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Show Tooele, Utah, Friday, January 25, 1963 Volume Sixty Eight Tooele Jaycee DSA Award Given Wayne Saltzgiver Wayne M. Saltzgiver, president of the Tooele Junior Chamber of Commerce received the Service Jaycee Distinguished Award at the DSA Award banquet Wednesday night in the Kirk Hotel. THE AWARD was made to him for his service to the community for his leadership of the Tooele Jaycees, and work with youth in civic organizations. Judges of the event were Sidney Noble, Jess Duffin, George Buzianis, Bill Gochis and Nona Shibley. Commissioner Buzianis presented the award on behalf of the Tooele Jaycees. SEVERAL PAST Jaycee Distinguished Service Award winners were special guests at the banquet. They were: M. Earl Marshall, Orin Mueller. Leigh Pratt, Sike Gillette and Howard Clegg. Featured speaker of the evening was Judge M. Earl Marshall who was one of the original members of the Tooele Jaycees when they were first founded in Tooele during the 1930's. He recalled both the fellowship and the problems of Jaycee projects during a period of depression. and its original organization in the old Strand Theatre. DISINTEREST in the organization caused it to die out in Tooele and this year marks the first year of its full activity, since that time. In his remarks to the Jaycees and guests, Judge Marshall told them that more people have been to Europe from Tooele in the last few years than had been to California 50 years ago. He pointed out that economic competition from other countries even in goods marketed in America, is one that they must solve. IN A RECENT trip to Europe Judge Marshall recounted his experience with people of good will with whom he had no verbecause of bal communication the language barrier and of the of music that common forms the one universal language understood by everyone. He advised the group that there were three responsibilities that each man has - to himself to his family and to society,. The responsibility to society has come to not only effect the relationship with neighbor but with America and with other nations as distant events effect our daily lives Military cemetaries in Europe were somber remind, ers he said BUILDING A STRONG family he noted was a second responsibility that is most difficult to do alone and he called upon the group to make their mate number one in their book He urged the young men to discipline themselves which is the most difficult of tasks Put something of yourself in everything you do he concluded Judge Marshall called the Jaycee Creed an inspired one and urged the Jaycee members to strive to live up to it HE NOTED that every judgment is the product of one persons mind and each individual is as potentially great as any other man. Brief remarks were also given by Jack Clark and by Wayne Saltzgiver. Dee Tranter was master of ceremonies and Mrs. Joy Pratt gave three vocal selections accompanied by Mrs Jack Maher WAYNE SALTSGIVER winner of the service award was born in Salt Lake City Sept 20 1936 a son of Roma 0 and Alberta. Saltzgiver. He was educated in Salt Lake City schools and graduated from West High School At the present time he is a part time student at the University of Utah In 1954 he married the former Helen Salter of Bountiful They have two children Larry 7 and Western Utah Spaceport Is SfUtlllTH To Hold Annual Banquet Suggested 1 Senator Wallace ,F. Bennett, has asked the National Aeronautics and Space Administration to consider favorof making ably the proposal Western Utah a Spaceport Senator Bennett wrote to NASA Administrator James E. Webb asking for a favorable report on the proposal. The Utah Senator pointed out that the vast flatland of the Region would moke it suitable for a landing of an Astronaut. "In light of the fact that later space capsules will have a folding, inflatable wing, I feel a facility and a runway to handle such a vehicle could be established In Utah with relative ease" Senator Bennett said. Senator Bennett said, "Finding an Astronaut on the land as compared with finding him In the sea would be considerably easier. "I heartily endorse the proposal of using Utah as a Spaceofport and urge you and other ficials of NASA to consider this area seriously, he said. IJ'fliN On Evpnt The Lights on for Education program sponsored by all Tooele PTA's will be held Thursday night, January 24, at 7:30 p.m. in the Tooele Junior High 4. BEFORE COMING to Tooele he lived in Bountiful and moved to Tooele in 1956 He is a service man for Mountain Fuel Supply Company and has been with the company since 1954. The Saltzgivers own their own home in Tooele at 369 South 360 West. TRAP SHOOT There will be another Sunday Trap Shoot on January 27 beginning at 10 a.m. at the trap grounds North of town. Hits 7 30 pm. Pine is $1.75 per per- son The dinner will be served by the Relief Society of the Tooele Sixth Waid At this dinner the otficers for the year will be installed. Presentation of awards to outstanding Siouters, will be on the program. The Scout committee of the sponsoring institutions will have all of for tickets plenty who want to come, A more detailed program will be announced later. 13 Governor To Speak In Tooele Ten 4Y Professors Coming For Saturday Seminar Wildlife Group Dari Long, executive secretary of the Utah School Boards Association will be the guest speaker. AWARD WINNER Wayne Saltzgiver, winner of the Tooele Junior Chamber of Commerce Distinguished Service Award for 1962, shows the plaque given him at Wednesday nights banquet to his wife Helen. Annual Meet The annual membership meeting of the Tooele Countv Wildlife Federation will be held at 7:30 pm February 2 at the Tooele Sineltermens Lodge on East Vine. The public is invited to attend Tlk sandwiches wildlife movies el'Ttioa of officers md a short talk by a conservationist is o.i the agenda. Munterj fi :V -- cn and wild-li- f cnnjervao'o ! ,.s are urged write up their gripes, recomor projects and mendations hrvl them in to the newr president to be elected at the meeting. The ma'erial then can be processed by appropriate committee chairmen for 1963. The annual Tooele County Republican Lincoln Day banquet will feature an address by Governor George D. Clyde. It is scheduled lor Wednesday February 13 in the Tooele High School room. Eagles To Honor Kid Curry mul'i-purpos- e Carl Dean Scott Dies Thursday; Funeral 1:00 Sat COMMUNITY Candi- Bill Gibson, Gary England, Lee Beck-stroPhil Phil Spencer Maynard, Dean Stringham and Clair Hansen. George Karabatas was in New York. Melvin Carter, 70 So. man, to build a residence Cole-- , MARRIAGE LICENSE at a A marriage licenst has been issued to John Lloyd Hansen, 21 and Patia Elizabeth Tooele, Frailey, 17, Tooele by the Tooele County Clerks office. cost of $13,406. Happy Homes is Tooele City has issued build-- , the contractor, Ross P. Taylor, 745 West ing permits to: Claytor Allred, 175 So. Main, Vine, to build a residence at a at a cost of $11,686. to remodel a residence cost of $1,800. Vertis Carter is the contractor. Wasps were the worlds first paper makers. Carl Dean Scott, age 42, died Thursady at 11:40 a m. at the Tootle Valley Nursing Home following an extended illness. Mr. Scott had been foreman at the Tooele Smelter zinc plant for some 20 years prior to becoming ill. IIE WAS BORN in Salt Lake David Williams City, June 10, 1920, but had lived in Tooele since early childhood. He was a graduate of the Tooele High School, and was married April 14, 1940, to Pearl Oldham, of Garfield. The marriage was later solemnized in the Salt Lake LDS Temple. Mr. Scott had been active in Home coming program in the LDS Church, a member of honor of Elder David Williams the 3S6th Quorum of Seventy, will be held January 27 and had been in the Superinten- in the Tooele Sunday, First Ward, startdency of the Eighth Ward Suning at 7 p.m day School and had filled a stake Elder Williams, a son of Mr. mission. and Mrs. Glen Williams, arrivSURVIVING are his widow, ed home recently after spending two daughters, Mrs. Sidney the past 30 months in the Cenof McGill, Nev.; tral German LDS Mission. Hullinger and Pamela, Tooele; as well as three brothers and one sister, Rudolph Brunn, of Los Angeles, Richard and Lynn Henwood, and Mrs. Claude Atkin, all of Tooele. Funeral services will be held in the Tooele Fourth and Eleventh Cake Ward, Saturday at 1 p.m., due Members of the Junior class to the BYU Seminar being held at THS will sponsor a door to in the Eighth Ward. Friends may call at the Tate door cake sale on Saturday, to Mortuary from 7 to 9 p.m. Fri- raise funds for the Junior Prom. Anyone wishing a cake to be day and Saturday prior to services. brought to their door may call and place their order. Interment will be in the Tooele Anyone desiring to contribute Cemetery. a cake to help with About one fourth of Americas funds may also call ten million trucks are used on number. Prom Committee To Hold Door To Sale Door 0 farms. Edgemont Marks Twenty Years of Service Edgemont Housing area in reached its twentieth bhtl.day on December 20, 1962 without fanfare. The housing units that were to be for the war period oply were dedicated in 1942 and are still filled to near capacity with 163 Tooele Cadillac with air conditioning. It continues to be occupied by people that for the most part cannot at present find or afford $4,000 anything better to fit their circumstance. Essentially the Citys maintenance program has kept them in better shape than when they parts. were built. Unfortunately siding was used on the buildings that is no longare better er available. Roofs have to be counter- - fixed like new in order to be leak proof. The part of the housing project that is now starting to show the most wear and will be the most expensive to repair or replace is the underground water and sewer pipes throughout the IN MOST CASES replacements such as water heaters, sinks, and other utilities e than their war-tim- families. ORIGINALLY owned by the federal government they wgre turned over to Tooele City in about 1951. There are housed 100 in the now oroject. A TARGET DATE for closing Edgemont is June 30, 1964. families 163 Under the agreement by which the housing project was turned over to Tooele City by the Federal Government it cannot be sold but must be demolished and the land returned to its original 30 and 33 three-bedroo- apartments. They house a total pf 800 people which is about six per cent of Tooele Citys population. DURING THE past six months rent from the units have provided 51,346.09 into Tooele City funds. Operational expenses of $21,000 or 46.6 per cent of the budgeted amount. Over 200 families have stayed in Edgemount that have stayed long enough to accumulate a down payment for a new home. Others such as widows on welfare would have a difficult time finding any type of housing within their means in Tooele. DURING ITS twenty years of operation, all types of people have lived in Edgemont including one family that owned a state. Tooele City purchased the land which is about 40 acres in extent from Dr. Mayo and Kurt Harding for $1,000 an acre when the government gave the city Edgmont as an outright gift. THE ORIGINAL gift consisted of 42 buildings. Tooele City was the first city in Utah to take over such a housing project from the United States Govern- egrBIRTHDAY has completed ment. Housing area years of service to Edgemont 20 Tooele and starts filled to capacity. another Invitational Howling lournament year still Tooele Eagles will honor a 50 member, Mr. Seymour (Kid) Curry, with a dinner and dance Saturday evening. MR. CURRY was born at Farmington, Canada, June 5, 1878, and was one of six children there were four boys and two girls. He enlisted in the United States Army at the age of 19 from Great Falls, Montana and served two years in the Spanish American War, during that time was engaged in 18 battles, receiving his Honor Discharge at San Francisco, California on November 6, 1899. Mr. Curry came to Tooele, Utah from Great Falls, Mont., in the year of 1908, and made his home up in the canyon with the a sister and brother-in-laSam Merritts, until he met a young miss by the name of Elsie Hanks Green, whom he took marriage vows with in May of vows 1912, again having those the Mormon at solemnized Temple in Salt Lake City in the year of 1957. HE WAS ONE of the first men to work on the operation of the International Smelter being employed there from 1908 to 1933, from there he went to work as a custodian at the Tooele Post Office, working for 15 years, until he retired at the age of 70. Mr. Curry joined the Fraternal Order of the Eagles at the Murray Lodge, and transferred to the Tooele Lodge in 1914, serving as president of the Tooele Aerie in the years of 1931 and 1932. He is the oldest member of the Tooele Lodge and one of in the oldest Lodge members the state of Utah. A few years ago the Tooele Eagles had the honor of being host to a group, called the Last 1st Montana Man Club (Co-Volunteers: of which Mr. Curry is a member. MR. CURRY IS a High Priest LDS Ward in in the Fourth Tooele. Though Mr. Currys specialty in his own kitchen is clam chow-Jo- r and Irish stew, he will not oe feasting on them at the dinner in his honor, as the committee has chosen to serve spaghetti and chicken with all the ear (De-An- TO It was taken over and rented and by the City under a health welfare clause in the Utah state constitution. trimmings. There will be a short program intermission, a vocal during solo by Emma Rasmussen, accompanied by Elna Williams. M Men-Gleane- 7, n Rear End Collision Links 2 Cars One car practically welded itself to another Tuesday evening about 7 pm., in a two car collision rear-en- d on Main Street, in front of the Tooele Post Office. A two year old girl Susan Cole received a deep laceration above the right eye. The two cars had to be towed away togethr, by a wrecker and seperated at the garage. A 1963 CORVAIR, driven by Dean Cole, of Tooele, rammed ino the rear of a 1953 Buick sedan driven by Maynard W. Jensen, who had stopped just south of the crosswalk on the inside lane to let another car make a turn. Cole, accompanied by his two-yeold daughter, Susan, was distracted from noticing Jensen stoo by his adjusting the safety belt on his small daughter and hit the rear of the northbound north-boun- d Jensen car, reported Troooer of the Utah High-wa- v Patrol who investigated. The accident happened the same time as the fire call which reouired Tooele Police assis- Neil Bishop tance. THE TWO YEAR OLD girl was thrown against the jockey box lid and received a cut over the right eye that required hospital treatment. She was treated at Tooele Valiev Hospital and re- leased The two men were examined for injuries and released .The Buick received damages estimated at $125 in the accident and the Corvair $300 Mr. Cole was cited for failure to keep proper lookout. rs To Hold Two Stake Meet and Gleaners of Tooele and North Tooele Stakes will meet egether next week for their "Bride and Groom night. A very fine program has been outlined and all those of Gleaner and M Men age are invited to attend. The meeting will be held on Thursday, January 31, at 7 p.m. School in the Junior Sunday Room of the First Sixth Ward Church and will be under the direction of Jim Pedersen and Maxine Kennedy, Tooele Stake leaders. Feb. 3 Singles Handicap Ian. PRIZES GALORE Everyone Invited $2.75 Entry Fee 26-2- PROFESSOR IVAN J. Barrett to give the keynote address for the days classes at the devotional assembly which will begin at 11 am. In the chapel of the North Stake Tabernacle. Preident Sherman A. of the North Tooele Stake is conducting the opening meeting President Arthur L. Barrus of the Grantsville Stake will offer the invocation. is Congregational singing under the direction of Bishop I. D. Bird with Mrs. Bird at the organ. She will also play prelude and postlude music. A SPECIAL musical number will be played by a string ensemble, and President Howard Clegg will give the benediction. Ten professors are coming conduct to from the BYU the classes. The 50 minute long classes will begin on the hour and with a ten minute break between. Roy W. Doxey is scheduled to give three lessons on the DocVincent trine and Covenants; L. Jones, will teach genealogy lessons; and Ivan J. Barrett, The Life of the Master. HOW TO LIVE with Yourself and Like it is the title of the course to be given by C. Kay Allen. Rulon Craven will also teach three classes in Human Relations and John E. Ord will conduct teaching classes. J. Spencer Cornwall will conduct music classes. "Jesus the Christ" will be treated in the evening classes by Sidney B. Sperry. Darrell in Moses will conduct classe counseling and interviewing and Daryl V. Hoole will give homemaking classes. Llnd-holt- n Sunday 7 PM dates for the Junior Chamber of Commerce Service Award Distinguished were recognized for their service to Tooele, Wednesday evening. They are: to be held here, is scheduled Homecoming; SERVICE Seminar BYU this Saturdav. Elder Williams o crowd is expectattend the three stake An overflow ed to will Hold audi-tiuu- bond Julie, The nnmiul banquet and party for all Siouiers, friends of Svo.it mg and their partners will Ik held f riday, ebruary 15 at the Lirst Sixth Ward church at Number Thirty Three JAN 31 DEADLINE FOR CITY LICENSES January 31st is the deadline for renewing Tooele City licenses, warns Tooele City Recorder, Herman Pedersen. After this date, penalties will be added to the license fee, he stated. Under the DRUG STORE Rotation Plan CALDWELL DRUG 2-- will b open Sunday |