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Show 141 PIERPOINT AVS: SALT LAKE CITY 10,'JTAH Reffex Index WOMANS PAGE CLASSIFIED MOVIES I.EGALS Hews Guide .13 KAYSVILLE LAYTON FARMINGTON SYRACUSE 2 . 4 11 VOLUME LI KAYSVILLE, DAVIS COUNTY. UTAH. THURSDAY. FEBRUARY .! r 'A Calene Henrie Will Reign : At Annual Ball Besides Mr. Rutledge, the comincludes Mrs, G. Gibbs Smith, Mrs. Thomley K. Swan, Mrs. Charles n. Dredge, Mrs. N. V. Sanders, Ray S. Odd and Harry G. Duckworth. They will meet at the home of Mrs. Smith Friday evening at 7:30 p.m. to make the nominations for assistant chairman, adult activity chairman, youth activity chairman and treasurer. Layton Pretty Calene Henrie, Weber College student from South Ogden, won the title of queen of Layton Battery A, 222nd Field Artillery Battalion of ,the Utah National Guard, at judging in the Central Davis Junior Present assistant High school auditorium evening. chairman, LaMar Green, will automatically succeed Mr. Rutledge, s. according to l'huto SECOND FLOOR GOING UP Alan W. Layton, contractor for the addition to the Daria County Courthouse in Farmington, removes forms from cement pillars of second floor. Basement, which will house jail and sheriff's department, is nearly complete. Also on the bottom floor will be the vault. Jail will offer separate facilities for men and women and a kitchen to prepare food for prisoners. The brown haired, blue eyed miss a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. L. B. Henrie, 303 Leona Drive, Ogden. Republicans Set Lincoln Dinner Kaysville Datis County Republicans wUl hold their annual Lincoln Day Dinner at the Kayaville The LDS five stakes Elementary school next Monday Kaysville of Davis County Davis, Layton, evening, February 11, at 7:30 p.m. North Bountiful and South Guest speaker will be Orval Haf-e- n, Small Davis Davis, will hold a genealogy conpresident of the Utah Senate. ference at Davis High School in The program ia under the direcLee Kaysville Sunday. of the Davis dounty Republition All stake presidencies, high coun- can Committee which includes E. Layton A record attendance at Sunday mornings session of Lay ton Stake quarterly conference, more than 140 persons, heard Elder cllmen; bishoprics, stake srenealogry aie pak. Bountiful, chairman; ar genea ogy Harold B. Lee of the Council of the Twelve Apostles speak as presid - commles an George B. Wilcox, Layton, J committees are invited and urged vice chairman; Helen Brown, Boun- . , . , .. ing authority. ,a Elder Lee emphasised that the small decisions which everyone tiful, secretary; and E. J. Sharon, must make constanUy add up to the most important thing, in life. incJud demonstration. of slide, by Kaysville, treasurer. He said if one is to gain the bless- - j V1,n8 representatives. Tickets for the banquet are will include hand Morning topics d; laua. HEADS UTAH Of Davis County Layton Syracuse defeated Nalders Service, Layton, ' to 11, for the championship of the Davis County loth annual basketball tourna-- 1 ment last Saturday evening at the Central Davis Junior High School gymnasium. Third place went to Intermountain Oil of Bountiful after they topped Winegars Market of Layton, 72 to 33; and the consolation was won by Bowmans Market of Kaysville with their win over Layton LDS Eighth Wards team, 3s to !. Award for outstanding player went to Blair Wilcox of Syracuse. The first team honors went to Gary Cook. Syracuse; Jan Mallett, Nalders Service; J. B. Meade, Najders Service; Watson, Intermountain Oil, and Allan Steed of elected , Syracuse. Second Team Second team honors went to Harvey Brough, Bowmans Market; H. D. Call, Nalders Service; Billy Stevenson, Nalders Service; Harker, Intermountain Oil; Howard Criddle, Syracuse; and Dick Assenberg, Nalders Service. Individual sportsmanship awards went to Bill Chatwin, Layton 8th; Marvis Drummond, Layton Mh; Calvin Wood, Winegara Market; David Batchelor, Winegara; Mark Morgan, Winegara; Ralph Aahby, Bowmana Market; Don Cottrell, Bowmana; L. Adams, Clearfield First; V. Wallace, Clearfield Second; Nolan Schofield, Syracuse; Rolert Montgomery, Syracuse; and Beck, Intermountain Oil. Team sportsmanship trophy went to Winegara Markets. High point men of the three nights of play were as follows; . p ed his 13th term as two-di- y , j Layton Raises fa M tion is owned by 23 local including the Davis Farm Co-o- p in Kaysville which Mr. Behling organised in 1U33 and served as president for 23 yeart. Sewer, Water Connection Fees Ul6V 3 IT lllllS HOIlOl S Mary's Meanderings i Ah, What Price Beauty, Even In The Twenties! er ' Commissioners Set Hearing Dates PROCLAMATION Kaysville News p. -- By Karlynn Hinman . re j i Queen Calene and her attendants will reign at the Battery's annual military ball to be held at Davis High school on February IS. The queen was sponsored by the 3rd Howitzer Section of Battery A. Miss Furman waa sponsored by Headquarter Section; Mia Sartor by the Communication Section; and Miss Gittens by the Reconnaissance and Survey Section. Beauty contest Judges were SgL Marvin S. Green, Mrs. A. J. Robinson, SgL Eldon K. Anderson, Mrs. Helen Thurman and SgL Joseph C. Riley. Mr. Behling, who waa named lotah's Horticulturist of the Year for 1053, by the Utah, chapter of the Future Farmers of America, lives on a fruit farm northeast of Kaysville. He haa been a Davis County fruit farmer for thirty years. Prior to that he mined in Alaska for seventeen Attend Play years. Mr. and Mrs. Casper Carroll atMr. Behling is at present serv- tended tha play, Ah Wilderness at tie U S. A. C. in Logan Satur-- I ing as secretary of V nl'vii day evening. A nephew, Norman Farm Co-oI McPhee had the leading role. Layton Sewer t and water connection fees for new homes in Lay-to- n will be increased as soon as an ordinance can be prepared and published. City councilmen voted Monday night to adopt the North Davis Sewer District sewer ordinance which calls for a connection fee of $130 for tha privilege of hooking onto the city's aewer system. The property owner would be required to pay the expenses of running a line to tha main line and to repair the road where it is damaged. Under the present city ordinances, the charge is $! and and the city takes the sewer pipe to the property line. The councilmen voted to increase the water connection fee from $15 to $100 on inch pipe and from Brigham City Friday afternoon. $100 to $130 on inch pipe. The By Mary Bowring The following Davis boys and city will run the pipe to the propwill in this proparticipate girls There is, after all, much to be erty line. gram: Brent Wood, Beck Sheffield, The council found it necessary to said for not being a teen-agor John Manzanares, Bernard John- - increase the connection fees in one's early twenties, As tOeven son, Barton Ence, Duane Hamblin. meet rising costs of the (sewer and long as there is an array of fun Leland Judd, Gary Brown, Robert water departments. memories it isn't bad to be in the' Fames, Val Morgan, J&mes Chides-ter- , In other business before the very prime of life. The prime? Stan Reid, Duke Jones. councilmen, John M. Park waa re- Thats the age YOU are, wheth-- j Janice Adams, La Rae Fikstad, appointed recorder and supervisor Karen Imhoff, Juanita Benton, for another year, Irvin Henefer Beverly Pitchford, Bonnie Hansen, was reappointed treasurer; K. Two building perMary Schick, Katherine Harvey, Roger Bean, attorney and Leland Kaysville mits were issued by Kaysville City Phyllis Sperry, Karren Hodgson, Nalder, police chief. Barbara Alger, Mary Ann Adams, during the month of January. Both were for garages. James A. ThomSharon Sells, Becky Briggs, Geraldine Heaton, Francine Smith, and son, 423 East 2nd South, was issued a permit for $1,300 and T. S. Rush-fortMarjorie Thurgood. Tax 200 West First North, was Farmington Davis County com- issued a permit for $2,000. missioners last week set date for sitting as a board of equalization to hear complaints on personal and Whereas, February 8, 1037, is real property tax vaulations. , Kaysville A total of 67 cases the 47th anniversary of the foundBoard of equalization hearings of diseases were reported in Daing of the Boy Scouts of America, on personal property will be con- vis County last week by the Utah Now, therefore, J, Lloyd A. ducted February 10, March 19 and State Department of Health. They Bishop, Mayor of Kaysville, do April 16. Hearings on real prop- included 46 streptococcus infechereby proclaim the week of Feb- - erty valuations will be held May tions, 17 measles, three chicken ruary 3 to 0 as Boy Scout Week." j 31 and June 6 and 17. pox and one infectioue hepatitis. School Students ivill Attend Indian School y, Co-o- ed 129 Davis High r ed TV Hopes Miss Henrie, along with the other contestants, were judged by per sonal interview, in street clothes, bathing auita, evening gowns and on talenL The winner, who hopes to become a television performer, gave a vocal number for her talenL She Uated as her hobbies exhibition dancing,1 sewing, reading and modeling. She has received a superior rating from the National Federation of Music and Art to and waa a soloist ia the Weber High school Messiah presentation. j Davis Twenty-nin- e Kaysville are participating ini High students . . . the annual Indian School exchange lr"? Miss Dorothy Streeper, Other directors elected included student adviser, accompanied body J. Cliff Linford, William E. Gail-lewho were guests of thc students Brigham Harvey and Samuel the Intermountain School February Raymond. i. 7, and x. Outgoing president was Alan B. The Intermountain students will Blood, who did not seek spend February 13, 14, and 13 at to the companys board of Davis. The Indians, who will ardirectors. rive at noon, will go home with In other action taken at the their hosts Wednesday. annual stockholders meeting, plans Thursday the guests will see for a $123,000 pressure irrigation Bountiful High's Traveling Assemsystem to serve the Fruit Heights bly. Jack Schofield, president of area was approved. the Kaysville Jaycees, will conduct Team Name Points a tour of Hill Air Force Baae and 31 the Clover Club Potato Chip facCook, Syracuse 47 tory. During the evening the visitMallet, Nalder's 47 ors will return for the Davis High Wilcox, Syracuse 43 School Play, Annie Laurie. Watson. Intermountain The Ag department undet the Bowmans 43 .. Brough, 41 leadership of LaMar K. Godfrey .. . Meade, Nalders 37 and Clinton Zollinger with David Stevenson, Nalder's 37 Potter as student chairman, will Cottrell, Bowmans The tournament was sponsored present a program for ths Indian students. They will return to by Layton Fifth Ward. r Re-elect- Kaysville Welfare Banquet j ' Photo Ernest R. Behling, Kaysville, haa been Association. president of the Utah convention In Salt Lake City FriThe Association held a The annual Davis day and Saturday at the Newhouse Hotel. Kaysville were Ray Seely, ML Pleasant, vice presOther officers Stake Welfare banquet will be held W. B. Robins, Salt Lake City, secretary; and John G. Carr, ident; the at Kaysville evening Saturday Salt Lake City, treasurer. First and Sixth Ward Chapel, beAssociaThe Utah ginning at 7:30 p.m. B. Tournament Association. Kaysville Fruit Farmer Has Served President For 12 Years As Co-o- p ber and district chairmen. ' Wins Championship Saturday te ed Behling President Of Utah LeConte Stewart, tle three Utah universities, Mr.j Kaysville Kaysville artist, and Don Olsen, Stewart from the University ofj another Utah artist, were receivers Utah; Calvin Fletcher. USAC, andj F. Larson, BYXJ. of purchase awards in judging Sat-Lex- .Vith annual Professor art of Stewarts award waa the urday hibit of the Utah State Institute for his oil painting on a deserted in the of Fine Arts at the Utah Capitol. ' farm home, Abandoned, A month long exhibit of more conservative division, professional an 200 works of art was opened Mr. Olsen's award in the modern Sunday at 2 p.m. with a tea and professional group was for an oil reception on the mezxanine floor entitled Abstraction No. 5." The Institute will purchase the f the Capitol building where the works are on display. paintings for $230 each for the The exhibit will honor emeritus state. They will be hung in the heads of the art departments of Capitol. 16. Syracuse p, E. R. nt ruary E. R. Behllag, Kayaville fruit farmer, and IWflrx-Joorn- i.lon m p Co-o- ' vantage of using the Temple file, priesthood responsibility in Tem-- ! pie work and acceptable records for Temple work. During the afternoon session, the topics will in-l- l. c)ude how to 8ucceful in earch thc reward of wise genea- lojrical correspondence in writing family history of KeneaIogy and how to increaws Temple attendance. Co-o- was secretary of the Davis Farm his 13th term as president of the Utah ' Haven Barlow who cautioned his A joint sweetheart audience not to let social pull or Syracuse ball of the two Syracuse LDS the idea of trying to keep up with Wards will be held next Wednes- - the Jones interfere with church day evening beginning at 8:30 p.m. activities. Music will be furnished by Ernie Joel Watt of Layton reported on Jensens orchestra. Each auxiliary his mission to Australia, telling of, a of the wards will sponsor a couple the Churchs rapid growth there. from which the sweethearts will Patriarch David E. Layton, now be picked. The couples will rep- - r, years of age. related his their wards at the North periences while in the Southern Davis Stake sweetheart ball Feb-- States mission many years ago. Named attendants were lxie Joy Gittens, 10, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Howard Gittena, 302 Park Street, Layton;' Patricia Ellen Furman, 17, daughter of Mrs. Ruby Cheeaman. 712 South Stata, Gear-fieland Judith Jeanne Sartor, 1H, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank W. Sartor. Meet Members Must Pay Attention to Details of Gospel, Elder Says Syracuse Wards Will Choose 2 Sweethearts Tuesday is Fiva Davis Stakes Will Join for (.. -8 Nominating Committee Will NameCandidates ; mittee Record 1400 Attend Genealogy Layton Conference -7- NUMBER 43 Sherman Rutledge, Kaysville chairman of the Kaysville Civic Association, th., week named a seven-ma- n nominating committee to pick candidates for four KCA positions for the election February l'hr -- KCA 1 tr : 7, 1957 11 13 -- 14 -- h, Davis Diseases. er it be 38, 40, 80 or 80! For instance, a glamorous in preparing for a fancy date sprays her hair to set it and again to keep it in place dur- ing an evening of dining, dancing and what have you. Not so back in the late twenties and thirties. Those were the days of flax seed even before the days of commercialized wave seL For 13c in a general store you could buy a sizeable handful of flax seed. It was taken home and put in a pan of water and soaked, then boiled until the liquid was all gummy. Then, the gummy liquid waa slathered on your hair and waves firmly pushed into place. Naturally, they stuck together with the flax seed gum. It maybe wasnt so convenient as a fancy bottle of spray net but it did the job. And if everyone's using flax seed to wave hair, it really seems quite the thing to usel I remember marcel irons, too and having my ears burned with (Continued on Page 4) . |