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Show THURSDAY SEPTEMBER 12, 1974 PLEASANT GROVE REVIEW, PLEASANT GROVE, UTAH , ., Changes Made in Visitor Schedules at Timp Cave Changes will be made in vis-itor service schedules at Tim-panog- Cave as the summer season draws to a close. Be-ginning Sept. 16, tickets for the cave tours will be available from 8 a.m. until 4 p.m. daily. The visitor center will remian open from 8 a.m. to 5:30 p.m., offering a orienta tion sound-slid- e program and museum exhibits. The g nature trail along the Am-erican Fork River will also re-main open. Cave tours will continue to be offered seven days a week until about the end of October when the cave trail becomes unsafe due to ice and snow. The size of each tour is lim-ited to no more than twenty persons so that all will be able to hear the guide and ask ques-tions. The capacity of the cave to accomodate large groups at one time is limited. School and seminary leaders planning the tour of Timpanogos Cave for their groups are reminded that advance reservations are nec-essary. The cave is reached by hik-ing over miles of paved trail that rises nearly 1100 feet. The round trip normally re-quires three hours. Timpano-gos Cave National Monument is an area administered by the Department of Interior, Nation- - Align Your Tires Keep your tires properly al-igned to steer more safely and save on treadwear. Tires which roll straight make proper, eco-nomic use of tread design. Legal Speeds Save Safe, legal speeds are tire-savi- (speeds says the Tire Industry Safety Council. Sus-tained excessively high speeds can increase tire temperatures beyond the boiling point of wa-ter, shortening tread life and wearing down the strength of tire fabric. AN ORDINANCE AN ORDINANCE EXTENDING THE LIMITS OF THE CITY OF PLEASANT GROVE. Background. 1. On the 19th day of Aug-ust, 1974, Glen A. Phillips & Isabella L. Phillips the owners of real property as shown by the last assessment rolls, sit-uated in the tract herein de-scribed, requested that said tract of land be taken within the limits of Pleasant Grove affixed the corporate seal of Pleasant Grove City, Utah, this 3rd day of September, 1974. (Signed) Mark Johnson, Pleasant Grove City Recorder. (SEAL) City. 2. Petitionars caused an ac-curate plot or map to be made and certified to by a compet-ent surveyor to be filed with the City Recorder together with said petition. 3. Said tract of land is con-tiguous to Pleasant Grove City and there is no proper reason why it should not be annexed to and made a part of said city. 4. The City Council at a uo Plsll Suiui jcjn ber 3, 1974, after examining said petition of the said own-ers and considering the circum-stances thereof voted by vote of more than two-third- s of all members of the City Council in favor of annexing said tract of land to Pleasant Grove City and directed that an ordinance should be passed annexing said tract of land to Pleasant Grove City and directed that an or-dinance should be passed an-nexing said territory and the extension of the city limits of Pleasant Grove accordingly. NOW, THEREFORE BE IT ORDAINED by the City Coun-cl- i of Pleasant Grove City, Utah: Section 1. That the city lim-its of Pleasant Grove be and the same are hereby extended and enlarged so as to include the following described tract of land in Utah County, to-wi- t: Beginning at a point in a fence line intersection, which point is South 1014.5 feet and East 796.97 feet (based on the Utah State Coordinate System, Central Zone) from the North-west corner of Section 20, Townshop 5 South, Range 2 East, Salt Lake Base and Mer-idian, Thence along a fence line as follows: North 89 deg. 11 min. 12 sec. East 234.26 feet and North 89 deg. 10 min. 15 sec. East 158.85 feet to the West side of 600 West Street, thence South 0 deg. 48 min. 56 sec. West along said Street 333.27 feet to a fence line, thence North 89 deg. 27 min. 27 sec. West along said fence line 393.29 feet to a fence line, thence along said fence line as follows North 0 deg. 27 min. 07 sec. East 78.11 feet and North 1 deg. 00 min. 38 sec. East 245.81 feet to the point of beginning. Area 2.97 acres. BE IT FURTHER ORDAIN-ED AND DECLARED that when this ordinance takes ef-fect, the said tract of land described shall thence-forth be within the corporate limits of Pleasant Grove City and all ordinances, jurisdiction, rules and obligations to or per-taining to said Pleasant Grove City are extended over and made applicable and pertinent to the said tract of land. Section 2. Upon passage of this ordinance, the City Recor-dr-e of Pleasant Grove City shall file and he is hereby directed to file a copy of the map or plat above-mentione- duly cer-tified, together with a certified copy of this ordinance. Addi-tionally, the City Recorder is hereby directed to file with the State Tax Commission within 10 days of the passage of this ordinance notice of the annex-ation accomplished by this or-dinance. Such notice shall in-clude the foregoing description of the area affected and shall contain a certification by the secretary that all necessary le-gal requirements relating to such annexation have been ful-ly completed. In the opinion of the City Council it is necessary for the immediate preservation of the peace, health and safety of Pleasant Grove City that this ordinance take effect upon its first publication. This ordinance shall take ef-fect upon its passage and first publication. Passed by the City Council of Pleasant Grove City this 3rd day of September, 1974. (Signed) W. Cornell Haynie, W. Cornell Haynie, Mayor ATTEST' STATE OF UTAH ) Couny of Utah ) ss. I, Mark Johnson, City Recor-der of Pleasant Grove City, Utah, do hereby certify that the above and foregoing is a full, true and correct copy of an Ordinance passed by the City Council of Pleasant Grove, Utah on the 3rd day of Sep-tember, 1974, entitled "An Or-dinance Extending the Limits of the City of Pleasant Grove." IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand and al Park Service. stem immmiwhiwm " I! frn Fl f7ri ne e rst stePs to an energY conservation home is the installation of j If storm doors and windows. They save natural gas, they make you and your l U iVl family more comfortable and they save you money. But please don't wait for cold weather to place your order. Dealers will be rushed, prices may be higher and the supply may not be adequate to fill everyone's needs. A telephone call to dealers (listed in the Yellow Pages under "Storm Windows and Doors") will bring recommendations and cost estimates without obligation. Weat herstripping and Caulking When there's cold air sifting under doors and around windows, there's money sifting through your pockets. Cracks between door frames or window frames, both inside the house and out, should be caulked. Weatherstripping materials and caulking are carried by most hardware, building supply and department stores at small cost. Just because there's an ample supply of natural gas for homes in Mountain Fuel Country or that it's so low in cost is no reason to waste it. Use gas wisely and you can be assured of a good supply for many years to come. irJ) A Providing you lflilhW I A w'tn na,ural WJ I 9as energy is gg MOUNTAIN FUELVtsy |