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Show . WEEKLY REFLEX-DAV- IS NEWS JOURNAL, FEBRUARY . t- ' . , 12, 1976 Services Held Rites Held Bugle Corps. He then worked years for Davis County School board, and later for Bon Marche in Ogden, retiring in 1962. He also ser ed seven years in the U.S. Marines, and played in the band during this time. By CONGRESSMAN ALLAN HOWE between American He was an active member of the Clinton First LDS Ward and Clinton Stake High Priest ' Harlan Barton Bodily, 73, of 1438 N. 1000 W. Clinton, died Thursday morning at his home following an extended Bodily, both of Clinton; Dale Bodily, Syracuse; Mrs. Kent D. (Fern) Lee, Casper, Wyo. ; 14 grandchildren and two great grandchildren. illness. MR. BODILY was born April 20, 1902, in Kaysville, a son of Daniel and Annie Barton Bodily. He was married to Ruth Muir on Aug. 27, 1929 in Clinwas The ton. marriage solemnized in the Salt Lake Temple on May 15, 1964. resided in the Clinton area for 47 MR. BODILY had years, and had been employed at the Ogden Arsenal as a guard and fireman, retiring in 1953. While there he played on the Arsenal Drum and Also surviving are three brothers and one sister, Spencer Bodily, Milpitas, Calif.; Ervin Bodily, Dan Bodily, and Mrs. Ila Brown, all of Fremont, Calif. SERVICES FUNERAL were held Monday in the Clinton Stake Center, 1448 W. 1800 No., with Bishop Tim Wight of the Clinton First Ward conducting. The Clinton community extends sympathy to Mrs. Bodily and family members. 11 Thanks Fire Dept. Mrs. Cora Green and son Udell Green and daughter Darlene Haynes wish to express their thanks and appreciation to the Kaysville City Fire Department and City Police for the cooperation and quick response on Thursday evening, Feb. 5, when they were in desperate need of emergency service for their father and husband, Clarence Green. r - CLARENCE GREEN Funeral Rites Are Held sons and daughters: Jay M. Bodily, Mrs. Blaine B. (Eva Jean) Moffat, both of Ogden; LaRae Dorman Bodily, HARLAN BODILY .r? .O SURVIVING are his widow of Clinton, and the following 'w)f' V 'V Clarence A. Green, 70, of East 100 North, Kaysville, died Friday morning in the 490 McKay-De- of Hospital in Ogden e complications following heart surgery. MR. GREEN was bom Jan. a son of HE WAS a lifelong resident of Kaysville and was employed at the Kaysville Canning company for 36 years. He was then employed at Hill Air Force Base for 13 years, retiring Feb. 28, 1972. He was a High Priest in the Kaysville Ninth LDS Ward. Surviving are his widow of Kaysville, one son and one daughter, C. Udell Green, Kaysville, Mrs. Richard A. (Darlene) Haynes, Layton; six grandchildren and four are ALSO SURVIVING two Alfred Green and Parley Green, both of FIREPLACE OlVriERS Why waste your heat and money?? 90 is wasted!! Install a within minutes providing oxygen and first aid service until the ambulance service arrived. The family is indeed grateful to these men for their services and support, np HEAT fwlIZER Layton. Funeral services were held Monday at 12 noon in Lindquists Kaysville Mor- tuary with Bishop Rodney Felt officiating. Prelude and postlude music was played by Rea Mae Whicker; family prayer, Jeffrey Reeves; musical Fireplace furnace Start saving now!!! Lorance Rites Wat $289.95 Kow M99 Contact Dean K. Johnson 65 King Street, Layton 376-444- 1 Patricia Muckey Mrs. Lorance, 46, of 192 N. Circle, died Sunday morning at the McKay-De- e an extended illness. Ed-gehi- ll Hospital in Ogden following Overstocked! WASHER SPECIAL MRS. LORANCE was born 16, 1929, in Ogden, a daughter of Willard S. and Dec. Martha Clifford June Muckey. She was formerly employed at the Defense Depot, Ogden, Hill Air Force Base, J. C. Penney Co. and the National Car Loading Co. SHE HAD received two Outstanding Performance Whirlpool Awards from Hill Air Force Base, and an Outstanding Performance Award from Automatic Washer Defense Depot Ogden. She was a member of the First Methodist Church of Ogden and had lived in Ogden and Orleans, France, prior to moving to Layton. SURVIVING ARE her hus- band of Layton; one daughter, Mrs. Kathleen Williams, Roy; one grandchild; her mother, Mrs. June Currin, Ogden; two sisters, Mrs. J. R. (LouAnn) Dunifer, South OgC. I. (Linda) McKinley, Ogden. den; Mrs. Funeral services were conducted in the Myers Mortuary Chapel in Ogden with Rev. Bronston Greenwood of the First Methodist Church officiating. CREMATION followed the services, dc Modal LDA7600 2 washing and 2 spin speeds 4 cycles: GENTLE. KNIT, NORMAL PERMT. PRESS Lint Alter 4 washrinse water temp selections dm tea Coal-dow- n Press labrics Soak setting on dial Pump Guard to trap foreign obects Heavy-dut- y 't-ti- p HE WAS a member of the Layton 12th LDS Ward and had been a music teacher. Surviving are his widow of Layton: four sons and four daughters, Jack Angell, Ogden; Basil L. Angell, Fair-vie- However, Dorchester from his council of war, so he abandoned SANFORD ANGEL O. Angell, Salt Lake City; Mrs. Alta Martin, Scipio, Utah; and Mrs. Jewel McQee, Bud (Dalene) Swenson, Nuevo, Calif.; Mrs. Vala McReynolds, Sait Lake City; Mrs. Sandra Gibson, Layton; Los Angeles, Calif. two MR. ANGELL died Feb. 3, ALSO 1976. He was 1909. surviving are one brother and two sisters, Basil selection, Somewhere My and Shirley Smith. INVOCATION, Charles Shoemaker; remarks, Bishop Rodney W. Felt; speakers. Bishop Forrest Barker and President Alan B. Blood. musical selection, bom March s. Invocation I was Walked, Albert Clark; Haven J. Barlow. benediction, Robert Burton. Dedication of the grave was by Randall M. Green; A vocal solo was sung by Jeni Hall, Jesus Savior Pilot Me. Speaker was John L. interment was in the Memorial Park. Voss. PALLBEARERS were Glen Walker, A. Neal Smith, A PIANO solo Images was played by LaDale Vander-DoeThe benediction was by Kirtley Tucker, Alden Adams, Ernest Little, and s. Morris Miller. Henry Schuller. Honorary pallbearers were the High Priests Quorum. Pallbearers were Don An- gell, Keith Robinson, Thomas B. Memmott, Douglas Fluharty, Kevin McReynolds, and Wendell McReynolds. CARE OF the flowers was by the Kaysville Ninth Ward Relief Society. motor daring proposed. Mrs. Wilhelmine Weger Luker, 89, of Layton died Tuesday afternoon in an Ogden nursing home after a short illness. MR. LUKER was born April 26, 1886,' in Wurtzberg, On the Main, Germany, a daughter of George Mathias and Maria Barbara Winter Weger. She was married to Tom Thomson in Salt Lake City. They were later divorced. She was married to Brazill Luker on Jan. 14, 1920, in Salt Lake City. He died in August of 1965. SHE WAS a member of the LDS Church and had been a member of the ward choir. She had been a Primary teacher, Relief Society visiting teacher and an active safer when they are protected against hitting metal or glass. LAP AND SURVIVING are one son, N. Michael Luker, Inkom, Ida.; one stepson, Edward B. Luker, Salt Lake City; two daughters, Mrs. Richard E. (Linda) Oliver, Tiburon, Calif.; Mrs. Donald D. (Marie Barbara) Stout, Layton; 22 grandchildren. Funeral services were conducted Saturday in the Chapel of Flowers Mortuary in Ogden with Bishop Ardell Adams of the Layton Sixth Ward officiating. Interment was in the Memorial Estates Cemetery in Salt Lake City, dc STUDIES estimate seat belts would save from 19 to 50 percent of current occupant deaths; lap and shoulder belts, from 30 to 60 percent. Air bags, which are installed in the steering wheel and the glove compartment area, will add from $250 to $300 to the cost of a new car, according to the car manufacturers. THE INTENT is to protect American motorists against serious injury and death. In the final analysis, whether this becomes a fact depends to what extent vehicle owners are willing to accept and to pay for an extra margin of safety, whether it is mandatory seat belt usage or seat belts with mandatory air bags. A number of our Utah Power customers have asked how they can read their own meters so they can monitor their success at saving electricity. Thats a very good idea. Electric meters are precision measuring devices. They record, in units called kilowatt hours, how much electricity you use. One kilowatt hour (kwh) is 1,000 watts of electricity consumed for one hour, or the power required to burn a light bulb for 10 hours. 100-wa- tt others counter-clockwis- 1, 2, 3 1 Your meter has either 4 or 5 dials. Each dial has 10 numbers and a pointer. The pointers turn very, very slowly, from smaller to larger numbers as electricity is used. Note that all the pointers do not turn in the same direction. e. Read smaller number 2. When the dial pointer is between numbers, read the smaller of the two. Thus, in the example at right, the first number youd put down is 4; the second, 6; the third, 9; and the fourth, 5, for a total of 5,964 kwh. When the pointer rests almost squarely on a number, as it does on Dial 4, the dial to its right determines which number you record. Note that the Dial 3 pointer is between 9 and 0, indicating it has yet to complete a full revolution. In this case, the smaller number, 5, is the Dial 4 reading. Had the pointer on Dial 3 gone beyond 0, indicating the completion of a full revolution, the reading for Dial would have been 6. - n8 i 2 3. Dul 4 Regular checking of your meter can indicate the effectiveness of your energy conservation efforts. For example, read your meter at the same hour on successive days. The difference between such readings is your consumption of electricity in kilowatt hours. Your reading will give you a fair indication of how well you are conserving electricity. Remember, use what you need, but need what you use! 4 Dial 4 i Dial 4 6 Dial 2 Dial Dial 1 The meter reading is made up of one number from each dial, recorded from right to left. When the pointer is between two numbers, you read the number it has just passed, that is, the lower number. So, the reading above is 5,964 kwh. five-dimeter is read the same way, from right to left. Try reading this one yourself. Then check your answer against the one below. A m al KT' lished 773-40- 36 Refrigerators Furnaces Washers Phono 1 376-160- 3 :8uipBa Reddy Kilowatts newspaper Vfe UTAH POin U & LIGHT Dryers, Etc. EASY BANK TERMS in column. Write to Reddy Kilowatt, P.O. Box 899, Salt Lake City, Utah 84110. 520 South State Street, Cleartield Eit21 Question? Write to Reddy! Utah Power welcomes your questions, suggestions, and comments. Often-aske- d questions and good suggestions are pub- shoulder belts have been installed in all cars since 1968 models, about 75 million of the estimated 108 million cars now cn the road. Prior to the interlock system, about 20 to 25 percent of U.S. motorists used seat belts; about five percent also wore shoulder belts. In cars with the interlock from 50 to 55 percent used the system. The remainder disconnected it. Learning To Read Your Electric Meter Can Help You Use Energy More Wisely Easy as substantiate air bags or seat occupants are belts-vehi- cle genealogy worker. She was reared and educated in Germany and came to the United States in 1909. She had lived in Ogden, Salt Lake City and Pocatello, Ida. until recently moving to Layton. MM)t For all the information you need about your new community, call Ranges STUDIES that--wit- h COMMANDER Hopkins had been directed bv Congress to break the British blockade of Chesapeake Bay. The war was growing expensive for America, 200 years ago, and on Feb. 17, the Congress was forced to issue new money - $4,000,000 worth of bills - to cover the expense. How to Save on Electricity Meters are simple to read. Here are the steps: 1. Read the dials and write down the figures from right to left, because thats how your power usage is recorded. As in the middle illustration at right, Dial measures single kilowatt hours; Dial 2 records tens; Dial 3, hundreds; and Dial 4, thousands. Some meters have a fifth dial which measures tens of thousands. As indicated, some of the dials turn clockwise, in- terlock system resulted in the federal government rescinding its mandatory installation after one model year. 24-ho- LOOKING Phone the lapshoulder belt Feb. 17. The ships, the USS Alfred, USS Columbus, USS Andrew Doria, USS Cabot, USS Providence, and USS Wasp, were under the command of Esek Hopkins. Mrs. W. Luker Dies At 89 Y ears given by Frank Bringhurst and remarks were by Bishop Walked Today Where Jesus his proposal in favor of a less bold strategic offensive, tactical defensive substitute plan designed to reach the same objective. This plan was calculated to force the British to either atentrenchtack American ments or abandon their anchorage in Boston harbor, and it avoided the dangers of the bolder, more direct assault Washington had first Island, Rhode Island. THE FIRST Continental Navy squadron put to sea, sailing from Philadelphia through Delaware by en route to Nassau, in the Bahamas, on 28, Services were as follows: family prayer, Basil L. Angell; prelude and postlude music was played by Thora Gregory. A musical selection, One Solemn Sweetly Thought by Jeni Hall, accompanied by LaDale Love, Frances Shoemaker A Heights. his plan drew strongly negative reaction Calif.; Allen G. Angell, Roy; Denis N. Angell, Kaysville; Mrs. Verl (Doris) Fluherty, Pasco, Wash. ; Mrs. grandchildren and Washington motor vehicle safety is soon to be decided by the Federal government. SEVERAL insurance companies and some consumer advocates favor air bag installation in new cars. The auto industry and the American Automobile Association believe increased seat belt usage should be encouraged. In the middle is the car owner whose refusal to accept The British were causing British raided Prudence proposed a bold plan to seize (seat belts) restraints for successfully. GENERAL Washington was searching for a plan to break the stalemate in Massachusetts. On Feb. 16, (his birthday), The controversy between passive (air bags) and active 3-- Nelson on June 30, 1928, in Nephi. He was reared in Levan, Utah, and had lived in Layton for the past 24 years. He was a retired employee of Hill Air Force Base. Check meter regularly ol 3 water level care tor PermL and at Ticonderoga and trickery to fool the British into thinking they were in a more seriou' military situation than was actually the case. On March the plan was carried out the Americans problems in other areas. On Feb. 15, the 30, 1906, in Kaysville, Alford and Rilla Kilfoyle Green. He was married to Cornelia Buckway on Oct. 6, 1928. The marriage was later solemnized in the Salt Lake LDS Temple. British forces THE PLAN involved the use the fire power of guns from Dorchester Neck, Mass. 29 s, AFTER notifying the fire department, they and the police were at the home of This week, 200 years ago, the British still held Boston, and much of Massachusetts, under seige. On Feb. 14, 1776, there was a brief engagement Quorum. During his lifetime lie filled many positions in the church; serving in the High Priest Group presidency, Scoutmaster, Cub Scout committee, on the Genealogical committee and on various finance committees. Seat Belts Of The Air Bags? 200 Years AS CO. - |