bxlp u)p to l4xRB)64X-688-1688

8518 X4QL

SECURE STORAGE

SurveillanceCameras

Covered StorageSuper size 16'x50'

541-523-21283100 15th St.

Baker City

American WestStorage

541-523-4564

Behind Armory on Eastand H Streets. Baker City

RV Storage

SAF-T-STOR

7 days/24 houraccess

COMPETITIVE RATES

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

i 4 ' I , I I I r OO N• • • ' naaI I V jopsI

B AKER CO. YARB 8 S A R A S E S A L E S

• II IN I S / I I r I

pgI I )g Rrl al drlg' , III IQIIaj'

„• r e eu „ I , „ I)­

""" m "IPPB • C '7I I ", h~~.;­•, SLR '"', I I (H H I Ia i •.„.', a~I • ' i ia aa I I I I I j

L•

,>

•w ~ Hs7 ~ Hsg

,"IIIPI ' j'L , ,„J

541-524-15342805 L Street

NEW FACILITY!!Vanety of Sizes Available

Secunty Access Entry

CLASSIC STORAGE

Computenzed Entry

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

Grande.

UNION 2BD, $550. 2 bcl,$600. 2 b c l , $695.Pets okay I!t senior dis­count. 541-910-0811

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

760 - CommercialRentals

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

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

780 - Storage Units

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

140 - Yard, GarageSales-Baker Co.

FULL editions ofThe Baker City

TAICE US ON YOUR

LEAVE YOUR PAPERPHONE!

AT HOME

Aaherret­

SlUSSggisggSI PRE-ESTATE SALE

Fn., 9/11 Lrr Sat., 9/12;8- 4

3060 GROVE Stp Saturday only

9am till?

MULTI-FAMILY SALEE 3025 Carter St.

Fn. 9/11; 8m -4pmSat. 9/12; 8am -12pm

140- Yard, Garage 140 - Yard, Garage 140 - Yard, Garage 5 Line s,Sales-Baker Co. Sales-Baker Co. Sales-Baker Co. 3 Days

A 14593 Angel Lane,Baker City

Sun., 9/I3; 1 - 4Lots of exciting items

including but not limitedto hand I!t power tools,

new I!t used items,furniture, antiques, Xmasdecor plus much more!

. „„RElSRI I I R""" IIIeFI .!aI I I q aI I I :,. r. r' raaII I I• II I (T ~ I - % I r

• [VWw!I8 Herald. Locations shown are approximations — Check individu­

rttr-8 + ommissions.

I Sat. 8 - 2 . M o u n ta inbike, clothing, snow­board boots, sewingmachine, I!t more!

YARD SALE2905 11th StStarts: 9AM

One Day OnlySat., Sept. 12

1916 PLUM St. Fri, @ Plus Map $

— I+~ + ~ YARD, GARAGE SALES

50

Herald

online.

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.

g ­ plete and accurate, we cannot be responsible for errors and

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

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

All ard sale ads must be PREPAID!Additional Lines r/.00per line

Private Party

Private party advertisers only. 3 days must nin consecutively. Yard Sale

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

r ap publishes Wednesday and Friday with minimum of 10 ads

255 HILLCRESTGreat view of BakerCity and Eagle Mtns.

One level, 1,200 sf (ml),2-bdrm, 1.5 bath home.Livingroom, family rm,

gas fireplace, AC,electnc heat.

Double car garage,shop, fenced backyard.

Close to golf course.

541-519-8463$140,000

FSBO

3 EASY STEPS

1. Register youraccount before youleave

2 . Call to s top y o urpnnt paper

3. Log in wherever youare at and enloy

are now availableDirections from Baker

Pocahontas Rd to GoodnchCrk Ln to Angel Ln. 1st

dnveway on nght on AngelDierections from HainesAnthony Lakes Hvvy to

S. Rock Crk Rd to

Crk Ln to Angel Ln. 1stdnveway on nght on Angel

Pocahontas Rd to Goodnch

1ST EVER YARD SALEG 3925 Grace St.

Sat. only — 8 am-?Craftsman, furniture,

plants, I!t misc

YEAR END SALE2516 Valley Ave.

F n. I!t Sat; 9a m - 5pmWelders, bunk bed,glass­ware,Hondas I!t antiques

K 1 9 18 18th St.Sat. 9/12 I!t Sun. 9/1 3;

8am -?. Tools, camping,hunting, clothes I!t misc

MULTI-FAMILY SALEL 375 Spnng Garden

Saturday Only8AM -?

Call541-963-3161

541-523-3673 toplace your ad.

OI'• MloI-Wtroltovso• Ovtsldo Ismmll PetMttg• Itsrsoretile IIslet

For lrlAxlrtoIIort oriII:

52$4MIIaya$94NIevelti!Igs

378510th Streei

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

825 - Houses forSale Union Co.

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

• I I

POST MOVING SALEB18479 W. Campbell Lp

Sept., 11 I!t 12; 8a — 3p

925 J St. (Off of Birch)Call Now to Subscnbe! C Fn. 9/11I!t Sat 9/12,

541-523-3673 8am - ?. Misc items.

MOVING SALE914 Washington

Sat. 9/12; Starts 9amClothing, household,

I!t more

• Rent a unit for 6 mo

%ABC STORESALL%

MOVF IN SPFCIAl!get 7th mo. FREE

(Units 5x10 up to 10x30)

FOR SALE. 38 farmedacres on HVVY 30 be­tween Truck Stop I!tSteel's . $15 8 , 000208-343-81 35541-523-9050

• 0 • • 0 • • 0 •

Page 15: La Grande Observer Daily Paper 09-11-15

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 2015 THE OBSERVER rk BAKER CITY HERALD — 5B

DEADLINES:LINE ADS:

Monday: noon FridayWednesday: noon TuesdayFriday: no on Thursday

DISPLAY ADS:2 days prior to

publication date

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

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

825 - Houses forSale Union Co.

825 - Houses forSale Union Co.

825 - Houses forSale Union Co.

825 - Houses forSale Union Co.

825 - Houses forSale Union Co.

*PRICE REDUCED*

855 - Lots & Prop­erty Union Co. 915- Boats & Motors 930 - Recreational

VehiclesTHE SALE of RVs not

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

ONLY YOU CAN PREVENT IYILOFIRES.w w w . e m o k e y b e a r . c o m

I E CARE f l k .

2002 PALM HARBOR

Triple Wide 2428 sq. ft.

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

Please drive by 8rpick-up a flyer.

69519 Haefer Ln. CoveCALL for showing today!

$270,000

on 1.82ACRES

8

$439,900 4000SQUARE FOOT COM­MERCIAL BUILDINGin prime location withample concrete parking,anchored by SuperWalmart store. Goodstreet frontage. Buildingcould be used for 2separate businesses ifdesired. 2400 sq. ft.with 3 roll up overheaddoors, upstairs storage,

,

2 offices tk bathroom.1600 sq. ft. with 2 over­head roll up doors, of­fice tk bathroom. Utili­

possible uses. Currentlya transmission shop.Equip. available.15246119Century 21 EagleCap Realty,

' 541-9634511.

BEAUTIFUL VIEW lot inCove, Oregon. Buildyour d ream h o m e.Septic approved, elec­tnc within feet, streamrunning through lot .A mazing v i ew s ofmountains (lt val ley.3.02 acres, $62,000208-761-4843

ties are separate. Many,

920 - Campers

$5,500 firm541-663-6403

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

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

970 - Autos For Sale

2000 NEW VISIONULTRA 5TH WHEEL

$16,000Fully loaded!

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

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

g Ilt6

For Sale By Owner

541-91 0-1 684

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

I

930 - RecreationalVehicles

I .

$140,000

ROSE RIDGE 2 Subdrvpsion, 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.

Spacious, 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 (lt more!1 block from school.

North PowderSee more at:

o 4114 •

2007 NUWA HitchHikerChampagne 37CKRD

Tnple axles, Bigfoot Iackleveling system, 2 new

6-volt battenes, 4 Slides,Rear Drnrng/ICrtchen,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

by Sfella Wilder

able to tell you what is right for you. You musttrust your instincts ­- and hope for a littleluck as welL

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) — What youdo can cause a competitor to make a game­changing mistake. You're ready to play in amore aggressive fashion all the way around.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) — Routinebusiness is likely to take more of your timethan usual — which, of course, moves it out ofthe realm of routine!

CANCER (June 21-July 22) — You cansend a signal to someone that makes yourposition clear and lets him or her know thatyou're not to be trifled with.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) ­- Teamworkresults in more measurable gains. You willwant to confirm what you hear from afar.Evening offers a new opportunity.

740 3rd St.

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER11, 2015YOUR BIRTHDAYby Stella WilderBorn today, you are ultimately destined to

travel your own unique path — one paved bydreams, desires, talent and opportunity — butat the beginning, you are likely to be muchmore derivative in your approach to life, bothpersonally and professionally. You will freelyimitate those you admire, learning whatworks for you and what doesn't, so that even­tually you will be able to shape yourself in amanner that is a unique combination of allthat you have gathered from others, com­bined with your own natural talents andinclinations. When you are first starting out,you will recognize the value of trying almostanything at least once ­- and this will be ahabit you maintain throughout your lifetime!

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 12VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) ­- You may not

be able to move as quickly as you hadplanned, and someone else will have to tie upsome loose ends as a result.

LIBRA(Sept. 23-Oct. 22) ­- You mayhave

a few fires to put out before everyone feelsthat things are going the way they are sup­posed to.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) — The tradi­tional gives you what you're looking for.There's no need to spend anytime looking forthe new and untried — for now.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) ­- Youcan reveal something to others that changesthe dynamics between you and them in a wayonly you can truly understand.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) — You'relikely to be noticed by someone who is in aposition to do you a professional favor. He orshe is worth some study.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) ­- You'realmost sure to get the help you need, but in aform that comes as a complete surprise. You'llcredit another's creativity.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) — You and afriend or co-worker aren't likely to see eye toeye when it comes to the best way to put moremoney in your wallet.

ARIES (March 21-April 19) ­- No one is

www zrllow com/homedetails/740-3rd-St-North-Powder-OR­

9~7867/86342981 * 6/

541-523-2206

850 - Lots & Prop­erty Baker Co.

$72,000/OBO.

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

location for contractors.

Senous buyers only.541-523-9643

880 - CommercialPropertyNEWLY RENOVATED

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

/9m iiEDlTOR5 /97 /o9//II q6//6961 pl/I///96/26 Ryan rl/I I I////elm6/676/II

COPYRIGHT 2//15 UNITED r EATURE SYNDICATE, INCDrrrRIBUTED BY UNIVERSAL UCLICK /OR Urrll//IWalnutr/ KI6/21 Q/r MO641/16, 8/I/I ar 67/4

541-519-1488

't

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.

*I I'I, j ' j i / i .

'

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)

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

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

Good condition!$4000/OBO541-403-4255

«t

CROSSWORD PUZZLERACROSS

1 High peak inEurope

4 Raised, asrabbits

8 Treadmi l l un i t12 Jungle crusher13 Trevi Founta in

14 Concept15 Golden ra is ins17 Castle de fense18 Tech schoo l19 Untamed

region

session

coins

excuses

20 Med ium 's

23 Wine adject ive24 Greed's cousin25 Feudal tenants29 Whiskey gra in30 Clammy3 2 Good name ,

33 Splinter group35 Emerg ing

magma36 Terse

37 Defendant 's

39 Potent ial oak42 Cl imb sha rp ly4 3 Sub ­

(secretly)

funnels

52 Sign of gr ief ,

53 Wield, as oars

44 World's largest

48 Brick oven49 Part of a .m .50 Come dow n

with something51 Vegas

machine

perhaps

DOWN

A ns w e r t o P re v io u s Pu z z le

M A V V S HU H O H AM E R E RS M E A R E

R A MA M U S EF A N IR O D E N T

M O DK A P U TO N E S I DO N S C OL E O E VV

9-t t-15 © 2015 UFS, Dist. by Un iv. Ucl /ck for UFS

H E X

for short

1 Washboard ­2 Dobbs of CN N3 Good buddy4 Opposite of

"noir"5 Dent ist's order6 QED par t7 — M o i nes ,

lowa 10 Main ro le

8 Doesimpersonations

9 Goddess 'statue

11 Diner sign

O N E A F T't/ E R B E AI V E R B E DD C O A L S

A T VE S S E N C EL K U P CS R E T R O

F I B U L A SE D L A M AT E T R E SE S S A N E

51

24

33

48

43

29

15

t2

t 2 3

3 9 4 0 4 1

2 0 2 1 22

affirmative

36

34

16

18

13

3 0 3 1

52

49

4 5 6 7

25

42

23

37 3 8

19

35

17

14

50

8 9 10 t t

45 46 47

26 27 28

one

carrier

wine

caveman

44 Make do i l ies

16 Microscopic19 Left, on a map20 Medieval

laborer

singer22 Wi th , to

Maurice23 Stockholm

2 5 Mo n s i e u r ls

26 Mighty steed27 Name in b lue

jeans28 Hot spr ings3 0 Demea no r31 Comic-str ip

34 Ruth less ru le r35 City or bean37 Major artery38 Standof f ish

39 Havens40 Spring41 Fjord port42 Type of

basketbal ldefense

45 Skip stones46 Olive yield47 Cagey

21 "Or inoco F low"

ai I

I I I ' I I I

9 ', I

l a

• • •

O O I e

53

• 0 • • 0 • • 0 •

Page 16: La Grande Observer Daily Paper 09-11-15

6B — THE OBSERVER a BAKER CITY HERALD FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 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 '

970 - Autos For Sale

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

(PNDC)

2005 J E E P W ra n g I e r.F actory r i gh t h a n ddrive, 6 c ly , 4 w d,automatic, runs excel­lent, new tires, cruisecontrol, AC, s t e reonew postal signs. 127k$8,900. 541-426-9027or 541-398-1516

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

$6,500 OBO.541-963-9226

, ' v%a '+=. gi '

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 2015YOUR BIRTHDAY by Stella WilderRorn today, you are likely to make quite a

splash when you are young, and your entirelifei aysubsequentlybemadeupofattempts-- successful and unsuccessf'ul — to matchand recapture that early triumph. This is notto say that you are destined for disappoint­ment; on the contrary, you i ay enjoyremarkable success and do extraordinarythings, but you will always have a baseline ofaccomplishment established when you areyoung against which you can measure what­ever you do later in life. Indeed, this canprove quite a boon: Unlike many, you will beable to tell when you are getting close to amajor success or missing the mark.

SUNDAY, SEPTEMI3ER 13VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) ­- You i ay

have to share something you are used to

enjoying on your own, but you're likely todiscover an unexpected benefit.

LIBRA(Sept. 23-Oct.22) ­- You i ayhave

970 - Autos For Sale

WANTED! I buy old Por­sches 91 1 , 356 .1948-1973 only. Anycondition. Top $$ paid.F inders F ee . Ca l l707-965-9546 or emailporschedclassics©ya­hoo.com (PNDC)

1001 - Baker CountyLegal Notices

NOTICE OFSHERIFF'S SALE

On September 29, 2015,a t the hour o f 9 : 00a .m. a t t he Ba k e rCounty Court House,1995 Th ird S t r eet ,Baker City, Oregon,the defendant's inter­est will be sold, sub­Iect to redemption, inthe real property com­monly known as: 1311Walnut Street, BakerCity, OR 97814. Thecourt case number is13041, where JPMOR­GAN CHASE BANIC,NATIONAL ASSOCIA­TION, its successorsin interest and/or as­signs is plaintiff, andPAUL A. BLAIR; OC­CUPANTS OF THEPREMISES is defen­dant. The sale is a

trouble working through a certain issue, evenwith technical assistance. Re patient.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) ­- You and afamily member i ay be on two very differentschedules, based on your own inner clocks.Don't try to force anything.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) ­- YourLay i ay haVe tO begin quite differently frOmthe way you thought it would ­- but that canprove to be advantageous.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) ­- Youhave certain things you must get done beforeyou can focus on that one endeavor you mostwant to enjoy. There will be time!

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) ­- You are

looking for just the right person for a certainjob, but have you ever considered that youi ay be better at it than anyone elsef

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) ­- You i ayhave trouble with something you expected tobe merely routine. The difficulty stems froma misinterpretation of the issue.

ARIES (March 21-Apru 19) — You i ay

LegaI No. 00042515Published: August 28,

September 4, 11, 18,2015

IN THE CIRCUITCOURT OF THE SATEOF OREGON FOR THECOUNTY OF BAKER

In the Matter of theEstate ofLEONA JOY MILLER,

Deceased.

Case No. 15-614

NOTICE TOINTE RESTED PE RSONS

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

1001 - Baker CountyLegal Notices

public auction to thehighest bidder for cashor cashier's check, inh and, made ou t t oBaker County Shenff'sOffice. For more infor­mation on this sale goto: www.ore onsher­

by Stella Wilder

have to work in conditions that are not per­fect, but you can get a great deal done, not­withstanding. Your desire is great.

TAURUS (Apru 20-May 20) — You canafford to be a little more aggressive in yourpursuit of a certain goal. Others are in directcompetition with you!

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) — You can beenthusiastic about a certain project eventhough others are letting their doubts get thebetter of them.

CANCER(June21-July22) — Anticipationwill keep you from giving up on somethingthat has taken a great deal oftime to come tofruition. Today is very likely the Lay!

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) — You should beable to wrap your head around even the mostcomplex issues. Others will look to you forguidance, surely.

1001 - Baker CountyLegal Notices

of first publication oft his n o t i ce , o r theclaims may be barred.

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

Dated and first publishedAugust 28, 2015.

Attorney for thePersonal Representative

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

LegaI No. 00042578Published: August 28,

September 4, 11, 2015

NOTICE OFSHERIFF'S SALE

On October 06, 2015, atthe hour of 9:15 a.m.at the Baker CountyCourt House, 1995Third St reet , B akerCity, Oregon, the de­fendant's interest willbe sold, sublect to re­

OF UNION

1001 - Baker County 1 0 10 - Union Co.Legal Notices Legal Notices

demption, in the realproperty c o mmonlyknown as: 2523 ValleyAvenue, Baker City,OR. The court casen umber i s 1 2 9 9 5 ,where JPMORGANCHASE BANIC, NA­TIONAL ASSOCIA­TION is plaintiff, andTIMOTHY ROBERTS;C LAU R ITA ROB E RTS;MORTGAGE ELEC­TRONIC REGISTRA­TION SYSTEMS, INC.;GREENPOINT MORT­GAGE FUNDING, INC.;OCCUPANTS OF THEPROPERTY is defen­dant. The sale is apublic auction to thehighest bidder for cashor cashier's check, inh and, made ou t t oBaker County Shenff'sOffice. For more infor­mation on this sale goto: www.ore onsher­iffs.com/sales.htm

LegaI No. 00042676Published: September 4,

11,18, 25, 2015

1010 - Union Co.Legal Notices

FOR THE COUNTY

FAMILY LAWDEPARTMENT

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

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

stricting the Respon­dent to supervised par­enting time. Respon­dent must appear andshow cause for whymodification of parent­ing time should not bemade and Petitioner'scost and attorney fees.

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

If you have questions,you should see an at­torney immediately. Ifyou need help in find­ing an attorney, youmay call the OregonState Bar's Lawyer Re­f erral Ser v ic e at(503)684-3763 o rtoll-free in Oregon at(800)452-7636.

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

NOTICE TO

1010 - Union Co.Legal NoticesEmail:

wpbettis©eoni.com

Published: August 21,28, 2015 and

September 4, 11, 2015

Legal No. 00042491

INTERESTED PERSONS

Sharon Schubert hasbeen appointed Per­sonal Representative(hereafter PR) of theEstate of Dwaine A.Schubert, Deceased,P robat e N o .1 5-09-8553, U n i o nCounty Circuit Court,State of Oregon. Allpersons whose rightsmay be affected bythe proceeding mayobtain additional infor­mation from the courtrecords, the PR, or theattorney for the PR. Allpersons having claimsa gainst t h e est a t emust present them tothe PR at:

Mammen 5 Null,Lawyers, LLCJ. Glenn Null,Attorney for PR1602 Sixth Street­P.O. Box 477La Grande, OR 97850(541) 963-5259within four months after

the f i rs t p u b l icationdate of this notice orthey may be barred.

Published: September11,18,and 25, 2015

Legal No. 00042820

PUBLIC NOTICE­SURPLUS VEHICLES

Union County P u b l icWorks is taking sealedbids until 4:00 P.M.,Sept. 17, 2015, thenopened and read aloudfor the following vehi­cles:

• 1995 Chevy 3/4 ton4x4 pick-up, minimumbid $250

• 1 985 C h e vy S-10pick-up, minimum bid$250

• 1990 Ford 3/4 ton 4x4pick up, minimum bid$250

• 1976 International Pay­

FOR SALEWITH THE

CLASSIFIEDS!

Sell your unwanted car,property and h o use­hold items more quick­ly and affordably withthe classifieds. Just callus today to place youra d and get r eady t os tart c o u n t i n g y o u rcash. The Observer 541­963-3161 or Baker CityHera Id 541-523-3673.

1010 - Union Co.Legal Notices

sta r 5000 4x4 dum ptruck, min. bid $2,500

• 1977 Dodge 1 tonpick-up, minimum bid$500

• 1985 W hit e FordTempo, minimum bid$100

• 1989 Chevy Corsica,min bid $100

• Westward IndustriesGO-4 ut i l ity veh icle,3 -wheeler, m i n b i d$100

• 1991 F ord B r o nco,min. bid $250

• 1979 Ford Bronco, minbid $100

All VIN ¹s are availableb y c a l l in g Un io nCounty Public Works.A ll vehicles w i l l b esold "as-is." Vehiclesmay be inspected atthe Union County Pub­lic Works Department,10513 N M c A l i s terRd., from 7:00 AM to5:00 PM, Monday­Thursday. No phone,fax or oral bids will beaccepted. Clearly markbid on the outside ofthe envelope for "Ve­hicle Bid" and mail bidto: Union County Pub­lic Works Department,P O Box 1 1 03 , L aGrande, OR 97850 orhand deliver to UnionCounty Public WorksDepartment at 10513N. McAlister Rd. Suc­c essful b i dder w i l lhave 30 days to pickup vehicle(s).

Published: September 7,9,and 11,2015

LegaI No. 00042694

GET QUICIC CASH

COPYRIGHT2015 UNITED FEATURE SYNDICATE, INCDISIRIBUIED BYUNIVERSAL UCLICK FOR UFSll lOWA 5 K » Qp M O 64106,800255 67l4

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 2015YOUR BIRTHDAY by Stella WilderBorn today, you are the kind of individual

who, with a little luck and perhaps sometimely help from others, can do somethingwith your life that not only brings you con­tentment and reward, but that also ensuresthat you will be remembered long after youare gone. Indeed, in this wayyou are likely tobecome immortal, exerting an influence over

the world and the people in it long into theI'uture. Who wouldn't want to do than Therewill come a point at which you recognize thispotential, and it i ay both inspire you andscare you — for with immortality comesresponsibility, andyou maywonder ifyou arereally up for it. Have no fear — you mostdefinitely are!

MONDAY, SEPTEMRER14VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) — You will

remember something that inspires you today.A visit to old haunts will give you a valuablenew perspective.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) ­- You can give

others an important piece of information, butthey i ay not be willing to give you fullcredit for your contribution.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) — You arelikely to derive a great deal of importantinformation from another who, in actuality,did not intend to share it.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) ­- Youmust bewilling to take responsibility forwhatyou do and say. Any attempt at denial will beineffective — and dangerous.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) ­- Youcan learn a great deal by watching someoneelse do what he or she does best. The oppor­tunitywill lead to a personal discovery.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) ­- Take carethat what you do is in the best interest ofthose who are counting on you. Now is notime to play the lone wolf.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) — Take noth­ing for granted! Say the things you want tosay, and do the thingsyou want to do, includ­ing what is most important to you.

ARIES (March 21-Apru 19) — You i ay

have a tough decision to make that you knowwill affect someone else even more than itdoes you.

TAURUS (Apru 20-May 20) — You're notlikely to solve a mystery, but you can surelycollect a few important clues. More informa­tion comes from an unusual source.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) — Irll be up toyou to steer a young person in the right direc­tion. You must be sure your information isaccurate and up-to-date.

CANCER (June 21-July 22) — You i ayfind yourself changing your mind and doingsomething you had sworn you would neverL x This is bound to have a huge impact.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) — Can you betrusted to make the right decision for some­one who is counting on youf That will bedetermined for you, come what may.

COPYRIGHT2015 UNITED FEATURE SYNDICATE, INCDISIRIBUIED BYUNIVERSAL UCLICK FOR UFSll lOWA 5 K » Qp M O 64106,800255 67l4

CROSSWORD PUZZLER

1 4 Forme r

ACROSS

1 Yes, inEdinburgh

4 Penci l remnant8 Gathe r

12 Shippingcontainer

13 Myst ica lemanation

Montrealbaseball player

novel

15 Mascara k ln17 Rose f ru i t18 Sett ing of a

19 Likesandpaper

21 Wordlessgreeting

22 Bal loon f i l ler23 Kitchen gadget26 Refresh ing

30 Clean ­ ­

31 Chaucer 'sPrioress

town

33 Assemble

40 Blue r ibbon

5 0 Wine an d ­51 High-schooler52 "— upon th is

quiet life!"53 Mi lky Way

component54 Blarney Stone

5 5 Not masc .

DOWN

site

32 Umbrel laspoke

hastily (2 wds.)36 Take the s ta i rs38 Loophole39 Want-ad

letters

taker43 Incl ined gent ly47 Oklahoma

48 Cockp i treading

drink

whistle1 Cain's v ict im2 Go up and

down lhyph.)

3 Business VIP4 Deckhand5 Fixed the

piano6 Ending for

depart

50

30

47

33

12

15

18

1 2 3

2 3 2 4 2 5

4 0 4 1 4 2

21

38

16

3 4 3 5

13

51

31

4 5 6 7

4 8 4 9

26

43

22

39

19 2 0

3 6 3 7

17

l4

32

8 9 10 11

2 7 28 29

4 4 45 46

A nswe r t o P r e v i o u s P u z z l e

A L P B RBO A L ISU L T A N

I N SS E A N C EE N V YRY E M OF A C T I 0

Y E PA C O R NRO S A TK I L N AS L O T T

9 -12-15 C c3 2015 UFS , D ist . by Unw . Uc uck to r UFS

heist

India

10 Dr.'s v is i t

E D M I L ERE I D E AAs M O A TTV V I L D S

S E CV A S S A L SI S T R E P

N L A V AA L I B I S

Z Q O MOR N A D O SN T E A I LEA R P L Y

7 Negot iate8 Take back on9 Park ing lo t

sign

11 Nosegay16 Jet route20 Crater edge23 Br i t ish rule in

24 Ames ins t .25 Part of a t ra in26 Tote27 Onass is

nickname28 Shadowy29 Wane31 Fert i l izer type34 Thataway35 Regret deeply3 6 Singer — D i o n37 Proceeds of a

39 Organiccompound

40 Gets hi tched41 No fu ture ­ ­

42 1492 sh ip44 Breathe ha rd45 Adams o r

Brickeu46 Regard as4 9 Aloha to ke n

~mer t t < ermHK BSKRVKR

52

53 54 55I I • • O a a • •

• 0 • • 0 • • 0 •

Page 17: La Grande Observer Daily Paper 09-11-15

PUZZLES 8 COMICS THE OBSERVER a BAKER CITY HERALD — 7BFRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 2015

y By DAVID SUDOKU® OUELLE T

I D R 0 F M US M U R D L UL A B C 0 N 0A F B V I M IN QB E T 0 T HD T Q A N E A ST L H QNK S AP G N E QDT TI 0 S R S E LD P A I D I RE 0 L D V L ZB A W E E D SC A W A K E EN I L 0 D N AL T S I H T R

HOW TO PLAY: All the words listed below appear in the puzzle — horizon­tally, vertically, diagonally, even backward. Find them and CIRCLE THEIRLEITERS ONLY. DO N O T C I R CLE THE W O RD. The leftover lettersspell the Wonderword.MUM F ORD dk SONS Solution: 7 letters

0 W SR J 0G S NA P YN I LI R IC I MI T AR U FT A SC L NE 0 AL R YE E 0K V E© 2015 Universal Uclick www.wonderword.com Download our app! 9/9Acoustic, Awake, Babel, Band, Banjo, Bass, Bloom, Bluegrass,Cave, Drums, Electr ic, Eyes, Fami ly, Is land, Keyboards, L ive,L ondon, Lover , Lo ve t t , M a n d o l in , M a r c us , M i nd , M u m f o r d ,Organic, Platinum, Red Rocks, Road, Shakespeare, Sigh NoMore, Song, Soul , Sp i r i tual, Stage, Synthesizer, Ted Dw ane ,T hist le , V o c a l i s t , W e e d s , W i ld e r , W in d s , W i nt e r , W o l fWednesday's Answer: Lady in Satin

M E V A CR E V 0 LM 0 0 L BS R G E LM E N B UG D 0 A EU R S B GS 0 U R RE C C 0 AY K R A SE S A D SE T M I D0 R N V NM U E I IE D L I W

OTHER COAST

WEDNESDAY'S SOLUTION

FLOAND FRIENDSIT 9hE ABzE 'THAT OME

oF EVERY RXRsTl CIH

A ILtTCi-t,'

Complete the grid so thatevery row, column and 3x3box contains every digit from1 to 9 inclusively.

GENiAL0N' '

z

~. ..SAIPLSY~A I QLY ~ABOUT ~~ ­'TIVI%./ ... IT'SEHB)ARVAKI M!

DIFFICULTY RATING: +'k+ + ' 4 +

I'VEBEENOVER'(OURFANIILf'TREENUMEROUSTIMES ANDI'MAFRAID IFOUND NOEVIDENCE ImiARE DESCENDED FROM

WOLVES.

~ iW ~ tM TCOHPLAIN!

...Ak)t) %8WS iHESAHB tKAM! ...

P~, . I ODP

10

Omloo

O O

nluidt

'I

Treasury13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20 or 21 can be purchased online at /mi

www.WonderWordBooks.com. (Contain 130 puzzles.)

PEANUTS B.C.ID LQOK

6REAT IAIITHSIDEBURNS!

How I ON& Aiv.E Yc)UGolNca To SIVE

JVie. THE SILENTTREATTViE/uIT e

YOUVE &OTTEN TSETTEI'AT THIS.

g 11 JnhnHartst dios cnm Dsl byCraatn sDlrust tbc tda Harluivn John Han illrghts reserved

PICKLESGRAhAIAA STiLLCAQ'l'lALIP.

MoPE.

I1M Q)RRL? VOUCAMtT TALIC,CRAMIvtA.

9/11

I1M REALLV,REALLLL' SAP

foRVau!

' Stte CAIki STiLL ',SAKE OX)KIES,

,

1,ftIOUCII, RICttf+, i'

rI

BOUNDS.GAGGED

XI-IIV' PIPN~ qOu~Y' & u bL ~ Z =

Voug MA&HE pFtTl jkTOE5 LL/

egRJLnriivRX L-L- &BT

THE~ ~ NE R ,

7

,,i!; IJ; . I ' ,, lf r

'lil~li I'>: ­

'

I'll

MOTHER GOOSE 5. GRIMM THE WIZARD OF IDctrustfbc Iaa Hartu c Jcnn Hart na ngnts rascrvaa

MIINHATAR IE. 900RQGIN|->

AW%EIv,'APISTTOLP IVIE M SETBOOKS ONrAPE

MIIIISKINS' = . GKW ISKONE.

ON MA5~lgg,scorcH, teC~ELECTRICP I

~ZVi~" eLEA~ AgIo UU

D st by Craatn s Jnt Hangt dnscnm

U

OOoo II=1 •

o4': 6fAPYSR., 'I II/5r cabcckccm i'rrarduflu

GARFIELD TUNDRAPIP YOU

MISS MERUH... YOU PIPN'T

NOTICE i WASCtONE, PIP YOU?

PON'T EtESILLY...UH...

ARLENE! @ ~r' 4W, UKP EEXTRENIE

cyoLpHlhl500 SWIMMfhl& WITH

gy

0O

0 Ioo'1-11

C4a cr

0

a o

RUBES

IUI] Q,IIIP 305TLoOK AT HERI /tNCINIgoIINNHL'NEIIVII58I00LKEACYIENlWP! CIq gLALLY DEARP

XHA|INT NOTICED

c aatnra cnmmaalataghh lirnttaigh@ bascarl nns cnm

9-I/

CLOSE TO HOMEg~ // lgr . 6/ V /t/EBPYC

ciAssic DOONESBURY (1982)

OKAY, KIO5, 7H/5/5 8/NKIEANO PLIP-TOPS 8/GECENEJUETEETORE7HEEERIOU5CRAZINEE58EGIN5. PIAY7HETENEIONPlAY7HEANTIQPA­w TION!

EOOPEIE,/y'AVE )O//GOT 8/NKIE5TAKE ON THE5OENEV

wm

I 7HINK50 CgARTH.. Htr

7H/NG PRE'CIOU57O HER — HER

OI&VITY.

5HEs /47ORRIEL/ AEOIIT THE IUET7-5HIRTCONTE5T 5/IEPEEL5 A TER/IIEIEA/hIEIGUIIYAEOUTHERI/rTI/VE5ANI/PEAR5mSPI/5PIACEOEOIHEC

,) 4

YOUR5VOR/5UNTILAF/ER7HE5PRINK­IER COIIE5 Oil/

UH., RIGHT.NOHII 8URKE,l5V7NAVE GRUM

BY G.B. TRUDEAU

Agi

5LAI.i

SLJI P!5LJIf

MALLARD FILLMORE0

a •

Eau "STsHHA,„

Qei cS-'UNIB~ I'tossuYm „soHEMP7.„:::::::-';::';-:;:,:=='',='::::; :4E wchR:,.:=:';:,:,=:'.:';:,

' ItIISTNOTttII6TAILSTI4CT>ldA&TAILI/III>T

IIOTIIIIII TAIL.l/IIIST t4T

~e&A'TtVI'IEANA„

W-/I-WfASVBE

1'I tr, I l r i

Estee Lauder debuts its mostalluring perfume ever. lyvu nbvu I I sv d t , l wmt u ohI

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

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

cthom son@la randeobseroercom or send them to14065t StreetLa Grande OR97850 I l i ff@y(gtt/tfi +4IT IIgtm@~Q

U

• 0 • • 0 •• 0 •

Page 18: La Grande Observer Daily Paper 09-11-15

SB — THE OBSERVER s BAKER CITY HERALD COFFEE BREAK FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 2015

REFUGEE CRISISTeen too busy with collegeignores dangers of diabetes

her connect with a doctor close to her school.Tell her you11 support her any wayyou can.

In the meantime, engage in behaviors thatLacey needs to adopt, i.e., learning aboutdiabetes and maintaining healthy eating andregular exercise habits. When she's home,set a good example. Tell her whatyou'redoing and askif she'd like to join you. Someresources you might find helpful aie www.dia­

betes.org and www.mayoclinic.org/disease-conditions/type­

D EAR 2-diabetes/basics/definitions/ABBY con- 20031902.

DEARABBY: Last year, durirg herrequired physical for college, my 19-year-olddaughter, "Lacey,"was diagnosed with Type2 diabetes. She is in denial and hasn't seena doctor since. She doesn't take her medi­cations and refuses to change her diet orexercise. She is also obese.

When I try to discuss this with her, she getsargry and storms away. Her school is threehours away and I'm worriedsomethirg terrible will haveto happen to make her getserious. She's in that "invinci­ble/know-it-all /I don't care"teenage phase ofher life.

There are already signs that her diabetesis out of control — headaches, vision charg­es, foot sores, numbness in her hands andirritability. Any advice before it's too late?

— WORRIED SICKIN VIRGINIADEAR WORRIED SICK: Yes. There may

be many reasons Lacey doesn't want to dealwith her diagnosis right now. With startingcollege, meeting new friends and navigatingthe transition to adulthood, she has a lotshe'd rather focus on, and issues that seemmore immediately relevant. It may also bescary to think about her health, the possibleconsequences of diabetes and all that man­aging her condition entails.People Lacey's age don't like to be told

what to do or be nagged. So approach theissue as a conversation and demonstratean interest in her perspective and goals.This can happen in bits and pieces over anextended period of time , as she comes to seeyou as a supportive resource.

You might start by saying, 'What did youthink of what'Dr. Jones' said about Type 2diabetes?" Then listen. Resist the urge to tellher to do something. Instead, reflect back onwhat she says — even if it's something you'drather not hear, such as,"I have too manyother things to worry about right now." Yourgoal is to get her talking and thinking, andlet her know you're willing to listen and lether make her own decisions.

Once you get her talking, listen carefullyfor any signs that she's considering changesieating more healthfully, joining a gym, tryingmedication suggested by her doctor) and showan interestin her thoughts, such as,"So you'rethinking about eating healthier? What haveyou been doing?" Offer concrete support suchas offering to help cover the cost of the gym,looking up diabetes-fiiendlyrecipes or helping

• ACCuWeather.COm FoTonight Saturday Sunday

Change isn't easy. Prog­ress often isn't a direct path.

Remember, diabetes is just one part ofherlife. Let Lacey know she's valued as a personand capable of taking care ofherself But ulti­mately, the decision to do that must be hers.

DEARABBY:At what point does a parentno longer have the right to know who theirchild's fr7'ends are?

I have three grown daughters, all on theirown, livirg on the other side of the country.During a recent visit homefor their grand­m other's birthday, I asked each of them togive me all of their friends'phone numbers,in case I couldn't reach them. I also wantedto know who they were exactly, how well theyknew them, etc. I was simply thinkirg oftheir safety. If I can't reach my girls, I wantto know who might have seen them last and,if need be, give that information to the police.

Abby, all three of them told me NO! Theysaid they are grown women and can takecare of themselves, and besides, if, God for­bid, they didn't want to answer their phonewhen I called, I sure as h-- didn't need to bepesterirg their fr7'ends.

They say they are adults, and that we (theirdad and I) no lorger have the right to "dictate"who they are friends with. I say I'm theirmother and no matter how old they get, I willalways have the right to know who they arefriends with. I wouldappreciate your thoughts.

— RENEE INOREGONDEAR RENEE: I ayee thatyou are their

mother, butyou aie notyour daughters'paroleoflicer. They are self-supporting, self-suflicientadults. Perhaps ifyou were less overbearing,your daughters would be livingcloser, wouldanswer their phones more often whenyou calland would open up to you about their fiiend­ships. Frankly, I thinkyou should apologize forgiving them such a heavy-handed third degree.

Monday Tuesday

By Laura KingLos Angeles Times

BERLIN — Obstacleseased Thursday at thenorthern and southern endsof Europe's ever-crowdedmigrant trail, with Danishauthorities moving to openthe path for asylum-seekersto head onward to Swedenand Greece largely clearing ahuge backlog that had builtup on the tiny tourist islandof Lesbos.

But fresh confrontationsloomed at the midpoint ofthe snaking thousand-milepathway, as Hungary's armyconducted exercises on itsborder with Serbia andits government sought tocriminalize passing throughHungarian territory on theway to northern Europeanhavens that are deemedmore desirable destinations.

In Germany, which istaking in exponentially moremigrants and refugees thanany other European state,Chancellor Angela Merkelvisited a refugee shelterand spoke ofhopes that thenew arrivals many &omwar-torn Syria and Iraq,others fleeing tumult inAfghanistan and elsewherewill be able to find a place inGerman society.

"Their integration will cer­tainly take place in part byway of the children, who willlearn German very quickly,"Merkel told reporters aftermeeting in the Berlin suburbof Spandau with two asylum­seeking families who havekindergarten-age children.

The German leader hascome under fire from someEuropean neighbors and do­mestic opponents who believeGermany's generous resettle­ment policies and willingnessto waive EU rules about

Baker CityHigh Thursday ..........................Low Thursday ...........................PrecipitationThursday ..................................Month to date ...........................Normal month to date .............Yearto date ..............................Normal year to date .................

La GrandeHigh Thursday ..........................Low Thursday ...........................

PrecipitationThursday ..................................Month to date ...........................Normal month to date .............Yearto date ..............................Normal year to date ...............

ElginHigh Thursday ..........................Low Thursday ...........................

PrecipitationThursday ..................................Month to date ...........................Normal month to date .............Yearto date ............................Normal year to date ...............

r icultura I n fo .

Lowest relative humidity .........

nanons

relocated

ef pi%e Eutopean Unonhascteateda pian to tetocateetugew nllaly HungaryandGteece lo olhet Eutopean

Receivmg relocatedrefugees

p Refugees being

Enroseandottlenecksease insome slaces,remaininothers

seeking asylum in the firstEuropean country reachedare helping to spur what hasbecome one of the continent'slargest-scale displacementssince World War II.

Germany has surpassedits previous postwar annualrecord for taking in thosefleeing violence and persecu­tion: the 438,000 who floodedacross its frontiers in 1992,seeking to escape the Balkanwars. Vice Chancellor SigmarGabriel told lawmakers onThursday that Germany hadreceived about 450,000 mi­grants and refugees this year,including more than 100,000in August.

The forecast of Germanytaking in 800,000 this yearmay prove a low estimate,officials have said.

While praising a plan putforth Wednesday by the headof the European Union'sexecutive arm to distribute160,000 refugees among allthe bloc's members, Gabrielalso called it a"drop in theocean." That proposal needsthe endorsement of Euro­pean officials meeting nextweek in Brussels.One bastion of resistance to

the presence of migrants andrefugees is Hungary, whoseright-wing government hasbridled at criticism of theharsh treatment reported bythose passing through. The

IT L

(

Baker City Temperatures

La Grande Temperatures

Enterprise Temperatures

Portlan".SV>8-, •

40 4) 92 43 4)

rTl

Sunny and hot

E.

h

" The a l i bs ,

The AccuWeather Comfort Index is an indication of how it feels based on humidity and temperature where 0 is leastcomfortable and 10 is most comfortable for this time of year.

~ri , i ii ~r~ii. '

, , Pen d ieton : eiprise II,

84 39 (9

rf%

Sunshine

48 5) 92 50 4) 84 42 ( 10) 66 40 (8)

51 (6) 9 0 52 (4) 81 44 ( 10 ) 68 42 ( 10 ) 63 42 (8 )

Shown is Shturday's weather weather. Temperatums are Friday nigheslows and Saturday's highs.LLgg 6

Cooler

10 44 (10)

13 38 (10)

f,".:L'a Graiid

Mostly cloudy

High I low (comfort index)

64 34 (8)

Hay Information Saturday

0ldaIla

....... i 5 %to 6 mph

0.00"0.90"0.27"

15.88"15.80"

0.00"0.79"0.21"7.70"

11.08"

0.00"0.41"0.20"7.69"7.27"

88'41'

85'86'

91'41'

',-55/91

52/ Redrpand

E „'­ ' 53/92

oc

iP '

• y$ Berfd Ontanp„„•

regon:High: 100' ............................ Medford

C5 Low: 80' .............................. Sunriver

1 ~ ~ ) '~~ri gj T h ursday for the 48 contigqous states

1'J, 64/100 . i +:i4i . High,117 D thv l l y C l i ff• + Klamath'4llslg r~: /,$,:> L : 2 8 ' . . . .................. St 1 n I d h,Og 49/93 5 ' , . ' i i ' i'I' Wettest: 4.76" ........ Philadelphia, Pa.

Nation

Wettest: none ......................................

4~.' iWy/­

Afternoon wind ........ NW at 3Hours of sunshine .....................Evapotranspiration ...................Reservoir Storage through mThursdayPhillips Reservoir

Unity Reservoir

Owyhee Reservoir

McKay Reservoir

Wallowa Lake

Thief Valley Reservoir

Stream Flows through midnightThursdayGrande Ronde at Troy ............ 504 cfsThief Vly. Res. near N. powder ... 0 cfsBurnt River near Unity ............ 80 cfsLostine River at Lostine .............. N.A.Minam River at Minam ............ 51 cfsPowder River near Richland .... 17 cfs

6% of capacity

16% of capacity

1% of capacity

80% of capacity

8% of capacity

0% of capacity

....... i 0. 7

....... 0.i 8idnight

EE

CorvallisEugeneHermistonImnahaJosephLewistonMeachamMedfordNewportOntarioPascoPendletonPortlandRedmondSalemSpokaneThe DallesUkiahWalla Walla

RecreationAnthony LakesMt. Emily Rec.Eagle Cap Wild.Wallowa LakeThief Valley Res.Phillips LakeBrownlee Res.Emigrant St. ParkMcKay ReservoirRed Bridge St. Park

Sun 0 MoonSunset tonight .........Sunrise Saturday ....

N ew F ir st

eather HiStor

Hi L o W

91 51 s91 52 s96 59 s96 55 s90 48 s92 60 s88 4 1 s100 68 s64 51 s94 55 s95 56 s94 61 s88 59 s94 47 s91 55 s86 56 s97 60 s92 49 s94 65 s

O r a S75 8 7 s86 4 8 s79 8 9 s90 4 8 s92 4 8 s90 4 7 s96 6 2 s88 4 7 s94 5 6 s92 5 0 s

Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy,c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms,r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.

On Sept. 12, 1988, the remains ofHurricane Florence spawned a smalltornado that skipped through down­town Indianapolis, Ind. There were nofatalities and only scattered damage.

R i 1 Cit i e

• 6 6 6

police detained a one-dayrecord number of arrivalsWednesday, rounding upmore than 3,300 people.

The potential involve­ment of Hungary's militaryin stanching the flow couldratchet up confrontations onthe country's frontier withSerbia. Hungary is nearingcompletion of a fence alongtheir mutual border stretch­ing more than 100 miles.

Austria, the next stop onthe northwest passage, is thefinal way station on whatis for many a destination ofGermany. Austrian authori­ties on Thursday helped hun­dreds make the trip from theHungarian border onward toVienna but were reported tobe consulting as to whethercontinuing the special trans­port was feasible.

In Denmark, wherepolice this week had triedto block migrants andrefugees heading north toSweden, the crush appearedto ease on Thursday whena highway connecting theDanish peninsula of Jutlandto Germany was reopened.But migrants and refugeesstill risked being stopped iftravehng by train.

'The situation changesfrom hour to hour," Den­mark's national police saidin a statement quoted by theReuters news agency.

Authorities had initiallytried to enforce the provi­sion that anyone not seekingasylum in Denmark couldnot merely transit its terri­tory. Large numbers of thosemaking the overland journeyare trying to reach Sweden,where conditions for seek­ing asylum are seen as morefavorable and many alreadyhave a foothold through fam­ily ties.

Saturday

................. 7:12 p.m.

................. 6:27a.m.

Full Last

Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2015

F REE ROOF I N S P E C T I O N Sd c ESTIMRT E S !

R OOF REP L R C E M E N T , REPR IRS, INSURRNC E EK P E R T S AT WIND AN D

H AII D R lVIROE, RI I T Y P E S OF R O O F I N O - R S P HR I T , M E T R I , F I J LTR OOFS, RESI D E N T I R I J e COlVllVIERCIRI , I J LRGE OR SM R I I J O B S

8 41-66 3 - 4 1 4 5 i> . -. •FULLY LICENSED & INSURED, CCB¹101989

• 0 0 0

Serving Northeast Oregon Since 1993. "Relax. You've Hired A Professional."

• 0 0 0• 0 0 0

Page 19: La Grande Observer Daily Paper 09-11-15

Friday, September 11, 2015

The Observer & Baker City Herald

BACICPACICINGWEEIt',LY

FISHINGREPORT THE DIFFICULT TO ECHO LAKE PROVIDES

GRANDE RONDERIVERThe Grande RondeRiver Road is open inthe Troy area wherethe fire danger haspassed. Fishing forsteelhead will likelybe slow until laterinto the fall whensteelhead start arriv­ing in more substan­tial numbers. Steel­head have been slowto move up the mainstem of the Columbiaand Snake rivers sofar. Counts have beengood at BonnevilleDam for GrandeRonde fish. How­ever, observations atLower Granite Damon the Snake Riverhave been slow.

PEACH PONDFishing restrictionshave been relaxedin preparation foran upcoming fishremoval project. Fishmay be harvested byhand, dip net, or an­gling. Daily bag andpossession limits willalso be lifted. Theserelaxed regulationswill be effective untilSept. 25, when thepond will be closedto all fishing throughDec. 31, to preventpublic exposure to

Tyler Britton stands on the north shore of Echo Lake, on the Hurricane Divide in the Eagle Cap Wilderness. The hike from Hurricane Creek to EchoLake, while just three miles, includes 2,300 feet of elevation gain and offers a difficult challenge.

By Jayson Jacoby

I fulfilled a dream of more thanthree decades last month when Ihiked into the Eagle Cap Wilderness.

Butit was a nightmare getting there.Possibly I write too harshly of the

trail that climbs from HurricaneCreek to Echo Lake.Perhaps I retain a certain bitter­

ness because of the toe on my rightfoot, which has a black nail almost amonth later and still gives a twinge ifI step wrong.

"Nightmare" is a nasty noun.It suggests darkness and fiight

and paln.Echo Lake, by contrast, glows with

ethereal alpine light at noon of asummer's day. To lounge on its shore,feet soaking in its chilly blue waterand back propped against a graniticwall, is a pleasant way to pass thetime and not a bit scary.

As for pain, well that's a different

rotenone.

WALLOWA RIVERSteelhead season isopen on the WallowaRiver, however fish­ing doesn't normallypick up until later inthe year and into thespring. Trout fishinghas been good onthe river with angersfinding some nicefish. Fall caddis andmayfly hatches havebeen good and fishseem to be keying inon them.

WALLOWA LAKETrout fishing hasslowed at WallowaLake. However, thepressure has droppedoff with the end of thesummer season. Dur­ing the fall stockedtrout have been in thelake long enough thatthey start to learn toeat natural food. Tryfishing with flies andother more naturalbaits.

VVesCom News Service

A guidebook sows the seedThe three-mile trail to Echo Lake,

the authors of several hiking guide­books agree, is the steepest path inthe Eagle Cap, at least among thosewhich the Forest Service sanctionswith signs.

It was one of those books thatpiqued my curiosity about the trail,and ultimately, I suppose, is par­tially to blame for my temporary toetrouble.

The book is "100 Oregon HikingTrails" by Don and Roberta Lowe. Itwas published in 1969, and thoughlong since out of print you mightcome across one at a garage sale orwhen a library is purging its shelvesof musty volumes.

I came across a copy when I was ingrade school, probablyin the late'70salthough I recall neither the precisetime nor the details of myintroduction.

What I do remember is that thebook entranced me as few others haddone.

In particular I was fascinated bythe Lowes' descriptions of severaltrails in the Eagle Cap Wilderness, aplace I had never visited and possiblynot even heard of.

(I grew up in Stayton, about 15miles east of Salem, and my knowl­edge of Oregon's mountains at thetime was limited to the Cascades.)

Among those trails, though, theone to Echo Lake stood out, and forthis reason — the Lowes emphasizedthe severity of its grade. They alsocontrasted its steepness with thecomparatively gentle ascents com­mon in the wilderness.

This intrigued me, but it alsokindled a certain instinctive streak ofjuvenile competitiveness.

The trail can't be all that awful, Ifigured.

It's not.(Although my toe might dispute this.)But the trail certainly deserves its

reputation.Of course I knew its measure­

Finding the trailTo get to the Hurricane CreekTrailhead, drive south fromEnterprise on the HurricaneCreek Road to its end, aboutnine miles. Parking passes arerequired at the trailhead.Hike the Hurricane Creek trailsouth for about five miles. Justbefore the trail crosses BillyJones Creek, the Echo Lake trail,marked by a sign, veers off tothe right (west).

— Jayson Jacoby

m ents, so to speak, long before Istepped onto its tread.

The data included in all the guidesare daunting, to be sure — an eleva­tion gain of 2,300 feet over the mod­est distance of three miles.

But those figures also are compa­rable to several trails in the Elkhorn

See EcholPage 2Cmatter.

FISHING

Hwrard Britton photo

Some0regonliasslshersdisgleasedliyruling

Source: ODRN

JOHN DAY RIVERSmallmouth bassfishing is good withmany being caught.There also has been afair number of catfishbeing caught. Bassanglers may try theirluck higher in theNorth Fork below thetown of Dale. Bass arepresent up to Dale butin lower numbers.

By George PlavenEast Oregonian

PENDLETON — BudHartman can sense 55 yearsof progress beginning tounravel.

As one of the originalmembers of the Oregon Bassand Panfish Club in 1958,Hartman, of Portland, foughtfor the state's first everbag limits on bass fishingto protect the species fromoverharvest.

The Oregon Fish andWildlife Commission last

w eek approved sport fishingregulations for 2016 that in­clude removing bag limits onall warmwater fish — includ­ing bass, walleye, crappie,panfish and catfish — inthe Columbia, John Dayand Umpqua rivers, leavingHartman deflated."I've been at the forefront

of making sure these fishhave the right to exist inOregon," he said."As oflastFriday, I felt like all of theseefforts we put in have allbeen in vain."

Hartman, who attendedthe commission's meetingin Seaside, said he felt hisarguments against endingbag limits on warmwater fishfell on deaf ears. He isn't wor­ried the fisheries will becomeoverly degraded, but said itsimply sends the wrong mes­sage to anglers.

aTo me, it devalues theresource," Hartman said."Itsays to the angling publicthat (these fish) don't meananything."

Eighteen percent of

Oregon fishermen said theyconsider themselves pri­marily warmwater anglers,according to a 2006 surveyby the state Department ofFish and Wildlife. Another 26percent said they fished forwarmwater species at somepoint during the past year.

When it comes to bassfishing, Oregon has become aworld-class destination. Lastyear, Bassmaster Magazineranked the Columbia River14th in its list of top 100places to fish for bass in the

U.S., while Field & StreamMagazine also named theJohn Day River as the bestsmallmouth bass river in theWest in its May 2015 issue.

Lonnie Johnson, conserva­tion director for the OregonBass Angler SportsmanSociety, or B.A.S.S., said mostbass fishermen are catch­and-release only, and remov­ing bag limits might open thedoors to a potential cottageindustry.

aWe're very concerned

See Ruling IPage 2C

Hlit',ING NORTHEAST OREGON FLY-TYING CORNERTO DO LIST

A Swift Night Outslated for next week

Near Nuff Sculpin draws trout, bassCopper Creek presents a five-mile challengeThe Copper Creek Hike is uphill with nearly 2,200 feet of elevation gain. Travel south from

Lostine 18 miles to the end of the Lostine River Road atTwo Pan Trailhead. Hike along the WestFork Lostine RiverTrail 2.8 miles to reach the junction with Copper CreekTrail (6,425 ft) and turnright. Cross theWest Fork Lostine River 200 yards from the junction (a shallow crossing spotis upriver).The trail crosses a couple of small streams, then begins to climb, crossing CopperCreek at1.75 and 2.25 miles (7320 ft).The trail flattens out, enters a valley, with several camp­sites, then starts climbing through switchbacks. The trail leaves the valley and crosses ElkhornCreek(7800 ft). Another stream crossing, more switchbacks and a granite outcropping followuntil the trail reaches a rounded ridge (8,510 ft).The trail turns left, reaches its peak at8,600 feet,then dips to the end at the junction with North Minam RiverTrail (8,420 ft).

• 0 0 0Source: "Hiking Oregon's Eagle Cap Wilderness" dy Fred Barslad

• 0 0 0

The Blue Mountain Conservancyis hosting A Swift Night Out from5-7 p.m. Sept. 18 at La Grande's M axSquare. The gathering is held to raiseawareness about and encourageinterest in Chimney and Vaux's Swifts.It is an opportunity to learn about theSwifts that show up in La Grande eachfall as they begin to migrate south. Formore information call 541-786-2665.

Tie this pattern with olive thread on a stout, long-shank No.4-6 streamer hook. For the tail, use a pair of olive grizzlyrooster body feathers and two strands of pearl Krystal Flash.

Wrap the body with olive dubbing. Tie indumbbell eyes painted yellow with

a black pupil. For the hackle, turnolive grizzly rooster body feather,

palmered up to the eyes Finish witholive dubbing wound between and in

front of the eyes.Source: Gary Lewis, for WesCom News Service

• 0 0 0

Page 20: La Grande Observer Daily Paper 09-11-15

2C — THE OBSERVER a BAKER CITY HERALD OUTDOORS 8 REC FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 2015

NolanilereadYlo welcomethechill of thefallseason

ECHO

Echo Lake is seen here from the pass between the lake and Billy Jones Lake, in theEagle CapWilderness between Hurricane Creek and the Lostine River.

The trail is deeplyincisedin places, creating a narrowtrench that makes it awkwardto walk with a normal gait.

When the trail finallyreaches a crest it's both a re­lief and a disappointment­the latter because the pathactually descends slightly,and briefly, to a meadowthat covers several acres.After climbing that ridge thenotion ofhaving to regainany lost elevation during thereturn seems a cruel prank.

Speaking of which, most ofthe guidebooks describe thismeadow interlude as a"falsesummit" — one of those topo­graphic tricks that misleadhikers into thinking they'vecompleted the climb when inreality the punishing ascentcontinues.

This description is accu­rate, I suppose.

But I don't think it's appro­priate when applied to theEcho Lake trail.

From here, the trail doesclimb 700 feet or so before itreaches the lake.

But compared with theridge between the creekcrossing and the meadow,this last stretch leading tothe lake seems to me a pleas­ant stroll through the starkbut spectacular alpine coun­try for which the Wallowasare so beloved.

At the lake, finally

Also typical of the Wallowasis the grandeur of Echo Lake.

At nearly 8,400 feet, thelake is lofty even for a rangewhere most of the lakes lieabove 7,000 feet. I didn'thappen to have a color wheelin my backpack, but to myeyes, &om the vantage pointof the pass between Echo andBilly Jones Lake, the waterappeared nearer to purplethan to blue.

It's awfullypretty,regmHess.There are several massive

whitebark pine trees alongthe shore, their exposed rootscurled around the granitic

~C -Ws~~ ~W '>.-, P a~~ . ~ . . o

boulders rather like ten­tacles. Some of these treesprobably were growing herewhen Columbus set sail.

There are a few campsites,mainly on the east side ofthe lake near its outlet, butfirewood is lacking.

To get to Billy Jones Lake,cross the outlet and followthe rough, but visible, trailthat climbs a slope ofbrownscree at the southeast cornerof Echo Lake.

This trail crosses a passand then descends about 300feet to Billy Jones. The dis­tance is about three-quartersof a mile.

Backpacking thebest option

Echo is not an impossibledestination for day-hikersbut the distance — 16 milesround trip &om HurricaneCreek Trailhead — combinedwith the elevation gain putsthe lake at the extreme endfor one-day trips.

Fortunately, there are sev­eral fine camping spots nearthe Hurricane Creek trailwithin a quarter-mile of theEcho Lake junction, most ofwhich have astounding viewssoutheast to the great 3,000­foot marble west face of theMatterhorn, second-highestpeak in the Wallowas.

My party, which includedmy father-in-law, HowardBritton, my brother-in-law,Dave Britton and his 12-year­old son, Tyler, camped besidethe creek Friday nightand hiked to Echo Lake onSaturday morning, carryinglighter packs than the typicalkindergartener hauls aroundthese days.

I was grateful for this.And my toe, having bat­

tered itself some thousandsof times during the descent ofthe ridge, was even more so.

I shudder to think whatthe trail would have doneto that poor appendage hadI been carrying 30 poundsinstead of five.

Jayson JacobyNVesCom News Sennce

~3

Technically, it is still sum­mer, and will be for a couplemore weeks. Fall doesn'tofficially start until Sept. 23.

However, last weekendbrought in a few early signsthat the seasons are aboutto change, if they haven'talready.N ot only are football,

volleyball and the rest ofthe fall sports here, but sois the accompanying coolerior even, at times, downrightcolder) weather. Beforelong, the mountains willbe packed with snow, andskiers and snowboarderswill flock to Anthony LakesMountain Resort.

Personally, I'm not quiteready for the cold to hit, andgot a reminder of that factlast weekend.

Maybe I'm a bit of awimp, but the steady rain atthe football game I coveredlast Friday night sent mescurrying for cover, and Idonned multiple layers atlast Saturday's soccer game.Both times, the weather wasnot what I was expecting­at least not this soon.

But in reality, I should beready for it. Heck, I shouldembrace it.

Having spent seven yearsin Eugene with the dreary,depressing drizzle that wasour weather seemingly halfof the year, I should be usedto the rain. Even the coldrain that seeps down andchills you to the bone.

And I should be used tothe cold. I grew up in Vale,after all, which gets justas cold as La Grande comewintertime ithough it may

RQNALD BQND

not get as much snow).But every year when

that cold snap comes rollingaround, I'm never ready forit. It doesn't matter if it hitsin early September or notuntil late October. Whenthe cold shows up, I'm onewho doesn't welcome it withopen arms.

I guess you could say Ihave a love-hate relation­ship with chilly weather. Ilong for itin the dog daysof summer when it's 110degrees outside, but loatheit when it shows its face andI have to crank up the heatiand the gas bill) at home.

Case in point — lastweekend. I've already beenpicked at for complainingabout the rain Friday nightiand rightly sol, so this isnot a further complaint, butrather, an explanation.

And maybe, a lesson inpreparation.

I went into Friday'sopener between Heppnerand Imbler only somewhatprepared. I had a jacket onand gloves in my pocket, buthadn't the slightest notionof being ready for the rain. Ididn't expect it. I hadn't paidany attention to the weatherreport in recent days, or tothe skies that evening, so forthe heavens to open up asthey did early in the secondquarter caught me com­pletely off guard.

It started innocentlyas just a few drops. Those

Continued from Page 1C

Mountains near Baker City.Except a trail laid out in

neat rows of numbers onpaper doesn't necessarily tellthe true tale.

After making the climb toEcho Lake, my mind iandeven more so my toe, whichhad no choice but to go along)insists that no route in theElkhorns quite matches theEcho Lake trail in difficulty.

This is not immediatelyapparent, though.

The trail's first mile orso is steep by Eagle Capstandards, lacking thetypical long switchbacks thatsacrifice distance for gradeand make even a 3,000-footascent seem almost imper­ceptible.

iThe Frances Lake Trail,on the opposite side of theHurricane Divide, epitomizesthis horse-friendly approachto trail design.)

But that first section isn'tterribly taxing.

The trail even levels for ashort distance before crossinga branch of Granite Creek.At that point I was feelingskeptical, even a bit haughty,thinking the route wasn't sobeastly after all.

A climb like no otherThen we came to the base

of the ridge.There might be an easier

way to climb this chunk oftopography, which is pitchedat the sort of angle associatedwith flying buttresses onGothic cathedrals.

But the trail doesn't gothat way.

Instead it stays on thespine of the ridge, as obsti­nate as a mosquito strad­dling the bridge of your nosewhile taking its blood meal.

For the next mile the gradenever relents.

And it's not only the steep­ness that confounds hikers.

s

OutdoorAdventure Program too&er fall dasses tonon-students

EASTERN OREGON UNIVERSITY

THE REC, ROOM

e

s

drops turned into a drizzle,and subsequently, into adownpour. By the end of thesecond quarter, taking noteson the game was next to im­possible as the pages of m ynotebook became about assoggy as I was. I iwimpishlylretreated to the press boxfor the second half, having toturn about 10 to 15 pages tofind some paper dry enoughto take notes on.

I quickly learned my les­son, though, and Saturday Iwas better prepared, havinga hoodie and a jacket, in ad­dition to the gloves. Thank­fully, it didn't rain, but I wasglad to have the additionallayer — just in case.

I'll probably look back onthat first weekend in Sep­tember in a couple of monthswhen I'm on the sidelines fora late-season battle in a driv­ing blizzard, asking myselfwhy I was so whiny.

I mean, let's be honest.It was my own fault for notbeing prepared.

So the takeaway fiom this?I have two options:

• Go into each game andsituation the rest of the sea­son ready for whatever maylie ahead. Which meansdigging out the winter wearand finding my slicker iorbuying a new one); and/or

• deal with it and quitbeing a wimp. It's here, so Ibetter just embrace it.If I want to be capable of

dealing with snow on theslopes of Anthony Lakescome winter, I probably bet­ter stick to the former andnot the latter.

Or better yet, both.

s

I

RULINGContinued from Page 1C

about what's the writing on the wall here,"Johnson said.

The ODFW has said the proposal is meantto lower the rate at which bass prey on nativesalmon and steelhead smolts, especially inthe John Day River where rising water tem­peratures have lured smallmouth bass higherinto the watershed.

But Steve Fleming, of Mah-Hah Outfittersin Fossil, cited an ODFW study &om 1999that concluded smallmouth bass are not ma­jor predators of spring chinook and steelheadsmolts in the John Day, since the bass are notparticularly active when smolts migrate incolder water.On the other hand, northern pikeminnow

prey on smolts year round, Fleming said, and

• 0 •

bass have actually helped decrease pikemin­now numbers in the river.

"I just don't see the science supporting thisdecision-making," Fleming said.

Fleming, who has guided fishing trips onthe John Day for 27 years, said the vote toremove bag limits on warmwater fish wasthoughtless. He doesn't expect his business tosuffer, though he said the fishery, along withrural communities, will all be impacted.

"The word will get out that you can't findanywhere to fish on the John Day unless youhave a boat," he said.cThe summer traffic willdie down."

The new rules are part of an effort to sim­plify warmwater and trout fishing regulationsstatewide. Other changes adopted by the Fish& Wildlife Commission include eliminatingthe April trout opener and removing baglimits on non-native brown and brook trout instreams, with a few exceptions.

WesCom News Service staff

• 0 •

The Eastern Oregon University OutdoorAdventure Program is offering its outdooractivity courses to non-admitted studentsthis fall, allowing community members theopportunity to participate in these courses.M ost of the classes are one-credit courses,

and taking the course as a non-admittedstudents means participants pay the tuitioncost, but do not have to take the class for acredit or a grade.

"This is a great way for community mem­bers to take the outdoor activity courses oftheir choosing and gain valuable skills andexperience, but not have to be an EOU stu­dent to enroll," Outdoor Adventure ProgramCoordinator Michael Hatch said.

Rock climbing is one of the classes offered by the Eastern Oregon University Out­door Adventure Program that non-students can sign up to take this fall.

Among the courses available are: horse­manship, archery, whitewater kayaking,mountain biking, stand up paddleboard­ing, fly fishing, hiking and rock climbing. Adetailed description of the courses can befound at www.eou.edu/outdoor/out-courses.

"These courses are designed for individu­als with little or no experience and are agreat way to check out new outdoor sports,develop technical skill sets and enjoy thefantastic recreational opportunities thatabound in eastern Oregon," Hatch said.

Those interested can visit www.eou.edu/admissions/non-admitted for the non-admit­ted student form.

For more information, contact Hatch at541-962-3621 or at [email protected].

Michael Hatch photo

• 0 •

Page 21: La Grande Observer Daily Paper 09-11-15

HEALTH 8 FITNESS THE OBSERVER tk BAKER CITY HERALD — 5CFRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 2015

wor out~ on'tsweatitl'lgglll• Sweating keeps us cool while exercising, and the Gtter you are, the more you tend to sweat

By Gabriella BostonSpecial to The Washington Post

r No sweat, no glory.""Sweat is fat crying.""Good things come to

those who sweat."These are popular mottos

among the fitness set. Butis there any truth to them?Is sweat really a sign offitness? Do athletes sweatmore?

Yes, so embrace it."Sweating is one of the

best methods of cooling thebody," says Max Prokopy,director of the Uni versity ofVirginia SPEED Clinic.

Sweat is a byproductwhen the body heats up toconvert chemical (glucose)energy to work (muscle)energy, Prokopy says. Sweathelps keep the body tem­perature between 98 and103 degrees Fahrenheitno matter how intense theworkout.

"Performance reallystarts to suffer at 103," hesays. And if you reach 104degrees you are risking heatexhaustion or worse.

Everyone sweats whenexercising, but when andhow much can vary widely,says Julieann Harris, anAmerican College of SportsMedicine-certified personaltrainer in Frederick.

"Athletes tend to sweatsooner and more," she says,explaining that activepeople convert chemical en­ergy to work energy fasterand that their bodies areconditioned to sweat sooner,at lower temperatures andin anticipation of what'scoming (a long or hardworkout).

In the end, this allowsathletes to go harder andfarther without causing theincreased body heat thatcould hamper performance(or worse).

yourself

Heavy waterlossExercising 30minutes inwarm, humidweather orwearing heavypadding, youcan lose morethan 1 qt. (1 I)or 2 lb. (1 kg)of water assweat

onaccuratescales

Did you feelthirsty?

Ifso, at what pointduring the workoutwas it?

Ifnot, had you losta significantamount of waterwithout knowingit?

In other words, sweatingis a form of conditioning­an adaptation — that allowsus to keep going.

"You can train yourbody to sweat more as youincrease intensity and dura­tion over time," Harris says.

But copious sweatingcomes at a cost. You haveto replenish the water andsometimes also the other"waste" products, such assalt.

Prokopy says water usu­ally does the trick, but ifelectrolytes are called for, herecommends cutting orangejuice with water (50/50l andadding a pinch of sea salt tothe mix.

He recommends 20ounces of liquid for every 45

Losing water as sweat

Exercise for an hour ormore without drinkinganything, and weighyourself wearing thesame shoes and clothesas before

Some people feel thirsty when they start becoming dehydrated, andsome seldom do. How to determine which type you are:

or more

Sweatingaway 5%

Why lt matters

Sweating away2% to 3% inbody weight

Waterlost(Approximate figures)

1 lb. (500 g) 2 c ups (500 ml)

2 lb. (1 kg) 1 qt . (1 liter)

4 lb.(2 kg) 2 q t . (2 I)

to 60 minutes of moderate tointense exercise.Harris says that after 90

minutes you might needto add some sugar (carbo­hydrates) to the water andelectrolytes. Some athletesweigh themselves beforeand after training to seehow much fluid they need toreplenish.

Mike Hamberger, a Wash­ington running coach, saysit's important to rememberthat short, intense workoutscan cause just as muchsweating as a long, lessintense workout. "I alwayshave to remind runners tohydrate when we have our30-minute track workouts,"he says.

Prokopy notes that the

Calculate howmuch weight youlost and whatpercentage ofyour body weightthat equals

more

Reducesaerobicability by

than 10%

Createssignificantrisk ofheat stroke

Graphic Paul Trap

short and intense workoutswhere the heart rate is inthe anaerobic zone (80 to 90percent of max heart rate)usually don't produce allthat much sweat until afterthe workout is finished andyour body is recovering.

Other ways to help thebody stay cool in hot, humidsummers include removingmakeup to unclog pores,wearing wick-away shortsand sleeveless tops to allowsweat to evaporate, arrang­ing your hair short or in aponytail (off the neck) andslowing down your pace andintensity a bit.

The amount of sweat weproduce varies from personto person. Obese people, forexample, tend to sweat morebecause of thicker layers offat that insulate the body.

Women have as manyor more sweat glands thanmen — a few million — butmen tend to sweat more,Harris says."This has todo with the fact that menhave more muscle mass,create more waste productand have more overall bodymass."

One interesting thing interms of gender differences,says Prokopy, is that prepu­bescent boys and girls havethe same sweat rate. It'sonly after puberty that boysstart to sweat more."Thereseems to be a testosteronecomponent."

Think you sweat morethan most people? It couldbe a genetic predisposi­tion, or if it's really bad,you could be among the 3percent of people for whomexcessive sweat is a m edi­cal condition (check with adoctor).

But for most of us,sweating during exerciseis perfectly natural — andvery goo(l.

atmore anWel eS S~• Doctors say eating more of certainfoods can reduce your risk of obesity

Adding certain foods to your diet, including cinna­mon, may reduce risk of obesity.

Bill Hogan/Chicago Tnhune

LICEContinued from Page 6C

That's contrary to advicefrom the U.S. Centers for Dis­ease Control and Prevention,which recommends parentsfirst use the over-the-counterproducts as directed.

Pollack, of Harvard, doesn'tdoubt knockdown resistancehas reached the levels Clarkand Yoon have identified, buthe doesn't think that meansall lice wouldn't respond tothe over-the-counter treat­ments. He estimates over­the-counter products are nowless than 50 percent effective,but they're still worth a shot.

"I hear every week from afew people who tried themthat they didn't work forthem, but I also hear &ompeople who say, Yeah, theyworked fine,"' he said."End ofstory. I'm confident there arepopulations ofhead lice outthere that are susceptible."

Dr. Darin Vaughan, MosaicMedical's clinical medicaldirector for pediatrics, saidover-the-counter productstend to work for the familieshe's talked to. He generallyrecommends parents trythose remedies first. If theydon't work, that doesn't nec­essarily mean resistance isthe problem, he said. It couldalso be the product wasn'tused properly or the patientdoesn't have head lice.

"Concluding that resis­tance is the reason for atreatment failure is often amistake," Vaughan said.That said, it's reasonable

for parents to see their child'spediatrician if they still feelcomfortable, he said.

Over-the-counter lice re­m oval products are generallymade of one of two things:pyrethrins, a type of flowerextract, or a synthetic versionof that, called pyrethroid.Both bind to sodium chan­nels and keep them opentoo long, creating a state ofhyperexcitation that eventu­

• 0 •

open.

gl~~•

Researchers say chemical-resistant head lice are becom­ing more common.

ally kills the insects.When an insect develops

resistance, however, theirsodium channels becomedesensitized to the chemicals,and they lose their abilityto bind to keep the channels

If they don't bind, theydon't kill the insect," Clarksald.

The main factor drivingPollack's recommendation ismoney. Most over-the-counterproducts cost between $8 and$10, he said. Plus, you don'tneed to spend money to see adoctor to get a prescription.

The prescription medica­tions, by contrast, cost anaverage of $150, he said. Forsome families, that's a dropin the bucket, he said.

"For other folks, it's feedingyour family for a week," Pol­lack said.'This is one reasonI suggest: Go the cheap routefirst. It might work."Pollack estimates pre­

scription lice treatments arebetween 75 percent and 85percent effective; none are100 percent.

Widespread misdiagnosisOnce people believe they

have head lice, buyingproducts to get rid of themshouldn't even be the firststep they take, Pollack said.The first step, he said, should

be making sure it's actuallyhead lice.

Pollack published a paperin 2000 in which he foundthat more than half of allchildren and adults treatedfor head lice didn't actuallyhave the infestation.

"Misdiagnosis is the rulerather than the exception,"he said."It's horrifying."

School nurses are the bestat identifying lice infesta­tions, but even they got itwrong more than they gotit right, Pollack said. Manytimes, the tiny specks theythought were lice are actu­ally dandruff. Cookie crumbs.Other miscellaneous debris.Sometimes it's a differentkind ofbug altogether, hesaid. Sometimes it's lice eggs,but — for whatever reason­not the live bugs.In the cases that are lice,

people notoriously use theproducts incorrectly, Pollacksaid. Some people use theproducts only once, whichwill usually fail to get ridof all of the lice. He recom­mends one application thefirst day the lice are identi­fied and a second on day 10.That will give all of the eggssuKcient time to hatch, hesaid.aYou don't want to treatfive, eight, 12 times like somepeople do," Pollack said.

While some have touted

' (~M

Getty Images

• 0 •

natural lice remedies — us­ing concoctions with ingredi­ents like apple cider vinegarand coconut oil, olive oil ormayonnaise — both Pollackand Vaughan agreed parentsshould steer clear of those, asthere is no evidence they'reeffective in treating the infec­tion. It's also not uncommonfor parents to use essentialoils in lice treatment. Pollacksaid he'd be open to the ideaif there was any researchthat found it to work — butthere isn't. Out of curiosity,Pollack said he's actuallytested essential oil's ability tokill lice in his lab. He said itdoesn't.

Some parents who claimedthey used essential oils tokill their childrens' lice havebrought Pollack the allegedcarcasses from their trashbins.

"I look at them under themicroscope and I snicker alittle bit and I say, almostinvariably, These are notlice,"'he said."They neverwere lice and they never willbe lice."'

Others have told him theoils killed the lice, but whenhe looks at the child's hair,they're still there. In thesecases, in addition to prolong­ing their child's discomfort,parents could unintention­ally be exposing their childto harm if the ingredientconcentrations are too high,he said.

Clark and Yoon have beencriticized for taking researchfunding from companies thatm ake prescription lice treat­ments. Clark defended theirwork, arguing they developedcutting-edge technology foruse in lice research thatcompanies want to use to testtheir products. He said theteam did not receive industryfunding for its research pre­sented at the conference inBoston, but a company thatmakes prescription lice treat­ments provided lice samplesused in the study.

S ept. 2 , 2 0 1 5

Attention:

t i ons ar e o pen un t i 1 f i 1 1 ed .

S uccessfu l c a n d i d a tes w i 1 1 be c o n ­t dcted f o r i nt er v i e ws . T h ese pos i ­

5 41-898-2244 (ex t . 8 8 2 1 )

I t i n t e r e s t e d p l e a sesubmit dn d p p l i c d t i c n t o :

Assistant Middle School Football Coach

Powder Valley SchoolsNOrth POWder SChOOl D1Str1Ct 8J

P.O. Box 10 — 333 G StreetNorth Powder, OR 97867

N orth Powder , OR 9 7 8 67

N or th Powder School D i st r i c t 8 J i sc urrent l y a d v e r t i s i n g f o r d par t - t i m eparaprofessional and an assistant

middle sc hool f o o t b a l l coa c h f o r t he2 015 — 2016 schoo1 year . Fo r mo r e

i nformat ion c o n t ac t V i k i Tu r n e r d t

Phone 541-898-2244 F AX 541-898-2046

Lance L Di xonPO Box 10

Part-time Paraprofessional and

ByAlison BowenChicago Tnbune

Incorporating more foods into your diet to avoid gainingweight — it sounds too good to be true.

But one doctor says that a few foods can slow your riskof obesity.

Dr. Mitchell Gaynor, author of"The Gene Therapy Plan:Taking Control of your Genetic Destiny with Diet andLifestyle," which focuses on reversing gene damage tomaximize longevity, talked to us about foods to take out orbringin.

Research shows, Gaynor said, that multiple genes affectsomeone's chance ofbecoming overweight.

''What we used to think is that if you had a gene or

genes, for instance, a lot of people in your family wereoverweight, you would just assume you would be over­weight at some point in your life as well," he said.

But, he said,"Genes are largely dynamic, and you canchange the expression of genes."

For example, you can eat foods that are protectiveagainst things that your genes might predispose you to,like cancer or obesity.Genes affect the formation of new fat cells — people

form new fat cells at diferent rates.But even if you can't change your genes, you can change

what's happening in your body, said Gaynor, who is alsofounder of Gaynor Integrative Oncology in New York City.

And knowing whether you're predisposed to genes that,for example, cause obesity, can help you know how tocounteract that.

If you're more predisposed to obesity, Gaynor said, youcan home in on the hormones that influence weight.

According to Gaynor, three major hormones affectwhat the scale says: insulin, which helps the body processsugar; and leptin and glucagon-like peptide-1 (or GLP-1),which make you feel full.

Everyone has those three hormones, but sometimesinflammation blocks them.

'The major causes of inflammation are too much whitesugar and white flour and heat-damaged vegetable oilsfound in fast food and processed food," he said.

So in addition to the oft-prescribed fish, for example,consider cooking with other anti-inflammatory foods,such as rosemary, extra-virgin olive oil, artichokes, garlic,turmeric and cinnamon.

"It's good to have cinnamon at the end of every meal,even if you're having cinnamon tea, or you could have des­serts with cinnamon instead of white sugar," he said.

• 0 •

Page 22: La Grande Observer Daily Paper 09-11-15

Friday, September 11, 2015

The Observer & Baker City Herald

HARD-TO-It',ILL BUGSMAIt',ING A HEALTHY LUNCH: IT'S NOT JUST FOR It',IDS

Mutatedhead lice>Yep, they'reout there• Researchers say lice thatare resistant to over-the­counter medications arebecoming more common

By Ellie KnegerSpecial to The Washington Post

This time of year a lot of at­tention is paid to kids' lunches,but just because you're grown updoesn't mean you need a goodlunch any less.W hether you head to work five

days a week or are out runningerrands, bringing your lunch hasbig advantages over eating out orpicking up something to go.

When you DIY, chances areyou11 eat better quality food insaner portions with more of whatyou need, such as vegetables andwhole grains, and less of what youdon't, including excess calories,saturated fat and sodium. Andthat is without even trying.

If you make a point ofbringinghealthful options, the nutritionalbonuses multiply. Plus, packinglunch saves money.

Plan leRoversThe easiest trick is to make

lunch with food from dinner thenight before.

When you're cooking, it is nomore work to toss an extra pieceof chicken breast or salmon filletin the skillet, add a few morebroccoli florets to the steamer, boilan extra egg or toss some extravegetables on the grill, and allof these are just as good servedchilled.

TOP TIP

• C

Make today's lunch fromyesterday's dinner leftovers

Rotisserie chicken sandwich with lettuce on whole wheat bread, accompanied by a fresh Asian pear.

• M aking, and taking, your own lunch can save you money and calories

If you have access to a micro­wave, you can pack just aboutany meal in a microwave-safecontainer and reheat it for lunchthe next day.

Rethink your sandwichMost homemade sandwiches

are automatically a better betthan the foot-long, meat-stuffedkind you might get at a deli. Butconsider this to make yours evenbetter: Skip the humongous rolls,bagels and oversized wraps thatcan weigh in at the equivalent offour standard bread slices.

Instead, aim for two ounces ofbread total ithe nutrition labelgives you the weight of a serving)and make it whole grain for thefiber, antioxidants and nutty taste.That generally translates to twoslices of sandwich bread, a 6-inchpita or a 9-inch wrap.

Scooping the center out of acrusty baguette or roll is also agreat way to keep starch portionsin check and still have the satisfy­ing sandwich you crave.

When it comes to spreads, getyourself out of a mayo rut by ex­

ploring condiments that are burst­ing with flavor and nutrients.

Try slathering a basil or sun­dried tomato pesto on bread fora punch of flavor, indulging in aspread ofbuttery ripe avocado orsmearing on some rich, creamyhummus.

Pack more produceThat go-to slice of tomato and

lettuce leaf on your sandwichis OK, butyoucando so muchbetter.

Rather than treating the veg­gies as an afterthought, makethem the star. Grilled zucchini,eggplant, fennel, peppers, onionsand tomatoes, interesting greenssuch as watercress or fiisee,steamed asparagus spears orgreen beans, sliced beets, snowpeas, shredded carrot, cabbage orsliced radish can all be piled ona sandwich to give it a big wowfactor.

Say no to soggyThere is no need to suffer

through soggy sandwiches andsalads.

For salads other than slaws,which can stand up to beingdressed ahead, pack the dress­ing separately and toss with thegreens right before eating. Thereare many containers availablewith separate salad and dressing

compartments, or you can use anysealable food containers.

Also be sure to dry your greenswell before packing them so theydon't get waterlogged.

To keep sandwiches fromgetting mushy, protect the breadfrom any wet ingredients byputting large pieces oflettuce inbetween the bread and the otherfillings on both the top and bottompieces ofbread.

Most important, keep yourlunch fresh and safe to eat bypacking it in an insulated lunch­box with an ice pack and, if youhave access to a refiigerator, pop itin there as soon as you can.

Step away from the deskTwo of the most compelling

reasons to go out to lunch if youare at work are simply to getaway from your desk and maybesocialize a bit.

There is no reason to forgo thatimportant mental break whenyou bring food from home.

Make a point of finding a spotin a nearby park or outdoorseating area or, at least, findsomewhere in the office whereyou can escape your computer fora few minutes. Invite a fiiend orco-worker to join you if you arecraving company. It might be justthe inspiration that person needsto pack lunch, too.

photo by Lisa Britton/Forwescom News Sennce

treatments.

WesCom News ServiceBy Tara Bannow

The past few weeks have seen a flur­ry of news articles about the emergenceof so-called mutant head lice, bugs thatcan survive even several rounds of thechemicals designed to kill them.

To parents, it sounds terrifying.Those who study lice, however, arescratching their heads and wondering,rr~ d

rpr

aWe've known for decades that thereare lice out there that have become re­sistant to these products," said RichardPollack, an immunology and infectiousdiseases instructor at Harvard Univer­sity."It's perfectly expected and there isnothing surprising about it."

For years, researchers have docu­m ented the gradual rise of insecticideresistance among some lice popula­tions, some of which is indeed striking.The bugs have become increasinglyimmune to over-the-counter productsspecifically, which are far cheaper thantheir prescription counterparts, anddon't require a trip to the doctor.

The recent uproar started with a pre­sentation in Boston by two researchers,John Marshall Clark, a chemistry andenvironmental toxicology professorat the University of MassachusettsAmherst and Kyong Sup Yoon, an as­sistant biological sciences professor atSouthern Illinois University Edwards­ville. They described recent researchthat found lice in at least 25 U.S. statesto have the three genetic mutations­hence the loving nickname, mutants­necessary to give a louse what's knownas knockdown resistance, meaning itcan't be killed using over-the-counterproducts.

Oregon was among five states thathasn't quite reached that level of resis­tance. Here, the researchers found licesamples had one, two or three of themutations. Overall, 80 percent of thelice tested in Oregon had the muta­tions, compared with 100 percent inm ost other states, Clark said.

'You're well on your way to becoming

as resistant as the rest of the states,"he said.

Over-the-counter or Rx?So, what does this mean for frantic

parents trying to rid their kids of lice?Clark and Yoon say the spread of

knockdown resistance has made over­the-counter products so ineffective,parents should take their kids straightto the doctor for advice and, most likely,a prescription for more effective lice

See Lice/Page 5C

MARIt', ON YOUR CALENDAR Stop Smoking Program StartsFree Session Addresses Common

Causes Of Shoulder PainBAKER CITY — A program de­

signed to help people quit smok­ing started this week in Baker City.

"Breathe-Free 2" will take placeat the Seventh-Day AdventistChurch, 42171 Chico Road, on

Wednesday andThursday nightsat 6:30 through Oct. 7.

More information is availableby calling Monte Wood at 661-742­3635 or by email at [email protected].

Foods high on the glycemicindexraise tryptophan levelsin the blood,which can make a person sleepy.

Where they placePeople who ate foods that rank around"100" four hours before bedtime fellasleep in about 9 minutes

103 Dates95 French baguette

70 Mashed potatoes

56 Boiled potatoes

52 Qrange juice ~

BAKER CITY — A free session about shoulder pain and shoulderdysfunction is set for Friday, Sept. 18, from 9:45 a.m. to 10:45 a.m. atthe YMCA Fitness Center, 3715 Pocahontas Road in Baker City.

Kim Zinn, who holds a doctorate of physical therapy degree andalso is a certified athletic trainer at St. Alphonsus Medical Center'srehabilitation services, will lead the class. This is Part 4 in her "Sym­metry Series."

Zinn said the talk will address a "kink in your shoulder" and "thatpinch when you reach up or out." Although this "mechanical pain"is quite common and often eventually resolves itself, there are toolsto address this kind of pain and improve function sooner.

She will discuss various types of shoulder pain, what causes itand options for treatment. There will be a focus on proper posture/alignment, repeated mechanical-based exercises (to "un-kink" thehose) and strengthening of the rotator cuff muscles. Additionaldiscussion will cover less common reasons for shoulder pain, suchas inflammation and referred pain from the neck.

Child care is available. Those planning to attend are asked toRSVP by calling 541-523-9622.

• 0 0 0

LA GRANDE — The Office ofDevelopmental Disability Services(ODDS) is hosting two communityforums in La Grande next week todiscuss the vision for the future ofservices for people with intellectu­al and developmental disabilities.

• For people with intellectualand developmental disabilitieswho receive services and their

• 0 0 0

Forums focus: Services for peoplewith developmental disabilities

families: Wednesday, Sept. 16,from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m.

• For CDDPs, Brokerages andProviders: Thursday, Sept. 17, from9 a.m. to noon

Both events are at the Centerfor Human Development, 2301Cove Ave. There will be a shortpresentation followed by a groupdiscussion.

Source: Unrversityof Sydney;TNS Photo Service

49 Chocolate bar

30 Whole milk

Sleep inducers

• 0 0 0

Page 23: La Grande Observer Daily Paper 09-11-15

<Simker;a,grI 3<j' etaRjCable subscriber channel numbers follow call names. Times may vary for satellite viewers

SUNDAY DAYTIME LG - La Grande BC - Baker City 9/13/15LQ BC ~ g ggl ggg] gggl ggjg gggl gll] gllgl ~ g gggl [ggjg gggglmI g ggl mI g ggl mI g ggl mI g ggl ggjg gggl ggjg gggl

~up v4 13

QO 6 6

g+ 8 8

A&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

12 12

3 13

cc

Sponge­BobQuestInsanity!

(6:00) *** The Abyss (1989, Science Fiction) Edoil-rig crew must search for a sunken nuclear subTo Be AnnouncedDoc S o f ia theMcSt. F i rstNFL InsidersKevin YoungMother MotherLucy L ucyIn TouchSponge­BobAnti­PaidPaid Pro- Paid Program gramPaid P a idLaw & Order"Custody" nMysteries at theMuseum ccSkin P a idSeinfeld SeinfeldBrg Lrar Hard Knocks S tate oIVillow Creek cc Inside the NFL n

KATU News This Morning - Sun (N)

Mister Clifford- Thomas/Rogers Dog Fri endsCBS News Sunday Morning(N) n cc(6:00) KGW News at Sunrise(N)Good Day Oregon Sunday (N)

Xplor. Animal FOX NFL Kickoff J. Van IT Cos­Planet Rescue (N) n (Live) Impe met i csBounty Hunter Bounty Hunter B ounty Hunter

Harris. An

MotherMiddleJereAI­vinnn!!!BaldFootball

BobtheBuilderFacelNationMeet the P(N) cc

FOX NFL Sunday(N) n (Live)cc

***r, Flight (2012)GoldenOsteenAI­vinnn!!!21 DayOffBilly Bob's Gagsto Riches ccSay Yes Say YesLaw & Order'Savior" nBizarre BizarreFoods: Foods:NCIS n ccFriends Friend

GoldenSub-DSponge­Bob21 DAYEngine

Mickey Tomor- Liv and GirlMouse rowland Maddie MeetsSunday NFL Countdown (N) cc*** Robin Hood (1973, Adventure)MotherMiddleAmazingPowerRangersHornsFootballJoel I n TouchOsteen nDisney Sexy!Law & Order"Encore" nMysteries at theMonument ccP. Chris PaidSeinfeld Friends

f P (2014)lay n * * The Man (2005) n ** Into the Storm60 Minutes Sports ***r, The Hurricane(1999) n cc

cc

Teenage Sponge­Mut. BobP90X CookerBar Rescue nEpic PrivateIslands n ccSay Yes Say YesLaw & OrderAtonement" nBizarre FoodsAmerica "BostonNCIS "Escaped"to Blue Ja s at N

Police officers

ING LG - La Grande BC - Baker Cjty 9/1 3/1 5• Qggi Qgg ggggi mlI gggi g iig g iig ggjg ggggi

Your WE N Th i s Week With Ninja! P aid Pro- Into the Ocean SeaVoice Hai r Geo rge... gram Wil d My s . Res cueStarlight Ballroom (My Music) Perform- Aging Backwards Sweet Revenge — Turningers of the swing era. n cc the TablesThe NFL Today (N) NFL Football Kansas City Chiefs at Houston Texans. (N) (Live) cc(Live) ccress L PGA Tour Golf Evian Cham- World of Adven- Cycling Vuelta a

pionship, Final Round. ture Sports (N) n Espana, Stage 21NFL Football Seattle Seahawks at St. Louis Rams. (N) n(Live) cc**r, Guess IVho(2005, Comedy) Bernie Hee Haw 21DAY **i;Enduring Love(2004, Suspense)Mac, Ashton Kutcher. FIX Da n iel Craig, Rhys Ifans.The First 48 n T he First 48 n The First 48 n Beh ind Bars B ehi nd Bars** Predator 2 (1990) Danny Glover.lock horns with a bloodthirsty alien. cc

Austin & Liv and **r, Spy Kids 3r Game Over *i; Spy Kids: All the Timein Austin & Jessie cc Jessie cc Jessie ccAlly n Maddie (2003) n 'PG' cc the IVorldin 4D n Ally nCollege Football 30 for 30 cc U.S. 2 015 U.S. Open Tennis Men's Final. (N) (Live)**r, Pocahontas (1995) **** Cinderella (1950, Fantasy) * ** r Sleeping Beauty (1959)Denzel Washington, Don Cheadle. ***i; Avatar(2009) Sam Worthington, Voice of Zoe Saldana.Golden Golden * Love's Unfolding Dream (2007) *** Love Takes Wing (2009) * * Love Finds a Ho**r, The Gabby Douglas StorySponge- Sponge­Bob BobYouthful PaidTruck MuscleEpic Beach Homes

Say Yes Say YesLaw & Order"Deceit" nBizarre FoodsAmerica "DetroitNCIS n ccMLB Baseball Ts oron y ew York Yankees. F'

**r, IVe Are Marshall (2006) Matthew McconaugheyGame Shakers"Sky Whale" nMariners MarinersBar Rescue nBuying Buying Buying Buying Ultimate HomesHawaii Hawaii Hawaii Hawaii "Hawaii" ccSister Wives Sis ter Wives Sis ter Wives n**r, Thmk Lrke a Man (2012) MichaelFerrara, Meagan Good. Premiere. ccBizarre Foods F ood ParadiseAmerica cc International ccNCIS n cc NCIS "Iceman" n

*** 300 (2007) Gerard Butler. Badly outnumbereSpartan warriors battle the Persian army.

Eal

Auto Racing Global Rallycross Series. Paid ProFrom Los Angeles. (N Same-day Tape) gramThe OT Bundesliga Soccer FC Bayern Munich(N) vs FC Augsburg. (Taped) n

Henry Sponge- Sponge- Al- Al- Al­

To Be Announce

IVith This Ring (201

Danger Bob Bob vinn n!!! vinnn!!! vinnn!!!MLB Baseball Colorado Rockies at Seattle Mariners. (N)Bar Rescue n B a r Rescue n Ba r Rescue n

Real Time, Bill ** De a rGod(1996) Greg Kinnear. ***i AI.: Artrfrmallntelhgence*** Tiny Furniture(2010) (:15) ***r, King Kong (2005) Naomi Watts, Jack Black. n cc

NCIS n cc NCIS "KnockoutIVe Know lt (2010) Katherine Heigl.

Elise, Steve Harris. cc (DVS)

Behind Bars

me (2009)5) Jill Scott. ccSponge- Sponge­B ob Bo bMariners MarinersBar Rescue n

Ultimate Homes Naked and Afraid"Islands" cc Tensions run high.Sister Wives n S ister Wives n

y, Jerry ** Diary of a Mad Black IVoman (2005) Kimberl

Food Paradise cc Food Paradise cc Food Paradise cc

PortableCooktopSmileUSA

Derm JuiceCleanse

Wildlife WorldDocs o f XRick Steves' Europe Travel Skills Plan- Rick Steves' Dynamic Europe: Amsterning a trip to Europe. n cc dam, Prague, Berlin n cc(:25) NFL Football Baltimore Ravens at Denver Broncos. (N) On the The In­(Live) cc Money sider (N)

Football Night in America (N)n (Live) ccRookie Blue "FreshPaint" nThe Closer "RedTape" ccBehind Bars

World Outback Born to Sub-D MyDesti- KATUof X A dv Expl ore nation News

KATU News at 6(N) n ccEd Slott's Retire­ment RoadmapKOIN 6 EveningNews NewsFootball New Yorkallas Cowboys.Engage- Engage­

Mike & Mike &Molly n Molly nIntervention cc

d *** Troy(2004, Adventure) Brad Pitt, Enc Bana, Orlando Bloom. Achil- Fear theles leads Greekforces in the Trojan War. Walking

d Rugged Justice North Woods LawK.C. K . C . K.C. Bun k 'd Bunk'd BestUnder. Under. Under. cc cc Frie ndsSportsCenter (N) MLB Baseball: Royals at Orioles**** Toy Story (1995) Tim Allen Toy S tory 2 (1999)** Battleship(2012) Taylor Kitsch, Alexander Skarsgrd.

** Love Begins (2011) Wes Brown*r, Obsessed (2009) Idris ElbaGame Shakers"Sky Whale" nClean CookBar Rescue nNaked and Afraidrr ccSister Wives n***A Time to Kill(Y 1996, Drama) San­dra Bullock. cc (DVS)Big Time Big TimeRV RV

NCIS "Aliyah" n NC IS n ccnends ** Life as **r, Due Dafe(2010) (DVS)

(2001) n

Mega RV Countdown ccNCIS n ccThe Change-Up(:15) *r, Norbit(2014) n cc

Gone is dce boss/subordinate reladonship thatactress Em (Emily Mordmer) had with best friendDoll (Dolly Wells), whom she employed as herpersonal assismrct, in Season I. Now, with Doll nolonger in Em's employ and dceir rift from the endoflast season mended, the rcvo embark on writinga semi-autobiographical play together in dce hopesof getdng it on Broadway. They've sequestereddcemselves in a remote lighdcouse to do it, anddcough their relationship is back on equal footing,more struggles ensue.

Making guest appearances as themselves in Season2 are Olivia Wilde t"House") and Evan RachelWood t"The Wresder"), whom the pals ub to playdceir onstage incarnadons. Mikhail Baryshnikov andEwan McGregor also have guest roles.

"The first tseason) is much more obvious — thepower dynamic," explains Mordmer, who is also anassociate producer with Wells. "But even within dcat

power dynamic, we were really interested in havingit shift dce whole dme and dce sort of servant/masterdcing gets turned on its head, like 'All About Eve' or'The Servant' or that thing where suddenly you gofrom the servant and the master and dcen suddenlydce master becomes dce servant and suddenly it'sturned on its head. And in dce second one, it wasmuch less, it was more subde but dcat's happeningall the time. Your sympathies shift from one to the

"In a superficial way you see my character wearinga suit and we're bodc i rying to work out what it isto be alpha," Wells says. "... We are the boss, likewe're putting on dcis play and we're employing dceseactresses and it's our thing. And it's how dcat sitswith us, and that's probably like us in real life, dcatneither of the characters wants to be alpha becausedcey think that being alpha, you lose out on being... loved."

QO 6 6

g+ 8 8

A&E 52 28AMC 60 20

ANP 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 39TNT 57 27

TRAV 53 14USA 58 16

WTBS 59 23HBO 518 551

SHOW 578 575

12 12

3 13

NCIS n ccThe Change-Up(6:15) *r, NorbitMasters of Sex n

cert in Central Park n cc

soitsBrooklynNine

America's Funniest Shark Tank n ccHome Videos n (DVS)Ed Slott Simon & Garfunkeh The Con­

60 Minutes (N) n cc Big Brother (N) n cc

(5:20) NFL Football New York Sports SuGiants at Dallas Cowboys. (N)Bob's B ob'sBurgers BurgersBig Bang Big BangTheory TheoryIntervention cc(6:30) Fear theWalking DeadIce Lake Rebels (N)Best L i v andFriends MaddieMLB Baseball(6:00) Toy Story 2*** Pacific Rim (2013) Charlie Hunnam, Diego Klattenhoff. T he Strain (N)** Love's Everlasting Courage (201 0) ** Love Comes Softly (2003, Drama)Tyier Perry's the Family That Preys cc Tyler Perry's-Marriage Counselor

Full Full FullHouse House House

Extreme RVs cc Mega RV Count­

NCIS n*** Knocked Up (2007) Seth Rogen. (DVS)*** IVild (2014) Reese WitherspoonRay Donovan cc Ray Donovan (N)

down ccNCIS n

Henry Henry G ame Shakers "Sky FullDanger Danger Whale" cc HouseMLS SoccerBar Rescue n Bar Rescue nNaked and Afraid Naked and Afraid Naked and Afraid Naked and Afraid Naked and Afraid

cc cc "Guyana: Jungle" "Colombia" cc "Jungle Love" nSister Wives (N) n cc(5:00) *** A Time toKill (1996)Extreme RVs cc

Madam Secretary"The Kill List" nnday In s ide

EditionFamily Last ManGuy nThe Good Wife"Pilot" n ccInterventionFear the WalkingDead "The Dog"North Woods LawK.C. Undercover"Runaway Robot"

Simp­

Rookie Blue "FreshPaint" n ccIntervention ccFear the WalkingDead ccRugged Justice nLiv and Liv andMaddie MaddieSportsCenter (N) (Live) cc SportsCenter (N) (Live) cc***r, IVreck-lt Ralph (2012) ***i; Monsters, lnc. (

Bar Rescue n Bar Rescue n

cc cc

Sister Wives (Season Premiere) (N) n (:01) Sister Wives***r, The Blind Side (2009, Drama) Sandra Bullock, ***r, The Blind Side (2009,TimMcGraw, QuintonAaron. cc (DVS) Drama) Sandra Bullock.

Extreme RVs cc E x t reme RVs cc

NCIS n *** Skyfall*i; Killers (2010) (DVS)

Masters of Sex (N) Ray Donovan

T he2016MissAmericaCompetition KA T U (:35)Women vie for the crown. n cc News CastleDownton Abbey Rediscovered Downton Abbey Rediscovered

GameOn!GrantGetawayLove­RaymondBens­inger

Behind Bars(:12) Mad Max 2rThe Road IVarriorTo Be AnnouncedLiv and Liv andMaddie MaddieSportsCenter cc2001)(:01) The StrainGolden GoldenFamily That PreysFriends (:36)n cc Fri ends

MLB Baseball Colorado Rockies at Seattle Mariners. Mariners

CSE Cyber "Bit byBit rr ccDateline NBC "Sec­ond Chances" n10 O'Clock News (N)

The Good Wife"Stripped" ccIntervention(:06) Fear the Walk­ing Dead ccIce Lake Rebels nGirlMeets

I Didn'tDoltn

News

KGWNewsOregonSportsOregonSports

Bar Rescue n

members.

• • •

Anyone in a long-term relationship knows dcebalance of power can shift back and forth benveen

And dcat's what is uking place in HBO's half­hour comedy "Doll sz Em," as it opens for Season 2on Sunday, Sept. 13.

'Doll a Em'return as epuals

in Season 2other."

Paid ProgramBest P a id Pro

WorldNewsNews­Hour WkKOIN 6News(:20) NFLGiants at DNextStop

Cook g ramBehind Bars

Lovesick

ment m ent

mans mansThunder- Thunder­

S hip M L SBar Rescue nNaked and Afraid"Mayan Misery"Sister Wives n

G reen. Doll & L as t Gre e n

Page 24: La Grande Observer Daily Paper 09-11-15

Good Morning America

Curious Curious Daniel DanielGeorge George Tiger TigerCBS This Morning

Today

Good Day Oregon

JudgeMableanParkingPaid Pro- Paid Program gramPlt Bulls-ParoleNever MickeyLand MouseSportsCenterBuffy, SlayerMovieLucyPaidSponge­BobVariedVaried ProgramsVaried Paid Pro

gramCake CakeCharmed

Anthony BourdainNo ReservationsVaried ProgramsMarried Married Married MarriedMovie Varied MovieMovie (:45) Movie

AM Northwest

WEEKDAY DAYTIME LG - La Grande BC - Baker City

© 2 2The View

3 13Sesame Street

OO 6 6

glL 8 8

(MI 12 12

~Up I4 13JudgeRossParking

Justice Judgefor All FaithParking DogPald Pro- Pald Program gramPlt Bulls-ParoleTomor- Mickeyrowland MouseSportsCenterDawson's CreekgramsGolden GoldenUnsolved MysteryAl- Bl aze,vinnn!!! MonsterVaried ProgramsPaidJoyce Paid ProMeyer gramCouple CoupleClt d

The Layover WithAnthony Bourdain

MORE Good DayOregonDivorceCourtDogMovie

Dirty JobsDocMcSt.Varied700

Let's Make a Deal

A&E 52 28

AMC 60 20

ANP 24 24DISN 26 37

ESPN 33 17FAM 32 22FX 65 15

HALL 87 35LIFE 29 33NICK 27 26

ROOT 37 18• • SPIKE 42 29

TDC 51 32

TLC 49 39TNT 57 27

TRAV 53 14

USA 58 16WTBS 59 23HBO 518 551

SHOW 578 575

Varied ProLucyBalanceSponge­BobPaid

Paid

MickeyMouseSportCtrMiddle

Golden GoldenUnsolved MysteryPAW PAWPatrol PatrolThe Varied ProgramsVaried ProgramsVaried Programs

Couple Varied ProgramsSupernatural

Varied Programs

PaternityCourtDogVaried Pro

Married Married King K ingVaried MovieMovie Varied Programs

The 700 Club

Dinosaur Dinosaur

The Price Is Right

Supernatural S upernatural

H ot H o tBench BenchDog Doggrams

Dirty JobsSofiathe SofiatheFirst F i rstSportCtr VariedThe 700 Club

Home & FamilyUnsolved Mystery Frasier FrasierShimmer Mutt & Team

Stuff Umiz.

Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVUKing Ki ngVaried Movie

Paid Pro- VariedgramJudge Mathis

CSI: Miami

Dirty JobsVaried Mickey

MouseFootball InsidersGilmore Girls

Two

Live! With Kellyand MichaelPeg Plus SuperCat W hy!The Young and theRestlessThe Dr. Oz Show

BubbleGuppies

Supernatural

Food Paradise

KGWNewsRachaelRayJudge JudgeJudy JudyCSI: M'

The Chew

Varied Programs

News

Law & Order: SVUCleve Amer.Varied Programs

Bold

Varied

Varied

I G BC Qgjg ~ i Qgjg ggg gggg ggg Ktt j giig> gggjg ggg> [ggjg ~ i gggjg ggg Qgjg ~ i ggjg ggg Qgjg ggg Qgjg ~ i Qgjg ~ i

To Be AnnouncedMickey VariedMouseVaried LiveGilmore GirlsTwo MotherHome & FamilyMother Mother Grey's AnatomyWallyka- PAW PAW B laze,zam! Patrol Patrol Monster

Bones

VariedBoy...Mother

General Hospital

Charlie Rose

Varied ProgramsLittle

Bizarre Foods/ZimmernLaw & Order: SVUAmer. Amer

The Talk

Days of our Lives

Wendy VariedWilliamsThe People's Court

CSI: Miami

DocMcSt.QuesBoy...Mother

FABLife

The MeredithVieira ShowThomas/ SesameFriends StreetThe Doctors

The Real

The People's Court

The First 48

Varied Programs

Around Pardon SportsCenterMiddle Middle Middle MiddleMother Varied Programs MikeLittle HouseGrey's AnatomyAl- Sp onge­vinnn!!! Bob

The Ellen DeGeneres ShowTMZ Live

Cops CrazyRel. T a lkThe First 48

Steve Harvey

Cat in Arthurthe HatDr. Phil

Little HouseGrey's AnatomySponge- Sponge­Bob B ob

Bones

Varied Programs

Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVUAmer. Family New Girl New Girl Friends Friends Friends Friends Seinfeld Seinfeld

Movie Varied Programs

ING LG - La Grande BC - Baker City 9/14/15• ~ j KK

III gggj goe'g goeg gjj'g gjjgt gg aag gggj

KATU News Firstat FourMarthaSpeaksKOINLocalKGW New

JudgeJudyCleve- Simp­land sonsTlt F' t48

sat4

JudgeJudy

Varied

WordGirl

Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes VariedProgramsBones Bones Castle Castle

KGWNews

KATUNewsOddSquadNews

ment mentThe First 48

To Be Announced To Be Announced To Be Announced

Varied ProgramsVaried ProgramsVaried ProgramsLittle House T h e Waltons T h e WaltonsVaried ProgramsSponge- Sponge- Al- A l- Hen r y HenryBob Bo b vin nn!!! vinnn!!! Danger Danger

Mariners

WorldNewsWildKrattsNews

NightlyNews

5 O'Clock News

Engage- Engage

Vaned Programs

News

News

Movie

Weekday Movies toughest villain of his career. (y «(2:15)SHOW Wed. 9:15 a.m., Wed. 6:55 p.mMr. Holland's Opus *** (1995)Richard Dreyfuss. Life steers a musiciantoward teaching. (y «(2:30) SHOWWed. 11:30 a.m.

S

MONDAY EVEN

© 2 2

LG BC ~

(:35) Movie Vari ed Programs

Varied

KGW New

KATU News at 6

AA.lu Artificial Intelligence***5(2001) Haley Joel Osment. An androidboy embarks on a journey to discoverhistruenature. (y «(2:30) HBOWed.4:15 p.m.American Graffiti **** (1973) Rich­ard Dreyfuss. Town teens cruise on gradu­ation night 1962. (y «(2:00) SHOW Tue.12 p.m., Fri. 1 p.m.Another Happy Day*** (2011) EllenBarkin. A woman attends her son's wed­ding at the estate of her ex-husband. «(2:00) LIFE Mon. 4 p.m.Arachnophobia *** (1990) Jeff Dan­iels. Couple's new farm has termites andVenezuelan spider. (y «(2:00) SHOWFri. 3 p.m.

Evita *** (1996) Madonna. The Ar­gentine first lady becomes a cult figure,thendiesyoung.(y «(2:15) SHOWTue.5:45 p.m.

F

Jeop- Wheel ofardy! n FortunePBS NewsHour(N) n«

Extra (N)

Live at 7(N)FamilyFeud nBig BangTheoryThe First 48 («(5:30) The Quickand the Dead(cTreehouse MastersAustin & Bunk'dAllyn n «

(:15) NFL Football Mi(6:00) ** Step UpHere Cm BoomThe WaltonsFriends With KidsThunder- Thundermans mans

Dancing With the Stars (Season Premiere) (:01) DanceBattle(N Same-day Tape) n(« America (N) («

Antiques Roadshow"Survivors"Big Bang The OddTheory CoupleAmerican Ninja Warrior "Vegas Finals" (Season Finale) Ob­stacles include Psycho Chain. (N) n («(DVS)So You Think You Can Dance The winneris chosen. n(«FOX 12's 8 O'Clock FOX 12's 9 O'ClockNews on PDX-TV News on PDX-TVThe First 48 (« (:01) The First 48*** Tombstone(1993) Kurt Russell, Val Kilmer. Doc Hollidayjoins Wyatt Earp for the OK Corral showdown. («Treehouse Masters Treehouse Masters Treehouse Masters** Teen Beach 2 (2015, Musical Comedy) Liv and JessieRoss Lynch, Maia Mitchell. n (« Maddie n («nnesota Vikings at San Francisco 49ers. (Live) Spo rtsCenter (N) (Live) («SwitchedatBirth (:01)ChasingLife SwitchedatBirth The700Clubn** Bad Teacher(2011) Cameron Diaz. ** Bad Teacher(2011) Cameron DiazThe Waltons Mid dle Middle Middle*** Friends IVifh Benefits (2011) Premiere. «Game Shakers "Sky Full F u l l FullWhale" (« House House House

Mariners(6:04) ** / Am Number Four (:35) ** 2 Fast 2 Furious (2003) Paul Walker. nFast N' Loud n («

Bad Boys*** (1995) Martin Lawrence.Two Miami cops attempt to recover stolenpolice evidence. (y (2:59) SPIKE Wed.5:01 p.m.Best in Show***t (2000) MichaelHitchcock. The fur flies at a prestigiousPhiladelphia dog show. (y «(1:30) HBOFri. 1 p.m.Blades of Glory *** (2007) Will Fer­rell. Rival male skaters compete as a pair.(y «(1:45) HBO Fri. 9:45 a.m.The Book of Life *** (201 4) Voicesof Diego Luna. Animated. A young man istorn between family duty and his own de­sires. (y «(f:40) HBO Mon. 2:35 p.m.The Breakfast Club ***t (1965)Emilio Estevez. Five teenagers makestrides toward mutual understanding. L«3(2:15) AMC Thu. 4 p.m.Bridget Jones's Diary *** (2001)Renee Zellweger. A diet-obsessed womanlooks for suitable husband material. (y «(1:45) SHOW Wed. 2 p.m.

a.m.

The 50 Year Argument *** (2014)The histoty of the New York Review ofBooks. (y L«3 (1:45) HBO Fri. 8 a.m.

Kick-Ass*** (2010) Aaron Johnson.An ordinary teen decides to become asuperhero. (y (2:34) SPIKE Mon. 10:26

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows:Part 1 *** (2010) Daniel Radcliffe.Harp sets out to destroy the secrets toVoldemorl's power. (3:30) FAM Wed.4:30 p.m.The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug*** (2013) lan McKellen. Bilbo andcompany encounter the fearsome dragonSmaug. (y «(2:45) HBO Tue. 5:15 p.m.

Ghost Town *** (2008) Ricky Gervais.A dentist sees spirits after having a near­death experience. (y «(1:45) HBO Wed.6:45 p.m.Groundhog Day***t (1993) Bill Mur­ray. A TV weatherman's day keeps repeat­ing. «(2:30) AMC Fri. 1:45 p.m.

H

G

K

Willow Creek*** (2013) AlexieGilmore. Two campers try to find firsthandevidence of Bigfoot. (y «(1:25) SHOWWed. 5:30 p.m.World Trade Center *** (2006)Nicolas Cage. Port Authority officers gettrapped in rubble on Sept. 11. (y «(2:10)SHOW Thu. 11:50 a.m.

X

St. Vincent *** (2014) Bill Murray. Abawdy misanthrope mentors his youngneighbor. (y «(1:45) SHOW Mon. 10:45a.m., Mon. 5:15 p.m.Splash *** (1964) Tom Hanks. Adisenchanted businessman struggles toprotect a mermaid. «(2:30) AMC Fri.11:15 a.m.The SpongeBob SquarePants Movie*** (2004) Voices of Tom Kenny.Animated. SpongeBob must find KingNeptune's stolen crown. (y «(1:45) NICKFri. 5:30 p.m.

Tiny Furniture *** (2010) Lena Dun­ham. An aimless college graduate movesback in with her family. (y «(1:45) SHOWWed. 3:45 p.m.Tombstone*** (1993) Kurt Russell.Doc Holliday joins Wyatt Earp for the OKCorral showdown. «(3:00) AMC Tue.5 p.m.True Lies *** (1994) Arnold Schwar­zenegger. A man lives the double life of aspy and a family man. (3:00) AMC Tue.12 p.m.

W

A&E 52 28

AMC 60 20

ANP 24 24

DISN 26 37

ESPN 33 17FAM 32 22FX 65 15

HALL 87 35LIFE 29 33

NICK 27 26

ROOT 37 18• • SPIKE 42 29

OO 6 6

glL 8 8

(M1 12 12

~Up I4 13

3 13

n ccEntertainmentInsideEditionFamilyFeud (N)Big BangTheory

MLB Baseball: Angels at Mariners

Fast N' Loud:Revved Up(N) nHuman Spiders nCastle "After theStorm" nUncommonGrounds(«WWE Monday Night RAW (N Same-day Tape) n(«FamGuy FamGuy American American FamGuy FamGuy

Mad Max 2: The Road Warrior ****(1981) Mel Gibson. Loner lawman MadMax fights bikers for wasteland gas. (2:00)AMC Mon. 3:30 p.m.Matilda *** (1996) Mara Wilson. Achild uses her amazing abilities against un­caring adults. (2:00) FAM Tue. 6 p.m.The Matrix Reloaded *** (2003)Keanu Reeves. Freedom fighters revoltagainst machines. «(3:00) AMC Thu.1 p.m.Mission: Impossible III *** (2006)Tom Cruise. Agent Ethan Hunt faces the

TDC 51 32

TLC 49 39

TNT 57 27

TRAV 53 14

USA 58 16WTBS 59 23HBO 518551

SHOW 578 575

Lost His FaceCastle "Always" n («(DVS)Bizarre FoodsAmerica («NCIS n «Seinfeld SeinfeldThe Jinx: The LifeMasters of Sex

American Experience "Walt Disney" Thelife and legacy of Walt Disney.Scorpion The team (9:59) NCIS: Losmust save Walter. Angeles n

/Am Number Four(:02) Fast N' Loud

Body Bizarre («Bones Pregnant teenmurdered. nUncommonGrounds(«B/g Montnta'sConan (N)

(:15) *** Dawn of the Planet of the Apes (2014) *** Kill the Messenger nRay Donovan Masters of Sex Ray Donovan Masters of Sex

Bones n («

Middle Golden Golden(:32) The Preacher's MistressFull F r iends (:36)House n (« Fri endsMLB Baseball

Fast N' Loud (N) (:01) Rusted Devel­n cc opment "Bird Up"Mermaid Girl: Shiloh's Journey (N) («Castle n («(DVS)

Bizarre BizarreFoods: Foods:

100'Clock News (N)

Law & Order: Spe­cial Victims Unit n(:01) The First 48

X-Men *** (2000) Hugh Jackman.Two groups of mutated humans squareoff against each other. (y «(1:50) HBOWed. 9:10 a.m., Fri. 6:15 p.m.

Bizarre FoodsAmerica («

n cc

News

KGWNewsNews

Mlke & Mlke &Molly Molly

KATU JimmyNews Kimmel** Hava Nagf/a (TheMovie) (201 2)

Late­ColbertTonightShowLove­Raymond

Law & Order: Spe­cial Victims Unit n(:02) The First 48*t I/I/ifd Hogs (2007)Tim Allen.Treehouse MastersI Didn't Austin &Do It n Ally n

Busi­ness

Varied

EveningNewssat6

The Devil Wears Prada*** (2006)Meryl Streep. A recent college graduatelands a job at a fashion magazine. (y «(2:00) HBO Tue. 1:30 p.m.

Page 25: La Grande Observer Daily Paper 09-11-15

Fresh Off Fresh Offthe Boat the BoatIn Their Own Wordsn cc3 i3

~UP tct 13

OO 6 6

glL 8 8

n cc

The Layover WithAnthony BourdainMod Fam Mod FamSeinfeld SeinfeldHobbif: Desolation(5:45) *** Evifa

EntertainmentInsideEditionFamilyFeud (N)Big BangTheoryStorage

The WaltonsCeleb.-SwapiCarly n iCarly

n cc

Jeop- Wheel ofardy! (N) FortunePBS NewsHour(N)n «

Extra (N)

Live at 7(N)FamilyFeud (N)Big BangTheoryStorage(5:00) *** Tombstone (1993)To Be AnnouncedAustin & Bunk'dAllyn n «

MLB Baseball(6:00) Matilda*** iron Man 3 (2013) Roberl Downey Jr. PremiereThe WaltonsCeleb.-SwapGame Shakers "SkyWhale" ccMLB Baseball: Angels at MarinersInk Master cc Ink Master ccYukon Men: Revealed "Race AgainstWinter" n ccFabulous Fabulous Labor Labor(5:00) ** Gangster Squad (2013) JoshS.VV A.T. bring mobster Mickey Cohen to ju

Anthony Bourdain:No ReservationsMod Fam Mod FamBig Bang Big Bang**s The Hobbif: The Baffle of the Five ArmiesJim Rome, Sho Insidethe NFL (N) A Sea

Brg Brother (N) ncc

America's Got Talent Contestants compete

Middle MiddleCeleb.-SwapF ull Fu l lHouse House

Dancing With the Stars "First Dances" (NSame-day Tape) n ccAmerican Experience"Walt Disney" WaltDisney's life and legacy. (N)Zoo "That Great BigHill of Hope"

one last time. (N Same-day Tape)*** Scary Movie (2000, Comedy) ShawnWayans, Marlon Wayans. n 'R'FOX 12's 8 O'Clock FOX 12's 9 O'ClockNews on PDX-TV News on PDX-TVStorage Storage Storage Storage*** Batman Begins (2005, Action) ChristianBruce Wayne becomes Gotham City's Dark KTo Be Announced To Be Announced** The Game Plan (2007) Dwayne "TheRock" Johnson. n 'PG' ccSportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N)Monica the Medium Next Step Real

Ink Master ccYukon Men "DarkDays" (N) n ccCake CakeBrolin. Cops try tostice.Hotel Impossible"Not Anice Hotel"Mod Fam Mod FamBig Bang Big Bang

Ink Master (N) n(:01) Rebel Gold"Treasure Train"Our Little Family nPublic Morals'Ladies Night" (N)The Layover WithAnthony BourdainMod FamBig Bang

NCIS: New Orleans"My City" n ccBest Time Ever WithNPH10O'Clock News (N)

Law & Order: Crimi­nal Intent ncc

Storage StorageBale, Michael Cainenight, ccTo Be AnnouncedLiv and JessieMaddie n ccSportsCenter (N)Monica the MediumThe Bastard Executioner "Pilot"Middle MiddleCeleb.-SwapF ull Fu l lHouse HouseMariners MLB Baseball

Ink Mas Tattoo(:02) Yukon Men"Dark Days" ccCake CakePublic Morals"Ladies Night" ccAnthony Bourdain:No ReservationsMod Fam Mod FamConan(N)

KGWNewsNews

Golden GoldenCeleb.-SwapFriends (:36)cc Friends

KATU JimmyNews KimmelGreat Museums­Sound Tracks-RockNews Late­

ColbertTonightShowLove­Raymond

Law & Order: Crimi­nal Intent ncc

Storage Storage** Fantastic Four(2005)cc

To Be AnnouncedI Didn't Austin &Do It n Ally nSportsCenter (N)The 700 Club n

A&E 52 28

AMC 60 20

ANP 24 24DISN 26 37

ESPN 33 17FAM 32 22FX 65 15

HALL 87 35LIFE 29 33NICK 27 26

ROOT 37 18SPIKE 42 29

TDC 51 32

TLC 49 39TNT 57 27

TRAV 53 14

USA 58 16WTBS 59 23HBO 518 551

SHOW 578 575

THURSDAY EVENING LG - La Grande BC - Baker City 9/17/15 FRIDAY EVENING LG - La Grande BC - Baker City 9/18/15LQ HC ~gjg ~ I II j iII ~ I KK««I ~ I gll'g gllgl gggjg gggl LQ HC ~gjg ~ I KIIjiII gggl KK««I gggl gll'g gllgl ggjg gggl

© 2 2

TUESDAY EVENING LG - La Grande BC - Baker City 9/15/15 WEDNESDAY EVENING LG - La Grande BC - Baker City 9/16/15LQ HC ~ ~ I II j i(I ~ I IX ««I ~ I gll'g gllgl gggjg gggl LQ HC ~gjg ~ I ggjg ~ I IX ««I ~ I gll'g gllgl ggjg gggl

© 2 2

~UP tct 13

OO 6 6

glL 8 8

A&E 52 28

AMC 60 20

ANP 24 24DISN 26 37

ESPN 33 17FAM 32 22FX 65 15

HALL 87 35LIFE 29 33NICK 27 26

ROOT 37 18SPIKE 42 29

TDC 51 32

TLC 49 39TNT 57 27

TRAV 53 14

USA 58 16WTBS 59 23HBO 518551

SHOW 578 575

© 2 2

3 i3

n cc

Jeop- Wheel ofardy! (N) FortunePBS NewsHour(N)n «

NFL Football: Bron­cos at ChiefsLive at 7(N)FamilyFeud (N)Big BangTheoryThe First 48 cc(6:15) **s SixteenCandles ccTo Be AnnouncedAustin & Bunk'dAllyn n «

Grey's Anatomy"You're My HomeOregon Stage­Art Beat pass(:15) Game On! withStan Brock(N)Jeff Dunham: Un­hinged in Hollywood*** Scream 3 (2000, Horror) DavidArquette. Premiere. n 'R'cc

FOX 12's 8 O'Clock FOX 12's 9 O'ClockNews on PDX-TV News on PDX-TVThe First 48 cc To Be Announced(:15) ***s The Breakfast Club (1985, Comema) Emilio Estevez, Molly Ringwald. cc

To Be Announced To Be Announced**s 16 Wishes (2010) Debby (:40) JesRyan. n'G' « sie n

Football SportsCenter (N) (Live)cc SportsCenter (N)Practical Magic (:10) ** Burlesque (2010, Drama) Cher, Christina Aguilera.*** iron Man 3 (2013, Action) Roberl Downey JrThe WaltonsProject RunwayThunder- Thunder­mans mans

Scandal "You Can'tTake Command"The Last Enemy n(Part4of5)cc

Extra (N) Entertain

Mat Franco's Got Man cc

How to Get AwayWith Murder ccThe Last Enemy n(Part5of5)cc

KOIN 6 News Spe­cial Edition (N)gic Magician Mat

10O'Clock News (N)

The Mentalist "HisRight Red Hand"Behind Barsdy-Dra- **<, Sixfee

Molly RingTo Be AnnouncedLiv and JessieMaddie n ccSportsCenter (N)

Mod FamBig BangThe Theory of Everything nA Sea Insidethe NFL n

KATU JimmyNews KimmelMasterpiece Mys­tery! cc (DVS)

Late­ColbertTonightShowLove­Raymond

The Mentalist ncc

© 2 2

Fast & FuriousSeinfeld Seinfeld

Jeop- Wheel oardy! (N) FortunePBS NewsHour(N) n«

Extra (N)

Live at 7(N)FamilyFeud (N)Big BangTheoryCriminal Minds n(6:45) * Coyote UglyAdam Garcia, Maria B(:04) Tanked (N) n(6:20) **s 16 Wishes(2010) 'G'College Football(5:30) BurlesqueHorrible BossesThe WaltonsBring It! ccSponge- Sponge­B ob B o bMLB BaseballCops n Cops nBering Sea GoldExtreme measuresSay Yes Say Yes(6:00) The Taking ofPelham 123Mysteries at theMuseum ccModFam ModFamSeinfeld Seinfeld(6:15) X-Men (2000)Last Exorcism 2

Jeop- Wheel ofardy! (N) FortunePBS NewsHour(N) n«

Extra (N)

Live at 7(N)FamilyFeud (N)Big BangTheoryDuck D.***s The Matrix (1 99his world is a computeTo Be Announced(6:00) ** The GamePlan (2007)Baseball TonightHarry Potter(5:00) Jack ReacherThe WaltonsLittle Women: LAThunder- Thunder­mans mansMLB Baseball: Angels(5:01) Bad Boys nFast N' Loud ncc

Suddenly Royal nCastle "ProbableCause" nBooze Travelercc

EntertainmentInsideEditionFamilyFeud (N)Big BangTheoryDuck D.

n cc

ABC Fa

The G o ld­Middle n bergsKangaroo Dundee

Big Brother (N) n cc

America's Got Talent (N) ncc

MasterChef (Season Finale) Final challenge; the winner is revealed. (N) nFOX 12's 8 O'Clock FOX 12's 9 O'ClockNews on PDX-TV News on PDX-TVDuck D. Duck D. Duck D. Duck D.9) Keanu Reeves. A computer hacker learnsr simulation.cc

To Be AnnouncedLiv and Liv andMaddie MaddieSportsCenter (N)Young Kevin*** Pacific Rim (201The WaltonsLittle Women: LAiCarly iCarlyn « "IQ"nat Mariners

*s Law Abiding Citizen (2009) Jamie FoxxAirplane Repo "Epi­sode18" (N)cc

Fabulous FabulousCastle A guitarist ismurdered. nExpedition Un­known cc

Airplane Repo Thelocation of a jet. nFat FabulousCastle "The FinalFrontier" nBizarre FoodsAmericacc

**<, Fast Five (2011, Action) Vin Diesel, Paul WalkerBig Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang

(6:45) ***Ghosf Townn *** Wild(2014) Reese Witherspoon. Dol l &(6:55) *** Mission: lmpossible lll n R a y Donovan T h e Affair ncc

To Be AnnouncedGirl Je ssieMeets n ccSportsCenter (N)** you Again (2010) Kristen Bell

OO 6 6

glL 8 8

(MN i2 i2

~UP tct 13

A&E 52 28

AMC 60 20

ANP 24 24

DISN 26 37

ESPN 33 17FAM 32 22FX 65 15

HALL 87 35LIFE 29 33

NICK 27 26

ROOT 37 18SPIKE 42 29

TDC 51 32

TLC 49 39

TNT 57 27

TRAV 53 14

USA 58 16WTBS 59 23HBO 518 551

SHOW 578 575

3 i3

High School FootbalCops n Cops nNaked and Afraid"Paradise Lost" nMy 600-Lb. Life nCastle Alexis starts avideo blog. nMysteries at theMuseum ccLaw & Order: SVUSeinfeld Seinfeld(5:55) **s Hulk

InsideEditionFamilyFeud (N)Big BangTheory

The WaltonsProject RunwayF ull Fu l lHouse HouseI Bonney Lake at AubuCops n Cops nNaked and Afraidn cc

Fattest ManCastle "Reco>l" n cc

(DVS)Mysteries at theMuseum ccLaw & Order: SVUFam Guy Fam GuyProject Greenlight

Sex &Middle Middle MiddleProject Runway (N)cc

F ull Fu l lHouse Housern-MountainviewCops n Cops nNaked and Afraid"Playing With Fire"Fattest ManCastle "Reality StarStruck" nMysteries at theMonumentcc

Law & Order: SVUFam Guy Big Bang**s The Maze Runner(2014) n

Defen (:45) *s Vampire Academy (2014) n *** Scary Movie (2000)

n c c m en t

Franco performs. (N)

FullHouseHawksCops n

MarriedMiddle(:32) ProjeFullHouseSeaCops n

Naked and Afraid"Surlhrive" cc900 PoundCastle A kidnappingplot is revealed.Mysteries at theMuseum ccGracelandcc

Big Bang Big Bang

News

KGWNewsNews

Behind Barsn Candles (1984)wald, ccTo Be AnnouncedI Didn't Austin &Do It n Ally nSportsCenter (N)The 700 Club nSex & MarriedGolden Goldenct Runwaycc

Friends (:36)n cc F ne ndsHS FootballRoad; DynamiteNaked and Afraid"Damned in Africa"Fattest ManCastle Castle tries tofind Alexis.Mysteries at theMuseum ccMod Fam Mod FamConan(N)SexOnii CatGigolos Sins

OO 6 6

glL 8 8

(MN i2 i2

~UP tct 13

A&E 52 28

AMC 60 20

ANP 24 24

DISN 26 37

ESPN 33 17FAM 32 22FX 65 15

HALL 87 35LIFE 29 33

NICK 27 26

ROOT 37 18SPIKE 42 29

TDC 51 32

TLC 49 39

TNT 57 27

TRAV 53 14

USA 58 16WTBS 59 23HBO 518551

SHOW 578 575

3 i3

n ccEntertainmentInsideEditionFamilyFeud (N)Big BangTheory

ton

StandingWashing

Pig GoatBan.MLB BaseCops n

aks Barbara down.

FOX 12's 9 O'ClockNews on PDX-TVCriminal Minds n*** Erin Brockovichpower company cover(:07) Tanked nI Didn't Dog WithDo It (N) a BlogSportsCenter (N)

Middle MiddleBring It! (N)cc

F ull Fu l lHouse Houseball Seattle Mariners aCops n Cops nBering Sea Gold"The Quest" (N) nSay Yes Say YesCold Justice: SexCrimes (N)cc

Mysteries at theMonumentcc

ModFam ModFam

Last ManPrevOver­heard

Elementary "A Con­trolled Descent" nBest Time Ever WithNPHGotham The Ogre bren «(DVS)FOX 12's 8 O'ClockNews on PDX-TVCriminal Minds n(2000) Piper Peraboello. ccTreehouse MastersJessie Girl(N) n MeetsSportsCenter (N)(:15) *** Grease(1978) John Travolta, Olivia Newton-John.*s Identity Thief (201 3, Comedy) Jason BatemanThe WaltonsBring It! (N)cc

HarveyBeaksMarinersCopsBering Sea Gold:Dredged Upcc

Say Yes Say YesCold Justice (Sea­son Finale) (N)Mysteries at theMuseum ccModFam ModFam**s The Longest yard (2005) Adam Sandler. * Mr. Deeds (2002) (DVS)**A Million yVays fo Diein the yyesf Re al Time, Bill R e al Time, BillMeat Loaf-Hell * * s Camp X-Ray (2014) cc

Modern (:31) N ashville Juliette foFamily blackish cuses on her album.NOVA "Dawn of Humanity" Ancient fossilhuman ancestors. (N) n cc(DVS)Criminal Minds NFL: Undrafted"Protection" n (N) nAmerica's Got Talent "Finale Results" TheSeason 10 winner is revealed. cc

100'Clock News (N)

The Walking Dead"Us" n «

Duck D. Duck D.*** The Matrix ReloReeves, Laurence FisTo Be AnnouncedLiv and JessieMaddie n ccSportsCenter (N)

3) Charlie Hunnam, Diego KlattenhoffMiddle MiddleLittle Women: LAF ull Fu l lHouse House

Shark Tank n« (:01) 20)20 (N) n « KATU(DVS) NewsMasterpiece Mystery! Moriarly Silk ncc

breaks into the Crown Jewels.Hawaii Five-0 "A Blue Bloods "TheMake Kaua"cc Art of War" ccDateline NBC n cc

Middle MiddleLittle Women: LAJim Gaf­figanMariners

Middle Middle(:02) Atlanta PlasticF ull Fu l lHouse Houset Texas RangersCops n Cops n(:01) Edge of Alaska(N)cc

Say Yes Say YesCold Justice (Part 2of2)cc

Mysteries at theMuseum ccModFam ModFam

Impastor(N)cc

Sea(:33) ** Fo

To Be Announced

Suddenly Royal (N)Castle "After Hours"nBooze Travelercc

News NightLights

Bones Death metalband. n ccCriminal Minds n(2000) Julia Roberls. Aup over poisoned wateTo Be AnnouncedDroid PennTales ZeroSportsCenter (N)

KGWNewsNews

News

KGWNewsNews

News

CC

Cops n

KATU JimmyNews KimmelOregon Experience

Late­ColbertTonightShowLove­Raymond

The Walking DeadMany paths collide.Duck D. Duck D.

aded(2003) Keanuhburne. ccTo Be AnnouncedI Didn'tDoltnSportsCenter (N)The 700 Club nBastard ExecGolden GoldenLittle Women: LAFriends (:36)n cc F ri endsHawks Baseballur Brofhers nAirplane Repo"Episode18" n ccFabulous FabulousCastle "SecretSanta" nBizarre FoodsAmericacc

The Ugly TruthConan (N)Ferrell-FieldMasters of Sex

(:36)FriendsMarinersCops n

(:02) Bering SeaGold "The Quest"Say Yes Say YesCold Justice: SexCrimes ccMysteries at theMuseum ccModFam ModFam

PBS Pre­viewsLate­ColbertTonightShowLove­Raymond

Bones Hearl failure.n cc

(:01) Criminal Mindswoman probes a

To Be AnnouncedJessie Girln cc M ee tsSportsCenter (N)The 700 Club nIdentity Thief(2013)Golden Golden(:02) Atlanta PlasticFriendsn cc

HS BI'Itz

Austin &Ally n

Ray Donovan

Page 26: La Grande Observer Daily Paper 09-11-15

KATU News This Morning - Sat (N) n ~c

Cat inthe HatLuckyDog(6:00) KGW Newsat Sunrise (N)(6:00) Good Day Ore

Live Life- CareerWin D a yBounty HunterThe Th e The (:45) *** The Cowboys (1972, Western) John WayneRifleman Rifleman Rifleman Rancher takes schoolboys on cattle drive. ~c

To Be AnnouncedDoc S ofia the Never Tomor- Droid Jessie ~c Jessie n I Didn't GirlMcSt. First L and ro wland Tales Do It n Meets(6:00) College GameDay (N) ~c College Football Teams TBA. (N) (Live)

**s Legally Blonde (2001 )TwoLucyPaidSponge­BobCollege Football Central Michigan at Syracuse. (N) (Live)

OO 6 6

glL 8 8

(MI 12 12

~Up H 13

S 1S

A&E 52 28

AMC 60 20

ANP 24 24DISN 26 37

ESPN 33 17FAM 32 22FX 65 15

HALL 87 35LIFE 29 33NICK 27 26

ROOT 37 18• • SPIKE 42 29

LucyPaidAI­vinnn!!!Dr. HoPaid

SesameStreetDr. ChrisPet Vet

SpaceRacersInnova­tion NatEarth toLuna!

BobtheBuilderRecipeRehabLazy­Town

gon Saturday (N)

Holly- Pets.wood TV ccBounty Hunter

Kevin Another Cinderella Story (2008)Buffy, SlayerLucyPaidAI­vinnn!!!21 DayPaidPaid Pro- Paid Program gramPaid PaidLaw & OrderCausa MorlisMysteries at theMuseum cc

PaidMarried(:45) *** Dawn of the Planet of the Apes nInside the NFL n A Sea Jim Rome, Sho

Santiago Bernabeu Stadium inMadrid, Spain. (N) (Live)

2:00 ESPN Around the Horn (N)

ROOT Bundesttga SoccerBayer 04 Leverkusen vs SVDarmstadt 98. From BayArena inLeverkusen, Germany.

2r80 ESPN Pardon the tnterrup­tion (N) A ~~

4:00 ROOT Bundesttga SoccerFC Schalke 04 vs F.S.V. Mainz.From Veltins-Arena in Gelsen­kirchen, Germany. (Taped)

5:00 ESPN MLB Baseball Hous­ton Astros at Texas Rangers.From Globe Life Park in Arling­ton, Texas. (N Subject to Black­out) (Live)

7:00 ROOT MLB Baseball LosAngeles Angels of Anaheim atSeattle Mariners. From SafecoField in Seattle. (N) (Live)

WEDNESDAY

League Pregame (N) (Live)11r80 ROOT UEFA Champions

League Soccer Chelsea FCvs Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C. FromStamford Bridge in London, Eng­land. (N) (Live)

2:00 ESPN Around the Horn (N)

2r80 ESPN Pardon the tnterrup­tion (N) A ~~ROOT Monster Jam (N)

4:00 ESPN MLB Baseball Cht­cago Cubs at Pittsburgh Pirates.From PNC Park in Pittsburgh. (NSubject to Blackout) (Live) «

7:00 ROOT MLB Baseball LosAngeles Angels of Anaheim atSeattle Mariners. From SafecoField in Seattle. (N) (Live)

THURSDAY

PaidPaid

Anger Anger TwoLucy Lucy L ucyP aid Paid Pa i d*** The SpongeBobSquarePants Movie (2004)PaidPaidDisney Paid ProStory gramPaid Di sneyLaw & Order"I.D." nAnthony BourdainNo ReservationsP.Chris PaidSeinfeld Seinfeld

CC

Cyber­chaseGmeChngersr Golf BMWin Lake ForePregame

All In WiLaila AliPGA TouGolf ClubPaid ProgramGarden Se­Time (N) ahawksFli in Ve as npp g g Flrpprng Vegas n

College Football Teams TBA. (N) (Live)

SciGirls

TwoGoldenPaidSponge­Bob

Victory GardenGarden HomeLeveragecc

Mother MotherGolden GoldenLittle Women: LAHarvey Sponge­Beaks Bob

**** The Shawshank Redemption (1994) Tim Robbins. n ~cRusted Develop­

Disney CruiseLaw & Order "GoodGirl" nMan v. Man v.Food FoodNCIS "Deception"Seinfeld Seinfeld

TwoGoldenPaidPig GoatBan.

Fl'

CollegeFootballFit 2StitchCollegeFootball

Championship, Third Round. From Conway Farmsst, III. (N) n (Live) ~c

MLB Baseball New York Yankees at New York Mets. FromCiti Field in Flushing, N.Y. (N) n (Live) ~cPaid Pro- Paid Pro- Paid Pro- Paid Pro- Paid Pro- Paid Program gram gram g ram g ram g ram

Sewing/ It's SewNancy Easy nSports Spectacular(N)cc

SATURDAY DAYTIME LG - La Grande BC - Baker City 9/19/15I G BC Qgjg ~ i Qgjg ggg gggg ggg [Qi i] g iig> gggjg ggg> [ggjg ~ i gggjg ggg Qgjg ~ i ggjg ggg Qgjg ggg Qgjg ~ i Qgjg ~ i

© 2 2

To Be AnnouncedAustin & Austin & Gamer's Gamer's Liv and Liv andAlly n Ally n Guide Guide Maddie MaddieScore ESPN GoalLine Football Scoreboardlly Blonde2: Red, White & Blonde ** * Grease(1978Mother Mother **s The Twilight Saga: New Moon (2009, Romance)Accidentallyin Love(2010, Drama)Damaged (2014) Chris Klein. cc

Power Al­Rangers vinnn!!!

Cops nFast N' Loud n ~c

Suddenly Royal**s The Day After TQuaid, Jake GyllenhFood Paradise Vir­g>n>a country ham.NCISn «

Seinfeld Seinfeld *s Rush Hour 3 (2007) (DVS)(:15) **'i The Book Thief (201 3) n ~c

(:15) ** Runaway Bride (1 999) n (:15)

WhackedOutGreen The In- Next T rout TV Joy of Paid Pro

gredient Stop Fishing gramrpprng Vegas n Fhpprng Vegas n **s yye Are Marshall(2006) Matthew McConaughey.

(:45) ** Black Dog (1 998, Action) (:45) * Coyote Ugly (2000, Romance-Comedy)Patrick Swayze, Meat Loaf. Piper Perabo, Adam Garcia, Maria Bello. ~c

Paid Program

Timbers

TDC 51 32

TLC 49 39TNT 57 27

TRAV 53 14

USA 58 16WTBS 59 23HBO 518 551

SHOW 578 575

Weekday Sports

cc

9:00 ROOT The Rich Eisen Show(N) (Live)

ar80 ESPN NFL PrimeTime (N)(Live) cc

1:00 ESPN Around the Horn (N)

ROOT The Dan Patrick Show(N)

1r80 ESPN Pardon the tnterrup­tion (N) A ~~

2:00 ESPN Monday Night Count­down (N) (Live) «ROOT College Football CentralFlorida at Stanford. Justin Hol­man and the Knights (0-1) takeon Kevin Hogan and the 21stranked Stanford Cardinal (0-1).(Taped)

3:55 ESPN NFL Football Philadel­phia Eagles at Atlanta Falcons.QB Matt Ryan and the Falconshost Chip Kelly and the Eagles inthis season opener. (N Subject toBlackout) (Live)

5:00 ROOT Monster Jam 7:00ROOT MLB Baseball Los Ange­les Angels of Anaheim at SeattleMariners. From Safeco Field inSeattle. (N) (Live)

7:15 ESPN NFL Football Min­nesota Vikings at San Francisco49ers. Teddy Bridgewater andAdrian Peterson of the Vikingsvisit Colin Kaepernick and the49ers. (N Subject to Blackout)(Live)

8:00 USA WWE Monday NightRAW Will Sting continue to tor­ment WWE Champion Seth Rol­lins? (N Same-day Tape) A «

11:00 ROOT UEFA ChampionsLeague Pregame (N) (Live)

11r80 ROOT UEFA ChampionsLeague Soccer Real Madrid CFvs FC Shakhtar Donetsk. From

MONDAY

PaidMarriedBookSports

cc

cc

11:00 ROOT UEFA Champions

ment n cc

NCIS n «

ment n ccRusted Develop

Disney HotelsLaw & Order'Survivor" nFood Paradise ~c

CC

cc

9:00 ROOT The Rich Eisen Show(N) (Live)

12:00 FOX The American Athlete

1:00 ROOT High School FootballBonney Lake at Auburn-Mounta­inview.

2:00 ESPN Around the Horn (N)

2r80 ESPN Pardon the tnterrup­tion (N) A ~~

5:00 ESPN College Football Flori­da State at Boston College. FromAlumni Stadium in Chestnut Hill,Mass. (N) (Live) «ROOT MLB Baseball SeattleMariners at Texas Rangers.From Globe Life Park in Arling­ton, Texas. (N) (Live)

ar80 ROOT MLB Baseball SeattleMariners at Texas Rangers.From Globe Life Park in Arling­ton, Texas.

vs Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C. FromStamford Bridge in London,England.

2r80 ESPN Pardon the tnterrup­tion (N) A ~~

4:00 ROOT UEFA ChampionsLeague Soccer Chelsea FCvs Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C. FromStamford Bridge in London, Eng­land.

4r80 CBS NFL Thursday NightKickoff (N) (Live) «ESPN College Football Clem­son at Louisville. From PapaJohn's Cardinal Stadium in Lou­isville, Ky. (N) (Live)

5:00 CBS NFL Thursday NightKickoff (N) (Live) «

5:25 CBS NFL Football DenverBroncos at Kansas City Chiefs.Peyton Manning and the Broncosvisit Kansas City to battle AlexSmith and the arch-rival Chiefs.(N) (Live) «

7:00 ROOT High School FootballBonney Lake at Auburn-Mounta­inview. (N) (Live)

FRIDAY

NCIS "Probie" n

Rusted Develop­ment "Bird Up"Disney CruiseLaw & Order "Corruption" nFood Paradise ~c

A&E 52 28

AMC 60 20

ANP 24 24

DISN 26 37

ESPN 33 17FAM 32 22FX 65 15

HALL 87 35LIFE 29 33

NICK 27 26

ROOT 37 18• • SPIKE 42 29

*

OO 6 6

4 IL 8 8

(MN 12 12

~Up H 13

TDC 51 32

TLC 49 39

TNT 57 27

TRAV 53 14

USA 58 16WTBS 59 23HBO 518551

SHOW 578 575

S 1S

College Football Teams TBA. (N) (Live)

Love of Nick Test Pr oject Motor- Wood­Quilting Stellino Kitchen Smoke Week wrightCollege Football Auburn at LSU. From Tiger Stadium in Baton RougeLa. (N) (Live) ~cCollege Football Georgia Tech at Notre Dame. From Notre DameStadium in South Bend, Ind. (N) n (Live) ~c

tures ccNCISn « NCIS "Ex-File" n NCIS n ~c* Bad Boys ii (2003) Marlin Lawrence, Will Smith.

Cops n Jail n

AI- AI­vinnn!!! vinnn!!!College Football MoCops n Cops nFast N' Loud n ~c Bering Sea Gold Bering Sea Gold

"Girl Drama" n "The Quest" nSuddenly Royal Stories of the ER Stories of the ERmorrow (2004) Dennis ** The Losers (2010) Jeffre0 Y

aal, lan Holm. ~c (DVS) De an Morgan. ~c

Food Paradise ~c Food Paradise ~c Ghost Adven­

** IVhite Water Summer (1 987, Adventure) Kevin Bacon.'PG'

Bessie(2015) Queen Latifah. n ~c Doll & (2:55) **** Titanic(1997) Leonardo DiCaprio. n ~c

(:45) Lega , Musical) John Travolta. *** Pretty Woman (1990) Richard Gere.

Thunder- Henrymans DangerMLB Baseball: MariCops n Cops nYukon Men "DarkDays" n ccStories of the ER

ck ii(2002, Action)(DVS)

Ghost Adven­tures ccNCISn «Friends Friends

*** Mission: lmpossible lll (2006) n ***r The Hurricane (1999) n ~c Ray Donovan n

Globe Trekker n ~c(DVS)NCIS: New Orleansn cc

Cops n Cops n

Portrait of Love (201 4) Jason DohringThe Perfect Student (2011) PremiereSponge- Sponge- Sponge- SpongeBob Bo b Bob Bobntana State at Eastern Washington. (N) (Live)

Cops nYukon Men "WinterTakes All" nStories of the ER(:15) ** Men in BlaTommy Lee Jones. «

Ghost Adven­tures ccNCISn «Friends Friends

To Be Announced Pit Bulls-ParoleGirl G i r l Girl Best Dog Dog Jes s ie ~c Jessie ~cMeets Meets Meets FriendsCollege Football South Carolina at Georgia. (N) ~c College Football

TwilightChan RomanceBride BoughtHenry GameDanger Shakersners at RangersCops n Cops nEdge of Alaska

Stories of the ER**s Red (201 0) cc(DVS)Ghost Adventures(N)cc

NCIS "Caged" nSeinfeld SeinfeldX-Men: LastRay Donovan n

SATURDAY EVENING LG - La Grande BC - Baker City 9/19/15LG BC /gjg ~ I KIIilII ~ I IX

III ~ I gll'g gllgl mII gggl

© 2 2

CollegeFootballWood­shop

Ghost Adventures

NCIS "Squall" nBig Bang Big Bang

**'i Exodus: Gods and Kings (2014) ~cRay Donovan

TUESDAY

cc

9:00 ROOT The Rich Eisen Show(N) (Live)

2:00 ESPN Around the Horn (N)

ROOT UEFA ChampionsLeague Soccer Chelsea FC

CC

NCIS n «Big Bang Big BangX-Men: LastRay Donovan ~c

NCIS "Kill Screen"Big Bang Big Bang

American Ninja Warrior "Vegas Finals" ObsChain. n ~c (DVS)*s Trespass (2011, Suspense) NicolasCage, Nicole Kidman.'R'

Glee "Wonder-ful" Blue Bloods Dannyn cc witnesses a murder.The First 48 ~c The First 48 ~c

CC

Pit Bulls-ParoleBunk'd Bunk'dn cc n cc

(5:00) College Football Stan- Paidford at USC. (N) (Live) ~c ProgramTravels Steves'to Edge EuropeEntertainmentTonight (N) n ~cPoPPy Tree FuCat (El) Tom (Fl)College FootballCalifornia at TexasBig Bang Big BangTheory TheoryThe First 48 ~c**s The Great Gatsby (2013) Leonardo DiCaprio. Premiere. Awould-be writer lives next to a mysterious millionaire.Pit Bulls-Parole Pit Bulls-ParoleK.C. Un- K.C. Un- Bunk'd Bunk'ddercover dercover n cc n ~cCollege Football Mississippi at Alabama**How to Losea Guyin fODays(2003)Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn **s The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Part 2 Bas tardChan RomanceBride BoughtGame HenryShakers DangerMLB BaseballCops n Cops nEdge of Alaska "TheBreakup" nDateline on ID n(6:00) **s Red(2010) Bruce WillisGhost Adventures

(:15) SportsCenter

ThisOld PaidHouse ProgramThe Doctor BlakeMysteries n ~cCriminal Minds "TheHunt" n

Bellator MMA Live (N) n (Live)Ice Age: Last of theGiants (N) nDatelrne on TLC (N)

ThundermansMarinersCops n

Cedar Cove (N) Le ad IVith Your Heart (201 5) Premiere. Golden GoldenUngodly Acts (201 5) Dominique Swain. (:02) MovieHenryDangerMarinersCops (N)Edge of Alaska ncc

Dateline on ID n** The Expendables (2010) Sylvester Stallone, Jason Statham. ~c (DVS)The Dead Files ~c

CC

**s The Twilight Saga: Eclipse(2010)Be My Valentine (2013, Romance)Nanny Cam (2014) Laura Allen. ~c

Thundermans

Game 100 Thunder- Full F ul l Frie nds (:36)Shakers Things mans House House n ~c FriendsMLS Soccer: Sounders at Whitecaps FC Soun MLB BaseballCops n

*** Pitch Perfect (2012) Anna Kendrick

NCIS nNext Weatherman

*** Mission: lmpossible iii(2006) n Access Sports

Ghost Adventures

NCIS nBig Bang Big Bang

Paid ProgramHome­time (N)OntheMoneyRuf­TweetCol. Pre­gameThe Closer Depu- Paid Pro- Paid Pro- Mike & Mike &tized by the FBI. gram gr am Mo lly n Molly nThe First 48 n The First 48 n The First 48 n*** Erin Brockovich (2000) Julia Roberls. A woman probesa power company cover-up over poisoned water.

Paid ProgramThis OldHousePaid ProgramAstro­blast(El)College Football California at Texas. (N) n (Live)

News­Hour WkKOIN 6News

Jeop- Wheel ofardy! n FortuneNew Tricks Griffin'sfriend is murdered.48Hoursn cc

tacles include Psycho

100'Clock News (N)

Blue Bloods "ModelBehavior"To Be Announced**s The Great Gatsby (201 3) LeonardoDiCaprio, Tobey Maguire.To Be AnnouncedLab Rats Lab Rats

SportsCenter (N)

Stonehenge: Se- Ice Age: Last of thecrets of the Stones Giants ~cDateline on TLC (N) Dateline on ID n(:15) ** Men in Black ii (2002, Action)Tommy Lee Jones, Will Smith. ~c (DVS)

The Dead Files ~c

College Football Stanford at USC. (N)(Live)cc

This OldHouseGameOn!KGW News at 5 (N)

n cc

Last ofWineKOIN 6NewsPreview

KATU (:35)News CastleMasterpiece Con­temporary ~cNews

To Be AnnouncedDroid JessieTales n ccSportsCenter (N)

KGWNewsAnimation Domina­tion High-Defcc

Anger Anger

(:02) The First 48

(:35) UpLate NWSNL

Last ofWineEveningNewsStraightTalk

*r Tammy (2014) n ~c