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Show Page August 21, THE JOURNAL 2 An Ordinance tin1 Authorizing tin Mayor and Cor- City Recorder of Layton City baWeber poration to petition the District for sin Water Conservancy declarand an allotment of water ing an emergency. RE IT ORDAINED RY THE CITY COUNCIL OF LAYTON CITY CORPORATION: Section 1. The public convenience and necessity require that the Lay-to- n City Corporation petition the Weber Basin Water Conservancy District for the allotment of 7.50 of Weber Rasin Project acre-fewater for municipal use, and the are Mayor and the City Recorder and execute hereby authorized to file the following petition: PETITION TO WERER RASIN WATER CONSERVANCY DISTRICT FOR ALLOTMENT OF WATER FOR MUNICIPAL USE. Layton City Corporation, a municipal corporation of the State of Utah, hereinafter referred to as the City, hereby applies to the Weber Rasin Water Conservancy District, hereinafter referred to as the District, for the allotment of of Weber Basin 750 acre-fe- such bonds as the City shall de-- j sire and the District shall have water available for the City, as herein set forth. Subsequent to the retirement of all such bonds the annual amount shall not include therein the charge specified in item l(b) of paragraph 1. The first pay-- ! meat of the amount specified in item (c) shall be made on January I of the first year in which water is available for1 use by the City and subsequent payments shall be made on January of each year f 1 thereafter. 5. The annual amount specified shall be paid paragraph whether or not all or any part of the water allotted as hereinabove provided is called for or used by the City. The District may, at its election, reduce such annual amount in any year in which for any reason the full amount is not needed by the District for the purposes therein specified. I. Class R taxes shall be levied annually by the Board of Directors of the District upon property within the City, as provided by Section Utah (ode Annotated, 1!53, as amended by Chapter 132, Laws of Utah, 1055, at rates sufficient to produce the annual amount specified in paragraph 1, less any amount paid or undertakfor water en to be paid from water revenues, annually Project followthe In and from any other source. upon use, municipal conditions: and levies the such terms annual making ing for Board of Directors of the District 1. Payment to the District water so allotted shall be made in shall take into account the defian annual amount to consist of ciencies and defaults of prior years the total of the following items: and shall make ample provision for the payment thereof. of (a) $0.50 per acre-fo5. Water allotted herein shall he the water allotted for each of first ten years in which water made available to the City and shall be measured at treatment is available for use by the acre-foplant unless the City and the DisCity, and $15.00 per each trict otherwise mutually agree. of water allotted for shall meet minimum on Such water year thereafter, to apply standards for municipal water esthe Districts obligations under tablished by the Department of repayment contract No. Health of the State of Utah, and 1052, December 12, dated United States Public Health the and between the United States not be the responService. shall It the District, of sibility of the District to provide (b) $11.00 per acre-fofacilities to convey water from such water allotted for each of the which in point of delivery to the place of first three years use unless otherwise agreed in use by water is available for acre-fowriting by the District and the the City, $15.00 per City. for each of the next succeed0. In the event there is a shortand $10.00 three years, ing allotof project water caused by water of acre-foage per drouth, inaccuracy in distribution ted for each year thereafter, not resulting from negligence, hosmade which shall be a charge tile diversion, prior or superior be for the purpose of, and to claims, or other causes not within used by the District to pay to the control of the District no liaand of amount that principal collection bility shall accrue against the Disbank interest, trict. or the United States, or any charges for payment of prinreof their officers, agents or employcipal and interest, and to and ees, or either of them for any damon, demption premiums direct or indirect, arising fund reserve age, a for, establish therefrom and the payment to the hereafter and bonds heretofore District issued by the District pursuant provided for herein shall not be reduced because of any such to authorization granted at the election held therein on Deshortage or damage. During periods of water shortage allocations and 1!52. cember C, of municipal water shall have first (c) a fair proportionate amount of estimated operating priority. If there should ever be and maintenance charges for any shortage of municipal water, deliveries of water allotted purthe next succeeding calendar suant to this petition shall be reyear. Such fair proportionate duced in the proportion that the amount shall be determined dinumber of acre-feof such shorteach year by the board of rectors of the District and the age as determined by the District bears to the total number of acre-fedetermination shall be final and allocated for municipal use. is estimate such conclusive. If 7. more or less than the actual Any allotment of water made cost thereof, an appropriate pursuant to this petition shall be the made in will be subject to the Water Conservancy adjustment Act of Utah, Title 73, Chapter 0, annual amount for the year Utah Code Annotated, 1053, as which for following the year amended, the rules and regulations the estimate was made. 2. The first payment of the of the Board of Directors of the amount specified in item (a) of District, and the Repayment Conparagraph 1 hereof, shall be made tract between the United States on January 1 of the year follow- and the District. This petition is made pursuant ing the first full calendar year in to a directive of the legislative body which project water is available for use by the City and shall be in of Layton City Corporation, towit, payment for water so made avail- its Council as evidenced by Ordiable in such first full calendar year. nance No. 1 adopted by the City Subsequent payments shall be Council of the City on the 7th day made on January 1 of each year of June. 1054, a copy of which is thereafter until payment in full of attached hereto. Dated this 7th day of June, 1054. that part of the construction obliDistrict apportioned ELIAS A. DAWSON, gation of the to the development unit in which Mayor. the City is located. The first pay- ATTEST: ment of the amount specified in JOHN M. PARKS, item (b) shall be made on January City Recorder. 1 of the first year in which proj(SEAL) ect water is available for use by Section 2. An emergency is herethe City. Subsequent payments by declared, and it is necessary for shall be made on January 1 of each the peace, health, and safety of the year thereafter for a period of 40 inhabitants of the Layton City years from said date, and as long Corporation that this ordinance thereafter as any of the bonds shall take effect immediately upon hereinabove referred to or any its passage, approval and publishbonds issued to refund any such ing as provided by law. Passed by majority vote of the bonds, remain outstanding, and for as long after the final payment members present of the City Coun- in 1 et 73-b-1- 7, et ot 1951 at $15.5o to siu.oo. Heavy utility bulls brought $17.oo late in the week. Cutter kinds down to $12.. LIVESTOCK Commercial to choice calves sold at $lb.5o to 10.00, a lew reached $l!.5o to $2o.oo. Odd good active was 1051 There AUGUST, and choice vealers brought $lt.M this cow on market the trading to $20.5o. Cull and utility calves sold week. Prices were 50c to $1.00 high- at $lo.oo to .10. oo. er. Salable cattle receipts were A few steers weighing 05o to somewhat less than a week ago. N20.oo Prices were generally steady on Iihio lbs. sold as feeders at most classes. Choice steers and to 21.25. Medium and good light heifers moved fairly well but sales feeders brought $17.50 to $l'..oo. were draggy on bulls. Calves and Common and medium kinds $ll.oo feeder vealers were strong to 50c higher. to $17. oo. Medium and good to $174(0. The hog market showed a firmer heifers sold at. 15,oo cows stock undertone. Butcher hogs were $l.oo Common and medium to $1.50 higher, sows were $1.5o to! brought so.5o to 11.75. 2.50 higher. Receipts increased! The bulk of choice butcher hogs above a week ago. Trading on weighing lso to 255 lbs. sold at lambs was slow. $23.00 to $2t.oo. A few loads weigh, Sev- One load of high choice fed ing to 2lo lbs. brought 21.25. of grain feds sold at $2 1.50, steers, averaging 1500 lbs., sold at eral lots 210 to 250 lb. $25.00. The bulk of good and choice to $25,oo. Medium oo to $22.25. A fed steers weighing under lloo lbs., weights sold at 22. few choice hogs weighing to 350 brought $22.00 to $23.50. Late sales on good grade steers weighing lbs. sold at $i:.oo to $21.00. Sows under boo lbs. were down to $21.00. and gilts averaging 2 so to It 5 lbs. Most commercial steers brought sold at $ l(!.oo to lvoo. Choice sows to loo lbs. brought; $ls.oo to $20.50. Utility and com- weighing 20 $10.00 to $17.oo, heavier weights mercial kinds $15.00 to $17.50. down to $15.00, A few loads of good and choice Odd head of choice lambs sold at fed heifers sold at $19.00 to $22.00. Most kinds sold at $17.50 to Commercial and low good grass and $10.00. A few yearlings and wethers short fed heifers brought $10.00 to $1.50. brought o.oo to $10.00. (. -- j $ s.5i 1 Utility and commercial cows sold ot SEN. ESTES KEFAUVER of Tennessee talks to reporters In Washington after he won the Democratic nomination for e second term. The 1952 Presidential candidate won easily despite a spirited campaign by Rep. Pat Sutton, who charged Kefauver with being an "internationalist. (International) The JOURNAL weekly new spaper published in the interests of the residents of Davis County, at Layton, Utah. A at $11.50 to $14.00. Several loads of young cows brought up to $15.00. Canners and cutters mostly $U.0o to $1 l.oo. Shelly canners down to matter at Entered as second-clas- s Lavton, Utah, under the Act of $s.oo. March 1879. 8, Utility and commercial bulls sold ot Published By INLAND PRINTING CO. Phone: Kaysville 10 Regains Sight ot utaii ot awiaatiqv NATIONAL EDITORIAL ASSOCIATION Xatl Advertising Representative Newspaper Advertising Service. 222 No. Michigan Ave. Chicago, 111. Subscription: $1.00 Per Year Payable in Advance. In combination with The Weekly Reflex, $3.00 per year. Lloyd E. Anderson Editor Manager Mary B. Bowring News Editor J. V. Woolsey by long distance et et telephone Remember, reduced rates are in effect daily after 6 p.m. and all Display Advertising Manager hone day Sundays. Long distance calls now cost you less because Federal Excise Taxes have been reduced. REFLEX and DENZIl MEYERS, IB, of India, who came to New York for an opera- LEADER tion and is now able to see with one eye. Is shown broadcasting through the Voice of America a message to his home town, in the state of Madhya Pardesh. Doctors transplanted a cornea in the boys ye and in six months will perform a similar operation on the other cil ey. Fast Action Want Ads Reach Over (International) of Layton City Homes in Davis County For Only . . . Corporation, Utah, this 7th day of June, 1054. ELIAS A. DAWSON, A TTFT- (SEAL) Mayor; - JOHN M. PARK, City Recorder. Published in The Journal gust 14 and 21, 1054. 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