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Show LEGAL RWRICE-S "YES" UTAH DONOR REGISTRY FOR ORGAN, EYE, AND TISSUE DONATION. NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'S SALE The following described property will be sold at public auction to the highest bidder on April 23, 2010April 30, 2010 at 3:00 p.m.3:00 p.m. at the Main EntranceMain Entrance to the GARFIELD County Courthouse, GARFIELD COUNTY COURTHOUSE, 55 South Main Street, PANGUITCH, UT 84759, in the County of GARFIELD by BRYAN W. CANNON, as Successor Trustee, and Citifinancial, Inc., current Beneficiary, under the Deed of Trust dated April 21, 2004, made by KENNETH L. LESLIE, as Trustor recorded April 23, 2004 as Entry No. 232359232359 in Book 03830383 at page 06270627 of official records of GARFIELD county, given to secure indebtedness in favor of Citifinancial, Inc. by reason of certain obligations secured thereby. Notice of Default was recorded December 22, 2009December 22, 2009 as Entry No. 255944255944 of said official records. Trustee will sell at public auction to the highest bidder payable in lawful money of the United States, without warranty as to title, possession or encumbrances. Bidders must be prepared to tender the purchase price in the amount bid within 24 hours of the sale by cashiers check. The address of the property is purported to be 455 West Page Lane, Panguitch, UT 84759 more particularly described as follows: BEGINNING AT A POINT WHICH IS AT A FENCE CORNER, SAID POINT BEARING NORTH 36 39'26" EAST 3,085.76 FEET FROM THE SOUTHWEST CORNER OF SECTION 29, TOWNSHIP 34 SOUTH, RANGE 5 WEST, SALT LAKE BASE AND MERIDIAN, SAID POINT ALSO BEARING SOUTH 84 31'47" EAST 1,822.46 FEET FROM THE WEST QUARTER CORNER OF THE BEFORE MENTIONED SECTION; THENCE NORTH 00 58'01" WEST 174.03 FEET ALONG A FENCE; THENCE NORTH 89 23'10" EAST 161.48 FEET TO A FENCE; THENCE SOUTH 01 33'04" EAST 169.51 FEET ALONG SAID FENCE TO A FENCE CORNER, THENCE SOUTH 87 47'03" WEST 163.24 FEET ALONG A FENCE TO THE BEGINNING POINT. The undersigned disclaims liability for any error in the address. The record owner(s) of the property as of the recording of the Notice of Default are Kenneth L. Leslie. This sale is for the purpose of paying obligations secured by said Deed of Trust including fees, charges and expenses of Trustee, advances, if any, under the terms of said Deed of Trust, interest thereon and the unpaid principal of the note secured by said Deed of Trust with interest thereon as in said note and by law provided. DATED this 22nd day of March, 2010. BRYAN W. CANNON 8619 South Sandy Parkway Building A, Suite 111 Sandy, Utah 84070 Published in The Garfield County Insider on April 1st, 8th, 15th, 2010. UPAXLP GARFIELD COUNTY VEHICLE AUCTION Separate and sealed bids are being accepted by Garfield County on or before 5:00 p.m., Friday, April 23rd, 2010 for the County's surplus vehicle fleet and for six Quad cab, 4 Wheel Drive, 3/4 ton Diesel pickup trucks. Garfield County is a taxexempt local government and reserves the right to accept and/or reject any or all bids. Sealed bids may be submitted to Garfield County, 55 South Main, P.O. Box 77, Panguitch, Utah 84759, fax (435) 676-8239, email: gcclerk@mountainwest.net. Faxed and emailed bids will be accepted. Minimum bid amounts are required. If you have any questions, please call (435) 676-1101. Published in The Garfield County Insider on March 11th, 18th, 25th, April 1st, 8th, 15th, 21st 2010 UPAXLP Trai S Full Professional ci Time Real Estate Services En Serving Escalante, Boulder & St. George Utah Is Number One in Saving Lives Spring is in the air and that can only mean one thing, National Donate Life Month. April is National Donate Life Month, a month where organizations like Intermountain Donor Services and Utah's Donate Life Coalition raise awareness about the need for organ, eye, blood and tissue donation. This year, as in many past years, citizens of Utah should be proud that we lead the nation in the number of people saying yes to donation. Currently, over 70% of Utahn's have signed up on the Yes Utah Donor Registry to express their donation wishes, one of the highest in the nation. While this is great news, there is always more to be done. Many people have recently asked, if you have all those people signed up, why is there still such a shortage of organs available for transplant? The obituary pages are full every day, so what's going on? These are excellent questions. What few people realize is that to become a donor, someone has to die in the hospital on a ventilator. In any given year, there is the potential for about 80 organ donors out of the 6,000 deaths a year in Utah. This means that approximately one out of every 75 deaths in Utah could be an organ donor. Each organ donor has the potential to save nine lives, so every single donor is vitally important to saving the lives of fellow Utahns. So while 70% of people signing up on the Yes Utah Donor Registry sounds impressive, and it is, there is still more to do. When asked in professionally done surveys, "In general, do you support or oppose the donation of organs and tissue for transplant?" 96% of Utahns say they support donation. So where are the other 26% that haven't signed up? Typically it is because of a myth or misconception about donation, and that brings us back to April being National Donate Life Month. We want to help dispel those myths and misconceptions that keep people from saying "yes" to donation, even though they may support it. If you have questions about donation or transplantation, please go to www.yesutah.org , or call 1-800-833-6667. So many lives hang in the balance. Food Sense Makes Sense What is Food $ense? SuzAnne A. Jorgensen, MS, CFCS For Great Real Estate Service.... It's a program that offers nutrition education through Come Visit Us at 10 W. Main St., Escalante or Call individual or family instruction in your own home or in Leslie Venuti 435-668-0540 or Denise Olson 435-680-4663. small groups. The lessons are free and include a great We can show all properties in the area and assist healthy family guidebook, recipes and samples of recipes you with all your buying or selling needs. made in the class. SPRING HAS SPRUNG Ill As I mentioned in my January article, it is good to focus on the foods we can have, rather than what we can't. DON'T WAIT TOO LONG TO LEAP The healthy habits from the Food $ense class guidebook ONTO THE TAX CREDIT OF $8,000. make great reminders for everyone, whether you're taking the class or not. The making healthier habits tell us HOMES MUST BE UNDER CONTRACT BY 4130110 AND CLOSED BY 6130110 TO to: Vary your veggies, Focus on fruits, Get calcium-rich QUALIFY FOR BOTH FIRST TIME HOMEfoods, Make half your grains whole, Go lean (lower fat) BUYERS AND EXISTING HOMEOWNERS. with protein, Limit your fats, sugar, and salt and to Balance WE HAVE LOTS OF HOMES AVAILABLE; what you eat with physical activity. VISIT WWW.TRAILSENDRE.COM FOR A What can you learn if you take a Food $ense class? LIST OF ALL PROPERTIES OR GIVE US • How to make food dollars last all month A CALL ! WE'D BE HOPPY TO HELP. • How to plan a menu and shop from a list • How to prepare easy, quick and tasty meals Glen N. Barker CPA / MBA • How to save money on food and still Tel: 435-586-7019 eat well • How to feed infants and kids • How to eat when you are pregnant • How to eat a heart healthy diet Located at: Full Service Accounting Firm • How to keep food safe to eat Panguitch City Corporation (Old High School) • Personal & Business Tax Preparation • How to use MyPyramid . . . And lots, 245 E. Center St. - Room #1 (All States) lots more Panguitch, UT 84759 We are planning to have a class • Payroll & Bookkeeping Tuesdays and Wednesdays (1:00 p.m. - 6:00 p.m.) at the Panguitch Food Bank ThursAvailable by appointment for other hours • QuickBooks Pro Advisor Walk-ins always welcome! days April 29, May 6, 13, 17 (Mon.), and 27th. Demonstrations will also Tax Professional for 34 years be there on April 22 and May 20. Available year round We'll be in Escalante on April 23 and Resident of Mammoth Creek Henrieville April 27. We can also do classes in the schools. Classes are • You don't pay extra franchise costs! available in both English and Spanish. • Have a CPA (Certified Professional Accountant) doing your taxes. If you would like more details on the • Drop off your tax information and pick up your taxes in a week or schedule a block of time classes or would like a class at your lowhere you wait in a one-on-one session as your taxes are prepared. cation, please contact me at 676-1114 Call for an appointment and free consultation! or suzannej@ext.usu.edu or Michelle Available on Saturdays by appointment 676-3160 or Teri 690-1553. Reliable and Affordable Tax Preparation GOVERNMENT SHOULD LEARN FROM SUSTAINABLE AGRICULTURE. As I watch our Government continue to make decisions that are in no way sustainable, I can't help but notice the similarities to cattle ranching. My family has been involved with farming and cattle ranching for generations. 40 years ago we spent all summer making hay to feed to our cows all winter. The labor, depreciation of the machinery, and fuel we consumed was so expensive that it was not sustainable and nearly broke us. Our cows mostly stood at the gate and bawled as they waited for us to feed them expensive hay. Our operation has gradually evolved as we've learned from our mistakes, to where today we view grass as nature's best solar collector that turns free solar energy into fuel and we view cows as the most efficient animal at turning grass into highly nutritious food for humans. The more we work with this concept and have our cows harvest their own grass as much as possible, on a year round basis, the more profitable cattle ranching is. Our cows today are so good at taking care of themselves they get annoyed when we try to manage them. All we have to do is maintain the fences and water and move the cows to fresh grass. As our federal Government insists on expensive programs that it can't afford and as the public clamors for more, I can't help but be reminded of our ranch 40 years ago and the way our cows waited at the gate for us to feed them. As the Tea Party protests, I can't help but think of how our cows today act annoyed when we show up to control them. I can't help but wish our Government would maintain our borders, and stop taking our "grass" from us and then giving it back with expensive "strings" attached. Our family also owns a small business with two employees, and every month the government takes more out of our business than we do. I'm just a small time cattle rancher, so what do I know, but, what happens when the parasite gets bigger than the host? What happens when the number of voters who want to stand by the gate and wait for the social program handouts gets to be greater than the annoyed voters who were trained to take care of themselves? Bush's tax cuts along with his increased government spending seemed just about as unsustainable as Obama's spending on social programs with no foreseeable way to pay for them. There appears to me to be a direct correlation between the length of time a government leader has been in office and the amount of rules and regulation they are willing to impose on the rest of us. I think the more people we have in Government who are used to living by the regulations the rest of do the better. The biggest red flag to me with national health insurance was our leaders exempting themselves from it. I think its time for Government to learn from past mistakes and to learn to be sustainable before natural laws kick in and we as a country have a train wreck. Maybe that's the problem; we don't have enough people in this country anymore with an agricultural background that have learned from nature. Instead of labeling people like me as angry, white, straight males I think the Government should take a hard look at their unsustainable decisions lately. Stephen Westhoff Escalante, UT 84726 435-826-4134 • 435-632-1475 EMPOWERMENT THROUGH ACTION by Merrilee Mecham I want to see a change in Washington! I feel like I took the first step last week when I attended my local Republican caucus. I was asked to help vote in certain delegates, who would then represent the people of Tropic by going to the county convention to decide who will be on the republican ballot. The town of Tropic gets five delegates. We also had the opportunity to vote for one state delegate who will go to the state convention representing the town of Tropic and vote for who will be on the state ballot for the Republican Party. Our Republican Chairman Lowell Mecham stated at the first of the meeting that he was happy to see so many people attend saying that at the last republican caucus only five people attended. From what I have heard the Republican caucuses all over the state were better attended than in previous years. I have always been interested in politics but have not educated myself on the way the system works. I assumed that when I go to the polls to vote I am doing my duty. Little did I know that it all begins with the delegates and who ever has the most delegates gets on the ballot, I now understand that it is the duty of whoever is voted in as a delegate to decide for the people who will be the best person to run for the republican party. I have now learned that if I want to make a change in Washington it all begins by voting for a delegate who will represent my view in the State Republican convention. It may be a very small voice but it's the place we all need to start. I am very proud to be an American citizen and I am going to stop being apathetic, I want to exercise my rights and I want others to become educated and learn how the system really works. I enjoyed the caucus meeting and felt like there was a really positive energy and heard others who attended for the first time make that same statement. It really empowers you to get involved and voice your concerns, that's our right as American citizens. Thank you to all the men and women who have and will sacrifice their lives and time away from their families to help protect and serve all Americans so that we can retain our freedoms that our Founding Fathers and original patriots fought so hard to attain. May God Bless America. |