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Show r. WEEKLY REFLEX SUMMONS Civil No. IN DAVIS NEWS JOURNAL, NORTH DAVIS LEADER, FEBRUARY 4, 1982 11:00 a.m., on Wednesday, February 24, 1982, for the purpose of foreclosing a trust deed executed by BRIAN N. WALLACE and ROCHELLE B. WALLACE, as trustors, in favor of THE LOCKHART CO., as beneficiary, recorded December 8, 1980 as Entry No. 581197 in Book 850, Page 149, of the official records of Davis County, State of Utah, covering real property located at 2858 E. 2450 N., Layton, Utah, and more particularly described as: All of Lot 7, OAK FOREST NO. 1 Subdi- vision, Davis County, Utah according to the, official plat thereof. Notice of Default was recorded October 14, 1981, as Entry No. 602174 in Book 882, Page 140 of said official re- 1 purposes. WHEREAS, pursuant to authorization contained in the Utah Solid Waste Management Act, the City of FRUIT HEIGHTS (the "City) is authorized to provide solid waste management facilities and is THE DISTRICT tliyih Time COURT OF DAVIS COUNOF UTAH ROBERT L. HAMILTON, Plaintiff, ' vs. authorized to enter into EVELYN MAE HAMILments with other public enTON, tities pursuant to the Utah InDefendant. terlocal Act to You are hereby Summoned cords. provide for or to operate solid ' and required to file an answer Said sale will be made withwaste management facilities: in writing to the Complaint for and out covenant or warranty, ex, . ; divorce which has been filed WHEREAS, there has been press of implied, regarding title with the Clerk of the above enpossession or encumbrances. presented to this city Council titled Court and to serve upon for approval an Interlocal DATED this 22nd day of or mail to Hess, Van Wagenen, January, 1982. Agreement between the City and other pubPage & Hess, Plaintiffs Attorlic agencies in Davis W. CLARK BURT neys, 40 South 125 East, Clear, County to field, Utah, 84015, a copy of' Successor Trustee provide for solid waste mansaid answer within twenty (20) agement facilities; and Published in the Davis News days after publication of this WHEREAS, it is now deJournal Summons, if you fail so to do, ' sired to approve the participaFirst publication Jan. 28, 1982 tion of the City in the solid judgment for divorce will be Last publication Feb. 11, 1982 taken against you as prayed for waste management project for Issue No. 52..., in the Complaint which is on Davis County described in the file with the Clerk of said Interlocal Court. Agreement and to authorize SUMMONS DATED this 21 day of Januthe Mayor to execute and the Probate No. 2 4328 1982. City Recorder to attest and ary, A.D., countersign the Interlocal IN THE SECOND JUDI, GERALD E. HESS Agreement on beCIAL DISTRICT COURT of half of the City; DAVIS COUNTY, STATE Published in The Weekly NOW, THEREFORE, Be It OF UTAH Resolved by the City Council In the matter of the adoption t First publication Jan. 21, of the City of FRUIT of 1982 Feb. 11, publication HEIGHTS, Davis County, HATHAIRAT SOOKA-PUIssue No. 51 Utah, as follows: and WACHARA Section 1. That the participaSOOKAPUN, NOTICE OF tion of the City in a joint or Minors. TRUSTEES SALE action for a solid THE STATE OF UTAH TO waste management project in ROBERT A. MANOLA The following described real Davis County, Utah pursuant You are hereby summoned property will be sold at public to the terms and provisions of and required to file an Answer auction to the highest bidder the Interlocal in writing to the Petition filed to as title, without warranty with the Clerk of the above en(the AgreeAgreement possession or encumbrances, is hereby approved. titled Court, and to serve ment), the of door front north the at Section 2. That the Mayor of upon, or mail to KING & County Courthouse, State and the City is hereby authorized KING, Plaintiffs attorneys, Main Streets, Farmington, to execute and the City RecorP. O. Box 220, 251 East 200 Febof 15th the day Utah, on der of the City is hereby authoSouth, Clearfield, Utah, ruary, 1982, at 11:00 oclock s rized to attest and countersign, 84015, a copy of said Answer a.m. of said day: the Agreement on behalf of the within twenty (20) days after SORAll of Lot 213, service of this Summons upon City. RENTO ESTATES Section 3. That this resolu-- : you. . PLAT NO. 2, a subdivi- tion, shall be published in a If you fail so to do, Judgment sion of part of Section circulaof Default will be taken general newspaper by 36, Township 2 North, ; tion in the City, in accordagainst you for the relief de1 West, Salt Lake Range ance with the provisions of manded in said petition, which Meridian', in die City of Section Utah Code has been filed with the Clerk of Woods Cross, according Annotated 1953 and of Section said Court. to the official plat 12 of the Agreement. For a DATED this 25th day of 1982. (30) days from thirty January, known a?-, TY, STATE " , Re-fl- 1982-Las- N R-3- 1 , , ? f f2T fV tv ' F Woods Cross, Utah 84087. .iucJusMeaiimL,. interest shall . have the right to contest the legality of this resolution. Afn , , The Trust Deed being foreclosed by these proceedings is dated February 28, 1978, and Was executed by SHERRY LYN CASE, husband and wife, who are the present owners., , j , V The purchase price is payable in lawful money of the United States. Dated this 14th day of January, 1982. PAUL M. HALLIDAY Successor Trustee 455 East 400 South No. 400 Salt Lake City, Utah 84111 6 Telphone: News Davis the in Published Journal First publication Jan. 21, 1982 Last publication Feb. 4, 1982 7 Issue No. 51 355-288- R-3- NOTICE OF TRUSTEES SALE Published in The Weekly Reflex First publication Feb. 4, 1982 Last publication Feb. 25, 1982 R--2 Issue No. I County, Utah, November 17, 1981 , with Councilmen Wayne R. Ballantyne, Lynn A. Benson, Jay N. Fisher and H. AYE Dean Wade voting and Councilman Jack D. Palmer absent. NOTICE OF SHERIFFS SALE ON REAL PROPERTY Civil No. 8192 RESOLUTION SIGNED TO BE SOLD AT A SHERIFFS SALE on the 18th day of Febhiary, 1982, at the hour of 12:00 Noon at the north front December 8, 1981 by Mayor Neil K. Noorda and attested to by City Recorder Belva M. Provost. PUBLISHED Jan. 28 in the Weekly Reflex, 197 No. Main, Layton, Utah. door of the Davis County Courthouse in Farmington, Davis County, Utah, all the inright, title and terest of the defendant, Dennis Wilson, in and to the following jH i described real property, to wit : M All of Lot 8, Block 7, Published in The Weekly ReDRAAYER SUBDIVI-SIOflex NO. 3, a subdiviFirst publication Jan. 28, 1982 Last publication Feb. 11, 1982 sion of part of Section Issue No. 52 23, Township 5 North, Range 2 West, Salt Lake NOTICE TO Meridian, in the City of WATER USERS. Clinton, Davis County, Utah, according to the Dennis Morley, 589 S. Sunofficial plat thereof. set Dr., Kaysville, UT has aka: 2382 North 840 filed with the State Engineer West, Clinton, Utah to PAYMENT TO BE MADE Appl. No. 57176 appropriate 0.015 sec. ft. of IN lawful money of the United water in Davis County. The States of America. SUBJECT water is to be diverted from an ' TO any liens. well, 285 ft. DATED AT FARMING-TOexisting DAVIS COUNTY, deep, at a point N. 700 ft. W. 1650 ft from EVi Cor. Sec. 4, UTAH, this 26th day of JanuT3N.R1W, SLB&M (1 mi SW ary, 1982. of Kaysville); and used from Jan. 1 to Dec. 31 for the domesBRANT L. JOHNSON, Sheriff tic purposes of 1 family, stockDavis County watering 2 horses; and from Apr. 1 to Oct. 31 for the irrigation of 0.25 acs. in SWViNE'A By Kathleen Czech Sec. 4, T3N, R1W, SLB&M. Deputy Sheriff Protests resisting the granting of this application with Attorney; reasons therefore must be filed Timothy W. Blackburn in duplicate with the State EnBank of Utah, Suite 320 2605 Washington Blvd gineer, 1 636 W. North Temple, SLC, UT 84116, on or before Ogden, Utah 84401 3 Mar. 13, 1982. Telephone: non-exem- pt T The following described real property will be sold at public auction to the highest bidder without warranty as to title, possession or encumbrances, at the north front door of the County Courthouse, State and Main Streets, Farmington, Utah, on the 15th day of February, 1982, at 11:00 oclock a.m. of said day: All of Lot 13, JOHNS ACRES AMENDED PLAT, a subdivision of part of Block 10, Plat 825-220- FRUIT HEIGHTS Davis - KING & KING By: Felshaw King, Esquire Attorneys for Plaintiff 251 East 200 South P.O. Box 220 Clearfield, Utah 84015 2 Telephone: (801) ter such time no one shall have any cause of action to contest the regularity, formality or legality of this resolution. Section 4. That this resolution shall take effect immediately upon its adoption. PASSED AND ADOPTED BY THE City Council of DENNIS LEE CASE and ' Kaysville Town-sit- e Survey in the City of r Kaysville, according to the official plat thereof. ; Commonly known as 114 South 400 West, n Kaysville, Utah 84037. The Trust Deed being foreclosed by these proceedings is dated September 23, 1980, and was executed by DAN W. HOLBROOK and "G", CINDY L. HOLBROOK, husband and wife. The purchase price' is payable in lawful money of the United States. Dated this 14th day of January. 1982. , , x t , BELVA M. PROVOST City Recorder v t, N , 393-846- ! PAUL M HALLIDAY Successor Trustee 455 East 400 South No. 400 Salt Lake City, Utah 84111 6 Telphone: DEE C. HANSEN, P.E. State Engineer 355-288- ublished in tfie Davis News ournal , :irst publication Jan. 21, 1982 .ast publication Feb. 4, 1982 ssue No. 51. Published in The Weekly Reflex First publication Jan. 28, 1982 Last publication Feb. 11, 1982 Issue No. 52 R-3- Published in The Weekly Reflex First publication Feb. 3, 1982 Last publication Feb. 17, 1982 R-- 3 Issue No. 1 ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS R-3- NOTICE OF RESOLUTION 81-1- to Board of Education, Davis County School District for the 2 with1 construction of BURTON The following described A RESOLUTION approving and authorizing the execution of an Interlocal or coAgreement for a joint operative action Sealed proposal addressed NOTICE OF TRUSTEES SALE ' other in Davis Counpublic agencies tv for solid waste management poor, copy property will be sold at public auction to the highest bidder, on the front steps of the Davis QjpnyCqurthe, Farming-to- n, Utah, payable in lawful money of the United States at the time of sale, at the hour of ELEMENTARY SCHOOL ADDITION at Davis County, Utah, for the Board of Education, Davis County School District, hereinafter called Owner in accordance with plans snerifienfion rnn- - h 1 By FLORENCE BITTNER salesman recently to-do- when we had differences. He thought 1 was so clever to think that up all by myself and asked if he could quote me. BEN FRANKLINS Poor Richard was full of these little gems of wisdom. I remember well Miss Bradshaws knobby finger pointing out the hard words when our second grade class read about Poor Richard being cheated out of his money when he bought a whistle. "Too dear for the whistle" became a standby in my life for someone who paid too much for a shoddy piece of merchandise. Tell anyone today they paid too dear for the whistle, and theyll think you're balmy. I still believe there is worth in those old sayings. They help when people are too confused or tired or upset to think clearly. They come easily to the tongue to give a flavor of wisdom to advice. What has happened to the old aphorisms we grew up with? Generation after generation has been raised with these sturdy sayings forming the boundaries of their values, like picket fences keeping stray ideas out and sound principles in. WHEN I WAS a student, every teacher put a "Motto For The Day on the blackboard. We learned to spell and to ready by reciting them. "A fool and his money are soon parted. I handed this little gem to Warren one day and he came back with, "I guess that means TV commercials are trying to make fools out of all of us." MAYBE, BUT that wasn't what I was trying to tell him. 1 was thinking more along the lines of a penny saved, a penny earned or take care of the pennies and the dollars will take care of themselves. When my daughter became I told her irate at a to calm down. You can catch more flies with honey thap you can with vinegar. She gave me a puzzled look. Who wants to catch flies? USED TO BE we could re- cite the old truisims by the yard and have some inches left over. I doubt my kids know half a dozen. One rotten apple spoils the barrel. No need for the pot to call the kettle black. People in glass houses should not throw stones. If you aim at two rabbits, you miss both. THEYRE STILL as true as they ever were. Well, most of them are. They are so convenient in conversation and as rules to hand ready packaged to the kids, but who knows them any more? ciple printed on the ing your standards and convic- NO ONE EVER questioned their rightness. They were just there as uncompromising and dependable as Miss Bradshaw or the school building. I knew that saying, like Miss Bradshaw would be there when I needed them. dont wonder that the younger generation is going astray. We have failed to give them their daily guidelines to cling to. Each morning when I went to school I knew there would be a granite-boun- d prin IT HAS BEEN argued that most great truths can be stated in platitudes which can be easily remembered, and if the wisest saying is repeated often enough it becomes a platitude. Some of them, I admit, do sound somewhat dated. I told Aunt Martha recently that an apple a day keeps the doctor away and she laughed. "We used to say that when doctors made house calls. OCQ GOD HELPS them that help themselves." A friend reminded me this doesn't give anyone a license to shoplift. Help yourself is a phrase that has changed meaning. A good example is the best sermon. Three men may keep a secret if two of them are dead. Men and melons are hard to know. A lie stands on one leg; a truth on two. Waste not, want not. Eat to live, not live to eat He that rises late must trot all day. The squeaking wheel gets the grease. He that lies with dogs will rise up with fleas black- board. tions handed to you frequently in pithy little sayings. I w THERE IS one 1 don't like to be reminded of by people w ho think I talk too much: an empt v pot makes the loudest noise f)30D Today you can buy 49 t THERE IS security in hav- - Foot you; fool me twice, shame on me. 1 gave that one to a door- - tract documents, which were prepared by and may be obtained from KENNETH JONES AND ASSOCIATES, Architect, at 533 26th St. Suite . 101 , Ogden, Ut 84401, and will be received at the office of the Clerk of the Board of Education in Farmington, Utah until 7:00 P.M. oclock, February 16, 1982, and then publicly opened and read aloud. Any bid received after closing time will be returned unopened. Minimum wage rates as stipulated under Labor Laws of the specification, shall be adhered to as a condition of this contract. A certified check or Bid Bond of not less than five percent of the amount of the bid must accompany each proposal, said check being made payable to the Board of Educa- tion, Davis County School District, must accompany each bid as a guarantee that, if awarded the contract, the bidder will promptly enter into a contract and execute such bonds as may be required. The Owner reserves the right to reject any or all bids and to waive any or all formalities. Plans and specifications may be examined without charge in the office of the Architect and may be procured from KENNETH JONES ASSOCIATES AND Architect, at 533 26th St. Suite 101, Ogden, Ut. 84401 upon a deposit of $35.00 as a guarantee as to the safe return of the plans and sepcifications, the fUll amount of which will be repaired upon the return of plans and specification within five days after receipt of bids. Roger C. Glines, Clerk BOARD OF EDUCATION DAVIS COUNTY SCHOOL DISTRICT Published in the Davis County Clipper on Fpb. 3, 1982 7 Issue No. 3.... dependability at a super-valu- e Prohibition Prohibition became effective in the United States on Jan. 16, 1920. It was an idealistic experiment, and a hopeless one, for it sought to legislate morals and personal behavior. price! Eureka high performance and work savings feature make this upright a bargain hunter's best buy. Steel motor hood protects the powerful motor. Big 560 cu. in. capacity disposable dust bag for fewer bag chantes. d vinyl furniture guard. Edge Kleenr deans up to baseboards. citizens find it hard to believe Congress ever voted a ban on alcoholic beverstates ages, and that thirty-si- x YOUNGER (three-fourt- ), of the quickly ratified the Wrap-aroun- forty-eight- amendment. (Only Rhode Island and Connecutitut never ratified it.) But thats what happened under emotional pressure of the day. MODEL experiment was a failure. Bootleggers and gangs sneaked booze illegally into "speakeasies and the results were gang wars, bad booze, cooruption and a widespread breakdown in law enforcement. The 21st amendment in 1933 repealed the 18th, effective again with the ratification of thirty-si- x states on Dec. 5, POWER DRIVEN BEATER BAR BRUSH Loosens deeply imbedded din, fluffs up crushed nap. ONLY 1933. About Your Home By April Rhodes To clean or freshen babys toys, rinse in a solution of baking soda and water. Save your larger round containers and cans from groceries. Cover them with colorful Christmas paper and tie with ribbon for home baked cookies for the neighborhood children. it glides effortlessly Because its forward or backward. The gentle command of your finger tips on the Touch Control handle is all it takes. d, A discarded mattress covered with a durable material will give children many hours of fun using it as a gym mat. C-3- Published in The Weekly flex on Feb. 4, 1982 Issue No. 1..... 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