Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current, October 25, 1995, Page SIX, Image 6

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    SIX- Heppner Gazette-Times, Heppner, Oregon Wednesday, October 25, 1995
Jim Farley honored by OSU
James Farley, Heppner, was
among those recently honored
as Diamond Pioneers by the
Oregon State University Col­
lege of Agricultural Sciences in
Corvallis. Farley was among
the nearly 50 men and women
who were saluted for their con­
tributions to Oregon's agricul­
ture, natural resources and
OSU.
Farley, Morrow County's
1991 Citizen of the Year, is a
native son who operated a car
dealership in Heppner for 40
years while running a wheat
ranch. He is still actively involv­
ed in ranch operations.
The OSU graduate founded
Heppner's annual St. Patrick's
Day celebration and was grand
marshal of the parade in 1988.
For the last five years, he
helped host the Oregon Lamb
Cook-off, held on St. Patrick's
Day, in the showroom of Farley
Motor Co.
He has been a member of the
Elks Lodge for more than 50
years and is a past exalted
ruler. He is also an active
member of St. Patrick's
Catholic Church. He counts
service on the Morrow County
Board of Equalization among
his civic activities.
Other Eastern Oregon 1995
Diamond Pioneers are Earl
Smith, Antelope; James Hill,
Jr., Arch Cape, formerly of
Pendleton; Ronald Davis and
R.J. Phillipi, Arlington; Fred
Phillips II, Baker City; William
Hulse, Dufur; Charles Gavin,
Enterprise; Ken Killingsworth,
Fossil; Bill Rolfe and Orville
Ruggles, Grass Valley; Robert
Skinner, Jordan Valley; Randall
Pope, Merrill; Shigeo Mura­
kami and Ray Novotny, On­
tario; Dewey and Catherine
Thomas, Wasco; and Fred Hill,
Walla Walla, formerly of Helix.
The Diamond Pioneer Reg­
istry started when the college
celebrated its 75th anniver­
sary and honors those 75 years
and older, according to Judy
Modrell, program coordinator.
This year's Diamond Pioneer
class is one of the largest ever
selected, she added.
St Patrick’s Senior Center
________Bulletin Board_______
Ninety-two people were present for the senior dinner Oct. 18.
Two meals were home delivered. Members of the Christian Life
Center served. George Steagall won the meal ticket and Alta
Baker won the bingo ticket. Blood pressures were taken before
the meal.
The menu for Nov. 1 will be pork roast with gravy, green beans,
mashed potatoes, hot rolls and applesauce. Macaroni and cheese
will be served for non-pork eaters. Members of the Seventh-Day
Adventist and Nazarene churches will serve. Hearing aid
assistance will be given at 10 a.m. and blood pressures taken at
11 a.m.
Nobody played cards Friday, Oct. 20 and there wasn't a movie
Sunday evening. Hopefully both will take place next week.
Dates to remember: Tuesday and Thursday, exercise 10 a.m.;
VVednesday, hearing aid assistance 10 a.m., blood pressure clinic
11 a.m., senior meal noon, quilting lp .m .; Friday, cards 2 p.m.;
Sunday, movie 7 p.m.
Symphony chorale plans concert
The Oregon East Symphony
Chorale will be in concert Nov.
4 at 7:30 p.m. at St. Patrick's
Catholic Church in Heppner.
Selected music includes:
"Turn Back o Man" by Gustav
Holst; "The Last Words of
David" by Randall Thompson;
"Jesus and The Traders" by
Koltan
Kodaly;
"Greensleeves" arranged by
Richard Moffatt; "Cantique de
Jean Racine" by Gabrieli; "The
Seasonings" by Peter Schickle
and "Lullaby” arranged by
Game night at
Stokes Landing
Game night and dinner will
be held at Stokes Landing
Senior Center on Friday Oct.
27, from 5-7 p.m. The dinner is
$2.50 a person and will feature
hot turkey sandwiches, apple
salad, pumpkin pie and coffee.
Games of pinochle and
Scrabble or other table games
will begin at 7 p.m. Cost is $1.
The Game Night program is
regularly scheduled for the last
Friday of the month and is a
fundraising event for the care
and maintenance of the build­
ing. "Irrigon Senior citizens are
proud of their building that
they built themselves and feel
it is an important addition to
the Irrigon community,” said a
spokesperson.
Everyone is welcome to
attend.
Friday School
sessions
Friday school will hold ses­
sions from 9 a.m.-3 p.m. on Fri­
day, Oct. 27, Nov. 3 and 10.
Children will sing and have Bi­
ble study, crafts, recreation and
watch meaningful videos, said
the Reverend Stan Hoobing,
spokesperson.
Roger Wagner. Soloists are
Arlene Thompson, soprano;
Barbara Nash, alto; Jedd
Nelson, tenor and Harvey
Foreman, bass.
Admission is free for the
Heppner concert.
Concert sponsors include the
Bank of Eastern Oregon; Col­
umbia Basin Electric Cooper­
ative; First Interstate Bank;
Kevin and Sharia Erich; Mor­
row County Abstract and Title
and Morrow County Grain
Growers.
A second concert will be held
Sunday afternoon, Nov. 5, at
the Vert Auditorium, 4th and
Dorian Streets, in Pendleton, at
3:15 p.m. Ticket prices for the
Pendleton concert are $5 per
ticket.
PUBLIC NOTICE
The Planning Commission of
the City of Heppner will hold
a public hearing on Monday,
November 6,1995, beginning at
7:00 pm at Heppner City Hall,
188 West Willow Street, to con­
sider formulation of a recom­
mendation for City Council
adoption of a proposed or­
dinance amending various por­
tions of the City's Subdivision
Ordinance. The City Council
will hold a subsequent public
hearing on Monday, November
13, 1995, beginning at 7:00 pm
at City Hall to consider adop­
tion of the above referenced
ordinance.
Copies of the proposed or­
dinance are available for public
examination at City Hall.
These hearings will be held in
public meetings where delib­
erations of the Planning Com­
mission and City Council will
take place. Any person may ap­
pear at these meetings and
discuss the proposed ordinance
with the Planning Commission
or City Council.
Gary B. Marks
City Recorder
Published: October 25, 1995
DARRYL BIGELOW
Representative
nmn
Ciptorer
Bronco
Ranger Winds tar
PENDLETON FORD
LINCOLN-MERCURY INC
2225 Eastgate, PO Bo* 70
PENDLETON. OR 97801
r Series
Cconoline Van
Club Wagon
Bus Phone 276-3131
FAX 276-2539
Res Phone 443 2157
Cities, county
receive O LC C
revenue
The Oregon Liquor Control
Commission distributed $6.6
million from August revenue,
according to the agency's mon­
thly fiscal report. The city of
Heppner received $903; Board-
man, $1,322; lone, $154; Lex­
ington, $175; Irrigon, $548; and
Morrow County, $1,685.
Of the $6.6 million, $3,381,
876 went to the state's general
fund. The total distributed to
cities and counties amounted to
$1,811,719. The rest of the
funds went to different services
and advisory boards.
The distributed revenue
comes from sales in liquor
stores, taxes on malt beverages
and wines, license fees and
other income such as fines paid
by licensees for liquor law
violations.
Geoffory Anderson
earns USU degree
Geoffory Anderson, Hepp­
ner, recently completed re­
quirements for a master of
science degree in animal
science from Utah State
University.
He is the son of Dwight and
Darlene Anderson and is mar­
ried to Kristine Kylen. They
have one child, Kylen.
Anderson attended Box Elder
High School and earned a
bachelor of science degree in
range science from USU in
1992.
He is employed by the U.S.
Forest Service in Heppner.
Local students
earn scholarships
More Oregon students will
see a silver lining in the cloud
of college debt this year due to
a 23 percent increase in scholar­
ship funding. The Oregon
State Scholarship Commission
recently announced that 1,228
students claimed a total of
$2,243,300 in scholarships
funded by federal programs,
businesses and individual
donors. This tops last year's
total by more than $400,000.
Local students earning
scholarships are Patty Ander­
son, $2,565 and Dani Hill
$1,632, both Ford Scholars; Jen­
ny Krein $1,500 Robert Byrd;
Brent Wright and Anderson
both $500 Mervin and Gena
Leonard.
PUBLIC NOTICE
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF
THE STATE OF OREGON
FOR MORROW COUNTY
In the Matter of the Estate of
CLARENCE G. HAYWOOD,
Jr., aka Clarence Junior Gerald
Haywood, and aka Robert Wat­
son, deceased
No. 95 PR 021
NOTICE TO
INTERESTED PERSONS
Notice is hereby given that
the undersigned has been ap­
pointed and qualified as per­
sonal representative of the
estate. All persons having
claims against the estate are
hereby required to present the
same, with proper vouchers,
within four months after the
date of the first publication of
this notice, as stated below, to
the personal representative c/o
Collins & Collins, P.O. Box
1457, Pendleton, OR 97801, or
they may be barred.
All persons whose rights may
be affected by the proceedings
in this estate may obtain addi­
tional information from the
records of the court, the per­
sonal representative or the at­
torneys for the personal repre­
sentative.
DATED and first published:
October 11, 1995
Darlene Lovgren
Personal Representative
c/o COLLINS & COLLINGS
Attorneys for
Personal Representative
326 SE Second
P.O. Box 1457
Pendleton, OR 97801
Tel. No. (503) 276-3320
Published: October 11, 18 and
25, 1995
PUBLIC NOTICE
TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE
Reference is made to that cer­
tain trust deed made by Ronald
R. Robertson and Susan Ann
Robertson, husband and wife,
as grantor, to Land Title In­
surance and Escrow Corpora­
tion, as trustee, in favor of Key
Bank of Idaho, as beneficiary,
dated February 22, 1994,
recorded March 3, 1994, in the
mortgage records of Malheur
County, Oregon, in Instrument
No. 94-1459, covering the
following described real pro­
perty situated in said county
and state, to-wit:
Land in Malheur County,
Oregon, as follows:
In Township 17 South,
Range 47 East of the Willamette
Meridian: Section 31: A parcel
of land in the NWViNEVi more
particularly described as
follows, to-wit: Commencing at
the Southwest corner of said
NWV 4 NEV 4 ; thence South
89°42'43"East, along the South
boundary of said NWV 4 NEV 4 ,
330.00 feet to the TRUE POINT
OF BEGINNING; thence
North 0°23'35"East, parallel to
the West boundary of said
NWV 4 NEV 4 , 1300.55 feet to a
point on the North boundary of
said NW'ANEVi; thence South
89°55'00"East, along the North
boundary of said NWV 4 NEV 4 ,
328.15 feet; thence South
0°28'12"West, 1301.73 feet to a
point on the South boundary of
said NWV 4 NEV 4 ; thence North
89°42'43"W est, along the
South boundary of said
NWV 4 NEV 4 , 326.39 feet to the
Point of Beginning. EXCEP­
TING THEREFROM road right
of way along the North side
thereof.
Both the beneficiary and the
trustee have elected to sell the
said real property to satisfy the
obligations 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:
Payment due September 1,
1995 $5,000.00 Lender advances
309.00 Total $5,309.00*
By reason of said default the
beneficiary has declared all
sums owing on the obligation
secured by said trust deed im­
mediately due and payable,
said sums being the following,
to-wit:
Principal balance $25,848.75
Interest 5/5/95 - 10/6/95 981.44
Lender advances 309.00 Total
$27,139.19*
‘ Plus accrued attorney/trus-
tee fees and costs.
WHEREFORE, notice hereby
is given that the undersigned
trustee will on February 8,
1996, at the hour of ten o'clock,
a.m., in accord with the stan­
dard of time as established by
ORS 187.110, at the lobby of the
offices of First American Title,
158 S.W. 1st St., in the City of
Ontario, County of Malheur,
State of Oregon 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 ex­
ecution by him of the said trust
deed, together with any in­
terest which the grantor or his
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 reasonable
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 before the date last set for
the sale, to have this foreclo­
sure 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 re­
quired 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 in­
curred in enforcing the obliga­
tion and trust deed, together
with trustee's and attorney's
fees not exceeding the amounts
provided by said ORS 86.753.
In construing this notice, the
masculine gender includes the
feminine and the neuter, 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 said trust deed, and
the words "tru s te e " and
"beneficiary" include their
respective successors in in­
terest, if any.
DATED September 28, 1995
Ronald Robertson
SUCCESSOR TRUSTEE
Published: October 11, 18, 25;
and November 1, 1995_____
PUBLIC NOTICE
CIRCUIT COURT,
STATE OF OREGON,
MORROW COUNTY
FAMILY LAW DEPARTMENT
In the Matter of the Marriage of
PEDRO ALVAREZ
SOLORZANO
Petitioner,
and
REGINA GOMEZ De
ALVAREZ, aka
REGINA GOMEZ,
Respondent.
No. 95CV078
DOMESTIC RELATIONS
SUMMONS
TO: REGINA GOMEZ De
ALVAREZ, aka REGINA
GOMEZ
A Petition has been filed in
this court for dissolution of this
marriage. The Petition further
seeks an Order indicating that
the property of the parties has
already been divided and
should remain as presently
divided.
You are hereby required to
appear and defend the Petition
within 30 days of the date of
first publication (said date be­
ing specified below). If you fail
to do so, Petitioner will apply
to the court for the relief
demanded in the Petition.
NOTICE TO RESPONDENT:
READ THIS PUBLICATION
CAREFULLY! YOU MUST
"APPEAR" IN THIS CASE OR
THE OTHER SIDE WILL WIN
AUTOMATICALLY. TO ''A P­
PEA R " YOU MUST FILE
WITH THE COURT A LEGAL
PAPER CALLED A "M O ­
TION” OR "AN SW ER". THE
"M OTION "'OR "ANSW ER"
MUST BE GIVEN TO THE
COURT CLERK OR ADMIN­
ISTRATOR WITHIN 30 DAYS
OF THE DATE OF FIRST
PUBLICATION SPECIFIED
HEREIN ALONG WITH RE­
QUIRED FILING FEE. IT
MUST BE IN PROPER FORM
AND HAVE PROOF OF SER­
VICE ON THE PETITIONER'S
ATTORNEY. IF YOU HAVE
ANY Q U ESTIO N S, YOU
SHOULD SEE AN ATTOR­
NEY IMMEDIATELY. IF YOU
NEED HELP IN FINDING AN
ATTORNEY, YOU MAY CALL
THE OREGON STATE BAR'S
LAWYER REFERRAL SER­
VICE AT 503-684-3763 OR
TOLL FREE IN OREGON
1-800-452-7636.
(s) Dennis D. Doherty
OSB 70038
Attorney for Petitioner
Published: October 18, 1995.
Published: October 18, 25;
November 1 and 8, 1995
Valby Lutheran
plans fundraiser
Valby Lutheran Church,
under the auspices of Aid
Association for Lutherans
(AAL), will sponsor a table at
the Artifactory Craft Fair to be
held at the Morrow County
Fairgrounds, Dec. 12.
Valby members are encour­
age to bring five food or craft
items to the table. Money rais­
ed from the project will be us­
ed to purchase new hymnals
entitled "With One Voice," a
supplemental service and hym­
nal to the current green hym­
nal. Many hymns have been
sung from the new hymnal at
church services, said the
Reverend Stan Hoobing.
Matching funds will be
sought from AAL and
Lutheran Brotherhood Blue
Mountain Branch #8716 for the
project.
PUBLIC NOTICK
NOTICE OF INTENT TO
COMPLETE ENVIRONMEN­
TAL A SSESSM EN T FOR
WILDLIFE DAMAGE MAN­
AGEMENT IN THE JOHN
DAY, OREGON ANIMAL
DAMAGE CONTROL
DISTRICT
BY
UNITED STATES DEPART­
MENT OF AGRICULTURE
ANIMAL AND PLANT
HEALTH INSPECTION
SERVICE
ANIMAL DAMAGE
CONTROL
USDA, Animal and Plant
Health Inspection Service,
Animal Damage Control (ADC)
is in the initial stages of
evaluating its wildlife damage
management activities in the
John Day District. Livestock
producers and the Oregon
D epartm ent of Fish and
Wildlife (ODFW) have re­
quested USDA Animal and
Plant Inspection Service,
Animal Damage Control (ADC)
to conduct wildlife damage
management to protect
livestock, various wildlife
species, and to protect human
health and safety from
dangerous bears and cougar.
The results of this evaluation
will be written in an En­
vironmental Assessment (EA).
The EA is a public document
that will reveal how the pro­
posed program to protect
livestock and wildlife could af­
fect the environment in north­
east and southeast Oregon. The
EA will help ADC to decide the
best way to manage their
responsibilities. The analysis
will focus on how ADC pro­
grams will affect resident
wildlife and other identified
public concerns.
The public is invited to pro­
vide information and com­
ments towards the completion
of the EA. Anyone interested in
obtaining detailed information
relative to this analysis can con­
tact the State Director, APHIS-
ADC, 2600 iSE 98th Ave. Suite
110, Portland, Oregon 97266.
(503)-231-6184.
Published: October 25, 1995
PUBLIC NOTICE
Availability of Hill-Burton Un­
compensated Services
Pioneer Memorial Hospital,
Heppner, Oregon provides this
notice of the availability of un­
compensated services in accor­
dance with regulations pro­
mulgated by the Secretary of
Health and Human Services,
set forth in 42 CFR 124.504
Notice of Availability of Un­
compensated Services.
Federal law requires that
Pioneer Memorial Hospital pro­
vide a reasonable amount of
care without charge to people
who cannot afford care.
All services of the facility will
be available as uncompensated
services. Service that are eligi­
ble include inpatient acute care
and out patient at the Pioneer
Memorial Hospital.
Eligibility for uncompensated
services will be limited to per­
sons whose family income is
not more than Category B of
the current poverty income
guidelines established by the
Department of Health and
Human Services.
Eligibility recipients will be
determined on a first come first
serve basis until the allocation
is made for the year.
Criteria for determining
eligibility: Individuals will be
eligible for uncompensated care
on a first come, first serve basis,
if their annual family income is
at or below the following
amounts.
SIZE OF
FAMILY
FAMILY UNIT
INCOME
1
$14,940
2
$20,060
3
$25,180
4
$30,300
5
$35,420
6
$40,540
7
$45,660
8
$50,780
For family units with more
than 8 members, add $5,120 for
each additional member.
Pioneer Memorial Hospital
Heppner, Oregon
July 20,1994
Published: October 25, 1995