OCR Text |
Show Way T Damaged Page s U published 1h SUN CHMONIClf toy. Utah 4067. Second (ion poitoo paid at toy, Utah Subocription II additional. por yoor IS 50, Iwo yoort 110. Ph. 25 1666 Sinpia copy price 19 conto. Write PO Ooi 207. toy Utah 4067 Stroot oddrooo SStt S 1400 W.. toy. Utah. wkly i s; February 16 1980 ? 1 f ' v Get dogs licensed before March 1 i t , ! H Ben Reeves, supervisor of Animal Control for Roy City, reminds all citizens of Roy that they have two weeks to get their dog licenses or they stand in jeopardy of getting a citation which would result in paying double the price. The licenses are on sale at the Roy City Police Department every day for the cost of $15.00 for unaltered dogs, and $5.00 for spayed or neutered dogs with the owner showing certification of the surgery. After the 1st of March, officers will be going door to door checking on dog licenses and will be issuing tickets and selling licenses to those who are not licensed. Which with the cost of license and fine for tickets will equal depending on the status of the $20-$3- dog. Officer Reeves further said that the licenses are running somewhat behind last year and encourages people to get in and obtain a license and save themselves any problems and increased cost. Annual crab crack to be held i: i- i The past Exalted Rulers of Roy Lodge no. 2338, are hosting their annual crab crack at the Lodge Friday and Saturday night, February 15 and 16, Chairman Kenneth L. Stamback announced. Guests may have either crab or steak with baked potato, salad, cold slaw, garnishments, hot rolls, condiments plimentary beer at butter, and $9.50 com- per in- dividual. There will be one hour servings from 6:00 p.m. through 9:00 p.m. each evening seating ap150 persons per hour. This event is the Past Exalted Rulers main fund raiser for the major proximately projects sponsored by the Lodge each indicate both evenings will be filled to capacity. There will be dancing from 9:00 p.m. to 1:00 a.m. each evening. Friday it will be the Night Train with the Smith Brothers furnishing the music on Saturday evening. year. Reservations Six Roy students chosen to be in drawing exhibit students from the Roy area attending Weber State College had drawings chosen recently to be shown in the second annual Drawing Invitational Exhibit in the Gallery of Six .the WSC Art Building. The students are: Margaret Call of 2430 West 5025 South, Roy, a sophomore majoring in art; Karen Davis of 1713 North Main, Sunset, a freshman majoring in general studies; Marcia Perry of 5917 South 3100 West, Roy, a freshman majoring in general studies; Natahi E. Simmons of 1508 North 400 West, Sunset, a freshman majoring in art; Mike Tyler of 3314 B. Street, Hill Air Force Base and Elaine Thompson of 2241 West 5100 South, Roy, a freshman majoring in family life. The exhibit represented selected work of WSC students from the first four quarters of the drawing foundation program along with several pieces from the class for non-a- WHAT A WAY to start a week! Last Monday morning at about 7:15 a.m., Officer Kelly Call was hit head-o- n by a car driven by Tony Jensen of Roy. Neither were seriously injured, both receiving neck and back What a way to start the week! Early last Monday morning, a brand new police car driven by Officer Kelly Call, 26, of the Roy Police Department and a Ford driven by Tony Jensen of about 200 feet Roy collided head-o- n person. The voluntary targets set by DOE ftlaftnfliral By Keith Duncan On Wednesday, February 6th at 9:35 a.m., the Roy Police Department were notified of an unconscious child at the Roy Elementary School where the Roy Fire Department and the rt r, According to Prof. VanWagoner, great effort has been made in the drawing classes to get students to see accurately and develop skills that will allow them to describe and represent with clarity that which they see. Marchant, Vocational Agriculture instructor at Roy High School in Roy, Utah, believes that while one picture may be worth a thousand words, it is no substitute for seeing what really happens to native rangelands under different systems of management. And each year for the past few years he has, with assistance from Earl Spendlove of the Soil Conservation Service in Ogden, been taking the natural resources class to the field to study the native plants and learn what is required to keep them healthy so they hold the soil in place and furnish feed for livestock. We can talk just so long about natural resources in the classroom, Marchant says, then we have to go to the field if the students are to learn anything. Last fall a dozen students, accompanied by their instructor, Spendlove, and A.T. Fillingim, SCS Conservationist, spent a day at the Abbey of the Holy Trinity in Huntsville, Utah. Here Brother Cyril, a Monk at the Monastery, took the group to the nearby hills where they saw, first hand, the things they had been studying in the classroom. Under the direction of Mr. Fillingim they clipped and weighed grass to determine forage production, listed and identified plants along a line transect, and studied water intake rate of the soil. Mr. Fillingim identified and discussed growth habits Weber County Paramedics were immediately dispatched to the scene. John Thomas, age 9, of 2887 West - .TWO South, Roy son of Lee John and ogn Thomas, was found by two J classmates, hanging by the neck from a towel dispenser in the school restroom. Teachers were summoned, who administered first aid, until Roy Ambulance and Paramedics arrived at the scene The victim was pronounced dead at the McKay-De- e Hospital. Friends of the youth and his family mourned his death at a funeral held last Saturday at the Roy LDS 10th Ward where he was a member with his family. Den Mother in the Cub Scout program where her son was quite active. In primary he was always active in the Targeteer B class. are part of President Carters plan to limit national gasoline consumption to roughly seven million barrels of oil daily. If states fail to achieve their vouluntary targets, the president has the authority to make them mandatory. of different native plants. He dug a few plants to show differences in root systems and explained plants must have good root systems if they are to take in water and soil nutrients south of the 4400 South 1900 West intersection in Roy. Officer Call sustained back and neck injuries while Mr. Jensen was also injured Officer Craig McColum of the Utah John was a very active youth, reported his mother. She serves as a JOHN THOMAS loved the piano, astrology and being around other children, particularly those younger than he. resource students Bruce of the intersection Highway Patrol Department reported that Mr. Jensen was traveling in a northbound direction and apparently fell asleep at the wheel causing him to run into the police officers vehicle, which was headed in a southbound direction. The accident took place at ap- proximately 7:07 a m. cm Monday It was also re ported th at a dog was killed in the accident. of Roy youth taken in accident majors, said Richard J. art department chairman. Upon hearing his states second quarter target, Governor Scott M. Matheson said he was pleased to learn that DOE had this time considered both Utahs four percent growth rate and its enviable conservation record. feet south RJew Roy police car totaled in accfident Gasoline targets show slight increase Utahs voluntary gasoline targets, calculated today in accordance with of U.S. Energy Department methodology, reflect a modest increase in consumption over the second quarter of 1979, but a slight decrease as calculated on a per capita basis. The Utah Energy Office said the second quarter target allows the state to use 1.8 percent more gasoline than it did the same quarter of last year, but 2.3 percent less gasoliine per injuries. The accident took place 200 located at 4400 South and 1900 West, His mother reports, John always had a good understanding for the teachings of the church and always enjoyed attending John was active in sports with summer recreation baseball a big joy. He also loved to play marbles with his friends. Mrs. Thomas also stated, John also had a great deal of interest in ceramics and would often sneak over to the school and spend hours Dearn needed to manufacture plant food. He pointed out that grazing plants at different intensities and at different times of the year harms some plants and helps others. This causes some designing small projects. Those who played baseball knew of Johns great throwing arm, especially Tim Greenwood, a brother to Mrs. Thomas and an uncle to the youth. Greenwood and the deceased youth would often play basketball together Tim is a student at Ben Lomond High School in Ogden. John also had a noticeable love for other youth, particularly those younger than he. One particular time, his mother noticed John jumping high into the air to touch the bottom of a street sign that stands in front of their home. Another younger youth was having trouble following the act so John picked up his younger friend and let him touch the sign to make it even. John also enjoyed playing the piano and had another interest in astrology. He had received a telescope this past Christmas and his parents say he loved it. Mr. Pete Davis, a third grade teacher at Roy Elementary, helped Johns interest grow in that field of science Given Permission Police investigation indicated the child was attending a special education class and was given permission to use the restroom from a class taught by Iola Waggner. Apparently because of his failure to return to class, two classmates about nature plants to increase and others to decrease or to be killed out completely. Brother Cyril told how they were d using this principle to improve rangeland which was too steep and rough to seed He said fifteen years ago the range looked like it was all weeds and cheatgrass With assistance from the Soil Conservation Service they developed a plan which badly-deplete- were given permission to ta ok for the excused youth. It was then that they found the youth and quickly ( 'ailed for their teacher Ms. Waggi ler and Kathleen Shelton who was i issistmg her that day. They removed young Thom as from the continuous type towel dii ipenser and began to administer first a id until medical authorities arrived called for dividing their 1100 acres of rangeland into four pastures of approximately the same size. This enabled them to work out a grazing rotation which allowed each pasture to go ungrazed three years out of four during the crucial spring growing season After the desirable grasses, such as bluebrunch wheatgrass and Junegrass, were allowed to rest continued on page 4 Soil District to hold election of the ist rict, announced today an elect ion of supervisors for the Weber boi trd will be held during the last two w eeks in February. Candidates for t1 ne fi ve positions include Boyd Hancoc k, We st Weber; Frank V. Rawson, Ho oper, .1. Maurice Skeen, Warren; Earl Stakei , Taylor; Francis E. Stratford, Wilson; and Glynn F. Wayment, War ren Landowners not receiving a ballot by mail may request one f om the local Soil Conservation Servu :e office or from the State Soil Cons ervation Commission at 147 North 2( X) West, Salt Lake City, Utah 84103 The Soil Conservation District, Staker said, is concerned w ith conservation activities on pr ivately-owne- d lands in Weber Coun'.y and the supervisors direct the acth 'lties of technicians of the Soil Corns ervation Service, a federal agency, in i issistmg landowners with soil and water conservation problems The supervisors serve without pay for a term of two or three years, dep nding : on the number of votes they receive The three candidates receiving the most terms. votes will serve the three-yea- r Election results will be published March 30, 1980. Earl Staker, Weber Soil Chairman Conservation D -- Paying taxes? pay by check i i J .4'v My students record plants encountered along a line transect established to reflect changes brought about by range management practices. ROY HIGH SCHOOL - . students record plants encountered along a line transect established to reflect changes brought about by good range management practices. ROY HIGH SCHOOL "To pay your Federal income tav. send either persona check or money order, but never se nd cash, advised Roland V. Wise, Director for the Internal Revenue Service in Utah Using a check or money order is safer from two standpoints, the IRS Director explains: First, a check or money order is harder to steal, and secondly, the cancelled check or money order receipt will serve as a record that the payment was made. Wise also says that taxpayers should be sure to write their social security number on the check or money order. This assures that the taxpayer will receive credit for the payment should the check or money order be detached from the return. 1 continued on page 9 |