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Show 2 Just how The Salina Sun. Wednesday. May 3, 1982 much oil is that? Delinquent tax list Sevier County : NOTICE OF FINAL TAX SALE Notice is hereby given that : S on the 24th day of May, 1 989, at 1 0 o'clock a.m., at the front door of the county courthouse in Sevier County, Utah, I will offer for sale at public auction and sell to the higest bidder for cash, under the provisions of the following Section described real estate located in the county and now held by it under preliminary tax sale. No bid for less than the total amount of taxes, interest, penalty, and costs which are a charge upon the real estate will be accepted. Barney, Farrel Wayne & Jan B., 259 East 200 North, Richfield, Utah 84701. Beginning 33 ft. south of NE corner Lot 1 Block 8 plat E, Richf ield City Survey, thence south 2 ft west 1 07.25 feet N 2 ft E 1 07.25 Ft. to POB. Area 5 acres. Amount Due: $87.32 plus costs $40.00; total due, $127.32. King Erma J. and Ronald ' W., 160 West 5th North, Richfield, Utah 84701. Beginning 77.50 ft. W. from SE. Cor. Lot 2, Block 2, Plat H, Richfield City Survey, Thence W. 71 ft., N. 142.50 ft., E. 71 ft., S. 142.50 ft. to beg. Area 0.23 acre. Amount due $500.74 plus costs $40.00. Total Due: $540.74. Memmott, Edward C. and Fern R., 1 02 South 300 East, Salina, Utah 84654. Beginning NE Cor lot 4 block 9 plat A Salina City survey, th W 1 49 Ft. S 70 ft. E 1 49 ft., N 70 ft. to beg. area.0.24 acres. Amount due: $325.04 plus costs $40.00; total due: $365.04. VeaterVallin&LavonnaK., 264 East 1st North, Salina, Utah 84654. Beg. NW Cor Lot 4 Block 19 Plat A Salina City Survey E70Ft. S 1 07.25 Ft. W 70 ft. N 107.25 ft. to beg - area plus - .17 acre. Amount due: $2,1 86.98 costs $40.00; Total due $2,226.98. Hansen Afton, Beg S. 88.30E 1 07.25 ft. from SW Cor Lot 6 Block 7 Plat A Salina City Survey, S 88.30 El 02.50 ft. N 21 4.5 ft.N 88.30 ft W 96.55 S 1 . 1 5 ft W 21 4.5 to beg area. .48 ac. Amount due $99.27 plus costs $40.00; Total due $139.27. Mecham Vivian & I. Wallace, 135 North 400 East, Salina, Utah 84654. Beg. NE Cor Lot 1 Blk 28 Plat A Salina City Survey S 95 Ft. W. 1 07.25 Ft.N 95 Ft.E 107.25 ft. to beg. area. .23 acre. Amount due: $1,086.29 plus costs $40.00; Total due, $1,126.29. Sorensen Ted L. & Shaheen Bruce., 477 Grand Circle Moab Utah 84532. Com at NW Cor of NE4 SW 4 of Sec 7, TP21 S, R1 E, SLB&M Th S 20 ch. E 2.85 chs, Ml to Wly line st hwy Rw along same N253230" E 22.75 chs, to N line of NE4 SW4 of said sec 7 W 13.34 chs to POB a Amount due: REA 1 6.1 9 acre TR-2$262.1 5 plus costs $40.00; Total due, $302.15. Tokaco Enterprises & Etal; Gardner William T, 180 North 100 East, Richfield, Utah 84701. Beg at SE cor of SW4 SW4 Sec 1 9 TP 2 1 S R1 E SLB&M N 1 0 chs West 802.27 The Salina Sun USPS 4780-800- 0 63 East Main Salina, Utah 84654 Phone 529-783- Salina Sun, The SECD 9 4780-800- 0 is publ- ished each Wednesday for $ 2.00 per year in Utah 1 and $14.50 peryearout of the state of Utah by the Salina Sun, 63 East Main, Salina, Utah 84654. Second class postage is paid at Salina, Utah 84654. Ml to E side of Co rd Swly along Co road 765 ft ml to sec line E 1 1 45 Ft ml to Beg less canal 0.55 acre assed area 12.50 acres. Amount due: $335.45 plus costs $40.00; Total due: ft. $375.45. Lawrence Mason, Single Copy $.35 W. & Evelyn Eva, 395 West 1st North, Aurora, Utah 84620. Com 10 chs N of SE cor of SW4 NE4 Sec 7, TP22S, R1W, SLB&M Th E 2 chs to Verm Canal Swly along SD can to 1 4 Sec line Ml 5 12 chs Th N 5 chs Ml to POB area. .25 acres ml. Amount due $79.19 plus costs $40.00; Total Due: $119.19. Acord Dean C., 32 1 7 South 4840 West, West Valley City, Utah 84120. All of Lot 366A Acord Lakes Mountain Retreat Subdivision in Sec 16 TP 22S R 4E SLM Area 3.13 acres. Amount due $160.14 plus costs $40.00; Total due $200.14. Dean C. Acord, 32 1 7 South 4840 West, West Valley City, Utah 84120. All of Lot 366 Acord Lakes Mountain Retreat Subdivision in Sec 16 TP 22S R 4E SLM Area 2.00 acres. Amount due: $133.21 plus costs $40.00. Total due $173.21. Interlake Thrift, PO Box Lake City, Utah 841 06. All Salt 6164, of Lot 280 Acord Lakes Mountain Retreat Subdivision in Sec 9 Tp 22S R 4E SLM Area 6.56 acres. Amount due: $355.62 plus costs $40.00. Total Due: $395.62. Interlake Thrift, 1025 East 21 st South, Salt Lake City, Utah 841 08. All of Lot 201 Acord Lakes Mountain Retreat Subdivision in Sec 4 TP 22S R 4E SLM Area 5.00 acres, amount due: $334.00 lus costs $40.00. Total Due: $374.00 Acord Lakes Mountain Retreat, 2028 East 7000 South Suite 201 , Salt Lake City, Utah 841 21 . All of Lot 176 Acord Lakes Mountain Retreat Subdivision in Sec. 4 TP 22S R 4E SLM. Area 5.01 acres. Amount due: $334.00 plus costs $40.00. Total due: $374.00. Hinkson, Margaret & Thompson, Dorothy, 78399 Cedar park Road, Cottage Grove, Oregon 97424. Lot 11 Block 12 New Elsinore Addition No 1 A Subdivision in Sec 33 TP 24S R 3W SLM. Area 0.12 acre. Amount due: $108.03 plus costs $40.00. Total due: $148.03. Hinkson, Margaret & Thompson, Dorothy, 78399 Cedar Park Road, Cottage Grove, Oregon, 97424. Lot 12 Block 12 New Elsinore Addition No 1 A Subdivision in Sec 33 TP 24S R 3W SLM Area 0.12 acre. Amount due: $108.03 plus costs $40.00. Total due: 148.03. Moyes, Sarah, 132 West 2700 South, Bountiful, Utah 84010. Beg. 26.5 rds N of SE Cor NW4 SW 4 SEC 1 7 TP 24S R 2W SLM W 1 6 rds N 10 rds E 16 Rds S 10 Rds to POB. Area 1.00 acre. Amount due: $199.98 plus costs $40.00. Total Due: $239.98. Anderson Talmage S. & Sylvia H., RFD Monroe, Utah 84754. Beg. SE Cor SW4 SE4 Sec 3 TP 24S R 3W SLM Th W 0.50 ch N 1 8.56 ch E 0.050 Ch S 18.56 ch to beg. Area 0.93 acres. Amount Due: $148.51 plus costs $40.00. Total Due $188.51. Geraldine, Burningham, 1280 So Orchard Drive, Bountiful, Utah 84010. Beg 30.95 chs W& 2.86 ch N of SE cor Sec 1 4 TP 24S R 3W SLM W 6.75 Ch N 1 .95 Ch W 3.25 Ch N 1 .80 ch E 1 0 ch S 3.75 Ch to beg. Area 3.12 acres. Amount due, $2,193.79 plus costs $40.00 Total Due $2,233.79. Holgate Lewis & Sanrda C, Box 271, Monroe, Utah 84754. Beg 7.78 Ch E of SW Cor of Sec 16 TP 25S R 3W SLM N 0.55 E 1 6.85 ch E 1 1 .95 ch Ml to 40 line S 86.1 5E 2.85 ch S 1 6.66 Ch ml to Sec Line With Alg Sec Line 1 6.05 ch to POB. Area 24.1 5 acres less Co Rd .38 Acre. Net area 23.77 acres. Amount Due $2,175.57 plus costs $40.00. Total Due: $2,2155.57. IN WITNESS WHEREOF I have hereunto set my hand and official seal this 20th day of April 1989. POSTMASTER: Please send address changes to the Salina Sun, P.O. Box C, Salina, Utah 84654. For weeks weve been readand seeing on newscasts about, ing the ugly, black oil slick near Valdez, Alaska. Word is that 11 million gallons of oil were dumped into the bay. Students of the chemistry and physics classes at Homer High School, Alaska, have calculated just how much oil that is: If you left your kitchen faucet running at full volume, it would take 9.7 years to get the same volume as the oil spill. If you drained the oil from 8.8 million cars, youd have about as much oil as the slick. The oil would fill 92 averto the ceiling. houses age It would take more than 15,300 pickups to haul the oil away. If the oil was spread out on the highway a half inch deep and 24 feet wide, it would stretch about 279 miles. If the oil was soda pop, every person in homer could drink one can every day for 82 years. It would take about 332 million boxes of Kleenex to soak up the oil. The oil would fill the high school gym 3.5 times. The oil would Fill 44 high school swimming pools. Richard Ingels, chemistry-physic- s instructor at Homer High compiled the information. Steven C. Wall Sevier County Auditor Published in the Salina Sun April 26, May 3, May 1 0, and May 1 7, 1989. I especially enjoy the May Theres been an explosion, and its one that many people look evenings. A sweet scent Fills the cool night air, and the miracle of forward to each year! the about Im speaking Spring renewal and rebirth is felt all explosion of the apple blossoms all around . Thank heaven, the forces through the valley. The latest cold bringing all this about are still a snap hasnt seemed to do much mystery - the seed swells, begins damage, and this morning on my new life, matures, bears fruit, setting way to work, I could see the beautithe scene for the same drama as the ful white or pink blooming trees next season unfolds - and we really scattered everywhere. dont have much to say about iL Many were in the dooryards Every day a new achieveof modern homes, but others were ment is noted by a scientist somenot. The blossoms are often a sign of where. Things that were mysteries a a long ago homestead, for as soon as few years ago, are now documented the cabin had been raised, and the and well explained. larder stocked with game, the seeds Its easy to think of God in which had been so carefully guarded the Spring, regardless of ones relion the long hard journey from the gious allegiance. Miracles abound East were planted. Many immion every side, and in the center of it grants brought a start of a favorite all, we reach for something beyond. bush or tree from the homeland. It Its reality is everywhere, in every wasnt long until orchards, apple tuft of new, sweet clover, every trees, rose bushes, and lilacs were chattering fledgling in the nest; the blooming, reminding them of a disswelling bud on branch and bough; tant home that most would never see and the new life coming to Field and again, and creating memories for meadow. those who would now grow up in the All of our knowledge and sweetness of their shade. scientiFic knowhow can take us just Many such homesteads are so far. We have to reach for the vacant now, and in some instances rest...and reach we do. Invariably the home itself is gone, but the blossome force beyond touches the leaf, soming trees and wild roses that had the seed, the bud, and then - touches once graced the dooryard still wait Man himself. and bloom patiently, unattended. If the cares of a sometimes Its been abeautiful Spring, life tend to get you hasnt it? The wet grass in the early down once in a while, perhaps a morning smells sweet; the kittens step out into a May night will have play in the falling apple blossoms; a healing influence for you,...It ofasparagus lines the ditch banks ( if ten does for me. you know just where to look ). over-compl- Election meeting set by American Legion Auxiliary ing year. The Salina American Legion Auxiliary will hold an important meeting on Tuesday, May 9, 1989. The purpose of this meeting is to elect new officers for the upcom Art Show The meeting will be held at the Legion Hall, and will begin at 7 p.m. All members are urged to attend. Continued from Page sioners Art Show. Richfield High student Clint Henrie won third place, ($10), and classmates Lenny Hartle and Jerome Austin won honorable mention ($5.) South Sevier High students Ole Lindgren, Zap Laughter, and Dan Gladden won honorable mention. Now in its 8th year the show opened Monday, April 24, and continued through April 28. This was the first time small cash awards were presented. Elementary and Middle School winners receive ribbons and certificates which will be awarded in the schools when the art is returned. Chairman Maureen Karst said the Commissioners Art Show had 193 entries this year. It is held for Sevier county residents every spring in connection with the Festival of the Arts for the Young, a 1 celebration encouraged by state arts and educational organization. Winners from local schools included: Salina Elementary: Preston Noyes, Krista Page, 1st grade; Brandi Madsen, 2nd grade; Brock Tatum, Christian Jacobsen, and Amy Bown, 4th grade; Wendy Frame, Jared Nielsen, Dawn Dahlsrud. North Sevier Middle School: Mario Okcrlund, Donald Lee Jones, 6th grade; Tatiana Jacobsen, 7th grade; Patrick Coons, Jeremy Kjar, Patrick Shields, 8th grade. Other winners included, Pat Anderson, Ransom Owens, Terry J. Anderson, Janette C. Hales, Karen Stubbs, Jan Kelsey, Carol Jensen, Diana Barney, Maureen Karst, Clint Henrie, Lenny Hartle, Sammie Terry, Nalita Hcrmansen, Myrlene Norman, Patti Muir, Ole Lindgren, Jerome Austin, Zap Laughter, and Dan Publisher: Kevin Ashby Editor: Carol Jensen Correspondents: Aurora: Kathleen Lloyd Redmond:Tammy Johnson Salina: Evelyn Kiesel Phone News Items 529-783- 9 it is said that the musical juke box gets its name from a west African word dzua meaning "to behave improperly." What is a Teacher? Its Teacher Appreciation Week, and author Dan Valentine tells us just what a teacher is: What is a teacher? A teacher...Shes knowledge with a smile on her face. Democracy with a book in her hand; wisdom with a flick of white chalk dust on her left eyelid. She comes in all sizes and temperament, short, tall, skinny, plump, laughing, serious, happy and sad. Shes the future of the nation is a sack dress. Love with a education. college In her everyday work week, shes expected to be: Diplomat, philosopher, politician, fight referee, pediatrician, policewoman, practical nurse - and the quiz program conductor. She has little children in here eyes, and all her dreams are dreams. young Shes a psychiatrist without a couch; politician without a promise; babysitter without the right to the icebox. She makes more money than a dishwasher, or a ditch digger,' or a garbage collector. She makes less money than a women wrestler, ' Burlesque shipper, or women blackjack dealers in Nevada. Her days are filled with school bells, young chatter, chalk dust, waving hands, questions, and worried parents. A teacher is equally adept at: blowing small noses, teaching fractions, pulling on galoshes, finding lost mittens in dark cloakrooms, and making parents feel good at parent-teachmeetings. She spends four years in college studying hard in order to learn how to: Make orange paper pumpkins at Halloween, umpire baseball games at recess, tell young boys to toss that bubblegum in the wastebaskeL In addition to knowing all there is to know about reading, writing and arithmetic, not to mention science, biology, history and music, a teacher has to be an authority of baseball, grasshoppers, little girls, snakes, young love, boys and how to live three months without a paycheck. Teachers can be found after school - taking aspirin, picking up spitballs, washing blackboards, rehearsing plays, sewing angel costumes for the Christmas pageant, and just sitting at a desk waiting to get the strength to get home. Teachers are expected to Go to church.keep out of debt, have creative minds, but not disagree with the board of education; stay away from cigarettes, beer and bingo games, and give willingly to the United Fund. From the small classroom will come the doctors of tomorrow, the men who will fly in outer space, the great artists and novelists of the year 2000, the industrial tycoons and all the leaders America will need to survive in a puzzled world. She s the future of the world with a ruler in her hand. Progress with a pencil back of her ear. Underpaid, unappreciated at times, harried and overworked, she gains her pay in secret satisfaction. Secretly, teachers admit, I have the greatest job of all.. And thats true. Because she holds the history of the world in the palm of her hand. She (or He)s a Teacher! er Grant money goes to work in area towns The Utah Energy office has developed a local government grant program using oil overcharge money. This program helps fund community projects dealing with energy efficiency. The program was designed to put oil overcharge dollars to work in local communities throughout the state, said Richard Anderson, director of the Utah Energy Office. This program has made the following local projects possible: Redmond received almost $3,000 to upgrade their Senior Citizen Center. The project includes converting the heating system from electric to gas, insulating, and weathThe project will be erstripping. this year and will pay for completed itself in about 7 years. Gunnison received over $5,000 for an energy efficient cover for its swimming pool. The cover will be completed this year and should pay for itself in about 6.5 years. Centerfield received nearly $2,000 to convert the Town Hall heating system from electric to gas. The conversion will be completed this year and should pay for itself in 7.5 years. Ml Pleasant received almost $6,000 to upgrade the heating system and insulation in City Hall. THe project will be completed this year and should pay for itself in 10 years. Requests for grand money have exceeded funds available, said Michael Glen, Utah Energy Office program manager. With the completion of the 40 projects in progress, we hope other communities will become acquainted with the effectiveness of the new energy saving techniques, he added. |