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Show The Tooele Bulletin Tuesday, January THE TOOELE BULLETIN Issued each Tuesday at Tooele City, Utah. Entered as Second Class Matter at the Post Office at Tooele City, Utah, August 14. 1894, under Act of March 8, 1879. Publishing Company, Inc., Published by the Transcript-Bulletie 5ft North Mam Street. Tooele City, Utah. Address all ID Box 390, Tooele, Utah. - Price 10 cents per copy. Subscription $4 per year n corres-pondcnc- ALEX F. DUNN, Publisher JOEL J. DUNN. Editor mm 9, 1962 Utah Guard Open For Enlistments A revision of policy announced this week by the Chief, National iGaarJ Bureau, Washington, has opened uu enlistments again in the Utah Army National Guard for men 17 through 34 years ol age. Formerly enlistments were re strirted to men with prior mili tary service, or to young men 17 through 22 without prior service. tu vV ' thirty years. Have pear NOW THE only restriction on woiked for Jess Allen so long, I Just a line to inclose a check not only act like him, but look enlistments is quotas for the man on per statement. like him. datory six months bas'C training I am really enjoying reading required of all new enlistees, and It doesn't seem to matter how that is being increased now. sa:d the History of Tooele County. I am only sixty years old, but long you are away from Tooele, Major General Maxwell E. Rich there are many of the Pioneers it is still home. We look forward Utah Adjutant General. mentioned that I can remember, to receiving the Tooele papers The recent mobilization which and many events that took place. I enjoy reading them. took 1,600 Utah Army Guardsmen I have been in Caliente, Nev. Signed: Bob Vowles to a year of active duty has pracout the greater tically cleaned The Dynamics of Good Inter Salt Lake City area. The remainin this area are hightv personal Relationships in Operat- ing units requiring such quali specialized, ing Room Nursing." fications as fluent linguists, musicians with six years experience or men with police experience. Special Forces units located in Making plans for the Rainbow Crutch drive which will be held Salt Lake City and Murray have and Julie Joe McBride here, Saturday, are vacancies for men of unusual Park. The proceeds from the drive will help swell the funds nhysical condition who can qualfor the 1962 March of Dimes. The project is being carried ify for parachute training duty, on all over the country by teen agers. Lt. Colonel Mildred I. Clark, and become thogoughly proficient Chief, Nursing Division, Office of in at least ten different military the Sixth U.S. Army Surgeon, at Teen-Age- rs as weapons or such specialties the Presidio of San Francisco will both friendly and enemy forces, visit Tooele Ordnance Depot, on demolitions, comfinanced maD reading, Youthful vigor was added to scholarship program Wednesday, January 10th. Foundation. munications, and first aid to in- the 1962 New March of Dimes in by The National Colonel Cecil M. MacGregor clude performance of minor this program students Tooele County today as Julie Through Tooele Ordnance Depot, Comand Joel McBride, students are- - trained in nursing, medical Parks mander stated that Col. Clark will announced at Tooele High School, were na- sdcial work, medicine and GENERAL RICH inspect the U. S. Army Dispenand physical therapy. week are vaca-cie- s med chairmen of the Teen-Agthere that this sary at the depot and also Col. of the January PARKS said teen - age (TAP) JULIE Program in the in units the artillery Clark is interested in supporting volunteers would take part in a of the southern campaign. and northern parts for drive Generals the Surgeon THE APPOINTMENT was an- number of activities, including state, and in engineer units in 500 additional Army Nurses, needPrice, Lehi, American Fork and nounced by Mrs. Gordon Elliott, crutch sales and balloon sales, ed because of the service's overduring the campaign which will Springville. Interested young men campaign director. all expansion. com- be held January 2 to 31. TAP chairmen new The commanders unit contact should diColonel Clark was given a at their local armories, he said mented that teenagers in Tooele Rainbow Crutch sales wiii berect appointment in the Regular Gen. Rich added that member- County had always played a key gin Saturday, while the balloons a 1938 in March beginning Army Pete Mermejo, son of Mr. and ship in the Army National Guard role in the March of Dimes will be sold January 27. career in Army nursing that spans Mrs. Don t Mermejo, of Stockton, Teenagers have had a large almost 24 years of unbroken ser- left last week for Arkansas City, holds more opportunity today than Foundain The National ever before with larger quotas for stake vice. Kansas after spending the Christ- Officer Candidate School, service tions effort to wipe out paralytic A prolific writer on professionattendis mas holidays here. He a disease that hits hard schools and leadership. polio al subjects. Colonel Clark has Parks Miss ing Arkansas City Jr. College. at people. young of wealth on her drawn professaid. FACT-TIME Funeral services were held FriFLYS! PROVEN sional experience to author many HOME FROM CALIFORNIA two day, January 5, in Denver, Colo, WE are fighting NOW Mr. Martin Barrus, Grantsville, articles on various phases of Tests have proven that time other diseases that offer even for Russell D. Faddis, father of Army nursing, from its public re- and his son, Layton, of Salt Lake the lations aspects to the dynamics City, have returned from a holi- goes by five times as fast for a greater challenges - birth defects David Faddis, teacher at said McBride. in day visit in California, with Lay- man in his 60s as it does for a and arthritis, Tooele Junior High School. of interpersonal relationship The rites were conducted by Approximately 250,000 Amerioperating room nursing. In 1956 ton's son, Mr. Donald Barrus and child in his early teens. Also, time goes by more quickly for women can children are born with signi- the Elks Lodge. she wrote The Prayer of the family. Mr. and Mrs. Faddis were in birth defects each year than for men. If some of the ficant Nurse, which has been Army GIVING rediseases rheumatic and at the funeral. They Arthritis attendance otherwise bosses wonder its into why adopted by the Cojps If a free society cannot help liable employees Americans. Of wish to express their appreciaseem to lose attack 11,000,000 creed. At present, C$1. Clark is the many who are poor, it can- track of time during the coffee that number 30,000 teenagers and tion to all who were so kind to compiling data and wlnting a secnot save the few who are rich. break, it is because that is exactly children are victims of juvenile them and extended them symof the of tion "The History Army 16,000 pathy in any way. what happens. Tests show that rheumatoid arthritis and Nurse in Korea and the Far East John F. Kennedy medical care each year, which contain caffeine, from 1945 to the Present. require beverages CHANGING TIMES such as coffee, have a direct ef- said Miss Parks. Her other articles include The CHANGING TIMES The new chairmen said that anCaffeine "A Builders in Public Relations, Superstition is diminishing, ac- fect on time sense. One trouble that jet planes have Phase of Nurse - Patient Rela- cording to the social scientists. makes the minutes slip by faster other of the major interests of teen- got us into is that there are no Dimes of R and does this until the effect is the New March and crossed Civila Be Can You Keep your fingers tionships, worn off. age volunteers is the Health longer any distant relatives. and may go away altogether. ian and a Reservist, Too. Secretary. President Dunn: now for almost Is: occu-(jatign- e Tooele Man Attends Funeral Of Father ... the free world he lives in will be using almost a million gallons of petroleum every minute. Thats about 60 more than it uses by 1971. Where will it all come from? today From hundreds of places on earth you might never expect oil to exist. Right now, for example, Standards exploration teams are probing the ocean floor many miles out to sea ...trekking across Arabian deserts, marked , inaccessible on maps. Others are climbing over glaciers in ' Alaska, pushing through the snow into the frozen interior-- of Canada, slogging through the jungles of Latin America. In the last ten years, geologists from Standard and its affiliates explored in 47 countries on six continents. Is the search paying off? Yes. In the United States alone, we found two new barrels of oil for every barrel we took out of the ground. The search will continue to help make certain that Jimmy and his generation will have the oil they number need for an of homes, Cars, mechanized farms and industries .. . and provide chemicals from petroleum that will help make possible more exciting new products. planning ahead to serve you better STANDARD OIL COMPANY OF CALIFORNIA , te i ; r . - K 9 v R: Joy above L to School are pictured Bell, Lee Johnson, Louise Hicks, Laurie Ann Bacon and Judy Worthington. Plans GHS Homecoming For January 12 G. H. S. Home Coming plans are moving rapidly ahead with committee members enthusiastically urging the support of ail alumni to come out to the big day which is Friday, January 12. Starting the days activities is an assembly, which starts at 12 noon the High School audi torium. The Home Coming Queen candidates will each display their own special talent and one will be crowned. Home Coming Queen candidates are: Joy Hicks, Laurie Johnson, Louise Bell, Lee Ann Bacon and Judy Worthington. The basketball games between Grantsville Cowboys and North Rich will be the next attraction for homecomers and they will begin with the Jr. Varsity game at in the gymnasium followed by the main game at 8:00 p.m. Following the game, there will be a dance. the Highlighting dance will be a special floor show featuring past queens. This homecoming day can only be a success if the alumni come out to enjoy it. in Former Resident To Take Band To World Fair Cowboys Look Good, but Lose League Game the Cowboys started their basketball season on Friday, when they traveled to Salt Lake to meet the Judge Memorial BullWell 1362 dogs. THE COWBOYS got off to a bad start but came out of it very well. The first and second quarters were not so good for the Cowboys, they just couldnt seem to make the ball hit the basket. The first half ended with the Bulldogs out in front 27 to 19. The Cowboys had determination to win from which they played one of the most exciting games for a long time. The third quarter ended with the score at 32 to 32, from there the score seesawed back and forth for some coaches using time, with both just about everything they could think of. But the Bulldogs came out on top to win by three points 46-4- Grantsvilleites will be happy to hear that the Orem High School Concert Band, under the direction of former resident, Wes Barry, has been invited to appear at the Seattle Worlds Fair, on June 1st The band will play two programs during the day and will also be utilized in the flag-raisin- g when Jimmy grows as big as his shadow O Queen Candidates Rainbow Crutch Sale Active in Dime Drive I Coeds who are vying for the honor of Home Coming Queen to reign over festivities of Grantsville High Home Coming Day at Chief of US Army Nurses To Visit Here ; tA ceremony, w'here it will play the National Anthem and the State of Utah song. The group received the invitation to play at Seattle on the basis of excellence as determined by a tape recording reviewed by the fair committee. The Tiger Band has appeared at many of Utah Counties parades and other celebrations, during last year and has won many high ratings in state musical contests during recent years. A native of Grantsville, Wes, has always been known for his musical ability and had a school score by quarters was: third to 9; second, 32 to 32; fourth, 46 to 43. THE COWBOYS have a very good team both Jr. Varsity and The first, 17 19-2- Varsity. Grantsville should be proud of their school and teams, and should support them in all sports. We want to wish the team all the luck they need the rest of the season. Individual scoring: Dean Matthews, 13; Dennis Palmer, 8; Jim Black 8; Wayne Boyer, 11 and Terry Thomas, 3. Wayne Lemmon dance band as early as the age twelve. He continued with a dance band all through his school years until his graduation from GHS in 1943. Wes still has a dance band which is very popular in Utah Countv area. The onlv trouble with Wes and his success of that Grantsville has seen very little of him during the intervening years since High School. HERE FROM ELKO is Mrs. Nevada, Jerry Thompson, of Elko, arrived on Friday for a weeks visit with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Millward. Mrs Thompson will be remembered as Rosemary Millward. ELEVEN YEARS OLD A housefull of guests helped M;ss Loralee Harris celebrate her eleventh birthday by playing games and eating sloopy joes and chocolate sundaes. Guests were Wootton. Gary Young, George John Lemmon, Val Gibson, Billy Allen Walters, Rydalch, Lorey Harris, Kelley Harris, Raney Millward, Connie Millward, Coro-le-e Castagno, Loreen Williamson, Rebecca Valerio, Yvonne Black, Marge Durfee, Joyce Broadbent, Camille Anderson, Pat Beacham, Cherry Hearty, Carol Soelburg. Claudia Lowder. Emma Lou Williams, Sheryl Wright, Linda Walters, Leah Ann Rydalch, Toni Rydalch and Phyllis Rydalch. Little Jill Worthington was a belated Christmas gift to the Ivan Worthington household, last year, but made up for it by being the center of Santas attention, this year. Jill has five brothers and Mr. and Mrs. Orson Hager and sisters who were happy to help family accompanied by Tom her celebrate her first birthday. Ware drove to Denver, Colorado, over the weekend to visit with RETURN FROM CALIF. son, Charles Townsend who has Mr. and Mrs Wallace Boyer recently been assigned to Lowry after a Air Chuck was returned on Wednesday Force Base. awarded his Airman First Class motor trip to Pasadena, Caifor-niwhere they were spectators rating the same evening of their arrival It was a happy family at the Tournament of Roses Paand also the big Rose Bowl DINNER PARTY reunion and the Hagers report rade, were accompanied President and Mrs. Paul Wrath-al- l that their son is enjoying his ser- Game. They by Mr. and Mrs. Bob Brown of entertained a group of their vice in the Air Force. Tooele. at their at a dinner friends home on Tuesday evening. After a delicious dinner the guests enjoyed listening to Book of Mormon records and spent sometime recalling old time experiences common to members of the group who were all youthful friends. Gupsts at the Wrathall home included Mr. and Mrs. B. H. Bowen, Tooele; Mr. and Mrs. John R, Droubay, Erda; Mr. and Mrs Samuel Clark, Lake Point; and Mr. and Mrs. Noel Anderson " of Grantsville? -- a, |