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Show Volume Number Number Thirty Tootle, Utah, Friday, December 27, 1 90S Seventy-Fou- r Home Decorations Judged Best Ever Judged bed for decorations on a religious theme during the recent home lighting contest was this home belonging to Mr. and Mrs. Harold J. Meiniuger, 24 1 Last Skvliuc Avenue. Winners base lieen announced in the annual Tooele Home Decoration contest. Hie judging was done bv ineinlierx of the Business and Professional Womens Club. JUDGED TO have the liest decoration m the rebgnms (lav situation was the home of Mr. and Mrs. Harold J. Meuunger, 241 Skvluie Avenue. The special feature at this home was a manger scene with cast figures of Mary and Joseph. Two homes wete given honor able mention in this category. They are the homes of Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Martin, 382 South Main Street and Dr. and Mrs. Dovle Tailor, 480 South 3S0 West. The Tovland Scene at the home of Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Fait. 2S0 Griffith Ave., was judged Best in this classification. Decorations included a large figure of Santa Claus near the North Pole, Santas House with elves nearby. HONORABLE mtntion for a toyland scene went to the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ross Williams, 143 East 5th North. The final classification was for a Santa Claus scene and here the home of Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Partridge, 134 South 3rd Street was judged lest. At this home a large Santa Claus figure was shown alMiut to enter the chimney, In front of the house were large revolving candles spelling out a Merry Christinas. Honorable mention went to the home of Mr. and Mrs. Oran G. M duller, 39 i South 2nd West. A PRIZE of $20 will tie Tooele iv growing! awarded in each category to the And av it grows, itv needs in first place winners. Every resiwas dence in Tooele eligible itinneronv areas also expand. One for the contest. Judging was done of these needs is for nurses. lietweco the 22nd and 2 1th of TO HELP Tooele meet the Dcccinlier and was based on design oiiginahty and effectiveness. demand for moie nurses, BrigThe judges also cited Fuir-lau- e ham Young Uniersity has extendthe Best ed a Two-Yea- r Drive as Associate Degree Decorated and Lighted Street in nursing class which is stlicdnlcd the city. to liegin in Tooele in January. Mrs. Juanita Pokes, nursing director at Tooele Valley Hospital. is sponsoring the group. Already 15 licensed practical nurses and nurses aids are enrolled, as the need for registered nurses in the area is acute. These students, lic-in- 0 '!' At Ogden Funeral Fri. Wheatley LeRoy Wiggins, 88, died at Ogden Mnndav, December 23 of natural causes. He was the father of Emmett L. Wiggins of this citv. Funeral services will lie held Friday, 1 p.m. at the Larkin and Sons Mortuary in Ogden. Friends may call Thursday from 7 to 9 p.m. and prior to funeral time on Friday, Burial will be in the Ogden City Cemetery. Mr. Wiggins, who resided at 2252 Lincoln Ave., had been a e resident of Ogden. He was bom September 26, 1880 to William J. and Annie Gibson Wiggins and was married to Mary Montgomery, October 10, 1912. The marriage was later solemnized in the Salt Lake LDS Temple. He was a retired Southern Pacific Boiler Maker and had also' been an Ogden City Fireman. He belonged to the Boiler Makers Union and was a member of the Ogden Third Ward and a High Priest in the North Weber ) .ill ,ji W like all BYU nursing students, will train in Salt laike City at the LDS or Cottonwood Hospitals or the Bonneville Nursing Home during their second year. BYUs associate degree program, of which the Tooele course is a part, is neither a watered-dowversion of the bar he! rs degree course nor a three-yea- r hospital training situation placed in a university setting. n " MR. BOLIN DER Death Claims G. O. Bolindcr; Funeral Sat. Cilliert O. Bolindcr, 77, died early Decen liter 26 of natural IT IS BkSEl) on the philosophy of education for service and is designed for the changing functions of nursing. At the completion of the course, graduates are eligible to take the State Board Pool Examinations to !e licensed m Utah as registered nurses. registered Many girls nurses through the associate degree program and take nursing ositions while continuing their studies toward Itaclielors degiees. THE ASSOCIATE degree program is under the duectiou of BYUs College of Industrial and Technical Education, with Dr. Ernest C. Jeppson, dean. In its aim to train nurses and help give them new outlooks on life, BYU works closely with the Utah State Departments of Welfare and Vocational Rehabilitation. First year courses are preferably taken on the BYU campus but also are available through the BYU Salt Center for Conwhich directs Education, tinuing the Tooele group. e Save Empty Cartons THE NLF.D for nurses grows in relation to the expansion of imputation, and many hospitals throughout the country are phav-in- g mil their nurses training programs. For these reasons BYU is constantly enlarging its program. The TtMH'le course is an example. Another innovation in the broadening BYU program is an class in which a iutriKluctory candidate may learn prosNctive what nursing is all almut. In the class, the girls will tour the hospital from the operating room to the kitchen and laundry. They ll see how the nurses work and what they do. THE CLASS will le held twice weekly for five weeks, and is offered in ('(injunction with classes or can lie taken separately enrolling in nursing. lliree general education classes will lie offered lieginning January 6, 1909, in psychology, English, and religion. Any Tooele resident who is interested in participating in these courses is welcome to enroll. e . . . Cream O Weber Will Aid THS Band Travel Fund causes. A Father Dies Associate Degree in Nursing Available at T.V. Hospital LIFE LONG resident of Mr. Ed Bowen local manager times which will lie worth a Mr. Bolindcr was contribution of ten cents or more. Imm May 7, 1891 to John Lars for Cream O Welier has announThe campaign which liegins and Charlotta Johnson Bolindcr and was married to Beulah Bates ced a special promotion by the Friday will also feature marchconcerts by the band under January 15, 1936 in Farmington, Dairy which will provide funds ing the direction of Roy Ferrin. Their Utah. to aid the Tooele High School first performance will be on the. ...He had iieen employed for Hand in making the Marching' parking lot of Allens Foodtown many years at Combined Metals trip to (Washington, D.C. for on Saturday Decemlier 28. They Reduction Company at Bauer as the Nixon Inaugural. will perform again on January i blacksmith and had also workTHE COMPANY will place 4th at Alliertsons Food Center. ed for President J. Reulien Clark A large specially printed bus White Buffalo on each milk carranching at Crantsville. lie used to collect the will for redeemed will be which of ton World a He was veteran War I and was a member of the a two, five or ten cent contribuempty cartons. The bus with a tion to the bands travel fund. public address system will be American Legion. SURVIVING are his widow Special dairy foods will lie added driven through town or parked of Crantsville; three daughters to the promotion at different at various places in the business and two sons, Darrel, of Erda; John L., and Mrs. Ronald (Gloria) Hall, Crantsville; Mrs. Leon (Donna) Crim, Kingman, Ariz.. and Mrs. Richard (June) Nayloi Crantsville, district. Persons with the cartons need only deposit them in the bus. Cream O' Welier Dairy will then redeem the cartons for the total amount shown on the stickers. A DANCE Band made up of 18 inemliers of the THS Band will also perform during the promotion which will continue through the eleventh of January. Sxikesmen for the Cream O Welier Com pany expressed their pleasure in noting the way the community responds to the band and lends support to the ' organization. Willard, Utah. Also surviving are elevei grandchildren; three sisters and two brothers, Mrs. Charles (Annie) Worthington, Mrs. Ellen England, and William Bolinder, all of Crantsville; Mrs. Ivan (Tes-sie- ) Turpin, Murray, Utah and Francis Bolinder, Tooele. Funeral services will be held Saturday 2 p.m. in the Grants-vill- e Stake Center. FRIENDS MAY call at the Tate Mortuary, Friday 7 to 9 p.m. and at the home of a daughter, Stake. In addition do his son Em- 265 Willow Street, on Saturday mett of Tooele he is survived by from noon until funeral time. Burial will be in the Grants-vill- e three grandchildren and one cemetery. grandchild. great life-tim- I" ' J ', The best toyland scene was judged to be that at the home of Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Fait, of 280 Griffith Avenue. Fed . Help Available For Home Loans to Tooele Families Salt Lake, Tooele, aijd Davis rural famiCounties lies have a greater chance now than ever before to become homeowners as a result of the new federal interest supplement plan on home loans, according to Carl G. Bown, representing the Farmers Home Administration. BOWN SAID the Housing and Urban Development Act of 1968 makes it possible for the federal government to apply an interest supplement payment to rural housing loans made to rural families that will lower the cost of buying a house. The interest supplement plan on rural housing loans will be administered through the Farmers Home Administration, the U. S. Department of Agricultures credit agency. Under the interest supplement plan Bown said that families earning as little as $3,000 annually could possibly qualify for as much as an $8,000 loan to buy a site and construct a house. THE NEW plan allows for interest supplements to reduce the payment of interest on housing loans to as low as one percent. This new plan, Bown said will be extremely helpful in removing the substandard housing in Salt Lake, Tooele, and Davis Counties. The actual supplement a family receives will depend on the owners .income and number of people in the household. A MINIMUM requirement is that a borrower who does not low-inco- low-inco- have enough to pay his loan installment in full will pay at least the amount that would be due if the interest rate were one per cent. For example, a family witH five children and an annual gross income of $3,000 would receive an interest supplement of $222 a year on an $8,000 rural housing loan. The family would receive as an interest supplement the difference between their annual scheduled note, $508 (principal and interest), and their annual installment if it were figured at one per cent, $286. IN THIS example, the familys monthly payments of principal and interest on an $8,000 loan amortized over 33 ' years would be approximately $24. , Bown said Farmers Home Administration would review interest supplement agreements every two years with borrowers. If necessary, supplements will be adjusted at renewal time, based on the borrowers income and family size, i LOANS FOR the purchase of building sites for farm-labhousing. Housing and training facilities for rural job trainees and their families. Expanded housing credit for lower income city people who work in rural areas. . FARMERS Home Administration rural housing loans are made to applicants who are unable to obtain the required credit from other sources. Further information on the interest supplement plan can be obtained at the Salt Lake, Tooele, and Davis Counties Office ol the Farmers Home Administration in the Post Office Building, Room 413, 4th South and Main, Salt Lake City. Early Deadlines For Next Weeks Paper Due to. the jew Years holiAnother feature of the new day, deadlines for next weeks act is an interest supplement on have been advanced. loans to develop nonprofit rental papers The Bulletin will be publishand cooperative housing for ed on Monday, December 30. people. Deadline for advertising is SaturLOWER payments by the day noon. News copy should be sponsor of the housing project in by 6 p.m. as a result of the interest suppleThe will be pubment are to be translated into lished asTranscript usual on Thursday but lower rents for the tenants. should be in by TuesOther major provisions of the advertising day noon. All news copy should new housing measure include: be in by 3 p.m. p Financial support for housing projects. low-inco- self-hel- No Health Hazard Moss Confers On Nuclear Tests Senator Frank E. Moss announced today after a conference in his office with officials of the Atomic Energy Commission that he was assured 'that there was no release of radiation in the atmosphere from the nuclear test explosion at the Paiute Mesa test site in Nevada recently. RICHARD Hamburger, AEC Assistant Director of Peaceful Nuclear Explosives told the Senator that the shot, which had a high national priority created no health hazards whatsoever. We held the shot up a day as a further precaution because of the wind pattern, in case there might have been any venting of radio active material. But all radiation stayed underground as planned, he stated. It was made clear furthermore by the officials that there was no measurement of radiation in underground water and no problems arose from the shot which involved radioactive substance. THE SENATOR also inquired about the December 8 blast and the report that the Public Health National Center for Service Radiological Health had reported higher levels of airborne iadio- activity. The AEC officials assured the Senator that these radioactive levels subsided quickly, and were at least a thousand times lower than the level that might be allowable for the public on a continuous basis. We make tremendous efforts to protect the health and safety of the people, Mr. Hamburger There are elaborate stated. safety features in each test. HE EXPLAINED that the December 8 test was not a device est, but a crater test, and was closer to the surface than the shot today. He said the crater test released some radioactivity, as expected, but that at no time did it pose a health hazard. Practically all the radioactive material released was tungsten 187 which has a rapid rate of decay and does not collect or remain in any part of the body. Not only were the levels far below any danger point, but the substance had declined to normal background radiation in a very short period, he said. There were no bad effects and no threat from the crater test, Mr. Hamburger stated. IS TAD Employee Wins 2nd Place In Essay Contest Tooele Army Depot employees have been winners in many fields, gratulations for a job exceedingly well done. At a special ceremony in the Management Engineering Division Office, Col. ONeal added his congratulations to Allred for earning the second place spot in the contest. Witnessing the ceremony were Orville Mooberry, Depot Comptroller; Percy Smith, Administrative Assistant to the Comptroller, and members of the Management Engineering Divi- and now we add Claytor W. Allred, Chief of the Management Engineering Division, who has earned. the distinction of winning second place in an essay contest conducted by the Fund for the Advancement of Management in the Armed Forces. Allred submitted an essay A Case for Combinatitled: tion to the organization as his sion. AMONG THE ten winners entry in the contest. of the nation-wid- e d contest were A LETTER received by from Col. Harry R. Williams, four civilians, 5 commissioned President of the Fund for Advanc- officers and one enlisted man. The e winner was awarded ed Management, inclosed a check and the following congratulatory $200; second place, $150; and third place, $75, and 25 was premessage: You can be justly proud of sented to each of seven other entrants. this unique distinction, particuThe first three prizes were of comthe view in intense larly all won by civilians in the govpetition for the awards. The independent panel of judges were ernment management field. Miliunanimous in their praise of your tary men who won $25 in the most outstanding contribution of contest included ranks ranging new thoughts in the field of from an SP4 rating to that of management. . . . Again, con lieutenant colonel. All-re- first-plac- Slake Center Open House Slated An open house has been planned for the Tooele Stake Center, 253 South Second East, to be held on Saturday, December 28th. The program will feature a complete tour of the building with an explanation of its many uses. Members of the 43rd Quorum of Seventies will conduct the tours and be available to ans- wer questions about the Center or the beliefs and practices of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-da- y Saints. There will also be brief presentations of religious music from choral groups in the stake and short explanations of Mormon doctrines. All residents of Tooele County are invited to attend the open house. Four complete tours will be given with the first one starting at 2.00 p.m. The others will start at 3:30, 5.00 and 6:30 p.m. Pot Luck: Lunch with a hipJoseph Salak pie. |