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Show Jiigpr f t WEEKLY REFLEX DAVIS NEWS JQURNAL, OCTOBER 27. 1977 Clearfield Choral Concert C0L Clearfield High School's choral department will present a concert Nov. 2 at 8 p.m. in the school audi- - ; torium. studies programs at Layton High. Scott has many fine ideas and his enthusiasm will show more as the program By CAMILLE CORNABY Layton Highs studentbody officers will be showing the movie Murder by Death on Monday, Oct. 31. It will be shown in the auditorium and will begin at 8 p.m. Everyone is invited to share an evening of laughter. S1 develops. A Fall Concert was presented Wednesday by the music department at Layton High, including performances by the Laytones, Acapella choir and choir, junior-senisophomore choir. It was a fine program and was enjoyed by THE musical Once Upon a Mattress will be presented again this week in the Layton High Little Theatre. It will be Thursday, Friday and Saturday, Oct. 27, 28 and 29. The all. Kaysville Elementary Readies Carnival $2 adults, $1.50 students, and $1 children. This delightful story is one of romance and humor as you are carried back to the fifteenth century, in a satire on the Princes and the Pea. IT STARS Risa Weber and The Kaysville Elementary School PTA is sponsoring a Cat nival, Halloween Halloween night, Oct 31 at the school from 5 : 30 to p.m. THE CARNIVAL will feature all types of booths, food and also a cake walk, country store, hot dogs and rink along with game booths. Mrs. Beverly Nelson, PTA publicity chairman, is announcing the fun and exciting event. IT IS OPEN to the public and they hope everyone will make their Halloween night a little more entertaining by attending the Halloween Carnival and assist them in this special event, np Terry Long, with Michelle Almond, Wayne Anderson, Karen Bromley and Scott Deru, with other players. Scott Deru of the Layton High National Honor Society was elected chairman of the program to help raise funds for Laytons new Heritage Museum. The NHS is planning a community drive for funds, including competition between the junior high schools and elementary schools, hoping to get everyone involved. BAND FUND RAISING Lets all get behind the Davis High School and Kaysville Junior High School and support them in their annual They need approximately uniforms and $6,000.00 for the 5. South. ; THERE WILL be all types of items available for all ages, in addition to the big bake sale, food sale and games. include the entire 400- member cast as they raise their voices to sing You Light Up My Life. Other with a little help from everyone their goal can be REMEMBER -- - the event Nov. 5. Halloween - the time of witches, goblins, monsters and Spooks. Nowhere is this more apparent than at the Red Cross Chapter House, 1961 tour, you will go from the pearly gates to hades, and with a little luck - you may meet the devil himself. Your goose bumps will get goose Washington Blvd., Ogden. bumps. The spook alley will be open Friday and Saturday nights,. Oct. 28 and 29 from 7 p.m. to -- BUSY RED Cross volunteer workers are literally changing that innocent looking house into the spookiest Spook Alley you have ever seen. On your midnight -- - Christmas Shopping? Let us Make your Gifts Our Patterns or Yours 773-188- 3 the 66th Ward Young Men and Womens Mutual Class are all working hard to make this one of the spookiest experiences in fact, you have ever had they guarantee to scare the heart right out of you. - the witching hours. On Halloween night, Oct. 31 from p.m. Admission is $1 for adults, 75 cents THE museum will eventually include a theatre and library and various historical facts of interest to the social -- Public is invited. ADMISSION is $1.25 for adults and 75 cents for students and children. Tickets may be obtained from the choir members before the concert or at the door the night of the performance, said Mr. Davis, grb SPECIAL PLACE It is admirable for a man to take his son fishing, but there is a special place in heaven for the father who takes his daughter shopping. Tribune, San Diego. -- Were you nervous when you first asked your husband for was calm - and 7-- for children, and all bats are admitted free. Group tours can be arranged at 75 cents per person. Call for tour 394-345- 7 Kindergarten Visits At Kaysville Fire Station CONTINOUS movies with Dracula and Frankenstein will be shown, witches brew will be served and there will be all manner of spooks and goblins to guide you on the tour. The students from Weber Adult High School class and GARELISON CLAIRE. SNOW FOR MAYOR FOR COUNCILMAN Creativity Etc. culminated their study of fire prevention and safety by taking a field trip to the Kaysville Fire Station. PAT HEASTON took the children on an exciting tour of the complete fire station. The children had the opportunity to wear the firemens helmets and sit behind the wheel of the fire truck. All the children took a short ride on the fire truck and some slid down the fire pole. All the children took home fire hats, pictures of themselves on the fire truck for their fire protection books and pleasant memories. Students under the direction of Elizabeth Sanders and Becky Simpson, teachers who took the tour were Heather Cragun, Mesha Graham, Shelly Lewis, Mitzi Davis, Christy Tischner, Josee Fagg, SuzAnn Henderson, Heather I Feenan, Ryan Woodward. ROGER Gardiner, Neil Harvey, Marty Johnson, Jay Maxwell, David Andersen, Doug Fryer, Jason Jenkins, Jared Harvey, Matt Williams and Jeff McArthur! np CLAIR E. SNOW Elect Individuals Who Will Be Sensitive to Local Values Meet Needs of All Residents Develop Community Resources Especially Cultural Arts Library and Parks Implement a City Master Plan Create More Opportunity for Public Input to Decision Making Be Efficient With Tax Dollars Preserve Kaysville Uniqueness American Births Are Now Declining During the first half of the 19th Century, the population of the United States expanded at an average rate of aboul three percent a year, accord- ing to Argus Research Corp. THEN THE growth rate dropped, largely because of a pronounced decline in fertility, to an average of 0.7 percent per year during the 1930s. The annual growth rate later increased to 1.7 percent during the 1950s, at the peak of the baby boom, before starting to decline again in the 1960s, to the current level equal to the historically low rates of the 1930s. To all Federal employees: ONE HEALTHCARE PLAN LOOKS AS GOOD AS THE NEXT. UNTIL YOU GET SICK. When people buy a health care plan, they often base their decision only on cost. And thats too bad. How much the plan covers is whats really crucial. Because if you arent covered adequately, you might find out later. The hard way. Thats why you should know how much help you can expect from your health coverage. And just how much its going to take care of if you get sick and end up in the hospital. Or if someone in the Or emerneeds family Or onroom treatment. gency treatment. going outpatient X-ra- BLUE CROSS AND BLUE SHIELD COVERAGE IS BETTER. In almost every case, when you buy one plan because its cheaper than another, youll get what you pay for. Less. But enroll in the Blue Cross and Blue Shield high option program and you get better coverage. Period. True, our program costs more. But when you consider how high the cost of health care has gotten, its worth every dollar. ago for the same treatment. Surgery costs are higher, too. The second chart shows the increased costs for common surgical procedures and required medical services up as much as 250 in just ten years. A DAY IN I HI IIOSll Al LET THE FIGURES SPEAK FOR THEMSELVES. Treatment for almost anything nowadays simply costs more than it used to. So if you have to spend time in the hospital, chances are you could have to spend a lot of money. Unless you have Blue Cross and Blue Shield coverage. These charts tell the first shows the jump The story. in cost for a day in the hospital. If you were hospitalized tomorrow, the hill could be 300 higher than it would have been ten years -- A NEW One was chosen as the concert title, said Mr. -Davis, because of the new and T expanded group of students participating and because the entire cast will be in new . outfits. . BONNEVILLE Chapter, American Red Cross, np I J " concert choir. np money? Oh, no, collected. : choir, sophomore' ladies choir, the junior choir, the Madre Singers, and the begins at 9 a.m. on Saturday, accomplished. . musical groups will include the sophomore mens 1 see-throu- GAR ELISON The concert finale will M (Sums Sports fund project raising scheduled for Saturday, Nov. ALL BAND members under the direction of Dana Rothlisberger and Keith Brimhall are urging everyone to join them in an effort to raise funds for band uniforms. The event will be held at the Kaysville Junior High parking lot, 100 East 350 son. ; e' cost is Happiness Is. .. Supporting the Davis High School band. With that theme, the school band will sponsor a garage sale Saturday, Nov. 5, beginning at 9 a.m. in the Kaysville Junior High parking lot. Proceeds will go to the band for new uniforms. Food, games and bake sale will also be available. Planning the sale are to r, band director Dana Rothlisberger and students Lawrence Graves and Kimberly Houghton. FIVE CHOIRS, comprising some 400 students, will participate in the concert, A New One, directed by Les Davis, choral director, and student teacher Marie Jepp- - Blue Cross and Blue Shield Plans all across the country are working harder than ever to develop programs to try to keep these costs down. But buying cheaper health care coverage really doesnt help. With rising health care costs a fact of life, you need the comprehensive coverage of our program more than ever. So even if you pay more for Blue Cross and Blue Shield coverage, its worth it. Because what you really cant afford is coverage that costs you less in the first place, but ends up costing you more later. When it counts. Blue Cross Blue Shield o( Utah I Ol ) ALL OF US HELPING EACH OF US. |