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Show w ?m 7pj Last Rites Held for Mr. Gollaher The Tooele Transcript, Fri., January 16, 1970 Last rites for Gilbert Gollaher were held Wednesday, January 14 in the Third - Seventh Ward Chapel. Mr. Gollaher died January 11 after a short illness. ROBERT MCLAWS gave the family prayer at the Mortuary and Leona Pocock played prelude and postlude music. Bishop Bert Williams conducted the service. The invocation was offered by Joseph Hawkins and Bishop Williams read the obituary and gave a few remarks. Other speakers were Bishop Marion Bevan and President Lloyd Callister. Musical numbers were an organ selection by Mrs. Pocock and a vocal solo Oh My Father by Roxie Dobson with Geraldine Droubav playing accompaniment. ANDREW LASSEN pronounced the benediction and Bishop George Condie dedicated the grave at the Salt Lake City cemetery where interment took place. Pallbearers were Brad Gollaher, Robert Gollaher, Gary Robert McLaws, Oliver Shosted and Lloyd (Gus) Shields. War-burto- u, ; 'rrV v' i fe. 7 Alvin II. Cordon of 3T , v$ ; - Cordons Furniture Store presents a Trans-Oeeani- c Elton conducting. MRS. COWANS died January 10 after a lingering illness. Prelude and postlude music was played by Mrs. Dorothy Turner and the family prayer at the Mortuary was given by William Sykes.- The Utah Federal Employees annual banquet will be held Saturday evening, January 24, at the Salt Palace in Salt Lake City.-Heleach year in January, the month the Civil Service Act was signed in 1883, the program honors the 46,000 Federal Em- Utah Senator Frank E. Moss sharing the speaking honors. Senator McGee is chairman of the Post Office Civil Service Committee, from which comes much of the legislation effecting federal workers. Senator Moss also a member of the Post Office ployees in Utah. Civil Service Committee has GOVERNOR Calvin L. Ramp-to- n been active on the Committee will !e Master of Ceremonies of Commerce and Insular Affairs for the evening with Wyoming and a special committee of the Senator Gale W. McGee and Aging. An impressive list of guests Correspondence Study has "been compiled for the banquet. The list includes; Senator Grows at University Bennett, Representatives Lloyd The correspondence study deand Burton and heads of federal partment at the University of installations. Utah has served 7,699 students National JOHN CRINER, through 9,285 courses in the past President of the American Fedyear. eration of Government employees and Vice President of the ExecuETERNITY tive Committee of the AFL-CIThe more we doubt the Bible, will be present as an additional the less awareness we have of special guest as will represeneternity; and the more we betatives of other labor groups. lieve it, the more conscious we A social hour will be held are of the vast unknown to which at 6:00 p.m. and probeginning no sane man would venture an opportunity to meet viding without God. Billy Graham, friends and relax. The dinner of Billy Graham Speaks! (Grosset roast sirloin of beef will be serand Dunlap). ved at 7:00 p.m. Our population increases at Tickets must be purchased in the rate of one person every advance (no tickets will be avail10.5 seconds. We cant control able at the door) and will cost the population but we at least $6.00 each. have it timed. Nat Turner, O - a o d -- ham i OS Sidney Atkin offered the invocation and speakers were Carver Brvan and Bishop Elton. MUSICAL NUMBERS were a piano solo by Tony Black, and a vocal duet Beyond the Sunset by Fae Rosenberg and Mae Liddell. Colleen Elton played Mrs. Shirley accompaniment. Eisenbrant sang Youll Never Walk Alone, with Mrs. Turner as accompanist. Tom Atkin gave the closing prayer and Willard G. Atkin dedicated the grave at the Tooele City cemetery. Pallbearers were Jaren, Dean Bruce and Revell Atkin, Willard Gowans Jr., and Terry Hewelett. suf- fered three dry spells against Kearns Tuesday night and that was the difference in the two teams as the Cougars padded their league lead with a convincing 4 win over the Buffs. PLAYING a beautiful brand of basketball the two teams played on even terms three minutes into the third period when for some unexplainable reason the Buffs went flatter than a moose track in the snow. Tooele was trailing bv a single point 36-3- 5 when it happened. In the space of two minutes Stan Ross, Ron Lunt, Roger Rich and Mike Woods reeled off 9 straight points while the befuddled Buffs were zilched and it was the end of Tooeles hopes as the Cougars went out in front 45-3But more important they had 72-5- EDUCATION Character building has the first place, and that is primarily education. A building erected on that foundation will last. 9 Gan . cm dittflfii fdu' O 'UtE QMJcm-iGattr- . ecu m unn f7377TrtBfnQ (3) vTflftPlflfo fto Gl) Gdii) GQ3Mb fto ftEP luCED IB cU? (R 1MHM0 fepGD OHi) (RUnB f$! (!i fHu 0i33HD IMS Qnaitemv, ffor4t. 18-1- 4 The two quints then battled on even terms until Tooele hit those awful dry spots which came about partly because Kearns made them happen and partly because the Buffs went completely sour. They ruined an otherwise fine exhibition of basketball. McBeth was magnificent for Tooele as he topped all scorers with 22. But it wasnt enough to taken the play away from Tooele match the 38 points Hunt and and once they got the advantage Rich collected for Kearns. TOOELE stopped the much they never let the Buffs forget who was the boss. feared Ross and he didnt hurt 5. nii GH-T-O The Fraternal Order of the Eagles, No. 164, once again will have their annual Dago Night party on January 24, 1970. Chairman, Mr. Lewis Pannunzio, expects this years dinner dance will he as popular as it has been in the past several years, featuring real authentic Italian food, made by real and adopted Italians. Dinner will be served from 7:00 to 9:00 p.m. Friendly hour 8:00 to 9:(X) p.m. Dancing 9:00 p.m. to 1:00 a.m. All members are welcome to attend this entertaining evening. Mayor Swan To Address East PTA Mayor Robert Swan will be guest speaker at the East Elementary PTA meeting, Monday, January 19, at 7:30 p.m. The theme for the meeting will be Citizenship according to PTA President Joe Gimbel. An item of business will be to establish a definite PTA project goal. Entertainment will be by the Uke group under the direction of Mr. Roe Harrison. ' (Ml en- Grantsville Men Sentenced Two young Tooele County men were sentenced Monday, January 12, in Third District Court at Tooelt to indeterminate terms in the Utah State Penitentiary on a charge of attempted burglary, second degree. Stephen D. Riddle, 18, 490 East Clark, Grantsville, and Bruce Butler, 23, also of Grantsville were ordered to make full restitution, serve 90 days in the Tooele County Jail and to remain on probation for two years. Funeral services and burial will be held at Nampa on Friday, January 16. to IGUJJ0 PLAYING controlled and confident basketball for the first quarter Tooele fashioned a lead and when they scored the first points in the second period for a 20-1- 4 lead it looked like the Buffs had the formula to carve out the win. But they didn't figure on the deafllv outside shooting of lanky Roger Rich who single handily got Kearns hawk in the game midway in the second period. of Mary McLaws. OlTi GfcffiBOQ Scheduled For Jan. 24 formerly of this city. He died of a heart ailment in a hospital at Nampa, Idaho. Mr. Stevens was the husband 0 Lor- Dago Night Word was received here Tuesday of the death of H. E. Stevens, Orb QJ3! -- v Former Resident Dies at Nampa, Idaho 903My2e Wt37 GM&B J All parents are invited and couraged to attend. n ZB 4 r. THS Buffs Go Flat Loose to Cougars from Rosss loss than did Kearns. IN THE NEXT 30 seconds Kearns went out in front 61-4- C3SS7 , Pictured above, Photo by A. D. Thomas, are committee members and chairman, raine Pannunzio, who were responsible for last years successful party. Tooeles basketball team Funeral services for Mrs. Elva Atkin Gowans were held Tuesday in the Tooele Fourth- - Eleventh Ward Chapel with Bishop George Federal Employees Plan Annual Banquet fcs by Andy Roberts Elva Gowans Laid to Rest i portable radio to Dr. Homer Cate, 74 East Nine. Dr. Cate won the $269.95 receiver, capable of picking up short wave as well as AM and FM transmissions, in a recent sales promotion contest sponsored bv Cordons in cooperation with Wells Distributing Co., Salt Lake City. He became eligible for the prize following the purchase of a Zenith Color TV Set from Mr. Cordon. Mr. Cordon became a winner too. He was one of II salesmen in the Idaho, Nevada, Utah area to win an all expense paid trip to the Hawaiian Islands. He and his wife will leave on March 1st to spend 1 1 days there. Zenith n, tS, at which point coach Gary Gardner called time out and instructed his charges to put the full court press on the Cougars. There was four minutes left. n The press proved to be the Cougars dish and they got fat on it. Instead of shooting for the basket the cool, calm and collected Cougars played keep away passing back and forth until Tooele fouled. Then they poured the points through the hoop. In three minutes they didnt take a single shot at the hoop, scoring seven points, all from the foul line, and at the same time holding Tooele scoreless. Score with a minute left was Steve Taylor finally broke the Buff dry spell with a pair of foul shots, but Kearns subs rubbed salt in the wounds with a pair of field goals for the man-to-ma- 68-5- 72-5- 4 win. PRAISE The best leadership I have observed in American business uses sincere praise as a motivator. The best teaching I have observed back as far as I can remember into the elementary and forward through secondary, college and advanced levels has used sincere praise as a motivator. In mv own teaching experience the most gratifying results have come from the use of sincere praise. Harry G. Green, President, United Busi- Donkey Basketball Returns to THS Youll laugh and wonder who the Donkeys really are as the Reynolds Company and their World Famous Donkey Basketball team return to Tooele on January 20, after a year of absence, for a single performance in the THS Gymnasium. This frolic will pit the Tooele High School Faculty against the Senior Letterinen; and will get underway at 7:30, with action as slow as a mule! Th letterman have the and we want to help. He is a young man, full of vitality and plans for the wants the most for his wife and children. future. Hes concerned about the future. And hes very much aware that he should be saving, but its a difficult He task. We would like the Army by a score of 28-2A half-tim- e performance by Lt. Mike Kilbourn, karate instructor at TEAD and holder of the Black Belt in the first degree will be another worthwhile feature of the evening. Advance tickets cost 75 cents for children under 12 and $1 for adults. At the gate, admission will cost $1 for children and $1.25 for adults. 2. favor- The key to progress doesnt ing nod haven beaten the faculty both times they have met. The always fit. Bob Brown, Philalettermen have one loss in their delphia Bulletin Sunday Maga- last three games, losing only to to offer a few suggestions. Successful savers are those who make a decision to save and stick to it. They decide on a specific amount to put away each month. How much is not important. How often is. A regular, systematic plan is the key to steady financial growth. Most of us live within a budget, but part of our earnings is called disposable income. Thats the part that can be put to work in a savings account. Try to think of it this way: Each month you have to have certain fixed amounts to pay for the necessities food, clothes, shelter, etc. Include yourself on this list. Make an amount payable to you each month and immediately deposit it in your savings account. Thats the first step and its a big one. But if you make it and stick to it, it gets easier. . Once you have set your goal, you should choose a savings plan to meet your objectives. First Security Bank offers five distinctly different plans. See which one is right for you. Aliens Must Register During January The Immigration and Nationality Act requires that aliens in the United States on January 1, each year, shall report their address during the month of January. This is reqifhed even though the alien has not changed his address since the last report. The alien may go to any Un- of entry into the United States, ited States Post Office or any Im- date and place of birth, nationamigration and Naturalization lity and, most important, his Service Office and ask for the alien registration number. An alien registration number Address Report Card, Form filled in all is the number preceded by the has alien the When ness Schools Association, Praise he should sign the card letter A appearing on his alien The Motivator, Balance Sheet the items and hand it to an employee in registration recepit card. Aliens admitted temporarily in the U.S. anv Post Office or Immigration in should write nonimmigrant Office. Naturalization The and EXECUTIVES card is not to be mailed or fold- - the space provided on the report The day of the The alien must hand form. executive is gone. He has been ed or torn. An alien required to report Card during the the in Report the man who college replaced by his each address who willfully or inex- of mouth year. January begins as a member of a planned or The parent legal guardian cusably fails to report is libable training program and enters the children must submit an to be taken into custody and dealien of organization hierarchy. George for such alien. S. Swope, Man at the Top: address report ported. Furthermore, such alien to his address an may be fined or imprisoned addition n In Whats He Like? Nations Busi- reports the date and place ore deportation. self-mad- e I We know how he feels I Member First Security Corporation System of Banks RESOURCES OVER ONE BILLJON DOLLARS First Security Bank of Utah, National Association. First First Security Bank of Idaho, National Association. Members Federal Deposit Insurance First Security State Bank Security Bank of Rock Springs, Wyoming Corporation |