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Show St. John- Qover News Second Section y Oulda B I anthem A PRODUCT OF THE MINES. The decision of Governor George D. Clyde to travel throughout the state meeting the people and bringing government closer to them reminds us of another Governor, a product of the Mercur era who along with five thousand people lived and worked in the narrow confines of the canyon that was to yield over a million dollars in gold and other metals. As general manager of the Mercur Gold Consolidated Mines Co. George H. Dem became a resident of Mercur in 1904 and resided there until 1909. He was later to become Governor of the State of Utah CANCER FUND DRIVE Rom Mary Gillrspl. publicity chairman; Mr. Phyllis and Secretary of War in PresiCondor, Cancer Fund Drive Chairman, and Dr. Kelley Guhler, County Medical Addent Roosevelt's Cabinet. For visor for the fund drive talk over the need for fund to he (ought during April, which I 18 years he was actively encancer drive month. gaged in mining operations at Mercur, five years of which he Bu Ju"T It home, where two of MISSING OUT? 19 9. This marriage was Of this h chjldren were Early to bed and early to solemnized in the Salt Lake 0f residence in Mercur rise and you will not know .Temple. She l.ved in Clover. he aid ... . . my wotl vivid what i going on in the night Utah until 1947 when she mov- - rw.ollectioM are AFTER THE FIRE fjve. Gln White, equipment supervisor Carey Williams, Pubspot. ed to Davis County. from 1904 to 1909 oi for the Tooele City Volunteer Fire Department, takes a lishers Syndicate. year Mrs. Bush was an active during which , reiided Jn Mer. length of fire hose from the drying rack after firemen member of the Relief Society cur wjth . . . ven. family spent several hours scrubbing the hose after the fire. " Pn".ary organizations un- that ev od Mer. The fabric In the hose is weakened by chemical action ,0 ,(re it. til illness her for the first time in That prevented or mildew If not kept clean. Tooele Army Depot loanay with fer. curjte today wj In addition to her husband. many months the cost of livvant gincerjtyt Those were the ed the Tooele Fire Department a truck with hose to she is survived by two aons. h , am willjn t0 ing dropped (one tenth of one standby In case of another big fire while the hose was and two daughters Wesley D. admt days!' per cent indicates that sellhey were the hap. doing. . lers must have been unaccust-omedl- y v,"a piest days of my life. This was Bush, Clearfield; Mrs. Barbara negligent about markbecause I was deeply Telia EXPRESSION OF SYMPATHY St. John, and Karen party ing up prices. and lfregtfd my A side or sad-ligto the Barfuss. of Layton, and eleven , party becauae ,iked the which claim- Booka and Libraries grand children. with whom I was associat- - tragic ptane crah pie William ed of the lives Harris is also survived by four ed B She Mrs. Mary Helen Parsons, time Mercur was and Mosier of Dugway Tooele Ralph brothers. Roy. Jim. Jack and a one.mine Librarian writes of and wr were was camp. the receipt of a letter by the firstCitypublic library estabof Los An Cheshire, Floyd or for. r dependent v, and two sisters, tj working Cheryl Mosier. the crash vic- lished in 1731 was the Library upon ty)e game company, and tim's from Mrs. daughter, Mrs. May Carter and Mrs. La- - wfre one Company of Philadelphia. A bjgt happy family . . Jacqueline Von Kennedy a week be- modest subscription was charScofield, of Inglewood. Nobody else. highattei anybody fore the accident.- - This letter ged. The first Free Public Lknew everybody Everybody thanks to Cheryl for expressed will held be services Funeral ibrary in the United States was else . . . We were all good her expression of sympathy to established in Peterborough, Monday at 1 p.m. at Clearfield friends and good neighbors . . Caroline Kennedy upon the New Hampshire. When the LFifth Ward Church. 328 Cen- - n my dreams I still hear the death of JFK. Cheryl had writter St., Clearfield, Utah. ibrary opened in 1833 there was skip dumping, the tramway ten a note saying. "I am so no specific State legal tax base Friends may call Sunday rumbling, and occasionally the Violet Cheshire Bush, former night from 7 to 9 p.m. and on three blasts of the whistle to sorry that you no longer have to support it's operation. It a Daddy." resident of Clover, and now liv- - Monday from II a.m. to 12: 15 te ug that the wasn't until 1849 that a general power was off." The Diamond Man WAR laws for Libraries ing in Bountiful, died Thursday a.m. at the Lindouist Mortuary (From "Souvenir" of the il enabling All people agree that war is were passed. 16, at 7 a.m. in a Salt at Kaysville, Utah. cur Pioneer Society. Lake Hospital of a lingering ill DURING THE turn of the s. H Goodwin writing on the stupid, which is equivalent to admitting that people are stu- Century. Andrew Carnegie, beVE FROM OUR TOWN bo S.I, Lake pid, as they have been waging came the great benefactor of S N Main r d.u- Over 2.500 Clly. on July u. 1901. "P"' ciorsDera belolged tell. .! war off and on for many long Public Libraries. were Olin Public Libraries started, . ghter of George and Sarah . . .. that the selection of a name and weary centuries. Cheshire and was married to Thomaston (Ga. Times. added or endowed by Carnegie Miller, T Mr .nMr!, ," gifts. Tooele Free Public Library was one of these with a grant of 15,000 in 1911. It Is of most importance that young adults have personal contact within the Library. The individual transition from childrens to adult reading. Care should be taken in the guidance of reading all types of fiction and books, The Public Library has the reof sponsibility serving the community as a center of information which is helpful and beneficial to the Public welfare. A set of The Children's Hour (If Vol. Just added to our shelves will be of lasting value in good literature in all phases of reading for our young non-fictio- April 17, 1964 "Young Living." by Nanalee Clayton; "Thresholds To Adult Living." by Craig; "Historic Costume." by Lester; "Horses and their Bosses" by Ballan-tine- ; "Story of Geology" "Candle In Her Heart" Fool Be Still" by by Loring; Hurst; "Katie's Young by Seifert; "Trade Wind" by Kaye; "Dolphin Island" by Clark; "Legion Of Strangers." by Mercer; "Readers Encyclopedia of American Literature" by Herzberg; "Mandate For Change" by Eisenhower; "Exploring The Great Basin" by Cline; "Outlaw of Navaho Mountain" by Lyman; "Fourth And One." by Grosscup; and "Power Of Attorney" by .... librarian V$) You Can Flow of 's5 View And Order Pictures Of The Prom!! Mer-Apr- DATEMAN "11 ... E . TIME FOR FISHING Sterling Halladay, variety store owner, left, sells the first new 1964 fishing license to Joseph B. Elfors, Grantsvillc. Licenses went on sale last Thursday. 5t have ealsV Jnhnh to8Tlhi indtr?fh Lode blished .in Utah at from St. c. , . h h P F will be County, where Kenny but was snuffed out !n employed by Geneva Steel. by the oncoming storm of d vil war. He also points out some ro'VI5 interesting features of the area Jerry Donahue, 231, 569; John jn a Bulletin published by the 207 Hiromi Grand 539; jM.yamoto of Utah. Ishizuka. 200. 520. It was C&orge Dern who re- the end of the Mercur U Randevu. For Pedersens, I?, Parted . M 'Welch, 553. and Roy Thomas. PI ApInl, ' J913. ,wa . For Randevu. ,a.StBSlip Ken Snydw at a.m.. Sunday. . 557; Bill Wilson. 554; Rich fisted Mer-sha1913 and the Garcia, 548 and Jerry Open- - Marcb 30, cur Mine was at an end. An 537. NMA won one point from the hour before. Joe Sullivan, one Eagles. For NMA, Jack Maher of our oldest miners loaded Butch Johnson, 547 and the last car at the Mercur Sta Bill Johnson 523. For the tion. The car was decorated agles, Frank Redding, 203, with bunting and flags, attach-4- . ed to the last train hauled out Roy Colledge, 553. Bevans won two points from by the motor, and dumped in Allens. For Bevans, Bill Spence the Mercur pockets. As the last c19; Lynn Buys, 209, 527 and was being hoisted, the flag skip Beva u1 was raised on the mill, the rr,,nA?S 551: C.:-R.'CR,.Ruswere blown for one whistles h 538. Harry school-bel- l hour, the fire-bel- l, Frank Redding, Secretary were rung, and and church-be- ll the famous old producer passed into history with due ceremony. It was an impressive occasion to those who have made Mercur their homes for many years, and to whom the rumble of the tramway and the skips ALL KINDS was a part of their daily exisCut & Wrapped FREE tence. AT ive-GKTjc- Pence iy ODDS AMD ENDS OF " flBflMIID IPAIPEIHI Ids to $1.03 pkgs. TRANSCniPT-DULLETi- n 58 North Main 3 LOCKER MEAT Cut as you like Only U.S. Graded Meat Cut Half or Whole Beef PORK Half or Whole Sausage Pork Loins Cul lb. 43c 39c lb, 45c lb. 49c made Wrapped Lamb Whole or Half T Saltine Crackers ven Fresh Fish Sticks Booth's 8 oz. pkg. Breaded Oreo Cream Sandwich Nabisco ib. pkg. Bologna Lar9 1 Swift's Thick Sliced 0AC0N 45c Ib. ftR, IQPV 11 North 2 lb. box 45c 4 f0y 1.00 2 for 89c lb. 45c STOU LIBRARY WEEK This is National Library Week, a time when we contemplate the worth of good books and their influence in our lives. The books collected and kept for study and reading by the State of Utah Library in Salt Lake City and brought to our front door oh wheels via the bookmobile, are an important contribution to the cultural development of the communities in the southern part of Tooele County. Mr. Paul Buttars has been with the library for the past three years. A native of Cache Valley, he graduated from the Utah State University and resides in Ogden with his wife and five children. He looks forward to his visits in this area. For the next six weeks, Bob Day of Bountiful will be substituting for Paul, as he does for other drivers in the northern part of the state. Six bookmobiles now service Roosevelt, Richfield, Panguitch, Brigham City and Ogden; and it is expected that the program will extend into other sections of the state. The library was here on Tues day April 14 and is scheduled in Vernon from 9 a.m. to 10:15 a.m.; Clover 10:45 a.m. to 11:45 a.m.; St. John, 12 noon to 1:15 p.m.; and Stockton, 1:45 p.m. to 3 p.m. COMPLETES TRAINING Mark Stookey is home on leave after having completed basic training at Ft. Ord, California. He will report to Ft. Irwin on the Mojave Desert near Bars tow. California Apr. 24. His parents, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Stookey are happy to welcome him home for this brief visit. cotton Hundreds of tempered Prebuilt border with vents and Mutrhlng box spring gives easy-tur- n il handles support Made by the makers of the famous $79.50 Serta Perfect Sleeper Mattress Tate Furniture 50 North Main Tooele, Utah Phone 882-322- Co, 1 f; Doc-lor- ." |