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Show The Tooele Transcript, Fri., February 22, 1974 ft U h " r' ,w ' - J .CCv . i ?i V - V V r" v. .$ N ;s V" ' ml' x.o- Kennrn lli received the coveted Eagle Award at a Scmit Court of Honor held February S at the Tooele Stake (enter, lie it pictured here with hi parent Mr. and Mr. Frederick G. 1 1 is, 164 Russell As emir. I erra cor Scores 111 Meng received hi Eagle Scout Award recently at the Tooele Fourteenth Mard. Here he receive congratulation from hi aistant wont leader Rill Edward (at right). laioking on approvingly are, from left, Mearl Brough, laiMar' grandmother, hi mother Ida Mae, and hi father Charlct Meng. SitppI vinx Subdivision Servlets Oulv tliiee out of 20 maor cilities, two were owned liv Salt recreation siiIkIivisioiis in Utah I -- ike Citvhased Terracor. a will have aile'iiate valer. sewcoiiiimiuilv develoM'r with five age disposal ami ro.nl l.uilities, planned recreation couiiniiiulies it was reported nvcntlv lv the in four states. Salt Uike Trilmne. the state's The two Terracor communilargest ami most piestigiuus da ilv ties ju I t, ih are Staiisliurv I'aik. r 10 tildes north of Tooele, and liewspaH-OF THE three siilihvisioiis Kloniniugtnn. in evtreine southwhich have det lared their in- western I'tah three miles from tent to provide all piiliiarv fa St. Ocorge. Terracor cominuiiitie will piovide culinary water, d sewage svstem and all iitditicv as well as paved roads, it was reputed bv The Trilmne. BV (OSTIUM. The Tri- bune noted. "Hie niaorit lack most, if not all. of these ameni- ties. For example. If of the 20 are Mrs' suIkIi visions, without Roth under-groun- "11 ? disposal fa llhtli-v.-" iiialilv home site wliivli provide all necessary scrv ices for scr ing a home." noted Terracor ic- The analvsis of the 20 sub- divisiiHis. each larger than 3000 acre, was comlmted liv a In- bune re j n ter. who studied copies of real estate enntnet. tide repots, sale ami trust agrccoieiit. correspimleiK e ami prop-itdescription repots filed with K'' ' ' 1 uh during 11. 1 ,.l. Terracor is commit led to the concent of developing Ingh- - j1 ,4T requirement for memliership. In addition to Bloomington ami Stansbiirv Iark in is the develop-- A I'tah. piesideut and chairman of the Terracor of 3 Ixurd Ian SI Ciimming other planned communities, inIIE ADDII) that Tenacor cluding- The miles Finery, to Ik one of the mils southeast of Denver. Colo. The is two Utah laud developers which Woods of Red Cedar I -- ike. Wise., of the Smencaii are iiiemlo-rappioximatelv 100 miles northI -- md l)eveloHTs Sssn., the naeast of Mmocapilis- - St. Iaul tional trade asvx-i.i- inn for the ami Haile Creek, three miles laud industry. south of Soda development Springs. Idaho. SI.DV actively seeks to upgrade imlustr standards and has rigid ,,l,,,,iiuminnmiui UlMMIMIlHtl .S r 2-- s t President and Mrs. Howard Clegg accepted the Eagle Award in behalf of their von Boh at the Court of Honor held at the Stake Center February 5. Boh it enrolled at Cal Poly at Pamona. California and I also in charge of a calf project owned by his father. Heading Marathon Knds After 11 Hours 15 Minutes One hundred and four East Elementary' students took art in a unique reading marathon' Tuesday, and when the parents and teachers called a halt, six youngsters were declared the winners, after having read continuously for M hours and 45 minutes. Champion readers were Cloria Russo and Jill Schofield, old, Beverly Klein, II, and Ramona Phillips, Cary Reunion old. and Rnice Lee, The marathon was the idea of teacher Helen Mortenson and the 104 volunteer students lie- gan to read at 8.00 a.m. The rules were simple. Each reader 12-ea- BOOT SALE New Book By DONT MISS THIS Zf HENKE STAR SKI BOOTS Deluxe adult buckle boots A questions of the teachers to demonstrate that they understood what they were reading. They were given 15 minutes for lunch had had a 10 minute break every two hours. Other than that they read constantly. 10:45 p.m., nearly 15 after they started, the not because children stopped they wanted to, but liecause the teachers and parents ran out of steam. At hours Juanita Brooks Details Settlement Of Dixie CHANCE TO SAVE! leather lining was to bring his or her own Imoks any kind, religious, fiction, spirts or magaines they were required to read continuously, and lie able to answer The struggles of Utahs early ning down his cheeks.1' He felt pioneers to tame a harsh envir- - that he had got the group into onment were often on a heroic this difficulty and was afraid scale. Nowhere was the task the men would complain or as more demanding than in the argue among themselves southern portion of the state to whose horse could lie shot. known as Dixie. The well known Years later, when Dudley retold author and historian Juanita this story, he said no meat ever Brooks tells this story of pioneer tasted so good. bAiVK KUHBLKS Rating their own egos. Most na and tnumph .n her newest 0EN INTO this bio- - Bank robbers commonly run bank robliers see themselves as On the Ragged book Edge: graphy of an important pioneer through money they steal with- - failures. They will say for Life and Times of Dudley are many amusing and heart- - in a h day or two. They laviih stance tha, been Leavitt. warming stories which Mrs. gjft$ on strangers, buy friends ex- - nothing for 30 years. Thirty of an Brooks recounts with her special A thorough revision pensive cars, give $20 bills to times 365 davs Thats a lot of old favorite, this delightful book skill. The reaction of Dudleys skid-robums. The robbers try time Yet in a five minute rob- chronicles the aspirations, frus- - three families when he returns to the berv they can become a some- trations, ingenuity, disappoint- - from a trip for supplies with a experience of their youth, pre-- . body they think David G ments, and eventual victory of new Indian wife and the ingeni- - sumablv generating tremendous Hubbard, the first generation of settlers ous methods adopted to avoid gratitude to themselves and in- - Observer, in Utahs Dixie. The focal point arrest during the federal poly- n a robust, charming, gamy raids add to the rich is a man but the ric of this superb story, inspiring man The Utah State Historical setting is panoramic and the theme is timeless. Society published On the Rag- IMMIGRATING from Canada ged Edge. The new book is d to Illinois in 1837, the Leavitts available at many local the Mormons there and stores or from the Society, 603 lived through the harrowing East South Temple, Salt Lake days following the assassination City, Utah 84102. The retail of Joseph Smith and the immi- - price is $5.00, plus 25 cents postage for mail orders. gration west. Dudley Leavitt settled first in Tooele where he and Jacob CHILDHOOD Hamblin became close friends. There are comfortable limits Then in 1855 the two men, in jn jfe and childhood is a time company with others, headed 0f learnjng those comfortable i. south for the Santa Clara where limits that the street is not years of hardship and adventure a paCe to play if cars are whiz-caUvj, both Hamblin and Dudley zjng by, that people are not to Leavitt into heroic roles. be hit and that something with- After six years of building jn eacj, of us can help us stop and planting in Santa Clara, when were planning something and came literally harmful. Part of teaching a child heavy rains washed the settlement away. j0 fee worthwhile comes by Tree by tree their largest or- helping him or her gain limits, chard went, each one bending Fred Rogers (Mlster Rogers) down slowly as if bowing to the Intellectual Digest will of the river. . . somewhere away downstream buried in mud AUTOMOBILES were the grist mill, the molasses want to know why driving mill, and the homemade cotton seems to get worse and worse? Its those other cars on the gin. SANTA CLARA was rebuilt, road. The 100,000,000 mark was but it doesnt and Dudley Leavitt went on to passed last year help found other towns - Hebron, include 23,200,000 trucks and Read, Many Easy Gunlock, Bunkerville, and Mes- - buses also in there fighting for on How Plan . . quite among them. While taming road space. Yes, traffic is worse the desert, Dudley made homes jn some places than others. Thats BRIDAL SHOWER for his five wives and their because 52.2 per cent of the families, ran the mail on contract cars are in 20 per cent of the BABY SHOWER to Kingman, Arizona, and work- - states: California, Texas, New ed as a missionary among the York, Pennsylvania, Ohio, PARTY nois, Michigan, Florida, New From cover to cover, its packed with FUN Returning from the Hopi In- - jersey and North Carolina. The dians one winter, Dudley and future? At present rates of and GAMES and with Tips For Your the other missionaries camped gr0wth, the car count will be in deep snow at Pipe Springs, nearing 150,000,000 by 1984. Their horses were exhausted R you think that wont raise and supplies depleted. Jacob even more havoc with traffic Hamblin saw no way for them control, fuel needs, service, etc., to survive except by killing just waR Changing Times 29 North Main someones horse for food. Without a word, Dudley Phone 882-028- 7 outside a cemetery: pulled the saddle from his mare Sign Cash or Convenient Charge! 1 and motioned for his companion Owing to employment difficul-t- o shoot it. Jacob turned and ties, grave digging will be done Bill Bickmore Ted Czakowski walked into the tent, tears run- - bv a skeleton staff. in-T- foam padding BHP MOLDED PLASTIC BOOTS - KIDS SKI BOOTS Rugged design, with buckle closure Bright orange or yellow with foam padding fab-eve- THE UNIQUE MOON BOOT The latest thing to hit the slopes One sixe fits all; your choice of colors book-joine- i Drastic reductions on all our skis! SS st 450 GLASS SKIS Designed for the hot action skier it it A Sunset exclusive combi ski Reduced to clear glass Planning Booklets 125.00 REG. to and Ideas RED MASTER ADULT AND KIDS SKIS great ski for the begin ner or intermodiate Hurry while the selection is still good in the length you want most. A 215 Get-togeth- 'D NORTH MAIN IN TOOELE Illustrations to a. 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