Dark Money: 5 APS’s million-dollar bid to sway election
Halloween: 6
Fall Hike: 19
The Rim Country gets its spooky on
PAYSON ROUNDUP
ARIZONA NEWSPAPERS AND NATIONAL LOCAL MEDIA ASSOCIATIONS’ NEWSPAPER OF THE YEAR
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FRIDAY | OCTOBER 28, 2016 | PAYSON, ARIZONA
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Payson ammo maker poised to reopen Owners say they’ll resume next week by
Alexis Bechman
roundup staff reporter
A month after an abrupt shutdown, Payson’s sole ammunition manufacturing facility re-opened its doors Monday, with plans to begin manufacturing next week. Jim Antich, founder of Advanced Tactical Armament Concepts (ATAC) LLC, gave an impromptu tour of the facility to the Payson Roundup Wednesday. Only a few employees worked among the rows of silent machines, but Antich said the plant will start making ammunition again next week. He said the company must first order the components to manufacture HPR branded ammunition again. ATAC closed in September, abruptly sending employees home, reportedly due to financing issues. Antich would not discuss specifics, but said the company had resolved its issues and acquired additional partners to support the business. Jim and his son Jeff Antich, co-founder of ATAC, are also still working on plans to build a massive manufacturing facility in Tennessee.
The Tennessee plant will be built by another Antich company — Python Meteor Holdings Inc., the parent company of Advanced Munitions International (AMI) Investment Holdings LLC, which will serve as a testing and product development facility. They will make some or all of the components needed for ammunition manufacturing in-house and then manufacture finished ammunition in Tennessee. They will also ship components made in Tennessee to Payson for the production of HPR and other licensed ammo. On Wednesday, ATAC announced it would make Jesse James licensed ammo in Payson soon. Jim said the company will manufacture HPR branded ammo in Payson, but not in Tennessee. Antich said they would sell a new brand of ammunition from their Tennessee facility, but could not say what it will be called, referring to it generically as “ABC” ammo. When the Antichs and the Tennessee governor announced the new plant in October 2015, they did so in front of an HPR background. Local media also reported HPR would be manufactured there.
• See Ammunition, page 3
Roundup file art
Advanced Tactical Armament Concepts founder Jim Antich on Wednesday said the Payson ammunition manufacturing firm hopes to resume operations next week, a month after difficulties over financing forced the shutdown of the plant and the furloughing of about 45 workers.
School locked down after police warning Woman’s ‘bad day’ spurs action, frightens parents
by
Alexis Bechman & Michele Nelson
roundup staff reporters
Teachers at Julia Randall Elementary School rushed to lock themselves and their students in classrooms, the library and other buildings after Payson Police advised the school to go on “lockdown.” “This was called by the Payson Police Department and specifically Chief Engler,” said Superintendent Greg Wyman. Police later said they asked for the lockdown on Monday just as school let out because a woman having “a bad day” left her home with a knife. Wyman said when the school received the news, they immediately went into lockdown making the announce-
ment over the intercom. “We were able to get the students on their buses and on their way home as normal,” he said. “There were approximately 20 students and a few parents at parent pick up. These students/parents were escorted into our school library to lockdown.” But those teachers, students and parents had no idea why the lockdown had been ordered. Jolynn Schinstock, a JRE parent, on Monday night told the school board the half hour she spent in the library with students and teachers proved traumatic. “That was the most terrifying 30 minutes of my life. We were in the library and we had no idea what level the threat was. Was there an active shooter? It was ter-
rifying. I know it’s probably the right thing to do. There were a lot of us in the library who were scared. I was waiting for pop pop pop — or is there somebody out there with a knife? “A lot of us were on our phones texting trying to find out what was going on: Are we really in danger or hold on a moment while the police find this crazy person walking around in the area? “Even when we were released, we were still on lockdown and they were one-on-one walking kids to their cars. But we still did not know what was going on. It was a terrifying 30 minutes — I think I lost about five years of my life.”
• See School lockdown, page 3
Judge rejects Greer’s bid to drop three charges Former Pine water, posse treasurer still facing 7 charges
by
Michele Nelson
roundup staff reporter
Judge Timothy Wright denied efforts to dismiss three of the eight counts of fraud and conflict of interest against Mike Greer, the former treasurer for the Pine Strawberry Water Improvement District and the Mounted Posse. A grand jury indicted Greer of fraud, conflict of interest, theft and forgery after the Auditor General published a report based on months of research into Greer’s activities with the two organizations. Greer attended the Oct. 24 hearing to hear his lawyer Jason Lamm argue against the case presented by Assistant Attorney General Mary Harriss. He also listened to John Bliven, his former brother-in-law who loaned Greer money to keep him out of jail while the investigation ensued.
Greer’s appearance has changed since learning of the indictment, shedding weight, wearing glasses and developing more gray hair. As Greer sat quietly at the table, dressed in a plaid shirt, jeans and work boots. Lamm asked the judge to dismiss Counts 6 and 7, saying the grand jury did not have enough evidence. “I don’t mean to use the old adage, but the perception is that a grand jury would indict a ham sandwich. So while this is not a debate as to the quantum of evidence provided to the grand jury in terms of its sufficiency, there needs to be something in the record that supports the charge,” he said. Lamm criticized a statement in the Auditor General’s report claiming Greer had used money he stole from the Mounted Posse to pay for a vacation rental in Mexico. Just because money went
• See Judge won’t drop charges, page 7
Mike Greer faces fraud, forgery and conflict of interest charges.
Fire disaster averted by
Alexis Bechman
roundup staff reporter
A family is out of their home after a grease fire Monday night. The fire started around 8 p.m. after a teen living in the home put oil in a pan to fry pinwheels and then walked away. When the 14-year-old returned to the kitchen, the pot of oil had boiled over and started a fire on the stovetop. The fire was making its way up the wall and to overhanging cabinets when a single sprinkler in the kitchen was activated. When firefighters arrived, the sprinklers had already doused the fire. Battalion Chief Jim Rasmussen said the sprinkler saved not only the kitchen, but likely stopped a larger fire from damaging the whole apartment complex at 209 S. Ponderosa St. Rasmussen warned residents not to leave anything unattended when cooking.
If heating oil, start on a medium setting and increase the heat as needed. Do not start on the highest setting. If a grease fire does start, cover it with a lid if you can safely do so without burning yourself, Rasmussen said. Do not put water on it. No other sprinklers in the apartment came on. Firefighters shut the single sprinkler off when they arrived. Rasmussen estimated it ran for about 15 minutes before crews shut it off. That works out to about 120 gallons of water. Firefighters helped clean up the water in the unit until a clean up crew arrived. Rasmussen said water damage to the unit would likely keep the family out of the home for a week. The Red Cross will provide the family with assistance. The unoccupied unit below suffered water damage to its ceiling.
THE WEATHER
volume 26, no. 88
Weekend: Mostly sunny with highs in the upper 70s, dropping to lower 70s by the beginning of the week; lows in the mid to upper 40s. See page 7
See our ad and upcoming events on page 20
Photographer DJ Craig captured this idyllic fall afternoon at Water Wheel, a popular swimming spot on the East Verde River off Houston Mesa Road just past Beaver Valley. Water Wheel should be a great place to hang out this weekend, with the forecast calling for sunny skies and temperatures in the upper 70s. Skies should cloud up early next week, but there’s no rain in the forecast. The cottonwoods and sycamores along the East Verde have started to turn, despite the lack of freezing nights that normally kick off a strong display of fall colors. If you want to take a fall color hike this weekend, try the East Verde or maybe See Canyon (see story, page 19).
Payson Roundup LOCAL Friday, October 28, 2016
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roundup staff reporter
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The Payson Lioness Club and Payson Area Woofers Society staged a fundraiser to raise money to train guide dogs for the blind, with help from Pet Club. It can cost $40,000 to train one dog.
People and canines came together in support of a good cause in Payson on Saturday. The Payson Lioness Club and Payson Area Woofers Society (PAWS) sponsored A Dog Day Out at Pet Club, a fundraiser with proceeds benefiting Leader Dogs For The Blind. “That dog cost $40,000,” said Payson Lioness Club member Marion Karstadt, pointing to a Leader Dog For The Blind. “It takes a lot of training.” She said the organization currently has 13 working dog teams (dog and owner) in Arizona. The event featured several vendors offering a variety of services from dog nail clipping, microchip implants, nutrient information, handouts, games, prizes and more. Highlighting the event were contests for best canine vocalist, most amazing pet trick, waggingest tail, pet and owner look alike and best theme costume. Gila County Animal Control offered pet adoptions. “It’s gone very well,” said Payson Lioness Club vice president Pam Padilla. “We’ve had quite a few people show up.” Payson Lioness Club president Barb Stratton said she hopes this becomes an annual event. For information, stop by Pet Club or visit pawsinpayson@facebook.com.
Payson Roundup LOCAL Friday, October 28, 2016
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When Robert Langdon wakes up in an Italian hospital with amnesia, he teams up with Dr. Sienna Brooks, and together they must race across Europe against the clock to foil a deadly global plot.
PG-13 • No Passes • 1:00, 4:00, 7:00 A divorcee becomes entangled in a missing persons investigation that promises to send shockwaves throughout her life.
R • No Passes • 1:00, 4:00, 7:00
This file photo shows workers in the HPR ammunition plant in Payson. The plant has been closed for a month due to problems with financing, but owners expect to resume operations next week.
Ammunition maker to reopen From page 1 Jim said making the announcement in front of the HPR branded logo background was a mistake and “hurt us,” but they didn’t even want to make the announcement then. He said the governor insisted so they went ahead although they felt it was too soon to make the announcement. “Officials in Tennessee knew that HPR was just a brand, they knew we were going to make “ABC,” they didn’t care about HPR, nobody cares about HPR, it is us, it is what we do, our quality,” he said, referring to the talent he and his son and staff bring to ammunition manufacturing. Tennessee news outlets reported that AMI would invest some $500 million in the plant, generating 600 jobs at the 235-acre site. Jim Wednesday said that was a “little misleading” because in phase I the investment will total $291 million and will provide 477 jobs. Phase II will add the other jobs. The company had explored building the additional plant on an empty piece of land in Granite Dells in Payson, but abandoned that plan due to the expense of building on the site and opposition to the plans locally. Jim said after the Tennessee announcement, the company faced two lawsuits. One is from former partners in Scottsdale, who claim they created the HPR brand and that ATAC violated their trademark for HPR. ATAC has filed counterclaim.
The other lawsuit is from former ATAC president, Mark Kresser, who says ATAC violated his employment agreement. Read more about those lawsuits in an upcoming Roundup article. In a release, ATAC stressed that it is a “completely different company” from AMI and operate as such. “Jim Antich and Jeff Antich are two of the officers of ATAC, but ATAC’s corporate structure and operations are completely separate from the entity to be based in Tennessee,” said Mary Beth West, of Mary Beth West Communications, which is handling the Antich’s public relations. Tennessee offered the Antichs incentives to open a plant there. Under that contract, the Antichs have two years to break ground and make progress with construction, West said. With year one ending, AMI is making progress to open that plant, she added. “As with any major project in excess of $300 million in its initial phase one development, there are many elements to manage on a relatively short timeline. However, we feel confident that AMI is well poised to stay on track with its agreement with local and state governmental entities in Tennessee,” Jim said in a statement released through West. “AMI is working steadfastly to manage the many complexities of this important project — one which it is fully committed to bringing to Blount County, Tenn., at
the level of operation and on the timeline as originally planned.” Jim said while they are excited to expand to Tennessee, they have no plans to close the Payson facility. He said they actually plan to expand, upping production from 25 million rounds a year to 100 million in Payson. However, if he feels the community no longer wants ATAC in Payson they will leave. “I am feeling that I am not wanted here,” he said. “Because if they don’t want us here we could move this all.” Jim said it has not been easy to recruit employees, such as a quality engineer, to live in Payson’s rural community. “It is hard to find people,” he said. In 2014, the Antichs proposed building a new facility in Payson in the Granite Dells area. When that went before the town, several members of the community spoke out, saying they were against an ammunition plant in that area, popular with hikers. Jim said they abandoned plans to build in the Granite Dells because the site was not big enough for their needs. Jim said he wants to keep ATAC in Payson “forever.” Asked if they lost any employees during the recent plant closure, Jim said they had probably lost a couple, but would not give specifics. The plant has about 45 employees. They hope to expand to 60.
Jack Reacher must uncover the truth behind a major government conspiracy in order to clear his name and discover a life-changing secret from his past.
PG-13 • No Passes • 1:00, 4:00, 7:00
In 1967 Los Angeles, a widowed mother and her two daughters add a new stunt to bolster their seance scam business and unwittingly invite authentic evil into their home.
PG-13 • No Passes • 1:00, 3:10, 5:20, 7:30
A story set on the offshore drilling rig Deepwater Horizon, which exploded during April 2010 and created the worst oil spill in U.S. history.
PG-13 • No Passes • 1:15, 4:15, 7:15
The Accountant A forensic accountant un-cooks the books for illicit clients. R • No Passes • 1:30, 4:30, 7:30
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School lockdown alarms some parents From page 1 Wyman said the school’s initial announcement told everyone about the lockdown, but the police had not given the district much information. “The initial announcement told everyone of the lockdown,” said Wyman. “There would be no change to the announcement until the police change the situation.” The district can text only the parents and staff from a single school, but communication about the situation was limited to what the school knew. As it turned out, the woman apparently never came close to campus and never did anything dangerous anyway. The woman reportedly left her home in the 500 block of West Frontier Street with a knife of some kind around 2:30 p.m., say police. A family member called police to report she had left and they didn’t know where she was headed or what her intentions were. Officers learned the woman had been spotted in the general area of the school and out of an “abundance of caution” police called school officials and instructed them to go into a lockdown, said Police Chief Don Engler. When school ended, officers stood by in
the parking lot as students were picked up. “At one point, Officer Engler felt the parking lot was secured by the police and he states students could be released to parents that were waiting in their cars,” said Wyman. “Teachers and staff were also able to leave the school through the front doors where police were present.” One student approached Engler and asked what had happened. He told him a woman was “having a bad day.” Police later learned the woman had returned to her home. When they went back to the home, the woman fled. Officers found her around 3:45 p.m. northwest of the Senior Center. It is unknown if she was arrested or brought to a hospital for medical care. No one was injured. The school district recently developed a plan for handling emergencies, including procedures for ordering lockdowns, improved communications and making it so that teachers can lock rooms from the inside in case of a threat on campus. The system got a dry run last year when police asked for a lockdown as they searched for an armed robbery suspect near the high school and middle school. Wyman said the school often doesn’t receive the details of the threat when Payson Police ask for a lockdown.
“The police requested a lockdown,” said Wyman. “Depending on the circumstances, you may get more — or less — information. You try to send out through the school messenger — put it on the website. The problem we ran into here is that we had kids on buses — so it was a little bit confusing. Some kids are frozen (in locked classrooms) and others aren’t. If I’m walking my kids to the bus — and I get a lockdown — and I’m sitting by the library, then into the library I go.” Parents then find themselves on the outside or waiting for the buses. “We lock the doors from the inside. So parents get into the building. So it was a little bit confusing for some parents,” said Wyman. The district did send out an auto-dialer call at 6 p.m. that evening letting parents know there had been a lockdown called by the Payson PD. Wyman also said there are always ways to improve the district’s response to emergencies. “As with any event, the district will analyze the situation and look for ways to improve,” he said. “We meet on a regular basis with the Emergency Response Planning team (school officials and police) and we will use the next meeting to debrief.”
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PAYSON ROUNDUP
OPINION
4 Friday, October 28, 2016
ourview
lookback
Dark money strikes again
• Oct. 30, 1864: The town of Helena, Mont., is founded by four gold miners who strike it rich at the “Last Chance Gulch.” Eventually, Last Chance Gulch would prove to be the second biggest gold deposit in Montana. • Oct. 28, 1904: The St. Louis Police Department became the first to use fingerprinting. • Oct. 29, 1948: Killer smog hovers over Donora, Pa., trapping the sulphuric acid, carbon monoxide and other pollutants released by steel mills and a zinc smelting plant. By the time rain washed the air, 20 people had perished and thousands were ill. • Oct. 27, 1970: Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice released a double-LP “concept” album called “Jesus Christ Superstar” after they were unable to find financial backing for a stage production due to the nature of the story.
We spoke too soon. No sooner had we taken comfort from the apparent decision of APS to sit out the current election than the giant utility company decided to spend $1 million to elect three Republicans to the Arizona Corporation Commission. Clearly, they want commissioners who will grant them an 8 percent rate increase — and maybe snuff out solar in Arizona. Meanwhile, SolarCity — the nation’s largest installer of rooftop solar systems — has also spent upward of $1 million to sway the election its way. This astonishing, perfectly legal corruption of the political system all stems from the U.S. Supreme Court’s Citizens United decision, which came to the ridiculous conclusion that special interest groups and corporations have all the free speech rights of real people. Despite a nudge from the Supreme Court in its disastrous, system-corrupting decision, neither Congress nor the Arizona Legislature has lifted a finger to require these dark money groups to reveal how much they spend and what they spend it on. So now we must witness the dismaying spectacle of two special interest groups completely dominating the election of the people who will regulate them. Two years ago, APS spent a reported $3.2 million to elect two Republican incumbents, who have faithfully supported their every request ever since. Now, the utility with a government-granted monopoly to provide power to Rim Country and some 1.1 million other customers figures it had better make sure it seats a friendly commission — with billions of dollars on the line. The utility company wanted to impose new fees and cut payments to solar customers so drastically that it could dramatically reduce solar installations in a state awash in sunlight. Curiously, the dark money campaign will also benefit Republican Bob Burns, who the company has resisted due to his demands that the company reveal the full extent of its dark money spending. The other four Republicans on the commission have refused to support Burns’ push for disclosure — including incumbent Andy Tobin, running for re-election and Boyd Dunn, seeking to fill an empty seat. APS argues that Democrats Tom Chabin and Bill Mundell have openly criticized the company for its dark money campaign — and even its executive salaries, with the CEO pulling in more than $1 million a month. Contrast the APS’s chief executives $12 million salary to that of the Salt River Project, where the chief executive makes $1.2 million annually. SRP, by the way, also runs a huge irrigation and reservoir system — and has just put through a rate decrease. We believe the voters ought to reject APS’s effort to buy this election. Even more importantly, we think voters should make it clear to Congress, in the state Legislature or on the Corporation Commission that we must overturn Citizens United, require full disclosure and prevent the hostile takeover of our government by special interests.
guestcomment
Taking Clinton’s health agenda from good to great by
Kenneth E. Thorpe
emory university professor
Hillary Clinton wants to change the way we treat mental illness and drug addiction. As she put it at a recent campaign stop, too many American lives “are either being totally undermined or shortened” by these devastating conditions. She’s absolutely right, and Secretary Clinton deserves credit for making mental health and substance addiction so central to her agenda. Reducing their enormous social burden needs to begin with significant breakthroughs in treatment. More than 42 million American adults suffer from some form of mental disorder, while another 40 million fight some form of substance addiction. Although these illnesses can be tragic in their own right, they are part of an even more dire health crisis: a growing epidemic of chronic diseases. In the next 15 years, 80 percent of Americans will suffer from at least one chronic disease — illnesses that include everything from diabetes to schizophrenia. Treating these conditions now accounts for 86 cents of every dollar spent on health care. Over the next decade and a half, these conditions are on pace to cost our economy an astounding $42 trillion. Fortunately, these trends aren’t inevi-
table. But preventing this bleak future will require a comprehensive strategy aimed at promoting healthy lifestyles, expanding access to care, and igniting medical innovation. When combined, these three approaches can help avoid as many as 169 million cases of chronic illness in the coming years, according to a recent analysis by IHS Life Sciences. The savings to our economy would total as much as $6.3 trillion. Many of Secretary Clinton’s health policies would make important progress towards this goal. In particular, her promises to expand coverage and boost funding for community health centers are deeply encouraging. But she also needs to get rising insurance costs under control so that patients can access the newest and best medicines. A new national survey from the Partnership to Fight Chronic Disease reveals many Americans are drowning in excessive insurance costs. Four in 10 say that their out-of-pocket health costs have gone up over the previous year. And these rising expenses are hitting our most vulnerable citizens the hardest: nearly a third of seniors report that insurance premiums are the biggest health care-related drain on their family budget. Worse still, many insurance companies
throw up administrative blockades that prevent enrollees from receiving timely care. Fully seven out of 10 surveyed report having trouble with their health insurance over the previous year. Common complaints include difficulty finding an in-network doctor and the denial of coverage for a treatment recommended by a doctor. Reducing insurance cost-sharing and improving plan benefits would boost access to needed care for the chronically ill. Too often, even if these patients have insurance, they still can’t afford the recommended treatments because their benefits are so thin. They’re burdened with high deductibles, co-pays, co-insurance, and other costly features. Secretary Clinton’s pledge to tackle the issues of mental illness and drug addiction is worth celebrating. But patients facing high cost sharing are less likely to use needed health care services, resulting in even worse health care outcomes. Removing these financial roadblocks to seeking care is important for all chronically ill patients. Outlining approaches to reduce these barriers is likely to reduce overall spending and improve health care outcomes. Kenneth E. Thorpe is professor of health policy at Emory University and chairman of the Partnership to Fight Chronic Disease.
Premier Dental. Each dental office will set its own hours, and will be offering veterans the choice of a filling, an extraction or a cleaning free of charge. To participate, veterans need to call one of the dental offices and make an appointment. There will be a wait list when the schedules are filled. Veterans will need to bring their VA ID card and a list of current medications to the appointment. “We look forward to providing this service to our veterans, and encourage them to call and schedule their appointments as soon as possible.” says Wade. Alpine Family Dentistry: 928-474-3216 Anderson Dental Group: 928-474-4581 Center Point Dental: 928-472-2500 Dr. Charles Beier: 928-472-9303 Payson Premier Dental: 928-472-8400
John McCain and Jeff Flake refuse to openly endorse their party’s nominee and both try to take the moral high ground and lecture us to justify their treason to voters. John says Republicans need to reconcile after the election; no John, there needs to be a reckoning and that means you, Flake and the other posers in the party need to pay the price for your betrayal. Any party politician who does not openly and willingly endorse their candidate for president I will not vote for — as a matter of fact, I will vote for your opponent. You can say what you want about the Democrats, but they always stick together even after fighting it out. The dye is cast John, win or lose, you and the other sham artists’ days are numbered — rightly so. Scott Barker
mailcall
More signs for the trash
Scary times
Editor: I find it, with a great deal of humor; that some will complain that the signs they put up on private property are taken down. I, and only I, have consent to have signs on my property. For those of you that have nine times put signs on my property I would like to thank you for the extra wire I get to keep from said signs. But please stop, my trash can is getting full. Dan Millermon
Terrifying. And a sign of these sad times. This week, Payson Unified School District officials got a cryptic warning from police about potential dangers in the neighborhood. The police suggested officials lockdown Julia Randall Elementary School, just as kids were heading for the school buses. School officials acted with great poise and efficiency — immediately sending out word to teachers to take students heading for the buses back to the classrooms, libraries or other buildings, lock the doors and wait for information. The district didn’t have much information on the threat feared by police — so officials couldn’t provide much reassurance for students, parents and teachers waiting fearfully for roughly 30 minutes in those carefully locked classrooms. One parent told the Payson School Board that it proved one of the most frightening 30 minutes of her life. She waited for the sounds of shooting out on the campus and wondered where her children had ended up. As it turned out, the Payson Police were acting from an “abundance of caution,” upon receiving word that a potentially disturbed woman who might have a knife might be somewhere near the campus. It proved a false alarm. Still, everyone involved acted with calm professionalism and concern for the students. We’re lucky to have such teachers and such police officers. We’re not so lucky to live in times when those teachers and police officers and school officials must consider the possibility some crazed person would want to hurt children on school grounds. That said, the police should have provided school officials with better information — quickly updated. The terrible possibilities justify caution. But remember, those same terrible possibilities haunt us all. Surely, we can keep our children safe — without subjecting them to that blank, half-hour of terror.
Dentists help veterans Editor: Fall is here, and Payson dentists are gearing up for their fourth annual Veterans Day event to be held, Thursday and Friday, Nov. 10 and 11. Last year, Payson dentists, in conjunction with Denture Specialists, provided $42,441 in free services to our local veterans. “We are thankful to live in a free country, and are grateful for the hard work and dedication of our soldiers. This is our way of giving back,” says Dr. Kristin Wade, owner and full-time dentist at Payson Premier Dental. The Veterans Day event started with Dr. Thomas Mattern, former owner of Payson Premier Dental (then High Desert Dentistry). When Dr. Wade purchased the practice in 2015, she chose to continue this valuable community service in Payson. This year there will be five dental offices participating in the event: Alpine Family Dentistry, Anderson Dental Group, Center Point Dental, Dr. Charles Beier, and Payson
Traitors in the party Editor: Soon our nation will select a new president and as I consider the campaigning I ask myself, “Where do we go from here?” If nothing else, this election has been a shining example of the deep divisions in our country and a harbinger of the political and social unrest that will surely follow regardless of who wins. Like two tectonic plates ready to release their grip on one another and unleash waves of destructive force, I believe this election will be the catalyst for social and political unrest such as this country has not seen in many decades. Can this be a good thing? Yes, from time to time we need to right the ship.
Leaning towards communism Editor: I know that neither candidate for president is a prize. However, Hillary is leaning more towards communism all the time, and most people just don’t see it. She is a pathetic liar, especially to the people of this country. Stop and think why Trump is playing up the shenanigans? He needs attention, and is not as dumb as people make him out to be. No experience; did Obama have any? No! It is imperative that you all go out to vote or our USA will become a third-world country. Mathilde Seibert
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Payson Roundup LOCAL Friday, October 28, 2016
5
Dark money groups dominate
Talking REAL ESTATE
APS will spend $1 million to elect its own regulators by
Peter Aleshire
Top 5 Independent Expenditure Groups
roundup editor
Arizona Public Service has announced it will spend $1 million to get three Republicans elected to the Arizona Corporation Commission — including Commissioner Bob Burns who has crusaded to force the company to reveal its spending two years ago to elect two of the incumbent commissioners. The company is seeking an 8 percent rate increase and new rules that will potentially smother the rooftop solar industry in the state. Republicans Andy Tobin and Boyd Dunn have both refused to support Burns’ effort to force disclosure of the APS or Pinnacle West expenditure of a reported $3 million to influence the race two years ago. Pinnacle West — APS’s parent company — will reveal what it’s spending the $1 million on after the election, according to an APS spokesman. The announcement by APS concluded that Democratic candidates Bill Mundell and Tom Chabin have so consistently criticized APS both for its previous dark money political campaign and for its proposals to reduce incentives for rooftop solar customers that the company had concluded they couldn’t fairly consider the company’s needs. “They have from the start of the campaign made Pinnacle West and APS enemy No. 1,” said a company spokesman. Meanwhile, SolarCity reportedly funded an independent expenditure group called Save our AZ Solar, which spent an estimated $686,522 during the Republican primary in an independent expenditure campaign to support Burns — then contending with four other candidates for one of the three Republican nominations for the seat. That’s about 10 times as much as Burns spent on his own campaign from donations made directly to that campaign. People who donate directly to a campaign have strict limits on how much they can contribute, which is intended to prevent a candidate from becoming beholden to a single donor. However, under the terms of the U.S. Supreme Court’s Citizens United ruling, special interests and corporations can spend as much as they want so long as they don’t directly coordinate their campaigns with the candidates they’re supporting. Companies can form independent expenditure committees for strictly political purposes, which means they eventually have to disclose what they’re spending. However, companies can also file with the federal Internal Revenue Service to form nonprofit groups that have a social purpose — but also spend money on independent political campaigns. Those groups don’t have to reveal the source of their money or what they spend so long as they remain in good standing with the Internal Revenue Service. The distinction between the two types of independent political groups remains murky and the connections between the candidates and the dark money groups almost impossible to monitor. Neither Congress nor the Arizona Legislature took advantage of U.S. Supreme Court suggestions that they could require the dark money groups to disclose their spending and sources of funding. Congress has ignored the suggestion. The Arizona Legislature this year actually passed SB1516 that swore off any state role in regulating the dark money groups so long as they remained in good standing with the IRS, surely the first time the Arizona Legislature has abdicated in favor of federal regulation. The Legislature also reduced to misdemeanors violations of the laws that remain. The change in the campaign finance laws also made it possible for one elected official to bundle up contributions from businesses and special interests and pass them along to other candidates, all without revealing the source of the money. The law to loosen the last
Out of the 200 independent expenditure groups that have filed so far, here are the five biggest spenders. The total doesn’t include dark money groups like the one formed by APS to invest $1 million in supporting three Republicans running for the Arizona Corporation Commission. Save our Solar: The group has spent $1.2 million, most of it supporting Republican Bob Burns in the Republican primary. Boyd Dunn
Andy Tobin
Responsible Leadership for AZ: This conservative group has spent $100,000 supporting various Republican legislative candidates, including Rep. Noel Campbell, Rep. Kate Brophy McGee, Rep. Sonny Borrelli, Rep. Rusty Bowers and others. Most of the money comes from the Realtors of Arizona PAC. American Federation for Children: This pro-choice education group supports things like charter schools and taxpayer-supported vouchers to pay for private school costs. The group has spent at least $230,000 so far. Most of its money has gone to Republican lawmakers, who this year came close to approving expanding the limited Empowerment Scholarship Fund to almost every school district in the state. The scholarships would provide something like $5,000 in taxpayer-provided voucher money for parents who want to put their kids in private schools. Stand for Children Arizona This group has spent $200,000 in support of candidates it believes support public schools. The money has gone to both Republicans and Democrats. The group is chaired by Rebecca Gau, former Gov. Jan Brewer’s director of the office of education. Revitalize Arizona A union-supported, left-leaning group who has mostly supported moderate Republicans.
Bob Burns few restraints on dark money groups drew the support of Rim Country’s entire delegation, including House members Brenda Barton (R-Payson) and Bob Thorpe (R-Flagstaff). Their Democratic opponents — former Jerome mayor Nikki Bagley and former superintendent of schools Alex Martinez — have criticized the measure. Dark money groups have played an increasingly dominant role in fundraising since the Supreme Court ruling in Citizens United in 2010. In 1998, independent expenditure groups spent $328,000 adjusted for inflation, according to an article in Capitol Times. Candidates at that time spent far more in money contributed directly to them, with legal disclosure of the source. However, in 2012 after the Citizens United decision, dark money spending in Arizona jumped to $28 million, including $1.8 million backing Gov. Doug Ducey’s campaign and $6.4 million spent to oppose his Democratic opponent, Fred Duvall. That amounted to three times as much as Duvall raised from donations to his campaign. The dark money contributions this year will likely remain much lower, with no statewide offices up for grabs. However, dark money spending has spiraled in federal contests. The New York Times reported this weekend that Donald Trump has drawn about $63 million in dark money support while Hillary Clinton has drawn an estimated $180 million. The hard-fought, high-stakes contest for control of the Arizona Corporation Commission will once again serve as the poster child for dark money spending in Arizona. The solar industry hasn’t revealed yet how much money it’s spending in the general election campaign, but the $1 million plan by APS will likely exceed everything the five can-
By Kimberly Anderson, REALTOR®
What to Do If Your Home Doesn’t Appraise for Its Purchase Price
It can be a bit of a surprise if your home turns out to be valued at less than the purchase price offered, but this is the type of thing that can occur in an appraisal situation. Especially in a market were prices are going up. While this can change everything from your contract to the amount of your down payment if your home has been appraised at less than you envisioned, here are some options you may want to consider. Review The Appraisal Contingency Clause - If an appraisal contingency clause is built into the terms of your contract, this means that the terms of your contract can be re-evaluated and re-negotiated if an appraisal happens to come up short. In the Arizona Residential Purchases Contract there is an “Appraisal Contingency” this is what it says – Buyer’s obligation to complete this sale is contingent upon an appraisal of the Premises acceptable to lender for at least the purchase price. If the Premises fail to appraise for the purchases price in any appraisal required by lender, Buyer has 5 days after notice of the appraised value to cancel this Contract and receive a refund of the Earnest Money or the appraisal contingency shall be waived. While this is meant primarily to protect the homebuyer against a lower appraisal, it doesn’t mean that the terms of a new deal can’t be met for the good of both parties. Get A Second Appraisal - It’s entirely possible that the initial appraisal is accurate, but it doesn’t necessarily hurt to get a second opinion in the event that the first appraisal seems too low. Whether it happens to be good news or bad news, it can be worth the peace of mind to know how to proceed. Consider A Lower Price - It’s less than ideal when your home is appraised for less than the purchase price, but this doesn’t have to be a deal breaker when it comes to selling it. While you may be able to get away with a higher price for your home in a hot real estate market, if things have cooled off, this can be an important time to re-negotiate the deal you’ve got. If a potential buyer likes your home and has already made an offer, they may be happy to decide on new contract terms. What’s next? - It can be quite disappointing if your home is appraised at a value that is less than the offer you’ve received, but this doesn’t necessarily mean that you’ll have to put your home back on the market. Whether you and the potential buyer decide to re-negotiate or get a second opinion, there are options that can be beneficial for both parties.
Kim@LivingInPayson.com | 928-978-3913 | http://www.LivingInPayson.com
Visit payson.com for videos & photos of local events Call Me for a 2nd Opinion on your Health Insurance Tom Chabin
Bill Mundell
didates raise by a wide margin. The stakes for APS are considerable, with its request for an 8 percent rate increase almost the first item on the agenda in the spring for whoever wins the commission race. APS also wants to impose new charges on people who install rooftop solar systems. Solar industry supporters say the demand charges will reduce the value of solar systems for homeowners. Also, APS wants permission to pay much less for excess power generated by the solar rooftop panels, so reducing the incentives for installing solar systems that it could cripple the industry. APS maintains that the new charges would ensure that solar energy customers pay their fair share of the cost of the infrastructure on which they continue to rely when the sun’s not shining. However, supporters of the solar systems say that argument ignores the benefits to the entire system of having more solar and wind generated power, which puts off the time APS would need to build expensive new power generating systems. They maintain the Corporation Commission bases the profit margin for the company’s government-granted monopoly on its total investment. Therefore, the company’s profit margin is based on its investment in things like power plants. “If they build a fossil fuel plant, they get to put that in rate base and raise everybody’s
rates, solar and non-solar alike, so rooftop solar benefits the non-solar customers as well,” said Mundell a former state senator and former Corporation Commissioner. Tom Chabin, a former state senator, said the shift to “net metering” would also hurt consumers. He said APS wants to pay lower, wholesale rates for the excess power generated by the solar systems — which it can sell to other homeowners at higher, retail rates. “When I produce the kilowatt hour that’s extra in that total, where does it go? It goes to my next door neighbor,” said Chabin, for which APS charges the retail rate.
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Payson Roundup LOCAL Friday, October 28, 2016
Halloween treats abound by
Teresa McQuerrey
roundup staff reporter
The Halloween fun runs through next Monday, Oct. 31. Good luck trying to hit all the events planned for the occasion. PHS Haunted House Longhorn Theatre presents a benefit Haunted House at the high school auditorium from 7 p.m. to 11 p.m., Saturday, Oct. 29. “Zombie Apocalypse” awaits. Admission is $3 per person or $2 and a can of food for the Food Bank.
MONDAY, OCTOBER 31, 2016
rate the costume contest as the contestants walk the parade — then announce the winners at the carnival. Once the parade ends, the kids can go on over to the waiting ATVs and side-by-sides stuffed with candy to trick or treat. New for the adults this year — corn hole contest with a $5 entry fee. The community will also sponsor a cake walk, dedicated to local legend EC Conway, who passed away a few years ago. Payson Elks, Oct. 29 (6-8 p.m.) The Payson Elks Lodge (1206 N. Beeline Highway) will welcome kids under 12 and their parents for free food for kids, a haunted house, carnival games and more.
Bashas’ Halloween Party, Oct. 29 (10 a.m.-2 p.m.) The family-friendly Halloween party will welcome kids of all ages in Halloween costumes, offering an alternative to traditional door-to-door trick-ortreating. Activities include trick-or-treating throughout the store; free cookies and apple cider tasting; picture taking opportunities; Halloween cake decorating for $5; and caramel apple dipping for $3.
Pine, Oct. 31 (6-8 p.m.) The Pine-Strawberry Fire Department still needs donations and “trunks” for its Third Annual Open House and Trunk or Treat at the Pine Fire station, with music, treats and lessons on fire prevention and safety. Decorating Photo courtesy of DJ Craig begins at 4 p.m. and set up of the trunks is at 5 p.m. Organizers need volunteers, trunks decorated Double fun at library The Payson Public Library, 328 N. McLane to hand out goodies, candy, decorations, money, Road, is planning two special Halloween events. food and baked goods. Call Stacy at 476-4272 or The first is from 2 p.m. to 3:30 p.m., Saturday, 978-3964 for information. Oct. 29 for youngsters. A teens-only event, for those ages 13 through 18, is planned from 7 Payson Trunk or Treat, Oct. 31 (6-9 p.m.) The event this year features the Star Wars p.m. to 10 p.m., Saturday, Oct. 29. There will be a costume contest, pizza, prizes, raffle and film Experience at the very spooky Ox Bow Saloon on Main Street. Payson will buy all the candy for screening. more than 30 decorated booths for children ages 12 and under. The event will attract Star Wars Tonto Basin, Oct 29 (5-8:30 p.m.) For the past 30-plus years, the residents of characters like Luke Skywalker, Darth Vadar, Tonto Basin have put on a Halloween Carnival Princess Leia, Han Solo, Chewbacca, Rea, Storm at the school to raise money for playground Troopers and many more. Admission is $3 or equipment and other needs of the district. This $2 with a can of food for the local food bank. Ox year they’ve added a parade at 5 p.m. and a Bow owner Brian Mortensen opened the historic Tonto Basin-style Trunk or Treat. Judges will restaurant for the event.
Wolves now foster parents by
Peter Aleshire
roundup editor
Mexican gray wolves have proved willing to raise pups born to other parents in captivity and slipped into their dens. Biologists hailed the success of the effort in “cross fostering” the endangered wolves, saying it will boost the chance the wolves will ultimately establish a self-sustaining population in Arizona and New Mexico. The experiment involved two pups born in the Brookfield Zoo in Illinois, but then slipped into the den of a wolf pair in Arizona. In April, five Mexican wolf pups were born at the Illinois zoo, part of the ongoing captive breeding program that has sustained the reintroduction effort. Biologists placed two of the pups in the den of the Arizona-based Elk Horn Pack of wild wolves, which already had a litter. The technique, which has proven successful with wolves and other wildlife, shows promise to improve the genetic diversity of the wild wolf population. On Sept. 18, the Mexican wolf Interagency Field Team captured a male wolf pup from the pack. A genetic test revealed it was one of the two pups born in the zoo. During the capture and handling, biologists gave the wolf a brief exam, administered vaccines, and fitted him with a radio collar, which will allow the Interagency Field Team to track him and learn important information about the animal’s survival, dispersal, and potential new pack formation in the future. The Arizona Game and Fish Department, the Chicago Zoological Society (CZS), the Endangered Wolf Center (EWC), the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) and the White Mountain Apache Tribe all collaborated in the effort. At least one additional cross-fostered pup has survived with the Panther Creek Pack in Arizona. In May, biologists added two Mexican wolf pups born at the Endangered Wolf Center
in Missouri to a five-pup litter in the den of the Panther Creek Pack, increasing the litter size to seven. The Panther Creek Pack was recently confirmed as having at minimum of six pups. “We are thrilled to hear that cross-fostered pups have been located and are doing well with their foster packs,” said Bill Zeigler, senior vice president of animal programs for CZS. “The success of the program is a true testament to the collaboration with our partners.” “A big advantage of cross-fostering is that we’re introducing wolf pups that have had minimal contact with humans offering a chance to improve genetic diversity while maintaining social tolerance for Mexican wolf recovery,” said Jim deVos, assistant director for Wildlife Management for Arizona Game and Fish. Wolf biologists attempted an additional cross-fostering adoption last April, this one involving two pups born at the Endangered Wolf Center placed in the den of the New Mexicobased Sheepherder’s Baseball Park Pack. The Interagency Field Team continues efforts to document pup survival in this pack. This year is the first time since 1998 when the Mexican Wolf Recovery Program began releasing Mexican wolves back into the wild that pups born in the captive breeding program have been successfully cross-fostered into the wild. In 2015, the Interagency Field Team fostered two pups from one wild litter to another, and has recently confirmed one of those pups is alive in the wild. This pup, M1347, set off exploring apparently with an uncollared female. Currently, 243 Mexican gray wolves live in captive breeding programs in 54 institutions. As of December 2015, at least 97 Mexican gray wolves lived in the wild along the border between Arizona and New Mexico centered on Alpine. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has proposed greatly expanding the area in which it will introduce wolves and let them wander without the threat of recapture. If approved, the expansion would allow the wolves to move into Rim Country.
LEGISLATORS WHO ABANDONED US LEGISLATIVE FACT CHECK #6: According to the voting records of the Arizona Legislature, Sen. Sylvia Allen, Rep. Bob Thorpe, and Rep. Brenda Barton have continually acted against their constituents by voting: • For HB2403 to allow one party-favored real estate investor to avoid paying $146,000 in county fees on foreclosed land that he purchased at 90% discount, thus forcing the rest of us to make up the difference in tax revenue. • For HB 2524 which preempts the constitutional right of Arizona voters to pass our own gun laws, requiring Arizona to surrender its right to decide its own laws, and requires Arizona to follow laws of states with which it has a “compact” • Supported HB 1417 to add additional regulations, burdensome red tape, and increased costs on solar industry to prevent its success statewide, thus undermining private business in favor of APS and SRP • For HR 2014 to give the Legislature all the power to combat a statewide initiative to raise the minimum wage, which usurps the right of Arizona’s citizens to choose
VOTE FOR CANDIDATES WHO WILL TRULY REPRESENT US
ALEX MARTINEZ for AZ House
NIKKI BAGLEY for AZ Senate
They are Democrat conservatives who support education, veterans funding, small businesses, protecting forests/rivers/clean air, protecting voting rights, health care, eliminating secret Dark Money that takes control of elections, protection for vulnerable children and women. Sponsored by Democratic Women of Rim Country on behalf of 2,855 registered Rim Democrats
Payson Roundup LOCAL Friday, October 28, 2016
Payson depends on fire, police grants by
7
WEATHERREPORT Forecast by the National Weather Service
Friday
Alexis Bechman
roundup staff reporter
Payson has secured $385,000 in funding recently to outfit police with new radios, firefighters with breathing masks, improve a section of the American Gulch and to help crime victims. The council approved all of these contracts at the Oct. 20 council meeting. Beth Beck, the town’s grant coordinator, said the town is receiving $21,600 from the Attorney General’s Office to help run Payson’s Victims Rights Program. The money goes toward a parttime coordinator to run the program. The town has received the funding every year since 2013. The coordinator notifies victims of upcoming court dates, rulings and their rights. Police meanwhile will receive $44,500 from the Arizona Department of Homeland Security to buy portable radios and headsets for the town’s Special Response Team. The town is providing $16,000 in matching funds for the radios. Police Chief Don Engler said the radios would allow SRT members to not only communicate more efficiently with each other, but other agencies as well. He said the units represent a step up from the current radios and will benefit officers. For firefighters, the U.S. Fire Administration has awarded the town $310,000 to buy 43 self-contained breathing apparatus. Firefighters wear breathing masks on all home fires and many other calls where they might breathe in harmful chemicals or smoke. Finally, the Gila County Board of Supervisors is giving the town $8,500 for Phase I of the American Gulch project on Main Street. A small section of the pathway from the Sawmill Crossing to Westerly was recently worked on, with a path on either side added, along with benches and signage.
missing from the Mounted Posse account doesn’t mean Greer used that money for the purchase, said Lamm. “… as to Count 7, the response points out, that there was a vacation rental, etc. that was paid for, yet there is no correlation between misstated balances if you would,” said Lamm. Counts 6 and 7 refer to Greer stealing from the Mounted Posse and then trying to put the money back before the theft could be discovered with the money he borrowed from Bliven. Harriss responded that the grand jury had plenty of evidence to support the charge. “The state presented more than adequate evidence in both of these instances to show that there was an intent to defraud,” she said. “And I believe the intent to defraud is demonstrated by the fact that in each of these incidences, the defendant misrepresents or lies about what his intentions are.” In the Auditor General’s report, the evidence used to prove that Greer had stolen from the posse included recordings of meetings where Greer misrepresented the true balances in the posse’s bank account. Greer never gave the posse its bank account records, so they did not know they were out of funds until it became impossible to ignore. “So in order to facilitate his scheme and to make sure that nobody catches what he’s doing or puts an end to the theft from the posse, he’s misrepresenting the balances during these
meetings. So I think that the fact that there’s fraud shows his intent to deprive because he does not want anybody to find out that these steps are occurring.” Judge Wright agreed and denied the motion to throw out Counts 6 and 7. Count 4 had to do with Greer using the PSWID credit card to charge $2,299 for personal use. Lamm argued that because PSWID did not explicitly have a policy regarding credit card use by board members, Greer couldn’t have violated that policy. He based his argument on a letter written by the Pine water board’s attorney. Lamm argued, “… the issue becomes whether or not he acted with lawful authority and it is the legal opinion of the board’s attorney and arguably of the board, which is the victim in this case, that in fact the defendant did have lawful authority absent a specific prohibition in the board’s procedures and regulations to permit such conduct,” said Lamm. “That legally is clearly exculpatory because it negates the element of the defendant not having lawful authority.” However, Harriss countered that the water board attorney’s letter didn’t specifically talk about Greer’s actions, it just said the board had no policy regarding the credit card. She went on to say that Greer kept using the card even after the board told him to stop. At some point, the defendant was confronted with the usage of the card and he was told to stop doing that,” she said. “I think for sure from that point forward you have him no
Saturday
“I am excited and accept the challenge of moving the college mission forward and continue to make the college an integral part of our communities throughout Gila County,” she said. For information on all course offerings or to arrange for academic advising call 928425-8481 in Globe or Payson at 928-468-8039.
Sunday
DATE
Monday
Mostly sunny
Sunny
Tuesday
928-978-8202
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PRECIP.
0.16 0.03
Precipitation
Mostly sunny
Oct. 2016 0.41 Oct. Avg. 1.72
Average Payson Precipitation from the office of the State Climatologist at Arizona State University.
70/44
PAYSON POLLEN COUNT FORECAST Friday
Saturday
Sunday
Monday
MEDIUM
MEDIUM
MEDIUM
MEDIUM
5.3 6.4 6.8 6.2 Dominant pollen: Ragweed-Chenopods High: Pollen levels between 9.7 and 12.0 tend to affect most individuals who suffer from the pollen types of the season. Symptoms may become more severe during days with high pollen levels. Medium: Pollen levels between 7.3 and 9.6 will likely cause symptoms for many individuals who suffer from allergies to the predominant pollen types of the season. Low: Pollen levels between 0 and 7.2 tend to affect very few individuals among the allergy-suffering public.
Source: pollen.com
Roundup file photo
longer able to use that card,” which makes the lack of a policy on using the credit card irrelevant.” Judge Wright said he didn’t think the letter about the lack of a credit card policy would make a difference to the count of theft, so he denied the motion. Then Wright gave Bliven a chance to speak. “Mr. Bliven, as a victim you have a right to be heard,” he said. Bliven said he loaned $32,000 to Greer “to keep him out of jail. He told me about the story of the Pine water district and the situation. Basically the way he approached me with the loan request was that if he didn’t have money immediately, he was going to be put in jail,” said Bliven. Greer told him he needed the money to post a bond, Bliven
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said. “I asked him for a copy of the bond and the specifics of the — who was going to be handling it and who was point of contact for the case and he wrote a letter from the PineStrawberry water district that basically it was a fraudulent letter,” said Bliven. He said Greer took stationery from PSWID, wrote the letter and forged the name of another to validate the letter. Bliven said Greer made no effort to pay back this loan, so Bliven went to civil court and won a judgment against Greer for $39,000, “because of the all the costs that I incurred as a result of this loan ... All’s I’ve heard from Mike from the very start has been lies ... Mike has troubles, he needs to address those troubles.”
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16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26
2016 thru today 15.67 30-year Avg. thru October 17.97
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Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct.
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Griffin takes over marketing, public relations for college district Leitha Griffin, longtime resident of Gila County, will take over marketing and public relations for the Gila Community College District. Griffin moves from her recent position as administrative assistant/student support services. Griffin holds a bachelor’s degree from Liberty University and continues to be active in many community activities.
Weather courtesy of Bruce Rasch, weather.astro50.com
80/51
Judge won’t drop charges against Greer From page 1
PAYSONREPORT
Mostly sunny; slight chance for rain
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St. Vincent de Paul
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“Our proceeds support the St. Vincent de Paul Food Bank”
1006 S. Beeline Hwy, Payson, Az 928-474-4476 Open Thurs-Fri-Sat
PAYSON ROUNDUP
SPORTS
8 Friday, October 28, 2016 3A Football Power Rankings
Top 20 (of 37) Rk. Team W-L Rating 1 Show Low 9-0 16.4738 2 Snowflake 8-1 14.1336 3 American Leadership 8-1 12.0482 4 Monument Valley 9-0 11.8402 5 Sabino 8-1 11.7025 6 Florence 8-1 9.1531 7 Northwest Christian 7-2 6.8885 8 Yuma Catholic 7-2 6.2730 9 Casteel 8-1 5.9284 10 Wickenburg 8-1 5.8126 11 Pusch Ridge 6-3 5.3889 12 Safford 5-4 4.8868 13 Winslow 6-3 4.8422 14 Payson 4-5 3.2520 15 Benjamin Franklin 6-3 2.7432 16 River Valley 7-2 2.7410 ---------------------------------------------------17 Page 6-4 -0.4744 18 Chinle 4-5 -0.4610 19 Tuba City 5-5 -1.0798 20 Ganado 5-4 -1.1448
Imagine a playoff run Imagine this. Payson qualifies for the Class 3A state football playoffs with a 5-5 record. The No. 14 Longhorns will do just that with a win in the regular season finale tonight at No. 22 Holbrook (2-6). OK, that seems reasonable enough. But then imagine these Longhorns shock the state for four weeks in November and win the state championship. Harder to conceive? more than I’ll grant you a game that. But that’s just what they’re planning. And I’m telling you, these kids can do it. I believe. The reason is Keith Morris simple — they’ve got what it takes. They’ve got the size, strength, speed and raw talent. And, in addition to good coaching, they’ve something else — determination and heart. With 15 seniors, they’ve got the senior leadership so crucial in putting together a championship run. Guys like quarterback Ryan Ricke and his Houdini-like ability to avoid sacks and come through with crucial completions. Guys like J.T. Dolinich and Cameron Ross, who rank among the fastest and most elusive running backs in the state. Guys like Angel Jacquez and Dailin Playoff Keith, who brackets make clutch revealed catches and shut down an Saturday opponent’s passing game The Class 3A (Jacquez) and football state win battles in tournament the trenches bracket will be revealed (Keith). Guys like live at www. Korben White azpreps365. and Trey com at 9:30 a.m. G l a s s c o c k , Saturday. The who lead a bracket will be strong offen- posted there folsive line and lowing the show. dominate on defense and should continue playing at the next level. Guys like run-stopping nose guard Wyatt Richardson, who wears offensive linemen out battling him for four quarters. Guys like defensive end Jeremiah Hamm, who along with Glasscock terrorizes opposing quarterbacks. Guys like kicker Kenny Ayres, whose accuracy on extra points and field goals and his ability to pin opponents deep on kickoffs is only matched by his courage. And that’s not even mentioning seniors Brandon Moore, Carver Bonn, Jeremiah Krieger, Emerson Carr and Franciso Apodaca; and juniors DiAndre Terry, Jason Bland, Trent Cline and Shane Law, who’ve also been key this season. I wasn’t shocked when the Longhorns came within a gutsy twopoint conversion try of upsetting Show Low, currently ranked No. 1. They threatened to beat No. 3 Snowflake before a drive in the final minute stalled. And they pushed Round Valley, the top-ranked team in Class 2A, to the end in another heartbreaking loss. Fortunately, none of that really matters now. With a win tonight the Longhorns will make the state playoffs. And just imagine the possibilities.
Harriers ready to run for state Sectional race today in Holbrook by
Keith Morris
roundup sports editor
No seniors. Eight of the 12 on the roster had no experience in a high school race. Yes, Payson High girls cross-country coach Jonathan Ball had plenty of questions entering this season. And he’s gotten some answers. “We have come a long way both as a team, as well as individual runners,” Ball said. It’s been a season of progress for the Longhorns, who compete in the Division 3 Section 4 Championships at Holbrook’s Hidden Cove Golf Kyra Ball Course today. The girls race follows the 1 p.m. boys race at 1:30. The only thing the coach was sure of was that his daughter, Kyra, would lead the way. And the junior hasn’t disappointed in her third varsity campaign. “She has taken it to a whole new level,” he said. She’s finished in the top five in five races for the second straight season, placing second in three races — the Sept. 7 Payson Invitational, Sept. 20 Valley Christian Park Run and Oct. 22 Fountain Hills Invitational. But her performances this year have been more impressive than her sophomore season. Her 20:28 clocking in the regular-season finale in Fountain Hills represents the 13th fastest time among Div. 3 Section 4 runners this fall. The top 14 today make the all-section team. “What’s different about these topfive finishes is the quality of competition that she is beating,” coach Ball said. Ball hopes to run down all-section accolades for the first time after placing 20th in last year’s section meet. The top 25 individuals at the sectional earn the right to compete in the State Championship, set for Saturday, Nov. 5 at Cave Creek Golf Course. Ball isn’t the only runner that has
Keith Morris/Roundup
Payson’s girls cross-country team begins the season-opening Payson Invitational on Sept. 7. The Longhorns close the season at the section meet in Holbrook this afternoon looking to qualify for the state meet. The top half of 15 or 16 teams in the race qualify. If the Longhorns aren’t able to qualify as a team, they still have a chance to qualify individually, as the top 25 finishers advance. the coach excited about not only the rest of the season but for next year and beyond. A pair of freshmen have shown great potential. Holly Carl started the season with a 25:59 effort at the Chandler Invitational and has run at least two minutes faster than four times, including a personal-record of 23:18 at the Desert Twilight Invitational in Casa Grande. “Holly has fantastic talent at running,” coach Ball said. “She also has a great desire to improve, which she has throughout the season.” Holly’s best performance of the season may have come this past week when she took second in the open division in Fountain Hills. Fellow ninth-grader Jordan Kile turned in a PR 24:10 at the season-opening Chandler Invitational and has impressed ever since. “Jordan is a great athlete,” coach Ball said. “She is very strong and
has come a long way this past season when it comes to her desire of being good at distance running. “Her best race came at Winslow where she got out strong and finished second in the open division. Jordan has a great upside, and has an enormous amount of potential.” Sophomore Melissa La Spisa has improved in her second varsity campaign. She’s run at least a full minute faster this year on five of the six courses she also ran as a freshman. “That is some significant progress,” coach Ball said. Junior Gabby Ferguson “has been a pleasant surprise for us this season,” the coach said. “On two different occasions she has ran with Melissa in races. When she does this, which means our four and five runners are teamed up and coming in together, it totally changes our team for the better.” Freshman Karissa Ball has turned in a couple of “really solid races,”
according to her father. She’s finished among the Longhorns’ top five to contribute to the team score in multiple races and recorded her team’s third-fastest time even though she was running in the open division at the Alchesay Invitational. Junior Danielle Pentico joined the team for the final race after the girls soccer season ended on Oct. 20. And she medaled, placing 18th in the open division at the Fountain Hills Invitational to earn a spot in the lineup for the sectional. “I love tough athletes that want to participate and help out PHS athletics anywhere they can,” coach Ball said. The coach said it won’t be easy for the Longhorns to qualify for the state meet for a second straight season. “For us to have a chance to qualify all of our athletes would need to PR at the same meet,” he said. “It can happen as we seem to really be hitting our stride at the right time.”
Young boys team set to run sectional by
Keith Morris
roundup sports editor
Senior Daely Pentico leads the Longhorn boys cross-country team into today’s Division 3 Section 4 Championships at Holbrook’s Hidden Cove Golf Course. The boys race begins at 1 p.m. His best time of the season is 18:48, which earned him 11th place in a field of 362 at the Twilight Invitational. He also took 24th in 18:55 to medal at the Chandler Valley Christian Invitational.
“Daely doesn’t have a ton of races in this season but is in great shape and is running really well right now,” Jonathan Ball said. The addition of freshman Dalton Harold, who joined the team after the Payson varsity boys soccer season ended, bolsters the team. He had a great debut at last weekend’s Fountain Hills Invitational, taking second in the open division in 19:17. “Dalton is not necessarily in cross-country shape, but he is a very
tough athlete and showed his toughness on Friday,” his coach said. “I’m excited about having Pentico and Harold run together at the sectional meet. They are really competitive with each other in practice, and having both of them together running in the same race will be good for both of them as well as the team.” Rounding out the five competitors will be Austin Rice, Julien Sanchez, and David Pasquini-Jonassen. Rice is a first-year runner who has had
Co-Ed Conquerors
some good success running in the open division medaling in the past two races. While Sanchez, also a firsttime high school runner, has been a pleasant surprise for the boys. “He has been a very consistent runner that has really helped us this season,” Ball said. “David is by far our most improved runner this season. From the start of the season he has shaved over four minutes from his time, which will help him stay competitive in our very, very competitive section.”
Horns eye state tourney
Submitted Photo
Chris’s Mom beat Tonto Apache Recreation 14-1 in the championship game of the Town of Payson Fall Co-Ed Softball League on Oct. 12 on Randy Johnson Hall of Fame Field in Rumsey Park.
Regular Season Standings W-L Chris’s Mom 7-1 Bay Equity’s Roundin’ Third 7-1 Tonto Apache Rec 3-5 Chili’s 2-6 Scared Hitless 1-7
Tournament Results
5-Scared Hitless d. 4-Chili’s 2-Bay Equity’s Roundin’ Third d. 3-Tonto Apache Rec. 1-Chris’s Mom d. Scared Hitless Tonto Apache Rec. d. Chili’s Chris’s Mom d. Bay Equity’s Roundin’ Third Tonto Apache Rec. d. Scared Hitless Tonto Apache Rec. d. Bay Equity’s Roundin’ Third Chris’s Mom d. Tonto Apache Rec.
Keith Morris/Roundup
The play of sophomores Cloee Beeler (25) and Savanna White at the net has been a big reason the No. 8-ranked Longhorns could make noise in the Class 3A State Championships. Payson had a chance to win the 3A East Region championship with a win at Holbrook on Thursday or a Blue Ridge loss to Snowflake. The pairings for the state tournament will be revealed at 11 a.m. Sunday at www.azpreps365.com. The tournament is set for Nov. 4-5 at Phoenix Camelback High. The first three rounds will be played at Camelback and the championship game at Phoenix North High.
Payson Roundup SPORTS Friday, October 28, 2016
9
Positive signs from a challenging season by
Keith Morris
roundup sports editor
Look at the 2-8 record and it’s clear this wasn’t a great season for Payson’s girls soccer team. But look beyond the record and you find players with hearts of champions. Like freshman Joselyn Alonso, who was injured in a 2-1 victory over Gilbert Leading Edge Academy on Oct. 18 but kept playing. “During the game Jocelyn injured her shoulder and has a possible break in her arm,” said head coach Leslie Fletcher Ayres. “Despite the injury she continued to play and did not let it affect her. “That is kind of the spirit of this team. When they think they are done they find a little more in their tanks.” That kind of courage doesn’t come by accident. “We talked a lot about the Navy SEAL rule that when you think you’re completely done you really have 40 more percent left,” the coach said. “These girls are a testament to this.” Payson’s other win also came against Leading Edge by a 7-3 score at Payson on Sept. 29. In the second victory over the Spartans, freshman Ana Hipolito and senior Becca Carr scored the goals with assists by freshman Brenna Winton and sophomore Taylor Brade. The goal was the first of Carr’s four-year career. “Becca has traditionally played very defensively throughout her four
years and she was over the moon,” Fletcher Ayres said. The Longhorns closed the season with senior night at Rumsey Park on Oct. 20 where captains Carr and Sadie Sweeney and Callie O’Connell and Josey Long were honored. Payson lost 10-0 to a Flagstaff Northland Prep team that finished No. 3 in the state power rankings behind only Chino Valley and Eagar Round Valley. “We played with the team I predict will probably be the No. 1 team in the state scoreless for almost the first 15 minutes of the game,” Fletcher Ayres said. “Three of my four seniors have struggled with injuries this year. All of my seniors started and played almost all game. We played probably some of the best soccer we’ve played all season, even if the score did not reflect that. “That (freshman) Yammie Avalos playing at outside fullback and halfback generated two shots on goal shows how strong our young team is.” A pair of freshmen starters — Yessica Benitez and Hannah Baca — sat out the final game after suffering injuries in the Tucson Old Pueblo Tournament on Sept. 30-Oct. 1. “Both ended up with bone bruises on the inside of their legs,” the coach said. “Our team is very small compared to most soccer teams, but they do not let that deter them.” Defense was a strength thanks to strong players such as sophomore Megan Ryden, who the coach said
Keith Morris/Roundup
Senior Sadie Sweeney (left) hugs junior Jaycee Albert during the senior night ceremony against Flagstaff Northland Prep on Oct. 20.
averaged 10 steals a game and had 37 in a single contest. With her, junior Jaycee Albert and freshman Teryn Fabian all returning, the coach is excited about what that experience means for 2017. “We had some of the quickest backs in this league,” Fletcher Ayres said. Albert dealt with a significant knee injury from last season but hopes to be fully recovered for her senior season. The Longhorns finished fourth among five teams in the 2A Central Region, going 2-6. Leading Edge finished last at 0-8. The Longhorns finished No. 9 among 11 teams in the final power rankings ahead of No. 10 Holbrook (1-12) and Leading Edge (0-10), which
Keith Morris/Roundup
Sophomore Megan Ryden (10) battles for the ball against Flagstaff Northland Prep in the season finale on Oct. 20 as senior Callie O’Connell pursues. finished No. 11. With only four seniors this year, the Longhorns who’ll return next year gained plenty of valuable experience. “Almost all of my underclassmen played almost every single game and played over 50 percent most games,”
the coach said. “That is experience that we can take forward from here. Probably half of my players are going to try to play club soccer down in the Valley. We will also be doing offseason training and volunteer work and fundraising.”
Sports Briefs Denton Petersen wins high school steer wrestling buckle Star Valley’s Denton Petersen won the steer wrestling buckle for the Arizona High School Rodeo Association Wickenburg Rodeo held Oct. 21-22. The Payson High senior finished third in the first go in 12.76 seconds and won the second go in 5.74 seconds to take the buckle for the weekend. He also won the second go in tie-down roping in 11.08 seconds. Denton Peterson Petersen is 11th in the all around season point standings after two rodeos. T.R. Frost of Tonto Basin tied for first in the second go of breakaway in 2.52. Abbie Shofner of Los Lunas, N.M. posted the same time. Frost also placed fifth in breakaway (3.22) at the
State Fair Rodeo on Oct. 20. Payson’s Bryndee Hall finished fourth in breakaway (3.07) in the first go at Wickenburg. Tim Hughes and Dave Rutter win in men’s golf Tim Hughes and Dave Rutter combined to shoot a net score of 127.7 to win the Payson Men’s Golf Association Blind Partner Tournament at Payson Golf Course on Oct. 12. Ed Bossert and Richard Harding finished second with a 131.3 score, while Jack Proietto and Mike McKee (134) took third. Lou Crabtree had the longest putt, finding the hole from 20 feet, 4 inches on No. 9. Closest-to-the-pin winners were: John Rikala on both Nos. 5 (4-5) and 8 (15-10 1/2), John Calderwood (No. 2, 28-4), Don Pollack (No. 14, 1-9) and Doug Magnuson (No. 17, 2-7 1/2).
Youth volleyball Registration ends Nov. 18 for fourth-sixth grade and seventh-ninth grade volleyball leagues. The season begins on Dec. 3 and games are played on Saturday mornings. The fee is $30 per player. Fifth-sixth-grade basketball Registration ends Dec. 2 for boys and girls in the fifth and sixth grades. The fee is $30 per player. The season begins on Jan. 6. Games are Friday nights and Saturday mornings. This will be a co-ed league unless four boys and four girls teams can be formed. Sign up for any of these leagues at paysonrimcountry.com or at the Parks & Rec office. Volunteer coaches are needed for all activities. Pick up a coaches packet at the Parks & Rec office.
Rim Country Church Directory Calvary Chapel Payson 1103 N. Beeline Hwy. at Sherwood Dr.; (928) 468-0801, office@ calvarypayson.com, calvarypayson.com. Sunday: Services at 8:30 & 10:30 a.m., Devotion & Prayer at 6:30 p.m.; Tuesday: Men’s & Women’s Discipleship at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday: Fellowship Dinner at 5 p.m., Service at 6:30 p.m.; Thursday: Christ-Centered Recovery & Young Adult Fellowship at 6:30 p.m. Childcare is provided for all of the above services. Catholic Church of the Holy Nativity A Roman Catholic Church under the Personal Ordinariate of the Chair of St. Peter. 1414 N. Easy St.(corner of Easy Street & Bradley Dr.), Payson, AZ 85541, (928) 478-6988, wwwholynativitypayson. com. The Rev. Fr. Lowell E. Andrews, Pastor. Sunday: Mass 10 a.m. All Souls’ Day Mass will be celebrated on Wednesday, Nov. 2, 10 a.m. in our Memorial Garden. Wednesday: Low Mass & Holy Unction 10 a.m. First Wednesday of the month: Benediction & Chaplet of Divine Mercy 5:30 p.m. followed by potluck supper. High Holy Days: Mass 10 a.m. Christians Together A Community Christian Church meeting on Sundays at 10:30 a.m. at Majestic Rim Retirement Center, 310 E. Tyler Parkway. For more information, call 928-474-0160. Christopher Creek Bible Fellowship-I.F.C.A. 1036 E. Christopher Creek Loop, 478-4857, www.christophercreekchapel.org, first driveway past fire station on left. 10:30 a.m. Worship Service and Children’s Sunday School (nursery provided). Tues. & Thurs. Bible Studies. Please join us on Sunday, October 16th for a potluck following the Worship Service to welcome our new Pastor Jeremy Jessup and family.
2059 office, 474-0624 fax, E-mail: cpcgen@yahoo.com, Website: cpcpayson.org. Crossroads Foursquare Church We invite you to join us Sunday mornings, 10 a.m. Find us at www. crossroads4square.com, on Facebook or at 114 E. Cedar Lane, Payson. Expedition Church 301 S. Colcord Road (two blocks west of Hwy. 87, just north of Bonita). Expedition is a non-denominational church whose mission is to “make disciples who love God and people.” Sunday services are at 9 a.m. and 10:45 a.m. For more information, go to www.expedition. church, Facebook at ExpeditionChurchPayson, or call (928) 4749128. We look forward to having you join us on our journey! First Baptist Church of Pine 4039 N. Highway 87, 476-3552, Website: www.fbcpine.com. Sundays: Sunday School 9:15 a.m., Morning Worship Service 10:30 a.m., Evening Fellowship 6 p.m. Communion service the first Sunday during Morning Worship. Men’s Fellowship Breakfast 8 a.m. first Saturday of each month. Women’s Bible Study 9:15 Tuesday mornings. AWANA program on Mondays as follows: Sparks for K-2nd 2:30-4 p.m.; TNT, Trek and Journey 6-8 p.m. All other activities, please contact the church office Wednesday 10 a.m. to noon or Friday 9 a.m. to noon.
Church of Christ in Payson 401 E. Tyler Parkway, (928) 474-5149. Sunday: Bible Class 9:30 a.m., Morning Worship 10:30 a.m., Singing Practice 5:30 p.m., Evening Worship 6 p.m. Tuesday: Ladies Bible Class 10 a.m. Wednesday: Bible Class 6:30 p.m. www.paysonchurchofchrist.com Church on Randall Place, SBC (in Pine) Pastor John Lake. All are welcome! 6338 W. Randall Place (turn west on Randall Place road near the Thrift Store) Sunday Morning Prayer: 8 a.m. to 8:30 a.m., Sunday Adult Bible Enrichment 8:45 a.m. to 9:40 a.m., Sunday Worship Celebration: 10 a.m. Sunday Communion 2nd Sunday of the month. Sunday Fellowship Meal every 3rd Sunday of the month. Women of CORP Ministries and Bible studies lead by Simone Lake. Other various Connection Groups available throughout week. For more information, contact: 1-928-476-4249 (ch), 1-928472-6439 (pastor’s hm) 1-928-970-4249 (pastor’s cell), Email: pinerandallchurch@hotmail.com Website: http://churchonrandallplace. org Online Sermons: www.sermon.net/CORP Community Christian Church An independent, undenominational fellowship. Meets every Sunday at 10:30 a.m. in the chapel at Majestic Rim Retirement Living, 310 E. Tyler Parkway. Open Communion served every Sunday. Community Presbyterian Church 800 W. Main Street, Rev. Charles Proudfoot, Pastor. Sundays: SON Risers Adult Bible Class at 8:30 a.m.; Hymn Sing at 10:15 a.m. followed by Morning Worship at 10:30 a.m. The sermon Sunday, October 30 is “Reformation & Being Reformed,” Rev. Charles Proudfoot preaching. Bible Study Bible Time and nursery care for children provided. Office hours are weekdays 9 a.m. to noon; 474-
Ponderosa Bible Church of Payson 1800 N. Beeline Hwy. Dr. Joe Falkner - Sr. Pastor: Traditional Worship Service 9am, Contemporary Worship Service 10:45am. Nursery, Children, Youth and Adult Bible Studies during both services. Wednesday evening fellowship & Bible study for all ages! For more details and information on other weekly events check out our website at www. pbcpayson.org or call the church office at 928-474-9279. Restoration Church 1100 W. Lake Drive. Introducing people to the life changing power of Jesus. Join us Sunday at 10:30 am for our Sunday morning worship experience. Check us out online at www.restorationpayson.com for more info. Rock of Ages Evangelical Lutheran Church (WELS) At Rock of Ages you will find a worship service designed to praise God and enrich faith. Our purpose is to serve all people in God’s world with the Gospel of Jesus Christ on the basis of the Holy Bible. We are a friendly, family oriented church. All are welcome! Rock of Ages Lutheran Church is located at 204 W. Airport Road (corner of Airport Rd and North McLane). Pastor David Sweet, (928) 970-7606 or (928) 474-2098. Sunday Worship Service is at 9 a.m.; Sunday School and Adult Bible Class at 10:15 a.m.; Holy communion is celebrated at the 2nd and 4th Sunday of the month. Adult Bible class is held on Tuesdays at 1 p.m., Thursdays at 9 a.m. and Saturdays at 9 a.m. Shepherd of the Pines Lutheran Church (LC-MS) 507 W. Wade Lane, 928-474-5440, Pastor Steve De Santo. Sunday: Adult Bible Study 8:30 a.m., Sunday School 8:30 a.m., Worship Service 10 a.m. Holy Communion is celebrated on the 2nd and 4th Sunday of the month.
Church For the Nations Payson Sunday Experience at 901 S. Westerly Rd @ 10 a.m. Contact us at 928-444-8791 or email us at info@cftnpayson.com for more detailed information on mid-week connection events and community outreach. Visit us on our website at cftnpayson.com and like us on Facebook. WE ARE BETTER TOGETHER! Church of Christ 306 E. Aero. Sunday Bible classes 10 a.m., Worship 11 a.m. For Bible studies any day of the week, call Bob Nichols, 468-0134. By understanding and living the principles taught in the New Testament, we attempt to accomplish the spiritual mission of the church, rather than being a social or recreational institution.
more information on our choir and handbell programs and ministries and mission to the community, visit our website: paysonumc.com or call 928-474-0485, M-F, 8 a.m. - 12 noon.
Mount Cross Lutheran Church (ELCA) 601 E. Highway 260, 474-2552. Rev. Scott Stein, Pastor. Sunday Worship Schedule: 8:30 a.m. Traditional Service; 10:30 a.m. Praise Service. Holy Communion is celebrated every week. Visit our website at www.mountcross.org. Church office hours: Monday-Friday 8:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Mount Cross is a warm, loving church community that extends itself to others and welcomes everyone with joy. Mountain Bible Church Please be our guest this weekend, 8:45 a.m. and 10:30 a.m. at 302 E. Rancho Road where our goal is to ‘Love God and Love People!’ We have many adult, children and student ministries on Sundays and during the week. Our Spanish Church called “La Roca” meets Sundays at 12:30 p.m. Want more information? (928) 472-7800 or www. mountainbible.org New Life Foundation Hwy. 87 (next to Windmill Corner Inn), Strawberry, 476-3224. Services: Wednesday, 7 p.m.; Saturday & Sunday, 9 a.m. Payson Family Church 501 E. Rancho Rd. 474-3138. We are a new, non-denominational Christian church that ministers to the entire family. Our vision is to reach this community with God’s love and Word and see lives transformed for His glory. We are mission minded and believe in showing people Jesus, not just talking about Him. Join us Sunday mornings at 10:45 for contemporary worship and teaching of God’s Word. We also offer various other ministry meetings throughout the week for junior high, high school, and college-aged students. Visit our website @ paysonfamilychurch.org. Or our Facebook page for more information. Payson United Methodist Church 414 N. Easy Street (between Zurich St. and Malibu St. behind ACE Hardware); Pastor Carl Peterson. Services: 8:30 a.m. Informal; 11:00 a.m. Traditional. Safe nursery care provided. We are a growing, multi-generational faith community where our hearts, minds, and doors are open to all people. Our mission is to Love Like Jesus. For
St. Paul’s Episcopal Church WE Welcome Everyone. 1000 N. Easy St. (Corner of Sherwood & Easy St.). 928-474-3834. The Rev. Daniel F. Tantimonaco, Rector. Sunday: Holy Eucharist Services are at 8 a.m. and 10 a.m. The 10 a.m. service includes traditional and contemporary music. Child care is provided. Wednesday: Service of Healing & Holy Eucharist at 9 a.m. Visit our Website: www.stpaulspayson.org. Email: stpaulspayson@gmail.com. WE Welcome Everyone. Seventh-day Adventist Church 700 E. Wade Lane, Payson; Pastor Steven Salsberry; Elder Sharon Judd. Saturday services: Sabbath School/Bible Study 9:30a.m.; Worship Hour 11 a.m. We welcome all visitors. Come and join us for uplifting fellowship. Call 928-474-9209 for Prayer Meeting times and location, and for coming local events, or visit our website: http:// payson.adventistfaith.org. Tonto Village Chapel We are a Bible based church, in the cool pines of Tonto Village, just a short 17 miles East of Payson, AZ, in the Mogollon Rim area. We invite you & your family to join us for Worship, Bible Study & Fellowship on Sunday & Monday. We offer Sunday Worship Service at 9:30 am, followed by Adult & Child Sunday School/Bible Study at 11 am. We also offer a Monday Evening Adult Bible Study at 5:30 pm (Currently studying the Book of Job) & a Women’s Bible Study Thursday Mornings at 10 am (Currently studying Understanding Purpose by Women of Faith). Lead Pastor Mark Pratt 711 W. Haught Ave, Tonto Village, AZ 85541. Website: www.tontovillagechapel.com Call us @ 928-478-5076 or Email us @ tontovillagechapel@gmail.com. Highway 260 East to the Control Road/Tonto Village turn off, then 1 mile in to Tonto Village Chapel. Hope to see you there! Unity Church of Payson Join us on a positive path for Spiritual Living. We sing, laugh, love, pray, and support each other and our Payson community. Our October 30 service topic is The Wisdom of Gratitude. Service is at 10 a.m. Sundays at 600 State Highway 260, #14 (Board of Realtors Conference Room, back of Tiny’s parking lot). For more, go to www.unityofpayson. org (See ‘What’s Happening’ tab for upcoming events) or call 928478-8515.
PAYSON ROUNDUP
communityalmanac
10
Help with Medicare Open Enrollment
amazing value of 6 for $1. This is an opportunity to stock up on books by your favorite authors for those cold winter days to come. Another special this month is a free cookbook with any purchase. This is a good time of year to discover some new recipes. Bookstore stock is constantly changing, so stop by often. All proceeds directly support the library. The LFOP Bookstore is located to the right of the circulation desk just inside the Payson Public Library, 328 N. McLane Road. For more information visit our website at www.libraryfriendsofpayson.org.
community blood drive is monday
Fall Open Enrollment in Medicare is now through Dec. 7, 2016. It’s the time of year when people with Medicare can make unrestricted changes to their coverage options. They can make as many changes as they need, and the last change they make on or before Dec. 7, 2016 will take effect on Jan. 1, 2017. To assist in the Open Enrollment process representatives from the PinalGila Council for Senior Citizens will be visiting northern Gila County in mid-November. Representatives will be in Pine at the Isabelle Hunt Memorial Library from 11 a.m. to 2:30 p.m., Friday, Oct. 28. Representatives will also be at the Payson Senior Center from 10 a.m. to 3:30 p.m., Thursday, Nov. 10.
Community Health and Care Fair is Nov. 5
Don’t miss the annual Community Health and Care Fair to be held from 8 a.m. to 12 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 5 at Julia Randall Elementary School cafeteria/ gym.
Take pride, clean outside
The Town of Payson is encouraging residents to get outside at 10:28 a.m., Friday, Oct. 28 and for 15 minutes clean up the community — whether at home, at work, at school or wherever you may be. If you plan to “Join the fight against litter and blight” email jlarson@ paysonaz.gov.
Treasures and Trinkets ribbon-cutting
There will be a ribbon-cutting ceremony for the relaunch of the Treasures and Trinkets Senior Thrift Store on Main Street at noon, Friday, Oct. 28. Activities celebrating the event are planned from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Food distribution
Go to the Payson First Church of the Nazarene, 200 E. Tyler Parkway between 3 p.m. and 6 p.m., Friday, Oct. 28 and get a $10 ticket for a basket of food. The food is distributed Saturday, Oct. 29 at the church, with the time for pick up on the ticket. For more information, call 928-474-5890.
Dia de los Muertos Art Show opens Oct. 28
Down the Street Art Gallery, 703 W. Main St., will have an opening reception for its Dia de los Muertos Art Show from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m., Friday, Oct. 28. Dia de los Muertos is the remembering and celebrating of loved ones who are no longer with us. The participating artists have created some very artistic and interesting works in many different mediums. For details, call 928-468-6129.
Angel Project fundraiser
The Mount Cross Lutheran Church hosts the Angel Project, to collect toys and blankets for the needy, at its event center (Building B), 601 E. Hwy. 260, Payson, from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m., Saturday, Oct. 29; Saturday, Nov. 12; and Saturday, Dec. 3. There will be auction baskets; sports home décor; beauty products; movies; candles; table games and kids toys; holiday décor; plus lots of holiday treats to enjoy: popcorn, cupcakes, popcorn balls, cakes and chocolate treats. Call 480-322-2743 for more information.
Holiday bazaar at St. Philip’s Church
Metro Creative Services photo
A Payson Community Blood Drive, sponsored by Community Radio 96.3 KRIM-FM is from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., Monday, Oct. 31 at the Shepherd of the Pines Lutheran Church, 507 W. Wade Lane. Make an appointment or get more information from Pat or Jon at 928-951-0863 or go online to www.Bloodhero.com (sponsor code: payson).
Free dance lessons Free Country Western dance lessons are offered from 5 p.m. to 6:30 p.m., Saturday, Oct. 29 at the OxBow Saloon with Lynn and John Pajerski. Learn the Arizona 2-step, country waltz, shuffles and line dances. Lessons are free, but the instructors request that participants bring a canned food or non-perishable item to donate to the Deacon’s Pantry Food Bank. For details, call 480-734-1647.
BBBS benefit A benefit dinner for Big Brothers/ Big Sisters in Payson is planned from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m., Saturday, Oct. 29 at the Sy Harrison Masonic Lodge, 200 E. Rancho Road. A chicken dinner prepared by Chef Duane Ridl will be provided, with music by Cinnamon Twist. Reservations and tickets can be obtained by calling the Sy Harrison Masonic Lodge, 928-474-1305 and leaving a message with your name and contact number. Ticket prices are $10 per plate. Join the Masons and help support the good works of Big Brothers/Big Sisters of Payson. All proceeds go to Big Brothers/Big Sisters and remain in Payson.
Jazz All Stars perform The next Jazz All Stars program is at 2 p.m., Sunday, Oct. 30 at the Community Presbyterian Church, 800 W. Main St. Performing will be Ioannis Goudelis, Devon Bridgewater, Dave Ihlenfeld, Ted Sistrunk and Gerry Reynolds Goudelis performs on the piano, accordion; Bridgewater performs on the
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• Take Pride, Clean Outside: 10:28 a.m., go outside and clean up for 15 minutes • Trinkets & Treasures ribbon-cutting: 11 a.m. to 1 p.m., 512 W. Main St. • American Legion Fish Fry: Noon-8 p.m., American Legion • Medicare Open Enrollment help: 11 a.m. to 2:30 p.m., Pine Library • Get ticket for Food Distribution: 3 p.m. to 6 p.m., 200 E. Tyler Parkway • Dia de los Muertos Art Show: 5 p.m. to 8 p.m., 703 W. Main St.
flugelhorn, trumpet and violin; Ihlenfeld performs on the tuba; Sistrunk is on bass; and Reynolds is on drums. A suggested donation of $5 is requested for the performance to help defray costs.
Food drive ends Oct. 31 The Central Arizona Board of Realtors annual Food Drive, benefiting the Payson Food Bank and Pine/ Strawberry Food Bank, continues through the end of October. Drop non-perishable food donations or checks payable to the Food Bank at any real estate office in the area or at the CABR office, 600 E. Hwy. 260, Suite 12, Payson.
Win a side of beef The Gila County Republican Party’s last fundraiser of the season features a side of beef. The raffle prize is approximately 300 pounds of northeast Arizona-raised beef and will be cut to the order of the winner. The cost: one ticket, $20; three for $50. Tickets are available at the Republican Club Headquarters, 307 S. Beeline, Suite C (behind Buffalo Bar and Grill) or call Gary 928-478-8186 or Shirley 928-951-6774. Drawing is Monday, Oct. 31 at the Rim Country Republican Club meeting.
Harvest Block Party Mountain Bible Church, 302 E. Rancho Rd., will have the Harvest Block Party on Oct. 31 from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. There will be free dinner, free candy and free games. There will be 24 games along with a maze the kids
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Friday
Friday, Oct. 28, 2016
• Rim Country Museum: 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., 700 Green Valley Pkwy. • Pine/Strawberry Museum: 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., Pine Community Center • Angel Project Toy & Blanket Drive: 1 p.m. to 5 p.m., Mount Cross Lutheran Church • Free Country Western Dance Lessons: 5 to 6:30 p.m., OxBow Saloon • Big Brothers Big Sisters Benefit: 6 p.m. to 8 p.m., Masonic Lodge, 200 E. Rancho Rd.
love! Dress up, bring your family and friends to a safe, fun-filled night! Enjoy our cake walk, maze, dunk tank and many other games!
Elks events
Applications for the Elks’ New Year’s Eve SUPERSTARS! Duets are now available at the Lodge, 1206 N. Beeline Hwy. Duets can consist of any combination. All singers are invited to apply. Applications must be returned to the Lodge by Wednesday, Nov. 2. The Lodge’s Free Throw Hoop Shoot event, for boys and girls ages 8 to 13, is Saturday, Nov. 5 at the Tonto Apache Gym. Registration is at noon and contest begins at 1 p.m. Call Lee Schwein for details at 928-978-2311. Also available at the Elks Lodge are tickets for its Veterans Day Dinner and Ceremony. The dinner is free for all veterans and only $8 per plate for non-veterans. A complete baked chicken dinner will be served. A maximum of 150 tickets are available, so get tickets early. Everyone must have a ticket, including all veterans. For details, call the Lodge at 928-474-2572.
Library bookstore specials
During November, the Library Friends of Payson Bookstore will feature Christmas fiction, cookbooks, craft books, etc. at two for the price of one. As always, the second item must be of equal or lesser value than the first item. Bookstore gift certificates are $3 and make perfect gifts for those hard to shop for people. Stop by and discover the Bookstore’s holiday treasures. The Bookstore will also be offering all regular size paperbacks at the
Merry Mall is Nov. 5
The annual Merry Mall features Christmas arts and crafts, lots of yummy baked goods, and a baked potato and pie bar Saturday, Nov. 5, from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Payson United Methodist Church, 414 N. Easy St. Proceeds are for United Methodist Women’s worldwide mission projects.
U.S. Marine Corps anniversary celebration
Rim Country patriots and visitors will celebrate the 241st anniversary of the U.S. Marine Corps Saturday, Nov. 5 at the Mazatzal Hotel & Casino. The evening’s featured guest will be retired USMC Sergeant John Naughton, former publisher of the Payson Roundup. The social hour is from 5 p.m. to 6 p.m.; dinner from 6 p.m. to 7 p.m.; program from 7 p.m. to 8 p.m., which will be followed by the traditional cake-cutting ceremony. For more information and to make reservations, call 928-468-1095.
LOTTERIES Powerball (Oct. 26) 2 3 16 48 56 (24) Mega Millions (Oct. 25) 8 9 24 49 67 (13) The Pick (Oct. 26) 1 5 10 20 21 26 Fantasy 5 (Oct. 26) 4 9 16 27 39 Pick 3 (Oct. 26) 288 5 Card Cash (Oct. 26) 2H 4S 10C 5D 5C
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• Rim Country Museum: 1 p.m. to 4 p.m., 700 Green Valley Pkwy. • Bingo: 1 p.m., Elks Lodge, open to the public • Jazz All Stars perform: 2 p.m., 800 W. Main St.
• HALLOWEEN: See page 6 for a schedule of Halloween events • Payson Public Library: 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. • Rim Country Museum: 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., 700 Green Valley Pkwy. • Pine/Strawberry Museum: 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., Pine Community Center • Harvest Block Party: 5 p.m. to 8 p.m., Mountain Bible Church
• Payson Public Library: 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. • Pine Library: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
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A holiday craft bazaar is planned from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., Saturday, Nov. 5 at St. Philip the Apostle Catholic Church. In addition to beautiful handmade items there will also be delicious baked goods for sale and a raffle.
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NEWSPAPER CARRIERS WANTED
About half of the 63 Rim Country Middle School students who scored as “highly performing” on the AzMERIT test showed up at the board meeting to pick up their certificates — and see their names on a permanent plaque which will hang in the board room.
The Payson Roundup is seeking independent contractors to deliver newspapers on Tuesdays and Fridays in the EARLY MORNING HOURS.
RCMS honors top scoring students by
Peter Aleshire
roundup editor
The Payson School Board celebrated the 63 “highly performing” Rim Country Middle School students, based on scores on the tough AzMERIT test. About half of the students showed up at the Monday board meeting to get certificates and pose in front of a plaque engraved with all of the students who scored as “highly proficient” on the nationally-normed achievement test. “Today we celebrate hard work, self-discipline and the outcomes that are produced from this kind of dedication,” said Director of Student Achievement Brenda Case. “But it is rarely a solitary process. It requires a great deal of outside support from parents, family members and teachers who have guided them along the way.” The delighted parents and little brothers and sisters filled the boardroom to overflowing, many sitting on the floor. Proud parents crowded forward to take pictures of the beaming bunch of scholars — many of whom rated as “highly proficient” on both math and language arts tests. Statewide at most grade levels, only a relative handful of students ranked as “highly proficient.” A much larger number fell far below the standards, based on national tests originally dubbed “Common Core,” but in Arizona tweaked to become the AzMERIT test. Payson students generally did a little bit better than the state average in the primary school grades, fell to near or a bit below the state average in middle school, then generally fell to below the state average in high school. But the top performing students on Monday from the middle school grinned, got red-faced, posed for parents and basked in their moment of fame, having one and all blasted past the grade-by-grade standards. Because Arizona has now adopted the national standards, the parents and students know they can match what they know against the top students anywhere in the country. “Today we’re celebrating amazing kids — and amazing teachers that guide amazing kids. And amazing parents who guide amazing teachers who guide amazing kids,” gushed Case.
ATTORNEY
Rim Country Middle School ‘Highly Performing’ Students English Katelynd Fabian Cole Goldman Stone Best Kylan Kirschbaum Abby Cleary Derek Griffith Matthew Choate Kortney Wilcox Lydia Schouten Jordan Houser Matthew McMinimy Corrine Creasy Ethan Meredith Alyssa Boerst Zachary Choate Justin Keegan Barbara MacFarlane McKennah Kirschbaum Sadie Hazelo Ellison Hubbard Brandon McEntire Math Andrew Williams Kourtney Rose Emmy Whaley Caitlin Harold Dayton Morris Vianney Marquez-Rey Mike Dominguez Ethan Payne
Mariah Hintze Katelynd Fabian Joshua Michels Mason Dick Blake Hathcock Kayde Johnson Rohan Smith Trayden Rolan Cole Goldman Shaylie LeBlanc Emmy White Kylan Kirschbaum Krystal Nash Claire Hancock Derek Griffith Larry Griffith Matthew Choate Damian Goode Hayze Chilson Lydia Schouten Colton Justice Ethan Meredith Jozeph Al-Tamimi Chloe Sumegi Zachary Choate Zacary Taylor Brandon McEntire Yamileth Avalos Dylan Michels John Becker B.J. Paulson Teryn Fabian Alyssa Boerst Ellison Hubbard
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Howl-O-Ween Pet Costume Contest is Saturday by
Chandra Cushman
humane society of central arizona
Join the Humane Society of Central Arizona from noon to 2 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 29 at Christopher Creek Lodge for the 1st Annual HowlO-Ween Pet Costume Contest! There will be fun, snacks, a cute competition and great prizes in four categories. We’ll bring also some of our adoptable dogs. Entry fee is $10 and all proceeds will benefit the HSCAZ. You can submit an online entry request to sbonefield@gracehospitality.com. Christopher Creek Lodge is just 20 miles east of Payson on Highway 260. Halloween safety tips for pets I can’t believe Halloween is already here! It seems like just last week summer was in full effect and autumn was just a glimmer in the distance. Despite how time flies, I am prepared for the holiday. My house is decorated with spooky ghosts and goblins and the kids have their costumes picked out and ready to go. Of course, Halloween wouldn’t be in full effect without a
vomiting, nausea, decreased friendly reminder of some of the risks and dangers to appetite or abdominal pain. Humane Society be aware of as a pet parent. Glow sticks and jewof Central So while the kids and I elry. Pets love to chew on Arizona are out collecting candy things they’re not supposed (and being safe, of ADOPTION to, and cats in particular course) we hope you OPTIONS seem to love these items. enjoy yourselves as Over the past year, 70 perwell and that your pets cent of Pet Poison Hotline’s stay safe and healthy. calls relating to glow sticks and jewChocolate. It is more poi- elry involved cats. In addition to the sonous to pets than any choking hazard, the contents of glow other candy. Chocolate sticks can cause pain and irritation in contains chemicals sim- the mouth. Keep an eye out for mouth ilar to caffeine that pain, as well as profuse drooling and can quickly sicken foaming at the mouth. dogs. In general, Costumes. Though you may love the darker the choco- the costume, does your pet? Some late, the more poisonous costumes can cause discomfort, so if it is. Symptoms in pets you dress your pets in costumes, make that have ingested choc- sure it doesn’t impair their vision, olate include vomiting, diar- movement, or air intake. rhea, lethargy or agitation, While opening the door for increased thirst, an elevated guests, be sure that your dog or cat heart rate, and, in severe doesn’t dart outside. Always make cases, seizures. sure your pet it wearing proper identiCandy and candy wrap- fication — if for any reason he or she pers. Candy itself is not the only threat. does escape, a collar with ID tags and/ Pets that have ingested candy and/ or a microchip can be a lifesaver for a or candy wrappers may show signs lost pet. such as decreased appetite, vomiting, diarrhea, lethargy or abdominal pain. In The Dog House postponed Raisins. While good-intentioned HSCAZ has postponed our “In The neighbors may hand out raisins as Dog House” event. We will reschedule a healthy alternative to candy, very small amounts of raisins (or grapes) as soon as possible. Sorry for any can cause kidney failure in dogs and inconvenience. cats and ingesting any amount can Adopt-Ober Fest cause serious damage. Pets that have ingested raisins may show signs like Don’t forget to come down during
Sheena
Star
adopt a shelter dog month to take advantage of our “Adopt-Ober Fest” adoption special. Adoption fees are at an all-time low, and you can even win some free prizes! To view all of our adoptable animals, please visit us Monday through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at 605 W. Wilson Ct. Our number is 928-4745590, or visit us on the web at www. humanesocietycentralaz.org. Don’t forget to like us on Facebook too!
off balance but making progress day by day, so please be patient. I love smacking things with my paws so keep yourself on the lookout if you come close while playing. I like to get down and can be a dirty player; which involves nibbling on my opponent. STAR: I’m an athletic girl who enjoys a nice long walk or a brisk morning jog. I wouldn’t protest the occasional hike. Let’s go sight-seeing together and we can knock some of those items off of your bucket list. I can be a bit much for other dogs since my personality is fairly strong. That’s okay though because I’m looking for some human companions at the moment. Let’s get those walking shoes on and start bonding, or how about tossing around some balls in the yard. Even a good game of Frisbee sounds appealing.
Featured pets SHEENA: Watch out world, I’m coming up! Have you ever seen such determination from a kitty before? I won’t let my missing limb slow me down! Even though I’ve been learning how to walk again, I make it look like a walk in the park. I’ve been bouncing around, wrestling my stuffed animals and making a comeback like most have never seen before. I’m still
ORGANIZATIONS HAM radio club
Amateur Radio Operators (HAMS) and any who are interested in becoming a HAM operator are encouraged to join Tonto Amateur Radio Association (TARA). There is a meeting the last Saturday of each month for a breakfast and socialization. Club members participate in community projects and are known for providing emergency communications during natural disasters. Please see the website for more information: www. TontoRadio.org.
Payson Fly Casters and TU meeting
“Going Buggy for Trout” is the theme of the Oct. 29 Trout Unlimited and Payson Fly Casters meeting at Tiny’s Restaurant. The meeting begins at 9 a.m. A new movie filmed on Tonto and Christopher Creeks explains how to match the bugs and other insects found in the streams with the right artificial flies to catch more fish. The program begins at 9 a.m., but come before that to enjoy some fish stories and a great breakfast. For more information, go to www.paysonflycasters.org or call Ric Hinkie at 928-848-4501.
Alcoholics Anonymous
Alcoholics Anonymous is a fellowship of men and women who share their experience, strength, and hope with each other to help others recover from alcoholism. For more information on local meetings, call (928) 474-3620.
Alanon
Alanon meets: Monday at 6 p.m., St. Philip the Apostle Catholic Church, Payson; Wednesday at 1 p.m.,
Southern Baptist Church, Star Valley; Saturday at 1 p.m., starting Oct. 15, Payson United Methodist Church, 414 N. Easy, Payson. For information call Kali at 503-354-4402. Alateen meetings have been suspended until further notice. For information call Helen at (928) 978-6424.
new elks lodge members
The Alzheimer’s Caregivers Support Group invites caregivers, families, service providers and members of the community to attend the next meeting from 1:30 p.m. to 3 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 2 at the Senior Center, 514 W. Main St. For more details, call Mary, (928) 474-3560.
Republicans host Barton
The Rim Country Republican Club will meet Monday, Oct. 31 at Tiny’s Family Restaurant, 600 E. Hwy. 260, Payson. Members and guests may gather at 11 a.m. to order lunch and to socialize. Beginning at 11:30 a.m., the speaker will be incumbent Arizona State Representative, Brenda Barton. Everyone is welcome to attend. Call Nancy Cox at 928472-1172 for more information.
Overeaters Anonymous
Overeaters Anonymous meets from 2 p.m. Mondays at Shepherd of the Pines Lutheran Church, 507 W. Wade Lane, Payson. There are no fees or dues. The only membership requirement is a desire to not compulsively overeat anymore. Call the following members for more information: Denise, (928) 978-3706; Mary Jo, (928) 978-4663; Ted, (928-) 951-3362; Alice at (602) 828-0917 or (928) 478-4361.
Celebrate Recovery
Celebrate Recovery is a group for those with hurts, habits and hang-ups. Celebrate God’s healing power through eight recovery principles and Christ-centered 12 steps. Meetings are held at 6:30 p.m. Mondays at Mountain Bible Church. For more information, call (928) 472-7800.
Alzheimer’s caregivers support group
PAWS meets
Contributed photo
The Payson Elks Lodge recently welcomed new members (l-r) Kelly Oxborrow, ER Terry and Jewell Hill.
TOPS in Pine
The TOPS 412 (Take off Pounds Sensibly) Pine group meets Tuesdays at the LDS chapel in Pine. Weigh-in is at 8 a.m., the meeting starts at 8:15 a.m. For more information, call Barbara at (928) 978-4750 or Charlotte at (928) 978-3640.
Veterans of Foreign Wars meet Nov. 1 The Veterans of Foreign Wars of the United States of America will meet at 5 p.m. on the first Tuesday of each month at the Elks Lodge, 1206 N. Beeline Hwy., Payson. All members are invited to attend. For more information, contact Post 9829 Commander Ken Dale, 928-363-1037.
Women of the Moose
The Women of the Moose meet at 6 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 1 The Moose Lodge is located on E. Hwy. 260 in Star Valley. For more information, call (928) 4746212.
Bridge results
Ladies Tuesday Bridge winners for Oct. 25 were: Kay Hutchinson, first; Connie Gyde, second; Flo Moeur, third. We meet every Tuesday at the Senior Citizen’s Center, 514 W. Main St., at 12:30 p.m. Come join us! For information and reservations, call Mary Kemp, 928-468-1418.
Card players wanted
The Saving Graces of Payson — a Canasta card-playing group — is looking for a few ladies who enjoy fun, laughter and friendship. This Red Hat group meets at 10 a.m. the first Wednesday of every month at the Crosswinds Restaurant patio room. There is a break for lunch around noon and play and resumes after lunch. Anyone interested in joining will be welcomed. You do not need to know how to play, the members will be happy to teach the game. Please contact Queen Mum Ann-Marie at (928) 468-8585; please leave a message.
The Payson Area Woofers Society (PAWS) meets at 6 p.m., Wednesday, Nov. 2 in the conference room at the Payson Public Library. Dr. Tim Patterson, holistic veterinarian, will be the evening’s speaker. It will be an open forum, so bring questions. Everyone is invited. Complimentary light refreshments will be served. If you have any questions, please call Dorothy Howell, 928-472-7396.
Rim Country Classic Auto Club
The Rim Country Classic Auto Club (RCCAC) holds its monthly meetings at 6:30 p.m. on the first Wednesday of each month at Tiny’s Family Restaurant, 600 E. Highway 260 in Payson. For information, call Steve Fowler at (928) 478-6676.
Arizona Cactus Navy luncheon
An informal get-together of Navy and Coast Guard veterans and Merchant Marines in the Payson area is held on the first Thursday of each month at La Sierra restaurant on north AZ 87 at Forest Dr. in Payson. The group meets for coffee or lunch at 11 a.m. to share stories and camaraderie among fellow vets of World War II, Korea,
Vietnam, other conflicts, and peacetime naval service. For questions, call (928) 970-0066.
Genealogy meeting
The Northern Gila County Genealogical Society will have a monthly membership meeting Thursday, Nov. 3 at 1:30 p.m. Visitors are welcome and encouraged to attend. We vote on the slate of officers for 2017 at this meeting, and the head librarian will give a progress report on the library collection. The library is now open three days a week, 9 a.m. until 3 p.m., Thursday, Friday, and 10 a.m. until 2 p.m. on Saturday. Coffee, lemonade, and doughnuts will be served. The Society is located at 302 E. Bonita St. in Payson.
High Country Garden Club meets Nov. 3
The High Country Garden Club meets at 6:30 p.m., Thursday, Nov. 3 in the log cabin building of Mount Cross Lutheran Church, 601 E. Hwy. 260, Payson. The speaker will be Brian Stultz of the Arizona Wilderness Coalition. The Coalition works to protect and restore Arizona wilderness through a collaboration with volunteers. He will show how people can get involved in volunteer wilderness stewardship activities including trail restoration, trail sign installation, trash clean-up, and more. Stultz will have a Power Point presentation and then answer any questions. A short business meeting will follow the presentation and refreshments will be served. All members and guests are encouraged to attend and please remember to bring non-perishable food items for the local food banks. For more information, contact Sallie at 928-468-6102.
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Payson Roundup LOCAL Friday, October 28, 2016
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aroundthe rim Creekers enjoying all types of outdoor activities Christopher Creek is fully into tainer. On Saturday, Nov. 5 a pickup firepits, football and fall foliage. As service will be offered if you call one we near another flip of the page on of the officers. the calendar, the beautiful weather In order to defray the $150 cost has lent itself well for all outdoor for the container, a quarter-a-bag activity. A ride or a hike up See charge is required. You may make Canyon on FR284 is quite spectacu- your donation to any officer or one of lar with its palette of autumn colors. the attendants. Outside flat screens, campfires And, of course, there is a call for and refreshments make for some volunteers with trucks and trailers enjoyable evenings for football and to meet at the Landmark on Nov. 5 World Series baseball devotees. at 9 a.m. Recently, it seems, that can be every New officers are Pam Voita at 602night of the week. 550-7223, Rosemary Elston Halloween decorations another week at 602-284-5284 and Karen are seen around town, ready in the creek Thornton at 928-478-4133. for this weekend’s events. We tried to capture Locals know about the kid’s Gary’s email message here party at 3 p.m. on Saturday. without his weak attempt Later that evening the at humorous political innuadults take over the show endo and his unabashed at the Landmark. Creekers support of one of the state always seem to get into the universities other than NAU costume thing. You won’t and ASU. want to miss that show. Gabrielle Gray is Alex Rod Britain Monday’s brief shower and Irma Armenta’s grandgave us a mere fifteen-hundaughter and has been dredths on an inch — hardly enough around this summer working as a to settle the dust. Winter forecasts server at the Landmark. You know call for a warm and dry winter. her as Gabby. She is a licensed cosThat’s what we had last winter metologist and would like you to despite the much-hyped El Niño know she is now at Above & Beyond event. Maybe these forecasters will Aesthetics, a full service salon at 718 be wrong again this year. N. Beeline Highway in Payson. The Firebelles will have a panA reminder, there is to be a Paint cake breakfast Saturday morning Your Palette event with renown artfrom 8 a.m. until noon. All you can ist, Terri Glad Flores on the 12th of eat for a $5 donation. November up at Creekside. Sheila Gary Anderson tells us about the has the details. roll-off dumpster to be stationed at Sheila up at Creekside can’t seem the Landmark parking lot from Nov. to catch a break. After a long run of 3 through Nov. 10. The Christopher doctor and hospital visits this year, Creek Homeowners Association she was finally able to schedule sponsors this service each year in a short vacation to the coast with cooperation with Gila County. Wiley and the boys. On their way On Nov. 4, 5 and 6 there will assis- out of town they broke a tie-rod on tance on duty to help offload your their vehicle, delaying their trip by debris. All leaves and needles should 12 hours. Perhaps she should make be bagged and emptied into the con- one more doctor visit to check for
snakebite. Would it be safe to assume that most of you remember 45 rpm records? For any others, they were music storage discs made of vinyl to be played on a device called a record player. It was popular back in a time when there was music worthy of replaying. This week one such 45 came into my possession. It came from Cookie and Deanna. For those who don’t know, Deanna is the new admin assistant at the fire department. Back in the day, their parents, Blanche and Heber White, owned the old Landmark and had an antique device called a jukebox that played 45s. The girls had a collection of old 45s from that old jukebox. Searching through the box of old records they found three copies of a song recorded back in 1970. During the day of the memorial dedication, Cookie had mentioned remembering a song about the Labor Day flood. None of the folks involved in our group had any knowledge that there was such a song. Having dismissed any thoughts about ever getting a copy of the song, you can imagine my surprise when one arrived here in the Creek. The artist’s name is Jimmy Chappell and the title is “Norma’s Tropic Fury.” At this juncture we are looking for one of those antique record players just to be able to listen to the song. Soon we plan to get the recording transcribed to a modern electronic medium and post the song to social media. It makes one wonder if in that box of old 45s there might have been a copy of Bobby Vee’s “Take Good Care of My Baby” ... and that’s anothRod Britain photo er week in the Creek. See Canyon is quite spectacular this time of year with its palette of autumn colors.
Shelby School students collecting money for UNICEF Wow, what an exciting weekend Bill and I had. Our the children decided we needed village to be at our granddaughter’s wedding in Coronado, Calif. so it was arranged that we would stay at our daughter Vicki’s house, spend the night and then the next day, drive the rest of the way to Coronado. We had never gone over that bridge before Janet and it was a bit scary, but Snyder seeing those big ships was quite a sight. Our hotel room was a quaint 12 occupant hotel, very homey and comfortable and not too far away from our granddaughter’s wedding sight which was right on the beach. If anyone is familiar with the area, it was called “Dog Beach.” The wedding sight was very close to the water, and we had to struggle through about 100 yards of soft sand to get to the arch which had been set up by our new grandson’s parents. Kathy and Scott made up their own vows and against the setting sun, the sight was a memorable one. The reception was at an upscale Italian restaurant not too far away
from the beach. Again, the scenery was unforgettable, the restaurant was located on the bay, and the tall buildings were all lit up across the water and the sailboats were passing by as we were treated to canapes before the main meal. Bill and I were introduced to Scott’s parents and aunts and uncles as we were seated with many of the bridegroom’s relatives. The whole experience is an unforgettable one that Bill and I will remember for a long time. Shelby School This year, Shelby School students have been learning about global citizenship and the value of helping others. It follows naturally that the kids have become very excited about contributing to UNICEF (United Children’s Fund) this Halloween. Each classroom has a fundraising goal, and has been participating in an ongoing bake sale for UNICEF at lunchtime. Worldwide, many kids need medi-
thank you. Double D Doings
Contributed photo
Shelby School students will be collecting donations for Unicef on Halloween night.
cine, nutrition, clean water, emergency relief and education, and UNICEF works to give them healthier lives and brighter futures. For instance, $5 can provide children with 13 doses of measles vaccine, $15 can provide a child with clean, safe water for one year, and $50 can provide 35 malnourished children nutrition for one day! So, when Shelby students come trick-or-treating at your door this Monday night, they’ll be collecting donations in UNICEF boxes. Please consider giving some change, dollars or even a check made out to UNICEF. On behalf of our Shelby students,
It’s not too late to put a costume together for the Halloween party at the Double D on Saturday, Oct. 29. The fun will be if you can guess who is under the mask. If putting on a costume is not your thing, that’s OK, come and enjoy the music by Carl Anthony. He will be playing from 7:30 p.m. to 11:30 p.m. The kids will be doing their thing on Monday, gathering up all that candy, so why not enjoy your Halloween too. Ethel will also be supplying a few munchies to enjoy as you listen to the music. Anniversaries I don’t have any more birthdays listed for October, so I will mention the first week in November anniversaries. Friday, Nov. 4, Tonto Village I residents Curt and Kathy Arrants will celebrate their 44th wedding anniversary. On Saturday, Nov. 5, Ron and Lonie Smith of Ellison Creek Summer Homes will celebrate their 56th wedding anniversary. It’s a pleasure and a privilege to wish good friends all the
joy your hearts can hold. Happy anniversary to the Arrants and Smiths. Recipe Are you indulging in anything pumpkin these days? There is a recipe in the cookbook, “Fireflies Can Cook” that uses pumpkin. It is called: SPICY PUMPKIN BARS Submitted by Joan Phippeny of Payson
4 large eggs 1 3/4 cups sugar 1 cup of oil 1 (16 oz. can of solid pack pumpkin) 2 cups all purpose flour 2 teaspoons baking powder 1 teaspoon salt 2 teaspoons pumpkin pie spice 1 cup golden raisins Preheat oven to 350 degrees. In mixer, beat eggs until frothy, beat in sugar for 2 minutes. Beat in the oil and pumpkin. Sift dry ingredients over the raisins and fold dry mixture into the egg mixture. Do not overmix. Pour into a greased and floured 13x9 pan. Bake in oven for 35 to 40 minutes or until done. Cool on rack and cut into 24 squares. You may want to bake in a larger pan so bars are not so thick.
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Payson Roundup LOCAL Friday, October 28, 2016
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aroundthe rim Pine/Strawberry archery event impressive As a retired public school coach “We are very thankful to them for of 37 years and a Payson Roundup that,” Pederson told me several years and White Mountain Independent ago. In the school NASP-sanctioned sports reporter for close to 30 years, I’ve attended and participated in hun- class, the student-athletes are taught dreds, maybe thousands, of athletic archery history, safety, technique, equipment needs, mental concentraevents. Even with all that exposure, which tion, core strengthening physical fitincluded some high school state ness and self-improvement. championship games, I walked away Early on in the Buff program, the from the National Archery in Schools archers shot at 80 cm bull’s-eye targets (NASP) match held Saturday at Pine- placed before an arrow curtain in the Strawberry School genuinely PS gymnasium. Equipment impressed with the event. used continues to be stateThe tournament drew rattlin’ of-the art and designed to fit about 150 school-aged the rim every student. archers from around central Thanks to support from Arizona who were there to the archery industry, schools showcase their skills and, can purchase the $6,000 since the match was a state equipment “kits” for $3,100 qualifier, earn a berth in the to $3,500 depending upon NASP Arizona finals next which targets and bow hangspring. ing units are chosen. Many of the archers were Before jump-starting the accompanied to Pine by their Max Foster archery course at the Pine parents who brought along Strawberry School, Pederson pop-ups, coolers and lawn and Johnson underwent an chairs which they set up near the eight-hour National Archery in the archery range just west of the school. Schools Program Basic Archery A passerby might have mistakenly Instructor Training Program. thought a tailgating party rather than The local program has grown to an archery shoot was occurring. become one of the finest in Arizona Most impressive for this old football annually qualifying team members for coach was the atmosphere surround- state and national finals. ing the event — it was mostly positive In 2012, Skyler Cornelius, became and sportsmanship was at a premium. the program’s first state champion Parents cheered for all the archers, winning the title with a Herculean not just their own children, and were effort at Ben Avery Shooting Range silent and respectful during shooting near Phoenix. times. Since the team has continued to Also there was none of the arguing, churn out some of the state’s finest catcalling or booing that spoils some young archers. high school sporting events. The archery education program It was obviously early on that Pine was started in Kentucky in 2002 and Strawberry coaches Margaret Johnson has spread throughout the United and Dean Pederson had successfully States offering archery to fourthwaded through all the logistics need- through 12-grade students. ed to successfully set up two archery ranges, one a traditional bull’s-eye Eat, drink and be scary target and the other a 3-D shoot at wild An excellent way to get in the animal targets. Halloween spirit and support local stuHelping out was an Arizona Game dents is to attend the Pine-Strawberry and Fish Department representative Fall Festival to be held from 5 p.m. to 8 on site throughout the day helping with scoring and rules interpretation. p.m. today, Oct. 28, at the school. A dinner to be served between 5 AG&F is a sponsor of NASP. p.m. and 7 p.m. will include a hot dog Community members also pitched ($4), chili dog ($5) or bowl of chili ($5) in — Freddie Miranda spent most of the following day, Sunday, disassem- and include chips, cookie and a drink bling tents and canopies at the shoot (water, tea or lemonade). A costume contest will begin at 6 site and his wife worked the concesp.m. sion stand. Fun booths will include pie in the About 3 p.m. Saturday, after all the archers had taken their turns shooting face, haunted house, cake walk, buckon both ranges, an awards ceremony ing bronco, fish toss and pumpkin bowling. put a fitting end to the competition. Pre-sale of tickets began Oct. 19 As a former teacher, I know well the struggles educators face in improving and will continue today during school student behavior, attendance, atten- hours. Pre-sale tickets are three for $1. At the door, they are two for $1. tion and motivation. Pine-Strawberry teacher Angus Watching the matches on Saturday, it was obvious NASP is an excellent MacFarlane is sponsoring the event way to engage students in the educa- along with the eighth-grade students. Currently, sponsors are in need tion process. The Pine Strawberry NASP pro- of donations of candy and cupcakes. gram has its roots in 2011 when Donations can be dropped off at the then-principal Mike Clark and the school office until closing time today. school board agreed to a full scale For all you witches out there, broom program. parking at the festival is 5 cents.
Max Foster photo
A National Archery in Schools match was held Saturday at Pine-Strawberry School. Finally some good vibes
Fire reduction rescheduled
for more information.
With all the complaining, blaming and negativity we are hearing from one of the presidential candidates and some of his supporters, it was refreshing to read Payson School District Superintendent’s Greg Wyman’s guest comment that appeared in the Oct. 21 Payson Roundup. Titled “Congratulations on a job well done,” Wyman praised the students who put on last Friday’s weeklong homecoming ceremonies writing, “Your efforts help to remind our communities of what it means to be a part of a small town.” He went on to laud their leadership, spirit and enthusiasm in hosting the myriad of events designed in part to welcome home PHS alumni. Wyman wrote that he was not amazed by what the students and sponsors had accomplished because, “As an educator I get to see you doing amazing things every day.” He also wrote the students “Remind us of what is right in the world. You provide hope for what is possible.” Wow — energizing. Rendering the homecoming extra special was the Longhorn football team’s dominating 31-7 win Friday over those rascals from Lakeside — the Blue Ridge Yellow Jackets. What most don’t know about homecoming games is they are doubly tough to win unless the athletic director has the gridiron moxie to schedule a patsy. The difficulty in chalking up a “W” on homecoming night is keeping teenage players, during the practice week, focused on the job at hand, winning a football game. In the days leading up to the game their young minds are distracted by parades, dances, pep rallies, bonfires, class competition, float building, royalty contests and more. Nice job players, students, teachers and coaches.
The Pine Strawberry Fuel Reduction meeting that was originally scheduled for Wednesday, Oct. 26, was postponed so as not to conflict with the fire department’s meeting on the proposed tax override meeting on that same date. No word yet on when the PSFR will be rescheduled.
Madness at the library
Turkeys needed With Thanksgiving just over the horizon, the Pine Strawberry Food Bank is appealing for 150 turkeys and other food stuffs that will be distributed to needy families in our area. Contributors may begin dropping off turkeys at the Ponderosa Market in Pine on Tuesday, Nov. 1. “If someone has more than one turkey and they are unable to drop them off at the market they can call Marti Heinert at 480-296-4337 and she will arrange to have them picked up,” says food bank volunteer Pat Impiccini. Food bank distributions are on the first Tuesday of each month. With the holidays approaching, additional distributions will be on Nov. 22 and Dec. 22. Help with Trunk or Treat The Pine-Strawberry Fire Department is in need of donations and “trunks” for its Third Annual Open House and Trunk or Treat to be held from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. Monday, Oct. 31 at the Pine Fire station. Decorations will begin at 4 p.m. and setting up of the trunks at 5 p.m. Volunteers, trunks decorated to hand out goodies, candy, decorations, money, food and baked goods are needed. Organizers say there will be music and “a little bit of learning” presumably fire safety. Call Stacy at 476-4272 or 978-3964
Movie Madness at the Isabelle Hunt Memorial Library continues at 1 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 9 with the showing of “Nine Lives” a movie rated PG and 87 minutes in length. Children should bring a pillow so as to be comfortable on the floor and refreshments will be served. Medicare help today Pinal-Gila County Council for Senior Citizens representatives will be at the Isabelle Hunt Memorial Library from 11 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. today, Friday, Oct. 28 to help seniors review their health and prescription insurances including changes is cost, coverage and benefits. Vote now Time is growing short to mail in early voting ballots for the Nov. 8 general election. Those who do not participate in voting by mail can cast their ballots in person at the First Baptist Church in Pine. There are several crucial issues voters must decide on including approving an override to increase the Pine-Strawberry Fire District’s tax levy limit from $3.25 to $3.50 assessed property value, the legalization of marijuana and raising the minimum wage. Also, two seats on the Pine Strawberry Elementary School board are up for grabs. The seats were vacated last spring by the resignations of former members Dave Prechtel and Bob Horne. The vacated seats have drawn three candidates — Larry Hartman, Rosina French and Michael Ward. Thought for the week “With ordinary talent and extraordinary perseverance, all things are attainable.”
‘Jack Reacher: Never Go Back’ a solid action film Purists are still carping about using Tom Cruise in the title role of the Jack Reacher films because of the disparity in size between the fictional operative and the actor. In author Lee Child’s 18 Jack Reacher books the tough guy stands six-foot-five and weighs in close to 250 pounds. Famously, Tom Cruise stands only fivefoot-seven. He is however very fit and can act his way around the disparity. Cruise is fast enough, violent enough and ruthless enough to pull it off. He is an authentic action hero. He tells the bad guy that he will “break your arms, break your legs and then break your neck” in a way that seems simply predictive rather than bombastic. Not every actor can recite a line like that without the crowd snickering.
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And director Edward Zwick, who “Love and Other Drugs.” Herskovitz got has one Oscar win and another Oscar at the movies an Oscar nom for “Traffic.” These guys nom, knows how to ramrod an action work very well together. flick. He directed such successful and Besides Tom Cruise, Cobie Smulders bloody films as “Blood Diamond” and (“The Avengers,” “Captain America”) the heart ripping “Glory.” But his Oscar plays the other leading role as the inside comes from a historical romance, gal to Reacher’s outside guy. Smulders “Shakespeare in Love.” He also directhas a fine and high degree of fitness, ed the very well reviewed “Legends of which she needs because she and the Fall” and got his Oscar nom for the Andy Cruise spend a lot of time running, and brilliant and harrowing drug smuggling McKinney running full out. Young Danika Yarosh movie “Traffic.” He has a hand in the plays a 15-year-old who gets mixed up writing also along with Richard Wenk in the dirty deeds with both authenticity (“The Equalizer,” “Magnificent Seven”) and (she plays a 15-year-old-girl — Pa-leeeze) and Marshall Herskovitz. Both Zwick and Herskovitz charm. We will see more of her. wrote “The Last Samurai” and also the rom/com The producers made the movie in New
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Orleans. Watch for novelist Lee Childs in a cameo. Lee Childs wanted to make it clear to his readers that he thinks Tom Cruise makes a fine Jack Reacher. “Jack Reacher: Never Go Back” lasts for one hour and 58 minutes. It carries a mild PG-13 rating, but that does not mean that younger children should see this blood bath. The producers allowed a frugal — by Hollywood standards — $68 million to make the movie. They should have no problem making a profit. This solid threeand-a-half saw blade action flick has a couple of very interesting side stories going on besides the very dangerous main line story. And best of all, Reacher smites the evildoers until they stay smote.
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Payson Roundup LOCAL Friday, October 28, 2016
Are you, like I am, one of those ‘Think Ahead!’ types? – Part 2
SUPER CROSSWORD
© 2016 King Features Syndicate, Inc. World rights reserved.
SCHOOL ORDERS ACROSS 1 Loch monster moniker 7 ___ Tome 10 Party giver’s abbr. 14 Disk units 19 And much more of the same: Abbr. 20 Waters off Fla. 21 Part of BSA: Abbr. 22 Target for an exterminator 23 Start of a riddle 25 “Me neither” 26 Hunky-dory 27 Address book no. 28 Riddle, part 2 31 Polar vehicle 33 Puts on the burner again 34 Fair-haired folks 35 Saintly glow 38 On top of that 39 Wall St. insider, maybe 41 Brewery oven 42 Riddle, part 3 49 Crooner Jones 50 Lament 51 Perp’s charge 52 “Later, Jose” 55 Ample 57 Trawl, e.g. 58 Typical Tiger Beat readers 61 Brewery tank 62 Round hairdo 63 Riddle, part 4
66 Toshiba rival 68 Neighbor of Arg. 69 U.K. “Inc.” 70 Riddle, part 5 79 “___-Ca-Dabra” (1974 tune) 83 Stadium shout 84 Without help 85 With 4-Down, gear up 86 Newbies, so to speak 87 Die marks 89 Numbered hwy. 90 Like red soil 92 Ore-___ (maker of Zesties!) 93 Riddle, part 6 98 “Mamma Mia” quartet 100 Suffix for an enzyme 101 Stadium shout 102 Vatican site 103 Detonate 105 African cat 109 Meat stamp inits. 112 End of the riddle 117 Cal. units 118 Holy Roman emperor known as “the Great” 119 Ian who played Bilbo Baggins 120 Riddle’s answer 122 Ban Ki-moon heads it, for short 123 Run up ___ (drink on credit) 124 “A,” in Caen
125 Submissive 126 Big mattress maker 127 Setup on eHarmony 128 Signing need 129 Many stage mutterings DOWN 1 Colorful amphibians 2 Merman of “Gypsy” 3 Warrior’s suit with small, overlapping plates 4 See 85-Across 5 ___-bitsy 6 Audio effect 7 Ketchup, e.g. 8 Words after attorney or heir 9 Language of early inscriptions 10 Rampaged 11 L.A. hazes 12 Stylish Wang 13 Rigidly formal 14 Bar fight 15 Gave an attention-getting shout 16 Fallen suddenly 17 Clicked-open greetings 18 Least bold 24 “The Skin of ___ Teeth” 29 Author ___ Hubbard 30 Peters out 32 Penn & Teller, e.g. 36 July gem 37 Bonobo, e.g. 39 “Law & Order” actress
TRIVIA TEST BY FIFI RODRIGUEZ 2016 KING FEATURES
1. LANGUAGE: What is the meaning of the Greek prefix “xeno”? 2. GEOGRAPHY: Gotland Island is located in what body of water? 3. MEASUREMENTS: What does a micron measure? 4. MOVIES: Who was the Oscarwinning director of the movie “Deer Hunter”? 5. LITERATURE: In which U.S. state was the writer Eudora Welty born? 6. MUSIC: Who wrote the song “Raindrops Keep Falling on My Head”? 7. MOVIES: What movie featured the line, “Hasta la vista, baby”? 8. PSYCHOLOGY: What is a fear
of books called? 9. HISTORY: Who was the first U.S. astronaut to fly into space twice? 10. FOOD & DRINK: What food is eaten traditionally in the United Kingdom on the day before Ash Wednesday?
___ de la Garza 40 Push away 42 Razor choice 43 Slip up 44 High-end hotel chain 45 Antagonists 46 Way to go 47 Glenn of the Eagles 48 Laces into 53 Sculler’s tool 54 Bourbon and Wall: Abbr. 56 Funny Sahl 58 Govt.-issued security 59 Snaky swimmers 60 Bank (on) 63 God that’s part goat 64 Conical woodwind 65 The date 6/6/44 67 Earthen pot for liquids 70 Tax-taking org. 71 Tot’s break 72 One given to ostentatious display 73 Golf vehicles 74 Offering-plate share 75 Notion, to Fifi 76 Eye creepily 77 ___ tide 78 About 5.88 trillion mi. 80 Wedding VIP 81 Traveled by bus, e.g. 82 “That is ___ commentary” 86 Old toy company 88 Defrosts
90 Rises slowly 91 Always, in odes 94 Neck part 95 West African tree 96 Oscar winner Guinness 97 Rhea relative 98 Monastery heads 99 Actress Danner 104 Wake ___ cold sweat 105 B soundalike 106 Macduff, e.g. 107 Tunesmith Harold 108 Pork product 110 Sir Arthur Conan ___ 111 Mules’ sires 113 Landlocked African land 114 Tiny amount 115 Fanta, e.g. 116 Grandson of Adam 121 College dept.
MAGIC MAZE ANSWER
MAGIC MAZE HOODED WORDS
Answers 1. Foreigner or stranger 2. Baltic Sea 3. Length 4. Michael Cimino 5. Mississippi 6. Burt Bacharach and Hal David 7. “Terminator 2: Judgment Day” 8. Bibliophobia 9. Gus Grissom 10. Pancakes
WEEKLY SUDOKU BY LINDA THISTLE
Find the listed words in the diagram. They run in all directions — forward, backward, up, down and diagonally.
CROSSWORD ANSWER
SUDOKU ANSWER
SALOME’S STARS ARIES (March 21 to April 19) The pitter-patter of all those Sheep feet means that you’re out and about, rushing to get more done. That’s fine, but slow down by the weekend so you can heed some important advice. TAURUS (April 20 to May 20) You’re in charge of your own destiny these days, and, no doubt, you’ll have that Bull’s-eye of yours right on target. But don’t forget to make time for family events. GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) Be prepared for a power struggle that you don’t want. Look to the helpful folks around you for advice on how to avoid it without losing the important gains you’ve made. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) Congratulations! You’re about to claim your hard-earned reward for your patience and persistence. Now, go out and enjoy some fun and games with friends and family. LEO (July 23 to August 22) The Big Cat might find it difficult to shake off that listless feeling. But be patient. By week’s end, your spirits will perk up and you’ll be your perfectly purring self again. VIRGO (August 23 to September 22) A problem with a co-worker could prove to be a blessing in disguise when a superior steps in to investigate and discovers a situation that could prove helpful to you. LIBRA (September 23 to October 22) This is a favorable time to move ahead with your plans. Some setbacks are expected, but they’re
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only temporary. Pick up the pace again and stay with it. SCORPIO (October 23 to November 21) Your creativity is recognized and rewarded. So go ahead and claim what you’ve earned. Meanwhile, that irksome and mysterious situation soon will be resolved. SAGITTARIUS (November 22 to December 21) A new associate brings ideas that the wise Sagittarian quickly will realize can benefit both of you. Meanwhile, someone from the workplace makes an emotional request. CAPRICORN (December 22 to January 19) It might be a good idea to ease up on that hectic pace and spend more time studying things you’ll need to know when more opportunities come later in November. AQUARIUS (January 20 to February 18) A relatively quiet time is now giving way to a period of high activity. Face it with the anticipation that it will bring you some well-deserved boons and benefits. PISCES (February 19 to March 20) Go with the flow, or make waves? It’s up to you. Either way, you’ll get noticed. However, make up your own mind. Don’t let anyone tell you what choices to make. BORN THIS WEEK: You like to examine everything before you agree to accept what you’re told. Your need for truth keeps all those around you honest.
Last week I told you how a am a bit — uh — different. Come snake stuck its face in mine your turn over to my place and try to get while I was on a high ledge, me to promise to do something. causing me to, (a) let go and fall, Unless I am absolutely certain and (b) tell myself as I dropped that, (a) I want to do it, and (b) I’ll that next time I should do a little be able to do it, you can forget it. If more checking before I start out I make a promise I keep it. There’s on across a narrow ledge above one I made all the way back in a height. I got lucky and didn’t 1969 that was a terrible mistake, get killed, but the experience but I am still stuck with it. Tom Garrett taught me to think ahead, and Dumb? Yes. But I just can’t get over the years I have become myself to break a promise. the world’s greatest “Think Ahead” nut. However, it’s not always quite so dumb. The other side of that coin is that I’ve Lolly will never spend a day in a nursing always been calm about the things we home. Why? Wedding vows, remember? can’t change, but I’ll admit that I don’t “For richer or poorer, for better or worse, leave a lot to chance. Example. A few in sickness and in health, till death do us years back my son David gave up his life part.” As we stood before that altar and I in the Valley and came up here to help me spoke those words I knew I meant them. with his mother, who was stricken in 2006 If I hadn’t meant them, I wouldn’t have with a debilitating disease that ended her said them. ability to do anything for herself. It was There’s something to be said for that. a solemn moment in David’s life, I knew, Works in other ways too. On the troop and I was very glad when I heard him ship to Iceland the Navy opened the ship’s laughing in my bathroom as he washed store as soon as we cleared the harbor. his hands after we’d done some work I went to it and bought a whole big 144upstairs. count box of Hershey bars. Some of the “What’s so funny?” I asked him. guys laughed at me when I came back He grinned and pointed to a stack of 10 with it, but they quit laughing when they super-size tubes of toothpaste and said, discovered that those candy bars were “I guess you’re not planning on running the medium of exchange on board. You out.” could buy a lot of stuff on that old tub for That, you see, is me. If you came to a Hershey bar after they became scarce, our little place you’d soon see that I don’t which took just two whole days. leave much to chance. If a problem can be Yes Johnny, ever since that snake on avoided I find a way to avoid it! that cliff looked me in the eye and did its For example, we use about four lactose best to frown at me for disturbing its early free half-gallons of milk a week. Try going morning sunbath, which took one hell of into our refrigerator and finding less than an effort for a critter with no eyebrows, eight. I have left very little to chance. What the The same thing is true of anything hey, if that poor snake was working that essential. I am now the chief cook and hard to send me the message to check bottle washer, and if I decide to cook next time the very least I could do was to something I don’t have to run into town listen. for ingredients. I just walk into the pantry Besides as our fussbudget of a junior year English teacher once said, “One and get them out. But that’s not the only way in which I should never jump to a conclusion.”
Rim holidays – Veterans Day will reveal the names of veterans Veterans Day has come back when who fought in every war since the down to us as the successor to War Between the States. Armistice Day, commemorating Among the first soldiers to the end of World War I. It was serve here was a Mexican immiNov. 11, 1918 when that “war to grant named Andres Moreno. He end all wars” concluded with a had enlisted in Company E of signed peace agreement. The folthe Arizona Volunteer Infantry lowing year President Woodrow at Tubac after the Gadsden Wilson proclaimed the date as Purchase moved the U.S. bounda national day of remembrance, Stan Brown ary south and he became a citiand by 1938 it had become a fedzen. Stationed at Camp Lincoln eral holiday. in the Verde Valley (later Camp Verde) his In 1954, with World War II behind us, company made many forays into the Rim the holiday was changed to Veterans Day. Country scouting out Apaches and their Its purpose was to honor the courage and camps. The Arizona Volunteer Infantry patriotism of all those who served in the had been raised by Arizona’s Governor armed forces. Goodwin to protect the settlers after the A friend of mine met his son at the air- regular Army units had departed to fight port when the boy returned from a combat the Civil War. Private Moreno made his mission in one of our wars. He had been mark when on one occasion his company an outgoing lad, president of his class in came upon the Natural Bridge, the first school, active in his church youth group. white men to lay eyes upon this natural Now he had been wounded and sent home. wonder. They destroyed an Apache camp As they drove home the boy was very there and took an old man prisoner. The quiet, but then suddenly blurted out with report of their sergeant to the commander terror in his voice, “Dad, I killed 19 men contains the earliest description of the that I know of.” Natural Bridge to be found. Such stories among friends and famiAfter his hitch with the Volunteers, lies remind us that Veterans Day is more Moreno made his way to New Mexico than a vacation from school or the fun of where he married and began a family. a parade. The commemoration still has They were among several families enticed this twofold meaning. It is an apprecia- by a freighter named Solomon Barth to tion for those who have fought to defend come to Arizona where they settled the America’s freedom and worldwide inter- town of St. Johns. Later Moreno developed ests. It also is a day to remember that the his own freighting business in Globe, and horrors of war are beyond imagination to it was while transporting several persons all except those who experience it first- to Flagstaff that one of his passengers, an hand. itinerant lawyer named Knox Lee, shot The relative isolation of the Rim and killed Moreno during an argument on Country was no buffer against the intru- the Mogollon Rim at Baker’s Butte. His sion of wars. The people of this beautiful grave and the military headstone with his land in Arizona’s central mountains have name, rank and company, can be seen served in every war and conflict since set- along the Crook Trail (Forest Road 300). tlement. Many of the ranchers, gold min- Each Veterans Day and Memorial Day an ers and merchants who were the first to anonymous, but patriotic person places a arrive here served in the Civil War, either flag on the grave. [1] the Union or Confederate Armies. They [1] The dramatic and romantic story came here to establish squatter’s rights, of the Moreno family is told in the book establish mining claims, and raise their families on ranches. However, no sooner by Stanley Brown, “Andres and Delfina.” did they come to these meadows and val- It can be purchased at the Rim Country leys than they found themselves fighting Museum gift shop. the Native tribes. The Indian Wars in the Rim Country began in 1864 and continued until almost 1890. Raids, skirmishes and even pitched battles left hundreds dead among settlers, military and Native Americans. Some of the old-timers buried in our cemeteries were veterans of that war, though few of them wore a uniform. Rim Country graves hold their markers and memories. A search of the cemeteries PART ONE
HUNGRY FOR LOCAL NEWS?
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Payson Roundup CLASSIFIEDS Friday, October 28, 2016
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NORTH MECHANICAL
Order: 10084224 Cust: -North Mechanical is looking for HVAC/R Technicians Keywords: Revised ad sent to Jay Stable year-round positions available now! art#: 20138248 Class: General REQUIRED: Size: 2.00education X 2.00 in HVAC/R or minimum 3 years Accredited field experience. Professional appearance/attitude, and clean drivers license.
MERCHANDISE ANIMALS DOG SITTING, HOME AWAY FROM HOME! 24-7 LOVING CARE In My Home, Yvonne: 928-468-2105
BIKES/SCOOTERS
Hiring in the Payson, AZ office: Are you passionate about care & enjoy working with a great team? We may be the perfect opportunity for you!
PRN RN SOCIAL WORKER RN CASE MGR RN ADMISSIONS PRN / CNA
We have great benefits and competitive pay. Please visit our website at www.Compassus.com Contact Mary Jane Rogers at 928.472.6340
Email to mary.rogers@compassus.com
Order: 10079403 Cust: -Gila County Personnel FRONT DESK SUPERVISOR art#: 20127705 Class: General FULL-TIME HOUSEKEEPERS Size: 2.00 X 3.00
FULL-TIME FRONT DESK AGENT/NIGHT AUDIT
McDonald’s invites you to join our professional, friendly and dedicated team. McDonald’s is committed to outstanding customer service, people development and professional growth. The McDonald’s Team offers Part-Time and Full-Time employment with wages starting at $8.50 per hour. Flexible hours, training, advancement opportunities, management development, employee retirement benefits, insurance, performance reviews and raises, and many other benefits. McDonald’s rewards outstanding performance.
ROUTE DRIVER
ATVS
CARS Mobile RV & Trailer Repair!
FIREWOOD
Call Carl
FIREWOOD: Oak, Discount for Seniors. 928-476-3819 or 480-266-4471
LOST AND FOUND LOST: WEDDING RINGS, Fastened together, looks like one ring. Engraved inside of band. Possibly lost in or outside of McDonalds in Payson! REWARD for return of rings! Call 480-838-0267
MISCELLANEOUS *DOWNWINDERS CANCER CASES* www.cancerbenefits.com Flagstaff Office; 928-774-1200 or 800-414-4328.
10ft, 20ft, 30ft. and 40ft. Shipping Containters, Call 928-537-3257
928-951-3500
Serving Payson over 7 years Ray s Auto Exchange, 615 W. Main,Payson 928-978-8375
304 N. Stagecoach Pass, Oct. 28 Fri. 7am to 2pm; Oct. 29 Sat. 8am to Noon: Shop Tools, Furniture, Artic Cat 650HI and More!
2007 Kia Sportage SUV 4x4, Nice Family Car, Sale Price $5,995. 2007 Dodge Dakota Crew Cab, 2wd 5sp, 3.7 liter 6 cyl. Nice Clean Truck, Retails at $9,085. On Sale for $7,995.
2003 Jaguar, Super Clean, Low Miles, Luxury at an Affordable Price, $4,895.
MOTORCYCLES 2003 Harley Davidson, Wide Glide, 100 year Anniversary Model, 12,435 miles. New tires, (F&R) HD, new brakes and front cable assembly, new handlebar and mirrors, new digital tach and oil pressure gauge, new battery, new crash bars and footpegs, custom HD luggage, black and silver, showroom condition, much more, manual/records available, $6500 602-525-5517, keepon82@gmail.com
RVS 1986 Executive RV, 33ft, 24K Miles Gas, Good Condition, Call for Details, like oak Cabinets, $15,000. 928-978-3597
EMPLOYMENT DRIVERS Looking for Full Time and Part Time CDL DRIVERS with Clean Driving Record. Please apply in person at 201 W Phoenix St. Payson AZ 85541.
7435 N. Paloma Vista (Mesa Del), Fri. & Sat. Oct. 28 & 29 from 8am to 2pm: H&R .22 Revolver, Daybed, Roll-Top Desk, Antique Cedar Chest, 1913 Edison Phonograph, China Set, Signed Art, Books, Occupied Japan Figurines, Misc.
PAYSON
Order: 10079582 Join our Cust: -McDonalds friendly Team Keywords: Help Wanted art#: 20115075 Class: General Size: 2.00 X 4.00
BOOKKEEPER POSITION Part-Time Position
Bookkeeping experience required, Drug testing, background and credit check will be completed prior to employment. Starting $9.00hr. hr. Starting pay $8.25
ROUND VALLEY/ OXBOW COMMUNITY ESTATE AND GARAGE SALES 371 W ROUND VALLEY RD AND MULTIPLE OTHER ADDRESSES Round Valley
Fri, Oct 28 and Sat, Oct 29. 8AM - 2PM Multiple houses will be having yard sales along with a huge estate sale where everything must go. At the estate sale in Upper Round Valley you will find a whole house and very large workshop full of stuff including: many collectibles, housewares, tools, tractor, power tools, guy stuff etc. - there is way too much to list. Also in Upper Round Valley (four families will be at one location), multiple saddles and horse tack, clothes, housewares, guy stuff, tools etc. Lower Round Valley sale will have Oklahoma Joe Smoker, Powr-Kraft Arc Welder, and 98 Chevy Silverado. Also, 12 x 20 8 ft wall metal garage brand new still on pallets $2500 call 928-951-3510. Don t miss out! Call 928-978-8010 if you have questions.
Order: 10084201 Cust: -Kohls Ranch Keywords: Front Desk, Housekeeping & Night Agent art#: 20138223 Class: General Size: 2.00 X 2.00
Apply in person with General Manager at McDonalds
Full-Time Position Maintenance experience required, Drug testing and background check will be completed prior to employment.
Starting pay $9.50 hr. Apply in person with General Manager at Payson McDonald’s.
Maintenance Coordinator 12 months/benefits Beginning Salary - $13.62 - $17.04 (Salary based on years of experience up to and including 10 steps) QUALIFICATIONS Has at least five years experience in building maintenance supervision, experience in long and short range planning, experience in construction and remodeling. APPLICATION All applicants are requested to submit a classified application which can be found on our website: www.pusd10.org and a current résumé or if you are a current PUSD employee, transfer request plus a current résumé to: Payson Unified School District #10 Personnel Office PO Box 919 Payson, AZ 85547 472-5739 or FAX (928) 472-2013 Website: www.pusd10.org Open Until Filled
GENERAL Security FT PT, all shifts, background ck, computer or typing, able to be on feet, work ethic, service oriented. Pay DOE, PU/Return app Mon-Sat 11am-2pm, 814 N Beeline Hwy, Suite J, Payson
HEALTH CARE NEEDED NOW!!! Experienced In House Medical Biller RN w/IV Skills Pay D.O.Experience, Send Resume & References Required. Internal Med Clinic, PO Box 2581,Payson,85547
Certified Home Child Care Provider Care for your communities kids from your home! Become a Certified Home Child Care Provider. Call your Buena Vista Specialist at 928-451-6800 or 866-646-5200 or visit www.BV-CS.org
MECHANICAL
GEORGE HENRY
ad attached
Plumbing, Heating & Cooling
EXPERIENCED HVAC TECH WANTED
Requirements: 15 years+ of HVAC Experience and repair technician with EPA Certification a must. Must also have a valid AZ Drivers License. We offer great pay and benefit package.
Join Our Great Team! Send resumes to: resumes@GHPHC.com or go to 204 S. Beeline Highway, Payson, AZ
Seeking Branch Manager / Sales Representative
Order: 10084285 Cust: -North Country Healthcare Keywords: Certified Medical Assistant / North Country HealthCare is currently hiring for the following position: same ad as before art#: 20137566 Certified Medical Assistant - Payson, AZ Office Duties: Class: Healthcare Assists health care workers in providing direct patient care. Gathers necessary Size: 2.00 X 3.00 vital signs from patients. Collects, prepares, and sends laboratory specimens for routine tests and record results. Administers selected medication and treatments to patients as ordered. Gives injections and immunizations and instructs patients on proper follow-up procedures. Requirements: Diploma of completion of education or training as a medical assistant or a related field recognized by the National Center for Competency Testing (NCCT) AND certification or registration by exam. To apply, visit our website at www.northcountryhealthcare.org NCHC offers competitive compensation and benefits. EEO M/F Disabled/Vet and VERAA Federal Contractor
HANDYMAN Complete Home Repair Experienced carpenter and repairman. No job too small. windows, doors, decks, closets,, and more. Honest, reasonable and dependable. References available. Free estimates 602.826.1937 Specializing in Custom Woodwork: Furniture and cabinetry, design and build or repair and refinish not licensed contractor Don s Handyman Home Repairs, Mobile Home Roofs, Backhoe Work, Drains, Driveway, Landscaping, Yardwork Tree Trimming, Hauling! Senior Discount: 928-478-6139 HANDY CARPENTER Repairs & Small Remodeling Work,20yrs Experience,Doors, Windeows,Decks, Sheds,Kitchen,Bath, etc. Ask for Dennis 928-978-1385 not a lisenced contractor JIMMY S ALLTRADES Since 1993 Plumbing, Electrical, Sun Screens, Dryer Vent Cleaning, Gutters Cleaned, Window Screen Repair 928-474-6482 not licensed
HAULING
HOME REPAIRS
Home Repair Lawn Care Hauling CD 2015
Lawn Care
HAULING
Diversified Services IOWA BOY - HONEST, DEPENDABLE
(Inexpensive) Not a Licensed Contractor
JOE - 970-1873 HOME SERVICES HOUSEKEEPING ETC. Cleaning Services, Regular Scheduled Cleanings, Organizing and Move-Outs! Call Shari for an Appointment! 928-951-1807
LANDSCAPING Antonio s Landscaping
Landscaping, Yard Maintenance, Stonework and Firewood Available, Call Antonio @ 928-951-4267 or 928-363-1382
Legal Services ad attached
SALES/MARKETING
Order: 10083796 Join our Cust: -McDonalds friendly Team art#: 20137704 Class: Mechanical Size: 2.00 X 4.00
MAINTENANCE WORKER
928-478-6972
Griffin’s is an equal opportunity employer
HOME BASED
Now offering a 30 Day Retention Bonus! Please pick up an application and learn of the opportunities available at your McDonald’s today. To apply online, visit: www.mcarizona.com
Send resume to: Griffin’s Propane P.O. Box 1790, Payson, AZ 85547
PAYSON UNIFIED SCHOOL DISTRICT HAS THE FOLLOWING OPEN POSITION:
We Buy Cars
3 Party Yard Sale; Fri. & Sat. Oct. 28 & 29 from 8am to 2pm; 1201 W. Birchwood Rd., Payson: Mens Large - Womens 16 Hawaiian Clothes, Mens Suits (42/34), Hats, Purses, Luggage, Christmas Decorations, Hide-a-Bed (beige & clean), House hold Items and More!
Company benefits include: Medical, 401K plan, paid holidays and vacations. Salary based on experience.
2012 Hyundai Elantra Touring Wagon, Low Miles, 40K, Warranty till 2022, Heated Seats and Much More, $10,800.
THE BLIND DOCTOR Broken Blinds? Saggy Shades? Droopy Drapes? WE CAN FIX THAT! Dani 928-595-2968 BLINDS & DESIGNS Repairs, Sales, Shade Screens & More!
YARD SALES
Applicant must have Arizona Class B CDL with TankerAirbrakes-HAZMAT endorsement, and must be organized with good customer service skills, job includes local route deliveries and minimal service work.
EDUCATION
2009 Pontiac G5 Coupe, 5sp Manual Transmission, Runs Great, Cold AC, On Sale for $4,995.
BIG MOVING SALE: 1116 S. Mud Springs Rd. Sat. Only,Oct. 29 from 8am to 2pm: Large New Curved Couch w/Ottoman, Section Sofa, 45 inch Patio Table w/4 New Spring Chairs, Pool/Game Table, Lamps, Art, Decorator Items, Tools and MUCH MORE!
Full-Time Position Available For Payson Area
2013 Kia Soul, Very Low Miles 30K, w/70K Miles Factory Warranty, Very Nice, Nicely Equipped $11,995.
Franklin heating stove, complete w/smoke stack, roof jack, spark arrestor, grate to hold wood or charcoal, swing out grille, fire screen, fire tools (poker, shovel, brush) suitable for heating cabin, garage, workshop, barn, whatever. $350/obo, ANXIOUS SELLER, 928-476-2251.
MOVING SALES
Join our Friendly Team
AUTOS/VEHICLES
BOATS
YARD SALES/ AUCTIONS Order: 10084095 Cust: -McDonalds Keywords: BOOKKEEPER / same as previous ad art#: 20138091 Class: General Size: 2.00 X 4.00
pickup existing ad copy from e m p l o y ment ad that ran 10/21
16ft Outdrive Boat, $2000. Ask for Bill 928-978-4362 Schwinn 18 speed Shimano Gears and Brakes. New comfort seat, Hi-Security lock, Rack and water bottle. Great for the hills around Payson. $100. 928-978-8917 am/pm
DRIVERS
Three Family Yard Sale: Mesa Del 7430, 7436 & 7441 N. Paloma Vista: Antiques, Collectibles, Household Items, Fishing Boat.
ATV 2006 Artic Cat 650HI, w/Snow Plow, Wench, Hitch, Racks, Second Seat, Saddle Bags, $4,700.obo Call 406-240-5298
Call 928-468-9400 to apply.
Order: 10084003 Payson’s Original Hospice With The Only Inpatient Unit Cust: -Hospice Compassus Keywords: p/u existing ad and rerun Serving Rim Country art#: 20137965 for 22 years! Class: Healthcare You’ll remember why you do what you do, when you Size: X 3.00 join2.00 the fabulous care team at Hospice Compassus!
YARD SALES
Fast Auto Loans No Experience required, full training provided Requirements: Credit,criminal and MVD background,check, valid Driver Licence. Benefits: We offer competitive pay and benefits. Send Resume to: jrowland@clacorp.com or call 928-474-2360
REVOCABLE LIVING TRUSTS WILLS & DEEDS LIVING WILLS LLC FORMATION FINANCIAL POWERS OF ATTORNEY MEDICAL POWERS OF ATTORNEY
Patricia Rockwell AZ Certified Legal Document Preparer/ Paralegal
928-476-6539 AZCLDP #81438
REAL ESTATE MANUFACTURED HOMES FOR SALE 12x60 1Br/1ba MFG, 55+, Washer, Dryer, Furnished, Patio, Car Port, Covered Porch $12,000. 705 E. Miller Rd. #33 928-978-7499
MOBILES FOR SALE Foreclosures: 30 Homes, both New and PreOwned to Choose From, Free Delivery, Call Bronco Homes, 1-800-487-0712 REPOS: 2, 3, & 4 Bedrooms, Starting from $9,989. Call Bronco Homes: 1-800-487-0712
OPEN HOUSES
OPEN HOUSE
OPEN HOUSE / 505 E. WADE LANE
Site Built on Large Lot!
2 BR/1 Full BA/885sf Character wraps itself around this home on a large 0.30 acre lot. Hobby room, fireplace, wood burning stove, one car garage and carport. Includes large shed and fully fenced yard. Room for RV parking!
$135,000
Saturday Only Oct 29th 10:00am to 2:00pm 505 E Wade Lane, Payson
Realty ONE Group
Payson 928-478-2000 www.PaysonAZPropeties.com
RENTALS APARTMENTS FOR RENT 2 Bedroom Unfurnished, RAINBOW APTS. Pets-No! $550/mo Dep.Req. 928-970-0158 or 928-978-0714
This Fall make ASPEN COVE Your New Home
SERVICES
Apartments For Rent
CONSTRUCTION
Units Available! Apply Today!
Debco Construction
New Homes,Remodels,Decks, Painting, Garages, Wood/Tile Floors, Affordable Prices, Don 928-978-1996, Lic. & Bonded, Res. Lic.#ROC185345 Commercial Lic.#ROC182282 In Payson Area 35 years
APARTMENTS FEATURING: • 2 Bedrooms/2 Baths • 2 Bedrooms/ 1.5 Baths • Washers & Dryers • Covered Parking • Pet Friendly
ASPEN COVE
801 E. FRONTIER ST. , PAYSON, AZ 85541
(928) 474-8042
Cornerstone Property Services www.cornerstone-mgt.com
Payson Roundup APARTMENTS FOR RENT 1100 Sq. Ft 2BDR/2BAApartment in Cenral Payson, Central Heating and A/C, F/P, Washer/Dryer Hookup $750 p/m, 480-326-7203 or 480-926-9024 Apartments for Rent
Tonto Oaks Apts. & Mobile Homes 120 S. Tonto St.
. .K LOO
NO LONGER!
I have what you need! GLORIOUS 1 & 2 BEDROOM APARTMENTS
Call Cindy for availability & Details (928) 472-9238 Newly Renovated 1Br/Apt., $498.13 p/m, First Month Rent Free w/One Year Lease, $300. Dep. 928-474-2406. Positively Payson
Warm & Cozy Community nestled in the Pines!
Forest Hills Condominiums
333 N. McLane Large 1-2 Bedrooms WOOD BURNING FIREPLACE WASHER & DRYER COVERED PARKING PET FRIENDLY CLOSE TO RUMSEY PARK & LIBRARY
Call Caroline 928-472-6055
HOMES FOR RENT 1Br/1Ba Clean & Cozy Furnished Cabin, Senior Neighborhood in Pine, $600.mo w/1yr lease, Shorter Term Lease Rates Availalbe, 928-476-3989 Smoking/Animals-No 2Br Mobile for Rent, Roosevelt/Tonto Basin Area, $500.mo + Dep. 928-300-7161 Beautifully FURNISHED ,New Paint/Carpet, 2Br/2Ba w/FP, 1800sf, MAIN HOUSE, in town, short and long leases, quality neighborhood, $1500.mo Call: 602-290-7282. NICE 3/BDRM/2BA. SITE BUILT Home w/Loft in Payson, Nice Yard w/covered deck, Backs to National Forest, Extra Storage-Shed, Includes all appliances, Smoking/Pets, No! $945.mo+dep. 928-595-4024 NICE 3BDRM/2BA SITE-BUILT HOME, 1500+sf. Kitchen w/all Appliances, AC, Laundry Room, Double Car Garage, Drip System, Large Covered Patio, Smoking/Pets-No, $895.mo+dep. 928-595-4024 Prudential Pine BERKSHIRE
HATHAWAY HomeServices Advantage Realty
PO Box 329, 3640 Hwy 87, Pine, AZ 85544
928-476-3279
Strawberry, 3BR, 2BA . . . . . $1600
UNFURNISHED RENTAL HOMES NEEDED
Independently Owned & Operated
BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY Berkshire-Hathaway 1x3
HomeServices Advantage Realty ProPerty ManageMent
609 S. Beeline Hwy. PaySon, aZ 85541 474-5276
www.paysonrentals.com RESIDENTIAL RENTALS
906 N. Hillcrest Dr., 4BD, 4.5BA........................$2200 204 S. Bronco Cir., 3BD, 3BA...........................$1300 613 S. St. Phillips St., 4BD, 3BA.......................$1050 105 N. Spring Rd., 3BD, 2BA............................$1050 309 N. Heritage Ln., 3BD, 2BA.........................$1000 306 S. Bentley St., 4BD, 2BA..............................$995 906 S. Lakeview Dr. 2BA, 2BA............................$950 609 N. Ponderosa #B, 2BD, 2BA........................$925 200 W. Chateau Cir., 2BD, 2BA..........................$900 1501 N. Beeline Hwy. #38, 2BD, 2BA.................$900 707 W. Bridle Path Ln., 2BD, 2BA.......................$875 512 W. Longhorn #4, 2BD, 1BA..........................$775
FURNISHED HOMES
1110 S. Sequoia Cir., 3BR, 3BA..................$2300-$2600
COMMERCIAL LEASE SPACE
601 N. Beeline 408 W. Main St., Suite 8 & Suite 11 708 E. Hwy 260, A2, C2, C1- A & B 1322 W. Red Baron Rd. #A & #B Independently Owned & Operated
SPACIOUS 1 Bedroom Duplex Rock Fireplace, Fenced Yard, Close to Hospital. $625/mo. Credit Report & Deposit Req. 480-649-0005 Owner/Agent Woodhill Custom Home, 3/2/2, Rent $1,400/mo + Deposit. Retirees Encouraged to Call. Smoking-No, 928-978-6167
MOBILES FOR RENT 1Br/1Ba Park Model, w/Storage, W/D, $650.mo. Smoking/Pets-No, Please Call 928-474-8222
MOBILE/RV SPACES 55+ Juniper Roost Village in Oxbow Estates, Trailer/5th Wheel Lot for Lease $275.per/mo Includes: Water, Septic, Trash, & Wifi. Laundry house on property. Large Lots border National Forrest 928-476-8650 or info@juniperroost.com www.juniperroost.com
LEGAL NOTICES 16354 10/7, 10/14, 10/21, 10/28/2016 16-43576 Order #: 160177766-AZ-VOO The following legally described trust property will be sold, pursuant to the power of sale under that certain Deed of Trust dated 3/22/2013 and recorded on 4/4/2013, as Instrument No. 2013-004019, in the office of the County Recorder of Gila County, Arizona, NOTICE! IF YOU BELIEVE THERE IS A DEFENSE TO THE TRUSTEE SALE OR IF YOU HAVE AN OBJECTION TO THE TRUSTEE SALE, YOU MUST FILE AN ACTION AND OBTAIN A COURT ORDER PURSUANT TO RULE 65, ARIZONA RULES OF CIVIL PROCEDURE, STOPPING THE SALE NO LATER THAN 5:00 P.M. MOUNTAIN STANDARD TIME OF THE LAST BUSINESS DAY BEFORE THE SCHEDULED DATE OF THE SALE, OR YOU MAY HAVE WAIVED ANY DEFENSES OR OBJECTIONS TO THE SALE. UNLESS YOU OBTAIN AN ORDER, THE SALE WILL BE FINAL AND WILL OCCUR at public auction to the highest bidder at the Front Entrance of the Gila County Courthouse, 1400 E. Ash Street, Globe, AZ 85501, on 12/7/2016 at 11:00 AM of said day:LOT 107, THE PORTAL PINE CREEK CANYON UNIT IV, ACCORDING TO MAP NOS. 709 AND 709A, RECORDS OF GILA COUNTY, ARIZONA. Per A.R.S. Section 33-803 (A)(2) the successor trustee appointed here qualifies as a Trustee of the trust deed in the Trustee s capacity as a member of the State Bar of Arizona. ACCORDING TO THE DEED OF TRUST OR UPON INFORMATION SUPPLIED BY THE BENEFICIARY, THE FOLLOWING INFORMATION IS PROVIDED PURSUANT TO A.R.S. SECTION 33-808(C): Street address or identifiable location: 4519 SUNDOWN LANE PINE, AZ 85544 A.P.N.: 301-69-107 Original Principal Balance: $278,800.00 Name and address of original trustor: (as shown on the Deed of Trust) MARIO CARMELO BELVEDERE AND STEPHANIE ELOISE BELVEDERE, HUSBAND AND WIFE 4519 SUNDOWN LANE PINE, AZ 85544 Name and address of beneficiary: (as of recording of Notice of Sale) Ditech Financial, LLC 3000 Bayport Drive, Suite 880 Tampa, FL 33607 NAME, ADDRESS and TELEPHONE NUMBER OF TRUSTEE: (as of recording of Notice of Sale) Eric L. Cook, a member of the State Bar of Arizona Zieve, Brodnax and Steele, LLP 112 North Central Avenue, Suite 425 Phoenix, Arizona 85004 Phone Number: (602) 688-7420 SALE INFORMATION: Sales Line: (800) 280-2832 Website: www.auction.com Dated: 8/29/2016 Eric L. Cook, a member of the State Bar of Arizona Per A.R.S. Section 33-803 (A)(2) the successor trustee appointed here qualifies as a Trustee of the trust deed in the Trustee s capacity as a member of the State Bar of Arizona. A-4593905 16355 10/7, 10/14, 10/21, 10/28/2016
S/File 405237.10364 NOTICE OF TRUSTEE S SALE The following legally described trust property will be sold, pursuant to the power of sale under that certain Deed of Trust recorded on JANUARY 13, 2006, in INSTRUMENT NO. 2006-000708, in the Office of the County Recorder of GILA County, Arizona - NOTICE! IF YOU BELIEVE THERE IS A DEFENSE TO THE TRUSTEE SALE OR IF YOU HAVE AN OBJECTION TO THE TRUSTEE SALE, YOU MUST FILE AN ACTION AND OBTAIN A COURT ORDER PURSUANT TO RULE 65, ARIZONA RULES OF CIVIL PROCEDURE, STOPPING THE SALE NO LATER THAN 5:00 P.M. MOUNTAIN STANDARD TIME OF THE LAST BUSINESS DAY BEFORE THE SCHEDULED DATE OF THE SALE, OR YOU MAY HAVE WAIVED ANY DEFENSES OR OBJECTIONS TO THE SALE. UNLESS YOU OBTAIN AN ORDER, THE SALE WILL BE FINAL AND WILL OCCUR at public auction to the highest bidder HELD AT THE MAIN ENTRANCE OF PIONEER TITLE AGENCY, INC. 421 S. BEELINE HWY, PAYSON, ARIZONA on NOVEMBER 30, 2016 at 10:00 A.M. of said day: That part of Lot 1, Section 36, Township 1 North, Range 15 East, Gila Salt River Base and Meridian, Gila County, Arizona described as follows; BEGINNING at the Northeast corner of Lot 1, Block 1, ANDERSON AND BLAKE ADDITION, according to Map No. 10 records of Gila County, Arizona, now known as HIGHLAND PARK ADDITION, according to Map No. 21, records of Gila County, Arizona; THENCE Westerly and along the North side of said Lot 1, Block 1, a distance of 127.16 feet to the Northwest corner of said Lot 1, Block 1; THENCE North 52°43 West, 88.31 feet; THENCE North 57°10 East along a rock flood
Order: 10084032 Cust: -HOUSE ADS Keywords: Two Offices for Rent. Over 400 sq feet each with art#: 20138002 Class: Commercial For Rent Over 400 Square feet each with Size: 2.00 X 3.00 electricity, phone jacks, A/C and restroom. Premium 2nd floor location on Beeline Highway. Parking, carpeted, each office has its own separate entrance. PRICED LOW. Please call Gary for showing 928-474-5251 ext. 117
TWO OFFICES TO RENT
Friday, October 28, 2016
LEGAL NOTICES wall, a distance of 163.28 feet; THENCE South 23°41° 30 East, 56.94 feet to the Point of Beginning. Purported Property Address: 659 E. BOSTON ST., GLOBE, AZ 85501. Tax Parcel Number: 208-05-413. Original Principal Balance: $14,763.88 Original/Current Beneficiary: MARY L. CASILLAS AND MANNY CASILLAS, TRUSTEES OF THE MARY and MANNY CASILLAS FAMILY TRUST, DATED NOVEMBER 6, 2002, 2328 CECIL CIRCLE, GLOBE, AZ 85501. Original/Current Trustor: GLOBEN ENTERPRISES, INC., 2201 N. CENTRAL AVE., #3-D, PHOENIX, AZ 85004. Said Trustee s Sale will be held without covenant or warranty express or implied, regarding title, possession, or encumbrances, to pay the unpaid principal balance of $19, 045.12 plus monies due as provided under the terms of said Deed of Trust, plus fees, charges and expenses of the Trustee and of the trust created by said Deed of Trust. Dated: AUGUST 23, 2016. Current Trustee: Pioneer Title Agency, Inc., an Arizona corporation. 580 East Wilcox Drive, Sierra Vista, AZ 85635. (520) 458-3500 Pioneer Title Agency, Inc., an Arizona corporation, as Trustee. By: /s/ Linda Miller, Vice President. Manner of Trustee Qualification: Escrow Agent. Name of Regulating Agency: Arizona Department of Financial Institutions. STATE OF ARIZONA, COUNTY OF COCHISE. The foregoing instrument was acknowledged before me on August 29, 2016, by Linda Miller, Vice President of Pioneer Title Agency, Inc., an Arizona corporation. By: /s/ Teresa Heiser, Notary Public. My Commission Expires: March 15, 2019. 16356 10/7, 10/14, 10/21, 10/28/2016 NOTICE OF TRUSTEE S SALE The following legally described trust property will be sold, pursuant to the power of sale under that certain Deed of Trust recorded on January 11, 2007 in Instrument No. 2007-000481 in the office of the County Recorder of Gila County, Arizona, NOTICE! IF YOU BELIEVE THERE IS A DEFENSE TO THE TRUSTEE SALE OR IF YOU HAVE AN OBJECTION TO THE TRUSTEE SALE, YOU MUST FILE AN ACTION AND OBTAIN A COURT ORDER PURSUANT TO RULE 65, ARIZONA RULES OF CIVIL PROCEDURE, STOPPING THE SALE NO LATER THAN 5:00 P.M. MOUNTAIN STANDARD TIME ON THE LAST BUSINESS DAY BEFORE THE SCHEDULED DATE OF THE SALE, OR YOU MAY HAVE WAIVED ANY DEFENSES OR OBJECTIONS TO THE SALE. UNLESS YOU OBTAIN AN ORDER, THE SALE WILL BE FINAL AND WILL OCCUR at public auction to the highest bidder at the front entrance to the Gila County Courthouse, 1400 E. Ash St., Globe, Arizona at 11:00a.m. on December 22, 2016: LEGAL DESCRIPTION AS SHOWN ON EXHIBIT A ATTACHED HERETO Purported Street address: 450 Hackney Hill Rd, Globe, AZ 85501 Tax Parcel # 207-15-298 Original Principal Balance $36,116.00 Name and Address of Beneficiary: U.S. Bank National Association as Indenture Trustee for Springleaf Mortgage Loan Trust 2013-1, Mortgage-Backed Notes, Series 2013-1, in c/o Nationstar Mortgage LLC, 8950 Cypress Waters Blvd, Coppell, Texas 75019.
Name and Address of Original Trustor: Albert Avalos, A Single Man, 450 Hackney Hill Rd., Globe, AZ 85501. 16356 10/7, 10/14, 10/21, 10/28/2016 NOTICE OF TRUSTEE S SALE The following legally described trust property will be sold, pursuant to the power of sale under that certain Deed of Trust recorded on January 11, 2007 in Instrument No. 2007-000481 in the office of the County Recorder of Gila County, Arizona, NOTICE! IF YOU BELIEVE THERE IS A DEFENSE TO THE TRUSTEE SALE OR IF YOU HAVE AN OBJECTION TO THE TRUSTEE SALE, YOU MUST FILE AN ACTION AND OBTAIN A COURT ORDER PURSUANT TO RULE 65, ARIZONA RULES OF CIVIL PROCEDURE, STOPPING THE SALE NO LATER THAN 5:00 P.M. MOUNTAIN STANDARD TIME ON THE LAST BUSINESS DAY BEFORE THE SCHEDULED DATE OF THE SALE, OR YOU MAY HAVE WAIVED ANY DEFENSES OR OBJECTIONS TO THE SALE. UNLESS YOU OBTAIN AN ORDER, THE SALE WILL BE FINAL AND WILL OCCUR at public auction to the highest bidder at the front entrance to the Gila County Courthouse, 1400 E. Ash St., Globe, Arizona at 11:00a.m. on December 22, 2016: LEGAL DESCRIPTION AS SHOWN ON EXHIBIT A ATTACHED HERETO Purported Street address: 450 Hackney Hill Rd, Globe, AZ 85501 Tax Parcel # 207-15-298 Original Principal Balance $36,116.00 Name and Address of Beneficiary:U.S. Bank National Association as Indenture Trustee for Springleaf Mortgage Loan Trust 2013-1, Mortgage-Backed Notes, Series 2013-1, in c/o Nationstar Mortgage LLC, 8950 Cypress Waters Blvd, Coppell, Texas 75019. Name and Address of Original Trustor: Albert Avalos, a Single Man, 450 Hackney Hill Rd, Globe, AZ 85501 Name, Address and Telephone Number of Trustee: Jason P. Sherman, 3636 N. Central Ave., Suite #400, Phoenix, AZ 85012, 602-222-5711 Dated: September 22, 2016 /s/Jason P. Sherman Jason P. Sherman, Trustee Manner of Trustee
LEGAL NOTICES
LEGAL NOTICES
Qualification: The Trustee qualifies pursuant to A.R.S. § 33-803(A)(2) as a member of the State Bar of Arizona. . Name of Trustee s Regulator: The Trustee s Regulator is the State Bar of Arizona. STATE OF ARIZONA } } ss. COUNTY OF MARICOPA
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The foregoing instrument was acknowledged before me on September 22, 2016, by Jason P. Sherman, a member of the State Bar of Arizona, as Trustee. s/s Kari Sheehan NOTARY PUBLIC My commission expires: 9/12/2018 EXHIBIT A PARCELNO. 1 That portion of Lot 2, Section 26, NORTH GLOBE TOWNSITE, according to Map Nos. 6, 7 and 9, records of Gila County Arizona as follows: · BEGINNING at the Southwest comer of the Northwest quarter of the Southeast quarter of Section 26, Township 1North, Range 15 East, Gila and Salt River Base and Meridian, Gila County Arizona ; THENCE South 89 degrees 49 minutes 00 seconds East 1517.30 feet; THENCE North 44 degrees ll minutes 00 seconds East 207.12 feet to the True Point of Beginning of the parcel herein described; THENCE North 14 degrees 21 minutes 45 seconds West 60.13 feet; THENCE North 50 degrees 54 minutes 59 seconds East 21.85 feet; THENCE North 57 degrees 53 minutes 37 seconds East 60.2 J feet, THENCE South 27 degrees 54 minutes 08 seconds East 61.33 feet; THENCE South 48 degrees 26 minutes 18 seconds West 53.06 feet; THENCE South 70 degrees 35 minutes 19 seconds West 44.53 feet to the Point of Beginning. PARCEL NO.2 That remainin g parcel of land lying to the South of the above described parcel of land bounded on the East by the parcel described in Docket 59, Page 348 on the South by the North line of Lot 41 of Lot 2 of said Section 26, and on the West by the prolongation of the Westerly line (South 14 degrees 21 minutes 45 seconds East of the above described parcel. 16357: 10/14, 10/21, 10/28, 11/4/2016 NOTICE OF TRUSTEE S SALE Trustee Sale No.: 00000005913629 Title Order No.: 733-1600290-70 FHA/VA/PMI No.: The following legally described trust property will be sold, pursuant to the power of sale under that certain Deed of Trust dated 07/21/2006 and Recorded as Instrument No. 2006-012591 on 07/24/2006 of Official Records, in the office of the County Recorder of GILA County, Arizona. NOTICE! IF YOU BELIEVE THERE IS A DEFENSE TO THE TRUSTEE SALE OR IF YOU HAVE AN OBJECTION TO THE TRUSTEE SALE, YOU MUST FILE AN ACTION AND OBTAIN A COURT ORDER PURSUANT TO RULE 65, ARIZONA RULES OF CIVIL PROCEDURE, STOPPING THE SALE NO LATER THAN 5:00 P.M. MOUNTAIN STANDARD TIME OF THE LAST BUSINESS DAY BEFORE THE SCHEDULED DATE OF THE SALE, OR YOU MAY HAVE WAIVED ANY DEFENSES OR OBJECTIONS TO THE SALE. UNLESS YOU OBTAIN AN ORDER, THE SALE WILL BE FINAL AND WILL OCCUR at public auction to the highest bidder at THE FRONT ENTRANCE TO THE GILA COUNTY COURTHOUSE, 1400 EAST ASH ST., GLOBE, AZ 85501, in GILA county, on 12/02/2016 at 11:00AM of said day: SEE EXHIBIT A Attached Hereto and Incorporated Herein for All Purposes. EXHIBIT A That Portion Of Tract C, Strawberry Ranch Five, According To The Plat Of Record In The Office Of The County Recorder Of Gila County, Arizona, Recorded In Map No. 318, Being Described As Follows: Beginning At The Southwest Corner Of Said Tract C; Thence North 04°11 00 West Along The Westerly Line Of Said Tract C 191.68 Feet; Thence North 75°11 00 East 140.00 Feet; Thence North 85° 11 00 East 131.42 Feet To A Point On The Easterly Line Of Said Tract C; Thence South 0°15 00 East Along Said Line 247.99 Feet; Thence Around A Curve To The Right, Said Curve Having A Central Angle Of 40°32 40 A Radius Of 15.00 Feet, And A Length Of 10.61 Feet To A Point Of Compound Curve; Thence Continuing Along A Curve To The Right, Said Curve Having A Central Angle Of 4°41 00 A Radius Of 580.87 Feet, And A Length Of 47.48 Feet To A Point Of Compound Curve To The Right, Said Curve Having A Central Angle Of 92°56 00 A Radius Of 15.00 Feet, And A Length Of 24.33 Feet To A Point Of Reverse Curve To The Left, Said Curve Having A Central
Angle Of 37°21 20 A Radius Of 80.55 Feet, And A Length Of 52.52 Feet To Appoint Tangency; Thence North 79°26 30 West 154.32 Feet To The Southwest Corner Of Said Tract C And The True Point Of Beginning. ACCORDING TO THE DEED OF TRUST OR UPON INFORMATION SUPPLIED BY THE BENEFICIARY, THE FOLLOWING INFORMATION IS PROVIDED PURSUANT TO ARIZONA REVISED STATUTES SECTION 33-808(C): Street address or identifiable location: 4980 FULLER DRIVE, STRAWBERRY, AZ 85544 Tax Parcel number: 301-08-141B Original Principal Balance: $332,000.00 Name and Address of Original Trustor (as shown on the Deed of Trust): CHARLES FRANK FALBO MAILING ADDRESS: P.O. BOX 862, PINE, AZ 85544 Name and address of beneficiary (as of recording of Notice of Sale): WELLS FARGO BANK, N.A. AS TRUSTEE FOR BANC OF AMERICAALTERNATIVE LOAN TRUST 2006-7 MORTGAGE PASS-THROUGH CERTIFICATES, SERIES 2006-7, C/O NATIONSTAR MORTGAGE, LLC 8950 CYPRESS WATERS BLVD. COPPELL, TX 75019 Name, address & telephone number of trustee: CARSON EMMONS, A MEMBER OF THE STATE BAR. BARRETT DAFFIN FRAPPIER TREDER & WEISS, LLP 4004 Belt Line Road, Suite 100 Addison, Texas 75001-4320 (855) 286-5901 The beneficiary under the aforementioned Deed of Trust has accelerated the Note secured thereby and has declared the entire unpaid principal balance, as well as any and all other amounts due in connection with said Note and/or Deed of Trust, immediately due and payable. Said sale will be made as is, but without covenant or warranty, express or implied, regarding title, possession or encumbrances, to pay the remaining principal sum of the note secured by said Deed of Trust, which includes interest thereon as provided in said note, advances, if any under the terms of said Deed of Trust, interest on advances, if any, fees, charges and expenses of the Trustee and of the trust created by said Deed of Trust. Trustee will accept only cash (in the forms which are lawful tender in the United States and acceptable to the trustee, payable in accordance with A.R.S § 33-811(A)) or credit bid by the beneficiary. Reinstatement payment must be paid before five o clock p.m. on the last day other than a Saturday or legal holiday before the date of the sale. The Purchaser at the sale, other than the beneficiary to the extent of his credit bid, shall pay the price no later than five o clock p.m. of the following day, other than a Saturday or legal holiday. The undersigned Trustee disclaims any liability for any incorrectness of the property address or other common designation, if any, shown herein. Date: 08/16/2016 CARSON EMMONS, A MEMBER OF THE STATE BAR. Trustee is qualified per AR.S § 33-803(A)(2), as a member of the State Bar of Arizona. Trustee s regulator is the State Bar of Arizona. State of ARIZONA } § County of MARICOPA } On 08/16/2016 before me, Sean Wilson Notary Public, personally appeared CARSON EMMONS, who is known to me to be the person(s) whose name(s) is/are subscribed to the within instrument and acknowledged to me that he/she/they executed the same in his/her/their authorized capacity(ies), and that by his/her/their signature(s) on the instrument the person(s), or the entity upon behalf of which the person(s) acted, executed the instrument. WITNESS my hand and official seal. Signature: Sean Wilson (seal) Name: Sean Wilson SEAN WILSON Notary Public, State of Arizona Maricopa County My Commission Expires October 12, 2019 FOR TRUSTEE S SALE INFORMATION PLEASE CALL: XOME 750 HIGHWAY 121 BYP, SUITE 100 LEWISVILLE, TX 75067 800-758-8052 www.homesearch.com If you have previously been discharged through bankruptcy, you may have been released of personal liability for this loan in which case this letter is intended to exercise the note holder s rights against the real property only. NPP0292991 To: PAYSON ROUNDUP 10/14/2016, 10/21/2016, 10/28/2016, 11/04/2016 16362: 10/14, 10/21, 10/28/2016 NOTICE TO CREDITORS NO. PB2016-00082 (For Publication) IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF ARIZONA IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF GILA In the Matter of the Estate of MARGARET ANN CAMPBELL Deceased NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that John S. Campbell has been appointed Personal Representative of this Estate. All persons having claims against the Estate are required to present their claims within four months after the date of the first publication of this notice or the claims will be forever barred. Claims must be presented by delivering or mailing a written statement of the claim to the Personal Representative at 523 North Grapevine Drive, Payson, AZ 85541. DATED this 13th day of Sept,
LEGAL NOTICES 2016. /s/John S. Campbell, Personal Representative Estate of Margaret Ann Campbell 523 North Grapevine Drive Payson, AZ 85541 LAW OFFICES OF JEFFREY B. COHN, P.C. By /s/Jeffrey B. Cohn, Attorney I. D. # 0007367 LAW OFFICES OF JEFFREY B. COHN, P.C. 7234 East Shoeman Lane Scottsdale, AZ 85251 (480) 423-1441 Attorney for John S. Campbell, Personal Representative Estate of Margaret Ann Campbell 10/14, 10/21, 10/28/16 CNS-2933322# 16364: 10/21, 10/28, 11/4, 11/11/2016 NOTICE OF TRUSTEE S SALE TS#: 14-32304 Order #: 140589535-AZ-VOO The following legally described trust property will be sold, pursuant to the power of sale under that certain Deed of Trust dated 7/18/2002 and recorded on 7/19/2002, as Instrument No. 2002-011601, in the office of the County Recorder of Gila County, Arizona, NOTICE! IF YOU BELIEVE THERE IS A DEFENSE TO THE TRUSTEE SALE OR IF YOU HAVE AN OBJECTION TO THE TRUSTEE SALE, YOU MUST FILE AN ACTION AND OBTAIN A COURT ORDER PURSUANT TO RULE 65, ARIZONA RULES OF CIVIL PROCEDURE, STOPPING THE SALE NO LATER THAN 5:00 P.M. MOUNTAIN STANDARD TIME OF THE LAST BUSINESS DAY BEFORE THE SCHEDULED DATE OF THE SALE, OR YOU MAY HAVE WAIVED ANY DEFENSES OR OBJECTIONS TO THE SALE. UNLESS YOU OBTAIN AN ORDER, THE SALE WILL BE FINAL AND WILL OCCUR at public auction to the highest bidder at the front entrance to the Gila County Courthouse, 1400 East Ash Street, Globe, Arizona 85501, on 12/16/2016 at 11:00 AM of said day: LOT 37, OF PINAL VIEW UNIT TWO, ACCORDING TO THE PLAT OF RECORD IN THE OFFICE OF THE COUNTY RECORDER OF GILA COUNTY, ARIZONA, RECORDED IN MAP(S) NO. 347.Per A.R.S. Section 33-803 (A)(2) the successor trustee appointed here qualifies as a Trustee of the trust deed in the Trustee s capacity as a member of the State Bar of Arizona. ACCORDING TO THE DEED OF TRUST OR UPON INFORMATION SUPPLIED BY THE BENEFICIARY, THE FOLLOWING INFORMATION IS PROVIDED PURSUANT TO A.R.S. SECTION 33-808(C):Street address or identifiable location: 7404 GRANDVIEW DRIVE GLOBE, AZ 85501 A.P.N.: 102-23-060 Original Principal Balance: $41,800.00 Name and address of original trustor:(as shown on the Deed of Trust) LINDY L QUINTANA, A SINGLE WOMAN 7404 GRANDVIEW DRIVE GLOBE, AZ 85501 Name and address of beneficiary: (as of recording of Notice of Sale) M and T Bank 4425 Ponce De Leon Blvd. 5th Floor Coral Gables, FL 33146 NAME, ADDRESS and TELEPHONE NUMBER OF TRUSTEE: (as of recording of Notice of Sale)Eric L. Cook, a member of the State Bar of Arizona Zieve, Brodnax and Steele, LLP 112 North Central Avenue, Suite 425 Phoenix, Arizona 85004 Phone Number: (602) 688-7420 SALE INFORMATION: Sales Line: (714) 730-2727 or Website: www.servicelinkasap.com Dated: 9/14/2016 Eric L.Cook, a member of the State Bar of Arizona Per A. R.S. Section 33-803 (A)(2) the successor trustee appointed here qualifies as a Trustee of the trust deed in the Trustee s capacity as a member of the State Bar of Arizona. A-4594695 10/21/2016, 10/28/2016, 11/04/2016, 11/11/2016 16365: 10/14, 10/21, 10/28, 11/4/2016 NOTICE OF TRUSTEE S SALE TS#: 16-44299 Order #: 160255048-AZ-VOO The following legally described trust property will be sold, pursuant to the power of sale under that certain Deed of Trust dated 11/18/2013 and recorded on 11/22/2013, as Instrument No. 2013-013809, in the office of the County Recorder of Gila County, Arizona, NOTICE! IF YOU BELIEVE THERE IS A DEFENSE TO THE TRUSTEE SALE OR IF YOU HAVE AN OBJECTION TO THE TRUSTEE SALE, YOU MUST FILE AN ACTION AND OBTAIN A COURT ORDER PURSUANT TO RULE 65, ARIZONA RULES OF CIVIL PROCEDURE, STOPPING THE SALE NO LATER THAN 5:00 P.M. MOUNTAIN STANDARD TIME OF THE LAST BUSINESS DAY BEFORE THE SCHEDULED DATE OF THE SALE, OR YOU MAY HAVE WAIVED ANY DEFENSES OR OBJECTIONS TO THE SALE. UNLESS YOU OBTAIN AN ORDER, THE SALE WILL BE FINAL AND WILL OCCUR at public auction to the highest bidder at the Front Entrance of the Gila County Courthouse, 1400 E. Ash Street, Globe, AZ 85501, on 1/4/2017 at 11:00 AM of said day: THE SURFACE AND THE GROUND TO A DEPTH OF 200 FEET LYING IMMEDIATELY BENEATH THE SURFACE OF THE FOLLOWING DESCRIBED PROPERTY:LOTS 17 AND 18, BLOCK 5, CENTRAL HEIGHTS ADDITION TO CENTRAL HEIGHTS TOWNSITE, ACCORDING TO MAP NO. 69, RECORDS OF GILA COUNTY, ARIZONA.Per A.R.S. Section 33-803 (A)(2) the successor trustee appointed here qualifies as a Trustee of the trust deed in the Trustee s capacity as a member of the State Bar of
Payson Roundup
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LEGAL NOTICES Arizona.ACCORDING TO THE DEED OF TRUST OR UPON INFORMATION SUPPLIED BY THE BENEFICIARY, THE FOLLOWING INFORMATION IS PROVIDED PURSUANT TO A.R.S. SECTION 33-808(C): Street address or identifiable location: 5721 SOUTH CENTRAL DRIVE GLOBE, AZ 85501 A.P.N.: 207-09-059 Original Principal Balance: $114,500.00 Name and address of original trustor:(as shown on the Deed of Trust) BENJAMIN J. HAINES, A MARRIED MAN AS HIS SOLE AND SEPARATE PROPERTY 5721 SOUTH CENTRAL DRIVE GLOBE, AZ 85501 Name and address of beneficiary:(as of recording of Notice of Sale)Sun American Mortgage Company 314 S. FRANKLIN ST. TITUSVILLE, PA 16354 NAME, ADDRESS and TELEPHONE NUMBER OF TRUSTEE:(as of recording of Notice of Sale) Eric L. Cook, a member of the State Bar of Arizona Zieve, Brodnax and Steele, LLP 112 North Central Avenue, Suite 425 Phoenix, Arizona 85004 Phone Number: (602) 688-7420 SALE INFORMATION:Sales Line: (800) 280-2832 Website: www.auction.com Eric L. Cook, a member of the State Bar of Arizona Per A.R.S. Section 33-803 (A)(2) the successor trustee appointed here qualifies as a Trustee of the trust deed in the Trustee s capacity as a member of the State Bar of Arizona. A-FN4595261 10/14/2016, 10/21/2016, 10/28/2016, 11/04/2016 16369: 10/21, 10/28, 11/4, 11/11/2016 Notice of Trustee s Sale Recorded on: 9/15/2016 TS No. : AZ-16-739325-JP Order No. : 733-1600772-70 The following legally described trust property will be sold, pursuant to the power of Sale under that certain Deed of Trust dated 8/30/2005 and recorded 9/1/2005 as Instrument No. 2005-016120 in the office of the County Recorder of GILA County, Arizona . Notice! If you believe there is a defense to the trustee sale or if you have an objection to the trustee sale, you must file an action and obtain a court order pursuant to rule 65, Arizona rules of civil procedure, stopping the sale no later than 5:00 p.m. mountain standard time of the last business day before the scheduled date of the sale, or you may have waived any defenses or objections to the sale. Unless you obtain an order, the sale will be final and will occur at public auction to the highest bidder: Sale Date and Time: 1/4/2017 at 11:00:00 AM Sale Location: At the Front Entrance to the Gila County Courthouse, located at 1400 E. Ash Street, Globe, AZ 85501 Legal Description: LOT 8, CHAPARRAL RANCH SUBDIVISION, ACCORDING TO MAP NO(S). 660 AND 660A, RECORDS OF GILA COUNTY, ARIZONA. Purported Street Address: 808 N CHAPARRAL PINES DR,
LEGAL NOTICES PAYSON, AZ 85541 Tax Parcel Number: 302-83-008-3 Original Principal Balance: $650,000.00 Name and Address of Current Beneficiary: THE BANK OF NEW YORK MELLON FKA THE BANK OF NEW YORK, AS TRUSTEE FOR THE CERTIFICATEHOLDERS OF CWALT, INC., ALTERNATIVE LOAN TRUST 2005-48T1, MORTGAGE PASS-THROUGH CERTIFICATES, SERIES 2005-48T1 C/O Ditech Financial LLC fka Green Tree Servicing LLC 7360 S. Kyrene Road Tempe, AZ 85283 Name(s) and Address(s) of Original Trustor(s): PAUL C ALEXANDER AND KIMBIE ALEXANDER, HUSBAND AND WIFE Name and Address of Trustee/Agent: Quality Loan Service Corporation 411 Ivy Street, San Diego, CA 92101 Phone: ( 866 ) 645-7711 Sales Line: 800-280-2832 Login to: www.auction.com O r Login to: http://www.qualityloan.com Reinstatement Line: (866) 645-7711 Ext 5318 AZ-16-739325-JP The successor trustee qualifies to act as a trustee under A.R.S. §33-803(A)(1) in its capacity as a licensed Arizona escrow agent regulated by the Department of Financial Institutions. If the sale is set aside for any reason, including if the Trustee is unable to convey title, the Purchaser at the sale shall be entitled only to a return of the monies paid to the Trustee. This shall be the Purchaser s sole and exclusive remedy. The purchaser shall have no further recourse against the Trustor, the Trustee, the Beneficiary, the Beneficiary s Agent, or the Beneficiary s Attorney. If you have previously been discharged through bankruptcy, you may have been released of personal liability for this loan in which case this letter is intended to exercise the note holders right s against the real property only. QUALITY MAY BE CONSIDERED A DEBT COLLECTOR ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT AND ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE . TS No.: AZ-16-739325-JP Dated: 9/13/2016 QUALITY LOAN SERVICE CORPORATION By: Rachel C. Kenny, Assistant Secretary A notary public or other officer completing this certificate verifies only the identity of the individual who signed the document to which this certificate is attached, and not the truthfulness, accuracy, or validity of that document. State of: California County of: San Diego On 9/13/2016 before me, Brenda A. Gonzalez a notary public, personally appeared Rachel C. Kenny, who proved to me on the basis of satisfactory evidence to be the person(s) whose name(s) is/are subscribed to the within instrument and acknowledged to me that he/she/they executed the same in his/her/their authorized capacity(ies), and that by his/her/their signature(s) on the instrument the person(s), or the entity upon behalf of which the
Friday, October 28, 2016
LEGAL NOTICES person(s) acted, executed the instrument . I certify under PENALTY OF PERJURY under the laws of the State of California that the foregoing paragraph is true and correct. WIT NESS my hand and official seal. Signature Brenda A. Gonzalez Commission No. 2116627 NOTARY PUBLIC - California San Diego County My Comm. Expires 6/21/2019 IDSPub #0116486 10/21/2016 10/28/2016 11/4/2016 11/11/2016 16370: 10/28, 11/4, 11/11, 11/18/2016 NOTICE OF TRUSTEE S SALE The following legally described trust property will be sold, pursuant to the power of sale under that certain Deed of Trust dated 07/08/1999 and recorded on 07/16/1999 as Instrument No. 1999 11520, Book - Page - and rerecorded on as in the official records of Gila County, Arizona, NOTICE! IF YOU BELIEVE THERE IS A DEFENSE TO THE TRUSTEE SALE OR IF YOU HAVE AN OBJECTION TO THE TRUSTEE SALE, YOU MUST FILE AN ACTION AND OBTAIN A COURT ORDER PURSUANT TO RULE 65, ARIZONA RULES OF CIVIL PROCEDURE, STOPPING THE SALE NO LATER THAN 5:00 P.M. MOUNTAIN STANDARD TIME OF THE LAST BUSINESS DAY BEFORE THE SCHEDULED DATE OF THE SALE, OR YOU MAY HAVE WAIVED ANY DEFENSES OR OBJECTIONS TO THE SALE. UNLESS YOU OBTAIN AN ORDER, THE SALE WILL BE FINAL AND WILL OCCUR at public auction to the highest bidder At the main entrance to the Gila County Courthouse 1400 E. Ash Street Globe, AZ 85501, in Gila County, on 01/26/2017 at 11:00 AM of said day: Legal Description: THE FOLLOWING DESCRIBED PROPERTY LOCATED IN GILA COUNTY, ARIZONA: LOT 80, OF RIM TRAIL MOUNTAIN CLUB TRACT PLAT 7, ACCORDING TO THE PLAT OF RECORD IN THE OFFICE OF THE COUNTY RECORDER OF GILA COUNTY, ARIZONA, RECORDED IN MAP NO. 173. Purported Street Address: 132 W Sierra Vista Lane, Payson, AZ 85541 Tax Parcel Number: 302-04-078 Original Principal Balance: $ 97,600.00 Name and Address of Current Beneficiary: Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. as Trustee for Structured Asset Securities Corporation, SASCO Mortgage Loan Trust 1999-BC4, Mortgage Pass-Through Certificates, Series 1999-BC4 c/o Ocwen Loan Servicing, LLC,
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LEGAL NOTICES 661 Worthington Road, West Palm Beach, FL 33409 Name and Address of Original Trustor: Eldon W. Jenkins and Joan A. Jenkins, Husband and Wife as Joint Tenants With Rights of Survivorship, 132 W Sierra Vista Lane, Payson, AZ 85541. Name, Address and Telephone Number of Trustee: Western Progressive - Arizona, Inc. Northpark Town Center, 1000 Abernathy Rd NE; Bldg 400, Suite 200, Atlanta, GA 30328; (866) 960-8299 SALE INFORMATION: Sales Line: (866) 960-8299 Website: http://www.altisource.com/Mort gageServices/DefaultManagem ent/TrusteeServices.aspx Western Progressive - Arizona, Inc. DATED: September 28, 2016 /s/ Keisha Lyons Trustee Sale Assistant Pursuant to A.R.S. 33 - 803(A)(6), the trustee herein qualifies as a trustee of the Deed of Trust in the trustee s capacity as a corporation all the stock of which is owned by Premium Title Agency, Inc., an escrow agent in the state of Arizona. The regulators of Premium Title Agency are the Arizona Department of Insurance and the Arizona Department of Financial Institutions. Western Progressive - Arizona, Inc. is registered with the Arizona Corporation Commission. STATE OF Georgia COUNTY OF Fulton On September 28, 2016, before me, the undersigned, a Notary Public in and for the said State, duly commissioned and sworn, personally appeared Keisha Lyons, personally known to me (or proved to me on the basis of satisfactory evidence) to be the person who executed the within instrument and acknowledged to me that he/she executed the same in his/her authorized capacity, and that by his/her signature on the instrument, the person, or the entity upon behalf of which the person acted, executed the instrument. WITNESS my hand and official seal. /s/ Stephani Spurlock NOTARY PUBLIC My Commission Expires: April, 09, 2017 16373: 10/28, 11/4, 11/11, 11/18/2016 NOTICE OF TRUSTEE S SALE Trustee Sale No.: 00000006164438 Title Order No.: 733-1600827-70 FHA/VA/PMI No.: 023-2888305-952 The following legally described trust property will be sold, pursuant to the power of sale under that certain Deed of Trust dated 08/05/2008 and Recorded as Instrument No. 2010-000294 on 01/12/2010 of Official Records, in the office of the County Recorder of GILA County, Arizona. NOTICE! IF YOU BELIEVE THERE IS A DEFENSE TO THE TRUSTEE SALE OR IF YOU HAVE AN OBJECTION TO THE TRUSTEE SALE, YOU MUST FILE AN ACTION AND OBTAIN A COURT ORDER PURSUANT TO RULE 65, ARIZONA RULES OF CIVIL PROCEDURE, STOPPING THE SALE NO LATER THAN 5:00 P.M. MOUNTAIN STANDARD TIME OF THE LAST BUSINESS DAY BEFORE THE SCHEDULED DATE OF THE SALE, OR YOU MAY HAVE WAIVED ANY DEFENSES OR OBJECTIONS TO THE SALE. UNLESS YOU OBTAIN AN ORDER, THE SALE WILL BE FINAL AND WILL OCCUR at public auction to the highest bidder at the front entrance to the Gila County Courthouse, 1400 E. Ash, Globe, AZ, in GILA county, on 12/08/2016 at 11:00AM of said day: PARCEL A AS SHOWN IN RECORD OF SURVEY RECORDED AS SURVEY MAP NO. 1093, AND AMENDED SURVEY MAP NO. 1154, BEING A PORTION OF THE SOUTHWEST QUARTER OF SECTION 23, TOWNSHIP 6 NORTH, RANGE 10 EAST OF THE GILA AND SALT RIVER BASE AND MERIDIAN, GILA COUNTY, ARIZONA. ACCORDING TO THE DEED OF TRUST OR UPON INFORMATION SUPPLIED BY THE BENEFICIARY, THE FOLLOWING INFORMATION IS PROVIDED PURSUANT TO ARIZONA REVISED STATUTES SECTION 33-808(C): Street address or identifiable location: 159 W. QUAIL TRAIL, TONTO BASIN, AZ 85553 Tax Parcel number: 201-08-020S Original Principal Balance: $322,500.00 Name and Address of Original Trustor (as shown on the Deed of Trust): THOMAS H. KANE AND PAULA J. KANE, HUSBAND AND WIFE AS COMMUNITY PROPERTY WITH RIGHT OF SURVIVORSHIP MAILING ADDRESS: 159 W. QUAIL TRAIL, TONTO BASIN, AZ 85553 Name and address of beneficiary (as of recording of Notice of Sale): NATIONSTAR MORTGAGE LLC DBA CHAMPION MORTGAGE COMPANY, C/O CHAMPION MORTGAGE COMPANY 8950 CYPRESS WATERS BLVD. COPPELL, TX 75019 Name, address & telephone number of trustee: CARSON EMMONS, a member of the State Bar BARRETT DAFFIN FRAPPIER TREDER & WEISS, LLP 4004 Belt Line Road, Suite 100 Addison, Texas 75001-4320 (855) 286-5901 The beneficiary under the aforementioned Deed of Trust has accelerated the Note secured thereby and has declared the entire unpaid principal balance, as well as any and all other amounts due in connection with said Note and/or Deed of Trust, immediately due and payable. Said sale will be made as is, but without
LEGAL NOTICES covenant or warranty, express or implied, regarding title, possession or encumbrances, to pay the remaining principal sum of the note secured by said Deed of Trust, which includes interest thereon as provided in said note, advances, if any under the terms of said Deed of Trust, interest on advances, if any, fees, charges and expenses of the Trustee and of the trust created by said Deed of Trust. Trustee will accept only cash (in the forms which are lawful tender in the United States and acceptable to the trustee, payable in accordance with A.R.S § 33-811(A)) or credit bid by the beneficiary. Reinstatement payment must be paid before five o clock p.m. on the last day other than a Saturday or legal holiday before the date of the sale. The Purchaser at the sale, other than the beneficiary to the extent of his credit bid, shall pay the price no later than five o clock p.m. of the following day, other than a Saturday or legal holiday. The undersigned Trustee disclaims any liability for any incorrectness of the property address or other common designation, if any, shown herein. Date: 08/30/2016 CARSON EMMONS, a member of the State Bar. Trustee is qualified per AR.S § 33-803(A)(2), as a member of the State Bar of Arizona. Trustee s regulator is the State Bar of Arizona. State of ARIZONA } § County of MARICOPA } On 08/30/2016 before me, Sean Wilson Notary Public, personally appeared CARSON EMMONS, who is known to me to be the person(s) whose name(s) is/are subscribed to the within instrument and acknowledged to me that he/she/they executed the same in his/her/their authorized capacity(ies), and that by his/her/their signature(s) on the instrument the person(s), or the entity upon behalf of which the person(s) acted, executed the instrument. WITNESS my hand and official seal. Signature: Sean Wilson (seal) Name: Sean Wilson SEAN WILSON Notary Public, State of Arizona Maricopa County My Commission Expires October 12, 2019 FOR TRUSTEE S SALE INFORMATION PLEASE CALL: Nationwide Posting & Publication a Division of First American Title Insurance Company 1180 IRON POINT ROAD SUITE 100 FOLSOM, CA 95630 916-939-0772 www.nationwideposting.com If you have previously been discharged through bankruptcy, you may have been released of personal liability for this loan in which case this letter is intended to exercise the note holder s rights against the real property only. NPP0294010 To: PAYSON ROUNDUP 10/28/2016, 11/04/2016, 11/11/2016, 11/18/2016 16374: 10/28, 11/4, 11/11, 11/18/2016 DCS S NOTICE OF HEARING ON MOTION FOR TERMINATION OF PARENT-CHILD RELATIONSHIP NO. JD 201500015 (Honorable Timothy M. Wright) IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF ARIZONA IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF GILA In the matter of: BRYAN MIGUEL OCHOA d.o.b. 02-15-2007 Person(s) under 18 years of age. TO: VICTOR MANUEL OCHOA, father of the above-named child. 1. The Department of Child Safety, (DCS or the Department), by and through undersigned counsel, has filed a Motion for Termination of Parent-Child Relationship under Title 8, of the Arizona Revised Statutes and Rule 64 of the Arizona Rules of Procedure for the Juvenile Court. 2. The Court has set a continued Initial/Publication hearing on January 19, 2017, at 9:00 a.m.., at the Gila County Superior Court, 714 S. Beeline Hwy, #104, Payson, AZ 85541, before the Honorable Timothy M. Wright for the purpose of determining whether any parent or guardian named herein is contesting the allegations in the Motion. 3. You and your children are entitled to have an attorney present at the hearing. You may hire your own attorney or, if you cannot afford an attorney and want to be represented by an attorney, one may be appointed by the Court. 4. You have a right to appear as a party in this proceeding. You are advised that your failure to personally appear in court at the initial hearing, pretrial conference, status conference, or termination adjudication, without good cause shown, may result in a finding that you have waived your legal rights and have admitted the allegations in the Motion. In addition, if you fail to appear without good cause, the hearing may go forward in your absence and may result in termination of your parental rights based upon the record and the evidence presented to the Court. 5. If you are receiving this Notice by publication, you may obtain a copy of the Motion for Termination of Parent-Child Relationship and Notice of Hearing by submitting a written request to: TRACEY L. HEINRICK, Office of the Attorney General, 120 W. 1st Avenue, 2nd Floor, Mesa, AZ 85210. The assigned child safety worker is Sheena Walters and may be reached by telephone at (928) 358-6594. 6. Requests for reasonable accommodation for persons with disabilities must be made to the court by parties at least three working days in advance of a scheduled court proceeding and can be made by calling (928) 474-3978. 7. You have the right to make a request or motion prior to any hearing that the hearing be closed to the public.
LEGAL NOTICES DATED this _____ day of October 2016. MARK BRNOVICH Attorney General TRACEY L. HEINRICK Assistant Attorney General 10/28, 11/4, 11/11, 11/18/16 CNS-2937987# 16375: 10/25, 10/28, 11/4/2016 NOTICE (for publication) ARTICLES OF ORGANIZATION HAVE BEEN FILED IN THE OFFICE OF THE ARIZONA CORPORATION COMMISSION FOR I. Name: TRID, LLC File No: L-2121422-8 II. The address of the known place of business is: 200 E. Malibu Dr., Unit D5, Payson, AZ 85541. III. The name and street address of the Statutory Agent is: United States Corporation Agents, Inc., 17470 N. Pacesetter Way, Scottsdale, AZ 85255. (A) Management of the limited liability company is reserved to the members. The names and addresses of each person who is a member are: Donald Stoykovich; 200 E. Malibu Dr., Unit D5, Payson, AZ 85541; Daylon Stoykovick, 200 E. Malibu Dr., Unit D5, Payson, AZ 85541; Donna Stoykovich; 200 E. Malibu Dr., Unit D5, Payson, AZ 85541. 16376: 10/25, 10/28, 11/1/2016 ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION OF NOKAOI COMPANY 1. ENTITY NAME: NOKAOI COMPANY 2. INITIAL BUSINESS: The Corporation initially intends, but dos not limit itself, to the sales and installation of Floor Covering. 3. AUTHORIZED CAITAL: The Corporation shall have authority to issue 1000 (one thoushand) shares of Common Stock with no par value. 4. ARIZONAKNOWN PLACE OF BUSINESS ADDRESS: The street address of the known place of business of the Corporation is: 111 W. Bonita St., Payson, AZ 85541. 5. STATUTORYAGENT: Dr. J. Albert Almendinger, 1753 S. 77th St., Mesa, AZ 85209. 6. BOARD OF DIRECTORS: Michael D. LeVac, 111 W. Bonita St., Payson, AZ 85541; The number of persons to serve on the board of directors thereafter shall be fixed by the Bylaws. 7. INCORPORATORS: Dr. J. Albert Almendinger, 1753 S. 77th St., Mesa, AZ 85209. All powers, duties and responsibilities of the incorporators shall cease at the time of delivery of these Articles of Incorporation to the Arizona Corporation Commission. 8. DURATION: The existence of this corporation shall be perpetual. 9. INDEMNIFICATIN OF OFFICERS, DIRECTORS, EMPLOYEES AND AGENTS: The Corporation shall indemnify any person who incurs expenses or liabilities by reason of the fact he or she is or was an officer, director, employee or agent of the Corporation or is or was serving at the request of the Corporation as a director, officer, employee or agent of another Corporation, partnership, joint venture, trust or other enterprise. This indemnification shall be mandatory in all circumstances in which indemnification is permitted by law. 10. LIMITATION OF LIABILITY: To the fullest extent permitted by the Arizona Revised Statutes, as the same exists or may hereafter be amended, a director of the Corporation shall not be liable to the Corporation or its stockholders for monetary damages for any action taken or any failure to take any action as a director. No repeal, amendment or modification of this article, whether direct or indirect, shall eliminate or reduce its effect with respect to any act or omission of a director of the Corporation occurring prior to such repeal, amendment or modification EXECUTED this 16th day of September, 2016 by all of the incorporators. /s/ Dr. J. Albert Almendinger, Dr. J. Albert Almendinger ACCEDPTANCE OF APPOINTMENT BY STATUTORY AGENT: The undersigned hereby acknowledges and accepts the appointment as statutory agent of the above-named corporation effective this 16th day of September, 2016. /s/ Dr. J. Albert Almendinger, Dr. J. Albert Almendinger; 1753 S. 77th St., Mesa, AZ 85209. 16377: 10/28, 11/1, 11/4/2016 NOTICE (for publication) ARTICLES OF ORGANIZATION HAVE BEEN FILED IN THE OFFICE OF THE ARIZONA CORPORATION COMMISSION FOR I. Name: MARK ALTEN PLLC File No: P21237904 II. The address of the known place of business is: 1300 N. Navajo Ln, Payson, AZ 85541. III. The name and street address of the Statutory Agent is: Mark Alten, 1300 N. Navajo Ln, Payson, AZ 85541. (A) Management of the limited liability company is reserved to the members. The names and addresses of each person who is a member are: Mark Alten, (x) member, 1300 N. Navajo Ln, Payson, AZ 85541.
PAYSON ROUNDUP
OUTDOORS
Friday, October 28, 2016
19
Final burst of
FALL along the Highline
Story and Photos by Randy Cockrell hiking columnist
On an absolutely cracking fall day in mid-October, 18 of us set out from Payson to enjoy one of our favorite hikes — the eastern end of the Highline Trail as it meanders from the Two Sixty Trailhead to the See Canyon Trailhead at Christopher Creek. Doing this hike every year in the autumn provides a feast for the eyes as we walk through virtual tunnels of colorful, dying leaves. This day’s beautiful, sunny weather is especially welcome considering that it hailed and rained on us during last year’s hike. After leaving a shuttle car at the See Canyon Trailhead, we members of the Payson Packers C Group gather at the Two Sixty Trailhead, located just a few miles east of the Christopher Creek Loop on State Highway 260. It’s one of the better trailheads around: It’s sign-posted on the highway, suitable for your regular family sedan, has a toilet, and room for about 25 cars. Beginning our march at the big informational sign, we head westerly into a typical mixed forest of juniper, oak, pine, manzanita and prickly pear. Here, early in the hike, we see no sign of the colorful maples we seek, but we know the wonders that await down the trail. This excellent trail — popular with mountain bikers — is very distinct, well-tended, and largely free of annoying rocks. At first, you’re aware of traffic noise as you parallel the highway, but this goes away after a mile or so of negotiating the hilly single-track. Scenic overlooks are few and far between, but you don’t really mind as the handsome trail cuts back
Highline Trail (260 Trailhead to See Canyon) • The Highline National Recreation Trail runs for 50 miles between the Pine trailhead and the Two Sixty trailhead. • See Canyon trailhead: From Payson, drive Hwy. 260 east, past mile marker 272, and turn left onto the Christopher Creek Loop. Drive about a mile until you reach FR 284 on the left, direct ly across from the Tall Pines Market. Take the dirt road FR 284 for 1.6 miles to the trailhead. Passenger cars OK. Elevation 6,150 feet. • Two Sixty trailhead: From Payson, drive Hwy. 260 east, past mile marker 278, and turn left where the sign indicates. Elevation 6,660 feet. • End to end distance: 7.6 miles. • Difficulty: Easy • Highlights: Massive trees, autumn colors, access to the Drew Trail.
• See Highline Trail, page 20
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Payson Roundup OUTDOORS Friday, October 28, 2016
20
What do trout eat?
My Uncle Bud taught me to slower current. The swimmers fly fish when I was about 10 have a broader range and are years old. He always used a found in fast as well as slow coachman wet fly, which nat- sections of a stream. urally became my favorite fly The crawlers are more flattoo. He liked it because it had tened and wider bodied. They a white wing that he could eas- are more often found in fastily track in the stream, and er currents and their flattened he believed it was a great imi- shape and sprawled legs help tation of the body structure them hold tightly to the rocks of most aquatic insects in the in the faster sections of the water. I still tie that fly and use stream. it today along with a handful of Take some time and carefulother wet flies. ly lift a few rocks in the water When folks think about fly where you are fishing to get a fishing, they picture delicate good idea of the size and shape casts with a dry fly bobbing of the mayflies present that the along on the surface. I too enjoy trout are likely eating. the thrill of seeing a trout rise After a year or more in the to the surface to take my fly, water, the burrowing, swimand appreciate the sense of ming, and crawling nymphs accomplishment transform to the next stage of deceiving the called the dun or the trout to take an sub-imago. This is artificial fly a vulnerthat I hoped able time matched the for the hatch. Unlike insect as it many fly fishermen, has to come however, well over to the sur95 percent of my face and shed fly fishing is done its nymphal skin, with wet flies, bead break through the heads, midges, water surface to wooly buggers, and open its wings, streamers below and allow them the surface of the to dry sufficiently before flying off to water. a nearby bush or Trout target several groups of tree. As you can imagine, trout love aquatic insects, JIM STROGEN to feed on mayflies including mayflies, Fishing Columnist while they are stoneflies, caddismaking this transflies, midges, damformation, so an selflies, and dragemerger pattern is a onflies. All of these insects have immagreat fly to use at ture stages in the this time. water and spend These duns usuthe bulk of that ally rest for up to time on or near a day or two in the the bottom of a vegetation and then stream or lake. return in the spinner That’s why I or imago stage to mate fish with flies in the air and deposit that imitate their eggs in the stream. these aquatic life stagThen they die, providing es. a meal as they float downMayflies, perhaps the most stream. As you can see, the one important group of insects to or two days during which they trout, are the order of insects transform into a winged adult called Ephemeroptera. The and returning to the stream name suggests these insects to lay eggs offers a very short are ephemeral, but that is real- window for the trout — comly far from the truth. While their pared to the yearlong sojourn winged, adult life lasts for just in the nymph stage. When the 24-48 hours, the water-dwelling insects assume their dun and nymphal stages last a year or spinner stages, dry fly fishing more. So trout search for these works great. That’s when fly mayflies nymphs crawling on fishermen are focused on trying rocks or being washed down- to “match the hatch.” stream. But for the rest of the year, There are three major types the nymphs remain hidden of mayfly nymphs: burrowers, beneath the surface. So day swimmers, and crawlers. The in and day out, you’ll do betburrowers and swimmers are ter fishing under the surface generally elongated, thin-bod- with flies that match the genied nymphs. The burrowers live eral body shape and size of the in silt or fine grained sand areas mayfly nymphs the trout see of the stream that often have a every day.
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414 S. Beeline Highway, Payson, AZ www.drbeier.com
Highline Trail fall hike From page 1 and forth around ravines and gullies, most featuring large stone shelves undercut by water rushing down off the Mogollon Rim. Another treat is the presence of BIG trees — quite a lot of the biggest old junipers you’ve ever seen, a few huge pines, and many outsized manzanita. After a couple miles, we spot the occasional splash of fall color, but just one or two trees here and there. At about 4.5 miles into our trek, we arrive at a fence, the highest elevation of the hike at 6,800 feet, and the intersection of the Drew Trail, where we take a break. (The Drew Trail runs for only a mile, but it goes north right up the escarpment of the Rim, switchbacking to the top to meet Forest Road 9350, and gaining a lot of elevation during its brief span.) A few hundred yards past our snack break, we encounter one of our favorite photo opportunities: The sideways juniper. Easily accessed just a few feet off the right side of the trail, the fat trunk of this curious old tree runs horizontal-
ly for several feet across a shelf of rock, providing the perfect place to pose for photos. Soon, we head downhill and start to see more maples flaunting fancy foliage — the stuff we seek. We spend a good bit of time in this delightful half-milelong area, which, to many of us, calls to mind the massive displays of fall color in the northeast U.S. We shoot a ton of photographs, posing and playing amid the fallen leaves and watching the sunlight filter down through the trees. After the “photo zone” the landscape returns to what we’d encountered earlier — an excellent trail through mixed forest, although now, at a point in the journey when it’s very much appreciated, the trail trends mostly downhill. Finally, after about 7.5 miles, we arrive at Christopher Creek, balancing carefully as we cross the crude log footbridge, then head left and up the wide path to the parking lot. Now it’s just a matter of shuttling the drivers back up to their cars at the Two Sixty trailhead. We’ll be doing this trail again next year, without a doubt, come rain, hail or shine.