Image provided by: Morrow County Museum; Heppner, OR
About Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current | View Entire Issue (June 1, 2005)
Heppner Gazette-Times, Heppner, Oregon Continued from previous page A c tu a l D a ta Nam * of Fund C ounty R oad Last Y ea r 2 0 0 3 04 j 1 ! I 2 . To W MrtteMa and S arw cM ___ A d o p te d B u d g e t A p p ro v e d Budget T h is y e a r 2 0 0 4 -0 6 Next Y * o r 2 0 0 6 0 6 4*77 12665 10625 1076 6500 6 5 00 1 TM C o W Q u b y 4. T M I M t h N M ............................................. » To u t T r u l i n T '-'/ u ¡ 0. Jotel Commpsocte»................................. ............ T Too* M O ta * Ejpan a o ra a and R m f ^ j T i T I îT P fl Ï Ï T T ï ......................................... 10. To t* fc w w v o o E ~ . p l *r>P«rty T o n * Nam * of Fund 1175 7248 28 1 4 4 18300 7 2 48 26 1 4 4 296 ». Top* U n . p e n s a ta li fendKB Fund t a a r c . ... 1. ToO* RapuromanO 5 9 69 w im m i C a p ta i O utlay 18300 A c tu a l D a ta A d o p te d B u d g e t A p p ro v e d B u d ge t Lost Y e a r 2 0 03 0 4 T h is ye a r 2 0 0 4 0 5 N e x t Y e a r 2 0 0 5 -0 6 1. lO W F W V w W te lV IO te ... ................................. 0 0 0 2. T o m M i o m a and I w m a 0 0 0 1 Tatet Cop** Oullay 0 0 0 4. T o M 0*01 Sorvtoo........... ................................... 0 0 0 » 0 0 0 0 0 T « M Transform ................. ......................................... 0. T t M C a ta p o A c m .................................... .. 0 0 0 O T o M Unappropriated E n d re T io k J Botano« 0 0 0 *. ToM Rsquiramane 0 0 0 0 0 0 T To M A N O t a r Eow ndhj-oo on* RoguTsmarOt 10. T t a t a » « ........................................... E j ^ J Ï S E î a L l i S L ^ m ------------- F U N D S R E Q U IR IN G A FORM LB-3 P R O P E R T Y T A X T O B E L E V IE D PuOM> ONLY campéala* potion or t a papa. ?*"• rima Actual Data Last Voar 2003 04 General Fund 1. Tow Preonri StfViOM 2. Total Material» and Sanrfca* ................ Approved Budget Next Year 200506 Adopted Budget This year 2004-05 25904 J8325 215 65 20223 14592 26132 >. TotMCte^Outey ...... 4. Totei OobC Sor'Aoo ........................... 14000 5. Tout TVanotom . .................................................. e. Totei Conongonaes................................................. 26314 26617 7. Totei AM O tte r Lxpenctejres and Requirements 8 Total Unappropriated Endng Fund Bafcanoo.......... 9. Total Roqure monte.................................................. 48187 59231 87314 10 Toni Raorarro* Except Property T o m b .............. 24605 23703 42314 11. Preparty Tamo EaOmstad to Be Rooorvod 35640 35528 46000 69231 87314 35526 45000 60245 12. ToMRooourooo(addlneo10and 11)................ 19. Property Taaoo Eatmatod to bo Received (lno 11) S S 14. FaMmotert Property Taxes Not to be Reoeivod..... B ""* A. Loos Due to Conettutonal Limit....................... B. Dwcourto, Other Uncrttoctod Amounts........... 35528 19. Total Tax Levied (add Inee 13 and 14)................ 45000 Rale V A jm u T R a « or A m ur.it 4.42BÖ 10. Pormanont Rato Limit Levy (rate Im i _____ ) ......... 4 4288 17 Local Option Taxoo................................................. 11. Levy lor Bonded Debt or Obigaiorte Published: June 1, 2005 Affidavit PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC MEETING NOTICE MORROW COUNTY COURT Public notice is hereby given that the Morrow County Court will hold a public hearing on Wednesday, June 15, 2005 at 10:00 a m. at the Port of Morrow' Conference Room. 2 Marine Dr.. Boardman. OR for the purpose of receiv ing public comment pursuant to ORS 198.800 - 198.869 upon a petition to annex certain portions of Morrow County into the Boardman Rural Fire Protection District. Specific Sections to be annexed are: T2N R23E All or part of Sections 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16,21, 22, 23, and 24; T2N R24E All or part of Section 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8. 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14. 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, and 24; T3N R23E All of this Township; T3N R24E All of this Township; T3N R26E All or part of Section 1,2, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 20,21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28. 29, 32, 33, 34, 35, and 36; T3N R27E All of this Township that lies within Morrow County; T4N R23E All o f this Township that lies within Morrow County; T4N R24E All or part of Section 7, 8, 9. 16, 17, 18, 19, 25, 26, 27. 28. 29, 30,31,32,33, 34, 35. and 36; T4N R26E All or part of Section 14, 23, 24. 25. 26, 35, and 36; T4N R27E All of this Township that lies within Morrow County and south of UPRR Right Of Way. For more information contact the Morrow County Court office at (541) 676-5620. All interested parties are welcome to attend Upon request, accommodations will be made at the meeting to facilitate persons w ith physical Family returns to memorialize flood survivor iff,It Jones’ family (L-R): granddaughter, Patricia (Jones) Dalton, cousin, Mary Pensotti and son, Ronald Jones. ,7 E verett Jones shortly before passing. Family members o f Everett C. Jones, one o f the last known survivors o f the historic 1903 Heppner flood, retu rn ed to H eppner Tuesday, May 24 to spread his ashes over the family graves at Heppner Masonic Cemetery Jones, 102, died Nov. 5, 2004 He was born in Heppner on June 8, 1902, to Lemul Perle and Laura May (Ashbaugh) Jones A cco rd in g to the family, Jones’ aunt Mary was trying to escape the flood w ith her ow n son and Everett when she dropped both into the water Mary tried to rescue both but ended up only being able to save E v e re tt. O f his immediate family, only he and a brother survived the flood Jones’ is survived by his son and daughter-in-law, Ronald and Mariylyn Jones o f Prescott, AZ; daughter and son-in-law, Phyllis and Jerry Wilde o f Pine, AZ; seven grandchildren and 12 great-grandchildren Here in Heppner to spread Jones’ ashes were his son and daughter-in-law , Ronald and Mariylyn Jones, his granddaughter. Patricia (Jo n es) D alton, and her husband, o f Spokane, WA and his co u sin , M ary Pensotti, and her husband, of Santa Rosa, CA Local students graduate from U of 1 Bobbie Rankin and David Bates graduated from the University o f Idaho on May 14, 2005 Rankin received a bachelor o f science degree in fo rest reso u rces and a b ach e lo r o f science in wildlife resources. Rankin graduated from Heppner High School in 1999. Parents are Tim and Kathy Rankin B ates received a bachelor o f science degree in en v iro n m en tal earth resource geography and GIS c e rtific a te He also g ra d u a ted from HHS in 1999 Parents are Dale Bates o f Heppner and Kandy Hall o f Lewiston, ID DVS offering free volunteer training Domestic Violence Services is offering free v o lu n te e r tra in in g in Pendleton. Volunteers are needed to work on the crisis line and other areas and volunteer services. The dates for the training are June 8, 9, 15, 16, 22, 23, 29 and 30. Classes will be held from 6- 9 p.m., at the Pendleton DVS office For m ore information or to register class 276-3322 or 567-0424. owe to hold Marriage Licenses public budget hearing The Oregon Wheat Com m ission is holding a public meeting on June 6 at 8:30 a m at the Red Lion in P en d leto n to discu s the proposed budget for the fiscal year July 1, 2005 to June 30, 2006. At this meeting, any producer o f wheat in Oregon has the right to be heard with resp ect to the pro p o sed budget, a copy o f which is available for inspection, u n d er reaso n ab le circumstances, in the office o f each county extension agent in Oregon The meeting location is accessible to persons with d isa b ilitie s. T he ADA p ro h ib its d iscrim in atio n ag ain st p e rso n s w ith disabilities A request for an interpreter for the hearing im paired or fo r o th e r accommodations for persons w ith d isab ilitie s, please contact the Oregon Wheat Commission office 48 hours in advance at (503) 229- 6665 or TTY (503) 986- 4762. May 27: Joseph Ely Rivera, 27, Hermiston and K arina T orres, 23, Hermiston, Jon C Lorence, 38, Umatilla and Tricia L. C oe, 31, U m atilla; and Miguel Angel Gomez, 27, B oardm an and Jam m ie LeA nn J a rre tt, 21, Boardman Thomas Condon visitor center to hold extended summer hours The sta ff o f John Day Fossil Beds National Monument wishes everyone a safe and enjoyable summer season During the summer, the Thomas Condon Visitor Center will be closing one- half-hour later From May 28 th ro u g h L ab o r Day, the visitor center will be open from 8:30 a m to 5 p.m. daily Throughout the rest of the monument, hiking trails and overlooks will stay open during daylight hours For fu rth er information, call (541 ) 987- 2333. For those o f you who remember Linda Englert, this is what she and her husband do... D fllA /S WEST COAST A U T O GLASS Free Mobile Service OLCC distributes monthly revenue allocations Eight counties and 53 cities in eastern Oregon received $161,133 from the O regon L iquor C ontrol Commission’s April distilled spirits revenue allocation Local disbursement included: Morrow County, population, 11,750, $3572; Boardman, $2790; Heppner, $1270; lone, $304; Irrigon, $1601; and Lexington, $233. The agency distrib uted $1 1.5 million statewide, based on a total population of3.58 million OLCC reve nue is derived from the sale o f distilled spirits in 241 li quor stores, taxes on malt beverages and wine, license fees and fines for liquor law violations. Last month’s rev enue share was $8 5 million The disbursements were: State general fund- $6.1 million, 239 incorporat ed cities- $2.18 million; 36 counties- $1.09 million; City revenue sharing account- $ 1 52 million. State Office of Mental Health and Addiction Services- $590,769; and Or egon Wine Board- $17,759. The distribution is based on population, with counties receiving 10 per cent; cities, 20 percent; state general fund, 56 percent; and city revenue sharing ac count, 14 percent The per capita distribution rate for cities was 89 cents and for counties was 30 cents Wednesday, June 1,2 0 0 5 - NINE “You Say Where & We’ll Be There!” ( 541 ) 567-1871 • ( 541 ) 276-1778 1 - 800 - 538-1871 A lit» • Tru th * Farm • Heavy Equipm ent Ante Gluts Replucement Recb Chip Repuir M ia S>cV\nitz l j - years, experience ‘R e a E full) l s ta te By DAVID SYKES REA LTO R WHEN SELLER HELPS FINANCE SALE Sometimes, the only road block to completing a sale is the inability o f the buyer to come up with all o f the re quired deposit money. One potential source o f financial help for the buyer could be the seller. When sellers create loans that reduce down pay ment requirem ents, their homes are more salable. One strategy might work like this: The buyer puts down 10% and the seller “ takes back” (lends to the buyer) an amount equal to 10% o f the purchase price The balance of Past Real Estate columns and property listings are available at www.heppH er.net/heritage the dow n paym ent m oney comes from the bank, w ho of fers 80% o f the financing This strategy can also be attractive to the seller who may negotiate a som ewhat higher interest rate loan se cured by the old home It might allow the seller to make an investment deal that would not otherwise be possible. Seller financing is not alw ay s work able. Many sellers need all the money from the sale to buy another home or for other pur poses. 180 W Baltimore #5 Heppner, OR 97836 HeitageJfgndCo. REALTOR a 541-676-9228 UEO FINANCIAL SERVICES Anda K. Z astraw F in a n c ial A dsiso r Long Term Financial Needs, Retirement Planning, IRA’s, Pension Rollovers, Long Term Care; Life Insurance ***** Securities related products and services made available through BF.O Financial Services are offered by Royal Alliance Associate*. Inc . an independent registered broker-dealer, member NASD, SIPT. not affiliated with Bank of Faster* Oregon, its affiliates, divisions or subsidiaries Securities are not obligations of deposits nor guaranteed by the bank, are not FD1C insured, or insured bv any Federal ( wn eminent Agency, and may involve investment risk including the loss of principal invested 279 N Mam St.. Heppner. OR 97836 ♦ 541-676-9127 email azastrow xtroyalaa.com »