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Show 6A, Lakeside Ret iew, November 20, 1900 Carrier Kaysville Still jy Critical Agenda What's That? , street. Appointment of a library board member was initially billed as item number six. Several reports by Fire Chief Jim Dotson were heard instead. Utah law requires that all public meetings have an agenda which is posted and made available to the public. It is also illegal to hold a closed meeting without a vote of the council members. Mayor Gar Elison Tuesday said the closed meeting was being called to discuss personnel matters. multiple fractures sustained in a two-ca- r mishap on U.S. 89 10 days ago. The driver of the other car was Tracy L. Rollins, 41, Salt Lake City, who died in the accident. Mrs. Cooks daughter, Elizabeth, 6, was released Of Electricity . critically injured when struck by a car while on 13 his route Nov. remained in intensive care unit Wednesday at St. Benedicts Hospital in . Ogden, and a victim of a Layton traffic accident was in serious condition Wednesday at the same hospital. Kevin Goede, 12, was riding his bicycle across Fort Lane at about 6:30 the morning of Nov. .13. when he was struck by a car driven by Carl J. Graham, 35, near 300 North, of Uintah, police said. He was delivering the Lakeside Review. He was thrown onto the hood of the car by the impact and struck the windshield, police reports said. He sustained head Anita Watson Cook, 32, of 2536 E. 2500 N., Layton, is being treated in the intensive care unit for In Theft six-mon- ' and chest injuries. Parents of the boy are Dale and Gaylene Goede of 317 Aircraft. Charged A Kaysville resident KAYSVILLE has been named in a complaint filed by the city charging theft of services involving tampering with a city electrical meter. The charge is third degree felony theft. Kenneth E. Crawford, 885 N. Thorn-fiel- d Road, will be arraigned Monday in 4th Circuit Court in Layton before Judge Douglas Cornaby. In the complaint, signed by Mike Lee of the Kaysville City Police, the city alleges that Crawford illegally tampered with the meter at his home to allow power to be used by not recorded. According to the complaint, electrical power worth about $262 was consumed at the Crawford home in a period and not recorded by the meter. Walt Meacham, supervisor of the Kaysville Electrical Department, said the meter had been removed and hack saw blades inserted in the machanisrr to cause the meter not to record the flow of electricity into the home. He said the city installed a separate meter on a power line going to the home and monitored the actual flow of power. A carrier newspaper sub-stiturt- Man - LAYTON - KAYSVILLE It was difficult to tell from the offical agenda just what was going to be discussed at the Kaysville City Council meeting Tuesday. Two items were added and two items deleted from the original agenda which was mailed to newspapers and posted by the city. The council also decided, with no vote, to go into an executive meeting at the end of the regular council meeting, with no representatives of the public or the press allowed. Number five on the original agenda was adoption of a game machine ordinance. Instead, the council a discussion of a petition ' presented by a group of Kaysville for residents asking improvements on a t wheel chair in Clearfield. The van will be operated by the Heritage DEMONSTRATING THE feature of the Davis County Council on Agings new van is Center and is the first van of its type that the Davis County part-tim- e technical advisor Michael Seach and Connie Senior Citizens have obtained. Waiting (in the chair), van driver for the Heritage Center Davis Council on Aging Buys Van to Transport Handicapped The first van of its CLEARFIELD type, in Davis County, with the ability to pick up wheel chair passengers, has been purchased by the Davis County Council on Aging. The modified 1980 Dodge maxi-va- n will be operated out of the Heritage Center in Clearfield. The van features an all electric lift that lowers to ground level, allowing a wheelchair to roll onto the platform, and then raises to a level where the chair can be brought into the van and secured. Walter Marceli, director of transportation for the Davis County Council on Aging, said the van is the first one of its type for the senior citizens in Davis County. He said that it is intended for exclusive use by senior citizens. The van will be able to carry 14 regular passengers along with two wheelchairs, and in the event that the wheelchair spaces are not needed there are two jump seats which can be fitted from Davis CAROL HAMMOND design happening 2520 r Health News . . . BACK INJURIES... IS SURGERY THE ANSWER? Or. Brion Burns has revealed the results of a nationol ; survey which indicates that back injuries cos)'. .Americans over $1 billion annually. In documenting the survey statistics, Dr. Burns of the Chiropractic Care Center notes they were compiled from information, gathered from the files of State Workmen's Compensation Departments, the U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare Service, etc. According to the survey, about one in every fine accidents resulting in back injuries occurs in the home. Roughly33of such injuries happen on the job; about 22occur in motor behicle accidents, and the rest are caused by a variety of kinds of accidents.. ' One of the most importyant revelations in the survey r concerns a study undertaken by the State of five-yea- Washington Department of Labor and Industries of back surgery cases. The study reveals that20.of the period resulted in total failure. North of oil surgery during the 51 yeor Only 20 back surgery cases were listed as having "very good'1 results. "This rather dismal projection. of the outcome of surgery for correction of back disorders indicates the patient seeking surgery to gain relief from back injury is playing a highly speculative game with his future," Dr. Burns says. Medical Center Saturday after being treated for injuries sustained in the accident. Charity Concert Planned Commenting further on the Washington state figures, Dr. Burns continued, "I do not discount the value of surgery in the most desperate coses. In such instances it is better that the high risk be token than nothing done at all. The Utah. Heart and is Lung Association in place and keep the ldoad capacity at sponsoring a musical 16 passengers, Marceli explained. concert featuring jazz, The van was purchased with funding classical, and choral from the council on agings nutrition music at Layton High budget and matching $5,000 donations School, Friday at 7:30 from both Mervyns Department Store p.m. in Layton and the United Way FounCentral Davis, North dation. Mrs. Alice Johnson, director of Davis, and North Layton the Davis County Council on Aging, said junior highs and Davis, because they did hot use federal fun- Clearfield and LAy ton ding in the purchase of the van they will High School bands and not be required to follow government' choral groups will regulation regarding the handicapped. "However, our experience shows that most of our cases respond favorably to more conservative procedures at minimal risk to the patient. Manipulative procedures and physical therapy ore among these nonsurgfical procedures," the Kaysville doctor concluded. psychologically. He may become morose and develop an attitude that he is o liability to his fomily and friends. Such on ottitude can often lead to even further physical and mental deterioration. 3 Hurt in Mishap ."My hope is the public will become more informed regarding back injuries and will take steps to reduce home and work accidents. Mony of the notion's back , injury accidents can be prevented by taking precautions," states Dr. Burns. TOYS FOR THE CHILD ABUSE section of Weber County Family Services are examined by advisor Carla White (left) and president Jolene Stander of the Lakeview Homemakers Club of Weber County. The womens club donated the toys as a part of its annual service project for this year. The club raises the funds for the projects through a garage sale that it sponsors. In addition to the toys club members also volunteered to clean the room at family services that is set aside for parents to visit their children. MISSIONARY SUITS Clearfield Pair Killed I CLEARFIELD A Clearfield woman and her son were killed and three members of another Clearfield family injured in a head-o- n collision in Logan Canyon Monday afternoon, the Utah Highway Patrol reported. Donna B. Box, 48, 1565 E. 750 S., and her son Craig, 13, were killed when a Scott Gerald car driven by Carlson. 567 E. 1100 N., Logan, reportedly veered into the Box vehicle, the Highway Patrol said. Injured in the accident were Jerrie McCafferty, 49, 80 E. 500 N., Clearfield, who sustained head injuries and was listed Wednesday in serious condition . McKay-De- e Hospitals intensive care unit, and two other members of the McCafferty family, Marla, 22, and Alana 2, who sustained cuts and bruises but were not hospitalized. in Carlson also received injuries following the accident when he reportedly was struck by a truck when he ran into its path following the ac- cident, the highway patrol said. Carlson, according to UHP Trooper Robert Daily, was a mental patient who had recently walked away from a hospital where le was undergoing treatment. He was listed in critical condition at the Logan hospital. t A t We feature only the finest most durable two pant suits. Domestic tailoring gives you the sharp appearance that you want. 20 DISCOUNT TO ALL MISSIONARIES ON All SUITS - EXPERT TAILORING- - f)Tlic Squire HRS: 10 a.m.-- t p.m. Daily 1 0 o.m.-- 6 p.m. Sat. common-sens- e We accept Group, Auto, ond Industrial Insurance NO CHARGE FOR CONSULTATION OPEN MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 10-6 DOWCIICGilllEeEOlHI 220 North Main, Kaysvill Ski Extravaganza! November 2022 Were The Special Place For You! of Dr. Burns points out the tragic consequences failure in back surgery affect many persons other than the patient. His family may lose all or part of the earning power of its breadwinner. If the patient becomes totally disabled resulting in a complete inability to provide for his fomily, the patient is often affected . LAYTON Three people received minor injuries in an accident that occurred at the corner of U.S. Highway 89 and State Road 193 Friday. Bennett J. Stone, 17, 333 E. 4600 S., Ogden, and his passenger Terri Cook, 17, 4879 Kiwana Dr., South Ogden, were treated at the scene of the accident by the Weber County paramedics and released. Stone, according to the Utah Highway Patrol, had pulled out in front of a vehicle driven by Annette Smith,. 21, 788 E. 300 N., Kaysville, who was southbound on Highway 89. JEFFERSON AVE. 376-349- 5 , |