OCR Text |
Show man Greg Solberg placed fourth, SWAM TOOELE against Brigham Young University's fresh- men Thursday night and their next outing is set with Highland High at South. Jan. 27. Highland beat the Buffs for the first time in history, 49-4in their only other encounter this year. The Ram tank crew is coach- ed by former Tooele great Kim Buff Faddlers Pull Plug Out On Titans Tooele swimmers returned to their winning ways, Tuesday as they splashed to a 56-4- 0 victory over the Olympus Titans at the Ute Swim School in Salt Lake. CRABBING seven of eleven first places, the Buffs had to Kit COTSOfl S come from behind to take the lead after the sixth event, the iji ' 100-ybutterfly when they swept Sketched with Steve Keene hitting a B,rn in Ken,"v 0,1 1:02.6 and Ken Lewis, a 1:08.9 ,K,r 24 18,w- Kil Carson coml,in-finis- h The Buffs also swept a f he frontier with ed in the 50-yfreestyle and tmlities of civilization. He per- backstroke. the 100-yDouble winners were Mike fonned exrtly as a trapper, ,n,ian f'h,er- - Indian who won the 50 free Plorer. a'd A""V offlcer400-yASpn free-and anchored the AfTER his birth his SPN Style relay team and Jess Allen. moved to Missouri. At Winner in the backstroke and a fanldy of the same relay team. ,een he '?a an apprentice to a but quit the monoI FRESHMAN John Pitt grab- - raddle-make- r bed a surprise second in the 400- - ,ono"s work af,er ,w yeaR- In fd. freestyle in his best time of ,he su,nmer of 1828 he j"'"ed a San,a Fe ,a,,ld ,fro'n the year at 5:12.7. He placed taravan Carson and the West Kit that time fourth in the 200-yfree in his we onefirst attempt at the event. T1 Other seconds were Mark nf h.r years Carson Dean in the 200 free. Wally John- - sPe,,t in Mexlc0- - California and hat is ,n,ow A?zna and New on in the 50 free, Tom Sawyers H worked as an, n,er Mex,ca and the individual in medley, r e eams,er a,,d Pre'f,n Jerry Clark in the backstroke. he ,h welnt1w,,h Hunt outdistanced Olymtrapped pus best diver by 25 points to F'tzpatnck Party win his event going away. Fresh- - all over the mountains and in ! 6, J-- 2 t- - 2 - - - Lh,,n-Stev- LARGE AA EGGS several rivers. For eiht years young Kit lived among the real Mountain Men; trapping, hunt- ing and Indian fighting. He married an Indian wife. In the winhe was critically ter of 1832-3- 3 wounded in a battle with the Blackfeet but recovered completel- an (0 avenge the wrongs of Meu- r J tans whom they did not know. I Jr 11110131 xlClCl repeat, it was Carson and Codey former an Am- who did this-th- e erican, both in Kentucky; the lat- - T ter a Frenchman by descent, born AalllgO in St. Louis; and Ixith trained to Funeral services for Emma Western enterprise from early Lingo Cuddihy, 90, who died on yof causes inci- He was still a young man when Carson started a farm in 1845, January 13. the silk hat put the coup-d-e grace but sold it to join Fremont's third dent to age, were conducted Moo d rly Mortuary on a sagging leaver market. He expedition. The War with Mexico fv ,n Salt was a champion hunter and knew City. Fremont about the time igan Mrs. Cuddihy was a resident Indian character and ways. He an( bis men arrived in California. Tooele from 1911 to 1942 and could speak English. French, Sa- - Kit was a dispatch liearer for in the Methodist La-nish and several Indian languages, several thrilling months. He was wa dies KLE Aid, Club, Auxiliary of riin lieutenant the made a FOR ABOUT eight years Kit later fle corps but Congress never ap- the Elks, and the Womens Benefits was, for the most part, a hunter Association. the appointment. for the renowned firm of Bent proved Surviving are her daughter THE of WITH capitulation and St. Vrain. In 1842, Lt. John L. S. A. (Edna) Hatton, Salt Mrs. n Kit and one Mexico in 1848, Fremont used Carson as a guide Maxwell legan ranching. Lake City, three grandchildren on his first expedition. As a reand nine great grandchildren. Kit took time off for Indian fightsult of accompanying Fremont on Services were under the direche was 1853 In and trading. his first expedition, the fame and ing of Mr. Dan Eastman. Mr. tion Indian Agent for the legend of Kit Carson legan and appointed Carver Bryan, a lifetime family Utahs and Apaches. He headquarhe Itecame a real and living part tered at Taos. During the Civil friend was the speaker. Musical of the American Frontier MoveWar Kit Carson was a U. S. selections were rendered by Mrs. ment. VolJoseph Griffith. In 1843, Carson and his old Army Brigadier General of Interment was in the Shrine He served with honor unteers. friend Fitzpatrick accompanied of Memories in Salt Lake City. had and a career. distinguished Fremont on the latters most faOn May 23rd, 1868, General mous expedition. It was during A still Indian Agent, died of K f Carson, this adventure-fillejourney that a Fort at Lyon, ruptured artery fljr Carson and a comrade named CodColorado. It has Iieen said of Carey made a memorable attack on son's life that . . . Here was the an Indian camp to recover some of a typical plainsman, startstolen horses. Fremont descrilied story as the freest of trappers and ing the adventure later: . . . Their ending as the dedicated servant object accomplished, our men of a powerful and progressive gathered up all the surviving WASHINGTON (ANF) horses, fifteen in number, return- government. for the Army Kit Carson fought and hunted Volunteers ed upon their trail, and rejoined all of his life. He used many guns; Language Training Program at our camp in the afternoon of are in great demand. the same day. They had rode Paterson Colts, a Coulcher rifle Hawk-e- n famous Language training la conand more. His many about one hundred miles in the is treasured by the Montezuma ducted at the Defense Lanpursuit and return, and all in 30 No. IF & A.M., Sante Fe, guage Institutes West Coast hours. The time, place, object, Lodge Branch at the Presidio of New Mexico. A percussion shotand me misers considered, this exmade by Hellinghuas and ownCalif.; and the Monterey, gun pedition of Carson and Godey ed the time of his East Coast Branch in Washat Carson, by may le considered among the was passed on to a trooper ington, D. C. boldest and most distinguished death, Cahill. He sold it to a comrade Qualified officers and enwhich the annals of western adP. M. Dobbins, listed personnel may apply named Dobbins. venture, so full of daring deeds, his grandson, presented the much-use- d under the provisions of AR can present. Two men, in a saand DA Circular 350-2- 1. gun to the Museum of the dll-8- 2 vage desert, pursue day and night Fur Trade. Another owned by gun an unknown body of Indians into Carson is exhibited in the Colorado Language courses are the defiles of an unknown mountainState Museum. The maker is not available in Arabic, Chinese, -attack without on them sight, known. There exists, however, a Mandarin, Czech, Dutch, defeat them counting numbers-an- d faint possibility that this might be French, German, Greek, Hunin an instant and for what? To Kit's Benjamin Mills rifle. The garian, Indonesian, Italian, punish the robliers of the desert. general style is that of a typical Japanese, Korean, Russian, plains rifle. Thai, Slovenian, Spanish, THUS THE same weapons Turkish, Ukranian, Vietnathat made Kit Carson a legend, mese, Hausa, Hebrew, Hindi, live on as memorials to the man Lingala, Persian, Polish, Porthat made them so famous. tuguese, Rumanian, Malay(Based on The Plains Rifle, a an, Swahili, Tagalog, and book by Charles E. Hanson, Jr. Burmese. This book is available through NaAustralia's coral reef covers tional Rifle Association Book Seran area twice the size of Ohio. vice.) rt T. J rip For Emma R3 C!C3 At Caen's AO assist New fJfl . y (tst I8, Automation man's effort to make work so easy that women can do it all. h Book shine Magazine Get $19r Vandals Break Glass O. T. Barrus told Tooele Police Friday that someone broke the glass out of a gas pump at Workmans Bus Company. INCCuS rTl Language Students - We have them now at rainfall, according to Encyclopedia. Lu-cie- d Id so d POLAROID CAMERAS 30-inc- one-inc- double-parke- have something to worry about tew Sun w, beep my mind off the pain." Hard - to It takes a layer of h moist snow or a layer of in the water snow to equal dry ca, my Bible Society six-inc- h a World The ponce officer was in the act Gf ticketing a car which was double parked when suddenly a woman ran up to him excitedly she pleaded, Oh, please officer, -you see, I just visited the dentist, and I left j0 have a tooth pulled, BIBLE Tlie gap between the number 0f tbe world's people who can read the Holy Scriptures and those who have a Bible is widen- ing annually. In northern India forty years ago one portion of the Scriptures was available for every ten literates; today it is one for every 300 literates. - American vlUllliny . DOZEN , BATEMAN JEWELRY 5 N. Main, Tooele II0H0 II !!? I JAMUAKYbT 999 2099 62 CHIV SEDAN, stick, sharp 62 CHIVC0RVITH 62 STUDEBAKER LARK, V8, auto 61 CAD SEDAN, air. 61 61 60 899 999 499 699 599 299 V01KSWAG0N. BUICK LeSABRE, like new. FORD FALCON WAGAN 60 59 CHEV IMPAIA SEDAN, 59 57 57 55 RAMBLER WAGON, PONTIAC SEDAN Life 599 1799 V8, stick PONTIAC WAGON PLYMOUTH overdrive 99 149 WAGON 99 PONTIAC Warranty Plus 5-d- ay Trial Exchange Privilege C. ittohar tulefios 44 East 1st North Phone 882-106- 6 First Step For Farm Workers DIG VALUE! SENSI-TET.1- P RANGE 2291 Lighted oven Interior. Removable oven door. Automatic easy set oven timer. Full width storage drawer. Calrod Surface units. Pushbutton controls. ed "By phasing out the use of braceros, the first long step bad been taken toward eliminating thd special disadvantages of wage earners in California agriculture. But it is only the first step. Much remains to be done before farm workers will have the same status as those in other industries and before agricultural employers will have built and maintained a reliable and efficient domestic labor supply- .- An excerpt from the recommendations of the California Farm Labor Panel a ppoint-e- d by Secretary of Labor W. Willard Wirtz. 6 Mixed Styles and Sizes; Pumps, Flats Values to 13.00. Values to 9.00. MAKE SOMEONE n lOW-PaiCH- p? SELF OVEN CLEANING RANGE 299 NO MORE HAND CLEANING With Trade YOUR OVEN! General Electric's P-- 7 oven cleans Itself electric... even in places you could never ally for only clean properly before. Baked on grease and grime simply vanish! oven timer . Automatic easy-s- et Calrod surface units . Accurate pushbutton controls. Full width storage drawer. Lighted oven and Cooktop. of 8p If --Clean Ing Oven now available In every type E Range IS models to choose from. G-- Electric Ranges as low as See Us ... We Can Save You Money! Model 00 . Values to 8.00. . HAPPY Once upon a time there was a girl named Melanie. She was mousy - looking and always seemed to have a hem loose or a button missing from her dress. In class, too, Melanie behaved like a mouse, and no one paid much attention to her. Came lunchtime and recesses and Melanie seemed to melt into the sea of chatting classmates around her. No one had ever been to her house. One day, something special happened to Melanie. Something that changed her whole life. It was Valentines Day. Melanie came to school and sure enough, the hem was down on her skirt, her hair, though combed, was parted like a z and the top button was missing on her sweater. Came recess, and her teacher, Mrs. Wood, said the children could exchange the valentines they had made for each other. All the boys and girls giggled and laughed In excitement but not Melanie. For who would send her a valentine? But suddenly there appeared on her desk, not Just a valentine, but a valentine of tiny red paper flowers. There was a card attached. It read: From someone who cares. The next day, and the day after that, and the day after Melanie came to school that with her hair brushed to a gleaming shine. Her clothes were as trim as could be, and her eyes were as bright as her smile. At lunchtime and at recess you could hearvMelanies giggles for she was surrounded by friends. Wouldnt It be nice if you could make someone happy In your class this Valentines Day? t PRICES UTTERLY SLASHED!, t A J A T V A Y Q a A I PisCQUIntfS Continue! Lovely Fall Coats Co-ordina- tes t S FOR i everybody of Ladies Lined Boats 30 Pair and 10 Styles in Low & High Tops Flats Dresses 600 Heels & QOO V bou-'qu- TOOELE, UTAH (Copyright 1966 by Mattel, Inc.) i |