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Show V v.t liy roncx-o- he a 5 jolrdau afb n, 1 7, 1 1 w? i t V I VlY. J 4lA TW BLACKS SETTLE IN NORTH DAVIS Tkevfb tub PUck N Ml Mir Vi r- them aJ when m tiliftkf (Urrtq f Jakf, Daf Dl vmtJ Cftnby tad will) h efifinal Motmoq lil M fMAKT iu M IN MU f)tlwliNbrl0. k i fvtakdiaUxL'uU Ibre Drevii Coualy Htrelib Dionn,ilu Ub on i vm it ont ef ih rmWM 1 Htwtwnt 1C VmiD HAD Dill IITIIIP9 wi 111 I to ibt InlroJuf lh prtRT ULLU to UMn I UU I Ui tlifli btlp 10 UUn Jerry pJ4k. 9) DICK STU kl chkltf cmuMunteM-i- A new E n eMn IS AS effort id Nip reduce it County the Health Depart mem t holding free cbmci to ted ihe automobile emieeionf of tour vehicle. County rcNklentt are Nmg I although your car may have emission control equipment designed for low pollution levels, the effects of these rh VjM 1 t --n n t ' . s f V'4'I ' 4 a ao V ; e f S L P r $ n ? 4 i , - t - 0 l o, ... b v FA Mil Y ALL II TUP II ' youngest son, Kevin, received ' his Eagle award on March 22. ' THE ALLREDS are the parents of four sons, all Eagle Scouts. All the Allred boys attended the Court of Honor when Kevin received his ; award and all were dressed in their scout uniforms. Kevins grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.- - Rodney Childs, of ' Centerfield, Utah also ' attended the Court of Honor. MRS. ALLRED started her boys out in the Cub Scouting program. She worked as a cub leader while her boys were ac- -' tive in the program. Mr. Allred supported his sons by coaching Little League base- hall and basketball teams. The 1 family is interested in camping ' and outdoor activities and this helped the boys earn many badges in scouting. Mrs. Allred gives considerable credit to Dee King and Craig Snow for the hours they spent working as scoutmasters for the Allred boys and other members of Troop 206. ' THE THREE oldest Allred boys, John, Bruce and Gary, the cooperation from the citizens and ask for your continued support. The money generated for the Legion through this drive u used to support its many service projects and programs. Everyone that helps with this drive is helping many others. Each 100 families that receive a daily newspaper generate I V tons of news pnnt each month. The newspapers and aluminum scrap and cans can also be Le- CLEARFIELD A rummage sale will be held at the J i 4 IM Julie, Layton, when their THE LECIONNAIRES have been pleased in the past with Rummage Sale Set For April 24th Its all for one and one for four at the Ace - 19 Clearfield Community o Raising their children to become Eagle Scouts is a goal that was recently realized by Mr. and Mrs. Ace Allred, 585 it Ihe Legion Post monthly newtpaper and scrap aluminum dme. Trucks manned by the legionnaires will cover the town to pick up these items as a fund raiding project. There motto is Keep It is sugKaysville Klcen. gested that the old new epapere and aluminum be put out on the curb by 9 a.m. for easy pickup. It is requested that new vpapers be boxed, bagged, or tied. Saturday, April Kawl!e American tinue to support your local gion post in this drive, np , i Drive Set For Sat. turned into Carls Chevron Station at the comer of Main and 2nd North. Please con- 't I s JO'; f s . . i . nv o N- - r - . sv' r that EVENSON SAID, Shopping Center, 1606 South Mam. on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, April 16, 17, 18. 1980.from IOa.rn.to6D.rn. , funds. AFTER THE health department tests your car, they will give you literature that will explain tome of the areas you can have checked on your own. It will give advice for if you have high carbon monoxide, or if you have high hydrocarbons. The county is also giving out tips to help you save on your gasoline consumption. under ihe authorization of Congress. One of the mam problems in Davis County, according to Evenson, is smog. And autos are the major contributor to unhealthy air. ducted at the Five Points 1 ably become mandatory in lv2. And if the program is made mandatory, you will have to have your car tested just like you base it inspected each year. If the program is made mandatory by the federal government. the state will have to conform to the program or it would not receive federal HIGH LEULS of automotive pollutants in the air, says Evenson. effect all of us and can be especially bad for children. the aged and those with respiratory and heart ailments. The standards that your car must meet ere set by the EPA encouraged to take the five minute ted. Ihe men will place a proN in ) our tail pipe and led the levclt of carbon monoxide and hydrocarbon. ACCORDING 10 Bryant Evenson. registered environ mental health specialist, some of the reasons to have the tests are: Improved fuel economy: reduced air pollution: and improved public health. The free tests will be con- x on April 21. 21. 25. IWJ. Mr. Evenson says that they hope to educate the people in the county that emission testing can Nip them save money. It ts also intended to help you learn how to lake better care of your car. County Health Department. mr pollution problem in Due akevide Shopping Center. J9 South State. Clearfield, program it Nine intro-dmr- J to vehicle in Drem County by the Dretit emission controls are often nut realized due to Uk of proper maintenance. Ihe Clean Air Act Amend-mems1977 singled out these emission tests as the main wrey of inspecting vehicle to be sure that they are not polluting at unsafe levels, THE PROGRAM will prob- THE TFSIS will also be cen IN lotto tnfwtck at tN frt i Allred resident in Layton where all of their four sons have achieved the Eagle rank Johnj left Brucei and Allred. Kevin Gary all graduated from Layton High School. Kevin is a sophomore at Layton High this year. John served an LDS mission to Indiana. He worked a short time as a scoutmaster before going on his mission. He mar- ried Malinda Hansen of Layton and they are the parents of a three month old baby boy. John lives in Syracuse and is employed at the Albertson Warehouse in North Salt BRUCE ALLRED married Kathy Adams from Morgan. They live in South Weber. Bruce works for Jim Bundy in construction. Gary is currently working at Clover Club Foods. MRS. ALLRED says earning Eagle Scout ranks is a family affair. She believes the scouting program helped her raise her family by giving the boys something constructive to do. She says scouting helps boys set goals and gives them foresight to help them with everyday living.dmg Church, 200 S. 500 E Clearfield on April 24 from 9 a.m. until 6 p.m. and Friday April 25 from 9 a.m. until 12 noon. THERE WILL be clothes, dishes, and all types of rummage on sale. Light refreshments will be sold. Mirer Appointed OGDEN The Variane Dance Club invites the public to the closing dance of their 1979-8- 0 season to be held at 9 p.m. on April 18 in the Weber State College ballroom. Music is by Soft Touch. Refresh- ments will be served and LAYTON Victor G. tastes highlights the eight reduce highway deaths and Crowther, 301 North Main No. accidents. 108, Crowther is a graduate of Weber High School in Ogden and also graduated from B YU. He is married and the father of one child. Layton, has been All- appointed an agent by the state Insurance Co. HE WILL sell the companys full circle of auto, life, health, property and business insurance. He will represent the Allstate Motor Club and Econo-Rat- e financing. He also will assist local groups in promoting traffic safety to help THE PURPOSE of the dance is to acquaint dancers in the area with the quality entertainment the club provides. A range of music which appeals to adults with varying non-prof- it Insurance Co. Agent CROWTHER has com- pleted Allstates professional insurance course at the Allstate Research Center, Menlo Park, Calif., and is located at the Ogden Sears store at 3625 all Ave. us-d- strut ccnitfi where (hey could fmd employment. By 1940, both Ogden and Salt Lake City bad well-establish- ed Black popuDlKXtS. WO KIT) WAR II trampled (he rap id growth of lldl A! B and boib mihiary and civilian employees moved Into north-er- a tub. Among the many new amvals to Davis County were three Black families the Ralph Price family, (he Leandcr Henry family and (he dames Spinks family. Ralph Price was probably the first Black man to establish residency in Davis County. U.S. Army Air Corp 1st Sgt. Price was stationed at Hill AFB in 1942. He had under his command 250 mco assigned to the dual purpose of constructing roads and air strips and of landscaping the base. AITLR HIS discharge, Mr. Price would return to Hill AFB to drive the HiU Field train and to work as a master mechanic. There was a critical housing shortage in the county during the 1940s. Temporary trailer houses were erected near HiU AFB on Layton's north section of Mam Street until several government housing projects could be completed Sahara Village, near the Main Gate of Hill AFB; Anchorage, across the street from the Naval Supply Depot or the present-da- y Freeport Center; Verde-lan- d Park, where the Layton City offices and Layton High School now stand and the Arsenal Village in Roy. BLACK families, like so monthly dances held each season beginning in September. Membership dues are $25 per couple. Registration for the 1980-8- 1 season will begin at the dance and will continue through July. For further information, call Barbara and Gordon Yurth, Olive and Lane Nal-dDel Mar and at 825-983- er 376-296- Judy Stevens, 376-487- 4 John and Connie Alberts, or I 5 I KAU1II1UCE VerdcDfttl Park School i4 WbitctiJff Elemeretzry School. Thar daughter. Beverly, graduated Hom Davi ILgh ire 1959, Oiher BUk including LJJ TiHmaa. J L. Dixore rend Bobhtre Lee VtcftJcd Dam rend graduated reboot tint wine lime. ttu-den- tv Leandcr Henry became involved la Layiofl Community refrain, especially the recrea- tion programs. Jay Starkey and Mr. Henry were in- strumental ui organizing Little League baseball in Layton. Mr. Henry coached Little League teams for many years. He Mifl remem- THE RALPH Price family older rurchaved aspacious indiprivate vidual. tthen they moved into Ouvhouvc. Lxaicd at 9))tttvl Caentde. Uyton, they became the fust HUk people to own properly w Dovjs County. James Sprnks npproacheJ the leading real eviate firm ire northern Davis County about home and was pvrchaving told there were no lutings avaUMe in Davis County hut there were several owe homes near Wall Ave. in Ogden. He contacted another realtor w ho told him selling to Blacks would cause him to love burners. This man suggested Spinks might want to build tl varly HUtl (JiWl, dore b in Uke, a minks impfe. mher put- tw bers IN hud feehegs he had W hen frof4 w ho he had b ed. worked nd pUvrd WUb for over 20 years reted to sc4 bum ( home. The Henry DmJy rnoved min s n.e rtwdential sectrem of (4en. g y from ftik UiN lermoved 10 via) M IN a Nut m they w VtWv imo im w as Vue ao in Dvl hvied ihrougb the hading Ikivu Couy realtor M alvo Bated by ptutlipte baling With 1 Mrs, red fat:e fua ujOg Sprnks cased IN Ogden (m. homo and sjgned viewed papers tN neefivary ore weekend. It was in SitJy morning before the Davis County realtor realized the Sak had hrere mJe, Mr. Spinks recalls he ws rerprehenvive aKn the rteep-the would receive where he moved into hv new home. IN foci day, re CathoN neighbor and Mormon neighbor Mb came to tN Sprnks home to make IN new family feel wel- m come in the neighborhood. They never felt any racial pre judne from their neighbors. - I (HR SPINKS children from Davis High School rend two graduated pa-dilat- from Lreyion High School. wNn tN Since tN Price. Henry and Sprnks families moved to La non. many other Black families have located in the county. These people have contributed to the of their neighborhoods and communities, dmg IWi PTPi f "AJ. many other families, found homes in these government ' housing units. Ralph Price lived in the Sahara Village first, then moved to Ogden for a short time when he was joined by his wife, Ruby, and their children. The Price family settled in Verdeland Park. RALPH retired from Hill AFB civil service in 1963. He then went to work for Layton city, retiring from this job in 1978. Ruby Price started teaching school in Utah at the Intermountain Indian School in Brigham City in 1950. Her career with the Davis County 1963. admission is free. If. Sol-dm- ." Verdeland Park School in Season s C . I School District began at Dance Club Closes But fmdy. y. Te- When BLi.k families moved to Utah, (hey tetilcd M Ihe u Wifo, pdvrrre- - V ise i Dll iXkbnM. IN HUk mere wert called "Buffalo Tea yean laier. he 2i:b Infantry, atwuher Black regimenl, wai ilationed at Tort Dougtai in Sail Lake Cuv. tturd I eandcr Ifrmy tonlacfrd red edaJf company and Was fold there was no bouvini rev i!Me in iFou tWnt for re m. Ui, hi n Tttr; Ihf lo UOOff tf hi 9rh Cavalry cam to Fort IN tiU wen Mvtdwkre-far Dvftc ire Ny or to rrm Moved Mud of IN rritory." TM qupuuore is ukrfl from a Utab &auif J4 rnef tfesiau IVlttfwl icJfr-fi- f im tU wr. Ihnt ktif Vri4' ( wsf rttlrtj m (bfficll, U'l. Mt M l4 luVi Kk (tpmrwit N ta IN f Iffc!wub ftj fwz tfirr llrfcy (ajsuly, w WIkJ tesff M LuVl Mviufy, ttuiieijxttrtl. .. . JESSE RUTH Price, their daughter and Edna Pearl Bolden, a niece, were among the first Black students to attend Davis County schools. James Spinks was stationed at Hill AFB in 1945. He met a girl, Willa May Payne, and eventually they married. Miss Payne attended Davis High School in 1944. When her father, who worked for the railroad, was transferred to Nevada, she moved with the family and did not graduate from Davis High. JAMES SPINKS left this area in 1946 and then returned to Layton in 1950 after he was discharged from the service. The Spinks family lived in the temporary trailer homes and then in Sahara Village from January 1951 to August 1953. In 1953, the family moved to Verdeland Park. Mr. Spinks as a civil service employee at Hill AFB. Leander Henry started working at the Naval Supply Depot in Clearfield in 1945. His family lived in Sahara Village. When they moved into Verdeland Park in 1946, they became the first Black family to live in this housing project. THE HENRY children attended Hill Top School, ! , 7J IM!. WOODS CROSS When some students at Woods Cross High School hear that a man has suffered third degree bums in a news report, theyll have more than just an inkling of what that means. BECAUSE FOR 90 of them, one hour a day was spent over the past week learning lifesaving procedures in the Para-me- d program, a new lifesaving techniques program geared to teach all county resie and up, dents, 14 what to do to aid a stricken patient until the paramedics or other help arrives. "There are three types of years-of-ag- burns, volunteer Paramed Instructor Karen Edson told the students. A first degree means red skin, second degree affects skin tissue and third has destroyed all skin layers down to the bone. A second degree bum should be kept in cold water for 0 minutes, she explained. 15-2- A PATIENT suffering third degree burns, on the other hand, should be placed in a sheet or pillow slip something sterile, Mrs. Edson said. "The biggest problem with bums is infection. People often get pneumonia and die. Turning to poisoning, she said the University of Utah Medical Centers poison control center should be contacted To dilute the immediately. poison with milk is the best ' ' h. ws ntr t Woods Cross High sophomores PARADED PROGRAM By TOM BUSSELBERG . S'' f' ' Blair Kent and Tim Marsh apply cardiopulmonary techniques to resuscibaby during paramed class. life-savi- dont induce vomiting, she cautioned the students, unless so instructed by the poison center. THE CLASS wasnt only lecture. Neartheend, students were turned loose to try some of the techniques theyd learned. That included cardiopulmonary resuscitation on resusciannis or practicing the Heimlich manuever, used to free dislodged items in someones throat, preventing choking. life-savi- Students appeared in- terested in the class, intently watching the demonstrations and asking questions. Student Troy March said of the class, "Ive learned a lot from this. Im getting certified in CPR. THE WOODS Cross class was a first in Davis County, but may lead to similar classes in other schools and throughout the county to adults, as well. In fact, Allan Parker, who is coordinating the program for the county health department, says he has a "battery of instructors trained and ready to provide instruction to anyone interested. ALL IT takes is a group of 10 people, from friends and neighbors to members of a social club, church or civic group. In four hours, they can receive the instruction. A $3 donation to help cover mate- rial costs is all that is asked in return, he says. It was organized for the great need recognized for citizens to respond to an emergency in the proper way, Mr. Parker says. If a trained bystander or citizen can do something to keep a patient breathing for three minutes (until help arrives) it can mean saving a life. CPR administered within one minute of trouble can mean a 98 percent chance for recovery. That diminishes to only eight percent in seven and a patient could actually be dead within four-si- x minutes if nothing is done, Mr. Parker notes. es Speaking of the instructors he says, "I think they are the best we can find. We have outstanding emergency medical services in Davis County. Theyre really great but it still e takes minutes for them to get there (to an accident, etc.). Well save some lives in Davis County. two-thre- INSTRUCTORS will teach during lunch hours or whenever possible at a location chosen by potential students. If a single person can get nine of his neighbors together we can have the class in his home, Mr. Parker points out. The program has operated successfully in Salt Lake City, where it originated several years ago. Those wishing more information should call the health department at or 773-780- 0, 867-229- 1, Ext. 340. |