OCR Text |
Show r Tiip i f Davis Co. Rifle Range: Ready By September? By ROSELYNKIRK Davis County Rifle Range, located in the Fruit Heights area just east of the Davis County road shops, should be operational by the September deadline, according to Commissioner Wendell Zaugg. THE RANGE, a project of the Davis County Sheriffs Office in cooperation with the county commission, was set for completion last fall, but construction stopped during last summer. Early this spring, Deputy Sheriff Jan Cunningham asked the county commission to get the survey completed so the construction work could begin. Commissioner Wendell Zaugg said County Surveyor Glenn Austin completed the survey, making it possible for corpsmen from the Weber Basin Job Corps to begin work with heavy equipment about the middle of June. THE commission agreed with the job corps to supply the fuel for the heavy equipment. Weber Basin Job Corps will supply the equipment and labor for the project. A total of $30,000 has been budgeted for the rifle range this year, but Commissioner Zaugg said more may be needed if the commission decides on some refinements in the project. As planned the range will include three shooting areas, positioned so that marksmen will shoot into targets on the east side of the range and into the hill. The circular high berm, which separates the range from the area below, is almost complete. The two berms, running north and south, provide the separation of the three ranges. six-fo- Members of the Articulettes Toastmistress Club brought home the traveling trophy from their meet in Boise. Members include, front to r, Geneva Henry, Washington Terrace, retired Hill Air Force Base president of Council Two. Articulettes officers, Lorraine Helgeson, treasurer, Ogden; Ruth Smith, president, Roy; Kathryn Wood, vice president, Kaysville; back, Evelyn Galeazzi, West Point; Wanda Ewing, Layton; Nila Mohr, Ogden; Lola Mcferson and Shirley Reed, Clearfield. All the above work at Hill AF Base except Geneva Henry. 1 TRAVELING TROPHY Members of the Articulettes and the RHETS Toastmistress Clubs have just returned from the Regional Conference in Boise, Idaho. MEMBERS of both clubs took an active part in such workshops as club responsibilities given by Irene Laidley, International vice president, Division other workshops 1 and as: Parliamentary Law, Organizing and Setting Priorities, Programming, Training, How Instructor To traveling the most miles to the Regional Conference. Develop Humor in Speaking and Assertiveness Training and Communication. There were 180 women registered, making it the lar- These miles were computed by totalling the round trip mileage between Ogden and Boise and multiplying it by the number of members in attendance which this year was 12. This marks the tenth time the Articulettes have won this trophy. There are now six Utah gest attended conference Snake River Region has held. THE Articulettes were joyous to again bring home the traveling trophy. This trophy was originated in 1961 and is given to the club Toastmistress "A little bit o( San Francisco con be found at the beOutiful Bratten's Cove in Bountiful SUPERB SEAFOOD & STEAKS FAST, COURTEOUS SERVICE' Seafood 1385 S. 500 West A.M.-10P.- CLOSED SUNDAY Bountiful Phone Ar- TOASTMISTRESS Clubs are open to anyone interested in personal It is so designed that it enables one to develop themselves that whatever their home, sphere of living business, or public life, they can deal competently with events. Mon. thru Sot." 1! Clubs: ticulettes and RHETS in the Air Force Base Ogden-Hil- l area; Salt Lake Club, Live Wires and West Valley in the Salt Lake area; Tyro Club in the Provo area. These six clubs combined, make up Council No. 2 of the Snake River Region. This region is comprised of clubs from Utah, Idaho, eastern portion of Oregon and Washington and a small corner of Canada. 295-238-4 STORAGE SNEOS Anyone interested in any of the Council No. 2 Clubs can obtain additional information from Shirley Maylett (RHETS) ext. 2452 or Ruth. Smith (Articulettes) ext. 4664. Visit a club! The Articulettes hold dinner meet The future of the United States, the happiness of its citizens, relate directly to how well younger generations understand this county, its past and what it took to make this country what it is. work, pride, the will to better AMERICA has been the land of opportunity for two centuries. It has been easier to make ones way up from WORK, OF course, is not everything, but it is usually the bottom, here, than anywhere else in the world. been blessed with good land, natural resources and the Anglo-Saxo- n heritage of democracy and free enterprise. We have BUT ALL that could have meant little if America's early settlers had not worked hard, and sacrificed, to make this country strong and affluent. And that often meant a lifetime of hard work by Ger- Americans of well placed today owe their parents who toiled long and hard with very little, often on virgin land, to make a new in the new world start 10X10 12X12 These Americans were the American dream. They made it come true. Others, slaws ROBERTS 825-395- 3 1464 No. Fort Lane Layton, Utah crews and the rifle range, Commissioner Zaugg said. exThe removal of the fill has is posed the gravel which needed by the county for road construction. IF construction does not proceed as planned, completion of the project may be extended into October, Commissioner Zaugg said. But he anticipates that even if all the the targets are not placed, public will be able to shoot on the range this fall. Viho tioned that arrangements would have to be made through the Division Services (DFS) if of Knows? Family the last plan were implemented. In addition, a parking lot is planned, but the location has not been set until the engineering is complete. Commissioner Zaugg said it has been proposed that the county work with the Forest Service to develop a water source to the area. IF WATER were available, the berms would be planted When were transistors demonstrated? 2. When did France present the Statue of Liberty to the 1. U.S.? 3. July 4th was the birthday of ? what famous song-writer- Answers 1. June 30, 1838, by Bell Laboratory scientists. 2. July 4, 1884. 3. Stephen Foster, 1826. DIXON P. REISBECiC -- OF INSURANCE-19- 7 North Main, Layton ALL FORMS Phone 376-42AUTO, HOME OWNERS & LIFE INSURANCE 79 4 AA IU IU AA AA AAAA AA AAIIA A.AAAAAAAIUI finally get their start. Hard ones position, the American this eventually made way us the strong America we are today. necessary for advancement and happiness. and The danger today older Americans point this out to younger fellow citizens is that in the more urbanized life we live, with so many depending more and more on the government (other citizens) for all kinds of living support, with so many lucrative government so with many jobs, conveniences and so much easy living and stress on pleasure, the old spirit will be - lost. AMERICA in the future will be as strong as its people. That means if the Germans, Japanese or Russians work harder, appreciate the necessities of national strength and and better, security Americans grow softer from easy living, the American dream and spirit of two centuries will haw been forgot ten, and more energetic peoples will perhaps own the future. When you need your time as much as you need your loan. Put Your Finger on a PHONE LOAN Follow These Simple Steps from anywhere in Utah. 1. Dial toll free 2. A PHONE LOAN Specialist will answer all your questions and skillfully take your application, usually in less than minutes. process your application, notify you of approval, and mail you a copy, usually the very same day... 4. You may then either pick-uyour check at the bank im mediately or receive it by mail too, after you return notarized copies of the final PHONE LOAN papers... without ever coming into the bank. 3. Well DUTCH BOY Its Just That Easy... Bank of Utahs PHONE LOAN . . . Over 20 Yrs. Another Experience Mr. We A A AAA-- and indentured servants, endured long years of toil to FREE LOCAL DELIVERY A HOME OCCUPATION ft! county supply the concrete and provide jail trustee labor or use people presently receiving assistance payments. He cau- out well for both the road GET YOHJ OFF THE HOOK! 5 239.95 289.95 on Sunday Although plans are not complete, Commissioner Zaugg said proposals are being considered to have the been excavated from a county owned site south of the county worked shops. The project has can CLEANERS - Closed AN improvement the commission is hoping to make is to separate the pistol shooting ranges with concrete curbs and also mark the distance from the target with concrete. First in Innovative Service. Steam Cleaning Special!! clean all kinds ol fumiture-w- e s1595 remove dog and cat odors BAni(fUTRH With Adv. Davis Countys Largest Carpet PHONE & 773-500- 0 Innovation in Banking Member: FDIC Furniture Cleaners - 376-335- 7 FREE ESTIMATES - 292-86- 26 V . con- the project has IPHORJE LOARJ CARPET Credit Cards Accepted it will be open to the public under the supervision of the Davis County' Sheriffs Office. Commissioner Zaugg said fees have not been set until it is determined what the cost of supervising the range will be. of Todays Youth Of security to hard working CONSTRUCTION struction further separate the area. The fill needed for the Bank of Utahs new Conference Room, Room D06, Building 849 at 4:15 p.m. the second and fourth Wednesdays of the month. Understanding MILLIONS 8 FT. TALL RED BARNS ing. When the range is complete, 100-yard- Future Depends On with grass and trees and would 180-yar- d ings the second and fourth Thursdays of the month and the RHETS hold their meetings on base in the DSS man, Irish, Scandinavian, Italian immigrants, and many black Americans - not just a few years of effort ALL STEEL THE long range on the east is planned for pistol shooting. The central range, s engineered to be long, will provide an area for in high marksmanship powered rifles. The range on the south is planned for pistol, small arms and skeet shoot- |