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Show Page 2 May 28, 1980 Clearfield Courier Clocrfiald Barnes' local feed and seed store to serve you! The only way a small business can survive is if it meets the needs of the folks in the community it serves. This simple truth spoken by the owner of a new establishment in Clinton exemplifies the type of ser growing ones own food? And along with the supplies go all the free advice and instruction needed to successfully The helpful hints grow a garden come from a congennial, down-hom- e 'type of fellow who has many years of vices and goods offered in the folksy atmosphere of Barnes Feed and Seed, 2056 N. 2000 W. What could be a more natural business these days than one that supplies the necessary equipment for started on their own green houses and root cellars, Mr. Barnes said. He feels it is important for people to be able to provide for themselves and their families and he is eager to help them get started. gardening experience behind him. Virgil Barnes, along with his wife Eldeen, built the store on a lot adjacent to their home. The business has turned into a real family affair, with the couples seven children pitching in. One son owns a similar business in Ogden and has supplied a lot of the basic know-hoin getting the enterprise off the ground. In an area where a vast majority of the residents have gardens and keep animals, the Barnes are definitely meeting the needs of the folks. Many of our customers tell us they are happy to see our store here because we fill a need that the area was lacking in before, said Mrs. Barnes. Natives of Davis County, the Barnes spent several years operating h trout farm in Morgan, following a medical retirement from Hill AFB as a result of an airplane accident. The feed and seed business was a natural next step for a man following his instincts in looking for a business that would serve folks needs as well as make use of his own abilities. w The have a Barnes Besides stocking a complete line of feed, bedding plants, garden supplies, hardware, wood and coal, Barnes sells rabbits for less than anyone in the area. I figure that way, they will probably come back for feed and Ive gained a steady customer. Sound logic from a true country gentleman. small greenhouse behind their home in which they raise bedding plants for sale in the store. They plan to construct a larger one directly behind the store in the near future. I've helped a lot of people get Hearings to be held concerning transportation for handicapped A series of public hearing will be conducted over the next two weeks in Weber, and Davis Salt Lake Counties to receive comment on proposed transportation services for handicapped persons. The hearings will be jointly sponsored by the VIRGIL AND ERDEEN BARNES Clearfield Courier have opened Barnes Feed and Seed in Clinton. Sun Chronicle Ben Lomond Beacon Sun Times These papers are published weekly at Roy, Utah, 5388 S. 1900 W. Mailing address: P.O. Box 207, Roy, Utah 84067. Telephone or Salt Lake All news and photographs for Wednesday papers must be in the news office by 5 p.m. Monday, pictures may be included without charge either taken in our office or submitted by our 825-166- 6 359-261- 2. readers. Registration set for swimming The Clearfield pool is now taking registrations for their summer arc J. Howard Stable Owner-Publisher-Edit- M. Glen Adams Mrs. Bonnie Stahle LaVora Wayment Dave Horner Nancy Lynn Krzton Keith Duncan Cindy Shy Pam Zaug . . Trade Bailey Asst. Publisher Ad. Mgr. Courier Editor Chronicle Editor Beacon Editor sports Editor .! . Staff Staff Staff swim program, which will begin the week of June 9. A second session will begin the week of July 14. Swim instruction schedules as follows: Early inorning swim for adults ages 18 and up Monday through Friday from 5:30 to 8 a. m. Cost is $1 per visit. The Red Cross Special Training classes for ages are held on Monday and Wednesday with hour long sessions beginning at 8 a.m., 10 a.m.' and noon Mom. or Padapd Tjot (ages classes are held at 9 a.m. on Monday and Wednesday 3-- ! 0-- Wasatch Front Regional Council, the Utah Transit Authority and the Utah Council for Handicapped and Disabled Developmentally Persons (DD Council). The first hearing will be at 7 p.m., May 30, at the South Salt Lake Auditorium, 2500 through Saturday. After rental is hours pool available. Individual or, family discount cards may be purchased. For further information call 825-417- Original Recipe inside when you seethe i v & ficult, demanding, and even, confusing at times. But, it is also something more. It is, above all else, the Most Beautiful of trusts ever placed in any peoples hands. It remains a glorious love-affa- ir that no agressor, no the paradings and doomsayers (both in this country and abroad), with all our faults and failings there are still far far more people, from all over the world, trying to get IN, that get out, and that. Sir, says it all. (And always will). We confound our critics and adversaries. We even amaze ourselves sometimes, and why not? We remain as we began, We the People . . . the freest, the gutsyest, the This coupon Rood for 2 pieces of the Colonels Original Redx-o- 13PZZC3 9 pieces of chu ken (Original Recipe or Exira Crispy) large mashed potatoes and gravy I large salad 6 dinner rolls r Extra Crispy and a roll for only 89'. Limit one coupon per cusotmer Customer pays .til applicable sales tax. CUC10T Get 1 5 pieces of the Colonel 's Original Recipe or Extra Crispy, 1 pint of gravy, and 5 rolls for only $6.49. Limit one coupon per customer. Customer pays all applicable sales tax. (Jet all (his for S3 99 and this coupon Limit one coupon per customer Customer pays aJI applicable sales tax. OFFER EXPIRES JUNE 30, 1980 (Thii coupon pood only ai tiorc ddcvMra listed in thin ad I OFFER EXPIRES JUNE 30, 1980 .- Kentucky CCRC-- 8 iThi. coupon good Mjfr COUPONS ad Jj Fried Chicken. It OFFER EXPIRES -I! I nice to feel so good about a meaT JUNE 30, 1980 I rr or n ,T, "t GOOD ONLY AT STORES LISTED BELOW Clearfield: 225 No. Main Street. Roy: 1864 West 5300 South. Layton: 734 South Main 0 only d Ogden. Federal 504 Regulations published last year require UTA to equip all of its buses with wheelchair lifts for the handicapped, but allows a certain period of time in which to comply. The transit services. In Salt Lake County, UTA funds will be channeled into it a newly-formed, non-prof- organization, tentatively named Transport Handicapped and Elderly by Van (THE Van, Inc.), which will consolidate existing transportation from private carriers whose vehicles are equipped to carry handicapped persons, according to UTA Grants most unpredictably undefeatable opinionated, people in the whole world, because, thats where weve come from, all over the world, and its working. Today, there are those who would have us believe our Nation is on the brink of disaster. They seem to feel the need to have us join them in believing how weak we are, how our economic future is doomed to failure; our military how second-rat- e strength is, and on and on and Administrator, Craig Robert ts. i " Editor, TAM AN AMERICAN. I am part of the greatest human experiment this world has ever known, and I love it. It is important that you know that now. From our great Nations beginning, it has been, and still remains, a very very costly experiment, often equally as frustrating dif- With all our seemingly endless problems, with all CROWN DAGGER room, Street, multi-purpo- Twenty-secon- Opsn letter to nation's critics amount of threatenings or wars, or anything else has ever been able to destroy, or never will. PAKC 550 Guest editorial: Open plunge hours are 1 : 30 p.m. to 10 p.m. Monday FAMILY School vehicles now operated by various organizations and agencies. In Davis and Weber Counties the UTA money will probably be used to purchase of $18 for 10 lessons. outside. Courthouse in Farmington, and the final hearing will be at 7 p.m., June 4, at the Dee regulations, until UTA can put the necessary equipment on its fleet. The UTA Board of Directors late last year earmarked $200 thousand as seed money to help in the organization of such interim apped-accessible beginningatll a.m. atacost Blue Ribbon Commission County chambers in the County transportation services to be discussed at the hearings constitute a transition plan, required by the handic- or 9 a.m. Tuesday and Thursday. Mixed Adult classes for ages 18 and up are Monday 9 p.m. Adult Ladies instruction, 8a., m. Friday. All of the above classes consist of 10 lessons for $12. Swimming instruction for Scouts (boys, girls, cubs) will be held on Friday You know its my South State. A second hearing will be held at 7 p.m., June 3, at the Davis on. They tell us, we have given up hope and have lost our trust, purpose, faith, and resolve. (But then,, theyve been saying that for over 200 years now). They presume to be our nations head- hunters and revealing far more regarding their own needs than Therefore, e it kqpwny our great nation was born out of the fires of testings, threats, shortages, and crisis, and in these we will continue to and grow stronger, hopefully, wiser than before. Thank God for the testings! The experiment is not over. Our Nations hope, trust, purpose, and resolve does not lie in our Dow economic Jones in the words nor averages, and actions of the few, no matter who they are or what their positions, nor has it ever. It is time for each of us, who call ourselves to use our Americans, back-boneand Godgiven come down out of the grand stands, and onto the field, and make our individual voices heard. Not only in the voting booth, but seven days a week, fifty-tw- o weeks a s, year, with every opportunity. You see the bottom line is this, the only way our nations critics, plenmnrilV at'thesime time failing to meet the transportation needs of the handicapped. APTA contends, and UTA officials are now seeking a waiver of the e regulations, that a approach to handicapped transportation better would provide mobility for handicapped persons at a lower cost than would transit buses equipped with wheelchair lifts. It is that kind of system which will be implemented in the transition plan to be discussed at the local meetings in the next few dial-a-rid- days, Roberts said. UTA will also coordinate for handicapped persons to the transportation hearings. Telephone requests for riders should be received by UTA Customer no later Services than 24 hours prior to the (531-860- particular hearing the caller wishes to attend. initiated Six Clearfield area residents attending Weber State College have been inducted into the WSC Scholastic Society, a group for top scholars in the and junior sophomore classes. The society honors those students who have maintained a grade point average of 3.5 or better while completing 45 to 120 hours of college work. CLINTON: Paul B. Baker, a major in botony; HILL AFB: David M. Syndergaard, a major in math; CLEARFIELD: Gordon L. a logistics Daley, management major; Dennis Hepworth, an accounting major; Malika O. Keval, majoring as a medical loboratory technician; Sonja G. Pen tt ilia, an acacounting major. Council offers safety tips The Utah Safety Council joins the President in urging all boaters to Set Your Course for Safety during the June 7 observance of National Safe Boating Week. Boating is everyones sport, said Bob Ingersoll, Manager of the Utah Safety Council. Nearly 60 million the Americans enjoy freedom and thrill of boating each year, and most of them do it safely. To keep it that way, we must all do our part in making people aware of proper boating practices. As a guide to safe boating during the 1980 season, the Utah Safety Council urges all boaters to: Check and heed the weather forecast before boating. Advise your family and friends staying ashore of your travel itinerary, g Make sure our boat is fuHyequippedi with and equipment, suitable for the planned trip. Avoid overloading or tund, safety overpowering your boat. Take enough flotation devices for ail of your passengers and make sure that at least the and wear them rs children at all times. Make sure a second member of your party can operate the craft and knows the area of operation. Keep a lookout for avoid and swimmers swimming areas. Be careful when you are changing positions in a small craft. You can tip it over. Protect against the suns glare with sunglasses and skin lotion. Save happy hour celebrations the for homeport mooring. Be a defensive boater. Plan ahead and Set Your Course for Safety. head- and hunters, other adversaries, can have the last word, is if We the doom-sayer- 504 The Federal been have Regulations challenged in federal court by the American Public Transport Association as being too scholars s, ... allow it to people happen, by choosing to sit back and play the victim. (A role our forefathers refused to play). In short, to those of you who feel your need to parade your own doubts and lack of faith, resolve, and purpose, by questioning ours; to those of you who feel your need to a behind hide role of headhunter or scorekeeper ; or, to those who would have us retreat or play the eternal victim, be it known, you have never known us, nor do you now! The ball may be a bit battered and warn, and our adversaries and distractors many and strong, and the points may come slowly and painfully now. But, the ball is .still in our hands, and its goal to gol The very same goal weve had for over 200 years! MOTIVATOR" tor promoting homo study In our achoolo. CUTWORMS, EAGER REAVERS OF THE INSECT FAMILY, CAR LEVEL A FELP SEEPLtNG CORN M 24 HOURS... OF S PURfRG THE RIGHT FOLLOWING A WARM EVE-RR- G SHOWER, OR WHEN SOIL CONOITOHS ARE RICH WITH ORGANIC MATTER OFTEN FOLLOWING SOYBEANS ANP WHEAT. PRIME 77ME HOWA GROWER CAR PEEP CONTROL. GET OUT ANP MUR THE HELP. IF MORE THAN 3 PLANTS OUT OF A HUNPREP ARE CUT OFF AT THE GROUNP INFESTA- TION SHOULP BE TREATEPtMMEPtATELY TO SAYE THE CROP. Mr. Dennis Wood s, score-keeper- those of whom they judge. Constantly in the grand stands. Never down on the field. They, sadly, have are. forgotten who We (Or perhaps, they never really knew). ..." ; P.S. To our nations critics, where ever they may be . . . Be fully assured, our faith, our drive, our resolve, our purpose is as strong as it has always been. Sorry to hear about yours. fjJHE EMERGENCY TREATMENT AFTER .yvv1 YOU NAVE THE PROBLEM, tS ONE WAY TO HANPLE CUTWORMS. . . A BETTER HAY IS TO USE AN IRSECTtCIPE SUCH AS PYFORATE AT PLANTING TIME WHICH PROTECTS THE CROPS FROM CUTWORMS AS WELL AS ROOTWORMS ANP OTHER INSECTS. ' 2 |