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Show I WEEKLY t REFLEX-DA- f NEWS JOURNAL, JUNE 21, 1979 VIS WGilllME: j Utary Plans FARMINGTON Laytons library may be built on the corner of Wasatch and Hawthorne in the south end of that citys commons with possible construction starting in Spring, 1981. LIBRARY Board Chairman Evan Whitesides said in the board's Tuesday meeting that Layton Mayor Glen Shields and other city officials had offered a site not to exceed three acres for a future facility. I told Layton to tentatively reserve the south portion (of the commons) and said that we would get an architect to lay plans. I also asked them if we could stay as far away as possible from the museum, Mr. Whitesides said. generated by city offices library should be farther THE SITE is By FLORENCE BITTNER adjacent to Kays Creek and to provide adequate parking it might be necessary to fill in a portion of the stream and pipe the People who live in cities think nothing important happens in small towns. They couldnt be more mistaken. P. water elsewhere, library board members were told. An architect could be ap- pointed about the first of next year with funds to be set aside by November of 1980 and construction V EVERYTHING happens in small towns, only less frequently than in cities. In our town, we had our gossips and saints, our loose women and tight fisted men, barely spoken mysteries and open shame. We even had a home grown prophetess. Eda Mitch lived on a dry farm outside RUSTY G. NELSON in Spring, 1981, Mr. Whitesides said. Maybe preliminary work could even begin before that time. possible town and came in only occasionally. Usually she rode on a creaky spring seat wagon, pulled by one dejected horse and accompanied by her two children. There was a Mr. Mitch, but he came to town so seldom he was almost a myth. Rusty G. Nelson, 15, has earned his Eagle Scout Award during a recent Court of Honor sponsored by the Lay-to- n WHILE PLANS have yet to be drawn, the building could include two stories, with the administrative offices on the second level, the library board was told, tb 22nd LDS Ward. EDDIE WAS the older of the two Mitch children, and at 14 he was bursting out of the faded bib overalls and torn shirt. His shoulders showed promise of power and from his quick darting blue eyes flashed signs of native intelligence. Quiet and content to sit in school as an observer, he did well on tests and poorly in any social contacts. The girl, Hilda, was a desperately shy 13 year old. Her face was already blotched with acne, but she could have been pretty if anyone had taken the time to bring out her fine features. RUSTY, A son of Mr. and Mrs. Kay Nelson, 567 North Adamswood, Layton, is a member of Troop No. 402. His scoutmasters are Bruce Golightly of the Third Ward and Keith Halls of the 22nd Ward. During his years of scouting he has been a patrol leader, a senior patrol leader ana a scrjbe. He attended Central At Bear Lake With a program to improve the cutthroat fishing at Bear Lake more than five years old, it is no surprise that the Davis Jr. High School and will be a sophomore at Layton High this year. NIELSON SAYS the pose of the program is only to increase the number of cutthroats in Bear Lake, and achievements include being on the high honor roll, a member in the Honor Society, active in Little League activities and C League baseball. He has earned his On My Honor Award, was deacon quality of the species. In the past, many of the native cutthroats have hybridized with introduced rainbow trout. Cutthroats are marked with a fluorescent dye pigment prior to stocking and Nielson is pleased that more of these infish are being caught dicating that the program is HARVEST AND catch rates have increased and pressure is rup dramatically, says Bryce Nielson, a Division of Wildlife Resources fisheries biologist at the Bear Lake Laboratory. .'People are finally finding out theres more to Bear Lake than water skiing and sailing, he says. quorum president teacher quorum first pounds. Bear Lakes improved fishing is directly related to a program initiated in 1973 to rejuvenate the Bear Lake cutthroat. The population had been dropping prior to this time and fishing was falling ' off. campUS wear seen now-fo- r. the fall are Levi straights, super straights or plow boy 16 or 18 inch leg in light weight denim. 'SINCE 1973, however, eggs spawn- lave been taken from ing cutthroat, fertilized and raised at the Divisions Man-t(i- a Hatchery. Fingerling cutthroat are stocked back into Bear Lake a year later. Nearly one million eggs will be taken by the third week in June from traps on Swan and St. Charles creeks. Eggs taken last year have h now developed into fish and about 750,000 of the five-inc- fingerlings are released this vear. being Theres quite a choice of summer shorts available. Polyester is blended with nearly all cotton shorts for comfort and easy care. Terri and duck shorts are popular. .'AWAWA Sad But True The cooing usually stops when the honeymoon is over, but the billing goes on forever. News, Jacksonville. and coun- The Real Gen. Erwin Rommel NIELSON ADMITS that fisheries biologists have more to learn about the spawning patterns of the Bear Lake cutthroat, but he feels that with no rough fish problems. Bear Lake could be a real ace in the hole for Utah anglers. year-roun- .1 : Enjoying the annual slimmer patio dinner were members of the Wagon Wheel Camp of Daughter of Utah Pioneers who met Tuesday eyening June 12 at the home (rf Mr. and Mrs. Ferd Alder. Husbands were guests for the evening. The dinner and program were under the direction of DUP Captain, A4rs. Peggy Taylor assisted by Mrs. Leone Alder, Mrs. Mary Bodily, Mrs. Diane Erodsham. jMrs. Norma Preece hosted the Fine Arts Club at her home Tuesday evening. Mrs. Ann Buchanan was assisting hostess. The book review was given by Mrs. Joyce Clark. , j New officers have been installed in the Kaysville Literary Club. Mrs. Alta Lloyd will serve as president; Mrs. Lois Rasmussen, vice Vs president; and Mrs. Cleo Timothy as secretary. Mrs. Lois Stephens hosted the DeLite Pinochle Club at the Valley View Clubhouse in Layton on Wednesday for their luncheon meeting. Mrs. Edna Smith is hostess for the next meeting. tertain the Mountain Road Neighborhood Birthday Club at her home Thursday evening. Shauna Mrs. Niederhauser Lynn hosted members of the Orchid Club at her home Tuesday evening. Assisting hostesses were Mrs. JoAnn Johnson and Mrs. Sandy Thaxton. The program was given by the guest, Mrs. Jane Bergen, an expert handwriting analyst, of Roy. e Hospital DURING BYU HIS Masters program, he worked skins, implicated him, knowing of Hitlers fondness for the famed general BUT HE HAD been urging Hitler to make peace with the Allies for some time, and he had given limited encouragement to anti-Hitlplotters, though specifying that no physical violence should be employed. Irving has tracked down sources all over Europe to put this valuable, historical biography together. He establishes beyond much doubt that most Frenchmen sided with Germany until the invasion of France in June of 1944, des-- , much contrary pite propaganda about the admit- tedly gallant resistance HE SHOWS beyond any reasonable doubt that Rommel was a highly ambitious general, an admirer of Hitler, often too reckless in ordering attacks and, in the last two years of the war, often a defeatist. He tells it like it is -f- or the first time -a- bout one of the most gifted generals of world war II, unquestionably adored by his soldiers, for he took the same risks, and lived the same hard life that they did. JUNE 21 ST UNTIL 30TH WHILB SUPPLY LASTS New address: 280 E. Gentile east of ol0 store CRAFTS in Monument Valley, Arizona as director of a parasitic disease project for the Center for Disease Control, Atlanta, Ga. Called Hydatid Disease, the sickness spreads from sheep to dogs and then to graphic warnings. She threw the most satisfactory fits of any of the believers, and we discovered she could play the old pump organ well enough to accompany the enthusiastic congregation. At first our parents forbade us to attend the meetings, but since we went anyway,-thefinally shrugged and said maybe we would learn something. We did. We learned Old Bronc Hall, a bowlegged batchelor was really an escaped jailbird. We learned Maude Jensen had been Filled with sinful lust for the town butcher, Hans Larsen. We learned that Molly and John Burten were not really married at all. Saint Eda encouraged those who got the Spirit to first confess their secrets to the world. Unfortunately, the world was more willing to listen than people. His assignment was to develop health education materials and strategies for bridging some of the cultural barriers that would prevent the Navajos afflicted with the disease from seeking treatment. L. Steve Californian, is the new Director of Planning at GRADUALLY THE Awakened Saints began to lose their first enthusiasm, and according to Kenneth Hospital Center, C. Johnson, Hospital AdminisMcKay-De- e the believers benches were half empty after the sheriff showed little Christian tolerance when he came for Old Bronc trator. see planning as a continuous, ongoing management process, in which the hospital evaluates its alternatives to design a desired future. Then strategies can be recommended to achieve that future condition, he said. PLANNING identifies and addresses needs in the community that may be currently unmet, through research, public surveys and other means. My job is very NEXT DAY we heard they had put a straight jacket on the raving prophetess and accompanied by two strong men, the sheriff drove her to the state hospital. An eerie quiet settled on the town. We went back to listening to the Hit Parade and Little Theatre Off Times Square with Don Ameche or? the radio. costs made it necessary for hospitals to employ someone who can devote full time to the planning activity. MR. WILSON obtained his Bachelor of Science degree from Young Brigham University in 1976. He filled a two-yemission for the Church of Jesus Christ of Lajuer-da- y Saints on ..the. Navajo reservation and speaks the Navajo language. Following his mission, he returned to BYU and earned his Masters Degree in Public He Administration. is ; y, Hilda looked straight ahead and Mr., Mitch stared at the plpdding horse,. (r .',!The empty store was rented to a farm equipment salesman. The Awakened Saints returned to their kitchens, farms' and pool hall, and the town slumbered again. Its famed Stonewall Brigade (Gen. Stonewall Jackson had just been killed at Chancellorsville the month Glaucoma Checkups Urged currently. . before) marched through Spottsylvania, on to the Rapidan, then to Gaines Crossroads. On the 12th the brigade was at Cedarville, with other divisions near Winchester Glaucoma is an increas- and Berryville. On the 15th ingly serious eye disease the Confederates defeated Union forces occupying Winchester and captured which occurs most frequently in persons over the age of 30, and affects at least 2 percent of individuals over 40. THOUSANDS OF completing-- ! requirement for his Masters Degree in Hospital Administration, with emphasis on planning, from the University of Iowa. many cannon and supplies. ON JUNE 17th the Confederate Army camped at Shepherdstown and then crossed the Potomac into Maryland and moved on to Hagerstown. A few miles further along a Marylander named John Bloom barred the Confederate Army at a toll gate at Tilghmanton, demanding to know who would pay him! THE ARMY crossed into Pennsylvania and at Gen. Lee issued his famous order to his troops to respect all private property, stating that the army sought battle only with armed forces. On to Shippensburg and to and then GettysCarlisle burg, and disaster for the Cham-bersbur- LaMar Wall. Mrs. Ima Harvey of Kaysville was the hostess for the meeting of the OFT Club which was held Monday afternoon at the Layton Noodle Parlor, dmg , ar WE WATCHED them drive to where the state highway, recently gravelled all the way to Devils Point, joined Main Street. June, 1863. The Confederate Army, newly formed into three corps, started northward June 5, have increasingly , In the Civil War, the last of Gen. Lee to win independence for the South by invading the North began in Mark L. Wall was honored in the Layton LDS 3rd Ward sacrament meeting prior to his departure for the Calif. Arcadia LDS Mission. Mark is the son of Mr. and Mrs. definitely research-orienteHe said various governmental regulations and intervention, as well as growing public concern over hospital FOR A few days, Hilda attended school, wrapped again in her cocoon of shyness. Eddie had disappeared and we never saw him again, though they say he put on a Marine uniform and wore it in death on a small island in the Pacific. Then one day the old spring seat wagon creaked down Main Street one last time, piled with chairs, beds and boxes. Hilda and the ever silent Mr. Mitch sat on the effort The annual Strawberry Festival of the Buena Vista Ventura Chapter of the Sons of Utah Pioneers was held Monday evening at the home of Weldon and Mary Roberts. This activity is usually held at one of the local park boweries but the stormy and cold weather forced a change of plans. Chapter members and their wives enjoyed a dinner which was topped-of- f with fresh strawberries, cream and homemade hot bread. Sunday afternoon, Elder planning. Both Mr. Johnson and I One evening, Eda threw the most fantastic fit we had ever seen, but she didnt come out of it. After she had remained in a fixed, back arched trance for half an hour, one of the unbelievers went for the doctor. The meeting was dismissed and the doctor came in with his black bag. We were shooed, but we peered through the store windows and saw the doctor give Eda an injection, which caused her to go limp. 1944 Layton HIS WORK includes more than building construction Hall. amphibious invasion of western Europe, came on June 6, June is a famous month in the annals of military history, if for no other reason than that the weather limited armies in earlier months. June was often the first month suitable for campaigning. MIDWAY, THE naval battle that turned the tide of the war in the Pacific in 1942, came on June 4th. the Wilson, a native to forget. seat. IT IS BELIEVED that the disease was introduced to Sanpete County, Utah in sheep imported from Australia in the 1940s. Mr. Wilson and his wife, the former Cathy Coles of Riverside, Calif, are the parents of a baby daughter, Jaime, 10 months of age. L. STEVE WILSON g, Confederates, and retreat from the highwater mark of the last Confederate invasion. Conserve energy by replacing several low wattage bulbs with one large bulb. Were told it takes six incandescent bulbs to give the same light as one bulbil !. ;. Potatoes and dried beans are good buys for April. Heavy supplies are reportedly on the market. New potatoes will soon be plentiful. tt 100-wa- tt The Heart Attack Warning Signals Tte Lasl! Dmsooim plotting as the Fuhrer thought. Others, seeking to save their own MANY ITEMS IN THE OLD STORE J-- describing the awful fate awaiting the doubters who failed to heed her very the legendary German field marshal was really like. The paperback, just out, is now widely available. Rommel, forced to take poison by Hitler in late 1944, was not as involved in the OFF ON 2 doors SHE SHED her shyness and bloomed. Only Saint Eda exceeded her eloquence in Fox," the inquiring reader has the first authentic biography which tells what fighters. Mrs. Mary Talbot will en- SAINT EDA, for such had been the title bestowed on her by Paul, leaped on tables, stomped up and down aisles, she screamed, she went into trances, she threw fits, she made converts. In a matter of weeks all the believers benches were filled and there was standing room only in the observers section. Mr. Mitch never attended a meeting and Eddie was a visibly reluctant parj ticipant, but Hilda was transformed. David Irving, perhaps the foremost researcher of the world war II era, has rendered the historians world a service with a book about German General, Erwin Rommel, the famed desert fox, about whose memory so much adulation and romance have centered... ,, , ........ . THE Trial Of The IN er jCtaysville Clubs indifference and prepare them for the second coming. Our new prophetess carried out her mission with vigor. She rented an empty store and began to hold meetings. At first her hapless son and daughter were her congregation, but such was the fervor and volume of her exhortations that her nightly meetings were soon the weekly movies. selor. paying off. CUTTHROATS HAVE been averaging five pounds during the recent spawning season and some' fish have been in d class. The the average is one tp two THEN ONE day the family became the focus of attention for the town. Eda had a vision. Paul, the Apostle appeared to her as she walked down a dusty road. In her vision she was so dazzled she was unable to see or speak for three days. When she came round, she told how she had been instructed to stir this people from their HIS SCHOLASTIC activities but also to improve the has pressure increased on this northern Utah and Idaho lake. But, happily, so has the fishing. angling KIcKay-De- DM north of the tentative site and reopening of Verdeland Park School this fall, it was felt the south, Mr. Whitesides said. SOME LAYTON residents have asked that the museum and library be constructed adjacent to one another but the museum venture is not connected with the county and library board members have felt the two should not be identified as one facility. The .. w mm M museum is located adjacent to Layton municipal offices with a July 4 opening set. And due to possible traffic Named To Post At The American Heart Association continues its national educational campaign to create public awareness and recognition of the early signs of heart attack. SINCE HEART attack is the greatest killer in the United States (more than 660,000 says, often subside and return at a later time. Those experiencing the symptoms should call a doctor at once, because the first hours of a AHA heart attack are often the most critical, and the time in which the most can be done to limit damage. deaths annually), all should be interested in telltale signs which give the first indication of its approach. The AHA says the most common warnings are: oppressive pain or discomfort in the center of the n radiation to chest; the shoulder, arm, neck or Point Sale 30 30 Air Filter 95 Off list price Gates (2)-Pai- Auto Belt 25 Off List Price Ladies Garden Gloves accom- jaw; Off List Price Lawnmower Plug Phillip 66 panying the pain, perhaps nausea, vomiting or shortness of breath. 95 Offer Good Until July 31. 1979 Wost Pofitl Sendee 3036 W. 300 N., West Point THESE SYMPTOMS, the Ameri- cans have lost their sight from Many glaucoma. Americans have the disease without knowing it, and unless it is diagnosed and treated early, it can cause blindness. One type of glaucoma, HIP Announces their called chronic glaucoma, causes no symptoms until severe damage has been done. Chronic glaucoma can be detected by the medical eye physician (ophthalmologist) who uses an instrument to. measure the degree of pressure in the eye and another instrument to measure the size of the visual field, or side vision. Every adult over 40 should have a test for eye pressure as well as for visual fields when he or she goes for an eyeglass checkup. ANOTHER TYPE of this insidious eye disease is called acute glaucoma. In this ailment the pressure suddenly rises to a very high level, and the attack is accompanied by severe pain, redness and blurred vision. Most often the patient must be placed in a hospital immediately and treated by surgery to relieve the pressure. Surgery is successful in most cases, but prompt treatment is necessary. It is highly important for individuals past the age of 40 to have an annual medical checkup for their eyes, even if they dont wear glasses and have no apparent visual problems. Semi-Annu- al LEAIRAMC Off All Summer Stock o Jeans Blouses ' e Tops Pants Dresses Coordinates Swim Suits Skirts Select Group of Junior Shorts & Tops Sale Starts June 22nd VISA Mastercharge No Layaway All Sales Final Lakeside Square Clearfield, Utah ea. |