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Show : DAVIS REFLEX JOURNAL, JUNE 20, 1984 CHURCH kLulL Missionaries o ELDER PETROFF STILL BARGAIN By DONETA GATHERUM Elder Paul S. Kirby, son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred B. Kirby. 290 N. 500 E.. Kaysville, has accepted a call to serve in the LDS Honduras Tegucigalpa Spanish speaking mission. He will enter the Mission Training Center on Thursday, June Elder Mark Robert Cottle, 2242 Valley View Dr., Layton, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Cottle will be honored at a farewell Sacrament service on June 24 at 2:45 p.m. in the Layton 14th Ward, Cherry Lane Chapel, Layton. 28. MARK IS going to the Spanish Speaking, Anaheim, Calif, mission and will enter the MTC on July 5. Mark is a graduate of Layton High School and LDS Seminary. He also earned the rank of Eagle Scout and received his Duty to God award. He has attended Weber State College this past year. ELDER KIRBY' will be speaking in his ward Sacrament meeting on Sunday. June 24 at 10:40 a.m. in the Chapel on 875 E. 200 N., Kaysville. Elder Kirby graduated from Davis High School in 1983. He was chosen Utah State winner Sterling Scholar in vocational education. During high school he was active in EEA where he was chosen state st place winner in public speaking. THERE WILL be an open house at his home for friends and relatives following the farewell. 1 HE PARTICIPATED in sports, music (band and symphonic), political science and was a high honor graduate. He served as a delegate to Boy's State and also to the Close-u- p Program in Washington. D.C. Paul is an Eagle Scout with three silver palms. This past year Paul has been attending the University of Utah on scholarship. He was a member of and affiliated with the among family pictures and meaningful mementoes was a December, 1914 issue of The Weekly Re- football, soccer and track. He attended one year at Weber State where he also wrestled. flex. A color picture of Santa Claus and his helpers appeared front page center. Just last week a daughter of Charles Sill was cleaning out a buffet drawer. Out fell a cancelled check. The blue draft was dated Feb. 27, 1914. It was made out to AN OPEN house will be held at the Petroff home from 12:00-- 4 p.m. All family, friends and associates are invited. The Weekly Reflex. Cost for the in 1914 was $1.25. paper Kaysville News COINCIDENCES ELDER ROSS Elder Douglas Clair Ross, son of Mr. and Mrs. Clair Ross of West Point, has been called to serve an LDS mission in the Spokane-Washingto- n mission. HE WILL speak Sunday, June 24 at the West Point Stake Center, 550 N. 2300 W., West Point at Regional Young Adult Sock Hop Scheduled a.m. 10:15 A group from Davis High School Hawaii. They enjoyed the sights and beaches on the island of Oahu. Bruce and Annette Bitner were chaperons of the group. The group included Laurie Flint, Niederhauser, Kristie Hatch, Cindy Bates, Trisha Ott, Sandra Giles, Joyce Broder, Doug Hunger, Greg Pearson, Blair Giles, Mike Rick Francis, Jess Sampson, Ryan Smith and Robert Reed. Lt. Col. (Ret) and Mrs. Leon Heaps spent a few days at their summer cabin at Weber Meadow View Ranch in the Uintas. From Scottsdale, Ariz. comes word of the arrival of a son born to Mr. and Mrs. David Hughes weighing 8 lb. 8 oz. and was born Clearfield High School and seminary and has attended Snow College. He has been active in the West Point 4th Ward where he has earned his Eagle Scout award and his Order of the Arrow. FRIENDS and family are invited to call at the Ross home throughout the afternoon and evening on Sunday following the meeting, vsb An LDS Regional Y'oung Adult Sock Hop" will be held Saturday, evening, June 23 at the Crestwood LDS Stake Center. 555 N. 100 E. DANCE INSTRUCTION will be from 7:30-8:3- 0 p.m. with dancing 0 from p.m. Admission charge is $1 per person. 8:30-11:3- The region includes Young Adults from the Farmington, Kaysville and Fruit Heights area ages ON SUNDAY, June 24 there will be a Young Adult Fireside beginning at 8 p.m. at the Crestwood Stake Center. 555 N. 100 E.. Kaysville. Guest speaker will be Olive Smith Mack, of Salt Lake City. All Y oung Adults are urged to attend, np Kaysville 18-2- d, paper. In just a few weeks the Epperson family was publishing a popular weekly paper that put the stories of local people and their achievements, talents and tragedies on the front page. FOR OVER 70 years The has printed the Weekly Reflex most comprehensive current history of Northern Davis Courity. People who move away miss their weekly local paper. Subscriptions come from former Davis County residents living in nearly half of the May 30. He will be named Nicholas David. He is the first child for the couple. The new mother is the former Sue Bills of Kaysville. Grandparents include Mr. and Mrs. Darrell Bills, Kaysville; Mrs. Georgia Hughes, St. Louis, Mo.; Frank Hughes of Plattsburgh, Mo. Mrs. Salome Barnes is the great- states in the U.S. Servicemen and missionaries look forward to the day when The Reflex is delivered. LETTERS ARE received at the office frequently thanking the publisher for a certain article or a particular story. Many write to express appreciation for a home-tow- n newspaper. grandmother. Elder Ross graduated from KAYSVILLE - Participants in the Learning Center Daycare may be eligible for free and reduced price meals depending on income. THATS BASED on family income according to strict guidelines with further information available by calling -- rarely are single events. Mrs. Lettie Adams daughter-in-laRuth H. Adams, worked many years for The Reflex writing Layton news articles. A granddaughter of Charles Sill is currently employed as a writer for The Reflex. In 1914 the Reflex was a newly published paper. It had been in circulation only three years. BENJAMIN F. Cummings was the first editor of The Weekly Reflex. John S. White owned the publishing company. Mr. White sold out in early 1912 to three Kaysville businessmen, John R. Barnes, John R. Gailey and Henry H. Blood. These men negotiated with William P. Epperson and his son, Clyde to work for the new vacationed for eight days in Ger-rar- THE PAST three years Paul has been employed as assistant produce manager at Smiths Food and Drug in Layton. Paul is a member of the Kaysville 4th Ward where he has held leadership positions, np Alden S. Adams has been confined to the Humana Davis North Hospital in Layton undergoing treatment the past week. He is now at home. DIET CENTER. THE WEIGHT-LOS- S PROFESSIONALS! CALL US TODAY, for a free, introductory consultation BOUNTIFUI 2132 S. CENTERVILL...Dick's KAYSVILLE SUNSET REFLEX GREETINGS The Weekly Reflex has been wishing holiday greeting to its thousands of readers for a long time, as this 1914 Christmas card illustrates. Today, the paper continues as the Davis From Riverside, Calif., Mrs. J. Roy Fudge writes, We have taken the Reflex for many years and still look forward to reading about the happenings in our beloved Utah. DESCENDANTS of the Adams family and the Sill family have continually subscribed to The Reflex since it was first published in the early 1900s. We would be in w terested in knowing how many of our current readers can trace subscriptions of The Reflex" back to its beginning. Please drop us a note or give us a call if your family was a charter subscriber to The The way to a womans heart is through her sole. TO BOUNCE Bone ------ British Tan Navy Black Taupe Wine Orchard Supermarket Plaza 216 N. Main 9 2649 N. Main 1913 Diet Center, Inc. CHIROPRACTIC GETS RESULTS you suffer from: If Weddings, Funerals Special Occasions Watch for our --WEEKLY SPECIAL- SSpecial Carnations $662 Doz. through August OGDEN 5305 So. 1900 W. 1358 Washington Blvd. 399-116F 10-- 5 -- - Stiff Backaches Hip Leg Pain Numbness ShoulderArm Pain Nervousness TRY We stock lots of sizes and widths!- - o IT! Made in Texas, USA CJgnuint CHIROPRACTIC OFFICE 195 E. 3 DR. DALE J. BENNETT BARTONS GENTILE. LAYTON 546-360- 10-- -- BENNETT 1 SAT. Neck Painful Joints . ROY 0 Headaches 0 m. c aCtatL jaflufyL. SHOES 43 No. Main, Bountiful VISA -- Re- If you have stories about the paper or keepsakes saved from past issues, please let us know. We will publish a list of charter subscribers in about six weeks. flex. 544-079- 2. Flower M-- through an old trunk. Stored n, elected to the Honor Society, Phi Eta Sigma, and was selected as one of the five outstanding Freshman students for 1983. SUMMER HRS. Lettie Adams family were looking Natalie Horne, Jerilynn Arbuckle, Chris Elliott, Jill Arnold Air Society. He was 776-077- mally discarded with the daily trash are sometimes accidently saved. NOT LONG ago members of the Monica Scow, Collette Green, Keri Corless, Kristin Robison, Lisa McDonald, Sherie Duncan-so- AE-ROT- C CHRISTMAS Things that would have been nor- HE WILL speak Sunday, June 24 at the 30th Ward Sacrament Meeting at 9 a.m. at the Layton East Stake Center, 1015 N. Emerald Ave. Michael graduated from Layton High and Layton Seminary. He received varsity letters in wrestling, al alw OTrrkltt Srfli'x. Valueless, priceless treasures are discovered in strange places. Mission. ELDER COTTLE1 lt costs a bit more than $1.25 a year for a subscription these days, but then everything elses skyrocketed in price, as well. In fact, its still a bargain, just as it was 70 years ago. Reflex-Journ- ' Elder J. Michael Petroff, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Petroff Jr. of 1831 E. 1375 N., Layton, has been called to the Cali LDS Columbia ELDER KIRBY L Mastercard -- Layaway |