Image provided by: Morrow County Museum; Heppner, OR
About Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current | View Entire Issue (April 11, 2012)
EIGHT- Heppner Gazette-Times, Heppner, Oregon Wednesday, April 11, 2012 -Continuedfrom PAGE obligation, the performance SIX o f w hich is secured by property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution by him o f the said trust deed, together with any interest 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 tru ste e . Notice is further given that any person named in Section 86.753 of Oregon Revised Statutes has the right to have the foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of said principal as would not then be due had no default occurred), together with the costs, trustee's and attorney's fees and curing any other default complained of in the Notice o f Default by tendering the performance required under the obligation or trust deed, at any tim e prior to five days before the date last set for sale. In construing this notice, the masculine gender includes the feminine and the neuter, the singular includes plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other persons owing an said trust deed, the words "trustee" and 'beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. Dated: 3/13/2012 First American Title Company c/o Seaside Trustee, Inc 3 First American Way Santa Ana, California 9270 (805)644- 9300 Seaside Trustee Inc., P.O. Box 2676, Ventura, CA 93014. Signature By: ELIVA BOUCHE Trustee Sales Information: 855-986- 9342, www.superiordefault. com (3/21/2012, 03/28/12, 04/04/12, 04/11/12, SDI- 1072) Published: March 21, and 28, April 4 and 11, 2012 Affidavit PUBLIC NOTICE Public Hearing Tuesday, 6:00 P.M.04/24/12 at City Hall 111 N . M ain S tr e e t, Heppner Public Works Projects for Heppner (HB2001 Projects) There w ill be a public hearing held at City Hall, on Tuesday, April 24, 2012 at 6:00 P.M. Ferguson Engineering will be present. This hearing is for the public to ask questions and obtain answers about project design, time lines for bidding and beginning these projects etc. These projects include the pedestrian bridge by the bowling alley, the sidewalks to Heppner High School, Riverside Avenue improvements etc.Barrett B o u lev ard and S perry Street s are not included ,but are separate projects. If you have questions or concerns, please call City Hall at 541-676-9646. Published: April 11 and 18, 2012 A D T I C T IVT D 17 C I IA ET 1\J C * IT /A. IV I I I UN I\L o3IL f C/Ci -Continuedfrom PACE ONE only a few can do.” cooking. No one was bom knowing how to do it,” she said. “You have to get fa miliar with the ingredients, learn the rules. You start with a recipe and then start making changes to person alize it. It’s all very leam- able; it’s not something Rocket cli ib holds successful launch The South Morrow Rocket Club (SMoRC) said goodbye to the Hardman launch site until fall when it held its last launch of the season there Saturday. SMoRC will be back at the Hardman launch site in October, thanks to the generosity of property own ers Bob Stevens and Jerry Gentry. Dave and Barba ra M oser o f Pasco, WA showed up at the Hardman site around 9:30 a.m. to help club leader Pat Struthers fin ish setting up. The Palmer family arrived shortly after, carting the club’s brand- new launch pad and eight- foot rail. Jason Palmer, Dave Fowler and the Hep pner High School technical department fabricated the new pad—and got it done just in time—while Dar rell Smith purchased the rail. BMR also deserves credit for donating “used” equipment, expertise and training. As u su a l, club president Hannah Palmer had the best launch day of the group. Palmer made several attempts to improve her B and C parachute re cords, and she established the A streamer record. She also established a new C altitude record of 947 feet with an Estes Alpha with a payload bay and an Adept ALTIM1. She put up a total of five flights. The club put up 13 flights altogether. Just because the Hardman launch season has ended, doesn't mean SMoRC is going away. Club members plan to at tend Missile Mayhem and the Blue Mountain Blast this spring, and will also be doing lots of low-altitude flights in preparation for the Morrow County Fair in August. Gage’s art reflects her Eastern Oregon roots. She was born in Harney County, south o f Burns, and attended Crane High School. The school didn’t have an art program, but the football coach taught a half-year art class. Gage re members when he showed the class a film made by the Hallmark card company. She already liked to draw, but said that was the first time she realized it could be a profession. “I thought all the great artists were dead and that paintings sold for thou sands of dollars,” she said. “I had no clue people could draw or paint every day and be paid for it.” She went on to at tend the Oregon College of Art, a now-nonexistent art school in Ashland, OR. It was a commercial art school, where Gage learned to create advertisements and other commercial art, and even to write ad copy. It was there that she also was exposed to watercolor painting for the first time. That discovery led her into the world of fine art. She did student teaching with the college before going to work for an ad agency in Boise. She went from there to Bon Marche, where she was the fashion illustrator for the clothing chain’s northwest A detail from one of Gage’s paintings. stores. She quit that job when she m arried cow boy and buckaroo, Leon. The couple moved to a ranch outside Jordan Val ley, where they ranched for 28 years and raised two children. Gage continued to work as an artist, taking freelance illustration jobs at home and continuing to de velop a career in fine art. Leon retired from ranching two years ago and the couple moved off the ranch and into Jordan Valley, where he contin ues to create his own art, silversmithing bits, spurs, jewelry and other buckaroo gear. G a g e to o k up teaching, partly because of the freedom retirement gave her but mostly through a natural desire to share what she knew about art. “I’ve always taught in one way or another,” she said with a chuckle. “That’s what I do; gather information and force it on people.” Sewing group gets started for the year ¡2 A pathway to jobs. An investment in rural counties. the Morrow ■Pacific project Cooks & Notions members (L-R) Ivy Sandford, Diana Healy, Shavna Osmin and Bailee Heard at the sewing club’s first meeting. -Contributedphoto Let your voice support jobs and opportunity in Morrow County. The sewing seg ment of the Cooks & No tions 4-H club met Friday, April 6, at the Sandford home in lone for their first meeting. The club consists of Lillian Sandford, presi dent and junior leader; Ivy Sandford, vice president; Shayna Osmin. reporter; Bailee Heard, treasurer; Diana Healy, secretary; and Sylvia Sandford, leader. The members discussed their project selections, The Morrow Pacific project will ship Powder River Basin coal to the Port of Morrow by train. From there, barges will move the coal to the Port of St. Helens, where it will be transferred to oceangoing vessels bound for U.S. trade allies such as Japan, South Korea and Taiwan. Ecumenical salad supper planned The Morrow Pacific project represents a capital investment of more than $150 million. It will pay about $750,000 annually in Morrow County property taxes, $850,000 annually in Port of Morrow fees A much-anticipated annual event, the ecumeni cal ladies salad supper, is back. The dinner, hosted this year by the St. Patrick’s Altar Society, will be held at 6:30 p.m. on Monday, April 16. in the St. Patrick's Catholic Church parish hall. This year, the in spirational speaker will talk about marriage; there will also be musical entertain and $350,000 annually in voluntary contributions to Morrow County public schools. Most importantly, the Morrow Pacific project will bring 25 family-wage jobs with benefits to Morrow County. Support the Morrow Pacific project. Currently, the project is in the "public com ment” phase of the Army Corps of Engineers environmental assessment process: Put simply, the Corps wants to hear your opinion. There are groups opposed to any and all projects involving coal. Their goal is to block the project, without regard for the jobs and economic benefits it will bring to Morrow County and its citizens. Our goal is to move forward toward greater opportunity for Morrow Visit www.MorrowPacific.com and click on Show Your Support by May 2. ■ Morrow Pacific Project Fact: » ment. The altar society will provide drinks and dessert. As always, everyone is asked to bring a small salad to share. Everyone is wel come to come and bring a friend. “ It is alw ays a blessing to see women of faith coming together to learn how to be pleasing to God,” says one of the event’s coordinators, Mary Ann Elguezabal. DA’s Report County. If you share that goal, let your voice be heard. It will matter to the Corps. Th« U.S. has tha largest coal reserves in the world, enough to last 249 years. Exports by the Morrow Pacific project will have no significant effect on the domestic supply of coal. differences in materials, sewing notions, tools, ma chines, making a kit and ironing. Each member was presented with a sewing pincushion, various 4-H items and a cinch bag for their books and sewing items. The c lu b ’s next meeting will be May 6 at 1 p.m. at the Sandford home. Members will cut out their fair project and start sew ing. ambreenergÿ ( The Morrow Coun ty District Attorney’s office has released the following report: -Robert Wade East- ep. 51, was found guilty of possession of methamphet- amine, a Class C felony, and was sentenced to 18 months supervised proba tion, subject to 90 sanction units with 30 jail units. Conditions of pro bation include substance abuse evaluation and any directed treatment, mental health evaluation and any directed treatment, alcohol evaluation and any directed treatment, and attendance of a Victim’s Impact Panel. Defendant was also given 10 custody units to be used for 160 hours of com munity service. Total fines, fees and assessments were $2,758.