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Show L 1 I 141 PIERPOIM w'- -i UN SALT LAKE CITY Ji I L" I NU CDXr AVE. 10,JTAH mm Layton Getting an early start on how to solve next summer's heat and recreation problems, Layton City has forged ahead with plans for a swimming pool. The final contract is about to be signed and it is anticipated that construction on the long awaited pool will begin sometime in March. It is planned to have the pool ready for the first plunge around the first of June, according to Gil bert Fairholm, city administrator for 'and city administration working togeth-- j jer for a betterment program," Mr. Fair-- i Layton. hold added. He noted that the pool fund The pool will be built on property in the Verdeland Park area, just was first started nearly two years ago by north of the city administration building. a group of town residents. The fund has It will be a regulation Olympic size pool, grown through donation and novel ticket sales plans. about 75 by 30 feet in size. The city will complete financing of Cost of the pool will be in the neighborhood of $50,000, Mr. Fairholm said. the pool through the new sales tax pro"The pool is an example of citizens gram. The sales tax is earmarked for city-owne- d Hey DAVIS NEWS capital improvement and Layton City officials pointed out that financing the pool will not add to any existing tax in the city but will be paid for entirely from the sales tax. The outdoor pool will be complete with an up to date filter system. The water in the pool will be changed frequently, also, Mr. Fairholm said. administrator at Layton Begins work on city problems Layton Gilbert Fairholm is a personable young man. He will soon become as well known as an) one in Layton tor he has become administrator for Layton City, taking over the duties of John Paik who resigned to enter private enterprise. Mr. Fairholm is a native Utahn, was born and reared in Salt Lake City. He attended the Brigham Young University where he obtained his B.S. degree in GovernFir-- t ment Administration. working as assistant manager in Orem, he left that post to continue his studies at the of Pennsylvania. University MIA drama LAYTON, FEBRUARY UTAH 9, IttCiO Held during February I DAVIS family when its needed is aim Of new service center at HAFB NEWS LINE A Dawson to run again former Republican Layton William A. gressman from the Second District and formerly of Lay-tohas announced his bid to reclaim the seat he lost in 1958 to Rep. David S. King, a Democrat. BOWLING SENSATION Ogden Pap Miya, Clearfield, rolled a sensational 706 in the Nisei Mens league at Paramount Bowl last week. His feat is the first recorded in competition in Ogden in over five years. He bowled games of 193, 207 and 276. His single game of 276 was also the largest recorded during the current bowling season in Ogden or northern Utah. PTA MEETINGS Layton Two PTA organizations at Layton have set founders day observances. Layton Elementary school will hold its program at 7:30 p.m. Thursday. E. M. Whitesides school event will be this Tuesday. A day at Layton Elementary on film will be shown at that school meeting. At Whitesides, foreign exchange students will speak. FOUR NEW EAGLES Four Clearfield Second Ward scouts have Clearfield received their Eagle badges Perry Fifield, son of Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Fifield. 1249 East 1450 South; Glen Smith, son of Mr. and Mrs. Vern Smith, 836 South State; James Huffaker, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Hutfaker, 37 West 250 North; and Kenneth Morley, son of Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Morley, 908 South 550 East. NEWCOMERS Ogden Recent births listed at the Ogden hospitals include a daughter to Mr. and Mrs. Grant H. Brough, Kaysville, (February 5) ; a son to Mr. and Mrs. Eugene B. Dyches, Layton, (February 5) ; a daughter to Mr. and Mrs. Donald Hughes, Layton, (February 6); a son to (FebMr. and Mrs. Harvey M. Broadbent, Clearfield, ruary 3) ; a daughter to Mr. and Mrs. Felix J. Martinez, Clearfield, (February 8) ; a son to Mr. d Mrs. Edward F. Taylor, Layton, (February 4); a daughter to Mr. and Mrs. Monte Merritt, Layton, (February 3) ; and a daughter to Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Bradfield, Idaho Falls, (January 31), Mr. Bradfield is formerly of Kaysville and Mrs. Bradfield Pat Kleitches of Clearfield. KAYSVILLE DSA Kaysville Jaycees at Kaysville have named Richard C. Bowman, of Bowmans Maiket; as recipient of the distinguished service award. Also named was Leonard W. Hill Jr., West Kaysville as outstanding young farmer. Presentation of the awards was made by Mayor J. C. Linford. OUTSTANDING FARMER Layton Masaru- Yamada, 83, was named Friday as Young Farmer of the Year at the annual convention of the Utah State Young Farmers Association. Mr. Yamada is a row crop and general farmer with 50 acres of land in Syracuse. He also has 60 head of cattle. DART VICTORY are in the State Class A basketDarts The Kaysville ball tournament after defeating Ben Lomond 67 to 52 Friday at Ogden. It was the sixth straight victory for the team. top Region One-Tw- o con- Daws-on- , n, a-- - District DAV met Layton SundayA in Joint district meetLayton ing of the DAV and their auxilia- ries was held Sunday, February 7, in the local chapter hall, 27 South Main, Layton. The meeting was conducted by Commander Comrade George Macey. He was assisted by other state officials. The auxiliary served a buffet luncheon from noon to I pm. at which time the regular order of business was taken up. The meeting was atfended by practically every chapter in the state. Principal speaker was Comrade James Brucatto who reported his trip to the national held in Washington, convention DC. State The next district meeting will be held March 6 at 2766 Adams Avenue. Ogden. It was voted to hold the staie convention June 16, 17 and 18 in Salt Lake City as guests of DAV Chapter 6. Reservations may be made at the New house Hotel. The next meeting of the board of directors will be held Maich 10 -- at the Newhouse Hotel, Salt Lake City. There will be nomination and election of officers for local Chapter 14 Tuesday eien-mFebruary 9, at 8 pm. The officers will be installed February 23 at 8 p m. All members are urged to at- tend these meetings by acting commander Comrade Emmett Nalder. The news releases are submitted by W. G Cox,, histonan. festival to be Februaiy is drama Kd)sviile time and the MIA has scheduled a full round of plays to be sented during the month Plays m various wards in Dav-- , is Stake will be piesented Feb 22 and 23. District dramas will be piesented February 25 and 26 at 7.30 pm. in the Davis Stake House, according to Mrs Leone Gurr, actnng district diama supie-'hel- d The word family is th important one in Hill Air loite Base's new Famil.v ServAway from home and family who are ready to help when the need arises, service&en and their dependents are finding a helping hand right wheie and when pen is oi they need it. Five stakes paitiupatmg in the The Family Service Center was opened recently at Hill Air Forte Base in its own distnct aie South Davis, leader comfortable, homey quarters. It is staffed largely by volunteei officers and Jay Packaid, Bountiful, leader ice Center. ar-liv- ; ' - - Layton Elementary iPTA schedules Founder's program The Layton Elenien-tar- y PTA Founders day meeting and program will be held Thursday, February 11, at 7.30 "Pm. at the school cafeteria. AA film will be shown, entitled Layton School V ' All this equipment has been donated by members of the Air Force eager to lend a helping hand. non-use- d City. Wilma Elkins; Bountiful North leader Beth Ciandull, Bountiful South, and Davis leader Elaine Elggi en A winning play will be chosen from each stake to enter distnct officers wives. The center is planned to help anyone needing emergency aid of any kind. If an auman at the field, complete with wife and baby, the Center helps him find housing for himself and family. The Center is even emergency equipped with equipment to be loaned out, such as dishes, baby cribs, small appliances, tables and chairs to help a family get by until their own belongings Airmen at the field are wanting to be in the act and have volunteered their time towards buildings fixing some to become emergency housing while a family is looking for a permanent place to land. Incorporated Into the centers plan for aid is the casualty branch. Volunteer women are to help anytime a assigned distress signal shows. So a wife with her husband far away who finds herself ill and alone with small children dependent upon her will discover some members of the family willing and able to take over for a few days. The library of the Family Service Center has on its shelves waiting to be given away doxens of booklets describing posts throughout the world where Air Force personnel may be sent. Thug, a family about to move to a base in Geimany is able to find out what to take, the sort of living conditions to be found, a description of the base and its area. That and the advice and actual physical help with the work involved all make the move much less painful. The new Family Service Center has grown out of the old dependents program. It is a warmer help with a great deal of personal touches. Women who devote their time to the center and the people needing aid are interested women who are eager to lend their time and resources whenever help is needed. It is a friendly organization. The people who are its volunteer workers have either found themselves in need of help or anticipate that they probably will before their Air Force careers are over. Mrs. Morey B. Jeffery is coordinator of the Center. Her assistant is Mrs. Fredrick E. Carlsen. Mrs. Otto R. Kvapil is in charge of the casualty committee. This committee has a file of ladies who have volunteered to scrub, wash, cook, iron, baby competition Distnct winner will enter the dn laion comelttion to be Maich 10 m Salt Lake City The 15 winning plays in the division will be featured m the MIA June Festival m Salt Lake at Layton Elementary School. It will be an actual Day I GETTING READY TO MOVE TO YOKOTA AIR BASE, JAPAN, for three years are Mrs. John Preston, left, and three children, three weeks old Jodi, five year old Chipper and three year old Jerry. Mrs. Mor-re- y Jeffery, right, coordinator of the Family Service Center at Hill Air Force Base, is ready to give advice and any help Mrs. Preston might need. Mrs. Prestons husband, SSgt. John Preston left for his overseas base a couple of weeks ago. His wife and children will join him a soon as housing is available for them there. Will meet with KAYSVILLE film of the childi en in the school will show them in the lunch room, during various activities of the day. The meeting will pay special honor to bus drivers as wed as past piesidents of the PTA. There will be an amusing skit Off to school we go, on a bus with the made up of children from school, a bus driver and a mother and a father. John Gnsmore's sixth grade ill also participate on the gram. The PTA officers are ing to piesent a short skit con-- j cerning Founders Day. CHURCH pio-jso- ... hor Mri. Dorothy G. Notion newspaper rated best among air force publications in AMC judging. B.n-ban- sit or furnish transportation whenever needed. The welcoming committee is headed by Mrs. YV a r r e n G. Ward. This group has In communities in the area who visit newcomers and acquaint them with their new surroundings. The office and publicity committee wgrk under the direction of Mrs. Joseph A. Arduengo. repie-sentativ- AH the committees are or- and worked by volunteer helpers no payment. The ladies work every other week for three hours at a time and are always ready for any emergency duties. Mrs. Jeffery said that, although the Center Is primarily for military personnel, its workers stand by ready to give aid and advice to civilian personnel searching for housing or about to be transferred to another base. ganized their little daughter. third straight year the newspaper has taken top spot. The Hill Top Times is published by Inland Printing Company, Hill Kaysville. A board of judges at AMC headFirst quarters, Dayton, Ohio, made the selection. The paper competed In with eight other newspapers from such bases as San Antonio, Texas; The Hill Top Times, San Bernardino, California; Oklanewspaper of Hill AFB, was judg-cas- homa City, Oklahoma; Tachikawa e ed first place winner in the Air Base, Japan; and Mobile, nual Air Materiel Command's Alabama. r Contest. Mrs. Nelson is the wife of Guy Edited by Mrs. Dorothy G. Nel-- B. Nelson, Clinton. They are parClinton, the Times took first ents of five children: Steven, Gy- honors m Class IV, w hich ene Ronnjei Carol, and Luanne" includes bases with populations of 10,000 and over. This is the newspaper place AMC contest an-th- Newspaper-of-the-Yea- GOP NEWS Bountiful club Rotarians of Kay: Ka)sville ville will meet Thursday at 6 .10 p.m. with the Bountiful Rotary Club, according to Ernest R. Little, president. The group will meet at the Seiv-U- s Drug to hear John Penton speak. Mr. Peaton is from Australia, and is a member of the finance committee of Rotary International. There will be no meeting Wednesday evening. There, he received his Master's degree in Government Administration. Until he accepted the Layton post, he was assistant manager in Ogden. The pioblems and pleasure of a amaller community appeal to Mr. Fairholm so it is with a good deal of delight that ha moved to the Layton position, lie believes that the problems a small town is concerned with are just about the same ones besetting a city, but the latter lacks the spirit of friendliness and neighborlinesa to be found in a smaller community. "The problems in Layton are in projust about nation-wid- e gressive communities rapid growth with concurrent police and fire protection, housing. There ia a good neighborhood feeling here, though, Mr. Fairholm said. The title of administrator carried a different connotation than manager. As administrator, Mr. Fairholm will work under the direction of city council-me- n and the Mayor, each of whom head a definite department. Mrs. Fairholm is also a native Salt Laker. The Fairholm will be living in Layton with In Every birthday worth a penny Kaystille Fifth Wind Primary ofliceis and teacheis met Monday evening at the church prior to contacting homes in their waid during the annual Penny Drive. Each member of the ward was asked to give at least twice his age in pennies as a contribution to the Primary Childrens Hospital in Salt Lake City. After the group had canvassed homes in their ward they returned to the recreation hall for light lunch. Creslview PTA to meet Farmington Farmington The Republicans of Davis County have called a convention for Friday, March 4, at 8 p.m. at the courthouse in Farmington, according to Richard S. Stevenson, chairman of the party. Delegates to the State Conventions will be elected along with a county chairman, vice Roy C. Evans, Layton chairman, tecretary, treasurer of pupil personnel of the and central committee to serve Davls Stho01 District, will be the for the ensuing two years. THIRD WARD PENNY DRIVE Crestv.ew Ka) sv ille Pennv Drive for the Third Ward Primary The County Primary convenmeeting mursday. will be held February 9 to the 16th. Teachers will call at tion will be held at 8 p.m. Satevery home in the ward to collect pennies, according to The meeting will be held at 7 urday, August 13, Mr. Stevenson said. Nominees shall be p m. in the school Mrs. Ethel Webb, president. room. Following Mr. Evans talk, selected 'to run on the party there will be a short question ticket at the regular primary GIRLS DATE DADS Kaysville Homebuilder girls of the Fourth Ward and answer period with the audi- election. took their Dads as dates last Friday evening to a dinner-danc-e ence participating. Delegates to county convenat the ward hall. The evenings entertaining folA nominating committee will tions will be chosen at a mas lowed the theme of knights and their ladies. Dinner, be chosen during the evening to meeting to be held in each votselect a slate of candidates to ing district in the county on dancing and games were enjoyed by the group. or before April 20. serve on next years PTA. Sets meeting multi-purpos- e GENEALOGY COURSE GIVEN course in genealogy is being Kaysville A held in the Fourth Ward. The class will convene Tuesdays at 7 p.m. in the ward chapel. Mrs. Maude Odd and Mrs. Carma Sanders arc instructors. STAKE WELFARE BANQUET Kaysville Davis Stakes annual welfare banquet will be Saturday, February 13, at the stake house at 7 p.m. Dinner will be followed by an entertaining program. Funds collected will go to the purchase of the Davis Stake farm. SUNDAY SCHOOL SWIMMING PARTY Kaysville Mrs. Mina Flints Sunday School class had fun at a swimming party Saturday at the Clearfield Swrim-min- g Pool. After the swim, they returned to Mrs. Flint home for refreshments. BOY SCOUTS PRESENT MEETING Kaysville Third Ward Boy Scouts under the direction of James Layton, scout master, will present the program Sunday, February 14, during Sacrament meeting at 4:30 p.m. i I r; r y. V. b |