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Show f. 9 VT ('..'i t.?) LArvtiiDi : Getting . i V W-f-- J a jump on jobs M Carls Jr. to replace op. w - S New to be butt at site In north end of city E y pOYON SAXTON Teens find fair good opportunity to seek summer work ; Cl LARI iri D - A iluflgtf menu here tv in the work. Carl' Jr. Restaurant fran. chie i in the rroce of bu mg the Skippers SeafooJ 'n Chow, N. Mam to der lloue at raze it and build a new revtau in lire By EHYON SAXTON too? t Uv - tvd To get a Jump on the summer job ruh. teen LAYTON , gathered Stake Center Ate. 'Ihe ; ! . gm, hamburger chain out of Ana heim. Calif., will build about a 3)20.000 restaurant at the location. Clearfield official said the restaurant will be 3.050 square feet, slightly larger than the Skipper's restaurant now there. Last week the Clearfield Planning Commission granted preliminary site plan approval for the project. "It's pure economics." said Bob Moon. Skipper's district manager of the deal expected to dose April 2. "They got spread a little too thin," Moon said of Skippers, which two years ago closed a restaurant in Bngham City. Moon said equipment out of Clearfield estabthe lishment will be sold, while the company w ill try to absorb the 11 employees who work there the LOS W. CorJon W) four-hou- r hjs taste of employment cleaning trailers for a local trucking company for about four years. It appears those teens who attended the job fair made a first good impression. Nanette Duffin, Hometown BulTet community events coordi- - Horse From 1 Point riding. Michelle, who now lives in Ogden, said she was never interor rodeoing. Her inested in 4-terest is horse training. "When Michelle is finished with a horse a baby can ride it, Angie said. Angie, who wanted to go on the wagon ride herself, contacted Boll and asked him if there were any openings. She then met with Bell and showed him photos of her family and their horses. The ones that caught his eye were of Michelle on a cutting horse, owned by Maurice Thur-gooMichelle has had no formal training or lessons as a horse trainer. Bell then saw Michelle in action on one of her own horses. "Michelle has the best hands I've ever seen on horses and Ive seen quite a few, said Bell, who is also a veterinarian. Bell said Michelle barely holds the reins to get the horse to follow her commands. Bell asked the two women to ride as outriders on the trip. Angie is paying her way and Michelle has a sponsor. There are two outriders for every wagon on the trail. Bell said. Their job is to watch the wagon and team of horses or oxen. If there is a problem, they take care of it. "If there is an emergency, they H d. Wagon From 1 why some people think horses can just pull 15 miles in one day without any preparation. The fastest the horses will pull all depends on the lead team, he said. Faerber should know. He was the trail boss for Utahs Centennial Wagon Train last year. That was the longest wagon ride hes ever been on. It lasted one month. This one will cover 1,000-plu- s miles in three months. The average speed will be 15 miles a day or three miles an hour. Faerbers day will begin at 4:30 a.m. when he feeds his horses. By 6:30 he will harness his team and they'll be on the road. There will be a midday stop for lunch. Between 3 and 5 p.m. the wagon train will stop for the evening. The horses are cared for first. Faerber said. They are unharnessed, cooled and washed down, then fed. Then Faerber, along with other participants, will shuttle back and get their campers, trailers and motor homes. Then they can think about dinner. By rant there. Darrell R. Frick son. Holme & Narver Architect project engineer for Carl Jr., said the in event last SaturevHirJmjtcd by about 50 volunteer to nuteh employee with local employer. Clay. IS, was hiking for any kind of work, while Lindsey was more interested in outside manual labor. The two, who say finding work can be lough when you're not yet 16. came to (he fair at a father's request. My dad wanted ntc to come and check it out. Clay said, encouraged by what he found. Clay said he has possibilities of getting his first job with Hometown BufTet. a Layton rcs-- ! taurant. -It's close to my house," he said. Lindsey has already had a day ' i2 Clay Jaggi and Ltndwy Winn pe rucJ the firt t mplocr Spot light and Job f air. Ihe two North Laton Junior High MuJenu were just two of I. lot) to mingle among the 31 vendor bedtime, Faerber said he in Clearfield Skippers restaurant DMWJCVXNSmwC d her turn while Lynn Fa!s!on (center) talks to Darrel May cl Bank Utah ?ter gMng him his resume. The three were at a job four last Saturday held in Layton for local employers and job searchers. JOB FAIR: Janice Attica waits nator. said the teens she talked to seem to have a lot on the ball. "They're the kind of kids y ou want to hire," Duflin said. And it's important what she thinks. Duffin' husband. Kevin, is the general manager of Lay-ion- 's Hometown Buffet. Iithcr way. David Workman. LDS Lmployment specialist and event organizer, was gtad they all came. "It looks like about S3 people will get a job out of it. It was worth it," said Workman, who volunteered to organize the fair because unemployment can lead to depression. "It is definitely a labor of love." he said. Workman, a former Navy recruiter prior to being a nurse and a locksmith, said the fair, with vendors Sam's like Club. (outriders) are there to save the day." Bell said. Right now she is working with Bell's quarterhorse. Blue. She started riding Blue on March 16. Blue and Michelle will make the trek together across the plains. Sitting on top of Blue, Michelle barely holds his reins or lets go of them altogether. The horse gives no indication they had barely met. Michelle gently touches the rein and Blue side-steto the right. She touches the left rein and he side-steto the left. She is also working on getting him to stop smoothly, instead of "jarring your brains out. Michelle had no idea she was going until March 13. Her grandmother, Dona Ong of Napa. Idaho, told her about it several days before. Michelle got "goose-bump- s hearing about a pioneer Then wagon train her mother called her and asked her if she wanted to go. Michelle has quit her job at Mattrix. Her things are in storage. She has even sold a few items to make her car payments for the three months she will be gone. Michelle looks forward to the trip, adding that she was "bom in the wrong century. She thinks if she had been bom in the 1800s, she would have been happier. She plans to take only a sleeping bag, a few comfortable clothes and basic hygiene stuff. No shorts. will be I cant ride in dead-tired- ., It just kills you. Its the hardest work Ive ever done, but its fun, he said. was the brainchild Bell said. Several years ago the state celebrated their 150th anniversary of joining the Union. At that time they organized a wagon train that traveled along the Mormon Trail, Bell said. The fun of organizers in Iowa, Its the best known trail in the state, he said. They also contacted Bell while he was serving an LDS mission in Nauvoo, 111., and asked him if he would help organize a bigger wagon train to commemorate the Mormons crossing the plains. Bell said the LDS Church is morally supporting the wagon train and helping fund it. People like Faerber who want to participate have paid $1,000 to ride along the way. Several families are traveling from overseas to participate. Bell said. One is a family from Japan. They are being sponsored by the state of Illinois, Bell said. Another family is traveling from Russia bringing a handcart to pull along the trail. One wagon, called "The Lega One who used the fair as an opportunity to apply for a county Katrina job was . Campbell of Layton. "Davis County had some real"They (the school district) have 6.300 jobs," Workman said, ly good job offers," Campbell not all of them involving teach- said. Campbell is try ing to avoid ing. working retail, something she's "Nobody knows that," he already done. - . Campbell is employed as a resaid. Workman said they also had ceptionist for a local company, and is hoping to find work mak"homegrown enterprises" represented there, as well as Layton ing better use of her secretarial skills. City and Davis County govern"I need something a little betment. Steve Baker, Davis County ter." she said. Workman said he has "no personnel director, said they received tremendous response at clue" whether this first annual their booth, and at times had Job Fair w ill be his last. . . lines of people waiting to step up He hopes not, because he doesn't mind putting in the enerto talk to them. "We have some positions we gyneed to solicit applicants for," he "I know it has been benefisaid. cial," he said. Smedlcy Plumbing, Heating & Air Conditioning, and the Davis School District, gave attendees a "tremendous blend." Wal-Mar- t, shorts. I will definitely have ma- jor saddle sores, she said. Her mother plans to pack authentic pioneer outrider clothes, like a black bam denim coat, a rain slicker, a black vest, a cowboy hat made out of beaver, railroad shirts, and Mexican spurs that already has horse crap on them. She is also including a few comforts from home, like a pillow and a foam pad. Angie broke her back when she was thrown from a horse eight years ago. "I'm not as hardy or as young as Michelle," Angie said. Michelle has had her share of broken bones also. A horse stepped on her foot once and broke it. Her worst accident was when her Arabian horse. Rah, got spooked, slid on the road and threw her. Michelle had a fractured skull and the spill took the hide off my face. Her most recent accident happened Mien she was loading a colt in a trailer. It moved its head hard enough to break Michelles nose. But riding doesnt scare Michelle, who wants to be a professional horse trainer. She trusts the horses and they trust her. She keeps a pocket full of oats to give them when they do what she asks. She also praises them a lot. Theyve got to trust you if youre going to ride them she said. When she rides in the field in West Point she keeps her cassette full-tim- e, ld player going with only soft mu- sic, ;; ... , into the if other nre. Skipper will continue to oj. crate restaurant in Laton, ? den, Logan, and two in the Sait Lake area. Bat while the new mav be bad for Skipper , it good for Cal Jr. and Clear fit 14, Kent Bush, city planner, said he' glad to see Hut one of their prime bumcs location will remain active. "If Skipners i going out of business. I wouldnt want the building to sit vacant," he said. Sui Brown, public relation manager for CKL Restaurants, owners of Carls Jr., said the hamburger chain with 674 store ordinarily build from the ground up. but in some case has convened existing restau. rant, a is the case with a Mid vale location, to open April I. Brown said Carl's Jr. also ha a restaurant in St. George, and is planning to bnng restau rants to Layton and OgJcn. "We are developing in the Salt Lake market." she said. Brown said it's a logical busimove for the ness, already in West Coast states, Arizona and Nevada. Carls Jr. sene charbroilcd hamburgers and chicken sandwiches, along with a variety of other foods including baked potatoes and salad bar. "We are really catering to an , adult palette," Brown said of their restaurants that employ about 30. WELCOME JESUS CHRIST WITH US at COMMUNITY UNITED METHODIST CHURCH Saslet Wotsfttp Qcmicb SUNDAY - MARCH 30 EASTER 7:00 A.M. SUNRISE WORSHIP Worship conducted outside in the beauty of Washington Heights Memorial Park 4500 Washington Blvd., Ogden "It relaxes the horses," she said. But as an outrider, she w ill not have any music to listen to until evening. She and her mom-wil- l be on a horse for at least eight hours a day, six days a week until they are back in Salt Lake City. They will travel 15 miles a day 'on I the average. Michelle's dad, Walter Oka-mot- o, and her sister, Lindsy, will meet them at different spots along the trail to visit with them. Walter hopes to be able to take a few days off from his job as a Syracuse policeman and ride with his wife and daughter. Riding horses as a family is nothing unusual for the Okamo-to- s, Michelle said. In the summer they take the horses and go camping for at least a week, riding almost every day. She and Angie went riding one recent Sunday for about six hours. Both admit their bones were a little out of shape for endurance rid- (In case of Inclement weather, service 8:30 A.M. i: and f k SANCTUARY WORSHIP CHANCEL CHOIR CONGREGATIONAL SINGING s will be held at the church) ' PRAYER CHILDRENS MEDITATION 11:00 A.M. SANCTUARY WORSHIP CHANCEL CHOIR CONGREGATIONAL SINGING and CHILDRENS MEDITATION 11:00 A.M. PRAYER -- T.: -. 4 mi CHAPEL WORSHIP WORSHIP and CELEBRATION KOREAN LANGUAGE 63 WEST 4800 SOUTH (Laker Way) OGDEN 0 In Washington Terrace 1 - 479-743- t ing. My bones hurt for awhile that night, Michelle said. My butt still aches, Angie said. ; Both women said after about two weeks on the horses they wont feel any pain. Both jare working every day with the horses to get the animals into shape for the trek. . . Washington Heights Memorial Park w 4700 South 3 to 4800 South CHURCH J 3 W a. is coming from Salt Lake City. It will represent all the states, Bell said. cy, Most of the time there will be about 30 wagons along the trail. When the wagon train hits Hene-fe- r, there will be about 75 to 85 wagons, along with Hallelujah! More Saints and than we can take care of, Bell said. non-Sain- ts i t First United Methodist Church 26th & Jefferson 2 Ogden 1 MOUNTAIN VIEW BAPTIST 393-566- The Faerbers will take out their collection of pioneer stories at every stop. It will make the trip more interesting reading about our grandparents, Faerber said. Faerbers not looking forward to the winds of Wyoming. He said most of the time it blows so much it makes it difficult to see. Hes not concerned about the sun because his wagon cover will shade him. In his wagon there will be seats for those who want to go on the trail, but not walk. He will also carry enough water for his horses to drink at the noon day stop. There will also be several veterinarians traveling with the wagon train and a horse ambulance in case of an emergency, Bell said. Easter Services 7:30, 9:00, 11:00 Celebrate the Living Christ RQXtaiBLEtCHURCH a- SHARING pm 5 $75lStil0$MBo$l276l82Z EASTER SUNDAY Sunrise Service - 7 a.m. A N, LAYTON 771-32- THE LOVE OF CHRIST 10:30 AM Sunday School 9 AM Morning Service 9AM410:30AM Discipleshlp Training 5:30 PM Sunday Evening Service 6:30 PM Wednesday Evening Tcnm KID, 6:30 PM Wednesday Evening Bible Sludy 6:65 PM (Nursery Provided) Sr. High School & Adult Studies AWANA following Fellowship Dinner & v IT Dinner 5:30-6:1- Jr. LAYTON HILLS BAPTIST CHURCH 2585 E. 3000 Sunday School for all ages 9:30 am 10:30 am Worship Service Wed. Night Fellowship ' - CHURCH (SBC) OEEEBKSTajEStE Pastor Keith Markham Breakfast -- 6 a.m. Visitors always sat free. Sunday School - 9:45 a.m . Easter Cantata -- 11 a.m. 6 1204 Sunday School - 9:45 am Worship Service - 11:00 am Nursery Provided 25th Street & Jefferson Just off City Center 621-176- 1 . Us. Gerald East 1450 South Clearfield, Utah 84015 First Baptist Church GROWING IN LIFE for Worship and Service Episcopal Church Layton 544-242- A Center St. Peter's 1332 N. Hlllfield Rd. 025-017- Puton Peggy Settle, 6:30 a.m. - Sunrise Service 8:00 a.m. - Breakfast 10:00 a.m.- - Morning Worship 11:30 a.m. - Egg Hunt For Youth 2635 Grant Ave., Ogden 621-35- anwffi' C06? g 14 hb OF v. 80 Com Worship With Vs too Art Welcome . , |