RRP 2011 24pgs - Rogue River Press

Transcription

RRP 2011 24pgs - Rogue River Press
ROGUE RIVER
50¢
Published Weekly!
PRESS
PRESS
INSIDE
THIS WEEK’s
PRESS:
October
Breast
Cancer
Awareness
Month
Page 15
By Brad Smith
Rogue River Press
The Rogue River city
council is mulling over an
idea of a tax on marijuana –
should Measure 91 pass.
By Brad Smith
INDEX
FOR POSTAL USE
Business Directory
16
Classifieds
23
Churches, Obituaries
6
Community Events
6
Opinions
2
Headlines & Highlights
7
Special Sections
Legals
17
Outdoors, Weather
9
Real Estate
24
© 2012
Sports
Valley Pride Publications, Inc. 9
During the Oct. 6 Gold
Hill city council meeting,
two young men apologized
for vandalism they’d committed on city property
nearly a year ago.
Last November, law enforcement and city officials
investigated a a series of
vandalism incidents that
struck Gold Hill's reservoir
compound over a threeweek period.
City manager Rick
Hohnbaum said during
three weekends last november, five juveniles –
one female and four males
– allegedly entered the
reservoir compound, painting graffiti and vandalizing
city equipment and property. Nothing, he added,
was stolen.
“They caused a lot of
damage, nonetheless,” he
said.
Hohnbaum said that
reservoir's water meters
had taken the brunt of the
vandalism – which in turn
caused the city many major
problems.
With the water meters
vandalized, they relayed information to the water
treatment plant that levels
RogueRiverPress.com
Published Weekly!
vote retains laws classifying
cannabis as a controlled
substance, prohibiting most
sale, possession, manufacture of cannabis; permitting
production, possession of
cannabis for medical use.
Summary: Currently, cultivation, possession, delivery,
sale of marijuana is unlawful,
excepting regulated production, possession, use of
medical marijuana. Measure
allows production, processing, delivery, possession,
sale of marijuana to adults,
licensed, regulated by Oregon Liquor Control Commission. Marijuana producer,
processor, wholesaler may
deliver "marijuana items"
(defined) only to/on licensed
retail premises. OLCC collects tax imposed on marijuana producer at different
rates for marijuana flowers,
leaves, immature plant.
"Homegrown marijuana"
(defined) not regulated,
taxed. Tax revenues, fees
fund OLCC suspense account, Oregon Marijuana Account distributed: 40 percent
to Common School Fund; 20
percent for mental health/alcohol/drug services; 15 percent for state police; 20
percent for local law enforcement; 5 percent to Oregon
Health Authority. "Marijuana
paraphernalia" (defined) excluded from "drug paraphernalia" laws.
The city is moving forward with an abatement
process against foreclosed
property that could prove to
be a potential fire hazard.
Late month, area resident Curtis Shuler had
raised concerns about a
parcel of abandoned property along Berglund St. that
he felt was a fire hazard.
The property, more than an
acre in size, was overrun
with dry weeds and he took
those concerns to city manager Mark Reagles. Along
with the fire district’s Chief
Jim Price, both had managed to track down the company who now owns the
property.
Reagles was told by the
company that they had been
paying someone to oversee
the property, keeping it
clean and not overgrown
with weeds.
“I told them that they
needed to have a serious
talk with (the caretaker) due
to the property’s condition,”
Reagles said. He was then
assured by the company
that the property would be
taken care of.
“I was told that it would
be a few days,” he said.
“Hopefully, this will be taken
care of within a week.”
As of last Monday, Reagles found that the company
The Jackson County
Sheriff’s Office and Jackson
County Search and Rescue
continues to search for
Shawn May, 42, of Medford.
Shawn was last seen on Friday, October 3, 2014 around
5:30 p.m. in the Prospect
area. Volunteers from Jackson, Josephine, Klamath,
and Siskiyou counties continue to dedicate their time
to search for Shawn.
The Civil Air Patrol, and
two different volunteer air
support pilots are also flying
and looking for any signs of
Shawn May or his vehicle.
According to the last contact
with Shawn, he was going to
use back roads to drive
back to the Medford area
from Prospect.
Shawn is six feet tall and
weighs 230 pounds. He has
dark, short hair and a dark
goatee. He was last seen
wearing Camo BDU pants
and a dark colored shirt. He
is driving a 1993 Buick
LaSabre. The vehicle is light
blue in color except for the
driver’s side door, which is
dark blue. There is also red
tape on the taillights. The
vehicle has Oregon license
plates, TBF-359. The Jackson County Sheriff’s Office
is looking for help from the
community. Now that hunting season has officially
started there are many peo-
Volume 54 • Issue 41
Measure 91, also called
the Control, Regulation, and
Taxation of Marijuana and Industrial Hemp Act of 2014,
and would allow the legal
sale and use of marijuana,
Juveniles Charged
With Vandalism
Appear Before GH
Mayor, Councilors
Rogue River Press
Girls Soccer
50¢
Will Rogue River Tax Marijuana?
October 8, 2014
Proudly Serving the Rogue Valley Since 1915
had dropped. So, Hohnbaum said, the water plant
responded automatically by
sending more water to an
already-full
reservoir.
“Which resulted in a serious overflow problem,” he
said. “It was a big mess.”
The Jackson County
Sheriff’s Office (JCSO) was
contacted, he said. Repair
crews had to fix damaged
equipment, the fence and
other property. Security
cameras had managed to
get pictures of some of the
suspects. Hohnbaum said
a deputy eventually made
contact with two of the suspects and two more were
contacted afterwards.
At the time, Hohnbaum
said that the female juvenile and one of the male
suspects would only be
charged with trespassing.
The remaining three will be
facing vandalism and other
charges.
“Just starting to look at
what was done and the resulting repairs,” he said,
“it’s something under
$20,000. But, when everything else is factored in, it’s
going to be a considerable
sum of money.”
On Monday night, Cara
Walsh, the director of
see GOLD HILL page 8
regulated by the Oregon
Liquor Control Commission
(OLCC). Medical marijuana
will still be regulated by the
Oregon Health Authority
(OHA).
According
to Ballotpedia, Measure 91 is:
Result of
"Yes"
Vote:
"Yes" vote allows possession,
authorizes in-state manufacture, processing, sale of
marijuana by/to adults; licensing, regulation, taxation
by state; retains current
medical marijuana laws.
Result of "No" Vote: "No"
City Now Dealing
With Company Over
Abandoned Property
By Brad Smith
Rogue River Press
see TAX page 3
see ABATEMENT page 8
Search Continues for
Missing Medford Man
ple in the wilderness areas.
If anyone one notices his vehicle, please contact the
Jackson County Sheriff’s Office at 541-774-6800.
2
October 8, 2014
!
RICK DYER FOR
SMALL BUSINESS
OWNERS
I would like to encourage
all small business owners to
vote for fellow local business
owner Rick Dyer for Jackson
County Commissioner, Posi-
ROGUE RIVER PRESS
Subscribe Today! • 541.582.1707
Letters to the Editor
tion 1. Rick owns an
energy/construction business
and is all too aware of the myriad problems we face. One of
his goals is to help streamline
the bureaucratic red tape that
small business owners deal
with. To learn more about
Rick, visit his website at electrickdyer.com. Rick has a de-
Guidelines & Policies for
Letters to the Editor:
Letters longer than 300 words may be rejected, and/or
may be edited for grammar, content and length. All letters
need a full address (no P.O.’s), phone number and a signature (for our records). No more than one letter from any
individual will be published in 30 days. The opinions contained in Letters to the Editor, as well as any bought opinion space are not the opinions of this paper or the
individuals who run or write articles for the Rogue River
Press. Deadline for submission - Monday before 5pm.
Scam Watch
The Rogue River Press has recently received calls
from residents who claimed that they’ve been contacted
by representatives from the Publishers’ Clearing House
(PCH) Sweepstakes.
The calls are part of a scam and it’s not the first time
the Rogue River area has been targeted. Back in February 2012, area residents received similar calls and at
least one victim was taken for thousands of dollars.
“The scammers claimed they were from Publisher’s
Clearing House,” Chief Ken Lewis said, “and told the victim that he’d won the PCH sweepstakes. However, the
supposed winner must pay some ‘taxes’ or ‘processing
fees’ or both. The more money won, the higher the fees
and taxes and that’s where the scammer makes his/her
money.”
According to the PCH website, officials state that:
“Recently we’ve been hearing reports that scammers
are accessing and using the names of our real PCH employees in their criminal attempts to deceive you.
If you are ever contacted by someone claiming to
represent PCH, or claiming to be one of our employees,
and asked to send or wire money (for any reason whatsoever, including taxes); or send a pre-paid gift card or
Green Dot Moneypak card in order to claim a sweepstakes prize – DON’T! It’s a SCAM. If you are sent a
check, told it’s a partial prize award, and asked to cash
it and send a portion back to claim the full prize award,
DON’T. The check is fake, but the SCAM is real!
Publishers Clearing House does not operate this way
and would NEVER ask for money to claim a prize award.
PCH employees would never contact you personally or
in advance to notify you of a prize award. Our prize
awards are presented just the way you see in our popular TV commercials, ‘live and in person’ by our Prize
Patrol, with balloons, bouquet of roses and check in
hand - - and with no advance notification!”
In the past, the Rogue River Police Dept. and other
law enforcement agencies have urged area residents to
contact them after receiving such a call. As stated by
PCH, they do not ask for money or any sort of payment
for prize money.
a publication of:
Valley Pride Publications, Inc.
Publisher/Editor: Teresa Pearson
Production Mgr.: Nadine Roper
Administrative Assistant/Office Mgr: Pam Birdsall
Circulation Manager: Leif Birdsall
Production Assistant: Toni Barker
Marketing: Barbara Schudawa Webmaster: Chris Dowers
Writers: Brad Smith, Brian Mortensen,
Tammy Asnicar, Garrison Wells
Photographers: Karl Roper, Julie Chase
Jr. Photographer: Larraine Pearson
Notary: Terri Mendonca
gree in accounting and business administration from
SOU. He’s keenly aware of
the importance of budgeting
and sticking to a budget during
both hard times and good
times. Rick knows that making
payroll, rent and utilities are all
things that small business
owners face on an ongoing
basis. Please join me in electing Rick Dyer, the best candidate for Jackson County
Commissioner, on November
4.
Ryan Vanderhoof
Medford Oregon
@
SUPPORT FOR
RICK DYER
I am writing to urge support in the upcoming election
for Rick Dyer, whom I believe
to be the most qualified candidate running for the position
of Jackson County Commissioner, Position 1. Of the four
candidates in contention for
the position, I believe only
Rick Dyer is worthy of our
votes.
I have known Rick for
nearly forty years, as we both
grew up in the Rogue Valley
and in Jackson County. As a
local graduate from Southern
Oregon College (now SOU)
with a degree in Accounting
and Business Management,
with a background in senior
management with several
large companies in the Jackson County, he knows the importance
of
accurate
forecasting and the need to
maintain a balanced budget.
He is currently the
owner/operator of an Energy/Construction business,
so he has experienced the
daily challenges of running a
small business in our community. He pursued and
achieved a law degree while
running that business, and
raising a family, so he understands the value of hard
work, planning, and timemanagement to achieve
worthwhile goals.
He has spent time serving on
the Board of RVTD for the
past five years, so he has
gained an understating of
how our local government
agencies operate. This experience gives him an edge in
evaluating the potential impact of proposed legislation
on Jackson County.
Please join me on November
4 in voting for Rick Dyer!
Bill Powell
Medford, Oregon
!
POSITIVE CHANGES
FOR SMALL
BUSINESS OWNERS
It's time for a change in
Jackson County. Small business owners know how frustrating it can be dealing with
county bureaucracy. There is
only one candidate, Rick Dyer,
who sees this as a major issue
for the future. Rick, who is running for Jackson County Commissioner, Position 1, is a
small business owner himself.
He knows firsthand the potential pitfalls that small business
owners can face in dealing
with governmental bureaucracy. And, what's more, he
wants to do something about
it! If you go to Rick's website
(electrickdyer.com), he spells
out his goals. He not only
wants to streamline the overall
You Don’t Know Jack
Mom: Do you have homework today?
Jack: Well, I have homework. But it’s not due tomorrow.
Mom: When is it due?
Jack: Monday.
Mom: Looking at it, it seems you have a packet. There is a lot here.
Jack: Not a lot if you divide it by the amount of days I have to do it.
Mom: Ok and what does that work out to be?
Jack: Mom, can you divide?
Mom: Yes, I can divide. I just want to know how you figured it out.
Jack: I can’t do your homework, Mom. Just take it slow and you can figure out the answer.
Mom: Um.. how did this conversation go from your homework to mine?
Jack: Mom, I think you’re missing the whole point. You really need to learn to divide.
process small business owners face in dealing with the
county; he also wants to do
everything he can to attract
new businesses to Jackson
County, thereby creating new
jobs. Vote for a pro-business
candidate on November 4,
Rick Dyer for Jackson County
Commissioner!
Kathryn Johnson
Medford, Oregon
@
RICK DYER,
TIRELESS, ETHICAL,
EDUCATED
I have known Rick Dyer
for over 25 years. He is a
tireless worker and very ethical with a strong sense of
right and wrong and a high
level of integrity. Rick has
lived in the Rogue Valley for
over 40 years. He graduated
from SOC (SOU) with a degree in Accounting and Business Administration, very
useful for working through
the county’s budget issues.
He also possesses a law degree, invaluable for analyzing proposed legislation for
its impact on Jackson
County. He currently runs a
small business specializing
in energy and construction,
so he’s well aware of the
day-to-day problems that
small business owners face.
He is married and has a 10
year old son attending Medford schools, so he can appreciate the importance of
education for the citizens of
tomorrow.
For all these reasons, I
urge you to join me in voting
for Rick Dyer for Jackson
County Commissioner.
Bill Freda
Medford, Oregon
Weekdays 10am - 5pm
Sat. and Sun. 9am - 5pm
Guidelines & Policies for Letters to the Editor:
Letters longer than 300 words may be rejected, and may be
edited for grammar, content and length. All letters need a full
address (no P.O.’s), phone number and a signature. No more
than one letter from any individual will be published in 30 days.
The opinions contained in Letters to the Editor, as well as any
bought opinion space are not the opinions of this paper or the
individuals who run or write articles for the Rogue River Press.
Deadline for submission-Monday before 5pm.
DEADLINES:
Monday at 12pm: Legals
Monday at 5pm: Letters to the Editor
Tuesday at 12pm: Classified Advertising
Friday at 5pm:
Display & Real Estate Advertising
Obituaries
Rogue River Press
is a legal newspaper of general circulation for
Jackson County, Oregon.
Rogue River Press (USPS 751-590) is
published weekly by Valley Pride Publications, Inc., 8991 Rogue River Highway,
Grants Pass, OR 97527-4377. Periodicals
postage paid at Grants Pass, OR and at
additional mailing offices. POSTMASTER:
Send address changes to Rogue River
Press, PO Box 1485, Rogue River OR
97537-1485
Subscription Rates
In Jackson Co OR: $21/year, $18/year 62+
Outside Jackson Co OR: $31/year, $28/year 62+
Rogue River Press
541.582.1707 fax: 541.582.0201
email: [email protected]
website: rogueriverpress.com
Member Oregon Newspaper Publishers Association
Elmo Smith General Excellence Award Winner
1994, 1995, 1996, 1998, 1999, 2001, 2005
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TAX from page 1
Section 42 of Measure
91 states: "No county or city
of this state shall impose
any fee or tax in connection
with the purchase, sale, production, processing, transportation and delivery of
marijuana items." That said,
a number of local governments are attempting to
pass their own taxes in
hopes that Salem politicians
will change their minds and
amend the law – should
ROGUE RIVER PRESS
Measure 91 pass.
According to City Manager Mark Reagles, the
Rogue River city council is
looking at passing such a
tax.
“As it stands, the council
is considering a five percent
tax on medical marijuana
and a ten percent tax on
recreational marijuana,” he
said. “Nothing is set yet. The
council will be addressing it
again during the October 16
council workshop.”
Reagles said that there
hasn’t been much opposition to the tax issue.
“Then again, everything
is still at the discussion
level,” he said. “Will someone take issue with this proposal? Who knows?”
Portland and Eugene
are considering a tax, and
some communities in Jackson County have already
adopted taxes.
ing California license
plates northbound on Interstate 5 near milepost
45 for a traffic violation.
During the stop, the
trooper identified the
driver as FRANCISCO ALBERTO BEIZA, age 27,
from San Jose, California.
Subsequent investigation during the traffic stop
led the trooper to discover
approximately 4.5 pounds
of methamphetamine concealed inside the vehicle.
Estimated value is approximately $60,000.
BEIZA was arrested
with incident and lodged in
the Jackson County Jail
for Unlawful Possession
and Distribution of a Controlled Substance Methamphetamine.
OSP Traffic Stop Leads to
Over 4 lbs of Meth
A Saturday night Oregon State Police (OSP)
traffic stop led to the arrest
of a San Jose, California
man after a trooper found
over 4 pounds of methamphetamine inside the
man's car on Interstate 5
near Rogue River.
On October 4, 2014 at
approximately 11:59 p.m.,
an OSP trooper stopped a
1998 Volkswagen display-
By Dakota Livesay
Special to the Press
We’re all aware of Wild
Bill Hickok’s expertise with
a pistol, and so were the
bad guys with whom he
faced off. Of all the people
Wild Bill Hickok shot, the
killing of Mike Williams was
one he regretted. This sad
story is coming right up.
It was October 5, 1871
and Wild Bill Hickok was the
sheriff of Abilene, Kansas.
Now, Abilene was a wild
cattle town with a number of
ways for cowboys to get
into trouble. On this particular night, a group of about
50 drunken Texas cowboys,
lead by Phil Coe, were
causing havoc on the
streets.
This Week in the
Old West
Wild Bill told them they
must keep within the
bounds of order or he would
have to stop them. But,
they kept on creating a
ruckus, until finally; Phil Coe
fired his pistol, according to
Phil, at a dog.
Wild Bill immediately
headed for the Alamo Saloon, where he confronted
Coe, who still had his pistol
in hand. As quick as
thought “Wild Bill” drew two
revolvers and both men
fired almost simultaneously.
Phil Coe was shot
through the stomach. Now,
one of Coe’s shots went
through Wild Bill’s coat and
another passed between
his legs striking the floor behind him. Unfortunately,
one or two others in the
crowd were also hit by the
gunfire, but none seriously.
At this point Mike
Williams, a policeman and
friend of Wild Bill came
around the corner with his
gun in hand ready to assist.
In the confusion, thinking
him to be one of the cowboys, Wild Bill shot him…
twice. This was one time
Wild Bill wished he wasn’t
such a good shot.
Wild Bill was seriously
affected by the shooting.
Quite possibly, part of the
cause for the mistake could
have been his failing eyesight.
Two months later, Wild
Bill Hickok was dismissed
from his job as marshal of
Abilene and…this was the
last time he served as a
lawman.
The Healthy Geezer:
Fred Cicetti
October 8, 2014
Hearing Issues
Rogue River Press
Q. It seems like a lot of
my friends are watching TV
with the volume way up,
and accusing everyone of
mumbling. How common
are hearing problems
among seniors?
About one in three Americans over 60 suffers from
loss of hearing, which can
range from the inability to
hear certain voices to deafness.
There are two basic categories of hearing loss. One
is caused by damage to the
inner ear or the auditory
nerve. This type of hearing
loss is permanent. The second kind occurs when sound
can’t reach the inner ear. This
can be repaired medically or
surgically.
Presbycusis, one form of
hearing loss, occurs with
age. Presbycusis can be
caused by changes in the
inner ear, auditory nerve,
middle ear, or outer ear.
Some of its causes are
aging, loud noise, heredity,
head injury, infection, illness,
certain prescription drugs,
and circulation problems
such as high blood pressure.
It seems to be inherited.
Tinnitus, also common in
older people, is the ringing,
hissing, or roaring sound in
the ears frequently caused by
exposure to loud noise or
certain medicines. Tinnitus is
a symptom that can come
with any type of hearing loss.
Hearing loss can by
caused by "ototoxic" medicines that damage the inner
ear. Some antibiotics are ototoxic. Aspirin can cause temporary problems. If you’re
having a hearing problem,
ask your doctor about any
medications you’re taking.
Loud noise contributes to
presbycusis and tinnitus.
Noise has damaged the
hearing of about 10 million
Americans, many of them
Baby Boomers who listened
to hard rock with the volume
turned up as far as possible.
Hearing problems that
are ignored or untreated can
get worse. If you have a
hearing problem, see your
doctor. Hearing aids, special
training, medicines and surgery are options.
Your doctor may refer
you to an otolaryngologist, a
physician who specializes in
problems of the ear. Or you
may be referred to an audiologist, a professional who can
identify and measure hearing
loss. An audiologist can help
you determine if you need a
hearing aid.
There other “hearing
aids” you should consider.
There are listening systems
to help you enjoy television or
radio without being bothered
by other sounds around you.
Some hearing aids can be
plugged directly into TVs,
music players, microphones,
and personal FM systems to
help you hear better.
Some telephones work
with certain hearing aids to
make sounds louder and re-
3
move background noise. And some auditoriums, movie theaters,
and other public places are
equipped with special sound
systems that send sounds directly to your ears.
Alerts such as doorbells,
smoke detectors, and alarm
clocks can give you a signal
that you can see or a vibration that you can feel. For example, a flashing light can let
you know someone is at the
door or on the phone.
If you would like to ask a
question,
write
to
[email protected].
LOCAL NEWS
just another
reason to
SUBSCRIBE To Your
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Local Sports,
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Rogue River Family Practice Clinic
EDMUND GLOVINSKY, D.O.
DAVID FRANK, D.O.
BRIAN MATEJA, D.O.
HEATHER MERLO, M.D.
CORA HAZE, PA-C
Osteopathic Physicians
509 E. Main • Rogue River
582-0505
FLU SHOTS - NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY!!
THURSDAY, OCT. 16
8:30 a.m. - 11:30 a.m
THURSDAY, OCT. 23
8:30 a.m. - 11:30 a.m. & 1 p.m. - 4 p.m.
4
October 8, 2014
ROGUE RIVER PRESS
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ROGUE RIVER PRESS
October 8, 2014
5
6
ROGUE RIVER PRESS
October 8, 2014
www.rogueriverpress.com
O u r Comm un it y
Events • Announcements • Births • Obits • Graduations • Reunions • Honors
Dick Williams
bEVENTS
Coming Soon...
His Music and Ministry
Dick Williams is a composer, recording artist, and Bible teacher who shares the simple truths of God’s Word in everyday life through his music and teaching. God has
gifted him with a powerful, but gentle prophetic word for those to whom he has the opportunity to minister. Dick has served the Lord in public ministry for 25 years. He has
been priviliged to take this ministry of music and teaching the Word of God to seven
different countries, including Yugoslavia, Hungary, and Czechoslovakia.
Be encouraged and refreshed through
the ministry of Dick Williams as he seeks to lift up the Lord Jesus Christ.
October 12, 2014 • 6 p.m.
Valley Rogue Christian Center
(next to First Community Credit Union in Rogue River)
YOUR COMMUNITY!
YOUR THOUGHTS!
Weekly in
the Rogue River Press!!
Local Sports, Events, TV Guide &more!!!
Healthy & Beautiful Smiles
ACCESS Opening Enrollment for its Senior Food
Box Program. www.oregon.gov/energy/BUSINESS/Incentives/Pages/EIP
-Trans.aspx. ACCESS announces open enrollment in
the program with the chance
for even more qualifying seniors in Jackson County to
sign up. Effective immediately, anyone over the age
60 meeting the following income requirements may
contact Peggy at ACCESS
(541-774-4309) to register
for regular monthly CSFP
food boxes. Income Limits:1
person, $1,245/mo., 2 people, $1,681/mo., 3 people,
$2,116/mo., 4 people,
$2,552/mo.
tttttt
Alcoholics Anonymous
Open Meeting. Tuesdays,
6:30pm - 8:00pm, Our Lady
of the River Church (opennon smoking-wheelchair access) 3625 North River
Road, 1.5 miles South of the
mill.
tttttt
Stockings for Soldiers
Project - Remembering our
overseas Soldiers at Christmas. For the 5th year
Josephine County 4-H will
again be collecting donations for the service men and
women stationed overseas
at Christmas time. f you
would like to donate items or
funds for shipping, donations
can be brought to the OSU
Extension office at 215
Ringuette St, during business hours M-F 9am to 4pm.
Info: OSU Extension Office
at 541-476-6613.
tttttt
Food & Friends Needs Volunteers. Food and Friends
provides hot, nutritious
meals and a friendly visit to
hundreds of homebound
seniors. Meals are served
Monday through Friday between 10:00 am and noon.
Our Rogue River location is
looking for volunteers to help
out at the meal site on Mondays and Thursdays. For
Friendly, Comprehensive Oral Health Care
Family & Cosmetic Dentistry
New Patients Always Welcome!
more info, call Nancy
Hayes/Volunteer Coord. at
(541)734-9505 x 4.
tttttt
The Oregon Department of
Energy is accepting applications for the Energy Incentives
Program’s.
Alternative Fuel Vehicle Infrastructure Projects from
Aug. 11 through Dec. 31,
2014. The State has approximately $3 million in tax credits available for these
projects. For application materials and other information,
please visit the webpage at:
www.oregon.gov/energy/BU
SINESS/Incentives/Pages/E
IP-Trans.aspx.
tttttt
Hello mushroom hunters!
September 27th was the first
day that you could sign up
for the mushroom hunts this
year. We have decided to
have two forays: October 25
and November 1st. Go to our
website,www.estacadafungusfest.com and click on the
Mushroom Hunt page, fill out
the form. The foray is limited
to the first 20 people will be
signed up.
tttttt
October 11th, See Our
Salmon. Join us for the 8th
annual event to learn about
salmon as they return to
spawning gravels on the
Rogue River. See Our
Salmon (SOS) is a family oriented event that balances
fun and educational activities
for both children and adults.
There is no charge for attendance and refreshments will
also be provided. Contact
the Seven Basins Watershed Council at 541-2617796 for more information.
tttttt
October 20th, Rogue River
Rooster Sams October
Outing. October outing at
the Seven Feathers RV Park
in Canyonville, OR. Begins
Monday afternoon, 10/20
ending Friday, 10/24. We will
be holding a silent auction at
the outing in support of Dogs
for the Deaf. You are welcome to bring something to
the auction. If you have a
recreational vehicle, and are
interested in joining this fun
group, please call this
month’s host, Don & Norma
Taylor, at 541-582-3022 (H)
or 541-840-4182 (C) to
make your reservations. We
look forward to making new
friends.
Adult & Family Dentistry • Preventive Care
Cash Discounts, 0% financing available
through CITI Financial OAC
Wayne A. Hopper DMD, LLC
General Dentist
204 W Main St • Rogue River
541-582-3767
OUR COMMUNITY CHURCHES WELCOME YOU!
faith
Lutheran Church
(L.C.M.S.)
8582 Rogue River Hwy.
Foots Creek Church Of God
Holiness
Chapel
“A Christ-Centered Fellowship”
Worship: 10 a.m.
Family Hour: 8:45 a.m.
~~
Sunday School 9:30am
Morning Worship 10:45am
Wednesday: AWANA 6:30 pm
Thursday: AWANA
for 7th & 8th grades 6:30pm
Pastor
Dick Kammerzell
Pastor evan Goeglein
913 Foots Crk. Rd., Gold Hill
Sunday Worship
11am
582-0457
www.faithrogueriver.org
HOPE
nursery Care
Provided
Presbyterian Church
515 Broadway - 582-3282
Worship
Service and
Children's
Sunday School
HH H
10:00 a.m.
Pastor Brian Boisen
582-2524
~~
Rogue River
Church of Christ
1775 east evans Creek rd
582-1501
Sunday Bible Class 10 a.m.
Worship 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wed. Bible Study 7 p.m.
*Sharing first century
Christianity in the
21st century*
Our Lady Of
the river
3625 N. River Road
401 Broadway
Rogue River
582-1373
Phone
Mass:
SUNDAY - 8:30 A.M.
582-3841
Grace
Baptist
582-2290
4233 East Evans Creek Rd.
``````
10am Sun.
8:30am
Sun.
& 11am
6pm
6pm
Sun.
Wed.
Bible Study
Worship
Bible Study &
Youth Night
Bible Study &
Team Kids
gracebaptistrogueriver.com
``````
For emergencies
requiring a priest, phone:
476-2240
Valley Rogue
Christian Center
Rogue River Shopping Center
next to SOFCU
A Foursquare Church
“Join Us in Celebrating
the Power of God”
Sunday Morning
10:30 a.m.
Pastor Bill Donaldson
582-4788
List Your House
of Worship Here
j
Only $5 a week!
Call 582.1707
for Details
fr. Willian holtzinger
the ChurCh Of
JeSuS ChriSt
Of
L at t e r - d ay S a i n t S
Sunday
9:00aM
GrantS PaSS LdS
Stake Center
1969 WiLLiaMS hWy
GrantS PaSS
J O n at h a n J e n S O n
BiShOP
479.5066 (OffiCe)
rogue valley
Community Church
623 Pine Street • PO Box 640
rogue river, Or 97537
(541) 582-0737
Sunday Morning
Schedule
9:30am Connection Café
10:00am Worship
& Children Church
11:30am adult Bible Study
rvcconline.org
Subscribe Today! • 541.582.1707
ROGUE RIVER PRESS
Headlines & Highlights
October 9, 2013
One Year Ago
• RRFD Open house informative, entertaining •
VFW needs to welcome
young vets, families • Local
men arrested after charging
chief • Instructional days
give students days off •
Gold Hill looking for Public
Works Director
October 14, 2009
Five Years Ago
• Savage Rogue - Officials urge river runners to
stay away from former dam
site • Man arrested for
printing & using fake bills •
70-year-old Gold Hill landmark-Oregon Vortex ‘still a
mystery’
October 13, 2004
10 Years Ago
• Dead bluejay found to
have West Nile virus • 95year-old woman struck by
car Tuesday morning - listed
in fair condition in Medford
hospital • Swingin’ - couple
teaching popular dance
classes at Community Center • Successfully sued,
municipalities have insurance- pair of lawsuits recently filed against City of
Rogue River • Church beginning search for community’s oldest bible
October 13, 1999
15 Years Ago
• Hungry bears making
frequent appearances this
time of year • Rapid Rider Gold Hill’s Covey Baack is
excelling in competitive
kayaking events. • They’re
RACING to recycle- High
school class teaming with
city for bi-annual event in
Rogue River Saturday •
RR’s push to grow brings
traffic to forefront
October 12, 1994
20 Years Ago
• Arson still suspected in
fire of policeman’s home Lab reports come up negative • Drug-alcohol survey
gives RR mixed review-project 16 says seventh
graders show increases,
tenth graders decreases. •
Third fire in three weeks destroys rural home-house
burns in less than 30 minutes • Council hires doctor
for ailing oak • RRRFD
breaks ground for new station
October 11, 1989
25 Years Ago
• Citizens’ group seeks
kinder timber harvest on
nearby hills • Schools hoping to get “free” computers •
United way kicks off local effort
• Passing thoughtsWhere is your favorite
place to ride your bicycle?
Shawn Sauter: On the
Sentry lot – because it’s a
big parking lot to ride in. You
can’t go anyplace else unless you want to get run
over by a car.
Joshua Smith: To the
middle school. There’s a lot
of stairs to jump and a lot of
jumps and a humongous
field where you can do whatever you want.
Stephanie
Layton:
Downtown… cause I can
ride with my friends. I have
a lot of friends downtown,
We just have fun spending
time together.
Jesse Smith: On the elementary school yard.
There used to be a tree
there, and where it used to
be there’s a ramp to jump
now. I like to jump.
Kecia Later: Up and
down Broadway, because I
like going up an down the
hills, and lots of my friends
are up there too.
October 11, 1984
30 Years Ago
• Satellite TV zaps local
market, raises issues •
Kathy Ring of Rogue River
took her case to the streets
in front of City Hall last
week. She’s unhappy with
city’s surprise trimming of
her tree on Broadway.
• What do you think
about satellite TV dishes?
Should their placement be
regulated?
Harry Daniels, Rogue
River - A man’s got to own
his own property. If his
neighbors don’t mind and
he’s not breaking any laws
he should be able to do
what he wants.
Shelly Reeder, Rogue
River - It doesn’t matter as
far as I’m concerned. A person should be allowed to do
what they want with their
property.
Glady’s Bricker, East
Evans Creek – I wish we
had one. We live in the
country and we don’t mind
them at all. I don’t think
there should be any regulations.
Ludine Webb, Rogue
River - I never did like them.
I don’t think they need that
much TV and I don’t think
satellites are necessary.
Jack Murphy, Rogue
River – I suppose they
should [be regulated]. It’s
easy for things to get cluttered up if there’s no regulation. The place could turn
out to be one solid satellite
dish. The city of Rogue
River should start thinking
about it - it looks like the city
could grow easily if they see
fit to let it. I haven’t formed
an opinion yet on satellite
TV itself. Some of the programming is undesirable,
and we’re going to have
more of that available in the
future. We’ve got grandkids
and they watch some programs that we wouldn’t. The
media carries a big stick and
they control a lot of lives by
what they put on the air. It’s
up to parents to control what
kids are exposed to, and
that’s a big job.
Leo and Mary Reyes,
Foots Creek – Leo: they are
somewhat of a hideous site.
Mary: They should be near
the rear of a home and
should be camouflaged.
Kathy Allison, Gold Hill –
I don’t think there should be
any regulations, but they
should be inconspicuous
and shouldn’t offend neighbors. It would be nicer if they
were away from the street
and they should blend in
with the environment. I plan
to buy one someday and put
it behind the barn.
October 8, 2014
October
Gardening Calendar
By Claire Atteberry
Rogue River Press
Maintenance
and Clean Up
Drain your irrigation system, insulate valves, in
preparation for winter.
Recycle disease-free
plant material and kitchen
vegetable and fruit scraps
into compost.
Use newspaper or cardboard covered by mulch to
discourage winter and spring
annual weeds. For conversion, work in the paper and
mulch as organic matter
once the lawn grass has
died.
Clean greenhouses and
cold frames for plant storage
and winter growth.
Harvest sunflower heads;
use seed for birdseed or
roast for personal use.
Dig and store potatoes;
keep in darkness, in moderate humidity. Discard unused
potatoes if they sprout. Don't
use as seed potatoes for
next year.
Ripen green tomatoes indoors or make some lovely,
garlicky pickled green tomatoes. Check often and discard rotting fruit.
Harvest and store apples; keep at about 40°F,
moderate humidity.
Place mulch over roots of
roses, azaleas, rhododendrons and berries for winter
protection.
Cover asparagus and
rhubarb beds with a mulch of
manure or compost.
Clean, sharpen and oil
tools and equipment before
storing for winter.
Store garden supplies
and fertilizers in a safe, dry
place out of reach of children.
Prune out dead fruiting
canes in raspberries.
Train and prune primocanes of raspberry
Harvest squash and
pumpkins; keep in dry area
at 55° to 60°F.
If necessary and if
weather permits, spade organic material and lime into
garden soil.
Planting/Propagation
Dig and divide rhubarb.
(Should be done about every
four years.)
Plant garlic for harvesting
next summer.
Propagate chrysanthemums, fuchsias, geraniums
by stem cuttings.
Save seeds from the
vegetable and flower gardens. Dry, date, label, and
store in a cool and dry location.
Dig and store geraniums,
tuberous begonias, dahlias,
and gladiolas.
7
Pest Monitoring
and Management
Monitor landscape plants
for problems. Don't treat unless a problem is identified.
Remove and dispose of
windfall apples that might be
harboring apple maggot or
codling moth larvae.
Rake and destroy diseased leaves (apple, cherry,
rose, etc).
Spray apple and stone
fruit trees at leaf fall to prevent various fungal and bacterial diseases.
If moles and gophers are
a problem, consider traps.
Or a really big cat.
Houseplants
and Indoor Gardening
Early October: Reduce
water, place in cool area (5055°F) and increase time in
shade or darkness (12-14
hours) to force Christmas
cactus to bloom in late December.
Place hanging pots of
fuchsias where they won't
freeze. Don't cut back until
spring.
Check/treat houseplants
for disease and insects before bringing indoors.
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541-582-2323
8
October 8, 2014
GOLD HILL from page 1
Restorative Justice Programs, and two of the juveniles appeared. Walsh
explained how the program
worked and introduced the
pair. Each teenager apologized for his actions.
Hohnbaum told the
council that the three
youths will be spending the
next few weekends working on some city projects.
ABATEMENT from page 1
hadn’t followed through
with its promised removal
of weeds from the property.
“It was disappointing. I
contacted the police department,” Reagles said,
“and (Chief Ken Lewis) saw
to it that a notice was
Many of those projects, he
said, involved a lot of
heavy, physical work.
“We have a lot of things
planned,” he said.
Both Mayor Jan Fish
and the city councilors accepted the apologies and
appreciated the youths’
sincerity and willingness to
atone for their mistakes.
Hohnbaum said he’s
glad that a resolution was
posted on the property.
Then, we filed an abatement citation.”
However, as of Oct. 7,
Reagles said that he’d
been in contact with the
company.
“I was told that they’re
in the process of taking
ROGUE RIVER PRESS
found and that both parties
are moving forward.
Hohnbaum also reported that the recent
Community Development
Organization (Can-DO)
dinner was a success, raising more than $1,800 for
charity.
A further recap covering the marijuana tax issue
will appear next week.
care of everything,” he
said. “However, I was also
told that since they are a
large company and manage hundreds of such properties, it might take a
while.”
Reagles said that he
will continue talking with
the company and hopefully
a deadline will be set. And,
if the company doesn’t
comply one way or another
– the city will take action.
“We’ll file an abatement
lien on the property and
send in a crew to clean up
the property,” he said.
“We’ll take care of this
property – and there will be
more for us to deal with in
the future.”
Subscribe Today! • 541.582.1707
Offbeat Oregon History:
Jefferson “Secession”
Publicity Stunt
By Finn J.D. John
Special to the Press
Most Oregonians know
about the State of Jefferson
— in general concept, at
least: a small group of
Southern Oregon people got
together in 1941 to proclaim
a new state, made up of
southwest Oregon and
northwest California, called
Jefferson; just as they got
started, the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor; and the
idea just never got off the
ground.
All of which is true
enough. But it barely
touches the real story of Jefferson — and it’s not even
the most interesting part.
The fact is, the 1941
move for statehood was
mostly a publicity stunt. It
was crafted over drinks by
two guys who seem right out
of central casting for a Hollywood movie — a highrolling,
back-slapping
business promoter and a
hard-drinking, wildly imagi-
An NBC promotional drawing of Gilbert Gable in 1931, for his radio show.
(Image: Radio Digest Magazine)
native newspaper man.
The newsman actually
won a Pulitzer prize for his
part in the affair. His name
was Stanton Delaplane; he
wrote for the San Francisco
Chronicle.
The business promoter
was a stocky, dynamic man
named Gilbert E. Gable,
onetime dinosaur egg
hunter, movie maker, NBC
radio-show star and (he
claimed) Navajo Indian
chief. In 1941, he was mayor
of the tiny Oregon town of
Port Orford and, for a brief
see OFFBEAT page 24
Rogue River Press Puzzles
CLUES ACROSS
1. Leaf attachment
5. Gaiters
10. Nearly all
14. Carbonated soft drink
15. Dogma
16. Plural of ascus
17. Highly excited
18. Annuity
19. 750 mi. So. African river
20. "Blue Bloods" Danny
23. Away from wind
24. Ardor
25. Senior officer
28. Consumed
29. Radioactivity unit
30. Make lacework
33. Courtesy titles for women
35. Of she
36. Wolf (Spanish)
37. Jordanian seaport
38. Father
39. Clear wrap
40. Gastric fold
41. __ student, learns healing
42. Placate
43. Neckwear
44. More (Spanish)
45. Post-office box
46. Belonging to a thing
47. Antique Roadshow twins
48. Bark
50. Retiring Late Show host
56. AKA Matakam
57. Seamlike union
58. River in Florence
59. Arab outer garments
60. Distinctive spirit of a people
61. Up to the time of
62. Disfiguring marks
63. Slants from vertical
64. A branch of the Tai languages
CLUES DOWN
1. Any of several carangid fishes
2. African nation
3. University in North Carolina
4. __ Carta, British Constitution
5. Thoroughfares
6. Herman character
7. Tolstoy's Karenina
8. Attached by a rope
9. Like a star
10. Expert
11. Narrow ridges (Swedish)
12. Street name for heroin
13. '__ death do us part
21. Annona diversifolia
22. Not good
25. Intelligent
26. Chilean superfruit
27. Saying
30. Shinto temple gateway
31. Toward the stern
32. Broadway awards
34. Fabric for 59 across
35. Possessed
36. Varnish ingredient
38. Abandoned
39. Expensive fur
41. Lathe spindle
42. A woman poet
44. Japanese apricot
45. Large Old World boas
47. Russian barley brew
49. Swift Malayan sailboat
50. Biu-Mandara
51. From a distance
52. Cubage unit
53. Messenger ribonucleic acid
54. Gaming stake
55. A small alcove
56. One's mother (Brit.)
last week’s answers
ROGUE RIVER PRESS
National Deer Alliance Aims
to Be Voice of Hunters
www.rogueriverpress.com
Kevin Naze
RR Press Outdoors
Whether you pursue
blacktails, whitetails or
mulies, a new group — the
National Deer Alliance —
hopes you’ll take advantage
of a free membership offer as
they work to unite and educate hunters.
The NDA’s goal is to
serve as the unified voice of
the modern deer hunter and
guardian of North America’s
wild deer, wildlife habitat and
the hunting heritage. Members will be kept informed on
key deer issues through a
weekly email, and real-time
through social media and the
NDA website.
Soon, members will have
the opportunity to have their
voice heard by participating in
advocacy efforts. When a
subject of broad concern is
identified, a steering committee will engage NDA staff and
members to achieve positive
outcomes for deer and deer
hunting.
Deer are the most commonly pursued and economically important big game
animal in North America.
However, less than one percent of deer hunters belong to
a national conservation organization dedicated to the
protection of deer and our
deer hunting heritage.
During the inaugural
North American Whitetail
Summit held in March, the
Quality Deer Management
Association was identified as
the organization best suited
to form this new umbrella organization as a natural extension of our current mission.
Craig Dougherty is serving as the initial Executive Director of NDA, with additional
support from select QDMA
staff including Kip Adams and
Matt Ross. Eventually, NDA
will have its own staff.
Interested hunters can
get a free membership and
sign up for the e-updates at
www.nationaldeeralliance.co
m.
WOLVES, BEARS AND
COUGARS
Oregon’s Fish and
Wildlife Commission Thursday and Friday at the Jackson County Fairgrounds
(Mace Watchable Wildlife
Center, 1 Peninger Road) in
Central Point to be briefed on
wolf management and recovery, set 2015 big game hunting regulations and consider
options for recruiting a new
agency director.
Thursday’s meeting is a
joint one with California Fish
and Game Commission.
Thursday’s meeting begins at
9 a.m. and Friday’s at 8 a.m.;
see the meeting agenda on
both days or watch a streaming
video
live
at
www.dfw.state.or.us/agency/c
ommission.
On Thursday, the California and Oregon Commissions will be briefed on
Klamath Basin Restoration
efforts, ocean acidification
and temperature anomalies,
and the Oregon Wolf Conservation and Management
Plan.
Finally, the group will engage in a roundtable discussion about issues of mutual
interest including forage fish
management, the Interstate
deer herd, and salmon management.
Friday’s wolf briefing to
the Commission will include a
discussion about delisting
wolves from the state Endangered Species Act, the
process and timeline for the
five-year Wolf Plan evaluation
and public disclosure of wolf
location information.
The Commission will also
consider options for recruiting
a new agency director. Roy
Elicker, director since 2007,
recently resigned to take a
position with the U.S. Fish
and Wildlife Service.
The Commission will also
be asked to adopt 2015 Oregon Big Game Regulations.
Among the changes being
proposed are adding 250
Siskiyou spring bear tags in
southwest Oregon and increasing the statewide
cougar quota from 777 to 970
to reflect increased cougar
population,
higher
damage/public safety issues
from cougar in some areas,
and deer and elk populations
that are below objectives in
many areas.
October 8, 2014
Murphy Leads at
College Tourney
By Brian Mortensen
Rogue River Press
Rogue River High graduate David Murphy was the
first-day leader in the Border
War collegiate golf tournament at Centennial Golf
Club in Medford for Oregon
Tech, but he would settle for
a tie for 12th place in the individual standings in favor of
leading the Hustlin' Owls to
second place in the sevenschool tournament Sept. 2829.
Murphy, a sophomore,
shot a one-under 71 through
the first day, leading four
players by one stroke, on
Sept. 28, but he would come
back with a 78 on the final
day on Sept. 29. He finished
with a five-over 149.
One of those four immediately behind Murphy
through the first day, Kade
Crossland from Corban University, shot a 68, good
enough to give him a fourstroke victory.
9
Crossland was the only
player finishing below par,
with four players tying for
second at even-par 144.
Corban, as a team, finished two-under par, at 574,
with Oregon Tech 20 strokes
back at +18. Simpson University (CA) was in third,
three strokes behind Oregon
Tech.
Murphy also finished in a
tie for 41st place at the twoday, three-round Cavalier
Classic in Portland. The
tournament, hosted by Concordia University of Portland
at Rose City Golf Club,
ended on Oct. 7.
Murphy finished with a
three-round tally of 85-8374--242, for 26 over par.
Jack Wood, from University of British Columbia, won
by two strokes, shooting
eight-under.
The tournament was the
Oregon Tech golf team's last
action of the fall season, beginning spring play in Salem
on March 9, 2015.
10 October 8, 2014
ROGUE RIVER PRESS
Chieftains Drop Two on the
Road, Host Big Rematch
in their Sept. 18 meeting with
the Challengers, also a threeset loss.
Only three Class 3A
"The girls had no answer
Southern Cascade League for Cascade's digs up on the
(SCL) matches remain for net," he said. "We talked a lot
Rogue River's team, and they about getting under their kill
will be the most important.
attempts, which our dig count
They'll, at least, determine can attest to."
whether there'll be a fourth or
Indeed, Anjelica Pammaybe a fifth.
plona led the Chieftains with
The Chieftains host their 18 digs, while Skye Downhill
second match against St. had 14. The trio of Courtney
Mary's on Thurs., Oct. 9 at Sakraida, Kortney Moore and
James Martin Court. A five-set Della Birdsall each had 10.
victory against the Crusaders
The Challengers scored
in Medford on Sept. 23 the first seven points of the
helped put them in the posi- first set on Alyssa Brown's
tion to fight for a second- serve and then scored the
straight SCL playoff berth. A last 11 points on freshman Alvictory may be necessary to lison Winter's serve.
do it again.
The second set was as
The Chieftains lost to the close as 13-8 before Alyssa
two teams that placed above Brown served up 10 straight
them last year, in road points, only stopping the
matches at Lakeview on streak by missing her serve
Thurs., Oct. 2, and in Medford on 23-8.
against Cascade Christian on
Rogue River scored three
Tue., Oct. 7.
straight points and had 6-5
At Lakeview, the Chief- lead after Moore sent a shot
tains fell to the Honkers 25- down the line, then served up
15, 26-24, 25-21, but the loss an ace and when setter Naat Cascade Christian wasn't talie Watkins managed to
nearly as close.
send the ball onto the ChalIn short order, the Chal- lengers' back row for a point.
lengers stopped the ChiefBut that was it. Moore
tains 25-7, 25-8, 25-10.
served the next one long, and
The easiest way to de- Cascade's Makenna Polan
scribe the match in Medford is proceeded to fire an ace to
that Rogue River was not as start a 10-point service.
sharp, and Cascade Christian
For the Cascade Chrisis a team that neutralize the tian match, Coach Bryan Dethings Rogue River like to do. Bolt went with a slight
variation on his lineup from
The Challengers cover the previous week, starting
the floor well and aren't his four seniors Moore,
beaten by tips into the back Watkins, Pamplona and
row. They pass well to give Downhill, with junior Birdsall
setter Alyssa Brown a chance and sophomore Elly Moulder,
to set up one of, of course, with Sakraida subbing to play
Cascade Christian's tall front- on the back row.
line players who can all jump.
With the score 20-8, DeA few hits by either out- Bolt cleared his bench, as he
side hitters Nicole Morse, did during the Sept. 18 meetKatelyn Smith or middle hitter ing at James Martin Court in
Ellie Brown, all 5-10 or taller, Rogue River.
hit from their highest point
"We just didn't put toand straight down, tend to in- gether much offense tonight,
timidate and wear a team and they covered our serves
down.
pretty well," DeBolt said.
Rogue River coach Bryan
While they were able to
DeBolt said his team did a dig up a lot of the Chalbetter job of getting in position lengers' hits, the Chieftains
to dig those hard shots than often had trouble with the
By Brian Mortensen
Rogue River Press
Challengers serves. Cascade
Christian picked up 18 aces in
the three sets.
In the match at Lakeview
last week, Moore had eight
kills, 20 digs and three blocks,
while Skye Downhill had five
kills, 10 digs and seven
blocks on Lakeview's big hitters.
Anjelica Pamplona had
18 digs, while senior Sam
Krusemark, off the bench,
had 11 digs, as did Courtney
Sakraida.
Watkins had 19 assists,
while Elly Moulder had seven
digs and three blocks.
"The girls all played really
well, but we just couldn't close
the gap and get wins," Rogue
River coach Bryan DeBolt
said. "We competed really
well and proved we belong
amongst the top teams in our
league."
Going into play on Sept.
7, the Chieftains, St. Mary's
and Lakeview were tied, with
2-2 SCL records, for second
place in the league. The
league's top three finishers
move on to the SCL playoff
on Oct. 25, usually at the
home court of the top seed.
Lakeview swept its match
at home against Illinois Valley
on Oct. 7, 25-14, 25-12, 25-6,
so it now takes over second
place. St. Mary's played out of
league that night, so it stood
pat at 2-2.
And, Rogue River, with its
loss, leaves the Chieftains
with a little climbing to do. Following its match against St.
Mary's this week, the Chieftains play at Illinois Valley on
Tue., Oct. 14 and end the regular season at home against
Lakeview on Oct. 21.
The Chieftains also play
at tournaments at North Valley on Oct. 11 and Bonanza
on Oct. 18.
The Rogue River junior
varsity lost its match at Lakeview 25-23, 26-24 and at
Cascade Christian 25-16, 259.
The Chieftains' JV 2 team
lost at Lakeview 25-16, 25-19.
Chieftains Prepare for
Another Battle in Bonanza
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By Brian Mortensen
Rogue River Press
The Rogue River
Chieftain football season
has not started the way
anyone connected to the
program wanted.
With a schedule that includes eight games
against Class 2A schools,
they've found that low
numbers, youth and inexperience have still proceeded to bite them to the
tune of an 0-5 record
halfway through the season.
One thing the schedule
has allowed the Chieftains
do, though, as they play
what would have been bye
dates in the 2A Mountain
View Conference schedule, is play each week.
Barring an unforeseen
unfortunate circumstance,
the Chieftains will play nine
games, nine chances for
the players to learn and
get better.
Even so, the Chieftains
would surely appreciate
winning even one game in
2014, and their opponent
this week gives them the
best chance.
Bonanza, like the
Chieftains, is 0-5 and has
lost all three of its games
to its MVC opponents.
The way the season
started for the Antlers, any
victory this season might
be an achievement.
Coach Garry Young,
who led the Antlers to a 15 record last season, with
injuries forcing them cancel all non-league games,
resigned on the second
day of fall sports practice
on Aug. 19, just two hours
before afternoon practice
was to start.
That left Bonanza High
principal Art Ochoa, an
area football coach himself
at Lakeview, as well as Bonanza, who had retired
vs.
Chieftains vs. Bonanza
Where: Bonanza High School
When: Friday, October 10
Time: 7 p.m.
Series: Bonanza has won two of the three games
played against Rogue River between 2011 and 2013.
from coaching in 1995 to
take over the program for
at least this season.
The Antlers have
played two common opponents to Bonanza (Glide,
Oakridge) and lost to each.
The Antlers are led by
junior quarterback Carson
Merkley and running back
Gage Knox, also a junior,
with is 5-9, 150.
Both scored touchdowns in Bonanza's 43-21
home loss to Monroe last
weekend. Knox ran for 95
yards on 14 carries.
The Antlers have
shown life on defense, returning three fumbles for
touchdowns this season.
Senior linebacker Kyle
Stickel, at 5-7, 155
pounds, usually leads Bonanza in tackles.
What gives the Chieftains the most hope
against Bonanza is that
they nearly came away
with a victory in last year's
meeting in Bonanza.
The Chieftains trailed
21-20 at halftime but took
the lead for the first time on
the second of a pair of long
runs by Alex Valencia. The
lead changed six times in
the second half.
The Chieftains had the
lead with when Jarrid Hopkins ran in from nine yards
out with five minutes left,
but the Antlers took over
with Eric Salazar's third
touchdown, a 41-yard
sprint with 2:07 left in the
game to give Bonanza a
41-40 victory.
Potential
winning
touchdown passes in the
final seconds out of the
hand of Cody Wright, on
consecutive plays, were
dropped and interceptive
Merkley was the quarterback that night for Bonanza. It was Knox who
made the interception of
Wright's second pass into
the end zone in the closing
seconds.
The victory was Bonanza's only one of the
2013 season. Rogue River
would finally get its victory
two weeks later at home
against Chiloquin.
But, still, Chieftains
coach Beau Canfield
thinks about the missed
opportunities that game on
Oct. 11, 2013.
"We know we left
points on the field last
year, if you will, against
Bonanza, and it maybe
took me three months to
figure out we should have
kicked a field goal to win it
instead of just pounding it
in there, " he said. "We
were a single dropped
pass away from winning
that ballgame.
"These kids want a win.
They deserve a win.
They've been working their
tails off."
The Chieftains also
earned a victory on Homecoming Night against the
Antlers in 2012, when Seth
Gretz caught a tipped 11yard pass from Andy Valencia on the last play of
the game to win 12-6.
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By Tammy Asnicar
October 8, 2014
ROGUE RIVER PRESS
www.rogueriverpress.com
The Cabin
A Tandem Memoir of Life in the Wild (of Wimer)
Rogue River Press
Another curve - and suddenly there was a small
building. Another abandoned
miner's shack. But, the car
ahead was slowing, as were
we. I looked at Doug, who
smiled back, encouragingly.
I let my eyes travel over a
structure that had no relation
whatsoever to the cabin of
my imagination. This? This
was to be my home for the
foreseeable future?
This was a shed, and not
a large one at that, built of
planks and battens, with a
tar-paper roof. I sat there in
the car clutching the children
to me. I wanted to run - run
back the way we had come,
to my mother, paved streets,
the sound of traffic. ~ from
Louise Ruddle Talbot's journal
It was an inauspicious
beginning to the first year
city-born and bred Louise
Talbot spent living in a cabin
Photo Courtesy: David Talbot family.
Louise Talbot and her young sons, Douglas and David, outside the cabin she dubbed “the doghouse.”
David Talbot – Louise's
youngest son.
“The Cabin” weaves excerpts from nine of Louise's
journals, written between
1933 and 1935, and David's
memories of growing up
“wild and woolly” hunting and
fishing with his brother, Dou-
“I read the memoir,” Jacobs said. “I absolutely loved
it! A different time in our
lovely woods!”
Louise Talbot died in
1961. Her journals, scrapbooks and family photographs were left in her
husband's hands, and then
duced a book that has
“swept away” reviewers, and
that many are calling “a story
that appeals to all generations” and “a fun, heart-felt
must-read.”
Not bad for a man who
spent his career traveling the
mountains,
streams,
Photo Courtesy: David Talbot family.
Aspiring author Louise Talbot with her husband, Doug, and sons, Douglas and David, settle into a life in the woods of Wimer.
nestled in the wilds of the
Pleasant Creek drainage
above Wimer. Her family's
homestead --- a 12-foot-by14-foot cabin, she (un)affectionately
dubbed
“a
doghouse.”
Accessible only by traveling over the river and up
the creek by car or truck in
the summer and by trudging
through the snowy woods in
the winter, the shack did not
fit Louise’s romantic notion of
a cozy, fire-lit paneled cabin
where Clark Gable welcomed her with a martini in
hand.
The journal entry is the
beginning of “The Cabin: A
Tandem Memoir of Life in the
Wild,” an eloquent, poignant
book recently published by
11
glas, in the nooks and crannies of Pleasant Creek
during the 1940s.
The 116-page book is a
point-counterpoint account
of life in the wilderness in the
dark days of the Great Depression, and later the sunny
days of a young boy's childhood paradise.
Talbot is tickled by a reporter's interest in “my little
book; really my mother's little
book,” he said in a recent
telephone interview.
The “little book,” by the
way, has generated a huge
response and garnered its
share of good reviews.
Mysti Jacobs of Wimer
first came across the book
when David Talbot visited the
Evans Valley with his family
in late summer.
when he died in the mid1980s, the couple's oldest
son gained possession.
After David Talbot retired
as director of Oregon State
Parks and Recreation, he
developed an interest in genealogy, and specifically his
own family's history. He
delved into his brother's
stash of his mother's journals
which included a collection of
her poetry too.
“As I pawed through it all,
I came to the conclusion that
there was something
there...something that I
thought 'I gotta get out,'” he
recalled.
After years of sifting
through his mother's writing
and photographs, and with
the collaboration of family
members, Talbot has pro-
beaches, deserts and backwoods of Oregon, and under
six governors helped develop a thriving state parks
system that is the jewel of
the nation.
As the longest-serving
state parks director (19641992), he said his writing
previously consisted of the
technical, “bureaucratese”
variety.
“The Cabin” is the story
of Louise, a San Francisco
groomed young lady who
heads north to the wilds of
Southern Oregon with her
husband, Doug, and two little
boys. David is a six-week-old
sickly infant with grim
prospects of survival and
young Douglas is a two and
a half-year-old toddler.
“It was 1933, and we
were living in Oakland when
my father lost his job,” Talbot
recalled. “He convinced my
mother that we could live off
the land.”
“The land” was a “huge
chunk” of timberland that his
grandparents owned.
“He told my mother that
he'd log in the summer and
mine in the winter,” Talbot
said. And, hunting and fishing would feed the family.
Talbot chuckles at the
thought.
“My mother was a silly
city girl who didn't even know
how to boil water,” he said.
And, when his father told
her about the cabin, she pictured “Clark Gable with a
martini standing by the fireplace,” he continued.
The fantasy quickly
faded into reality. They lived
on just $20 a month, and
were isolated several miles
from the nearest road, and
another several miles from
the nearest town. There was
no running water or electricity. In the winter time, when
the roads were impassable,
supplies were what “you
could carry on your back”
trudging through the snow.
Louise was able to escape the harsh reality by
writing in her journal.
Much of the writing is of
the “mundane” things of life,
and “the terrible times of the
Depression were nothing
unique” to the Talbot family,
David commented. But, his
mother's narrative style is
“poignant,” he added. And,
she had “such a hunger to
write her story.”
Talbot said that his
mother “could look at a stand
of trees and see the golden
light filtering through; my dad
look and calculated board
feet.”
In late 1935, the Talbot
family headed back to the
San Francisco Bay Area,
and lived there until the war
years “changed the city a
great deal,” Talbot recalled.
In 1943, the family headed
north again and settled in
Grants Pass. They spent
weekends and summer vacations up at the cabin as
they had for several years.
All was “wonderful” until
Louise suffered a miscarriage and was diagnosed
with ovarian cancer. Mounting medical bills and debt
forced the Talbot family to
once again seek refuge at
the cabin.
By this time, David was
11 years old and his brother,
Douglas, a teenager.
The boys were “very
happy” to be at their summer
place.
Talbot's memories of
Wimer are of the “wild, and
woolly fun” he and his
brother had and their “Huck
Finn-Tom Sawyer existence”
running around, hunting,
fishing and exploring the territory of the last battles of the
Indian wars and the creeks
where an early “gold rush”
brought a stream of miners.
With the trail to the cabin beginning where the road
ended at the last set of mailboxes, everyday was “a hike
through the woods.”
“Those were good
times,” he said, “as long as
you avoided the rattlesnakes.”
Ultimately, the Talbot
family moved back to Grants
Pass, and David later graduated from Grants Pass High
School in 1952. Periodically,
mostly during summers, the
family would venture back to
the cabin.
This summer, Talbot returned to the Evans Valley to
try to find the old cabin site.
“It was quite a hike,” he
said, adding that he and his
family “crawled through
brush and poison oak.”
Sadly, there was nothing
left. “Nature and man had
obliterated the site,” he said.
Happily though, he has
preserved the homestead
forever in “The Cabin: A Tandem Memoir of Life in the
Wild.”
David Talbot will visit
Grants Pass on Oct. 18,
when he will sign the book
and share his memories
from 3 to 5 pm at Oregon
Books, 150 NE E St.
To learn more, go to
www.thecabinmemoir.com.
The book is available on
Amazon for $12.95, or check
with the Evans Valley Community Center Thrift Shop,
where Talbot donated a limited supply of autographed
copies.
Proceeds from the book
sales are being donated to
charity.
12
October 8, 2014
Standing Together
in the Fight Against
Breast Cancer
ROGUE RIVER PRESS
www.rogueriverpress.com
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and treatment options continue to evolve, medical experts agree that early detection is a key factor in overcoming the disease,
and performing a monthly breast self-exam is often vital to detecting abnormalities, including lumps or tenderness, in the
breasts that may indicate illness. Take steps to protect yourself against breast cancer during Breast Cancer Awareness Month
by initiating healthy lifestyle changes, beginning monthly breast self-exams, and talking to your doctor about the appropriate
clinical breast exam and screening mammogram schedule for you.
October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month. These local sponsors join us in
raising awareness of the importance of early detection in the fight against breast
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ROGUE RIVER PRESS
RRHS Art Students Give Festival a
Look at Their Talent
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RRP/Garrison Wells
By Garrison Wells
Rogue River Press
Caitlyn McVeigh with fellow art student Isobel Berglund in the background are hard at work Saturday
on their art for the Art Along the Rogue festival in Grants Pass.
Miles Davis would have
been proud.
Shielded under vinyl from
a glaring sun, a trio of Rogue
River High School students
paid the jazz musician tribute,
drawing one of his album covers on pavement with chalk at
Art Along the Rogue Street
Painting and Music Festival.
H Street in downtown
Grants Pass was alive with
kneeling artists Saturday, Oct.
RRP/Garrison Wells
Isobel Berglund and Alanna Carroll of Rogue River High School work on
their street art in Grants Pass Saturday.
4.
Usually bland, grey concrete became canvas, and
musicians like Jimi Hendrix
stared up from the street, their
likenesses chalked into the
macadam by artists of all ilk.
Rogue River was represented by Rogue River Junior/Senior High school art
teacher Hannah Kolega and
her students Caitlyn McVeigh,
a senior; junior, Isobel
Berglund; and Alanna Carroll,
a senior.
They chose the Miles
Davis album cover because “it
was kind of different,” McVeigh
said. “It’s not a common album
and would stand out in its own
way.”
The group, said Kolega,
worked about a week or so on
preparation, scouring album
covers for likely candidates.
Davis won, thanks at least in
part to her husband, jazz aficionado Jeff.
She sketched the album
cover, then they had to plan
how they would make it fit in
larger proportions on the concrete.
“We knew the theme was
music, so we thought immedi-
ately of album covers and we
looked at some kind-of classic
ones, the Beatles, then I
thought of this one,” Kolega
said. “It’s complex enough, it
looks good and everybody
kind of likes it. It’s cool.”
By about 2 p.m. Saturday,
Kolega, who was helping out
gave the students a B plus.
They weren’t quite finished, and she wanted them to
strive for better.
This was Berglund’s first
time at the art show.
“I really like it,” she said. “I
like art.”
She admitted to some
anxiety but found it “a lot easier then I anticipated.”
Carroll took part in the
show because as a senior,
she wanted “to try as many
things as possible.”
How were they doing?
“I think it’s turning out really well,” she said.
BOBITUARY
LARRY PARADISE, 78,
passed away at home on
Sept 8th, 2014 in Wimer,
Oregon.
He was born July 30,
1936 in Fresno, CA and attended Abraham Lincoln
High School in San Francisco, CA. He then enlisted
in the United States Army,
serving in combat as a paratrooper with Army Special
Forces units in Laos and
Cambodia.
October 8, 2014
Local Sports
Schedules
13
Wednesday, October 8
GIRLS' SOCCER
Cascade Christian at
Rogue River, Chieftain
Stadium, 4:30 p.m.
Stadium, 4:30 p.m.
Saturday, October 11
GIRLS SOCCER
St. Mary's at Rogue
River, Chieftain Stadium,
3 p.m.
Friday, October 17
FOOTBALL
Rogue River at Lost
River, Lost River High
School, 7 p.m.
JR HIGH VOLLEYBALL
Rogue River at Scenic,
4:30 p.m.
JR HIGH SCHOOL
Tuesday, October 14
FOOTBALL
VOLLEYBALL
Rogue River at White Rogue River at Illinois
Mountain (White City), Valley, 6:15 p.m.
4:30 p.m.
Wednesday, October
JR HIGH VOLLEYBALL
15
Ashland at Rogue River, CROSS COUNTRY
Rogue River ES-W Gym, Rogue River at Max King
4:30 p.m.
Invitational,
Jackson
County Expo, 4:30 p.m.
Thursday, October 9
VOLLEYBALL
JR HIGH VOLLEYBALL
St. Mary's at Rogue Rogue River at Hedrick
River, James Martin (Medford), 4:30 p.m.
Court, 6:15 p.m.
JR HIGH FOOTBALL
JR HIGH CROSS
Hanby vs. White MounCOUNTRY
tain, Dutch Meyer Field,
Rogue River at Talent, Crater HS, 6:30 p.m.
4:30 p.m.
Hanby at Scenic, 4:30 Thursday, October 16
p.m.
JR HIGH
CROSS COUNTRY
Friday, October 10
Rogue River at McLoughFOOTBALL
lin, Medford, 4:30 p.m.
Rogue River at Bonanza, Hanby at Eagle Point,
7 p.m.
4:30 p.m.
VOLLEYBALL
Saturday, October 18
Rogue River at North Val- GIRLS SOCCER
ley Tournament.
Lakeview at Rogue River,
Chieftain Stadium, 1 p.m.
Monday, October 13
JR HIGH FOOTBALL
VOLLEYBALL
South (Grants Pass) at Rogue River at Bonanza
Rogue River, Chieftain Tournament.
His long career as a
manufacturing engineer included working with companies such as Sylvania,
General Dynamics and
Lockheed.
He married the love of
his life, Bev, in 1978 and
moved to Wimer, Oregon in
1986 where he became involved with the Evans Valley
Fire District as a Firefighter/EMT. His many
awards included Firefighter
of the Year and Volunteer of
the Year in 1997. He also
worked as a Wildland Firefighter and loved his time in
the woods.
Larry and Bev enjoyed
traveling in their motor
home and made many trips
with friends. An avid reader,
Larry had thousands of
books, many of which he’s
read numerous times. He
was also a lover of animals
and fed most of the wild and
domestic critters that came
to their twenty acres in the
woods.
Larry is survived by his
son, Rick Paradise, daughter Julie Buck, stepson Tony
Apodaca, step-daughter
Kim Henriksson and her
husband Patrik, brother Bob
Dayton, and sister Mary
Tranberg. He is further survived by grandchildren,
nieces, nephews and many
friends who love and miss
him deeply.
At his request, there will
be no funeral services. He,
and his wife, Bev, will placed
in the columbarium at the
Eagle Point National Veterans Cemetery Friday, Oct
10th, at 2PM, with full military honors.
There will be a Celebration of Life, with potluck and
music, Saturday, Oct 11th,
at 2PM, at the VFW in
Rogue River, OR. All are
welcome to attend both
events.
14
Local Sports
October 8, 2014
ROGUE RIVER PRESS
Watson Fourth at UO’s
Meet in Salem
By Brian Mortensen
Rogue River Press
Cole Watson, a six-time
state cross country and track
and field distance-races
champion during his days at
Rogue River High School, ran
the first race of his senior season last weekend, taking
fourth place at the Charles
Bowles Invitational in Salem
on Sat., Oct. 4.
Watson, who last ran in a
cross country meet for the
Ducks when he placed 43rd at
the NCAA West Regional
meet in Sacramento, ran the
8-kilometer race in 24 minutes, 8.88 seconds.
With most of Oregon's top
runners getting the week off
after its meet in Boston,
Mass., the Bowles meet, at
Bush's Pasture Park, was a
chance for the Ducks to use its
depth.
Watson, who also ran for
the Ducks in the Pac-12 Conference Championships last
year, finishing 33rd, could be
called upon for this year's conference championships in
Oakland, Calif., on Oct. 31.
Each team may enter as many
as 10 runners at the conference meet.
Watson also earned Pac12 All-Academic Honorable
Mention honors last year. He
majors in product design.
ond-best time, all-time.
Lopez battled Michael
Martin, a sophomore from
Etna, Calif., who finished
second in 17:42.53.
Lopez's finish led Rogue
River's five-man team to a
fourth-place finish, out of six
teams, in the junior varsity
boys' race, with 120 points.
Sophomore Wyatt Borman was 39th with a season-best 20:51.3 time. His
classmate, Zane Bjorge was
43rd, with a PR at 21:01.14.
Another
sophomore,
Michael Howard, had his
season best at 22:27.42, for
68th place. Freshman
Calvin Bertik, in his first-ever
race, finished 80th, in
22:55.43.
In the girls' junior varsity
race, senior MacKenzie
Smith ran in 26:59.1 to finish
28th.
The Chieftains head
north for the South Umpqua
Invite at South Umpqua
High School in Myrtle Creek
on Sat., Oct. 11. A 3,000meter junior varsity race
starts at 11 a.m. Varsity
races start at noon.
Chieftains Make Changes,
Weather Oakridge 47-6 Win
Lopez Wins JV Race
at Jefferson Meet
By Brian Mortensen
Rogue River Press
Junior Rio Lopez earned
his first high school cross
country race victory, finishing first in the junior varsity
boys' race at the big State of
Jefferson meet at Lithia
Park in Ashland on Sat.,
Oct. 4.
He ran the 5,000 meters
in 17 minutes, 41.58 seconds. That's a time not quite
as swift as his 17:34 personal best in Coos Bay on
Sept. 20, but it is his sec-
ROGUE RIVER PRESS
TYLER SAKRAIDA
KASSY STAPLES
Junior Tyler Sakraida, out for high school football for the
first time, moved from a tight end to the offensive line,
part of the Chieftains' new offensive look they showed
against Oakridge last weekend.
Junior Kassy Staples scored her first soccer goal
for Rogue River in the Chieftains' 3-1 victory
against Illinois Valley on Wed., Oct. 1. She scored
off a pass from Annie Teehan.
F OOTBALL
S OCCER
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www.rogueriverpress.com
RRP/J. Chase
Rogue River's Alex Valencia drags Oakridge's Josh Briggs during a second-half run in the Chieftains' 47-6 victory at
Chieftain Stadium on Fri., Oct. 3. Valencia, returning from an injury, ran for 102 yards and Rogue River's only score.
By Brian Mortensen
Rogue River Press
The results might have
looked the same, but change
was afoot in the Rogue River
team's football game against
unbeaten Oakridge at Chieftain Stadium on Fri., Oct. 3.
The Chieftains, looking
for some kind of consistent
offensive production, from
backs on up to the offensive
line, shifted personnel for this
contest, their fifth of the season.
Looking to use a two-fullback blast offense, with senior Eli Hice and senior
Brennan Moody moving from
the center position to the
backfield, with senior Alex
Valencia, back after missing
the Sept. 26 game against
Crow, at the tailback.
The Chieftains shifted
physical freshman back
Jacob Tambellini to center,
flanked by his classmate
Gabe Echaide and junior
Thomas Welch at guards,
and juniors Dean Nelson and
Tyler Sakraida at tackles.
Sakraida, a first-year football
player, moved from a tight
end spot to tackle.
Against a more stout defense than what they faced
against 1-4 Crow, the Chieftains didn't gain as much on
the ground against the Warriors in their 47-6 loss.
Even so, Chieftains
coach Beau Canfield said
there were positives they can
take through the final four
games of the season.
"We're a block off, we really are," he said. "That was
the talk at halftime. We put
Moody and Hice out there to
get those kick-out blocks, and
we're so close to so many of
them.
"There's a reason that
team's 5-0. Their system's
working. We've got bodies
that have been on our team
for (the minimum) nine days
just trying to contribute as
much as they possibly can."
The Chieftains gained
169 yards in total offense, including 171 via the rush. Valencia ran for 102 on 24
carries, including the Chieftains' only touchdown on a
20-yard run with 39.5 seconds to go.
With a young and green
team that's allowed an average 53.6 points a game on
defense (the 47 allowed is
actually a season-low),
Oakridge rushed for 405
yards as part of a 459-yard
night.
The brothers Austin and
Justin Moe combined for five
touchdowns, including three
by the junior tailback Austin
Moe, who had 212 yards on
14 carries.
Justin Moe, a senior,
added another 88 yards on
16 carries, mostly right up the
middle, following an offensive
line that just powered through
Rogue River's defensive
front.
The Chieftains clearly
had kinks to work with their
new offensive look. Their first
two possessions were derailed by early penalties that
messed up the down-anddistance.
The Warriors, whose
schedule has them underrated despite their unbeaten
record, actually helped the
Chieftains, fumbling their first
two possessions, including
one forced at the goal line,
forced and recovered by
freshman Kia Jamison.
Moody, a ball-carrier for
the first time in at least two
seasons, had gained five
yards on his first two carries
and hit the hole hard for a
bigger gain when he was
stripped for a fumble at Chieftains' 24.
Three plays later, Austin
Moe scored on a seven-yard
run. Kicker Gerry Snyder,
who hit five of his six pointafter tries, made it 7-0.
The Moes each scored
touchdowns in the second
quarter, Austin on a 21-yard
sweep and Justin on a
seven-yard inside run, made
it a 20-0 Oakridge lead at
halftime.
The second half started
with another big defensive
play by a Rogue River defensive back with Gavin Decker
intercepting Warrior quarterback Brody Edmunds's pass
20 yards downfield.
The Chieftains gave the
ball up on downs at the
Oakridge 49, and five plays
later, Edmunds lofted the ball
over the defense for Josh
Briggs for a 37-yard play not
two minutes into the half.
That was the first of three
third-quarter touchdowns, all
occurring in less than eight
minutes.
After a Rogue River fourand-out, Oakridge used two
plays to cover 39 yards, ending in Austin Moe's second
seven-yard run to make it 330.
On the ensuing kick, Snyder lofted the ball over the
first line of men on the Chieftains' kick return, keeping it
inbounds on the right sideline. Briggs raced over and
recovered the ball before any
Rogue River players could
get turned around.
In three plays, ending
with Justin Moe's 25-yard
see FOOTBALL page 17
Junior Chiefs Stay
Unbeaten with Win
By Brian Mortensen
Rogue River Press
The Rogue River Junior
High school football team
remained unbeaten, at 3-0,
with a 36-24 victory against
Ashland at Beck Field on
Wed., Oct. 1.
Alex Carrillo, an eighth
grade running back, scored
four touchdowns for the Junior Chieftains, while quarterback Austin Gardner scored
one.
Jose Chavez ran in a
two-point conversion.
On defense, Rogue
River had three interceptions, including one by
Bodie Byrd.
Rogue River was able to
win in spite of four fumbles.
The Junior Chieftains
are at White Mountain in
White City on Wed., Oct. 8.
Lady Chieftains Battle
Challengers in Big Match
RR Seventh Grader
Improves by 60+ Seconds
By Brian Mortensen
Rogue River Press
Evan Mengershausen, a
seventh grader, improved his
time in the 3,000-meter middle
school cross country distance
by better than 65 seconds at
the Southern Oregon Middle
School Athletic Conference
(SOMSAC) cross country predistrict meet in Grants Pass on
Thurs., Oct. 2.
Mengershausen ran in 14
Rogue River Press
RRP/J. Chase
Rogue River's Sequoia Poston, 5, battles Illinois Valley defender Taylor Byrne
in the second half of the team's District 5 soccer match at Chieftain Stadium on Wed., Oct. 1.
the Chieftains.
Though the Chieftains
had a 2-0 lead at the half,
While illness prevented thanks to a 19th minute goal
the Rogue River High girls' by Teehan and a 38th minute
soccer team from playing goal from junior newcomer
their Oct. 4 match against Kassy Staples, Illinois Valley
Cascade Christian for the kept pushing, and a lot of the
early leg-up for a District 5 second-half action was on
playoff spot, the Chieftains the Chieftains' east end of the
built a bridge to that important field.
first meeting with the ChalThe Cougars had seven
lengers with a 3-1 victory of their eight corner kicks in
against Illinois Valley at the second half and finally
Chieftain Stadium on Wed., broke past the Chieftains deOct. 1.
fense when Andrea Hong
The Cascade Christian slipped the ball past two dematch was postponed on Fri., fenders and freshman Kayla
Oct. 3, because a number of Mantlo in goal at the 78th
Rogue River players had re- minute to make it 2-1.
portedly come down with an
Less than a minute later,
illness that had been moving though, the Chieftains got the
through the school through goal back when Poston
last week.
streaked down the right side
The match was reset to and slotted a perfect cross in
the afternoon of Wed., Oct. 8, front of Cougars' keeper
still at Chieftain Stadium, at Chawna Crawford for Tee4:30 p.m.
han, who made good on the
The victory against Illinois final nail.
Valley was important for
The Chieftains kept the
Rogue River because it gave pressure on from the start of
the Chieftains (4-1) an impor- the game and kept hammertant second District 5 victory ing at Crawford until the 18th
and match Cascade Christ- minute, when midfielder
ian's 2-1 district mark.
Larissa Hamilton sent the ball
Only two teams from the down to Poston. Poston
District 5 make the Class 3A changed direction and shook
playoffs, and besides No. 1- her defender, putting the ball
ranked St. Mary's, the other at Teehan's feet 10 feet in
advancing team will be team front of the goal. A 10-foot
that prevails between Rogue chance for Teehan is a pointRiver and Cascade Christian blank chance, and it was 1-0.
in the team's two matchups.
The Chieftains were
Even with its 3-5 record, ahead 2-0 when Teehan
Illinois Valley, under long-time passed up a possibly conarea coach Dr. Dick Matti, still tested chance, sending a
proved a tough opponent for perfect pass to her left to find
Rogue River Press
Staples, who crashed in unmarked and found a wideopen net.
"I just had to be there to
get it in, get a cross from the
center and make a goal,"
Staples said.
Staples was excited because it was her first goal as
a Chieftain after having just
joined the team in time to
play in Rogue River's match
against St. Mary's on Sept.
17.
Staples, who moved from
North Medford, is playing
high school soccer for the
first time. Her game action
was an all-boys team on
which she played from third
grade through sixth grade.
Mantlo made two big
saves in the match that
helped maintain a shutout
through the its first 86 minutes.
She stopped Julia Marinho's, trying to go short side
on her, in the last minute the
first half, to protect the new
two-goal lead.
The second big save
came minutes into the second half. The Cougars'
Rachel Starr had missed a
shot that sliced to the right,
but the ball went right to senior Mikael Cusumano, who
had a point-blank shot from
10 feet away. Mantlo stayed
low to the ground and
stopped it.
Mantlo stopped four of
the five Illinois Valley shots on
goal.
The Chieftains outshot
the Cougars 12-9.
15
minutes, 46.24 seconds, to finish in 155th place and lead a
duo of Rogue River runners.
Josh Bunker, also a seventh
grader, ran in 18:32.28 for
238th place, out of 273 runners.
Jantz Tostenson, an eighth
grader from Scenic, won the
race in 10:18.55.
Hanby's top finisher was
seventh grader Ian Gwaltney,
who finished 30th in 11:51.
The girls' race, also 3,000
meters, was won by Emma
Schmerbach of Sacred Heart
Catholic, in 11:33.5.
Presley Robison, a seventh grader, was Hanby's top
finisher, taking fifth place in
12:27.53. Her eighth grade
teammate Elezebeth Allen was
sixth, in 12:34.
McLoughlin Middle School
in Medford won the boys' competition, while Ashland was the
girls' champion.
Junior Chieftains coach
Nadine Roper said the
eighth graders' first set at
Lorna Byrne was "beautiful,"
but the team ran into trouble
in the second set.
"The second set, they
started falling apart," she
said. "There were some issues with the scoreboard
and it just went downhill
from there."
Laura Howard led the
Junior Chieftains with 11
service points, with one ace
and two kills by tip. Emileigh
Gray served for nine points,
with one dig, and Molly Cullotta served for seven points
with two digs.
Against South, Howard
served for 18 points with an
ace, while Annarose Has
served for 11 points with an
ace.
The seventh grade team
was led by Brynn Caulley in
the Lorna Byrne match with
nine service points with a
dig, and Breanna Ruiz had
seven points and an ace.
Caulley served up five
aces among her 16 service
points against South.
Akira Alvarado played
the specialized libero position for the third set and did
well, Roper said. Ruiz, Cort
and Kaiya Roper each
served for six points, with
Roper collecting two aces.
Akira Alvarado in the
eighth grade match, and
Alyssa Wolf in the seventh
grade match, played the
specialized libero position
for the third sets in their
matches and each did well,
Roper said.
The Junior Lady Chieftains are at home against
Ashland on Wed., Oct. 8,
and play at Scenic in Central
Point on Mon., Oct. 13.
Junior Lady Chieftains Take
Losses, Come Back Strong
By Brian Mortensen
By Brian Mortensen
October 8, 2014
ROGUE RIVER PRESS
www.rogueriverpress.com
The Rogue River eighth
grade volleyball team saw
its first loss last week, but
came back with a big victory
to improve to 6-1 on the
season.
The Junior Chieftains
took their first loss of the
season at Lorna Byrne in
Cave Junction on Wed.,
Oct. 1, 19-25, 26-24, 15-5.
Rogue River would come
back with a 25-8, 25-17, 159 victory against South at
home, Rogue River Elementary School West Gym, on
Mon., Oct. 6.
The Rogue River seventh grade volleyball team
also lost at Lorna Byrne 2518, 25-13, 15-9 and would
also turn it around with a 258, 25-22, 15-10 victory
against South.
Rogue River Vaulters
Photo Courtesy: Debi Pakizer
Isla and Tanny
The Rogue River
Vaulters, a local club that
practices the sport of vaulting, or gymnastics performed on horses, won a
number of ribbons at a
competition last weekend.
The local club was the
largest club represented
and won the most ribbons.
The ribbon winners pictured include, from left, Jen
Hook (standing), Jeanna
Olerich, Delaney Hook,
Jada Green, Isabelle Pillardo, Isla Hook, Riley
Lovich, Kinsey Lovich and
coach Debi Pakizer. In the
other photo, Isla Hook, 4,
who lives in Rogue River,
demonstrates the "Flag"
maneuver on Tanny. The
club trains at Harmony
Acres Equestrian Center.
Members of the club range
in age from four-years old
to adult.
ROGUE RIVER PRESS
16 October 8, 2014
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FOOTBALL from page 14
run, it was 40-0.
Oakridge imposed the 440 point rule and a running
clock with sophomore running
back Cale Edmunds' 39-yard
run with 10:25 left in the
game.
After that, the Chieftains
had their best drive of the
game, moving 76 yards, gaining three first downs and
coverting two fourth downs to
score on Valencia's run
around the right side in the
last minute of the contest.
In his first game in the
new set, Moody gained 68
yards on 14 carries. The motion in the backfield between
Moody, moving from the line,
and Hice, still in his first year
of varsity football as a senior,
was methodical, as they were
conscious of moving laterally
and not illegally toward the
line of scrimmage.
And methodically is how
the improvement's going to
come, even when the result
on the field on the scoreboard
hurts, Canfield said.
"The kids wear their
hearts on their sleeves as
much as I do. Nobody wants
to walk out of here like this,"
he said. "It's not like our kids
aren't trying. They're working
their tails off and nobody
wants these kinds of results.
We just hope to get better and
we have an opportunity to go
against someone who's in the
same boat as we are (in 0-5
Bonanza, next week's opponent)."
The second-year head
coach revealed that his father
had suffered a stroke in the
previous week but was recovering well. Canfield said the
experience reminded him that
even as bad as a game looks,
it is but a game.
"There's still joy in football," he said. "My Dad last
week, I think the way he put it,
'A day with football, even bad
football, is good football.'
"Coming out for football
every day, my Dad reminds
me to come out, take a deep
breath, enjoy the game. I try
to preach that to our players,
too. It's like talking to our players about grades right now.
You can't just look at the
scoreboard. You keep getting
better. Some of those Fs turn
into Cs really fast if you do the
job, and it's the same thing on
the football field. Some of
those plays that we're working
on right now turn into touchdowns. Four-yard gains, fiveyard gains, those things are
there. It's just that one block
we need. There's guys giving
their all."
Another positive, Canfield
said, is that it was the return
of sophomore lineman Eric
Goodboe. Goodboe's season
ended last year when he suffered a compound fracture to
his left leg in the Chieftains'
game against Glide on Sept.
13, 2013. The injury required
an operation and six months
of recovery time.
October 8, 2014
17
The Chieftains's next contest is at Bonanza, which is
officially the lowest-rated
team in Class 2A football at 05, including an 0-3 mark in
Mountain View Conference
play on Fri., Oct. 10.
It is the first of two straight
games in Klamath County for
the Chieftains, following up
with a trip to Lost River near
Merrill on Oct. 17.
The Chieftains' next home
game will be their last, when
they host Monroe on Oct. 24.
That will serve as Rogue
River's Homecoming and
Senior Night game.
Bu si n ess Di rec to ry • B us in es s D ir ecto r y • Bus i n ess Di rec to ry
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THE ROGUE RIVER PRESS IS A PUBLICATION OF GENERAL CIRCULATION IN JACKSON COUNTY. PUBLISHED WEEKLY, LEGAL NOTICES ARE CONTAINED IN THIS SECTION.
TRuSTEE’S NOTICE OF
SaLE TS No.: 013037-OR
Loan No.: ******1062 Reference is made to that certain
trust deed (the “Deed of
Trust”)
executed
by
SHERITA
VLACH,
as
Grantor, to LAWYERS TITLE
INSURANCE CORPORATION, A VIRGINIA CORPORATION, as Trustee, in favor
of
COMMONWEALTH
UNITED MORTGAGE A DIVISION OF NATIONAL CITY
BANK OF INDIANA, as Beneficiary, dated 9/7/2005,
recorded 9/9/2005, as Instrument No. 2005-055176,
rerecorded on 06/16/2006 as
Instrument
No.
2006030868, in the Official
Records of Jackson County,
Oregon, which covers the
following described real
property situated in Jackson
County, Oregon: LOT SIX
(6), BLOCK ONE (1) OF
CLAYTON CREEK MOBILE
HOME ESTATES SUBDIVISION, JACKSON COUNTY,
OREGON, ACCORDING TO
THE
OFFICIAL
PLAT
THEREOF, RECORDED IN
VOLUME 10, PAGE 32
PLAT RECORDS. APN:
10119928 Commonly known
as: 630 REITEN DR ASHLAND, OR 97520 The current beneficiary is: PNC
BANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, SUCCESSOR BY
MERGER TO NATIONAL
CITY BANK, SUCCESSOR
BY MERGER TO COMMONWEALTH
UNITED
MORTGAGE COMPANY, A
DIVISION OF NATIONAL
CITY BANK OF INDIANA
Both the beneficiary and the
trustee have elected to sell
the above-described real
property to satisfy the obligations secured by the Deed of
Trust and notice has been
recorded pursuant to ORS
86.752(3). The default for
which the foreclosure is
made is the grantor’s: Installment of Principal and Interest plus impounds and/or
advances which became
due on 2/1/2011 plus late
charges, and all subsequent
installments of principal, interest, balloon payments,
plus impounds and/or advances and late charges that
become payable. Delinquent
Payments:Dates: 2/1/20116/1/2011 7/1/2011-6/1/2012
7/1/2012-6/1/2014No. 5 12
24
Amount
$1,532.17
$2,001.07 $1,707.35 Total:
$7,660.85
$24,012.84
$40,976.40 Late Charges:
$276.60 Beneficiary Advances: $9,898.95 Foreclosure Fees and Expenses:
$1,208.00 Total Required to
Reinstate:$84,033.64
TOTAL REQUIRED TO PAYOFF: $275,527.19 By reason of the default, the
beneficiary has declared all
obligations secured by the
Deed of Trust immediately
due and payable, including:
the
principal
sum
of
$202,751.16 together with
interest thereon at the rate of
6.625 % per annum, from
1/1/2011 until paid, plus all
accrued late charges, and all
trustee’s fees, foreclosure
costs, and any sums advanced by the beneficiary
pursuant to the terms and
conditions of the Deed of
Trust Whereof, notice hereby
is given that the undersigned
trustee, CLEAR RECON
CORP., whose address is
4375 Jutland Drive, San
Diego, CA 92117, will on
11/4/2014, at the hour of
11:00 AM, standard time, as
established
by
ORS
187.110, AT THE OAKDALE
ENTRANCE STEPS TO
THE COUNTY OFFICES
BUILDING AT 10 S. OAKDALE, MEDFORD, OR
97501, sell at public auction
to the highest bidder for cash
the interest in the above-described real property which
the grantor had or had power
to convey at the time it executed the Deed of Trust, together with any interest
which the grantor or his successors in interest acquired
after the execution of the
Deed of Trust, 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 86.778 has the right
to have the foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the
Deed of Trust reinstated by
payment to the beneficiary of
the entire amount then due
(other than the portion of
principal that would not then
be due had no default occurred), together with the
costs, trustee’s and attorneys’ fees, and curing any
other default complained of
in the Notice of Default by
tendering the performance
required under the Deed of
Trust at any time not later
than five days before the
date last set for sale. Without
limiting the trustee's disclaimer of representations or
warranties, Oregon law requires the trustee to state in
this notice that some residential property sold at a
trustee's sale may have
been used in manufacturing
methamphetamines,
the
chemical components of
which are known to be toxic.
Prospective purchasers of
residential property should
be aware of this potential
danger before deciding to
place a bid for this property
at the trustee's 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 obligation,
the performance of which is
secured by the Deed of
Trust, the words “trustee”
and ‘beneficiary” include
their respective successors
in interest, if any. Dated:
6/20/2014CLEAR RECON
CORP 4375 Jutland Drive
San Diego, CA 92117 858750-7600 Hamsa Uchi, Authorized Signatory of Trustee
9/17, 9/24, 10/1, 10/8/2014
18
October 8, 2014
TRuSTEE’S NOTICE OF SaLE
Loan
No:899352
T.S.
No.:
1407109OR Reference is made to
that certain deed made by, THOMAS
NOEL HENNEY AND SHERI L.
HENNEY, AS TENANTS BY THE
ENTIRETY as Grantor to KEY TITLE,
as trustee, in favor of NEW CENTURY MORTGAGE CORPORATION,
as
Beneficiary,
dated
5/21/2003, recorded 5/29/2003, in official records of Jackson County, Oregon in book/reel/volume No. xx at
page No. xx, fee/file/instrument/microfile/reception No. 03 34989 (indicated which), covering the following
described real property situated in
said County and State, to-wit: APN:
372W11BB 3000/1-014570-6 LOT 4,
TRuSTEE’S NOTICE OF
SaLE TS No.: 015218-OR
Loan No.: ******5683 Reference is made to that certain
trust deed (the “Deed of
Trust”) executed by BRIAN
SMITH, as Grantor, to
LAWYERS TITLE INSURANCE CORPORATION, as
Trustee, in favor of NATIONAL CITY MORTGAGE
A DIVISION OF NATIONAL
CITY BANK, as Beneficiary,
dated 3/1/2007, recorded
3/6/2007, as Instrument No.
2007-010602, in the Official
Records of Jackson County,
Oregon, which covers the
following described real
property situated in Jackson
County, Oregon: PARCEL
NO. TWO (2) OF PARTITION PLAT RECORDED
JUNE 2, 1997, AS PARTITION PLAT NO. P-40-1997
OF "RECORD OF PARTITION PLATS" IN JACKSON
COUNTY, OREGON, AND
FILED AS SURVEY NO.
TRuSTEE’S NOTICE OF
SaLE TS No.: 018096-OR
Loan No.: ******7553 Reference is made to that certain
trust deed (the “Deed of
Trust”) executed by RILEY
K. WHITE AND TERRA L.
WHITE, HUSBAND AND
WIFE, as Grantor, to FIDELITY NATIONAL TITLE
INSURANCE COMPANY, as
Trustee, in favor of WELLS
FARGO BANK, N.A., as
Beneficiary,
dated
11/25/2009,
recorded
12/1/2009, as Instrument No.
2009-044527, in the Official
Records of Jackson County,
Oregon, which covers the
following described real
property situated in Jackson
County, Oregon: LOT 16,
BLOCK 1 OF T&M SUBDIVISION UNIT NO. 2, IN JACKSON COUNTY, OREGON.
APN:
1-064880-8
/
361W20AD 4200 Commonly
TRuSTEE’S NOTICE OF
SaLE TS No.: 018075-OR
Loan No.: ******6704 Reference is made to that certain
trust deed (the “Deed of
Trust”)
executed
by
RONALD W PROBST AND
MARIA SALOME PROBST,
HUSBAND AND WIFE, as
Grantor, to FIDELITY NATIONAL TITLE INS CO, as
Trustee, in favor of WELLS
FARGO BANK, N.A., as
Beneficiary, dated 7/7/2008,
recorded 7/14/2008, as Instrument No. 2008-025841,
in the Official Records of
Jackson County, Oregon,
which covers the following
described real property situated in Jackson County, Oregon: THAT TRACT OR
PARCEL OF LAND SITUATED IN THE NORTHWEST
QUARTER
OF
THE
NORTHEAST QUARTER
OF SECTION 28, IN TOWNSHIP 36 SOUTH, RANGE 1
WEST
OF
THE
WILLAMETTE MERIDIAN,
JACKSON COUNTY, OREGON, MORE PARTICU-
BLOCK 33, CITY OF CENTRAL
POINT, JACKSON COUNTY OREGON Commonly known as: 217 231
SOUTH 5TH STREET CENTRAL
POINT, Oregon 97502 Both the beneficiary 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: Installment of Principal and
Interest plus impounds and/or advances which became due on
11/1/2012 plus late charges, and all
subsequent installments of principal,
interest, balloon payments, plus impounds and/or advances and late
15380 IN THE OFFICE OF
THE COUNTY SURVEYOR.
APN: 10899076 Commonly
known as: 1519 LOZIER LN
MEDFORD, OR 97501 The
current beneficiary is: PNC
BANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, SUCCESSOR BY
MERGER TO NATIONAL
CITY BANK, SUCCESSOR
BY MERGER TO NATIONAL
CITY MORTGAGE CO. Both
the beneficiary and the
trustee have elected to sell
the above-described real
property to satisfy the obligations secured by the Deed of
Trust and notice has been
recorded pursuant to ORS
86.752(3). The default for
which the foreclosure is
made is the grantor’s: Installment of interest only payments which became due on
10/1/2013 plus late charges
if any, and all subsequent interest,
advances,
late
charges and foreclosure fees
and costs that become
known as: 2671 HADLEY
CIRCLE, WHITE CITY,
OREGON 97503 The current beneficiary is: Wells
Fargo Bank, N.A. Both the
beneficiary and the trustee
have elected to sell the
above-described real property to satisfy the obligations
secured by the Deed of Trust
and notice has been
recorded pursuant to ORS
86.752(3). The default for
which the foreclosure is
made is the grantor’s failure
to pay when due, the following sums: Delinquent Payments: Dates: No. Amount
Total: 08/01/13 thru 03/01/14
04/01/14 thru 09/03/14 8 6
$825.86 $826.92 $6,606.88
$4,961.52 Late Charges:
$53.14 Beneficiary Advances: $1,130.00 Foreclosure Fees and Expenses:
$562.00 Total Required to
Reinstate:
$13,313.54
LARLY DESCRIBED AS
FOLLOWS: COMMENCING
AT A 3/4" IRON PIN AT THE
NORTH QUARTER CORNER OF SECTION 28, SAID
TOWNSHIP AND RANGE;
THENCE SOUTH 89°39'10"
EAST, ALONG THE NORTH
LINE OF SAID SECTION,
505.21 FEET TO A 5/8"
IRON PIN, BEING THE
POINT OF BEGINNING;
THENCE
CONTINUING
SOUTH 89°39'10" EAST,
168.80 FEET TO A 5/8"
IRON
PIN;
THENCE
SOUTH
0°19'
EAST,
1291.13 FEET TO THE
NORTH LINE OF THE
COUNTY ROAD; THENCE
NORTH 89°59'20" WEST,
168.80 FEET; THENCE
NORTH
0°19'
WEST,
1292.12 FEET TO THE
POINT OF BEGINNING.
APN:
1-045635-1
/
361W28A 900 Commonly
known as: 3615 COREY RD
CENTRAL POINT, OREGON 97502 The current
beneficiary is: Wells Fargo
Bank, N.A. Both the benefici-
ROGUE RIVER PRESS
charges that become payable.
Monthly Payment $757.65 Monthly
Late Charge $37.88 By this reason of
said default the beneficiary has declared all obligations secured by said
deed of trust immediately due and
payable, said sums being the following, to-wit: The sum of $89,043.08 together with interest thereon at the
rate of 8.4 % per annum from
10/1/2012 until paid; plus all accrued
late charges thereon; and all trustee’s
fees, foreclosure costs and any sums
advanced by the beneficiary pursuant to the terms of said deed of
trust. Whereof, notice hereby is given
that First American Title Company,
the undersigned trustee will on
1/20/2015 at the hour of 10:00 AM,
payable. Delinquent Payments: Dates: 10/1/20136/1/2014 No. 9 Amount
$1,240.70 Total: $11,166.30
Late Charges: $208.00 Beneficiary Advances: $360.28
Foreclosure Fees and Expenses:$1,173.00 Total Required
to
Reinstate:
$12,907.58 TOTAL REQUIRED
TO
PAYOFF:
$200,685.33 By reason of
the default, the beneficiary
has declared all obligations
secured by the Deed of Trust
immediately
due
and
payable, including: the principal sum of $188,391.36 together with interest thereon
at the rate of 6.625 % per
annum, from 9/1/2013 until
paid, plus all accrued late
charges, and all trustee’s
fees, foreclosure costs, and
any sums advanced by the
beneficiary pursuant to the
terms and conditions of the
Deed of Trust Whereof, notice hereby is given that the
TOTAL REQUIRED TO PAYOFF: $127,333.64 By reason of the default, the
beneficiary has declared all
obligations secured by the
Deed of Trust immediately
due and payable, including:
the
principal
sum
of
$118,275.12 together with interest thereon at the rate of
4.875 % per annum, from
7/1/2013 until paid, plus all
accrued late charges, and all
trustee’s fees, foreclosure
costs, and any sums advanced by the beneficiary
pursuant to the terms and
conditions of the Deed of
Trust Whereof, notice hereby
is given that the undersigned
trustee, CLEAR RECON
CORP., whose address is
4375 Jutland Drive, San
Diego, CA 92117, will on
1/20/2015, at the hour of
11:00 AM, standard time, as
established
by
ORS
ary and the trustee have
elected to sell the above-described real property to satisfy the obligations secured
by the Deed of Trust and notice has been recorded pursuant to ORS 86.752(3). The
default for which the foreclosure is made is the grantor’s
failure to pay when due, the
following sums: Delinquent
Payments:
Dates:
No.
Amount Total: 05/01/13 thru
09/01/13 10/01/13 thru
09/01/14 5 12
$778.33
$1,050.41
$3,891.65
$12,604.92 Late Charges:
$194.60 Beneficiary Advances: $660.00 Foreclosure Fees and Expenses:
$778.00 Total Required to
Reinstate:
$18,129.17
TOTAL REQUIRED TO PAYOFF: $128,411.93 By reason
of the default, the beneficiary
has declared all obligations
secured by the Deed of Trust
immediately
due
and
payable, including: the principal sum of $110,845.67 together with interest thereon
at the rate of 6.75 % per
Standard of Time, as established by
section 187.110, Oregon Revised
Statutes, at At the front door to the
Jackson Justice Building, 100 S Oakdale Ave, Medford, OR County of
Jackson, 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 execution by him of
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 trustee. Notice is fur-
undersigned trustee, CLEAR
RECON CORP., whose address is 4375 Jutland Drive,
San Diego, CA 92117, will on
11/4/2014, at the hour of
11:00 AM, standard time, as
established
by
ORS
187.110, AT THE OAKDALE
ENTRANCE STEPS TO
THE COUNTY OFFICES
BUILDING AT 10 S. OAKDALE, MEDFORD, OR
97501, sell at public auction
to the highest bidder for cash
the interest in the above-described real property which
the grantor had or had power
to convey at the time it executed the Deed of Trust, together with any interest
which the grantor or his successors in interest acquired
after the execution of the
Deed of Trust, to satisfy the
foregoing obligations thereby
secured and the costs and
expenses of sale, including a
reasonable charge by the
trustee. Notice is further
187.110, AT THE OAKDALE
ENTRANCE STEPS TO
THE COUNTY OFFICES
BUILDING AT 10 S. OAKDALE, MEDFORD, OR
97501, sell at public auction
to the highest bidder for cash
the interest in the above-described real property which
the grantor had or had power
to convey at the time it executed the Deed of Trust, together with any interest
which the grantor or his successors in interest acquired
after the execution of the
Deed of Trust, 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 86.778 has the right
to have the foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the
Deed of Trust reinstated by
annum, from 4/1/2013 until
paid, plus all accrued late
charges, and all trustee’s
fees, foreclosure costs, and
any sums advanced by the
beneficiary pursuant to the
terms and conditions of the
Deed of Trust Whereof, notice hereby is given that the
undersigned trustee, CLEAR
RECON CORP., whose address is 4375 Jutland Drive,
San Diego, CA 92117, will on
1/20/2015, at the hour of
11:00 AM, standard time, as
established
by
ORS
187.110, AT THE OAKDALE
ENTRANCE STEPS TO
THE COUNTY OFFICES
BUILDING AT 10 S. OAKDALE, MEDFORD, OR
97501, sell at public auction
to the highest bidder for cash
the interest in the above-described real property which
the grantor had or had power
to convey at the time it executed the Deed of Trust, together with any interest
which the grantor or his successors in interest acquired
after the execution of the
Subscribe Today! • 541.582.1707
ther 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 of Default by tendering
the performance required under the
obligation or trust deed, at any time
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
given that any person named
in ORS 86.778 has the right
to have the foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the
Deed of Trust reinstated by
payment to the beneficiary of
the entire amount then due
(other than the portion of
principal that would not then
be due had no default occurred), together with the
costs, trustee’s and attorneys’ fees, and curing any
other default complained of
in the Notice of Default by
tendering the performance
required under the Deed of
Trust at any time not later
than five days before the
date last set for sale. Without
limiting the trustee's disclaimer of representations or
warranties, Oregon law requires the trustee to state in
this notice that some residential property sold at a
trustee's sale may have
been used in manufacturing
methamphetamines,
the
payment to the beneficiary of
the entire amount then due
(other than the portion of
principal that would not then
be due had no default occurred), together with the
costs, trustee’s and attorneys’ fees, and curing any
other default complained of
in the Notice of Default by
tendering the performance
required under the Deed of
Trust at any time not later
than five days before the
date last set for sale. Without
limiting the trustee's disclaimer of representations or
warranties, Oregon law requires the trustee to state in
this notice that some residential property sold at a
trustee's sale may have
been used in manufacturing
methamphetamines,
the
chemical components of
which are known to be toxic.
Prospective purchasers of
Deed of Trust, 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 86.778 has the right
to have the foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the
Deed of Trust reinstated by
payment to the beneficiary of
the entire amount then due
(other than the portion of
principal that would not then
be due had no default occurred), together with the
costs, trustee’s and attorneys’ fees, and curing any
other default complained of
in the Notice of Default by
tendering the performance
required under the Deed of
Trust at any time not later
than five days before the
date last set for sale. Without
limiting the trustee's disclaimer of representations or
warranties, Oregon law requires the trustee to state in
this notice that some residential property sold at a
includes plural, the word “grantor” includes any successor in interest to
the grantor as well as any other persons owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said
trust deed, the words "trustee" and
'beneficiary" include their respective
successors in interest, if any. Dated:
9/15/2014 First American Title Company c/o Seaside Trustee, Inc. 3 First
American Way Santa Ana, California
92707 (702) 207-0292 Signature By:
CINDY ENGEL, AUTHORIZED
SIGNOR P1112891 9/24, 10/1, 10/8,
10/15/2014
chemical components of
which are known to be toxic.
Prospective purchasers of
residential property should
be aware of this potential
danger before deciding to
place a bid for this property
at the trustee's 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 obligation,
the performance of which is
secured by the Deed of
Trust, the words “trustee”
and ‘beneficiary” include
their respective successors
in interest, if any. Dated:
6/18/2014 CLEAR RECON
CORP 4375 Jutland Drive
San Diego, CA 92117 858750-7600 Hamsa Uchi, Authorized Signatory of Trustee
9/17, 9/24, 10/1, 10/8/2014
residential property should
be aware of this potential
danger before deciding to
place a bid for this property
at the trustee's 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 obligation,
the performance of which is
secured by the Deed of
Trust, the words “trustee”
and ‘beneficiary” include
their respective successors
in interest, if any. Dated:
9/3/2014 CLEAR RECON
CORP 4375 Jutland Drive
San Diego, CA 92117 858750-7600 9/24, 10/1, 10/8,
10/15/2014
trustee's sale may have
been used in manufacturing
methamphetamines,
the
chemical components of
which are known to be toxic.
Prospective purchasers of
residential property should
be aware of this potential
danger before deciding to
place a bid for this property
at the trustee's 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 obligation,
the performance of which is
secured by the Deed of
Trust, the words “trustee”
and ‘beneficiary” include
their respective successors
in interest, if any. Dated:
9/5/2014 CLEAR RECON
CORP 4375 Jutland Drive
San Diego, CA 92117 858750-7600 9/24, 10/1, 10/8,
10/15/2014
www.rogueriverpress.com
TRuSTEE’S NOTICE OF
SaLE TS No.: 018044-OR
Loan No.: ******4262 Reference is made to that certain
trust deed (the “Deed of
Trust”) executed by MARIA
PROBST AND RONALD
PROBST, WIFE AND HUSBAND, as Grantor, to FIDELITY NATIONAL TITLE
INS CO, as Trustee, in favor
of WELLS FARGO BANK,
N.A., as Beneficiary, dated
3/9/2007,
recorded
3/16/2007, as Instrument No.
2007-012814, in the Official
Records of Jackson County,
Oregon, which covers the
following described real
property situated in Jackson
County, Oregon: LOT 14, OF
CLEAR SKY ESTATES
SUBDIVISION, IN JACKSON COUNTY, OREGON,
ACCORDING TO THE OFFICIAL PLAT THEREOF,
RECORDED IN VOLUME
TRuSTEE'S NOTICE OF
SaLE File No. 7023.97757
Reference is made to that
certain trust deed made by
Ruth A. Caro, as grantor, to
First American Title Company, as trustee, in favor of
Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. as
nominee for American Brokers Conduit, its successors
and assigns, as beneficiary,
dated 04/21/05, recorded
04/28/05, in the mortgage
records
of
JACKSON
County, Oregon, as 2005024357 and subsequently
assigned to Wells Fargo
Bank, N.A. by Assignment
recorded as 2011-035512,
covering the following described real property situated
in said county and state, to
wit: Unit No. 2, in 210 West
Main Condominiums, Phase
1, to the City of Rogue River,
Jackson County, Oregon. Together with an undivided interest in the "Common
Elements", as set forth in Bylaws and Declaration of
Covenants, Conditions and
Restrictions recorded January 6, 1987, as Document
Nos. 87-00187 and 8700188, Official Records of
Jackson County, Oregon.
TRuSTEE’S NOTICE OF
SaLE TS No.: 019419-OR
Loan No.: ******8446 Reference is made to that certain
trust deed (the “Deed of
Trust”) executed by JAMES
A STEVENS AND NANCY S
STEVENS TENANTS BY
THE ENTIRETY, as Grantor,
to FIRST AMERICAN TITLE,
as Trustee, in favor of NATIONAL CITY MORTGAGE
CO
DBA
COMMONWEALTH UNITED MORTGAGE
COMPANY,
as
Beneficiary, dated 1/5/2004,
recorded 1/12/2004, as Instrument No. 2004-001418,
in the Official Records of
Jackson County, Oregon,
which covers the following
described real property situated in Jackson County, Oregon: BEGINNING AT A
BRASS CAP MONUMENT
BEING THE QUARTER
CORNER COMMON TO
SECTIONS 10 AND 11,
TOWNSHIP 36 SOUTH,
RANGE
1
EAST,
WILLAMETTE MERIDIAN,
JACKSON COUNTY, OREGON; THENCE WEST
248.31 FEET; THENCE
NORTH 73° 35' 52" WEST
8.36 FEET TO A 5/8 INCH
IRON
PIN;
THENCE
SOUTH 82° 09' 47" WEST
324.16 FEET TO A 5/8 INCH
IRON
PIN;
THENCE
25,
PAGE
15,
PLAT
RECORDS APN: 1-0925309 / 361W21BA 2900 Commonly known as: 8011 25TH
ST WHITE CITY, OREGON
97503 The current beneficiary is: Wells Fargo Bank,
N.A. Both the beneficiary
and the trustee have elected
to sell the above-described
real property to satisfy the
obligations secured by the
Deed of Trust and notice has
been recorded pursuant to
ORS 86.752(3). The default
for which the foreclosure is
made is the grantor’s failure
to pay when due, the following sums: Delinquent Payments: Dates: No. Amount
Total: 05/01/13 thru 10/01/13
11/01/13 thru 08/01/14 6 10
$912.42
$1,085.66
$5,474.52 $10,856.60 Late
Charges: $182.48 Beneficiary Advances:
$918.00
Foreclosure Fees and Ex-
PROPERTY ADDRESS: 210
WEST MAIN STREET #B
ROGUE RIVER, OR 975379640 Both the beneficiary
and the trustee have elected
to sell the real property to
satisfy the obligations secured by the trust deed and
a notice of default has been
recorded pursuant to Oregon
Revised Statutes 86.752(3);
the default for which the foreclosure is made is grantor's
failure to pay when due the
following sums: monthly payments of $567.79 beginning
08/01/11, $828.46 beginning
03/01/12, $662.29 beginning
03/01/13; plus prior accrued
late charges of $113.56; plus
advances of $682.50 that
represent property inspection, attorney fees and costs;
together with title expense,
costs, trustee's fees and attorney's fees incurred herein
by reason of said default;
any further sums advanced
by the beneficiary for the
protection of the above described real property and its
interest therein; and prepayment penalties/premiums, if
applicable. By reason of said
default the beneficiary has
declared all sums owing on
the obligation secured by the
SOUTH 23° 39' 22" WEST
787.00 FEET TO INTERSECT THE NORTHERLY
RIGHT OF WAY LINE OF
THE RELOCATED LAKE OF
THE WOODS HIGHWAY
NO. 140 AT A 5/8 INCH
IRON PIN; THENCE ALONG
SAID NORTHERLY RIGHT
OF WAY LINE NORTH 70°
02' 50' WEST 174.09 FEET
TO A POINT 35.00 FEET
NORTHEASTERLY
OF,
WHEN MEASURED AT
RIGHT ANGLES TO, ENGINEER'S CENTERLINE STATION 620+50; THENCE
ALONG SAID NORTHERLY
RIGHT OF WAY LINE AS
FOLLOWS: NORTH 60° 09
05" WEST 245.22 FEET;
THENCE ALONG THE ARC
OF A 1859.86 FOOT RADIUS CURVE TO THE
RIGHT (THE TONG CHORD
TO WHICH BEARS NORTH
56° 42' 50" WEST 216.24
FEET) A DISTANCE OF
216.36 FEET; THENCE
LEAVING
SAID
NORTHERLY RIGHT OF
WAY LINE NORTH 35° 50'
51" EAST, 873.60 FEET TO
A 5/8 INCH IRON PIN;
THENCE NORTH 61° 40'
28" EAST 549.51 FEET TO
INTERSECT THE BOUNDARY AGREEMENT LINE
DESCRIBED IN DOCUMENT NO. 78-17553, OFFI-
ROGUE RIVER PRESS
penses: $362.00 Total Required
to
Reinstate:
$17,793.60 TOTAL REQUIRED
TO
PAYOFF:
$142,801.82 By reason of
the default, the beneficiary
has declared all obligations
secured by the Deed of Trust
immediately
due
and
payable, including: the principal sum of $127,754.32 together with interest thereon
at the rate of 6.375 % per
annum, from 4/1/2013 until
paid, plus all accrued late
charges, and all trustee’s
fees, foreclosure costs, and
any sums advanced by the
beneficiary pursuant to the
terms and conditions of the
Deed of Trust Whereof, notice hereby is given that the
undersigned trustee, CLEAR
RECON CORP., whose address is 4375 Jutland Drive,
San Diego, CA 92117, will on
1/8/2015, at the hour of
trust deed immediately due
and payable, said sums
being the following, to wit:
$90,382.72 with interest
thereon at the rate of 5.5 percent per annum beginning
07/01/11; plus prior accrued
late charges of $113.56; plus
advances of $682.50 that
represent property inspection, attorney fees and costs;
together with title expense,
costs, trustee's fees and attorneys fees incurred herein
by reason of said default;
any further sums advanced
by the beneficiary for the
protection of the above described real property and its
interest therein; and prepayment penalties/premiums, if
applicable. WHEREFORE,
notice hereby is given that
the undersigned trustee will
on December 30, 2014 at the
hour of 10:00 o'clock, A.M. in
accord with the standard of
time established by ORS
187.110, at the following
place: on the front steps outside the main entrance of the
Jackson County Courthouse,
10 South Oakdale, in the
City of Medford, County of
JACKSON, State of Oregon,
sell at public auction to the
highest bidder for cash the
CIAL RECORDS OF JACKSON COUNTY, OREGON,
AT A 5/8 INCH IRON PIN;
THENCE ALONG SAID
BOUNDARY AGREEMENT
LINE SOUTH 53° 16' 21"
EAST 120.00 FEET TO A 5/8
INCH IRON PIT); THENCE
SOUTH 46° 34' 33" EAST
265.37 FEET TO A 5/8 INCH
IRON
PIN;
THENCE
SOUTH 63° 09' 47" EAST
186.70 FEET TO A 5/8 INCH
IRON
PIN;
THENCE
SOUTH 00° 10' 08" WEST
167.81 FEET TO THE
POINT OF BEGINNING.
APN: 10623006 / 10742119
Commonly known as: 10755
HWY 140 EAGLE POINT,
OR 97524 The current beneficiary is: PNC BANK, NATIONAL
ASSOCIATION,
SUCCESSOR IN INTEREST TO NATIONAL CITY
REAL ESTATE SERVICES,
LLC, SUCCESSOR BY
MERGER TO NATIONAL
CITY MORTGAGE, INC.,
FORMERLY KNOWN AS
NATIONAL CITY MORTGAGE CO. DOING BUSINESS
AS
COMMONWEALTH
UNITED MORTGAGE COMPANY Both the beneficiary
and the trustee have elected
to sell the above-described
real property to satisfy the
obligations secured by the
11:00 AM, standard time, as
established
by
ORS
187.110, AT THE OAKDALE
ENTRANCE STEPS TO
THE COUNTY OFFICES
BUILDING AT 10 S. OAKDALE, MEDFORD, OR
97501, sell at public auction
to the highest bidder for cash
the interest in the above-described real property which
the grantor had or had power
to convey at the time it executed the Deed of Trust, together with any interest
which the grantor or his successors in interest acquired
after the execution of the
Deed of Trust, 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 86.778 has the right
to have the foreclosure pro-
interest in the described real
property which the grantor
had or had power to convey
at the time of the execution
by grantor of the trust deed,
together with any interest
which the grantor or
grantor's successors in interest acquired after the execution of the 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 for reinstatement or payoff quotes
requested pursuant to ORS
86.786 and 86.789 must be
timely communicated in a
written request that complies
with that statute addressed
to the trustee's "Urgent Request Desk" either by personal delivery to the trustee's
physical offices (call for address) or by first class, certified mail, return receipt
requested, addressed to the
trustee's post office box address set forth in this notice.
Due to potential conflicts with
federal law, persons having
no record legal or equitable
interest in the subject property will only receive information concerning the lender's
Deed of Trust and notice has
been recorded pursuant to
ORS 86.752(3). The default
for which the foreclosure is
made is the grantor’s failure
to pay when due, the following sums: Delinquent Payments: Dates: No. Amount
Total: 04/01/14 thru 09/04/14
6 $1,269.45 $7,616.70 Late
Charges: $276.55 Beneficiary Advances: $235.56 Foreclosure Fees and Expenses:
$889.00 Total Required to
Reinstate: $9,017.81 TOTAL
REQUIRED TO PAYOFF:
$162,149.78 By reason of
the default, the beneficiary
has declared all obligations
secured by the Deed of Trust
immediately
due
and
payable, including: the principal sum of $155,548.07 together with interest thereon
at the rate of 5.875 % per
annum, from 3/1/2014 until
paid, plus all accrued late
charges, and all trustee’s
fees, foreclosure costs, and
any sums advanced by the
beneficiary pursuant to the
terms and conditions of the
Deed of Trust Whereof, notice hereby is given that the
undersigned trustee, CLEAR
RECON CORP., whose address is 4375 Jutland Drive,
San Diego, CA 92117, will on
1/13/2015, at the hour of
11:00 AM, standard time, as
October 8, 2014
ceeding dismissed and the
Deed of Trust reinstated by
payment to the beneficiary of
the entire amount then due
(other than the portion of
principal that would not then
be due had no default occurred), together with the
costs, trustee’s and attorneys’ fees, and curing any
other default complained of
in the Notice of Default by
tendering the performance
required under the Deed of
Trust at any time not later
than five days before the
date last set for sale. Without limiting the trustee's disclaimer of representations or
warranties, Oregon law requires the trustee to state in
this notice that some residential property sold at a
trustee's sale may have
been used in manufacturing
methamphetamines,
the
chemical components of
estimated or actual bid.
Lender bid information is
also available at the trustee's
website,
www.northwesttrustee.com. Notice is further
given that any person named
in ORS 86.778 has the right,
at any time prior to five days
before the date last set for
the sale, to have this foreclosure 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 required 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
incurred in enforcing the obligation and trust deed, together with trustee's and
attorney's fees not exceeding the amounts provided by
said ORS 86.778. Requests
from persons named in ORS
86.778 for reinstatement
quotes received less than six
established
by
ORS
187.110, AT THE OAKDALE
ENTRANCE STEPS TO
THE COUNTY OFFICES
BUILDING AT 10 S. OAKDALE, MEDFORD, OR
97501, sell at public auction
to the highest bidder for cash
the interest in the above-described real property which
the grantor had or had power
to convey at the time it executed the Deed of Trust, together with any interest
which the grantor or his successors in interest acquired
after the execution of the
Deed of Trust, 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 86.778 has the right
to have the foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the
Deed of Trust reinstated by
payment to the beneficiary of
the entire amount then due
(other than the portion of
principal that would not then
be due had no default occurred), together with the
costs, trustee’s and attorneys’ fees, and curing any
other default complained of
in the Notice of Default by
tendering the performance
required under the Deed of
19
which are known to be toxic.
Prospective purchasers of
residential property should
be aware of this potential
danger before deciding to
place a bid for this property
at the trustee's 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 obligation,
the performance of which is
secured by the Deed of
Trust, the words “trustee”
and ‘beneficiary” include
their respective successors
in interest, if any. Dated:
8/26/2014 CLEAR RECON
CORP 4375 Jutland Drive
San Diego, CA 92117 858750-7600 9/17, 9/24, 10/1,
10/8/2014
days prior to the date set for
the trustee's sale will be honored only at the discretion of
the beneficiary or if required
by the terms of the loan documents. 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 trust deed, and the
words "trustee" and "beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if
any. The trustee's rules of
auction may be accessed at
www.northwesttrustee.com
and are incorporated by this
reference. You may also access
sale
status
at
www.northwesttrustee.com
and
www.USAForeclosure.com. For further
information, please contact:
Kathy Taggart Northwest
Trustee Services, Inc. P.O.
Box 997 Bellevue, WA
98009-0997
586-1900
CARO, RUTH A. (TS#
7023.97757) 1002.272154File No. 10/1, 10/8, 10/15,
10/22/2014
Trust at any time not later
than five days before the
date last set for sale. Without
limiting the trustee's disclaimer of representations or
warranties, Oregon law requires the trustee to state in
this notice that some residential property sold at a
trustee's sale may have
been used in manufacturing
methamphetamines,
the
chemical components of
which are known to be toxic.
Prospective purchasers of
residential property should
be aware of this potential
danger before deciding to
place a bid for this property
at the trustee's 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 obligation,
the performance of which is
secured by the Deed of
Trust, the words “trustee”
and ‘beneficiary” include
their respective successors
in interest, if any. Dated:
9/4/2014 CLEAR RECON
CORP 4375 Jutland Drive
San Diego, CA 92117 858750-7600 9/17, 9/24, 10/1,
10/8/2014
20
October 8, 2014
SuMMONS BY PuBLICaTION
CaSE NO. NO. 14Cv06250
IN THE CIRCuIT COuRT FOR THE STaTE OF OREgON
IN aND FOR THE COuNTY OF JaCKSON
NATIONSTAR MORTGAGE LLC, Plaintiff,
v.
THE ESTATE OF VERNALEE WILLIAMS, DECEASED; UNKNOWN HEIRS AND DEVISEES OF VERNALEE
WILLIAMS, DECEASED; CALVIN C. WILLIAMS; JOHNNY
COLEMAN; KENNETH COLEMAN; LORI NIELSEN;
CHARLES WILLIAMS; PAMELA WILLIAMS; SONJA
WILLIAMS; TROY WILLIAMS; CINDY ZINK; AND PERSONS OR PARTIES UNKNOWN CLAIMING ANY RIGHT,
TITLE, LIEN, OR INTEREST IN THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED IN THE COMPLAINT HEREIN, Defendants.
TO: THE ESTATE OF VERNALEE WILLIAMS, DECEASED,
UNKNOWN HEIRS AND DEVISEES OF VERNALEE
WILLIAMS, DECEASED, JOHNNY COLEMAN, KENNETH
COLEMAN, PAMELA WILLIAMS, SONJA WILLIAMS, TROY
WILLIAMS, AND PERSONS OR PARTIES UNKNOWN
CLAIMING ANY RIGHT, TITLE, LIEN OR INTEREST IN THE
TRuSTEE’S NOTICE OF
SaLE TS No.: 018057-OR
Loan No.: ******8212 Reference is made to that certain
trust deed (the “Deed of
Trust”)
executed
by
MATTHEW K VOTAW, A
MARRIED PERSON, as
Grantor, to WELLS FARGO
FINANCIAL
NATIONAL
BANK, as Trustee, in favor of
WELLS FARGO BANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, as
Beneficiary,
dated
3/21/2008,
recorded
3/25/2008, as Instrument No.
2008-011230, The subject
Deed of Trust was modified
by
Loan
Modification
recorded as Instrument
2008-038050 and recorded
on 10/14/2008. in the Official
Records of Jackson County,
Oregon, which covers the
following described real
property situated in Jackson
County, Oregon: COMMENCING AT THE INITIAL
POINT
OF
BEL AIR
HEIGHTS IN THE CITY OF
MEDFORD, ACCORDING
TO THE OFFICIAL PLAT
THEREOF,
NOW
OF
RECORD IN JACKSON
COUNTY, OREGON, FROM
WHICH THE NORTHEAST
TRuSTEE'S NOTICE OF
SaLE File No. 7023.101911
Reference is made to that
certain trust deed made by
Dale M. Havniear, as
grantor, to Lawyers Title Ins
Corp, a Virginia Corp, as
trustee, in favor of Mortgage
Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. as nominee for
First Horizon Home Loan
Corporation, its successors
and assigns, as beneficiary,
dated 06/24/05, recorded
06/29/05, in the mortgage
records
of
JACKSON
County, Oregon, as 2005038617 and subsequently
assigned to Wells Fargo
Bank, NA by Assignment
recorded as 2011-030092,
covering the following described real property situated
in said county and state, to
wit: Commencing at the
South sixteenth corner between Sections 19 and 20 in
Township 37 South, Range 1
West of the Willamette
Meridian in Jackson County,
Oregon, thence North along
the east line of said Section
19, a distance of 1312.86
feet to the North line of
Spring Street, thence North
89 degrees 41'30" West
along said line, 113.0 feet to
the true point of beginning;
thence North 0 degrees 10'
West (record North) 390.77
feet to the South line of
Woodrow Lane, as described in Volume 129 Page
601 of the Deed Records of
Jackson County, Oregon;
CORNER OF DONATION
LAND CLAIM NO. 58,
TOWNSHIP 37 SOUTH,
RANGE 1 WEST, OF THE
WILLAMETTE MERIDIAN,
SAID JACKSON COUNTY,
BEARS SOUTH 00° 15`
WEST, 60.00 FEET AND
SOUTH 89° 39` 30" EAST,
574.41 FEET; THENCE
ALONG THE EASTERLY
RIGHT-OF-WAY LINE OF
STANFORD
AVENUE,
NORTH 00° 15` 30" EAST,
424.07 FEET TO A POINT
WHICH BEARS SOUTH 00°
15` 30" WEST, 70.00 FEET
FROM THE NORTHWEST
CORNER OF TRACT DESCRIBED PER INSTRUMENT NO. 74-00317 OF
THE DEED RECORDS OF
SAID JACKSON COUNTY,
FOR THE POINT OF BEGINNING; THENCE CONTINUE NORTH 00° 15` 30"
EAST ALONG SAID RIGHTOF-WAY LINE, 70.00 FEET
TO SAID NORTHWEST
CORNER OF TRACT DESCRIBED PER INSTRUMENT
NO.
74-00317;
THENCE SOUTH 89° 39`
3D" EAST ALONG THE
NORTHERLY BOUNDARY
OF SAID TRACT, 264.50
thence West along said line
180.0 feet; thence South 14
degrees 39'50" East 403.48
feet to the North line of said
Spring Street; thence South
89 degrees 41'30" East
along said line 76.0 feet to
the true point of beginning.
Excepting therefrom the following: commencing at the
South sixteenth corner between Sections 19 and 20 in
Township 37 South, Range 1
West of the Willamette
Meridian in Jackson County,
Oregon, thence North along
the East line of said Section
19, a distance of 1312.86
feet to the North line of
Spring Street, thence North
89 degrees 41'30" West
along said line 113.0 feet,
thence North 0 degrees 10'
West (record North) 228.77
feet to the true point of beginning; thence continue
North 0 degrees 10' West
(record North) 162.0 feet to
the South line of Woodrow
Lane as described in Volume
129 Page 601 of the Deed
Records of Jackson County,
Oregon; thence West along
said line 180.0 feet; thence
South 14 degrees 39'50"
East 167.45 feet to a point
West of the true point of beginning; thence East 138.08
feet to the true point of beginning. PROPERTY ADDRESS: 1239 Spring Street
Medford, OR 97504 Both the
beneficiary and the trustee
have elected to sell the real
property to satisfy the obliga-
ROGUE RIVER PRESS
PROPERTY DESCRIBED IN THE COMPLAINT HEREIN,
IN THE NAME OF THE STATE OF OREGON: You are
hereby required to appear and defend against the allegations
contained in the Complaint filed against you in the above entitled proceeding within thirty (30) days from the date of service of this Summons upon you. If you fail to appear and
defend this matter within thirty (30) days from the date of publication specified herein along with the required filing fee, NATIONSTAR MORTGAGE LLC will apply to the Court for the
relief demanded in the Complaint. The first date of publication
is October 1, 2014.
NOTICE TO DEFENDaNTS:
REaD THESE PaPERS CaREFuLLY!
You must "appear" in this case or the other side will win
automatically. To "appear" you must file with the court a legal
paper called a "motion" or "answer." The "motion" or "answer" must be given to the court clerk or administrator within
thirty days along with the required filing fee. It must be in
proper form and have proof of service on the plaintiff`s attorney or, if the plaintiff does not have an attorney, proof of service on the plaintiff.
FEET TO THE NORTHEAST CORNER THEREOF;
THENCE SOUTH 00° 15`
30" WEST ALONG THE
EASTERLY BOUNDARY OF
SAID TRACT, 70.00 FEET;
THENCE LEAVING SAID
BOUNDARY, NORTH 89°
39` 30" WEST, 264.50 FEET
TO THE POINT OF BEGINNING. APN:
10760756
Commonly known as: 345
STANFORD AVE MEDFORD, OREGON 97504
The current beneficiary is:
Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. Both
the beneficiary and the
trustee have elected to sell
the above-described real
property to satisfy the obligations secured by the Deed of
Trust and notice has been
recorded pursuant to ORS
86.752(3). The default for
which the foreclosure is
made is the grantor’s failure
to pay when due, the following sums: Delinquent Payments: Dates: No. Amount
Total: 06/01/13 thru 03/01/14
04/01/14 thru 08/01/14 10 5
$2,233.99
$2,254.15
$22,339.90 $11,270.75 Late
Charges: $293.12 Beneficiary Advances: $1,925.00
Foreclosure Fees and Ex-
tions secured by the trust
deed and a notice of default
has been recorded pursuant
to Oregon Revised Statutes
86.752(3); the default for
which the foreclosure is
made is grantor's failure to
pay when due the following
sums: monthly payments of
$1,072.91
beginning
04/01/12, $1,090.40 beginning 4/1/13 and $1,077.17
beginning 4/1/14; plus prior
accrued late charges of
$181.44; plus advances of
$1,396.50 that represent
paid foreclosure fees and
costs and property inspections; together with title expense, costs, trustee's fees
and attorney's fees incurred
herein by reason of said default; any further sums advanced by the beneficiary for
the protection of the above
described real property and
its interest therein; and prepayment penalties/premiums, if applicable. By reason
of said default the beneficiary has declared all sums
owing on the obligation secured by the trust deed immediately due and payable,
said sums being the following, to wit: $142,868.85 with
interest thereon at the rate of
5.5 percent per annum beginning 03/01/12; plus prior
accrued late charges of
$181.44; plus advances of
$1,396.50 that represent
paid foreclosure fees and
costs and property inspections; together with title ex-
penses: $562.00 Total Required
to
Reinstate:
$36,390.77 TOTAL REQUIRED
TO
PAYOFF:
$409,127.01 By reason of
the default, the beneficiary
has declared all obligations
secured by the Deed of Trust
immediately
due
and
payable, including: the principal sum of $385,081.20 together with interest thereon
at the rate of 2 % per
annum, from 5/1/2013 until
paid, plus all accrued late
charges, and all trustee’s
fees, foreclosure costs, and
any sums advanced by the
beneficiary pursuant to the
terms and conditions of the
Deed of Trust Whereof, notice hereby is given that the
undersigned trustee, CLEAR
RECON CORP., whose address is 4375 Jutland Drive,
San Diego, CA 92117, will on
1/8/2015, at the hour of
11:00 AM, standard time, as
established
by
ORS
187.110, AT THE OAKDALE
ENTRANCE STEPS TO
THE COUNTY OFFICES
BUILDING AT 10 S. OAKDALE, MEDFORD, OR
97501, sell at public auction
to the highest bidder for cash
pense, costs, trustee's fees
and attorneys fees incurred
herein by reason of said default; any further sums advanced by the beneficiary for
the protection of the above
described real property and
its interest therein; and prepayment penalties/premiums,
if
applicable.
WHEREFORE,
notice
hereby is given that the undersigned trustee will on
January 7, 2015 at the hour
of 10:00 o'clock, A.M. in accord with the standard of
time established by ORS
187.110, at the following
place: on the front steps outside the main entrance of the
Jackson County Courthouse,
10 South Oakdale, in the
City of Medford, County of
JACKSON, State of Oregon,
sell at public auction to the
highest bidder for cash the
interest in the described real
property which the grantor
had or had power to convey
at the time of the execution
by grantor of the trust deed,
together with any interest
which the grantor or
grantor's successors in interest acquired after the execution of the 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 for reinstatement or payoff quotes
requested pursuant to ORS
86.786 and 86.789 must be
Subscribe Today! • 541.582.1707
IF YOu HavE aNY QuESTIONS, YOu SHOuLD SEE
aN aTTORNEY IMMEDIaTELY. If you need help in finding
an attorney, you may call the Oregon State Bar`s Lawyer Referral Service at (503) 684-3763 or toll-free in Oregon at
(800) 452-7636.
The object of the said action and the relief sought to be
obtained therein is fully set forth in said complaint, and is
briefly stated as follows:
Foreclosure of a Deed of Trust/Mortgage
grantors: Calvin C. Williams and Vernalee Williams
Property address: 8113 W Evans Creek Road,
Rogue River, OR 97537
Publication: Rogue River Press
DaTED this 26th day of September, 2014.
Brandon Smith, OSB #124584
Robinson Tait, P.S.
attorneys for Plaintiff
Tel: (206) 676-9640
Fax: (206) 676-9659
10/1, 10/8, 10/15, 10/22/2014
the interest in the above-described real property which
the grantor had or had power
to convey at the time it executed the Deed of Trust, together with any interest
which the grantor or his successors in interest acquired
after the execution of the
Deed of Trust, 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 86.778 has the right
to have the foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the
Deed of Trust reinstated by
payment to the beneficiary of
the entire amount then due
(other than the portion of
principal that would not then
be due had no default occurred), together with the
costs, trustee’s and attorneys’ fees, and curing any
other default complained of
in the Notice of Default by
tendering the performance
required under the Deed of
Trust at any time not later
than five days before the
date last set for sale. Without
limiting the trustee's dis-
timely communicated in a
written request that complies
with that statute addressed
to the trustee's "Urgent Request Desk" either by personal delivery to the trustee's
physical offices (call for address) or by first class, certified mail, return receipt
requested, addressed to the
trustee's post office box address set forth in this notice.
Due to potential conflicts with
federal law, persons having
no record legal or equitable
interest in the subject property will only receive information concerning the lender's
estimated or actual bid.
Lender bid information is
also available at the trustee's
website,
www.northwesttrustee.com. Notice is further
given that any person named
in ORS 86.778 has the right,
at any time prior to five days
before the date last set for
the sale, to have this foreclosure 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 required 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
claimer of representations or
warranties, Oregon law requires the trustee to state in
this notice that some residential property sold at a
trustee's sale may have
been used in manufacturing
methamphetamines,
the
chemical components of
which are known to be toxic.
Prospective purchasers of
residential property should
be aware of this potential
danger before deciding to
place a bid for this property
at the trustee's 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 obligation,
the performance of which is
secured by the Deed of
Trust, the words “trustee”
and ‘beneficiary” include
their respective successors
in interest, if any. Dated:
8/27/2014 CLEAR RECON
CORP 4375 Jutland Drive
San Diego, CA 92117 858750-7600 9/17, 9/24, 10/1,
10/8/2014
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 86.778. Requests
from persons named in ORS
86.778 for reinstatement
quotes received less than six
days prior to the date set for
the trustee's sale will be honored only at the discretion of
the beneficiary or if required
by the terms of the loan documents. 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 trust deed, and the
words "trustee" and "beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if
any. The trustee's rules of
auction may be accessed at
www.northwesttrustee.com
and are incorporated by this
reference. You may also access
sale
status
at
www.northwesttrustee.com
and
www.USAForeclosure.com. For further
information, please contact:
Kathy Taggart Northwest
Trustee Services, Inc. P.O.
Box 997 Bellevue, WA
98009-0997 425-586-1900
Havniear, Dale W. (Deceased) (TS# 7023.101911)
1002.272502-File No. 10/8,
10/15, 10/22, 10/29/2014
www.rogueriverpress.com
TRuSTEE'S NOTICE OF
SaLE File No. 7827.20632
Reference is made to that
certain trust deed made by
Bud Smith and Katherine I.
Smith, as Tenants by the Entirety, as grantors, to Ticor
Title Company, as trustee, in
favor of Financial Freedom
Senior Funding Corporation,
a subsidiary of IndyMac
Bank, F.S.B., as beneficiary,
dated 11/16/2007, recorded
11/21/2007, in the mortgage
records of JACKSON, Oregon, as 2007-052799 and
subsequently assigned to
OneWest Bank N.A. by Assignment recorded as 2014013705,
covering
the
following described real
property situated in said
county and state, to wit: Lot
19, Block 2, T & M Subdivision - Unit No. 2, in Jackson
County, Oregon. PROPERTY ADDRESS: 2933 Avenue A White City, OR 97503
Both the beneficiary and the
trustee have elected to sell
the real property to satisfy
the obligations secured by
the trust deed and a notice of
TRuSTEE'S NOTICE OF
SaLE File No. 7827.20647
Reference is made to that
certain trust deed made by
Betty R. Wortham, Trustee,
or her Successors in Trust,
under the Betty R. Wortham
Trust dated April 12, 2000,
and
any
amendments
thereto, as grantors, to
Lawyers Title Insurance Corporation, a Virginia Corporation, as trustee, in favor of
Action Mortgage Company,
as
beneficiary,
dated
01/26/2006,
recorded
02/01/2006, in the mortgage
records of JACKSON, Oregon, as 2006-005189 and
subsequently assigned to
OneWest Bank N.A. by Assignment recorded as 2014014102,
covering
the
following described real
property situated in said
county and state, to wit: Lot
Two (2) in ALLISON CREEK
SUBDIVISION, in the City of
Medford, Jackson County,
Oregon, according to the Official Plat thereof, recorded in
Volume 29, Page 16, Plat
Records. PROPERTY ADDRESS: 2381 Garland Place
TRuSTEE’S NOTICE OF
SaLE TS No.: 013150-OR
Loan No.: ******5767 Reference is made to that certain
trust deed (the “Deed of
Trust”) executed by JAMES
BAXTER JR AND LISA BAXTER HUSBAND AND WIFE,
as Grantor, to AMERI-TITLE,
as Trustee, in favor of NATIONAL CITY MORTGAGE
CO
DBA
ACCUBANC
MORTGAGE, as Beneficiary,
dated
8/25/2004,
recorded 8/27/2004, as Instrument No. 2004-050569,
in the Official Records of
Jackson County, Oregon,
which covers the following
described real property situated in Jackson County, Oregon: COMMENCING AT
THE SOUTH QUARTER
CORNER OF SECTION 29,
TOWNSHIP 36 SOUTH,
RANGE
2
WEST,
WILLAMETTE MERIDIAN,
JACKSON COUNTY, OREGON; THENCE NORTH
0°06`18'' EAST ALONG THE
NORTH-SOUTH CENTERLINE OF SAID SECTION,
1276.79 FEET TO THE
NORTHEAST CORNER OF
TRACT DESCRIBED IN
DEED RECORDED AS
DOCUMENT NO. 75-14665,
default has been recorded
pursuant to Oregon Revised
Statutes 86.752(3). The default for which foreclosure is
made is grantor breach of
the terms and conditions of
the obligation secured by the
deed of trust. The event of
default under the note and
deed of trust, pursuant to
Section 9(b)(i) of the Deed of
Trust, which provides that,
"Lender may require immediate payment in full of all
sums secured by this Security Instrument if... The property ceases to be the
principal residence of a Borrower for reasons other than
death and the Property is not
the principal residence of at
least one other Borrower".
The
Default
date
of
03/04/2014 and pay the following sums: principal balance of $215,483.28 with
accrued
interest
from
02/04/2014; together with
title expense, costs, trustee's
fees and attorney's fees incurred herein by reason of
said default; any further
sums advanced by the ben-
Medford, OR 97501 Both the
beneficiary and the trustee
have elected to sell the real
property to satisfy the obligations secured by the trust
deed and a notice of default
has been recorded pursuant
to Oregon Revised Statutes
86.752(3). The default for
which foreclosure is made is
grantor breach of the terms
and conditions of the obligation secured by the deed of
trust. The event of default
under the note and deed of
trust, pursuant to Section
9(b)(i) of the Deed of Trust,
which provides that, "Lender
may require immediate payment in full of all sums secured by this Security
Instrument if... The property
ceases to be the principal
residence of a Borrower for
reasons other than death
and the Property is not the
principal residence of at least
one other Borrower". The
Default date of 03/25/2014
and pay the following sums:
principal
balance
of
$187,890.62 with accrued interest from 02/25/2014; together with title expense,
OFFICIAL RECORDS OF
JACKSON COUNTY, OREGON; THENCE NORTH
89°49`20'' WEST 644.00
FEET FOR THE TRUE
POINT OF BEGINNING;
THENCE NORTH 00°05`40''
EAST
215.00
FEET;
THENCE NORTH 89°49`20''
WEST 541.63 FEET TO
THE EASTERLY LINE OF
TOLO (COUNTY) ROAD;
THENCE SOUTH 0°05`40''
WEST ALONG THE EASTERLY LINE OF SAID ROAD,
459.50 FEET TO THE
MOST WESTERLY-NORTHWEST CORNER OF SAID
TRACT; THENCE ALONG
THE NORTH LINE OF SAID
TRACT, SOUTH 89°49`20''
EAST 415.63 FEET TO THE
INTERIOR ELL CORNER
OF SAID TRACT; THENCE
NORTH 0°05`18'' EAST
ALONG THE WEST LINE
OF SAID TRACT, 244.50
FEET TO THE NORTHNORTHWEST
CORNER
THEREOF;
THENCE
SOUTH 89°49`20'' EAST
ALONG THE NORTH LINE
OF SAID TRACT 126.00
FEET TO THE TRUE POINT
OF BEGINNING. APN:
10722751 Commonly known
as: 6432 TOLO RD CEN-
ROGUE RIVER PRESS
eficiary for the protection of
the above described real
property and its interest
therein; and prepayment
penalties/premiums, if applicable. By reason of said default, the beneficiary has
declared all sums owing on
the obligation secured by
said trust deed immediately
due and payable, said sums
being the following, to wit:
$215,483.28 with interest
thereon at the rate of 1.11
percent per annum beginning 02/04/2014; plus miscellaneous advances of
$17,162.70; together with
title expense, costs, trustee's
fees and attorneys fees incurred herein by reason of
said default; any further
sums advanced by the beneficiary for the protection of
the above described property and its interest therein;
and
prepayment
penalties/premiums, if applicable. WHEREFORE, notice
hereby is given that the undersigned trustee will on
January 7, 2015 at the hour
of 10:00 o'clock, A.M. in ac-
costs, trustee's fees and attorney's fees incurred herein
by reason of said default;
any further sums advanced
by the beneficiary for the
protection of the above described real property and its
interest therein; and prepayment penalties/premiums, if
applicable. By reason of said
default, the beneficiary has
declared all sums owing on
the obligation secured by
said trust deed immediately
due and payable, said sums
being the following, to wit:
$187,890.62 with interest
thereon at the rate of 1.61
percent per annum beginning 02/25/2014; plus advances
of
$18,767.33;
together with title expense,
costs, trustee's fees and attorneys fees incurred herein
by reason of said default;
any further sums advanced
by the beneficiary for the
protection of the above described property and its interest therein; and prepayment
penalties/premiums, if applicable. WHEREFORE, notice
hereby is given that the undersigned trustee will on DeTRAL POINT, OR 97502 The
current beneficiary is: PNC
Bank, National Association,
successor in interest to National City Real Estate Services, LLC, successor by
merger To National City
Mortgage, Inc., formerly
known as National City Mortgage Co., doing business as
Accubanc Mortgage Both
the beneficiary and the
trustee have elected to sell
the above-described real
property to satisfy the obligations secured by the Deed of
Trust and notice has been
recorded pursuant to ORS
86.752(3). The default for
which the foreclosure is
made is the grantor’s: Installment of Principal and Interest plus impounds and/or
advances which became
due on 7/1/2013 plus late
charges, and all subsequent
installments of principal, interest, balloon payments,
plus impounds and/or advances and late charges that
become payable. Delinquent
Payments: Dates: 7/1/20136/1/2014 No. 12 Amount
$1,416.45 Total: $16,997.40
Late Charges: $244.60 Beneficiary Advances: $915.23
Foreclosure Fees and Ex-
cord with the standard of
time established by ORS
187.110, at the following
place: on the front steps outside the main entrance of the
Jackson County Courthouse,
10 South Oakdale, in the
City of Medford, County of
JACKSON, State of Oregon,
sell at public auction to the
highest bidder for cash the
interest in the described real
property which the grantor
had or had power to convey
at the time of the execution
by grantor of the trust deed,
together with any interest
which the grantor or
grantor's successors in interest acquired after the execution of the 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 for payoff
quotes requested pursuant
to ORS 86.786 and 86.789
must be timely communicated in a written request
that complies with that
statute addressed to the
cember 12, 2014 at the hour
of 10:00 o'clock, A.M. in accord with the standard of
time established by ORS
187.110, at the following
place: on the front steps outside the main entrance of the
Jackson County Courthouse,
10 South Oakdale, in the
City of Medford, County of
JACKSON, State of Oregon,
sell at public auction to the
highest bidder for cash the
interest in the described real
property which the grantor
had or had power to convey
at the time of the execution
by grantor of the trust deed,
together with any interest
which the grantor or
grantor's successors in interest acquired after the execution of the 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 for payoff
quotes requested pursuant
to ORS 86.786 and 86.789
must be timely communicated in a written request
that complies with that
penses: $1,143.00 Total Required
to
Reinstate:
$19,300.23 TOTAL REQUIRED
TO
PAYOFF:
$190,795.68 By reason of
the default, the beneficiary
has declared all obligations
secured by the Deed of Trust
immediately
due
and
payable, including: the principal sum of $176,044.67 together with interest thereon
at the rate of 6 % per annum,
from 6/1/2013 until paid, plus
all accrued late charges, and
all trustee’s fees, foreclosure
costs, and any sums advanced by the beneficiary
pursuant to the terms and
conditions of the Deed of
Trust Whereof, notice hereby
is given that the undersigned
trustee, CLEAR RECON
CORP., whose address is
4375 Jutland Drive, San
Diego, CA 92117, will on
11/6/2014, at the hour of
11:00 AM, standard time, as
established
by
ORS
187.110, AT THE OAKDALE
ENTRANCE STEPS TO
THE COUNTY OFFICES
BUILDING AT 10 S. OAKDALE, MEDFORD, OR
97501, sell at public auction
to the highest bidder for cash
the interest in the above-de-
October 8, 2014
trustee's "Urgent Request
Desk" either by personal delivery to the trustee's physical offices (call for address)
or by first class, certified
mail, return receipt requested, addressed to the
trustee's post office box address set forth in this notice.
Due to potential conflicts with
federal law, persons having
no record legal or equitable
interest in the subject property will only receive information concerning the lender's
estimated or actual bid.
Lender bid information is
also available at the trustee's
website,
www.northwesttrustee.com. A right exists, or
may exist under ORS 86.778
to have the proceeding dismissed and the trust deed
reinstated by paying the entire amount then due, together with costs, trustee's
fees and attorney fees,
and/or by curing any other
default complained of in the
notice of default, at any time
that is not later than five days
before the date last set for
the sale In construing this
statute addressed to the
trustee's "Urgent Request
Desk" either by personal delivery to the trustee's physical offices (call for address)
or by first class, certified
mail, return receipt requested, addressed to the
trustee's post office box address set forth in this notice.
Due to potential conflicts with
federal law, persons having
no record legal or equitable
interest in the subject property will only receive information concerning the lender's
estimated or actual bid.
Lender bid information is
also available at the trustee's
website,
www.northwesttrustee.com. A right exists, or
may exist under ORS 86.778
to have the proceeding dismissed and the trust deed
reinstated by paying the entire amount then due, together with costs, trustee's
fees and attorney fees,
and/or by curing any other
default complained of in the
notice of default, at any time
that is not later than five days
before the date last set for
the sale In construing this
scribed real property which
the grantor had or had power
to convey at the time it executed the Deed of Trust, together with any interest
which the grantor or his successors in interest acquired
after the execution of the
Deed of Trust, 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 86.778 has the right
to have the foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the
Deed of Trust reinstated by
payment to the beneficiary of
the entire amount then due
(other than the portion of
principal that would not then
be due had no default occurred), together with the
costs, trustee’s and attorneys’ fees, and curing any
other default complained of
in the Notice of Default by
tendering the performance
required under the Deed of
Trust at any time not later
than five days before the
date last set for sale. Without
limiting the trustee's disclaimer of representations or
warranties, Oregon law re-
21
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 trust deed, and the
words "trustee" and "beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if
any. The trustee's rules of
auction may be accessed at
www.northwesttrustee.com
and are incorporated by this
reference. You may also access
sale
status
at
www.northwesttrustee.com
and
www.USAForeclosure.com. For further
information, please contact:
Breanon Miller Northwest
Trustee Services, Inc. P.O.
Box 997 Bellevue, WA
98009-0997 425-586-1900
Smith, Katherine I. and Bud
(TS#
7827.20632)
1002.272434-File No. 10/8,
10/15, 10/22, 10/29/2014
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 trust deed, and the
words "trustee" and "beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if
any. The trustee's rules of
auction may be accessed at
www.northwesttrustee.com
and are incorporated by this
reference. You may also access
sale
status
at
www.northwesttrustee.com
and
www.USAForeclosure.com. For further
information, please contact:
Breanon Miller Northwest
Trustee Services, Inc. P.O.
Box 997 Bellevue, WA
98009-0997 425-586-1900
Wortham, Betty R. (TS#
7827.20647) 1002.271669File No. 9/17, 9/24, 10/1,
10/8/2014
quires the trustee to state in
this notice that some residential property sold at a
trustee's sale may have
been used in manufacturing
methamphetamines,
the
chemical components of
which are known to be toxic.
Prospective purchasers of
residential property should
be aware of this potential
danger before deciding to
place a bid for this property
at the trustee's 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 obligation,
the performance of which is
secured by the Deed of
Trust, the words “trustee”
and ‘beneficiary” include
their respective successors
in interest, if any. Dated:
6/25/2014 CLEAR RECON
CORP 4375 Jutland Drive
San Diego, CA 92117 858750-7600 Hamsa Uchi, Authorized Signatory of Trustee
Pub Dates: 9/24, 10/1, 10/8,
10/15/2014
22
October 8, 2014
TRuSTEE’S NOTICE OF
SaLE TS No.: 016130-OR
Loan No.: ******7399 Reference is made to that certain
trust deed (the “Deed of
Trust”)
executed
by
STEPHEN G DAVIS AND
TERRY S DAVIS, as
Grantor, to TOCIR TITLE, as
Trustee, in favor of NATIONAL CITY BANK OF INDIANA, as Beneficiary, dated
3/2/2006, recorded 3/8/2006,
as Instrument No. 2006011679, rerecorded on
02/10/2011 as Instrument
No. 2011-004655, and rerecorded on 04/15/2011 as Instrument No. 2011-011633,
in the Official Records of
Jackson County, Oregon,
which covers the following
described real property situated in Jackson County, Oregon: LOT 18, BLOCK 2,
ROGUE TERRACE UNIT
NO.2, IN THE CITY OF
MEDFORD,
JACKSON
COUNTY, OREGON. APN:
TRuSTEE’S NOTICE OF
SaLE TS No.: 018264-OR
Loan No.: ******3051 Reference is made to that certain
trust deed (the “Deed of
Trust”) executed by EMILY M
CARTER AND ERIC D
CARTER, HUSBAND AND
WIFE, as Grantor, to FIDELITY NATIONAL TITLE
INS CO, as Trustee, in favor
of WELLS FARGO BANK,
N.A., as Beneficiary, dated
12/3/2004,
recorded
12/8/2004, as Instrument No.
2004-071347, in the Official
Records of Jackson County,
Oregon, which covers the
following described real
property situated in Jackson
County, Oregon: BEGINNING AT A 1/2" IRON PIPE
ON THE SECTION LINE
WHICH BEARS SOUTH,
19.16 FEET FROM THE
SECTION CORNER COMMON TO SECTIONS 20, 21,
28 AND 29, TOWNSHIP 36
SOUTH, RANGE 2 WEST
OF THE WILLAMETTE
MERIDIAN,
JACKSON
COUNTY, OREGON, RUN-
TRuSTEE'S NOTICE OF
SaLE File No. 7023.99636
Reference is made to that
certain trust deed made by
Daniel R. Bergstrom, an estate in fee simple, as grantor,
to David A. Kubat, as trustee,
in favor of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems,
Inc., as nominee for Home
Loan Center, Inc., DBA
LendingTree Loans, its successors and assigns, as
beneficiary, dated 11/21/05,
recorded 12/01/05, in the
mortgage records of JACKSON County, Oregon, as
2005-072909 and subsequently assigned to Wells
Fargo Bank, N.A. by Assignment recorded as 2012000566,
covering
the
following described real
property situated in said
county and state, to wit: The
North half of the West half of
the Southwest quarter of the
Northwest quarter of Section
29, Township 36 South,
Range 4 West, Willamette
Meridian, Jackson County,
Oregon. Excepting therefrom
the West 33 feet thereof.
Also excepting therefrom the
following: commencing at a
3/4 inch iron pipe at the
North 1/16th corner on the
West line of Section 29,
Township 36 South, Range 4
West, Willamette Meridian,
Jackson County, Oregon;
thence North 89 degrees
51'30" East along the North
10319023 Commonly known
as: 2516 GOULD AVE MEDFORD, OR 97504 The current beneficiary is: PNC
BANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, SUCCESSOR BY
MERGER TO NATIONAL
CITY BANK, SUCCESSOR
BY MERGER TO NATIONAL
CITY BANK OF INDIANA
Both the beneficiary and the
trustee have elected to sell
the above-described real
property to satisfy the obligations secured by the Deed of
Trust and notice has been
recorded pursuant to ORS
86.752(3). The default for
which the foreclosure is
made is the grantor’s: Installment of Principal and Interest plus impounds and/or
advances which became
due on 5/1/2010 plus late
charges, and all subsequent
installments of principal, interest, balloon payments,
plus impounds and/or advances and late charges that
NING THENCE SOUTH
0°03`WEST, 143.0 FEET TO
A 5/8" IRON PIN; THENCE
SOUTH
88°07`
EAST,
338.94 FEET TO A 5/8"
IRON PIN ON THE WEST
BOUNDARY OF OLD PACIFIC HIGHWAY; THENCE
NORTH 24°49`45" WEST
ALONG BOUNDARY OF
HIGHWAY 30.60 FEET TO A
POINT
OF
CURVE;
THENCE ON A CURVE TO
THE LEFT WHICH HAS A
RADIUS OF 686.20 FEET
THROUGH AN ANGLE OF
8°44`30" A DISTANCE OF
104.69 FEET TO A POINT
OF TANGENT; THENCE
NORTH 31°34` 15" WEST,
31. 95 FEET TO A 1/2" IRON
PIPE; THENCE NORTH
88°07` WEST, 257.25 FEET
TO A 1/2" PIPE AND THE
POINT OF BEGINNING.
APN: 10188410 / 362W2800-02001 Commonly known
as: 7181 BLACKWELL
ROAD CENTRAL POINT,
OREGON 97502 The current beneficiary is: Wells
Fargo Bank, N.A. Both the
line of the Southwest quarter
of the Northwest quarter of
said Section, 335.0 feet to
the true point of beginning;
thence South 0 degrees
00'30" East parallel with the
West line of said Section,
315.7 feet to a 3/4 inch iron
pipe on the North line of the
existing dirt road; thence
along said line the following:
North 89 degrees 59'30"
East 201.1 feet to a 3/4 inch
iron pipe, and North 86 degrees 34'30" East 129.0 feet,
more or less, to the East line
of the West half of the Southwest quarter of the Northwest quarter of Section 29;
thence North along said line
309.0 feet, more or less, to
the North line of said quarterquarter; thence South 89 degrees 51'30" West along said
line 330.0 feet more or less,
to the true point of beginning.
PROPERTY
ADDRESS:
6907 Rogue River Highway
Grants Pass, OR 97527
Both the beneficiary and the
trustee have elected to sell
the real property to satisfy
the obligations secured by
the trust deed and a notice of
default has been recorded
pursuant to Oregon Revised
Statutes 86.752(3); the default for which the foreclosure is made is grantor's
failure to pay when due the
following sums: monthly payments of $1,139.30 beginning 10/01/11 and $1,172.87
ROGUE RIVER PRESS
become payable. Delinquent
Payments: Dates: 5/1/20106/1/2014 No. 50 Amount
$1,608.61 Total: $80,430.50
Late Charges: $213.36 Beneficiary
Advances:
$21,375.43
Foreclosure
Fees
and
Expenses:
$1,243.00 Total Required to
Reinstate:
$103,262.29
TOTAL REQUIRED TO PAYOFF: $304,481.82 By reason of the default, the
beneficiary has declared all
obligations secured by the
Deed of Trust immediately
due and payable, including:
the
principal
sum
of
$216,488.36 together with
interest thereon at the rate of
6.375 % per annum, from
4/1/2010 until paid, plus all
accrued late charges, and all
trustee’s fees, foreclosure
costs, and any sums advanced by the beneficiary
pursuant to the terms and
conditions of the Deed of
Trust Whereof, notice hereby
beneficiary and the trustee
have elected to sell the
above-described real property to satisfy the obligations
secured by the Deed of Trust
and notice has been
recorded pursuant to ORS
86.752(3). The default for
which the foreclosure is
made is the grantor’s failure
to pay when due, the following sums: Delinquent Payments: Dates: No. Amount
Total: 12/01/12 thru 08/01/14
21 $863.04 $18,123.84 Late
Charges: $258.90 Beneficiary Advances: $1,225.00
Foreclosure Fees and Expenses: $562.00 Total Required
to
Reinstate:
$20,169.74 TOTAL REQUIRED
TO
PAYOFF:
$143,487.13 By reason of
the default, the beneficiary
has declared all obligations
secured by the Deed of Trust
immediately
due
and
payable, including: the principal sum of $128,528.06 together with interest thereon
at the rate of 5.5 % per
annum, from 11/1/2012 until
beginning 3/1/12; plus prior
accrued late charges of
$231.60; plus advances of
$2,187.50 that represent
paid foreclosure fees and
costs, property inspections,
lawn care, external debris
and lock rekey ; together
with title expense, costs,
trustee's fees and attorney's
fees incurred herein by reason of said default; any further sums advanced by the
beneficiary for the protection
of the above described real
property and its interest
therein; and prepayment
penalties/premiums, if applicable. By reason of said default the beneficiary has
declared all sums owing on
the obligation secured by the
trust deed immediately due
and payable, said sums
being the following, to wit:
$191,808.08 with interest
thereon at the rate of 5 percent per annum beginning
09/01/11; plus prior accrued
late charges of $231.60; plus
advances of $2,187.50 that
represent paid foreclosure
fees and costs, property inspections, lawn care, external debris and lock rekey;
together with title expense,
costs, trustee's fees and attorneys fees incurred herein
by reason of said default;
any further sums advanced
by the beneficiary for the
protection of the above described real property and its
is given that the undersigned
trustee, CLEAR RECON
CORP., whose address is
4375 Jutland Drive, San
Diego, CA 92117, will on
10/30/2014, at the hour of
11:00 AM, standard time, as
established
by
ORS
187.110, AT THE OAKDALE
ENTRANCE STEPS TO
THE COUNTY OFFICES
BUILDING AT 10 S. OAKDALE, MEDFORD, OR
97501, sell at public auction
to the highest bidder for cash
the interest in the above-described real property which
the grantor had or had power
to convey at the time it executed the Deed of Trust, together with any interest
which the grantor or his successors in interest acquired
after the execution of the
Deed of Trust, to satisfy the
foregoing obligations thereby
secured and the costs and
expenses of sale, including a
reasonable charge by the
paid, plus all accrued late
charges, and all trustee’s
fees, foreclosure costs, and
any sums advanced by the
beneficiary pursuant to the
terms and conditions of the
Deed of Trust Whereof, notice hereby is given that the
undersigned trustee, CLEAR
RECON CORP., whose address is 4375 Jutland Drive,
San Diego, CA 92117, will on
1/8/2015, at the hour of
11:00 AM, standard time, as
established
by
ORS
187.110, AT THE OAKDALE
ENTRANCE STEPS TO
THE COUNTY OFFICES
BUILDING AT 10 S. OAKDALE, MEDFORD, OR
97501, sell at public auction
to the highest bidder for cash
the interest in the above-described real property which
the grantor had or had power
to convey at the time it executed the Deed of Trust, together with any interest
which the grantor or his successors in interest acquired
after the execution of the
Deed of Trust, to satisfy the
interest therein; and prepayment penalties/premiums, if
applicable. WHEREFORE,
notice hereby is given that
the undersigned trustee will
on January 7, 2015 at the
hour of 10:00 o'clock, A.M. in
accord with the standard of
time established by ORS
187.110, at the following
place: on the front steps outside the main entrance of the
Jackson County Courthouse,
10 South Oakdale, in the
City of Medford, County of
JACKSON, State of Oregon,
sell at public auction to the
highest bidder for cash the
interest in the described real
property which the grantor
had or had power to convey
at the time of the execution
by grantor of the trust deed,
together with any interest
which the grantor or
grantor's successors in interest acquired after the execution of the 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 for reinstatement or payoff quotes
requested pursuant to ORS
86.786 and 86.789 must be
timely communicated in a
written request that complies
with that statute addressed
to the trustee's "Urgent Request Desk" either by personal delivery to the trustee's
www.rogueriverpress.com
trustee. Notice is further
given that any person named
in ORS 86.778 has the right
to have the foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the
Deed of Trust reinstated by
payment to the beneficiary of
the entire amount then due
(other than the portion of
principal that would not then
be due had no default occurred), together with the
costs, trustee’s and attorneys’ fees, and curing any
other default complained of
in the Notice of Default by
tendering the performance
required under the Deed of
Trust at any time not later
than five days before the
date last set for sale. Without
limiting the trustee's disclaimer of representations or
warranties, Oregon law requires the trustee to state in
this notice that some residential property sold at a
trustee's sale may have
been used in manufacturing
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 86.778 has the right
to have the foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the
Deed of Trust reinstated by
payment to the beneficiary of
the entire amount then due
(other than the portion of
principal that would not then
be due had no default occurred), together with the
costs, trustee’s and attorneys’ fees, and curing any
other default complained of
in the Notice of Default by
tendering the performance
required under the Deed of
Trust at any time not later
than five days before the
date last set for sale. Without
limiting the trustee's disclaimer of representations or
warranties, Oregon law requires the trustee to state in
this notice that some residential property sold at a
trustee's sale may have
physical offices (call for address) or by first class, certified mail, return receipt
requested, addressed to the
trustee's post office box address set forth in this notice.
Due to potential conflicts with
federal law, persons having
no record legal or equitable
interest in the subject property will only receive information concerning the lender's
estimated or actual bid.
Lender bid information is
also available at the trustee's
website,
www.northwesttrustee.com. Notice is further
given that any person named
in ORS 86.778 has the right,
at any time prior to five days
before the date last set for
the sale, to have this foreclosure 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 required 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
incurred in enforcing the obligation and trust deed, together with trustee's and
methamphetamines,
the
chemical components of
which are known to be toxic.
Prospective purchasers of
residential property should
be aware of this potential
danger before deciding to
place a bid for this property
at the trustee's 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 obligation,
the performance of which is
secured by the Deed of
Trust, the words “trustee”
and ‘beneficiary” include
their respective successors
in interest, if any. Dated:
6/17/2014 CLEAR RECON
CORP 4375 Jutland Drive
San Diego, CA 92117 858750-7600 Edward Jamir, Authorized Signatory of Trustee
9/17, 9/24, 10/1, 10/8/2014
been used in manufacturing
methamphetamines,
the
chemical components of
which are known to be toxic.
Prospective purchasers of
residential property should
be aware of this potential
danger before deciding to
place a bid for this property
at the trustee's 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 obligation,
the performance of which is
secured by the Deed of
Trust, the words “trustee”
and ‘beneficiary” include
their respective successors
in interest, if any. Dated:
8/26/2014 CLEAR RECON
CORP 4375 Jutland Drive
San Diego, CA 92117 858750-7600 9/17, 9/24, 10/1,
10/8/2014
attorney's fees not exceeding the amounts provided by
said ORS 86.778. Requests
from persons named in ORS
86.778 for reinstatement
quotes received less than six
days prior to the date set for
the trustee's sale will be honored only at the discretion of
the beneficiary or if required
by the terms of the loan documents. 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 trust deed, and the
words "trustee" and "beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if
any. The trustee's rules of
auction may be accessed at
www.northwesttrustee.com
and are incorporated by this
reference. You may also access
sale
status
at
www.northwesttrustee.com
and
www.USAForeclosure.com. For further
information, please contact:
Kathy Taggart Northwest
Trustee Services, Inc. P.O.
Box 997 Bellevue, WA
98009-0997 425-586-1900
BERGSTROM, DANIEL R.
(TS#
7023.99636)
1002.272501-File No. 10/8,
10/15, 10/22, 10/29/2014
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ROGUE RIVER PRESS
October 8, 2014
23
24
October 8, 2014
ROGUE RIVER PRESS
OFFBEAT from page 8
and shining moment, governor of the State of Jefferson.
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*The promoter
Gilbert Elledy Gable was
born in Pennsylvania in the
late 1880s. Although he
never went to college, he
quickly found his way into
public relations, and spent
nine years as a publicity man
for Theodore Vail’s Bell Telephone Company. During this
time, Bell transitioned from
the most hated company in
the nation to one of the most
trusted, publicly committed
to using its market dominance to bring telephone
service to the remotest outposts of America. That story
is more than we can get into
in this article, but it’s one of
history’s greatest public-relations triumphs. And Gable
was a part of it — although I
have been unable to learn
how big a role he played.
*The Adventurer
The phone business
must have been good to him,
though, because after the
war Gable became an explorer and amateur paleontologist. He discovered a
vast assortment of dinosaur
tracks in Arizona, as well as
a lost ancient Indian village,
and claimed to have been
made an honorary chief of
the Navajo people — a claim
he backed up with a certificate “written in human
blood.” He made a number
of dinosaur-hunting expeditions to the Painted Desert
area, until in 1929, the governor of Arizona ordered po-
lice to prevent “Dr. Gable”
from removing any more fossils or artifacts.
He also made movies. In
1927, as vice-president of
Bray Motion Pictures, he
won publicity for the silent
movie “Menace” by bringing
a film crew down the wild
Colorado River on a boat
through the Grand Canyon,
a feat that was breathlessly
described in the papers as
fraught with deadly peril.
The town of Port Orford as it appeared shortly before Gilbert E. Gable came to town.
(Image: Alan Mitchell’s Port Orford Historical Photos archive)
*The radio star
By the early 1930s,
Gable had gotten involved in
the new world of radio
broadcasting with an NBC
show called “Highway of Adventure” (sometimes listed
as “High Road to Adventure”), in which he recounted
spine-tingling moments from
the previous dozen years of
hunting for dinosaur eggs
and exploring unknown landscapes. He also sought and
won the hand of Miss
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Gilbert E. Gable in his office at the Trans-Pacific administration building in 1935.
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Paulina Stearns, daughter of
a wealthy Michigan timber
family. And then, in 1933, he
went to Port Orford — probably to search for the legendary
Port
Orford
Meteorite. It was a historic
moment indeed.
“Two years later, to the
amazement of its 300 inhabitants, Gilbert Gable appeared at Port Orford, Ore.,
and formed six companies to
promote it as the only natural
deep-water harbor on the
rugged coast between Puget
Sound and the Golden
Gate,” reports TIME Magazine in its somewhat supercilious 1938 account.
*The empire builder
Gable hit Port Orford like
a temperate-zone hurricane.
He was convinced the
nearby countryside was peppered with deposits of copper, gold and other
resources, all covered over
with billions of board-feet of
old-growth timber. The harbor, having no river to complicate navigation with a bar
to fight through, was just a
million-dollar jetty away from
becoming the perfect port …
but, of course, it would also
need a railroad line.
For a few years things
went very well indeed.
“Since 1935, Gilbert Gable
has wrought such changes
in Southwestern Oregon that
the region has been called
his ‘empire,’” Time Magazine
reported in April of 1938.
But: “Last week, Emperor Gable was dethroned
by the Interstate Commerce
Commission,” the article
continued.
It was the railroad line
that took Gable down — the
railroad line, and the sea.
Just three months after
Gable (now mayor of Port
Orford) dedicated the harbor
in a splendid ceremony before dignitaries from all over
the state, the massive new
Trans-Pacific and Port Orford Dock and Terminal Line
breakwater collapsed in a
huge storm. A temporary pier
was soon built, but it didn’t
afford the kind of protection
the harbor would need, and
Gable’s backers weren’t willing to invest in a railroad line
to service a harbor that might
not be capable of functioning
as more than a temporary
port of refuge.
In 1938, an ICC examiner quashed the whole plan,
opining that Port Orford was
never going to be an important center of commerce,
and pulling Gable’s “certificate of convenience and necessity” — and with that, his
permit to build the railroad
line.
*Desperation sets in
Now Gable was caught
in a catch-22. Without a railroad connection, his backers
wouldn’t help him finance the
necessary repair and beefing-up of the harbor jetty.
Without a beefed-up jetty
protecting the harbor, the
ICC wouldn’t issue a permit
to build a railroad.
An increasingly desperate Gable looked to the state
for help in getting roads improved, so that the mining,
logging and shipping companies that he’d founded could
get their produce out to markets.
But politicians in Salem
could barely be bothered to
even notice the tiny port city
of 1,000 residents that still
cherished hopes of superseding Portland’s harbor.
Roadbuilding dollars remained in scarce supply.
By fall of 1941, Gable
was watching his dream slip
from his fingers for want of a
railroad link. He started
thinking about ways to bring
pressure on the state to help
him out. He started advocating for Curry County to split
off from Oregon and become
part of California — a suggestion that seems to have
yielded amusement, alarm
and ridicule in roughly equal
measures from the governments of both states, but
nothing more.
The suggestion did bring
something else, though. It
brought a visit from one of
the West Coast’s most enterprising and colorful newspapermen
—
Stanton
Delaplane.
Gable and “Del” hit it off
immediately. Soon, the two
of them were cooped up together in a cozy office with a
bottle of 150-proof rum as a
hard winter rain pounded the
roof, making plans that
would soon blossom into an
apparently serious proposal
to secede from the state outright.
(Sources: Laufer, Peter. The Elusive State of Jefferson. Guilford,
Conn.: Twodot, 2013; “Gable’s Gold
Coast,” TIME, 04 Apr 1938; Gable,
Gilbert. “Thrills,” Radio Digest, March
1931; Los Angeles Times, 19271930)
Finn J.D. John teaches New
Media at Oregon State University and
is the author of “Wicked Portland,” a
book about the dark side of Oregon’s
metropolis in the 1890s. He produces
a daily podcast at ofor.us/p . To contact him or suggest a topic:
[email protected] or 541357-2222.