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Show The Tooele Transcript I Friday, August (PIMML 16, Zoologists 1963 f r-- V' are the most complex performed by any animal, and are far beyond that of any group of ants or bees. Civil Service Position Up Rhonl horn are highly valueJ the going price ia by Chinese half their weight In gold, or about $18 per ounce. The United States Civil Service Commission announces an examination open competitive . 1270 per for Meat Cutter, hour. Positions are located priat Dugway Proving marily Ground, Du gw ay. Utah. How- Many people change Jobs bethe boss geta W-8- ever, vacancies In state that the of tha beaver cause of illness auk of them. Running after gala never hurt any feller. Its catching them that causes the trouble. other Federal Agencle In the aame locality msv also be filled as a result of this examination. APPLICANTS WILL not be required to report for a written test. They will be rated on the basis of training and experience shown In their applications and obInformation any additional tained by the Civil Service Commission. and the Full Information forms application necessary may be obtained from the Commission Examiner in Charge or Civil Service Information Rep resentatlve located at many US Post Offices; from the Director, Denver Region, U S. Civil Service Commission. Building 41, Denver Federal Center. Denver golf, swim, ride horses, attend 25. Colorado; or from the Board theatricals and art shows, picnic of U S. Civil Service Examlneri, fish and hunt. Dugway Proving Ground, Dug-waMost prominent among the reUtah. tort installations are the roadlike clearings and lift and gondola towers, and the 1350,000 recreation center going up on the northwest outskirts of Park City. Further up the mountain, an activities center is rising atop Pioneer Ridge at the 9,400 foot level and a for the gondola is taking shape at the Silver King Mine. THE MAIN Treasure Mountains center is being constructed of native stone and cedar siding. It will house the lower terminal of the gondola tramway, longest of its type in the United States, and a cafeteria-restaura- As the bumper post war baby crop Comes of working age, new investments will be needed to create, an average of 1) million jobs year during the next 7 years. In the lui 10 years, tha country needed only an average of 900,000 new jobs a year to keep up with tha growth in tha labor force. The water cf tha Ohio River is used and reused by communities and industries almost four times as It row from Pennsylvania to tha Mississippi. SIMPLE SIMON SAYS Death may taka a holiday, but seldom when pwpie do. Delight Summer Fancies With Taste Surprising Ilaisinbread But Country Roads ere DANGEROUS NEW PARK CITY RECREATION too! Park City Expects Recreation Boom Park City ia scheduled to ex- ita aecond boom In a century thia December when the new Park City retort center la opened. The latest bonanza wiU be of the recreational variety whereat the first one waa In mining in 1869. SKI TRAILS have been cut, and seeded through the aspens, towers are awaiting cables, gondolas and chairs which will lift skiers and sightseers to the upperience of per reaches the Treasure ar 125-se- . 3 fndoors, w-sms- ; dining tive 0ffjcei .dancing . fl and after - ski socials will be featured. IN THE SUMMER, the rec- reatioa-seekewill be able to 1UB , nursery, and ticket dae terrace Jau'ti purpose r00m Vk !L upper terminal mjt resjaurant day rs And ,re in sum wm "Lets sell It with a Want Im tired of pissAd, Daddy ing d ping-pong- cost $172,000. It will house a In its own way. Western Utah is one of the states most ro- regions. Its history is among Utahs most colorful; Its and economy, among Utahs most interesting. It con- tains most of the state's still remaining ghost and semi-ghotowns, and its boundaries embrace an amazing variety of semi-arivalleys and rugged desert mountains; high forestwooded ed peaks and deep, canyons; fertile farmlands and sparsely seeded ranges; the bitter waters of Great Salt Lake and the ultimate desolation of ts Great Salt Desert. Here are thousands of square miles devoted to testing, development, and storage of mankind's deadliest and most advanced weapons, overlooked by caves where scientists have exof ancient cavated remains 250-se- at cafeteria, facilities for gondola and chairlift patrons and an 8,000 square foot sun terrace. The Silver King gondala midstation, which will serve the upper and lower mountain ski trails, is being installed at a cost of $40,000. THE GONDOLA,., a $636,000 piece of equipment, will be the longest aerial tramway in America. It will have a capacity of 800 persons per hour, carrying cathem in 145 bins which will ride on 31 towers. 93 of the gondola cabins will be In service for the 1963-6winter season. The tramway will have a vertical rise of 2,400 feet to an elevation of 9,400 feet. The Prospector chairlift is also slated for completion this fall. The $161,000 facility will 'mfles" of i serve 5 and one-haski trails and slopes. It will be man's primitive cultures. IN WESTERN UTAH is the riders of the Pony Express; race fastest land speedway track in the world, located only a few miles from wagon tracks made more than a hundred years ago by hardy pioneers who required five days travel 50 miles across the same desert. On Western Utah's mountain- sides, hundreds of feet above the va,ley floor are huge, wave- formed terraces, eternal testa- ments of an enormous fresh5,709-foa double-chailong lake that once rose and water facility with a capacity of 900 fell, rose and fell, shrinking fihour. passengers per to the tiny nally comparatively are Park Citys residents prebody of water we know as the paring to welcome an expected Great Salt Lake. 100,000 skiers and other visitors Across the areas wide valleys this coming winter season. mountain its and through panics once galloped intrepid riders of the Pony Express; at the same time, and for another eight years, clumsy stages of the Overland Mail rumbled on their way across the continent. Three decades earlier, in 1827, the famed Jedediah S. the first Smith had become white man to view its white deserts and junipered hills; and almost twenty years after Smith John Charles Fremont had crossed the region, followed shortly by parties of east and Then west - bound pioneers. came the Mormon colonizers, soon to settle along Western Utahs streams but avoid restill-visib- lf r, TOM O' SHANTER KNIT SHIRTS Special Short and Long Sleeves Sixes 9 Months to 14 Team them up with BILLY THE KID years a pair of SAF-T-NE- E Stabilized Denim leans or a Pair oi Dress Pants either in Slims or Regulars Special 2.98 and up Chick and New Is the styles ior back to school in 3 Our Junior PETITE Sub Teens and Regulars ligiously Botony Wool Skirts & Sweaters to match by Koret of California Special Group of Sweaters 6.99 Blouse Specials 2.69 a Botony Sweater For the Lucky Small Girl For the Lucky Boy X a School Skirt a Pair ol Pants nn s its fabulous mineral deposits. Only three years after the Pony Express had passed into history, Connors soldiers came to exploit the areas riches, attract thousands of gold seekers, and end the Mormon isolation. More communities have flourished and died in Western Utah than in any other regions. Few of them exist today except as shafts, and waste dumps. Ajax, Clifton, Diamond City, Dividend, Homansville, Ibex, Ironton, Silver City, Tintic Mills, Topaz, once thriving communities, now only fading memories. BONNEVILLE SALT FALTS, located about 120 miles west of Sait Lake City and just north of U.S. comprise the worlds fastest land speedway. Part of the Great Salt Lake Desert, the flats are formed by precipitated salt from ancient Lake Bonneville. The area most suitable for racing measures about 10 by 15 miles and consists of hard salt of sufficient thickness to support heavy vehicles. During most of the year the salt is either under water or too moist for racing, but the summer sun evaporates the surface moisture, and usually the flats are in ideal condition by August and September. All the most important world land speed records have been established on the Bonneville Salt Flats, including the attaining of speeds of more than 400 miles per hour. Such notables as Teddy Tezlaff, Ab Jenkins, Sir Malcolm Campbell, George E. T, Eyston, John Cobb, Athol 0, For the Lucky Girl Inn or Carson Hotel, a quairgt frame building but!) in 1857. The old hotel was presented to the State of Utah and is now being restored by the State Park Commission as a part of Camp Floyd Historic State Park, which will include the hotel, and commissary, Western Utah Is Colorful 4 Si () two-stor- y nt entertainment mediate); (S) Silver Skla (expert race course); 4) Hidden Splendor ( inter medi-)- ; ($) CUlm Jumper (novice); (I) Lost Prospector (intermediate); (7) Treasure Hollow expert); (8) Trail of Treasury (novice); (I) silver Shadows (Intermedi-- ) Py Day (intermediate); and II) Park View (expert). mid-statio- n Mountains, a golf course hat begun to grow In the foothills, and three recreation centers are reaching skyward. Thia is being done under the direction of the Treasure Mounconvention center tains Resort Division of the with a seating capacity of 350. United Park City Mines Co., In addition, there will be a Richard H. Street, manager. lounge which will acProject expenditures are expect- commodate dancing and live ed to reach 12,193.000 by 1963. entertainment. schedThe grand opening it Other facilities planned for uled for early in December. The the giant structure .will be a outdoor winter activities will In- ,f lh ,f cIubhouw and ski dude skiing, toboganmng. foot exhjbt ,rcade. cutter school, races, social JfSnTSi AREA (A) Treasure Mountains Tramway (2'4 miles long, with Mid Station); (B) Prospector Double Chairlift (14 miles long); 2; (D) (C) Silver King Novice Tenderfoot I; (E) Treasure Mountains Center; and (F) Summit Restaurant. Park City Treasure Trails": (I) Bonanza (novice); (2) Silver King (inter- - Graham and Mickey Thompson, ent increasingly power-manti- c M an3 ts,fr racing cars across ,he fall the flats are a bee- . Every )e rod and other racers from many states compete in the Bonneville Nationals - advertised as the world's safest automobile speed trials." About six miles east of Wend-ove- r is a highway shelter containing charts and information boards about the Salt Flats, as well as an orientation map of the nearby Island Peaks of (Desert) Mountains. this range have been officially named for these men famous in the history of the race track: Malcolm Campbell, John Cobb, Silver Ab Jenkins. Blair Lamus, liam D. Rishel, and Teddy September 2 Utah's 1963 Mourning Dove hunt will begin on Monday, Sept. 2, this year. Earlier Commission action, which set the opening day for Sunday, Sept. 1, was rescinded when it was discovered that under existing State law, no season could open on a Sunday. The hunt will run through Sept. 15 throughout most of the State with an extension of in shooting through Sept. 30 seven southern counties. f. Neuro-Surgeo- Overland Mail Slices of taste surprising raismbread are spread with a mustard flavored butter and baked in muffin cups to make these Raisin Buttercups, When toasty, pile them high with creamy scrambled eggs and bacon. Theyre fun to eat! During National Sandwich Month make your favorite sandwich with raismbread. Deviled ham or cream cheese and nuts are especially good fillings. Oftentimes many varieties of raismbread are available including cinnamon, orange and nut. Raisin Buttercups 3 strips bacon ts cup butter or margarine, 6 eggs melted Its tablespoons prepared ti cup milk mustard ts teaspoon seasoned salt 6 slices rasinbread Dash pepper Blend butter and mustard together; brush over inside of 6 large muffin cups. Fit raismbread slices gently into muffin cups; brush inside each one with remaining mustard-butter- . Bake in moderately hot oven (375 degrees F.) until crisp and golden brown, about IS minutes. Fry bacon until crisp. Remove bacon and all but one tablespoon drippings from skillet. Beat eggs lightly with milk, salt and pepper. Add egg mixture to hot drippings and cook over medium-loheat, stirring now and then, until eggs are set but still soft. Sprinkle crumbled bacon over eggs ftist before they are done. Spoon scrambled eggs into hot raisin toast cups. Makes 6 servings. ANNUAL Line, Time has changed it less than most communities, CLIFTON,- FAMILY PARTY - a mining ghost OF TOOELE town located a few miles south of Gold Hill, dates from the has It 1860s. experienced deaths and some rebirths, but none to match the heydays of Gold Hill nearby. Few evidences of its existence remain, except for crumbled ruins and abandoned mine workings. DUGWAY PROVING Ground is a restricted military estab- lishment operated by the Army Chemical Corps. Embracing a vast semi-ari- d region near the Great Salt Lake Desert, the Proving Ground has been used since its founding in 1942 for the testing of chemical, biological, and radiological munitions Facilities are and weapons. used for experiments by the Air Force and Navy as well as the Army. The huge installation is one of the largest defense establishments in Utah, employing almost 5,000 civilian and military personnel in 1959. EUREKA, whose mines have been among the richest in the West, is one of the best remaining examples of a mining town that is slowly expiring. Capital of the fabulously rich Tintic Mining District, Eureka dates from the early 1870s, when a number of very rich deposits were located In the vicinity. Many fortunes have been made in the Eureka area from its silver ores, including those of Jesse Knight, the McIntyre brothers, and John Q. Packard. Numerous towns grew up around Eureka, prospered briefly, then passed into oblivion. Eureka has survived the longest. In 1957, however -due to high costs, low prices, and problems of deep mining its last major producer was forced to cease operations. A rather large town, located on U.S. Eureka displays Highway 50-some of the best and most numerous examples of old western architecture of the mining community type. FAIRFIELD is a quiet, farming community dating from Mormon pioneer days. It is noteworthy especially for nearby Camp Floyd, established in 1858 by federal troops under Colonel Albert Sidney Johnston. Nothing remains of Camp Floyd (abandoned in 1861 and soon razed) except a cemetery. However, in Fairfield a stone monument commemorates Camp Floyd, later renamed Fort Crittenden. Also in Fair-fiel- d Is an old army commissary building and tha Old Stagecoach . Season Opens 030-fo- and ' v. Mourning Dove RETIREMENT Retirement is a misnomer. CALLAO, a small farming and It's really the time for your ranching village, lies between second career. Time for the old the 12, Deep Creek Moundog to perform new tricks, not tains and Great Salt Lake to rest and rust. - Dr. Wilder Desert. It is one of the most Penfield, McGill University Isolated settlements in the state, quoted by Bill being accessible only by 50 Dumont, Harvest Years. miles of dirt and graveled road, Callao, known formerly as Wil-t- o People who hold the key to a low Springs, was a station on given problem often lack the amthe Pony Express route (1860- bition to Insert and turn it. 31) - cemetery. (To bo continued) WilTez-laf- V BIT and SPUR Sunday, August 18tb 1P.M. In MIDDLE CANYON EVERYTHING Lets call that roofer Want Ads when it rains!" its in the even worse FREE! t J66 Polaroid Camera Color Adapter Kits For J66 Camera 4.50 $7Q95 m Jr Polaroid Announces The most advanced Camera in the world! 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