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About Illinois Valley news. (Cave City, Oregon) 1937-current | View Entire Issue (May 12, 2004)
Illinois Valley News, Cave Junction, OR Wednesday, May 12, 2004 RAIN OR SHINE: Yards for sale / Some with houses! See Mike Palmer Realty today! 596- 2026 in O’Brien. PR47-tfc SERVICES THE FINISHING TOUCH CLEANING SERVICE: Custom- ized cleaning to your specifications — commercial, residen- tial, rentals, new con- struction, windows, local references, licensed, bonded and insured. Phone 592- 5270. C42-tfc RENEW yourself this spring. Experience the benefits of MASSAGE. Tina Haemmerlein, licensed massage therapist (OBMT #9280). 592-6190 or massagether- apy@cavenet.com. TH7-3p SHEET METAL If it’s SHEET METAL, We’ll Make It! ANNUAL YARD SALE Please come to Valley Evangelical Free Church, 498 Laurel Rd., Friday, Saturday, May 21 and 22, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. EFC8-2p YARD SALE Must sell. 125 Floyd Lane, halfway up Rocky- dale. Plants, jewelry, clothes, blown glass. 1991 Saturn, $500. Friday the 14th, Sat- urday the 15th. Must sell all. 592-4752 DF8-1p MULTI-FAMILY YARD SALE May 14 through May 22, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. all week. 3835 Lake- shore Drive, Selma (across from Deer Creek Grange). Our stuff could be your treasures. DA8-2p WANTED ESTATE SALE of ex- mayor Sully Sullivan Friday and Saturday, May 14 and 15, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. only. 229 Honeybee Lane. No early sales. Boxes of dry survival food, lots of good tools, household items, all priced to sell. AS8-1p GROWING FAMILY SEEKS serviceable dressers and shelves, cheap or free. Will pick up. Please call Kate, 592-2214 KD8-1-p BIG CARPORT SALE Rain or shine. Gas clothes dryer, TV, plants, lots of miscellaneous. 1861 Laurel Rd. 9 a.m. Friday and Saturday. EL8-1p FOR SALE MULTI-FAMILY yard sale in the parking lot of 200 Lister St., across from the post office, Saturday 9 - 3, Sunday 10 - ?. SP8-1p *Seamless Gutters *Duct Work & Fittings *Roof Flashing *Hard-to-Find Items *Fabrication *Installation DOWN & OUT SEAMLESS GUTTERS 592-3391 License #94699 D&O7-tfc HELP! Our stock is multiplying faster than we can find room. Rattan living room set and dining set, 2 antique secre- tary desks, 6 dining sets, 2 sofas, 2 or- gans, crib, clawfoot tub, Hoosier cabinet, gun cabinet, china hutch, 2 refrigerators, 2 bedroom sets - 1 vintage, queen mates bed, clocks, lamps, glassware, kitchenware, tools, CDs, DVDs, movies, model trains, drums, guitar, baritone horn, stereos, TVs, fine jewelry - gold, silver costume, furs leath- ers, fishing-camping- sporting gear, toys, collectables/vintage items, and more arriving daily. Call or come by Darn Near Everything, 136 S. Redwood Hwy., Cave Junction. 592- 5255. Closed Sun- days. DNE8-1p 10-INCH BANDSAW and other power tools, hand tools and golf clubs. All must go. Phone 592-2154 evenings. LR8-1p Antiques, tools, furni- ture, appliances, ETC. Also property - 5 1/2 acres. Cash. 8 to 5:30, June 14 to 16, 21 to 23, 5353 Holland Loop Rd. PV8-2p EXOTIC CAT CAGE Chain link, 16’x24’ with entry. Complete. Can deliver. $2,500 592-6258 TM7-2p STUFF 4 SALE: Twin bed, $75. 2.5 hp 10” table saw, $225. 16” Delta vari- able speed scroll saw, $85. 10” 2.5 hp radial arm saw, $150. 10” Rand mi- ter saw, $95. 10” Delta miter saw, $150. Two 1/2” elec- tric routers, $50 each. 7 1/4” Skil saw, $40. Electric hand planer, $85. Air brad nailer, $65. Cash, no checks. Offers? 592- 2876 KP7-2p SATURDAY MAY 15 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the 50 mph sign go- ing out of Kerby. If it is wet, forget it. CB8-1p MOVING SALE all week long, 9 to 4, next 3 weeks. 610 S. Junction Ave. MS8-3p MOVING SALE at 462 S. Junction Ave. Beds, carseats, furni- ture, clothes, shoes and more. Cancel if raining. Friday, Sat- urday, Sunday, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. RS8-1p MONSTER SALE: MOVING, MULTI- FAMILY, GRAD- NIGHT SENIORS Appliances, furniture, clothes. 1981 Mer- cedes 280E, $1,000. Saturday and Sun- day May 15, 16, 8 - 5. No early shows. 18247 Redwood Hwy, Selma. A por- tion of proceeds go to Grad Night Party. JK8-1c FRIDAY AND SATURDAY. Toyota truck, guns and ammo, water-well pump, computers, clothes, kitchen, fish- ing, tools, lots of mis- cellaneous. 142 Hol- ton Creek Rd., Kerby GL8-1p AUTOMOTIVE NOVUS REPAIR for stone-damaged wind shields prevents fur- ther cracking, re- stores optical clarity. Free repairs for most insured drivers, de- ductibles waived, we come to your car. (541) 848-2225. (800) 848-2225. N46-July 19p 1974 VW SUPER BEETLE Runs, $700. 597-2175 CG8-1p PERSONALS A+ MINI STORAGE needs to have any- one who knows LES or JOSH GARDNER to inform us of their address or where- abouts. Please contact either us at (541) 592-6855 or the Gardners and inform them that if their property is not removed from our premises by May 15, 2004, it will be dis- posed of. LB5-4c HAVING A DRINK- ING problem? Per- haps Alc oholics Anonymous can help — Cave Junction 592-6258 or 592- 2901. Sunday 8 p.m. at Immanuel United Methodist Church. Tuesday, 7 p.m. book study at St. Matthias Episcopal Church. Wednesday, 7 p.m. men’s meet- ing at Episcopal Church. Thursday 7 p.m. at Methodist Church. Saturday 10 a.m. Women’s meet- ing at I.V. Family Resource Center. AA-tfc NOTICE METAPHYSICAL STUDY CLASS First and third Tues- days, 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. at the I.V. Family Coalition (around back). For information phone 592-2901. BS5-2p NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING This is to give notice that on Monday, May 24, 2004 at 7:30 p.m. in the Council Cham- bers of the City Hall, 22 W. Lister St., Cave Junction, the Common Council, in accordance with the Land Use Hearing Rules and ORS 197.763, will hold a Public Hearing to consider an applica- tion by Fountain of Life Assembly of God for a Conditional Use Permit for a Christian counseling and administration office at 481 S. Junction Ave. more particu- larly described as Assess or’s Map 39-08-21-DA, Tax Lot 1000. Possible actions include Approval, Approval with Conditions, Dis- approval, Table, or Continue. Publish May 12, ‘04 MEETING NOTICE The Three Rivers School District Board of Directors will meet in special session, Wednesday, May 12, 2004, beginning at 6:30 p.m. at the District Office, 8550 New Hope Road, Grants Pass, Josephine County, Oregon. Publish May 12, ‘04 Check out OCANs online at classifieds.oregon.com! YARD SALES TOP MOVIES TRUSTEE’S NOTICE OF SALE TRUSTEE’S NOTICE OF SALE Reference is made to that certain trust deed made by Anthony L. Bovis and Brenda Bovis, as grantor, to Glen H. Prohaska, as trustee, in favor of Conseco Finance Servicing Corporation, as beneficiary, dated June 1, 2001, recorded on June 20, 2001 in the records of Josephine County, Oregon Instrument No. 01-11139 covering the following described real property situated in the above- mentioned county and state, to wit: SEE ATTACHED EXHIBIT A Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the said real property to satisfy the obligation secured by said trust deed and a notice of default has been recorded pur- suant to Oregon Revised Statutes 86.735(3); the default for which the foreclosure is made is grantor’s failure to pay when due the following sums: Four monthly payments of $1,399.19 each due for the months of October 2003 through January 2004, with inter- est accruing thereon at the contract rate of 9.99% per annum or $43.26 per diem until paid in full, plus costs and attorneys fees. By reason of said default the beneficiary has declared all sums owing on the obligation secured by said trust deed immedi- ately due and payable, said sums being the following, to-wit: Principal $158,069.46 Interest as of December 1, 2003: $5,147.94 Foreclosure Guarantee $600.00 Beneficiary is also entitled to costs and attorney fees. WHEREFORE, notice hereby is given that the undersigned trustee will on Friday, June 18, 2004 at the hour of 1 o’clock, p.m., in accord with the standard of time established by ORS 187.110, at the Josephine County Courthouse, 500 NW 6 th and C Street, City of Grants Pass, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the said described real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution by grantor of the said trust deed, together with any interest which the grantor or grantor’s successors in interest acquired after the execution of said trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expenses of sale, including a reason- able charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that any person named in ORS 86.753 has the right, at any time prior to five days be- fore the date last set for the sale, to have this foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of the principal as would not then be due had no default occurred) and by curing any other default complained of herein that is capable of being cured by tendering the performance required under the obligation or trust deed, and in addition to paying said sums or tendering the performance necessary to cure the default, by paying all costs and expenses actually incurred in enforcing the obligation and trust deed, together with trustee’s and attor- ney’s fees not exceeding the amounts provided by said ORS 86.753. In construing this notice, the singular includes the plural, the word “grantor” includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other person owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by the trust deed, and the words “trustee” and “beneficiary” include their respective successors in interest, if any. DATED 13th day of February, 2004 Laura J. Walker, Trustee State of Oregon, County of Multnomah ss: I, the undersigned attorney of record for the Plaintiff, certify that the foregoing is an exact and complete copy of the original trustee’s notice of sale 1. “Kill Bill Vol. 2,” starring Uma Thurman Rated: R 2. “13 Going on 30,” Jennifer Gar- ner PG-13 3. “Man on Fire,” Denzel Washing- ton R 4. “Ella En- chanted,” Anne Hathaway PG 5. “The Punisher,” John Travolta R 6. “The Passion of the Christ,” Jim Caviezel R 7. “Connie and Carla,” Nia Var- dalos PG-13 8. “The Whole Ten Yards,” Bruce Willis PG-13 9. “Hell Boy,” Ron Perlman PG-13 10. “The Alamo,” Patrick Wilson PG-13 (c) 2004 DBR Media, Inc. MEETING NOTICE Illinois Valley Fire District Board of Directors Meeting May 13, 2004 7:00 p.m. The Board will meet at Cave Junction City Hall, Cave Junction, Oregon for its regular meeting. Items to be considered include: Annexation of Prop- erty into Fire District, and any other matter that may arise after this publication. 1. CALL TO ORDER - President Downing 2. F l a g salute (please remove hats) - President Downing 3. ROLL CALL - Ad- ministrative Assis- tant Beards 4. APPROVAL OF April 8, 2004 MIN- UTES - President Downing 5. APPROVAL OF BILLS AND FI- NANCIAL RE- PORTS - Presi- dent Downing 6. C O R R E S P O N - DANCE 7. C H I E F ’ S RE- PORT 8. U N F I N I S H E D B U S I N E S S NEW BUSINESS 1. Annexation of Property into Fire District 9. ITEMS NOT ON THE AGENDA 10.AGENDA SUG- GESTIONS FOR NEXT MEETING 11.A N N O U N C E - MENT OF NEXT MEETING - June 17, 2004 12.ADJOURNMENT William J. Lehman Attorney for said Trustee (The Board reserves the right to hold an executive session at this this meeting) Publish April 26, May 5, 12, 19, 2004 Publish May 12, ‘04 O regon C lassified A dvertising N etwork YOUR AD WILL RECEIVE CLOSE TO 2,000,000 EXPOSURES FOR ONLY $230! Oregon Classified Advertising Network is a service of the Oregon Newspaper Publishers Association. Week of May 10, 2004 Place your newspaper contact info here. Illinois Valley News 321 S. Redwood Hwy., Cave Junction, OR. 97523 Building Materials M & W CUSTOM pole buildings: 20x30x10, $2,744; 24x36x10, $3,491; 30x48x10, $4,887. F.O.B., many other building sizes. Kits, built, financing. Free brochure. 1-800-547-1714, www.MWBSC.com. Business Opportunities ARE YOU making $1,000 per week? All cash vending routes with prime locations available now. Under $9,000 investment required. Call Route Crafters, toll-free (24-7) 1-888-333-2254. LOG HOME dealers wanted. Great earning potential, excellent profits, protected territory, lifetime warranty. American made, honest value. Call Daniel Boone Log Homes, 1-888-443-4140. WA N T TO R E A C H n e a r l y 2 , 0 0 0 , 0 0 0 Oregonians? Try the Oregon Classified Advertising Network! Call this paper today, and ask about an OCAN! Employment Opportunities COOL TRAVEL job. Entry level positions, 18+, no experience necessary. 2 weeks paid training, transportation, lodging provided, return transportation guaranteed. $500 signing bonus. Success Express, 1-877-646-5050. DRIVERS...NEW speed-65mph! $2,500 experienced driver sign on bonus. New trainee pay. Van, flatbed, autohaul and heavy haul. CDL training available. Swift Tr a ns por t a t i on, 1- 800- 800- 4400, www.swifttruckingjobs.com. DRIVERS/OWNER/OPERATORS $500 Sign-On Bonus. Two pay packages. Free cargo, liability insurance. 15 months experience and 12 months experience flatbed. Sammons Trucking, 1-800-457-2349 or 1-866-329-6397. SECRET SHOPPERS NEEDED for store evaluations. Get paid to shoplocal businesses. Flexible hours. Email Required C a l l 5 a m - 7 p m P S T. P r o S h o p p e r s , 1-800-585-9024, ext 6188. TRUCK SCHOOL - US Truck Driving School since 1959. 3 week - 160 CDL Program. Financing available, OAC. Weekly starts, tuition reimbursement. Call Phil or Bob: 1-866-268-7854, Troutdale, Oregon. Page 14 TRIVIA TIME By WALTER BRANCH 1. What former school teacher introduced us to "The Vatican Rag"? 2. What African tribe did Albert Luthuli, winner of the 1960 Nobel Peace Prize, belong to? 3. What did fashion critic Mr. Blackwell say was "unclean and unpleasant. It's also impossible for women over 35"? 4. What Charlton Heston sci-fi movie was set in Manhattan in the year 2022? 5. What comic-strip character did Joe Corntassel take up with? 6. Which member of the Beatles appeared in denim on the "Abbey Road" album cover? 7. What song got the worst-ever rating on "American Bandstand"? 8. How many times was Nikita Khrushchev married? 9. Who starred in "Owen Marshall: Coun- selor at Law"? 10. What was the second U.S. state to legalize gambling casinos? Trivia Time Answers: 1. Tom Lehrer; 2. The Zulus; 3. Going braless; 4. "Soylent Green"; 5. Little Orphan Annie; 6. George Harrison; 7. "The Chipmunk Song"; 8. Two; 9. Arthur Hill; 10. New Jersey (c) 2004 DBR Media, Inc. THE SAVVY SENIOR By CAROL MARTIN Lawyers killing health care? (Created by Mary Mahoney) Americans suddenly see doctors fleeing from their profession. Bureauc- racy, paperwork, excessive medical litigation, and skyrocketing liability in- surance costs are forcing doctors to change specialties, move their prac- tices, or leave health care altogether. One reason health care is in seri- ous crisis: skyrocketing insurance pre- miums. They drive doctors away. For example, Mississippi anticipates losing 20 percent of its doctors in the next year. Las Vegas, Nev. will lose 10 per- cent. That is a crisis. Hospitals are being closed. A Ne- vada trauma center closed for 10 days because surgeons could not afford insurance premiums. Some annual rates had risen from $40,000 to $200,000. The nearest equivalent trauma center is five hours away, seri- ously threatening the lives of patients needing emergency care. Other states face similar problems. Patients are being subjected to additional, and often unnecessary, testing simply because doctors are threatened by possible lawsuits at every turn. In fact, 79 percent of doc- tors said they ordered more tests than they normally would, for fear of law- suits. Patients who are injured by bad doctors or institutions should be able to recover proper damages. But we have a badly broken system of litiga- tion explosions that are not serving the best interest of all patients across the country. States that have reasonable caps on non-economic damages appear to have experienced real health-care cost savings. If these caps were ap- plied nationally, studies based on the experience of certain states indicate: **Up to $108 BILLION per year in health-care costs could be redirected from lawsuits and unnecessary "defensive" care into valuable drugs and other treatments. **Up to $44.3 BILLION per year in reduced federal health-care payments could be instead invested in innovative market solutions for Medicare, Medi- caid, and other federal health pro- grams. This savings could help fund a solution for Medicare's future through Personal Health Accounts owned by Americans. If the federal Health and Human Services Dept. is right, $1 TRILLION- plus in health-care cost savings could be achieved during a 10-year period. (Mary Mahoney is vice president for Government Relations at the United Sen- iors Association.) (c) 2004 DBR Media, Inc. Financial CASH FOR structured settlement/annuity payments. It’s your money. Get cash now when you need it most. Oldest/best in the business. Settlement Purchasers. 1-877-Money-Me. Miscellaneous for Sale FREE 4-ROOM Direct TV system, including installation. 125+ channels, including locals, from $29.99/month. Digital picture/sound. Limited offer. Plus shipping. Restrictions apply. 1-800-261-3543. Services www.OregonFAST.net. $7.99 per month Internet Access. Includes free virus/SPAM protection. 1-877-902-TECH. You can advertise like this or You can advertise in the ‘Illinois Valley News’