Transcript-Bulletin Tennis Tournament in photos See B2 TOOELETRANSCRIPT S  T  C BULLETIN S  TUESDAY July 30, 2019 www.TooeleOnline.com Vol. 126 No. 17 $1.00 Drug court and programs help addicts

STEVE HOWE to cope with that type of trag- STAFF WRITER edy, that type of experience,” Baxter said. “So rather than Editor’s note: This is the third deal with it emotionally or in a three-part series discussing spiritually, I just tried to numb illicit drug use in Tooele County, the feeling with drugs and criminality linked to drugs and alcohol.” treatment and recovery. While he started with mari- juana and ecstasy, Baxter said Growing up, Adam Baxter he started using opiates. The knew he didn’t want to use opiates led to heroin, which drugs. is cheaper and has the same Both of his parents were effect. active drug users and while he Baxter bounced between drank socially in high school, Utah and Arizona, where he he stayed away from the hard- was born, to try and get away er substances. from his drug use disorder. When he was 17, Baxter got He left Utah for 10 years, but his girlfriend at the time preg- remained with an active addic- nant. The pregnancy ended in tion to heroin. a miscarriage. “Anywhere you go, the drugs “So we buried our son and I really, I didn’t have the skills SEE ADDICTS PAGE A7 ®

Luke Combs entertains the crowd as Saturday night’s headliner at the Country Fan Fest held at Deseret Peak Complex. Fans pack Deseret Peak Complex to hear country music star Luke Combs

PHOTOS SUE BUTTERFIELD

MARK WATSON CORRESPONDENT Country Fan Fest started hot on Thursday night and was sizzling by the time Luke Combs performed on the main stage at 10:15 p.m. on Saturday. “Thursday night in the campground was the biggest kickoff we’ve ever had with over COURTESY OF ADAM BAXTER 6,000 people getting the party started. We Audrey Baxter, Adam Baxter and Heidi Pitt are shown at The Rally for were above 10,000 in attendance Friday Recovery event at the Utah State Capitol in February 2018. The Baxters night and Saturday night was the biggest and Pitt are leaders for the Tooele County Chapter of Young People in night in Country Fan Fest history with 12,000 Recovery Utah. people packing into Deseret Peak Complex for Luke Combs,” said festival director Bracken Hudson. Combs is soaring nationally as a top coun- try music artist. “He’s the biggest country music star we’ve seen in decades. The awards he is winning, the records he is setting have simply not been Tooele County Fair done since Johnny Cash and we were very lucky to have him here,” Hudson said. starts Thursday at Country Fan Fest was Combs’ 27th stop Salt Lake native Liz Anderson and Preston Creed of SEE FAN FEST PAGE A7 ® Deseret Peak Jagertown entertained the crowd on the main stage.

Mary Lalas TIM GILLIE Friday night, the fair fea- serves up a EDITOR tures an outdoor concert head- Gyro dinner Grab your family and head lined by country songwriter from Tooele’s down to Deseret Peak Complex and performing artist Phil Dimitris Cafe this weekend for some good Vassar. Friday night old fashioned family fun, Vassar is one of a handful of at Country advises Tooele County Fair musicians to have multiple hits Fan Fest. Board Chairman Ron Baum. as a songwriter and as an art- “Red, White and Moo is the ist, according to Baum. He has theme,” Baum said. “And we’ve 10 No. 1 hits, 15 top 10s, and got the weekend packed. There 26 top 40s. will be fun for everybody.” Friday night’s concert will The fair runs Aug. 1-3 at also feature rising local coun- Deseret Peak off of state Route try singer Carver Louis. 112. The fair officially kicks off Gates for the concert open with an opening ceremony on at 6 p.m. Tickets are $10 with Thursday at 5 p.m. general admission seating. The concert, the demolition “Punishment at the Peak” is derby, and some activities in the name of the fair’s demoli- the family fun area will require tion derby. It draws both spec- tickets, but the rest of the fair tators and participants from is free, according to Baum. across the state. This year seat- “There is no fee for parking ing has been expanded and the or entry fee at the gate,” he Merchandise Manager Tia VonWald (left) shows a t-shirt to a customer Friday night at Country Fan Fest. Brody Cottam said. SEE FAIR PAGE A3 ® (above) plays in the foam pit Friday night at Country Fan Fest.

INSIDE BULLETIN BOARD B5 CLASSIFIEDS B6 Over six Little Warriors Police search HOMETOWN B1 decades of the Camp delivers for driver OBITUARIES A6 Tooele County joy See A3 OPEN FORUM A4 Fair See A2 SPORTS B2 See B1 A2 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN TUESDAY July 30, 2019 Camp Wapiti creates fun weekend for Little Warriors

TIM GILLIE EDITOR There were 71 Little Warriors in the Oquirrh Mountains above Tooele City last weekend. The Utah Elks Association held its sixth annual Little Warriors Camp at Camp Wapiti in Settlement Canyon on Friday through Sunday. The annual camp is for children from ages six months to 18 years old who have lost a military family member, either in combat or from sui- cide related to post-traumatic stress disorder. “There’s 83 children in Utah that fit that description,” said Robert Pagnani, a Tooele Elks Lodge member and Utah Veterans Advisory Board Chairman. “We bring them up here to the mountains and they get to relax and enjoy themselves doing a variety of activities,” he said. Little Warriors and their family members were able to participate in activities like rock wall climbing, BB gun shooting, riding a zip line, air rocket launching, oil painting on canvas, and other activi- ties. Home Depot put on an arts and crafts program for them, while the Utah National Guard provided the rock climbing wall and the BB gun range. Camp Wapiti has a large lodge with a commercial kitchen where meals were prepared for the campers. Saturday’s lunch was spon- sored by Walmart Distribution FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTOS Center. Tanner Isaksen (above) on the zipline during the Little Warriors Camp at Camp Wapiti on Saturday afternoon. Kira The Little Warriors Camp Larsen (above right) gives Elroy the Elk a hug. Elroy is the Elk’s drug awareness program’s mascot. Marcus Norton ran from noon Friday to noon (below right) gently captures and balances a bubble on the back of his hand. Sunday. “Friday night the camp- she said. camp in 1990 and signed a The Utah Elks Association ers were given walkie-talkies This was 11-year-old Scotty 99-year lease for the property and its lodges raised money that were donated by Rush Arabie’s third year at the with Tooele City, Crocker and contributed labor and Limbaugh,” Pagnani said. camp after he lost his uncle. said. materials to build a dining “They talked all night to each “I like the zip line, BB guns, Wapiti is a Native American hall with an upstairs sleeping other on those walkie-talkies. horseback riding, and the term for elk. facility for staff, an infirmary, We had to make a run to rock wall,” he said. “I keep The Utah Elks worked a craft building, a campfire Walmart for more batteries.” coming back because Bob with a collective of orga- arena, a swimming pool, a One of the Little Warriors (Pagnani) makes it fun.” nizations, including the caretaker’s cabin, and 17 cab- was Sarah Norton. She lost Camp Wapiti sits on 8 acres American Cancer Society, the ins with beds for campers. her brother four years ago. of land owned by Tooele City Cystic Fibrosis Foundation, The Elks provide ongoing “It has been great to come that was a Girl Scout camp, the American Diabetes maintenance for the facilities, here and associate with other according to Eric Crocker, Association, and the National including a work party each the end of September. It will disease, according to Crocker. kids going through the same who volunteers as the director Hemophilia Foundation when spring to get the camp ready host a variety of camps this “We might have a week- thing,” she said. of Camp Wapiti for Utah Elks. it acquired the property. Each to open after snow laden year, including programs for end or two that is open,” Sarah’s mother, Crystal, Crocker works for Rio organization was looking for winters. children with cancer, children Crocker said. “And we may also enjoyed the little Tinto. He said during the a facility that met the needs Little Warriors is only one with parents or another fam- book a wedding or two on Warriors Camp. summer he spends almost of the children they serve, camp that will be held at ily member with cancer, and those weekends. But for four “It’s nice to come here each seven days a week at Camp according to the history of Camp Wapiti this summer. children with medical chal- months we’ll be busy with dif- year and remember my son,” Wapiti after work. Camp Wapiti on the Utah Elks Camp Wapiti is open from lenges such as asthma, hemo- ferent camps for youth.” The Utah Elks acquired the website. the beginning of June through philia and congenital heart [email protected]

TOOELETRANSCRIPT BULLETIN ADMINISTRATION Salt Lake City woman charged with Scott C. Dunn Publisher Joel J. Dunn Publisher Emeritus OFFICE Bruce Dunn Controller attempted child kidnapping Chris Evans Office Manager Vicki Higgins Customer Service STEVE HOWE custody problem on July 19, near milepost 56. tinuing on. Makenna Bergen Circulation Manager STAFF WRITER according to a probable cause Troopers advised the chil- The UHP trooper then trans- EDITORIAL A Salt Lake City woman is statement. The father said dren were with Brown, who ported Brown to the Tooele A Full-Color Tim Gillie Editor facing criminal charges after Brown had come over to take was in a stolen vehicle, the City Police Department so she David Bern Editor-at-Large she allegedly tried to leave his children out for ice cream, probable cause statement said. could be interviewed, accord- Activity Page Darren Vaughan Sports Editor with two children in a stolen which was supposed to last When the father picked up his ing to the probable cause state- Francie Aufdemorte Photo Editor vehicle without their father’s about 20 minutes. children, they told him and ment. Just for Kids! Steve Howe Staff Writer permission. Once the two children, both troopers Brown had taken the Brown made her initial Mark Watson Correspondent Jeannette Iva Brown, 38, younger than 13, were not oldest child’s phone and threw appearance in 3rd District Every Thursday in the ADVERTISING is charged with two counts of returned and phone calls were it from the car as soon as they Court on Monday morning Tooele Transcript-Bulletin Clayton Dunn Advertising Manager second-degree felony attempt- not answered for three hours, left the house. before Judge Matthew Bates. Keith Bird Advertising Sales ed child kidnapping and one the father contacted dispatch, According to the children, She is scheduled to return to Subscribe Today 882-0050 Dianna Bergen Advertising Sales & count of second-degree felony the statement said. While wait- Brown also said they would court for a scheduling confer- Classified Advertising Manager theft by receiving stolen prop- ing for officers to respond to need to leave and change their ence on Aug. 13 at 9 a.m. TOOELE LAYOUT & DESIGN erty. his call, Utah Highway Patrol names, the statement said. [email protected] TRANSCRIPT John Hamilton Creative Director A Tooele City police offi- troopers were called to a dis- She said they might stop in BULLETIN Liz Arellano Graphic Artist cer was called concerning a abled vehicle on Interstate 80 Wendover to sleep, before con- PRODUCTION Perry Dunn Pre-press Manager Fred Feinauer Production Manager Dan Coats Pre-press Technician

SUBSCRIPTION RATES: $1.00 per copy; $40 per year delivered Tooele man charged with DUI by carrier in Tooele, Grantsville, Erda, Stockton, Lake Point and Stansbury Park, Utah; $45 per year by mail in Tooele County, Utah; $77 per year by mail in the while driving on a denied license United States. OFFICE HOURS: STEVE HOWE observed “swerving all over the said. You’re Invited ... Monday-Friday 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m., STAFF WRITER closed Saturday and Sunday. road and throwing beer cans When police spoke with A Tooele man has been out of the car.” Bittinger, they could smell the to let us take care of your CLASSIFIEDS DEADLINE: 4:45 p.m. day prior to publication. charged with several criminal A UHP trooper observed the odor of alcohol on his breath wedding print needs PUBLIC NOTICES DEADLINE: counts after he was stopped driver crossing the centerline and a field sobriety test was 4 p.m. day prior to publication. by police for allegedly driving three times, the statement performed, which determined COMMUNITY NEWS ITEMS, erratically on state Route 36. said. The trooper stopped the he was impaired, the probable BULLETIN BOARD, ETC.: Jason Alan Bittinger, 42, vehicle as it pulled into the cause statement said. A pre- 3 p.m. day prior to publication. is charged with third-degree Holiday Oil on Bates Canyon liminary breath test came back OBITUARY DEADLINE: felony driving under the influ- Road. at .150, or three times the legal 10 a.m. day of publication. ence of alcohol, as well as mis- When the trooper made con- limit, and positive for alcohol. Publication No. (USPS 6179-60) issued twice a week at Tooele City, Utah. Periodicals demeanor counts of interlock tact with the driver, later iden- Bittinger’s license was alco- postage paid at Tooele, Utah. Published by restricted driver operating a tified as Bittinger, he observed hol restricted and suspended the Transcript Bulletin Publishing Company, vehicle without an interlock an open can of beer and could for an interlock device viola- • Invitations Inc., 58 North Main Street, Tooele City, Utah. Address all correspondence to P.O. Box 390, device, alcohol restricted smell alcohol coming from tion, the statement said. There • Save the Date Cards Tooele City, Utah 84074. driver, driving on a denied the driver, the statement said. was no interlock device in the • Envelopes POSTMASTER: license, reckless driving, and After asking the driver to step vehicle. • Foam Core Pictures, Send change of address to: open container in a vehicle on out of the vehicle, the trooper During his initial court PO Box 390 Any Size Tooele, Utah 84074-0390 the highway. saw a half-empty case of beer appearance on Monday, 435-882-0050 Fax 435-882-6123 Tooele County Dispatch on the passenger floor and Bittinger was ordered $5,000 email: [email protected] was contacted on a report of three open beer cans, includ- bail and appointed counsel. He or visit our website extension at an intoxicated driver head- ing one in the driver’s seat. is scheduled to return to 3rd www.tooeletranscript.com ing southbound on SR-36 in A witness spoke with police District Court on Aug. 13 at 9 Entire contents ©2019 Transcript Bulletin Lake Point on July 22 at 1:27 and told them the driver nearly a.m. for a scheduling confer- Publishing Company, Inc. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may p.m., according to a probable hit several people and “he ence before Judge Matthew be reproduced in any form without the cause statement. The driver thought the guy was going to Bates. written consent of the editor or publisher. of a maroon Isuzu Rodeo was kill someone,” the statement [email protected] 435.882.0050 • 58 N Main • Tooele TUESDAY July 30, 2019 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN A3 Man flees police, strikes power pole

STEVE HOWE got into a red pickup truck and STAFF WRITER fled to the north. Tooele City police were dis- Tooele City police, who patched to a residence in the believe they know the suspect’s area of 160 N. 200 West on a identity, followed him to a resi- report of suspicious activity at dence on McKellar Street. 10:50 a.m. Residences in the McKellar When police arrived on the Street area were evacuated as scene, the suspect fled south SWAT was called to the scene on 200 West. The suspect around 12:40 p.m. eventually crashed at the inter- This story will be updated section of 200 West and 400 online as details become avail- South striking a power pole. able. He then abandoned his car and showe@tooeletranscript

FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO A suspect fled Tooele City police, crashed into a power pole at the intersection of 200 West and 400 South and continued to flee on Tuesday morning.

CLERK’S CORNER On Election Day you have great power in your hands to vote

ll registered voters in tions, dates and times of early very important. Local lead- munity and determine what those decisions. Hopefully, Tooele City, and within voting; and polling locations ers determine your tax rate, the side yard is on your neigh- whoever gets your vote, will the Stansbury Service Marilyn Gillette for Election Day if you did not whether it’s sales tax or bor’s new home. The deci- have the same values you do, A GUEST COLUMNIST Agency boundaries, should receive your ballot in the mail. property tax. They determine sions made by local leaders have the same goals for your have received their ballot in If you have not registered your water rates, and funds have more influence on your community as you do, and the mail by now. yet, you may do so on-line or to support local public safety day-to-day living than federal have a love for the community If you have not, please call in person in the Clerk’s office including Sheriff, police, fire elections do. you live in. me at 435-843-3148 or email date profiles; candidate finan- by Aug. 6, or you may register department, even the local For that reason, it’s impor- You have great power in me at mgillette@tooeleco. cial forms beginning Aug. 7 at the poll on Election Day. dog catcher. tant to vote, but it’s also your hands: a vote to put the org. There is a lot of primary (special district candidates are These voters will both have to They also pay to have your important to make sure the right person in office. Hence election information on the not required to file financial vote a provisional ballot. roads repaired, work to bring person/persons you vote for the saying, your vote is your Clerk’s website, such as candi- forms); sample ballots, loca- Voting in local elections is new business into the com- are the best people to make voice … speak up!

Grantsville man charged in second child sexual abuse case

STEVE HOWE counts of first-degree felony During a forensic interview last two years by Swan, accord- Swan touched them inappro- Swan, while facing extremely STAFF WRITER rape of a child, one count of the children reported that ing to the probable cause state- priately over their clothing on serious charges, met the stan- A Grantsville man now fac- first-degree felony object rape Swan had exposed his genitals ment. The victim indicated the three of the five times they dard for denying bail, and ing 24 felony charges related of a child, three counts of first- and tried to get them to touch abuse happened more times visited his house. assigned a bail of $250,000 in to the sexual abuse of children degree felony sodomy of a his genitals. One of the alleged than they could recount but During Swan’s initial each case. If Swan posts bail, made his initial appearance on child, two counts of aggravated victims reported they had been went into detail on several of appearance in the first case he will be required to remain a second case in 3rd District sexual abuse of a child, and raped by Swan over a period the instances. on July 23, 3rd District Court confined to his home with GPS Court Tuesday morning. three counts of second-degree of more than four years, with Two of the instances of Judge Matthew Bates assigned or RFID monitoring. Mark A. Swan, 48, is felony sex abuse of a child. the last incident occurring abuse occurred earlier this him no bail and he was Swan is also not allowed charged with four counts of Swan was arrested on July two days ago, according to the month, according to the prob- appointed counsel. to have personal contact with first-degree felony sodomy on 19 after a parent of three chil- probable cause statement. able cause statement. One At his court appearance anyone under the age of 16, a child, four counts of first- dren reported a man in the Since the initial report, one of the incidents occurred at Tuesday morning, Chief including his own children, degree felony object rape of neighborhood had “inappropri- additional child came forward Swan’s house and the other Deputy County Attorney Gary should he be released from a child, two counts of first- ately touched their children,” and said that Swan has “inap- near Adobe Rock. Searle called Swan a serial the Tooele County Detention degree felony aggravated kid- according to a probable cause propriately touched his pri- Another victim, also under child rapist and said he didn’t Center. He is scheduled to napping, and three counts of statement from Grantsville City vates,” according to the prob- the age of 14, was interviewed believe bail should be granted. return to court on Aug. 13. third-degree felony attempted police. During an interview able cause statement. by investigators and indicated Bates said he didn’t believe [email protected] sex abuse of a child in one case with investigators, the alleged In the second case, a child filed July 22. victims, aged 7 to 13 years old, under the age of 14 told inves- In a second case, filed July identified Swan as the perpe- tigators she had been consis- 26, Swan is charged with two trator. tently sexually abused for the READY TO BUILD! Hurry! Only 5 Lake Lots Left! Baum. gets underway at 9 a.m. Fair However, the fair commit- Saturday. tee has planned a “Family Fun Indoor and outdoor stages continued from page A1 Center,” full of family oriented will feature a variety of enter- ticketed activities that Baum tainment throughout the three said will be a “blast of fun.” days of the fair, according to derby will run on two nights, Activities in the Family Fun Baum. according to Baum. Center will include bounce Entertainers include dance Friday night the demolition houses, mechanical swings, groups, a balloon man, a magic derby will feature stock cars zip lines, zorb balls, bumper show, a bird and reptile show with gates opening at 6:30 boats, a video game trailer, and other talents. p.m. and the derby will start at double bungee trampolinex, Musical groups will include 7 p.m. a mechanical bull, and slides bluegrass, classic rock, and Thein Stansbury Pier Park Saturday night gates for the and rides. country performers, according derby open at 5 p.m. with the Also for kids, the fair to Baum. Lot 203 Lot 204 Lot 218 Lot 219 Lot 220 derby starting at 7 p.m. includes an art yard and a little The exhibit hall at Deseret Lot 201 Lot 202 Lot 205 Lot 206 Lot 207 Lot 208 Lot 209 Lot 210 Lot 211 Lot 212 Lot 213 Lot 214 Lot 215 Lot 216 Lot 217 Tickets for one demolition farmers play area, as well as a Peak will have displays of Pier Place derby are $15 for adults, $5 for small animal exhibit, petting home arts and 4-H exhibits. Lot 108 Lot 109 Lot 110 Lot 111 Lot 112 Lot 113 Lot 114 Lot 115 Lot 116 Lot 117 children ages 4-12, children 3 zoo, and pony rides, Baum Display categories include Lot 101 Lot 102 Lot 103 Lot 104 Lot 105 Lot 106 Lot 107 and under are free. A family said. entries like baking, sewing, art,

derby pass is available for $40, The Tooele County Fair and crafts — including duct Lot 118 which includes admission for is also home to the Junior tape creations, original Lego two adults and four children. Livestock Show and Sale. High designs, and 3D printing. Dual tickets, for both derbies, school age youth will show and Three horse events — team are $25 for adults, $8 for chil- sell livestock they have raised. branding, team roping, and dren, with children under 3 The breeding sheep team penning — will be held in Enjoy pleasant family evenings admitted for free. A family pass show will be at 3 p.m. on conjunction with the fair. for both derbies is $75. Wednesday. The market swine, There will be at least six on your own beach at Stansbury Tickets for both the concert sheep, goat, and beef judging contests at the fair in 2019: Park’s own wakeboard lake! and the demolition derby are will be on Thursday. Create a Better Burger, • Beautiful Gated Community available locally at Macey’s Thursday evening there will an Open Pet Show, Pie or • Only 30 minutes from Salt Lake City Food and Drug Store or any be a Pee Wee Showmanship Pie Inspired Desserts, No Soelberg’s Market. They are contest at 6:30 p.m. for Electricity Churned Ice Cream, • Community Beach with a Children’s Play Park also available online at smith- entrants too young for the live- the possibly oldest and biggest • Boatless Wakeboard System stix.com. stock show. Karaoke Contest and a Lawn • Aqua Park Playground all photos are only representations. Traditional carnival rides Friday will be the fitting and Mower Race. will not be returning to the showing for swine, sheep, goat, Complete details on the fair fair this year. The fair did not and beef with an awards cer- can be found at tooelefair.com. generate enough revenue for emony at 5:30 p.m. [email protected] the ride operator, according to The market livestock sale

MONEY SAVING Coupons Choose From Many Different Floorplans & Lots on or off the Lake in Tuesday’s Paper • Upgrades are our standard • Custom Home Builder Subscribe Today! 882-0050 TOOELETRANSCRIPT • Your plan or ours Magazine BULLETIN • We can design your perfect home • .40 Acre Lots • Building Homes for over 30 Years Starting in the $500’s Laramie Dunn & Lisa Neil Realtypath 2014 & 2015 top producers in Utah & 2016 top producing agent for the Tooele County Association of Realtors Laramie 435-224-4000 Lisa 435-849-6130 A4 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN TUESDAY July 30, 2019

• Editorial Editor Tim Gillie • Guest Opinions [email protected] • Letters to the Editor Open Forum 435-882-0050

OUR VIEW Fighting back Community agencies are working hard to fight drugs and crime he Tooele Transcript Bulletin has long reported on illicit drug use in Tooele County, the ongoing work by local law enforcement to stem the Ttide, and the need to further increase help for citizens who suffer from addiction. Those points were further explored in a three-part series of articles on local illicit drug abuse that began in last Tuesday’s edition. The final installment is printed on today’s front page. The series brought more light to a problem that reaches deep into many homes and families across the county. It also revealed several key points in the local fight against drug abuse that may help readers understand the source of the problem, what local police, the courts and mental health care providers are doing about it, and how the community can make a difference. Some of those key points are: • When law enforcement makes an arrest, rarely is it people on the streets, because law enforcement is primarily targeting suppliers, not users. • Drug abuse crosses all cultural and socioeconomic lines, according to Tooele County law enforcement. Nearly everyone can identify a family mem- ber, neighbor, friend or acquaintance who has been directly or indirectly affected. • Much of the work to combat illicit drugs in the county happens behind the scenes, with ongoing investigations out of the public eye. As a result, the public may think nothing is being done to fight drugs and property crimes associated with drug use. • Regardless of drug type, possession charges often go hand-in-hand with LETTERS TO THE EDITOR property crimes, such as theft, burglary or robbery, officials say. Seldom is someone arrested for burglary or a stolen vehicle without a controlled sub- stance or paraphernalia involved. Drug use is the number one factor in rising from the city) and the city will pay LETTERS POLICY property crimes in the county, officials say. Quit selling out for a relocation of a city sewer line. All so Tooele City can have another The Transcript-Bulletin welcomes letters to • The best candidates for Tooele County’s Drug Court and similar programs the editor from readers. Letters must be no are those motivated for treatment, according to Valley Behavioral Health. Tooele City has done it again. strip mall and more congestion. Last longer than 250 words, civil in tone, written Drug courts is a structured program to hold those in treatment accountable. Under the disguise of the Tooele City month, Tooele City gave $360,000 in exclusively for the Transcript-Bulletin, and • Individual and group therapy, case management services, and jail in- Redevelopment tax incentives to another developer accompanied by the writer’s name, address Agency, it has sold out to another for the old Broadway Apartments, but and phone number. Longer letters may be reach services through Valley Behavioral Health are also available. Treatments published, based on merit and at the Editor’s also include help to deal with opioid cravings, past trauma, Post Traumatic developer. The 33 acres on 1000 yet it raised the cemetery fees for citi- discretion. All letters may be subject to editing. North was sold to the developer for zens of Tooele City and don’t forget Stress Disorder and other factors. Letters written to thank an individual or • Getting a job, applying for school or finding a safe place to live are chal- $1.1 million less than the city paid the 85% tax hike last fall! organization should be submitted for lenges for locals in recovery. Affordable housing is a big hurdle in the county, for it. According to the recent article If the city would quit selling out “Notes of Appreciation.” officials say. A citizen in recovery says there’s nowhere for somebody in drug in the Tooele Transcript Bulletin, the to developers, maybe it could afford Readers who are interested in writing a longer court to live that “isn’t right above a bar or in a trailer park” where drugs are developer is also getting $4.75 mil- a respectable fence around the cem- guest op-ed column on a topic of general being sold. lion in tax incentives over a 20-year etery. interest should contact Editor Tim Gillie. • The Young People in Recovery chapter is focused on reducing stigma period. The developer is additionally Email: [email protected] around citizens in long-term recovery. Furthermore, citizens in treatment getting $2.25 million in financing, Joe Roundy Fax: (435) 882-6123 assistance in acquiring water (most Tooele Mail: Letters to the Editor need support from the community, including treatment providers, law Tooele Transcript-Bulletin enforcement and the courts. likely water at a discounted rate P.O. Box 390 It is vital that local law enforcement is given the support it needs to catch Tooele, UT 84074 and bring to justice drug suppliers and dealers. Likewise, more support — and housing — is needed for agencies and groups that are on the front lines help- ing citizens beat their addictions. Furthermore, the community is urged to broaden its net of help instead of turning away. The need to further increase help for citizens who suffer from addiction GUEST OPINION should not be ignored. GUEST OPINION Heavy reliance on technology Ilhan Omar holds backfires on the CIA America in contempt ot long ago I was targeted in proven costly. a computer hack. The experi- Last month, the Iranian govern- eto O’Rourke, the losing Texas ence showed how the origin ment disclosed that it had rounded N Rachel Marsden senator candidate who boot- of a hack can be faked or spoofed in up 17 people in a U.S. spy ring, all of GUEST COLUMNIST Bstrapped his way into becom- order to direct the blame elsewhere them Iranians recruited by CIA offi- ing a losing presidential candidate, and muddy the waters. cers. The director of the Iranian intel- had a message for refugees who had The hacker initially did some ligence ministry’s counterespionage come to America: Your new country reconnaissance that was traceable to But the location of a proxy address department said the 17 accused spies is a hellhole. an IP address in Tel Aviv, Israel, but proves nothing, as my situation illus- had worked in the economic, nuclear, The former congressman told a then donned an electronic cloak of trated. infrastructural, military or cyber roundtable of refugees and immi- proxies in other countries before try- We’ve seen that technology can be fields. The detainees had no links grants in Nashville, Tennessee: ing to crack my accounts. Most of the untrustworthy and exploitable. So to one another, each was separately “This country was founded on white breach attempts over the next three why do intelligence agencies such as linked to a CIA officer, and some of supremacy. And every single institu- Washington Post, Omar felt betrayal days were launched through a proxy the CIA rely so heavily on it? them were lured by the promise of tion and structure that we have in immediately upon getting to service with servers in multiple coun- We live in an age where we gamble U.S. visas, according to the Iranian this country still reflects the legacy America. tries, from Russia to the Netherlands. with our online information for the official, who added that several of the of slavery and segregation and Jim “I arrived at the age of 12 and The proxy service provider was sake of convenience. An overwhelm- people arrested have been sentenced Crow and suppression.” learned that I was the extreme featured in an FBI flash alert and a ing number of shady online applica- to death. Just in case the newcomers were other,” she explained to The Post, Wired magazine article three years tions try to convince us to hand over Iran released a stash of documents inclined to believe that they had noting bullying when she was in ago. Some experts believed there access to our electronic devices (and this week that purportedly identify escaped to the greatest country on school in Arlington, Virginia, an were “Russian fingerprints” on attacks all of the information they contain) in the CIA officers involved in the spy Earth, an open, dynamic, generous affluent Washington, D.C. suburb. directed at Illinois and Arizona board exchange for some supposed benefit. ring. The documents include busi- society that, whatever their struggles “I was black. I was Muslim. I also of elections websites in the run-up to But if anyone would be immune ness cards, notes and family photos. now, will afford them opportunities learned I was extremely poor and the 2016 U.S. presidential election to the pitfalls of technological con- Iran’s counterespionage chief said unimaginable back home — Beto that the classless America that my simply because the address of the venience, surely it would be the CIA, was there to tell them of all its sins. father talked about didn’t exist.” attacker’s proxy cloak was Russian. right? Wrong. And its mistake has SEE CIA PAGE A5 ® He had made himself into an Somehow, despite all the dep- instrument of woke assimilation. redations, she gained a seat in This is the backdrop of the contro- Congress. Omar doesn’t represent versy over Ilhan Omar, the Somali- a majority-minority district. She GUEST OPINION born left-wing member of Congress started her elected career, as The whom Donald Trump urged, in par- Post puts it, by getting to know ticularly noxious tweets, to return to “older peace-and-justice hippies.” Economy leaders need to help douse this fire her native country and fix it before She attended Black Lives Matter presuming to tell us what to do. protests, and established relation- It’s a mistake, though, to think ships with all the left-wing groups in t began with Donald Trump’s rac- It’s profoundly misleading. The that Omar is anything other than on Minneapolis. ist tweets demanding that four clips are all taken out of context. her way to total assimilation, only on Omar’s default is to blame Democratic congresswomen — Robert Reich Pressley’s reference to “fire” was part I GUEST COLUMNIST the terms set out by Beto O’Rourke. America first. She explained that Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Rashida of a statement calling for a humane America has two assimilation local Somali-Americans attempted to Tlaib, Ayanna Pressley and Ilhan system and noting that positive problems. One is immigrants feel- join the Islamic State as a function of Omar — “go back” to the “crime- change happens either because people ing only a tenuous connection to “systemic alienation.” She contends infested places from which they see the light or feel the fire. America, and getting isolated in that she has met American veter- came.” the “Squad,” as the four congress- Who is funding this? Much of the ethnic enclaves. The other is immi- ans “who say the most horrendous All four women are American citi- women have become known. money that’s flowing into Republican grants like Omar — and some of things, who have complete disregard zens, and only one, Omar, was born The ad opens with a clip of coffers is coming from the same place her second-generation colleagues for life.” And she accuses her con- overseas. Ocasio-Cortez referring to migrant it’s always come from: Wall Street. — assimilating into the America of gressional colleagues of singling her Last week, at a rally in North detention facilities as “concentration Last year, JPMorgan Chase con- identity politics and grievance. out for demonization. Carolina, Trump continued his attack, camps,” then saying “‘Never again’ tributed $149,908 to the RNC. They have learned to speak not Anyone who thinks these atti- especially on Omar. In response, the means something,” referring to les- JPMorgan’s chairman and chief just English, but the language of tudes are alien to America has never crowd chanted: “Send her back!” sons from the Holocaust. This is fol- executive, Jamie Dimon, is no rac- oppression. They understand our been to a college campus or watched The relevant question is not wheth- lowed by a clip from a 2018 primary ist. A few months ago, in a speech system (at least no less than the MSNBC. In short, whatever fool- er Trump is a racist. Of course he is. debate where she asks her opponent, to the Economic Club of Chicago, he average officeholder), but hold it in hardy things Trump may tweet, Ilhan Or whether he’s going to continue Joe Crowley, why he was willing said white people don’t adequately low regard. They know our history, Omar is not suited to return and fix bashing these members of Congress, to call Immigration and Customs understand racial discrimination. as taught by an instructor cribbing Somalia, rather to join a segment of who fill all his demonization boxes: Enforcement, or ICE, “fascist” but not “If you’re white,” he said, “paint from Howard Zinn. the American elite. Democrats, females, people of color, a to call for its elimination. yourself black and walk down the They may be citizens, but they are Muslim. Of course he will. It then cuts to Tlaib saying she street one day, and you’ll probably certainly outraged victims. Rich Lowry is editor of the National The real question is whether the agrees with Ocasio-Cortez’s “concen- have a little more empathy for how According to a profile in The Review. people bankrolling Trump and the tration camp” phrase, and to Pressley some of these folks get treated. Republican Party are going to stop this saying: “You will see the light. And We need to make a special effort rot before it consumes the politics of if you don’t, we will bring the fire.” because this is a special problem.” EDITORIAL BOARD 2020, and perhaps more. There follows footage of an attack on JPMorgan isn’t the only Wall Joel J. Dunn Scott C. Dunn Timothy H. Gillie David J. Bern Early signs are not encouraging. an ICE facility in Washington state, Street firm backing Republicans. Publisher Emeritus President and Publisher Editor Editor-at-Large Just before Trump’s North Carolina showing a burned car, and a facility in Between April and June, Senate With the exception of the “Our View” column, the opinions expressed on this page, rally, the Republican National Colorado where an American flag was including the cartoon, are not necessarily endorsed by the Tooele Transcript Bulletin. Committee released an ad attacking replaced with the flag of Mexico. SEE REICH PAGE A5 ® TUESDAY July 30, 2019 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN A5 Frank OHLMAN GUEST OPINION M Attorney at Law Free Consultation Race card slowly loses its sting through overuse for Wills & ome 60 million vot- Obama. He dared suggest that American culture and poli- has Trump and his followers on Trusts ers who cast ballots for Obama of Chicago had bene- tics. Kennedy wasn’t held to which to feed. SPresident Donald Trump John Kass fited from the corrupt Chicago account for his attack on Bork. And what simmers out there in 2016 are once again being GUEST COLUMNIST Democratic machine. He was, well, lionized. in that silence is dangerous. kicked to the margins of soci- In those days even inanimate Kennedy also warned that 493 W. 400 N. Tooele ety and shamed as racists, all objects could be condemned as racist Republicans would pre- John Kass is a columnist for because of Trump’s idiotic racist, like those Obama Chia side over a land where “school- the Chicago Tribune. His Twitter 882-4800 thumbs on Twitter. leverage power and determine heads — the “Happy Obama” children could not be taught handle is @john_kass. Most of America knows by who gets hired and who gets and “Determined Obama” about evolution, writers and www.tooelelawoffice.com now that he tweeted out some- promoted, who is leveraged — that were removed from artists could be censored at the thing absurdly crass, even for into elite universities, who shelves due to complaints of whim of the Government.” Trump, telling four hard-left gets the public contract, who disrespect, which was thought But in schools these days, Democratic freshman congress- is allowed to speak and who is a crime against Obama. writers and artists are cen- women who loathe him to “go shamed into silence. When I grew an Obama Chia sored by the Thought Police Your Complete Local back” from where they came. Politics as outrage in the side by side with a Romney of the Democratic left. A The four are American. They vicious game of who wins and Chia, the Obama hair was San Francisco school board are women of color. They say who loses is nothing new. But thick, yet the Romney Chia decided that a mural of George News Source Trump’s tweet was racist. Many what about all those other hair came out long and stringy, Washington at a local school Contact us today 435.882.0050 TOOELETRANSCRIPT Democrats and more than a alleged Republican racists out like the locks of rocker Joe is to be erased. The name of BULLETIN few Republicans agree, as do there? Walsh. Thomas Jefferson, who like or [email protected] I. I think it was profoundly Like Mitt Romney, the “They’re not racist!” insisted Washington also owned slaves, un-American of Trump to have Republican milquetoast. He’s Chia founder Joe Pedott, who is being stricken from celebra- told Americans to “go back” to now treated as an ally by grew up in a Chicago orphan- tions in Virginia. their own country. This is their media, but back in the day, age, of his Obama Chia heads. The list of sinners pointed Je Saunders country, even if they loathe when he sinned by trying to But whether the heads were out in spasms of virtue-sig- FOR TOOELE CITY COUNCIL much of what America stands defeat then-President Barack racist or not didn’t matter. naling, just as witches were • Well-planned Growth for. Obama, wasn’t he a racist? What mattered was fear. And pointed out hundreds of years As the son of immigrants, Democrats said as much, so the offending Obama Chia ago in Salem, is endless. • Promote Local Businesses I’ve been told that, too, grow- therefore it must have been heads were removed. Budweiser beer was rac- • Support Public Works, Parks, and Common Areas ing up in Chicago, where the true. All this isn’t new. The use ist until it cut the Rev. Jesse first question of the South Side Joe Biden, then-vice presi- of race cards to shame people Jackson’s sons in on the beer http://jeffysaunders.wixsite.com to newcomers wasn’t “Who are dent, condemned Romney into submission and force them business in Chicago. Nick /website you?” but rather, one of ethnic- and Wall Street banks as slave on the defensive has been Sandmann, that teenager Facebook: @Jefffortooele ity: “Whaddare ya?” (What are masters. an important arrow in the from Covington Catholic High [email protected] you?) “They’re going to put y’all Democratic quiver for many School in Kentucky, was por- I didn’t take it as racist, but back in chains,” insisted Biden, decades now. trayed as a racist across many then I’m not a woman of color. using his Southern accent to Judge Robert Bork, the media platforms simply for I just took it as asinine. speak to an African American brilliant conservative nomi- smiling, nervously, while wear- The controversy gave audience. nated for the Supreme Court, ing a Trump hat at a pro-life PLEASE ADOPT US! license to many on the left Y’all. was fitted for a white hood rally in Washington. to put Trump voters in that I don’t remember Obama by Sen. Edward Kennedy of So rather than risk being worn basket of deplorables. sternly pressed endlessly by Massachusetts. publicly shamed, millions of Yet the outrage marshaled reporters — with righteous “Robert Bork’s America is a Americans lapse into a sullen by the media, in their role as fingers wagging in his face — land in which ... blacks would silence. Democratic handmaidens, is about the clumsy racial com- sit at segregated lunch coun- Trump is eager to elevate deeply cynical, designed to ments of Biden. ters,” said Kennedy. political enemies like the four separate Trump from suburban The late Sen. John McCain, Think of it. Kennedy painted congresswomen of what’s voters in 2020. now a hero in death because Bork and Republicans with the called “The Squad” so they But overuse of the race he loathed Trump in life, and Jim Crow brush. But the media may become the angry Mount card is causing it to lose its beloved by the liberal media as loved Kennedy. Or at least the Rushmore of the new Socialist sting. And suburbanites know their Republican “Maverick,” media loved the idea of a once- Democratic Party. And the Democrats are expert in using was also vilified as a racist for and-future Arthurian romance hard-Democratic left, with its race through government to how he campaigned against that had Kennedy shaping black-clad antifa shock troops,

have helped bust the CIA’s had been migrated over from operations in Syria and else- CIA Iranian network? the Middle East and allowed where in the region. continued from page A4 In August 2018, Foreign recruited assets to communi- As confident as some Policy magazine published cate with their CIA handlers. people are with technology — LOVABLE a story titled, “Botched CIA Given that China, Russia including the people respon- that CIA officers were recruit- Communications System and Iran are allies, what are sible for keeping state secrets KITTENS! ing Iranians online, and he Helped Blow Cover of the odds that the Chinese — the risk of entering into a claimed Iran had penetrated Chinese Agents.” The piece shared their findings about house of mirrors is face-plant- CIA systems that were mas- explained how Chinese coun- the CIA’s spy network with ing into a wall of glass. querading as more benign terespionage dismantled the the Russians and Iranians? websites. CIA’s in-country espionage And if the system was origi- Rachel Marsden is a col- For more info. on animals- Adoption Procedure Ali Shamkhani, secretary of network from 2010 to 2012, nally developed for CIA intel- umnist, political strategist Tooele County Local shelter adoption requires Iran’s supreme national secu- leading to the execution of ligence operations in the and host of an independently Animal Shelter 882-1051 vaccination payment, licensing rity council, said the spy net- the CIA’s Chinese assets. Middle East, information produced French-language Tooele City and possible shelter fee. work had been discovered a This disastrous episode was about that system would program that airs on Sputnik Animal Shelter 882-8900 while ago and was operating blamed on the agency’s use clearly be useful to Iranian France. Her website can be Shelters are required to in countries other than Iran. of a supposedly secure covert intelligence and to Russia’s found at www.rachelmarsden. Grantsville hold animals for 5 business So which country might communication system that efforts in countering CIA com. Animal Shelter 884-6881 days before euthanization.

Brought to you by Joe H. Roundy, D.V.M. Subscribe Today Tooele Veterinary Clinic the Consumer Financial “active and good.” 435-882-0050 1182 N. 80 E., Tooele • 882-1051 Reich Protection Bureau and have Asked about Trump say- continued from page A4 allowed the banks to grow ing the Fed had “gone crazy,” even larger, announcing Dimon said he had “never more mergers and acquisi- seen a president who wanted Majority Leader Mitch tions in the first five months interest rates to go up.” Tooele County School District McConnell collected $3 mil- of 2019 than in any full-year Wall Street and the CEOs lion, but just 9% of it came period since the Street nearly of major corporations have from individuals in his home imploded in 2008. made a hellish deal — ignore REGISTRATION state Kentucky. The biggest The result has been vastly Trump’s repugnance and block came from execu- more money for the Street. provide ongoing support for tives at Wall Street hedge Last year’s bonus pool totaled the GOP, regardless of its TOOELE2019-20 COUNTY SCHOOL School DISTRICT YearREGISTRATION funds such as the Blackstone $27.5 billion — more than complicity, in return for high 2019-20 SCHOOL YEAR Group ($95,400), KKR & Co. three times the combined returns. First DayF irstof Day School: of School: AugustAugust 19, 201 19,9 2019 ($51,000), and Apollo Global incomes of the approximately Perhaps they also believe Online Registration for K-12 is now open. (Online Registration is required of all Tooele Management and Golden 600,000 Americans earning that the flames of racism and County School District Students K-12). Tree Management ($65,100). the minimum wage. xenophobia will distract the ELEMENTARY (New Students) Why is Wall Street funding Since Trump’s inaugura- nation sufficiently for them to Registration will be held on August 7th, 8th, and 9th from 9:00 a.m. – 3:00 p.m. at all elementary schools, unless Trump’s GOP? Because it is tion, JPMorgan’s stock is up continue looting it. otherwise noted. Kindergarten Schedule: delighted with what Trump nearly a third. Dimon earned But a deal with the devil  August 23rd – Kindergarten Reception and Senate Republicans are $31 million in 2018. can exact a large toll. Flames  August 26th – First day students in class giving it: tax cuts and regula- Asked recently how Trump that distract now could lead First Grade Schedule: tory rollbacks. was doing, Dimon gushed. to an uncontrollable confla-  August 19th – 23rd (Wednesday schedule all week.) Dimon was instrumental in “Regulatory stuff, good.” gration.  August 19th – Starts full day getting the Trump-Republican The summit with North The putative leaders of the SECONDARY Registration dates and times are as follows: tax cut through Congress. Korea’s Kim Jong Un? A American economy owe it to SCHOOL DATE TIME Last year it saved JPMorgan “great idea.” the nation: They must help August 7 8:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. and the other big banks $21 He also complimented the douse this fire. August 8 2:00 p.m. – 7:00 p.m. Clarke N. Johnsen Jr. High August 9 (new students to the District By appointment billion. administration’s “negotiating or from a charter) Trump and the Republicans tactic” on China and called Robert Reich’s latest book is August 12 (New Students) 10:00 a.m - 5:00 p.m. Grantsville Jr. High August 13 (7th Grade) 10:00 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. have also given Wall Street the relationship between big “The Common Good.” August 14 (8th Grade) 10:00 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. more freedom. They defanged business and the White House August 6 (7th grade & returning 8th) 2:00 p.m. – 7:00 p.m. August 8 (New Students) 1:00 p.m. – 7:00 p.m. August 12 (During work hours) 8:00 a.m. – 2:00 p.m. Tooele Jr. High After these dates, registration by Appointment only Blue Peak High August 13th 9:00 a.m.-- 2:00 p.m. August 7(8-12th grade) 8:00 a.m. – 3:00 p.m. Dugway High August 8(8-12th grade) 8:00 a.m. – 3:00 p.m. August 9(7th grade) 8:00 a.m. - 3:00 p.m.

MONEY SAVING Coupons st August 1 (Pay fees if not online) 8:00 a.m. – 2:00 p.m. August 12th (Students can get locker) Any time after the 12th in Tuesday’s Paper Grantsville High August 15th (9th grade) 7:00 pm in Auditorium August 7 8:00 a.m.-1:00 p.m. Stansbury High August 8 1:00 p.m.-7:00 p.m. Subscribe Today! 882-0050 TOOELE Tooele High August 12 (New 11th Grade) 9:00 am TRANSCRIPT (New 12th by Appt) 12:00 pm – 3:00 pm August 13 (New 10th Grade) 8:00 am ULLETIN (New 9th Grade) 11:00 am Magazine B th (New 12 by Appt) 1:30 – 3:00 pm August 16 (New 12th by Appt) 8:00 – 3:00 pm 9:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. Wendover High August 13-14 1:00 pm – 3:30 p.m.

Immunizations: Seventh Grade Requirements – Utah Immunization Rule  Effective December 1, 2014, students entering 7th grade must have two doses of Varicella(chickenpox) vaccine.  Effective December 1, 2014, students entering the 7th grade must have a single dose of Meningococcal vaccine.  Effective July 1, 2011, students entering 7th grade must have a Tdap booster, regardless of interval since the last tetanus/diphtheria containing vaccine. Students MAY NOT be admitted on the first day of school unless they have received a dose of Tdap or have an exemption form. A school cannot admit students if they are missing the Tdap vaccine. Students must be in full compliance from the first day of entry into school.

If you have any questions, please contact Sue Medina, Administrative Secretary, (435)833-1900, Ext. 1104. A6 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN TUESDAY July 30, 2019 OBITUARIES

Mary Jane Keckler where she worked until her Maria Louise classes, led music, and played retirement in 1991. She then Shepherd Dickerson piano in religious callings. She Our loving mother, Mary worked at H&R Block for 15 loved family history and served Jane Keckler (Lindenberg), years where she made lasting in the Family History Center passed away on July 21, 2019. friends. Maria Louise Shepherd from 1998 to 2010. She was She was born on Nov. 2, 1929, She is survived by her four Dickerson, 79, was born March a member of the Daughters of on her Uncle John Jones’ daughters: Linda (Mike) 29, 1940, to James Glendon the Utah Pioneers and served ranch to Lloyd and Cynthia Horton, Terra, Utah; Deborah Shepherd and Louisa Rowley as president for one year. Ruth Lindenberg. Mother (Wayne) Simpson, Challis, Shepherd in the now ghost She is survived by her son, was the youngest of their ID; Laura Bell (Charlie), town of Silver City, Juab, Utah. Jeffery (Penny) Dickerson three children. Immediately Port Townsend, WA; Dona She passed away Tuesday, of Sauk Rapids, Minnesota; after she graduated from Christine Davis, Magna, Utah; July 23, 2019, in the Good eight grandchildren: Amy high school, she married many nieces and nephew; Shepherd Nursing Home in (Andrew) Glaves, Alicia Louis E. Keckler on May 21, and her sister-in-law Maria Sauk Rapids, Minnesota, after (Clark) Ostvig, James (Jess) 1947. When she was young, Warrell in North Carolina. a long illness. Dickerson, Jessica Dickerson, she would go with her family She is preceded in death Maria grew up in Mapleton, Laurel Dickerson, Tiffany every summer to a fire look- by her husband, her parents, Utah. She graduated from Dickerson, Melissa Dickerson out on Pollock Mountain in her siblings, a niece and four Springville High School and and Chantelle Dickerson; and Idaho. The first summer she and they were later married nephews, and her in-laws then attended BYU, earn- Maria collected songs, wrote six great-grandchildren. She was 7 months old. She has in the Temple. whom she loved very much. ing bachelor’s and master’s original words and narratives is also survived by her brother pictures and many stories of She had worked for the Next spring Louis and Mary degrees in education curricu- to a Utah History play, which Mitchell Shepherd, Placerville, those times. U.S. Postal Service in Weed Jane’s remains will be taken lum. She taught elementary was put on every spring. She California. She and Louis were mem- Height, Nevada. After they to Indian Valley, Idaho, where school for 38 years in Tooele, also taught dances to the chil- She was preceded in death bers of The Church of Jesus moved to Tooele, she got a they will be buried together Utah. Her master’s thesis was dren for this play. by her parents and brother Christ of Latter-day Saints, job at Tooele Army Depot among and near loved ones. on student councils in elemen- Maria also loved science. Jack Shepherd. tary school. She started and She was member of the Utah Funeral Services will be held directed a student council in Nature Study Society and Saturday, Aug. 3 at 11 a.m. Tooele Transcript Bulletin Subscribe 435-882-0050 Tooele for 22 years. served as president for two at Sundberg-Olpin Mortuary, Maria loved music. She led years. She taught one unit on 495 S. State Street, Orem, a school choir and a ukulele the weather. She took her class Utah, with a viewing from club. She took this choir to to be on TV Weather School 9:30-10:30 a.m. prior to the Symphony Hall every spring every spring. service. Interment will be at and to the various Salt Lake Maria loved children and the Evergreen Cemetery in Malls at Christmas time for her work. She was a member Springville, Utah. Condolences singing carols and other of The Church of Jesus Christ may be expressed at Spaghetti Dinner Christmas songs. of Latter-day Saints. She taught SundbergOlpinMortuary.com.

Benefit Fundraiser Mark Lowell Bullock For a youth that is part of the Lake Point Sunset Buckaroos 4H Mark Lowell Bullock born English Club. She was injured at the State 4H Hunter Show. July 27, 1951, passed away July 21, 2019, a few days before his 68th birthday. He left behind two broth- Thurs • August 1 • 6:00pm ers, Jim Waggnor and Kenny Eastburn. He married Shauna Lake Point Park • 1337 Canyon Road, Lake Point Ekins to have children Mark Bullock Jr., Mike D. Bullock, Jennifer Nancarrow and Phillip $5.00 a plate or $20.00 a plate per Family of 6 Flanders. If you didn’t know (No takeouts please) him personally, most knew his house for Halloween for the biggest candy bars. He was MENU - Spaghetti, Green Salad, Cookie & Bottle Water very political and was happy to see someone like Debbie Winn SILENT AUCTION - Silent Auction items needed take office. As per his request, there will Marianne Gines 801-244-6321; Be Rasmussen 801-793-5382 be no services. Love you all!

Orson Albert their growing family’s lives. The heart of this home was the Tooele Education Johnson love between Orson and Jessie. Their marriage was one of two F   soul mates and best friends. S T  C  S  In 1948, Orson Johnson They worked together, laughed prepared the foundation for a together, served together in new home on Johnson Lane in the California San Jose mis- Rush Valley, Tooele County. In sion, mourned together the this house, Orson, alongside death of their son, Steve in his wife, Jessie, would raise his 1976, and never stopped find- family, welcome in-laws, play ing reasons that life was sweet, with grandchildren, and urge which for Orson included whit- visitors to stay for dinner or at tling, writing, painting, and least have some peanut M&Ms. rooting for the Utah Jazz and Here, he would watch the sea- especially the BYU Cougars. Ophir Summer Classes Conclude! sons pass and care for Jessie to Losing Jessie in 2010 and the end of her life. his son Lee in 2012, was dev- By Clint Spindler That foundation is not the astating for Orson, but he only one built by Orson, who California to find work while decided God had more work TEF is in the process of died on July 23, 2019, at the continuing to court Jessie. for him to do. He made sure completing its second summer age of 97. His devotion to He proposed over the Fourth his family members and other season of outdoor learning family, humility before God, of July holiday in 1941, and loved ones knew how much he classes at the Ophir Canyon dedication to the gospel of over Labor Day weekend that enjoyed and appreciated them Education Center. What a Jesus Christ, sense of humor, year, he and Jessie were mar- while always looking forward fun time it has been! During work ethic, and endless enjoy- ried. They started married to seeing “my Jessie” and his May, June, and July more than ment of service and of making life in California, but it was sons again. We who love him 240 students ventured up to connections with people gave not long before both Orson have no doubt that this joyful Ophir Canyon for one or more 5th Grade students participating in a 3-Day STEM offering at every member of his posterity and Jessie wanted to return to event has occurred, and that is intriguing learning experiences the Ophir Canyon Education Center. Class was sponsored the strongest of foundations on Rush Valley. There, they wel- a comfort as we now await our provided by the foundation. by Cargill Salt. which to build their lives. We comed their first child, Darrell, own reunions with Orson. Our outdoor classes continue to are eternally grateful. in 1942. Five more children Orson was preceded in meet with great success and are included: basic drawing, Animation and Clay in Nature Orson Albert Johnson was would follow: Carol, Van, Ray, death by his parents; siblings; a popular way for students to plein air, leatherworking, class at the OCEC this summer. born in Ophir, Utah, on Jan. Lee and Steve. wife, Jessie; sons Lee and continue their learning during photography, drama, drones, Participating students were 12, 1922, the youngest of Orson continued to work Steve; daughter-in-law Judy; the summer months. With rock climbing, mountain able to bring their imagination seven children of Edwin and the ranch, inheriting the cattle grandsons Luke and Josh; and such enthusiasm to further biking, archery, hiking, and a to life in the Stop-Motion Pauline Johnson. Orson grew business from his father. He great-granddaughter Lauren. develop the OCEC, we are tie and fly fishing adventure. Animation class. They were up on ranches, first in Ophir also worked at the Hidden He is survived by his sons Creek and then on his family’s Treasure mine, which he very and daughters-in-law, Darrell already looking forward to Last week, TEF’s final able to write, produce, and original pioneer-era spread in much enjoyed, and Tooele (Carol), Van (Susie) and Ray the upcoming planning and summer 2019 classes were direct a short film using their arts education focused as well. own images, text, shapes, and Rush Valley. He attended coun- Army Depot before trans- (Kathy); daughter and son- expansion of offerings for next try schools in Ophir, Stockton ferring to Dugway Proving in-law Carol (John) Cluff; 23 year! These classes were taught by set design. Students learned instructors from the University how to record audio sound and Clover. He enjoyed farm- Ground. He played in local grandchildren; and dozens of At the end of May, our ing with his father as well as baseball leagues and served grandchildren-in-law, great- class schedule kicked-off with of Utah’s ArtsBridge outreach effects and import music to program. ArtsBridge is an arts make their creations truly listening to Detroit Tigers base- as Sunday School superin- grandchildren, and step-grand- a 3-Day STEM enrichment ball, playing baseball himself, education program that serves unique. The end product was tendent, bishopric counselor, children. There was room at offering for Tooele School attending church, and visiting and twice as bishop, once of Orson’s table and in his heart students mainly in the Salt a short film they were able to District’s fifth grade students relatives in Salt Lake City for a the Clover ward and once of for everyone, and he was very who participated in its early Lake Valley. Thanks to a recent take home that “wowed” their taste of urban life. the Rush Valley Ward. He also proud of his posterity. morning science camp. This collaborative relationship TEF friends and families. Attending high school in served as second counselor to Visitation will be held from was a wonderful 6-station was able to establish with TEF is grateful to all of Tooele, Orson participated in Stake Presidents Joel Dunn 6-8 p.m. on Tuesday, July 30, rotational-class sponsored ArtsBridge director, Kerri the local area people, and Future Farmers of America and Wallace Johnson of the at Tate Mortuary, 110 S. Main by our friends at Cargill. Hopkins, we were able to our friends at the University and lettered in agricultural sci- Tooele South Stake. He also St., Tooele, and on Wednesday, Other OCEC summer classes schedule both a Stop-Motion of Utah, for teaching these ence. He also began to notice was a dedicated Boy Scout July 31, at the Rush Valley engaging summer classes at Jessie Sagers, the St. John girl leader who received the Silver Ward in St. John, 985 N. the Ophir Canyon Education who rode the bus to THS with Beaver award. Church St., from 10-11:30 a.m. Center. Many thanks to him. Upon graduating from Orson’s and Jessie’s home with the funeral to follow at these wonderful folks is high school in 1940, Orson on Johnson Lane in Clover noon. appropriate as their dedication traveled with some friends to was for decades the center of and commitment to helping students to love the joy of learning was immeasurable and uplifting! Full Local Tooele Education Foundation Sports Coverage Students attending the Stop-Motion Animation class at the Ophir Canyon Education Center. Class was taught by Kerri @TEFbellringer Hopkins from the University of Utah’s ArtsBridge Program. In Every Issue TOOELETRANSCRIPT www.tooeleeducationfoundation.org BULLETIN TUESDAY July 30, 2019 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN A7

Several fans sang lyrics of there was covered with fans,” is insane how this festival is Fan Fest Combs’ songs while he per- she said. growing. It is run incredibly continued from page A1 formed, with a few seeming The festival included 18 well, and for us it feels like overwhelmed by the experi- groups with Rodney Atkins the family out there,” Creed said. ence. headliner on Thursday night Tooele’s Carver Louis helped “I was super, super excited and Brett Young on Friday kick off the festival with a per- on his “Beer Never Broke My for this year because I love night. formance on Thursday. Heart Tour” at sites through- Luke Combs and I love coun- Utah band Jagertown per- Hudson looks forward to out the country. Sixteen per- try music. It was amazing; I formed Friday in the afternoon many more Country Fan Fests. formances on his tour were was able to meet him. I look on the main stage and kept the “We have thoroughly sellouts. forward to this festival every festival rolling at the camp- enjoyed the partnership we “Luke Combs’ camp was single year,” said Riverton’s ground stage beginning at mid- have grown with both the extremely impressed with the Sierra Ipson who camped out night on Saturday. venue and Tooele County. festival grounds. They com- at Country Fan Fest for the “We played out there So much so that we signed mented that most festivals fourth consecutive year. until about 3:30 a.m.,” said a multi-year agreement to they play are in dirt fields and “It was also exciting to see Jagertown lead singer Preston keep Country Fan Fest here in having such a beautiful venue how much bigger this festival Creed. Tooele Valley,” he said. to play at, surrounded by has grown. It was especially “We had our tour bus over The 2020 Country Fan Fest SUE BUTTERFIELD/TTB PHOTO mountains was just incredible,” fun out at the campground there and we promote Country will be held July 30-Aug. 2. Brett Young entertains the crowd at Friday night’s headliner at the Hudson said. stage. The whole area out Fan Fest everywhere we go. It [email protected] Country Fan Fest held at Deseret Peak Complex.

Probation and Parole. or to someone you want to Addicts Barrett said drug court is a rent from,” Baxter said. “So I continued from page A1 very structured program to hold introduce myself as a person in those in treatment accountable. long-term recovery versus I’m If they miss a group meeting, an addict. That automatically are going to be there because for instance, it is reported to the changes the conversation and you’re a drug user, so you can court or Adult Probation and changes the person you’re talk- find them no matter what,” he Parole. ing to’s thinking.” said. The drug court program does Baxter said other terms, like Once he managed to get off have failures, Barrett admitted, abuse or junkie, also create heroin, Baxter turned to meth- as some don’t want the change. negative emotions around those amphetamine, then started to Most are set on getting a reduc- attempting to recover from sub- use both for a three-year period. tion in their criminal charges if stance use disorder. He was eventually arrested they complete the program, he Baxter also said someone on distribution charges in said, with some taking as long as new in recovery who wants it Grantsville. three years to finish. but doesn’t know how to get it “I did about 33 days in Tooele “It takes time,” Barrett said. requires support from every- County (Detention Center) and “When they first come in, it’s one in the community, includ- heard somebody with more dis- very structured. It’s hard for FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO ing treatment providers, law tribution charges than me got them to change the lifestyle, the Valley Behavorial Heath offices on 1000 North in Tooele City. VBH provides drug rehabilitation, services for Tooele enforcement, and the courts. County including therapy, case management, and jail in-reach services. out on drug court,” he said. “So criminogenic thinking lifestyle, “I’m just over three and a I immediately hit up my public for them.” half years clean, and about two defender and told him I wanted Despite the failed attempts, You don’t need to house minimal offend- group areas and other amenities years off of cigarettes, but I still drug court just so I could get out Barrett said many do very well for those working on long-term crave a cigarette every now of jail.” in drug court, with some stay- ers in the jail or mental health people in recovery. and then,” he said. “I still have While Baxter said he joined ing for after care and others the jail. That’s not the place for them. Baxter said he was thankful dreams about using meth and the Tooele County drug court becoming leaders in groups Steve Barrettn for the treatment facility and heroin. There are still situations program in April 2016 as an like Narcotics Anonymous or OPERATIONS MANAGER AT VALLEY BEHAVIORAL HEALTH said he hopes a transitional that might trigger me into think- excuse to get out of jail, he spent Alcoholics Anonymous. housing facility can be con- ing, ‘Oh man, I should go use just over a year to complete the “To get them back into the Drug court did encour- ing,” he said. “There’s nowhere structed in the future. or I could go use’ but because I program. Since February 2016, community on a good note, age Baxter to join Narcotics for somebody in drug court to In addition to helping pro- actively work every day toward he has never had a reoccurrence instead of a negative, is always a Anonymous, at first to gather go and find somewhere to live vide resources, Baxter’s Young the goal of not using, it’s easier of use. good thing for us,” Barrett said. required signatures to complete that isn’t right above a bar or in People in Recovery chapter is for me. But for somebody new, The first drug court in Utah “It’s a success for us.” the program. a trailer park near where most of focused on reducing stigma where they don’t know how to was in Salt Lake’s 3rd District There’s a waiting list for drug “I started going just for the the drugs are sold.” around those in long-term recov- cope, they don’t know how to Court in 1996, according to the court right now, according to signatures but started hearing Back in June, the Tooele City ery. While he is in Narcotics actively work on it, it’s hard.” state. Drug courts were estab- Barrett, with 50 people cur- stuff that really stuck with me,” Council approved a rezone of Anonymous and identifies as an Valley Behavioral Health can lished after drug-related crimes rently enrolled. Baxter said. “Stuff that I could the former Harris Elementary addict in the program, Baxter be contacted in Tooele at 435- have increased and judges saw Another expansion of treat- relate to. So I knew that once I School for Skull Valley Health said it’s not how you want to 843-3520 or 801-530-0950. the same offenders appear in ment has been through the didn’t have that supervision of Care to repurpose the build- present yourself to the general You can reach out to the Tooele their courts repeatedly. Justice Reinvestment Initiative, drug court, that if I wanted to ing into a drug rehabilitation public. County chapter of Young People “It seemed as if traditional which was approved by the stay clean, that I had somewhere center. A remodel of the school “Well, you really don’t want in Recovery at tooelecountyut@ methods of dealing with addicts state Legislature and Gov. Gary to go to do that, with like-mind- would create housing for up to to identify as that to someone youngpeopleinrecovery.org. such as strict probation or man- Herbert in 2015. The stated goal ed people trying to do the same 120 patients, with educational you’re trying to get a job with [email protected] datory imprisonment did not of JRI is to reduce incarceration thing.” attack the fundamental prob- and recidivism rates by allowing After graduating drug court, lem of addiction,” according to more low-risk offenders to be Baxter met the founder of the utcourts.gov. treated in the community. Salt Lake chapter of Young Rebecca Brown, chief strategy Under JRI, inmates can People in Recovery, a national officer for Valley Behavioral receive time cuts of at least nonprofit aimed at creating Health in Tooele County, said four months from their ordered access to resources those with the best candidates for the release date by completing pro- substance use disorder need NOTICE OF PROPOSED county’s drug court and similar grams such as substance use to recover, get an education programs are those motivated treatment, vocational training, and employment, and build for treatment. or completing a high school healthy relationships. He was TAX INCREASE “We do want to find people diploma or GED. encouraged to start a chapter in who have a desire to engage,” Law enforcement has seen Tooele County, which he did in Brown said. some changes as a result of JRI, November 2017. TOOELE CITY When doing an initial screen- according to agencies in Tooele “I knew from my experi- ing at intake, however, there County. Grantsville City Police ence in drug court, or I learned is typically more resistance Sgt. Lydon Allred said when rather, what Tooele County was from someone court-ordered to someone is arrested, they’re lacking in recovery services,” The TOOELE CITY is proposing to increase its treatment, Brown said. Those more likely to try to connect it to Baxter said. “So to have an orga- candidates are screened and a drug use problem in the hopes nization backing me that would property tax revenue. evaluated to determine their of staying out of jail. help bring those organizations level of required care and review It hasn’t changed how law around, or help develop them, risk factors. enforcement handles arrests, seemed like a good idea.” “When we’re dealing with the however, according to Tooele Many of the challenges facing - The TOOELE CITY tax on a $223,000 residence court-ordered drug court popu- County Sheriff’ s Lt. Eli those with substance use dis- lation, most of them are not Wayman. order go beyond getting clean, would increase from $370.89 to $408.92, which is with us by choice,” Brown said. “The court system can do Baxter said. Understanding how In Tooele County, patients what it’s going to do,” Wayman to apply for a job or financial aid $38.03 per year. also have access to individual said. “That’s kind of out of our for school, where to find a safe and group therapy, case man- hands. We still have to be proac- place to live, and even how to agement services, and jail in- tive in our enforcement and do have fun without drugs can be reach services through Valley our job to protect life and prop- challenging for those with long- - The TOOELE CITY tax on a $223,000 business Behavioral Health. Some of the erty. Ultimately what happens in term substance use disorder, he services are available in Salt the court system happens in the said. would increase from $674.35 to $743.48, which is Lake because Tooele hasn’t tra- court system.” “We also do monthly pro- ditionally been big enough to A veteran of law enforcement, social activities, which is a $69.13 per year. provide some services, such as a Barrett said the focus of JRI is a lot of times, people who are residential setting, Brown said. positive, with keeping low-level active users don’t know how to The treatment provided by offenders out of the jail. have fun without being high Valley Behavioral Health also “It’s always been a positive or drunk,” Baxter said. “So we - If the proposed budget is approved, TOOELE CITY includes offering prescription for us to try to get them back to put on activities to show them drugs like suboxone or vivitrol their families and on the street how to do that while they’re in would increase its property tax budgeted revenue to deal with opioid cravings, where we’re not housing them,” recovery.” by 10.24% above last year’s property tax budgeted depending on the client. The he said. “You don’t need to Both Valley Behavioral Health treatment process also addresses house minimal offenders in the and Baxter agree that a major revenue excluding eligible new growth. past trauma, Post Traumatic jail or mental health people in hurdle for those in long-term Stress Disorder, and other fac- the jail. That’s not the place for recovery is acceptable housing. tors, Brown said. them.” Brown said Tooele County is “Really, we can offer a Brown said JRI helps provide growing so fast it outstrips fund- - All concerned citizens are invited to a public comprehensive continuum alternatives to incarceration ing for the necessary support of care and we will support for those with mental illness or functions, which are generally hearing on the tax increase that through our other pro- substance use disorder, which based upon the number of resi- grams throughout all of Valley can be treated. The initiative dents eligible for the programs Behavioral Health,” she said. has also provided more access or the total population in the “So we offer everything from a to treatment for those disorders county. Another effect of the residential setting to … just the and involved more community rapid growth is a lack of avail- PUBLIC HEARING traditional outpatient model of partners, she said. able housing. care.” “The number one thing that “The other thing that I think When looking specifically we’ve seen as a benefit from the would exponentially improve Date/Time: 8/7/2019 7pm at drug court, treatment starts JRI initiative has been the inter- our ability to care for clients is with extensive outpatient, which est in law enforcement, sheriff’s the access and availability of Location: Tooele City Hall can become general outpatient department and other commu- affordable housing in the county with the proper treatment and nity stakeholders in the collabo- that can be managed and sup- Council Chambers guidance, according to Steve ration of the care for our clients ported by behavioral health Barrett, operations manager at as a whole,” Brown said. organizations,” Brown said. 90 N. Main St. • Tooele Valley Behavioral Health. The While the strict nature of pro- “That is something that we see progress of each drug court grams like drug court provide providing a great success in our attendee is reported back to the structure, Baxter said it was other communities with those court monthly, whether it’s posi- hard to sit in a drug court group partnerships and there is not To obtain more information regarding the tive or negative. with someone who used that enough housing, period. Which Most of the people entering day and was given community speaks back to the same thing — tax increase, citizens may contact TOOELE CITY drug court are generally high service hours, while he spent the growth problem in Tooele.” risk and high need, Barrett the weekend in jail for missing Baxter echoed the sentiment, at 435-843-2100. said. Those who are too high of a one-on-one meeting with a calling a housing a challenge in a risk for Valley Behavioral to therapist because he was attend- Tooele County. manage usually stay with Adult ing welding school. “There’s no transitional liv- A8 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN TUESDAY July 30, 2019

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FILE PHOTOS AUGUST 1959 Ann Hardy, Tooele City; Judy Gregrich, Miss TOD, Marion Marchant, Miss Vernon; Janice Bryan, Miss Stockton; Evan Davis, Miss Erda; Linda Newman, Miss Dugway and Ila Anderson, Miss Grantsville (above) on stage for the Miss Fair Contest 1959. Miss Dugway, Linda Newman (right), dones her royal robes as she prepares to rule over the Tooele County Fair held in August 1959. Miss Newman was chosen over the six other candidates in a contest to choose the Fair Queen. Judging the event were TV personality Bob Welti, charm school authority Doris Hardi and KSL promotion manager and sportscaster Dean Bennett. Tooele County Fair Over the Decades he Tooele Transcript Bulletin travels back through six decades of the Tooele County 1969 TFair to relive the tradition, history and fun of the annual event. In 1959, Tooele County Commissioners Willis Smith, George Buzianis and Sterling Halladay wrote a welcome invitation to all residents of Tooele County to attend the fair and prepare an exhibit for it. They wrote, “the purpose of the fair was to acquaint the people of the county with the products and industries of the county; to stimulate improvement in the raising of fruits, crops and livestock; to improve homemaking practices; to provide a wholesome type of recreation; and to to stimulate community spirit and enterprise.” The 1959, the opening Thursday featured a fer- ris wheel and merry-go-round on the grounds near National Guard Armory and a Fair Queen contest at the North Tooele Stake. The newly-crowned queen officially opened the fair at 6 p.m. The fair continued with flower show, Dorothy Searle Dance Review and a fashion show along with the viewing of entries beautiful hand-crafted items and fruits and vegetables from local gardens. Jump ahead a decade to the 1969 fair, Miss Junie Gay Hunt “had the crown placed on her head and walked off with the title of Miss Tooele County for the 1969-70 year, after the contest, FILE PHOTOS AUGUST 19, 1969 held on Thursday evening in the Grantsville High Above: Miss Junie Gay Hunt, center, School Auditorium.” Hunt was selected from a Miss Tooele County for the 1969-70 Tooele County Fair season and her group of seven competing in the talent by yodeling first attendant Ann Mooberry, left, and singing in a western style as she accompanied and Carolee Castagno, right. Paula herself on the guitar. Parson and Nannette Fish (left) dis- play one of the winners in the foods division in the 4-H contest at the fair. SEE FAIR PAGE B10 ® 1979

FILE PHOTOS 1979 The sweepstakes winning float (above left) for the second annual Landmark Days parade was sponsored by the Tooele Army Depot during the 1979 Tooele County Fair. Senior divi- sion winners of the Farm Bureau Talent Find Contest (above): Craig Ferrin, David Swan and Barry Dickersen. Cheryl Battison’s (left) painting was selected as the People’s Choice for mountain scene which was entered in the Fine Arts divi- sion of the county fair. Battison was awarded a plaque from the Tooele Transcript Bulletin. B2 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN TUESDAY July 30, 2019 Sports Bears knocked out of

Legion state tourney Jaxson Miner (3) tries to snag a flip from team- schools had to offer. everyone. It was cool to see mate Austin Mountain Crest, And while the Bears ulti- that once they were put on Woodhouse dur- mately fell short of their goal the same team and all had the ing the Tooele of bringing home a 19U state same goal, they realized, ‘hey, County Bears’ Herriman beat championship, there were these guys aren’t all that bad American Legion other ways in which the boys — they’re just down the road baseball game Tooele County from Tooele County went from us is all and I actually against Highland beyond anything their coach like these guys a lot.’” earlier this month DARREN VAUGHAN could have hoped for. The Bears’ season came to at Dow James SPORTS EDITOR “The team camaraderie, a close Tuesday evening with Memorial Park. The Bears’ season When the Tooele County how the guys came together a 8-3 loss to Herriman in the ended with an 8-3 Bears began their American and formed friendships one-loss bracket of the 19U loss to Herriman Legion season in early June, exceeded my expectations,” state tournament at Cate Field in the state tour- coach Nolan Stouder had high Stouder said. “The two in West Jordan. Tooele County nament Monday hopes for the squad that fea- schools have been rivals for was within a run late in the in West Jordan. tured some of the best players so long, and there’s always a FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/ Tooele and Stansbury high little bit of bad blood between SEE BEARS PAGE B3 TTB PHOTO TENNIS, ANYONE? Utes picked as Pac-12 football favorites

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Utah had been in the Pac-12 for eight years before coach ’s team finally won its first division title and played for the conference championship last season.

FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTOS The annual Tooele Transcript Bulletin Tennis Tournament took place over the weekend at the Tooele High School tennis courts, drawing players of all ages to take part in the long-standing summer tradition. Camdin Nelson (right) stands ready to return a serve during the tournament on Saturday. Kayla Johnson (above) celebrates with her father, Chris, after winning a point on Saturday. Tournament play wrapped up on Monday.

With 17 starters returning, the Utes believe the ultimate breakthrough could be coming soon. So do the voters in the annual preseason poll of media members released Wednesday prior to the conference’s media day in Hollywood. Utah was tabbed as the pre- season favorite to win the Pac- 12 for the first time since join- ing the conference in 2011, receiving 12 of 35 votes in the sharply divided ballot. Oregon received 11 votes and defend- ing champion Washington had 10. “We definitely need to get back to that game and want to get back to that game so that we can come out victorious on that night,” Utah running back Zack Moss said of the Pac-12 title game that the Utes lost to the Huskies last season. Utah was an even stron- ger favorite to become the Pac-12’s first repeat South Division winner, though UCLA did appear in the first two conference title games when Southern California was ineli- FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO gible to participate in 2012 Tytan Thurgood (above) hits a return as his father, because of NCAA sanctions. Stephen, looks on during their doubles match The Utes received 33 votes to Saturday at Tooele High School. Jonah Wilson (right) win the South, with the other catches some air as he chases down a ball during a two going to the Trojans. singles match. SEE UTES PAGE B3 Bees’ hot streak continues with four wins over ABQ in six of their past seven games in front 4-1, and Rojas hit a left to tie the game in the fifth by Brian Mundell. Salt Lake sweeps overall after a streak of seven two-run homer in the fourth to inning, and Rojas added a two- However, the Bees took the losses in nine games. They make it 6-2. Josh Thole added run single in the sixth to give lead back with a bases-loaded, road series against now sit three games ahead of a two-run homer of his own in the Bees the lead. Cowart’s two-run single by Wilfredo last-place Albuquerque (45- the fifth inning. bases-loaded walk provided Tovar in the top of the eighth, struggling Isotopes 62) in the Pacific Southern The nightcap saw the Bees the Bees with a much-needed and Franklin added a three- Division as the season enters scoring. give up five runs in the bot- insurance run in the sixth, as run home run to put Salt DARREN VAUGHAN its final full month. The series then shifted to tom of the third inning, only Sam Hilliard’s two-run double Lake up 8-3. Tovar added a SPORTS EDITOR On Thursday at Smith’s New Mexico for three games, to come storming back with in the bottom of the seventh bases-loaded RBI groundout The Albuquerque Isotopes Ballpark, the Bees overcame with Friday’s scheduled con- eight unanswered runs over pulled Albuquerque back in the ninth, with Franklin’s were the perfect elixir to cure an early 3-0 deficit with eight test postponed by a thunder- the next three frames. An RBI within a run. RBI double providing the final the Salt Lake Bees’ ills. unanswered runs. Salt Lake storm. That led to a double- single by Drew Butera, fol- In Sunday’s series finale, the margin. The Bees capped their took the lead with four runs header on Saturday between lowed by a two-run double Bees scored seven runs over The Bees enjoyed an off- week with four consecutive in the bottom of the third the Bees and Isotopes, with by Pat Valaika and a two-run the final two innings to break day Monday before opening victories over their foes from inning, thanks to home runs the visitors winning both home run to straightaway open a 3-3 tie. Salt Lake had a three-game series against New Mexico, beating the by Jose Rojas, Justin Bour contests. In Game 1, the Bees center field by Roberto Ramos taken a 3-0 lead through five the Oklahoma City Dodgers Isotopes 8-3 on Thursday in and Jared Walsh. Anthony led wire-to-wire with an RBI gave the Isotopes — dressed as innings, thanks to an RBI dou- on Tuesday in Salt Lake City. Salt Lake City before sweeping Bemboom’s RBI single in the double by Bour and an RBI the Albuquerque Green Chile ble by Rojas in the third and The Bees will also play host to a doubleheader on Saturday fifth stretched the lead to 5-3, single by Jarrett Parker giving Cheeseburgers — a 5-0 lead, a two-run home run by Bour the New Orleans Baby Cakes in Albuquerque by scores of and Bour and Kaleb Cowart them a 2-0 lead in the top of but Franklin’s grand slam to in the fifth, only to have the in a four-game series from 8-4 and 8-7. Salt Lake won added RBI singles in the sixth. the first inning. left in the top of the fourth got Isotopes tie the game in the Friday-Monday during the Sunday’s series finale 10-4, Nick Franklin’s sixth-inning Taylor Ward’s two-run home Salt Lake back into the game. seventh on a two-run single by homestand. giving the Bees (48-59) wins sacrifice fly closed out the run in the second put Salt Lake Cowart hit an RBI single to Josh Fuentes and an RBI single [email protected] TUESDAY July 30, 2019 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN B3 Koepka outduels McIlroy, wins first WGC title MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) — victory over probably the best when this course hosted the for- birdie and the outright lead, added a birdie on No. 6. Then “Knowing that Brooks Koepka Brooks Koepka knows everyone player right now.” mer St. Jude Classic. while McIlroy’s second was on he added four birdies on the and Rory are out in front, I wanted to see a tight final-round Webb Simpson had a 64 to Koepka says he feels he the left fringe with his attempt back nine and tied the best knew it needed to be a low duel with Rory McIlroy. finish second. Marc Leishman knows this course better than 5 feet short on yet another round of the day with his best round,” Simpson said. “I didn’t “That would have been (67) was third, four strokes any other on tour, and finally par. Koepka birdied his second round since winning the 2018 have a number in mind. ... Very incredible for the fans, for back. Tommy Fleetwood (66) winning here and a WGC title, straight on the par-4 sixth, Players Championship. happy with how the day went.” everybody that showed up and and Matthew Fitzpatrick (69) too, is special. rolling in a 20-footer for a two- I’m sure that’s what everybody joined McIlroy at 11 under. “It’s a thinker’s golf course,” stroke lead . wanted,” Koepka said. Koepka wrapped up the regu- Koepka said. “I probably don’t Koepka padded that lead Too bad Koepka drained lar-season points title a week get enough thought process after the turn, hitting his second all the drama Sunday on the early and claimed a $2 million going through my mind some- from 143 to 8 feet on the par-4 Join the Club! way to his first World Golf bonus from the Wyndham times, just get up and hit it. It 10th. Koepka rolled in the birdie Championships title. Rewards program. He is assured gets very routine. A lot of times putt to go to 15 under with a Koepka had three birdies in to going into the FedEx Cup it’s drivers, but out here you’ve three-stroke lead making the Tooele Club a four-hole stretch on the front playoffs as the No. 1 seed. really got to position yourself off only question left whether any- Tooele 438 W 400 N Annual nine and cruised to a three- Koepka became the sixth the tee depending on where the one could get close. Teen Center Membership stroke victory in the FedEx St. player to win a major cham- pin is.” He created the last of the Boys & Girls 102 N 7th St. Jude Invitational. pionship and a World Golf Now Koepka has come from drama by scrambling for par on Tooele, UT 84074 $$10 Playing with McIlroy in their Championship in the same year. behind in three of his seven vic- the next two holes. He put his Club 435.843.5719 first final-group pairing, the He won the PGA Championship tories, though this time teeing second into the intermediate top-ranked Koepka closed with for the second straight year in off only a stroke off the lead. rough on the edge of the green a bogey-free 5-under 65 at TPC May. When they teed off, Koepka was on No. 15, forcing him to hole a Homework Help | Computers | Games | Arts | and More! Southwind for his seventh PGA After tapping in for par on among 10 players within four 9-footer, with a poor chip on the Tour title. He finished at 16- No. 18, Koepka celebrated with strokes of leader McIlroy. par-5 16th leading to another Afterschoolol under 264. a little fist pump before hugging After a couple of pars, Koepka par. But he clinched the win McIlroy followed his third- McIlroy. took control. with a 12-footer on No. 17. programs forfor round 62 with a 71 to drop into Koepka had been so close in Koepka rolled in a 9-footer McIlroy had won three of his a tie for fourth at 11 under. recent weeks, coming in second for birdie and a share of the lead previous four when shooting Youth andd Teens McIlroy declined to talk to at the U.S. Open in June and on the par-5 third he bogeyed in at least a 62 in an event. The ages 6 - 18.8. When School reporters after the round. tying for fourth last week at the each of the first two rounds for Northern Irishman who missed is The Club “Rory didn’t play the way British Open. He also had a pair a nice confidence boost. McIlroy the cut at the British Open by is In! he wanted to today, but still of top-10 finishes in this event missed his own 4-foot birdie a stroke last week just couldn’t Out it’s so much fun to watch him when it was held at Firestone chance a couple inches left after keep up with Koepka. play,” Koepka said. “You kind Country Club in Akron, Ohio, chipping from behind a green- Simpson eagled No. 3 and TooeleClub.org of get glued watching him hit and he also won for the first side bunker. balls. I mean, it’s mesmerizing time at the TPC Southwind, Then Koepka hit his second watching him hit. You know where he tied for third in 2015 shot on the par-4 fifth from 185 it’s always nice to squeak out a and tied for second in 2016 yards to 5 feet for his second Hamlin pulls away late, Spaghetti Dinner Benefit Fundraiser wins at Pocono Raceway For a youth that is part of the Lake Point Sunset Buckaroos 4H LONG POND, Pa. (AP) the victory that eluded him last Jones and Truex made it a 1- — Denny Hamlin had enough week at New Hampshire. 2-3 running order for JGR as English Club. She was injured at the State 4H Hunter Show. fuel in the No. 11 Toyota to pull With the leaders running low the race headed into OT. That’s away off the final restart in an on fuel, Hamlin had enough the way it shook out after three overtime finish Sunday for his left to get a good jump off two extra laps. fifth victory at Pocono Raceway. late restarts that made the dif- Hamlin swept Pocono as a Thurs • August 1 • 6:00pm Hamlin raced to his third ference. rookie in 2006 and won two victory of the season and 34th “I was really worried,” straight races over the 2009 Lake Point Park • 1337 Canyon Road, Lake Point overall in NACAR Cup Series Hamlin said. “We just did a and 2010 seasons, but often race, giving Joe Gibbs Racing great job with the car.” struggled in recent seasons to its 11th win in 21 races this Hamlin seemingly had the seriously compete for a win on $5.00 a plate or $20.00 a plate per Family of 6 season. race won in regulation when he the tri-oval track. (No takeouts please) Hamlin held off teammates took the lead off a restart with On Sunday, the Daytona 500 Erik Jones, who needed a win four laps to go after Kurt Busch winner had the right combina- to secure a spot in the playoffs, slammed into the wall to bring tion and figured out how to con- MENU - Spaghetti, Green Salad, Cookie & Bottle Water and Martin Truex Jr. to secure out another caution. Hamlin, serve his gas to the very end. SILENT AUCTION - Silent Auction items needed

Marianne Gines 801-244-6321; Be Rasmussen 801-793-5382 Bears “I know with the talent we have continued from page B2 out here, there’s no reason we contest, but Herriman pulled aren’t a big, bad team that away to beat the Bears for the third time this season. steamrolls the whole league.” “We were right there, and then they just got a few base — Nolan Stouder, Tooele County Bears coach hits here and there and kind of broke it open,” Stouder a little bit of extra motivation, tournament, Stouder was said. as a number of the Bears were pleased with how the Bears The Bears won their tourna- on the Tooele High squad that did in their first season. ment opener 3-0 against Sky upset Mountain Crest on its “It was very successful,” View on Friday behind a dom- home field during the Class he said. “I don’t see why inant pitching performance 4A state tournament in May. not, down the road, why we from Clay Freeman, who “We had a rough day,” couldn’t compete for the state pitched six shutout innings. Stouder said. “(Nicholes) did title in Legion and go on to Jaxson Miner picked up the a pretty good job — he was regionals or whatever’s past save with a scoreless sev- getting ground balls and get- that. I know with the talent enth. However, on Saturday, ting opportunities for our we have out here, there’s no Mountain Crest routed Tooele defense, but we just had one reason we aren’t a big, bad County 12-2 as the defense of those out-of-body experi- team that steamrolls the struggled behind starting ence-type days and couldn’t whole league. That’s what I’m pitcher Kaden Nicholes. field the ball for him. That leaning toward and I think it’s Stouder also noted that happens.” very close.” Mountain Crest may have had Despite the exit from the [email protected]

bility elsewhere in the confer- teams to the Bay Area. But the Utes ence as it is the Utes’ solidity. Cardinal lost their two most continued from page B2 The perennially talented important offensive playmak- Trojans, who were picked to ers from last season in running Whittingham credits finish second in the South back Bryce Love and receiver improvement in the passing Division and received two first- J.J. Arcega-Whiteside. game for getting the program place votes in the Pac-12 race, Washington State received to its currently lofty heights. are coming off a 5-7 season one first-place vote in the Always known for strong play with coach Clay Helton under North Division and the Pac-12 on the offensive and defensive pressure to produce an imme- race after winning 11 games lines, it wasn’t until senior diate turnaround. Arizona last season, but needs a new Tyler Huntley and State, UCLA and Arizona each quarterback after the depar- his receivers brought more carry flashes of promise in ture of graduate transfer quar- consistency and explosiveness their second seasons under terback Gardner Minshew, last to the offense that Utah finally new head coaches, while season’s breakout star. won the South. Colorado starts over with for- Even lightly regarded Despite losing Huntley and mer Georgia defensive coordi- California with its dominant Moss for part of the season nator Mel Tucker at the helm. defense and Oregon State because of injuries, Utah still The Pac-12 North is more with its surprisingly explosive averaged 30 points per game muddled. One point separates offense can make things dif- even after failing to score a Oregon from Washington ficult for teams with title aspi- touchdown in that 10-3 loss to as the favorites, followed by rations. Washington in the title game. Stanford and Washington “I think it’s as deep as we The Utes then blew a huge State. have ever been,” Stanford early lead over Northwestern Oregon brings back senior coach David Shaw said. “I and lost the Holiday Bowl to quarterback and top NFL pros- think we’re deeper than any finish 9-5, yet still won at least pect Justin Herbert behind an other conference. I don’t think nine games for the fourth time experienced offensive line, but any other conference can rattle in the past five seasons. has a new defensive coordina- off more than half the confer- “We’re still not a finished tor in former Boise State assis- ence as legitimate contenders.” product,” Whittingham said. tant Andy Avalos. Washington For Utah, that unpredict- “I don’t know anybody that is. has won two of the past three ability increases the urgency But we feel like we’re certainly conference titles, but must to make sure any and all issues better equipped right now replace four-year starting quar- are addressed before what than at any time that we’ve terback Jake Browning. could be a historic season. been in the league to be com- Stanford, which hosts “Prepare each and every petitive.” Washington and Oregon week as if we’re not so talent- But Utah’s status as a Rose this season, won the North ed, we’re not No. 1 in people’s Bowl favorite might be as Division in 2013, 2015 and eyes and things like that,” much a reflection of the insta- 2017 when welcoming both Moss said. B4 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN TUESDAY July 30, 2019

5. FOOD & DRINK: What is a latke? 6. ADVERTISING: Which by Fifi breakfast cereal features Rodriguez a leprechaun in advertise- ments? 1. ANATOMY: Which vita- 7. LITERATURE: Who wrote min is necessary for nor- the Greek play “The Trojan mal blood clotting? Women”? 2. GEOGRAPHY: Which 8. U.S. PRESIDENTS: Who state lies directly south of was Abraham Lincoln’s Missouri? first vice president? 3. PSYCHOLOGY: What 9. MOVIES: Which early fear is represented by the 20th-century film actress condition called pogono- was dubbed “America’s Moments phobia? Sweetheart”? 4. GENERAL KNOWLEDGE: 10. GAMES: How many balls What is the basic currency are used in pocket bil- in Time of the nation of Georgia? liards? The History Channel ➤➤ On Aug. 17, 1877, though only a teenager, Billy the Kid kills his Mega Maze first victim, an Arizona blacksmith. Just how many men the outlaw killed is uncertain. Billy himself reportedly once claimed he had killed 21 men. ➤➤ On Aug. 13, 1902, German engineer Felix Wankel, inventor of a rotary engine, is born in Germany. Wankel reportedly came up with the idea for a new type of internal combustion gasoline ALL PUZZLE ANSWERS BELOW engine when he was 17 years old. ➤➤ On Aug. 16, 1920, Cleveland Indians shortstop Ray Chapman is struck in the temple by a ball pitched by Carl paperweight that wooden plate with a cen- Mays of the New York looks like a forgot- ter “well” and nine smaller Yankees. He died 12 Aten mound of gold carved wells surrounding it hours later. It was the coins is a vintage puzzle that is a gaming board — not an only death as the result has been solved. A pristine oyster plate like I thought. of a pitched ball in example was offered for sale It is decorated with painted major league history. recently with the original playing cards so that might box. There is an inscribed be true. Any suggestions? ➤➤ On Aug. 14, leather patch on the bottom, A: It can’t be an oyster 1945, an official and a small leaflet describ- plate. The food and the announcement of ing the coins and their his- washing would destroy the Japan's unconditional tory. The leather patch had painted cards, and oyster surrender to the Allies a message: “Your friendship plates usually have four to is made public to the is more precious than gold.” six wells. That is a generous Japanese people. Even The paperweight was made portion for dinner. There is though Japan's War by the Johnson Bronze an old English card game Council had submitted Company of New Castle, called “Pope Joan” that uses a formal declaration of Pennsylvania. The weights a board like yours. It was surrender on Aug. 10, Keeping paws cool in summer heat were sold to companies known in the 16th century, fighting continued. In who gave them to custom- and still is played today by fact, two days later, a general. Here are a few tips for shady, open-air spot for it to ers as gifts. They were very three to eight players. The Japanese submarine keeping pets safe during the rest. popular with banks, insur- game was very popular with sank two American summer: A blog post at Vets Now ance agents, stock brokers, families in Victorian times • Take pets outside early in breaks down the details. Even ships. mortgage brokers, real estate and first recorded in the the morning, before it gets very when the air temperature is agents and other companies famous book of card and ➤➤ On Aug. 12, 1964, hot, or after sunset. below 80 F, asphalt on the that dealt with coins and board game rules by Hoyle British author and • Before walking dogs on street can reach 125 F, espe- money. in 1814. The game uses journalist Ian Fleming, the sidewalk, place the back of cially on sunny days with little The paperweight is called the 52-card deck minus the creator of James your hand on the pavement for wind. That’s hot enough to the “Pile-O-Gold,” and the eight of diamonds and mak- Bond, the world's 7 to 10 seconds. If it’s too hot cause severe skin burns, even coins picture presidents, cap- ing the nine of diamonds most famous fictional to keep your hand pressed to it, on dogs’ seemingly tough pads. tains of industry, scientists, an important winning card. spy, dies in England. DEAR PAW’S CORNER: it’s too hot for your dog’s paws. Brick and concrete pavement inventors and engineers. All antique game boards are His novels about the We’re now in the full grip of Walk on a grassy area, instead. are only slightly cooler. Some of the coins have selling well today, and a rare debonair Agent 007 summer. Please remind your • If you must walk your dog So don’t leave it to chance. quotes, and all have the round wooden Pope Joan were based in part readers to be careful walking on pavement (you live in the Take control of your pet’s com- name and embossed head of board sold at auction for a on Fleming's real-life their dogs on the hot pave- city, for example), place boo- fort and safety this summer by the honored person, plus the little over $1,000 a few years ment, because it can burn the ties on your dog’s paws to pro- making sure they are protected experiences. The first name of the job that brought ago. pads of their paws. — Debra L., tect them. from heat-related injuries. the person fame. A vintage • • • Bond book, "Casino Baltimore • Make sure your pet has example sold recently for TIP: If your electric clock Royale," was published DEAR DEBRA: Absolutely! plenty of cool, clean water to Send your tips, comments or about $50. We are told the stops, turn it upside down in 1953. Folks, even dogs that love drink, even if it spends all day questions to ask@pawscorner. pile of gold coins on a desk for a day. The oil inside may ➤➤ On Aug. 15, 1979, being in the outdoors are vul- indoors. com. often fools visitors. flow into the gears and the "Apocalypse Now," the nerable to injury from the hot • Don’t let your pet out in • • • clock may start working acclaimed Vietnam War pavement, and from heat in the backyard unless there’s a © 2019 King Features Synd., Inc. Q: A friend just told me again. film directed by Francis that a 12 1/2-inch round © 2019 King Features Synd., Inc. Ford Coppola, opens in theaters. It told the story of an Army captain who is sent into old. picks up one year after the (RBR.com), former WABC-7 radio station. The most recent the Cambodian jungle The new season premiere is final episode of “The Good meteorologist Bill Evans is now programming schedule shows set for Thursday, Sept. 19 at 9 Wife.” The hope is that it will the program director for Sag that he is on the air Sunday to kill a U.S. Special p.m. ET on TLC. For now, you entice cable and satellite view- Harbor, N.Y.’s WLNG-FM 92.1 afternoons and Monday nights. Forces colonel who can view a preview at TLC. ers to subscribe to CBS The station’s website www. has gone AWOL and is com/tv-shows/little-couple/, All Access so they can WLNG.com also has a link thought to be crazy. which shows the family mov- continue watching the that allows you to listen live ➤➤ On Aug. 18, 1992, ing from Houston to Florida as show. via the internet if you can’t celebrated Boston the main storyline. “The Good Fight” get the station on your radio Celtics forward Larry • • • has three seasons so far in the car or at home. Bird retires. Bird Q: I was wondering when Q: Could you please tell and has been renewed I’m not sure if Evans entered the NBA in the show “The Little Couple” me if “The Good Fight” will for a fourth. For more chose to leave TV or was 1979 and was named will be returning to TV? So continue on CBS, or is it just a information and to forced out, but replac- Rookie of the Year after many of us miss it. It’s a true tease for the summer? It really learn how to sign up, ing him is a familiar face leading the Celtics to a and believable reality show. is enjoyable and so good to see visit www.cbs.com/all- to national audiences. — C.S. so many of the cast from “The access. Former “Good Morning 61-21 record. A: Good news! The preview Good Wife.” — Kathleen • • • America” meteorologist Sam © 2019 King Features Synd. for the new season of “The A: “The Good Fight” has Q: What happened Champion is now in Evans’s Little Couple” is now avail- aired for three seasons on CBS to the meteorologist old spot while still occasion- able for viewing on TLC.com. All Access, a streaming service who had the weekday ally appearing on “GMA.” For those who haven’t seen it, (think Netflix or Hulu) that mornings slot on ABC’s Champion was working at Subscribe Today the sweet reality show centers shows original content as well Channel 7 in New ABC7 when “GMA” first 882-0050 around the Klein family: Bill as older shows available from York? His first name hired him years ago, and he Klein is the father and owns the CBS library. It costs $5.99 was Bill. I believe there says he’s thrilled to be back. a pet supply business, Dr. Jen a month. was a rumor that he Arnold is a neonatologist, This summer, the regular had contract problems. Send me your questions William is their young son CBS network that is available Please enlighten me. at NewCelebrityExtra@ whom they adopted from everywhere has been airing — G.J. gmail.com! Something China when he was 3 years episodes from the first season A: According to old, and daughter Zoey was of “The Good Fight,” which “Radio + Television © 2019 King Features Synd. Christine Baranski On Your adopted when she was 2 years stars Christine Baranski. It Business Report” Mind? ANSWERS Write a Letter Trivia Test Answers to the Editor! 1. Vitamin K 7. Euripides 2. Arkansas 8. Hannibal Hamlin 3. Fear of beards 9. Mary Pickford Tooele Transcript Bulletin 4. The lari 10. 16 balls (15 num- P.O. Box 390 5. A pancake usu- bered balls and the Tooele, UT 84074 ally made of grated cue ball) potato [email protected] 6. Lucky Charms © 2019 King Features Synd., Inc. TUESDAY July 30, 2019 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN B5 Bulletin Board

is needed. Please plan to stay and fun. For more information, call (435) attend this event and to meet our new Rock, Garfield Beach and/or Lake Veterans holds monthly general Tooele present your entry to friendly judges. 833-1934 ext. 1410. We are located at Supreme Governor. A meet and greet Point, as well as any similar turn-of- membership meetings at the Pioneer Make a dessert that is patriotic or cow West Elementary School, 451 W. 300 will be held at 5 p.m., followed by din- the-century attractions and resorts Museum, 47 E. Vine Street in Tooele, Utah Hunter Education themed to match the Red, White and South, Tooele. Please enter through ner at 6 p.m. for an upcoming book project. Those every third Thursday of the month Courses MOO Fair theme to win a special prize. the south side doors. who wish to contribute information at 8 p.m. Those who wish to attend The fourth set of Utah Hunter Desserts will be cut into bite size piec- or photographs of these parks should the leadership meeting at 7 p.m. are Education Courses will be held es and shared with the audience. You St. Marguerite Catholic Eagles contact Emma Penrod at elpenrod@ welcome to listen to the appointed August 6, 8, 13, 14 and 15 for Range must pre-register by texting Darlene School gmail.com. Contributions will be print- members’ meeting. All Tooele County 17. Classes are held from 6 to 9 p.m. at 435-840-4404 by Thursday, August Students of all faiths are welcome Sunday Breakfasts ed with credit in a yet-to-be released veterans are invited to attend. at the Tooele County Health Building, 1 at 7 p.m. Cosponsored by Sherry’s from preschool through 8th grade Breakfasts will be served every Sunday pictorial history book. There is no Disabled American Veterans (DAV) will 151 N. Main St., Tooele. Range times Sweets and USU Extension. at Tooele County’s only faith- morning this month from 9 to 11 a.m. such thing as too many photographs hold its monthly executive and gen- will be announced. State law requires based school. Featuring all-day Order from the menu or have the as the author needs a minimum of 160 eral meetings on the third Thursday of students to attend all sessions of class. Little Farmers Yard Kindergarten, all-day preschool, junior special for $5. Adults pay $7 from the photographs, and any help is greatly every month at the Pioneer Museum Before attending a class, all students Convention Center at Deseret Peak – high grades 6-8, small class sizes, and menu and children 11 years and under appreciated. (rear entrance). The executive meeting must purchase a Hunter Education West of Home Arts and 4H Area. Come an enhanced STEM curriculum. Give are $3.50. Bad Beer is available. Public will be at 7 p.m. and the general meet- Voucher for $10 from a license agent and see what it is like to live life on the us a call at 435-882-0081 or visit www. invited. Tooele Valley Free Masons ing will be at 8 p.m. The DAV is look- farm! Drive a tractor, plant some crops, Tooele Valley Free Masons meet the or vender, bring the voucher to the stmargschool.org. New Door Key Cards ing for volunteer drivers — no DAV class, and give it to the instructor. The eat a healthy treat! Thursday, August 1 second Friday of each month for din- New door key cards are now available. membership is required. Will need a voucher includes all costs for the class from 4 to 8 p.m., Friday, August 2 from ner and socializing. If you are inter- Please bring your current membership VA physical. No monthly meetings are and includes a small game license that 12 to 6 p.m. and Saturday August 3 Education ested or have questions, please join card to the bar to get a new key. held in December. Call commander is validated upon completion of the from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Cosponsored by us at the Lodge, located at the corner Tooele Technical College James Yale at 435-849-0521 or senior class. For more information call Gene Utah State University Extension, Rocky of Settlement Canyon Road and state vice commander Dustee Thomas at Programs with space available include Drink Tokens Expiring at 435-882-4767 or Bryan at 435-882- Mountain Power Foundation and All drink tokens expired on Sunday, Route 36, or call at 435-277-0087. 435-830-8487. the POST (Peace Officer Standards 6795. Cargill Foundation. June 30. Chips will no longer be used. Training) program (Satellite Police Tooele Valley Family History Health Department and Aging Senior Center Free 4H Activities For Kids Academy), Commercial Driver’s Center Services hours Convention Center at Deseret Peak The senior center is for the enjoyment License (CDL) program and Software Elks Research your ancestors free with The Tooele County Health Convention Center in the 4H Exhibit of all seniors 60 and older. Center Development. These programs and trained FamilySearch volunteers at the Department and Aging Services’ Area. Kids of all ages are invited to hours are others are offered at Tooele Tech. Meetings Tooele Valley Family History Center, new hours of operation are Monday- participate in these fun and free activ- Monday thru Thursday 8 a.m. to 4 Enroll today and begin training for a No meetings will be held during the 751 N. 520 East, Tooele. Phone 435- Thursday, 8 a.m. to 6 p.m., and Friday ities. Make a Purple Cow (ice cream p.m., Friday 8 a.m. to Noon. New and promising career. Visit tooeletech.edu month of July. Our first meeting after 882-1396. Hours of operation: Tuesday from 8 a.m. to noon. Check out our and grape juice “milked” through a exciting activities or call student services at 435-248- July will be held on Tuesday, Aug. 27. through Friday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. calendar on our main page for holiday baggie. Thursday, Aug 1 at 7 p.m., include bridge, pinochle, bingo, crafts, 1800 for more information. Lodge floor meetings are held the Tuesday and Thursday evenings 7-9 hours and closures. For more informa- Friday, Aug 2 at 5 p.m. & Saturday, Aug pickleball, Mexican train, tangled art, second and fourth Tuesday of every p.m. Wednesday evenings by appoint- tion call 435-277-2301. yoga, exercise program, line dancing, 3 at 3 p.m. Make homemade paper! Adult Education month. House committee meetings ment only. Special classes offered wood carving, Wii games, water- Thursday, Aug 1 at 8 p.m., Friday, Aug Get your high school diploma this year are held every first and third Tuesday regularly. Call the center for more Parkinson’s disease Support at the Tooele Community Learning color class movies and health classes. 2 at 3 p.m. & Saturday, Aug 3 at 5 p.m. of the month. All members are wel- information. Group Meals-On-Wheels available for Duct Tape notebooks Friday, Aug 2 at Center. All classes required for a high come and encouraged to attend. school diploma, adult basic education, A diagnosis of Parkinson’s disease can homebound. Lunch served weekdays. 10 a.m. and Saturday, Aug 3 at 7 p.m. Tooele Family Al-Anon be overwhelming for the newly diag- GED preparation and English as a sec- Al-Anon meetings are held For 60 and above, suggested contribu- nosed. Tooele has a support group for ond language are available. Register Wednesdays at 11 a.m. in the Tooele tion is $3. For those under 60, cost is Historical Society persons with Parkinson’s disease and Grantsville now to graduate — just $50 per Pioneer Museum’s basement at the $5. Transportation available to the their caregivers. You can learn how semester. Located at 211 Tooele Blvd. Historical books back of the building. For questions or store or doctor visits for others are coping with PD and how to Grantsville Irrigation Call 435-833-8750. Adult education Tooele County Historical Society’s more information, please call Allene at residents in Tooele and Grantsville live well. We meet the third Friday of Company classes are for students 18 and over. books are available to purchase at 435-830-0465 or Elizabeth at 435-884- areas. For transportation information each month from 1-2 p.m. at Tooele call (435) 843-4114. For more informa- Grantsville Irrigation has issued agri- meetings. The History of Tooele 0825 or 435-241-9200. cultural users two regular turns. The ESOL County Volume II is $35, The Mining, Technology College, 88 S. Tooele tion about the Tooele center, call 435- ESOL conversational classes are held Tooele Al-Anon Choices 4U Blvd., Tooele. For information, call Hal 843-4110. meters were read Monday, July 15. Smelting, and Railroading in Tooele is Residents are responsible to monitor Tuesdays and Thursdays at the Tooele $25, and we also have eight note cards This group meets Sundays at 5 p.m. at at 435-840-3683. Community Learning Center. ESOL Mobile Vet Center their own use to ensure the allot- depicting four different pioneer build- the Mountain Faith Lutheran Church, Tooele Naranon “Circle of students may also come anytime the 560 S. Main St., Tooele. For more infor- To better serve veterans located ted 250,000 gallons per residential ings for $4. These make great gifts for Hope to Recovery” share is not exceeded. There are center is open for individualized study. family and friends. Please call Alice mation, contact Gesele at 435-224- in Tooele County, the Mobile Vet Tooele Naranon meets Thursdays at penalties for using more water than Registration is $50 per semester. Dale at 435-882-1612 if you would like 4015 or Jo-Ann at 435-849-4180. Center (MVC) will visit Tooele every 6:30 p.m. at 134 W. 1180 North, Ste. 4 is allowed. Contact the office at 435- Located at 211 Tooele Blvd. Call 435- to purchase these books. Wednesday from 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Alcoholics Anonymous in Tooele (Bonneville Mental Health). at the eastern side of the Walmart 884-3451 or [email protected] if 833-8750 for more information. Meetings are held daily at noon and 8 Open to all those affected by some- parking lot, 99 W. 1280 North, Tooele. you have any questions. Seeking Historical Items Early Head Start p.m. at the Oasis Alano Club, 1120 W. one else’s addiction. As a 12-step The MVC provides free, confidential The Tooele County Historical Society Do you have a child under age 3? Are Utah Ave. For more information, con- program, we offer help by sharing our counseling for theater veterans of Share the past would like members of the commu- you currently pregnant? VANTAGE tact Lance at 435-496-3691 or Wendy experience, strength and hope. For all conflicts. For further information Share the past, submit a history, nity who have any family or personal obituary, or a picture of a deceased Early Head Start is a free program for histories, photographs, books, bro- at 801-694-2624. more information, please contact Terri contact Dave Brown at 801-255-1499, eligible families that offers quality at 435-313-4851. call our 24/7 national call center relative. The Family History Center in chures, DVDs, VHS tapes or newspaper Grantsville is assembling a record of early education for infants and tod- articles that you would like to donate Alcoholics Anonymous 1-877-WARVETS or visit vetcenter. Alcoholics Anonymous meetings are Military Items Wanted Grantsville residents. Your submis- dlers in the home; parent education; to our organization to please call va.gov also held every Tuesday and Thursday When you no longer want your sion may be made by emailing to comprehensive health services to us. We are also looking for books, at 7 p.m., at St. Barnabus Church, 1784 military items, do not take them to [email protected] or by coming into women before, during and after preg- newspaper articles, photos, brochures Donate to library Aaron Dr., Tooele. Deseret Industries or a thrift store. the center at 115 E. Cherry St., or by nancy; nutrition education and family or any history that pertains to the Please remember the “Friends of Bring them — hats, helmets, dress mail to PO Box 744, Grantsville, Utah support services. Call 435-841-1380 or Tooele County area. If you would like the Tooele City Library” while doing Young People in Recovery uniforms, boots, shoes, pants, jackets, 84074. Come in and receive help from 801-268-0056 ext. 211 to apply or for to donate them to our organization, home cleaning and donate your used Young People in Recovery (YPR) hold backpacks, belts, canteens, pouches, our trained consultants. For more free additional information. or if you would let us make a copy for books to the bookstore in the library. all recovery meetings on Thursdays old photos, etc. — to 775 S. Coleman information, call 435-884-5018 or 435- the Tooele County Historical Society, Money from book sales is used to sup- Free developmental evalua- at 6 p.m. in the Grantsville City Street. They will be displayed with 224-5010. please call 435-882-1612. port programs within the library. The Library, and also on the first and third honor and respect. Call Matthew or library is located at 128 W. Vine St. For tion Senior Center DDI VANTAGE Early Intervention offers Friday of the month at 5:30 p.m. in Tina at 435-882-8688. more information, call 435-882-2182 or the Remington Park Apartments’ The senior center is for the enjoyment a variety of services to families with go online to tooelecity.org. Thank you Groups and Events Clubhouse, 495 W. Utah Ave., Tooele. Children’s Choir Auditions of all seniors 60 and older. Center infants and toddlers from birth to age for your support. Questions contact Adam at 480-695- Rising Voices Children’s Choir is an hours are 3. Individualized services are available “Make and Take: Sculpt With 6611, Audrey 435-255-9518 or Heidi at auditioned children’s choir for chil- Monday thru Thursday 8 a.m. to 4 to enhance development in commu- Books for the Whole Family Paper clay” - Tooele County 435-255-9905. dren 7-14 years of age. The talented p.m., Friday 8 a.m. to Noon. New and nication, motor development, cogni- Donated children’s books and paper- Arts Guild Katelynd Blake, owner and director exciting activities tion, social/emotional development, backs are for sale for 25 cents, and Tuesday, July 30 at 7 p.m. at The Family support group of Blake Music Studios, directs the include pinochle, bingo, crafts, bunko, self-help skills and health concerns. hard-covers are being sold for $1 from Coulter House Event Center, 175 Get your loved one sober. The USARA choir. Blake has a degree in vocal per- therapeutic coloring, flint knapping, Contact us for a free developmental 11 a.m.-5 p.m. on Fridays, 5-8 p.m. UT-138, prepare yourself for an event- Craft family support group is held formance and has taught at the col- yoga, fly tying and exercise program, evaluation at 435-833-0725. on Mondays and 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. on ful messy evening and tons of creative Mondays at 6 p.m. in the large reading legiate level. If your child loves to sing wood carving and health classes. Tuesdays at the Tooele City Library. fun! Master of all mediums, Aleta room at the Tooele City Library. Group and you are looking for an exceptional Meals-On-Wheels available for home- All proceeds go back to the library for Boyce will let us get dirty creating books and materials provided. Craft musical experience for them, this is it. bound. Lunch served weekdays. For Charity projects and programs. paper clay sculptures. Bring an apron is a free program for family members For more information and to register 60 and above, suggested contribution Tooele Children’s Justice or wear your grubbies. Decorations who have a loved one with a sub- for an audition, please visit blakemu- Bingo is back is $3. For those under 60, cost is $5. and creations to make and take home stance use disorder. For more informa- St. Marguerite Catholic Church has Center sicstudios.com or call 435-277-0755. Transportation available to the store and gift, share, sell, or duplicate. A tion, call Heidi Warr at 435-255-9905. started its bingo games again on or doctor visits for residents in Tooele Tooele Children’s Justice Center is in need of DVD-Rs, soda, bottled water small fee of $3 is suggested to cover Rocky Mountain Hospice Fridays starting at 6:45 p.m. Come and and Grantsville areas. For transporta- Alzheimer’s Caregiver Group Want to have more meaning in your and snacks. We appreciate all dona- the cost of materials. Donations for have a good time. Food is available. tion information call 435-843-4114. Join us the 2nd Monday of each life. Do you want to do something tions. For inquiries or drop-off, call The Coulter House are always wel- Call 435-882-3860 with questions. For more information about the month from 2-3 p.m. at Mountain that is satisfying and of great service 435-843-3440. 25 S.100 East, Tooele. come! Bring an example of your most Grantsville center, call 435-884-3446. current artwork, or creative creation West Medical Center in Tooele. The to your community? Then become a Tooele County Health Department’s Tooele County Fair Daughters of Utah Pioneers United Methodist Dinner for ‘Show and Tell’ and/or critique. Rocky Mountain Hospice volunteer. We will be asking for nominations for Aging Services program is the spon- No experience required. All train- The DUP is seeking any family his- Tooele United Methodist Church a President Elect and 3 more board sor for these Alzheimer’s Association ing, background check and TB tests Create A Better Burger tories, photographs, books, stories offers a free dinner every Wednesday. members. Caregiver Support Groups. The groups provided by Rocky Mountain. The Compete in this fun contest on or vintage artifacts (before 1900) Coffee and social hour starts at 4 p.m. All artists from Tooele County age are designed to provide emotional, only requirement is your desire to Thursday, Aug 1 at 7 p.m. on the Lawn to display at the DUP Grantsville and dinner is served from 5-6 p.m. All 13 and above are welcome to join educational and social support for help someone in need. Please contact Area West of Deseret Peak Convention Museum, located at 378 W. Clark St. (in are welcome. the Tooele County Arts Guild for an caregivers. Questions call 435-277- Diane Redman at Rocky Mountain Center! Provided: Lean ground beef, the basement of the J. Reuben Clark First Baptist Food Pantry evening, or for the year as a member. 2440. Hospice at 801-397-4904. whole grain bun, lettuce, tomato and Farmhouse across from the Grantsville The First Baptist Church in Tooele is Benefits of membership include the onion. Bring anything else you may Cemetery). For more information, call Food Addicts in Recovery want to use! Propane grill provided. offering an emergency food pantry opportunity to display your artwork The Next Chapter Ellen Yates at 435-884-0253 or Coralie Anonymous The Next Chapter is a free social sup- Age categories: Kids 12-17 and Adults to meet the needs of our community. for show and sale in various venues Lougey at 435-884-3832. Visit www. Are you having trouble controlling port and educational program to help 18. PRIZES! Must preregister: email Hours are Saturdays from 10 a.m. to around Tooele County, as well as grantsvilledupmuseum.com or www. the way you eat? Food Addicts in widows and widowers adjust to the [email protected] by Tuesday, noon. First Baptist Church is located regular updates on events in our com- exploretooele.com. Recovery Anonymous (FA) is a free, loss of their spouse through monthly July 30 at 7 p.m. Co-sponsored by at 580 S. Main Street. For information, munity. The best benefit is meeting 12-step recovery program for any- activities. You are invited to join oth- USU Extension Food $ense and Cargill call 435-882-2048. other artist friends you wouldn’t meet one suffering from food addiction. ers who are on the same page as you, Foundation. Schools otherwise! Call 435-228-8217 for more Baby blankets needed information. Meetings are held every Saturday at 9 to begin a new chapter in your life No Electricity “Churned” Ice Tooele Junior High Baby blankets are needed for the a.m. at the Pioneer Museum, 47 E. Vine story. Call Sarah with Tooele County Cream Contest nursery at Mountain West Medical Ladies Community Club of Street in Tooele. Enter at the north Aging Services at 435-277-2456 for Registration Center. Blankets should be new and in Kids, Adults and teams are invited Tooele back entrance. For more informa- more details. New student registration for students good condition. Homemade blankets to compete on Friday, August 2 at 1 To view upcoming events, learn more tion, call Millicent at 435-882-7094 or who have just moved to Tooele will are also accepted if new. Donations Sons of Utah Pioneers p.m. on Lawn Area West of Deseret about our organization, or to become Colleen at 435-882-9019 or visit www. begin this month. Walk in registra- can be turned in to the volunteer desk Anyone interested in the history of Peak Convention Center. Use a hand a member, please visit gfwctooele.org. foodaddicts.org. Everyone is welcome tion dates are Aug. 8 from 1 p.m. to at Mountain West Medical Center, Tooele City, Tooele County or Utah churner, ice cream ball, or tin can to to attend. 7 p.m., and Aug. 12 from 8 a.m. to 2 2055 N. Main Street in Tooele. Call pioneers, we need you. Please come “churn”. There won’t be electricity - TOPS Weight Loss Support p.m. Please bring with you a copy of Diane at 435-843-3691 with any ques- Group Tooele County Aging and join us for a potluck social dinner so don’t bring an electric ice cream your student’s birth certificate and Tooele County Aging is looking for tions. The TOPS (Take Off Pounds Sensibly) at the LDS church, 192 W. 200 South, maker. Bring all of the ingredients for immunizations. After these dates, volunteers to help us meet the needs Weight Loss Support Group meets Tooele. For more information, please your ice cream. Due to food safety new student registration will be by Community Closet of seniors in the community. Many every Tuesday in the Cornerstone contact Joe Brandon, 435-830-9783 or concerns no raw eggs are allowed appointment only. For more informa- Clean out your closets. The seniors require assistance and need Baptist Church located at 276 E. 500 435-830-9784. The local Sons of Utah in recipes unless pasteurized eggs. tion call 435-833-1921. Community Closet is accepting rides to doctors or other North, Tooele. Weigh-in begins at 5:30 Pioneers meets the first Thursday of Open to adults, kids and teams. Kids donations for gently used cloth- professionals. Rides help seniors live p.m. followed by a meeting at 6 p.m. each month at 6:30 p.m. need to be 8 and older. Everyone will THS Class of ’56 Reunion ing. Donations are accepted at your more independent lives. Call 435- Men, women and children are invited win a prize! Cash prizes for winners. A Class Reunion luncheon for the neighborhood school. Contact Christy 843-4114 for more information. The TC Squares Dance Club to attend. Come and let us help you Make an ice cream that is patriotic or Tooele High School Class of 1956 will Johnson at 435-830-4706 with any Grantsville and Tooele The TC Squares Dance Club has begun live a healthier lifestyle! For more cow themed to match the Red, White be held on Saturday, Aug. 10, 2019 questions. Senior Centers also are in need of vol- dancing again on Mondays at the information visit TOPS.org or contact and MOO Fair theme to win a special at Bonneville Brewery, 1641 N. Main unteers. For more information about Clarke Johnson Jr. High Cafetorium, Mary Lou Beck at 435-228-8202. prize. You must pre-register by texting St., Tooele. (See their website for volunteering at the Grantsville Center 2152 N. 400 West, Tooele, from 7:30- Darlene at 435-840-4404 by Thurs at 7 more details.) A luncheon from the Moose Museum volunteers needed call 435-884-3446. For volunteering at 9:30 p.m. Please bring finger food to p.m. Contest limited to first 10 entries. menu will start at 12 p.m., followed Tooele Valley Museum & Historical the Tooele Center call 435-843-4110. share. For more information, contact USU Extension has two quart size ice by a program and visiting from 1 to Meals at the Lodge Park is seeking volunteers. Do you Woody at 435-850-2441, Roberta at cream balls available to use, request 5 p.m. We hope to see you soon! No Friday and Saturday night dinners will enjoy history or science? Volunteers Life’s Worth Living 801-349-5992 or visit the club’s web- by texting number. First ones to text mail invitations will be sent. Please be served from 5 to 9 p.m. Friday night at the museum can gain new skills Foundation site at tcsquares.com. will get to borrow. Sponsored by USU RSVP via Facebook: facebook.com/ dinners change weekly or you can or practice old ones. We are looking Suicide support group meetings are Extension and Rocky Mountain Power groups/286403918220685/ or contact order from the menu items Saturday Tooele County Homemakers for people to help with organization, held every fourth Thursday at 7 p.m. at Foundation. Carolyn at 435-841-7640 or ccgull13@ night. All meals are for a reasonable From February to May, the exhibit development, gardening and Mountain West Medical Center, 2055 gmail.com. Bring a partner, invite your price. No orders taken after 8:45 p.m. Homemakers will meet on the first educational program development. N. Main Street in Tooele, in the class- Pet Show classmates, or just come! Daily lunch specials are available at room by the cafeteria. If you struggle Tuesday of every month. All meetings Saturday, August 3 at 10 a.m. on the Volunteer positions are seasonal the lodge from 11 a.m. For members with suicidal thoughts or have lost a will be held from 10 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Pavilion Stage (by Pet Zoo & vendors). THS Class of ’64 Reunion and year round. Scheduling is flex- and their guests only. loved one to suicide, please plan on at the USU Extension Building audito- Registration starts at 9:30 a.m., please The Tooele High School Class of ’64 ible. Volunteers must be at least 16 attending. Please go on Facebook and rium, 151 N. Main St., Tooele. For more be on time. Dress your pet as a cow or Reunion will be held on Friday, Aug. Entertainment years old. To apply or request more like our page to keep current with our information call Thiel at 435-238-8245 in patriotic style to get a special prize! 16 and Saturday, Aug. 17. For more There will be a jam session on information, send email to: stepha- latest news and events. Contact us on or Eileen at 435-882-5009. Adults and kids with any type of pet information contact Gayle: 435-882- Saturday, August 17 from 2 to 6 p.m. [email protected] that page. Visit lifesworthlivingfoun- are welcome. Just be sure your pet 4766, Lynda: 435-882-4400, or Lynette: Tooele County Quilters Tooele Gem and Mineral dation.com or call 435-248-LIVE. won’t get away! Bring it in a carrier, on 435-882-0077. Breakfast All meetings are held on the third Breakfast will be served every Sunday a leash, etc. Text Darlene at 435-840- Society Tuesday of each month in the Tooele meeting at 10:30 a.m. until gone. Disabled American Veterans 4404 to register by Friday, August 2 at Story and Craft Hour The Tooele Gem and Mineral Society County Health Dept. auditorium. Dues Please attend the men’s meeting at Chapter 20 7 p.m. Sponsored by Join us every Monday at 10 a.m. at the meets the first Thursday of the month are $20 per year to be paid at the first 9:30 a.m. and the women’s meeting at The “Jordan M. Byrd” Tooele County USU Extension and Rocky Mountain Tooele Family Center-PIRC as we enjoy except for June, July, and August. meeting. 11:30 a.m., and enjoy a great breakfast. Chapter for the Disabled American Power Foundation. the adventures of books and make Meetings are held from 7 to 9 p.m. in fun crafts. For more information, call the downstairs conference room of Pie or Pie Inspired Dessert 435-833-1934 ext. 1410. We are located Veteran’s Appreciation Dinner the Pioneer Museum, 47 E. Vine St., A veteran’s appreciation dinner will Contest at West Elementary School, 451 W. 300 Tooele. Come and learn about rocks, South, Tooele. Please enter through be held on Wednesday August 14 at minerals, and ways to craft them, and Bulletin Board Policy Bring your pie or pie inspired desert 6 p.m. If you would like to announce an upcoming event, contact the Transcript-Bulletin at 882- on Saturday, August 3 at 1 p.m. at the south side doors. enjoy field trips for rock collecting. Membership is $15 per year. For more 0050, fax to 882-6123 or email to [email protected]. “The Bulletin Board” is the Deseret Peak Convention Center Free Preschool Hour Supreme Governor in Tooele for special community events, charitable organizations, civic clubs, non-profit organiza- Foyer. Open to adults, kids and teams. information email tooelegemandmin- Every Tuesday at 10 a.m., the Tooele Rodney A. Hammond, Supreme tions, etc. For-profit businesses should contact the advertising department. Please limit Kids need to be 8 and older. Everyone [email protected]. Family Center-PIRC has a fun activity Governor of the Loyal Order of your notice to 60 words or less. The Tooele Transcript-Bulletin cannot guarantee your will receive a prize. Cash prizes for hour of learning, singing and creat- Moose, will speak at the Lodge on Local author seeks photos announcement will be printed. To guarantee your announcement please call the adver- winners! If bringing cookies, cupcakes ing. The class is for all children up to 5 Wednesday, August 14 as part of his A local author and historian is seeking tising department at 882-0050. Information must be delivered no later than 3 p.m. the or other small pie inspired items, day prior to the desired publication date. years old. Please come and enjoy the travels across the country. We encour- original photographs of Saltair, Black please bring 4 of them. Only one pie age all men and women members to NOTICE OF TRUS- TEE'S SALE The following de- scribed property will be sold at public auction to the highest bidder, payable in lawful money of the United States at the time of sale, at the Tooele County Courthouse, 74 South 100 East, Tooele, UT 84074, on August 21, 2019, at 1:00 p.m. of said day, for the purpose of fore- closing a trust deed dated December 9, 2015, and executed by FRANY BEZUNAR- TEA, SINGLE MAN, as Trustor, in favor of MORTGAGE ELEC- TRONIC REGISTRA- TION SYSTEMS, INC. ("MERS") SOLELY AS NOMINEE FOR VERI- TAS FUNDING LLC, ITS SUCCESSORS AND ASSIGNS as Beneficiary, which Trust Deed was re- corded on December 11, 2015, as Entry No. 422377, in the Official PUBLIC NOTICE Records of Tooele NOTICE IS HERBY County, State of Utah GIVEN THAT Tuesday the covering July real 30, property 2019 B6B6 TooeleTOOELE TranscripT TRANSCRIPT BULLETINBulleTin Tooele Planning Com-TUESDAYpurportedly July located 30, 2019 at mission will hold a 171 West Utah Ave- public hearing during nue, Tooele, Utah their business meeting 84074 in Tooele scheduled for August County, Utah, and To place your Classified ad 14, 2019 atTo 7:00 place p.m. yourmore Classified particularly ad de- call 435-882-0050 in the City Councilcall 435-882-0050scribed as: Chambers of City Hall COMMENCING AT A located at 90 North POINT 110 FEET ClassifiedMain Street, Tooele, WEST OF THE Utah. NORTHEAST COR- Public Hearing on a NER OF LOT 8 IN Rates for the Tooele Transcript Bulletin, Conditional Use Permit BLOCK 35 OF PLAT CLASSIFIED LINE AD RATES published every Tuesday and Thursday Classified ad deadlines: Monday 4:45 p.m. for Tuesday edition • Wednesdayto allow 4:45 for additionalp.m. for Thursday"A", TOOELE edition CITY All classified line ads running in the Tooele Transcript Bulletin on Tuesday or Thursday will automatically run in the Tooele Valley Extra, a separate publicationheight that is delivered on a to newall nonsubscribers ac- SURVEY, of the Tooele Transcript TOOELE Bulletin. TwENTy wORDS OR LESS MONTHLy RATE cessory structure lo- CITY, RUNNING An ad running a minimum of 8 consecutive issues NOTICE Transcript Bulletin Publishing Co. does not endorse, promote, or encourage the purchase of any product All real estate advertised in the Tooele Transcript-Bulletin is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which $ 50 After 20 words or service advertised in this newspaper. Advertisements are the sole responsibility of the advertiser. Transcript makes it illegal to advertise “any preference,cated limitation, at 881 or discrimination Upland basedTHENCE on race, religion, WEST sex or national 50 30¢ per word/issue $2.00 per word over 20 words Bulletin Publishing Co. hereby disclaims all liability for any damages suffered as the result of any advertisement in origin, or any intention to make any Drivesuch preference, in the limitation R1-7 or discrimination.”Resi- FEET; The Tooele Transcript-Bulletin THENCE will 6 $ the Tooele Transcript-Bulletin. Transcript Bulletin Publishing Co. is not responsible for any claims or representations not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are informed that Bold/boxed ads extra made in advertisements in the Tooele Transcript-Bulletin. The Tooele Transcript- Bulletin has the sole authority to edit all dwellings advertised in this paperdential are available zoningon an equal opportunity district basis.SOUTH 75 FEET; Bold type 5¢ per word/issue 25 No credit for stopped ads. Includes and locate any classified advertisement as deemed appropriate. Transcript Bulletin Publishing Company reserves on .68 acres. THENCE EAST 50 Boxed ads 50¢ per issue (20 words or less) the right to refuse any advertisement. 4 runs in the Tooele Valley Extra Pursuant to the Ameri- FEET; THENCE cans with Disabilities NORTH 75 FEET TO Act, individuals need- THE POINT OF BE- Services Services Miscellaneous Garage, Yard Help Wanted Autos Water Shares ingPublic special Notices accommo- GINNING.Public Notices Tax ID: Sales dationMeetings during this 02-044-0-0030Trustees meeting should notify The current Benefici- TREE WORK. Free HughesNet Satellite HAVING A GARAGE HEAVY EQUIPMENT DONATE YOUR CAR TWO SHARES Settle- Andrew Aagard, City ary of the trust deed is ALTERATIONS estimates! Local Internet - 25mbps SALE? Advertise it in OPERATORS: GTM TO UNITED BREAST ment Canyon water. Planner / Zoning Ad- UTAH HOUSING company. Licensed starting at $49.99/mo! the classifieds. Call Builders is looking for CANCER FOUNDA- Send bids and phone ministrator at (435) CORPORATION, and and AWARD & insured. Bucket Get More Data 882-0050 heavy equipment op- TION! Your donation number to 667 Grey- 843-2132 or TDD the record owner of WINNING truck, Crane serv- FREE Off-Peak Data. erators who can oper- helps education, pre- stone Way, Tooele, (435) 843-2180 prior to the property as of the FAST download MOVING SALE Tooele ate and haul equip- vention & support UT 84074. the meeting. recording of the Notice ice, Stump removal, 1256 Upland, Satur- mulch. speeds. WiFi built in! ment, such as skid programs. FAST (Published in the of Default is FRANY TAILORING FREE Standard In- day 9am-2pm. steers and excava- FREE PICKUP - 24 Tooele Transcript Bul- BEZUNARTEA, A SIN- 801-633-6685 Pre- Clothes, tools, power Buildings by ciseTreeLLC.com stallation for lease tors. Class A CDL is HR RESPONSE - letin July 30, 2019) GLE MAN. customers! Limited tools, furniture, required. $14-$18/hr TAX DEDUCTION Bidders must tender to household items, PUBLIC NOTICE: KATHY T i m e , C a l l based on experience. 1-855-507-2691 If you build, remodel or The Grantsville City the trustee a 1-844-294-9882 boat, sporting equip- Great benefits. $20,000.00 deposit at DONATE YOUR CAR, remove buildings you Council will hold a spe- Miscellaneous ment. Everything Please email re- the sale and the bal- JONES TRUCK OR BOAT can place your classi- cial meeting at 6:00 If you sell Insurance, must go. sumes to ance of the purchase TO HERITAGE FOR fied ad in 45 of Utah's p.m. on July 30, 2019 promote a hospital or employment@gtmbuild price by 2:00 p.m. the DIAMONDS don't pay OVERLAKE YARD THE BLIND. Free 3 newspapers for only at the Utah Fire Mu- 882-6605 an ambulance serv- ers.com. Any ques- day following the sale. retail! Large selec- ice, place your classi- and Living Estate Day Vacation, Tax $163. for 25 words seum, 1891 East Sale 294 Durocher tions please contact Both the deposit and A1 PAINTING. Inte- tion, high quality. Bri- fied ad in all 47 of Deductible, Free ($5. for each addi- SR112, Grantsville, UT Ln. Friday-Saturday T r a v i s a t the balance must be rior, exterior painting, dal sets, wedding Utah's newspapers. Towing, All Paper- tional word). You will 84029. The agenda is August 2 and 3 435-840-2849. paid to Lincoln Title In- staining, deck oiling, bands. Everything The cost is only $163. work Taken Care Of. reach up to 340,000 as follows: wholesale! Rocky 8am-1pm. Appli- households and all surance Agency in the power washing, dry- for a 25 word ad ($5. LICENSED CDL CALL SPECIAL MEETING Mtn. Diamond Co. ances, furniture, col- you do is call the form of a wire transfer, wall, phase, patching. For each additional DRIVERS: GTM 1-855-408-2196 AGENDA: S.L.C. lectables, antiques, Transcript Bulletin at 1. Closed Session cashier's check or cer- Professional work at word). You will reach Builders is looking for RW AUTO Sales- 1-800-396-6948 and household items, 882-0050 for all the (Litigation). tified funds. Cash pay- reasonable rates. up to 500,000 news- licensed CDL Drivers. Commuter Car Deals! too much to list. details. (Mention 2. Adjourn. ments, personal (435)840-3282 DIRECTV NOW. No paper readers. Just 2+ yrs of experience 336 N Main in UCAN Classified Net- Christine Webb checks or trust checks Satellite Needed. call Tooele Transcript is required. Class A Tooele! 10 Units DRYWALL: Hanging, work) City Recorder are not accepted. $40/month. 65 Chan- Bulletin at CDL is a must. Home $9,995 or less! Vehi- finishing, texturing. Pets In compliance with the DATED: July 10, 2019. nels. Stream Break- (435)882-0050 for de- Nightly. Local Driving. cle Locator Program METAL ROOF/WALL 37 years experience. Americans with Dis- LINCOLN TITLE IN- ing News, Live tails. (Ucan) $14-$18/hr based on for any make or Panels, Pre-engi- Licensed and in- ability Act, Grantsville SURANCE AGENCY Events, Sports & On experience. Great model! Dlr. #278A. neered Metal Build- sured. Doug Put on your TV Ears RUSH City will accommodate By: Shelby K. Irvin Demand Titles. No benefits. Please We only sell clean title, ings. Mill prices for (435)830-2653 and hear TV with un- LAKE reasonable requests to Its: Authorized Agent Annual Contract. No email resumes to em- clean Carfax units. All sheeting coil are at a matched clarity. TV KENNELS. assist persons with Telephone: (801) HANDYMAN, any kind Commitment. CALL ployment@gtmbuild- vehicles come with 4 year low. You get Ears Original were Dog & Cat boarding, disabilities to partici- 476-0303 of handyman work, 1-877-927-4411 ers.com. Any ques- an engine and trans- the savings. 17 Col- originally $129.95 - obedience training. pate in meetings. Re- web site: www.smith- yard work, leaf tions please contact mission warranty. ors prime material, NOW WITH THIS Call (435)882-5266 quests for assistance knowles.com cleanup. Residential DISH Network $59.99 T r a v i s a t visit www.mycom- cut to your exact SPECIAL OFFER are rushlakekennels.co may be made by call- SK File No. 17-0977 and business. Call For 190 Channels! mutercar.com or call length. CO Building only $59.95 with code m 435-840-2849. ing City Hall (435) (Published in the J i m m y a t Add High Speed 801-842-1411. Systems MCB59! Call 884-3411 at least 3 Tooele Transcript Bul- (435)228-8561 Internet for ONLY 1-800-COBLDGS letin July 16, 23 & 30, 1-866-233-2402 SELL YOUR CAR or days in advance of a $14.95/month. Best 2019) HOME REPAIRS ex- Livestock boat in the classi- meeting. pert. Doors, knobs, Technology. Best Two great new offers Public Notices Value. Smart HD NOW HIRING Tooele fieds. Call 882-0050 (Published in the trim, baseboards, from AT&T Wireless! NOTICE OF TRUS- DVR Included. FREE Army Depot has an or visit www.tooele- Meetings Tooele Transcript Bul- mouldings, drywall re- Ask how to get the Need to sell that new TEE'S SALE Installation. Some re- opening for a cook, transcript. com letin July 30, 2019) pairs, texturing, Next Generation champion bull or your Deadline for public The following de- strictions apply. Call NA-04. The salary is caulking, weather- Samsung Galaxy yearling calves? notices is 4 p.m. the scribed property will be 1-866-360-6959 $11.48 to $13.46 per Public Notices proofing, framing, S10e FREE. FREE Place your classified Homes for day prior to publica- sold at public auction iPhone with AT&T?s hour based on experi- Rent Trustees home updating and Earthlink High Speed ad into 47 newspa- ence. This is in inter- tion. Public notices to the highest bidder, renovations and Buy one, Give One. pers, find your buyers submitted past the payable in lawful Internet. As Low As While supplies last! mittent position; no TOOELE 2BDRM Deadline for public much more. Small $14.95/month (for the quickly. For only guaranteed hours, no deadline will not be money of the United jobs okay. Call CALL 1-8667177052 $163. your 25 word 1bth, carport, no accepted. notices is 4 p.m. the States at the time of first 3 months.) Reli- or www.freephones- benefits. Opening smoking, no pets, day prior to publica- Shane (435) able High Speed Fi- classified will be seen date is July 17, 2019, UPAXLP sale, at the Tooele 840-0344. now.com//utah by up to 500,000 $975/mo first and last tion. Public notices County Courthouse, ber Optic Technol- closing date is July PUBLIC NOTICE readers. It is as sim- month plus cleaning submitted past the 74 South 100 East, NEED CONCRETE ogy. Stream Videos, You may have just the 31, 2019. For instruc- NOTICE IS HERBY ple as calling the deposit. Call deadline will not be Tooele, UT 84074, on WORK? We have 35 Music and More! Call thing someone out of tions on how to apply, GIVEN THAT the Tooele Transcript 435-224-4306. accepted. August 28, 2019, at years experience! Earthlink Today town is looking for. g o t o Tooele Planning Com- Bulletin at UPAXLP 1:00 p.m. of said day, Driveways, patios, 1-844-240-1769 Place your classified www.usajobs.gov. mission will hold a (435)882-0050 for de- NOTICE OF TRUS- for the purpose of fore- sidewalks, EVERY- ad in 45 of Utah's The job announce- Homes public hearing during Frontier Communica- tails. (Ucan) TEE'S SALE closing a trust deed THING! We also do newspapers, the cost m e n t # i s their business meeting tions Internet Bun- The following de- dated May 13, 2015, backhoe and grading. is $163. For up to 25 O1NAFFQ191055481 scheduled for August dles. Serious Speed! HOME FOR SALE- scribed property will be and executed by Gordie words. You will be Sporting 0. For more informa- 14, 2019 at 7:00 p.m. Serious Value! Brand new every- sold at public auction RUTH ANN RICH- 435-850-9533. reaching a potential Goods t i o n c a l l in the City Council Broadband Max - thing. New kitchen to the highest bidder, ARDSON AND PAUL of up to 340,000 435-833-2005. Chambers of City Hall RAIN GUTTERS, $19.99/mo or Broad- cabinets and counter- payable in lawful RICHARDSON, WIFE households. All you SELLING YOUR located at 90 North seamless, aluminum, band Ultra - SCHOLAR ACAD- tops, new hardwood money of the United AND HUSBAND AS need to do is call the mountain bike? Ad- Main Street, Tooele, all colors, leaf protec- $67.97/mo. Both In- EMY a K-8 Charter LVF floor, new tile in States at the time of JOINT TENANTS, as Transcript Bulletin at vertise it in the classi- Utah. tion cleaning. Li- clude FREE Wi Fi School is seeking baths and laundry. sale, at the Tooele Trustors, in favor of 882-0050 for full de- fieds. Call 882-0050 Public Hearing on a censed and insured, Router. CALL For De- applicants for para- New carpet in base- County Courthouse, MORTGAGE ELEC- tails. (Mention UCAN) www.tooele tran- Zoning Map Amend- free estimates. t a i l s ! - professional teach- ment and basement 74 South 100 East, TRONIC REGISTRA- script.com ment request from the (435)841-4001 1-866-307-4705 ing assistants bedrooms. Single car Tooele, UT 84074, on TION SYSTEMS, INC. Furniture & GC General Commer- YOTTY DISOLVING $12/hr 30hr/wk. garage, RV parking August 21, 2019, at ("MERS"), SOLELY TREE TRIMMING and Get DIRECTV! ONLY cial Zoning District to Appliances Sinkers. Get your bait Great working envi- on both sides. 1:00 p.m. of said day, AS NOMINEE FOR stump removal. Call $35/month! 155 the RR-1 Residential where the fish are. ronment. Send re- Fenced yard, multiple for the purpose of fore- SECURITYNATIONAL Kolleen at Tooele Channels & 1000s of FOR SALE 3x6ft solid Zoning District ap- Environmentally safe, s u m e t o sheds in backyard w/ closing a trust deed MORTGAGE COM- Valley Stump Grind- Shows/Movies On wood desk with side proximately 3 acres lo- no harmful chemicals. sshepard@scholar- covered patio. Call or dated December 9, PANY, ITS SUCCES- ing 435-849-6768. Demand (w/SELECT shelves: $300 OBO. cated at 705 North 100 C a l l L a r r y charter.org. text 435-830-1343. 2015, and executed by SORS AND ASSIGNS All Included Pack- Wooden credenza: West. TREE TRIMMING ISA 435-850-2990 or Text preferred. FRANY BEZUNAR- as Beneficiary, which age.) PLUS Stream $200 OBO. Contact Pursuant to the Ameri- Certified Arborist. yottydisolvingsinkers@ TEA, SINGLE MAN, Trust Deed was re- on Up to FIVE Jim 435-833-9524. Planning on selling cans with Disabilities Trees up to 40’ tall. gmail.com. Business as Trustor, in favor of corded on May 14, Screens Simultane- your home, you could Act, individuals need- Call Stephen NORTH VALLEY Ap- MORTGAGE ELEC- 2015, as Entry No. ously at No Addt?l Opportunities be sending your sales ing special accommo- (435)241-2504. pliance. Washers/ TRONIC REGISTRA- 412819, in the Official Cost. Call DIRECTV points to up to dation during this dryers refrigerators, Personals INVENTORS - FREE TION SYSTEMS, INC. Records of Tooele SELL YOUR CAR or 1-833-599-6474 340,000 households meeting should notify INFORMATION ("MERS") SOLELY AS County, State of Utah boat in the classi- freezers, stoves. at once. For $163. Andrew Aagard, City PACKAGE Have your NOMINEE FOR VERI- covering real property fieds. Call 882-0050 SELL YOUR computer $149-$399 full war- Meet singles right now! you can place your Planner / Zoning Ad- product idea devel- TAS FUNDING LLC, purportedly located at or visit www.tooele- in the classifieds. Call ranty. Complete re- No paid operators, 25 word classified ad ministrator at (435) oped affordably by ITS SUCCESSORS 863 West 580 South, transcript. com or 882-0050 or visit pair service. Satis- just real people like to all 45 newspapers 843-2132 or TDD the Research & De- AND ASSIGNS as Tooele, Utah 84074 in e-mail your ad to www.tooeletranscript. faction guaranteed. you. Browse greet- in Utah. Just call the (435) 843-2180 prior to velopment pros and Beneficiary, which Tooele County, Utah, tbp@tooeletranscript. com Parts for all brands. ings, exchange mes- Transcript Bulletin at the meeting. presented to manu- Trust Deed was re- and more particularly com (435)830-3225. sages and connect 882-0050 for all the (Published in the facturers. Call corded on December described as: live. Try it free. Call details. (Mention Tooele Transcript Bul- Portable Oxygen Con- 1-877-649-5574 for a 11, 2015, as Entry No. LOT 64, WESTLAND now: 844-400-8738 ucan) letin July 30, 2019) centrator May Be Free Idea Starter 422377, in the Official COVE SUBDIVISION Covered by Medi- Guide. Submit your SELLING YOUR PUBLIC NOTICE Records of Tooele NO. 3, A SUBDVI- care! Reclaim inde- Help Wanted idea for a free consul- HOME? Advertise it NOTICE IS HERBY County, State of Utah SION OF TOOELE pendence and mobil- tation. in the classifieds. Call GIVEN THAT the covering real property CITY, ACCORDING ity with the compact 882-0050 or visit Tooele Planning Com- purportedly located at TO THE PLAT Business owners If design and long-last- Small Business own- www.tooeletran mission will hold a 171 West Utah Ave- THEREOF, RE- you need someone ing battery of Inogen ers: Place your clas- script.com public hearing during nue, Tooele, Utah CORDED IN THE OF- fast, place your clas- One. Free information sified ad in 45 news- their business meeting 84074 in Tooele FICE OF THE sified ad in all 48 of k i t ! C a l l papers throughout scheduled for August County, Utah, and TOOELE COUNTY Utah's newspapers. 877-691-4639 Utah for only $163. Water Shares 14, 2019 at 7:00 p.m. more particularly de- RECORDER. Tax ID: !"#$%&&'()*+,$%((-*&.)*"+/ The person you are for 25 words, and $5. in the City Council scribed as: 12-001-0-0070 Now Renting Stay in your home looking for could be per word over 25. Chambers of City Hall COMMENCING AT A The current Benefici- !"#$%&'(&)*+,#*,$")'-../0 longer with an Ameri- from out of town. The ONE SHARE Settle- Income Restrictions Apply You will reach up to located at 90 North POINT 110 FEET ary of the trust deed is can Standard Walk-In cost is only $163. for ment Canyon irriga- (&"*1/'1)),)*1"#&'%10'2&' 340,000 households Main Street, Tooele, WEST OF THE UTAH HOUSING Exclusively for Seniors Bathtub. Receive up a 25 word ad and it tion water $3500 and it is a one call, Utah. NORTHEAST COR- CORPORATION, and 131,/12/&4'51//'6$+'7&*1,/) to $1,500 off, includ- reaches up to O B O c a l l Pet Friendly one order, one bill Public Hearing on a NER OF LOT 8 IN the record owners of ing a free toilet, and a 340,000 households. 435-830-2891. program. Call the Conditional Use Permit BLOCK 35 OF PLAT the property as of the 012340135676 lifetime warranty on All you do is call the Transcript Bulletin at SETTLEMENT CAN- to allow for additional "A", TOOELE CITY recording of the Notice Call for details the tub and installa- Transcript Bulletin at 899$45536123:;55 882-0050 for further YON Irrigation Water height on a new ac- SURVEY, TOOELE of Default are RUTH 435.843.0717 tion! Call us at (435)882-0050 for all info. (ucan) Shares for lease or cessory structure lo- CITY, RUNNING ANN RICHARDSON 1-877-838-9074 or the details. (Mention sale. Contact Robert cated at 881 Upland THENCE WEST 50 AND PAUL RICHARD- visit www.walkin- UCAN) You can now N e w b o l d a t Drive in the R1-7 Resi- FEET; THENCE SON, WIFE AND tubquote.com/utah order online Wanted 801-544-1527 or dential zoning district SOUTH 75 FEET; HUSBAND AS JOINT www.utahpress.com robertnewbold75@gm on .68 acres. THENCE EAST 50 TENANTS. ail.com SELLING YOUR I AM paying more for Pursuant to the Ameri- FEET; THENCE Bidders must tender to HOME? Advertise it junk cars/trucks. I will SELL YOUR com- cans with Disabilities NORTH 75 FEET TO the trustee a in the classifieds. Call come to you and tow puter in the classi- Act, individuals need- THE POINT OF BE- $20,000.00 deposit at 882-0050 or visit it away. Call/Text fieds. Call 882-0050 ing special accommo- GINNING. Tax ID: the sale and the bal- www.tooeletran (435)224-2064 or visit www.tooele- dation during this 02-044-0-0030 ance of the purchase script.com DL5970 transcript. com meeting should notify The current Benefici- price by 2:00 p.m. the Andrew Aagard, City ary of the trust deed is day following the sale. Planner / Zoning Ad- UTAH HOUSING Both the deposit and ministrator at (435) CORPORATION, and the balance must be 843-2132 or TDD the record owner of paid to Lincoln Title In- Part-Time Nursing Clinical Teacher CARRIERS(435) 843-2180 prior to the property as of the surance Agency in the USU - Tooele Campus the meeting. recording of the Notice form of a wire transfer, (Published in the of Default is FRANY cashier's check or cer- USU is currently hiring non-benefited teachers to provide clinical instruction to USU Needed!Tooele Transcript Bul- BEZUNARTEA, A SIN- tified funds. Cash pay- nursing students. Positions are currently open in Tooele. This is an ACA Variable position. letin July 30, 2019) GLE MAN. ments, personal Responsibilities Bidders must tender to checks or trust checks 1. Plans, prepares, and follows an approved course of student with measurable the trustee a are not accepted. Attention!! Valley Behavioral Health is current- Attention!! Valley Behavioral Health is current- objectives for each clinical course taught. ly hiring for part-time and full-time Therapists $20,000.00 deposit at DATED: July 19, 2019. 2. Instructs, manages, and supervises individuals and groups in clinical and/or thely salehiring andfor part-time the bal- andLINCOLN full-time Therapists TITLE IN- simulation lab settings. (to include those graduating school) to provide ance(to include of the those purchase graduatingSURANCE school) toAGENCY provide 3. Evaluates learning. treatment for a variety of behavioral condi- is looking for pricetreatment by 2:00 for p.m.a variety the ofBy: behavioral Shelby K.condi- Irvin 4. Maintains and submits student evaluations and records. tions to adult and children populations within Paper Carriers daytions following to adult the and sale. childrenIts: populations Authorized within Agent 5. Counsels students as needed. Tooele County. (Sign-on Bonus!!!) Competitive Both the deposit and Telephone: (801) 6. Assists nursing program in maintaining an effective program. Tooele County. (Sign-on Bonus!!!) Competitive pay & compensation, good work-life balance, in the the balance must be 476-0303 7. Maintains safe clinical conditions. paidpay to & Lincolncompensation, Title In- goodweb work-life site: www.smith- balance, and an opportunity to make a lasting impact. See https://careers-usu.icims.com/jobs/intro for more information and to apply Erda Area! suranceand an Agencyopportunity in theto makeknowles.com a lasting impact. online. Job id: 2019-1676 form of a wire transfer, SK File No. 19-0539 Please email Please email [email protected] or go to If you’re interested please call cashier's check or cer- (Published in the EEO Employer/Veterans/Disabled [email protected] tified funds. Cash pay-or goTooele to Transcript Bul- www.valleycares.com/careers to apply. 435.882.0050 ments,www.valleycares.com/careers personal letin July to 23, apply. 30 & checks or trust checks August 6, 2019) are not accepted. DATED: July 10, 2019. LINCOLN TITLE IN- SURANCE AGENCY By: Shelby K. Irvin Tooele Transcript Bulletin Its: Authorized Agent Telephone: (801) Size: 3 (3.875”) x 4” 476-0303 web site: www.smith- Issue: 7/30 knowles.com SK File No. 17-0977 (Published in the Tooele Transcript Bul- letin July 16, 23 & 30, 2019) NOTICE OF TRUS- TEE'S SALE The following de- scribed property will be sold at public auction to the highest bidder, payable in lawful money of the United States at the time of sale, at the Tooele County Courthouse, 74 South 100 East, Tooele, UT 84074, on August 28, 2019, at 1:00 p.m. of said day, for the purpose of fore- closing a trust deed dated May 13, 2015, and executed by RUTH ANN RICH- ARDSON AND PAUL RICHARDSON, WIFE NOTICE OF ADOP- AND HUSBAND AS TION AND NOTICE JOINT TENANTS, as OF RIGHTS Trustors, in favor of In the District Court of MORTGAGE ELEC- Utah, Divdist Judicial TRONIC REGISTRA- District Tooele County, TION SYSTEMS, INC. 47 South Main Street, ("MERS"), SOLELY Tooele, Utah 84074 AS NOMINEE FOR In the matter of the SECURITYNATIONAL Adoption of Jaiden Al- MORTGAGE COM- exander Lewis PANY, ITS SUCCES- Case Number SORS AND ASSIGNS 192300031 as Beneficiary, which Judge Bates Trust Deed was re- The State of Utah To: SUMMONS corded on May 14, Michele Lynn Johnson. DISTRICT COURT OF 2015, as Entry No. You are being notified THE STATE OF UTAH 412819, in the Official of the Peition to Adopt THIRD JUDICIAL DIS- Records of Tooele Jaiden Alexander TRICT TOOELE County, State of Utah Lewis. COUNTY covering real property You have the right to SARANELL WALK, purportedly located at file a motion to inter- EVERN JAY WALK, 863 West 580 South, vene with this court. If Petitioner, vs. Tooele, Utah 84074 in your motion to inter- ROBERT EARL OS- Tooele County, Utah, vene is granted, you TLER, WENDY LYNN and more particularly have the right to op- KRIPPNER, Respon- described as: pose this adoption. dent. SUMMONS LOT 64, WESTLAND If you want to inter- Case Number COVE SUBDIVISION vene in this adoption, 184300605 NO. 3, A SUBDVI- you must file a motion Judge Matthew Bates SION OF TOOELE to intervene with this Commissioner Mi- CITY, ACCORDING court within 30 days chelle C. Tack TO THE PLAT after August 20, 2019, THE STATE OF UTAH THEREOF, RE- which is the last date TO THE ABOVE CORDED IN THE OF- this notice will be pub- NAMED RESPON- FICE OF THE lished. And you must DENT: TOOELE COUNTY serve a copy of your You are hereby sum- RECORDER. Tax ID: motion on petitioner or moned and required to 12-001-0-0070 their attorney at: Kelli file an Answer in writ- The current Benefici- Lewis, 772 N Main ing to the attached pe- ary of the trust deed is Street #276, Tooele tition with the clerk of UTAH HOUSING UT, 84074. the above captioned CORPORATION, and If you do not file a mo- court, 74 South 100 the record owners of tion to intervene within East, Tooele, Utah, the property as of the that time, you waive 84074, and to serve recording of the Notice any right to further no- upon, or mail to, Jaime of Default are RUTH tice in this adoption, Topham, petitioner's ANN RICHARDSON forfeit all rights in rela- attorney, 291 N Race AND PAUL RICHARD- tion to the adoptee, Street, Grantsville, UT SON, WIFE AND and are barred from 84029, a copy of said HUSBAND AS JOINT bringing or maintaining Answer within 21 days TENANTS. any action to assert after service of this TUESDAYTuesdayBidders must JulyJuly tender 30,30, to 20192019 any interest in the summons uponTooeleTOOELE you. TranscripT TRANSCRIPT BULLETINBulleTin B6B7 the trustee a adoptee. If you fail so to do, $20,000.00 deposit at You may obtain a copy judgment by default thePublic sale and Notices the bal- Public Notices ofPublic the Petition Notices to Adopt willPublic be taken Notices against Public Notices ance Trustees of the purchase Miscellaneous andMiscellaneous other court re- youMiscellaneous for the relief de- Miscellaneous NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING – price by 2:00 p.m. the cords in this case only manded in said peti- day following the sale. NOTICE OF ADOP- if your motion to inter- tion, which has been PUBLIC NOTICE ENTERPRISE FUND TRANSFER Both the deposit and TION AND NOTICE vene is ganted. filed with the clerk of Lifeline Assistance - the balance must be OF RIGHTS You also have right to said court, and a copy Who qualifies? paid to Lincoln Title In- In the District Court of consent to this adop- of which is hereto an- Low-income telephone Notice: Tooele City will conduct a Public Hearing on a proposed Enterprise surance Agency in the Utah, Divdist Judicial tion. nexed and herewith assistance is available form of a wire transfer, District Tooele County, Date: July 12, 2019, served upon you. to qualifying low-in- Fund Transfer on August 7, 2019 at 7pm. The Hearing will be held in cashier's check or cer- 47 South Main Street, Kelli Lewis DATED this 4TH day come Beehive Tele- the Council Chambers at City Hall 90 N. Main St. Tooele, Utah. tified funds. Cash pay- Tooele, Utah 84074 772 N Main Street of April, 2019. phone customers ments, personal In the matter of the #276, Tooele, UT TOPHAM FAMILY through the “Lifeline” Purpose: In accordance with Utah Code 10-6-15.5 a public notice is required checks or trust checks Adoption of Jaiden Al- LAW, PLLC and “Link-up” federal 84074 to notify Tooele City utility customers of the intent to transfer funds are not accepted. exander Lewis (Published in the /s/ Jaime Topham telephone assistance DATED: July 19, 2019. Case Number Tooele Transcript Bul- JAIME TOPHAM programs. from the Solid Waste (sanitation) Enterprise Fund to a Capital Proj- LINCOLN TITLE IN- 192300031 letin July 30, August 6, (11782) Lifeline provides quali- ects Fund. It is not uncommon for cities to transfer what is typically SURANCE AGENCY Judge Bates 13 & 20, 2019) ATTORNEY FOR PE- fied customers with a referred to as dividends from an Enterprise Fund to other Funds of By: Shelby K. Irvin The State of Utah To: TITIONERS monthly reduction on the City to participate in the costs of city services, capital equipment Its: Authorized Agent Michele Lynn Johnson. SUMMONS 291 RACE STREET their telephone bill. Telephone: (801) You are being notified DISTRICT COURT OF GRANTSVILLE, UT Link-up assists in pay- and capital projects. This proposed transfer is a one-time transfer 476-0303 of the Peition to Adopt THE STATE OF UTAH 84029 ing for the installation from the Enterprise Fund to the Capital Projects Fund. The proposed web site: www.smith- Jaiden Alexander THIRD JUDICIAL DIS- TELEPHONE: (435) of basic telephone transferred funds will be used for the purchase of capital equipment TRICT TOOEL E knowles.com Lewis. 884-3426 service by reducing and capital projects such as: costs for the Tooele City Police Station SK File No. 19-0539 You have the right to COUNTY Serve Respondent: connection charges by (Published in the file a motion to inter- SARANELL WALK, Robert Earl Ostler 50% or $30, whichever that are not allowed under the CIB loan and must be paid for with City Tooele Transcript Bul- vene with this court. If EVERN JAY WALK, 10185 S. Zina Way is less. funds including interior furnishings and equipment, the purchase of 4 letin July 23, 30 & your motion to inter- Petitioner, vs. White City, Utah Beehive Telephone new snow plow trucks to replace the 20 year old plows as the mainte- August 6, 2019) vene is granted, you ROBERT EARL OS- 84094 customers who partici- TLER, WENDY LYNN nance costs are exceeding the value of the vehicles, the purchase of have the right to op- (Published in the pate in at least one of air packs for our volunteer Fire Department to replace their air packs pose this adoption. KRIPPNER, Respon- Tooele Transcript Bul- the following programs Public Notices dent. SUMMONS that will be out of compliance in 2020 and a new storage facility for the Water User If you want to inter- letin July 9, 16, 23 & are eligible for tele- vene in this adoption, Case Number 30, 2019) phone assistance: Fire Department to store high value equipment currently stored in the you must file a motion 184300605 Medicaid, Food non-earthquake proof station. Deadline for public Judge Matthew Bates Deadline for public notices is 4 p.m. the to intervene with this notices is 4 p.m. the Stamps, Supplemental court within 30 days Commissioner Mi- Security Income (SSI), day prior to publica- chelle C. Tack day prior to publica- Due to the fluctuation in various fees paid by the Solid Waste Fund tion. Public notices after August 20, 2019, tion. Public notices Federal Housing As- which is the last date THE STATE OF UTAH sistance, Nevada En- an excess of Fund Balance has been created over many years in this submitted past the TO THE ABOVE submitted past the deadline will not be this notice will be pub- deadline will not be ergy Assistance Pro- fund. This trend is not expected to continue as costs are increasing lished. And you must NAMED RESPON- gram (EAP), Tempo- accepted. DENT: accepted. and new services such as community clean up days are now being UPAXLP serve a copy of your UPAXLP rary Assistance to provided. There are no proposed changes to the fees paid for this motion on petitioner or You are hereby sum- Needy Families Pro- DEADLINES FOR their attorney at: Kelli moned and required to NOTICE OF PUBLIC gram (TANF), National service. classifieds ads are Lewis, 772 N Main file an Answer in writ- AUCTION School Lunch Program M o n d a y a n d Street #276, Tooele ing to the attached pe- Stansbury Park Stor- (NSL). Administrative & Overhead Costs: Wednesdays by 4:45 UT, 84074. tition with the clerk of age 211 W. Center St Beehive Telephone p.m. If you do not file a mo- the above captioned Lakepoint, Utah customers who do not HAVE A good idea for tion to intervene within court, 74 South 100 435-883-8648 participate in one of The Tooele City General Fund allocates costs for administrative and a story? Call the that time, you waive East, Tooele, Utah, DATE: August 17, the above programs overhead services provided to the Enterprise Funds. These services Transcript and let us any right to further no- 84074, and to serve 2019, 11:00 AM. are eligible if their in- include utility billing, cash receipts, accounts payable, customer ser- know 882-0050. upon, or mail to, Jaime tice in this adoption, This Notice of Auction come is at or below vice functions, management, technology, fleet maintenance and other Topham, petitioner's is being given pursu- WANT TO get the lat- forfeit all rights in rela- 135% of the Federal attorney, 291 N Race ant to 38-1-1-et administrative services. The City calculates the cost of all of these est local news? Sub- tion to the adoptee, Poverty Guidelines. Street, Grantsville, UT el, Utah Code Anno- functions and charges the Enterprise Fund for its proportionate share scribe to the Tran- and are barred from For more information 84029, a copy of said tated. script Bulletin. bringing or maintaining please call of the costs. If the General Fund did not provide these service the any action to assert Answer within 21 days Kenneth Hein (Chrys- 1-800-629-9993. Enterprise Fund would need to hire the additional staff and resources after service of this ler) 1. Abandoned Car HAVING A yard sale? any interest in the (Published in the to complete these functions on its own. The City believes the amount Advertise in the Tran- adoptee. summons upon you. - Red convertible - Tooele Transcript Bul- script You may obtain a copy If you fail so to do, runs, no plates. Vin# letin July 30 & August transferred for these services is less than the amount that would be of the Petition to Adopt judgment by default 3C3EL45H4VT578135 1, 2019) paid to a third party to provide these services. The administrative and SELL YOUR car in the and other court re- will be taken against (Published in the overhead costs charged to all Enterprise Funds are as follows: Transcript Bulletin cords in this case only you for the relief de- Tooele Transcript Bul- BECOME A SUB- Classified section. if your motion to inter- manded in said peti- letin August 1, 2019) SCRIBER. 882-0050 tion, which has been Percent of Transfer for Percent of vene is ganted. Transfer for Transfer filed with the clerk of Enterprise Costs Not Enterprise You also have right to Enterprise Administrative to Capital said court, and a copy Fund Associated Fund consent to this adop- Fund and Overhead Projects of which is hereto an- Expenditure to Enterprise Expenditure tion. Costs Fund MONEY SAVINGDate: July 12, 2019, Couponsnexed and herewith in Tuesday’s Paper Budget Fund Budget Kelli Lewis served upon you. DATED this 4TH day Solid Waste 772 N Main Street $108,750 5.80% $0 $2,300,000 122.67% #276, Tooele, UT of April, 2019. TOOELE Fund 84074 TOPHAM FAMILY TRANSCRIPT LAW, PLLC (Published in the Water Fund $432,500 5.22% $0 $0 0% Tooele Transcript Bul- /s/ Jaime Topham BULLETIN letin July 30, August 6, JAIME TOPHAM (11782) 13 & 20, 2019) Sewer Fund $222,500 3.43% $0 $0 0% ATTORNEY FOR PE- TITIONERS 291 RACE STREET Subscribe Today! Storm Drain $25,000 1.00% $0 $0 0% GRANTSVILLE, UT Fund 84029 58 N. Main St. TELEPHONE: (435) Street Lighting $12,000 4.74% $0 $0 0% 884-3426 435-882-0050 Fund Serve Respondent: Robert Earl Ostler 10185 S. Zina Way White City, Utah 84094 (Published in the Tooele Transcript Bul- letin July 9, 16, 23 & You Have30, 2019) Fascinating Neighbors! Read Their Stories in Every Issue!

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MONDAY’S WARM COCOA Happiness never decreases while sharing it with others

ne early Friday morn- high Wasatch Mountains to the humor, bright eyes, commit- We lifted and hauled, I pulled up to Scott’s home. ing, I drove to my friend town of Kamas. In the center of ment to doing good and inimi- cleaned and pulled throughout When we arrived, he got out of OScott Wall’s home. Lynn Butterfi eld Kamas, we turned south again, table wisdom. That dearth of the day. It seemed long and the car and stood on the drive- When I arrived, he was already GUEST COLUMNIST until we turned east on state shared time had come to an end hard from time to time. That is way to say goodbye. Now, just standing in the driveway, ready Route 35, the mountain pas- because of this little adventure. until we walked past some of as when I picked him up in the to go. Now, days later, this sageway that would be the last “Turn here!” Scott said as he the girls we were there to serve. morning, his smile was like a memory lights my way forward, thoroughfare to our destination pointed to a small dirt road to They smiled and thanked us. candle, etching a bright picture like a candle etching a bright fused long, for we were headed — a nonprofit camp for teenage our right. Their illuminated faces remind- of goodness. picture of goodness. east. girls. “I would have completely ed me of a specific principle “Buddha was right!” I said He wore a baseball-style-cap, Our trip took Scott and me Our purpose was to work at missed that!” I said and turned taught by Buddha: to myself as I looked at Scott jeans, and a long-sleeve shirt on a path that gained altitude. the camp. I also had another the car off the highway and fol- “Thousands of candles can and remembered the harmo- and carried a medium-size First, we drove north on state purpose: to spend time and lowed the rough road toward be lighted from a single candle, nizing, happy smiles of girls at white cooler and work gloves. Route 36, then on eastbound talk with Scott. So as we drove the caretaker’s campsite. That’s and the life of the candle will the camp. “Happiness never He also wore a bright smile Interstate 80 for about an hour along without music or the where we got out of the car not be shortened. Happiness decreases by being shared!” that gave the rising sun serious until we reached U.S. 40. From radio on, I listened to my old, and Scott donned a work hat to never decreases by being competition, and caused all of there we drove south on U.S. good friend, fill me in on what shield him from the high-alti- shared.” Lynn Butterfield lives in Erda the roosters in the area to crow 40 into Summit County until had been happening in his life. tude sun. He was ready to focus We had shared the day and is a managing broker for a in two different directions. Yet, we reached state Route 248, We hadn’t really talked for a on our shared purpose and led together and it was now Friday real estate company. the roosters wouldn’t be con- which snaked through the few years and I had missed his the way. afternoon. We were tired when

THE RIGHT THING Was it wrong of prospective employer to contact candidate’s boss?

hen a reader we’re chatted with him about Jamie. Jamie also feels torn about doesn’t seem so clear. Jamie have to do so. That Jamie calling Jamie was Jamie was taken aback, he whether he should say any- expressed a preference and Eve ended up with a new job he Wapplying for a new Jeffrey L. Seglin says. He had a good impres- thing to Eve about the matter. acknowledged that preference. so far likes seems a good out- job, his prospective employer GUEST COLUMNIST sion of Eve through the hiring While I can understand Had Jamie specifically said, come. we’re calling Eve asked him process and the first two weeks Jamie’s concern, nothing his “Please do not contact my for- for a list of references, includ- of work suggested that he was former boss or any other refer- mer boss” and Eve said “OK” Jeffrey L. Seglin, author of ing current co-workers. Jamie both welcomed by his new ence said kept Eve from offer- and did so anyway, he might “The Simple Art of Business complied by providing three or boss in the past. employer and that he would ing him the job. Because Eve have a more legitimate beef. Etiquette: How to Rise to the four names. Jamie was offered the job enjoy working there. knew the former boss, it seems The right thing, in other Top by Playing Nice,” is a senior But Jamie let Eve know and accepted it. A couple of But this passing refer- natural that she might solicit words, is to be as clear as pos- lecturer in public policy and that he would prefer that she weeks into the new job, Eve ence, which Jamie says he his opinion about Jamie and sible when making a request of director of the communications not contact his current boss and Jamie were walking to a didn’t question at the time it his work. a prospective employer. Giving program at Harvard’s Kennedy because, among other reasons, meeting with a human resourc- was made, made him won- The wrinkle is that Jamie them an option does not mean School. Send your ethical ques- Jamie had not told her he was es representative. As they chat- der whether he should feel was left with the impression they will choose the option you tions to rightthing@comcast. being considered for a new ted about the role Jamie would betrayed that Eve didn’t honor from Eve’s “OK” that she had would have preferred. net. job and he would like not to be taking on and his potential his request, or if he should agreed not to contact the While it might have shown © 2019 Jeffrey L. Seglin. raise an alarm. “OK,” was Eve’s relationship to other employ- worry about whether his old former boss but had done so good faith for Eve to let Jamie Distributed by Tribune Content response. Jamie knew that Eve ees, Eve mentioned Jamie’s old boss had colored her opinion anyway. From Jamie’s report know she planned to chat up Agency, LLC. had worked with his current boss and it was clear she had of Jamie in any way. of the incident, this agreement his former boss, she didn’t

Depression symptoms linked to increased risk of stroke

COURTESY OF UNIVERSITY elevated risk of stroke, early risk, such as diabetes, high health care agencies across the supdate.com. supdate.com. Distributed by OF MILLER SCHOOL OF detection and treatment will blood pressure, and smoking, U.S. Online at www.awellnes- © 2019 www.awellnes- Tribune Content Agency, LLC. MEDICINE be even more important.” researchers found that people WWW.AWELLNESSUPDATE.COM The study involved 1,104 who had elevated symptoms People who report an people with an average age of depression were 75 percent elevated number of depression of 70 who had never had a more likely to develop an symptoms may be more likely stroke. The participants were ischemic stroke than people to have a stroke years later followed for an average of 14 without depression symptoms. than people with no depres- years. A total of 69 percent of Every five-point increase in the sion symptoms or a low num- the participants said they were score on the depression test Something on ber of depression symptoms, Hispanic. was related to a 12 percent according to a preliminary Eighteen percent of the greater risk of ischemic stroke. your mind? study that was at the American participants, or 198 people, Of the 198 people with Academy of Neurology’s had elevated symptoms of elevated symptoms of depres- 71st Annual Meeting in depression at the start of the sion, 22 later developed an Philadelphia in May. study. Symptoms were mea- ischemic stroke, compared to “Depression is common and sured with a questionnaire 65 of the 906 people who had often goes untreated, so these that asked how often in the no or low numbers of depres- results could hold great prom- past week people felt sad, felt sive symptoms. ise as we learn more about like everything they did was Simonetto noted that more Write a letter how depression may affect an effort, had a poor appetite research is needed to confirm people’s risk for stroke and and other questions. Scores these results. She said the to the Editor! other cardiovascular problems ranged from zero to 60, with study does not prove that and ultimately develop ways scores of at least 16 considered depression causes stroke, but Tooele Transcript Bulletin to prevent these problems,” elevated. shows the association between Letters to Editor said study author Marialaura During the study, 101 the two. Simonetto, M.D., M.S., of the people had a stroke. Of those, P.O. Box 390 University of Miami Miller 87 were ischemic strokes, or A Wellness Update is a maga- Tooele, UT 84074 School of Medicine and a a stroke where blood flow to zine devoted to up-to-the minute member of the American part of the brain is blocked. information on health issues or Academy of Neurology. “If After adjusting for other fac- from physicians, major hospi- [email protected] people with depression are at tors that could affect stroke tals and clinics, universities and

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FILE PHOTOS AUGUST 1989 Megan McRoy (above left) enjoys a merry-go-round ride with her mother Tonya Full Color McRoy at the 1989 Tooele County Fair. The air-filled jumping arena (above) was a Only popular spot for young jumpers and hoppers. Linday Hales (left) is very careful in ¢ cutting on her creation for the finger puppet show put on during the fair. Copies! Fair The county fair was held at the wrestling contest also held that of Fun Carnival also set up 12 24Per Copy Tooele Junior High School with day. Events were held at the rides for patrons to enjoy. continued from page B1 its traditional blue-ribbon 4-H Tooele City County Complex In the 2000s the Tooele events as well as an art show. (now known as the Dow James County Fair’s events have Landmark Days continued Building and Park) and the Bit been held at the Deseret Peak At the horse show “Marvu with the final day including a and Spur Rodeo Grounds. Complex with the demolition Twist” netted owner Gail Martin race from Stockton to Tooele, a In 1998, the Livestock Show derby drawing thousands of the Grand Champion Mare prize. parade, CowJazz concert and a and Demolition Derby, as part spectators from across the state. The Tooele County Livestock fireworks Finale. of the county fair, were held at In 2009, almost every 4-H show was held at the Grantsville If you were looking for a high- the not quite completed Deseret exhibit table had an entry from Show grounds where 36 beef jean contest 1989s fair was you Peak Complex. The entire fair Rylee Shafer. The 12-year-old cattle, 30 lambs and 22 swine ticket. Restless Heart played as moved to the complex when it Rush Valley resident entered 23 were sold during the Saturday the headliner taking the stage opened in 1999. The annual fair items in the 4-H exhibits. Three show. on the Tooele High School was billed as featuring “enter- entries earned her sweepstakes Skip forward to 1979 where Football Field with tickets cost- tainment for everyone.” Along ribbons. Nightly fireworks, a the fair became a three day ing $10. There was also a lot of with the traditional carnival rodeo and free concert featuring addition tucked into the newly local talent to be enjoyed with a rides, agriculture and craft dis- Jagertown and David Ball were launched “Landmark Days” in Farm Bureau Talent Find kicking plays the fair featured non-tra- a draw to the annual event that its second year. The Livestock off Saturday’s event schedule. ditional entertainment such as has been showcasing and enter- Show kicked off the festivi- Those with a strong arm could a 4x4 truck pull, monster trucks taining Tooele County for over ties with sports tournaments. test their strength in the arm and a demolition derby. The City six decades. TOOELETRANSCRIPT ULLETIN Bring in Your B Digital Files 1999 58 N. Main • Tooele 8:30 am to 5:30 pm • Monday – Friday 8.5 x 11 inch • 20# bond paper Some restrictions apply

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FILE PHOTOS AUGUST 1999 A cowhand (left) at the Tooele County Junior Livestock Show and Sale parades his entry past the judges. Tooele native, Phil Garcia (above left), winner of best costume Our family in the karaoke contest sings “La Bamba” before the Mark Chestnutt con- cert. Kayla Gillespie and serving your family a fellow pie-eater (above) slurp in the banana cream as they contend for the title at the pie eat- ing contest. 2009

FILE PHOTO 2009 Jarrod Lazenby crashes into Patrick Dunlavy Jr. during the 2009 for over 50 YEARS Tooele County Fair Demolition Derby at Deseret Peak. UTAH’S LARGEST SELECTION OF

RECREATIONAL FILE PHOTOS 2009 BURR Rush Valley resident Rylee Shaffer (above) holds a bouquet of tissue paper VEHICLES flowers that she made in the 2009 4H contest. Austin Gonda, Kyle Peterson and Parker Mangum (left) wrangle a pig into a pen at the 2009 Deseret Peak stockyards in preparation for the fair.