OCR Text |
Show Viennas Famous Choir Boys To Be Heard In Sail Lake The Tooele Transcript, Fri., February 7, 19C9 NOTilC m Duett ELECTION OFFICIALS POLLING PLACE Sym-(sIiim- oM-rett- It was a Date With Dad last Monduy night for the Cater Ward Primary IJImma girls. The cultural hall reflected the sounds of the circus. Clever eluwn dolls stood in the center of each table. Balloons and pentent decorations, games and refreshments carried out the circus theme. There to enjoy the fun pictured in back row are: Martha Fitwaler with borrowed father Dean Bird; Caro! and Jake Watkins; Deniece and Howard Chadwick; Karen Duwyenie and borrowed dad Dase Bush; Ixrrrie Bush with brother Danny Bush; Jill and Wendell Kirk; Nyla and LaVar Sagers; Erlene and Bill Harding, seated: Carina Green with Bishop Floyd Maxwell; Gloria and Calvin Green; Cindy Harding with Orson Johnson. Responsible for the festive affair was first counselor Christine Johnson and teacher of all the girls laiis Harding. Also invited to enjoy the meal of salads barbecued hamburgers and nut sundies were Stake visitor Mrs. LaRue Soelherg and her daughter Jean of Granlssille. Prizes were awarded to Carol Dewyenie and Dan Bush for games won. St. Jolin-Clov- News Anna Mae Erickson by Verla McFarland Beverly White Shirley Wright Naoma Beck The polls shall lie open lietween the house of 7:00 oclock a.m. and 8:00 oclock p.m. There is to lie no special registration of voters for such election and the official register last made or revised shall constitute the register for such election, except that the County Clerk of Tooele County will register at his office during regular office hours, except Saturdays, Sundays and Holidays, and except during the ten-daperiod immediately preceding the Imnd election, any on the day of election will lie qualified elector and who person will register such persons as provided by law. The County Clerk will make available or will cause the registration agents to make y available at each of the polling place(s) a registration list or copy thereof listing all registered electors entitled to use such voting places. Notice is further given that on Monday, the 3rd day of March, 1969, that living within ten clays after said election, the City Council will meet at its regular meeting place in Tooele City, I'tah, at 7:00 o'clock a.m. and canvass the returns and declare the results oT said election. Given by order of the City Council of Tooele City, Utah, this 13th clay of January, 1969. FRANK II. BOWMAN aliove-descrili- ATTEND MISSIONARY TESTIMONIAL Traveling to Orein last Sunday to attend a testimony meeting for Elder Douglas K. Arthur, son of Mr. and Mrs. Keith Arthur were Mr. and Mrs. Milton Stookey, Joan Stookey, Mrs. Joseph Russell, of Clover; Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Arthur, and Mr. and Mrs. Vaughn Arthur, of St. John and other relatives of Salt Lake. Elder Arthur will lalmr in Korea He will enter the mission home February 8 and leave by ATTEST. Mrs. Lucille Strausbaugh City Recorder (SEAL) ATTENDS DINNER PARTY Very close friends of Mrs. Leona Shelton honored her with a birthday dinner held at the Hillcrest dining room. A lovely Kentch, NOTICE TO WATER USERS The following application has been filed with the State Engineer to change water in Tooele County, State of Utah, throughout the entire year unless otherwise designated. Locations in IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF TOOELE COUNTY PROBATE DIVISION STATE OF UTAH (16-538- ), n. 75-9-- 5, in Sec. 16, T6S, R7W. (Date of first ubl. Jan. 31, 1969 Date of last publ. Feb. 21, 1969) 16-in- AMERICA This country was not built by men who relied on somebody else to take care of them. It was built by men who relied on themselves, who dared to shape their own lives, who had enough courage to blaze new trails enough confidence in themselves to take the necessary risks. J Ollie 17, 0 here-intofo- Protests resisting the granting of this application with reasons therefor must be filed in duplicate with the State Engineer, 442 State Capitol, Salt Lake City, Utah 84114, on or before March 16, 1969. Hubert C. Lambert Ulti-prote- in world. Sec. Hereafter, the 4.71 sec.-f- t. of water is to be diverted from .well 200-50a ft. deep at a point N. 670 ft. VV. 900 ft. from SE Cor., Sec. 17, T6S, R7W, and used for the same purposes and in the same place as described. ROY S. BARTON FOOD FOR THOUGHT: EDIBLE PETROLEUM When the' motorist of the future pulls into a service station and says, Fill 'er up! he may be ordering a meal instead of gasoline. According to the magazine Petroleum Today oil scientists have developed an edible synthetic protein derived from petroleum. The substance is being tested as a food supplement for animals. will supplement human diets as well, particularly in underdeveloped areas of the EHSVV14 Mrs. Millie Bryan, Mrs. Ouida Blanthom and Mrs. Eva Creen. A delicious fried chicken dinner was enjoyed by all afterwhich the guest of honor cut a beautiful cake, decorated n colors of yellow and unwrap- ped several nice gifts. Number of new housing starts in Utah in 1969 will show a sizable increase despite rising construction costs, managers of the states insured savings and loan associations predict. They also expect an increase in sales of mobile homes and summer homes. Most managers believe interest rates on mortgage loans will remain at their present levels or rise slightly during the year. This outlook is shown in the results of a survey by the Utah Savings and Loan League released Friday by G. Blair Bradshaw, league president. NINE OF the 15 association managers anticipate new housing starts in the state in 1969 will be up from one to ten percent over 1968s. Four managers look for a gain of between 10 and 20 per cent, and two predict the housing starts will be about the same as in 1968. Gene Donovan, president of State, Engineer Prudential Federal Savings and (Published in Tooele Transcript, Loan Association, with a branch Tooele, Utah, on Jan. 31, Feb. in Tooele, expects a one to ten 7, 14, 1969) cent increase in housing starts. The individual demand for The publication Oil Facts reis definitely with us and housing of this in that course the ports be will satisfied to some exit travel, drivers used 81 billion of certain unfatent regardless of fuel motor and gallons paid vorable factors at present, commore than $8.5 billion in special state and federal taxes on mented D. F. Stoker, executive the fuel. State gasoline taxes vice president of Zions Savings and Loan Association. average 6.8 cents a gallon; the SIX OF the managers believe federal tax is 4 cents a gallon. that construction costs in Utah will rise between 10 and 20 per cent in 1969. The other nine Roofing We fix all types of leaks. Complete roof on new homes and recovers. Free Call or estimates 882-305- 882-451- 3 5 Ik-c- e Utah Box Office Symphony and at ZCMI Down- ) instrumentals and demonstrating the various types of music. town ami Cottonwood. SHOWER Clover friends gathered together at Mrs. Judy Barnett's home and showered Mrs. Mema -"-Kirk with many Iwautiful gifts to le used for a new arrival the Kirk family is expecting. Helping with the partv was Miss Cathv Bamett and Jack and Jill Kirk. Catch BABY Thirty-tw- o NFL Football Sm oB tha action oa CBS-T- V aw for a hotter Sunday! deal on your car, homo or lift insurance any day! So Visiting at the Calvin Hutchins home was Mrs. Ethel Corradini, of Colorado, Mrs. Sue Walker and new baby of Sandy, Utah. Mrs. Estella Russell went back with Mrs. Corradini on her return trip to Crand Junction, Colorado and stay there for w-i- New Officers elected in January for the Tooele Carden Club: Alex Cillespie, conservation chairman, also secretary of the Utah State Association; Wilbur M. House, secretary and treasurer; Mrs. N. F. Burger, publicity; Mrs. E. J. Grecnwalt, president, all of Tooele; and Mrs. Calvin Creen, historian and program chairman, of Clover. Not pictured, vice president, Mrs. Lucy Johnson. Monday, February 3 the club held a meeting at the home of Mrs. Creen-wai- t where Mr. Cillespie gave a report on the state meeting he attended and talked on a variety of new flowers. Next garden club meeting will be the second Monday night in foresee tween 5 and a rise of be- per cent. Mobile home sales in our area were up 10 per cent in 1968 over 1967's, said Howard C. Bradshaw, executive vice president, American Savings and Loan 10 ever, a strike in 1968 which hampered sales. With the high cost of lumber and a slower moving housing industry, I predict mobile home sales will increase approximately 25 per cent in 1969. All but one of the managers foresee a gain in summer home construction in the state this year, principally because of demand and also because of the LEONARD HANSEN Utsvixnci 49 S. 1st East 882-300- 5 FARM INSURANCE COMPANIES Illinois Horn OH cm: Bloom-ngto- STATE March. a few weeks. FAITH An church with a shrivelled-u- p and watered-dow- n gospel has little future in the kind of world we face today. What is needed is not more words, but tfle Word; not more philosophy, but faith that grasps spiritual verities and lays hold of eternal reality. -iy. T. Purkiser, The Death of the Church, Herald of Holiness Paulos Chrysler Dodge says Something coming, Utah To Start More New Homes In 1969 managers A- -l rt (32S-5626- SLB&M. In the Matter of the Estate of 571I Hatch Land Deand Livestock Company, 351 S. DORA R. BUSHNELL, ceased. State, Salt Lake City, Utah, proposes to change the point of diCreditors will present claims version of 4.71 sec.-f- t. of water with vouchers to Venice B. Stott, as evidenced by App. 37524-a- . 1002 Montgomery Street, Salt The water was to have been diLake City, Utah, on or before the verted from a 16-iwell 200-50- 0 30th day of April, 1969. ft. deep at a point N. 2610 ft. Claims must be presented in E. 648 ft. from SW cor.. Sec. accordance with the provisions 16, T6S, R7VV, and used from of Utah Code Annotated, Apr. 1 to Nov. 1 for supplemental 1953, and with proper verificairrigation of 840 acs., but limited to the sole supply of 323 acs. tion as required therein. "v' hful in Vicuna to xiug ut religious wonderful. piettv or not, this was singing ol the services at the llofnmsikkaH'Ile ami ut St. Stephen's Cathedral, highest order. PART III will include the us well us to appear in perforFairo-iea- ii mance requiring cliihlien ut the (Hogiam with a variety of folk songs, im hiding Gypsy Vienna State Ojiera. Other units Life and Beautiful Mower by travel around the world, and each RoU'rt Schumann. Chatter Box Ikiv is given the oportiiiiity to Polka by Joseph Strauss; ami visit as many countries as posTownsmen from Vienna by Call sible. Since Ikiv s' voices change, eadi choir that has upHaared here Zieluer, among others. One of the outstanding musi- lias lieen completely different. cal attractions of one of the In the liuMriul (last such Ikiv world's most musical cities the as Josef llavdn and Frail Scliu-U-Imivs of the historic Seminary sang with the grmip. Si limit have THE ONE appearance in a prominent feature in Vienna since I I9H, Salt laike City will lie their only when the llapshorg Faupcror performance in the Interinountain will lie a real opporMaximilian established the grmip West, It for the Austrian Court's private tunity to hear the iK'guiliug freshness, charm and artistry of religious scrviirs Each year fewer than 100 Imivs, only ten per- the Vienna Choir Roys who have cent of the tiumlier of applicants, won multitudes of admirers and are admitted to the institution. have liecoine the most lieloved admission to one of the choir ever to tour America. Sumchoirs, students receive two years marized The Philadelphia Eveof training. Each Ikiv is given an ning Bulletin: The upjieul of academic education in addition the Vienna Iwy is instantly felt. to his musical one. They are thoroughly professional A rotating system always ill their music, excellently trainleaves one complete choir unit ed ami disciplined with a keen sense of the appropriate. The audience had a good time. Tickets are on sale at the IN HOSPITAL Mr. Faye Ahlstroin is in the Veterans Administration Hospital. He has been receiving therapy air February 13 to spend two treatment since January 24 for months at the College of Hawaii arthritis. He expects to lie able learning a language for this par- to Send the weekends at home soon. ticular mission. setting of jonquils and yellow candles surrounded with fem was a welcoming to Mrs. Mildred Potter, Miss Melba Speirs, Mrs. Cora Mielke, Mrs. Dorothy Gillespie, Mrs. Martha Alverson, Mrs. Vera Young, Mrs. Janice Mayor a ' St. John MIA held a ward music hour with the young people participating in songs and er Clara Marritt Leona McKrndrick Tooele County Courthouse THE CHOIR, made up of Ik-- ween the ages of eight and fourteen, has won fame around the woild. S. I hunk, the noted impresario, has brought them to North America on 2) tours previous to the forthcoming one. Their Salt like apKwrancc is sponsored by the Utah as a public service. Ilie program will consist of three parts sacred music, a cosand folk songs. tumed Part I will include works of Biukhard and Haydn, including excerjits from St. Ieorolds Mass. Part II will lie a rollicking costumed short version of the oM-rSignor Bnischino by Rossini. Said the New York Times: "The F.niK-ro- r Maximilian would have flipped to see what went on in Tuwn Hall Friday night . . . lniM-ria- l disdain or no, it was 22 I my PROPOSITION NO. 2 Shall tha negotiable coupon General (Mitigation Ronds of Tooele City, I'tah, in the sum of toO.tXNMX) (tearing interest at a rate not to exceed five per cent (5 percent) per annum and due and payable in not to exceed five (5 years from the date of said I muds lie issued and sold for the purpose of defraying part of the cost of constructing maintainance shops in said City? Said election will lie held at the following (Milling placets) and the persons indicated as follows will act as election officials: NOTICE TO CREDITORS PROBATE NO. 3137 capi-ta- l, Vienna 20 at H.30 p.m, TO ALL (.RAUFIFD ELECTORS OF TOOKLE CITV, tTAII: mitlir lh.it mi (hr iltli day of Fvhniary, an r led inn will I held in Tooele City, I'tal at the platen net out Itelow for the purpose of submitting to mu li qualified electors of taid City an dull have paid a proterty tan therein during the year pretvdmg naid election the following propositions: PROPOSITION NO. Shall the negotiable cimimhi (General Obligation Bonds of Tooele City, Tooele County, Utah. in the sum of lieariug interest at the rate not to exceed 5 per cent per annum and due and payable in not to exceed fifteen years from date of said bonds le issued and sold for the purMse of defraying part of the cost of constructing and equipping a Library in said City. DISTRICTS woild famous Choir Boys will Ik heard in concert here at Highland High Auditorium on Thursday, February Flection .Notice VOTING from the Austrian the m provision in the Federal Housing Act of 1968 permitting savings and loans to make loans for these structures under the home improvement loan program. WITH INCOMES rising and our natural areas of recreation in Utah, I anticipate a larger volume of summer home building this year, commented M. L. Dye, president, First Federal Savings and Loan Association. The new powers for lending can easily be adapted for this type of loan. Six of the 15 managers believe interest rates for mortgage loans will remain at their present levels in 1969. Four predict a slight increase, and three expect a moderate increase. Two of the managers think that interest rates will decrease slightly during the year. Your next car: A brand-ne- Monday Holidays In Pennsylvania, uniform Monday holidays have been set by state law for Washingtons Birthday, Memorial Day, Columbus Day and Veterans Day. The becomes effective enactment January 1, 1971. The Pennsylvania legislatures act is in step with a federal law passed last year by Congress. Earlier, Massachusetts and Hawaii passed their own Monday holiday laws, although they differ from the federal model followed by Pennsylvania. Support for the federal law was built by the Chamber of Commerce of the United States, speaking for an overwhelming majority of American businessand their employees men throughout the country. The Pennsylvania State Chamber of Commerce was solidly behind the approved by that proposal states legislature. FATHERHOOD The best gift a father can give to bis son is the gift of his time. For material himself things mean little, if there is not someone to share them with. C. Neil Strait I w 1969 Chrysler is priced just a few dollars a month more than the most popular smaller cars, comparably equipped. Chrysler Newport 2Door Hardtop CIOAA ? You can move up to Chrysler for a lot less than you think. For just a few dollars a month more, your Chrysler dealer can make the 1969 Chrysler Newport your next car. Newport gives you the luxury and comfort a popular-price- d car cant provide. That few dollars a month can make the difference. See your ' dealer and test price the great new Chrysler today. Start a Chrysler coming your way. AUTHORIZED DEALERS CHRYSLER M0TDR8 CORPORATION PAULOS CHRYSLER DODGE 67 E. VINE |