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Serving Baker County since 1870 • bakercityheratd.com
October 9, 2015
iN mis aomoN: L ocal • Health@Fitness • Outdoors • TV $ < QUICIC HITS
In SPORTS, 5A
Baker nips Ontario
EastFaceProjectIn TheEIKhornMountains
Good Day Wish To A Subscriber
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A special good day to Herald subscriber Sally Farmer of Baker City.
BRIEFING
Soroptimists offering three cash awards Soroptimist International of Baker County is accepting applications for three awards. • Live your Dream: Education andTraining Awards for Women is a cash award given to assist women who provide the primary source of financial support for their families by giving them the resources they need to improve their education, skills and employment prospects. The award amount is $1,000. The application deadline is Nov. 5, 2015. Women who plan to achieve their GED certificate at a community college are eligible to apply for the Award. • The Violet Richardson Award is for young women between the ages of14 to17 who exhibit leadership qualities as a volunteer in their community or school. The cash award is in recognition of young women leaders who make the community and world a better place through volunteer efforts. The program offers a $150 award to the recipient and $250 to the organization for which she volunteers. The application deadline is Dec. 1. • The Soroptimist Ruby Award honors women who are working to improve the lives of women and girls through their personal or volunteer efforts, or through professional avenues. The award recipient receives a $200 donation to the charitable organization of her choice. The application deadline is Dec. 1. Anyone interested in applying for any of these awards can send a request to jmacy@ otecc.com
Fundraiser for Nancy Basche A benefit dance for Nancy Basche featuring the Chaz Browne Group is set for Saturday, Oct. 10, starting at 7 p.m. at the VFW Hall, 2005 ValleyAve. There is no covercharge.
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This view from the Lakes Lookout takes in Anthony Lake, right middle, and in the background much of the publicly owned forest included in the East Face project.
By Jayson Jacoby ]]acoby©bakercityherald.com
The Wallowa-Whitman NationalForestisproposing one of its bigger timber sales in the past 25 years. The East Face project is on the east slopes of the northern Elkhorn Mountains, mainly from the Anthony Lakes Highway north toward Ladd Canyon and the Grande Ronde Valley. It includes about 48,000 acres of public land, mostly national forest,with about 1,200 acres of BLM ground. According to the 293-page environmental assessment the ForestServicereleased Wednesday, the East Face project isdesigned to reduce the risk oflarge wildfires in the areaand to begin to restoreforests that have been harmed by past logging and many decades of fire suppression. The East Face projectis also designed to supplement similar work on adjacent private lands, a campaign that involves the Oregon Department of Forestry and the U.S. Natural Resources Conservation Service iNRCSl. Last year the NRCS distributed $1.4 million to private landowners to help pay to thin about 3,100 acres of overcrowded forests in the eastface area. The Wallowa-Whitman's East Face project would expand that effort onto public lands. A 30-day comment period for the East Face environmental assessment started Wednesday.
EAST FACE PR03ECT • WHAT Forest Service proposal that includes commercial logging, non-commercial thinning, brush piling and prescribed burning, on 48,000 acres of public land • WHERE East slopes of the northern Elkhorn Mountains, mainly north of the Anthony Lakes Highway in the Anthony and Wolf creek drainages • WHAT'S NEXT An environmental assessment for the project was released Wednesday, the start of a 30-day comment period • MORE INFORMATION Copies of the assessment available online at www.fs.usda.gov/ project/?project=41765
The Wallowa-Whitman's proposed action — one of five strategiesanalyzed in the assessment — calls for commercial logging on 6,700 acres, with a total timber volume of 16.4 million board-feet. That's more timber than the entire 2.4 million acre WallowaWhitman has offered for sale in some years during the past two
decades. Some of the East Face logging is proposed within designatedold growth areas. That would require the Forest Service to amend the 1990 management plan for the Wallowa-Whitman. The East Face project does not, however, call for cutting trees larger than 21 inches in diameter. The Forest Service agreedtothatlimitation for national forestseastofthe Cascadesintheearly 1990s atthe behest of environmental groups that pointed out that most of the old growth trees had been cut during past decades. The proposedaction — it's alternative No. 2 in the study — also proposes building 5.3 miles of new, temporary road, rebuilding 53 miles of existing roads,and temporarily re-opening 107miles ofclosed roads. The alternative calls for substantial amounts of noncommercial work as well, including cutting small trees and clearing and piling brush on about 10,000 acres, and lighting prescribed fireson about 6,700 acres. Baker County Commissioner Mark Bennett said Thursday that he hopes the East Face project goes ahead as designed. ''We need to get as much timber as possible while maximizing opportunities to slow potential fire growth," Bennett sald. See Timber/Page GA
Forest Service officials are asking the public forideas about salvagingtreesburned in this summer's unprecedented wildfires in Baker County, as well as removingroadside trees that pose a danger. The Wallowa-Whitman National Forest is looking at options following the Cornet/Windy Ridge,Eldorado,EagleComplex and Dry Gulch fires. Combined those blazes burned more than 150,000 acres in Baker County, including about 48,725 acres on the Wallowa-Whitman. According to a Wallowa-Whitman press release, forestoffi cialsare"considering avariety of management opportunities across each of these fire areas including looking at salvage of ire killed treesandremoval ofhazard treeson f or near the impacted Forest Road systems for safety of the public and employees." Wallowa-Whitman officials expect that any salvageprojectsthatresultwillbe exempt from a lengthy environmental assessment or impact statement, under a provision in federal law known as"categorical exclusion." SeeSalvagelPage GA
County transfers land to Sumpter Valley Railroad By Joshua Dillen >dillen©bakercityherald.com
Baker County commissioners on Wednesday approvedthe transfer of54 acresofland to Sumpter Valley Railroad Restoration Inc.
iSVRRl. The company, which operates the steampowered historic railroad in Sumpter Valley, requested the transfer ofland at its McEwen Depot, about five miles southeast of Sumpter, in March. At that time, public comments indicated positive support for the request, Baker County Parks Director Karen Spencer said. She said SVRR made the request in part because it would be more likely to obtain grants if it owns the land. Baker County and SVRR had a 25-year leasefor the property.Therailroad didn'tpay a lease fee. The county's parks department has managed the property, which includes a day-use area and sewer lagoon. SeeCounty IPage8A
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Issue 66, 18 pages
Calendar....................2A C o m m u nity News ....3A He a lth ...............5C & 6C O b i t uaries..................2A Sp o r ts ........................5A Classified............. 1B-4B C r o ssword........za & 3B Ja y s on Jacoby..........4A Op i n i on......................4A T e l e vision .........3C & 4C Comics... ....................5B Dear Abby.... .............6B News of Record... .....2A Outdoors..........1C & 2C Weather.....................6B
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2A — BAKER CITY HERALD
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015
Bentiwillseekre-electionin By Pat Caldwell For the Baker City Herald
BAKER COUNTY CALENDAR SATURDAY, OCT. 10 • Elkhorn Grange Fall Festival:9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at Haines; the fifth-annual event includes a variety of vendors, apple cider pressed on the site, and a luncheon from 11 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. featuring pulled pork sandwiches, bierrocks and veggie burgers. • Midnight in the Maze:7 p.m. to 11:30 p.m.,Val's Veggies, 44889 Houghton Creek Road; $8; for ages15 and older; for more information, call 541-853-2358. TUESDAY, OCT. 13 • Baker Web Academy & Early College:5 p.m., North Baker Campus, 2725 Seventh St. • Baker City Council:7 p.m., City Hall, 1655 First St. WEDNESDAY, OCT. 14 I Lower Powder River Irrigation District Board:6 p.m. at the Sunridge. • Baker City Tree Board:Regular meeting, 4 p.m., City Hall, Room 205, 1655 First St. FRIDAY, OCT. 16 • Sumpter Valley Railroad Fall Colors Train:Steampowered trip through the fall foliage prior to the Photographer'sWeekend; two round-trips depart from McEwen Depot at10 a.m. and1:15 p.m. and a round-trip from Sumpter departs at noon.
TURNING BACK THE PAGES 50 YEARS AGO from the Democrat-Herald October 9, 1965 Berthold (Bertj Neuberger, a partner of the Neuberger and Heilner Department Store, 1901 Main St., died at his home this morning, itwas reported today. Funeral services for Mr. Neuberger,1839 Second St., will be heldTuesday. The obituary notice will be published by the Democrat-Herald Monday. 25 YEARS AGO from the Democrat-Herald October 9, 1990 Poole Brothers of Ontario recently purchased from John Bootsma of Baker City the entire Truck Corral complex at the Campbell Street interchange. The purchase price was not disclosed. Ralph Poole, partner and owner of Poole Brothers, said thecompany hasowned the service station and convenience store, but leased the ground from Bootsma, who also owned the Truck Corral restaurant. 10 YEARS AGO from the Baker City Herald October 10, 2005 MayDay Inc., Baker County's advocacy program for victims of domestic violence and sexual assault, has been awarded a $20,000 grant from the Mary KayAsh Charitable Foundation to help fund its work in helping domestic violence survivors and their families. ONE YEAR AGO from the Baker City Herald October 10, 2014 LiseYervasi is perplexed about the BLM's insistence that she turn over to the agency a wild horse she's been training since late August at her ranch in northern Baker County. Perplexed and angry. The situation started when Yervasi, an accomplished equestrian who also was diagnosed four years ago with an autoimmune motor neuron disease (similar to ALSj, drove to the BLM's wild horse corrals near Burns to pick up the mustang. The bay horse, officially Mustang 1703, althoughYervasi named the animal Oberon, was captured two years ago as a yearling in the Coyote Lake Herd Management Area about 80 miles southwest of Burns.
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SENIOR MENUS • MONDAY:Chicken-broccoli fettuccine Alfredo, tomato green beans, green salad, garlic bread sticks, pudding • TUESDAY:Beef tacos, Spanish rice, refried beans, fruit cup, spice cake Public luncheon atthe Senior Center,2810 Cedar St., 11:30 a.m.to 12:30 p.m.; $4 donation (60 and older), $6.25 for thoseunder 60.
She will be greatly missed by all, her family said. She was an active member of Marjorie E. Thomason-Smith of Baker the Baker Valley Seventh-day Adventist City, died Sept. 18, 2015, at Ashley Manor. Church for many years. Burial was on Oct. 2 at Mount Hope Survivors include her son and daughter-in-law, Bill and Donna Thomason of Cemetery. Marjorie Ridenour was born on Dec. Redmond; her sister, Doris Alderson of Baker City; her brother Howard"Buck" 18, many years ago, in the hills outside Exeter, Missouri. A daughter of Charles RidenourofTulsa,Oklahoma; nephews, E. and Rosa M. Ridenour, Marge was the Shane Alderson and MarkAlderson and fifth child in a family of eight. his wife, Diane, of Baker City; sister-inArtistically gifted, Marge enjoyed law,Dean Ridenour;and many other playing music with her siblings and their cousins, nieces, nephews and fiiends. father as The Ozark Kids and Dad. After She was preceded in death by her moving to Caldwell, Idaho, the group had parents, Charles and Rosa Ridenour; a dailyprogram on KFXD radio.They sisters, Gladys Lee, Golda Walburn,"Kit" Griffin and Grace Bradshaw; brother, Len alsoperformed forlocalrodeos,dances Ridenour; and stepson, Neal Thomason. and community gatherings. Marge also played guitar, fiddle and The family suggests memorial contrisang with her sister, Doris, in The Blue butions to the Baker Valley SDA Church MountainRidersband form any RCA through Coles Tribute Center, 1950 Place rodeos. They also appeared with Grand St., Baker City, OR 97814. Ole Opry members such as Little Jimmy Dickins, Red Sovine and TVs Annie Oak- Leland Fortner ley, also known as Gail Davis. Former Baker City resident, 1929-2015 The music tradition continued when Leland U."Lee" Fortner, 86, of Kenneshe joined her sister, Doris, and her wick, Washington, a former Baker City nephew,Mark, asMark and theRidenour resident, died Oct.5,2015,with loving Sisters. They played throughout the family members by his side. Northwest and released three albums. His memorial service will be at 2 p.m. Marge also pursued a lifelong love Saturday at the Kennewick First Presof drawing and painting. In addition to byterian Church, 2000 W. Kennewick paintings on canvas board,shealsodeAve., in Kennewick. veloped"Oregon Trail Timber Art,"which Lee was born on Jan. 20, 1929, at were on natural Oregon pine boards. Lakeview to Philip and Gertrude FortShe eventually sold her vivid watercolor ner, the second of three sons. He grew paintings across the US. and internation- up in Baker City and was a 1947 Baker ally. High School graduate. During World War II, Marge worked He attended college atOregon State in a defense plant at Pryor, Oklahoma, University in Corvallis, attaining his where she worked in the lab making bachelor's degree. He then served as a explosive compounds for bombs. After the second lieutenant in the U.S. Marine war ended, shemarr ied Kenneth ThomaCorpsfor tw oyears,serving atourof son, a longtime employee of Ellingson duty in Korea in 1952. Lumber Co. and remained so until his Returninghome, hemet and mardeath in 1983. ried his bride of 62 years, Diona"Dee" After years as a widow, she married Al- Baum, of Baker City. Over the next five bert"Smitty" Smith, a Hereford rancher, years they had three children, Raymond, logger and cowboy. He died in 2004. Douglas, and Roxane. Baker City
Parole violatorsought Steven Michael McBride, 33, has absconded from the supervision of the Baker County Parole and Probation Department on a conviction for coercion. The Department is asking the public for help in finding McBride. Baker County residents should not attempt to apprehend him, however, said Will Benson, Parole and Probation supervisor. McBride has blonde hair and blue eyes. McBdde He is 5 feet, 10 inches tall and weighs 190 pounds. Anyone with information about McBride is asked to callParole and Probation at541-523-8217;the nearest police department; or the Baker County Consolidated Dispatch Center's business number, 541-523-6415; or send the information via email to parole@bakercounty. org.
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®uket Cffg%eralb ISS N-8756-6419 Serving Baker County since 1870 PublishedMondays,Wednesdays and FndaysexceptChnstmas Day ty the Baker Publishing Co., a part of Western communica0ons Inc., at 1915 First st. (PO. Box 8071 Baker City, OR 97814. Subscnption rates per month are: by carner $775; by rural route $8.75; by mail $12.50. stopped account balances less than $1 will be refunded on request. Postmaster: Send address changes to the Baker City Herald, pO. Box807, Baker City, OR 97814. Rriodicals Postage Paid at Baker City, Oregon 97814
ter not just walk ofE" he said Bentz said from the beginning of his stint in the Legislature he maintained he would try to stay for 10 years. "If the people would have me, I might go longer," he satd. Bentzpointed to several critical legislative successes he secured as a representative for District 60. "I have done a lot to protect water and that was one of my primary goals," he satd. Bentz also mentioned the recent approval of a mining mandate — House Bill 3089 — he sponsored as a win for the region. The bill instructs the Oregon Department of Geology and Mineral Indus-
triestoorganize a study of the mineral reservoirs in Eastern and southern Oregon counties. The results of the study are tobe delivered to the Legislature. Another key attribute of the bill was language that deemed mining to be a natural resource use. Bentz said his work on ensuring the bill was passed was crucial. "I was the first one to get mining legislation passed in 40 years," he said. Bentz said he believes the foundation by previous District60 representatives such as Bob Smith and Butler also paid dividends. "I think I have been able to build on what they did," Bentz said.
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Rep. Cliff Bentz said Wednesday that he will seek re-election next year. Bentz, a Republican who represents District 60 in the Oregon House of Representatives, first B ent z journeyed to Salem in 2008 when he was appointedto replace Tom Butler. District 60 includes the counties of Malheur, Baker, Harney, Grant and a portion of Lake County. Bentz said he knows of no onewho has filed torun against him in the May 2016 primary. Bentz said he believes his
record as a lawmaker is a good one. "I think I have raised, dramatically, the awareness of Western Oregon when it comes to the opportunity and scope that is Eastern Oregon," he said. One of those opportunities, he said, is the vast mineral wealth that exists in the easternpartofOregon. "I think people are beginning to understand that this is a worthwhile part of the state with a lot to offer if it is allowed to utilize the assets we have," he said. Bentzsaid he alsofeels likethere ism oretodo for Eastern Oregon Republicans at the Legislature. "The people in my district have faith in me. And I bet-
Lee obtainedhismaster' sdegreefrom OSU in 1955, and returned to work for his father in Baker City for a short time. He accepted a position with Seattle First National Bank in 1958, where he began a 27-year career in banking. His work took him and his family through various positions of increasing responsibility in the Washington cities of Seattle, Yakima, Mount Vernon, Yakima again, and finally to Pasco in 1974.He retired in 1985 asa regional vicepresident ofSeaFirstbased in Pasco, Washington. During his career he was active in many community affairs, as a member of the Rotary Club, and Kiwanis Club. He alsoserved a term on the schoolboard at Mount Vernon, Washington. In retirement, Lee and Dee traveled extensively, taking part in many Elderhostel programs. They learned about the history and culture of many different places in the U.S., and also took extended journeys to Australia and Europe. H e andDee alsoplayed activeroles in their children's and grandchildren's lives, traveling often to visit them all. He stayed active physically, playing golf and bowling for many years. Lee touched and affected many lives during his life, and will be sorely missed by all who knew him, family members sald. Survived include his loving wife of 62 years, Diona; their three children and their spouses, Raymond iAnnl, Douglas iKathyl and Roxane Frostad iMIckl; his younger brother, Ross; and nephews, James Fortner iKayl, and Richard Fortner iNancyl, and their families; and grandchildren, Aidan Fortner, Mark Fortner, Clair Fortner, Noah Fortner, Michael Frostad, and Ryan Frostad
iKirstenl. The family asks that, in lieu of flowers, a donation be made in Lee's name to Trail Seekers of Kennewick, 1035 Pattyton Lane, Richland, WA 99352.
NEWS OF RECORD DEATHS
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Carlyne Gae Gregory: 89, a longtime Halfway resident, died Oct. 6, 2015, at Meadowbrook Place in Baker City. Arrangements are under the direction of Tami's Pine Valley Funeral Home Br Cremation Services. Online condolences may bemade at www.tamispinevalleyfuneral home.com
FUNERALS PENDING
Peggy Phillips: 78, of Baker City died Oct. 8, 2015, at her home. Arrangements are under the direction ofTami's Pine Valley Funeral Home Br Cremation Services.Online condolences may be made at www.tamispine valleyfuneralhome.com Delbert 'Del' Stone: 82, of Richland, died today at Meadowbrook Place in Baker City. Tami's Pine Valley Funeral Home Br Cremation Services is in charge of arrangements. Online condolences may bemade at www.tamispinevalleyfuneral
ShirleyTaylor: Memorial service, 2 p.m., Saturday, Oct. 10, at the Cove Sportsman Club. Daniels-Knopp Funeral Br Cremation Center is in charge of arrangements. Michael Hendriks: Memorial service, 2 p.m., Tuesday, Oct. 13, at New Hope Church,2007 First St. Pastor Joe Bush will officiate. There will be a reception afterward. Memorial contributions may be made to Gray's West Br Co. Pioneer Chapel, 1500 Dewey Ave., Baker City, OR 97814.
Wanda Virginia Cole: Celebration of her life, 1 p.m., Friday, Oct. 16, at Baker City Christian Church, 650 Highway 7. Pastor JesseWhitford will officiate. Memorial contributions may be made to the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation through Gray's West Br Co. Pioneer Chapel, 1500 Dewey Ave., Baker City, OR 97814.
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Family woulJ liLe to thanL everyone for their outpouring of love anJ support Juring the recent loss of our little Morgan. Your Lindness will always he rememhereJ. You may have sent fooJ, carJs, anJ Jonations, gave us a hug or saiJ a prayer anJ for this we are grateful anJ cannot express how it has helpeJ get us through this
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FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015
BAKER CITY HERALD —3A
oun dacksoutofloddyinggrouy By Joshua Diiien ldillen©bakercityherald.com
Baker County has been billed almost
$16,000 in lobbyist fees by a coalition of Eastern Oregon counties to which Baker County belongs. On Wednesdaythe Baker County Commissioners decided to maintain the county's membership in the coalitionthe Eastern Oregon Counties Association — but to not continue to pay to be representedby itslobbyists. Commissioners had tabled a discussion of the bill on Sept. 16. 'The Eastern Oregon Counties Association iEOCAl would like to have us pay a bill ... And I believe we have objections to this," Commission Chairman Bill Harvey said on Sept. 16."I'd rather discuss it with all three commissioners than to try and vote on it at this point
COUNTY Continued from Pcge1A The Oregon Department of Environmental Quality requires the sewer lagoon to be inspected on a weekly basis during the park's operating season. The transfer will save the county money. 'The parks department is trying to reduce financial obligation," Spencer said. She said that since there is no financial gain from the lease with SVRR, she felt it was in the county's best interest to recommend the land transfer to SVRR. If the railroad were to disband, the property would revert to the county. She said the county will retain the mineral rights to the land, and SVRR cannot sell the property. Another stipulation of the agreement to transfer the land is that SVRR cannot use theproperty ascollateral for a loan. That ensures the county would not be responsible for any liens in case ownership reverts to the county.
Sofhvare purchase In other business Wednesday,commissioners approved the purchase of MPulse Silver Maintenance Software for the county's facilities department. Facilities Maintenance Foreman Dan McQuisten
said the $7,000 program will provide a database of all facilities and their maintenance records. He said the sofbvare would make his operation more efficient, and streamlinethe processof maintenance requests. The MPulse software also providesfree ongoing support
and time." iCommissioner Mark Bennett was not present at that meeting.) When the issue came up again Wednesday, Bennett said he told EOCA that due to funding issues, Baker County could not afford to pay the annual lobbying fees. In a phone interview, Union County Commissioner Steve McClure said"It's Baker County's decision to join ithe EOCA's lobbying arml. I respect that they have a fiscal decision. But I'm not goingtosecond-guess theirdecision." Bennett said Baker County is a member of several organizations, including the Association of Oregon Counties, that lobby in Washington, D.C., on behalf of counties. McClure said the initial purpose of the EOCA organization was to lobby for
and met all of the criteria that McQuisten was looking for.
Heritage Museum Baker Heritage Museum Director Lea Hoover gave an update to the Commission. She said giftshop sales were up and admission numbers were down compared with last year. Hoover said Kids Camp had twice the normal participation and that the museum will focus more on educationalprograms in2016. She said the central gallery's military exhibit did very well this year and will continue to be the main exhibit next year. The current projects the museum is working on are the replacement of the Adler House roof and "Paint Your Wagon" 50-year anniversary in 2018. The museum closes for the season on Oct. 31.
LOCAL BRIEFING Local author to sign books Sunday
10 Eastern Oregon counties'interests concerning federal forest management. Dues collected by the EOCA from its member counties are used to hire lawyers who lobby in Washington, D.C., McClure said. ''We know we get a return from it," he said."I would say we've had a big influence in Washington, D.C." He said that money invested by the EOCA has helped to get increases in funding streams such as Payments in Lieu of Taxes iPILTl and Secure Rural
Baker City Western mystery author, Clair Button, will attend a book-signing and reading event at the Wolf Creek Grange in North Powder this Sunday, Oct. 11, from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. Button has written and published three novels. During the North Powder event he will read from those as well as discuss his new writing adventures. There will be time to meet and visit with Button after the reading. Admission to the book signing is free and is open to the public. Refreshments will be served after the reading.
Hospital auxiliary book fair set for Oct. 26 The St. Alphonsus Auxiliary-Baker City has scheduled its annual book fair for Monday, Oct. 26, from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. in the breezeway at the hospital, 3325 Pocahontas Road. There will be a wide selection ofbooks and other giftsat40 percent to 70percent offretailprices.Proceeds benefit St. Alphonsus Medical Center-Baker City and the Auxiliary's scholarship fund. Credit cards will be accepted.
Schools iSRSl. Bennett said he believes Baker County could do just as well by themselves. "I worked on PILT. I worked on SRS," he said."I don't want to say it worked because I worked on it, but I don't know that a lobbyist could have gotten us any more."
$192,595.33. Turner said the demolition derby was a huge success this year. Extra bleachers had to be brought in from the Haines Rodeo Grounds. "There were still people standing outside the gate that could not get in," she said."It was absolutely crazy how many people showed up. Turner said plans are in the works to construct a small animal barn. Currently, a tent is used. She said the Friends of Fair Pie Auction in July
raised$4,090 from 25 pies. Turner reported that the year end budget for her department came in about
$1,900 under what she projected.
Forest Service coordination
Commission Chairman Bill Harvey asked for comments from people who attended a Commission/Forest Baker County Fair Service coordination meeting Fair Manager Angie Turn- on Sept. 30. Topics at that meeting er gave the Commission an — which allowed public updateon her department. "Our fair this year was a attendance, but no public comment — were related to huge success," she said. wildfires that burned about She said part of that success was because of a new 150,000 acres of forest and door that was installed in the rangeland in the county this summer. show barn, which allowed for much better animal and Chuck Chase, a member peoplefl ow through the barn. of the county's Natural ReGrantstoreplace thedoor sources Advisory Committee, were provided by U.S. Bank, Soroptimists, Good Shepherds and the 4-H Association. Turner said in-kind sponsorships were up this year
thanked the commissioners fortheireffortsatthe m eeting and said it was an excellentstartto thecoordination process. Harvey said county stafF will be meeting with Forest Service managers weekly, and the commissioners will meet with Wallowa-Whitman Supervisor Tom Montoya monthly. Chase asked about future operations in the iBaker City) watershed concerning fire danger. ''We're just one lightning storm away," he said. ''We did touch base on all the watersheds for all the towns in Baker County," Harvey replied."This is the beginningofavery long ongoing working relationship with ithe Forest Service)." Harvey said he emphasized the need for fuels management in the watersheds along with expedited salvage logging in areas that have burned. Tork Ballard asked about discussioniatthe coordination meeting) about putting roads in storage iused by Forest Service only to manage theforest)instead ofclosing them to all access. 'They don't need to put them in storage and use them for themselves," Ballard said. Harvey said the Forest service is required to explain
why roads are to be closed under the open forest plan from 1990. He said the county is building a case to explain why roads should not be closed in theforest. "Historically the Forest Service built this road system so there would be ongoing access...fortim ber,for thInnmg, for maintenance..." he said, "not to mention for the cultural needs of Baker County citizens — berry picking, hunting, mushroom hunting — all of these aspects depend on an open road system." Commissioner Mark Bennett said the coordination process will allow the county to havea betteridea ofw hat's coming upregarding federal projects and theircorresponding documents. ''When they mail you this giant packet ... trying to wade through them almost becomes a full time job," he said. Bennett said the coordination process allows the county to focus on specific topics and issues rather than wade through hundreds of pages of documents. 'That's going to be a benefit ofcoordination,"hesaid.
In other business, commissioners: •Approvedaletter of commitment to support New Directions Northwest's application for money to imple-
ment the Strategic Prevention Framework for Success Initiative. •Approveda resolution to designate and appoint Economic Development Director Greg Smith as manager of the enterprise zone co-sponsored by Baker City, Baker County and Haines. Harvey said the manager will process enterprisezone applications that givetax breaks to businesses that come into the area. • Reappointed John Wilson and Sandy Sorrels to the BakerCounty Development
Corporation iBCDCl for terms expiring Oct. 1, 2018. The BCDC runs Anthony Lakes resort for the county. • Approved an intergovernmental agreement in support of a Community Development
Block Grant iCDBGl program that provides loans to lowincome households to repair their homes. • Approved the renewal of an agreement with Baker 5J School District in which the Baker County Health Department operates the SchoolBased Health Center. • Approved an agreement with New Directions Northwest to provide a maximum of four hours per week of psychiatricjmental health servicesatthejail.Ratesper hour are$115 forpsychiatric
time and $50 for qualified mental health professionals/ associates time.
and totaled $8,979. Cash sponsorships were $11,145
fora totalof$20,124 — up about$5,000 from lastyear. 151 animals were auctionedthisyearfor a totalof
EASTERN OREGON U N I V X ll 5 I T Y
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Please join us at Peterson's Gallery & Chocolatier 1925 Main Street I B a ker City Monday, October12 I 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. Light refreshments will be served.
Eat Grains, Vegetdblei, Fruits, ®
L i e i t nitrates eAd eured
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Drink plenty of viater eaeh day e .Avoid food additives
Saint A/phonsus Neelicai Center
EOU looks forward to its continued partnership with Baker County
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FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015 Baker City, Oregon
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Write a letter
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ADVISE MR. PUTIN TCiAT HEBE
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The short, strange saga of the Haggen grocery store in Baker City has attracted considerable attention among local residents. Which is no surprise. We all have to eat, after all. And although the slated Nov. 25 closure of the Haggen store at 1120 Campbell St. won't leave shoppers without an option, we have over the decades become accustomed to having two major grocery chains — Safeway and Albertsons — from which to choose our staples. This history is the main reason we're optimistic that when Haggen closes its Baker City storewhich was, until mid-May, an Albertsons grocerycustomers won't have to wait too long before they'll again have stores facing each other across Campbell. Moreover, we hope the 50 or so Haggen employees — almost all of whom previously worked for Albertsons — can soon find jobs with a new grocery company here. Haggen announced this week that it has asked a Delawarebankruptcy courtto approve the company's plan to try to sell more than 100 stores, including the Baker City location, by auction in November. We're not grocery industry insiders. But considering the city's retail track record, and the relative stability of its population, we think we're on pretty firm ground, economically speaking, in predicting that the local customer base is suKcient to continue supporting two full-service grocers. Haggen's failure might suggest otherwise, except the company's problems are not at all unique to its Baker City store. In fact Haggen plans to close the vast majority of the 146 stores it bought early this year from the newly merged Albertsons-Safeway corporation. It seems a clearcut case of a company that tried to grow too quickly. We're pleased to see that two chains have already bid to buy 36 Haggen stores in California and ¹ vada. We hope a competitor sees similar potential in Baker City.
The best way to see a townany town, whether it's the one you'velived in fordecades orone you'venever before visited — isby walking its neighborhoods. You won't cover a greatdealof ground,ofcourse,attheplacid pace of a mile or two per hour. But this strikes me as a clear case in which quality, in terms of what you'll see, hear and smell, trumps quantity as expressed in miles traveled. Because from a car, or even from a bicycle, you'll inevitably miss some ofthe detailsthatreveal themselvesto apedestrian. I was reminded of the simple pleasure of strolling unfamiliar streets and sidewalks this summer when I spent a couple of days in King City. It's a southwest Portland suburb that boasts the curious distinction of being among both the newer, and the older,ofOregon cities. King City barely ranks as an adolescentas a legalentity,having beenincorporatedin 1966,almost a century after Baker City's incorporation. But King City also is one of Oregon's more venerable cities in a demographic sense. This is not a coincidence. King City was started as a
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)itck GUEST EDITORIAL
a e rousewon't e iste , u t e ir cansti a v e i e e c ts Editorial kom The (Bend) Bulletin: The federal government's decision not tolistthegreater sagegrouse asendangeredwas a substantialvictory — or so we thought. There are things that the federal government is doing short oflisting the bird thatcouldadd up toa defacto listing. State, federal and local collaboration did a lot by setting up voluntary conservation zones. Some ranchers, for instance,agreed to bar theircows from areaswhere the birds mate. Interior Secretary Sally Jewell highlighted that cooperation in her announcement not to list the bird. Buried deeper in her announcement
and federal documents, though, are plans to establish official buffer zones around mating areas. "Sagebrush Focal Areas" are strongholds with the highest level of protection from activity."Priority Habitat Management Areas" are places where any new habitat disturbances will be limited or prohibited."General Habitat Management Areas" get special management but short of what is in the priority areas. There's more. Some areas that are open to mining now will be excluded from mining. Grazing permit renewals will get new scrutiny. The Interior Department says its three objectives will be to minimize
Letters to the editor
• Letters are limited to 350 words; longer • We welcome letters on any issue of letters will be edited for length. Writers are public interest. Customer complaints about limited to one letter every15 days. • The writer must sign the letter and specific businesses will not be printed. • The Baker City Herald will not knowingly include an address and phone number (for print false or misleading claims. However, verification only). Letters that do not include we cannot verify the accuracy of all this information cannot be published. statements in letters to the editor.
poline or any of the other inevitable outdoor accoutrements of the family JAYSON with young kids living at home. JACOBY In most other respects, though, King City didn't distinguish itself, in my eyes at least, from several other suburban districts I've walked planned community, restricted to through. people 50 and older. The age limit There were fewer cars parked was later raised to 55,butKing City's boundaries also were exin driveways and beside the curb than is common, it seemed to mepanded to include areas that have no age limit. again, not an unexpected situation Nonetheless, theaverage ageof giventhe absence ofteenagers. King City's 3,111 residents, as of And perhaps there exists a the 2010 U.S. Census, was 63.9 — a greaterdegree ofconformity among quarter century older than Oregon's the homes, both architecturally and median age of 38.4. in their landscaping, than is typical. But this was no Levittown, with iBut King City isn't quite the its somehow eerie homogeneity that eldest among Oregon towns. Richland'saverage age atthetim e ofthe always makes me think that behind the identical facades there lurk not Census was 64.4. And 83.9 percent of Richland's 156 residents were humans but alien bodysnatchers. In King City there are brown 50 orolder,compared with 65.9 lawns and lush green lawns and percent of King City's populace.) some lots with no lawn at all, the I was curious, given the rather structured and artificial nature of turf, ifindeed itevergrew,replaced King City's history, whether the by decorative white stoneorred results would seem to me obvious cinders or, in a couple of memorable as I plodded along. cases, by discarded filbert hulls. %hich are easy on water but It was, and within a few blocks. King City's unusual demographic rather more harsh, I would think, on bare feet.) status was blatant both by what I saw — everypedestrian I passed Flowers grew profusely in places, including one hibiscus bloom so was clearly older than 50 — and by what I didn't see — not a single gigantic that it prompted Lisa to ask the woman who was tending plastic toy,basketballhoop,tram-
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new or additional surface disturbances, improve the condition ofhabitat and reduce the threat of fire to sage grouse habitat. Depending on how those policies and objectives are implemented, it could be just like listing the bird as endangered without listing the bird as endangered. The plansare said to"respectvalid existing rights" but what will be found to be valid? About half of the sage grouse's habitat is on federal land. There is a substantial portion in Oregon that is also on private land. We don't want the bird to go extinct, nor do we want the economy of Eastern Oregon to be threatened.
• Letters will be edited for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Mail:To the Editor, Baker City Herald, PO. Box807,BakerCity,OR 97814 Email: news@bakercityherald.com Fax: 541-523-6426
the plot to confirm the species, so as to avoid telling a taxonomically inaccuratetale. Anyway Ienjoyed my two hours or so of ambling King City's streets, which meander in the potentially confoundingbut agreeably unpredictable way common to the whims ofsubdivision developers,m ostof whom apparently disdain the oldfashionedgrid pattern thatprevails in most of Baker City. And yet as I walked away from the last suburban street and stepped onto the shoulder of Highway 99, a banal commercial strip with nothing to distinguish it from any ofhundreds of others across the nation, I felt the slightest twinge of disappointment. I often endure a minor and brief bout of melancholy when I've finished such a walking tour. It has to do with the people I've seen. I thought of the woman wearing the lemon-yellow sun visor who greeted me with a hearty"good morning" and who put her little schnauzer at heel when we passed at the entrance to a cul de sac, even though the diminutive dog seemed unlikely to do so much as nuzzle my ankle. And the man in the natty golfing togs who tipped me a friendly nod
as heheaded acrossthe streettoward a tee box iKing City, as befits its retired residents, is bisected by a golf course). If you spend more than a few minutes walking in a residential area, at least when the weather is fine, you're apt to come across at least a couple of fellow pedestrians. These chance encounters with people I've never before seen and almost surely will never see again seem to me sad, although I am not normally prone to maudlin thoughts. There is I suppose a sense of chanceslostin these briefestof m eetings, the prospectofpotential conversations that didn't happen, of possible friendships unfuMed. It is of course impossible to know any such thing. Which is reason enough, when you come to a new street, to set off on a sedate journey along its cement paths. The world is far too sprawling for eventhemost inveterate traveler to see, atthewalker'space,even a minuscule part of it. But I try to think of each street, each salutation from a stranger, as a tiny jewel to add to the collection called life. Jayson Jacoby is editor of the Baker City Herald.
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FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015
BAKER CITY HERALD — 5A
BAIt',ER VOLLEYBALL
Huskies
• Baker repeatedly comes back from deficits to win GOL match and avenge a loss last week at Ontario By Gerry Steele
13-13. Finally, with Baker leading 15-14, Flanagan's hit tippedoffthe top ofthe net, falling between two Ontario players for the match win. "Kaeli played a great match," Wilson said. Flanaganfinished with 17 kills. "Amy Wong started slowly, then regrouped and played well. Jordan Rudolph and Summer Phillips also had some good play,"Wilson said.
gsteele©bakercityherald.com
Baker would have done a great job in construction
Thursday, digging deep holes and then filling them in. The Bulldogs fell behind early in their first two games with Ontario in the Baker gym before rallying. When all was done, Baker had ended a two-match Greater Oregon League losing streak by defeating the Tigers 26-24, 23-25, 23-25, 25-21, 16-14. "It was kind of a scramble," said Baker coach Warren Wilson. He noted the Bulldogs' improvement from a week ago when they lost at Ontario. "This was like night and day," Wilson said. "The kids just stepped up and did the
Phillips added 11 kills
job." Wilson said the Bulldogs have been working on playing with more energy, selfconfidence and heart. "The older girls say we just need to step up and finish," Wilson said. It took some doing, but the
Bulldogs (2-2 in the GOL) got the job done in most casesagainstOntario. In Game 1, Baker trailed 18-9beforebattling back. Behind the serving of Jordan Rudolph and Makenna Bachman, and the net play of Kaeli Flanagan
S. John Collins/ Baker City Herald
Baker players, left to right, Dani McCauley, Makenna Bachman, AmyWong and Kourtney Lehman surrounded the ball during action against OntarioThursday. and Kourtney Lehman, the Bulldogs came back to take a 21-20 lead. Then, leading 23-22, Baker allowed Ontario to regain a 24-23 edge. An Ontario error knotted the game at24-24 before Dani McCauley's hit with Flanagan serving gave Baker the win.
In Game 2, Baker fell behind 18-6 before again rallying. The Bulldogs never gained the lead in the game, but did get within one point three times late. Baker again trailed most of the game in Game 3, leadingjustonce at23-22,before falling.
Game 4 was totally different from the first three. The teamsbattled to 10 ties and five lead changes. Baker took the lead for good at 16-14, but could never pull away for the easy win. In the deciding fifth game, Baker bolted to a 5-0 lead only to have Ontario come back totiethe game at
Wong nine and Lehman seven. Bachman had 16 assists and McCauley 10. In an attempt to mix up the Bulldogs' fortunes, Wilson also inserted two junior varsity players — Maddie Hampton and Jayme Ramos — into the rotation. "BothJayme and Maddie played phenomenal," Wilson sard. Hampton served 6 for 6 in the final game. Baker served 86 percent for the match. Baker also swept the preliminary matches, winning the JV match 25-18, 25-13, and the JV2 match 25-18, 25-2. BakertravelstoVale Tuesday for a nonleague match, then returns to GOL play Thursday hosting MacHi.
upset Tlorans LOSANGELES (AP) — Nearly every Washington upperclassman insisted they took no personal pleasure in beating the coach who left them for Southern California two years ago. A gritty defensive victory over a ranked team on the Coliseum's national stage was more than enough reason for these Huskies to celebrate. Myles Gaskin ran for 134 yards and a fourthquarter touchdown, and Washington shut down
No. 17 USC's high-powered offense throughout a 17-12 victory Thursday night. Receiver Marvin Hall threw a 27-yard touchdown pass to Joshua Perkins early in the second half as the Huskies
(3-2, 1-1 Pac-12) beat Steve Sarkisian and the coaches who recruited many of them to Seattle. Cody Kessler had two interceptions while passing for just 156 yards on a disastrousnight for the Trojans (3-2, 1-2), the popular preseason pick to win the conference and a healthy doubledigit favorite against Washington.
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL PLAYOFFS
Astrsstake%0Ieadover IIoyals KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Houston Astros manager A.J. Hinch has a"soft rule" when it comes to a rain delay during a game: If it lasts about an hour, he'll usually remove his starting pitcher. Good thing it's not a hard rule. Hinch opted to keep Collin McHugh on the mound after a 49-minute stoppage Thursday night, and the soft-spoken righty responded
with a resounding performance. He shut down the Kansas City Royals over six innings for a 5-2 victory in the opener of their AL Division Series. George Springer and Colby Rasmus went deep for the homer-happy Astros, but they alsoscored via the same sortofsm allballthe Royals used in reaching the World Series last season.
RangerswinopeneroverBlnejays TORONTO (AP) — After taking a knee to the head, Josh Donaldson didn't make it to the end of Toronto's first postseason game in 22 years. Robinson Chirinos hit a two-run homer against David Price, Rougned Odor had a solo shot and the Texas Rangers beat the Blue Jays 5-3 Thursday in an AL Division Series opener. Donaldson left in the fifth, one inning after colliding with Odor's left knee while sliding in an attempt to break up a double play. Blue Jays manager John Gibbons said the slugging third baseman felt
light-headed while playing defense in the fifth, forcing
the AL MVP candidate to come out of the game.
LT WAR ROO M PG Aseiminglypeitedfamilylooksto f>xtheir problemswith the help of an older, waerwoman FRI 8r SAT: (4 00) SUN: (4 00) 7 00 7 00, 9 40 MON-THURS 7 00
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THE I N T E R N
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6A — BAKER CITY HERALD
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015
LOCAL 8 STATE
East Face Project Vicinity Map
TIMBER Continued from Page1A "Obviously timber cuts are good for Baker County as well as fuels treatment," Bennett said.
Summenvtlle
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What's wrong with the Island
forests? The assessment outlines the current conditions in the area as well as what the ForestServiceidentifi esas causesforsome oftheproblems aff ecting theforests. "A combination of past management activities and exclusion of fire along with the resultsofacresofpost fireoverstocked lodgepole pine stands has led to an increase in stocking levels, fuel loadings, and dense understorie s, "the assessment states."Overstocking,insects, and diseasearethreatening the health and vigor of many stands within the project area. Stands are not growing to their site potential ..." Those "past management activities" included logging that concentrated on the biggest and most fire-resistant trees, including ponderosa pines and tamaracks. Today's forestscontain a higher proportion of grand fir trees than was typical in the past, and these treesare more susceptible to fire, accordingto the ForestService. Many acres also are supporting more trees than was customary, which makes these forests more vulnerabletoinsects and diseases, accordingtothe Forest Service. The assessment states: "In the East Face project area mountain pine beetle, western pine beetle, spruce beetle, fir engraver, western spruce budworm, and balsam wooly adgelid populations have shown an increase in activity the last few years." In addition to restoring foreststo a m ore natural condition, in terms of the number of trees, the East Faceprojectisdesigned to create firebreaks in the vicinityofthree areas: • Anthony Lakes wildland urban interface, which consists of45 structures, including the ski area and
City
La Grande 2
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244
S. John Collins/Baker City Herald file photo
Union
Pilcher Creek Reservoir is near the eastern boundary of the Forest Service's East Face project. The proposal, which includes logging and prescribed burning, takes in the forests in the background.
"Overstocking insects, and disease are threatening the
health and vigorfomany stands within the project
East Face Vegetatton Prolect Area
Nonth Powder
area. Stands are notgrowing to their site potential ..." — Wallowa-Whitman National Forest's environmental assessment for its proposed East Face project Haines
the summer cabins at Floodwater Flats • Rock Creek/Bulger Flat wildland urban interface, which includes 124 structures in Baker County, south of the Anthony Lakes Highway • Beaver Creek watershed, the municipal watershed for La Grande Norm Paullus, La Grande's public works director, said the city maintains the Beaver Creek watershed as an emergency backup source for the city's five municipal wells. The city is not using that water now. But he expects that La Grande will in the future rely on water trom Beaver Creek. Paullus said the accumulation of fuel in the area, and the potential for a large wildfire, has long been a concern. The East Face project's goal, according to the Forest Service, is that"treatments would cause a change in fire behavior by reducing the rate of spread and intensity and would reduce standing and down dead fuels and ladder fuels."
Hells Canyon Preservation Council disputessome Forest Service findings The Forest Service's proposedprescriptions forwhat the agency contends are
SALVAGE Continued from Page1A That means the work, if any, couldstartassoon asthisfall,accordingto the pressrelease. Salvage logging under the categorical exclusion is limited, however, to 250 acres per project. The deadline to submit ideas or comments is Oct. 16. Submit comments to: Jeff Tomac, Whitman District Ranger, 1550 Dewey Ave., Suite A, Baker City, OR 97814. Submissions should include the phrase Whitman Fires Danger Tree Removal and Salvage" with written comments. Comments may be hand delivered to the above address between 7:45 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. on week-
days iexcept legal holidays).
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ailingforestsruns counter to the contentions of some environmental groups, including the Hells Canyon Preservation Council of La Grande. In written comments submitted earlier this year after the ForestServicereleased a generaldescription ofthe East Face project, Veronica Warnock, the Preservation Council's conservation director, submitted comments spanning 26 pages. Warnock writes that although the Preservation Council endorses some treatments, including cutting trees, in lower-elevation, drier forests — areas where ponderosa pines typically predominate — the organizationopposes commercial loggingin thewetterforests where the climate is also colder. "Forest treatments in m oist forestsand coldforests do nothave a solid basis in science-based restoration,"Warnock wrote."Any treatments of the moist and coldforestsin theproject area should be limited to non-commercial treatments of smaller trees in strategic locations." Thosecooler,wetterforests make up about 78 percent of the acreage in the East Face project, according to the Forest Service. "Thinning in these for-
30
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logically significant unroaded hasn't always succeeded in areas." quickly stopping wildfires in the East Face area. Effects of firefighting The most noteworthy The agency's campaign exception was the 1960 Anthony fi re,w hich burned to put out wildfires as soon as possible ,a policy thathas about 20,000 acres north of dominated for more than a the Anthony Lakes Highway. The new forest that grew century, has also contributed in the burned area consists to the overabundance of trees in some areas. primarily oflodgepole pines. "Decades of successful The East Face assessment fire suppression has led to describes the area this way: developmentofdenser forest "These acres have come back conditions, increased levels as athicket ofoverstocked of shade tolerant/fire intoler- dog hair lodgepole pine. It ant tree specIes inamely is severelyoverstocked with grand firl and accumulaabundant ladder fuels which tion of fuels and smaller would easily carry ground understory trees resulting fires into the crowns resultin an increased wildfire risk ing in severe mortality." within the planning area as The Forest Service is prowell as the neighboring priposingtocuttreesin some of vate,state and other federal thoselodgepole thickets. forest and range lands," the assessment states. Joshua Dillen contributed to But the Forest Service this story.
Odamatsmute Iunlawmessale after he was wounded by police. Staunchly conservative Douglas Countyis bristling WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama is bringing with gun owners who use their words of comfort and sympathy firearms for hunting, target to grieving families of victims shootingand self-protection. of the shootingrampage in A commonly held opinion in the area is that the solution to Roseburg, Oregon, muting his mass killings is more people message about the need for new laws to stem gun violence carrying guns, not fewer. "The fact that the college as he visits an area where didn't permit guar4 to carry firearms are popular. Obama will talk with family guns, there was no one there members Friday at the start to stop this man," said Craig of a four-day West Coast trip. Schlesinger, pastor at the GarEight community college studen Valley Church. Referring to potential prodents and a teacher were killed before the gunman fatally shot testers, White House spokeshimselfin fiontofhis victims man Josh Earnest saidThose By Kevin Freking
W ll
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02l 20
est types would not mimic natural disturbance patterns, but would instead create unnatural conditions,"Warnock wrote. She cites research suggesting that logging in those forests can increase, rather than decrease, the wildfire risk. The Forest Service, partially in response to Warnock's comments, contends in the East Face assessment that limiting work in moist and coolforestswould notachieve the agency's goals:"Not treating in moist/cold iforestsl will not only not meet the purposeand need for thisproject but it will also not respond to climate change concerns because it would not improve stand resiliency." The Preservation Councilalsoopposesthe Forest Service's plan to log in what Warnock describes as "eco-
Associated Press
~
Wyden, Merkley call for tougher gun laws
individuals have nothing to fear. Thefactisthepresident has madeclearthatthegoalof his visit is to spend time with the families of those who are so deeply affected by this terrible tragedy." In the wake of the shooting, a visibly angry Obama said that thoughts and prayers are no longer enough and that changes to the nation's gun laws are needed. Obama was already scheduled to go on the West Coast trip when the shooting occurred, and the White House adjusted his schedule to include Roseburg.
PORTLAND (APj — Oregon's two U.S. senators are calling for tougher gun restrictions in thewake ofashooting atUmpqua Community College last week. Democratic Sens. RonWyden and Jeff Merkley spoke Thursday at the U.S. Capitol. They're calling for mandatory background checks on all gun sales. Federal law requires background checks for sales through licensed gun dealers, but private person-to-person transactions are excluded. They also want to improve the database of people prohibited from owning firearms. And they want to make it a federal crime to purchasea gun on behalfofsomeone who's prohibited from owning them.
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ti
110 - Self-Help Group Meetings AA MEETING:
Powder River Group Support Group meeting Mon.; 7 PM -8 PM 2nd Friday of every mo. Wed.; 7 PM -8 PM 11:30 am to 1:00 pm. Fri.; 7 PM -8 PM 1250 Hughes Lane Grove St. Apts. Baker City Church Corner of Grove (!t D Sts. of the Nazarene Baker City, Open (In the Fellowship Hall) Nonsmoking 541-523-9845 Wheel Chair Accessible
BAKER COUNTY Cancer Support Group Meets 3rd Thursday of
SAFE HAVEN Alzheimer/Dementia Caregivers Support Group
ACCEPTANCE GROUP of Overeaters 3 EASY STEPS every month at Anonymous meets 2nd Friday of 1. Register your St. Lukes/EOMA © 7 PM every month Tuesdays at 7pm. account before you United 11:45 AM in Fellowship Methodist Church Contact: 541-523-4242 Publication Days: leave on 1612 4th St. in the Mondays, Hall (Right wing) of PREGNANCY 2 . Call to s t o p y o u r library room in the Nazarene Church Wednesdays and SUPPORT GROUP CIRCLE OF FRIENDS pnnt paper 1250 Hughes Lane basement. Fridays Pre-pregnancy, 3. Log in wherever you (For spouses w/spouses Baker City 541-786-5535 pregnancy, post-partum. who have long term are at and en!oy BINGO 541-786-9755 terminal illnesses) AL-ANON MEETING WALLOWA COUNTY Sunday — 2 pm —4pm Meets 1st Monday of in Elgin. AA Meeting List SETTLER'S PARK Catholic Church every month at St. PINOCHLE Meeting times ACTIVITIES Baker City Fridays at 6:30 p.m. 1st (!t 3rd Wednesday Lukes/EOMA©11:30 AM AlcoholicsAnonymous $5.00 Catered Lunch Senior Center Evenings ©6:00 pm Monday, Wednesday, 1st (!t 3rd FRIDAY Call Now to Subscnbe! Must RSVP for lunch OREGON CONCEAL 2810 Cedar St. Elgin Methodist Church Fnday, Saturday 7 p.m. (every month) 541-523-3673 541-523-4242 Public is welcome 7th and Birch Tuesday, Wednesday, HANDGUN Ceramics with Donna Thursday noon. 9:00 AM — Noon. LICENSE CLASS 110 Self-Help Someone's Women only (Pnces from $3- $5) Sunday, October 18th NORTHEAST OREGON drinking a problem? PUBLIC BINGO Group Meetings AA meeting CLASSIFIEDS of fers 9:00 AM in Baker City AL-ANON Community Connection, Wednesday 11a.m., MONDAY NIGHT Self Help (!t Support This will get you the AA 2810 Cedar St., Baker. Monday at Noon 113 1/2 E Main St., Nail Care certificate needed to "As Bill Sees It" G roup A nn o u n c e Presbytenan Church Every Monday Enterpnse, across from apply for the Oregon 6i00 PM (FREE) ments at n o c harge. Sat.; 10AM -11AM Corner of Washington er 4th Doors open, 6:00 p.m. Courthouse Gazebo For Baker City call: CHL. (Concealed 2533 Church St Baker City Early bird game, 6:30 pm H otIin e 541-624-511 7 TUESDAY NIGHTS J uli e — 541-523-3673 Handgun License). Baker Valley 541-523-5851 followed by reg. games. Craft Time 6:00 PM Call for details and to For LaGrande call: Church of Chnst All ages welcome! WALLOWA (Sm.charge for matenals) E n ca — 541-963-3161 sign up: 503-369-0692 Open AL-ANON 541-523-6591 606 W Hwy 82 Concerned about PH: 541-263-0208 EVERY WEDNESDAY someone else's NARACOTICS Sunday Bible Study; 10:30 AM AA MEETING: drinking? ANONYMOUS 7:Oop.m.-8:00 p.m. Been There Done That Public Bingo; 1:30 PM Sat., 9 a.m. Goin' Straight Group Open Meeting ( .25 cents per card) Northeast OR 120 - Community M t ct , Sunday; 5:30-6:30 Compassion Center, Tues. Calendar Mon. — EVERY MORNING Grove St Apts 1250 Hughes Ln. Thurs. (!t Fn. — 8 PM Corner of Grove (!t D Sts (Monday — Fnday) Baker City Episcopal Church Baker City/Nonsmoking Exercise Class; (541) 523-3431 Basement 9:30AM (FREE) Wheel Chair Accessible 21771st Street AL-ANON. At t i tude o f AA MEETING Baker City Gratitude. W e d n e sYou too can use this I Been There, days, 12:15 — 1:30pm. Attention Getter. ii! Done That Group Ask how you can get Faith Lutheran Church. Sun. — 5:30 - 6:30 PM 1 2th (!t Gekeler, L a your ad to stand out Grove Street Apts Grande. NARCOTICS like this! (Corner of Grove er D Sts) ANONYMOUS: Baker City AL-ANON. COVE Keep Monday, Thursday, (!t Open, Non-Smoking C oming Back. M o n - Fnday at8pm. Episcopal 140 - Yard, Garage Wheelchair accessible Sales-Baker Co. days, 7-8pm. Calvary Church 2177 First St., AA MEETING: B aptist Church. 7 0 7 Baker City. 1904 PLUM St Sat. Only Survior Group. Main, Cove. Great VieW Of Baker City and 9 am -4pm. Toolbox, gas Mon., Wed. (!t Thurs. cans, pitch fork, shovels, NARCOTICS Eagle Mtns. One level, 1,200 sq ALCOHOLICS 12:05 pm-1:05 pm. nuts (!t bolts, and a ANONYMOUS ANONYMOUS Presbytenan Church, few household items. HELP ft m/I, 2 bedroom, 1 bath, living can help! 1995 4th St. LINE-1-800-766-3724 (4th (!t Court Sts.) 24 HOUR HOTLINE 1930 18TH St room, family room, gas fireplace, Meetings: Baker City. Open, (541) 624-511 7 Fn. (!t Sat.; 9am -? 8:00PM: Sunday, Monwww oregonaadistrict29 com No smoking. Everything from A to Z! AC, electric heat, double car day, Tuesday, WednesServing Baker, Union, day, Thursday, Fnday garage, fenced backyard, close and Wallowa Counties Noon: Thursday AL-ANON-HELP FOR to gOlf COurSe. $132,000 6:00PM: Monday, Tues- 2104 COLORADO AVE. families (!t fnends of alUNION COUNTY day, Wednesday, Thursc ohol i c s . U ni o n AA Meeting Fnday (!t Saturday day (Women's) County. 568—4856 or Info. 8 am- ? 7:00PM: Saturday 963-5772 541-663-411 2 No early birds, please!
ONE BUSINESS DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION.
Call For Sale By Owner 541-963-3161 255 Hillcrest
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OVERCOMERS OUTREACH Chnst based 12 step group Sundays; 2:45-3:45 PM 2533 Church St 541-523-731 7
ALL ADS FOR: GARAGE SALES, MOVING SALES, YARD SALES, must be PREPAID at The Baker City Herald Office, 1915 First St., Baker City or
The Observer Office, 1406 Fifth Street, LaGrande.
GARAGE SALE —Alley side. 1639 2nd St., BC. Antiques, collectibles, good stuff. Sat., 9-4.
145 - Yard, Garage Sales-Union Co.
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ALL YARD SALE ADS MUST BE PREPAID You can drop off your payment at: The Observer 1406 5th St. La Grande
OR +Visa or Mastercard, are accepted.+ Yard Sales are $12.50 for 5 lines, and $1.00 for each additional line. Call for more info: 541-963-3161. Must have a minimum of 10 Yard Sale ad's to pnnt the map.
1ST PART of inside sale. Oct 10th, 8-3. 112 2nd St., LG. Cash only. Living room dinette furniture, pictures, kitchen, misc, household, (!t yard items.
ANTIQUES, KAYAK, reloading, tools, rings, 1602 Washington, LG. Sat., 8-1.
BARN SALE (!t Mini Flea 62913 Wallsinger Rd., Off Booth Ln. Furniture, Farm Antiques, Shabby Chic, Household Goods, New (!t Used Clothing, Handcrafted Goods, Treats (!t Mo re . S a t u rday, Oct. 10, 9-3
CHAPTER DK P . E.O Yard Sale. Sat, 10th,
9-2. Methodist Church b asement, 1 6 12 4t h St., LG. All proceeds go t o s c h o larships. Lots of good items.
INSIDE BARN/YARD Sale. Rain or S h ine. C onstructio n t o o l s , extensio n c or ds , crafts, light fixtures, (!t fridge. 61550 Lower C ove Rd. , 2 m il e s north of Cove. Fri (!t Sat., 8-5.
TEARING DOWN the house sale. Sale inside. Lots of sheets and bedding, quilts, H ull v a s es , A m b erina g l ass, a n tiques and collectib les, e v e r ything
needs to go. Please no bid monies. 10/9 ( !t 10/10, 9 am - 4 pm. 216 Oregon St, Union
GARAGE SALE 3445 9th Dr.
YARD SALE at C's Storage, Sat., 8-?. Lots of stuff. Lots of Cosmetics. 3107 Cove Ave., HUGE MOVING SALE LG 2815 2nd St. Sat., Oct 10th 8am-2pm PARKINSON'S Support 150 - Bazaars, FundGroup, open to those 145 - Yard, Garage raisers with Parkinson's/Caregiver's. 3rd Mon. each Sales-Union Co. VENDORS WANTED! month. 4:30-5-:30pm YARD SALE. 1201 11th Fall Bazaar, Nov. 7th at GRH, Solanum. St., LG. Sat., 8-12. Call Kay 541-437-5907 Fn. (!t Sat.; 8am — 3pm Dry firewood for sale
Need to move that house. Show it over 100,000 times with our Home Seller Special L Full color Real Estate picture ad Start your campaign with a full-color 2x4 picture ad in the Friday Baker City Herald and The Observer Classified Section.
2. Amonth of classified picture ads Five lines orcopy plus a picture in 12 issues or the Baker City Herald and the Observer Classified Section 3. Four weeks ofBuyers Bonus and Observer Plus Classified Ads Your classified ad automatically goes to non-subscribers and outlying areas or Baker and Union Countiesin the mail for one month in the Buyers Bonus or Observer Plus Classified Section.
4. 30 days of 24/7 online advertising That classified picture ad will be there for online buyers when they're looking at www. northeastoregonclassifi eds.com — and they look at over 50,000 page views a month. Home Setter Special price ls for advertising ihe same home, air'rh no copy changes and no refunds i f ctassi/iedad is killed before end ofschedrite.
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2B — THE OBSERVER a BAKER CITY HERALD 150 - Bazaars, Fundraisers
210 - Help WantedBaker Co.
SISTER SHIC 4TH ANNUAL SHABULOUS SHOW FRI., OCT. 9TH, 4-7 SAT., OCT. 10TH, 9-4 68389 KERNS LOOP, COVE, OR.
HKLP ATTRACT ATTNTION TO YOURAP!
Antiques (It Crafts Cottage Businesses Folly Farm Garlic Soup Kitchen
Baked Goods Coffee House Scarecrows on Parade Apple Cider Press Hay Rides Vintage Trailers
Pick'N Patch Pumpkins
160 - Lost & Found FOUND C U BIC zirconium nng contact Tim Smith 5 4 1-519-8050 2530 7th st. Baker City
FOUND GLASSES by Hilgard Park 541-963-0779 FOUND RING © r est
area between LG (It Baker City 541-605-0091
FOUND: HAND TOOLS Call to identify. 541-523-6629, Evenings
FOUND: OLDER female white/yellow Labrador Retriever at Safeway parking lot. C all Best F riends o f Bak e r 541-519-738 7 or 541-51 9-4530.
MISSING YOUR PET? Check the Baker City Animal Clinic 541-523-3611 PLEASE CHECK Blue Mountain Humane Association
Facebook Page, if you have a lost or found pet.
180 - Personals MEET S I NGLES right nowl No paid operators, Iust real people l ike y o u . Bro ws e greetings, ex change m essages and c o nn ect Iive. Try it f r e e . CaII n ow : 877-955-5505. (PNDC)
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015 210 - Help WantedBaker Co.
220 - Help Wanted 220 - Help Wanted Union Co. Union Co. IT IS UNLAWFUL (Sub- CDL A Dnvers Needed
220 - Help Wanted Union Co.
220 - Help Wanted 230 - Help Wanted Union Co. out of area OREGON H EALTH (It SCHOOL BUS DRIVERS C OM M U N ITY COU N O RS Wade Transport ComScience University is NEEDED SELING Solutions is a
sectio n 3, 6 59.040) for an e m hiring a Practice En- LOCATIONS: La Grande, 501(c)(3) corporation pany, a FedEx Ground C ontracted S e r v i c e hancement Research Union, (It North Powder serving O r e g o n in ployer (domestic help excepted) or employProvider is now hinng Coordinato r i n La PAID CDL Morrow, Wheeler, Gilment agency to print for slip seat positions G ra nde. Work with IoTRAINING! liam, Grant, H a rney JOIN OUR TEAM! or circulate or cause to to pull doubles/triples cal clinics to evaluate ' No experience necesand Lake C o u nties. Administrative be pnnted or circulated e ast and w es t f r o m and improve their qualsary '401 IC retirement We are currently reAcIcI BOLDING Assistant any statement, adverNorth Powder, Oreity of care. Learn more ' Paid t r a i ning ' P a r t cruiting for a n A d u lt or a BORDER! for our Developmental tisement o r p u b l ica- g on. To p P a y a n d at w ww .o h s u.edu t ime w or k ' M o d e r n Protective Services InDisabilities program. t ion, o r t o u s e a n y Benefits. To be conI RC¹ I RC49550. equipment 'Perfect vestigator, Quality AsIt's a little extra P/T — 25 hrs/week. form of application for sidered for one of four for extra income surance, and Eligibility that gets Mon — Thurs. employment o r to full time positions and 'Bonus for current SBDL Determinations p o s iPART-TIME Car Wash BIG results. Orga nizationaI a nd m ake any i n q uiry i n t wo p ar t t i m e p o s i (It CDL tion for individuals enAttendant. Driver's licustomer service skills c onnection w it h p r o- t ions, c a l l R o n © 'Must have current Orerolled in Developmencense required. Apply Have your ad required. spective employment 971-227-2505, or go to gon DL t al D i s a b ilities p r o in person at Island Ex- 'Must pass Background STAND OUT which expresses di- vvadetrans ortcom an .com grams. This is a compress, 10603 I sland for as little as F/T positions include: rectly or indirectly any and fill out a dnver inCheck, Drug Screenbined full-time position Ave. $1 extra. Excellent Benefits limitation, specification formation sheet. Posiing, and Finger Pnnts. that will conduct invesPackage, Health 8r or discnmination as to tions will be filled by "More Than Just A t igations, ensure t h e Life Ins., Vacation, race, religion, color, November 1. Ride To School" quality of documentaPOWDER VALLEY TRUCK DRIVER. Flat Sick, Retirement 8r sex, age o r n a t ional Must be able to pass a For more i n f o rmation, tion as per the Oregon Schools bed experience helpEducational Training ongin or any intent to background check and North Powder School Administrative R ules please call ICathaleen ful. L o cal (It P a c ific www.newdirectionenw.org (OAR's), as well as demake any such limitadrug screen. One year District 8J at; N orthwes t ro ute s ddoughertytN ndninc.org t ion, specification o r venfiable expenence in Mid Columbia Bus Co. termine eligibility to be Phone 541-898-2244 a va ilable. No w e e k - 541-523-7400 for app. discrimination, unless the last 36 months, or 1901 Jefferson enrolled in the DevelFAX 541-898-2046 ends, or night shifts. b ased upon a b o n a five years' expenence Octobe r 7, 201 5 La Grande, OR 97850 opmental D isabilities D edicated t r uc k f o r WANTED: AUTO Body fide occupational qualiin the last 10 years. 541-963-611 9 p rogram w i t hi n a 6 drivers . St ea dy , fication. kmaley©midcobus.com county area. Qualified R efinish Tech. M i n iWANTED: y ear-around w o r k . mum 3 yrs expenence. ELEMENTARY candidates must have • Farm to School CoordiBased in Baker City. TEACHER a Bachelor s degree in When responding to Send resume to: S (It S nator- 2 year position THE USDA Farm Service Gary N. Smith TruckFT, Manan Academy human, social behavAuto, 3610 10th St., Blind Box Ads: Please (Management and pub- Agency in Enterprise, i ng. Contact M ike at Catholic School. i oral or c r i m inal s c iB aker C it y o r c al l be sure when you adlic relations skills reOR is currently accept541-523-3777 www.themanan ence and two years of 541-523-6413 dress your resumes that quired, 5 hours daily, ing applications for a the address is complete experience in h uman 188 day contract, four full time, t e mporary, services, law enforcePART-TIME TELLER with all information redays weekly, flexible Program Technician. BAKER COUNTY quired, including the TRAINING AND Emor i nvestigative schedule, full benefit (Community Bank) C ustome r se r v i c e ment PLANNER ployment Consortium experience, or an AsPart-time position at our Blind Box Number. This package, $15.00 an skills, basic c l e rical, Baker County is accept(TEC) is recruiting for a sociate's degree in huis the only way we have hour) Baker Iocation. To re- of and mapping skills are making sure your reman, social behavioral ing applications for the part time Fiscal Assis- • Assistant Varsity Basview the entire)ob derequired. A n agnculsume gets to the proper positio n of Bak er tant in La Grande, ketball Coach or cnminal science and scnption please visit ture background and County Planner. The Oregon. A p p lication • Basketball Coach four years of experiwww.communit bank place. knowledge of GIS is p osition w i l l r e m a i n packets can be picked ence in human servnet.com . To express preferred. Ap p l i ca- ices, law enforcement open until filled. This up at Oregon Employ- North Powder S c hool interest in this position tions are available at is a full-time position m ent D e p a r t m e n t , District i s a c c e p t i ng 401 NE 1st St., STE E, or investigative expenplease email your rewith excellent bene1901 Adams Avenue, ence. This i ndividual sume to a pplications f o r t h e GRANoe E nterprise, OR. F o r fits. For additional inLa Grande, OR. If sewill investigate allegaRONDE a bove positions. T h e svela©communit bank q uest i o n s , c a l l HOSPITAL t ion s of in) u r i e s , formation, please conl ected, app l i c a n t s positions begin in the net.com . Community 541-426-4521 ext. 2 or tact the State Employmust pass a c r iminal abuse, and n e glect, Bank is an Equal Op2015 — 2016 school email ment Department at a nd d r i v in g r e c o r d year. C o m pensation and will be responsible portunity Employer, Jennifer.isley©or.usda A FINANCIALLY suc1575 Dewey Avenue, check pnor to employto ensure p r otective for all positions will be Member FDIC. .gov. The deadline to cessful, services, provide comBaker City, OR. All apment. Position closes based on educational apply is October 16, independent, nonprofit, plicant s w il l be October 13th, 2015 at prehensive reports of leveland expenence. 2015. FSA is an Equal C OM M U N IT Y C O N community based, pre-screened. 5:00 PM PT.TEC is an findings and decisions Opportunity Employer. NECTION o f B a k er cntical access hospital Baker Countyis an equal EOE/Program. A uxil- Successful c a ndidates of whether abuse exCounty i s c u r r e ntly in La Grande OR, is ists, and develop reopportunity employer. iary aids and services will be contacted for 230 - Help Wanted seeking a n A S S ISseeking a full-time, quired actions to preavailable upon request interviews. These poTANT MANAGER to benefited Hospital out of area to individuals with disvent f u r t her a b u se. sitions are open until coordinate and impleand/or abilities. p lace a free EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR filled. The City of J o s eph is T his p o s i t i o n w i ll ment client assistance Clinic MA, LPN or RNs g ather a n d r e v i e w relay call in Oregon, seeking applicants for programs for the eld- Current Oregon LPN/RN documentation to deBAICER COUNTY dial 711 the position of LibrarIf interested please suberly, people with dislicense in good termine if i n d ividuals CHAMBER OF mit a letter of interest, ian. This will be a pera bilities, an d l o w - i n- standing or certified MA IMMEDIATE are eligible for the DeCOMMERCE is resume and an applicamanent part-time posicome persons. This is preferred. We offer a OPENINGS velopmental Disabiliaccepting applications tlon to: tion o f 2 0 hr s . / p er a full t i m e p o s i tion, competitive salary and in a busy medical office ties Program by utilizfor the FT position of week. . Qualifications $2,873 per month plus benefit package. ing guidelines provided Executive Director Lance L Dixon will be three years ofbenefits. EOE. Appli- For further information P/T billing clerk. Pnor by OAR's and the SenPO Box 10 fice/admin experience. c ations and Job D e including full )ob office experience reiors and People with REQUIRMENTS: North Powder, OR Library experience is s criptio n av a i l a b l e requirements, please quired. Prior medical Disabilities S e r v ices B achelor's d e gree o r 97867 preferred. Please subon-line at ccno.org or visit us on the web © b illing e x p erience a D ivision . Q ua l i f i e d equivalent work expemit a letter of interest, h. plus. candidates must have rience i n m a r k eting, at the Oregon Employresume and applicament Department. PoEOE Our farm community excellent writing and public or business adtions by 4:00 pm Octosition closes October P/T o f f ic e a s s i stant . is well represented in computer skills and be ministration, economic ber 14th, 2015 to the 23, 2015 at 5:00 p.m. LA GRANDE SCHOOL Prior office expenence the classified columns able to assist the Prod evelopment, or r e City of Joseph. For a Distnct is accepting aprequired. Must be able of this newspaper. For gram M a n a g e r in lated field. complete Iob descripplications for a to work evenings. meeting the needs of Min. of 2 years experi- FAST-PACED PHYSIall your agricultural tion, p lease c o n tact FACILITIES 8r the community. Salary ence in management, CAL Therapy office in needs, look to classh Donna Warnock, City BOND MANAGER range i s $ 3 6 ,700 F/T Medical Insurance fied. b usiness de v e l o p - Baker City seeks enerRecorder. The City is Billing Specialist. m ent, tourism o r r e g etic a n d o u t g o i n g to provide oversight on $52,900 year, DOEE. EOE capital c o n s t r uction Gym Aide to assist cliPnor Insurance billing Excellent benefit packlated field. pro)ects and provide expenence required. age, including 401IC. Must h av e a d v anced nicians in carrying out l eadership ove r t h e Apply online and uppatient care. The ideal computer skills, knowlgrounds and mainte- Please email resume to candidate will take iniload resume at: edge of budgeting, acnance departments. tiative and pay attenmbro oitti©eoni.com communit counselin counting, and finanction to detail. Qualifica- For more information call or apply in person at t ing and experience in (541) 663-3212 or visit P ositions o pe n u n t i l creating a b u s i n e ss tions for this part-time Blue Mountain Associwww.lagrandesd.org ates, LLC 1101 I Ave, filled. EOE. position include posplan. session o f a high La Grande. Please send cover letter, s chool d i p l om a o r WANTED CERTIFIED resume and a list of 3 flagger for P/T posi280 - Situation p rofessional r e f e r - equivalent and current C PR C e r t i f i c a t i o n . tion. Reliable transporences to: Wanted Please submit applicatation an d s t a n dard Chamber EXPERIENCED tions to: flagging gear required. P.O. Box 305 LOGGING COMPANY kkossow©mountain C ont a c t Tim North Powder, OR 97867 SEEKS WORK 541-784-7592 Deadline: Oct. 30, 2015 th .b
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FRIDAY, OCTOBER9, 2015 know that those around you are going to be YOUR BIRTHDAY by Stella Wilder on board all the way. Born today, you know how to take what SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) You has been done before and study, analyze, don't have to follow all the rules, but be aware imitate and absorb it, then reshape it to suit that you'll certainly have to have safety fore your uniquetastesand talents.You are never most in your mind. satisfied with doing the same thing over and CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Others over again; you always want to be learning, r ay not share all the information you need, growing and evolving. This is sure to make so you'll have to go searching for the most your workoriginal in every respect.You are important pieces on your own. able to work well with others in close col)abo AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) You don't ration,butyou maybe even moreeffectiveon have toprepare forevery eventuality,but be
make things right between two conflicting parties who, in the past, have looked to you for guidance. They'll surely listen! GEMINI (May 21-June 20) You know just whom to go to when you are in need ofa little advice and comfort, too. It'll soon be time to return the favor.
your own, free to pursue your own aspira sure that you knowwhat the job entails over tions without restriction or limitation. You a)l when you enter the room. are drivento explore freely and push the PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) It's no good envelope ever I'urther. to let your emotions run amok; maintain SATURDAY, OCTOBER 10 control when you are faced with situations LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) You should be that make you hot under the collar. able to do enough to satisf'yyour hunger for ARIES (March 21-April 19) The deci activity even enjoying a few endeavors that sions you make will be admired by those who are entirely new. do not share your ability to anticipate such SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) Your desti seemingly minor developments. nation is best kept secret for a time, until you TAURUS (April 20-May 20) You can
at what you have done recently, and you'll come up with a plan that allows you to look forward with just as much satisfaction. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Don't pass judgment too quicldy. You will realize that not everyone has enjoyed the good fortune you have, so give others a break!
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Includes up to 40 words of text, 2" in length, with border, bold headline and price. • Publication in The Observer and Baker City Herald • Weekly publication in Observer Plus and Buyer's Bonus • Continuous listing with photo on northeastoregonclassifieds.com
4 5 E dg e d o i l i e s 4 6 F r eu d t o p i c 47 Ham m e tt's Spade
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CANCER (June 21-July 22) You can avoid a major obstacle, but in the process, you'll encounter a few minor ones that take up more time than expected.
A nswe r t o S T LA I R D O
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Free Consultation: Contact Bill at 541-377-4300
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Thinning/Fuel Reduction, Salvage ttrGeneral Logging Well Maintained Equipment w/ Log Hauling Service Available.
by Stella Wilder
*No refunds on early cancellations. Private party ads only
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FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015
THE OBSERVER a BAKER CITY HERALD —3B
320 - Business Investments
380 - Baker County Service Directory DID YOU ICNOW 7 IN 10 FRANCES ANNE
450 - Miscellaneous
505 - Free to a good home
AVAILABLE AT
Americans or 158 mil- YAGGIE INTERIOR 8E THE OBSERVER lion U.S. Adults read EXTERIOR PAINTING, NEWSPAPER content from newspaCommercial 5 BUNDLES per media each week? Residential. Neat 5 Burning or packing? Free to good home Discover the Power of efficient. CCB¹137675. $1.00 each 430- For Saleor 541-524-0369 the Pacific Northwest ads are FREE! Newspaper AdvertisTrade (4 I Res for 3 days) NEWSPRINT i ng. For a f r e e b r o SALE: Pr e s sed ROLL ENDS c hur e c a I I HEAVY DUTY Leather FOR boa rd da rk g ray wa II Repair all kinds Tac 5 Art prolects 5 more! 916-288-6011 or email u nit with lights. 8 1 " w 550 - Pets Saddle Etc. Custom Super for young artists! cecelia©cnpa.com x 72"h; TV o p ening Wo rk 541-51 9-0645 $2.00 ar up (PNDC) 38w; plus 2 speakers Stop in today! 10"w; Large TV 38w. DID YOU ICNOW News- JACKET ar Coverall Re- Also a TV stand 19" h x 1406 Fifth Street 541-963-31 61 paper-generated conpair. Zippers replaced, 38"w to r eplace TV. tent is so valuable it's p atching an d o t h e r $ 200 c a s h o nl y . CANADA DRUG Center Use ATTENTION taken and r e peated, heavy d ut y r e p a irs. 541-432-7535. CaII to GETTERSto help is your choice for safe condensed, broadcast, Reasonable rates, fast see pictures . your ad stand out and affordable medicatweeted, d i scussed, service. 541-523-4087 like this!! tions. Our licensed Caposted, copied, edited, or 541-805-9576 BIC FOR SALE: Nespressor nadian mail order pharCall a classified rep and emailed countless TODAY to ask how! D300 Expresso Mamacy will provide you times throughout the Baker City Herald with savings of up to O R E G O N chine. Includes vanety day by ot hers? Dis- N OTICE: 541-523-3673 of coffee capsules and 75 percent on all your Landscape Contractors c over the P ower o f ask for Julie cups. $200 cash only. medication needs. Call Law (ORS 671) reNewspaper Advertis541-432-7535. CaII to LaGrande Observer today 1-800-354-4184 quires all businesses ing i n S I X S T A TES 541-936-3161 see pictures. f or $10.00 off y o u r that advertise and perwith Iust one p hone ask for Erica first prescription and form landscape concall. For free Pacific free shippinq. (PNDC) tracting services be li- 435 - Fuel Supplies Northwest Newspaper censed with the LandA ssociation N e t w o r k DIRECTV STARTING at s cape C o n t r a c t o r s PRICES REDUCED b roc h u r e s c a II $19.99/mo. FREE InB oard. T h i s 4 d i g i t 916-288-6011 or email $140 in the rounds 4" s tallation. F REE 3 number allows a conto 12" in DIA, $170 cecelia©cnpa.com months of HBO sumer to ensure that (PNDC) split. Fir $205 split. SHOWTIME C I N Et he b u siness i s a c Delivered in the valMAX, STARZ. F REE DID YOU ICNOW that tively licensed and has ley. (541)786-0407 HD/DVR U p g r ade ! a bond insurance and a not only does newspa2015 N F L S u n d ay PRIME FIREWOOD q ualifie d i n d i v i d u a l p er m e dia r e ac h a Ticket Included (Select for sale: contractor who has fulHUGE Audience, they Packages) New CusRed Fir, & Lodgepole a lso reach a n E N - filled the testing and t omers O n ly. C A L L Will deliver: experience r e q u ireGAGED AUDIENCE. 1-800-41 0-2572 541-51 9-8640 LA G R A NDE ments fo r l i censure. Discover the Power of (PNDC) 541-51 9-8630 F ARM E R S ' For your protection call Newspaper Advertis503-967-6291 or visit DISH NETWORK —Get M ARK E T ing in six states — AIC, our w ebs i t e : MORE for LESS! StartID, MT, OR, UT, WA. 440 - Household ing $19.99/month (for Max Square, La Grande www.lcb.state.or.us to For a free rate broc heck t h e lic e n s e Items 1 2 m o nt hs). P L U S c hur e caII status before contract- DACOR D U A L F u e l Bundle 5 SAVE (FAst 916-288-6011 or email EVERY SATURDAY ing with the business. Internet f or $15 R ange, works w e l l ! 9am-Noon cecelia©cnpa.com Persons doing l andmore/month). CA LL $150 OBO. EVERY TUESDAY (PNDC) scape maintenance do Wood stove,Nice Earth Now 1-800-308-1563 3:30-6:00pm not require a landscap(PNDC) brand, with fan, heats 330 - Business Oping license. up to 2000 sq ft, GOT KNE E Pa in? Ba ck Through October 17th. portunities 541-534-6554. Pain? Shoulder Pain? OREGON STATE law reGet a p a i n -relieving www.lagrandefarmers LITTLE GRACIE market.org brace -little or NO cost q uires a nyone w h o Home Machine Quilting contracts for construc- System. Was $600 new, to you. Medicare Pa"EBT & Credit Cards tients Call Health Hott ion w o r k t o be Yours for $200. Accepted" l in e N ow ! 1censed with the ConRIMS FOR YOUR 800-285-4609 (PNDC) DELIVER IN THE struction Contractors SNOW TIRES? Board. An a c t ive TOWN OF 4 size 15x6, $40 ea. REDUCE YOUR Past 605 - Market Basket BAKER CITY cense means the con541-523-4512 Tax Bill by as much as tractor is bonded 5 in75 percent. Stop LevINDEPENDENT sured. Venfy the con- NEED f r ame for twin bed. 541 - 534-4780 ies, Liens and Wage THOMAS ORCHARDS CONTRACTORS tractor's CCB license ICimberly, Oregon 541-91 0-2486 Garnishments. Call the through the CCB Conwanted to deliver the Tax Dr Now to see if Baker City Herald s ume r W eb s i t e QUEEN SIZE electnc NEW FALL HOURS y ou Q ual if y Monday, Wednesday, www.hirealicensedbed.$700. CLOSED: Tues. 5 Wed. 1-800-791-2099. contractor.com. and Fnday's, within 541-524-1073 OPEN: Thur. — Mon. (PNDC) Baker City. 10AM — 4 PMOnly Ca II 541-523-3673 TWIN C R AFTMATIC SELL YOUR structured POE CARPENTRY bed $250, Sm. ICensettlement or annuity Apples from Bend more freezer $ 1 25, • New Homes payments fo r C A SH $ .65/Ib INDEPENDENT • Remodeling/Additions 541-91 0-0849 NOW. You don't have CONTRACTORS Jonagold • Shops, Garages to wait for your future wanted to deliver 445- Lawns & GarAmbrosia • Siding 5 Decks payments any longer! Pinata The Observer dens • Wi ndows 5 Fine Call 1-800-914-0942 Monday, Wednesday, Cameo finish work JOHN JEFFRIES (PNDC) and Fnday's, to the Red Delicious Fast, Quality Work! SPRAY SERVICE, INC following area's Golden Delicious NORTHEAST Wade, 541-523-4947 Rangeland — Pasture Granny Smith OREGON CLASSIFIEDS or 541-403-0483 Trees-Shrubs-Lawn e La Grande Fuli reserves the nght to CCB¹176389 Bareground - Right of Way relect ads that do not Insect — Weed Control Ca II 541-963-3161 LAST DAY FOR comply with state and RUSSO'S YARD 541-523-8912 or come fill out an federal regulations or FRUITSTAND 8E HOME DETAIL Information sheet that are offensive, false, TO BE OPEN Aesthetically Done 450 - Miscellaneous misleading, deceptive or Saturday, Oct. 31st Ornamental Tree INVESTIGATE BEFORE otherwise unacceptable. 5 Shrub Pruning YOU INVEST! Always CONTAINERS 541-856-3445 %METAL RECYCLING VIAGRA 100mg, CIALIS BRING a good policy, espe541-934-2870 503-407-1524 We buy all scrap 20mg. 50 tabs $90 incially for business opVisit us on Facebook Serving Baker City metals, vehicles cludes FREE SHIPp ortunities 5 f ran for updates & surrounding areas 5 battenes. Site clean PING. 1-888-836-0780 chises. Call OR Dept. ups 5 drop off bins of or M e t r o - M e ds.net o f J u stice a t ( 5 0 3 ) all sizes. Pick up (PNDC) 378-4320 or the Fedservice available. 630 - Feeds eral Trade Commission WE HAVE MOVED! at (877) FTC-HELP for 470 Tools Our new location is 200 TON 1st crop SCARLETT MARY ljl!T f ree i nformation. O r 3370 17th St Alfalfa-alfalfa grass. 3 massages/$ 1 00 v isit our We b s it e a t BOSTITCH 5 g a l a i r 3x4 bales. No rain, test. Sam Haines Ca II 541-523-4578 www.ftc.gov/bizop. comp., porter c able Enterpnses 150 TON 2nd crop Baker City, OR c oil gun, 3 B o s t i t c h 541-51 9-8600 Alfalfa -alfalfa grass 380 - Baker County Gift CertificatesAvailable! brad guns, 5 e x tras. Sm. bales.(100 lb. avg.) Service Directory 541-963-2288 Attention: VIAGRA and 541-51 9-0693
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CEDAR ar CHAIN link 385 - Union Co. Serfences. New construc- vice Directory t ion, R e m o d el s 5 ANYTHING FOR ha ndyma n services. A BUCK Kip Carter Construction Same owner for 21 yrs. 541-519-6273 541-910-6013 Great references. CCB¹1 01 51 8 CCB¹ 60701
cheaper alternative to high drugstore prices! 50 Pill Special — $99 FREE Shipping! 100 Percent Guaranteed.
CAL L NO W : 1-800-729-1056
(PNDC)
PARKER TREE Service DO YOU need papers to D 5. H Roofing 5. Local 5 E s t ablished start your fire with? Or Since 1937. All your a re yo u m o v i n g 5 Construction, lnc CCB¹192854. New roofs tree needs including; need papers to wrap 5 reroofs. Shingles, t rimming, s t um p r e - those special items? moval, and p r u ning. The Baker City Herald metal. All phases of construction. Pole CCB¹ 172620. FREE at 1915 F i rst S t r eet buildings a specialty. ESTIMATES! Contact sells tied bundles of Respond within 24 hrs. Grant Parker papers. Bundles, $1.00 541-975-3234 each. 541-524-9594
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www.La rande All real estate advertised b drm, w/s/g pd , n o h ere-in is s u blect t o Rentals.com smoking/nopets, $375 the Federal Fair Housmonth, $300 deposit. 541-91 0-3696. ing Act, which makes 745 - Duplex Rentals it illegal to a dvertise Union Co. any preference, limita- 1 BD, 1 BA, (Lower portions or discnmination tion of large house) 1613 K Ave., LG. 2 bd, $550/mo, 1st 5 l a st, based on race, color, small attractive very $200 cleaning, no pets religion, sex, handicap, c lean, separate e n 541-663-8410 Lv msg. familial status or n atrance. Near GRH 5 tional origin, or intenE OU. Partially f u r tion to make any such nished. Includes: w/d, 1 BD, 1 BA, (Lower portion of large house) p references, l i m i t a- w/s/g, electnc 5 heat small, attractive, very tions or discrimination. paid. Good neighborc lean, separate e n We will not knowingly hood. Many upgrades. trance. Near GRH 5 accept any advertising No smoking, no pets, for real estate which is $ 545. 40 2 S u n s et . E OU. Partially f u r nished. Includes: w/d, in violation of this law. 541-786-4606. w/s/g, electnc 5 heat All persons are hereby paid. Good neighborinformed that all dwellCENTURY 21 hood. Many upgrades. i ngs a d v ertised a r e PROPERTY No smoking, no pets, available on an equal MANAGEMENT $ 545. 40 2 S u n s e t . opportunity basis. 541-786-4606. EQUAL HOUSING La randeRentals.com OPPORTUNITY
750 - Houses For Rent Baker Co.
(541)963-1210
CIMMARON MANOR ICingsview Apts.
720 - Apartment Rentals Baker Co. 2-BDRM, 1 bath Downtown. $625/mo. W/S pd. No pets. 541-523-4435
UPSTAIRS STUDIO
2 bd, 1 ba. Call Century 21, Eagle Cap Realty. 541-963-1210
3-bdrm, 1 bath Home $695.+dep 2588 1st St 2-bdrm, 1 bath Home 625.+dep 1769 Estes
CLOSE TO EOU, small Molly Ragsdale studio, all utilities pd, Property Management no smoking/no pets, Call: 541-519-8444 $395 mo, $300 dep. """Pick up-applications 541-91 0-3696. 2710 f/2 First St. Info box
Custom kitchens. Laun- Welcome Home! dry on site. W/S/G 5 3-BDRM, 1 ba t h, g as lawn care p r ovided. heat 5 a t tached carCall Tenant pays electric. port $800/mo + dep. (541) 963-7476 Close to park 5 downNo smoking, pets neg. t own. Se e a t 2 1 3 4 S ee at 2825 7t h S t . GREEN TREE Grove St. $450+ dep. CaII D av i d 541-403-2277 No pets / s m o k ing. APARTMENTS 541-519-585 2 o r 2310 East Q Avenue 541-51 9-5762 La Grande,OR 97B50 4-BDRM, 2 ba t h. F ireI place, laundry room, 9I d etached garage 5 UPSTAIRS S T U DIO. workshop. No smokLaundry on si te . Affordasble Studios, ing. 541-519-4814 W/S/G heat/hot water, 1 5 2 bedrooms. Dish TV 5 lawn care (Income Restnctions Apply) provided. Tenant pays Professionally Managed NEWLY REMODELED 3-BDRM, 1.5 bath electric. Close to park by: GSL Properties Excellent location / views 5 d o w ntown . 2 2 0 9 Located Behind No pets. $975/mo. G rove St. $ 4 5 0/mo La Grande Town Center 541-523-4435 +dep. No pets/smoking. 541-519-5852 or 541-51 9-5762 Nelson Real Estate Has Rentals Available! 541-523-6485
ELKHORN VILLAGE APARTMENTS
HIGHLAND VIEW
Qr Apartments Senior a n d Di s a b l ed Housing. A c c e pting SUNFIRE REAL Estate 800 N 15th Ave applications for those LLC. has Houses, DuElgin, OR 97827 aged 62 years or older plexes 5 Apartments as well as those disfor rent. Call Cheryl abled or handicapped Now accepting applications f o r fed e r a l ly Guzman fo r l i s t ings, of any age. Income re541-523-7727. funded housing. 1, 2, strictions apply. Call and 3 bedroom units Candi: 541-523-6578 with rent based on in- 752 - Houses for Rent Union Co. come when available. 1 BD Carriage house, Prolect phone number: $525/mo, $500 dep, 541-437-0452 Pet upo n a p p rovaI, FURNISHED STUDIO TTY: 1(800)735-2900 541-91 0-3696. 8E 2-BDRM APTS. Utilites paid, includes internet/cable. Starting at
"This institute is an equal opportunity provider."
$600/mo. 541-388-8382 The Elms Apartments 2920 Elm Street Baker City, OR 97814
UNION COUNTY Senior Living
1 BR, with loft, remolded farmhouse/cabin outside Cove, a creage, a nimal s al l o we d . $ 750/mo, f o r in f o : mountemilyproperties ©hotmail.com 413-243-6054
ridia
Mallard Heights 870 N 15th Ave Elgin, OR 97827
by Stella Wilder
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4 Puts tw o a n d t wo t o g e t h e r 8 — gnp!
725 - Apartment Rentals Union Co.
3 BDRM 2 bath, double car garage, covered d eck, f e n ce d b a c k Currently accepting appliyard, $ 1200mo. Call cations. 2 bdrm apart541-568-7777 l e ave ment w/F R IG, DW, Now accepting applicamessage. tions f o r fed e r a l ly STV, onsite laundry, f unded h o using f o r playground. I n c o me APPLICAt hos e t hat a re ACCEPTING and occupancy guideTIONS fo r 2 b d, w/ sixty-two years of age lines apply, Section 8 storage shed, $625mo or older, and h andiaccepted. Rent is $455 plus $ 90 0 d e p o sit. capped or disabled of to $490, tenant pays 541-91 0-4444 any age. 1 and 2 bedelectnc. No smoking, room units w it h r e nt except in d esignated THE pets! 4 bd, b ased o n i nco m e BRING smoking area and no 1 bath house on 1 acre when available. p ets. A ppl i c a t i o n s 475 - Wanted to Buy of land. Stop by any a vailable onsite o u t Saturday. 610 16th St, side of manager's ofProlect phone ¹: ANTLER DEALER. BuyLG. $1200/mo. Avail 541-437-0452 fice located at Apt. 1. ing grades of antlers. Nov 1 st . TTY: 1 (800) 735-2900 O f f i c e Ph. F air h o n es t p r i c e s . 503-266-5739. 541-523-5908; E ma il: From a liscense buyer theelms©vindianmgt.com"This Instituteis an using st at e c e r t i f ied LARGE 4 b e d , 2 b a , website: equal opportunity skills. Call Nathan at house downtown La vindianmgt.com/propprovider" 541-786-4982. Grande. $1,200 plus 705 - Roommate ert ies/e lm s-a pa rtd eposit. O f f s t r e e t ments. Wanted parking, n o g a r age, HOME TO sh are, Call small yard. No pets. m e I et s t a Ik . J o 541-605-0707 l e ave 541-523-0596 voicemail message.
A nswe r t o P r e v i o u s P u z z l e
cheese
710 - Rooms for Rent NOTICE
31 Flabbergast 3 4 Dr i p p e d 35 John, in Glasgow 36 Whodunits 37 Pitc he r in a basin 39 Like s uper m a r k e t milk 4 0 Te a s e s 41 Fjord po rt 4 2 C la w b a d l y 44 Ove r run w ith 4 5 On e o f t h e b asic taste s 46 Wh ite-tailed
s ea eag le 49 Rawls or Gehrig
that's no reason to let yourselfbe sidetracked. have to employ a good deal of native cleverSATURDAY, OCTOBER IO, 2015 YOUR BIRTHDAY by Stella Wilder Stay on task! nesseven asyou dig up answersthatseem to Born today, you are often able to combine SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) - You be right out of the textbook. the routine and the unusual, the acceptable can put on quite a display, but be sure that irs GEMINI (May 21-June20) -- You're eager and the controversial, the conventional and the work you do, not your ego, that has the to accept another's offer of hospitality, but the exceptional, in ways that are unique and greater impact. this may not be the time. A personal issue impressive. Your skill in this and other areas CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) —You're keeps you closer to home. is the result of an unwillingness to settle; you working on a plan that hasyou excited about CANCER (June 21-July 22) - You'll be alwayswant to do more,reach further and a comingendeavor. You willcross profes- compelled to look into a certain issue much achievemore than you have in thepast— or sional and personal boundaries. more intimately than you have in the past. than has anyone else. Creative outlets are AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) — It's not What someone tells you strikes a chord. essential to you, and your mental and physi- likely to be youwho must repeat yourself, but LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) — You're eager to cal health depend upon your ability to chal- that doesn't mean that reviewing what you renewyour friendship with someonewhohas lenge yourself freely and explore without have done isn't valuable. been out of the picture for a while, but you hindrance all the things in life that interest PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) — You'll be may not know how just yet. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) —You may be you. You will not be restricted in any way! impressed bythe waysomeonecomesback to sUNDAY, OGTOI)ER u you withequal effectiveness when you reunited with someone who has figured LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) - You may have thought you had put him in his place. prominently in your past success. It could be reason to say"I told you so" before the dayis ARIES (March 21-April 19) -- Personal that another big thing is on the horizon. out, but it's not likely to be for the reason you strength isn't necessarily about physical think! prowess; your emotional fortitude is likely to COPYRIGHT2015 UNITED FEATURESYNDICATE, INC SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) — You may be much more important. DISIRIBUIED BYUNIVERSALUCLICKFORUFS lllOWd 5 K » Qp M O 6 4106 800255 67l4 be envious of a friend's current position, but TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - You may
SUNDAY, OCTOI)ER u, 2015 YOUR BIRTHDAY by Stella Wilder Born today, you are creative, hardworking, industr iousand clever,andyou neverhave to relysol ely uponwhathasbeen donebefore as you search for the right way to do things. You are also tenacious, and you will stick with a project to the bitter end -- provided, of course, that you are able to goabout it in your own way, without being restricted by arbitrary rules that you feel do not really apply to you. Your sense of independence isgreat. You areconfidentand have a healthy opinion of yourself and your abilities, yet because of the wayyou carryyourself and interact with others, you never come across ascocky or arrogant. You are, indeed, quite down-to-earth. MONDAY, OCTOI)ER 12 LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) — Despite your explicit instructions, things aren't likely to happenthewayyou havelaid them ouuWhat variable did you missf SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) — Now is a
good time for you to insert yourself into a TAURUS (April 20-May 20) — You're in situation that will benefit greatly from your needofjustthe kind ofencouragement and contributions. Do it in a subtle way! reassurancethata loved onecan provide,but SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) you must make yourself available for it. Certain reactions to what you do are likelyto GEMINI (May 21-June 20) — You mustn't take you by surprise - not so much in what is let good reviews go to your head, just as you said, but in how much is said! mustn't let criticism slow you down. Keep CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) — If you everything in perspective! pay attention to what others say about you, CANCER (June 21-July 22) — You may you're not likely to get much done. You can't wonder at another's inability to understand avoid being talked about right now! what is really going on. He may be protecting AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) —You have himself in some way. the feeling that something isn't quite rightLEO (July 23-Aug. 22)--You don't have to and the feeling grows throughout the day pursueeverything with equal fervor;temper until you reach critical mass. your approach and let your instincts tell you PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) —You're sure what is most important. that something is not as it should be, yet VIRGO (Au(,. 23-SePt. 22) -- You may you've done everything possible to ensure violate an unwritten rule and attract a great that it is. Is yourperception fau)tyf deal of criticism as a result. Some, however, ARIEs (March 21-April 19) — Irll be up want to do things your way. to you to show another the best way to proceed,even though you maywellbeproceedCOPYRIGHT2015 UNITED FEATURESYNDICATE, INC ing blind throughout much of the day. DISIRIBUIED BYUNIVERSALUCLICKFORUFS -
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5 K » Qp M O 6 4106 800255 67l4
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4B —THE OBSERVER a BAKER CITY HERALD
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015
PUBLISHED BY THE LAGRANDE OBSERVER & THE BAKER CITY HERALD - SERVING WALLOWA, UNION & BAKER COUNTIES
DEADLINES : LINE ADS:
Monday: noon Friday Wednesday: noon Tuesday Friday: no o n Thursday DISPLAY ADS:
2 days prior to publication date
Baker City HeraId: 541-523-3673e www.bakercityheraId.com • classifiedslbakercityheraId.com• Fax: 541-523-6426' The Observer: 541-963-3161e www.la randeobserver.com • classifiedsllagrandeobserver.com • Fax: 541-963-3674 xg w 760 - Commercial Rentals
820 - Houses For Sale Baker Co.
LG RETAIL/OFFICE, 1/2 b lock o f f Ada m s , a bout 1 00 0 s q . f t , $525 includes h eat, 541-569-51 89
1988 CAB over camper. F its 7 ' be d . P o r t a Potty, 3 burner stove, fndge/freezer, propane heater, excel. shape. $1200. See at 2 4 20 1 st St., B a ker C i ty . 541-523-203 2 or 541-51 9-7860
780 - Storage Units
FSBO 255 HILLCREST • Mltil-Wtrt.rioirse • I)irIS(di. FammlPartliit l e • Itesatisbls Rafs>
fx lnfsrlamilonsaII:
52$4MIIeye $9<N7eyeltiltgs 3785 10th Street
930 - Recreational
Great view of Baker Vehicles City and Eagle Mtns. One level, 1,200 sf (ml), THE SALE of RVs not beanng an Oregon in2-bdrm, 1.5 bath home. signia of compliance is Livingroom, family rm, illegal: cal l B u i lding gas fireplace, AC, electnc heat. Codes (503) 373-1257. Double car garage, 2000 NEW VISION shop, fenced backyard. Close to golf course. ULTRA 5TH WHEEL
$132,000 541-519-8463 %ABC STORESALL
%
a+
MOVF INSPFCIAl!
• Rent a unit for 6 mo
get 7th mo. FREE (Units 5x10 up to 10x30)
541-523-9050
t 8|cvtIIy fenced
t Coded Eafty e Lleh(NIlcr yoarprotec(lca t 6 t(ifietett( size vails
t Lo(sof lRVslerage 41298Chiott IRd,Baker Cey
A PLUS RENTALS has storage units available. 5x12 $30 per mo. 8x8 $25-$35 per mo. 8x10 $30 per mo. 'plus deposit' 1433 Madison Ave., or 402 Elm St. La Grande. Ca II 541-910-3696 American West Storage 7 days/24 houraccess 541-523-4564 COMPETITIVE RATES Behind Armory on East and H Streets. Baker City
~ NTQZ ULOE • Beeure • Keypadl )en~ • A~uto-Iock G@e • Becurller Lltrbtfng • S e~ C sr n m e • Outslde RV Htorsge • Fenced Azea, (6-fbot, btub3 REw' slean umita All frizee avatta)bte (Bxlo u)p to l4xRB)
64X-688-1688 8818 X4QL CLASSIC STORAGE 541-524-1534 2805 L Street
NEW FACILITY!! Vanety of Sizes Available Secunty Access Entry RV Storage
SAt'-T-STOR SECURESTORAGE Surveillance Cameras Computenzed Entry Covered Storage Super size 16'x50'
541-523-2128 3100 15th St. Baker City
795 -Mobile Home Spaces SPACES AVAILABLE, one block from Safeway, trailer/RV spaces. W ater, s e w er , g a r bage. $200. Jeri, mana ger. La Gran d e 541-962-6246
805 - Real Estate Land for Sale — Investm en t Pr o pe r ty . Sand-Gravel, 2 2 m il+ tons Geo-Tek report and drilling samples available, possible rail access. Next to active pit. West of Spokane Wa. Ca II 360-835-5947
(PNDC)
GET QUICIC CASH WITH THE CLASSIFIEDS! Sell your unwanted car, property and h ousehold items more quickly and affordably with the classifieds. Just call us today to place your a d and get r e ady t o s tart c o u n t in g y o u r cash. The Observer 541963-3161 or Baker City Herald 541-523-3673.
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980 - Trucks, Pickups
920 - Campers
~ $179,900 REMODELED SOUTH SIDE 2068 sq. II. home 1.5 bath3bd.plus anoff ice space. Beautiful hard wood floors large kitchen and lots oi storage. G!F!A heat, finished basement, new win-
1001 - Baker County Legal Notices Defendants.
1001 - Baker County Legal Notices
R E l '
1010 - Union Co. Legal Notices IN THE CIRCUIT
1010 - Union Co. Legal Notices
enng opportunities for The applicable Land Use salvage of f ire k illed Court of the State of Regulations are found Case No. 15311 t rees. The f i re s i m Oregon for the i n Sections 8 . 0 3 a t 21.072 of th e U n ion County of Union, p acted t h e For e s t SUMMONS Road system, resulting Case No. 15-09-8552, County Zoning, Partii n n u m e r ou s d e a d Guardianship of Travis tion at Subdivision OrLee Matthew d inance. F a i l ur e t o TO DEFENDANTS THE trees immediately adraise a specific issue E STATE O F L E L A lacent to roads and arBabcock, a child. MADALINE DOUGeas of c o n centrated with sufficient specificity at the local level LAS; THE UNKNOWN public use. These dan- NOTICE OF FILING OF HEIRS AND ASSIGNS g er t rees h av e t h e PETITION FOR p recludes appeal t o 2011 FORD F-150 LUBA based on the isV-6, 4-wd, 8' bed, OF LELA MADALINE GUARDIANSHIP to possibility of reaching DOUGLAS; THE UNthe road right-of way Amesha Dodge. sue. Th e application standard cab, towing ICN OWN D E V I S EE5 a nd a re a potentiaI hazand all information repackage,42k/miles. I/er o o d condition! OF LELA MADALINE ard to F o rest u s e rs A p e t i t io n t o a p p o i n t lated to the proposal are available for review DOUGLAS; and ALL and Forest S e r v ice Jerry and Gizete Bab$19,600 at no cost and copies OTHER PERSONS OR personnel. cock as temporary and 541-523-2505 PARTIES UNKNOWN The prolects would procan be supplied at a permanent guardians C LAIM I N G A N Y vide for improved pubof Travis Lee Matthew r easonable c o st . A 990 - Four-Wheel s taff r e port w i l l b e RIGHT, TITLE, LIEN, I ic a n d em p l o y e e Babcock (the "child") available fo r r e v i ew Drive OR INTEREST IN THE safety by felling danwas filed in the above REAL P R O PERTY court on September 2, seven days before the ger trees located along 1987 JIMMY 4x4. Good 2015. A motion to exh earing, and can b e COMMONLY ICNOWN Forest Roads. These condition. $ 7 5 0 or roads are considered AS 1189 H STREET, tend th e t e m p o rary supplied at reasonable trade? 541-519-5662 cost. For further inforB AICER CITY, O R primary routes for pubguardianship was filed 97814: lic and administrative o n S e pt ember 2 9 , mation contact this ofIN THE NAME OF THE access in the f ire ar2015.Jerry Babcockis f ice b y pho n e at
eas. Fe lled d a n ger the paternal grandfa541-963-1014, or stop in M o nday t h r o u gh trees may be removed ther of the child. The as timber products or a ddress an d p h o n e Thursday, 8 : 30-5:00 $16,000 left in place depending w here J e r r y and pm. Fully loaded! on the management Gizete Babcock may direction for the areas be reached is c/o Cory Scott Hartell they are located and Larvik, Attorney, 2202 Planning Director • 35 foot 1001 - Baker County the associated e nviCove Ave., Ste A, La • 3 Slide Outs ronmental effects. AdG rande O R 9 7 8 5 0 , P ublished: October 9 , dows and newer roof. Legal Notices • W/D Combo 2015 ditional salvage proPatio, nice back yard ( 541) 6 63-8864. A • Kitchen Island PUBLIC NOTICE c op y of t he lects would allow eco' and a garden space. • 4-dr Fridge/Freezer Pursuan t to O RS nomic recovery of fire above-mentioned peti- Legal No.0043191 One car garage. For more info. call: 294.250, a schedule of killed timber and retion and motion may 15193356 (541) 519-0026 Bake r Co u nty ' s duce potential for an be obtained from Cory Century 21 Eagle Monthly Expenditures NOTICE OF REVIEW insect outbreak. ActivLarvik. Exceeding $ 5 0 0 .00 UNION COUNTY , Cap Realty, i ty f u el s w o u l d b e No court hearing has yet 970 Autos For Sale (Newspaper Report) i 541-9634511. PLANNING been scheduled. You piled and treated after f or t h e m on t h of Dated: DEPARTMENT timber felling operamay oblect to the petiA ugust, 2 0 1 5 ha s tions are completed. tion and motion. If you 3/201 5 825 - Houses for been prepared. This 8/1 At this time it is anticido not file an oblection NOTICE IS H E REBY schedule, along with By: Sale Union Co. G IVEN, t h e Uni o n i n this m a t t er, t h e pated that these prominutes of the Board s S h a nnon IC. Calt County Planning delects can be categoric ourt m a y e n t e r a HOUSE AND of County C o m m ispartment is reviewing c ally excluded f r o m ludgment granting the BARN ON sioners' proceedings a Minor Partition applid ocumentation in a n requested relief. Obfor August, has been OSB ¹121855 c ation s u bmitted b y environmental assesslections must be filed (503) 345-9877 posted at th e C ourt- 503-222-2260 HNS Incorporated to ment or environmental in the above court by (Facsimile) house, and the Baker scalt©aldndgepite.com create Pacel 1 about impact statement. A November 13, 2015. County Library for pub- 621 SW Morrison Street, To file a n o b l e ction 10 acres and Parcel 2 2000 CHEVY BLAZER prolect file will be prelic review. Copies of Suite 425 c ontact t h e Uni o n about 4 acres, on propw/ snow tires on nms pared to document the the Newspaper Report Portland, OR 97205 erty located 1.2 miles environmental effects County Circuit Court, and snow chains. New for August, 2015, may Of Attorneys for Plaintiff east of the City of Is1008 "IC" Avenue, La of these prolects. Substereo system, hands b e o b t a i ne d fro m land City, at 63830 Infree calling at xm radio m itting w r i t te n c o m Grande, OR 9 7 8 50. Baker County's Admindustnal Lane, and dem ents d u r i n g t hi s capability. 2nd owner. (541) 962-9500. istrative Services Described as Twp. 2S, 10 ACRES! scoping penod would NOTICE TO Have all repair history. partment at a cost of Range 38 EWM, SecCOVE OREGON DEFENDANT/ establish eligibility to Dated this 30th day of Good condition! $2.00 tion 35 (A), Tax L ot FOR SALE. DEFENDANTS September, 2015. $4000/OBO oblect to t h ese p r o900, in a C ounty 1-2 Located three miles from READ THESE PAPERS 541-403-4255 lects under 3 6 CF R Bill Harvey, Heavy Industnal Zone. 218.5, should an envi- ~ C L k t he city o f C o v e a t CAREFULLY Commission Chair The applicable land 6 2160 Lowe r C o v e ronmental assessment Cory Larmk, OSB ¹98278 u se regulations a r e Road. Great view of Y ou must " a ppear" i n or environmental im- Attorney for Petitioners LegaI No. 00043202 found in Articles 13 at the valley. $260,000. this case or the other pact statement be preP ublished: October 9 , 25 o f the U nion Published: October 2, 9, Ca II541-786-0801. side will win automatipared. 2015 County Zoning, Partically. To "appear" you How to Participateand and 16,2015 tion an d S u b d ivision 855 - Lots & Propmust f i l e w i t h t he Submit Comments NOTICE OF Ordinance. court a l e ga l p aper You are invited to com- Legal No. 00043121 erty Union Co. Lien Foreclosure Sale ment on the proposed called a "motion" or BEAUTIFUL VIEW lot in "answer". Th e " m oa ctions. Y ou r c o m - NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S A s a p r o perty o w n e r Pursuant to ORS 87.689. Cove, Oregon. Build 2005 J E E P W ra n g I e within 500 feet of the r. SALE tion" "answer" or ments will help idenNOTICE IS HEREBY y our d r ea m h o m e . F actory r i g h t h a n d sublect property you must be given to t he tify issues to be conGIVEN that the followSeptic approved, elecdrive, 6 c l y , 4 w d, sidered in the environ- O n N o v e mbe r 1 8 t h , are entitled to notice court clerk or adminising described property tnc within feet, stream of this application and automatic, runs exceltrator within 30 days mental review. Please 2 015 at th e h our o f will be sold for Classic r unning through l o t . m ay su bmit w r i t t e n 10:00 a.m. at the Unlent, new tires, cruise (or 60 days for Defens ubmit y ou r w r i t t e n Storage, 28 0 5 L A mazing v i e w s of t estimony e i t h e r i n c ontrol, AC , s t e r e o S treet, B a ke r C i t y , dant United States or ion County S heriff's comments by October mountains at v a lley. support or in opposinew postal signs. 127k State of Oregon DeOffice, 1109 IC Ave, La 16, 2015 so they can Baker County, Oregon 3.02 acres, $62,000 tion of th e p roposal. b e considered in t h e Grande, Oregon, the $8,900. 541-426-9027 partment of Revenue) 97814 on Fnday, Octo208-761-4843 t es ti m o n y or 541-398-1516 defendant's i n t e rest W ritte n a long w i t h t h e r e - analysis. Implementaber 16, 2016, starting must be received by will be sold, sublect to tion is expected to bequired filing f ee . It at 1:00pm to s a tisfy ROSE RIDGE 2 Subdivithis office no later than m ust b e i n pr o p e r gin in Fall 2015. Any redemption, in the real storage liens claimed sion, Cove, OR. City: 5:00 p.m., October 14, form and have proof of comments r e c e ived property c o m m o nly by Classic S t o rage, Sewer/VVater available. 2015. known as: 730 N 9th service on th e p l ain- will be placed in the LLC. Regular price: 1 acre A venue, Elgin, O r etiff's attorney or, if the prolect file and shall m/I $69,900-$74,900 b ecome a m a tter o f plaintiff does not have gon, 97827. The court Failure to raise an issue P roperty Ow ner: M i k e We also provide property in wnting or to provide the public record (36 case nu mb e r i s an attorney, proof of H ull, Unit ¹ 5 , o w e s management. C heck sufficient specificity to 14-03-48943 w h e re service on the plaintiff. CFR 215.6 (b) (2)). $871.00, antlers, milk out our rental link on afford t h e d e c i s ion U.S. Bank National AsIf you have questions, P lease submit y o u r cans, wood f l ooring, our w ebs i t e maker an opportunity comments to: Jeff Tosociation, is the plainyou should see an atantique metal bed, tv www.ranchnhome.co 2008 TAURUS X SEL, to respond to th e i storney immediately. If mac, Whitman Distnct tiff, and Richard L. Bidand misc h o usehold m or c aII 98k m i , sea t s 6, sue precludes appeal Ranger, 1550 Dewey well; The Estate of Evyou need help in finditems. Ranch-N-Home Realty, to the Planning Comleather , 6 d is c ing an attorney, you Ave, Suite A , B a ker elyn F. Bidwell, DeIn c 541-963-5450. changer, Sinus Radio, Legal No. 00043068 may contact the Orec eased; Un k n o w n mlsslon. City, OR 97814, Ph: almost new s t udless Published: October 2, 5, 541-523-1350, Heirs and Devisees of gon State Bar's LawI snow tires, great SUV, I Fax:541-523-6394. Evelyn F. Bidwell, De- All interested agencies, yer Referral Service 7, 9, 12, 14, 2015 departments or a r ea $7000. 541-91 0-3568. ceased; and Persons online at www.oregonT hose s ubm i t t i n g residents may request or Parties u n known THIS IS an action for Justatebar.org or by callh and-delivered c o mthat a public hearing 880 - Commercial dicial Foreclosure of ments may do so durClaiming any Right, Tiing (503) 684-3763 (in be held by the PlanProperty r eaI property c o m - the Portland metropoliing the regular office tle, Lien, or Interest in n ing Co m m i ssion a t t he P r o p e rt y Demonly known as 1189 tan area) or toll-free hours of 7:45 to 4:30 NEWLY RENOVATED their earliest convenH Street, Baker City, elsewhere in Oregon Monday through Fris cribed in t h e C o m c ommercial / ret a i l i ent meeting t o c o n OR 97814. A motion at (800) 452-7636. day except legal holiplaint H e r ein, i s / are p roperty o n A d a m s sider the application. o r answer m u s t b e days. Please be sure the defendant(s), said and 2nd St. $1200 per This request must be Wnt of Execution begiven to the court clerk LegaI No. 00043062 t o i n clude W h i t m a n month. Possible lease 69 CHEVY Impala, cusmade within 14 days i ng in f a vo r o f s a i d or administrator within Published: October 2, 9, Fires Danger Tree Reoption to p u rchase. of the mailing date of tom 2 door with rebuilt 30 days of the date of 16,23, 2015 moval as the sublect plaintiff a n d a g a inst ~541 910-1711 tranny and turbo 350 this notice and the rethe f i rs t p u b l ication for your written comthe real property of quest for public hearmotor. New front disc LEGAL NOTICE said defendant(s), is specified herein along m ents . El ec t r o n i c ing review must be acbrakes and new front with the required filing of Scoping c omments m us t b e defendant. The sale is companied by specific and back seats. Runs Whitman Fires fee. submitted in a format a public auction to the reasons why the regreat! Must hear it to such as anemail meshighest bidder for cash Danger Tree Removal quest is being made. appreciate. Ready for and Salvage or cashier's check, in sage, nch text format body and paint. Asking IN THE CIRCUIT COURT (.rtf), Adobe Portable hand, made out to Unapplication and all in$6,500 OBO. USDA- Forest Service OF THE STATE OF D ocument For m a t ion County S heriff's The f ormation r e lated t o 541-963-9226 OREGON FOR THE Wallowa-Whitman ( pdf),or M ic r o s o f t Office. For more inforthe proposal are availNational Forest mation on this sale go COUNTY OF BAICER W or d to DONATE YOUR CAR, OCWEN LOAN able for review at no Whitman Ranger Distnct comments- acificto: TRUCIC OR BOAT TO SERVICING, LLC, 915- Boats & Motors cost and copies can be Baker County, Oregon northwest-wallowawww.ore onshenffs. HE R ITAG E FOR THE supplied at a reasonw hitm an w h it com/sales.htm BLIND. Free 3 Day Vaable cost. For further The W h i t ma n R a nger manunit©fs.fed.us Plaintiff, cation, Tax Deductible, i nformation c o n t a c t D istrict o f t h e W a l V. Comments received, P ublished: October 9 , Free Towing, All Pathis office by phone at l owa-Whitma n N a 16,23,and 30, 2015 i ncluding th e n a m e s perwork Taken Care THE ESTATE OF LELA 9 63-1014, or stop i n t ional Forest w o u l d a nd a d d r esse s o f Of. CAL L M onda y t hr ou g h MADALINE DOUGlike to know your conthose who comment, Legal No.43165 1-800-401-4106 Thursday, 8 : 30-5:00 LAS; THE UNKNOWN cerns, s u g g estions, will be considered part (PNDC) p.m. HEIRS AND ASSIGNS and questions regardof the public record for NOTICE OF HEARING UNION COUNTY OF LELA MADALINE this proposal and will ing a prolect proposal GOT AN older car, boat Failure of property owner DOUGLAS; THE UNto abate roadside danbe available for public PLANNING or RV? Do the humane t o receive n o t ice o f COMMISSION ICNOWN DEVISEES ger trees and fire salinspection (Authonty: thing. Donate it to the this application shall OF LELA MADALINE v age i n t h e W i n d y - 40 CFR 1501.7 and CONDITIONAL USE Humane Society. Call no invalidate this proDOUGLAS; STATE OF Cornet, Eldorado, Ea1508.22; Forest Serv1-800-205-0599 1985 B E A CHCRAFT O REGON and A L L gle Complex, and Dry ice Handbook 1909.15, NOTICE IS H E REBY c eeding if t h e l o c a l (PNDC) Magnum 192 Cuddy, government can demOTHER PERSONS OR Gulch fire areas. Your Section 21). G IVEN, t h e Uni o n 200 hp, Coast Guard onstrate by a f f i davit comments will help us County Planning ComPARTIES UNKNOWN If you have any questhat such notice was radio, d e pt h f i n d e r, i dentify issues to b e m ission, m e e t in g i n C LA IM I N G A N Y tions, additional infors wim/sk i p l a t f o r m , WANTED! I buy old Porgiven. RIGHT, TITLE, LIEN, considered in the envim ation can b e p r o reg ula r sess ion, Octovery good c o ndition, sches 91 1 , 356 . OR INTEREST IN THE r onmental review o f vided b y c o n t a cting ber 26th 2015 at 7:00 canopy, boat c over, 1948-1973 only. Any REAL P R O PERTY these proposals. p m, i n t he Dan i e l Scott Hartell Melissa Shelley, Enviand e-z trailer included. Chaplin Building Con- Planning Director COMMONLY ICNOWN In August and Septemronmental Coordinator condition. Top $$ paid. $5,500 firm ference Room located b er of 2 0 1 5 , t h e r e at (541) 523-1350. F inders F e e . Ca l l AS 1189 H STREET, 541-663-6403 707-965-9546 or email B AICER CITY, O R were 4 large fires that at 1001 4th Street, La P ublished: October 9 , 2015 i ncluded portions of Legal No. 00043222 Grande, will consider a porschedclassics©ya97814, the Whitman Ranger P ublished:October 9 , Conditional Use applihoo.com (PNDC) 920 - Campers Legal No.00043201 D istrict. T h ese f i r e s 2015 c ation s u bmitted b y were called the CorICyle Wright to estabnet/VVindy Ridge, Eldo- 1010 - Union Co. lish a one station hair s alon business in a n Looking for somerado, Eagle Complex, accessory structure as thing in particular? and Dry Gulch. Collec- Legal Notices tively the fires burned BOARD M EETING of a home o c c upation. about 152,573 acres t he B l u e M o u n t a in The sublect property is Then you need the on state and p r ivate located at 62178 Mt. Translator District will lands, and lands manG len Rd, a bout 0 4 Classified Ads! This '09 NORTHLAND be held Tuesday, miles north of the City is the simplest, most aged by the Bureau of for our most current offers and to October 13th, at GRIZZLY Land M a n a g ement Denny's restaurant in of La Grande and is 880 Camper w/slide. browse our complete inventory. and Forest Service. Of described as Twp. 2S, inexpensive way for La Grande OR, at 6:00 Medical issues force Range 38 EWM, Sec- you to reach people the total acres burned, p.m. sale. Must see tion 32, Tax Lot 3700, approximately 32%, or to appreciate. about 1.5 acres, in an in this area with any 48,725 acres, were on P ublished: October 9 , Pnced below NADA National Forest SysR-3 Farm Residential message you might 2015 541-523-1056 or tem managed lands. Zone. 253-973-1 664 1415 Adams Ave • 541-963-4161 The district is consid- Legal No. 00043126 want to deliver. •
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STATE OF OREGON: Y ou are h e reby r e quired to appear and defend the action filed against y o u i n t he above-entitled cause w ithin 30 d ays f r o m the date of service of this Summons u p on you; and if you fail to appear and defend, for w ant t h e r e of , the Plaintiff will apply to the court for the relief demanded therein. ALDRIDGE PITE, LLP
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PUZZLES 8 COMICS
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015
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HOW TO P L AY: All the words listed below appear in the puzzle — horizontally, vertically, diagonally and even backward. Find them, circle each letter of the word and strike it off the list. The leftover letters spell the W ONDERWORD . DESSERT RKCIPES Solution: 7 letters
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Does your carrier never miss a CIay? Are they always on time, no matter what kind of weather? Do they bring your paper to your front door? If so we want to hear from you. The Observer and Baker City Herald wants to recognize all of our outstanding carriers and the service they provide to ensure your paper gets to you. Let us know about their service by sending your comments to cthom son@la randeobseroercom or send them to 24065t StreetLu Grande ORI/7850
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6B —THE OBSERVER a BAKER CITY HERALD
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015
COFFEE BREAK
PRISON POPULATION
Party guest feels singled out
Druginmateswithlongrag sheetsamong thosefreed
by subtle, 'Special' treatment DEARABBY I wasinvited to a small ing this for them, you should stay out of it gathering of women. I arrived punctually, DEAR ABBY: Six monthsago my brother was greete d by the hostessand asked ifI wanted some water to drink. I accepted. told me he vapes. At ftrst I didn't think much As Ilooked around the room, everyone else ofit. Because Ipr7'de myselfon how well I hud a glass of wine. When one other woman keep secrets, I haven't told our parents. But arrived a little while later andjoined our now his grudes have started sliding and I group, the hostess asked her if she wanted wonderifthere'sa connection. He's going into his senioryear ofhigh wine or water to drink. I have never abused alcoschool and his graduation hol. Why wasI notgiven a is on the line. If vaping has DEAR had an effect on hcsgrades, choice? I later found out that all the other women had been ABBY it mig h t be best for me to tell our parents andQure things given a "show up" time that was a half-hour earlier than outfrom there.Idon'tknow my "show up"time. what therightchoiceis. WhatshouldIdo? I am hurt by the way I was treated. What — HOLDINGA SECRET IN WASHINGTON are your thoughts? — SECOND-CLASS DEAR HOLDING: From what I have CITIZENINFLORIDA been reading lately, some teens have begun DEAR SECOND-CLASS CITIZEN:I vaping marijuana, which is known to impair think your hostess could learn a few things memory. Depending upon what substance about hospitality, because you were treated your brother has been vaping, it could definitely be why his grades have dropped. shabbily. As it stands, you have nothing to lose by asking her why because I can't Secrets that can pose a danger shouldn't imagine that you would ever accept another be kept because they are not harmless. I invitation from the woman if one is offered. think your instinct is to share your concerns with your parents, and I concur. DEARABBYAt what point should grown DEARABBY: I wrote to you about my kidsin their 20s pay for their own "extrus"(cellphone, gas, movies, gym memberships)? In my 97year-old mother who wasin failing opinion, if they can't ufford these luxuries, they health. My question was how to notify her should get a secondj ob or do without. My hus- out-of state elderly friends with news ofher bard, on the other hand, thinks they should be passing when the time came. My idea was to "rewarded"simply for being good kids. use her uddress book l Christmus card list for At this stage in their lives, I think gifts uddressesand then printa copy ofher obitushould be reserved for birthdays and Christ- ary with a short messuge thanking those mus only and that we have been raising friends for their letters, cards and support kids with a sense of entitlement that may be during her life. You sent me back a note that detrimental to their future (and to our retire- positively reinforced my idea. My mother passed away earlier this year. ment). What are your thoughts on this? — ODD WOMAN OUT I mailed the letters and received a response IN PENNSYLVANIA from almost every single person. Each one DEAR ODD WOMAN OUT: My thoughts thanked me for letting them know the sad are these: If you are truly concerned that news.With your encourcgement,Iwasable your husband's generosity could have a to handle this matter with respect and dignegative impact on your retirement savnity. Thank you so much. — GAYLE INARIZONA ings, then he may be overly generous. If the "children" expect these gifts and don't realDEAR GAYLE: You're welcome. I occaize how lucky they are to be receiving this sionally hear from readers asking if people I kindoflargesse,the giftsshould be stopped. have advised actually follow my advice. I'm However, if neither of these things is true pleased my encouragement worked well for and your husband derives pleasure from do- you.Thank you forlettingusknow.
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — A push to overhaul criminal sentencing is prompting the early releaseofthousands offederal drug prisoners, including some whom prosecutors oncedescribed as threatsto society, according to an AssociatedPress review ofcourt records. About 6,000 inmates are due tobefreed from custody in the coming month, the result of changes made last year to guidelines that provide judges with recommended sentences for specific crimes. Federal officials say roughly 40,000 inmates could be eligible for reduced sentences in coming years. Many of them are smalltime drug dealerstargeted by an approach to drug enforcement now condemned by many as overly harsh and expensive. But an AP analysis of nearly 100 court casesalsoidentified defendants who carried semiautomatic weapons, had past convicti ons forrobbery and other crimes, moved cocaine shipmentsacross states,and participated in international heroin smuggling. Supporters oflighter drug sentences say there's no evidence that longer punishm ent protects publicsafety. Studies show that inmates releasedearly aren'tm ore likely to reoffend than those who serve their entire sentences. Still, the broad spectrum of defendantsgranted early release — including some about whom prosecutors not longagoraised dire warnings
• ACCuWeather.COm ForeCaS Tonight
Monday
Cooler
Par t ly s u n n y
Mostly sunny
Warmer
High I low(comfort index)
0141 10
64134 10
14 136 10
16 135 10
66 l39 (>0)
14 l38 (10)
13 l36 (>0)
6 4 136 (> 0)
11 144 (> 0)
1 1 142 (> 0)
La Grande Temperatures
40 (8)
19 141 (10) Enterprise Temperatures
43 (8)
8144 (9)
The AccuWeather Comfort Index is an indication of how it feels based on humidity and temperature where 0 is least comfortable and 10 is most comfortable for this time of year. wn is 5 turday's weather weather. Temperatures are Friday nighes'Iows and Saturday's highs.
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Annual percentage change in the prison population 5% -----------------------------------------------------------------------.
State: ---- -0.7%
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High: 105 .......... Death Valley, Calif. Low : 26 .. . . ......... SaranacLake,N.Y. ' W ettest: 1.80" ............... Marfa, Texas regon: High: 89 .............................. Medford Low: 41 ............................. Lakeview '
Wettest: none
Graphic: Tnbune News Serwce
Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics
— underscores the complex decisions confronting the government as it pursues an overhaul of drug sentencing. "I'm a career prosecutor. I'm a law-and-order girl, and I believe that you need to send dangerous people to prison for a very long time," said Deputy Attorney General Sally Yates."But I think that we need to be smart about deciding who are those dangerous people." Willie Best, a one-time District of Columbia drug dealer whose sentence was already slashed under past crack guideline changes, had an additional month taken
1Info.
Hay Information Saturday Lowest relative humidity ................ 25% Afternoon wind ... WSW at 7 to 14 mph Hours of sunshine .............................. 6.0 Evapotranspiration .......................... 0.14 Reservoir Storage through midnight Thursday Phillips Reservoir 5% of capacity Unity Reservoir 11% of capacity Owyhee Reservoir 2% of capacity McKay Reservoir 22% of capacity Wallowa Lake 3% of capacity Thief Valley Reservoir 0% of capacity Stream Flows through midnight Thursday Grande Ronde at Troy ............ 586 cfs Thief Vly. Res. near N. Powder ... 4 cfs Burnt River near Unity ............ 10 cfs Lostine River at Lostine .............. N.A. Minam River at Minam ............ 53 cfs Powder River near Richland ...... 4 cfs
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off and is due out in 2016. Prosecutors in 2008 said Best helped run a drugdealingorganization,shotat someone he believed had stolen from him and, after fleeing as warrants were served, was found in a stolen car with an assault rifle and other guns. His lawyer described him as the productofa troubled, impoverished upbringing. And Best, in an interview from prison, called himself a loving father who bears no resemblance to his past self. "It's been a long time coming. Eight years is a long time," he said."I came in one way. I'm coming out another."
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Baker City High Thursday .............. 71 Low Thursday ............... 42 Precipitation Thursday ....................... .. 0.00" Month to date ................ .. 0.07" Normal month to date .. .. 0.14" Year to date ................... .. 8.03" Normal year to date ...... ... 7.76" La Grande High Thursday .............. 73 Low Thursday ............... 50 Precipitation Thursday ....................... ... 0.00" Month to date ................ ... 0.02" Normal month to date .. ... 0.24" Year to date ................... .... 7.78" Normal year to date ...... . 11.78" Elgin High Thursday ............................ 71 Low Thursday ............................. 50 Precipitation Thursday .................................. O.OO" Month to date ........................... 0.08" Normal month to date ............. 0.44" Year to date ............................ 16.12" Normal year to date ............... 16.29"
Tuesday
Baker City Temperatures (8
Prisoners under state and federal jurisdiction In millions
1mana Sunday
Saturday
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U.S. prisonpopulation
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Friday, October 9, 2015 The Observer & Baker City Herald
WEEICLY HUNTING REPORT
WILDLIFE
BAKER COUNTY • Hunters should find deer around cool, moist northern aspects with good forage nearby. The continuation of warm temperatures will limit animal activity to early morning and late evening. Remember to check the regulations for the area you will be hunting. • Blue grouse can be found in the higher elevations while ruffed grouse are more common in wetter areas. Hunters should expect an average year for grouse. Successful hunters are asked to place the tails and wings from harvested birds in the collection barrels. UNION COUNTY • Rifle deer hunters can expect dry conditions and high fire danger. Hunt mornings and evenings for the best chance of finding a buck. Buck numbers will be good in all units, but low precipitation will keep them near water sources. Fawn survival was about average last spring so there are good numbers of yearling bucks this fall. • Forest grouse hunters can expect a productive season. Look for ruffed grouse in creek bottoms and blues above 5,000 feet on open ridges. Both may be found near water sources. WALLOWA COUNTY • Buck hunters can expect only fair success as deer numbers are still below management objective and dry conditions will make stalking difficult. Hunters are reminded to check USFS regulations on camp/cook fires. • Hunters can expect to find blue grouse on ridge tops near wet spring areas. Numbers are still below long-term averages, so hunters will need to work a little harder to find birds. Ruffed grouse numbers have been more stable. • Bear hunting is expected to be good early in the morning and late in the evening in draw bottoms and stream bottoms where bears are feeding on hawthorn, service berry and elder berries. Saurce: ODRN
BLUETONGUE IS IN WASHINGTON, BUT NOT
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Bluetongue disease has been the confirmed cause of hundreds of deaths in white-tailed deer and a few mule deer in Eastern Washington and parts of Idaho this summer. However, the disease has not yet been found in Northeast Oregon. By Ronald Bond
son, Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife biologist in La Grande. A severe outbreak of the viraldisease bluetongue has The Spokesman Review been linked to hundreds in Spokane, Washington, reported that hundreds of deer deaths in Eastern Washington and parts of of white-tailed deer from Colville, Washington, to Western Idaho since August Lewiston, Idaho, have died as drought conditions have helpedaid itsspread. since the outbreak began in But to this point, the August, and that the disease disease appears to be isolated has also been confirmed in to just the two states. It is some deceased mule deer. hitting the hardest in the The conditions have been a Evergreen State but has haven for the gnats responsibleforspreading thedisease, not been found in deer in Northeast Oregon in spite of as theinsectsbreed atwater the dry, hot weather that can sources where deer migrate helpitto spread. to during the summer. "The conditions are right The Review article also for it, 4utl we have not seen states that livestock and anything yet that indicates otheranimals are susceptible it's here," said Leonard Erick- to thedisease.Indeed,oneof Wescom News Service
the animals reported was a bighorn sheep in Idaho. In light of the surrounding news, Erickson became more focused on what was happening locally in case it reared its head. So far, the area isclean. However, the disease does have a history in Northeast Oregon, albeitabriefone. Erickson and ODFW Assistant Biologist Justin Primus in Baker City said bluetongue popped up in theirrespective countiesa few years back, though it never materialized into a serious threat the way it has in Washington. aWehad animals dying, iandl we did document it in one or two samples," Erick-
son said of the outbreak, which happened roughly seven to 10 years ago. Primus has already been dealing with a condition that is closely related to bluetongue: epizootic hemorrhagicdisease.The midge-spread malady has been the cause of roughly 20 white-tail deaths in Baker County. ''White-tail, for whatever reason,seem to besusceptible to it," Primus said."It can affectmule deer and antelope
ias well)." Wallowa County, on the other hand, has remained clear. In fact, ODFW Biologist Pat Matthews in the Enterprise office said to his knowledge, bluetongue has never been confirmed in his area.
aWe've never had it diagnosed in any wildlife here," he said."There could have been some livestock, but as far asfi nding dead deer,elk and getting a confirmed diagnosis, we have not had that." While bluetongue has not yet been found in deer, Primus said a woman came into the Baker City ODFW office Wednesday suspecting the disease in her sheep. The results of tests on the animals are not yet back, Primus said. With both bluetongue and EHD, the diseased animals, which can die within a few days after symptoms of mouth and nasal discharge appear, have been turned into the ODFW after being SeeDisease/Page 2C
ran eRon eRiverRoa trigworththeri e utumn is a great time to ride ong most rivers. Washouts and other high water damage have most likely been repaired and deciduous treeslove the moisture-laden valleys and pebbly beaches. The colors as the willows and grasses become dormant are beautiful. The Wallowa-Whitman National Forest also hosts the western larch, which adds its own touchofgold to thecrisp falldays.A wonderful place to ride a bicycle on such a day is Forest Service Road 51. FS 51, the Grande Ronde River Road,starts a brief12 m ilessouthwest of Hilgard State Park on Oregon Highway 244. In years past, I would suggest stopping at the
THE NEXT RIDE MAVIS HARTZ Starkey Store for the most recent happenings and a snack before and after your ride, but it is no longer in business. Find a nice place to park in one of the nearby campgrounds, or a nice pull-out and start your ride. From the now closed Starkey Store, or the quaint looking Grande Ronde Cow Camp Bed and Breakfast, the heart-grabbing, frequently elk rich Tony Vey Meadows is a delightful 15 miles away. Vey Ranch, once a booming
AROUND NORTHEAST OREGON
Options abound to view Wallowa County wildlife A good place to observe mule deer is along the Wallowa Lake highway between Joseph and the south end ofWallowa Lake. Drive slowly and watch along the moraine on the east side of the lake around dawn and dusk. White-tailed deer can be found throughout theWallowa Valley on or near agricultural lands. Many elk have returned to the Zumwalt Prairie. Try driving the Zumwalt and Pine Creek roads and looking carefully at ridge tops. Elk can also be observed regularly along the Lostine River Road four to five miles south of Lostine, and along the Powwatka Ridge Road between18 and 27 miles north of Wallowa. All of these areas are county roads that run through private property, so respect the landowner's privacy and remain on the county road and park out of the traffic lanes while watching the elk.
Source:OregonDepartment of FlshandWildlife
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Ovine enterprise with an airstrip, is upstream from Starkey. Grande Ronde River Road winds along the river climbing at a consistent 1- to 2-percent grade. There are brief bursts of more intense incline, but they are short and inconsequential. The pavement is old but smooth, and the traffic count is significantly higher in wildlife than motorized vehicles. Th eriver and itsvegetation offer ever-changing magnificence as countless ridges and waterways meet the Grande Ronde. A leveling of the constant climb and less pleasing pavement greets riders to the meadows themselves. Though the pavement is pockmarked
TO DO LIST
and crumbly, the sculpted rocks in the form of Hoodoos, waving grasses and winding rivers are worth the continued push past the meadows to Chicken Creek. The rugged splendor of FS 51 continues and the pavement endures and improves on to Granite, Sumpter or Anthony Lakes. For those lusting after a multi-day, self-supported, bike-camping extravaganza, a route that includes FS 51, FS 73, Anthony Lakes Highway and Medical Springs Highway 203 promisesdays ofendlesspaved majesty. Notable campgrounds along the way are North Fork of the John Day River, Anthony Lake and Catherine Creek. SeeHartz/Page 2C
FLY-TYING CORNER
Register for a bicycle Stonefly nymph always a good call tourism workshop UVF is the fluorescentwavelength in bright colors that are visible at The Northeastern Oregon Bicycle Tourism Studio is hosting a workshop scheduled for 9 a.m. Oct. 22 at the Cook Memorial Library, 2006 Fourth St. in La Grande.Thegroup works in part to make Northeast Oregon a premier cycling destination. Registration is free but is required to attend the workshop. Visit www.industry.traveloregon.com for more information or to register.
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greater distance underwater. UVR isreflective ultraviolet light. The UV2 dubbings combine both UVFand UVR.Tie the UV2Fuzzy Bug Dark Stone on aNo. 12long nymph hook Slide a small brass bead up against the eye. Forthe tail, use CDCwith two strands of Krystal Flash. Build the body with black or dark brown UV2nymph dubbing and rib with fine copper wire and small Krystal Flash. Usepheasant or partridge for the hadde and finish with an ostrich herl collar.
Source:GaryLewis, for WesComNews Service
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2C —THE OBSERVER a BAKER CITY HERALD
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015
OUTDOORS 8 REC
FISHING
Fishing with an October caddis a sure way to success
'FlyFishingandWriting't cometo2ailelAuditorium
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The Eastern Oregon University Outdoor Adventure Program is sponsoring "Across the Great Divide: Bridging the Gap between Fly Fishing andWriting" at 7 p.m. Wednesday at Zabel Auditorium on the EOU campus. The multimedia presentation by local fishing guide and author Cameron Scott will focus on fly fishing, but will go beyond the river, as Scott will share photos and readings from his own works and experiences. For more information, contact EOU Outdoor Adventure Program Coordinator Michael Hatch at mhatch C eou.edu or 541-962-3621.
BIRD HUNTING
Hunting for the Hungarian partridge in Washington Early in the 1900s, this bird was successfully introduced in the United States when Out on a low hilltop on a littl erectanglecarved outof some 40,000 partridges farm ground near Rockford, were transplanted from the Washington, there's a quiet game coverts of Europe into America. place called the Mica Creek Henry Oldys, a bioloCemetery. We turned on a dirtroad past the small collec- gist of the day, wrote in his tionofgravemarkers shaded report"Introduction of the by pines and yellowed vine Hungarian Partridge into maples and wild rose and hid the United States," that the the rigs in a gully. first successful transplant Joe Biggs, aguidefrom was in 1899 at Lynnhaven, Double Barrel Ranch in the in Princess Anne County, Spokane Valley, joined us Virginia. Ninety-seven for this hunt. Bob Mulligan birds were stocked in the turned out Duchess, a fourWillamette Valley in 1900. year-old German shorthair, Some 2,000 partridges were and kept her close to heel. released in Eastern Washington over a three-year peMy cousin, Neil Lewis, carried the camera — we would riod starting around 1906. After three years, along tradeoffshooting pictures and shooting my 20-gauge the northern border of the CZ Ringneck. statethey were reported to cWe'll head to that little be "almost as plentiful as hilltop to start, then work pheasants." In my experience, this back and forth through these little washes," Biggs partridge is a bird of open whispered. farmland,preferring coverts Liesl, my almost twoin tall wild rye, native year-old pudelpointer, and grasses, milletand other Duchess worked ahead, crops. I've found them in coveysofhalfa dozen to quartering back and forth. Duchess seemed to catch as many as 15. They run ahead of the dogs then try the scent first, tightening her circles, acquiring scent, to hold or flush atop a rise. losing it and picking it up The rise can be explosive as again. As soon as she locked birdsseem topop outand up, on point, two partridges go in various directions. jumped into the air. I tipped Most, though, go the same one into chest-high rye and, direction and the birds can moments later, two more be locatedagain atop the next rise. partridges were aloft. After the shooting was I find where there are over, Lieslmade a retrieve Huns, there are hunters on her first Hungarian haunted by them. Biggs is one such, as he has chased partfldge. Perdix perdix is the scithem since he was a kid. cWe have Huns here, naentific name for the bird we affectionately call the Hun. tive to the area," Biggs said. By Gary Lewis
For WesCom News Serwce
DISEASE Continued from Page1C discovered by residents, and most carry one common theme: there is no outside indication of what killed them. "People see a white-tail that is in fine body condition and that is not rundown," Primus said."They just kind oflay down and die." The biggest problem if indeed there was a severe outbreak? There is no way to treatthe disease. "I'm always concerned that we could get an outbreak, but there is nothing we can do aboutit,"Erickson said. That leaves biologists in a place where all they can re-
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ixty-five degrees, the sun setting over the Wallowa River and not anotherfisherman orfi sherwoman anywhere to be seen. The long stalksofthissummer's grass dip into the water, which has cooled down over the course of the month. Everything has cooled down, and when everything cools down from the summer iincluding, but notli mited to barbecues, blockpartiesand basking in the sunl, it's time to fish for steelhead. Granted, barring a minor miracle, there aren't any steelhead actually swimming around on the Wallowa River today. Not yet. But with reports drifbng up from Troy and Bogan's, there is always a possibility. And possibility, when going fishing for steelhead, is all you need. Because I wasn't planning on catching a steelhead, I rigged up a two-weight fiberglass Reddington"Butter Stick" and tied on a size 8 Octobercaddis,then scrambled down the bank. Memories from last season flooded me, mostly a mish-mash of wet snow, bleak, overcast morningsand crisp,fogged-breath evenings, with days spent scrambling around from spot to spotin search ofsteelhead. I was first introduced to the magic of fly fishing with an October caddis 19 years ago on the Tucannon River in Eastern Washington. As sometimes happens, I had been catching smallish trout when suddenly the orangebodied stimulator I was casting was hoovered up by a large trout-like thing. That I stood there dumbfounded as the fish quickly spun and broke my leader
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ally do, as Matthews said, is "just have to document what your losses are and monitor it that way." Fortunately, the disease is not transferable from animal to animal, nor can humans contract it. And a deep freeze would take out the host insects and eradicatethedisease,atleast for the winter. For now, biologists encourageresidents to reportany dead deer or livestock whose death doesn't appear to be the result of foul play or predator. "Ifpeople seenotjusta single deer, but more than a singledeerthatisdead or sick with no apparent wounds, ireport it)," Erickson said.
"The habitat suits them well. They love the bluegrass fields and the wheat fields, and live out on the rolling hilltops and ridges." The grey partridge has an understated beauty with wings of white and mottled brown that allow the bird to hide by holding still. A pastel-grey on the breast blends on the head with shades ofbrown or orange. Their eyes are surrounded by a pencil-thin border of red. Flanks and breasts are splotched with markings of chocolate. We often find the birds in short, light cover. And they arealmostalways a surprise when we expect quail or pheasantinstead. We had to stop early because our dogs were tired and the weather was unseasonably warm, but we each had a bird in hand and that was enough. I took a few minutes to walk through the old cemetery. It was officially established in 1905, but there were older markers, probably all belonging to a single family. Many of the headstones only listed a first name, date ofbirth and passing. Tendrils of wind ghosted in thetreetops.Ifone inclined an ear at dusk, he might hear the partridge. Kieerr-ikk. Kieerr-ikk. Some ofthepeople atrest here, no doubt, were hunter/ farmers who welcomed the European import with the orange head and grey legs and habit of holding tight on little hilltops like this one.
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The orange October caddis is a great fly for hauling in both trout and steelhead. like it was a cobweb, and that moments afterward I began shaking and sweating as adrenaline coursed through my veins, are two things I have never forgotten. When I got back and attemptedtodescribewhat had happenedtome that day, a friend said it must have been a steelhead. And it was. An early runner off the Snake River that had made its way up the Tuc. First thing I noticed when the dust from my bank scramble deared was a number of caddis flying through the air. Big caddis. Dive bombing the water, the bank and occasionally my face. The October caddis, genus dicosmoecus, or fall caddis, is a big, orangecolored caddis flyin our local rivers that punctuates the end of September and October with some great dry fly fishing. And sure enough, not a minute after I began casting, a brightly silvered troutrolled over the fly on the surface of
the water, attempting, I suppose, to drown it. So maybe it wasn't a steelhead, butthe restof the evening's fishing was incredibly fun. At one point even punctuated by a nice 17-inch trout caught on a long cast and a swing into some deep rough water il was pretending at the time to swing the fly for steelhead and imagining the upcoming fall's fishing for steel). On a two-weight fiberglass rod it was easy to pretend I even had a steelhead on for a bit.Itwasa beautifultrout regardless, and well worth an evening's fishing. One of these Octobers, be it this one or 10 years down the road, I'd like to once again experience a steelhead taking a dry fly off the surface of the river. To be surprised by a sudden strike from an occasional fish that occasionally rises. I've heard itleavesyou weak in the knees. I've heard it changes you forever.
Mavis Hartz photo
Views such as this are common along the Grande Ronde River Road.
HARTZ Continued ~om Page1C Those who have enjoyed the wonderful jaunt from Starkey to Tony Vey Meadows but are starting to feel their legs should turn around. The zip back to Starkey
is scenic and surprisingly quick. Extreme speeds may not be reached on the return due to the gradualness of the incline, but the superhuman feeling of pedaling downhill is engaging. Those looking for more of a 55-mile ride should start at Hilgard State Park. Hilgard has copious parking,
and Highway 244 is lovely. It too winds along the Grande Ronde River, but it hosts more traffic than Grande Ronde River Road. As a connecting piece, the start of a grand adventure or the whole ride FS 51, the Grande Ronde River Road is worth
the pedal.
What you should know about household hazardous waste. HHW is anything labeled toxic, flammable, corrosive, reactive or explosive. These materials can threaten family health and the safety of pets and wildlife.
ar '
Aerosols
HgXARDO~S
Bleach Drain Cleaners Metal Polish Mothballs Oven Cleaners
Toilet BowlCleaners Ammonia-based Cleaners Mercury'Ihermometers WoodPolishes
Fertilizers Insecticides Herbicides Rodenticides Spa 8c Pool Chemicals
Waxes
RoofingCompounds
Antifreeze Batteries Motor Oil Paint Strippers8c 5inners Gasoline 8c More.
La Grande Facility: Open to any resident of the three counties every other Tuesday, 8am to 12 noon. By appointment, however, small labeled quantities accepted daily. 541-963-5459 Baker city Facility: open the first wednesday of each month, 10 am to 12 noon. By appointment only. 541-523-2626 Enterprise Facility: Open the 2nd and 4th Saturday of each month loam to 12 noon. By appointment only. 541-426-3332
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FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015
THE OBSERVER a BAKER CITY HERALD — 5C
HEALTH 8 FITNESS
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• Hospital bills for snakebites are expensive — but the reason might surprise you By Kathleen McLaughlin WesCom News Service
Three years ago this month Marsha Phelps, of Sisters, became one of the very few peoplein Oregon to bebitten by a rattlesnake. She was air-lifted fiom the Crooked River Ranch area to St. Charles Bend, where she receivedfourvialsofantivenom and spent a night under observation. The juvenile rattler's fangs struck just the tip ofher finger, but the swelling had progressed up the length ofher arm. Back at home, she felt tired fora couple ofweeks.Overthe next year, her lymph glands would swell."Otherwise, I think I got offlightly," said Phelps, who'd seen horrific photosofsnakebit e victims online. Her hospital bill also was relatively mild for a snake-
bite: about $25,000, Phelps recalled. Snakebites are notoriously expensive to treat, and an Arizona researcher has found that the antivenom itself accountsforjusta sliverof those bills. The largest factor is hospital mark-up before insurance discounts, according to a forthcoming paper by Dr. Leslie Boyer, founding director of the VIPER Institute at University ofArizona, which studies the effects of venom on humans. 'This analysis demonstrates that well over half of the astonishing hospital charges reported in the lay media are not true costs at all, but are instead attributable to the idiosyncrasies of the US. health care finance system," Boyer wrote in an article to be published by the American Journal of Medicine in February. The accepted version was published online in August. Even after big mark-ups, not all hospitals earn a profit on antivenom, Boyer said. A rural community hospital that
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Why does anxiety sometimes manifest itself with physicalsymptoms7
W enit'snot
allinyour ead • Anxiety can lead to physical symptoms Mayo Clinic News Network
Peter Haden /Cronkite News Sennce-TNS
AWestern diamondback rattlesnake assumes a defensive position at the Phoenix Herpetological Society. This species of rattlesnake doesn't live in Oregon. doesn't have much clout with insurance networks could end
up losing $1,000 per vial after the insurance discount. St. Charles Health System treated five snakebites and 28 spider bites at hospitals in Bend, Madras, Redmond and Prineville over a one-year period ending Sept. 1. The hospital charges
"When the patientis Pail or has other serious Continued ~om Page6C illnesses, it makes sense The chance ofbeing diagnosed with cancer goes up as not to screenfor diabetes you age, but competing risks, or breast or colon cancer." such as heart attacks and — Dr. Ranit Mishori, professor of family medicine, Georgetown University
benefit — preventing death &om the disease — can be elusive, especially if the cancer is growing slowly. Dr. Ranit Mishori, professor of family medicine at Georgetown University in Washington, notes that the upper age limits on screeningtestsare"populationbased." She prefers to have a discussion with each patient based on individual wishes and health status. ''When the patient is frail or hasother serious illnesses, it makes sense not to screen fordiabetes or breastor colon cancer," she said."But if you have a robust, active 75-year-old who plays tennis and you think they have another 10, 15, even 20 years ahead of them, the question of whether they should be screenedbecomes different." She also takes into account the nature of the test. Climbing onto an exam table
VOLUNTEERS Continued ~om Page6C 'You're such a big part of that interface between the public and the hospital," Null said. For Ruth Leitch, current GRH Auxiliary president, serving as a volunteer is a way to give back to her community. Leitch joined the Auxiliary in 1967 and has stayed
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"My insurance covered everything, but it was quite
spendy," Phelps said. Treating snakebites can require 20 vials of antivenom, Boyersaid,soit'seasy tosee how a bite could result in a
hospital bill over $100,000.
Boyer's research team was involved in developing two snake antivenoms, CroFab $6,023.44 per vial of snake antivenom and says it usuand Anavip, and conducted ally takes four to five vials to clinical trials on the first FDA-approved scorpion antitreata bite.Spiderantivenom venom, Anascorp. costs $60.68 per vial and Like most doctors, she treatment also requires four triedtokeep a safe distance to five vials. The only poisonous snake from the business side of the in the wild of Oregon is the drugs she researched. But she was dismayed to learn Western rattlesnake, but it's hard to determine how many afterAnascorp'sreleasethat the wholesale cost was so high people they bite. Anywhere &om 35 to 55 snakebites are that hospitals weren't using reported each year to the Or- it. With the antivenom, the egon Poison Center at Oregon victim of a scorpion sting could Health & Science University. go home fiom the ERin an That count includes bites hour, she said, but hospitals &om domestic pets and nonfound it was cheaper to keep a victim for two days while the poisonous snakes. Phelps said she was always poison wore ofI: curious about how much her Then Boyer started noticing insurance company paid for news articles about enorthe antivenom. One of the mous hospital bills for snake three friends who was hiking antivenom. Boyer said,"It's with her the day she was very easy to wave your hands bitten is a nurse who told her in the air and say,'somebody's the typical wholesale cost is greedy.' "
TESTS
strokes, are increasing faster. "So you don't have to worry so much about icancerl screening because you're more likely to die of something else," said her husband and colleague, Dr. Steven Woloshin."That's a hard conversationfordoctorsand patients to have." Schwartz and Woloshin, professorsofm edicine atthe Dartmouth Institute, have written extensively about communicating medical risk. Telling a patient she doesn't have enough time left to reap the potential benefit of ascreening testisn'talways perceived as good news. The related message, that a competing risk is more likely to get her, likewise might be hard to swallow. So Schwartz and Woloshin might instead talk about the balance of benefits and harms. The harms of cancer screening, including complicationsofa biopsy and side effectsoftreatment ifcancer is found, are "fiont-loaded," Woloshin said. The potential
$2,000 per vial.
for a Pap test might be hard for a patient with mobility issues. The benefit of the test is unlikely to outweigh the discomfort. But even cholesterol screening, which involves only a blood draw, is probably unnecessary after a certain age."At 70 or 80, will the benefit of the test be such that you want the patient to have to take a pill every day and potentially suffer its side effects?" she asked, noting thatolder patients are more sensitive to medications and more likely to suffer ill effects. There are no age limits on blood pressure screening. And taking someone's blood pressure is quick and noninvasive."Everybody gets a blood pressure reading," Mishori said, "and if it's high, we have a conversation. Do you want to be treated? If you're 50, it could make a huge difference. If you're 85, the ramifications are different. We can be more permissive in older individuals in terms ofbloodpressure and blood sugar limits." When a patient is outside the recommended age range fora screening test,M ishori said, "we have a conversation about risks and benefits.
busy with the hospital ever since. "It might not look like we do a lot, but we do plenty," she said, addressing her fellow volunteers. The volunteers reminisced on the pastfi ve decades atthecelebration, passing around a photo of the first class of the Auxiliary. Hospital stafF encouraged those who could identify members of the class to write names on copies of the photo, which was
Instead,she started contacting her many connections in the antivenin industry to gathercostdata.She called everyonefi 'om snake milkers to the people who acquire drugsforhospitalpharmacies. She created a model of a bill forahypotheticalscorpion antivenin, which would be $14,624. Seventy percent of that is attributable to hospital mark-up, according to Boyer. The next-largest category of expenseswould be acatch-all that includes miscellaneous profits, marketing costs and legalfees,Boyersaid. The cost of actually making the drug, fiom research and developmentto &eeze-drying
and bottling, would be $14,or 0.1 percent of the cost. That's despite the fact that making antivenom requires injecting horses, or some other farm animal, with the poison and then harvesting and purifymg the antibodies they produce. Although Boyer used arthopod antivenom as the model for her study, she thinks her findings apply to snake antivenom. The dollar figures would be different, she said, but the proportion ofbills attributable to hospital mark-up would be the same.
More often than not, the patientsoptnotto screen. But occasionally someone wants to have a few more years of tests." Dr. Nortin Hadler, emeritusprofessorofm edicine at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and author of"Rethinking Aging," sees even less value in screening tests. "Everybody knows their numbers," he said."They taketheirblood pressure, cholesterol, BMI 4ody mass
index), A1C iblood sugar). All these numbers speak to an element of risk for something. We need to ask: How much risk? And what's the something? Will reducing thatparticular risk matter in the overall scheme?" A Pap test indicates the risk of developing cervical cancer. But, Hadler said, "we won't do anything meaningful with a Pap smear in an older woman — it won't change the date you die." On the subject of high bloodpressure,he said:"It will increase the likelihood ofheart attack and stroke, but by how much? And is it a function of something else, like my age? The answer is yes — age is a bigger risk factor. The older you are, the
"It's gratifying to be able tohelp in some wayin our community." — Ruth Leitch, member of Grande Ronde Hospital Auxiliary since 1967 and its current president
restored by Dave Yerges. A framed print of the photo, along with several photo books, was on display. Leitch said she is proud of her
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We all experience periods of anxiety. It's the brain's way of gett ing usready tofaceor escape danger ordealwith stressful situations. For example, anxiety before exams can make one study more and, hence, do well on a test. However, at times, the anxiety can be quite severe or exaggerated in relation to the actual situation. This can lead to intense physical sensations, anxious thoughts, worries and avoidant behaviors that impact your life. An example would be skipping school the day of a test because you're so anxious. Or, another example is having a panic attack to the point that you can't take a test. But why does anxiety manifest with physical symptoms? Dr. Fliza Hussain, Mayo Clinic Health System behavioral health provider, offers this simplified explanation: The brain is an extremely powerful organ. It is, in a way, the central command center for the rest of the body and has an influence over all the different organ systems. When this central command system is hijacked by anxiety, the anxiety has &ee reign to cause havoc in the different organ systems, creating physical symptoms even though there is nothing wrong with the organ itself. Primary care physicians and emergency room doctors usually are the first line of defense. Their methodical approach to first rule out medical causes, such as thyroid, heart and other hormonal problems, and then diagnose an anxietydisorder,isa positive approach to such a diagnosis. The good news is that anxiety disorders are manageable. Medications are available to help in the short- or long-term. There also are a number of ways of managing anxiety without medication. They include reducing stress, exercising, practicing breathing exercises and using yoga techniques. Cognitive behavioral therapy, which teaches your brain to change thought patterns, can help as well. "So, when you hear,'It's an anxiety disorder,' don't despair or think no one is taking you seriously. Rejoice in the fact that there is no life-threatening medical problem causing your symptoms, and ask your doctor about the best way for to gain control over your a%ction,a says Hussain.
sooner you will die." Hadler conceded that he would "rather not have a stroke in the last years of my life, and I can reduce that risk a little bit if I normalize my blood pressure." For most of the elderly, he said, that little bit can be accomplished with the gentlest of drugsoften just a low-dose water pill — whereas "getting it truly normal through aggressive means could make you sicker, because all drugs have side effects." As to cholesterol,Hadler said, "treating high cholesterol in older well people ithat is, people who have not already had a heart attack or stroke) is unconscionable," because the potential benefit does not outweigh the risk of serious adverse events. And if you're not going to treatit,there isnoreason to test for it. The same goes for screening for Type 2 diabetes, the kind that develops later in life. According to Hadler, oral drugsthatlower blood sugar, though popular, have never been shown to improve longevity;decrease the incidence of stroke,heartattack or loss oflim bs;orprevent kidney failure or blindness. But they are associated with
fellow Auxiliary volunteers, who always have something to do. From manning the hospital gift shop and &ont information desk to calling patients to remind them of appointments and delivering floral arrangements, Leitch said they keep busy. "It's gratifying to be able to help in some way in our community," she said. "I love going to work."
occasionally serious adverse events. The task force recommends screening for Type 2 diabetes only in people with high blood pressure. But it's because hypertension is m ore dangerous in diabetics, H adler said;"it'snotto treat the diabetes." Here's one more thing you can stop worrying about: your BMI. Being overweight or even moderately obese will not take time off your allotted lifespan, Hadler said ialthough being underweight or morbidly obese
will). And those extra 10 pounds might plump out some of your wrinldes.
Come visit the
PICK'N PATCH & SIsTER SGHIGsSHABULQUs event OnFri. & Sat., Oct. 9th & 10th Sister Schic's Shabulous will run from 4-8on Fri 8 9-4on Sat. Pick 'N Patch will be open
Friday and Saturday: 9am-6pm Sunday:10am-4pm Monday-Th ursday:Byappointment Where: Pick 'N Patch, Corner of Booth Lane and LowerCove Road Sister Schic's Shabulous, 68389 Kerns Loop
What you will find: Small corn maize, several varieties of pumpkins and gourds, straw bales, corn stalks, wheat bundles. If you would like to schedule a school field trip or other event, please call the number iisted below. Like us on Facebook at
www.facebook.com tpickNparchFarm or searchPick N Patchfrom
your Facebook page.
please call 541-786-2421
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Friday, October 9, 2015 The Observer & Baker City Herald
GRANDE RONDE HOSPITAL AUXILIARY CELEBRATES A MILESTONE
24 show up for flu shot at drive-in
clinic Oct. 3 By Trish Yerges For WesCom News Service
Tim MustoeNVesCom News Servrce
Grande Ronde Hospital Foundation Board member Rhonda Sue Basso serves, from left,Auxiliary member Gai Ludviksen, Maggie Ivesters and Auxiliary member Fred Moore at a celebration of the Auxiliary's 50th anniversary last week.
The drive-through flu clinic hosted by the Center for Human Development and community partners on Oct. 3 administered 74 flu immunizations to residents in their vehicles in the parking lot behind Walmart. It was the first clinic of its kind in Union County, and an opportunity to practice mass inoculations for future health emergencies. 'The event was very successful," said Andi Walsh, community relations, grants & emergency preparedness coordinator at CHD.oWe had two evaluators from the Oregon Health Authority that said our event was very well-organized, and they were very surprised that it was our first time conducting a drivethrough flu clinic. They said it was comparableto other locations conducting their tenth drive-through flu clinic. We will take that as a'win'!"
MEDICAL SCREENINGS
• Volunteers from the Grande Ronde Hospital Auxiliary help the operation run smoothly By Kelly Ducote WesCom News Service
For more than 50 years, dedicated women — and menhave volunteered to help Grande Ronde Hospital run like clockwork. Many of those volunteers were honored last week as the hospital celebrated the Grande Ronde Hospital Foundation Auxiliary's 50th anniversary. oWe wouldn't be the same facility today were it not for your contributions," said GRH CEO Jim Mattes. Since its founding in April 1965,Auxili ary members have performeda variety oftasksto aid medical personnel and staf, and provide a fiiendly atmosphere to patients. Through the years, the Auxiliary has raised money to buy portable defibrillators, an X-ray machine and exercise equipment for the Rehabilitation Department. Mattes noted that the Auxiliary was founded in the midst of major changes, including the onsetofMedi care and Medicaid. Similarly, he noted, the hospital is again in the midst of major changes in terms ofhealth care reform. Mattes said GRH is well-positioned and is "bucking the trend ofhealthcare reform."He said it's important that the hospital has remained independent as
By Judy Peres Chicago Tnbune
Tim MustoeNVesCom News Service
Grande Ronde Hospital Foundation ManagerWIII Simons admires a restored photograph ofthe first Auxiliary members. Volunteers at the 50th anniversary celebration were encouraged to help hospital staff identify those founding members by writing names on copies of the photos on each of the tables. hospitals around the country are consolidated into hospital networks. And with the changes, Mattes said, the hospital needs volunteers just as it always has, if not more. "Our volunteers do more than they've ever done," he said. 'You're deeply appreciated, and
we want you to know it." GRH Foundation Chair Glenn Null, in addressing those who attendedthe celebration,noted that the Auxiliary gave the Foundation its first gift, $1,000, when the Foundation was established in 1969.
LAKE OSWEGO — The Oregon Association of Hospitals and Health Systems and its data subsidiary Apprise Health Insights announced this week that the ORHospitalGuide.org website now features searchable, comparable hospital financial and utilization data for every hospital in the state. This is the second phase of a larger hospital transparency effort and complements the comparable hospital quality data already available on the website. ORHospitalGuide.org, which launched in March 2015, now provides finance and utilization data for all Oregon hospitals, in addition to quality of care data — all of which patients can use to learn about their local community hospital. This new searchable online platform will replace the traditional hardcopy community hospital report that OAHHS and Apprise Health Insights have published since 2009. "Today we continue to deliver on our com-
"We wouldn't be the same
facility today were it notfor your contributions." — Jim Mattes, CEO, Grande Ronde Hospital, thanking members of the Grande Ronde Hospital Auxiliary for 50 years of service
Feeling sorry for yourselfbecause you can no longer do all the things you used to do? Because your joints are creaky and your strength and stamina seem to be dribbling out along with your memory? Take heart in the fact that growing old comes with a silver lining of sorts: You can cross a bunch of things off your health-related to-do list, includingroutine screening tests for cancer and other health issues. According to the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force, average-risk folks can stop getting mammograms for breast cancerand colonoscopiesforcolon cancer around 75. And, after 65, most women can forgetabout Pap testsforcervical cancer. iThe task force does not recommend prostate cancer screening for men of any age; but the American Urological Association, which suggests that men over 55 discuss screening with their doctors, sets an age limit of 69.l "Some people are so indoctrinated about screening — we're taught that's what socially responsible people do — thatitcan behard to give up,"said Dr. Lisa Schwartz of the Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice in Lebanon, N.H.
See Volunteers/Page 5C
Searchable database for hospitals
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Abenefit of age: Fewer medical tests needed
mitment to hospital transparency," said Andy Davidson, OAHHS presidentand CEO. Key data features on ORHospitalGuide.org: Key indicators in graph form for individual hospitals including: • Margins • Payer mix •Uncompensated care in percentage and dollars Key indicators for comparing one or more hospitals including: • Average length of stay, average daily census, occupancy rate, surgery mix, and FTEs per adjusted occupied bed. • Charity care as a percentage of total charges, total uncompensated care as a percentage of total charges, collected charges as a percent of total charges, operating margin, and total margin. • Quality of care data reported to the federal government
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See Tests/Page 5C
MARIC ONYOUR CALENDAR
'Eating for Health' seminar continues Oct 20 in Baker City Elizabeth Smithson of Baker City will present a community health seminar Tuesday, Oct. 20, on "Seeds, Nuts and Healthy Fats" as part two of her "Eating for Health Series." She will give two presentations that day:noon to1 p.m. and 6 p.m .to 7 p.m . Both will be in the conference room at St. Luke's EOMA, 395017th St. in Baker City. Smithson will talk about how seeds and nuts are some of nature's ideal foods, and ways to incorporate them into your diet. The class is free. Advance registration helps with planning — please RSVP by calling the YMCA, 541-523-9622.
Too much of a goodthing Takingexcessive amounts ofsome vitamins and minerals can cause harmful reactions.
Some to watch • Vitamin A (preformed from supplements or theraputic retinoids) • Iron (adult men, postmenopausal women at greatest overdose risk) • Zinc • lodine Source: U.S. National Institutes of Health, TNS Photo Service
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Girls n Girls n Molly n Molly n Bounty Hunter Beyond Scared Be ond The F irst 48 The First 48 The F irst 48 The First 48 The First 48 A&E 52 28 Bounty Hunter B o unty Hunter y Scared Beyond Scared The First 48 Walking (:29) The Walking (:29) The Walking (:29) The Walking (:28) The Walking (:28) The Walking (:28) The Walking (:28) The Walking (:32) The Walking (:31) The Walking (:31) The Walking (:31) The Walking Walking AMC 60 20 Dead De a d "Slabtown" Dead "Self-Help" De ad cc Dead "Crossed" De ad "Coda" D ead cc Dead "Them" Dea d cc Dead cc Dead "Forget" Dea d "Spend" D e ad -9 C ops cc R ugge d Justice RuggedJustice NorthWoodsLaw NorthWoodsLaw NorthWoodsLaw NorthWoodsLaw NorthWoodsLaw RuggedJustice Rugged Justice River Monsters n ANP 24 24 K-9Cops cc K Doc PJ Mic key Tomor- Best Best Liv and Liv and K.C. 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Perfect Match (2015) Danica McKellar HALL 87 35 L ucy L u cy Middle Middle Golden Golden Golden Golden All of My Heart AmazingJere Osteen Feel Prank The Jacksons T h e Jacksons yyh i fney (2015) Yaya Dacosta. cc **r, TheSecret Life of Bees (2008) cc A DayLate and a Dollar Short (2014) LIFE 29 33 In Touch AISponge- Sponge- Power AISponge- Sponge- Sponge TeenageAl- AlAlSpo nge- SpongeSponge- Sponge- *** The SpongeBob Spon ge- Henry Game Thunder- ThunderNICK 27 26 Bob Bob Rangers vinnn!!! vinnn!!! Bob Bob Bob M ut. vi n nn!!! vinnn!!! vinnn!!! Bob Bob Bob Bob Squar e panfs Movie(2004) Bob Dang er S hakersmans mans Quest Horns Paid Paid Nu 21 Day Blower Cooker Paid Co l lege Football Oregon State at Arizona. (Taped) Cooker Blower Women's College Soccer Ship F o otball ROOT 37 18 AntiFootball Paid FanDuel Off Engine Truck Muscle ** Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen(2009) Shia LaBeouf. n * r, G .l. Joer The Rise of Cobra(2009, Action) n Cops n Bar Rescue n SPIKE 42 29 Total Paid Pro- Amazing Joel I nTouchAmerican Muscle Gold Rush n cc Epic Mancave Epic Mancave Buying Buying Buying Buying Naked and Afraid Naked and Afraid Naked and Afraid Alaska: The Last TDC 51 32 gram F acts Osteen n "Forsaken" cc n cc Burlds n cc Builds n cc Alaska Alaska Alaska Alaska 'Lord of the Rats" "Surthrive" cc Frontier n cc Sex y ! 90 Day Fiancen 90 Day Fiance n 90 Day Fiance n 90 Day Fiance n 90 Day Fiance n 90 Day Fiance n Say Yes Say Yes SayYes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes T LC 49 39 P aid P a i d N u Law & Order Law & Order Law & Order La w & Order Law & Order Law & Order "Gun **r,Shaft(2000)Samuel L. Jackson, *** Gran Torino(2008,Drama) Clint Eastwood. A **r,S.yyA.T. (2003) Samuel TNT 57 27 Juvenile" n show" n "Tabula Rasa" n "Empire" n "Ambitious" n "Admissions" n Vanessa L. Williams. cc (DVS) veteran faces his longtime prejudices. L. Jackson. cc Mysteries at the Mysteries at the Uncommon Biz a rre Foodsl Food Paradrse Food Paradise cc Food Paradise «Food Paradise cc Halloween Fright 50/50 (N) 50/50 (N) Big Time Big Time Most TerrifyingTRAV 53 14 Museum cc "London"cc Museum cc Grounds cc Zimm e rn House: Revealed RV RV Amer i ca 4 P Chris Paid Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVULaw &Order:SVU Law & Order:SVU Law & Order:SVU Law & Order:SVU Law & Order: SVU Law& Order: SVU Law & Order:SVU Law & Order: SVU USA 58 16 Coffee! Paid ** Ghostsof Grrlfnends Past *** Crazy,Stuprd, Love. (2011)Stevecarell. **TheChange-Up(2011,comedy) Th e ory Theory WTBS 59 23 Friends Friends Friends Friends **r, It's Comphcated(2009) Meryl Streep. (:15) **r,Unbroken (201 4)Jack O'Connell. San (:15) ***r,TheLEGOMovie n RealTime, Bill *** Dolphin Tale 2(2014) n cc (4:50) **r,Unbroken (2014) n HBO 518 551 (6:35) *** Get OnUp(2014) n **r, CampX-Ray (2014) n cc ** Failure to Launchn (:10) *** Mission: Impossible III (:15)Prophet's Prey(2015) n cc SHOW 578 575 (6:00)Bandits n Inside the NFL n 60 Minutes Sports **r, Serendipity (2001) cc
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In moving forward, "Fargo" is going backward.
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America's Funniest Once Upon a Time Blood & Oil "Hustle (:01) Quantico KATU (:35) "Siege Perilous" (N) and Flow" (N) n "Cover" (N) cc Home Videos n News C a stle The Great British Masterpiece Classic Masterpiece ClassicThe Widower (N) cc Great Estates Scot3 13 Baking Show cc (N) cc land "Kincardine" (N) cc 60 Minutes (N) n cc Madam Secretary The Good Wife "In- CSI: Cyber "Heart News Game 6 6 (N) n cc nocents" (N) cc Me" (N) n cc On! NFL Football San Francisco Sports Sunday Grant Dateline NBC n cc KGW Straight 8 8 49ers at New York Giants. (N) Getaway News Talk T he Bob ' s Simp- Brooklyn Family Last Man 10 O'Clock News (N)Oregon Love12 12 Grinder Burgers sorts Nine G u y (N) Sports Raymond Big Bang Big Bang Rookie Blue "Broad Blue Bloods "Critical Blue Bloods Danny Oregon Bens Theory Theory Daylight" n cc Con d ition" n shoots a cop. n Sports inger The Secret Tapes ofthe O.J.Case A&E 52 28 The First 48 (:02) O.J. Speaks: The Hidden Tapes n (:31) The Walking Dead Daryl The Walking Dead Rick and the (:32) Talking Dead ccWalking AMC 60 20 Walking Dead f i nds trouble while on a run. o t hers struggle. cc Dead ANP 24 24 River Monsters n Rugged Justice n River Monsters n River Monsters n Rugged Justice n Girl Liv and *** Monsters University(2013, Comedy) (9:50) G i r l Best Austi n & DISN 26 37 Meets Maddie Voices of Billy Crystal.'G' cc Bunk'd Meets F r i ends Ally n S p o rtsCenter (N) (Live) cc S p o rtsCenter cc ESPN 33 17 WNBA Basketball SportsCenter (N) (Live) cc ** yyhaf toExpect yyhen You'reExpecting FAM 32 22 *** PitchPerfect (2012) Anna Kendrick *** Iron Man 3 3(2013, Action) Robert Downey Jr F X 6 5 1 5 (5:30)Iron Man 2 ** * Iron Man Har v estMoon(2015) Jessy Schram Golden Golden HALL 87 35 So youSaid yes(2015) Kellie Martin. Family That Preys LIFE 29 33 Tyler Perry's the Family That Preys cc Tyler Perry's-Marriage Counselor Henry Sponge- Sponge- Sponge- Full Full Full Full Friends Friends NICK 27 26 Danger Bob cc Bob Bob House House House H o use cc High School Football Wilson at Capital ROOT 37 18 (6:30) College Football Teams TBA Bar Rescue n Bar Rescue n Bar Rescue (N) n Bar Rescue n SPIKE 42 29 Bar Rescue n Alaska: The Last Alaska: The Last Alaska: The Last Naked and Afraid Alaska: The Last TDC 51 32 Frontier n cc Frontier Exposed Frontier (N) cc (N) n cc Frontier n cc T LC 49 39 Say Yes Say Yes Sister Wives cc S i ster Wives (N) n (:01) 90 Day Fiance Swipe Swipe **r,S.yyA.T. **r, TheBookof Eli (2010) Denzel Wash (:15) ** The Losers(201 0,Action) Jeffrey TNT 57 27 (5:30) (2003) ington, GaryOldman. cc (DVS) Dean Morgan, Zoe Saldana. cc Most TerrifyingMost TerrifyingMost TerrifyingMost TerrifyingMost TerrifyingTRAV 53 14 America 5 America 6 America 4 America 5 America 6 USA 58 16 Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Mod Fam Mod Fam WTBS 59 23 Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang The Change-Up The Leftovers (N) Green. Doll & Last Le f t overs HBO 518 551 (:10) **r,Focus (201 5)Will Smith. The A f fair n cc Homeland (N) n The Affair (N) cc Homeland cc SHOW 578 575 Homeland cc
The Emmy- and Golden Globe-winning FX mystery-drama series inspired by the Coen brodcers' Oscar-winning 1996 movie smrts
®
its second season Monday, Oct. 12, but it continues in the form of a newly cast prequel
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to the first round's events. A major link is Lou Solverson, played as a redred lawman in Season I by Kefth Carradine, but now seen in
his younger incarnation — portrayed by Patrick Wilson t"Insidious") — as a Vieucam veteran working as a Midwestern state uooper in the late 1970s. He becomes enmeshed in a case connecting several sutes as well as n obsters, smaller•
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time crooks and a young couple (K!rsten Dunst and "Friday Night Lights" alum Jesse Plemons). Numerous odcer characters factor
in, represented by an impressive ensemble dcat also includes Ted Danson, Jean Smart, Brad Garrett t"Everybody Loves Raymond"), Jeffrey Donovan ("Burn Notice"), Bokeem Woodbine, Nick Ofrerman ("Parks and Recreation" ), Adam Arkin and Kieran Culkin. In adding South Dakota to Mfnnesou as a locadon this season, executive producer Noah Hawley notes North Dakota was used sparingly in dce original movie, "but dcey call it 'Fargo,' in my mind, because the word itself is so evocadve of a place ... the sort of tundra where civilizadon meets dce wilderness. So, dce name Fargo is not only evocative of a place, it's evocadve of a kind of story — a true crime story that isn't true, where truth is stranger than fiction." Familiar with Minnesota via her many relatives who hail from it, Dunst (in her first series role since
"ER" almost 20 years ago) introduces her "Fargo" alter ego Peggy Blumquist as a small-town beaudcian with simple wants and needs. However, she ultimately reinforces the franchfse's message dcat not everything is necessarily what it seems.
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Anthony Bourdain Varied Programs Man v. Man v. Food Paradise Food Paradise Varied Programs TRAV 53 14 No Reservations Food Food Law & Order: SVU Law &Order: SVU Law & Order: SVULaw & Order: SVULaw & Order: SVULaw &Order:SVU Law & Order:SVU Law &Order:SVU Law & Order:SVU USA 58 16 Varied Programs C l eve C leve Amer. Amer. Amer. Amer. Varied Programs WTBS 59 23 Married Married Married Married King K i n g King K in g Mov ie V a ried Programs Movie Varied Programs HBO 518 551 (6:20) Movie (:45) Movie Va r ied Programs SHOW 578 575Movie Varied Programs
Weekday Movies A American Gangster *** (2007) Denzel Washington. A chauffeurbecomes Harlem's most-powerful crime boss. «(3:30) AMC Tue. 4:30 p.m., Wed. 1 p.m. Begin Again *** (2013) Keira Knightley. An ex-music producer and a singer form a life-changing bond.A «(1:45) SHOW Tue. 1 p.m.
C The Case Against 8 *** (2014) Ted Olson. Activists fight California's ban on same-sex marriage.A « (2:00) HBO Fri. 2 p.m. Charlie's Angels *** (2000) Cameron Diaz. Three nubile crimefighters must solve a kidnapping.A «(1:45) HBO Mon. 10 a.m. Cocaine Cowboys Reloaded ** * (2006) Drug lords invade
G GBF *** (2013) Michael J. Willett. Trendy teens race to be the first with a gay best friend.A «(1:35) SHOW Mon. 11:30 a.m.
H Happy Feet *** (2006) Voices of Elijah Wood. Animated. An emperor penguin expresses himself through tap-dancing.A «(1:50) HBO Wed. 7 a.m. Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone *** (2 001) Daniel Radcliffe. An orphan attends a school of witchcraft and wizardry. (3:30)FAM Fri. 3:30 p.m. Independence Day *** (1 996) Will Smith. Eaithlings vs. evil aliens in 15-mile-wide ships. «(3:00) AMC Mon. 2 p.m., Mon. 5 p.m.
K Kick-Ass *** (2010) Aaron Johnson. An ordinary teen decides to become a superhero.A (2:30) SPIKE Wed. 12 p.m.
1980s Miami. A «(2:40) SHOW
Mon. 1:05 p.m.
D The Dark Knight **** (2 008) Christian Bale. Batman battles a vicious criminal known as the Joker. « (3:30) AMC Wed. 4:30 p.m.
E Elysium *** (2013) Matt Damon. In 2159, the wealthy live aboard a luxurious space station. (2:30) FX Thu. 5:30 p.m.
F The First Wives Club *** (1 996) Goldie Hawn. Three women take revenge after their husbands dump them. «(2:00) LIFE Mon. 8 a.m.
The LEGO Movie ***i ( 2 014) Voices of Chris Pratt. Animated. An ordinary LEGO figurine must help stop atyrant's plan.A «(1:45) HBO Thu. 8:45 a.m.
M The Matrix Reloaded *** (2 003) Keanu Reeves. Freedom fighters revolt against machines. «(3:00) AMC Mon. 11 a.m. Mission: Impossible III *** (2006) Tom Cruise. Agent Ethan Hunt faces the toughest villain of his career.A «(2:15) SHOW Wed. 8:45 a.m., Wed. 4:15 p.m. Monsters University *** (2013) Voices of Billy Crystal. Animated. At first rivals, Mike and Sulley became
the best of pals. A «(1:55) DISN Mon. 10 a.m.
N The Nightmare Before Christmas ** * * ( 1993) Voices of Danny Elfman. Animated. Halloweentown's leader aims to kidnap Santa.A « (1:30) DISN Thu. 1:30 p.m.
R Rush Hour *** (1998) Jackie Chan. Mismatched police partners seek a kidnapped girl.A «(1:45) HBO Wed. 12:30 p.m.
S St. Vincent *** (2 014) Bill Murray. A bawdy misanthrope mentors hisyoung neighbor.A «(1:45) SHOW Mon. 9:45 a.m., Mon. 5:15 p.m., Fri. 7:05 a.m., Fri. 4:30 p.m. Snowpiercer ***i ( 2 013) Chris Evans. Survivors of a second ice age live aboard a supeitrain.A cc (2:10) SHOW Wed. 6:20 p.m. The SpongeBob Squarepants Movie *** (2004) Voices of Tom Kenny. Animated. SpongeBob must find King Neptune's stolen crown.A «(1:45) NICK Mon. 2 p.m. The Truman Show ***i ( 1 998) Jim Carrey. Cameras broadcast an unwitting man's life.A «(1:45) HBO Wed. 10:45 a.m.
Veronica Mars *** (2014) Kristen Bell. Veronica returns home to help Logan, who's a murder suspect. A « (1:55) HBO Mon. 11:45 a.m. The Way *** (2010) Martin Sheen. A father travels to France to claim the body of his son.A « (2:05) SHOW Tue. 7:25 a.m.
MONDAY EVENING
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