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Show An Editorial 1962 Friday, October 26, The Tooele Transcript LETTjRS)EDITOR Issued etch Friday at Tooele City. Utah. Entered as Second Clas Matter at the Post Office at Tooele City, Utah, August 14. 1894, unto Act of March 8. 1879. Publishing Company, Inc., Published by tie Transcript-Bulleti58 Nonh Main Street, Tooele City. Utah. Address all correspondence to Box 390, Tooele, Utah. RFD. PO. Bo,es. and Subscription rates: J5 per year or City Deliver. Carrier $6 mail. year per foreign Where Is Info. On Chil Defense? Dear Editor, which Due to the crisis LOREN C. DUNN. Editor Publisher ALEX F. DUNN. has arisen during the last few days, I think that whatever Civil Defense preparations have been made by the City of Tooele NEW SON TOOELE STAKE RELIEF SOCIETY Mr. and Mrs. Rodney Lyman should be made known to the TO MEET SUNDAY the happy parents of a son new citizens who have come to are Tooele Stake Relief Society born Oct. 13 at the LDS Hospilive here. will hold its monthly meeting tal in Salt Lake City. Named FROM WHAT we have found this Sunday at 2 p.m. in the Michael Phil, the young man out by inquiries, Civil Defense First Sixth Ward chapel. was welcomed by a five year in this area is not very active. Instruction will be given in old brother, Stephen. Would you please, Editor, Proud all departments. The Stake leadin your paper Mr. information and are Mrs. grandparents print aters are desirious of a good of Satina and regarding location of shelters, if tendance from all ward Relief Melvin Petersen Mr. and Mrs. Glen Lyman of there are any. Is there anything Society organizations. to protect our children in school. Salt Lake City. ALSO HOW CAN an ordinary Mot. Sat. person prepare their basements to serve as a shelter? I don't think this is panicking, but we must face reality and be prepared to protect ourselves and our children against nuclear war and communism. PM 1 .V HdlTiW Hz):H L rll ruff U.T7 fSe.COUNTRY.GIRL' CROSBY HOLDEN KELLY IrtHtHSM TO BE GOOD loyal our country we must in the ed. This be a period of grace CMtUimo iceoeiKM tf'FlSf PARAMOUNT Wed. let-u- p spiri- Citizen Last Hites Held lit Tuesday For tuMukU Max Roach ANOV OBRIEN dfvinf mm- - Last rites were held Monday at p.m. in the North Tooele Stake Tabernacle for Max 2 ADULTS ONLY Fri. - Sat. Heat the Academy Award winning Roach. BISHOP THOMAS A. Burgess of the Tooele Fifth Ward conducted the service. Prayer at the Mortuary was given by Don Kirk and prelude and postlude music was played by Phyllis Dunn. The opening musical number was a vocal solo "Beside Still Waters by Connie Theobald with Mrs. Dunn at the piano. Speakers were Bishop Aron Bryan and Superintendent Sterling R. Harris. IN CLOSING Mrs. June Gillette and Mrs. June Bryan sang Sometime Well Understand. Mrs. Dorothy Liddell played On Screen Sun. Only At 7:00 ' song hit, "Never On Sunday"! TKe"Tnmest Sex Romp In Years! Mafijfcada SGKS UUWtMT HUl C0Ut JACK WITLING J0 BENM' this hunting season??? Moke a date with the motion picture every woman over 18 should see Lonely at Sliced Bacon Cudahy Wicklow Brand Ham Hocks ET 39 Franks ir . 53 n, Ham Steaks Tamales t. Hershey Bars oi,.i,Goodbor3 Junior Bars Junior BarsXC.tr; b ,f A 39 Ex-Lar- Prunes ge IX 39 I QQ , 3 Corned Beef iT. 3 Pineapple frca;r.d Quaker Oats Quaker Oats 4 rr M Taste Treat best qualified for Congress Tooeleans were surprised and delighted on Wednesday morning to see and hear Carol Lynn Palmer Dixon on TV. MRS. DIXON, who is visiting here with her husband, Navy officer, Lt. Jewel Dixon, is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Palmer. She was a guest of Jackie on Nokes and Dick Bingham Mid-daon Channel Five (11 to 11:30 am.) The personable young lady sang "I Could Have Danced All Night and then did a night club act she had worked up in which she sang "Swanee and Dixie State Senator y Bruce Jenkins Lullaby. WELL KNOWN in this area Mrs. for her singing talent, Dixon has continued her training both in vocal work as well as acting. She is a student of the noted instructor Paula Bain. The Dixons have been residing in Oak Harbor, Wash. Lt. Dixon had enjoyed the deer hunt while in Utah. They left for their home Thursday. FOR CONGRESS - earned ernment and Law at the University of attorney. SKILLED LEGISLATOR - in Utahs member of Appropriations, Education, TRAINED degrees in GovUtah. Practicing State Senate and Sifting Clear Bell gallon Sundown Brand of 24 No. 95 Drinks Joyette Stuffed Olives Aluminum Foil F 1 Broiler roil points presently iiiunaiing tnat an average number of animals will be harvested from the States 62 deer units. Mild weather, a general lack of foliage and accessibility into most of the deer hunting country is expected to account for another good harvest year, according to the Department of Fish and Game. Holders of a regular license and tag who fail to bag a deer during the regular season may still go afield to hunt during extended seasons on some herd units. Anyone planning to do so should be certain of the hunting unit boundaries before going afield. For Conpmiuii BRUCE S. JENKINS Paid Pol. Adv. by Gordon Hall, Norval Adams, Alma Jean Walters, Beverly White How About Ham I 59' Rs Great Northern "7. 43 Seasoned With Are Delicious These Excellent Smoked Meats Apples n t and 4 ft 49' Large Limas Pinto Beans 79 Split Peas Split Peas -- X,: Extra Foncy Fancy Delicious Brandt .22 IT. XXX. 2 r;.X. 2 . 49 49 25 25 bog 9 B Peanuts 3.1 Freshly Roasted Jumbo Size SJres lb. 11' IS Flameless electric heat is as pure and radiant as summer sunshine. And cleaner heat means cleaner clothes. SAFE AS LIGHT. You can set and forget a flameless electric clothes dryer . . and turn to more time for your family and other activities. Your most delicate synthetics are safe in the tender care of 100 pure, even electric heat. INSTALL ANYWHERE Along with many other advantages of drying clothes electrically, you save steps. An electric dryer can be installed anywhere you name it. kitchen, laundry, bathroom electric Like all electric appliances, an LONG LIFE. dryer has there are less less because life. maintain and to to costs It buy long fewer moving parts. Like cooking electrically, drying clothes electrically is your better way . ! J1 z Ne. 1 con and Yams? ":.3X 65 2 Kaiser Brond 85' 1.00 or l'rZ.T 3 Goodouoitty 24 - 4 99) 14s 20 OC A Flameless Electric Dryer is a Better Buy Winter's coming. Buy now from jour dealer. . Prices f Effective Thursday. Friday and Saturday a com- mittees. COMMUNITY LEADER - Navy veteran, Salt Lake J. Cs., Utah Assn, for United Nation Lions Club, Center for Handicapped Children. MAN OF COURAGE - led the fight to secure State Aid for emergency school construction, interest on deposits of State Funds. DEVOTED FAMILY MAN - wife the former Margaret Watkins, two boys and two girls. 1.00 300 Save af Safeway v BRUCE JENKINS No Vi tins Y ams Dry Beans M Apple Cider 1 - 4 1.00 89' Tempest Brond - Heres a Real Treat That You Won't Wont To A Good Versatile item Miss Famous Town Hows a Sav-.ng- lb Campbell Here s a Real Sovmgt It s Concentrated Skylark Bread As FIRST LIGHTHOUSE The worlds first lighthouse was built at the mouth of the an open fire on an Nile River elevated platform. lb. Slice Piece Here's a Real Treot Mony Wonderful Uses Elli Brand You Cant Afford To Pass Up This Buy Hern 39 .89 Easy-t- Hawaiian r.neopplc Gropefruit Drink look At This low Price Whole Apricots Tomato Soup Chum Salmon Typical Safeway Bargains . 89 Cudahy Brand, liberol Sue Chili with Beans 19 Seedless Raisins llZ Seedless Raisins IX 4 &. 79 Tender Apricots 39c lb. Star-KistTu- na . "39 Your bank sells shares of freedom. Ask for them under the name of United States Bonds. They are good for yen-g- ood for America. 43 89' Butt Portion 53 La Lani Juice Medium Prunes JX 2 Pt, 55 2 59 Large Prunes IX Fleers Double Assorted Bars cHr b 2 Busy Baker Vanilla or Whole Busy Baker wheotf.gBor Who! Cudahy Fne Quality Sava at Safeway or Half Evaporated Fruits Hershey Bars Chiclets Gum Caramel Com Bar - S Hams 89 Shop These Trick or Treat Ideas fiant Its a son for Captain and deMrs. W. Don Gillespie. The who has waited mother lighted welcomed nine years for a baby Thursthe new arrival at 12:05 at Burley, Idaho. 25, Oct. day, who is stationed Capt. Gillespie, at Siagon, Viet Nam. with the US. Air Force, will not make he his son's acquaintance until Christarrives home on leave at mas time. Mrs. Gillespie is the former Ha Schoonover, and is with her twin making her home her husduring in Burley, sister bands absence. are Mr Happy grandparents who reG. Gillespie, J. Mrs. and and mother baby are port both fine. doing Shank Portion Cudahy Brand, 5 to 7 Pound Portions, Guaranteed &. 39 ZT ITS A SON FOR THE DON GILLESPIES W. ..98 Cudahy Brand. Gat a Couple For Your Freezer 59' Fish Cakes EN1936, Cudahy Puritan Hams 21.19 Wicklow Brand SAFEWAY! t Cudahy Bacon Thick Sliced Utahs general deer hunting season comes to a close on most hunting units across the State Oct. 30, with field reports and information from key check TEMPTATION Temptation is bound to knock on your door, but its your fault if you invite him to supper. Don't miss these smokehouse treats ' Most Deer Units Will Close To Hunting Oct. 30 Myron Vorwaller offered the benediction and the grave at the Lake Point cemetery was dedicated by Bishop Burgess. in forecast the beginning of the end of public relief. That was the starting year of the Social Security program, with Old Age and SurInsurance and unemvivors It was ployment compensation. also the starting year for federal sharing in local relief programs. How are things working out? Upwards of $15 billion a year is flowing out to workers and survivors covered by Social Security. In 1960 another $2.7 billion was meted out in unemployment benefits. Yet public relief has not lessened, instead has moved up with eaeh passing year until payments have reached $5 billion a year. Former Resident Performs On TV Among those observing the hunting season were Dr. Mrs. John Gibbs, Dr. and Mrs. Kelley Gubler, Mr. and Ted Gillette and son, Ronald, and Jack Gowans, who spent a long weekend at Island Park, Idaho. JAYCEES WERE GUESTS OF THE JAYCETTES at a Halloween party on Tuesday night. The Civic Room of the City Hall was cleverly decorated with cornshocks, moons, bats, and pumpkins, and other Halloween motifs. This was a Backwards Party, and all the guests came dressed 'backwards to eat a backwards dinner which began with dessert. Most backwards dressed of all were Bill Gibson and Mrs. Gary England, who won the costume prizes. Chairman of the event was Mrs. Clair Hansen. Mrs. Bill Gibson and Mrs. Gordon Lewis were responsible for the decorations. Refreshments were planned by Mrs. Rex Bennion, while Mrs. Wayne Saltzgiver and Mrs. Bob Hunt were in charge of games and recreation. From Stockton, California, the T. J. Armstrongs write that they are settled in their new home and that they miss Tooele and their friends. They hope to be back soon for a brief visit to pick up their horse. tually. A Naturalized - Hither and Yon citizens to be preparcrisis may for us to prepare, shelterwise and He nis airman, is sent to England and on his 23rd mission is shot down and killed. SERVICEMAN SMITH is accepted for military duty during World War II and leaves his wife and two children to answer the need of his country. He trains as an artillery observer, is sent to Europe and receives a serious leg wound. He returns home, walking with a limp, and is discharged from military service. Two years later he dies. Under our present law the widow of Serviceman Jones can receive no tax exemption because her husband was not discharged as a he was killed. The wife of disabled veteran Serviceman Smith, being the widow of a disabled veteran, may claim the full $3,000 exemption. THE APPROVAL OF Constitutional Amendment No. One will allow the unremarried widows and minor orphans of men killed in action to enjoy the same tax concession granted to unremarried widows and minor orphans of disabled servicemen. As mentioned, this amendment was approved by the voters of Utah two years ago and is being given further consideration because of an error in wording. EDITORS NOTE: Tooele County voters wil' amendfind three proposed constitutional ments at the bottom of their ballots in the General Election. In the interest of better understanding for said amendments, this newspaper offers the following brief review . of Amendment No. One. Constitutional Amendment No. One on the Nov. 6 ballot may prove familiar to the voters of Utah, and rightfully so, for they voted their approval of this measure two years ago. The amendment, as passed, was ruled unacceptable because of faulty wording, so is being offered again, in corrected form. THIS AMENDMENT ALLOWS AN exemption from taxation for property, not to exceed $3,000 in value, if owned by an unremarried widow or minor orphan of a man killed in wartime military service. The exemption is currently allowed to disabled veterans and dependents and is simply being extended to include dependents of men killed in the line of duty. In brief, this amendment clears up a point, as illustrated in the following example: SERVICEMAN JONES is accepted for military duty during World War II and leaves his wife and two children to answer the need of OHIOL Back TERPRISE: Franklin D. Roosevelt Equalize War Widows Exemption trains as an country. TO HIE 1X1 WELLINGTON, . . . UTAH POWER & LIGHT CO. |