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Show The Tooele Transcript Friday, April 3, 1964 WOW IW OPERATION DUP TO MEET Emmi J, Atkin Camp DUP metiipg will b held Monday, April I at 7; JO pm. at tha homa of Hilda Clark, JOO 411 So. WetL Skilled Nursing Care Center IR0DWE1 HUB? 3500 GRANGER, UTAH Sivo with Stall f Jirn'i low insurance I ' 334 South NEXT TO THI VALLEY WIST HOSPITAL rates tor careful drivers See me. V,.-.-.- 112-486- MUTUAL Theres really only one thing HERE. ER0M DENVER Visiting here with friends wrong with the younger gener- nd relatives is former Tooele-lonbea lot of us dont ation is - Buyers: SQUARE GUESTS are invited to see our beautiful Symphony Homes! S8 3 Bedroom I I ' ' . , - v. 1 . - . . -- , , jp. u Full Basement Hardwood Floors 9 ride the bus to school. LOW MONTHLY PAYMENTS OPEN HOUSE I Antelope Avenue Weekdays 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. Saturday & Sunday 10 am. to 7 p.m. Lloyd Olsen Realty Phan SKEKMAN SMITH Tommy Iverson Cels Eagle Await! g Anderson. He to it anymore. Boys an Richard Ranch Roundup (Amarillo. Tex. ueft of hi grandmother Mrs. Vida Anderson. Richard gradu- atrd from the University of Utah last year and la present- ly employed at Denver. Colo- rado. He it the son of Mrs. Harriet Anderson Winn and late Bert Anderson. To All Home You , 7 STATE FARM r .. Tommy Iverson receives congratulations from Bishop Jack Cox upon receiving his Eagle Scout and Duty to God awards. Looking on at left are Tommys parents Mr. and Mrs. DeVon Iverson. Foirtono Drtvo rootla, Utah Phono SOUTH 4155 WEST 882-202- DANCE Dale Schirm caller for Too- ele Rebels Square Dance Club brought a guest caller to the night beginners class, Franklin and his lovely wife Ruth, from Denver, Colo, returning from a calling en- gagement in California were the guests. He called several dances for the class. Don has recorded many square dance records. He is the owner of Wagon Wheel Recorder Co. , FAMILY 4 6 iv Tommy Iverson, son of Devon and Betty Iverson, became the first member of the Twelfth Ward to receive both his Eagle Boy Scout award and the coveted Duty to Cod award. The awards were made last Sunday with Lewis Wey-th- e land presenting Mr. Iverson with his Eagle badge, the high tst award in Scouting and Bishop Jack L. Cox awarding Tommy the Duty to Cod medal, Not only was Tommy the first member of the newly ganized Twelfth Ward to ceive both the Eagle and Duty to Cod Award, but it is also believed that he is also the first recipient of the Duty to Cod award in the Sixth Ward also, and in the memory of the leaders. Scouting Tommy's Eagle is only the second to ever be earned in the Sixth- Twelfth Wards. re-D- :2X? Utah's New Nursing Home Provides Outstanding Care for its Elderly or Infirm Residents. Inquiries Invited from those requiring Church, Federal or Welfare Assistance. AGED CHRONICALLY ILL GET TOGETHER Easter Sunday was the oc- - casion of a family get together at the home of Mr. and Mr. Melbourne Lawrence. On hand for the fun were Mr. and Mrs. Perrv Lawrence and sons. Ken- neth and Randy, of Magna Mr. and Mrs. Roy Niskala and children Dorothy. Arlene and David and Mr. and Mrs. Fred and daughters Dana and Tracy Ann. all of Lake. Mr. and Mrs. Denzil Remington and children George, Allen and Ranae and Jimmy and Linda Lawrence, of Tooele, were there and oh, yes, Bill, Mel, Karen and Mark, who are the unmarried Lawrence children. POST OPERATIVE . .7 ,Lif? and . must be kePl touch, and as you c'08ey can adiust life to law, you mst adJust ,aw t0 life. The ony P,nt in having law is to make ife work- - Otherwise there wi" be explosions. Arnold of Toynbee, "The tory. Peaceful Change An emational Problem (Macmil-Sal- t Ian). - PARALYTIC VISIT OR CALL MR. McDONALD His-Wei- 298-90- 28 GEM BOX 9 When love and skill work together, expect a masterpiece. natural gas rates are now even lower! When CONGRESS recently reduced the Federal income tax for individuals, it also reduced the tax on corporations. The former Federal tax rate of 52 on taxable income for corporations was reduced to 50 this year, and will be reduced to As a result 48 next year. of these reductions we are filing revised schedules with the Utah Public Service Commission for a reduction of all consumer rates based on our tax saving for both this year and next. This will result in a saving of approximately $410,500 annually for our natural gas customers in Utah. We expect to meet soon with the Wyoming Public Service Commission to propose a similar rate reduction for our customers in Wyoming. Our natural gas rates, which are already 37 below the national average, will now be even lower. Natural gas serves you best M 0 NTAIII U limi j I - costs you less. Copjpdirs claiiry lieirdl...900 cows It would take a herd of nearly 900 cows to supply milk to the families of Kennecotts 6700 Utah Copper Division employees. Every day Utahs copper family buys about 13,200 quarts of milk. This is just one example of the enormous purchasing power represented by the Kennecott payroll. Other examples of how employees spend their daily earnings of approximately $124,000 include average daily expenditures of $25,000 for food products, $21,700 for housing, $11,700 for clothing and $3,200 for health care. From the full range of their buying, virtually every segment of Utahs economy feels the impact of copper. However, Kennecotts annual payroll of nearly $45 million is just part of the story. Add $30 million in local purchases by, the company, and state and local tax payments totaling $12.5 million, and the grand total soars to $87.5 million! Every operating day at Kennecott is the starting point of dollars that circulate from one end of the state to the other. Directly and indirectly just about every Utahn is in the path of these dollars. FUEL COMMNV (yCbi ScwiCA Kennecott Copper Corporation t vtah copper Division i |