9-16-14 transcript bulletin

20
T RANSCRIPT B ULLETIN T OOELE TUESDAY September 16, 2014 www.TooeleOnline.com Vol. 121 No. 31 $1.00 INSIDE Source: www.airquality.utah.gov Good Good Good AIR QUALITY Tuesday Wednesday Thursday SERVING T OOELE COUNTY SINCE 1894 Rush Valley Ophir Grantsville Tooele Lake Point Bauer Stockton Pine Canyon Stansbury Park Erda 87/60 79/55 89/63 89/62 88/63 88/62 88/62 77/54 89/63 90/62 WEATHER See complete forecast on A9 Tooele football rolls over Bear River for 4-0 start See A10 Stansbury beats Uintah 49-6 See A10 BULLETIN BOARD A8 CLASSIFIEDS B5 HOMETOWN B1 OBITUARIES A6 OPEN FORUM A4 SPORTS A10 by Emma Penrod STAFF WRITER A lab test has confirmed the presence of West Nile infections in a population of sentinel chickens in Stansbury Park, indicating the virus is spreading among local avian and, potentially, human popu- lations. Scott Bradshaw, district manager for Tooele Valley Mosquito Abatement, said the abatement district uses chickens as indicators for whether the virus is being transmitted by mosquitos because the chickens can be tested for antibodies that develop after the bird has been infected by the virus. If chickens in the Stansbury area have those antibodies in their blood, then that is a good sign the virus is not only present in local mosquito populations, but also being transmitted by those mosquitos to other species, including humans. The virus has been unusually active this summer, and so far the official count for West Nile in Utah is 147 positive mos- quito pools and one confirmed human infection. The cool, rainy weather over the past week or so has caused mos- quito populations to drop off consider- ably, Bradshaw said. But he cautioned that residents should still take measures to protect themselves against the virus, for which there is currently no vaccine West Nile found in chickens Lab test confirms virus in Stansbury may be spreading to humans FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO Foreman Antonio Gomez directs his crew from Silver Spur Engineering Company as they work on the new pipeline in Settlement Canyon to bring irrigation water to the Settlement Canyon Irrigation Company Reservior. The crew completed over 500 feet of line by Monday afternoon and anticipated they would complete 800 feet by the end of the day. FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO Pediatrician Steve Rich talks about the quick progression of the Enterovirus D68 at his office on Monday. Rich has seen many patients who he suspects had the virus, and several had to be hospitalized. FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO The Tooele County School District spent $43,000 to buy a piece of property adjacent to Grantsville High School football field, which is currently planned to serve as an alternative entrance to the stadium for ambulance vehicles. by Emma Penrod STAFF WRITER After years of false starts and incremental progress, crews began construction on the long-await- ed Settlement Canyon pipeline on Monday morning. The two-mile pipeline will replace an old line that once connected springs near Sawmill Flat to Settlement Canyon Reservoir. The original pipe- line was destroyed by flooding in the 1980s, resulting in the loss of an esti- mated 336 gallons per minute — water that currently seeps into the ground before reaching the reservoir. Gary Bevan, president of Settlement Canyon Irrigation Company, said it was his hope that rebuilding the pipe- line and routing that water into the reservoir would keep the reservoir full and put an end to water shortages that have plagued the company in recent years. This isn’t a new issue — Settlement Canyon pipeline project finally underway by Emma Penrod STAFF WRITER An aggressive, uncommon respiratory infection that has hospitalized children across the Midwest may have also found its way to Tooele County. The virus, known to clinicians as Enterovirus D68, is not a new virus — it was first discovered in California in 1962 — but it is not considered a common virus among the U.S. population. However, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the virus has been spreading much more aggres- sively this year, with a total of 130 people in 12 states with con- firmed cases of the virus. Many of those patients have been chil- dren with asthma or other known respiratory troubles. While there are currently no confirmed cases in Utah, Dr. Steve Rich, a pediatrician with Wellsprings Pediatrics and Mountain West Medical Center, said he has seen nearly 20 patients with symptoms that resembled Enterovirus. About half of those patients were hospitalized, and two were Aggressive virus may be spreading to area by Lisa Christensen STAFF WRITER Residents of fire-afflicted areas want to thank emergency responders who helped to save their township from a wildfire in July — and they’re hoping com- munity members will help them do it. In mid-July, the Anaconda Fire threatened the residents of Pine Canyon and, at one point, necessitated evacuations to a local LDS chapel. A few miles south, Stockton had problems of its own as an alleged arson-lit fire ripped through the town, forcing evacuations and compromising its water system. Hundreds of first responders — firefighters, dispatchers, law enforcement officers and EMTs — from a wide collection of agencies, battled both blazes and helped people from both areas. Now, a group of grateful resi- dents from both Pine Canyon Residents plan dinner to thank fire crews for saving their towns by Tim Gillie STAFF WRITER The Tooele County School District has spent $43,000 to buy a piece of property to make the Grantsville High School foot- ball field safer for emergencies. The school board authorized the pur- chase of a 0.82-acre parcel that is adja- cent to the west side of the north end of the football field. The property sits behind another par- cel at 124 E. Main Street in Grantsville. It has an easement for access from Main Street. Appraised at $57,000, the district paid $43,000 for the roughly 250 foot by 125 foot vacant lot. “We paid for the property with funds from the sale of other pieces of prop- erty that the district owns,” said board member Scott Bryan, “So it is like trading property we are not using for property that we need. The property fund will still have a net increase after this transac- tion.” The new property will be used for emergency vehicle access to the football field and for evacuation of the field in an emergency, said Scott Rogers, Tooele County School District superintendent. “It is important that we have a second exit and safe egress for events,” he said. “I hope we never have to use it in an emer- gency, but we have had serious concerns about emergency services access through the one gate to the south. An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.” Funds to purchase the property include proceeds from the sale of an eight-unit District buys land to improve safety SEE PIPELINE PAGE A9 SEE VIRUS PAGE A9 SEE CHICKENS PAGE A9 SEE FOOTBALL PAGE A6 SEE CREWS PAGE A7 Group gives women a chance to learn in the outdoors See B1

Upload: vanquynh

Post on 20-Dec-2016

214 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: 9-16-14 Transcript Bulletin

TRANSCRIPTBULLETINTTTOOELE

TUESDAY September 16, 2014 www.TooeleOnline.com Vol. 121 No. 31 $1.00

INSIDE

Source: www.airquality.utah.gov

Good

Good

Good

AIR QUALITYTuesday

Wednesday

Thursday

SERVING TOOELE COUNTY

SINCE 1894

RIVERS AND LAKES 24-hour

Stage Change

Great Salt Lake Elevation

In feet as of 7 a.m. Monday

Vernon Creek at Vernon 1.12 +0.01South Willow Creek at Grantsville 1.38 none

at Saltair Boat Harbor 92.89

Tu W Th F Sa Su M

Pollen Index

Source: Intermountain Allergy & Asthma

HighModerate

LowAbsent

The Sun Rise Set

The Moon Rise Set

UV INDEX

The higher the AccuWeather.com UV Index™number, the greater the need for eye and skin protection. 0-2 Low; 3-5 Moderate; 6-7 High; 8-10Very High; 11+ Extreme

ALMANACTemperatures

Precipitation (in inches)

Daily Temperatures

SEVEN-DAY FORECAST FOR TOOELESUN AND MOON

UTAH WEATHER

Last Normal Month Normal Year Normal Week for week to date M-T-D to date Y-T-D

Salt Lake City

Ogden

Logan

Provo

Vernal

Price

Tooele

Nephi

Manti

Green River

RichfieldMoab

Cedar CitySt. George Kanab

Blanding

BeaverHanksville

Delta

GrouseCreek

Roosevelt

Clive

Rush Valley

Wendover

Gold Hill

Vernon

Ophir

Grantsville

Tooele

Lake Point

Bauer

Stockton

Pine Canyon

Stansbury ParkErda

Knolls

Ibapah

Dugway

High Low

Eureka

Wednesday 7:12 a.m. 7:35 p.m.Thursday 7:13 a.m. 7:33 p.m.Friday 7:14 a.m. 7:32 p.m.Saturday 7:15 a.m. 7:30 p.m.Sunday 7:15 a.m. 7:28 p.m.Monday 7:16 a.m. 7:27 p.m.Tuesday 7:17 a.m. 7:25 p.m.

Wednesday 1:14 a.m. 3:48 p.m.Thursday 2:07 a.m. 4:27 p.m.Friday 3:01 a.m. 5:03 p.m.Saturday 3:56 a.m. 5:35 p.m.Sunday 4:52 a.m. 6:06 p.m.Monday 5:48 a.m. 6:36 p.m.Tuesday 6:45 a.m. 7:05 p.m.

Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2014

90/66

87/60

90/65

86/61

85/59

79/55

89/63

89/62

88/63

88/62

88/62

77/54

80/57

89/6390/62

91/67

90/60

89/62

90/65

89/64

89/53

88/59

84/55

85/58

89/62

88/56

88/56

91/63

88/5892/64

82/5393/66 85/60

84/59

85/5490/61

91/62

87/55

85/57

New First Full Last

Sep 23 Oct 1 Oct 8 Oct 15

W Th F Sa Su M Tu

Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun Mon

WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY

Mostly sunny

89 62

Sunny intervals with a shower or t-storm

83 56

Clouds and sun with a t-storm in spots

77 51

Nice with a full day of sunshine

78 51

Times of sun and clouds

79

Mostly sunny and nice

79 52 54

Mostly sunny and not as warm

71 53TOOELE COUNTY WEATHER

Shown is Wednesday’s weather. Temperatures are

Wednesday’s highs and Wednesday night’s lows.

High/Low past week 85/43Normal high/low past week 81/55Average temp past week 64.0Normal average temp past week 68.2

Statistics for the week ending Sept. 15.

WEATHER

See complete forecast on A9

Tooele football rolls over Bear River for 4-0 start See A10

Stansbury beats Uintah 49-6 See A10

BULLETIN BOARD A8

CLASSIFIEDS B5

HOMETOWN B1

OBITUARIES A6

OPEN FORUM A4

SPORTS A10

by Emma Penrod

STAFF WRITER

A lab test has confirmed the presence of West Nile infections in a population of sentinel chickens in Stansbury Park, indicating the virus is spreading among local avian and, potentially, human popu-lations.

Scott Bradshaw, district manager for Tooele Valley Mosquito Abatement, said the abatement district uses chickens as indicators for whether the virus is being transmitted by mosquitos because the chickens can be tested for antibodies that develop after the bird has been infected by the virus.

If chickens in the Stansbury area have those antibodies in their blood, then that is a good sign the virus is not only present in local mosquito populations, but also being transmitted by those mosquitos to other species, including humans.

The virus has been unusually active this summer, and so far the official count for West Nile in Utah is 147 positive mos-quito pools and one confirmed human infection. The cool, rainy weather over the past week or so has caused mos-quito populations to drop off consider-ably, Bradshaw said. But he cautioned that residents should still take measures to protect themselves against the virus, for which there is currently no vaccine

West Nilefound inchickensLab test confirms virusin Stansbury may be spreading to humans

FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO

Foreman Antonio Gomez directs his crew from Silver Spur Engineering Company as they work on the new pipeline in Settlement Canyon to bring irrigation water to the Settlement Canyon Irrigation Company Reservior. The crew completed over 500 feet of line by Monday afternoon and anticipated they would complete 800 feet by the end of the day.

FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO

Pediatrician Steve Rich talks about the quick progression of the Enterovirus D68 at his office on Monday. Rich has seen many patients who he suspects had the virus, and several had to be hospitalized.

FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO

The Tooele County School District spent $43,000 to buy a piece of property adjacent to Grantsville High School football field, which is currently planned to serve as an alternative entrance to the stadium for ambulance vehicles.

by Emma Penrod

STAFF WRITER

After years of false starts and incremental progress, crews began construction on the long-await-ed Settlement Canyon pipeline on

Monday morning.The two-mile pipeline will replace

an old line that once connected springs near Sawmill Flat to Settlement Canyon Reservoir. The original pipe-line was destroyed by flooding in the 1980s, resulting in the loss of an esti-

mated 336 gallons per minute — water that currently seeps into the ground before reaching the reservoir.

Gary Bevan, president of Settlement Canyon Irrigation Company, said it was his hope that rebuilding the pipe-line and routing that water into the

reservoir would keep the reservoir full and put an end to water shortages that have plagued the company in recent years.

This isn’t a new issue — Settlement

Canyon pipeline project finally underway

by Emma Penrod

STAFF WRITER

An aggressive, uncommon respiratory infection that has hospitalized children across the Midwest may have also found its way to Tooele County.

The virus, known to clinicians as Enterovirus D68, is not a new virus — it was first discovered in California in 1962 — but it is not considered a common virus among the U.S. population.

However, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the virus has been spreading much more aggres-

sively this year, with a total of 130 people in 12 states with con-firmed cases of the virus. Many of those patients have been chil-dren with asthma or other known respiratory troubles.

While there are currently no confirmed cases in Utah, Dr. Steve Rich, a pediatrician with Wellsprings Pediatrics and Mountain West Medical Center, said he has seen nearly 20 patients with symptoms that resembled Enterovirus.

About half of those patients were hospitalized, and two were

Aggressive virus may be spreading to area

by Lisa Christensen

STAFF WRITER

Residents of fire-afflicted areas want to thank emergency responders who helped to save their township from a wildfire in July — and they’re hoping com-munity members will help them do it.

In mid-July, the Anaconda Fire threatened the residents of Pine Canyon and, at one point, necessitated evacuations to a local LDS chapel. A few miles

south, Stockton had problems of its own as an alleged arson-lit fire ripped through the town, forcing evacuations and compromising its water system.

Hundreds of first responders — firefighters, dispatchers, law enforcement officers and EMTs — from a wide collection of agencies, battled both blazes and helped people from both areas.

Now, a group of grateful resi-dents from both Pine Canyon

Residents plan dinner to thank fire crews forsaving their towns

by Tim Gillie

STAFF WRITER

The Tooele County School District has spent $43,000 to buy a piece of property to make the Grantsville High School foot-ball field safer for emergencies.

The school board authorized the pur-chase of a 0.82-acre parcel that is adja-cent to the west side of the north end of the football field.

The property sits behind another par-cel at 124 E. Main Street in Grantsville. It has an easement for access from Main

Street.Appraised at $57,000, the district paid

$43,000 for the roughly 250 foot by 125 foot vacant lot.

“We paid for the property with funds from the sale of other pieces of prop-erty that the district owns,” said board member Scott Bryan, “So it is like trading property we are not using for property that we need. The property fund will still have a net increase after this transac-tion.”

The new property will be used for emergency vehicle access to the football

field and for evacuation of the field in an emergency, said Scott Rogers, Tooele County School District superintendent.

“It is important that we have a second exit and safe egress for events,” he said. “I hope we never have to use it in an emer-gency, but we have had serious concerns about emergency services access through the one gate to the south. An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.”

Funds to purchase the property include proceeds from the sale of an eight-unit

District buys land to improve safety

SEE PIPELINE PAGE A9 ➤

SEE VIRUS PAGE A9 ➤

SEE CHICKENS PAGE A9 ➤

SEE FOOTBALL PAGE A6 ➤

SEE CREWS PAGE A7 ➤

TOOELETOOELET

Group gives women a chance to learn in

the outdoors See B1

FRONT PAGE A1FRONT PAGE A1

Page 2: 9-16-14 Transcript Bulletin

WASHINGTON (AP) — After amassing a private collection of African-American Art over four decades, Bill Cosby and his wife Camille plan to showcase their holdings for the first time in an exhibition planned at the Smithsonian Institution.

Cosby, 77, is a comedian, actor and author best known for the smash hit TV show he crafted, “The Cosby Show,” which aired on NBC television from 1984 to 1992. The groundbreaking show featured a successful black fam-ily. He later starred in a CBS sit-com and is now in talks with NBC for a new extended-family sitcom with Cosby as the patriarch. The new project could air in 2015.

The Smithsonian’s National Museum of African Art announced Monday that the entire Cosby collection will go on view in November in a unique exhibit juxtaposing African-American art with African art.

The collection, which will be loaned to the museum, includes works by such leading African-American artists as Beauford Delaney, Faith Ringgold, Jacob Lawrence, Augusta Savage and Henry Ossawa Tanner. The Cosby collection of more than 300 African-American paintings, prints, sculptures and drawings

has never been loaned or seen publicly, except for one work of art.

“It’s so important to show art by African-American artists in this exhibition,” Cosby said in a written statement. “To me, it’s a way for people to see what exists and to give voice to many of these artists who were silenced for so long, some of whom will speak no more.”

Cosby, 77, is a comedian, actor and author best known for the smash hit TV show he crafted, “The Cosby Show,” which aired on NBC television from 1984 to 1992. The groundbreaking show featured a successful black fam-ily. He later starred in a CBS sit-com and is now in talks with NBC for a new extended-family sitcom with Cosby as the patriarch. The new project could air in 2015.

The exhibit “Conversations: African and African-American Artworks in Dialogue” will open Nov. 9 and will be on view through early 2016 in Washington. It will

be organized by themes, placing pieces from African artists in the Smithsonian collection near sim-ilar works from African-American artists in Cosby’s collection. Curators said it will explore ideas about history, creativity, power, identity and artistry.

Some highlights include rare 18th and early 19th-century por-traits by Baltimore-based artist Joshua Johnston, explorations of black spirituality in the 1894 piece “The Thankful Poor” by Henry Ossawa Tanner and Cosby family quilts.

“The exhibition will encour-age all of us to draw from the creativity that is Africa, to rec-ognize the shared history that inextricably links Africa and the African diaspora and to seek the common threads that weave our stories together,” said Museum Director Johnnetta Betsch Cole, in announcing the exhibit.

The exhibition of Cosby’s col-lection is part of the African art museum’s 50th anniversary.

Bill Cosby to loan art collection to US musuem

A2 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

ADMINISTRATIONScott C. Dunn PublisherJoel J. Dunn Publisher Emeritus

OFFICEBruce Dunn ControllerChris Evans Office Manager Vicki Higgins Customer Service

EDITORIALDavid Bern EditorMark Watson Sports EditorFrancie Aufdemorte Photo EditorTavin Stucki Community News EditorTim Gillie Staff WriterLisa Christensen Staff WriterEmma Penrod Staff Writer

ADVERTISINGClayton Dunn Advertising ManagerKeith Bird Advertising SalesShane Bergen Advertising SalesKelly Chance Classified Advertising

LAYOUT & DESIGNJohn Hamilton Creative DirectorLiz Arellano Graphic Artist

PRODUCTIONPerry Dunn Pre-press ManagerDarwin Cook Web Press ManagerJames Park Press TechnicianShawn Oviatt Pre-press TechnicianScott Spence Insert Technician

SUBSCRIPTION RATES: $1.00 per copy; $40 per year delivered by carrier in Tooele, Grantsville, Erda, Stockton, Lake Point and Stansbury Park, Utah; $45 per year by mail in Tooele County, Utah; $77 per year by mail in the United States.

OFFICE HOURS: Monday-Thursday 8 a.m. to 6 p.m., Friday 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., closed Saturday and Sunday.

CLASSIFIEDS DEADLINE: 4:45 p.m. day prior to publication.

PUBLIC NOTICES DEADLINE: 4 p.m. day prior to publication.

COMMUNITY NEWS ITEMS,BULLETIN BOARD, ETC.:

3 p.m. day prior to publication.

OBITUARY DEADLINE: 10 a.m. day of publication.

Publication No. (USPS 6179-60) issued twice a week at Tooele City, Utah. Periodicals postage paid at Tooele, Utah. Published by the Transcript Bulletin Publishing Company, Inc., 58 North Main Street, Tooele City, Utah. Address all correspondence to P.O. Box 390, Tooele City, Utah 84074.

POSTMASTER: Send change of address to:

PO Box 390 Tooele, Utah 84074-0390

435-882-0050 Fax 435-882-6123 email: [email protected] visit our web site extension at

www.tooeletranscript.com

Entire contents ©2014 Transcript Bulletin Publishing Company, Inc. All rights

reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced in any form without the written consent of the managing editor or publisher.

TRANSCRIPTBULLETIN

TOOELE

TUESDAY September 16, 2014

by Tim GillieSTAFF WRITER

The new owners of Tooele County’s only new car dealership held a grand opening last week to show off their updated facilities.

On Sept. 10, Performance Auto Mall Tooele held a grand opening ceremony at its 1041 N. Main, Tooele, location, which houses Performance Automotive Ford, Performance Automotive Dodge Chrysler Jeep Ram, and Performance Automotive Chevrolet Buick.

“Put a smile on your face, every customer, every day. That’s our slogan,” said Kirk Bengtzen, man-aging partner for Performance Automotive Utah.

Bengtzen, along with his part-ner, Mike Dever, who also owns Performance Auto Network, a Fairfield, Ohio-based auto com-pany that runs nine dealerships in Ohio, were on hand for the grand opening.

Dever and Bengtzen purchased the Willey Automotive Group, which owned the three Quality Auto dealerships in Tooele, for

an undisclosed amount in March 2014.

At the time of the purchase, Bengtzen announced that Performance had plans to infuse cash into the Tooele facilities to make improvements that would improve the car buying experi-ence in Tooele more friendly for customers.

Last week Performance Auto Mall Tooele staff showed off some of the initial remodel projects to the public.

“They took out several offices in the Chevrolet building and increased the show room space,” said Jack Bell, new car inven-tory manager for Performance Auto Mall Tooele. “The waiting area for the service department was opened up and expanded. Customers have access to free drinks, including water, hot bev-erages and soft drinks, all in a comfortable lounge area.”

In the Ford building the sales managers were moved out of their offices onto the sales floor, the waiting room for the Quick Lane was remodeled and is now a space for more equipment for mechan-

ics, and the service waiting room was expanded to include access for service as well as Quick Lane customers, according to Bell.

The changes on the sales floor was designed to take the mystery and intimidation out of the sales process, he said.

“Things are lot more open,” said Bell. “No longer will custom-ers see their sales person disap-pear into a closed room to talk to their manager. The sales manag-ers will interact directly with the customers. We have no secrets.”

Future plans include add-

ing more service capacity to the Chevrolet building, he said.

Performance Automotive Utah started in the Utah car market in 2011 when it bought Menlove Toyota in Bountiful.

The Willey acquisition gave the company a total of six dealerships

in Utah.Trent Bell, who was manag-

ing partner for the Quality Automotive Group, has stayed on with Performance Automotive Utah as the manager for the com-pany’s Tooele [email protected]

Performance Auto Mall Tooele enhances buying experience

FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO

Shaelee Weyland directs customer calls in the recepetion area at Performance Auto Mall in Tooele. The dealership underwent an overhaul at their facility to cre-ate a more open customer expereince.

FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO

On Sept. 10, Performance Auto Mall Tooele held a grand opening ceremony at its 1041 N. Main, Tooele location, which houses Performance Automotive Ford, Performance Automotive Dodge Chrysler Jeep Ram, and Performance Automotive Chevrolet Buick.

by Lisa ChristensenSTAFF WRITER

A Tooele man was arrested last Wednesday after allegedly pulling his wife out of a car and fleeing from police.

The 31-year-old man, whom the Transcript-Bulletin is not naming in an effort to protect the identity of the victim, was upset with his wife for leaving with a friend and tried to get her to go with him instead, according to a probable cause statement.

When she would not come, the

man got in the back of the friend’s car, allegedly hit his wife on the head, took her purse while she was trying to get her phone to call for help, and ran around the car with the purse, according to the statement.

The man also pulled his wife from her friend’s car out onto the pavement, according to the state-ment, and two bystanders had to keep him away from the woman. The incident occurred in the park-ing lot of Wendy’s and 7-Eleven near 1000 North in Tooele.

When police arrived, the man

ran after he was told to place his hands behind his back, according to the statement. When caught and subdued by officers, the man gave them an incorrect name and birth date, and later confessed the switch, citing an arrest war-rant, according to the statement.

Officers also searched the man and found two glass pipes with white residue, according to the statement. The man was taken to Mountain West Medical Center for treatment and the booked into the Tooele County Detention Center.

He was charged Monday with possession or use of a controlled substance, a third-degree felony; false personal information with intent to be another actual per-son, a class A misdemeanor; damage or interruption of a com-munication device, a class B mis-demeanor; two counts of assault, a class B misdemeanor; and use or possession of drug parapher-nalia, a class B misdemeanor. He is scheduled to make his initial appearance in 3rd District Court on Sept. [email protected]

Tooele man arrested for alleged assault

by Lisa ChristensenSTAFF WRITER

A Tooele motorcyclist was injured after rear-ending a slowed-down car on Tooele City’s Main Street.

The 52-year-old man driving south on SR-36 Monday after-noon ran into the back of a passenger car that had slowed down because the car in front of

it was attempting to make a left turn into Tooele City Hall, said Lt. Adrian Day of the Tooele City Police Department.

The man had a leg injury but otherwise was not seriously injured, Day said; however, the man was transported to a Salt Lake hospital for treatment.

Day said no citations were issued in the [email protected]

Motorcyclist hurt after running into back of car

LISA CHRISTENSEN/TTB PHOTO

A Tooele motorcyclist was injured after rear-ending a slowed-down car on Main Street near city hall.

NEW YORK (AP) — Getting a family of six out the door on time can be quite a challenge — even when you’re a Beckham.

“With me and the boys, five minutes. With Harper it’s a lot more of a process and obvi-ously with Victoria,” said the former soccer star Tuesday at an event for his fashion col-laboration with British brand Belstaff. “You see her (Harper) every morning getting her clothes out for school or you know changing her mind like 20 times.”

The famous family has made a name in fashion with Victoria Beckham’s high-end collection, which showed Sunday at New York Fashion Week, and sons Romeo, 12, and Brooklyn, 15, gracing magazine covers and Burberry ads. (The couple also have a 9-year-old son, Cruz.)

But it turns out that 3-year-

old Harper is the one calling the shots when it comes to Beckham’s personal style.

“She will come into my dress-ing room and she’ll be like, `Daddy, wear those shoes with those jeans. You know she’s got her own kind of mind and her own character already. So it’s great,” he said.

Beckham said he lent much more than his name to the six-piece capsule collection that includes leather motorcycle jackets ($1,950), a pair of dis-tressed jeans ($395) and a clas-sic, white T-shirt ($95).

“I have always been involved 110 percent,” Beckham said. “People know that it’s what I would wear and that’s why peo-ple have loved the collection the way they have.”

The 39-year-old also part-nered with Belstaff and pho-tographer Peter Lindbergh on

a limited-edition, coffee-table book.

The former England captain says he’s loving retirement and the shift in focus to fashion and family.

“Obviously it’s something that’s totally different to what I have done over the years,” he said. “I’ve had my moments of missing playing, but you know I think that watching my kids play, watching them train, you know, has taken over that kind of void of what I used to do.”

Asked if he was a typical “soc-cer dad,” Beckham smiled.

“I am one of those dads, because I always I know how good they can be at times, the boys. And, you know obviously all dads are the same, you know, very competitive,” he said. “But, you know, these days you’re not allowed to say too much on the sidelines.”

David Beckham dabbles in fashion

A Full-Color Learning and Activity Page Just for Kids!Every Thursday in Your Tooele Transcript-Bulletin

A2

���facebook.com/AmericanBurgers ���

Like us on Facebook forexclusive weekly specials

490 N. MAIN, TOOELE • 882-3608HOURS: Mon - Sat 10 am –10 pm Sunday 11 am – 10 pm

230 E. MAIN, GRANTSVILLE • 884-4408HOURS: Monday - Sunday 10 am – 10 pm

Like us on Like us on 490 N. MAIN, TOOELE490 N. MAIN, TOOELE • 882-3608HOURS: Mon - Sat 10 am –10 pm Sunday 11 am – 10 pm490 N. MAIN, TOOELE490 N. MAIN, TOOELE • 882-3608

Greeklishous!

A2

Page 3: 9-16-14 Transcript Bulletin

TUESDAY September 16, 2014 A3TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

WILL ROCK FOR FOOD

Schayla Claydon (above left) holds her pet reptile Xenia. Claydon brought Xenia to Let’s Make History Benefit concert and Car Show last Saturday. Lorri Cook, Tooele Food Bank director, (above right) with food donations. The event reached its goal of being the largest one day one location food drive in Utah, according to organizer Danny Marz. Local band One Way gui-tarist Jesus Ramon (left) rocks out at the Pit Stop Car Wash Coffee Shop & More in Tooele on Sept. 13. The concert featured the Pat Travers Band and Edgar Winter along with Utah bands.

PITTSBURGH (AP) — Sheila Consaul’s front yard is the largest natural sand beach in Ohio.

Her walkway is a stone jetty that extends a half-mile into Lake Erie. Her front steps are the rungs of a ladder, and the light atop her three-story home can be seen for miles. It comes with the benefit of helping boaters navigate at night.

“So yeah, I bought a light-house,” Consaul said recently while trekking along the jetty to her summer home in northeast Ohio. “I heard about these light-houses coming up for auction, and I thought, ‘Well, that would be interesting.’”

Since 2000, the federal gov-ernment has sold more than 100 lighthouses to private buyers, many of whom are turning them into livable spaces.

Consaul and others bought their lighthouses through the National Historic Lighthouse Preservation Act, under which the government sells unneeded properties.

“Advancements in naviga-tion technology have reduced the Coast Guard’s requirement to own and operate light sta-tions,” Cat Langel, a spokes-woman for the General Services Administration, wrote in an email.

Although the lighthouses con-tinue to operate, they are run by computers, she said, meaning the “structures themselves are often no longer critical to the (Coast Guard’s) mission needs.”

The government offers light-houses first to local government agencies or certified nonprof-its. If they’re not interested, the lighthouses are sold through public auction.

The GSA has sold more than 100 lighthouses at prices ranging from $10,000 to $933,000, Langel said. Proceeds — $4 million to date — go to the Coast Guard’s aid to navigation fund.

Consaul paid $72,010 for the Fairport Harbor lighthouse in 2011. She spent the following summers renovating and repair-ing. On the ground floor where boats once were stored is a new kitchen. The second floor, for-merly the lighthouse keepers’ living space, now holds three bedrooms.

“It was not occupied since 1948 when the last keeper moved out, but basically, it’s in very good shape,” said Consaul, 56, of Reston, Va. “I have just about everything painted inside, the hardwood floors have all been redone, the furniture is moved in and in place. ... It’s pretty much livable now, except that there’s no running water yet. It’s really nice camping, is what it is.”

Nick Korstad turned the Borden Flats Lighthouse in Fall River, Mass., into a unique bed-and-breakfast. Built in 1881 at the mouth of the Taunton River, outside Mt. Hope Bay, the cylin-

drical lighthouse is half a mile from shore.

“This was my dream since I was kid: To be a lighthouse keep-er,” said Korstad, 33, of Fall River. “It’s just something I always wanted to do. I have no idea why, but it started when I was like 7. The only thing I can say is pos-sibly in a past life, if that exists, I was a lighthouse keeper.”

Wisconsin painter John Burhani bought the Kenosha Lighthouse and turned it into his art studio.

“It’s a good place to work,” said Burhani, who grew up in Kenosha and as a kid fished from the pier where his lighthouse stands. “It gets hot in the sum-mer and cold in the winter, but it’s good for my art.”

For many people, lighthous-es hold a certain mystique, a romantic aura. Owners find lighthouses to be a lot of work.

“It’s constant,” Korstad said. “There’s always something to fix or cleanup. You don’t get to relax.”

It’s also expensive.For starters, lighthouse own-

ers must buy costly insurance policies.

“It’s pretty hefty. The mini-mum liability policy in my case was $2 million,” Consaul said. “And you can’t just call your average State Farm agent. I did, but obviously, our conversation didn’t go very far.”

Plus, there’s maintenance. Though the Coast Guard retains the right to enter the property to maintain the beacon, light-house owners are responsible for everything else.

“It’s a lot of work,” Consaul said. “There are many challeng-es. The biggest has been dealing with the water situation. I have a composting toilet, which works for sewage. But for things like showers, that water needs to be treated. I’m still working on a solution for that.”

Still, buying a lighthouse means owning an iconic piece of property, thick with history.

In Korstad’s case, the history is difficult to ignore: The Borden Flats Lighthouse, he said, is haunted by ghosts, including the former keeper, his 10-year-old son who died after a tumble down the lighthouse stairs, and a little girl who drowned in the bay.

“My brother was outside work-ing, and a woman came up and started talking into his ear,” he said. “It gave us goosebumps.”

The haunting has not kept vis-itors away. From June to August, he had 100 percent overnight occupancy rates.

“There is definitely this cool factor to it,” Consaul said of own-ing a lighthouse. “I get out here, and you can see 360 degrees, and the view is phenomenal. The sunrises and sunsets, just watch-ing the boat traffic, especially the sailboats ... it’s hard to beat.”

Some are turning lighthouses into living spaces

A3

Now Open

Come try Our Amazing

Flavors!

NOW SERVING � � frozen yogurt

� � gelato

� � italian ice

� � sorbet

Offering 19 Mouthwatering

Topping Choices!

HOURS—MON - THURS 11AM - 10 PM

FRI & SAT - 11AM - MIDNIGHTSUNDAY - NOON - 8PM

FREE WI-FI

134 W 1180 N, Ste 6 • TooeleNext to Bonneville Family Practice

A3

Page 4: 9-16-14 Transcript Bulletin

President Barack Obama’s stated goal in the fight against the Islamic State, aka ISIS, is

to reduce it to a “manageable prob-lem.”

What this means, he hasn’t spelled out in great specificity. Presumably fewer beheadings. A slower pace of Western recruiting. Fewer genocidal threats against embattled minorities. A downgrading of the caliphate to a mini-state, or merely a large swath of territory in Syria and Iraq.

The evil of ISIS has stirred nearly everyone around President Obama to ringing statements of resolve. Vice President Joe Biden says, “We will follow them to the gates of hell.” The president himself? He says it will be “degraded to the point where it is no longer the kind of factor that we’ve seen it being over the last several months.”

Put to the rhythms of Winston Churchill’s famous call to arms in Parliament in June 1940, the Obama posture is, “We shall degrade you, we shall lessen you as a factor, we shall make you manageable, we shall hope that the attention of this great continental nation ... turns to something else soon.”

What we have been witnessing the past few weeks is the intellectual collapse of Obama’s foreign policy, accompanied by its rapid politi-cal unraveling. When Al Franken is ripping you for lacking a strategy against ISIS in Syria, you have a problem.

The hoary hawkish clichés about the stakes in Iraq — repeated over and over again by Sens. John McCain and Lindsey Graham through the years — have proved correct. In 2007, McCain argued that if we failed in Iraq, “these people will try to follow us home and the region will erupt to a point where we may have to come back or we will be combating what is now, to a large degree, al-Qaida.”

And so it is that seven years later, we are bombing Iraq as we battle an offshoot of al-Qaida amid fears that

the terrorists will attack us here at home.

It is not that the latest events in Iraq and Syria necessarily vindi-cate a rigorously McCainite foreign policy. You can believe ISIS must be defeated and still think that the Iraq War was a mistake and McCain and his allies are too recklessly interven-tionist. But events have vindicated the surge that devastated the fore-runner of ISIS and demonstrated the folly of Obama’s total pullout from Iraq.

The political worm has turned so completely that even Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky, the strictest of nonin-terventionists, now supports war in Iraq and Syria.

The most prominent figure who is out of step with this new zeitgeist is President Obama. He explained recently that things aren’t as bad as they seem because social media is amplifying events. He has gone from blaming Bush to blaming Instagram. It’s another evasion by a president who wants to avoid speaking too forthrightly about the threat of ISIS, lest he commit himself to the force-ful action necessary to defeat it.

When the only tool you have is a hammer, President Obama has said of President Bush’s alleged approach to the world, every problem looks like a nail. By the same token, when the only tool you have is retreat, every problem looks “manageable.”

Rich Lowry is editor of the National Review.

Obama’s foreign policy collapse was imminent

Be glad to payIt is finally time to write a positive

Letter to the Editor. I would like to com-mend whoever was responsible for the advertising of what Tooele County has to offer on the County Seat and At Your Leisure television shows. It is good to see that Tooele County has started to move forward again. We have a great county; all we have to do is get people here to see how beautiful it is. Don’t forget Casey Stott and Road Tripping.

It’s been great that Dave Brown has reduced camping to half price for senior citizens during the week up Settlement Canyon, which has greatly increased the amount of campers. These people all go downtown and spend money that helps stimulate the economy greatly. It’s good to see a county employee take the initia-tive on his own to help seniors and the county at the same time.

Now that winter is coming on, horse-men will start wanting to use the indoor arena more at Deseret Peak Complex. Since you will be heating it seven days a week, put in a drop box to collect the money. Get the website up and running again; this will bring back the horsemen from Salt Lake Valley where they used to be, therefore making Tooele County more money.

Now the county is moving forward again. Keep it going. Now that there is a conference center at Deseret Peak Complex, let’s get it going. The Cowboy Poetry and Country Music Fest was one of the best events that I have gone to there. They charged $12. I would be glad to pay $30 for that quality of entertain-ment.

Kent Williams Grantsville

Open Forum• Editorial• Guest Opinion• Letters to the Editor

David J. BernEditor

Scott C. DunnPresident and Publisher

Joel J. DunnPublisher Emeritus

OUR VIEW

GUEST OPINION

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Editor David [email protected]

435-882-0050

TUESDAY September 16, 2014A4 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

With the exception of the “Our View” column, the opinions expressed on this page, including the cartoon, are not necessarily endorsed by the Tooele Transcript-Bulletin.

EDITORIAL BOARD

GUEST OPINION

GUEST OPINION

The Transcript-Bulletin welcomes letters to the editor from readers. Letters must be no longer than 250 words, civil in tone, written exclusively for the Transcript-Bulletin, and accompanied by the writer’s name, address and phone number. Longer letters may be published, based on merit and at the Editor’s discretion. Priority will be given to letters that refer to a recent article in the newspaper. All letters may be subject to editing.

Letters written to thank an individual or organization should be submitted for “Notes of Appreciation.”

Readers who are interested in writing a lon-ger guest op-ed column on a topic of general interest should contact Editor David Bern.

Email: [email protected]: (435) 882-6123Mail: Letters to the Editor Tooele Transcript-Bulletin P.O. Box 390 Tooele, UT 84074

LETTERS POLICY

The NFL is all about making bil-lions of dollars a year selling its brand of glitzy gladiatorial vio-

lence and power.The kind of violence and power Ray

Rice showed.Not what Rice showed in a hotel

elevator when he punched his wife’s lights out and then dragged her out like a sack of potatoes. The video of the punch is sending spasms of anxiety through the NFL.

I’m talking about the violence on

the field, where the destruction of the human body is celebrated as virtue, so that millions of Americans can feel vicarious thrills as we finger our key-boards to play fantasy football.

Unfortunately for the NFL, appeals

to testosterone alone weren’t enough.The boomers are getting old. They

don’t drink as much beer or eat as many chips or buy as many muscle cars as they did back in the day.

So a few years ago, just as American moms began to be worried about con-cussions in youth football and started wondering whether to send their little boys out to bash heads on the week-ends, the NFL wised up.

Send Goodell packing and call Condoleezza

France is abuzz with the rumor that former center-right French President Nicolas Sarkozy is set to

re-enter public life. Could the era of the chill bros be over already?

The world has been worse off since Sarkozy left — for the very same reason the French public voted him out of office.

Sarkozy was seen as overbear-ing, meddling, bold and brash to the point of vulgarity. It’s well-known within Sarkozy’s inner circle that he didn’t believe in decisive action alone, but rather action followed by the announcement of action. The result was a perception of hyperactivity that exasperated the French public. They wanted to wake up in the morning without Sarko’s face being the first thing they saw in the media — whether it was Sarko jogging, Sarko chewing out a European Union official over poor immigration controls, Sarko announc-ing the deployment of French troops in Libya, or Sarko proposing another reform of the French state.

The French like their leaders to resemble swans on the surface of a pond: The little feet can be paddling like crazy underwater, but there should only be the appearance of grace above the surface. French President Francois Hollande fits that description perfectly, as did Sarkozy’s predecessor, Jacques Chirac. Both men effortlessly juggled wars, women and the backstabbers in their own political parties. In France it’s considered high art to be busy while appearing to be doing virtually nothing. The problem is that sometimes it’s hard to tell if French leaders are getting the first part of the equation right.

With Sarkozy, there was no doubt. It was like watching the French adapta-tion of a George W. Bush cowboy swept

into power on the tide of global con-cern over radical Islamic terrorism and related immigration issues. Sarkozy told a woman at a town hall event that France expected Muslim immigrants to stop slaughtering sheep in their bath-tubs (a ritual that’s often part of the Islamic festival of Eid al-Fitr). He prom-ised to pressure-wash the scum right out of the hoodlum-plagued suburbs.

Sarkozy and Bush had something in common: the strength to unapologeti-cally pursue a decisive course of action in the face of criticism. And while other world leaders might not have agreed with their positions or styles, their strength was respected. No one was going to push or provoke them without first carefully weighing the consequenc-es of doing so and taking into account their propensity for action over words.

The leadership vacuum left by the likes of Bush and Sarkozy has since been filled by indecision, insecurity and timidity, poorly disguised as intellec-tualism and diplomacy. The last leader left of that ilk is Russian President Vladimir Putin, who has been trying to unilaterally reframe the global debate because Western leaders these days can’t seem to find the real fight. (Hint: It’s still in the Middle East, against radi-cal Islamists.) Putin is standing in the boxing ring with his gloves on and shirt off, flexing his pectorals, while Western leaders are at a bar across the street, kicking back with beers and throwing darts at a map of Ukraine.

A multipolar world only works if the various “poles” are present and engaged. Without leaders like Sarkozy in Europe and Bush in America, a mul-tipolar world cannot exist. It will tend to drift into chaos without the exertion of pressure to hold everything together.

Constant indecision and postpone-ment of significant action — typified by U.S. President Barack Obama vis-a-vis the Islamic State terrorists in Iraq and Syria — is not leadership. It’s simply a cowardly way to do nothing. I could sit at home for an entire year “weighing my options” to leave the house, and it would just mean that I’ve effectively decided to stay home.

Granted, leadership can sometimes consist of covert action. One’s actions don’t always have to be announced to be decisive and effective. But you should at least be able to point to the results as justifying the means. Otherwise, you could claim to be the greatest statesman in history, and that your greatness eludes the public because you just happened to run your entire mandate covertly.

Even then, it may not be enough. The pendulum could very well be swinging back in favor of leaders who not only have the political sense to pick appro-priate priorities, but who also make a point of clearly articulating their posi-tions before following up with concrete action. We may get tired of their hyper-activity, but it beats the alternative of yelling at the TV for a head of state to get off his behind.

Rachel Marsden is a columnist, politi-cal strategist and former Fox News host based in Paris. She appears frequently on TV and in publications in the U.S. and abroad. Her website can be found at http://www.rachelmarsden.com.

Is ‘slackocracy’ leadership near an end?

Rachel MarsdenGUEST COLUMNIST

John KassGUEST COLUMNIST

SEE KASS PAGE A5 ➤

First there was one. Then two. Then three. Sadly and tragically, it didn’t stop there.We’re talking about the alarming frequency of teen suicides that occurred

during the 2013–14 school year in Tooele County. There were also a number of adult suicides during that same time. How many teens and adults died by suicide during those nine months is difficult to define, for cause of death, especially when suicide is suspected or involved, is rarely made public.

But the prevalence of suicide here at the time caught the attention of resi-dents and officials alike. Instead of wringing their hands and doing nothing, officials thankfully and progressively jumped in last spring with educational programs and seminars for the community to hopefully prevent another per-son from dying by suicide.

One of those programs is continuing with great success. As reported in last Thursday’s story, “Suicide prevention program finds quick popularity with locals,” the program, started last April, has been quietly, yet effectively reach-ing out to county residents on the key signs of someone who is at risk of death by suicide — and how to safely and appropriately intervene.

Launched by Valley Behavioral Health and Tooele City’s Communities that Care, the QPR (Question, Persuade, Refer) program provides free suicide pre-vention training. To date, nearly 1,000 residents have been QPR certified. Both organizations started the training in response to the spate of youth and adult suicides during the last school year. They also started it because a 2013 state health survey reported that more than 14 percent of local school-age youth said they had contemplated suicide.

According to officials, the QPR program trains citizens to respond to sui-cidal behaviors in much the same way CPR instructs on how to restore normal heartbeat and breathing in heart attack or drowning victims. Certified citizens have been taught to recognize the warning signs and to act quickly to prevent a possible tragedy. They have been trained to avert denial, to directly deal with suicidal behaviors, and to refer a distressed or potential suicide victim to appropriate medical help.

Also according to officials, scientific studies show that QPR training does have a direct influence on whether or not a potential suicide victim will actually act on their plans. Julie Spindler, a prevention coordinator at Valley Behavioral Health, calls QPR “A life-saving technique until professional help can arrive. … The community has really rallied around this cause, and we’re really excited to save lives in our community.”

The nearly 1,000 QPR certified residents is not only an astonishing high number that shows the importance and need for such training, but also illus-trates how residents have truly “rallied around this cause” and want to make a difference. And that difference speaks volumes about the heart and compas-sion of residents who are trying to reach out to those who are suffering.

The local QPR training program has demonstrated that it is fulfilling a vital need. It is hoped the program, which is funded by Valley Behavioral Health and hosted by Communities that Care, will successfully continue. This is important work that can save lives and spare families from profound grief.

Another public QPR training session will be held at 7 p.m. tonight at Tooele City Hall. Additional training sessions are available to groups, businesses and organi-zations by calling Spindler at 435-843-3520 or by email to [email protected].

Suicide preventionLocal QPR training is helping citizens to properly and effectively respond to those who are suffering

A4 OPEN FORUMA4 OPEN FORUM

Page 5: 9-16-14 Transcript Bulletin

TUESDAY September 16, 2014

BELLEVILLE, Ill. (AP) — With instruments in the hands of stu-dents, Sister Jeannine Neumann leads the rhythm band class of first- and second-graders at St. Mary-St. Augustine Catholic School in Belleville.

Neumann, who recently turned 80, grabs her sombrero and pops it on top of her head as the chil-dren laugh in excitement as the song about a yellow sombrero comes on the cassette player she uses.

Students have a variety of instruments they play along with the song including triangles, maracas, rhythm sticks and sym-bols. With just a motion of her arm, Neumann directs which stu-dents to play their instruments.

Neumann has taught music and reading to Catholic school children in Belleville for 18 years. She taught at St. Mary’s Catholic School and now teaches at St. Mary-St. Augustine. And she has taught primary schoolchildren for nearly six decades and doesn’t plan to stop any time soon.

“As long as I can make a dif-ference in children’s lives then I keep doing it,” she said.

On Friday mornings, Neumann teaches two rhythm band classes. Before the first and second-grad-ers, she had the younger students: preschool, pre-kindergarten and kindergarten.

“It’s important to her kids have the experience of music,” said Sandy Baechle, principal at St. Mary-St. Augustine.

Baechle praised Neumann and her work with students. “She’s an amazing person,” Baechle said.

She wondered how the 80-year-old had the energy to do all she does.

“She’s kind of like the Energizer bunny,” Baechle joked. “She just keeps on going.”

Neumann said enjoys teaching a variety of classes at St. Mary-St. Augustine. She teaches rhythm band, reading and guitar lessons. She also teaches Parish School of Religion classes at St. Mary’s Catholic Church in Belleville.

After music classes on a recent Friday morning, Neumann switched roles and helped stu-dents with their reading as a reading specialist.

She worked with two kinder-garten students on early read-ing skills. She asked the students Alex Foster and Jeremy Meister to identify the beginning or the end-ing letter of a word she sounded out for them.

The boys took turns identify-ing the letter and picking up the corresponding letter card on the table in front of them. It was easy for Alex and Jeremy to pick out common letters like s, z and r in words, but they had more trou-ble when Neumann asked them about words beginning or ending in y, q, x or w.

“Gosh, that’s hard,” Alex said at one point.

Neumann took Jeremy by the hand when he was struggling with identifying the ‘n’ sound at the end of a word and walked him around the circle-shaped alphabet carpet until he stepped on the letter n and recognized it as the sound he heard.

The boys seemed to get the hang of it toward the end of the 30-minute session. “You did a great job guys,” Neumann told them.

Neumann then headed inside a second-grade classroom to help two students with reading as they played the game “Pairs in Pears,” where you build words off other words using letter squares. Other students in the class worked in small groups using similar games as the teacher rotated around the room.

Third-grader Ethan Whoolery looked serious but content as he sat down in a small chair in the preschool room at St. Mary-St. Augustine for his one-on-one guitar lesson with Neumann.

She helped him tune his child-sized guitar before the lesson began. Then they practiced songs Ethan knew before Neumann taught him to play a new song, “We Are One In The Spirit.”

She provided plenty of words of encouragement as Ethan played. “You are doing beauti-fully,” Neumann told him. “I’m so proud of you.”

At the end of the lesson, she reminded Ethan to share the new song sheets with his two sis-ters, who also take lessons from Neumann.

“She’s really good,” Ethan said of Neumann, who he started learning guitar from this sum-mer. “She’s a good teacher.”

Ethan’s father Charles Barbour said he’s impressed with how well Ethan is doing on guitar. “He’s actually doing really well,” Barbour said.

When Ethan expressed interest in playing guitar, Barbour said he was supportive of his son’s deci-sion. “We thought it would be an opportunity for him to grow

a little bit and experience some-thing new,” Barbour said.

Neumann not only teaches guitar lessons to children during their lunch hours at St. Mary-St. Augustine but also invites stu-dents to her Belleville home for lessons.

She does guitar lessons on Tuesday and Thursday evenings and Saturday mornings. She charges a minimal fee of $5 per half-hour lesson for her guitar students.

“I stay busy,” Neumann said. “It keeps me out of trouble.”

Fifteen of her guitar students play during Masses.

Growing up, Neumann said she loved to sing and played the violin, and her father would always tell her she should play an instrument the family could sing with. She learned the guitar later in life.

“Now, if he’s looking down on this, he would be delighted,” she said.

Neumann was born and raised in St. Louis. She attended ele-mentary through high school at the Missouri School for the Blind. Neumann is legally blind, though she had surgery on her eyes in 1979 and saw a bird fly for the first time while in Ohio.

Neumann went to Rosati-Kain Catholic High School in St. Louis her senior year of high school to learn more about her faith and entered the convent in 1954.

She was welcomed by the Franciscan Sisters of Our Lady of Perpetual Help. Neumann said other communities didn’t want her due to her poor eyesight.

She started teaching in September 1956 and has taught ever since.

Why did she want to be a teach-er? “I love children,” Neumann said. And why does she continue to teach? “Same reason — I love children,” Neumann said.

She has two degrees: a bache-lor’s from Webster University in St. Louis and a master’s degree from Cardinal Stritch University in Wisconsin.

She taught students through-out the United States including in Kansas, Ohio, Michigan and New Mexico.

In Michigan, Neumann served as principal of a school for three years. However, she felt a prin-cipal should be able to drive and she cannot so she went back to teaching.

She came back to Illinois 18 years ago and began teaching

at St. Mary Catholic School in Belleville.

One of the best things about being in Belleville so long, Neumann said, is being able to watch the children grow up.

“It’s such a joy to see these young people,” she said. “Some of them are still in college, and some are married.”

One of her former students Clare Behrmann, 22, of Belleville, who attended St. Mary’s School, said she has many fond memo-ries of Neumann including when she shared her story about gain-ing some of her eyesight back through surgery.

“I remember thinking this woman has been through so much, but she still loves life and has her faith, and she loves what she does,” Behrmann said.

Neumann encouraged Behrmann’s love of music. “I really did enjoy having her,” Behrmann said of Neumann. “Although she was one of the stricter teachers, you could tell she really cared about her students and the suc-cess of students. She wanted kids to learn but have a good time.”

Neumann helped a once clum-sy boy named Billy learn to read, write, add numbers, recite prayers and walk up and down stairs at a school in West Frankfort, Ill., in the early 1960s.

That boy is now a priest — Monsignor Bill McGhee, 58, who serves the families of St. Augustine’s Catholic Church just as Neumann does.

“She challenged you to do your best,” McGhee recalled. “Sister’s attitude always to make you love your Lord and grow your faith. Sister still has the same mindset. It’s beautiful to see.”

McGhee said Neumann was supportive when he shared his desire to become a priest. He remembered her telling him: “If God wants it, it will happen.”

Neumann prepared McGhee for his first confession and first communion in 1962.

“It’s wild to think that now I’m working with her preparing chil-dren for first confession and first communion,” McGhee said. “It just blows your mind.”

Neumann was McGhee’s teacher in West Frankfort for

three grades — first, second and third.

They kept in touch over the years through Christmas cards. Both were pleased to learn they would be working together when McGhee came to Belleville in 2007.

“It’s a beautiful gift to be able to be work with her at this point in life,” McGhee said. “For me, she was such a foundational teacher during those early grades. It felt like with sister you got a start that set you on a solid foundation, and it carried on from there.”

“It’s really pleasure to be able to come back 50 years later and have this relationship we are now having,” Neumann told McGhee.

“The gift to be with sister is a great gift from God. Sister pours faith into everything,” McGhee said. “We are very blessed.”

80-year-old nun still teaching after nearly 60 yearsA5TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

NEWS TIPS: 882-0050

The NFL began targeting a new marketing demographic:

Women and girls.Samantha Gordon, a 9-year-

old girl who scored 35 touch-downs in a boys tackle league — and whose highlight video went viral — was celebrated as a hero by NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell.

He even invited her to his box during the Super Bowl XLVII in New Orleans.

“He thinks she is an inspira-tional story for football, youth football and the participation of girls in sports,” said an NFL spokesman.

It was artfully done, aimed right at a boy’s vulnerability: If a girl can do it, why can’t you?

And the league began to offer tailored jerseys for the first time to women, who make the deci-sions about spending in most American households.

But all those marketing strate-gies are threatened now because the world has been clicking on that video that went public the other day of running back Rice knocking his bride-to-be cold in that Atlantic City hotel elevator.

The NFL’s original punish-ment was a two-game suspen-sion for Rice, formerly of the Baltimore Ravens. But that was months ago, when all we saw was an earlier video: Rice drag-ging his now-wife into the hotel hallway, her legs limp, toe drag-ging. He hit her so hard that he knocked her out of her shoes.

And now, with fans watching a second video in which Rice throws a short left hook that put her on the floor, it’s time for the NFL to consider one more mar-keting idea to women.

The league should fire NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell.

He had a chance to resign. He didn’t take it. So fire him imme-diately.

And replace him with San Francisco 49ers fan and former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice as the first female commis-sioner of the National Football League.

The idea is going crazy on Twitter under the hashtag #thegoodrice. The Washington Post quipped this week that Condoleezza just might save the NFL.

And in 2002, Rice herself was quoted in The New York Times saying the NFL commissioner’s gig would be her dream job.

So why not start now?As the former secretary of

state, she knows about large bureaucracies that leverage bil-lions of dollars. She’s also quite familiar with corporate back-biting that takes place behind the scenes, as she did some of that herself.

And it’s clear after watching Norah O’Donnell of CBS News interview Goodell that he has to go.

Goodell said he had seen the first video of Rice dragging the woman along the ground. But he said hadn’t seen the second — the one showing that Jake LaMotta left hook, until this week, when his staff came to him “and said there’s new evi-dence that you need to see.”

Before that, Goodell said, “We had not seen any videotape of what had occurred in the eleva-tor.

“We assumed that there was a video. We asked for a video. But we were never granted that opportunity.”

That is simply not credible.Historically, the NFL has hired

many former FBI agents as cor-porate security. And the hotel industry wouldn’t deny the NFL that information.

If Goodell had wanted it, he could have seen it. Yet had he seen it, he couldn’t very well have given Ray Rice a measly two-game suspension, though he’s given other players harsher suspensions for other infrac-tions.

Since the second video sur-faced, the NFL has bounced Rice from the league indefi-nitely. Although Goodell says he might be reinstated if the league determines he has taken the proper steps.

“We were very open and hon-est,” Goodell said. “We didn’t get this right. That’s my respon-sibility and I’m accountable for that.”

Open and honest? That should be the name of a bar outside a Las Vegas sports book, with pay phones and a mean bartender named Lou who knows a guy at the pawn shop.

All this tells me that Goodell doesn’t know about Occam’s razor.

It’s named for a learned monk in the 1300s who studied logic. The friar determined that if there are two explanations for something, the simpler explana-tion is best.

The razor in Occam’s razor isn’t a blade for tonsuring a fri-ar’s scalp. It’s an idea, about cut-ting away that which is unneces-sary, like Goodell’s nonsense.

What should the NFL have determined when a woman was dragged from an elevator after it was known that violence was involved?

That Ray Rice put her there with his fist.

Goodell has to go.

John Kass is a columnist for the Chicago Tribune who also hosts a radio show on WLS-AM. His e-mail address is [email protected], and his Twitter handle is @john_kass.

Kasscontinued from page A4

Look for it every month.

Isn’t it time you led a Spry life?

TRANSCRIPTBULLETINTOOELE

A5

THE PIANO WORKSHOP

Call today to schedule your complimentary evaluation

435-830-5345

Serving Tooele County

• free piano evaluation and a free cost estimate for any work requested

• tuning and voicing • replacement of broken or chipped keys• repair or replacement of missing or

broken strings• any other needed mechanical repairs

or adjustments

We Can Make Your Sad Piano Happy Again

THE PIANO WORKSHOP

NEED CASH NOW?We Want to Make You a Loan!

$100-$3,000 TODAY!Gentry Finance • 435-843-8680

TOOELE APPLIED TECHNOLOGY COLLEGE

ATV ROUNDUP

Saturday, September 20, 2014 Stockton Park

8:00 am

Scholarship Fundraiser

Join us for a fun ATV/UTV ride to Jacob City!

GROUP DISCOUNTS AVAILABLE Children 10 and under are FREE

Entry includes continental breakfast; steak, potato and chili lunch; entry in a drawing for prizes!

LIVE Entertainment from local country band EXIT 99

SPONSORED BY:Proceeds will be donated to the TATC scholarship fund.

Festival of the Old WestFestival of the Old WestFestival of the Old WestGrab Your Partner... Step Back in Time

Experience life as it was...• Laundry by hand• Butter Churning• Trader’s Row• Military Encampment

• Fur History• Cannon Demonstration• Native American• Kid’s Activities

Sept 26-27-28 • 9am - DuskTooele City Complex (500 W. 400 N.)

20th Annual Tooele Mountain Man Rendezvous2nd Annual American Heritage Festival

Black Powder Fun Shoot

For more information call Blair Hope 801.554.0527

Shirlee Forrester 435.228.8184 or email [email protected]

A5

Page 6: 9-16-14 Transcript Bulletin

TUESDAY September 16, 2014TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETINA6

OBITUARIES

John W. “Jack” Baker

Dec. 23, 1926 – April 24, 2014

John Wayne (Jack) Baker, 87, of Marshall, Arkansas and of hum-ble Wyoming origins, died April 24, 2014 in Little Rock, Arkansas. He was born December 23, 1926, in Byron, Wyoming, to James Daniel and Lelia Pinckard Baker. He married Marilou Skroch on June 10, 1950. From that union they had three sons. They later divorced. Jack married Carolyn Reid Svalina on Nov. 18, 1977, and gained a daughter. Jack served in the European Campaign for the U.S. Army during WW II. After discharge and educa-tion, he pursued a career in the metals industry which allowed him and his family to travel the country while he utilized his professional skills. Jack’s church was enjoying the solitude and beauty of the Ozark Mountains surrounding his home and the company of his wife, animals, birds and nature in general. Jack

is survived by his wife Carolyn; sons: John W. (Tami) Baker, Erda, Utah, Patrick (Michelle) Baker, Tooele, Utah and Scott Baker, Stockton, California; daughter, Jackie (Larry) Dobrenz, Gillette, Wyoming; 11 grandchildren, 15 great-grandchildren; sis-ter, Patricia Easley of Hughson, California along with numerous nieces and nephews. He is pre-ceded in death by his parents

and two brothers and two sisters. Internment for Jack will be held Friday, Sept. 26, 2014, at 1 p.m. at the South Lincoln Cemetery in Kemmerer, Wyoming. A cel-ebration of Jack’s life will be held Saturday, Sept. 27, 2014, at the home of John and Tami Baker, 1075 E. Brookfield Ave. Erda, Utah at 1 p.m.

Cyril Moroni “Cy” Durfee

Cyril Moroni “Cy” Durfee, 97, died Sept. 11, 2014, at his daughter’s home in Cedar City, Utah. The funeral will be held Saturday, Sept. 20, at noon in the Grantsville 7th Ward building on West Street. Viewing will be prior to the service at 11 a.m. He will be buried next to his beloved wife in the Grantsville Cemetery. Cy was born Sept. 3, 1917 in Grantsville, Utah, to Franklin Ether and Vendla Amelia Anderson Durfee. He lived in Idaho, Nevada and Grantsville, Utah. He is a Veteran of World War II, having served in Alaska and Washington. May 5, 1947, he married Enid Lue Eyre. He began working at the

Tooele Army Depot in 1950 as a mechanic and retired in 1982 as a quality control supervisor. He enjoyed sports and coached

and umpired boys’ baseball dur-ing the ’50s and ’60s. Cy was preceded in death by his wife, Enid; all of his brothers and their

wives: Marc (Audrey), Ken (Ida), Marion (Mary), Jay (Bannie), and Lowell (Ida) Durfee; his sister and her husband Chleo (Wally) Boyer; and one great-greatgrand-child Liam. Survivors include his children: Milo (Renee) Durfee, Marge Durfee, Sherry (Sheldon) Stephens, Terry (Vicky) Durfee, Esther (Hector) Zamora and Tamera (John) Andersen; 17 grandchildren and 33 great-grandchildren; and many neph-ews and nieces who truly love and respect him. Arrangements are being handled by Southern Utah Mortuary. Online con-dolences can be sent to www.sumortuary.com.

DEATH NOTICEGayle V. Helm

Gayle V. Helm passed away at her home on Sept. 15, 2014. A full obituary will appear in Thursday’s edition of the Transcript-Bulletin. For fur-ther information contact Tate Mortuary at 435-882-0676.

Jamie Steadman BairdJamie Steadman Baird was

born Jan. 1, 1968, and passed away during the wee hours of the morning on Sept. 11, 2014, at the Intermountain Medical Center in Salt Lake City. Jamie was the daughter of Gary W. Steadman and Sharon Wardle Steadman. Her mother died when she was 3 years old, and she was raised by her father and her second mother, Mary Potter Steadman in Tooele. She attended Tooele High School and graduated in 1986. She loved her participation in Sha-Ronns, the drill team named after her first mother. Jamie always loved to dance. She married Duane Evans and gave birth to her first son Duane “Blake” Evans. They divorced but remained life-long friends. As a single mom, she went to school and became an RN with a specialty in labor and delivery, and was an exceptional and caring nurse. She and David Baird (deceased) were married

and later sealed in the Salt Lake Temple. They had Zachary Gary Baird and Courtney Baird. Jamie suffered from many medical ail-ments throughout the last years of her life and was lovingly cared for by her children and long-time friend Bradley Myers. In spite of illnesses, she was a happy and caring person and loved to be in

the middle of all activities. Her signature was arriving late for every occasion with a big smile on her face. She is survived by her children; Blake and Brittany Evans, her adored grandchild Bentley Drake, Zachary and Courtney Baird, her dear friend; Brad Meyers, her parents; Gary and Mary Steadman, her siblings; Julie (Steve) Lyman, Diana (Andy) Law, Lori (Bennett) Barcon, David (Michelle) Steadman, Teri (Alan) Edmunds, Jana Whittaker, and Michael Steadman, plus many nieces, nephews, aunts, uncles, cousins and friends. Funeral ser-vices will be held at the Tooele Stake Center, 253 S. 200 East, on Wednesday, Sept. 17, at 11 a.m. with a viewing at 10 a.m. before the service. A viewing will also be held Tuesday, Sept. 16, in the same building from 6-8 p.m. Interment at the Tooele City Cemetery.

NOTES OF APPRECIATION

Frances Gallegos On behalf of the family of

Frances Gallegos, we would like to thank all family and friends so much for the kindness shown to us all during the passing of our mother. The phone calls, visits, flowers, cards, money were very much appreciated. Thank you Diane and crew from the Eagles for serving and preparing the luncheon.

— Love from The Gallegos Family.

apartment complex the district owned in Wendover, Utah and sold last month for $269,000.

The district is in the process of closing on the sale of an addi-tional apartment complex it owned in Wendover, Utah. The district also owns four acres of property on Tooele City’s east bench that is listed for sale.

The two apartment com-plexes were built by the district in 1984 for employee housing. In September 2013 the district decided to get out of the rental business and put the two apart-ment complexes on the [email protected]

Football continued from page A1

PRESTON, Conn. (AP) — As if on cue, the morning clouds broke on a recent Sunday, send-ing rays of bright sunshine into the sanctuary at the Preston City Congregational Church just as the reverent procession started making its way to the front to dedicate the newly renovated historic church.

It was light that has gone unnoticed for the past 40 years, as a utilitarian drop ceiling con-cealed the vaulted roofline above the front portion of the sanctu-ary. The original 24 windows that line the top of the walls now let in the light from above.

“This is the day God has made possible,” the Rev. Stanley White said at the start of the service that featured a dedication cer-emony for the $170,000 renova-tion. It was the first time most of the overflow crowd of 186 people had seen the renovated sanctu-

ary. The church held Sunday ser-vices in the lower level hall since the July 4 weekend.

“The sun is shining in just the right places,” a parishioner noted as the dedication service began.

The builders of the 1886 church likely designed it that way, with the cross-shaped sanc-tuary defined by broad arches, a giant stained-glass window at the rear and smaller clear win-dows with stained highlights elsewhere, including those just below the roof.

But when the energy crisis hit America in 1974, with gas ration-ing and quick decisions to cut power costs, the vaulted ceiling and its brilliant light were sacri-ficed in the name of conserva-tion.

In June, the congregation decided it was time to use more modern technology to save energy and to restore the origi-nal sanctuary design. Building Committee member Lynwood Crary said insulated glass storm windows were added to the exterior of the windows. Blown-in insulation was added to the walls. The giant stained-glass window behind the pews also received a face-lift, with rotted wood replaced and reinforce-ment bars added to better secure the Biblical scene depicted.

White led a double-line pro-cession — a rare occasion in a Congregational church — that carried a giant Bible and the American and Christian flags

back to their proper places.“It’s not traditional for us as

Congregationalists to make such a big deal of processions,” White said.

But he relayed the Biblical story of Solomon who accepted the daunting task of building a new temple and celebrated its completion with a grand proces-sion.

“It’s important to bring the Bible back into the sanctuary,” White said.

More important, White and other speakers at Sunday’s ser-vice and dedication said, was the presence of so many parishioners shining their own light on the occasion and on the lives of oth-ers. White said the Preston City Congregational Church is not the building and grounds, but those who gather there to worship God and serve the community.

“There is no place God wishes to reside more than in our minds and in our hearts,” White said.

Congregational churches operate autonomously, without the hierarchical structure com-mon to the Roman Catholic Church and other religions, but the Preston City church did not stand alone in the renovation project.

The church received a $60,000 low-interest loan from the Fellowship of Northeast Congregational Christian Churches. The organization is a loose affiliation of 42 churches in Connecticut, Massachusetts,

Rhode Island and New York that provides support to members in the form of small grants, loans, summer camps and retreats, said Barbara Erlendson, executive secretary fellowship executive secretary.

Erlendson too noted the “brightness” that shines from the Preston City congregation in its dedication to the church and their Christian faith. She said the fellowship received more thank-you notes from Preston than she has seen from any other congre-gation.

Crary said funding for the project came from several sourc-es, including church savings, a fundraiser that raised $12,000 and several memorial donations. The Crary family purchased the four new chandeliers in mem-ory of his mother, Phyllis Crary. Stella Dawley donated new pew and seat cushions in memory of her husband, Arthur Dawley, and speakers were donated in the memory of Bea Shaw by her family.

The building committee not only oversaw the work done by Mattern Construction, but got their hands dirty reconstruct-ing the front decorative rail-ing, installing lights and wiring. Building committee member Tom Ames “gave up his summer” to coordinate the project as clerk of the works.

“My wife wants you to find me another big project,” Ames told the congregation.

Congregationalists celebrate renovated church

Opinions Shared Freely.

(Yours and Ours.)

Open ForumEvery Tuesday

TRANSCRIPTBULLETIN

TOOELE

If it happens here, read about it here.

Subscribe Today • 882-0050

TRANSCRIPTBULLETIN

TOOELE

A6 OBITUARY

Frank

MOHLMANAttorney at Law

FREEConsultation

forWills & Trusts

493 W. 400 N. Tooele882-4800

www.tooelelawoffice.com

KNEE PAIN? You DON’T have to live with it!

��������������

�������������������

����������������

�����������������������������������������������

�������������������������������������������������������������� New Tooele Location: 2356 N. 400 East, Bldg B, Suite103

Board Certified Specialist

435-728-0711Call today to reserve your seat !

2356 N. 400 East, Bldg B, Suite103

The Most Advanced NON-SURGICALTreatment to Reduce or Eliminate Knee Pain!

FREE Seminar!��� �th at 6:30 PM

SEATING IS LIMITED

Refreshmentswill be Served

www.motionmed.com

��� �th at 6:306:30 PMSEPT 17 • 6:30PM

Come join us for a fun/healthy morning.Walk any distance

you choose!

Prizes and medals!

Free senior event. To sign up please call

435.843.4110

Come join us for a fun/

Senior MileTuesday, September 23 • 9-11am

Skyline Park, Tooele

A6 OBITUARY

Celebrating America’s Love of Food

Find it here every month in the Tooele Transcript-Bulletin

TRANSCRIPTBULLETINTOOELE

Celebrating America’s

If it happens here, read about it here.

Page 7: 9-16-14 Transcript Bulletin

TUESDAY September 16, 2014

Editor’s note: “Matters of faith” is a column that provides local religious leaders a place to write about how their respective faiths provide hope, courage and strength in these modern times.

This last summer I went on a trip with my mother to Colorado. We visited

a number of beautiful towns, including Steamboat Springs, Estes Park, and Vail.

A month later, I went with Fr. Martin Diaz, who is the rector of the Cathedral of the Madeleine, to Alaska. Fr. Martin had been rector at the Cathedral in Anchorage for a number of years when he was a Dominican priest, so he was my guide. We traveled to Denali National Park and then to Fairbanks. We then went to Homer and Seward. In between we spent a good deal of time in Anchorage.

All of the places we visited were built for people to live, to recreate, and to enjoy. What was common with all of these towns, besides being in beautiful loca-tions, was that they had trails. They had trails for people to stroll, ride their bikes, walk their dog(s), run, etc. Trails make such a difference for those who live there or for those who are enjoy-ing their vacation.

When I am traveling with someone, I am usually the first one up. Instead of bothering my traveling companion like a cat who is ready to be fed, I take a morning walk and find a coffee shop to do morning prayer and read rather than wait in the same room for them to get going while also trying not to be frustrated that this person is not only wast-ing his/her day, but mine as well — I don’t think vacations are for rest; they are for seeing cool places. If you want rest, stay at home and sleep. With trails and nice coffee shops, this problem goes away. My traveling compan-ion is happy. I am happy. Trails make for a happier universe.

Many nice towns in Utah have great trails. Actually, my last three parishes were within a short walk to trails. My first par-ish in Midvale and my third one just west of downtown Salt Lake City, were close to the Jordan

River Trail. Park City, my second, wow, there is no city with better trails, unless you are in northern Europe. The mountain biking trails are primo in the summer and in the winter they maintain amazing cross country ski trails.

As people who are formed from earth, we need the earth, we need to encounter nature. We require beautiful places to lift our spirits. My first two years in college, I was a forestry major at Utah State University in Logan. I took numerous classes where we studied our need as human beings for natural environments. Not only do we need wood from our forests or healthy forest eco-systems to maintain the water-shed, but we need forests for us to wander in.

Frederick Olmsted designed Central Park in New York City as well as the campuses of UC Berkley and Stanford (my former running trails) with this primar-ily in mind. He knew that people need places with trees to recre-ate. It not only raises the quality of life, but it also reduces crime, domestic violence, and just makes people get along better.

Having nice places to walk also makes those communities more desirable to live. When walking, running, or biking on the Jordan River Trail, it is nice to see a diversity of folks from different socio-economic back-grounds. It is not one group that uses the trails. I think that every major city in Utah has trails including smaller ones, like Cedar City, Moab, Richfield, and Logan.

What is important as well is to limit trails to pedestrians. Motorized vehicles, whether they are trucks, ATVs, motorcycles, etc., make being on a trail dan-gerous for all and just make the experience poorer.

Some of the most serene (and annoying) times I have had in Tooele has been after a good snowstorm and I have the time to go cross country skiing in

Settlement Canyon. Everything is white. There is hardly a sound except for the sound of the ani-mals and the wind in the trees. The air is crisp and clean — and then you hear a truck, ATV or snowmobile coming up the trail. Everything changes. The trail is packed down or ruined, the sound is deafening, and the smell of gas fumes is repulsive.

I could compare it to having a nice evening dinner with friends, and then some drunk and loud person attaches himself to your group and your evening may not be ruined, but it is changed. In addition the person on the offensive machine many times (just going by percentages of our relatively poor heath here in the county) has high blood pressure, high cholesterol, and is probably pre-diabetic if not already there, and really needs to rely less on loud three-cycle motors and gas.

Instead, she or he needs to use those legs and lungs that God gave to them. She or he really should make less noise in order to hear the birds and the sounds of nature and to make less of an impact upon others, the trail, and the environment.

What is missing in Tooele are trails. Sure, there are trails on BLM land east of Droubay Road and I use them as well as the other mountain bikers in the area. There is also a short little trail called the Dark Trail in Settlement Canyon that is cov-ered with cow and horse excre-ment.

We really don’t have acces-sible trails for those who are not good mountain bike riders who cannot navigate our rocky and steep terrain. We have roads, but one prays to God that she or he doesn’t get mowed down by a drunk/stoned/distracted/tex-ting/yelling at kids/talking on cell phone/somewhat blind usu-ally driving a huge SUV designed so that crunching the bike and skeleton of the unfortunate bicyclist/runner/walker does not make a bump so that the driver can continue to do what they were doing automobile enthu-siast.

Trails make people want to live here, so property values go up. Since people want to live

here, businesses want to come increasing the tax base. Property values go up and more people live here, so there is more money for schools. The schools get more money, so teacher to student ratios go down. Test scores go up and more than 15 percent of the kids are actually ready for their first day of college.

Since there are good, nice, and accessible trails, people are encouraged to walk, run, or bike so obesity rates go down. People are thinner, healthier, and hap-pier. They have to take less meds to keep their blood pressure and cholesterol low and their blood sugar just right. The tea party folks are happy (or just less angry) because we don’t have to spend as much on Medicare and health care in general. Trails lead to happiness. People love each other more. The jails are empty. There is full employment. People and dogs are dancing in the street, etc.

I tell people from former parishes who ask me where I am now that I live in Park City West. They ask where is that? Tooele has the potential to be a great town, since it is on the nice side of the Oquirrhs (the side that hasn’t been destroyed for eternity), has a nice view of the Great Salt Lake, and could be a cute little city (hint: big box stores and strip malls are not charming). It is on the bench, so there are limitless possibilities for recreation.

We also have many canyons that could be amazing (especial-ly with fewer beer cans, big gulp cups and fast food wrappers). Tooele remains a diamond in the rough. She needs a make-over. She needs love. She needs peo-ple who live in her with vision who understand what makes life worth living. This will happen sooner or later. I just hope it is sooner.

Rev. Dinsdale is the priest at St. Marguerite Catholic Church in Tooele.

What is missing in Tooele is a good system of pedestrian trails

TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN A7

MATTERS OF FAITH

Samuel DinsdaleGUEST COLUMNIST

Samuel Dinsdale

and Stockton are hoping to give something back.

Daniel Pacheco, one of the organizers, said the event started as an idea to host a barbecue for the firefighters who helped push back on the Anaconda Fire, but quickly grew as a plan to thank all first responders in the area.

“It’s just kind of evolved,” he said. “We just said, there’s got to be a way to say thank you. No other agenda, just thank you.”

Pacheco said so far the response from community mem-bers wanting to help out has sur-passed that of the prospective attendees, which he suspects is because first responders, both those who are paid and those who volunteer, aren’t accus-tomed to the attention.

“They’re just not used to it,” he said. “If someone’s hurt, they take them to the hospital, and they’re done. If there’s an accident, the sheriff’s there, he guides traffic, they’re gone. It’s not just the firefighters. It’s the people who responded to the car accidents that happened last night. It’s the helicopter that’s going to have to land tomorrow. That’s what we want to thank.”

On Saturday, the “thank you” Dutch oven dinner will be held in Pine Canyon from 4 p.m. to 8 p.m. A specific location will be announced depending on the weather.

Community members and businesses interested in help-ing out or donating can find more information at tofr.weebly.com. All donations should be made through the Tooele County Chamber of Commerce.

All first responders and their significant others are invited, and are encouraged to RSVP by clicking the link on the website to give organizers an estimation of how much food should be [email protected]

Crews continued from page A1

OPEN HOUSEFOR SALE BY OWNER

SATURDAYSEPTEMBER 20TH10:00AM-2:00PM

1235 EAST 940 NORTH, TOOELEFor more information 435-224-2970

Afterschool programs forYouth and Teens ages 6 - 18.

AnnualMembership

$10

olfor

d Teens8.

$

Join the Club!Tooele Club

438 W 400 N

Teen Center102 N 7th St.

Tooele, UT 84074435.843.5719

When School is Out

The Club is In!TooeleClub.org

TooeleBoys & Girls

ClubHomework Help | Computers | Games | Arts | and More!

A7

Heating and CoolingHHeeaating and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and ting and CCCCoolingoolingoolingoolingoolingoolingoolingoolingoolingoolingoolingoolingoolingoolingoolingoolingooling

$10OFF A/C orFurnace tune up

Use the right amount of power and keep your energy bills down.

Install a NEWAir Conditioner

for as low as $34 A MONTHwith a 10 year warranty!

435-843-4482

CAR SEAT CHECKPOINT September 18 • 10AM-12:30PM

Tooele City Library North Parking Lot

Child Passenger Safety Week is ���������������������������������child passenger safety technicians will be available to provide free, hands-on, car seat education & inspection! Along with child passenger safety there will also be information provided on heat stroke prevention and awareness, driveway safety, and trunk entrapment prevention. The goal is to make sure all parents and caregivers are correctly securing all children in the right car restraint for their ages and sizes. Every year, thousands of children

are tragically injured or killed in car crashes. Car crashes are a leading cause of death for children age 1 to 13. Correct use is crucial because kids are not as secure in cars as they should be. Many parents and caregivers move their children to the next restraint type too soon. Hands-on inspections and instruction are important.Parents and caregivers need to make certain they and their kids are buckled up properly on every trip, every time. Proper use of car seats, booster seats and seat belts will help decrease deaths and injuries.

Tooele City Library North Parking Lot

Child Passenger Safety Week is are tragically injured or killed

JOIN US FOR A CAR SEAT CHECKPOINT, STORY TIME, BOUNCE HOUSE, REDUCED PRICE CAR SEATS & REFRESHMENTS!

www.tooelehealth.org151 North Main

A7

Page 8: 9-16-14 Transcript Bulletin

TooeleFamily history fairTheme: become a fan of family history. When: Saturday, Nov. 8, 2014, from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Tooele Valley Family History Center Building at 751 N. 520 East in Tooele.

Suicide prevention trainingCome learn how you can help. These trainings will be held on a regular basis to meet the critical need in our community with increased suicidal ideation and depressive factors. Next meeting is 7 p.m. on Sept. 16 at Tooele City Hall. Sign up now and save your spot, call or email Heidi, 843-2188 or [email protected].

AARP smart driver classClass will be held Sept. 19, 2014, at Mountain West Medical Center located at 2055 N. Main St., Tooele. Registration is at 9 a.m., Lunch at 11:30 a.m. Sponsored by MWMC Senior Circle. The cost is $20 for non-mem-bers, discount of $5 for members. The class will conclude at 2:30 p.m. All par-ticipants must sign up prior to date of class. For more information and to sign up call: 435-843-3690 or 843-3691

Tooele Community ChoirAre you up for a challenge? Join the Tooele Community Choir and Orchestra as we prepare for the 30th annual presentation of Fredrick Handel’s “Messiah.” Rehearsal will begin Oct. 12 at the LDS Chapel on 10th West and Utah Ave. in Tooele at 7 p.m. This is an inter-faith community choir and orchestra. All singers and musicians are invited. For more information, contact Betta Nash at 882-5107 or Dave Young at 882-2094.

Tooele County Choral SocietyThe Tooele County Choral Society is once again holding open auditions for singers to join us for our 10th-annual Christmas season and beyond. We are looking for both men and women to join us. We rehearse every Saturday night from 7-9 p.m. Please call Denise McCubbins at (435) 224-5032 for audi-tion information.

Historic Benson GristmillThe Benson Gristmill will be open this year. We need volunteers and dona-tions. Please contribute $1, or more, for each family member. The Indians, trappers, explorers, pioneers, farmers, ranchers and miners all camped, rested and got water at Twin Springs. Please bring donations to the boxes at the Benson Gristmill.

GrantsvilleWater sharesAgricultural users have been issued an additional 1/2 turn. This makes a total of 4 1/2 turns for the season. Residential users need to keep track of their own meter readings. You are allotted 250,000 gallons per share. Extra shares need to be paid for before we shut the system down in October to avoid penalty fees. Please contact the office at 884-3451 if you have any questions.

HomecomingThe Class of 1995 will be honored this year at Homecoming. Information about this event can be located on the Grantsville High School facebook page, as well as contacting Liz Smith@ [email protected] or calling the school 884-4500. Lunch will be served for the alumni starting at 11:15 in the commons and meeting with classmates in the library. Parade starts at 4:30 starting on Center Street, traveling east on Main (SR-138) turning down Quirk and concluding at the high school. The following is a list of the events for the week: Monday: Hall decoratingTuesday: Powder Puff starting at 4 p.m.Wednesday: Queen Assembly starting at 9:15 a.m. in the auditorium (Voting during both lunches with winners be announced at the end of the day)/Powder Tuff 3 p.m.Friday: Alumni luncheon 11 a.m.Assembly 1 p.m. New GymParade: 4:30 p.m.Fan Fest: 5 p.m.Game: 7 p.m. GHS vs. Carbon Dinos

Red Cross blood driveSept. 29, 8:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Grantsville High School, 155 E. Cowboy Drive.

Clark Farmers MarketThe Farmers Market at Clark Historic Farm will run Saturdays through the end of September, 8:30-11:30 a.m. Meet friends and shop, or sell local produce, crafts, jewerly and more in the pleasant market atmosphere under the trees at the farm. Vendors can contact Shaun Johnson at [email protected].

Family History CenterGreet your ancestors free at the Grantsville Family History Center, 117 E. Cherry St. All are welcome with consultants there to assist you. Open Mondays noon to 4 p.m., and Tuesday through Thursday noon to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m.

Stansbury ParkBenson GristmillThe Pumpkin Walk is returning to the Benson Gristmill on Oct. 17-18. We are looking for groups wanting to enter our Pumpkin Display Contest. We also need entertainers, food vendors, volunteers and various other vendors who would like to have a booth at this event. Please contact Jodi at the Mill from Thursday to Saturday, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. or by email [email protected]

The Historic Benson Gristmill Restoration Committee is seeking donations from individuals, groups, and businesses to help with restoration efforts and the operation of the historic Gristmill site. Donations may be sent to Tooele County Benson Gristmill Fund, 47. S. Main Street, Tooele, Utah 84074. For more information contact Mike 602-826-9471.

Red Cross blood driveSept. 29, 8:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Stansbury High School, 5300 N. Aberdeen Lane.

SchoolsScholar AcademyFall Fiesta on Friday, Sept. 19, 2014 5-8 p.m. at the Scholar Academy Charter School, 928 N. 100 East behind Macey’s in Tooele. Games, prizes, food, bouncehouse, fun. Open to the public.

Settlement Canyon ElementarySettlement Canyon Elementary Community Council will be Thursday, Sept. 18, at 5 p.m. in the library.

TJHS Ghost story concertTJHS will have a ghost storytelling con-cert titled “A Haunted Evening” on Oct. 10-11. It will be a compilation of ghost stories and Halloween themed scenes. Professional Storytellers as well as student tellers will be performing. The Professionals will be working with the students and it is going to be an awe-some experience for everyone. Auditions for the students are on the 16th, but then we should have everyone ready to go around the first week of October.

Miss Karma’s Retirement PartyMonday, Sept. 22, from 5-8 p.m. at Woodland Park in Stansbury Park (cor-ner of Spyglass Dr. and Miller Circle). Come wish her well. Please submit your photos with Miss Karma at Facebook page: “Miss Karma’s Retirement Party.” Please consider donating to her future mission fund: https://www.giveforward.com/fundraiser/kdg5/miss-karma-s-mission

Grantsville Elementary School Community Council Meeting will be held Thursday September 18, 2014, at 4 p.m. in the Library Any interested parents are welcome to attend.

TJHS Community Council ElectionsThe next TJHS Community Council Meeting will be held Thursday, Sept. 18 at 6:30 p.m. All parents are invited and encouraged to attend. The main business item will be elections. There are openings on the TJHS Community Council for two parent members. You may file to run for this position by contacting the TJHS office or by attending the meeting on September 18th. You may also be nominated to run. Committee members must have a student enrolled at TJHS during the first year they are elected. Terms are for two years. Voting will be open Sept 18, 19 and 22.

Chinese immersion at NorthlakeNorthlake Elementary is excited to offer Mandarin Chinese as part of the Dual Language Immersion Program. Currently we have openings on a first-come, first-served basis. Don’t miss out on this amazing opportunity to have your stu-dent speak a fluent second language. Research is clear on the benefits of speaking a second language. Please contact Bryce or Jen at 435-833-1940 or stop by the school for details.

Excelsior Academy toursCurious about charter schools? Want to know more about Excelsior Academy? Tours are held each Wednesday at 8:30 a.m. School tours cover a range of topics such as the Excelsior Academy Philosophy and Vision, Direct Instruction, CHAMPS and the character development program. There is also an opportunity to observe the school’s unique group settings. Come and tour the building and have any questions answered. Everyone is welcome, 124 E. Erda Way, Erda. 882-3062.

Gardening2015 Garden Tour Applications and NominationsThe Master Gardeners are accepting applications and nominations for the 2015 Spring Garden Tour that will be held on Saturday, June 13, 2015. If you have a great yard you’d like to be considered for the Tour, or know some-one that does, contact Jay Cooper at [email protected] or 435-830-1447.

Fall Crop Storage BasicsSponsored by the Tooele Master Gardeners and presented by Dana Cooper. Attend this free class Wednesday, Sept. 24, from 7-8 p.m. at the USU Extension Office at 151 N. Main Street, Tooele. Learn the vari-ous ways to store and preserve your fall harvest. For more information, contact Jay Cooper at 435-830-1477 or [email protected].

Plant Diagnostic ClinicFrom now through September, the USU Extension and the Tooele Master Gardeners conduct a free Plant Pest Diagnostic Clinic every Wednesday from 3-6 p.m. at the USU Extension Office, 151 N. Main Street, in Tooele. Bring in your horticulture samples for diagnosis and get your questions answered.

Take the pressure out of pres-sure canning Class offered by the USU Extension held on Tuesday, Sept. 23, 2014, from 6-9 p.m. If you’re intimidated by your pres-sure canner, this class is for you. Learn how to safely use your pressure cooker while you are canning two jars of low acid foods. Cost is $6. Session is held at the USU Extension Office kitchen at 151 N. Main, Tooele. Register at http://pressurecanningusu.eventbrite.com or contact Darlene at 435-840-4404 or [email protected].

TATCHeavy Duty DieselThe Heavy Duty Diesel Technician pro-gram is now accepting new students. Utah wage for entry level technicians is $14.46-$18.85 per hour. Enroll today and start right away. Call Student Services at 435-248-1800 for more information.

Scholarship fundraiserTooele Applied Technology College’s Scholarship fundraiser the Annual ATV Roundup has been rescheduled for Sept. 20, 2014. Mark your calendars and join us for this exciting ride.

EducationAdult EducationMonday, Wednesday, 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., Thursday, 8 a.m. to 4 p.m., Friday, 8 a.m. to noon. ESL class Tuesday and Thursday, 6-8 p.m. Adult Education will

be closed Oct. 16, 17, 31; Nov. 26-28; Dec. 22 to Jan. 2. Dec. 19 is the last day of the term.

Utah Hunter Education CoursesClasses at Tooele County Health Building at 151 N. Main Street Sept. 9, 11, 16, 17, 18 and range Sept. 20. Range times to be announced. State law requires students to attend all sessions of class. All students must purchase a hunter education voucher for $10. For more information, call Gene at 882-4767 or Bryan at 882-6795.

Network meetingsLooking to obtain or improve your employment? Come join the Tooele Networking Group and learn job seeking techniques, how to market yourself, get support and actually search job leads. Every Thursday at 7 p.m. at the Tooele LDS Employment Resource Center locat-ed next to Deseret Industries. Everyone is welcome.

Online coursesOnline courses in Network+ and Security+ IT are designed for the IT pro-fessional seeking to upgrade their skills and knowledge of networking and secu-rity, and prepares you for the CompTIA Network+ and Security+ exams. Call the TATC at 248-1800 for more information or to enroll.

Adult educationGet your high school diploma this year. All classes required for a high school diploma, adult basic education, GED preparation and English as a second language are available. Register now to graduate — just $50 per semester. Located at 211 Tooele Blvd., call 833-8750. Adult education classes are for students 18 and over.

ESOLESOL conversational classes are held Tuesdays and Thursdays. ESOL students may also come anytime the center is open for individualized study. Registration is $50 per semester. Call 833-8750 for more information.

ChurchesThe Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day SaintsTo find a meeting house and time of worship for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, go to http://mor-mon.org/meetinghouse or contact 435-850-8211.

BYU Adult Religion Class start Sept. 2 and run through Dec. 2, 2014, on Tuesday evenings from 7-8:30 p.m. Subject: Doctrine and Covenants. Location: Grantsville Seminary building. Subject taught by Darin Griffith. Tuition is $21 per course or $2.50 per lecture. Registration at the door 15 minutes before class.

Berean Full Gospel ChurchWe invite you to discover how God’s Word can transform your life and provide you with the answers for questions and for problems you may be struggling to overcome. Come join us this Sunday morning for our 10 a.m. worship service where we will assemble in praise, share testimonies and explore worship in ways that strive to highlight the greatness of God. After our morning praise and wor-ship time we enter into a one-hour Bible Study at 11 a.m. Attend with us Sunday mornings at 635 N. Main St., (Phil’s Glass), or call 435-578-8022 for more information.

First Baptist ChurchWhat does Jesus say about everyday situations? That’s what we’ll learn in a series through the Gospels in a chrono-logical order of Jesus’ life. Join us in learning and in worship of the Lord, and serve him by serving those around us. Sunday Bible study: 9:45 a.m. Worship: 11 a.m. Tooele First Baptist — 580 S. Main St.; 882-2048

United Methodist ChurchFall Boo-Tique: The Boo-tique will be held Oct. 10-11. If you would like to have a space to sell your craft, contact Glenice Moore at 435-830-1443 for more information.

Tooele United Methodist Church ser-vices are held on Sundays at 11 a.m. Please check our website, tooelecumc.org, or call Tooele UMC’s office at 882-1349 or Pastor Debi’s cell at 801-651-2557 for more info. We are located at 78 E. Utah Ave. in Tooele.

Church of ChristChurch of Christ meets at 430 W. Utah Ave. Bible class, Sunday at 10 a.m. and worship from 11 a.m. to noon. Wednesday Bible class at 7 p.m. We seek to be the Lord’s church estab-lished about 33 AD. Jesus is our only head of the church, headquarters are heaven. Come and grow with us. Call 882-4642.

Cornerstone BaptistPassion for God, compassion for people at 276 E. 500 North in Tooele, phone: 882-6263. Come as you are this Sunday, where you can hear a message from the Bible and meet new friends. Service times: Bible study (for all ages) 9:45 a.m.; morning worship 11 a.m.; evening worship 6 p.m.; WiseGuys chil-dren’s program 6 p.m. Nursery provided for all services, and children’s church during morning worship. WiseGuys Program during evening worship.

Mountain of Faith LutheranWe’re a healthy, growing congregation who welcomes newcomers and reaches out to those in need. Join us for worship Sunday mornings at 10 a.m., 560 S. Main, Tooele. We treat the word of God with respect without taking ourselves too seriously. Check us out on Facebook by searching for Mountain of Faith Lutheran Church. Please join us for meaningful worship that is also casual and relaxed. For more information, call 882-7291.

St. Barnabas’ EpiscopalWeekly service of word, prayer and sac-rament followed by fellowship. Sunday mornings at 10 a.m. St. Barnabas’ Episcopal Church, 1784 N. Aaron Drive, Tooele. Phone: 882-4721. Email: [email protected]. Web at www.stbarnabasepiscopal.org. You are God’s beloved child, beautifully created in God’s own image. Whatever your his-tory, wherever you are in life’s journey, the Episcopal Church welcomes you.

Spanish servicesLa Iglesia Biblica Bautista de Tooele le invita a sus servicios en espanol Jueves 6 p.m., Domingos 2 p.m. We invite you

to their Spanish services on Thursday at 6 p.m. and Sunday at 2 p.m. Come to know a church that focused in the word of God rather than the emotions. God loves you and he wants to reveal himself to you. Located at 276 E. 500 North, Tooele. Call 840-5036, rides provided.

St. MargueriteSt. Marguerite Catholic Community welcomes you to worship with us. Our liturgy schedule is as follows: Worship schedule: Saturday Vigil 5 p.m., Sunday 8 a.m. (Spanish), 10:30 a.m., 12:30 p.m. Mon-Fri: 9 a.m. Office hours 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. from Mon-Fri. Closed Tuesday. Sunday school 9 a.m. (435) 882-3860. Elementary and Jr. High- (435) 882-0081. Call 435-882-3860. St. Marguerite Catholic Elementary School can be reached at 435-882-0081. We are located on the corner of Seventh Street and Vine Street.

Brit-Ammi KahalCovenant People Assembly are teach-ing the Hebrew roots of the Christian faith. Visitors welcome on Saturdays at 1 p.m., 37 S. Main Street, Tooele. Call 843-5444 for more information.

Bible Baptist ChurchThe folks at Bible Baptist Church would like to invite you to some old fashioned church services with singing from the old fashioned hymns and messages from the old fashioned KJV Bible. Some things should never change. Sunday Service times: Sunday School, 10 a.m.; gospel hour, 11 a.m.; Bible study, 12:30 p.m.; Wednesday evening services, 6 p.m. Contact Pastor Jeff Sinner at 840-2152.

Mountain View Baptist ChurchWe would like to invite you to discover what God’s plan and purpose is for your life. The Bible contains all of the answers for life’s questions. Come and join us this Sunday for our adult Bible study and graded Sunday School which starts at 9:45 a.m. Our worship service begins at 11 a.m. We also have a Bible study time each Sunday at 6 p.m. We meet on Wednesdays at 7 p.m. for prayer time. Bring your needs and let us pray together for God’s help. Mountain View Baptist Church meets at the Eastgate Plaza in Grantsville, Suite 2C. Join us.

Stansbury Park Baptist ChurchPlease join us each Sunday morning at 10 a.m. for Worship Services and Bible Study at the Stansbury Park Clubhouse (next to the SP Swimming Pool). For details, please call us at 830-1868 or go to www.stansburyparkbc.org.

First Lutheran ChurchFirst Lutheran Church, on the corner of 7th and Birch, would like to invite you to hear of God’s grace and the love of Christ, who died to forgive you of your sins and attain salvation on your behalf. Worship at 10 a.m., Sunday School at 11:15 a.m., on the second sunday of the month, worship at 3 p.m.

New Life Christian FellowshipWe invite you to worship and serve Jesus with us. Our clothing closet and food pantry is open from noon to 3 p.m. every Tuesday to Thursday at 411 E. Utah Ave. Programs for kids, teens, women and men are also available every week. Sunday services are in the Stansbury High School café at 10 a.m. and at our Tooele building at 9 a.m., 11 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. Come join us. Find out more by calling 843-7430 or visiting www.NLOT.org.

New Life Christian Fellowship is hosting a Women’s Conference Sept. 19-20. The cost is $40. For more information please call the office 435-843-7430 or go to www.nlot.org.

Tooele Christian FellowshipSunday School 9:45 a.m., Worship Service 11 a.m. Services are held at 40 N. Main, former Stowes Family Music building. For more information, call 435-224-3392 or www.tooelechristianfellow-ship.org. Parking and entrance in back of building.

CharityMedical equipment neededTooele and Grantsville Senior Centers are in need of donated medical equip-ment to be used for seniors in need. New or gently used items needed are wheelchairs, walkers, canes or other items that may be useful to our seniors. Contact Debbie Winn at the Tooele cen-ter, 435 843-4103, or Dan Lawrence, 435-843-4753, at the Grantsville center.

Tooele Children’s Justice CenterTooele Children’s Justice Center is in need of CD-Rs, DVDs and soda. We appreciate all donations. For inquiries or drop-off call 435-843-3440. 25 S. 100 East, Tooele.

United Methodist dinnerTooele United Methodist church offers a free dinner every Wednesday starting at 4 p.m. All are welcome.

The Tooele Valley Resource CenterThe Tooele Valley Resource Center is currently in need of donations. Please consider donating items such as deodor-ant, chapstick, lotion, diapers, formula, toilet paper, shampoo, conditioner, combs and brushes. Cash is also welcomed. Those who receive services include individuals or families in crisis, the homeless and families at risk of becoming homeless. Located 23 S. Main Street, 843-9945.

First Baptist Food PantryThe First Baptist Church in Tooele is offering an emergency food pantry to meet the needs of our community. The food pantry is available for emergency needs. Hours of operation are Saturdays from 10 a.m. to noon. We are located at 580 S. Main Street. For information call 882-2048.

The Tooele Food BankThe Tooele Food Bank is seeking dona-tions to increase inventory. Summer is around the corner making it difficult for more families to provide healthy meals. Packaged meals like hamburger helper, mac and cheese, tuna, canned fruits and vegetables, flour, sugar, salt, ketchup, mustard, mayo, bottled water and juice boxes are accepted. Cash donations are also greatly appreciated. Located at 38 S. Main Street, 882-0355.

DAV Chapter 20Volunteer Drivers Needed: The DAV is

looking for three volunteer drivers. No DAV membership is required. Will need a VA physical. Call Jim Yale at 435-849-0521 or 882-7626. Or call Les Peterson at 435-830-7812.

Eagles Eagle Steak NightThe Eagles Auxiliary will serve Steak Dinners on Friday, Sept. 19 from 6:30-8:45 p.m. The special for tonight is a halibut dinner two-piece $9 or three-piece $11. All members and guests are invited to come and eat, and support your Aerie and Auxiliary.

Breakfasts, something new: Breakfast will be served every Sunday in September. The menu is the same as always and there is a special every Sunday. Bad Beer is available. Public invited.

Auxiliary meeting changedThe second meeting of the Auxiliary has been changed to Monday, Sept. 29, 2014, at 7:30 p.m.

Potato and salad barOn Saturday, Sept. 20, 2014, Auxiliary Chairman Diana Lujan will have a Potato/Salad Bar. The cost is $7 per person and there will be a raffle. All pro-ceeds will go to the Eagles Cancer Fund.

Eagles Past Presidents The Eagles Past Presidents will meet at the Sun Lok Yen on Wednesday, Sept. 17, 2014, at 7 p.m. All PPs are invited to the dinner meeting. PMP Jan Fox will host the evening.

Moose LodgeMeals at the lodgeFriday and Saturday night dinners will be served from 5-9 p.m. Friday night dinners include clam chowder or home-made chili, and/or fish baskets (halibut, shrimp or chicken strips). Saturday night dinners include 16-oz ribeye or T-bone steak with choice of baked potato or fries, salad and roll; halibut or salmon steak with choice of baked potato or fries, salad and roll, or jumbo shrimp with choice of baked potato or fries, salad and roll. All meals are for a reasonable price. No orders taken after 8:45 p.m. Daily lunch specials are available at the lodge from 11 a.m. For members and their guests only. After buying 10 meals either Friday or Saturday night, you get a free one.

Special events:Tri-lodge Fraternal get-together Sept. 19-21 at Camp Wapiti. Call Elks, Eagles or Moose Lodges for more info. For members and their guests.

Elks LodgeCamp Wapiti Charity Golf TournamentOquirrh Hills Golf Course, Tooele, Saturday, Sept. 27, 2014. Format: Red, White and Blue Scramble. Start Tim: 9 a.m. Cost: $65 per player (includes prize money and banquet). Banquet will take place at Camp Wapiti after golf scramble. Non-golfers banquet tickets are $10 per person. Get entry form at Tooele Elks.

Tooele County Historical SocietyOur meeting will be held at the Tooele County Pioneer Museum at 47 E. Vine Street in Tooele. Parking is in the rear of the building. Please enter through the back door and take the ramp down to the meeting room. Members and guests are welcome. If you would like to join our organization, our dues are only $5 per year.

Historical booksTooele County Historical Society’s books will be available to purchase at our meeting. The History of Tooele County Volume II is $30, The Mining, Smelting, and Railroading in Tooele is $20, and we also have eight note cards depicting four different pioneer buildings for $4. These will make great gifts for your fam-ily and friends. Please call Alice Dale at 882-1612 if you would like to purchase these books.

Seeking Historical ItemsTooele County Historical Society would like members of the community who have any family or personal histories, photographs, books, brochures, DVDs, VHS tapes, or newspaper articles that you would like to donate to our orga-nization to please call us. We are also looking for books, newspaper articles, photos, brochures or any history that pertains to the Tooele County area. If you would like to donate them to our organization, or if you would let us make a copy for the Tooele County Historical Society, please call Alice Dale at 435-882-1612.

Tooele Family CenterStory and craft hourJoin us every Monday at 10 a.m. at the Tooele Family Center as we enjoy the adventures of books and make fun crafts. For more info call 833-1978 ext. 2127 or ext. 2010. We’re located at 301 W. Vine St., Bldg. #11 (right behind Tooele High School).

Ready, set, school! Preschool hourEvery Tuesday at 10 a.m. the Tooele Family Center has a fun activity hour learning, singing, and creating. This class is for all children 0-5 years old. Please come and enjoy the fun. For more info. call 833-1978 ext. 2127 or ext. 2010. We’re located at 301 W. Vine St., Bldg. No. 11 (right behind Tooele High School).

Groups and eventsStansbury Art and Lit SocietyThe next meeting of the Stansbury Art and Literary Society will be on Tuesday, Sept. 23, at 7 p.m., at the Tooele Applied Technical College, 88 S. Tooele Blvd. Jane Autry, noted local artist and former Grantsville High School art teacher, will present a hands on artistic program. The monthly optional project is titled “Ice.” Create a work of art in your choice of medium using ‘ice’ as the the theme and bring it to the meeting. Let’s see how your imagination works on this one. Last month’s projects brought to

the meeting were exceptional in their creativeness and so well done. Don’t forget to visit our Downtown Wall Gallery at the Chamber of Commerce building to see art exhibits by Stansbury Art and Lit member artists.

Tooele Senior CenterThe Tooele Senior Center will be hosting a senior “Golden Mile” event Tuesday, Sept. 23, at the Skyline Park in Tooele from 9-11 a.m. This event is for all seniors in Tooele County to walk around the park for fun an exercise. You may walk any distance you wish. Prizes, med-als and fun. Call 435-843-4110 to regis-ter for event. No charge for this event.

Benson Gristmill Farmers MarketBenson Gristmill Farmers Market, 325 State Road 138, Stansbury Park, Saturdays beginning July 12 through October at 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. SNAP EBT accepted.

MasonsMasons meeting second Friday at 7 p.m. with dinner at 6 p.m., 22 Settlement Canyon, Tooele. Breakfast on the second Saturday, 9 a.m., Jim’s Cafe. For more information or a ride, call Blair 801-554-0527.

Ophir Historical DistrictThe Ophir Historical District will be open Saturdays through Sept. 20 (weather permitting). Hours are 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. For information, call (435)849-0254 or (435)830-2120.

Stansbury RidersThe Stansbury Riders are looking for new youth and adult members. The youth ages are 6 to 15 and will do sign ups for both adult and youth at 6 p.m. on Monday or Wednesday at the Grantsville arena located behind City Hall in Grantsville, Utah. The adult ages are 15 and up. Youth practice will be begin Mondays and Wednesday at 6:30 p.m. Practice will also be held at the Grantsville arena. Must have own horse in order to participate. For more information please contact Chevelle Anderson 435-841-2851.

Tooele Valley Family History CenterResearch your ancestors free with trained FamilySearch volunteers at the Tooele Valley Family History Center, 751 N. 520 East, Tooele. Phone 435-882-1396. Hours of operation: Tuesday through Friday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday evenings 7-9 p.m. Wednesday evenings by appointment only. Special classes offered regularly. Call the center for more information.

Recovery InternationalWe have a very structured group that follows a format of four basic steps: report an upset, describe thoughts, impulses, feelings and sensations. If you can’t change a situation, you can change your attitude toward it. Life can be distressing, but not dangerous. Recovery is helpful for handling addic-tions, fears, anxiety, anger, loneliness, worries and any challenge. Try it for six weeks. For more information, call MaryAnn 884-0215.

Take Off Pounds SensiblyGive yourself the gift of health and wellness. Resolve to lose those extra pounds. TOPS can help you achieve your goals and support you in your journey. We provide accountability through week-ly weigh-ins and support and encourage-ment in a non-judgmental environment. TOPS is open to all men, women, teens and preteens. There are now two TOPS chapters in Tooele to accommodate your schedule. UT 330 Tooele meets Tuesday at Cornerstone Baptist Church, 276 E. 500 North. Weigh in from 5:30-6 p.m., meeting at 6 p.m. Call Mary Lou at 830-1150 for information. UT 365 Tooele meets Saturday at 9 a.m. at the Bit n Spur Clubhouse, 240 W. 500 North. This chapter will meet occasionally at a private residence, so call ahead for the exact location. Call Lisa at 882-1442 for information. Also see the TOPS website at www.tops.org.

Tooele Gem and Mineral SocietyTooele Gem and Mineral Society meets the second Tuesday of the month at the Tooele Applied Technology College (TATC) Auditorium at 88 S. Tooele Blvd, Tooele. Come learn about rocks, minerals and ways to craft with them and enjoy field trips for rock collecting. Membership is $10 per year. Our “Festival of the Old West” Annual Rock Show and Sale, held in conjunction with the Mountain Man Rendezvous, is Sept. 26-28 and admission is free. Visit us on Facebook, www.tooelegem.com, 435-882-5752 or [email protected].

Sons of Utah PioneersThe goals of the Sons of Utah Pioneers

Settlement Canyon Chapter is to keep our pioneer heritage alive. We do this through histories, stories, artifacts, monuments, museums, service and scholarships. Much of this labor of love is found in the Tooele Pioneer Museum at 47 E. Vine in Tooele, as well as vari-ous statues and monuments around the county. The Tooele Pioneer cemetery, at the mouth of Settlement Canyon, is another of our projects. We are always looking for artifacts and histories, including yearbooks, as a loan or gift to be displayed for everyone’s benefit at the Tooele Pioneer Museum. If you are interested in the values of honoring past and future pioneers and in visiting their historical settings and learning more about those who settled and shaped Utah, attend our business and educa-tion meeting the first Thursday of each month. A pot-luck dinner followed by various presentations starts promptly at 6:30 p.m. in the Tooele Senior Citizens Center at 53 E. Vine. Call Gene White at 435-882-0805 for additional informa-tion.

Mood disorder support groupDo you or someone you love have a mood disorder? NAMI-Tooele affiliation offers help, hope and healing. Please join us for support group sessions every Wednesday at 4:30 p.m. at the New Reflection Clubhouse on 900 South in Tooele. For more info, contact Kelly at 841-9903.

PFCCABack to PFCCA kick offTuesday, Sept. 23, 2014, from 7-9 p.m. in Tooele. To reserve your materi-als for the training, please call Kathy Witt at 435-830-9614. Training topic: Portfolios for Children in our Care with Amy Christiansen, PFCCA Chapter Liaison. This is open to all Childcare Providers in our area.

The Professional Family Child Care Association of Utah will be holding Chapter Meetings in Tooele the fourth Tuesday of each month from 7-9 p.m. This support group/training meeting is open to all childcare providers in Stockton, Tooele, Erda, Stansbury, Grantsville and Lake Point. For more infor-mation, call Kathy Witt, 435-830-9614.

Family Support CenterThe Family Support Center is a non-profit agency providing services in Salt Lake and Tooele County. Free 12-week in-home parenting skills program. Families with children birth to 17 will receive instruction during an 80-minute weekly visit to gain the tools they need to strengthen their family. Topics dis-cussed include communication, conflict resolution, attachment and bonding, establishing rules and routines as well as managing stress. Please contact Rachel at (801) 955-9110 ext. 107 for more information. You can also visit familysupportcenter.org.

Tooele Family Al-AnonWednesdays at 11am at 77 West 400 North. For questions or more informa-tion, please call Allene at (435)830-0465 or Elizabeth at (435)884-0825 or (435)241-9200.

Food Addicts in Recovery AnonymousFood Addicts in Recovery Anonymous is a program based on the 12 steps of AA. FA is a fellowship of individuals who through shared experiences and mutual support are recovering from the disease of food addiction. Meetings are held every Thursday at 6 p.m. at the Pioneer Museum, 47 East Vine Street, Tooele, Utah. Enter at back entrance on north side of building. For more information contact Millicent at 435-882-7094 or Carolyn at 435-882-0805.

Class reunionsTooele 1943The Class of 1943 will be meeting at Denny’s Restaurant on Thursday, Sept. 18, 2014 at 1 p.m. If you know of any-one from our class, please call Joseph Stephens at 882-0543.

Tooele 1954The class of ‘54 reunion is scheduled for September 26 and 27, for the Tooele High School Homecoming date. We are looking for missing classmates: Joyce Olsen, Loretta Padgen, Kaye Roth, Helen Hendee, Norma Lou Russell, Veda Edwards, Helen Phelps, Shirley Drysdale, Eva Bates, Joe Hansen, Dorthey Begay, Phyllis Spradling, Carmen Montoya, Margaret Krolak, Geraldine Gardner, Geniel Bridges, Sharon Thomas, JoAnn Bevan, Marcia Sharp, Helen Hndee, Anadelle Schueter, Karen Nelson and Marybell Tonioli. Anyone having information about any of them is encouraged to contact Lila Duffin Atkin at (435) 830-0261, or email at [email protected].

The Bulletin BoardTUESDAY September 16, 2014A8 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

Bulletin Board PolicyIf you would like to announce an upcoming event, contact the Transcript-Bulletin at 882-0050, fax to 882-6123 or email to [email protected]. “The Bulletin Board” is for special community events, charitable organizations, civic clubs, non-profit organizations, etc. For-profit businesses should contact the advertising department. Please limit your notice to 60 words or less. The Tooele Transcript-Bulletin cannot guarantee your announcement will be printed. To guarantee your announcement please call the advertising department at 882-0050. Information must be delivered no later than 3 p.m. the day prior to the desired publication date.

PHOTO COURTESY PATSY HOLDEN

In a recent fundraiser for the RoundUp 4-H Livestock to raise money for the Vernon Veteran’s Memorial, kids gathered items from hand-sewn items to baked goods from residents in Vernon and took them to Eureka to Silver Days, where they had a booth that raised over $300. Pictured above from left: Shar Manzione, Mayor Bruce Thomas, John Olson, Chris Anderberg, Dennis Clark and Rodney Manzione, Town Board members; 4-H members representing the Vernon Round-Up Livestock Club; Dalton Holden, Hailey Holden and Jase Livingston.

Page 9: 9-16-14 Transcript Bulletin

TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN A9TUESDAY September 16, 2014

Canyon Irrigation began to pur-sue the pipeline project, which will cost the company just under $1 million to complete, more than six years ago. But the pipeline has run into numerous delays.

The irrigation company had the money and plans in place in 2007, but the Army Corps of Engineers stepped in with concerns before work could begin. The corps asked the irri-gation company to complete various environmental studies to ensure that there were no endangered species living in the area that would be harmed by the pipeline, and that the pipe-line would not divert water from the Great Salt Lake.

In early 2013, once the irriga-tion company gained the envi-ronmental approval it needed, the company went to its share-holders for a vote on the project. The plan at the time was to fin-ish the project by the end of the year, in order to have the water available for the 2014 summer. However, one of the company’s largest shareholders — Tooele City — voted against the project because it wanted more time to review the company’s plans.

Despite the city’s vote, a majority of shareholders voted in favor of the pipeline, and the project moved forward — until the irrigation company ran into difficulty while acquiring easements along the planned pipeline route. A final easement wasn’t obtained until April of this year.

The company hoped to have construction under way by June, but technicians Settlement Canyon Irrigation hired to over-see the project were busy with other jobs and put the pipeline on a backburner, Bevan said.

Still, in early July, Bevan said the company hoped to see con-struction begin by the end of the month. Yet it wasn’t until this week that crews began to install pipe in the canyon.

“Maybe after six years, we’re finally on our way,” Bevan said.

The crews will start at both ends of the pipeline’s route and follow Settlement Canyon Road until the pipeline meets in the middle of the route, Bevan said. The process is expected to take about 15 days. Once finished, work crews will circle back to install various structures along the pipeline.

Bevan said there was no offi-cial estimate on just how much water the pipeline would bring

to the reservoir, but he said the company hoped it would be enough to keep the reservoir

full next summer.

[email protected]

Pipeline continued from page A1

FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO

Crews from Silver Spur Engineering Company work on the new pipeline in Settlement Canyon to bring irrigation water to the Settlement Canyon Irrigation Company Reservior.

transferred to Primary Children’s in Salt Lake for more advanced care, he said. One of the two was sent on Life Flight on account of the severity and rapid progres-sion of the illness.

Both children sent to Primary Children’s had asthma, Rich said, and “there was more potential for badness that we wanted to keep around.”

Primary Children’s currently has about 100 suspected cases that are awaiting lab confirma-tion, Rich said.

Enterovirus is something like a cousin to more common dis-eases such as hand, foot and mouth disease and even the common cold. However, the enterovirus currently hospital-izing children is unusual in that it progresses rapidly from symp-toms that resemble the common cold — fever, runny nose, sneez-ing and coughing — to respira-tory difficulty and hypoxia.

Infected children may begin to wheeze, experience shortness of breath, and may have trouble with everyday activities, such as walking up stairs, within 24 hours of showing initial symp-toms.

“Things that you expect in a 95-year-old man, but they’re happening in 5-year-olds,” Rich said of the symptoms.

Children who progress to this stage of the illness may be hos-pitalized for extended periods of time to receive oxygen, he added.

The virus can infect anyone, but currently children ages six months to 16 years are consid-

ered the most susceptible to the illness. Those with a history of asthma or other underlying con-ditions are considered especially at risk.

Because the disease is a virus, there is no specific treatment, such as an antibiotic, or cure, Rich said. That means the key to fighting the virus, he said, is pre-vention. Enterovirus can spread via airborne transmission like the common cold — meaning the virus spreads via saliva and mucus when an infected per-son sneezes, coughs or touches a surface.

But unlike the common cold, Rich said enterovirus can survive in the human digestive tract, so the virus may spread via fecal material and other body fluids as well.

To prevent the virus, Rich said individuals should be vigilant about the usual cold etiquette — hand washing, covering coughs and sneezes, and staying home when ill. But he said parents should also be especially care-ful about disinfecting frequently touched surfaces, and not allow-ing their children to share eat-ing utensils. Those with young children should pay close atten-tion to what their children put in their mouths.

Should a child fall ill, Rich said parents should watch closely for signs of breathing difficulty, and should take the child to a doctor if the notice any shortness of breath or wheezing seems to be rapidly worsening.

“You want to watch closely with your kids,” he said, “because it can be a very rapid progression of symptoms.”[email protected]

Virus continued from page A1

or cure.“Now that it’s actually being

transmitted to chickens or humans, it means the public needs to be actively protecting themselves against West Nile Virus,” he said.

West Nile Virus does not affect everyone equally, making it dif-ficult to use human cases of the virus to monitor its spread. For roughly 80 percent of the pop-ulation, infection would mean little more than mild flu-like symptoms.

But for the remaining 20 per-cent, the virus can cause severe illness with symptoms including fever, vomiting, rash and fatigue, with symptoms lingering for up to a month. The virus can be fatal in especially vulnerable individ-uals, such as the elderly.

The best way for individuals to address West Nile is to avoid mosquito bites, Bradshaw said. Residents should wear repel-

lents containing DEET, Picaridin or lemon eucalyptus oil, should avoid being outside at dusk or dawn when mosquitoes are most active, and wear long sleeves and pants when outdoors.

Homeowners should also remove any standing bodies of water from their properties to prevent the mosquitoes, which breed in stagnant water, from moving in next door.

Residents should call mosqui-to abatement at 801-250-3879 to report areas where mosquitoes are present in large numbers, so that the district can keep mos-quito populations at a mini-mum. Bradshaw said the dis-trict plans to increase its night-spraying routine, especially in the Stansbury area, to keep the mosquitos there at bay. But he said he’s also hoping the cur-rent weather pattern holds — if the next few weeks remain cold, he said, mosquito season could come to an end by the first of [email protected]

Chickens continued from page A1

Inspiring Healthy Lives

Look for it every month in your Tooele Transcript Bulletin

TRANSCRIPTBULLETINTOOELE

A9

RIVERS AND LAKES 24-hour

Stage Change

Great Salt Lake Elevation

In feet as of 7 a.m. Monday

Vernon Creek at Vernon 1.12 +0.01South Willow Creek at Grantsville 1.38 none

at Saltair Boat Harbor 92.89

Tu W Th F Sa Su M

Pollen Index

Source: Intermountain Allergy & Asthma

HighModerate

LowAbsent

The Sun Rise Set

The Moon Rise Set

UV INDEX

The higher the AccuWeather.com UV Index™number, the greater the need for eye and skin protection. 0-2 Low; 3-5 Moderate; 6-7 High; 8-10Very High; 11+ Extreme

ALMANACTemperatures

Precipitation (in inches)

Daily Temperatures

SEVEN-DAY FORECAST FOR TOOELESUN AND MOON

UTAH WEATHER

Last Normal Month Normal Year Normal Week for week to date M-T-D to date Y-T-D

Salt Lake City

Ogden

Logan

Provo

Vernal

Price

Tooele

Nephi

Manti

Green River

RichfieldMoab

Cedar CitySt. George Kanab

Blanding

BeaverHanksville

Delta

GrouseCreek

Roosevelt

Clive

Rush Valley

Wendover

Gold Hill

Vernon

Ophir

Grantsville

Tooele

Lake Point

Bauer

Stockton

Pine Canyon

Stansbury ParkErda

Knolls

Ibapah

Dugway

High Low

Eureka

Wednesday 7:12 a.m. 7:35 p.m.Thursday 7:13 a.m. 7:33 p.m.Friday 7:14 a.m. 7:32 p.m.Saturday 7:15 a.m. 7:30 p.m.Sunday 7:15 a.m. 7:28 p.m.Monday 7:16 a.m. 7:27 p.m.Tuesday 7:17 a.m. 7:25 p.m.

Wednesday 1:14 a.m. 3:48 p.m.Thursday 2:07 a.m. 4:27 p.m.Friday 3:01 a.m. 5:03 p.m.Saturday 3:56 a.m. 5:35 p.m.Sunday 4:52 a.m. 6:06 p.m.Monday 5:48 a.m. 6:36 p.m.Tuesday 6:45 a.m. 7:05 p.m.

Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2014

90/66

87/60

90/65

86/61

85/59

79/55

89/63

89/62

88/63

88/62

88/62

77/54

80/57

89/6390/62

91/67

90/60

89/62

90/65

89/64

89/53

88/59

84/55

85/58

89/62

88/56

88/56

91/63

88/5892/64

82/5393/66 85/60

84/59

85/5490/61

91/62

87/55

85/57

New First Full Last

Sep 23 Oct 1 Oct 8 Oct 15

W Th F Sa Su M Tu

Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun Mon

WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY

Mostly sunny

89 62

Sunny intervals with a shower or t-storm

83 56

Clouds and sun with a t-storm in spots

77 51

Nice with a full day of sunshine

78 51

Times of sun and clouds

79

Mostly sunny and nice

79 52 54

Mostly sunny and not as warm

71 53TOOELE COUNTY WEATHER

Shown is Wednesday’s weather. Temperatures are

Wednesday’s highs and Wednesday night’s lows.

High/Low past week 85/43Normal high/low past week 81/55Average temp past week 64.0Normal average temp past week 68.2

Statistics for the week ending Sept. 15.

A9

Page 10: 9-16-14 Transcript Bulletin

TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

SportsSPORTS WRAP

CorrectionA Stansbury High School volley-ball player was misidentified in a photo on page 30 of Fall Sports magazine which was inserted in Thursday’s Transcript-Bulletin. The player in the photo at the top of page 30 is Jessica Bassett. Stansbury’s girl soccer schedule also was wrong. Remaining SHS soccer games: Tuesday, Sept. 16 vs. Ben Lomond; Tuesday, Sept. 18 vs. Bear River; Tuesday, Sept. 23 at Tooele; Thursday, Sept. 25 vs. Grantsville; Thursday, Oct. 2 at Ben Lomond; Tuesday, Oct. 7 at Bear River; Thursday, Oct. 9 vs. Tooele. The Transcript-Bulletin apologizes for the mistakes.Region 11 golfBear River edged out Tooele to win the Region 11 golf match on Thursday, Sept. 11 at El Monte Golf Course in Ogden. The Bears shot 300 followed by Tooele at 301, Stansbury 316, Ben Lomond 349 and Grantsville 400. Leading the way for Tooele were Jerzee Houston 71, Braxton Quinn 74, Marcus Bunn 76, Braydon Boswell and Mitch Gibson both at 80 The Stallions were led by Ryan Romero 76, Parker Buys 79, Tyler Hale and Ho Derrick 81. The next Region 11 match will be hosted by Grantsville on Thursday at Oquirrh Hills Golf Course.Penning championsSix members of the Tooele Bit N’ Spur Riding Club turned in impres-sive performances at the Utah State Western RIding Clubs of America Utah State Finals on Sept. 5-6 at the fairgrounds in Fillmore. The penning team of Cindy Elton, Katie Taylor and Sam Anderson shined at the event. The trio penned their three cows with the fastest time, taking state championship trophy, beating out over 30 teams from various USWRCA clubs. Other triumphs at the state show included a fifth-place finish for Katie Taylor in the Ranch Cow Cutting event, a fourth-place finish for Russ Hatt and Cindy Elton in the Pairs Pleasure Class and the Pole Bending Team of Doug Dolgner, Katie Taylor, Cathy Hatt, Cindy Elton, and Sam Anderson garnered a seventh-place victory at the state show.Blue Cougars winJuniors Taysom Hill and Jamaal Williams combined for a gritty ground attack in BYU’s 33-25 vic-tory against Houston in the 2014 home opener Thursday at LaVell Edwards Stadium. Williams paced the offense with 139 yards rushing on 28 attempts and two touch-downs. Hill led the assault with 160 yards rushing and 200 passing yards on 21-for-34 attempts with one pass and one rushing touch-down as BYU began the season 3-0 for the first time since 2008.USU downs Demon DeaconsBehind a dominant defense that limited Wake Forest to negative 25 yards rushing, Utah State ral-lied from an early 7-0 deficit with 29 unanswered points and the Aggies beat the Demon Deacons, 36-24, Saturday night in a White Out at Merlin Olsen Field at Romney Stadium. Utah State won its second game in a row in improving to 2-1 on the season, as well as winning 27 of their last 36 games, including eight of its last 10 games in the month of September. With the loss, Wake Forest slid to 1-2, after not only the first-ever meeting between USU and WF, but the first-ever visit to Logan by an Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) school. With Saturday’s win, USU is now 1-3 all-time against the ACC. The negative 25 yards rushing is the third-best defensive performance by USU, behind the -51 against Pacific in 1980 and -35 also against Pacific in 1967.Elk permitsAs of last Friday there were 5,187 bull permits available and 6,176 spike permits. The general rifle bull elk hunt starts Oct. 4. If you’d like to participate in the rifle hunt, or the general muzzleloader hunt that starts Oct. 29, you need to get a permit soon. “There’s a good chance the permits will sell out before the rifle hunt starts,” says Judi Tutorow, wildlife licensing coor-dinator for the Division of Wildlife Resources. “If you want a permit, don’t wait. Get one now.” You can buy a permit online. Youth watefowl huntHunters 15 years of age and young-er will have Utah’s marshes — and the ducks and geese that go with them — all to themselves on Sept. 20. That’s the day Utah hosts its annual Youth Waterfowl Hunt. And this year, even young people who haven’t completed a Hunter Education course can participate through a new program offered in Utah. The state’s Trial Hunting program allows someone 21 years of age or older to take a person 12 to 15 years old hunting, even if the 12- to 15-year-old hasn’t com-pleted Hunter Education. See more information about the Trial Hunting program at wildlife.utah.gov.

A10 TUESDAY September 16, 2014

by Tavin Stucki

COMMUNITY NEWS EDITOR

Tooele avenged last year’s shoot-out loss to Bear River with a dominating performance, beating the Region 11 rival with a 38-15 victory Friday.

Tooele ran all over Bear River, racking up 221 yards on the ground and four touchdowns.

“Bear River is a tough, tough opponent at home,” said Tooele head coach Kyle Brady. “We thought we had a good game plan coming in offensively, we thought we could move the ball on them pretty well.”

It’s hard to believe Bear River actually led at one point: After forcing Tooele to punt on the opening possession, Bear River receiver Judd Miller caught a 56-yard touchdown pass with 8:16 to go in the first quarter and make it 7-0 Bears.

On the next drive, Tooele run-ning back Ryan Brady busted loose for a 52-yard run to set up a 1-yard quarterback sneak by his brother Jake Brady and tie the game at 7 with 6:36 in the

THS Buffaloes blast Bear River 38-15Tooele’s defense, offensive linemen help team improve to 4-0 on the season

by Jake GordonCORRESPONDENT

All Stansbury needed on offense was to complete a pass to get going against Uintah. After missing on his first seven attempts in a sloppy first half, Gage Manzione found Landon Stice in the flat and Stice did the rest for a 76-yard touchdown for a 14-6 lead at intermission.

That pass broke the ice for the Stallions. The senior quar-terback came back and tossed three more touchdowns in an impressive second half where the Stallions outscored visiting Uintah 35-0 to open 3AA North Region with a 49-6 victory Friday night in Stansbury Park.

After a sluggish first half where Stansbury only led by eight points, the Stallions broke open the game and showed that they belonged at the top of the region standings. The Stansbury defense was stingy and only allowed 70 yards while gain-ing 493 yards of offense in their region opener.

Manzione completed only five passes but those passes went for 186 yards and four touchdowns while rushing for a touchdown late in the game. Stice and Casey Roberts each caught two touch-down passes for Stansbury.

On the first drive of the game, Stansbury flexed their muscles and drove down the field. Josh Griffith, Manzione and Gavin Skogg each had rushes that con-verted a first down for Stansbury

and then McCoy Didericksen finished off the drive with a 2-yard touchdown run to give the Stallions a 7-0 lead only 1:53 into the game.

Stansbury didn’t have as much success on their next two drives as they had a turnover on downs and then a lost fumble deep in their own territory.

Kedric Coonis recovered that fumble late in the first quar-ter that gave Uintah the ball 35 yards away from tying the game. Haden Bunderson opened the drive with a completion to Talon Strong for 12 yards and then Bunderson finished off the drive himself after faking a handoff and carrying the ball 23 yards to the left side of the field for a touchdown. A failed extra point kept Stansbury in a 7-6 lead with 3:02 left in the opening quarter.

The fumble wouldn’t be the only mistake that Uintah forced Stansbury to make, but it would be the only one they would cap-italize on. Vaisa Maile recovered a botched Stansbury snap and Uintah got the ball 30 yards away from a score, but was forced to punt by the Stansbury defense.

Jurey Beddes was able to intercept a pass late in the sec-ond quarter that gave Uintah the ball only 11 yards away from the end zone. A Uintah holding penalty and the stingy Stansbury

Stallions break game open in second halfStansbury outscores Uintah 35-0 after halftime to win region opener

by Mark WatsonSPORTS EDITOR

Grantsville football can use a fresh start.

The Cowboys dropped their fourth-consecutive game Friday night 14–7 to Juab at Cowboy Stadium.

Grantsville will need to learn from those preseason losses as they begin region action next Friday with a homecoming game against Carbon. The Cowboys’ preseason opponents were a challenge, with a combined record of 10-2 so far.

“We need to improve quickly on offense heading into region,” coach Tony Cloward said. “I believe we are close to putting it all together and going on a win-ning streak.”

The Cowboys held out a few players for the Juab game which included starting senior running back Lorenzo Silva, and junior defensive back and backup quarterback Cody Riding. Both

nursed injuries. Cloward liked we saw on

defense from his team in the game against the Wasps. Grantsville shut out Juab in the second half, and stayed close with several strong defensive stands in the first half.

Grantsville looked sharp in the passing game to start the game with a 31-yard completion from Nephi Meono to Gavin Eyre. But the drive stalled at the Juab 42.

The Cowboys found them-selves in prime position on the next series after Riley Smith stripped the ball away from Juab receiver and Kyle Peterson recov-ered the fumble at the Juab 30.

After the turnover, the GHS offense could not move the ball. Grantsville missed on a 48-yard field goal attempt.

Juab struck after the missed

GHS Cowboys drop to 0-4 with loss to Juab

FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO

Tooele linebacker Zac Cruz tackles a Bear River runner and forces a fumble in the Buffaloes’ rout of the Bears.

COURTESY OF GARRET BRYANT

Stansbury’s Landon Stice (10) lays out Uintah’s Trevor Lofthouse with help from Gage Manzione (34).

COURTESY SCOTT BARRUS

Cade Coon (88) and Wyatt barrus (41) tackle Juab’s Brandon Smith behind the line of scrimmage. Gavin Eyre (9) prepares to help out on the play. Grantsville shut out Juab in the second half.

SHS FOOTBALL

THS FOOTBALL

GHS FOOTBALL

SEE THS PAGE A11 ➤

SEE STALLIONS PAGE A11 ➤

SEE GHS PAGE A12 ➤

A10 SPORTSA10 SPORTS

Page 11: 9-16-14 Transcript Bulletin

TUESDAY September 16, 2014 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN A11

by Charlie RobertsCORRESPONDENT

Seventy-six Tooele Valley resi-dents are doing more than their fair share to help Tooele County become the healthiest in Utah.

That’s the number of Tooele Running Club athletes who suc-cessfully competed in the Big Cottonwood marathon and half marathon Saturday.

They range in abilities, ages, shapes and sizes and come from cities and towns scattered throughout Tooele County.

The Big Cottonwood event attracted more than 4,500 run-ners and included athletes from all 50 states and several coun-tries. The 26.2 marathon course started at Brighton Ski Resort, traversed 17 miles to Wasatch Boulevard, then out and back along the Salt Lake eastern foot-hills before ending in the heart of Cottonwood Heights.

“There are dozens of incredible stories of Tooele Running Club athletes who conquered their doubts, achieved their dreams and set new personal records. They received incredible sup-port on the course from family, friends, and club members.” said Sandra Hadlock. “We congratu-late everyone who ran the full and half-marathons.”

TRC members Trent Maez, Spencer Holt and Steve Allen all eclipsed the three-hour barrier in Saturday’s race.

Tami Searle, who blazed down the canyon and across Wasatch Boulevard fast enough to qual-ify for 2016 Boston said, “It was

truly an amazing experience to see so many TRC members on the course Saturday. Each one of them inspired me.”

While Tooele Running Club boasts its fair share of elite run-ners, nearly half of the competi-tors from the local running club

ran in their first half or full mara-thon.

Carolin Quist was among those experiencing their first

26.2 mile run. “My first and only full marathon experience is now checked off my bucket list. I had a great time running down Big Cottonwood Saturday morning since it was the canyon of my childhood and holds so many happy memories.”

“All in all I feel like it was a good end to the racing season,” added Andrea Rawlings. “I’m even excited to try to tackle the marathon next year. I appreciate TRC for helping me be the best runner I can be.”

Karrie Middaugh who ran her first marathon in 1986 on a whim and has completed six more in the past two years added, “We had an awesome showing at Big Cottonwood at both the half and

the full. I loved seeing all our run-ning club shirts that helped me pick so many of our TRC family out of the crowd.”

Membership to Tooele Running Club is free and open to everyone regardless of age, size or athletic ability. The club hit a milestone yesterday with 800 members, 600 who joined in the past year.

The club features Saturday morning runs, free clinics and classy shirts. Additional informa-tion can be found on Facebook at Tooele Running.

Former Tooele City mayor Charlie Roberts is the Minister of Propaganda for the Tooele Running Club. He currently serves as the public information officer for the State Tax Commission.

Large contingent of local runners compete in racesTooele Running Club members achieve success at Big Cottonwood marathon, half marathon

FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO

Sandra Hadlock on the course of the Big Cottonwood marathon. Hadlock finished the marathon with a time of 05:06:36.7

quarter. Senior linebacker Nick

Schwartzman caught his first of three interceptions on the next drive, returning it five yards to the Bear River 20-yard line. The Bear River defense held and forced Tooele to settle for a field goal, but a roughing the kicker penalty extended the drive. Ryan Brady doubled the score on his first touchdown run of the night, this one from five yards out to make it 14-7 with 4:25 left in the first quarter.

The Brady brothers connected in the second quarter on a 29-yard gain to set up Jake’s second scoring run of the night, this one again from a yard out to make it 21-7 with under 10 minutes to play in the half.

Ryan Brady finished with 121 yards rushing and a pair of scores, adding up to 184 yards of total offense.

Kyle Brady said he always hopes his team can impose its will and play Tooele-style foot-ball no matter the opponent.

“Our line right now is play-ing really, really well,” he said. “I think we still have some room to improve. We’re trying to peak, not right now, but peak at the end of October and first of November when we get to the playoffs, but we’re doing a good job. They’re playing tough up front and when

we can run the ball we’re tough to stop.”

The Buffs did just that to the Bears: Jake Brady completed 4-6 passes for a total of 50 yards and the team ran the ball 58 times in traditional Wing-T style.

Defensively, Tooele had a solid game with four interceptions and a fumble takeaway.

Schwartzman said turnovers won Tooele the football game.

“Linemen stepped it up today,” Schwartzman said. “On the passes, we asked them to get their hands up if they couldn’t get there and they did that, knocked the ball down. Our middle backer Zac Cruz came through big today, coming back from an injury.”

Defensively, Schwartzman had three tackles, a fumble recovery after senior Zac Cruz’s strip, three interceptions, 41 interception return yards and one touchdown. He also chipped in offensively with one catch for 14 yards.

“Right now he’s just killing it on defense,” Kyle Brady said. “The thing that Nick did well though, is we talked a lot about getting under these passes that they throw out into the flat, and that’s where two of the picks came. He did a great job doing that and lis-tening, paying attention watch-ing film and making himself get in the right position.”

Bear River tried a fake punt with five minutes to go in the

third quarter and down 24-7, but the Buffaloes stuffed it to take over on the opposing 36-yard line.

“Defensively man, when you’ve got five turnovers and one score, you definitely put yourself into a position to win games,” Kyle Brady said. “The defense played great tonight. We gave up one score at the end that we’re not too happy about, but they dominated the game. The guys up front in the trenches, we talk about all the time if they can dominate up front, we’ll defi-nitely win a lot of games and they did that tonight.

Junior running back Nate Reynolds added 82 yards in the ground game, but didn’t find pay dirt Friday. Jake Brady had 50 yards through the air.

The win brings Tooele to 4-0 for the first time in the best start to the season since going on a six-game win streak after losing the opener in 2006. The Buffaloes haven’t started unde-feated through four games since 2000.

The Buffaloes will next face Park City on the road Friday at 7 p.m. in the second installment of their Region 11 football season. Park City is 1-3 coming off a 17-point loss to Union last week.

“We have 24 hours to enjoy this,” Kyle Brady told his team in the post-game huddle. “We have to prepare: We’re coming after Park City.”[email protected]

THScontinued from page A10

defense helped to force a turn-over on downs.

That Stansbury defensive stand must have sparked the Stallion offense as Manzione found Stice on the first play of the drive in the flat and Stice ran the rest of the way for a 76-yard touchdown pass that gave the Stallions a 14-6 lead heading into halftime.

Uintah came out with energy to start the second half, but the Stansbury defense stifled the Utes on their opening drive and

essentially the entire second half. Uintah didn’t earn a first down in the second half as their drives in the final two quarters either ended with a three and out or a turnover.

While the Uintah offense was stalling in the second half, the Stansbury offense was finding its stride. It only took two plays on the first Stansbury drive of the second half to score when Manzione found a streaking Roberts down the middle of the field for a 51-yard touchdown and a 21-6 lead with 9:49 left in the third.

Uintah had a turnover on downs on its next drive when the Utes got great field position after

a solid kick return by Beddes to the Stansbury 37. Griffith had a pair of rushes for Stansbury on its ensuing drive that of 8 and 13 yards to keep the Stallions’ drive alive. Manzione capped the drive for Stansbury with a pass over the middle to Stice to give Stansbury a 28-6 lead with 2:08 left in the third.

The Stansbury passing game helped to tack on more points as Manzione tossed his fourth and final touchdown pass, this time to Stice crossing over the middle for a 38-yard touchdown and a 35-6 with 11:12 left in the game.

Disaster struck the Uintah offense as they lost a fumble on

the first play and gave Stansbury the ball only 5 yards away from another score. Manzione pro-vided another score, this time with his feet as he crossed the goal line from a yard away for a 42-6 lead with 10:09 left in the game.

Stansbury tacked on anoth-er score before the end of the game as Mitchell McIntyre took a hand off 30 yards through the Uintah defense for a 49-6 lead with 4:04 left. That would be the final points for Stansbury as the clock ran out.

Stansbury, now 3-1 overall and 1-0 in region, will travel to Ogden on Friday to face Ben Lomond for a game at 7 p.m.

Stallionscontinued from page A10

FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO

Tooele’s Jonathan Ficken runs with the ball at Bear River.

LOCAL BIG COTTONWOOD MARATHON PARTICIPANTSFull Marathon Participants (26.2 miles)Kelly Allen Steve AllenTodd Arave Riker Atkinson Curtis Beckstrom Miriam BuellKurt Cline Ray Colledge Lori Drake Rebecca Gale Austin Gumbrecht Sandra HadlockSarah HartleyNathan HartleySpencer Holt

Lisa Kelly Ryan Kelly Matthew KempMelissa Lawrence Jim Logan Monique Loth Trent Maez Jolene Maughan Tammy Mccreery Karrie Middaugh Craig Packham Sharayne Packham Stacey Pankratz Katie Potter Randy QuarezCarolin Quist Stephanie Reinicke

Michael Rice Charlie Roberts Virginia Rodriguez Tracy Schaffer Tami Searle Brysie Shepard Mike SorensenRichard Spence Aaron Spilker Christine Spilker Susie Taylor Lindsey WilliamsChristina Wilson Renae Woodard Collette Yeck Kaylene Young Harold Ziegler

Half Marathon Participants (13.1 miles)Sabrina Anderson Pam BennettHeidi Broderick Suzy Cannon Brett ChristensenDiane CottrellJenny Edmondson Tony George Tine Harris Audra Lloyd LeAdelle Maez Shelli Mora Kristi Mortensen Alanna Otasua Jennifer Pashley

Andrea Rawlings Kaycee RobertsAnee Rosales Brysie ShepardBecky Sims Lisa Sorensen Paige SternerTammy Stone Bonnie Swenson Aly WarburtonCharisa Wasson Lisa Winder

A11

Afterschool programs forYouth and Teens ages 6 - 18.

AnnualMembership

$10

olfor

d Teens8.

$

Join the Club!Tooele Club

438 W 400 N

Teen Center102 N 7th St.

Tooele, UT 84074435.843.5719

When School is Out

The Club is In!TooeleClub.org

TooeleBoys & Girls

ClubHomework Help | Computers | Games | Arts | and More!

Brought to you by Joe H. Roundy, D.V.M.

Tooele Veterinary Clinic

Adoption ProcedureLocal shelter adoption requires vaccination payment, licensing

and possible shelter fee.

For more info. on animals-Tooele CountyAnimal Shelter 882-1051Tooele CityAnimal Shelter 882-8900GrantsvilleAnimal Shelter 884-6881

PET OF THE WEEK

1182 N. 80 E., Tooele • 882-1051

Shelters are required to hold animals for 5 business days before euthanization.

CUTE KITTENS!

Submit your photo to: [email protected]

Lighting over Tooele Valley

Your photo could be next!

PHOTO OF THE MONTHAugust 2014 Winner:

Malisa Gren

TRANSCRIPTBULLETINTTOOELE

A11

Page 12: 9-16-14 Transcript Bulletin

TUESDAY September 16, 2014A12 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

by Mark WatsonSPORTS EDITOR

Greg Pursley still leads the NASCAR K&N Pro West standings after Saturday’s races at Miller Motorsports Park.

With two races remaining in the series, Pursley leads with 501 points followed by Dylan Lupton at 486, Brandon McReynolds at 472 and David Mayhew in fourth at 429.

According to information on hometracks.nascar.com, Pursley has finished in the top 10 in 11 of the 12 races this season, and has two wins. But he found himself in trouble on Saturday in his quest for his first victory at MMP. The series leader led for 43 laps, but collided with a lapped car on lap 44.

Rookie James Bickford took the lead momentarily on the 44th lap, but Mayhew raced past Pursley and Bickford to win the 50-lap race. It was Mayhew’s fourth race victory of the 14-race series,

according to the website.The final major event of the

season at MMP wrapped up on Sunday with final races for the Pirelli GT3 Cup Trophy USA series and the Miller GT Challenge.

In the third race of the weekend for the Pirelli GT3 Cup Trophy USA series, Lorenzo Trefethen finally accomplished what he was unable to in the weekend’s first two races, and that was beat Loren Beggs. Beggs won on Friday and Saturday, but Trefethen and

his No. 17 Aasco Motorsports Porsche 911 GT3 Cup put it all together on Sunday and posted a 1.357-second margin of victory over Beggs’ No. 03. 911 Design entry. David Donner, who was fifth on Friday and second on Saturday, continued his upward trend by completing the podi-um on Sunday with his No. 1 Air Power Racing entry.

Results of the Pirellie GT3 Cup was provided in a press release from MMP.

In the Gold Class, Desire Wilson was victorious in her No. 33 Wilson Motorsports entry in seventh overall, and Les Long was the Silver Class winner in his No. 59 Air Power Racing entry.

The second race of the week-end for the Miller GT Challenge took place on the 4.5-mile Full Course, following Saturday’s race on the 2.2-mile West Course. Cole Powelson was the overall win-ner, bringing his No. 23 RaceCo Nissan GT-R home 4.141 seconds ahead of the Audi R8 of Derek Wolthoff. Ford Racing School director Cindi Lux completed the podium with her No. 5 Lux Performance SRT Viper. Mike Sekhon won the United States Touring Car Championship class, ahead of Jason Alexandridis and Beau Borders.

The final spectator event of the year at MMP will take place over the weekend of Sept. 27–28, with the final rounds of the National Auto Sport Association Utah Region sports car championship, the Utah Sport Bike Association’s VORTEX Masters of the Mountains motorcycle races, the Lucas Oil Regional Off Road Racing Series and the penultimate round for the Utah Kart [email protected]

David Mayhew capitalizes after opponents crash to win 50-lap NASCAR K&N Pro West competition

SUE BUTTERFIELD/TTB

Drivers and race officials wait for the start of the NASCAR K & N Pro Series West race at Miller Motorsports Park on Saturday afternoon.

SUE BUTTERFIELD/TTB PHOTO

Robert Thorne (6) and Ryan Dalziel (31) battle it out at the Pirelli World Challenge GT race Saturday afternoon at Miller Motorsport Park. Thorne, his K-PAX team and McLaren 12C GT3 car won the race.

by Mark WatsonSPORTS EDITOR

A small group of Tooele Valley youth swimmers compete the entire year as member of the Devil Ray Aquatic team, which is affiliated with USA Swimming.

These local swimmers helped the team to its highest finish at the state championship this past July. The Devil Ray Aquatic team finished in second place out of more than 30 swim clubs in the state. More than 2,500 kids participate in USA Swimming in Utah.

The Devil Ray Aquatic team is coached by Stansbury High School coach Dan Peterson and Mike Hillman.

Peterson said these swimmers put in countless hours to get bet-

ter. Three of the top swimmers this year were Garrett Hillman, Savannah Thomas and Hadlee Begay.

Thomas and Begay are very close to qualifying to go to California or Hawaii this com-ing year. Garrett Hillman had a great season and qualified to swim at a meet in Austin, Texas, next March. But first he will attend Whitworth University in Spokane, Washington.

Coach Peterson said It takes a lot of dedication to do what these swimmers and their parents do on a daily basis. Especially in try-ing to find pools where they can practice.

“So far this year, we have been to six different pools for prac-tice,” the coach [email protected]

Local swimmers star for Devil Ray Aquatics

COURTESY OF DAN PETERSON

Local swimmers Hadlee Begay, Garrett Hillman and Savannah Thomas helped lead the Devil Ray Aquatic team to a second-place finish in a state meet this season.

field goal with a 45-yard pass from Nick Robins to Dedric Davidson to push the ball inside Grantsville territory. Diego Carmon popped a long run, and Juab scored the first touchdown of the game on a 4-yard run by Dray Sheperd.

Juab drove to the GHS 4-yard line early in the second quar-ter, but strong defense by the Cowboys with big tackles from Wyatt Barrus, Cade Coon and Coy Peterson thwarted the Wasps’ scoring attempt on a fourth-down play.

On another Juab drive, Grantsville shut down its oppo-nent again. The Wasps missed on a 36-yard field goal attempt.

With time running out in the first half, Juab drove 70 yards for a score to make it 14–0 at inter-mission. Juab moved the ball through the air, and scored on a 32-yard pass to Cody Williams with 1:09 left in the first half.

Grantsville sliced the Juab lead

to 14–7 late in the fourth quarter with a 95-yard drive that burned 7 minutes off the clock, but kept its chances alive for a victory.

Big plays included runs by Meono, Barrus and a quick pass to Conner Collings who ran 30 yards after the catch to move the ball inside Juab territory.

The Wasps were hit with an interference call on another attempt to Collings which set up Grantsville at the Wasp 33. A pair of penalties against the Wasps moved the ball to the Juab 10. On fourth-and-goal a the 3-yard line, Juab was whistled with a personal foul in the end zone on a head-to-head tackle penalty.

The penalty pushed the ball to the 1-yard line where Meono sneaked in for a touchdown with 4:43 left in the game.

The Cowboys attempted an onside kick on the ensuing kick-off, but the Wasps pounced on the ball.

Grantsville did get the ball back with under 1:30 left on the clock after an interception by Cameron Potter at the GHS 8-yard line. The Cowboys moved it out to the 30, but were sacked at the 25 to end their chances of scoring a touchdown to tie the [email protected]

GHScontinued from page A10

Subscribe Today882-0050

TRANSCRIPTBULLETIN

TOOELE

Since 1894

A12

TH

UR

ST

HU

RSF

RI

FR

ISAT

SAT

20%Off Your Favorite Halloween or Fall ItemOne Coupon Per Person • Valid With Coupon Only • Exp. 9/30/14

Cannot be combined with any other offer

FallFallis in the air!

Real Deals on Home Decor30 West 100 South in Tooele

435-882-0200www.realdeals.net/Tooele

Thursdays 10 am - 6 pm • Fridays & Saturdays 10 am - 4 pm

OReal Deals on Home DecorOClothing Boutique Coming Soon!

25%Off Your Favorite

Everyday Item

One Coupon Per Person • Valid With Coupon Only • Exp. 9/30/14

Cannot be combined with any other offer

THS MiniCheer ClinicTuesday-ThursdaySept. 30 - Oct. 2Tues. & Wed.5:30-7:00 p.m.Thursday6:00-7:00 p.m.THS Practice Field

$3000• Sibling Discount Offered.• T-Shirt and Cheer Bow for Every Participant.If Weather is Bad Meet in THS CommonsArea. Please Bring a Jacket To All Events. Kids will perform at half-time, Oct. 3 football game vs. Stansbury.

Register with a THS Cheerleader or pay at the THS Finance Office. For questions, call 435-830-9607.

A12

Page 13: 9-16-14 Transcript Bulletin

TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

Hometown• Weddings, Missionaries, Birthdays

• Classifieds and Public Notices

B1TUESDAY September 16, 2014

Unless otherwise requested, community news items such as weddings, missionaries, birthdays, babies and The Bulletin Board must be submitted by 3 p.m. the day prior to the desired publication date. To place a community news item or for more information contact the Community News Editor at 882-0050 or [email protected]. Items more than one month old will not be considered for publication.

Tooele County group helps women learn valuable outdoor skillsMountain (wo)men

Nestled in the cool moun-tain air and the chang-ing autumn leaves of Settlement Canyon, Camp Wapiti was home to 22 women who gath-

ered to learn new skills, take time for themselves, and just have fun.

But for the members of the Tooele County (TC) Strutters Women in the Outdoors, the past weekend was far more than ordinary.

Separating themselves from their spouses and children, their work responsibilities and the cares of the world, these women were given the chance to focus on themselves. Designed specifically for the female gender, the WITO program offered par-ticipants ages 18 and older the opportu-nity to learn a variety of valuable skills.

As part of the three-day event, the women participated in a diverse range of classes including archery, crafts, yoga, self-defense, fly fishing, Dutch oven cooking, handguns, emergency preparedness, first-aid, fly-tying jewelry and zumba.

An outreach program of the National Wild Turkey Federation (NWTF), TC Strutters is the local chapter of WITO and was organized eight years ago. Each year TC Strutters sponsors the WITO event. Although there are other

Rosey Rupp (top) gets instruction from Dugway Police Chief Earl Scholfield during Women in the Outdoors. Area police officers served as expert instructors at the event and taught participants how to handle a gun safely. Women in the Outdoors archery instructor Dave Richard (middle) helps Ashton Walters aim during one of the classes held over the weekend for the annual event. Women in the Outdoor Regional Instructor Rick Brittain (above left). Hot Hula instruc-tor Ashley Carter (above middle) leads a class at the event. Kaylynn Arther (right) serves as secretary and treasurer for the Women of the Outdoors.

STORY MINDY GULL | PHOTOS FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE

SEE MOUNTAIN PAGE B8 ➤

B8B8

Page 14: 9-16-14 Transcript Bulletin

TUESDAY September 16, 2014B2 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

DEAR PAW’S CORNER: My cat’s current litter works fine, but I am reading some worry-ing things about the ingredi-ents and how they might harm him. Plus there’s the environ-mental impact. Is there a good “green” cat litter available? — Suzy G., via email

DEAR SUZY: You’re not alone in your concern about litter and the health of your cat. According to a report in

Scientific American a couple of years ago, many litter products contain silica dust — which can cause respiratory prob-lems in cats. “Clumping” type litters may use a sodium ben-tonite clay, which swells up as it absorbs liquid — however, it may cause gastrointestinal problems if ingested by cats, such as when they lick their paws to clean them after using the litter box.

There are also issues around how certain clays are mined, and the size of the “carbon footprint” surrounding produc-tion of cat litter, including how far a product travels to reach store shelves.

Sure is a lot to consider when you’re just trying to find a bet-ter place for your cat to pee.

In response to consumer

concerns, there are a few “green” litter products on store shelves. Look for a product like Yesterday’s News, litter made from recycled paper; SchweatScoop Natural Wheat Litter; World’s Best or Benovo, made from corn; or even litter made from wood shavings and sawdust.

If you’re feeling adventurous, look into creating litter yourself from old newspaper.

But don’t jump fully into “green” litter without consult-ing your cat: Test out a new product for a few days to see if your cat will use it. If it doesn’t adapt to one, try another.

Send your questions or com-ments to [email protected].

© 2014 King Features Synd., Inc.

1. GEOGRAPHY: The Yakima River flows through which U.S. state?

2. TELEVISION: What was the theme song to the sitcom “Friends”?

3. MUSIC: What pop music group had a hit album in 1969 titled “The Age of Aquarius”?

4. COMICS: Which comic strip featured a character called “Dragon Lady”?

5. MEDICINE: How long is the

average adult’s spinal cord?6. FOOD AND DRINK: What fast-

food franchise featured the story of Jared S. Fogle, who lost a lot of weight eating their products?

7. LITERATURE: Where did the Grinch live in the Dr. Seuss story “How the Grinch Stole Christmas!”?

8. MOVIES: What was the name of the mad scientist in “The Rocky Horror Picture Show”?

9. GENERAL KNOWLEDGE: What is the significance of the acronym ROY G BIV?

10. FAMOUS QUOTES: What comedian and actor once said, “A day without sun-shine is like, you know, night”?

➤ On Oct. 4, 1937, legend-ary blues singer Bessie Smith is buried near Philadelphia. Smith was killed a few days earlier when the old Packard she was driving hit a parked truck near Coahoma, Mississippi. In 1923, Smith had released her first record, “Down-Hearted Blues.”

➤ On Sept. 30, 1949, after 15 months and more than 250,000 flights, the Berlin Airlift officially comes to an end. The daily airlift supplied tons of food and other goods. Without fir-ing a shot, the Americans foiled the Soviet plan to hold West Berlin hostage.

➤ On Sept. 29, 1954, Willie Mays, centerfielder for the New York Giants, makes an amazing over-the-shoulder catch of a fly ball hit by Cleveland Indians first baseman Vic Wertz to rob Wertz of extra bases in Game 1 of the 1954 World Series. The catch has gone down as one of the great-est in baseball history.

➤ On Oct. 1, 1962, Johnny Carson takes over from Jack Paar as host of the late-night talk program “The Tonight Show.” Carson went on to host “The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson” for three decades, hand-ing over the reins to Jay Leno in 1992.

➤ On Oct. 2, 1971, “Maggie May” becomes Rod Stewart’s first No. 1 hit and tops the U.K. and U.S. pop charts simulta-neously. “Maggie May” was a last-minute addi-tion to the album “Every Picture Tells a Story” and was originally released as the “B” side to the single “Reason to Believe.”

➤ On Oct. 3, 1981, a hunger strike by Irish national-ists at the Maze Prison in Belfast in Northern Ireland is called off after seven months and 10 deaths. In the aftermath of the strike, British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher agreed to give in to several of the protest-ers’ demands, including the right to wear civilian clothing.

➤ On Oct. 5, 1990, “Henry & June,” starring Uma Thurman, Fred Ward and Maria de Medeiros, opens in theaters as the first film with an NC-17 rating. A month earlier, the Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) had debuted NC-17 (No One Under 17 Admitted) as a replacement for the X rating.

© 2014 King Features Synd., Inc.

THE HISTORY CHANNEL

Momentsin Time

by FifiRodriguez

Mega Maze

ALL PUZZLE ANSWERS BELOW

ANSWERS

1. Washington2. “I’ll Be There

For You” (The Rembrants)

3. The 5th Dimension4. Terry and the

Pirates5. 17 to 18 inches6. Subway

7. Mount Crumpit8. Dr. Frank-N-Furter9. A mnemonic device

to remember the colors of the rain-bow

10. Steve Martin

© 2014 King Features Synd., Inc.

Trivia Test Answers

Q: Now that “Dancing with the Stars” has started back up, I got to thinking about one of my favorite mirror-ball-trophy win-ners: Apolo Ohno. Can you tell me what he’s been doing lately? — Frieda S. in Georgia

A: The world-champion Olympic speed skater is deep in training for the Ironman World Championship, a 140.6-mile triathlon competition that takes place Oct. 11 in Kailua-Kona, Hawaii. I spoke with Apolo recently, and it just so happens that another “DWTS” champ was an impetus behind Apolo’s deci-sion to compete.

“Hines Ward completed his first Ironman challenge in Kona last year, and I was inspired by it,” he said. “I had been thinking about doing it last year, but I was traveling so much, it didn’t make sense. But I needed a challenge. I needed to inspire other people. I needed to inspire myself. I needed something that wasn’t anything like speed skating.”

Apolo is excited to make his mark once competition gets under way, and he got some advice from Hines: “The first thing Hines said to me was, ‘Brother, I’m praying for you.’ He said to just enjoy it and to take my time. It’s once-in-a-lifetime opportunity — it’s pretty incred-ible. I’m in a whole new place now. I’m more confident; I’m stronger; I’m getting leaner; and I can’t wait to arrive in Kona. It’s a good feeling.”

• • •

Q: I was shocked to hear of the canceling of A&E’s “Longmire.” It was a great series. Why in Sam Hill did they cancel it, and to leave us hanging on who killed Longmire’s wife? Do you think another network will pick it up? — Dominick C., via email

Q: I’m a big fan of “Longmire” on A&E. Can you tell me why A&E would cancel one of the bet-ter shows on television? — Mary E., via email

Q: What the devil is A&E thinking, canceling “Longmire”? — Hal T., via email

A: This is just a sampling of irate reader letters I’ve received about the canceling of the much-loved A&E drama, and to tell you the truth, I have no idea why it was canceled. The show is A&E’s most-watched original drama series, and its season-three rat-ings had only a negligible dip from season two. There are heavy rumors that the USA network is a solid contender to pick up the series, so let’s keep our fingers crossed for that (and let USA know you approve!).

• • •Q: Will “Hart of Dixie” return

for another season? — Patricia S., via email

A: “Hart of Dixie” has been renewed by the CW network for a 10-episode fourth season, but it won’t premiere until early 2015 in order to accommodate star Rachel Bilson’s real-life preg-nancy. It was revealed during the Television Critics Association press tour this summer that exec-utive producer Leila Gerstein is planning for the character of Zoe Hart to be pregnant as well.

Write to Cindy at King Features Weekly Service, P.O. Box 536475, Orlando, FL 32853-6475; or e-mail her at [email protected].

© 2014 King Features Synd., Inc.

Apolo Ohno

Q: I have inherited three pieces of Delftware that I understand were made in Holland about 200 years ago. What can you tell me about this type of pottery? —Joan, Norman, Okla.

A: Delftware is distinctive because of its soft, red-clay body and tin-enamel glaze. The first pieces originated in the region around Delft, Holland. The unusual color came from adding tin ash to lead glaze. During the 17th and 18th cen-turies, English potters were copying this technique result-ing in designs that were unique to the British craftsmen. Later pieces were made for the sou-venir trade and these are not to be confused with the more scarce earlier examples. Prices vary depending on age and quality of the piece. I recently

spotted a blue and white Delftware plate from the 18th century in a shop priced for $375.

• • •Q: I have a metal bootjack

in a beetle design. I am enclos-ing a picture for you and hope you can tell me more about it. I purchased it at a flea market in Albuquerque. — Jimmy, Rio Rancho, N.M.

A: After examining your picture, I am convinced that you purchased a reproduction. Bootjacks have always been a popular tool for the removal of boots. By placing the heel of the boot in a U-shaped opening, the boot can more easily slip off the foot. Although older boot-jacks are collectible and often can sell for $100 and more, your reproduction is probably worth only about $15 or $20. The tipoff is that your bootjack is made from aluminum; the older ones generally are cast iron, and occasionally wood.

• • •Q: Several years ago, I

received a Hummel plate as a

gift. It is the 1976 “Apple Tree Girl.” What do you think it is worth? — Betty, Sun City, Ariz.

A: According to “M.I. Hummel Figurines, Plates, Miniatures & More” compiled by Robert L. Miller and pub-lished by Portfolio Press, your plate probably is worth about $50.

• • •Q: I have a partial set of ster-

ling flatware in the Alexandra pattern. Do you have any idea of when it was made? — Barbara, Austin, Texas

A: Your pattern was made in 1961 by the Lunt Silversmiths.

Write to Larry Cox in care of KFWS, P.O. Box 536475, Orlando, FL 32853-6475, or send e-mail to [email protected]. Due to the large volume of mail he receives, Mr. Cox cannot per-sonally answer all reader ques-tions, nor do appraisals. Do not send any materials requiring return mail.

© 2014 King Features Synd., Inc.

B2 TUESDAY FEATURESB2 TUESDAY FEATURES

Page 15: 9-16-14 Transcript Bulletin

TUESDAY September 16, 2014 B3TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

TELL ME A STORY

‘The Monkey’s Fiddle’(a South African tale)

adapted by Amy Friedman and illustrated by Meredith Johnson

Once upon a time, the land was devas-tated by drought, and even insects and beans disappeared. Monkey traveled to

another part of the country where his Great Uncle Orangutan lived. His uncle offered him shelter and work, but after he had stayed a while, Monkey became homesick.

“I must go home,” Monkey said.So his uncle gave him a fiddle and a bow

and arrow. “With this bow and arrow,” Uncle Orangutan said, “you can kill anything to eat.”

“Thank you,” Monkey said, raising his eyebrows at the sight of the fiddle. “What will I do with this?”

“Ah, with this fiddle, you can force anyone to dance,” his uncle said.

Monkey thanked his uncle and began his jour-ney home. The first fellow he came upon was Brother Wolf. “How are you, old friend?” Monkey asked, and Brother Wolf explained that he had worked all morning stalking a deer, but he had failed.

“Look at my bow and arrow!” Monkey proudly pointed to the tools on his back. “If I see this deer, I’ll bring it down.”

“Quiet,” said Brother Wolf, and they stood silently, side by side, staring out into the bush.

“There he is,” Brother Wolf whispered, and sure enough, Monkey saw the deer. So he aimed his arrow, shot and killed it.

Brother Wolf and Monkey then shared a fine meal together.

But Brother Wolf was jealous and wished he had the bow and arrow for himself. “Give me that bow and arrow,” he said, softly. “I’ll make good use of them.”

But Monkey naturally shook his head. “It’s mine. My uncle gave it to me,” he explained. “And I could never give away such a gift.”

“Very well, then,” Brother Wolf growled, “I guess I’ll have to take it from you,” and he began to pounce upon his friend, but just then Brother Jackal happened to pass by, and when he saw the two beginning to tussle, he stopped and asked what was going on.

“Monkey has stolen my bow and arrow,” said Brother Wolf. “I was only trying to take back what is rightfully mine!”

“That’s not true!” Monkey protested. “This is my bow and arrow. My Uncle Orangutan gave it to me, and Brother Wolf tried to steal it.”

Now Brother Jackal was known to be thoughtful, so naturally he thought about all he had heard.

“Tell me again,” Brother Jackal said after he had thought a while and had come to the conclusion that he had no conclusion at all.

Monkey once more explained that his uncle had given him the bow and arrow, and once again, Brother Wolf insisted it belonged to him and Monkey had tried to steal it.

“Well, I propose we bring the matter to court,” said Brother Jackal. “We’ll ask the other animals to judge. But in the meantime, I’ll hold on to the bow

and arrow to keep them safe.”Monkey thought this sounded wise, and Brother

Wolf could not argue, and so he handed over the bow and arrow to Brother Jackal, who called upon the other animals to set a date for court.

In the meantime, while Monkey and Brother Wolf awaited their day in court, Brother Jackal used that bow and arrow every hour of every day and took down so many deer, leopards, mongoose, cats, weasels, zebra, hyena, kudu, eland and other creatures that everyone grew afraid of him.

Then at last came the day in court, and Monkey and Brother Wolf testified. Once again, they told the same story they had told Brother Jackal.

The lions and tigers and buffalo and giraffe lis-tened closely, but Monkey’s evidence was weak, and Brother Jackal turned against him. When it was his turn to testify, he said it had appeared to him that the bow and arrow must belong to Brother Wolf. You see, he believed he might be able to strike a deal with Brother Wolf to keep the bow and arrow half the time.

At long last, the animals broke for judgment, and when they announced their verdict, it was Monkey who was called the thief.

“You must hang!” the animals announced.Monkey was terribly upset, but just then he

remembered his fiddle, which could force any creature to dance. “May I ask one last favor of the court?” Monkey asked.

“Of course!” said Elephant, for he was fair.“I’d like to play a tune on my fiddle,” Monkey

said, and he picked it up and began to play a waltz. Before he had struck three notes, the ani-mals were on their feet. A moment later, they were waltzing. Elephant’s trunk was around Giraffe’s neck, whirling, while Lion and Tiger, Zebra and Kudu, and Wolf and Jackal began to twirl.

Monkey changed the tune — something jazzier and faster. The dancers began to dance faster, dip-ping and swinging, bobbing and weaving, unable to stop moving their feet.

Monkey was dazzled by the sound of his music. He leaned his head against the instrument and closed his eyes and played on, while the others cried, “Please stop! We’re tired.”

But Monkey played on.Lion was delirious with exhaustion, and as he

and his wife passed by Monkey, he cried, “I’ll give you the kingdom if only you’ll stop playing!”

“Who needs your kingdom?” Monkey said. “Give me back my bow and arrow. Brother Wolf, confess you are the thief. Only then will I stop playing!”

Monkey played faster still, and the animals whirled and twirled faster than ever. Brother Wolf could barely catch his breath.

“I stole the bow and arrow! I’m guilty!” he huffed.

“Then we must withdraw the sentence!” said the other animals.

Monkey smiled and stopped playing his fiddle, gathered up his bow and arrow and climbed to the top of a tree to stare down at all those he had conquered. The other animals of the land learned to respect him and knew never to question him again.

NEW YORK (AP) — Two Mark Rothko paintings are among the objects that will be auctioned in the fall from the estate of Rachel “Bunny” Mellon, a noted horti-culturist, philanthropist and heir to the Listerine fortune, Sotheby’s announced Friday.

The works, which have been in the Mellon collection for more than 40 years, will be offered on Nov. 10. “Untitled (Yellow, Orange, Yellow, Light Orange),” painted in 1955, could bring up to $30 million; “Untitled” from 1970 is estimated to sell for up to $20 million.

The auction house on Friday detailed some of the 2,000 items, including jewelry and furniture, that will be sold in a series of auctions that could realize a total of more than $100 million.

Among the jewelry is a Fancy Vivid Blue pear-shaped diamond estimated to bring $10 million to $15 million on Nov. 20. Furniture and other home interior items

will be sold Nov. 21-23.Proceeds will benefit The

Gerard B. Lambert Foundation, which supports The Oak Spring Garden Library in Virginia. The library houses Mellon’s collec-tion of rare books, manuscripts and works of art related to land-scape design, horticulture and natural history.

Mellon, who died in March at 103, was the widow of philan-thropist Paul Mellon. The objects come from the couple’s homes in the United States and abroad. Their 2,000-acre (800-hectare) Virginia farm went on the market last month for $70 million.

Her grandfather Jordan W. Lambert created Listerine, and her father, Gerald Lambert, built a company that made everything from Dentyne to Schick razors. Paul Mellon had his own fortune, inherited from his Pittsburgh industrialist father and built on holdings in banking, coal, rail-roads, steel and aluminum.

Bunny Mellon was a self-taught botanist and close friend of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis. In 1961, she redesigned the White House Rose Garden and later cre-ated another White House gar-den that was named for Kennedy after her death.

A private person, Mellon was thrust in the spotlight when for-mer Democratic vice presiden-tial candidate John Edwards was indicted in 2011 for using what prosecutors alleged was cam-paign money, including $750,000 from Mellon, to hide his mistress during his 2008 presidential bid. He was later acquitted. Mellon was never accused of breaking any laws.

During their lifetimes, the Mellons donated hundreds of important artworks to museums, including the National Gallery of Arts. The Washington, D.C., museum was founded in 1937 by Paul Mellon’s father, Andrew Mellon.

Pair of Mark Rothko paintings among Mellon auction items

B3

DON’T GUESS ABOUT READINESS.

Contact a certified heating pro soon. In fact, the sooner, the better.

FallPrep.comFallPrep.comFallPrep.comFallPrep.comFallPrep.com

DON’T GUESS ABOUT READINESS.

Contact a certified heating pro soon. In fact, the sooner, the better.

ABOUT READINESS. Contact a certified heating pro soon.

DON’T GUESS ABOUT READINESS.

Contact a certified heating pro soon. In fact, the sooner, the better.

ABOUT READINESS. Contact a certified heating pro soon.

DON’T GUESS ABOUT READINESS.

Contact a certified heating pro soon. In fact, the sooner, the better.

ABOUT READINESS. Contact a certified heating pro soon.

DON’T GUESS ABOUT READINESS.

Contact a certified heating pro soon. Contact a certified heating pro soon. In fact, the sooner, the better.

ABOUT READINESS. Contact a certified heating pro soon.

Copy

righ

t © 2

01�

Que

star

Gas

Com

pany

.

OH SURE, the sky could fall. Aliens could invade the world. Your kids might only get B’s. And that spaghetti stain might not come out.

But at least you won’t have to worry about your furnace safely providing warmth and comfort this winter, if you contact a certified heating pro before that cold front suddenly materializes.

To find a licensed heating contractor, visit FallPrep.com, search the Web, or call the Rocky Mountain Gas Association toll-free, 800-729-6791.

Don’t let your furnace be one of them.

THERE ARE ENOUGH THINGS IN LIFE

TO WORRY ABOUT.

B3

The History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyThe History of Tooele CountyIn September 1846 the Donner-Reed Party, while trying a shortcut to

California, passed through the what would become Tooele County and nearly perished in the Great Salt Lake Desert. Three years later, a handful of Mormon pioneer families left Salt Lake Valley and built a meager encampment in Settlement Canyon above today’s Tooele City. Soon, others followed, and a community emerged on the edge of the Great Basin frontier that was populated by individualistic and energetic settlers who managed to thrive in an environment fraught with hardship. Their story, and many others, are found inside this History of Utah’s Tooele County. Learn about how the pioneers ingeniously built their lives in the wilderness; the wild mining days in Ophir, Mercur and Jacob City; the Pony Express Trail; the glorious beaches and resorts along the southern shore of the Great Salt Lake, and more.

TRANSCRIPTBULLETIN

TOOELE

Get Your Copy Today at the Tooele Transcript-Bulletin

$3995

• Nearly 500 pages• Large 8.5 x 11 size pages• Hardcover with dust jacket• More than 500 photos• More than 700 pioneer

biographies 58 N. Main • TooeleMon.-Thurs. 8 to 6 • Fri. 8 to 5 • Closed Sat. and Sun.

Page 16: 9-16-14 Transcript Bulletin

TUESDAY September 16, 2014B4 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

MOBILE, Ala. (AP) — For Saraland veterinarian Ben George — a lifelong history buff with a spe-cial interest in, as he calls it, “The War Between the States” — owning Magee Farm, one of only three sites of major surrenders leading to the end of that war, was like a dream come true. Losing it has been dev-astating to him.

“It’s like I’ve lost both my par-ents,” he said.

Like many people who experi-ence a death in the family, George said he is now “clinically depressed about the whole thing.”

Built in 1848, Magee Farm, located on U.S. 45 at Ala. 158 in Kushla, Ala., is marked by a large wooden sign calling it “The Last Appomattox.” In the home’s front parlor, Confederate Gen. Richard Taylor and Union Gen. E.R.S. Canby met on April 29, 1865, agreed to a cease-fire and negotiated a sur-render of the 47,000 troops serv-ing from Alabama, Mississippi and Louisiana, to end the Civil War, which occurred one week later.

Unlike the McLean House at

Appomattox Court House, Va., which was looted and dismantled until a replica was built in the 1940, or Bennett Farm in Durham, N.C., which was struck by lightning and burned in 1921, and eventually was replaced with a similar cabin, Magee Farm is completely intact.

The home “is the only surviving structure from a Confederate sur-render,” said George, noting that he and his wife once visited all three surrender sites in a 24-hour period.

Years ago, George met Margaret Sturtevant, whose family bought Magee Farm in 1898, when she brought her dogs to his veterinary practice. “She was a sweet Christian lady, and she knew I had a passion for history, especially that period,” he said. “I brought my young chil-dren by and told them of the signifi-cance” of the house.

After she died, George spoke to her nephew about the possi-bility of buying Magee Farm and all its furnishings. “His wife and Miss Sturtevant’s sister prevailed on him that it was what she would have wanted,” he said — and so her

nephew agreed to sell it.Paul Bryant Jr., who at the

time was president of the Civil War Preservation Trust, “donated $300,000 to the trust to buy the farm with,” George said, and a year later he took it over as a nonprofit, open-ing the house as a museum in 2007. “We had no one on the payroll,” he said. “It took $60,000 a year to run it. At the same time, Chickasabogue Park had nine employees, with a budget of $750,000 to $950,000 a year.”

Groups of school children visited Magee Farm on field trips, George said, and curator Ken McGhee, a well-known re-enactor, gave tours. But operating the house as a history museum didn’t generate enough money to pay the operating expenses. Mobile County contrib-uted $5,000 “a couple of years,” and $20,000 another time, he said, but then stopped.

“We tried to get the city and county to understand the signifi-cance and help preserve it,” he said. “And we told the truth about his-tory. General Canby was the only

one who kept his word” (by not allowing Union troops to vandalize the property).

George believes Mobile is biased against Confederate history, unlike other cities such as Natchez, Mississippi, Charleston, South Carolina, and Savannah, Georgia “We do very little to preserve our history here,” he said. “The idea is that this is a piece of history we want to forget about.”

In 2010, Magee Farm was named a “Place in Peril” — one of Alabama’s most endangered places - by the Alabama Historical Commission and the Alabama Trust for Historic Preservation, which noted that the property is listed in the National Register of Historic Places and is “the only surrender site that retains its original building, in unrecon-structed form with many of the original furnishings intact.”

When the museum closed, the house was put on the market for sale, much to the chagrin of the his-torical commission: “Magee Farm illustrates the difficulties faced by many historic house museums in

the wake of the economic down-turn. It also represents a failure of community leadership to recognize and respond to the rare opportu-nity to keep this nationally signifi-cant piece of Alabama history in the public realm.”

That same year, “The char-ity closed for lack of funding,” said George, who was left saddled with paying $36,000 a year out of pocket to pay the mortgage and mainte-nance on the home, he said.

George agrees that city and county leaders have failed. “Every person in elected office is responsi-ble,” he said. “I’m disappointed that the city and county did not step forward to help preserve it.” Magee Farm “is something Mobile should be proud of, instead of having to be a detective to find it.”

He listed the house with a local real estate company for about two years, without any luck. Now he has taken it off the market, he said, and is currently renting it.

“I’ve had multiple offers for buy-ing the furniture, and I just gave up,” he said. He contacted Bill

Appling of Antiques and Estates in downtown Mobile about doing an estate sale.

“It’s a sad story,” George said. “I wanted whoever got the furni-ture to at least know where it came from.”

Appling, who said he feels “very honored to have been chosen for such an important historical resi-dence,” called Magee Farm “the Oakleigh of north Mobile County.”

“It deserves the attention so many houses in town get,” he said.

“It’s an incredible burden that he’s carried all this time, to get people to recognize the home’s his-torical significance,” Appling said of George. “He has put everything into it.”

George said he moved to the Mobile area from Birmingham in 1969 and considers Mobile to be his home. “I hope our city starts to look at the treasures all around us,” he said. “We spend so much money on stupid things like the Maritime Museum, when we could have taken that money and pre-served history.”

Farm in Mobile provides view into Alabama own Civil War history

B4 SERVICE DIRECTORY

������������Door knobs, baseboards, mouldings, drywall repairs, textures, caulking, weatherproofi ng, framing, home

updating and renovations and much more. Small Jobs okay. Call Shane

������������

������������������������Door knobs, baseboards, mouldings,

������

435-882-0438

882-4614

APPLIANCE REPAIRINSTALLATIONS • Washer/dryers • Refrigerators • Dishwashers • Microwaves • Swamp coolers • Ranges/etc.ALL MAKES

Come see me for all your parts needs!

Do You Need Your

WINDOWSWASHED?

435-224-4123Call Amanda

�Residential�Commercial

��Interior & Exterior Windows

��Screen Cleaning�Competitive Pricing

�Serving Tooele County

Place Your

Business Card Here

$1500 each

Based on a 13 Issue Contract

435.224.4344Locally Owned & Operated

Serving Tooele Countyfor Over 20 Years

FREE EstimatesSenior DiscountsLicensed & InsuredInterior & Exterior

PLUMBING

PLUMBING

• Frozen Pipes • Water Heaters

SAME DAY! • Water Softeners• Drain Cleaning• Camera Sewer Line

Residential & Commercial

COMPETITIVE RATES!

24 HOUR SERVICE!Locally Owned & Operated

882.2857 • 882.3942 TOOELE241.0047 CELL

SERVICE DIRECTORYPLACE YOUR AD HERE • CALL 8820050

TRANSCRIPTBULLETIN

TOOELE

CONTRACTORS

CONTRACTORS

CONTRACTORS MISCELLANEOUS MISCELLANEOUS

CONTRACTORS

CONTRACTORS

CONTRACTORS

MISCELLANEOUS

435.241.5648 TOOELE801.972.2727 (SLC OFFICE), 5800 N. SR-36 • ERDA

ROCK PRODUCTSCrushed Rock Products • Roadbase • Sand

Topsoil • Landscape Boulders

YARD & GARDEN

Bertoch Flooring Servicing Tooele County

FREE EstimatesAll your flooring needs

Brian Bertoch435-224-2021

• Install• Carpet• Laminate

• Tile• Hardwood

Jeremy Porter435-339-7383

SAVE SAVE SAVE

SAVE SAVE SAVESAVE

SA

VE

SA

VE

Overhead

All work is guaranteed!

435.841.9289www.hymersgaragedoors.com

Installation & RepairGarage Doors and Openers

Call today for your FREE Estimate

SA

VE

SA

VE

SAVESAVE SAVE

Installation & Repair

FREE SERVICE LUBE AND INSPECTION FOR APRIL!

OverheadOverhead

Garage DoorsOverheadOverheadOverhead

Garage DoorsGarage DoorsOverhead

Garage DoorsOverheadHymer’s Sorensen

TowingBRIAN/JERILYN— OWNER/OPERATOR

LLCYARD #886

AUTO REPAIRState Safety Inspections

100 N. EMERALD RD I TOOELE

435.843.0075 • 801.577.3222435.843.0075 • 801.577.3222435.843.0075 • 801.577.322224 HRTow!

SERVICE COVERING TOOELE COUNTY

Damage Free

CONTRACTORS CONTRACTORS MISCELLANEOUS

IVESTER’STREE & LAWN

435.841.2375 SHOP • 435.841.0439 MAIN

LICENSED & INSURED

• Small Engine Repair — FREE PICK UP/DELIVERY

LLC

Tree Trimming, Removal, Haul AwayMowing• Edging • Trimming

Aeration • Power Raking

FREE ESTIMATES

Like us on Facebook

YARD & GARDEN

�������������������� LOCALLY OWNED

& OPERATED FOR 35 YEARS

TooneDoorRepair.com

Toone GarageDoor Repair

801.803.0482��������������������������

SALES & SERVICE FOR ALL MAKES & MODELS!DOORS & OPENERS • PARTS

Residential & Commercial • Lifetime Warranty

801.898.6999

PATIO COVERS • AWNINGS • RV COVERS • LATTICEPERGOLAS • SOLAR SCREENS AND MORE…

StuartAwning.com

Serving Utah for over 40 Years

When Quality is as Important as price, call Steve

AWNINGS

300 N. MAIN • GRANTSVILLE

TOP-QUALITY

FIREWOOD

Split • Delivered • StackedPinion, Cedar, Mixed Pine, Cords or Truckloads

801.638.1325 • 435.224.3699

Goff Firewood

CONTRACTORS CONTRACTORS MISCELLANEOUS

TURF-IT LANDSCAPESERVICES

• Mowing • Fertilizer • Aeration• Clean-Up • Pest Control• Hydroseeding• Sprinkler Install & Repair

Locally Owned

435-884-3377

FREEESTIMATES

YARD & GARDEN

Harris Aire Serv®

435-248-0430HarrisAireServ.com

NEWAir Conditioning System for as little

as $29 a month

$50OFFFirst Time

Repair or Tune-Up$25 OFF For Existing

Customers

Air Conditioning

Not valid with any other offer. Valid only at participating locations. Call for details. Limited

time offer. *WAC

Independently owned and operated franchise.

Locally owned and serving Tooele County for 20 years

Not valid with any other offer. Valid only at participating locations. Call for details. Limited

time offer.

$49 Air Conditioner

Tune-Up

Not valid with any other offer. Valid only at participating locations. Call for details. Limited

time offer.

NEWAir Conditioning System for as little

as $29 a month

$50OFFFirst Time

Repair or Tune-Up$25 OFF For Existing

Customers

Not valid with any other offer. Valid only at participating locations. Call for details. Limited

time offer. *WAC

Not valid with any other offer. Valid only at participating locations. Call for details. Limited

time offer.

$49 Air Conditioner

Tune-Up

Not valid with any other offer. Valid only at participating locations. Call for details. Limited

time offer.

21 Point ComprehensiveFurnace Tune Up & Safety Inspection

High Efficiency Furnace as little as $29 a Month

Furnace BRR COATINGS, LLC

435.841.4552

We have the best spray on Bed Liner on the Market! We do Truck Beds, Horse Trailers, Concrete,

Boat Decks, Toy Haulers, Wood Decks, Patios, Farm Equipment! And so much more!

FREE PICK UP & DELIVERY!LOWEST PRICES IN TOWN!We also have Flow Mat and Eco Meric Roofing

System! We have over 200 colors to choose from and UV protection. Let us bring your old concrete or deck back to life. Protect the bed of you truck from

rust, protect the rocker panels from chips.

��������

�������������

��������������������������

��������

Shauna Nikolaus435-229-9738

����������������������������������������������������

����������������

Shauna Nikolaus435-229-9738

CONTRACTORS CONTRACTORS MISCELLANEOUS

Place Your

Business Card Here

$1500 each

Based on a 13 Issue Contract

WE SERVICE ALL BRANDS & ALL TYPES

���������������������������������������������

������������������������������������������������

TOOELE - GRANTSVILLE - SURROUNDING AREAS

435.833.9393SENIOR DISCOUNTS

PLUMBING

DRAIN • SEWER

B4 SERVICE DIRECTORY

Page 17: 9-16-14 Transcript Bulletin

CLASSIFIEDTOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

NOTICE Transcript Bulletin Publishing Co. does not endorse, promote, or encourage the purchase of any product or service advertised in this newspaper. Advertisements are the sole responsibility of the advertiser. Transcript Bulletin Publishing Co. hereby disclaims all liability for any damages suffered as the result of any advertisement in the Tooele Transcript-Bulletin. Transcript Bulletin Publishing Co. is not responsible for any claims or representations made in advertisements in the Tooele Transcript-Bulletin. The Tooele Transcript- Bulletin has the sole authority to edit and locate any classifi ed advertisement as deemed appropriate. Transcript Bulletin Publishing Co. reserves the right to refuse any advertisement.

All real estate advertised in the Tooele Transcript-Bulletin is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise “any preference, limitation, or discrimination based on race, religion, sex or national origin, or any intention to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination.” The Tooele Transcript-Bulletin will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are informed that all dwellings advertised in this paper are available on an equal opportunity basis.

Visit www.tooeletranscript.com

to place your Classifi ed ad!Or call 882-0050

Visit www.tooeletranscript.com

to place your Classifi ed ad!Or call 882-0050

CLASSIFIED LINE AD RATESRates for the Tooele Transcript Bulletin, published every Tuesday and Thursday

TWENTY WORDS OR LESS

$650* After 20 Words30¢ per word/issue

Bold Type 5¢ per word/issueBoxed ads 50¢ per issue

*Includes the Tooele Valley “Extra” and Transcript Bulletin web-site

Classifi ed ad deadlines: Monday 4:45 p.m. for Tuesday edition • Wednesday 4:45 p.m. for Thursday edition

MONTHLY RATE

$25**

An ad running a minimum of 8 consecutive issues

(20 words or less)

$2.00 per word over 20 wordsBold/boxed ads extra

**No credit for stopped ads. Includes4 runs in the Tooele Valley “Extra”

All classifi ed line ads running in the Tooele Transcript Bulletin on Tuesday or Thursday will automatically run in the Tooele Valley Extra, a separate publication that is delivered to all

nonsubscribers of the Tooele Transcript Bulletin. They will also run on our web-site.

Call Janet at 884-673158 N Main, Tooele

882-0050

for theGrantsville area

newspaper

Carriers wanted

THE OPPORTUNITYCoordinates and refers clients for treatment and/or community resources. Assists the Director, Offi ce Coordinator and CJC boards as needed. Coordinates and participates with service volunteer projects. Responds to crisis situations, monitors children’s interviews and prepare transcripts. Com-municate with families, helping them understand the interview process. Be an advocate for families. Assists families to prepare Crime Victim Repara-tion applications, fi le them with the correct offi ce and monitor the status of the application. Acts as a receptionist. Performs related duties as required.Minimum Qualifi cations1. Education and ExperienceGraduation from high school, plus two (2) years of offi ce experience, in social work, medical offi ce or related setting.2. Required Knowledge, Skills and AbilitiesAbility to operate a personal computer with em-phasis on word processing, spreadsheets. Ability to communicate effectively and to follow written and oral instructions; to maintain effective working relationships with other employees, offi ces, and members of the public.

Children’s Justice CenterStarting Salary: $13.74 per hourStatus: Half-time w/fringe benefi tsClosing Date: Sept. 23, 2014 at 6p.m.

For a complete job description and application please visit www.co.tooele.ut.us

Application and resume must be submitted to Tooele County Human Resource Offi ce, Rm 308, 47 South Main Street Tooele

or email Tita Adams [email protected]

EEO Employer

SECRETARY II

Now Accepting ApplicationsIncome Restrictions ApplyRental assistance may be available. Call for details

435.843.0717TDD 800.735.2900

Now RentingIncome Restrictions Apply

Exclusively for SeniorsPet Friendly

Call for details435.843.0717

2 AND 3bdrm apartments behind Super Wal-Mart. Swimming pool,

hot tub, exercise room, playground, full clubhouse.

Tooele Gateway Apartments (435)843-4400

Tooele Gateway Apartments

Sandra Larsen REAL ESTATE

435.224.9186For All Your Real Estate Needs!

391 NORTH MAIN • TOOELE

ONLY $95,000Well maintained home w/new roof, new windows, new

bathroom, new kitchen counter. Hardwood fl oors, concrete patio. Full basement w/one bedroom & lots of storage. Nice backyard w/fruit trees. All appliances included!

78 BOOTH • GRANTSVILLE

ONLY $193,000Darling rambler!! Central air. Main fl oor laundry. 5 bdrms,

2 baths. Laminate & tile fl ooring. Lots of decorative woodwork (crown molding, bead board etc) LARGE kitchen island and lots of cabinets and counter space.

1113 S 1050 WEST • TOOELE

ONLY $208,000Still time to pick colors! Stucco, stone, carpet,

tile,cabinets, paint, fi xtures! Taxes unkown. Great fl oor plan. 120 sq ft cold storage. Garden tub in master/tile

surround.LOTS ofUPGRADES!

Service with a Smile!

6830 N BIGELOW DR • STANSBURY

ONLY $179,000Granite counter tops, Tile fl ooring in kitchen, baths

and laundry. Stainless steelappliances! Fridge included! LARGE crawl space for storage. HOA

takes care of landscaping and maintenance.

$179,000179,000Granite counter tops, Tile fl ooring in kitchen, baths

and laundry. Stainless steelappliances! Fridge

UnderContract

11 QUEBEC CIR • TOOELE

ONLY $165,000Do you love relaxing summer nights sitting on a big nice deck in a beautiful back yard? Mature, beautiful

landscaping offers privacy. Fire pit included. Basement entrance. Newer vinyl windows. Slate tile, new furnace

and central air. Stainless steel appliances.

11 QUEBEC CIR • TOOELENew Listing

721 E UPLAND DR • TOOELE

ONLY $150,000Nice Rambler on Tooele’s East Bench. Maintained yard w/mature trees & large

backyard. Newer roof, new furnace, new water heater, Central air. Hardwood under carpets!!

150,000150,000Nice Rambler on Tooele’s East Bench. Maintained yard w/mature trees & large

UnderContract

1113 S 1050 WEST • TOOELE

ONLY ONLY ONLY $208,000208,000$208,000$

Still time to pick colors! Stucco, stone, carpet, tile,cabinets, paint, fi xtures! Taxes unkown. Great fl oor plan. 120 sq ft cold storage. Garden tub in master/tile

surround.LOTS ofUPGRADES!

SOLD—More NewBuilds to

Come!

LAND693 E OAKRIDGE DR $92,000. Beautiful lot on East bench!

4000 N SR 36 Corner of SR36 & Erda Way. Apx. 35.11 acres of vacant land w/9.66 acres zoned CG (Commercial) & the remaining acrege of 25.45 acres is zoned RR-5. (Residen-tial on 5 acre lots.)

408 N 250 W $45,000. 1.25 ac in Tooele City!

260 W 400 N $40,000. Corner Lot.

300 W 400 N 1.25 ac on corner lot, Tooele City

2947 W RUIZ Prime building lot! Stockton. $64,900

1048 N DOUGLAS LN Beautiful 5+ acre piece in Vernon Utah. $67,410

Services

*DRYWALL and all Con-struction Services. Pro-fessional Quality. De-pendable. Referencesavailable. Free esti-mates. Jobs big &smal l ! Tooe le .(801)660-9152

ALTERATIONSand AWARD WINNING

TAILORINGby

KATHY JONES

882-6605BRICK WORK. Smallbrick jobs, mailboxposts, chimney repairs,etc. 45yrs experience.Call Lee (385)219-9807

CUSTOM AWNINGS.Protect your cars,patio, deck from theweather. Lifetime war-ranty, no mainte-nance. Lots of colors& styles. Call Tyson(435)849-3374

DRYWALL: Hanging,finishing, texturing. 32years experience. Li-censed and insured.Doug (435)830-2653

PRIVATE TUTORING.I am a certifiedteacher with 20yrs ex-perience. All ages/subjects. Call Angelafor free assessment(435)882-2733(435)496-0590

Services

ELECTRICIAN/ HANDY-MAN residential/ com-mercial electrical in-stalls & repairs, remod-eling, painting, plumb-ing! Dale 435-843-7693801-865-1878 L i -censed, insured.! Majorcredit cards accepted!

GARCIA!S Construc-tion. Licensed, in-sured. I guarantee mywork! Remodels, newconstruction. No jobtoo small! Call Tyson(435)849-3374

HANDYMAN. Tree trim-ming, sprinklers, yardwork. Snow Removal.Residential and busi-ness. Call Jimmy at(435)241-8153(435)249-5060

HOME REPAIRS expert.Door knobs, base-boards, mouldings, dry-wall repairs, textures,caulking, weatherproof-ing, framing, home up-dating and renovationsand much more.Smalljobs okay. Call Shane(435)840-0344

HONEY DO!S Profes-sional. Need newdoors, windows or re-placement glass? Re-modeling, basements,finish work, paintingwindow cleaning, sprin-klers, swamp coolers.Great deals on waterheaters! Now offeringhouse cleaning! Callnow for special rates onbasement finishing! Willbeat competitors prices.We accept credit cards.(801)706-5339

BECOME A SUB-

SCRIBER. 882-0050

Services

RAIN GUTTERS, seam-less, aluminum, all col-ors, licensed and in-sured, free estimates.(435)841-4001

TREE WORK. Free esti-mates! Local company.Licensed & insured.Bucket truck, Craneservice, Stump re-moval, mulch. 801-633-6685 PreciseYard.com

VOICE LESSONS. Allages. No experiencerequired. Learn propertechniques, will workwith all styles of sing-ing. (435)850-0590

Miscellaneous

ALCOHOLICS ANONY-MOUS Meeting Daily.Noon and 8:00pm.1120 West Utah Ave,Oasis Alano Club. Nextto White!s trailer court.(860)798-2139

DIAMONDS don't payretail! Large selection,high quality. Bridal sets,wedding bands. Every-thing wholesale! RockyMtn. Diamond Co.S.L.C. 1-800-396-6948

DO YOU Love Pam-pered Chef? Are youcurious about Pam-pered Chef? Inter-ested in attending aPampered Chef cook-ing show? Would youlike to host a cooking,catalog or Facebookshow? Would you likea career or to earnextra income as aPampered Chef con-sultant? Contact meat (435)830-8784or chefamy@

fullhappiness.com orvisit my website atwww.pamperedchef.biz/afeinauer

FIREPLACE Inserts andStoves. Great buys.Pellet inserts. New$1400. Pellet freestand, new $1800, usedwood inserts $400.(801)295-7398(801)598-3473

If you sell Insurance,promote a hospital oran ambulance service,place your classified adin all 47 of Utah's news-papers. The cost is only$163. for a 25 word ad($5. For each additionalword). You will reachup to 500,000 newspa-per readers. Just callTooele Transcript Bulle-tin at (435)882-0050 fordetails. (Ucan)

SELL YOUR computer inthe classifieds. Call882-0050 or visi twww.tooeletranscript.com

You may have just thething someone out oftown is looking for.Place your classified adin 45 of Utah's newspa-pers, the cost is $163.For up to 25 words.You will be reaching apotential of up to340,000 households.All you need to do iscall the Transcript Bul-letin at 882-0050 for fullde ta i l s . (Men t ionUCAN)

BECOME A SUB-

SCRIBER. 882-0050

Furniture & Appliances

BLACK TV Stand $50;four tall barstools $30each; Cedar chest $50;Large white hutch$600; chandeliers $40each. Call or text(801)913-5139

MAHOGANY CHINACabinet, 3 doors, 3drawers, 70”x45”x16”,very nice, $300; BONECHINA Mikasa servers9, no nicks/ damage$150. (435)843-7775

NORTH VALLEY Appli-ance. Washers/ dryersrefrigerators, freezers,stoves, dishwashers.$149-$399. Completerepair service. Satis-faction guaranteed.Parts for all brands. Giftcards w/purchases over$199. (435)830-3225.(435)843-9154

SMALL SPINET Piano,B e a u t i f u l t o n e ,40”x55.5”24”, matchingbench and cushion.$600; DOG HOUSE,45”x32.5”x32”, foampad, all weather roofing$50. (435)843-7775

SOLID DARK hardwoodhutch, large, very goodcondition, $150; match-ing table, 4 chairs,bench, two extensions,$ 1 0 0 o b o .(435)882-4503

Garage, Yard Sales

HAVING A GARAGE

SALE? Advertise it in

the classifieds. Call

882-0050

RUSH VALLEY, 971 NMain, Saturday, Sun-day, 9-5pm. Huge fam-ily yard sale!

Pets

Pampered Pet ResortQuality pet care for

over 30 years.Dog & Cat boarding

435-884-3374pamperedpetresort.com

RUSH LAKE

KENNELS.Dog & Cat boarding,

obedience training.Call (435)882-5266

rushlakekennels.com

Livestock

Need to sell that newchampion bull or youryearling calves? Placeyour classified ad into47 newspapers, findyour buyers quickly. Foronly $163. your 25word classified will beseen by up to 500,000readers. It is as simpleas calling the TooeleTranscript Bulletin at(435)882-0050 for de-tails. (Ucan)

STRAW bales. Newcrop. $5/ bale you pickup. $7/bale Delivered.Garth (435)837-2246(435)830-2309

Sporting Goods

FOR SALE: Exercise bi-cycle, treadmill, worko u t m a c h i n e .(435)882-1262

SELLING YOUR moun-tain bike? Advertise it inthe classifieds. Call882-0050 www.tooeletranscript.com

Child Care

DAYCARE FOR new-borns - 5yrs old, mealsand snacks provided,over 25yrs experience,2 openings (no pre-school). (435)882-3863or (801)598-0011

OPENINGS FORKathy Witt!s Pre-school & Childcare.Preschool Back ToSchool Night- August28th. Classes startSeptember 2nd & 3rd.Call (435)830-9614for more information.

DEADLINES FOR clas-sifieds ads are Mondayand Wednesdays by4:45 p.m.

Child Care

NEW BEGINNINGS

PRESCHOOL enroll-ing for the 2014-15s c h o o l y e a r . !LONGER CLASSES

NOW AVAILABLE.!

Instructors: CrystalLawrence, HeatherLawrence, BrookeCastagno, AmandaLawrence.! Call nowat (435) 882-0209 toreserve your child'splace. Over 20 yearsof experience!

Help Wanted

Business owners If youneed someone fast,place your classified adin all 48 of Utah's news-papers. The person youare looking for could befrom out of town. Thecost is only $163. for a25 word ad and itreaches up to 340,000households. All you dois call the TranscriptB u l l e t i n a t(435)882-0050 for allthe details. (MentionUCAN) You can noworder online www.utah-press.com

CARRIERS NEEDED!

TOOELE TRAN-SCRIPT Bulletin is

looking forPaper Carriers in

GRANTSVILLE. If youare interested please

call Janet(435)884-6731

DOLLAR CUTS now hir-ing full and part- time li-censed stylists. $50Signing Bonus. ClosedSundays. ContactMissy or Shirley at(435) 843-1890.

DONUT FRYER grave-yard shift, 12am-8amMonday-Saturday. Ex-perience preferred butnot necessary. Apply atNightime Donuts 299 NMain Street, Tooele.

DUGWAY PROVINGGround; Contractor-Government ResourcesGroup LLC (GRG). Theposition is Heavy Vehi-cle Driver, 4yrs experi-ence required. Appli-cants must have cur-rent Class “A” CDLw/one year remainingon license before re-newal. Current DOT en-dorsements ARE re-quired- P and X. Allpersons submitting re-sume must includereadable copy of cur-rent CDL front and re-verse side and aCLEAN DMV driver li-cense record. Inter-ested individuals pleasef a x r e s u m e t o435-831-3404. NOPHONE CALL INQUIR-IES. GRG will not ac-cept resumes afterSeptember 22, 2014.

HELP WANTED. Babysitin my home. Shift work.Call Kim (435)884-4411

Help Wanted

EMPLOYERS NEEDWORK- at-home Medi-cal Transcriptionists!Get the online trainingyou need to fill thesepositions with CareerStep's employer-trustedprogram. Train at hometo work at home! VisitCareerStep.com/UT tostart training for yourwork-at-home careertoday! (ucan)

EXPERIENCED COOKSupervisor. Must haveclean criminal recordand pass drug screen-ing. Working for correc-tions. Weekends amust. Must be over 21.Apply at www.mytrinity-career.com ContactLisa (435)277-4219

LABORERS NEEDEDASAP. Start today.Tooele County/ City,Mon-Fri, 8am-5pm.Sprinklers/ landscaping.No experience needed.General labor $12/hr.Call (801)913-0765

NOW HIRING: TooeleArmy Depot MWR hasan opening for an ITSpecialist, NF-04. Thestar t ing wage is$41,740- $52,175 PerYear. This is an inter-mittent position; noguaranteed hours andno benefits. Openingdate is Sep 15, 2014,closing date is Sep 24,2014. For instructionson how to apply go towww.usajobs.gov. Formore information call833-2005.

Business Opportunities

Small Business owners:Place your classified adin 45 newspapersthroughout Utah foronly $163. for 25words, and $5. perword over 25. You willreach up to 340,000households and it is aone call, one order, onebill program. Call theTranscript Bulletin at882-0050 for furtherinfo. (ucan)

Wanted

PAYING UP TO $1000for your unwanted cartruck or van, running ornot. Lost title? We canhelp! It!s worth yourt i m e ! C a l l(801)688-9053

WANTED: ConcordGrapes. Will tradePeaches for Grapes orwill pick vine that mayg o t o w a s t e .(435)882-4466

WANTED: Scrap metal.Appliances, lawn mow-ers, garbage disposals,etc. Will pick up free.C a l l R i c k a t(801)599-5634

Autos

2003 BLACK HondaCivic. Sunroof, powerwindows and locks,new tires. $5700 obo.Call (801)864-8848

CASH Paid To You foryour unwanted or bro-ken down car, truck orSUV. Free towing. Losttitle? We can help. Call(801)347-2428

SELL YOUR CAR orboat in the classifieds.Call 882-0050 or visitwww.tooeletranscript.com

Apartments for Rent

2BDRM 1bth, quiet. Nopets, no smoking, 1yrlease, air, w/d hookups,storage shed, carport,water, sewer, garbageincluded. For further in-formation please call(435)882-4986

2BDRM 1BTH, remod-eled, govt. subsidized.Playground, carport,free cable. $500/dep.211 S. Hale, Grants-v i l le . Cal l Chr is(435)843-8247 EqualHousing Opp.

3BDRM, 1.5BTH apart-ment $975/mo,$400/dep, utilities in-cluded, central air, w/dhookups, no pets ors m o k i n g . K i m(435)830-9371

SETTLEMENT CAN-YON APARTMENTS 2& 3 bedroom apts.Prices start ing at$840/mo. Call Danielle(435)882-6112 for info.

TOOELE, Basement,2bdrm, 1bth, large liv-ing room and full roomwalk-in closet, w/d, onecar garage. Fenced,grassed backyard, &patio. Close to elemen-tary school. Utilities in-cluded. No smoking/p e t s . $ 7 0 0 / m o ,$750/dep.(435)241-0472

Homes for Rent

WHY RENT When YouCan Buy? Zero down& Low Income pro-grams, 1st time & Sin-gle parent programs,Berna Sloan (435)840-5029 Group 1

Homes for Rent

3, 4, and 5bdrm homes,duplexes, & apts. $745-$1245/mo.! Pet friendly.Pictures, Details, & Ap-p l y o n l i n e a tWMGUtah.com.!435-849-5826.

3BDRM, 2BTH mobilehome for rent, no smok-ing/ pets. 882-1550

3BDRM, 2BTH, Walk toschool or shopping.Pets allowed. No smok-ing. $900/mo $900/dep.C a l l M e l o d y(435)849-2560

BEAUTIFUL TooeleTownhome 3bdrm1.5bth 88 W 1970 Nend unit with largemanicured yard “A musts e e ” $ 8 9 5 / m o801-627-1132

GRANTSVILLE, 151 EMain #2, 1bdrm, 1bth,P e t s w e l c o m e .$ 5 0 0 / m o . A a r o nwww.aaronoakeson.com (801)450-8432

HOMES available to pur-chase for LOW IN-COME buyers withgood credit.! BernaSloan (435)840-5029Group 1 Real Estate.

SELLER WILL FinanceCheaper than Rent!!

(435)277-0889(New Number)

Tim/ Cindy Toone Equity RE

TOOELE 4BDRM 2bth,2 car garage, fenced,one dog al lowed.$1245/mo. Availableimmediately. (801)842-9631 www. guardrightproperty.com Equity RE

TOOELE City, mouth ofSettlement Canyon,deer will be your near-est neighbors! Totallyrenovated home, 2bdrm1bth, single garagew/opener. $850/mo.(801)842-9631 www.guardrightproperty.com

TOOELE, 334 E 600 N,3bdrm, 2bth, no smok-ing/ pets. One level liv-i n g , $ 1 0 5 0 / m o ,$650/dep. Spencer(435)840-0412

TOOELE, 5BDRM, 2bthrambler, fenced yard,Brand New carpet$1050/mo guardright-property.com Equity RE(801)842-9631

WHY RENT? I need alive-in babysitter. Let!smake a deal. Call Kim(435)884-4411

Homes

$$SAVE MONEYSearch Bank & HUDhomes www.TooeleBankHomes.comBerna Sloan (435)840-5029 Group 1

$242,900 GRANTS-VILLE brick 4bdrm,3866sqft, total land-scaped, tile/ hardwoodfloors, new carpet, newpaint. Many upgrades.Mot i va ted se l l e r !(435)840-5445

FSBO 3BDRM, 2.5bth,family, and living roomw/upstairs loft, nicelylandcaped w/full vinylfence. 537 East 700North, Tooele. Pam(435)850-8516

HELP! NEED Seller

who wants $10-20Kmore on their home.!435-849-8880

Tim/ Cindy Toone Equity RE

Planning on selling yourhome, you could besending your salespoints to up to 340,000households at once.For $163. you canplace your 25 wordclassified ad to all 45newspapers in Utah.Just call the TranscriptBulletin at 882-0050 forall the details. (Mentionucan)

S E L L I N G Y O U RHOME? Advertise it inthe classifieds. Call882-0050 or visi twww.tooeletranscript.com

Mobile Homes

3BDRM, 2BTH mobilehome for rent, no smok-ing/ pets. 882-1550

3BDRM, 2BTH mobilehome for rent, no smok-ing/ pets. 882-1550

Offi ce Space

FOR LEASE Office/Bus iness SpaceUtilities included. 54South Main (plus oth-ers). 1mo free.(602)826-9471

OFFICE OR retail space,26 W Vine Street, goodparking, prox 600sqft,$450! 801-205-3883www.vinestreetcourtyard.com

Place Your Ad: 882-0050

TUESDAY September 16, 2014 B5

Page 18: 9-16-14 Transcript Bulletin

TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

Tooele Valley Homes & Lots!

Call Laramie Dunn for ALL your Real Estate needs435-224-4000

Call Laramie DunnTooele County’s Real Estate Specialist

4291 N. Rose Springs Rd, Erda

Newly Built Beautiful Rambler3 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, 3190 sq. ft. ram-bler is built on over 1/2 acre. $268,900

HotHomesTooele.com

412 E. Lindy Way, Tooele

Multi-Level in Pristine Condition3 bedroom, 2 bathroom, 2789 sq. ft., multi

level. On .34 acres. $219,900

4295 N. Rose Springs Rd, Erda

Newly Built West Erda HomeBeautiful 4 bedroom, 2 bathroom, 2 story home. 3,157 sq. ft. On over 1/2 acre. $284,900

992 E. Brookfield Ave., Erda

Beautiful Home on 5 Acres Horse Prop.4248 sq. ft., 6 bedroom, 3.5 bathroom Beautifully

finished. Open floor plan. $589,900

5 Acre Spring Canyon Estates Horse property in Tooele

Starting at $99,000

55 E. Main, Ophir

Amazing Home in Ophir3 bedrooms, 2 family rooms. Really beautiful.

2898 sq. ft. $299,900

HELP!! I Need More Listings!

108

107

106

105

104103102

101119

118

117

116

115

114

113112

111 110109

120

121 122

123

124125126

127

Pine Canyon Road

Dro

uby

Roa

d

15 beautiful 5 acre

lots with amazing views still available

Use your own builder or one of ours.

435-840-0344

For Sale794 E VINE ST

TOOELE$229,000•Adjacent to Oquirrh Hills Golf Course• Fully Fenced• 3 Bdrms, 3 Bath- Lg. Covered Patio - Storage Galore

For any of your real estate needs, call Shane Bergen

MAIN HOME:5 Bdrms • 4 Baths • Quality • Comfort!

SECOND HOME: • 2 Bdrm, 2 Bath • Rambler• Great shape• Options

2 Homes!

302 N 100 ETOOELE

$119,000• Fully Fenced• Detached Garage w/ Storage• Central AC Unit • Newer Furnace

Beauty in Rush Valley w/ 2nd Home & Land!

Water Shares

FOR SALE: 2 each Set-tlement Canyon Irriga-tion Shares. $3000each. Cal l Mike(435)830-0891

Buildings

If you build, remodel orremove buildings youcan place your classi-fied ad in 45 of Utah'snewspapers for only$163. for 25 words ($5.for each additionalword). You will reachup to 340,000 house-holds and all you do iscall the Transcript Bul-letin at 882-0050 for allthe details. (MentionUCAN Classified Net-work)

METAL ROOF/ WALLPanels, Pre-engineeredMetal Buildings. Millprices for sheeting coilare at a 4 year low. Youget the savings. 17 Col-ors prime material, cutto your exact length.CO Building Systems1-800-COBLDGS(ucan)

Financial Services

BANKRUPTCY ON ABUDGET *$350 AspireCredit Solutions. StopGarnishments Now!!Bankruptcy/ Credit Re-pair. Get a Fresh Start.aspirecreditsolution.com 801-446-8216 Li-censed/ Insured (ucan)

Public Notices Meetings

Deadline for public no-tices is 4 p.m. the dayprior to publication.Public notices submit-ted past the deadlinewill not be accepted.UPAXLP

PUBLIC NOTICENotice is hereby giventhat the Tooele CityCouncil & Tooele CityRedevelopment Agencyof Tooele City, Utah, willmeet in a Work Sessionon Wednesday, Septem-ber 17, 2014 at the hourof 5:00 P.M. The meet-ing will be held at theTooele City Hall LargeConference Room lo-cated at 90 North MainStreet, Tooele, Utah.1. Open Meeting2. Roll Call3. Discussion:- Utah Retirement Sys-tem Benefit ProtectionContracts Presented byKami Perkins- Copper Canyon Spe-cial Service District Pre-sented by Roger Baker- Chapter Revision toCity Code 8-4 Abate-ment of Nuisances Pre-sented by Jim Bolser- Rezone Request for1518 N Pine Canyon RdPresented by Jim Bolser4. Close Meeting to Dis-cuss:- Property Acquisition5. AdjournMichelle Y. PittTooele City Recorder/RDA SecretaryPursuant to the Ameri-cans with DisabilitiesAct, Individuals NeedingSpecial Accommoda-tions Should Notify Mi-chelle Y. Pitt, TooeleCity Recorder, at843-2110 prior to themeeting.(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin September16, 2014)

Public Notices Meetings

PUBLIC NOTICENotice is hereby giventhat the Tooele CityCouncil & Tooele CityRedevelopment Agencyof Tooele City, Utah, willmeet in a Work Sessionon Wednesday, Septem-ber 17, 2014 at the hourof 5:00 P.M. The meet-ing will be held at theTooele City Hall LargeConference Room lo-cated at 90 North MainStreet, Tooele, Utah.1. Open Meeting2. Roll Call3. Discussion:- Utah Retirement Sys-tem Benefit ProtectionContracts Presented byKami Perkins- Copper Canyon Spe-cial Service District Pre-sented by Roger Baker- Chapter Revision toCity Code 8-4 Abate-ment of Nuisances Pre-sented by Jim Bolser- Rezone Request for1518 N Pine Canyon RdPresented by Jim Bolser4. Close Meeting to Dis-cuss:- Property Acquisition5. AdjournMichelle Y. PittTooele City Recorder/RDA SecretaryPursuant to the Ameri-cans with DisabilitiesAct, Individuals NeedingSpecial Accommoda-tions Should Notify Mi-chelle Y. Pitt, TooeleCity Recorder, at843-2110 prior to themeeting.(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin September16, 2014)

PUBLIC NOTICENotice is hereby giventhat the Tooele CityCouncil will meet in aBusiness Meeting onWednesday, September17, 2014 at the hour of7:00 P.M. The meetingwill be held at the TooeleCity Hall Council Roomlocated at 90 North MainStreet, Tooele, Utah.1. Pledge of Allegiance2. Roll Call3. Mayor's CommunityYouth Recogni t ionAwards4. Public Comment Pe-riod5. Resolution 2014-43 AResolution of the TooeleCity Council Approving aContract with HawksJanitorial ContractingPresented by RogerBaker6. Minutes7. InvoicesPresented by MichellePitt8. AdjournMichelle Y. PittTooele City RecorderPursuant to the Ameri-cans with DisabilitiesAct, Individuals NeedingSpecial Accommoda-tions Should Notify Mi-chelle Y. Pitt, TooeleCity Recorder, at843-2110 prior to themeeting. TDD PhoneNumber 843-2108(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin September16, 2014)

Public Notices Meetings

TOWN OF VERNONREQUEST FOR PRO-POSALS SNOW RE-MOVAL SERVICESThe Town of Vernon isinviting bids from quali-fied persons or firms in-terested in entering intoa contract to providesnow plowing andsalt/sand applications forthe Vernon Town Roadsfor the 2014-2015 winterseason on an as neededbasis. Interested appli-cants must carry generalliability insurance andautomobile liability insur-ance as specified by theTown. Specificationsand the proposed con-tract are available bycontact ing Doret taShumway at 435839-3473 or 435840-2043. Please callBruce Thomas at 435839-3468 for more infor-mation.Sealed bids must be re-ceived by Doretta Shum-way at P.O. Box 134,Vernon, Utah 84080,prior to 5:00 PM on Oc-tober 10, 2014.All bids will be openedand formally consideredat the regular VernonTown Council Meetingon October 14, 2014 at7:30 p.m. The Town ofVernon is an Equal Op-portunity Employer.Dated this 9th day ofAugust 2014.Doretta ShumwayVernon Town Clerk(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin September16 & 18, 2014)

PUBLIC NOTICETooele County SchoolDistrict's Title VII Pro-gramSeptember 16, 2014 @6:00 p.m.Dugway ElementaryCafeteria1. Welcome and intro-ductions2. Explanation of Title VIIIndian Education For-mula grantHandout3. Review of School dataInstructional ProgramsExtracurricular activitiesOther opportunities forparticipation and serv-ices available4. Comments5. Concerns/ Questions/Recommendations(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin August28, September 2, 4, 9,11 & 16, 2014)

BECOME A SUB-

SCRIBER. 882-0050

Public Notices Meetings

TOWN OF OPHIRLand Use CommitteeMeetingOphir Town HallSeptember 30, 20146:00pmThe Town of Ophir pro-poses conditional use forCommercial Movie andVideo production withinthe Town of Ophir.In addition to conditionaluse, the Town Councilproposes to use a slidingfee schedule addressingthe loss of impacts asso-ciated with such produc-tion.(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin September16 & 23, 2014)

PUBLIC NOTICEThe Grantsville CityCouncil will hold its regu-lar meeting at 7:00 p.m.on Wednesday, Septem-ber 17, 2014 at 429 EastMain Street, Grantsville,UT 84029. The agendais as follows:CALL TO ORDER ANDPLEDGE OF ALLE-GIANCEROLL CALLAGENDA:1. Public Hearings:a. Proposed minor sub-division for Kaylie Buhldividing 4.62 acres ofland from two (2) lotsinto three (3) lots at ap-proximately 241 NorthCooley in a R-1-12 zone.b. Proposed minor sub-div is ion for ErnieBeacham dividing 13.47acres of land from one(1) lot into four (4) lots at558 South Quirk Streetin a RR-1 zone.c. Proposed conceptplan for Darrell Nielsenand Celtic Bank on theCherry Village subdivi-sion at West Main Streetfor the creation of 60 halfacre lots in the R-1-21zone.d. Proposed conceptplan for Todd Castagnoand Lou Rae Tate andRosanne Rhodes on theTate Place subdivision at230 South Quirk Streetfor the creation of 11 lotsin the R-1-8 zone.2. Public Comments.3. Summary ActionItems.a. Approval of Minutesb. Approval of Billsc. Personnel Matters4. Consideration of a mi-nor subdivision for KaylieBuhl dividing 4.62 acresof land from two (2) lotsinto three (3) lots at ap-proximately 241 NorthCooley Street.5. Consideration of a mi-nor subdivision for ErnieBeacham dividing 13.47acres of land from one(1) lot into four (4) lots at558 South Quirk Street.6. Consideration of aconcept plan on theCherry Village subdivi-sion at West Main Streetfor the creationof 60 half acre lots.7. Consideration of aconcept plan on the TatePlace subdivision at 230South Quirk Street forthe creation of 11 lots.8. Review and declara-tion of surplus items.9. Initial Consideration ofAnnexation Petition filedby Kenneth Hales.10. Mayor and CouncilReports.11. Adjourn.Christine WebbCity Recorder In compliance with theAmericans with DisabilityAct, Grantsville City willaccommodate reason-able requests to assistpersons with disabilitiesto participate in meet-ings. Requests for assis-tance may be made bycalling City Hall (435)884-3411 at least 3 daysin advance of a meeting.(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin September16, 2014)

Public Notices Meetings

PUBLIC NOTICEThe Grantsville CityCouncil will hold its regu-lar meeting at 7:00 p.m.on Wednesday, Septem-ber 17, 2014 at 429 EastMain Street, Grantsville,UT 84029. The agendais as follows:CALL TO ORDER ANDPLEDGE OF ALLE-GIANCEROLL CALLAGENDA:1. Public Hearings:a. Proposed minor sub-division for Kaylie Buhldividing 4.62 acres ofland from two (2) lotsinto three (3) lots at ap-proximately 241 NorthCooley in a R-1-12 zone.b. Proposed minor sub-div is ion for ErnieBeacham dividing 13.47acres of land from one(1) lot into four (4) lots at558 South Quirk Streetin a RR-1 zone.c. Proposed conceptplan for Darrell Nielsenand Celtic Bank on theCherry Village subdivi-sion at West Main Streetfor the creation of 60 halfacre lots in the R-1-21zone.d. Proposed conceptplan for Todd Castagnoand Lou Rae Tate andRosanne Rhodes on theTate Place subdivision at230 South Quirk Streetfor the creation of 11 lotsin the R-1-8 zone.2. Public Comments.3. Summary ActionItems.a. Approval of Minutesb. Approval of Billsc. Personnel Matters4. Consideration of a mi-nor subdivision for KaylieBuhl dividing 4.62 acresof land from two (2) lotsinto three (3) lots at ap-proximately 241 NorthCooley Street.5. Consideration of a mi-nor subdivision for ErnieBeacham dividing 13.47acres of land from one(1) lot into four (4) lots at558 South Quirk Street.6. Consideration of aconcept plan on theCherry Village subdivi-sion at West Main Streetfor the creationof 60 half acre lots.7. Consideration of aconcept plan on the TatePlace subdivision at 230South Quirk Street forthe creation of 11 lots.8. Review and declara-tion of surplus items.9. Initial Consideration ofAnnexation Petition filedby Kenneth Hales.10. Mayor and CouncilReports.11. Adjourn.Christine WebbCity Recorder In compliance with theAmericans with DisabilityAct, Grantsville City willaccommodate reason-able requests to assistpersons with disabilitiesto participate in meet-ings. Requests for assis-tance may be made bycalling City Hall (435)884-3411 at least 3 daysin advance of a meeting.(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin September16, 2014)

Public Notices Trustees

Deadline for public no-tices is 4 p.m. the dayprior to publication.Public notices submit-ted past the deadlinewill not be accepted.UPAXLP

NOTICE OF TRUS-TEE'S SALEThe following describedproperty will be sold atpublic auction to thehighest bidder, payablein lawful money of theUnited States, at theMain Entrance, ThirdDistrict Court Gordon R.Hall Courthouse, 74South 100 East, Tooele,Utah, on October 14,2014 at 10:00 a.m., forthe purpose of foreclos-ing a Deed of Trust forUtah (“Trust Deed”)dated June 1, 2006 andoriginally executed byNathan Putnam andBrandi Moody, as Trus-tors, in favor of theUnited States of Americaacting through the RuralHousing Service or suc-cessor agency, UnitedStates Department ofAgriculture, as Benefici-ary, covering the follow-ing real property locatedin Tooele County, Stateof Utah:Lot 216A, ShetlandMeadows Phase 2 Sub-division, a subdivision ofTooele City, according tothe official plat thereof,recorded in the office ofthe county recorder ofTooele County, Utah.Parcel No.: 12-024-0-216AThe current beneficiaryof the Trust Deed isUnited States of Americaacting through the RuralHousing Service or suc-cessor agency, UnitedStates Department ofAgriculture and the re-cord owner of the prop-erty as of the recordingof the Notice of Defaultis Nathan Putnam andBrandi Moody. Said salewill be made without anycovenant or warranty,expressed or implied,pursuant to the power ofsale conferred in theTrust Deed. The ad-dress is the property isreputed to be at 239West Daniel Drive,Tooele, Utah. The open-ing bid will be the net re-covery value of approxi-mately $91,168.00 whichis not a representation ofthe exact amount owed.This Notice of Trustee'sSale is an attempt to col-lect a debt, and any in-formation obtained willbe used for that purpose.Bidders must tender tothe trustee a $25,000.00deposit at the sale andthe balance of the pur-chase price by 12:00noon the day followingthe sale. Both the de-posit and the balancemust be in the form of awire transfer, cashier'scheck or certified fundspayable to Backman Ti-tle Services, Ltd. Cashpayments are not ac-cepted.Dated this 12th day ofSeptember, 2014.Backman Title Services,Ltd., a Utah limited part-nership, Successor Trus-teeBy: Backman TitleCompany of Utah, aUtah corporation, itsgeneral partnerPaul D. Newton,Vice-PresidentFile No. 5-084532Office Hours: 8am-5pm(M-F)167 East 6100 SouthSalt Lake City, Utah84107(801)288-8818(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin September16, 23 & 30, 2014)

Public Notices Trustees

NOTICE OF TRUS-TEE'S SALEThe following describedproperty will be sold atpublic auction to thehighest bidder, payablein lawful money of theUnited States, at theMain Entrance, ThirdDistrict Court Gordon R.Hall Courthouse, 74South 100 East, Tooele,Utah, on October 14,2014 at 10:00 a.m., forthe purpose of foreclos-ing a Deed of Trust forUtah (“Trust Deed”)dated June 1, 2006 andoriginally executed byNathan Putnam andBrandi Moody, as Trus-tors, in favor of theUnited States of Americaacting through the RuralHousing Service or suc-cessor agency, UnitedStates Department ofAgriculture, as Benefici-ary, covering the follow-ing real property locatedin Tooele County, Stateof Utah:Lot 216A, ShetlandMeadows Phase 2 Sub-division, a subdivision ofTooele City, according tothe official plat thereof,recorded in the office ofthe county recorder ofTooele County, Utah.Parcel No.: 12-024-0-216AThe current beneficiaryof the Trust Deed isUnited States of Americaacting through the RuralHousing Service or suc-cessor agency, UnitedStates Department ofAgriculture and the re-cord owner of the prop-erty as of the recordingof the Notice of Defaultis Nathan Putnam andBrandi Moody. Said salewill be made without anycovenant or warranty,expressed or implied,pursuant to the power ofsale conferred in theTrust Deed. The ad-dress is the property isreputed to be at 239West Daniel Drive,Tooele, Utah. The open-ing bid will be the net re-covery value of approxi-mately $91,168.00 whichis not a representation ofthe exact amount owed.This Notice of Trustee'sSale is an attempt to col-lect a debt, and any in-formation obtained willbe used for that purpose.Bidders must tender tothe trustee a $25,000.00deposit at the sale andthe balance of the pur-chase price by 12:00noon the day followingthe sale. Both the de-posit and the balancemust be in the form of awire transfer, cashier'scheck or certified fundspayable to Backman Ti-tle Services, Ltd. Cashpayments are not ac-cepted.Dated this 12th day ofSeptember, 2014.Backman Title Services,Ltd., a Utah limited part-nership, Successor Trus-teeBy: Backman TitleCompany of Utah, aUtah corporation, itsgeneral partnerPaul D. Newton,Vice-PresidentFile No. 5-084532Office Hours: 8am-5pm(M-F)167 East 6100 SouthSalt Lake City, Utah84107(801)288-8818(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin September16, 23 & 30, 2014)

Public Notices Trustees

NOTICE OF TRUS-TEE'S SALEThe following describedproperty will be sold atpublic auction to thehighest bidder, payablein lawful money of theUnited States, at theMain Entrance, ThirdDistrict Court Gordon R.Hall Courthouse, 74South 100 East, Tooele,Utah, on October 14,2014 at 10:00 a.m., forthe purpose of foreclos-ing a Deed of Trust forUtah (“Trust Deed”)dated June 1, 2006 andoriginally executed byNathan Putnam andBrandi Moody, as Trus-tors, in favor of theUnited States of Americaacting through the RuralHousing Service or suc-cessor agency, UnitedStates Department ofAgriculture, as Benefici-ary, covering the follow-ing real property locatedin Tooele County, Stateof Utah:Lot 216A, ShetlandMeadows Phase 2 Sub-division, a subdivision ofTooele City, according tothe official plat thereof,recorded in the office ofthe county recorder ofTooele County, Utah.Parcel No.: 12-024-0-216AThe current beneficiaryof the Trust Deed isUnited States of Americaacting through the RuralHousing Service or suc-cessor agency, UnitedStates Department ofAgriculture and the re-cord owner of the prop-erty as of the recordingof the Notice of Defaultis Nathan Putnam andBrandi Moody. Said salewill be made without anycovenant or warranty,expressed or implied,pursuant to the power ofsale conferred in theTrust Deed. The ad-dress is the property isreputed to be at 239West Daniel Drive,Tooele, Utah. The open-ing bid will be the net re-covery value of approxi-mately $91,168.00 whichis not a representation ofthe exact amount owed.This Notice of Trustee'sSale is an attempt to col-lect a debt, and any in-formation obtained willbe used for that purpose.Bidders must tender tothe trustee a $25,000.00deposit at the sale andthe balance of the pur-chase price by 12:00noon the day followingthe sale. Both the de-posit and the balancemust be in the form of awire transfer, cashier'scheck or certified fundspayable to Backman Ti-tle Services, Ltd. Cashpayments are not ac-cepted.Dated this 12th day ofSeptember, 2014.Backman Title Services,Ltd., a Utah limited part-nership, Successor Trus-teeBy: Backman TitleCompany of Utah, aUtah corporation, itsgeneral partnerPaul D. Newton,Vice-PresidentFile No. 5-084532Office Hours: 8am-5pm(M-F)167 East 6100 SouthSalt Lake City, Utah84107(801)288-8818(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin September16, 23 & 30, 2014)

Public Notices Water User

Deadline for public no-tices is 4 p.m. the dayprior to publication.Public notices submit-ted past the deadlinewill not be accepted.UPAXLP

Public Notices Miscellaneous

Deadline for public no-tices is 4 p.m. the dayprior to publication.Public notices submit-ted past the deadlinewill not be accepted.UPAXLP

GRANTSVILLE CITYNOTICE OF ADOPTIONOF ORDINANCES NOTICE IS HEREBYGIVEN that on Septem-ber 3, 2014 the Grants-ville City Council en-acted the following ordi-nance:Ordinance No. 2014-20amending Cemeteries,Title 6, Chapter 1 of theGrantsville City Code toupdate its content for thepolicies, duties and pro-cedures of GrantsvilleCity Cemeteries.This ordinance will takeeffect upon the publica-tion of this notice. Thisordinance may be re-viewed or a copy may beobtained from theGrantsville City Recorderat 429 East Main Street,G r a n t s v i l l e U t a h .(435.884.3411)DATED this 11th day ofSeptember, 2014.Christine WebbGrantsville CityRecorder(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin September16, 2014)

ORDINANCE 2014-11A N O R D I N A N C EAMENDING SUBSEC-TION 13-9-1(2), FINAN-CIAL ASSURANCE -IMPROVEMENT IN-STALLATION GUAR-ANTEE, OF TITLE 13,SUBDIVISIONS, OFTHE TOOELE COUNTYCODENOW, THEREFORE, BEIT ORDAINED BY THELEGISLATIVE BODYOF TOOELE COUNTY,UTAH AS FOLLOWS:SECTION I - PURPOSE.As the costs of infra-structure constructioncontinue to increase, theCounty recognizes thatthe required bondamount, which is cur-rently equal to the costof required improve-ments, may not be suffi-cient should the Countybe required to completea subdivision. Other ju-risdictions require 110%to 125% of the improve-ments cost to cover ad-ministrative expensesand any inflation thatmay occur if the devel-oper fails to completethe subdivision. TheTooele County PlanningCommission held a pub-lic hearing on the issueand recommends pas-sage of this ordinance.SECTION II - SUBSEC-TION AMENDED. Sub-section 13-9-1(2) of Sec-tion 13-9-1, Improve-ment installation guaran-tee, of Chapter 9, Finan-cial Assurance, of Title13, Subdivisions, of theTooele County Code ishereby amended to readas follows:(2) The guarantee shallbe in an amount equal to120% of the cost of re-quired improvements asestimated by an engi-neer retained by the sub-divider and approved bythe county engineer, orin an amount estimatedby the county engineer.The guarantee shall as-sure the actual construc-tion of such improve-ments within one year,or at a date approved bythe county engineer, im-mediately following theapproval of the financialassurance by the countycommission.SECTION III - RE-PEALER. Ordinancesand resolutions in con-flict herewith are herebyrepealed to the extent ofsuch conflict.SECTION IV - EFFEC-TIVE DATE. This ordi-nance shall become ef-fective fifteen (15) daysafter its passage, pro-vided it has been pub-lished, or at such publi-cation date if more thanfifteen (15) days afterpassage.I N W I T N E S SWHEREOF the TooeleCounty Commission,which is the legislativebody of Tooele County,passed, approved andenacted this ordinancethis 2nd day of Septem-ber 2014.ATTEST:MARILYN K. GIL-L E T T E , C l e r kTOOELE COUNTYCOMMISSION:J. BRUCE CLEGG,Chairman(SEAL)Commissioner Cleggvoted ayeCommissioner Hurstvoted ayeCommissioner Milnevoted ayeAPPROVED AS TOFORM:DOUG HOGANTooele County Attor-ney(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin September16, 2014)

Public Notices Miscellaneous

ORDINANCE 2014-11A N O R D I N A N C EAMENDING SUBSEC-TION 13-9-1(2), FINAN-CIAL ASSURANCE -IMPROVEMENT IN-STALLATION GUAR-ANTEE, OF TITLE 13,SUBDIVISIONS, OFTHE TOOELE COUNTYCODENOW, THEREFORE, BEIT ORDAINED BY THELEGISLATIVE BODYOF TOOELE COUNTY,UTAH AS FOLLOWS:SECTION I - PURPOSE.As the costs of infra-structure constructioncontinue to increase, theCounty recognizes thatthe required bondamount, which is cur-rently equal to the costof required improve-ments, may not be suffi-cient should the Countybe required to completea subdivision. Other ju-risdictions require 110%to 125% of the improve-ments cost to cover ad-ministrative expensesand any inflation thatmay occur if the devel-oper fails to completethe subdivision. TheTooele County PlanningCommission held a pub-lic hearing on the issueand recommends pas-sage of this ordinance.SECTION II - SUBSEC-TION AMENDED. Sub-section 13-9-1(2) of Sec-tion 13-9-1, Improve-ment installation guaran-tee, of Chapter 9, Finan-cial Assurance, of Title13, Subdivisions, of theTooele County Code ishereby amended to readas follows:(2) The guarantee shallbe in an amount equal to120% of the cost of re-quired improvements asestimated by an engi-neer retained by the sub-divider and approved bythe county engineer, orin an amount estimatedby the county engineer.The guarantee shall as-sure the actual construc-tion of such improve-ments within one year,or at a date approved bythe county engineer, im-mediately following theapproval of the financialassurance by the countycommission.SECTION III - RE-PEALER. Ordinancesand resolutions in con-flict herewith are herebyrepealed to the extent ofsuch conflict.SECTION IV - EFFEC-TIVE DATE. This ordi-nance shall become ef-fective fifteen (15) daysafter its passage, pro-vided it has been pub-lished, or at such publi-cation date if more thanfifteen (15) days afterpassage.I N W I T N E S SWHEREOF the TooeleCounty Commission,which is the legislativebody of Tooele County,passed, approved andenacted this ordinancethis 2nd day of Septem-ber 2014.ATTEST:MARILYN K. GIL-L E T T E , C l e r kTOOELE COUNTYCOMMISSION:J. BRUCE CLEGG,Chairman(SEAL)Commissioner Cleggvoted ayeCommissioner Hurstvoted ayeCommissioner Milnevoted ayeAPPROVED AS TOFORM:DOUG HOGANTooele County Attor-ney(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin September16, 2014)

Public Notices Miscellaneous

ORDINANCE 2014-11A N O R D I N A N C EAMENDING SUBSEC-TION 13-9-1(2), FINAN-CIAL ASSURANCE -IMPROVEMENT IN-STALLATION GUAR-ANTEE, OF TITLE 13,SUBDIVISIONS, OFTHE TOOELE COUNTYCODENOW, THEREFORE, BEIT ORDAINED BY THELEGISLATIVE BODYOF TOOELE COUNTY,UTAH AS FOLLOWS:SECTION I - PURPOSE.As the costs of infra-structure constructioncontinue to increase, theCounty recognizes thatthe required bondamount, which is cur-rently equal to the costof required improve-ments, may not be suffi-cient should the Countybe required to completea subdivision. Other ju-risdictions require 110%to 125% of the improve-ments cost to cover ad-ministrative expensesand any inflation thatmay occur if the devel-oper fails to completethe subdivision. TheTooele County PlanningCommission held a pub-lic hearing on the issueand recommends pas-sage of this ordinance.SECTION II - SUBSEC-TION AMENDED. Sub-section 13-9-1(2) of Sec-tion 13-9-1, Improve-ment installation guaran-tee, of Chapter 9, Finan-cial Assurance, of Title13, Subdivisions, of theTooele County Code ishereby amended to readas follows:(2) The guarantee shallbe in an amount equal to120% of the cost of re-quired improvements asestimated by an engi-neer retained by the sub-divider and approved bythe county engineer, orin an amount estimatedby the county engineer.The guarantee shall as-sure the actual construc-tion of such improve-ments within one year,or at a date approved bythe county engineer, im-mediately following theapproval of the financialassurance by the countycommission.SECTION III - RE-PEALER. Ordinancesand resolutions in con-flict herewith are herebyrepealed to the extent ofsuch conflict.SECTION IV - EFFEC-TIVE DATE. This ordi-nance shall become ef-fective fifteen (15) daysafter its passage, pro-vided it has been pub-lished, or at such publi-cation date if more thanfifteen (15) days afterpassage.I N W I T N E S SWHEREOF the TooeleCounty Commission,which is the legislativebody of Tooele County,passed, approved andenacted this ordinancethis 2nd day of Septem-ber 2014.ATTEST:MARILYN K. GIL-L E T T E , C l e r kTOOELE COUNTYCOMMISSION:J. BRUCE CLEGG,Chairman(SEAL)Commissioner Cleggvoted ayeCommissioner Hurstvoted ayeCommissioner Milnevoted ayeAPPROVED AS TOFORM:DOUG HOGANTooele County Attor-ney(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin September16, 2014)

REQUEST FOR PRO-

POSALS FOR SANI-

TARY SEWER MAINTE-

NANCE

GRANTSVILLE CITY

CORPORATION

Grantsville City is ac-cepting written proposalsfor Sanitary Sewer Main-tenance services fromqualified persons orcompanies to provideservice within GrantsvilleCity. A detailed list ofwork to be performed isavailable by contactingGrantsville City at (435)884-3411 and may berequested by email [email protected]. Proposals will beaccepted at the Grants-ville City Offices locatedat 429 East Main Street,Grantsville, Utah 84029until 3:00 p.m. on Sep-tember 26, 2014. Pro-posals received afterthat time will not be con-sidered. The Mayor andFinance Director will re-view the proposals andsubmit their recommen-dation to the City Councilon October 1, 2014. TheCity reserves the right toconsider both experi-ence and compensationin making a selection.The City also reservesthe right to negotiate thecompensation amountwith the person or com-pany that is selected.The person or companyselected to perform thisservices will be an inde-pendent contractor andnot an employee ofGrantsville City. Send ordeliver proposals toSherrie Broadbent, 429East Main Street,Grantsville, Utah 84029.Dated this 10th day ofSeptember, 2014.Sherrie Broadbent

Grantsville Finance

Director

(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin September11, 16 & 18, 2014)

B6 TUESDAY September 16, 2014

Page 19: 9-16-14 Transcript Bulletin

TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

Public Notices Miscellaneous

ORDINANCE 2014-12A N O R D I N A N C EAMENDING THE OFFI-CIAL ZONING MAP OFTOOELE COUNTY; RE-ZONING APPROXI-MATELY 40 ACRES OFLAND NORTH OFHICKMAN CANYONROAD, FROM MU-40TO A-20NOW, THEREFORE, BEIT ORDAINED BY THELEGISLATIVE BODYOF TOOELE COUNTY,UTAH AS FOLLOWS:SECTION I - AMEND-MENT. Pursuant toUtah Code AnnotatedSections 17-27a-502and 17-27a-503, theTooele County PlanningCommission conducteda public hearing on theapplication for rezonesubmitted by agentDayne Applegate, on be-half of Tool Box Realty,and recommended theamendment to the offi-cial zoning map.Notice having been pro-vided as required byU C A S u b s e c t i o n17-27a-205(1)(b) andhaving held a publicmeeting, the official zon-ing map of TooeleCounty is herebyamended by changingthe zoning designation ofapproximately 40 acresknown as Parcel #06-034-0-0005, and de-scribed as the NE 1/4OF NE 1/4 SEC 27,Y4S, R6W, SLM, whichis north of and adjacentto Hickman CanyonRoad, west of the inter-section with Mud SpringRoad, near the base ofBox Elder Canyon inTooele County, Utahfrom MU-40 (Multiple-Use, 40-Acre MinimumLot Size) to A-20 (Agri-culture, 20-Acre Mini-mum Lot Size).A map showing the areaof the rezone is attachedhereto and by this refer-ence made a parthereof.SECTION II - RE-PEALER. Ordinancesand resolutions in con-flict herewith are herebyrepealed to the extent ofsuch conflict.SECTION III - EFFEC-TIVE DATE. This ordi-nance shall become ef-fective fifteen (15) daysafter its passage, pro-vided it has been pub-lished, or at such publi-cation date if more thanfifteen (15) days afterpassage.I N W I T N E S SWHEREOF the TooeleCounty Commission,which is the legislativebody of Tooele County,passed, approved andenacted this ordinancethis 2nd day of Septem-ber 2014.ATTEST: MARILYN K.GILLETTE, ClerkTOOELE COUNTYCOMMISSION:J. BRUCE CLEGG,Chairman(SEAL)Commissioner Cleggvoted ayeCommissioner Hurstvoted ayeCommissioner Milnevoted ayeAPPROVED AS TOFORM:DOUG HOGANTooele County Attor-ney(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin September16, 2014)

Public Notices Miscellaneous

ORDINANCE 2014-12A N O R D I N A N C EAMENDING THE OFFI-CIAL ZONING MAP OFTOOELE COUNTY; RE-ZONING APPROXI-MATELY 40 ACRES OFLAND NORTH OFHICKMAN CANYONROAD, FROM MU-40TO A-20NOW, THEREFORE, BEIT ORDAINED BY THELEGISLATIVE BODYOF TOOELE COUNTY,UTAH AS FOLLOWS:SECTION I - AMEND-MENT. Pursuant toUtah Code AnnotatedSections 17-27a-502and 17-27a-503, theTooele County PlanningCommission conducteda public hearing on theapplication for rezonesubmitted by agentDayne Applegate, on be-half of Tool Box Realty,and recommended theamendment to the offi-cial zoning map.Notice having been pro-vided as required byU C A S u b s e c t i o n17-27a-205(1)(b) andhaving held a publicmeeting, the official zon-ing map of TooeleCounty is herebyamended by changingthe zoning designation ofapproximately 40 acresknown as Parcel #06-034-0-0005, and de-scribed as the NE 1/4OF NE 1/4 SEC 27,Y4S, R6W, SLM, whichis north of and adjacentto Hickman CanyonRoad, west of the inter-section with Mud SpringRoad, near the base ofBox Elder Canyon inTooele County, Utahfrom MU-40 (Multiple-Use, 40-Acre MinimumLot Size) to A-20 (Agri-culture, 20-Acre Mini-mum Lot Size).A map showing the areaof the rezone is attachedhereto and by this refer-ence made a parthereof.SECTION II - RE-PEALER. Ordinancesand resolutions in con-flict herewith are herebyrepealed to the extent ofsuch conflict.SECTION III - EFFEC-TIVE DATE. This ordi-nance shall become ef-fective fifteen (15) daysafter its passage, pro-vided it has been pub-lished, or at such publi-cation date if more thanfifteen (15) days afterpassage.I N W I T N E S SWHEREOF the TooeleCounty Commission,which is the legislativebody of Tooele County,passed, approved andenacted this ordinancethis 2nd day of Septem-ber 2014.ATTEST: MARILYN K.GILLETTE, ClerkTOOELE COUNTYCOMMISSION:J. BRUCE CLEGG,Chairman(SEAL)Commissioner Cleggvoted ayeCommissioner Hurstvoted ayeCommissioner Milnevoted ayeAPPROVED AS TOFORM:DOUG HOGANTooele County Attor-ney(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin September16, 2014)

Public Notices Miscellaneous

ORDINANCE 2014-12A N O R D I N A N C EAMENDING THE OFFI-CIAL ZONING MAP OFTOOELE COUNTY; RE-ZONING APPROXI-MATELY 40 ACRES OFLAND NORTH OFHICKMAN CANYONROAD, FROM MU-40TO A-20NOW, THEREFORE, BEIT ORDAINED BY THELEGISLATIVE BODYOF TOOELE COUNTY,UTAH AS FOLLOWS:SECTION I - AMEND-MENT. Pursuant toUtah Code AnnotatedSections 17-27a-502and 17-27a-503, theTooele County PlanningCommission conducteda public hearing on theapplication for rezonesubmitted by agentDayne Applegate, on be-half of Tool Box Realty,and recommended theamendment to the offi-cial zoning map.Notice having been pro-vided as required byU C A S u b s e c t i o n17-27a-205(1)(b) andhaving held a publicmeeting, the official zon-ing map of TooeleCounty is herebyamended by changingthe zoning designation ofapproximately 40 acresknown as Parcel #06-034-0-0005, and de-scribed as the NE 1/4OF NE 1/4 SEC 27,Y4S, R6W, SLM, whichis north of and adjacentto Hickman CanyonRoad, west of the inter-section with Mud SpringRoad, near the base ofBox Elder Canyon inTooele County, Utahfrom MU-40 (Multiple-Use, 40-Acre MinimumLot Size) to A-20 (Agri-culture, 20-Acre Mini-mum Lot Size).A map showing the areaof the rezone is attachedhereto and by this refer-ence made a parthereof.SECTION II - RE-PEALER. Ordinancesand resolutions in con-flict herewith are herebyrepealed to the extent ofsuch conflict.SECTION III - EFFEC-TIVE DATE. This ordi-nance shall become ef-fective fifteen (15) daysafter its passage, pro-vided it has been pub-lished, or at such publi-cation date if more thanfifteen (15) days afterpassage.I N W I T N E S SWHEREOF the TooeleCounty Commission,which is the legislativebody of Tooele County,passed, approved andenacted this ordinancethis 2nd day of Septem-ber 2014.ATTEST: MARILYN K.GILLETTE, ClerkTOOELE COUNTYCOMMISSION:J. BRUCE CLEGG,Chairman(SEAL)Commissioner Cleggvoted ayeCommissioner Hurstvoted ayeCommissioner Milnevoted ayeAPPROVED AS TOFORM:DOUG HOGANTooele County Attor-ney(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin September16, 2014)

ORDINANCE 2014-13A N O R D I N A N C EAMENDING THE OFFI-CIAL ZONING MAP OFTOOELE COUNTY; RE-ZONING APPROXI-MATELY 38.09 ACRESOF LAND ON BOXE L D E R C A N Y O NROAD, FROM MU-40TO M-DNOW, THEREFORE, BEIT ORDAINED BY THELEGISLATIVE BODYOF TOOELE COUNTY,UTAH AS FOLLOWS:SECTION I - AMEND-MENT. Pursuant toUtah Code AnnotatedSections 17-27a-502and 17-27a-503, theTooele County PlanningCommission conducteda public hearing on theapplication for rezonesubmitted by Janna LeeManning, Jason Man-ning, and CarollynnManning and recom-mended the amendmentto the official zoningmap.Notice having been pro-vided as required byU C A S u b s e c t i o n17-27a-205(1)(b) andhaving held a publicmeeting, the official zon-ing map of TooeleCounty is herebyamended by changingthe zoning designation ofapproximately 38.09acres known as Parcel #06-028-0-0006, locatedin Section 3, Township 4South, Range 6 West,which is on Box ElderCanyon Road near thebase of Box Elder Can-yon in Tooele County,Utah from MU-40 (Multi-ple-Use, 40-Acre Mini-mum Lot Size) to M-D(Manufacturing Distribu-tion). The legal descrip-tion of the rezoned prop-erty is:PARCEL 06-028-0-0006NW 1/4 OF NW 1/4 OFSECTION 3, T4S, R6W,SLB&M, TOGETHERWITH A 3 ROD R/WRUN N ALG W SIDE ELI NE 1/4 OF NW 1/4 OFSEC 3, & RUN TH WALG N SI OF TOWN-SHIP LI FROM THE S1/4 COR OF SECTION34, T3S, R6W, SLB&M,TO SW COR OF SE 1/4OF SEC 33, T3S, R6W,SLB&M LESS THESOUTH 60 FEET TOORSON P. KIMBALL/6-28-19. (38.09 AC)A map showing the areaof the rezone is attachedhereto and by this refer-ence made a parthereof.SECTION II - RE-PEALER. Ordinancesand resolutions in con-flict herewith are herebyrepealed to the extent ofsuch conflict.SECTION III - EFFEC-TIVE DATE. This ordi-nance shall become ef-fective fifteen (15) daysafter its passage, pro-vided it has been pub-lished, or at such publi-cation date if more thanfifteen (15) days afterpassage.I N W I T N E S SWHEREOF the TooeleCounty Commission,which is the legislativebody of Tooele County,passed, approved andenacted this ordinancethis 2nd day of Septem-ber 2014.ATTEST: MARILYN K.GILLETTE, ClerkTOOELE COUNTYCOMMISSION:J. BRUCE CLEGG,Chairman(SEAL)Commissioner Cleggvoted ayeCommissioner Hurstvoted ayeCommissioner Milnevoted ayeAPPROVED AS TOFORM:DOUG HOGANTooele County Attor-ney(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin September16, 2014)

Public Notices Miscellaneous

ORDINANCE 2014-13A N O R D I N A N C EAMENDING THE OFFI-CIAL ZONING MAP OFTOOELE COUNTY; RE-ZONING APPROXI-MATELY 38.09 ACRESOF LAND ON BOXE L D E R C A N Y O NROAD, FROM MU-40TO M-DNOW, THEREFORE, BEIT ORDAINED BY THELEGISLATIVE BODYOF TOOELE COUNTY,UTAH AS FOLLOWS:SECTION I - AMEND-MENT. Pursuant toUtah Code AnnotatedSections 17-27a-502and 17-27a-503, theTooele County PlanningCommission conducteda public hearing on theapplication for rezonesubmitted by Janna LeeManning, Jason Man-ning, and CarollynnManning and recom-mended the amendmentto the official zoningmap.Notice having been pro-vided as required byU C A S u b s e c t i o n17-27a-205(1)(b) andhaving held a publicmeeting, the official zon-ing map of TooeleCounty is herebyamended by changingthe zoning designation ofapproximately 38.09acres known as Parcel #06-028-0-0006, locatedin Section 3, Township 4South, Range 6 West,which is on Box ElderCanyon Road near thebase of Box Elder Can-yon in Tooele County,Utah from MU-40 (Multi-ple-Use, 40-Acre Mini-mum Lot Size) to M-D(Manufacturing Distribu-tion). The legal descrip-tion of the rezoned prop-erty is:PARCEL 06-028-0-0006NW 1/4 OF NW 1/4 OFSECTION 3, T4S, R6W,SLB&M, TOGETHERWITH A 3 ROD R/WRUN N ALG W SIDE ELI NE 1/4 OF NW 1/4 OFSEC 3, & RUN TH WALG N SI OF TOWN-SHIP LI FROM THE S1/4 COR OF SECTION34, T3S, R6W, SLB&M,TO SW COR OF SE 1/4OF SEC 33, T3S, R6W,SLB&M LESS THESOUTH 60 FEET TOORSON P. KIMBALL/6-28-19. (38.09 AC)A map showing the areaof the rezone is attachedhereto and by this refer-ence made a parthereof.SECTION II - RE-PEALER. Ordinancesand resolutions in con-flict herewith are herebyrepealed to the extent ofsuch conflict.SECTION III - EFFEC-TIVE DATE. This ordi-nance shall become ef-fective fifteen (15) daysafter its passage, pro-vided it has been pub-lished, or at such publi-cation date if more thanfifteen (15) days afterpassage.I N W I T N E S SWHEREOF the TooeleCounty Commission,which is the legislativebody of Tooele County,passed, approved andenacted this ordinancethis 2nd day of Septem-ber 2014.ATTEST: MARILYN K.GILLETTE, ClerkTOOELE COUNTYCOMMISSION:J. BRUCE CLEGG,Chairman(SEAL)Commissioner Cleggvoted ayeCommissioner Hurstvoted ayeCommissioner Milnevoted ayeAPPROVED AS TOFORM:DOUG HOGANTooele County Attor-ney(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin September16, 2014)

Public Notices Miscellaneous

ORDINANCE 2014-13A N O R D I N A N C EAMENDING THE OFFI-CIAL ZONING MAP OFTOOELE COUNTY; RE-ZONING APPROXI-MATELY 38.09 ACRESOF LAND ON BOXE L D E R C A N Y O NROAD, FROM MU-40TO M-DNOW, THEREFORE, BEIT ORDAINED BY THELEGISLATIVE BODYOF TOOELE COUNTY,UTAH AS FOLLOWS:SECTION I - AMEND-MENT. Pursuant toUtah Code AnnotatedSections 17-27a-502and 17-27a-503, theTooele County PlanningCommission conducteda public hearing on theapplication for rezonesubmitted by Janna LeeManning, Jason Man-ning, and CarollynnManning and recom-mended the amendmentto the official zoningmap.Notice having been pro-vided as required byU C A S u b s e c t i o n17-27a-205(1)(b) andhaving held a publicmeeting, the official zon-ing map of TooeleCounty is herebyamended by changingthe zoning designation ofapproximately 38.09acres known as Parcel #06-028-0-0006, locatedin Section 3, Township 4South, Range 6 West,which is on Box ElderCanyon Road near thebase of Box Elder Can-yon in Tooele County,Utah from MU-40 (Multi-ple-Use, 40-Acre Mini-mum Lot Size) to M-D(Manufacturing Distribu-tion). The legal descrip-tion of the rezoned prop-erty is:PARCEL 06-028-0-0006NW 1/4 OF NW 1/4 OFSECTION 3, T4S, R6W,SLB&M, TOGETHERWITH A 3 ROD R/WRUN N ALG W SIDE ELI NE 1/4 OF NW 1/4 OFSEC 3, & RUN TH WALG N SI OF TOWN-SHIP LI FROM THE S1/4 COR OF SECTION34, T3S, R6W, SLB&M,TO SW COR OF SE 1/4OF SEC 33, T3S, R6W,SLB&M LESS THESOUTH 60 FEET TOORSON P. KIMBALL/6-28-19. (38.09 AC)A map showing the areaof the rezone is attachedhereto and by this refer-ence made a parthereof.SECTION II - RE-PEALER. Ordinancesand resolutions in con-flict herewith are herebyrepealed to the extent ofsuch conflict.SECTION III - EFFEC-TIVE DATE. This ordi-nance shall become ef-fective fifteen (15) daysafter its passage, pro-vided it has been pub-lished, or at such publi-cation date if more thanfifteen (15) days afterpassage.I N W I T N E S SWHEREOF the TooeleCounty Commission,which is the legislativebody of Tooele County,passed, approved andenacted this ordinancethis 2nd day of Septem-ber 2014.ATTEST: MARILYN K.GILLETTE, ClerkTOOELE COUNTYCOMMISSION:J. BRUCE CLEGG,Chairman(SEAL)Commissioner Cleggvoted ayeCommissioner Hurstvoted ayeCommissioner Milnevoted ayeAPPROVED AS TOFORM:DOUG HOGANTooele County Attor-ney(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin September16, 2014)

Public Notices Miscellaneous

ORDINANCE 2014-13A N O R D I N A N C EAMENDING THE OFFI-CIAL ZONING MAP OFTOOELE COUNTY; RE-ZONING APPROXI-MATELY 38.09 ACRESOF LAND ON BOXE L D E R C A N Y O NROAD, FROM MU-40TO M-DNOW, THEREFORE, BEIT ORDAINED BY THELEGISLATIVE BODYOF TOOELE COUNTY,UTAH AS FOLLOWS:SECTION I - AMEND-MENT. Pursuant toUtah Code AnnotatedSections 17-27a-502and 17-27a-503, theTooele County PlanningCommission conducteda public hearing on theapplication for rezonesubmitted by Janna LeeManning, Jason Man-ning, and CarollynnManning and recom-mended the amendmentto the official zoningmap.Notice having been pro-vided as required byU C A S u b s e c t i o n17-27a-205(1)(b) andhaving held a publicmeeting, the official zon-ing map of TooeleCounty is herebyamended by changingthe zoning designation ofapproximately 38.09acres known as Parcel #06-028-0-0006, locatedin Section 3, Township 4South, Range 6 West,which is on Box ElderCanyon Road near thebase of Box Elder Can-yon in Tooele County,Utah from MU-40 (Multi-ple-Use, 40-Acre Mini-mum Lot Size) to M-D(Manufacturing Distribu-tion). The legal descrip-tion of the rezoned prop-erty is:PARCEL 06-028-0-0006NW 1/4 OF NW 1/4 OFSECTION 3, T4S, R6W,SLB&M, TOGETHERWITH A 3 ROD R/WRUN N ALG W SIDE ELI NE 1/4 OF NW 1/4 OFSEC 3, & RUN TH WALG N SI OF TOWN-SHIP LI FROM THE S1/4 COR OF SECTION34, T3S, R6W, SLB&M,TO SW COR OF SE 1/4OF SEC 33, T3S, R6W,SLB&M LESS THESOUTH 60 FEET TOORSON P. KIMBALL/6-28-19. (38.09 AC)A map showing the areaof the rezone is attachedhereto and by this refer-ence made a parthereof.SECTION II - RE-PEALER. Ordinancesand resolutions in con-flict herewith are herebyrepealed to the extent ofsuch conflict.SECTION III - EFFEC-TIVE DATE. This ordi-nance shall become ef-fective fifteen (15) daysafter its passage, pro-vided it has been pub-lished, or at such publi-cation date if more thanfifteen (15) days afterpassage.I N W I T N E S SWHEREOF the TooeleCounty Commission,which is the legislativebody of Tooele County,passed, approved andenacted this ordinancethis 2nd day of Septem-ber 2014.ATTEST: MARILYN K.GILLETTE, ClerkTOOELE COUNTYCOMMISSION:J. BRUCE CLEGG,Chairman(SEAL)Commissioner Cleggvoted ayeCommissioner Hurstvoted ayeCommissioner Milnevoted ayeAPPROVED AS TOFORM:DOUG HOGANTooele County Attor-ney(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin September16, 2014)

Public Notices Miscellaneous

SUMMONS FOR PUB-LICATIONJenifer Lynn Cosey,Petitioner v. EugeneThomas Cosey, Jr.C a s e N u m b e r144300114The State of Utah To:Eugene Thomas Cosey,Jr.:You are summoned andrequired to file an an-swer in writing to theAmended Verified Peti-tion for Divorce filed inthe case identif iedabove.Within 30 days after thelast day of publication,which is September 30,2014, you must file youranswer with the clerk ofthe court at: 74 S. 100E., Suite 14, Tooele, UT84074.If you fail to file andserve your answer ontime, judgment by de-fault will be takenagainst you for the reliefdemanded in the Peti-tion.The Amended VerifiedPetition is on file with theclerk of the court. Youcan obtain a copy of thePetition by requestingone from the clerk of thecourt at the above ad-dress or by calling435-833-8000.READ THE PETITIONCAREFULLY. It meansthat you are being suedfor divorce. A divorcecan affect your rightsconcerning child cus-tody, support, parent-time, child dependent taxdeductions, alimony,debt and personal prop-erty.Dated September 8,2014.(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin September9, 16, 23 & 30, 2014)

Public Notices Miscellaneous

SUMMONS FOR PUB-LICATIONJenifer Lynn Cosey,Petitioner v. EugeneThomas Cosey, Jr.C a s e N u m b e r144300114The State of Utah To:Eugene Thomas Cosey,Jr.:You are summoned andrequired to file an an-swer in writing to theAmended Verified Peti-tion for Divorce filed inthe case identif iedabove.Within 30 days after thelast day of publication,which is September 30,2014, you must file youranswer with the clerk ofthe court at: 74 S. 100E., Suite 14, Tooele, UT84074.If you fail to file andserve your answer ontime, judgment by de-fault will be takenagainst you for the reliefdemanded in the Peti-tion.The Amended VerifiedPetition is on file with theclerk of the court. Youcan obtain a copy of thePetition by requestingone from the clerk of thecourt at the above ad-dress or by calling435-833-8000.READ THE PETITIONCAREFULLY. It meansthat you are being suedfor divorce. A divorcecan affect your rightsconcerning child cus-tody, support, parent-time, child dependent taxdeductions, alimony,debt and personal prop-erty.Dated September 8,2014.(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin September9, 16, 23 & 30, 2014)

VERNON TOWNNOTICE OF VACANCYTOWN COUNCIL POSI-TIONNotice is hereby giventhat pursuant to the pro-visions of Utah Code20A-1-510, a vacancywill exists on the VernonTown Council as of Sep-tember 30, 2014. TheVernon Town Council issoliciting qualified per-sons (a registered voter,who has resided withinVernon Town for 12 con-secutive months prior toSeptember 30, 2014,and in accordance withUtah Constitution ArticleIV, Section 6, is not amentally incompetentperson, a person con-victed of a felony, or aperson convicted of trea-son or a crime againstthe elective franchise)who are interested in be-ing appointed to fill thisvacancy to submit theirname for consideration.The appointment willcontinue until January2017, at which time theposition will be filled pur-suant to the next munici-pal election.The City Council willmeet at the Vernon FireStation, 325 South MainStreet, Vernon, Utah onTuesday, October 14,2014, at 7:30 p.m. toconsider appointing aqualified person.Interested personsshould submit theirname and complete andsubmit the required Dec-laration of Candidacy toDoretta Shumway atP.O. Box 134, Vernon,Utah 84080 no later thanOctober 7, 2014, at 5:00pm.DATED this 12 day ofSeptember, 2014.BY ORDER OF THEV E R N O N T O W NCOUNCILDoretta ShumwayVernon Town Clerk(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin September16, 2014)

Public Notices Miscellaneous

VERNON TOWNNOTICE OF VACANCYTOWN COUNCIL POSI-TIONNotice is hereby giventhat pursuant to the pro-visions of Utah Code20A-1-510, a vacancywill exists on the VernonTown Council as of Sep-tember 30, 2014. TheVernon Town Council issoliciting qualified per-sons (a registered voter,who has resided withinVernon Town for 12 con-secutive months prior toSeptember 30, 2014,and in accordance withUtah Constitution ArticleIV, Section 6, is not amentally incompetentperson, a person con-victed of a felony, or aperson convicted of trea-son or a crime againstthe elective franchise)who are interested in be-ing appointed to fill thisvacancy to submit theirname for consideration.The appointment willcontinue until January2017, at which time theposition will be filled pur-suant to the next munici-pal election.The City Council willmeet at the Vernon FireStation, 325 South MainStreet, Vernon, Utah onTuesday, October 14,2014, at 7:30 p.m. toconsider appointing aqualified person.Interested personsshould submit theirname and complete andsubmit the required Dec-laration of Candidacy toDoretta Shumway atP.O. Box 134, Vernon,Utah 84080 no later thanOctober 7, 2014, at 5:00pm.DATED this 12 day ofSeptember, 2014.BY ORDER OF THEV E R N O N T O W NCOUNCILDoretta ShumwayVernon Town Clerk(Published in the Tran-script Bulletin September16, 2014)

WANT TO get the latestlocal news? Subscribeto the Transcript Bulle-tin.

Opinions Shared Freely.

(Yours and Ours.)

Open ForumEvery Tuesday

TRANSCRIPTBULLETIN

TOOELE

TUESDAY September 16, 2014 B7

Did You Know?BannersStationaryYard SignsMailersNewsletters

BooksPostersMagazinesCustom MagnetsCopy Services

Behind your Transcript-Bulletinis a FULL SERVICE Printing, Design,

and Distribution Service!

TRANSCRIPTBULLETINTTOOELE

(435) 882-0050

Serving YouSince 1894

Let us help you get the word out! From family newsletters to market-wide business

promotions, we can do it all—right here! Contact us today!

Page 20: 9-16-14 Transcript Bulletin

TUESDAY September 16, 2014TOOELE TRANSCRIPT-BULLETIN

WITO chapters within the state, TC Strutters is the only active chapter holding the annual event. This year’s participants came not only from Tooele County, but Salt Lake, Utah, and Summit Counties, as well.

TC Strutters co-chairwomen Cleora Evans has been a part of the TC Strutters since its incep-tion in 2006. Evans said over the years, the group has changed, adding new women and loosing others, but she has remained a part of the group because of her love for the outdoors.

Having lost her husband over 30 years ago, Evans raised five children on her own. It was through that experience that she learned how much she loved the outdoors.

“I wanted to keep my kids out of trouble, so I would load up my truck with the kids and my Dutch oven, and we would head out to Clover Creek,” she said. “With five kids and all their friends we would end up with nearly 40 of us.”

After her children started moving away Evans needed something to fill that void — the WITO program that fit the bill. Today Evans’ daughter Tracy Mascarenas is part of TC Strutters staff and helps host the annual WITO event.

According to TC Strutters co-chairwoman Margaret Walters, the women who participate in WITO are all ages and have a variety of backgrounds. Some of the women are avid hunters and outdoor activists, while others have never shot a hand-gun or rifle in their life. Despite their differences, these ladies find common ground in their womanhood and simply enjoy sharing time together.

Susan Ulrich has attended the WITO event for several years and said she keeps com-

ing back simply because of the good friendships and the chance it gives her to try new things.

“The instructors are good. No matter what stupid thing you do, no one cares,” she said. “Here you can learn new things and be comfortable among the women. No one is intimidat-ing or going to take over. The instructors just let you learn.”

Beryl Schwartz of Stockton felt the same way about the learning environment that WITO offers.

“Here you don’t have men trying to take over,” she said. “I think it’s just part of men’s nature. They do it without thinking.”

Rick Brittain, Regional Director for the NWTF who oversees chapters in Utah, Colorado and Nevada, was also in attendance at the Sept. 12-14 event. Brittain served as a great resource to TC Strutters and provided support for this year’s event, bringing his own wife along.

Brittain confessed to hearing the same complaint not only from his own wife but several other women as well, as he has attended other WITO events.

“Women tell me, ‘our hus-bands expect us to know this already because they are out-doorsmen. But because we don’t know it, they don’t have any patience with us,’” Brittain recalled.

“At WITO these instructors we have have lots of patience, and they’re very good with the gals,” Brittain continued. “They make sure they understand it, and they have a lot of fun.”

Instructors for the classes are experts in their fields; many of them are certified instructors.

Police Capt. Earl Scofield of the Dugway Proving Ground Directorate of Emergency Services praised the women for being involved and learning how to protect themselves and their families.

Scofield echoed Dugway Proving Ground Directorate of Emergency Services Investigator Jim Dekanich’s

opinions of the differences of teaching an all-female class opposed those with men.

“Here there are no egos, which is nice. The women are more willing to learn, and there aren’t any husbands here trying to show off,” Dekanich said.

These sentiments were the same according to David Richards of Unita Flyfishing Outfitters.

“These women are actu-ally willing to listen,” Richards said during his archery and fly fishing class. “These women take the criticism I give and try and improve on what they are learning. They just seem to want to learn and the teaching comes more easily to them,” Richards said.

Whether the class was archery or yoga, handguns or crafts, the women were encour-aged to try something new.

Local yoga instructor Sara Lynes said her classes were full of women who had never even tried yoga before.

“It was a slower pace class, but everyone enjoyed it so much,” Lynes said. “Everyone was so relaxed and wanted to spend the rest of the afternoon doing yoga.”

Walters believes for many women, WITO simply allows them a weekend away and the chance to do fun things.

Walters and Evans are con-tinually looking for ways to

improve TC Strutters and have high hopes for this group. Evans says she starts thinking about next year the day she goes home.

“I am really excited about next year. We already have some new ideas we are thinking about,” Evans said.

Next on her list is imple-menting an outreach program for youth, because the NWTF understands the need to target a younger audience for the suc-cess of their mission.

Brittain said the focus of the NWTF is shifting primarily to saving the habitat and the hunt, ensuring that everyone has the same opportunities as past hunters. NWTF believes women and kids are the fasting grow-

ing side of this shift in thinking, which is why the NWTF has found it imperative to include women through WITO and the youth through JAKES (Juniors Acquiring Knowledge, Ethics, and Sportsmanship).

The JAKES program is geared to youth 17 and younger. TC Strutters is working specifically with Walters’ 16-year-old grand-daughter Ashley Walters in the hopes of returning a JAKES pro-gram to Tooele County.

Evans says her hope is to hold with a one-day event for the youth.

For more information on TC Strutters, WITO, or JAKES contact Cleora Evans at (435) 830-7802.

B8

FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO

Maya Pandya takes aim during the archery class at the Women in the Outdoors camp held last Weekend.

FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO

Tooele County Sheriff Deputy Ron Johnson and expert instructor talks to Susan Ulrich during a shooting class held in con-junction with Women in the Outdoors.

Mountain continued from page B1

435-882-005058 North Main St.

BANNERSYard Signs, Vehicle Magnets, Window Stickers, and More!

Custom Design & 24 Hour Turnaround Available

TOOELE

High Quality • Full Color

TRANSCRIPTBULLETINTTOOELE

We Want to Make You a Loan!

$100-$3,000 TODAY!Noble Finance435-843-1255

NEED CASH NOW?

FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO

A group of women participating in the firearms class pose for a quick photo with Women of the Outdoors Regional Director Rick Brittain.

FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO

Jamie Mitchell models the hat she made to compete in the hat contest held dur-ing the three-day Women in the Outdoors event.