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"Cattle Drive Courtesy"

Mary Naylor, 67, of Malad Idaho passed away on Tuesday June 14 at her home after a long illness.

She was the third child of Hyrum Dean and Mary Rae Naylor born on March 25, 1955 in Salt Lake City Utah.

Mary grew up in South Jordan, Ut and attended elementary school there. She attended West Jordan Jr. High and then the family moved to Malad Idaho in 1969. Mary attended Malad High School and graduated with the class of 1973.

She then went to Ricks College and graduated with an Associate degree, then transferred to BYU and graduated Cum Laude with a Bachelor’s degree in Child Development Family Relations. Following BYU she served a mission for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints in the Illinois Chicago mission. Mary loved her mission and was happy to serve for two extra months for a total of 20 months.

After her mission Mary moved to Salt Lake City and worked for a preschool for about a year until she decided to go back to school.

Mary then attended Idaho State University Vocational technology and earned her LPN certificate in 1980. She worked in Idaho Falls in the ICU for 10 years. While working full time Mary earned her Associate and Bachelor’s degrees in Nursing. She moved to Salt Lake City in1990 and was a charge nurse in the telemetry unit at Holy Cross Hospital. In 1996 Mary returned to Malad to be closer to her parents. She worked at Oneida County Hospital, Long term care and also did home health. She was a Diabetic educator and taught CNA classes at the hospital. She taught the health professions classes at Malad High school for many years. Mary also was a clinical instructor for the LPN program for a short time through ISU. She retired early due to health problems.

Mary loved traveling when she was younger and took many trips. She traveled all over the United States, Hawaii, Europe and the Middle East. Her favorite place to visit was Israel, especially Jerusalem.

She was a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. She served in many callings including Primary, Relief Society, Visiting Teacher and Cub Scouts.

Although Mary never had any children of her own she was a positive influence in the lives of many students, cub scouts, and her nieces and nephews.

She is survived by her brothers and sisters, Craig, Keven (Marcia), Michele (Matt), Curtis, and Laurel (Pat). She is also survived by many nieces and nephews and her fur baby cats, Jellybean and Jewels. Preceded in death by her parents and sister in law Diane Naylor.

Funeral services were held on Tuesday June 21, 2022 at 12 noon in the Malad LDS Stake Center. Friends visited with the family at the Horsley Funeral Home Monday evening from 7-8 p.m. and Tuesday morning from 10:30-11:30 a.m. prior to going to the church.

Mary Naylor ONEIDA COUNTY SHERIFF’S OFFICE

Steven Workman, Malad, fail to obey traffic control devices, $33.50, costs $56.50

Michael Gregson, Pocatello, speeding, $33.50, costs $59.50

Danine Hobson, Malad, speeding, $33.50, costs $56.50

Sean Hoffman, Liberty, fail to obey traffic control devices, $33.50, costs $56.50

Keith John, Burke, speeding, $33.50, costs $59.50

Aaron Lamb, Blackfoot, speeding $33.50, costs $59.50 MALAD CITY

Koy Muir, Rupert, speeding, $33.50, costs $59.50

Bracken Ward, Malad, fail to obtain motorcycle endorsement drivers license, $44.50, costs $59.50; fail to register vehicle annually, $10.50, costs $56.50 IDAHO STATE POLICE

William Comfort, Bozeman, speeding, $33.50, costs $56.50

Vaniea Reese, Great Falls, speeding (16 mph or over), $98.50, costs $56.50

Sarah Bentley, Rexburg, speeding, $33.50, costs $59.50

Shaun Booth, Chandler, speeding, $33.50, costs, $56.50

Engelbert Holder, San Francisco, speeding, $33.50, costs $59.50

Amy Nydegger, Bountiful, speeding, $33.50, costs $59.50

Susan Orr, Farmington, speeding, $33.50, costs $56.50

Mason Sekona, Oakdale, speeding (16 mph or over), $98.50, costs $56.50

WE DELIVER!

52 Weeks A Year We Will Deliver Oneida County’s News To You! Call or Email Us Today.

208-766-4773 or enterprisenews@atcnet.net

ALL VENDORS

at the Malad Valley Welsh Festival must be registered as vendors and pay applicable vendor fees. Anyone not registered will not be allowed to sell food, drinks, crafts, or other goods at the festival. Please contact Roxanne Albretsen for information (208766-4777). Nonprofit organizations must register as vendors.

Welsh Festival Vendors

Come to the 16th annual Malad Valley Welsh Festival on June 24-25 and enjoy great food and shop for unique gifts for yourself and others! Everyone is invited to all events and activities, but be sure to visit the vendor booths.

The Taste of Wales booth will feature Welsh cookies as well as other Welsh delicacies prepared by the Family and Consumer Science students and their teacher, Shantel Tavoian.

Besides Welsh food, attendees will find hamburgers and scones (Eliason family), fish and chips (Fish-On Gourmet), Greek gyros, fajitas, and Philly cheese steak sandwiches (Pita Works Grill), and pulled pork sandwiches (Iron Door Smokehouse). Drinks, treats, and shaved ice will be at Bamma Wamma’s, and fresh squeezed lemonade will be prepared by Brooke and William Pack. Desserts and treats will include cookies and fancy treats at Ganache Pastries, churros at Churro’Amazin, and ice cream at the Rollin’ Moose.

The Welsh Country Store will be selling all kinds of souvenirs of the Festival, including shirts, caps, and blankets. Volumes 1-3 of the Malad Valley Family History and Volume 1 of the Winning Poems from the Welsh Festival (2017-2021) will be for sale. Kids’ toys, Welsh flags, mugs, keychains, and other items will make shopping fun.

Other vendors will be selling handmade jewelry and hair accessories (Ada Campbell), novels and hand cream (Carla Kelly), freeze dried snacks (Kristin and David Long), alpaca and sheep wool purses, sweaters, and back packs (Ecologic Arts), handmade gifts (Fonnie Miller), car seat covers, dish towels, and baby gifts (Vickie Ingram), educational learning aides for kids (Jensen sisters), quilts, hot pads, and handcrafted items from recycled wool (Jolyn John), chalk décor (Julie Williams), clothing and jewelry (Stacy Burton), baby and mama gifts (Sweet N Swag), and pumice stones and soaps (Volcano Girls).

A new feature at the Festival will be Adventure Time bouncy castles and houses. The bouncy toys will be set up beyond the home-run fence in Malad City Park. For one admission price, kids can bounce all day!

For the Welsh Festival schedule, see www. welshfestival.com or the Welsh Edition of the Idaho Enterprise.

SUMMIT CREEK COUNSELING

is now accepting new clients. Immediate openings available for in-person and telehealth appointments. Counseling and mental health services provided for individuals of all ages.

Medicaid and Private Insurance Certified Call to schedule 208-451-7180 Jodie Barnes, LCPC www.summitcreekcounseling.com

Attention - Idaho Medicare Supplement Clients!

Changes to Idaho Rule, IDAPA 18.04.10:

1. Medicare Supplement policyholders may change their insurance company and/or plan annually regardless of health conditions during a 63-day enrollment period beginning on the policyholder’s birthday. 2. Premium rates for new Medicare Supplement policies (including when changing insurance companies) will no longer be based on the age of the applicant. This is referred to as “community rating.”

• Current Medicare Supplement plans are guaranteed renewable, and current policies will continue unless a change is requested by the policyholder. • Change may be made beginning the day of your birthday and last for 63 days following.

You don’t have to wait until your garden harvest to enjoy the fruits of your labor. Aside from all of the tasty fruits and vegetables, there are so many other goodies that come from all that time spent gardening. Gardening continues to provide a variety of healthy benefits in addition to all those essential vitamins and minerals.

Gardening is a great way to get in a little exercise without hitting the gym. Between using a variety of tools, hauling bags of mulch, digging the soil, pushing a wheelbarrow, and weeding, gardening uses a variety of muscle groups that will build muscle and burn calories. The manual labor of working in the garden can also provide some cardiovascular benefits that will help keep the heart strong. Bending and moving while gardening also helps to stretch and keep joints limber.

Spending time out in the sun while gardening is a great way to help your body naturally produce the necessary vitamin D. Vitamin D is important for several body functions, but especially essential for building strong bones and immunity. A little time in the garden and sunshine can do a lot for the body.

Working in the garden also benefits the immune system by being exposed to a range of micro-bacteria that live in the soil. Time and experience have taught that from small children to the elderly, exposure to dirt and germs is important to building and maintaining stronger immune systems. Some exposure to dust and pollen can even help reduce the risk of developing allergies and asthma. As the saying goes, a little dirt can’t hurt, in fact, it can certainly help!

Gardening has been shown to help use and improve cognitive function, especially in older populations that suffer from dementia. Research in Korea, Norway and the Netherlands have demonstrated that individuals that spend regular time gardening show new nerve connections in memory related areas of the brain.

Time spent gardening has also been found to help reduce depression as it helps improve attention span, increase self-esteem and boost one’s overall mood. Focusing on the detailed task at hand instead of negative thoughts provides peace and relaxation. Growing and caring for a garden can be quite a feat, something anyone can be proud of. Being out in the fresh air and sunshine is the best sort of mood booster there is.

Not only does gardening reduce depression, but it also reduces overall stress by lowering cortisol levels, the major stress hormone that results in the body’s fight or flight response. In fact, a mycobacterium found in soil has actually been seen to stimulate serotonin production and those feelings of peace and relaxation. Reduced stress and fatigue from physical labor in turn aids in a more restful night’s sleep, continuing the cycle of reduced stress.

Those tasty fruits and vegetables might be the motivation for a summer of gardening, but the benefits of gardening go far beyond the plate. From stronger muscles and healthier immune systems to reduced depression and stress, gardening is just what the doctor ordered for a healthy lifestyle. The benefits of cultivating, planting, growing and harvesting a garden nourishes the body, mind and soul.

A garden has benefits for more than just the table

© 2022 by Vicki Whiting, Editor Je Schinkel, Graphics Vol. 38, No. 29

Some say that in 1876, something carrying millions of dollars of gold crashed and fell into the Ashtabula River in Ohio. Many have tried to find the mystery bullion, but to date no one has. Do you think it is really there? Or is it a legend? To find out what crashed, color each space with one dot BLACK and color each space with two dots BLUE. The crew of the pirate ship The Scurvy Albatross came up with a unique ag. It’s the only one here that has no exact duplicate. Circle it.

In the 1600s, Port Royal, Jamaica, was one of the busiest seaports in the Caribbean. It was home to merchants, missionaries, smugglers and pirates.

In 1692, an earthquake hit the city. Much of it sank 65 feet (20 meters) below sea level. For hundreds of years, sand and mud covered the city. Many treasure seekers tried to find the sunken city and failed.

Then in 1965, a diver named Robert Marx used modern equipment to dig under the layers of mud and found the lost city. He was not looking for treasure, but find it he did! Thousands of coins were found—perhaps lost pirate treasure.

Take a trip under the deep blue sea and look for treasures from A to Z. Can you find each letter of the alphabet hidden in the picture?

Diving for the lost city of Port Royal is dangerous. Divers must watch out for sharks. Divers looking for sunken treasure do not look for the hulls of sunken ships. Wooden hulls rot after hundreds of years under water.

Treasure hunters look instead for lumps that could be the remains of metal parts of a ship: cannons, anchors, tools and ballast. Sometimes, even these are hard to see, as most of them have been encrusted with sand and shells.

Long ago, Spanish ships full of treasure sailed the seas. Sometimes these ships sank, leaving tons of treasure on the sea floor. Search the sea floor for seven coins with letters on them. Unscramble the letters to find out what these ships were called!

A Spanish treasure ship was called a

Standards Link: Spelling: Spell independently combining phonemes to form words; vocabulary development. Answer: Galleon.

Standards Link: Reading Comprehension.

MYSTERY SUNKEN TREASURE JAMAICA SMUGGLERS SHIP DIVER GOLD LOST CITY SAND ROYAL SHARK MUD PORT

T A L D N A S E T S O E L Y R E T S Y M F O R S U R O U T K G N S U E L D N I R K E H V S U N K C A A C I A M A J E T H R D P O R T E N E S S M U G G L E R S A S L A Y O R U R T E

Standards Link: Letter sequencing. Recognize identical words. Skim and scan reading. Recall spelling patterns.

Well, shiver me timbers! There are two land animals hiding in the picture above. Can you find them all?

Dig through the newspaper to find: • a word that starts with tr • something you consider a treasure • four 2-syllable words • a 6-digit number

Strange and De nitely NOT True

Cut out words from the newspaper to create a very strange headline. Make up and write a strange story to go with your headline. Be sure to include WHO, WHAT, WHEN, WHERE, WHY and HOW.

Standards Link: Writing: Students write imaginative narratives in newspaper format.

The Greatest Treasure in the World

a.

c.

e.

g.

i.

k.

m.

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