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ElbertCountyNews.net ELBERT COUNTY, COLORADO A publication of October 16, 2014 VOLUME 119 | ISSUE 37 | 75¢ POSTAL ADDRESS ELBERT COUNTY NEWS (USPS 171-100) OFFICE: 9137 S. Ridgeline Blvd., Suite 210 Highlands Ranch, CO 80129 PHONE: 303-566-4100 A legal newspaper of general circulation in Elizabeth, Colorado, the Elbert County News is published weekly on Thursday by Colorado Community Media. PERIODICALS POSTAGE PAID AT ELIZABETH, COLORADO and additional mailing offices. POSTMASTER: Send address change to: 9137 S. Ridgeline Blvd., Suite 210 Highlands Ranch, CO 80129 DEADLINES: Display: Thurs. 11 a.m. Legal: Thurs. 11 a.m. | Classified: Mon. 10 a.m. GET SOCIAL WITH US PLEASE RECYCLE THIS COPY SPECIAL SECTION INSIDE Leaky roofs highlight aging schools Money requested for capital projects in Elizabeth district By Mike DiFerdinando mdiferdinando@colorado communitymedia.com Leaky roofs at Singing Hills Elementary and Elizabeth High School are just the most outward signs of aging infrastructure issues facing Elizabeth Schools. At Elizabeth High School, wa- ter came pouring into the school’s cafetorium as recently as Sept. 29. “These are safety issues,” said Chris Richardson, a school board member. “These kinds of infra- structure problems have to be ad- dressed for the well-being of our students.” According to Richardson, the roofs on the two schools have ex- ceeded their life cycle and the dis- trict would like to replace the roofs entirely at both locations. “When they were building the schools they had to make choices about where to cut costs. They de- cided to go with roofs that didn’t have as long of a life cycle as they could have,” Richardson said. “We got more years out of these roofs than we probably should have and now it’s time to replace them.” Estimates to replace the roofs with new ones that are expected to last up to 30 years will cost EHS about $1 million and Singing Hills about $475,000. The district hopes to raise funds to fix the roofs and make other re- pairs to its schools with two ballot measures in the upcoming Novem- ber election. At a special meeting in Septem- ber, the Elizabeth School Board voted to place two tax measures on the 2014 ballot. The first is a short- term mill-levy increase to ensure that the district can attract and retain quality teachers and begin to better meet the technological needs of its classrooms. A mill levy is the assessed prop- erty tax rate used by local govern- ments and other jurisdictions to raise revenue in order to cover an- nual expenses. The mill levy is cal- culated by determining how much revenue each taxing jurisdiction will need for the upcoming year, then dividing that projection by the total value of the property with- in the area and adding up the rate from each jurisdiction to get the mill levy for the entire area. According to the school dis- trict, the estimated property tax impact of the mill-levy override, if approved by voters, is $4.32 per month per $100,000 of a home’s ac- tual market value as determined by the county assessor, or $15.74 per month per $100,000 for businesses. The second ballot measure is a capital-needs bond request for $2.5 million to go toward what the district calls critical needs, includ- ing the acquisition of emergency Elizabeth High School is one of multiple schools in the district that is encountering water damage in classrooms. The district has two measures on the ballot this fall hoping that, if passed, they will be able to repair aging infrastructure such as this. Courtesy photo Elizabeth School District details long list of infrastructure needs Staff report In July 2013, the Elizabeth School District published an Infra- structure Assessment Committee report detailing the capital proj- ects and infrastructure improve- ments needed. Of the 158 items contained in the IAC’s reports, 17 were consid- ered for near-term corrective ac- tion using capital funding. These items represent safety and securi- ty risks and/or rapidly deteriorat- ing infrastructure. 1. Replace Running Creek Ele- mentary School fire alarm system. 2. Install Bi-Directional Ampli- fication (BDA) systems to improve first-responder communication capability. 3. Purchase radios compatible with first responders. 4.Replace Knox-Boxes (wall safes containing building keys for fire departments) with large dual- keyed models. 5.Repair Elizabeth High School track/pole vault surfaces. 6.Replace Elizabeth Middle School smoke doors. 7.Install eyewash station at transportation maintenance facil- ity. 8.Install protective barrier on windows adjacent to child-care play areas. 9.Repair lighting in Elizabeth High School parking lot. 10.Repair fencing and gates at elementary-school play areas. 11.Improve fencing surround- ing child-care facility play areas. 12.Replace exterior doors at Elizabeth Middle School. 13. Replace Singing Hills El- ementary School roof. 14. Inspect/repair Elizabeth High School roof. 15.Repair water-repellent coat- ings and joint seals on masonry buildings. 16.Replace up to three high- mileage buses. 17. Install additional diesel- storage capacity. Roofs continues on Page 9 THE INCUMBENT John Hickenlooper THE CHALLENGER Bob Beauprez INSIDE: Hickenlooper proud of his record — profile on Page 10; Governor hopefuls stray onto new ground — debate coverage on Page 11; Q&A with Hickenlooper on Page 11. INSIDE: Beauprez: State needs a leader — profile on Page 10; Governor hopefuls stray onto new ground — debate coverage on Page 11; Q&A with Beauprez on Page 11.

Elbert County News 1016

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Page 1: Elbert County News 1016

1

ElbertCountyNews.net

E L B E R T C O U N T Y, C O L O R A D OA publication of

October 16, 2014VOLUME 119 | ISSUE 37 | 7 5 ¢

POSTA

L AD

DRESS

ELBERT COUNTY NEWS(USPS 171-100)

OFFICE: 9137 S. Ridgeline Blvd., Suite 210Highlands Ranch, CO 80129

PHONE: 303-566-4100

A legal newspaper of general circulation in Elizabeth, Colorado, the Elbert County News is published weekly on Thursday by Colorado Community Media. PERIODICALS POSTAGE PAID AT ELIZABETH, COLORADO and additional mailing o� ces.

POSTMASTER: Send address change to:9137 S. Ridgeline Blvd., Suite 210Highlands Ranch, CO 80129

DEADLINES: Display: Thurs. 11 a.m.Legal: Thurs. 11 a.m. | Classi� ed: Mon. 10 a.m.

GET SOCIAL WITH US

PLEASE RECYCLETHIS COPY

SPECIAL SECTION

INSIDE

Leaky roofs highlight aging schools Money requested for capital projects in Elizabeth district By Mike DiFerdinando [email protected]

Leaky roofs at Singing Hills Elementary and Elizabeth High School are just the most outward signs of aging infrastructure issues facing Elizabeth Schools.

At Elizabeth High School, wa-ter came pouring into the school’s cafetorium as recently as Sept. 29.

“These are safety issues,” said Chris Richardson, a school board member. “These kinds of infra-structure problems have to be ad-dressed for the well-being of our students.”

According to Richardson, the roofs on the two schools have ex-ceeded their life cycle and the dis-trict would like to replace the roofs entirely at both locations.

“When they were building the schools they had to make choices about where to cut costs. They de-cided to go with roofs that didn’t have as long of a life cycle as they

could have,” Richardson said. “We got more years out of these roofs than we probably should have and now it’s time to replace them.”

Estimates to replace the roofs with new ones that are expected to last up to 30 years will cost EHS about $1 million and Singing Hills about $475,000.

The district hopes to raise funds to fi x the roofs and make other re-pairs to its schools with two ballot measures in the upcoming Novem-ber election.

At a special meeting in Septem-ber, the Elizabeth School Board voted to place two tax measures on the 2014 ballot. The fi rst is a short-term mill-levy increase to ensure that the district can attract and retain quality teachers and begin to better meet the technological needs of its classrooms.

A mill levy is the assessed prop-erty tax rate used by local govern-ments and other jurisdictions to raise revenue in order to cover an-nual expenses. The mill levy is cal-culated by determining how much revenue each taxing jurisdiction will need for the upcoming year, then dividing that projection by the total value of the property with-

in the area and adding up the rate from each jurisdiction to get the mill levy for the entire area.

According to the school dis-trict, the estimated property tax impact of the mill-levy override, if approved by voters, is $4.32 per month per $100,000 of a home’s ac-tual market value as determined by

the county assessor, or $15.74 per month per $100,000 for businesses.

The second ballot measure is a capital-needs bond request for $2.5 million to go toward what the district calls critical needs, includ-ing the acquisition of emergency

Elizabeth High School is one of multiple schools in the district that is encountering water damage in classrooms. The district has two measures on the ballot this fall hoping that, if passed, they will be able to repair aging infrastructure such as this. Courtesy photo

Elizabeth School District details long list of infrastructure needs

Sta� report In July 2013, the Elizabeth

School District published an Infra-structure Assessment Committee report detailing the capital proj-ects and infrastructure improve-ments needed.

Of the 158 items contained in the IAC’s reports, 17 were consid-ered for near-term corrective ac-tion using capital funding. These items represent safety and securi-ty risks and/or rapidly deteriorat-

ing infrastructure.1. Replace Running Creek Ele-

mentary School fi re alarm system.2. Install Bi-Directional Ampli-

fi cation (BDA) systems to improve fi rst-responder communication capability.

3. Purchase radios compatible with fi rst responders.

4.Replace Knox-Boxes (wall safes containing building keys for fi re departments) with large dual-keyed models.

5.Repair Elizabeth High School track/pole vault surfaces.

6.Replace Elizabeth Middle School smoke doors.

7.Install eyewash station at transportation maintenance facil-ity.

8.Install protective barrier on windows adjacent to child-care play areas.

9.Repair lighting in Elizabeth High School parking lot.

10.Repair fencing and gates at elementary-school play areas.

11.Improve fencing surround-ing child-care facility play areas.

12.Replace exterior doors at

Elizabeth Middle School.

13. Replace Singing Hills El-

ementary School roof.

14. Inspect/repair Elizabeth

High School roof.

15.Repair water-repellent coat-

ings and joint seals on masonry

buildings.

16.Replace up to three high-

mileage buses.

17. Install additional diesel-

storage capacity.

Roofs continues on Page 9

THE INCUMBENT

John Hickenlooper THE CHALLENGER

Bob BeauprezINSIDE: Hickenlooper proud of his record — pro� le on Page 10; Governor hopefuls stray onto new ground — debate coverage on Page 11; Q&A with Hickenlooper on Page 11.

INSIDE: Beauprez: State needs a leader — pro� le on Page 10; Governor hopefuls stray onto new ground — debate coverage on Page 11; Q&A with Beauprez on Page 11.

Page 2: Elbert County News 1016

2 Elbert County News October 16, 2014

2

A Halloween celebration with plenty of spooky surprises for children of all ages!

• Haunted Trek through Ghoul-ology • Creepy Crawly Crafts• Live Animals: Owl Flight Demonstrations 3 pm & 4 pm • Ghost Stories

In honor of the greatest Halloween tradition, candy booths will line the museum’s hallways, allowing guests to fill up their bags with candy and spooky toys in a safe,

fun environment regardless of weather conditions.

Cost is included with the price of museum admission. Free for museum members.

A Halloween celebration with plenty of spooky surprises

Trek or Treat Off the StreetSaturday, October 25, 9 am – 5 pm

The Wildlife Experience10035 Peoria StreetParker, Colorado 80134Near Park Meadows, 1 Mile East of I-25 on Lincoln Avenue

720.488.3344TheWildlifeExperience.org

NEWS IN A HURRY Ballots in the mail

Starting Oct. 14, ballots were mailed out to all active registered voters in Elbert County. Ballots must be received at the county elections offi ce or at a designated drop-off/voter service and polling center by 7 p.m. on Election Day, Nov. 4. Ballots received after that time will not be counted.

For those who do not want to return their ballots by mail, the following locations are options:

• Walmart, 2100 Legacy Circle, Elizabeth: drop-off only; Oct. 27 to Nov. 4

• Clerk and Recorder’s Offi ce, 215 Co-

manche St., Kiowa: voter service and polling center; Oct. 20 to Election Day, Nov. 4

• Spring Valley Golf Club, 42350 County Road 21, Elizabeth: voter service and polling center; Election Day, Nov. 4

• Elizabeth Public Library, 651 W. Beverly St., Elizabeth: voter service and polling center; Election Day, Nov. 4.

For more information, visit www.elbert-countyco.gov/2014_General_Notice_of_Elec-tion.pdf

Forum scheduled on ballot measuresA forum on a pair of ballot measures will be

held at the Elizabeth Public Library from 6 to 7:30 p.m. on Oct. 20. The panel discussion will focus on ballot questions 3A (mill levy over-ride) and 3B (bond authority).

The citizen forum and panel will be moder-ated by Natalie Gregory, community member. The community member panel includes: Tony Baker, Jason Lopez, Brian Luke, Ray Allen and Laura Kissinger.

The library is located at 651 W. Bev-erly Street, Elizabeth. For more information, visit www.3A3B.org and www.elizabeth.k12.co.us/2014election.aspx

Carnival Days on tapDuring fall break, Kids Club is hosting

Carnival Days, Oct. 15-17 for kindergarten through fi fth-grade students. At Frontier High School in Elizabeth there will be full-day childcare, clown activities, costumes, carnival games and learning circus basics from real circus performers. Register with Kids Club if interested. Cost is $33 per day. Bring lunch and snacks from home. For details, contact Rachelle Small at [email protected] or 303-646-6718.

‘Cookbook Junkies’: a delicious habit Parker woman’s Facebook group cooks up 12,700 members By Chris Michlewicz cmichlewicz @coloradocommunitymedia.com

If the cooking community speaks a uni-versal language, Jenny Hartin is undoubtedly fl uent.

A few years ago, she was a paralegal work-ing in Manhattan. Now a stay-at-home mom in Parker, she presides over a domain of de-voted cooks from every corner of the country. Hartin created a Facebook group called “The Cookbook Junkies” in 2010; it has since ex-ploded in popularity, amassing 12,700 mem-bers, as of Oct. 6.

The online forum enables cooks from all walks of life to share family recipes, swap tips and techniques, and perhaps most impor-tantly, bond over a love of precise food prep.

It was, of course, Hartin’s obsession with cookbooks — she owns about 3,000, give or take — that sparked the idea for the group, but the recipe guides have become almost secondary to the friendships that have blos-somed out of “The Cookbook Junkies” page.

“There are a lot of lonely people out there who are connecting now,” she said. “I’m not in this for the glory. This is making me feel more fulfi lled.”

What started as a private group for “people

who don’t want their families to know how much they spend on cookbooks” became a place for like-minded people to fi nd a shoul-der to lean on. Without “The Cookbook Junk-ies,” Hartin says she would lead a somewhat isolated existence. She quit working to take care of her 10-year-old son, Andrew, who has autism, but felt cornered by a friendless world of monotony.

Six years ago, Hartin created a blog about Andrew (and cooking) that gained a following, and that soon morphed into “The Cookbook Junkies,” a community of “easy-going people with a great sense of humor who are all willing to help each other,” she said.

Beverly Babarovich, a founding member of the group, can attest to the helpful nature of her fellow “junkies,” not to mention the therapeutic benefi ts of the relationships she has built. She considers Hartin one of her best friends, even though they’ve never met in per-son.

“She’s pulled me through some hard times,” Babarovich said. “I lost a son a year ago, and she was one of the fi rst people to call me. I’ve never laid eyes on her, but she’s been a brick.”

The Facebook forum is as much a kitchen resource as it is a social club. Babarovich is a 68-year-old widow who lives on an island in Washington state, and borrowing sugar from a neighbor isn’t exactly a viable option. But in-credibly, she can get assistance by simply put-ting the word out to “The Cookbook Junkies.” If she can’t fi nd, say, parmesan rinds for soup, Babarovich said a quick post on the forum will

bring out volunteers willing to send frozen ones in the mail.

Babarovich’s adult son lives at home and is diabetic, limiting the types of foods she makes, so Hartin sent her a cookbook from the Colorado Dietetic Association called “Sim-ply Colorado.”

“I’ve been feeding that kid out of that book,” said Babarovich, who has also received guidance on the forum for her in-home dog treat bakery business.

Because there are members from Alaska, Kansas, the Deep South and even Australia, there is an infi nite number of infl uences and cooking styles from which to borrow, opening fresh worlds and possibilities. While Hartin and others relish the discovery of new cook-ing frontiers, there are supporting casts of characters quietly reaping the rewards of their passion.

“My husband is happy I’m having this wonderful experience, too,” she said.

Parker resident Jenny Hartin and her son, Andrew, run through a few recipes in one of Hartin’s 3,000 cookbooks. She runs a Facebook page called “The Cookbook Junkies” that has more than 12,700 devoted followers. Photo by Chris Michlewicz

Page 3: Elbert County News 1016

Elbert County News 3 October 16, 2014

3

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Carnival Days on tapDuring fall break, Kids Club is hosting

Carnival Days, Oct. 15-17 for kindergarten through fifth-grade students. At Frontier High School in Elizabeth there will be full-day childcare, clown activities, costumes, carnival games and learning circus basics from real circus performers. Register with Kids Club if interested. Cost is $33 per day. Bring lunch and snacks from home. For details, contact Rachelle Small at [email protected] or 303-646-6718.

‘Cookbook Junkies’: a delicious habit

Because there are members from Alaska, Kansas, the Deep South and even Australia, there is an infinite number of influences and cooking styles from which to borrow, opening fresh worlds and possibilities. While Hartin and others relish the discovery of new cook-ing frontiers, there are supporting casts of characters quietly reaping the rewards of their passion.

“My husband is happy I’m having this wonderful experience, too,” she said.

Parker resident Jenny Hartin and her son, Andrew, run through a few recipes in one of Hartin’s 3,000 cookbooks. She runs a Facebook page called “The Cookbook Junkies” that has more than 12,700 devoted followers. Photo by Chris Michlewicz

Page 4: Elbert County News 1016

4 Elbert County News October 16, 2014

4

Calendar of EventsFor a complete calendar of South Metro Denver Chamber events and for more information, visit our web site at www.bestchamber.com or call 303-795-0142.

Friday, October 17iFly Indoor Skydiving Ribbon Cutting & Grand Reopening!10:00 am – 1:00 pm, iFly Denver, 9230 Park Meadows Drive, Lone Tree, CO

Sunday, October 19Making Strides of Denver9:00 am – 10:30 am, Village Center Station, 6380 S Fiddlers Green Cir, Greenwood Village, CO

Monday, October 20Save Lives, Sort Medical Supplies with Project C.U.R.E.7:00 pm, Project CURE, 10337 East Geddes Ave, Centennial, CO

Tuesday, October 21Denver Scholarship Foundation Ed Gala -Make College Possible for Denver Students6:00 pm – 9:00 pm, Wings Over the Rockies Air and Space Museum, 7711 E Academy Blvd, Denver Cost: $250/person. Please register via blacktie-colorado.com

Wednesday, October 22Girls’ Night Out event, The Many Faces of Breast Health6:00 pm – 8:00 pm, The Hudson Gardens & Event Center, 6115 S Santa Fe Dr, Littleton, CO

On Wednesday, October 1, Charles Schwab & Co., Inc., celebrated the grand opening of its new Colorado campus in Lone Tree, Colorado. Schwab is a South Metro Denver Chamber member.

A total of approximately 1,900 Denver-area Schwab employees will move into the 650,000-square-foot, 47-acre campus in staged phases over the next year and a half, enabling the company to consolidate the majority of its Colorado operations in one facility, located at 9800 Schwab Way (at the corner of Park Meadows and Lincoln). �e campus, when completed, will include three �ve-story o�ce buildings as well as a standalone branch o�ce, which opened last May.

Located in the RidgeGate master-planned community, the new campus will provide a new home for Schwab’s service center facilities, which are currently in three leased buildings

at two separate locations north of RidgeGate along the I-25 corridor. �ree of the company’s four local retail branch o�ces will remain in their current locations: at 201 Columbine Street in Cherry Creek; 518 17th Street in downtown Denver; and 2480 Canyon Blvd. in Boulder. �e fourth Denver-area branch o�ce relocated to a prominent location on the new campus, facing Lincoln Avenue just west of I-25.

�e Schwab campus was designed to create a sustainable, visually appealing and strong identity within the community, which itself blends natural open space with mixed-use density. Situated for solar orientation, the campus buildings are nestled into the existing site topography and optimize views of Mount Evans, Indian Peaks, Longs Peak and the downtown Denver skyline. Landscaping re�ects the natural Colorado landscape, with native grasses, plants and trees that

tie into the surrounding prairie. �e site and buildings all incorporate sustainable materials and systems, targeting LEED Gold certi�cation.

“Our corporate real estate team really outdid themselves with this project,” said Brian McDonald, senior vice president of Schwab Investor Services and senior location leader for the company in Colorado. “You couldn’t wish for a better located, more functional and beautiful place to be, and the RidgeGate development o�ers so many amenities. We are really looking forward to becoming a part of the Lone Tree community.”

To date, approximately 70 percent of the campus has been completed, with two of the three buildings ready for occupancy. �e third building is expected to be completed in the summer of 2015. For more information visit www.aboutschwab.com

Schwab Celebrates Grand Opening of new Colorado Campus in Lone Tree

Skydivers to Descend on iFLY Denver Grand Reopening Oct. 17-18Local business leaders, students and the

general public will be on hand to watch Skydivers jump from thousands of feet to kick o� the grand reopening celebration of the new iFLY Indoor Skydiving in Denver (formerly SkyVenture Colorado) on Friday, October 17 beginning at 10:00 a.m. Lone Tree Mayor Jim Gunning, along with the �understorm skydivers, will o�cially cut the ribbon to reopen the indoor skydiv-ing wind tunnel located just south of Park Meadows Mall. Meet professional skydiv-ers, tour the completely remodeled wind tunnel facility, watch indoor skydiving demonstrations from some of the best �y-ers in the world from the free observation deck and take a turn �ying.

Friday, October 17 Schedule• 10:15 a.m. Professional skydivers jump

from an airplane into the new facility. �ey will join Lone Tree Mayor Jim Gunning as he o�cially cuts the ribbon to re-open the wind tunnel as iFLY Denver and proclaims Friday, October 17, 2014 as iFLY Denver

Day. • 10:45 a.m. Tour the new facility and

watch an indoor skydiving demonstration performed by some of the best �ying talent in the world.

• 11 a.m. Lunch served courtesy of Brunswick Zone

• 11 am. – 1 p.m. Take a turn flying for free* in the new iFLY Denver wind tunnel, get behind the scenes to see how the wind tunnel technology works and learn about the iFLY’s new �ight programs including a STEM education program designed to create an interactive classroom for today’s education needs.

• 3-7 p.m. ESPN Radio will broadcast live from the all new iFLY Denver. �e general public is invited to enjoy indoor skydiving demonstrations from the free observation deck, prize giveaways includ-ing a signed Broncos helmet, free �ight vouchers, free tickets to the Wildlife expe-rience and more!

Saturday, October 18 Schedule

• 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. The general public is invited to enjoy indoor skydiving demonstrations from the free obser-vation deck, prize giveaways including a signed Broncos helmet, free �ight vouchers, free tickets to the Wildlife experience and more!

• 10:15 a.m. Professional Thunder-storm skydivers jump from an airplane into the new facility and o�cially cut the Grand Opening ribbon.

• 11 a.m. Special Grand Opening iFLY Denver Cake cutting.

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A physical therapist will assist in developing, maintaining and restoring optimal physical function, independence and quality of life. A physical therapist will help to correct strength and balance issues that have made it difficult for you to function at home and in the community. The goal is to restore normal movement and function while attempting to resolve problems such as pain, muscle weakness, loss of motion or lack of coordination.

An occupational therapist will help in evalu-ating and increasing your ability to perform activities of daily living (ADLs) such as dressing, bathing, getting up from a chair or out of bed, grooming, feeding one’s self, along with other independent living skills.

Physical Therapy:

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New tech building coming to Castle Rock By Mike DiFerdinando [email protected]

A new construction project will bring a four-story offi ce building to downtown Castle Rock and help keep jobs in the town.

The $10 million, 50,000-square-foot building will be at Sixth and Jerry Streets and will be occupied by local companies who were already based in Castle Rock.

In particular, the goal is to keep up and coming tech companies from leaving the

area for more spaces in places like the Den-ver Tech Center.

“This project is creating a small industry cluster in the heart of Castle Rock. This is a powerful thing,” said Kevin Tilson of the Castle Rock Downtown Development Au-thority. “Tech companies are seeking to be located in proximity to one another more and more. They can share developers to fl ex for big projects. This project is an asset in Downtown Castle Rock that is likely to at-tract more tech companies, creating jobs and supporting local merchants in down-

town.”The building will be named The Move,

according to White Construction who will be building the project. No date for ground-breaking has been set, but construction could begin in late November or early De-cember.

The project is still in the design phase. And White Construction Founder Tim White said renderings for the new building will be made public in the next month or so and that he hopes the new building will bring something new to the town.

“The type of space that is desired by these kinds of companies tends to be non-traditional in design,” White said. “It will be the only building in Castle Rock like it on the inside and out.”

White said that the building will feature a metal skin and large portions of glass. The upper levels will have moving glass door features that will allow the outside to come in and there will be patios and recreational spaces both on the ground and upper levels of the building.

Page 5: Elbert County News 1016

Elbert County News 5 October 16, 2014

5

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Page 6: Elbert County News 1016

6 Elbert County News October 16, 2014

6-Election

ElbertCountyNews.netFind more election coverage online

COVERAGE

Udall, Gardner hit hard in debate Pueblo event draws clear lines between rivals in Senate race By Vic Vela [email protected]

A knock-down, drag-out affair in Pueblo between Sen. Mark Udall and Congressman Cory Gardner on Oct. 9 could have easily been promoted on the venue’s marquee as the Steel City Smackdown.

Buoyed — and sometimes booed — by a rowdy audience, the two rivals tangled on a debate stage inside Memorial Hall on is-sues they have clashed over countless times throughout the Senate campaign.

But while many of the issues are worn — they once again sparred over issues that in-cluded women’s reproductive rights and the Affordable Care Act — the candidates’ ener-gies certainly weren’t. The two went at each other hard throughout the night.

That was apparent when the Democrat Udall attacked Gardner and his Republican colleagues in the House of Representatives for failing to make progress on immigration re-form. Udall scolded Gardner by saying, “You haven’t lifted one fi nger” toward movement on immigration issues.

“You talk about growth. You want to grow the econ-omy? Pass the immigration bill now,” Udall said, refer-ring to the immigration re-form measure that passed the Senate this year, but never got off the ground in the House.

When Gardner pivoted to energy issues during the exchange on immigration, it created an open-ing for Udall to highlight the congressman’s dodge.

“I’m glad to talk about energy because you’re wrong about that too, but we’re talking

about immigration reform here,” Udall said.Gardner said earlier in the debate that

Democrats had their chance to pass compre-hensive immigration reform when they con-trolled Congress in 2010, but failed to do so.

The two exchanged immigration failure labels on each other. Udall bashed Gardner for not sup-porting citizenship for many of the undocumented im-migrants living here, while Gardner pointed to Udall’s support for a bill from nine years ago that sought to make illegal immigration a felony.

Gardner got his own shots in while criticizing the way Udall has

courted women voters through television ads that have attacked the congressman over his positions on abortion, birth control and per-sonhood, which would provide legal rights for the unborn.

Udall has tried to corner Gardner on his continued support for a federal personhood effort and for his prior support of a statewide effort here.

Gardner, who is pro-life, has said he no longer supports local personhood efforts and is in favor of women being allowed to obtain birth control without a prescription.

Gardner said Udall is clinging to women’s issues “because he can’t talk about anything else.”

“You’ve run this entire campaign as a so-cial-issues warrior,” Gardner said.

Udall fi red back, telling Gardner, “It sure takes brass” to be referring to him as the “so-cial issues warrior.”

“Congressman, we wouldn’t be having this discussion if you hadn’t spent your career trying to limit the reproductive freedoms of women,” Udall said.

Gardner continued his campaign-long

Udall Gardner

Grant Doherty Residence: Lochbuie

Party: Unaffi liated

Occupation: Structural Engineer

Background: I was born and raised in rural Wyoming and currently live in Loch-buie and work in Lakewood as a project manager for Martin/Martin.

Contact information: DohertyForUS-House.com; www.facebook.com/Doherty-ForUSHouse; @GDoherty2014

Why are you seeking this offi ce?

The reason I am seeking this offi ce is due to the ineffectiveness of our current congress at the hands of the two political parties. As an unaffi liated I want to do the job to represent the people of the 4th Con-gressional District and actually “Represent People, Not Parties.”

What makes you the best person for the job?

I am unaffi liated, an engineer, and I am young. As an unaffi liated I am able to do the job to represent the district as they should be. As an engineer I bring critical thinking and problem solving to Congress. Being young brings my experience with new tech-nologies.

What will your top priority be if elect-ed?

The top priority when elected is break-ing the gridlock of our current congress. All issues hinge on our ineffective congress and without a congress working together we will continue down our current path.

How would you help to end gridlock in immigra-tion reform?

I would work to help end the gridlock in immigra-tion reform by working with both sides to get bipartisan legislation written just as they have done in the Sen-ate.

What two issues deserve more atten-tion next year than they have received in recent sessions? Briefl y explain why.

The top priority going into Congress is to fi x our broken Congress and get it back working again. This really is paramount to all issues. The second issue that deserves more attention is our failing infrastructure in the United States. Our infrastructure has been neglected for far too long.

Jess Loban Residence: Castle Rock

Party: Libertarian

Occupation: Small business owner

Background: No answer

Contact information: www.jessloban.com, [email protected]; www.face-book.com/Loban4Colo-rado

Why are you seeking this offi ce?

I am a father, a native Coloradan and a veteran.

I could no longer stand by as I watched big business control

our country’s direction. I am here to stand up for what is right and to be a positive ex-ample of how service to the state should be conducted.

What makes you the best person for the job?

I am a disabled veteran, having served in the Army and Air Force. I continued to serve in a management role through several government programs to include: Ballistic Missile Early Warning System, NASA: In-ternational Space Station, and our nation’s

F-22 AOCs. I am now a proud small business owner.

What will your top priority be if elected?

The reduction of waste and the restora-tion of power back to the individual states. I believe that many dictates that come from Washington are much better administered at a local level. My mission will be to reduce federal expense and get back to the govern-ment our founders intended.

How would you help to end gridlock in immigration reform?

The best way to do this is with a practical and direct approach with putting a mecha-nism in place that is simple and low-cost. This would then serve as the foundation for additional work and talks. But we have to take the fi rst step to get the framework in place.

What two issues deserve more attention next year than they have received in recent sessions? Briefl y explain why.

I stand against common core. A one-size fi ts all approach for content and delivery makes no sense for our unique nation. We are a gathering of individuals, and we must build and administer education on a local level. We must be free to teach our children as we see fi t.

Ken BuckResidence: Greeley Party: Republican

Occupation: Weld County District At-torney

Contact information: www.buckforColo-rado.com; 970-549-8808

Background: I have served as Weld County District Attorney since 2005. My wife Perry is a state representative from Weld County. My son Cody is an offi cer in the Army, and my daughter Kaitlin is an executive in the oil and gas industry.

Contact information: www.buckforColo-rado.com; 970-549-8808

Why are you seeking this offi ce?

It is immoral to transfer the debt that re-sults from our government’s excessive spend-ing to our grandchildren’s credit cards. In Congress, I will fi ght to reduce spending and balance our budget.

What makes you the best person for the job?

I have a record as a problem solver who gets results. As Weld County District Attorney, I worked with local police departments and the sheriff’s offi ce to reduce crime by 50 per-cent. We also created programs for juveniles, which resulted in a 75 percent reduction in

juvenile crime.

What will your top priority be if elected?

The most important issue facing this country is our nearly $18 trillion debt, which imperils everything from our infrastructure to military preparedness. We have to fi nd a way to reduce federal spending and the overall size

of government in order to not risk our children’s future.

How would you help to end gridlock in immigration reform?

We have to ensure that this country welcomes legal immigrants and also has the available labor that is needed. We should secure our border but also expedite the process for legal immigrants to be-

come citizens. We also need a verifi able guest-worker program for those who are not seeking citizenship.

What two issues deserve more attention next year than they have received in recent sessions? Briefl y explain why.

I discussed reducing federal spending and balancing the budget, which are the top two priorities that have to happen. We are also wit-nessing an erosion in our constitutional rights from an increasingly intrusive federal govern-ment, the size and power of which needs to be reined in.

4TH CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT CANDIDATES

Buck

Doherty

Vic MeyersResidence: Parker

Party: Democratic

Occupation: Candidate

Background: Born and raised in Colo-rado. Married to Kelly for 20 years, three children. B.S. in mathematics (physics mi-nor) U. So. CO, 1995. Trini-dad School Board ‘07-’11.

Contact information: [email protected]; www.vicmeyersfor-congress.com; 719-422-

4497

Why are you seeking this of-fi ce?

I have a duty as a father and a citizen to do my part in holding this Congress ac-countable for being the worst Congress in our nation’s history. We all have a duty to do this or we’ll keep getting the same results and future generations will pay for it.

What makes you the best person for the job?

My opponent is the hand-picked replace-ment of the guy who failed before him. He’s running on partisan talking points. I’ve stud-ied the district and I’m running on the issues

we need represented on: strengthen Social Security, pass immigration reform, invest in-frastructure, honor our veterans.

What will your top priority be if elected?

The four issues I’m running on are all critical to the economics and values of our district. They are all top-priority issues. It’s critical that we have a representative, me, who is focused on the needs of the people and not corporate sponsors who want the status quo.

How would you help to end gridlock in immigration reform?

I’m running as a Democrat, albeit an independent one, in a Republican-gerry-mandered district. I’m running on passing immigration reform while my opponent’s position is status quo. By electing me, the people of this district will break the gridlock on immigration reform.

What two issues deserve more attention next year than they have received in recent sessions? Briefl y explain why.

Making college affordable: it’s critical to our national strength and college debt threatens our economy. The conservative thing to do is make it affordable.

Closing the income inequality gap: Stan-dard and Poor’s recently issued a report showing that the gap is harming economic growth in America. It is becoming critical.

Meyers

Loban

Debate continues on Page 7

Page 7: Elbert County News 1016

Wayne Williams Party: RepublicanOccupation: Current El Paso County

Clerk and RecorderContact information: www.winwith-

wayne.orgBackground: El Paso County Clerk &

Recorder. Certifi ed Elec-tion/Registration Admin-istrator. Medallion Award, National Association of Secretaries of State for elec-tion performance during devastating wildfi res. Mar-ried 27 years.Four adult children. J.D., UVA.

Why does it matter who is the next secretary of state?

Elections are too impor-tant to trust to a novice. I expanded voting opportunities while running challenging elections — a recall with seven different rule sets and an election amidst a devastat-ing wildfi re.

As County Clerk from Colorado’s big-gest county, I’ve been a leader in making improvements. We provide great customer service – I run the only offi ce in the state open on Saturdays. We’ve been a model of effi ciency, openness, and transparency – while keeping costs low.

What distinguishes you from your opponent in this race?

I am the only candidate who has ac-tually run elections. When a devastating wildfi re attacked our community, we had

voters who were completely cut off. As the elected Clerk, I ensured that every citizen had the opportunity to vote – deliver-ing and receiving ballots in extraordinary ways.

When Democrats in another county faced a challenging election that needed to be run fairly and honestly, they selected me — not the other candidates. The elect-ed Democrats with whom I serve have en-dorsed me because they know I’m fair.

What are some policy improvements that you bring to this office?

(No answer.)Has Scott Gessler been a good secre-

tary of state?www.goVoteColorado.com and the

business registration systems are great. A Secretary of State with practical experience in running elections will be able to ensure better processes and more collaboration.

What do see as being the biggest challenge facing the current voting and elections system and what changes would you make?

Colorado has a great system but it can be better. My efforts as county clerk have resulted in record turnout. We need to re-form the recent laws, so that our election integrity matches our already-high voter participation and voters have choice. We should require photo identifi cation for in-person voting and actual residency for same day registration. We should re-quire signature verifi cation for all mail bal-lot elections.

Elbert County News 7 October 16, 2014

7-Election

ElbertCountyNews.netFind more election coverage online

COVERAGE

Ballot questions explored in debate Coloradans will vote on four measures By Vic Vela [email protected]

A televised debate on Oct. 6 laid out arguments for and against the statewide ballot questions that Colorado voters will begin deciding on this month.

The debate, sponsored by KUSA-TV, allowed advocates to argue their posi-tions on the four ballot questions, begin-ning with the two measures that would alter the state’s Constitution.

Amendment 67 is this year’s version of the so-called “personhood” amendment, which would create legal protections for the unborn and would essentially ban abortion in the state.

If passed, the measure would change the state’s criminal code and the Colo-rado Wrongful Death Act to include un-born human beings.

Supporters say the measure protects pregnant women and their unborn chil-dren from harm, but opponents argue the effort goes too far.

“They say it’s about protecting preg-nant women, and in fact, it is not,” said Cathy Alderman of the group No on 67. “It would ban abortion in all cases.”

There is no legal or medical definition of the term “unborn human being,” so Amendment 67 could end up providing legal protections for fertilized eggs, sup-porters have said. And that could impact the availability of abortions and birth control.

Alderman said the changes to the criminal code could result in women and doctors being investigated for mis-carriages.

Supporters of Amendment 67 were not there to make their case. Similar per-sonhood efforts have failed at the ballot box, going back to 2008.

The other proposed constitutional amendment on this year’s ballot, Amend-ment 68, would allow casino-style gam-bling at the Arapahoe Park racetrack along the eastern fringe of Aurora, with new gaming tax revenue going toward K-12 education.

Supporters say the measure would bring in $114.5 million in public and charter school funding. Supporters say schools could use the funding and it’s a great way to obtain the money without raising taxes.

But opponents say the effort would hurt mountain town casinos — which would depress the already-existing gam-ing tax revenues collected there — and would create casino-style gambling in communities that may not even want it there.

Katy Atkinson, who opposes the mea-sure, cited several education advocacy groups that oppose Amendment 68.

She also said it is telling that Con-gressman Mike Coffman and former state House Speaker Andrew Romanoff — two rivals locked in a heated 6th Con-gressional District race and who would represent the area where the racetrack sits — agree in their opposition to the measure.

“So, candidates who do not agree on much agree that this one’s a bad idea,” Atkinson said.

But Becky Brooks of Yes on 68 said 20,000 people in Aurora signed the peti-tion to get the measure on the ballot and that hundreds of teachers statewide are backing the effort.

“So, to make a broad statement that this is not wanted by the people around there is just untrue,” Brooks said.

Meanwhile, Proposition 104 would require school boards to negotiate col-lective bargaining agreements in open meetings.

Supporters say the public has a right to know how their local schools districts are spending their money and that the measure provides greater oversight of government spending.

“The goal is simply to provide trans-parency because it’s the basis of good government,” said former state Rep. BJ Nikkel, a Republican.

But Tyler Chafee, an opponent, said he the ballot language “could apply to every single conversation that admin-istrator has with a member of a teacher organization.” He also cautioned that school districts could end up seeing a spike in legal fees over confidentiality is-sues.

“If it passes I think there are a number of things or consequences that we may not think of,” Chafee said.

The broadcast closed with a debate over Proposition 105, which would re-quire the labeling of foods that contain genetically modified organisms.

GMOs are found in the vast major-ity of common food crops, such as soy-beans, corn and canola. The scientific consensus is that GMO-based foods are currently not harmful to the public’s health or the environment.

But supporters say that consum-ers have a right to know what’s in their foods and can make better choices about what their families consume if they know what’s in the foods they eat.

Robyn O’Brien, a 105 backer, said there have been no long-term health studies on GMO-based foods.

“So the industry can say there’s no ev-idence of harm when in actuality there is no long-term evidence,” she said.

But opponents said the ballot mea-sure presents a number of issues. They say the measure would result in higher food costs and that the labeling could be taken by consumers to mean that the food is unsafe, causing unnecessary con-cern for food they’ve probably been eat-ing for years anyway.

Opponents also take issue with the fact that 105 allows for exemptions for several food products like animal feed, gum, alcohol, cheese and restaurant meals.

Dietitian Mary Lee Kim said if a con-sumer goes into a grocery store for a frozen pizza, the pizza would require la-beling. But if the store cooked that same pizza on site and it was eaten there by the consumer, no label would be required.

“So, how is that consistent?” Kim said. “It doesn’t offer the consumer any good, reliable information.”

Joe Neguse Occupation: University of Colorado

regent and attorney

Contact information: www.joene-guseforcolorado.com

Background: Joe Neguse attended the University of Colorado for his un-dergraduate and law degrees. He cur-rently serves as a CU Regent and attor-ney at the state’s largest law firm.

Why does it matter who is the next secretary of state?

It matters because, as the son of im-migrants, I believe the right to vote is sacred. We need a secretary who will administer elections evenly and fairly. I will work to make our elections acces-sible to all eligible voters.

What distinguishes you from your opponent in this race?

Unlike my opponent, I have a history of working across party lines as a busi-ness attorney and CU Regent. Also, I supported recent election reforms that my opponent opposed, which ensure every registered voter receives a mail-in ballot, and will fight to protect those re-forms when elected.

What are some policy improvements that you bring to this office?

I will work to ensure that all who want to create a business in our state can by creating an online portal for businesses,

hiring regional representatives to work with local economic organizations, and expanding office hours to assist small business owners.

Has Scott Gessler been a good secre-tary of state?

No. The Secretary has been unwilling to work collaboratively with important stake-holders to improve our elections system. As Sec-retary of State, I will col-laborate with the clerks and other stakeholders to ensure that our elec-tions are as efficient and accessible as they can be.

What do see as being the biggest challenge facing the current voting and elections system and what changes would you make?

The most important issue facing the Secretary of State is how to engage peo-ple in our democratic process, thereby making Colorado the number-one state in the country for voter participation. I will work with county clerks to ensure that our elections are efficient and af-fordable, and will expand voter access where it is lacking, including for exam-ple, using tablet technology to ease the process for voters with disabilities.

SECRETARY OF STATE CANDIDATES

Neguse Williams

attack on Udall for supporting President Obama’s policies, including Obamacare, the president’s signature legislative achievement.

“While you’re voting with President Obama 99 percent of the time, I will vote 100

percent of the time for the people of Colora-do,” Gardner said.

The two also traded jabs over accusations of leadership failures. Gardner attacked Udall — whose Senate committee assignments in-clude Armed Services and Intelligence — for missing hearings having to do with emerging threats like that of ISIS-sponsored terrorism.

And Udall slammed Gardner for voting with Republicans to shut down the federal government last year during a time when

Colorado needed Uncle Sam’s help during a fl ood disaster.

This was the third debate of the week between the two, but it was easily the most lively. At one point, Pueblo Chieftain manag-ing editor Steve Hensen, who moderated the debate, had to scold the raucous audience for “embarrassing” themselves for their repeated outbursts throughout the evening.

But the candidates themselves seemed to be energized by the crowd, seemingly queu-

ing up their one-liners in anticipation of a hearty response from their supporters.

Gardner jabbed at Udall when the senator accused him of distorting his record as a way to distract voters.

“I agree, your record is pretty distracting,” Gardner quipped.

That led Udall to fi re back, “You get a sense of why the House of Representatives does nothing when you listen to Congressman Gardner.”

Continued from Page 6

Debate

Page 8: Elbert County News 1016

8 Elbert County News October 16, 2014

8-Opinion

OPINIONY O U R S & O U R S

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LETTER TO THE EDITOR No more money for schools

There they go again asking for yet another tax increase for public schooling! The system never has enough money and always wants more.

It is of course sold to the public appealing to your sense of pity for it is after all, for the children. It is apparent to me by reading the Oct. 9 front-page article, “Teacher turnover climb-ing in district,” that the teach-ers who are leaving Elizabeth Schools for higher paying jobs are in it for the money. They will go where they can make the most money for their time.

It is also apparent to me that this “news” paper is presenting a one-sided position in favor of raising taxes without presenting the other side of the argument against raising taxes for public schools. This is the third article selling us on a tax increase. First, it’s the new track, then the new buses, now it’s the teacher pay!

The Elbert County “News” is clearly biased in favor of more government and higher taxes. Isn’t $8,000 per student per year enough? I challenge the folks with children in the school system to pay for the new buses, teacher raises, new track, new roof, and whatever else the sys-tem says it needs!

Belly up parents and take responsibility for your own children and stop expecting everyone else to pay for your child’s education/indoctrina-tion. How many parents of these public school children want to transport their own children to the school each day?

I say, have each parent with a child in the school sign on to a personal bonded debt for the cost of educating their child and we’ll find out how many actually want the financial and moral responsibility of educating their children. Come on parents, it’s for the children after all!

Why don’t we just close the schools, send the kids home with iPads and let them learn at home under the tutelage of their parents? Is that a responsibil-ity that the parents of school children are willing to accept? If not, then why approve more taxes for the giant bureaucracy of education?

Dan MasonKiowa

Do-over needed on character test

“It’s not what happens to us that defi nes our character, it is how we respond to what happens to us.” I am sure you have heard that before, and if you have read my column in the past few years or heard me speak, you have heard me espouse these very same words.

Well, last week, those words put me to the test personally. How did I do on that test? FFS (failed for sure.)

“What?” you ask. “The guy who writes and speaks about positive attitude, integrity, and taking the high road failed the character test?” Yes he did. It really was not my fault — OK, maybe it was. However, there were mitigat-ing circumstances that resulted in my fl agrant display of lack of discretion and patience.

You see, I had been traveling for the past six weeks on a fairly intense schedule. And the fi nal week included seven cities in fi ve days. And that was nine fl ights and four different hotels. And I have been wrestling with migraine headaches for a while, and the magnitude and insanity of the trip were only exceeded by the ferociousness of the headaches. So lack of sleep and pain were certainly contributing factors to the eventual breakdown in character. But, it was also not my fault that on the very last leg of the trip home, someone opened up a can of “stupid” on the plane. Now, that wasn’t nice of me, was it?

I mean, the ridiculousness and ineptness of my fellow passengers and the fl ight attendants on that fl ight hit an all-time high, or low for that matter. Three people sitting in the wrong seat or row, a woman ringing for the fl ight at-tendant as we taxied away from the gate so she could ask if she could change her fl ight after we had already left, to the fl ight attendants being unable to locate and then relocate a suitcase in the overhead compartment for a passenger. They must have looked for 15 minutes at the same compartment and the same bag and then fi nally realized that it was the bag they were searching for. I mean, really, how many fl ight attendants does it take to change a light bulb? Now I am just getting mean, aren’t I?

I was tired, cranky, in pain, and just miser-able. And that’s when it hit me: I was the one who hit an all-time high, or low for that matter. My pain and anxiety were only exceeded by my own arrogance and impatience. My character was tested and I failed. And I wish that I could

let myself off the hook and chalk it up to a bad day and being human. However I choose not to so that I can learn from my poor behavior and attitude.

So this is an open letter, apology, and con-fession of a weary traveler. The truth is that I travel so often and I can say that I love the fl ight attendants. I know many of them because of the frequent travel. I am rarely if ever inconve-nienced by the airlines. And since I fl y almost exclusively on United, this is a shout-out to all of you at United and thank you all for the great work that you do. Over the past 20 years I have met the most interesting passengers on my fl ights and love to hear their stories. So again, it wasn’t my fellow fl iers and seat mates, nor was it the fl ight attendants, sad to say it, but it was just me.

Sometimes when we are working hard, studying, and preparing so that we pass the trials and tests of life with A’s or B’s, we are mo-tivated not to achieve anything less. And when we do receive that lower grade, like maybe even an F, it is a very blunt and quick reminder to get back on the right course of study, hard work, and preparation. I know that for me, the failed character test may have been just what I needed, and just what the teacher ordered.

The good news is that I can still hear my teacher Zig Ziglar saying to me, “Michael, fail-ure is an event, not a person. And yes, yesterday really did end last night.”

Are you passing the tests of life? I would love to hear all about it at [email protected], and when we do get back on course, it will always be a better than good week.

Michael Norton is a resident of Castle Rock, the former president of the Zig Ziglar Corpora-tion, a strategic consultant and a business and personal coach.

WE WANT TO HEAR FROM YOU

If you would like to share your opinion, visit our website at

www.coloradocommunitymedia.com or write a letter to the editor.

Include your name, full address and the best telephone number to

contact you. Send letters to [email protected].

Page 9: Elbert County News 1016

Elbert County News 9 October 16, 2014

9

OBITUARIES

Doug, 72, passed away Oc-tober 8, 2014 after a coura-geous battle with pancreatic cancer. He was a long-time resident of Elbert County in Elizabeth, Colorado.

A Memorial Service was held Tuesday, October 14, 10:30 AM at Kiowa Creek Presbyterian Church Fel-lowship Hall, 231 Cheyenne Street, Kiowa with Pastor Jim Emig officiating. A private burial took place in Elizabeth Cemetery.

Doug was born in Wichita, Kansas on April 20, 1942. He grew up in Burdett, Kansas and graduated from Burdett High School. He continued on to receive an Associates degree from Lassen Junior College and a Bachelor of Science in Agriculture from Fort Hays State College.

He married his high school sweet-heart, Sharon, on Feb-ruary 7, 1961, and celebrated 53 years of marriage.

Doug held a number of careers. He started out with the US Geological Survey working on a survey crew mapping the topography of the western United States. He transitioned into work-ing as a livestock buyer for Hormel Foods. These careers required numer-ous moves; therefore, Doug made a change and began working in lending and banking with the Production

Credit Association, Agri-Store, and the Kiowa State Bank. He enjoyed motor-cycling, camping, softball, golf, bowling, gardening and dancing. He was also actively involved in the Li-ons Club, Republican Party, and clerked livestock sales for the 4-H clubs in Elbert County.

Doug is survived by his wife Sharon; children Tammy Jo (Jerry) Mc-Whorter, Kurt Darold Ditus and Karl Leon (Pam) Ditus; grandchildren Heather and Shawn McWhorter, Garrett, Kaylyn, Graham and Mackenzie Ditus; great grandchildren Addison, Troy and Sadie McWhorter; siblings Gregory (Glenda) Ditus, Jeanette Ryan and Fredrick (Vonah) Ditus; numerous nieces and neph-ews; and many friends. He was preceded in death by his parents Leon and Lorena Ditus.

In lieu of flowers, dona-tions may be made to Amer-ican Diabetes Association - Denver, 2460 W 26th Ave, #500C, Denver, CO 80211. The family of Douglas Ditus wishes to thank all those who have made phone calls and sent cards support-ing him during his battle with cancer. Please share

memories and condolences at HoranCares.com.

DITUS

Douglas L. DitusApril 20, 1942 – Oct 8, 2014

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Patriotism isn’t as simple as slogans Like everyone else, I have been ab-

sorbed with the recent argumentative developments in Jefferson County.

The school board has had its hands full, hasn’t it?

I am not going to point fingers at anyone or advocate anyone: That’s done much better somewhere else.

But one thing did stand out that I thought could serve my purposes here, and that was the proposal to foster more patriotism among students.

I thought I knew exactly what the word means, but even so, I looked it up again. And I was right — but it made me wonder just how patriotism could be ap-proached in the classroom.

I think the course or the seminar or whatever it was going to be would have to begin with a disclaimer:

“Not everyone feels the same way about the United States as you do. Some of you feel more strongly than others, and are willing to chant `U-S-A’ when-ever you get the chance, and others would rather eat their hand than chant `U-S-A’.”

I would rather eat my hand.Some of us have an American flag

on our houses day and night, and some don’t.

Does that mean that the ones with flags are more patriotic, and the ones without flags are less patriotic?

Of course.Some people love the Fourth of July

and some don’t. If you don’t like the Fourth, does that mean you are less patriotic?

Of course.It’s my least favorite day of the year. It

comes with loud noises and obnoxious behavior.

Oh, here and there, a few people remember why the day is being celebrat-

ed, but mostly it’s an endorsement to get intoxicated, blow things up, and set fire to patio furniture.

Let’s say Patriotism 101 was going to be a 3-credit course. Who would you bring in to teach it? The winner or the loser of a drawing?

If I were asked to lead the course, I would aim for balance, and perhaps for irony.

Everyone would have to listen to John Philip Sousa 24 hours straight.

Everyone would be expected to watch “Coming Home” and fast-forward to the scene where Jon Voight, who is a paralyzed Vietnam veteran, speaks to a roomful of young men who are consid-ering enlistment.

I would ask them, “Was Jon Voight more patriotic before he enlisted and is he less patriotic now, or is he more patriotic now than he was before?”

Everyone would have to recite the Gettysburg Address to a bunch of second-graders, who might be hearing it for the first time.

Everyone would have to find out who Joseph McCarthy was.

And who First Lieutenant Audie Murphy was. Second Lieutenant William Calley. Corporal Pat Tillman.

Olympians Tommie Smith and John Carlos.

I would ask my students if you can be a racist and a patriotic American at the

same time. Or if you can be homophobic and a patriotic American at the same time.

I would ask if conservatives are more patriotic than liberals, or the other way around.

That’s where it gets tricky. Once that question is asked, the can of worms becomes very wormy.

I would require everyone to experi-ence some kind of civil disobedience regarding a perceived inequity, and then to write a 650-word essay, like this is, about it.

How would the students be evalu-ated? Maybe I would ask each of them to name the 43 people who have been sworn in as presidents of the United

States. No, that would be too easy.It couldn’t possibly be that specific,

because patriotism can’t be defined for everyone anymore than love can be or God or even art.

I never asked my students, “What is art?”

It would have taken up the entire semester, and in the end it would have answered nothing.

I thought it was ironic that this bit about “patriotism” was to be required in a county named Jefferson.

Craig Marshall Smith is an artist, educa-tor and Highlands Ranch resident. He can be reached at [email protected].

October haunting is no sure thing October has traditionally been a

spooky month, with several market busts landing on the 10th month of the year. However, even though the third-quarter earnings typically add volatility, on average, October is not the worst month of the year. It makes you wonder whether markets, when they defy logic, have a history to follow no matter what the facts are. It could almost appear as a haunting.

October is plagued with volatility for many reasons:

• The shift from the summer months, which are typically slow, toward the retail anticipation of the holiday season changes the focus of investors.

• The start of the fourth quarter, which is signaling the end of the year is near. Investors may fear there is not enough time to improve or make a change that will significantly impact their annual returns.

• Third-quarter reporting season be-gins. This is a crucial report in that it is the last one of 2014 and it looks back at the year so far, in addition to predicting what might occur in the remaining few months of the year.

• The markets normally react with daily swings during earnings season based on which company or sectors are reporting and whether the news is good or bad.

This particular year we have a few ad-ditional conditions that may cloud the stock market.

• The stock market never likes uncer-tainty and mid-term elections are just around the corner.

• Many countries in Europe are in re-cession, Russia is being sanctioned and China’s gross domestic product (GDP) is falling. This makes the U.S. one of the strongest economies in the world, which is being impacted by weaker countries.

Investors are still haunted by the witch of October and many remain frus-trated with paltry returns so far this year. This is a sensitive month, mainly due to the crashes of 1929, 1987 and 2008. There were also large declines in 1978, 1979, 1989 and 1997. Despite this dismal news, we often see substantial upswings during the first month of fall as well. We are also on the threshold of the strongest positive months on Wall Street, which historically have been from November through April.

Traditionally, October marks the end of the worst six months on the market, according to the Stock Trader’s Almanac. Therefore, investors both on the side-lines or committed to their strategy have some homework to do.

Here are some positive things to consider:

• The Federal Reserve has committed to keeping interest rates low for the time being. That can continue to fuel growth in the U.S. economy.

• Inflation remains low, which helps create cash flow for consumers and businesses to save or invest more.

• Retirement plan contribution limits

remain high, which allows small inves-tors to build a substantial nest egg with pre-tax dollars.

• Commodities led by oil are down in price, which helps stretch the monthly budget.

• The unemployment rate has fallen to 5.9 percent and the initial jobless claims are declining each month as well.

• The second-quarter GDP was re-vised to 4.6 percent growth, the highest since the great recession.

Keep in mind that market volatil-ity can offer sale prices in certain asset classes. It is important to create your plan first so you can identify the best opportunities for your situation.

Patricia Kummer has been an indepen-dent Certified Financial Planner for 28 years and is president of Kummer Financial Strategies Inc., a Registered Investment Advisor in Highlands Ranch. She welcomes your questions at www.kummerfinancial.com or on the econom-ic hotline at 303-683-5800. Any material discussed is meant for informational purposes only and not a substitute for individual advice.

communication systems, the repair of leaking roofs at Singing Hills Elementary and Elizabeth High School, and the pur-chase of new buses to supplement the dis-trict’s aging fl eet.

The question will ask voters to allow the district to borrow $2.5 million with a seven-year repayment period. This can be accomplished without an increase in the existing property tax rate, district offi cials say. Interest would not exceed 3 percent, and would likely be considerably lower if rates remain at today’s historically low rates through the next several months, ac-cording to the district.

The district is planning to restructure existing and new debt repayment in a way that would not increase current tax rates. This would be accomplished, in part, by extending debt repayment two years be-

yond the expiration of current obligations, from 2019 to 2021.

According to Richardson, approximate-ly $1.7 million of the $2.5 million borrowed by the district will go toward fi xing the roofs.

The district also hopes to apply for and receive a state BEST Program grant that would cover 40 percent of the project.

Established in 2008, BEST provides an annual amount of funding in the form of competitive grants to school districts, charter schools, institute charter schools, boards of cooperative educational servic-es, and the Colorado School for the Deaf and the Blind. BEST funds can be used for the construction of new schools as well as general construction and renovation of existing school facility systems and struc-tures.

“A combination of the two (the loan and the BEST Grant) would allow us to put up the least amount of money and keep some capital for the other less expensive, but just as important projects,” Richardson said.

Continued from Page 1

Roofs

Page 10: Elbert County News 1016

10 Elbert County News October 16, 2014

10-Election

ElbertCountyNews.netFind more election coverage online

COVERAGE

Hickenlooper proud of record By Vic Vela [email protected]

John Hickenlooper doesn’t worry about whether people “get” him.

His “aw, shucks,” nerd-like personality and his imperfect — and sometimes mean-dering — way of speaking are a far cry from anything that resembles a polished, focus-group-driven politician.

Through three elections, the quirky Hick-enlooper brand has resonated with voters, as evidenced by a landslide win for governor in 2010, and before that, two decisive victories in Denver mayoral races.

But it is that same style that has left him wide open for political attacks. He has be-come fodder for Republican press releases that blast the governor as being a wishy-washy failed leader who struggles while de-ciding over a breakfast menu, much less over areas of public policy.

“Obviously, I’m a different kind of politi-cian, but that’s what most people said they wanted,” said Hickenlooper during a recent one-on-one interview with Colorado Com-munity Media from inside his re-election campaign offi ce in Denver’s Lower Highland neighborhood.

“They said they’re sick of the same old talking head who gets up in there in a robotic fashion and says the same platitudes that we’ve heard for a million years. That’s one of the reasons why people like me run for offi ce. I think people deserve more.”

Hickenlooper has heard the criticism before. But as he enters the fi nal stretch of a tight re-election campaign against former Congressman Bob Beauprez, he prefers to talk about his economic record as governor.

There is no question that the economy has gained steam and jobs have been created un-der his watch. And he largely received praised for his response to crises that made national headlines, such as the Aurora theater shoot-ing, wildfi res and last year’s statewide fl ood-ing.

But Hickenlooper’s own words haven’t done him any favors this campaign.

Sometimes when the governor speaks, the result is reminiscent of the Grateful Dead dur-ing an off night — the trademark style is there, but it will sometimes run off the rails, leaving those listening scratching their heads.

His decision last year to grant a reprieve to death-row inmate Nathan Dunlap — who killed four people inside an Aurora Chuck E. Cheese’s restaurant in 1993 — was met with confusion and criticism.

And in television inter-views this year, the governor said that he has moved away from being a supporter of the death penalty (he told voters in 2010 that he was in favor of capital punish-ment).

And he suggested during a CNN inter-view that clemency for Dunlap may still end up being an option. The Hickenlooper cam-paign has said he was responding to a hypo-thetical question and maintains that Dunlap will die in prison.

Also this year, the governor caused a stir over remarks on gun-control legislation that he gave to a group of sheriffs meeting in As-pen. There, he apologized to lawmen for not better including them in the legislative pro-cess that led to him signing measures into law that created universal background checks on gun sales and banned high-capacity ammu-nition magazines.

Those measure were opposed by the ma-jority of sheriffs in the state, many of whom were onetime plaintiffs in an unsuccessful lawsuit against the new laws.

Those are a few examples of what has led to a lambasting of Hickenlooper over his “in-decisiveness” and “failed leadership” on the part of Beauprez and the rest of the Republi-can Party.

“Where have I been indecisive?” Hick-enlooper said. “Nathan Dunlap? The (Colo-rado) Constitution gives you three choices:

Execution, clemency or a reprieve. We chose reprieve two months before the decision was made.”

“And background checks ... I did say I wish we had gone and allowed the other side a greater opportunity to discuss, but I never went back on the decision.”

No to negative adsHickenlooper said his political opponents

are “looking for anything they can get” to defeat him, while ignoring his accomplish-ments.

The governor said he is proud of his work during the fl ooding that ravaged many parts of the state last year. While rain was wreak-ing havoc, the governor held a meeting with Colorado Department of Transportation ad-ministrators, during which he urged them to reopen roads around Lyons and Estes Park more than a month ahead of the time they believed was possible.

Had those roads not reopened when they did, Hickenlooper believes businesses in those small towns would have shut down.

“We made that decision in 48 hours while the rain was still falling — and we did it,” he said. “That’s indecision?”

In spite of a barrage of attack ads that tar-get him, Hickenlooper sticks to the promise he made to voters years ago — that his cam-paign would never run a negative ad.

“Sure it works,” Hickenlooper said of neg-ative campaigning. “If all you care about is winning one short-term election, sure, go out and have a fi eld day; load the cannons and fi re off the missiles.”

“But, at the end of the election, after all those negative ads, no one is satisfi ed ... Who-ever the winner is, there’s so many negative ads against them, they are going to have a hard time leading.”

Hickenlooper said he doesn’t regret any decision he’s made in offi ce. And he points to an economy that has been among the best in the nation in many post-recession categories.

The Business Insider website ranks Col-orado’s economy tops in the nation. And Forbes magazine recently listed the state among the best states for businesses.

However, other economic models show the rest of the state lagging behind the strengthening Denver metro area’s economy with median household incomes decreasing over the last seven years.

Still, Hickenlooper believes his steward-ship has helped the state move in a stronger economic direction.

“I sit there and look back over the past four years (and) I think during all the signifi cant issues, I think we made the right decisions,” he said.

Hickenlooper said this is “probably” his last political campaign and that he has “no intention” of running for national offi ce.

Hickenlooper said he never imagined that he would be running a re-election campaign for governor while he was opening the Wyn-koop Brewery in lower downtown Denver in 1988, Colorado’s fi rst brewpub and micro-brewery.

“If you would have talked to me even in 1998, I would have said, `No way. Why would I do that? Those guys get attacked,’” he said of running for political offi ce.

“Can you really make a difference? Is it re-ally worth the sacrifi ce? Well, it turns out you really can make a difference. And in my opin-ion it was worth the sacrifi ce.”

ELECTION 2014: THE RACE FOR GOVERNOR

Beauprez: State needs leader By Vic Vela [email protected]

It seems appropriate that a guy who likes to play in the dirt is involved in politics — a busi-ness where a lot of mud gets slung.

Yes, Bob Beauprez is a former congressman and the Republican nominee for governor, but he is also a bison rancher and an avid gardener who likes getting his hands dirty.

“I am obsessive about the condition of our yard and garden and all that,” Beauprez said during a recent one-on-one interview with Colorado Community Media. “I love playing in the dirt. I love plants and fussing with them and the beauty of them.”

When Beauprez isn’t tending to his plants, he is on the campaign trail trying to plant the seed in the minds of voters that Democratic Gov. John Hickenlooper is a failed leader who should be voted out of offi ce.

“He has this obsession with collaborating; wants to talk everything through, forever,” Beauprez said of Hickenlooper. “He can’t make a decision and he won’t make a decision.”

While Beauprez hammers away at Hicken-looper on a number of issues — gun control, the death penalty and hydraulic fracturing, just to name a few — he is also out to prove the late F. Scott Fitzgerald wrong, that there are indeed second acts in American lives.

Beauprez lost badly to Bill Ritter in a 2006 gubernatorial bid where he never recov-ered from the “Both Ways Bob” label that was pinned on him by a fellow Republican in the primary fi eld.

It would be a quite a comeback story if Beauprez unseats Hickenlooper, especially in a state that has been trending Democratic in recent elections and where voters rarely have an appetite to vote out an incumbent governor. Hickenlooper is also backed by an economy that has grown stronger and created jobs on his watch.

But Beauprez believes voters now have the appetite to oust a governor who won his seat in a landslide in 2010 and whose quirky person-ality has both endeared him to supporters and irked his detractors.

Beauprez spent the entire summer blasting Hickenlooper for “failing to lead” on the issue of the death penalty, having been highly critical of the governor’s decision to grant a reprieve to death-row inmate Nathan Dunlap, who killed four people at an Aurora Chuck E. Cheese’s res-taurant in 1993.

Beauprez said Hickenlooper should have either chosen to go forward with the execution or grant clemency, rather than taking a middle road.

Beauprez has also hammered away at Hick-enlooper for his handling of issues surround-ing hydraulic fracturing. Beauprez has been critical of the governor’s creation of a fracking task force that is charged with providing law-makers with recommendations on oil and gas drilling issues.

Beauprez believes the oil and gas industry is already over-regulated and that Hickenlooper’s fi elding of a commission is a yet another ex-ample of his “kicking the can down the road” approach to governing.

“At some point he crossed a line of `I just want to get along and make everybody happy,’ to `Where do you want to take us and how do you want us to get there?’ Lead,” Beauprez said of Hickenlooper.

Image not cuddlyBeauprez is not afraid to attack, either

through political ads or on the debate stage. But some in the media have recently wondered whether Beauprez risks coming across as being too rigid — or even mean.

A Denver Post article described Beauprez’s performance during a Sept. 30 debate the newspaper hosted as “practiced and polished — if sometimes stern in his conservative views ...”

Left-leaning columnist Mike Littwin of the Colorado Independent said Beauprez came across as angry and bully-like during an Oct. 3 debate in Pueblo.

“There’s a very thin line between being ag-gressive and, well, being a jerk,” Littwin wrote.

During a tense moment of the debate, Beauprez was criticized by Hickenlooper for

seeming to invoke the 2013 murder of Depart-ment of Corrections chief Tom Clements.

Clements was murdered outside of his Black Forest home, allegedly by Evan Ebel, an inmate who had been in solitary confi nement just days before he was paroled.

Beauprez asked Hickenlooper: “What do you have to say to women who are widows who have orphans because of parolees that you have let out of state correction direct from solitary confi nement?”

Hickenlooper blasted Beauprez’s com-ments.

“For you to make his murder part of a politi-cal gambit, I think is reprehensible,” the gover-nor said.

Beauprez — who did not specifi cally men-tion Clements during the exhange — made no apologies about his comments when asked them during his interview with Colorado Com-munity Media.

“It’s true,” Beauprez said as he leaned over the table for emphasis. Beauprez cited a 2013 Denver Post article that reported that 110 pa-rolees were let directly out of solitary confi ne-ment and onto the streets in a single year.

As for whether people think he comes across as prickly, Beauprez said, “I take the job seriously.”

“Most people that know me know that I’m a pretty good grandpa, that I’m a pretty good dad. I’ve been a very good husband, so I’ve got that side to me as well,” he said. “But this isn’t about who you want to go have a beer with or shoot a game of pool with. This is about who can lead this state.”

Beauprez, who is pro-life, has also been on the defensive on women’s is-sues of late.

Although abortion and contraception topics have played a big role in Colorado’s U.S. Senate race, they only be-came a focal point in the cam-paign when Beauprez said during a Denver Post debate

that intrauterine devices (IUDs) are abortifacients, meaning a

drug that causes abortions.Beauprez’s view is not backed by the Fed-

eral Drug Administration, which classifi es the device as one that prevents pregnancies, not ends them.

Beauprez told Colorado Community Media that he believes women should use whatever birth control they want, “but I don’t think tax-payers ought to be funding that.”

Beauprez said that when Hickenlooper and Democrats try to attack Republicans on issues like abortion and birth control, they are guilty of trying “to change the subject.”

“People are so hungry for people to address the real issues in this campaign, but (Demo-crats) don’t want to talk about it,” he said.

With voters set to receive mail ballots soon, it is hard for Beauprez or any other offi ce-seeker to get away from politics. When he does, Beauprez likes to retreat to his bison ranch, time away that he said is “almost like therapy.”

When asked if there are similarities between bison ranching and politics, Beauprez let out a hearty chuckle and said, “Good question.”

“With bison you don’t change their minds much,” he said. “You kind of have to convince them, cajole them, but mostly you have to en-courage them and wait it out and be patient.

“And maybe that is a parallel (to politics), that you can’t always do it on your time, your schedule, your way. You’ve got to make sure and bring them along.”

‘I sit there and look back over the past four years (and) I think during all the signi� cant issues, I

think we made the right decisions.’

John Hickenlooper, Colorado governor

‘...� is isn’t about who you want to go have a beer with

or shoot a game of pool with. � is is about who can

lead this state.’Bob Beauprez,

Colorado gubernatorial candidate

Beauprez Hickenlooper

Page 11: Elbert County News 1016

Elbert County News 11 October 16, 2014

11-Election

ElbertCountyNews.netFind more election coverage online

COVERAGE

Governor hopefuls stray onto new ground Hickenlooper, Beauprez debate safety, housing issues By Vic Vela [email protected]

Gov. John Hickenlooper and former Congressman Bob Beauprez sparred over issues voters are familiar with at this point in the gubernatorial campaign during an Oct. 9 debate in Fort Col-lins, but they also addressed issues that haven’t been making as many headlines.

Yes, the two tangled over the death penalty — as they have the entire cam-paign — but the KUSA-sponsored de-bate, held at Colorado State University, also focused on other areas of public safety, affordable housing and even red-light cameras.

Beauprez, a Republican, blasted the Democratic incumbent for not fight-ing hard enough for a construction-law reform bill from earlier this year that he believed would helped rein in rising housing costs around the state.

Beauprez said Colorado’s tough con-struction-defects law discourages build-ers from making affordable condos be-cause of high insurance costs.

“There is something, especially in the Front Range, that has driven up rents and housing prices and that’s called the construction-defects legislation,” Beau-prez said.

Beauprez said Hickenlooper provided “absolutely zero leadership” when a re-form bill that was introduced late in this year’s legislative session failed to gain

steam. The bill would have made it more difficult for condo owners to sue build-ers over construction defects.

Hickenlooper agreed that changes to the law need to be made, but said rising rental costs are attributed to other eco-nomic factors.

“It’s certainly not the defining factor in the incredible inflation we’ve seen in housing costs,” he said. “That’s been go-ing on for a number of years.”

Also during the debate, Beauprez made news for saying he would like to see a repeal of laws that allow for the legal sale of marijuana. The former con-gressman cited health concerns while laying out his position.

“Yes, I think we’re at that point where the consequences we’ve already discov-ered from this might be far greater than the liberty the citizens thought they were embracing,” Beauprez said.

Hickenlooper made news of his own at a debate earlier in the week, where he said voters were “reckless” for support-ing last year’s Amendment 64, which le-galized recreational pot sales and use in Colorado.

In spite of his concerns over the im-pact that marijuana use can have on a developing brain, Hickenlooper wouldn’t go as far as saying that the constitutional amendment needs to be repealed.

“But I do think we need more resourc-es to make sure that kids and parents un-derstand this is not like sneaking a beer out when you’re younger,” the governor said.

Public safety discussed

Beauprez has been trying make hay out of public-safety issues this cam-paign, which played a role in this debate as well.

Beauprez criticized Hickenlooper for failing to guide through new public-safety measures during last year’s legis-lative session, including a bill that would have created a felony DUI and another bill that would have placed mandatory minimums for vehicular-homicide con-victions.

And Beauprez again attacked Hicken-looper over the issue of the death penal-ty — which Hickenlooper once support-ed, but now opposes. Hickenlooper has had to play defense on this issue since last year, when he granted a reprieve for death-row inmate Nathan Dunlap.

“I don’t think you necessarily have a fondness for violent criminals,” Beau-prez said, “but why do you seem to have such a problem standing up for innocent Coloradans?”

Hickenlooper fought back against Beauprez’s attack, saying that violent crimes are down over the last four years and reminding him that he has signed into law legislation that put in place $30 million for reform in mental-health ser-vices, which he believes will also reduce violent crimes.

The governor said he will continue to support laws that strengthen public safety, but that sometimes things aren’t that easy at the Legislature.

“If you were governor and not just thinking about it, you’d recognize that sometimes you can’t get everything done you want,” Hickenlooper said.

As for Dunlap, the governor tried to

put an end to any speculation that he would grant him clemency, something he suggested was on the table during an interview last year.

“I will commit, promise to leave it to the next governor,” he said.

Beauprez found himself on the defen-sive over comments he gave to the Den-ver Rotary Club in 2010, where he gave economic comments that were similar to those that derailed Mitt Romney’s presi-dential candidacy in 2012.

Beuauprez said then that “we’ve got almost half of the population perfectly happy that somebody else is paying the bill,” saying that 47 percent of Americans pay no income tax.

“I think it’s human nature that we’re fine if somebody else picks up the tab,” Beauprez said on the debate stage, in re-sponse to a question about his previous comments. “The point of the comment ... was that there needs to be more op-portunity in Colorado, which has gone to other states on (Hickenlooper’s) watch.”

The Hickenlooper campaign believes the economy is a winning issue for them, citing an economy that continues to grow and create jobs.

The two agreed on certain issues, in-cluding whether they would sign a bill to ban red-light cameras. The controversial effort to curb bad driving and accidents at busy intersections seems to get atten-tion at the Capitol every year.

Both Beauprez and Hickenlooper said the cameras could be good uses for public safety, but they would like to get assurances from municipalities that they’re not simply using the technology to bust drivers to generate revenue.

John Hickenlooper Party: Democrat

Occupation: Governor

Contact information: www.hicken-looperforcolorado.com

Background: Hickenlooper was an exploration geologist in the oil and gas industry before opening 16 successful brewpubs and microbreweries in Colo-rado. He served as mayor of Denver from 2003-11.

What is a key policy improvement that you would like to see through over the next four years?

Colorado has gone from 40th to fourth in the nation for job creation and we’ve created 210,000 new jobs since January 2011, but we have more wo rk to do. I will continue promoting bottom-up economic development so every community feels economic improve-ment. I am dedicated to finding creative ways to get the long-term unemployed back to work.

How would you handle an issue like hydraulic fracturing, one where there are so many competing interests?

We negotiated a compromise with the oil and gas industry and the conserva-tion community that removed harm-ful proposals from the 2014 ballot that would have put thousands of jobs at risk and would have had a devastating im-pact on our economy. That compromise included the creation of a bipartisan task force.

Do you support the death penalty and what are your reasons behind that conviction?

I am opposed to the death penalty. After studying this issue in detail, I think the facts are pretty clear that the death penalty is not a deterrent to crime, nor is it cost-effective. My conscience compels me to the conclusion that the State of Colorado should not be in the business of taking human lives.

Job growth continues on an upward trajectory in Colorado and unemploy-ment continues to drop. Is the state on the right economic track?

Yes. Colorado is proud of our eco-nomic progress improving from 40th to fourth in the nation for job creation and creating 210,000 news jobs (190,000 of which are in the private sector).

Last year, the Legislature approved $500 million in new funding for K-12 education. After years of budget cuts, is the state’s education system finally on the right track?

Colorado’s continued economic suc-cess relies on a strong public education system that fosters home-grown talent. Thanks to smart budgeting and tough choices in our first term, we have in-creased K-12 education funding by $400 million and higher education funding by $100 million. We continue to champion accountability and effectiveness that has made Colorado a national model.

Bob Beauprez Party: Republican

Occupation: Buffalo rancher; banker

Contact information: www.bobbe-auprez.com

Background: A successful business leader, buffalo rancher, dairy farmer, and hometown banker, Bob Beauprez built Colorado businesses and created hundreds of jobs, helping hundreds of small businesses pursue their American Dream.

What is a key policy improvement that you would like to see through over the next four years?

A comprehensive audit of state gov-ernment to identify and eliminate un-necessary regulation, and minimize bu-reaucratic roadblocks.

How would you handle an issue like hydraulic fracturing, one where there are so many competing interests?

Policy should be based on science, and part of a governor’s job is to make a decision that is in the best interests of the state and its citizens. Conversation is important, but we need to be focused on finding a solution and then getting on with implementing that solution.

Do you support the death penalty and what are your reasons behind that conviction?

I do support capital punishment in rare cases for extreme crimes, and fol-lowing the strict application of due pro-

cess. The death penalty is provided as an option under the Colorado Constitu-tion for the most heinous of crimes, and as governor I will respect the process of law and the difficult decision of the jury.

Job growth continues on an upward trajectory in Colorado and unemploy-ment continues to drop. Is the state on the right economic track?

Colorado has slipped to middle of the pack economically, and is per-forming worse in many ways than our neighboring states. Some areas of the state — such as Grand Junction, Pueblo and Colorado Springs — experienced decreased or stagnant GDP in 2013. As governor, I will work to remove govern-ment as an anchor on the economy, and restore opportunity to ALL of Colorado.

Last year, the Legislature approved $500 million in new funding for K-12 education. After years of budget cuts, is the state’s education system finally on the right track?

Funding is only part of the equation, and we are not maximizing our existing K-12 funding — i.e., school trust lands, and return of federal tax dollars. In the meantime, the current governor has al-lowed federal bureaucrats to impose a one-size-fits-all standard that reduces opportunity in education. As governor, I will improve the quality of education by returning control to local boards and ending Common Core.

GUBERNATORIAL CANDIDATES

HAVE A LEGISLATIVE QUESTION?Email Colorado Community Media Legislative Reporter Vic Vela at [email protected] or call him at 303-566-4132.

Page 12: Elbert County News 1016

Things will get spooky in Parker concert`�e Unseen World’ is theme at PACE CenterBy Sonya [email protected]

Director Rene Knetsch will direct the Parker Symphony in a season-opening concert on Oct. 24 that explores “The Un-seen World,” featuring fantasy worlds cre-ated with music. The mood is Halloween.

Included will be the world premiere of “The Night Creeps Slowly” by young Colo-rado composer Ryan M. Smith, who is a Chaparral High School graduate (2008). Parker-area high school musicians will play with the orchestra for this piece, which is described as “mysterious and unsettling.”

Smith — a musician, composer, teacher and producer — received his bachelor’s de-gree in music from Metropolitan State Uni-versity in 2013.

He has been performing, teaching pri-vately and with local music organizations, and writing a variety of music. He performs with local music groups ranging from con-temporary classical to popular in style. His goal is to bring people together to help them understand themselves and one an-other using music, according to the biog-

raphy provided by the PSO. He has written, recorded and produced two solo albums under the name M.I.X.

Also on the orchestra’s program for Oct. 24: “Noon Witch” by Dvorak; “Danse Maca-bre” by Saint Saens; “March to the Scaffold” from Berlioz’s “Symphonie Fantastique”; and Respighi’s tone poem, “The Pines of Rome.”

PSO’s community liason, Cheryl Poules, offers a brief description:

“The first movement of the Respighi work depicts the happy memory of chil-dren playing among the `Pines ‘de Villa Borghese.’ Next a majestic dirge conjures dim “catacombs” where the dead are im-mured. As the full moon rises, we linger at `The Temple of Janus,’ the double-faced god, and are spellbound at the eerily beau-tiful call of the nightingale. Finally Respighi paints a magnificent scene of the ancient armies of Rome as they march by the `Pines of the Appian Way.’”

MileHiCon brings fantasy world to life46th annual event set for DTC areaBy Sonya [email protected]

The Hyatt Regency Tech Center’s spaces will take on an otherworldly look Oct. 24-26, when the 46th Annual MileHiCon draws hundreds of science fiction/fantasy geeks to see and hear more than 80 authors and artists. Many will be in elaborate costumes.

The literary focus of this long-running event is expanded by gaming , vendors of books and related items, artist demonstra-tions, writing panels, science presentations and kids’ programming.

Expected authors include Daniel Abra-ham, who writes as himself, as MLN Ha-nover, and as James S.A. Corey with Ty Franck. Franck will also be on hand; in addition to his collaborations as Corey, he also is author of “Avatar: A Short Story” and other short stories.

Also on tap is Michael Swanwick, winner of Hugo, Nebula, World Fantasy and Arthur C. Clarke Awards. His books include “In the Drift,” “Vacuum Flowers,” “The Iron Drag-on’s Daughter” and more, as well as short stories.

Hugo Award-winning artists Phil and

Kaja Foglio have designed many book cov-ers, album covers and gaming cards.

A complete list of participants and de-tailed schedules may be found at milehi-con.org.

Attractions include a painting demo by Littleton space artist Michael Carroll; short story samplers; autograph alley; masquer-ade judging; mask making; “Spaceships We

Have Loved”; film and literature discus-sions; and much more. (We printed out seven pages of activities.)

A literacy auction on Oct. 25 offers rare books, autographed books, original art-work, and sci-fi and fantasy items donated by guests and fans. Proceeds are given to a charity for the purchase of books and read-ing education programs.

12 Elbert County News October 16, 2014

12-Life

LIFES O U T H M E T R O

ABOVE: Attendees in the hall at MileHiCon 2013, looking for a favorite author. LEFT: A young family attended MileHiCon 2013. Courtesy photos

IF YOU GOMileHiCon activities will take place Oct. 24-26 at the Hyatt

Regency Tech Center Hotel, 7800 E. Tufts Ave., Denver. A three-day membership will cost $46 at the door or can be purchased in advance at milehicon46.eventbrite.com. Daily member-ships are available at the door: Oct. 24, $18; Oct. 25, $22; Oct. 26, $22. Parking is $5 for the weekend. Registration will be open at 2 p.m. Oct. 24; 9 a.m. Oct. 25 and 26. MileHiCon is sta�ed by volunteers.

IF YOU GOThe Parker Symphony Orchestra will perform at 7:30

p.m. Oct. 24 at the PACE Center, 20000 Pikes Peak Ave., Parker. Tickets are available at pacecenteronline.org, by calling 303-805-6800 or at the door.

`�is is Colorado’ returns to college

For many years, the Heritage Fine Arts Guild of Arapahoe County held its annual “This is Colorado” show at a various metro-area venues, but last year the group brought it closer to home. Open to artists statewide, in 2013 it was held in the handsome Colo-rado Gallery of the Arts at Arapahoe Community College and drew many viewers. The exhibit will return Oct. 21, with a public reception from 5-7 p.m. on Oct. 24, and will run until Nov. 14. The gallery is on the ACC campus at 5900 S. Santa Fe Drive in Littleton. Gal-lery hours: noon to 5 p.m. Mondays through Fridays (open until 7 p.m. on Tuesdays). Admission is free.

Sphere in EnglewoodEnglewood Arts Presents is bringing

the 13-member Sphere string ensemble to town at 2 p.m. Oct. 25 in Hampden Hall, inside the Englewood Civic Cen-ter at 1000 Englewood Parkway. This will be the first appearance at Hamp-den Hall for the 4-year-old ensemble, which performs without a conductor and offers a range of music including classical, rock, jazz and jive. The pro-gram will include Piazzola’s “Concerto Hommage a Liege for Banjo and Gui-tar” and Janacek’s “Suite for Strings.” Featured musicians: Evan Orman, bandoneon, and Patrick Sutton, guitar. Tickets: $20/$15, free under 18, Engle-woodarts.org or at the door one hour prior to performance.

Fear in LittletonHaunts of Littleton, a walking tour

of local haunts, is scheduled at 7 p.m. Oct. 18, 24 and 25. Meet at the light-rail station in downtown Littleton. Tickets: adults $13/kids $5. hauntsoflittlton.org.

Musician photos exhibitedColoradan Jensen Sutta’s photo-

graphs of celebrity musicians are ex-hibited at Parker’s PACE Center, 20000 Pikes Peak Ave., Parker, through Nov. 14, with an opening from 6-8 p.m. Oct. 16. Included: Jack Johnson, Jaime Foxx, Ryan Tedder, Burt Bacharach, Leann

Rimes, Merle Haggard, George Strait, B.B. King and more. Free.

Rusted Root set for GothicRusted Root is celebrating its 25th

anniversary with a tour to introduce a seventh studio album, “The Move-ment.” The band will perform at the Gothic Theatre, 3263 S. Broadway, En-glewood, on Oct. 25. Tickets: 303-789-9206.

Time for ragtimeThe Big Little Ragtime Band — John

Bredenberg, Bill Clark, Hank Troy and Maurie Walker — will perform “The Wonderful World of Ragtime” for the Ragtime Society of Colorado at 1 p.m. Oct. 26 at Montview Boulevard Presby-terian Church, 1980 Dahlia St., Denver. Tickets: $20/$15 members: Colleen Vander Hoek, 8360 S. Zephyr St., Little-ton, CO 80128, 303-979-4353, or at the door.

Boettcher bottom dollarThe Colorado Symphony will pres-

ent a Better Boettcher Bash concert and fundraiser and 25th anniver-sary celebration at 7 p.m. Oct. 26 at Boettcher Hall, Denver Performing Arts Complex. Admission: $50/$100/$200. Funds will go towards renovation of the downtown Denver concert hall. (Details of proposed plan by Sempel Brown are at coloradosymphony.org.) The event starts with cocktails at 5:30 p.m. followed by the 7 p.m. concert. Contributions can be made online at coloradosymphony.org or through the box office in Boettcher Concert Hall, 1000 14th St., Denver.

Rene Knetsch conducts musicians of the Parker Symphony at the PACE Center, where the orchestra will perform on Oct. 24. Courtesy photo

Page 13: Elbert County News 1016

Wonderbound stages dance to stringsBy Sonya [email protected]

Denver’s Wonderbound dance company will perform ar-tistic director Garrett Ammon’s “Serenade For Strings,” cho-reographed in 2013 to Tchaikovsky’s work of the same name, at Parker’s PACE Center Oct. 18 and 19. The dancers will be accompanied by musicians from the Colorado Symphony Orchestra.

It was the first time a choreographer had set a piece to the full score since George Balanchine and it drew national atten-tion.

Ammons recently visited the Smuin Ballet Company in San Francisco to stage the ballet on those accomplished dancers for a West Coast premiere.

A new work by dancer/choreographer Sarah Tallman will fill out the program.

It is set to Edvard Grieg’s “Holberg Suite” and features five movements based on 18th-century dance forms. Her piece is inspired by the work of 20th-century surrealists.

Tallman said, “I’m so excited and grateful to be premiering a brand new work for our season opener with musicians of the Colorado Symphony.

“Surrealist art, juxtaposed with the gorgeous Grieg com-position, has sparked my curiosity and I can’t wait to explore the subconscious, dreamlike aspects of our minds and their joyous complexities.”

Wonderbound will perform again later in the season at the PACE Center and at Lone Tree Arts Center in April. Formerly known as Ballet Nouveau Colo-rado, the company has a studio at 1075 Park Avenue West in Denver, where small perfor-mances are sometimes held.

Elbert County News 13 October 16, 2014

13

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“Enduring Grace” will be performed at 7:30 p.m. Oct. 18 and 2 p.m. Oct. 19 at the PACE Center, 20000 Pikes Peak Ave. in Parker. Tickets: pacecenteronline.com, 303-805-6800, or at the door. The performance will be repeated on Oct. 24-26 at the Performing Arts Complex at Pinnacle Charter School, 1001 W. 84th Ave., Denver. Tickets: wonder-bound.com, 303-292-4700.

Page 14: Elbert County News 1016

14 Elbert County News October 16, 2014

14

Join the Lone Tree Breast Center for an evening of wine, girlfriends and learning from the experts!

Thursday, October 23, 20144:30 – 7:30 pm

Lone Tree Breast Center, 9544 Park Meadows Drive, Ste. 100,

Lone Tree, CO 80124

Girls Night OutFashion, Makeup, and Mammograms!

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* Appointments will be taken prior to the event, based on availability. All participants must bring insurance card and photo ID. All mammograms are covered by your insurance provider if you are 40 or above. You can also schedule a mammogram for another time during the event if you prefer not to have one that night..RSVP to Amy Hurley

by October 23, 2014.

720-553-1127 [email protected]

Cost is free but space is limited so be sure to reserve your spot today!

Page 15: Elbert County News 1016

Elbert County News 15 October 16, 2014

15

OF GAMESGALLERYc r o s s w o r d •   s u d o k u

& w e e k l y h o r o s c o p e

GALLERY OF GAMESc r o s s w o r d •   s u d o k u & w e e k l y h o r o s c o p e

SALOME’S STARSFOR THE WEEK OF OCT 13 2014

ARIES (Mar 21 to Apr 19) A changing situation calls for a change in plans. Although you might prefer the schedule you had already worked up, you could do better by agreeing to make the needed adjustments.

TAURUS (Apr 20 to May 20) That once seemingly rock-solid proposition you favored might be hiding some serious flaws. Take time to check it more care-fully and question anything that seems out of kilter.

GEMINI (May 21 to Jun 20) Finish up those lingering tasks so that you can then arrange to spend some time in quiet reflection. This will go a long way in re-storing both your physical and spiritual energies.

CANCER (Jun 21 to Jul 22) A family situation could heat up and boil over unless you deal with it as soon as possible. Try to persuade other family members to work with you to help cool things down.

LEO (Jul 23 to Aug 22) Cheer up, Kitty Cat! That low feeling will begin to ebb by midweek, and you should be back in the social swirl in time for the weekend. A long-postponed deal could be starting up again.

VIRGO (Aug 23 to Sept 22) Going too fast and too far on too little knowledge could be risky. Best to slow down and check for any gaps in your information. It’s what you don’t know that could hurt you.

LIBRA (Sept 23 to Oct 22) Trying to make peace among quarreling family members, friends or col-leagues can be tough. Expect some resistance, maybe even some expressions of resentment. But stay with it.

SCORPIO (Oct 23 to Nov 21) Changing your mind doesn’t have to be a problem once you realize that you might have good and sufficient cause to do so. Make your explanations clear and complete. Good luck.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov 22 to Dec 21) An unkept prom-ise can be irksome and easily raise the Archer’s ire. But instead of getting into a confrontation, take time to check why someone you relied on came up short.

CAPRICORN (Dec 22 to Jan 19) A new workplace distraction creates an unnecessary delay. The sooner you deal with it, the better for all concerned. A personal matter also should be attended to as soon as possible.

AQUARIUS (Jan 20 to Feb 18) Once again, the Aquarian’s gift for applying both practical and creative methods to resolve a situation makes all the difference. Personal relationships thrive during the weekend.

PISCES (Feb 19 to Mar 20) A relationship appears to be losing its once-strong appeal for reasons that might be different from what you think. An open and honest talk could lead to some surprising revelations.

BORN THIS WEEK: Your life is bound by your belief that character counts more than anything else.

© 2014 King Features Synd., Inc.

Page 16: Elbert County News 1016

16 Elbert County News October 16, 2014

16-Calendar

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Colorado's institutions of higher education, and local development organizations.

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Professional Auctioneer Real Estate Appraiser Real Estate Broker

October 5, 2014 Ad Sent Via – Email – PDF FormatPlease email back verification of receipt of this email

Colorado Community Media Phone: (303) 566-4100Classified Section - Attn: Ron Mitchell Fax:9137 Ridgeline Blvd., Ste. 210 Email: [email protected] Ranch, CO 80129

Deadline: Thursday 5 p.m.

Dear Mitch,

Please run this display ad as follows:

Elbert County News Only

Dates To Run:Thursday, October 16.

Size: 2 columns x 5”

Please reference billing – Wheeling Auction.

We will mail some auction flyers and would appreciate your displaying them. If you have anyquestions please call.

- Thanks - Ed

Columns 2Height 5Total size 10Cost per column inch 8.75Cost of ad $ 87.50Number of Inserts 1Total of ads 87.50

Saturday, October 18th 9:30 a.m. MDT

Sellers: Owen & Woody Lea Wheeler

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An Auction Flyer & additional directions are listed onour website, or contact us for an Auction Flyer & to beon our mailing list: Email or US mail.

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THINGS TO DOEDITOR’S NOTE: Calendar submissions must be received by noon Wednesday for publication the following week. Send listings to [email protected]. No attachments, please. Listings are free and run on a space-available basis.

THE OUTBACK Express

PUBLIC TRANSIT service provided through the East Central Council of Local Governments is open and available to all residents of Cheyenne, Elbert, Kit Carson and Lincoln counties and provides an economical and e�cient means of travel for the four-county region. Call Kay Campbell, Kiowa, at 719- 541-4275. You may also call the ECCOG o�ce at 1-800-825-0208 to make reservations for any of the trips. You may also visit http://outbackexpress.tripod.com. To ensure that a seat is available, 24-hour advance reservations are appreciated. Schedule for October: Simla and Matheson

to Colorado Springs, Oct. 20; Kiowa, Elizabeth and Elbert to Parker or Colorado Springs, Oct. 21; to Limon, Oct. 23.

FALL PERFORMING Arts

ELIZABETH HIGH School and Elizabeth Middle School are starting their fall performing arts events. Upcoming are the middle school band concert on Tuesday, Oct. 21; and the high school fall play Thursday, Oct. 23, to Saturday, Oct. 25. Show times are at 7 p.m. Visit the schools’ calendars for information.

MURDER MYSTERY Dinner, Silent Auction

THE ELIZABETH Lions Club have engaged the Adams Mystery Playhouse performers to present “The Million Dollar Mystery” on Saturday, Nov. 1, at Spring Valley

Country Club, 42350 CR 17-21, Elizabeth. The evening starts at 6 p.m. with cocktails (cash bar), appetizers, meetings with the actors, and time to peruse the various silent auction o�erings. Dinner and the show begin at 7 p.m. Contact Tammy at 303-204-7415 or [email protected], or any Elizabeth Lions member for tickets and information.

KIOWA SCHOOLS Craft Fair

KIOWA SCHOOLS plans its 28th annual craft fair from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 1, at Kiowa Middle School, 535 Comanche St., Kiowa. More than 30 crafters will show their wares in the middle school gym and high school cafeteria. You can also purchase breakfast, lunch and backed goodies. Proceeds generated from the booths and food/bake sales go to help pay for the schools’ band program. Interested craters can call 303-621-2115, ext. 8555 or email [email protected].

AREA CLUBSEDITOR’S NOTE: Clubs submissions or changes may be sent to [email protected]. No attachments, please. Listings are free and run on a space-available basis.

DIVORCE AND Post-Decree Clinic. Elbert and Lincoln County Pro Se Divorce Clinic is o�ered from 9 a.m. to noon the third Friday of each month at the Elbert County Justice Center, 751 Ute St., in Kiowa. For information, call 303-520-6088 or email [email protected]. The clinic is free for parties who have no attorney and who are going through dissolution of marriage, legal separation, or post-decree cases. All walk-ins are welcome, and will be assisted on a �rst-come, �rst-served basis.

DOUGLAS-ELBERT COUNTY Music Teachers’ Association meets at 9 a.m. every �rst Thursday at Parker Bible Church, between Jordan and Cham-bers on Main Street. All area music teachers are welcome. Call Lucie Washburn, 303-814-3479.

THE ELBERT County Sheri�s Posse is a nonpro�t volunteer organization that is part of the Elbert County Sheri�s O�ce. As volunteers we support the Elbert County Sheri�s O�ce, all law enforcement in our county, and the community at large. Membership is open to anyone without a criminal record. It meets the last Monday of the month at the Elbert County Sheri�s O�ce at 7 p.m. For more information or a membership application, go to http://

www.elbertcountysheri�.com/posse.html, or contact Dave Peontek at 303-646-5456.

THE ELIZABETH Food Bank, 381 S. Banner in Elizabeth (next door to Elizabeth Presbyterian Church) needs to let the public know that we are available to help anyone who needs food. The hours are Friday 12:30-3 p.m. and Saturdays from 9-11:30 a.m. Other times by appointment.

LAWYERS AT the Library, a free legal clinic for parties who have no attorney, will be o�ered from 6-9 p.m. the second Tuesday of every month at the Elizabeth Library, 651 W. Beverly St. Volunteer attorneys will answer questions, help �ll out forms and explain the process and procedure for the areas of family law, civil litigation, criminal defense, property law, probate law, collections, appeals, landlord-tenant law and civil protection orders. Walk-ins are welcome. Everyone will be helped on a �rst-come, �rst-served basis.

MYSTERY BOOK Club meets at 9:30 a.m. the �rst Saturday of each month at the Simla Public Library. The group enjoys talking about a variety of mystery authors and titles. We also periodically host a Colorado author during our meetings. Everyone may join us, and registration is not required. Visit the Simla Branch of the Elbert County Library District at 504 Washington Avenue, call 719-541-2573, or email [email protected].

THE OUTBACK Express is a public transit service

provided through the East Central Council of Local Govern-ments is open and available to all residents of Cheyenne, Elbert, Kit Carson and Lincoln counties and provides an economical and e�cient means of travel for the four-county region. Call Kay Campbell, Kiowa, at 719- 541-4275. You may also call the ECCOG o�ce at 1-800-825-0208 to make reservations for any of the trips. You may also visit http://outbackexpress.tripod.com. To ensure that a seat is available, 24-hour advance reservations are appeciated.

OVEREATERS ANONYMOUS meets from 10-11 a.m. and from 7-8 p.m. Wednesdays in the Sedalia Room at New Hope Presbyterian Church, 2100 Meadows Parkway, Castle Rock.

SATURDAY GENEALOGY Fun meets at the Elbert Public Library at 1 p.m. on the seocnd Saturday of each month. Beginning to advanced genealogy enthusiasts are invited to attend. The Elbert Public Library is in the Elbert School library at 24489 Main Street in Elbert. Call 303-648-3533 for more information.

SENIORS MEET in Elizabeth every Monday at 11 a.m. for food, fun and fellowship at Elizabeth Senior Center, 823 S. Banner St. Bring a dish for potluck on the �rst Monday of each month. Other Mondays, bring a sack lunch. Bingo, games and socializing. New leadership. Call Agnes at 303-883-7881 or Carol at 303-646-3425 for information

CURTAIN TIMEWhat’s the good word?

“The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee” by William Finn and Rachel Sheinkin plays through Oct. 19 at the Lakewood Cultural Center, 470 S. Alison Parkway, Lakewood. It’s pre-sented by the Highlands Ranch-based Performance Now Theatre Company and is directed by Kelly Van Oosbree. Performances: 7:30 p.m. Fridays, Sat-urdays; 2 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays. Special intern performances (high school interns) at 7 p.m. Oct. 16 and Oct. 12 and 19 ($20). Tickets $18-$35: performancenow.org or 303-987-7845.

Family comedy“Over the River and Through the

Woods” by Joe Di Pietro plays through Oct. 26 at Cherry Creek Theatre, Shaver-Ramsey Showroom, 2414 E. Third Ave., Denver. Performances: 7:30 p.m. Fridays, Saturdays; 6:30 p.m. Sundays. Tickets: $28, $25, cherrycreektheatre.org. (Advance reservations suggested.)

Unreality TV

“Good Television” by Rod Mac Lachen plays through Nov. 1 at the Aurora Fox, 9900 E. Colfax Ave., Aurora. Directed by John Ashton, presented by Ashton and Abster Productions. A TV production company descends on a South Carolina trailer park for an episode on a young meth addict and his family. Performances: 7:30 p.m. Thurs-days, Fridays and Saturdays. Tickets: $26, $20, aurorafox.org or 303-739-1970.

Shepard classic“Buried Child” by Sam Shepard, a

1979 Pulitzer Prize winner, plays Oct. 17 to Nov. 16 at the Edge Theater, 1560 Teller St., Lakewood. Rick Bernstein is director. Performances: 8 p.m. Fridays, Saturdays; 6 p.m. Sundays; 8 p.m. Nov. 3. (No performance Nov. 2.) Tickets: $22, $26 ($15 on industry night, Nov. 3.) theedgetheater.com, 303-232-0363.

Stories on Stage“Brush Up Your Shakespeare” is the

title for the Oct. 19 Stories on Stage performances at Su Teatro, 721 Santa Fe

Drive, Denver. Included in the readings is a selection from “The Weird Sisters” by Eleanor Brown of Highlands Ranch. Also: “Hamlet” in 15 minutes and selections from other modern stories suggested by Shakespeare’s works. Per-formances: 1:30 and 6:30 p.m. Tickets: $28. 303-494-0523, storiesonstage.org.

Late-night laughsLate Night Comedy with Impulse

Theater will present a mix of comedy theater and audience interaction at the Avenue Theater, 417 E. 17th Ave., Den-ver, at 10 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays through Nov. 29. Tickets: $18, 303-321-5925, avenuetheater.com.

Family dynamics“The Outgoing Tide” by Bruce Gra-

ham makes its first Colorado appear-ance through Nov. 8 at the John Hand Theater, 7653 E. First Place, Denver. Pre-sented by Firehouse Theater Company, it is directed by Steve Tangedal. Tickets: $20, $18, firehousetheatercompany.com.

Page 17: Elbert County News 1016

Elbert County News 17 October 16, 2014

17-Sports

SPORTSTwo Elizabeth golfers compete at stateEveleth, Herr rank 48th, 50th at PuebloBy Scott StockerSpecial to Colorado Community Media

Elizabeth’s Adam Eveleth and Sean Herr were pleased to have qualified for the Class 4A state golf championships held in Pueb-lo Sept. 29-30. They just wished they could have finished higher in the field of 84 golf-ers over the Walking Stick Golf Course.

Eveleth shot 81 on the first day and 88 on the second to finish with a 169. With that tally, he finished 48th in the field. Herr had rounds of 83 and 87 for a 170 total that placed him 50th. They were the only golf-ers from Elizabeth to qualify for state this season under coach Dave Strang.

Pueblo South’s Taylor Rodriguez came through to win medalist honors. He was able to shoot back-to-back 69s for his two-day total, 138. It was two strokes better than runner-up Jake Staiano of Valor Christian, who shot rounds of 67-73 for his 140, and third-place finisher Ross MacDonald, also from Valor Christian (72-70: 142).

“The state course was longer than we have played, but I’m honored that I had the opportunity to play at state,” said Herr, who came into the tournament as the Col-orado 7 League champion. “Every par four was longer than we have been used to and it was rough. You have to play lights out and I just couldn’t do it.

“Adam is a great golfer and teammate,” said Herr, who plans to attend Northeast-ern Junior College in Sterling. “It’s going to be fun to see how he does next season. But this was a fun season for all of us on

our team. We all got along well and we’re all good friends. I just want all the guys to do well in whatever they do. I also hope that I can play golf at Northeastern.”

Eveleth knew that the course was going to be a challenge.

“It was a tricky course,” said Eveleth, a junior. “It was also pretty windy the second day. It was hard to determine what clubs to play and how to play them. I only played the course the day before in a practice round and knew from then it could be dif-ficult.

“The season was OK and I had some good days,” said Eveleth, who will now concentrate on the coming basketball sea-son. “I was happy with the first day, but the second just got away from me. I’m excited about next season and hoping to have a good year.”

Strang was pleased with the way his

players handled state. His only remorse was that the Cardinals didn’t go as a team.

“We came so close,” Strang said. “We had a fine season and only missed the whole team going to state by a couple of strokes. I’m just proud of all the kids. Walk-ing Stick is a long course and the winds, sometimes with 25-30 mile per hour gusts, didn’t help.

“Sean and Adam knew well what the competition was going to be like,” Strang said. “They had a fine season and it will be nice to have Adam back next season. We’re looking forward to his leadership. The boys hit the ball well, but they were a little off in their putting and short game. It just ended up being a fine season, but one can only hope for a better finish from all the boys.”

Lions mount comeback to stay perfectLutheran comes from down 16-0 to pick o� Fort Morgan’s upset bidBy Jim [email protected]

James Willis passed for two touchdowns and ran for another to spark Lutheran’s 22-point rally but he wasn’t finished.

For the first time this season Willis, and in the final minute of the game, he was told to play defense.

Coming in at safety, Willis made a tackle and intercepted a Fort Morgan pass with 11 seconds left to seal the Lions’ 22-16 victory over the Mustangs in a Colorado 7 League game Oct. 4 at Lutheran.

Unbeaten Lutheran, ranked second in the CHSAANow.com Class 3A poll, fell be-hind 16-0 in the second quarter but scored 22 unanswered points to pull out the win which improved the Lions record to 6-0 overall and 3-0 in the league. Fort Morgan is now 4-2 and 2-1.

Willis, a 6-foot-1, 180 pound senior, capped an 80-yard, seven-play drive with seven seconds remaining in the first half by throwing a 9-yard touchdown pass to 6-foot-4 wide receiver Joshua Clausen, who outleapt two defenders to make the catch.

In the third quarter, Willis scored on a 29-yard quarterback draw to pull the Lions to within two points and delivered another 9-yard scoring pass, this time to Alex Nem-mers with 2:15 remaining in the game. KJ Hall ran for a two-point conversion to push the Lions ahead by six points.

Fort Morgan, however, moved to the Lu-theran 34-yard line with 24.6 seconds on the clock but Willis intercepted Mustangs quarterback Joey Schneider at the 20-yard line to seal the win.

“I hadn’t played defense all year,” said Willis who accounted for 212 total yards in the game. “They put me in. It was coach’s decision. I’m not going to take any respon-sibility for the interception. Luckily I was in the right place.”

Lutheran coach Blair Hubbard called on Willis to make a play.

“James is such a heady kid,” he said. “He’s been taking reps at safety most of the year. He’s a kid that when we need a play to be made, we’ll put him in there. That was the first time we put him in on defense but we knew he was always ready to go. We had some kids banged up and we knew he was probably one of the freshest we could go to.”

Lutheran entertains Englewood at 1 p.m. Oct. 11 and the Lions feel that the comeback win over Fort Morgan was need-ed.

“It was a physical battle,” said Hubbard. “They punched us in the mouth in the first

half. We drew up exactly what we wanted the kids to do in the second half and we were able to run the ball a little bit bet-ter but we knew we had to put the ball in James’ hands and let him throw to the re-ceivers in the wings.

“It was a great test against a playoff caliber team. We knew Fort Morgan would be tough. We needed a good tough game where we could get some film on some mistakes that were made. Hopefully we will learn from those mistakes.”

Willis and Nemmers also believe the way the Lions defeated the Mustangs will help the team.

“It was good for us to be tested,” said Willis. “We haven’t been down all season. Fort Morgan was the first team to have us down and they were doing a great job. It was good for us to be down against a re-ally great team, a hard-working team. They weren’t afraid of us, they came and hit us in the mouth. What makes us a good team, we can come back and I guess we showed it.”

“It was rough,” said Nemmers “Our main motto this year is stay silver. First it’s our main team color and staying silver is we don’t want to fold. We could be down by any score and we’re always going to come back.

“At halftime our coaches talked to us, you guys have to stick to the motto. We got a little bit of momentum before halftime and we just came out in the second half and played our hearts out.”

Lutheran quarterback James Willis runs a keeper during the Lions 22-16 win over Fort Morgan Oct. 4. Willis passed for two touchdowns, ran for another and intercepted a pass in the closing seconds to thwart a late Mustang drive. Photo by Jim Benton

Simla shows youthful edgeYoung volleyball team has eye on stateBy Scott StockerSpecial to ColoradoCommunity Media

Some excellent senior leadership and superior play from underclassmen has played a valuable role for the Simla volleyball team this season.

Simla, coached by the esteemed Sue Snyder, rolled through its first 11 matches before the team stumbled in games against Colorado Springs Chris-tian and Byers. Yet the spirits are high and the Cubs have an opportunity of reaching the state tournament, to be held Nov. 7-8 at the Denver Coliseum.

Through those first 11 matches, Simla only lost five games. The only match to reach five games was the Cubs 3-2 victory against Evangeli-cal Christian. Kiowa, Rye and Hoehne were the only other teams to win a game against the Cubs at that point of the season.

Colorado Springs Christian defeat-ed Simla, 3-0, to put a halt to the win-ning streak. After a victory against Kio-wa, the Cubs were beaten by Byers, 3-1.

Simla has been able to fashion a far better season than most thought. The winning continued on a high note Oct. 3 and 4 as the Cubs defeated Calhan and Peyton, both 3-0, improving to 14-2 overall.

“We have a lot of fine kids,” said Snyder, now in her 30th coaching sea-son. “We only have four seniors and only two were up on the varsity last season. They have all worked hard to be leaders. We have such a nice mix of sophomores and juniors.”

The two returning varsity seniors are Hannah Lutz and Kaci Smith and they have been pleased with Simla’s success. Up from the junior varsity are the other two seniors, Bronwyn Duffy and Lindsey Medina.

There are six juniors, three sopho-mores and six freshmen joining the seniors. This is a young team, but they seem to be growing up in a hurry.

“We’re excited at what we have been able to accomplish so far,” Lutz said. “I

Golfers continues on Page 18

Simla continues on Page 18

THINGS TO DO

provided through the East Central Council of Local Govern-ments is open and available to all residents of Cheyenne, Elbert, Kit Carson and Lincoln counties and provides an economical and e�cient means of travel for the four-county region. Call Kay Campbell, Kiowa, at 719- 541-4275. You may also call the ECCOG o�ce at 1-800-825-0208 to make reservations for any of the trips. You may also visit http://outbackexpress.tripod.com. To ensure that a seat is available, 24-hour advance reservations are appeciated.

OVEREATERS ANONYMOUS meets from 10-11 a.m. and from 7-8 p.m. Wednesdays in the Sedalia Room at New Hope Presbyterian Church, 2100 Meadows Parkway, Castle Rock.

SATURDAY GENEALOGY Fun meets at the Elbert Public Library at 1 p.m. on the seocnd Saturday of each month. Beginning to advanced genealogy enthusiasts are invited to attend. The Elbert Public Library is in the Elbert School library at 24489 Main Street in Elbert. Call 303-648-3533 for more information.

SENIORS MEET in Elizabeth every Monday at 11 a.m. for food, fun and fellowship at Elizabeth Senior Center, 823 S. Banner St. Bring a dish for potluck on the �rst Monday of each month. Other Mondays, bring a sack lunch. Bingo, games and socializing. New leadership. Call Agnes at 303-883-7881 or Carol at 303-646-3425 for information

Page 18: Elbert County News 1016

18 Elbert County News October 16, 2014

18

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While Staiano fi nished as the runner-up and MacDonald was third in the indi-vidual competition, they were more than pleased to be able to lead Valor Christian to the team championship. The Eagles shot a team low of 424 to come out on top.

And it was a dominating performance

as Valor Christian, located in Highlands Ranch, won by a whopping 23 strokes. Pueblo South fi nished second in the team competition with a two-day total of 447, followed by Cheyenne Mountain (459), Windsor (466) and Steamboat Springs (467).

Joining Staiano and MacDonald on the winners’ stand from Valor Christian was Coby Welch, tied for fourth (67-79: 146) and Pierce Aichinger, tied for sixth (72-75: 147). It was defi nitely a dominating team

performance.Rodriguez came through with fi ve bird-

ies in his fi nal round. And, of course, he can consider any two as the most impor-tant shots of the tournament after his two-stroke victory. He has qualifi ed for state four times with his previous best fi nishes, ninth in his sophomore season and 11th last year.

“The key for me was just mentally stay-ing in the right frame of mind,” said Rodri-guez, the fi rst boys state golf champion for Pueblo South. “I was just taking it one shot

at a time and I was just staying hungry out there and wanting to win. It feels great and I’m really happy.”

Windsor, led by Bretton Krantz, who fi nished 10th (77-72: 149), was the highest team fi nisher from the Colorado 7 League, of which Elizabeth is also a member. The Wizards fi nished fourth with a team total of 466.

Joining Krantz was his brother, Cole, who fi nished 19th (77-80: 157), Ryan Lo-coco, tied for 26th (77-83: 160), and Bowe Colohan, tied for 73rd (87-92: 179).

Continued from Page 17

Golfers

just want to try and get the ball to my hit-ters. We’ve worked hard and we’re focused on what we need to accomplish. We have had a lot of fun and we hope to continue to be successful. It’s important for us to work as a team and that’s what we’ve been able to do.”

Smith is in complete agreement.“I think we have been able to prove to a

lot of people that we are a better team than most thought we would be at the begin-ning of the season,” said Smith, who has been an ace player at the net. “Our defense has really helped us win a lot of games this season. We just want to stay focused no matter what the situation is in any game. It’s important for us to stay together. We just want to go as far as we can, and so far, it’s been a good effort for all our team-mates.”

Continued from Page 17

Simla

Page 19: Elbert County News 1016

Elbert County News 19 October 16, 2014

19

R116777 41302 soutH FARMHouse, llc10940 SOUTH PARKER ROAD #237 PARKER, CO 80134Parcel: 7501401028 Section: 1 Township: 7 Range: 65Subdivision: DEER CREEK FARM FILING NO. 1A-2A Lot: 0089Actual Value: $306,00641302 S FARMHOUSE CIRYear 2013 Tax $1,138.56 Interest $68.31 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $1,231.87

R116859 AARoN RobeRt & tRisHA29250 E US HIGHWAY 24 CALHAN, CO 80808-9401Parcel: 7901413001 Section: 1 Township: 7 Range: 59Subdivision: HEALDS ADDITION AMENDMENT NO.2 Lot: 0007Actual Value: $7,50038438 LAKE STYear 2013 Tax $33.28 Interest $2.33 Penalty $0.00 Other $39.39Total Due: $75.00

R114726 AlbRecHt bRuce HAlbRecHt FAitH D b04375 PVT RD 162 ELIZABETH, CO 80107-8819Parcel: 7408300310 Section: 7 Township: 7 Range: 64 Section: 8 Township: 7 Range: 64Subdivision: RURALO PAR IN S2: 7 & 8 7 64 79.531 ACRES DESCActual Value: $155,8614375 PVT RD 162Year 2013 Tax $798.30 Interest $47.90 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $871.20

R115021 AlcANtARA ARcHiMeDes o6033 MERCHANT PLACE PARKER, CO 80134-5198Parcel: 8428100445 Section: 28 Township: 8 Range: 64Subdivision: MCCART RANCH LAND SURVEY Block: 008 A TRACT IN NE 4: 28-08-64 AKA “PARCELActual Value: $1,41931900 JENNY’S CIRYear 2013 Tax $35.08 Interest $2.46 Penalty $0.00 Other $37.46Total Due: $75.00

R116918 ANDeRsoN JeFFReY D & sHYlA D2380 ANTELOPE RIDGE TRAIL PARKER, CO 80138Parcel: 6501201105 Section: 1 Township: 6 Range: 65Subdivision: ELKHORN RANCH Lot: 0036Actual Value: $409,2012380 ANTELOPE RIDGE TRLYear 2013 Tax $4,737.84 Interest $331.65 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $5,094.49

R105924 bADGeR Mollie M AKA ellisoN Mollie M41603 LAKOTA RD PARKER, CO 80138Parcel: 7502101017 Section: 2 Township: 7 Range: 65 1/50 INTEREST IN TRACT B .4945 ACRES IN COMMON PROP-ERTY (.01 ACRES INTEREST)Subdivision: PRAIRIE TRAIL RANCHES Lot: 0015Actual Value: $201,44841603 LAKOTA RDYear 2013 Tax $345.06 Interest $27.60 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $397.66

R119974 bAiRD MARViN W estAte27130 CO RD 73 CALHAN, CO 80808Parcel: 9017100141 Section: 17 Township: 9 Range: 60Subdivision: RU-RALA NE4,LESS 60 AC PARCEL : 17 9 60, LESS HWY DESC B246 P165 97.980 ACActual Value: $2,257Year 2013 Tax $51.64 Interest $3.61 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $80.25

R112655 bAiRD MARViN W estAte27130 CO RD 73 CALHAN, CO 80808Parcel: 9017400065 Section: 17 Township: 9 Range: 60Subdivision: RURALA SE4: 17 9 60 160 ACRES Actual Value: $3,686Year 2013 Tax $85.00 Interest $5.95 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $115.95

R110541 bAiRD MARViN W estAte27130 CO RD 73 CALHAN, CO 80808Parcel: 9909400009 Section: 9 Township: 9 Range: 59 ALL (S OF HWY 118.05) Section: 10 Township: 9 Range: 59 W2W2 (S OF HWY 84.27 A), NE4SW4 (40 ACRES) TOTAL ACRES 242.32Subdivision: RURALAActual Value: $5,583Year 2013 Tax $89.84 Interest $6.29 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $121.13

R110544 bAiRD MARViN W estAte27130 CO RD 73 CALHAN, CO 80808Parcel: 9910400013 Section: 10 Township: 9 Range: 59 E2E2 (S OF HWY 147.30A)Subdivision: RURALAActual Value: $3,394Year 2013 Tax $54.32 Interest $3.80 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $83.12

R105222 beNJAMiN RobiN leiGH19973 E DARTMOUTH AVE AURORA, CO 80013Parcel: 7201000016 Section: 1 Township: 7 Range: 62Subdivision: CHAPARRAL VALLEY UNIT 2 Lot: 0038Actual Value: $17,50041466 WAY OF GOODNESSYear 2013 Tax $335.40 Interest $23.48 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $383.88

R107845 beNsoN lAuRel JPO BOX 1867 ELIZABETH, CO 80107-1867Parcel: 8406400011 Section: 6 Township: 8 Range: 64Subdivision: RU-RALO NE4SE4: 6 8 64 LESS N 40’(1.21 A) ANDActual Value: $426,52635187 CO RD 17Year 2013 Tax $2,904.16 Interest $203.29 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $3,132.45

R104300 beRtHeusoN MARK PHiliP4019 W HIGHWAY 70 DURANT, OK 74701-4591Parcel: 6513101012 Section: 13 Township: 6 Range: 65Subdivision: COAL CREEK FIL 1 Lot: 0016Actual Value: $374,2022718 AUTUMN WAYYear 2013 Tax $2,643.44 Interest $185.04 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $2,853.48

R102504 bisHoP NelDA MbisHoP cRAiGRHoDes GAil921300 LEILANI MAKAI RD CAPTAIN COOK , HI 96704-8003Parcel: 4071201131 Section: 20 Township: 7 Range: 61 S2-S2NW4-NE4 3/110 INTEREST 15.27 NET ACRES MINERAL RIGHTS JOINT TENANTS Subdivision: SEVERED MINERALSActual Value: $100Year 2013 Tax $2.04 Interest $0.14 Penalty $0.00 Other $55.00Total Due: $57.18

R102543 bisHoP NelDA MbisHoP cRAiGRHoDes GAil921300 LEILANI MAKAI RD CAPTAIN COOK , HI 96704-8003Parcel: 4072141130Section: 14 Township: 7 Range: 62 ALL 1/4 INTEREST 160 NET ACRES MINERAL RIGHTS JOINT TENANTS Subdivision: SEVERED MINERALSActual Value: $1,100Year 2013 Tax $18.72 Interest $1.31 Penalty $0.00 Other $50.00Total Due: $70.03

R102842 bisHoP NelDA MbisHoP cRAiGRHoDes GAil921300 LEILANI MAKAI RD CAPTAIN COOK , HI 96704-8003Parcel: 4082141120 Section: 14 Township: 8 Range: 62 SE4SW4 1/24 INTEREST 1.67 NET ACRES MINERAL RIGHTS JOINT TENANTS Subdivision: SEVERED MINERALSActual Value: $30Year 2013 Tax $0.60 Interest $0.04 Penalty $0.00 Other $55.00Total Due: $55.64

R119467 blAcKFoot lAND PARtNeRs ltc6608 N PINEWOOD DR PARKER, CO 80134Parcel: 9534103002 Section: 27 Township: 9 Range: 65Subdivision: BLACKFOOT MINOR DEVELOPMENT Lot: 3Actual Value: $50,40024955 INDIAN ROCK CIRYear 2013 Tax $983.04 Interest $68.81 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $1,076.85

R104826 blAiR clAReNce e4049 DON TOMASO DR LOS ANGELES, CA 90008Parcel: 6904200006 Township: 6 Range: 59 ALL SEC 4 LESS E2NE4 E I-70, PAR NE4 OF 5 E OF I-70Subdivision: RURALAActual Value: $23,90335501 CO RD 190Year 2013 Tax $365.56 Interest $25.59 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $416.15

R104830 blAiR clAReNce e4049 DON TOMASO DR LOS ANGELES, CA 90008Parcel: 6911000012Township: 6 Range: 59 ALL SEC 11,14, 23 ALL SEC 15 LESS RD & RR, NE4;NE4NW4;E2SE4 LESS RR SEC 22 Section: 14 Township: 6 Range: 59 Section: 15 Township: 6 Range: 59 Section: 22 Township: 6 Range: 59 Section: 23 Township: 6 Range: 59Subdivision: RURALAActual Value: $153,39837401 CO RD 178Year 2013 Tax $2,466.80 Interest $172.68 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $2,664.48

R100773 bRADAc JosePH stePHAN1477 S JOSEPHINE ST DENVER, CO 80210Parcel: 0408101011 Section: 8 Township: 10 Range: 64Subdivision: ACADEMY EAST FIL 2 Lot: 41 (TOTAL 5.020 A) Actual Value: $71,50022805 DEER TRLYear 2013 Tax $1,394.56 Interest $97.62 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $1,517.18

R108132 bRADleY DoNAlD G & PAtRiciA sPO BOX 1290 ELIZABETH, CO 80107-1290Parcel: 8409201018 Section: 9 Township: 8 Range: 64Subdivision: PINE RIDGE FIL 2 Block: 7 Lot: 8Actual Value: $104,0005379 PINE RIDGE DRYear 2013 Tax $708.08 Interest $49.57 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $782.65

R108710 bReWeR MARY cPO BOX 1216 ELIZABETH, CO 80107-1398Parcel: 8418206005 Section: 18 Township: 8 Range: 64Subdivision: ELIZABETH HALLS ADDITION Block: 003 Lot: 0001 AND:- Lot: 0002Actual Value: $37,700197 W POPLAR STYear 2013 Tax $319.56 Interest $22.37 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $366.93

R120437 bRoKeN RoAD eNteRPRises llc4190 COUNTY ROAD 154 ELIZABETH, CO 80107Parcel: 4074120437 Section: 29 Township: 7 Range: 64 LOT 2, KINTER MINOR DEVELOPMENT MINERALS LOC IN E2NW4NW4 19.41 MRASubdivision: SEVERED MINERALSActual Value: $134Year 2013 Tax $3.44 Interest $0.24 Penalty $0.00 Other $55.00Total Due: $58.68

R100399 bRuHN WilliAM s5105 BLUESTAR DR COLORADO SPRINGS, CO 80919Parcel: 0112100020 Section: 12 Township: 10 Range: 61 :E2 (TOTAL 320 A) Subdivision: RURALAActual Value: $7,373Year 2013 Tax $170.00 Interest $11.90 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $206.90

R115101 buNtiNG DouGlAs AFulMeR loRi JoPO BOX 441 SIMLA, CO 80835Parcel: 1918200116 Section: 18 Township: 11 Range: 59Subdivision: RURALA PAR IN N2 NW4: 18 11 59 63.45 A Actual Value: $1,462Year 2013 Tax $33.60 Interest $2.35 Penalty $0.00 Other $39.05Total Due: $75.00

R108691 cANiDA MAttHeW seAN134 W BROADWAY STREET ELIZABETH, CO 80107Parcel: 8418204004 Section: 18 Township: 8 Range: 64Subdivision: ELIZABETH HALLS ADDITION Block: 002 Lot: 0031 AND:- Lot: 0032Actual Value: $110,113134 W BROADWAY STYear 2013 Tax $466.54 Interest $27.99 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $519.53

R118651 cHAMbeRs bARtlett AlleNPO BOX 251 HUGO, CO 80821-0251Parcel: 9901300124Section: 1 Township: 9 Range: 59Subdivision: RURALA SW4: 1 9 59 LESS 2.631 A PAR DESC B260Actual Value: $3,62638485 ST HWY 86Year 2013 Tax $58.76 Interest $4.11 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $87.87

R108083 cHicK RoY GcHicK FloReNce ANNePO BOX 2134 ELIZABETH, CO 80107-2134Parcel: 8409101006Section: 9 Township: 8 Range: 64Subdivision: PINE RIDGE FIL 1 Block: 001 Lot: 0003Actual Value: $172,8265727 PINE RIDGE DRYear 2013 Tax $1,176.72 Interest $82.37 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $1,284.09

R109933 cHRisteNseN sANDRA DeNise ReVocAble liViNG tRust27784 FOREST RIDGE DR KIOWA, CO 80117-8834Parcel: 9316101026 Section: 16 Township: 9 Range: 63Subdivision: RANCH AT FOREST RIDGE, THE FIL 1 Lot: 00621/83 INT IN TRACT A .0441 AActual Value: $317,23727784 FOREST RIDGE DRYear 2013 Tax $1,478.60 Interest $103.50 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $1,607.10

R102720 cHRistiANseN cRAiG% GeNeVieVe cHRistiNseN 171 GROVER LN BALD KNOB, AR 72010-9764Parcel: 4079288470Section: 28 Township: 7 Range: 59 ALL SECS 20-30 7 59 1280 ACRES .0064 INTEREST 8.19 NET ACRES W2 .0064 INTEREST 2.05 NET ACRES Section: 22 Township: 7 Range: 59 S2-S2N2 .0064 INTEREST 3.07 NET ACRES Section: 26 Township: 7 Range: 60 ALL .0064 INTEREST 4.10 NET ACRES Section: 2 Township: 7 Range: 60 NE4-W2SE4-E2SW4 .0064 INTEREST 2.05 NET ACRES Section: 8 Township: 8 Range: 60 ALL .0064 INTER-EST 4.10 NET ACRES Section: 9 Township: 8 Range: 60 NW4 .0064 INTEREST 1.02 NET ACRES Section: 10 Township: 8 Range: 60 N2N2 .0064 INTEREST 1.02 NET ACRES Section: 12 Township: 8 Range: 60 SW4NW4-SW4SE4-W2SW4-SE4SW4 .0064 INTEREST 1.28 NET ACRES Section: 24 Township: 7 Range: 60 E2E2 .0064 INTEREST 1.02 NET ACRES Section: 2 Township: 8 Range: 60 S2-S2N2 .0064 INTER-EST 3.07 NET ACRES Section: 34 Township: 7 Range: 60 SE4-SE4SW4-S2NE4-NE4NE4 .0064 INTEREST 2.05 NET ACRES MINERAL RIGHTS Subdivision: SEVERED MINERALSActual Value: $240Year 2013 Tax $3.88 Interest $0.27 Penalty $0.00 Other $55.00Total Due: $59.15

R102731 cHRistiANseN cRAiG% GeNeVieVe cHRistiANseN 171 GROVER LN BALD KNOB, AR 72010-9764Parcel: 4080041260 Section: 4 Township: 8 Range: 60 SE4-S2NE4-NW4NE4-N2NW4 .0064 INTEREST 2.3 NET ACRES MINERAL RIGHTS Subdivision: SEVERED MINERALSActual Value: $30Year 2013 Tax $0.68 Interest $0.05 Penalty $0.00 Other $55.00Total Due: $55.73

R102713 cHRistiANseN GeNeVieVe171 GROVER LN BALD KNOB, AR 72010-9764Parcel: 4079208480 Section: 20 Township: 7 Range: 59 ALL SECS 20-30 7 59 .045 INTEREST 57.60 NET ACRES Section: 22 Township: 7 Range: 59 S2N2-S2 .045 INTEREST 21.60 NET ACRES Section: 28 Town-ship: 7 Range: 59 W2 .045 INTEREST 14.40 NET ACRES Section: 26 Township: 7 Range: 60 ALL .045 INTEREST 28.80 NET ACRES Section: 2 Township: 7 Range: 60 NE4-W2SE4-E2SW4 .045 INTEREST 14.40 NET ACRES Section: 8 Town-ship: 8 Range: 60 ALL .045 INTEREST 28.80 NET ACRES Section: 9 Township: 8 Range: 60 NW4 .045 INTEREST 7.20 NET ACRES Section: 10 Township: 8 Range: 60 N2N2 .045 INTEREST 7.20 NET ACRES Section: 12 Township: 8 Range: 60 SW4NW4-SW4SE4-W2SW4-SE4SW4 .045 INTEREST 9.00 NET ACRES Section: 24 Town-ship: 7 Range: 60 E2E2 .045 INTEREST 7.20 NET ACRES Section: 2 Township: 8 Range: 60 S2-S2N2 .045 INTEREST 21.60 NET ACRES Section: 34 Township: 7 Range: 60 SE4-SE4SW4-S2NE4-NE4NE4 .045 INTEREST 14.40 NET ACRES MINERAL RIGHTS Subdivision: SEVERED MINERALSActual Value: $1,590Year 2013 Tax $25.52 Interest $1.79 Penalty $0.00 Other $47.69Total Due: $75.00R102732 cHRistiANseN GeNeVieVe171 GROVER LN BALD KNOB, AR 72010-9764Parcel: 4080041264 Section: 4 Township: 8 Range: 60 SE4-S2NE4-NW4NE4-N2NW4 .045 INTEREST 16.2 NET ACRES MINERAL RIGHTS Subdivision: SEVERED MINERALSActual Value: $100Year 2013 Tax $2.04 Interest $0.14 Penalty $0.00 Other $55.00Total Due: $57.18

R115306 ciRbo tHoMAs e%lARRY ciRbo, P.R. 14206 N 95th St Longmont, CO 80504-8007Parcel: 0923209017Section: 23 Township: 10 Range: 59Subdivision: MATHESON ADDITION NO.3 Block: 003 Lot: 0017 THRU:- Lot: 0025LESS HIGHWAYActual Value: $3,97637211 US HWY 24Year 2013 Tax $91.96 Interest $6.44 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $123.40

R101216 ciRbo tHoMAs e%lARRY ciRbo, P.R. 14206 N 95TH STREET LONGMONT, CO 80504Parcel: 0923210005 Section: 23 Township: 10 Range: 59 (TOTAL 0.368 A) Subdivision: MATHESON TOWN LIMITS Block: ARB Lot: 5:PAR 117’ X 175’ X 75’ X 167’ IN NW4NW4 Actual Value: $13,90837131 US HWY 24Year 2013 Tax $88.76 Interest $6.21 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $119.97

R101217 ciRbo tHoMAs e sR%lARRY ciRbo P.R. 14206 N 95TH STREET LONGMONT, CO 80504Parcel: 0923210006 Section: 23 Township: 10 Range: 59 :PAR IN NW4NW4 E TO W 125’ W/ APPROX 65’ ON E & 75’ ON W BOUNDED BY HWY ON S (TOTAL 0.201 A) Subdivision: MATHESON TOWN LIMITS Block: ARB Lot: 5A AND:- Lot: 6AActual Value: $16,83037281 US HWY 24Year 2013 Tax $107.16 Interest $7.50 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $139.66

R101760 clARKe JAcK Wellsc/o cHucK FARisH PO BOX 027 PEBBLE BEACH, CA 93953-0027Parcel: 4003097500 Section: 26 Township: 9 Range: 63 SW4 (160 ACRES 3/1536 INTEREST .32 MRA) Section: 27 Township: 9 Range: 63 SE4 (160 ACRES 3/1536 IN-TEREST .31 MRA) Section: 34 Township: 9 Range: 63 N2NE4(80 ACRES 3/1536 INTEREST .16 MRA) Section: 35 Township: 9 Range: 63 W2 (320 ACRES 3/1536 INTEREST .63 MRA) Section: 14 Township: 10 Range: 63 SE4SW4 (40 ACRES 3/1536 INTER-EST .08 MRA) Section: 15 Township: 10 Range: 63 SW4, S2SE4 (240 ACRES 3/1536 INTEREST .47 MRA) Section: 22 Township: 10 Range: 63 ALL (640 ACRES 3/1536 INTEREST 1.25 MRA) Section: 23 Township: 10 Range: 63 SW4, E2NW4, E2 (560 ACRES 3/1536 INTEREST 1.09 MRA) Section: 24 Township: 10 Range: 63 ALL(640 ACRES 3/1536 INTEREST 1.25) Section: 19 Township: 10 Range: 62 E2W2 (160 ACRES 3/1536 INTEREST .31 NET ACRES MINERAL RIGHTS)Subdivision: SEVERED MINERALSActual Value: $30Year 2013 Tax $0.68 Interest $0.05 Penalty $0.00 Other $55.00Total Due: $55.73

R101777 clARKe JAcK WellsC/O CHUCK FARISH PO BOX 027 PEBBLE BEACH, CA 93953-0027Parcel: 4003254400 Section: 25 Township: 10 Range: 63 SE4-NW4 25 10 63 320 ACRES 3/1536 INTEREST .62 NET ACRES ALL 27 10 63 640 ACRES 3/1536 INTEREST 1.25 NET ACRES ALL 26 10 63 640 ACRES 3/1536 INTEREST 1.25 NET ACRES E2-E2NW4-S2SW4 28 10 63 480 ACRES 3/1536 INTEREST .94 NET ACRES S2NE4SE4-10 A. IN E2SE4SE4 32 10 63 30 ACRES 3/1536 INTEREST .06 NET ACRES S2-N2NW4-SE4NW4-NE4: 33-10-63 600 ACRES 3/1536 INTEREST 1.17 NET ACRES ALL 34 10 63 640 ACRES 3/1536 INTEREST 1.25 NET ACRES ALL 35 10 63 640 ACRES 3/1536 INTEREST (EX COAL IN SE4SW4- S2SE4-NE4SE4) 1.25 NET ACRES MINERAL RIGHTS Subdivision: SEVERED MINERALSActual Value: $70Year 2013 Tax $1.32 Interest $0.09 Penalty $0.00 Other $55.00Total Due: $56.41

R101897 clARKe JAcK Wellsc/o cHucK FARisH PO BOX 027 PEBBLE BEACH, CA 93953-0027Parcel: 4017123680 Section: 12 Township: 11 Range: 57 S2 12 11 57 320 ACRES 3/768 INTEREST 1.25 NET ACRES N2-SE4 14 11 57 480 ACRES 3/768 INTEREST 1.88 NET ACRES S2 24 11 57 320 ACRES 3/768 INTEREST 1.25 NET ACRES MINERAL RIGHTS Subdivision: SEV-ERED MINERALSActual Value: $30Year 2013 Tax $0.68 Interest $0.05 Penalty $0.00 Other $55.00Total Due: $55.73

R102187 clARKe JAcK Wellsc/o cHucK FARisH PO BOX 027 PEBBLE BEACH, CA 93953-0027Parcel: 4060069930Section: 6 Township: 6 Range: 60 ALL 3/3072 INTEREST 0.69 NET ACRES Section: 8 Town-ship: 6 Range: 60 ALL 3/3072 INTEREST 0.63 NET ACRES Section: 18 Township: 6 Range: 60 E2-E2W2 3/3072 INTEREST 0.47 NET ACRES Section: 12 Township: 6 Range: 61 ALL 3/3072 INTEREST 0.62 NET ACRES MINERAL RIGHTS Subdivision: SEVERED MINERALSActual Value: $30Year 2013 Tax $0.56 Interest $0.04 Penalty $0.00 Other $55.00Total Due: $55.60

R102250 clARKe JAcK Wellsc/o cHucK FARisH PO BOX 027 PEBBLE BEACH, CA 93953-0027Parcel: 4061028490Section: 2 Township: 6 Range: 61 N2-N2S2-SE-4SE4 3/3072 INTEREST 0.60 NET ACRES MINERAL RIGHTS Subdivision: SEVERED MINERALSActual Value: $30Year 2013 Tax $0.56 Interest $0.04 Penalty $0.00 Other $55.00Total Due: $55.60

R114096 clAWsoN JeNNiFeR l49357 CO RD 142 LIMON, CO 80828Parcel: 8702400059 Section: 2 Township: 8 Range: 57Subdivision: RURALA PAR IN S2E2: 2 8 57 100 ACRES Actual Value: $10,777,49525 CO RD 142 #Towers 19-21Year 2013 Tax $213.08 Interest $14.92 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $253.00

R102335 cliFFoRD KAY2715 SWASONT WAY HOLLADAY, UT 84117-6342Parcel: 4062341310 Section: 34 Township: 6 Range: 62 NW4: 2 7 62 160 A MR 1/16 INT 10 A ALL SEC 4 & 5: 7 62 1280 A MR 1/16 INT 80 A E2E2: 34 6 62 160 A MR 1/16 INT 10 A W2: W2E2: 34 6 62 480 A MR 1/32 INT 15 A E2NE4: 28 7 62 80 A MR 1/16 INT 5 A ALL SEC 26 7 62 640 A MR 1/16 INT 40 A TOTAL MRA 160 A MINERAL RIGHTS Subdivision: SEVERED MINERALSActual Value: $1,100Year 2013 Tax $18.72 Interest $1.31 Penalty $0.00 Other $50.00Total Due: $70.03

R100109 coit coRDleY & KeMPPO BOX 125 SIMLA, CO 80835-0125Parcel: 0026310010 Section: 26 Township: 10 Range: 60 (TOTAL 0.258 A) Subdivision: SIMLA ORIGINAL Block: 12 Lot: 27 THRU:- Lot: 29Actual Value: $28,134211 NAVAJO AVEYear 2013 Tax $109.24 Interest $7.65 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $141.89

R117691 cooPeR iRis sueWilKeRsoN JAMes WillAARD iiiWilKeRsoN JeNNiFeR ANNecooPeR RicHARD NPO BOX 2647 ELIZABETH, CO 80107-2647Parcel: 8415301001 Tract: A Section: 15 Township: 8 Range: 64Subdivi-sion: SUNFLOWER RIDGE MINOR RES DEV Lot: 000ATRACT A OPEN SPACEActual Value: $1,0006551 SUNFLOWER CIRYear 2013 Tax $24.80 Interest $1.74 Penalty $0.00 Other $48.46Total Due: $75.00

R118222 coRbiN FReDeRicK A6050 WAGON WHEEL DR PEYTON, CO 80831-7627Parcel: 2904100172 Section: 4 Township: 12 Range: 59Subdivision: RURALA E2NE4 & PAR IN N2N2SE4: 4 12 59 DESC B689 P509Actual Value: $1,87435510 CO RD 50Year 2013 Tax $42.88 Interest $3.00 Penalty $0.00 Other $29.12Total Due: $75.00

R116321 cR 29 llcPO BOX 656 CASTLE ROCK, CO 80104-0656Parcel: 2910100153 Section: 10 Township: 12 Range: 59Subdivision: RURALA Block: 002 Lot: 0000 PAR IN NE4: 10 12 59 35.981 ACRES DESC B624 P851 AKA TRACT 2 BOONE REZONE Actual Value: $3,03036890 CO RD 46Year 2013 Tax $69.92 Interest $4.89 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $99.81

R102348 DAuGHeNbAuGH AMY J5752 S NETHERLAND STREET CENTENNIAL, CO 80015Parcel: 4063180015 Section: 18 Township: 6 Range: 63 S2 1/40 INTEREST 7.36 NET ACRES Section: 24 Township: 6 Range: 64 N2:SE4 1/40 INTEREST12.00 NET ACRES SW4 1/60 INTEREST 2.67 NET ACRES Section: 26 Township: 6 Range: 64 N2 1/60 INTEREST 5.33 NET ACRES MINERAL RIGHTS Subdivision: SEVERED MINERALSActual Value: $170Year 2013 Tax $4.08 Interest $0.29 Penalty $0.00 Other $55.00Total Due: $59.37

R118753 DestiNY VeNtuRes 11 llc8203 E. 8TH AVENUE DENVER, CO 80230Parcel: 8513100168 Section: 13 Township: 8 Range: 65Subdivision: RU-RALO PAR IN SE4NE4: 13 8 65 DESC B683 P160Actual Value: $99,915Year 2013 Tax $3,086.88 Interest $216.08 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $3,327.96

R120110 DeWiNDt JoHN e & PAtRiciA APO BOX 494 HOOKER, OK 73945-0494Parcel: 7029100060 Section: 29 Township: 7 Range: 60 NW4NE4; NE4NW4: EXCEPT WEST 990’ ( 60 ACRES)Subdivision: RURALAActual Value: $38,14528522 CO RD 154Year 2013 Tax $150.54 Interest $9.03 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $184.57

R116601 DoWNeY cRYstAl00303 W CENTRAL AVE MISSOULA, MT 59801-6815Parcel: 8717100112 Section: 17 Township: 8 Range: 57Subdivision: RURALA ALL: 17 8 57 640 ACRES UNDIVIDED 7/64 INTEREST 70 NET ACRES Actual Value: $2,169Year 2013 Tax $43.24 Interest $3.03 Penalty $0.00 Other $28.73Total Due: $75.00

R120235 DoWNeY-sMileY cRYstAl303 WEST CENTRAL AVENUE MISSOULA, MT 59801Parcel: 8704100064 Section: 4 Township: 8 Range: 57 E2 (80.019 ACRES 1/5 INTERES TOTAL ACRES 16.035)Subdivision: RURALAActual Value: $1,510Year 2013 Tax $29.96 Interest $2.10 Penalty $0.00 Other $42.94Total Due: $75.00

Public NoticeDeliNQueNt tAX Notice

Public Notice is hereby given that i, Richard Pettitt, will ac-cording to law, offer at public sale, at the elbert county courthouse, 215 comanche st. Kiowa, county of elbert, state of colorado, on the 18th of November, 2014, com-mencing at 9:00 a.m. of the said day the described real

estate, situated in the said county on which taxes for the 2013 and prior years have not been paid as shall be neces-sary to pay herein below set down, together with interest, advertising and delinquent interest and fees to wit:

elbeRt couNtY DeliNQueNt tAX Notice

AccouNt NAMe to WHoM AssesseD cARe oF ADDRess citY stAte ZiP tAX iNt ADV totAl

Legal Notice No: 23054 -23058 * First Publication: October 16, 2014Last Publication: October 30, 2014 * Publisher: The Elbert County News

AccouNt NAMe to WHoM AssesseD cARe oF ADDRess citY stAte ZiP tAX iNt ADV totAl

AccouNt NAMe to WHoM AssesseD cARe oF ADDRess citY stAte ZiP tAX iNt ADV totAl

AccouNt NAMe to WHoM AssesseD cARe oF ADDRess citY stAte ZiP tAX iNt ADV totAl

AccouNt NAMe to WHoM AssesseD cARe oF ADDRess citY stAte ZiP tAX iNt ADV totAl

NoticesPublic NoticesPublic NoticesPublic NoticesPublic NoticesPublic NoticesTo advertise your public notices call 303-566-4100

Public NoticesPublic NoticesPublic NoticesPublic NoticesPublic NoticesPublic NoticesPublic NoticesPublic NoticesPublic NoticesPublic NoticesPublic Notices

Page 20: Elbert County News 1016

20 Elbert County News October 16, 2014

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Public Notices

R120511 DRAil iNVestMeNts llc20501 VENTURA BLVD #130 WOODLAND HILLS, CA 91364Parcel: 7917400148 Section: 17 Township: 7 Range: 59 PARC IN SE4 AKA PARC 7Subdivision: RURALAActual Value: $1,684Year 2013 Tax $27.16 Interest $1.90 Penalty $0.00 Other $45.94Total Due: $75.00

R120512 DRAil iNVestMeNts llc20501 VENTURA BLVD #130 WOODLAND HILLS, CA 91364Parcel: 7917400149 Section: 17 Township: 7 Range: 59 PARC IN SE4 AKA AS PARC 8Subdivision: RURALAActual Value: $1,678Year 2013 Tax $27.16 Interest $1.90 Penalty $0.00 Other $45.94Total Due: $75.00

R120508 DRAil iNVestMeNts llc20501 VENTURA BLVD #130 WOODLAND HILLS, CA 91364Parcel: 7918400151 Section: 18 Township: 7 Range: 59 PAR IN E2 AKA PARC 12Subdivision: RURALAActual Value: $1,387Year 2013 Tax $22.16 Interest $1.55 Penalty $0.00 Other $50.00Total Due: $73.71

R102721 DuRAN MAttie%GeNeVieVe cHRistiANseN 171 GRoVeR lN BALD KNOB, AR 72010-9764Parcel: 4079288610Section: 28 Township: 7 Range: 59 ALL SECS 20-30 7 59 1280 ACRES .0128 INTEREST 16.38 NET ACRES W2 .0128 INTEREST 4.10 NET ACRES Section: 22 Township: 7 Range: 59 S2-S2N2 .0128 INTEREST 6.14 NET ACRES Section: 26 Township: 7 Range: 60 ALL .0128 INTEREST 8.19 NET ACRES Section: 2 Township: 7 Range: 60 NE4-W2SE4-E2SW4 .0128 INTEREST 4.10 NET ACRES Section: 8 Township: 8 Range: 60 ALL .0128 INTER-EST 8.19 NET ACRES Section: 9 Township: 8 Range: 60 NW4 .0128 INTEREST 2.05 NET ACRES Section: 10 Township: 8 Range: 60 N2N2 .0128 INTEREST 2.05 NET ACRES Section: 12 Township: 8 Range: 60 SW4NW4-SW4SE4-W2SW4-SE4SW4 .0128 INTEREST 2.56 NET ACRES Section: 24 Township: 7 Range: 60 E2E2 .0128 INTEREST 2.05 NET ACRES Section: 2 Township: 8 Range: 60 S2-S2N2 .0128 INTER-EST 6.14 NET ACRES Section: 34 Township: 7 Range: 60 SE4-SE4SW4-S2NE4-NE4NE4 .0128 INTEREST 4.10 NET ACRES MINERAL RIGHTS Subdivision: SEVERED MINERALSActual Value: $450Year 2013 Tax $7.20 Interest $0.50 Penalty $0.00 Other $55.00Total Due: $62.70

R102733 DuRAN MAttie% cHRistiANseN GeNeVieVe 171 GROVER LN BALD KNOB, AR 72010-9764Parcel: 4080041400 Section: 4 Township: 8 Range: 60 SE4-S2NE4-NW4NE4-N2NW4 .0128 INTEREST 4.61 NET ACRES MINERAL RIGHTS Subdivision: SEVERED MINERALSActual Value: $30Year 2013 Tax $0.68 Interest $0.05 Penalty $0.00 Other $55.00Total Due: $55.73

R115354 elA llc20210 E SMOKY HILL ROAD CENTENNIAL, CO 80015Parcel: 7501403001 Section: 1 Township: 7 Range: 65Subdivision: DEER CREEK FARM FIL 3 (PUD) Lot: 0143Actual Value: $255,00641105 CO RD 13Year 2013 Tax $6,915.60 Interest $484.09 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $7,424.69

R102623 eVANs DARYlEVANS PEGGY JPO BOX 271 ELIZABETH, CO 80107-0271Parcel: 4074290375 Section: 29 Township: 7 Range: 64 SW4:W2SE4:S2NW4: 2/3 INTEREST 213.33 NET A MINERAL RIGHTS Subdivision: SEVERED MINERALSActual Value: $1,480Year 2013 Tax $36.76 Interest $2.57 Penalty $0.00 Other $35.67Total Due: $75.00

R102638 eVANs DARYleVANs HeRbeRt estAteeVANs lolA MGAsPeR teResAPO BOX 271 ELIZABETH, CO 80107-0271Parcel: 4074320385Section: 32 Township: 7 Range: 64 N2 2/3 INTEREST213.33 NET ACRES MINERAL RIGHTS ET AL: HERBERT EVANS ESTATE LOLA M EVANS TERESA GASPAR DARYL EVANS Subdivision: SEVERED MINERALSActual Value: $1,480Year 2013 Tax $36.76 Interest $2.57 Penalty $0.00 Other $35.67Total Due: $75.00

R116225 eVANs DARYleVANs PeGGY JPO BOX 271 ELIZABETH, CO 80107-0271Parcel: 8407404007 Section: 7 Township: 8 Range: 64 A STRIP OF LANE IN NW4SE4 (54’ X 308’) (TOTAL .382 MOL)Subdivision: ELIZABETH GARLANDS ADDITIONActual Value: $1,000Year 2013 Tax $30.88 Interest $2.16 Penalty $0.00 Other $41.96Total Due: $75.00

R113956 eVANs DARYl GeVANs PeGGY JPO BOX 271 ELIZABETH, CO 80107-0271Parcel: 8407100418 Section: 7 Township: 8 Range: 64Subdivision: RURALA PAR IN N2 & IN S2: 7 8 64 161.389 ACRES MOL Actual Value: $115,89034251 N BANNER STYear 2013 Tax $1,071.52 Interest $75.01 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $1,171.53

R119239 eVeRitt AiRFielD llc7221 N HYPERION WAY PARKER, CO 80134Parcel: 6515203006 Section: 15 Township: 6 Range: 65Subdivision: ROCKY MOUNTAIN AIRPARK ESTATES Lot: 3Actual Value: $96158 SKYHAWK WAYYear 2013 Tax $24.84 Interest $1.74 Penalty $0.00 Other $48.42Total Due: $75.00

R100709 FAuGHNAN JoHN HuGH tRust & eVA l tRust21987 CO RD 9 ELBERT, CO 80106Parcel: 0403105009 MBL HOME TITLE: 34E21656 MAKE: LONG SIZE: 14 X 64 Section: 3 Township: 10 Range: 64 (TOTAL 0.452 A) Subdivision: ELBERT SCOTTS ADDITION Lot: 49 AND:- Lot: 51 AND:- Lot: 53 AND:- Lot: 55 AND:- Lot: 57:E ON ECCLES ST , :E ON ECCLES ST , :FRONTING E ON ECCLES ST LESS HWY , :FRONTING E ON ECCLES ST LESS HWY , :FRONTING E ON ECCLES ST LESS HWY Actual Value: $79,31523815 N ELBERT RD,23809 N ELBERT RD,23813 N ELBERT RDYear 2013 Tax $477.60 Interest $33.43 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $536.03

R100711 FAuGHNAN JoHN HuGH tRust & eVA l tRust21987 CO RD 9 ELBERT, CO 80106Parcel: 0403105011 Section: 3 Township: 10 Range: 64 (TOTAL 0.093 A) Subdivision: ELBERT SCOTTS ADDITION Lot: 59 AND:- Lot: 61 AND:- Lot: 63:FRONTING E ON ECCLES ST W OF FLOOD CONTROL DIKE , :FRONTING E ON ECCLES ST W OF FLOOD CONTROL DIKE , :FRONTING E ON ECCLES ST W OF FLOOD CONTROL DIKE Actual Value: $4,622Year 2013 Tax $27.96 Interest $1.96 Penalty $0.00 Other $45.08Total Due: $75.00

R101001 FAuGHNAN JoHN HuGH tRust & FAuGHNAN eVA l tRust21987 CO RD 9 ELBERT, CO 80106Parcel: 0511400011 Section: 11 Township: 10 Range: 65 :SE4 Section: 12 Township: 10 Range: 65 :S2SW4 Section: 13 Township: 10 Range: 65 :NE4NW4 Section: 14 Township: 10 Range: 65 :NE4,NE4SE4: LESS 15.5 RDSubdivision: RURALA (TOTAL 464.50 A) Actual Value: $104,07521987 CO RD 9,21989 CO RD 9Year 2013 Tax $1,161.92 Interest $81.33 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $1,268.25

R118926 FiRstieR bANK1601 BRYAN ST DALLAS, TX 75201-3430Parcel: 7427101052 Section: 27 Township: 7 Range: 64Subdivision: BRI-TANIE RIDGE ESTATES Lot: 00A (OPEN SPACE)Actual Value: $1,00037750 BOBCAT CIRYear 2013 Tax $27.68 Interest $1.94 Penalty $0.00 Other $45.38Total Due: $75.00

R100262 FosteR Joe & PAMelA31657 CO RD 74 SIMLA, CO 80835Parcel: 0035212008 Section: 35 Township: 10 Range: 60 Subdivision: SIMLA ADDITION 1 Block: 23 Lot: 14N 1/2 OF LOT 13 (TOTAL 0.258 A) Actual Value: $60,138405 DAKOTA AVEYear 2013 Tax $466.20 Interest $32.63 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $523.83

R100347 FRAtes RobeRt & MARK880 NEWCOMBE ST LAKEWOOD, CO 80215Parcel: 0035229003 Section: 35 Township: 10 Range: 60 (TOTAL 0.572 A) Subdivision: SIMLA HEIGHTS Block: 9 Lot: 4 THRU:- Lot: 6Actual Value: $8,721806 PUEBLO AVEYear 2013 Tax $746.17 Interest $52.23 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $823.40

R119259 GAlVAN MARiA GuDeliA & sAlVADoRPO BOX 924 LIMON, CO 80828-0924Parcel: 7910400135 Section: 10 Township: 7 Range: 59Subdivision: RURALA PAR IN SE4: 10 7 59 DEC B696 P122Actual Value: $1,648Year 2013 Tax $26.60 Interest $1.86 Penalty $0.00 Other $46.54Total Due: $75.00

R114086 GeoRGe lisA MicHelle6344 LAGUNA CIR HIGHLANDS RANCH, CO 80130-3347Parcel: 0026300095 Section: 26 Township: 10 Range: 60Subdivision: SIMLA ORIGINAL PAR IN S2SW4: 26 10 60 R R RIGHT OFActual Value: $27,136621 ANTELOPE STYear 2013 Tax $764.72 Interest $53.53 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $843.25

R101177 GiecK bobbY A20935 1ST ST MATHESON, CO 80830Parcel: 0922106001 Section: 22 Township: 10 Range: 59 (TOTAL 0.184 A) Subdivision: MATHESON ADDITION NO.2 Block: 2 Lot: 11 AND:- Lot: 12Actual Value: $1,60020955 MAIN STYear 2013 Tax $36.80 Interest $2.58 Penalty $0.00 Other $35.62Total Due: $75.00

R101179 GiecK bobbY A20935 1ST ST MATHESON, CO 80830Parcel: 0922106004 Section: 22 Township: 10 Range: 59 (TOTAL 0.390 A) Subdivision: MATHESON ADDITION NO.2 Block: 2 Lot: 21 THRU:- Lot: 24Actual Value: $20,03520936 FIRST STYear 2013 Tax $127.96 Interest $8.96 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $161.92

R108373 GleAsoN JoHN MARtiN33070 PVT RD 29 ELIZABETH, CO 80107Parcel: 8414300282 Section: 14 Township: 8 Range: 64 W2SW4Subdivision: RURALAActual Value: $176,69733070 PVT RD 29Year 2013 Tax $1,195.68 Interest $83.70 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $1,304.38

R120348 GolD cReeK coMMoNs llc32176 COUNTY ROAD 17 ELIZABETH, CO 80107Parcel: 8512100187 Section: 12 Township: 8 Range: 65 PAR IN E2 12 8 65 DESC B695 P702Subdivision: RURALA, Actual Value: $230Year 2013 Tax $9.56 Interest $0.67 Penalty $0.00 Other $55.00Total Due: $65.23

R106796 GolDsbeRRY JeFF MGOLDSBERRY TRUDI A21100 STATE ST SPC 120 SAN JACINTO, CA 92583-8120Parcel: 7535202001 Section: 35 Township: 7 Range: 65Subdivision: PAWNEE HILLS FIL 2 (PUD) Block: 002 Lot: 0005Actual Value: $338,0331809 PAWNEE PKWYYear 2013 Tax $2,300.40 Interest $161.03 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $2,486.43

R118170 GooDHue RoGeR5656 N FLINTWOOD PARKER, CO 80134Parcel: 8513127002 Section: 13 Township: 8 Range: 65Subdivision: ELIZABETH STREET PLAZA 1ST AMENDEMENT Lot: 2AActual Value: $165,297Year 2013 Tax $5,106.44 Interest $357.45 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $5,488.89

R118172 GooDHue RoGeR5656 N FLINTWOOD PARKER, CO 80134Parcel: 8513127003 Section: 13 Township: 8 Range: 65Subdivision: ELIZABETH STREET PLAZA 1ST AMENDEMENT Lot: 002CActual Value: $165,297Year 2013 Tax $5,106.44 Interest $357.45 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $5,488.89

R118998 GRAFt RobeRt R iVGRAFt RobeRt R FAMilY tRustGRAFt RobeRt R cHilDReNs tRust8888 CO RD 74-82 ELBERT, CO 80106Parcel: 0425400258 Section: 25 Township: 10 Range: 64Subdivision: RURALA PAR IN E2SE4: 25 10 64 DESC B691 P144 AKA PAR 1Actual Value: $184,8278888 CO RD 74-82Year 2013 Tax $1,008.60 Interest $70.60 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $1,104.20

R118999 GRAFT ROBERT R IVGRAFT ROBERT R FAMILY TRUSTGRAFT ROBERT R CHILDRENS TRUSTRRG FAMILY LLP8888 CO RD 74-82 ELBERT, CO 80106Parcel: 0425400259 Section: 25 Township: 10 Range: 64Subdivision: RURALA PAR IN E2SE4: 25 10 64 DESC B691 P145 AKA PAR 2Actual Value: $1,349Year 2013 Tax $26.24 Interest $1.84 Penalty $0.00 Other $46.92Total Due: $75.00

R101222 GReeR Rose l34025 E US HWY 24 MATHESON, CO 80830Parcel: 0923211006 Section: 23 Township: 10 Range: 59 (TOTAL 0.112 A) Subdivision: MATHESON ADDITION NO.3 Block: 4 Lot: 1 THRU:- Lot: 6 N OF US HWY 24Actual Value: $17,91737025 US HWY 24Year 2013 Tax $209.92 Interest $14.69 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $249.61

R118174 GRiNDstAFF louise A43660 SADDLEHORN DR ELIZABETH, CO 80107Parcel: 6302100197 Section: 2 Township: 6 Range: 63Subdivision: RURALA PAR IN NE4 TRACK 3Actual Value: $138,474Year 2013 Tax $2,350.76 Interest $164.55 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $2,540.31

R112460 HAlbRooK Alice F00202 RUSHMORE ST ELIZABETH, CO 80107Parcel: 8407307008Section: 7 Township: 8 Range: 64Subdivision: ELIZABETH VILLAGES FIL 1 1ST AMENDMENT Lot: 0008Actual Value: $173,836202 RUSHMORE STYear 2013 Tax $1,474.20 Interest $103.19 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $1,602.39

R100642 HAlMA coRY bYRoN & KAseY lYNN11605 MERIDIAN MARKET VIEW UNIT 124, PMB 203 FALCON, CO 80831Parcel: 0331201003Section: 31 Township: 10 Range: 63Subdivision: HIDE-A-WAY RANCHES Block: 3 Lot: 2 (TOTAL 7.890 A) Actual Value: $71,01018864 SMOKEY PINE RDYear 2013 Tax $1,363.24 Interest $95.43 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $1,483.67

R119478 HAMbY cARol iNc.PO BOX 430 PARKER, CO 80134Parcel: 7405101004 Section: 5 Township: 7 Range: 64Subdivision: O’BRIEN VALLEY MINOR DEVELOPMENT Lot: 3Actual Value: $94,94441980 GOLDEN WILLOW CIRYear 2013 Tax $2,354.28 Interest $164.80 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $2,544.08

R119943 HAseNbAlG KiRKPO BOX 395 LIMON, CO 80828Parcel: 9012300140 Section: 12 Township: 9 Range: 60Subdivision: RURALA PAR IN S2S2 (120 A) LESS 4.491 ACRES FOR ROAD 115.509 AActual Value: $5,41432845 ST HWY 86Year 2013 Tax $124.72 Interest $8.73 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $158.45

R100614 HAuG AleNe10350 CO RD 94 ELBERT, CO 80106-9210Parcel: 0320300033 Section: 20 Township: 10 Range: 63 :S2SW4:SW4SE4 (TOTAL 120 A) Subdivision: RURALAActual Value: $7,397Year 2013 Tax $144.56 Interest $10.12 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $179.68

R116587 HAYes JoNHAYes lisA38280 RUSTY SPUR TR AGATE, CO 80101-9707Parcel: 8126100096 Section: 26 Township: 8 Range: 61Subdivision: RURALA PAR IN NE4: 26 8 61 70.027 ACRES DESC B631 P019 Actual Value: $1,613Year 2013 Tax $27.52 Interest $1.93 Penalty $0.00 Other $45.55Total Due: $75.00

R106572 HAYes KARie sue528 Verdos Dr Elizabeth, CO 80107-8546Parcel: 7527301043 Section: 27 Township: 7 Range: 65Subdivision: PONDEROSA PARK ESTATES UNIT 03 Lot: 11 Unit: 3Actual Value: $210,804528 VERDOS DRYear 2013 Tax $717.48 Interest $43.05 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $785.53

R108593 HecoX JAcKHecoX MARilYNN A%EVAN HECOX 4540 W 36TH AVE DENVER, CO 80212Parcel: 8418112002 Section: 18 Township: 8 Range: 64Subdivision: ELIZABETH AMENDED Block: 9 Lot: 7 THRU:- Lot: 10Actual Value: $169,340249 E POPLAR STYear 2013 Tax $7,367.02 Interest $515.69 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $7,907.71

R119781 HeiGR RANcH lllP24063 CO RD 122 RAMAH, CO 80832Parcel: 8135100121 Section: 7 Township: 8 Range: 60Subdivision: RURALA ALL: 6 9 60 (632.03), N2, PAR IN N2S2: 7 9 60 (384.998 A), E2E2: 34 8 61 (160 A), ALL: 35 8 61 (640 A), , ALL: LESS B170 P109: 2 9 61 (634.610 A), E2: 3 9 61 (318.90 A), NE4: 10 9 61 (160 A), ALL: 11 9 61 LESS B238 P489 & B587 P 375 (478.959 A), PAR IN 12 9 61 (350.537 A), ALL: 1 9 61 LESS 160.002 A DESC B708 P987 479.018 AValue: $97,668Year 2013 Tax $1,657.72 Interest $116.04 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $1,798.76

R102418 HelM GeoRGiANA325 PELLETIER DR SIOUX CITY, IA 51104Parcel: 4068089195Section: 8 Township: 6 Range: 58 E2E2-SW4NE4-SE4NW4-W2SE4 1/20 INTEREST 16.00 NET ACRES MINERAL RIGHTS Subdivision: SEVERED MINERALSActual Value: $100Year 2013 Tax $1.68 Interest $0.12 Penalty $0.00 Other $55.00Total Due: $56.80

R100413 HeRtNeKY RobeRt APO BOX 20 RAMAH, CO 80832-0020Parcel: 0116200029 Section: 16 Township: 10 Range: 61 :NW4 (TOTAL 160 A) Subdivision: RURALAActual Value: $3,686Year 2013 Tax $85.00 Interest $5.95 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $115.95

R100415 HeRtNeKY RobeRt APO BOX 020 RAMAH, CO 80832-0020Parcel: 0117200031Section: 17 Township: 10 Range: 61 :W2, SE4 (480 A) Section: 18 Township: 10 Range: 61 :SW4, S2SE4 (240 A) Subdivision: RURALA (TOTAL 720 A) Actual Value: $60,10622883 CO RD 86Year 2013 Tax $618.88 Interest $43.32 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $687.20

R100441 HeRtNeKY RobeRt APO BOX 20 RAMAH, CO 80832-0020Parcel: 0129100050Section: 29 Township: 10 Range: 61 :N2 (TOTAL 320 A) Subdivision: RURALAActual Value: $34,85119702 CO RD 89Year 2013 Tax $424.64 Interest $29.72 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $479.36

R100442 HeRtNeKY RobeRt APO BOX 20 RAMAH, CO 80832-0020Parcel: 0129300051 Section: 29 Township: 10 Range: 61 :S2 (TOTAL 320 A) Subdivision: RURALAActual Value: $11,101Year 2013 Tax $187.64 Interest $13.13Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $225.77

R118116 HGt eNteRPRises5525 E HIWAY 86 FRANKTOWN, CO 80116Parcel: 7325100269Section: 25 Township: 07 Range: 63Subdivision: SKY VIEW RANCH Lot: 0015Actual Value: $9,78037850 SKY VIEW CIRYear 2013 Tax $166.24 Interest $11.64 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $202.88

R112589 HicKoRY iNVestMeNts llc600 S CHERRY ST STE 920 DENVER, CO 80246Parcel: 0209200118Section: 9 Township: 10 Range: 62Subdivision: RURALA E2NW4, SW4: 9 10 62 240 AActual Value: $167,50322250 CO RD 69Year 2013 Tax $1,579.04 Interest $110.53 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $1,714.57

R110473 HocKMAN tHoMAs WAlteR& HocKMAN JoHN cHRistoPHeR18200 Meridian Rd Elbert, CO 80106-7540Parcel: 9535301027 Section: 35 Township: 9 Range: 65 Subdivision: KELLY AIR PARK AMENDMENT IV Lot: 53 (TOTAL 4.680 A) Actual Value: $90,00024254 BEN KELLY RDYear 2013 Tax $1,754.96 Interest $122.85 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $1,902.81

R107391 Hot stuFF iNVestMeNts llc10386 E WEAVER CIR ENGLEWOOD, CO 80111Parcel: 8320104006 Section: 20 Township: 8 Range: 63Subdivision: KIOWA ORIGINAL Block: 5 Lot: 8 ALL 7 LESS PAR DESC IN B510 P600Actual Value: $142,146222 COMANCHE ST,216 COMANCHE ST,218 COMANCHE ST,220 COMANCHE STYear 2013 Tax $2,202.28 Interest $154.16 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $2,381.44

R107975 HoWe KeViN lHoWe KAtHeRiNe M34525 FOREST PARK DR ELIZABETH, CO 80107Parcel: 8408105014Section: 8 Township: 8 Range: 64Subdivision: FOREST PARK Lot: 0012Actual Value: $292,20434525 FOREST PARK DRYear 2013 Tax $1,989.12 Interest $139.24 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $2,153.36

R117654 HuNt FAMilY llc43160 CO RD 21 ELIZABETH, CO 80107Parcel: 6428300267 Section: 28 Township: 6 Range: 64Subdivision: RURALA PAR IN SW4 & W2SE4: 28 6 64 79.127 ACRES Actual Value: $333,9305390 HUNT CIRYear 2013 Tax $7,491.48 Interest $524.40 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $8,040.88

R116328 J6M3 eNteRPRises llcPO BOX 2347 ELIZABETH, CO 80107Parcel: 6330300175 Section: 30 Township: 6 Range: 63 PAR IN SW4 (61.482)Subdivision: RURALAActual Value: $197,22143675 PVT RD 39Year 2013 Tax $1,535.48 Interest $107.48 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $1,667.96

R106734 JoHNsoN ANAstAsiA VPO BOX 1653 ELIZABETH, CO 80107Parcel: 7534101045 Section: 34 Township: 7 Range: 65Subdivision: PONDEROSA PARK ESTATES UNIT 01 Lot: 0045Actual Value: $219,72036569 VIEW RIDGE DRYear 2013 Tax $814.96 Interest $57.05 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $897.01

R102785 JoHNsoN ANNA REASLEY DAVID LEASLEY NORMA JPO BOX 151 KIOWA, CO 80117-0151Parcel: 4081082000Section: 8 Township: 8 Range: 61 ALL 1/22 INTEREST 29.09 NET ACRES MINERAL RIGHTSSubdivision: SEVERED MINERALSActual Value: $210Year 2013 Tax $4.12 Interest $0.29 Penalty $0.00 Other $55.00Total Due: $59.41

R102833 JoHNsoN ANNA REASLEY DAVID LEASLEY NORMA JPO BOX 151 KIOWA, CO 80117-0151Parcel: 4082122001 Section: 12 Township: 8 Range: 62 SE4SE4 1/44 INTEREST .91 NET ACRES MINERAL RIGHTS Subdivision: SEVERED MINERALSActual Value: $30Year 2013 Tax $0.60 Interest $0.04 Penalty $0.00 Other $55.00Total Due: $55.64

R102946 JoHNsoN KARl4585 FAIRWAY DR LOS ALAMOS , NM 87544-1845Parcel: 4087023880 Section: 2 Township: 8 Range: 57 SE4SE4 1/16 INTEREST 2.5 NET ACRES MINERAL RIGHTS Subdivision: SEVERED MINERALSActual Value: $30Year 2013 Tax $0.68 Interest $0.05 Penalty $0.00 Other $55.00Total Due: $55.73

R113512 JollY WilliAM RoY1331 N. Dixie Downs Rd #1221 SAINT GEORGE, UT 84770Parcel: 4067113512Section: 10 Township: 6 Range: 57 Section: 10 Township: 6 Range: 58 Section: 12 Township: 6 Range: 57 Section: 12 Township: 6 Range: 58 Section: 12 Township: 7 Range: 58 Section: 14 Township: 6 Range: 57 Section: 14 Township: 6 Range: 58 Section: 18 Township: 6 Range: 57 Section: 2 Township: 6 Range: 57 Section: 2 Town-ship: 6 Range: 58 Section: 2 Township: 7 Range: 57 Section: 2 Township: 7 Range: 58 Section: 20 Township: 6 Range: 57 Section: 22 Township: 6 Range: 57 Section: 22 Township: 6 Range: 58 Section: 24 Township: 6 Range: 57 Section: 24 Township: 6 Range: 58 Section: 26 Township: 6 Range: 57 Section: 26 Township: 6 Range: 58 Section: 28 Township: 6 Range: 57 Section: 30 Township: 6 Range: 57 Section: 32 Township: 6 Range: 57 Section: 34 Township: 6 Range: 57 Section: 34 Township: 6 Range: 58 SEE CARDS FOR LEGALS & INTEREST Section: 4 Township: 6 Range: 57 Section: 4 Township: 7 Range: 57 Section: 6 Township: 6 Range: 57 Section: 8 Town-ship: 6 Range: 57 Section: 8 Township: 6 Range: 58Subdivision: SEVERED MINERALS Block: 000 Lot: 0001 THRU:- Lot: 0007, Subdivision: SEVERED MINERALS LOT 2(NW4NE4) 71.11 A; S2NE4 80 A; LOT 3(NE4NW4) 71.07 A; LOT 4(NW4NW4) 71.03 A; S2NW4 80 A; SW4 160 A; W2SE4 80 A; 4-6-57 613.21 A 5.40062% OF 1/2 INT 16.559 MRA SW4NE4 40 A; LOT 3(NE4NW4 71.25 A; LOT 5 (SW4NW4) 12.8 A; SE4NW4 40A; LOT 6(NW4SW4) 14.51 A; LOT 7(SW4SW4) 16.22 A; E2SW4 80 A; NW4SE4 40A; 6-6-57 314.78 A 5.40062% OF 1/4 INT 4.250 MRA SW4 160 A; SE4 160 A; 2-6-57 320 A 5.40062% OF 1/2 INT 8.641 MRA NE4 160 A; E2NW4 80 A; E2SE4 80 A; 8-6-57 320 A 5.40062% OF 1/4 INT 4.320 MRA NE4NE4 40 A; S2NE4 80 A; S2NW4 80 A; NE4SW4 40 A; W2SE4 80 A; 10-6-57 320 A 5.40062% OF 1/4 INT 4.320 MRA NE4 160 A; NW4 160 A 12-6-57 320 A 5.40062% OF 1/4 INT 4.320 MRA SW4 160 A; SE4 160 A; 12-6-57 320 A 5.40062% OF 1/2 INT 8.641 MRA NE4 160 A; NW4 160A; SW4 160 A; SE4 160 A; 14-6-57 640 A 5.40062% OF 1/2 INT 17.282 MRA NE4 160 A; NE4NW4 40 A; LOT 1(NW4NW4) 17.54 A; LOT 2(SW4NW4) 17.6 A; LOT 3 (NW4SW4) 17.68 A; LOT 4(SW4SW4) 17.74 A; E2SW4 80 A; SE4 160 A; 18-6-57 430.56 A 5.40062% OF 1/4 INT 5.1832 MRA W2NE4 80A; SE4NE4 40 A; S2SW4 80 A; N2SE4 80 A; SW4SE4 40 A; 20-6-57 320 A 5.40062% OF 1/4 INT 4.320 MRA NE4 160 A; NW4 160 A; SW4 160 A; SE4 160 A; 22-6-57 640 A 5.40062% OF 1/2 INT 17.283 MRA NE4 160 A; NW4 160 A; SW4 160 A; W2SE4 80 A; NE4SE4 40 A; 24-6-57 600 A 5.40062% OF 1/4 INT 8.101 MRA NE4 160 A; 26-6-57 160 A 5.40062% OF 1/4 INT 2.160 MRA NE4 160 A; SE4 160 A; 28-6-57 320 A 5.40062% OF 1/2 INT 8.641 MRA NW4 160 A; SW4 160 A; 28-6-57 320 A 5.40062% OF 1/4 INT 4.320 MRA NE4 160 A; E2NW4 80 A; LOT 1(NW4NW4) 17.97 A; LOT 2(SW4NW4) 18.08 A; E2SW4 80 A; LOT 3 (NW4SW4) 18.18 A; LOT 4(SW4SW4) 18.29 A: SE4 160 A; 30-6-57 552.52 A 5.40062% OF 1/2 INT 14.920 MRA SW4 160 A; SE4 160 A; 32-6-57 320 A 5.40062% OF 1/2 INT 8.641 MRA NE4 160 A; NW4 160 A; SW4 160 A;SE4 160 A 34-6-57 640 A 5.40062% OF 1/2 INT 17.283 MRA LOT 1(NE-4NE4) 69.64 A; SE4NE4 40 A; LOT 3 (NE4NW4) 69.4 A; E2SE4 80 A; 2-6-58 259.08 A 5.40062% OF 3/4 INT 10.493 MRA LOT 2(NW4NE4) 69.52 A; 2-6-58 69.52 A 5.40062% OF 3/4 INT 2.816 MRAActual Value: $2,014Year 2013 Tax $32.16 Interest $2.25 Penalty $0.00 Other $40.59Total Due: $75.00

R115750 KAt cAttle llc39517 CO RD 153 AGATE, CO 80101Parcel: 7818300057Section: 18 Township: 7 Range: 58Subdivision: RURALA W2SW4, PAR IN E2SW4: 18 7 58 142.38 AActual Value: $7,634Year 2013 Tax $123.08 Interest $8.62 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $156.70

R107042 KAt cAttle llc39517 CO RD 153 AGATE, CO 80101Parcel: 7819300026 Section: 19 Township: 7 Range: 58Subdivision: RURALA S2: 19 7 58 324.00 A. SW4 W OFActual Value: $14,976Year 2013 Tax $240.64 Interest $16.84 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $282.48

R118689 KAt cAttle llc39517 CO RD 153 AGATE, CO 80101Parcel: 7912300128 Section: 13 Township: 7 Range: 59 Section: 12 Township: 7 Range: 59Subdivision: RURALA W2: 13 7 59 LESS 10 A (310 A), PAR IN SW4:Actual Value: $15,469Year 2013 Tax $248.40 Interest $17.39 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $290.79

R116080 KAt cAttle llc39517 CO RD 153 AGATE, CO 80101Parcel: 7914100090Section: 14 Township: 7 Range: 59Subdivision: RURALA N2NE4: 14 7 59Actual Value: $7,67937720 CO RD 162Year 2013 Tax $123.64 Interest $8.65 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $157.29

R103187 KeilMAN MYRNA e20201 KEILMAN LANE PFLUGERVILLE, TX 78660Parcel: 4099249921Section: 24 Township: 9 Range: 59Subdivision: SEVERED MINERALS ALL: 24 9 59 640 A UNDIVIDED 1/4 INTEREST 160 MRA MINERAL RIGHTS Actual Value: $1,100Year 2013 Tax $17.92 Interest $1.25 Penalty $0.00 Other $50.00Total Due: $69.17

R103237 KHA Kieu85 S UNION BLVD #1100 LAKEWOOD, CO 80228-2207Parcel: 6008100051 Section: 8 Township: 6 Range: 60Subdivision: COTTONWOOD ESTATES (FALCON RANCH) Lot: 0006B412 P018Actual Value: $67,89646800 DEER TRLYear 2013 Tax $294.72 Interest $20.63 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $340.35

R102798 KilliN PAul D02023 HAYSTACK RD CASTLE ROCK, CO 80104Parcel: 4081102080Section: 10 Township: 8 Range: 61 W2NW4-SE4NW4-SW4 1/16 INTEREST 17.5 NET ACRES Section: 14 Township: 8 Range: 61 NE4-N2SE4 1/16 INTEREST 15 NET ACRES MINERAL RIGHTS Subdivision: SEVERED MINERALSActual Value: $240Year 2013 Tax $4.08 Interest $0.29 Penalty $0.00 Other $55.00Total Due: $59.37

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AccouNt NAMe to WHoM AssesseD cARe oF ADDRess citY stAte ZiP tAX iNt ADV totAl

AccouNt NAMe to WHoM AssesseD cARe oF ADDRess citY stAte ZiP tAX iNt ADV totAl

AccouNt NAMe to WHoM AssesseD cARe oF ADDRess citY stAte ZiP tAX iNt ADV totAl

AccouNt NAMe to WHoM AssesseD cARe oF ADDRess citY stAte ZiP tAX iNt ADV totAl

AccouNt NAMe to WHoM AssesseD cARe oF ADDRess citY stAte ZiP tAX iNt ADV totAl

Legal Notice No: 23055

Page 21: Elbert County News 1016

Elbert County News 21 October 16, 2014

21

R100171 KNeeDleR KiMbeRlY sue6136 JANICE WAY ARVADA, CO 80004Parcel: 0035109004 MBL HOME TITLE: 34E071842 SERIAL: G0U24603S8043A&B MAKE: LH SIZE: 60 X 24 Section: 35 Township: 10 Range: 60Subdivision: SIMLA ADDITION 3 Block: 8S 200’ E 1/2 OF BLK 8 (TOTAL 0.689 A) Actual Value: $54,557711 ARAPAHOE AVEYear 2013 Tax $423.28 Interest $29.63 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $477.91

R104591 KRAusMAN DeboRAH1682 ELIZABETH DR PARKER, CO 80138-4704Parcel: 6535101019 Section: 35 Township: 6 Range: 65Subdivision: PARKER HYLANDS FIL 4 Lot: 0036Actual Value: $223,5641682 ELIZABETH DRYear 2013 Tax $1,450.84 Interest $101.56Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $1,577.40

R117058 lAVeNHAR lAuRie liViNG tRust (tHe)3227 ANTELOPE RIDGE TR PARKER, CO 80138Parcel: 6406201013 Section: 6 Township: 6 Range: 64Subdivision: ELKHORN RANCH Lot: 0157Actual Value: $423,6583227 ANTELOPE RIDGE TRLYear 2013 Tax $4,905.12 Interest $343.36 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $5,273.48

R100676 lee RANDAl c & cYNtHiA M8245 CAMFIELD CIR COLORADO SPRINGS, CO 80920Parcel: 0331401002 Section: 31 Township: 10 Range: 63 Subdivision: HIDE-A-WAY RANCHES Block: 4 Lot: 3 (TOTAL 8.140 A) Actual Value: $73,2609896 INDIAN TRLYear 2013 Tax $1,406.92 Interest $98.48 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $1,530.40

R120527 leYDeN PeRRY8495 E OTERO LANE CENTENNIAL, CO 80112Parcel: 4064120527 Section: 32 Township: 6 Range: 64 MINERALS LOCATED IN SPRING VALLEY RANCH, PHASE 1 BLOCK A, LOT 49 MRA 1.013Subdivision: SEVERED MINERALSActual Value: $10Year 2013 Tax $1.40 Interest $0.10 Penalty $0.00 Other $55.00Total Due: $56.50

R117420 leYDeN PeRRY8495 E OTERO LANE CENTENNIAL, CO 80112Parcel: 6432401064 Section: 32 Township: 6 Range: 64Subdivision: SPRING VALLEY RANCH PHASE 1 Block: A Lot: 32Actual Value: $14,99442081 N PINEHURST CIRYear 2013 Tax $615.76 Interest $43.10 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $683.86

R117419 leYDeN PeRRY8495 East Otero Lane Centennial , CO 80112Parcel: 6432401065 Section: 32 Township: 6 Range: 64Subdivision: SPRING VALLEY RANCH PHASE 1 Block: A Lot: 31Actual Value: $14,99442071 N PINEHURST CIRYear 2013 Tax $615.76 Interest $43.10 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $683.86

R100106 liPPiNcott DWAYNe sPO BOX 532 SIMLA, CO 80835Parcel: 0026310007 Section: 26 Township: 10 Range: 60 (TOTAL 0.248 A) Subdivision: SIMLA ORIGINAL Block: 12 Lot: 11 THRU:- Lot: 16, :E 72’ ALL LOTSActual Value: $7,778709 CARIBOU STYear 2013 Tax $483.52 Interest $33.85 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $542.37

R120123 loNGtRiP, llc5433 NEWPORT STREET COMMERCE CITY, CO 80022Parcel: 4740940370Section: 9 Township: 7 Range: 64 37.5% INTEREST IN SUNSET VALLEY ESTATES LOT 5 (35.114 ACRES TOTAL MRA 13.167)Subdivision: SEVERED MINERALSActual Value: $91Year 2013 Tax $2.56 Interest $0.18 Penalty $0.00 Other $55.00Total Due: $57.74

R114912 luceRo Rose123 EAST BROADWAY ELIZABETH, CO 80107Parcel: 8418103011 Section: 18 Township: 8 Range: 64Subdivision: ELIZABETH AMENDED Block: 004 Lot: 0015Actual Value: $35,866333 E BROADWAY STYear 2013 Tax $303.56 Interest $21.25 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $349.81

R120148 M & M 44, llc400 W GARST STREET ARTESIA, NM 88210Parcel: 4633020017Section: 30 Township: 6 Range: 63 PAR SW4 (17.54 MRA)Subdivision: SEVERED MINERALSActual Value: $121Year 2013 Tax $3.28 Interest $0.23 Penalty $0.00 Other $55.00Total Due: $58.51

R116717 MARGueRites stANleY c2036 GLENHILL RD COLORADO SPRINGS, CO 80906Parcel: 8411200471 Section: 11 Township: 8 Range: 64Subdivision: QUAIL RUN MINOR DEVELOPMENT 1ST AMEND-MEN Lot: 0003Actual Value: $52,5876840 QUAIL RUN CIRYear 2013 Tax $434.36 Interest $30.41 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $489.77

R116295 MAsoN steVeN oPO BOX 357 CALHAN, CO 80808-0357Parcel: 0820100069 Section: 20 Township: 10 Range: 58Subdivision: RURALA W2NE4: 20 10 58 80 ACRES Actual Value: $114,57740550 US HWY 24Year 2013 Tax $759.68 Interest $53.18 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $837.86

R120359 MccluRe RobeRtA J1105 SALEM STREET AURORA, CO 80011Parcel: 6306400007Section: 6 Township: 6 Range: 63Subdivision:ELBERT RANCH ESTATES Lot: 41/9 INT IN PRIVATE RDActual Value: $41473000 PVT RD 39Year 2013 Tax $0.80 Interest $0.06 Penalty $0.00 Other $55.00Total Due: $55.86

R106475 McFADDeN JAsoN & ANNette37505 BLUEBIRD LANE ELIZABETH, CO 80107Parcel: 7526402004 Section: 26 Township: 7 Range: 65Subdivision: PONDEROSA PARK ESTATES UNIT 08 Lot: 0003Actual Value: $98,00037505 BLUEBIRD LNYear 2013 Tax $2,430.40 Interest $170.13 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $2,625.53

R100089 McKANe GoRDoN & RoXANNePO BOX 453 SIMLA, CO 80835-0453Parcel: 0026308018Section: 26 Township: 10 Range: 60 (TOTAL 0.258 A) Subdivision: SIMLA ORIGINAL Block: 2 Lot: 27 THRU:- Lot: 29Actual Value: $8,489207 SIOUX AVEYear 2013 Tax $65.36 Interest $4.58 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $94.94

R116861 McNicHol JoHN38423 CO RD 166 AGATE, CO 80101Parcel: 7901413003 Section: 1 Township: 7 Range: 59Subdivision: HEALDS ADDITION AMENDMENT NO.2 Lot: 0009Actual Value: $7,50038418 LAKE STYear 2013 Tax $33.28 Interest $2.33 Penalty $0.00 Other $39.39Total Due: $75.00

R116860 McNicHol JoHN s38423 CO RD 166 AGATE, CO 80101Parcel: 7901413002 Section: 1 Township: 7 Range: 59Subdivision: HEALDS ADDITION AMENDMENT NO.2 Lot: 0008Actual Value: $94938420 LAKE STYear 2013 Tax $15.52 Interest $1.09 Penalty $0.00 Other $50.00Total Due: $66.61

R116855 McNicHol JoHN s38423 CO RD 166 AGATE, CO 80101Parcel: 7901413007 Section: 1 Township: 7 Range: 59Subdivision: HEALDS ADDITION AMENDMENT NO.2 Lot: 0003Actual Value: $94938429 CO RD 166Year 2013 Tax $15.52 Interest $1.09 Penalty $0.00 Other $50.00Total Due: $66.61

R102608 MeiNHARt ARtHuR e1001 MCKINNEY ST STE 1445 HOUSTON, TX 77002-6418Parcel: 4074210365Section: 21 Township: 7 Range: 64 SW4SE4 1/6 INTEREST 6.67 NET ACRES MINERAL RIGHTS Subdivision: SEVERED MINERALSActual Value: $30Year 2013 Tax $0.84 Interest $0.06 Penalty $0.00 Other $55.00Total Due: $55.90

R115477 MellAND AssociAtesPO BOX 1198 PARKER, CO 80134-1198Parcel: 0403100092 Section: 3 Township: 10 Range: 64Subdivision: RURALA A PARCEL IN NE4NE4: 03-10-64 SOUTHActual Value: $308Year 2013 Tax $6.04 Interest $0.42 Penalty $0.00 Other $55.00Total Due: $61.46

R115478 MellAND AssociAtesPO BOX 1198 PARKER, CO 80134-1198Parcel: 0403105016 Section: 3 Township: 10 Range: 64 NE4NE4 Subdivision: ELBERT SCOTTS ADDITION Block: 5 (TOTAL 0.708 A) Actual Value: $20Year 2013 Tax $0.76 Interest $0.05 Penalty $0.00 Other $55.00Total Due: $55.81

R115479 MellAND AssociAtesPO BOX 1198 PARKER, CO 80134-1198Parcel: 0403110001 Section: 3 Township: 10 Range: 64 Subdivision: ELBERT SCOTTS ADDITION Block: 5N PART OF PAR LYING IN THE TWN LIMITS SEPARATED FROM ORIG. DUE TO TWN LIMITS & DIFFERENT TAX DIST. (TOTAL 1.469 A) Actual Value: $41Year 2013 Tax $0.76 Interest $0.05 Penalty $0.00 Other $55.00Total Due: $55.81

R116128 MelleMA FAMilY liMiteD PARtNeRsHiPPO BOX 1198 PARKER, CO 80134-1198Parcel: 0425200225 Section: 25 Township: 10 Range: 64Subdivision: RURALA PAR IN NW4 N OF ROAD: 25 10 64Actual Value: $45,1288491 CO RD 74-82Year 2013 Tax $337.56 Interest $23.63 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $386.19

R116129 MelleMA FAMilY liMiteD PARtNeRsHiPPO BOX 1198 PARKER, CO 80134-1198Parcel: 0425400227 Section: 25 Township: 10 Range: 64Subdivision: RURALAPAR IN SW4SE4: 25 10 64Actual Value: $203Year 2013 Tax $4.04 Interest $0.28 Penalty $0.00 Other $55.00Total Due: $59.32

R109385 MeNDeZ WilliAMDicKeRsoN NAoMi GeNA02399 PINTO TR ELIZABETH, CO 80107Parcel: 8512301002Section: 12 Township: 8 Range: 65Subdivision: CIMARRON FIL 2 Block: 004 Lot: 0004Actual Value: $255,1352399 PINTO TRLYear 2013 Tax $1,056.12 Interest $73.93 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $1,155.05

R116153 MeRteNs DoNAlD W & VicKie A5102 GALLEY RD LOT 110C COORADO SPRINGS, CO 80915-2361Parcel: 0307100204 Section: 7 Township: 10 Range: 63Subdivision: RURALA PAR IN NE4: 7 10 63 DESC B617 P876Actual Value: $179,03522800 CO RD 39Year 2013 Tax $577.92 Interest $34.68 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $637.60

R120396 MesseNGeR PARtNeRs, llcWestFAll AlAN7964 KELTY TRAIL FRANKTOWN, CO 80116Parcel: 8418139001 Section: 18 Township: 8 Range: 64Subdivision: WALNUT GROVE TOWNHOMES Tract: BActual Value: $4,710Year 2013 Tax $145.92 Interest $10.21 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $181.13

R120397 MesseNGeR PARtNeRs, llcWestFAll AlAN7964 KELTY TRAIL FRANKTOWN, CO 80116Parcel: 8418139002 Section: 18 Township: 8 Range: 64Subdivision: WALNUT GROVE TOWNHOMES Lot: 25, Actual Value: $3,630708 S WALNUT GROVE DRYear 2013 Tax $111.84 Interest $7.83 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $144.67

R120398 MesseNGeR PARtNeRs, llcWestFAll AlAN7964 KELTY TRAIL FRANKTOWN, CO 80116Parcel: 8418139003 Section: 18 Township: 8 Range: 64Subdivision: WALNUT GROVE TOWNHOMES Lot: 24Actual Value: $3,630701 S WALNUT GROVE DRYear 2013 Tax $111.84 Interest $7.83 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $144.67

R120399 MesseNGeR PARtNeRs, llcWestFAll AlAN7964 KELTY TRAIL FRANKTOWN, CO 80116Parcel: 8418139004Section: 18 Township: 8 Range: 64Subdivision: WALNUT GROVE TOWNHOMES Lot: 17Actual Value: $3,484700 S WALNUT GROVE DRYear 2013 Tax $107.60 Interest $7.53 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $140.13

R120400 MesseNGeR PARtNeRs, llcWestFAll AlAN7964 KELTY TRAIL FRANKTOWN, CO 80116Parcel: 8418139005 Section: 18 Township: 8 Range: 64Subdivision: WALNUT GROVE TOWNHOMES Tract: AActual Value: $3,659Year 2013 Tax $112.92 Interest $7.90 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $145.82

R120401 MesseNGeR PARtNeRs, llcWestFAll AlAN7964 KELTY TRAIL FRANKTOWN, CO 80116Parcel: 8418139006 Section: 18 Township: 8 Range: 64Subdivision: WALNUT GROVE TOWNHOMES Lot: 15Actual Value: $3,194713 S WALNUT GROVE DRYear 2013 Tax $99.08 Interest $6.94 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $131.02

R120402 MesseNGeR PARtNeRs, llcWestFAll AlAN7964 KELTY TRAIL FRANKTOWN, CO 80116Parcel: 8418139007 Section: 18 Township: 8 Range: 64Subdivision: WALNUT GROVE TOWNHOMES Lot: 14Actual Value: $3,426716 S WALNUT GROVE DRYear 2013 Tax $105.44 Interest $7.38 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $137.82

R120403 MesseNGeR PARtNeRs, llcWestFAll AlAN7964 KELTY TRAIL FRANKTOWN, CO 80116Parcel: 8418139008 Section: 18 Township: 8 Range: 64Subdivision: WALNUT GROVE TOWNHOMES Lot: 13Actual Value: $2,439717 S WALNUT GROVE DRYear 2013 Tax $75.64 Interest $5.29 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $105.93

R120404 MesseNGeR PARtNeRs, llcWestFAll AlAN7964 KELTY TRAIL FRANKTOWN, CO 80116Parcel: 8418139009 Section: 18 Township: 8 Range: 64Subdivision: WALNUT GROVE TOWNHOMES Lot: 12Actual Value: $2,846718 S WALNUT GROVE DRYear 2013 Tax $88.40 Interest $6.19 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $119.59

R120405 MesseNGeR PARtNeRs, llcWestFAll AlAN7964 KELTY TRAIL FRANKTOWN, CO 80116Parcel: 8418139010 Section: 18 Township: 8 Range: 64Subdivision: WALNUT GROVE TOWNHOMES Lot: 11Actual Value: $2,962719 S WALNUT GROVE DRYear 2013 Tax $91.60 Interest $6.41 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $123.01

R120406 MesseNGeR PARtNeRs, llcWestFAll AlAN7964 KELTY TRAIL FRANKTOWN, CO 80116Parcel: 8418139011 Section: 18 Township: 8 Range: 64Subdivision: WALNUT GROVE TOWNHOMES Lot: 10Actual Value: $2,207720 S WALNUT GROVE DRYear 2013 Tax $68.16 Interest $4.77 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $97.93

R120407 MesseNGeR PARtNeRs, llcWestFAll AlAN7964 KELTY TRAIL FRANKTOWN, CO 80116Parcel: 8418139012 Section: 18 Township: 8 Range: 64Subdivision: WALNUT GROVE TOWNHOMES Lot: 9Actual Value: $2,671721 S WALNUT GROVE DRYear 2013 Tax $82.00 Interest $5.74 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $112.74

R120408 MesseNGeR PARtNeRs, llcWestFAll AlAN7964 KELTY TRAIL FRANKTOWN, CO 80116Parcel: 8418139013 Section: 18 Township: 8 Range: 64Subdivision: WALNUT GROVE TOWNHOMES Lot: 8Actual Value: $2,787722 S WALNUT GROVE DRYear 2013 Tax $86.28 Interest $6.04 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $117.32

R120409 MesseNGeR PARtNeRs, llcWestFAll AlAN7964 KELTY TRAIL FRANKTOWN, CO 80116Parcel: 8418139014 Section: 18 Township: 8 Range: 64Subdivision: WALNUT GROVE TOWNHOMES Lot: 7Actual Value: $2,207723 S WALNUT GROVE DRYear 2013 Tax $68.16 Interest $4.77 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $97.93

R120410 MesseNGeR PARtNeRs, llcWestFAll AlAN7964 KELTY TRAIL FRANKTOWN, CO 80116Parcel: 8418139015 Section: 18 Township: 8 Range: 64Subdivision: WALNUT GROVE TOWNHOMES Lot: 6Actual Value: $2,729724 S WALNUT GROVE DRYear 2013 Tax $84.16 Interest $5.89 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $115.05

R120411 MesseNGeR PARtNeRs, llcWestFAll AlAN7964 KELTY TRAIL FRANKTOWN, CO 80116Parcel: 8418139016 Section: 18 Township: 8 Range: 64Subdivision: WALNUT GROVE TOWNHOMES Lot: 5Actual Value: $2,729725 S WALNUT GROVE DRYear 2013 Tax $84.16 Interest $5.89 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $115.05

R120412 MesseNGeR PARtNeRs, llcWestFAll AlAN7964 KELTY TRAIL FRANKTOWN, CO 80116Parcel: 8418139017 Section: 18 Township: 8 Range: 64Subdivision: WALNUT GROVE TOWNHOMES Lot: 4Actual Value: $2,207726 S WALNUT GROVE DRYear 2013 Tax $68.16 Interest $4.77 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $97.93

R120413 MesseNGeR PARtNeRs, llcWestFAll AlAN7964 KELTY TRAIL FRANKTOWN, CO 80116Parcel: 8418139018Section: 18 Township: 8 Range: 64Subdivision: WALNUT GROVE TOWNHOMES Lot: 3Actual Value: $2,846727 S WALNUT GROVE DRYear 2013 Tax $88.40 Interest $6.19 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $119.59

R120414 MesseNGeR PARtNeRs, llcWestFAll AlAN7964 KELTY TRAIL FRANKTOWN, CO 80116Parcel: 8418139019 Section: 18 Township: 8 Range: 64Subdivision: WALNUT GROVE TOWNHOMES Lot: 2Actual Value: $3,775711 S WALNUT GROVE DRYear 2013 Tax $116.12 Interest $8.13 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $149.25

R120415 MesseNGeR PARtNeRs, llcWestFAll AlAN7964 KELTY TRAIL FRANKTOWN, CO 80116Parcel: 8418139020 Section: 18 Township: 8 Range: 64Subdivision: WALNUT GROVE TOWNHOMES Lot: 1Actual Value: $2,729709 S WALNUT GROVE DRYear 2013 Tax $84.16 Interest $5.89 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $115.05

R120416 MesseNGeR PARtNeRs, llcWestFAll AlAN7964 KELTY TRAIL FRANKTOWN, CO 80116Parcel: 8418139021 Section: 18 Township: 8 Range: 64Subdivision: WALNUT GROVE TOWNHOMES Lot: 26Actual Value: $2,381710 S WALNUT GROVE DRYear 2013 Tax $73.48 Interest $5.14 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $103.62

R120417 MesseNGeR PARtNeRs, llcWestFAll AlAN7964 KELTY TRAIL FRANKTOWN, CO 80116Parcel: 8418139022 Section: 18 Township: 8 Range: 64Subdivision: WALNUT GROVE TOWNHOMES Lot: 23Actual Value: $2,381703 S WALNUT GROVE DRYear 2013 Tax $73.48 Interest $5.14 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $103.62

R120418 MesseNGeR PARtNeRs, llcWestFAll AlAN7964 KELTY TRAIL FRANKTOWN, CO 80116Parcel: 8418139023 Section: 18 Township: 8 Range: 64Subdivision: WALNUT GROVE TOWNHOMES Lot: 18Actual Value: $2,439702 S WALNUT GROVE DRYear 2013 Tax $75.64 Interest $5.29 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $105.93

R120419 MesseNGeR PARtNeRs, llcWestFAll AlAN7964 KELTY TRAIL FRANKTOWN, CO 80116Parcel: 8418139024 Section: 18 Township: 8 Range: 64Subdivision: WALNUT GROVE TOWNHOMES Lot: 16Actual Value: $3,078715 S WALNUT GROVE DRYear 2013 Tax $94.80 Interest $6.64 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $126.44

R120420 MesseNGeR PARtNeRs, llcWestFAll AlAN7964 KELTY TRAIL FRANKTOWN, CO 80116Parcel: 8418139025 Section: 18 Township: 8 Range: 64Subdivision: WALNUT GROVE TOWNHOMES Lot: 20Actual Value: $4,355706 S WALNUT GROVE DRYear 2013 Tax $134.20 Interest $9.39 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $168.59

R120421 MesseNGeR PARtNeRs, llcWestFAll AlAN7964 KELTY TRAIL FRANKTOWN, CO 80116Parcel: 8418139026 Section: 18 Township: 8 Range: 64Subdivision: WALNUT GROVE TOWNHOMES Lot: 21Actual Value: $4,297707 S WALNUT GROVE DRYear 2013 Tax $133.16 Interest $9.32 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $167.48

R120422 MesseNGeR PARtNeRs, llcWestFAll AlAN7964 KELTY TRAIL FRANKTOWN, CO 80116Parcel: 8418139027 Section: 18 Township: 8 Range: 64Subdivision: WALNUT GROVE TOWNHOMES Lot: 28Actual Value: $4,297714 S WALNUT GROVE DRYear 2013 Tax $133.16 Interest $9.32 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $167.48

R120423 MesseNGeR PARtNeRs, llcWestFAll AlAN7964 KELTY TRAIL FRANKTOWN, CO 80116Parcel: 8418139028Section: 18 Township: 8 Range: 64Subdivision: WALNUT GROVE TOWNHOMES Lot: 27Actual Value: $2,381712 S WALNUT GROVE DRYear 2013 Tax $73.48 Interest $5.14 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $103.62

R120424 MesseNGeR PARtNeRs, llcWestFAll AlAN7964 KELTY TRAIL FRANKTOWN, CO 80116Parcel: 8418139029 Section: 18 Township: 8 Range: 64Subdivision: WALNUT GROVE TOWNHOMES Lot: 22Actual Value: $2,381705 S WALNUT GROVE DRYear 2013 Tax $73.48 Interest $5.14 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $103.62

R120425 MesseNGeR PARtNeRs, llcWestFAll AlAN7964 KELTY TRAIL FRANKTOWN, CO 80116Parcel: 8418139030 Section: 18 Township: 8 Range: 64Subdivision: WALNUT GROVE TOWNHOMES Lot: 19Actual Value: $2,381704 S WALNUT GROVE DRYear 2013 Tax $73.48 Interest $5.14 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $103.62

R116498 MesseR PRoPeRties llcPO BOX 3380 CASTLE ROCK, CO 80134Parcel: 8320102005 Section: 20 Township: 8 Range: 63Subdivision: KIOWA ORIGINAL Block: 006 Lot: 0005 THRU:- Lot: 9, TOTAL ACRES .571Actual Value: $251,767147 COMANCHE STYear 2013 Tax $2,615.30 Interest $156.92 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $2,797.22

R120346 MessMoRe RobeRt l & DeboRAH J l46950 BECKY CIR ELIZABETH, CO 80107-9515Parcel: 4064120346 Section: 12 Township: 6 Range: 64 PAR IN NE4 (35.57)Subdivision: SEVERED MINERALS, Subdivision: FOXWOOD ESTATES REZONE Lot: 1Actual Value: $245Year 2013 Tax $7.80 Interest $0.55 Penalty $0.00 Other $55.00Total Due: $63.35

R100468 MiKitA DARleNe M34402 E US HWY 24 RAMAH, CO 80832Parcel: 0202200004Section: 2 Township: 10 Range: 62 :NW4 (TOTAL 160 A) Subdivision: RURALAActual Value: $3,686Year 2013 Tax $68.76 Interest $4.81 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $98.57

R105989 MilleR MicHAelMILLER JOAN41055 FRONTIER RD PARKER, CO 80138-4668Parcel: 7502401012 Section: 2 Township: 7 Range: 65Subdivision: PRAIRIE TRAIL RANCHES Lot: 0001(5.20 ACRES) 1/50 INTERST IN TRACT BActual Value: $312,14141055 FRONTIER RDYear 2013 Tax $2,125.08 Interest $148.76 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $2,298.84

R104959 MilleR tiMotHY & DebRA A22198 AMETHYST RD DEER TRAIL, CO 80105Parcel: 7108304004 Section: 8 Township: 7 Range: 61Subdivision: CHAPARRAL FIL 2 Block: 010 Lot: 0004Actual Value: $15,10122132 AMETHYST RDYear 2013 Tax $79.24 Interest $5.55 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $109.79

R104958 MilleR tiMotHY l & DebRA A22198 AMETHYST RD DEER TRAIL, CO 80105Parcel: 7108304003 Section: 8 Township: 7 Range: 61Subdivision: CHAPARRAL FIL 2 Block: 010 Lot: 0003Actual Value: $162,17122198 AMETHYST RDYear 2013 Tax $852.36 Interest $59.67 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $937.03

R100146 Mills ANtHoNY G306 BUFFALO SIMLA, CO 80835Parcel: 0027406011 Section: 27 Township: 10 Range: 60Subdivision: SIMLA ADDITION 2 Block: 7:E75’ OF N 75’ OF W2 (TOTAL 0.129 A) Actual Value: $4,453306 BUFFALO STYear 2013 Tax $714.01 Interest $49.98 Penalty $0.00 Other $37.42Total Due: $801.41

R101882 MoNKs RicHARD DMoNKs JoDee l39517 CO RD 153 AGATE, CO 80101Parcel: 4015266273Section: 26 Township: 11 Range: 59 NE4: 160 A NW4: 26 11 59 160 A UNDIVIDED 1/2 INTEREST 160 MRA MINERAL RIGHTS Subdivision: SEVERED MINERALSActual Value: $1,100Year 2013 Tax $25.40 Interest $1.78 Penalty $0.00 Other $47.82Total Due: $75.00

R114210 MoNKs RicHARD DMoNKs JoDee l39517 CO RD 153 AGATE, CO 80101Parcel: 4099114210 Section: 26 Township: 7 Range: 59Subdivision: SEVERED MINERALS S2: 26 7 59 320 ACRES 1/4 INT 80 MRAActual Value: $550Year 2013 Tax $8.88 Interest $0.62 Penalty $0.00 Other $55.00Total Due: $64.50

R115751 MoNKs RicHARD DMoNKs JoDee l39517 CO RD 153 AGATE, CO 80101Parcel: 7818200055 Section: 18 Township: 7 Range: 58Subdivision: RURALA PAR IN W2NW4 W OF RRActual Value: $3,412Year 2013 Tax $54.88 Interest $3.84 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $83.72

R115752 MoNKs RicHARD DMoNKs JoDee l39517 CO RD 153 AGATE, CO 80101Parcel: 7818400056 Section: 18 Township: 7 Range: 58Subdivision: RURALA PAR IN W2SE4: W OF RRActual Value: $1,697Year 2013 Tax $27.16 Interest $1.90 Penalty $0.00 Other $45.94Total Due: $75.00

R119197 MoNKs RicHARD DMoNKs JoDee l39517 CO RD 153 AGATE, CO 80101Parcel: 7914400131 Section: 14 Township: 7 Range: 59Subdivision: RURALA PAR IN NE4SE4: 14 7 59Actual Value: $4,825Year 2013 Tax $77.64 Interest $5.43 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $108.07

R116024 MoNKs RicHARD D & JoDee l39517 co RD 153 AGATE, CO 80101Parcel: 4079116024 Section: 26 Township: 7 Range: 59 N2 (320 ACRES 1/2 INTEREST 160 ACRES)Subdivision: SEVERED MINERALSActual Value: $1,100Year 2013 Tax $17.76 Interest $1.24 Penalty $0.00 Other $50.00Total Due: $69.00

R116171 MoNKs RicHARD D & JoDee l39517 CO RD 153 AGATE, CO 80101Parcel: 7914300098Section: 14 Township: 7 Range: 59Subdivision: RURALA SW4 LESS NE4NE4SW4: 14 7 59 150 ACRES Actual Value: $22,073Year 2013 Tax $354.84 Interest $24.84 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $404.68

R116081 MoNKs RicHARD D & JoDee l39517 CO RD 153 AGATE, CO 80101Parcel: 7914400091Section: 14 Township: 7 Range: 59 S2SE4Subdivision: RURALAActual Value: $7,679Year 2013 Tax $123.64 Interest $8.65 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $157.29

R116064 MoNKs RicHARD D & JoDee l39517 CO RD 153 AGATE, CO 80101Parcel: 7923200089Section: 23 Township: 7 Range: 59 NW4Subdivision: RURALAActual Value: $15,549Year 2013 Tax $250.08 Interest $17.51 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $292.59

Public NoticesContinued from Last Page

AccouNt NAMe to WHoM AssesseD cARe oF ADDRess citY stAte ZiP tAX iNt ADV totAl

AccouNt NAMe to WHoM AssesseD cARe oF ADDRess citY stAte ZiP tAX iNt ADV totAl

AccouNt NAMe to WHoM AssesseD cARe oF ADDRess citY stAte ZiP tAX iNt ADV totAl

AccouNt NAMe to WHoM AssesseD cARe oF ADDRess citY stAte ZiP tAX iNt ADV totAl

AccouNt NAMe to WHoM AssesseD cARe oF ADDRess citY stAte ZiP tAX iNt ADV totAl

Legal Notice No: 23056

Page 22: Elbert County News 1016

22 Elbert County News October 16, 2014

22

R104000 MooRe RHoNDA Y8291 CONESTOGA CT ELIZABETH, CO 80107-9364Parcel: 6425203012 Section: 25 Township: 6 Range: 64Subdivision: SUN COUNTRY MEADOWS FIL 4 (PUD) Lot: 012BActual Value: $184,74408291 CONESTOGA CTYear 2013 Tax $1,198.84 Interest $83.92 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $1,307.76

R115002 MuNoZ luis M350 S SPLIT ROCK ROAD BENNETT, CO 80102Parcel: 8104100047Section: 4 Township: 8 Range: 61Subdivision: RURALA LOT 1(NE4NE4); SE4NE4; PAR IN E2SE4: 4 8 61 123.282 ACRES DESC B589 P749 Actual Value: $2,84023895 CO RD 144Year 2013 Tax $56.12 Interest $3.93 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $85.05

R120438 NAtiVe GRAce llc7419 SHRINE RD LARKSPUR, CO 80118Parcel: 0426100269 Section: 26 Township: 10 Range: 64 PARC N OF THE COUNTY ROAD Actual Value: $8527885 CO RD 74-82Year 2013 Tax $16.80 Interest $1.18 Penalty $0.00 Other $50.00Total Due: $67.98

R120439 NAtiVe GRAce llc7419 SHRINE RD LARKSPUR, CO 80118Parcel: 0426100270 Section: 26 Township: 10 Range: 64 PARC N OF THE COUNTY ROAD Actual Value: $829Year 2013 Tax $16.12 Interest $1.13 Penalty $0.00 Other $50.00Total Due: $67.25

R100212 NeHl sHAWN F & lAuRA leePO BOX 56 SIMLA, CO 80835-0056Parcel: 0035205006 Section: 35 Township: 10 Range: 60 (TOTAL 0.258 A) Subdivision: SIMLA ORIGINAL Block: 3 Lot: 14 THRU:- Lot: 16Actual Value: $42,755503 DEER STYear 2013 Tax $331.60 Interest $23.21 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $379.81

R109524 NielseN FRANKliN D & VAleRie JPO BOX 1432 ELIZABETH, CO 80107-1432Parcel: 8526401004 Section: 26 Township: 8 Range: 65Subdivision: BLUEBIRD ESTATES Lot: 0007Actual Value: $274,4891516 BLUEBIRD TRLYear 2013 Tax $1,868.56 Interest $130.80 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $2,024.36

R116320 olD tRAils llcPO BOX 1869 ELIZABETH, CO 80107-1869Parcel: 2910100154 Section: 10 Township: 12 Range: 59Subdivision: RURALA PAR IN NE4: 10 12 59 35.982 ACRES DESCActual Value: $3,03036820 CO RD 46Year 2013 Tax $69.92 Interest $4.89 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $99.81

R116323 olD tRAils llcPO BOX 1869 ELIZABETH, CO 80107-1869Parcel: 2910100156 Section: 10 Township: 12 Range: 59Subdivision: RURALA Block: 004 Lot: 0000 PAR IN NE4: 10 12 59 35.975 ACRES DESC B624 P846 AKA TRACT 4 BOONE REZONE Actual Value: $3,02910501 CO RD 149Year 2013 Tax $69.92 Interest $4.89 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $99.81

R114592 oWeN JeRRYPO BOX 233 SIMLA, CO 80835-0233Parcel: 0026309012Section: 26 Township: 10 Range: 60Subdivision: SIMLA ORIGINAL Block: 9 Lot: 5 THRU:- Lot: 7, E 42’ OF ALL LOTS (TOTAL 0.072 A) Actual Value: $23,065214 SIOUX AVEYear 2013 Tax $179.44 Interest $12.56 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $217.00

R104992 PecK lYNN JoAN (GAHAN)5880 38TH AVENUE NORTH B-110 ST. PETERSBURG, FL 33710Parcel: 7109104004 Section: 9 Township: 7 Range: 61Subdivision: CHAPARRAL FIL 1 Block: 005 Lot: 0032Actual Value: $32,00023750 JASPER TRLYear 2013 Tax $306.34 Interest $18.38Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $349.72

R107014 PeeteRs NANette35550 CO RD 183 LIMON, CO 80828Parcel: 7732200013 Section: 32 Township: 7 Range: 57Subdivision: RURALA NW4NW4: 32 7 57 39.84 AActual Value: $918Year 2013 Tax $18.40 Interest $1.29 Penalty $0.00 Other $50.00Total Due: $69.69

R109639 PeeteRs NANette35560 CO RD 183 LIMON, CO 80828Parcel: 8706100006 Section: 6 Township: 8 Range: 57Subdivision: RURALA E2, SW4: 6 8 57Actual Value: $58,18735550 CO RD 183,35560 CO RD 183Year 2013 Tax $515.40 Interest $36.08 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $576.48

R100674 PeteRsoN JAMes e9630 CO RD 74-82 PEYTON, CO 80831Parcel: 0331400080 Section: 31 Township: 10 Range: 63 :PAR IN S2S2 (TOTAL 36.00 A) Subdivision: RURALOActual Value: $254,0789648 CO RD 74-82Year 2013 Tax $1,338.72 Interest $93.71 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $1,457.43

R117301 PeteRsoN Julius e20380 CO RD 037 ELBERT, CO 80106Parcel: 0319400211 Section: 19 Township: 10 Range: 63Subdivision: RURALA E2SE4: 19 10 63 80 A.Actual Value: $2,232Year 2013 Tax $43.72 Interest $3.06 Penalty $0.00 Other $28.22Total Due: $75.00

R117302 PeteRsoN tHoRWAlD e tRust% olKJeR cARl 07770 CO RD 074-82 ELBERT, CO 80106Parcel: 0319300212 Section: 19 Township: 10 Range: 63Subdivision: RURALA SW4: W2SE4: 19 10 63 240 A.Actual Value: $50,77220356 CO RD 37Year 2013 Tax $525.16 Interest $36.76 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $586.92

R115565 PHilliPs Rosie e3324 GLENDALE DR W UNIVERSITY PL, WA 98466-2227Parcel: 4001115565Section: 11 Township: 10 Range: 61 NW4: 11 10 61 160 A 1/32 INTEREST 5.000 MRA Section: 2 Township: 10 Range: 61 E2NE4;S2NW4;E2SW4: 2 10 61 240 A 1/256 INTEREST .9375 MRA SE4 1/256 INTEREST IN 160 ACRES TOTAL MRA .625 Subdivision: SEVERED MINERALSActual Value: $50Year 2012 Tax $2.44 Interest $0.46 Penalty $0.00 Other $5.00Year 2013 Tax $0.80 Interest $0.06 Penalty $0.00 Other $55.00Total Due: $63.76

R105075 PieR MARtiN s & cHRistie D24146 CO RD 166 DEER TRAIL, CO 80105Parcel: 7110201003 Section: 10 Township: 7 Range: 61Subdivision: CHAPARRAL FIL 1 Block: 001 Lot: 0009Actual Value: $58924353 AGATE TRLYear 2013 Tax $11.24 Interest $0.79 Penalty $0.00 Other $50.00Total Due: $62.03

R107897 PioNeeR PlAstics iNc% ANtHoNY cHilleMi PO BOX 1870 ELIZABETH, CO 80107Parcel: 8407407002 Section: 7 Township: 8 Range: 64Subdivision: ELIZABETH GARLANDS ADDITION Block: 008 Lot: 0016 THRU:- Lot: 0018Actual Value: $267,987372 N BANNER STYear 2013 Tax $8,277.44 Interest $579.42Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $8,881.86

R115500 PlAiNs coNseRVAtioN ceNteR21901 EAST HAMPDEN AVENUE AURORA, CO 80013Parcel: 6106100058 Section: 6 Township: 6 Range: 61 ALL Section: 1 Township: 6 Range: 62 ALL Section: 2 Township: 6 Range: 62 SE4SE4 Section: 11 Township: 6 Range: 62 E2E2 Section: 12 Township: 6 Range: 62 ALL Section: 14 Township: 6 Range: 62 E2E2 Section: 23 Township: 6 Range: 62 E2NE4Subdivision: RURALAActual Value: $56,777Year 2013 Tax $781.44 Interest $54.70 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $861.14

R115794 PlAiNs coNseRVAtioN ceNteR21901 EAST HAMPDEN AVENUE AURORA, CO 80013Parcel: 6214200085 Section: 2 Township: 6 Range: 62 ALL OF 2 LESS SE4SE4 Section: 3 Township: 6 Range: 62 PARCEL IN SEC 3 Section: 10 Township: 6 Range: 62 ALL Section: 11 Township: 6 Range: 62 W2,W2E2 Section: 14 Township: 6 Range: 62 W2,W2E2 Sec-tion: 15 Township: 6 Range: 62 ALL Section: 16 Township: 6 Range: 62 E2E2 Section: 23 Township: 6 Range: 62 ALL OF 23 LESS E2NE4Subdivision: RURALAActual Value: $90,097Year 2013 Tax $1,529.52 Interest $107.07 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $1,661.59

R112756 PRoto-AleX beVeRlY J106672 S PARKER RD PARKER, CO 80138Parcel: 8511406003Section: 11 Township: 8 Range: 65Subdivision: STAGE RUN FIL 2 Lot: 0058Actual Value: $730,39734250 CHEROKEE TRLYear 2013 Tax $2,485.98 Interest $149.16 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $2,660.14

R120533 PuRsWell Joe MicHAelPuRsWell RebeccA c6523 W 69TH PL ARVADA, CO 80003Parcel: 9416100364Section: 16 Township: 9 Range: 64 NW4NE4 16 9 64 Subdivision: RURALAActual Value: $69,2295790 CO RD 114Year 2013 Tax $1,717.20 Interest $120.20 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $1,862.40

R115563 RAMeY loN l15121 FULLER GRANDVIEW, MO 64030Parcel: 4001115563 Section: 11 Township: 10 Range: 61 NW4: 11 10 61 160 A 1/32 INTEREST 5 MRA Section: 2 Town-ship: 10 Range: 61 E2NE4; S2NW4; E2SW4: 2 10 61 240 A 1/256 INTEREST .9375 MRA SE4: 2 10 61 160 A 1/256 INTEREST .625 MRA Subdivision: SEVERED MINERALSActual Value: $50Year 2013 Tax $0.80 Interest $0.06 Penalty $0.00 Other $55.00Total Due: $55.86

R120322 RAPAcKi JoNAtHoN G & cHRistiNe4830 W. EVANS AVE DENVER, CO 80219-5024Parcel: 4085120322 Section: 13 Township: 8 Range: 65 TRACT IN S2 (TOTAL MRA 3.98)Actual Value: $27Year 2013 Tax $0.84 Interest $0.06 Penalty $0.00 Other $55.00Total Due: $55.90

R113691 RAY bRADleY sPO BOX 660 KIOWA, CO 80117Parcel: 8233300122 Section: 33 Township: 8 Range: 62 Section: 4 Township: 9 Range: 62Subdivision: RURALA PAR IN NW4: 4 9 62 & IN SW4: 33 8 62Actual Value: $303,48917112 ST HWY 86Year 2013 Tax $3,048.52 Interest $213.40 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $3,286.92

R113692 RAY bRADleY sPO BOX 660 KIOWA, CO 80117Parcel: 9204200118 Section: 4 Township: 9 Range: 62Subdivision: RURALA PAR IN NW4 DESC B564 P181Actual Value: $1,398Year 2013 Tax $24.00 Interest $1.68 Penalty $0.00 Other $49.32Total Due: $75.00

R116592 RAYFielD JAMes MRAYFIELD RENEE A15505 CO RD 137 SIMLA, CO 80835Parcel: 1918100122 Section: 18 Township: 11 Range: 59Subdivision: RURALA E2NE4: 18 11 59 80 ACRES Actual Value: $120,55215505 CO RD 137Year 2013 Tax $976.40 Interest $68.35 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $1,069.75

R100144 RiVeRA DoNAlD A & GulicK bReNDA lPO BOX 314 CALHAN, CO 80808-0314Parcel: 0027406008 Section: 27 Township: 10 Range: 60Subdivision: SIMLA ADDITION 2 Block: 7:N 100’ OF E2 (TOTAL 0.344 A) Actual Value: $6,838330 BUFFALO STYear 2013 Tax $732.53 Interest $51.27 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $808.80

R114845 RobeRts FoRRest l & JANet l5113 PRONGHORN AVE ELIZABETH, CO 80107Parcel: 7416200318 Section: 16 Township: 7 Range: 64Subdivision: FOXTAIL FARMS REZONE Tract: 2 PAR IN W2: 16 7 64 DESC B583 P076 AKAActual Value: $545,3675113 PRONGHORN AVEYear 2013 Tax $3,712.28 Interest $259.86 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $3,997.14

R118247 RobiNsoN DANiel JRobiNsoN YVoNNe l24066 CO RD 61 ELBERT, CO 80106-9118Parcel: 9231300180 Section: 31 Township: 9 Range: 62Subdivision: RURALA PAR IN SW4: 31 9 62 DESC B670 P322Actual Value: $188,30324066 CO RD 61Year 2013 Tax $1,219.08 Interest $85.34Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $1,329.42

R120278 RolliN tRiM & cAbiNetRY iNc46153 COAL CREEK DRIVE PARKER, CO 80138Parcel: 4620820006 Section: 8 Township: 6 Range: 62 W2NW4 (80 ACRES)Subdivision: SEVERED MINERALSActual Value: $552Year 2013 Tax $9.36 Interest $0.66 Penalty $0.00 Other $55.00Total Due: $65.02

R118344 RuNNiNG bRooK iNVestoRs llc8480 E ORCHARD RD #1100 GREENWOOD VILLAGE, CO 80111Parcel: 7430303002 Section: 30 Township: 7 Range: 64 Section: 25 Township: 7 Range: 64Subdivision: RUNNING BROOK ESTATES THIRD AMENDMENT Lot: 58B-1Actual Value: $98,500Year 2013 Tax $2,443.24 Interest $171.03 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $2,639.27

R108517 RuNYAN JeANNiNe K & RAYMoND J33572 EAGLE COURT ELIZABETH, CO 80107Parcel: 8417202019 Section: 17 Township: 8 Range: 64Subdivision: ELIZABETH IN THE PINES PARK REPLAT Lot: 24-SActual Value: $215,72233572 EAGLE CTYear 2013 Tax $787.60 Interest $55.13 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $867.73

R118829 sANcHeZ DANNY & MARtHA APO BOX 45 AGATE, CO 80101Parcel: 7818200061Section: 18 Township: 7 Range: 58Subdivision: RU-RALAPAR IN NW4 & SE4SW4 LYING W OF 1-70 & E OF RR: 18 7 58Actual Value: $2,976Year 2013 Tax $47.68 Interest $3.34 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $76.02

R112990 sANDeRs eDWARD euGeNe21165 RED CLOUD RIDGE ELBERT, CO 80106-9227Parcel: 0317400168Section: 17 Township: 10 Range: 63Subdivision: COMANCHE CREEK RANCH PLANNED COMMUNITY Lot: 0020Actual Value: $142,99621165 RED CLOUD RIDGEYear 2013 Tax $1,003.88 Interest $70.27 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $1,099.15

R105299 sAWYeR tiMotHY JAMes & MelissA lYNN39196 OLSON DR KIOWA, CO 80107Parcel: 7316400083 Section: 16 Township: 7 Range: 63Subdivision: KIOWA COUNTRY RANCH Lot: 0016 TRACT IN 16 & 21 7 63 DESC B474 P891Actual Value: $299,89739196 OLSON DRYear 2013 Tax $1,397.24 Interest $97.81 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $1,520.05

R100255 scHeReR cARl PPO BOX 396 SIMLA, CO 80835Parcel: 0035212001 Section: 35 Township: 10 Range: 60 (TOTAL 0.344 A) Subdivision: SIMLA ADDITION 1 Block: 23Lot: 15 AND:- Lot: 16Actual Value: $101,335401 DAKOTA AVEYear 2013 Tax $787.04 Interest $55.09 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $867.13

R117897 scHMeiseR estel FRANK FAMilY tRustscHMeiseR HeleN DiMMitt FAMilY tRust21050 CO RD 197 LIMON, CO 80828Parcel: 0714300162 Section: 14 Township: 10 Range: 57Subdivision: RURALASW4Actual Value: $171,59521400 CO RD 197Year 2013 Tax $1,252.72 Interest $87.69Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $1,365.41

R107103 scHuette RoNAlD tGeneral Delivery GREELEY, CO 80631Parcel: 7912107007 Section: 12 Township: 7 Range: 59Subdivision: AGATE ORIGINAL Block: 2 Lot: 31Actual Value: $3,33238539 SECOND STYear 2013 Tax $53.80 Interest $3.77 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $82.57

R117997 scott AlleN iNc DbA619 NORTH CASCADE AVENUE, SUITE 200 COLORADO SPRINGS, CO 80903Parcel: 8522101196 Section: 22 Township: 8 Range: 65Subdivision: WILD POINTE Lot: 0097Actual Value: $32,20032640 LEGACY RIDGE STYear 2013 Tax $1,335.56 Interest $93.49 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $1,454.05

R104948 selleR ANtHoNY AND bRooKe l451 UVALDA ST AURORA, CO 80011-8519Parcel: 7108302001 Section: 8 Township: 7 Range: 61Subdivision: CHAPARRAL FIL 2 Block: 011 Lot: 0006Actual Value: $32,00040474 GOLD NUGGET DRYear 2013 Tax $612.68 Interest $42.89 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $680.57

R103484 sHeRRARD KeViNsHeRRARD KAtHRiNe25155 E PLYMOUTH CIR AURORA, CO 80016Parcel: 6405300002 Section: 5 Township: 6 Range: 64 Subdivision: PLAT OF 5-6-64 Lot: 13 (TOTAL 35 A) Actual Value: $2,0534750 PVT RD 192Year 2013 Tax $52.36 Interest $3.67 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $81.03

R116534 sMileY cRYstAl GAY303 W CENTRAL AVE. MISSOULA, MT 59801Parcel: 8704200098Section: 4 Township: 8 Range: 57Subdivision: RURALAW2: 4 8 57 (320.75 GROSS ACRES) 1/25 INT (12.83 NET ACRES) (PARTIAL INTEREST DEEDED AT DIFFERANT TIMES) UNDIVIDED 1/50 INT 6.415 A B331 P503 UNDIVIDED 1/50 INT 6.415 A B613 P209 Actual Value: $1,29647001 CO RD 142 #TOWERS 1 THRU 6Year 2013 Tax $25.88 Interest $1.81 Penalty $0.00 Other $47.31Total Due: $75.00

R116537 sMileY cRYstAl GAY303 W CENTRAL AVE MISSOULA, MT 59801Parcel: 8711200105Section: 10 Township: 8 Range: 57 :ALL (640 A) 1/25 INTEREST (25.6 NET A) Section: 11 Township: 8 Range: 57 :NW4 (160 A) 1/25 INTEREST (6.4 NET A)Subdivision: RURALA(TOTAL 32 A) Actual Value: $9,62648012 CO RD 142,49010 CO RD 142 #Towers 13-18Year 2013 Tax $146.84 Interest $10.28 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $182.12

R120236 sMileY GReG32399 CO RD 187 LIMON, CO 80828Parcel: 8704100064 Section: 4 Township: 8 Range: 57 E2 (80.19 ACRES 1/5 INTEREST 16.035)Subdivision: RURALAActual Value: $1,510Year 2013 Tax $29.96 Interest $2.10 Penalty $0.00 Other $42.94Total Due: $75.00

R104956 sMitH lARRYbloss DANA c3065 W 108TH AVE WESTMINSTER, CO 80030Parcel: 7108304001 Section: 8 Township: 7 Range: 61Subdivision: CHAPARRAL FIL 2 Block: 010 Lot: 0001Actual Value: $79,42522330 AMETHYST RDYear 2013 Tax $1,520.48 Interest $106.43 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $1,651.91

R101551 sNoVeR JoHN & coNNie2350 COUNTY ROAD 185 RAMAH, COLORADO 80832Parcel: 3719100020 Section: 19 Township: 13 Range: 57 N2-SW4-N2SE4 (602.32A) Section: 20 Township: 13 Range: 57 S2SW4-SW4SE4 (120A) Section: 21 Township: 13 Range: 57 E2 E2NW4 NE4SW4 (440A) Section: 23 Township: 13 Range: 58 SE4 LESS 1A (159A) Section: 24 Township: 13 Range: 58 ALL (640A) Section: 25 Township: 13 Range: 58 E2 (320A Sec-tion: 27 Township: 13 Range: 57 N2 SW4 N2SE4 SW4SE4 (600A) Section: 28 Township: 13 Range: 57 ALL (640A) Section: 29 Township: 13 Range: 57 ALL (640A) Section: 30 Township: 13 Range: 57 ALL (700A) Section: 31 Township: 13 Range: 57 ALL (718.40A) Section: 32 Township: 13 Range: 57 N2 N2S2 SW4SW4 (520A) Section: 33 Township: 13 Range: 57 N2 SW4 W2SE4 NE4SE4 (600A) Section: 34 Township: 13 Range: 57 N2 NW4SW4 (360A) TOTAL ACRES 7059.72 (SOME LOTS ARE GOVERNMENT LOTS)Subdivision: RURALAActual Value: $764,9122460 CO RD 177,1738 CO RD 185Year 2013 Tax $7,213.88 Interest $432.83 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $7,671.71

R115506 soPRis llcPO BOX 670 WINDSOR, CO 80550Parcel: 9513400185Section: 13 Township: 9 Range: 65Subdivision: RURALA PAR IN S2: 13 9 65 200 ACRES DESC B600 P326 Actual Value: $519,14327115 CO RD 13Year 2013 Tax $3,764.16 Interest $263.49 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $4,052.65

R120284 sPRiNG VAlleY RANcH HoA19590 E MAINSTREET STE 101 PARKER, CO 80138-7337Parcel: 6433100302Section: 33 Township: 6 Range: 64 PAR IN E2Subdivision: RURALOActual Value: $104,433Year 2013 Tax $2,290.32 Interest $160.32 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $2,475.64

R120286 sPRiNG VAlleY RANcH HoA19590 E MAINSTREET STE 101 PARKER, CO 80138-7337Parcel: 6433100304Section: 33 Township: 6 Range: 64 PAR IN N2Subdivision: RURALOActual Value: $78,720Year 2013 Tax $1,726.96 Interest $120.89 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $1,872.85

R108871 steVeNs eileeN J855 PEARL STREET ELIZABETH, CO 80107Parcel: 8418215023 Section: 18 Township: 8 Range: 64Subdivision: ELIZABETH ACRES FIL 1N 1/2 PLOT 15Actual Value: $159,111855 S PEARL STYear 2013 Tax $674.78 Interest $40.49 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $740.27

R108560 stiNNette iDAc/o DoNAlD R stiNNette, PeRsoNAl RePReseNtAtiVe PO BOX 513 WILBUR, WA 99185Parcel: 8418105007 Section: 18 Township: 8 Range: 64Subdivision: ELIZABETH AMENDED Block: 010 Lot: 0003 THRU:- Lot: 0006Actual Value: $86,648131 S PINE STYear 2013 Tax $733.92 Interest $51.37 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $810.29

R105109 stoNe lARRY WstoNe sHelleY l26555 CO RD 166 AGATE, CO 80101Parcel: 7112200006 Section: 12 Township: 7 Range: 61 NW4:N2SW4:W2NE4 320.0 A.Subdivision: RURALAActual Value: $214,43226555 CO RD 166Year 2013 Tax $1,513.24 Interest $105.93 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $1,644.17

R117652 stuKe HeRMAN A29647 COUNTY ROAD 125 SIMLA, CO 80835-9703Parcel: 8033400054 Section: 32 Township: 8 Range: 60 E2E2 LESS N2N2E2E2 & LESS N2S2N2E2E2 (100 ACRES) Section: 33 Township: 8 Range: 60 S2 (320 ACRES) Section: 4 Township: 9 Range: 60 NE4, PAR IN W2 (349.986 ACRES) TOTAL ACRES 799.986Subdivision: RURALAActual Value: $104,57829647 CO RD 125Year 2013 Tax $1,212.16 Interest $84.85 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $1,322.01

R101470 sulliVAN MicHAel07271 VIA RIO NIDO DOWNEY, CA 90241Parcel: 2906300009 Section: 17 Township: 12 Range: 59 Section: 18 Township: 12 Range: 59 Section: 6 Township: 12 Range: 59 Section: 7 Township: 12 Range: 59Sub-division: RURALA 534.4 A N2: 17 12 59 320 A NE4: 18 12Actual Value: $32,43133723 CO RD 42Year 2013 Tax $492.48 Interest $34.47Penalty $0.00 Other $45.00Total Due: $571.95

R101600 sulliVAN MicHAel e07271 VIA RIO NIDO DOWNEY, CA 90241Parcel: 3903100069 Section: 3 Township: 13 Range: 59 LOT 1(NE4NE4); LOT 2(NW4NE4); SE4NE4: 78.69 NET A 2/3UNDIVIDED INTEREST Subdivision: RURALAActual Value: $2,195Year 2013 Tax $48.88 Interest $3.42 Penalty $0.00 Other $45.00Total Due: $97.30

R117913 suMMeR tiMe eNteRPRises llc19775 SAKALA ROAD RAMAH, CO 80832Parcel: 0035235001 Section: 35 Township: 10 Range: 60Subdivision: GOLD MEDAL MINOR DEVELOPMENT 1ST AMEND Unit: 001Actual Value: $46,468820 DAKOTA AVE #1Year 2013 Tax $359.88 Interest $25.19 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $410.07

R117914 suMMeR tiMe eNteRPRises llc19775 SAKALA ROAD RAMAH, CO 80832Parcel: 0035235001 Section: 35 Township: 10 Range: 60Subdivision: GOLD MEDAL MINOR DEVELOPMENT 1ST AMEND Unit: 002Actual Value: $46,468820 DAKOTA AVE #2Year 2013 Tax $359.88 Interest $25.19 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $410.07

R117917 suMMeR tiMe eNteRPRises llc19775 SAKALA ROAD RAMAH, CO 80832Parcel: 0035235001 Section: 35 Township: 10 Range: 60Subdivision: GOLD MEDAL MINOR DEVELOPMENT 1ST AMEND Unit: 005Actual Value: $46,468820 DAKOTA AVE #5Year 2013 Tax $359.88 Interest $25.19 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $410.07

R117919 suMMeR tiMe eNteRPRises llc19775 SAKALA ROAD RAMAH, CO 80832Parcel: 0035235001 Section: 35 Township: 10 Range: 60Subdivision: GOLD MEDAL MINOR DEVELOPMENT 1ST AMEND Unit: 007Actual Value: $46,468820 DAKOTA AVE #7Year 2013 Tax $359.88 Interest $25.19 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $410.07

R117920 suMMeR tiMe eNteRPRises llc19775 SAKALA RD RAMAH, CO 80832Parcel: 0035235001 Section: 35 Township: 10 Range: 60Subdivision: GOLD MEDAL MINOR DEVELOPMENT 1ST AMEND Unit: 008Actual Value: $42,276820 DAKOTA AVE #8Year 2013 Tax $327.68 Interest $22.94 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $375.62

R117921 suMMeR tiMe eNteRPRises llc19775 SAKALA ROAD RAMAH, CO 80832Parcel: 0035235001 Section: 35 Township: 10 Range: 60Subdivision: GOLD MEDAL MINOR DEVELOPMENT 1ST AMEND Unit: 009Actual Value: $46,468820 DAKOTA AVE #9Year 2013 Tax $359.88 Interest $25.19 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $410.07

R117922 suMMeR tiMe eNteRPRises llc19775 SAKALA ROAD RAMAH, CO 80832Parcel: 0035235001 Section: 35 Township: 10 Range: 60Subdivision: GOLD MEDAL MINOR DEVELOPMENT 1ST AMEND Unit: 010Actual Value: $46,468820 DAKOTA AVE #10Year 2013 Tax $359.88 Interest $25.19 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $410.07

R117923 suMMeR tiMe eNteRPRises llc19775 SAKALA RD RAMAH, CO 80832Parcel: 0035235001 Section: 35 Township: 10 Range: 60Subdivision: GOLD MEDAL MINOR DEVELOPMENT 1ST AMEND Unit: 011Actual Value: $42,276820 DAKOTA AVE #11Year 2013 Tax $327.68 Interest $22.94 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $375.62

R117924 suMMeR tiMe eNteRPRises llc19775 SAKALA ROAD RAMAH, CO 80832Parcel: 0035235001 Section: 35 Township: 10 Range: 60Subdivision: GOLD MEDAL MINOR DEVELOPMENT 1ST AMEND Unit: 012Actual Value: $46,468820 DAKOTA AVE #12Year 2013 Tax $359.88 Interest $25.19 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $410.07

R120308 suNWest oF coloRADo iNcPO BOX 1869 EIZABETH, CO 80107Parcel: 4010290059 Section: 11 Township: 12 Range: 59 S2 EXCEPT B657 P632 (1/2 INT) Section: 10 Township: 12 Range: 59 BOONE REZONE TRACT 1-4 (1/2 INT)Actual Value: $1,532Year 2013 Tax $34.96 Interest $2.45 Penalty $0.00 Other $37.59Total Due: $75.00

R119966 sWeet RANcH lllP24063 CO RD 122 RAMAH, CO 80832Parcel: 8016400094 Section: 7 Township: 8 Range: 60 :ALL Section: 17 Township: 8 Range: 60 :ALL Section: 19 Town-ship: 8 Range: 60 :ALL Section: 30 Township: 8 Range: 60 :ALL Section: 31 Township: 8 Range: 60 :ALL LESS RADIO FACILITY Section: 16 Township: 8 Range: 60 :S2 Section: 18 Township: 8 Range: 60 :E2NE4, SW4NE4, SE4 Section: 13 Township: 8 Range: 61 :ALL Section: 24 Town-ship: 8 Range: 61 :ALL Section: 25 Township: 8 Range: 61 :ALL Section: 36 Township: 8 Range: 61 N2: PAR IN S2 Subdivision: RURALA TOTAL ACRES 6214.745 Actual Value: $189,19626750 CO RD 122Year 2013 Tax $2,717.20 Interest $190.20 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $2,932.40

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Legal Notice No: 23057

Page 23: Elbert County News 1016

Elbert County News 23 October 16, 2014

23

Public NoticesContinued from Last Page

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R108941 sYeR HARRY s liFe estAtecAstle couNtRY AssisteD liViNG iNc.PO BOX 491 ELIZABETH, CO 80107-0491Parcel: 8419201014 Section: 19 Township: 8 Range: 64Subdivision: SOUTHERN HILLS SUBDIVISION Lot: 0025Actual Value: $181,4861559 PADDOCK STYear 2013 Tax $617.84 Interest $43.25 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $686.09

R120455 tAll PiNes MiNeRAls llc36410 PARADISE CIRCLE ELIZABETH, CO 80107Parcel: 4074120455 Section: 34 Township: 7 Range: 64 PARCEL IN SW4 AKA TRACT 5 Subdivision: SEVERED MINERALSActual Value: $414Year 2013 Tax $9.92 Interest $0.69 Penalty $0.00 Other $55.00Total Due: $65.61

R100306 tAYloR bARbARA JoYce%iVAN tAYloR 8220 E 105TH AVE HENDERSON, CO 80640-8908Parcel: 0035219006 Section: 35 Township: 10 Range: 60 (TOTAL 0.344 A) Subdivision: SIMLA HEIGHTS Block: 1 Lot: 15 AND:- Lot: 1615000 SQ FTActual Value: $6,750601 SIOUX AVEYear 2013 Tax $191.16 Interest $13.38 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $229.54

R112239 tHAYeR FAMilY liMiteD PARtNeRsHiP24063 CO RD 122 RAMAH, CO 80832Parcel: 4081112239 Section: 20 Township: 8 Range: 61Subdivision: SEVERED MINERALS PARCEL IN SW4: 20-8-61 60 A. 1/2 MINERAL INTEREST 30 A. NET Actual Value: $210Year 2013 Tax $3.52 Interest $0.25 Penalty $0.00 Other $55.00Total Due: $58.77

R118688 tHAYeR GRANt e24063 CO RD 122 RAMAH, CO 80832Parcel: 8126100110 Section: 26 Township: 8 Range: 61Subdivision: RURALA PAR IN N2: 26 8 61Actual Value: $1,203Year 2013 Tax $20.48 Interest $1.43 Penalty $0.00 Other $50.00Total Due: $71.91

R117880 tHAYeR GRANt e24063 CO RD 122 RAMAH, CO 80832Parcel: 8126300105 Section: 26 Township: 8 Range: 61Subdivision: RURALAPAR IN W2Actual Value: $562Year 2013 Tax $9.36 Interest $0.66 Penalty $0.00 Other $55.00Total Due: $65.02

R116095 tHAYeR GRANt e & PAtti J24063 CO RD 122 RAMAH, CO 80832Parcel: 7915400093 Section: 15 Township: 7 Range: 59Subdivision: BI-JOU CREEK RANCH PAR IN S2: 15 7 59 DESC B616 P132Actual Value: $216,31639200 CO RD 147Year 2013 Tax $954.80 Interest $66.84 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $1,046.64R120514 tHAYeR GRANt e & PAtti Jo24063 CO RD 122 RAMAH, CO 80832Parcel: 4079120514 Section: 18 Township: 7 Range: 59 SEVERED MINERALS LOCATED IN THE E2Subdivision: SEVERED MINERALSActual Value: $843Year 2013 Tax $13.32 Interest $0.93 Penalty $0.00 Other $50.00Total Due: $64.25

R120310 tHAYeR GRANt e & PAtti Jo24063 CO RD 122 RAMAH, CO 80832Parcel: 4089120310 Section: 20 Township: 8 Range: 59 1/2 INT MRA Section: 28 Township: 8 Range: 59 1/2 INT MRA Subdivision: SEVERED MINERALSActual Value: $4,416Year 2013 Tax $70.96 Interest $4.97 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $100.93

R120311 tHAYeR GRANt e & PAtti Jo24063 CO RD 122 RAMAH, CO 80832Parcel: 4089120311 Section: 22 Township: 8 Range: 59 240 ACRES Section: 28 Township: 8 Range: 59 W2W2, E2E2 80 ACRES Subdivision: SEVERED MINERALSActual Value: $2,209Year 2013 Tax $50.84 Interest $3.56 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $79.40

R114049 tHAYeR GRANt e & PAtti Jo24063 CO RD 122 RAMAH, CO 80832Parcel: 6034100092 Section: 3 Township: 7 Range: 60 Section: 34 Township: 6 Range: 60Subdivision: RURALA LOT 1 (NE4NE4) 40.48 A:LOT 2 (NW4NE4) 40.52A:LOT 3 (NE4NW4) 40.56 A:LOT 4 (NW4NW4) 40.26 A:S2N2:SW4:W2SE4: 3 7 60 TOTAL ACRES 562.16 SE4:S2NE4:W 990’ NW4NE4: 34 6 60 268.06 A TOTAL ACRES 830.22 Actual Value: $43,596Year 2013 Tax $700.84 Interest $49.06 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $774.90

R115088 tHAYeR GRANt e & PAtti Jo24063 CO RD 122 RAMAH, CO 80136Parcel: 6035300107 Section: 35 Township: 6 Range: 60Subdivision: RURALA S2: 35-06-60 320 ACRES Actual Value: $340,45542020 CO RD 125Year 2013 Tax $1,927.84 Interest $134.95 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $2,087.79

R119141 tHAYeR GRANt e & PAtti Jo24063 CO RD 122 RAMAH, CO 80832Parcel: 7004100056 Section: 4 Township: 7 Range: 60Subdivision: RURALA E2: 4 7 60Actual Value: $6,696Year 2013 Tax $128.08 Interest $8.97 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $162.05

R120509 tHAYeR GRANt e AND PAtti Jo24063 CO RD 122 RAMAH, CO 80832Parcel: 7918100152 Section: 18 Township: 7 Range: 59 PAR IN E2 AKA PARC 13, 14 AND 15Subdivision: RURALAActual Value: $3,955Year 2013 Tax $63.76 Interest $4.46 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $93.22

R120513 tHAYeR PAtti Jo24603 CO RD 122 RAMAH, CO 80832-9705Parcel: 7917100153 Section: 17 Township: 7 Range: 59 PARC IN N2 AKA PARC 1 THROUGH 5Subdivision: RURALAActual Value: $12,597Year 2013 Tax $202.36 Interest $14.17 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $241.53

R116079 tHAYeR PAtti JoTHAYER GRANT E24603 CO RD 122 RAMAH, CO 80832-9705Parcel: 8134300084 Section: 33 Township: 8 Range: 61 Section: 34 Township: 8 Range: 61Subdivision: RURALA PAR IN 33 & 34-8-61Actual Value: $251,43624603 CO RD 122Year 2013 Tax $1,556.44 Interest $108.95 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $1,690.39

R120191 tHe NeW outbAcK lAND coMPANY llc2830 NORTH AVE STE C5B GRAND JUNCTION, CO 81501-5367Parcel: 2809300094Section: 9 Township: 12 Range: 58 W2SESW4 (20 ACRES)Subdivision: RURALAActual Value: $461Year 2013 Tax $10.32 Interest $0.72 Penalty $0.00 Other $50.00Total Due: $61.04

R118617 tHoMPsoN bRADleY e & lARieA WPO BOX 312 ELBERT, CO 80106Parcel: 9434420002 Section: 34 Township: 9 Range: 64 Subdivision: FRICKS ADDITION SECOND AMENDMENT TO LOT 6 Block: 3 Lot: 6A (TOTAL 0.100 A) Actual Value: $39,2786741 LAVELLE AVEYear 2013 Tax $430.38 Interest $25.82 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $481.20

R108525 tHuN tHoMAs359 FIRST STREET HOBOKEN, NJ 07030Parcel: 8417203008 Section: 17 Township: 8 Range: 64Subdivision: JIVANS REPLAT NO. 2 (LOT 2-E ONLY) Lot: 2-E1Actual Value: $126,64233760 CO RD 17Year 2013 Tax $862.00 Interest $60.34 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $947.34

R104096 toscANo euGeNie22930 BLACKWOLF WAY PARKER, CO 80138Parcel: 6426102011 Section: 26 Township: 6 Range: 64Subdivision: SUN COUNTRY MEADOWS FIL 3 (PUD) Lot: 048AActual Value: $48,4007829 SHENANDOAH DRYear 2013 Tax $1,145.00 Interest $80.15 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $1,250.15

R113550 tubbs DiANNA JBUTLERFIELD STEVE10600 FOXWOOD PL ELIZABETH, CO 80107Parcel: 6308400128 Section: 8 Township: 6 Range: 63Subdivision: FOX-WOOD Lot: 0012 DESC B559 P205, 60 A.Actual Value: $220,52210600 FOXWOOD PLYear 2013 Tax $1,953.04 Interest $136.71 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $2,114.75

R106716 tull MARc bHeNNessY sHeilA MPO BOX 1935 ELIZABETH, CO 80107-1935Parcel: 7534101027 Section: 34 Township: 7 Range: 65Subdivision: PONDEROSA PARK ESTATES UNIT 01 Lot: 0025Actual Value: $292,71336768 VIEW RIDGE DRYear 2013 Tax $1,992.56 Interest $139.48 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $2,157.04

R103174 tuReceK HeleN P165 S UNION BLVD STE 450 LAKEWOOD, CO 80105-0262Parcel: 4099029859Section: 2 Township: 9 Range: 59 E2 EXCEPT COAL TO U.S. 319.06 ACRES 1/4 INTEREST 79.765 NET ACRES MINERAL RIGHTS Subdivision: SEVERED MINERALSActual Value: $550Year 2013 Tax $8.88 Interest $0.62 Penalty $0.00 Other $55.00Total Due: $64.50

R103179 tuReceK HeleN P165 S UNION BLVD STE 450 LAKEWOOD, CO 80105-0262Parcel: 4099149933Section: 14 Township: 9 Range: 59 NE4 EXCEPT COAL TO U.S. 1/4 INTEREST 40.00 NET ACRES MINERAL RIGHTS Subdivision: SEVERED MINERALSActual Value: $280Year 2013 Tax $4.48 Interest $0.31 Penalty $0.00 Other $55.00Total Due: $59.79

R109577 tuRNeR KeNNetH R & teRRi l30266 CHISHOLM TR ELIZABETH, CO 80107-7115Parcel: 8534402004 Section: 34 Township: 8 Range: 65Subdivision: CHISHOLM AMENDED Lot: 26A (TOTAL 9.561 A) Actual Value: $315,37430266 CHISHOLM TRLYear 2013 Tax $2,147.32 Interest $150.31Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $2,322.63

R119490 tuRNeR MicHelePO BOX 2125 ELIZABETH, CO 80107-2125Parcel: 8418124003Section: 18 Township: 8 Range: 64Subdivision: ELIZABETH PHILLIPS ADDITION PLAT AMENDMENT #2 Block: 023 Lot: 0001Actual Value: $112,190673 S BANNER STYear 2013 Tax $951.20 Interest $66.58 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $1,042.78

R101563 VeRMillioN bettY & JAsoN A05789 CO RD 173 MATHESON, CO 80830Parcel: 3801200002Section: 1 Township: 13 Range: 58 Section: 12 Township: 13 Range: 58 Section: 2 Township: 13 Range: 58 Section: 3 Township: 13 Range: 58Sub-division: RURALA W2 OF SEC 1 , ALL OF SEC 2, E2NE4 OF SEC 3, N2 OF SEC 12 HAS GOV. LOTS TOTAL AC 1368.54Actual Value: $145,96944000 CO RD 22Year 2013 Tax $2,794.52 Interest $195.62 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $3,015.14

R118808 VeRMillioN JAsoN A5789 CO RD 173 MATHESON, CO 80830Parcel: 2833100081Section: 33 Township: 12 Range: 58 :ALLSubdivision: RURALA (TOTAL 640 A) Actual Value: $57,348Year 2013 Tax $1,321.00 Interest $92.47Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $1,438.47

R103188 WAlDRoP RutH A12234 PRESTON LANDING WAY KNOXVILLE, TN 37922-9486Parcel: 4099249938 Section: 24 Township: 9 Range: 59 ALL 640 A UNDIVIDED 1/4 INTEREST 160 MRA MINERAL RIGHTS Subdivision: SEVERED MINERALSActual Value: $1,100Year 2013 Tax $17.92 Interest $1.25 Penalty $0.00 Other $50.00Total Due: $69.17

R100101 WAlKiNsHAW tHoMAs FAMilY tRust (tHe)PO BOX 483 SIMLA, CO 80835-0483Parcel: 0026310002 Section: 26 Township: 10 Range: 60 (TOTAL 0.172 A) Subdivision: SIMLA ORIGINAL Block: 12 Lot: 1 AND:- Lot: 2Actual Value: $46,463210 PUEBLO AVEYear 2013 Tax $179.92 Interest $12.59Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $217.51

R116825 WAllAce GleNN MWAllAce DiANA c3015 ROSE HILL ST STRASBURG, CO 80236Parcel: 9904100106 Section: 4 Township: 9 Range: 59Subdivision: RURALA PAR IN S2NE4: 4 9 59 60.009 A MOL DESC B638 P314 Actual Value: $1,383Year 2013 Tax $22.16 Interest $1.55 Penalty $0.00 Other $70.00Total Due: $93.71

R117905 WAllAce GleNN M3015 ROSE HILL ST STRASBURG, CO 80136Parcel: 9904100110Section: 4 Township: 9 Range: 59Subdivision: RURALAN2 INCLUDES GOVLOTS 1T4 LESS 60.009 Actual Value: $15,547Year 2013 Tax $250.08 Interest $17.51 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $292.59

R101793 Weil cARl2477 CO RD 132 ELIZABETH, CO 80107Parcel: 4003298200 Section: 29 Township: 10 Range: 63 W2W2NE4 40 ACRES 1/2 INTEREST 20 NET ACRES MINERAL RIGHTS Subdivision: SEVERED MINERALSActual Value: $140Year 2013 Tax $2.68 Interest $0.19 Penalty $0.00 Other $55.00Total Due: $57.87

R118646 Weil cARl2477 CO RD 132 ELIZABETH, CO 80107Parcel: 8524200167 Section: 24 Township: 8 Range: 65 N2NW4NW4, N2SE4NW4NW4, NW4NE4NW4, N2SW4NE4NW4, EAST 30’ OF W2E2NW4Subdivision: RURALAActual Value: $948Year 2013 Tax $22.36 Interest $1.57 Penalty $0.00 Other $50.00Total Due: $73.93

R119193 Weil cARl2477 CO RD 132 ELIZABETH, CO 80107Parcel: 8524200183 Section: 24 Township: 8 Range: 65 W2SW4NW4, SW4NW4NW4, SW4SE4NW4NW4, NW4NE4SW4N-W4Subdivision: RURALAActual Value: $806Year 2013 Tax $19.04 Interest $1.33 Penalty $0.00 Other $50.00Total Due: $70.37

R119194 Weil cARl2477 CO RD 132 ELIZABETH, CO 80107Parcel: 8524200184 Section: 24 Township: 8 Range: 65Subdivision: RURALA PAR IN NW4: 24 8 65Actual Value: $54,4612477 CO RD 132Year 2013 Tax $199.84 Interest $13.99 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $238.83

R107772 WeltoN RicHLAFEVER BARBARA JPO BOX 1484 ELIZABETH, CO 80107-1484Parcel: 8405301002 Section: 5 Township: 8 Range: 64Subdivision: BON-NIE RIDGE Lot: 28 1/2 INTEREST IN COMMON PROPERTYActual Value: $366,2184393 BONNIE RIDGE DRYear 2013 Tax $2,492.84 Interest $174.50 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $2,692.34

R116322 Wesco DeVeloPMeNt llcPO BOX 1869 ELIZABETH, CO 80107-1869Parcel: 2910100155 Section: 10 Township: 12 Range: 59Subdivision: RURALA Block: 003 Lot: 0000 PAR IN NE4: 10 12 59 36.014 ACRES DESC B624 P849 AKA TRACT 3 BOONE REZONE Actual Value: $3,03310493 CO RD 149Year 2013 Tax $69.92 Interest $4.89 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $99.81

R115238 WestbANK RANcH GolF AND couNtRY club ltD0607 WESTBANK ROAD GLENWOOD SPRINGS, CO 81601Parcel: 8321203003 Section: 21 Township: 8 Range: 63Subdivision: MTB SUB - MTB ANNEX - TOWN OF KIOWA Lot: 0002A LOT 2, MTB SUBDIVISION (LESS PARCEL DESC. B594, P876) MTB ANEXATION TO THE TOWN OF KIOWA REMAINING ACRES: 1 ACRE MOL MTB SUBDIVISION 1ST AMENDMENT LOT 2A Actual Value: $167,535610 COMANCHE STYear 2013 Tax $3,481.08 Interest $243.68 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $3,749.76

R108599 West eliZAbetH HolDiNGs llc4675 MACARTHUR COURT SUITE 1550 NEWPORT BEACH , CA 92660Parcel: 8418114002 Section: 18 Township: 8 Range: 64 PREVIOUSLY PHILLIPS ADD REPLAT OF LOTS 7-12 BLK 25 (.491)Subdivision: TOWNE CENTRE SUBDIVISION Block: 001 Lot: 0001Actual Value: $207,023476 S ELBERT STYear 2013 Tax $3,197.64 Interest $191.86 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $3,414.50R114835 WiliAMs estAte N D44 AVENUE OF THE OAKS BEAUMONT, TX 77707Parcel: 4062114835 Section: 10 Township: 6 Range: 62Subdivision: SEVERED MINERALS ALL: 10-06-62 (LESS NE4NW4 IN PRODUCTION) 1/44 INTEREST WHOLE SECTION ACREAGE: 640 LESS 40 ACRES IN PROD: 600 NET INTEREST MR ACRES: 13.68 MINERAL RIGHTS Actual Value: $100Year 2013 Tax $1.76 Interest $0.12 Penalty $0.00 Other $55.00Total Due: $56.88

R107442 WiNNeR llcPO BOX 127 KIOWA, CO 80117-0127Parcel: 8320109032Section: 20 Township: 8 Range: 63Subdivision: KIOWA TOWN LIMITS PAR IN NE4NE4: 20 8 63 DESC B424 P932 9000 SQ FT Actual Value: $108,169480 COMANCHE STYear 2013 Tax $2,247.40 Interest $157.32 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $2,429.72

R116124 WooDs RoGeR lee74 ROCKY CLIFF RD ELIZABETH, CO 80107Parcel: 9526100201 Section: 26 Township: 9 Range: 65 NW4NE4 Subdivision: LAZY J O MANY SPRINGS CANYON RANCH PHASE 2 Lot: 6 (TOTAL 40.280 A) Actual Value: $9281515 PVT RD 104Year 2013 Tax $18.16 Interest $1.27 Penalty $0.00 Other $50.00Total Due: $69.43

R106998 WRiGHt Jill2548 SAVAGE RD ELIZABETH, CO 80107Parcel: 7536401009 Section: 36 Township: 7 Range: 65Subdivision: WESTERN COUNTRY RANCHES 1ST ADD (PUD) Lot: 0077Actual Value: $392,2462548 SAVAGE RDYear 2013 Tax $2,670.68 Interest $186.95 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $2,882.63

R103266 WulF bARbARA A45550 COTTONWOOD LN DEER TRAIL, CO 80105Parcel: 6017200076Tract: 20 Section: 17 Township: 6 Range: 60Subdivision: COTTONWOOD ESTATES (FALCON RANCH) Lot: 0020B473 P967Actual Value: $16,02945550 COTTONWOOD LNYear 2013 Tax $144.36 Interest $10.11 Penalty $0.00 Other $25.00Total Due: $179.47

Legal Notice No: 23058

Notice To Creditors PUBLIC NOTICE

NOTICE TO CREDITORSEstate of Diane Elizabeth McCuen,

Aka Diane E. McCuen,And Diane McCuen, DeceasedCase Number: 2014 PR 30023

All persons having claims against theabove-named estate are required topresent them to the Personal Represent-ative or to the District Court of ElbertCounty, Colorado on or before February 9,2015 or the claims may be forever barred.

Timothy M. McCuenPersonal Representative31456 Forsythia DriveSelbyville, Delaware 19975

Legal Notice No: 23050First Publication: October 9, 2014Last Publication: October 23, 2014Publisher: Elbert County News

Misc. Private Legals PUBLIC NOTICE

DISTRICT COURT, ELBERT COUNTYCOLORADO

751 Ute St., PO Box 232Kiowa, CO 80117

Plaintiff: EMANUEL TABACHNIK,v.Defendants: THE PANCOL LAND ANDCATTLE CO., INC., a Colorado corpora-tion, and all unknown persons who claimany interest in the subject matter of thisaction.

Attorney for Plaintiff:Jeffrey D. Felder, #3833Brownstein Hyatt Farber Schreck, LLP410 Seventeenth Street, Suite 2200Denver, CO 80202-443Phone: 303.223.1100Email: [email protected]

Case No.: 2014CV030075Division: 1

SUMMONS BY PUBLICATION

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATEOF COLORADO TO THEABOVE-NAMED DEFENDANTS:

You are hereby summoned and requiredto appear and defend against the claimsof the Complaint filed with the Court in thisaction, by filing with the clerk of this Courtan answer or other response. You are re-quired to file your answer or other re-sponse within thirty-five (35) days afterservice of this Summons upon you. Ser-vice of this Summons will be complete onthe day of the last publication. A copy ofthe Complaint may be obtained from theclerk of the Court.

If you fail to file your answer or other re-sponse to the Complaint in writing withinthirty-five (35) days after the date of thelast publication, judgment by default maybe rendered against you by the Court forthe relief demanded in the Complaint,without any further notice.

This is an action to quiet the title of thePlaintiff in and to the real property situ-ated in Elbert County, Colorado, more par-ticularly described on Exhibit A, attachedto and made a part of this Summons bythis reference.

EXHIBIT AThe SE¼ of the NW¼ of Section 18,Township 7 South, Range 61 West of the6th P.M., County of Elbert, Colorado.Date: September 18, 2014.

B R O W N S T E I N H Y A T T F A R B E RS C H R E C K , L L PBy: s/Jeffrey D. FelderJeffrey D. Felder, #38333

Legal Notice No.: 23034First Publication: September 25, 2014Last Publication: October 23, 2014Publisher: The Elbert County News

Misc. Private Legals

PUBLIC NOTICE

DISTRICT COURT, ELBERT COUNTYCOLORADO

751 Ute St., PO Box 232Kiowa, CO 80117

Plaintiff: EMANUEL TABACHNIK,v.Defendants: THE PANCOL LAND ANDCATTLE CO., INC., a Colorado corpora-tion, and all unknown persons who claimany interest in the subject matter of thisaction.

Attorney for Plaintiff:Jeffrey D. Felder, #3833Brownstein Hyatt Farber Schreck, LLP410 Seventeenth Street, Suite 2200Denver, CO 80202-443Phone: 303.223.1100Email: [email protected]

Case No.: 2014CV030075Division: 1

SUMMONS BY PUBLICATION

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATEOF COLORADO TO THEABOVE-NAMED DEFENDANTS:

You are hereby summoned and requiredto appear and defend against the claimsof the Complaint filed with the Court in thisaction, by filing with the clerk of this Courtan answer or other response. You are re-quired to file your answer or other re-sponse within thirty-five (35) days afterservice of this Summons upon you. Ser-vice of this Summons will be complete onthe day of the last publication. A copy ofthe Complaint may be obtained from theclerk of the Court.

If you fail to file your answer or other re-sponse to the Complaint in writing withinthirty-five (35) days after the date of thelast publication, judgment by default maybe rendered against you by the Court forthe relief demanded in the Complaint,without any further notice.

This is an action to quiet the title of thePlaintiff in and to the real property situ-ated in Elbert County, Colorado, more par-ticularly described on Exhibit A, attachedto and made a part of this Summons bythis reference.

EXHIBIT AThe SE¼ of the NW¼ of Section 18,Township 7 South, Range 61 West of the6th P.M., County of Elbert, Colorado.Date: September 18, 2014.

B R O W N S T E I N H Y A T T F A R B E RS C H R E C K , L L PBy: s/Jeffrey D. FelderJeffrey D. Felder, #38333

Legal Notice No.: 23034First Publication: September 25, 2014Last Publication: October 23, 2014Publisher: The Elbert County News

Misc. Private Legals

PUBLIC NOTICE

DISTRICT COURT, ELBERT COUNTYCOLORADO

751 Ute St., PO Box 232Kiowa, CO 80117

Plaintiff: EMANUEL TABACHNIK,v.Defendants: THE PANCOL LAND ANDCATTLE CO., INC., a Colorado corpora-tion, and all unknown persons who claimany interest in the subject matter of thisaction.

Attorney for Plaintiff:Jeffrey D. Felder, #3833Brownstein Hyatt Farber Schreck, LLP410 Seventeenth Street, Suite 2200Denver, CO 80202-443Phone: 303.223.1100Email: [email protected]

Case No.: 2014CV030075Division: 1

SUMMONS BY PUBLICATION

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATEOF COLORADO TO THEABOVE-NAMED DEFENDANTS:

You are hereby summoned and requiredto appear and defend against the claimsof the Complaint filed with the Court in thisaction, by filing with the clerk of this Courtan answer or other response. You are re-quired to file your answer or other re-sponse within thirty-five (35) days afterservice of this Summons upon you. Ser-vice of this Summons will be complete onthe day of the last publication. A copy ofthe Complaint may be obtained from theclerk of the Court.

If you fail to file your answer or other re-sponse to the Complaint in writing withinthirty-five (35) days after the date of thelast publication, judgment by default maybe rendered against you by the Court forthe relief demanded in the Complaint,without any further notice.

This is an action to quiet the title of thePlaintiff in and to the real property situ-ated in Elbert County, Colorado, more par-ticularly described on Exhibit A, attachedto and made a part of this Summons bythis reference.

EXHIBIT AThe SE¼ of the NW¼ of Section 18,Township 7 South, Range 61 West of the6th P.M., County of Elbert, Colorado.Date: September 18, 2014.

B R O W N S T E I N H Y A T T F A R B E RS C H R E C K , L L PBy: s/Jeffrey D. FelderJeffrey D. Felder, #38333

Legal Notice No.: 23034First Publication: September 25, 2014Last Publication: October 23, 2014Publisher: The Elbert County News

Government Legals Public Notice

NOTICE OF PURCHASE OF REALESTATE AT TAX LIEN SALE ANDOF APPLICATION FOR ISSUANCE

OF TREASURER’S DEED

TSC# 2011-01486

To Every Person in Actual Possession orOccupancy of the hereinafter DescribedLand, Lot or Premises, and to the Personin Whose Name the Same was Taxed orSpecially Assessed, and to all Personshaving an Interest or Title of Record in orto the said Premises and To Whom It mayConcern, and more especially to:

Nora Ellen Wagner You and each of youare hereby notified that on the 8th day ofNovember A.D. 2011 the then CountyTreasurer of the County of Elbert, in theState of Colorado, sold at public tax liensale to Gerald & Meg Ricke Revocable thefollowing described real estate situate inthe County of Elbert, State of Colorado, towit:

Section: 20 Township: 6 Range: 62S2N2: S2 (480 ACRES 1/2 INTEREST)240 ACRESSubdivision: SEVEREDMINERALS

and said County Treasurer issued a certi-ficate of purchase therefore to Gerald &Meg Revocable. That said tax lien salewas made to satisfy the delinquent taxesassessed against said real estate for theyear 2010;

That said real estate was taxed or spe-cially assessed in the name(s) of Nora El-len Wagner for said year 2010.

That a Treasurer’s Deed will be issued forsaid real estate to the said Gerald & MegRevocable at 3:00 o’clock P.M., on the13th day of January, A.D. 2015, unlessthe same has been redeemed.

Said property may be redeemed from saidsale at any time prior to the actual execu-tion of said Treasurer’s Deed. Witness myhand this 23rd day of September, 2014 A.D.

Richard PettittCounty Treasurer of Elbert County

Legal Notice No.: 23040First Publication: October 2, 2014Last Publication: October 16, 2014Publisher: The Elbert County News

Government Legals

Public Notice

NOTICE OF PURCHASE OF REALESTATE AT TAX LIEN SALE ANDOF APPLICATION FOR ISSUANCE

OF TREASURER’S DEED

TSC# 2011-01486

To Every Person in Actual Possession orOccupancy of the hereinafter DescribedLand, Lot or Premises, and to the Personin Whose Name the Same was Taxed orSpecially Assessed, and to all Personshaving an Interest or Title of Record in orto the said Premises and To Whom It mayConcern, and more especially to:

Nora Ellen Wagner You and each of youare hereby notified that on the 8th day ofNovember A.D. 2011 the then CountyTreasurer of the County of Elbert, in theState of Colorado, sold at public tax liensale to Gerald & Meg Ricke Revocable thefollowing described real estate situate inthe County of Elbert, State of Colorado, towit:

Section: 20 Township: 6 Range: 62S2N2: S2 (480 ACRES 1/2 INTEREST)240 ACRESSubdivision: SEVEREDMINERALS

and said County Treasurer issued a certi-ficate of purchase therefore to Gerald &Meg Revocable. That said tax lien salewas made to satisfy the delinquent taxesassessed against said real estate for theyear 2010;

That said real estate was taxed or spe-cially assessed in the name(s) of Nora El-len Wagner for said year 2010.

That a Treasurer’s Deed will be issued forsaid real estate to the said Gerald & MegRevocable at 3:00 o’clock P.M., on the13th day of January, A.D. 2015, unlessthe same has been redeemed.

Said property may be redeemed from saidsale at any time prior to the actual execu-tion of said Treasurer’s Deed. Witness myhand this 23rd day of September, 2014 A.D.

Richard PettittCounty Treasurer of Elbert County

Legal Notice No.: 23040First Publication: October 2, 2014Last Publication: October 16, 2014Publisher: The Elbert County News

PUBLIC NOTICE

NOTICE OF PURCHASE OF REALESTATE AT TAX LIEN SALE ANDOF APPLICATION FOR ISSUANCE

OF TREASURER’S DEED

TSC# 2010-01309

To Every Person in Actual Possession orOccupancy of the hereinafter DescribedLand, Lot or Premises, and to the Personin Whose Name the Same was Taxed orSpecially Assessed, and to all Personshaving an Interest or Title of Record in orto the said Premises and To Whom It mayConcern, and more especially to:

Richardson Family Partnership You andeach of you are hereby notified that on the9th day of November A.D. 2010 the thenCounty Treasurer of the County of Elbert,in the State of Colorado, sold at public taxlien sale to Jolie & John F Korinek the fol-lowing described real estate situate in theCounty of Elbert, State of Colorado, to wit:

Section: 32 Township: 10 Range:60Subdivision: SEVERED MINERALSTRACT IN SW4SW4 32 10 60 DESCB372 P113 2.41 NET ACRES ALL

and said County Treasurer issued a certi-ficate of purchase therefore to Jolie &John F Korinek. That said tax lien salewas made to satisfy the delinquent taxesassessed against said real estate for theyear 2009;

That said real estate was taxed or spe-cially assessed in the name(s) of Richard-son Family Partnership for said year 2009.

That a Treasurer’s Deed will be issued forsaid real estate to the said Jolie & John FKorinek at 3:00 o’clock P.M., on the 13thday of January, A.D.2015, unless thesame has been redeemed.

Said property may be redeemed from saidsale at any time prior to the actual execu-tion of said Treasurer’s Deed. Witness myhand this 22th day of September, 2014 A.D..

Richard PettittCounty Treasurer of Elbert County

Legal Notice No.: 23038First Publication: October 2, 2014Last Publication: October 16, 2014Publisher: The Elbert County News

Government Legals

PUBLIC NOTICE

NOTICE OF PURCHASE OF REALESTATE AT TAX LIEN SALE ANDOF APPLICATION FOR ISSUANCE

OF TREASURER’S DEED

TSC# 2010-01309

To Every Person in Actual Possession orOccupancy of the hereinafter DescribedLand, Lot or Premises, and to the Personin Whose Name the Same was Taxed orSpecially Assessed, and to all Personshaving an Interest or Title of Record in orto the said Premises and To Whom It mayConcern, and more especially to:

Richardson Family Partnership You andeach of you are hereby notified that on the9th day of November A.D. 2010 the thenCounty Treasurer of the County of Elbert,in the State of Colorado, sold at public taxlien sale to Jolie & John F Korinek the fol-lowing described real estate situate in theCounty of Elbert, State of Colorado, to wit:

Section: 32 Township: 10 Range:60Subdivision: SEVERED MINERALSTRACT IN SW4SW4 32 10 60 DESCB372 P113 2.41 NET ACRES ALL

and said County Treasurer issued a certi-ficate of purchase therefore to Jolie &John F Korinek. That said tax lien salewas made to satisfy the delinquent taxesassessed against said real estate for theyear 2009;

That said real estate was taxed or spe-cially assessed in the name(s) of Richard-son Family Partnership for said year 2009.

That a Treasurer’s Deed will be issued forsaid real estate to the said Jolie & John FKorinek at 3:00 o’clock P.M., on the 13thday of January, A.D.2015, unless thesame has been redeemed.

Said property may be redeemed from saidsale at any time prior to the actual execu-tion of said Treasurer’s Deed. Witness myhand this 22th day of September, 2014 A.D..

Richard PettittCounty Treasurer of Elbert County

Legal Notice No.: 23038First Publication: October 2, 2014Last Publication: October 16, 2014Publisher: The Elbert County News

Government Legals

PUBLIC NOTICE

NOTICE OF PURCHASE OF REALESTATE AT TAX LIEN SALE ANDOF APPLICATION FOR ISSUANCE

OF TREASURER’S DEED

TSC# 2010-01309

To Every Person in Actual Possession orOccupancy of the hereinafter DescribedLand, Lot or Premises, and to the Personin Whose Name the Same was Taxed orSpecially Assessed, and to all Personshaving an Interest or Title of Record in orto the said Premises and To Whom It mayConcern, and more especially to:

Richardson Family Partnership You andeach of you are hereby notified that on the9th day of November A.D. 2010 the thenCounty Treasurer of the County of Elbert,in the State of Colorado, sold at public taxlien sale to Jolie & John F Korinek the fol-lowing described real estate situate in theCounty of Elbert, State of Colorado, to wit:

Section: 32 Township: 10 Range:60Subdivision: SEVERED MINERALSTRACT IN SW4SW4 32 10 60 DESCB372 P113 2.41 NET ACRES ALL

and said County Treasurer issued a certi-ficate of purchase therefore to Jolie &John F Korinek. That said tax lien salewas made to satisfy the delinquent taxesassessed against said real estate for theyear 2009;

That said real estate was taxed or spe-cially assessed in the name(s) of Richard-son Family Partnership for said year 2009.

That a Treasurer’s Deed will be issued forsaid real estate to the said Jolie & John FKorinek at 3:00 o’clock P.M., on the 13thday of January, A.D.2015, unless thesame has been redeemed.

Said property may be redeemed from saidsale at any time prior to the actual execu-tion of said Treasurer’s Deed. Witness myhand this 22th day of September, 2014 A.D..

Richard PettittCounty Treasurer of Elbert County

Legal Notice No.: 23038First Publication: October 2, 2014Last Publication: October 16, 2014Publisher: The Elbert County News

Public Notice

NOTICE OF PURCHASE OF REALESTATE AT TAX LIEN SALE ANDOF APPLICATION FOR ISSUANCE

OF TREASURER’S DEED

TSC# 2011-01489

To Every Person in Actual Possession orOccupancy of the hereinafter DescribedLand, Lot or Premises, and to the Personin Whose Name the Same was Taxed orSpecially Assessed, and to all Personshaving an Interest or Title of Record in orto the said Premises and To Whom It mayConcern, and more especially to:

Gladys L Kellogg You and each of you arehereby notified that on the 8th day ofNovember A.D. 2011 the then CountyTreasurer of the County of Elbert, in theState of Colorado, sold at public tax liensale to E-Associates the following de-scribed real estate situate in the County ofElbert, State of Colorado, to wit:

Section: 20 Township: 7 Range:60Subdivision: SEVERED MINERALSE1/2: SW1/4: 20-7-60 480 A. 1/6 INT. INONLY A 1/2 INTEREST OWNING (240ACRES) TOTAL MRA 40

and said County Treasurer issued a certi-ficate of purchase therefore to E-Asso-ciates. That said tax lien sale was made tosatisfy the delinquent taxes assessedagainst said real estate for the year 2010;

That said real estate was taxed or spe-cially assessed in the name(s) of Gladys LKellogg for said year 2010.

That a Treasurer’s Deed will be issued forsaid real estate to the said E-Associatesat 3:00 o’clock P.M., on the 13th day ofJanuary, A.D. 2015, unless the same hasbeen redeemed.

Said property may be redeemed from saidsale at any time prior to the actual execu-tion of said Treasurer’s Deed. Witness myhand this 23 day of September, 2014 A.D.

Richard PettittCounty Treasurer of Elbert County

Legal Notice No.: 23039First Publication: October 2, 2014Last Publication: October 16, 2014Publisher: The Elbert County News

Government Legals

Page 24: Elbert County News 1016

24 Elbert County News October 16, 2014

24

Public Notice

UNITED STATES POSTAL SERVICE

Statement of Ownership, Management, and Circulation (All Periodicals Publica-tions Except Requester Publications)

1. Publication Title: Elbert County News 2. Publication Number: 171-100

3. Filing Date: 10/7/14 4. Issue Frequency: Weekly

5. Number of Issues Published Annually: 52

6. Annual Subscription Price: $30.007. Complete Mailing Address of Known Office of Publication (Not Printer): 9137 Ridgeline Blvd., Suite 210Highlands Ranch, Colorado 80129Contact Person: Shari MartinezTelephone (include Area Code):303-566-4071

8. Complete Mailing Address of Head-quarters or General Business Office Of Publisher (Not Printer): 9137 Ridgeline Blvd., Suite 210Highlands Ranch, Colorado 80129

9. Full Names and Complete Mailing Addresses of Publisher, Editor, and Managing: Publisher: Gerard Healey, 9137 Ridgeline Blvd., Suite 210Highlands Ranch, Colorado 80129Editor: Chris Rotar, 9137 Ridgeline Blvd., Suite 210Highlands Ranch, Colorado 80129Managing Editor: Chris Rotar, 9137 Ridgeline Blvd., Suite 210Highlands Ranch, Colorado 80129

10. Owner: Full Name and Complete Mailing AddressGerard Healey, 9137 Ridgeline Blvd., Suite 210Highlands Ranch, Colorado 80129Ann Macari Healey, 9137 Ridgeline Blvd., Suite 210Highlands Ranch, Colorado 80129

11. Known Bondholders. Mortgagees, and Other Security Holders Owning orHolding 1 Percent or More of Total Amount of Bonds, Mortgages, or OtherSecurities. If none, check box [X] None

12. Tax Status (Check one) The purpose, function, and nonprofit status of this organization and the exempt status for

federal income tax purposes:[ ] Has Not Changed During Preceding 12 Months[ ] Has Changed During Preceding 12 Months

13. Publication Title: Elbert County News14. Issue Date for Circulation Data Below: 09/18/14

15. Extent and Nature Of Circulation:Average No. Copies of Each Issue During Preceding 12 Months: No. Copies of Single Issue Published Nearest to Filling Date: a. Total Number of Copies (Net Press Run):442457b. Paid Circulation (By Mail and outside the Mail)(1) Mailed Outside-County Paid Subscriptions Stated on PS Form 3541 (include paid distribution above nomi-nal rate, advertiser’s proof copies, and exchange copies)2821(2) Mailed In-County Paid Subscrip-tions Stated on PS Form 3541 (include paid distribution above nominal rate,

advertiser’s proof copies, and exchange copies)138141(3) Paid Distribution Outside the Mails including Sales Through Dealers and Carriers, Street Vendors, Counter Sales, and Other Paid Distribution Outside USPS®209245(4) Paid Distribution by Other Classes of Mail Through the USPS (e.g. First Class®)120c. Total Paid Distribution (Sum of 15b (1), (2), (3). and (4)387.00407.00d. Free or Nominal Rate Distribution (By Mail and Outside the Mail)(1) Free or Nominal Rate Outside-County Copies included on PS Form 354100(2) Free or Nominal Rate In-County Copies included on PS Form 354100(3) Free or Nominal Rate Copies Mailed

at other Classes Through The USPS (e.g. First-Class Mail)00(4) Free or Nominal Rate Distribution Outside the Mail (Carriers or other means)1919e. Total Free or Nominal Rate Distribu-tion (Sum of 15d (1), (2), (3) and (4)1919f. Total Distribution (Sum of 15c and 15e)406426g. Copies not Distributed (See Instructions to Publishers #4 (Page #3)3631h. Total (Sum of 15f and g)442457i. Percent Paid (15c divided by 15f times 100)95.32 percent95.54 percent16. Publication of Statement of Owner-ship[X] If the publication is a general publi-cation, publication of this statement is

required.

Will be printed in the 10/17/14 issue of this publication.

17. Signature and Title of Editor, Publisher, Business Manager, or Owner

Gerard J. HealeyDate 10.7.14

I certify that all information furnished on this form is true and complete. I understand that anyone who furnishes false or misleading information on this form or who omits material or informa-tion requested on the form may be subject to criminal sanctions (including fines and imprisonment) and/or civil sanctions (including civil penalties).

First Publication: October 16, 2014Last Publication: October 16, 2014Publisher: The Elbert County News

Ownership Statement

Public NoticeELBERT COUNTY PAYMENTS FOR PUBLICATION SEPTEMBER 2014

FUND 10 TOTALS GENERAL FUND $304,366.39FUND 15 TOTALS HEALTH FUND $1,215.13FUND 20 TOTALS PUBLIC WORkS FUND $197,489.26FUND 25 TOTALS SALES AND USE FUND $131,290.25FUND 040 TOTALS LEA FUND $20,582.32FUND 050 TOTALS HUMAN SERvICES FUND $17,659.16FUND 070 TOTALS RETIREMENT FUND $345.38FUND 085 TOTALS IMPACT FUND $8,350.00FUND 090 TOTALS CONSERvATION TR FUND $1,293.87FUND 095 TOTALS BOND SvC FUND $750.00FUNDS TOTALS $683,341.76

vendor Name Description AMT

A & E TIRE EQUIPMENT EXPENSE 6,362.16 AARON SHEA REIMBURSEMENT 44.00 ACOMA LOCKSMITH OPERATING EXPENSE 15.00 AGATE MUTUAL OPERATING EXPENSE 23.91 AIRGAS OPERATING EXPENSE 866.15 AMBER REILMANN REIMBURSEMENT 262.00 ASIMAKIS D LATRIDIS OPERATING EXPENSE 1,352.40 Asphalt Specialties OPERATING EXPENSE 120,740.25 AUTO GLASS GUYS AUTO REPAIR 250.00 AUTO-CHOLOR OPERATING EXPENSE 163.50 BLACK HILLS ENERGY OPERATING EXPENSE 297.77 BRAZOS OPERATING EXPENSE 18,654.50 CAROLYN BURGENER CONTRACT SERVICES 200.00 Caterpillar Financial OPERATING EXPENSE 7,434.72 CATHERINE LAMBERT CONTRACT SERVICES 1,725.30 CCOM OPERATING EXPENSE 182.00 CDW GOVERNMENT SOFTWARE 351.28 CENTURYLINK Operating Expense 3,879.52 CERTIFIED LAB SHOP SUPPLIES 124.90 ChemTox OPERATING EXPENSE 330.00 CO COMMUNITY ADVERTISING 7.50 CO DPT PUBLIC SAFETY FEES 3,289.50 CO DEPT OF HEALTH & ENV VITAL RECORDS 55.47 CO RADIATOR VEHICLE MAINTENANCE 148.50 COMCAST MONTHLY EXPENSE 238.22 COMFORT OF HOME OPERATING EXPENSE 151.50

COMMUNITY MEDIA OF CO ADVERTISING 482.50 Corporate Billing OPERATING EXPENSE 545.64 COUNTY SHERIFF’S OF CO TRAINING 100.00 CREDIT UNION OF CO Operating Expense 6,637.11 D&L SMALL ENGINE REPAIR EQUIPMENT REPAIR 53.40 D-J PETROLEUM . FUEL 39,792.10 DEBBIE JONES REIMBURSEMENT 80.08 DEEP ROCK MONTHLY EXPENSE 8.45 DENVER INDUSTRIAL SALES OPERATING EXPENSE 636.16 DIANNA HIATT FAIR ROYALTY 630.18 DRIVE TRAIN INDUSTRIES OPERATING EXPENSE 465.79 DRYCO OPERATING EXPENSE 66,189.56 ECCOG OPERATING EXPENSE 3,500.00 EATON SALES & SERVICE OPERATING EXPENSE 8,350.00 EIDE BAILLY AUDIT & ACCounTING 23,930.00 EL PASO COUNTY AUTOPSY FEES 4,050.00 ECCA OPERATING EXPENSE 1,867.50 ELBERT COUNTY R&B FUEL 13,259.40 ELBERT COUNTY TREASURER BUILDING REPAIR 2,189.99 ELIZABETH CHAIN SAW OPERATING EXPENSE 77.60 ELIZABETH STORAGE OPERATING EXPENSE 119.00 ENERTIA CONSULTING GR OPERATING EXPENSE 7,694.36 FAIR POINT OPERATING EXPENSE 245.73 FREMONT COUNTY S/O PROFESSIONAL Services 41.66 FRONTIER BUSINESS PRODUCT COPIER EXPENSE 99.00 FRONTIER COMMUNICATIONS COPIER EXPENSE 995.96 G&K SERVICES OPERATING EXPENSE 321.19 GRAINGER OPERATING EXPENSE 446.36 GREAT WEST LIFE OPERATING EXPENSE 345.38 GREENLEAF WASTE OPERATING EXPENSE 1,290.00 GREENLEE’S PRO AUTO CARE VEHICLE MAINTENANCE 1,116.15 HARBOR FREIGHT TOOLS EQUIPMENT REPAIR 1,123.38 HENSLEY BATTERY EQUIPMENT REPAIR 72.72 HIGH PLAINS FOOD STORE FUEL 2,109.69 IREA OPERATING EXPENSE 8,935.30 INTERSTATE BATTERY OPERATING EXPENSE 319.97 J&A TRAFFIC PRODUCTS OPERATING EXPENSE 3,190.00 Jerri Spear REIMBURSEMENT 250.00 JOHN DEERE EQUIPMENT REPAIR 55,578.47

KAREN HEAP OPERATING EXPENSE 3,700.00 KIOWA STORAGE Operating Expense 145.00 KIRBY BREFIELD ADVERTISING 250.00 LABORATORY CORP PROFESSIONAL SERVICES 114.00 LARRY ROSS REIMBURSEMENT 196.27 LESLIE SMITH ADVERTISING 300.00 LISA MAZZOLA OPERATING EXPENSE 1,105.00 LISA TERRA REIMBURSEMENT 38.40 MARSHALL & SWIFT SOFTWARE SUPPORT 3,305.95 MATT MARTINICH OPERATING EXPENSE 595.50 McAfee OPERATING EXPENSE 363.78 MCC&LES INTERNATIONAL EQUIPMENT PARTS 1,480.00 MEDVED CO EQUIPMENT REPAIR 216.25 MHC KENWORTH EQUIPMENT REPAIR 1,945.13 MINES & ASSOCIATES PC PAYROLL PAYABLE 276.36 MOUNTAIN VIEW ELECTRIC OPERATING EXPENSE 298.42 DISTRICT ATTORNEY 18TH OPERATING EXPENSE 120,320.25 PARTMASTER EQUIPMENT REPAIR 583.24 PAUL ARNOLD CONTRACT SERVICES 5,360.00 PHOENIX TECHNOLOGY CONTRACT SERVICE 7,675.00 Pioneer sand OPERATING EXPENSE 742.05 PITNEY BOWES POSTAGE 5,250.72 POTESTIO BROTHERS OPERATING EXPENSE 1,336.76 POWER MOTIVE CORP OPERATING EXPENSE 12,720.87 POYSTI & ADAMS OPERATING EXPENSE 3,951.02 PROFORCE TRAINING 577.40 PRONGHORN COUNTry OPERATING EXPENSE 3.98 PROVOTE SOLUTIONS OPERATING EXPENSE 211.84 PUREWATER DYNAMICS MONTHLY LEASE 50.00 QUILL CORPORATION OFFICE SUPPLIES 407.40 RAINBOW COLLISIO AUTO REAPIR 945.00 RECYCLED MATERIALS CO. OPERATING EXPENSE 4,690.96 PORTA POT RENTAL MONTHLY SERVICE 195.00 ROCK PARTS CO AUTO REPAIR 2,828.56 RKY MTN SPRING & SUSPENSION EQUIPMENT MAINT 7,607.57 RUNNING CREEK QUICK LUBE VEHCILE MAINT 120.49 SAM’S CLUB FEE 45.00 SARAH PATTERSON FAIRBOARD EXPENSE 179.55

SCHMIDT CONSTRUCTION CO OPERATING EXPENSE 2,023.61 SPRINT MONTHLY SERVICE 96.11 STAPLES ADVANTAGE OFFICE SUPPLIES 686.87 STATE OF CO OPERATING EXPENSE 1,068.76 STATE WIRE & TERMINAL SHOP SUPPLY 134.06 STEEL CORNER EQUIPMENT PARTS 977.46 STERICYCLE OPERATING EXPENSE 142.02 STONE OIL CO FUEL 29,349.55 SYSCO FOOD SERVICES PRISONER MEALS 3,893.12 DANNY PAUL ARDREY ESTATE TR EQUIPMENT RENTAL 600.00 TIMOTHEOS TRAINING 1,000.00 TLO SECURITY DATA ACCESS 220.00 TOWN OF KIOWA OPERATING EXPENSE 5,358.96 TOWN OF SIMLA OPERATING EXPENSE 120.30 TRANSWEST TRUCKS AUTO REPAIR 947.35 TRUCKHUGGER EQUIPMENT PARTS 310.00 TRUE VALUE HARDWARE OPERATING EXPENSE 333.60 TYLER TECHNOLOGIES SOFTWARE SUPPORT 8,081.00 VAIL RESORTS OPERATING EXPENSE 819.66 VERIZON WIRELESS MONTHLY UTILITIES 1,985.43 WADE GATELY REIMBURSEMENT 212.12 WAGNER EQUIPMENT CO EQUIPMENT 598.98 WASTE MANAGEMENT MONTHLY UTILITIES 809.39 Wells Fargo OPERATING EXPENSE 750.00 WESTPACIfic EQUIPMENTREPAIR 413.67WESTSIDE TOWING OPERATING EXPENSE 379.00 Whisler INdustrial Supply EQUIPMENT REPAIR 77.84 WILL KOGER REIMBURSMENT 104.72 WITT BOYS-NAPA OPERATING EXPENSE 4,965.71 WRIGLEY ENTERPRISES OFFICE SUPPLIES 85.76 XEROX CORPORATION COPIER EXPENSE 2,374.16

Legal Notice No.: 23053First Publication: October 16, 2014Last Publication: October 16, 2014Publisher: Elbert County News

Government Legals

Public Notice

NOTICE OF PURCHASE OF REALESTATE AT TAX LIEN SALE ANDOF APPLICATION FOR ISSUANCE

OF TREASURER’S DEED

TSC# 2011-01489

To Every Person in Actual Possession orOccupancy of the hereinafter DescribedLand, Lot or Premises, and to the Personin Whose Name the Same was Taxed orSpecially Assessed, and to all Personshaving an Interest or Title of Record in orto the said Premises and To Whom It mayConcern, and more especially to:

Gladys L Kellogg You and each of you arehereby notified that on the 8th day ofNovember A.D. 2011 the then CountyTreasurer of the County of Elbert, in theState of Colorado, sold at public tax liensale to E-Associates the following de-scribed real estate situate in the County ofElbert, State of Colorado, to wit:

Section: 20 Township: 7 Range:60Subdivision: SEVERED MINERALSE1/2: SW1/4: 20-7-60 480 A. 1/6 INT. INONLY A 1/2 INTEREST OWNING (240ACRES) TOTAL MRA 40

and said County Treasurer issued a certi-ficate of purchase therefore to E-Asso-ciates. That said tax lien sale was made tosatisfy the delinquent taxes assessedagainst said real estate for the year 2010;

That said real estate was taxed or spe-cially assessed in the name(s) of Gladys LKellogg for said year 2010.

That a Treasurer’s Deed will be issued forsaid real estate to the said E-Associatesat 3:00 o’clock P.M., on the 13th day ofJanuary, A.D. 2015, unless the same hasbeen redeemed.

Said property may be redeemed from saidsale at any time prior to the actual execu-tion of said Treasurer’s Deed. Witness myhand this 23 day of September, 2014 A.D.

Richard PettittCounty Treasurer of Elbert County

Legal Notice No.: 23039First Publication: October 2, 2014Last Publication: October 16, 2014Publisher: The Elbert County News

Government Legals

Public NoticesPublic Notices are a way for government agencies to get information to the public. State law requires that these notices be printed in a “Legal Newspaper” allowing the public to be informed.

Your right to know about governmental changes and decisions are embodied in these notices. �is newspaper urges each citizen to read these public notices.

Public Notices

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Categories of Public NoticesCategories of Public NoticesIn these legal pages you will find:

Public Trustee Notices: �ese notices include foreclosure properties and public trustee sales.

Name Changes: �ese notices run for three weeks when someone wants of legally change their name.

Notice to Creditors: �ese notices are required to clear the estate of a deceased person.

Private Legals: �ese legals include divorces, adoptions, property being sold by the Sheri� ’s o�ce and sales by storage companies of abandoned property.

Government Legals: �ese legals include new or changed ordinances by the city or county; public hearings; requests for contracter bids on public buildings or land; settlement payments for work performed those properties; salaries of government employees; and payments made by governmental agencies; budgets and elections.

PUBLIC NOTICE

The Elizabeth Park and Recreation District is looking for an individual interested in serving on the EPR Board of Directors through May 2016. The board meets the third Tuesday of the month at 7:00 p.m. at Evans Park office which is located at 34201 County Road 21, Elizabeth CO 80107. If you’re interested in the board position and would like to apply, submit an Interest letter to [email protected]. To qualify you must be a resident of the district and currently a registered voter. If you have questions about the Board and the work it does, please contact Board’s Vice Director, Dianna Nelson@ [email protected] or by telephone at (303)

646-3599 to leave a message.

The deadline to submit Interest letter is 24 October 2014.

Legal Notice No.: 23059First Publication: October 16, 2014Last Publication: October 16, 2014Publisher: The Elbert County News

Government Legals Government Legals

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