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Show f Nothin To It Sport by A hjb t , u lTf 5 i o ip it o I u$ 4 are A. A. Carrel, deputy Supreme Governor; Joseph Shields, Outer Guard; OFFICERS OF THE NEWLY ELECTED Loyal Order of Moose in Tooele and inofficers are pictured above. stalling Seated L to R: Joe Hepner, treasurer; Lawrence Bollis, Past Governor; WilCecil Jarman, liam Gochis, Governor; Jr., Governor; Clifton Dean, Prelate; Frank Scharman, Standing secretary. Harold Tinnn, Assistant at Arms; Joe Goss, Carl Timblin, Sgt Gerald Donahue, three year Trustee; Herschel two year Director; Holsey, one year Director and Alden Lott, Inner Guard. Moose Lodge Here Organized The Sunbeam HAIRDRYER Universal HAIRDRYER 5-Tu- Westingliouse Loyal newly organized Order of Moose for Tooele was initiated Sunday, Dec. 2 in the Elks Hall by a degree stafl from Salt Lake Moose Lodge. THE OFFICERS DID a great job toward impressing the new Lodge members, reports newly elected governor, William T. Gochis. Fred T. Regional Director, Wilson, of Denver, expressed his pleasure at attending the ormeeting and said ganizational the Tooele Lodge had already made history by having 114 charter members initiated, which Utah. He also complimented Tooele City for the fine manner in which it accepted the new 14.93 13.93 be 13.95 TABLE RADIO Westingliouse CLOCK RADIO 16.93 ternity. of close order drill was given by the Moose Ladies drill team from Salt Lake City. Many visiting Moose members from Moab, Provo, Price, Vernal, Ogden and Salt Lake were in attendance. MR. GOCHIS states that new AN EXHIBITION (with case, battery, earphones) Q RADIO 13.93 G. E. or Universal 14.88 Electric TOOTH BRUSH G. E. or Sunbeam Fraternity. 9.66 STEAM & DRY IRON Silex BLENDER Silex BROILER G members will be welcomed into the Lodge and may contact him for further information. 7.95 7.95 Appointed As Jaycee Director E Portable STEREO Louis Sheik Matekel was appointed to the Board of Directors of the Tooele Jaycees last Tuesday evening at their regular business meeting reports Jaycee president Wayne A vacancy occurSaltzgiver. red in the Board when director Millard Wilde moved to the 88.00 Motorola STEREOS from 129.00 Motorola PORTABLE TV from 148.00 Cart) (Free Roll-arou- Provo area. Mr. Matekel is a charter member of the organization, and has been active in the clubs projects. He currently is heading up the athletic program by serving as coach of the Jaycee basketball team which is entered in the Tooele County recrea- ml Sales Craft 33 NORTH MAIN TOOELE PHONE 882-302- 9 tion league. "Mr. Matekels appointment was made effective immediate- Open Nights Til Christmas SWIFTS PREMIUM CENTER SLICES WHOLE OR SHANK HALF said Mr. Saltzgiver. SMALL. FRESH. MEATY 89fb Hams ly, 55b Spare Ribs 49 TENDER BLADE CUT FRESH FROZEN Smelts lb CUDAHY SLICED Pot Roast 45 Hb FRESH LEAN Salmon lib RED LONGHORN NIPPY Grd Beef 2179 Cheese lb ICE CREAM Dutch Treat Half PEAS & GREEN BEANS 303 size Fancy Garden Brand CORN Cream 01 Whole Kearnel Fancy Garden 303's SODA WATER Mac's Assorted Qt. Size (plus deposit) r9e 26 oz. MEAT PIES Chocolates 3 lb box $2.19 Gal. 69c g foy Q5c 6 for 95C 3 for 39c for 49c 2 pkgS 69c (plus deposit) 3 Morrison braots Fancy lb RED FRESH FROZEN CENTER CUTS BACON 7 UP ib 1 Fresh Delicious (pup. SKAGGS! FOOD 11 North Main Tooele STORES Last week was one of those bad ones. It reminds us of the that was out in this neck of the woods before anybody was here. When he got back his friends ask him if he was ever lost. "No," he reported, "but I was mighty confused for six weeks. I didn't know until last Friday just how confused I had become. CHIEF OF POLICE Sutherland was introduced to us as the Chief and we noted on his badge that his name was Marshall. It said so on his badge. Chief Marshall we thought. We were wrong. His name is Letand We found out by Sutherland. reading it on an overnight parking warning ticket. He siged It. It had to slowly dawn that the badge has been around longer than the Chief. He inherited it from somebody that inherited it from the Town Marshall. I took his picture with his new metermen and succeeded in confusing everybody. It wasn't that the camera lied, just the photographer. What came out on the identification is the example of the perils of a reporter. Our phonetics must have gotten in the way. According to the picture caption his name was Sullivan. Around the police station he was accused of having in alias. We didn't deliberately give him one but when he puts on an old shirt and pair of pants he now has a name to go Matters worsened, and I got an illustration of what happens when you dont know your right hand from your left. EDSON ALLRED IS the tall man in the photos left and Smith is the one on the Chiefs right, thats the tall and short of it. We are now off to a good start in Tooele. We have now insulted the Chief of Police and the two Parking Meter Men so do I leave town, sell my car, or sprout wings? After spotting what looked like a typographical error on the Chiefs badge, I was all set to advocate its retirement to the trophy case in honor of all the law quarterbacks who wore it and a new one be purchased but we changed our minds. After considering all of the TV raised kids now growing up I have decided that the Chief will, need all of the influence he has got or that he can inherit from Del-phi- TV. ANY COMMENT ON the Fall Concert of Tooele High Schools a cappella choir, mixed chorus and girls chorus is a little late but persons attending were repaid by listening to singers In small and large combinations singing because it was fun to sing. They sang mostly music of their contemporary America; because they wanted to sing it. It wasnt the high polish of the professional but I venture to predict that the ones with talent who really like to sing will find their way into local, state, and regional music as they mature both vocally and otherwise. I thought I had heard about a variety of mud but the other day we ran across a new one. Thpre is brick layers mud, and drillers mud and political mud and now we found out there is mud. The solvent used to clean clothes is filtered through diamotaceous earth that turns to mud as the solvent goes through it. It seems to us Mr. Coy (our spelling not his) of Mid - Vest Cleaners is going to have a hard time convincing housewives that mud is necessary to make their clothes cleaner. AST WEEK WE LEARNEDL we learned LAST WEEK something that we had never thought possible. Tooele Bowl has a fully automated janitor. This new machine is started with a button at one end of a bowling alley, it puts a special preparation on the alley boards and polishes as it goes to the end of the allev, stops, then bafks up to the place it started from and turns itself off. This leaves the janitor to become a building engineer and take care of the machinery. Have you noticed that if you open the wrong door in these new buildings it looks like they could start down the road. There must be a moral somewhere. Automatic pin setters now do what boys used to do to earn a little cash when I was going to school. It just goes to show that there is getting to be less room at the bottom all of the time. SOME OF OUR subscribers would like to see somebody fully automate a paperboy but that is a pretty big job. Automate the reporters and the editors and the typesetters and the printers and it would come out exactly the way you wanted, if you could afford it that is. Our favorite automation story is about the sheepherder over in Colorado that subscribed to a national magazine on a plan. The automated billing machine got stuck and he received four mail sacks full of identical bills for the same subscription. He was supposed to have telegraphed I surrender o the publication involved. MOST IMPORTANT Love is the hardest lesson in but, for that reaChristianity; son, it should be most our care Penn to learn it. t , SEEIKC WITH BEAU JCSJC S, 2)m The Pacific Coast League, which meets in Salt Lake City this coming weekend to iron out it's problems of scheduling, will certainly have some problems to iron out. Stretching from Oklahoma City and Dallas-Ft- . Worth to Honolulu, the travel problem alone is worthy of hours of meeting and talking. The league is frankly worried about travel costs for the forthcoming 1963 season. Hawaii, which has paid the differential in travel fare for the mainland teams has lost so much money that they now are looking for an "out in order to try to make some money for a change. The league, cognizant of the problem, and fearful that each club is going to have to shell out more money on transportation, is considering returning the Honolulu franchise to Sacramento and taking the smaller loss that would come in the California city. It s a real perplexing problem, and one that wont be solved easily. Also, with the league now expanded to 10 cities, theres the matter of how many games should be played. Baseball is the only sport that figures it takes eight or more meetings between teams to determine which is the best club. Others do it with a minimum of two, or possibly three or four. Best bet is that the league will keep a lesser number of games to help cut down on the excessive travel, and then try to finish its season by Labor Day at latest. This seems smart to us. Were also looking for a possible playoff between the two remaining Triple A leagues similar to the World Series, though we dont expect it to come in 1983. With Dallas-F-t. Worth, Oklahoma City and Denver in the league, it ought to make for a more interesting season for Salt Lake fans. Better think of a season ticket for a Christmas present to that Bee-FaIm sure Herman Franks would be glad to sell you one. There is no more rude awakening than to have a team you thought would be a good one, turn out rather flat in the early games of the season. And at Brigham Young, where the taste of football was still sweet in the mouth, the three losses out of the first four basketball games has been a rough and rude awakening to say the least. This was the year Stan Watts was supposed to have been "back after sustaining enough losses to wipe out BYU basketball back in the 1959, and 1958 seasons. He has height, shooting talent, floor generalship to a degree - - - nearly everything that a coach could ask for. In practice, the team knocks the bottom out of the basket with almost alarming regularity. But in a game, you wonder if ball and player have been introduced to the basket. forWatts knew he would lack one prime ingredient - ward line speed. And it has admittedly hurt in apparent ways against such speedy teams as Oklahoma City and Oregon. But it shouldnt have hurt that much. The Cougars were getting their shots, good ones and with more regularity than the opposition. Actually, against Oklahoma City, both nights the BYU club scored more field goals than did the opposition. But they couldn't hit the basket from the foul line. Admittedly the club is young, liberally sprinkled with transfers and sophomores and experience in the BYU system is still come, needed by some. We are pretty sure this club will simply because theres just too much good talent there not to. Perhaps BYU should schedule a few of the easier clubs, the smaller schools looking for a big game to help out their schedule. Certainly Los Angeles State isnt in the same class school, with Oklahoma City. And Gonzaga is not a major though they do play some pretty good basketball. And North and South Dakota schools, some feel, have no busineee playing schools in the Western Athletic Conference. Yet, a chance for the club to warm up against a slightly lesser opposition might in a give them confidence, poise on the court and stand them little better stead when the firing gets tougher. And get toughter it will for the BYU Club. Wichita, LaSalle, Providence, Ohio State, Memphis State, and all the regional opponents spell out a stiff season ahead for the Provo Cougars. Swimmers Tooele High School Swimmers will meet Logan High School Tuesday at the Logan Pool, at 3 p m. Ob Thursday they will swim against Granger High School at Tooele. LADIES CLASSIC ey High team games and Cigar Co. 514, 472, 1447; Reids Chevron, 490, 472, 1431; Gordon Furniture 514, 1412; Swift Atkin Realty, 471, 1386; Realty, 492, 1364; Alpine Lounge 1306; AUsop Chriss 1302. individual High games and series; Jean Rush, 203, 193, 530; Betty Ebbenga, 211, 527; Anne 517; Floss 185, 177, Walters, Gordon, 188 164 516; Lynn Magee 188 186 510; Dot Bloom-da- le 204, 498; Saxon Bracken, 191, 498; Etta Mae Harris, 187 498; Ann Bevan 171 484; Alyce Sly, 178, 482; Veria Kopfer 170. 175; 473; Louise Morris Ruby Dihel, 174; Millie Long 170. time-savin- g 20 re hunting in the of the Tooele District of the Wasatch National Forest promises to be much better than other years. Ranger Lynn Mitchell reports that there are more jack rabbits than for several years in the area. The jack rabbit population cycle is apparently on the upswing, he observes. Ben-mo- Rabbit area TUESDAY MORNING BOWLLNG BELLES How smart can Santa be? 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