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Show U-- 1 Wa X X. .J F 1 Lit Pi iflli L J 1 I 141 PIERPOIM AVE. SALT LAKE CITY 10, UTAH Hi VOL 1 NO. LAYTON, UTAH. TUESDAY, JUNE 16, 1939 10c i 31 Auto jumps curve island Injuring 4 at Kaysville S3P I... Arr Kaysville Four of the eight passengers wcie injured when the one vehicle in which they were traveling jumped the new highway island at First South and Mam m Kaysville at 11 30 p m. Thursday, then bumped off into the same lane again and over the curb into Barnes Bank parking lot. The northbound vehicle, driven by Timothy Paul Arnold, 20, Salt Lake City, remained upright o'er the accident course, but two of the injured were tossed out as it swerved across the island pavement. The four front seat passengers wee on the injured list tieated at St. Benedicts Hospital in Ogden weie- the driver who suffeied a fractured left elbow, multiple bruises and abrasions when he was tossed into the ditch west of the highway, Metro Foti, 17, Salt Lake City, multiple bruises and abrasions, Deloies Gallegos, 18, Ogden, also thiown from the vehicle, badly lacerated right leg and foot, abrasions, contusions and lacerations all over her body, and 'Barbaia Candi, 16, Ogden, multiple abrasions and lacerations and possible fractuied knee. Officer Yal A. Palmer of the Utah Stale Highway Patrol said the top section of the car was unsciaiched while damage to the underpart would amount to about $700 - rY V rV-- , v. ' 9 v iM: V v ' nfrfcf. FISHERMENS EYES WERE POPPING at the Bountiful Peak Beaver pond Saturday when Utah Fish and Game hatchery truck drove up and Gary E. Person, district conservation officer for Davis County, dumped 1,000 Rainbow trout averaging two to a pound into the water. Angling should be tops here The rest of the load went into Farmington Creek at several this week-enlocations. d. into the water. Fourth trout Plant fills Pond, creek load of 1 300 Rainbow trout, weighing approximately two to a pound, were planted at Bountiful Peak beaver pond and along Creek Saturday Farmington morning. Containing some of the lai gest trout placed m Davis County waters for some time, it was the fourth plant of the year in Farmington Canyon. The special fish truck carried the trout fiom the Scott Avenue Hatcheiy in Salt Lake City. They are kept alive and in top shape by the use of an aeration motor and ice until they are ready to be taken out by net and dropped A The plant was made by LaMar Phillips, superintendent of the Scott Avenue Hatchery, and Gary E. Iverson, district conservation officer for the Utah Fish and Game in Davis County. A plant of 700 trout was also made in the canyon Friday, bringing the total planted this year in the pond and creek to about 4,000. A group of some 20 fishermen no doubt had better luck when about 1,000 of Saturday's load was dropped in almost under their noses at the beaver pond. The other 300 were placed in Farmington Creek at five different locations. Fishing in Farmington Canyon should be as good as any place m the state, Mr. Iveison the said Saturday, following We are anxious to put plant. the fish in and let the fishermen take them out. Baseball schedules mapped For second half of season C Tuesday, at Comets, o 13; Layton ul 8:13. Tue-da- y, Aug. 11 Hill F'ield at Farmington, 0 13; Comets at d Thuisday, Aug. 13 at West Point, 8.13. B LEAGLE June is Kaysville at Lav- ton l' Thursday, June 23 Bountiful June It Cleaifield (1) at at West Point, 8:13. 30 Clinton at L.untiful (2), 0:13; Syracuse Tuesday, West Point, 6:13; Comets at at Centerville, 8:13. at June 20 Sunset-ClmtoHill Field, 8:13. Clearfield 12.00 Farming- (J), 1 KaysWednesday, July vine at Cleaificld, 6.13; Syra-- 1 ton at Bountiful (1), 12.00. June 23 Syracuse at Farrn-ingtocuse at Layton, 8.13. 6.13. n Thursday, July 2 Farming-toJune 26 Cleaifield (2) at at Bountiful, 8:13. Bountiful (1), 6:13; Sunset-Clinto- n Tuesday, July 7 Hill Field Clearfield at (1), 8.13. at Syracuse, 6:13; Layton at June 27 Centerville at Lay-toClearfield, 8.13. 12:00; Bountiful (2) at Wednesday, July 8 Kaysville at Bountiful, 6:13; West Point Kaysville, 12.00. July 2 Bountiful (1) at Syat Farmington, 8:13. 6.13. racuse, Thursday, July 9 Clinton at July 3 Kaysville at Sunset-ClmtoComets, 8.13. 6.13; Farmington at Tuesday, July 14 Farming- ton, 8.15. ton at Layton, 6.13; Clinton at (1) at Sj racuse, 8.13. Cleaifield 3.1 Centerville (2), Hill Wednesday, July 13 Field at West Point, 6.13; at Bountiful (2), 3.13. bountiful (2) at July 9 Clearfield at Bountiful, 8.13. 6.13. Farnnngton, Thursday, July 16 Comets at July 10 Suns at Kaysville, 8:13. Clearfield (2) Centerville, 6.13; 21 at Layton Tuesday, July at ,K,ays', 8:13. Clinton, 6:13; Clearfield at Hill 11 Cleaifield (1) at July 8:13. Field, 12 00; Lajton at Bountiful (1) Syra Wednesday, July 22 30. cuse at Bountiful, 6.13; West byiacuse, 10 at ClearKaysville July at Point Kaysville, 13 field 6 (1), n 23 Farming-to- business. The Shoppers Clinton, 8M3. mal get. He is m the process of Med., June 2 ex Kaysville, 0 13; enlarSnS the store- - h 8.13. Panded the walls through the old Syracuse, his new Smedley Plumbing building. SKETCH mid-weste- rn Hill Field at Clearfield at ne - Center soon To be in use - n, 17 July Farmington at 6 13; Bountiful lmton, ACCIDENT VICTIM Airreal Iloholt, Ogden, waits battered automobile for ambulance. Car and truck collided at intersection of U. S. Highway 89 and Utah-11- 0 (Kaysville Second North) at 4:35 Both drivers hospitalized. p.m. Saturday. beside his flUIT- - Cherry trees, generally, withstood the storm ture. Apiicnt trees more brittle, were in mary Shade trees eveiywhere suffered heavily. At Syracuse the hail did much damage to the der plants or otherwise damaging them. necessary "a. f? Davis County commis-- 1 sioner to give their approval to the tax increase, which was done last week. Sunset-C- (1) I .4 A. Phillips, Kays- thrown from his was (1) July truck cab to this ditch Fat- Centerville, 6 13. Clearfield (2) at urday afternoon when ve- July 31 Farmington, 6:13; Centerville hide collided with car. at Clearfield - at Kaysville, 8.13. Bountiful (1) at' Aug. 1 Bountiful (2), 12.00; Farming-beautifton at Clearfield (1), 12.00. Au- - Sunset-Clmto- n at Farmington Layton, 6:lu. Aug. 7 Clearfield (2) at Sy-- 1 racuse, 6.l,i; Bountiful (1) at Centerville, 8:13. make-waAug. 8 Bountiful (2) at 12:00; Faimington at Kaysville, 12:00. Aug 13 Layton at Clearfield Farmington Getting set for a (2), 6.13. over-flo(1) at cool plunge into the waters of Aug. 14 Clearfield Lagoon are children in the Farm- Syracuse, 6.13. s ington aiea. The summer swim-dipC LEAGIE the by sponsored program Saturday, June 20 Bountiful will begin (1) at Syracuse, 9 am; Cen- - Amencan Red Cross terville at Kaysville (2), 9 a m.; at 10 a m Thursday, according rsRuth Biown, director. 12- Kaysville (1) at West FJoint, 9 to and gills who are nine Boys older will receive old or yeais beginning, intermediate o a at Kaysville vanced instruction during the tteek Couise. Syracuse at Centerville, o 30 pm.; Bountiful (2) at W'evt t are also two adult There Point, 7.43 pm.; Farmington at under the scheduled classes ming Kaysville (2), 9 pm; BountiRed Cross sponsorship. The first J will meet at the same time as a ur the youth piogram on Thursday. course is set The at Farmington, Syracuse JunJ at 7 'soon be readied, and then paint- am.; Bountiful (2) at Clear to start on fairly well, being of tough tex- - ed tlls wcrk fold, 9 a in.; Kaysville (2) at Lagoon. West Point, 9 a.m ; Kaysville cases badly tpht and broken.! for both courses n bye. Art Bulklty, says the pioject be by contacting completed tomato crop, breaking the ten-- , planned to be completed m at Monday, June 29 Clearfield may rs- - Brown. (Continued on Page 4.) least three months. Swim program Begins Thur. - swim-'bea- a is(i) i 1 Dairy program Annual Davis County dan y banquet and mayors milking contest will be held this Thuisday evening in Kaysville. The milking contest will begin at 7 pm. at the county fair barns, where mayors and town board presidents of Davis County will be competing for a cowbell trophy. The banquet will follow in the high school cafetena Two drivers Fruit Heights at 8 p m vehicles from their thrown weie The annual affair, at which a into a narrow' ditch beside the county daily princess will be highway at the intersection of U. the DaS. 89 and Utah 110 (Kaysville crowned, is sponsored by with vis County dairy industry, Second North) Saturday at 4 35 L. W. (Hap) Robinson, Farming Pmington, serving as chairman. Treated for iniuries at St. Thus for four mayors have Mark's Hospital in Salt Lake for the contest Harold signed A. Thomas were Phillips, City Pope, Bountiful, Wayne Wuiegar, 16, 409 North 5th East, KaysBoss Folkman, East Layton, ville, bruises and abrasions; and Airreal Roholt, 45, Ogden, Layton, and Michiel Burson, Sunhead and face lacerations, set. Mayor J. C. Linford of cussion and possible back Kaysville, last year's winner, will juries, act as a judge Phillips was dining west from inBrult- Heights, stopped at the tersection for two other boys to get out and then proceeded onto Still the highway, where the right front of his 1947 truck was hit Layton The Layton Jaycettes by Roholt, dnving a 1949 sedan. still interested in sponson are truck spun around, Phillips for queens of Layton Riata Days backed off the highway and Business organizations interested dropped the driver into the ditch a Layton beauty near his vehicle. The southbound in sponsoring should get in touch with Darlene Roholt car swerved off the highTalbot, phone 1321-- J or Shirley way, lost the driver as it crossed Phone 389JGardlr the first ditch, and then bounced Princess Contest Prince, ditch. into a second Layton For more competition Trooper Leland P. Bybee of the Utah State Highway Patrol, for Layton's Prince and Pimccvs estimated damages of $300 to the contest, enter any child between The fust tiuck and $700 to the car. Phil- - the ages of three to six applicants will be ac was cited for failure to yield twenty-fivright of way and for no rinvprs cepted. Shirley Gaidner license drivers Hurt; car Truck hit 12.00. 30 Contest on 2 at Layton, 8.13. July 18 Centerville at Clearfield (2), 12.oo; Syiacuse at Bountiful (2), 12.0. July 23 Layton at Bountiful (2), 6.13. July 2 Kaysville at Itoun- titul (1), 12 oo; Syiacuse at one-ha- lf e l Mayor milking y of-th- s n, 1 near-pani- i 4! n, Layton Stake Gai-ley- h fi n Do you remember the quiet Sunday afternoon 30 years ago when a regular tornado hit Davis County? The following account of the storm is taken from the tiles of the Weekly Reflex for June 20, 1929: Davis County was treated with a twister last Sunday which dealt destruction in places from the south end of the county to the north. The south end w as fortunate in only being touched by the heavy hail and rain. wind, Large trees were uprooted, barns were laid low, roofs were blown in all directions, lodging against trees or tearing down electric light and telephone wires. Windows were blown in, people cut and bruised. Chickens and feathers were carried by the twister which took great delight in swooping into chicken Thursday, July at Comets, 8:13. coops, overturning them or breaking them to splinters. diTuesday, July 28 Kaysville The odd instances for been the wind have the Many reported. pranks of at 6:13; Hill Field at Syracuse, direction from which the wind came has caused many an argument. The general 8.13. Clinton, wTind and was from twisted the west. However, at places the rection, though, W ednesday, July 29 Comets turned carrying objects east, west, north and south. There were many miraculous escapes from destruction. South of Kaysville at the farm of George Blamires, trees were uprooted and all the sheds and barns were blown away. Next door, not 100 feet away, the home of Mrs. Fannie Layton was unmolested, notwithtanding the fact that the house had a fresh foundation under it which had been poured the day before. In Kaysville proper, electric service in part of the town was off all night. Many trees were blown down, some large strong trees, while rotten scrawny trees were untouched. s The sheep sheds of Mrs. Mary Linford were demolished. A shed of Will place was blown partly over just as a 50 gallon oil drum came rolling under Layton Members of the Layit. As the shed settled back, the drum rolled under, propping the shed on edge. ton Stake will soon be using the The storm was almost tornado-lik- e in its effect, sweeping eastward from the new Stake House on lake through Syracuse and Clearfield, where the greatest damage was reported. Chapel Street. On Saturday, heavy earth mov-- ; The storm was accompanied by heavy rain and hail. Five houses in Clearfield were destroyed, in one of which two persons were ing equipment moved in to rough-injured. It is estimated that 57 barns, valued from $500 to $3000 each were par- landscape around the enormous for to tially or totally destroyed by the force of the wind. From Layton to Clearfield, about building, and lot. Around about 25 telephone poles were thrown to the ground and the wires were a tangled mass. the parking way up, a portion will Wells Hadfield and Stephen Keough of Clearfield each reported that hundreds be black topped to accommodate of chickens were killed when the wind tore their hen houses to pieces. The roof of 120 cars. The rest will be the Clearfield canning companys factory was torn off and other damage to the giaveled to take the of plant, with a total loss of $2000, was caused. cars, or to serve as a playground c There was a in the Clearfield ward chapel when heavy objects carThe whole lot will be beautiried by the wind, crashed into the side building, tearing away a corner of 'fully landscaped with lawn, shrubs and trees. This will be the brick wall. The congregation made a mad dash for the doors. At Farmington the Smoot dairy farm, adjoining the Lagoon race track and accomplished soon after the curbs, driveways, and sidewalks using some of the stables there, reported that 70 sheds had been blown oxer. Travelers on the highway reported that, at its height, the wind was so fierce fre comP!eted- Magm icen that at times drivers stopped their automobiles and turned them parallel with to the wind for fear of being blown over. north and west exterior walls. Chris Apostohs, who has a farm near Clearfield, said that one of his horses Tne jdst portn of the tower was picked up bodily by the force of the wind and thrown to the other side of the,was completed Friday, with the ' field. The impact of the fall broke the animals legs and it died soon afterward. routing in of joints, and washing According to DeLore Nichols, Daxis County agiicultural agent, approximate- - the brick with acid and water. ly five percent of the cherry crop was destroyed and there was heavy damage to The scapel is now ready to be taken down tomato plants, alfalfa, cut hay and grain. Rulon Ford, a cherry grower of North Centerxille, reports that the high xxinds In th mter one wmg is off from 10 to 15 percent of the cherry crop, the value of which runs to l.igh f as,ererl: 'edrd0yJu pt"!lera Till rn public-official- S at Fainungton, "West Syracuse, 8 13. Thuisday, June is Wed, Aug. 12 Clinton at Point at Comet--- , 8.13. at Kaysville, Layton 0.13; at Tuesday, June 23 Layton 8 13. Comets, 0.13; Farmington at Bountiful, Clear-fnl- Sunday storm in 1929 gave county Taste of twister mid-weste- fj Field, 8.13. Syia-cus- e Wednesday, Aug. 3 at West Point, 0.13; Boun-tilat Clinton, 8.13. Thuisday, Aug. O Kajsville n, lf K Clearfield at Hill 4 Aug. 1 Bountiful All incorporated cities and towns in Davis County with the exception of two Clinton and Fruit Heights gave their approval to adoption cl the percent option sales tax law last night in this community by signing a contract with the Utah State Tax Commission, giving that governing body authority to administer and collect the tax. Each of the municipalities are now expected to pass ordinances imposing the city sales and use tax. The meeting of was called by Tom McCoy, executive director of the Utah Municipal League. The contract was 4 signed with II. C. Shoemaker, chairman of the tax f commission. Sixty - eight elected city officials were "S in attendance at the meeting. Kaysville and Layton both passed their ordinances the same evening. They will become operative July 1. The tax is levied and collected on every retail sale of tangible personal and services, one-ha- at Bountiful, 6 13; Fainungton at Cleaificld, 8.13. West Thuisday, July 30 Point at Layton, 8.13. Schedules for A, league baseball County have been diawn-u- p fur the second half of the season. DAMS COUNTY B SEBLL LEAGUES V League Second Half Tues., June 10 Clearfield at Clinton, 0.13; Kajsville at Lay-to8.13. Syra-cus- e Wednesday, June 17 at Fainungton, 0.13; Bountiful at Hill Field, 8 13. Kaysville and in Davis B, J-- , DAVIS HISTORICAL Saies tax collection to begin July Rcgi-tia'io- pmt - Queen sponsors needed - e Layton Little league scores Makeup games will be played League between the Cubs and tomoirow White Sox team rallied in the Hornets gnd EldXe! and whue bottom of the sixth inning t0 whose gamps have been me Dodgers, 18 to 17 last raiI)ed out Friday afternoon The Sox are j in the Eav Ruth league, league managed by Joe Kilby and the pdy was scheduled to be2in Dodgers by Walt Crowder. Tuesday wiin Cleaifield playing Elks at jn other Little League contests at Layton, the Ogden last week, Bill Kilmers Braves Central Davis Junior High, and won out over Jay Simmons Bees, Layton at IHll Am Force Base m the 6 to 3, Sgt. ack Knowluens There will be ten games The Lllte Hornets weie victorious against. the Eagles, 11 to 2, and F'lovd BuckleyTs Cubs topped Eugene Jones Pirates, 22 to 21. Babe Ruth League Managing Jav three l.a' .1 teams a Preee aid Starkey, Wendell Harold Dawwo. 111 |