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Show I 1 Times Come The Census of Population vanre Report Forms filled out and and Mousing, the Nation's Jsthready for the census takers. This will sase time for both the decennial nose count, gets under-Utfio1 J householder and the on census taker, way Friday morning, April With 160,000 census takers start-- , the census official said. ing their rounds which will take The Advance Report Form was them to every dwelling unit in the distributed to local households United States. In covering the 3 to the start of the house-to- prior and a half million square miles house canvass. It contains the of land area of the M states, the seven population and six housing census takers will travel an estiquestions which are asked of all mated combined distance of more persons. The Advance Report than 1. 000 times around the world, Form gives the family a chance or approximately 28 million miles to assemble information about Lincoln each member in advance of the Distr.ct Supervisor Stookey, po'nted out that resi- census taker's visit. Its use is exdents of this area can speed up pected to speed up the field and provide more accur- the big count by having their ate statistics. At every fourth household, n Volume Counted! be and p 4T icensus taker will leave a Census contains additional questions Questionnaire whichermg population and housing char-othe, Household steps are being taken the I 'too Census of Population and Housing, which starts April 1, to make sure that all tranare counted. District sients Supervisor Lincoln Stookey said Special today. Places such as large hotels, motels, and other accomodations for transient guests will be canvassed under a different procedure than the one used for regular household dwelling units. Prior to March 31, census takers will visit each of them and make a complete record of the rental units tn these special dwelling places. At the same time, they will determine which of these units are occupied by permanent residents and which are for transients. Transients will be counted on the night of March 31. This census operation is known as "T" night. A supply of Individual Census Report forms will be left at hotels, motels and other large to transient guests staying at these places during the night ol 31. Census bureau employes will be on hand during that evening to assist transients in filling out the forms. The purpose of the special canvass is to account for every person staying in such places on the Census date. After the individual rexrt forms have been collected, they will be screened to determine what names should be included in the local transient places to be distributed census counts. Persons enumerat Tooele, Utah Sixty-Fiv- e ( M-r- ch Friday, April Seventh -- UflYFU. w - 'I 7- 1ihiit f Aged Lady Dies Funeral Sal. at Mayor James Bevan, last weeks Who's Who" and Mrs. Helen House. A prize of Who's Who win$30.00 awaits this weeks ner, provided he or she has the right number of clues. Teacher Hit liy Auto Mrs. Lucille Bennion, formerly teacher at the Vernon School, and the wife of Glynn Bennion, was hit by an auto, this week, near a Salt Lake City crossing and suffered a severely shattered knee. . American Fork Mrs. Mary Alice Hoggard Murdock, age 86, mother of Mrs. Vida Anderson Roden, died Wednesday afternoon at 3: 15 p.m. at the home of her daughter at the Oquirrah Hotel. Funeral Set Funeral services for Delfin Perez Alonso will be held Saturday at 10 a.m. at the St. Marguerites Catholic Church. Rosary will be held at the Tate Mortuary, Fri. A NATIVE and life long resident of American Fork, Mrs. Murdock was born June 12, 1873, a daughter of George and Mary She was married to Robert E. Lee. After his death, she married Gene Murcock of Lehi and he prececded her in death by twenty years. She was a member of the LDS Church. at e. Mrs. Murdock had been very active and had lived alone, caring for her home and yard until January 2, of this year, when she was injured in a fall. Since January 13, she has been at the home of Mrs. 'Roden, and has been bedfast. SURVIVING are her daughter, three grand daughters, 8 great grand children and 7 great great grandchildren. Also surviving are a sister, Myrtle Birk of Provo; three half brothers, Alden and Lynn Hog-garAmerican Fork, and Don the Tooele day. For Guessing Mayor Bcvan Easter came early this year for Mr. Wilbur House of 4S5 N. 1st West, as he takes a $10.00 Who's Who check from an caster basket held by Bill Blckmore of Caldwell Drug, last weeks key sponsoring merchant. Keeping a close eye on the activity are in The three children of the ce ceased and eight grand children, are all expected to be in atten dance at the funeral service, Fri- . i. . Ward. Interment will be Cemetery. 8 p.m. ORVILLE JONES, JR., his wife and son and daughter, arrived by auto, Wednesday afternoon from Twenty Nine Palms, Calif. Orville Jr., was in a serious airplane accident on February 7th, and has just been released from the hospital two weeks ago. Saturday Number Thirty Three Grab That Rake . . Its Clean-U- p Time Miss Ruth Noall, of the University of Utah Lxtension Division will be the guest speaker at the Tooele Central School PTA meeting scheduled for Monday, April 4. The meeting will be held in the Central School auditorium, starting at 7.30 p m. FRIENDS may call at the Tate Mortuary, Thursday evening from 7 to 9 p.m. and Friday prior to the service. I I MIA Dance Ccn I nil PTA Will Hear Ilulli Noall Funeral services for Orville L. Jones, who died in Tucson, Sunday will be held Friday at 1 p.m in the North Tooele Stake Tabernacle. under the direction of Bishop Irvin C. Jones, of the Tooele V percent 1960 1, Funeral 1 PM Friday for Orville Jones jk s'v , which are being asked population. Householders are be used for investigation. sample of the quested to fill out the household,' taxation, or regulation, questionnaire and mail it withto the local census in three day district office. A pre. addressed postage free envelope is being ed on "T night" will be counied provided for this purpose. as part of the local population, The district supervisor emphasionly if they have no usual place The Saturday night, three stake of residence elsewhere. Names of zed that all information about inMl A dunce will be held in the transients will be allocated back dividuals and their homes furnish- to their usual place of residence ed to the Census Bureau is held s,ort(l Tootle Stake recreation hal, t 9 p m, Saturday, Information on permanent re- in absolute confidence under Fed The stake orcheestra will play sidents of these special dwelling eral law. It is used only to prounits wilt also be obtained by vide summary figures such as and the dance will be under the means of individual census report totals, averages, and percentages auspices of the Tootle Seventh forms, and the Information about The information about individuals' ard- their housing accomodations will cannot Be examined by any one There will be a floor show and lie furnished by the resident man- othtr than Census employees who refreshments. Admission will be are sworn to secrecy, and thus' by budget card or guest ticket. agers of these places. a 25 (For Transient ) Night March 31 in r f Pruelt Seeks Ulali Demo Get the rake and clippers out of the garage neighbor. Spring clean-u- p begins this Friday, April 1. The City has designated the fifteen day period beginning Friday, (April 1) and ending Friday, (April 15) as the time to get. all that debris around the yard gathered up and out on the street to bo hauled away. Tooele has been divided in half for the drive, and Miss Noall is from the Department of Audio- - Visual Aids and is crews will pick up rubbish from the streets east of Main chairman of Radio and TV Visual street between April 1, and April 8. From April 9, to Education and Motion Pictures. April 15, the trucks will remove debris from streets West Other program numbers will be a piano selection by Mrs. Urith of Main street. In order to cover the whole city during this period, Heriem and a reading by Mrs. Bob Kerr. crews will not be able to come back and pick up trash i on a street, once the trucks have been by to clean up. For this reason, it might be wise to clean up early and get it will save the trash in front before the truck goes by to a trip the Dump. 1 Funeral For Win. Johnson Saturday, 2 P.M. ... maintain the "cleaned up" look,"1 city officials state that no rubbish or litter of any kind is to be deposited in city streets or alley ways after the crews have been by. To Funeral services for William Perry Johnson, 63, who died Tuesday at the St. Mary's Hospital in Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Bradshaw Reno, Nevada, will be held on Church. and daughter are expected Thursat 2 p.m. at the Tate Baptist Saturday Surviving are his widow, of Reno; day from Tucson in the private Ray L. Pruett, Tooele County Mortuary. a son, Jack I. Johnson and two plane of Ernest Stevens, a friend Democratic Chairman for the past of the family. Mrs. gradshaw is two terms, and Tooele County Mr. Johnson was born July 17, grand children of Tooele. daughter of the deceased, at Garfield, Georgia, a son Surveyor, has filed his candicy 18 Friends may call Friday, from Mrs. Lester Clark, the other for Chairman of the State Demo of William and Emma Lewis John- 7 to 9 p.m. at the mortuary and son. He was married to Cleta daughter, resides at Lake Point cratic Party. prior to services. Mr. Pruett is Chairman of the Johnson, November 16, 1916, in Saturday Burial will be in the Tooele State Patronage Committee, a Garfield. City cemetery. member of State Finance ComCloset! in Meinorium was an He as Engiemployed ConSecond mittee, Chairman of SUCCESS Radio Electric and Hardware gressional District Organization, neer at St. Mary's Hospital in Success is often harder to take will be closed all day Friday, and has served for over twenty-fiv- e Reno until his retirement in Jan. 1959. He was a member of the than to gain. April 1, in honor of Orville Jones, years in lesser offices of the of the hardware store. Democratic party. He is owner of the Streamliner, Mr. Jones died March 27, in Chief Engineer of Wend-ove- r former Tucson, Arizona, and his funeral Air Base, former Inspector is scheduled for Friday at the of construction for United States North Tooele LDS Stake Engineer of the Army, in four different districts, and a construcThe Babe Ruth handicap singles Highest current averages will be tion superintendent for General benefit bowling tournament, with used, if no averages have been Contractor. proceeds earmarked to help put established, the handicap will be He is a native of Arkansas, a on the huge Babe Ruth baseball computed after three lines are rolgraduate engineer of Arkansas championships in Tooele, this sum- led in the tournament. State and a life long Democrat, mer, will begin April 1, at 7:30 There will be a men's division, having participated and voted in p.m. at the Tooele Bowl. Clark- - Second politics in four states. a women's division and a special the Grantsville Ward Church. This tournament will be run on prize list for those 16 and under. He married Freida Chilton, in The Sunday schedule in Tooele the 3rd of April. The cost will be $2 per entry, 1st, 2nd and November of 1941. They reside stake, due to general conference, at 509 West Second South, Tooele. Starting time on the 2nd and 3rd which includes bowling. The first will be 12:00 noon. Handicap will prize in the mens and womens calls for no Sunday Schools to be He is a past president of the be based on 66 s of 200. division will be a trophy and a held, Sunday morning, but sacra Lions Club, a member of the Elks, mental services will be held as El and Masonic Lodge Eagles, usual Sunday evening. Kalah Temple. In the North Tooele Stake, unless otherwise announced, there will be no Sunday School or sacWildlife Federation ramental service Sunday. Leadership h tabernacle. A closed wire reception is being Hoggard. The body was taken to the An- received by Grantsville Stake in derson Mortuary in American Fork where funeral services will be held at noon, Saturday. FRIENDS may call at the mortuary Friday evening and Saturday, prior to funeral time. Temperatures in March varied degrees. A low of 11 degrees was recorded on March 1st and a high of 75 degrees last Saturday, the official records of Burdett Bevan discloses. BE KIND March also contributed two in- Memories of unkindnesses to ches of moisture, with .74 of an others often make poor bedfellows J inch falling this week. There was Word has been received here by friends of the death of Mrs. Irene Mangum, former Tooele re- sident. Mrs. Mangum, wife of Arthur Mangum, died Wednesday at Me Gill, Nevada. Funeral services are scheduled for Saturday at McGill. ball. There will be 15 prizes in each division and twelve prizes in the special Junior Division. Prizes and tournament rules are on display at the Tooele Bowl. All those interested may sign up now at the Tooele Bowl. Early entries will have a choice of time. If there are further questions conthis tournament, either cerning Cliff Shields, phone 1219 or Mac Magee, phone 1570, should be bowling two-third- To Hold Range Hide March Varies 64 Degrees 64 Dies at McGill Bowling Benefit Begins Fri. LDS Stakes Can Hear Saturday Priesthood Meeting hy Wire Aaronic and Melchizedek Priesthood members in Tooele and North Tooele Stakes are invited to meet in the Tooele First-Sixtthis Ward, Saturday evening, April 2nd, at 7:00 p.m. to hear the closed wire reception of the semi- - annual LDS General Priesthood session, from the Salt Lake Former Resident .44 of an inch Monday and .30 of an inch on Wednesday. The March rainfall now brings the total of 7.19 inches for the weather year, which starts Oct. 1st. This is less than half of the 16 inches which falls in a normal year and the wettest part of the six months ends today. Tooele County Wildlife will hold a Range Ride, Sunday, April 3. All riders wishing to make the ride should call Francis Steele, Phone 1055; Howard Cooper, 1475; or Roy Garrard, 1068, on or before April 1,. Riders will meet at the Pine Lodge at 9:00 a.m. The Wildlife will serve chili and coffee for lunchc. Hanks Stouder Duel Great n-4 p 5 7 i . vr. 1 - I s - iJ h -- Sharon Stouder Threat to Carina By A. T. Roberts For the past couple of years Miss Carma Hanks has dominated the swimming waters of the Intermountain Age Group competition. She currently holds eleven Intermountain records, and two of those records, the 20 yard freestyle and the 20 yard butterfly for girls were fast enough for national recognition. In her age group, she has been virtually unchallenged for the past three years. THIS YEAR, however, charm- ng Miss Hanks will be seriously challenged by one of the outstand ing swimmers in the Southern Pacific Association, Sharon Stouder of Arcadia, California. Eleven year old, Sharon has been swimming since she was four years old, and ever since she has been in sanctioned meets, swimming she has been setting records, with most of them still standing. Miss Stouder appears in the top five in the National Age Group rankings in 23 events, and holds one first and three second place rankings in the National Junior The classifications. Olympics proud possessor of four National records, Sharon is tire nation's best in the girls age group for the 40 yard butterfly, the 40 yard freestyle, the 25 yard and the 50 yard freestyle, as well as being the National Jr. Olympic record holder for the 50 meter butterfly. 9-- back-strok- e, In the Southern Pacific Association, this great little miss, holds two records in the 8 and under class, fifteen records in the 10 and under age group, and one record in the eleven year old and under groupings, for a total of eighteen current records! And she swims them all, freestyle, backstroke. and butterfly, ranging all the way from 20 yards to 400 years. five feet A SIXTH GRADER, one inches tall and weighing 87 Sharon will be competpounds, ing in the age group, with 2 Tooeles pride and joy, Carma Hanks. Their individual duals should be worth the price of admission, as for the first time in Intermountain waters, one of the finest on the Pacific Coast, Sharon Stouder, clashes with the best in the Mountain area, Carma Rocky Hanks. 5 Italic Itulli Him ling Loot Mac Magee (left) and Cliff Shields (center), look over some prizes and trophies Shiek with Louis Matckel, President of the Tooele Babe Ruth League. These and a string (30 in all) of other valuable prizes will be given away at the Babe Ruth Handicap Singles Tourney to be held at the Tooele Bowl, April 1, 2, 3. Hose wishing to enter can contact any of the above men or the Tooele Bowl. Cost will be $2.00 per entry (this includes bowling) and a person may enter as many times as he or she wishes. Proceeds will help prepare for the Babe Ruth World Series to be held in Tooele this summer. |