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Show ANNUAL REPORT OF PRIVATE FOUNDATION Notice is hereby given that the annual report the The Dulany Hunter foundation (a private foundation) is available for inspection at the First Security Bank of Utah, Vernal Branch, 3 East Main Street, Vernal, Utah, during regular business hours by any citizen who requests it within 180 days after the publication. The aforesaid report will be in the custody of Mr. Vard L. Openshaw. By Kay D. Hunter, secretary-treasurer, 618 N.E. 3rd St. Dania, Fl. 33004. Dated this 2nd day of May, 1984. Published in the Vernal Express May 2, 1984. PUBLIC NOTICE The Uintah County Commission will hold a public hearing to discuss the proposed uses for the county's Community Development Block Grant. The hearing will be at 2 p.m. on Monday May 7, 1984, in the County Coun-ty . Commissioner's chambers, Uintah County Coun-ty Courthouse. Proposed uses for the money include: 1) The request of the Golden Age Center for needed funds to make repairs and to match funding fun-ding for a transport van. 2) The request of the Department of Social Services to help purchase pur-chase a facility to house the mentally handicapped. BYRON G. Chairman Uintah Commissioner Published in the Vernal Express April 27 and May 2, 1984. VJhitcrocks Virginia Ferguson Phone 353-4584 Daddy-Daughter party held The Merry Miss Class held their Daddy-Daughter party last week at the Whiterocks branch. The party was well attended, special visitors being Earline Smart and LaRae Moosman. The theme for the pary was Down on the Farm, and Carol Helquist was responsible for the clever decorations. Following the dinner (ordered by the Merry Misses themselves) of barbecued hamburbers, potato chips, slush, ice cream and cake, a program was presented after which party games were played. Muril Moosman has enjoyed a two week visit with her sister, Zelda Lemer of Ogden. Stan and Mary Lynne Hoopes and Bob and Betty King went to Provo. Bob and Sue Peters announce the arrival ar-rival of a new stud colt parents are registered quarter horses. Stan and LaRae Hoopes and children drove to Grand Junction, Colo., last week for an Easter weekend visit with Toni and Joe Weaver. Connie Chapoose suffered a mild stroke last week, and was taken to the University Hospital in Salt Lake City, where she is improving. With continued con-tinued improvement, Connie should return home within this next week. Clifford and Connie Pike drove to Wendover last weekend for a three-day three-day bowling tournament. Marcy Arrowchis, Annie Angel and Vincent Squires took part in the Festival of the Arts in Vernal last week. Connie Pike is the den mother for the cub scouts and held the first meeting at her home last week. Linda Cor-npeach Cor-npeach is assistant den mother. The cub scouts went on a nature hike for their first meeting. Carol Helquist's daughter, Peggy Clayborn, was given a baby shower by her sister-in-law, Connie Clayborn, at the home of Roger Clayborn in Bridgeland. Out of towncrs in attendance atten-dance were three of Mrs. Clayborn's sisters of Salt Lake City; Fern Chidester and Vicky Nelson of Sprtngville and Rosemary Jolly of f " 1 RLggI "TT i J s t I LZZZZZQZZl 7i TP Ti T' 7 7T-Q H- " oZZZZZZl - - 1 t " I I l: : '" 1 I IdJ oo ooooooo & NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'S SALE The following described describ-ed property will be sold at public auction to the highest bidder, payable in lawful money of the United States at the time of sale, at the front steps of the Uintah County Courthouse, Vernal, Uintah Uin-tah County, State of Utah, on June 1, 1984, at 3:00 p.m., on said day, for the purpose of foreclosing a Trust Deed executed by GERALD J. &LULA P. CLARK, husband hus-band and wife, Trustor, in favor of AMERICAN SAVINGS & LOAN ASSOCIATION, as Trustee ' and Beneficiary, covering real property located at 815 East 2850 South, Vernal, Ver-nal, Uintah County, State of Utah, and more particularly par-ticularly described as follows: All of Lot 14 of the High Country Estates Subdivision, Subdivi-sion, according to the official of-ficial plat thereof on file in the office of the Recorder, Uintah County, Coun-ty, Utah. "The present beneficial interest holder is Ralph C. Sutro Company. Dated this 18th day of April, 1984. L. Mark Ferre Successor Trustee 200 American Savings Plaza, 77 West 200 South Salt Lake City, Utah 84101 Published in the Vernal Ver-nal Express April 25, May 2 and 9, 1984. MERRELL County Orem. Following a dessert lunch, party par-ty games were played. Angie Lucero and Raechel Zephier found out that riding double on a bicycle bicy-cle isn't much fun. The bike tipped over, Angie's foot got caught under the bike pedal and her right little finger was dislocated. Raechel sustained slight bruises; both girls were taken to the public health clinic where their injuries were attended to. The Primary Quarterly Activity meeting was well attended, with between bet-ween 30 and 46 children. The theme of the meeting was "Reap What you Sow," and each child planted seeds, planning hopefully, on having a plant to give to his mother on Mother's Day. Each child also has planned a special surprise for his mother no one is telling. tell-ing. Snacks of vegetables and dip, cheese and crackers were served. The Dean Bagleys left last Friday night for Salt Lake City. They stayed overnight with Dean's parents and all drove to the airport Saturday morning for the farewell visit with daughter, Cynthia, who, along with 12 others, were leaving on their mission. Cynthia will be going to South Africa. Following Follow-ing the 10:30 a.m. leave-taking, Dean and Coene and family drove to Provo where they dropped Katy off to visit with Belinda. Belida is moving back home this week and Katy will be helping help-ing her move. Myrtle Hansen, teacher at West Junior High in Roosevelt, participated in the district art festival in Vernal last week. The show lasted for six days and all exhibits were by the students. The exhibit were in the foyer of the auditorium of the Vernal Junior HighMiddle School, and included paints on velvet, watercolors, cartoons, car-toons, pen and ink, basic art and cut paper. The art was created entirely by the students and Myrtle brought many exhibits from West Junior High done by the students there. Aaron Hansen ACROSS 1 A Claw;!) man 5 Hsrrn or Oonahtai 9 Vi0 10 Bo Deer Hu h 19 Don Adam role 18 Snoe Fituwaid 20 French iland 21 Ovw tmliC 22 A dld of imw 24 French omxlhv 25 Group or maw 28 Actor Hunt J 1 fencing rtd .12 KeieaMi 34 Truee accee ve lclw fo tuf I annr) 36 Diction 31 ' ' 64. Whe.ee Vmi" 33 Arlor Bea'tv 4 1 ' Winn Trawi tar 42 A th piece tX ttee DOWN 2 ' the OM - 3 ' l.ltW. Umitu the Pre. t k Aiiiii m llet's go to the Cinematic Sentiments By Dr. Allen Hasson 'Sixteen Candles' () (WW-2 Ch-1 OC-1 Sk-3) Rites-of-passage farce that tries for both the "Porky's" crowd and the sweet sentimentalists. No way. Molly Ringwald ("Tempest") is Samantha, and "Candles" is 2 days in her life: Her birthday that everybody forgot, during which the school geek pursues her at a dance, and the next day when her drunken sister marries and Samantha's dreamboat finally notices her. A few tender moments and inspired sight gags, lots of vulgarity and biz-zare biz-zare happenings. Eclectic, but an audience au-dience pleaser. PG, borderline R: Strongest profanity, profani-ty, nudity, 75 percent sexual references and vulgarity. Treasure of the Yankee Zephyr1 () (WW-2 Ch-2 OC-2 Sk-2) Sharply-produced, light-hearted B-grade B-grade adventure with good guys (Ken Wahl, Donald Pleasence, Leslie Ann Warren) and bad ("A-Team" skipper George Peppard) on the trail of WWII gold buillion in sunken airplane. This could have been broader appeal before "Raiders" spoiled us. Erratic pacing anyway, and stereotypic plot and characters. Impressive New Zealand scenery. Comparatively mild PG: Profanity, brief nudity, lots of shooting but no injuries. Utah farm prices lower According to the Utah Crop and Livestock Reporting Service, average prices received by Utah farmers and ranchers for livestock during April , were generally lower than in March, except for sheep. Barley and alfalfa prices were up, while other hay was off. Cows and calves were off 4 percent from last month, at $38.20 and $60.60 per hundredweight (cwt), respectively. respective-ly. Steers and heifers at $61.30 per cwt. , and beef cattle at $55.50 per cwt., were both 1 percent lower than the previous month. At $15.70 per cwt., sheep were up 6 percent, while lambs at $54.00 per cwt. were down 1 percent. The price of milk cows rose 2 percent per-cent over last quarter to $840.00 per head, and the all milk price was off 2 percent from March, at $12.60 per cwt. Wool prices held steady during April at $.73 per pound. Average barley prices during April rose $.08 per bushel over March prices to $2.94 per bushel. Alfalfa hay increased in-creased $4.00 per ton to $88.00 per ton, while other hay prices were off $4.00 per ton at $65.00 per ton. took the West Junior High School band of Roosevelt over on one day, and on two other days he took the grade school band and the grade school chorus. Bishop Blayne and VsLois Morrill drove to Salt Lake City Saturday on a business trip. While there they visited Connie Chapoose In the hospital. 4 Actor AanrtaH 5 School organiiationi 0 a & ' 1 Breathe m 8 Cnev I " 11 fashionetiia 9omP 3 International labor Ooanuatiort: alihr. 14 Rampart 16 Aecordt 0 meeting Icliri to pull " ITStweduo the motor 19 8.baor Jedrti 23 flump 28 Ne oathennfl etpantjn H Sooth of th border 21 Kate so" 30 Shmu. litfe Shaii" 33 5elMicer 35 Scotland - 36 Va 38 0e gndt (nlemrt ' 40lltnee"SI. iwrte": irot. i Answers on rage 7 ," -moxiesl I 'The Pit' () (WW-1 Ch-1 OC-1 Sk-) Trite or not, it's a "truism": If you've seen one demonflick you've seen them all. "The Pit" is the pits. R: 1 percent nudity, 2 percent violence, child demon-dupe, fiend teddy ted-dy bear. 'Surf ir () (WW-1 Ch-1 OC-1 Sk-1) The title (there was no "Surf I") is the only laugh in this cheapie which, among other things, provides employment employ-ment for fading character actors Cleavon Little, Lyle Waggoner and Ruth Buzzi, which makes two laughs, come to think of it. Demented genius in underwater lab, turns surfers into zombies. If your idea of comedy is eating garbage gar-bage and pulling down your pants, welcome aboard. One critic said this movie might even be considered lowbrow by Cheece and Chong. Strong R: Nudity, vulgarity, casual sex, profanity. Note: I do not usually review flicks shown only at drive-ins. I don't know whether this one will play indoors or outdoors, so here goes: 'Caged Women1 () (WW-1 Ch-1 OC-1 Sk-1) "Caged Women," this month's sex-and-savagery sleazeflick, will disgust the sensitive and amuse the barbarian. Lust and torture in women's prison. Strongest R: Gratuitous and graphic violence and cruelty, rape, sex, nudity, nudi-ty, profanity. Snake Venom Never overlook the value of snake venom, says National Wildlife magazine. One ounce of freeze-dried king cobra venom, used by doctors and medical researchers, goes for about $3,000 more than nine times the per ounce price of gold. Plastics From Fiowers An Arizona wildflower may someday some-day be used to produce plastics, according accor-ding to National Wildlife magazine. Scientists have produced polymers and polyesters, building blocks for plastics, by mixing popwell oil with natural and synthetic chemicals. Mi rV" k V n Wednesday, May Farm market report TUESDAY RADIO BROADCAST MAY 1, 1984 Tuesday morning there were 23,100 cattle offered on 11 markets compared with 22,500 last week 22,800 last year. In Omaha 3000 cattle offered slaughter steers and heifers steady to 2 lower. Choice 1050-1300 lb slaughter steers 66.50-67.50, load 68.00. Choice 950-1100 lb slaughter heifers 64.75-65.50. In Sioux City 1000 cattle offered slaughter steers and heifers steady to weak on very thin test. Load Choice 1056 lb slaughter steers 66.25. Choice 950-1150 lb slaughter heifers 64.00-65.50. At North Salt Lake on Monday 375 cattle offered. Feeder steers uneven, weights under 600 lbs steady to 2.00 higher, over 600 lbs steady to 1.00 lower. Feeder heifers uneven, weights under 400 lbs 1.00 higher, over 400 lbs steady to 1.00 lower. Slaughter cows mostly steady. Medium and large frame 1 300-400 lb feeder steers 68.50-73.75; 400-500 lbs 67.00-71.00; 500-600 lbs 64.50-67.50; 600-918 lbs 57.00-60.25. Medium and large frame 1 300-400 lb feeder heifers 57.75-60.75 ; 400-600 lbs 55.00-59.00; 600-800 lbs 53.20-54.25. Cutter Cut-ter and boning utility cows 42.00-45.00, few high dressing 45.00-47.00. Breaking utility and commercial 37.00-41.50. Choice steer futures for June at 9:30 this morning were up 25 points at 66.42, August up 10 at 63.62 and October up 03 at 62.35. May feeders up 40 at 63.95, August up 28 at 65.25 and September up 13 at 64.55. In Omaha 3500 hogs offered, of-fered, barrows and gilts 1.00-1.25, instances in-stances 1.50 lower. US 1-2 215-250 lbs 47.00-47.50. Sows not well established early, some opening sales 350-425 lbs steady at 43.00. PRODUCERS LIVESTOCK AUCTION, NORTH SALT LAKE MONDAY, APRIL 30 Salable at auction 375 head compared com-pared to 500 last week and 488 last year. Good attendance. Fair to good demand. Feeder steers uneven, weights under 600 lb steady to 1.00, instances in-stances 2.00 higher on 400-500 lb weights, weights over 600 lbs steady to 1.00 lower. Feeder heifers uneven, weights under 400 lbs 1.00 higher, over 400 lbs steady to 1.00 lower. Slaughter cows mostly steady. Slaughter bulls steady to 2.00 lower. Supply about 60 slaughter cows. Feeder steers: medium and large frame 1: 300-400 lbs 68.50-73.75; 400-500 lbs 67.00-71.00 ; 500-600 lbs 64.50-67.50; 600-918 lbs 57.00-60.25. Large frame 2 holsteins 565-1110 lbs 44.00-49.25. Feeder heifers: medium and large farme 1 300-400 lbs 57.75-60.75; 400-600 lbs 55.00-59.00; 600-800 lbs 53.20-54.25. , Slaughter cows: cutter and boning utility 1-3 42.00-45.00, few high-dressing 45.00-47.00. Breaking utility and commercial com-mercial 2-4 37.00-41.50. Slaughter bulls: yield grade 1 1280-2065 lbs 45.10-49.25. Yield grade 2 and bulls for further feeding 800-1300 lbs 40.25-45.00. 'SJHtjjfy'jSlllltliWjl li I wr There's Something for Everyone... Everywhere ... in the CLASSIFIEDS Affirmative! Classifieds are programmed to offer you the widest selection of data for buying, selling or renting products or services! Check them! Vernal Express j9lm i 'jut -vy 2, 1984 Vernal ExpfeSS PRODUCERS LIVESTOCK AUCTION SALINA. UTAH FRIDAY, APRIL 27 Salable at auction 1025, compared with 1050 last week and 1205 last year. Average attendance. Moderate to good demand. Feeder steers uneven, weights 400-700 lbs .50-1.00 lower, 700-950 lbs mostly 1.00 higher. Feeder heifers 1.00-2.00 higher. Slaughter cows steady to 1.00 lower. Slaughter bulls scarce. Supply about 80 feeder cattle. Feeder steers: medium and large frame 1 300-400 lbs 68.00-74.00; 400-500 lbs 62.00-68.50; 500-600 lbs 62.00-66.00; 600-700 lbs 59.00-64.50 ; 700-950 lbs 58.00-61.00, some partly fattened. Large frame 2 holsteins 575-880 lbs 46.00-49.75; some partly fattened 900-1475 lbs 52.00-57.00. Feeder heifers: medium and large frame 1: 300-400 lbs 58.00-62.00; 400-500 lbs 57.50-62.00, part load 440 lbs 63.00; 500-600 lbs 55.00-58.50 ; 600-700 lbs 53.00-56.75; 700-870 lbs 53.00-56.50, some partly fattened. Slaughter cows: high cutter and boning bon-ing utility 1-3 38.0-42.00. Breaking utility utili-ty and commercial 2-4 39.00-41.75. Cutter Cut-ter 35.00-37.50. Few good heiferettes 48.00-52.50. Slaughter bulls: few yield grade 1 1390-1870 lbs 49.50-51.00. Few young feeder bulls 780-940 lbs 48.00-55.00. UTAH HAY MARKET NEWS WE THURSDAY, APRIL 26 (Baled Alfalfa Hay Comparable to U.S. Grades) Utah hay movement this week slow. Most sales in small volume and instate in-state delivery. Cold weather and snow storms this week has hampered some movement. No. 1-2 dairy hay scarce. Feeder hay inquiry and demand good, prices mostly steady on all classes. No. 1-2 dairy hay confirmed 85.00 per ton. Mixed No. 2 dairy and No. 3 feeder wide range 65.00-75.00 per ton, some delivered 70.00-75.00 per ton. All hay 80.00-85.00 per ton, some delivered 105.00 per ton. No. 3-4 feeder hay in roadside stacked unless otherwise noted. Hay cube movement slow. Not enough sales for a price comparison. Small volume mixed No. 2 dairy and No. 3 feeder cubes 106.00 per ton. No. 3-4 feeder cubes 70.00-80.00 per ton. FOB slab. OMAHA HOGS ; TUESDAY, MAY V Hogs: 3500 barrows and gilts 1.00-1.25 lower, instances 1.50 lower. Fairly active after slow opening. US 1-2 215-250 lbs 47.00-47.50. US 1-3 240-260 lbs 46.50-47.00. Uneven weights 45.50-46.75. 260-275 lbs 46.00-46.50. Sows: Not well established early, some opening sales steady US 1-3 350-425 lbs 43.00. 1 rv. |