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Show PXJHJCNOTICES N I APPLICANT: Layton, UT. QUANTITY: 0.0)5 CFS SOURCE: 2 in. well 200 ft. to 400 ft. deep. POINT(S) OF NOTICE OF TRUSTEES SALE The following scribed property de- will be sold at public auc- tion to the highest bidder, Tuesday, January 15, 1985, payable in lawful money of the United States at the time of sale, at the front steps of the Davis County Courthouse in Farmington, Utah, at 12:00 oclock noon of said day, for the purpose of foreclosing a trust deed executed by Larry J. Farris and Jan Eve Farris, as trustors, favor of Z10NS in FIRST NATIONAL BANK, as beneficiary recorded March 12, 1982 as Entry No. 61 1016 in Book 893, Page 961 , of the official records of Davis County, State of Utah, covering real property located at 1964 North 300 East, Centerville, Utah, and more particularly described as: All of Lot 505, ROLLING HILLS ESTATES SUBD- IVISION, PLAT E, of part a subdivision 3 of Section 3 Township North, Range East, Salt Lake I , I Meridian, in the City of Centerville, according to the official plat thereof. Notice of Default was recorded May 4, 1984, as Entry No. 671132 in Book 988, Page 874 of said official r'ords. :id sale will be made without covenant or warranty, express or implied, regarding title, possession or encumbrances. DATED this 12 day of December, 1984. ZIONS FIRST NATIONAL in BANK, N.A., its capacity as Trustee By W. Clark Burt Its: Attorney GCN2082Z Published in the Davis News Journal First publication Dec. 19, 1984 Last publication Jan. 2, 1985 Issue No. 47 NOTICE OF TRUSTEES SALE The following described property will be sold at public auction to the highest bidder on the 15th dSy of January, 1985 at 1:00 1 A.M. at the North front door of the Davis County Court House at Farmington, Utah in the County of Davis by SECURITY TITLE COMPANY, as Trustee under the Deed of Trust made by JERRY W. JAQUES and LARENE JAQUES. his wife, as Trustors, and recorded October 9, 1980 as Entry No. 576615 in Book 843 at pages 327 of the Official Records of Davis County, Utah, given to secure an indebted- ness in favor of DEAN K. SWANER FAMILY TRUST. DEAN K. SWANER. TRUSTEE. DEAN S. COOK and HELEN P. COOK, his wife; JEFFERY D. COOK and CONNIE W. COOK, his wife (now owned and held by DEAN K. SWANER FAMILY TRUST, DEAN K. SWANER, TRUSTEED. DEAN S. COOK and HELEN P. COOK, his wife; JEFFERY C. COOK and CONNIE W. COOK, his wife; and JOHN H. BANGERTER MILDRED and BAN- GERTER, his wife) by reason of the breach of certain obligations secured thereby. Notice of Default was recorded September 11, 1984 as Entry No. 682374 in Book 1005 at page 279 of said official Records. Trustee will sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash, payable in lawful money of the United States at the time of sale without warranty as to title, possession or encumbrances, the following described property at about 3600 West, South of Gentile St., and West of the City of Layton, County of Davis, State of Utah: Beginning at a point North 89 degrees 5 40" West 2513.47 feet along the Quarter Section line from the East (garter corner of Section 26, Township 4 North, Range 2 West, Salt Lake Meridian, and run- ning thence South 0 degrees I308 West 330.01 feet; thence North 89 degrees 5150 West 132.0 feet to the Quarter Section line; thence North 0 degrees 1308 East 330.01 feet along the Quarter Section line to the center of said Section; thence South 89 degrees 5 40 ' East 132.0 feet to the point of beginning, containing 1.0 acre, more or less. ALSO, Begin- ning at a South point 0 degrees 56 West 329.88 feet along the Section line and North 89 degrees 5150 West 1984.20 feet from the East Quar1 1 ter corner of Sec- tion 26, Township 4 North, Range 2 West, Salt Lake meridian, and running thence South 0 degrees 2 50 West 329.98 feet; thence North 89 degrees 5201 West 661.43 feet to the Quarter Section line; thence North 0 degrees 3 0 8 East 330.01 feet 1 along the Quarter Section line; thence South 89 degrees 5 50 East 661.40 feet to the point of beginning, containing 5.01 acres, more 1 or less. TOGETHER WITH AND SUBJECT TO a 50 foot right of way for access and anything for which a road may be used, over and across a strip of land 25.0 feet on each side of and parallel to the following described centerline, to be used in common with other parties: Beginning at a point South 0 degrees 1156 West 329.88 feet along the Section line from the East Quarter corner of Section 26, Township 4 North, Range 2 West, Salt Lake n Meridian, and thence North 89 degrees 5150 West 2645.60 feet to the Quarter Section line. run-nig- for the purpose of paying obligations secured by said Deed of Trust including fees, charges and expenses of Trustee, advances, if any, under the terms of said Deed, interest thereon and the unpaid principal of the Note secured by said Deed of Trust with interest thereon as in said Note and by law provided. Dated: December 14, 1984 SECURITY TITLE COMPANY, Trustee By Gordon Gurr Its Owner and Sole Proprietor Published in the Davis News Journal First publication Dec. 19, 1984 Last publication Jan. 2, 1985 Issue No. 47 R-2- NOTICE OF INTENT TO REQUEST RELEASE OF FUNDS (NOlRROF) TO ALL Location City, County, of Project a. Approximately 1965 West 1700 South, Syracuse b. Approximate- County will request the State to release Federal funds under Title I of the Housing and Community Development act of 1974 for the fol(PL lowing project: Project, Title or Davis County Economic Develop- ment Revolving Loan Fund DI- Syracuse) PURPOSE AND PERIOD OF USE: Domestic: 1 the granting of this application with reasons therefore must be filed in duplicate with the State Engineer, 1636 West North Temple, Salt Lake City, Utah 84116 on or before January 26, 1985. c. 320 North e d. 638 South Main Street, Clearfield Estimated Cost of por- $43,700 $37,950 $53,560 $8,600 Stephen B. Watkins Successor Trustee NW'NW'4, Suite 202 Sec. 25, T4N, R2W. Executive Building 455 East 400 South Salt Lake City, Utah Protests resisting 84111 Telephone: (801) 355-288- 6 Published in the Weekly Reflex First publication Dec. 12, 1984 Last publication Dec. 26. 1984 Issue No. 46 Review Record respecting the within project has been made by the above-nameCounty which documents the environmental review of the project. This Environmental Review Record is on d file at the above address listed below and is available for public examination and copying, upon re- quest. Davis County will undertake the project described above with Block Grant funds from the State under Title I of the Housing and Community Development Act of 1974. Davis County is certifying to STATE that Davis County and Commissioner Glen E. Saunders, in his offin cial capacity as Cjr..-missio- Chairman, consent to accept the jurisdiction of the Federal courts if an action is brought to enforce responsibilities in relation to environmental reviews, decisionmaking, and action; and that these responsibilities have been satisfied. The legal effect of the certification is that upon its approval, Davis County may use the Block Grant funds, and STATE will have satisfied its responsibilities under the National Policy Act of 1969. STATE will accept an objection to its approval of the release of funds and acceptance of the certification only if it is on one of the following bases: (a) That the certification was not in fact executed by the chief executive officer or other officer of applicant approved by STATE: or (b) that apenvironmen- tal review record for the project indicates omission of a required decision, finding, or step applicable to the project in the Environmental Review Process. Objections must be prepared and submitted in accordance with the required procedure (24 CFR Part 58), and may be addressed to STATE Department of Community and Economic Development, 6290 State office Building, Salt Lake City, Utah 84224. Objections to the release of funds on bases other than those stated above will not considered by be DATED this 6 day of December, 1984. Dee C. Hansen, P.E. Environmental plicants States family. Stockwatering: 2 head of livestock. Irrigation: From Apr I to Oct 3 , total acreage 0.50 acs., sole supply 0.50 acs. PLACE OF STATE. No objection received after January 3, 1985 will be consi- dered by STATE. Name and Address of Chief Executive officer of Applicant: Glen E. Saunders, Chairman, Davis County Commission, P.O. Box 618, Farmington, Utah 84025 County Clipper on Dec. 19, 1984 Issue No. 47 C-5- Published in the Weekly Reflex on Dec. 19, 1984 Issue No. 47 NOTICE TO WATER USERS The following appli-cation(- s) have been filed with the State Engineer to appropriate water in Davis County throughout the entire year unless otherwise STATE ENGINEER NOTICE OF SHERIFFS SALE Published in the Davis News Journal on Dec. 12, 19, & 26, 1984. Issue No. 46 ON REAL PROPERTY Civil No. OF UTAH DIS- Trident Financial TRICT COURT OF DAVIS COUNTY, STATE OF UTAH Corporation, a Netherlands corporation CIVIL NO. 36360 -- L. DONNA vs- American Arms In- ternational, Inc., a FLOYD, Plaintiff, Nevada corporation; vs. RYAN MICHAEL S. FLOYD, Defendant. THE STATE OF UTAH TO RYAN S. MICHAEL Charles W. Goff; and Charles W Goff, Jr., TO BE SOLD AT A SHERIFF'S SALE on the 27th day of December, 1984, at the hour of 1 :45 AM at the north front door of the Davis County Courthouse in Farmington, Davis County, Utah, all the right, title and interest of the defendant, Charles W Goff and Charles W Goff Jr., in and to the 1 FLOYD: You are hereby summoned and required to file an answer in writing to a Complaint that has been filed with the Clerk of Davis County Court, on the above non-exem- entitled case, and serve upon or mail a copy of said answer to SCOTT W. HOLT, Plaintiff s Attorney, at 26 North Main Street, Layton, Utah 84041 . If you fail to do so within 30 days, judgment by default will be taken against you for the, relief demanded in said Complaint. SCOTT W. HOLT Attorney at Law 26 North Main Street Layton, Utah 84041 4 Telephone: (801) 546-126- following described real property, to wit: Lot 33, CHERRY WOOD according to the official plat thereof situated Davis in County, State of Utah AKA: . 469 Lauralwood Drive, Kaysville, Utah PAYMENT TO BE MADE IN lawful money of the United States of America. SUBJECT TO any liens. DATED AT Published in the Weekly Reflex First publication Dec. 12, 1984 Last publication Jan. Issue No. 46 COUNTY, UTAH, this 26th day of November, 1984. Brant L. Johnson, Sheriff Davis County R-2- NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING By: Stan Tebbs Deputy Sheriff Notice is hereby given that on Monday, January 7, 1985 at 2:00 P.M. in Room 126 of the Davis County Farming-ton- FARM-INGTO- DAVIS 2, 1985 Courthouse, 1 COURT OF DAVIS COUNTY. STATE THE SECOND IN JUDICIAL C83-774- IN THE DISTRICT LEGAL NOTICE , Utah, a public hearing will be held for the purpose of soliciting suggestions for projects that Davis Attorney: Stephen B Mitchell Elks Building 139 East South Temple Suite 1 Salt Lake City, Utah 84111 355-667- 7 Published in the Week- ly Reflex County should consider in applying for Community Development Block Grant funds in First publication Dec. 5, 1984 Last publication Dec. 1985. All Issue No. interested persons are invited to attend and will be given an opportunity to be heard. Michael G. Allphin Davis County Clerk Published in the Davis County Clipper on Dec. 19, 1984 Issue No. 47 Published in the Weekly Reflex on Dec. 19, . 7 1984 Issue No. 47 NOTICE OF TRUSTEES SALE 19, 1984 45 4 PUBLIC NOTICE IS NOTICE HEREBY GIVEN that the Annual Meeting Schedule of the Board of Education of Davis County School District for the 1985 calendar year is as follows: REGULAR MEETING DATES January 8th and 15th (8:00 p.m. at Layton Elementary School) February 5th and 19th The following de- scribed real property will be sold at public auction to the highest bidder without warranty as to title, possession or encumbrances, at the north front door of the Davis County Courthouse, State and Main Streets, Farmington, Utah, on the 8th day of January, 1985, at 12:00 oclock noon of said day: All of Lot 26, COLONIAL PARK SUBDIVISION, in the City of Layton, Davis County, Utah, according to the official plat thereof. A Mouse In The Home to make a little house for her kiddies. He said Im not going downstairs again till they leave. By FLORENCE BITTNER Person-to-Perso- n Financial Center of Utah. The purchase price is payable in lawful money of the United R2W (3 miles SE of Main Street, tion: a. b. c. d. An Citicorp Cor. Sec. 25, T4N, USE: - CDBG non-judici- VERSION: (1)S. 1190 ft, E. 158 ft. from NW West Center Street, Centerville ly 1500 Kays-vill- these proceedings is dated Mav 9, 1983, and was executed by Frank L. Mecham and Florence V. Mecham, husband and wife, in favor of 1 Published in the Davis IN- TERESTED AGENCIES, GROUPS AND PERSONS: On or about December 26, 1984 Davis Name Purpose or Nature of Project - Loans for private business expansion for creation of jobs for lowmedium income persons Project The Trust Deed being foreclosed by South Fort Lane, Right to Know High Time Commonly known as 950 Last 150 South. Layton, Utah 84041. Carolyn Caldwell, 338 Public Notice Advertising Protects Your j designated. Locations in SLB&M. (A60444) March 5th and 19th April 16th May 7th and 21st June 4th and 18th July 16th August 6th and 20th September 3rd and 17th October 1st and 15th November 5th and The advant of effective mouse poisons have eliminated from most house of our houses the age-ol- d guest; mama mouse and her babies. Each fall as the weather becomes cold, the outdoors mice move inside and the annual war is declared. WITHIN A couple of weeks, the uninvited guests have been eliminated from the house. This year they found mouse heaven. They got into a bag of stored wheat and before 1 really knew they were there, mama had invited her friends and relations and they set up housekeeping. I am the daughter of a flour miller. Probably todays flour mills are mouse-prooProbably. We hope they are. Since the beginning of time flour mills have had mice. My father kept a couple of cats which we children were not allowed to feed or pet. If they were wild and hungry, they kept the mice population within reasonable limits. December 3rd meetings of the Board of Education of Davis County School District are held in the Board Room on the first floor of the Board of Education of Davis County School District Administration Center at 45 East State Street. 1 f. IT REALLY wasn't much of a battle. The poor little mice didn't have a chance against all the tools of modern warfare; flame throwers. bacterial warfare, neutron bombs. To tell the truth, once the wheat went, they ate the poison grain just as they have all the other autumns. IT WOULD have been futile for me to be afraid of mice. Barns have mice and we all had a barn in the back of the house. Orchards and wheat fields and hay stacks have mice. We accepted mice as part of life like bluebirds or chipmunks or skunks or pairie dog towns. Some places were out of bounds for mice and women made constant war on them, but it was status quo and everyone accepted them as we did houseflies. Cast ate mice. Cats did not eat prepared food out of a can placed in a dish. If a cat expected to keep food in its stomach, it went out and caught mice. Some dogs were good While I was in a throwing mood, all sorts of corners and cupboards got cleaned out. There ought to be a law requiring us all to move once every ten years just to get rid of all the keepsakes we cant bearto part with. HALF THE stuff I threw away should have gone out the same day it came in. Once you decide to keep an object, it just lies quielty in its little spot until somone tosses it out. The idea is dont put it away in the first place. I tell myself that again every time I clean out an d obscure nook in my mousers, but most dogs aren't quick enough. DOGS KEPT the cat population down as most barn cats werent housepets, and cats can be almost as prolific as mice. Call it the balance of nature, or call it cruel and barbaric. The important thing was it worked. A good cat and a supply over-burdene- house. End of the mice sage. The base- ment is so clean I could hold a party. Just don't anyone invite any more mice. of mouse traps were standard equipment in every home. You can smell a mouse long before you see one to know you've been invaded. You see their droppings which we called mouse tracks. If you're really infested, you find little pieces of chewed up paper which mama mouse uses to make her nest. If she cant find paper, she chews up cloth or wood. Given time and help from friends and relations, mice can chew little holes in walls and make their own cunning little tunnels all through the house. Thats when getting rid of them really becomes a professional military campaign. Stationary Fronts How is a stationary front formed? What causes most of them in tall and winter? A ' till v he cold air mass. In summary, the stationary front .s set up when a warm and cold air mass meet and neither is strong enough to dissipate the other. THE WARM air mass sends its winds parallel to the juncture line the stationary front), but in the cold air mass. IT IS sense of humor is what makes you laugh at something which would make you mad if it happened to you. Coast Guard Magazine. A ding look. He said a mouse is eating my bedroom? Dont worry, I said. She wont eat all of it. Just enough ter as business BOARD OF EDUCATION DAVIS COUNTY SCHOOL DISTRICT By: Roger C. Glines Clerk of the Board in the Davis County Clipper on Dec. 19, 1984 Issue No. 46 -- New Years Week DEADLINES re- quires. If any meeting date falls on a legal holiday, the meeting will be considered cancelled or rescheduled by the Board of Education and public notice will be given of such new meeting date. Published exactl- y the opposite direction of those of 1 Farmington. Utah on the above mentioned first and third Tuesdays of each month, commencing at 7:00 oclock p.m. and continuing as long thereaf- as far as forward movement is concerned. The warm air mass sends its winds parallel to the juncture line 'the stationary fionl). but in exact-lthe opposite direction of those of MY KIDS w'ent downstairs and came up to tell me there was a funny smell in the basement storage room. I said I know. Weve got mice. They said, but it smells bad. I said I know'. Mice smell bad. They said. Oh, I didn't know that. Warren came upstairs one morning during Thanksgiving vacation to report he had heard strange little sounds in the walls during the said know. That was a night. mouse chew'ing on the house. He gave me that youve got to be kid1 STATIONARY front usually results from the movement of a cold air mass into a mass of warmer air. Instead of forcing a passage and breaking through sometimes he cold front's winds blow parallel io the juncture of the two air nasses. The cold air mass thus stands SUDDENLY, around Thanksgiving, I discovered all of the above. When I heard little chewing noises, in distant parts of the house, I knew I had an invasion. Most years, poison wheat takes care of them in short time, but this year they just turned up their pointed little noses at poison wheat. They liked the big bag of wheat and there was enough there to last out several winters. They had found mouse heaven. 19th The said regular SO I opened an all out campaign. The wheat went first. Then out came the vaccum cleaner, mop and scrub brush. Then poison wheat and mouse traps. The dog was a lot of help. She barked her silly head rousted another off whenever mouse. She never caught one, but she may have scared one to death. Carol said, how do you get rid of them? I looked at her and thought of all the cartoons of women standing on chairs shrieking at the sight of a mouse. I tried that once, found that the mouse wasn't impressed and no one came to my rescue. Mother said get down off that chair and behave yourself. End of the mouse hysterics. I repeated the admonition to my daughter who had retreated to her bedroom, and was perched on her bed. She refused to budge until the mouse war was decided one way or another. 1 Published in the Weekly Reflex on Dec. 19. 1984 Issue No. 46 Display Ads Fri. Dec. 21 at 6 p.m. News & Photos Wed. Dec. 26 at 6 p.m. WIC Program Moves Office FARMINGTON - The (WIC) program has moved to 37 N. Main in Farmington and may be reached by telephoning -- 451-561- Women-Infant-Childr- 8. THEYVE MOVED from the Courthouse basement and also have a Clearfield office at 934 S. 1000 E. Those interested in the nutritional assistance program for 5 may visit Farmington on Thursdays at or Clearfield Fridays at 10:30 a.m. for orientation. 1 1 4 i |