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Show 6 Lakeside Review, Wednesday, May 17, 1989 $2" Buffet M You Cm EH-"- Fries Meat Ball French Chop Suey Ham Fried Rice Egg Roll Hot Cabbage Pork Sweet & Sour Sauce Broccoli Chow Mein Fried Wonton Fned Chicken White Rice Kyung Pan Chicken 5678 S. 1900 W. ROY, UTAH Mon.-Sa- t. a.m.-- 9 773-064- 2 p.m. Closed Sunday iraer apdlen 315 N. Main, Kaysville Watching performance of mime Joe Pitti (above, from left) Joel Mickelsen, Justin ; (below) are Municipal Elementary students Young, Caleb Rushton, and Derek Ulm. Roses in Containers Nursery Stock PRIMROSE Municipal Fruit Trees Annuals Vegetables 3$l0 ;gets award; Isees mime Perenial 6 GERANIUMS ; 4 Inch 9-- Mon.-Sa- t. 546-351- 7, 2 Pak (2 Plants) $J29 'By JAN PUGH .Lakeside Review ROY ms&z Municipal Elementary School in Roy was recognized Series Trust The Family Living Costs $37,500! Bountiful Man Dies Without a re- cently for its outstanding support of the arts as part of the Utah Trust-Proba- Festival of the Arts for the Young. The school was awarded a certificate by Charles Stubbs, arts specialist for the State Office of .Education on behalf of the State .Office of Education, the Utah .Arts Council, the state PTA and .the Utah Alliance for the arts. The presentation was made at a student assembly Friday highlighted by a pantomime performance by mime Joe Pitti and a core group of students. ' Pitti served a three-wee- k resiat dency Municipal through a from the Utah Arts Coungrant cil, matched by funds from the Bountiful Woman Dies With a Robert ReganLakeside Review school. According to Principal Sheron Christensen, each student had three classes with Pitti. The core group, which performed in the show, was comprised of two students from each class. They studied with Pitti 40 minutes each day for the entire three weeks. Pittis visits were part of a month of celebrating the arts. Glass blowers, musicians, dis plays, concerts and a combined arts and academic fair all contributed to the observance. Teachers recognized by Stubbs for their leadership roles in developing programs at the school to encourage art appreciation were Jo D Dance, Municipals arts facilitator, Linda Lundstrom; Jim Aikens; Dan Holmes and Linda Burns. Students give drug warning "By JAN PUGH '.Lakeside Review Sunset Junior SUNSET Highs honor students recently took a very important message to stage at area elementary .schools as part of a service proj- Lthe DECEMBER 12, 1988 BOUNTIFUL AREA MAN DIES WITHOUT A FAMILY TRUST: Estate: $250,000 Results: Probate: Yesl Delay: One to two years! Attorney fees for Probatepossible litigation: $20,0001 Executor Fees: $10,0001 Court Costs, Appraisals, Accounting: $2,5001 Real Estate Commissions: 5,000.001 TOTAL COST OF PROBATE: $37,500! Fred, as we'll call him, lived alone in the Bountiful area. He died with no wife, no children, no living mother or father and no living brothers or sisters. His next heirs were eight COUSINS with the ninth deceased. After his funeral, they searched his home in vain for a will. They found one solitary key-t- o a safety deposit box. The drama was set. If there were a will in the box no cash for and it left his estate to his favorite CAT-the-n the COUSINS. Five of the COUSINS, The attorney and the bank executives all converged on the box. It was quite a scene. First out came the deed to the house, then the discharge appears, then the mothers but a will. So Fred died intestate (without a will) and his Estate now goes into probate for a long delay and at high cost. At a fraction of the cost of the probate, Fred could have set up a Living Family Trust and appointed a COUSIN or the bank as Trustee. But, like most of us, he just didn't get around to it. The second week in December, two weeks before Margaret (assumed name) of Bountiful died, she called Del Barton Rowe and asked him if he made home visits. She was on oxygen twenty-fou- r hours a day, hooked to a 30 -- te Trust-Proba- Costs te -- 0-! DECEMBER 10, WOMAN DIES WITH A FAMILY Estate: $250,000 Results: Probate: None! 1988-B0UNTIF- TRUST: Delay: None! Attorney fees: None! Executor fees: Nonel Court Costs, Accounting: None! Appraisal fees: Nonel Estate Tax: Nonel Real Estate Commissions: Nonel foot mobile cord. Del Barton Row and his staff made several trips to Margarets" home where she and her husband: 1) Executed THE FAMILY TRUST 2) Executed two DURABLE POWERS OF ATTORNEY. These are for use when one spouse becomes disabled or incompetent. 3) Executed two LIVING WILLS - which are the new Utah, Pull the Plug or Right To Die- Wills. 4) Executed a QUIT CLAIM DEED, conveying the REAL property into the FAMILY TRUST. You see, the Trust will live for 101 years. Thus, at her death the Trust owned the house, and the trust didnt die! No Probate! No Cost' THE WARREN REPORT IRONY NoMargaret had read the Living Trust series in theto call vember 1988 issue of the Warren Report and made to Del Barton Rowe and his staff. Ironically, after Fred s death this same issue of the Warren Report was found on his kitchen table. Had Fred read the article, made the call and completed his Trust, hts probate savings would have equalled $37,500! He just didnt get around to it. ADVERTISEMENT- g ect an message. Fifty members of the schools new Junior National Honor Socianti-dru- ety (JNHS) performed over a three-wee- k period in April, ending May 1, at six elementary schools feeding into Sunset Junior High. Renee Warner, honor society advisor and teacher at Sunset Ju, nior, said this is the first year for .the JNHS at the school. Since the honor society is a service organization, Warner said part of its charter involves the performance of group and personal service projects, both in the y & , Robert ReganLakeside Review Hearing about a person who died of drug abuse, Kermit the Frog, played by Jared Palmer, interviews a doctor, played by Jennifer Johnson, in student anti-dru- g skit. 4 7 ' "i Sfrm ' community and the school. The Tionor students got together and decided on a project aimed at youth. promoting drug-fre- e f4 i In putting together a program for presentation at elementary school assemblies, the students did the bulk of the work 'themselves. Warner said she offered critical analysis and did 'some directing; but, she wanted jt to be them who did the work. Three acting troupes visited Two schools each. Each performance involved 25 actors, in- ; - I, l v. j. cluding a core group Commence celebrating! ; ft At Hallmark you can find that special card for your "one in a million" graduate. AVOID THE PROBATE TRAP WITH A FAMILY f LIVING TRUST COMMUNITY INTEREST SEMINARS FREE TO THE PUBLIC I 1 THURSDAY MAY 18, 1989 Just Off the 7:00-9:0- 0 Layton Exit. P.M. For FREE seminar information for your group or organiza0 E or at tion, please CALL 298-064- TOLL-FRE- Dont miss this opportunity to ask your questions about a Living Trust' to an expert in the avoidance of probate. dry-bon- CANYON OFFICE PRODUCTS j o7ot,N i avtow ut ADVERTISEMENT- am f I - Cardio-Pulmonar- y, MONDAY, MAY 8 4-- 6 Served. facility. Humana is We have an experienced staff in y and Respiratory a staff knowledgeable and Therapy, caring of the complex system providing blood and oxygen to all parts of the body. As a community service, we also sponsor nutrition programs and an life-givi- effective program to stop tobacco addiction. p.m. All Visitors, If They Wish, May Receive A RESPIRATORY SINGLE BREATH EXAM At No Charge. Light Refreshments Will Be begin National Hospital Week, the 325 employees of Humana North are proud of the many offered services by the Layton medical To Cardio-Pulmonar- Bountiful attorney Del Barton Rowe will be speaking at a community interest seminar on the advantages of a Living Trust . Mr. Rowe, on the Board of the Bountiful Area Chamber of Commerce, specializes in living trust to avoid probate. Del presently serves on the Davis County Constitution Bicentennial Commission and is active in local politics. He lectures at BYU Education Week, as well as Morton Thiokol, Hercules, US Forest Service and the BLM. Del moved to Bountiful in 1968, sings a mean tenor on and plays trumpet in his own Dixieland Band and is the father of 5 children, including Kyndel the regions girls diving champion and Holly, who recently served as the youngest Utah delegate to the National Republican Convention in New Orleans. Join Us In Celebrating National Pedipiratory, atrics And Surgical Departments On Room. Hospi-tal-Dav- 7 Hospital Week By Touring Our Res- ood Health Offers You Breathing La Quinta Motel W 5, 1 Hospital-Davi- s North 1600 W. Antelope Drive Layton, Utah (801) 825-9561 l 1 3y inraainia8 1989 Humana Inc. |