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Show Volume Sixty-Si- Tooele, Utah Friday, May x Judm I'nxmau To Speak Al Government Employs (hty'o Ulalins Vet School ThurxJ.iv, M.iv IS at 7.30 pm be the final meeting of the vear for the Sest Elementary will School PTA. 11 ll!h Ward Belief final touches. The public Is invited to attend the exhibit which will be held between the hours ot 1 and I p.m. Food Sab; Artists Society Bazaar This Saturday Let's give mother an apron, a pair of pillow cases, a quilt, dish towels, or other home made items or take home some home baked food to make her day complete. Buy these items at the Bazaar Saturday, May 13, at 10 a m. at the First Ward Church. Sponsored by the Eleventh Ward Relief Society. Toocleans To Hear African Authority Friday Saturday Plan Exhibit Give mother a break! Keep her out of the kitchen on Mother's Day. but still enjoy home cooked delicacies. Buy them at Safeway from the Tenth Ward on Saturday, May 13 Only home baked foods will be is the date set sold (no cake mixes or frozen Sunday, May 14, for the Art Exhibit and Tea spon- pies). sored by the Sterling Harris PTA To insure getting just what you The exhibit is to be held in the want, you may order in advance school library, and will begin at by calling your orders to Mary 1:00 p.m. and remain open until Shields at 1328. 6.00 pm. Among the local artists who will participate are Patsy Tulio, Clara Griffith, and Dorothy Jones. Local citizens will have an opportunity :o preview some of these paintings this week in the windows Principal M. I. Oveson of the of local business houses. Central School announced today An invitation is extended to that the annual sixth grade dance everyone to come and enjoy this festival scheduled for Friday, May event. 12, will begin at 6:15 p.m. instead Some samples of the artistic of 6:30 as originally planned. of the children of the This change was made to enable ability Harris School will be on display interested students and parents to also. Art work from every room attend another event to be held later in the evening. in the school will be shown. Dance Fetial Friday 6:30 pin Rev. Marshall Murphree, a missionary to Africa, and he himself born in Southern Rhodesia, while were missionaries his parents there for the Methodist Church, will speak and show slides and movies of Africa, this Friday at 7:30 p.m. at the Tooele Community Methodist Church. The public is invited to hear Rev. Murphree, whose wide experience in areas of Africa, which are now rated as the world trouble Tooele County Fireman brought spots, makes him one of the lead- a brush fire under contol at 7:00 ing authorities on the questions p.m., after it had Wednesday, and answers which trouble the burned ten acres of sage brush dark continent. and cedar trees at Hickman Canyon, five miles north of St. John in the Stansbury range. . MOTHER Men are what their mothers According to Deputy Sheriff Brill'll Burns Second Ilay Fire Does $900 Damage Fanned by up to 55 mph winds, a Wednesday afternoon baize deJames Park, the fire broke out made them. stroyed 16 tons of baled hay on Ralph Waldo Emerson at approximately 2:00 p.m. the Stookey Brothers ranch at Clover and destroyed a barracks type building being used as a Nona Sliibley Fills Chamber Position Nona Shibley was named by the Tooele County Chamber of Commerce, Wednesday, as new Executive Secretary. SHE WILL REPLACE KAY V. Hadden who has served in this position on a part time basis over the past six months. Mr. Haddon is regularly employed as City Treasurer. Mrs. Shibley has served as news reporter for local station KDYL and as correspondent for the Salt Lake Tribune. to Chamber PresiAccording the indent, Peter VanOtten, who could come in on more of a full time basis. MRS. SHIBLEY will be at the Chamber office from 10:30 a.m to 4:30 pm. weekdays and those wishing to reach the C. of C. can 1000 during the above phone hours. barn. IT two weeks to the day fire burned down another stack at the Stookey ranch, just a short distance from where this blaze started. According to Deputy Sheriff, James Park, who was directing fire fighting activities, the blaze was believed started when high winds fanned smoldering remains of the first hay stack fire. The hay was valued at $400 and the building valued at $500, for a total of $900. The fire was checked at this point. IN THE FIRST fire, 75 tons of baled hay were destroyed, valued at $2,000. WAS since In other activities, Mrs. Iven Allsop and Mrs. Mary Parsons presented a review of a book on Tooele County which is soon to come off the presses. The local chapter of the Daughters of Utah Fighting the blaze were the Pioneers have compiled the book, Tooele County fire crew; a truck creased activity at the Chamber and it is believed to be the most from Deseret Chemical and local of Commerce office has made it complete authority on the history volunteers. necessary to employ a secretary of Tooele County. The fire began at 2:00 p.m. ,;L,4V - ' " . rv v i i Second Stack Burns the last of a blaze that did $900 worth of damage, Wednesday afternoon at the Stookey Brothers ranch at riremen extinguish The fire, fanned by 55 mph winds, destroyed a hay stack and barracks type building used as a barn. Clover. tt N by the School Board at their last meethis new duties ns head basketball coach and uv tor this coining fall. Gaiy was a great player, Ixith m high school and in to'Iege and he assume Ins new duties with a hi. Hunt backgriHinl as a player A star at Joidan High under Art Hughes, Hale played as a regular in l'33 and I'l.Vf, earning all stjte honors for himself ami helping the lieeidiggers to consecutive state championships. lor three years - 1935, 56 and 57, Hale played for Jack Gardner at the U of U. As a sophomore and junior he earned honorable se mention on the lections and as a senior he was they won only one game and in a unanimous selection for allconthey lost all ton games. ference honors, and capjxd his ITS A TOUGH rebuilding job brilliant career by earning little faring Hale he'll have two or All Amei nan honors. three letterman juniors back, plus NT XT CAME a two year sting a fine looking group of sophofor Unde Sam with 19 months of mores. Most of them are letter-me-n since Johnsen started a rehis military service spent in the building program midway in the theater. European Season. Gary is currently a student So it's a new look for Tooele teacher at a Salt Lake junior high new coach and new players and school. we wish them both success. The embryo mentor is single and plans to come to Tooele in mid summer to get settled and acquainted before the fall term t etnments Division of the U. S. Bureau of the Census. HIE Foundation report shows tf.ai there were 634 government ( HOxf S 1 11 1O.0JO starts. IIAl E TAKES over from Clarke Johnsen who resigned as head basketball and baseball coach to take on full duties as Assistant Principal. With Hale as the top basketball man, and the baseball there will be job now ofx-n- , some shuffling among the coaches but this will come later. In talking to Hale, he stated that he was "tickled to death" at having been selected and was eagerly looking forward to com mg to Tooele and working with the White Buffaloes. Tooele's new coach takes over the basketball at a low ebb. The fluffs, after being a power for 11 years, have won only five league games, in the past three years In 1959, they won four, in I960 Hubert Sabers s.n mti: nia: Doctors Earn Salute During National Hospital Week During National Hospital Week which is being observed May 7 to 13th, the Tooele Valley Hospital would like to salute its staff of doctors. FOLLOWING IS a brief history of each: Doctor Millburn graduated with an M.D. degree from the University of Pennsylvania; served his internship at the Salt Lake County General Hospital and surgical residency at the Bingham Canyon with Doctor Paul S. Hospital Richards. Dr. Millburn is a member of the American Medical Association, Utah State Medical Society and the Salt Lake County Medical Society. At present he is serving as secretary of the medi cal staff of the Tooele Valley hospital. DOCTOR ALDOUS received his medical education and graduatec from the University of Pennsyl vania and served his internship at the University of Pennsylvania (Graduate Hospitals). He is member of the American Medical Association, Utah State Medical Society, Salt Lake County Medical Society and the American Association of Railroad Surgeons. He is and has been for 34 years a school physician. For 15 years he has served a sphysician for the IS&R Co., and is a panel physician for the Western Pacific and Union Pacific Railroads. At present he is serving as president of the medical staff of the Tooele Valley Hospital. Dr. Mayo, presently vice presi dent of the medical staff of the Tooele Valley Hospital, is a graduate of the University of Louisville, Kentucky. He interned at the Salt Lake County General hospital. He is a member of the American Medical Association, Utah State Medical Society and the Salt Lake County Medical Society. Dr. Felt is a graduate of the University of Utah School of Medicine. He interned at the Henry of Medicine. He holds Intcr-mounta- r llIF ing and will octal sen m e These fads were ptesi sited In a rdent analysis by the Utah I ound-am of data released by the Gov employees per Garv Hale is Tooele's new basketball iiiaUi. For the fust tuna fourteut years t.u Butf quintet will le under the reign of a new coav h, Saturday For tile membership in the American Medical Association, Utah State Medical Society, Salt Lake County Medical Society and the 'jr in Open IIoue School I Ex Ute Gary Hal e Is New THS Coach population MUSICAL NUMBERS will be by in Ulah, a rate of nearly f.fiy the students of the Fourth grade pi r cent higher than the National and the faculty. averjge of 434 government em Installation of officers for the pi wees per 10,000 population. Staled differently, more than 63 coming year will be held with Telma Evans, Tooele County IMA per cent of Utah's total pojmla-tiowas employed by some gov president as installing officer. Officers to be instanc'd are ernment unit, compared with an average rale of 4 3 per cent for the Geneve Buys, president; Pat nation as a whole. first vice president; PrinciA factor accounting for pal Thomas Irvine, second vice the major of government emrate high third president; John Sheperd, ployment in Utah, according to Maxine vice president; Struhs, the report, is the relatively large Robert Bloomdale. secretary; treasurer and Ella Myrle Whear number of Federal employees in GARY HALE the State. Federal employment in historian. Utah was equal to 21)7 per 10,000 Bull Coach New ALSO TO be presented is the PTA project for the year, funds population, highest rate among the for which were raised at the fam- states on the Mainland and third highest rate in the entire nation ily fun night and carnival. Play- the United States was equal to 124 a ground equipment including 10,000 population. per climbing gym, chinning bar and Foundation note that jungle gym have been purchased. Utah also ranks analystsin the prohigh Everyone is invited to attend. portion of its population employed by state and local units of During October. 10. Triends and relatives of Mr. full - time equivalent state and and Mrs. Robert Sagers are inThe Stockton Ward MIA will local employment in Utah was vited to attend an ojx-- house on the regular Saturday equal to 337 per IO.OiK) population, Saturday, May 13, on occasion of sjxmsor night dance, on May 13. compared with an average of 311 their golden wedding. Dancing will be to records and per 10,000 population in the entire will be held in the Stockton Ward nation. Utah's state and local The affair will be held at the recreation hall and is scheduled public employment per centage Lake View church between the to begin at 8.30 pm. Refresh- was 14th highest among the 50l hours of 7 and 9 pm. The family ments will be served. states. requests no gifts. Ford Hospital in Detroit and served a residency in Ophthalmology at the University of Colorado - luh ranks first in the footmen ta I 'niied Slates and third among th fifty states in the pen eiuagc of its population rmploved bv units (I enteral, governmental si e'e, and local). The (inly si, it ra1 k m higher than Utah in this rubo are the new stairs of Alaska and Hawaii, 1 SPFAKFR for the evening will be Juvenile Court Judge Monroe II. Paxman of Provo He has chosen for his subject 'family Night f un," the title of his famous published tsxik. Judge Paxman is one of the must outstanding men in his field Together with hi.x wife they have just completed another book, soon to be released. Hie Paxman family was chosen as the All American" family to represent Utah at judging finals held in Florida last year. They were one of the lop four families named in the nation Typical of the art work being shown at the Harris School tea on Sunday afternoon it this beautiful painting by Mrs. Myrtle A sop who is pictured above as she adds the Number Forty Eight 12, 1961 Oto - Ophthalmological Society. He is on the staffs of the Holy Cross and LDS Hospitals in Salt Lake City. Dr. Felt is a diplomat of the American Board of and he is on the Ophthalmology teaching staff of the Medical School of the University of Utah. DR. CRANE, a native Utahn, received his medical education and graduated from the Univer sity of Utah School of Medicine. ciety. the Radiological Society of American Roentgen and Ray He interned at the Norwalk GenAmerica, the Rocky Moun- - ciety and is a Fellow of the Amer-taieral Hospital in Connecticut and Radiological Society, theican College of Radiology. served residencies in Patnology at the Norwalk General Hospital and the University of Pennsylvania Hospital in Philadelphia. He is associate Pathologist for the St. Mark's Hospital and is a member of the American Medical Association, Utah State Medical Society, Salt Lake County Medical Society, The American College of Pathology and the American Society of Clinical Pathology. Dr. Johnson, a native of this community, is a graduate of the University of Utah School of Medicine. He served internships at the Holy Cross Hospital and the Baltimore Marine Hospital. He is active in the American Medical Association, Utah State Medical Society and Salt Lake County Medical Society. Dr. Gubler is a graduate of I n Saline To Therapists One of the many facets of medical care and hospitalization is the therapy known as physical therapy. Physical therapy is defined as "the treatment of various disabilities through the use of heat, light, electricity, massage, and exercise. The Tooele Valley Hospital is fortunate in having on its staff Jess Peck, a physical therapist. A physical therapist works on a prescription of medical referral basis. Mr. Peck did his undergraduate work at Utah State University and the University of Utah and grad- uated from the University graduate work at Stanford University after which he worked in Van Nuys, California for one year in physical therapy. Following the time spent in California, Mr. Peck came to Utah and has worked here for four years, two and a half of those being at the Tooele Valley Hospital for three days a week, the rest of his time being spent in other Utah hospitals. Northwestern University. He in terned at Cook County Hospital in Chicago, and served surgical residencies at the Salt Lake Veterans Hospital and the Grand Junction Veterans Hospital. He is a member of the American Medical Association, Utah State Medical Society, Salt Lake County Medical Society, Salt Lake Surgical Society. He is a diplomat of the American Board of Surgery; a Fellow of the American College of Surgery and a Fellow of the South Western Surgical Congress. At present he is Chief of Staff of the Tooele Valley Hospital. DR. JOURNAY received his medical education and graduated from the University of Illinois. LDS Hospital in Salt Lake City. His internship was served at the in Salt Lake City. LDS Hospital He is a member of the American Medical Association, Utah State Medical Society, and Salt Lake County Medical Society. He is a Fellow of the American Geriatric Society. Dr. Wilson is a graduate from of the Toronto, University Canada. He interned at the Regina General Hospital and served a residency in Radiology at Michael Reese Hospital. He has done post graduate w'ork at Radium-hemmeSweden in Stockholm, and at the Curie Institute in Paris, France. He is a member of the staff of St. Marks Hospital, radiologist for the Shrincrs Hospital for Crippled Children and visiting radiologist for the Salt Lake Veterans Hospital. He is a member of the American Medical Association, Utah State Medical Society, Salt Lake County Medical Society, the American Radium So t, Employees at Tooele Valley Hospital salute the staff of doctors, during National Hospital Week, May 6 to 13. Pictured above they Dr. Millburn, Dr. are Left to right: front Aldous, Dr. Mayo. Back row: Dr. Felt, Dr. Crane, Dr. Johnson, Dr. Gubler and Dr. Journay. gist, and therapist John for of Utah. Following graduation, he worked one year in Palo Alto, California, in corrective therapy. Mr. Peck had two years post- Upper left is Dr. Wilson, radioloupper right, Jess Peck, physical who prepares Allen Sagers of St. physical therapy. Photo by A. D. Thomas |