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Show Lakeside Review, Wednesday, July 17, 1985 2A S'- - ; ? Coming Events k -- , ik V.1, r Female Trio Will Sing In Layton Performance Threes LAYTON S' 2 ' r, x 4 'V Weber County Farm Bureau Compny, a trio of women Talent Find, and went on to participating in the Summer Fest Series in several communities in Northern Utah, will be featured in Layton July 21 at 7:30 p.m. at the Heritage Museum, 403 Wasatch Dr., near Layton High School. They have been performing for several years throughout Utah entertaining a wide variety of audiences. They were the weekend entertainment at Trappers Inn in Ogden Valley. They won first place in the be among the five finalists in state competition. They were featured at the Utah State Fair. They perform a wide range of music suitable for all ages and family entertainment. With clever costume changes they progress through musical styles and through several decades of well loved musical selections with a little rag time piano thrown in for fun. Bring your blanket, lawn chairs, and family. Layton Seniors Plan Dance, Class LAYTON The Layton senior citizens will hold a dance Saturday, July 20, at the Layton Senior Citizens Center, 410 Wasatch Dr., Layton. Music will be provided by the Washington Terrace Senior Band from 8 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. All persons 40 years old and older are welcome. A donation of $2 is requested. Porcelain class will be held 10 a.m., pinochle 12:30 p.m. and a ceramics class p.m. For information, call Shirley 1 Lynch, 544-410- 4. . Center Plans Variety of Activities A moon CLEARFIELD Sunthe walk, guided tours, shine Generation singers, and ballons will be a part of a Summer Fest hosted by the Clearfield Convalescent Center, 1450 S. 1500 E., July 19. Beginning at 3 p.m. and running until 6 p.m., the eighth anniversary open house celebration will kick off with a presentation from the Sun- shine Generation. At 3:30 p.m. the Clearfield Job Corps Rangers will be featured, along with a cold air balloon display. The Childs Country Cousins Band will perform at 4 p.m. At 5 p.m., Frank Beards Leather and Lace will be featured. ' 40-fo- ot The public is invited. Staff Photo by Rodney Wright ITS UNCLEAR whether the For Rent sign on this mailbox refers to what would likely be pretty cramped quarters in the Clinton Ready for Fun Day Events A dunk tank, CLINTON fish pond, sawdust scramble, auc- are only tion, and mud a handful of the treats in store for residents this Saturday. The city will hold its annual Fun Day at the Clinton City Park July 20, beginning at 7 a.m. and ending with a bang at 9:30 p.m. with a fireworks display. At 7 a.m., the Sherman Way-meMemorial 5K Race will begin. Entrants can still register the day of the race for $3, though they will be provided no Sherman Wayment memorial shirt. The event is sponsored by the Kiwanis Club of Clinton. Medals will be awarded to the top three men and women. Ribbons will be awarded to six places in each age tug-of-w- ar nt Layton Neighborhood Dates Party LAYTON The 4th annual neighborhood party will be held this Saturday, July 20, at Vae View Park in Layton from 3 until dark. All families of Park West, Holt and Green Leaf Meadows 1 subdivisions are invited. Bring picnic lunch and blanket. Activites will include a fish pond, minature golf, volleyball, bake sale, popsides, root beer and a watermelon eating contest. There will be games for old and young alike. VFW Post Plans Fishing Getaway Lee Renney, LAYTON senior vice commander and chairman of this annual event of the post and auxiliary to the Veterans of Foreign Wars 8307, states that Cat Fish Joe 1 at Days will be held July Willard Bay State Park. If staying overnight, members must make their own reservations. Dinner Saturday 20-2- night, and breakfast Sunday is $7 per person. In addition to the fun and and hats will fishing, be on sale. Jesse Aranda designed the logo. The money from the sale will go towards the projects sponsored by the Veterans of Foreign Wars 8307. mail holder itself or to the trash beneath. For those interest ed in either, a number is included. group. Age categories are: below pop, handiwork sale, squirrel 21-2- 16-2- 0, 5, 26-3- 0, 31-3- 5, 46 and up. The 3.1 mile race will begin at 1000 W. 1 800 N. next to the Clinton Elementary School. At 7:30 a.m., a flag ceremony will be conducted at the Clinton City Park and breakfast will be served until 9:30 a.m. At 9 a.m., parade entrants will line up for the citys parade. At 9:30 a.m., the parade will begin and proceed along 1800 36-4- 0, 41-4- 5, cage. A Clydesdale wagon ride, kiddie train and bumper wagon will also be available. A major league all-stgame, CHERYL ARCHIBALD . Review Staff SYRACUSE The North Davis Sewer District is facing $95,000 in costs to implement the federal Industrial Pretreatment Program. The cost will eventually be passed on to sewer users. I , Industrial users of the sewer system will also have to bear ex penses for the program. The program, mandated in 1977 under the Clean Water Act to be carried out by the Environ-- ; mental Protection Agency, re- quires industries to treat waste water going to the sewer plant to eliminate hazardous materials, said Tom Jacobs, engineer with Montgomery Engineers, consul- tants for the district. The North Davis plant and sev ; ; EPA-mandat- : - ! ; ed CHERYL ARCHIBALD Review Staff FARMINGTON county-wid- e waste-to-ener- Plans fqr a bum plant finally may be materializing. All options and service agreements have been signed by enough Davis County cities to meet bank requirements. . The Solid Waste Special Service District has accepted documents eral other sewer plants in the cause they use chemicals in their state are not capable of handling processes of cleaning and paintindustrial waste containing haz- ing. Hill Field has chrome painting and chemical paint stripping, ardous materials. he said. We have an industrial advisoThe district will take samples at ry committee and they (indus- intervals from industrial waste tries) all understand that its a waters throughout north Davis federal law. Theyre concerned show excesIf County. about what its going to cost sive amountssamples of the listed of any them, he said. contaminants, waste. water will Major industries will have to have to be treated to eliminate pay for sampling their own waste the materials. water, installing manholes for Contaminants named on a speeasier collection of samples and cial table listing parameters to be for treatment of waste water, Ja- monitored and number of samcobs said. ples to be taken are: cyanide, oil FRAM, Johnson Controls, Util- and grease, heavy metals, volatile ity Trailer and Hercules, all locat- organics and chemicals such as ed at or near the Freeport Center, sulfide, chromium and phenol. The sewer district is now drawwill be required to do their own ing up a plan to submit to the sampling, Jacobs said. They all have a potential for EPA before the deadline of July dumping hazardous waste be- - 31. The EPA has to approve the all-st- - i ; ; 'i J funds to help the disadvantaged, Because there is no money ; available to help the elderly in the winter by providing carports, Rose Mary Davis, director of the housing authority, asked board members to consider asking cor-- t porations for donations. We dont have the money to do it ourselves, she said. shelters are needed Thirty-fiv- e for the residents of The Mead- ; I ows, a apartment com- - plex for the elderly. At $1,000 each, $35,000 has to be raised for I the project. l During the winter the residents have difficulty keeping the snow shoveled off their cars, Ms. Davis ' said. She asked the housing au-- ; thority board to make suggestions since the soliciting approach has v never been taken. Bruce McFarland, board felt the ida was workable, ; 72-un- - r ; : it mem--.be- r, ar and given the chairman, North Salt Lake Mayor Robert Palmquist, authority to sign agreements. Art easement for a road going to the building site has been approved. As far as we know, we are scheduled to come out of escrow July 19, Palmquist said at last weeks Solid Waste Board meeting. Weve done all we can do, were just waiting to hear from IndoSuez (the banker holding $45 million in bonds for the burn plant construction). The service district will hire a manager when money for the burn plant is out of escrow, Palmquist said. Garbage from five of the six cities in the south Davis area and from seven of nine cities in the north will go to a plant to be burned to make steam to be sold to Hill Air Force Base. Each city has a representative on the Solid Waste Board. n mmmMM rnwnZmm'i ss x THEREVE BEEN SOME plan before it will be implemented. Approval will be slow in coming. In January of this year we turned one in for the south Davis plant. It still hasnt been approved. Theyre being inundated by these proposals from sewer districts around the state, so it may be a year before the plan is approved," Jacobs said. The sewer district recently acquired $11 million in general obligations bonds to upgrade and expand the sewer plant. A conditional yse permit was granted by county planners to the district for the building of new structures on the plant site. Its a part of the expansion plan for increasing growth, replacing old, dilapidated structures for all improvements in the next five years, Jacobs said. CHANGES MADE. . . n NEW OFFICE HOURS The LAKESIDE REVIEW Business office will be Monday-Frida- 8:00 y a.m.- - 6:00 p.m: NEW CLASSIFIED HOURS Now you can place your classified ads Do you have a NEWS TIP? but that both labor and money should be solicited from service organizations such as the Jaycees, who gave both money and labor to finish the basement of the Project Turn group home for mentally retarded adults. Theyre young enough to have the energy to do it, he said. Though public housing has reserves in its amended 1984-8- 5 budget, none of the reserves are available for the shelters, Ms. Davis explained. Housing and Urban Development funds cannot be used, because HUD says carports are unnecessary and wont give any money for the purpose. Other reserves are earmarked for acquisition of another Project Turn home. Public housing presently owns one home in Bountiful, which it rents to Project Turn for $350 a month. At present housing prices, we have to come up with cash up .front," Ms. Davis Asaid. tug-of-w- ar Plans Move Ahead for Davis Burn Plant Housing Authority Will Solicit Funds ; 2 n T-b- all open Davis FARMINGTON County Housing Authority will .for the first time be soliciting At one-ma- ar Federal Sewer Program Costs High : will begin. p.m., Jeff Murrays band will perform, followed by an auction at 2:30 p.m. will The triathlon mud begin at 3:30 p.m., followed by horse tourney (no cost) and the candy drop at 4:30 p.m. for children of different age groups. game will begin at 10:30 a.m. At 5 p.m., the Clinton Fire DeThe triathlon championship . softball game will begin at 11:30 partment will hold a waterfight, a.m. and ah awards ceremony will be At noon, the Little Miss Clin- conducted at 5:30 p.m. The free drawing for the BMX ton and Little Mr. Clinton contest drawing will be held. There is bike, gas grill and handmade quilt North to Clinton Park. will be held at 5:45 p.m. Entrants a $1 entry fee for 3 to Booths will open at 10 a.m. contestants, with the drawing at must be present to win. At 9:30 p.m., a fireworks show, They will include a dunk tank, noon. booths selling pie, ice cream, The Brent Hale family fiddlers sponsored by the Clinton City snow cones, french fries and will perform at 1 p.m., and the Fire Department, will be held. No hamburgers, baked goods, a teddy minor league game and private fireworks or sparklers will bear throw, a fish pond, ballon volleyball triathlon championship be allowed. 15, Monday-Frida- CALL YOUR 8:00 a.m,8:00 p.m. y ADVERTISING G. UMAR BOTT, NEWS Lakeside Review MARILYN L KARRAS, APRIL A0AMS, GARY HATCH, AREA CORRESPONDENT Editor Advertising Director SHERI BON or DARLENE Assistant Editor Sports Editor MIX, Information on Billing and Circulation NEW DEADLINESAll news and photos should be submitted no leter than 12 noon Fridays tor publication the following Wednesday. ADVERTISING DEADLINES Display advertisements Thursday at 12 noon. Classified liner ads. Monday at 8 00 pm. Published weekly and distributed FREE by carrier every The Wednesday morning from Roy through Farmington. Lakeside Review is a subsidary of the Ogden Standard-Examiner. PHONE 776-495- 1 or 298-891- 6 Lakeside Review 2146 Or pleas call the Lakeside Review If V L N. Main St., Layton, Utah UUMl'UPPIJ4lP |