OCR Text |
Show I I 1 I ' VEEKLY REFLEX DAVIS NEWS JOURNAL, OCTOBER 25, 1979 filseig Slated Physical appearance is our calling card. An attractive IT IS not merely vanity that prompts tens of thousands of Americans to turn to cosmetic opens doors. surgery to seek improvement of physical appearance. The mental shock of dumbo ears can mark a boy for life, the American Medical Association points out. and pleasant appearance Called To Serve LOS Mission - Cathie SYRACUSE Coleman, 21, who has been living with Mr. and Mrs. Elmer South, called sion in Wilcox of 2927 West 700 Syracuse, has been to serve an LDS misNashville, Tenn. in SHE WILL speak sacrament services Sunday at 2:15 p.m. in the Momument Park Fourth Ward at 2235 Roosevelt in Salt Lake City. She will depart for the Missionary Training Center on blepharoplasty. Bags under the eyes are included in this silicone prosthesis sometimes is sought. Injection of liquid procedure. The widely known face lift is actually called rhy is no longer done. tidoplasty. Incisions silicone into the breast has been found to be harmful and THE MOST common cosmetic surgical procedure is the rhinoplasty the nose job. The surgeon removes excess bone and cartilage to reduce the hump on a prominent nose. For proper facial harmony, chins are sometimes built up with bone or cartilage transplants in an operation HANGING UPPER eyelids that give a look of fatigue and appearance. tendent at a meeting Tuesday 8 p.m. at Viewmont High School. MEMBERS OF the Davis County Board of Education will conduct the meeting, with an earlier meeting held in Clearfield. The board is selecting a new Davis School away a liability so that the persons own natural talents and personality can develop normally. District superintendent to replace Bernell Wrigley, 66, who will retire effective Dec. It All Depends Joyce - What do you call a man who tries to pick you up in a car? Jane - How big is the car? The incision usually is hidden on the back side of the ear. aging can be corrected by removing excess skin and fat. The operation is called Breast enhancement through implanting of a 31. He has served as school district chief for about 14 years and has resigned for personal reasons, tb Nov. 8. Miss Coleman is a graduate of Oceana, W. Va. High School and has been employed in Salt Lake City and other areas since that time, tb Participates Infujy Erase AT OLSEN CHEVROLET All 1979 Impalas anj Caprices are - Navy Equipment Operator Constructionman Steven O. Arave, son of Blaine O. and Elizebeth A. Arave of 2428 No. 475 West, Sunset, is par- ticipating in flood disaster relief operations in Jamaica. He is a member of Naval from Judson College in Elgin, imi Vocalists m- will present a musical program Sunday at Layton Community Church. PLArilJlilU PROG HA III Servant 79, a contemporary Christian music group from Judson College in Elgin, 111. will givea concert at 7:30 p.m. Oct. 25 at the Layton Community Church, 644 East 1000 North, Layton. The public is invited and there will be no admission charge. - MADE UP of seven Judson 79 is performing throughout the United States this year. They draw their name from a recurring theme in the ible. This is the 16th musical ensemble to tour as part of the Judson summer reach out program, one of the students, Servant midwests" best known Chris- tian groups. The group is traveling more than 20,000 miles and performing in some 125 locales during the spring, summer and fall of 1979. Their music ranges from works of Christian contemporary writers to traditional gospel songs. Mobile Construction Battalion 40, based at Port Hueneme, Calif. HIS UNIT has joined with Marines from the 8th Engineer Battalion from Camp Lejeune, N.C. to repair roads, bridges and culverts which were damaged during heavy flooding in June. They are expected to complete their reconstruction efforts in November. A 1978 graduate of Clearfield High School, Arave joined the Navy in July 1978. I 1979IMPALA no- cv V'C, ' t., ' Coupe 545 : V v, v y ; 'A ' - An'; p, v ' . v. ' v .s Was 755395 SALE PRICE 5987 D 1979 CAPRICE me again who each person was; I would examine the faces carefully and try to make that young girl with the curls look like the Aunt Martha I know with the round face and the short grey hair. By FLORENCE BITTNER Somewhere in every house is a little box, usually dusty, fairly inaccessible, and probably nondescript. Tucked away in that box are the family keepsakes; of no value to anyone else, but priceless to, those who have hoarded them. I HAVE a box of keepsakes, and instructions in my house that if the house catches fire, grab the box first and then run. Why is it so valuable? Pure sentiment. No one else would MY MOTHERS box had a a lace shoe, baby handkerchief, a piece of yellowed ribbon and a bundle of childhood scribbles. There was a packet of pictures of stem looking people, ramrod straight who bore no resemblance to anyone I knew. , Whenever the box came down off the closet shelf, mothers eyes misted. I would coax her to tell me about the treasures. The baby shoe was from the little boy who lived only a few weeks. The bit of ribbon was the sash of her wedding dress. The handkerchief had been her grandmothers. Each of her children had contributed to the bundle of scribbles, and each time she would dust off the pictures carefully and tell faithfully for a whole year in high school. Reading recently, I found where I it told what I bought with a five dollar paycheck: A pair of shoes, a dress, a sweater and slip for my sisters birthday and my high school graduation announcements. Mr. B. was prone to look askance at keepsakes. Dust collectors, he called them, but he had his little box. In it were medals and insignia and a couple of machine gun give a dime for'the entire contents, but to me it is transferred to Jonathans beyond price. closet shelf. MY SISTER showed me where her box is and said, If I get hit by a truck, you get over here and take that box out unopened and bum it. I promised because she said if I didnt shed come back and rattle windows. THERES NO logic to what THERE IS a picture of a sailboat, wavy but recognizable, drawn by Jon when he was only three. There is a letter Carol wrote to her third grade teacher which the teacher received and gave to me because she knew I would treasure, it. That was the teacher Carol loved so much she cried for days after school was out. There is a bundle of letters from the soldier who got home afterall, though we thought he was dead. Hes the one I married. THERES A diary I They have been bullets. makes these keepsakes so valuable to the keeper, except that each brings back to the owner a memory. Because memories are so totally in- dividual and mean nothing to anyone else, keepsakes are about the most personal thing each of us has. kept are from our most private memories, and anyone who intrudes uninvited is treading on hallowed ground. In my mother-in-law- s bottom dresser drawer, we found her box. There was a bankbook of the savings and loan which failed in the depression, wiping out their savings, there was a dance program, a picture of an unidentifiable young man, a lock of hair, an old pocket watch and a faded dried flower. TO THOSE of us who opened the box, they were just old junk, but they had been hoarded for fifty years, so they had value. What is in your box? Does your family know where it is? !3!a Old Uniques jJ & New 1361 North Highway 89, East Layton 10a.m.-- 6 p.m. Monday-Saturda- y (Closed Sundays) NATIONALLY ADVERTISED PATTERNS Yours Truly Ozark Patterns That Patch Work Place Down On The Farm Creative Makings by Marty New ideas for the talented person someone will open it and go through it and wonder what possessed you to save that junk, and out it will go. But by then, you wont be around to care. LDS Call KAYSVILLE-El- der Greg Apgood, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jay Apgood of 564 South Sunset Drive in Kaysville, has been called to serve in the Pennsylvania Philadelphia Mission of the LDS Church. HE WILL speak in farewell services Sunday at 2:30 p.m. in the Kaysville Sixth Ward (Kaysville Tabernacle) and will depart for the Missionary Training Center on Nov. 8. Elder Apgood is a Davis attHigh School graduate, ended LDS seminary and has been employed since at Lagoon Corporation in Farmington. tb 8 Was 10,462' SALE PRICE Jrrsrt 8261 69 old it had become stiff. Why had he saved them? I have no idea and if I had had the opportunity, 1 would not have asked him. Keepsakes 724 3 sear wagon and then burned unread, a pocketknife, a watch chain, an old account book, and of all things, a leather bootlace, so Just remember, someday, Oottoe &tfjb Qluojp CLASSIC Twice I have been assigned to go through the belongings of a person who had died and the hardest part of the chore was when I found the box of ffpociirpc MY FATHER had a bundle of letters, which I peeked at Ai. Plus Great Savings on these 't A. 79s t Prices good through Oct. 31, 1979 Caprice Classic Monte Carlo 2 Door Sport Landau Coupe Coupe 819 890 ses Camlno NOW $599900 503, 504, 495 Were os high os 19,618 NOW Sport Vans - Choice of 2 I 442 14,998 High Cube Vans Choice of 2 Wos 10,705 874, 875 now8998 WERE PRICED 10,749 SALE PRICE 1082 Was 7159 Ft. 2 Aspen Mini Motor Homes $74077 Was 792615 END OF YEAR PRICE J6179 El 3-2- NOW 7312 Chevy Van Your Choice Was 91 2484 Was 922945 SALE PRICE 683 8998 Was 11,452 Now Davis at talents or personalities to people. Rather, they take - - County residents will have the chance to give input on selection of a new school superin- surgery to remove excess tissue and reshape the breast. Plastic surgical operations do not magically give new THIS PROTECTS the child from the teasing by schoolmates that may arise from his called mentoplasty. BOUNTIFUL sagging ENLARGED, breasts can be reduced by THE AGING process continues, however, and the face lift must be repeated after a few years. Surgery to correct protrudis ing ears otoplasty usually performed just prior to the childs entering school. - School Chief are made close to the ear and in the hairline and the skin is redraped into a more youthful position. Consider To $959300 825-22376-123- 48 4 845 N. MAIN LAYTON a . villi , |