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Show tflkobhld Rttvww 2 Tuesday, November 72, 1994 Dont t a commuter It down freeway; just slow down slip-slid- e solved. worst night- mare, A fight snow that had brc fall. ;tng all day was hrgtnnmg to fnxe, creating icy and slushy condition .on the lireay, Traific Roy and Tayton wa mo vine along at a reasonable rate, hut then came the guy in the ' Volkswagen bug. He was weaving tn end out of bailie, probably do-tn- g what be doe during fiery commute, Then ai be tried to change lane in front of me to get by a - slowa-movin- iclmle in the fji g lane, be brgan to fiih tale, (It aUay seem the guy in the moil vulnerable vehicle are the ! one who drive the most recklessly J during hazardous road condition) t I immediately begin pumping my ; brake to slow down a I watched I ; Eorrorva Notes (, the driver in the Volkiwagort over-compeni- and then stall It) spin around. He hu the foubwheel-dnvvehicle next to him and they both started spinning down the freeway bgether like two darners. 1 he Volkswagen ended up in the median, safe and sound, white the drive ended up on the opposite side of the freeway on the Shoulder, No one was hurt and for. lunatcly no other vehicles were in e country-wester- n four-whe- continued down the free, could see the rtvuli of other on both side of the Inter-Stat- I way. spm-of- Andy Howell (j A t e, Vrt. winter has arrived in Davis he commuting corridor County of Northern Utah. Maybe we just arent used to suih a storm this early in the sea. son, but whaiever the reason, it seem some of ut didnt adjust our driving habits for the weather. Come to think of it. this sort of Stutr happens the first winter Storm of every year. After I watched the Volkswagon e, and the four-whedrive play doe-sec-do- noticed that everyone around me slowed down about 10 mph and were driving even more I cautiously than we were before, 1 he first storm is kind of a process and taubon signal for drivers along the Wasatch f root. It seems if there are any major pileups or serious accident dur. mg the winter, they always happen during that first storm. Drivers who run off the road or witness others doing n. become more cautious the rest of the win ter. We just had our wake-u- p call, and luckily there were no JO- - and 40-a- r pileups to go along with il With such a major storm this early, it looks like we are in for a lung commuting But so far we passed the first Step tn a pretty reasonable fashion. Now. we wait for the fog to roll in for the nest test. The Agenda A fte werd-ing-o- white-knuckl- e sea-so- n, I J M fcJ ft IJ, lH fats lee si mm fllel I ulHC I y.Ktoft mam Home From page 1 ! for them to get down because she 1 was afraid they would fall and hurt - themselves. She said the porch was 2 a great place to rollerskate although 2 it sounded like freight trains going through on the inside of the house. 2 Hatch says there was a living 2 room, kitchen and two bedrooms i on the main floor. A bathroom sat between the two bedrooms and the J only door to the bathroom was j from the bedrooms. She said there j was an attic on the second floor of the house that had a window that looked down on the yard. Although z the attic was used as a storage area, ;! Hatch and her sister played many a t day up there. The house has an aluminum roof 2 and she can remember the sound of the snow sliding off in the winter v like a thunderous roar. According to Hatch, Lank had a 2 green thumb and shared flowers and vegetables with all his friends j 2 and neighbors and family. J He was a marvelous neighbor 2 and a good man. He shared what he had with them and was always concerned about other people. Many of the trees around the f house today are those he planted. 2 Lank and Olive had a beautiful J yard with bushes, trees and all kinds of flowers and at one time had a fruit orchard. Hatch said. She J recalls that one year her father had 1 ' 2 2 t 2 very frustrated that year. For some time. Lank worked at a Centerville nursery called Porton Walton Nursery. The property around the house used to have free flowing wells and he would water the trees, flowers, plants and his vegetable garden from those wells, which arc now dried up. I was happy there, Hatch said as her voice choked back the tears. My parents were older when they had my sister and I and they were wise about their time, possessions and money. My mother once made a coat for me from an old coat she had. We kept everything in case it could be used latcr, she said. When Mom cooked, she didn't use cookbooks, she just put a little of this and a pinch of that and ev-- s 1 of a hat randomly. They dont" Silvester said the producers give each person in the audience 30 onds to present themselves. Then they choose based on those intervsec- I still chose me. don't know why they I tutftfed 1 ftmffl ( June ( ) I if IWUftftf I), h1 0t to beteme Ho ift ft Axrt rftutkto W 1ft MovftvHIft UHk CftuAty ftrom i arftofl ( My fvtotofKto ftftft 70 mrt1to don't have any idea of Of rivetSoar o aMl Pear fenat- - Cl' hml 1KU v 0w B KewWrton at wrant M lews tone Tiemeu'eiw Suu'N Va PeN County Syrecuee Counci ei ft ftsofttc er rofty 0a ft S4 B AOnaur ta tmnl e (famrtltt errwraa thiitaa S wrtwvdarF p, runinai el law . r a el S rn Ainamw or uwweurar tuhaare B Inrutl l.yhl al way rrtl d Ul N p. n bam k6 I S Li.wt U name ktf nommeuoa trf len (K irw Sear ftN CMy B (term stetemmtt a b, .lew at Pudeeif hr Mnsutls nl e Contpua auta hreren amesenon ji Saw eod Norm fmmar I Spaed mat tai fcuQ Wml B Com B B B B PTJA Iw aonelton PuCAK heermp oi Nnel Pkel Approval C C Ann tubdtvtwon pneie N NrourU i coovkmt c hoove m me ton- - I renal West Point City Counci Teclen Ridve Sub tor Dent Co ally sharin'! report Mcutt CUnD amt arovr am Adupr revaul-- a railway havdmg Cenemea bend Davis officials back west highway effort By BRYON SAXTON Staff Writer With transFARMINGTON portation woes facing the Wasatch Front, a Davis County lawmaker $150 wants the ul million West Davis Highway to become an immediate reality. Rep. Marda Dillrce. recently asked the Davis Council of Governments to help her convince Gov. Mike Leavitt to fund a north-sout- h highway through Davis County following the eastern shoreline of the Great Salt Lake. The route, proposed to run from the Salt Lake International Airport to 4700 West in Weber County, is slated to be west of Interstate 15 and cast of the Great Salt Lake following the Denver Rio Grande Railroad tracks. The highway is expected to alleviate comset for a $1 muter traffic on 35-mi- lc Holding a stuffed cat to illustrate a point, Qina Hoffenbeck of Wasatch Humana answers a question about responsible pet ownership from students at Sunset Elementary crything turned out wonderful. She made a fruit bread and grass peas, which was a stronger pea that she would make a dish with like baked beans." Hatch also fondly remembers the holiday season. We also had so much fun at the holidays. The entire family would come and Mom and Dad would make ice cream and lemon sherbet and we would play the piano and sing songs. Our days there were not eventful in the sense of big sensational things happening but we raked leaves and picked fruit and mowed and played board games on the front porch. Life was good there, peaceful, safe and happy. Lank's grandfather was a prominent figure in early Salt Lake City history. He was the LDS Churchs first historian, a General Authority, a missionary, and an orator. He also was an author of such books as A New Witness For God. Hatch says that while she was growing up there was a bookcase in their living room that once belonged to her I can remember it always being filled with lots of books sometimes I think that he is the reason we all love books and reading. According to historical records, great-grandfath- the first inhabitants of the house were Thomas Jefferson Brandon and his wife, Margaret Maggie Cherry Brandon. According to the historians, they had a frame store attached to the east side of the home. Maggie was the daughter of daughters would bring light refreshments and donuts from the store to the stage coach station across the street for the weary travelers. The building that was the station still stands there today and is now an apartment building. The house was built with supporting floor joists made of timber. Those timbers can still be seen under the house. The walls in the main room, which is today the living room, were made of adobe and are a foot thick. Thomas died in 1916 and Maggie died in 1923. It is assumed they lived in the house until their deaths. Two or three families lived in the house until 1943 until Roberts bought the house and lived there until 1984. what they look for. Price iews. - ft JcetM ft fell Counci ir rro ) lil Car irol erwwieMt I djittoa. Few from Swfttel Junker HtH Neeuesl Aaron Benjamin Cherry, who was planted many fruit trees and the one of the first settlers in Centernotorious east wind blew so hard that it tore most of the trees right ville, which was then called the out of the ground and tossed them Cherry Creek Settlement Many children of the settlers all over the property. She said some even landed on the roof of took eggs to Maggie in exchange for young the house. She said her father was candy. The Brandons From page ft I He Iltume (onSaiW ttototo t totMto imim il' Final accent enca 2 2 tA OO ft ft 2 I (Mu I C'i ft ty 1 J CtmtPf 'toft Cult toOsEtev )(i0 w torsH ftsrl itohsisd Ift ft areppwd wsmtait maasutH South Weber CMy Counci r CSnton City Counci its heart, lungs and liver the same as the human skdclal system docs, j "Wcre going into this one, girl," 'Shelton said as she sliced a breast z open. $ "Ooh, wow." they said as they gacd inside the red hen they had tenderly held earlier. 1 Quickly students volunteered to pull out the organs. J In the palm of (he laic gloves ; were hearts, livers, gizzards. lungs and intestines. "The heart is about one inch J 1 long and 34 inches wide." said Daniel Sedgwick as he showed it to J his friends. Ashley Cram of Clearfield re moved a gizzard. ! Hailey, who was in Crams group. 2 said. "I thought when we cut open the chicken that they would have a 2 ton of guts and it would splatter ; out all over the place." Instead, she found that like hu- -t j mans, the chickens insides stay in- side until cut out. Both Cram and Bailey said they plan on entering the medical field 2 someday. After examining the chickens in- 2 sides, the students placed the parts 2 on cookie sheets. Johnson will be ; using the parts for the next several weeks as the students study the dif-ferent body systems in depth. But on Friday, the students ate J lunch chicken croissant sand J wichcs. t ( ft - ne at ataAa imp IfwwoMf aha Morris M aw inmrwH Far 4 ft ft ftubtic Hrtfftn ft V m Wo' I 1400 tnt0tftev tom ewertl toy toft ;frentp)t 2 wt Cuuea at Keys vISe City fet He 4 ruuheMtk to M cwwvkiiF se4 we 4awwtt aumevetwa tvtodHPMe fcsOel I Anamitewt 'caum ITtauM review M fWUW ft I (AH1 wwu 1 amend umkeimeif oerty cuttod iat Ofttorly fto 0 u(jc totoml ut nd ftl toft APtMOvto h MHK toll 9 Pot zzrtzo 2 Uft , "ft HI touM ai 0t Hto ft A t9 1st) 4 b A 2 faf m 01 C mmrn-- Cftaffftoftd City Cotetcl RuUf ereuteMO to Mve vw ao ae Mkf 1 hot$ Id TM, City 2 ai v imit Ml Silvester said that she hadnt planned on going to see the Price is Right. She, her husband, Mark, and another couple had gone to California recently for Silvesters birthday. They were at a theater when they met a man handing out tickets to the game show. We decided to try it, she said. Silvester said although she doesn't remember much, its an experience she will hever forget. School During a visit to the school Thursday, she said that more than 600 animals are put to sleep each hour in the United States; the solution is spaying or neutering pets. Lynn and Beth Kitchen bought the house in 1984 for their son. He didn't end up living there so they rented it to Doug and H6lly Cob-ab- c and their five children, who have now lived there for 12 years. The Cobabes say they love the house and have a very real sense of belonging and an interest in keeping its past alive. They have even decorated it in much of its original style. The Cobabcs say they feel a closeness with the original inhabitants of the city. They also go to church in a building that was the first one in Centerville. We feel a sense of belonging to something that is old and has continued for many years and we feel a kinship with those who lived here before," says Doug Cobabe. Theres a myth or rumor that B.H. Roberts didnt trust banks and that he buried a large amount of gold somewhere in Centerville. Ive even had people knock on our door and ask if they could run their metal detectors over the ground. Doug says the house used to have a single roof on it and there is a place where its evident that at one time the roof caved in and was repaired with reinforcement of He says that probably was when the aluminum roof was put on. That kind of roof can be very noisy when it rains but it is a very soothing and pleasant sound. Even when the snow comes off the roof, it's an exciting noise. It sounds like maybe what an avalanche would sound like, but the kids love it and make sliding paths on the piles of snow left from it" They removed the old linoleum on the kitchen floor and restored the original wood floors which they say gives the house a warm look. Many of the light fixtures are antique although its not known if they are the original ones. The Cobabcs also say the front porch is the best feature of the house and is used year-rounThey can sit out there and watch it rain, lightening or snow and still fee safe and warm. Windows of beveled glass and glue scratch (an opaque look) are still in the house as is an antique paned glass picture window. The house now has three bedrooms since the upstairs attic was remodeled by the Kitchens and is now one big bedroom. The door and window casing are the originals and are made of fir tree wood and are stained and varnished. There is a fireplace in the living room with a large hearth made out of hard wood. The front of it is faced with small shallow tiles and there is a big antique mirror above it. The original front door has thick beveled glass with angled edges and a skeleton key is used to lock it. All of the doors in the house have original key holes and are locked with a skeleton key. There is no central heating in the house it still has floor heat registers and radiant heat. Not a lot has been done to the old house over the years that would make it stand up to the modern advances in home building today. But in spite of this, it has been a safe and stable haven for those who ' have called it home. d. Disabled to play on Junior Jazz team CLINTON The recreation department is looking for disabled and special needs children to play on a unique Junior Jazz basketball team this winter. City Recreation Director LeeAnn Powell said fees are $30 but scholarships are available. Powell said she needs a half dozen more children to fill first-yeteam. Play is set to begin in ar More information may be obtained by calling Clinton recreation at 825-539- 8. Standard-Examine- r Norm dams Conors commcntty newspaper DAVIS BUREAU Andy Howell April Adams Robert Regan Sarah Cannon, Bryon Saxton ... Donna Merry Brandi Bos worth, Chad Harward EditorManager..... Lakeside Editor Photographer Reporters Advertising Manager Advertising Representatives... Marilyn Child Receptionist Val Bagtey Cartoonist n Callahan, Tom Deardon, Jana Doxey, Correspondents JaNae Francis, Ruth Malan, Ginger Mikkelsen, Loretta Park billion road widening project beginning in 2002. COG agreed to help Dillrce in her effort and recruit the support of Weber and Morgan County officials. COG members also agreed to accompany Dillrce to a meeting she has scheduled with Gov. Leavitt in December to discuss the issue. Dillrce said the problem is the West Davis Highway is now listed on the Wasatch Front Regional Council and Utah Department of Transportation master list, but cant stay without targeted funding. Thats where the governor comes in. We need to address this immediately in how to protect the corridor, she said. Dillrce said the Utah Department of Transportation will not pay for rights of way for roads, so other support "Wcrc hoping to have atrong aupport from Salt Lake County. The West Davis Highway will be a state highway," Dillrce said. "Wc a need secure, long-terfunding commitment that will ensure transportation dollars." Dillrce doesnt believe making the highway a toll road to recoup funds appropriated up front for the project is feasible. "There is not support for that in the state," she said. But the Farmington lawmaker said Davis leaders need not feel guilty about the state picking up the expense. She said in the last seven years Davis County has had the third highest revenue in the state and received the lowest percentage of state highway funds expended Wc are entitled to a little bigger piece of pic than we arc getting," she said. With the growth trends of Davis and Weber counties, Dillrce would like to see the two neighboring counties use their position to gain leverage with the state for funds. Clearfield Mayor Ncldon Hamblin believes it is time for Davis County to get on with it. m We need to press on and get something on the table, he said. said Rep. Don Bush, he will strongly support the project because of his concern with the North American Free Trade Agreement between Mexico, the U.S. and Canada creating additional truck traffic on Utah highways designated as truck routes. He said the highway could divert some of that truck 5. traffic from I- -1 rienced in that disaster was a recent earthquake in Mexico where some 100 people lost their lives trying to save friends and loved ones. Layton hopes that if a disaster Train From page funding mechanisms need to be put into place, including approaching Salt Lake County officials for their 1 are residents Joann Moore and Rex Stacy. Firefighters Alan Joos and Mark Weeks join Fire Chief Roger Bodily as instructors. The firemen help teach the courses- Layton said while the training program is new in Utah, its in other parts of the country. He said he was interested to watch the organized rescue efforts in Los Angeles, Calif., last year during the earthquake. I saw the community response teams activated, he said. They knew what to do and kept the situation from utter chaos. In contrast to organization expe ed should occur in his community, the same type of organization can be used to remedy resulting dangers. Were jumping on this training hard because we feel it is very worthwhile, he said. We encourage everyone to get involved in training. You dont have to be involved in the citys emergency preparation program or anything. Layton said besides this training program, the city operates a citywide emergency preparation network. More information may be obtained on either program by calling Layton or Cathy Diehl at 774-7217 or 774-720- 4. Some straight talk to athletes. Back and shoulder pain affects your athletic performance. Chiropractic treatment helps relieve pain and restore mobility. Maximize your potential - play to win. Give us a call. Jo-An- Th. Laknida Review is published weekly end distributed by earner Tuesday afternoon bom Suneet a published deity. Famxngton The Standard-ExaminNEWS DEADLINES All news and photos should bs submitted no later than 3 30 p m Wednee day lor publication the following Tuesday m the Lakeside Review and 3 30 p m the previous day tor publication m the Standard-Examine- r. ttirouofi ADVERTISEMENT Chiropractors. We Can Help. DEADLINES: Display advartisamanta Wednesday at noon. Classified liner ads Friday at 4 pm. tor the Lakeside. Standard-Ekamindeadlines are the day before pubkeatnn 44 N. Main, AMsteae S sears, Layton OFFICE HOURS Monday IhromN Frida 140 ajn. iiOO pun. CLASSIFIED NOUNS ft PHONE 776-- 4 OS1 9f M4S1 BULL0UGII CHIROPRACTIC CENTER Dr. . 360 Jsrry J. Bulkwgh Fort Lane 4102 (801 ) 546-37-31 Layton, Utah $4041 j |