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Show 2 Tuesday, August Lakeside 18, 1992 Lakeside Review Home in family for 4 generations On The By RUTH MALAN Standard-Examine- r A correspondent agenda Appointment of recreation board members and officials summary of agendas of city council meetings KAYSVILLE Although the rose gardens and trellises are no longer there, the memory lingers for those who grew up in die home at 454 N. Flint St. An old magnolia tree with its abundance of pink blossoms each spring grows on the homes south side. to be held Tuesday, Aug. Sunset 18 City Council Fruit Heights City Council Oavis County Sheriff's Department Oath of office, David E. Adams, board of adjustments chair Consider request for rezone for 9.56 acres adjacent to Davis Coun- ty Golf WeberDavis Canal Company, request for waiver of cover for secondary water reservoir Proposed meeting with railroad reps Public works update Waiverbusiness feefundraiser Course Wednesday, Consider adoption of Resolution license Aug. 19 92-1- 6 The house was built of adobe brick for John Flint Jr. sometime before the turn of the century. His descendants believe n William Allen, a local ; architect at that time, designed and built the home. It was 1850 when John Flint Sr. left England and came to the area, then called Kays Ward, to settle in a dugout in the west part of town. His son John Flint Jr. married in 1872 and soon after built the brick home, beginning with just two rooms. His later additions made it y a brick with three bedrooms upstairs and a parlor, living room, kitchen and pantry and a dining room on the main floor. John Jr.s granddaughter Jane Flint Green of Kaysville grew up in the home. It had an upstairs when I was young, she recalled. It was fun to be upstairs and look out the win- 92-1- Kaysville Kaysville-Layto- n This Kaysville house is believed to have been n area architect William Allen built by well-know- John Jr., was bom in the home and inherited it from his parents. He and his wife, Mina, raised five children there: Jane Flint Green, Helen Flint Barber, Barbara Flint Iverson, Catherine Flint Adams and Vernon Flint Mina Flint had her home remod--ele- d sometime during the late 1930s. I remember it was summer time. We had our beds on the back lawn, said Green. The upper story was removed and the parlor became the master bedroom. The kitchen was moved to where the dining room once was and the old kitchen became a bedroom. All of the porches were re- Irrigation you have a clear understanding of what is expected of you ;ln your Job with Layton City? 66 2 Definitely Definitely not 0 know 27 Dont Probably 5 Probably not 16. Do you fee! you could discuss problems openly 1 5. Do Job-relat- ed with your supervisor? Definitely Probably Probably not 17. What kind of 55 29 Definitely not Dont know 5 3 8 results have you had in the past when you have reported problems with your supervisor? 21 15 Poor results Excellent results 7 34 Good results Never reported problems 1 Don't know 22 .Fair results 18. Using a 5 scale, with 1 being poor and 5 being excellent, how would you rate Layton City employees overall on their 1-- honesty and ethics? 0 46 4 ipoor 3 2 32 5excellent 15 3 4 Dont know . ;19. From what you know or have heard, has there been any unreported theft or unauthorized use of city equipment? ; 15 Yes Don't know 2 83 No 20. Are there employees working for Layton City who you feel heed assistance with an alcohol andor drug problem? 8 Ves Don't know No 4 88 21. Would most city employees feel free to talk with elected officials and provide information to officials when requested? 11 21 Definitely Definitely not Don't know 5 29 Probably 34 Probably not 22. Has Information been withheld from elected officials? r 16 28 Definitely has Definitely has not : 29 11 Don't know Probably has 16 Probably has not .23. Has Information been altered or manipulated before being given to elected officials? 14 Definitely has 14 Probably has not 26 has Probably 35 Definitely has not Don't know home was remodeled, as was the green wool carpet. Most of the light fixtures are the original antique fixtures. The yellow and black bathroom is unique with its arched ceiling over the bathtub. The small tile installed years ago remains on the floor. After four living in the Rint and theird'ree young chil- - dren are moving. They are building a new home to the south. ' The one-lsubdivision was apot proved recently in a Kaysville city, council meeting. The subdivision is aptly named Ma and Pas Place. It was always Pa and Mas place, said Steve Eint of his grandparents farm. Dan and Tauna Luke will soon be moving into the home. We hate to see it leave the family, but we asked and nobody in the family wanted to buy it, said Margo Flint and step grand-childre- Mark Boyd Shirley Mark I n. screen for cancer ered nurses. 1 $5-$2- 773-566- 7. Although the clinic is being held in a church a building the clinic is for all women regardless of religious with a disability requiring accommodation to participate in the program should contact the Cancer Screening Program at least 10 days before the clinic to request reasonable accommodations. CENTER -- ; 102 1 2. CORRECTION The police blotter last Tuesday incorrectly stated the number of calls the Kaysville Police Department responded to from July 30 to Aug 6. Police responded to approximately 170 calls. Review Lakeside S tandard- Examiner - DAVIS BUREAU Davis County Editor t Andy Howell Lakeside Editor Photographer Reporters ''$9 HE 30(1(3 GET TO SCHOOL SEWING Give Your Sewing That Professional Finish - In Half The Time SERGER With This New Has The Features You Want Including 34 'T M ' thead -- Width Adjustment Easy Threading Fast, Smooth rah; ;u;LLtU r VM . : CORRESPONDENTS CLEARFIELD FARMINGTON JaNae Francis Sue Utley LAYTON FRUIT HEIGHTS KAYSVILLE Ruth Malan Sue Utley Ruth Malan SOUTH WEBER SYRACUSE WEST POINT SUNSET CLINTON JaNae Francis Ruth Malan Anita Kersey JaNae Francis Kathy Kelly RaDon Gatherum The Lakeside Review is published weekly and distributed FREE by carrier Tuesday afternoon from Sunset through Farmington. The Standard-Examine- r is published daily. NEWS DEADLINES: All news and photos should be submitted no later than 3:30 p.m. Wednesday for publication tbe following Tuesday in the Lakeside Review and 3:30 p.m. the previous da for publication in the Standard-ExamineADVERTISING DEADLINES: Display advertisements p.m. for the Lakeside. Qu liL' iHPOliEt atisfaction Adams Robert Regan James Nickerson, Bryon Saxton, David Castellon, Valerie Phillips Marc Paulsen Advertising Representatives Dale Rounkles Office Manager Kristen Adams Cartoonist Val Bagley MONTH ONLY OTJUrQimUTiiD April .- THIS BULLOUGH CHIROPRACTIC 360 So. Fort Lane, Suite Layton 546-373- 1 -; affiliation. : BACK If rs Anyone TO Chiropractors... V( cnn help. three-quarte- , TIME major insurance programs are accepted. e along-quit- brand-nam- women 8 or older, or who are sexually active and have not had a Pap test during the past year are encouraged to attend. 7 will A fee ranging from be charged based on annual family income and family size. Appointments are necessary. To make an appointment, call All Yv P8$pi pain. Most ! I and nine step-childr- The Cancer CLEARFIELD Screening and Prevention Program, sponsored by the Utah State Department of Health and the American Cancer Society, will hold a cancer screening clinic Wednesday, SepL 9 at the Clearfield LDS Stake Center, 935 S. State, from 8:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. The women's clinic will include a Pap test, pelvic and breast examination, blood pressure check, hem-ocu- lt kits to test for colorectal cancer, health education information on risk factors, signs and symptoms of cancer, and referral for appropriate medical follow-u- p. A mammogram is not provided. Examinations are given by regist- $ : 1 r Because many accidents leave you with more than a dent... If you have suffered injuries from an automobile accident, we can help relieve your Eyestone last-minu- te couldnt believe it These were good friends of Dad Their son Scott Mark of Ogden, and Ma, he said. But I didnt think something like this would said he thought the memorial trees come of it. were a wonderful idea. It was a very kind and generous I was astounded myself, said another son, Steve Mark of Layton. thought," Scott Marie said. t'My You Need An Adjustment! The marathon began at 6:30 a.m. Sunday, Aug. 9 in Mataro, Spain just north of Barcelona. We ran 12 miles along the coast 1 From page south to Barcelona and wounds around some famous sites. It was; opening ceremony in Barcelona. The 260 U.S. athletes boarded a hot and humid. We had had a little chartered plane and landed in break, there was a big rain storm Spain two days prior to the opening that cleared out the pollution so we had cleaner air, but it was still in of the Games July 25. We arrived in Spain early in the the 80s and we were exposed to the morning. We had a police escort sun, Eyestone said. Eyestone didnt start out running through accreditation and to Olymtoo hard. I picked a time I thought; pic Village, which was secured, said Eyestone. would be good and held back," he As the American athletes were said. Of the 120 runners, two other; marching into the outdoor arena i Americans ran with him. during the opening ceremonies was a There Eyestone heard commotion in the unity of spirit and ; stadium. a feeling we were cruising The basketball players arrived a well. We were off pace, then i little late and they allowed them in there was a big move up front We ; the line. We marched past the king were passing consistently, but we and queen and marched a lost track of where we were. We! were passing Kenya runners and all lap to the infield, "said Eyestone. of the favorites. I could only see a Other athletes already on the few runners ahead with a pace vefield saw the Dream Team and hide, he said. rushed over to get the players auAt 21 miles I felt I was running, tographs, he said. Eyestone called into a medal. After passing the pace '' the ceremony neat, but it went on car I saw another group. At 22 mi- les I though I was in the top eight I too long It was followed by a daz.then someone in the crowd yelled; zling display of fireworks. Since the marathon took place 9th. I knew it was too late, ; toward the end of the Olympics, Eyestone said. the runners went to Narbonne, My strategy was a good one. 1 France to a track training camp was only one minute and 20 sec-- ! first onds from third place, he said. It was a nice quiet place to get The American runners came in away and do some 12th, 13th and 17th, which Eyes-- ; tone said was the best U.S. finish training he said. Eyestones wife, Lynn, and his since the 1972 Games. If the three had been running as ; parents flew to Paris and took a train to Barcelona where he met a team they would have had the them. bronze medal, he said. It was hot and humid and there Eyestone also ran in the 1988 was no air conditioning, but they Olympics. He said this time the did have great food. There was a was friendlier. Before the security was overgood selection of fruits and vegetables, he explained. He had to whelming. This time we were more adapt to the Spanish lifestyle of relaxed, more the way the Games should be, he said. It is a neat staying up until midnight or a.m. and trying to sleep in in the morncity to visit, but with the Olympics it was a fantastic place. ing. He and his wife spent the two Like most other Olympic athnights before the race in the letes, Eyestone has a contract to e and quiet mission promote shoes and home where he had served in eyeglasses. He also writes for a run1980-8ning magazine. 1 page 1 The letter also stated that It is our hope that the trees, purchased with this money, will add beauty and the comfort of shade for all who come to enjoy your park in the years to come. We also hope their children and grandchildren will eh-jo- y coming to the park to watch the trees grow. The two are survived by five chil- Clinic to restroomboweries Utah League of Cities and Towns Convention -. From grand-childr- en New GRAMA ordinance, Chapof Title II, first reading Municipal insurance bid Bid award, Shepard Lane Park VII ; generations of Flints home, Steve and Mar Trees dren and ter REGANStandard-Examln- er sometime in the latter part of the 19th century. It has been home to the Flint family since then. loved to entertain. A rock fireplace was a focal point of her yard. The rock was laid by Elmer Ward of Fruit Heights, said Green. A fish pond which was once part of the back yard is no longer in use. The rose garden was cultivated to the north of the home. She updated it and made it into an elegant home, said Green. It wasprobably during that time that the brick was covered with stucco. An arched doorway now leads into the large living room, with the original fireplace facing the door. Mina Flint died in 1976 and three years later Chester Eint died. Vernon Flints son Steve and his wife, Margo, purchased the home from the family about 12 years ago. They added new tile to the fireplace and removed the wallpaper from all of the ceilings except in the master bedroom. The wallpaper in that room was hung when the 11 Standard-Examine- . mission Adoption of resolution withdrawing membership from Utah Municipal Finance Cooperative Acceptance of improvements on Ward Road 'tji ROBERT moved. The old back porch was reCompany, Knight Sugar Company moved, the dining room had anof Canada and of Ellison Ranch in other entrance and the old home Nevada. Although not all of his had a porch on the front, said business ventures proved profit- Green. able, he left each of his children a Mother converted the middle farm when he died in 1930. bedroom into a TV room, said Chester Flint, the 13th child of Green. She always had parties and . Request for final approval, small subdivision Future meeting format, report on U.S. 89 Future meeting format, review of general plan with Planning Com- City Council two-stor- ny, City Council 7 Consider adoption of GRAMA Status of city celebration Justice court report Update on emergency preparedness program well-know- dows. Green said the parlor was opened and used for special occasions. A porch led to the kitchen at the back of the home. Another porch had a door to the large dining room on the. south side of the home and there was once a porch in the front According to family records, John Jr. loved to dance. Fie even walked from west Kaysville to Mountain Road for dances at a home there. John Jr. was a director of the First National Bank of Layton, a director for Layton Sugar Compa- Farmington Consider adoption of Resolution white stucco Wednesday Standard-Examine- r at noon. Classified liner ads Friday at 4 deadlines are the day before 2146 N. Main, Antelope Square, Layton OFFICE HOURS Monday through Friday 8:00 a.m.-4:0- 0 p.m. Classified Hours p.m. Monday through Friday 8:00 a.m.-4:0- 0 PHONE 776-495- 1 or 298-891- 6 |