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Show 14 More development planned in Park City Ford will honor Marriott JOSEPH H. JENKINS PRESIDENT Jenkins Insurance & Investment Agency OFFICE: 2889 EAST 3300 SOUTH SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH 84109 BUS. 801 467-606- 1, RES. 278-052- 8 Gerald Ford has confirmed an invitation to address a banquet honoring J. Willard Marriott Nov. 29. The banquet, to be held at the Hotel Utah, will edition celebrate the printing of Marriotts biography by Deseret Publishing Co. The book was authored by Robert OBrien, senior editor of Readers Digest. A native Utahn, Marriott has risen to corporate fame through the Marriott Corporafirst tion, operator of hotels, restaurants and airline food services nation. of dollars in residential developments are planned for Park City in the next 15 years, and commercial development wont be far behind. The Royal Street Land Company got the green light for its Deer Valley Resort master plan from the Park City Commission. The 1,579 acres will be developed in six phases stretching over 15 years for an eventual investment of $150 million. The proposed recreational and residential development is a cooperative venture of Royal Street Land Co. of New Orleans and the Millions throughtout the 9 Lon Investment Co., owned by Murray First Thrift. To be constructed by Neal Davidson, the subdivision will be located on 324 acres annexed to the city. The exact number of upit developments for the subdivision has not yet been determined. Royal Street president Warren King says Deer Creek will include an golf course, tennis courts, ski lifts and slopes. 18-ho- le Farmers get higher prices Prices received by Utah farmers and ranchers were generally higher in t. compared with But while livestock prices were higher, crops prices dropped, according to the Utah Crop and Livestock Reporting Service, U.S.D.A. Meat Animals and Wool: The price received for cows was $26.30 mid-Septemb- DRAPERY CLEANING & PROFESSIONAL DRY CLEANING er mid-Augus- mid-Septemb- er per cwt. compared with $26.00 in August. Calves increased from $36.50 per cwt. in August to $38.80 in September. Steers and heifers went from $36.90 per cwt. in August to $37.10 in Lambs were September. $50.60 90 Sheep $10.20 per cwt. in September-u- p cents from August. also increased from per cwt. in August to $11.00 in September, an increase of 80 cents. Hogs at the U.S. level decreased form $42.80 per cwt. in August to $40.20 in September. Crops: Barley dropped 3 cents to a $1.64 per bushel in " It makes the office look so much better!" Alfalfa hay dropped $3.50 making the September. September, a $4.50 decrease from August. Other hay also dropped $3.50 making the price an even $50,00 per ton. Wheat at the U.S. level rose from $2.13 per bushel last month to $2.17 in September. Com decreased at the U.S. level from $1.63 per bushel in August to $1.59 in September. Dairy and Poultry: Prices received for milk cows increased from $500.00 per head in August to $510.00 in September. Milk was $9.35 per cwt in September, 15 cents higher than in August. Turkeys were up 1 cent at 35 cents a pound in September. Eggs at the U.S. level were 52.6 cents per dozen compar-wit- h 51.5 cents in August. Feed: Prices paid for feed w ere lower in September compared to August. All were down, ranging from a 2 to 3 percent decrease for bran and com meal to a 10 percent decline for turkey grower and middlings. Dairy feed (16 percent protein) was $116.00 September FOR DRAPERY PICK-U- P, REMOVAL, CLEANING AND REHANGING: FINE DRY CLEANING 1871 South 7th East 487-854- 8 per ton compared with $123.00 in August, a 6 percent decline. |