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Show Id v 1 - f & Vr- - - r:v. - naa Volume Sixty Eight ip Tooele, Utah, Friday, July Band M oney Now At $871 Highlights of the week in the final drive to cover the deficit of the money needed to send the Tooele High School Band to the World Fair next month, was the donation of $76 from the Lady Eagles, and an Anonymous Donor who gave $100 for the group he represents. Thursday noon the donors gifts to the band for its World Fair appearance totaled $871.50. Such liberality on the part of the Tooele citizenry deserves highest commendation, and the band leaders and members are deeply grateful for such kindness. Should the entire $1,500 deficit be raised by donation of the citizenry, the half way mark was passed Thursday, but it is anticipated that the band members and parents will raise part of this amount. It is the plan to continue the fund raising drive until the entire $1,500 is raised from the various sources of donations, and individuals and organizations are invited to continue to make their contributions leading to a successful conclusion. Here is the list of donors, uncluding Thursday: MR. AND MRS. TED GILLETTE, $35 MR. AND MRS. ALEX F. DUNN, $25 MR. AND MRS. V. L LANCASTER, $25 MRS ROSE NISONGER, $10 DR. AND MRS. T. M. ALDOUS, $10 MR. AND MRS. SIDNEY G. ATKIN, $10 MR. AND MRS. EVERETT DeLaMARE, $10 MR. AND MRS. MARK HALGREN, $10 MR. AND MRS. MILLARD WILDE, $10 MR. AND MRS. HERMAN PEDERSEN, $10 MR. AND MRS. LaVAR TATE, $10 MR. AND MRS. JESSE P. ALLEN, $20 MRS. MYRTLE ALLSOP, $25 MRS. MAUDELLA JOHNSON, KEARNS, $20 MR. AND MRS. GRANT RIDING, $25 MR. AND MRS. WILFRED McBRIDE, $10 MR. AND MRS. VAL LARSEN, $5 MR. AND MRS. BAND SUPPORTER, $20 MR. AND MRS. F. CHILEON HALLADAY, $20 MR. AND MRS. PARK CALDWELL, $25 MR. AND MRS. JAY BATEMAN, $27.50 TOOELE CITY, $100 MR. AND MRS. DEAN BEVAN, $10 MR. AND MRS. DALE JAMES, $10 PRESIDENT AND MRS. O. T. BARRUS, $10 DR. AND MRS. JAMES R. BURTON, $10 MR. AND MRS. JOHN L. BROWN, $10 MR. AND MRS. NORVAL ADAMS, $27.50 BARRUS MOTORS INC., $25 DR. AND MRS. JOHN L. JOURNAY, $10 MR. AND MRS. ELMER J. ELKINGTON, $10 MR. AND MRS. BENJAMIN H. BOWEN, $10 LADIES AUXILIARY FOE 164, $76 MR. AND MRS. DEAN HUNT. $10 MR. AND MRS. BRANT CALDWELL, $25 MR. AND MRS. WILLIAM BICKMORE, $10 MR. AND MRS. M. M. DUNN, $10 MR. AND MRS. RAY W. DUNN, $25 FARM AND HOME BUILDER SUPPLY, $10 ANONYMOUS DONATORS, $100 MRS LOUISE HARDY AND CHILDREN, $10 You are solicited to make your contribution today. The list of donors will be published and names added until the goal is reached. 13, 1962 Number Five 21 File For County Public Office Office Democrats Republicans Four Year G. Willis Smith Commissioner Incumbent Leland D. Hogan Stockton Stockton Two Year Commissioner Clerk-Audit- or ' R. Sterling Halladay Incumbent Grantsville Barnard Castagno Grantsville J. Rex Kirk, Sr. Incumbent Lois N. Likes Tooele Tooele Recorder Rose P. Nisongcr Incumbent Tooele Ida H. Johnson Grantsville Treasurer Vera B. Gillespie Norval H. Adams Toode Incumbent Tooele Assessor Jess N. Charles Grantsville Wendell Anderson Grantsville Sheriff No Fay Gillette Candidate Incumbent Tooele Surveyor No Candidate Ray L. Pruett Incumbent 10 Tooele Attorney No Candidate Gordon R. Hall Incumbent 1 Tooele t Justice of the Peace Grantsville No Candidate Justice of the Peace Oliver E. Sharp Wendover Mile Of Pennies Makes Cents For H. LeRoy Sutton ' Incumbent No Candidate Building Fund Incumbent Nelson B. Lamus Justice of the Peace John No Candidate Justice of the Peace Lake Point State Representative H. Edwards Incumbent Stockton Samuel W. Clark No Candidate Incumbent No Candidate F. Chileon Halladay Incumbent Tooele Biographical sketches of all the candidates for Tooele issues of the Transcript and Bulletin. County offices will be published in Minor League To Note 8th Anniversary All-St- Police Chief Injures Arm Members of the Stockton LDS Ward Primary have initiated a unique project to raise money which will be applied to paying for their new chapel. Ten yards of pennies is a small beginning, but the 125 children of the Primary, between the ages of three and 12, are busy collecting one cent pieces as rapidly as possible. Their goal is to accumulate one mile of pennies. The coppers are pasted to masking tape. This helps the children to visualize their progress. Incidentally, a mile of pennies is worth $739.20. The primary children plan to visit members of the Stockton Ward during the next few weeks. Anyone interested in contributing their spare cents is invited to phone Bertha HoOpal West, and Vivian Sangan, the officers in dino, Stockton Primary. 882-21- 882-04- approximately ten yards of pennies, the start of their mile of pennies project, for the Ward Building Fund. WBBA Regional Tourney July 21 Tournament time in Western is just around the corner, and Director Max McBeth has just released the tourney schedule for Tooele Countys four leagues. Tooele American and Tooele National along with Dugway and Boys Baseball ReGrantsville are in an gion with teams from Springville and American Fork. In order to reduce these 11 teams down to eight for the Region Tourney, five teams drew byes and six teams will meet in a qualifying round - single game elimination, winners advancing to the Region Meet, losers are eliminated. Tooele National got a bye, but the other three Tooele County Teams will play in the qualifying round. am 882-33- Last Kites For Clara D. Adams Friday 1 PM New Dean Of Students Pay Their Own Way Band members who have earned their own way to the Worlds Fair are pictured above L to R, front: Jed Bryan, Eddie Mason, Phil Norton, Glen Lowry and Robert Erickson. Back row: Lee Caldwell, Lance Sutherland, John Nutter and Don McCants. Neal A. Maxwell was named by the Board of Regents today as the new Dean of Students at the University of Utah. He will replace Dr. Willard W. Blaesser, who recently resigned his position at the Utah school to accept a similar responsibility at the City College of New York. The change will take place August 1. MR. MAXWELL has served since October, 1958, as Assistant to the President at the University and, in addition, since July of 1961 has been Secretary to the Board of Regents. He is also an Instructor in the field of Political Science and is well known as the Host and Moderator of KUEDs Tell Me half-ho- ur program, which is a weekly interview program. President A. Ray Olpin, in commenting on the appointment, said that cultivation of human resources is necessary for sound economic and social development. Education of our youth is the key to our economic progress, more These three games will be played in American Fork, Saturday, July 21. The schedule is as follows: Grantsville vs Spring Creek, 11 a.m.; Tooele American vs Sage Creek, 1pm. and Dugway vs Mapelton, 3 p.m. The three winners join the Tooele two American Fork National, teams and two teams from Springville for the Regional Tournament which will be held in Springville August 1, 2 and 3 This will also be a single elimination tournament with the one winner qualifying for the State Tourney to be held in Wellington, Utah (Carbon County) August 9, 10 and 11. Eight regional winners in will enter the State Play-of- fs another single loss elimination, with the four winners qualifying for an paid trip to San Fernando, California and the World Series. U of U Names Band Members Pay Own Way Young Jed Bryan of Erda turned town money and enough to help an-ihis final payment on his Worlds other besides. Don McCants raised his own Fair trip which he earned hauling dirt from a basement, spreading money and then worked on the car manure, selling cherries, selling wash to help another. candy and in other ways using inJudy Jankovich, only girl fidustry and ambition to make his nancial wizard, has earned her trip with the band a reality. expenses through cleaning ticket Ken Riding and Paul Lowry have sales, candy sales and other pro been top businessmen in the bands jects. financial life and have raised their Thirteen more students are within ten dollars of having raised the expense money for their trip. This means a lot of hours to some of the students who have earned only 25 cents an hour. Some have gone door to door in other Utah communities with products and donation tickets to sell when they could find no more support within their own neighborhood. The band students appreciate the people who have employed them and bought candy and tickets Many are still anxious for employment, especially girls. Jobs for boys have exceeded the girls by a great percentage which partly accounts for the boys financial success. Some students who became mem bers of the band this spring have a little handicap in selling because much of the territory had already been covered before they knew Jankovich Judy they were going to make the trip. Every effort is being made to encourage students to raise their own expenses where there are sufficient opportunities for employment. So far a comparative hand ful have been fortunate enough to find jobs. The Tooele Minor League is The car wash netted $77 to be celebrating eight years of baseball divided among nineteen boys and this season, climaxing it with an girls who worked on it. They apar game to honor its found- preciated the use of Clar Hansens er Joe Thomas. service station and the courtesy he Saturday at 6:30 p.m. at Inter- afforded them. national Field, players representAll the students arc paying their ing teams from North Tooele will own food and spending money exvie for victory with players from clusive of projects and donations, South Tooele. Some of the players were infants in 1154 when Joe Thomas began the League so that every boy in Tooele could play baseball if he so chose. In the insuing eight years, the League has grown from four Tooele Chief of Police Leland teams to the present strength of Sutherland was injured at 10:30 twenty teams of boys being taught p.m. Monday when he tripped on the fundamentals of baseball. a child's toy and fell down the Ned Shaffer and Lowell Blcazard, cellcr stairs in his home. committeemen for Joe Thomas His elbow was badly chipped and Day" invite everyone to watch an he suffered torn ligiments and tenexciting ball game and to cheer for dons. The arm, still painful, is in their favorites. a Cast. " Yards Of Pennies Terrie Day, Dari Allred, Ricky Anderson, Merle Sandino and Laurali Benson, members of the Stockton LDS Ward Primary display Clara DeLaMare Adams, 89, died at the Tooele Rest Home on Tuesday, June 10, of causes incident Neal A. Maxwell Assistant to Senator Wallace to age. SHE WAS BORN on Christmas day 1872 at Tooele to Henry and She Green. Emma Broomhead had been a lifelong resident of this community and was an active member of the Relief Society and the Daughters of Utah Pioneers. On June 25 she was married to Collin DeLaMare and it was later solemnized in the Salt Lake LDS Temple. He died Nov. 11. 1894. She was married to Joseph DeLaMare, Dec. 6, 1899 and he died April 30, 1923. On October 22, 1930 she married Thomas E. Adams, and he passed away March 22, 1945. SURVIVING ARE a daughter, Mrs. Milton L. (Emma) Horsley Bennett. of Soda Springs, Idaho; Mr. Maxwell returned to the UnAlso surviving are four grand1956 as Assisin of Utah iversity children and 11 great grandchilRelations Public of tant Director dren. and in October, 1958, he was apFuneral services will be held on President. to the Assistant pointed at 1 p.m. in the First-Six- th Friday sevof author is the Mr. Maxwell Church. Viewing will Ward mathan machines, important eral published articles on politics. be from 7 to 9 p.m. on Thursday terial or development of any other He is married to the former at the Tate Mortuary and Friday resource. four have and they Hinckley The President added that Mr. children. prior to funeral time. Interment will be in the Tooele City Maxwell will do a fine job of fulHE IS CURRENTLY Bishop of filling the responsibilities of the the of the Ward 6th University important position of Dean of Stu- Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Da- y dents and will help to create serSaints. vices that will assist in caring for individual needs of students. MR. MAXWELL graduated from Granite High School in 1944 and served in the U.S. Army from 1944 to 1946. He was a First Sergeant in the Infantry and participated in the Army Reserve as an officer in The very essence of a free Word has been received here Military Intelligence from 1950 to consists in congovernment the of with honors from Barstow California, 1953. He graduated offices as public sidering Smith, Ken Riding, Skippy Hamilton and from the University of Utah in 1952 death of Wayne Alfred Turner, More ambitious boys who have sold candy, bestowed for the good trusts, resident. Vere Lancaster. Back row: Paul Lowery, with a Political Science major. He former Tooele cleaning tickets and in other ways raised of the country, and not for the Mr. Turner died July 2 at Clark Stookey, Danny Wilkes, James Smith received his Masters Degree in enough money to take them to the fair with benefit of an individual or a susof Calif., injuries Bakersfield, Paul Smart. and Science at the August Political the band are, front: Rickie Hamilton, Randy party. accident. automobile in an Commencement. From 1952 to 1954 tained From a speech the CIA (Central He had attended high school in with he served by John C. Calhoun Get A Box of the member a was and 1954 Tooele Intelligence Agency) and from Church. LDS through 1956 he was Legislative He was born at Sidney, Ncbr., January 9, 1910, a son of William WESTERN UNION TELEGRAM Turner and Mrs. Carolyn AberOnly one hundred boxes of those No. nathy. delicious chocolates remain to be DC, 12 528 P EDT Surviving are his parents, both Washington sold to complete the Tooele High of Kanab and the following Alex F. Dunn, Tooele, Utah School band candy project. havejers and sisters, John William Auxiliaiy of FOE No. These boxes sell for $1 each and Turner, Salt Lake City; Stanley R. been at it those who still would like a box Language worked out between Interior and Bureau of Ranking asagain. one of Tooele High Turner, San Clements, California: or two of these delicious candies, The Budget on Settlement Canyon. Expect bill to clear School band's most ardent sup- Gerald R. Turner, brother. Salt can have them delivered to their Lake Citv; Walter T. Abernathy, organiInterior within the next low days and be sent to the porters, the ladies of the another 7. home by phoning Dolly and Mary Ann Abernathy, zation have turned over Kanab. Band members who still have House. $76 to the World's Fair fund. will be open Funeral services were held at The money was raised by the candy money to check in are askDAVID S. KING, Member Of Congress ed to please contact Mrs. Ruby contribution of a bowling ball which the ODonnell Funeral Home in Smith at band practice Friday was won by a lddy from Brigham Barstow, Calif, on July 6 and burial 62 12 P MST 432 JUL was at Kanab, Utah on July 7. morning. City. F. Co-le- en rsmEISlSJB3 Former Resident Is Killed In Auto Accident Qtiofct LUisifoni Financial Go Geltcrs Of Those Delicious Baud Chocolates Bulletin On Dam FOB Auxiliary Is One Baud Supporter! Eesesea Under the DRUG STORE Rotation Plan TOOELE DRUG Sunday I |