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Show Tooele, Ltah, Iriday, Nov, 20, 19W Volume Srtrnlv Construction Projects Slowed by Winter Ice Snow and cold weather is hampering but has not stopped construction on several projects in the Tooele area. Work on Settlement Canyon Dam is going forward with drilling of grouting holes and pumping of grout into the bedrock at the bottom of the dam SO per cent approximately complete, reports Roy M. Jensen, superintendent of construction. HAULING OF gravel for the chimney drain which will be part of the dam is continuing Cold weather has not stopped the flow of spring water Into the excavated base of the dam Mr. Jensen reports, and pumping is continuing to keep the base clear for grouging operations. Trenching operations and placing of large diameter pipe for the Settlement Canyon Irpressure Company rigation pipeline is proceeding with pipe being placed near Hillcrest. SURFACING of Tooele City streets will continue as long as temperatures permit and Wed nesday crews were placing hot mix on West Vine Just west of First West. Curb and gutter construction in the vicinity of Tooele City Cemetery is still underway with placing of gravel and grading along the street edge on East 3rd South being pushed despite the weather. Installation of the pump and on the electrical equipment new Third South Culinary water well is progressing with electrical conduit being installed in the below ground pump hous. Soil has been hauled in that will be rounded over the roof to put it completely below ground. The Utah Power and Light Company will install transformers in the pumphouse doing away with those that were mounted on poles that provided rower for the old well City Manager Sidney Noble re- ports. Curb and gutter construction under the new special improve ment district is almost entirely completed. Completion of the stabalized earth treatment of Marvista Lane and Coleman streets must await a period of 24 hours of 40 degree temperatures before mixing of cement with the soil can be resumed, Mr. Noble re- Construction on tbo Settlement Canyon Irrigation PIPELINE WORK CONTINUES Company pressure pipeline is continuing despite the snow as this photo near the mouth of Settlement Canyon shows. C lu V I ja a V oW . j f pf sV 1 sniriey i Concrete is lowered into the deep DAM PROGRESSES trench of the Settlement Canyon dam as workmen pour a concrete cap on the bedrock. Work has been slowed but not stopped by the weather. YV7 W eyianaJ - 1 Honored At Homecoming 1O t)C in program Homecoming honor of Miss Shirley Weyland will be held Sunday, November 22, at 11:45 a.m. in the Erda Ward Chapel. Miss Weyland returned to her home October 24 after serving an 18 month mission for the LDS Church in the Gulf States. She is a daughter of Mr. Albert Weyland, Erda. Leaving for the mission field April 14. 1963, Miss Weyland in Lake Charles, uaton Rouge, Louisiana and at Meredian, Mississippi. She reports that the mission growing rapidly under the President M. of leadership Ross Richards. An invitation to attend the homecoming is extended to all friends of the returned mis- sionary and her family. Carpenter Injured On Railroad Bridge Project Tooele County Commissioners the Tooele County granted Chamber of Commerce $250 to aid in advertising the County during the regular Commission era meeting Wednesday night. MARK LINDBERG and Tom before the Steele appeared Commissioners to ask their aid again this year in placing an ad in the Utah Tourist and Va- cation Guide. Jay Hale was granted a beer for the Bonneville Sec vice 8t Bonneville. Payments toe- - regimration agents for the Primary and General elections was authoriz ed at the following rates: $13 registration fee; $5 house rent; $13 election day rent; $9 posting notices; and $3 putting up and taking down booths. ALSO $1 per hour challenge was granted for agents required to keep their places open three hours each of two nights when someone challenges the vote count. In other action, Thomas McBride was denied an adjustment on his property tax. Com-C- l. missioners told him he should have appeared during equaliza-tion days held by the County Commission. Marshall Grade TREE PUT IN PLACE Christmas tree chairman for the Tooele County Chamber committee supervises placeof Commerce Christmas ment of the tree at the corner of Vine and Main Streets by a Tooele Army Depot crew. CHRISTMAS ree,. fire ca by rucJk Te. j '"pered ,he. the w,ndovr urce the ?d resPonded ,rem5.n.w5J? frm f01 locating the 4-- H FDur-Achievement Proned ,n lhe at. DISEASE REPORTED were held at Grantsville after firemen left and one .One .case of cancer was re- grams fjre Uuck WM Called bacVlo ported to the Utah Depart- - November 11, and at Tooele aid ,n putting ment of Health for the week November 14. according to Er- house N80"1 Jnen-elout the hot spot. ending November 13. from Too "es BL? 8?d The fire Uc e Countv Utah University Exten- sion Agents for Tooele County. were planned Both programs and carried out by the county leaders council. Mrs. Etna Worthington conducted the program at Grantsville and Mrs. Van Shafer at Tooele COMPLETION certificates and awards were presented by David Schmid, Grantsville Beehive State Bank and Tom Steel Tooele Beehive State Bank. Savings accounts of $5 each were presented by the First Security Foundation to the folmembers: Marsha lowing VanVleet, Barbara Diderickson, Judy Weyland, Celia Ludwig, Gary Brown, Suzanne Lindsey and Laurie Dawn Walters. Mr. Moroni Oveson made the presentations at the Tooele program. Special county awards were presented. Achievement: Susan Shafer, Patti Bauer, Marlene Buys and Doris Adamson; Agricultural: Larry Gordon, and Beef: Larry Valory Gordon; Gordon, Valory Gordon and Marlene Van Warr; Clothing: Buys and Patty Iverson; Dairy Peggy Redden, Dennis Wright and Greg Brown; Field Crops: NuJimmie Redden; Foods trition: Marlene Buys, Patty Iverson, Susan Nutter and Flo- -' rence Elaine Young; Food Preservation: Patty Iverson; Home Economics: Marlene Buys, and Susan Smith, Patty Iverson, and Florence Elaine Young; Leadership: Patti Bauer, Susan Shafer, Marlene Buys, Doris Adamson; Swine: Craig Blea-zarGreg Brown and Gary Brown; Citizenship: Susan Shafer; Public Speaking: Susan Williams; Dress Revue: Doris Adamson, Rhonda Biggs, Bona Blanchard, Lorita Burgess, Mar lene Buys, Patty Iverson, Karen Johnson, Vicki Nelson, Karen Osako and Shana Tonioli. STATE certificates were given to Marlene Buys for clothing and Susan Shafer for citi4-- m 4-- Fire Does $5,000 Damage Fire damage estimated at about $5,000 by Tooele City Fire Chief Fay Gillette was done t0 the residence of Mi- ae' Padgen- - 9 Nrth First d West- - early Wednesday mom-laoore- ing. Tooele City Volunteer fire- men were summoned at 3:05 a.m. to fight the blaze that ex-i- s tensively damaged the interior, The fire apparently started e in a next to a room used as a television room Chief Gillette stated, Mr. and Mrs. Padgen were awakened by smoke and were assisted out of the house by their son Tony, who was asleep when awakened by upstairs their warning. Brigham Mclntire, Chamber of County Commerce Christmas Activities chairman. The Christmas lighting Including the decorating of the traditional Christmas tret at Vine and Main is under direction of the Tooele Lions Club with Ted Gillette as chairman. THE TOOELE Lions Club over the years have purchased the lighting equipment for both the streets and the tree at no cost to Tooele City government. This year the coming of Santa Claus will follow the turning on of the lights by one week. He will come to Tooele the week following the turning on of the Christmas street lights by the Tooele Lions Club. THE TRADITIONAL Christmas tree which was put in plsce by a Tooele Army Depot crew after it was donated by Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Myers from their property at 1st So. and Broadway, will be decorated by the Tooele Lions Chib, along with the placing of the street lighting. Special thanks for their generous contribution to the Tooele County Chamber of Commerce's Christmas activity fund is given to merchants who donated, is given by the Chamber's Christmas activities Achievement Program Is Held Here County wall-furnac- FIRE DAMAGE Tony Padgen examines damage done to. one of the rooms in his parents home at 97 North 1st West early Wednesday morning. Hans Pautke, a carpenter in the Western Pacific Bridge and Building Department suffered a severely ' broken leg when a 4 by 4 inch timber broke and fell on him Monday afternoon d, - zenship. service pins were pre sented to the following leaders - Five years: Helen Bradford, Bessie Davis, Reeda Gillette, Ida Mae Meng, Nellie Smith, Barbara Spendlove and Halcyon Robins; Ten years: Billie Lee and Elna Worthington; and Twenty years: Merl Brough. Four-- -- Workman are shown PUMPS GROUT INTO DAM pumping cement grout into holes in bedrock in the foundation of the new Settlement Canyon dam despite the cold weather. CHAMBER OF COMMERCE TO MEET Tooele County Chamber of Commerce will wind up the current years business at their regu,ar luncheon meeting Wed- Coral at noon in nesd Room 0f y,e Kirk Hotel It wi be the fina, Meeting jn which nominations from the noor win accepted for the new officers prior to the elec- - Into Coin Device raguldrly f'8?1. tnf hunts will come scheduled to a close on November 23. The hunts opened on Novem- ber 14 on the Fish Lake and the Heaston elk units. Recent snow storms should provide hunters with excellent conditions for these two late elk hunts. tion p An inch of snow fell on Tooele Wednesday night bringing to 1 and inches of moisture for the month of November, reports Burdett Tooele weather observer. Temperatures for the past five days have dropped as low as 13 above and highest temperature was 39 degrees. They were as follows: Saturday high 28 and low 22; Sunday high 33 and low 18; Monday high 39 and low If; Tuesday high 38 and low 13; Wednesday high 33 and low 17. Commissioners Approve Registration Expenses ELK HUNTS CLOSE Richard Dick Monosso was guilty in Tooele City Court of petty larceny of the Coin-OLaundercenter at 53 E. He admitted Vine. breaking into a coke machine. Monosso was fined $50 and sentenced to 10 days in jail. announces Tooele Be-va- n. Admits Breaking found Christmas lights will be turr ed on In Tooele on the day following Thanksgiving, Nov. 27,. Tooele Receive Another Inch Deer Congregating On Winter Range Unusually Early Deer in the Stansbury Mountain area have started to concentrate in herds on the winter deer range, reports Ranger Lynn Mitchell. Forest Service personnel who want to check on the snow depth in the recently cleared winter range area at Salt Mountain reported a large concentration of deer in the area. This is early for the deer to pull onto their winter range, and if weather conditions do not moderate it will be a hard winter both for the deer and for the winter deer range, whose condition determines the size of the deer herd on the Stansbury District, Mr. Mitchell says. Christmas Lightin to Usher in Holiday Tooele Army Depot has not received any Information that would Indicate a change la Its present position as a result of the announced policy. Re-Seedi- ng of the Salt The Mountain deer range scheduled for this weekend has been cancelled because of the snow depth, announces Ranger Lynn Mitchell. Snow on the recently cleared ground was 8 inches deep along the lower section of it with more, higher up, Thursday. The project which was to be aided by members of the Tooele County Wildlife Federation and other volunteers has been cancelled until weather permits the planting of the deer browse Bulletin Tooele Army Depot will be unaffected as far as personnel Is concerned by Thursday's announcement by the Defease Dedefense department closing pots la the United States and IS overseas. Senator Frank E. Moss's office la Washington DC stated la a telephone conversation Thursday afternoon. Hill Air Force Base stands to gala several Air Material Missions. One Navy office will be transferred from Clearfield to the Ogden Defense Depot and Fort Douglas wlU lose very-thin- g except Its National Guard and Army Reserve functions by 1M7. ports. Effort Cancelled Number Twenty Four S v Blood Donors pital, by Gillette ambulance. He is a member of a rail- road work gang that works be tween San Francisco and Salt Lake City. LOSE TIRE Western Auto ele City Police a tire and rim of their pickup Main, Tuesday reported to Toothat they lost from the back truck on South about noon. Tooele Valley Hospital superintendent Ralph Nelson talks over BLOOD NEEDED the need for blood donors for the blood drive Monday as Irene Alsop, Colleen DeLa-MarAfton Gubler, Maxine Nelson and Irene Kostello, blood drive committee women look on. e, Make it a point to donate blood Monday, November 23 sit your Red Cross Blood Center to be located at the Elks Lodge. You may go anytime between 3 and 7 p.m. , There will be no waiting to donate your blood. In this new location we will have more space to take care of more donors at one time. k |