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Show ; KFftS JOURNAL, MAY 15, n 1583 QRTH 0AV13 tf ADC a WAY 15, 1563 Kaysville News fm i p.nfMirnirci rA?5i Mf, M tf v4 Mr SKuVy P Jaa t u.irj M 14 IN tt ui rr m 4rmeM9 fit Mr. Ml Mn. v4 l)um Ml iii M, Uirr m MwfMrr, Juft a4 J Uf jof i MmII Sa Jo Fomr cn.H'irJ 4 jiiufufti M (XiftryUftJ iMrr pt4f( J lAirmi fduiKni CVifuni, Mr, n4 Mv N Ntf k IN fl ftj ii Balrf lJ Ne Atmadm, V, 14 h phi mi Id 1t( nwi(4 )(W, Lull unt( hn rriuf mm Jroiq IN Njr JirfwrtHicflt fit IN Frauioa 14 IN Wi)mi14, 9 N ftudn w nxfi. D C . a4 JrftJ lM Mr. and Mm d Pmsh pHjfartd Id Burley, 14a, Nafuf-&- y id tiui wuli Mt cowua, Mi4.RC.wat. Mr. iaJ Mrt. Gordoa Gurr incftJrd a r44tn inJ rccrp-Uo- a M Kf oa. Nf , Ud ftk fit Nt iuce. Julie Aa4 CWJ41d v4 Mne Ik) 4. M pfifi AnJertod returned borne from CoU area iPfr bet be l 04 ejaewla i f raj- - Mie j by Mil lije. iftJ M.'l, An4a MtuNU, ltftttrro fur aiteak4. Il at MJ 1 14 IN Botu M buoiey tctbi, ttfea bai V. M Mime U K)i 272 W. Golden Avenue, Layton, received his Cagle Seoul at a special Court of Honor brid March 29 m the Atxiut SO Kaywille arra rtwuli-n- u are members of ibe Church of Chrwi located on South Flint Stmt The auditorium will neat !xut 100 with six ckwrooms and an office housed In the basement CHURCH OF CHRIST , La ton BISS1U1KG 'YSVILLE pends on the person but they must be old enough to have sinned and felt a conviction and desire to obey Christ. We came through on vacation in the summer of 1977 and visited the utions) request. Their Dumbcn may be few but in Urrrvj it high and a new church in ute for IN Kayiville Church of Chnvt. conception and at tN first of 1978 they found they someone needed WE BFAIEVE all Christ- ians should be teachers. 1 teach on a fullptime basis and THE TLN year old congregation began meeting in a new building al 137 South flint a the find few months ago building of its own. lays Steve e GofT, w ho acts as pastor for the congregation that includes 26 members and 23 children. And while that receive fmancul support (from tN conception)." Mr. GofT says. That teaching includes not only during regular services but in study classes by full-tim- n those requesting them and through correspondence course he has prepared. We have very simple, informal services. We study directly from the Bible. We have singing but no instruthat was added (and ments isnt mentioned m the Bible)1 he explains. We have prayers may not seem like many, attendance averages around 100 percent. The new church was fi- nanced by the members and much of the work on the base- ment classroom portion has been completed by them as well, Mr. Goff says. It includes auditorium on the a main floor, six classrooms and an office in the basement. to God and partake of the Lords supper every week. We also have Bible teaching at 100-se- i . I MR. GOFF, who says he uses no title, says his church stresses the Bible and bases its beliefs and services on nothing have had no formal else. i training, 1 the native Texan studied finance in col- says. lege and have taught since 1972. - He oversaw a congregation in Centerville, Tex., from that year until moving to central Davis County in July 1978. I came up here at their (congre- - each service. WHILE MR. Goff does , much of the teaching he says others aid in preaching and many of the adult members are involved in teaching the childrens classes and one adult class. Baptism is by immersion in water (signifying) burial for the remission of sins, he says. A baptistry is located at the front of the auditorium and has already been utilized for several baptisms. Baptismal age de- - CHURCH Layton West and Layton Holmes Creek stakes. The dance will begin at 8:30 p.m. r TICKETS MUST be purchased in advance from ward or stake activities chairmen or ward Bishoprics. Price of Best dress is in order, dmg Stake Reorganized take was reorganized May 1 1 the stake conference mom-- g session. sion. The conference session was presided over by Elder David B. Haight of the Council of the Twelve Apostles. RELEASED WERE Stake es. Clive Barney, Richard . Bauer and Brent A. Allen, es. Barney and his wife, an, have been called to pres-- i over the Puerto Rico Mis- -, SUSTAINED as the new Layton West Stake president was Brent A. Allen. His counselors are LeGrande Simmons and Steven A. Randall, dmg The Layton .West LDS IN A church publication, The Gospel Messenger, some of the beliefs and practices are further outlined. The publication says: It is our aim to have no other creed, no other foundation than Christ: to follow the Bible onl-to follow the New Testament pattern of organization: Christ as the only head; elders as overseers in the local congregation, deacons as special servants in the local body; to be Christians only with no sectarian or denominational party name; to be diligent servants of our Lord, striving to serve to the good of man and y; The first-evlogo for the Davis County ft Library will be unveiled at 2 pjn. Saturday ceremonies at the North Branch Library, 562 South 100 East in Clearfield. CLEARFIELD er - . i THE LIBRARY has been a contest asking patrons to submit ideas for the logo. Some 75 entries have been received, says Delora Russell, administrative assis- tant. A first place prize of $50 will be awarded along with smaller cash awards for second place and three runnerups. Honorable mentions will also be announced and all participants captain; Elaine Abbott, 7 I second vice captain; Diane 'tcCoonradt,' secretary; Melba Wade, historian; Doraine Hales, lesson leader; Sarah Giles, organist; Ethel Mont- V gomery, chaplain; Vera Cottrell, parlimentarian. The lesson was given by Mrs. Oldham. Assisting hostesses for the meeting were Shirley Berkstrom and Elaine Abbott, np .i v . i t . , ' s i ii I 7 ,f hh 1 f I 1 5 STEVE GOFF the glory of our Father, to live in harmony with the principles of truth (morals, ethics, standards of behavior) as set forth by our Lord; to endure faithfully until the end of life that we may receive the crown of life. SUNDAY SERVICES include a 9a.m. worship, 10 a.m. classes and an 11:10a.m. worship. At 7 p.m. Wednesday service is also held each week. The church telephone number 0 and Mr. Goffs is home number is 766-099- 766-162- 0. Childrens Day At Community Church Slated For May 18 Sunday, May 18 is drens day at the Layton chilCom- munity Church. The children of the church will participate in the morning worship service. Following the service there will be a coffee hour. The families of the children are asked to bring two dozen cookies per family. EIDER ANDERSON Returns From LDS Mission Elder Owen Anderson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph D. Anderson of 1950 South Main, Clearfield, will arrive home on Friday, May 16, after serving Misin the Oklahoma-Tuls- a sion. HE WILL be giving his report on Sunday at 2:45 p.m. at the Clearfield llth Ward Chapel on South State. All friends and relatives are invited to attend, vsb recognized, she says. THE LOGOS will be displayed at the North Branch through May 31 while they will be shown at the South Davis Branch, 725 S. Main in Bounti-- . fill, June Refreshments will be served at the unveiling and the public is invited, tb 7, aauiNf hrA Kfel, SN t M home. Mr, and Mra, fihrr v fit M rv 'Brdy l allfjr LUH,uve 14 Cwy a Ibuivday etfftini. Mr. aN Mn, RuN-to- p 4 Mis L'JrlJ Green, Mr, tN-aou- . Mr, and Mis JanMr, and Mis sen atiendrd IN Rotary Jda IN al weekend, s Atr am dowr (.! Mather Jiy 14 borne aN dauiMer IN and Sin, Kena tt Sir, Plena anJ (astjiy, Olea L. Crete anJ bit diuthier. Siri. Haricot Pranct fit Spun jvi JA lae Bountiful at coa-tcsjio- a A Rus p-Dr, and Mis attended tN ut mxJ men-mgof IN Ame'wa fit (JnhodofttiUt m New (Meant. La, bd week, Jh Rmpun vened as and presided ri IN rrsearvb setfiMi ol ihte meetings, He tt presently a ihpAnnate on tN baa'd fit IN AAO, JrfJ Challeswufih, who is U cblos in 44) fit the latum 27th Ik nt. res roe d a reel fishing rod and from ho kkcHot leader and for father, Terry Scouii-RiaJO selling fhoflimrd Sab 04 dififtrfta Wt City Wfgaesday La , ai JM. Jka AJffti, ftJ Mu. I rafti Mb attended IN Hu4uiii4 jfii f Lilt Jr) Mr. 4 rik M t gurus tt Mount so Lae. Ida,, nujiidf i Fa bate armed Id red (be weekend nub tui iimct. Sin, Rebecca Axhbaker. Ibtir maihef. Slit. I liaNih (aten it ttrtoutiy til 14 ibe Dam Nonb Medial Ccmer. Mrt. AibbaScr at con lNikeili a ttskets. Jeff Storied selling twkets on Saturday and neser quit until N hod reached his goalMist Nancy Pngmore. who has been serving an I DS mis- to the Mexico sion Guadalajara Mission, returned home uesdey. Apnl 6. SN ts tN daughter vt Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Pngmore ami a member of the Kaysstlle Second Word. t HE IS 14 years Id. has been active in scouting for many He is a member of the Stan. of Arrow, a service group that fixes council camps and many other worthwhile things. la order to earn his Eagle, Robert planned 4 service project that included painting the outside of Central Davis Jr. High School and doing some ground work around the school. ROBERT IS active in Little League sports, and he is now coaching a Layton city Pee Wee team. He has been a den chief sinec 1976. has also Nen a patrol leader, a librarian, a senbe, a quartermaster and a bugler for the troop. He entered a council varsity scout swimming contest and earned a fifth place award. HE IS an active memNr of the Layton llth Ward where he served as Deacon Quorum counselor, secretary and pres- -' idem. He is now secretary in the Teachers Quorum. A ninth grader at Central Jr. High School, Robert will re- ceive a three-yea- r perfect attendance award this year. He is on the school track team and is a memNr of the Cub Pack, a school service group, dmg . Know The Weather What causes most of the seasickness experienced on ocean trips of some distance? ONE OF the secret causes of seasickness (w huh can N controlled to a considerable degree by drugs) is swell. Unlike waves, swell cannot be detected by tN novice of the sea. A swell is caused by a weather disturbance and may radiate out for many, many miles. It causes boats, large and small, to dip or sway one way when the waves or surface action of the water indicate an opposite reaction from the boat. The stomach muscles are fooled' by this constant, expected motion. un- FINALLY ONE experiences what is really a nervous breakdown of the stomach muscles and gets seasick. One can get seasick without encountering swell, but it is probably the least understood of the sources of motion sickness. li f-- Fix Up Mailboxes It's time to do something for your winter-wear- y friend the mailbox, says Ken Stuart, postmaster in Layton, and the perfect time to do it is during Mailbox Improvement Week, May 19-2- Logo To Be Unyeiled f THEY ARE as follows: Mina K. Oldham, captain; Elva Spainhower, first vice Christ." admission is $2.50 per person refreshments. New officers were installed in tN Sunflower Campof DLP on May 9. TN monthly meeting was held at tN home of Mrs. Clara Colemere. Mrs. Vemctta Wilson, president of the North Center Davis Co. Board installed the new slate of offers. them to work (back to) or $5 per couple. Everyone in the community is invited to attend this outstanding social activity. Two orchestras, the George Fisher Orchestra and the New Creations, will provide music for listening and dancing. IN ADDITION to dance music, there will be historical displays, the Ogden Institute of Religion Folk Dancers and Installed c role of members he says. "IN Bible teaches we must believe in Christ and confess lbs faith and be baptized. At that point we become children of God and receive a remission of our past sins. Emphasizing a Bible foundation be continues, We welcome any discussion or questions and we openly invite anyone interested to study with us publicly or privately. If we And were wrong, well change." Members must continue to follow Christ after baptism, he says, noting that every bookie laftcr Acts deals with falling from Christ and encouraging Layton Grand Ball Planned For Sat. Saturday, May 17, a Layton LDS Region sesquicentennial ball will be held in the new Layton Hills Mall. The grand ball is being sponsored by the four stakes in the Layton RegionLayton, Layton East, Officers riRTHF.R explaining the full-tim- Ward. New DUP a aa By TOM llth Medial CVwcf L I Jr d Jiti wrrl lufietiag Um Sn t be niftier auxufci, mated Id Mi Men IB Pid. furftb Jar IN witMff, tie li Attains Eagle Rank Robert S. Dwlton, 14. von of Donald and Kathie Dalton of fiael ta bf Pans North I-- brt8Bil Ml, IMd W-- v mi! grreAeai MiMftrtt mp, M.M hWwrttc Keeler Envied m a Nvl4 AT 3 P.M. there will be a mother and daughter tea (coffee and punch). Please bring dessert enough to serve four people and your favorite doll. Dolls will be judged and prizes awarded for the oldest, prettiest and funniest. The program will be recitations and musical presentations. The Utah Association of American Baptist Churches is planning a spring rally at Murray Baptist Church on Sunday, May 18. Everyone is invited to come. The program development and outreach committee is setting up an interesting and spiritual program entitled Beyond the Wall. GUEST speakers for the program will be Rev. Robert J. Smith, area executive minister, and Jim LaGrone, past regional officer. The spring rally is scheduled to be held from 4 to 8 30 p.m. The Murray Baptist Church is located at 184 East 577 South, Murray, 266-155- 1. New officers for the phone It is requested that anyone interested in attending the quilt will be held. A Love Gift Offering will be received and dedicated. chicken and salad for themselves. The dessert and drink will be provided. Womens Society will be in- -' stalled and the awarding of the FIVE YOUNG people will graduate from high school this month: Sandra Odle, Valerie Ferneau, Tim Nickerson, Steve Dixon and Tom Hill. Tickets for the quilt are available from Virginia Nickerson at the close of the service. SUMMER SCHEDULE begins Sunday, May 25. The morning worship service will begin at 10 a.m. There will not be a Sunday School during the summer. The children will leave the service following the pastors story and attend a special program in the educational building. spring rally bring enough Kaysville Mrs. Evelyn Austin re- ceived word of her mothers death, Mrs. Nora Morse in Cheyenne, Wyo.She accompanied her daughter and Dr. and Mrs. Bruce Howard and her other daughson-in-la- ter, Mrs. Sam Hovey and daughter Chelle to Wyoming for the funeral service which was held on Monday, May 12 at Carpenter, Wyo. Evelyns husband, Glenn Austin just returned home from the hospital where eye surgery and is convalescing at his home. RESIDENTS OF Layton are urged to examine their mailboxes to determine whether they have been damaged during the winter by weather or vandalism particularly those located along rural and rcurb line routes. Some boxes may only need painting, says Postmaster Stuart. Others may need to be replaced. Mailbox Improvement Week is a good time to decide the best way to improve your mailbox. A dam aged or improperly placed box will make it difficult for rural letter carriers to leave that special letter or package. THE POSTAL Service does not restrict customers to a specific type of mailbox, but does whether say that all boxes standard or custom-mad- e must meet certain specifica- tions for size, strength and location. A variety of approved commercial mailbox designs are available for use with decorative posts. Mailboxes should be from 2 inches from the bottom of the mail box to the road. Name and address should be painted on the side that the carrier approaches from in letters at least one inch high, larger if 40-4- possible. I WOULD remind people that the mailbox regulations have been written with safety and efiicienty in mind, said Postmaster Stuart. You should not use massive farm equipment or heavy objects like plows and milk cans filled with cement to hold up mailboxes. Supports of this type are potential accident hazards. They can damage vehicles and cause serious injury to people who accidentally them. strike Mail can be withheld if boxes fail to meet regulations. The postmaster urges cooperation from those whose mailboxes fail to meet the required standards. Longhorn Roundup By NEAL COPPERMAN For the first time in North Layton Jr. Highs 1 1 year his- tory, the ninth grade track team came in first place in the district track meet. THOSE THAT helped attain this championship were Doug Tepe, second, hurdles and the 400 meter relay; David Adams, fifth, hurdles, second, 400 meter relay, and first, medley relays; Allen Montoya, third, 1600 meter run; Gleason Sweeney, fifth, 1600 meter run and fourth, 1600 meter relay. Also Amel Cruz, second, 400 meter relay and first, medley relay; Darrell Richards, sixth, 200 meter run and long jump and second, 400 meter relay; Tony Markham and Jack Berger, second and fourth respectively, 800 meter run ; Cliff Hilliard and Dan Steele, third and fifth, discus; German Reyes and Eric Johnston, third and fourth, high jump; and Art Lopez and Bill Terry, first, medley. Congratulations to all of you, who led the class to their first district championship ever. THE EIGHTH graders also did quite well, placing second in their meet. Art Morakot, fifth, 100 and 200 meter runs; Paul Bauer, fifth, 800 meter run; Steve Hash, second, high jump; James Beauregard and Randy Lewis, third in medley relay and fourth in 1600 meter relay; Daniel Sheldon and Greg McClune, third, medley relay; and Mike Joos, fourth, 1600 meter relay. The girls track team placed second, the highest they have ever done in the district competition. THE WINNERS were Crystal Ellis, second, hurdles and fifth, high jump; Diane Gibbs, third, 100 and 200 meter dash; Kareen Martinez, sixth, 1600 meter run; Rosalind Edwards, fifth, long jump. A team consisting of Michele Pollard, Adrianne Pearson, Margie Evans and Crystal Ellis took second in the 800 meter relay and another team of Diane Gibbs, Heidi Jordan, Terri Tolbert and Sandy Scott took third place in the 400 meter relay. Vicky Fields, Sam Mattingly and Joyce Helton took first, third and fourth in the shot put. VICKY FIELDS is the girl athlete of the week because of her second year in a row as shot put champion of the district. Last Friday, the Lasers, North Laytons science club, went on a field trip that took them to the museum of natural history in Salt Lake City, the student union building, for a dinner on the University of Utah campus, and to the Hansen Planetarium, where they saw the star show and the Clio awards. THE FIRST session of this years student court was held last Thursday in an attempt to have students tried by their peers. Students guilty of these infractions of the school law vandalism, misuse of lunch room facilities, lettering, offensive language, inappropriate behavior, etc. will be issued citations to appear in court. The punishments vary from reports to work assignments, depending upon the law broken. Mr. Dobson is the teacher-advisfor the court, which will be meeting Tuesdays and or Thursdays until the end of school. |