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Show i WEEKLY REFLEX r f DAVIS NEWS JOURNAL, NORTH DAVIS LEADER, AUGUST 27, 1981 Services Held For Waller Baxter Rites Held For Vivian McEntire Mrs. Vivian Berry Smith McEntire, 71. of 351 Fern Drive, Clearfield, died Aug. 19, 1981 in the Davis North Medical Center in Layton. She was born Feb. 26, 1910 in Saluda County, South Carolina, a daughter of George W. and Annie Rowe Berry. ON DEC. 14, 1938 she married Robert L. Smith in Columbia, S.C. He died in 1956. She married James A. McEntire June 16. 7 in the Salt Lake LDS Temple. He died in 1974. Prior to coming to Utah, she worked as a textile worker in South Carolina. She had worked at Deseret Industries in Ogden. SHE WAS an active member of the Clearfield 7th Ward and had held various positions in the auxiliaries of the church. Surviving are two sons. Robert L. Smith. Fort Mill. S.C.; George F. Smith, Columbia. S.C.; stepson, Ray 0. McEntire, Layton; stepdaughters, Mrs. Allen (Melba) Taylor, Mrs. Russell (Larene) Nielsen, both Clearfield; Mrs. Eldon (Marie) Sill, Mrs. Malcolm (Mauna) Morgan, both Layton; Mrs. Graham (Ruth) Bums, Seattle, Wash.; three grandchildren and several Fair-fiel- d, ALSO SURVIVING are two brothers. Ralph Berry, Greenwood, S.C.; Joe B. Mabry, Wrens. Ga.: sister, Mrs. Alio Hall, Ogden. Funeral services were conducted under the direction of Clearfield Lindquist Mortuary Aug. 22 in the Clearfield 7th Ward with Bishop Clifford LeFevre officiating. The family prayer was given by Eldon E. Sill; prelude and postlude music played by Rick Eddington; Goodnight and was sung by Irleen Eddington, Acc: by Rick Eddington; invocation by Ray 0. McEntire. Good-mornin- REMARKS WERE given by Bishop LeFevre, Glannin A. Cloward and Glen McEntire; "0 My Father" was sung by Irleen Eddington, Acc: by Rick Eddington; A quartet sang "Abide With Me, Tis Eventide; benediction by Rex M. Morgan. Dedication of the grave by Allen A. Taylor; pallbearers were Francis W. Carling, Her- bert Carter, Kenneth L. Davies, Willard L. Gardner, Richard P. Jepson, Willard Lewis, Walter I. Myers and Eugne E. Petersen; care of flowers by Clearfield 7th Ward Relief Society. Interment in the Ogden City Cemetery. Kaysville Matthew Wilson has re- ceived his Duty To God award. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. William K. Wilson. Recently Matthew, along with Robert Rosier and Eric Christensen, vacation for three days in southern Utah. They visited with Roberts relatives during their stay. Mrs. Pearl Bishop, Mrs. Sally Higginson and Mrs. Ruth Harvey attended the play, in Salt Promised Valley Lake City last week. Mrs. Lucile B. Sheffield was the guest of her son, Dr. and Mrs. Sherman B. Sheffield, and family in Salt Lake City over the weekend. Mr. and Mrs. William S. Bennett entertained at a birthday dinner Wednesday in honor of their son, Blake. Guests included Blakes wife, Julie, and both grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Pearson and Mr. and Mrs. Leland Bennett, of Farmington. Mrs. Ella Mae Manning was hostess to a dinner party at her home Thursday evening for the Exhausted Hens group. Mr. and Mrs. Dean Sheffield and family entertained their nieces and nephews at a boating and swimming party at Bear Lake. Their guests were Sherrie Sheffield, Holly Parker, Mrs. Vickie Tippetts, Annie Tippetts, Gerrard Sheffield. Mr. and Mrs. Rodney Felt attended his sisters graduation from BYU on Friday. She received her RN degree. His sister is Melba Wheeler of Springville. A houseguest of Mr. and Mrs. John E. Taylor is her mother, Mrs. Naomi Wallace of Ithaca, N.Y. Mrs. Wallace is in Utah for the wedding of her daughter, Carol Jean Wallace, who was married Aug. 21, and a sister of Mrs. Taylor. Dee Webster hosted a din- -' ner at the Hayloft in Roy for his mother, Mrs. Julia Webster, on her 90th birthday. Other guest was Pauline Hansen. Mr. and Mrs. George Heywood entertained at a family reunion for 61 family members at their home Aug. 19. Guests were the family of Glen and Lola Robins. Guests were Blaine and LaRue Pack, Ogden; Grant and Olive Bringhurst, Campbell, Calif.; Mark and Ruth Stringham, Provo; Glenna and Don Feller, Salt Lake City; Don and Clover Carroll, Bountiful; Dee and Carol Robins, Farmington; Mr. and Mrs. Freeman Curtis, Ogden, and Seth Blood, Centerville, and all of their families. Mark and Ruth Stringham have just returned from serving an 18 month mission to Guatemala. Grant and Olive Bringhurst and family of Campbell, Calif, have been here visiting with relatives for two weeks. Descendents of the James and Sarah Adelaide Wilmer Sheffield family held their annual family reunion on Saturday with 138 members attending. Mrs. Merrill Call and twin daughters, Pamela and Angela, of Nyssa, Oreg.; Mr. and Mrs. Brian Call and daughter, Sarah, of Homedale, Ida., came to attend the open house 90th birtday held Saturday in the Kaysville Tabernacle. Mrs. Webster was further honored at a dinner on Wednesday at the Heidleburg Restaurant in Farmington hosted by Mrs. Norma Stread-bec- k and Mrs. Janet Clark. Mrs. Doris Hensler and grandson, Kevin, of Salt Lake City visited on Wednesday with her sister, Mrs. Norma Preece and her brother, Russell W. Buhler. Houseguests of Mr. and Mrs. Binden Cottrell was their son, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Cottrell of Henderson, Nev. and their family. They were entertained at a family dinner with other guests including Mr. and Mrs. Lanny Cottrell, Layton; Mr. and Mrs. Russell Carter, Corinne, Ut.; Mr. and Mrs. Steven Thomas, Centerville, Mr. and Mrs. Steven Cottrell, Bountiful, and all of their families. Mr. and Mrs. William K. Wilson and sons Cliff, Matt and Tim, and Miss Shirley Morton, attended the Wilson family reunion at Boulder Mountain in southern Utah last week, with 130 descendents of the James W. and Lydia Johnson Wilson family. Kory Collier and David Clark are spending their vacation in southern Utah. Mrs. Julia Webster was honored at a luncheon at the Red Flame Restaurant in Bountiful oh Tuesday by a group of friends for her 90th birthday. Hosting the luncheon were Cecil Seamon, Gladys Neilsen, Ann Wood, Layton and Geneva Bowman, all of Clearfield. 19. 1961. HE MARRIED.Connie J. Perez on Feb. 10, 1963 in Salt Lake City. Mr. Baxter had been a warehouseman at Hill AFB for 18 years. He was reared in Pleasant Grove. Ut. and had lived in Salt Lake City. He was a resident of Layton for 15 years. HE ATTENDED schools in Provo and Pleasant Grove and graduated from Provo High School. He was the first student in Provo High School to pole vault on the track team. He was a member of the Layton First Ward and was active in scouting and church athletics. He served with the U.S. Army in Germany during World War II. SURVIVING are his widow of Layton; sons, Bradley and James K. Baxter, both of Layton; Clyde W. Baxter, Upland, Calif.; daughters, Mrs. Stephen (Shirley) Aycock, Duchesne, Ut.; Raquel Baxter, Layton; stepsons. Curtis L. Fillmore, Layton; Clint L. Fillmore, Lasrence, Ut.; stepdaughters, Mrs. Junior (Kay) Hollenbeck, Fort Collins, Col-o- .; Mrs. Carol L. Graham, Sunset; 1 grandchildren. Also surviving are three sisters, Mrs. Oran (Viola) Walker, Provo; Mrs. William H. (Leah) Wright and Mrs. Dale (Eva) Featherstone, both of American Fork. St. Benedict's Hospital has acquired a new ultrasound machine called a Duplex Sector Scanner. It is one of only two between Denver and the West Coast, DURING AN ultrasound procedure, (he patient lies comfortably on a padded cart while a technician rubs a transducer across the body part to be examined. Sound waves, reflected from and then back to the transducer, are used to reconstruct a picture of the internal organs being examined. This picture can be viewed on a videoscrecn or reproduced on film. The new sector scanner machine offers ultasound features plus a feature called By using the two features, a technician can see the section of the body he wishes to observe and can hear the sounds emanating from that body part. dop-pie- e Mr. and Mrs. William S. Bennett were guests at a family dinner in Orem on Monday held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. LaMar Thayne honoring their father, Irvin Peason of Farmington, on his birthday. Mrs. Thayne is a sister of Mrs. Bennett. Mrs. Lucile B. Sheffield and family members attended the wedding and reception of her niece, Lisa Sheffield, who was married to Benjamin Mehr Aug. 14. Lisa is the daughter of Mrs, Bernice Wells and the late Homer J. Sheffield. Classes Offered The Davis Area Vocational Center will offer selected business classes in night school starting Sept. 8. Individualized instruction w ill be given so that students may progress at their own speed. INSTRUCTION IN business machines, record-keepinaccounting, filing, business math, keypunch, typewriting and word processing will be offered on an open entry-ex- it basis. Registration will begin at 7 p.m. Sept. 8 at the Center in Kaysville. For more informa- -' tion call the DA VC at FURNERAL services were under the direction of Lin-quis- ts Kaysville Mortuary held Aug. 20 in the Layton First Ward Chapel with Bishop F. Renny Knowlton officiating. Interment in the Pleasant Grove City Cemetery. Mission Call Jeffrey B. Jones, 1934 N. Layton, son of Barton Jones of Clearfield and Peggy Jones of Layton, has accepted an LDS mission call to the Philippine Quezon City Mission. 440 W THE NEW elder will speak on Sept. 14 at 2:20 p.m. in the Layton 15th Ward, Antelope of ultrasound. By using the doppler feature, he can also hear the sw ish of blood as it passes through the artery. According to James N' Jones, MD, neuroradiologist, "sector scanner ultrasound is especially useful for heart patients." Because it is a "real time" unit, the new machine makes pictures of organs in motion instead of static images. "We can see areas of the heart muscle that aren't contracting where tissue may be dead," he says. By using the doppkr feature with real time imaging, blood (low through the heart can also be ascertained. ANOTHFR REASON for the popularity of using sector scanner ultrasound for di- agnosing heart patients is the sector beam of sound waves which the machine uses. Instead of shooting sound waves into the body in a straight line, as is done with other machines, the waves are emitted from the probe into the r. FOR EXAMPLE, if the technician is examining a section of an artery, he can see the artery through the acoustical window R. Nunley Receives Navy Wings Second Lt. Randy J. Nunley, son of Chief Master Sgt. and Mrs. James E. Nunley of Layton, has been awarded silver w ings follow ing graduation from U.S. Air Force navigator training at Mather AFB, Calif. WILL now serve at Blytheville AFB, Ark. He is a 1980 graduate of USU at Logan. NUNLEY 1 of Mrs. Julia Webster on her Annabel-l- Walter Clyde Baxter, 61, of 189 S. Main, Layton, died Aug. 16, 1981 at his home. He was bom Dec. 19, 1919 in Ida., the son of James Angus and Belle Maud Ellis Baxter. He married Reda Lublin in Fort Lewis, Wash. Aug. 18, 1942. The marriage was later solemnized in the Salt Lake LDS Temple. She died Aug. Gets New Scanner Hospital David II. Swink Is Decorated Tech. Sgt. David H. Swink, son of Mallie Swink of Route 6, Morganton, N.C., has been decorated with the U.S. Air Force Commendation Medal at Mt. Vergine, Italy. THE AIR Force Commendation Medal is awarded to those individuals who demonstrate outstanding achievement or meritorious service in the performance of their duties on behalf of the Air Force. Swink, is a communications computer technician with the 2181st Communications Squadron. His wife, Susan, is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. F.E. Case of Layton. By DONETA M. GATHERUM 773-497- 6 Dean anJ Anita Sheffield recently enjoyed a vacation at their cabin near Bear Luke. Sharing the vaction with them were Sherrie Sheffield and her friend Holly Parker; Mrs. Vickie Tibbetts and daughter from Provo; Jared Sheffield, Brea, Calif. Keith and Clista Campbell of Layton celebrated their golden wedding anniversary Aug. 15 in the Ogden 21st Ward. Mr. and Mrs. Campbell lived in Ogden befoie moving into a condominium in Layton. He was a counselor in the Ogden LDS Temple presidency with Pres. Leslie Norton and counselor Zundcll. Mrs. Campbell was a temple supervisor. Mrs. Ruth H. Adams and Mrs. Katherine Dickson spent a day in Centerville visiting Mrs. Ruth H. Baird, a former Latyon resident. Mrs. Baird lives at the home of her son. Bob and Beverly Baird and spends time in California staying with another son, Gaylord, who lives in Roseville. Mrs. Baird and her husband, Clarence, who is deceased, was in charge of the Union Pacific Station in Layton for many years. Mrs. Paul (Jaydene) Taylor and her children from Longmont, Colo, are visiting at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jay Love. Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Arnone and six of their seven children from Dundee. III. are visiting with Mrs. Arnone's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wall and other family mem- bers. Mr. and Mrs. Jim McBride recently moved to Layton from Mesa, Ariz. They are the parents of four children and Mr. McBride is a labratory technician at the Holy Cross Hospital in Salt Lake City. Mr. and Mrs. Arnones seventh child was attending the National Boy Scout Jamboree in Virginia. Jim and Lisa McBride are the sister and brother-in-la- to Mrs. w Arnone. Mrs. Cheryl Smith and several of her neighbors hosted a bridal shower Friday evening for Hazel Bodily. Mr. and Mrs Joe Love and their daughter, Emily, were dinner guests last week of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Gatherum. The meal was prepared by a Japanese Labo exchange 4-- student named Miyuki Nakashima who has been staying with the Gatherum family. The food consisted of authentic Japanese food . Mr. Love served an LDS mission to Japan and spent part of his mission in Sasebo, the seaport city that is Miyuki's home. After dinner, Mr. Love showed slides of Sasebo which pleased Miyuki very much. Bible Verse "Therein is the righteousness of God revealed from faith to faith; as it is written. The just shall live by faith. 1. Who was the author of the above verse? 2. To whom was he writing? 3. What man made the last clause of this verse famous? 4. Where may this statement be found? ANSWERS TO BIBLE VERSE 1. The Apostle Paul. 2. The believers in the city of Rome. 3. The statement, "The just shall live by faith, which caused Martin Luther to question his Roman Catholic adherence. 4. Romans 1:17. body at an angle. "This allow s us to angle into places where we couldn't get before, such as between the ribs, and above and below the sternum," explains Dr. Jones. mothers. Ultrasound Can indicate development stace f the fetus, the pie'cmc ot i.r.luple births, abnoiuialiiics. sieand even sex. arent 1 1.1 KWH Mils also comfortable lor the patient. It is what is called a non invasive procedure. I he patient receives no imciiions, dites not have to swallow t ii min or other contrast media and no cxposiuc to radiation. However, heart patients the only ones on which the new machine is used, Al Shirley, registered ultrasonog-ruphe- r notes. "Ultrasound can see into uny urea of the body which isn't comprised of bone or air." he says. It is used on with abdominal riatients with expectant Layton Opens Campaign Against Weeds Layton City Council last days after the letter is icceived to Like care of the problem. If no action is taken by the owner. the city then has the authority to take action by following the legal procedure outlined THIS IS the second time this attorney. Mr. Scoftield rcpoi ted to the council that some property owners had cleaned up their lots w hile other, h.o e done nothing. LAYTON In response to several complaints made by Layton city residents about weeds and debris in vacant and occupied lots in the city, the Thursday evening authorized Ladd Snoflield to issue nine letters requesting nine different property owners to clean up their lots. year the council has autho- rized cleanup letters to be sent out to property owners. The biggest weed problem areas in Layton, according to Mr. Scoffield, are vacant lots in subdivisions. However, some letters have been sent out to individual homeowners who have poorly kept yards. ACCORDING TO Layton city's weed control ordinance, the property owner has ten by Bruce Barton, city IT WILL be the fust part of September before the ten day cleanup period has passed for the people receiving the first cleanup notice. Councilman John Baker instructed Mr. Scoffield to "make sure the city doesn't have weedy spots." Citizen complaints ab- out city property will be treated the same as complaints about privately owned lots, dmg Electronic Studies Offered In Davis The Davis Area Vocational will offer two different levels of electronics classes this fall. Each class will meet one night per week for three hours per quarter. The beginning class will cover electrical Center physics, electrical units, meters. Ohms Law and DC circuits, and AC Circuits. THE ADVANCED class will contain solid state devices, oscillators, amplifiers, test equipment, digital electronics and integrated circuits. Classroom and laboratory training will be directed to electronic circuit analysis, troubleshooting and repair. Satisfactory completion of the first class or equivalent is re- quired for entry into the second class. REGISTRATION will be held Sept. I. at 7 p.m. at Layton High School in the electronics dassioorn. Classes are open to all high school and adult students and will receive high school credits. Tuition is free to high school and adult high school students post secondary: $36 per quarter. For more information call or Il 766-244- 1 766-010- Drive Chapel. A graduates of Layton High School in 1979, he has attended WSC and Dixie Cdl-leg- e. William Cook Graduates Airman 1st Class William C. Cook, son of Mr. and Mrs. Donald E. Cook of Layton, has graduated from the U.S. Air Force course for inventory management specialist at Lowry AFB, Colo. GRADUATES of the course learned how to inventory supplies using electronic data processing machines, and earned credits toward an associate degree in applied science through the Community College of the Air Force. Cook will now serve at n AFB, Ariz. He is a 1980 graduate of Seaside High School, Calif. Davis-Montha- Glen A. Bowden Assigned Airman Glen A. Bowden, son of Mr. and Mrs. James W. Bowden of Syracuse, has been assigned to Chanute AFB, 111., after completing Air Force basic training. DURING THE six weeks at Lackland AFB, Texas, the airman studied the Air Force mis- sion, organization and customs and received special training in human relations. In addition, airmen who complete basic training earn credits toward an associate degree in applied science through the Community College of the Air Force. THE AIRM AN will now receive specialized instruction in the aircraft maintenance field. e He is a 1979 graduate of American High School, Ipswich-- , Suffolk, England. Wood-bridg- v GOOD SEASON Pirates have just Finished one successful season as the Kavsville Uitv Little League Champs with a 20-- 1 record. 1 hey also c aptuied the first place title of the South Davis tournament this summer. I Lev were the winner of the Tri-cit- y tournament consisting of teams In un Kaysville, Syracuse and Hill Field. On Aug. 20, they met as a team and parents for a pizza party to honor the outgoing bovs. Piituieil are: front, Joseph Warden, left, Steven Johnson. Ted Lukins, I iov Hulse, Cody Gustin. Second row, Jeff Bosln, Paul Warden, Maik Sargent, Troy Starkey, York Major, Brad Richens. T hird row . Nate Goff, Jeff Kinnard, Rob Warden. John McClearv Jr.. John Gustin, Ricky Robinson. Back row. Coaches Rex Johnson, Gary Gustin and Dr. David Warden. |