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Show r Tooele, Utah, Friday, May 10, IMS Volume Seven tyThree Army Meeting Scl On Sheep Damage Irrigation Canal Claims Granlsville Tot, 3 'A MASTER CAVIN Police Blotter Mav 4, 1968 Minor accident in Hoods parking lot. Car owned by Frank E. Minor. 211 West 2nd North was struck by a truck registered to M. O. Jones, 95 East 4th North. Jones' truck left the scene of the accident. Mav 5, 1968. Arrested Joe Gene Mata, Ogden, for reckless dedriving, contributing to the unlawful of a minor, linquency possession of alcohol and having no Utah drivers license in his possession. Found guilty on two counts, not guilty on reckless driving. Fined $100. May 6, 1908. Minor accident 50 West and Allens parking lot, involving automobiles operated by Brent Steven Murdock, Kirk Hotel and Betty Lou Coucher, 525 South 525 West. Mav 7, 1968. Citation to Robert Harold Madsen, 434 Antelope Avenue, for driving under the influence of alcohol. May 7, 1968. Citation to Edwin R. Clark, 431 South 380 West, for disobeying stop sign. Mav 7, 1968. Citation to Jame: Scldasser, St. John, for avoiding a traffic control devise by cutting across private property. May 7, 1968. Citation to Paul Layton Griffith, 265 West 1st So., for driving 35 mph in a 25 mph zone. Mav 9, 1968. Harvey Thompson, 595 Sunset, reported a stolen six volt battery. A Grantssille child was drowned Wednesday when lie tumbled into an irrigation ditch near his home. Rosd Lee Gavin, son of Mr. and Sirs. Donald Gavin, 21 North Hale, Crautsville, was found in the canal aland 1 p.m. Wednesday. He had apparently fallen into the canal at alniut 55 North Hale and had lieen swept down the ditch and under a nutnlier of culverts. He was found one half mile from his home. Highway Patrol Officer Howard CooMr said that the Imy had lieen missing alniut one and a half hours when his InhIv was located. Boyd lxe Gavin was Inirn June 19, 1965 in Delta, a son of Donald and Carol Wood Gavin. Besides bis parents he is survived hv two brothers, Carl S. and Donald F. Jr.; two sisters. Teresa L)iiii and Melinda lam, all of Mr. Granlsville, grandparents and Mrs. laiw F. Wood and Mr. and Mrs. Owen Holt, and a great grandfather, Mr. Frank Winnl, all of Delta. Funeral services will lie held at 12 noon Saturday in the Grantsville Second Ward Chapel. Friends mav call at the Tate Mortuary in Tooele from 7 to 9 p.m. Friday and at the home of Bishop William B. Johnson, 263 East Main Grantsville, one hour prior to services. Burial will lie in Delta, Utah. Graveside services will lie conducted at Delta at 3:30 p.m. Slill Serious Roy Morris, 3339 Santa Rosa Drive, was reported still in serious condition Wednesday in a Salt Lake hospital following a roll-ove- Mr. Morris rolled his drive truck Saturday near Simpson. Two National Guardsmen working in the area were credited with saving his life after they stopped profuse bleeding from a head wound four-whe- Under the el T i - . Senator Frank E. Moss said Wednesday that he had lieen informed that the U.S. Army has scheduled a meeting for Mav 13 in Salt laike City Army claims iersonnel and Utah claimants regarding the death of some WNK) sheep near the Armys tv AskTatePark Mayor Frank Bowman has received two letters from state and national Bala- - Ruth offices requesting that the Tooele Bala- - Ruth Baseball Paik lie renamed in honor of the late Elmer Tate. The letters, signed bv Jim Ferguson, State Director of the Utah State Balie Ruth and Richard W. Case, executive vice president of the Bala Ruth league, Inc., praised Mr. Tates woik in the Balie Ruth Program. Mr. Ferguson's letter said in part. Mr. Tate was known all of us as the Father of Balie in the State of Utah. His nine years as State Director of our program speaks for itself. He was always dedicated to the cause of providing wholesome summer recreation for yough and dealt in all aspects of his respon- e F. Cllll lON II M L VI) VV Primary Contest Assured A local primary contest was assured Wednesday when F. Chilian llalladav, inciimlcut State Representative from District 57 filed for Mr. llalladav, a Democrat, will oppose Mrs. Myrtle Allsop, also )iliti(.--s a Democrat. To date, no Republi- The letters urged the Mavor cans have filed for the post. and the citv park authority to MR. HALLADAY was first rename the park Elmer G. Tate elected to the Utah State LegisMemorial Field." lature in 1960. He is a memlier Mr. Tate died in Novemlier of of the House Education Rules and Procedures, Revenue and Taxation, State, Federal and Military Affairs Committees and is presently a member of the House General Operating Committee, an interim committee which handles matters which arise while the Legislatuie The Tooele County Chandler is not in session. of Commerce and guests of the Mr. llalladav is married to Chamber heard U.S. Bankruptcy the former Erma Tanner and they Referee Bruce Jenkins explain have three children and twelve How To Faii in Rllsjlless is retired a He out Reav Trying. teacher at Tooele High School. Mr Jenkins who has been Gom-mitte- e. Deadline for filing petitions will be Frida v. May 10 at 5 p.m. I,965- - five al- o follow to five Slire f're end up in his court. These rules la-e- n procedures established to handle xmh cases," the Senator said. There is everv indication that the claims will Ik-- processed promptly, consequently, no legislation will lie necessary." Senator Moss said This should conclude the sheep incident except for assurances that such accidents will not in the future ami that humans and livestock w ill not le affex ted by future tests." r Senator Moss said that he had not heard whether the I latch Gom-Rut- h pauy, owner of the m.ior xirtion of the dead animals, had arrived at a cost estimate of damages. representative of the company stated Thursday that they did y dcfiuiately plan to file for ages against the Armv. HOOD DRUG will be open Sunday May is the ideal time to visit one of the nations newest National Parks. The summer sun can be gruelling in this beautiful badlands, but May is a gentle month in Canyonlands. Canyonlands National Park is not all that there is to see in the Canyonlands country, there and if you are planning a over Memorial Day you will have to move fast to see even a portion of this fabulous part of Utah. First stop will be Moab, 234 miles from and Salt Lake City along US 15, Utah 0 U.S. 160. All are well paved, multi-lane- d highways. Moab is a green and progressive town k in the middle of country. The town boomed during the uranium haydays of the 50s and now is supported largely by potash mini-vacati- ing. Another must stop is Dead Horse Point. At this spot, south west of Moab over good paved roads, legend has it that a group of f wild mustangs stampeded and followed their leader over the cliff to the rocks many hundreds of feet below. The view over Canyonlands from this point is spectacular, and a d few miles further on, over a less View which Point Grand is road, opens a panorama which equals if not surpasses the Grand Canyon. Pleasure cruises may be taken from Moab well-travele- Rock towers and arches characterize the weird and wonderful sights for the visitor to the Canyonlands area of the state. at Tooele Army Depot's Armed Forces Day Open House, May 17, will be treated to a mink battle which will vividly portray Forces For Freedom. Troops of the 197th Ordnance Battalion, will stage the mock battle beginning at 1 p.m. in the area west of the Headquarters building. SH-ctato- 99 Show TAD To Slagc Really Big dain-fairl- PLANMNGZOMNG W)ARD MELTS TONIGHT d Zoning meeting will Ik held to- niKhl- - Thursday. May 9, at S.00 p in. at the City Hall. Tu,,,,,e C".v were: to make it a point not to know, understand or apply good money management principles; care where you are going, live only from day to day. The third rule is to never keep gxxl records or inventory and never seek competent professional ad- Fourth, he advised, never periodically review, don't find Canyonlands Beckon Tourists mining and tourists. It has many lovely motels and good restaurants and most other facilities are available. If you would rather camp, public facilities are available in Arches National Monument 18 miles north of the visitors center and in Canyonlands at Island in the Sky 44 miles south of U.S. 160 and Needles, 34 miles west of U.S. 160. Arches National Monument will be the first sight on our tour. Here nature has carved many geologic impossibilities out of the red rock cliffs. Large rocks balanced upon smaller ones, arches and windows fill the area. Perhaps the most spectacular is Delicate Arch - which stands alone on the edge of a deep gorge, with lovely blue mountains in the background. One comes upon the bridge so suddenly after a short hike from the road that its beauty is almost overwhelm- I1AI!J1 Dugway Proving Grounds. No exact time or place for the meeting has yet announced. Senator Moss piaiscd the Armv for calling the meeting and said it was a demonstration of on their part to settle claims resulting from the deaths of the animals. The Armv is ready to assist and advise in the normal claims DRUG STORE Rotation Plan r- - FORCES FOR FREE1X)M is the theme for Armed Forces Day which will lie held at Tcxh-IcDepot Friday, Mav 17. day will Ik-- observed with at 10:30 an open house a. m. and closing at 2:30 p in. Included in the day's activities will lie guided tours, displays of - Chamber Told "How To Fail In Business Without Really Trying red-roc- r. Number Forty Nine Ml?' SKI? in sightseeing boats down the Colorado River where the scenery defies description. There are also boat ramps available in Moab for launching private craft. Much of Canyonlands National Park is drive inaccessible except by foot or vehicles, and the National Park Service intends to keep it that way. This is certainly one of the most nigged of the parks and it is felt that such beauty should be protected from the ravages of the casual tourist with his litter. Professional guides located in Moab, Monticello, Blanding, Bluff and Mexican Hat all offer a large selection of tours through the park. Aerial tours can also be arranged at Moab, Monticello and Blanding airports. One hundred fifty miles south of Moab on US 160 and State 47 is Monument Valley. This area has been the scene of many western movies and is part of the huge Navajo Indian Reservation. Gouldings Trading Post offers plush accommodations nearby or there are campgrounds available at Mexican Hat and at the Navajo Tribal Park campgrounds. Until recently the only way to see Monument Valley was on a huge bus run on airplane tires which Gouldings took through the area daily. Now paved roads circle through much of the valley but tours are still available. To see in the valley are some of the famous rock formations such as El Capitan and the three Sisters, ruins of ancient Indian dwellings, the hogans where todays Navajo dwell. If lucky, you may catch a glimpse of the way these Indians live, with their weaving and sheep tending, and dancing. Another stop which should be made is at Goosenecks State Park, North of Monument Valley. Here the San Juan River twists and turns through a deep gorge it has carved for itself. Doubling back and forth, the river takes seven miles to cover one crows mile. Camping facilities are also available here. The trip into the most primitive section of Utah is spectacular and enjoyable. The roads are good and distance between scenic wonders is short so that a vacation to Canyonlands would be a relaxing way to spend your Memorial Day holiday. four-whe- half-inflat- Gun Club, Sunday, May 12 a.m. Breakfast Shooting Starts at 9 8 Sponsored by American Legion American Legion Hall Baseball Team 8:30 P.m. - 75 Person Elk's iPMxiM ipmehity Ltge May 11, Sat $2.00 per perjona $4.00 per paraja 7:00 p.m. r sjt. f the Tooele High School Band, under the direction of Rov Perrin and the family of a dier killed in Vietnam will v re-T- ceive, posthumously, the Silver Star, Bronze Star and Air Medals, THE FINAL event of the day, following the presentation of the medals, will lie a sky div- mg exhibition by a team from Idaho, This marks the first time in four years that Tock-IArmv e Armed xt has had a The depot will be open to the Forces Day.' public at l():30 a.m. for the tours and static displays. Beginning at 12:45 the display of military with a fire fightpower will ing denonstration, followed by a mock buttle complete with tanks, troops, flame throwers, smoke creens, land mines, machine guns, etc. the following Immediately mock buttle, troops stationed at the depot will parade to the five-ma- n c De-allie- s. full-scal- out where you are in terms of owed and owing money or fifth, always say yes to all sales-domen and to everyone of your customers, MR. JENKINS defined a bankrupt as a person or firm who has done an act which able his creditors to have his reachable assets turned into cash for their own benefit. The mo- incut a person files a petition of he is legally bankis then up to the court and it rupt to work out an equitable distribu- lion of his assets. If the court so rules, all debts owed by the bankrupt may be discharged by the court, allowing him to start out again with a clean slate. Although the number of bankruptcies have been steadily rising, for 18,510 nationally in 1918 to 208,329 last year, the percentages of businesses filing petitions has been declining. Last year only 8 percent of the petitions were filed by businesses. There were 1591 filings in Utah last year. This is 155 filings per 1(X),000 persons in the state. This rate is lower than all of the western states except Idaho and i 5 vet Texas had only Wyoming, u; (XX New 18; , Jersey, 100, per 17 9, New York 36, Pennsylvania ' and South Carolina five. MR. JENKINS said that these states with such low rates all had laws either exempting limiting the garnishment of a debtors wages. It is the act of garnish- ment which frequently drives a person to file bankruptcy He blamed garnishments, but also the failure of people to man age their money properly for the number petitions filed in his court. He said that telev.s.on and advertising have convinced many people that some luxiries necessities and claims of or no down payment credit easy buying have led some into trouble. In the area of personnel bank- ruptcy, Mr. Jenkins said that there are very few persons who repeat petitions. The law states that la-in- g nt en-vic- number of petitions which can be filed, discharges of debts can not be granted more often than every six years WHEN A bankrupts assets have been liquidated. Congress order for sets up a his creditors to be compensated. First to receive money is the bankruptcy court itself as it is self sustaining and must receive money for its service of administration. Second in line are the wage earners, usually employees in the case of a bankrupt comp- any, who have earned unpaid wages within the previous 90 davs, then come tax claims. Mr. Jenkins said that unsecured creditors share in the residual ssets. Not all liabilities of a bank- rupt are dischargeable, the Continued on Page Two equipment, a mink battle, mili- tary parade, special presentation of medals to the family of a sol- dier killed in Vietnam, and a sky diving exhibition. THE PUBLIC is cordially invited to visit the depot and see first hand how the 5.2(H) civi- ban employees and military per- sonuel supMirt the United States war effort in supplying tanks, guns, artillery, ammunition and other items to our troops and re- - la-gi- n Buffs Lose Playoff Bailie Granger captured the Divi- sion One baseball championship Tuesday afternoon at Magna when Both they defeated Tooele teams finished the regular season 4-- records necessitating the and despite the fact that Tooele had defeated the Lancer twice during the course of the season, they lost the play-of- f with play-of- 5-- 2 f, SP BOLINDER game. Doug Curliss, turned in a masshutout as he kept terful four-hthe usually loud Buff bats to a whisper. Two ,of the hits Curliss allowed came in the final inning, and all Tooele raps were singles, GRANGER won the game in the top of the first inning when they scored three times on a walk yman. Doug Holt's wrong-fiel- d double, another walk, an error, Curliss 's single and a pass- e Tooe,e pitch. er, also ran into trouble in the second inning, when with two out Lyman doubled and seootedaround the bases on two Tooele errors. Other than those first two inn-o- r Sanderson was tough as he 12 ,)ut the damage had been done, and Tooele could jn he 1)al, They threatened jn both the it . innj . when loaded the bases in eacl. frame. But the threats came with two out, and Granger snuffed he wj(h , harm. less fielders choice, and in the seventh, the final out came on a strijteout THE ONLY Buff batters to get hits, were Frank Park with two, Tom Parker and Sanderson with one each. q he seas()n .e Cra r ,avs 3 of Djvisi()n Twq for the Region Three championship. May 8, 1968. Minor accident jn Tooele High School parking ()( involving car driven by John Bergren, 55 East 1st North and a parked car owned bv Willis A. prver, 199 North Broadway, 1968. Minor accident Mav 3rd North, involving Gn Main, automobiles operated by Lawrence Larry Tafova and Bessie Duke' Roberts. Accident still under vestigation. Grantsville Boy Dies in Vietnam A recent graduate of Grantsville High School died May 3 in a Vietnam hospital after a short illness. SP4 Arnold Lee Bolinder, 20, died of hepatitis and amebic dysentery. Army officials from Dugway Proving Ground notified Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Don Bolinder, 192 VV. Durfee St., Grantsville, of their sons death. Arnold Lee Bolinder was born November 15, 1947 at Tooele, a son of Arnold Lee and Evelyn Louise Ellis Bolinder. He lived in Paige, Arizona from 1956 to 1965 and attended Paige, Arizona High School and Glendale High School in Phoenix. He graduated from Grantsville High in 1966. He entered the Army July 18, 1967 at Ft. Lewis Washington and had been in Vietnam since December 18, 1967. He was a jungle combat specialist with B Co., 196th Battalion of the First Infantry and was stationed near Da Nang when he became ill. He was treated in the 91.st Evacuation Hospital at Phu Iliep; He was a member of the LDS ChurchSurvivors include his parents, two sisters, Shirley and Sherie and a brother Larry, all of Grantsville, grandparents Mr. and Mrs. L. M. Ellis and Mr. Gordon Bolinder, all of Grantsville. The bodv will be shipped to Grantsville for burial. Whitney Young, head of moderate Urban League, on mili- tant Stokelv Carmichael: Right rs following consists of niow about fifty Negroes and five thousand white reporters. V gksi V yr m |