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Show VEEKLY REFLEX DAVIS NEWS JOURNAL, OCTOBER 18, 1979 vsv Diversification Aiding Shoe Companies NOTICE OF SALE OF against you for the relief DAVIS COUNTY SURPLUS REAL PROPERTY Notice is hereby given that Davis County will sell at a Public Auction in the County Commission Room Farmington, Utah at 12:00 noon on the 6th day of November 1979 the following described real property known as play lot iocated at approximately 185 East 3000 South: Beginning at the northweast corner of Lot 3, Star Heights Subdivision which is a part of Section 6, Township 1 North, Range 1 East, Salt Lake Base and Meridian and part of Section 31, Township Range 1 1979. By DONALD C. HUGHES, JR. Chambers, County 126, Courthouse, demanded in said complaint, which has been filed with the Clerk of said Court. This is an action for divorce. Dated this 14th day of June, 2 Attorney for Plaintiff Published in the The Weekly Reflex The domestic shoe industry has long been plagued by problems preventing the achievement of a consistent earnings record. Over the past three decades, the chief obs- 1979 1979 ad- vance in operating expenses. ANOTHER trouble spot has been the intense competition d from often more stylishly appealing-nonrub- ber footwear from lower-cost-an- abroad. As a result, U.S. firms have not been able to capitalize extensively on this countrys economic and population growth. Over the past ten years, for example, domestic production of nonrubber shoes and other types of footwear has been al- - HIGH TIME North, Base and Meridian; Published in the Davis County Clipper First publication Oct. 3, 1979 Last publication Oct. 24, 1979 Published in The Weekly Jteftex First publication Oct. 4, 1979 1979 Last publication Oct. 25, X NOTICE TO CREDITORS '' AND ANNOUNCEMENT OF APPOINTMENT . Probate No. 2862 IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF DAVIS COUNTY, STATE OF UTAH In The Matter Of The Estate Of JONES MYRTLE PHILLIPS, ; Deceased. ;The undersigned hereby announce their appointment as Personal Representatives of the above estate. All persons having claims against the above estate are required to present them to the undersigned or to the Clerk of the Court, Courthouse Building, Farmington, Utah, 84025, on or before the 10th day of January, A.D., 1978, or the said claims shall be forever barred. ALAN B. BLOOD 33 South Main Kaysville, Utah 84037 Clifford G. Green 33 South Main Kaysville, Utah 84037 - t. Milton J. Hess Attorney for Estate 40 South 125 East Clearfield, Utah 84015 825-222- 5 Published in The Weekly Reflex First publication Oct, 4, Last publication Oct. 18, 1079 1979 IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF DAVIS COUNTY, STATE OF UTAH CONNIE LINN (HIGGS) VonCOLLN, Plaintiff, vs. ROBERT EDWARD VonCOLLN, Defendant. THE STATE OF UTAH TO THE ABOVE-NAME- D DEFENDANT: are hereby summoned and required to file an answer in writing to the attached of complaint with the Clerk d Court, and the to serve upon, or mail to You above-entitle- DONALD C. HUGHES, Plaintiffs attorney, JR., 2411 Kiesel Avenue, Suite 101, Og- den, Utah, a copy of said answer, within 20 days after service of this summons upon you. If you fail so to do, judgment by default will be taken IN RECENT years, however, the shoe industry has been making serious efforts to combat its difficulties, with some of the leading companies managing to rack up more sa- tisfactory marks in annual sales, eamings, and dividend distributions. Among tactics used has been the relocation of production facilities in regions, both at home and abroad. In modern addition, management techniques have been adopted in product designing, production procedures, and marketing and promotion strategies. Revitalization dustry Program for study of the impact of computerized design and production methods, to assess the value of new tech- If we had to pay admission to the canyons this week, would be a by appointment only show. ONLY NATURE would dare. If an artist painted those colors on his canvas, he would be accused of garrish overstatement. Only nature could get away with that bright red oak brush against the gold aspen with a dark green fir as counterpoint and a backdrop of grey and brown rock. Bare fingers of already denuded branches frame the picture and the gold of fallen leaves is a new minted carpet. But then, life has always been too strong for make believe. Any writer knows he must mute reality. So much that is part of living would not be accepted in a story. It would be called contrived or theatrical. Tone it down if' you want to reproduce it. HOW OFTEN does an artist succeed in painting a sunset? Sunsets are too transitory to capture and too brilliant to reproduce. The old masters studied all their lives and passed on their learning to their students, but mere pigment on canvas is a poor substitute for light. Red from a tube cannot reproduce the clouds set aflame by the sinking sun. Edna St. Vincent Millay said it: Lord, I do fear Thoust made the world too beautiful this year. My soul is all but out of me... NATURE PRODUCES her shows without encore. No two sunsets are identical. The same bird will never alight in just that way on that bare branch again, silh. jetted against the blue sky. ToAs Robert Frost said, Nothing gold can stay. morrow is too late, the curtain will come down, leaves will fall, children grow up. ' LEAVES WONT wait. Theyre here today, flaming vermillion, stiff and rustling with approaching death. Tomorrow is too late. Tomorrow they lie on the brown earth, carpet for squirrels. We lament the .. ing otsummer and bemoan the in climes with one season, life but of winter, approach would be played out against a static backdrop. Summer as to be forgotten. always could become so uninteresting Four seasons mark life off into segements to be appreciated, each for its special spice. I I MUST come back and bring my children, said, I was in a hurry. This Saturday we will bring a picnic sit and feel sun and smell earth and hear water. But Saturdays are such crammed full days and theres only one per week. Next week, I thought, but children have plans and leaves wont wait. SEASONS COME every year, but our lives are too full to notice them. There is never time to enjoy them. Children have time, and in their own unaware way they enjoy the seasons. I suppose most of us know of seasons, we learned as children. Leaves are for rustling through, for piling up and jumping in, for raking up and burning with tingling acrid smoke. On crusty ice mornings, each puddle needs to be cracked carefully around the edges, watching the ice needles spread out and out until they splinter. SNOW IS for making trails and snow angels and playing fox and geese and for building forts and for snowballs and snowmen. Snow is for sleigh riding and for sliding on. Spring is for marbles and jump rope and hop scotch and games on the new green grass. Summer is for all day and far into the cool evenings. Summer is for lying on grass, making animals and people out of clouds. Summer is for counting birds and catching grasshoppers and digging in the dirt. Adults dont need seasons. Weather and the affairs of nature are extraneous to our world except for the few minutes between car and building and for the upkeep of yard and cars. I KNOW theres fishing season and deer season, and skiing and golfing weather. But these things are incidentals in the lives of adults. Theyre not the stuff and substance of our days the way they were when we were children and pressed our noses to the window waiting for the snow to get deep enough for snowmen. If I had to pay admission to the canyons this week Id go and sit in reverence at a display too garish for any showman to dare. BUT ITS only nature, and it will come again next year, and the next. Not quite the same, but there will be another spring and another display of color in the fall and next year Ill go. One of these years Ill pack a lunch and take the children and well soak up the beauty till we have our fill. cant do that. The children are gone. They I wasnt watching and they have their own when grew up lives now, and its forever too late. Oh well. There will be time to take my grandchildren. NO, WAIT. I wide footwear center. AS TO THE matter of combating foreign imports, some notable benefits have resulted from the governments negotiations leading to the limitation of shoe imports from Taiwan and South Korea. It SKATING OFFICERS still remains to be seen, The 1979-8- 0 season of the Utah Figure Skating Club those be renewed at whether however, agreements will the conclusion of their four-ye- began with its opening social ar recently at the Bountiful terms, and whether similar restraints can be negotiated with other nations. , years, some leading domestic shoe manufacturers and re-- , tailers have been able to strengthen their financial positions and now face the future more optimistically. SHOE RETAILING will benefit in the period ahead from the expansion in those segments of the population with high consumption and a rapid growth of income. This promise must, of be course, tempered somewhat by soaring costs for labor, raw materials (particularly for hides, which are in tight supply), and shipping. . .as well as by the temporary weakening of the economy. the NEVERTHELESS, Research Department of Bab-soReports is of the opinion that prospects for the shoe industry as a whole deserve to be viewed constructively. While our current recom- for stock purchases focus upon issues in fields with investment opportunities that we believe to be more attractive than those in the shoe group, investors already holding shares of the leading shoe producers and re- tailers would appear to have ample justification for maintaining their commitments because of their basic values. Ex-Smok- ers In America 29.2 Million Although millions of Americans are still cigarette addicts, the most encouraging news in recent years comes from the National Center for Health Statistics, which reports that 29.2 million Americans are now LAST YEAR alone some Americans had a try at stopping the 17,000,000 million habit. Of between that number, three and four million actually stopped! Its encouraging to know that an increasing number of Americans are breaking the even as habit each year cigarette companies aim ads at the young and vulnerable to get them started early. BLACKS AND women are not doing as well, in their efforts to stop, as white males. With heavy smoking cause of so much serious the ill- ness and death, cute, rationalizing remarks about this grim danger are no longer appropriate or fashionable. Recreation Center Ice Rink. The junior club officers were elected following a fun even- , With an improvement in T operating results in recent ' mendations but and 'A industrial for nology procedures, and to see what lessons can be learned from the detailed financing and management of an industry- it rs SUMMONS Civil No. 26409 most consistently in a downtrend while foreign imports have been steadily on the rise. This has been especially troublesome in the case of womens shoes. SINCE July 1977, the government has made several grants under the Footwear In- By FLORENCE BITTNER Davis County Clerk x lucrative profit margins. The government has been and other footwear. Efforts have thus far met with only modest success, although persistence may bring more substantial results in the future, trying to aid the industry in stimulating exports of shoes ConL 0.248 RODNEY W. WALKER V merchandising of various sorts of apparel and accesnormal sories, which-und- er circumstances-enjo- y more East, Salt Lake Terms of sale are cash upon award of bid. The Davis County Commission reserves the right to accept or reject any and all bids. wJ SOME COMPANIES have made significant strides in establishing chains of retail shoe outlets. In certain such instances, operations have been broadened to include the and running thence N 89 13 E 10.0 feet along the South line of Park Street to the Northwest corner of Lot 4 said Subdivision, thence S 0 E 80.0 feet along the West line of Lot 4, thence N 89 13 E 25.0 feet along the South line of Lot 4, thence S 0 09 E 240.0 feet, thence N 89 13 E 125.0 feet, thence S 0 09 E 10.0 along the West line of Sue Ave, thence S 89 13 W 160.0 feet, thence N 0 09 W 330.0 feet to the point of beginning. ' w'. tacle to improved profitability has been the relentless large-scal- e First publication Oct. 4, Last publication Oct. 25, J j ing." l)li " V ,j VY ' h i.r JM NEW PRESIDENT of the Junior Club is 14 year old, Stephanie Tanner, a ninth grade student at Bountiful Jr. High School. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Tanner of Bountiful. She is currently working on her fourth figure test. Holly Cook, 8 year old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Paul R. Cook of Bountiful was elected club vice president. Holly attends the third grade at Tolman Elementary School in Bountiful. Holly is Special lnll Junior Club officers of the Utah Figure Skating Club are, 1 to r, Holly Cook, vice president; Stephanie Tanner, president, and Janet Nate, secretary. currently working on her second figure test. NEWLY ELECTED secretary of the club is Janet Nate, 13 year old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Larry Nate of Salt Lake City. Janet is attending the eighth grade at Butler Middle School in Salt Lake Citv. She is currently working on her third figure test. The Utah Figure Skating Club is currently under the direction of Senior Club President Jack Searle of Salt Lake City; Margie Cook, vice RusBountiful; president, . sell Pack, secretary, Salt, Lake City; Jim Larkin, treasurer, Salt Lake City.: Working with the officers to form the board of directors is , Ida Tateoka, Margo Nate, ( Shirley Ray Anderson all of , Salt Lake City; David Welch ; of Bountiful and Wayne Owen -of Layton. x s ff Weekly Newspapers The principle of a free press in the communities of Utah has taken on special significance this week as several government officers acknowledge the service of the states weekly newspapers during National Newspaper Week. GOV. SCOTT M. Matheson said, As Governor of Utah, I am keenly aware of the eminent role played by our 50 members of the Utah Press Association and their weekly newspapers. Our weekly newspapers are the vital link between public servants and their constituents and reflect the community sentiment which public officials and state leaders need to understand in our decision making process. GOV. MATHESON then quoted Adlai Stevenson, who said, The free press is the mother of all our liberties and of our progress under liberty. Concluding, Gov. Matheson said, Without our community newspapers, those of us in public offices would lose our best voice to communicate with the people of our state. The people would be cheated out of their privilege of having a local, interested, community based news outlet, which mirror community needs and concerns. JAMES V. Hansen, speaker of the Utah House of Representatives, said that the weekly papers. . .provide an excellent service to the communities regarding local events, the general spirit of each community, and are very important tools to the citizens which they serve. Mr. Hansen also said that the papers are an especially important part of the culture of our area. Sen. Jgke Gam expressed a very high regard for community papers when he said, I am well aware of the vital and invaluable service weekly newspapers perform for the residents of Utah communities. A communitys identity and values are transmitted within this weekly publication, along with the necessary news and information. IVE ALSO found that newspapers provide a valuable forum for the presentation of all sides of the crucial issues of the day. An educated, informed public is the single most important deterrent to bad government, and as long as newspapers continue to serve the public in a responsible, professional way, we will have a better government and a better society. Sen. Orrin G. Hatch paid tribute to the community papers by saying that they ... are at the forefront of a number of battles for the free enterprise system. He said that the weekly papers do an excellent job. I am always concerned about what is going on with people in Utah, and the weekly papers give me more information than any other source. I dont know what I would do without them, he said. Brady Pointers :rl Dr. Rodney H. Brady of Weber State College likes to keep close to sports, both because he enjoys them, and : because hed like to see the pursuit of excellence a goal in : mens and womens athletics as well as on the academic side. HE HAD made it a practice to start the season for each major sport by appearing before the team for a message of support and good will, and his own message on how the pursuit of excellence can be expedited in sports. The essence of that message has been boiled down into six keys of success, which are presented to each member d card after the of the squad on a small, talk. plastic-covere- THE SIX points stress that in athletics and in life: - There is no substitute for training and thorough . preparation. A WEEKLY newspapers local focus enables it to give space to events directly affecting the lives of its readers, from weddings and sports activities to town celebrations, school happenings and local controversies. But beyond the traditional informational role of the press, Sen. Gam continued, weekly newspapers are able to communicate with their readers on very basic issues in a comfortable, conversational way and then y assess citizen response a true relationship which often doesnt occur with other media. - two-wa- IN MOLDING themselves to the specific interests of several thousand readers, weekly newspapers exist to serve the public in the truest sense. Congressman Dan Marriott explained why he reads Utahs weekly newspapers in his Washington office. It he said, that has been my experience in Washington, when they are at their best, reporters and editors play a key role in conveying information and events to the public and returning public opinion to those who govern. Without this vital link, there would be a serious lack of knowledge on the part of the public and public officials. THE DIFFERENCE between the person who experiences average success and the one who achieves superior success is (1) giving an extra amount of effort after ones total effort presumably has been given and ej (2) giving a final second effort after ones first effort has been 100 percent. - The succdbs of the team is more dependent upon the unified, cooperative, and unselfish efforts of its members w than upon the individual heroics of any single member. I ; $ THE SUCCESS of the team requires that every team member accept totally and completely the counsel, advice, and direction of the appointed leader; that is, the coach. Success comes most often to those who formally set worthwhile goals, develop clear and effective plans vwhich will enable them to reach those goals, and then develop the willpower and determination to follow the plan until the goal is achieved. '3 SUCCESS COMES to those with the mination to succeed. greatest deter- $ |