OCR Text |
Show fyryt M Us Knowlton rtvffftyvyf'yf' ff ttinrfyyrf nfripryi University and College and is currently employed by the Church in the office of Richatd L. L'.vans, the LDS Business Tho approaching Novemiwr IS wedding of Miss Shu ley Jean Know lion and Ronald H. Matthews, is being announml by her parents, Mr and Mrs. Vernon I. Know lion, 2 IS West Main, Grants-ille- . Mr Matthews is a son of Mr. Hunter I.. Matthews, 27(i West Claik, Gmnlswlle and the late Marge Matthews. The wedding ceremony will be performed in the Salt Lake LDS Temple, with Richard L. Evans, member of the Council of The Twelve officiating A reception in the esenmg will honor the young couple at the Giantsville First attended www Frlghnm Ymtn To Moitv Uonnhl Mottheus Ward The bride elect "r Friends Fcle Salt Lake. Nona Shibley The bridegroom to be attended the University of Utah for two years before filling a two year LDS Mission to the New I ngland states. He will return to the University where he will continue his studies for electro al engineering MITT . The Fmma J. Atkin Camp, DUP, will hold its meeting, Monday, November 7, 10, at the home of Lenore 145 Elkington, West Third Smith. Grace Bennett will give the lesson. All members and interested the ladies are invited to attend. V iJm f a SPECIAL PURCHASE ' h mr- i Miss Shirey Jean Knowlton Door Mats 3 49 LINSEED OIL Factory Purchase) (Your Container) ALUMINUM STORM WINDOWS El her sixteenth birthday. Jols Daughters FARM & HOME BUILDEItS SUPPLY Phone 606 Invite All To Carnival Place, Masonic Temple, Magna, Utah. Everyone is invited. Dont miss the fun well be expecting II Pays To Take The Local Paper award her senior year. The pilgrims soon learned that the Portuguese fishermen had been drying fish on Cape Cod for years and years before they got you. It pays to take the Transcript Bulletin, according to Archie Maynard, whose son Robert will get an opportunity he would have Come one, come all, youre all invited to attend our spectacular Lima, San Domingo and Mexico surely missed save for the BulleCity all had crowded universities tin. carnival. A SHORT TIME age when the Booths, prizes, food, fun galore. centuries before our first one, in the National Saturday, November 5, 7:30 pm. Harvard, was founded. were Contest Merit Scholarship named, Robert Maynard was one of them, along with Mitzi Alver-so- n and Louise Allen, THS seniors. Along with the official papers contained in individual packets for each student announcing their Jobs Daughters Bethel No. Magna, Utah. DEVELOPING A SOCIETY OF MEDIOCRITY? FRANK C. CARMAN WANTS UTAH SCHOOLS TO MEET THE RUSSIAN CHALLENGE He wants to code. He wants the Utah educational a phonetic approach in teaching our children how to read so our children can read not words, try to recall pictuers. u ! He wants to restore basic essentials of education more microscopes, not more trampolines! EDUCATION IS A BUSINESS FRANK C. CARMAN IS A BUSINESSMAN Our ) oung People Cant Meet The Rochet Age If They Cant Read The Facts. ELECT : i J AT FRANK GORDON'S MEN'S WEAR 10 West Vine in Tooele (Name Brand Clothes of Distinction) f 1 jfa sf & hhiU H '- -v', f - "iP f , - ! ftii , Co CARAAAN UTAH STATE BOARD OF EDUCATION (Regional Distict No. 3) YOUR THANKSGIVING TURKEY FREE! 18 lb. Dressed or equivilent in merchandise with each SPORT - COAT AND PAIR OF MATCH-INSLACKS, PURCHASED During the SALE! 10, PARENTS I IS UTAHS EDUCATIONAL SYSTEM Vi Turkey Days Again! there. semi-fianalis- ts 4 Miss Patricia Brown pre-gam- e Miss Lida Gay Peterson Broadway w V half-tim- more 272 North .4 Young Couple Tells Plans (Reg 4.59) T198 ' Elected to U of U Band Office 18x30 (Bulk - Direct vm ' Mrs. Ruth Hogan was chairman of the event and Diane was brought to the ward chapel in her bed to receive the greetings of the townspeople. Not only was it a birthday party but it was also a going away party for Diane, as she left Wednesday morning for the LDS Hospital in Salt Lake City, where Thursday morning she underwent Miss Bryan the second major operation in the past three months. Word from the hospital Thursday at noon reports that the operation had been completed and was very successful. Diane is the daughter of Mr. Miss Janis Bryan, daughter of and Mrs. John Thomas of Stock-ton- . Mr. and Mrs. George Bryan, of Stockton, and student at the Univ. of Utah, has been elected Treasurer of the University of Utah band Her duties for the year 1960-6include checking rolls and personal equipment for band trips and she leads the line of marchOf interest is the forth coming ers from their famous tunnel marriage of Miss Lida Gay Peter- ramp entrance. She is a member son to Roger Ray Hammond, on of the honorary band fraternity. November 25, 1960, as announced Mr. Forrest D. Stoll is director by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. of the band and has produced Wesley Peterson, 140 North Hale, some outstanding football shows Grantsville. for the current season. He has Mr. Hammond is a son of Mr. taken this years band to Laramie, and Mrs. Wilson Hammond, Brook-law- n Wyoming where they marched in s Drive, Salt Lake City. 26 degree weather after The wedding ceremony and rehad cleared the field of snow. ception will be held in the Grants- Soaking wet uniforms and freezville First LDS Ward church. ing fingers were the order of the The bride to be graduated from day. The band just returned Sunthe Grantsville High School and day from Carbon College where has been employed at the Hot they performed a and e show. Shoppe in Salt Lake. The prospective bride groom is Miss Bryan is a graduate of employed in Salt Lake at present, Tooele High School where she was but wilt enter college in January'. active in student and scholarship activities. She was twirler and first saxophonist with the Tooele High Band. She made many first division ratings in contest and was awarded the highest merit 1 1: Vs , Diane Thomas, Miss Mary Tooele County sweetheart, who has been a victim of polio since she was nine, was feted at a celebration in the Stockton Ward Tuesday evening on the occasion of vr:r,. Mr. and Mis. John L. Brown of Tooele, announce the engagement of their daughter. Miss Patricia Brown to Mr. Burton Blaine Cahoon of Delta, Utah, son of Mr. and Mrs. Blaine V. Cahoon. A June wedding is being planned in the Salt Lake LDS Temple. The bride to by is an LDS Business College graduate. While attending the LDS Business College, she was an active member of the Mpha Iota Sorority and the Lambda Delta Sigma. Mr. Cahoon, at present, is attending the University of Utah. He is majoring in Science and Second- Diane Thomas Feted (ROLL ENDS) LINOLEUM Palricla Tlrowii Makes June Wedding Plans and Coin;; Away Party 14 I? r f t yiM ' At Dirthday CEILING TILE SANDRAN vrtvff,rt yr yr yytttt Nona Shibley, candidate for State Representative, was honored at a luncheon, Saturday, at 1.00 pm. at the Coral Room of the Kirk Hotel. Hostesses for the event were Ina Cook. Geneva Greenley and Berntece Warner, and about forty ladies were in attendance. Speakers at the luncheon were Mrs. A. F. Dunn, Mrs. Edna Mae Wilkins of Salt Lake City, and Dorothy Journay. Mrs. Shibley is believed to be the second woman candidate in Tooele County history to run for ary Education. such a high office. - EMMA ATKIN DI P ffvyyrr ly success, were instructions and forms to be filled out and mailed by two successive deadline dates. Since Robert had moved from Tooele and had left no forewarding address at Tooele High School, Mr. Morrill, counselor began an extended attempt to track Robert down so he could mail him his packet in time for Robert to complete the specified forms and get them to the proper destination before the deadline, so he would not lose his chance at the big prize. ASSOCIATES of Robert were called into the office for the purRoberts pose of ascertaining in New York where abouts State. As a result of this, various schools from New York received letters of inquiry and as the letters returned one by one, with the report that no such student was enrolled there, and as the deadline neared, it was feared that Roberts opportunity was about to go down the drain. Just at this point, however, Roberts father made his appearance at Tooele High School having come from Newburgh, New York to Salt Lake City and on to A school savings stamp program teaches early thrift . . . and citizenship When school children buy U. S. Savings Stamps, they start learning the important habit of saving at an early age. But they also learn one of the ways of serving their country by saving for Peace Power. Stamps come in denominations of 10, 25(J and up. As the albums are filled, they can be exchanged for U. S. Savings Bonds and tucked away for college, or for a nest egg at graduation time. If your school doesnt have, a Stamp Saving Program, why not suggest it at the next PTA meeting? Meanwhile, your children can buy Savings Stamps at any Post Office. Tooele. HOW HAD HE learned about Roberts good furtune and why had he come just in time to obtain and prepare the necessary papers and get them in, just ahead of the deadline date? Another son, James Maynard, now attending school in California had received his Transcript Bulletin, which carried the story of Tooeles three winners. He, had clipped the Bulletin article and mailed the clipping to his parents. The Maynard family are grateful for the Transcript Bulletin and appreciate the fact that it was an instrument in bringing an opportunity to Robert that may have a life long affect for good on their Heres why V. S. Savings Bonds are a good way to save You now get 33A to ma- turity. You can get your money any time you want it. Your money is guaranteed by the U. S. Government. The Treasury replaces your Bonds free if theyre lost or destroyed. Every Stamp and Bond dollar helps your Government pay for Peace Power. YOU SAVE MORE THAN MONEY WITH -- U.S. SAVINGS BONDS To 8. Government doet not pay for The Treaewy Depart thatike for thevr patmotu; doruUum, TSo Adverluny Conned and IT. Uiio advrrtunnff. Tooele Transcript son. A G |