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Show ait ut i. 141 itiU 4 prn?cinT ave. SALT LAKE CITY 4 L.Uuiku m. j. w . 1 i I ' I t Vl 10, UTAH Two registration days remain prim to the Primary Election September 11. They are August 21 and 2x. Hours aie from S a.m. until b p.m. Here is list of Davis County registration agents, (Clip and save for future reference) District 1. 2. 3. 1. .7. 1. 7. N. ! LAYTON. DAVIS COUNTY, UTAH 10. Farmington Fiesta Days Parade Begins at 5:30 p. m. Saturday The Friendly FiFarmington esta Days parade in Farmington begins at 5:30 p. m. this evening (Saturday). Floats, decorated bicycles and costumed children will compete for $12.") in prize money. The parade is being sponsored for the second year by the Farmington Junior Chamber of Commerce under the direction of the Lions Club, general sponsor of the celebration. The parade will begin at the Farmington Church, Third North and Main. It will move south to State Street, west one block and then south to Farmington City Fark where the floats will be left on display for the evening. Barbecued sandwiches, hot dogs, ice cream, pop corn, drinks, etc., will be sold from concession stands Saturday evening following the parade. Many valuable prizes will be given away during the carnival. Events Friday evening included a Chuck Wagon Dinner sponsored by American Legion Post 27, a program and the queen judging. Dale P. Lund 11. Two Injured 12. 13. 1 In Accident, 1.7. 10. 17. Driver Cited 1. 10. Two persons were Clearfield two-car crash on the injured in a Hill Field Road near the entrance to Ilill Garden II ernes Wednesday evening shortly after p. m. ! Oliver of one vehicle, Gary 21, Roy, was cited for drunk driving when his car crashed into a second vehicle being driven by Sgt. Jessie W. Haggans of Hill Garden Homes. The two injured were Sgt. Haggans and a passenger in his car, Tessie Norse, !). They were treated for bruises and minor injuries. Both vehicles were demolished. Ken-eric- k, I)ian Johnson, 18, one of four candidates for the queen contest being held this week end at the Farmington Friendly Fiesta Days. Others are Fern McDonald, 1G; Gail White and LaRae Pear. son. Jaycees As President At Farmington Farmington Dale P. Lund, Sr., for the past eight years and is lifelong resident of Farmington, married to the former Mary Jenleads the Farmington Junior Jun- nings of Farmington. He served in nt. Layton 8th Ward Take 6th Place Layton 8th Ward placed sixth at the divisional softball playoffs in Ogden this week. In the first of four games the Lay-to- n Ward defeated Oakley and Syracuse wards. They then lost out to Ogden 41th and Ogden 30th. Coach is John Goethsche, Layton Europe during the Korean War and is senior compounder for the Greater Mountain Chemical Company. Dialing Prefix Planned For nt. vice-preside- 21. 22. 23. 21. 2.7. 20. 27. 2N. 20. 30. 31. 32. 33. 31. 3.7. 37. Vardeland Group Still 50 Clearfld Phones Clearfielders will Clearfield soon be exercising their telephone dial finger a little more when a prefix of TAylor will be added to the five digit numbers. This will become effective when the new telephone books are ready for distribution, W. H. Morton, the Mountain States Telephone and Telegraph Co., manager, explained. Most of the numbers will remain the same he said and this will fit the telephones into the nationwide uniform numbering plan. It will facilitate the procedure by which operators in other parts of the country dial calls direct to these telephones, and will be paving the way for the future when Clearfield residents may dial long distance calls anywhere in the nation. 3s. 30. 40. B-- S-- , Short of Quota Lawn Moths Presenting Problem Verdeland Park tenLayton ants have just three more days left to join the Verdeland Park Housing Corporation to participate in the purchase of the federal housing project from the Public Housing Administration. Fifty per cent of the required members have been secured thus far. Waivers are being prepared at the present time to be circulated among the tenants to determine which families have no intentions Non-Prof- it vice-preside- 20. 30. Li iads ior Chamber of Commerce as president this year. Dale is married to the former Opal Echols of Phoenix, Arizona; they have four children. He is a veteran of World War II, having seen action in the pacific theater and is a builder and construction worker by trade. Myron Mike Lund, also a lifelong resident of Farmington, is A plant superclub intendent for Greater Mountain Chemical and a real estate salesman, Mike is married to the former Virginia Sanders of Asliville, Alabama. He is a veteran of World War II and served in Europe and the Pacific theatres. Dale Bone, born and raised, in Kaysville,. is another He has lived in Farmington 1. Name Address Mrs. Harold Nelson, Woods Cross Chloe M. Arbuckle, 211 N. s W, West Bountiful Manila II. Sessions, !2 East .7th South, Bountiful Hazel B. Cutler, .77 North 3rd East, Bountiful Mrs. Harold L. Pope, 30.7 North 1st East, Bountiful. Mavis G. Clayton, (S.W.) 3.71 E. 2( So., Centerville Effie T. Apple, 12 North 2nd East, Farmington Iva S. Wood, 3111 North 1st East, Farmington Lucille Strong, 111 East 2nd South, Kaysville Norma T. Swan, 131 West 1st North, Kaysville Mathis E. Cleveland, Layton (East) Laytona Ruby Ilickenlooper, Layton (West) Nell Staples, South Weber Ivy M. Johnston, Clinton Fern Fearle, 1S.7 South Lakeview Dr,, Clearfield Ruby Barber, Syracuse Della Cook, West Point Iona C. Cook, 170 West Gentile, Layton Nancy A. Martin, 410 North Main, Sunset Norma Betts. 7010 So. 1100 W., North Salt Lake Marie Stoker, Clearfield Anna S. Thompson, 17 East 1th North, Bountiful Angus Smedley, 10.7 West Center, Bountiful Julia Memmott, 20.7 South Nth East, Bountiful Stephen K. Pearce, 2(H) South Nth East, Bountiful Sylvia N. Call, 301 West .7th South, Bountiful Arta Whitesides, 7N Beacon Ave., Layton Alta J. Hayward, ossi South .700 West, Bonutiful Afton IL Adams, 0 Verdeland Park, Layton Vilate Adams, 70.7 Church Street, Layton Maggie Birch, Anchorage Sarah McEntire, 100 South Main, Sunset Thelma Steed, Clearfield Dorothy T. Meacham, 113 East 0700 South, Bountiful Mrs. Robert A. Trump, 121 East 100 South, Centerville Lucy Barker, INI' North 2nd East, Kaysville Yvonne Gailey, 047 E. OK) Clearfield Hazel Child, 02.73 Orchard Dr., Bountiful Sarah Ilepworth, 13x N. 1th East, Bountiful Carrol Hedgepeth, 10U Ross I)r., Clearfield 300-un- it of participating. If sufficient numbers can not be obtained within the project,- - it will be thrown open to outside application. The number of members has grown from eleven to approximately one hundred since August 2. Applicants are required to deposit with the Corporation $.70 earnest money and 810 membership fee. Someone will be at the administration office each evening from G until 8 p. m. to accept new members. Wednesday, August 22, is the deadline. The PHA is asking $748,400 for the project which would be approximately $1875 per unit. Explorers Camp At Mirror Lake Kaysville The Kaysville First Ward Explorers are spending the week on a camping trip to Mirror Lake in the High Uintas. They left Kaysville Monday morning and will return home Saturday. Laddie Timothy and Doug Baldwin accompanied the boys as leaders. Lawn moths are Farmington doing considerable damage to Davis County lawns at the present time, according to Darrel Stokes and Maurice Marshall, county extension service agents. The lawn moths which are in the form of worms and may be any color from white to black are just below the surface and do their damage by cutting off the roots of the grass Davis Dairymen Attend Field Day at Farmington e be pulled out when this occurs ex- posing the worms beneath. Homeowners can spray with heptaclor or chlorodane to get rid of the lawn moths. The spray or dust, whichever is preferred, will also aid in eliminating other pests such as earwigs and grasshoppers. The chemical can be obtained at feed dealers, farm and orchard supply stores or chemical companies. Directions are on the containers for diel-dro- n, use. Jaycees Backing USAC Twenty-on- which then dies and becomes a brown spot. The grass can easily Da- vis County dairymen attended a dairy field day at the Utah State Agricultural College last Wednesday led by Maurice Marshall, assistant county extension agent. The event was held at the USAC experiment station in Logan. Attending were L. W. Robinson, Clarence Perkins, Les Turner, Frank Richards and Truman Holbrook, Farmington; Lingby Stoker, Clearfield; Clinton Zollinger, Jess Heslop, Cliff Linford, Rulon Barnes, and Leon Harrison, Kaysville; Dee Whitesides and Elmer Major, Layton; Stan Smoot and Edgar Smoot, Centerville; Alma D. Eakle, and Douglas Hyatt, Woods Cross. . The field day covered milking demonstrations, clipping pasture and feeding green, feeding of young dairy stock, alfalfa silage, pasture grazing management, etc. Blood Bank The Layton Jaycees Layton today announced that they are cooperating with the Davis County Chapter of the American Red Cross in a blood procurement drive scheduled for next Thursday, August 23. Glen Simmons, recently elected to the Layton Jaycees board of directors, is director in charge of the Layton drive and announces that donors will be received at the Lay-to- n American Legion Hall from 4 p.m. until 8 p.m. on Thursday, the 23rd. As the Davis County blood bank is near empty he urges all citizens to cooperate in the drive for this worthy cause. Nurses and doctors will be on hand to assist the Red Ci oss. All blood donors will be eligible to draw from the bank in case of future emergencies at no cost to them. |