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Show j 2D Lakeside Review North, Wednesday, August 1, 1984 Freeport Center Firms to Answer Waste Charges APRIL ADAMS 0 Jf ?S . J 4, ( LAYTON Two Clearfield They were not following the Freeport Center firms will meet state requirements for hazardous .with the state attorney generals waste storage. office and state health departThe Julv 16 deadline ' for ment officials in coming weeks removal of the drums off Adorn after the two firms were referred property has not yet been veri.to the attorney generals office by fied yet. We expect health depart;the state Bureau of Solid Hazar- ment officials to do that at the dous Waste for alleged violation of meeting, Edelman said. state hazardbus waste storage Acorn manager A1 Richey had laws. no comment on the matter. Larry Edelman of the attorney Hercules Inc., the other firm referred for inadequate record keepgenerals office said an tentative settlement proposing of hazardous waste disposal, al may be reached with one of the will also meet with the officials .firms. next week, Edelman said. An Aug. 15 meeting was schedThough there is no tentative uled with the officials and Acorn settlement proposed for the firm, Building Components West Inc. the matter will be discussed, he The firm was referred the first said. week of July, after the Bureau of The firm was referred to the ofSolid Hazardous Waste, tipped by fice by the bureau after it was disan anonymous citizens comcovered on a routine inspection plaint, investigated the site. They that there were no records of found about 100 drums that had where several shipments of hazbeen stored in excess of the time ardous waste had gone, he experiod allowed, said Larry plained, or if the waste went to man, of the attorney generals approved disposal sites. fice. Ted Olsen, a spokesman for : Some of the drums had prob- - Hercules, said that the company lems with leaking, bulging, and has compiled and supplied quite deterioration, said Dennis Downs a bit of information that will help of the Bureau of Solid Hazardous them come to a decision. v. ' 'V: " s Waste. Acorn also had no permit to store the materials, he said. Review Stall CL ,.v ' f v ;s - f a rVs . i.V s V: ' , , . out-of-co- DOLLS WAIT for new in Kaysville. Solution to Lonely Days . Knitting Hobby Becomes Business SHELLEY KANCITIS Review Correspondent .. ROY When your husband is in the Air Force stationed in Belgium, youre living in the sticks with no phone and he has the family car, there isnt much to do except knit. At least that was Yvette Woods solution to long, lonely Restaurant Aids Museum On Tuesday, Aug. 7, be broadcasting live from Burger ; ROY rthe Roy Burger King, 5650 S. King. Displays on thC heritage of ; 900 W.; will donate to the Air the Air Force and Hill will be set Force Heritage Foundation of up with the Silver and Blue Band a.m. to p.m. !Utah, Inc., $1 for each Whopper playing from .sold during that day, towards the The event is being Museum construction ; Heritage fund. Jack F. Pierce, mayor of by the Ogden Chapter of !Roy, has signed a declaration the Society of Logistics Engineers and the Heritage Foundation of proclaiming this day as Heritage Utah to raise funds for the con;Museum-WhoppDay. To also help with the efforts, struction of an Aerospace MuseLeo Allen, from KLO Radio will um at Hill Air Force Base. days during her first months overseas. Her cure for boredom grew into a hobby that recently became a business-Yvet- tes Yarn Shop in Roy. Born in Quebec, Mrs. Woods learned how to knit in school when she was seven. I wasnt interested then, but I did knit a little for my three children 1 1 1 1 homes at Babes and Wicker, a new shop when they were young. It was the European tour that started her needles clicking per er I met a Belgian manently. woman who really knit well. She taught me a lot of tricks, said Mrs. Woods. She became even more inter- ested after discovering she could buy quality yarn at reasonable prices, plus the latest pattern books from Paris. After I really started liking to knit. I told my husband that one day I wanted to have my own shop and order my own yarn and patterns. Thomas Woods, Yvettes husband,' was skeptical. The idea didnt resurface until their family moved to Utah four years ago. "Wherever I worked, I would always knit on my break. People saw what I was making and before I was .even done, they would ask if I would knit ' one for them or their children. I decided if I could do well that way, I would start a shop. This time her husband agreed. They opened a home business, but their address was difficult to find so,they moved to their cu-rrent location. Painted light blue, the shops walls are covered with, cubbyholes stuffed full of yarn in a variety of colors and fiber contents. The emphasis is on quality yarn with names like Tahki, Bucilla, Susan Bates and as well as imports from Canada; France, Belgium and Scotland. There is yam on cones for knittting machines, Persian Yarn for needlepoint and crewel, and yarn for New products include double knitting yarn and latch-hookin- chenille yarn. ) The Thomass stock a wide variety of knitting accessories and pattern books for both, hand and machine knitters. One thing we have that is to find are bamboo knitting needles. They improve with use because' the more you use them, the smoother they get, said Mrs. Thomas. Free instruction is offered any time during the day to customers who buy their materials at the shop. A schedule of evening classes will be available in September, including knitting, crocheting, needlepoint and cross diffi-cu- lt stitch. Yvettes yarn Boutique is located at 5800 S. 1900 W. across from Radio Shack in Roy. The phone number is g. 825-052- 3. Rated Ride Lagoon Kaysville Shop Offers Dolls, Wicker 8th by Magazine v- f HPr, To step into KAYSVILLE Babes and Wicker is to step back in time. The new shop located at 1 North Main in downtown' features dolls and furniture dated from the late 1800s and early 1900s. Some of the babes ;are the original dolls of that era, while others are reproductions' It grew from a dream of hav-- ; , ing a doll shop, said .Norita Loz- I ano, owner. Eight years ago she ; began buying and storing dolls and furniture. Kays-tvill- e, for dolls with a real bone china tea set before them. An original wicker baby crib from England holds some of the doll collection. Real baby clothes from 1900s are dis- played on the walls. . , ,4 , . the-ealr- y Rare old Bentknees, dolls with dark skin, 922 Madam Alexander dolls. Cricket, and a 1 1930s eyes doll, are googley a-f- , A ew of the dolls available in the shop. v. 'An old baby mannequin can be in the collection. Bone chifound I had a lot of fun and growing from na England, old handkerexperiences. I picked up some old hoosier are and chiefs, :good things at good prices, she ; said. antiques and among the collected by Mrs. LozaHats decked with flowers,. uniques no. Special orders may be placed ; gloves and purses from the 1920s for dolls not readily available at to 1940s adorn the walls of the the shop. lunique little shop. It took a lot of If I can see beauty in some;leg work and research to find thing, why not share it, said the old gloves and purses. Some Mrs. Lozano. lof the gloves were so dirty I You may visit Babes and thought it would never come Wicker at the northwest corner but, said Mrs. Lozano. of Center and Main Street beAn 1898 tea party is in prog- tween 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m. daily ress in the doll room. Two young except Wednesday when the store ladies dressed in the style of closes at 1:30 p.m.or you may call the day are seated at a dining set , S- - I S? 0. ' . week. A representative from the magazine came to Lagoon about a month ago to find the best roller coaster rides in America, said Ron Van Woerden, advertising manager for Lagoon. We knew he liked it because he told u$. before he left that it was. one of the top 10 in the United. States, he said. But Lagoon officials were not sure that they would place so high because the representative said he was going to California to test some more roller coasters. Van Woerden said. It was a big surprise for us when we found out, he added. Veterinarian to Join Layton Hospital Staff Dr. David D. LAYTON Frame will be joining the staff of the Layton Veterinary Hospital and Clearfield Veterinary Clinic after having recently graduated from the Qregon State University College of Veterinary Medicine. Dr. Frame has a special interest in pet bird medicine and is a member of the Association of Avian Veterinarians. A native of Taylorsville, Utah, Frame received a bachelor of science degreee in animal science from Utah State University. a fulltime LDS mission in the Costa Rica, San Jose Mission in Central America. -- -- 546-383- FARMINGTON Lagoon Amusement Parks double-looride Colossus was named the eighth best roller coaster ride in the U.S. by People magazine last p, - ROWS OF YARN are displayed by Yvette Woods at Yvettes Yarn Shop in Roy. He-fill- ed DR. DAVID D. FRAME Films Produced in Syracuse ARLENE HAMBLIN Review Correspondent Are the SYRACUSE strobes all powered? Kill the ; house lights. Unplug the phones. Doors shut? Keep your scripts quiet. Throw your candy and gum away. Listen up. Ted will .give our prayer. Sound a little different from the usual Hollywood set? Thats because it is. It is Eternal Quest, a local filmstrip production company, located in Syracuse, owned - and operated by Robert and Kathy Wood and their four children. Produced primarily as a teaching tool in the beginning, the filmstrips with, their accompanying cassette tapes, have become popular for home use also. In the 20 by 20 recording studio, the sound track, bringing the sounds of ancient times as well as the activities of modern times, is syncronized with the colorful film that depicts life in both. -; Much of our film was shot on Antelope Island for our first production, Children Of Promise," Wood said. It is the ideal terrain and really gives you the feeling of !what it might have been'like in 'ancient times." The company has produced .the film to be used for seminary. three' film series, Children of Then the missionaries got hold of Promise, which is the complete it and it swept the nation. Scott Strong, a seminary teacher Book of Mormon told and illusin the Granite School District, trated for children; Eternal Families, depicting modern day wrote the musical score Ill challenges and solutions facing Build You A Rainbow. The films, which cost approxiLDS families; and Jesus of Nazareth, the life of Christ accordmately $10,000 each to produce, are a personal involvement for. ing to the 4 gospels. We shoot locally with local the Wood family. people," Wood said. Our films Sometimes its acting, or helpare rapidly gaining popularity nawith sound or staging. The ing tionwide in Canada and in the children are employed in the English speaking parts of Spain packaging and shipping of the finand Austria. We have recorded ished product. the sound so that when we exI8V2, is a freshman at Nichole, into another language, only pand the speaking part will have to be Utah State University. Lisa, 16, is a junior at Clearfield High. Chris: changed. Eternal Quest has come a long tian, 10, and Kara, 8V2, go to -' way since its humble beginning in Cook Elementary School in Syracuse. the basement of the Wood home five years ago. Music for the productions is' In those days we knew all our furnished by Gary Romers customers by their first names. Change of Pace. They are the Now ye have over 4000 customsecret behind our fantastic musiers and employ 110 sales personcal effects, said Wood. nel," Wood said. When asked about the many Families Are Forever was the hats he wears as owner, writer, first film we produced," Wood producer, technician, etc. Wood said. We shot it in Clearfield in replied, I could hire a lot of it 1978 while I was teaching semidone, but no one really knows nary. The LDS Church bought what is in my heart and my head. . EDITING FILM in' Syracuse recording 1 dont mean to sound pious, but to make these productions come out right, you have to be in studio is Robert Wood me to write it. We are in business tune..living right..inspired. Every film has been preceded to further the work of the Lord, by a personal challenge to qualify and thats jusj the way it is 1 |