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Show -- WEEKLY REFLEX-DAV- IS NEWS JOURNAL, AUGUST 18, 1977 Clubs In Kaysville New officers of the Athena Club for the 1977-7- 8 year have been elected. Mrs. Lucile B. Sheffield will serve as president. Other officers are Mrs. Adelia Rushforth, vice president; Mrs. Alexia Stewart, secretary; and Mrs. Florence Bishop as secretary. They met at the home of Mrs. Sheffield on Tuesday to set up a schedule for the programs for the coming year. Their opening social and luncheon will be held at the Chateau Reception Center in Layton on Wednesday, September 7 at 7 p.m. np Elder Flint Will Report Elder Steve' Flint will report his missionary experiences Sunday at the Layton Conference, Building Dedication All members of the Layton LDS Stake are invited to at- tend two special meetings that will be held Sunday, August 21. The meetings are Stake Quarterly Conference and the dedication of the new stake center. STAKE conference will be held in two separate locations. Members of the 6th, 7th, 11th, 15th, 17th and 23rd Wards will meet at 9:30 a.m. the Gordon Avenue Chapel, 50 W. Gordon Ave. Those living in the 2nd, 4th, 10th, 13th, 18th and 19th Wards will begin their conference session at 10 a.m. in the new stake center. Elder Mark E. Petersen, a member of the Council of the Twelve Apostles, will preside over both conference meetings. ELDER Petersen is distinguished for his many years of church service. He and his several books dealing with dating, courtship and Temple marriage. Stake to According President Gayle Stevenson, several important decisions affecting the members of the stake will be made at the morning conference session. DEDICATION services for the new Layton Stake Center will commence at 7 p.m. President Ezra Taft Benson, president of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, will preside over the dedication. n President Benson is for his leadership in both church and civic capacities. He served as the secretary of agriculture during the Eisenhower administration. Elder Benson is the author of several books and he is an outspoken proponent of patriotism, constitutional government and the free terprise system, dmg en- ARCHERY DEER permits went on sale at all Division offices July 27 and will continue to be sold through the last day of the season. Applicants must apply in person when obtaining archery permits from license agents other than Division offices; cost is $5. The entire state is open to the taking of deer by bow and arrow. The Henry Mountains deer herd unit (no. 52) has been set aside as a trophy deer unit. Any buck deer taken from that unit must have a minimum of four points on each antler. THE BOW and arrow is a legal weapon in Utah for all big game species. The minimum bow pull at archer's draw must be 40 pounds. Arrowheads must have two or more sharp cutting edges and not be capable of passing inch ring. Arrows with through a seven-eighth- s chemically treated or explosive arrowheads and any mechanical device for cocking, releasing or holding the bow at draw are illegal, as are crossbows. It is also illegal to hunt from or discharge an arrow from any vehicle. 26 open bull area archery permits went on and were sold through August 5 at Division offices. All open bull elk areas in the state are open to archery elk hunting for permit holders. Permits are valid for bull as animals with antlers over five inches elk in length. In addition, a public drawing was held August 10 to select 100 archery elk permit holders who will receive hunter's choice archery elk permits. only-defi- ned ARCHERY hunters during prescribed archery seasons are exempt from meeting the "hunter orange" clothing requirements Manure Heat One of the newest developments on the energy scene is the discovery, in Denmark, that cow manure mixed with hot water can be used to generate gas, which in turn can be used to heat one's home. p.m. HE IS the son of Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Flint of Kaysville. Elder Flint has served the past two years in the Costa Rica-Sa- n Jose Mission. : AN innovator in Denmark has recently successfully demonstrated this technique. He gathers the manure from his fields, mixes and stores it, and pipes the gas produced into his home, where it's burned for heating purposes. SCOUTS IN WASH. The Layton East Stake held their annual pit barbeque, Saturday, August 13 at the Street Park. Chapel Approximately 2,550 persons from the 11 wards involved in the stake attended the dinner. THE HIGHLY organized meal had a menu consisting of barbequed beef and turkey, baked potatoes, rolls, fresh green salad, sliced tomatoes and hot steamed com on the cob. To top it all off was a refreshing banana split with your choice of chocolate or strawberry topping. The meat was pit barbequed under the direction of John Morgan and Stan Wig-gil- l. The fire for the meat was started in the pits Friday morning at 3:30 a.m. and the coals were heated until Friday afternoon at 4 p.m. The meat cooked through the night Friday and most of the day Saturday when at 5 p.m. it was uncovered and brought to the dinner hot and ready for carving. THE ENTIRE stake shared in the assignments of the dinner with everyone contributing to its large success. The meat carving and serving was under the direction of the High Priest Quorums of the stake. The Elders handled the setting up of the tables work. The and the clean-u- p Seventies took charge of serving the banana splits. The young people were in charge of keeping everyones glass filled with ice water. DARWIN Stott took charge of cooking all the com and the Relief Society cooked the baked potatoes, sliced tomatoes and served the dinner to the hungry attenders. Lynn Wood was the high councilman chairman in charge. Comments were circulating that this was the largest group participating since this annual event started some seven years ago. Also the word was that it gets bigger and better every year, dmg In Fashion Blouses with draw strings at the neckline are popular. Some of these are rather low and fashioned of soft materials. Hair-do- s drawn down over Some very lucky local area Scouts just returned from the National Scout Jamboree which was held at Moraine State Park, Pa. IN addition to attending the Jamboree from Aug. with 28,000 other scouts from all the 50 states plus special visitor Scouts from foreign nations, the boys and their 0, leaders toured scenic and historic points in the eastern United States for 10 days. They visited the Gettysburg Battlefield, Mt. Vernon, Arlington Cemetery, D.C., Washington, Philadelphia, New York City, the Hill Cumorah Pageant and Niagara Falls. In Washington, D.C. they were privileged to have audiences with Senator Jake Syracuse Mrs. Joseph S. Thurgood is Loran Thurgood has spent some time in the hospital improving greatly after being receiving treatment for a in bed for the past month heart condition. suffering with broken and torn ligaments that she sufThe Syracuse Third Ward fered in a fall down her stairs and School officers Sunday teachers, and their partners at the family home. enjoyed a steak fry at the Syracuse Bowery on Friday ; Mrs. Vaun Barber and Mrs. William S. Holt entertained at evening. the Barber home last ThursMr. and Mrs. Lynn Clifford and their three sons and day with a baby shower for daughter, Paul, Daren, Craig the daughter of Terry and Patricia Barber. Luncheon and Sharol left on Sunday for was served to 32 neighbors their home in Placentia, Calif., after a visit here for and relatives for the honored the past ten days, at the home guests. of Mrs. Cliffords parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Chatelain Nathan Norman Stuart, of Syracuse and also time four month old son of Mr. and with family members of Mr. Mrs. Leslie N. Stuart, is still Clifford in northern Davis very ill in the Childrens HosCounty and Ogden. pital in Salt Lake City. The The Syracuse First LDS lad has undergone open heart Ward members enjoyed an surgery and several follow-u- p outing held at the stake camp, surgeries since. He has been in East Canyon last Friday there for the past month. evening, a very large number attended and took part in the Mayor and Mrs. Boyd program, games and dinner. Thurgood and their family Melvin Davis has been in spent a week of camping and the hospital for the past week fishing in the Uinta Mounand is much improved at his tains recently. home now. Mrs. Duane Stoker is The James Bennett and improving from major surEllen Pincock Ellison Bennett gery that she underwent this family reunion will be held at past week at the McKay Hosthe Downey City Park in pital in Ogden. Downey, Idaho, on Saturday, Aug. 20. All descendants of this family line are invited to Home Sweet Home partake in the activities of This will be remembered as this day and join together in the summer we discovered a (he Idaho city for dinner and a place tourists haven't spoiled - home. program. Genealogy information will be available for Changing Times these families to secure. Garn, Senator Orrin Hatch and Congressman Gunn McKay. They went to the Washington Monument, the Jefferson Memorial, the Lincoln Memorial, the White House and the Capitol. They were also impressed with the Smithsonian Museum of Natural History and the new National Air and Space Museum. THE troop attended a New York Mets baseball game, saw the Radio City Music Hall Rockettes, went to the U.N., to the top of the World Trade Center Building and the Statue of Liberty. The boys did very well in scout skill and patrol competitions. Those placing in Western region competition were Mark Michie, log sawing; Tim Whitmore, flint & steel, Craig Steve Crunk, Jordan Stover, Craig Halber, Ron Kaufman, Halber, cooking; Paul Whitmore, baking; Tim Whitmore, air rifle, Thunderbird patrol, Mark Worden and Roger Roberts; Mountain Man patrol members Kim King, Jeff Neilson, Ron Larson, Charles Giles, Jeff West, Brad Stacy, Bret Thorpe and David Shiramizu. jamboree salute. Marauder patrol and first aid. Jamboree Troop 783 from Kaysville, Layton, Clearfield, Roy and south Ogden was composed of Senior Patrol Leader Guy Hess, assistant SPL Mark Michie, quartermaster Phil Chandler; Thunderbird patrol members Jeff Nielson, Russell Cook, Mike Michie, Clay Perry, Doug Slade, Jon Morley, Gary Gurr and Dean Taylor. INTERNATIONAL Boy assigned to the troop were Kazuo Endo of Tokyo and Toshiyukio Fukasado of Nagoya. The leaders were Scoutmaster Dean Sanders of Kaysville, assistant scoutScouts master (program) Major Bruce Whitmore of Fruit Heights and assistant scoutmaster (quartermaster) Marauders patrol members Tim Whitmore, John Sanders, Clark Hirschi, Stan Ferrin, William Gurney, Stanford Acomb, Travis Wilkinson and Paul Whitmore. MORMON A1 Halber of Hill Air Force Base. The troop will meet again soon to view slides and photographs and prepare a memorial brochure, np Major Pioneer patrol members How to .with Pete . . Features handyman Pete Prlain in a series of weekly programs loaded with projects you can easily do yourself to save energy . . . and money. Pete doesn't make the mistake of assuming that we are all he makes each step clear People who skilled handymen have seen Pete's shows say they have completed projects without further help. Folders are available on most of Pete's "how to" subjects at Utah Power offices (along with other information on energy conservation), and many building supply dealers will also, offer the folders and further helps This week Pete tells you How to Hang a Metal Storm Door Saturday, Aug. 20 1:30 p.m. KSL-T- V Channel 5 the brow are becoming to people who have very high foreheads. These can be or curled up on straight-lin- e the end. juJUeneA '&& For those worried about their energy supply, the dairying business might therefore offer new possibilities. Which line of cattle produces the best manure is the next logical question, etc. ShitaMKHaaiilv uruKBaminm FACTORY yTILEY Center Building Freeport Tues-Fr- i. Hours: Saturday 11:00-5:0- 0 Phone 825-155- C-1- 2 10:00-4:0- 0 2 New at... Audrenes Beauty Boutique Announcing Registration SUSAN GUNNING Susannas She K,nd the stoH ot Auchene specialties in precision ho it cutting lor men hos from Illinois Solon ond women m Sassoon previous experience ond Naming Salons hos School of Dance Ballet - Tap - Modern Jazz Boy Scouts and leaders from the Lake Bonneville District recently met with Utah Senators while in Washington, D.C. en route to the Boy Scout national jamboree. They are, front to r. Senators Crrin Hatch and Jake Gam, A1 Halber, assistant scout master; Dean Sanders, scout master. Row 2, Bruce Whitmore, assistant scout master; Dennis Nielson, Jeff West, Bret Thorpe, Kim King, Brad Stacey, Russell Cook, Guy Hess, Charles Giles, Phillip Chanler, Craig Halber. Row 3, Ronald Larsen, Jeff Nielson, Dean Taylor, Douglas Slade, Steven Crunk, William Gurnee, Gary Gurr, Clay Perry, Mark Warden. Row 4, Mark Michie, Ronald Kaufmann, Russell Stover, John Sanders, Clark Hirschi, Stanley Ferrin, David Shiramizu, Michael Michie, Roger Roberts, John Morley and Stanford Acomb. 1 Layton East Holds Pit Barbeque well-know- Both deer and elk archery seasons are scheduled to open Saturday, August 20, 1977. Archers will have until September 5 to bag their quarry. RESIDENT 3: 15 wife, Emma Marr Petersen, Archery Season Opens Saturday sale July LDS Kaysville Sixth Ward at SUSAN -- Trampoline - Acrobatic NEW OPERATOR SPECIAL Dancing Advanced and Beginners Classes begin September 15th -- A permanent 15 Clearfield -- Suzanna Taggar- tGot 825-423- 1 a little Dancer? for School now OPEN TO THE PUBLIC Lay-a-wa- y |