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Show P I WEEKLY REFLEX DAVIS NEWS JOURNAL, NORTH DAVIS LEADER, JANUARY 29, 1981 C DEADLINES CHANGED We are changing our display ad deadline to Wednesday at noon effective immediately. There will also be a change .in the. picto deadline ture Thursday at 6 p.m. Copy deadline will be Thursday at noon. thank you for your cooperation. The Management We UU li ATE D w i' JIM &" Richard Bennett, the guide dog chairman for the TRW Systems, recently presented a check for $350 to the FOE Past Presidents Club (PAAP) to be used in their guide dog charity program. I ,v y, 4, ' ACCEPTING the check is Frank Zamora of Layton, past president of the PAAPs club and the originator of the guide dog charity program. TRW System personnel have donated over $1,000 to the Eagles guide dog charity over the past three years. The Eagles help blind people acquire guide dogs and guide dog training. , Frederick Nalder holding a strawberry crate in his hand and walking down a row of berries. In the background is a shed and an older model car. The Nalder home is hidden by the trees. This strawberry patch stood where U.S. 89 is now. STRAWBERRY PECKER Richard Bennett, guide dog chairman for T.R.Wj Systems, presents $350 check to FOE Past Pres. Frank;; . Zamora, pictured with guide dog Aztec. tion will be used to help pay for: a guide dog for Kim Atekinson'; of Francis, Ut. Mr. Atekinson is 26 years old and married with two children. He lost sight eight months ago as are-suit of diabetes. He has also ? undergone a kidney transplant because of the diabetes. Y ... Miss Tabithia Johanson' of ' Kaysville has been accepted the club PAAPs members,. by to be the recipient of a guide ' dog. SINCE 1974, the Utah FOE . PAAPs Club have paid for ten ; guide dogs to assist ten blind people living in Utah. Seven of the blind people have gradu- -. . ated from college with the aid. of the dogs. Three are now. attending college. , . . . THE TRW Systems dona DERKSANDALL W', JAMIE LEIGH FICKETT LccFiiino Disabilities Learning disabilities lab for parents will be held Feb. 5, 12, 19, 26 at 7:30 p.m. at the Monte Vista Center, 70 South 200 East, Farmington. By DONETA M. GATHERUM A GROUP experience for parents of children diagnosed as learning disabled designed to: Develop an understanding of what a learning disability is and how a learning disabled child affects The family. On Sept. 27, 1868, Stephen Nalder of Kaysville (now Layton) received a letter edged in black from his nephew, Richard Hamblin who was living in Newbury, Berkshire, England. THE LETTER, dated June of the death of Richards mother and nine of the 11 children in the. Hamblin family. 16, 1868, told tgti joyed reading. His wife Jane, was an expert quilter. The Nalders became the parents of six children, Frederick James, Archie Henry, William Alma, Roland Eugene, Mary Lavem and Myrtle Jane. The bad news continued in these words, My dear grandmother is dead also and Uncle Richard dropt down dead in North Books Street one Saturday night when he had done his work. Dear Uncle there, Aunt Elizabeth Ann is dead to. We have seen some ups and downs in our time. THE UNCLE Richard and Aunt Elizabeth (Ann) mentioned in the letter were the parents of Frederick Richard Nalder. In 1868, Frederick was only 14 years old. It would be easy to assume that Richard Hamblin and Frederick Nalder were very close. They were cousins. Both had been jockeys in England and they lived in the same town. WITH THE death of so many family members, it was logical for the young boys to leave England and travel to America where they hoped to find a better life in Utah with one of the few living members of their family, Stephen Nalder. Their Uncle Stephen fi nanced the trip in 1868 or early 1869, 16 year old Richard Hamblin and 14 or 15 year old Fredrick Nalder arrived in Kaysville (now Layton). The boys worked for their uncle to pay back the price of passage to Utah from England. IT WAS hard for Frederick to leave England because a twin brother and sister remained in their native country. Frederick carried a lock of his sister's reddish auburn hair with him to Utah. In later years, many descendants of Frederick Nalder had lovely auburn hair. ALTHOUGH THE cousins lived many miles apart after they married, the boys re- mained very close. Their lives ran along parallel lines. Both had been jockeys, they raised prize winning strawberries, Frederick and Richard joined the LDS Church many years after they came to Utah and at the same time one of their children joined the church. Both men preceeded their wives in death. The relationship between Frederick and Richard seems to be as close as brothers. On Dec. 8, 1881, Frederick Nalder married Jane Forbes Nalder. He was 27, his bride 18. Stephen H. Nalder, a cousin to Frederick and the son of Uncle Stephen Nalder, later married Catherine Forbes, a sister of Janes. THE FORBES family were FREDERICK joined the LDS Church Sept. 2, 1906 at the age of 52. His sons Alma and Eugene were baptized the same day. When U.S. 89 was relo- cated, the original Nalder home was torn down. A Road section of Layton. Frederick and Jane moved into a log home located on the original Forbes homestead just south of the family home. The two frame rooms were later added on to the house. AS THE girls started to put their store goods into the wagon, the man drove off, laughing. The girls continued walking towards their home. They passed this same man. A wheel had broken on his wagon and he was stalled along the side of the road. The girls beat him home. THE RICH sandy soil of the mountains proved to be ideal for strawberry growing. Frederick farmed and was a trained horticulturist, but his life centered around his strawberry patch. This knowledge came with him from England.' The multi-acr- e patch was planted at the rear of the family home. U.S. 89 runs through where the patch once stood. A stream located to the south of the patch furnished water for the delicate plants. A cool spring filled with watercress was north and west of the strawberries and a second bepatch of berries was grown low the spring. FREDERICK worked constantly in his strawberry patch. He weeded, set out new plants, fertilized and watered. His children and grandchildren assisted him. When he wasnt working in his straw- berry patch, Frederick en- - r second frame home was built. It is standing today and is owned by Norris Nalder, a descendant of Fredericks. Frederick died July 12, 1927. AFTER HIS death, Jane and her family continued to raise and sell strawberries. Jane lived over 30 years after her husbands death. When she was 93, the Reflex published a five generation picture of her and her descendants. She died July 9, 1959 at the age of 96. CORY MARK MATHISON, .COTTRELL,.. HAPPY BIRTHDAY Birthday salutations go out to four North Davis this week including: Jamie Leigh Fickett, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Scott F. Fickett of 534 S. 725 E. in Layton, whose birthday was Jan. 15; Emily Jean Mathison, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Mathison, 1120 E. Raymond Road in Fruit Heights, whose birthday was Jan. 21; Derk Sandall, son of Mr. and Mrs. Rich Sandall of 113 S. Fort Lane of Layton, whose birthday was Saturday and Cory Mark Cottrell, son of Mr. and Mrs. Mark G. Cottrell of 646 S. 150 E. in Kaysville, whose birthday was Wednesday. ALSO PROVIDES an opportunity to meet with families with similar.situations ancj exchangCideasj'tech parents11' techniques for working with the learning disabled child in the home. Instructor will be Judith Southworth. She has a B.S. in secondary education with both learning disabilities and be- havioral handicapped en- dorsement. She has taught as a resource teacher in the Davis School District and is currently teaching in the unit for stu- dents. THIS IS being sponsored by nt 1. Bible Verse For the Fordseethuot as maijn) seeth; for man looketh on the,., outward appearance, but the.,. Lord looketh on the heart. 1. Where is the saying re- corded? 2. To whom were the words ' : addressed? ' 3. What was the occasion? 4. Where was the prophet at ' the time? Answers : 1. 1 Samuel 16:7b. 2. Samuel. 3. Selecting a son BYU Students from Davis County were among the 1,140 graduates who received diplomas in December at BYU. These graduates represented 46 states and 24 foreign countries. DEGREE recipients have been invited to attend the 106th commencement exercises next April since no formal services were held in December. Students from Bountiful are Eric Y.K. Chen, Sheri Lynn Davis, Lorraine Munso Haines, Dale Ray Longhurst, Bruce Edward Pearson, Paul Henry Peterson, Kristine Fry Rix, Warren C. Robinson, Debra Vee Seeley, David Lee Slater, Barbara Vaniepeien, Shayna M. Walker, James Ray Wall, Sharon U. Wendel and Laura Lene Yancey. ALSO DENIS Lenard Howe and Brad T. Johnson, both of Centerville; Derena Barrus Blood, Clearfield; Wendy Marsell, East Layton; Mark Harris Arnell, Micheal Gary Elliott, and Carolyn Reading Wood, all of Farmington; Elizabeth S. Duncan, Hill Air Force Base. From Kaysville were Pamela A. Scheul Clark, Patrick Dee Collins, Julie Cooper, Richard Earl Fitt, Alan L. Hanline, Alan Gay Harris, Kathleen Broug Harvey, Dan E. Horton and Diane Elaine Keck, Steven P. Knowles and Martha E. Welling; Dianne A. Flint, Diane Fawcet Reaveley and Gregory Paul Sargent, all of Layton. Timely Advice The best thing that parents can spend on their children is time not money. Times, Marshalltown, la. -- VAN LIFT A new van for the Davis County Council on Aging has been given a new lift. The mechanical lift is attached to the side door of the van and can be operated from ground level to the level of the vans floor, explained Larry Lundquist, driver. He noted that wheelchairs and walkers can be placed on the lift, along with the patient, and lifted into the van. it can also be used as an ad ' ditional step, aiding persons with arthritis or other ailments which make it difficult for them to step into the van. Trying the new lift are Adele Stensland, center, and Dave Noakes as Mr. Lundquist operates the newly installed lift. The van is used to transport elderly persons of Davis County. '': of Jesse to become king of Israel. 4. In Bethlehem. Graduate From early settlers of the Mountain A family story tells of Jane and her sister, Margaret or Maggie, traveling to Kaysville to trade eggs and butter for products the family needed. On the way home, the girls were stopped by a man who offered them a ride in his wagon. The Forbes sisters accepted gratefully becuase their arms were full and they were carrying a bucket of goods and a broom. r? EMILY JEAN Davis School District, Parent Education Resource Center. " Registration is $10 per couple, $6 individual. Participation of " both parents is strongly en- couraged. Enrollment is li- - ' mited so register early by is phone or mail. requested. For further information, call ' : |