OCR Text |
Show t t SOUTHERN UTAH NEWS - Thursday, February 11, 1988 - Page Seven public notice ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE Probate N.842 In the matter of Real Property reputedly owned Hemstreet. by Mark S. Upon reviewing the Petition for Probate Deed and the Request for an Order to Show Cause contained therein and the Court being fully advised in the premises and good 'cause appearing therefore. IT IS HEREBY ORDERED, ADJUDGED AND DECREED that any and all persons having an interest in the below described real property adverse to the interest of the Petitioner herein, Mark S. Hemstreet, are ordered to appear before this Court to show cause, if any they have, why a Probate Deed should not be issued to the Petitioner, conveying the real property to the petitioner, free and clear of any and all other claims: Lot 2, Block 30. Plat A, of the Official Survey of Kanab Townsite. IT IS FURTHER ORDERED, ADJUDGED AjTD DECREED that all such persons are ordered to appear before this Court on the 4th day of March 1988 at the District Court Courtroom at the Kane County Courthouse in Kanab, Utah at 9:00 a.m. of said day. DATED this 8 day of January, 1988. BY THE COURT: SDON V. TIBBS District Court Judge Published in the Ssouthern Utah News January 21, 28, February 4 and 11. 1988. Farm Costs, Returns Survey Slated Local interviewers will begin knocking on the doors of 215 Utah farms and ranches next week for the fourth annual Farm Costs and Returns Survey. This major, nationwide survey on costs of production and financial conditions throughout the farm section is conducted by the state offices of the National Agricultural Statistics Service, part of the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Across the nation, 24,000 farmer and ranchers will be ' contacted for survey interviews. In Utah the survey starts Saturday, Feb. 13, and is expected to continue until March 12. Most of those selected for interviews have been notified by mail. Interviewers will collect data on farm expenses, finances, capital purchases, and costs of prduction for 1987. The information will be used to determine farm production expenditures, measure farm income, and access farm sector debts, assets, and Cash flow - key indicators of the economic wellbeing of farmers. Survey findings will also be used to estimate costs and returns for producing individual commodities. USDA will publish the results of the survey in various reports scheduled for release beginning this summer. The Utah survey is being managed by the Utah Agricultural Statistics Service in Salt Lake City, headed by DelRoy Gneiting. 1 PUBLIC NOTICE The Town of Fredonia will have a Primary Election March 15. Polls will be open from 6 a.m. to 7 p.m. The election will be held at the Fredonia County building and the purpose is to elect two council members to fill two fouryear terms. Published in the Southern Utah News February 11 and 18, 1988. Valley Eagles Honored By Lions Club On Feb. 6, the Long Valley Lion's Club held a dinner honoring the boys who had earned their Eagle Scout Award last year. The boys honored were Kevin Heaton of Alton, Brian Haris of Glendale and Monde Chamberlain of Orderville. Special tribute was also paid to their parents for their support. We are proud of these young men and their accomplishment. Farmers Warned of Congressionally Mandated Tax Collection Utah congressmen are being urged by Utah Farm Bureau to support repeal of a new federal law which requires Utahs farmers and ranchers to pay diesel fuel taxes at the time of purchase then apply for a refund of the taxes. Under another federal law farmers are exempt from the taxes on fuel used on the farm. In a letter to Utahs congressman, Kenneth R. Ashby, Delta, Utah Farm Bureau President, said the new tax will require farmers to borrow more money to pay the taxes and then be burdened with extra paperwork to apply for the refund. "Under the new law government will face the cost of both collecting the money and then refunding it. Nationally about $420 million will be collected from farmers and most of that will be refunded. It just doesnt make sense," Ashby said. He added that Utah farmers are heavy users of diesel because Beehive state farms are larger than the national average and diesel is a primary fuel for many farmers in Utah. Ashby said the big change in the tax laws was made in a closed conference committee that finalized the 1987 Budget Reconciliation Act. Farmers, tax specialists and others had no advance warning and no opportunity to explain to congress the adverse effects the advance-pa- y and refund procedure would have on agriculture," he added. The Farm Bureau leader said the new law is particularly harmful to farmers because it comes at a time when agriculture is fighting to restore profitability in the industry. He said F arm Bureau will work hard to repeal the law. National Park Visits Show Increase Over 86 luoyed by the popularity of such ennial favorites as Yellowstone, tnd Teton and Rocky Mountain tional Parks and Glen Canyon tional Recreation Area, visitation National Park Service areas in Rocky Mountain Region was up 7 percent over 1986 figures, dore than 28 million people ited parklands in the states of orado, Wyoming, Montana, Dakota and South Dakota 1987. he most popular single park area the Region, surpassing even dey Mountain and Yellowstone tional Parks, was Glen Canyon Lake A, whose extends .from northern izona into southern Utah. The ord number of visitors to the a totaled 2,883,412 for calendar it 1987, up 16 percent over the ivious year. Vailing in order were Rocky well untain and Yellowstone (each h 2.6 million) and Grand Teton I million). d 'he most drastic increase Post Union at Fort Trading tional Historic Site in North iota. Visitation, spurred by the lpletion of the Bourgeois House tor center in June and a cessful Fur Trade .Rendezvous, iped to 44,300, a 63 percent over 1986. tlso of note was Bryce Canyon tional Park which received its t million visit year in December, s park welcomed a total of oc-re- in-a- visitors, a 21 percent increase over the previous year. Other areas with record numbers of visitors for 1987 were Zion National Park, Mesa Verde National Park, Colorado National Monument and Capitol Reef National Park. Utahs figures were as follows: Arches National Park, 468,916, up 12 percent: Bryce Canyon 1,013,541, up 21 percent; Canyon-land- s 180,709, up 2 percent, Capitol Reef 471,300, up 12 percent: Cedar Breaks, 444,780, up 2 percent; Glen Canyon NRA, 2,883,412, up 16 percent; Golden Spike National istoric Site 192,118, down 7 percent; Natural Bridges National Monument 89,043, up 20 percent; Rainbow Bridge 210,708, down 26 percent; Timpanogos Cave 137,279, up $0 percent; Zion National Park 1,986,382, up 7 percent. 1,013,541 PUBLIC AUCTION SALE February 16, - 11:30 at the Kane County Courthouse. 80 ft. by 200 ft lot fronting the Senior Citizen Center and the Lions Qub House. Call 644-S8S- S for details. Or call for information on 1280 shares of Golden Circle Tours stock at $7.50 per share. New Exploring Committee Named by Forace Green Exploring is the name of the Scouting program for young men ages 16 and 17. In the Kanab Speakers Announced for Coommemorative Scout Program District there are approximately 100 of these, about 50 in each age group. J. Evan Chynoweth is chairman of the Exploring committee in the District. Craig Hansen is assistant chairman, Ken Brown, trainer, and Rick Abbott, secretary. inherent activities. His major satisfaction is his family. As a Scout, Craig Hansen reached the Eagle rank with two palms and 33 merit badges. He also won most of the other awards in the program for boys, including the Duty to God award, and held most of the patrol and troop offices. He has also served attended SUSC for three years. Ken is manager of Western Hills Rocks and Gems and Gift City. He is a member of and active in the Kiwanis Club. He has a special interest in outdoor sports and mechanics. Rick Abbott reached the Life rank as a Scout. He served as Because this is a new committee, the calendar of events for this year for Explorers has not yet been completed. A Council leadership Editors Note: Forace Green by writing about Explorers and Explorer leaders. For five years he was Scout Explorer editor of The Deseret News where he wrote a full page weekly. For three years he was chairman of the Explorer Committee of the Great Salt Lake Council, then the sixth largest council in the United States. For six years he was chairman and two years a member of the Explorer Committee for the LDS Church while he was on the General Board of the YMMIA. Here he wrote the Explorer manuals for the Church. comes naturally President Ezra Taft Benson, world leader of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-da- y Saints, plans to address a gathering of Scouts and Scouters during a commemorative fireside honoring the Church's 75th anniversary as an official sponsor of the Boy Scouts of America. The fireside is scheduled for Sunday, Feb. 14, in the Tabernacle on Salt Lake Citys Temple Square. It will begin at 6 p.m. (MST) and be telecast live via satellite to more than 1,800 locations throughout the United States. In Kanab, the program will be received at the Kanab Stake Center. President Benson will head a line-uof speakers which includes President Thomas S. Monson, second counselor in the First Elder Vaughn J. Presidency; Featherstone of the First Quorum of the Seventy, who is general president of the Young Men of the Church and Chairman of the Church General Scouting Committee; and Dwan J. Young, general president of the Primary children's organization and a member of the Church General Scouting Committee. Also scheduled to speak are Ben Love, chief Scout executive, and Charles Piggott, president of the National Scout Executive Board. A choir of Scouts and Scouters will sing during the program and a color guard of Scouts will place 100 flags around the horseshoe-shapebalcony of the Tabernacle. The Church sponsors some 23,000 Scouting units, which is more than any other organization, said John director of Mormon Warnick, Relationships for the Boy Scouts of America. There are more than 300,000 Scouts and 120,000 leaders in those units. p 400-voic- e d Grazing Fees On Forest Increase for 88 -- institute for Explorers will be held at the BYU June details of which, with a registration form, will be given to each Explorer soon. Round Tables for Explorer leaders, both ward and stake, are held the fourth Wednesday of each month in the Stake Center. Scouter Chynoweth became a Life Scout in is youth in Tropic. Lack of leadership kept him from reaching the Eagle rank. He served in the st stake YM presidency. Bishopric, and as Teacher quorum advisor, working in Scouting in all three positions. He was High Council advisor to the Primary and Cubbing in the Escalante Stake. Evan spent 10 years as line superintendent and 11 years as log cutting superintendent for Kaibab Industries and is a lifetime cattle rancher. He served an LDS mission in Scotland and is currently Stake YM president of the Kanab Stake and a member of the High Council. He likes camping and other outdoor Western states. The fee is set in accordance with in Executive Order No. 12548 of Feb. 14, 1986, and is essentially the same formula prescribed in the Public Rangelands Improvement Act of 1978, with the addition of a floor of $1.35 per head month. Beginning in 1988, fees will be charged per head month instead of per animal month, as in the past, Robertson said. Rate per head is commonly used in the private sector. Using head month as the pricing unit will not affect the calculation of grazing bills and will help eliminate the confusion between the term animal month and animal unit month," a term denoting available forage or grazing capacity. A full head months fee will be charged for a month of grazing by adult animals. A grazing animal is classified as adult if it is weaned or six months of age or older at the time of entering national forest land or will become 12 months of age during the permitted period of use. A head month is one month's use and occupancy of range by one animal. In 1988, receipts from grazing on national forest lands in the 16 w estern states are estimated to be said. Robertson $10.8 million, Twenty five percent of annual grazing fee receipts are returned to the counties where the lands are located, to be used for public schools and roads. the formula prescribed -- three times as Scoutmaster, Ex- plorer Post Advisor, Order of the Arrow Advisor and Summer Camp Director. Craig attended SUSC and BYU, was in the building trade in Oregon, and presently manages Western River Expeditions in Fredonia. He has a hobbie of fixing up used cars and trucks. For two years he was project manager for a company that farmed in Libya, Africa. Kenneth Brown reached the Life rank as a Scout and had most of the experiences that boys have in their teens. He has served as Scouting Coordinator, Varsity Scout Coach and Explorer Post Advisor. He graduated from Kanab High and president of his Explorer Post and attended the National Explorer Presidents conferences in Washington, D.C. Scouter Abbott teaches LDS Seminary in Kanab. He has served in the presidency of the Young Men and in the presidency of the 5th Ward Elders Quorum. He and his wife. Lisa, have four children. If you need used furniture, Check our selection. 30 North Main Kanab el-Trade Buy Bruce's World of Values CLASSIFIED ADS For Rent 644-505- See Robert Hale. - Beautiful $35 per 644-234- 8 2 story home in Kanab. $552.87month. 5 bedrooms, large kitchen and living room, basement,! !2 bathrooms, 0.378 acres, 2 1 2 shares of water. Call 74 Ford Pickup AT 79 Luv 4(4 $800 $1275 $900 $1250 .. $850 $2850 $2000 $1350 $2850 $1650 $1200 $800 $550 72 Ford 4x4, 12 Ton, 81 Ford, 12 ton, 4 sped 78 Toyota, 5 ap. pickup 81 Jaap Scrambler, 4 ap 80 Jinny, 4x4 80 Pinto, low milaa 84Ckatlon 83 Citation 81 Clation 77 Mustang 75 Toyota pickup ALLEN AUTO SALES 644-5- For Sale We have bundles of newspapers the Southern Utah $ a bundle! 40 E. for sale at News for just 1 bunk beds of solid pine, toterspring mattresses. 15.1 cubic ft. gold refridgerator. Both 5 in good condition. (after 4 pm). 644-242- 1 Center HOUSE FOR SALE - 3 bdrm.. 2 baths. Assumable loan. Contact 4 after 5. 643-744- Help Wanted 644-502-7 2 Chevrolet Pickup. Call or see at 298 W 300 N. year old gelding, will trade for older horse or make offer. 644-531- 3 for reading books! 7. $100.00 per title. Write: 161 S. Lincoln. N. Aurora. IL 60542 GET PAID a retirement collect (212) 628-064- 3 325-352- 0. HOMES From delinquent tax properties and repo's. For current Ext. 1547 lists call also open evenings. GOVERNMENT $1.00 revolutionary weight toss prosatisfacgram. No drugs. 1 00 tion. Money back guarantee. Call Jill Lose up to 30 lbs. first month. Exp. weight toss program needs 20 obese subjects, no matter how big. that are serious about losing Lose up to 29 pounds this month, inches, cellulite. Doctor recommended. I've lost 50 pounds. Incredible Fat Absorber. Free shipping. in- come or that extra income thet you need by selling advertising for Kane County's official newspaper. Call for appointment at 1983 Toyota 4x4 pickup wshell. 644-512- Supplement (802) Murray or our adoption counselor weight. Can ACE-6114- 1981 4x4 and Need 20 obese subjects to try 55 Corner-styl-e START THOSE FIRES? CAN'T Our loving 8 year marriage provides al but a child to love. We want to adopt white newborn to fill our hearts and Sfe. Legal, confidential. Call Susan ADOPTION. FOR SALE 7 HORSE PASTURE - will water. per month; will stall. $75 RENT TO BUY Miscellaneous ) For Sale Kanab Irrigation water shares. Geneve Beesley month. Grazing fees on national forest lands in the 16 Western states will be raised in 1988 by 19 cents to $1.54 per head month, F. Dale chief of the U.S. Robertson, Department of Agriculture's Forest Service, announced today. The change raises the fee from $1.35, which has been charged since 1985. The fee reflects an eight cent per pound average increase from 1987 in the price per pound received for the sale of beef cattle, and two percent drop in the cost of livestock production. The fee announcement coincides with the Feb. 2 publication of the Federal Register of the final USDA rule for annually determining fees for livestock grazing and use on national forest lands in the 16 DISTRICT EXPLORER LEADERS are, from left to light, Craig Hansen, Evan Chynoweth, and Ken Brown. These men are responsible for the exploring program in the Kanab District Services 644-233- 7 ATTENTION!!! 1985 Ford Bronco. 4x4, 54,000 miles. Very good condition. See at 1 26 Myrtle Green, Haven trailer tot, west of Page or call $7500 or best offer. Beautiful 5 bedroom. 2 bath, 3 level home on 1 12 ac. fenced for horses. 2 car garage, wood-stovrock fireplace, fruit trees. 1 $85,000 to Fredonia. Call Classified Ad dead- - Southern Utah News line is Monday by noon. Classified Ad Deadline is Monday at noon Miscellaneous e, 643-705- BLOCK BUILDING at old sewer plant in Kanab Submit sealed bid . for building with or without contents. Also 1 982 Dodge Aries and 1 981 Ford LTD. Bids will close February 26. 1 988. Board reserves the right to accept or reject any or all bids. Kane School District. 746 S. Hwy 89 A, Kanab. UT 84741, Attn. Dick Hamblin 1000 TABLES SUNBEDS. TONING Tanning beds. SlenderQuest passive exercisers. Call for FREE color catalogue. Save to 50, 1 Sunal-WOLF- F We buy anything of value from one Item to a fleet. Or let us sell it for you. McKee Auction Co. or EXCELLENT WAGES for spare time assembly work; electronics, crafts; others. Information EXT 3964. k.iAitl W vv. Open 7 days a ATTENTION!!! Southern Utah News Classified Ad Deadline is Monday at noon MONEY PROBLEMS? Chapter 11. 12. or 13 bankruptcy may be the answer. For free information, call Embry & Associates. We also do estate and business planning. For all your PRINTING NEEDS ... r liable source Southern Utah TuBtisfiing Co. come to the 40 East Center Kanab Letterheads Envelopes Brochures Computer Forms Business Farms Carbonless Forms Business Cards Vfcdding Stationery and any other printing need. 40 East Center Kaneb - 644-233- 0 |