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Show iMfo The Tooele Transcript Friday, October W National Cuaril To Sponsor Womens Rifle Team 18, 1963 rfw-jr-- J ;I;C o -- 3 Attention til Udtei. Plant to organize a amall bore rifle team for women, will be made at a meeting at the Tooele National Guard Armory at 7:30 pm. on Wednesday, October 23. All Interested ladiet are Invited to attend. The National Guard will furNRA instruction nish qualified and rules. A amall ft will be charged for ammunition. XM 5 Vi'f SF-F- kU minutes FB'V 1' H" H- ''-K - err SECONDS The Veterans Administration recognized 176 local unions hid to represent VA employees at the close of fiscal year 1963. stf 5 lnkm deaths In service in the civil war, 365,000, outnumbered the total deaths in World War I, 131.000, almost three to one; and v -- to VV nearly equalled the total deaths In World War III, 409,000, according to the Veterans f . A NEW SCOREBOARD . --Hera la the aluminum day and night, electric controlled scoreboard, which la contemplated for the Tooele High School football field, and for which public donations nr being . Scoreboard Pot Grows ' '4 t, ' J V ' W Vr ' . -- t jr - The tally la up to $440, with the goal now in aight. Letters are being mailed to alumni this week, asking for their support. The following letter is being mailed: V 5 4 ... LARGE TREE At big around as a willow meant many fort for this unusual tree on tha Jack Johnsoa Ranch In Grantsvllle Unusual Tree Becomes Giant By Brtsy McAJUier THEM II IOMETHINO VERY SPECIAL ABOUT A PLOTMM QJJinF You'll never know how special" a Plateau suit is until you try ona. Its in tha comfort, tha fit, in tha a blend of uniqu weightlessness of the fabric Kodel stay-fresand wool. Discover how famous Balanced Tailoring keeps your Plateau longer. Ask for the most asked for" suit in America: our Fall collection is outstanding. 'KoM Is ins trsds nsms lor Cattmsn's poljmtsr fiber. etst.su fsbrle Is woven eKluttvely for Tim sly Cloths by h trim-lookin- PACIFIC MILLS. eOT&ee Cflesii.c&. The Complete Family Store Jack Juhnn, of Granisville, is a b.g man with a big ranch and the finest kind of a ranch house, and it seems only fitting that he should also own the biggest tree in Tooele County. 11IE TREE, an enormous black willow, he estimates to be over 75 years old. It's a four-matree, in that four men holding hands can just barely encircle it. Officially, its waistline measures 22 feet. It stands at the edge of field near the Johnsons' house. The house itself is sixty years old and has had its ups and downs, even to the ignominious extent of housing pigs in its dining room. Its present charm and livability are a credit to the imagination and hard work $ JU for truck owners who need a new one now Things Chevrolet has developed since the last time you bought to give you more for your money: construction. This ture of Chevrolet cabs and the Fleetside pickup body has two advantagea. Insulamaterial is tion and sandwiched between the two layers of steel in the cab to give you more comfort; in the body, the lower inner wall acta as a buffer against load damage, preserving the outer appearance of the truck. fea- Double-wa- ll sound-deadenin- g Suspension to fit the truck. Conven- models tional half-- and have independent front suspension with variable rate coila in the rear. Variable rate coils do not bottom out as readily. Mediums and heavies have leaf springs. suspension with variable-ratIt automatically stiffens as the load increases and vice versa. It means a smoother, flatter ride regardless of load, a better handling truck. three-quarter-t- e Chevrolet truck engines V8's. Stronger frames. Every conventional 1964 Chevrolet truck has a ladder-typ- e frame. This type ia more resilient, better able to give with the load and terrain. Its simple design also makes it easier to mount special bodies on the truck. Its riveted aide rails are stronger. Greater model selection. This time youre going to find it a simple matter to pick the exact type of Chevrolet truck for the kind of work you do. In delivery trucks, for instance, in addition to regular panels and pickups, we have eleven walk-idifferent sizes of ready-mad- e rear doors. with some vans, Quality and value. Chevrolets today are a lot more truck than your money bought the last time, and yet the price tag is just about the same as 5 or 6 years ago. Call your Chevrolet dealer for information or for a demonstration. n full-widt- h The right engine. Chevrolet never has been in better position to give you the type and size you need for maximum efficiency. Today there are many different capacities of gasoline and diesel Quality of Jack and his wife, Virginia. A SMALL, high- - ceihnged hall Is lisiinguished by iron balustrades. hand- - wrought from old wagon wheel rims which one carried. Porter Rockwell, bodyguard to Brigham Young. These edge a steep, narrow staircase which leads directly to the second floor living room. Here, wide windows open on an unlimited view of the surrounding country, and a long window teat invites relaxation. This room, like the rest of the house. Is Early American In feeling and filled with the Individuality which only objects of personal can value and meaningfulness give There are, for example, a nice old rocker which Virginia rescued from a chicken coop and carefully restored, and two old lamps which once belonged to Hilda Erickson of Grantsville, Utah's oldest living pioneer. MANY OF the paintings which hang here and elsewhere in the house are the work of the Johnson's daughter, Mrs. Nina Morrison, of Camarilla, Calif. Virginia's kitchen conceals its complete array of modern conveniences behind doors and pa-- fours, sixes, trucks always cost less! 1964 CHEVROLET TRUCKS 48SW8)Yril--3 Dear Fellow Alumnus, - nelling of slippery elm, grown right on the ranch. Jack cut the trees and had them made into lumber in Salt Lake City. He spent over a year on the sanding and finishing of the extremely hard wood, with its many intriguing but stubborn knots. Hardest job I ever tackled, but just look at it," says Jack. THE RANCH belonged through the years to the Cooley and Rydalch families. Jack is the The Tooele High Stliool Alumni Association has undertaken he project of furnishing an electric scoreboard and a public iddress system for the high school football field. Every effort is being made to locste all grads' of our high school and give hem an opportunity to contribute to this worthy fund. This is the first opportunity we have had to help our "Alma Mater" in a material way. Let's lose no time but get behind the Project Scoreboard and make it a reality. The contributions are unlimited. Your dollars will help. Send your donation to: Scoreboard. Transcript Bulletin, 58 North Main Street. Tooele, Utah. Sincerely your Alumni Committee, Bill Gochis and Reed Russell P.S.: Your donation and name will be published home town paper. in the old PROVOST MARSHAL'S OFFICE, DUGWAY, $5.00 MR. AND MRS. STAN SHEA, $5 00 MR. AND MRS. CHRIS WEYLAND. $5.00 MR. AND MRS. RAY PRUETT. $5.00 MR. AND MRS. JAMES L. BEVAN, $5.00 MR. AND MRS. E. L. GILLESPIE. $5.00 MR. AND MRS GEORGE BUZIANIS, $5.00 MR. AND MRS. ELLIOTT BLACK. $5.00 MR. AND MRS. DALE JAMES. $5.00 C. ARTHUR HANKS. $5.00 ELIZABETH OAKES. $5.00 PRESIDENT AND MRS. O. T. BARRUS, $5.00 KEITH ENGLAND. $5 00 MR. AND MRS. FRANK H. BOWMAN. $5.00 MR. AND MRS. GEORGE NELSON. $5.00 MR. AND MRS. JOSEPH R. LEONELLI, $5.00 MR. AND MRS. DALE R. BROWN, $5.00 MR. AND MRS. MAX PROCTOR. $5 00 MR. AND MRS. GUS KARABATS, $5.00 MR. AND MRS. JESS ALLEN. $5.00 MRS. ETHEL ENGLAND, $500 MR. AND MRS. WILLIAM T. GOCHIS, $5 MR. AND MRS REED RUSSELL, $5 MR AND MRS. ALEX F. DUNN, $5. MR. AND MRS. JAMES T. GOCHIS. $5. MR AND MRS DERIS PORTER, $5. MR AND MRS. DON PRINCE, $5. DR. AND MRS. JOHN GIBBS, $5. MR. AND MRS CHARLES WEBSTER. $5. MR. AND MRS. GEORGE T, WOODRUFF, $5.00 MR. AND MRS. BYRON E. TOWNSEND, $5.00 MR. AND MRS. JAMES DeSIMON, $5.00 MR. AND MRS. GORDON HALL, $5.00 DR. AND MRS. JOHN L. JOURNAY, $5.00 ABBC, $5.00 JOHN H. ROWBERRY. $5.00 AL LANGLOIS, $5.00 LUKE WEST. $5.00 JOHN WILSON, $5.00 MR. AND MRS. GRANT M. SHIELDS, $5.00 ANONYMOUS, $5.00 MR. AND MRS. HOWARD DUNLAVY, $5.00 third owner. MR. AND MRS. TED GILLETTE, $5.00 Besides its big tree and doMR. AND MRS. CLYDE ALLEN, $5.00 zens of smaller ones, it also MR. AND MRS. DEAN STRINGHAM, $5.00 boasts an old granary put toMR. AND MRS. ELMER TATE, $5.00 gether with square nails and MR. AND MRS. ANG CERRONI, $5.00 pegs, which Jack is restoring to MR. AND MRS. JAY BATEMAN, $5.00 usefulness. MR. AND MRS. J. D. MAHER, $5.00 Also worthy of mention are MR. AND MRS. ANDREW KARABATSOS, $5.00 a fine view of the Stansbury MR. AND MS. JAMES FERGUSON, SR.. $3.00 peninsula and the remains of a MR. AND MRS. HUBERT H. BRADEN, $5.00 MR. AND MRS. BILL GENTRY, $5.00 old, burnt tree which thrust upward for 40 feet like a giant MR. AND MRS. JIM DUGDALE, $5.00 MR. AND MRS. LIONEL OLSON, $5.00 pitchfork. JACK KEEPS CATTLE . and MR. AND MRS. TONY DelPAPA, $5.00 horses, plus a few pigs and DR. AND MRS. BARRY JAMES, $5.00 chickens. He runs his cows on MR. AND MRS. MARK HALGREN, $5.00 three ranches, the others being MR. AND MRS. CHESTER WHITEHOUSE, $5.00 at Lakeside and Government ANONYMOUS, $5.00 Creek, about 35 and 65 miles MR. AND MRS. GRANT RIDING, $5.00 from Grantsville, respectively. SUPT. AND MRS. STERLING R. HARRIS, $5.00 All this has kept him busy for MR. AND MRS. JAMES PAULOS, $5. a number of years. This Fall hi FRANK RYDALCH, $5.00 added to his activities by becomMR. AND MRS. NATHAN JONES, $5.00 Grantsville at coach High ing MR. AND MRS. ALLEN JONES, $5.00 School, no inconsistency in view WHITE CITY MOTEL, $5.00 of his onetime career as a proMR. AND MRS. DAN W. WHITEHOUSE, $5.00 fessional football player. G.W., $5.00 MR. AND MRS. JESSE WOOD, $5.00 MR. AND MRS. SID HULLINGER, $5.00 MR. AND MRS. JOHN L. BROWN, $5.00 HELEN R. HOWARD, $5.00 MR. AND MRS. JAY ALLEN, $5.00 DR. AND MRS. J. L. MAYO, $5.00 MR. AND MRS. LeROY M. CORUM, $5.00 ROMANIA DODS, $5.00 MR. AND MRS. JOHN D. LONG, $5.00 MR. AND MRS. W. V. TINNIN, $5.00 DR. AND MRS. JOEL GILLESPIE, $5.00 MR. AND MRS. JIMMIE YEE, $5.00 MR. AND MRS. ROSS WILLIAMS, $5.00 MR. AND MRS. ALEX BRYAN, $5.00 Arrived At MR. AND MRS. BILL BUCKINGHAM, $5.00 Tooele Valley Hospital MRS. EMILY STAPLES, $5.00 MR. AND MRS. PAUL RANDALL, $5 00 MR. AND MRS. FRANK SCHARMANN, $5.00 Ann of and Jo Fielding, Jay ROBERT SWAN, $5.00 Tooele, daughter, October 15. Leave your money at the Transcript Office. Wendell and Sandra Walton, of Tooele, daughter, October 16. Jusf . Telephone your Chevrolet dealer about any type of truck Mantes Chevrolet Company 23 South Main Tooele 882-314- 8 MEDICAL-Leo McLaws, Tooele John Manhart, Ophir Carol ODriscol, Tooele Alex Rhone, Tooele Vernon Bissegger, Tooele SURGERY- Clyde Hogan, Stockton Wilma Johnson, Tooele Calvin Black, Tooele Mitchell Spimac, Tooele Kathleen Poulsen, Tooele A man may fall many times. But, he wont be a failure until he says somebody pushed him. If only New tions had some Years trade-i- n resolu- value. People go to Florida in the winter to get some of the blessed sunshine that they went to Nova Scotia last summer to avoid. SO TISI SAID A good walk in the country is still 4he best medicine for nerves. TOO, TOO TRUE The average wife has the sweeper whenever handy, lubby puts his foot down. People need a sense of humor and imagination to balance what thev arent. Mr. Lionel Olsen receives a car stereo set from Harold Stoker, owner of Stoker Motor Co. Mrs. Olsen won the net during Stokers showing of new 1M4 model Cadillacs, Pontiacs and Ramblers. ment program not now included this administrative and financial consolidation is the FireMillion S mens Pension Fund which Is still managed by the Department of Finance. FOUNDATION analysts point State and local governments out that the total assets of the five state-- administered pension contributed more than $16 million -- during the 1963 fiscal year programs amounted to $47.6 miltoward retirement programs lion on June 30, 1963. Last year these funds Increased by apfor employees public operating in Utah. This point was brought proximately $9 million. The study shows that over the out in a comprehensive survey of public pension programs just years Utah has maintained a rather conservative approach in completed by Utah Foundation, the private governmental re- the investment of its retirement funds. Two years ago. the Utah search agency. Nearly every state and local Legislature broadened the investment authority, by permitemployee in Utah now is covered by a public retirement ting retirement boards to invest program in addition to Federal In corporate bonds, mortgages, Social Security. corporate stocks, and other seTHE FOUNDATION .. study curities. Thus far, the retirenotes that currently there are ment boards have adopted a $cautious approach in exercising five major retirement programs administered by state agencies this latitude. The Foundation rein Utah. In addition, there are port observes that while there are some benefits in a more agnine other state or local retirement systems administered by gressive investment policy, there private or local agencies plus are also additional elements of Federal Security risk in such a policy. The Foundation report con(CASDI( coverage. More over state and local agencies also are tains two specific recommendastill making contributions for 5 tions or suggestions as follows: 1. IN ORDER to maintain a pension programs that have sound investment program, inbeen terminated. According to the report, the vestment decisions should remain free of political pressures. 1963 Utah Legislature abolished 2. If Utah should decide to folretirement programs for state prison employees, probation and low a more aggressive investparole employees, and industiral ment course in the future, such school employees, absorbing a move should be accompanied these programs into the general by measures to insure competent investment management statewide public employees reand outside professional assistirement system. Administratance where needed. tion of the Utah Public Employees Retirement System, the Utah System, the Highway Patrol ReSPEAK WEDDING VOWS tirement System, and the Judges Mrs. Marion Dunn and Mr. Retirement System also was Ross Dunn were remarried on consolidated a single under September 20. Bishop McCoy State Retirement Board and Johnson performed the rites at State Retirement Office. Grantsville. In addition to a single retirement board and centralized adLIONS MEET ministration for these four penLions Club will meet this sion systems, the 1963 LegislaThursday evening at 7:30 p.m. ture established a common trust at the Hillcrest Cafe. George fund for investment purposes. Argus informs members that The report observed that the this will not be a joint meeting, only state- - administered retire but a regular Lions meeting. State Operates In Pension Program Social GROUP SAVINGS PLANS HELP UTAH ORGANIZATIONS Churches, schools and civic groups in Utah obtain needed merchandise with S & H Green Stamps. Friends of St. Francis School at Provo, for example, saved trading stamps which were redeemed for three school buses. Such group savings programs are arranged by the Sperry and Hutchinson Company as a service to those organizations which work toward goals important to their communities. THE SPERRY AND HUTCHINSON COMPANY Group Savings Director 114 Fifth Avenue New York 11, New York y |