Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current, October 05, 2005, Page EIGHT, Image 8

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    EIGHT - Heppner Gazette-Times,
most of the aged and leaking
pipes in the water system. The
project is anticipated to be com­
pleted by October 14th. Chlo­
rination of the water system
will continue until the project
is completed and there are no
more positive sam ples for
coliform bacteria.
For more information, please
i ntact City Hall at676*9618.
This notice is being sent to
you by the City of Fleppner.
State Water System ID#:
41(X)369. Date distributed: 10/
05/05.
Published: October 5, 2005
Affidavit
PUBLIC NOTICE
TRUSTEE’S NOTICE OF
SALE Loan No: 0419666722
LS. No.: 1077981-09 Refer­
ence is made to that certain
deed made by, Erik Wenberg
ind Cynthia Wenberg, As Ten­
ants By The Entirety, as Grant­
or to Mid-Columbia Title Com­
pany, as Trustee, in favor of
Mortgage Electronic Registra­
tion Systems, Inc., as Benefi­
ciary, dated March 19, 2004,
recorded March 29, 2004, in
official records o f Morrow
County, Oregon in book/reel/
volume No. xx at page No. xx,
fee/file/lnstrument/microfilm/
reception No. 2004-10568 cov­
ering the following described
real property situated in said
County and State, to-wit: All
that fraction of lot 1, block 1,
Looney’s Addition, in the City
of Heppner, County of Morrow
and state of Oregon lying West
of Jones Street and the east 50
feet of lot 2, block 1 of said
Looney’s Addition; excepting
therefrom the South 47.2 feet
of both lots. Commonly known
as: 595 Jones Street Heppner
Or 97836. Both the beneficia­
ry and the trustee have elected
to sell the said real property to
satisfy the obligations secured
by said trust deed and notice
has been recorded pursuant to
Section 86.735(3) of Oregon
Revised Statutes: the default
for which the foreclosure is
made is the grantor’s: Failure
to pay the monthly payment
due June 1, 2005 of principal,
interest and impounds and sub­
sequent installments due there­
after; plus late charges; togeth­
er with all subsequent sums
advanced by beneficiary pursu­
ant to the terms and conditions
of said deed of trust. Monthly
payment $1,101.00 Monthly
Late Charge $37.67. By this
reason of said default the ben­
eficiary has declared all obli­
gations secured by said Deed
of Trust immediately due and
payable, said sums being the
following, to-wit; The sum of
$122,384.30 together with in­
terest thereon at the rate of
6.125% per annum from May
01, 2005 until paid; plus all
accrued late charges thereon;
and all trustee’s fees, foreclo­
sure costs and any sums ad­
vance by the beneficiary pur­
suant to the terms and condi­
tions of the said deed of trust.
Whereof, notice hereby is giv­
en that. Cal-Western Recon­
veyance Corporation the under­
signed trustee will on January
10,2006 at the hour of 1:00pm.
Standard o f Time, as estab­
lished by Section 187.110, Or­
egon Revised Statutes, At the
court street entrance to morrow
county courthouse 100 Court
Street City of Heppner, Coun­
ty of Morrow, State of Oregon,
sell at public auction to the
highest bidder for cash the in­
terest in the said described real
property which the grantor had
or had power to convey at the
time of the execution by him of
the said trust deed, together
with any interest which the
grantor or his successors in in­
terest acquired after the execu­
tion of said trust deed, to satis­
fy the foregoing obligations
thereby secured and the costs
and expense of sale, including
a reasonable charge by the
trustee. Notice is further giv­
en that any person named in
Section 86.753 of Oregon Re­
vised Statutes has the right to
have the foreclosure proceed­
ing dismissed and the trust deed
reinstated by payment to the
beneficiary of the entire amount
then due (other than such por­
tion of said principal as would
not then be due had no default
occurred), together with the
costs, trustee’s and attorney’s
t
Heppner, Oregon Wednesday, October 5,2005
fees and curing any other de­
fault complained o f in the No­
tice of Default by tendering the
performance required under the
obligation or trust deed, at any
time prior to five days before
Sept. 27-MCSO cit­
the date last set for sale. In ed H um berto F. Lorenzo
construing this notice, the mas­ Garcia, 50, for going 50 mph
culine gender includes the fem­ in a 35 mph zone.
inine and the neuter, the singu­
-MCSO received an
lar includes plural, the word
animal com plaint about a
“grantor” includes any succes­
fawn stuck in a fence.
sor in interest to the grantor as
-M CSO cited Noe
well as any other persons ow ­
Emanuel
Sanchez, 24, for
ing an obligation, the perfor­
driving
while
suspended.
mance of which is secured by
-MCSO
cited Lynan
said trust deed, the words
“trustee" and “beneficiary” in­ Rae Bingham, 18, for viola­
cludes their respective succes­ tion of the basic rule, 82 mph
sors in interest, if any. Dated: in a 55 mph zone.
August 31,2005. Cal-Western
-MCSO received an
R econveyance Corporation animal complaint about a
525 East Main Street P.O. Box dog being a nuisance around
22004 El Cajon Ca 92022- an Irrigon school. The dog
9004 Cal-Westem Reconvey­
was chasing the lawn mow­
ance Corporation Signature/
er behind the construction
By: Yvonne J. Wheeler, A.V.P.
R -122027 10/05; 12; 19; 26/ site.
-MCSO received an
2005 Affidavit
Morrow County
Sheriff’s Report
PUBLIC NOTICE
The Town of Lexington cur­
rently has the following coun­
cil positions available: Mayor,
Council positions 2 & 3. Any
person residing within the City
Limits of Lexington, who has
an interest in local government,
should submit a letter of intent,
stating the council position &
interest to: The Town of Lex­
ington, P.O. Box 416, Lexing­
ton, OR 97839 or drop off at
Lexington Town Hall at 150 W.
Main. Letters of intent should
be received by Oct. 10, 2005.
Published: October 5, 2005
Oregon ag
resources
directory now
available
Q u e stio n s about
who to call or where to go
when it comes to Oregon
agriculture are likely an­
swered with the help of a
p o p u lar, new ly rev ised
handy guide.
The Oregon Depart­
m ent o f A g ricu ltu re a n ­
nounces the availability of
this year’s edition of the Or­
egon Agricultural Resourc­
es D irectory, an updated
handbook that contains com­
prehensive contact informa­
tion for numerous agricultur­
al organizations and agen­
cies.
The 140-page direc­
tory is a convenient, com­
pact publication that in ­
cludes organization names,
addresses, phone numbers,
e-mail addresses, and con­
tact persons for a variety of
entities.
The d ire c to ry in ­
cludes information for the
Oregon Department of Ag­
riculture, other selected gov­
ernment agencies, Oregon
Commodity Commissions,
statewide farm bureaus, soil
and water conservation dis­
tricts, Oregon State Univer­
sity agricultural resources,
and v a rio u s p ro d u c e r
groups.
All inform ation in
the Oregon Agricultural Re­
sources Directory has been
updated as of August 2005.
Copies of the pock­
et sized resource guide can
be purchased at a cost of $5
each by mail order from the
Oregon Department of Ag­
riculture, 635 Capitol Street
N E, Salem , OR 9 7 301-
2532.
Payment by check or
money order must accompa­
ny all handbook orders.
Find the Ag R e­
so u rces D irecto ry o rd er
form o n lin e at: h ttp ://
oregon.gov/ODA/docs/pdf/
form_ard.pdf or contact the
Oregon Department of Ag­
riculture at (503) 986-4550.
Public Notice
Legal Notice
DEADLINE
Mondays at 5 p.m.
l
animal complaint about a vi­
cious dog. The subject re­
ported that his dog got into
the neighbor’s yard and was
killed by the dog in that yard.
The subject would like assis­
tance in getting his dog’s
body back.
-MCSO cited Jason
Torres, 34, for violating the
basic rule, going 77 mph in
a 55 mph zone.
-MCSO arrested Sa-
vanah Rane Jackson,21, for
failing to appear for driving
while suspended.
-M C SO a rre sted
Travis L Grigsby, 25, for fail­
ing to appear for driving
while suspended.
-M CSO received a
request from a father in Irri­
gon wanting to make contact
with his eight-year-old son
who was left in charge of his
residence while the father
was out of town.
-BPD cited Alfonso
Vasquez Bombela, 45, for
going 38 mph in a 20 mph
school zone.
-HFD received a re­
port of a wheat field on fire,
some equipment burnt and
electric transformers. lone
Fire Department was also
called out on the fire.
Sept. 28-MCSO re­
ceived a report of theft from
the Irrigon Cemetery shop.
A utility trailer 8-10 inch
wheels, that used to haul
trash, was taken sometime
over the weekend.
-MCSO received a
report of three juveniles in a
fight at the high school in
Irrigon.
-MCSO received a
report of a fire alarm water
flow activated. It was a false
alarm. Workers are trying to
correct the system as multi­
ple false alarm s were re­
ceived.
-MCSO received a
report for agency assistance
for a person at a rest stop in
Boardman face down on the
grass and not moving.
-MCSO received a
report about animal neglect.
A horse in pasture next door
to the reporter is injured and
has been for a month or so.
The caller would like depu­
ty contact.
-MCSO arrested Zo-
lio Lopez Ramirez for driv­
ing under the influence of
alcohol. He was cited and
released
-MCSO received a
report about an abandoned
vehicle. It is a trailer that has
been left on property the re­
porter leases.
-MCSO received a
report that the reporter has
been attempting to contact
son in Irrigon for two days
and can’t get a hold of him.
The reporter would like him
to contact his sister.
-M CSO received a
driving complaint about cat­
tle trucks tailgating other
vehicles.
-M CSO received a
report of a six-m onth-old
female in lone who possibly
ate a packet of silica gel. The
call was transferred to poi­
son control.
-MCSO cited Joseph
Bart Corliss for a driving
while suspended violation.
-MCSO received a
report about a burglary in
Irrigon. In the last couple of
days someone has broken
into the caller’s residence.
-M C SO a rre sted
Kalab Michael for failing to
appear/driving while sus­
pended.
-MCSO received a
call from a female in Irrigon
who reported shots and then
hung up. MCSO was unable
to recontact the subject.
S e p t. 29: -M CSO
received a report o f a small,
newer model domestic vehi­
cle driving around in the re­
porter’s field. The vehicle hit
the reporter’s fence, causing
possible damage to the ve­
hicle. The vehicle was last
seen going westbound on
Hwy. 730.
-M CSO received a
report of an employee that
didn’t show up for work that
morning. When checked on,
her apartment door was wide
open. She had overslept.
-MCSO received an
animal complaint that some­
one left a pit bull chained to
the re p o rte r’s fence with
water. The reporter does not
know whom the animal be­
longs to.
-M CSO received a
report for agency assistance
at the intersection on 1 lIh and
Main in Irrigon. A male had
fallen into a manhole, which
contains methane gas, after
falling off ladder trying to get
out. The male was passed
out and not conscious, but
still breathing.
-MCSO received a
theft com plaint about the
reporter’s son finding a part
of his bike on someone else’s
bike.
-MCSO received an
animal complaint about two
dogs that killed a fawn about
an hour previous. One dog
has white and black over
eyes and ears, the other dog
was solid light color, possi­
bly yellow.
-MCSO cited Justin
Lee Matteson, 26, for vio­
lating the basic rule, 74 mph
in a 55 mph zone and driv­
ing uninsured.
-BPD received a re­
port o f a domestic verbal
fight, husband left, and there
were no injuries.
-HFD received a fire
call about smoke coming
from reporter’s light switch.
Sept. 30: -BPD re­
ceived a report on a burglary
in a house the reporter has
been taking care of.
-BPD received a re­
port of an assault that result­
ed in two subjects needing
emergency medical services.
-MCSO received a
report that Hermiston Police
Department arrested Ramel
Rodriguez, 24, on multiple
Morrow County warrants.
-M CSO received a
report that Clinton Shep-
ardson, 24, was served an
Irrigon Justice Court war­
rant for failing to appear for
driving while suspended.
-MCSO received an
extra patrol request for a
multiple 10-wheel and 18-
wheel trucks reportedly by­
p assing the “no through
trucks” signs and driving on
Wilson and Kunze roads.
-M CSO received a
theft complaint about a va­
cant house being broken into
and the utility trailer being
stolen from the property.
-M CSO received a
report that a subject was ha­
rassing the reporter.
-M CSO received a
theft complaint about a hy­
draulic pump stolen from
Western Alfalfa in Irrigon.
-MCSO received a
report that Hermiston PD
arrested M aria M argarita
G onzalez, 40, on Irrigon
Justice Court warrant for
driving while suspended.
-MCSO received a
report that the re p o rte r’s
neighbors were locked out of
house with a baby inside.
There is a window that is
cracked upstairs where the
baby is.
-MCSO received a
report that the reporter is
having problems with neigh­
bors. They are driving by the
reporter’s house very fast
multiple times and yelling at
them.
Red Cross to
hold disaster
volunteer classes
A m erican
Red
C ross, O regon M ountain
River Chapter, Pendleton,
will hold a Disaster Volun­
teer Class on Saturday Oct.
8. Class will be held from
8:30 a.m. - 5 p.m.
“ You can support
your community by becom­
ing a Red Cross Disaster
Services Volunteer. Wheth­
er you are a babysitter or a
banker, a carpenter or a case­
worker, your special skills
can help the American Red
Cross,” said a spokesperson.
For more informa­
Deschutes River tion on location
and pre-reg­
istration,
call
the
Red Cross
Conservancy Bill
office at (541) 276-1211.
passes Energy
Office hours are 8:30 a.m. to
4:30 p.m. Monday through
Committee
S en ato rs G ordon Friday.
Smith and Ron Wyden an­
nounced the unanimous pas­ Wheat Foundation
sage o f th eir leg islatio n
(S.166) in the Senate Com­ offers scholarship
mittee on Energy and Natu­
The Oregon Wheat
ral Resources on Sept. 29. Foundation will provide up
Their bill reauthorizes partic­ to 12 scholarships for high
ipation by the Bureau of school seniors whose fami­
R eclam ation in the D es­ lies are members of the Ore­
chutes River Conservancy gon Wheat Growers League.
for an additional 10 years. Students whose family mem­
The Deschutes River Con­ bers are em p lo y ed by
servancy, formerly known as OWGL members are also
the D eschutes Resources eligible. The scholarship re­
Conservancy, is designed to quirements include an essay
achieve local consensus for on any topic related to the
on-the-ground projects to wheat industry and a sum­
improve ecosystem health in mary of the student’s school
the Deschutes River Basin. and community involvement.
The Deschutes Riv­
One $500 award will
er Conservancy was origi­ be made to a qualifying stu­
nally authorized in 1996 as dent from each of the par­
a pilot project and was so ticipating counties, which
successful it was reautho­ include Baker, Gilliam, Kla­
rized in the 106th Congress. m ath, M alheur, M orrow,
During the past eight years, Sherman, Umatilla, Union,
the Conservancy has suc­ Wallowa and Wasco.
cessfully found cooperative,
A d d itio n ally , one
market-based solutions to award will be made in the
enhance the ecosystem, and Willamette Valley counties
restore over ninety cubic- and the c e n tra l O regon
feet-per-second of stream- counties.
flow in the Deschutes Basin.
A pplication forms
It has improved fish habitat are available from the Ore­
and water quality along one gon Wheat Growers League
hundred miles of the Des­ website at www.owgl.org,
chutes River and its tributar­ or Cindy Osterlund, scholar­
ies by planting over 100,000 ship coordinator for the Or­
trees, installing miles of ri­ egon Wheat Foundation, PO
parian fencing, rem oving Box 322, C ondon, OR
berets and reconstructing 97823.
stream beds.
Applications are due
February 1, 2006.
C L E A R F IE L D 101
T R E A T E D W ITH
RAXIL & LIN D AN E
$8.80/BU
ANDERSON SEED
422-7204
TU B B S
T R E A T E D W IT H D IV ID E N D E X T R E M E
Loading by appointment. Please call ahead.
Estate
By DAVID SYKES
R EA LTO R
md
FILLING IN THE BLANKS
In any real estate transac­
tion, you’ll normally find
printed forms used in the area
of sales contracts, deed, mort­
gages and leases. Ever won­
der why any layman can't use
the printed forms himself and
save the fee of an attorney,
Realtor or hank?
A typical legal stationery
store will have dozens of va­
rieties of leases, deeds and
mortgage forms. Which is the
right one for your situation?
These forms are only a start­
ing point. It’s what goes into
the blanks, what is crossed
out. and what is added that
Past Real Estate columns and
property listings are available
at www.heppner.net/heritage
gives you the value, security
and protection that you are
paying the experts for.
Watch a lawyer or Realtor
go over a filled-in purchase
and sale form. They’ll skip
over the pre-printed matter
and go right for the filled-in
numbers, dates, dollars and
added or deleted paragraphs.
That’s where the real action is.
Believe me, some of the larg­
est financial losses and legal
hassles have resulted from
printed forms being incor­
rectly used.
180 W. Baltimore #5
Heppner. OR 97836
/fa Mage JfandCc.
REALTOR 9
541-676-9228
I