Tooele shuts out Stansbury 12-0 in softball See A8 TOOELETRANSCRIPT S  T  C BULLETIN S  TUESDAY April 24, 2018 www.TooeleOnline.com Vol. 124 No. 94 $1.00 County says it’s ready to sell racetrack Request for offers has begun and will continue through July 2

TIM GILLIE July 2 deadline for receiving STAFF WRITER offers. Closing of the sale will The former Miller Motorsports be held within 30 days after the Park, now known as the Utah announcement of the accepted Motorsports Campus, is for sale. offer, with the full cash purchase Tooele County officials price due at closing, according announced Tuesday that they to Milne. have officially posted a request In the request for offers, for offers to purchase UMC. the county offers for purchase, The date for offers and as a package, the race track, inquires by prospective buyers buildings, and all improve- begins Tuesday and runs through ments, except for the Lucas Oil July 2, according to a written Grandstand and certain specified statement that accompanied the personal property. request for offers. The Lucas Oil Grandstands are “The sale of Utah Motorsports owned by Lucas Oil, according Campus represents a commit- to Milne. ment by the commissioners While the sale is subject Pamela Keller is hooded at Utah State University Tooele’s 2018 commencement ceremony Thursday evening. Keller received a master’s of to ensure its proper manage- to current tenant leases and education degree in elementary education. ment and long-term viability event contracts, all tenants and to the economic development leases are on a yearly basis and of Tooele County,” said County contracts, except for the Ford USU Tooele graduates 165 students Commissioner Shawn Milne. Performance Racing School, The county will announce the whose agreement expires at the acceptance of an offer, if one is accepted, within 30 days of the SEE RACETRACK PAGE A10 ® Tooele Mayor Debbie Winn tells graduates ‘trials make you stronger’

PHOTOS FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE

TIM GILLIE STAFF WRITER The 2018 graduation season has begun. Utah State University - Tooele Regional Campus held its 2018 commencement cer- emony on Thursday evening at Tooele High School’s auditorium. “We’re here for one reason,” said Jennifer Van Cott, executive director of USU Tooele. “You did it! We’re here to FILE PHOTO celebrate the achievements of all of our The Tooele County Commission has formally announced that Utah students.” Motorsports Campus is up for sale. In 2018, USU Tooele will recognize the efforts of over 165 students with associ- ate’s, bachelor’s, and master’s degrees, according to Van Cott. Tooele City Mayor Debbie Winn gave the keynote address to the graduates. Big Shot Ranch fire “I have never been where you are,” Winn said. “I don’t have a college Scott Klein is hooded at Thursday’s commencement ceremony. He received a master’s degree. At times I have been embar- under investigation degree in business administration from the Jon M. Huntsman School of Business. SEE USU PAGE A7 ® for possible arson

STEVE HOWE “During the investigation, it STAFF WRITER was learned that the fire was A fire that destroyed the intentionally started,” the war- clubhouse at the Big Shot rant said. “The fire was caught Ranch on Higley Road on on a security camera that was March 19 is being investigated above the building.” as an act of arson, according to According to the warrant, a search warrant unsealed over the DVR was recovered from a the weekend. vault in a cement building near The Tooele County Sheriff’s the clubhouse and could con- Office submitted the search tain images of the suspect or warrant for any video images suspects who started the fire. from a surveillance camera at Firefighters from North Also receiving degrees Thursday night, Cindy Gold (left) with an associate’s of applied SUN AND MOON SEVEN-DAY FORECAST FOR TOOELE the shooting range from a DVR Tooele Fire District UVand INDEX science in nursing and Kevin Sullivan (above middle) with an associate’s degree. The Sun Rise Set WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAYrecovered MONDAYat the site, the war-TUESDAY Executive director Jennifer Van Cott (above right) congratulates graduates. Wednesday 6:36 a.m. 8:19 p.m. Thursday 6:35 a.m. 8:20 p.m. rant said. SEE ARSON PAGE A7 ® Friday 6:34 a.m. 8:21 p.m. Saturday 6:32 a.m. 8:22 p.m. Sunday 6:31 a.m. 8:23 p.m. Monday 6:30 a.m. 8:24 p.m. W Th F Sa Su M Tu Tuesday 6:28 a.m. 8:25 p.m. The higher the AccuWeather.com UV Index™ The Moon Rise Set number, the greater the need for eye and skin Wednesday 3:52 p.m. 4:34 a.m. protection. 0-2 Low; 3-5 Moderate; 6-7 High; 8-10 Thursday 4:58 p.m. 5:08 a.m. Very High; 11+ Extreme Friday 6:04 p.m. 5:40 a.m. UDOT construction begins in earnest on Exit 99 overpass Saturday 7:08 p.m. 6:11 a.m. ALMANAC Sunday 8:12 p.m. 6:42 a.m. Statistics for the week ending April 23. Partly sunny and Mostly sunny and Some sun; a shower in Times of clouds and Chance for a couple of A couple of showers Monday 9:13 p.m. 7:15 a.m. Mostly sunny and nice STEVE HOWE pylons for theTemperatures new bridge, will be moved into place once The Exit 99 interchange to Beery. In addition to the bridge Tuesday 10:13 p.m. 7:49 a.m. pleasant pleasantly warm the p.m., breezy sun showers possible STAFF WRITER which will beHigh/Low erected past weekadjacent it’s 72/28constructed, similar to the bridge and railroad bridges are The interchange bridge is project, UDOT will repave I-80 Full Last New First The Interstate 80 inter- to the existingNormal overpass high/low past bridge, week plans 64/41 for the Union Pacific rail- part of a $30 million project scheduled for completion first, between mileposts 30 and 40, 72 47 73 48 79 55 75 46 66 48 63 45 62 44 Average temp past week 50.8 change bridge at Exit 99 according toNormal Utah average Department temp past week road 52.5 bridges near Black Rock, slated for completion this year. according to UDOT. A pothole near the Knolls interchange, as TOOELE COUNTY WEATHERremains down to a single west- of TransportationDaily Temperatures spokesman HighBeeryLow said. The work currently The project is currently in envi- repair project on the bridge part of planned maintenance Apr 29 May 7 May 15 May 21 Shown is Wednesday’s bound lane as construction Tim Beery. Crews have also being done now is preliminary ronmental review and design, at Lake Point in January 2017 on the interstate, according to ©2018; forecasts and graphics weather. Temperatures are provided by Wednesday’s highs and begins to replace the structure. been moving earth for road construction, with the project with construction slated to delayed evening commuters UDOT. Crews will also install Wednesday night’s lows. On Monday, construction base. expected to continue through start mid-summer and contin- for hours and caused traffic to crews were preparing steel The new overpass bridge the summer. ue through the fall, according back up on I-80 to 7200 West. SEE OVERPASS PAGE A7 ® UTAH WEATHER Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun Mon Logan BULLETIN BOARD B4 Grouse 75/46 Wendover PrecipitationINSIDE (in inches) Creek 73/52 Knolls Clive WEATHER Lake Point CLASSIFIEDS B6 69/41 74/48 74/48 71/49 Ogden Stansbury Park Peace Crane GHS will present HOMETOWN B1 70/45 Erda 72/49 donated to “You’re a Good OBITUARIES A6 Vernal Grantsville 72/48 Pine Canyon Salt Lake City 67/40 73/48 56/41 0.35 0.51 1.20 1.77 5.83 7.35 Wendover Airfield Man, Charlie OPEN FORUM A4 Tooele 75/51 Bauer 72/47 Last Normal Month Normal Year Normal 71/46 Tooele Week for week to date M-T-D to date Y-T-D Museum Brown” SPORTS A8 Provo Roosevelt 72/47 69/41 72/45 See Stockton Pollen Index See B1 See A3 Price complete 71/46 70/42 High Nephi forecast Rush Valley 72/44 71/44 Ophir Moderate on A7 65/42 Low Delta Manti Absent 73/49 73/41 Green River Tu W Th F Sa Su M 79/48 Dugway Source: Intermountain Allergy & Asthma Richfield Gold Hill 73/45 74/45 Moab 70/47 RIVERS AND LAKES Hanksville 75/46 Beaver 75/48 Vernon In feet as of 7 a.m. Monday 73/42 Ibapah 71/44 24-hour 73/46 Stage Change Vernon Creek at Vernon 0.93 none Cedar City Blanding South Willow Creek St. George 77/44 71/47 at Grantsville 1.46 +0.01 89/61 Kanab 80/45 Eureka 61/42 Great Salt Lake Elevation at Saltair Boat Harbor 4194.04 A2 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN TUESDAY April 24, 2018 Walk to Wendover raises money, miles and awareness Popular event helps inform citizens about suicide prevention

TIM GILLIE a T-shirt with a picture of his New York.” STAFF WRITER dad pinned to it. There were 84 participants While numbers show “If anybody asked Wyatt in the walk-a-thon on Tooele the second annual Walk to who he was walking for, he County’s Midvalley Trail on Wendover was a success, the didn’t hesitate to say, ‘I’m Saturday morning. Last year’s real story of the event was the walking for my dad Jed walk-a-thon had 48 partici- abundant energy of its young- Hansen,’” Gossett said. pants, according to Gossett. est walker. Wyatt Hansen’s dad died Around 40 board and coali- According to Jon Gossett, from suicide when Wyatt was tion members participated president of the Life’s Worth six years old. in the walk on Friday and Living Foundation and origina- “To see that little kid out Saturday. A sponsor paid for tor of the Walk to Wendover, there walking — and he a chartered bus to transport 10-year-old Wyatt Hansen understood why he was walk- walkers, who took turns in accompanied Life’s Worth ing —was very touching,” rotating shifts walking through Living board and coalition Gossett said. Tooele City, Grantsville, and members as they left Tooele By the numbers, partici- along the frontage roads to City Hall Friday morning pants during the two days of Wendover. and marched across the West the Walk to Wendover, walked The final tally of dollars Desert toward Wendover. a combined total of 1,343 raised during the event was “As 10 year olds do, Wyatt miles compared to 814 com- not available at press time. had a lot of energy as we bined miles walked in last While the walk raised walked across the desert,” year’s event, according to money for the Life’s Worth COURTESY OF TONI BROADHEAD Gossett said. “For every 10 Gossett. Living Foundation and the A group participates in the second annual Walk to Wendover event on Saturday afternoon. miles I walked, he did at “We beat our goal of walk- Stansbury High School Hope least 15. He wandered off ing 1,000 miles for this year,” Squad, one of the original con- “Suicide is something we compared to last year. to Wendover. to explore every object we Gossett said. “Our total miles cepts for the walk was to draw need to talk about,” he said. “We had people coming out In their hotel room on passed.” were roughly one-third of the attention to suicide, according Gossett noted the media of stores and their homes to Saturday evening after the As he walked, Hansen wore distance from San Francisco to to Gossett. coverage was good this year. shout at us and encourage us end of the 100-mile trip across “Three television stations as we walked by,” he said. “It’s Tooele County’ West Desert, made the trip out to Tooele working. People are talking Wyatt Hansen turned his County to cover the walk,” about suicide.” grandfather and said: “Do Gossett said. “And that helped. Wyatt Hansen’s grandpar- we have to drive back in the When we are out there walk- ents, Ed and Barb Hansen, van tomorrow? Can’t we walk ing across the salt flats, lead the Life’s Worth Living back?” Tooele City leaders hold nobody can see us.” Foundation’s support group The Walk to Wendover will Gossett also said it was evi- for people affected by suicide. be back for its third year in dent more people knew what Ed Hansen drove a van tow- 2019, according to Gossett. second budget retreat the walk was about this year ing a port-a-potty for the Walk [email protected] Mayor and council call tax increase necessary to address rising costs

MARK WATSON finances by Lewis Young to the public in the past,” STAFF WRITER Robertson & Burningham, Wardle said. Tooele City Mayor Debbie Inc. showed that the increase The mayor will present her Winn and the City Council in tax for a $240,000 home preliminary budget to the City continued to work on formu- could reach $27.46 per Council on May 2, and a final lating a budget for the 2018- month. hearing and adoption of the 19 fiscal year with a second “That would be a worst- 2018-19 fiscal-year budget is Mayor and Council Retreat on case scenario,” the mayor scheduled for June 20. Saturday at City Hall. explained. The budget most likely will The leaders discussed the Council Chairman Steve be reopened later in the year, budget and other city issues Pruden said a tax increase with a truth-in-taxation hear- for about six hours. Winn and would be a one-time hit. ing scheduled to increase the the City Council met for an In addition to building a property tax rate, according to eight-hour retreat back on new police station and third the mayor. March 3. They confirmed that fire station, funds are needed “I was surprised that so city residents should soon see to pay for legal costs, deficits, many people have said that an increase in the property additional labor costs and they are willing to pay more tax rate to help bring city capital improvements, accord- taxes to receive increased ser- employees’ pay up to market ing to the financial analysis. vices,” Winn said. “I am grate- value, build a new police sta- The City Council looked at ful to the staff for the time FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE tion and a third fire station. budget requests from various and effort spent in preparing Photo shows the Tooele County Detention Center at 960 S. Main St. in Tooele. An inmate died by suicide at “After 36 years without a city departments and dis- budgets early and by present- the center in January. tax increase, it’s necessary,” cussed other city issues on ing those budgets to the coun- Winn said. Saturday. cil. This is the first time that It has not been determined “The number one thing we they have been able to let the how much Tooele property discussed with the budget was council know directly what Medical examiner confirms owners will pay, but a finan- compensation for our employ- they need.” cial analysis of the City’s ees,” Pruden said. Winn said the City will con- He said Tooele has com- tinue to be transparent and let death of inmate a suicide pared its pay rate for employ- citizens know what is being ees to pay rates at other cities done on their behalf and why. STEVE HOWE County Sheriff’s Office. He Anderson tested negative TOOELE TRANSCRIPT with similar populations, “I am always available for STAFF REPORTER was flown to a Salt Lake area on urine tests for controlled BULLETIN and Tooele wants to be com- the residents to talk to them The state medical exam- hospital and died from his substances. petitive to be able to keep its about their issues and help iner’s office has confirmed injuries on Jan. 17. Anderson In the medical examiner’s ADMINISTRATION employees. to solve them,” she said. “We the death of an inmate in had been booked into the opinion, it said Anderson Scott C. Dunn Publisher Councilman Scott Wardle will continue to improve cus- the Tooele County Detention jail on Jan. 10 for violating a was alone in his cell and Joel J. Dunn Publisher Emeritus said it is important that City tomer service and I am look- Center in January was a sui- protective order. video does not show another OFFICE employees are compensated ing forward to working with cide. In the medical examiner’s person enter or exit his cell Bruce Dunn Controller at the market rate. He said the staff to become a business Chip Thayne Anderson, report, Anderson’s cause of before he was discovered. Chris Evans Office Manager another concern is the safety friendly city.” 39, of Grantsville, was death was listed as complica- The last time an inmate Vicki Higgins Customer Service of Tooele residents. She said building a public found unconscious in his tions from a brain injury in died at the Tooele County EDITORIAL “We talked about public safety building and increasing cell the morning of Jan. which oxygen was cut off Detention Center was July David Bern Editor safety priorities and that the number of police officers 16, following an apparent from his brain suffered due 31, 2016 as a result of an Darren Vaughan Sports Editor would include building a new are her top priorities. suicide attempt, according to hanging. The included overdose. Francie Aufdemorte Photo Editor fire station and police sta- [email protected] to a release from the Tooele toxicology report found [email protected] Tim Gillie Staff Writer tion,” Wardle said. Steve Howe Staff Writer He said if a new fire station Mark Watson Staff Writer is not built, it could result in ADVERTISING insurance rate increases for Clayton Dunn Advertising Manager homeowners. FIRE FIGHTERS TRAIN IN STOCKTON Keith Bird Advertising Sales The City seeks to build a Dianna Bergen Advertising Sales & third fire station on city land Classified Advertising Manager at 1000 North. A police sta- LAYOUT & DESIGN tion would be located on land John Hamilton Creative Director the City owns near City Hall. Liz Arellano Graphic Artist Department heads pre- PRODUCTION sented their budget requests Perry Dunn Pre-press Manager during city council meetings Darwin Cook Web Press Manager in March and April. Dan Coats Pre-press Technician “Those meetings were Scott Spence Insert Technician wonderful,” Pruden said. “They will help us make cru- SUBSCRIPTION RATES: $1.00 per copy; $40 per year delivered cial financial decisions. The by carrier in Tooele, Grantsville, Erda, department heads were asked Stockton, Lake Point and Stansbury Park, Utah; $45 per year by mail in Tooele to prioritize their needs and County, Utah; $77 per year by mail in the that is critical in the budget- United States. ing process. It gave us great OFFICE HOURS: insight.” Monday-Friday 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m., closed Saturday and Sunday. Wardle said this year’s meetings on the budget and CLASSIFIEDS DEADLINE: 4:45 p.m. day prior to publication. Saturday’s retreat were fan- PUBLIC NOTICES DEADLINE: tastic. 4 p.m. day prior to publication. “I appreciate the open dia- COMMUNITY NEWS ITEMS, logue between the mayor and BULLETIN BOARD, ETC.: the council. Coming together 3 p.m. day prior to publication. has been tremendous,” he OBITUARY DEADLINE: said. “We’ve been able to 10 a.m. day of publication. unite on financial priorities Publication No. (USPS 6179-60) issued twice a week at Tooele City, Utah. Periodicals for the City.” FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTOS postage paid at Tooele, Utah. Published by He said the City has hit a The Stockton Fire Department (above) conducted a day-long train- the Transcript Bulletin Publishing Company, crossroads with finances. Inc., 58 North Main Street, Tooele City, Utah. ing on Sunday which involved burning a vacant home and burning Address all correspondence to P.O. Box 390, “We’ve gone through a thick brush. Members of the department received structure and Tooele City, Utah 84074. recession. We’ve done every- wildland training. Firefighters Amy Lyman (above right) takes the POSTMASTER: thing including selling prop- nozzle with backup from Andrew Byres. Firefighter Zach Brady pulls Send change of address to: erty and other things. We just some hose to protect a nearby tree from the flames during training. PO Box 390 Tooele, Utah 84074-0390 can’t continue to fix finances 435-882-0050 Fax 435-882-6123 with bandaids,” Wardle said. email: [email protected] He added that previous or visit our website extension at mayors and councils took city www.tooeletranscript.com finances seriously and were TOOELE Entire contents ©2018 Transcript Bulletin able to weather the storm. TRANSCRIPT Publishing Company, Inc. All rights “You can only live on sav- reserved. No part of this publication may Find us on Facebook! be reproduced in any form without the ings for so long. We’ve tried to BULLETIN written consent of the editor or publisher. minimize the financial impact TUESDAY April 24, 2018 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN A3 GHS to present ‘You’re a Good Man, Charlie Brown’ MARK WATSON “The Schroeder Cast.” The STAFF WRITER “Lucy Cast” will perform A pair of Grantsville High on Thursday, Saturday and School students will play Tuesday while “The Schroeder the part of Charlie Brown in Cast” will perform Friday, the school’s production of its Monday and Wednesday. spring musical “You’re a Good GHS is located at 155 E. Man, Charlie Brown.” Cherry St., in Grantsville. The play is set for six nights Tickets are $7 for adults, $6 for starting Thursday. Jaden students and $5 for children. Saari will play Charlie Brown Tickets are available at the on Thursday, Saturday and door. Tuesday while Alexander Cammack announced that Scott will play Charlie Brown she has accepted a drama on Friday, Monday and teacher position at a new high Wednesday. school in Idaho Falls, Idaho, “Both of them bring a geeky and will leave GHS at the end likableness to the character of the school year. She worked that has always been present in at GHS for the past two years, the character,” said GHS drama and at Clarke N. Johnsen director Jorden Cammack. Junior High School in Tooele

“Both are different and bring FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO for seven years. a little bit of themselves to the Charlie Brown (Alexander Scott) (left) sings some laments during dress rehearsal on Monday for Grantsville High School’s upcoming production of Cammack commented on character.” “You’re a Good Man, Charlie Brown.” The show opens on Thursday night. Snoopy (Marissa DeHerrera) (right) sings from atop his dog house while his the past two years at GHS. The musical runs Thursday faithful feathered friend Woodstock (Samantha Jensen) watches from below. “I have loved being able to through Wednesday with per- work with these kids and the formances at 7:30 p.m. each music and lyrics for the musical watching the Christmas special, group of characters,” Cammack highlight some of the classic community,” Cammack said. night. There is no performance that premiered Off-Broadway ‘It’s the Great Pumpkin, Charlie said. “It’s just an all-around feel comic strip moments. “It’s been a lot of work, but on Sunday. in New York City on March 7, Brown,’ and reading the comic good show.” “Each of the characters we’ve done some great shows, The show is double cast 1967. The first ever “Peanuts” strips. The show is really just a The role of Lucy is played by has their songs, and there are had great success with region with 12 kids in each show, comic strip by Charles M. compilation of classic moments Lillian Beckingham and Hillarie numbers that are more geared and state competitions, and Cammack said. A total of 23 Schultz, appeared on Oct. 2, from the comic strips that Dahle. to the ensemble,” the director learned a lot about theatre and actors will perform. 1950. Several Charlie Brown adults can really enjoy because “Lucy is very strong and, to said. “The dialogue in the play about ourselves. I’m not going Charles Schultz’s beloved TV specials have aired dating they grew up with it.” be honest, obnoxious young is just as funny as the old comic to quickly forget the friend- comic strip comes to life in back to 1961, according to She said a new Charlie lady,” Cammack said. “Both strips and movies. It’s humor ships I’ve made and the stu- Clark Gesner’s “You’re a Good Emmytvlegends.com. Brown movie came out only a ladies who play the role have we can all relate to, adults and dents that I’ve been privileged Man, Charlie Brown,” accord- “I’ve always loved ‘You’re a few years ago. a lot of fun with Lucy and her children alike.” to work with.” ing to stageagent.com Good Man, Charlie Brown’,” “A new generation has found unique personality.” The students are either [email protected] Gesner wrote the script, Cammack said. “I grew up an appreciation for the same She said the music numbers part of “The Lucy Cast” or

Inmate faces felony charges for smuggling meth into jail

STEVE HOWE transported meth into the jail the doors of three different Carson’s cell from inmates county jail serving a sanction Carson is scheduled to STAFF WRITER internally and distributed it cells. included requests a “little bit through the Tooele County make his first appearance A Tooele man is facing to several members of the cell The inmates in the cells more” and to work out a deal Drug Court and on probation in 3rd District Court before multiple felony charges after block, according to a probable where Carson was seen plac- for some “met.” with state Adult Probation Judge Matthew Bates on he allegedly smuggled meth- cause statement. ing the items on surveillance The probable cause state- and Parole when the offenses Tuesday. amphetamine into the Tooele A review of video surveil- footage later tested positive ment noted Carson was in the occurred. [email protected] County Detention Center and lance from March 14 showed for methamphetamine, the distributed it to other inmates. Carson walking around the statement said. On March 15, James Wayne Carson, 45, is cell block, speaking with other letters were found in Carson’s charged with three counts of inmates in their cells, the cell, including one from an Money saving Coupons in Tuesday’s Paper first-degree felony distribution probable cause statement said. inmate who tested positive of a controlled substance. During the same time frame, for meth asking “Wayne” how TOOELE An inmate at the Tooele Carson was seen on surveil- much he had left and what he TRANSCRIPT County jail reported to a sher- lance taking something off his wants for it. Subscribe Today! 58 N. Main Street 882-0050 BULLETIN iff’s deputy that Carson had person and pushing it under Other notes found in

Tooele Education F   S T  C  S  Chalk Talk Tooele County Spring is in the Air! Mr. & Miss Super By Clint Spindler

April showers bring May flowers…” After a brutal Amazing Pageant winter for most of the United States, and many places still receiving snow and rain, it is beginning to look like Spring may be here to stay in the Tooele Valley. While we are officially a little over a Thursday month into the spring season, we are seeing the many th pm glorious changes that arrive with this beautiful season. Mrs. Hall, TEF Life Cycle Program Coordinator, with April 26 | 7 Spring symbolizes rebirth classroom butterfly kits ready to be delivered to TCSD and rejuvenation, as the schools. Tooele High School Auditorium • 301 W. Vine Street earth emerges from a restful slumber bursting forth facilitated projects this data related to the life cycle with greenery, warmth, and spring whereby they are changes they see over time. energy. Our classrooms are learning about life cycles. This kind of engaging, WHAT IS IT? much like this nice Spring Becca Hall, a first grade hands-on learning lends season as they too experience teacher at West Elementary, itself to becoming more A pageant for people with disabilities this same kind of feeling is the program coordinator knowledgeable scientists (ages 14-24) in Tooele County! in them. With this fourth for our Butterflies and as students explore the quarter and the end of the Chicks in the Classroom biological world around school year winding down, program. Mrs. Hall and them. While this is a students can sense a change the 1st grade teachers and fun and interesting way Cost: $5.00 a person or $20.00 for a Family Pass (5 people) is in the air. students throughout TCSD to help students acquire All proceeds will benefi t our Severe Special Education Program 1st and 2nd grade have been readying their more knowledge, this kind classrooms throughout classrooms to learn more of learning also teaches the school district are about how caterpillars students some important participating in TEF become butterflies, and lessons in responsibility. she has been Besides the academic PM helping 2nd grade benefits, students learn how SILENT AUCTION • 6 classrooms to do the to feed and care for animals same as they prepare and see for themselves just We have a lot of great prizes from over 50 Local businesses! to observe sterile how fragile and complex the chicken eggs hatch life cycle process is. We will also have concessions before their very TEF hopes these young eyes. students experience a sense available that evening! While both groups of wonder…learning many will be doing a great amazing facts as they explore Purchase tickets at the fi nance offi ce now until the event or they can be purchased at the deal of reading the topic of life cycles! door on the evening of the pageant. For more information or to donate, please contact and writing as they Mrs. Ford at Tooele High School 435-833-1978 Ext:2147, [email protected] venture forth with Tooele Education this learning, they Foundation will also have many Student enjoying the release of opportunities to butterflies as part of TEF’s Butterflies observe and collect @TEFbellringer in the Classroom program. www.tooeleeducationfoundation.org A4 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN TUESDAY April 24, 2018

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

OUR VIEW Read and learn Public information campaign is needed before voters decide on proposed change of county government It’s official: Local voters will decide in November if the three-member Tooele County Commission — the county’s principle form of government since 1896 — stays or goes. But when citizens vote this fall, will they fully understand what they’re voting for — or against? As we reported in the April 10 edition, Tooele County Attorney Scott Broadhead had finished his mandatory review of the Tooele County Government Study Committee’s report. He concluded that, except for some “obvious false statements” regarding charts and commission com- pensation, the report meets legal requirements and would not require any revision. The 64-page report, submitted to Broadhead on Feb. 2 after a year of work by the nine-member citizen study committee, recommends that the current three-member county commission be “abandoned” and replaced with a part-time, five-member county council elected by district, and an appointed county manager who works at the behest of the council. In the report, the study committee noted it anticipates the change to a council/manager form of government will result in a shift in the candidate pool from “career-seeking” individuals to “community service minded, altruistic-charitable citizens” who are not dependent upon full-time county income. It is also believed by the study committee the change will create broader representation. With Broadhead’s review finished and the report’s findings and rec- ommendations passing legal muster, it now falls into the hands of local voters where this proposed change must be finally decided after more than three years of process. But with November’s general election nearly eight months away, there are a couple of vital points that should be con- GUEST OPINION sidered. When the government study process was first proposed and debated in 2014, we vigorously encouraged it to move forward — but only if it was done with complete transparency and public access. In February, we Airstrikes on Syria pit Trump against himself published an editorial that commended the study committee for being committed to transparency and for going beyond the call of duty to keep hat a difference five years the buildings for shelter. the public informed while the study was underway. can make. In 2013, then- Yeah, mission accomplished. But we also urged in 2014, and in subsequent editorials, that if a U.S. President Barack Trump had the right idea about W Rachel Marsden study is undertaken, its data must be comprehensive and rock solid, Obama decided to postpone military GUEST COLUMNIST red lines five years ago. Just because stand for a high degree of professionalism, and be able to withstand action in response to an alleged he’s now surrounded himself with exhaustive public review and hearings. Syrian chemical weapons attack in trigger-happy neocons doesn’t make We feel that the study committee has also fulfilled that challenge. But order to let Congress debate the mat- the imposition of red lines a better we would like to add that the study’s findings and recommendations ter and vote on it. In the meantime, many of which are terrorists whose idea now. should undergo an intensive public information campaign to educate Russia stepped up to oversee the activity has been backed by nations The lip-service bombings smack of voters well before they go to the polls in November. removal of chemical weapons from seeking to oust Syrian president the kind of insecurity that comes from Possibly changing Tooele County’s form of government is a seri- the Syrian government’s possession, Bashar al-Assad — now know exactly knowing your actions are unpopular, ous matter that, if approved by voters in November, will have short- and Congress was relieved of having how to get Trump’s missiles flying unauthorized and based on flimsy and long-term impacts — and pros and cons — that need to be fully to decide the matter. into the country. All they have to do evidence. Trump isn’t enforcing his explained beforehand. At the time, private citizen Donald is convince the world that chemical authority as commander in chief; With nearly eight months to go, this newspaper commits to help Trump criticized the potential use weapons have been deployed, thereby he’s diluting it by appearing as if he’s explain those points as Election Day nears. Likewise, citizens are encour- of U.S. military force in Syria. On crossing the “red line.” Before any being goaded into useless, symbolic aged to take it upon themselves to carefully review the study commit- September 5, 2013, Trump tweeted: independent inquiry into an alleged actions by some warmongers in his tee’s report at studytooelecounty.com. The website not only features the “The only reason President Obama chemical weapons attack can be entourage instead of saving military entire report, but also is a comprehensive document of record since the wants to attack Syria is to save face launched, the missiles will be flying, strikes for times when they might study committee began its work in February 2016. over his very dumb RED LINE state- perhaps even unwittingly providing actually have an impact. Read and learn. Become informed. Fully understand what you’re vot- ment. Do NOT attack Syria, fix terrorists with helpful air cover in Britain and France rode shotgun ing for — or against. U.S.A.” their fight against the Syrian govern- with Trump into this latest charade, Fast-forward to April 14, 2018, ment. and both countries’ parliaments are when Trump retweeted a quote by Trump’s missile response amounted now debating the legitimacy and his U.S. Ambassador to the United to fireworks, or “nosebleed strikes” legality of their participation in the GUEST OPINION Nations, Nikki Haley: “When our in military terms. They purportedly strikes. president draws a red line, our presi- struck some old chemical weapons A tweet by citizen Trump from dent enforces the red line.” program installations. Given that the August 31, 2013, nicely summarizes A prig with an ax to grind Citizen Trump was correct about U.S. has had a troop presence in Syria the position of opponents to President red lines being a bad idea — includ- for several years, you’d figure these Trump’s latest strikes: “The President ames Comey did it, naturally, ing those laid down by now-President sites would have been neutralized ear- must get Congressional approval for the children. Trump — because they explicitly lier, or at least targeted in a previous before attacking Syria — big mistake J Why does anyone in announce to the world how to trigger airstrike against Syria. The fact that a if he does not!” Washington take advantage of the you. It’s exactly like the parent who giant chemical cloud didn’t emanate Great point, citizen Trump! On most opportune moment to make says to an unruly child, “Don’t make from the strikes and kill everyone what legal grounds were these strikes a mint off publishing a tell-all me come over there!” Now the child in the vicinity suggests that the only authorized, President Trump? book? It’s never for the profits or knows exactly how to get your atten- ones punished as a result of Trump’s America and its French and British the sheer satisfaction of sticking tion whenever he or she wants it. red line being crossed were any stray it to your enemies and putting The entities at war in Syria — animals who might have been using SEE MARSDEN PAGE A5 ® yourself in the best possible light. No, there’s always some osten- sible higher cause. For the former note of the size of Trump’s hand FBI director, it’s demonstrating, when they first met — smaller GUEST OPINION through his own sterling example, than his. He goes out of his way to what ethical leadership is, “espe- say Trump looks like he wears tan- cially to young people.” ning goggles. That the nation’s youth will Is all fair in a struggle with a While China picks winners, Trump picks losers be riveted to their TV screens in president who calls you a “slime coming weeks, watching Comey’s ball”? Maybe. But this is another t’s nonsense that there’s a into space — and, not incidentally, exquisitely thoughtful gymnastics instance of the country not being beautiful free market in the seeded the commercial solar industry. of self-justification, and conclude well-served by the president or his power industry,” Energy America’s high-tech companies “I Robert Reich that this is how to conduct them- opponents violating norms. Secretary Rick Perry said recently as have continued to depend on govern- selves when they inherit the baton It’s not a healthy precedent he pushed for a government bailout of GUEST COLUMNIST ment indirectly — feeding off break- of the country’s leadership seems for former FBI directors to attack coal-fired power plants. throughs from America’s research extremely unlikely. presidents they served, even if Republicans, who for years have universities, along with the engineers James Comey has managed the briefly in terrible circumstances. It voted against subsidies for solar and est rates. Chinese firms now produce and scientists those universities train seemingly impossible. The former doesn’t do the standing of our law wind power, arguing that the “free three-quarters of the world’s solar (think of Stanford and Silicon Valley). FBI director is locked in a death enforcement and intelligence insti- market” should decide our energy panels. Much of this research and training is struggle with an unpopular presi- tutions any good to have the men future, are now eager to have govern- China’s success in solar power financed by the U.S. government. dent who makes even his allies recently entrusted with leading ment subsidize coal. has inspired China’s new high-tech Trump’s original budget would cringe with his belittling nick- them, like James Comey and John Donald Trump’s Environmental industrial policy — a $300 billion have slashed funding of the National names, foolish threats and strange Brennan, brand themselves as Protection Agency is also scrapping plan to boost China’s position in other Science Foundation and related view of the presidency — and committed partisans almost imme- rules for disposing coal ash waste, cutting-edge industries, called “Made research by nearly 30 percent. somehow it is Comey who is com- diately upon leaving government. giving coal producers another big in China 2025.” Fortunately, Congress didn’t go along. ing away as the unlikable one. It’s understandable that Comey helping hand. As if this weren’t Besides subsidizing these indus- Meanwhile, federal, state and local That’s because no one likes a wants to get his side out. But he’s enough, a former coal lobbyist, tries, China is also telling foreign governments in the United States prig, especially when he has an ax already done that in his extensive Andrew Wheeler, has just become the (usually American) companies seek- spend more than $2 trillion a year to grind. Comey has good reason memos that he made sure to leak second in command at the EPA. If EPA ing to sell in China that they must on goods and services. Due to “buy to disdain Donald Trump, who upon his firing and in his congres- Administrator Scott Pruitt leaves (a make their gadgets in China. As a American” laws, about 60 percent of fired him in humiliating circum- sional testimony. He’ll probably growing possibility), Wheeler will be practical matter this often means the content they purchase must be stances and whose warped view have his moment in the sun again in charge. American firms must disclose and of the Justice Department as an as a key witness in the Robert Meanwhile, Trump is imposing a share their technology with Chinese SEE REICH PAGE A5 ® institution for the protection of Mueller matter, depending on how 30 percent tariff on solar panels from firms. the president is rightly anathema it shakes out. China, thereby boosting their cost to “We have a tremendous intellectual to him. Comey is just the latest of Yet none of that is as remu- American homeowners and utilities. property theft situation going on,” LETTERS POLICY Trump’s adversaries, though, who nerative as cashing in as a hero of The Trumpsters say this is because said Trump, just before upping the The Transcript-Bulletin welcomes letters to are diminished by the president the resistance when the Mueller China is subsidizing solar power. ante and threatening China with $100 the editor from readers. Letters must be no dragging them down to his level investigation is perhaps at peak To Trump and his merry band of billion of tariffs. longer than 250 words, civil in tone, written exclusively for the Transcript-Bulletin, and and exposing their weaknesses. intensity. Nothing is better than climate-change deniers, boosting coal China’s theft of intellectual proper- accompanied by the writer’s name, address Every Washington memoir being the most righteous guy in is fine. Helping solar is an unwar- ty is troublesome, but the larger issue and phone number. Longer letters may be portrays its author as the smart- the room — while still getting a ranted interference in the free market. of China’s industrial policy is not. The published, based on merit and at the Editor’s est guy in the room; Comey is the huge payday. As with so much else, Trump United States has an industrial policy, discretion. All letters may be subject to editing. most ethical guy in the room, and Children, take note. is determined to Take America too. We just don’t do it well — and Letters written to thank an individual or he lets us know it. Underneath Backwards Again. Trump is intent on doing it far worse. organization should be submitted for “Notes of Appreciation.” the high-mindedness is a thirst Rich Lowry is editor of the Until about a decade ago, the The United States government used for petty revenge. He says he took National Review. United States was the world leader in to incubate new technologies through Readers who are interested in writing a longer guest op-ed column on a topic of general solar energy. Federal tax credits and the Defense Department, allocating interest should contact Editor David Bern. state renewable electricity standards billions of dollars to research and Email: [email protected] EDITORIAL BOARD helped fuel the boom. development that spilled over into Fax: (435) 882-6123 Joel J. Dunn Scott C. Dunn David J. Bern Then, China decided to boost its commercial uses. Mail: Letters to the Editor Publisher Emeritus President and Publisher Editor own solar industry. State-controlled Out of this came the internet, new Tooele Transcript-Bulletin banks lent Chinese solar companies materials technologies, and solar cells P.O. Box 390 With the exception of the “Our View” column, the opinions expressed on this page, Tooele, UT 84074 including the cartoon, are not necessarily endorsed by the Tooele Transcript Bulletin. tens of billions of dollars at low inter- that helped propel the United States TUESDAY April 24, 2018 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN A5

GUEST OPINION Sunlight is always necessary, especially now f you closed your eyes and campaign, about Russian pros- didn’t think I used the term Among the French of those currency in our politics. listened to former (and titutes and golden showers ‘Steele dossier.’ I just talked times and among the establish- One who doesn’t appear fired) FBI Director James may “possibly” be true, though to him about additional mate- mentarian American big wigs to play it that way is Justice I John Kass Comey in conversation with Comey supplied absolutely no GUEST COLUMNIST rial.” of our new century, there is the Department Inspector General former Clinton aide (and evidence it was true. Stephanopoulos: “Did — but art of hinting and letting the Michael Horowitz, an Obama Clinton Foundation Donor He just left it out there. did he have a right to know damage dangle in the air. administration holdover, who Zero) George Stephanopoulos Littlefinger or Varys would that?” But there is also great art issued his report on McCabe. on ABC, you would have heard more to the McCabe/Clinton have smiled, faintly as is their Comey: “That it had been in knowing what not to say, of You should read it for yourself. two things that were disturb- story expected in an upcoming way, at this mastery of tech- financed by his political oppo- inscribing the negative space Horowitz’s report on the ing. Department of Justice inspec- nique. nents? I don’t know the answer around an issue, of avoiding FBI and the Obama Justice One was the gossipy silki- tor general’s report on how the And Comey’s likening to that. It wasn’t necessary for the inconvenient truths, and Department’s handling — or ness of their voices, Comey and Clinton investigations were the president to a mob boss my goal, which was to alert this marks them as masters of not handling — of the Clinton Stephanopoulos cooing at each handled. demanding loyalty rings true, him that we had this informa- the game. investigations is due out in a other, eviscerating President McCabe wasn’t a focus of and helps sell his book. tion.” They’re not alone. Pro- few weeks. Donald Trump like the intrigu- the ABC interview. Instead, Of course, Trump did his He doesn’t know the answer Trump Fox news pundit Sean And in it, Americans expect ers Varys and Littlefinger in Comey and Stephanopoulos part to sell the book too, to that? Hannity has proved he’s prac- to learn about the political “Game of Thrones.” feasted on salaciousness about unleashing his angry Twitter Whenever Comey would ticed in what not to say too. intrigues in the FBI and the The other was the lack of Trump. thumbs to play the Presidential dish on something particularly Hannity has loudly been Justice Department under talk about Andrew McCabe, “He had impressively coifed Troll. And in doing so, Trump disgusting, Stephanopoulos vilifying the investigation Obama. the former assistant director of hair, it looks to be all his,” affirms the criticism — from would respond delightedly. of Trump by special counsel It will be an ugly but neces- the FBI who was fired recently Comey said of Trump, who Democrat and Republican “Stunning,” he’d say. Robert Mueller, and recently sary thing, just as the Mueller and became something of a fired Comey for leaking and establishmentarians alike — Watching the two of them the raids on the offices of report is necessary once it’s hero to the anti-Trumpers, whom Comey loathes. that he doesn’t quite have the on ABC, you couldn’t miss that Trump’s personal lawyer and complete. with $500,000 stuffing his It didn’t sound like an FBI temperament for the job. they’re well practiced in the fixer, Michael Cohen. Sunlight is always neces- GoFundMe account. director. It sounded like a catty Trump was vulgar and loud dark arts of Washington. But Hannity hid the fact sary, especially now, with so According to the takedown by a fashionista. with his ridiculous un-presi- Those who read history that he was a Cohen client, as many players like Varys and Department of Justice inspec- “I confess, I stared at it dential tweets, but is this new? probably understand that our recently revealed in court. Littlefinger in the Washington tor general’s office, McCabe pretty closely and my reaction Stephanopoulos: “Did you American capital is the Hannity is now in the same shadows. arranged for information to was, ‘It must take a heck of a tell him that the Steele dossier Versailles of the modern age. boat as selective truth tellers be leaked to The Wall Street lot of time in the morning, but had been financed by his politi- The French of old had their Comey and Stephanopoulos, John Kass is a columnist for Journal about investigations it’s impressively coifed.’ He cal opponents?” courtiers, ministers, intriguers, where lack of candor and the the Chicago Tribune. His Twitter into the Clintons. He did this to looked — his tie was too long, Comey: “No. I didn’t — I and we have them too. sins of omission are the moist handle is @john_kass. shield himself from a Journal as it always is,” Comey said. story about how his wife had “He looked slightly orange up accepted hundreds of thou- close with small white half- sands of dollars in campaign moons under his eyes, which funds from Clinton-related I assume are from tanning politicos in a failed run for googles. And otherwise looked office in Virginia. as I had expected him to look After setting up that leak, from tele—, as I thought he McCabe lied four times to FBI looked on television.” investigators, and threw other Stephanopoulos: “You even FBI officials under the bus, clocked the size of his hands?” FOR A SIMPLE WAY according to the report. There was plenty of fodder It is the kind of lie that has for Trump haters: hints that led to criminal charges against the so-called Steele dossier, Trump loyalists. And there’s paid for by Hillary Clinton’s TO TAKE YEARS OFF

force, then it’s fine? That’s one Marsden heck of a precedent for future continued from page A4 wars. YOUR MORTGAGE The world can be thankful allies weren’t attacked by that the recent strikes were Syria. And it isn’t feasible that primarily symbolic and useless, any authorization for fighting and we should hope that this terrorists in the wake of the miscalculation didn’t render September 2001 attacks on the situation on the ground Zions Bank is for you. American soil could extend to worse for those (including the targeting the Syrian govern- Syrian military) trying to flush ment 17 years later. terrorists from their strong- There has been no official holds. finding on the alleged use of Maybe next time, before chemical weapons. French whipping out his missiles for Apply for a Home Refinance Loan* today. President Emmanuel Macron the world to behold, President Why pay for your home longer than you have to? A Zions Bank Home Refinance Loan has said that three of the five Trump can consult with citizen permanent members of the Trump. The world would be could help take years off your mortgage — and lock you into a great low rate. Plus, it U.N. Security Council decided better off for it. offers you the freedom to cash out part of your home’s equity to use any way you like. to act, so therefore it’s justi- fied. Yeah, well, the other two Rachel Marsden is a colum- permanent members — Russia nist, political strategist and • Various fixed rate terms • Fast approval process • No closing costs and China — undoubtedly former Fox News host based in would have vetoed this little Paris. She is the host of the syn- adventure had it come up for dicated talk show “Unredacted a vote. Where does it say that with Rachel Marsden” and her To learn more or apply, visit if three out of five permanent website is rachelmarsden.com. members decide to use military www.zionsbank.com/refinance or your nearest Zions Bank.

BYD’s huge factory north of Reich has already cre- continued from page A4 ated 600 well-paid, unionized jobs and 200 white-collar jobs. made in America. America has always had As Steven Greenhouse an industrial policy. The points out in the latest issue of real question is whether it’s The American Prospect, a few forward-looking (the internet, state and local governments solar, zero-emissions buses) or are taking a page out of China’s backward-looking (coal). book — luring foreign firms to Trump wants a backward- the United States to make high- looking industrial policy. tech products that are good for That’s not surprising, given the environment and good for that everything else he and American workers. his administration are doing is As one example, Los Angeles designed to take us backward. has contracted with BYD, a Chinese company that’s the Robert Reich, a former U.S. world’s leading producer of Secretary of Labor, is professor zero-emissions electric buses, of public policy at the University to make its buses in . of California at Berkeley.

In Loving Memory Damian ... On April 10th, 2018 you’d be 10 YEARS OLD! HAPPY BIRTHDAY! I Love You, I Love You, I Love You!!! Grandma

A division of ZB, N.A. Member FDIC Equal Housing Lender NMLS# 467014 *Loans subject to credit approval; terms and conditions apply. See bank for details. Your Complete Local News Source Tooele Transcript Bulletin Subscribe 435-882-0050 A6 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN TUESDAY April 24, 2018 OBITUARIES Paula Workman Marilyn Bebee dren: Bonnie (Joel) Buck, Walker (Laurie) Blickensderfer Aagard DeDecker and Heidi (Gary) Lewis; her sister Shanna Judd; seven Paula Workman Aagard, Marilyn Bybee DeDecker grandchildren, three great a long-time resident of died Friday, April 20, 2018, grandchildren and one great Grantsville, Utah, died peace- in Grantsville, Utah. She great grandchild; and many fully in her sleep Thursday, was born on June 24, 1934, other nieces, nephews and April 19, 2018, at her home in in Tropic, Utah, to Walter extended family members. Grantsville. Gerald Bybee and Theo Hatch She was preceded in death She was born Aug. 27, Bybee. She was married to by her parents; her sisters, 1936, in Provo, Utah, to Karl Ray Blickensderfer on Nov. 25, Cecil Byland and LuAna Bybee; and Arvilla Workman. Paula 1955. She later married Art her brother Jerry Bybee: and grew up in Hinckley, Utah, and DeDecker on Dec. 22, 1981. grandson Parker Buck. graduated from Delta High Marilyn worked for Tooele Visitation will be Friday, School in 1954. Army Depot for 36 years in April 27 from 6-8 p.m. and Paula had three children manpower management and Saturday, April 28 from 10-11 and was later divorced. She as a management analyst spe- a.m. Services will follow at 11 then met the love of her life Paula is survived by her hus- cialist. She retired in 1989. a.m. at the LDS 5th Ward, 113 Gary Aagard. They were mar- band Gary; their six children, She was a member of the LDS ily gatherings was contagious. hall in Wendover. Marilyn was W. Cherry St., in Grantsville, ried and joined two families Debbie Privett (Curtis), Kathy Church. She instilled values in her the cornerstone and a matri- Utah. together raising seven chil- Burton (Randy), Kim Russell Marilyn thoroughly enjoyed children and grandchildren arch of our family that adored In lieu of flowers, please dren. Paula and Gary spent (Breck), Ted Aagard (Kenna), a celebration of any kind. She of patriotism, a deep love of her. We are so blessed and make a donation to the 44 wonderful years together Wendy Dimmick (Cory) and had a way of making every family, true friendship and an fortunate to have known and American Cancer Society or fishing, camping, traveling and Trudie Peterson (Kyle); 18 holiday season, birthday and insatiable zest for life. She was loved such a loving, special the Diabetes Association. taking care of their growing grandchildren and 33 great- family gathering feel unique a passionate music enthusiast soul. family. grandchildren. and special. Her love of fam- who loved visiting the concert She is survived by her chil- Paula was a very hard work- She is preceded in death er and was always concerned by her son Mark Holsten; and about the well being of her grandchildren Mike Madrid, family and friends. J.J. Russell and Kristie Russell Paula loved her family and Anderson. Woodrow “Guy” Carolee Johnson socializing with close friends. A graveside service was Weddle Hale She enjoyed fishing, camp- held Monday, April 23, 2018, ing and gardening. She had at the Grantsville Cemetery. Our darling son and father, Carolee Johnson Hale. 74, immaculate flower beds and Condolences can be sent to Woodrow “Guy” Weddle, left beloved daughter, wife, moth- especially enjoyed purple flow- P.O. Box 731, Grantsville, his earthly body on Thursday, er, grandmother, great-grand- ers. Utah, 84029. April 19, 2018, after his long mother (GG), sister, aunt, and battle with diabetes and end- friend, passed away peacefully stage renal failure. He was on Wednesday, April 18, 2018 born in 1965 to Terry and after struggling for years with Janet Ruby Clark Frances Weddle in Clarkston, complications of diabetes. Washington, where he Carolee was the first of Janet Ruby Clark passed remained an only child until at six children born to Farrell away at age 79, on Thursday, the age of 4 his sister Christina Johnson and Elaine Palmer April 19, 2018, in Tooele, came into our lives. His family Johnson. She arrived on June Utah, where she had resided eventually relocated to 15, 1943 in Tooele, Utah, at for the past several years. where he graduated from Blue Tooele Valley Hospital. Jan was born Sept. 11, 1938, Ridge High School in 1984. Starting at a very young in Brigham City, Utah. Her He was a poet at heart and alone for some time, he joined age, Carolee was a blessing The family would like parents were Ruby and had a love of writing that the of rest his family and set- to her mother as she willingly to thank the Tooele Valley Ed Foglesong. The family eventually led him to form his tled in Tooele, Utah, in 2012. cared for her and five younger Dialysis Center for their loving moved from Malad, Idaho, to metal band Altar where his His presence was one of cel- siblings. care during the 15 years that Grantsville, Utah, where she love of writing inspired the ebration and was the missing She grew up in Grantsville Carolee was on dialysis. met her first husband Reed music he played. He loved his piece that brought our family graduating from Grantsville Carolee is survived by her Smith. Together they had three guitar and could shred like the together. He had the chance to High School with the class husband Ron; children, Eric children. They later divorced. Rockstar he was. reconnect with and build an of ’61. She married her high (Cholamany) Hale, Andrew Jan loved to crochet and do In his later years and with amazing relationship with his school sweetheart, Ron Hale Hale and Heather (Mike) crafts. She adored her family advances in technology, he parents and daughter Rachel on April 4, 1962. They soon Sutton; grandchildren, Zen and had a special place in her learned he had an amaz- Spafford, his two grandchil- became proud parents of Eric, (Mandie) Hale, Shem Hale, heart for all animals, especially Marlene Udy and Earla Bryant. ing skill for working with dren Isaac and Sander who Andrew and Heather. Nia (Blake) Whitehead, Alex her beloved dog, PJ, who had She was preceded in death computers. He fixed, built called him Pop-Pop, and his Carolee was an active mem- (Trent) Kranwrinkle and Meg passed away. by her parents; sisters, Alice and designed programs for sister Christina and her chil- ber of the LDS Church. She Sutton; great-grandchildren, Jan is survived by her chil- Millward and Roxie Anderson; companies like IMC, The Art dren. enjoyed staying busy using her Ava Kranwrinkle and Gus Hale; dren: Wayne (Bonny) Smith and by her daughter (and best Institute of Philadelphia, and He loved deeply, laughed talent for sewing and quilting brothers, Van Johnson and and Danny Smith; siblings, friend) Jade Marie Patrick. Motherhood Maternity. with all of his soul and loved and was a beautiful seam- Rick (Kristi) Johnson; sisters, Wayne Johnston, Karen Ball, God Bless you. After fighting his diabetes his animals who were always stress. Throughout her life, she Laurie (Brent) Palmer, Barbara near his side. His whole family unselfishly used her hands to (Gary) Dalton and LuAnn fought every step of the way bless the lives of others. (Tim) Timmerman. with him and after contract- Carolee’s greatest happiness In lieu of flowers, please ing pneumonia he was able in life was found in her family donate to kidneyfund.org in Our family, helping your to leave this world with his and loved ones. She cherished memory of Carolee Hale. mother near his side. the time that she spent visiting Funeral Services will be He is survived by his with others and always made held at 11 a.m. Wednesday, family, in a time of need parents, Terry and Francis them feel welcome and loved. April 25 in Grantsville at the Weddle; cousin Sharon Young; Due to poor health in her LDS Chapel on 428 S. Hale his daughter Rachel Spafford later years of life, it became St. There will be a viewing and her husband Tyler; two a struggle for her to do the from 10 a.m. to 10:45 a.m. for grandchildren, Isaac and things that she enjoyed. friends and family. Sander; his sister Christina Carolee faithfully endured Interment will follow in the Vokt; niece Brenna Vokt; neph- her hardships with grace and Grantsville City Cemetery. ews Ian, Colin and Terry; and humor. She has been a great Online condolences and his furry friends to the end example and will be missed by memories may be left for the Ginger, Sophie and Gia. all who were touched by her family at www.daltonhoopes. sweet, unselfish spirit. com. Something On Your Mind? DEATH NOTICES Write a Letter Molly Murray Thomas Thackery to the Editor! Molly Murray passed away Thomas Thackery, Skull FULL SERVICE FUNERAL HOME Tooele Transcript Bulletin on Monday, April 23, 2018. Valley, Utah, passed away We have now opened our own full service cremation center. Services are pending with Tate Monday, April 23, 2018. A P.O. Box 390 Mortuary. A full obituary will full obituary will be in the Tooele, UT 84074 appear at a later date. Thursday edition of the Tooele [email protected] Transcript Bulletin. Services 435.884.3031 • www.daltonhoopes.com are pending under the direc- tion of Didericksen Memorial. For more information, call 435-277–0050. Settlement Canyon Runners hit the hills Irrigation Shareholders: for Tooele Serengeti

Trail runners often say, “It’s will be marked clearly. just a hill. Get over it.” Volunteers will distribute Saturday morning, a band of water, electrolyte drink, fruit, IRRIGATION LINES WILL trail runners will gather for the and other refreshments along first of a series of events in the all three courses. Tooele Serengeti Trail Series. Although trail running can No doubt they will be get- be somewhat intimidating, BE TURNED ON THIS ting over, across and down race organizer Jimmy Thomas a series of trails on the said the event appeals to both west bench of the Oquirrh beginner and experienced run- TH Mountains above the commu- ners. SATURDAY, APRIL 28 nities of Stansbury Park and “Trails are going to take Erda. away a lot of stress from the Wednesday is the deadline impact that you’d normally get for the $45 event that begins running on harder surfaces,” Please ensure that your valves are CLOSED to on the east end of Erda’s Bates says Dr. Scott Levin, a sports Canyon Road, just past the medicine expert and orthope- Union Pacific railroad tracks. dic surgeon. avoid the possibility of flooding. Participants can register at “Some of the forces that http://oquirrhtostansburytrail- would normally be transmit- series.com/index.html ted from the pavement up to Three separate courses are the ankles, knees, shins, and part of Saturday’s event. These hips are dissipated when the If you have a water emergency, please call Dave at 435-841-9522. include a 5K (3.1 miles), 10K foot hits the ground on the (6.2 miles) and half marathon trails because there’s some give For other questions please call 435-833-9606. (13.1 miles). All three courses there.”

Tooele Transcript Bulletin Subscribe 435-882-0050 TUESDAY April 24, 2018 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN A7

SUN AND MOON SEVEN-DAY FORECAST FOR TOOELE UV INDEX The Sun Rise Set WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY Wednesday 6:36 a.m. 8:19 p.m. Thursday 6:35 a.m. 8:20 p.m. Friday 6:34 a.m. 8:21 p.m. Saturday 6:32 a.m. 8:22 p.m. Sunday 6:31 a.m. 8:23 p.m. Monday 6:30 a.m. 8:24 p.m. W Th F Sa Su M Tu Tuesday 6:28 a.m. 8:25 p.m. The higher the AccuWeather.com UV Index™ The Moon Rise Set number, the greater the need for eye and skin Wednesday 3:52 p.m. 4:34 a.m. protection. 0-2 Low; 3-5 Moderate; 6-7 High; 8-10 Thursday 4:58 p.m. 5:08 a.m. Very High; 11+ Extreme Friday 6:04 p.m. 5:40 a.m. Saturday 7:08 p.m. 6:11 a.m. ALMANAC Sunday 8:12 p.m. 6:42 a.m. Statistics for the week ending April 23. Partly sunny and Mostly sunny and Some sun; a shower in Times of clouds and Chance for a couple of A couple of showers Monday 9:13 p.m. 7:15 a.m. Mostly sunny and nice Temperatures Tuesday 10:13 p.m. 7:49 a.m. pleasant pleasantly warm the p.m., breezy sun showers possible High/Low past week 72/28 Full Last New First Normal high/low past week 64/41 72 47 73 48 79 55 75 46 66 48 63 45 62 44 Average temp past week 50.8 Normal average temp past week 52.5 TOOELE COUNTY WEATHER Daily Temperatures High Low Apr 29 May 7 May 15 May 21 Shown is Wednesday’s ©2018; forecasts and graphics weather. Temperatures are provided by Wednesday’s highs and Wednesday night’s lows.

UTAH WEATHER Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun Mon Logan Grouse 75/46 Wendover Precipitation (in inches) Creek 73/52 Knolls Clive Lake Point 69/41 74/48 74/48 71/49 Ogden Stansbury Park 70/45 Erda 72/49 Vernal Grantsville 72/48 Pine Canyon Salt Lake City 67/40 73/48 56/41 0.35 0.51 1.20 1.77 5.83 7.35 Tooele 75/51 Bauer 72/47 Last Normal Month Normal Year Normal 71/46 Tooele Week for week to date M-T-D to date Y-T-D Provo Roosevelt 72/47 69/41 72/45 Stockton Pollen Index Price 71/46 70/42 High Nephi Rush Valley 72/44 71/44 Ophir Moderate 65/42 Low Delta Manti Absent 73/49 73/41 Green River Tu W Th F Sa Su M 79/48 Dugway Source: Intermountain Allergy & Asthma Richfield Gold Hill 73/45 74/45 Moab 70/47 RIVERS AND LAKES Hanksville 75/46 Beaver 75/48 Vernon In feet as of 7 a.m. Monday 73/42 Ibapah 71/44 24-hour 73/46 Stage Change Vernon Creek at Vernon 0.93 none Cedar City Blanding South Willow Creek St. George 77/44 71/47 at Grantsville 1.46 +0.01 89/61 Kanab 80/45 Eureka 61/42 Great Salt Lake Elevation at Saltair Boat Harbor 4194.04

USU Overpass continued from page A1 continued from page A1 rassed. There were times when I was cable median barriers along looking for a job that if I had made I-80 between mileposts 18 different decisions and taken the route and 33, near the Tree of Life you have, life would have been easier.” sculpture. However, Winn said that like the Another project in the coun- graduates, she too has had to over- ty this year will be the repav- come difficulties. ing of 15 miles of SR-36, from Married at the age of 16 with three the junction with SR-73 to a children by the time she was 21, mile north of the Pony Express Winn’s husband was killed in a tragic Trail. car accident when she was 24. She [email protected] eventually remarried. One year after Winn’s second mar- riage, the newly wed couple dealt with tough times when Winn’s new hus- band was diagnosed with cancer. “Trials make you stronger,” she said. “When I’m faced with difficult things now, I tell myself, ‘I can do dif- ficult things because I have done them FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO before.’” Some of the graduating students are shown at the USU Tooele commencement ceremony. About 100 students walked in the ceremony Graduating students Mary Beth on Thursday held at Tooele High School. Moreno and Marissa Van Noy also addressed the students. story. As a child we had dreams. As is a waste of time and effort.” will be May 23 at the Peppermill A Full-Color In high school, Moreno took classes you grow up, you forget those dreams. USU Tooele was the first school Concert Hall. in two different career and technical Go back to the time when all you had in Tooele County to hold graduation Commencement ceremonies for Activity Page education pathways: animal science was dreams and now you can accom- exercises for the class of 2018. Grantsville, Stansbury, and Tooele and child development. She com- plish those dreams.” Tooele Technical College will hold High schools will be held on May 24 Just for Kids! pleted a Child Development Associate Van Noy moved to Tooele County in its 2018 spring graduation ceremony at the University of Utah’s Huntsman Every Thursday in the Credential in the summer of 2016. 1999 with her husband and three chil- on May 10 from 6 p.m. to 7 p.m. in the Center. Grantsville’s ceremony will Tooele Transcript-Bulletin After high school, Moreno decided dren. Van Noy completed a bachelor’s college’s multipurpose room. start at 1 p.m., Stansbury’s ceremony to head to Utah State University, but degree in social work while balancing Blue Peak High School will hold begins at 4 p.m. and Tooele’s ceremo- when she received a local scholarship, family and school, Van Cott said. its graduation ceremony on May 21 ny will begin at 7 p.m. TOOELETRANSCRIPT she decided to start her education at Van Noy expressed her initial frus- at 6:30 p.m. in the Blue Peak High A graduation ceremony for Tooele BULLETIN USU Tooele. tration of studying hard, but not doing School gym. Graduation for Dugway County School District’s Adult Moreno recalled a class in storytell- as well as she thought she should on High school is scheduled for May 22 at Education program will be held on Subscribe Today ing that she took at USU Tooele. tests, especially in math. 6:30 pm. in the school’s auditorium. May 25 at 6:30 p.m. in the Blue Peak “A story is a dream,” Moreno said. “I learned to trust my instincts,” she Out in Wendover, the graduation gym. 882-0050 “And we are the authors of our own said. “And that striving for perfection ceremony for Wendover High School [email protected]

The Stansbury High School Theatre Department Proudly Presents Arson continued from page A1

Grantsville Fire Department were dispatched to the March 19 fire at 4:27 a.m. after the owner, who was out of town, contacted dispatch about a fire alarm, according to NTFD pub- lic information officer Ryan Willden. The owner was con- tacted by the alarm company then notified dispatch. The clubhouse structure near the shooting range was fully engulfed when firefight- ers arrived on scene, accord- FILE PHOTO ing to Willden. Due to guns Firefighters respond the clubhouse fire at Big Shot Ranch on Higley Road and ammunition stored in on March 19. the building, fire teams were unable to attack the fire from inside the building, he said. to $400,000 in value. It took ous support equipment, includ- The building was unoc- about 20 firefighters nearly ing water tenders, on scene. cupied and a total loss, which three hours to knock down the [email protected] Willden estimated as $350,000 fire, with six engines and vari-

For All the Great Events in Life Let Everyone Know! Place a Notice in the Transcript Bulletin! Weddings • Birthdays • Graduations • Retirement • Anniversaries Military • Missionaries • Honors & Awards 435-882-0050 • 58 N. Main, Tooele TOOELETRANSCRIPT 8:30 to 5:30 Mon-Fri (closed Sat & Sun) BULLETIN A8 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN TUESDAY April 24, 2018 Sports

SPORTS WRAP Grantsville softball at Manti Oblad makes her pick: Kylee Leach and Breana Hiatt each homered and August Cowan allowed just one run on three hits, striking out and walk- SHS star is BYU-bound ing one, to lead the Grantsville softball team to a 5-1 nonregion DARREN VAUGHAN Oblad said. “I was having road win over Manti on Thursday. SPORTS EDITOR SHS TRACK a really hard time picking Addison Smith went 2-for-3 at Stansbury track and field between (USU, the U of U and the plate for Grantsville. star Sami Oblad had her pick of hurt. On Thursday afternoon BYU) because they’re all great Region 11 girls golf Utah’s three premier Division I in the Stansbury High School schools, and as I would think at Oquirrh Hills programs — Utah State, Utah gym, with her SHS teammates about it, BYU just felt right.” The seven Region 11 girls golf and Brigham Young. All she and coaches present, along Oblad, who hasn’t decided teams competed in a match needed to figure out was which with her family, Oblad made what she will study at BYU, Thursday at Oquirrh Hills Golf one she felt was the best fit. it official, signing her national will get her tuition and housing FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO Course in Tooele, with Stansbury Ultimately, she decided that Letter-of-Intent to call Provo paid for as part of her scholar- Stansbury High senior Sami Oblad (front center), surrounded by team- mates and family, shows off her new Brigham Young University hat after finishing second to Park City Cougar blue suited her best, her home for the next four ship — a rarity for a track and signing a national Letter-of-Intent to compete for the BYU track and field by just two strokes and Tooele though the offer of a full-ride seasons. team. Pictured with her are her parents, Andy and Sandra, and her sib- finishing sixth. Stansbury’s scholarship certainly didn’t “It just felt really right,” SEE OBLAD PAGE A9 ® lings, Josh and Mili Oblad. Brittnee Buckingham tied for second place individually with an 18-hole score of 85, and was joined in the top five by team- mates Madi Buckner (fourth, 87) and Megan Paskvan (tied for fifth, 89). Michal Broadhead rounded out the Stallions’ effort Buffaloes remain unbeaten with a 96, giving them a team score of 357. Tooele posted a team score of 461, wth Emily Medina and Aysha Lewis each Power surge shooting 102. Riley Root shot 117, and Halle Smart and Shelby Smart each shot 140 — propels THS with one of those scores count- ing toward the team total. Grantsville boys tennis past rival vs. Rowland Hall The Grantsville boys tennis team lost its Region 13 match to Stallions Rowland Hall by a final score of DARREN VAUGHAN 3-2 on Thursday. The Cowboys’ SPORTS EDITOR first doubles team of Andrew Whether it’s pitching, defense Dalton and Jase Wilson won 6-3, or offense, the Tooele softball 6-2, as did the second doubles team can do it all. team of Weston Tuckett and Max Coon. Seth Beckett lost 6-1, 6-0 to the Winged Lions’ top SHS SOFTBALL singles player, Leif Thalin. Porter Whitworth lost 6-3, 6-4 to Tucker THS SOFTBALL Lee at second singles, and Peter Kurtz lost 6-3, 6-2 to Peter All three phases were on Chase at third singles. display for the Buffaloes dur- Grantsville boys soccer ing Friday’s 12-0, run rule- at Judge Memorial shortened victory over county Dylan Defa scored in the first rival Stansbury at the Deseret half for the Grantsville boys Peak Complex. Tooele freshman soccer team, but the Cowboys pitcher Attlyn Johnston threw a (7-7, 0-7 Region 13) were over- three-hitter with nine strikeouts whelmed by a superior Judge and one walk and got some help Memorial squad in an 8-1 loss from her defense to preserve a Friday in Salt Lake City. The shutout, and the Buffs hit six Cowboys will wrap up their home runs — including two season Friday at home against each from Payton Hammond and Summit Academy. Bryerly Avina — to give their Tooele boys soccer freshman pitcher more than vs. Ben Lomond enough run support as Tooele Said Ramirez scored in the remained undefeated through its second half for Tooele, but the first 15 games. Buffs couldn’t hold off Ben “I couldn’t be prouder of this Lomond in a 3-1 Region 11 loss team and everything they have at home on Friday. done so far this season,” Tooele coach Marissa Lowry said. than what we’ve seen compared Grantsville softball vs. Morgan Tooele (14-0-1, 7-0 Region to some other girls,” Avina said. Laura Sandberg, Hannah Butler 11) wasted no time getting “It’s all about getting your tim- and Addison Smith each hom- on the board on Friday. With ing, I think.” ered to power the Grantsville Mercy DeRyke on base and two Madisen Baker and Amber softball team to a 13-1 win over outs, Hammond ripped her first Lujan each drew walks and Morgan in a Region 13 home game Friday. Smith picked up home run over the right-center DeRyke singled later in the the win in the circle, allowing field fence off Stansbury starter inning, with all three eventually one run on four hits with nine Makayla Witkowski for a 2-0 scoring thanks to an error, an strikeouts and three walks. lead. Blake Hervat followed with RBI groundout by Hammond a double that fell between a and an RBI single by Paige Grantsville baseball group of Stallions in shallow left, Rydalch for an 8-0 advantage. vs. San Juan Tooele’s Emma Jackson setting up Emma Jackson’s two- Stansbury looked like it might (above) celebrates with The Grantsville baseball team run home run to right-center. break through with two outs in her teammates after scored three runs in the third In the bottom of the second, it the top of the third when Kaeley hitting a home run dur- inning and four more in the was Avina’s turn. The Buffs’ No. Loader’s ground ball briefly ing the first inning of fourth en route to a 7-4 win over 9 hitter got a hold of an 0-2 pitch eluded Hammond at shortstop. Friday’s 12-0 win over San Juan in a nonregion home from Witkowski and hit a no- But the Tooele senior recov- Stansbury at the Deseret game Friday afternoon. Isaac doubter to left-center to extend ered in time to throw the ball Peak Complex. Tooele Riding, Justin Richardson and catcher Blake Hervat the lead to 5-0. After clearing to Hervat at home as Berkeley (left) puts the tag on Jake Paxton each had a double the temporary fence, the ball Bryant attempted to score, pre- for Grantsville, and Keagan Stansbury’s Berkeley came to rest at the foot of the serving Johnston’s shutout. Landon was 2-for-3 with two Bryant (5) permanent chain-link fence Then, Tooele put the exclama- RBIs. Coy Johnson picked up the during the third inning some 300 feet from home plate. win on the mount, allowing two of Friday’s game. “(Witkowski’s) a faster pitcher SEE SOFTBALL PAGE A9 ® runs on four hits with six strike- SUE BUTTERFIELD/TTB PHOTOS outs and a walk in four innings. Richardson allowed two runs on one hit, striking out two in three innings. Grantsville baseball Swept away: Tooele takes vs. Bear River The Grantsville baseball team’s lengthy winning streak finally came to an end Saturday after- three straight from SHS noon as the Cowboys fell 12-2 to Bear River in a nonregion Buffs in prime playoff position; Stallions’ postseason hopes take a hit game in Garland. The Cowboys (18-3, 9-0 Region 13) played DARREN VAUGHAN awesome for him because he’s host to South Summit on SPORTS EDITOR SHS BASEBALL going to be able to talk about Tuesday in the first game of a Tooele senior Jaden Park that for the rest of his life and three-game Region 13 set. The wasn’t in the starting lineup for THS BASEBALL how cool a moment that was. game was not complete at press Thursday’s Region 11 rivalry He sure makes me look good, I time. game against Stansbury on first-pitch hitter,’” Park said. guess — the right move at the Stansbury boys soccer Thursday afternoon at Dow “I just went for it. (Stansbury right time.” vs. Park City James Park, but he stayed ready pitcher) Hayden (Beck) throws Tooele went on to defeat Caleb Jensen’s first-half goal just in case his number was first-pitch strikes a lot, so I the Stallions 10-5 in Friday’s gave the Stansbury boys soccer called. was ready for it and got lucky series finale, capping a three- team the lead, and goalkeeper It’s a good thing he did. With enough for it to be just fair. game sweep after having Chapman Wade made it stand one on and two out in the bot- I haven’t been up to bat in a never beaten Stansbury before up as the Stallions defeated tom of the eighth inning of a tie couple games, so it’s nerve- Wednesday. That puts Tooele Park City 1-0 in a Region 11 game, Park delivered a walk- wracking ... but it’s worth it.” (7-11, 7-7 Region 11) in the home game Monday after- off, opposite-field RBI single Seeing Park step up in such a driver’s seat for a postseason noon. The Stallions (3-11, 3-7 down the left-field line to drive big moment brought a smile to berth with three games against Region 11), who forfeited last in teammate Jaxson Miner with Tooele coach Nolan Stouder’s last-place Ben Lomond and one Thursday’s scheduled game the game-winning run as the face. game against Ogden — a team against Kearns, snapped a six- Buffaloes beat the Stallions “For a senior to be able to Tooele has already beaten twice game losing streak with the vic- FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO 6-5 in the second game of their come in off the bench cold and — remaining on the schedule. tory. They will play host to rival Tooele’s Trey Maumasi makes contact on a pitch during the second inning three-game set. come through with a game- “I’m happy for this team,” SEE WRAP PAGE A9 ® of Thursday’s game against Stansbury at Dow James Park. Maumasi was “I heard my dad in the winning hit, it’s awesome to able to reach base safely, setting up teammate Tyler Beer’s two-run dou- SEE BASEBALL PAGE A9 ® ble in the Buffaloes’ 6-5, extra-innings victory over the Stallions. crowd — he was like, ‘be a watch,” Stouder said. “It’s TUESDAY April 24, 2018 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN A9 Tough competition tests local HS track athletes 200. She also finished fourth in Tooele County athletes domi- Littlefield and Silas Young Deseret Peak Invite the 400, just behind Stansbury’s nated the boys’ throwing events, clocking in at 53.65. Young, Aubree Cheney. led by Grantsville’s Connor Richins, Littlefield and Josh brings top talent to Stansbury’s Zoe Hales won Ware, who set new PRs in win- Wintch won the medley relay in the 1,600 in a season-best ning the javelin (161-9 1/2) and 3:37.09. town for big meet 5:27.24 and was fifth in the shot put (50-1 — school record). Young had a pair of season- 800 (season-best 2:32.05). Ware trailed Stansbury’s Jared best times, finishing third in DARREN VAUGHAN Grantsville’s Sabrina Allen Brown by nearly three feet the 100 (11.20) and second SPORTS EDITOR won the 3,200 in a season-best entering the finals of the shot in the 200 (22.75). Tooele’s Saturday’s Deseret Peak 12:01.53, and Ellie Wilson won put, but ended up beating him Aaron Pectol set a new PR in Invitational brought some of the high jump with a mark of by more than three feet. Tooele’s the 800, finishing second in the area’s top high school track 4-11. Danielle Hunsaker was Garcia won the discus 2:02.90. Grantsville’s Porter and field athletes to Stansbury second in the long jump (14-3 with a toss of 140-6. Whitworth’s second-place time High School, with each trying to 1/4), and Sydney Killian was Stansbury’s Xander of 10:05.80 in the 3,200 was a improve their marks before next the area’s top finisher in the jav- Littlefield won the boys’ 400 new personal-best. month’s state championships. elin with a mark of 97-6, good in a season-best time of 51.39. Tooele’s 4x400 relay team of The athletes from Grantsville, for fifth place. Teammate Josh Oblad set a Pectol, Gavin Ware, Spencer Stansbury and Tooele certainly Tooele’s Samantha Thomas new PR with his winning time Moreno and Joseph Wilkins proved they belong. was third in the discus (97- of 4:29.63 in the 1,600, and finished second in 3:37.48. Tooele’s Makenna McCloy 2) and second in the shot put Jacob Medsker had season- Ware finished seventh in had another impressive day, (33-0). Stansbury’s Alexia bests in the 110 high hurdles the high jump (5-6), and winning the girls’ 100-meter Williams (17.88) and Emily (15.81, first place) and 300 Grantsville’s Braxton Hansen dash in 12.88 seconds and set- Franz (51.02) were fifth in the hurdles (41.89, second place). was third in the long jump with SUE BUTTERFIELD/TTB PHOTO ting a new personal record with 100 hurdles and 300 hurdles, Stansbury won the 4x100 relay, a PR of 19-4 3/4. Grantsville’s Ellie Wilson clears the bar during the girls’ high jump com- her winning time of 26.17 in the respectively. with Abram Miller, Jet Richins, [email protected] petition at the Deseret Peak Invitational on Saturday at Stansbury High School. Wilson won the event with a mark of 4 feet, 11 inches.

middle to set up another titanic 10-6 overall and 4-2 in Region go out and play them one at a Great Southwest Invitational Softball blast by Avina. 11, thanks to a pair of home time.” Oblad in New Mexico following her “We have 23 players who can runs from Payten Staley, a Meanwhile, Tooele rode junior season, and has a good continued from page A8 continued from page A8 step up at any time and be a triple by Lindsey Allie, two a 14-game winning streak idea of where her strengths and tion point on things in the bot- part of our lineup,” Lowry said. doubles from Loader and one into Tuesday’s game against field athlete, particularly one weaknesses are. tom of the fourth. Hammond’s “It’s fun to see Bryerly step up double each from Witkowski Bonneville. The Buffs are set to coming straight out of high “I think my strongest ones second home of the game led and have that role as a ninth and Maame Johnson, proof of face Bear River, Springville and school. It is made all the more will be the high jump and the off the inning, and Hervat batter and to do her job.” their ability to put losses behind Herriman during Saturday’s impressive by what Oblad has 200,” she said. “I’m not a very followed with a home run to It was a tough outing for them quickly. The Stallions Lady Buff Invitational. had to overcome after suffering good thrower, so we’ll see how almost the same spot beyond Stansbury, which now finds faced Ben Lomond on Tuesday “We’re really close and we a knee injury that ended her that goes. I’ll have to learn how the fence in right-center that itself trailing its county rival by in a game that was not com- support each other a lot,” Avina volleyball season prematurely to do that.” ended Witkowski’s outing. two games in the region stand- plete at press time. said. “That’s been one of the and still has her at less than full Oblad said her time at After reliever Lily Morris retired ings. The Stallions rebounded “We don’t worry about (sec- biggest keys. We just need to speed during her senior track Stansbury High has provided the first two batters she faced, on Monday with a 20-0 win ond place),” Stansbury coach keep working hard.” and field season. her with the boost she needed Jenna Gowans singled up the over Juan Diego to improve to Bridget Clinton said. “We just [email protected] “At first, I couldn’t tell any to get to the next level. of the coaches recruiting me, “I think that was the biggest because I thought that was part of it — having the right going to be an issue,” said coaches that pushed me for (Tooele’s) got the tiebreaker Stallions ended up stranding extended the lead to 3-0 in Oblad, who tore her ante- it, and having teammates that Baseball for the No. 3 seed. We’ve got two runners in scoring posi- the second inning before rior cruciate ligament and her do the same,” she said. “Just continued from page A8 to start winning some games tion, and were also undone by Stansbury responded with a meniscus. “Then, I realized having the positive attitude all or else we’re going to be sitting an uneven day in the field that two-run single by Woodhouse if I went on a visit, they were around that it’s possible to go Stouder said. “The way they at home watching the playoffs included seven errors. in the top of the third. The going to see that I’m wearing a on after high school and com- work and their work ethic — instead of being in them.” “A loss is a loss,” Clinton Buffs stretched the lead to knee brace and I’m on crutches pete (helped).” they deserve it.” Stansbury showed quite a said. “It killed us to have (run- 4-2 in the bottom of the third — you can’t hide that. I called [email protected] Meanwhile, Stansbury bit of resiliency in Thursday’s ners on) second and third with when Miner singled and all the coaches and let them (6-12, 5-7) has a difficult contest, erasing a 5-2 lead one out in the seventh inning scored on an error, and Beer’s know, and they were all really series against Juan Diego in the top of the seventh to and we couldn’t execute to get leadoff triple in the fifth led to cool about it. They said, ‘don’t ahead of it, likely needing to force extra innings. Conner the go-ahead run. That might another run when he scored worry about it, we trust you win at least one of the three Fackrell and Justin Matthews have been the difference in the on Thevenot’s groundout. that you’ll come back well.’” games against Region 11’s top each singled and Braydon Allie game if we could have scored Thursday’s win certainly Oblad will compete in the team. The Stallions will wrap was hit by a pitch to open the one of those two runs.” buoyed not only Tooele’s play- heptathlon for BYU, which up their season with a three- inning, with Fackrell scoring Tooele led 1-0 after Peyton off hopes, but its confidence includes the 100-meter hur- game set against Bonneville. on Cayden Clark’s bases-load- Thevenot reached on an error, level as well. dles, high jump, shot put, 200- “We’re fighting for the play- ed walk, Matthews coming advanced to third on a wild “When we have the adrena- meter dash, long jump, javelin offs now,” Stansbury coach across on Austin Woodhouse’s pitch and scored on Griffen line going, we play our best and 800-meter run. She did the Ray Clinton said. “The No. 1 sacrifice fly and Allie scor- Bate’s first-inning groundout. ball,” Park said. heptathlon at the prestigious Colorful Children’s and No. 2 seeds are out and ing on a wild pitch. But the Tyler Beer’s two-run double [email protected] Activities Every Thursday in Your Transcript-Bulletin

Ridgeline 3, Bear River 2 Schedule Wrap Sky View 10, Mountain Crest 3 Wednesday’s games Tooele and Stansbury girls golf continued from page A8 Judge Memorial 9, Frank South Summit 6 at Juan Diego, 10 a.m. Tooele on Wednesday. Summit Academy 11, Morgan 5 Tooele track and field vs. Grantsville OHLMAN Attorney at Law Tooele boys soccer Carbon 12, ALA 1 and Dugway, 3 p.m. M vs. Bonneville Providence Hall 11, Delta 1 Tooele boys soccer at Stansbury, 3:30 p.m. Ethan Hogan had the Buffaloes’ Union 4, Juab 2 Tooele baseball at Ben Lomond, Free lone goal in their 5-1 loss to Emery 6, North Sanpete 4 Bonneville on Monday that dropped 3:30 p.m. Consultation Grand 8, Manti 1 Tooele to 2-11 overall and 1-10 in Grantsville baseball for Region 11 play. The Buffs travel to Grand 3, Manti 1 at South Summit, 3:30 p.m. Wills & Stansbury for their regular-season Richfield 4, South Sevier 3, (9) Grantsville softball vs. Bear River, Trusts finale on Wednesday with both Saturday 3:30 p.m. teams eliminated from postseason Bear River 12, Grantsville 2 Stansbury baseball contention. Park City 13, Juan Diego 3 vs. Juan Diego, 3:30 p.m. Grantsville softball Westlake 15, Cedar 6 Stansbury softball at Ben Lomond, 493 W. 400 N. Tooele at South Summit Westlake 11, Canyon View 7 3:30 p.m. Maizie Clark was 3-for-3 with two North Sevier 3, South Sevier 2 Thursday’s games 882-4800 home runs and four RBIs as the Monday Tooele boys tennis at Stansbury, Grantsville softball team routed Ogden 11, Morgan 0 3 p.m. www.tooelelawoffice.com South Summit 18-0 in a Region 13 road game Monday. Laura Sandberg, Hannah Butler and Rylee Udom also homered in the win for the Cowboys (13-5, 6-0 Region 13), who pounded out 17 hits in 30 combined at-bats. Addison Smith pitched four innings, allowing three hits, striking out 10 and walking one. Grantsville trav- eled to Salt Lake City on Tuesday to face Judge Memorial in a Region 13 game that was not complete at press time. Notable HS boys soccer scores Thursday FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO Dixie 4, Hurricane 0 Stansbury’s Megan Paskvan watches her putt roll toward the hole during Thursday’s round at Oquirrh Hills Golf Course. Paskvan tied for fifth in the Tooele County Domestic Violence Coalition ALA 3, Providence Hall 2 Region 11 match with a score of 89, helping Stansbury finish second in the Carbon 5, Delta 1 tournament behind Park City. Emery 1, Grand 0 Presents Our 2ndAnnual March Uintah 18, Salem Hills 3 San Juan 12, Richfield 2 Manti 5, South Sevier 2 Bonneville 18, Park City 0 Lone Peak 7, Providence Hall 6 North Sanpete 3, Richfield 1 Saturday Friday Bear River 11, Mountain Crest 1 Sky View 9, Hunter 8, (8) Layton Christian 3, Wendover 0 Logan 13, Green Canyon 0 Monday Judge Memorial 8, Grantsville 1 Ridgeline 13, Sky View 1 SATURDAY APRIL 28TH, 2018 Grantsville 18, South Summit 0 Ben Lomond 3, Tooele 1 South Summit 7, Stansbury 20, Juan Diego 0 VETERANS MEMORIAL PARK, Tooele City, UT Snow Canyon 6, Pine View 0 Summit Academy 2 Orem 5, Payson 2 Lehi 3, Payson 2 ALA 11, Delta 7 Morgan 17, Judge Memorial 1 EVENT ITINERARY BE PART OF THE MOVEMENT Orem 4, Spanish Fork 1 Juab 14, Union 6 Manti 9, South Sevier 3 Sat, April 28th, 2018 9am - 2pm $25 - Become a Walker Salem Hills 3, Uintah 0 Carbon 12, Emery 2 Friday 9:00am - 10:30am $25 - Company Sponsorship (per walker) Juan Diego 0, Bonneville 0, tie Notable HS baseball scores Grantsville 13, Morgan 1 Thursday Registration is open @ Veterans Memorial Park $30 - Become a Vendor Park City 1, Ogden 1, tie Tooele 12, Stansbury 0 Tooele 6, Stansbury 5, (8) 10:30am - 11:00am Bear River 3, Ridgeline 1 Open Ceremony Canyon View 7, Pine View 1 Dixie 9, Cedar 2 Logan 1, Sky View 0, 2OT 11:00am - 1:00pm Hurricane 5, Dixie 1 Orem 4, Spanish Fork 0 TO REGISTER OR FOR MORE INFO CONTACT: Mountain Crest 6, Green Canyon 1 Mile March Starts @ Family Dollar to Wal-Mart Ogden 21, Juan Diego 20 Salem Hills 2, Payson 1 Theresa Lewis @ 435-843-3532 Summit Academy 4, *transportation will be available to and from locations* Bear River 4, Bingham 1 Ana Twitchell @ 435- 830-6707 South Summit 2 Uintah 7, Lehi 6 1:00pm - 2:00pm Monday Bonneville 6, Roy 5, (8) Sky View 4, Mountain Crest 1 Kick off your heels for the after party, special guest *All proceeds benefit victims within our community* Stansbury 1, Park City 0 Box Elder 4, Ridgeline 0 Summit Academy 14, Morgan 2 speakers, raffle, food, & drinks Bonneville 5, Tooele 1 Logan 7, Corner Canyon 0 Friday Proudly Sponsored By: ICS 8, Wendover 0 Mountain Crest 13, Hunter 0 Grantsville 7, San Juan 4 South Summit 16, Sky View 12 Tooele 10, Stansbury 5 WALK A MILE IN HER SHOES® IS PART OF A GLOBAL MOVEMENT TO BRING LOCAL Notable HS softball scores Union 15, ALA 0 Desert Hills 5, Pine View 0 COMMUNITIES TOGETHER TO RAISE AWARENESS ABOUT SEXUAL ABUSE. Thursday Snow Canyon 7, Hurricane 1 Grantsville 5, Manti 1 Manti 5, Grand 4 BE PART OF THE AWARENESS BY WALKING A MILE DOWN MAIN STREET IN TOOELE Juan Diego 6, Park City 3 Cedar 11, Desert Hills 7 Manti 6, Grand 4 WEARING RED HIGH HEELED SHOES. THIS IS A FAMILY EVENT FOR ALL AGES. Ogden 7, Bonneville 6 Payson 19, Mountain View 0 North Sanpete 15, Emery 2 PLEASE JOIN US TO SUPPORT TOOELE COUNTY DOMESTIC VIOLENCE COALITION Logan 8, Green Canyon 2 IN ITS EFFORTS TO AID VICTIMS AND END SEXUAL VIOLENCE IN OUR COMMUNITY. Spanish Fork 10, Lehi 2 San Juan 14, Richfield 9 A10 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN TUESDAY April 24, 2018

Racetrack with the school’s required time the county commission’s slow frame to have a new agreement response to his requests to renew continued from page A1 in place. a long-term agreement for the “We met with the county school, McKeever had already end of the 2019 season. commissioners and they have located at least two facilities that Tooele County chose to sell declined to extend our contract were willing to enter into a five- UMC without any long-term and will leave it to us to negoti- year agreement with the school encumbrances and let the buyer ate with the new owners,” said at cost less than what McKeever negotiate any leases or contracts, Dan McKeever, president and anticipated the county would ask according to Milne. owner of Ford Performance for 2019. “We want all the vendors to Racing School. “They estimate The Ford Performance stay,” Milne said. “After the sale the track sale will be finalized in Racing School has been in we will work with the buyers to October, barring any complica- Tooele County since 2006. It do all that we can to keep them tions. This will not work with currently employs 41 people, 24 here.” our time frame so the school working-full-time. The school’s For the Ford Performance will be relocating after the 2019 guest number for 2017 reached School, waiting to negotiate FILE PHOTO season.” 4,011 people. An independent with future buyers doesn’t fit in A racing official signals to drivers during an event at the Utah Motorsports Campus. Previously unsatisfied with analysis estimated that in 2017 the school was responsible for $2.3 million in visitor spending in Tooele County, according to McKeever. Right off Main Street, Offers to purchase UMC may include, and Tooele County may consider, not only the cash price of purchase, but also the Right on the price offer’s anticipated future value to Tooele County. Anticipated future value includes increased tax revenues and the creation or 1210 N 80 E • TOOELE maintenance of jobs, according (between Dr. Roundy & Service King Collision) to Milne. The consideration of future value got the county entangled in a lawsuit that ultimately 435-882-8100 3 DAYS voided the county’s first attempt to sell the former Miller ONLY! Motorsports Park in 2015. Tooele County signed an agreement in Oct. 2015 to sell the track to Mitime Investment and Development for $20 mil- PARKING LOT SALE! lion. In accepting Mitime’s offer, the county turned down an offer for $22.5 million from Center APRIL 26, 27, 28 • CAL RANCH PARKING LOT Point Management. The county commission cited long-term eco- nomic benefits as the reason for SPRING INTO ACTION, SAVE SOME MONEY! accepting the lower offer. Center Point sued Tooele County, claiming that both county and state law require the county to accept the highest offer 2015 HYUNDAI 2015 KIA SEDONA regardless of future benefits. During the lawsuit, Center Point Management raised its offer to SONATA LIMITED EX $28.5 million. Third District Court Judge Robert Adkins ruled in favor of Center Point Management, stat- ing that the county must receive fair market value for the prop- erty, which according to Adkins, is the highest offer. After the sale to Mitime was invalidated by Adkins’ ruling, Tooele County tried to sell the property to its Redevelopment Agency. Center Point filed suit again to challenge that sale. In Dec. 2017, Tooele County reached an out of court settlement with Center Point $16,990 $19,990 Management and paid it $1.55 million to drop all challenges to the sale of the track and not par- ticipate in future attempts to buy the facility. 2017 FORD 2015 FIAT With Center Point Management satisfied, Tooele County was still faced with FUSION 500 Adkins’ ruling that the county must accept the highest offer for TITANIUM the property. The county commission want- ed to be able to consider not just the highest one-time cash offer, but also the long-term economic $15,990 $10,190 development benefit to the coun- ty, according to Milne. “All along we have said we want to do what is best for the county,” Milne said. With assistance of Sen. Wayne 2015 2017 Harper, R-Taylorsville, a bill was crafted for the 2018 state general HYUNDAI RAM legislative session that would allow counties to consider future benefits and sell certain parcels ACCENT 1500 for less than the highest offer. Harper’s bill, Senate Bill 114, also allows the county to require potential purchasers to provide $8,490 $21,990 the county with proof of ability to pay the sales price and proof that potential benefits are rea- sonably anticipated. SB 114 also allows the county to not consider unsolicited offers. 2017 Harper’s bill passed the 2016 Legislature and was signed by Gov. Gary Herbert. It will take CROSSTREK effect on May 8, prior to the FORD culmination of the sales process 2.0 PREMIUM announced today for UMC, Milne F-150 said. “ Ironically, May 8, 2018 will SPORT be three years to the date that the Larry H. Miller Group told us that they were not going $28,990 $19,990 to renew their lease for Miller Motorsports Park,” Milne said. After Harper’s bill passed, the county commission worked 2018 SANTA FE 2017 NISSAN 2016 TOYOTA 2016 NISSAN with its attorneys to develop the sales process outlined in the request for proposals, according SPORT TITAN SV CAMRY SENTRA to Milne. Following the timeline out- lined in the request for offers, an offer may be accepted by the first of August with closing taking place around the first of September. “After three years, I think we $19,990 $28,990 $13,490 $12,990 are close enough to a sale that I could hold my breath,” Milne said. “But I’m not ready to cel- SALE PRICES ARE FIRST COME, FIRST ebrate until the sale has cleared www.saltfl atsautosales.com SERVE! PLUS TAX, LICENSE AND FEES all legal hurdles.” [email protected] TUESDAY April 24, 2018 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN B1 Hometown A LEGACY OF

RET. AIR FORCE COL. EDWIN P. HAWKINS SAID THE U.S. AND PeaceJAPAN SHARE NOBLE VALUES OF... COMPASSION FOR “VICTIMS, AND THE WILLINGNESS TO OVERCOME ANGER, DISTRUST AND HATRED STORY PEGGY BRADFIELD TOWARD THOSE WHO PHOTOS FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE COMMITTED THE ACT...” The last crane folded by Sadako Sasaki was donated by the girl’s WIKICOMMONS family last year. The crane was fold- PUBLIC DOMAIN ed out of a gum wrapper the day Sadako Sasaki before she died. A bowl of origami cranes (below) sit in a bowl next (1943 – 1955) was a to the guest book in the Wendover Japanese girl who Museum. Visitors are encouraged was 2 years old when to take a crane as a memento and a the atomic bomb was reminder of their visit. dropped on Aug. 6, 1945, near her home in Hiroshima, Japan. Sadako is remem- bered through the story of a thousand origami cranes before her death. One of the cranes Sadoko folded is now on display in the Historic Wendover Museum.

Family of Sadako Sasaki, who died from fallout from the atomic bomb over Hiroshima, Japan, donated her fi nal peace crane to Historic Wendover Airfi eld Museum

t is a gum wrapper, painstak- ingly folded 33 times by 12-year-old Sadako Sasaki. She used two small pins to form it the day before she died.I Now it rests in Wendover, Utah, as a statement about peace. The wrapper, like 643 other cranes she folded, began as a flat strip. This one is tan. After hours of work, the folding reveals a neck to the side. With the lift of two flaps, two wings appear and a belly surfaces below. It is February 1955, young Sadako works tirelessly, folding paper cranes. Since her leukemia diagnosis, she is frail but focused. The disease and its treat- ment ravage her body and weaken her, but her resolve and spirit are strong. Sadako’s best friend, Chizuko, is the girl’s first hospital visitor. She brought with her paper, scissors and a plan. Chizuko shares with Sadako the Japanese legend: if Sadako would fold

SEE PEACE PAGE B8 ®

A replica of the Little Boy atomic bomb is on display at the Historic Wendover Museum. Little Boy is the name of the bomb that was dropped on Hiroshima, Japan. B2 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN TUESDAY April 24, 2018

When does winter begin in the Southern Hemisphere? 6. NOBEL PRIZES: Who was the only prime minister by Fifi Rodriguez to win the Nobel Prize for Literature? 1. ART: Which artist from 7. FOOD & DRINK: What Iowa painted the iconic are the ingredients in a “American Gothic”? Moscow Mule? 2. BUSINESS: Where is the 8. ANATOMY: What is the Target store’s headquar- most common blood type ters? in human beings? 3. GEOGRAPHY: What is the 9. ANIMAL KINGDOM: longest mountain range in What is the largest rodent North America? in North America? Moments 4. LANGUAGE: What is the 10. LITERATURE: How meaning of the Latin term many lines are in a “ad infinitum”? Shakespearean sonnet? in Time 5. GENERAL KNOWLEDGE: The History Channel ➤ On May 7, 1789, President George Washington attends a ball Mega Maze in his honor. The event provided a model for the first official inaugural ball, which later became an annual tradition. The record number of inau- gural balls attended in one night by a president is 15, set by President Bill Clinton in 1997. ➤ On May 11, 1947, the B.F. Goodrich Company announces it has devel- oped a tubeless tire, a technological innovation that would make automo- ALL PUZZLE ANSWERS BELOW biles safer and more effi- cient. In 1952, Goodrich won patents, and the tubeless tire quickly became standard on most new automobiles. ➤ On May 13, 1958, anti- any artists don’t ings of round-faced people in American demonstrators create just pictures pseudo 19th-century clothes pelt then-Vice President Mor sculptures. They and often surrounded by Richard Nixon’s lim- make furniture, jewelry, din- vines, floral wreaths and ousine with rocks in nerware or even kitchen tools trees, can be found online and Caracas, Venezuela. and toys. In the 1920s and in shops for less than $50. Despite warnings not to ‘30s, there was a new title • • • send Nixon to Venezuela, for these multi-talented art- Q: I found four vintage ists: industrial designer. They baseball cards glued to the where anti-American sen- redesigned existing large bottom of a dresser that I timent ran particularly machines like trains or trucks, bought at an estate sale. high, he went anyway. and small household goods The players are “Pete” ➤ On May 12, 1963, Bob like telephones and clocks. Appleton, “Line Drive” Dylan walks out on “The The result was better-looking Nelson, “Hank” Greenberg Ed Sullivan Show” after objects that were less expen- and “Red” Kress. I’m not a network censors rejected sive to make. collector. Are they worth the song he planned to Collectors today may not anything? perform, “Talkin’ John have space in their homes A: Your baseball cards are Birch Paranoid Blues.” Plastic surgery for pets for the largest industrial part of the 1940 set by Play Sullivan had heard the machines, but they can find Ball and issued by Gum, Inc., song days before and had in order for them to breathe improving vision and pre- examples of smaller decora- a Philadelphia company that better. If their nostrils are mal- venting medical issues like tive items by these famous made Blony bubble gum. It no concerns. formed or too narrow, they can scratched corneas. men. A few designers to look was the largest bubble-gum ➤ On May 9, 1971, the be widened to improve airflow. However, other procedures for are Russel Wright (dinner- producer in the United States. last original episode Or, if the soft palate (at the are more cosmetic — lifting ware, furniture, aluminum); Play Ball baseball cards were of the sitcom “The top of their mouth) is too long saggy skin around the face or Henry Teague (Kodak cam- included with the gum from Honeymooners,” star- and causing breathing issues, abdomen, for example. And era); Henry Dreyfuss (tele- 1929 to 1941. The 1940 set ring Jackie Gleason, airs. surgery can be done to shorten apparently some owners opt phone); Lurelle Guild (alu- included 240 different cards. Although a perennial the soft palate. to give their dogs testicular minumware, vacuum clean- In 1948 Gum, Inc. became rerun favorite in syndica- While these may cause implants after neutering, so er); Viktor Schreckengost Bowman, which was bought tion, only 39 episodes slight changes in Granby’s they’re (hopefully) less likely (Cowan pottery, pedal cars, by Topps Chewing Gum in actually aired. DEAR PAW’S CORNER: My appearance, they can drasti- to notice or be bothered by the dinnerware); and Bjorn 1956. Your cards are of little 4-year-old pug, “Granby,” is cally improve his quality of life loss of their real testicles. Wiinblad (posters, furniture, value because they were ➤ On May 8, 1984, the having surgery soon to cor- and overall health. On the plus side, Granby’s dinnerware and tapestries). glued to the dresser and are Soviet Union announces rect a problem that makes it Pets are increasingly receiv- surgery appears to be medi- At a summer Rago auction in poor condition. Cards for that it will boycott difficult for him to breathe. ing cosmetic surgery. A CBS cally necessary and might be in Lambertville, New Jersey, Appleton, Kress and Nelson the 1984 Olympics in One of my friends said the report said that dog owners covered by some pet insurance a 1970s Wiinblad table and are worth about $5, if in poor Los Angeles. It was a procedure is nothing more in the U.S. spent $62 million plans. six matching chairs sold for condition. Hank Greenberg’s response to the United than cosmetic surgery and in 2011 on such treatments. $1,875. The black lacquered card is worth more because States’ decision to boycott that I ought to save my For pugs like Granby as well Send your questions, pieces had a different colorful he’s in the Hall of Fame. It’s the 1980 Moscow games. money. What do you think? as many bulldogs and Boston comments or tips to ask@ modern design on each chair worth about $30 in good con- Thirteen other commu- — Mel in New York terriers, corrective surgeries pawscorner.com. back and tabletop. They are dition and half that in poor nist nations also refused DEAR MEL: For pugs and are often necessary. Likewise large examples of Wiinblad’s condition. to compete. other short-nosed breeds, sur- for shar-peis, which may need © 2018 King Features Synd., Inc. talent. But his ashtrays and gery is sometimes necessary surgery to raise their eyelids, dishes, decorated with draw- © 2018 King Features Synd., Inc. ➤ On May 10, 1990, the government of the People’s Republic of China announces the tionship knowledge and physi- guests. They were so fun, and filmmaker, and Jamie, a public had briefly separated — but release of 211 people cal acumen in 10 one-hour they were willing to go for relations specialist. In season luckily the couple did get back arrested during the episodes that will have you it. They revealed so much of six, they welcomed a daughter, together. massive protests held laughing and playing along. themselves. They just really Mabel, and in the series finale, • • • in Tiananmen Square I spoke with the couple stand out for me.” we got a glimpse of the future Q: Do you know when in Beijing in June 1989. recently, and they had a blast • • • where Mabel was all grown “Unbreakable Kimmy Observers viewed it as an filming these shows, with Q: I know you’ve been up (and played by Janeane Schmidt” will be back? — attempt by China to dis- Jason telling me: “For me it’s asked a lot about reboots Garafalo), and Paul and Jamie Nina F., via email pel much of the terrible kind of a sadistic ‘Newlywed lately, so can you A: The hilarious publicity it received for its Game’ crossed with ‘Double find out for me if Netflix original comedy brutal suppression of the Q: I’ve just started watch- Dare.’ I grew up with the phys- the “Mad About starring Ellie Kemper, 1989 protests. ing “Orange Is the New ical-challenge aspect, so I’ll You” rumors Tituss Burgess and Jane Black,” and it got me to take a physical challenge any are true? — Cal Krakowski will drop © 2018 King Features Synd. wondering what day. But I think anyone who’s R., Harrisburg, Wednesday, May 30 — is up to lately. Can you get ever been in a relationship, but Pennsylvania however, this time, we’ll me any info? — Kelly K., via most especially the married A: Both Helen get only half a season email couples, will really relate to Hunt and Paul Reiser at a time, with six epi- A: The “American Pie” this because we’re asking ques- have signed on sodes premiering first, star has teamed up with his tions that I think any long-term with Sony Pictures and the other six com- wife, Jenny Mollen, for a new couple understands. We get Television to reprise ing later in 2018. show on Lifetime called “My into the very thing that rela- their roles of Jamie Subscribe Today Partner Knows Best,” which tionships are made up of and and Paul Buchman, Write to Cindy at 882-0050 airs Wednesday nights at asking partners to reveal how with co-creator King Features Weekly 10/9c. It’s an outrageous game well they know each other.” Danny Jacobson on Service, 628 Virginia For All the Big Events in Life show where couples are pitted A couple that stands out for board as well. The Drive, Orlando, FL Let Everyone Know! against other couples in physi- Jenny is a pastor and his wife. original run aired 32803; or e-mail her at cal and mental challenges to She revealed: “I thought they from 1992-99, and letters@cindyelavsky. Place a Notice in the try to win $20,000. Jason and would be too conservative for centered on the lives com. Jenny — a fun and outrageous this show, that it wasn’t going of newlyweds living Transcript Bulletin! Hollywood couple in their own to work. But they ended up in New York City: © 2018 King Features Synd. Jason Biggs Weddings • Birthdays right — test each couple’s rela- being some of our favorite Paul, a documentary Graduations • Military Missionaries ANSWERS Anniversaries Trivia Test Answers Honors & Awards 1. Grant Wood 7. Vodka, ginger beer 435-882-0050 2. Minneapolis, and lime juice Minnesota 8. O positive 58 N. Main, Tooele 3. Rocky Mountains 9. The beaver 8:30 to 5:30 Mon-Fri (closed Sat & Sun) 4. Going on forever 10. 14 5. June 21 TOOELETRANSCRIPT 6. Winston Churchill © 2018 King Features Synd., Inc. BULLETIN TUESDAY April 24, 2018 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN B3 MONDAY’S WARM COCOA ‘Take the high road and treat them with kindness and love anyway’

looked directly into her It was a great time for me to “Get ready to turn your came to my mind. Have we “You can be angry, bitter, eyes as she spoke. admire the skills and talent of clocks back 20 years,” some- changed? Do we welcome the resentful and unkind back, “We’ve noticed a huge the skaters. It was also a good one would quip. people who’ve come to join or you can take the high road I Lynn Butterfi eld change in people since we time for me to sit and listen Now, people like Tracy with us because of the com- and demonstrate your beliefs GUEST COLUMNIST moved here four years ago,” to what others were saying and Tom DiNardo come here munity we’ve built, because better than they have theirs. Tracy DiNardo said. “When about our community. As I because they are looking for of who we are? I pondered Our advice would be to take we came here, we really loved listened, one idea struck me a healthy environment in these important questions the high road and treat them how friendly the people were. short time. I say kids, but over and over again. which to raise great kids. It’s again as I read one of my with kindness and love any- But, things have change dra- they’re more than kids now. People are moving here just like my friends Michael favorite local authors, rela- way. Do this, not because matically. I guess they just They’re young adults. I’ve now for the same reasons and Jay Dee Crouse once tionship expert and life coach they deserve it, but because feel really stressed about all enjoyed watching them at the people used to laugh at us said to me, “The teenagers Kimberly Giles. it’s the kind of person you of the new people.” Utah Olympic Oval from time more than 20 years ago. I here are so respectful and She gave all of us great want to be.” Tracy and Tome DiNardo to time. used to sit on airplanes, head- good! They’re much differ- advice as she responded to What kind of people do you came here so their kids could One time, during a World ed back home from working ent than those where we’ve a question asked by a hurt- and I really want to be? work to be part of the United Cup Event, I sat in the stands out of state, when someone lived before. We’ll never move ing mother who had been States Speed Skating team. with hundreds of others would make a common state- again!” treated unkindly, by longtime Lynn Butterfield lives in I’ve marveled at how their watching the best skaters ment as we began our descent As Tracy talked, I listened. residents, upon her family’s Erda and is a managing broker kids have grown over that from throughout the world. into Salt Lake International. As she spoke, questions recent move here. for a real estate company. Corn, soybeans and nuts: MAYOR’S AWARD Top U.S. exports feed the economy (BPT) - Politicians spend a lot of time talking about America-first trade deals. Even though the average person may not think about U.S. trade often, it’s a key part of the economy - a topic that’s on everyone’s mind. In 2017 alone, the U.S. exported around $132 billion worth of agricultural prod- ucts. As experts hope to grow this number in 2018, possible trade deals could become big news. COURTESY OF GRANTSVILLE CITY The future of U.S. trading Lance Pitt was recognized last week for the Grantsville City Economists and agricultural Mayor award for April. Right to left: Police chief Jacob Enslen, experts want U.S. trade to Lance Pitt, Mayor Brent K. Marshal. remain strong, so that exports are equal to or more than what they were last year. However, the complexities of selling U.S. commodities internationally constantly increases. RED BUTTE GARDEN Companies are working Corn, soybeans and nuts- Top U.S. exports feed the economy UTAH’S BOTANICAL GARDEN to grow agricultural trade to help Americans feed the world supply, so remaining competi- candles and haircare products. NAFTA (North American Free and build a stronger economy tive is crucial for U.S. agricul- The U.S. exports about half Trade Agreement). at home. Many agricultural ture.” of its soybeans to other coun- “Syngenta remains engaged associations and Syngenta tries. with U.S. government officials ARBOR DAY employees work every day Top U.S. agricultural exports • Nuts: Nuts are wholesome to monitor impacts in rene- with foreign countries to Corn, soybeans and nuts and versatile. From using nuts gotiations and trade-dispute develop positive relationships make up three of the top five in spreads and oils to snacking actions,” Peterson says. “The April 27 and a preference for U.S. com- agricultural exports from the on roasted varieties, people, current threat of trade wars or modities. U.S. There is a lot to know domestically and internation- withdrawing from trade agree- American farmers are the about these foods, including ally, enjoy them every day. ments may harm agriculture.” most efficient in the world, the following fascinating facts: In December 2017, the U.S. says Laura Peterson, federal • Corn: One planted seed exported $936 million worth Learn more about agricul- government and industry rela- delivers more than 500 ker- of nuts. ture’s future tions head for Syngenta. “We nels of corn. Corn is widely With so much going on in rely on export markets for grown around the globe, with Negotiating trade agree- 2018, it’s likely more news our products, and with prices more tons produced each year ments headlines will be dedicated as low as they are, now is an than any other grain. Free trade agreements to the important topic of U.S. important time to protect and • Soybeans: Soybeans are beneficial to agriculture can trade. To learn more about grow our markets,” she says. the largest source of protein in boost the marketability of U.S. agriculture, including FREE ADMISSION THANKS TO ZAP “We are able to produce far agriculture. They are also used U.S. crops like corn, soybeans crop research and trade nego- 300 WAKARA WAY, SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH more than we consume and to make a variety of nonfood and nuts even more overseas. tiations, visit http://www. WWW.REDBUTTEGARDEN.ORG compete in a world of high products, including crayons, One prime example of this is syngenta-us.com/thrive.

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a $50 Wal-Mart or grocery store gift card. Tooele To register, go to extension.usu.edu/ tooele and click on Tooele County Saves Senior Center Challenge box. Fill out survey to begin. The senior center is for the enjoyment of Questions? Contact Darlene at darlene. all seniors 55 and older. New and exciting [email protected] or text/call 435- activities include bridge, pinochle, bingo, 840-4404. exercise program, line dancing, wood- carving, Wii games, watercolor class, mov- Online courses ies and health classes. Meals-on-Wheels Online courses in Network+ and Security+ available for homebound. Lunch served IT are designed for the IT professional weekdays. For age 60 and above, sug- who seeks to upgrade his or her skills and gested donation is $3. For those under knowledge of networking and security. age 60, cost is $5. Transportation available Courses prepare students for the CompTIA to the store or doctor visits for residents in Network+ and Security+ exams. Call the Tooele and Grantsville areas. For trans- Tooele Technical College at 435-248-1800 portation information call 435-843-4102. for more information or to enroll. For more information about the Tooele Center, call 435-843-4110. Get enrolled Start the New Year off right and enroll Donate to library in training at Tooele Technical College. Please remember the “Friends of the Sharpen your current skills or train for a Tooele City Library” when doing your new career. Most programs have open spring cleaning and donate your used enrollment and you can enroll anytime of books to the bookstore in the library. the year. Get a commercial driver’s license Money from book sales is used to sup- in as little as 4 weeks and get on-the-road port programs within the library. The to a lucrative career. Tooele Tech also library is located at 128 W. Vine St. For offers CPR classes to its students and the more information, call 435-882-2182 or public on the second Monday of every COURTESY OF TOOELE CITY go online to tooelecity.org. Thank you for month. Become CPR certified at Tooele your support. Tech. For more information, call 435-248- Pictured above are the 7th-12th Grade recipients of the Mayor’s Youth Recognition Award for the month of April, 2018. Pictured front row, left to right: 1800 or visit tooeletech.edu. Garret Lawton (Tooele Jr High School), Sydney Gustin (Tooele Jr. High School), Jaxson Miner (Tooele High School), and Ryan Ascarte (Stansbury High Books for the Whole Family School) Back Row, Left to Right: Police Chief Ron Kirby, Mayor Debbie Winn, Council Member Melodi Gochis, Councilman Dave McCall, Council Chairman Donated children’s books and paperbacks Train to work Steve Pruden, Councilman Scott Wardle, Councilman Brad Pratt and Communities That Care Director, Heidi Peterson. are for sale for 25 cents, and hard-covers Tooele Technical College’s new Software are being sold for $1 from 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Development program and Nail VHS tapes or newspaper articles that you basement at the back of the building. For with PD and how to live well. We meet the on Fridays, 5-8 p.m. on Mondays and 11 Technician program have immediate Moose would like to donate to our organization questions or more information, please third Friday of each month from 1-2 p.m. a.m. to 2 p.m. on Tuesdays at the Tooele openings. Train to work in the computer to please call us. We are also looking for call Allene at 435-830-0465 or Elizabeth at at Tooele Technology College, 88 S. Tooele City Library. All proceeds go back to the software industry or own your own busi- Meals at the Lodge books, newspaper articles, photos, bro- 435-884-0825 or 435-241-9200. Blvd., Tooele. For information, call Hal at library for projects and programs. ness as a licensed nail technician. Visit Friday and Saturday night dinners will be chures or any history that pertains to the 435-840-3683. tooeletech.edu for more information. served from 5-9 p.m. Friday night dinners Tooele County area. If you would like to Tooele Al-Anon Choices 4U Bingo is back change weekly or you can order from the donate them to our organization, or if you This group meets Sundays at 5 p.m. at the Tooele Naranon “Circle of Hope St. Marguerite Catholic Church has started Adult Education menu. All meals are for a reasonable price. would let us make a copy for the Tooele Mountain Faith Lutheran Church, 560 S. to Recovery” its bingo games again on Fridays starting Get your high school diploma this year at No orders taken after 8:45 p.m. Daily lunch County Historical Society, please call 435- Main St., Tooele. For more information, Tooele Naranon meets Thursdays at 6:30 at 6:45 p.m. Come and have a good time. the Tooele Community Learning Center. specials are available at the lodge from 11 882-1612. contact Gesele at 435-224-4015 or Jo-Ann p.m. at 134 W. 1180 North, Ste. 4 in Tooele Food is available. Call 435-882-3860 with All classes required for a high school a.m. For members and their guests only. at 435-849-4180. (Bonneville Mental Health). Open to all questions. diploma, adult basic education, GED prep- Breakfast those affected by someone else’s addic- aration and English as a second language Groups and Events Alcoholics Anonymous tion. As a 12-step program, we offer help Breakfast will be served every Sunday Meetings are held daily at noon and 8 are available. Register now to graduate by sharing our experience, strength and Grantsville meeting at 10:30 a.m. Please attend p.m. at the Oasis Alano Club, 1120 W. — just $50 per semester. Located at 211 Caregiver Lunch & Learn Series hope. For more information, please con- the men’s meeting at 9:30 a.m. and the Utah Ave. For more information, contact Tooele Blvd. Call 435-833-8750. Adult edu- Robert York, Occupational Therapist at tact Terri at 435-313-4851. Grantsville Irrigation Co. cation classes are for students 18 and over. women’s meeting at 12:30 p.m., and enjoy Rocky Mountain Care, will share ways Lance at 435-496-3691 or Wendy at 801- The system is on in most areas and meters a great breakfast. to evaluate the safety of your home for 694-2624. Military Items Wanted have been read. Agricultural users have ESOL caregiving. Then he will provide tips on When you no longer want your military been issued two regular turns for the sea- Entertainment ESOL conversational classes are held how to make improvements and show Alzheimer’s Caregiver Group items, do not take them to Deseret son. Residents have been allotted 150,000 Exit 99 will perform from 7-11 p.m. on Join us the 3rd Monday of each month Tuesdays and Thursdays at the Tooele tools you could incorporate in your home. Industries or a thrift store. Bring them gallons per residential share. Please Saturday, April 28. For members and their from 2-3 p.m. at Mountain West Medical Community Learning Center. ESOL stu- You’re invited to join us Friday, April 27 — hats, helmets, dress uniforms, boots, monitor your meter readings closely. It is guests only. Center in Tooele. The Tooele County dents may also come anytime the center is from 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. at the Tooele shoes, pants, jackets, backpacks, belts, recommended you take a picture of your Health Department’s Aging Services pro- open for individualized study. Registration Senior Center for Home Safe Home. Please canteens, pouches, old photos, etc. — current reading and check it frequently. If Appreciation dinner gram is the sponsor for these Alzheimer’s is $50 per semester. Located at 211 Tooele RSVP at 435-277-2440 or call if you have to 775 S. Coleman Street. They will be you notice any leaks, please contact the A Veterans Appreciation Dinner will be Association Caregiver Support Groups. Blvd. Call 435-833-8750 for more informa- questions. displayed with honor and respect. Call office at 435-884-3451. held on Thursday, April 26 at 5:30 p.m. The groups are designed to provide emo- tion. Matthew or Tina at 435-882-8688. Control those garden critters tional, educational and social support for Share the past Officer installation Early Head Start The Master Gardeners is hosting a ses- caregivers. Questions call 435-277-2440. Children’s Choir Auditions Share the past, submit a history, obitu- Installation of new officers is scheduled Do you have a child under age 3? Are you sion on how to control pocket gophers, Rising Voices Children’s Choir is an audi- ary, or a picture of a deceased relative. for Friday, April 27. The men will be currently pregnant? VANTAGE Early Head rodents and other destructive garden Food Addicts in Recovery tioned children’s choir for children 7-14 The Family History Center in Grantsville installed at 5 p.m. and the women at 6 Start is a free program for eligible families pests at 7 p.m. on Wednesday, April 25 at Anonymous years of age. The talented Katelynd Blake, is assembling a record of Grantsville p.m. that offers quality early education for the USU Extension, 151 N. Main, Tooele. Are you having trouble controlling the owner and director of Blake Music Studios, residents. Your submission may be made infants and toddlers in the home; parent Cinco de Mayo celebration You’ll learn different effective approaches way you eat? Food Addicts in Recovery directs the choir. Blake has a degree in by emailing to [email protected] or by education; comprehensive health services On Saturday, May 5, the lodge will host to reign in the destruction. Contact Jay Anonymous (FA) is a free, 12-step recov- vocal performance and has taught at the coming into the center at 115 E. Cherry St., to women before, during and after preg- a Cinco-De-Mayo and Kentucky Derby Cooper at 435-830-1447 or dirtfarmerjay@ ery program for anyone suffering from collegiate level. If your child loves to sing or by mail to PO Box 744, Grantsville, Utah nancy; nutrition education and family celebration starting at 2 p.m. There will gmail.com for more info. food addiction. Meetings are held every and you are looking for an exceptional 84074. Come in and receive help from our support services. Call 435-841-1380 or be food, prizes and fun. For members and Saturday at 9 a.m. at the Pioneer Museum, musical experience for them, this is it. For trained consultants. For more information, 801-268-0056 ext. 211 to apply or for free their guests. Celebrating Tooele County 47 E. Vine Street in Tooele. Enter at the more information and to register for an call 435-884-5018 or 435-224-5010. additional information. Pioneers north back entrance. For more informa- audition, please visit blakemusicstudios. The Stansbury Art and Literary Society tion, call Millicent at 435-882-7094 or com or call 435-277-0755. Senior Center Free developmental evaluation Eagles Carolyn at 435-882-0805 or visit www. The senior center is for the enjoyment of will hold an Open House on Tuesday, April DDI VANTAGE Early Intervention offers foodaddicts.org. Everyone is welcome to Rocky Mountain Hospice all seniors age 55 and older. For informa- 24, at 7 p.m. The noted storyteller, Clive a variety of services to families with Dinner attend. Want to have more meaning in your life. tion, call 435-884-3446. Activities include Romney, will entertain with songs and infants and toddlers from birth to age 3. Friday dinners have been postponed until Do you want to do something that is Bunco, exercise programs, bingo, ceram- stories in celebration of Tooele County Individualized services are available to further notice. Tooele County Aging satisfying and of great service to your ics, pinochle, movies and wood- carving, Pioneers. This is open to all so come to the enhance development in communication, Tooele County Aging is looking for volun- community? Then become a Rocky etc. Meals-on-Wheels is available for the Sunday breakfast Coulter House Event Center, 175 SR-138, motor development, cognition, social/ teers to help us meet the needs of seniors Mountain Hospice volunteer. No experi- homebound. Lunch served weekdays. For Breakfast will be served every Sunday Stansbury Park, and join our celebration. emotional development, self-help skills in the community. Many seniors require ence required. All training, background age 60 and above, suggested donation this month. You can have the special for Refreshments will be served. and health concerns. Contact us for a free assistance and need rides to doctors or check and TB tests provided by Rocky is $3. For those under age 60, cost is $5. $5 or order from the menu, which is $7.50 developmental evaluation at 435-833- 5K Freedom Run other health professionals. Rides help Mountain. The only requirement is your Transportation is available to the store or for adults and $3.50 for children up to 11 0725. Registration is now open for the Tooele seniors live more independent lives. Call desire to help someone in need. Please doctor visits for residents in the Tooele years old. The breakfast includes a glass of Kiwanis Club’s 5K Freedom Run scheduled 435-843-4114 for more information. The contact Diane Redman at Rocky Mountain and Grantsville areas. For transportation juice, milk or cup of coffee with refills. Bad for July 4. Register early at tooelekiwanis. Grantsville and Tooele Senior Centers Hospice at 801-397-4904. information, call 435-843-4102. Charity beer is available. Come bring the family com also are in need of volunteers. For more and have a good breakfast at a nominal information about volunteering at the The Next Chapter Daughters of Utah Pioneers Tooele Children’s Justice Center price. Public is invited. Artist of the Month Grantsville Center, call Dan at 435-843- The Next Chapter is a free social support The DUP is seeking any family histories, Tooele Children’s Justice Center is in Jaime Reynolds is the Stansbury Art and 4753. For volunteering at the Tooele and educational program to help widows photographs, books, stories or vintage Aerie Officer nominations need of DVD-Rs, soda, bottled water and Literary Society artist for April. Reynolds Center, call Debbie at 435-843-4103. and widowers adjust to the loss of their artifacts (before 1900) to display at the Nominations for new officers for Eagles snacks. We appreciate all donations. For is a self-taught, eclectic artist who loves spouse through monthly activities. You DUP Grantsville Museum, located at 378 Aerie #164 for 2018-19 will be held at 8 inquiries or drop-off, call 435-843-3440. 25 to combine all kinds of items, techniques Life’s Worth Living Foundation are invited to join others who are on the W. Clark St. (in the basement of the J. p.m. on April 26. Any member in good S. 100 East, Tooele. and mediums into her art. She has been Suicide support group meetings are same page as you, to begin a new chapter Reuben Clark Farmhouse across from the standing interested in being an officer creating some form of art since she was a held every fourth Thursday at 7 p.m. at in your life story. Call Sarah with Tooele Grantsville Cemetery). For more informa- United Methodist Dinner must be there or have a letter of accep- child. Having been drawn to “old things” Mountain West Medical Center, 2055 N. County Aging Services at 435-277-2456 for tion, call Ellen Yates at 435-884-0253 or Tooele United Methodist Church offers a tance to be nominated. Any office that Main Street in Tooele, in the classroom by free dinner every Wednesday. Coffee and that others have viewed as broken or of more details. Coralie Lougey at 435-884-3832. Visit does not have a nominee as of this date no use, she gives them a new life. The the cafeteria. If you struggle with suicidal www.grantsvilledupmuseum.com or social hour starts at 4 p.m. and dinner is cannot be filled until the first regular thoughts or have lost a loved one to sui- Sons of Utah Pioneers served from 5-6 p.m. All are welcome. artwork she shares this month is a mix www.exploretooele.com. meeting held in June 2018. The Aerie of acrylic, soft pastel, inks, charcoal and cide, please plan on attending. Please go Anyone interested in the history of Tooele needs new officers. Please come, join in, mixed mediums. Many of her pieces on Facebook and like our page to keep City, Tooele County or Utah pioneers, we Tooele Valley Resource Center and have a good time. Schools The Tooele Valley Resource Center, now have a bit of recycled items in them. Her current with our latest news and events. need you. Please come and join us for a sharing a building with the Tooele County Auxiliary Officer nominations artwork will be displayed on the Wall Contact us on that page. Visit lifesworth- potluck social dinner at the LDS church, livingfoundation.com or call 435-248-LIVE. 192 W. 200 South, Tooele. For more infor- Community Council Food Bank at 38 N. Main Street, Tooele, Nominations for new officers for Eagles Gallery at the Tooele County Chamber mation, please contact Joe Brandon, 435- The next Grantsville Elementary is currently in need of donations. Please Auxiliary #164 will be held at 7:30 p.m. on of Commerce building, 154 S. Main St., Disabled American Veterans consider donating items such as deodor- Tooele, for the month of April. The public 830-9783 or 435-830-9784. The local Sons Community Council meeting will be held April 23. If any member in good standing Chapter 20 on Tuesday, May 8 at 4:30 p.m. in the ant, Chapstick, lotion, diapers, formula, is invited to view these works during the of Utah Pioneers meets the first Thursday is interested in participating, please come The “Jordan M. Byrd” Tooele County GES library. All parents are encouraged toilet paper, shampoo, conditioner, combs chamber’s regular business hours. of each month at 6:30 p.m. out. To be nominated, you must be at the Chapter for the Disabled American to attend. It will last one hour and lots of and brushes. Cash is also welcomed. meeting or present a letter of acceptance Tooele Gem and Mineral Society Veterans holds monthly general member- Grandparent Networking Group good information will be presented. Hope Those who receive services include indi- for the office to which she is to be nomi- The Tooele Gem and Mineral Society club ship meetings at the Pioneer Museum, Come meet and network with others to see you there. viduals or families in crisis, the homeless nated. who are raising their grandchildren. For and families at risk of becoming homeless. meets the third Tuesday of the month 47 E. Vine Street in Tooele, every third Story and Craft Hour (except June, July and Aug), 7:30-9:30 p.m. Thursday of the month at 8 p.m. Those address or other information, call Trisha For more information, call 435-566-5938 435-849-2536 or email at tesschelble@ Join us every Monday at 10 a.m. at the or fax 435-843-0244. Elks in the Pioneer Museum downstairs confer- who wish to attend the leadership meet- Tooele Family Center-PIRC as we enjoy ence room located at 47 E. Vine St. Tooele. ing at 7 p.m. are welcome to listen to the yahoo.com. the adventures of books and make fun First Baptist Food Pantry Meetings Come learn about rocks, minerals and appointed members’ meeting. All Tooele ways to craft them and enjoy field trips County veterans are invited to attend. TC Squares Dance Club crafts. For more information, call 435-833- The First Baptist Church in Tooele is offer- Lodge meetings are held the second and The TC Squares Dance Club has begun for rock collecting. Membership is $15 per Disabled American Veterans (DAV) will 1934 ext. 1410. We are located at West ing an emergency food pantry to meet fourth Tuesday of every month. House dancing again on Mondays at the Clarke year. For more information, send ques- hold its monthly executive and general Elementary School, 451 W. 300 South, the needs of our community. Hours are committee meetings are held every third Johnson Jr. High Cafetorium, 2152 N. 400 tions to tooelegemandmineralsociety@ meetings on the third Thursday of every Tooele. Please enter through the south Saturdays from 10 a.m. to noon. First Tuesday of the month. All members are West, Tooele, from 7:30-9:30 p.m. Please gmail.com. month at the Pioneer Museum (rear side doors. Baptist Church is located at 580 S. Main welcome and encouraged to attend. bring finger food to share. For more infor- entrance). The executive meeting will Street. For information, call 435-882-2048. mation, contact Woody at 435-850-2441, Free Preschool Hour Friday Night Dinners Local author seeks photos be at 7 p.m. and the general meeting Roberta at 801-349-5992 or visit the club’s Every Tuesday at 10 a.m., the Tooele Food Banks Friday Night Dinners have returned and A local author and historian is seeking will be at 8 p.m. The DAV is looking for website at tcsquares.com. Family Center-PIRC has a fun activity hour Tooele County Food Bank, Grantsville are from 6-9 p.m. If there is something original photographs of Saltair, Black volunteer drivers — no DAV membership of learning, singing and creating. The class Emergency Food Pantry, and the Tooele new or different you would like to see, Rock, Garfield Beach and/or Lake Point, is required. Will need a VA physical. No as well as any similar turn-of-the-century Tooele County Homemakers is for all children up to 5 years old. Please County Food Bank are in need of canned stop by the social quarters, fill out a sur- monthly meetings are held in December. The new season of Tooele County attractions and resorts for an upcoming come and enjoy the fun. For more infor- meats, soups, pasta and any non-perish- vey and let us know your opinion. Call commander James Yale at 435-849- Homemakers is from September to May. book project. Those who wish to con- mation, call (435) 833-1934 ext. 1410. We able foods. We are accepting donations 0521 or senior vice commander Dustee For December and January, the group Snacks tribute information or photographs of are located at West Elementary School, for Pathways Women’s and Children’s Thomas at 435-830-8487. will meet on the second Tuesday of both Hungry? Need a snack? Available in the these parks should contact Emma Penrod 451 W. 300 South, Tooele. Please enter Shelter (victims of domestic abuse). They months from 10 a.m. -1:30 p.m. at the USU social quarters, during business hours: at [email protected]. Contributions Health Department and Aging through the south side doors. are in need of socks, underwear, blankets Extension Office auditorium or inside the Nachos $2.50, hot dogs $2, burgers $3.75 will be printed with credit in a yet-to-be for twin beds, hygiene products (hair- Services hours Tooele County Health Department, 151 St. Marguerite Catholic School ($4 with cheese), chicken sandwich $3.75 released pictorial history book. There is spray, hair gel, body wash, nail polish and The Tooele County Health Department N. Main, Tooele. The meetings include a Students of all faiths are welcome from ($4 with cheese) and personal pizzas $3. no such thing as too many photographs remover) toys. Anything will be appreci- and Aging Services’ new hours of opera- luncheon and often include speakers. For preschool through 8th grade at Tooele as the author needs a minimum of 160 ated. Underwear and socks must be new. Dart League tion are Monday-Thursday, 8 a.m. to 6 more information, call Cindy at 435-843- County’s only faith-based school. Other items can be gently used. Please photographs, and any help is greatly The Elks will be starting a fall and winter p.m., and Friday from 8 a.m. to noon. 0202 or Thiel at 435-224-4807. Featuring all-day Kindergarten, all-day help us help our community. Drop boxes appreciated. dart league at the lodge. The league will Check out our calendar on our main page preschool, junior high grades 6-8, small are located in the Intermountain Staffing be played on Thursday evenings and will Tooele Valley Free Masons for holiday hours and closures. For more Tooele County Quilters class sizes, and an enhanced STEM cur- Office, 7 S. Main Street #203 in Tooele. information, call 435-277-2301. It’s a new year and the Tooele County be a 12-week season, beginning the first Tooele Valley Free Masons meet the riculum. Give us a call at 435-882-0081 or Quilters are ready to go. If you’re interest- Thursday in October. Contact the Lodge second Friday of each month for din- visit www.stmargschool.org. Baby blankets needed Parkinson’s disease Support ed, come join us for our first meeting of or Jesse 435-224-7228 with any questions. ner and socializing. If you are interested Baby blankets are needed for the nurs- Group 2018 at 9:30 a.m. on Jan. 16 in the Tooele or have questions, please join us at the ery at Mountain West Medical Center. A diagnosis of Parkinson’s disease can be County Health Dept. auditorium. Dues are Education Lodge, located at the corner of Settlement Blankets should be new and in good overwhelming for the newly diagnosed. $20 per year to be paid at the first meet- condition. Homemade blankets are also Historical Society Canyon Road and state Route 36, or call at Dads Matter Tooele has a support group for persons ing. All meetings are held on the third accepted if new. Donations can be turned 435-277-0087. with Parkinson’s disease and their caregiv- USU-Tooele Regional Campus is offer- Historical books Tuesday of each month. For more informa- in to the volunteer desk at Mountain West Tooele County Historical Society’s books ers. You can learn how others are coping tion, call 435-843-7649. ing a free, research-based, five-week Medical Center, 2055 N. Main Street in Tooele Valley Family History Fatherhood Course on Thursdays April are available to purchase at meetings. The Center Tooele. Call Diane at 435-843-3691 with History of Tooele County Volume II is $35, 5, 12, 19, 26 and May 3 from 6 p.m. to any questions. Research your ancestors free with trained 8 p.m. at 1021 W. Vine St., in Room 111. The Mining, Smelting, and Railroading in FamilySearch volunteers at the Tooele Bulletin Board Policy Come hungry. There is a free meal at Community Closet Tooele is $25, and we also have eight note Valley Family History Center, 751 N. 520 If you would like to announce an upcoming event, contact the Transcript- each of the five classes. Register at Clean out your closets. The Community cards depicting four different pioneer East, Tooele. Phone 435-882-1396. Hours HealthyRelationshipsUtah.org or email Closet is accepting donations for gently buildings for $4. These make great gifts of operation: Tuesday through Friday, Bulletin at 882-0050, fax to 882-6123 or email to pbradfield@tooeletran- [email protected] used clothing. Donations are accepted for family and friends. Please call Alice 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday script.com. “The Bulletin Board” is for special community events, charitable at your neighborhood school. Contact Dale at 435-882-1612 if you would like to evenings 7-9 p.m. Wednesday evenings organizations, civic clubs, non-profit organizations, etc. For-profit busi- Family Finance Challenge Christy Johnson at 435-830-4706 with any purchase these books. by appointment only. Special classes nesses should contact the advertising department. Please limit your notice Join the Family Finance Challenge spon- questions. offered regularly. Call the center for more to 60 words or less. The Tooele Transcript-Bulletin cannot guarantee your sored by USU Extension. Make a family Seeking Historical Items information. announcement will be printed. To guarantee your announcement please finance goal, attend fun activities, join the The Tooele County Historical Society Facebook group and report how you are would like members of the community Tooele Family Al-Anon call the advertising department at 882-0050. Information must be deliv- doing meeting goals during this 12- week who have any family or personal histories, Al-Anon meetings are held Wednesdays ered no later than 3 p.m. the day prior to the desired publication date. program. Earn enough points and receive photographs, books, brochures, DVDs, at 11 a.m. in the Tooele Pioneer Museum’s TUESDAY April 24, 2018 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN B5 Local News You Get Nowhere Else

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TUESDAY September 26, 2017 TUESDAY October 10, 2017 A4 TOOELE TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN A10 B1 • Editorial TUESDAY February 27, 2018 J&J Jewelry • WWeddings,eddings, Missionaries, Birthdays • Guest Opinions still going • CClassifiedslassifieds and Public Notices Unless otherwise requested, community news items such as • Letters to the Editor weddings, missionaries, birthdays, babies and The Bulletin Editor David Bern strong after Board must be submitted by 3 p.m. the day prior to the desired publication date. To place a community news item or for more [email protected] 27 years information contact the Community News Editor at 882-0050 or Open Forum Sports [email protected]. Items more than one month old 435-882-0050 See A10 OOELE will not be considered for publication. Hometown T SPORTS WRAP RANSCRIPT Stansbury volleyball vs. Ogden OUR VIEW SERVING T The Stansbury volleyball team Cowboys send a message TOOELE COUNTY defeated Ogden 25-15, 25-13, SINCE 1894 25-11 in a Region 11 home SHS tops match Thursday. The Stallions (10-10, 4-2 Region 11) began Underdog Traffic flow the second half of the region Tigers to Information meeting about I-80 congestion problem ULLETIN $1.00 season at home against Ben Vol. 124 No. 29 Lomond in a match that was Grantsville B No one else could have described the predicament more clearly: not complete at press time www.TooeleOnline.com remain “This is a serious problem,” said Rep. Merrill Nelson, R-Grantsville. Tuesday. THURSDAY September 7, 2017 wins region “It’s important to all of the residents. The commuter problem affects our Tooele volleyball vs. livelihood, it affects the time with our families, it affects our activity time Bonneville unbeaten after work, and most importantly, it affects our safety as we travel back The Tooele volleyball team tennis crown and forth through that dangerous stretch of road.” upended Bonneville 25-21, What Nelson was referring to is the commuter traffic bottleneck 25-19, 23-25, 25-23 in a PEGGY BRADFIELD COMMUNITY NEWS EDITOR of state Route 36 and Interstate 80 at Lake Point, and commuters’ hard-fought Region 11 home in region heavy reliance on I-80 and SR-201 to drive to and from the Wasatch match Thursday afternoon. The Grantsville girls ten- Front for work. His words were offered during opening remarks at an Fassio Egg The Buffaloes (7-9, 4-2 Region nis team disregarded the Stansbury overcomes informational meeting he organized between the Utah Department of 11) played host to Ogden Salt Lake City newspapers’ Transportation and local citizens at Stansbury High School on Feb. 1. predictions about who would in a region match that was another sluggish start Nelson’s words clearly defined the problem, but the purpose of the not complete at press time win Region 13 and outscored meeting was made even more clear before it even began: UDOT officials Tuesday. Judge Memorial by 2 points to spoil Ogden’s night who were scheduled to attend and make a presentation were delayed and Waterford by 5, taking first Grantsville volleyball vs. from Salt Lake for nearly 30 minutes because — you guessed it — an Farms starts place Friday. DARREN VAUGHAN Summit Academy SPORTS EDITOR accident forced evening commuter traffic to a crawl on I-80. The Grantsville volleyball team The Stansbury football UDOT officials at the meeting, including executive director Carlos Braceras, reviewed past and future projects intended to reduce commut- rolled to a 25-12, 25-14, 25- GHS TENNIS team came away from Friday’s 8 win over Summit Academy Region 11 road game against er congestion and increase safety. What’s to come is the $74.4 million in a Region 13 home match Ogden as the only undefeated phase one of the Midvalley Highway in 2019, and this year’s replace- to cleanup Thursday. The Cowboys (8-13, The newspapers had predict- ment and expansion of bridges at Lake Point’s Exit 99 and at Black Rock ed other squads would reign team left in region play, but 1-2 Region 13) traveled to two miles to the east on I-80. as region champs. Grantsville the Stallions were left ques- Judge Memorial for a region To help minimize anticipated congestion from those two projects, wasn’t “in the picture,” GHS tioning their focus after yet match that was not complete another slow start. UDOT plans to build both new bridges next to the existing bridges. And at press time Tuesday night. coach Stephen Thurgood said. both new bridges are reportedly designed to carry extra traffic capacity. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Thurgood said he figured, Which sounds fine and good. But if there was a takeaway from the after fire Region 11 golf at Park City “I’d rather not be on the front Feb. 1 meeting, it was this: UDOT’s current plans will only help reduce ly 600,000 remaining chickens The Tooele boys golf team fin- SHS FOOTBALL See, eat and hear page. If you’re not on the front traffic congestion and improve safety — but commuters shouldn’t expect STEVE HOWE are unable to get to refrigera- ished third and the Stansbury page, it goes much better.” So! Today’s headline in a publica- to view such aberrations. This narra- STAFF WRITER clear sailing after Midvalley Highway’s phase one and the bridges at tion quickly enough without boys were fifth at the final Stansbury (3-3, 2-0 Region tion proclaimed Gov. Herbert stating, tive includes video games including Of the region win after play- Lake Point and Black Rock have been replaced. Because Tooele Valley’s A day after a fire destroyed the conveyer system, Larsen Region 11 golf match of the 11) led just 21-20 at halftime, “The public wants the government to “Mortal Combat” and “Grand Theft LETTERS POLICY ing both Thursday and Friday, population is growing and is projected to continue, which means more two chicken coops and killed said. As a result, all of the eggs season Thursday in Park City. but poured it on in the second do something about school shootings.” Auto,” which are among the lesser of The Transcript-Bulletin welcomes letters to he added, “Yeah, we won, but it commuters and general traffic than today, everyone should continue to the editor from readers. Letters must be no as many as 300,000 chickens produced since the fire must The Buffaloes posted a team half en route to a 56-20 tri- What an understatement! Recognizing some of the droppings that our culture wasn’t easy.” plan on long delays on SR-36, I-80 and state Route 138. longer than 250 words, civil in tone, written at Fassio Egg Farms in Erda, be disposed of, he said. score of 331, and were paced umph that gave the Stallions a that our society is now oriented toward provides. We are talking responsibility exclusively for the Transcript-Bulletin, and For the Cowboys, Marissa And traffic congestion and delays may likely continue, even if the employees were beginning to The conveyer system is by Bridger Holmes’ 78. Jesse one-game lead over four other recreational and leisure time, much of here. Such movies are not allowed at accompanied by the writer’s name, address Linares and Maci Jackson state pushes forward with an auxiliary lane on I-80 between Lake Point clear debris. a priority for the farm and Sayers shot a 79, Tegan placed first at No. 2 and 3 teams in the region standings. which is structured around our graphi- our house. and phone number. Longer letters may be and Black Rock, and an SR-201 extension from Black Rock directly to published, based on merit and at the Editor’s “We’re cleaning up as best Larsen said they hope to have FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTBRobison PHOTOS shot 87 and Peyton It marked the second game in cally violent movie industry, does the Our grandchildren, when we singles and Paige Peterson and SR-36 in Lake Point. Neither of those projects are currently funded and discretion. All letters may be subject to editing. as we can,” said Corby Larsen, some version of the system in Thevenot shot 89. Stansbury’s a row where Stansbury over- government have the guts to take on have the pleasure of their company, Lexi Colson placed first in No. 1 the projected cost of the SR-201 extension is $200 million. Letters written to thank an individual or vice president of operations at place within the next couple of team score of 351 was led doubles, with sisters Brooklyn came a slow start to win, as the Hollywood? still view treasures such as “Bambi,” by Gabe Golden’s 84. Brady Yet, even though such projects may not fully alleviate congestion organization should be submitted for Fassio Egg Farms. days. The farm is also looking Ashlyn, KedRick and Melinda Hunsaker (left) listen while Adriana Padillo with The Brothers Restaurant explains about the eatery’s offerings at the and Brynlee Butler taking sec- Stallions erased a 28-7 half- Without public support, govern- “Dumbo” and “Aristocats.” A few years “Notes of Appreciation.” Kimberling (86), Hunter Luke woes, the state must continually work toward improving traffic flows The two chicken coops to replace the chickens killed Taste of Our County, Business and Career Showcase at the Benson Grist Mill on Wednesday. ond in No. 2 doubles. Grantsville junior Maci Jackson hits a return during last week’s Region 13 tennis tournament at Liberty Park in time deficit in its 35-28 win ment interaction will not happen. It ago I read a letter to the editor from (88) and Creighton Patterson Salt Lake City. Jackson won the region title at third singles and enters this week’s Class 3A stateCOURTESY tournament OF KAREN HOLT as between Tooele and Salt Lake valleys. That work will likely take on even Readers who are interested in writing a longer destroyed in the fire were con- in the fire within the next few over Tooele a week earlier. The normally takes a Pearl Harbor to get a very astute citizen in the Transcript guest op-ed column on a topic of general (93) also contributed to the Additionally, Kayla Johnson one of the favorites to win a state championship. more importance after the Utah State Prison is finished, and as busi- nected to the additional coops weeks. took fifth place at No. 1 singles. Stallions have outscored their us out of our doldrums and face the Bulletin that was entitled, “Spoons do interest should contact Editor David Bern. Stallions’ score. ness parks west of Salt Lake International Airport continue their march and processing plant by a Chickens in the adjacent past two opponents 63-0 in the reality of such issues. When you spend not make people fat.” The reverse side Email: [email protected] Chamber draws big crowd toTIM grist GILLIE mill She came back from a loss in toward the Great Salt Lake. conveyer system, which trans- second half. coops are being monitored STAFF WRITER Grantsville soccer at Kearns her first match against Judge time at the dump, you start smelling of which reflected “Guns do not kill Fax: (435) 882-6123 ported the eggs, Larsen said. “It’s like Jekyll and Hyde, Those facilities will employ thousands, many of whom may choose to people. People kill people.” With our Mail: Letters to the Editor for effects from the fire and It was by all counts aWhitney big Wangsgard had a hat Memorial and won her next set. She came back to beat like the dump. How many times have I The fire used the conveyer sys- who they are,” Stansbury live in Tooele Valley, further adding to commuter congestion. Unless the socialized attraction toward violence Tooele Transcript-Bulletin smoke, Larsen said. event with more than 50trick, dif- Ashley Wangsgard and two. Robinson 7-5 in that set and observed my peers involved in graphi- tem connection to spread from coach Clint Christiansen said. state acts purposefully on this problem with solid funding, relief may nowadays, if the government takes P.O. Box 390 While Larsen described ferent booths, hundredsAlyssa of Roberts each scored “If you really look at it, if then capped it off with a 6-1 cally violent movies on their laptops Tooele, UT 84074 the initial coop into the second “It just comes down to them never arrive. your guns away, perpetrators will be Tuesday’s fire as a frighten- people, and lots of food.twice and Savannah Thomas Kayla’s not there and every- trouncing. Her previous match- with rapturous fascination, literally building. not mentally getting them- forced to use crossbows, then ball bats, ing experience, he said he The Tooele County pickedChamber up the shutout in goal body moves up one, we don’t up with Robinson in region drooling at the lips in becoming both Work to clean up the pro- selves ready. They know it and and finally, fountain pens. We really doesn’t expect a major impact of Commerce’s annualas com- the Grantsville girls soccer win any points. So, she didn’t play was just like that champi- psychologically as well as intellectu- LETTER CONTEST cessing plant for operation was team rolled to an 8-0 win over onship match. we’re addressing that now. If GUEST OPINION ally involved in much of the hideous need to get behind the government in ➤ munity business expo, and win any points, but in a way Each month, the Transcript-Bulletin will select underway Wednesday but eggs SEE FASSIO PAGE A9 Kearns in a non-region road the team that shows up in the resolving this deteriorating phenom- Taste of Our County — for- she did,” Thurgood said, In the prior match, she also stunts that many of these films portray. the best letter of the month and reprint it in laid by the farm’s approximate- game Friday. Sarah Ellett also second half shows up for four enon that we have allowed to become merly known as Taste of Tooele Regarding Linares’ final came back from a 5-1 set to win Would you feed you children arsenic? the first Open Forum page of the following scored for the Cowboys (7-3, quarters, we have a chance to an almost monthly socialized event. month. The winning letter writer will receive a and Job Fair — was held region match, Thurgood said, 7-5, but with the second set, it We become what we see, eat and 1-3 Region 13), who resumed be a pretty good football team, free one-year subscription to the newspaper. Wednesday from 4 p.m. to 7 “She beat the Waterford girl was a bit closer at 6-3. hear. How about a stiff prison term Ralph E. Pierce region play with a home match but we’ve got to figure that The fault is with The subscription can be transferred or used to for the second time. This time At region she said, “I got for parents who allow their children p.m. at the Historic Bensonagainst Judge Memorial that Grantsville’s Paige part out.” Tooele renew a present subscription. Grist Mill. it was 6-4, 6-3. Marissa was down in the finals 2-5 and I just was not complete at press Peterson (left) and The rough start somewhat It even attracted the state’s ahead the whole time, she Lexi Colson kept telling myself ‘It’s not over time Tuesday afternoon. never got behind. It just went ‘til it’s over.’ And to ‘just keep overshadowed another stellar lieutenant governor. encourage each performance for Stansbury’s GUEST OPINION Cross country back and forth and back and other during a match playing my game and hit the us, not with bots “I’m here because the gov- at Bob Firman Invitational forth, right to the very end.” ball.’” rushing attack, which seems to ernor announced an initiative at the Region 13 f only Joe McCarthy had lived tennis tournament at be hitting its stride after strug- to create 25,000 jobsTooele in the County’s three high Of her final match When asked how much to see this moment, when it is against Waterford’s Tanisha Liberty Park in Salt pressure she was feeling in the gling early in the season. Silas state’s rural counties,”school said cross Lt. country teams suddenly in vogue to attribute Mueller 13 indictments expose US hypocrisy competed at the Bob Firman Martheswaran, Linares said, Lake City last week. region tournament, Linares Young rushed for 158 yards I Gov. Spencer Cox. large-scale events in American Invitational at Eagle Island “She’s really fun to play with. Peterson and Colson said, “I felt more pressure than and four touchdowns, Mitch ine months into his mandate Cox was there because if a won the region title politics to the hand of Russia and State Park in Boise, Idaho, on So, we had some really long normal, but, I knew it wasn’t a Lindsay ran for 77 yards and to investigate possible Russian combined Expo, Taste of Our at first doubles. to inveigh against domestic subver- home” (1,145,470 interactions). Saturday. Grantsville’s Porter points.” huge deal if I didn’t win.” two scores and Bridger Roberts interference in the 2016 County, and Job Fair wasn’t sion. N How lucky we are that Mueller and Whitworth had the fastest carried the ball six times for 65 U.S. presidential election, special enough, the chamber also Linares said she could tell Referring to her come- Robert Mueller released an time of any Tooele County COURTESY OF KAREN HOLT yards and a TD as the Stallions counsel Robert Mueller has finally Rachel Marsden the Justice Department are saving us teamed up with Gov. Gary Martheswaran was playing to back twice against Robinson, indictment of 13 Russians for runner, clocking in at 16 min- pounded the Tigers (2-4, 1-1) found some actual Russians to indict. GUEST COLUMNIST from any disinformation that those Herbert’s 25K Jobs Tour to her backhand, trying to attack Jackson said, “All I could think crimes related to their social-media utes, 10.80 seconds to finish her coach had been strategiz- for 425 yards on the ground. Unfortunately, by pointing the finger Russians might be spreading. bring in around 20 statewide what she might have thought will meet Martheswaran again was ‘Wow!’ because I did that campaign to meddle in our internal second in the boys’ Division was Linares’ weakness. ing about how to play,” Linares twice — I got down. The first Young staked the Stallions at these Russians, he has exposed The 13 Russians are accused of organizations that offered sup- at state this week. affairs in the run-up to and after- creating “hundreds of social media I Section 1 race. He was “I felt pretty confident going said. “ … there were some time it was 1-5, instead of 2-5, to a 14-0 first-quarter lead hypocrisy within the U.S. system. The U.S. Justice Department has In Jackson’s final round math of the 2016 election. ment, you might think the Russians accounts” under fake identities. followed by teammate➤ Seth into it, because I hadn’t lost in deuces that were a little close, and both times I came back and with a pair of touchdown Last year, Mueller’s investigation charged these 13 Russian nationals SEE CHAMBER PAGE A4 against Amy Robinson from Mueller obviously isn’t a were everywhere, not only adver- FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO Beckett in fourth (16:16.58), but it was good.” runs from 5 and 6 yards out. produced indictments against four with conspiracy to defraud the United They then allegedly pretended to be region so far. I’m sure she and Judge Memorial, she found won 7-5. So, I was just amazed McCarthyite, and can’t be held tising on Facebook (“Trump is Stansbury’s Nathan Winters Linares said she suspects she However, the Tigers, playing former Trump campaign advisors who States. Supposedly, the accused tried U.S.-based activists on social media, herself down 5-1 in the first responsible for the hysteria — our only hope for a better future”; The still morning waters of Stansbury Lake reflect trees and homes that (48th, 17:00.34), Grantsville’s SEE had dealings with Russians during to pollute the sacred electronic insti- posting election-related opinions in TENNIS PAGE B8 ➤ and hopeful expectations of an “Ohio Wants Hillary 4 Prison”), but surround the lake. Jace Wilson (97th, 17:37.26) SEE STALLIONS PAGE B8 their international business careers tutions of truth that recently brought an effort to influence the outcome in ➤ impeachment-level event — that organizing rallies around the coun- and Stansbury’s Isaac before joining the campaign. Most of us fascinating (but false) political favor of Donald Trump and, during has built up around his work. His try. But it’s not clear these rallies Nelson (122nd, 17:53.08). what those indictments covered could information such as “President Trump the primary elections, Democratic indictment is, as far as anyone can even came off. Stansbury’s Dmitri Morse have fallen under the purview of the orders the execution of five turkeys candidate Bernie Sanders. won the Division I Section 2 tell, rigorously factual. That’s prob- The Russians didn’t do anything The indictment implies that Buffaloes shut down Scots to us that we weren’t doing to Internal Revenue Service and seemed pardoned by Obama” (a story that Stansbury Lake ably the point of it — to create a boys race in 16:58.04, with out of place in a multimillion-dollar provoked 914,429 social media inter- the operation was linked to the teammates Talmage Ricks record of an episode that we should ourselves, although we were doing | PHOTOS SUE BUTTERFIELD investigation into alleged electoral actions, according to a 2017 year-end Russian government, and that a St. (17:15.77), Ryan Brady Dominant ground game powers Tooele to big win over Ben Lomond STORY DIANE HATCH want to know as much about as it on a much larger, more potent subversion. analysis by Buzzfeed News). Petersburg-based company called (17:58.55) and Jaxton Maez possible and prevent from ever hap- scale. The Russians are just aping the Internet Research Agency failed But now, we actually have some Former FBI director Mueller’s long faces ‘invaders’ (17:59.04). Tooele’s Wyatt DARREN VAUGHAN pening again. the arguments we are already hav- to register as a foreign agent before arm of the law has reached into that SPORTS EDITOR ing with one other, and the sewer- indicted Russians — 13 individuals Olsen (80th, 18:50.00), Jared The Russia campaign was a pristine electronic river of democracy, purchasing paid advertisements on Downard (91st, 19:42.77), ish level of much of the discussion who supposedly had a hand in the After a disappointing loss shockingly cynical violation of which was also home to this viral social media. Silly Russians — you’re Jordan VanDerwerken (95th, on social media. 2016 electoral outcome. How so? in the Region 11 opener, the our sovereignty. President Donald Facebook post about his own former supposed to pay a lobbying firm in 20:10.28) and Jared Bird ran a report Primarily by screwing around on of all varieties Tooele football team’s game Trump would do himself and the bureau: “FBI seizes over 3,000 penises Washington to do all that for you on social media. (96th, 20:12.06) also com- plan coming into Friday’s road country a favor by frankly denounc- the other day on Russian bots, in Flynn. during raid at morgue employee’s peted in that race. Josh game against Ben Lomond was ing it. But the scale of the opera- the immediate aftermath of the Editor’s note: This is the final In the winter, the lake level SEE MARSDEN PAGE A5 UV INDEX Wintch (41st, 16:12.77) simple: run, run and run some tion shouldn’t be exaggerated. In Parkland school shooting, posting ® installment of a three-part series is lowered to allow it to freeze led Stansbury in the boys more. the context of a hugely expensive, on Twitter about gun control. It’s on the history, ecology and closer to the bottom, Flynn GUEST OPINION elite race. Josh Oblad (46th, obsessively covered, impossibly hard to believe that this is going to future of Stansbury Lake. said. This is detrimental to the SEVEN-DAY FORECAST FOR TOOELE 16:17.15), Scott Ruebush dramatic presidential election, rip apart the American body politic SUN AND MOON sago pondweed cluttering the Camille Vela shares her talent of belly dancing after healing from a tragic loss FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY (56th, 16:25.17), Blaise Miller THS FOOTBALL the Russian contribution on social when many perfectly respectable, The Sun Rise Set STEVE HOWE lake and helps prevent damage (75th, 16:37.77) and Dylan Friday 7:03 a.m. 7:50 p.m. STAFF WRITER amille Vela has been media was piddling and often red-blooded Americans themselves Has the real meaning of America been lost? Saturday 7:04 a.m. 7:48 p.m. through heaving F Sa Su ice M Tu along W Th the Bryant (89th, 16:44.62) also a bride, a widow advocate for gun control, and often With extensive weed FRANCIE AUFDEMORTE/TTB PHOTO The Buffaloes executed that laughable. Sunday 7:05 a.m. 7:46 p.m. shoreline, heThe said. higher the AccuWeather.com UV Index™ scored points for the Stallions, Grantsville’s Coy Johnson (10) follows through on a handoff during a in the immediate aftermath of hen Donald Trump and his Monday 7:06 a.m. 7:45 p.m. growth, waterfowl and thou- number, the greater the need for eye and skin strategy to perfection, attempt- and a new mother, The Russians wanted to boost Tuesday 7:07 a.m. 7:43 p.m. Flynn saidprotection. maintaining0-2 Low; 3-5 Moderate;the 6-7 High; 8-10 Tyson Hunt (middle) takes a sample of a smoothie from who finished seventh of 27 game earlier this season. Johnson ran for a touchdown and threw for in that order — and shootings. followers refer to “America,” sands of fish, it can be easy to Very High; 11+ Extreme ing 68 rushing plays and gain- Trump, but as a Facebook executive free.” Wednesday 7:08 a.m. 7:41 p.m. level in the lake takes con- Tracy Shaw at the Taste of Our County, Business and teams in the race. James another in the Cowboys’ 43-15 win over Union on Friday in Roosevelt. she’s only 25. She’s In a better world, Trump would what do they mean? Thursday 7:09 a.m. 7:40 p.m. forget the dynamic ecosystem ing 426 yards on the ground en noted, most of their spending on W It inspired the poems of Walt stant attention. ThisALMANAC year, the Miles (169th, 17:36.20) was be less defensive about the Russian Some see a country of white, The Moon Rise Set in Stansbury Lake is meticu- Career Showcase at the Benson Grist Mill. The Grantsville route to an impressive 37-7 win Dance�to�healalso a belly dancer and has been Facebook ads came after the elec- Robert Reich Whitman and Langston Hughes, Friday 9:30 p.m. 9:28 a.m. lake was highStatistics by foran the inch week endingor Sept. 6. Tooele’s top finisher, and investigation, and his opposition English-speaking Christians. Show Choir (above right) performs the national anthem. over the Scots that evened their tion. The larger goal was to sow GUEST COLUMNIST Saturday 10:05 p.m. 10:35 a.m. lously maintained and moni- An afternoon was joined by Ryan Callister assessing local interest in the dance and the songs of Woody Guthrie. All Partly sunny with a two throughTemperatures May after a wet 92/59 would be less obsessively invested Others want a land inhabited by Sunday 10:43 p.m. 11:43 a.m. tored over the course of thethunderstorm possible Justin Berry (above) with USTAR talks about the role of region record at 1-1. form. discord, yet we had already primed turned their love for America into Mostly sunny and Mostly sunny shower in spots spring, but heHigh/Low said past that week quickly (192nd, 18:07.32), Ethan GHS demolishes in it (at least until such time that it self-seeking individuals free to accu- Monday 11:26 p.m. 12:51 p.m. Pleasant with partial “That was the game plan,” none 1:58 p.m. Some sun, a t-storm pleasant year. Normal high/low past week 85/59 75.5 programs to support technology entrepreneurs and inno- Olcott (200th, 18:28.25), Eli In August, Vela began teaching ourselves for plenty of that. demands that we live up to our ideals. Tuesday Partly sunny, a t-storm sunshine changed dueAverage to heat temp andpast week dry- produces a genuine bombshell). We mulate as much money and power as around in the p.m. The man-made61 lake doesn’t84 62 said Tooele senior Jeno Bins, a belly dancing class at Red Tree Does anyone believe, absent “This land is your land, this land is Wednesday 12:14 a.m. 3:02 p.m. in the afternoon 86 64 88 ness. Normal average temp past week 71.9 vators through training, funding, incubator and accelera- Messick (201st, 18:30.10) possible, who pay taxes only to protect creed. We are a conviction — that all Thursday 1:08 a.m. 4:01 p.m. 85 62 High Low who led Tooele (3-3, 1-1 Region C Russian trolls on Twitter and should seek to shut down Russian my land,” sang Guthrie. 62 83 61 have a natural source like a The waterDaily level Temperatures took a brief tor programs. Lt. Gov. Spencer Cox (right) speaks briefly and Spencer Moreno (203rd, Yoga, next to Macey’s in Tooele. But their assets from criminals and foreign people are created equal, that people 87 64 82 11) with 171 rushing yards and Facebook, that we were headed to a influence as much as possible, with- Last New First Full stream or river, which requires drop when it was discovered 18:38.41). Stansbury’s Zoe Cougars, 43-15 because few people showed up, she aggressors. should be judged by the content of “Let America be America again,” at the event about the county’s economy and jobs. He out losing perspective. We aren’t TOOELE COUNTY WEATHERthe water level to be adjusted had Hales was the fastest female two touchdowns on 26 carries. couldn’t maintain rent for the space. placid election season involving an their character rather than the color of pleaded Hughes. “The land that never the pump at the Mill Pond is joined by Derek B. Miller, who is president and CEO of Tooele’s D’warren Robinson (25) looks for running roomSUE BUTTERFIELD/TTB during a Sept. PHOTO 15 divided because of Russia; we’re Others think mainly about flags, throughout the year, accord- runner from Tooele County, “We wanted to come out and She said the dance form gets a bad incendiary, mediagenic former real- their skin, and that government should has been yet — /And yet must be — Shown is Friday’s weather. DARREN VAUGHAN game against Stansbury. Robinson and the Buffaloes beat Ben Lomond divided because we have genuine, national anthems, pledges of alle- Sep 13 Sep 19 Sep 27 Oct 5 ing to Stansbury Park Service ➤ World Trade Center Utah. Miller also spoke at the event. winning the Division I Section take it to them and have more rap, for which she has a little advice ity TV star bent on blowing up the the land where every man is free. Temperatures are Friday’s SEE LAKE PAGE A9 SPORTS EDITOR 37-7 on Friday in Ogden. deeply held differences. The fault, giance, military parades and secure be of the people, by the people and for ©2017; forecasts and graphics highs and Friday night’s Agency manager Randall 1 race in 18:33.06. She was GHS momentum going into the rest for people who hold preconceived political establishment and a long- / The land that’s mind — the poor provided by BULLETIN BOARD B6 One week after a disap- FOOTBALL borders. the people. lows. joined in the top 100 finishers of our season. We still have negative judgment. time pol who had stoked the enmity to the extent there is one, isn’t with man’s, Indian’s, Negro’s, ME —.” CLASSIFIEDS C6 pointing loss on its home- It was a refreshing bounce- the bots, but with ourselves. Trump encourages a combination Political scientist Carl Friedrich, Thu Fri Sat Sun Mon Tue Wed by Grantsville’s Sabrina Allen to pick up their first Class 3A more to go, but we’re on track mouth.” “Try it before you knock it” Vela of Republicans for 30 years and was comparing Americans to Gallic people, That idealism sought to preserve Download our app today coming night, it was the back effort for the Buffs, who of all three — tribalism, libertarianism Precipitation (in inches) (sixth,HOMETOWN 19:37.50), A10 Stansbury’s North win of the year behind for sure.” Tooele opened the game with said. under FBI investigation? noted that “to be an American is an and protect our democracy — not INSIDE Deep Creek Grantsville football team’s gave up 28 unanswered points Rich Lowry is editor of the and loyalty. UTAH WEATHER Lake Point ShelbyOBITUARIES Archer (14th, A8 running back Gage Schmidt’s The Buffs’ ground game was a 15-play, 71-yard drive that As an adolescent, Vela had to If you read the Mueller indict- ideal, while to be a Frenchman is a inundate it with big money, or allow B7 turn to play the spoiler Friday in the second half of their 35-28 National Review. But the core of our national identity Clive WEATHER 89/68 Run of hot, dry Mountains 19:51.92), McKenna Rogers so dominant that the Scots quit gymnastics because of family one party or candidate to suppress Logan Knolls KID SCOOP night in Roosevelt. 213-yard, three-touchdown loss to Stansbury a week earlier. took up 7:30 of game time. The has not been any of this. It has been fact.” Wendover 91/69 91/69 Stansbury Park (34th, 20:21.87) and Elena B1 (0-6, 0-2) had the ball for less 87/56 90/65 weather continues punctuated with SPORTS effort. drive, which included a 4-yard finances, so as a teenager she taught That idealism led Abraham Lincoln votes from rivals, or permit a foreign Grouse Erda 90/68 The Cowboys put together “The kids responded to how EDITORIAL BOARD found in the ideals we share — politi- Creek Allen (68th, 21:08.16) and than three minutes in the first herself to dance. Her mother wanted power to intrude on our elections. Grantsville 89/66 Pine Canyon See A2 lofty peaks A6 their most dominant perfor- Grantsville (2-4, 1-1 Class we practiced,” Tooele coach Jeff run by Bins on a fourth-and-1 Joel J. Dunn cal equality, equal opportunity, free- to proclaim that America might yet be 83/59 72/58 Trace 0.25 0.00 0.22 14.06 13.48 Grantsville’s Lyndee Limburg half, and for barely over 15 Publisher Emeritus Scott C. Dunn Ogden 91/68 3A North) controlled the clock play, ended with a 4-yard scor- Vela to participate in pageants, so she President and Publisher David J. Bern the “last best hope” for humankind. It It spawned a patriotism that once 88/64 Bauer Last Normal Month Normal Year Normal mance of the season, demol- Lewis said. “I’m very pleased dom of speech and of the press, a dedi- Tooele Week for week to date M-T-D to date Y-T-D SEE WRAP PAGE B8 minutes for the entire game. entered and won two. With the exception of the “Our View” column, the opinions expressed onEditor this page, required all of us take on a fair share Vernal 88/65 ➤ ishing Union 43-15 in the with its punishing running with that, and that’s a tribute to ing run by Ben Wasson. cation to open inquiry and truth, and prompted Emma Lazarus, some two 86/50 87/64 Ben Lomond managed just 226 including the cartoon, are not necessarily endorsed by the Tooele Transcript Bulletin. Transcript Bulletin of the burdens of keeping America Salt Lake City Pollen Index Cougars’ homecoming game Ben Lomond went three-and- ➤ to democracy and the rule of law. decades later, to welcome to America Stockton yards of total offense compared our kids to come back the way SEE HEAL PAGE A11 P U B L I S H I N G Tooele 91/68 See High SEE COWBOYS PAGE B8 out on its first possession of the the world’s “tired, your poor, your going — paying taxes in full rather 87/64 Roosevelt complete 88/65 ➤ to Tooele’s 445. they did. The plan was to come Camille Vela (top) practices traditional belly dancing movements which she Proving the Power of Print Since 1894 We are not a race. We are not a Provo 86/56 Rush Valley Moderate became interested in while living in Mexico. Tooele. Camille Vela (above) huddled masses yearning to breathe 85/59 Ophir out and play a little smash- forecast 87/64 81/60 Low SEE BUFFALOES PAGE B8 SEE REICH PAGE A5 Price on A9 ➤ performs some dance moves with help from her nine-month-old son Jacob. ® 84/57 Absent Nephi 87/60 Th F Sa Su M Tu W Source: Intermountain Allergy & Asthma Delta Manti Dugway 89/66 87/62 84/56 Green River RIVERS AND LAKES 95/62 In feet as of 7 a.m. Wednesday Gold Hill Vernon 24-hour Richfield 82/61 Stage Change Moab 87/63 83/55 Vernon Creek Hanksville 93/63 0.98 none Beaver 93/63 Ibapah at Vernon 79/55 84/60 South Willow Creek at Grantsville 1.48 none Elevation Eureka Great Salt Lake Blanding 75/56 at Saltair Boat Harbor 4193.11 Cedar City 85/57 82/52 St. George Kanab 88/67 85/57 TOOELE RANSCRIPT Get Over 100 Issues T For Only $ One year subscription BULLETIN Home deliver within delivery area 40 Subscribe: 435.882.0050 or TooeleOnline.com B6 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN TUESDAY April 24, 2018

To place your Classifi ed ad To place your Classifi ed ad call 435-882-0050 STANSBURY PARK call 435-882-0050 Improvement District is accepting applica- GRANTSVILLE CITY CLASSIFIEDtions for part-time NOTICE OF PUBLIC summer help, $12 hr. HEARINGS No benefits. Consists NOTICE IS HEREBY Rates for the Tooele Transcript Bulletin, of very hard work ex- GIVEN that the CLASSIFIED LINE AD RATES published every Tuesday and Thursday Classifi ed adercising deadlines: the Monday water 4:45 p.m. for Tuesday edition • Wednesday 4:45 p.m. for ThursdayGrantsville edition City Coun- All classifi ed line ads runningvalves in the Tooele Transcript and Bulletin some on Tuesday or Thursday will automatically run in the Tooele Valley Extra, a separate publication that is delivered to all nonsubscriberscil of thewill Tooele conduct Transcript Bulletin. the fol- TWENTY WORDS OR LESS MONTHLY RATE other duties may in- lowing public hearing 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 cludenewspaper. meter Advertisements reading, are the sole responsibility of the advertiser. Transcript makes it illegal to advertise “any preference, limitation, or discrimination basedat onthe race, Grantsvillereligion, sex or national City 30¢ per word/issue $2.00 per word over 20 words Bulletin Publishing Co. herebymeter disclaims all replacement,liability for any damages suffered as the result of any advertisement in origin, or any intention to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination.”Offices, The Tooele 429 Transcript-Bulletin East Main 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 thebuilding Tooele Transcript-Bulletin. maintenance, The Tooele Transcript- Bulletin has the sole authority to edit all dwellings advertised in this paper are available on an equal opportunity basis.Street, Grantsville, Bold type 5¢ per word/issue 25 No credit for stopped ads. Includes and locate any classifi ed advertisementpainting, as deemed weed appropriate. con- Transcript Bulletin Publishing Company reserves Utah at 7:00 p.m. on Boxed ads 50¢ per issue (20 words or less) the right to refuse any advertisement. 4 runs in the Tooele Valley Extra trol, welding repairs, Wednesday, May 2, vehicle maintenance, 2018 to receive public water, sewer or storm input regarding the fol- Services Services Miscellaneous Livestock drainHelp maintenance. Wanted Wanted Homes Public Notices lowing:Public Notices Must be at least 18 Meetings a. 2018Meetings Capital Sewer years old and have a Project Environmental HOME REPAIRS ex- DIAMONDS don't pay Need to sell that new valid driver's license. I PAY ABOVE pawn SELLING YOUR Deadline for public Assessment finding of pert. Doors, knobs, retail! Large selec- champion bull or your Apply at: 30 Plaza, shop offers for gold HOME? Advertise it notices is 4 p.m. the no significant impact ALTERATIONS trim, baseboards, tion, high quality. Bri- yearling calves? Stansbury Park, UT and precious metals. in the classifieds. Call day prior to publica- and Project Engineer- and AWARD mouldings, drywall re- dal sets, wedding Place your classified during the hours of 8 This includes broken 882-0050 or visit tion. Public notices ing Report. WINNING pairs, texturing, bands. Everything ad into 47 newspa- am to 4:30 pm, Mon- or unwanted jewelry, www.tooeletran submitted past the b. Proposed Amended caulking, weather- wholesale! Rocky pers, find your buyers day thru Friday. Ap- dental gold, as well script.com deadline will not be Final Plat for Mustang proofing, framing, Mtn. Diamond Co. quickly. For only plications will be ac- as gold & silver coins. accepted. Ridge Phase 1, to TAILORING home updating and S.L.C. $163. your 25 word cepted until 4:30 pm Call or tex t UPAXLP amend seven (7) of renovations and 1-800-396-6948 classified will be seen on May 11, 2018. (An (801)330-8155 after Water Shares the original twenty-six by AGENDA much more. Small by up to 500,000 Equal Opportunity 6pm. (26) lots, for Land De- FOR SALE Bowflex NOTICE is hereby jobs okay. Call readers. It is as sim- Employer) velopment. LLC and KATHY max trainer brand 10.364 ACRE FEET in given that the Stans- S h a n e ( 4 3 5 ) ple as calling the Adam Nash in the new never used. Dan Tooele City, $8,000 bury Service Agency 840-0344. Tooele Transcript Stansbury Park Im- Trailers RM-7 and R-1-12 JONES 435-841-9829 per acre foot. Call Board of Trustees will Bulletin at provement District is zone. 435-830-2426 hold its Regular Meet- JOSE’S YARD Mainte- If you sell Insurance, (435)882-0050 for de- accepting applica- c . P r o p o s e d 2017 Forest River ing on Wednesday, 882-6605 nance. Mow and yard promote a hospital or tails. (Ucan) tions for part-time 5 ACRE FEET in East 2018-2019 tentative Rockwood 2280 April 25, 2018, at 7:00 cleanup, hauling gar- an ambulance serv- summer help, $12 hr. Erda (East of Drou- budget. Tent Trailer. Steel pm, at the Stansbury AERATION, POWER bage, residential and ice, place your classi- No benefits. Consists bay Road, $9,500 All interested persons Sporting frame construction, Park Clubhouse, #1 RAKING, tilling, Top commercial. Low fied ad in all 47 of of very hard work ex- obo per acre foot. are invited to attend Goods fully automatic lift. Country Club Drive, soil, mulch, manure, rates. Licensed/In- Utah's newspapers. ercising the water Call 435-830-2426 and provide comment Easy to tow and Stansbury Park, Utah sand, landscape rock sured. Senior dis- The cost is only $163. valves and some upon this proposal. SELLING YOUR small enough to 7.72 ACRE FEET of 84074. & gravel. Hauling/ counts. now hiring. for a 25 word ad ($5. other duties may in- Written comments will mountain bike? Ad- store in garage. water for Grantsville BUSINESS MEETING cleanup. Seasonal (435)843-7614 For each additional clude meter reading, also be considered if vertise it in the classi- Shower, toilet, in- area, 10,000 per 1. Call to Order Service Call John word). You will reach meter replacement, submitted to the City NEED A GREAT fieds. Call 882-0050 door/outdoor stereo acr/ft. Cal l 2. Pledge of Allegiance 435-850-2909 up to 500,000 news- building maintenance, Recorder in advance PAINTER? Resi- www.tooele tran- system and other 435-512-7873 or 3. Review & Adopt DRYWALL: Hanging, paper readers. Just painting, weed con- of the hearing. dential or commer- script.com accessories never 435-850-0507 Minutes finishing, texturing. call Tooele Transcript trol, welding repairs, Persons with disabili- cial. Free estimates. used. Sleeps up to April 11, 2018 Regular 36 years experience. B u l l e t i n a t vehicle maintenance, 9 PLUS feet East Erda ties needing accom- Call Randy at B&B 6. Excellent Condi- Meeting Licensed and in- (435)882-0050 for de- water, sewer or storm $9000 each foot or modations to partici- Custom painting, Help Wanted t i o n . C a l l 4. Public Comment sured. Doug tails. (Ucan) drain maintenance. $8500 each for all. pate in hearings 435-224-2792 435-241-9193 or 5. Nate Green - Ice (435)830-2653 Must be at least 18 C a l l S h e l l y should contact Chris- SELL YOUR computer Business owners If 435-830-0209 Shack/Paddle Sports RAIN GUTTERS, years old and have a 801-580-0971 t i n e W e b b ELECTRICIAN/ in the classifieds. Call you need someone Vendor Lease seamless, aluminum, valid driver's license. (435.884.3411) at the HANDYMAN residen- 882-0050 or visit fast, place your clas- ONE SETTLEMENT 6. Michael Hughes - all colors, leaf protec- Apply at: 30 Plaza, Grantsville City Offices tial/ commercial elec- www.tooeletranscript. sified ad in all 48 of Autos canyon water share Pure Ag Presentation, tion cleaning. Li- Stansbury Park, UT at least 24 hours in ad- trical installs & re- com Utah's newspapers. for sale. $3,500 call Lake/Pond Treatment censed and insured, during the hours of 8 vance of the hearings. pairs, remodeling, The person you are S t e v e a t 7. MGB+A Presenta- free estimates . You may have just the am to 4:30 pm, Mon- SELL YOUR CAR or DATED this 23rd day painting, plumbing! looking for could be 801-541-6008 tion, Community Mas- (435)841-4001 thing someone out of day thru Friday. Ap- boat in the classi- of April, 2018. Dale 435-843-7693 from out of town. The ter Plan, Public Input town is looking for. plications will be ac- fieds. Call 882-0050 SETTLEMENT CAN- Christine Webb 801-865-1878 Li- cost is only $163. for RECESS REMODELING SPE- Place your classified cepted until 4:30 pm or visit www.tooele- YON water share for Grantsville City Re- censed, insured. Ma- a 25 word ad and it WORK SESSION CIALIST kitchens, ad in 45 of Utah's on May 11, 2018. (An transcript. com sale, $3,500. Call corder jor credit cards ac- reaches up to 1. General Manager's bathrooms, additions, newspapers, the cost Equal Opportunity 435-830-7469. (Published in the Tran- cepted! 340,000 households. Report basement, finish car- is $163. For up to 25 Employer) Apartments script Bulletin April 24, All you do is call the 2. Board Members' HANDY-MAN SERV- pentry, custom tile, words. You will be 2018) Transcript Bulletin at Tooele Youth Transi- for Rent Reports & Requests ICES remodeling, siding and roofing li- reaching a potential Buildings (435)882-0050 for all tion Specialist 3. Correspondence painting , texturing, censed and insured. of up to 340,000 1BDRM BASEMENT PUBLIC NOTICE the details. (Mention Received framing, electraical, Free estimate s households. All you APT. No smoking, no If you build, remodel or NOTICE IS HEREBY UCAN) You can now $10.50/hr + benefits at 4. Financials & Bills plumbing, tree work, 435-841-4001 need to do is call the p e t s . C a l l remove buildings you GIVEN THAT the order online 32 hours. Flexible 5. Possible Closed landscaping, etc. Li- Transcript Bulletin at 435-830-3076 can place your classi- Tooele City Planning www.utahpress.com hours (20-3 2 Meeting censed and insured TREE PRUNING ISA 882-0050 for full de- fied ad in 45 of Utah's Commission will meet hours/week). HS LARGE 2BDRM 6. Adjourn c a l l R a y certified Arborist. Can tails. (Mention UCAN) CAR WASHING PO- newspapers for only in a public hearing and grad plus 1 yr paid 1.5bth, washer dryer (Published in the Tran- 435-268-9583. prune up to 40ft tall. SITIONS $ 10-12/hr $163. for 25 words Business meeting experience working hookups, enclosed script Bulletin April 24, Call Stephen at 40hrs/week at the ($5. for each addi- s cheduled for HANDYMAN, any kind Furniture & with people with dis- patio, covered park- 2018) 435-241-2504 for a Ford Performance tional word). You will Wednesday, April 25, of handyman work, Appliances abilities. Will teach ing. Rent $700/mo, free consultation. Racing School in reach up to 340,000 GRANTSVILLE CITY 2018 in the hour of yard work, leaf life skills to students deposit $600 . Grantsville. E-mail households and all NOTICE OF PUBLIC 7:00 PM. The meeting cleanup. Residential TREE WORK. Free NORTH VALLEY Ap- with disabilities in lo- (435)241-9118 josh.williams@fprac- you do is call the HEARINGS will be held at Tooele and business. Call estimates! Local pliance. Washers/ cal Tooele County ingschool.com if inter- Transcript Bulletin at NOTICE IS HEREBY City Hall in the City J i m m y a t company. Licensed dryers refrigerators, high schools and at SETTLEMENT CAN- ested. 882-0050 for all the GIVEN that the Council Chambers, lo- (435)228-8561 & insured. Bucket freezers, stoves. Utah Independent YON APARTMENTS details. (Mention Grantsville City Coun- cated at 90 North Main truck, Crane serv- $149-$399 full war- DRIVER WANTED for Living Center- Tooele 2 & 3 bedroom apts. HANSON & SONS UCAN Classified Net- cil will conduct the fol- Street, Tooele, Utah. ice, Stump removal, ranty. Complete re- small family owned Branch, a non-profit, Prices starting at handyman home re- work) lowing public hearing Agenda Items mulch. pair service. Satis- trucking company out non-residential $840/mo. Call Dan- pairs, basements, at the Grantsville City 1. Pledge of Allegiance 801-633-6685 Pre- faction guaranteed. of Grantsville Utah. agency. Valid driver's ielle (435)882-6112 SELL YOUR CAR or siding, roofing, decks, Offices, 429 East Main 2. Roll Call ciseYard.com Parts for all brands. To run regional or license needed. Good for info. boat in the classi- tile, small jobs, Street, Grantsville, 3. Public Hearing and (435)830-3225. long haul if you prefer writing, interpersonal, fieds. Call 882-0050 Snow-removal. Very Utah at 7:00 p.m. on Motion on conditional WINDOW TINTING, must be 25 or older, public speaking, Homes for or visit www.tooele- reasonable, local Wednesday, May 2, use permit for heavy home, business, and dependable with 3yrs teaching and com- transcript. com or Tooele. Jef f Garage, Yard Rent 2018 to receive public manufacturing to allow RV. Save money on experience. We have puter skills needed. e-mail your ad to 435-775-1445 Sales input regarding the fol- State Brass Foundry to energy bill and add flexible schedule to Knowledge of disabil- tbp@tooeletranscript. WHY RENT When lowing: expand their foundry to HAVING A yard sale? privacy! Call Chris for meet the needs of ity and education com HAVING A GARAGE You Can Buy? Zero BECOME A SUB- a. 2018 Capital Sewer include 440 Jade St, Advertise in the Tran- a free estimate your family. Contact laws, goal setting, re- SALE? Advertise it in down & Low In- SCRIBER. 882-0050 Project Environmental Bldg 603. script (435)850-9050 B r i a n a t port writing. Some the classifieds. Call come programs, 1st Assessment finding of 4. Review and Ap- 435-840-3675 or physical activity re- 882-0050 time & Single par- no significant impact proval of Planning email resume to no- quired. Must travel in ent programs, and Project Engineer- Commission minutes STANSBURY PARK creektransport@gmai Tooele County and Berna Sloan (435) ing Report. for meeting held April 68 Fairway Dr. Fri l.com pass background 840-5029 Group 1 b. Proposed Amended 11, 2018. May 4th- Sat May 5th check. OPERATIONS LA- Final Plat for Mustang 5. Adjourn 8am-4pm. Holiday Fax resumes to HOUSE FOR rent BORER! $13-$15 per Ridge Phase 1, to Pursuant to the Ameri- decorations, craft ma- 801-466-2363, email need roommate for hour. Ford Perform- amend seven (7) of cans with Disabilities terials, furniture, and to [email protected] upstairs. Cal l ance Racing School the original twenty-six Act, individuals need- INMATE WORK lots of household or call 801-466-5565. 435-849-1777 mounting/ balancing (26) lots, for Land De- ing special accommo- items. Open until filled. tires, runner, fueling WHY RENT when you velopment. LLC and dations during this RELEASE TOOELE 784 Oquirrh Utah Independent vehicles, detailing can buy? $2000 a Adam Nash in the meeting should notify Ave. Friday April 27th Living Center. EOE cars. Send resume to month & good credit RM-7 and R-1-12 Rachelle Custer, 8am-3pm, Saturday Josh Williams at Soldzone. for Tooele City Planner COORDINATOR could get you a home April 28th 8am-noon josh.williams@Fprac- w/Zero Down. Call c. Proposed prior to the meeting at St. Marguerit e TOOELE COUNTY SHERIFF’S OFFICE ingschool.com Business Berna 435-840-5029 2018-2019 tentative (435) 843-2130 or Knights of Columbus budget. TDD (435) 843-2108. STARTING SALARY: $16.32 PER HOUR TA COUNTRY Pride Opportunities Group 1 Real Estate. come and see! All interested persons (Published in the tran- STATUS: PART-TIME WITH NO BENEFITS Restaurant now hiring Small Business own- Topare invitedDollar! to attend script Bulletin April 24, CLOSING DATE: OPEN UNTIL FILLED servers, cooks, and ers: Place your clas- and provide comment 2018) dishwashers. Apply Homes The Opportunity Pets sified ad in 45 news- upon this proposal. online at www.myTA- Tooele County Sheriff’s Office is looking for a papers throughout Written comments will job.com or by phone Utah for only $163. $$SAVE MONEY hard-working individual to supervise inmates Pampered Pet Re- also be considered if 1-888-669-8256. for 25 words, and $5. Search Bank & approved to be inmate work trustees. sort submitted to the City per word over 25. H U D h o m e s I received 9 Offers Quality pet care for STANSBURY PARK Recorder in advance You will reach up to www.Tooele Bank- EXAMPLE OF DUTIES over 30 years. Improvement District of the hearing. 340,000 households Homes.com Berna within a Week and put the Home • Responsible for screening minimum security Dog & Cat boarding is accepting applica- Persons with disabili- and it is a one call, Sloan (435) inmates for work release 435-884-3374 tions for part-time ties needing accom- one order, one bill 840-5029 Group 1 • May be required to take inmates to job sites pamperedpetresort.com summer help, $12 hr. Under Contractmodations for to $8,000 partici- over List No benefits. Consists program. Call the pate in hearings and supervise those inmates Planning on selling of very hard work ex- Transcript Bulletin at should contact Chris- • Perform general maintenance of the detention RUSH your home, you could Price and Closed within 45 days, ercising the water 882-0050 for further t i n e W e b b LAKE be sending your sales facility valves and some info. (ucan) (435.884.3411) at the KENNELS. points to up to • Acts as the commissary liaison for the other duties may in- HAPPYGrantsville SELLERS! City Offices Dog & Cat boarding, 340,000 households detention facility clude meter reading, at least 24 hours in ad- obedience training. at once. For $163. meter replacement, Wanted vance of the hearings. Call (435)882-5266 you can place your MINIMUM QUALIFICATIONS building maintenance, DATED this 23rd day rushlakekennels.co 25 word classified ad A. Graduation from high school or GED painting, weed con- of April, 2018. m I AM paying more for to all 45 newspapers I WILL GET YOU TOP DOLLAR B. Experience in Corrections and or law trol, welding repairs, Christine Webb junk cars/trucks. I will in Utah. Just call the enforcement procedures is preferable, but not vehicle maintenance, Grantsville City Re- SELL YOUR com- come to you and tow Transcript Bulletin at FOR YOUR HOME! required water, sewer or storm corder puter in the classi- it away. Call/Text 882-0050 for all the drain maintenance. (Published in the Tran- AND fieds. Call 882-0050 (435)224-2064 details. (Mention Must be at least 18 It Matters a scriptGreat Bulletin Deal April How24, It’s Sold, C. One (1) year of responsible work experience or visit www.tooele- DL5970 ucan) transcript. com years old and have a 2018) OTHER QUALIFICATIONS valid driver's license. DEADLINES FOR HAVE A good idea for When It’s Sold and Who you Get to • Must be 21 years of age Apply at: 30 Plaza, classifieds ads are a story? Call the • Must possess a Valid Utah Driver’s License StansburyStansbury Park, UT M o n d a y a n d Transcript and let us Negotiate on Your Behalf and Protect and a satisfactory driving record during the hours of 8 Wednesdays by 4:45 know 882-0050. am to 4:30 pm, Mon- • Ability to pass an extensive criminal back p.m. you in the Selling Process. Serviceday Agency thru Friday. Ap- ground check and positive work history plications will be ac- • Ability to think and act quickly in emergency STANSBURY PARKcepted POOL until 4:30 pm situations; use of judgement for people and on May 11, 2018. (An List your home here, give me a call! situations • CERTIFIED LIFEEqual GUARDS Opportunity • Ability to communicate both orally and in Employer) writing • CERTIFIED WATER • Ability to frequent lifting of 25-50 pounds with • SAFETY INSTRUCTORS occasional lifting of up to 100 pounds or more • CASHIERS • Knowledge of policies and procedures of The Stansbury Service Agency is hiring Certified Life the detention facility; knowledge of Utah State Guards, Certified Water Safety Instructors, and Cashiers Laws to work at the Stansbury Park Pool, for the 2018 season. For any of your Preference will be given to applicants with WSI NowNow AcceptingAccepting Applications Applications real estate Certification. Applicants do not have to be “certified” NowNow RentingRenting For a complete job description or an when applying, but do need to be “certified” by hire IncomeIncome Restrictions Restrictions ApplyApply needs, call application please visit date. IncomeIncome Restrictions Restrictions ApplyApply http://www.co.tooele.ut.us/hr.html ExclusivelyRental assistance for Seniors may be Shane Bergen Applications must be submitted to Applications are available by contacting the ExclusivelyRental assistance for Seniors may be Service Agency Office at available. Call for details Tooele County Human Resource Office, available.Pet FriendlyFriendly Call for details Rm 308, 47 South Main Street, Tooele 435-882-6188 or serviceagency@stansburypark. org. Office hours are 8:00 am to 12:00 noon & Or email to [email protected] Call for435.843.0717 details 12:30 pm to 4:00 pm Monday – Friday. Call for435.843.0717 details EEO Employer 435.843.0717TDD 800.735.2900 435-840-0344 APPLICATION DEADLINE DATE IS MAY 19TH 435.843.0717TDD 800.735.2900 SMALL CLAIMS SUMMONS SMALL CLAIMS In the District Court of SUMMONS Utah, 74 S 100 E #12, In the District Court of SMALL CLAIMS Tooele UT, 84074. Utah, 74 S 100 E #12, SUMMONS SMALL CLAIMS 1st Choice Money Tooele UT, 84074. In the District Court of SUMMONS Center, Plaintiff/Peti- 1st Choice Money Utah, 74 S 100 E #12, In the District Court of SUMMONS FOR tioner, 980 N Main St, Center, Plaintiff/Peti- Tooele UT, 84074. Utah, 74 S 100 E #12, PUBLICATION Unit B, Tooele UT tioner, 980 N Main St, 1st Choice Money Tooele UT, 84074. IN THE THIRD JUDI- 84074, VS Anna Unit B, Tooele UT Center, Plaintiff/Peti- 1st Choice Money CIAL DISTRICT Boone, 581 W 700 S, 84074, VS Meaghan tioner, 980 N Main St, Center, Plaintiff/Peti- COURT SALT LAKE Tooele, UT 84074. Gailey, 316 E Clark St. Unit B, Tooele UT tioner, 980 N Main St, COUNTY STATE OF I swear that the follow- #A3, Grantsville, UT 84074, VS Jordan Nel- Unit B, Tooele UT UTAH ing is true: 1. Defen- 84029. son, 62 W Plum St, 84074, VS Tosha STEVEN R. SAUN- dant owes me I swear that the follow- Grantsville, UT 84029. Crouse, 421 N 200 W DERS, SHERRIE K. $2,680.00 Plus pre- ing is true: 1. Defen- I swear that the follow- #20, Tooele, UT SAUNDERS, AND judgement interests to dant owes me ing is true: 1. Defen- 84074. SHERIK L.L.C., the date of judgement, $2,160.00 Plus pre- dant owes me I swear that the follow- Plaintiffs, v. SCOTT H. if qualified for prejudg- judgement interests to $2,143.00 Plus pre- ing is true: 1. Defen- BOETTCHER, an indi- ment interests. 2. This the date of judgement, judgement interests to dant owes me vidual; KELLY R. claim arose on De- if qualified for prejudg- the date of judgement, $1,687.00 Plus pre- JENSEN, an individ- cember 1, 2017. ment interests. 2. This if qualified for prejudg- judgement interests to ual; KENNETH PUBLIC NOTICE THE STATE OF UTAH claim arose on Janu- ment interests. 2. This the date of judgement, PATEY, an individual; NOTICE IS HEREBY TO THE DEFEN- ary 26, 2018. claim arose on Janu- if qualified for prejudg- DELLE AUTO TRUCK GIVEN THAT the DANT: You are sum- THE STATE OF UTAH ary 11, 2018. ment interests. 2. This STOP INC., a Utah Tooele City Planning moned to appear at TO THE DEFEN- THE STATE OF UTAH claim arose on No- corporation; STOCK- Commission will meet trial to answer the DANT: You are sum- TO THE DEFEN- vember 20, 2017. TON LAND AND LIVE- in a public hearing and above claim. The trial moned to appear at DANT: You are sum- THE STATE OF UTAH STOCK LLC, a Utah Business meeting will be held at the court trial to answer the moned to appear at TO THE DEFEN- limited liability com- scheduled for address shown above. above claim. The trial trial to answer the DANT: You are sum- pany; and DOE D Wednesday, April 25, If you fail to appear, will be held at the court above claim. The trial moned to appear at FENDANTS I-X, 2018 in the hour of judgment may be en- address shown above. will be held at the court trial to answer the Defendants. 7:00 PM. The meeting tered against you for If you fail to appear, address shown above. above claim. The trial (Tier III) will be held at Tooele the total amount judgment may be en- If you fail to appear, will be held at the court Case No. 180902302 SUMMONS City Hall in the City claimed. Date of Trial, tered against you for judgment may be en- address shown above. Judge Patrick Corum IN THE THIRD JUDI- Council Chambers, lo- June 1, 2018, 9:00 the total amount tered against you for If you fail to appear, THE STATE OF UTAH CIAL DISTRICT cated at 90 North Main a.m., room 11. claimed. Date of Trial, the total amount judgment may be en- TO: KENNETH COURT OF TOOELE Street, Tooele, Utah. Notice to Defendant. A June 1, 2018, 9:00 claimed. Date of Trial, tered against you for PATEY A lawsuit has COUNTY STATE OF Agenda Items small claims case has a.m., room 11. June 1, 2018, 9:00 the total amount been filed against you UTAH 74 South 100 1. Pledge of Allegiance been filed against you. Notice to Defendant. A a.m., room 11. claimed. Date of Trial, regarding the owner- East, Tooele, Utah 2. Roll Call This imposes upon small claims case has Notice to Defendant. A June 1, 2018, 9:00 ship dispute over cer- 84074 3. Public Hearing and you certain rights and been filed against you. small claims case has a.m., room 11. tain real property at KENT S. KIRKHAM, Motion on conditional responsibilities. You This imposes upon been filed against you. Notice to Defendant. A Delle, Utah. The relief Petitioner, v. LESLIE I. useTUESDAY permit forApril heavy 24, 2018 may obtainTOOELE small youTRANSCRIPT certain rights and BULLETINThis imposes upon small claims case has requested by Plaintiff KIRKHAM Respon-B7 manufacturing to allow claims information and responsibilities. You you certain rights and been filed against you. is declaratory judg- dent. State Brass Foundry to instructions at may obtain small responsibilities. You This imposes upon ment regarding owner- Civil No. 174300616 expandPublic their Notices foundry to Public Notices Public Notices http://www.utcourts.goPublic Notices claimsPublic information Notices and mayPublic obtain Notices small youPublic certain Notices rights and shipPublic of said Notices property DAPublic Notices includeMeetings 440 Jade St, Trustees Miscellaneous v/howto/Miscellaneous instructionsMiscellaneous at claimsMiscellaneous information and responsibilities.Miscellaneous You andMiscellaneous monetary dam- TheMiscellaneous State of Utah To: Bldg 603. Disabillity Accomoda- http://www.utcourts.go instructions at may obtain small ages related to your Leslie I. Kirkham You 4. Review and Ap- Deadline for public SMALL CLAIMS tions. If you need ac- v/howto/ http://www.utcourts.go claims information and tortious conduct. You are summoned and re- proval of Planning notices is 4 p.m. the SUMMONS commodation of a dis- Disabillity Accomoda- v/howto/ instructions a t are summoned and re- quired to file an an- Commission minutes day prior to publica- In the District Court of abililty, contact a judi- tions. If you need ac- Disabillity Accomoda- http://www.utcourts.go quired to answer the swer in writing to the for meeting held April tion. Public notices Utah, 74 S 100 E #12, cial service assistant commodation of a dis- tions. If you need ac- v/howto/ Complaint which is on Petition for Divorce 11, 2018. submitted past the Tooele UT, 84074. at least 3 days before abililty, contact a judi- commodation of a dis- Disabillity Accomoda- file with the Court. filed in the case identi- 5. Adjourn deadline will not be 1st Choice Money hearing. cial service assistant abililty, contact a judi- tions. If you need ac- Within twentyone (21) fied above. Pursuant to the Ameri- accepted. Center, Plaintiff/Peti- (Published in the Tran- at least 3 days before cial service assistant commodation of a dis- days after service of Within 30 days after cans with Disabilities UPAXLP tioner, 980 N Main St, script Bulletin April 17 hearing. at least 3 days before abililty, contact a judi- this Summons, you the last day of publica- Act, individuals need- Unit B, Tooele UT & 24, 2018) (Published in the Tran- hearing. cial service assistant must file your written tion, which is May 8, ing special accommo- 84074, VS Anna script Bulletin April 17 (Published in the Tran- at least 3 days before answer with the Clerk 2018, you must file SMALL CLAIMS dations during this Public Notices Boone, 581 W 700 S, & 24, 2018) script Bulletin April 17 hearing. of the Court at the fol- your Response with SUMMONS meeting should notify Water User Tooele, UT 84074. & 24, 2018) (Published in the Tran- lowing address: Third the clerk of the court In the District Court of SMALL CLAIMS Rachelle Custer, I swear that the follow- script Bulletin April 17 Judicial District Court, at: Third District Court, Utah, 74 S 100 E #12, SUMMONS SMALL CLAIMS Tooele City Planner Deadline for public ing is true: 1. Defen- & 24, 2018) Salt Lake County, Tooele County, State Tooele UT, 84074. In the District Court of SUMMONS prior to the meeting at notices is 4 p.m. the da n t o w e s me Matheson Courthouse, of Utah, 74 South 100 1st Choice Money Utah, 74 S 100 E #12, In the District Court of SUMMONS FOR (435) 843-2130 or day prior to publica- $2,680.00 Plus pre- 450 South State East, Tooele, Utah Center, Plaintiff/Peti- Tooele UT, 84074. Utah, 74 S 100 E #12, PUBLICATION TDD (435) 843-2108. tion. Public notices judgement interests to Street, Salt Lake City, 84074, and serve a tioner, 980 N Main St, 1st Choice Money Tooele UT, 84074. IN THE THIRD JUDI- (Published in the tran- submitted past the the date of judgement, Utah 84114, and you copy of your Response Unit B, Tooele UT Center, Plaintiff/Peti- 1st Choice Money C IAL DISTRIC T script Bulletin April 24, deadline will not be if qualified for prejudg- must mail or deliver a on Petitioner's attorney 84074, VS Meaghan tioner, 980 N Main St, Center, Plaintiff/Peti- COURT SALT LAKE 2018) accepted. ment interests. 2. This copy to Plaintiffs’ attor- at: Larry G. Reed, 231 Gailey, 316 E Clark St. Unit B, Tooele UT tioner, 980 N Main St, COUNTY STATE OF UPAXLP claim arose on De- ney at the address East 400 South, Suite #A3, Grantsville, UT 84074, VS Jordan Nel- Unit B, Tooele UT UTAH cember 1, 2017. listed above. If you fail 210, Salt Lake City, 84029. son, 62 W Plum St, 84074, VS Tosha STEVEN R. SAUN- PUBLIC NOTICE THE STATE OF UTAH to do so, judgment by Utah 84111. Public Notices I swear that the follow- Grantsville, UT 84029. Crouse, 421 N 200 W DERS, SHERRIE K. Notice is Hereby Given TO THE DEFEN- default may be taken If you fail to file and ing is true: 1. Defen- I swear that the follow- #20, Tooele, UT SAUNDERS, AND that the Tooele City Miscellaneous DANT: You are sum- against you for the re- serve your Response dant owes me ing is true: 1. Defen- 84074. SHERIK L.L.C., Redevelopment moned to appear at lief demanded in the on time, judgment by Deadline for public $2,160.00 Plus pre- dant owes me I swear that the follow- Plaintiffs, v. SCOTT H. Agency of Tooele City, trial to answer the Complaint. default will be taken notices is 4 p.m. the judgement interests to $2,143.00 Plus pre- ing is true: 1. Defen- BOETTCHER, an indi- Utah, will meet in a above claim. The trial DATED this 19th day against you for the re- day prior to publica- the date of judgement, judgement interests to dant owes me vidual; KELLY R. Business Meeting, on will be held at the court of April, 2018. lief demanded in the tion. Public notices if qualified for prejudg- the date of judgement, $1,687.00 Plus pre- JENSEN, an individ- Thursday, April 26, address shown above. HOLLAND & HART Petition. submitted past the ment interests. 2. This if qualified for prejudg- judgement interests to u a l ; K E N N E T H 2018 at Approximately If you fail to appear, LLP The Petition is on file deadline will not be claim arose on Janu- ment interests. 2. This the date of judgement, PATEY, an individual; 1:00 p.m. The Meet- judgment may be en- James L. Barnett with the clerk of the accepted. ary 26, 2018. claim arose on Janu- if qualified for prejudg- DELLE AUTO TRUCK ing will be Held at the tered against you for Cory A. Talbot court. You can obtain UPAXLP THE STATE OF UTAH ary 11, 2018. ment interests. 2. This STOP INC., a Utah Dixie Center, St. the total amount Karina Sargsian a copy of the Petition TO THE DEFEN- THE STATE OF UTAH claim arose on No- corporation; STOCK- George, Utah. claimed. Date of Trial, Attorneys for Plaintiffs by requesting one from DANT: You are sum- TO THE DEFEN- vember 20, 2017. TON LAND AND LIVE- 1. Open RDA Meeting NOTICE OF ESTRAY June 1, 2018, 9:00 Steven R. Saunders, the clerk of the court at moned to appear at DANT: You are sum- THE STATE OF UTAH STOCK LLC, a Utah 2. Roll Call Horse Gender: Geld- a.m., room 11. Sherrie K. Saunders, the above address or trial to answer the moned to appear at TO THE DEFEN- limited liability com- 3. Discussion: ing Face Whorls: 1 Notice to Defendant. A and Sherik LLC b y c a l l i n g above claim. The trial trial to answer the DANT: You are sum- pany; and DOE D - RDA Strategic Plan- Leg RF: No White Leg small claims case has (Published in the Tran- 435.833.8000 will be held at the court above claim. The trial moned to appear at FENDANTS I-X, ning RH: Full Pastern Leg been filed against you. script Bulletin April 24, READ THE PETITION address shown above. will be held at the court trial to answer the Defendants. 4. Adjourn LF: No White Leg LH: This imposes upon May 1 & 8, 2018) C AREFULLY. It If you fail to appear, address shown above. above claim. The trial (Tier III) Michelle Y. Pitt Full Pastern Face: you certain rights and means that you are judgment may be en- If you fail to appear, will be held at the court Case No. 180902302 SUMMONS T o o e l e C i t y Blaze Color: Horse responsibilities. You being sued for divorce. tered against you for judgment may be en- address shown above. Judge Patrick Corum IN THE THIRD JUDI- Recorder/RDA Secre- was found in the area may obtain small Dated April 16, 2018 the total amount tered against you for If you fail to appear, THE STATE OF UTAH C IAL DISTRICT tary of SR112 and Sheep’s claims information and Larry G. Reed claimed. Date of Trial, the total amount judgment may be en- T O : K E N N E T H COURT OF TOOELE Pursuant to the Ameri- Lane on April 4th, i nstructions a t Attorney June 1, 2018, 9:00 claimed. Date of Trial, tered against you for PATEY A lawsuit has COUNTY STATE OF cans with Disabilities 2018. If this Horse be- http://www.utcourts.go (Published in the Tran- a.m., room 11. June 1, 2018, 9:00 the total amount been filed against you UTAH 74 South 100 Act, Individuals Need- longs to you, or if you v/howto/ script Bulletin April 17, Notice to Defendant. A a.m., room 11. claimed. Date of Trial, regarding the owner- East, Tooele, Utah ing Special Accommo- have any information Disabillity Accomoda- 24, May 1 & 8, 2018) small claims case has Notice to Defendant. A June 1, 2018, 9:00 ship dispute over cer- 84074 dations Should Notify on a possible owner, tions. If you need ac- been filed against you. small claims case has a.m., room 11. tain real property at KENT S. KIRKHAM, Michelle Y. Pitt, Tooele please contact Lt. Ron commodation of a dis- This imposes upon been filed against you. Notice to Defendant. A Delle, Utah. The relief Petitioner, v. LESLIE I. City Recorder, at Johnson at the Tooele abililty, contact a judi- Your Local you certain rights and This imposes upon small claims case has requested by Plaintiff KIRKHAM Respon- SELLING YOUR 843-2110 or michel- County Sheriff’s Office cial service assistant responsibilities. You you certain rights and been filed against you. is declaratory judg- dent. HOME? Advertise it [email protected], at 435-882-5600 (Utah at Newsleast 3 Sourcedays before may obtain small responsibilities. You This imposes upon ment regarding owner- Civil No. 174300616 in the classifieds. Call Prior to the Meeting. code 47-2-1). hearing. TOOELE RANSCRIPT claims information and may obtain small you certain rights and ship of said property DA 882-0050 or visit (Published in the Tran- (Published in the Tran- (PublishedT in the Tran- BULLETIN i nstructions at claims information and responsibilities. You and monetary dam- The State of Utah To: www.tooeletran script Bulletin April 24, script Bulletin April 24, script Bulletin April 17 http://www.utcourts.go instructions at may obtain small ages related to your Leslie I. Kirkham You script.com 2018) May 1 & 8, 2018) & 24, 2018) v/howto/ http://www.utcourts.go claims information and tortious conduct. You are summoned and re- Disabillity Accomoda- v/howto/ instructions at are summoned and re- quired to file an an- tions. If you need ac- Disabillity Accomoda- http://www.utcourts.go quired to answer the swer in writing to the commodation of a dis- tions. If you need ac- v/howto/ Complaint which is on Petition for Divorce abililty, contact a judi- commodation of a dis- Disabillity Accomoda- file with the Court. filed in the case identi- cial service assistant abililty, contact a judi- tions. If you need ac- Within twentyone (21) fied above. Great Savings onat leastBooks 3 days before cial service at assistant thecommodation Transcript of a dis- days after service of Within 30Bulletin days after hearing. at least 3 days before abililty, contact a judi- this Summons, you the last day of publica- (Published in the Tran- hearing. cial service assistant must file your written tion, which is May 8, script Bulletin April 17 (Published in the Tran- at least 3 days before answer with the Clerk 2018, you must file & 24, 2018) script Bulletin April 17 hearing. of the Court at the fol- your Response with & 24, 2018) (Published in the Tran- lowing address: Third the clerk of the court All Behind You, Winston script Bulletin April 17DistantJudicial District Court, Worldsat: Third District Court, & 24, 2018) MilestonesSalt Lakein Planetary County, Tooele Exploration County, State Churchill’s Great Coalition 1940-45 Matheson Courthouse, of Utah, 74 South 100 450 South State East, Tooele, Utah All Behind You, Winston tells the story of the men In this richly illustrated overview,Street, Salt author Lake Peter City, Bond84074, describes and serve the remarkable a achievements of the astronomers,Utah scientists 84114, and and you engineerscopy of your who Response helped unravel the and women of Winston Churchill’s coalition govern- must mail or deliver a on Petitioner's attorney ment who steered Britain through its darkest hour, copy to Plaintiffs’mysteries attor- at: ofLarry the G. distant Reed, 231worlds that make ney at the addressup our solarEast 400system. South, This Suite clearly written showing how they helped to win the Second World listed above. If you fail 210, Salt Lake City, War. It explores the roles played by characters as to do so, judgmentand bycompellingUtah 84111. account includes dramatic default may bedescriptions taken If you of fail the to daring file and and resourceful- diverse as the mercurial newspaper magnate Lord against you for the re- serve your Response Beaverbrook, who supplied the planes that won the lief demanded ness in the of planetaryon time, judgment pioneers, by clear explana- Complaint. default will be taken Battle of Britain; the pugnacious trade union baron DATED this 19thtions day of againsthow philosophers you for the re- and observers first Ernest Bevin, who kept the nation working; Lord of April, 2018. took thelief measure demanded of the in theheavens paving the HOLLAND & HART Petition. Woolton, the minister for food – a man so wide- LLP way for Themodern Petition astronomy, is on file and up-to-date James L. Barnettappendiceswith that the clerkdetail of the the properties of the ly loved he was dubbed ‘Uncle Fred’; and Sir John Cory A. Talbot court. You can obtain Anderson, one of the first people to contemplate the Karina Sargsianmajor membersa copy of ofthe our Petition solar system. Attorneys for Plaintiffs by requesting one from awful power of the atom bomb. Steven R. Saunders, the clerk of the court at Only Only Sherrie K. Saunders,$ 50the above$ 95 address or $ 99 $ 95 and Sherik LLC 32 b y 12 c a l l i n g 29 16 (Published in the Tran- 435.833.8000 script Bulletin April 24, READ THE PETITION May 1 & 8, 2018) CAREFULLY. It means that you are being sued for divorce. Dated April 16, 2018 Larry G. Reed Attorney Extreme Science Thinker, Failure, Soldier,(Published in the Tran-Jailer script Bulletin April 17, From Cybernetics to Time Travel, Adventures An Anthology of Great Lives24, May in 1 365& 8, 2018) Days at the Edge of Knowledge Mixing heroism, ingenuity, infamy, and the bizarre, Travel to the outer extremities of experimental sci- collects the very best of ence and contemplate the unhallowed arts of re-ani- Thinker, Failure, Soldier, Jailer obituaries from to present an endlessly mation, genetic engineering, galvanism, time travel, The Telegraph absorbing compendium of human endeavor. Orga- mind control and psychedelic drugs. nized day by day around the calendar year, with each Center stage are the extreme scientists who chal- life presented on the date it ended, the book features lenged everything — nature, morality, the govern- hundreds of remarkable stories. World statesmen ment, the law and sometimes even their own bodies jostle with glamorous celluloid stars, pioneering bof- — in the pursuit of knowledge. fins sit alongside chart-topping rock ’n’ rollers, while Are these men in white coats trailblazing an bright- artists and their muses mingle with record-breaking er future for humanity, or tampering with things sportsmen. This is the perfect gift for the armchair they really shouldn’t? psychologist in all of us. Only $ 95 $ 95 Only 19 9 $2395 $1000

The Intellectual Devotional: These and other titles available Modern Culture at the Tooele Transcript Bulletin In The Intellectual Devotional: Modern Culture, the au- thors explore the fascinating world of contemporary cul- ture to offer 365 daily readings that provide the essential references needed to navigate the world today. TOOELE Quench your intellectual thirst with an overview of the TRANSCRIPT literature, music, film, personalities, trends, sports, and pop references that have defined the way we live. From the Slinky to Star Wars; Beatlemania to Babe Ruth; flap- BULLETIN pers to fascism—refreshing your memory and dazzling your friends has never been easier, or more fun. Whether you’re a trivia genius, pop-culture buff, or avid reader, you’ll be riveted by this comprehensive journey through 58 N. Main – Tooele contemporary culture. Mon-Fri: 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. • Sat-Sun: closed Only $2400 $1495 B8 TOOELE TRANSCRIPT BULLETIN TUESDAY April 24, 2018

Peace continued from page B1

1,000 paper cranes the Gods might grant her a cure. For Sadako, the folding, the work and hope begin. Decades pass and this crane had yet to have a final home. The crane is deflated, or at least it appears so. It might be round. The miniature origami is, at most, an inch in all directions. It is too small to tell without mag- nification. The crane is a token of peace, good will and friendship. On Aug. 5, 2017, 63 years later and 5,740 miles away in Wendover, Utah, a Japanese delegation, with Sadako’s neph- lasting peace.” ew, Yuji Sasaki, presented one According to Hawkins, both Paper origami cranes (above left) are an display near the tiny of Sadako’s completed paper elements of the reconciliation crane folded by Sadako Sasaki. Worldwide, the cranes are a cranes to officials at the Historic are symbolized by Sadako’s symbol of peace, hope and recovery. C-123 Provider aircraft Wendover Airfield in Wendover, paper crane. According to the (above) permanently resides at Historic Wendover Airfield in Utah. Wendover Airfield’s website, Wendover, Utah. The museum contains many artifacts. This The presentation was monu- in Japanese culture, cranes are field telephone (left) is one of the many things on display. mental in many ways, said given to victims as a “symbol of The telephones were first used in World War I to direct troops HWAF president Jim Petersen. peace … hope and recovery.” replacing flag signals and the telegraph. Ronnie and Gerald First, the site of the presenta- Hawkins explained, “This act, McDonough (bottom left) take a moment to check out an interactive display during a visit to the museum in January. tion — the Enola Gay hangar — presenting the very paper crane was the location from which the Sadako folded as she lay dying, hangar’s plane and namesake, in memory of the Enola Gay and departed on its mission, arriv- the Atomic Bombing Group, this ing at its destination on Aug. simple act speaks powerfully to 6, 1945, to drop the atomic the power of reconciliation. Join the Club! bomb, named “Little Boy,” on “I suspect few will fully Hiroshima, Japan. appreciate what we witness Second, there are only five here today,” he said. “Maybe not Tooele Club other U.S. sites where the fam- now; perhaps in generations to Tooele 438 W 400 N Annual ily has made such a donation, come.” Teen Center Membership but this site is the only one of Also touching to Petersen and Boys & Girls 102 N 7th St. the six that was a Manhattan many of the attendees was Yuji’s Tooele, UT 84074 $10$ Project site, where plans were duet that he sang with another Club 435.843.5719 carried out to drop the bomb Japanese lady. The song was that would stop the war, written as a tribute to his Aunt Homework Help | Computers | Games | Arts | and More! Petersen stated. Sadako. Among the other U.S. crane Kathy Hussey, docent for exhibits are the World Trade the airfield’s museum, said Afterschoolol Center’s visitor center in New she spent the better part of the York City, one at Pearl Harbor, ceremony in tears, especially as programs foforr Hawaii, and another at the Yuji performed the duet. Harry S. Truman Presidential Hussey, who grew up Youth andd Teens Library in Independence, in Wendover, but who in a When School Missouri. previous interview with the ages 6 - 18.8. is For Petersen, besides the Transcript Bulletin stated that The Club is In! Out presentation of the crane itself, she would help deliver items to there were two other highlights the base’s barracks to help out of the ceremony. One was the the local colonel’s wife, also had also honored at a luncheon by needles.” TooeleClub.org talk given by Ret. Air Force a family connection to the base. Wendover City officials. As Sadako weakened and was Col. Edwin P. Hawkins, which Hussey noted that at the Along with presenting unable to fold more cranes, her Petersen noted was both short, ceremonies, the Japanese del- Sadako’s tiny paper crane, the family and friends exceeded her but poignant. Hawkins’ past as egation, including Yuji Sasaki, delegation brought crates full 1,000 crane goal. By October OF THE a liaison for the U.S. in Japan, were friendly, humble, energetic of similar paper cranes, which 1955, they totaled 1,300. She PET WEEK where he became a close friend and they all mingled cordially were folded by Japanese school died, that month, just eight of the Sasaki family, made him among the audience members. children. They offered these months after her diagnosis. also the perfect liaison to facili- Petersen was fairly happy cranes to the museum to pres- A giant monument sits in tate the presentation. His com- with the ceremony’s attendance. ent to those who tour the air- Hiroshima, Japan. It is at the ments at the ceremony carry There were around 100. The field museum. Children’s Peace Park. There, even further weight because of foundation’s three active mem- While Sadako’s crane cur- a statue towers above. It is of his ties to both sides. bers were disappointed with rently sits behind glass sharing Sadako holding a crane high Hawkins’ gist was that the the lack of representation from space with other airfield memo- above her head. Japanese and American delega- Utah government officials. After rabilia, Petersen said the foun- Japanese kids and others tions’ meeting at the Enola Gay inviting the governor, lieutenant dation will soon create a display from around the world fold hangar was a historical event. governor and state representa- that highlights just this singular thousands of paper cranes each This was the first time the two tives, none showed up. crane and make it stand out year to donate for placement at sides — the one who dropped Gov. Herbert did send a letter from the rest of the museum as Sadako’s statue as a symbol of the atomic bomb and the other stating, ”[the ceremony] was a a key feature. world peace. who were the remaining family good thing,” Petersen said. The crane and its exhibit, And, now, in Wendover, members and fellow-citizens The board invited many over time will continue as a Utah, at another museum, of the victims of that bomb — international and national symbol of healing for the two where a former airfield stands is for fi nding all would come together, he said, media organizations, including countries. Regardless of fault another relic from Sadako. This “not with enmity in their hearts, 60 Minutes and Japanese media and motivation, the crane has airfield, which Jim Petersen and our pets a good but with thoughts of reconcili- outlets. set the two countries on a con- his Historic Wendover Airfield home. ation.” Brad Westwood, of the Utah ciliatory path. Foundation are restoring bit by He acknowledged that Japan State Historic Preservation However, Sadako’s work and bit, is also a piece of World War still feels “deep pain at the fate Office, and all three Tooele her family’s loss has become II metaphor. Here the American of the ones they loved; the County commissioners attend- a bigger metaphor, but that military worked to train officers other feels pride in the accom- ed. Commissioner Shawn Milne metaphor came with a cost. whose efforts by air would halt plishments of men who they introduced the program. The day the bomb was dropped the growing tyranny in Japan consider heroes. Both strive to Petersen said his airfield on Hiroshima, was so memo- and Germany and bring peace For more info. on animals- keep those memories alive.” board saw the crane presenta- rable for her, that even though to the world. Adoption Procedure He continued on, saying that tion as an opportunity for the she was only 2 years old, she In this museum, is a little Tooele County Local shelter adoption requires what the two countries share word to spread about what remembered its effects. paper crane folded by a 12-year- Animal Shelter 882-1051 vaccination payment, licensing are the noble values of “compas- exactly happened at the top- According to the biography, old girl, who fought hard to live, Tooele City and possible shelter fee. sion for victims, and the willing- secret base during World War II. “Sadako and the Thousand who hoped for a miracle that Animal Shelter 882-8900 Shelters are required to ness to overcome anger, distrust The air base was critical in Paper Cranes,” written by did not come for her. Though Grantsville hold animals for 5 business and hatred toward those who ending the war and its pilots Eleanor Coerr and published she was not cured, perhaps her Animal Shelter 884-6881 days before euthanization. committed the act …” and support personnel fought by G.P. Putnam’s Sons in 1977, crane can continue to heal our He further argued that true in both the European and Asian she claimed to remember the world and provide hope that reconciliation will be two- theatres. feeling of the heat of the the peace is worth fighting and Brought to you by Joe H. Roundy, D.V.M. pronged. It will involve the While in Wendover, the detonation touching her face. dying for, but if at all possible, necessity to “promote mutual Japanese delegation would Sadako told Chizuko, “... not at the cost of war. Tooele Veterinary Clinic understanding and strive for tour the base and they were the heat prickled my eyes like 1182 N. 80 E., Tooele • 882-1051

NO REFERRAL NEEDED.

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