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Show Lakeside Review, Wednesday, July 10, 1985 2A Group Coming Events Breaks Lectures Planned at Roy Center ROY the Hillside Senior Center is presenting a Distinguished Lecturer Summer Series for the next seven weeks at the center located at 5051 S. 2000 W. The lectures will be held on Fridays at 1 p.m. as follows: July 12 - The science of handwriting - Jane Bergen, certified handwriting expert. July 19 - Dos and donts of medications and drugs - Vince tassone, pharmacist. July 26 - Ethics, libel and the right of privacy - Marilyn Karras, editor. Lakeside Review. Aug. 2 - Legal procedures of the elderly - Michael E. Bul-so- n. Legal Services, Ogden. Aug. 9 - Patriotism - George E. Wahlen, holder of three Away Girl SALT LAKE CITY Scouts will now raise their own funds, without the financial help of United Way. The Girl Scout Council voted recently to withdraw from United Way because of restrictions inflicted on the group. The 1,325 scouts in Davis County will now be able to raise funds for their own groups year Purple Hearts and the Congressional Medal of Honor. Aug. 16 - The history of Roy city - Emma Russell, author, museum advocate. Aug. 23 - Senior citizens contribution and interest in the need for defense of the nation - Chesley G. Peterson, retired general, USAF. The public is invited to attend. round. A restriction of United Way prohibited all Girl Scout branches from competing in the fall and spring except for cookie sales, said Jeneva Swartz, executive director of the Girl Scout Council in Salt Lake City. Hopefully well expand the cookie sales, she said. A committee will be meeting to see what other methods will be used to raise funds for the Girl Scouts. Another restriction imposed by United Way prohibited Girl Scouts from contacting corpora, tions for donations. If you know someone like a father who is in a large corporation you cant contact him, Ms. Cat Show to be Held at College The Promontory Point Cat Club will present its summer cat show at the Weber State College, Union Building Ball Room. t The show will be held on July 14, from 8:30 am.m to 4:30 p.m. Admission prices are $1.50 adults and 50c for children under 12. Children must be accompanied by an adult The show will include four judging rings and a top 10 format. For more information call Barbara Forrest The Promontory Point Cat it Club is a organization. In addition to the many different cats at the show their will also be information booths concerning the. health and care of cats, and many art pieces dealing with cats for 731-270- 0. SEVERE GRASSHOPPER non-prof- sale. Utah and Idaho farmers and ranchers are presently battling the most severe grasshopper infestation since 1933 and probably the worst in this century in an effort to save millions of dollars worth of agricultural crops. Farmers and ranchers are faced with a plaque that in recent years originated on the federal lands and migrated to cropland, orchards and other green areas as the rangeland grasses are consumed or dry. The size and spread of the infestation in 1985 can be attributed to federal government inaction in recent years, budget reductions the Utah Heritage foundation on the ghost towns of Utah will be presented by Donna Beesley, who has studied the subject extensively. Members, guests, and all interested in the history of the area are invited to attend the meeting. Kaysville Photographs on Display A collecKAYSVILLE tion of old photographs of Kaysville City and old Kaysville residents is on display at Barnes Bank. The display is from the private collection of Jack and Alice Rampton of Kaysville. Included in the exhibit of 140. enlarged photographs are pictures of Main Street as it was in years past and of the old Kaysville Academy. of concerts will be ton Hills Mall, on July 17th at presented by the nationally acclaimed 566th Air Force Band of the Illinois Air National Guard, in the local area. The first of a series of concerts in Layton will be held at the Layton City Park, on July 13th. There will also be a special appearance on the green (by American Savings) at the Lay- - 6 p.m. . The band, conducted by Captain Floyd R. Hendricks, plays a variety of music entertaining to all age groups. The group plays the gamut of music from Sousa to the Classics, Broadway to Classical Jazz. Dont forget your blanket and picnic basket. dance will be held at 6 p.m. For information on location or other questions, call Mary 5 Ann Nicks Facer at or Pat Martinez Graham at 773-379- 546-480- 1. Swap Meet set on Base Sunday The Non Commissioned Officers Association, Chapter 1089 from Hill AFB, will continue to hold a swap meet on Sunday, July 14th at the Hillgate Market parking lot across from the HAFB south gate. The cost of renting a selling space is still only $4 per spot, however the opening time has moved to 8 a.m. A general admission donation of 259 is redeemable towards door prizes throughout the day. Private sellers as well as commercial vendors are welcome on a first-cobasis, so come early. Start gathering up those unwanted items around the house and bring them to the swap meet. Free Outdoor Concert to be Held High Mountain Winds and Brass Festival will be featured at the Layton Heritage Museum, 403 Wasatch Dr. at 7:30 p.m. on July 14. The festival will feature A brass and wind ensembles from Weber State College. The outdoor concert will be free to the public, and is spon LAYTON Officials at Hill Air Force Base, after discovering the cause of strange radar signals, have determined seagulls to be their present enemy. Seagulls, landing and taking off from a nearby landfill, have been entering the range of a newly installed ground radar devise on the base. Birds flying oyer the airfield and striking Air Force aircraft have caused $3 million in damages in the last two years. The sored by the Golden Spike Summerfest free concert series this summer. Other free concerts will be held at the museum on July 21, featuring Threes Compny, a womens trio, and on July 28, featuring k band Horizon, a from Weber State. Continued From Page 1A Melvin has only seen his brother once after that. Eight years ago, while Melvin was living in Arizona, Mark appeared on his doorstep one evening, and again, only stayed for a short visit before moving on to Seattle, where his family believes he is living now. In 1976, the brother and sisters received phone calls saying their father had died in California. Shortly after arriving in Arizona, Melvin met his future wife, Sheila. They married and moved to Sunset, where they have lived for the past few years. Last October, Melvin received a letter in the mail from an elderly man with the last name of Petty-poo-l. The man was working on tracing a family tree and had 23 Pet-typo- listed. Melvin wrote the man, at Sheilas prompting, and received another letter back a month later. The man turned out to be a very distant relative, and asked in of Evanstheir chilUtah, will Saturday, at the Roy Municipal Park, corner of 2200 W. 5900 S., Roy, Utah. Those attending should Indo-Sue- base is ready to take action to protect aircraft by breaking the seagulls stronghold at the landfill. In a letter t6 Richard Harvey, director of Davis County envi- ronmental health, Frank McFarland, base civil engineer, warned the county, specifically NARD (North Area Refuse Disposal District), to enforce the state law, the Code of Waste Disposal Regulation, passed June 20, 1981, by properly covering garbage at the landfill. If the landfill is not properly covered soon, the Air Force base may enforce the federal Resource Recovery Act,' RECRA. State and county health departments and NARD will be liable if there are any deaths or aircraft accidents caused by the landfills seagulls )he letter said, according to Harvey. At $15 million to $16 million for an or in case of an accidental death, God forbid, the lia- F-1- 6, ie sales. About $5,500 went to Davis County Girl Scouts in Davis last year, based on percentage of Girl Scouts in the county. bility could be staggering," Harvey said. To properly cover the landfill, six inches of soil must be layered over the landfill daily, Harvey explained. The landfill is spread out in too large of an area to properly cover, so the area should be minimized. To do so, NARD will need new machinery, a crawler-typperhaps cat tractor. Costs are going to be considerable, a half million to $1 million, Harvey said. e, ifaflMi the letter if Melvin knew a Lorie and Mary Pettypool, whom he had also heard from. The sisters obtained Melvins phone number from the old gentleman, and called in December. They corresponded by letter and talked weekly on the phone for several months. It was through them Melvin discovered his brother Jimmy, 28, was living in Cottonport, La., and working as an organist for a church. On a family vacation, Sheila, Melvin and their children went to Arkansas three weeks ago. There they met Lorie and Mary. Lorie returned with the family and has stayed with them the past week and a half. Mary, still in Arkansas, may move to Sunset, though no have been made yet. We wont lose each other now, not now that weve found each other," Melvin says with certain- .ty. THEREVE BEEN SOME CHANGES MADE... 1 NEW OFFICE HOURS 8:00 - 6:00 p.m. The LAKESIDE REVIEW Business office will be open For more CALL YOUR information, phone Joe Schwartz or Irle E. Champneys 393-254- 3 731- -' 0565. 2 Do you have a NEWS TIP? bring their own table service and a potluck dish. Coffee and rootbeer will be furnished. Monday-Frida- a.m.- y enough of the landfill to have a place to dump its garbage and the bonds could still be paid off. Layton and Clearfield are the two largest cities in North Davis County and the question has been raised would the other six cities own a very large portion of the landfill. Bonds for the burn plant have been sold and are in escrow awaiting signing of the document. Thereafter, the bond money will be available to start building the burn plant, said North Salt Lake Mayor Robert Palmquist. - 4 SUSAN TANNER HOLMES 4515831 LAYTON LYNDIA GRAHAM 5444423 SOUTH WEBER JUDY BLACKNER. ROY ANITA KERSEY 544-995- 8 4794119 773-635- 2 825-453- 1 pleas call the Lakeside Review Advertising Director SHERI BON or DARLENE MIX, Information Sports Editor on Billing and Circulation NEW DEADLINES: news end photos should be submitted no later then 12 noon Fridays for publication me following Wednesday. 731-570- ADVERTISING DEADLINES: Display advertisemente at 12 noon. Classified Imar ads. Thursday at 00 8 Monday p.m. Published weekly and distributed FREE by carrier every Wednesday morning, from Roy through Farmington. The Lakeside Review is a subsidary of the Ogden Standard-Examine- r. PHONE 776-495- 1 or 298-891- 6 2146 N. Main St., Layton, Utah SUNSETCUNTONCLEARFIELD CAROL GRAHAM GARY HATCH, Lakeside leview SYRACUSEWEST POINT ARLENE HAMBLIN ADVERTISING G. LAMAR BOTT, L KARRAS, Editor APRIL ADAMS, Assistant Editor MARILYN All FARMINGTON KAYSVILLE, FRUIT HEIGHTS RUTH MALAN 8:00 a.m,8:00 p.m. NEWS Lakeside Review Or NEW CLASSIFIED HOURS Monday-Frida- y AREA CORRESPONDENT Landfill Rights Given Continued From Page 1A Cities not participating can do what they want," said Dave Packer, Fruit Height city councilman and member of the NARD landfill board. We who do participate feel its in our own best interest." Legal counsels for banks z among which the Bank of is spreading the $54 million raised by bonds, required a majority of cities to sign in case the burn plant did not get built for some reason. The Solid Waste Service District would then own o Farmers Union. the ing past few years, the funding for western grasshopper control has been cut and remaining funds diverted to other areas leaving federal lands with little or no control efforts. Losses to already economical-- , ly stressed farmers and ranchers could exceed the $30 million figure this year in Utah, the farm leader reported. No spraying was done in Davis Utah-Idah- Allocations from United Way have dropped from $114,327 in 1980 to $49,500 in 1985. The Girl Scout Council felt allocations were not equitable with other youth agencies. Because of increasing needs to upgrade camps and accommodate growing numbers of girls, the Girls Scout Council decided to seek support from the community at large and from expanded cook- pop-roc- Wyoming Residents Hold Reunion Former residents ton, Wyoming and dren now living in meet for a reunion July 13th, at 5 p.m. farmer and president of the Swartz said. County because most of the land is cropland, and there is no rangeland of over 10,000 acres, said Paul Daniels with the State Dept, of Agriculture. Grasshoppers should not migrate from rangelands in Box Elder to nearby Weber and Davis Counties, he said. Spraying was done in June, before the grasshoppers had wings to fly as adults. Most infestations in Davis will come from vacant lots, roadways, undeveloped privately owned land and undisturbed forest service land. Siblings Reunited Class of 1975 to Hold Reunion The Layton High School class of 1975 will hold its ten year reunion on July 26 and July 27. On July 26, a picnic will be held at 6 p.m. On July 27, a dinner, program and and late announcement of this years program," according to Boyd Munns, a Box Elder County Seagulls Cause Damage to Aircraft The exhibition may be viewed during regular banking hours throughout the month of July. Band Concerts to be Presented A series cide. Up to 50 grasshoppers per square yard have been reported in some areas, Hoppers Create Problem, Though no Spraying Done Ghost Towns Studied by Society LAYTON Old ghost towns of Utah will be featured at the next quarterly meeting Hisof the Kaysville-Layto- n torical Society. That meeting will be held on July 16 in Layton city council meeting room at 7:30 p.m. A slide presentation from infestations in 17 Western states have prompted emergency spraying of crops and rangeland with insecti- - 2 v U |