Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current, October 15, 2008, Page NINE, Image 9

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    Heppner Gazette-Times, Heppner, Oregon Wednesday, October 15,2008 - NINE
YARD SALK
Huge Yard Sale! Antiques,
new stuff, little bit of every­
thing. lone Grange Hall, Oct.
17-18, 9-5.
10-8-2p
Ed Hunt Estate Sale: Oc­
tober 17, 9 a.m. - ?? Tools,
furniture, autos, household,
miscellaneous items. On
Meadowbrook Road between
Heppner
and
Lexington
(Highway 74/207).
10-8-2c
Deadline for
Classified A dvertising
Mondays at 5 p.m.
PUBLIC NOTICE
TRUSTEE’S NOTICE
OF SALE
Reference is made to the
deed of trust made by Reyes
Nunez and Elma Rafael, as
grantors, to John W. Weil, as
successor trustee, in favor of
Associates Housing Finance
Services, LLC, as beneficiary,
dated January 22, 1999, re­
corded on February 1,1999, as
Microfilm No. M-56775in the
Microfilm Records of Morrow
County, Oregon, which deed of
trust was duly assigned to Van­
derbilt Mortgage and Finance,
Inc. by assignment recorded
January 23,2002 as Microfilm
No. 2002-3210 in the Records
of Morrow County, Oregon,
covering the following de­
scribed real property situated
in the above-mentioned county
and state, to-wit:
ALL OF LOT 18, QUAIL
RUN ADDITION IN THE
CITY OF IRRIGON, COUN­
TY OF MORROW, STATE OF
OREGON.
Together with the manufac­
tured home located thereon.
Both the beneficiary and the
trustee have elected to sell the
said real property to satisfy
the obligations secured by said
deed of trust and a notice of
default has been recorded pur­
suant to Oregon Revised Stat­
utes 86.735(3); the default for
which the foreclosure is made
is grantors’ failure to pay when
due the following sums:
Failure to make monthly
payments of $679.06 each due
on the 1 st day of December,
2007 through July 1, 2008.
By reason of said default
the beneficiary has declared all
sums owing on the obligation
secured by said deed of trust
immediately due and payable,
said sums being the following,
to-wit:
$88,999.10 plus interest
on the principal amount of
$83,559.84 at 8.64% per an­
num from May 9, 2008 until
paid, late charges and miscel­
laneous fees, plus attorney and
trustee’s fees and costs; plus
$402.00 foreclosure guaranty.
W H EREFO RE, n o tice
hereby is given that the un­
dersigned trustee will on No­
vember 21,2008, at the hour of
11:00 A.M., in accord with the
standard of time established
by ORS 187.110, at the main
lobby of the Morrow County
Courthouse, 100 S. Court St.,
Heppner, Oregon 97836, 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 succes­
sors 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 fore­
closure 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 de­
fault 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 tender­
ing the performance neces­
sary to cure the default, by
paying all costs and expenses
actually incurred in enforcing
the obligation 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
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 deed of trust,
and the words "trustee” and
“beneficiary” include their
respective successors in inter­
est, if any.
We are a debt collector. This
communication is an attempt to
collect a debt and any informa­
tion obtained will be used for
that purpose.
DATED: July 21, 2008
Isl John W. Weil,
Successor Trustee
1001 SW Fifth Avenue,
Suite 2150
Portland, Oregon 97204
Telephone No. (503) 226-0500
STATE OF OREGON )
)ss.
County of Multnomah )
1, the undersigned, certify
that I am the attorney or one
of the attorneys for the above-
named trustee and that the
foregoing is a complete and
exact copy of the original
trustee’s notice of sale.
Attorney for
Successor Trustee
Published: October 1,8,15 and
22,2008
Affidavit (2)
PUBLIC NOTICE
MORROW COUNTY
LAND USE HEARING
THE CITY of HEPPNER
PLANNING COMMISSION
and THE MORROW COUN­
TY PLANNING COMMIS­
SION will hold the follow ing
joint hearing of public interest
on Tuesday, October 28th, at
7:00 p.m. at the Heppner City
Hall located at 111 North Main
Street, Heppner Oregon. This
notice serves both the City
Planning Commission and
the County Planning Com­
mission.
County Land Partition LP-
S-397: Kyle Robinson, ap­
plicant; Merlyn Robinson,
owner. Property is described
as tax lot 101 of Assessor’s
Map 2S 26 35. A portion of the
property is located within the
City Limits of Heppner and is
zoned R1. Another portion of
the property is located within
the Urban Growth Bound­
ary of Heppner and is zoned
R1 and R3. A final portion
of the property is outside the
Urban Growth Boundary and
is zoned Exclusive Farm Use
(EFU). The property is located
south of Highway 74, east
of Rock Street in Heppner to
the Urban Growth Boundary
line. Request is to partition
a 109.36-acre parcel to create
three parcels. When complete
the largest parcel will be the
portion of the subject property
east of the city limits line. The
portion west of the city limits
will be two parcels; a small
acreage parcel in the northwest
comer of the subject property
and the balance of the subject
property west of the city limit
line. Criteria for County ap­
proval includes the Morrow
County Subdivision Ordi­
nance (MCSO) Article 5 Land
Partitioning. Criteria for City
approval includes the Heppner
City Zoning Ordinance Title
12, Chapter 2.
THE MORROW COUN­
TY PLANNING COMMIS­
SION will hold the following
hearings of public interest on
Tuesday, October 28th, at ap­
proximately 8:00 pm, at the
Heppner City Hall located at
111 North Main Street, Hep­
pner, Oregon, following the
joint public hearing.
Land Partition LP-N-396
and Replat R-011-08: BAIC,
Inc., applicant and owner.
Property is described as tax lot
100 of Assessor’s Map 2N 23;
tax lot 100 of Assessor’s Map
2N24; tax lot 100 and 111 of
Assessor’s Map 3N 23; tax lots
100 and 120 of Assessor’s Map
3N 24; tax lots 100 and 110 of
Assessor’s Map 4N 23; and
tax lot 121 of Assessor’s Map
4N 24. The subject property
is zoned EFU and is located
south Interstate 84 and west
of the Boardman Bombing
Range. Request is to partition
and enlarge Parcel 2 of Parti­
tion Plat 2001-6 which affects
and therefore causes inclusion
of Parcel 1 of Partition Plat
2007-9. Criteria for approval
include the MCSO Article 5
Land Partitioning.
Zoning Amendment AZ( M )-
009-08: Morrow County Plan­
ning Department, applicant;
and Greenwood Tree Farm
Fund, owner. Property is
described as tax lot 3420 of
Assessor’s Map 4N 26 located
approximately three miles
south of the Paterson Ferry
Road interchange at Interstate
84 on Poleline Road. Request
is to apply Rural Light Indus­
trial zoning to the 48.60-acre
parcel. Criteria for approval
include the Morrow County
Comprehensive Plan Review
and Revision Process and the
Morrow County Zoning Ordi­
nance Article 3 Sections 3.015;
and Article 8 Section 8.050.
Opportunity to voice sup­
port or opposition to the above
proposals or to ask questions
will be provided. Failure to
raise an issue in person or
by letter or failure to provide
sufficient specificity to afford
the decision maker an oppor­
tunity to respond to the issue
precludes appeal to the Land
Use Board of Appeals based
on those issues.
Copies of the staff report and
all relevant documents will be
available after October 17th,
2008. For more information,
please contact the Planning
Department at 541-922-4624
or 541-676-9061 extension
5503.
DATED this 8th day of Oc­
tober 2008
M O RRO W C O U N T Y
PLANNING DEPARTMENT
Published: October 15, 2008
Affidavit
Advertise with the
Heppner
Gazette-Times
6 7 6 -9 2 2 3
Lady Cardinals finish a strong week
The lone Lady Car­
dinals had a strong week,
w inning tw o key league
matches before falling to
division-leading Helix.
lone hosted Condon/
Wheeler on Tuesday pulling
out the match, three games
to one. Tyree Svetich served
the final four points o f game
one with two aces as the
Cards took the win 25-17.
Condon/Wheeler rallied in
game two to win 25-21. lone
squeaked out a 25-22 game
three win before com ing
from behind to win the final
25-20. In the final game, Se­
nior Tiana Camarillo scored
points 15-21 and Stefanie
Archer finished things oft',
scoring points 23-25. The
Lady Cards were down 13-
17 before rallying for the
win.
Overall in the match,
Tiana Camarillo served 25
of 26 with two aces and Beth
Morter was 14 o f 14 serv ing
with one ace. Beth Morter
led the team at the net with
six kills and Briana Peterson
had five.
“The girls are com­
ing out and playing as a
team. We have really been
working on our serves and
hitting and it is really show­
in g ,” said C o ach Dawn
Eynetich.
H osting A rlington
on Friday, the Lady Cardi­
nals dominated game one,
winning 25-9. Stefanie Ar­
cher served points 7-13 to
help put the game out o f
reach. Arlington woke up
in the second game and did
not let the ball hit the floor.
The Lady Honkers took that
game 25-17. The third game
was close 25-20 before the
Lady C ards took care o f
Arlington once and for all,
25-12 to win the match.
Tiana Camarillo was
again strong at the service
line, making 24 o f her 25
serves with six aces. Beth
Morter was 16 o f 16 with
one ace. At the net, Tiana
Camarillo and Beth Morter
each had five kills and Tyree
Svetich had four.
"I am so pleased with
how the girls are playing
right now. We were down in
the third game but the girls
stayed positive and came
back to w in,” said Coach
Eynetich.
Traveling to Helix
on Saturday, the Lady Cards
faced a formidable opponent.
After leading briefly in each
game, Helix pulled away to
win the match 25-12,25-19,
25-16. In game three, the
game was tied at 16 before
Kylee Rogers served out the
rest o f the game with four
aces. The Cards could find
no answer for Rogers in the
back row.
Briana Peterson had
perfect 14 o f 14 serving with
one ace. Stefanie Archer led
the team with five kills.
"H elix is a tough
team , but I think that we
played a good match. Playing
against such a tough team
points out some areas that
we need to work on before
heading into districts,” said
Coach Eynetich.
The Lady Cards will
wrap up the league season
w ith th e ir h o m eco m in g
volleyball m atch against
Dufur on Friday beginning
at 5 p.m. As the rest o f the
district also finishes their
season, the Lady Cards look
poised to progress to district
as the second place team
from the Big Sky East.
When it com es to
districts, A rlington is the
only team that can tie lone’s
record. If the Cardinals end
up in a tie then the district
will look at the head to head
m atch es and sin ce lone
beat Arlington both times,
lone will take second. So
the Cardinals are going to
end up second no m atter
what. lone will then play
a crossover game at home
on October 23 against the
third place team from Big
Sky West.
Cardinals beat Honker 64-32
-Continuedfrom Page SEVEN
scoring on a 40 yard
touchdown run. The Cardi­
nals tried a pass on the next
possession. Q uarterback
RJ Ramos hit Matt Hams
for a 60 yard scoring play.
The final score o f the first
quarter came when Ramos
hit Gunner Jessen with a 10
yard pass.
Arlington got in the
board twice in the second
quarter. The Cardinal’s an­
swer was a 20 yard run by
Alex Rietmann. RJ Ramos
hit Matt Hams for the extra
point.
The teams swapped
scores in the third quarter.
Tanner Rietmann caught a
21 yards pass and Micah
Stillm an scored on a 48
yard run. Ramos ran in the
extra points on both touch­
downs.
Stillman finished off
the lone scoring with 2:49
left in the game when he
shot downfield for a 67 yard
kickoff return.
Lots o f C ardinals
got their hands on the ball
in the game. Cory Peterson
led the rushing attack with
119 yards on four carries.
Micah Stillman (5-92) Alex
Rietmann (7-80), Tanner Ri­
etmann (4-30), Luke Emmel
(6-30) and RJ Ramos (7-24)
rounded out the rushing
yards.
RJ Ramos was 6-12
for 97 yards in passing.
Zac Orem was 2-4 for 48
yards. Matt Hams was the
leading receiver, with three
catches for 88 yards. Alex
F e tte rh o ff had 1 for 23,
Tanner Rietmann had 1 for
21, Gunner Jessen had one
for 10 and ClayMorter had
two for 10.
Defenisvely, Micah
Stillm an had 10 tackles.
Clay Morter had nine, in­
cluding two sacks. Tanner
Rietmann also had nine and
Alex Fetterhoff had seven
including a sack.
"A game like this
gives us a good opportunity
to watch the younger kids
and try them in different
p o sitio n s,” noted C oach
Stefani. "Freshman Omar
Juarez had an incredible se­
ries at linebacker. You could
see the lightbulb come on.”
The Cardinals will
host Dufur this Friday night
for their homecoming game
starting at 7 p.m. The Cards
expect a tough game but
“we think we can play with
them,” said Coach Stefani.
Feel the Stang: Mustangs beat Rockets 14-12
Left Photo: Jordan Hatfield #4« intercepted a crucial Chance
Bandy pass in the last few minutes of the Mustang Victory game
in Pilot Rock. Top Photo: Heppner Mustang Brent F.ckman
(#3) proves to he unstoppable against the Pilot Rock Rockets'
defense in the Friday Night match-up in Pilot Rock. The Hep­
pner defensive line proved that “Tradition Never Does (Gradu­
ate" against the Rockets. The defense line stayed strong through
the battle to the end. The Mustang beat the Rockets 14-12 in a
hard fought game. -Photos by Sandy Matthews
By Cody O rr
T h e P ilo t R o ck
Rockets and the Heppner
Mustangs’ football game is
the one all the people wait
for during the regular sea­
son, and the last 24 years
the Mustangs have come out
on top. It is always a close
game but the Mustangs have
had the courage to pull it out
in the end. Leading up to this
game there is always a lot of
talk, usually coming from
the fans. The players put the
talk behind them and focus
on the game.
Friday the Mustangs
and Rockets were facing oft'
again for this game. Many
people thought it was the
year that Pilot Rock was
going to win. They have
m any w eap o n s on th e ir
team. Trav is Copeland was
one o f those main weapons
coming into the game but
the Mustangs shut him down
with only 35 yards.
The Mu s t a n g s
scored on their first drive
with a trick play. Holland
ran the play in for 25 yards.
The two point conversion
was successful as Eckman
punched it in, putting the
score at 8-0.
In the second quar­
ter the Rockets put a drive
together and scored when
Chance Bandy connected
with Dylan Cutler for an
eight yard touchdown. They
failed the point after attempt
with a missed field goal,
which made the score 8-6,
Mustangs in the lead. Hep­
pner put together a nine min­
ute drive in the third quarter
which led to Eckman's quar­
terback sneak for an eight
yard score. The two point
conversion was failed, as
the Mustangs went up 14-6.
Shortly before the beginning
o f the fourth quarter when
the Mustangs were back by
their own end zone, they
fumbled and it was recov­
ered by Pilot R ock’s Kris
Snodgrass for a touchdown,
which made the final score
o f the game 14-12.
“ PR is nothing to
the Heppner Mustangs. Year
after year they say it is their
year then we shut them up,
all I have to say is ‘Feel the
Stang’,” said Wacy Coil.